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10 _ 1'he ()aily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, March 19,1976

Another Good Buv

Tne Meigs Girls Softball were

From BAKER'S

---------------------------,I

Local·notices, briefs

BUDGET SHOP

released

on

recognizance bonds pending
recelpt of probat ion repor-ts
and sentencing .

League, junior and senior
divisions. will meet Sunday.
March 21, at 6 p.m. at the

Royal Crown Bottling Co.

Area Deaths

Homer S. Carman. 78, of
West Main St ,. Pomeroy ,

269

Court.

Food Company for many
years. He was born July 30,

THE POMEROY E-R unit

went to Tuppers Plains at
10 : 46 p.m . Thursday for
Lydia Swain who wils Itt with

1897 the son of th~ late John

Project PEP

taken to Holzer Medical
Center.

p.m. Saturd~y at Royal Oak
Park , four miles north of

Pomeroy , off Route 1. ·

WAYNE HUBBARD AND
Homer Miller were arraigned
Thursday before M eigs
County Common Pleas Judge
John C. Bacon on d1arges of
receiving stolen property .

Bolh pleaded gullly and both

Were Celebratin' the
"Wearin' of the Green"
With A ...

.

We ' re selling money!
During Pomeroy · National
Bank's Money Sale you can
save 15 percent of the normal
finance charge on any
installment loan of $1000 or
more. And that's ·for the
duration of the loan .
Pomeroy
N&lt;Jtion&lt;JI 's
Money Sale applies to all
kinds of loans. Auto loans.
Personal
loans.
Home
improvement loans . Home
furnishing loans. Vacation
loans.
Boat
loans.

Consolidation
there others?

involve Meigs County parents
in the reading instruction of
, their children, "Project
PEP" (for Parent Education
Program),
has
been
described in the April issue of
The Reading Teacher, a
JI'Ofessional journal devoted
to elementary reading instruction.
The article was written by
David R. McWilliams,
assistant director of the Ohio
University Teacher Corps
Project, and Patricia M.
Cunningham, now director of
reading for the Alamance
County, North Carolina,
Schools. McWilliams resides
in Rutland.
Project PEP was designed
to show p~rents in the
community how to help their
school age children benefit
from reading instruction in
the . schools and how to
provide a home environment
that would help . their
IJ'OSChoolers develop those
readiness skiiJs expected of a
beginning reader .
The article describes how
the program overcame
various problems, including
getting the active participation of parents.
The Reading ,Teacher with
a circulation of 50,000, is
published by the International Reading Assn., a
nonprofit
professional
associ a lion with 65,000
members in 75 countries.

Six hills
thrown out
by court

Of The .Normal Finance Charge!
loans.

Are

So. if you are planriin\j to
borrow money, do it now
during Pomeroy National's
Money Sale ... and save.
Remember. dUring this
period you can save 15 .
percent of the .normal
finance charge on any
installment loan oi $1000 or
more.
It's here ... the big Money
Sale. At Pomeroy National
Bank!!!

St. Patrick's is a friendly day .•.
A day to slop awhile

Carman .

He

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Supreme Court ruled
today six bills rammed
through the Democr~tic
controlled General Assembly
in the week before former
Gov . John J. Gilligan left
office were Invalid because
they were no! signed by then
Lt. Gov. John Brown who was
presiding officer of the stale
Senate. ·
The bills, including one that
realigned
the
state's.
congressional districts, were
passed after the new
legislature was sworn into
office In January, 1975, one
week before Gilligan, a
Democrat, left office.
The majority opinion in the
6-1 decision by the high court
said presiding officers of both
the House and Senate must
sign all bills before they are
presented to the governor.
"This is not only
ministerial duty, it is mandatory," the court said.
The
court
said
if
Democratic legislative
leaders were afraid thai
Brown, a Republican, would
not have signed the bills they
should have obtained a court
order forcing him to do so.

Funeral servi ces will be

Home in Middleport.

held Sunday al 3 p.m. at ·
Ewing Chapel with buri al In
Carlelon Cemetery . Friends
may call at the funeral home
after 7 this evening .

GLENNA M. HEFF .
Glenna M. Heff , 82, who

died In Bucyrus Tuesday, was
born June 2, 1893 in Pomeroy ,
the daughter of the late
James and Margaret Swager
Jenkinson. She moved fr.om

Pomeroy , to Buty rus in 1942.
She was a member of the
First Christian Church in

Bucyrus.
She was also preceded In
death by three brothers and

three sisters.
She is survived by

two

daughters, Mrs . T. H. IQuen)

IDA C. STANLEY

Mrs. Ida C. Stanley, 74 w ife
of Herbert C. Stanlev , died
ear ly fhis morning in Holzer
Med ical Cent.er. She was an
employe of the State Welfare
Department
in
Mason
County, placing children In
homes tor 40 years .
Funeral services will be
conducted Svnday at 1: lO
p.m. from the Wll cox;en
Funeral Home with the Rev .

Bryan Blair offlclat(ng . In ·
terment

will

be

in

CLASS AA
At New Concord

Visitation hours at the
funeral home are from 7 to 9
p.r;n. Saturday .
Mrs . Stanley was a
member of the Point
Pleasant Women's Club and
was acti ve i n many civic

New Concord Glen n
Martin s Ferry 30

ADMITTED - Ruth Smith,
Racine;

Janice

Salser,

Racine ; Herbert Whaley,
Shade; Orion Darrah;
Racine; Terry George ,
Middleport ;
Louise
McElhinney , Middleport;
Robert Brown, Pomeroy ; Joy
Neutzling; Pomeroy; Scottie
Queen, Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Leondus
Lee, Ralph Parcell, · Reva
Johnson, Nancy Freeman ,
Juanita Ferrell, Mary
Fowler, James Riffle, Harold ·
King, David Donohue, Peggy
Reilmire , Peter Chase,
Charles Young.

Thurman ;

NOW YOU KNOW
The only case in history jn
which a dead language haS
been resurrected is the caso
of Hebrew which had been otil
of use for 2,300 years before
the Jews in Israel claimed II
for their own .

Open Tonight Until 8
Save This Weelcend On

COORD INATE SPORTSWEAR

pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

pomeroy·
nationa
bank
the bank of
the century
established 1872

{

I

.

Entire Stoclc Included

By RiCK DU BROW
SAN FRANC!SOO (UP! ) - Patricia
Hearst Saturday was found guilty of the
Hibernia Bank robbery by a jury that
deliberated only 12 hours.
The verdict was read in a sealed
courtroom by clerk Gene Driscoll, after he
had been handed the jury's written verdict
by the foreman and showed it to U.S..
District Judge Oliver J. Carter.
Miss Hearst, who had entered the
courtroom smiling minutes before; showed
no irrunediate emotion when the verdict
The jury reached its verdict at 3:38p.m.
after deliberating since it received the
case at 10:48 .a.m. Friday morning. The
jury's nearness to a verdict was indicated

Open Saturday 9: 30 to 5 P.M.

-

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
..,

unfair anti..competitive actions, and

ownership of domestic coal production by
a iimled nun\ber ·or companies and their
interrelation with oil and gas firms.
Included in the study will be the nature
(Continued on page 2)

WESLI::Y A. BUEHL

at the lunch hour when it sent out for food,
· instead of taking a break.
The jurors entered the tension-filled
courtroom with a solemn appearance.
They listened quleUy as the verdict was
announced.
Bailey said he wanted the jury polled.
Each was asked for the verdict. They all
answered in the affirmative.
The clerk asked: " Is the verdict as read
as to count one and count two of the
indictment your verdict?" There were 12

Buehl wants to return
·as county's engineer
POMEROY - Wesley A. Buehl,
incwnbent, Friday filed his petition of
candidacy to run for the nomination as

"yes" responses .

Then the judge asked Bailey if he wanted
a separate poll. He said that was adequate.
The judge suggested April 12 for
judgment and sentence. Bailey said he
preferred Aprill9. The judge approved the
(Continued on page 2)

to

two

consecutive

state

championships during the 1973-74-75

seasons
In lil74, Phelps received a certificate
under the Division of Mental Retardation

and is currently completing M8sler's
Degree in Educational Administration at
Xavier University, Cincinnati.

Mr. Barton has served the school as its
(Continued on page 2)

•

tmes

flw-ries northeast and partly

cloudy elsewhere Sunday
night. Lows from the teens to'
low ' 20s. Partly sunny Monday.

NO. 8

team

Republican candidate !or Meigs CoWJty
Engineer.
Central committee candidates filing
Friday were HeiU'y Hunter, North Otester
Precinct; David Brickles, West Bedford,
and Lewis Long, Middleport Third Ward.
All are Democrats. Filing deadline for
county posts and central committee
positions is 4 p.m. on March 25.

Weather

VO. 11

C!iESHffiE - I.Dren D. Ph&lt;ilps,
Marion, has asswned the superintendency
ol the Guiding Hand School here replacing
Gary Barton who resigned to accept a
similar position in Fulton County. Phelps
began his duties March B.
, lfe graduated from Muskingum
()&gt;liege majoring in physical education
and health. He was a member of the
varsity basketball squad during his four
years and was elected c~a ptaln of the
team during his senior year.
~'oliowing graduation, PllelJls was
emPloyed as an elementary physical
education specialist in tbe MI. Vernon City
Schools. During his tenure ·there, he
developed a progranuned playground
concept for 10 elementary schools, and
coached junior high baske tball and
rreshrnan football .
From 1971 to March 5, he was
employed at the MARCASchool in Marion,
Oh1o as physical educa lion instructor,
coaching, athletic director and director of
the IIIARCA · Summer Recreation
propam. While at MARCA, he developed
an IndiVidualized programming approach
for the multi-handicapped in physical
development.
- He coached the MARCA basketball

wUJ investigate coal prices and their affect
on utility rates.
,
JeiU'ette said the investigation would
also look into possible price fixing, other

Chance of showers Sunday
eoding west by early afternoon , Highs from the 40s to
low 50s. Chance of snow

SUNDAY, MARCH

21. 1976

Bank's top officers
are Evans, Haskins
board and Morris E, Haskins as president
of Ohio Valley Bank.
Election of new o{ficers was held
Wednesday, March 17, at the directors
meeting which lollowed the bank's annual
shareholders meeting at 420 Third Ave.
In accepting the newly created
position of chairman of the board, it was

munity activities aimed at Improvements

Warren as

EMERSON E. EVANS

MORRIS E. IIASKINS

Rt. 35 and Rt. 160 near Holzer Medical L. Daily, vice president; Wilma P. WebCenter.
, ster, aSst. cashier; Madge E. Boggs,
Ohio Valley Bank was established on assistant Cashier and controller; Joycelyn
Sept. 24. 1872. First presidenl was Alfred M. Barlow, assistant cashier; Larry E.
Henking, who was succeeded by C, W. Lee, assistant cashier; Thelma F. Rees,
Henking ; then came Sherman H. Eagle, assistant cashier and Marion E. Caldwell,
the third OVB president, followed by Dr. assistant cashler and consumer Joan of.
Lewis C. Bean, and Mr. Merriman.
ficer.
Other officers elected · during WedDirectors are Emerson E . Evans,
nesday night 's directors meeting
Morris E, Haskins, John McNeill, Frank
were: C. Leon Saunders, vice president H. Mill~ . Jr., Ernest N. Wiseman, Keith R.
and cashier and secretary to the Board of Brandeberry, James L. Dailey, Selwyn R.
Directors; Wendell B. Thomas, vice While, Warren F . Sheets and Dr. W. Lewis
president and senior Joan officer: James ilrown, director emeritus.

Soci@l security comes
to 5,871 in Gallia Co. ·
•

files petition

-theme;·.,f 1976 Standard
VIS Materials and correlated helps.

.THURSDAY, MARCH; 25~ 1:00·and 7:00 p.m.
AT

MEIGS THEATRE

HEATH UNITED.METHODISl CHURCH

Tonite lhru fMr. 25

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SOUTH THIRD

JAWS .
( Technicol'o rl

~ONWREOBY

Based on the novel "The
Great White Shark" by
Peter Benchley.
"PG"

'

THE MIDDLEPORT BOOK ·STORE,
99
,•

II.L ST. IN MIDDLEPORT
I'

JAMES E. BAIJ)WJN

Democrats set date to
honor Lt. Govem~r

POMEROY - Plans for a meeling to
hooor Lt. Gov. Richard B. Celebreeze on
May Sin Meigs County were made Thursday night by Democrats at Grace
Episcopal Parish House. ·
Tentative . p~ns call lor a picnic on
May 5 at the county fairgrounds.
Judge Darrell R. Hottler, common
pleas jqe of Highland CoWJty, a candidate for the court of appeals, gave a
report on the appellate court. Greg Hill,
GAWPOL!S - The Ga!Ua-Meiga Athena, and Allaba Brown, Jackson, spoke
Community Action Agency executive on
beh.ll of UdaU for President.
·
board will hOld Ita montllly meeting
Spqldlll!
also
was
Lawrence
Grey,
Tuelday, March 23 at 7:30 p.m. In the
court of appeals candidate. Mrs.
&lt;lleshlre Central offlce. All members are Athena,
Lou
Diehl
was recognized at the meeting
urged to atland.
for beillll a member of the party lor 80
years.
•
l

•'

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

t

in GaJiia· County.
' ·
Hask!Ds SeveDth President

James Baldwin

INCREASE GRANTED
COLUMBUS (UP!) -The
Western Reserve Telephone
Co., which served 16 counties
in Ohio, Thursday was
gran led a 2.03 per cent rate
increase, representing an
annual hike In revenues of $3
miUion, for all custorQers. ·

tntint

Ry ROBERT E. SWEET
. SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UP!)
Edmund G. Brown Jr. became governor of
California ,just 14 months ago. ~ he
already has passed some • ou•
predecessors - including Ronald "agan
and Eat! Warren - in a statewh;e
popularity polL ·
Now the 37-year-Oid bachelor, who
rivals Reagan as a fiscal conservative and

I

GATES TO PEKING
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Thomas S. Gates, a former
defense secretary, will be
named
chief
U.
S.
representative to China with
the personal rank of ambassador. While House aides
said President Ford was
expected to announce the
appointment today.

Your Invited Guest
Reaching More
Than 12,()()()
Families

Jerry Brown making
Californians happy .·

SJate St., m 1896.
Wh~n the bank moved to iis current
home 15 years ago, assets totaled $8
million. Assets today toJalin excess of $44
million.
The new chairman of the board has
"""n lnstrwnental not only in the growth of
Ohio Valley Bank, but Gallia County as
well. He is still engaged In many com-

OVB president the past 22 years, will
Evans successor, Morris E . Haskins,
continue to work closely with the officers is a close
and personal friend who has been
and directors.
with
the
since he was named a
Evans joined Ohio Valley Bank on director onbank
Dec.
30, 1939.
Feb. 21, 1947, as a director. He became
At the time, Haskins operated
sixth president of the county's second Haskins-Tanner Clothing. lfaskins joined
oldest financial insUiullon In January,
the bank full time i~ 1961 ; became vice
1954, succeeding the late A. K. Merriman. president
in January, 1954, and was named
A giant in business, indUstry and
senior vice president in 1964.
agriculture "Circles, Evans has been a
uwe feel we have exceUent teamwork
prime reason for the 104 year-old bank's al Ohio
Valley Bank," the new president
Outstanding success during tbe past 29
remarked.
''It's the best and only way to
years.
go," he added.
Evans was one, of the sever~l key
Since moving to Third Ave., several
persons associated with the bank when Its expansions
have extended the plant
board of directors decided to build the through to Fourth Ave. Too, a branch
new structure on Third Ave., In 1961. The
has · been constructed in Rio
bank was organized In the Henklng- facility
Grande, andlalar this year, a new facility;
Allemong building on Court St. It was Jackson Pike Office now under conrelocated at the corner of Second Ave., and strucUon, will open at the lnlerseclion of

GALIJPOIJS - James E. Baldwin,
Route 2 Gallipolla, has fUed for Gallia
County Sheriff In the Republican Primary.
Qwner of Jim Baldwin's Fine Guns,
Inc,, and a life long ""!I dent of GaUia
County. Baldwin has had 18 years of law
enforcement experience at the city,
county, and state le~is.
Jim is a graduate of GaUia Academy
High School and Crawfordsville, Indiana
School of Business. His law en!Qrcement
experience include Gallipolis City
patrolman, Gallla County Deputy Sheriff
under George Ehman, Oscar Baird, and
Denver Wallrer, and as a Security Chief for
the State of Ohio at the Galllpolis State
Institute.
.
He is a member of the Gallia Masonic
l&lt;Kige No. 4811, the York Rile, the Aladdin
· Shrine of Columbua, Knights of Pythias,
life member Of the NaUonal rune Assn.;
member of Ohio Gun Collectors Assn.,
Central Ohio Gun and Indian Relic
Collector&amp;, Gallia County Gun Club, Point
Pleasant Gun Club, a charter member of
the Gallla-Meigs Fraternal Order of
Police, and received the Jtm Mills award·
as "OUtstanding Police Officer" for the
year Of 1988.
He Is married to tbe former Betty
Raike from Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va. They
baveiwochlldren, Mellisa,l5, a student al
Gallia Academy High Sehooi, and Larry,
28, employed at Holzer Hospital.

. NEW SUPERINTENDENT - L&lt;&gt;ren D. Phelps, seated, formerly associated
With. the MARCA School in Marion, Ohio, has been named superintendent for the
Gaiha County Mental Retardation's Guiding Hand School in Cheshire. He replaces
Gary Barton, (standing). Barton is leaving to become superintendent of the Fulton
County Board of Mental Retardation.

Devoted .To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley
GAlliPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

announced that Evans, who has served as

Main Store - Annex and Warehouse

Guiding Hand superintendent
has background in athletics

Hearst guilty.

Emerson E. Evans as chairman of the

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Show starls at 7:00p.m.
\

WASHINGTON (UP!) - A House
sub&lt;:ommittee has begun an investigation
of posslble pri""!!ouging by the coal
industry, Including pooaible price-fixing
and other anticompetitive actions, Rep.
John W. Jenrette, Jr., 0-S.C., said Friday.
Jenrette said a staff was being hired by
the House Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee for the investigation
and work would begin by April. The study

GALLIPOLIS - Announcement was
made Saturday or the selection of

Misses - Juniors - Womens

McCarty, Henderson ; Nancy
See,
Point
Pleasant ;
Jonathon Dewitt, Henderson ;
Deibert Blake, Middiepor:;
Jackie Call, Clifton; Mrs .
Denny Wroten, (;ailipolis
Ferry; Oscar Packs, Jr .,
Crown City; Terry' Pierce,
Radcliff, Mrs. Mark Cheng,
son, Point Pleasant.
Birth - March 18, a son to
Mr.and Mrs. Lowell Thom~s.
Point Pleasant.

Coal prices in
line for probe

was announced.

Continued from page 3
. •
the public on ApriiJ9. Everyone - men, women, aod childre!J:
(accompanied by adults) - is invited as participants or
spectators. Prizes are given at these shoots, and as a black;
powder man myself, I can assure you that these contests are'
far from boring.
·
Besides accurate shooting, tomohawk and knife-throwing
·
are also exhibited.
Other public and private shoots are planned, so watch the
paper for further details. I really hope this club picks up
momentum, because what better way for us to recognize our
great Bicenienniai than to replay some of the scenes of the
frontier days with these same guns used by our forebears i
Hope to see you at the neitt shoot.

To talk a bit and visit ...
To share a friendly smile ... so ..•

Stop in the Pomeroy National Bank and its branches
at Rutlarid and Tuppers Plains, on Saturday, March
20 to enjoy refreshments with our friendly staff.
There will also be favors!

:.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Emma

Holzer Medical Center
(Births, March 16)
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Gonion, son, Jackson: Ml' .
and Mrs. Douglas Sommer,
·son. Jackson .
(Birth, Marchl1i
Mr . and Mrs . Steven
Bryant, son, Gallipolis.

GATLINBURG, Tenn~
(UP!) - The search foi
missing Stale DepartmenJ
official Bradford Bishop Jr:,
charged with the slaughter of
five members of his famlly1
has led to the rugged Great
Smoky Mountains Natiornil
Park.
~
The FBI said a search
party of FBI agents an4
forest
rangers, using
tracking ·dogs, would fan out
along three wilderness tral~
leading from the spot where
Bishop's
bronze-colored
station wagon was found
Thursday.
•
The 1975 Chevrolet was left
in an unpaved parking Jot
near the Elkmont Mountain
camp ground, a developed
camping area abOut 14 mileS
southeast of Gatlinburg ,

the Sports Desk

She i s survived in addition
to her husband by a son,
River
Captain
Charles
Stanley, Point Pleasant ;
three· brothers , Randolph
McGill , Staunton McGill and
Nap McGill , all of Akron ; one .
sister, Mrs. 0 . J. Blake,
Charleston, . four grand children and one great .
grandchild.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Thomas
Hunt,

.d El

Tri .Val le y 92 We ll sville 15

Nancy McGill.

Veterans Memorial Hospital

.Trail leads
to Smokys_

the

Kirkland Memorial Gardens .

Baker, Bucyrus. and Mrs. A
E. {Virginia) Hartenbach,
Point Pleasant ,· four grand - groups .
She was a Methodist who
children, and six great attended the Bellemead U. M.
grandchildren .
Funeral services were held Church . Born In Putnam
tOOay at the Wise Funeral County~ she was a daughter of
Home, the Rev . Donald B . the late Or . Char les and

Hospital Ne:-;ws

Browns want
ex-Dolphins
in Oevelar.id
CLEVELAND ( UP!)
Head Coach Forrest Gregg
said tQday the Cleveland
Browns will explore all
avenues in an effort to sign
three former Miami Dolphins
- wide receiver Paul Warfield, fullback Larry Csonka
and halfback Jim Kliick who reportedly have been
released from any obUgations
to the Memphis Southmen Of
the defunct World Football
League.
" I'd take all three of
them," Gregg told UP! from
his bed at Mt. Sinai Hospital,
where he underwent surgery
earlier this week to remove a
mole from his leg. "Paul
Warfield already has Indicated to owner Art Modell
he would like to finish his pro
career with the Browns, right
where he started In the
league .

EDITH SAUNDERS
Funeral services for Mrs
Edith Saunders , 59, who dleci
Wednes day at Riverside
Hospital In Columbus will be
held al 2 p.m. Salurday at the
,Silver Run Freew ill Baptist

teachers' mag

the caller at a public square

dance to be held from 8 to II

SAVE 15%

Pennybaker

Bucyrus .

written up in

DON PENNELL of New
Martinsville, W. Va., will be

NOW THROUGH MARCH 31

Della

Childres otficiating. Burial
was in Oakwood Cemetery,

was also Church wltH\the Rev. Noel
preceded iri death by a sister ·Her-rmann officiating . Buri al
will be In lhe Gravel Hill
and a brother .
He Is surv ived by his wife, Cemetery at Cheshire.
Mrs . Saunders was born on
Elizabeth Ray Carman; one
brother, Denver , Rt . 2, Nov . 19, 1916 In Cheshire: the
Pomeroy; two sisters, Jennie daughter of the late Harvey
and
Lucinda
Carman , and Margaret Rupe Mulford .
Friends may call at the
Pomeroy and several nieces
A program designed to and nephews.
Rawl ings -Coats
Funeral
•

a hear! condition . She was

22"x51"

and

I
I

HOMERS. CARMAN

The marriage ol Philip W. died Thursday at Holzer
Garage on Norlh Second
Ave .• Middleport. Coaches of HoUck end Christine M , Medical Center .
all league teams and new Houck has been dissolved In
Mr . Carman was owner and
teams are asked to attend . Meigs County Common Pleas operator of the Pomeroy

BASSETT
DEOORATIVE
PlATE GLASS
MIRRORS
Framed

r

-

GALLIPOLIS
There were 5,871
social security · beneficiaries and 871
supplemental security Income (SSI)
recipients in Gallia County as of last June
30. Of the SSI reclpienis, 583 received both
SSI and social security checks.
Trische Danesi, Gallipolis Security
Branch Manager, said that over $775,000
per month was beirg paid to Ga!Ua County
residents as of last June. Nearly $350,000 of
this was to retired workers, almost $93,000
to disabled workers, and more than
$335,000 to dependents and survivors of
retired, disabled, and deceased workers.
The social security beneficiaries were
further categorized as disabled and retired
workers. 2,469; wives and children, 1,386;
survivors and others, 2,014.
In Ohio nearly $165 million in social
security benefits were beinR oald monthly

to alniost 1.4 million social security
beneficiaries. Nearly 125,600 people
received SS! checks with over 73,000 of
them getting both social security and SSI
payments, Mrs. Danesi said.
Social security pays monthly
benefits to insured retired and disabled
workers and their dependents, and to the

a liberal on social issues, is a

candidate for president.
Using the same unorthodox style
which sparked national curiosity in .his
young administration, Brown hopes to win
the Democratic nomination with a fourmonth campaign in which he wiU enter
few, if any, primaries outside California.
A former Jesuit seminary student who
tells audiences, "I spent three years on a
mountain top praying for you," Brown
says he has a new vision that can over-

$1,000 shot in the arm
POMEROY - The pubUc lund
drive for !be purchase of aa aerial
ladder fire truck for use throughout
Meigs County got another substantial
Hsbot in the arm" Friday whea

Theodore T. Reed, Jr., on behalf ol the
Farmero Baak ODd sav!Dgs Co.
preseDted a $1,000 contribulioD to
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles ~gar. The '
total raised lor !he purehase of tlte
truck DOW staDds at a little over $13,000,
Chief Legar said.

Volunteers all
on their own
GALLIPOLIS - A spokesman of the

survivors of ~ deceased workers wh.o · Gallia County Volunteer Emergency

worked long enough under social security.
SUPPlemental security income
payments, Mrs. Danes! said, do not depend
upon past work history, but are payable to
people who are 65 or over, or who are blind
or disabled and who have little or no income i&gt;r resources. Social Security
benefits are paid lor by social security
taxes, Whereas supplemental security
income Payments are made from general
fundS.

Squad Saturday issued the following
sJatement to the voters of Gallia County:
"In response to your many questions:
:rhe Gallia County Volun""'r Emergency
Squad has been guaranteed NO funds from
the .4 mill levy to be voted on March 30.
" We have always provided free
emergency medical service and transportation to area hoapitals. We are supported only by our donations and receive
no help from county or state offices.
"The Volun""'rs Emergency Squad
~=~r=·: ;:::;:::::::~=::.-:;:::::::;:::::::::========:::::::::::::::::=:=:=:::=:=:===:===:====::======::=:=:=======·=======:===========·=·=:====::===:====:===:========:==:==================:====::=:========:::::===:=t
now has over 70 trained, competent personnel to serve you 24 hours a day, seven
days a week. We have three fully equipped
ambulances serving Ga!Ua County.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County's Local
Only three members attended
"There has been much misunBoard of Education Friday night in special Friday's session. Present were J. E. derstanding on these points. We feel that
session, failed to take any action on two (Dick) Cremeens, William Carter and you as a voter should !mow the truth about
disciplinary problems and a m!lller in- James Blevins.
the issues on which you will be voting."
volving a bua driver.
During the special meeting, L&lt;&gt;tene
The board went Into an executive Johnston, a North Gallia teacher, was
session with Principals Cliff Wilson of granted permission to take her BiEXTENDED OUTLOOK
North Gallia and Robert Lanning of Kyger Centennial Club to Washington, D. C.
Moaday tltreugb WediU!oday, little
Creek regarding two discipline problems. Eight students wUI participate.
or no preclpitalloa through the period.
The principals had sought expulsion of
Mrs. Ruth George, art instructor at Cool Mond.ay and Tuetday but wanner
bOth pupUs. The executive session waa North GaUia and diatrict DPPF super- Wednesday. Htcho Moaday will be In
held with the parents of one of the students visor, W81 granted permiallon to attend a
the 30s to the 1.,. to. 101111 aDd 5I to 55
being present.
DPPF conference In April at Columbus. south, warmlq by Wedaeoday to hltlho
Another 35-minute executive session was Sherry Wray, an aide, Will also attend.
near 50 north and In the 50• to the lower
held with Supreintendent C. Comer
The boarct•s clerk, Mrs. Naomi Beman, 60s south. L&lt;&gt;wo will be 1n the 28s to the
Bradbury, A:;st. Supt. Frank Cremeans was granled permiSIIion to attend the SEO lower 30s.
and Mrs. Sarah Swnmers. a bus driver . No Chapter School Busineos Officials meeting
action was taken following U~al sess ion , March ,'l$ at Zanesville.
.;.;.;.;.:.
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:!![ . ~iscipline is hoard problem l,i

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come disillusionment among voters.

.As governor ~ Brown won-attention for

refusing to live 'In the new .governor's
mansion built by Reagan .
He rejected tax increase bills and
insisted on Ught budgets. He insUtuted !he
state's first farm worker union elections

shortened hundreds of prisoners' term;
through a new ''determinant'~ sentencing

policy and signed legislation reducing
marijuana penalties.
In November, the Field Poll said 84
per cent of voters approved Brown's
performance, the ' highest rating a
California governor has ever received,
"I don't see the presidential nominee
at this polntln lime," Brown told reporters
when he announced his candidacy. "!don't
think thai person has emerged. And. so the
convention will be very decisive."
Many campaign strategists think
Brown will win a plurality, If not a
majority, of the Democratic vote in the
June 8 California primary, gaining half the
280 delegates from , the most populoua
state.
Since his appeal crosses philosophical
lines, Brown's campaign would siphon
votes from George ·Wallace on the right
!!lid Morris Udall on the left.
If voters give him "the appropriate
response," Brown said, his campaign will
"spread east" and could upset front
runners who entered primary contests
around the nation.
Brown plans to campaign for
delegates who are uncommitted or
pledged to aiso-rans.

Pre Census
will need
65 workers
GALIJPOLIS - Sixty to 65 '!'OC"kers
will be hired to cooduct a Census pretest In
Gallia and Meigs Counties the U. S. Dept.
of Conunerce and Bureau of the Census
ssld Saturday'
The purpose of this test is to evaluate
two types of enumeration districta to
detennine the best procedure for housing
unit coverage and geographic allocation of
addresses for use In the IINIO Census.
Enwnerators will contact all housing units
and make listings of addresses lor all units
within certain prescribed boundaries.
The 60 to 65 positions will consist of
cler"ks, enumerators and crew leaders who
should expect to travel throughout either
Gallla or Meigs County. Thus, the employe
will have a dependable automobile for
which they will be reimbursed for use at
the rate of 15 cents per mUe.
Applicants must be U. S. Citizens, 18
years of age or older, and have a hil!h
school education or equivalent. They mut
be physically able to perform the work
required, Some of the applicants solecled
will begin work about April 28, others not
until May 24. All appllcania mut be
available to begin work AprU llll, however.
Interested appUcants IDIIII apply at
the Gallipolis local Office, Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services, 45 Olive Slreet In
per1011. Applications wUJ be a~led
·through Friday April 5. This Ia an Equal
Employment Opportunity Employer.
.

)

J

�3- The Sunday Times . Sentinel, Sunday, March 21, 1976

Special hone for
this alert dog

2- The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday,March 21 , 1976
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t e llers of opinion are welcomed. They should be
less than 300 II'Ords long tor be subject to reduction by
the editor) and must be signed with the signee 's address. Nantes may be &gt;~mlheld upon publication.
lloll·ever, on request, names will be diJclooed. Letters
should be In good ta ste , addressing i&gt;sues, not personalities.

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heads
state
!
assn.
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. JACKSON - C. Richard
( Dick ) Lanier, Jackson high
school faculty member . . has
been elected new president of
the Ohio Indus trial Arts
Association.
Lanier became president at
the Ohio Indus trial Ar ts
Conference held in Cleveland
and attended by more than
1.000 members, guests and
exhibitors.
There were more thim 2,500
students who visited to see
·some 3,300 projec ts submitted by 83 Ohio schools at
the conference held March 1113 at the Cleveland-Sheraton
Hotel.
The new presiden t has been
a member of the Jackson
hi~h school fa culty for 11

Dear Slr :
I do not very often complain about anything pertaining to
Meigs Co. or surrounding area, as this was and wiU always be

referred to me as home".
11

I find this a necessary and legitimate complaint.
I was "home" the 1st of Feb. Also this past weekend of
March 13th, and as I always do went to Miners viDe Cemetery.
This in the past has always been a peaceful and beautiful
setting for our deceased loved ones.
I was shocked to see tbe condition existing here. Namely
beer, pop, wine.botUes strewn everywhere. Beer cartons tore
and thrown around, old pieces of clothing laying at the
entrance. Broken bottles so thick it would be impossible to
park a car close to the gate. This is not only on the road leading
to the cemetery but inside and outside of fences surrounding
the burial places of people who years past settled this little
conun·unity of ' 4Welchtown" and "Dutch town" . I believe we
owe these people a better resting place than this . Surely there
is some place else to have this sort of outtings.
Might I suggest that the sheriff who also has many relatives
here - iJ\clude this on his regular patrol. Check · correct and
stop this deplorable condition.
Perhaps this could be taken into the commissioners agenda
to seek a solution and prosecution of this violation. - Thank
you, Mrs. Joan Mescher, 3015 Lebanon Rd .; Lebanon, Ohio
45036.

Dear Slr:

During my early youth I had met three of the remaining
Civil War veterans that lived here in Gallia county. Two I knew
real well, for I did off jobs for them as a youngster.
I
met
" Uncle
Jimmy"
Gatewood
of the Swan Creek area when I was working for the
U. S. Forest Service taking- a land survey for the Wayne
National Forest. Ail I recall the stately old gentleman had a
long white beard at the time.
MajorS. F. "Finn" Neal lived on 3rd Ave. across from the
Ohio Valley Bank. Mrs . Jake Moore now owns and occupies the
house.
·
In his old age, and during decent weather, the Major sat on
his front porch much of the time. He always wore a red buttonup,the.front sweater and a flat cap. ije smoked pencil type
stogies. One of my many jobs was to sweep the front walk early
on Saturday morning and pick. up the many stogie butts and
twigs in the front yard. I received what was then a king's
ransom for this, twenty cents!
.
Mrs. Neal, as I recall, had been a teacher at the old Gallia
Academy. She kept an immaculate home and looked after tbe
major's every need.
Although they lived in the very heart of town, they coo\&lt;ed
thelr food on a coal and wood coo.k stove. In their old age they
had a hlred cook, and boy, did I ever eat some fine food that
came out of the kitchen prepared on that stove. Just the smell
of some of those pies was enough to starve a boy to death:
Major Neal had been a former postmaster of our city. He
was also still a weatherman in his old age. He and his won
Albert had also operated a feed store on Vine St. where a part
of North's Produce is now.
The Major had the last cows quartered in the downtown
area. His barn was located in the back of his yard behind the
postoffl~e. This was around 1930. Each milrnlng a lad would
herd them down Thlrd Ave. to Vine St., then out Vine across
the creek and to the pasture field on tbe Chi!Ucothe road. In the
evening they were brought back to the barn for the night.
Fonner Supt. of schools Marshall Boqs had been one of these
herdsmen in his youth.
Dr. A. B. Garrett had his home and office on the next block
of Thlrd Ave. downriver from the Major's home . This was the
flrst house upstreet from Womeldorf and Thomas.hllrdware. II
no longer stands. The doctor had entered the war young as a
drummer boy.
I also did odd jobs for the doctor . He was, you could say,
also our family dOctor. He mixed his own medicines and
usually gave liquids. In the early 19308 his fee was 50 cents for
an examination' and one bottle of medicine. If 2 bottles, it was
75 cents.
I can assur.e all who read this tliat he was a good doctor
and people carne for hundreds of miles to him. The doctor had
a poll parrot which could talk. When 8 patient entered the
office a shrill voice would say "Sit down. Dr. will be with you in
8 moment." Looking a bout you would see only the parrot,
which dld the talking.
,
The doctor at one time was a U. S. Consul in Mexico. He
owned stoCk in gold and silver mines there. I recall seeing
some of his stock certificates years ago.
My step-grandfather was wounded in, action in the war.
Mter many years he was granted a pension of $8 (eight) per
mooth. He died before I wM born.

. ATHENS
The Athens
Mental Health and Mental
Retardation Center beca me a
teaching hospital of the Ohio
Univers it y College of
Osteopathic Medicine Friday
with· the formalizing of an
affiliation agreement.
Participating in the signing
ceremony were Dr. Timothy
B. Moritz, director of the Ohio
DICK LANIER
Department of Menta l Hea lth
and Mental Retardation; Dr.
years and prior to that taugh1 Taylor
Culbert ,
the
a t Lick, Ga llipoli s and university's provost, and Dr.
Madison South schools.
Gerald A. Faverman , acting
Lanier is a graduate of dean of the College of
Cadmus High &amp;hool in Gallia Osteopathic Medicine.
County and is the son of the
Others taking part were
late Olen Lanie r and Mrs. Sen. Oakley C. Collins of
Evelyn Lanier .
Ironton ; Rep. Claire M.
He holds a bachelor 's (Boz) Ball, J r. , of Athens;
degree fr om Rio Grande and
Floyd
Sarff ,
College and a mas ter 's superiniendent ; and Dr .
degree from Ohio University. Harr y Chovnick, clinical
Hi s wife , Peg gy. is an director , of the center.
elementary teacher in. the
"The agreement between
Jackson city schools and they the Athens Center and the
reside on Mayhew Hd. with Ohio University College of
their two children .
Os te opathi c Me di ci ne
represents a major step in the
department's effort s to
invOlve Ohio's universities in
the goal to improve patient
not been receiv ed , The care, training and research
pledges are to be sent to the programs in our institutions
Pomeroy Postmaster . Also for the mentally disabled, "
response fr om business Dr. Moritz said at the signing.
Dr . Fa verman said he
lette&lt;S sent this year has only
netted $283 . lor the drive . anticipates that eventually as
Businesses not yet respon· many as 60 medical students
ding and . individuals not at a year will receive some of
home during the door-to-door their clinical training at the
phases of the drive are asked Athens Center lor th e
to mail their contributions to mentally disabled .
Sarff pointed out that a $2.1
the postmaster at Pomero}
or leave them by the million capital improVement
project to begin soon at the
Pomeroy Post Office.
Kloes and Childs e.tend ed center will greatly facilitate
thanks to workers and con· the affiliation between it and
the university . The project
tri~ut ors for thei r work in the
driv e which will conclude includes the conversion of the
with the April 3 palloon sale. current ce nter hospi\al into a
med ical-s urgical services
Arcade with physicians'

Heart drive near goal
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Hear t Fund Drive,
with a goal of $3,500, has
reached $2,984.18, Paul Kloes
and Mick Childs , cochainnen, announced.
Wrapping up this year 's
drive will be a balloon day on
Saturday , April 3, with
members of Job 's Daughters
exchanging balloons for
contributions in the business
section of Pomeroy while the
Meigs Chapter , Order of
DeMolay, will be handling the
balloons in Middleport.
The chairmen of the drive
report that about $300 rnade
in pledges on radio day have

A pleasure to prove them wrong

Civil War veterans recallecl ·

College, mental health center are
affiliated for training ·of doctors

l

Finally, a necessary complaint

Dear Sir:
.
My name is Joyce Thorne and I live in Clarksburg, W.Va.
On Feb. 8, 1976, I brought my daughter Peggy to compete in the
Miss Ohio Valley Pageant held at Meigs Jr.High School. Mr.
Bob Hoeflich, a photographer for your paper, took pictures of
the winners and runners-up for your paper. I approached him
that day and asked if he would be kind enough to send me a
couple of papers. He not only sent the papers but a few days
later sent a picture.
In my opinion he deserves to be commended. His act of
kindness, I assure you, will not be forgotten. To some, it may
seem a small thing - but to us it meant a lot.
.
My daughter's been in baton for several years and at
different times I've tried to get hold of out of town papers.
. Believe me, unless you have a relative in that town, you're out
of luck.
.When l approached Mr. 'Hoeflich to send me the papers
some of the mothers said forget it - you 'll never learn. It was
a real pleasure to prove them wrong and it certainly restored
my faith in fellow man. It's a real pleasure to meet such an
honest man.
I hope that should an occasion such as this ever take place
here In Clarksburg, our newspapermen would be as courteous
to someone out of town.
Your paper deserves to be commended for having such a
rnan. as Bob Hoeflich associated with it. - .Sincerely, Mrs.
Joyce Thorne, Clarksburg, W. Va .
f.

Gallian

'offices, examination and

Theft probe continues
GALUPOUS - City police
here Saturday continued
investigation into the theft of
a 1966 Ford Fairlane taken
Friday night from a parldng
space at Jones Boys on Pine
St.
Officers said Brenda
·Holley, 2321 Jefferson St.,
Point, Pleasant, parked her
husband's car to shop between 7:30 and 8:i8 p.m.
When she came out, the car
Will! gone. The car was blue in
color, has two different types
of chrome wheels with yellow
traction bars. It has the West

Virginia tag l·A 221 1.
Two other complaints were
investigated Friday night.
Emm ett Ra ines, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, reported he was
assaulted by a resident of
Chatham Ave . while he was
walking along the street.
Rajnes said he was struck
several times about the face
before being knocked down
into a mud hole.
Jim Rich, 521 Flrst Ave.,
said someone broke off the
antenna of his car which was
parked at the Holzer School of
Nursing .

Premium book printing is·sold
GM..LIPOUS - French
City Press has been awarded
the contract to print the 1976
Gallia County Junior Fair
premium book. That action
was taken Thursday night
daring the monthly meeting
of the Gallia County Junior
Fairboard. ,
It was aMounced that all
premium book material must
be in by March 22. Jack
Harrison, chairman of the
ways and means committee,
re[)(ll'ted he has several new
advertisements for the 1976
book.
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell
Shriver, ' representing the
Gallia County Pony Pull
Association, discussed final
plans for this year's event.
Dir~tors also reviewed plans
for revamping the lighting
system, new parking area
and new crossing bridge.
Matt Saunders and Terri
Jividen were introduced as
the new youth representatives to the fairboard . Mrs.
Thelma Elliott, chairman pf
the membership committee,
announced all supplies have

Sunday Tim ~~S"Sentinel
Publ ished everv~ Sunday
by
The . Ohio
Valley
Publishing Co .

GALLIPOLI-S
OAILY TRIBUNE
825 Tl'tlrd Ave ., Gallipol is ,
Ohio 45131 .
Published every weekday

evenlnv except Saturday .
Second Class Poafege Pa1d
at Gallipolis , Ohio .tf5631 .

THE DAILY SENT1NEL

111 Court St., Pomeroy , o .

45769 . Published everv week -

day evening e~cept Satur day . Entered as second class
mailing matter at Pomeroy,

Onlo Post Office.
By carrier daily

Sundlv 75c

routt~l3. 25

and

er week. Motor
,per month .
p.

MAIL

SUBSCR!PT10N RATJ;S
For those who may be interested :
The
Gallipolis Daily
Tribune In Oblo and West
The whole work crew at Keystone Iron furnace in Vinton
Vlrgl('ll one year $22.00; srx.
county enlisted in the.army during the Civil War, thus shutting
months Sll.S&lt;l ; three months
$7 .00. !lsewhere $26.00 per
down its opera lion.
year; six months 113.50 ;
The flrst train engines to nm on the local railroad tracks
three month1 17 .50; motor
route S3.25 monthlv.
bere In town were the old type small, large stack engines. They
r he Dally Sentinel, ono
ear S22.80 ; Six months
were brought to this area by the B. &amp; 0 . on the West Virginia
tl'lne months S7.00.
lide of the river. They were ferried acrllS8 on barges and ' 11.50;
llewhtrt S26.00: . six
months •13.50; thrN months.
brolflht up the hill at the First Ave. end of Spruce St. between
S1 .SO.
•
.
the lee plant and North's proclucewarellouae. I belii!Ve this was
Tht United Prell · ln ..
ternatlonel 11 eJCc:lullvtlv
~1m.
·
entltled
fo the uae for
Something to think about:
publ !cation of 111 new s
dispatehes cr.clfte4 · to the
Who entered the U. S. Army at the youngest age, stayed In
"ewsp•per
and also the loca I
the longeat, and 1'0111! from a drummer boy to he mustered out a
newti"publloh.., herein .
· Ge:neral?. - Frank Hill.

i

treatment rooms and other
support fa cilities.
"Another vital aspe ct of the
capital improvement will be
·the addition of 205 Joint
Commission on Accreditation
of Hospitals {JCAH ) certified
bects. bringing the facility's
total of such beds to 374,"
Sarff said .
Dr. Chovnick said he looked
forward to the affiliation in
terms of increased medical
needs of the patients, adding :
"Many persons who come
to the mental health facility
have a wide range of medical
and surgical problems that
need attention" and the
teaching doctors and medical
students will fa cilitate this
type of service to them.
Dr. Chovnick recently was
appointed to the volWltary

teaching facu lty of the new
medica l college as a clinical
associate professor of
psychiatry.
The Athens Mental Hea lth
Center, which first opened its
doors in 1874, now serves 450
res idential pa ti ents wi th
a professional staff of 196 and

another 219 employees as a
supporting staff.
Dr. Faverman said with the
addition of the center the new
university medical school,
opening in September , has

affilia tions with seven
medical facilities. The others
are Selby General Hospital,

Marietta; Grandview in
Day ton ; Bre ntwood !n
Clevela nd ; Doctors m
Co lumbus; Young stown
Osteopathic and Northeast
Ohio General in North
Madison. The hospitals have
a combined capacity of 1,988
beds .

Roush in race for commission

HARTFORD, W. Va. - The
David L. Roush family,
mother, father and four
children from 11 to 16 years
old, perhaps will be giving
one of thelr dogs a bigger
than usual bone thiJ weekend.
It was his barking early
Saturday morning that
waked them to find thelr
home in flames . They only
had time to get themselves
' out with what they could
_
carry..
A spokesman of the New
Haven Volunteer Fire

DEXTER- James E. Roush , Route 1,

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became the second Democrat to file his
petition for nomination in the Meigs
County Commissioner's race. He is fili ng
for the January 2 term .
Roush , a graduate of Ohio University,
served as appointed Meigs Count y Auditor
to fill the une&lt;pired term of Gordon
Caldwell . He is th e son of Everett and
Grace Roush of Racine.
Roush is a U. S. Navy veteran , a
member of Racine American Legion Post
No. 602, and belongs to these frawrnal
organizations : F &amp; AM No. 461 , Racine
Chapter O.E .S., Royal Arch Masons No.
80, Bosworth Council No. 46, Ohio Valley
Commandery No. 24, and Aladdin Temple
Shrine.
He has served as chairman of the TB
Association , cancer Society, and Hea rt
Ailsociation . He also served on Meigs
County Action Plan Committee, Meigs
Countv Reeional Plannine Commission.
Buckeye Hills H ockin~ Valley Regional

-:·~·

WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND BASEBALL
League Wednesday 6:30p.m .
at American Legion Hall on
Beech Grove Road . All
parents and interested
persons urged to attend .
Election of officers .
OHIO VALLEY Commandry 24, Knights Templar ,
will meet at 1:30 Wednesday
at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. All Sir Knights
urged to attend.
POMERo·y • Middleport
Uona Club, noon Wednesday,
Meigs Inn.

JAMES E. ROUSII

{Continue&lt;) from pa ge 1)
superint endent sin ce July, 1973. A
graduate of Marshall University, Barton
has done additional work at Marshall and
Ohio Uni vers ity . ' He fir st becam e
associated with the Guiding Hand &amp; boo!
in .1970 when classes were taught at the
Calholic Youth Center in Gallipolis.
The school which served 78 students in
Gallia and Meigs.Counties is now located
in the · former Bishop Fenwick &amp; hool
Building north of Cheshire. Batton , in
leaving, sa id many improvements have
been made since the school opened.
The sc hool offers an adult program
and training for children of all ages.

Developm ent Commiss ion and Meigs
Couin ty River Erosion Committee. .
Roush , upon filin g sa id good
gove rnm ent , "starts wit h active,
progressive and trustworthy leadership.
Being active in county government, I am
awa re of fiscal affairs, the problems, and
needs of the county."

Hearst
1Con tinue&lt;! from

1Continued from pa ge 1)
and effectiveness of antitrust and .price
regulatory·actions of the executive branch

and independent government a gerlcles .

"I fe el that it is imperative that the true
facts about the enormous in creases in coal
prices be uncovered and made ava ilable to
the American people," Jenrette said .

He said the prices have in large part
been responsible for "the outrageous
escalation in utility rates."
" If there is unwarranted price,gouging
going on in tl1e coal industry, Congress has
a duty to find out where," he added . .

be

announced

later.

Tickets will be $5 for adults
and $%.50 for students.
;:;:::;.;.;.;.:-:::::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::;

change.

-when th e verdict was announced, Mrs.
Catherine Hearst, the defendant's mother ,
began crying. Her father , Randolph A.
Foreman William Wright read the
verdict : "We the jur y find Patricia
Ca mpbell Hearst, the defendant at the bar,
guilty ·as to count one of the indictment,
gu ilty as to count two of the indictment.
Signed William Wright, foreman. Filed
March 20, 1976 . At 4 o' clock and 30 minutes
p.m. William L Whittaker , clerk, by E. F .
Dr iscoll, deputy clerk."
Following the court session, the Hearsts
were taken to the back of the courtroom,
:Jpparently with hopes of · seeing their
convi cted daughter. One of Miss Hearst's
sisters, Vicki , broke down and wept quietly
in the third row of the co urtroom, putting
her head in her hands. Her other si:!ters
appeam:l on the verge of tears.

said Wednesday he would not
resign his state job even if he
is nominated.
Sweet said he feared his
conswner oriented attitudes
at the PUCO would not be
maintained by someone apNOT RESIGN
MRS. OLEN F. TAYLOR
pointed to fill his position by
COLUMBUS ( UP! J
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Olen
Public
Utilities Gov. James A. Rhodes .
tKonefa) Fosler Taylor , 52,
Rhodes says it has been the of Mesa, Ariz., died Friday
Commissioner David C.
morn ing at a hosp ital in
Sweet, a candidate for the policy of his administration Mesa
. She was born and
June
8
Democratic that a state workers ought not raised In Gallipolis and at.
nomination to the 15th stay on the payroll and run tended Gallipolis schools.
The daughter of the late
Congressional District seat, for office at the same time .
Everett and Myrtle Foster,
she was a member of the
Free Will l)apflst Church.
Survi-vors Include:
children, Eugene Kemper ,
California ; Judy Dever man,
Tommy. Freddy, Nancy, all
of Mesa, Ariz .; Millie, In the
Armed Fortes ; two sisters,
Evelyn Dav is of Gallipolis
and · Dorothy Miller ·of Big
Spr ings, TelL, and tw 6
brothers, Johnny and Wayne , ·
Presents
both ot Columbus.
Two brothers, .Joe and
Fashion News
Harvey, preceded her in
death.
For the Lady
Funeral serv ices will be at
In White
Gibbons -Bunker Funeral
Home In Mesa 1 p.m. Mon.
100 per cent polyester
day.

UNIFORM
CENTER

double~n i t featur ing a
cable knit bodice. back

zipper and gently fl"red
skirt . .Size 8-14 .

0

21.00

1

'.

Y our

:,

. ...

. -") - ;

been ordered and should be
available June L
Louis Pasquale wa s
employed as fair electrician
for the 1976 event.

White Swan Dist .

.

\\

..366 Second Ave •• _ .____. . Galli~olis, Ohio

Judgment asked
in Gallia court

SHIRLEY PROCTOR
ALLIANCE - Graveside
services will be conducted at
the City Cemetery here at 10
a.m. Monday for the victims
In a rural Gallla County lire
early Friday.
Shirley Smith Proctor, 30,
and her daughter, 1\1\elissa
Marie Mallns. Rt. 1,
Gallipolis. were killed In a
fire which destroyed their six
room frame home on the
Butaville-Porter Rd .
.
Mrs . Proctor is survived by
her husband, Michael D.
Proctor, a patient at the

M,!','&gt;f"\i Frrqii.,(Hl

I
I

S.lt Prices Good thru .

regulated

Oh~lissa is surv.ived by her · COLUMBUS (UP! ) - GOv.
father, Richard H . Malins, of
James A. Rhodes has signed
All iance.
Burial will be under the a pair of bills, effective June
direction of the Casslday- 18, changing the regulations
Turkle Funeral Home. Loca l for Ohio's barbers and
arrang emen ts were con · beauticians.
dueled by Miller 's Home tor
One bill signed Friday will
Funer~l s .
' require barber shops, as well
GEORGEs. TEWKSBARY
MIDDLEPORT _ George as individual barbers, to
S. Tewksbary, 85, formerl y a obtain licenses from the state
r ~s taurant operator
in Board of Barber Examiners
Middleport, died Sa1urda y by ne&lt;t Sept. 1. It also :
morn ing at the Newark
-Sets management and
Memor ial
Hospita l
in sanita tion standards for
Newark.
Mr. Tewksbary was born barber shops and forbids the
Aug . 14, 1891 in Middleport, employment of unlicensed
the son of the late George and barbers.
Dorothy Hysel l Tewksbary .
- Permits licensed barbers
He is survi ved by his wife ,
to
perform body waving,
Adrah Graham Tewksbary ; a
limited
hair weaving and
son , George, and a sister.
Mrs. Eva Struble.
fittin g and measuring
Funeral arrangements are headcaps for wigs or
being made at the Rawlings. hairpieces.
Coats Funeral Home.
- Req!llres that barbers he
MRS. HELEN LEWIS
at least 18 years old, perform
ZANESVILLE - Mr s . apprenticeship for at leas.t 18
Helen (Katherine) Lew is, 68, months and pass the state
543 Brookover , Zanesville,
Ohio A died at Bethesda examination .
Hospital.
- Provides for reciprocity
· Born March 25, 1907 in of barber licensing with other
Greenfield, she was a former
resident of Middleport and states.
- Increases licensing fees.
Pomeroy.
Mrs. lewis is survl.ved by
~Provides for the teaching
her hvsband, Wesley ; four
·of additional subjects in
daughters, Mrs . June barber .schools.
Kocher , and Mrs . Peggy
Darst, both of ·Zanesville ; . The other bill broadens the
Mrs. Betty Johnson , Carroll , definition of cosmetology,
OhiO, and Mrs . Janice which now applies only to the
Hastings, Red Hou se , W. Va .;
five sons, BilL Steve, and care of women's hair.
Cosmetologists will be able
Rick , all of ZanesvillE!, ·and
John and Jim of Dresden, to clean and embellish glris',
Ohio ; two brothers. Ben- men's and boys' hair, as well
jamin Fox, Blue Rock , Ohio,
and Harm on, of Pomeroy ; a as wigs and hairpieces.
The bill also raises
half.brother. George Lemley,
Cheshire ; two sisters, Gladys licensing fees and incre~es
Dott, Ravenswood, 'and Olive the penalty for practicing
Munyon , Thornv ille ; 35 cosmetology without a
grandchildren , and eigh t
license from a fine of $100 to
great -gr a ndGhildrer. .
Funeral services will be $200 to a 3!klay maximum
Monday at 1 p.m. at the
Putnam ·Chapel of Bolin
Funeral Home wi th the Rev .
her first husband, .James
Phil · Batlen officiating . by
Collins,
1932 . One brother
Buri.;.l will be in Woodlawn precededi.nher
in death .
Cemetery .
Zanesville .
Funeral services will be 2
Fr iends may call at the p.m.
Monday at. .White
Chapel at anytime .
Funeral Home in Coolville
with Rev . Freel.and Norr is
officiating. Burial will follow
in Tuppers Plains Christian
Cemetery.
M'Rs. ORPHA t.i. BENNETT
Friends may call at the
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mrs. funera I home after noon on
Orpha M. Bennett, 75, a Sunday .
res ident of Rt . L Reedsville,
died early Saturday morning
at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Pt. Pleasant, following a
brief illness.
She was born In Buffalo, W.
Va .. . on Nov. 22, 1900,
daughter of the late Thomas
C. and Charlotte ' Burch
Hayes.
She Is survived by her
husband , B. L. tTobe)
Bennett, at home ; three sons,
Rev. J . l. Coll ins , Oecator ,
Ind .; Chief Warrant Officer
Donald L. Bennett, Ft. Lee.
Va ., and Wayne Bennett,
Zanesville ; a daughter,
Agnes Collins Hill , Tuppers
Plains ; three sisters, Mrs .
Elmer I Edith ) . Bauman.
Delaware ; Mrs. Carl !Lucy)
Bleke, and Mrs . Donald
{Mildred ! Warren, both of
Arizona ; 13 grand and 19
great -gr andchlldre n.
.
She was preceded In death
"
.

LOVELY
SPRING
PASTEL
COLORS

We've got Spring Fever prices on all
new MF farm tractors under 80 pto hp.
Spring into action and save!

· MIDDLEPORT ..:. · Mel
Clark,
Mason
County
businessman and a candidate
for public office, recalled his
days as a professional
baseball player in remarks to
the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club Friday evening
following dinner at Heath
United Methodist Church.
Presently acting as a scout
for the Philadelphia Phillies,
for whom he played in the
outfield in the late fifties,
C1ark told how young players
are graded today by scouts on
performance and potential
abilities for the big leagues.
In response to questions he
gave
his'
off-the-c uff
valuations of some of the
game's biggest stars today,
including Johnny Bench and
Pete Rose of Cincinnati, and
others on other clubs.
AKuest was Bill Fletcher of
Middleport, with Rotarian
John Werner. Ladies of the
church served dinilel'·

False alarm
syphilis test
By Lawrence E. Lamb; M.D.

DEAR DR. LAMB - My
husband has always been a
blood donor but he can no
longer give blood. When be
went to give blood for a man
who needed it the wst showed
syphilis.
Needness to say this caused
a problem with us and I was
in shock because I have
always trusted my huSband.
The doctor had me corne in
and they tested me and 1 had
a negative result. They tested
my husband some more and
said It was a high protein
count which gave the same
results.
He will never be able to
give blood again. This has
caused some questions in my
mind. Why is this so' The
doctor would give me no
answer on this. All he said
was it happens sometimes
and he has seen couples who
couldn't cope with it and were
divorced·. Would you please
explain if it is possible and
give more details about it.
I do love my husband but it
has caused me to doubt him
and not have the complete
trust that I did have in our
marriage.
DEAR READER - The
standard blood test for
syphilis is merely a chemical
reaction. When a person. has.
had syphilis he may {but does
not always have J a chemical
in the blood that produces a
specific reaction and results
in a positive test. That's why .
the test is useful in detecting
someone who has had

syphilis.
Things don't stop there .
The body is also able to
produce a similar or like
chemical in certain other
co ndition s which are not
associated with syphilis at
all. Then when the same lest
is done this chemical will
cause a positive test. We call
these false positives. The
value of a laboratory test Is
dependent upon its ability to
detect a di sease without
giving false positive reactions in people who do not
have it.
The standard syphilis blood
lest is pretty good but not
,
..
llrt 'llll•
perfect. There are individuals who have false · ·
positive tests . Additional
TONIGHTTHRU
tests can ·also be rWl to
TUESDAY
narrow this problem down for
the individual. I presume
'~
from your remarks that your
...
~t -.. ~
doctor is quite confident that
your husband did not have
YO 110 110
syphilis and that his test
reaction is caused by one of
'; ' .
these flukes in chemical
he
go!
reactions. I fail to see how
you can blame your husband
for having a chemical
reaction in his blood stream
over which he had no control
at all.
Your doctor has told you he
doesn't have syphilis. He has
also tested you as part of the
total. examination and
determined that you don't
have syphilis despite having
Jived in the marriage with
your husband for years . What
else do you need' While I
can't vouch for your
husband's behavior, your

SAVE
'1,200

MF230
Tractor

SAVE

$~.600

MF235
Tractor

SAVE
$.2.000

MF255
Tractor

SAVE

$~.350

MF265
Tractor

All

$2.400
STUDY CANVA~ UPPERS
WITH SPONGE CUSHIONED
INSOLES

MF275
Tractor

Come on in-see for yourself-you
can't beat these Spring Fever Values!

•,

.

.

$~EG..
2.97

1

SIZES
5 TO 10
....

MEIGS THEATRE

USTINOV JONES PLESHETTE

* • • .. • • •

i

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

* • •

•

1916
1976
HOOVER UPRIGHT

LIVING ROOM
FURNITURE
REG.

SWEEPER

'7.7 676

WITH ATTAaiMENTS

sggg,gs

'7676

DINING ROOM
SUITE

Sneaker

'2!0

1 BASSm WALNUT

DINING ROOM
SUITE

REG.'197676

'2999.95

2.97

1

BLACK
OR
WHITE

.

REG.

Many, Many Other Bargains

i

i... .

I

will

ONE GROUP

:..

GALLIPOLIS TRACTOR, INC.
UPPER RT. 7 NORTH

COURT-GRIPPING
MOLDED SOLES . .
LONG WEARING
CANVAS UPPERS

a haunting ' ·•

76
'176

LADIES
SIZES TO 10

SAVE

'if(

jail term and fine of up to
$250.
' •
It also :
1,
- Enlarges
the
Tonite thru M~r . 25
membership of the state
JAWS
Board of Cosmetology.
(Technicolor)
- Requires beauty salon
managers to have at least one
Based on the novel "The
, _ Pl:ilH
OfM
SlJW. ~ l
year ill e&lt;perience as a
Great
White
Shark"
by
cosmetologist, take an extra
Peter Benchl.ey ;
50 hours of instruction and
T. h. • I
·1:
" PG" t8C
OICOtOT ' ~ ... -.,...... ..,.. ..,.. .. ,.. ,. r;:i1
pass an examination.
Q W• It D1 1ne1 Pro ~~( tum s
~
- Forbids the saleoffood in
Show starts at 7:oop.m.
rooms used as beauty , _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..
CARTO()N
salons.
.

ONE LANE
'

COLO\) ·

RECLINERS

to Rotarians
'

statements lead me to believe
that he has a clean bill of
health as far as any evidence
of venereal disease. You're
reacting to something that Is
not too different than if he
showed up with mild jaundice
because he had a chemical
reaction in the blood.
You should be happy that
the medica l tests showed that
your husband did not have
ve nereal disaease. Your
concer n rea ll y should be
direc ted toward hoping that
Ule unique d 1emical reaction
that he had does not indicate
that . he has any important
medical problems that will
affect his heailh in the future.

ONE GROUP STRATOLOUNGER

COLORFUL
CANVAS
UPPERS

Rope Wrapped

DR. LAMB

Beauticians
b arb ers

ASSORTED
COLORS

THE FAMILY PLACE TO SAVE

Clark speaks

Pleasant Valley Hosp ital ,
who received fi rst and third
degree burns ; a son, Dav id
Armour , and a daughter.
Andrea Armour of Youngs town. Oh io. and a brother ,
D&lt;lnal d Smith of Seberl ng,

1

Canvas Skimmers

MF= SPRING-FEVER

GALLIPOLIS - William C.
Dagger, Lancaster, has filed
suit in Gallia County Com·
mon Pleas Court against
Helen B. Cook, aka Helen B.
Burdette, Moundsville, W.
Va., Nellie Shaw, Gallipolis;
Dorothy S. Stiverson, ad·
ministratri&lt; of the estate of
Crilla Shaw Stiverson,
deceased, and Joseph L.
Stiverson of Columbus.
Plaintiff seeks to recover a
$4,000 judgment and asked
foreclosure of a lien on lot 177
in the city of Gampolis.
Plaintiff asked the court to
marshal the real estate and
sell it to satisfy the judgment.

JAMESS. MOUNT
CHE SAPEA KE
- James
S. Mount, 50 , a resident
of
Huntington , and a former
res iden t of Gal li pol is, was
f d d d 1 hi h
oun
ea a
s ome
/Saturday ~roun d 11 a .m.
He was born Aug . 6, 1925. In
CSa 1bell Ctounty,dsonBof the late
;,y ves er an
er tie A.
Mount.
He Is survived ·by his wife
Betty Light Mount, and a
broth er , Sylves ter MoUnt.
Kitts Hill .
Funeral services will be
held 2 p.m. Mondar al lhe
Schne ider Funera Horn e .
burial will be In Fa irv iew
Cemetery, Green ·Bottom . W.
VaFriends may call at the
funeral home between Sand 9
p.m. Sunday .
LOWELL D. FRENCH '
GALLIPOLIS - l owell D.
French, 53, a resident of
Belleville, Mich .. and na tive
of Fostoria , died Wednesday
at University Hospital , Ann
Arbor,. Mich .
Mr. French was born Oct.
28 . 1922, In Fostoria, son of
Gallla
County
former
residents .James and Dollie
(Walters) French , who
Survive and. reside In
Fostoria . He married June·
Welling on March 15, 1947 .
She survives, along with a
son, Larry, Roseville, Mich. ;
one grandchild ; a brother,
Jack , Bow II ng Green ; a
sister, Mrs . Mary E . Smith,
Fostoria .
Mr. French was a comptroller with Ellra COrp .,
Detroit. He was a Navy
veteran of World War II.
Services were held Friday
afternoon at the Mann
Funeral Home with Rev.
Lowel ·l Reeder offi ciating .
Burial was In Fountain
Cemete"ry .
Attending services from
Gallia County were Mrs.
Belle Ecker. George French
and Mr. and Mrs . .James
French.

1HE

page I )

Hearst, said ,· "Oh, Ch rist.''

Coal pric~s

SHOW COMING
RACINE - The Racine
Fire Dept. wlll be spoasorlng a country western
show leaturlng Del Reeves
and , the Good Time
Charlles from Nashville on
Saturday, July 3, at 8 p.m.
at the Southern High gym.
Tickets at the present
time may be purchased
from any member of the
department. They will be
distributed for sale to area
business establishments to

Social
I
Calendar ~~:

Area Deaths

f
I

Department said the family
was wakened by .one of their
dogs barking shortly after 5
a.m. Their two-story frame
house was in flames .
One of the family called the
New Haven Department
which arrived on the scene
with 14 men and three trucks
shortly after 5:30 a.m.
Firemen battled the fire for
45 minutes before bringing it
under control.
The house and its contents
were valued at $18,000.

Dexter , formerly of Racine, Saturday .

Guiding Hand

--------------------------- ,

'999.95

During·Our 60th
Anniversary Celebration

.

I

'776

7

~**********************************************************ir*'l•

PH. 446-1044 .
t

.

,.

�3- The Sunday Times . Sentinel, Sunday, March 21, 1976

Special hone for
this alert dog

2- The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday,March 21 , 1976
~ - -------- ---- - ---- - - -- - --- - ,

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1
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1

t e llers of opinion are welcomed. They should be
less than 300 II'Ords long tor be subject to reduction by
the editor) and must be signed with the signee 's address. Nantes may be &gt;~mlheld upon publication.
lloll·ever, on request, names will be diJclooed. Letters
should be In good ta ste , addressing i&gt;sues, not personalities.

I •••~
..e~-~}~-~~
~:
I
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..

1
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heads
state
!
assn.
1

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. JACKSON - C. Richard
( Dick ) Lanier, Jackson high
school faculty member . . has
been elected new president of
the Ohio Indus trial Arts
Association.
Lanier became president at
the Ohio Indus trial Ar ts
Conference held in Cleveland
and attended by more than
1.000 members, guests and
exhibitors.
There were more thim 2,500
students who visited to see
·some 3,300 projec ts submitted by 83 Ohio schools at
the conference held March 1113 at the Cleveland-Sheraton
Hotel.
The new presiden t has been
a member of the Jackson
hi~h school fa culty for 11

Dear Slr :
I do not very often complain about anything pertaining to
Meigs Co. or surrounding area, as this was and wiU always be

referred to me as home".
11

I find this a necessary and legitimate complaint.
I was "home" the 1st of Feb. Also this past weekend of
March 13th, and as I always do went to Miners viDe Cemetery.
This in the past has always been a peaceful and beautiful
setting for our deceased loved ones.
I was shocked to see tbe condition existing here. Namely
beer, pop, wine.botUes strewn everywhere. Beer cartons tore
and thrown around, old pieces of clothing laying at the
entrance. Broken bottles so thick it would be impossible to
park a car close to the gate. This is not only on the road leading
to the cemetery but inside and outside of fences surrounding
the burial places of people who years past settled this little
conun·unity of ' 4Welchtown" and "Dutch town" . I believe we
owe these people a better resting place than this . Surely there
is some place else to have this sort of outtings.
Might I suggest that the sheriff who also has many relatives
here - iJ\clude this on his regular patrol. Check · correct and
stop this deplorable condition.
Perhaps this could be taken into the commissioners agenda
to seek a solution and prosecution of this violation. - Thank
you, Mrs. Joan Mescher, 3015 Lebanon Rd .; Lebanon, Ohio
45036.

Dear Slr:

During my early youth I had met three of the remaining
Civil War veterans that lived here in Gallia county. Two I knew
real well, for I did off jobs for them as a youngster.
I
met
" Uncle
Jimmy"
Gatewood
of the Swan Creek area when I was working for the
U. S. Forest Service taking- a land survey for the Wayne
National Forest. Ail I recall the stately old gentleman had a
long white beard at the time.
MajorS. F. "Finn" Neal lived on 3rd Ave. across from the
Ohio Valley Bank. Mrs . Jake Moore now owns and occupies the
house.
·
In his old age, and during decent weather, the Major sat on
his front porch much of the time. He always wore a red buttonup,the.front sweater and a flat cap. ije smoked pencil type
stogies. One of my many jobs was to sweep the front walk early
on Saturday morning and pick. up the many stogie butts and
twigs in the front yard. I received what was then a king's
ransom for this, twenty cents!
.
Mrs. Neal, as I recall, had been a teacher at the old Gallia
Academy. She kept an immaculate home and looked after tbe
major's every need.
Although they lived in the very heart of town, they coo\&lt;ed
thelr food on a coal and wood coo.k stove. In their old age they
had a hlred cook, and boy, did I ever eat some fine food that
came out of the kitchen prepared on that stove. Just the smell
of some of those pies was enough to starve a boy to death:
Major Neal had been a former postmaster of our city. He
was also still a weatherman in his old age. He and his won
Albert had also operated a feed store on Vine St. where a part
of North's Produce is now.
The Major had the last cows quartered in the downtown
area. His barn was located in the back of his yard behind the
postoffl~e. This was around 1930. Each milrnlng a lad would
herd them down Thlrd Ave. to Vine St., then out Vine across
the creek and to the pasture field on tbe Chi!Ucothe road. In the
evening they were brought back to the barn for the night.
Fonner Supt. of schools Marshall Boqs had been one of these
herdsmen in his youth.
Dr. A. B. Garrett had his home and office on the next block
of Thlrd Ave. downriver from the Major's home . This was the
flrst house upstreet from Womeldorf and Thomas.hllrdware. II
no longer stands. The doctor had entered the war young as a
drummer boy.
I also did odd jobs for the doctor . He was, you could say,
also our family dOctor. He mixed his own medicines and
usually gave liquids. In the early 19308 his fee was 50 cents for
an examination' and one bottle of medicine. If 2 bottles, it was
75 cents.
I can assur.e all who read this tliat he was a good doctor
and people carne for hundreds of miles to him. The doctor had
a poll parrot which could talk. When 8 patient entered the
office a shrill voice would say "Sit down. Dr. will be with you in
8 moment." Looking a bout you would see only the parrot,
which dld the talking.
,
The doctor at one time was a U. S. Consul in Mexico. He
owned stoCk in gold and silver mines there. I recall seeing
some of his stock certificates years ago.
My step-grandfather was wounded in, action in the war.
Mter many years he was granted a pension of $8 (eight) per
mooth. He died before I wM born.

. ATHENS
The Athens
Mental Health and Mental
Retardation Center beca me a
teaching hospital of the Ohio
Univers it y College of
Osteopathic Medicine Friday
with· the formalizing of an
affiliation agreement.
Participating in the signing
ceremony were Dr. Timothy
B. Moritz, director of the Ohio
DICK LANIER
Department of Menta l Hea lth
and Mental Retardation; Dr.
years and prior to that taugh1 Taylor
Culbert ,
the
a t Lick, Ga llipoli s and university's provost, and Dr.
Madison South schools.
Gerald A. Faverman , acting
Lanier is a graduate of dean of the College of
Cadmus High &amp;hool in Gallia Osteopathic Medicine.
County and is the son of the
Others taking part were
late Olen Lanie r and Mrs. Sen. Oakley C. Collins of
Evelyn Lanier .
Ironton ; Rep. Claire M.
He holds a bachelor 's (Boz) Ball, J r. , of Athens;
degree fr om Rio Grande and
Floyd
Sarff ,
College and a mas ter 's superiniendent ; and Dr .
degree from Ohio University. Harr y Chovnick, clinical
Hi s wife , Peg gy. is an director , of the center.
elementary teacher in. the
"The agreement between
Jackson city schools and they the Athens Center and the
reside on Mayhew Hd. with Ohio University College of
their two children .
Os te opathi c Me di ci ne
represents a major step in the
department's effort s to
invOlve Ohio's universities in
the goal to improve patient
not been receiv ed , The care, training and research
pledges are to be sent to the programs in our institutions
Pomeroy Postmaster . Also for the mentally disabled, "
response fr om business Dr. Moritz said at the signing.
Dr . Fa verman said he
lette&lt;S sent this year has only
netted $283 . lor the drive . anticipates that eventually as
Businesses not yet respon· many as 60 medical students
ding and . individuals not at a year will receive some of
home during the door-to-door their clinical training at the
phases of the drive are asked Athens Center lor th e
to mail their contributions to mentally disabled .
Sarff pointed out that a $2.1
the postmaster at Pomero}
or leave them by the million capital improVement
project to begin soon at the
Pomeroy Post Office.
Kloes and Childs e.tend ed center will greatly facilitate
thanks to workers and con· the affiliation between it and
the university . The project
tri~ut ors for thei r work in the
driv e which will conclude includes the conversion of the
with the April 3 palloon sale. current ce nter hospi\al into a
med ical-s urgical services
Arcade with physicians'

Heart drive near goal
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Hear t Fund Drive,
with a goal of $3,500, has
reached $2,984.18, Paul Kloes
and Mick Childs , cochainnen, announced.
Wrapping up this year 's
drive will be a balloon day on
Saturday , April 3, with
members of Job 's Daughters
exchanging balloons for
contributions in the business
section of Pomeroy while the
Meigs Chapter , Order of
DeMolay, will be handling the
balloons in Middleport.
The chairmen of the drive
report that about $300 rnade
in pledges on radio day have

A pleasure to prove them wrong

Civil War veterans recallecl ·

College, mental health center are
affiliated for training ·of doctors

l

Finally, a necessary complaint

Dear Sir:
.
My name is Joyce Thorne and I live in Clarksburg, W.Va.
On Feb. 8, 1976, I brought my daughter Peggy to compete in the
Miss Ohio Valley Pageant held at Meigs Jr.High School. Mr.
Bob Hoeflich, a photographer for your paper, took pictures of
the winners and runners-up for your paper. I approached him
that day and asked if he would be kind enough to send me a
couple of papers. He not only sent the papers but a few days
later sent a picture.
In my opinion he deserves to be commended. His act of
kindness, I assure you, will not be forgotten. To some, it may
seem a small thing - but to us it meant a lot.
.
My daughter's been in baton for several years and at
different times I've tried to get hold of out of town papers.
. Believe me, unless you have a relative in that town, you're out
of luck.
.When l approached Mr. 'Hoeflich to send me the papers
some of the mothers said forget it - you 'll never learn. It was
a real pleasure to prove them wrong and it certainly restored
my faith in fellow man. It's a real pleasure to meet such an
honest man.
I hope that should an occasion such as this ever take place
here In Clarksburg, our newspapermen would be as courteous
to someone out of town.
Your paper deserves to be commended for having such a
rnan. as Bob Hoeflich associated with it. - .Sincerely, Mrs.
Joyce Thorne, Clarksburg, W. Va .
f.

Gallian

'offices, examination and

Theft probe continues
GALUPOUS - City police
here Saturday continued
investigation into the theft of
a 1966 Ford Fairlane taken
Friday night from a parldng
space at Jones Boys on Pine
St.
Officers said Brenda
·Holley, 2321 Jefferson St.,
Point, Pleasant, parked her
husband's car to shop between 7:30 and 8:i8 p.m.
When she came out, the car
Will! gone. The car was blue in
color, has two different types
of chrome wheels with yellow
traction bars. It has the West

Virginia tag l·A 221 1.
Two other complaints were
investigated Friday night.
Emm ett Ra ines, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, reported he was
assaulted by a resident of
Chatham Ave . while he was
walking along the street.
Rajnes said he was struck
several times about the face
before being knocked down
into a mud hole.
Jim Rich, 521 Flrst Ave.,
said someone broke off the
antenna of his car which was
parked at the Holzer School of
Nursing .

Premium book printing is·sold
GM..LIPOUS - French
City Press has been awarded
the contract to print the 1976
Gallia County Junior Fair
premium book. That action
was taken Thursday night
daring the monthly meeting
of the Gallia County Junior
Fairboard. ,
It was aMounced that all
premium book material must
be in by March 22. Jack
Harrison, chairman of the
ways and means committee,
re[)(ll'ted he has several new
advertisements for the 1976
book.
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell
Shriver, ' representing the
Gallia County Pony Pull
Association, discussed final
plans for this year's event.
Dir~tors also reviewed plans
for revamping the lighting
system, new parking area
and new crossing bridge.
Matt Saunders and Terri
Jividen were introduced as
the new youth representatives to the fairboard . Mrs.
Thelma Elliott, chairman pf
the membership committee,
announced all supplies have

Sunday Tim ~~S"Sentinel
Publ ished everv~ Sunday
by
The . Ohio
Valley
Publishing Co .

GALLIPOLI-S
OAILY TRIBUNE
825 Tl'tlrd Ave ., Gallipol is ,
Ohio 45131 .
Published every weekday

evenlnv except Saturday .
Second Class Poafege Pa1d
at Gallipolis , Ohio .tf5631 .

THE DAILY SENT1NEL

111 Court St., Pomeroy , o .

45769 . Published everv week -

day evening e~cept Satur day . Entered as second class
mailing matter at Pomeroy,

Onlo Post Office.
By carrier daily

Sundlv 75c

routt~l3. 25

and

er week. Motor
,per month .
p.

MAIL

SUBSCR!PT10N RATJ;S
For those who may be interested :
The
Gallipolis Daily
Tribune In Oblo and West
The whole work crew at Keystone Iron furnace in Vinton
Vlrgl('ll one year $22.00; srx.
county enlisted in the.army during the Civil War, thus shutting
months Sll.S&lt;l ; three months
$7 .00. !lsewhere $26.00 per
down its opera lion.
year; six months 113.50 ;
The flrst train engines to nm on the local railroad tracks
three month1 17 .50; motor
route S3.25 monthlv.
bere In town were the old type small, large stack engines. They
r he Dally Sentinel, ono
ear S22.80 ; Six months
were brought to this area by the B. &amp; 0 . on the West Virginia
tl'lne months S7.00.
lide of the river. They were ferried acrllS8 on barges and ' 11.50;
llewhtrt S26.00: . six
months •13.50; thrN months.
brolflht up the hill at the First Ave. end of Spruce St. between
S1 .SO.
•
.
the lee plant and North's proclucewarellouae. I belii!Ve this was
Tht United Prell · ln ..
ternatlonel 11 eJCc:lullvtlv
~1m.
·
entltled
fo the uae for
Something to think about:
publ !cation of 111 new s
dispatehes cr.clfte4 · to the
Who entered the U. S. Army at the youngest age, stayed In
"ewsp•per
and also the loca I
the longeat, and 1'0111! from a drummer boy to he mustered out a
newti"publloh.., herein .
· Ge:neral?. - Frank Hill.

i

treatment rooms and other
support fa cilities.
"Another vital aspe ct of the
capital improvement will be
·the addition of 205 Joint
Commission on Accreditation
of Hospitals {JCAH ) certified
bects. bringing the facility's
total of such beds to 374,"
Sarff said .
Dr. Chovnick said he looked
forward to the affiliation in
terms of increased medical
needs of the patients, adding :
"Many persons who come
to the mental health facility
have a wide range of medical
and surgical problems that
need attention" and the
teaching doctors and medical
students will fa cilitate this
type of service to them.
Dr. Chovnick recently was
appointed to the volWltary

teaching facu lty of the new
medica l college as a clinical
associate professor of
psychiatry.
The Athens Mental Hea lth
Center, which first opened its
doors in 1874, now serves 450
res idential pa ti ents wi th
a professional staff of 196 and

another 219 employees as a
supporting staff.
Dr. Faverman said with the
addition of the center the new
university medical school,
opening in September , has

affilia tions with seven
medical facilities. The others
are Selby General Hospital,

Marietta; Grandview in
Day ton ; Bre ntwood !n
Clevela nd ; Doctors m
Co lumbus; Young stown
Osteopathic and Northeast
Ohio General in North
Madison. The hospitals have
a combined capacity of 1,988
beds .

Roush in race for commission

HARTFORD, W. Va. - The
David L. Roush family,
mother, father and four
children from 11 to 16 years
old, perhaps will be giving
one of thelr dogs a bigger
than usual bone thiJ weekend.
It was his barking early
Saturday morning that
waked them to find thelr
home in flames . They only
had time to get themselves
' out with what they could
_
carry..
A spokesman of the New
Haven Volunteer Fire

DEXTER- James E. Roush , Route 1,

:-:·:::-:-:-:-:::::::::·:::·:·:·:::.:·:·:·:·:·:·::;:;.;.;;:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::
:·~

became the second Democrat to file his
petition for nomination in the Meigs
County Commissioner's race. He is fili ng
for the January 2 term .
Roush , a graduate of Ohio University,
served as appointed Meigs Count y Auditor
to fill the une&lt;pired term of Gordon
Caldwell . He is th e son of Everett and
Grace Roush of Racine.
Roush is a U. S. Navy veteran , a
member of Racine American Legion Post
No. 602, and belongs to these frawrnal
organizations : F &amp; AM No. 461 , Racine
Chapter O.E .S., Royal Arch Masons No.
80, Bosworth Council No. 46, Ohio Valley
Commandery No. 24, and Aladdin Temple
Shrine.
He has served as chairman of the TB
Association , cancer Society, and Hea rt
Ailsociation . He also served on Meigs
County Action Plan Committee, Meigs
Countv Reeional Plannine Commission.
Buckeye Hills H ockin~ Valley Regional

-:·~·

WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND BASEBALL
League Wednesday 6:30p.m .
at American Legion Hall on
Beech Grove Road . All
parents and interested
persons urged to attend .
Election of officers .
OHIO VALLEY Commandry 24, Knights Templar ,
will meet at 1:30 Wednesday
at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. All Sir Knights
urged to attend.
POMERo·y • Middleport
Uona Club, noon Wednesday,
Meigs Inn.

JAMES E. ROUSII

{Continue&lt;) from pa ge 1)
superint endent sin ce July, 1973. A
graduate of Marshall University, Barton
has done additional work at Marshall and
Ohio Uni vers ity . ' He fir st becam e
associated with the Guiding Hand &amp; boo!
in .1970 when classes were taught at the
Calholic Youth Center in Gallipolis.
The school which served 78 students in
Gallia and Meigs.Counties is now located
in the · former Bishop Fenwick &amp; hool
Building north of Cheshire. Batton , in
leaving, sa id many improvements have
been made since the school opened.
The sc hool offers an adult program
and training for children of all ages.

Developm ent Commiss ion and Meigs
Couin ty River Erosion Committee. .
Roush , upon filin g sa id good
gove rnm ent , "starts wit h active,
progressive and trustworthy leadership.
Being active in county government, I am
awa re of fiscal affairs, the problems, and
needs of the county."

Hearst
1Con tinue&lt;! from

1Continued from pa ge 1)
and effectiveness of antitrust and .price
regulatory·actions of the executive branch

and independent government a gerlcles .

"I fe el that it is imperative that the true
facts about the enormous in creases in coal
prices be uncovered and made ava ilable to
the American people," Jenrette said .

He said the prices have in large part
been responsible for "the outrageous
escalation in utility rates."
" If there is unwarranted price,gouging
going on in tl1e coal industry, Congress has
a duty to find out where," he added . .

be

announced

later.

Tickets will be $5 for adults
and $%.50 for students.
;:;:::;.;.;.;.:-:::::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::;

change.

-when th e verdict was announced, Mrs.
Catherine Hearst, the defendant's mother ,
began crying. Her father , Randolph A.
Foreman William Wright read the
verdict : "We the jur y find Patricia
Ca mpbell Hearst, the defendant at the bar,
guilty ·as to count one of the indictment,
gu ilty as to count two of the indictment.
Signed William Wright, foreman. Filed
March 20, 1976 . At 4 o' clock and 30 minutes
p.m. William L Whittaker , clerk, by E. F .
Dr iscoll, deputy clerk."
Following the court session, the Hearsts
were taken to the back of the courtroom,
:Jpparently with hopes of · seeing their
convi cted daughter. One of Miss Hearst's
sisters, Vicki , broke down and wept quietly
in the third row of the co urtroom, putting
her head in her hands. Her other si:!ters
appeam:l on the verge of tears.

said Wednesday he would not
resign his state job even if he
is nominated.
Sweet said he feared his
conswner oriented attitudes
at the PUCO would not be
maintained by someone apNOT RESIGN
MRS. OLEN F. TAYLOR
pointed to fill his position by
COLUMBUS ( UP! J
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Olen
Public
Utilities Gov. James A. Rhodes .
tKonefa) Fosler Taylor , 52,
Rhodes says it has been the of Mesa, Ariz., died Friday
Commissioner David C.
morn ing at a hosp ital in
Sweet, a candidate for the policy of his administration Mesa
. She was born and
June
8
Democratic that a state workers ought not raised In Gallipolis and at.
nomination to the 15th stay on the payroll and run tended Gallipolis schools.
The daughter of the late
Congressional District seat, for office at the same time .
Everett and Myrtle Foster,
she was a member of the
Free Will l)apflst Church.
Survi-vors Include:
children, Eugene Kemper ,
California ; Judy Dever man,
Tommy. Freddy, Nancy, all
of Mesa, Ariz .; Millie, In the
Armed Fortes ; two sisters,
Evelyn Dav is of Gallipolis
and · Dorothy Miller ·of Big
Spr ings, TelL, and tw 6
brothers, Johnny and Wayne , ·
Presents
both ot Columbus.
Two brothers, .Joe and
Fashion News
Harvey, preceded her in
death.
For the Lady
Funeral serv ices will be at
In White
Gibbons -Bunker Funeral
Home In Mesa 1 p.m. Mon.
100 per cent polyester
day.

UNIFORM
CENTER

double~n i t featur ing a
cable knit bodice. back

zipper and gently fl"red
skirt . .Size 8-14 .

0

21.00

1

'.

Y our

:,

. ...

. -") - ;

been ordered and should be
available June L
Louis Pasquale wa s
employed as fair electrician
for the 1976 event.

White Swan Dist .

.

\\

..366 Second Ave •• _ .____. . Galli~olis, Ohio

Judgment asked
in Gallia court

SHIRLEY PROCTOR
ALLIANCE - Graveside
services will be conducted at
the City Cemetery here at 10
a.m. Monday for the victims
In a rural Gallla County lire
early Friday.
Shirley Smith Proctor, 30,
and her daughter, 1\1\elissa
Marie Mallns. Rt. 1,
Gallipolis. were killed In a
fire which destroyed their six
room frame home on the
Butaville-Porter Rd .
.
Mrs . Proctor is survived by
her husband, Michael D.
Proctor, a patient at the

M,!','&gt;f"\i Frrqii.,(Hl

I
I

S.lt Prices Good thru .

regulated

Oh~lissa is surv.ived by her · COLUMBUS (UP! ) - GOv.
father, Richard H . Malins, of
James A. Rhodes has signed
All iance.
Burial will be under the a pair of bills, effective June
direction of the Casslday- 18, changing the regulations
Turkle Funeral Home. Loca l for Ohio's barbers and
arrang emen ts were con · beauticians.
dueled by Miller 's Home tor
One bill signed Friday will
Funer~l s .
' require barber shops, as well
GEORGEs. TEWKSBARY
MIDDLEPORT _ George as individual barbers, to
S. Tewksbary, 85, formerl y a obtain licenses from the state
r ~s taurant operator
in Board of Barber Examiners
Middleport, died Sa1urda y by ne&lt;t Sept. 1. It also :
morn ing at the Newark
-Sets management and
Memor ial
Hospita l
in sanita tion standards for
Newark.
Mr. Tewksbary was born barber shops and forbids the
Aug . 14, 1891 in Middleport, employment of unlicensed
the son of the late George and barbers.
Dorothy Hysel l Tewksbary .
- Permits licensed barbers
He is survi ved by his wife ,
to
perform body waving,
Adrah Graham Tewksbary ; a
limited
hair weaving and
son , George, and a sister.
Mrs. Eva Struble.
fittin g and measuring
Funeral arrangements are headcaps for wigs or
being made at the Rawlings. hairpieces.
Coats Funeral Home.
- Req!llres that barbers he
MRS. HELEN LEWIS
at least 18 years old, perform
ZANESVILLE - Mr s . apprenticeship for at leas.t 18
Helen (Katherine) Lew is, 68, months and pass the state
543 Brookover , Zanesville,
Ohio A died at Bethesda examination .
Hospital.
- Provides for reciprocity
· Born March 25, 1907 in of barber licensing with other
Greenfield, she was a former
resident of Middleport and states.
- Increases licensing fees.
Pomeroy.
Mrs. lewis is survl.ved by
~Provides for the teaching
her hvsband, Wesley ; four
·of additional subjects in
daughters, Mrs . June barber .schools.
Kocher , and Mrs . Peggy
Darst, both of ·Zanesville ; . The other bill broadens the
Mrs. Betty Johnson , Carroll , definition of cosmetology,
OhiO, and Mrs . Janice which now applies only to the
Hastings, Red Hou se , W. Va .;
five sons, BilL Steve, and care of women's hair.
Cosmetologists will be able
Rick , all of ZanesvillE!, ·and
John and Jim of Dresden, to clean and embellish glris',
Ohio ; two brothers. Ben- men's and boys' hair, as well
jamin Fox, Blue Rock , Ohio,
and Harm on, of Pomeroy ; a as wigs and hairpieces.
The bill also raises
half.brother. George Lemley,
Cheshire ; two sisters, Gladys licensing fees and incre~es
Dott, Ravenswood, 'and Olive the penalty for practicing
Munyon , Thornv ille ; 35 cosmetology without a
grandchildren , and eigh t
license from a fine of $100 to
great -gr a ndGhildrer. .
Funeral services will be $200 to a 3!klay maximum
Monday at 1 p.m. at the
Putnam ·Chapel of Bolin
Funeral Home wi th the Rev .
her first husband, .James
Phil · Batlen officiating . by
Collins,
1932 . One brother
Buri.;.l will be in Woodlawn precededi.nher
in death .
Cemetery .
Zanesville .
Funeral services will be 2
Fr iends may call at the p.m.
Monday at. .White
Chapel at anytime .
Funeral Home in Coolville
with Rev . Freel.and Norr is
officiating. Burial will follow
in Tuppers Plains Christian
Cemetery.
M'Rs. ORPHA t.i. BENNETT
Friends may call at the
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mrs. funera I home after noon on
Orpha M. Bennett, 75, a Sunday .
res ident of Rt . L Reedsville,
died early Saturday morning
at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Pt. Pleasant, following a
brief illness.
She was born In Buffalo, W.
Va .. . on Nov. 22, 1900,
daughter of the late Thomas
C. and Charlotte ' Burch
Hayes.
She Is survived by her
husband , B. L. tTobe)
Bennett, at home ; three sons,
Rev. J . l. Coll ins , Oecator ,
Ind .; Chief Warrant Officer
Donald L. Bennett, Ft. Lee.
Va ., and Wayne Bennett,
Zanesville ; a daughter,
Agnes Collins Hill , Tuppers
Plains ; three sisters, Mrs .
Elmer I Edith ) . Bauman.
Delaware ; Mrs. Carl !Lucy)
Bleke, and Mrs . Donald
{Mildred ! Warren, both of
Arizona ; 13 grand and 19
great -gr andchlldre n.
.
She was preceded In death
"
.

LOVELY
SPRING
PASTEL
COLORS

We've got Spring Fever prices on all
new MF farm tractors under 80 pto hp.
Spring into action and save!

· MIDDLEPORT ..:. · Mel
Clark,
Mason
County
businessman and a candidate
for public office, recalled his
days as a professional
baseball player in remarks to
the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club Friday evening
following dinner at Heath
United Methodist Church.
Presently acting as a scout
for the Philadelphia Phillies,
for whom he played in the
outfield in the late fifties,
C1ark told how young players
are graded today by scouts on
performance and potential
abilities for the big leagues.
In response to questions he
gave
his'
off-the-c uff
valuations of some of the
game's biggest stars today,
including Johnny Bench and
Pete Rose of Cincinnati, and
others on other clubs.
AKuest was Bill Fletcher of
Middleport, with Rotarian
John Werner. Ladies of the
church served dinilel'·

False alarm
syphilis test
By Lawrence E. Lamb; M.D.

DEAR DR. LAMB - My
husband has always been a
blood donor but he can no
longer give blood. When be
went to give blood for a man
who needed it the wst showed
syphilis.
Needness to say this caused
a problem with us and I was
in shock because I have
always trusted my huSband.
The doctor had me corne in
and they tested me and 1 had
a negative result. They tested
my husband some more and
said It was a high protein
count which gave the same
results.
He will never be able to
give blood again. This has
caused some questions in my
mind. Why is this so' The
doctor would give me no
answer on this. All he said
was it happens sometimes
and he has seen couples who
couldn't cope with it and were
divorced·. Would you please
explain if it is possible and
give more details about it.
I do love my husband but it
has caused me to doubt him
and not have the complete
trust that I did have in our
marriage.
DEAR READER - The
standard blood test for
syphilis is merely a chemical
reaction. When a person. has.
had syphilis he may {but does
not always have J a chemical
in the blood that produces a
specific reaction and results
in a positive test. That's why .
the test is useful in detecting
someone who has had

syphilis.
Things don't stop there .
The body is also able to
produce a similar or like
chemical in certain other
co ndition s which are not
associated with syphilis at
all. Then when the same lest
is done this chemical will
cause a positive test. We call
these false positives. The
value of a laboratory test Is
dependent upon its ability to
detect a di sease without
giving false positive reactions in people who do not
have it.
The standard syphilis blood
lest is pretty good but not
,
..
llrt 'llll•
perfect. There are individuals who have false · ·
positive tests . Additional
TONIGHTTHRU
tests can ·also be rWl to
TUESDAY
narrow this problem down for
the individual. I presume
'~
from your remarks that your
...
~t -.. ~
doctor is quite confident that
your husband did not have
YO 110 110
syphilis and that his test
reaction is caused by one of
'; ' .
these flukes in chemical
he
go!
reactions. I fail to see how
you can blame your husband
for having a chemical
reaction in his blood stream
over which he had no control
at all.
Your doctor has told you he
doesn't have syphilis. He has
also tested you as part of the
total. examination and
determined that you don't
have syphilis despite having
Jived in the marriage with
your husband for years . What
else do you need' While I
can't vouch for your
husband's behavior, your

SAVE
'1,200

MF230
Tractor

SAVE

$~.600

MF235
Tractor

SAVE
$.2.000

MF255
Tractor

SAVE

$~.350

MF265
Tractor

All

$2.400
STUDY CANVA~ UPPERS
WITH SPONGE CUSHIONED
INSOLES

MF275
Tractor

Come on in-see for yourself-you
can't beat these Spring Fever Values!

•,

.

.

$~EG..
2.97

1

SIZES
5 TO 10
....

MEIGS THEATRE

USTINOV JONES PLESHETTE

* • • .. • • •

i

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

* • •

•

1916
1976
HOOVER UPRIGHT

LIVING ROOM
FURNITURE
REG.

SWEEPER

'7.7 676

WITH ATTAaiMENTS

sggg,gs

'7676

DINING ROOM
SUITE

Sneaker

'2!0

1 BASSm WALNUT

DINING ROOM
SUITE

REG.'197676

'2999.95

2.97

1

BLACK
OR
WHITE

.

REG.

Many, Many Other Bargains

i

i... .

I

will

ONE GROUP

:..

GALLIPOLIS TRACTOR, INC.
UPPER RT. 7 NORTH

COURT-GRIPPING
MOLDED SOLES . .
LONG WEARING
CANVAS UPPERS

a haunting ' ·•

76
'176

LADIES
SIZES TO 10

SAVE

'if(

jail term and fine of up to
$250.
' •
It also :
1,
- Enlarges
the
Tonite thru M~r . 25
membership of the state
JAWS
Board of Cosmetology.
(Technicolor)
- Requires beauty salon
managers to have at least one
Based on the novel "The
, _ Pl:ilH
OfM
SlJW. ~ l
year ill e&lt;perience as a
Great
White
Shark"
by
cosmetologist, take an extra
Peter Benchl.ey ;
50 hours of instruction and
T. h. • I
·1:
" PG" t8C
OICOtOT ' ~ ... -.,...... ..,.. ..,.. .. ,.. ,. r;:i1
pass an examination.
Q W• It D1 1ne1 Pro ~~( tum s
~
- Forbids the saleoffood in
Show starts at 7:oop.m.
rooms used as beauty , _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..
CARTO()N
salons.
.

ONE LANE
'

COLO\) ·

RECLINERS

to Rotarians
'

statements lead me to believe
that he has a clean bill of
health as far as any evidence
of venereal disease. You're
reacting to something that Is
not too different than if he
showed up with mild jaundice
because he had a chemical
reaction in the blood.
You should be happy that
the medica l tests showed that
your husband did not have
ve nereal disaease. Your
concer n rea ll y should be
direc ted toward hoping that
Ule unique d 1emical reaction
that he had does not indicate
that . he has any important
medical problems that will
affect his heailh in the future.

ONE GROUP STRATOLOUNGER

COLORFUL
CANVAS
UPPERS

Rope Wrapped

DR. LAMB

Beauticians
b arb ers

ASSORTED
COLORS

THE FAMILY PLACE TO SAVE

Clark speaks

Pleasant Valley Hosp ital ,
who received fi rst and third
degree burns ; a son, Dav id
Armour , and a daughter.
Andrea Armour of Youngs town. Oh io. and a brother ,
D&lt;lnal d Smith of Seberl ng,

1

Canvas Skimmers

MF= SPRING-FEVER

GALLIPOLIS - William C.
Dagger, Lancaster, has filed
suit in Gallia County Com·
mon Pleas Court against
Helen B. Cook, aka Helen B.
Burdette, Moundsville, W.
Va., Nellie Shaw, Gallipolis;
Dorothy S. Stiverson, ad·
ministratri&lt; of the estate of
Crilla Shaw Stiverson,
deceased, and Joseph L.
Stiverson of Columbus.
Plaintiff seeks to recover a
$4,000 judgment and asked
foreclosure of a lien on lot 177
in the city of Gampolis.
Plaintiff asked the court to
marshal the real estate and
sell it to satisfy the judgment.

JAMESS. MOUNT
CHE SAPEA KE
- James
S. Mount, 50 , a resident
of
Huntington , and a former
res iden t of Gal li pol is, was
f d d d 1 hi h
oun
ea a
s ome
/Saturday ~roun d 11 a .m.
He was born Aug . 6, 1925. In
CSa 1bell Ctounty,dsonBof the late
;,y ves er an
er tie A.
Mount.
He Is survived ·by his wife
Betty Light Mount, and a
broth er , Sylves ter MoUnt.
Kitts Hill .
Funeral services will be
held 2 p.m. Mondar al lhe
Schne ider Funera Horn e .
burial will be In Fa irv iew
Cemetery, Green ·Bottom . W.
VaFriends may call at the
funeral home between Sand 9
p.m. Sunday .
LOWELL D. FRENCH '
GALLIPOLIS - l owell D.
French, 53, a resident of
Belleville, Mich .. and na tive
of Fostoria , died Wednesday
at University Hospital , Ann
Arbor,. Mich .
Mr. French was born Oct.
28 . 1922, In Fostoria, son of
Gallla
County
former
residents .James and Dollie
(Walters) French , who
Survive and. reside In
Fostoria . He married June·
Welling on March 15, 1947 .
She survives, along with a
son, Larry, Roseville, Mich. ;
one grandchild ; a brother,
Jack , Bow II ng Green ; a
sister, Mrs . Mary E . Smith,
Fostoria .
Mr. French was a comptroller with Ellra COrp .,
Detroit. He was a Navy
veteran of World War II.
Services were held Friday
afternoon at the Mann
Funeral Home with Rev.
Lowel ·l Reeder offi ciating .
Burial was In Fountain
Cemete"ry .
Attending services from
Gallia County were Mrs.
Belle Ecker. George French
and Mr. and Mrs . .James
French.

1HE

page I )

Hearst, said ,· "Oh, Ch rist.''

Coal pric~s

SHOW COMING
RACINE - The Racine
Fire Dept. wlll be spoasorlng a country western
show leaturlng Del Reeves
and , the Good Time
Charlles from Nashville on
Saturday, July 3, at 8 p.m.
at the Southern High gym.
Tickets at the present
time may be purchased
from any member of the
department. They will be
distributed for sale to area
business establishments to

Social
I
Calendar ~~:

Area Deaths

f
I

Department said the family
was wakened by .one of their
dogs barking shortly after 5
a.m. Their two-story frame
house was in flames .
One of the family called the
New Haven Department
which arrived on the scene
with 14 men and three trucks
shortly after 5:30 a.m.
Firemen battled the fire for
45 minutes before bringing it
under control.
The house and its contents
were valued at $18,000.

Dexter , formerly of Racine, Saturday .

Guiding Hand

--------------------------- ,

'999.95

During·Our 60th
Anniversary Celebration

.

I

'776

7

~**********************************************************ir*'l•

PH. 446-1044 .
t

.

,.

�4- Tbe Swldav Till'""· !il'ntinel, SWiday, March 21, 1976

~--------------------------~
IN THE
SILVER BR IDG.E
PLAZA

..

···········~·················································

Woman's World

EXTRA SPECIAL! f

LADIES

SALE STARTS

Sarah Carsey

KNEE HI'S

MONDAY MORNING

Regula r 3 Pair Pck : Sl.OO
Several Shades
One Size Fits All

AT 10 A.M.

6

••'
••
••

B~ta

The Beta Alpha Chapter of
Delta Kappa Gamma
Society, International Honor
Society for women educators
hosted a regional meeting of
Delta Epsilon and Alpha
Omicron Chapters at tbe St.
Paul United Methodist
Church In Oak Hill Saturday,
March 13.
Mrs. Elsie Bradshaw
president of Beta Alph~
Chapter, gave the welcome
and introduced Mrs. Mary
Erwin, stale president: Miss
Freda
Martin,
state
parliamentarian, and the
presidenla and members or
the various chapters,
Following invocation by
Mrs. Mildred Wickline, the 1
p.m. luncheon was enjoyed
by 69 members and three
kuests. Hostesses were Mrs.
Margaret Lewis, Mrs. Elsie
Bradshaw, Mrs . Eva Caulley
and Mrs , Emma Queen.
A Sl. Patrick's motif
graced the lables. Name
cards were while with green
shamrock stickers. After the
luncheon, the group reured lo
the sanctuary for the
program. Mrs . Elsie Brad-

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant i Pomeroy-Middleport f
446-2342
i
992-2156
:
••

PAIR$

FOR

PLENTY OF FREE PARKING

SLEEPWEAR LEISURE
SUIT
SALE
FAMOUS BRAND
REGUlAR
15.00 &amp; '6.00
PIANO WANTED - The Tri-County Community Concert Associi.tion has launched a
campaign to raise money for the purchase of a piano. The goal established by the
association directors is $10,000 which will purchase a seven foot Steinway. Carolyn
Roderick, president of the associatioo, and Donald M. Thaler, M.D., campaign chairperson,
met recently to oUUille plans for the fund raising drive.

SHIFT GOWNS
AND

I

1

100% Nylon and
Polyester and Cotton.

Ugh! Camel

• Jacket Sizes of 38 to 46 in
Regulars &amp; Longs.
Slacks 32 to 42.

DECORATOR

OVER 100 IN
STOCK TO
CHOOSE FROM

THROW PILLOWS •
Regular s2.so NOW 99$
FASHIONABLE
P.V.C. LEATHER· ·
LIKE JACKETS
Two great styles to
from. in beautiful
colors of clay blue. tan,
green, and bone. Snc!PI
shirt-jac styling
b.tJttoon front pant rn,...
Sizes: 8· to 18.

TOWELS
1

2.98 &amp;13.98 VALUES
IF PERFECT

•soo

FoR

REGULAR s16.00

•Colors of gold, white, pink,
green and blue.

$1099

$

DEARFOAM
SLIPPERS
Terry Veloure

ONE RACK

SPORTSWEAR
No·w

50%

TO

75%

20%

$1

NOW

99

Large Selection
LADIES'

WORK SHOES
AND BOOTS

2

Pair
For

ONE RACK OF
FAMOUS BRAND

SPORTSWEAR

2

PAIR
FOR

$100

$100

Regular

Reg . $9.00
NOW

Huskies
Sizes

$599

ONE TABLE MEN'S DRESS

SHIRTS
long Sleeves
Reg .
$8 &amp; $9

Popsicle Colors
Reg.
$5.99

Reg . $13.00
WAIST
SIZES :
29
40

2.

Pair
For

$799

ONE RACK
OF MEN'S

LEISURE
SHIRTS
VALUES
TO
NOW

$799

$12.00

ONE RACK OF MEN'S

Reg. s2s .oo
Sizes
S,M, L &amp; XL

SLINGS &amp; WEDGES

.

·. JEAN'S

JACKETS

PRE-WASHED
$999

ONE TABLE MEN'S
PRE-WASHED

P.V.C. LEATHER-LIKE

WOMEN'S
CASUAL FOOTWEAR

Reg. SIS.OO
5·6 to 15-16

Pnce

&amp;

ONE TABLE
OF JUNIORS

JEANS

Reg .

JEANS

PANTIES
Reg. 79c
Assorted
Colors

.

ONE TABLE OF BOYS'
PRE-WASHED

BOOTIE SOCKS
Regular
$1.00

$400 OFF

NOW

OFF

Of DRESSES

Ail Size 12

Reg. $3.50 &amp; $4 .00

ladies' Famous Brand
NANCY KING

ENTIRE STOCK

SALESMAN'S
SAMPLE$

STOCK OF MEN'S

FAMOUS BRAND

Slight
lrr.

FULL SIZE ONLY

$"100

r

$15

88

large Selection of

MEN'S PANTS
100 Pet . Polyester
· Sizes : 32to42
Regular
$16.00

GALLIPOLIS - April is
the annual art auction
sponsored by the French Art
Colony at Riverby, · The
paintings, antiques, poltery,
sculpture and crafts that will
be on display throughout the
month of April are to be
available
for
auction
Saturday evening, Apri124, at
Riverby.
Mrs . Joy Prendergast,
chairwoman of the event, has
made individual contacts by
letter to all artists who have
participated in French Art
Colony exhibits and activities
during
recent
years.
However, she urges those
who have never had the
opport\JIIIty to take part and
Wish to do so, to contact her.
Mrs. Prendergasl's address
Is Eureka Star Route,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
She reminds contributors
that all items for the April
exhibit and art auction must
be delivered ·to Rlverby by
Thursday, Apnll, in order to
properly prepare lor the
display as well as the auction.
All paintings must be matted,
framed and ready to be hung .
~ch contributor to April's
exhibit and auction will
receive 30 per cent 0( the
auctioned or sale price,
The art aucUon and sangria
party will be at a o'clock
Saturday evening, Aprll24 at
Riverby.

Trainer was accompanied by

Mrs. Zelma Northcutt
Mrs. Bradshaw introduced
the guest speaker, Mrs .
Erwin, president of the Ohio
organization, who spoke on
"Women of the American
Revolution ." Mrs . Erwin's

costwne typified the type of
dress worn by women of the
revolutionary period which
helped the audience relive the
American Revolution as Mrs.
Erwin presented tile roles of
Abagail Adams, Martha
Washington, Mercy Otis
Warren and Margaret
Cockrin Corbin during the
Revolution:
. Each chapter held a short
business meeting after the
program. Gallia County
members · a !tending were

BRIDAL POLICY
Wedcllq ad lllleci!IDIIII
aotlcu for tile lladay 1'lmel
Selllluelmut be Ia- bllldl
by U DDOD ... IJie 'l'llan*y
precedlag pablleau1 a.
lilfomudlaa IIIII)' lie l1lnled Ill
or maD.-! to llle GUU)MIIll
Dally Trlbae or Pao ny
O.Uy Seatlael. Ep.,.._w
'llld weddlag ' fonlll ..
IMIUable 1D reqllelt.

.::::~:::: :::: :::::;:::;:;:::: :::::::;:::::: ::: ::;::::: ::::::::: :;:;:;:~~

Quilt

-~1. slated \:.:
=·:·

GALIJPOLIS - The day
workshop at the home of Mrs.
Wymond Sheets April 13
beginning at 10 a.m . was
announced at the Sew and So
Club Thursday evening
meeting at the home of Mrs ..
Marion Caldwell. The
workshop will be setting up a
quilt.
Devotions were given by
Mra. Bruce Unroe readln~ a
chapter from Paalms. The
group repeated the Lord's
Prayer in unllon.
Club members sent get well
card to Mrs. Blanche Sievers.
Preoent were Mrs. Lawson
Dalley, Mrs. Wymond Sheets,
Mrs. John Oslelllren, Mrs.
Dorothy Beaver, Mrs. Jimmy
Sheets, ·Mrs. Earl Caldwell,
Mrs. Bruce Unroe and Mrs.
Marlon Caldwell.
Refreshments of jello
sqlad, cake and coffee
were aerved, The next nlchl
1111tllna will be at the home of
Mrs. Rick Swain April 22 at 7
p.m.

evening's en~
tertainment. games were
the

!c

:
:

•
:

,!
':

':

••

••

I
I
T
T

A
L
A
CRYSTAL

:•
••
:
•
••

:••
•••
:••
•••
•

:••
:

was read . A nominating

committee was appointed
consisting of Sophie Swisher,
Charlotte Elliott and Gertrude Mossman . Program
chainnan for April is Mary
Moore. Hostess is -Mrs . Don
,Thomas.

APPETITEI
G 1ve rhe pe rtect g1lt at love A
briH1ant. perfec1. pe r manenlly
reg 1stered K eepsake diamond
Guar an teed il'1 writing

Keepsake'
Regi~ttlred

Diamond Rinp

CLARK'S

Choose from steaks charbroiled to your liking, roast
prime rib of .beef fresh from
the oven, and a wide selec~
tion o1 sandwiche!il, salads,
sausage aM seafood. EnJOY
our homemade rqus, too

Jewelry Store
342 Second &gt;\ve.

Q;IIJipolis, Ohio

Lunch

'

•'•

Super Shef,' Golden Brown Fri~
and regular-:size soft drink

'

Offer good Monday-Friday

;.
•~
~1

i

!
•!
'I

'

il
l

f:
I'
ll

!1

lf

·I
••

•'~·••
••

MAR. 22-27
9:30A.M. fillll P.M.

up to $2. 00 on these
great Playtex styles!
SAVE $1.50
WHEN YOU BUY TWO
CROSS YOUR HEART~ BRAS

SAVE $1.00 ON THESE
CROSS YOUR HEART•·
BRAS

Lightweight Cotton bra .
slrelch straps Reg. $4 .95 each
Now 2 lor 88.40
# 173 Stretch bra ·cotton and
lace cups Reg. 55.50' each
Now 2 lor 19.50'

#35 Lightweight Cotton bra
Reg. 53.95 each Now 2 lor $6.90
D Cups 21or 88.90
#73 Fiberfill Stretch bra - lace cups
Reg . 56.50 Now only $5.50

SIDER• BRAS

Regular Cup- Reg .
each Now 2 lor $S.40
Cupa Now 2 lor 410.40
tg61 Fiberfill- Reg. 55.95 each
Now 2 lor 110.40
!1962 Padded · Reg. 55.95
Now 2 lor $10.40

,.'
••

•••

:
:=•
:

13-

r

played with prizes going to
''
Ethel Steele and Thelma · ~I
Le1ter.
·~ :
The next meeting will be
~:
April 15, 7' 30 p.m. with
'.
Thelma Lester. Refresh - 1
men Ia were served by Dortha
:'
Adams and Lula Lawrence in
!
keeping with the St. Patrick's
Day theme. A aoclal hour
!l
followed .
""I
!r

STIIDENTS HONORED
MOREHEAD, Ky.
Morehead Stale University
has released Ill fall semester
Academic Dean's Lilt, ln.
cluding elgbl pers1111 from
Gallla County. Included on
lbe U.t were: Michael A.
Beebe, Cheahlre: Donna L.
Holderby, Mike D, Noe,
WWiam M. Peel, Larry E.
Snowden,
SuuUe
R.
Snowden,
aU
of Gwlllpnlts;
German cwnposer Johann
Sabeatlan Bach was bern Jane L. Smith, Palrlot:
Debra S. Felker, 'l'hurman.
March 2,1, 1880.

-.·-.i

:

GREAT FOOD TO
SATISFY ANY

tington in various Broadway
shows, Also in the cast is
folksinger Jean Ritchie wtio
appeared two years ago on
the artists series with the
Agnus de Mille Heritage
Dance Theatre .
Brand says of his musical ,
"Our show is a profile of
history, . an American
autobiography sketched in

For

United

Set A Table

~

MARY ERWIN

First

Kay Presbyterian Church.

:I

The women worked on a

children ·and six guests, Mrs .
and daughter ,

numerous : ttmes in Hun.

GALIJPOLIS - The CIC
Club met Friday evening at
the home of Nettle Adams.
Nine members and four
guests, Lula Lawrence
Bonita Glllilen, Mrs. Hlld~
Copley and Dortha Adams,
attended.
In the absence of the
president, the vice-president,
Ethel Steele presided.
Secretary Pina Ward and
treasurer ·. Evelyn Rothgeb
read their reports which were
approved.
The bifthday of Helen
Grumbling was observed .

Fanning,

the

&gt;
a

leader.

Mrs. Carlos Swisher and son,
and Mrs. Jimmy Evans and
daughter were present.
Scripture from Matthew

a business session followed at

:::
Raitt who has appeared

CIC Club
has meeting

(o

Nazarene ; Glen Bissell, class

CHESHIRE - Uttle Kyger
Ladies Aid held an all day
meeting recently with Mrs. T.
F. Burleson· as hostess.
quill top in the morning, and

song."

The public is invited to
attend and a $1 donation will
be asked at the door.
Assisting Mrs. Prendergast
with preparations ior the art
auction and sangria party are
Ann Jenkins, Geisla Alonzo,
Beth Cherrington, Judy
Evans, Judy Wolfe, Ruby
Jenkins and Sue Beverly.

Linda

of ·at

•••

A II day gathering held

tile afternoon. A covered dish

The program was produced
for the Kennedy Center by
Roger L. Stevens and was
video taped during a series of
special performances at the
center by The South Carolina
ETV Network ..

c ommittee co nsisting

Daisy Glassburn, Mrs. Doris
Lanham, Mrs. Zelma Northcutt, Mrs. Vickie Powell,
Miss Faye Roberts; Mrs.
Mrs . Irene Brannon, Mrs . Florence Trainer, Mrs . Mary
Deanna
Cook,
Mrs . Walker, Mrs. Mildred
Rosemary Evans , Miss · Wickline and Mrs . Mary
Gladys · Frederick , Miss Withee.

dinner was served at noon.
Fifteen members, · four

bicentennial musical, "Sing

..

Mrs .

Turner, Betty McGinness ,

Deadline to turn in
art works is April 1

•One group, woven cotton
•One group 100% Po~ester

Mountain ,"

and Carolyn and Evan
Roderick . Sue Beverly will
handle mailing to the
membership.
.
The association hopes the
community at large will
participate in tills endeavor
which wlll add another
resource to area cultural
opportuniUes . Contributions
may be made py sending a
· check or pledge to Donald M.
Thaler, Rl. 2, Box 112,
Gallipolis, Ohio, Checks
should be made payable to
Community Concert Piano
Fund.

America Sing, " . which
highlighted !he current
season at the John F. Ken"
nedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington .
The renowned folksinger
performed in February on the
Convoca tion Series of the
33.
- .
Marshall Artists Series.
Brartd is creator of the . The production stars John

NOW

NOW

Ev 'ry

•=
•••

Pack master Fan ning Cameron, Gretchen Carty,
thanked the Rev. Fran k Donna Shaw and Becky
Hayes and the Rev. Tura Pasquale , and Pack 204
Hayes , representatives of the treasurer Bill Shaw.
sponsoring church, his den
Fanning announced the
leaders and Webelos leaders. next pack meeting would be
He recognized the banquet Monday eveni ng, March 22,

Sl iNOAY
REVIVAL at Racine First
Baptist Clrurch Sunday
through March 28, 7:30
nightly . The Rev. Don Walker
will be the speaker. Special
singing. Public Welcome .
PRACT ICE
lor
tne
Independent
Syracuse
Baseball Team at 3 p.m.
Sunday at the Municipal
Park . .
COUNTY WIDE pra yer
meeting , 2 p.m. Sunday ,
Ches ter Church of the

~~ climb

" Edelweiss" and

Brand featured in program ~l

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. Folksinger Oscar Brand,
recent guest artist at Marshall University , will be
featured in ·a special PuUlic
Broadcasting Service
program , "Sing A,erica
Sing," to be aired Monday at
9p ,m. on WMUL-TV, Channel

BEDSPREAD SPECIAl.

-25.00

DRESS AND
PANT COATS

::::

-21.00

REGUL~R

ALL LADIES ·

!111

BATH

REGULAR

$11'1

avoid artists because of

shaw introduced Mrs.
Richard Trainer who sang,
"The Sound of Music,

~~:::::~:~ :::::;:::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::: ::: ::;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::: ;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::::;:::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::;:::;:::::;:;:;: ;:::::; :;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::;:i:;

ANOTHER NEW SHIPMENT
FAMOUS CANNON

3

where8s, in Ute past it was
sometimes necessary to

specific piano requirements.
Association , the board The goal established by the
elected to launch a campaign directors Is $10,000, which
to raise money for the pur- will purchase a seven foot
chase of a piano. In recent Stelnway.
years the association has
Ca rolyn Roderi c k ,
found it increasingly difficult president of the ass ociation,
to obtain a quality Piano for has appointed Donald M.
concerts and, when available, Thaler, M.D. to head the
the cost has been great . .. campaign With Jan .Thaler
Members feel purchasing a assisting as ca&lt;hairperson.
piano will allow the Other members of the lund
association greater freedom raising committee include
in selection of programs, Louis Schmidt, M.D., Eldon
Wuerch, H. 0 . Francis, Dick

Ugh! Blue, r.,int Green and

'3"

20%oFF

GALLIPOLIS - At a
recent meeting of the board
of directors of the Tri-County
Community Concert

• New Spring Pastel Colors of

Sizes: P,S, M &amp; L

'

Association starts piano fund

•1 00% Polyester

BABY DOLLS

\

-

REGULAR 141.00 OUTFITS

Pack 204 has annual banquet

Alpha chapter hosts ,
regional honor society meet

.•
lCharlene Hoeflich i
:

..•

5 - The SWiday Times- Sentinel, SWiday, March 21. 1976

•
s
..:

•• •

:•
•••

=
•
a
•

j

:•

j:

SAVE $1.000N
THESE SUPPORT CAN
BE BEAUTIFUL" BRAS

#100 Tricot lined nylon
Crepeset Cups Reg . 57.50»
Now onty 16.50»
#102 Proportioned Fiberfill cuo"'
Reg. $ 7.95' Now only 86.95 •

:
:

•••

j

'

#259 Regular Longtine
Reg. $8.95 Now only U.9~
SAVE $1.00 ON THESE LIVING" STRETCH BRAS
!1132 Comfort Styled!
!1179 Rigid Straps
Reg. $6.g5• Now only 85.91' Reg . $5.95' Now only 84.95'
#159 Lace Cups
#239 3/4 Length Longline
Reg. $8.50' Now only n .so• Reg. 58.95 Now only 17.95
•ocupeand OOCuPI 11 .00 More

:•=

f( DCuPI S1.00 More and DDCuge 11.45 More
'

IN THE SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

1503 E.. stern Ave.,

Gallipolis

i
I:
:•

•-·
•

'•

�4- Tbe Swldav Till'""· !il'ntinel, SWiday, March 21, 1976

~--------------------------~
IN THE
SILVER BR IDG.E
PLAZA

..

···········~·················································

Woman's World

EXTRA SPECIAL! f

LADIES

SALE STARTS

Sarah Carsey

KNEE HI'S

MONDAY MORNING

Regula r 3 Pair Pck : Sl.OO
Several Shades
One Size Fits All

AT 10 A.M.

6

••'
••
••

B~ta

The Beta Alpha Chapter of
Delta Kappa Gamma
Society, International Honor
Society for women educators
hosted a regional meeting of
Delta Epsilon and Alpha
Omicron Chapters at tbe St.
Paul United Methodist
Church In Oak Hill Saturday,
March 13.
Mrs. Elsie Bradshaw
president of Beta Alph~
Chapter, gave the welcome
and introduced Mrs. Mary
Erwin, stale president: Miss
Freda
Martin,
state
parliamentarian, and the
presidenla and members or
the various chapters,
Following invocation by
Mrs. Mildred Wickline, the 1
p.m. luncheon was enjoyed
by 69 members and three
kuests. Hostesses were Mrs.
Margaret Lewis, Mrs. Elsie
Bradshaw, Mrs . Eva Caulley
and Mrs , Emma Queen.
A Sl. Patrick's motif
graced the lables. Name
cards were while with green
shamrock stickers. After the
luncheon, the group reured lo
the sanctuary for the
program. Mrs . Elsie Brad-

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant i Pomeroy-Middleport f
446-2342
i
992-2156
:
••

PAIR$

FOR

PLENTY OF FREE PARKING

SLEEPWEAR LEISURE
SUIT
SALE
FAMOUS BRAND
REGUlAR
15.00 &amp; '6.00
PIANO WANTED - The Tri-County Community Concert Associi.tion has launched a
campaign to raise money for the purchase of a piano. The goal established by the
association directors is $10,000 which will purchase a seven foot Steinway. Carolyn
Roderick, president of the associatioo, and Donald M. Thaler, M.D., campaign chairperson,
met recently to oUUille plans for the fund raising drive.

SHIFT GOWNS
AND

I

1

100% Nylon and
Polyester and Cotton.

Ugh! Camel

• Jacket Sizes of 38 to 46 in
Regulars &amp; Longs.
Slacks 32 to 42.

DECORATOR

OVER 100 IN
STOCK TO
CHOOSE FROM

THROW PILLOWS •
Regular s2.so NOW 99$
FASHIONABLE
P.V.C. LEATHER· ·
LIKE JACKETS
Two great styles to
from. in beautiful
colors of clay blue. tan,
green, and bone. Snc!PI
shirt-jac styling
b.tJttoon front pant rn,...
Sizes: 8· to 18.

TOWELS
1

2.98 &amp;13.98 VALUES
IF PERFECT

•soo

FoR

REGULAR s16.00

•Colors of gold, white, pink,
green and blue.

$1099

$

DEARFOAM
SLIPPERS
Terry Veloure

ONE RACK

SPORTSWEAR
No·w

50%

TO

75%

20%

$1

NOW

99

Large Selection
LADIES'

WORK SHOES
AND BOOTS

2

Pair
For

ONE RACK OF
FAMOUS BRAND

SPORTSWEAR

2

PAIR
FOR

$100

$100

Regular

Reg . $9.00
NOW

Huskies
Sizes

$599

ONE TABLE MEN'S DRESS

SHIRTS
long Sleeves
Reg .
$8 &amp; $9

Popsicle Colors
Reg.
$5.99

Reg . $13.00
WAIST
SIZES :
29
40

2.

Pair
For

$799

ONE RACK
OF MEN'S

LEISURE
SHIRTS
VALUES
TO
NOW

$799

$12.00

ONE RACK OF MEN'S

Reg. s2s .oo
Sizes
S,M, L &amp; XL

SLINGS &amp; WEDGES

.

·. JEAN'S

JACKETS

PRE-WASHED
$999

ONE TABLE MEN'S
PRE-WASHED

P.V.C. LEATHER-LIKE

WOMEN'S
CASUAL FOOTWEAR

Reg. SIS.OO
5·6 to 15-16

Pnce

&amp;

ONE TABLE
OF JUNIORS

JEANS

Reg .

JEANS

PANTIES
Reg. 79c
Assorted
Colors

.

ONE TABLE OF BOYS'
PRE-WASHED

BOOTIE SOCKS
Regular
$1.00

$400 OFF

NOW

OFF

Of DRESSES

Ail Size 12

Reg. $3.50 &amp; $4 .00

ladies' Famous Brand
NANCY KING

ENTIRE STOCK

SALESMAN'S
SAMPLE$

STOCK OF MEN'S

FAMOUS BRAND

Slight
lrr.

FULL SIZE ONLY

$"100

r

$15

88

large Selection of

MEN'S PANTS
100 Pet . Polyester
· Sizes : 32to42
Regular
$16.00

GALLIPOLIS - April is
the annual art auction
sponsored by the French Art
Colony at Riverby, · The
paintings, antiques, poltery,
sculpture and crafts that will
be on display throughout the
month of April are to be
available
for
auction
Saturday evening, Apri124, at
Riverby.
Mrs . Joy Prendergast,
chairwoman of the event, has
made individual contacts by
letter to all artists who have
participated in French Art
Colony exhibits and activities
during
recent
years.
However, she urges those
who have never had the
opport\JIIIty to take part and
Wish to do so, to contact her.
Mrs. Prendergasl's address
Is Eureka Star Route,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
She reminds contributors
that all items for the April
exhibit and art auction must
be delivered ·to Rlverby by
Thursday, Apnll, in order to
properly prepare lor the
display as well as the auction.
All paintings must be matted,
framed and ready to be hung .
~ch contributor to April's
exhibit and auction will
receive 30 per cent 0( the
auctioned or sale price,
The art aucUon and sangria
party will be at a o'clock
Saturday evening, Aprll24 at
Riverby.

Trainer was accompanied by

Mrs. Zelma Northcutt
Mrs. Bradshaw introduced
the guest speaker, Mrs .
Erwin, president of the Ohio
organization, who spoke on
"Women of the American
Revolution ." Mrs . Erwin's

costwne typified the type of
dress worn by women of the
revolutionary period which
helped the audience relive the
American Revolution as Mrs.
Erwin presented tile roles of
Abagail Adams, Martha
Washington, Mercy Otis
Warren and Margaret
Cockrin Corbin during the
Revolution:
. Each chapter held a short
business meeting after the
program. Gallia County
members · a !tending were

BRIDAL POLICY
Wedcllq ad lllleci!IDIIII
aotlcu for tile lladay 1'lmel
Selllluelmut be Ia- bllldl
by U DDOD ... IJie 'l'llan*y
precedlag pablleau1 a.
lilfomudlaa IIIII)' lie l1lnled Ill
or maD.-! to llle GUU)MIIll
Dally Trlbae or Pao ny
O.Uy Seatlael. Ep.,.._w
'llld weddlag ' fonlll ..
IMIUable 1D reqllelt.

.::::~:::: :::: :::::;:::;:;:::: :::::::;:::::: ::: ::;::::: ::::::::: :;:;:;:~~

Quilt

-~1. slated \:.:
=·:·

GALIJPOLIS - The day
workshop at the home of Mrs.
Wymond Sheets April 13
beginning at 10 a.m . was
announced at the Sew and So
Club Thursday evening
meeting at the home of Mrs ..
Marion Caldwell. The
workshop will be setting up a
quilt.
Devotions were given by
Mra. Bruce Unroe readln~ a
chapter from Paalms. The
group repeated the Lord's
Prayer in unllon.
Club members sent get well
card to Mrs. Blanche Sievers.
Preoent were Mrs. Lawson
Dalley, Mrs. Wymond Sheets,
Mrs. John Oslelllren, Mrs.
Dorothy Beaver, Mrs. Jimmy
Sheets, ·Mrs. Earl Caldwell,
Mrs. Bruce Unroe and Mrs.
Marlon Caldwell.
Refreshments of jello
sqlad, cake and coffee
were aerved, The next nlchl
1111tllna will be at the home of
Mrs. Rick Swain April 22 at 7
p.m.

evening's en~
tertainment. games were
the

!c

:
:

•
:

,!
':

':

••

••

I
I
T
T

A
L
A
CRYSTAL

:•
••
:
•
••

:••
•••
:••
•••
•

:••
:

was read . A nominating

committee was appointed
consisting of Sophie Swisher,
Charlotte Elliott and Gertrude Mossman . Program
chainnan for April is Mary
Moore. Hostess is -Mrs . Don
,Thomas.

APPETITEI
G 1ve rhe pe rtect g1lt at love A
briH1ant. perfec1. pe r manenlly
reg 1stered K eepsake diamond
Guar an teed il'1 writing

Keepsake'
Regi~ttlred

Diamond Rinp

CLARK'S

Choose from steaks charbroiled to your liking, roast
prime rib of .beef fresh from
the oven, and a wide selec~
tion o1 sandwiche!il, salads,
sausage aM seafood. EnJOY
our homemade rqus, too

Jewelry Store
342 Second &gt;\ve.

Q;IIJipolis, Ohio

Lunch

'

•'•

Super Shef,' Golden Brown Fri~
and regular-:size soft drink

'

Offer good Monday-Friday

;.
•~
~1

i

!
•!
'I

'

il
l

f:
I'
ll

!1

lf

·I
••

•'~·••
••

MAR. 22-27
9:30A.M. fillll P.M.

up to $2. 00 on these
great Playtex styles!
SAVE $1.50
WHEN YOU BUY TWO
CROSS YOUR HEART~ BRAS

SAVE $1.00 ON THESE
CROSS YOUR HEART•·
BRAS

Lightweight Cotton bra .
slrelch straps Reg. $4 .95 each
Now 2 lor 88.40
# 173 Stretch bra ·cotton and
lace cups Reg. 55.50' each
Now 2 lor 19.50'

#35 Lightweight Cotton bra
Reg. 53.95 each Now 2 lor $6.90
D Cups 21or 88.90
#73 Fiberfill Stretch bra - lace cups
Reg . 56.50 Now only $5.50

SIDER• BRAS

Regular Cup- Reg .
each Now 2 lor $S.40
Cupa Now 2 lor 410.40
tg61 Fiberfill- Reg. 55.95 each
Now 2 lor 110.40
!1962 Padded · Reg. 55.95
Now 2 lor $10.40

,.'
••

•••

:
:=•
:

13-

r

played with prizes going to
''
Ethel Steele and Thelma · ~I
Le1ter.
·~ :
The next meeting will be
~:
April 15, 7' 30 p.m. with
'.
Thelma Lester. Refresh - 1
men Ia were served by Dortha
:'
Adams and Lula Lawrence in
!
keeping with the St. Patrick's
Day theme. A aoclal hour
!l
followed .
""I
!r

STIIDENTS HONORED
MOREHEAD, Ky.
Morehead Stale University
has released Ill fall semester
Academic Dean's Lilt, ln.
cluding elgbl pers1111 from
Gallla County. Included on
lbe U.t were: Michael A.
Beebe, Cheahlre: Donna L.
Holderby, Mike D, Noe,
WWiam M. Peel, Larry E.
Snowden,
SuuUe
R.
Snowden,
aU
of Gwlllpnlts;
German cwnposer Johann
Sabeatlan Bach was bern Jane L. Smith, Palrlot:
Debra S. Felker, 'l'hurman.
March 2,1, 1880.

-.·-.i

:

GREAT FOOD TO
SATISFY ANY

tington in various Broadway
shows, Also in the cast is
folksinger Jean Ritchie wtio
appeared two years ago on
the artists series with the
Agnus de Mille Heritage
Dance Theatre .
Brand says of his musical ,
"Our show is a profile of
history, . an American
autobiography sketched in

For

United

Set A Table

~

MARY ERWIN

First

Kay Presbyterian Church.

:I

The women worked on a

children ·and six guests, Mrs .
and daughter ,

numerous : ttmes in Hun.

GALIJPOLIS - The CIC
Club met Friday evening at
the home of Nettle Adams.
Nine members and four
guests, Lula Lawrence
Bonita Glllilen, Mrs. Hlld~
Copley and Dortha Adams,
attended.
In the absence of the
president, the vice-president,
Ethel Steele presided.
Secretary Pina Ward and
treasurer ·. Evelyn Rothgeb
read their reports which were
approved.
The bifthday of Helen
Grumbling was observed .

Fanning,

the

&gt;
a

leader.

Mrs. Carlos Swisher and son,
and Mrs. Jimmy Evans and
daughter were present.
Scripture from Matthew

a business session followed at

:::
Raitt who has appeared

CIC Club
has meeting

(o

Nazarene ; Glen Bissell, class

CHESHIRE - Uttle Kyger
Ladies Aid held an all day
meeting recently with Mrs. T.
F. Burleson· as hostess.
quill top in the morning, and

song."

The public is invited to
attend and a $1 donation will
be asked at the door.
Assisting Mrs. Prendergast
with preparations ior the art
auction and sangria party are
Ann Jenkins, Geisla Alonzo,
Beth Cherrington, Judy
Evans, Judy Wolfe, Ruby
Jenkins and Sue Beverly.

Linda

of ·at

•••

A II day gathering held

tile afternoon. A covered dish

The program was produced
for the Kennedy Center by
Roger L. Stevens and was
video taped during a series of
special performances at the
center by The South Carolina
ETV Network ..

c ommittee co nsisting

Daisy Glassburn, Mrs. Doris
Lanham, Mrs. Zelma Northcutt, Mrs. Vickie Powell,
Miss Faye Roberts; Mrs.
Mrs . Irene Brannon, Mrs . Florence Trainer, Mrs . Mary
Deanna
Cook,
Mrs . Walker, Mrs. Mildred
Rosemary Evans , Miss · Wickline and Mrs . Mary
Gladys · Frederick , Miss Withee.

dinner was served at noon.
Fifteen members, · four

bicentennial musical, "Sing

..

Mrs .

Turner, Betty McGinness ,

Deadline to turn in
art works is April 1

•One group, woven cotton
•One group 100% Po~ester

Mountain ,"

and Carolyn and Evan
Roderick . Sue Beverly will
handle mailing to the
membership.
.
The association hopes the
community at large will
participate in tills endeavor
which wlll add another
resource to area cultural
opportuniUes . Contributions
may be made py sending a
· check or pledge to Donald M.
Thaler, Rl. 2, Box 112,
Gallipolis, Ohio, Checks
should be made payable to
Community Concert Piano
Fund.

America Sing, " . which
highlighted !he current
season at the John F. Ken"
nedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington .
The renowned folksinger
performed in February on the
Convoca tion Series of the
33.
- .
Marshall Artists Series.
Brartd is creator of the . The production stars John

NOW

NOW

Ev 'ry

•=
•••

Pack master Fan ning Cameron, Gretchen Carty,
thanked the Rev. Fran k Donna Shaw and Becky
Hayes and the Rev. Tura Pasquale , and Pack 204
Hayes , representatives of the treasurer Bill Shaw.
sponsoring church, his den
Fanning announced the
leaders and Webelos leaders. next pack meeting would be
He recognized the banquet Monday eveni ng, March 22,

Sl iNOAY
REVIVAL at Racine First
Baptist Clrurch Sunday
through March 28, 7:30
nightly . The Rev. Don Walker
will be the speaker. Special
singing. Public Welcome .
PRACT ICE
lor
tne
Independent
Syracuse
Baseball Team at 3 p.m.
Sunday at the Municipal
Park . .
COUNTY WIDE pra yer
meeting , 2 p.m. Sunday ,
Ches ter Church of the

~~ climb

" Edelweiss" and

Brand featured in program ~l

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. Folksinger Oscar Brand,
recent guest artist at Marshall University , will be
featured in ·a special PuUlic
Broadcasting Service
program , "Sing A,erica
Sing," to be aired Monday at
9p ,m. on WMUL-TV, Channel

BEDSPREAD SPECIAl.

-25.00

DRESS AND
PANT COATS

::::

-21.00

REGUL~R

ALL LADIES ·

!111

BATH

REGULAR

$11'1

avoid artists because of

shaw introduced Mrs.
Richard Trainer who sang,
"The Sound of Music,

~~:::::~:~ :::::;:::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::: ::: ::;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::: ;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::::;:::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::;:::;:::::;:;:;: ;:::::; :;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::;:i:;

ANOTHER NEW SHIPMENT
FAMOUS CANNON

3

where8s, in Ute past it was
sometimes necessary to

specific piano requirements.
Association , the board The goal established by the
elected to launch a campaign directors Is $10,000, which
to raise money for the pur- will purchase a seven foot
chase of a piano. In recent Stelnway.
years the association has
Ca rolyn Roderi c k ,
found it increasingly difficult president of the ass ociation,
to obtain a quality Piano for has appointed Donald M.
concerts and, when available, Thaler, M.D. to head the
the cost has been great . .. campaign With Jan .Thaler
Members feel purchasing a assisting as ca&lt;hairperson.
piano will allow the Other members of the lund
association greater freedom raising committee include
in selection of programs, Louis Schmidt, M.D., Eldon
Wuerch, H. 0 . Francis, Dick

Ugh! Blue, r.,int Green and

'3"

20%oFF

GALLIPOLIS - At a
recent meeting of the board
of directors of the Tri-County
Community Concert

• New Spring Pastel Colors of

Sizes: P,S, M &amp; L

'

Association starts piano fund

•1 00% Polyester

BABY DOLLS

\

-

REGULAR 141.00 OUTFITS

Pack 204 has annual banquet

Alpha chapter hosts ,
regional honor society meet

.•
lCharlene Hoeflich i
:

..•

5 - The SWiday Times- Sentinel, SWiday, March 21. 1976

•
s
..:

•• •

:•
•••

=
•
a
•

j

:•

j:

SAVE $1.000N
THESE SUPPORT CAN
BE BEAUTIFUL" BRAS

#100 Tricot lined nylon
Crepeset Cups Reg . 57.50»
Now onty 16.50»
#102 Proportioned Fiberfill cuo"'
Reg. $ 7.95' Now only 86.95 •

:
:

•••

j

'

#259 Regular Longtine
Reg. $8.95 Now only U.9~
SAVE $1.00 ON THESE LIVING" STRETCH BRAS
!1132 Comfort Styled!
!1179 Rigid Straps
Reg. $6.g5• Now only 85.91' Reg . $5.95' Now only 84.95'
#159 Lace Cups
#239 3/4 Length Longline
Reg. $8.50' Now only n .so• Reg. 58.95 Now only 17.95
•ocupeand OOCuPI 11 .00 More

:•=

f( DCuPI S1.00 More and DDCuge 11.45 More
'

IN THE SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

1503 E.. stern Ave.,

Gallipolis

i
I:
:•

•-·
•

'•

�7- TheSundlly Timea-Sentlnel,Sunday,March 21,1971
6- The SWJday Times- Sentinel,SWJday, March 21, 1976

Ladies Aid jQrms
three committees

~.. Canaday-Mi!ler

·...~-... solemnize
'

,

--

vows

By RENE BROYLES
GALLIPOLIS - Three new

~

·~
~

GALLIPOLIS - Saint
Peter's Episcopal Chur ch
~. was the scene of Miss Tish
~,: Miller's wedding to Jeff
•• Canaday,son of Mr. and Mrs.
: ·~ Jack Canaday, 250 State
·- Street, on Feb. 14, at 4:30

..

pink and lavender hear ts and

fl owers . She carried a basket
of pink rose pel&lt;lls. Master
Tony
Canaday,
!he
bridegroom 's nephew, was
ringbearer . Groomsmen
were Bob Baxter, best man
and ushers were Charles

p.m .

•.u

2

Nuptial musi c preceding

Bodimer, and the couple 's

,... : , the ceremony was presented

brother, Jim Miller and Mike
and Gene Canaday.

:;;.· by Miss Vicki Clayton, of
~ Nashville, Tenn. She sang
~ ; "Time In a Bottle ," "Sunrise,

Sunset, "

~~

The couple exchanged vows

before the candlelit altar on
whic h were vases of pink
gladioli and white mum s. The
Rev . Albert H. Mackenzie
c:tflciated at the ceremony
and nuptial mass whi ch
followed :
The mother of the bride
wore a gown of sheer wool
with full butterfly silk sleeves
of id entical print, a

··sometimes ,''

;::.;_ "We've Only Just Begun,''
~~

·

11

The Lord's Prayer ,' 1 ''One

" ' Hand , One Heart" and "The
:.:. Wedding Song ." The organ
~

presentation included "Love

,, . Theme from the Gqdfather,"
~ "! Won 'I Last a Day Without
,-::. You,""LoveStory ," " Romeo
;:;- and t Juliet ,"

and

·the

:; traditional wedding marches.
•h
The bride, daughU,r of Mr .
;:; and Mrs. Loren F . Miller, 620

reproduction

Field .' ' She wore a corsage of

ivory rosebuds and pearls.
The bridegroom's mother
wore a gown of. pink knit and
her corsage was of cream
colored rosebuds and pearls. ·
Following the ceremony , a
reception was held at the
home .of the bride. HosU,sses

':- ll!e altar by her father and

wore a French silk organza,

:-;_
::.:·
::

full A line gown fashioned
with a highrise waistline. The
fitu,ct b9dice had a high
neckline accented with
~ Venetian lace and seed pearls
,. which extended dowri the
;;:: front~ its bishop sleeves and

and guest registrars were
Mrs. Lynne Fisher and Miss

:=

around the hemline of the
~:. controlled A Hne skirt. Her

Teresa Bane. The reception
hall, living and dining rooms
were
decorated
with
magnolia boughs and white
candles in silver and crystal
holders and the sta irway was
draped with garlands of
boxwo9d and white wicker
wedding bells .
A champagne buffet was
served and the banquet table
was set with a white cut
madeira cloth, silver candelabra and a ce nU,rpiece of
white and deep pink mum s,
bal)y's breath and sweethear t
roses in a silver and crystal
compote.
·
A floor length , white.
organdy cloth, over linen,

;:: chapel length illusion veil
- flowed from a Camelot
: ~- headpiece or ma tc hing
~ Venetian lace which

also

:::; edged the full veil. Her
2:. bouquet was a cascade of
.. . . stephanotis, pink rosebuds,
':.. baby 's breath, Ba ker ferns
~ :, cente-red with a catleya
~

orchid. She wore a diamond
~~ pendant, which was the
·~ bridegroom's wedding gift,
:-; and diainond earrings which
::· were her fa ther's wedding
::_ gift to her mother .
::: Maria Hanson and Susan
"~ Mills were the bride's honor
-· ~ attendants. Her sisters, Anne
,",: and Micaela Miller and Cindy
-::_~ Jones were bridesmaids. All
~~ wor e identical gowns of
:;: whisper pink silk crepe which
. '·"'' reatured empire waistlines
~ with deep V necks fram ed in
~ white sa~n. trimmed in lace

:; and long sleeves gently
:; ·ruffled at the wrists. They
· ..... wore matching picture hats
:::: and carried baskets of white
~- mums, baby 's breath and

~ sweetheart roses .
~= Miss Anne Adkiris, serving

Monet ' s

painting, "Poppies of the

: :~ Fourth Ave., was escorted to
;--~.

of

Mr, and Mrs. Jeff Canaday
covered the separate table
for the four tiered wedding
cake, and white cut madeira
the serving 1&lt;1 ble for the
crystal punch service, mints
and nuts.
For her going away
cos tume , th e new Mr s .
Canaday wore a three piece

ensemble of wool which was
sweater knit of myriad pastel
s tripes with which she wore a

delicate pink silk blouse and
ll!e catU,ya orchid from her
bridal bouquet.
Out of town guests. at the
wedding were the: bride's

aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs.
James Venz of Washington

Desk

Award

as

Bes t

uarantee
for

-: : :. a l'fetl• me
;;

"Poppy."

=

General seating tickets for
the performance will be on
sale at the theater box office
the day of the performance
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and
again an hour before curtain.
Tickets are $5.50 each.
Marshall University students
may obtain free tickets upon
presentation
of valid student
.
activity cards.
In additon to his awards for

"': :
;::·
.."'
'" ·
,.._.
~-

~

...
''

MANDARI N

,_

:;.:• Only Art Ca rved wedding
t; ·
~;
rings are gua ranteed.

'

;.:::·
:::;
-:;
••
::.:,
:,::_

For a lifetime. One more
reason why more brides
and grooms se lect Art Carved for thei r wedd ing
rings . For a liftetlme..

::.;

~
,_

-·-. .
••
''"
·~

~

"'"'
.....

l' ""

·-'·4

,, ,

·

" The Wiz,'' Faison was

choreographer for the smash
musical hit, "Don't Bother
Me I Can't Cope" and appeared on Broadway in
" Pur lie." He has also staged
the acts of Stevie wonder,
Roberta Flack, Eartha Kilt
and Dionne Warwicke.

c_Art Carved
TAWNEY
JEWELERS
' ' House of Diamonds
and Fine Gifts"
422 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio
1.,__ _....:;__ _ _ __

-.J

Canaday gradua ted from
Galli a Academy Hi gh School
in 1971, and attended Ohio
State University. He is employed by· B&amp;W Construction
Company .
·
·

'Universal Dance Experience'
coming.to Marshall series
HUNTINGTON, W. Va . George Faison. winner of the
1975 Tony Award and Drama

The

George

Faison

was

a

ways and

means

program.

Lauren :Bacall on television.
He then joined the Alvin Ailey
American Dance Theatre and

Davis, $ister Stone, Bela

wa s its principal dancer for

Michaels , Gyorgy Ligeti ,
Melba Moore , Black Sabbath
and Brute F'orce. This work
was recently featured · on

Bartok,
Dio nn e

Is sac

Hayes,

Warwi eke ,

Lee

publi c television on t~e
1
' Soul"
program which

SCOPS meeting,set
EXHIBIT for the month of MARCH: Island Art, Bahamian
GALLI POLIS
A
Student Art CollecU,d by Miss Mary Phillips, Riverby .
discussion of how buildings
GALLERY HOURS : Saturda ys and SWJdays, 1-5 p.m.; a nd districts are chosen for
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10-3 p.m., River by.
national
r eg i s ter
March 21, Sunday, 2-4 p.m . - Parent-child workshop nominations . and how
enti tled "Mind Bending Workshop." Six students of Mrs. Joan nominations are written, will
Loeffler who are seniors at Rio Grande College majoring in be part of the mee.ting or
education will conduct · the workshop.
·
"SCOPS," the South Central
March 23, Tuesday, 8 p.m. - F.A .C. Trustees Meeting, Ohio. Preservation Society,
Riverby.
·
· Inc., Sunday, March 28, at 2
March 25, Thursday , 9-11 a .m. - Christmas Conunittee, p.m. in the courtroom of the
River by.
Gallia County Courthouse in
March 28, Sunday, 2-5 p.m. - Membership Reception Gallipolis. The res toration of
honoring all members, Riverby.
!he second empire s tyle
Exhibit for llle month of April : All i!A!ms for the Art Gallia. County Co urthous e
Auctioo, Riverby.
was recently featured in the
April I, Thursday - All contributions to the art auction Sunday ed it io n of the
must be delivered to Riverby .
Columbus Dispatch .
April 24, Saturday, 8 p.m. - Art Auction and Sangria
After the business mee ting ,
Party, Joy Prendergast, chairman, Hiverby .
"Our House " State Memorial
May ~. Saturday, 9 p.m.-1 a.m. - Bicentennial Ball, · will be specially opened out of
Gallia CoWJ ty Junior FairgroWJds. The orchestra : The United sea son
for
viSitation.
SoWJd . Advance tickets, $17.76 couple. At the door, $20. Bob Lafaye tte wa s e-n tertained at
·
and Jane Daniel, co-chairpersons.

Scouts tour museum
GALLIPOLIS ~ Whil e
)"orkirg on their Heritage
Badges, members of Cub
Scout Den 2 and Den 3, Pack
204, visited Campus Martius
Museum in Marietta. The cub
scout s, after touring the

ce ntered on- a discussion of
the drug problem.
Other dancers in the museum , viewed the mov ie,
company are Gary DeLoatch, "The Gunsmith of Williamsballet master , Christi na bUrg," and participated .in a
Kimball, Vikkie Baliimore , demonstration of the firing of
Ruth Ashton, Charlotte a flintl ock muzzle loading
Neveu, Edith Williams, Paul · rifle . Each activity was part
from which heroin, morphine Hoskins , Roumel Reaux,
of · Cam p~s
Marti us
and opiwn are derived. It is Lewis Whitlock and Leon Mu seum's Bicente nni a l
danced to the music of Miles Jackson.
Weekend Program series.
Cub Scouts who took part in
the field !rip were Allen
Green, Bryan Pasquale , Huss
Shaw, and Billy Swain of Den
3..Den 2 members were David
Brown , Marc Cameron,
GALLIPOLIS - Final plans have been compleled for the Kevin Carter , Kevin Carty,
Saturday, March 27 wedding of Debbie Northup and Kurt Mark Dillon, Robby Fanning,
Eric Jones , Paul MacKenzie,
,Smith,
The ceremony will begin at 3:30 in the afternoon at Grace Billy Marrah , Chris Nelson,
United Methodist Church with the Rev. Tim Heaton officiating. Gene O'Rourke and paul
A half hour of nuptial music ~resented by organist Mrs.
Merlyn Ross and soloist Gale Douphitt will precede the
PACK TO MEET
ceremony. A reception will follow in the church social room.
MIDDL EPORT - MidThe custom of open church will be observed.
The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William 0 . dleport Cub Scouts Pack 245
Northup, Gallipolis. Smith is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Duane will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday
at the Middleport American
Smith, New London .
Legion Hall .

Final plans made

Simon.
Den
m oth ers
a nd
assistants, accompanying the
scouts were Kay Cameron ,

G(&lt;;lchen Ca rty , Becky
Paaquale and Donna Shaw.
Darlene Brown , Dee Dillon,
and Martha MacKenzie also
1dsited the m useum with the
t: ·:;:::·:·:·:·: ·:·:·: :;.;.;:;:;:; :;:; .;.;. ; ::· : ·:·~·:·:·:·:·:· :·:·:·:gf,

{·
Youth group \~
~·
//!

has gathering ;.,

CHES!'IIRE - Th e Old
Kyger Youth Group met
Tuesday at 7 with Jan
Drummond leadin g the
Lord's
Prayer.
The
secretary's report was by
Cindy Price and treasurer 's
r~port was by Sharon Hively.
Old and new business was
discusSed . Bible games were
played. The meeting closed
with "Praise thee the Lord."
Twenty members were
present.
The next ·meeting will be
Tuesday, March 23, at 7 at the
church. All youth inv ited. Reporu,~, Charlene Hively.

Universal Dance Experience

was formed in 1971 at the
urging of jazz great Miles
Davis who has made all of his
published and Wlpublished
music available to Mr.
Faison . A
na tive
of
Washington, D. C., Faison's
first professional assignment
was as

~ance

partner to

~-

••:r---=::;.--:;;;'1

DAUGHTER BORN
SYRACUSE - Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Nease of
Alamogordo, New Mexico,

ENGAGED - Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth D. Grover of
Long Bottom and Mr. and Mrs. Leon B. Jeffers of Patriot
are announcing the engagement and approachmg
marriage of their daughter , Joy Loraine Grover and son
Steven Brent' Jeffers. Miss Grover , 'a 1974 graduate of
Eastern High School, is· employed at Grover's Studio,
Gallipolis. Her fiance is a 1972 graduate of Southwestern
High School. He attended Ohio University and Rio Gr.ande
· College and is employed at Convenient Food Mart,
Gallipolis. The open church wedding and reception wlll be
an event of April 17 at 6:30 p.m . at the Zion Church of
Christ, Harrisonville Road .

George CWJdiff, Nitro, W.Va.
and paternal· grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Bill Nease
of
Racine .
Greatgrandmothers

are

Mrs.

are annoWJcing the birth of
ll!eir first child , a six poWJd, Eve lyn Moore and Mrs .
nine' oWJce !laughter, Cassie Neitie Moore of Syracuse.
Leigh, March 10. Maternal Mrs. Blanch Gibbs of Racine
the
great-greatgrandpar ents are Irene is
grandmother.
Cun diff , Syracuse, and

REPAIR
DAMAGED VINYL

:r:·sq:·· · :;~:· ·d;;;~;·· ·':

the federal style tavern, built
in 1819. "Our House " was

featured March I on the
"High Road to Adventure "
television show .
Also open to those attendi ng the mee~ng will he
" Riverby," the FederalGreek Revival former home

of Dr . Charles Holzer,
founder of the Holzer Clinic.
The house has. been converu,d
into a community art center .
Both houses are on First

Ave. by the Ohio River, and
within easy walking distance
of the courthouse. The publlc
is invited to attend lhe
meeting.

Easter
April 18

..

~

Russell Stover
Easter Candy

·:. held Friday ·:
GALLIPOLIS
The
French City Swingers Square
Dance Club held a dan ce
Friday ni ght a! Clay
Element ar y School wiih
caller Bill Evans.
Four couples attended from
The Reddy Squares of
Hurri cane , W. Va. A gun
donated by J im Baldwin's
Gun Shop was .awarded toT.
J. Pasquale.
The refreshment committee consisted of John and
Becky Pasquale, Tom and
Marybelle Pasquale , Mev
and Winford Ward, Jenny and
Wally Henry. Cake for · the
'cake walk was provided by Jo
Ann and Dave McQuaid.
The club is planning a
workshop SWJday, March 28
at the K of P Hall .

and

Hallmark .
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Nuptial vows repeated
tn Virginia ceremony
•

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. James E. Jeffers of
Eureka
Star
Route,
Gallipolis, are annolUlcing
the marriage of their
r-,;:.~:.-r,&lt;:-1'::::$;::::::::~::m~:::;:::~:::::;•;&lt;:,:

Coming I
Events f~

i%

daughter , VIckie L. , to
Charles H. Waugh, son of Mr.
and Mrs . Merrlll Waugh of
Rt. 2, Crown City.
The double ring ceremony
took place at 3 p.m . March 5
in the Tazwell Baptist Church
at Tazwell, Va , Performing
the ceremony was the Rev,

Windell R. Patterson.
Mrs . Waugh is a 1973
graduate of Gallia Academy
High School presentiy em~
i ployed at Clay Elementary
School.
SUNDAY
Mr . Waugh, a 1970 graduate
DEBBfE AND The Winters , of Hannan Trace High School,
Family of !.£sage, W.Va. will is employed at the G &amp; J Auto
sing at King's Chapel Church Parts Store in Gallipolis.
SWlday evening, 7. Pastor
Ernest Baker invites the
public.
EVANGELIST
CHARLES
wsher will be at the Vinton
Baptist Church for Sunday
setviees a! 10•30 a.m. and '
7:30p.m . Everyone welcome .

I!!

vices.

Everyone

MONDAY
BLUE DEVIL Booster s
l:asketball banquet, 6:30 p,
EUGENE RUTZ
m. GAHS gym . Po tluck.
Boosters will furnish bread,
butter, coffee a nd milk .
Parents and fans bring
rovered dish .
GALLIPOLIS TEMPLE 76
Pythlan Sisters, All officers
and degree staff practice
GALLIPOLIS - The 76th
Monday , 1 p.m.
annual Junior Classical
TUESDAY
Leag ue Convention on the
RIVE RSIDE St udy Club Ohio State Ca mpus was held
Tuesday, I p.m. at the home Friday and Saturday. Gallla
of Mrs. Howard Leimann .
Academy had an active part
planning for the convention.
WEDNESDAY
E1111ene Rutz, son of Mr.
GALLIPOLIS TEMPLE 76 and Mrs. Jur i Rutz and a
Pythia Sisters lnltlallon and jWJior at GAHS is the second
inspection by district deputy vice president of the state
grand chief Robie Good, orga nization . His primary
District II , 7:30 p.m. Wed- duty was to coordinate the
nesday at the K of P hall. All registration of the 48 schools
members urged to attend .
which participau,ct. He also
met with fellow state officers
each month in Colwnbus to
help formulate plans for the

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'•

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DEGREE RECEIVED
GALLIPOLIS - Joyce
Burner, daughter of Dr. and
Mrs . Ralph B, Burner,
Gallipolis, was among
Saturday's graduates of
Bowling
Green
State
Univerally, Bowling Green,
Ohio. She received a bachelor
&lt;i arts degree in psychology.
She has been accepu,ct In the
psyc hology
graduate
progra m
at
Marshall
University..

The Tri-County's Most
Exciting Night Spot ·

HYMN SING SLATED
POMEROY- A hymn sing
w!U be held Sunday March
28, at 2 p.m. at the Mt. Hermon
B. Church, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, (Texas Communlty) . Everyone welcome
·lo attend.

THE MEIGS 'INN
Phone 992-3629
Pomeroy, Ohio

u:

379-2 189- 379-2445 -- 992·5552

'

'

The theme for the 1976
Conventioo Is "Latin - the
Splrlt of '76." The officers
planned
motel
accommodations, contest
regulations , speakers and the
agenda for the Friday
evening and Saturday
sessions.
The GAHS chapter of JCL
assisted Rutz with final
preparation for lhe convention which was to prepare
a packet of information for
each club regardltqj various
state activities. Local club
"'fmbers assisted him as he
registered and aeau,ct each
school
at
Mershon
Audltoriwn for the Saturday
session . Forty-nine students
wlll represent GAHS in
competition for awards . in
derivatltve, Roman history,
mytholof!Y, Roman c011twne,
posters and arts, and crafts
contests.

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MEN'S BRUSHED
DENIM LEISURE
SET

RIDE MOWER

COSMETIC DEPT.

TRIEDSTONE BAPTIST
Church will celebrate its 24th
anniversary at 2 p.m. Sun day . Rev. Vance Watson will
be the guest speaker .
REVJV AL will start at the
Mercerville Baptist Church
SWJday, 7:30. The pastor,
Rev. Jack Templelori, will
bring the message. Special
sin ging throughout the · ser- ·

convention.

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LADIES
PANT
SUITS

joy Grover, Steven jeffers

Tamie , aunt, uncle a nd
cousin of the bridegroom.

Court House; Dr . and Mrs. J .
The new Mrs . Canaday
Scott Wilkinson, Caroline , attended !he University of
Elizabeth and Scott of Ox- Kentucky in Lexing ton where
ford ; ·Mr. and Mrs. Thomas she majored in Physical
· E. Agee, Mr. and Mrs . Peter Therapy and was a member
Hoy , Ms. Joan Layne and Mr. of the Junior Wom. en· ~
Justin Miller, cousin of the Honorary Society,
bride, all of Colwnbus; Dr .
The couple is at home at tho
and Mrs. Craig Rooney of .Ja c kso n Townhouse s
Chillicothe; Mr. and Mrs. apartment 2.1 ,

~ as flower girl, was dressed in Choreographer, will present three years.
:;::, a pink full , long sleeves
... cOtton-satin gown over which his
''George
Faison · The program opens wi th
,,;.
Unive rsal
Dan ce
Ex- "Gazelle, " a prologue· to a
:~ she wore a white organdv petience," Thursday, March larger
work
en titl ed,
.-.
pinafore embroidered with "'
~..
""a t 8 p .m.a 1 the Ke1'th -Alb ee "Slaves."
The
work
- • Theater.
describes th e tr a ~m atic
~.:
Appearing on llle MoWJt intrusion iniD Africa of the
:;;;
Series of !he Marshall Artists slave trade.
Series, the acclaimed New . "Sui(, Otis" is a spirited
••
York-based all black m9dern warm tribute. to Otis Redding
".
dance company of 12 will and is danced to ·his record~·
three
work s , ings.
I
.
. perform
"Gazelle," "Suite Otis" and
"Poppy" te lls of the plant

:;;_:

David Waugh of Springfield ;
Mr. and Mrs. D. Thomas
Normand of Oak Ridge,
Tennessee; Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph H. Puryear of Fairfield Glade, Tenn .; Mr. and
Mrs. Marshall E. Ho9d of
HWJiington; Mr. and Mrs . E.
R. Galeman and Jill of
Parkersburg; and Mr. and
Mrs . Harry Friedmann anil

committee . Jewell Russell,
Eva Gardner, Velva Casey
committees were formed at and Debbie Groves will serve
the recent meeting of the with Mrs. Russell as chairLadies ' Aid of the Addison man . Rene . Broyles was
appoinU,tl chairwoman of the
Free Will Baptist Church.
President Effie Martin Visitation Committee with
opened the meeting with a Betty McCoy , Myrtle CWJsilent prayer for the ill and ningham, Mickey Smith and
absent members. Alter the Mary Barcus , assistants.
opening song. "Some Day",
Door prizes were won by
the secretary's report by Rene Broyles, Mary Barcus,
Mary Barcus and the Dawn Martin and Effie
treasurer's report by Jewell Martin . The group sa ng
Russell were read and ac- "Happy Birthday'' to Pebbles
cepu,ct, Twenty-two members Clark. At the conclusion of
answered roll calL Thirty ll!e meeting, refreshments
visits were made and 10 cards were served to the members
were sent to the ill members. and their guests by Effie
Four sympathy cards were Martin an d Freida CottrilL
also mailed. A rummage sale
Debbie Groves , Verna
is scheduled for April 2 and 3 Neal, Mary Barcus and
providing a building can be Mickey Smith will serve
obtained.
.
refreshments at the April
A te lephone co,nmiltee meeting with Jewell Russell,
consisting of Lou Grubb, Eva Gardner, Ollie Oliver
c hairwoman , Shirley an d Shirley Dovenbarger
Dovenbarger, Verna Neal , furnishing door prizes .
Mary Barcus, Ollie Oliver Pebbles Clark, Loretta Clark,
and Emma J ohn son was Angie Abshire and Dawn
appointed by the president as Martin will present the

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�7- TheSundlly Timea-Sentlnel,Sunday,March 21,1971
6- The SWJday Times- Sentinel,SWJday, March 21, 1976

Ladies Aid jQrms
three committees

~.. Canaday-Mi!ler

·...~-... solemnize
'

,

--

vows

By RENE BROYLES
GALLIPOLIS - Three new

~

·~
~

GALLIPOLIS - Saint
Peter's Episcopal Chur ch
~. was the scene of Miss Tish
~,: Miller's wedding to Jeff
•• Canaday,son of Mr. and Mrs.
: ·~ Jack Canaday, 250 State
·- Street, on Feb. 14, at 4:30

..

pink and lavender hear ts and

fl owers . She carried a basket
of pink rose pel&lt;lls. Master
Tony
Canaday,
!he
bridegroom 's nephew, was
ringbearer . Groomsmen
were Bob Baxter, best man
and ushers were Charles

p.m .

•.u

2

Nuptial musi c preceding

Bodimer, and the couple 's

,... : , the ceremony was presented

brother, Jim Miller and Mike
and Gene Canaday.

:;;.· by Miss Vicki Clayton, of
~ Nashville, Tenn. She sang
~ ; "Time In a Bottle ," "Sunrise,

Sunset, "

~~

The couple exchanged vows

before the candlelit altar on
whic h were vases of pink
gladioli and white mum s. The
Rev . Albert H. Mackenzie
c:tflciated at the ceremony
and nuptial mass whi ch
followed :
The mother of the bride
wore a gown of sheer wool
with full butterfly silk sleeves
of id entical print, a

··sometimes ,''

;::.;_ "We've Only Just Begun,''
~~

·

11

The Lord's Prayer ,' 1 ''One

" ' Hand , One Heart" and "The
:.:. Wedding Song ." The organ
~

presentation included "Love

,, . Theme from the Gqdfather,"
~ "! Won 'I Last a Day Without
,-::. You,""LoveStory ," " Romeo
;:;- and t Juliet ,"

and

·the

:; traditional wedding marches.
•h
The bride, daughU,r of Mr .
;:; and Mrs. Loren F . Miller, 620

reproduction

Field .' ' She wore a corsage of

ivory rosebuds and pearls.
The bridegroom's mother
wore a gown of. pink knit and
her corsage was of cream
colored rosebuds and pearls. ·
Following the ceremony , a
reception was held at the
home .of the bride. HosU,sses

':- ll!e altar by her father and

wore a French silk organza,

:-;_
::.:·
::

full A line gown fashioned
with a highrise waistline. The
fitu,ct b9dice had a high
neckline accented with
~ Venetian lace and seed pearls
,. which extended dowri the
;;:: front~ its bishop sleeves and

and guest registrars were
Mrs. Lynne Fisher and Miss

:=

around the hemline of the
~:. controlled A Hne skirt. Her

Teresa Bane. The reception
hall, living and dining rooms
were
decorated
with
magnolia boughs and white
candles in silver and crystal
holders and the sta irway was
draped with garlands of
boxwo9d and white wicker
wedding bells .
A champagne buffet was
served and the banquet table
was set with a white cut
madeira cloth, silver candelabra and a ce nU,rpiece of
white and deep pink mum s,
bal)y's breath and sweethear t
roses in a silver and crystal
compote.
·
A floor length , white.
organdy cloth, over linen,

;:: chapel length illusion veil
- flowed from a Camelot
: ~- headpiece or ma tc hing
~ Venetian lace which

also

:::; edged the full veil. Her
2:. bouquet was a cascade of
.. . . stephanotis, pink rosebuds,
':.. baby 's breath, Ba ker ferns
~ :, cente-red with a catleya
~

orchid. She wore a diamond
~~ pendant, which was the
·~ bridegroom's wedding gift,
:-; and diainond earrings which
::· were her fa ther's wedding
::_ gift to her mother .
::: Maria Hanson and Susan
"~ Mills were the bride's honor
-· ~ attendants. Her sisters, Anne
,",: and Micaela Miller and Cindy
-::_~ Jones were bridesmaids. All
~~ wor e identical gowns of
:;: whisper pink silk crepe which
. '·"'' reatured empire waistlines
~ with deep V necks fram ed in
~ white sa~n. trimmed in lace

:; and long sleeves gently
:; ·ruffled at the wrists. They
· ..... wore matching picture hats
:::: and carried baskets of white
~- mums, baby 's breath and

~ sweetheart roses .
~= Miss Anne Adkiris, serving

Monet ' s

painting, "Poppies of the

: :~ Fourth Ave., was escorted to
;--~.

of

Mr, and Mrs. Jeff Canaday
covered the separate table
for the four tiered wedding
cake, and white cut madeira
the serving 1&lt;1 ble for the
crystal punch service, mints
and nuts.
For her going away
cos tume , th e new Mr s .
Canaday wore a three piece

ensemble of wool which was
sweater knit of myriad pastel
s tripes with which she wore a

delicate pink silk blouse and
ll!e catU,ya orchid from her
bridal bouquet.
Out of town guests. at the
wedding were the: bride's

aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs.
James Venz of Washington

Desk

Award

as

Bes t

uarantee
for

-: : :. a l'fetl• me
;;

"Poppy."

=

General seating tickets for
the performance will be on
sale at the theater box office
the day of the performance
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and
again an hour before curtain.
Tickets are $5.50 each.
Marshall University students
may obtain free tickets upon
presentation
of valid student
.
activity cards.
In additon to his awards for

"': :
;::·
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'" ·
,.._.
~-

~

...
''

MANDARI N

,_

:;.:• Only Art Ca rved wedding
t; ·
~;
rings are gua ranteed.

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For a lifetime. One more
reason why more brides
and grooms se lect Art Carved for thei r wedd ing
rings . For a liftetlme..

::.;

~
,_

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·~

~

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.....

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·

" The Wiz,'' Faison was

choreographer for the smash
musical hit, "Don't Bother
Me I Can't Cope" and appeared on Broadway in
" Pur lie." He has also staged
the acts of Stevie wonder,
Roberta Flack, Eartha Kilt
and Dionne Warwicke.

c_Art Carved
TAWNEY
JEWELERS
' ' House of Diamonds
and Fine Gifts"
422 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio
1.,__ _....:;__ _ _ __

-.J

Canaday gradua ted from
Galli a Academy Hi gh School
in 1971, and attended Ohio
State University. He is employed by· B&amp;W Construction
Company .
·
·

'Universal Dance Experience'
coming.to Marshall series
HUNTINGTON, W. Va . George Faison. winner of the
1975 Tony Award and Drama

The

George

Faison

was

a

ways and

means

program.

Lauren :Bacall on television.
He then joined the Alvin Ailey
American Dance Theatre and

Davis, $ister Stone, Bela

wa s its principal dancer for

Michaels , Gyorgy Ligeti ,
Melba Moore , Black Sabbath
and Brute F'orce. This work
was recently featured · on

Bartok,
Dio nn e

Is sac

Hayes,

Warwi eke ,

Lee

publi c television on t~e
1
' Soul"
program which

SCOPS meeting,set
EXHIBIT for the month of MARCH: Island Art, Bahamian
GALLI POLIS
A
Student Art CollecU,d by Miss Mary Phillips, Riverby .
discussion of how buildings
GALLERY HOURS : Saturda ys and SWJdays, 1-5 p.m.; a nd districts are chosen for
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10-3 p.m., River by.
national
r eg i s ter
March 21, Sunday, 2-4 p.m . - Parent-child workshop nominations . and how
enti tled "Mind Bending Workshop." Six students of Mrs. Joan nominations are written, will
Loeffler who are seniors at Rio Grande College majoring in be part of the mee.ting or
education will conduct · the workshop.
·
"SCOPS," the South Central
March 23, Tuesday, 8 p.m. - F.A .C. Trustees Meeting, Ohio. Preservation Society,
Riverby.
·
· Inc., Sunday, March 28, at 2
March 25, Thursday , 9-11 a .m. - Christmas Conunittee, p.m. in the courtroom of the
River by.
Gallia County Courthouse in
March 28, Sunday, 2-5 p.m. - Membership Reception Gallipolis. The res toration of
honoring all members, Riverby.
!he second empire s tyle
Exhibit for llle month of April : All i!A!ms for the Art Gallia. County Co urthous e
Auctioo, Riverby.
was recently featured in the
April I, Thursday - All contributions to the art auction Sunday ed it io n of the
must be delivered to Riverby .
Columbus Dispatch .
April 24, Saturday, 8 p.m. - Art Auction and Sangria
After the business mee ting ,
Party, Joy Prendergast, chairman, Hiverby .
"Our House " State Memorial
May ~. Saturday, 9 p.m.-1 a.m. - Bicentennial Ball, · will be specially opened out of
Gallia CoWJ ty Junior FairgroWJds. The orchestra : The United sea son
for
viSitation.
SoWJd . Advance tickets, $17.76 couple. At the door, $20. Bob Lafaye tte wa s e-n tertained at
·
and Jane Daniel, co-chairpersons.

Scouts tour museum
GALLIPOLIS ~ Whil e
)"orkirg on their Heritage
Badges, members of Cub
Scout Den 2 and Den 3, Pack
204, visited Campus Martius
Museum in Marietta. The cub
scout s, after touring the

ce ntered on- a discussion of
the drug problem.
Other dancers in the museum , viewed the mov ie,
company are Gary DeLoatch, "The Gunsmith of Williamsballet master , Christi na bUrg," and participated .in a
Kimball, Vikkie Baliimore , demonstration of the firing of
Ruth Ashton, Charlotte a flintl ock muzzle loading
Neveu, Edith Williams, Paul · rifle . Each activity was part
from which heroin, morphine Hoskins , Roumel Reaux,
of · Cam p~s
Marti us
and opiwn are derived. It is Lewis Whitlock and Leon Mu seum's Bicente nni a l
danced to the music of Miles Jackson.
Weekend Program series.
Cub Scouts who took part in
the field !rip were Allen
Green, Bryan Pasquale , Huss
Shaw, and Billy Swain of Den
3..Den 2 members were David
Brown , Marc Cameron,
GALLIPOLIS - Final plans have been compleled for the Kevin Carter , Kevin Carty,
Saturday, March 27 wedding of Debbie Northup and Kurt Mark Dillon, Robby Fanning,
Eric Jones , Paul MacKenzie,
,Smith,
The ceremony will begin at 3:30 in the afternoon at Grace Billy Marrah , Chris Nelson,
United Methodist Church with the Rev. Tim Heaton officiating. Gene O'Rourke and paul
A half hour of nuptial music ~resented by organist Mrs.
Merlyn Ross and soloist Gale Douphitt will precede the
PACK TO MEET
ceremony. A reception will follow in the church social room.
MIDDL EPORT - MidThe custom of open church will be observed.
The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William 0 . dleport Cub Scouts Pack 245
Northup, Gallipolis. Smith is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Duane will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday
at the Middleport American
Smith, New London .
Legion Hall .

Final plans made

Simon.
Den
m oth ers
a nd
assistants, accompanying the
scouts were Kay Cameron ,

G(&lt;;lchen Ca rty , Becky
Paaquale and Donna Shaw.
Darlene Brown , Dee Dillon,
and Martha MacKenzie also
1dsited the m useum with the
t: ·:;:::·:·:·:·: ·:·:·: :;.;.;:;:;:; :;:; .;.;. ; ::· : ·:·~·:·:·:·:·:· :·:·:·:gf,

{·
Youth group \~
~·
//!

has gathering ;.,

CHES!'IIRE - Th e Old
Kyger Youth Group met
Tuesday at 7 with Jan
Drummond leadin g the
Lord's
Prayer.
The
secretary's report was by
Cindy Price and treasurer 's
r~port was by Sharon Hively.
Old and new business was
discusSed . Bible games were
played. The meeting closed
with "Praise thee the Lord."
Twenty members were
present.
The next ·meeting will be
Tuesday, March 23, at 7 at the
church. All youth inv ited. Reporu,~, Charlene Hively.

Universal Dance Experience

was formed in 1971 at the
urging of jazz great Miles
Davis who has made all of his
published and Wlpublished
music available to Mr.
Faison . A
na tive
of
Washington, D. C., Faison's
first professional assignment
was as

~ance

partner to

~-

••:r---=::;.--:;;;'1

DAUGHTER BORN
SYRACUSE - Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Nease of
Alamogordo, New Mexico,

ENGAGED - Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth D. Grover of
Long Bottom and Mr. and Mrs. Leon B. Jeffers of Patriot
are announcing the engagement and approachmg
marriage of their daughter , Joy Loraine Grover and son
Steven Brent' Jeffers. Miss Grover , 'a 1974 graduate of
Eastern High School, is· employed at Grover's Studio,
Gallipolis. Her fiance is a 1972 graduate of Southwestern
High School. He attended Ohio University and Rio Gr.ande
· College and is employed at Convenient Food Mart,
Gallipolis. The open church wedding and reception wlll be
an event of April 17 at 6:30 p.m . at the Zion Church of
Christ, Harrisonville Road .

George CWJdiff, Nitro, W.Va.
and paternal· grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Bill Nease
of
Racine .
Greatgrandmothers

are

Mrs.

are annoWJcing the birth of
ll!eir first child , a six poWJd, Eve lyn Moore and Mrs .
nine' oWJce !laughter, Cassie Neitie Moore of Syracuse.
Leigh, March 10. Maternal Mrs. Blanch Gibbs of Racine
the
great-greatgrandpar ents are Irene is
grandmother.
Cun diff , Syracuse, and

REPAIR
DAMAGED VINYL

:r:·sq:·· · :;~:· ·d;;;~;·· ·':

the federal style tavern, built
in 1819. "Our House " was

featured March I on the
"High Road to Adventure "
television show .
Also open to those attendi ng the mee~ng will he
" Riverby," the FederalGreek Revival former home

of Dr . Charles Holzer,
founder of the Holzer Clinic.
The house has. been converu,d
into a community art center .
Both houses are on First

Ave. by the Ohio River, and
within easy walking distance
of the courthouse. The publlc
is invited to attend lhe
meeting.

Easter
April 18

..

~

Russell Stover
Easter Candy

·:. held Friday ·:
GALLIPOLIS
The
French City Swingers Square
Dance Club held a dan ce
Friday ni ght a! Clay
Element ar y School wiih
caller Bill Evans.
Four couples attended from
The Reddy Squares of
Hurri cane , W. Va. A gun
donated by J im Baldwin's
Gun Shop was .awarded toT.
J. Pasquale.
The refreshment committee consisted of John and
Becky Pasquale, Tom and
Marybelle Pasquale , Mev
and Winford Ward, Jenny and
Wally Henry. Cake for · the
'cake walk was provided by Jo
Ann and Dave McQuaid.
The club is planning a
workshop SWJday, March 28
at the K of P Hall .

and

Hallmark .
EASTER

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Nuptial vows repeated
tn Virginia ceremony
•

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. James E. Jeffers of
Eureka
Star
Route,
Gallipolis, are annolUlcing
the marriage of their
r-,;:.~:.-r,&lt;:-1'::::$;::::::::~::m~:::;:::~:::::;•;&lt;:,:

Coming I
Events f~

i%

daughter , VIckie L. , to
Charles H. Waugh, son of Mr.
and Mrs . Merrlll Waugh of
Rt. 2, Crown City.
The double ring ceremony
took place at 3 p.m . March 5
in the Tazwell Baptist Church
at Tazwell, Va , Performing
the ceremony was the Rev,

Windell R. Patterson.
Mrs . Waugh is a 1973
graduate of Gallia Academy
High School presentiy em~
i ployed at Clay Elementary
School.
SUNDAY
Mr . Waugh, a 1970 graduate
DEBBfE AND The Winters , of Hannan Trace High School,
Family of !.£sage, W.Va. will is employed at the G &amp; J Auto
sing at King's Chapel Church Parts Store in Gallipolis.
SWlday evening, 7. Pastor
Ernest Baker invites the
public.
EVANGELIST
CHARLES
wsher will be at the Vinton
Baptist Church for Sunday
setviees a! 10•30 a.m. and '
7:30p.m . Everyone welcome .

I!!

vices.

Everyone

MONDAY
BLUE DEVIL Booster s
l:asketball banquet, 6:30 p,
EUGENE RUTZ
m. GAHS gym . Po tluck.
Boosters will furnish bread,
butter, coffee a nd milk .
Parents and fans bring
rovered dish .
GALLIPOLIS TEMPLE 76
Pythlan Sisters, All officers
and degree staff practice
GALLIPOLIS - The 76th
Monday , 1 p.m.
annual Junior Classical
TUESDAY
Leag ue Convention on the
RIVE RSIDE St udy Club Ohio State Ca mpus was held
Tuesday, I p.m. at the home Friday and Saturday. Gallla
of Mrs. Howard Leimann .
Academy had an active part
planning for the convention.
WEDNESDAY
E1111ene Rutz, son of Mr.
GALLIPOLIS TEMPLE 76 and Mrs. Jur i Rutz and a
Pythia Sisters lnltlallon and jWJior at GAHS is the second
inspection by district deputy vice president of the state
grand chief Robie Good, orga nization . His primary
District II , 7:30 p.m. Wed- duty was to coordinate the
nesday at the K of P hall. All registration of the 48 schools
members urged to attend .
which participau,ct. He also
met with fellow state officers
each month in Colwnbus to
help formulate plans for the

Visit Our Salad Bar ·
Chicken Chow Meln
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Hot Rolls
'•

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DEGREE RECEIVED
GALLIPOLIS - Joyce
Burner, daughter of Dr. and
Mrs . Ralph B, Burner,
Gallipolis, was among
Saturday's graduates of
Bowling
Green
State
Univerally, Bowling Green,
Ohio. She received a bachelor
&lt;i arts degree in psychology.
She has been accepu,ct In the
psyc hology
graduate
progra m
at
Marshall
University..

The Tri-County's Most
Exciting Night Spot ·

HYMN SING SLATED
POMEROY- A hymn sing
w!U be held Sunday March
28, at 2 p.m. at the Mt. Hermon
B. Church, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, (Texas Communlty) . Everyone welcome
·lo attend.

THE MEIGS 'INN
Phone 992-3629
Pomeroy, Ohio

u:

379-2 189- 379-2445 -- 992·5552

'

'

The theme for the 1976
Conventioo Is "Latin - the
Splrlt of '76." The officers
planned
motel
accommodations, contest
regulations , speakers and the
agenda for the Friday
evening and Saturday
sessions.
The GAHS chapter of JCL
assisted Rutz with final
preparation for lhe convention which was to prepare
a packet of information for
each club regardltqj various
state activities. Local club
"'fmbers assisted him as he
registered and aeau,ct each
school
at
Mershon
Audltoriwn for the Saturday
session . Forty-nine students
wlll represent GAHS in
competition for awards . in
derivatltve, Roman history,
mytholof!Y, Roman c011twne,
posters and arts, and crafts
contests.

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MEN'S BRUSHED
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SET

RIDE MOWER

COSMETIC DEPT.

TRIEDSTONE BAPTIST
Church will celebrate its 24th
anniversary at 2 p.m. Sun day . Rev. Vance Watson will
be the guest speaker .
REVJV AL will start at the
Mercerville Baptist Church
SWJday, 7:30. The pastor,
Rev. Jack Templelori, will
bring the message. Special
sin ging throughout the · ser- ·

convention.

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LADIES
PANT
SUITS

joy Grover, Steven jeffers

Tamie , aunt, uncle a nd
cousin of the bridegroom.

Court House; Dr . and Mrs. J .
The new Mrs . Canaday
Scott Wilkinson, Caroline , attended !he University of
Elizabeth and Scott of Ox- Kentucky in Lexing ton where
ford ; ·Mr. and Mrs. Thomas she majored in Physical
· E. Agee, Mr. and Mrs . Peter Therapy and was a member
Hoy , Ms. Joan Layne and Mr. of the Junior Wom. en· ~
Justin Miller, cousin of the Honorary Society,
bride, all of Colwnbus; Dr .
The couple is at home at tho
and Mrs. Craig Rooney of .Ja c kso n Townhouse s
Chillicothe; Mr. and Mrs. apartment 2.1 ,

~ as flower girl, was dressed in Choreographer, will present three years.
:;::, a pink full , long sleeves
... cOtton-satin gown over which his
''George
Faison · The program opens wi th
,,;.
Unive rsal
Dan ce
Ex- "Gazelle, " a prologue· to a
:~ she wore a white organdv petience," Thursday, March larger
work
en titl ed,
.-.
pinafore embroidered with "'
~..
""a t 8 p .m.a 1 the Ke1'th -Alb ee "Slaves."
The
work
- • Theater.
describes th e tr a ~m atic
~.:
Appearing on llle MoWJt intrusion iniD Africa of the
:;;;
Series of !he Marshall Artists slave trade.
Series, the acclaimed New . "Sui(, Otis" is a spirited
••
York-based all black m9dern warm tribute. to Otis Redding
".
dance company of 12 will and is danced to ·his record~·
three
work s , ings.
I
.
. perform
"Gazelle," "Suite Otis" and
"Poppy" te lls of the plant

:;;_:

David Waugh of Springfield ;
Mr. and Mrs. D. Thomas
Normand of Oak Ridge,
Tennessee; Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph H. Puryear of Fairfield Glade, Tenn .; Mr. and
Mrs. Marshall E. Ho9d of
HWJiington; Mr. and Mrs . E.
R. Galeman and Jill of
Parkersburg; and Mr. and
Mrs . Harry Friedmann anil

committee . Jewell Russell,
Eva Gardner, Velva Casey
committees were formed at and Debbie Groves will serve
the recent meeting of the with Mrs. Russell as chairLadies ' Aid of the Addison man . Rene . Broyles was
appoinU,tl chairwoman of the
Free Will Baptist Church.
President Effie Martin Visitation Committee with
opened the meeting with a Betty McCoy , Myrtle CWJsilent prayer for the ill and ningham, Mickey Smith and
absent members. Alter the Mary Barcus , assistants.
opening song. "Some Day",
Door prizes were won by
the secretary's report by Rene Broyles, Mary Barcus,
Mary Barcus and the Dawn Martin and Effie
treasurer's report by Jewell Martin . The group sa ng
Russell were read and ac- "Happy Birthday'' to Pebbles
cepu,ct, Twenty-two members Clark. At the conclusion of
answered roll calL Thirty ll!e meeting, refreshments
visits were made and 10 cards were served to the members
were sent to the ill members. and their guests by Effie
Four sympathy cards were Martin an d Freida CottrilL
also mailed. A rummage sale
Debbie Groves , Verna
is scheduled for April 2 and 3 Neal, Mary Barcus and
providing a building can be Mickey Smith will serve
obtained.
.
refreshments at the April
A te lephone co,nmiltee meeting with Jewell Russell,
consisting of Lou Grubb, Eva Gardner, Ollie Oliver
c hairwoman , Shirley an d Shirley Dovenbarger
Dovenbarger, Verna Neal , furnishing door prizes .
Mary Barcus, Ollie Oliver Pebbles Clark, Loretta Clark,
and Emma J ohn son was Angie Abshire and Dawn
appointed by the president as Martin will present the

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9- Tbe SuncJilyTimes - Sentinel, Sunday, March 21 , 1976

8 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Mar~h 21, 1976

Thursday Club has final meet
GAUJPOUS - The last
meeting of the year or the
Thursday Club was March II
at the home of Mrs. Neal
Prendergast, with Mrs .
William Jenkins presenting a
program on the book Abigail
Adams by Janet Whitney which included excerpts from
selected letters of the Adams
family .
The review was the story of
the Americ~n Revolution as it
seemed to a woman. Abigail's
husband, John Adams, was
the greatest orator
perhaps the greatest intellect
of the First American
Congress, Mrs. Jenkins said.
Abigail Adams is the only
woman so far, to be both wife
and mother of a president.
Hundreds of her letters

were carefully preserved and
bear witness to her close
observations of current
. events, and her independent
judgment.
Her closing salutation to
public life was written in a
letter to her son, Thomas. "I
feel not only resentment
against those who are coming
into power, and only wish the
future administration of the
government may be as
protective Of the peace,
prosperity and happiness of
the nation as the two former
ones . have been. 1 leave to
ttme the unfolding of a
drama. 1leave to posterity to
renee! upon the times past
and 1 leave them characters
to con tempts.''

Side.effects of drugs dangerous

Homemakers'
Circle

The members enjoyed
dessert alter the program at
a table decorated with small
nags and red , white and blue
colors. The dessert following
the patriotic theme included
red wine, coffee and tea,
petit-fours frosted in white
with red, · while and blue
roses, and blueberry, vanilla
and red raspberry ice cream
balls served from a large
crystal compote .
The club closed this year of
bicentennial programs with
the announcement that a
designated amount has been
added again to the Addie
Vanden fund which Is used to
purchase children's books for
the library. The club wiU

.· ;·:· :·:·:·:.; ·:·:·:·:·:~::: ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: · :::·::::: :: :::: ·: ::::::::::::::::·:·:·:·:·~:::·:·:·:· : ·:·:· :·:·:·:·:·: ·:·:·::;.; -: ·:·:·:·:· :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· :· :· :·:·:::·:·:·:·:·: ·:·:·:;: ·:·:·: · :·: ·:·:::·:·:·:·:::;: ·:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:; : ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:: : ::;:;:;: ;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:; : ;:;: ;:;:;:;:;: ; : ;:;:;:;:;:;;::

By JAMES J . DOYLE
IRVINE, Calif. l UP I)
Every drug used in the
treatment of disease has tbe
· possibility of hannful side
effects and a
noted
ophthamologist says the eyes
are vulnerable to some drugs
used elsewhere in the body.
Dr. Irving Leopold, chief of

featurllq!
Annie Anybody
BY BETI'IE CLARK

science today

EJ:Ioulaa A.«•t,
Rome EeOIIIIIIIkl

COMMUNICATING
GALUPOUS - Words are Important cues to feelings, so
listen for feelings behind words. The tone of voice, facial
expression, the context in which the remark Is made, the
words used - all are clues to the feelings message.
Understanding feelings can help us couununicate with
each other. We must allow the other person to have feelings ;
reswne ,meeting again ln the
we won't get anywhere trying to deny another's feelings. And
RECEIVES HONOR - Kathy Brown of Centenary was named Single Parent of the
fall of 1976.
we must not deny the other person's perception of the
Year by Rolling Hills Chapwr 838 of Parents Without Partners recently. Mrs. Brown is a
situation.
divorced motherolfive. Pictured here are (first row, 1-r) her children, Kim, Karen 1second
For example, a child says, "I want a drink of water ." The
row) Keith, Mrs. Brown, and Kenneth.
parent says,' "You just had an ice cream cone. You don't need
a drink." Or a crying child says, "My linger hurta." The
parent replies, "Don't be silly. That's just a little scratch."
In these examples , several things happen to block
communication. The parent denies both the child's feelings thirst or hurt - and the child's need for water or comfort. The ·
child also "hears" tile parent say - ."You 're an unlmjlOttant
little kid ."
To improve communica Uons and strengthen a child's self•
image, give a reply that acknowledges the child's feelings and
perception of the situation. You might say, "You're thirsty
after the ice cream cone. We'Uget a drink at home." Or, "your
finger may hurt a little . We'll put some medicine on it."
This kind of response lsn 't just pennission for the other
)
person to do or say what he wants. Rather , it sets a stage
where feelings can be dealt with or changed. Feelings are
by Sarah Carsey
usually transitory; when acknowledged and understoOd ,
feelings
can be altered or even done away with, especially
I
446-2342
••
negative
feelings.
, ·, ~
I
Something else happens, too. The individual discovers that
the other person is not annoyed or shocked by what is said. He
GALLIPOLIS - "Because she loves and she cares," is the
discovers that the other person is not evaluating him.
CELEBRATING their 20th anniversary Tuesday, March 16, was Mr. and Mrs. Clyne
reason Kathy Brown of Centenary was named Single Patent of
Try not to evaluate another's words or feelings . Use
Brumfield. Helping them celebrate were their children, Cindy and Tom Brumfield, Mr. and
the Year by the Rolling Hills Chapter 838 of Parents Without
descriptive words in your reply . Describe what you see and
Mrs . Eugene (Connie ) Burd. They received a call from their daughter, Mrs. Leonard
Partners, acCordin g to her son, Keith.
SANTA WAUGH
feel ; don't evaluate a person's character or ability. When
(Tauuny) Mollohan. Others present were Mrs. Margaret Johnson, Rennie· Nolan, Mr. and
Kathy , a divorced mother of five, received the honor
someone spills a glass of water, do you mutter " Oh you clumsy
Mrs. Robert Johnson and Laurie, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Adkins and Keith, Burnie Watson,
following a search by the loca l PWP chapter for the single
dope !"? Your words and tone of voice reveal how you feel.
and Brenda Kemper.
parent in the Gallia-Meigs and Mason area who is making the
More important, your reaction is an eva luation which lessens
most success out of his or her life. President of the
the other's self-respect. If you reply, "Oops. Here's a sponge organization, Vivian Vinton , sayS the cqmmittee which
let me , help you," you acknowledge the other's
7
reviewed the nominations chose Kathy because she has ~l
embarrassment, share the problem, a oo offer belp.
teV1Jhouselui of kids, yet they are a happy and close knit family .
To improve communications, don 't blame and don:t
J According to Mrs. Vinton, Kathy has come through her divqrce
evaluate. Focus on solutions; give a helping hand. Go deeper
still smiling and not withdrawn.
than just words - we must sometimes block out our own
GALLIPOLIS - Nancy continuing education and
A small discussion was
thoughts to listen to another's feelings .
MERCERVILLE
Santa
Raming of the Corporation of public health education:
encouraged by the speaker as
"IT'S AN HONOR," says Kathy, "but I think all smgle Rosa Waugh was elected
Health Education in Athens She spo~e about the special weU as the members of the parents deserve this honor. I'd share it with them all." Kathy
March FHA Girl of the Month
was tbe speaker when the election to be held March 30 council.
says it's hard at first to adjust to the single life after years of by the Hannan Trace High
Gallia County Hwnan Ser- on the Southeastern Ohio
Next, Trische Danesi spoke being married, especially if you have children , but according School FHA.
vices Agencies gathered at Emergency Medical Service. bneny about Supplementary to her, ''everyone survives. ' '
Santa, .J7, is lhe daughter of
the Holiday Inn recently for a If the levy is passed, the Security Income benefits. She
butter, suced banana in
Erma
Waugh and the late Birthday Party, 1:30 p.m.
noon luncheon and meeting. taxpayers would not be sta ted that the SSI was to give
"CHILDREN, FRIENDS and God are the · biggest
strawberry
gelatin, milk ,
Friday,
March
26
SUnday
The Corporation of Health assessed until January . J, hope to people with limited strength ," she says, and it is important to just live each day Charles Lee Waugh, Sr. She is
Wednesday
- Baked pork
SChool
Lesson,
I
p.m.;
Art
a ninth grader at Hannan
Education, Miss Raming 1977, she announced. With income
and
limited and not worry about the future .
steak,
au
gratin
potatoes ,
Class,
1-3;
Adult
Education,
Trace, enrolled in the comsaid, serves seven counties this money plus the com- resources. She explained that
wedge
with
dressing
,
lettuce
1-4;
Social
Hour,
7
p.rri.
and works with allied health, missioners' general fund , as SSI is based on the cost of
FOR THREE YEARS, she has worked as a clerk-typist at mercial course . She has
Seniors'
Co-op
ls
open
peanut
butter
bread,
butter,
SEOEMS will have enough living, whenever the cost the Columbia Gas Co., " but I'm a mother first. " Her children ear ned her FHA junior 12:30 to I :30 p.m.
cookies, milk .
money to operate since the rises, the benefit payments are Chris, 19; Keith, 16 ; Kim, 16 ; Karen, 15, and Kenneth, 13. degree. Her hobbies are
The
.
Senior
Nutrition
Thursday - Sahsbury
federal money has already increase six months later. All her c hildren live at home except Chris who is married. record collecting, painting Program serves meals 12 steak with tomato gravy,
phased out. People will still She welcomed questions Kathy works part-til!le so she is home when the younge r and house cleaning. She is noon to I p.m.
buttered diced potatoes·,
need, however, to pay for regarding this relatively new children return from school. The main qualities she has tried interested in pursuing art
·buttered
The
menu
lor
this
week
is
peas, bread, butter ,
services until January I, 1977. program handled through the to tl,ach her children are shar ing, honesty, respect and to look following graduation .
as follows :
peach cobbler, milk.
at things in a happy way.
Should the levy be defeated, Social Security office ,
Monday ,- Meatloaf w&lt;th
Friday - Macaroni and
the people from Gallia
The next council meeting
gravy, mashed potato, cheese with ham chunks,
SEWING AND DANCING are what sbe en joys most. She is
County should not expect any will be in April with the Arefi
Waldorf salad, bread, butter, stewed toms toes, tossed
services from SEoEMS.
Agency on the Aging as host a membe r of the St. Louis Catbolic. Church , Catholic Women's
prune cake, milk.
salad, bread , butter, spice
CAPTURED WITH
Club, the Three Star Club of Columbia Gas Co. and PWP which
Tuesady - Sliced turkey, cake, milk .
she joined in October, 1975. She is director of the organization's
PHOTOGRAPHS BY
ca ndied sweet potato,
Choice of beverage setved
newsletter.
GROV!:RS
buttered green beans, roll , with each meal.
COMPLETE WITH
GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
AREA SINGLE PARENTS are urged to join the PWP. The
ALBUM. STARTING
Citizens
Center , located at 220
GALLIPOLIS - Salem J. WoOd ; "Prayer tor a only requiremen t is that the person be single, either divorced,
~T ...
Jackson
Pike in the old
Missionary Society met for Speaker, " Sylvia Gillam ; widowed or unmarried. "It's for people who are sin gle and
...,... 330 Second .....
County
Home
Building, is
its re gular mee ting with "Two Types of People," Alice ne ed othe rs who are in the same situation," Kathy states.
Shirley Hudson and Alice Salisbury ; " Worry , 11 BarACTIVITIES include discussion groups , monthly meetings open Monday through Friday
Salisbury as hostesses. They bara Nicholas; " Advi ce," with guest speakers, dances, roller-skating and swimming. from 9 a:m. to 3 p.m. Tbe
sugRestsMany of their activities are for the whole family because, schedul e of activities fo r this
spent the morning quilting Anna Davis .
and enjoyed a potluck dinner.
The missionary society will Kathy says, "Kids are a part of this too." For more week is as follows :
Monday, March 22 - Adult
The afternoon program serve lunch at the Jahu information write Box 312, Rio Grande, Ohio 45674.
Education,
1-2; Band and
was opened by the president, Jackson Fann Sale. Get-weU
Chorus
Practice,
1-3.
Bonnie Parkins who read cards were sent to Golder
Tuesday,
March
23 Proverbs Hi:1-6 and had the Dailey, Banner Harris and
9
a.m.-3
p.m.;
Adult
Visiting,
opening prayer . Shirle y Lena ·Wood. In addition to
Education,
10
:30.2
:30;
Blood
Hudson read the secretary's those named, Ruth Wood and
Pressure Check, 1-2.
report and the treasurer's Kevin Nicholas attended.
PROFESSIONAL
Size 4/5 - 14/15
Wednesday, March 24 report was by Bernice Wood.
Card Games, 1-3; Adult
Readings includ ed
PHOTOGRAPHY
Education, 1-3.
£'CC.
"Thoughts," Sally Gill;
Thursday,
March
25
Spring Valley Plara
"March," Janet Pitchford ; MONDAY
lc•lpcJis. Ottio.-._ ...................
Gallipolis, Ohio
Adult Education, 1-2: 30;
4
' GOd is not far off," Bernice
Phone 446-7494
OCSEA will hold its regular
Wood: "Musters of Land." monthly meeting Monday, 7
Open Tues.- Sat. 10-S
Bonnie Parkins; 11 Takin g p.m. at the Grande Squares
'TillS On Thurs.
Things as They Come," Helen building.

ophthalmology at University
of California College of
Medic_ine,
said
drugs
administered for a variety of
disorders often may have an
effect on eye tissue or other
organs.
"There
are
some
dangerous drugs that, when
used pro~ly, can restore
function (n certain cases
better than any other
medication," he said.
Among them are steroids
used to treat arthritis and

Sarah's

various other innauunations.
llqt Leopold said they also
may produce cataracts or an
accumula1on of fluid in the
optic nerve.
Certain tranquilizers can
affect pigmentation of the
retina , and medicines used to
control high blood pressure
may also Interfere with
vision.
Drugs lor the eyes such as
eye drops or ointments also
may affect some, or all, body
systems, he said.
He ooted, for example, that
drugs used in the treatment
of glaucoma ca n be absorbed
into the system through the
tear ducts · and affect
enzymes in the blood.
· Muscle relaxants given to
surgery patients can act with
medications for the disease
itself and inhibit breathing,
he said. Other drugs can
cause cardiac arrhythmia or
affect blood pressure, he

said.
"Patients have to realize
that every drug they use every single one - has the·
possibility of side effects," be
said. "There is no drug that is
perfectly safe."
" If aspirin were discovered
today, we would probably not
be allowed to prescribe it,"
Leopold said.
''Aspirin has a lot of .side
affects," he said. "It can
aggravate peptic ulcers and
could ·cause bleeding. One of
the ways in which aspirin
works is to inhibit an enzyme
which has to do with the .
formation of platelets. So
blood clotting is affected. "
He said the need lor
adequate therapy for disease
makes it iinperative that new
drugs, despite the hazards,
continue to be introduced.
"Even patent drugs and
over
the
coun ter
nonprescriptive drugs,
~!though
diluted
con-

Property valued by Mason court

:IIi

siderab!y, may ca use drug
reactions or interactions," he
said.
Most patients who are
hospitalized in the United
States, he said, receive an
average of eight or nine drugs
" Those
simultaneously.
drugs may have a direct or
indirect effect on each
other;~. Leopold said.
Other forms of medical
treatment also can endanger
the eyes. Leopold said the use ·
of heavy amounts of ionizing
radiation, especialy in the
head area, may bring on
cataracts four or five years
later.
A thought for the day:
Threetime presidential
nominee William Jennings
Bryan, born on this day in
1860, once said, " The
humblest of all the land, when
clad in the armor of a
righteous cause, is stronger
than all the hosts of error."

..,

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGED: Mrs. Betty
Martin, Gladys Huffman,
Bruce Bonecutter, Allison
Lei g ht y,
Richard
Cheese brew , all Point
Pleasant ; Cordell Harris,
Letart;
Arthur
Reed,
Southside; Mrs . Gerald
Campbell, Gallipolis; Mrs.
TRUSTEES TO MEET
Clifford Jeffers, Southside;
SALEM CENTER - The
Mrs . Char les Gray, New Salem Township Trustees
Haven ; Joh n Johnson, will meet the last Friday of
Mason; Belva Roush, Clifton; each month at 7:30 p.m. at
Thurman Stone, Roberts- the Salem Center School
burg; Mrs . Imogene Moore, ~a Smith, clerk, reported.
Henderson and Joseph All meetings are open to the
VanSickle, Gallipolis.
public.

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.SYUIANIA

---

BOARD RECESSES
The Eastern Local School
Board met Thursday night to
discuss the district's budget
but recessed until 10 p.m.
March 29 . Normally meeting
on the second Tuesday of
each month, the board,
because of shift-work difficulties , set the meeting
dates for the next three
months to be: April 15, May
13, and June 10.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . - - • J... .. .

· The Fabric Shop

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CALL ANSWERED
POMEROY
The
· Pomeroy Emergency Squad
answered " call to Spring
Ave ., at 12 :00 p.m. Friday lor
Bernice Darst who was taken
to Veterans Memorial
Hospitpl.

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13

SYLVANIA GT-MATIC 1" II

I

I

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
MIDDLEPORT - The
Middleport Emergency
Squad was called 1o Route I,
Middleport, at 5:22 p.m .
Friday for Willie Colllna who
had possibly suffered a heart
attack. He waa taken to
. Veterans Memorial Hospital .

Cabin et o f Walnut grdin finish o n high- impac t p last ic.

t

LEAGUE TO MEET
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
Girls' Softball League, junior
and senior divisions, is
meeting ioday 1116 p.m. at the
Royal Crown Bottling Co.,
garage, North Second Ave.,
Middleport. Coaches of all
league teams and any new
teams are asked to attend.

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copdi tron f;. GT - 10 1r ~o~ chassis is 100% so lid -s ta t8 fo r
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SYLVANIA PORTABLE CO LOR TV

•

AN OIL PAINTING by tweHth grader Anthony Dean
of R. M. B.alley High School in the Bahamas is included in
the Riverby exhibit this month . The French Art Colony is
featuring art works of school children in the Bahamas
brought to Gallipolis by Mary Phillips. (Photo by Lanna
Waugh )

For Color

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,-;::'

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Sankl Waugh ·

OF

overturned the original Thompson stated in his assessed new real value.
a!&gt;Sessment.
In other court action , Judge
judgment that it "was inGeraldine Bosworth of correctly appraised and Thompsorr awarded Sl ,600
Henderson whose property assessed. "
suit in favor of State
and home are reported
He then fixed its taxable Automobile Mutual In valued at $2 million, sued the value at $129,350 which surance Co. against James
Mason County Commission represents :;o per cent of Its Robert Garrett.
consisting of Clarence
Adkins, William Rardin and
Michael· Whalen and coon ty
...,... 330 Secancl .......
Clerk L. W. Getty.
·
property
was
Tlie
originally assessed for tax
purpose by the Mason Coon ty
Tax Assessor at $191,850. In
says
reversing
this , Judge

POINT PLEASANT - A
suit to have the assessed tax
value of real estate changed
was won Friday \ bY the
plaintiff in the Mason County
Circuit Court when J udge
James Lee Thompson

ALLISON'S

Gallia Diary

Nancy Raming speaks on SEOEMS

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Ga

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�'

9- Tbe SuncJilyTimes - Sentinel, Sunday, March 21 , 1976

8 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Mar~h 21, 1976

Thursday Club has final meet
GAUJPOUS - The last
meeting of the year or the
Thursday Club was March II
at the home of Mrs. Neal
Prendergast, with Mrs .
William Jenkins presenting a
program on the book Abigail
Adams by Janet Whitney which included excerpts from
selected letters of the Adams
family .
The review was the story of
the Americ~n Revolution as it
seemed to a woman. Abigail's
husband, John Adams, was
the greatest orator
perhaps the greatest intellect
of the First American
Congress, Mrs. Jenkins said.
Abigail Adams is the only
woman so far, to be both wife
and mother of a president.
Hundreds of her letters

were carefully preserved and
bear witness to her close
observations of current
. events, and her independent
judgment.
Her closing salutation to
public life was written in a
letter to her son, Thomas. "I
feel not only resentment
against those who are coming
into power, and only wish the
future administration of the
government may be as
protective Of the peace,
prosperity and happiness of
the nation as the two former
ones . have been. 1 leave to
ttme the unfolding of a
drama. 1leave to posterity to
renee! upon the times past
and 1 leave them characters
to con tempts.''

Side.effects of drugs dangerous

Homemakers'
Circle

The members enjoyed
dessert alter the program at
a table decorated with small
nags and red , white and blue
colors. The dessert following
the patriotic theme included
red wine, coffee and tea,
petit-fours frosted in white
with red, · while and blue
roses, and blueberry, vanilla
and red raspberry ice cream
balls served from a large
crystal compote .
The club closed this year of
bicentennial programs with
the announcement that a
designated amount has been
added again to the Addie
Vanden fund which Is used to
purchase children's books for
the library. The club wiU

.· ;·:· :·:·:·:.; ·:·:·:·:·:~::: ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: · :::·::::: :: :::: ·: ::::::::::::::::·:·:·:·:·~:::·:·:·:· : ·:·:· :·:·:·:·:·: ·:·:·::;.; -: ·:·:·:·:· :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· :· :· :·:·:::·:·:·:·:·: ·:·:·:;: ·:·:·: · :·: ·:·:::·:·:·:·:::;: ·:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:; : ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:: : ::;:;:;: ;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:; : ;:;: ;:;:;:;:;: ; : ;:;:;:;:;:;;::

By JAMES J . DOYLE
IRVINE, Calif. l UP I)
Every drug used in the
treatment of disease has tbe
· possibility of hannful side
effects and a
noted
ophthamologist says the eyes
are vulnerable to some drugs
used elsewhere in the body.
Dr. Irving Leopold, chief of

featurllq!
Annie Anybody
BY BETI'IE CLARK

science today

EJ:Ioulaa A.«•t,
Rome EeOIIIIIIIkl

COMMUNICATING
GALUPOUS - Words are Important cues to feelings, so
listen for feelings behind words. The tone of voice, facial
expression, the context in which the remark Is made, the
words used - all are clues to the feelings message.
Understanding feelings can help us couununicate with
each other. We must allow the other person to have feelings ;
reswne ,meeting again ln the
we won't get anywhere trying to deny another's feelings. And
RECEIVES HONOR - Kathy Brown of Centenary was named Single Parent of the
fall of 1976.
we must not deny the other person's perception of the
Year by Rolling Hills Chapwr 838 of Parents Without Partners recently. Mrs. Brown is a
situation.
divorced motherolfive. Pictured here are (first row, 1-r) her children, Kim, Karen 1second
For example, a child says, "I want a drink of water ." The
row) Keith, Mrs. Brown, and Kenneth.
parent says,' "You just had an ice cream cone. You don't need
a drink." Or a crying child says, "My linger hurta." The
parent replies, "Don't be silly. That's just a little scratch."
In these examples , several things happen to block
communication. The parent denies both the child's feelings thirst or hurt - and the child's need for water or comfort. The ·
child also "hears" tile parent say - ."You 're an unlmjlOttant
little kid ."
To improve communica Uons and strengthen a child's self•
image, give a reply that acknowledges the child's feelings and
perception of the situation. You might say, "You're thirsty
after the ice cream cone. We'Uget a drink at home." Or, "your
finger may hurt a little . We'll put some medicine on it."
This kind of response lsn 't just pennission for the other
)
person to do or say what he wants. Rather , it sets a stage
where feelings can be dealt with or changed. Feelings are
by Sarah Carsey
usually transitory; when acknowledged and understoOd ,
feelings
can be altered or even done away with, especially
I
446-2342
••
negative
feelings.
, ·, ~
I
Something else happens, too. The individual discovers that
the other person is not annoyed or shocked by what is said. He
GALLIPOLIS - "Because she loves and she cares," is the
discovers that the other person is not evaluating him.
CELEBRATING their 20th anniversary Tuesday, March 16, was Mr. and Mrs. Clyne
reason Kathy Brown of Centenary was named Single Patent of
Try not to evaluate another's words or feelings . Use
Brumfield. Helping them celebrate were their children, Cindy and Tom Brumfield, Mr. and
the Year by the Rolling Hills Chapter 838 of Parents Without
descriptive words in your reply . Describe what you see and
Mrs . Eugene (Connie ) Burd. They received a call from their daughter, Mrs. Leonard
Partners, acCordin g to her son, Keith.
SANTA WAUGH
feel ; don't evaluate a person's character or ability. When
(Tauuny) Mollohan. Others present were Mrs. Margaret Johnson, Rennie· Nolan, Mr. and
Kathy , a divorced mother of five, received the honor
someone spills a glass of water, do you mutter " Oh you clumsy
Mrs. Robert Johnson and Laurie, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Adkins and Keith, Burnie Watson,
following a search by the loca l PWP chapter for the single
dope !"? Your words and tone of voice reveal how you feel.
and Brenda Kemper.
parent in the Gallia-Meigs and Mason area who is making the
More important, your reaction is an eva luation which lessens
most success out of his or her life. President of the
the other's self-respect. If you reply, "Oops. Here's a sponge organization, Vivian Vinton , sayS the cqmmittee which
let me , help you," you acknowledge the other's
7
reviewed the nominations chose Kathy because she has ~l
embarrassment, share the problem, a oo offer belp.
teV1Jhouselui of kids, yet they are a happy and close knit family .
To improve communications, don 't blame and don:t
J According to Mrs. Vinton, Kathy has come through her divqrce
evaluate. Focus on solutions; give a helping hand. Go deeper
still smiling and not withdrawn.
than just words - we must sometimes block out our own
GALLIPOLIS - Nancy continuing education and
A small discussion was
thoughts to listen to another's feelings .
MERCERVILLE
Santa
Raming of the Corporation of public health education:
encouraged by the speaker as
"IT'S AN HONOR," says Kathy, "but I think all smgle Rosa Waugh was elected
Health Education in Athens She spo~e about the special weU as the members of the parents deserve this honor. I'd share it with them all." Kathy
March FHA Girl of the Month
was tbe speaker when the election to be held March 30 council.
says it's hard at first to adjust to the single life after years of by the Hannan Trace High
Gallia County Hwnan Ser- on the Southeastern Ohio
Next, Trische Danesi spoke being married, especially if you have children , but according School FHA.
vices Agencies gathered at Emergency Medical Service. bneny about Supplementary to her, ''everyone survives. ' '
Santa, .J7, is lhe daughter of
the Holiday Inn recently for a If the levy is passed, the Security Income benefits. She
butter, suced banana in
Erma
Waugh and the late Birthday Party, 1:30 p.m.
noon luncheon and meeting. taxpayers would not be sta ted that the SSI was to give
"CHILDREN, FRIENDS and God are the · biggest
strawberry
gelatin, milk ,
Friday,
March
26
SUnday
The Corporation of Health assessed until January . J, hope to people with limited strength ," she says, and it is important to just live each day Charles Lee Waugh, Sr. She is
Wednesday
- Baked pork
SChool
Lesson,
I
p.m.;
Art
a ninth grader at Hannan
Education, Miss Raming 1977, she announced. With income
and
limited and not worry about the future .
steak,
au
gratin
potatoes ,
Class,
1-3;
Adult
Education,
Trace, enrolled in the comsaid, serves seven counties this money plus the com- resources. She explained that
wedge
with
dressing
,
lettuce
1-4;
Social
Hour,
7
p.rri.
and works with allied health, missioners' general fund , as SSI is based on the cost of
FOR THREE YEARS, she has worked as a clerk-typist at mercial course . She has
Seniors'
Co-op
ls
open
peanut
butter
bread,
butter,
SEOEMS will have enough living, whenever the cost the Columbia Gas Co., " but I'm a mother first. " Her children ear ned her FHA junior 12:30 to I :30 p.m.
cookies, milk .
money to operate since the rises, the benefit payments are Chris, 19; Keith, 16 ; Kim, 16 ; Karen, 15, and Kenneth, 13. degree. Her hobbies are
The
.
Senior
Nutrition
Thursday - Sahsbury
federal money has already increase six months later. All her c hildren live at home except Chris who is married. record collecting, painting Program serves meals 12 steak with tomato gravy,
phased out. People will still She welcomed questions Kathy works part-til!le so she is home when the younge r and house cleaning. She is noon to I p.m.
buttered diced potatoes·,
need, however, to pay for regarding this relatively new children return from school. The main qualities she has tried interested in pursuing art
·buttered
The
menu
lor
this
week
is
peas, bread, butter ,
services until January I, 1977. program handled through the to tl,ach her children are shar ing, honesty, respect and to look following graduation .
as follows :
peach cobbler, milk.
at things in a happy way.
Should the levy be defeated, Social Security office ,
Monday ,- Meatloaf w&lt;th
Friday - Macaroni and
the people from Gallia
The next council meeting
gravy, mashed potato, cheese with ham chunks,
SEWING AND DANCING are what sbe en joys most. She is
County should not expect any will be in April with the Arefi
Waldorf salad, bread, butter, stewed toms toes, tossed
services from SEoEMS.
Agency on the Aging as host a membe r of the St. Louis Catbolic. Church , Catholic Women's
prune cake, milk.
salad, bread , butter, spice
CAPTURED WITH
Club, the Three Star Club of Columbia Gas Co. and PWP which
Tuesady - Sliced turkey, cake, milk .
she joined in October, 1975. She is director of the organization's
PHOTOGRAPHS BY
ca ndied sweet potato,
Choice of beverage setved
newsletter.
GROV!:RS
buttered green beans, roll , with each meal.
COMPLETE WITH
GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
AREA SINGLE PARENTS are urged to join the PWP. The
ALBUM. STARTING
Citizens
Center , located at 220
GALLIPOLIS - Salem J. WoOd ; "Prayer tor a only requiremen t is that the person be single, either divorced,
~T ...
Jackson
Pike in the old
Missionary Society met for Speaker, " Sylvia Gillam ; widowed or unmarried. "It's for people who are sin gle and
...,... 330 Second .....
County
Home
Building, is
its re gular mee ting with "Two Types of People," Alice ne ed othe rs who are in the same situation," Kathy states.
Shirley Hudson and Alice Salisbury ; " Worry , 11 BarACTIVITIES include discussion groups , monthly meetings open Monday through Friday
Salisbury as hostesses. They bara Nicholas; " Advi ce," with guest speakers, dances, roller-skating and swimming. from 9 a:m. to 3 p.m. Tbe
sugRestsMany of their activities are for the whole family because, schedul e of activities fo r this
spent the morning quilting Anna Davis .
and enjoyed a potluck dinner.
The missionary society will Kathy says, "Kids are a part of this too." For more week is as follows :
Monday, March 22 - Adult
The afternoon program serve lunch at the Jahu information write Box 312, Rio Grande, Ohio 45674.
Education,
1-2; Band and
was opened by the president, Jackson Fann Sale. Get-weU
Chorus
Practice,
1-3.
Bonnie Parkins who read cards were sent to Golder
Tuesday,
March
23 Proverbs Hi:1-6 and had the Dailey, Banner Harris and
9
a.m.-3
p.m.;
Adult
Visiting,
opening prayer . Shirle y Lena ·Wood. In addition to
Education,
10
:30.2
:30;
Blood
Hudson read the secretary's those named, Ruth Wood and
Pressure Check, 1-2.
report and the treasurer's Kevin Nicholas attended.
PROFESSIONAL
Size 4/5 - 14/15
Wednesday, March 24 report was by Bernice Wood.
Card Games, 1-3; Adult
Readings includ ed
PHOTOGRAPHY
Education, 1-3.
£'CC.
"Thoughts," Sally Gill;
Thursday,
March
25
Spring Valley Plara
"March," Janet Pitchford ; MONDAY
lc•lpcJis. Ottio.-._ ...................
Gallipolis, Ohio
Adult Education, 1-2: 30;
4
' GOd is not far off," Bernice
Phone 446-7494
OCSEA will hold its regular
Wood: "Musters of Land." monthly meeting Monday, 7
Open Tues.- Sat. 10-S
Bonnie Parkins; 11 Takin g p.m. at the Grande Squares
'TillS On Thurs.
Things as They Come," Helen building.

ophthalmology at University
of California College of
Medic_ine,
said
drugs
administered for a variety of
disorders often may have an
effect on eye tissue or other
organs.
"There
are
some
dangerous drugs that, when
used pro~ly, can restore
function (n certain cases
better than any other
medication," he said.
Among them are steroids
used to treat arthritis and

Sarah's

various other innauunations.
llqt Leopold said they also
may produce cataracts or an
accumula1on of fluid in the
optic nerve.
Certain tranquilizers can
affect pigmentation of the
retina , and medicines used to
control high blood pressure
may also Interfere with
vision.
Drugs lor the eyes such as
eye drops or ointments also
may affect some, or all, body
systems, he said.
He ooted, for example, that
drugs used in the treatment
of glaucoma ca n be absorbed
into the system through the
tear ducts · and affect
enzymes in the blood.
· Muscle relaxants given to
surgery patients can act with
medications for the disease
itself and inhibit breathing,
he said. Other drugs can
cause cardiac arrhythmia or
affect blood pressure, he

said.
"Patients have to realize
that every drug they use every single one - has the·
possibility of side effects," be
said. "There is no drug that is
perfectly safe."
" If aspirin were discovered
today, we would probably not
be allowed to prescribe it,"
Leopold said.
''Aspirin has a lot of .side
affects," he said. "It can
aggravate peptic ulcers and
could ·cause bleeding. One of
the ways in which aspirin
works is to inhibit an enzyme
which has to do with the .
formation of platelets. So
blood clotting is affected. "
He said the need lor
adequate therapy for disease
makes it iinperative that new
drugs, despite the hazards,
continue to be introduced.
"Even patent drugs and
over
the
coun ter
nonprescriptive drugs,
~!though
diluted
con-

Property valued by Mason court

:IIi

siderab!y, may ca use drug
reactions or interactions," he
said.
Most patients who are
hospitalized in the United
States, he said, receive an
average of eight or nine drugs
" Those
simultaneously.
drugs may have a direct or
indirect effect on each
other;~. Leopold said.
Other forms of medical
treatment also can endanger
the eyes. Leopold said the use ·
of heavy amounts of ionizing
radiation, especialy in the
head area, may bring on
cataracts four or five years
later.
A thought for the day:
Threetime presidential
nominee William Jennings
Bryan, born on this day in
1860, once said, " The
humblest of all the land, when
clad in the armor of a
righteous cause, is stronger
than all the hosts of error."

..,

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGED: Mrs. Betty
Martin, Gladys Huffman,
Bruce Bonecutter, Allison
Lei g ht y,
Richard
Cheese brew , all Point
Pleasant ; Cordell Harris,
Letart;
Arthur
Reed,
Southside; Mrs . Gerald
Campbell, Gallipolis; Mrs.
TRUSTEES TO MEET
Clifford Jeffers, Southside;
SALEM CENTER - The
Mrs . Char les Gray, New Salem Township Trustees
Haven ; Joh n Johnson, will meet the last Friday of
Mason; Belva Roush, Clifton; each month at 7:30 p.m. at
Thurman Stone, Roberts- the Salem Center School
burg; Mrs . Imogene Moore, ~a Smith, clerk, reported.
Henderson and Joseph All meetings are open to the
VanSickle, Gallipolis.
public.

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.SYUIANIA

---

BOARD RECESSES
The Eastern Local School
Board met Thursday night to
discuss the district's budget
but recessed until 10 p.m.
March 29 . Normally meeting
on the second Tuesday of
each month, the board,
because of shift-work difficulties , set the meeting
dates for the next three
months to be: April 15, May
13, and June 10.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . - - • J... .. .

· The Fabric Shop

·••fAIIIC SPfCIAL ..

•

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·- -----------------------~

I,

CALL ANSWERED
POMEROY
The
· Pomeroy Emergency Squad
answered " call to Spring
Ave ., at 12 :00 p.m. Friday lor
Bernice Darst who was taken
to Veterans Memorial
Hospitpl.

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Con temp orarY styl e cobinet u l W&lt;~ l nut
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EVERY COLOR TV IN
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v1nyl

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1 2 pc. Gold
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pc. Early Am . Wood Reg.
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I 2 pc. Orange &amp;
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Cont. (Velvet)

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I 2

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13

SYLVANIA GT-MATIC 1" II

I

I

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
MIDDLEPORT - The
Middleport Emergency
Squad was called 1o Route I,
Middleport, at 5:22 p.m .
Friday for Willie Colllna who
had possibly suffered a heart
attack. He waa taken to
. Veterans Memorial Hospital .

Cabin et o f Walnut grdin finish o n high- impac t p last ic.

t

LEAGUE TO MEET
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
Girls' Softball League, junior
and senior divisions, is
meeting ioday 1116 p.m. at the
Royal Crown Bottling Co.,
garage, North Second Ave.,
Middleport. Coaches of all
league teams and any new
teams are asked to attend.

nla

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t ube f e a t un~s a blac.k mat r ix and u dar k fa cep late for
add ed contrast and b r ig htness under all room light
copdi tron f;. GT - 10 1r ~o~ chassis is 100% so lid -s ta t8 fo r
high perfo rmance and reliability . Co nveni() nt 70-posil n.m
cli c k-stop UHF tun ing. AFC l o c k ~ 111 fin e tun ing fo r each
chann el, Telescoping dipole· V HF , bow t ie UHF ant ennas.
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COLOR

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I

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·
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$350.00
..,

SYLVANIA PORTABLE CO LOR TV

•

AN OIL PAINTING by tweHth grader Anthony Dean
of R. M. B.alley High School in the Bahamas is included in
the Riverby exhibit this month . The French Art Colony is
featuring art works of school children in the Bahamas
brought to Gallipolis by Mary Phillips. (Photo by Lanna
Waugh )

For Color

Syl
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,-;::'

,-;::'

th

Sankl Waugh ·

OF

overturned the original Thompson stated in his assessed new real value.
a!&gt;Sessment.
In other court action , Judge
judgment that it "was inGeraldine Bosworth of correctly appraised and Thompsorr awarded Sl ,600
Henderson whose property assessed. "
suit in favor of State
and home are reported
He then fixed its taxable Automobile Mutual In valued at $2 million, sued the value at $129,350 which surance Co. against James
Mason County Commission represents :;o per cent of Its Robert Garrett.
consisting of Clarence
Adkins, William Rardin and
Michael· Whalen and coon ty
...,... 330 Secancl .......
Clerk L. W. Getty.
·
property
was
Tlie
originally assessed for tax
purpose by the Mason Coon ty
Tax Assessor at $191,850. In
says
reversing
this , Judge

POINT PLEASANT - A
suit to have the assessed tax
value of real estate changed
was won Friday \ bY the
plaintiff in the Mason County
Circuit Court when J udge
James Lee Thompson

ALLISON'S

Gallia Diary

Nancy Raming speaks on SEOEMS

11·1

I3

pc . Oak Bedroom

Reg .

$

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s;~ile $~::.~5 $ 44SOO

1 3 pc.

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1 4

Suite

Pecan Bedroom

u

pc. Pecan Bedroom Reg.$
$699.95

~eg .

1 3 pc. Maple Bedroom
$
Suite
$799.95

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LAMPS1 PICTURES
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54noo
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You Can Buy Better For L.au .At • • •

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Main st11tt PomlfiiJ, Ohio

211 Third

ALLISON ELECTRIC CO.
I

Ga

'

Phone 446 0987

�10 - The Suhday Times- Sentinel, Sunday. March 21 , 1976

•••
'

:::: · :: :::::::::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;.;;;.;.;:: .:·:·:· :·:·:: :::~ :::~:::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::: :::::::::: :::=:;:::::: :.;:;. ;.:-:· :·:·:·: ::

Ohioans reunite
at Payne home

I

PINELLAS PARK, Fla. Folden, Myrtle Queen all of
Friends and neighbors met at Venice , Fla .; Mr . and Mrs.
the home of Mr. and Mrs . Denver Slagle, Mr . and Mrs .
Donald Payne of Pinellas John Baker, Sarasota, Fla.
Park, Fla. recently for a
Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence
potluck dinner and a day or Dickey , Zephyrhills , Fla . ;
visiting and making new Mr . and Mrs. Clyde Thompacquaintances. Seventy five son, Ada Johnson , Mary B.
attended the gathering Sullivan, all of Largo, Fla .;
started by the Paynes in 1963. Vernon Co lem an . Tarpon
Those present were : Mr . Springs , Fla .; Mr. and Mrs .
and Mrs . Gilbert Meal, Mr . G. V. Sheets, New Port
and Mrs . Merrill Saunders, Richey, Fla ; Ed Judy, St.
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Bane, Petersburg , Fla. ; Rev . and
Mr. and Mrs . Nolan Carter, Mrs . Frank Coleman and
Mr. and Mrs . Merrill White, . children , Rachel, David and
Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Byres, Cary , Mr. and Mrs. Jim De
Charles Baker, Rickey Rosa and children, Doug ,
Baker, all of Gallipolis ; Mr. Jimmy and David , Mr . and
and
Mrs .
J.
Dale Mrs. Ed Cheesebrew and
Milltr, Carrie N. Dale, Marie children,
Tammy
and
H. Richards, all of Rio Donnie, Mr . and Mrs . Bruce
Grande.
De Lille and children, Brucie,
Mr . and Mrs . Worthy Timmy and Jeffy, David
Bright, Langsville; Mr. and Garow, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Mrs . Henry Egelkraut, Payne, all of Pinellas Park,
Fairborn; Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Fla.
Russell, Tirfin , Mr . and Mrs.
Howard Williamson,
Fostoria ; Mr . and Mrs .
FIVE EARN HONORS
Wayne Singleton, Cincinnati;
GALLIPOLIS
Five
Mrs .
Thelma
Barton, students of Meigs Couinty
Waynesville; Myrtle Pat- who have rated the honor roll
terson, Middletown; Charles at Gallipolis Business College
DeLille, Columbus; Sibyl for the Winter Quarter are
Windon ; Dunbar, W. Va .; Mr . Richard Cole, Pomeroy;
and Mrs. Nelson Brucker, St. Norman Deem , Racine:
Albans, W. Va. ; Mr. and Mrs . Wallace Hatfield , Pomeroy;
William Stauton, Tampa, Cecil Rice , Racine , and
Fla.; Mr . and Mrs. Loyal Daniel Spencer, Middleport.

by creating poisonous gases.
A downstairs fire can kill
a child sleeping upstairs.
•• ·.you can protect your

-.

family by detecting a fire
in its earliest stages •• ~
before actual flames and

HOME

visible smoke are on the scene.

F l R E!
SArETY

I

HANDBOOK

a FREE

\.

copy of the

Home Fire Safety Handbook

,)

and a no obligation fire
safety survey, contact:

SECURITY &amp;SAFETY SERVICES
(6141446-9881- 24 HRS .

255 Third Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio 4.5631

'ROSS E. HAMRICK, OWNER

GALLIPOLIS - Colonial
era plants were discussed at
the Fren ch City Garden
Club's March meeting at the
home of Mrs . Lucille Neff.
Mrs.
Patty
Snyder
presided . Mrs.
Gladys
Trainer gave devotions entitled
" Duties of
an
American" and " What is an
American ?" followed by a
prayer.
Roll call was to name a
flowering shrub. Mrs . Patty
Snyder thanked the group for
coming out and Mrs. Neff for
having them in her hOme .
Mrs . Bertin a Smeltzer
reported she and Mrs . Snyder
attended a meeting of the
Spring Valley Homemakers'
Club. Mrs. Snyder demon-

This means your monthly payments can be a lot smaller or that
you can bor(ow more without straining your budget. It might
easily be the difference between the car you've been looking at
·and the car you really want - Stop at the Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Co. for a 48-monttl new car loan.

I 1.20

. Total Finance

Amount

Credit life Total Atnount
or Note
Insurance
SJ ,897 .60
S9l.S4

of Lo•n

u.ooo.oo

Cha r!Jes ·
U04 .06

"

.

Annual pet.

Rate.
11 .83

36 MONTHS
Installment

P•yments
$101.77

•

Amount
of Lo•n
$3,000 .00

Credit Llfe Total Amount Total Finane

Insurance

Ot Note

.

.

[~otat Amount

Installment

Amount

P•vment
l143.1t ·

Credit Life

u.ooo.oo

of Lo•n

Insurance •
$41 .24

Charges

$3,663 .72

165 .95

24 MONTHS

I

Mr s .

Moore

gave

a

RAP :
I'm all for the man who thinks he should run interference
for his girl friend when another fellow asks her to dance. Why
should she have to refuse an unwanted offer when he's right
there to say, "Sorry, this one's taken."
I also think that if a woman is bothered by a "masher," her
man should take over and protect her, even if it'means a fight .
Women who want to " take care of themselves" turn me off.FOR THE BETTER WAY (MALE)
DEAR FOR:
Let's hope you get a mate who agrees with you, or the fight
has only just begun ! - HELEN
FOR :
Who says the offer is "unwanted "? I'm all for letting a
woman make her own decisions. - SUE
FRAUDULENT PAYMENTS
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A list
of 243 state employes
suspected of fraudlently
receiving welfare payments
was sent to 23 colinty welfare
directors Wednesday for
investigation.
State Auditor Thomas
Ferguson said there were 113 ·
suspected empl 0yes in
F~anklin
County, 61 in.
Cuyahoga County, 14 in
Summit County, 10 In Lucas
County, 9 in Hamilton
County, 8 in Montgomery
County and 7 in Stark County.
The other 16 counties had
three or less .
A computer check revealed ,
the 243 appeared to be on the
state payroll for Aid to
Dependent Children benefits,
but failed to report their
employment or earnings to
county welfare departments ,
he said.
Welfare departments will
have to determine the e~tent
of any fraud and county
:,e~i~":;e to take necessary

program on "Bicentennial
Plants and Flowers of
Colonial Days. " She briefly
described the life of settlers
in colonial days, their hardships and trouble with the
Indians which later turned
into friendship . They had
herbs and garden and flower
seeds, she noted . Most seed
and supplies came from
England and the arrival was
usually broadcast. The Indians introduced corn,
squash and beans .
A plant exchange was
conducted· with Mrs. Harley
George, chairwoman. Mrs .
NOW YOU KNOW .
Neff had a bicentennial
Helium
, the secohd lightest
arrangement using red, white
~
lerrient
,
was
first discovered
and blue permanent flowers
in a tall container with in !868 in the atmosphere of
bicentennial colors. The next the Sun.
meeting is April II. A tour of
Mrs . Elaine George's daffodil
garden and an Aprill3 tour to
study natural areas including
plants , wildflowers, soil,
water, birds and animals on
the park front, Tycoon Lake
and Bob Evans Farms was
planned.
Refreshments were served ·
by the hostess .

of Note
IM36.S6

1597 .17

Annual pcf.

Rate
11.96

Total Fln•nce Annuill Pet.
Charges
Rate
sns.n
12.02

Accident &amp; Heallh Insurance elso available at additional cost .

Farmers Bank
Pomeroy, Ohio

,,

•'

Mrs. Frank Bise is a
s urgical patient at the
Camden-Clark
Hospital,
Parkersburg, W. Va .
Tom Dye is visiling in
Akron,
Everett Hale, from a
nursing home in Parkersburg, W. Va., Mrs . Helen
Buckley , and Doyle Hale of
Belleville, W. Va., visited
Sunday with Mr . and Mrs.
John Buchanan and Mr. and
Mrs: R. E. Williams.
Mr . and Mrs . Charles
Foster and family and Mrs.
Sheila Westfall and Tracy of
Belpre, visited with Horace
Kibble and Forrest Kibble
and Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Congrove and Pam, Sunday,
Several from here attended
the 5oth wedding anniversary
for Mr. and Mrs . Sam Wilson
at Hockingport Sunday .
Mr . and Mrs. John Riebel
and famll.y of Pomeroy Rd., ·
and Mr. and Mrs. Roher!
Morton and family of Belpre
Rd ., visited with Mr . and
Mrs . D. C. Riehel. They
celebrated their father's
lirthday, D. C. Riebel.
Mr . and Mrs. James
Carruthers and Penny of
Louisville, and Mrs. Doris
Marks of Chester visited
Saturday evening with Mrs.
Bess Larkins.

GALLIPOLIS Nelle Shaw feels it should be taining a surprising numher will make their material
Shaw, 454 Third Ave ., returned to Gallia County. of locally familiar names.
available to be preserved for
Gallipolis, displayed items She would also like to see the
- A diploma from Gallis future generations .
••
and records of historical society obtain a set of pic- Academy dated 1867 when it
At the business meeting
interest to Gallia County at tures and articles on historic was a pri vale academy_
•
preceding Miss Shaw's
the March meeting of the homes and buildings which
- A diploma from Gatlia presentation, the board of
Gallia County Historical was printed over a period of Academy High School dated directors decided to un·
Society at Saint Peter's years in the Gallipolis Daily 1871.
dertake a prolect of
Episcopal Church.
Tribune when
Dwight
- Xeroxed copies of six c ataloging items in ou'r
Miss · Shaw, a native of Wetherholt i'ias editor . She collections of · Gallipolis House and arrange for
Gallipolis, graduated from urged the society to collect clippings during the 1~ window displays of historical
Gallia Academy High School pain lings of early Gallipolis compiled by Mrs . William interest In the weeks im•
and received her BS degree in artists and portraits of many Lewis and containing much mediately precedinR the
Education with a major in local · people painted by a history In them.
Fourth of July celebration.
Fine Arts from the Ohio State Cincinnati artist named
Following Miss Shaw 's
- A xeroxed copy of the
University. She spent several Shepherd who traveled up Emma Gatewood scrapbook. presentation, refreshments
•
years jn retail merchandising and down the Ohio River
- An undocumented article were served by the program
specializing in photography painting portraits.
staling that the last buffalo committee.
and traveled throughout the
Miss Shaw talked a bout the killed in Ohio was killed In
The April meeting will be
country to various depart. items and records of local Gallia County.
Sunday, April !I, at 2:30p.m.
ment stores. In 1962 she historical interest, many of
Miss Shaw's records are at Saint Peter's Eplacopal
joined the Columbus School which she has offered to the the first to be offered to the Church with Mrs . Mary
System where she taught · society when a suitable histol'ical. society. It is the Lewis speaking · on 11 The
Fine Arts for five years.
permanent place would be hope of the society that other History of 'Rio Grande
She returned to Gallipolis available to display and to historically minded persons College."
in 1967 and was employed as use
them.
With
her
an art therapist at the knowledge of local history
Gallipolis State Institute she was able to elaborate on
where she is currently each item including :
•
teaching. It was during this
-Copies of Howe's History
employment that she took of Ohio.
By K. Knotts
graduate work at Ohio
" The
Wild Rose
Frank Kirby has been in University and received her Wreath," a handwritten
Holzer Hospital for several master's degree in Flne Arts composition of the young
.
days for surgery·. She is in 1969.
ladies of Gallia Academy In
getting along fine.
·
As art therapist at GSI Miss 1850.
Curt Knotts is in the Holzer Shaw keeps · a continuing
- Copies of "The American
Hospital.
exhibit of the art work of the Philatelist" containing a
Mrs . Marietta Burger and residents of GSI at Nlsonger well..,..searched story of the
.
d~
children of Columbus spent Center on the Ohio State establishment of the first
11 r diamon ·
.
. t/€1' tqiJNe 1JV1.f, h1.f1) ?JO
the weekend with her mother, University campus. The government Post Offices in
.oe~ 1 t. nw ·
Mrs. Marie Hively and exhibit is changed every the Northwest Territory with
---=-""--~
children of Tycoon Lake . Mr. quarter.
Gallipolis serving as one of
"
"'
and Mrs. Morris Hively and
Miss Shaw has been in· the five stations.
son, Greg of Columbus spent terested In the history o(
- Annual report of the
SWlday and Mr. and Mrs. Ga!Ua County through the auditor of the city of
Walter Hively and children of years and has collected many Gallipolis for the year ending
Kemper Hollow also spent. items of local historical December 31, 1905.
Sunday with their mother and significance as well as many
- A series of original
•'
brothers and sisters.
interesting family heirlooms. . manuscripts of 0. 0.
Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Bill
She
introduced
her Mcintyre. Also a Mcintyre
Knotts had dinner Sunday program by making several scrapbook of his columns.
Jt. eert ain l )~ dnt.•s. A pmclm.w.' as
with his sister, Ethel Knotts suggestions for
future Possibly a collection of all
iinpmtmil
aS
a
di
a
mr)ird sl Hmld pot IH.' lllihle 011 the
of Gallipolis .
projects for the historical four of his books.
basi:-; of prit·e or "cut-rate'" indm·L•mtmt,
Mr. and Mrs . Wayne Mc- society. She emphasized the
- A haridwri tten journal of
Cully and grandson, Deon importance of returning to · the passage book · from the
lmt nn th e 'firm f'oum1atirm rrf (/fwlity a11d t:alue
Taylor, spent a weekend with Gallia County many of the Steamer Ohio dated 1860.
rt'c:dved. At this ~ tore wt: proudl y display the .
his parents, Mr. and Mrs . Ted original legal documents,
- Pictorial atlas of county
em hlt~ m of lic~hl&lt;~red }e ru le r, A.meticau Gem S(JC;ic tu
McCully and her parents, Mr. once filed in the Gallia commissioners dated 1874.
-- your assr rnur (·c tl1at we know ami
and Mrs. Grant.
County Courthouse, but now
- A N'ew York newspaper
Margeda Bartholomew and stored at Athens . These printed entirely in Welsh in
1-{rrm:anke the_qr;ality.and va l~u~ flf
~
son, Jim, spent the weekend records reflect early local the middle 1800s.
&lt;wory d"•rnond we offer for sa le.
with her mother , Mrs. legal actions many of which
A
history
of
the
,
!ransCOSTUMES SHOWN - Mrs . Orion Netson, Mrs. Gtover Stout, Miss Ruby Diehl , Mrs .
Margaret Edwards, Tycoon occurred prior to 1803 when acllons pertaining to a couple
Lawrence Chapman and Mrs. Virgil Atkins, left to right, in bicentennial costuming at the
MEMBI=R AMEFIII":AN GEM SOCIETY
Lake
.
Gallia County was a part of of riverbank lots from the
recent meeting of the Star Garden Club.
Mr . and Mrs. Dan Justice
Washington County.
time we were ·a part of
are back after a week's
Miss Shaw also feels that Washington County to the
honeymoon . in the Southern
the local Indian heritage was . present.
.
States.
·
an interesting part of histury . - Several mid'cen~ury
Mrs. Graham Crilcketis, and she would like to see· that Ohio River docunients and
4041!COHQ AVENUE · • _..l4M7
Keene,
Va ., spent a few days
flower
preserved. She stated that journals.
HARRISONVILLE - The Church Parish House in provided
recently
with
her
niece,
Mr.
arrangemeq'ts
for
the
recent
A "Who's Who In
there was an Indian mound
bicentennial meeting of the Pomeroy and the demonand Mrs . Bernard Osborne. near the present site of St.
Star Garden Club was held. stration given by Mrs. Helen Grande meeting.
America" dated 1935 con-'-------------------~
Harry Lee Hively, oldeat
The traveling prize donated
Louis Catholic Church, and
., re~ently at the Meigs Walker, Wellston , on clay
·'· Musewn.
by Mrs. Atkins was won by son of Mrs . Marietta Hively
pots .
Dr. Charles Parker owned a
tremendous Indian collection
Material on how to control Mrs . Lawrence Chapman. and husband, has finished
... · For the observance many
·ow in northern Ohio. Miss
-'.· of the members carne in insects was presented by Ribbons for dried or live school and has gone to
·,· c&lt;&gt;stwnlng of an earlier era. Mrs . Atkins . Several tours mass arrangements on Florida for employment.
.,., Mrs. Virgil Atkins gave the were discussed and members display went to _Mrs . Atkins ,
~-· devotions · using scripture
reported on tours they had first, Mrs . Robert Jewell,
• •
·;., from Matt . 25 With the already taken . It was noted second, and Mrs. Norman
JOINS P.H INC.
··· readings, " Touched by the the therapy meeting with the Will, third. For artificial
~;.· Fire" and ,','Twilight in my Athens Mental Health Center arrangements, ribbons went
MIDDLEPORT
Raymond
E.
Hindy
has
:: Garden." Miss Ruby Diehl GOO&lt;j Luck Garden Club will to Mrs. G. A, Radekin , first
WINS DEGREE
and Mrs. Robert _ Holliday,
joined the Parkersburg office
~-: ,reported on the recent open ·be at the home of Mrs . C. E.
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. ·:·~ meeting of the Winding Trail
Stout in April. Mrs. Jewell second. 1'l]ere was also an Arthur Parker of Belpre, of Parker-Hunter Inc., a
.' Garden Club at the Episcopal thanked the members who artistic arrangement on Ohio, will receive a Bachelor regional investment firm
display made by Mrs . Seth of Science Degree in headquartered in Pittsburgh,
Nicholson.
Aueronautical Science and an Pa . Hindy, a graduate of
To carry out the bicen- Associate ln Science 'in Middleport High School,
tennial theme the refresh· Aviation Management in the a !tended Mountain State
ment table was covered with Golden Anniversary Com. · College in Parkersburg and
an antique red and white menrement Exercises at was graduated· from Ohio
: ' GALUPOUS - Emanon
The remainder of the
checkered cloth centered Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in 1975. He has
• Club held Its March social evening was spent playing
with an arrangement of University at 10 a .m. April23. served as an intelligence
• Thursday evening at Mrs. bridge with high score going
jonquils and forsythia .
analyst in the Army while
; .Robert Caldwell.
to Mrs. John ·L. Evans and Gingerbread, coffee and tea Parker is the son of Robert stationed at Ft. Shafter,
Parker, 751 Ruble Ave.,
;
The tables were decorated second to Mrs . Robert
were served.
Hawaii.
Belpre.
• with spring flowers with Richards.
.
.
.
: accents of green in keeping
The next meeting will be a
•* with St. PatriCk's day. Mrs. book
review by Mrs. A. D.
: : Leo Mossman's committee Lusk at the home of Mrs .
• , served a dessert course.
Mossman on April 1.

.
••
..

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smith

Anniversary approaching
DORCAS - Mr . and Mrs.
Paul Smith will celebrate
their 45th wedding anniversary Sunday, March 28
at the Be thany United
Methodist Church with an
open house from 2 to 4 p.m .
Hos ting the celebration will
be their son and daughter-inlaw. Mr. and Mrs . Dan Smith·
and family.
Married March 31, 1931,
Mr. and Mrs. Smith have two
sons, Dan, who resjdes at
Racine , Route 1, and Robert
of Columbus . They have nine
grandchildren,
Robert
Wayne, Stephanie a nd Paula
Smith, Columbus; Don
Smith, .Mrs. Terry (Faith )
Varney, and Tim, Tammy
and Ted Smith, all or Racine,

Route I. Mr. and Mrs . Smith
also have three greatg randchildren, Jerry and
David Smith , and Jenny
Varney, Racine, Route l.
Relatives and friends are
invited to call during the open
house hours. Mr. and Mrs .
Smith request gifts be
omitted.
MEN TO MEET
DORCAS - The Methodist
Men of Meigs County will
meet Tuesday, March 23 at
the Dorcas Church at 7:30
p.m. The guest speaker will
be Levon Sahum, Sugar
Grove , Ohio. Special music
will be presented by Vernon
Weber.

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

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Kerr News

..

OPEN FRI. TIL8

'

HARMONY

Bicentennial costumes worn

Bla ck Patent
Blue Leather

. i.~
..:
::;

the world
go around ...

SHOE$
BETTY OHLINGER

.,.

POMEROY
·:·

,_,.,.,

Love is what makes

Marguerite's

,.

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!-f.manon
social
enjoyed
=.
.
...

PLEASE AnEND
OUR STANDARD

N' BIBLE

Reedsville
News Notes

Now You Can Take Up To 48 Mllnttls To Repay
Your New Car Loan • • •

....

p.m. The Gallipolis Garden
Club will furnish the
program.
A letter was read announcing the
regional
meeting April 24 in Athens
called "Fashions in Flowers"
by Mrs. Vance Hendricks at
First Methodist Church on
College st.
A brochure showing a
schedule from World Wide
Travel Service on Motorcoach Tours was shown:
Miss Marie Meal reported
she had received thank-you
notes for donations sent to
Wahkeena and Victor H. Reis
funds.
Th'e date of the open
meeting was changed to June
1.

Mrs. Elaine George, Miss
Marie Meal, Mrs. Smeltzer
and Mrs. Snyder attended a
. design session led by Carol
Mitchell of Lexington. Ky., at
Roman J. Claprood's Open
House in Columbus.
Mrs . Snyder reported Mrs.
Zirkle had contacted her for
the club to take ' care of
· Horticultural Schedule. Mrs .
Grace Bradbury was appo(nted chairwoman and she .
named Mrs. Jewell Moore
and Mrs. Smeltzer to help
her. The county flower show
will be June 3 and 4.
Mrs. Esta _Reese thanked
the club for a hanging basket
, sent her while in the hospit~l.
./ The French C1ty Club IVlll
:host .the county meetmg of
'garden clubs Avril 22 at 7:30

NEW CAR LOANS?

Palmitnt

+++

NOTE FROM SUE : Your letter reminds me of a description
someone sent us: A mother is a person who hollers, "Go to
your room RIGHT NOW ... Don't you DARE turn your back
on me when I'm talking ~ you!"
P. S. She'll get over it. But it doesn't hurl to' say "I'm
sorry" fir$t.

Program covers
colonial plants

Deal On

rnstaflm•nt

I.

+++

Looking For
The Best

48 MONTHS

I

'Get Out' -But Don'tLeave
RAP :
My mother and I had a terrible argument over my
boyfriend. He 's really a great person, but you can't convince
mothers. Finally she screamed, "Get out and go live with him
them! "
And that's exactly what I did. I'm 21 and he 's 25, so we're
capable of decisions. ( Though I'll acjmit his apartment isn't
the dream nest ideal, and I'm looking for my own .)
But when I went batk for my belongings, Mom wouldn't
give them to me. She said I ''owed" for room and board and
they w~re impounded. (She'd never mentioned rent before.) I
asked how much, and she said she'd forget it if I moved back .
Since she suggested my present arrangement, what's she
doing with this brihe? Must 1 sue to get my clothes, etc. ? DOTTIE
DEAR DOTIIE:
"Get out, but don't leave !11 • • •
Mothers often yell now, think later. Then they compound
their mistakes by silly actions. Why don't you aod your mother
calm down and talk it over? Since you're 21, she can't force you
to come home.
And I'm sure (;he'll release your belongings If you tell her
you're apartment-bunting on your own. - HELEN

BUYING FIRST TiCKET - Greg Gibbs, on the board
of the Wahama High School Alumni Association, is shown
selling Richard Ord of the Mason County Bank the first
ticket to the Mike Lewis Benefit Dance to he held
Saturday, March 27, at Wahama High School. Gary
Billups and the Music Department from Portsmouth will
provide the musicfor lhe9 p.m. to I a.m. dance.

strated "Sandscaping."

Learn how

for

I

I

/

~~~~~~~~:.,~~!.

society hears Nelle Shaw

.....
•

;:.~New

Hope

called his mother, Mrs. Daisy
Ross Sunday saying he and
:r:..::::·
By Ada K.eels
lis wife both had been sick .
:;~ .. Jeff Keels and sisters, Jena
Willie Morris, local, who
Jania, were absent from Ills been ill In a Charleston .
::;;ligh school in Gallipolis for hospital came home recently
•~ oeveral days last week due to
much improved . His many
:.._ flu.
friends are glad he is back
... Mrs. John Gamble is ill home.
:;:,.frlth nu.
Dea~on Rober I Cooper,
:::;; • Mrs. Leila Scott and who was a pasilent for a few
.._-llrother, Bobbie Long, of days at Holzer Medical
..,. &amp;ackfork vilited their aunt
Center was returned home
::Daily RIIBI one day recently. Tuesday. His friends are glad
- . Leonora McDaniel of · he is able to .he back home ,
:llerlln, Ohio, visited her aunt,
~sy Roaa SWlday.
; ; Jell Keels and sisters,
:;!~~a and Janla Keels acMr. ·and Mrs. Marlin Rife
panled the singeu and
spent
a day this week with
::;,-•nd to Portsmouth, Ohio,
.
Mrs
.
Charles Young at ·
'"· Saturday
from
GAHS
llllllical in Gallipolis where Tuppers Pl&amp;ins. The Rife's
• ' they look part in a contest. son-ln-law is a patient in
:;: Mr. and Mrs. Jom Norman Veterans Memorial Hospital.
• · and 110n of near Berlin visited He Injured his back when he
cid lrlendl, Daisy Ross and fell while at his employment.
Mr. and Mrs. Hollier
-. dlulhter, Mrs. Edna Cooper,
Gofdon,
Fairmont, W. Va.,
&amp;lnday afternoon.
Clllled
on
Mr . and Mrs. Alex
: · Mrs. Barbara Brislin of
Sh~ler
on
Sunday. The
;:!; Akron called her parents Mr .
Gordon's
will
be
moving to St.
• and Mn. Gamble Sunday
Clairsville
In
lhe
near future,
;: staling they had three Inches
where
he
has
been tran·
:, fl. anow at Akron. They are
sf
erred.
"' line and hope to see them

: anct

... money just helps it go a liHie smoother.

LET US HELP

WITH THE CASH
Provincetown has
styling that Is everpopular, never gets
out of date. Select
pieces suitable for
various rooms In
your home or for
accent compatible
with many other ·
furnishings.

Storys Run

-theme of 1976
Materials and correlated helps.

vas
THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1:00 and 7:00 p.m •.

..'".
,.
,,

AT

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SOUTH THIRD

MIDDLEPORT, .OHIO

$

=

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SPONSORED BY

THE MIDDLEPORT IOOK.-sTORE
. ?9 MILL ST. IN

••
'"

:) Mr . 111d Mrs. RLBoell Keels
OAPSE CANCELS
... . 1111 family attended the
POMEROY - Meigs Local
:: concert In GallipoUs Sunday
""afternoon. The children look Chapter 17 OAPSE meeting
scheduled for
Monday
:part In the 11'0111'am. .
: · Edward Ross of Chicago . evening has been can9elled.

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I
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Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

�10 - The Suhday Times- Sentinel, Sunday. March 21 , 1976

•••
'

:::: · :: :::::::::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;.;;;.;.;:: .:·:·:· :·:·:: :::~ :::~:::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::: :::::::::: :::=:;:::::: :.;:;. ;.:-:· :·:·:·: ::

Ohioans reunite
at Payne home

I

PINELLAS PARK, Fla. Folden, Myrtle Queen all of
Friends and neighbors met at Venice , Fla .; Mr . and Mrs.
the home of Mr. and Mrs . Denver Slagle, Mr . and Mrs .
Donald Payne of Pinellas John Baker, Sarasota, Fla.
Park, Fla. recently for a
Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence
potluck dinner and a day or Dickey , Zephyrhills , Fla . ;
visiting and making new Mr . and Mrs. Clyde Thompacquaintances. Seventy five son, Ada Johnson , Mary B.
attended the gathering Sullivan, all of Largo, Fla .;
started by the Paynes in 1963. Vernon Co lem an . Tarpon
Those present were : Mr . Springs , Fla .; Mr. and Mrs .
and Mrs . Gilbert Meal, Mr . G. V. Sheets, New Port
and Mrs . Merrill Saunders, Richey, Fla ; Ed Judy, St.
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Bane, Petersburg , Fla. ; Rev . and
Mr. and Mrs . Nolan Carter, Mrs . Frank Coleman and
Mr. and Mrs . Merrill White, . children , Rachel, David and
Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Byres, Cary , Mr. and Mrs. Jim De
Charles Baker, Rickey Rosa and children, Doug ,
Baker, all of Gallipolis ; Mr. Jimmy and David , Mr . and
and
Mrs .
J.
Dale Mrs. Ed Cheesebrew and
Milltr, Carrie N. Dale, Marie children,
Tammy
and
H. Richards, all of Rio Donnie, Mr . and Mrs . Bruce
Grande.
De Lille and children, Brucie,
Mr . and Mrs . Worthy Timmy and Jeffy, David
Bright, Langsville; Mr. and Garow, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Mrs . Henry Egelkraut, Payne, all of Pinellas Park,
Fairborn; Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Fla.
Russell, Tirfin , Mr . and Mrs.
Howard Williamson,
Fostoria ; Mr . and Mrs .
FIVE EARN HONORS
Wayne Singleton, Cincinnati;
GALLIPOLIS
Five
Mrs .
Thelma
Barton, students of Meigs Couinty
Waynesville; Myrtle Pat- who have rated the honor roll
terson, Middletown; Charles at Gallipolis Business College
DeLille, Columbus; Sibyl for the Winter Quarter are
Windon ; Dunbar, W. Va .; Mr . Richard Cole, Pomeroy;
and Mrs. Nelson Brucker, St. Norman Deem , Racine:
Albans, W. Va. ; Mr. and Mrs . Wallace Hatfield , Pomeroy;
William Stauton, Tampa, Cecil Rice , Racine , and
Fla.; Mr . and Mrs. Loyal Daniel Spencer, Middleport.

by creating poisonous gases.
A downstairs fire can kill
a child sleeping upstairs.
•• ·.you can protect your

-.

family by detecting a fire
in its earliest stages •• ~
before actual flames and

HOME

visible smoke are on the scene.

F l R E!
SArETY

I

HANDBOOK

a FREE

\.

copy of the

Home Fire Safety Handbook

,)

and a no obligation fire
safety survey, contact:

SECURITY &amp;SAFETY SERVICES
(6141446-9881- 24 HRS .

255 Third Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio 4.5631

'ROSS E. HAMRICK, OWNER

GALLIPOLIS - Colonial
era plants were discussed at
the Fren ch City Garden
Club's March meeting at the
home of Mrs . Lucille Neff.
Mrs.
Patty
Snyder
presided . Mrs.
Gladys
Trainer gave devotions entitled
" Duties of
an
American" and " What is an
American ?" followed by a
prayer.
Roll call was to name a
flowering shrub. Mrs . Patty
Snyder thanked the group for
coming out and Mrs. Neff for
having them in her hOme .
Mrs . Bertin a Smeltzer
reported she and Mrs . Snyder
attended a meeting of the
Spring Valley Homemakers'
Club. Mrs. Snyder demon-

This means your monthly payments can be a lot smaller or that
you can bor(ow more without straining your budget. It might
easily be the difference between the car you've been looking at
·and the car you really want - Stop at the Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Co. for a 48-monttl new car loan.

I 1.20

. Total Finance

Amount

Credit life Total Atnount
or Note
Insurance
SJ ,897 .60
S9l.S4

of Lo•n

u.ooo.oo

Cha r!Jes ·
U04 .06

"

.

Annual pet.

Rate.
11 .83

36 MONTHS
Installment

P•yments
$101.77

•

Amount
of Lo•n
$3,000 .00

Credit Llfe Total Amount Total Finane

Insurance

Ot Note

.

.

[~otat Amount

Installment

Amount

P•vment
l143.1t ·

Credit Life

u.ooo.oo

of Lo•n

Insurance •
$41 .24

Charges

$3,663 .72

165 .95

24 MONTHS

I

Mr s .

Moore

gave

a

RAP :
I'm all for the man who thinks he should run interference
for his girl friend when another fellow asks her to dance. Why
should she have to refuse an unwanted offer when he's right
there to say, "Sorry, this one's taken."
I also think that if a woman is bothered by a "masher," her
man should take over and protect her, even if it'means a fight .
Women who want to " take care of themselves" turn me off.FOR THE BETTER WAY (MALE)
DEAR FOR:
Let's hope you get a mate who agrees with you, or the fight
has only just begun ! - HELEN
FOR :
Who says the offer is "unwanted "? I'm all for letting a
woman make her own decisions. - SUE
FRAUDULENT PAYMENTS
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A list
of 243 state employes
suspected of fraudlently
receiving welfare payments
was sent to 23 colinty welfare
directors Wednesday for
investigation.
State Auditor Thomas
Ferguson said there were 113 ·
suspected empl 0yes in
F~anklin
County, 61 in.
Cuyahoga County, 14 in
Summit County, 10 In Lucas
County, 9 in Hamilton
County, 8 in Montgomery
County and 7 in Stark County.
The other 16 counties had
three or less .
A computer check revealed ,
the 243 appeared to be on the
state payroll for Aid to
Dependent Children benefits,
but failed to report their
employment or earnings to
county welfare departments ,
he said.
Welfare departments will
have to determine the e~tent
of any fraud and county
:,e~i~":;e to take necessary

program on "Bicentennial
Plants and Flowers of
Colonial Days. " She briefly
described the life of settlers
in colonial days, their hardships and trouble with the
Indians which later turned
into friendship . They had
herbs and garden and flower
seeds, she noted . Most seed
and supplies came from
England and the arrival was
usually broadcast. The Indians introduced corn,
squash and beans .
A plant exchange was
conducted· with Mrs. Harley
George, chairwoman. Mrs .
NOW YOU KNOW .
Neff had a bicentennial
Helium
, the secohd lightest
arrangement using red, white
~
lerrient
,
was
first discovered
and blue permanent flowers
in a tall container with in !868 in the atmosphere of
bicentennial colors. The next the Sun.
meeting is April II. A tour of
Mrs . Elaine George's daffodil
garden and an Aprill3 tour to
study natural areas including
plants , wildflowers, soil,
water, birds and animals on
the park front, Tycoon Lake
and Bob Evans Farms was
planned.
Refreshments were served ·
by the hostess .

of Note
IM36.S6

1597 .17

Annual pcf.

Rate
11.96

Total Fln•nce Annuill Pet.
Charges
Rate
sns.n
12.02

Accident &amp; Heallh Insurance elso available at additional cost .

Farmers Bank
Pomeroy, Ohio

,,

•'

Mrs. Frank Bise is a
s urgical patient at the
Camden-Clark
Hospital,
Parkersburg, W. Va .
Tom Dye is visiling in
Akron,
Everett Hale, from a
nursing home in Parkersburg, W. Va., Mrs . Helen
Buckley , and Doyle Hale of
Belleville, W. Va., visited
Sunday with Mr . and Mrs.
John Buchanan and Mr. and
Mrs: R. E. Williams.
Mr . and Mrs . Charles
Foster and family and Mrs.
Sheila Westfall and Tracy of
Belpre, visited with Horace
Kibble and Forrest Kibble
and Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Congrove and Pam, Sunday,
Several from here attended
the 5oth wedding anniversary
for Mr. and Mrs . Sam Wilson
at Hockingport Sunday .
Mr . and Mrs. John Riebel
and famll.y of Pomeroy Rd., ·
and Mr. and Mrs. Roher!
Morton and family of Belpre
Rd ., visited with Mr . and
Mrs . D. C. Riehel. They
celebrated their father's
lirthday, D. C. Riebel.
Mr . and Mrs. James
Carruthers and Penny of
Louisville, and Mrs. Doris
Marks of Chester visited
Saturday evening with Mrs.
Bess Larkins.

GALLIPOLIS Nelle Shaw feels it should be taining a surprising numher will make their material
Shaw, 454 Third Ave ., returned to Gallia County. of locally familiar names.
available to be preserved for
Gallipolis, displayed items She would also like to see the
- A diploma from Gallis future generations .
••
and records of historical society obtain a set of pic- Academy dated 1867 when it
At the business meeting
interest to Gallia County at tures and articles on historic was a pri vale academy_
•
preceding Miss Shaw's
the March meeting of the homes and buildings which
- A diploma from Gatlia presentation, the board of
Gallia County Historical was printed over a period of Academy High School dated directors decided to un·
Society at Saint Peter's years in the Gallipolis Daily 1871.
dertake a prolect of
Episcopal Church.
Tribune when
Dwight
- Xeroxed copies of six c ataloging items in ou'r
Miss · Shaw, a native of Wetherholt i'ias editor . She collections of · Gallipolis House and arrange for
Gallipolis, graduated from urged the society to collect clippings during the 1~ window displays of historical
Gallia Academy High School pain lings of early Gallipolis compiled by Mrs . William interest In the weeks im•
and received her BS degree in artists and portraits of many Lewis and containing much mediately precedinR the
Education with a major in local · people painted by a history In them.
Fourth of July celebration.
Fine Arts from the Ohio State Cincinnati artist named
Following Miss Shaw 's
- A xeroxed copy of the
University. She spent several Shepherd who traveled up Emma Gatewood scrapbook. presentation, refreshments
•
years jn retail merchandising and down the Ohio River
- An undocumented article were served by the program
specializing in photography painting portraits.
staling that the last buffalo committee.
and traveled throughout the
Miss Shaw talked a bout the killed in Ohio was killed In
The April meeting will be
country to various depart. items and records of local Gallia County.
Sunday, April !I, at 2:30p.m.
ment stores. In 1962 she historical interest, many of
Miss Shaw's records are at Saint Peter's Eplacopal
joined the Columbus School which she has offered to the the first to be offered to the Church with Mrs . Mary
System where she taught · society when a suitable histol'ical. society. It is the Lewis speaking · on 11 The
Fine Arts for five years.
permanent place would be hope of the society that other History of 'Rio Grande
She returned to Gallipolis available to display and to historically minded persons College."
in 1967 and was employed as use
them.
With
her
an art therapist at the knowledge of local history
Gallipolis State Institute she was able to elaborate on
where she is currently each item including :
•
teaching. It was during this
-Copies of Howe's History
employment that she took of Ohio.
By K. Knotts
graduate work at Ohio
" The
Wild Rose
Frank Kirby has been in University and received her Wreath," a handwritten
Holzer Hospital for several master's degree in Flne Arts composition of the young
.
days for surgery·. She is in 1969.
ladies of Gallia Academy In
getting along fine.
·
As art therapist at GSI Miss 1850.
Curt Knotts is in the Holzer Shaw keeps · a continuing
- Copies of "The American
Hospital.
exhibit of the art work of the Philatelist" containing a
Mrs . Marietta Burger and residents of GSI at Nlsonger well..,..searched story of the
.
d~
children of Columbus spent Center on the Ohio State establishment of the first
11 r diamon ·
.
. t/€1' tqiJNe 1JV1.f, h1.f1) ?JO
the weekend with her mother, University campus. The government Post Offices in
.oe~ 1 t. nw ·
Mrs. Marie Hively and exhibit is changed every the Northwest Territory with
---=-""--~
children of Tycoon Lake . Mr. quarter.
Gallipolis serving as one of
"
"'
and Mrs. Morris Hively and
Miss Shaw has been in· the five stations.
son, Greg of Columbus spent terested In the history o(
- Annual report of the
SWlday and Mr. and Mrs. Ga!Ua County through the auditor of the city of
Walter Hively and children of years and has collected many Gallipolis for the year ending
Kemper Hollow also spent. items of local historical December 31, 1905.
Sunday with their mother and significance as well as many
- A series of original
•'
brothers and sisters.
interesting family heirlooms. . manuscripts of 0. 0.
Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Bill
She
introduced
her Mcintyre. Also a Mcintyre
Knotts had dinner Sunday program by making several scrapbook of his columns.
Jt. eert ain l )~ dnt.•s. A pmclm.w.' as
with his sister, Ethel Knotts suggestions for
future Possibly a collection of all
iinpmtmil
aS
a
di
a
mr)ird sl Hmld pot IH.' lllihle 011 the
of Gallipolis .
projects for the historical four of his books.
basi:-; of prit·e or "cut-rate'" indm·L•mtmt,
Mr. and Mrs . Wayne Mc- society. She emphasized the
- A haridwri tten journal of
Cully and grandson, Deon importance of returning to · the passage book · from the
lmt nn th e 'firm f'oum1atirm rrf (/fwlity a11d t:alue
Taylor, spent a weekend with Gallia County many of the Steamer Ohio dated 1860.
rt'c:dved. At this ~ tore wt: proudl y display the .
his parents, Mr. and Mrs . Ted original legal documents,
- Pictorial atlas of county
em hlt~ m of lic~hl&lt;~red }e ru le r, A.meticau Gem S(JC;ic tu
McCully and her parents, Mr. once filed in the Gallia commissioners dated 1874.
-- your assr rnur (·c tl1at we know ami
and Mrs. Grant.
County Courthouse, but now
- A N'ew York newspaper
Margeda Bartholomew and stored at Athens . These printed entirely in Welsh in
1-{rrm:anke the_qr;ality.and va l~u~ flf
~
son, Jim, spent the weekend records reflect early local the middle 1800s.
&lt;wory d"•rnond we offer for sa le.
with her mother , Mrs. legal actions many of which
A
history
of
the
,
!ransCOSTUMES SHOWN - Mrs . Orion Netson, Mrs. Gtover Stout, Miss Ruby Diehl , Mrs .
Margaret Edwards, Tycoon occurred prior to 1803 when acllons pertaining to a couple
Lawrence Chapman and Mrs. Virgil Atkins, left to right, in bicentennial costuming at the
MEMBI=R AMEFIII":AN GEM SOCIETY
Lake
.
Gallia County was a part of of riverbank lots from the
recent meeting of the Star Garden Club.
Mr . and Mrs. Dan Justice
Washington County.
time we were ·a part of
are back after a week's
Miss Shaw also feels that Washington County to the
honeymoon . in the Southern
the local Indian heritage was . present.
.
States.
·
an interesting part of histury . - Several mid'cen~ury
Mrs. Graham Crilcketis, and she would like to see· that Ohio River docunients and
4041!COHQ AVENUE · • _..l4M7
Keene,
Va ., spent a few days
flower
preserved. She stated that journals.
HARRISONVILLE - The Church Parish House in provided
recently
with
her
niece,
Mr.
arrangemeq'ts
for
the
recent
A "Who's Who In
there was an Indian mound
bicentennial meeting of the Pomeroy and the demonand Mrs . Bernard Osborne. near the present site of St.
Star Garden Club was held. stration given by Mrs. Helen Grande meeting.
America" dated 1935 con-'-------------------~
Harry Lee Hively, oldeat
The traveling prize donated
Louis Catholic Church, and
., re~ently at the Meigs Walker, Wellston , on clay
·'· Musewn.
by Mrs. Atkins was won by son of Mrs . Marietta Hively
pots .
Dr. Charles Parker owned a
tremendous Indian collection
Material on how to control Mrs . Lawrence Chapman. and husband, has finished
... · For the observance many
·ow in northern Ohio. Miss
-'.· of the members carne in insects was presented by Ribbons for dried or live school and has gone to
·,· c&lt;&gt;stwnlng of an earlier era. Mrs . Atkins . Several tours mass arrangements on Florida for employment.
.,., Mrs. Virgil Atkins gave the were discussed and members display went to _Mrs . Atkins ,
~-· devotions · using scripture
reported on tours they had first, Mrs . Robert Jewell,
• •
·;., from Matt . 25 With the already taken . It was noted second, and Mrs. Norman
JOINS P.H INC.
··· readings, " Touched by the the therapy meeting with the Will, third. For artificial
~;.· Fire" and ,','Twilight in my Athens Mental Health Center arrangements, ribbons went
MIDDLEPORT
Raymond
E.
Hindy
has
:: Garden." Miss Ruby Diehl GOO&lt;j Luck Garden Club will to Mrs. G. A, Radekin , first
WINS DEGREE
and Mrs. Robert _ Holliday,
joined the Parkersburg office
~-: ,reported on the recent open ·be at the home of Mrs . C. E.
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. ·:·~ meeting of the Winding Trail
Stout in April. Mrs. Jewell second. 1'l]ere was also an Arthur Parker of Belpre, of Parker-Hunter Inc., a
.' Garden Club at the Episcopal thanked the members who artistic arrangement on Ohio, will receive a Bachelor regional investment firm
display made by Mrs . Seth of Science Degree in headquartered in Pittsburgh,
Nicholson.
Aueronautical Science and an Pa . Hindy, a graduate of
To carry out the bicen- Associate ln Science 'in Middleport High School,
tennial theme the refresh· Aviation Management in the a !tended Mountain State
ment table was covered with Golden Anniversary Com. · College in Parkersburg and
an antique red and white menrement Exercises at was graduated· from Ohio
: ' GALUPOUS - Emanon
The remainder of the
checkered cloth centered Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in 1975. He has
• Club held Its March social evening was spent playing
with an arrangement of University at 10 a .m. April23. served as an intelligence
• Thursday evening at Mrs. bridge with high score going
jonquils and forsythia .
analyst in the Army while
; .Robert Caldwell.
to Mrs. John ·L. Evans and Gingerbread, coffee and tea Parker is the son of Robert stationed at Ft. Shafter,
Parker, 751 Ruble Ave.,
;
The tables were decorated second to Mrs . Robert
were served.
Hawaii.
Belpre.
• with spring flowers with Richards.
.
.
.
: accents of green in keeping
The next meeting will be a
•* with St. PatriCk's day. Mrs. book
review by Mrs. A. D.
: : Leo Mossman's committee Lusk at the home of Mrs .
• , served a dessert course.
Mossman on April 1.

.
••
..

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smith

Anniversary approaching
DORCAS - Mr . and Mrs.
Paul Smith will celebrate
their 45th wedding anniversary Sunday, March 28
at the Be thany United
Methodist Church with an
open house from 2 to 4 p.m .
Hos ting the celebration will
be their son and daughter-inlaw. Mr. and Mrs . Dan Smith·
and family.
Married March 31, 1931,
Mr. and Mrs. Smith have two
sons, Dan, who resjdes at
Racine , Route 1, and Robert
of Columbus . They have nine
grandchildren,
Robert
Wayne, Stephanie a nd Paula
Smith, Columbus; Don
Smith, .Mrs. Terry (Faith )
Varney, and Tim, Tammy
and Ted Smith, all or Racine,

Route I. Mr. and Mrs . Smith
also have three greatg randchildren, Jerry and
David Smith , and Jenny
Varney, Racine, Route l.
Relatives and friends are
invited to call during the open
house hours. Mr. and Mrs .
Smith request gifts be
omitted.
MEN TO MEET
DORCAS - The Methodist
Men of Meigs County will
meet Tuesday, March 23 at
the Dorcas Church at 7:30
p.m. The guest speaker will
be Levon Sahum, Sugar
Grove , Ohio. Special music
will be presented by Vernon
Weber.

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

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Kerr News

..

OPEN FRI. TIL8

'

HARMONY

Bicentennial costumes worn

Bla ck Patent
Blue Leather

. i.~
..:
::;

the world
go around ...

SHOE$
BETTY OHLINGER

.,.

POMEROY
·:·

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Love is what makes

Marguerite's

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!-f.manon
social
enjoyed
=.
.
...

PLEASE AnEND
OUR STANDARD

N' BIBLE

Reedsville
News Notes

Now You Can Take Up To 48 Mllnttls To Repay
Your New Car Loan • • •

....

p.m. The Gallipolis Garden
Club will furnish the
program.
A letter was read announcing the
regional
meeting April 24 in Athens
called "Fashions in Flowers"
by Mrs. Vance Hendricks at
First Methodist Church on
College st.
A brochure showing a
schedule from World Wide
Travel Service on Motorcoach Tours was shown:
Miss Marie Meal reported
she had received thank-you
notes for donations sent to
Wahkeena and Victor H. Reis
funds.
Th'e date of the open
meeting was changed to June
1.

Mrs. Elaine George, Miss
Marie Meal, Mrs. Smeltzer
and Mrs. Snyder attended a
. design session led by Carol
Mitchell of Lexington. Ky., at
Roman J. Claprood's Open
House in Columbus.
Mrs . Snyder reported Mrs.
Zirkle had contacted her for
the club to take ' care of
· Horticultural Schedule. Mrs .
Grace Bradbury was appo(nted chairwoman and she .
named Mrs. Jewell Moore
and Mrs. Smeltzer to help
her. The county flower show
will be June 3 and 4.
Mrs. Esta _Reese thanked
the club for a hanging basket
, sent her while in the hospit~l.
./ The French C1ty Club IVlll
:host .the county meetmg of
'garden clubs Avril 22 at 7:30

NEW CAR LOANS?

Palmitnt

+++

NOTE FROM SUE : Your letter reminds me of a description
someone sent us: A mother is a person who hollers, "Go to
your room RIGHT NOW ... Don't you DARE turn your back
on me when I'm talking ~ you!"
P. S. She'll get over it. But it doesn't hurl to' say "I'm
sorry" fir$t.

Program covers
colonial plants

Deal On

rnstaflm•nt

I.

+++

Looking For
The Best

48 MONTHS

I

'Get Out' -But Don'tLeave
RAP :
My mother and I had a terrible argument over my
boyfriend. He 's really a great person, but you can't convince
mothers. Finally she screamed, "Get out and go live with him
them! "
And that's exactly what I did. I'm 21 and he 's 25, so we're
capable of decisions. ( Though I'll acjmit his apartment isn't
the dream nest ideal, and I'm looking for my own .)
But when I went batk for my belongings, Mom wouldn't
give them to me. She said I ''owed" for room and board and
they w~re impounded. (She'd never mentioned rent before.) I
asked how much, and she said she'd forget it if I moved back .
Since she suggested my present arrangement, what's she
doing with this brihe? Must 1 sue to get my clothes, etc. ? DOTTIE
DEAR DOTIIE:
"Get out, but don't leave !11 • • •
Mothers often yell now, think later. Then they compound
their mistakes by silly actions. Why don't you aod your mother
calm down and talk it over? Since you're 21, she can't force you
to come home.
And I'm sure (;he'll release your belongings If you tell her
you're apartment-bunting on your own. - HELEN

BUYING FIRST TiCKET - Greg Gibbs, on the board
of the Wahama High School Alumni Association, is shown
selling Richard Ord of the Mason County Bank the first
ticket to the Mike Lewis Benefit Dance to he held
Saturday, March 27, at Wahama High School. Gary
Billups and the Music Department from Portsmouth will
provide the musicfor lhe9 p.m. to I a.m. dance.

strated "Sandscaping."

Learn how

for

I

I

/

~~~~~~~~:.,~~!.

society hears Nelle Shaw

.....
•

;:.~New

Hope

called his mother, Mrs. Daisy
Ross Sunday saying he and
:r:..::::·
By Ada K.eels
lis wife both had been sick .
:;~ .. Jeff Keels and sisters, Jena
Willie Morris, local, who
Jania, were absent from Ills been ill In a Charleston .
::;;ligh school in Gallipolis for hospital came home recently
•~ oeveral days last week due to
much improved . His many
:.._ flu.
friends are glad he is back
... Mrs. John Gamble is ill home.
:;:,.frlth nu.
Dea~on Rober I Cooper,
:::;; • Mrs. Leila Scott and who was a pasilent for a few
.._-llrother, Bobbie Long, of days at Holzer Medical
..,. &amp;ackfork vilited their aunt
Center was returned home
::Daily RIIBI one day recently. Tuesday. His friends are glad
- . Leonora McDaniel of · he is able to .he back home ,
:llerlln, Ohio, visited her aunt,
~sy Roaa SWlday.
; ; Jell Keels and sisters,
:;!~~a and Janla Keels acMr. ·and Mrs. Marlin Rife
panled the singeu and
spent
a day this week with
::;,-•nd to Portsmouth, Ohio,
.
Mrs
.
Charles Young at ·
'"· Saturday
from
GAHS
llllllical in Gallipolis where Tuppers Pl&amp;ins. The Rife's
• ' they look part in a contest. son-ln-law is a patient in
:;: Mr. and Mrs. Jom Norman Veterans Memorial Hospital.
• · and 110n of near Berlin visited He Injured his back when he
cid lrlendl, Daisy Ross and fell while at his employment.
Mr. and Mrs. Hollier
-. dlulhter, Mrs. Edna Cooper,
Gofdon,
Fairmont, W. Va.,
&amp;lnday afternoon.
Clllled
on
Mr . and Mrs. Alex
: · Mrs. Barbara Brislin of
Sh~ler
on
Sunday. The
;:!; Akron called her parents Mr .
Gordon's
will
be
moving to St.
• and Mn. Gamble Sunday
Clairsville
In
lhe
near future,
;: staling they had three Inches
where
he
has
been tran·
:, fl. anow at Akron. They are
sf
erred.
"' line and hope to see them

: anct

... money just helps it go a liHie smoother.

LET US HELP

WITH THE CASH
Provincetown has
styling that Is everpopular, never gets
out of date. Select
pieces suitable for
various rooms In
your home or for
accent compatible
with many other ·
furnishings.

Storys Run

-theme of 1976
Materials and correlated helps.

vas
THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1:00 and 7:00 p.m •.

..'".
,.
,,

AT

HEATH UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
SOUTH THIRD

MIDDLEPORT, .OHIO

$

=

"

~ aoon.

SPONSORED BY

THE MIDDLEPORT IOOK.-sTORE
. ?9 MILL ST. IN

••
'"

:) Mr . 111d Mrs. RLBoell Keels
OAPSE CANCELS
... . 1111 family attended the
POMEROY - Meigs Local
:: concert In GallipoUs Sunday
""afternoon. The children look Chapter 17 OAPSE meeting
scheduled for
Monday
:part In the 11'0111'am. .
: · Edward Ross of Chicago . evening has been can9elled.

·-

.

First Mortgage

Loans To

Buy: or Build

•

Created b:r .

crafbmen
who tllke pride
in excellence

::t

•

That's why we are here to help families get that
home . You'll get the lowest rate allowed by law and
you'll get friendly service . .If you're going to buy or
build, come see us, we love to say yes.

•

ro"Vlneetown•
•rDIMIOIIN

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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Athens County Savings &amp;leal Co.
I
I
L_ -..-..----~~:~.~~-~N~~~~~:~ ___ j
J'

296

W. 2nd St.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

�10 - The Suhday Times- Sentinel, Sunday. March 21 , 1976

•••
'

:::: · :: :::::::::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;.;;;.;.;:: .:·:·:· :·:·:: :::~ :::~:::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::: :::::::::: :::=:;:::::: :.;:;. ;.:-:· :·:·:·: ::

Ohioans reunite
at Payne home

I

PINELLAS PARK, Fla. Folden, Myrtle Queen all of
Friends and neighbors met at Venice , Fla .; Mr . and Mrs.
the home of Mr. and Mrs . Denver Slagle, Mr . and Mrs .
Donald Payne of Pinellas John Baker, Sarasota, Fla.
Park, Fla. recently for a
Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence
potluck dinner and a day or Dickey , Zephyrhills , Fla . ;
visiting and making new Mr . and Mrs. Clyde Thompacquaintances. Seventy five son, Ada Johnson , Mary B.
attended the gathering Sullivan, all of Largo, Fla .;
started by the Paynes in 1963. Vernon Co lem an . Tarpon
Those present were : Mr . Springs , Fla .; Mr. and Mrs .
and Mrs . Gilbert Meal, Mr . G. V. Sheets, New Port
and Mrs . Merrill Saunders, Richey, Fla ; Ed Judy, St.
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Bane, Petersburg , Fla. ; Rev . and
Mr. and Mrs . Nolan Carter, Mrs . Frank Coleman and
Mr. and Mrs . Merrill White, . children , Rachel, David and
Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Byres, Cary , Mr. and Mrs. Jim De
Charles Baker, Rickey Rosa and children, Doug ,
Baker, all of Gallipolis ; Mr. Jimmy and David , Mr . and
and
Mrs .
J.
Dale Mrs. Ed Cheesebrew and
Milltr, Carrie N. Dale, Marie children,
Tammy
and
H. Richards, all of Rio Donnie, Mr . and Mrs . Bruce
Grande.
De Lille and children, Brucie,
Mr . and Mrs . Worthy Timmy and Jeffy, David
Bright, Langsville; Mr. and Garow, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Mrs . Henry Egelkraut, Payne, all of Pinellas Park,
Fairborn; Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Fla.
Russell, Tirfin , Mr . and Mrs.
Howard Williamson,
Fostoria ; Mr . and Mrs .
FIVE EARN HONORS
Wayne Singleton, Cincinnati;
GALLIPOLIS
Five
Mrs .
Thelma
Barton, students of Meigs Couinty
Waynesville; Myrtle Pat- who have rated the honor roll
terson, Middletown; Charles at Gallipolis Business College
DeLille, Columbus; Sibyl for the Winter Quarter are
Windon ; Dunbar, W. Va .; Mr . Richard Cole, Pomeroy;
and Mrs. Nelson Brucker, St. Norman Deem , Racine:
Albans, W. Va. ; Mr. and Mrs . Wallace Hatfield , Pomeroy;
William Stauton, Tampa, Cecil Rice , Racine , and
Fla.; Mr . and Mrs. Loyal Daniel Spencer, Middleport.

by creating poisonous gases.
A downstairs fire can kill
a child sleeping upstairs.
•• ·.you can protect your

-.

family by detecting a fire
in its earliest stages •• ~
before actual flames and

HOME

visible smoke are on the scene.

F l R E!
SArETY

I

HANDBOOK

a FREE

\.

copy of the

Home Fire Safety Handbook

,)

and a no obligation fire
safety survey, contact:

SECURITY &amp;SAFETY SERVICES
(6141446-9881- 24 HRS .

255 Third Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio 4.5631

'ROSS E. HAMRICK, OWNER

GALLIPOLIS - Colonial
era plants were discussed at
the Fren ch City Garden
Club's March meeting at the
home of Mrs . Lucille Neff.
Mrs.
Patty
Snyder
presided . Mrs.
Gladys
Trainer gave devotions entitled
" Duties of
an
American" and " What is an
American ?" followed by a
prayer.
Roll call was to name a
flowering shrub. Mrs . Patty
Snyder thanked the group for
coming out and Mrs. Neff for
having them in her hOme .
Mrs . Bertin a Smeltzer
reported she and Mrs . Snyder
attended a meeting of the
Spring Valley Homemakers'
Club. Mrs. Snyder demon-

This means your monthly payments can be a lot smaller or that
you can bor(ow more without straining your budget. It might
easily be the difference between the car you've been looking at
·and the car you really want - Stop at the Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Co. for a 48-monttl new car loan.

I 1.20

. Total Finance

Amount

Credit life Total Atnount
or Note
Insurance
SJ ,897 .60
S9l.S4

of Lo•n

u.ooo.oo

Cha r!Jes ·
U04 .06

"

.

Annual pet.

Rate.
11 .83

36 MONTHS
Installment

P•yments
$101.77

•

Amount
of Lo•n
$3,000 .00

Credit Llfe Total Amount Total Finane

Insurance

Ot Note

.

.

[~otat Amount

Installment

Amount

P•vment
l143.1t ·

Credit Life

u.ooo.oo

of Lo•n

Insurance •
$41 .24

Charges

$3,663 .72

165 .95

24 MONTHS

I

Mr s .

Moore

gave

a

RAP :
I'm all for the man who thinks he should run interference
for his girl friend when another fellow asks her to dance. Why
should she have to refuse an unwanted offer when he's right
there to say, "Sorry, this one's taken."
I also think that if a woman is bothered by a "masher," her
man should take over and protect her, even if it'means a fight .
Women who want to " take care of themselves" turn me off.FOR THE BETTER WAY (MALE)
DEAR FOR:
Let's hope you get a mate who agrees with you, or the fight
has only just begun ! - HELEN
FOR :
Who says the offer is "unwanted "? I'm all for letting a
woman make her own decisions. - SUE
FRAUDULENT PAYMENTS
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A list
of 243 state employes
suspected of fraudlently
receiving welfare payments
was sent to 23 colinty welfare
directors Wednesday for
investigation.
State Auditor Thomas
Ferguson said there were 113 ·
suspected empl 0yes in
F~anklin
County, 61 in.
Cuyahoga County, 14 in
Summit County, 10 In Lucas
County, 9 in Hamilton
County, 8 in Montgomery
County and 7 in Stark County.
The other 16 counties had
three or less .
A computer check revealed ,
the 243 appeared to be on the
state payroll for Aid to
Dependent Children benefits,
but failed to report their
employment or earnings to
county welfare departments ,
he said.
Welfare departments will
have to determine the e~tent
of any fraud and county
:,e~i~":;e to take necessary

program on "Bicentennial
Plants and Flowers of
Colonial Days. " She briefly
described the life of settlers
in colonial days, their hardships and trouble with the
Indians which later turned
into friendship . They had
herbs and garden and flower
seeds, she noted . Most seed
and supplies came from
England and the arrival was
usually broadcast. The Indians introduced corn,
squash and beans .
A plant exchange was
conducted· with Mrs. Harley
George, chairwoman. Mrs .
NOW YOU KNOW .
Neff had a bicentennial
Helium
, the secohd lightest
arrangement using red, white
~
lerrient
,
was
first discovered
and blue permanent flowers
in a tall container with in !868 in the atmosphere of
bicentennial colors. The next the Sun.
meeting is April II. A tour of
Mrs . Elaine George's daffodil
garden and an Aprill3 tour to
study natural areas including
plants , wildflowers, soil,
water, birds and animals on
the park front, Tycoon Lake
and Bob Evans Farms was
planned.
Refreshments were served ·
by the hostess .

of Note
IM36.S6

1597 .17

Annual pcf.

Rate
11.96

Total Fln•nce Annuill Pet.
Charges
Rate
sns.n
12.02

Accident &amp; Heallh Insurance elso available at additional cost .

Farmers Bank
Pomeroy, Ohio

,,

•'

Mrs. Frank Bise is a
s urgical patient at the
Camden-Clark
Hospital,
Parkersburg, W. Va .
Tom Dye is visiling in
Akron,
Everett Hale, from a
nursing home in Parkersburg, W. Va., Mrs . Helen
Buckley , and Doyle Hale of
Belleville, W. Va., visited
Sunday with Mr . and Mrs.
John Buchanan and Mr. and
Mrs: R. E. Williams.
Mr . and Mrs . Charles
Foster and family and Mrs.
Sheila Westfall and Tracy of
Belpre, visited with Horace
Kibble and Forrest Kibble
and Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Congrove and Pam, Sunday,
Several from here attended
the 5oth wedding anniversary
for Mr. and Mrs . Sam Wilson
at Hockingport Sunday .
Mr . and Mrs. John Riebel
and famll.y of Pomeroy Rd., ·
and Mr. and Mrs. Roher!
Morton and family of Belpre
Rd ., visited with Mr . and
Mrs . D. C. Riehel. They
celebrated their father's
lirthday, D. C. Riebel.
Mr . and Mrs. James
Carruthers and Penny of
Louisville, and Mrs. Doris
Marks of Chester visited
Saturday evening with Mrs.
Bess Larkins.

GALLIPOLIS Nelle Shaw feels it should be taining a surprising numher will make their material
Shaw, 454 Third Ave ., returned to Gallia County. of locally familiar names.
available to be preserved for
Gallipolis, displayed items She would also like to see the
- A diploma from Gallis future generations .
••
and records of historical society obtain a set of pic- Academy dated 1867 when it
At the business meeting
interest to Gallia County at tures and articles on historic was a pri vale academy_
•
preceding Miss Shaw's
the March meeting of the homes and buildings which
- A diploma from Gatlia presentation, the board of
Gallia County Historical was printed over a period of Academy High School dated directors decided to un·
Society at Saint Peter's years in the Gallipolis Daily 1871.
dertake a prolect of
Episcopal Church.
Tribune when
Dwight
- Xeroxed copies of six c ataloging items in ou'r
Miss · Shaw, a native of Wetherholt i'ias editor . She collections of · Gallipolis House and arrange for
Gallipolis, graduated from urged the society to collect clippings during the 1~ window displays of historical
Gallia Academy High School pain lings of early Gallipolis compiled by Mrs . William interest In the weeks im•
and received her BS degree in artists and portraits of many Lewis and containing much mediately precedinR the
Education with a major in local · people painted by a history In them.
Fourth of July celebration.
Fine Arts from the Ohio State Cincinnati artist named
Following Miss Shaw 's
- A xeroxed copy of the
University. She spent several Shepherd who traveled up Emma Gatewood scrapbook. presentation, refreshments
•
years jn retail merchandising and down the Ohio River
- An undocumented article were served by the program
specializing in photography painting portraits.
staling that the last buffalo committee.
and traveled throughout the
Miss Shaw talked a bout the killed in Ohio was killed In
The April meeting will be
country to various depart. items and records of local Gallia County.
Sunday, April !I, at 2:30p.m.
ment stores. In 1962 she historical interest, many of
Miss Shaw's records are at Saint Peter's Eplacopal
joined the Columbus School which she has offered to the the first to be offered to the Church with Mrs . Mary
System where she taught · society when a suitable histol'ical. society. It is the Lewis speaking · on 11 The
Fine Arts for five years.
permanent place would be hope of the society that other History of 'Rio Grande
She returned to Gallipolis available to display and to historically minded persons College."
in 1967 and was employed as use
them.
With
her
an art therapist at the knowledge of local history
Gallipolis State Institute she was able to elaborate on
where she is currently each item including :
•
teaching. It was during this
-Copies of Howe's History
employment that she took of Ohio.
By K. Knotts
graduate work at Ohio
" The
Wild Rose
Frank Kirby has been in University and received her Wreath," a handwritten
Holzer Hospital for several master's degree in Flne Arts composition of the young
.
days for surgery·. She is in 1969.
ladies of Gallia Academy In
getting along fine.
·
As art therapist at GSI Miss 1850.
Curt Knotts is in the Holzer Shaw keeps · a continuing
- Copies of "The American
Hospital.
exhibit of the art work of the Philatelist" containing a
Mrs . Marietta Burger and residents of GSI at Nlsonger well..,..searched story of the
.
d~
children of Columbus spent Center on the Ohio State establishment of the first
11 r diamon ·
.
. t/€1' tqiJNe 1JV1.f, h1.f1) ?JO
the weekend with her mother, University campus. The government Post Offices in
.oe~ 1 t. nw ·
Mrs. Marie Hively and exhibit is changed every the Northwest Territory with
---=-""--~
children of Tycoon Lake . Mr. quarter.
Gallipolis serving as one of
"
"'
and Mrs. Morris Hively and
Miss Shaw has been in· the five stations.
son, Greg of Columbus spent terested In the history o(
- Annual report of the
SWlday and Mr. and Mrs. Ga!Ua County through the auditor of the city of
Walter Hively and children of years and has collected many Gallipolis for the year ending
Kemper Hollow also spent. items of local historical December 31, 1905.
Sunday with their mother and significance as well as many
- A series of original
•'
brothers and sisters.
interesting family heirlooms. . manuscripts of 0. 0.
Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Bill
She
introduced
her Mcintyre. Also a Mcintyre
Knotts had dinner Sunday program by making several scrapbook of his columns.
Jt. eert ain l )~ dnt.•s. A pmclm.w.' as
with his sister, Ethel Knotts suggestions for
future Possibly a collection of all
iinpmtmil
aS
a
di
a
mr)ird sl Hmld pot IH.' lllihle 011 the
of Gallipolis .
projects for the historical four of his books.
basi:-; of prit·e or "cut-rate'" indm·L•mtmt,
Mr. and Mrs . Wayne Mc- society. She emphasized the
- A haridwri tten journal of
Cully and grandson, Deon importance of returning to · the passage book · from the
lmt nn th e 'firm f'oum1atirm rrf (/fwlity a11d t:alue
Taylor, spent a weekend with Gallia County many of the Steamer Ohio dated 1860.
rt'c:dved. At this ~ tore wt: proudl y display the .
his parents, Mr. and Mrs . Ted original legal documents,
- Pictorial atlas of county
em hlt~ m of lic~hl&lt;~red }e ru le r, A.meticau Gem S(JC;ic tu
McCully and her parents, Mr. once filed in the Gallia commissioners dated 1874.
-- your assr rnur (·c tl1at we know ami
and Mrs. Grant.
County Courthouse, but now
- A N'ew York newspaper
Margeda Bartholomew and stored at Athens . These printed entirely in Welsh in
1-{rrm:anke the_qr;ality.and va l~u~ flf
~
son, Jim, spent the weekend records reflect early local the middle 1800s.
&lt;wory d"•rnond we offer for sa le.
with her mother , Mrs. legal actions many of which
A
history
of
the
,
!ransCOSTUMES SHOWN - Mrs . Orion Netson, Mrs. Gtover Stout, Miss Ruby Diehl , Mrs .
Margaret Edwards, Tycoon occurred prior to 1803 when acllons pertaining to a couple
Lawrence Chapman and Mrs. Virgil Atkins, left to right, in bicentennial costuming at the
MEMBI=R AMEFIII":AN GEM SOCIETY
Lake
.
Gallia County was a part of of riverbank lots from the
recent meeting of the Star Garden Club.
Mr . and Mrs. Dan Justice
Washington County.
time we were ·a part of
are back after a week's
Miss Shaw also feels that Washington County to the
honeymoon . in the Southern
the local Indian heritage was . present.
.
States.
·
an interesting part of histury . - Several mid'cen~ury
Mrs. Graham Crilcketis, and she would like to see· that Ohio River docunients and
4041!COHQ AVENUE · • _..l4M7
Keene,
Va ., spent a few days
flower
preserved. She stated that journals.
HARRISONVILLE - The Church Parish House in provided
recently
with
her
niece,
Mr.
arrangemeq'ts
for
the
recent
A "Who's Who In
there was an Indian mound
bicentennial meeting of the Pomeroy and the demonand Mrs . Bernard Osborne. near the present site of St.
Star Garden Club was held. stration given by Mrs. Helen Grande meeting.
America" dated 1935 con-'-------------------~
Harry Lee Hively, oldeat
The traveling prize donated
Louis Catholic Church, and
., re~ently at the Meigs Walker, Wellston , on clay
·'· Musewn.
by Mrs. Atkins was won by son of Mrs . Marietta Hively
pots .
Dr. Charles Parker owned a
tremendous Indian collection
Material on how to control Mrs . Lawrence Chapman. and husband, has finished
... · For the observance many
·ow in northern Ohio. Miss
-'.· of the members carne in insects was presented by Ribbons for dried or live school and has gone to
·,· c&lt;&gt;stwnlng of an earlier era. Mrs . Atkins . Several tours mass arrangements on Florida for employment.
.,., Mrs. Virgil Atkins gave the were discussed and members display went to _Mrs . Atkins ,
~-· devotions · using scripture
reported on tours they had first, Mrs . Robert Jewell,
• •
·;., from Matt . 25 With the already taken . It was noted second, and Mrs. Norman
JOINS P.H INC.
··· readings, " Touched by the the therapy meeting with the Will, third. For artificial
~;.· Fire" and ,','Twilight in my Athens Mental Health Center arrangements, ribbons went
MIDDLEPORT
Raymond
E.
Hindy
has
:: Garden." Miss Ruby Diehl GOO&lt;j Luck Garden Club will to Mrs. G. A, Radekin , first
WINS DEGREE
and Mrs. Robert _ Holliday,
joined the Parkersburg office
~-: ,reported on the recent open ·be at the home of Mrs . C. E.
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. ·:·~ meeting of the Winding Trail
Stout in April. Mrs. Jewell second. 1'l]ere was also an Arthur Parker of Belpre, of Parker-Hunter Inc., a
.' Garden Club at the Episcopal thanked the members who artistic arrangement on Ohio, will receive a Bachelor regional investment firm
display made by Mrs . Seth of Science Degree in headquartered in Pittsburgh,
Nicholson.
Aueronautical Science and an Pa . Hindy, a graduate of
To carry out the bicen- Associate ln Science 'in Middleport High School,
tennial theme the refresh· Aviation Management in the a !tended Mountain State
ment table was covered with Golden Anniversary Com. · College in Parkersburg and
an antique red and white menrement Exercises at was graduated· from Ohio
: ' GALUPOUS - Emanon
The remainder of the
checkered cloth centered Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in 1975. He has
• Club held Its March social evening was spent playing
with an arrangement of University at 10 a .m. April23. served as an intelligence
• Thursday evening at Mrs. bridge with high score going
jonquils and forsythia .
analyst in the Army while
; .Robert Caldwell.
to Mrs. John ·L. Evans and Gingerbread, coffee and tea Parker is the son of Robert stationed at Ft. Shafter,
Parker, 751 Ruble Ave.,
;
The tables were decorated second to Mrs . Robert
were served.
Hawaii.
Belpre.
• with spring flowers with Richards.
.
.
.
: accents of green in keeping
The next meeting will be a
•* with St. PatriCk's day. Mrs. book
review by Mrs. A. D.
: : Leo Mossman's committee Lusk at the home of Mrs .
• , served a dessert course.
Mossman on April 1.

.
••
..

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smith

Anniversary approaching
DORCAS - Mr . and Mrs.
Paul Smith will celebrate
their 45th wedding anniversary Sunday, March 28
at the Be thany United
Methodist Church with an
open house from 2 to 4 p.m .
Hos ting the celebration will
be their son and daughter-inlaw. Mr. and Mrs . Dan Smith·
and family.
Married March 31, 1931,
Mr. and Mrs. Smith have two
sons, Dan, who resjdes at
Racine , Route 1, and Robert
of Columbus . They have nine
grandchildren,
Robert
Wayne, Stephanie a nd Paula
Smith, Columbus; Don
Smith, .Mrs. Terry (Faith )
Varney, and Tim, Tammy
and Ted Smith, all or Racine,

Route I. Mr. and Mrs . Smith
also have three greatg randchildren, Jerry and
David Smith , and Jenny
Varney, Racine, Route l.
Relatives and friends are
invited to call during the open
house hours. Mr. and Mrs .
Smith request gifts be
omitted.
MEN TO MEET
DORCAS - The Methodist
Men of Meigs County will
meet Tuesday, March 23 at
the Dorcas Church at 7:30
p.m. The guest speaker will
be Levon Sahum, Sugar
Grove , Ohio. Special music
will be presented by Vernon
Weber.

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

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::'

Kerr News

..

OPEN FRI. TIL8

'

HARMONY

Bicentennial costumes worn

Bla ck Patent
Blue Leather

. i.~
..:
::;

the world
go around ...

SHOE$
BETTY OHLINGER

.,.

POMEROY
·:·

,_,.,.,

Love is what makes

Marguerite's

,.

.,.

!-f.manon
social
enjoyed
=.
.
...

PLEASE AnEND
OUR STANDARD

N' BIBLE

Reedsville
News Notes

Now You Can Take Up To 48 Mllnttls To Repay
Your New Car Loan • • •

....

p.m. The Gallipolis Garden
Club will furnish the
program.
A letter was read announcing the
regional
meeting April 24 in Athens
called "Fashions in Flowers"
by Mrs. Vance Hendricks at
First Methodist Church on
College st.
A brochure showing a
schedule from World Wide
Travel Service on Motorcoach Tours was shown:
Miss Marie Meal reported
she had received thank-you
notes for donations sent to
Wahkeena and Victor H. Reis
funds.
Th'e date of the open
meeting was changed to June
1.

Mrs. Elaine George, Miss
Marie Meal, Mrs. Smeltzer
and Mrs. Snyder attended a
. design session led by Carol
Mitchell of Lexington. Ky., at
Roman J. Claprood's Open
House in Columbus.
Mrs . Snyder reported Mrs.
Zirkle had contacted her for
the club to take ' care of
· Horticultural Schedule. Mrs .
Grace Bradbury was appo(nted chairwoman and she .
named Mrs. Jewell Moore
and Mrs. Smeltzer to help
her. The county flower show
will be June 3 and 4.
Mrs. Esta _Reese thanked
the club for a hanging basket
, sent her while in the hospit~l.
./ The French C1ty Club IVlll
:host .the county meetmg of
'garden clubs Avril 22 at 7:30

NEW CAR LOANS?

Palmitnt

+++

NOTE FROM SUE : Your letter reminds me of a description
someone sent us: A mother is a person who hollers, "Go to
your room RIGHT NOW ... Don't you DARE turn your back
on me when I'm talking ~ you!"
P. S. She'll get over it. But it doesn't hurl to' say "I'm
sorry" fir$t.

Program covers
colonial plants

Deal On

rnstaflm•nt

I.

+++

Looking For
The Best

48 MONTHS

I

'Get Out' -But Don'tLeave
RAP :
My mother and I had a terrible argument over my
boyfriend. He 's really a great person, but you can't convince
mothers. Finally she screamed, "Get out and go live with him
them! "
And that's exactly what I did. I'm 21 and he 's 25, so we're
capable of decisions. ( Though I'll acjmit his apartment isn't
the dream nest ideal, and I'm looking for my own .)
But when I went batk for my belongings, Mom wouldn't
give them to me. She said I ''owed" for room and board and
they w~re impounded. (She'd never mentioned rent before.) I
asked how much, and she said she'd forget it if I moved back .
Since she suggested my present arrangement, what's she
doing with this brihe? Must 1 sue to get my clothes, etc. ? DOTTIE
DEAR DOTIIE:
"Get out, but don't leave !11 • • •
Mothers often yell now, think later. Then they compound
their mistakes by silly actions. Why don't you aod your mother
calm down and talk it over? Since you're 21, she can't force you
to come home.
And I'm sure (;he'll release your belongings If you tell her
you're apartment-bunting on your own. - HELEN

BUYING FIRST TiCKET - Greg Gibbs, on the board
of the Wahama High School Alumni Association, is shown
selling Richard Ord of the Mason County Bank the first
ticket to the Mike Lewis Benefit Dance to he held
Saturday, March 27, at Wahama High School. Gary
Billups and the Music Department from Portsmouth will
provide the musicfor lhe9 p.m. to I a.m. dance.

strated "Sandscaping."

Learn how

for

I

I

/

~~~~~~~~:.,~~!.

society hears Nelle Shaw

.....
•

;:.~New

Hope

called his mother, Mrs. Daisy
Ross Sunday saying he and
:r:..::::·
By Ada K.eels
lis wife both had been sick .
:;~ .. Jeff Keels and sisters, Jena
Willie Morris, local, who
Jania, were absent from Ills been ill In a Charleston .
::;;ligh school in Gallipolis for hospital came home recently
•~ oeveral days last week due to
much improved . His many
:.._ flu.
friends are glad he is back
... Mrs. John Gamble is ill home.
:;:,.frlth nu.
Dea~on Rober I Cooper,
:::;; • Mrs. Leila Scott and who was a pasilent for a few
.._-llrother, Bobbie Long, of days at Holzer Medical
..,. &amp;ackfork vilited their aunt
Center was returned home
::Daily RIIBI one day recently. Tuesday. His friends are glad
- . Leonora McDaniel of · he is able to .he back home ,
:llerlln, Ohio, visited her aunt,
~sy Roaa SWlday.
; ; Jell Keels and sisters,
:;!~~a and Janla Keels acMr. ·and Mrs. Marlin Rife
panled the singeu and
spent
a day this week with
::;,-•nd to Portsmouth, Ohio,
.
Mrs
.
Charles Young at ·
'"· Saturday
from
GAHS
llllllical in Gallipolis where Tuppers Pl&amp;ins. The Rife's
• ' they look part in a contest. son-ln-law is a patient in
:;: Mr. and Mrs. Jom Norman Veterans Memorial Hospital.
• · and 110n of near Berlin visited He Injured his back when he
cid lrlendl, Daisy Ross and fell while at his employment.
Mr. and Mrs. Hollier
-. dlulhter, Mrs. Edna Cooper,
Gofdon,
Fairmont, W. Va.,
&amp;lnday afternoon.
Clllled
on
Mr . and Mrs. Alex
: · Mrs. Barbara Brislin of
Sh~ler
on
Sunday. The
;:!; Akron called her parents Mr .
Gordon's
will
be
moving to St.
• and Mn. Gamble Sunday
Clairsville
In
lhe
near future,
;: staling they had three Inches
where
he
has
been tran·
:, fl. anow at Akron. They are
sf
erred.
"' line and hope to see them

: anct

... money just helps it go a liHie smoother.

LET US HELP

WITH THE CASH
Provincetown has
styling that Is everpopular, never gets
out of date. Select
pieces suitable for
various rooms In
your home or for
accent compatible
with many other ·
furnishings.

Storys Run

-theme of 1976
Materials and correlated helps.

vas
THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1:00 and 7:00 p.m •.

..'".
,.
,,

AT

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SOUTH THIRD

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THE MIDDLEPORT IOOK.-sTORE
. ?9 MILL ST. IN

••
'"

:) Mr . 111d Mrs. RLBoell Keels
OAPSE CANCELS
... . 1111 family attended the
POMEROY - Meigs Local
:: concert In GallipoUs Sunday
""afternoon. The children look Chapter 17 OAPSE meeting
scheduled for
Monday
:part In the 11'0111'am. .
: · Edward Ross of Chicago . evening has been can9elled.

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I
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W. 2nd St.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

�10 - The Suhday Times- Sentinel, Sunday. March 21 , 1976

•••
'

:::: · :: :::::::::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;.;;;.;.;:: .:·:·:· :·:·:: :::~ :::~:::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::: :::::::::: :::=:;:::::: :.;:;. ;.:-:· :·:·:·: ::

Ohioans reunite
at Payne home

I

PINELLAS PARK, Fla. Folden, Myrtle Queen all of
Friends and neighbors met at Venice , Fla .; Mr . and Mrs.
the home of Mr. and Mrs . Denver Slagle, Mr . and Mrs .
Donald Payne of Pinellas John Baker, Sarasota, Fla.
Park, Fla. recently for a
Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence
potluck dinner and a day or Dickey , Zephyrhills , Fla . ;
visiting and making new Mr . and Mrs. Clyde Thompacquaintances. Seventy five son, Ada Johnson , Mary B.
attended the gathering Sullivan, all of Largo, Fla .;
started by the Paynes in 1963. Vernon Co lem an . Tarpon
Those present were : Mr . Springs , Fla .; Mr. and Mrs .
and Mrs . Gilbert Meal, Mr . G. V. Sheets, New Port
and Mrs . Merrill Saunders, Richey, Fla ; Ed Judy, St.
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Bane, Petersburg , Fla. ; Rev . and
Mr. and Mrs . Nolan Carter, Mrs . Frank Coleman and
Mr. and Mrs . Merrill White, . children , Rachel, David and
Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Byres, Cary , Mr. and Mrs. Jim De
Charles Baker, Rickey Rosa and children, Doug ,
Baker, all of Gallipolis ; Mr. Jimmy and David , Mr . and
and
Mrs .
J.
Dale Mrs. Ed Cheesebrew and
Milltr, Carrie N. Dale, Marie children,
Tammy
and
H. Richards, all of Rio Donnie, Mr . and Mrs . Bruce
Grande.
De Lille and children, Brucie,
Mr . and Mrs . Worthy Timmy and Jeffy, David
Bright, Langsville; Mr. and Garow, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Mrs . Henry Egelkraut, Payne, all of Pinellas Park,
Fairborn; Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Fla.
Russell, Tirfin , Mr . and Mrs.
Howard Williamson,
Fostoria ; Mr . and Mrs .
FIVE EARN HONORS
Wayne Singleton, Cincinnati;
GALLIPOLIS
Five
Mrs .
Thelma
Barton, students of Meigs Couinty
Waynesville; Myrtle Pat- who have rated the honor roll
terson, Middletown; Charles at Gallipolis Business College
DeLille, Columbus; Sibyl for the Winter Quarter are
Windon ; Dunbar, W. Va .; Mr . Richard Cole, Pomeroy;
and Mrs. Nelson Brucker, St. Norman Deem , Racine:
Albans, W. Va. ; Mr. and Mrs . Wallace Hatfield , Pomeroy;
William Stauton, Tampa, Cecil Rice , Racine , and
Fla.; Mr . and Mrs. Loyal Daniel Spencer, Middleport.

by creating poisonous gases.
A downstairs fire can kill
a child sleeping upstairs.
•• ·.you can protect your

-.

family by detecting a fire
in its earliest stages •• ~
before actual flames and

HOME

visible smoke are on the scene.

F l R E!
SArETY

I

HANDBOOK

a FREE

\.

copy of the

Home Fire Safety Handbook

,)

and a no obligation fire
safety survey, contact:

SECURITY &amp;SAFETY SERVICES
(6141446-9881- 24 HRS .

255 Third Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio 4.5631

'ROSS E. HAMRICK, OWNER

GALLIPOLIS - Colonial
era plants were discussed at
the Fren ch City Garden
Club's March meeting at the
home of Mrs . Lucille Neff.
Mrs.
Patty
Snyder
presided . Mrs.
Gladys
Trainer gave devotions entitled
" Duties of
an
American" and " What is an
American ?" followed by a
prayer.
Roll call was to name a
flowering shrub. Mrs . Patty
Snyder thanked the group for
coming out and Mrs. Neff for
having them in her hOme .
Mrs . Bertin a Smeltzer
reported she and Mrs . Snyder
attended a meeting of the
Spring Valley Homemakers'
Club. Mrs. Snyder demon-

This means your monthly payments can be a lot smaller or that
you can bor(ow more without straining your budget. It might
easily be the difference between the car you've been looking at
·and the car you really want - Stop at the Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Co. for a 48-monttl new car loan.

I 1.20

. Total Finance

Amount

Credit life Total Atnount
or Note
Insurance
SJ ,897 .60
S9l.S4

of Lo•n

u.ooo.oo

Cha r!Jes ·
U04 .06

"

.

Annual pet.

Rate.
11 .83

36 MONTHS
Installment

P•yments
$101.77

•

Amount
of Lo•n
$3,000 .00

Credit Llfe Total Amount Total Finane

Insurance

Ot Note

.

.

[~otat Amount

Installment

Amount

P•vment
l143.1t ·

Credit Life

u.ooo.oo

of Lo•n

Insurance •
$41 .24

Charges

$3,663 .72

165 .95

24 MONTHS

I

Mr s .

Moore

gave

a

RAP :
I'm all for the man who thinks he should run interference
for his girl friend when another fellow asks her to dance. Why
should she have to refuse an unwanted offer when he's right
there to say, "Sorry, this one's taken."
I also think that if a woman is bothered by a "masher," her
man should take over and protect her, even if it'means a fight .
Women who want to " take care of themselves" turn me off.FOR THE BETTER WAY (MALE)
DEAR FOR:
Let's hope you get a mate who agrees with you, or the fight
has only just begun ! - HELEN
FOR :
Who says the offer is "unwanted "? I'm all for letting a
woman make her own decisions. - SUE
FRAUDULENT PAYMENTS
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A list
of 243 state employes
suspected of fraudlently
receiving welfare payments
was sent to 23 colinty welfare
directors Wednesday for
investigation.
State Auditor Thomas
Ferguson said there were 113 ·
suspected empl 0yes in
F~anklin
County, 61 in.
Cuyahoga County, 14 in
Summit County, 10 In Lucas
County, 9 in Hamilton
County, 8 in Montgomery
County and 7 in Stark County.
The other 16 counties had
three or less .
A computer check revealed ,
the 243 appeared to be on the
state payroll for Aid to
Dependent Children benefits,
but failed to report their
employment or earnings to
county welfare departments ,
he said.
Welfare departments will
have to determine the e~tent
of any fraud and county
:,e~i~":;e to take necessary

program on "Bicentennial
Plants and Flowers of
Colonial Days. " She briefly
described the life of settlers
in colonial days, their hardships and trouble with the
Indians which later turned
into friendship . They had
herbs and garden and flower
seeds, she noted . Most seed
and supplies came from
England and the arrival was
usually broadcast. The Indians introduced corn,
squash and beans .
A plant exchange was
conducted· with Mrs. Harley
George, chairwoman. Mrs .
NOW YOU KNOW .
Neff had a bicentennial
Helium
, the secohd lightest
arrangement using red, white
~
lerrient
,
was
first discovered
and blue permanent flowers
in a tall container with in !868 in the atmosphere of
bicentennial colors. The next the Sun.
meeting is April II. A tour of
Mrs . Elaine George's daffodil
garden and an Aprill3 tour to
study natural areas including
plants , wildflowers, soil,
water, birds and animals on
the park front, Tycoon Lake
and Bob Evans Farms was
planned.
Refreshments were served ·
by the hostess .

of Note
IM36.S6

1597 .17

Annual pcf.

Rate
11.96

Total Fln•nce Annuill Pet.
Charges
Rate
sns.n
12.02

Accident &amp; Heallh Insurance elso available at additional cost .

Farmers Bank
Pomeroy, Ohio

,,

•'

Mrs. Frank Bise is a
s urgical patient at the
Camden-Clark
Hospital,
Parkersburg, W. Va .
Tom Dye is visiling in
Akron,
Everett Hale, from a
nursing home in Parkersburg, W. Va., Mrs . Helen
Buckley , and Doyle Hale of
Belleville, W. Va., visited
Sunday with Mr . and Mrs.
John Buchanan and Mr. and
Mrs: R. E. Williams.
Mr . and Mrs . Charles
Foster and family and Mrs.
Sheila Westfall and Tracy of
Belpre, visited with Horace
Kibble and Forrest Kibble
and Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Congrove and Pam, Sunday,
Several from here attended
the 5oth wedding anniversary
for Mr. and Mrs . Sam Wilson
at Hockingport Sunday .
Mr . and Mrs. John Riebel
and famll.y of Pomeroy Rd., ·
and Mr. and Mrs. Roher!
Morton and family of Belpre
Rd ., visited with Mr . and
Mrs . D. C. Riehel. They
celebrated their father's
lirthday, D. C. Riebel.
Mr . and Mrs. James
Carruthers and Penny of
Louisville, and Mrs. Doris
Marks of Chester visited
Saturday evening with Mrs.
Bess Larkins.

GALLIPOLIS Nelle Shaw feels it should be taining a surprising numher will make their material
Shaw, 454 Third Ave ., returned to Gallia County. of locally familiar names.
available to be preserved for
Gallipolis, displayed items She would also like to see the
- A diploma from Gallis future generations .
••
and records of historical society obtain a set of pic- Academy dated 1867 when it
At the business meeting
interest to Gallia County at tures and articles on historic was a pri vale academy_
•
preceding Miss Shaw's
the March meeting of the homes and buildings which
- A diploma from Gatlia presentation, the board of
Gallia County Historical was printed over a period of Academy High School dated directors decided to un·
Society at Saint Peter's years in the Gallipolis Daily 1871.
dertake a prolect of
Episcopal Church.
Tribune when
Dwight
- Xeroxed copies of six c ataloging items in ou'r
Miss · Shaw, a native of Wetherholt i'ias editor . She collections of · Gallipolis House and arrange for
Gallipolis, graduated from urged the society to collect clippings during the 1~ window displays of historical
Gallia Academy High School pain lings of early Gallipolis compiled by Mrs . William interest In the weeks im•
and received her BS degree in artists and portraits of many Lewis and containing much mediately precedinR the
Education with a major in local · people painted by a history In them.
Fourth of July celebration.
Fine Arts from the Ohio State Cincinnati artist named
Following Miss Shaw 's
- A xeroxed copy of the
University. She spent several Shepherd who traveled up Emma Gatewood scrapbook. presentation, refreshments
•
years jn retail merchandising and down the Ohio River
- An undocumented article were served by the program
specializing in photography painting portraits.
staling that the last buffalo committee.
and traveled throughout the
Miss Shaw talked a bout the killed in Ohio was killed In
The April meeting will be
country to various depart. items and records of local Gallia County.
Sunday, April !I, at 2:30p.m.
ment stores. In 1962 she historical interest, many of
Miss Shaw's records are at Saint Peter's Eplacopal
joined the Columbus School which she has offered to the the first to be offered to the Church with Mrs . Mary
System where she taught · society when a suitable histol'ical. society. It is the Lewis speaking · on 11 The
Fine Arts for five years.
permanent place would be hope of the society that other History of 'Rio Grande
She returned to Gallipolis available to display and to historically minded persons College."
in 1967 and was employed as use
them.
With
her
an art therapist at the knowledge of local history
Gallipolis State Institute she was able to elaborate on
where she is currently each item including :
•
teaching. It was during this
-Copies of Howe's History
employment that she took of Ohio.
By K. Knotts
graduate work at Ohio
" The
Wild Rose
Frank Kirby has been in University and received her Wreath," a handwritten
Holzer Hospital for several master's degree in Flne Arts composition of the young
.
days for surgery·. She is in 1969.
ladies of Gallia Academy In
getting along fine.
·
As art therapist at GSI Miss 1850.
Curt Knotts is in the Holzer Shaw keeps · a continuing
- Copies of "The American
Hospital.
exhibit of the art work of the Philatelist" containing a
Mrs . Marietta Burger and residents of GSI at Nlsonger well..,..searched story of the
.
d~
children of Columbus spent Center on the Ohio State establishment of the first
11 r diamon ·
.
. t/€1' tqiJNe 1JV1.f, h1.f1) ?JO
the weekend with her mother, University campus. The government Post Offices in
.oe~ 1 t. nw ·
Mrs. Marie Hively and exhibit is changed every the Northwest Territory with
---=-""--~
children of Tycoon Lake . Mr. quarter.
Gallipolis serving as one of
"
"'
and Mrs. Morris Hively and
Miss Shaw has been in· the five stations.
son, Greg of Columbus spent terested In the history o(
- Annual report of the
SWlday and Mr. and Mrs. Ga!Ua County through the auditor of the city of
Walter Hively and children of years and has collected many Gallipolis for the year ending
Kemper Hollow also spent. items of local historical December 31, 1905.
Sunday with their mother and significance as well as many
- A series of original
•'
brothers and sisters.
interesting family heirlooms. . manuscripts of 0. 0.
Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Bill
She
introduced
her Mcintyre. Also a Mcintyre
Knotts had dinner Sunday program by making several scrapbook of his columns.
Jt. eert ain l )~ dnt.•s. A pmclm.w.' as
with his sister, Ethel Knotts suggestions for
future Possibly a collection of all
iinpmtmil
aS
a
di
a
mr)ird sl Hmld pot IH.' lllihle 011 the
of Gallipolis .
projects for the historical four of his books.
basi:-; of prit·e or "cut-rate'" indm·L•mtmt,
Mr. and Mrs . Wayne Mc- society. She emphasized the
- A haridwri tten journal of
Cully and grandson, Deon importance of returning to · the passage book · from the
lmt nn th e 'firm f'oum1atirm rrf (/fwlity a11d t:alue
Taylor, spent a weekend with Gallia County many of the Steamer Ohio dated 1860.
rt'c:dved. At this ~ tore wt: proudl y display the .
his parents, Mr. and Mrs . Ted original legal documents,
- Pictorial atlas of county
em hlt~ m of lic~hl&lt;~red }e ru le r, A.meticau Gem S(JC;ic tu
McCully and her parents, Mr. once filed in the Gallia commissioners dated 1874.
-- your assr rnur (·c tl1at we know ami
and Mrs. Grant.
County Courthouse, but now
- A N'ew York newspaper
Margeda Bartholomew and stored at Athens . These printed entirely in Welsh in
1-{rrm:anke the_qr;ality.and va l~u~ flf
~
son, Jim, spent the weekend records reflect early local the middle 1800s.
&lt;wory d"•rnond we offer for sa le.
with her mother , Mrs. legal actions many of which
A
history
of
the
,
!ransCOSTUMES SHOWN - Mrs . Orion Netson, Mrs. Gtover Stout, Miss Ruby Diehl , Mrs .
Margaret Edwards, Tycoon occurred prior to 1803 when acllons pertaining to a couple
Lawrence Chapman and Mrs. Virgil Atkins, left to right, in bicentennial costuming at the
MEMBI=R AMEFIII":AN GEM SOCIETY
Lake
.
Gallia County was a part of of riverbank lots from the
recent meeting of the Star Garden Club.
Mr . and Mrs. Dan Justice
Washington County.
time we were ·a part of
are back after a week's
Miss Shaw also feels that Washington County to the
honeymoon . in the Southern
the local Indian heritage was . present.
.
States.
·
an interesting part of histury . - Several mid'cen~ury
Mrs. Graham Crilcketis, and she would like to see· that Ohio River docunients and
4041!COHQ AVENUE · • _..l4M7
Keene,
Va ., spent a few days
flower
preserved. She stated that journals.
HARRISONVILLE - The Church Parish House in provided
recently
with
her
niece,
Mr.
arrangemeq'ts
for
the
recent
A "Who's Who In
there was an Indian mound
bicentennial meeting of the Pomeroy and the demonand Mrs . Bernard Osborne. near the present site of St.
Star Garden Club was held. stration given by Mrs. Helen Grande meeting.
America" dated 1935 con-'-------------------~
Harry Lee Hively, oldeat
The traveling prize donated
Louis Catholic Church, and
., re~ently at the Meigs Walker, Wellston , on clay
·'· Musewn.
by Mrs. Atkins was won by son of Mrs . Marietta Hively
pots .
Dr. Charles Parker owned a
tremendous Indian collection
Material on how to control Mrs . Lawrence Chapman. and husband, has finished
... · For the observance many
·ow in northern Ohio. Miss
-'.· of the members carne in insects was presented by Ribbons for dried or live school and has gone to
·,· c&lt;&gt;stwnlng of an earlier era. Mrs . Atkins . Several tours mass arrangements on Florida for employment.
.,., Mrs. Virgil Atkins gave the were discussed and members display went to _Mrs . Atkins ,
~-· devotions · using scripture
reported on tours they had first, Mrs . Robert Jewell,
• •
·;., from Matt . 25 With the already taken . It was noted second, and Mrs. Norman
JOINS P.H INC.
··· readings, " Touched by the the therapy meeting with the Will, third. For artificial
~;.· Fire" and ,','Twilight in my Athens Mental Health Center arrangements, ribbons went
MIDDLEPORT
Raymond
E.
Hindy
has
:: Garden." Miss Ruby Diehl GOO&lt;j Luck Garden Club will to Mrs. G. A, Radekin , first
WINS DEGREE
and Mrs. Robert _ Holliday,
joined the Parkersburg office
~-: ,reported on the recent open ·be at the home of Mrs . C. E.
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. ·:·~ meeting of the Winding Trail
Stout in April. Mrs. Jewell second. 1'l]ere was also an Arthur Parker of Belpre, of Parker-Hunter Inc., a
.' Garden Club at the Episcopal thanked the members who artistic arrangement on Ohio, will receive a Bachelor regional investment firm
display made by Mrs . Seth of Science Degree in headquartered in Pittsburgh,
Nicholson.
Aueronautical Science and an Pa . Hindy, a graduate of
To carry out the bicen- Associate ln Science 'in Middleport High School,
tennial theme the refresh· Aviation Management in the a !tended Mountain State
ment table was covered with Golden Anniversary Com. · College in Parkersburg and
an antique red and white menrement Exercises at was graduated· from Ohio
: ' GALUPOUS - Emanon
The remainder of the
checkered cloth centered Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in 1975. He has
• Club held Its March social evening was spent playing
with an arrangement of University at 10 a .m. April23. served as an intelligence
• Thursday evening at Mrs. bridge with high score going
jonquils and forsythia .
analyst in the Army while
; .Robert Caldwell.
to Mrs. John ·L. Evans and Gingerbread, coffee and tea Parker is the son of Robert stationed at Ft. Shafter,
Parker, 751 Ruble Ave.,
;
The tables were decorated second to Mrs . Robert
were served.
Hawaii.
Belpre.
• with spring flowers with Richards.
.
.
.
: accents of green in keeping
The next meeting will be a
•* with St. PatriCk's day. Mrs. book
review by Mrs. A. D.
: : Leo Mossman's committee Lusk at the home of Mrs .
• , served a dessert course.
Mossman on April 1.

.
••
..

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smith

Anniversary approaching
DORCAS - Mr . and Mrs.
Paul Smith will celebrate
their 45th wedding anniversary Sunday, March 28
at the Be thany United
Methodist Church with an
open house from 2 to 4 p.m .
Hos ting the celebration will
be their son and daughter-inlaw. Mr. and Mrs . Dan Smith·
and family.
Married March 31, 1931,
Mr. and Mrs. Smith have two
sons, Dan, who resjdes at
Racine , Route 1, and Robert
of Columbus . They have nine
grandchildren,
Robert
Wayne, Stephanie a nd Paula
Smith, Columbus; Don
Smith, .Mrs. Terry (Faith )
Varney, and Tim, Tammy
and Ted Smith, all or Racine,

Route I. Mr. and Mrs . Smith
also have three greatg randchildren, Jerry and
David Smith , and Jenny
Varney, Racine, Route l.
Relatives and friends are
invited to call during the open
house hours. Mr. and Mrs .
Smith request gifts be
omitted.
MEN TO MEET
DORCAS - The Methodist
Men of Meigs County will
meet Tuesday, March 23 at
the Dorcas Church at 7:30
p.m. The guest speaker will
be Levon Sahum, Sugar
Grove , Ohio. Special music
will be presented by Vernon
Weber.

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

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Kerr News

..

OPEN FRI. TIL8

'

HARMONY

Bicentennial costumes worn

Bla ck Patent
Blue Leather

. i.~
..:
::;

the world
go around ...

SHOE$
BETTY OHLINGER

.,.

POMEROY
·:·

,_,.,.,

Love is what makes

Marguerite's

,.

.,.

!-f.manon
social
enjoyed
=.
.
...

PLEASE AnEND
OUR STANDARD

N' BIBLE

Reedsville
News Notes

Now You Can Take Up To 48 Mllnttls To Repay
Your New Car Loan • • •

....

p.m. The Gallipolis Garden
Club will furnish the
program.
A letter was read announcing the
regional
meeting April 24 in Athens
called "Fashions in Flowers"
by Mrs. Vance Hendricks at
First Methodist Church on
College st.
A brochure showing a
schedule from World Wide
Travel Service on Motorcoach Tours was shown:
Miss Marie Meal reported
she had received thank-you
notes for donations sent to
Wahkeena and Victor H. Reis
funds.
Th'e date of the open
meeting was changed to June
1.

Mrs. Elaine George, Miss
Marie Meal, Mrs. Smeltzer
and Mrs. Snyder attended a
. design session led by Carol
Mitchell of Lexington. Ky., at
Roman J. Claprood's Open
House in Columbus.
Mrs . Snyder reported Mrs.
Zirkle had contacted her for
the club to take ' care of
· Horticultural Schedule. Mrs .
Grace Bradbury was appo(nted chairwoman and she .
named Mrs. Jewell Moore
and Mrs. Smeltzer to help
her. The county flower show
will be June 3 and 4.
Mrs. Esta _Reese thanked
the club for a hanging basket
, sent her while in the hospit~l.
./ The French C1ty Club IVlll
:host .the county meetmg of
'garden clubs Avril 22 at 7:30

NEW CAR LOANS?

Palmitnt

+++

NOTE FROM SUE : Your letter reminds me of a description
someone sent us: A mother is a person who hollers, "Go to
your room RIGHT NOW ... Don't you DARE turn your back
on me when I'm talking ~ you!"
P. S. She'll get over it. But it doesn't hurl to' say "I'm
sorry" fir$t.

Program covers
colonial plants

Deal On

rnstaflm•nt

I.

+++

Looking For
The Best

48 MONTHS

I

'Get Out' -But Don'tLeave
RAP :
My mother and I had a terrible argument over my
boyfriend. He 's really a great person, but you can't convince
mothers. Finally she screamed, "Get out and go live with him
them! "
And that's exactly what I did. I'm 21 and he 's 25, so we're
capable of decisions. ( Though I'll acjmit his apartment isn't
the dream nest ideal, and I'm looking for my own .)
But when I went batk for my belongings, Mom wouldn't
give them to me. She said I ''owed" for room and board and
they w~re impounded. (She'd never mentioned rent before.) I
asked how much, and she said she'd forget it if I moved back .
Since she suggested my present arrangement, what's she
doing with this brihe? Must 1 sue to get my clothes, etc. ? DOTTIE
DEAR DOTIIE:
"Get out, but don't leave !11 • • •
Mothers often yell now, think later. Then they compound
their mistakes by silly actions. Why don't you aod your mother
calm down and talk it over? Since you're 21, she can't force you
to come home.
And I'm sure (;he'll release your belongings If you tell her
you're apartment-bunting on your own. - HELEN

BUYING FIRST TiCKET - Greg Gibbs, on the board
of the Wahama High School Alumni Association, is shown
selling Richard Ord of the Mason County Bank the first
ticket to the Mike Lewis Benefit Dance to he held
Saturday, March 27, at Wahama High School. Gary
Billups and the Music Department from Portsmouth will
provide the musicfor lhe9 p.m. to I a.m. dance.

strated "Sandscaping."

Learn how

for

I

I

/

~~~~~~~~:.,~~!.

society hears Nelle Shaw

.....
•

;:.~New

Hope

called his mother, Mrs. Daisy
Ross Sunday saying he and
:r:..::::·
By Ada K.eels
lis wife both had been sick .
:;~ .. Jeff Keels and sisters, Jena
Willie Morris, local, who
Jania, were absent from Ills been ill In a Charleston .
::;;ligh school in Gallipolis for hospital came home recently
•~ oeveral days last week due to
much improved . His many
:.._ flu.
friends are glad he is back
... Mrs. John Gamble is ill home.
:;:,.frlth nu.
Dea~on Rober I Cooper,
:::;; • Mrs. Leila Scott and who was a pasilent for a few
.._-llrother, Bobbie Long, of days at Holzer Medical
..,. &amp;ackfork vilited their aunt
Center was returned home
::Daily RIIBI one day recently. Tuesday. His friends are glad
- . Leonora McDaniel of · he is able to .he back home ,
:llerlln, Ohio, visited her aunt,
~sy Roaa SWlday.
; ; Jell Keels and sisters,
:;!~~a and Janla Keels acMr. ·and Mrs. Marlin Rife
panled the singeu and
spent
a day this week with
::;,-•nd to Portsmouth, Ohio,
.
Mrs
.
Charles Young at ·
'"· Saturday
from
GAHS
llllllical in Gallipolis where Tuppers Pl&amp;ins. The Rife's
• ' they look part in a contest. son-ln-law is a patient in
:;: Mr. and Mrs. Jom Norman Veterans Memorial Hospital.
• · and 110n of near Berlin visited He Injured his back when he
cid lrlendl, Daisy Ross and fell while at his employment.
Mr. and Mrs. Hollier
-. dlulhter, Mrs. Edna Cooper,
Gofdon,
Fairmont, W. Va.,
&amp;lnday afternoon.
Clllled
on
Mr . and Mrs. Alex
: · Mrs. Barbara Brislin of
Sh~ler
on
Sunday. The
;:!; Akron called her parents Mr .
Gordon's
will
be
moving to St.
• and Mn. Gamble Sunday
Clairsville
In
lhe
near future,
;: staling they had three Inches
where
he
has
been tran·
:, fl. anow at Akron. They are
sf
erred.
"' line and hope to see them

: anct

... money just helps it go a liHie smoother.

LET US HELP

WITH THE CASH
Provincetown has
styling that Is everpopular, never gets
out of date. Select
pieces suitable for
various rooms In
your home or for
accent compatible
with many other ·
furnishings.

Storys Run

-theme of 1976
Materials and correlated helps.

vas
THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1:00 and 7:00 p.m •.

..'".
,.
,,

AT

HEATH UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
SOUTH THIRD

MIDDLEPORT, .OHIO

$

=

"

~ aoon.

SPONSORED BY

THE MIDDLEPORT IOOK.-sTORE
. ?9 MILL ST. IN

••
'"

:) Mr . 111d Mrs. RLBoell Keels
OAPSE CANCELS
... . 1111 family attended the
POMEROY - Meigs Local
:: concert In GallipoUs Sunday
""afternoon. The children look Chapter 17 OAPSE meeting
scheduled for
Monday
:part In the 11'0111'am. .
: · Edward Ross of Chicago . evening has been can9elled.

·-

.

First Mortgage

Loans To

Buy: or Build

•

Created b:r .

crafbmen
who tllke pride
in excellence

::t

•

That's why we are here to help families get that
home . You'll get the lowest rate allowed by law and
you'll get friendly service . .If you're going to buy or
build, come see us, we love to say yes.

•

ro"Vlneetown•
•rDIMIOIIN

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

,-----··-·-·-··-·-·-··-·-··-··--·-··~--··-··-·-· , ~ ·-·- ·-·-,

I1
MEIGS BRANCH
Athens County Savings &amp;leal Co.
I
I
L_ -..-..----~~:~.~~-~N~~~~~:~ ___ j
J'

296

W. 2nd St.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

�••

13 - TheSurulovThiii!!I - So&gt;nt.i ""l. Sundav, March 21.11r16
OKAY,
LAW
HP.S TO
IN ' BUT

TO

Gallia
•

IIIOT 6 01 NG

JU~T WALK IN AND

T,._I&lt;E OUR f i.OOO I'R12E

MONEY 1 WE ' C&gt;IRL5 "llE
GOING

TO

Plll'cC. TICE

&lt;;EVEN ·B,._LL- AROUND
Tt-!E CLOCK!

County ,--~-==~

M

with Mojor Hoople

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

12 - The Sunday Times- Sentmel, SWlday, March 21, 1976

" ..§£1RIT OF TO~ORROW ~

BY FREDJ. DEEL
Galli a County
4-H Extension Agent

THE FIVE GENERATION family pictured here
includes Steven Matfllew Wood , 18 months old ; his
· mother, Mrs. Earie !Peggy ) Wood, sta nding right; his
grandmother, Mrs .. Burdell 1 Ka thryn ) McKinney ,
standing left; his great-grandmother, Mrs. Gertrude
Ditunan of Zanesville, seated left, and his grea t-greatgrandmother, Mrs. Jennie Hansher, 92, of Middleport,'
seated right.

"A' CREATIVE ARTS WORKSHOP"
GALUPOUS - Creative Arts is one of the most rapidly
growing 4-H projects in Ohio. Four-if members and adults
alike can gain personal development through self-expression
with art materials. Four,H members and advisors as well as
Interested parents are invited to attend and participate in 4-H
Crea tive Arts Workshop on March 25, at the Area Extension
Cen ter in Jackson. The Area Center is locaU!d about one mile
soufll of Jackson , off Staie Route 93, on the Ohio Ag. Research
&amp; Development Center Farm. It will begin at 6 p.m. and will be
over at 9 p.m.
During flle workshop, participants will have an
opportunity to see how other 4-H members and ·adults are
expanding the 4-H Creati\:e Arts Project.
There will be creative art displays! You will "learn by
doing•: in a craft demonstration workshop with Barbara
Wrenn, Professional art instructor and artist.
Every participant will make an art design to take home
and show others. See, evaluate and appreciate fine art of the
past and present. I \hink fllose who participate will find it to be
an interesting and worthwhile experience.

DENE WAGNER of WJEH was flle commentator
Tuesday for a fashion show held during the monthly
meeting of flle Gallipolis Christian Women's Club. The
meetnig was held at flle Holiday Inn .

~~:::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::_::::;:;:;:;:;::::: ;:;:::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:·:::: :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:;:·:·:· :;:;:;: ·:;:;:::-:.;~~.~

1

.

c;;..o

:;:
···

:::

CHESHIRE - Readings
highlighted the Wednesday
afternoon meeting of the
Kyger Methodist Women's
Society at the home of Mrs.
Cora Rupe.
The meeting was called to
order by presiden t, Mary
Sisson. " Trust and Obey"
was sWJg by the group in
Wlison. Prayer was given by

Malinda Bradbury and the
fllought for flle day taken
from the Upper Room was
read by Mrs. Gail Sisson . The
prayer also came from the
Upper Room. Scripture
reading was Psalm 100 by
Mrs. Rupe .
Roll call was to name a
happening in the monfll of
March. The secretary and
treasurer

repor ts

were

:,:

MINERSVILLE - Mrs .
Erma Roush and Mrs. Alfred
Yeauger entertained the
United Methodist Women of
the Forest Run United
Methodist Church at the
church Tuesday evening.
The meeting opened by the
president reading a poem on
Our Heritage entitled "This is
our Country" followed by
prayer. Mrs. Denver Holter

presented.
Readin gs included :
"Schooldays, " ''Some Keep was devotional leader with
the Sabbath, " Gail Sisson; devotionals entitled "He Put
Nina Rupe, a reading per- a Song in My lie art." She also
taining to St. Patrick's Day; rea d "The Story of Springtime" and cited six things to
Malinda Bradbury ,.para hies;
Mary Sisson, "The Ten do to ce lebrate each week
Commodities of Sports "; during Lent.
The program opened wifll
Cora ;Rupe, HSp rin gtime "
flle song "My Jesus I Love
· and " Riddles ."
Rug rags were sold and · Thee." Mrs. Fred Nease,
refreshmen Is in keeping wi fll leader, chose the1 topic, "One
St . Patrick's Day were Woman's Voice' taken from
served by Mrs . Rupe assisted the program book "A
by Mary Sisson . The meeting Conununity of Women." The
closed in usual form . The purpose was to motivate the
woman
to
April meeting will be at the individual
her
o wn
home of Malinda Bradbury determine
. the third Wednesday. of April. understa nding of 'Christian
efllics and its presence or
absence in the w0rld around
her. Mrs. Nease played the
part of a roving reporter,
TWO ARE FINED
int
e rviewing
va riou s
POMEROY - Fined in the
members
o(
the
society
as to
court of Pomeroy Mayor
their
views
on
ethics
in
Cla rence Andrews Friday
loday's
world.
A
discussion
night were Joni Bobo, no
address listed , $50 and costs, followed the interviews.
disorderly c onduct, an d Several other readin gs
pertaining to the theme were
James Parsons; Pomeroy,
given
followed by a prayer by
$25 and costs on speeding
Mrs
.
Kerns Roush. Mrs .
charges and $14 on a charge
Harry
Wya
tt's special for the
of failing to pay parking
was
entitled ;&lt;The
program
tickets.
Love
of
God."
A song " In
Forfeiting bonds ·were
Christ
there
is
no East or
Randall RqsseU , Mason, $35;
West"
·
concluded
the
Earl Archer, Middleport, program.
$30.50; Jerry Swartz, Mid·
Plans were discussed for
dleport, $30, and William
flle
Easter sunrise breakfast
, lmbnden, $25. All four of the
to
be
held at flle Forest Run
bonds were posted on
Church
for the Syracuse
speeding cha rges.
charge and tentative plans

CASSETTE

Our Reg . $2.95

$131
:J Pack
minute
blank cassette
tapes. 3-hrs .
total time.

. 60-

TAWNEY
JEWELERS

"House of Diamonds
and Fine Gifts"
422 Second Ave .

Gallipolis, Ohio

&lt;Cari'S'·

ram1IY

If y&lt;lll wa n t IQ know wh11l m akes~ greill WHve, fu~ t

~•k . We ' ll

tell ~o u It take ~ leather upper5 . lealhcr

cQvered weages &lt;1/ld. ot (Our r.e, Til e gre~t Conn ie na me
- lh&lt;tt_· ~ &lt;lll you need to know 11t1ou l we~ v ., Quilrler
5 1 r i~p

In

n "'lu r~l.

519.9'9 , s ting in brown ,

1

18.99

conn1e·
&amp; fri. 9:30 ti I P.ftl.

Tues.. Wid., Sot. 9;30 ti 5 p.ftl.
lb...., 9:30 ti 12 -

snoe SIONI

.

POMEROY - It's hats off to the Meigs United Methodist
Men who sponsored a pancake supper last week which brought
$450 iniD the Senior Citizens fund.
Giving flleir time for the project - and yes, they did the
cooking - were the Rev . Robert Bumgarner, John Compton,
Albert Hill, Vernon Nease and Edson Roush. Donations of foOd
and money came from the four banks, w. va . Sausage Co ..
Powell's Super-Valu, Simon's Market and Jack's Dairy Bar,
and members of the Council on Aging, flle paid staff at the
Center, and flle RSVP volWJteers did flle serving.
Next .. . a cornbread and bean supper Friday night, 4 w 7,
at $1 a person, dessert extra, but free entertairunent.
Slowly, but surely, flle Council is moving toward its
financial goa l, but still tllere are several thousand dollars to be
raised in the next few months to meet the local share .of
operating expenses ... and outside money is contingent on
raising the local share. So it's support the senior citizens need
in flleir many projects.

:::;
·:·:
were made for the Mother's
Day Banquet to be in May.
Twenty-four sick and shut-in
calls were made by
members. The treasurer's
report . concluded
the
meeting.
The hostesses served a
dessert course to Mrs. John
Scott, Mrs. Harry Wyatt,
Mrs. Olan Genheimer, Mrs.
Uswin Nease, Mrs. Edison
TO MILDRED AND ROSCOE FOWLER, congratulations!
Hollon, Mrs. May Holter, Tomorrow flley chalk up 60 years of marriage.
'
Mrs. Fred Nease, Mrs. Kerns
•
Roush and Mrs. Russ Watson.
TOO many of us take the gootl things of life for granted.
Like the democratic system of government. Not perfect by far,
but
the best there is. Anyway, for a real experience in
r '·
appreciation
you might read Alexander Dolgun's story of his
'). .
•
imprisorunent in Communist Russia from 1949 to 1954. Not a
new book, but one worth reading in this bicentennial yea r.

6 ,

THESE ARE FUN DAYS for Lois Ann Slluer. She flew to
Bermuda to 'visit friends.and will be there for the next week. A
teacher in flle Afllens County schools, she's on spring break
now.

TALENTED KIM BATEY who sings and accompa.nies
herself on the guitar was among flle entertainers at flle birfllday party of Feeney-Bennett Post 128 Wednesday night. We
didn't know , so, of course, het name wasn't included in the
party report.

JOSEPH L. KEMP

Celebrates .
birthday

•
STYLE SHOW ENJOYED - Members of flle
Gallipolis Christian Women's Club were treaU!d to a
fashion ·show at their luncheon meeting Tuesday at the
Holiday Inn. Here, Gloria Young models a wine color
leather .coat and a blue denim dress.

Readings highlight
-·.·_:·._
:
r jo ti'/)St R un
.:
women s program : UM w .t •I • d ;:;:
i
en ervatne f
f]

B TEAM CHAMPIONS of the Rio Grande RinkY Dink basketball program are !front
row 1-r) Matthew Withee, David Garber, Jimmy Green, Brad Smith, SU!ve Bennett and
Tndd Wooten. (Back row) Manager Jinuny Isaacs, Coach Garry Adkins and T. J . Owens.
Absent was David CarpenU!r.

RIO GRANDE Rinky Dink A team champions are (front row, 1-r )' Steve Runyon,
Chipper Young, Steve Wolle, Steve Thompson, Kevin Isaacs. (Back row ) Sarah Evans,
Coach Garry Adkins , Titn Lanier and Ma nager Jimmy Isaacs.

Skin care
studied
GALLIPOLIS - Skin care
was flle most important of
many subjects taught at
"Jamboree '76" sponsored by
Mary Kay Cosmetics attended by 2,000 consultants
and directors for Mary Kay in
the southeast region of the
United Slates. Fran Tabit
attended from the Gallipolis
area.
The meetings were held .to
give advanced training to the
consultants -on the importance of and most modern
teehniques of basic skin care,
as well as classes on glamour
make-up and corrective
make-up.
Consultants were given flle
opportWJity to at.tenq classes
on personal development,
business org anization and

comm WJica tion skills.
Mary Kay Cosmetics began
in 'Dallas, Texas in 1963 and in
the 13 years since, it has
grown into a $37 million
oompany with consultants
throughout flle United States,
as well as in ofller parts of the
world.

Kings Island has new phone listing soon
KINGS MILLS - New
Bofll Kings Island and the
i&lt;elephone numbers and area restaurant, over flle main
code will be in effect ·{or gate, open for preview
Kings Is la nd family en- weekends beginning April 24.
i&lt;ertainment center and In- Grand Opening Weekend is
ternatio na l Restaurant May 29-31.
beginning Friday, March 26.
This season InU!rnational
The new number of Kings Restaurant will be in
Island is (513) 241-5600.
operation only during regular
Reservations for In- park hours.
t&lt;!rnational Restaurant can
The Kings Island Guest
be made at (513) 241-5900.
Information Center bas the

following two ·toll -free
numbers : (8001 582·3~1. for
Ohio calls only; and (800 ) 5434031, for calls from all other
states.

Coin club will

RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Grande P.T.O. held its annual
basketball banquet Thursday
evening.
Millard Cassidy, principal,
introduced members of the
GaiUpoUs school board who
were guests at flle banquet.
They were Liz Cornell,
Katherine Williams and Bob
Marchi. He also reintroduced
the

new

superintendent,

Donald Staggs . Cassidy
praised the members of the
basketball teams.
Ted Woo~&lt;en gave the in·
vocation. A potluck meal was
enjoyed by the teams,
parents and guests. Three
decorated blue and white
cakes, featuring the coach's
name and the boys' names, as

and trophy; Tim Lanier,
certificate, second year pin,
trophy and most valuable
certificate, second year pin , player trophy ,
Jimmy Isaacs, manager
trophy and most valuable
and ::?Corekceper, was m ~
player trophy .
troduced and praised for his
A team a wards were :
Steve
Runyon ,
Steve · assistance in flle basketball
Thompson, Steve Wolfe, all program . Sarah Evans,
certificate,letter and trophy ; representing the teams, gave
Chipper YoWJg , certificate, Coach Adkins a plaque which
second year pin and trophy ; read, " To Coach Garry
Kevin Isaacs, ce rtificate, Adkins, 1975-1976 Rinky Dink
second year pin and trophy ; Class A Champs, Class B
Sarah Evans ( the only girl in Champs." WooU!n gave the
the Rinky Dink basketball benediction at flle close of the
league), ce rtificate, letter meeting.
trophy ; David Carpenter,
certificate, second year pin
and trophy; Matthew Withee,

BERNADINE'S
spon- ' '
sored the spring fashion "
show enjoyed by member11
of the GalllpoiJs· Christian · ~•.•
1' .

Wol!len's .Club at a Iuncheon meeting Tuesday.
Here, Reva Mullins of
Bernadine's models a coral
"chemise" style dress.

"

..

'"
•\

,J

,)
,

\' First birthday honored : :

well as, "1976 Champs,' were
served, baked and donated by :·:
Betty Carpenter and Roberta
HARRISONVILLE
Smith.
Thomas
Oliv er
Lee
Coach Garry Adkins in· ce lebrated his first birthday
troduced guest speaker, Bill March 11 at the home of his
Wamsley, head of flle Rinky uncle and aunt, Mr . and Mrs .
Dink basketball pr og ram. E ugene
Reeves
of
Wamsley paid tribute to the Harrisonville, The occasion
coach for fllc sl&lt;eady im- al so marked the 20th wedding
provement of his learns . His anniversary of Mr. and Mrs.
theory was fllat " you get out Reeves and the 17th birthday
just what you put into of their son, Randy .
anything." He stressed these
Atten~ing lhe celebration
yoWlger boys should lea rn were Mr. and Mrs . Thomas
basic
basketball
fun- Lee, Mrs. Jess ie Reev.es, both
damentals and not how to of Albany ; Mr. and Mrs .
win at all costs. The changes Eugene Reeves and their
·for next year were noted and seven children, Randy ,
he thanked the people Jor Rodney , Tony, Darlene ,
backing the basketball Ri cky, Mandy and David,
program.
Harrfsonville ; Miss Kathy
Coach Adkins made a brief Gibbs , Mason, W. Va . and
talk and gave flle following B Mrs .
Nellie
Nelson ,
Team Awards: Steve Ben- Harrisonville .
nett, Jimmy Green, Todd
Ice crea m, ca ke and soft
Wooten, David Garber, drinks were' served. Sending
Brad Smith, all certificate, gifts were Mr . and Mrs.
letter and trophy ; T. Harold Reeves and Trina,
J.
Owens,
certifi- Pomeroy; Mr . and Mrs .
cate, second year pin •and Eu ge ne Dilcher, Albany,

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Michael
Epple, Pomeroy; Mary

Middleport ; Salim Yates ,
Racine ; Becky Fultz, Middleport ; Ri chard Sauer,
Paulin e Derenberger, Middleport .
Pomeroyi Rose Marcinko,
DISCHARGED - Kyle
Reedsville: Bernice Darst, Sinclair, Glen Hudson, Scotty
Pomeroy ; ban a Glassburn , Quillen, Marvin Milliron ,
Bidwell; Flora Murphy, Orion
Darrah,
Opal
Rutland ; ·Willie Collins, Creniea ns , Rena McDaniel.

,-;;:

• 330 Second

J ~'' ·~~TE
~

Kelly and ~evin Dean, all of
Albany; Mr. and Mrs . Clyde
Dilcher, and Mr. and · Mrs.
Bryon Gilmore and family,
all of Columb~s.

for

r

YES

SEOEMS

March 30

I

A Vole for Quality
Emergen: :a~sportalion

~
1CIIli1101is.

AIMEE MILLS

Girl born
SYRACUSE - Mr. and
Mrs. Randy Ray Mills of
Syracuse are annoWJcing the
birth of flleir first child, a six
pound, four OWlce daughU!r,
Aimee Befll, Jan . 17 at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Maternal grandparents are .
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Blevins,
Syracuse, and paternal
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Homer Mills, SyracuSe.
Great-grandparents are Mrs.
Anflla Mills, Syracuse, Mrs.
Ernestine Friend, Ripley, W.
Va . and Dewey Ramsey,
Ripley , W. Va .

name officers
Area agency on
Mo1_1day night
MIDDLEPORT - The aging funded
Oh-Kan Coin Club will conduct a regular ·business
meeting and election Q( officers Monday night in the
meeting rooms of the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Elecll'ic Company building
m Mill St., In Middleport.
A social hour and trading
session at 7 p.m. will precede
the meeUng, and out-of-town
coin dealers will be present w
buy, sell or trade collecwr
items. A rep&lt;irt will be made
on the recent successfUl coin
show, and a 56-lot coin aucUon will be held. Refreshment,&amp; will be served. Interested persons are invited.

COLUMBUS ~ 'J'he Ohio
Commission on Aging
awarded $i,429,862 in new
federal funds to six area .
agencies on aging at its
March 17 meeting in
Colwnbus. Agencies located
In Dayton, Toledo, Colwnbus,
Rio Grande, Bridgeport and
Canton will receive the
money to provide social
services for ihe elderly.
Dlsll'icl Seven Area Agency
baaed at Rio Grande College
In Rio Grande received
$180,909 for Adams, Brown,
Qallla, Highland, Jackson,
Lawrence, Pike, Ross, Scioto
and Vlntvn coWJUes.

MORE HELP COMING
ATHENS - David R. Van
Voorhis, representative of the
Dlsll'ict Direcwr, for the
Athens Office of the Internal
Revenue Service, said increased taxpayer assistance
will be available during . the

1976 tax fllintl seuon on
Morldays from 8 a.m. w 4:f5
p.m.; 11:1e followlnt~ Saturdays
from 9 a .m. to I p.m., 1\farch
27, April 3 and 10, and on
Thursday, April 15 from 8
a.m. to 4:45p.m.

p.m .

Ohio..-_....__,...._.

The Owners Of
Big Jim's Plaza
Believe In th•.: future
of the Big Band Area.

.!

~

"'

Senior Citizens Nutrition '
Program, 11 :30 a.m .-12:30
p.m. Monday through Friday.
Monday - Meat loaf with '.
gravy, mas~ed potatoes, •.
Waldorf salad, chocolate .,•
cake wifll whir.. icing, bread, ''
butter, milk.
~
Tuesday .- Sliced turkey, ·•
candled sweet potato, but- •
tered green beans, fruit •
cocktail in strawberry jeUo, •
roll, butl&lt;er, milk.
••
Wednesday - Sausage t
links, au gratin potatoes :
(cheese topping), buttered •
beets, peanut butter cookies, :
(two), bread, butter, milk. '
Thursday - Salisbury
steak-gravy, buttered diced
potatoes, buttered peas,
peach cobbler, bread, butier,
milk.
· Friday - Fried fish, · .~
French fries, cole salw, spice
cake, bread, butter, milk.
"'
Coffee, tea and buttermilk ' "
served daily. Lunch program
is on a donation hula for · "
senior ciUzens and $1 fee is
charged guests of senior .;
ciUzens.

J

,.. g-·

DEL MONTE .

TOMATO

With Purchase
Of

5 LB.

MARlHA WHITE

MEAL
Expires:

50 EXTRA
TV STAMPS

Pearl &amp; Locust
MIDDLEPORT

GALLON
2% MILK

AWIDE SELECilON OF ELECTRONICS AND PARTS.

PAR KAY

It all happens on Wednesday We look forward to seeing you then.

100 EXTRA
With
Purchase of

JUICE
46 Ol
CAN

CARNATION

6 STICK
OLEO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

OPEN WED., MARCH 24 AT 12 NOON

16

oz.

JAR
MT. OLIVE

SWEET

50 EXTRA
TV STAMPS

PJCKLES

Good With

32 Ol
JAR

2-1-LB. PKGS.
OF

CARROTS
Expires:

AUTHORIZED SALES CENTER

COFFEE-MATE

2-1-LB. PKGS.

Expires: 3-27-76

BIG Jl

....,.)

Use 2nd week of Mailer good for 800
Top Value Stamps plus Coupons in this
paper.

50 EXTRA
TV STAMPS

nl STAMPS

•

3

· Middleport. 0 .

A New Store To
Explore And Enjoy

:

FBI GETS MAN
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Dan - ~
carlton Hazen, 30, sought for ·j
unlawful filgh,t to avoid
prGei!CUtion for forgery in ,..
Lawrence County, waa ""
arrested by the FBI Friday . ..
Hazen was taken to the ,
Franklin CoWJty Jail in lieu of
~.ooo bond.
"

P.V.C. JACKETS
REG. s25.00 NOW 'lsaa
SIZES: 8 TO 18

Good With

10 ;15 a.m.; Chorus, 12:30-2 •
Wednesday, March 24 - -.... .
Crafls; Games, 12 :30-2 p.m. '"
Thursday, March 25 - ;;
Crafts; Physica l Fitness,;,:·
10:45-11 :15 a.m. ; Ballroom
Dandng, 12 :30-1:30 p.m .;~
Mov1e, 1:45-2 :45 p.m.
Friday, March 26 - Ari, ,::
C.1ass, l0-!1 a .m.; Euchre and •
Pinochle, 10-11 :30 a.m.; "
Bowling, 1-3 p.m.; Cornbread
and bean soup supper, 4-7

~ver.uet

\

11 :30 a.m. i Square Dance, ..;

p.m.

LADIES'
LEATHER-LIKE

*7
iv..•·~~
vl';#&amp;"";.
&amp;a: V!QiE
v ~
r;..;-;

COACH GARY ADKINS and Matthew Withee and
Tim Lanier at the Rio Grande Grade PTO . basketball
banquet.

·.·.:.'_!

THOMAS LEE

9 O'CLOCK

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

~

12 :30-3 p.m.
-· ~
Tuesday , March 23 - .;r,
Crafts; First Aid Course ' ;:.
9:30-11 :30 a .m.-12 :30-2 :30 ,
p.m .; Discussion, Meigs ~­
County Manpower Programs,

'S

OPEN MONDAY
EVENING TIL

BIG JIM'S

:;:·~·: ·:· ;.;-;.:·:·:·:·&gt;:·:·;.; ':.; .;.;·:·:·:·:·:-:·:· :·;. :·:.:·:·:·:·:.: ·:·:.:.:.: ::.: ·:-:. :·:·:.:.: ·:-;.:·:·:.:· :·:.: :;. :. :.:·:. ;.;:;.:. :· ;:;:;: ;:;:; = :· :·~i\

·.·

POMEROY
Meigs
Senior Citizens Cen.ter DC·
tivities located at the
Pomeroy JWJior High School
is open 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Monday
fllrough Friday.
Monday , March 22 Crafts; Whittling Class, 10-

NOSTALGIA IS IN , what wifll the bicentennial, and
organizations are finding it delightful to take the step
backward in costume, foods and even recreation.
Hadn 't heard or fllought about an old fashioned taffy pull
for years, but this past week one took place at the Middleport
First Baptist Church. Manning Kloes, we understand, made
flle taffy, and members of the Golden Rule Class did the
pulling. Sounds lik e a marveluus diversion from the bang-bang
of television .

EVERYBODY 'S BUSY and we're all a little prone to "let
George do it," but when it comes io fllings which are sure to
GALLIPOLIS - Joseph L. affect our economy, best we do our part.
About . fllc proposed abandonment · of tlie C. and 0.
Kemp of 10t8 Third Ave.,
Railway's
Logan to Pomeroy lil]e, it's time to get involved in a
Gallipolis, celebrated his 94th
protest
action.
After flle April 7 hearing before the lnterstaU!
birthday Feb. 27 with friends
Commerce
Commission
at Gallipolis, it's too late.
and relatives.
George
Arnott
and
Ken
Gilkey of flle Meigs County Rail
Ice cream and cake were
Service
Committee
plan
another
meeting fllis week to arrange
served to Mr. and Mrs . Burl
for
testimony
at
flle
hearing
,and
to work out details of other
Roush , Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
protest
actions
such
as
a
letter
writing campaign and
Kemp and children, Mrs.
They
need
public
support.
As
soon as the meeting i$
petitions.
JuanitaDamron and Danny
set
up
we'll
let
you
know
when
and
where.
Easton .

"

Basketball·banquet enjoyed

CHAIRMAN NAMED
COLUMBUS (UP! )
President Ford Committee in
Ohio
Chairman
Keith
McNamara
Friday
announced the appointment
of Dayton business executive
Robert M. O'Hara as
chairman of the President
Ford
Committee
in
Montgomery County.
O'Hara i~ a group vice
president with the Mead
Corp. and has been active in
Dayton politics since moving
to the city in 1972.

WE HAVE

�••

13 - TheSurulovThiii!!I - So&gt;nt.i ""l. Sundav, March 21.11r16
OKAY,
LAW
HP.S TO
IN ' BUT

TO

Gallia
•

IIIOT 6 01 NG

JU~T WALK IN AND

T,._I&lt;E OUR f i.OOO I'R12E

MONEY 1 WE ' C&gt;IRL5 "llE
GOING

TO

Plll'cC. TICE

&lt;;EVEN ·B,._LL- AROUND
Tt-!E CLOCK!

County ,--~-==~

M

with Mojor Hoople

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

12 - The Sunday Times- Sentmel, SWlday, March 21, 1976

" ..§£1RIT OF TO~ORROW ~

BY FREDJ. DEEL
Galli a County
4-H Extension Agent

THE FIVE GENERATION family pictured here
includes Steven Matfllew Wood , 18 months old ; his
· mother, Mrs. Earie !Peggy ) Wood, sta nding right; his
grandmother, Mrs .. Burdell 1 Ka thryn ) McKinney ,
standing left; his great-grandmother, Mrs. Gertrude
Ditunan of Zanesville, seated left, and his grea t-greatgrandmother, Mrs. Jennie Hansher, 92, of Middleport,'
seated right.

"A' CREATIVE ARTS WORKSHOP"
GALUPOUS - Creative Arts is one of the most rapidly
growing 4-H projects in Ohio. Four-if members and adults
alike can gain personal development through self-expression
with art materials. Four,H members and advisors as well as
Interested parents are invited to attend and participate in 4-H
Crea tive Arts Workshop on March 25, at the Area Extension
Cen ter in Jackson. The Area Center is locaU!d about one mile
soufll of Jackson , off Staie Route 93, on the Ohio Ag. Research
&amp; Development Center Farm. It will begin at 6 p.m. and will be
over at 9 p.m.
During flle workshop, participants will have an
opportunity to see how other 4-H members and ·adults are
expanding the 4-H Creati\:e Arts Project.
There will be creative art displays! You will "learn by
doing•: in a craft demonstration workshop with Barbara
Wrenn, Professional art instructor and artist.
Every participant will make an art design to take home
and show others. See, evaluate and appreciate fine art of the
past and present. I \hink fllose who participate will find it to be
an interesting and worthwhile experience.

DENE WAGNER of WJEH was flle commentator
Tuesday for a fashion show held during the monthly
meeting of flle Gallipolis Christian Women's Club. The
meetnig was held at flle Holiday Inn .

~~:::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::_::::;:;:;:;:;::::: ;:;:::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:·:::: :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:;:·:·:· :;:;:;: ·:;:;:::-:.;~~.~

1

.

c;;..o

:;:
···

:::

CHESHIRE - Readings
highlighted the Wednesday
afternoon meeting of the
Kyger Methodist Women's
Society at the home of Mrs.
Cora Rupe.
The meeting was called to
order by presiden t, Mary
Sisson. " Trust and Obey"
was sWJg by the group in
Wlison. Prayer was given by

Malinda Bradbury and the
fllought for flle day taken
from the Upper Room was
read by Mrs. Gail Sisson . The
prayer also came from the
Upper Room. Scripture
reading was Psalm 100 by
Mrs. Rupe .
Roll call was to name a
happening in the monfll of
March. The secretary and
treasurer

repor ts

were

:,:

MINERSVILLE - Mrs .
Erma Roush and Mrs. Alfred
Yeauger entertained the
United Methodist Women of
the Forest Run United
Methodist Church at the
church Tuesday evening.
The meeting opened by the
president reading a poem on
Our Heritage entitled "This is
our Country" followed by
prayer. Mrs. Denver Holter

presented.
Readin gs included :
"Schooldays, " ''Some Keep was devotional leader with
the Sabbath, " Gail Sisson; devotionals entitled "He Put
Nina Rupe, a reading per- a Song in My lie art." She also
taining to St. Patrick's Day; rea d "The Story of Springtime" and cited six things to
Malinda Bradbury ,.para hies;
Mary Sisson, "The Ten do to ce lebrate each week
Commodities of Sports "; during Lent.
The program opened wifll
Cora ;Rupe, HSp rin gtime "
flle song "My Jesus I Love
· and " Riddles ."
Rug rags were sold and · Thee." Mrs. Fred Nease,
refreshmen Is in keeping wi fll leader, chose the1 topic, "One
St . Patrick's Day were Woman's Voice' taken from
served by Mrs . Rupe assisted the program book "A
by Mary Sisson . The meeting Conununity of Women." The
closed in usual form . The purpose was to motivate the
woman
to
April meeting will be at the individual
her
o wn
home of Malinda Bradbury determine
. the third Wednesday. of April. understa nding of 'Christian
efllics and its presence or
absence in the w0rld around
her. Mrs. Nease played the
part of a roving reporter,
TWO ARE FINED
int
e rviewing
va riou s
POMEROY - Fined in the
members
o(
the
society
as to
court of Pomeroy Mayor
their
views
on
ethics
in
Cla rence Andrews Friday
loday's
world.
A
discussion
night were Joni Bobo, no
address listed , $50 and costs, followed the interviews.
disorderly c onduct, an d Several other readin gs
pertaining to the theme were
James Parsons; Pomeroy,
given
followed by a prayer by
$25 and costs on speeding
Mrs
.
Kerns Roush. Mrs .
charges and $14 on a charge
Harry
Wya
tt's special for the
of failing to pay parking
was
entitled ;&lt;The
program
tickets.
Love
of
God."
A song " In
Forfeiting bonds ·were
Christ
there
is
no East or
Randall RqsseU , Mason, $35;
West"
·
concluded
the
Earl Archer, Middleport, program.
$30.50; Jerry Swartz, Mid·
Plans were discussed for
dleport, $30, and William
flle
Easter sunrise breakfast
, lmbnden, $25. All four of the
to
be
held at flle Forest Run
bonds were posted on
Church
for the Syracuse
speeding cha rges.
charge and tentative plans

CASSETTE

Our Reg . $2.95

$131
:J Pack
minute
blank cassette
tapes. 3-hrs .
total time.

. 60-

TAWNEY
JEWELERS

"House of Diamonds
and Fine Gifts"
422 Second Ave .

Gallipolis, Ohio

&lt;Cari'S'·

ram1IY

If y&lt;lll wa n t IQ know wh11l m akes~ greill WHve, fu~ t

~•k . We ' ll

tell ~o u It take ~ leather upper5 . lealhcr

cQvered weages &lt;1/ld. ot (Our r.e, Til e gre~t Conn ie na me
- lh&lt;tt_· ~ &lt;lll you need to know 11t1ou l we~ v ., Quilrler
5 1 r i~p

In

n "'lu r~l.

519.9'9 , s ting in brown ,

1

18.99

conn1e·
&amp; fri. 9:30 ti I P.ftl.

Tues.. Wid., Sot. 9;30 ti 5 p.ftl.
lb...., 9:30 ti 12 -

snoe SIONI

.

POMEROY - It's hats off to the Meigs United Methodist
Men who sponsored a pancake supper last week which brought
$450 iniD the Senior Citizens fund.
Giving flleir time for the project - and yes, they did the
cooking - were the Rev . Robert Bumgarner, John Compton,
Albert Hill, Vernon Nease and Edson Roush. Donations of foOd
and money came from the four banks, w. va . Sausage Co ..
Powell's Super-Valu, Simon's Market and Jack's Dairy Bar,
and members of the Council on Aging, flle paid staff at the
Center, and flle RSVP volWJteers did flle serving.
Next .. . a cornbread and bean supper Friday night, 4 w 7,
at $1 a person, dessert extra, but free entertairunent.
Slowly, but surely, flle Council is moving toward its
financial goa l, but still tllere are several thousand dollars to be
raised in the next few months to meet the local share .of
operating expenses ... and outside money is contingent on
raising the local share. So it's support the senior citizens need
in flleir many projects.

:::;
·:·:
were made for the Mother's
Day Banquet to be in May.
Twenty-four sick and shut-in
calls were made by
members. The treasurer's
report . concluded
the
meeting.
The hostesses served a
dessert course to Mrs. John
Scott, Mrs. Harry Wyatt,
Mrs. Olan Genheimer, Mrs.
Uswin Nease, Mrs. Edison
TO MILDRED AND ROSCOE FOWLER, congratulations!
Hollon, Mrs. May Holter, Tomorrow flley chalk up 60 years of marriage.
'
Mrs. Fred Nease, Mrs. Kerns
•
Roush and Mrs. Russ Watson.
TOO many of us take the gootl things of life for granted.
Like the democratic system of government. Not perfect by far,
but
the best there is. Anyway, for a real experience in
r '·
appreciation
you might read Alexander Dolgun's story of his
'). .
•
imprisorunent in Communist Russia from 1949 to 1954. Not a
new book, but one worth reading in this bicentennial yea r.

6 ,

THESE ARE FUN DAYS for Lois Ann Slluer. She flew to
Bermuda to 'visit friends.and will be there for the next week. A
teacher in flle Afllens County schools, she's on spring break
now.

TALENTED KIM BATEY who sings and accompa.nies
herself on the guitar was among flle entertainers at flle birfllday party of Feeney-Bennett Post 128 Wednesday night. We
didn't know , so, of course, het name wasn't included in the
party report.

JOSEPH L. KEMP

Celebrates .
birthday

•
STYLE SHOW ENJOYED - Members of flle
Gallipolis Christian Women's Club were treaU!d to a
fashion ·show at their luncheon meeting Tuesday at the
Holiday Inn. Here, Gloria Young models a wine color
leather .coat and a blue denim dress.

Readings highlight
-·.·_:·._
:
r jo ti'/)St R un
.:
women s program : UM w .t •I • d ;:;:
i
en ervatne f
f]

B TEAM CHAMPIONS of the Rio Grande RinkY Dink basketball program are !front
row 1-r) Matthew Withee, David Garber, Jimmy Green, Brad Smith, SU!ve Bennett and
Tndd Wooten. (Back row) Manager Jinuny Isaacs, Coach Garry Adkins and T. J . Owens.
Absent was David CarpenU!r.

RIO GRANDE Rinky Dink A team champions are (front row, 1-r )' Steve Runyon,
Chipper Young, Steve Wolle, Steve Thompson, Kevin Isaacs. (Back row ) Sarah Evans,
Coach Garry Adkins , Titn Lanier and Ma nager Jimmy Isaacs.

Skin care
studied
GALLIPOLIS - Skin care
was flle most important of
many subjects taught at
"Jamboree '76" sponsored by
Mary Kay Cosmetics attended by 2,000 consultants
and directors for Mary Kay in
the southeast region of the
United Slates. Fran Tabit
attended from the Gallipolis
area.
The meetings were held .to
give advanced training to the
consultants -on the importance of and most modern
teehniques of basic skin care,
as well as classes on glamour
make-up and corrective
make-up.
Consultants were given flle
opportWJity to at.tenq classes
on personal development,
business org anization and

comm WJica tion skills.
Mary Kay Cosmetics began
in 'Dallas, Texas in 1963 and in
the 13 years since, it has
grown into a $37 million
oompany with consultants
throughout flle United States,
as well as in ofller parts of the
world.

Kings Island has new phone listing soon
KINGS MILLS - New
Bofll Kings Island and the
i&lt;elephone numbers and area restaurant, over flle main
code will be in effect ·{or gate, open for preview
Kings Is la nd family en- weekends beginning April 24.
i&lt;ertainment center and In- Grand Opening Weekend is
ternatio na l Restaurant May 29-31.
beginning Friday, March 26.
This season InU!rnational
The new number of Kings Restaurant will be in
Island is (513) 241-5600.
operation only during regular
Reservations for In- park hours.
t&lt;!rnational Restaurant can
The Kings Island Guest
be made at (513) 241-5900.
Information Center bas the

following two ·toll -free
numbers : (8001 582·3~1. for
Ohio calls only; and (800 ) 5434031, for calls from all other
states.

Coin club will

RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Grande P.T.O. held its annual
basketball banquet Thursday
evening.
Millard Cassidy, principal,
introduced members of the
GaiUpoUs school board who
were guests at flle banquet.
They were Liz Cornell,
Katherine Williams and Bob
Marchi. He also reintroduced
the

new

superintendent,

Donald Staggs . Cassidy
praised the members of the
basketball teams.
Ted Woo~&lt;en gave the in·
vocation. A potluck meal was
enjoyed by the teams,
parents and guests. Three
decorated blue and white
cakes, featuring the coach's
name and the boys' names, as

and trophy; Tim Lanier,
certificate, second year pin,
trophy and most valuable
certificate, second year pin , player trophy ,
Jimmy Isaacs, manager
trophy and most valuable
and ::?Corekceper, was m ~
player trophy .
troduced and praised for his
A team a wards were :
Steve
Runyon ,
Steve · assistance in flle basketball
Thompson, Steve Wolfe, all program . Sarah Evans,
certificate,letter and trophy ; representing the teams, gave
Chipper YoWJg , certificate, Coach Adkins a plaque which
second year pin and trophy ; read, " To Coach Garry
Kevin Isaacs, ce rtificate, Adkins, 1975-1976 Rinky Dink
second year pin and trophy ; Class A Champs, Class B
Sarah Evans ( the only girl in Champs." WooU!n gave the
the Rinky Dink basketball benediction at flle close of the
league), ce rtificate, letter meeting.
trophy ; David Carpenter,
certificate, second year pin
and trophy; Matthew Withee,

BERNADINE'S
spon- ' '
sored the spring fashion "
show enjoyed by member11
of the GalllpoiJs· Christian · ~•.•
1' .

Wol!len's .Club at a Iuncheon meeting Tuesday.
Here, Reva Mullins of
Bernadine's models a coral
"chemise" style dress.

"

..

'"
•\

,J

,)
,

\' First birthday honored : :

well as, "1976 Champs,' were
served, baked and donated by :·:
Betty Carpenter and Roberta
HARRISONVILLE
Smith.
Thomas
Oliv er
Lee
Coach Garry Adkins in· ce lebrated his first birthday
troduced guest speaker, Bill March 11 at the home of his
Wamsley, head of flle Rinky uncle and aunt, Mr . and Mrs .
Dink basketball pr og ram. E ugene
Reeves
of
Wamsley paid tribute to the Harrisonville, The occasion
coach for fllc sl&lt;eady im- al so marked the 20th wedding
provement of his learns . His anniversary of Mr. and Mrs.
theory was fllat " you get out Reeves and the 17th birthday
just what you put into of their son, Randy .
anything." He stressed these
Atten~ing lhe celebration
yoWlger boys should lea rn were Mr. and Mrs . Thomas
basic
basketball
fun- Lee, Mrs. Jess ie Reev.es, both
damentals and not how to of Albany ; Mr. and Mrs .
win at all costs. The changes Eugene Reeves and their
·for next year were noted and seven children, Randy ,
he thanked the people Jor Rodney , Tony, Darlene ,
backing the basketball Ri cky, Mandy and David,
program.
Harrfsonville ; Miss Kathy
Coach Adkins made a brief Gibbs , Mason, W. Va . and
talk and gave flle following B Mrs .
Nellie
Nelson ,
Team Awards: Steve Ben- Harrisonville .
nett, Jimmy Green, Todd
Ice crea m, ca ke and soft
Wooten, David Garber, drinks were' served. Sending
Brad Smith, all certificate, gifts were Mr . and Mrs.
letter and trophy ; T. Harold Reeves and Trina,
J.
Owens,
certifi- Pomeroy; Mr . and Mrs .
cate, second year pin •and Eu ge ne Dilcher, Albany,

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Michael
Epple, Pomeroy; Mary

Middleport ; Salim Yates ,
Racine ; Becky Fultz, Middleport ; Ri chard Sauer,
Paulin e Derenberger, Middleport .
Pomeroyi Rose Marcinko,
DISCHARGED - Kyle
Reedsville: Bernice Darst, Sinclair, Glen Hudson, Scotty
Pomeroy ; ban a Glassburn , Quillen, Marvin Milliron ,
Bidwell; Flora Murphy, Orion
Darrah,
Opal
Rutland ; ·Willie Collins, Creniea ns , Rena McDaniel.

,-;;:

• 330 Second

J ~'' ·~~TE
~

Kelly and ~evin Dean, all of
Albany; Mr. and Mrs . Clyde
Dilcher, and Mr. and · Mrs.
Bryon Gilmore and family,
all of Columb~s.

for

r

YES

SEOEMS

March 30

I

A Vole for Quality
Emergen: :a~sportalion

~
1CIIli1101is.

AIMEE MILLS

Girl born
SYRACUSE - Mr. and
Mrs. Randy Ray Mills of
Syracuse are annoWJcing the
birth of flleir first child, a six
pound, four OWlce daughU!r,
Aimee Befll, Jan . 17 at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Maternal grandparents are .
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Blevins,
Syracuse, and paternal
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Homer Mills, SyracuSe.
Great-grandparents are Mrs.
Anflla Mills, Syracuse, Mrs.
Ernestine Friend, Ripley, W.
Va . and Dewey Ramsey,
Ripley , W. Va .

name officers
Area agency on
Mo1_1day night
MIDDLEPORT - The aging funded
Oh-Kan Coin Club will conduct a regular ·business
meeting and election Q( officers Monday night in the
meeting rooms of the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Elecll'ic Company building
m Mill St., In Middleport.
A social hour and trading
session at 7 p.m. will precede
the meeUng, and out-of-town
coin dealers will be present w
buy, sell or trade collecwr
items. A rep&lt;irt will be made
on the recent successfUl coin
show, and a 56-lot coin aucUon will be held. Refreshment,&amp; will be served. Interested persons are invited.

COLUMBUS ~ 'J'he Ohio
Commission on Aging
awarded $i,429,862 in new
federal funds to six area .
agencies on aging at its
March 17 meeting in
Colwnbus. Agencies located
In Dayton, Toledo, Colwnbus,
Rio Grande, Bridgeport and
Canton will receive the
money to provide social
services for ihe elderly.
Dlsll'icl Seven Area Agency
baaed at Rio Grande College
In Rio Grande received
$180,909 for Adams, Brown,
Qallla, Highland, Jackson,
Lawrence, Pike, Ross, Scioto
and Vlntvn coWJUes.

MORE HELP COMING
ATHENS - David R. Van
Voorhis, representative of the
Dlsll'ict Direcwr, for the
Athens Office of the Internal
Revenue Service, said increased taxpayer assistance
will be available during . the

1976 tax fllintl seuon on
Morldays from 8 a.m. w 4:f5
p.m.; 11:1e followlnt~ Saturdays
from 9 a .m. to I p.m., 1\farch
27, April 3 and 10, and on
Thursday, April 15 from 8
a.m. to 4:45p.m.

p.m .

Ohio..-_....__,...._.

The Owners Of
Big Jim's Plaza
Believe In th•.: future
of the Big Band Area.

.!

~

"'

Senior Citizens Nutrition '
Program, 11 :30 a.m .-12:30
p.m. Monday through Friday.
Monday - Meat loaf with '.
gravy, mas~ed potatoes, •.
Waldorf salad, chocolate .,•
cake wifll whir.. icing, bread, ''
butter, milk.
~
Tuesday .- Sliced turkey, ·•
candled sweet potato, but- •
tered green beans, fruit •
cocktail in strawberry jeUo, •
roll, butl&lt;er, milk.
••
Wednesday - Sausage t
links, au gratin potatoes :
(cheese topping), buttered •
beets, peanut butter cookies, :
(two), bread, butter, milk. '
Thursday - Salisbury
steak-gravy, buttered diced
potatoes, buttered peas,
peach cobbler, bread, butier,
milk.
· Friday - Fried fish, · .~
French fries, cole salw, spice
cake, bread, butter, milk.
"'
Coffee, tea and buttermilk ' "
served daily. Lunch program
is on a donation hula for · "
senior ciUzens and $1 fee is
charged guests of senior .;
ciUzens.

J

,.. g-·

DEL MONTE .

TOMATO

With Purchase
Of

5 LB.

MARlHA WHITE

MEAL
Expires:

50 EXTRA
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MIDDLEPORT

GALLON
2% MILK

AWIDE SELECilON OF ELECTRONICS AND PARTS.

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OPEN WED., MARCH 24 AT 12 NOON

16

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A New Store To
Explore And Enjoy

:

FBI GETS MAN
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Dan - ~
carlton Hazen, 30, sought for ·j
unlawful filgh,t to avoid
prGei!CUtion for forgery in ,..
Lawrence County, waa ""
arrested by the FBI Friday . ..
Hazen was taken to the ,
Franklin CoWJty Jail in lieu of
~.ooo bond.
"

P.V.C. JACKETS
REG. s25.00 NOW 'lsaa
SIZES: 8 TO 18

Good With

10 ;15 a.m.; Chorus, 12:30-2 •
Wednesday, March 24 - -.... .
Crafls; Games, 12 :30-2 p.m. '"
Thursday, March 25 - ;;
Crafts; Physica l Fitness,;,:·
10:45-11 :15 a.m. ; Ballroom
Dandng, 12 :30-1:30 p.m .;~
Mov1e, 1:45-2 :45 p.m.
Friday, March 26 - Ari, ,::
C.1ass, l0-!1 a .m.; Euchre and •
Pinochle, 10-11 :30 a.m.; "
Bowling, 1-3 p.m.; Cornbread
and bean soup supper, 4-7

~ver.uet

\

11 :30 a.m. i Square Dance, ..;

p.m.

LADIES'
LEATHER-LIKE

*7
iv..•·~~
vl';#&amp;"";.
&amp;a: V!QiE
v ~
r;..;-;

COACH GARY ADKINS and Matthew Withee and
Tim Lanier at the Rio Grande Grade PTO . basketball
banquet.

·.·.:.'_!

THOMAS LEE

9 O'CLOCK

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

~

12 :30-3 p.m.
-· ~
Tuesday , March 23 - .;r,
Crafts; First Aid Course ' ;:.
9:30-11 :30 a .m.-12 :30-2 :30 ,
p.m .; Discussion, Meigs ~­
County Manpower Programs,

'S

OPEN MONDAY
EVENING TIL

BIG JIM'S

:;:·~·: ·:· ;.;-;.:·:·:·:·&gt;:·:·;.; ':.; .;.;·:·:·:·:·:-:·:· :·;. :·:.:·:·:·:·:.: ·:·:.:.:.: ::.: ·:-:. :·:·:.:.: ·:-;.:·:·:.:· :·:.: :;. :. :.:·:. ;.;:;.:. :· ;:;:;: ;:;:; = :· :·~i\

·.·

POMEROY
Meigs
Senior Citizens Cen.ter DC·
tivities located at the
Pomeroy JWJior High School
is open 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Monday
fllrough Friday.
Monday , March 22 Crafts; Whittling Class, 10-

NOSTALGIA IS IN , what wifll the bicentennial, and
organizations are finding it delightful to take the step
backward in costume, foods and even recreation.
Hadn 't heard or fllought about an old fashioned taffy pull
for years, but this past week one took place at the Middleport
First Baptist Church. Manning Kloes, we understand, made
flle taffy, and members of the Golden Rule Class did the
pulling. Sounds lik e a marveluus diversion from the bang-bang
of television .

EVERYBODY 'S BUSY and we're all a little prone to "let
George do it," but when it comes io fllings which are sure to
GALLIPOLIS - Joseph L. affect our economy, best we do our part.
About . fllc proposed abandonment · of tlie C. and 0.
Kemp of 10t8 Third Ave.,
Railway's
Logan to Pomeroy lil]e, it's time to get involved in a
Gallipolis, celebrated his 94th
protest
action.
After flle April 7 hearing before the lnterstaU!
birthday Feb. 27 with friends
Commerce
Commission
at Gallipolis, it's too late.
and relatives.
George
Arnott
and
Ken
Gilkey of flle Meigs County Rail
Ice cream and cake were
Service
Committee
plan
another
meeting fllis week to arrange
served to Mr. and Mrs . Burl
for
testimony
at
flle
hearing
,and
to work out details of other
Roush , Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
protest
actions
such
as
a
letter
writing campaign and
Kemp and children, Mrs.
They
need
public
support.
As
soon as the meeting i$
petitions.
JuanitaDamron and Danny
set
up
we'll
let
you
know
when
and
where.
Easton .

"

Basketball·banquet enjoyed

CHAIRMAN NAMED
COLUMBUS (UP! )
President Ford Committee in
Ohio
Chairman
Keith
McNamara
Friday
announced the appointment
of Dayton business executive
Robert M. O'Hara as
chairman of the President
Ford
Committee
in
Montgomery County.
O'Hara i~ a group vice
president with the Mead
Corp. and has been active in
Dayton politics since moving
to the city in 1972.

WE HAVE

�Hi - The Sunday Times - Sentinel, Sunday, March 21, 1976

Six candidates
coming to dinner
COLUMBUS
State
An addl'd feature of the
Democratic Party chairman Ohio Democratic Party 's
Paul Ti pps said Friday plans Annual $11111 a plate dinner
are proceeding nicely for the will be the representation for
Ohio Democratic Party 's the first time of a woman
annual state dinner Friday, candidate for President .
April 9 at 8 p.m. in the Multi- Ellen McCormack, the Pro
Purpose Building on the Ohio Life candidate, is running on
State Fairgrounds.
the Democratic ticket and
The chairman indicated State Treasurer Gertrude
lila! he has received con- Donahey will be running as a
firmation of attendan ce from Favorite Daughter on an
five out of the six Presidential uncommitted state slate.
cand idates and expects all six
"We expect this event to be
candidates to attend.
one of the finest political
They are Ex-Governor events of this Presidential
Jimmy Carter of Georgia, year", said Tipps. The party
Senator Frank Church of expects to have in attendance
Id aho, Senator Henry between 2,000 and 3,000
Jackson of Washington, Ellen people. Tickets may be obMcCormack of New York, tained from Democratic
Representative Morris Udall State Headquarters, 88 E.
of Arizona and Gov. George Broad St., Columbus. ·
Wallace of Alabama.

j

WEEKend Digest
By Uolted Press InteruaUonal
COLUMBUS - U.S. REP. MORRIS K. UDALL, 0-Ariz.,
Friday approved a full slate of at-large delegates to appear on
Ohio's presidential primary ballot June 8 and said he would
enter slates in 22 of the state's 23 congre!Sional districts.
Udall said his Ohio slate represented "an impressive
blending of the new and the old coalitions within the
Democratic party - elected officials, party leaders, labor,
women, minorities and youth ." Among those on Udall's
statewide slate are former Democraiic State Cbainnan
William A. · Lavelle, now a Democratic national
committeeman ; William Casstevens of Cleveland and Joseph
Tomasi of Toledo, regional directors of the United Auto
Workers; and former stale Commerce Director Dennis Shaul.
WASHINGTON - FEDERAL RESERVE CHAIRMAN
Arthur F. Burns said Friday the government should provide
jobs for the unemployed ool should do so at "deliberately
unattractive" wages. Burns told a conference on full
employment, sponsored by Congress' Joint Economic
Committee , the government "has a responsibility of acting as
an employer of last resort" if other measures fail to
sufficiently cut unemployment.
But he said the wages should be kept "deliberately
unattractive' •in order to give workers an incentive to continue
seeking jobs in tbe private sector. Burns said the goal should
be an econoiny in which there are as many jobs available as
there are job seekers at prevailing wages.
He said steps toward this goal should include reforms to
encourage capital investment, slower implementation of
costly environmental and safety rules, anti-trust reform ·and
changes in minimum wage and unemployment compensatjon
systems which Burns said .encourage unemployment.
McARTIJUR, OHIO - ABOUT 150 MEMBERS of
Teamster Local 413 stayed off the job for the second day
Friday at the Red Diamond Division of the Austin POWd!'f Co.
in .an unsanctioned protest of the company's failure to fire a
foreman who struck an employe.
.
The company offered to temporarily suspend the foreman ,
Clyde Sidders, pending a grievance hearing into what workers
claim was an 11nprovoked attack. But workers refused tbe
offer when company officials said they could not guarantee
there would be no action taken against those who protested.
One worker explained, "It's a direct violati!lll of company
rules. It's dangerous to fight around explosives and had it been
one of us, we would have been fired." Austin Powder, located
outside this S&lt;Jutheastern Ohio village in Vinton County,
JT41nufacturers explosives.
COLUMBUS - PRESIDENT FORD'S Ohio campaign
committee reported Friday the President has . officially
consented to enter a slate of delegates in the June 8 primary
election. Keith McNamara, chairman of the President Ford
Committee, said "The President told us he was delighted wltb
our slate of 97 delegates and 97 alternates."
.
"Mr. Ford was especially pleased to find so many person~!
friends and prominent Ohio Republican leaders within the
delegation." Heading the at-large slate of delegates pledged to
Ford are Gov. James A. Rhodes and Sen. Robert Taft Jr. .
Meanwhile, Ohio poUtlclans interested In the candidacy of
former California Gov. Ronald Reagan said the time is past
when Reagan could field an effective slate of delegates to
challenge Ford in the June 8Ohio primary. "It's all over," said
one, pointing out about 30 Reagan supporters have joined tbe
Ford slate in order to get to the Republican Natiooal
Convention in August.

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President stump_s in Reagan
tenitories with confidence

BEST SELECTION EVER
IN OUR

a,
.IElL ." 'lW.I'l C. ILACIC
WHAT TO GIVE UP OllftlNG LENT
With the Lenten seaS&lt;Jn, Christians of various faiths are
making preparations for Easter. Various traditions will he
observed by different people.
Lent will be a time of special devotions, self-denial, and
special discipline for many people . SOrn.e will spend much time
in fasting. Others will be doirig penance. Many will give up
something during Leni.
If you are among those who want to give up something
during Lent, here area lew suggestions Of some things you can
quit doing :
I. Give up gossiping. Gossip isn't trustworthy. It will
inflame your imagination and stir up unmerited suspicion
toward others. Your own reputation can be hurt by repeating
or listening to gossip.
2. Quit griping and criticizing Others. Nobody likes a
chronic griper. Everyone has enough troubles of his own
without having to listen to S&lt;Jme else's Problems. And, instead
of finding fault with others, try correcting your own mistakes.
3. Don't make excuses for your failures. You will never
improve on your weaknesses by making excuses. Admit your
· ·
failures and try to do better.
4. Stop being late for appointments. AppointmentS are
trust agreements that should be kePt. Remember, the other
person's time is valuable, as well as yours. Be on time . By your
punctuality others will learn that you are dependable.
~- Quit procrastinating. Putting o(f until later what you
should do now will only make it more difficult to do later on. If
you don 't take the time to do it now, You probably wiU never
have the time to do it after while.
If you will give up these things during the Lenten season,
you will probably want to give thern up for good. By quitting
these things you will lind that life will be a little more cheerful
· and· worth Jiving. Try it!

•

•

CARPET
COMPLETE TRUCKLOAD
All Carpet on Sale for
Immediate Installation
1 Roll Reg. $12.95 Gold

one . l'he Red Cross collects
blood from voluntary donors
through bloodmobile Visits to
local commercial and
industrial
firms
and
surrounding commtu1ities, as
well as from· the center
headquarters. Tri-State also
haS •ubo(!enters set up in
Parkersburg, Charleston and
Beckley to help with blood
collection.
BlOod and blood products
are SUpplied w hospitals,
phySicians, clinics and public
health agencies by the Red
CroSS without charge lor the
product itself.
Tri..State Red Cross Blood
Center is proud of its blood
recruiting effort s. The
region's blood donations hit
41 ,693 Units during the last
fiscal Year. First time donors
Increased from 13,212 to
16,212 also during the last
fiscal Year.
Giving blood is a personal
experience. Some donors give
for a friend or relative
needing blood at that
particUlar time while others
design~te their donation to a
partiCUlar person or group
parUClpating in the blood
program.. Others wishing to
establiSh eligibility give so
that others as well as
themselves may be assured
of blood for a year,
In some areas, donor ·
groups are formed by
businesses and civic ·groups.
If 20 per cent of the rnembers
of a groop donate blood once
a year every member of that
group and certain members
of their families are covered.
Everyone can become a
part of the regional Red Cross
Blood Program in their
county by donating blood at a
Red Cross facility or at tbe
next locaJ bloodmobile visit.

MINERAL LEASES
COLUMBUS ( UPI)
Almost 124,000 has been
received !rom mineral rights
leases and royalty from
natural gas and oil produced
at two Ohio Department of
Mental Health and Mental
Retardation facilities, state
officials said Friday.
The MB OU &amp; Gas Co.,
Canton, leases mineral rights
to I, 100 acres at Massillon
State Hospitai. 1The Blaze OU
&amp; Gas Co., Wooster, leases
2,299 acres at Apple Creek
State Institute. '
The department said it will
start leasing mineral rights
this spring at Mount Vernon
State
Instititue,
the
Cambridge Mental Health
and Mental Retardation
Center, the AtheiiB Mental
Health
and
Mental
Retardation 'Center and
Gllllipolls State Institute.

•

•

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puct tshea c et!O .,Tlln ce lor
conven ho nat turnaces Sa~mgs wrU
yary W111'1 t hmare ene weath er
conllrtron 5

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Although some Republican
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Reagan to quit the campaign,
the President said such
action was neither suggested
nor authorized by him.
Reagan said in North
Wilkesboro, N.C., Saturday
he had no intention of
withdrawing . "I'm goin,g all

VOL 11

the way to the convention,
and I think I'm going to be

All Regular $14.95 sq. yd.
THIS SALE

'10.!!
INSTALLED

CELEBRATING OUR
30th ANNIVERSARY

Ask.For
Your Free

November," he said.

~&lt;Let 's

not forget that we are a
minority party."

nominated," he said.

Ford called for Republican
unity.
" Let's keep the party
together so we can win in

Observers said crowds

greeting Ford Saturday were
smaller and less enthusiastic
than the previous Saturday's.

SUNDAY, MARCH 21, 1976

NO. 8

His largest crowd, about
13,000, was at a shopping
center in Asheville.
Ford appeared in a jovial
mood and relaxed after a
breakfast
meeting
in
Charlotte by lighting up a
pipe.

PAGE 17

Reagan isn't
worrying Ford

I!;;:,::!~~::~~ I
:.:
:;;;
:;::
;:::
;;:~.
~;::
;:;;
;:;;
:~;;
:::;
:;::

NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C. (UPI) - Ronald Reagan :::
said Saturday President Ford's camp is suggesting he :::
quit the Republican presidential race because It is (
worried.
':':
"I don't think they 're really suggesting I get out ~;:
because they're worried about me," Reagan told a ?
sl!opping center rally. "l think they're suggesting I get out .:;:
because they're a lillie nervous ab!)Ut themselves ."
;:;:
A group of Republican governors headed by North ::::
Carolina's James E. Holshouser Jr., S&lt;JUthern climpaign :::;
coordinator for Ford, Friday urged Reagan to quit in the ;:;
~:~; name oi party unity.
:;:
{ Saturday, President Ford came to campaign in North ~:;:
:;:; Carolina and said he didn't "really care" whether Reagan :';·
;:;: quit.
·
:::
'~~~ Reagan said :,~ did better than he had expected in the ~:~
;:;: New Hampshire, Florida and Illinois primaries despite :;;
,;:; losses to Ford and has no intention of dropping out.
,:;:
} "Almost !)all the Republican party has indicated they :;:
,:;: would like to have me as a candidate and they would like &lt;:
:;:; to have me stay in the race, and that's what I'm going to ,;:;
:.- ::.· do I " he. said ,
&lt;:·.·
·:;; Reagan also said he was leading Ford in delegates from :'::.
:;; nonprimary states. "I'm going all the way to the ·:;:
convention, and I think I'm going to be nominated," he ~:~
( said.
:::
;:;. In another development, Reagan halted the distribution }
):. of flyers printed by his North Carolina campaign , :~:
i,:'_:.· committee thatraisedthe issuesofraceand busing . ·
{
.
The flyers showed a reprint of a newspaper story about ;:;:
·''' Ford saying while in Durham last November that he ;:;:
·. would consider Sen. Edward Brooke of Massachusetts, ?
who is black, as a running mate, and a quotation from a ::::
. magazine ~rticle in which Brooke defended busing.
?
:;: Matt Lawson, a press aide to Reagan, said another aide :':'
:;~: showed them to the former California goverOQr during the ::::
;'; rally and he immediately called the Raleigh campaign :;':
::; office and had them sto~d.
';:;
:;:: "They simply ought notto be issued," Lawson said.
\
::::··:::;:::·::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::?:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:·:·:::::·:::·:~: ::::·:::·:::·::::::!::;:::::·:

·r

Uolled Press International
state's 37 national convention
President Ford crowed delegates were to he selected .
about good economic news Carter was expected to win 12
Saturday and said he really -to 14 delegates, with former
doesn't care whether Ronald Sen. Fred Harris figuring on
Reagan quits his fight for the perhaps four, with the rest
uncommitted. Another nine
GOP nomina~ion .
. Both
men
were delegates will be chosen at a
campaigning in North s tate convention next
Carolina , at some points · month .
Ford's one-day trip to
scheduled to he in the same
North
Carolina was the
city, though not at the same
straight
weekend he
second
time.
was
in
North
Carolina.
He
George Wallace, struggling
claimed
his
economic
poUcies
to beat Jimmy Carter in
Tuesday 's North Carolina put the nation on the "road to
Democratic primary, kept up a new prosperity."
Referring to Friday's news
his campaign while Carter
that
retail prices rose at -the
went home to Plains, Ga .
slowest
pace in February
Henry
Ja ckso n
sin~e
1971,
Ford said, "I see
campaigned in upstate New
no
reaS&lt;Jn
to
change or alter
York while Morris Udall was
scheduled for evening our course because we've
appearances in J,.ong Island been right. The trends are all
afier spending the day · in the right direction,"
Ford, upon landing in Charmaking
television
commercials in Wisconsin. lotte, was asked if he would
. The newest Democratic. like Reagan to drop out of the
contender, Frank Church, race. He replied, "I really
spent a second consecutive don't care/' then said the
day since his announcement former California governor's
campaigning in California challenge has helped his own
Saturday, proposing campaign "bUt is now a case
separation of the U.S. Office of dililinishing returns" that
of Edocation from the Health, Republicans are concerne&lt;j·
·
·
'
Education and Welfare about.
Both Ford and Reagan,
Department and making it a
who inSisted he will not
cabinet~ eve! agency.
· In Oklahoma , 28 of the withdraw even if he loses a
fifth straight head-to-head
contest Tuesday, were
scheduled to be in Asheville
C
and Hickory, N.C., Saturday
but not at the same time.
Church meCFrfday "'just to
bring the blaze under control chat" with California Gov.
and cool the rubble to the Edmund G. Brown Jr. , who
point.;;that firefighters could entered the presidenti~l
enter the home.
campaign the week before.
"We didn't have any idea of Saturday, the Idaho senator
anybody being in there . told the California Teachers
There was no one around to Association, " The United
give us any idea," he said.
States is the only country in
the western world without a
minister or secretary of
education" and a secretary of ·
education could help state
and local agencies make the
operators and a white best use of federal flUids.
organization with possible
Mafia support, the Cleveland
U.S. has four
Plain Dealer reported.
Citing interviews with law
enforcement officials and months to leave
police figures connected with
BANGKOK, Tahiland
numbers racketeers , the
(
UPI)
- ThailaiJ&lt;i Saturday
newspaper said it learned
all Ameri.can troops
ordered
that the white organization
withdrawn
within four
has imported hired killers,
months,
spelling
the end of
dynamite and guns.
the
U.S.
military
presence
in
The report also said the
mainland
Asia,
except
SOuth
city's numbers king h~s
vowed to fight to the death, Korea.
Thai Prime Minister Kukrit
one black numbers operation
Qramoj
said tbe decision was
has tried to buy · a large
made
at
a two.!Jour cabinet
quantity of weapons and the
meeting
following
a week of
blacks hav e rejected a
Fruitless
negotiations
beproposal for a peaceful
tween
senior
U.S.
and
Thai
takeover.
Police and others . have officials.
Exempted from
the
estimated that the numbers
withdrawal
order
are
270
U.
racket, believed to have been
S.
advisers
with
the
Joint
U.
established here by southern
S.
Military
Assistance
Group;
blacks during World War I,
grosses between $6 and $10 which oversees military aid
to Thailand. With the
million a year. Federal Communist
victories in
authorities
have
said
VIetnam,
Caml&gt;odia
and
Cleveland is the only major Laos, the Thai order means
city where the numbers the end to a physical role for
racket is not under the American forces in mainland
contr61 of organized crime . Asia, except in SOuth Korea .

Nitecluhhing mothers lose ' hiJdren

OXFORD, N.C. (UPI)
nightclub about 2:341 a.m. and
WASHINGTON (UPI) Six youngsters left alone in a found their children dead.
The
AFL-CIO
asked small frame 'house died The Taborn woman was
congressmen Saturday to Saturday in a fire that gutted hospitalized for shock, ~ut
support a new strip mining
the dwelling while their released later in the day.
bill, despite the Ford mothers
out
were
Bill Jones, one of the
administration's position that
nightclubbing.
firemen on the scene, said it
such legislation would resUlt
Firemen ~id they never took firemen 45 minutes to
in a significant loss of jobs. knew anyon~ was in the house
President Ford based his until alter the blaze was
decision to veto a similar bill brought under Control.
last year "on fabricated
The vlctima, aged from 9
war
statistics and misleading montlts to 12 years, were
economic assumptions, ''
from
three
·separate
CLEVELAND (UPI) ~ A
AFL-CIO legislative director families .
They
were
full-scale
war may break out
Andrew J . BiemiUer said in a identified as Maxine Gooch,
soon
between
the city's East
letter sent to all House 12 ; John Wesley Gooch, 8;
Side
black
numbers
members.
Janet Gooch, 7; Terresa
He said Ford's warning Taborn, 6, Belinda Taborn, 5,
that the bill would result ''in a and Norris Gerome Miles, 9 Moon. rocks have
significant loss of jobs" months.
proved effective, and it led to
Five of the children were
narrow failure by the House found on the floo~ in a back to be protected
to override the President's bedroom in the home and tbe
veto last year.
sixth was found in a seperate,
HOUSE ON (UP!)
Organized labor thinks that smaller bedroom. All died of .._Jiecause decades may· pass ·
rationale Is erroneous, smolle inhalation.
before another lunar space
Biemiller said.
Officials said the blaze · mission, a planetary expert
He asked congressmen to began in the living room at an says future scientific
adopt H.R. 9725, the Surface . unvented space heater.
generations must have the
Mining Control and ReclamaThe chlldrens ' mothers remaining supply of dark
tion Act of 1976, as approved were at the Graystone night gray moon rocks preserved
this· year by the House club in Henderson 17 miles intact.
Interior Committee .
northeast of Oxford, at the
Dr. Larry Haskin, chief of
"We believe that H.R. 9725 time.
planetary and earth sciences
will constitute a sound step
Officials said the mothers at the Johnson Space Center,
forward in developing an of four of the victims, Effie said Friday "they are not
enlightened and balanced Lee Gooch and Vonnie Miles, going to degrade in value for
federal program to regulate lived in the home owned by a very long time.
and control surface mining in Norris Latta , the Miles
"The lunar samples are an
the United States," he said. woman's common-law invaluable legacy of the
· ''In oilr belief, experience husband and father· of the Apollo program," Haskin told
with the implementation of youngest victim. The other reporters at the close of the·
this act will serve to provide woman, Henrietta Taborn, Seventh Lunar Science
the basis for its further was visiting.
Conference. ''They are a
strengthening
and
The women · and Latta treasure that deserves to be
improvements."
arrived home from the taken care of."

·Full scale

is threatened

Evidence found to verify holy shroud

GIFT

TURIN, Italy (UP!) - A
Swiss criminologist using
fossilized pollen as a clue
claims be bas found evidence
supporting the belief that a
linen sheet preserved in
Thrin once wrapped the dead
bocly of Jesus, the newspaper
La Starilpa said Saturday.
"I don't know If the bod,y ol
JeiiUB lltrillt was wrapped in
the 11teet and If It Is the shroud mentioned In the Goapel," La Stampa quoted Prof.
Mu Frel u sayln1.
"What I can state with
certainty is that fabric dates

;

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MIDDLEPORT, 0.
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INSTALLED

No Long Waiting~~,,.,

President's afternoon

appearance in Asheville was
several hours ahead of
Reagan's scheduled arrival.
Ford said "I really don't
ca re" whether Reagan drops
out of the race because his
campaign Is based on
winning the nomination at
Kansas City and beating the
Democrats in the general .
election.
"I think we have the
momentwrt and I have no
· apprehension that it will be
stopped by any force that I

1 Roll Reg. '6.99 Beautiful

HI-LO SHAG

the revolutionary

'9!!

KITCHEN CARPET

Blood program
.was begun in '48
HUNTINGTON - Since
1948, the American National
Red Cross Blood Program
has collected over 60 million
units of blood to save the lives
of many thousands of patients
and to improve the health of
many thousands tnore.
Last year the. program's
annual blood collection
topped the four mi!Uon mark
with a total collection of
4 ,291,~19
units
an
impressive 12.1 per cent
increase over the previous
.
year.
From that blood, 5,868,214
units of blood components
were prepared to meet the
ll)edical needs of patients
served by 4,117 hospitals and
blood banks throughout the
nation.
·
The American National
Red Cross's blood services
began in 1937 when donors
were recruited in a few
Communities.
Then a wartime blood
donor program, undertaken
at the request of the Army
and Navy, began in
February, 1941, At the close
of World War II hostilities in
1945, the 3~ Red Cross
collection centers, with 63
mobile units, procured
13,326,242
units
from
voluntary donors for the
anned forced.
In the Orst tWo years after
tl!e • war, the need for a
coordinated blood activity
became apparent to many
medical
groups,
and
accordingly, the Red Cross
established Its peacetime
blood program in 1947. The
first
collection
and
processing center opened in
Rochester, N. Y. in January,
1948. '&gt;
During the Korean conflict
the Red Cross expanded its ·
collection facllltles and
established cooperative
agreements with 'private
blood collection agencies for
the purpose of supplying the
needs of the Department of
Defense . Nearly seven
million units were procured
for this purpose, including
more than one million from
the cooperating agencies.
Today, blood centers
operate through regional
collection centers : Trl..State
Red Cross Blood Center is

By RICHARD H. GROWALD
ASHEVILLE, N.C. (UPI)
- A relaxed and confident
President Ford campaigned
in the same area of North
Carolina as challenger
Ronald Reagan Saturday and
said he sees "nothing but
victory ahead" in his quest
for an elected term.
1
' 1 think we're going to win,
the momentum is with US/'
Ford told campaign workers
as he made a final bid for
votes in this state's
presidential primary
Thesday.
Contending · his economic
policies had the nation •:on
the road to a new
prosperity," Ford said the
indications were that he
would hand Reagan a sixth
straight primary defeat next
week.
"I can see nothing but
victory ahead, in Kansas City
(at the national GOP
convention) and on Nov. 2 (in
the general election)," Ford
said.
Skipping by presidential
Jetstar and helicopter from
Charlotte to Asheville to
Avery .. Coun ty and then
Hickory, For4's course at
times ran close to and once
crisso(!rossed Reagan's. The

.

..-.... ___. _-

from the times of Otrlst and
was displayed in Palestine,
Turkey, France and finally In
Turin."

La Stampa said Frel, for a
quarter of a century the head
of the oclentiflc laboratory of
ZUrich pollee, billed hill findIngs on the analysis of
particles of pollen he took
from lite lheel known to
Roman Catbollca u the Holy
Shroud.
The shroud, a 18-foot
brownlllll linen cloth btought
w Europe by crusac!ers,
preserves what lookl Uke the'

~

PRESENTED PLAQUES- Armand Turley, Mrs. Ferman Moore and Larry Spencer,
seated, !..-, were recently presented their "honorary" Grand Croaker plaques by Grand
Croaker Earl Ingels, right. They were initiated last Jqne in activities at the Shrine Park in
Racine.

Hearst jury may come
in with verdict soon
By RICK DU BROW
· but on the second day of
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) deliberations they were going
The Patricia Hearst jury sent at the task in a way that
out lor hamburgers for lunch indica ted they hoped it would
Saturday and had yet to ask he S&lt;Jon.
to examine any of the exhibits
The seven men and live
in the bank robbery trial.
women had been instructed
Miss Hearst crocheted in a by U.S. District Judge Oliver
holding cell on the floor above J. Carter to start their daily
in the federal courthouse deUberations at 9 a.m., but
awaiting their verdict.
they were in the jury room on
When the jury would hring the 19th floor at 8:45a.m .
in a decision of innocent or
The government had introguilty was anyone's guess, duced a total of 29~ pieces of

Controversy sure
to follow verdict
By RICK DU BROW
SAN FRANCISCO (tJPI) The opposing attorneys in
Patricia Hearst's bank
robbery trial shook hands
Friday alter the case .went to
the jury, and sat down to
discuss the eigbt-week court
battle.
" I think there'll always be.
a controversy no matter what
the jury does because the
public has involved itself in
personal decisions ," said
Miss Hearst's attorney, F.
Lee Bailey. "There'll always
be those dissatisfied with an
acquittal. There'll always be
those dissatisfied with a
conviction." ,
"We didn't pull any punches,"

said

Prosecutor

James L. Browning Jr.,
addjng:
"From
the
government'spointof view, if
we haven't gotten before the
jury enough to satisfy them,
to enable them to make a
decision, It wasn't · because
we didn 'I try very hard ."
" I .agree with . Mr.
Browning," said Bailey, who
sat next to the prosecutor at a
news conference after
Federal Court Judge Oliver
J . Carter had given the case
to the jury. "I don 'I know of
anything he left out !hat

•

televised address three years television in 1973.
ago that "whatever historical
La Stampa said Frei took
and scientific j'udgment samples of pollen from the
scholars : ·m ay choose to shroud before the television
express on this surprising display. It said his hiboratory
and mysterious relic, we can analysis showed the pollen
only pray that it may lead came from six species of
visitors, not only to Palestinian plants from the
thoughtful observation of the limes of Christ, one plant
outward and mortal features from Thrkey, where tradition
of the Saviour's wonderful ' Says the shroud was kept in
figure, but also to a deeper Constantinople for several
insight into his hidden and centuries, and eight species
fasclriating mystery. ''
of Mediterranean plants from
The shroud last was the times when the shroud
diplayed in public during the was displayed in France,
1933 Holy Year and shown on Belgium and then Italy.
:~

·

Patty's mother
finally afraid

SAN FRANCISCO (UP! )Patricia Hearst's mother
. rushed from the courtroom in
tears Friday as the judge was
giving final instructions to
the jury that is deciding her
daughter.'s fate.
· " I'm
afraid,"
Mrs .
Catherine Hearst confided to
a woman as the two rode an
elevator that took her away
from the courb'oom. "Up to
now I've been all right. Now
I've chickened out."
bad."
Mrs. Hearst had sat silently
jjYes," said the prosecutor. and composed In a front row
According to Bailey, spectator's seat during the
course of the trial.
Conllmietl 011 Page 18

Game-playing in Columbus
COLUMBUS ( UP I) - You
can find game-playing anywhere you find government
or politics, at any time of
year.
But there seems to be a
rash of it, just like the fiu, at
the Ohio Statehouse right
now.
Majority Democrats in the
General Assembly are
snagged
on
potential
repercussions of the two
major bills standing in the

Ohio politics
way of adjournment for reelection campaigns - tax
relief and utility rate reform.
Other important bills are
receiving · careful
consideration · in various
committees.

photographic negative of the
imprint of a human body. It
has been the property of the
dukes of Savoy, ancestors of
Italy's now~xlied family,
since 1453 and has been
preserved in a silver casket
in a chapel of the Thrin .
cathedral since 1670.
The Roman Catholic
Ourch has repeatedly said it
is not within lis competence
to say If the sllroud is
authentic, but a nwnber of
Popes
have
openly
worllltlppad lt.
Pope Paul VI said in a

would have helped them."
Browning, who said in his
final argument Thursday he
was sorry Miss Hearst was
kidnaped by the Symbionese
liberation Army, was asked
whether his feeling made it a
tough case for him or gave
him mixed emotions. ·
"I think anybody has to
regret, feel sorry, for the
kidnap victim," he said. But
he added the government's
view is that the fact of
kidnaping does not absolve
acts that follow by the victim.
Miss Hearst is charged with
robbing a bank with the SLA.
''You don't get many
persons accused of crimes
who originally were kidnap
victims,'.' Browning said.
"We've never had any·reason
to doubt that she was
originally kidnaped."
Bailey said he and
Browning both agreed "the
case had to be tried ... It could
not be dismissed, or Mr.
Browning, the system and I
would have been crucified."
The defense attorney said
he and Browning aiS&lt;J "agree
that a hung jury would be

evidence in Uie case-documents, tape recordings, a
'"Tania" diary, weaponsand if the jury were to go over
all of them they could be
deliberating for days.
· A court clerk said that as of
midday Saturday the jurors
had not asked to see a single
exhibit.
Miss Hearst, described her
attorney Albert Johnson as
"nervous," was passing the
time crocheting. Sbe was in a
holding area of the U.S.
marshal's office on the 20th
and top floor of the building.
Shortly before noon the
jury sent out an order for
hamburgers and french fries
to be brought in. Miss Hearst
had the same kind of lunch.
On the first day of deliberations after receiving the case
at 10:48 a.m. Friday, the jury
talked for five holD'S with a
lunch break, then adjourned
at 5 p.m.
Their deliberation room is
40 by 18 feet , windowless,
with yellow walls covered
with pictures of federal
judges going back to 1851.
Two large rectangular tables
were pushed together, and
the jurors sat around them in
leather chairs.

But out on the floor of the
House and Senate, restless
lawmakers, anxious to get
home and protect their
flanks, amuse themselves by
playing games with daily
agendas that often seem to
make no sense.
Hundreds
of
school
children and other groups
watching the action must
sometimes think they're
visiting a menagerie instead
of the Ohio General
Assembly.
Item : A couple of weeks
ago, the House defeated a bill
~

providing for construction of
government office buildings
in major cities. Moments
later, the sponsor rounded up
nine blgo(!ity Democrats who
had. deserted him, tbe roll
was called and the bill passed
without explanation of the.
turnabout.
Item : Senate Democrats,
who have declined to act on a
number of Gov. James A.
Rhodes'
cabine·t
appointments after more
than a year , singled out
Liquor Control Director
Clifford E. Reich for special
attention last week. A few
Democrats verbally flogged
him with floor speeches. Then
he was confirmed, ~ to 4.
Item : A bill came onto the
House floor authorizing
special temporary liquor
permits to barbershop
quartets and ethnic groups.
The pernnit was shortened
from 72 to 48 hours after
someone observed that ,,be
bartenders might get t;;.ed ."
Another member objected,
asking "how do you expect a
party to wind down in 48
hours ?" The biU was then
defeated.
Item : House lawyers
pushed through a bill
broadening provisions for
"power of attorney" to make
it binding if the person who
granted It becomes disabled ,

)•

'

incoherent or dead .
Item : The House passed a
bill requiring dog owners to
furnish shade and water to
their pets kept out-of-doors.
One member wanted to know
why the requirement should
not apply to chickens, cows
and pigs.
Item : A House member
opposed a proposal to permit
the advertising of prices for
eyeglasses
with
this
argument: "You !DaY . be
sitting at home watching TV
when suddenly the tnbe goes
black and a voice says,
'friends, if you can hear me
but can't see me, you may
have a vision problem. "'
· And S&lt;J on.
Just for the record , the
game-playing lsn 'I restricted
to the legislature . Gov.
Rhodes jetted back from
Europe last week and was
asked how his trip enhanced
Ohio's chances of attracting a
Volkswagen plant - one of
his prime missions.
"The chances are about the
same as they were before we
went over, more or )ess,"
said I be governor, diverting
attention to another "great
prospect" he may have sold
on Ohio lor an industrial site.
What was the name of the
company? Rhodes wouldn't
say, so if the deal falls
through, nobody will know.l
~

.•

t

�Hi - The Sunday Times - Sentinel, Sunday, March 21, 1976

Six candidates
coming to dinner
COLUMBUS
State
An addl'd feature of the
Democratic Party chairman Ohio Democratic Party 's
Paul Ti pps said Friday plans Annual $11111 a plate dinner
are proceeding nicely for the will be the representation for
Ohio Democratic Party 's the first time of a woman
annual state dinner Friday, candidate for President .
April 9 at 8 p.m. in the Multi- Ellen McCormack, the Pro
Purpose Building on the Ohio Life candidate, is running on
State Fairgrounds.
the Democratic ticket and
The chairman indicated State Treasurer Gertrude
lila! he has received con- Donahey will be running as a
firmation of attendan ce from Favorite Daughter on an
five out of the six Presidential uncommitted state slate.
cand idates and expects all six
"We expect this event to be
candidates to attend.
one of the finest political
They are Ex-Governor events of this Presidential
Jimmy Carter of Georgia, year", said Tipps. The party
Senator Frank Church of expects to have in attendance
Id aho, Senator Henry between 2,000 and 3,000
Jackson of Washington, Ellen people. Tickets may be obMcCormack of New York, tained from Democratic
Representative Morris Udall State Headquarters, 88 E.
of Arizona and Gov. George Broad St., Columbus. ·
Wallace of Alabama.

j

WEEKend Digest
By Uolted Press InteruaUonal
COLUMBUS - U.S. REP. MORRIS K. UDALL, 0-Ariz.,
Friday approved a full slate of at-large delegates to appear on
Ohio's presidential primary ballot June 8 and said he would
enter slates in 22 of the state's 23 congre!Sional districts.
Udall said his Ohio slate represented "an impressive
blending of the new and the old coalitions within the
Democratic party - elected officials, party leaders, labor,
women, minorities and youth ." Among those on Udall's
statewide slate are former Democraiic State Cbainnan
William A. · Lavelle, now a Democratic national
committeeman ; William Casstevens of Cleveland and Joseph
Tomasi of Toledo, regional directors of the United Auto
Workers; and former stale Commerce Director Dennis Shaul.
WASHINGTON - FEDERAL RESERVE CHAIRMAN
Arthur F. Burns said Friday the government should provide
jobs for the unemployed ool should do so at "deliberately
unattractive" wages. Burns told a conference on full
employment, sponsored by Congress' Joint Economic
Committee , the government "has a responsibility of acting as
an employer of last resort" if other measures fail to
sufficiently cut unemployment.
But he said the wages should be kept "deliberately
unattractive' •in order to give workers an incentive to continue
seeking jobs in tbe private sector. Burns said the goal should
be an econoiny in which there are as many jobs available as
there are job seekers at prevailing wages.
He said steps toward this goal should include reforms to
encourage capital investment, slower implementation of
costly environmental and safety rules, anti-trust reform ·and
changes in minimum wage and unemployment compensatjon
systems which Burns said .encourage unemployment.
McARTIJUR, OHIO - ABOUT 150 MEMBERS of
Teamster Local 413 stayed off the job for the second day
Friday at the Red Diamond Division of the Austin POWd!'f Co.
in .an unsanctioned protest of the company's failure to fire a
foreman who struck an employe.
.
The company offered to temporarily suspend the foreman ,
Clyde Sidders, pending a grievance hearing into what workers
claim was an 11nprovoked attack. But workers refused tbe
offer when company officials said they could not guarantee
there would be no action taken against those who protested.
One worker explained, "It's a direct violati!lll of company
rules. It's dangerous to fight around explosives and had it been
one of us, we would have been fired." Austin Powder, located
outside this S&lt;Jutheastern Ohio village in Vinton County,
JT41nufacturers explosives.
COLUMBUS - PRESIDENT FORD'S Ohio campaign
committee reported Friday the President has . officially
consented to enter a slate of delegates in the June 8 primary
election. Keith McNamara, chairman of the President Ford
Committee, said "The President told us he was delighted wltb
our slate of 97 delegates and 97 alternates."
.
"Mr. Ford was especially pleased to find so many person~!
friends and prominent Ohio Republican leaders within the
delegation." Heading the at-large slate of delegates pledged to
Ford are Gov. James A. Rhodes and Sen. Robert Taft Jr. .
Meanwhile, Ohio poUtlclans interested In the candidacy of
former California Gov. Ronald Reagan said the time is past
when Reagan could field an effective slate of delegates to
challenge Ford in the June 8Ohio primary. "It's all over," said
one, pointing out about 30 Reagan supporters have joined tbe
Ford slate in order to get to the Republican Natiooal
Convention in August.

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President stump_s in Reagan
tenitories with confidence

BEST SELECTION EVER
IN OUR

a,
.IElL ." 'lW.I'l C. ILACIC
WHAT TO GIVE UP OllftlNG LENT
With the Lenten seaS&lt;Jn, Christians of various faiths are
making preparations for Easter. Various traditions will he
observed by different people.
Lent will be a time of special devotions, self-denial, and
special discipline for many people . SOrn.e will spend much time
in fasting. Others will be doirig penance. Many will give up
something during Leni.
If you are among those who want to give up something
during Lent, here area lew suggestions Of some things you can
quit doing :
I. Give up gossiping. Gossip isn't trustworthy. It will
inflame your imagination and stir up unmerited suspicion
toward others. Your own reputation can be hurt by repeating
or listening to gossip.
2. Quit griping and criticizing Others. Nobody likes a
chronic griper. Everyone has enough troubles of his own
without having to listen to S&lt;Jme else's Problems. And, instead
of finding fault with others, try correcting your own mistakes.
3. Don't make excuses for your failures. You will never
improve on your weaknesses by making excuses. Admit your
· ·
failures and try to do better.
4. Stop being late for appointments. AppointmentS are
trust agreements that should be kePt. Remember, the other
person's time is valuable, as well as yours. Be on time . By your
punctuality others will learn that you are dependable.
~- Quit procrastinating. Putting o(f until later what you
should do now will only make it more difficult to do later on. If
you don 't take the time to do it now, You probably wiU never
have the time to do it after while.
If you will give up these things during the Lenten season,
you will probably want to give thern up for good. By quitting
these things you will lind that life will be a little more cheerful
· and· worth Jiving. Try it!

•

•

CARPET
COMPLETE TRUCKLOAD
All Carpet on Sale for
Immediate Installation
1 Roll Reg. $12.95 Gold

one . l'he Red Cross collects
blood from voluntary donors
through bloodmobile Visits to
local commercial and
industrial
firms
and
surrounding commtu1ities, as
well as from· the center
headquarters. Tri-State also
haS •ubo(!enters set up in
Parkersburg, Charleston and
Beckley to help with blood
collection.
BlOod and blood products
are SUpplied w hospitals,
phySicians, clinics and public
health agencies by the Red
CroSS without charge lor the
product itself.
Tri..State Red Cross Blood
Center is proud of its blood
recruiting effort s. The
region's blood donations hit
41 ,693 Units during the last
fiscal Year. First time donors
Increased from 13,212 to
16,212 also during the last
fiscal Year.
Giving blood is a personal
experience. Some donors give
for a friend or relative
needing blood at that
particUlar time while others
design~te their donation to a
partiCUlar person or group
parUClpating in the blood
program.. Others wishing to
establiSh eligibility give so
that others as well as
themselves may be assured
of blood for a year,
In some areas, donor ·
groups are formed by
businesses and civic ·groups.
If 20 per cent of the rnembers
of a groop donate blood once
a year every member of that
group and certain members
of their families are covered.
Everyone can become a
part of the regional Red Cross
Blood Program in their
county by donating blood at a
Red Cross facility or at tbe
next locaJ bloodmobile visit.

MINERAL LEASES
COLUMBUS ( UPI)
Almost 124,000 has been
received !rom mineral rights
leases and royalty from
natural gas and oil produced
at two Ohio Department of
Mental Health and Mental
Retardation facilities, state
officials said Friday.
The MB OU &amp; Gas Co.,
Canton, leases mineral rights
to I, 100 acres at Massillon
State Hospitai. 1The Blaze OU
&amp; Gas Co., Wooster, leases
2,299 acres at Apple Creek
State Institute. '
The department said it will
start leasing mineral rights
this spring at Mount Vernon
State
Instititue,
the
Cambridge Mental Health
and Mental Retardation
Center, the AtheiiB Mental
Health
and
Mental
Retardation 'Center and
Gllllipolls State Institute.

•

•

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' Ba se!~ on labormlo ry Jests 11ru:1
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yary W111'1 t hmare ene weath er
conllrtron 5

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see," he said.

Although some Republican
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Reagan to quit the campaign,
the President said such
action was neither suggested
nor authorized by him.
Reagan said in North
Wilkesboro, N.C., Saturday
he had no intention of
withdrawing . "I'm goin,g all

VOL 11

the way to the convention,
and I think I'm going to be

All Regular $14.95 sq. yd.
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'10.!!
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CELEBRATING OUR
30th ANNIVERSARY

Ask.For
Your Free

November," he said.

~&lt;Let 's

not forget that we are a
minority party."

nominated," he said.

Ford called for Republican
unity.
" Let's keep the party
together so we can win in

Observers said crowds

greeting Ford Saturday were
smaller and less enthusiastic
than the previous Saturday's.

SUNDAY, MARCH 21, 1976

NO. 8

His largest crowd, about
13,000, was at a shopping
center in Asheville.
Ford appeared in a jovial
mood and relaxed after a
breakfast
meeting
in
Charlotte by lighting up a
pipe.

PAGE 17

Reagan isn't
worrying Ford

I!;;:,::!~~::~~ I
:.:
:;;;
:;::
;:::
;;:~.
~;::
;:;;
;:;;
:~;;
:::;
:;::

NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C. (UPI) - Ronald Reagan :::
said Saturday President Ford's camp is suggesting he :::
quit the Republican presidential race because It is (
worried.
':':
"I don't think they 're really suggesting I get out ~;:
because they're worried about me," Reagan told a ?
sl!opping center rally. "l think they're suggesting I get out .:;:
because they're a lillie nervous ab!)Ut themselves ."
;:;:
A group of Republican governors headed by North ::::
Carolina's James E. Holshouser Jr., S&lt;JUthern climpaign :::;
coordinator for Ford, Friday urged Reagan to quit in the ;:;
~:~; name oi party unity.
:;:
{ Saturday, President Ford came to campaign in North ~:;:
:;:; Carolina and said he didn't "really care" whether Reagan :';·
;:;: quit.
·
:::
'~~~ Reagan said :,~ did better than he had expected in the ~:~
;:;: New Hampshire, Florida and Illinois primaries despite :;;
,;:; losses to Ford and has no intention of dropping out.
,:;:
} "Almost !)all the Republican party has indicated they :;:
,:;: would like to have me as a candidate and they would like &lt;:
:;:; to have me stay in the race, and that's what I'm going to ,;:;
:.- ::.· do I " he. said ,
&lt;:·.·
·:;; Reagan also said he was leading Ford in delegates from :'::.
:;; nonprimary states. "I'm going all the way to the ·:;:
convention, and I think I'm going to be nominated," he ~:~
( said.
:::
;:;. In another development, Reagan halted the distribution }
):. of flyers printed by his North Carolina campaign , :~:
i,:'_:.· committee thatraisedthe issuesofraceand busing . ·
{
.
The flyers showed a reprint of a newspaper story about ;:;:
·''' Ford saying while in Durham last November that he ;:;:
·. would consider Sen. Edward Brooke of Massachusetts, ?
who is black, as a running mate, and a quotation from a ::::
. magazine ~rticle in which Brooke defended busing.
?
:;: Matt Lawson, a press aide to Reagan, said another aide :':'
:;~: showed them to the former California goverOQr during the ::::
;'; rally and he immediately called the Raleigh campaign :;':
::; office and had them sto~d.
';:;
:;:: "They simply ought notto be issued," Lawson said.
\
::::··:::;:::·::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::?:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:·:·:::::·:::·:~: ::::·:::·:::·::::::!::;:::::·:

·r

Uolled Press International
state's 37 national convention
President Ford crowed delegates were to he selected .
about good economic news Carter was expected to win 12
Saturday and said he really -to 14 delegates, with former
doesn't care whether Ronald Sen. Fred Harris figuring on
Reagan quits his fight for the perhaps four, with the rest
uncommitted. Another nine
GOP nomina~ion .
. Both
men
were delegates will be chosen at a
campaigning in North s tate convention next
Carolina , at some points · month .
Ford's one-day trip to
scheduled to he in the same
North
Carolina was the
city, though not at the same
straight
weekend he
second
time.
was
in
North
Carolina.
He
George Wallace, struggling
claimed
his
economic
poUcies
to beat Jimmy Carter in
Tuesday 's North Carolina put the nation on the "road to
Democratic primary, kept up a new prosperity."
Referring to Friday's news
his campaign while Carter
that
retail prices rose at -the
went home to Plains, Ga .
slowest
pace in February
Henry
Ja ckso n
sin~e
1971,
Ford said, "I see
campaigned in upstate New
no
reaS&lt;Jn
to
change or alter
York while Morris Udall was
scheduled for evening our course because we've
appearances in J,.ong Island been right. The trends are all
afier spending the day · in the right direction,"
Ford, upon landing in Charmaking
television
commercials in Wisconsin. lotte, was asked if he would
. The newest Democratic. like Reagan to drop out of the
contender, Frank Church, race. He replied, "I really
spent a second consecutive don't care/' then said the
day since his announcement former California governor's
campaigning in California challenge has helped his own
Saturday, proposing campaign "bUt is now a case
separation of the U.S. Office of dililinishing returns" that
of Edocation from the Health, Republicans are concerne&lt;j·
·
·
'
Education and Welfare about.
Both Ford and Reagan,
Department and making it a
who inSisted he will not
cabinet~ eve! agency.
· In Oklahoma , 28 of the withdraw even if he loses a
fifth straight head-to-head
contest Tuesday, were
scheduled to be in Asheville
C
and Hickory, N.C., Saturday
but not at the same time.
Church meCFrfday "'just to
bring the blaze under control chat" with California Gov.
and cool the rubble to the Edmund G. Brown Jr. , who
point.;;that firefighters could entered the presidenti~l
enter the home.
campaign the week before.
"We didn't have any idea of Saturday, the Idaho senator
anybody being in there . told the California Teachers
There was no one around to Association, " The United
give us any idea," he said.
States is the only country in
the western world without a
minister or secretary of
education" and a secretary of ·
education could help state
and local agencies make the
operators and a white best use of federal flUids.
organization with possible
Mafia support, the Cleveland
U.S. has four
Plain Dealer reported.
Citing interviews with law
enforcement officials and months to leave
police figures connected with
BANGKOK, Tahiland
numbers racketeers , the
(
UPI)
- ThailaiJ&lt;i Saturday
newspaper said it learned
all Ameri.can troops
ordered
that the white organization
withdrawn
within four
has imported hired killers,
months,
spelling
the end of
dynamite and guns.
the
U.S.
military
presence
in
The report also said the
mainland
Asia,
except
SOuth
city's numbers king h~s
vowed to fight to the death, Korea.
Thai Prime Minister Kukrit
one black numbers operation
Qramoj
said tbe decision was
has tried to buy · a large
made
at
a two.!Jour cabinet
quantity of weapons and the
meeting
following
a week of
blacks hav e rejected a
Fruitless
negotiations
beproposal for a peaceful
tween
senior
U.S.
and
Thai
takeover.
Police and others . have officials.
Exempted from
the
estimated that the numbers
withdrawal
order
are
270
U.
racket, believed to have been
S.
advisers
with
the
Joint
U.
established here by southern
S.
Military
Assistance
Group;
blacks during World War I,
grosses between $6 and $10 which oversees military aid
to Thailand. With the
million a year. Federal Communist
victories in
authorities
have
said
VIetnam,
Caml&gt;odia
and
Cleveland is the only major Laos, the Thai order means
city where the numbers the end to a physical role for
racket is not under the American forces in mainland
contr61 of organized crime . Asia, except in SOuth Korea .

Nitecluhhing mothers lose ' hiJdren

OXFORD, N.C. (UPI)
nightclub about 2:341 a.m. and
WASHINGTON (UPI) Six youngsters left alone in a found their children dead.
The
AFL-CIO
asked small frame 'house died The Taborn woman was
congressmen Saturday to Saturday in a fire that gutted hospitalized for shock, ~ut
support a new strip mining
the dwelling while their released later in the day.
bill, despite the Ford mothers
out
were
Bill Jones, one of the
administration's position that
nightclubbing.
firemen on the scene, said it
such legislation would resUlt
Firemen ~id they never took firemen 45 minutes to
in a significant loss of jobs. knew anyon~ was in the house
President Ford based his until alter the blaze was
decision to veto a similar bill brought under Control.
last year "on fabricated
The vlctima, aged from 9
war
statistics and misleading montlts to 12 years, were
economic assumptions, ''
from
three
·separate
CLEVELAND (UPI) ~ A
AFL-CIO legislative director families .
They
were
full-scale
war may break out
Andrew J . BiemiUer said in a identified as Maxine Gooch,
soon
between
the city's East
letter sent to all House 12 ; John Wesley Gooch, 8;
Side
black
numbers
members.
Janet Gooch, 7; Terresa
He said Ford's warning Taborn, 6, Belinda Taborn, 5,
that the bill would result ''in a and Norris Gerome Miles, 9 Moon. rocks have
significant loss of jobs" months.
proved effective, and it led to
Five of the children were
narrow failure by the House found on the floo~ in a back to be protected
to override the President's bedroom in the home and tbe
veto last year.
sixth was found in a seperate,
HOUSE ON (UP!)
Organized labor thinks that smaller bedroom. All died of .._Jiecause decades may· pass ·
rationale Is erroneous, smolle inhalation.
before another lunar space
Biemiller said.
Officials said the blaze · mission, a planetary expert
He asked congressmen to began in the living room at an says future scientific
adopt H.R. 9725, the Surface . unvented space heater.
generations must have the
Mining Control and ReclamaThe chlldrens ' mothers remaining supply of dark
tion Act of 1976, as approved were at the Graystone night gray moon rocks preserved
this· year by the House club in Henderson 17 miles intact.
Interior Committee .
northeast of Oxford, at the
Dr. Larry Haskin, chief of
"We believe that H.R. 9725 time.
planetary and earth sciences
will constitute a sound step
Officials said the mothers at the Johnson Space Center,
forward in developing an of four of the victims, Effie said Friday "they are not
enlightened and balanced Lee Gooch and Vonnie Miles, going to degrade in value for
federal program to regulate lived in the home owned by a very long time.
and control surface mining in Norris Latta , the Miles
"The lunar samples are an
the United States," he said. woman's common-law invaluable legacy of the
· ''In oilr belief, experience husband and father· of the Apollo program," Haskin told
with the implementation of youngest victim. The other reporters at the close of the·
this act will serve to provide woman, Henrietta Taborn, Seventh Lunar Science
the basis for its further was visiting.
Conference. ''They are a
strengthening
and
The women · and Latta treasure that deserves to be
improvements."
arrived home from the taken care of."

·Full scale

is threatened

Evidence found to verify holy shroud

GIFT

TURIN, Italy (UP!) - A
Swiss criminologist using
fossilized pollen as a clue
claims be bas found evidence
supporting the belief that a
linen sheet preserved in
Thrin once wrapped the dead
bocly of Jesus, the newspaper
La Starilpa said Saturday.
"I don't know If the bod,y ol
JeiiUB lltrillt was wrapped in
the 11teet and If It Is the shroud mentioned In the Goapel," La Stampa quoted Prof.
Mu Frel u sayln1.
"What I can state with
certainty is that fabric dates

;

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'

FOREMAN
AND

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MIDDLEPORT, 0.
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:~_:,·:~.'

INSTALLED

No Long Waiting~~,,.,

President's afternoon

appearance in Asheville was
several hours ahead of
Reagan's scheduled arrival.
Ford said "I really don't
ca re" whether Reagan drops
out of the race because his
campaign Is based on
winning the nomination at
Kansas City and beating the
Democrats in the general .
election.
"I think we have the
momentwrt and I have no
· apprehension that it will be
stopped by any force that I

1 Roll Reg. '6.99 Beautiful

HI-LO SHAG

the revolutionary

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Blood program
.was begun in '48
HUNTINGTON - Since
1948, the American National
Red Cross Blood Program
has collected over 60 million
units of blood to save the lives
of many thousands of patients
and to improve the health of
many thousands tnore.
Last year the. program's
annual blood collection
topped the four mi!Uon mark
with a total collection of
4 ,291,~19
units
an
impressive 12.1 per cent
increase over the previous
.
year.
From that blood, 5,868,214
units of blood components
were prepared to meet the
ll)edical needs of patients
served by 4,117 hospitals and
blood banks throughout the
nation.
·
The American National
Red Cross's blood services
began in 1937 when donors
were recruited in a few
Communities.
Then a wartime blood
donor program, undertaken
at the request of the Army
and Navy, began in
February, 1941, At the close
of World War II hostilities in
1945, the 3~ Red Cross
collection centers, with 63
mobile units, procured
13,326,242
units
from
voluntary donors for the
anned forced.
In the Orst tWo years after
tl!e • war, the need for a
coordinated blood activity
became apparent to many
medical
groups,
and
accordingly, the Red Cross
established Its peacetime
blood program in 1947. The
first
collection
and
processing center opened in
Rochester, N. Y. in January,
1948. '&gt;
During the Korean conflict
the Red Cross expanded its ·
collection facllltles and
established cooperative
agreements with 'private
blood collection agencies for
the purpose of supplying the
needs of the Department of
Defense . Nearly seven
million units were procured
for this purpose, including
more than one million from
the cooperating agencies.
Today, blood centers
operate through regional
collection centers : Trl..State
Red Cross Blood Center is

By RICHARD H. GROWALD
ASHEVILLE, N.C. (UPI)
- A relaxed and confident
President Ford campaigned
in the same area of North
Carolina as challenger
Ronald Reagan Saturday and
said he sees "nothing but
victory ahead" in his quest
for an elected term.
1
' 1 think we're going to win,
the momentum is with US/'
Ford told campaign workers
as he made a final bid for
votes in this state's
presidential primary
Thesday.
Contending · his economic
policies had the nation •:on
the road to a new
prosperity," Ford said the
indications were that he
would hand Reagan a sixth
straight primary defeat next
week.
"I can see nothing but
victory ahead, in Kansas City
(at the national GOP
convention) and on Nov. 2 (in
the general election)," Ford
said.
Skipping by presidential
Jetstar and helicopter from
Charlotte to Asheville to
Avery .. Coun ty and then
Hickory, For4's course at
times ran close to and once
crisso(!rossed Reagan's. The

.

..-.... ___. _-

from the times of Otrlst and
was displayed in Palestine,
Turkey, France and finally In
Turin."

La Stampa said Frel, for a
quarter of a century the head
of the oclentiflc laboratory of
ZUrich pollee, billed hill findIngs on the analysis of
particles of pollen he took
from lite lheel known to
Roman Catbollca u the Holy
Shroud.
The shroud, a 18-foot
brownlllll linen cloth btought
w Europe by crusac!ers,
preserves what lookl Uke the'

~

PRESENTED PLAQUES- Armand Turley, Mrs. Ferman Moore and Larry Spencer,
seated, !..-, were recently presented their "honorary" Grand Croaker plaques by Grand
Croaker Earl Ingels, right. They were initiated last Jqne in activities at the Shrine Park in
Racine.

Hearst jury may come
in with verdict soon
By RICK DU BROW
· but on the second day of
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) deliberations they were going
The Patricia Hearst jury sent at the task in a way that
out lor hamburgers for lunch indica ted they hoped it would
Saturday and had yet to ask he S&lt;Jon.
to examine any of the exhibits
The seven men and live
in the bank robbery trial.
women had been instructed
Miss Hearst crocheted in a by U.S. District Judge Oliver
holding cell on the floor above J. Carter to start their daily
in the federal courthouse deUberations at 9 a.m., but
awaiting their verdict.
they were in the jury room on
When the jury would hring the 19th floor at 8:45a.m .
in a decision of innocent or
The government had introguilty was anyone's guess, duced a total of 29~ pieces of

Controversy sure
to follow verdict
By RICK DU BROW
SAN FRANCISCO (tJPI) The opposing attorneys in
Patricia Hearst's bank
robbery trial shook hands
Friday alter the case .went to
the jury, and sat down to
discuss the eigbt-week court
battle.
" I think there'll always be.
a controversy no matter what
the jury does because the
public has involved itself in
personal decisions ," said
Miss Hearst's attorney, F.
Lee Bailey. "There'll always
be those dissatisfied with an
acquittal. There'll always be
those dissatisfied with a
conviction." ,
"We didn't pull any punches,"

said

Prosecutor

James L. Browning Jr.,
addjng:
"From
the
government'spointof view, if
we haven't gotten before the
jury enough to satisfy them,
to enable them to make a
decision, It wasn't · because
we didn 'I try very hard ."
" I .agree with . Mr.
Browning," said Bailey, who
sat next to the prosecutor at a
news conference after
Federal Court Judge Oliver
J . Carter had given the case
to the jury. "I don 'I know of
anything he left out !hat

•

televised address three years television in 1973.
ago that "whatever historical
La Stampa said Frei took
and scientific j'udgment samples of pollen from the
scholars : ·m ay choose to shroud before the television
express on this surprising display. It said his hiboratory
and mysterious relic, we can analysis showed the pollen
only pray that it may lead came from six species of
visitors, not only to Palestinian plants from the
thoughtful observation of the limes of Christ, one plant
outward and mortal features from Thrkey, where tradition
of the Saviour's wonderful ' Says the shroud was kept in
figure, but also to a deeper Constantinople for several
insight into his hidden and centuries, and eight species
fasclriating mystery. ''
of Mediterranean plants from
The shroud last was the times when the shroud
diplayed in public during the was displayed in France,
1933 Holy Year and shown on Belgium and then Italy.
:~

·

Patty's mother
finally afraid

SAN FRANCISCO (UP! )Patricia Hearst's mother
. rushed from the courtroom in
tears Friday as the judge was
giving final instructions to
the jury that is deciding her
daughter.'s fate.
· " I'm
afraid,"
Mrs .
Catherine Hearst confided to
a woman as the two rode an
elevator that took her away
from the courb'oom. "Up to
now I've been all right. Now
I've chickened out."
bad."
Mrs. Hearst had sat silently
jjYes," said the prosecutor. and composed In a front row
According to Bailey, spectator's seat during the
course of the trial.
Conllmietl 011 Page 18

Game-playing in Columbus
COLUMBUS ( UP I) - You
can find game-playing anywhere you find government
or politics, at any time of
year.
But there seems to be a
rash of it, just like the fiu, at
the Ohio Statehouse right
now.
Majority Democrats in the
General Assembly are
snagged
on
potential
repercussions of the two
major bills standing in the

Ohio politics
way of adjournment for reelection campaigns - tax
relief and utility rate reform.
Other important bills are
receiving · careful
consideration · in various
committees.

photographic negative of the
imprint of a human body. It
has been the property of the
dukes of Savoy, ancestors of
Italy's now~xlied family,
since 1453 and has been
preserved in a silver casket
in a chapel of the Thrin .
cathedral since 1670.
The Roman Catholic
Ourch has repeatedly said it
is not within lis competence
to say If the sllroud is
authentic, but a nwnber of
Popes
have
openly
worllltlppad lt.
Pope Paul VI said in a

would have helped them."
Browning, who said in his
final argument Thursday he
was sorry Miss Hearst was
kidnaped by the Symbionese
liberation Army, was asked
whether his feeling made it a
tough case for him or gave
him mixed emotions. ·
"I think anybody has to
regret, feel sorry, for the
kidnap victim," he said. But
he added the government's
view is that the fact of
kidnaping does not absolve
acts that follow by the victim.
Miss Hearst is charged with
robbing a bank with the SLA.
''You don't get many
persons accused of crimes
who originally were kidnap
victims,'.' Browning said.
"We've never had any·reason
to doubt that she was
originally kidnaped."
Bailey said he and
Browning both agreed "the
case had to be tried ... It could
not be dismissed, or Mr.
Browning, the system and I
would have been crucified."
The defense attorney said
he and Browning aiS&lt;J "agree
that a hung jury would be

evidence in Uie case-documents, tape recordings, a
'"Tania" diary, weaponsand if the jury were to go over
all of them they could be
deliberating for days.
· A court clerk said that as of
midday Saturday the jurors
had not asked to see a single
exhibit.
Miss Hearst, described her
attorney Albert Johnson as
"nervous," was passing the
time crocheting. Sbe was in a
holding area of the U.S.
marshal's office on the 20th
and top floor of the building.
Shortly before noon the
jury sent out an order for
hamburgers and french fries
to be brought in. Miss Hearst
had the same kind of lunch.
On the first day of deliberations after receiving the case
at 10:48 a.m. Friday, the jury
talked for five holD'S with a
lunch break, then adjourned
at 5 p.m.
Their deliberation room is
40 by 18 feet , windowless,
with yellow walls covered
with pictures of federal
judges going back to 1851.
Two large rectangular tables
were pushed together, and
the jurors sat around them in
leather chairs.

But out on the floor of the
House and Senate, restless
lawmakers, anxious to get
home and protect their
flanks, amuse themselves by
playing games with daily
agendas that often seem to
make no sense.
Hundreds
of
school
children and other groups
watching the action must
sometimes think they're
visiting a menagerie instead
of the Ohio General
Assembly.
Item : A couple of weeks
ago, the House defeated a bill
~

providing for construction of
government office buildings
in major cities. Moments
later, the sponsor rounded up
nine blgo(!ity Democrats who
had. deserted him, tbe roll
was called and the bill passed
without explanation of the.
turnabout.
Item : Senate Democrats,
who have declined to act on a
number of Gov. James A.
Rhodes'
cabine·t
appointments after more
than a year , singled out
Liquor Control Director
Clifford E. Reich for special
attention last week. A few
Democrats verbally flogged
him with floor speeches. Then
he was confirmed, ~ to 4.
Item : A bill came onto the
House floor authorizing
special temporary liquor
permits to barbershop
quartets and ethnic groups.
The pernnit was shortened
from 72 to 48 hours after
someone observed that ,,be
bartenders might get t;;.ed ."
Another member objected,
asking "how do you expect a
party to wind down in 48
hours ?" The biU was then
defeated.
Item : House lawyers
pushed through a bill
broadening provisions for
"power of attorney" to make
it binding if the person who
granted It becomes disabled ,

)•

'

incoherent or dead .
Item : The House passed a
bill requiring dog owners to
furnish shade and water to
their pets kept out-of-doors.
One member wanted to know
why the requirement should
not apply to chickens, cows
and pigs.
Item : A House member
opposed a proposal to permit
the advertising of prices for
eyeglasses
with
this
argument: "You !DaY . be
sitting at home watching TV
when suddenly the tnbe goes
black and a voice says,
'friends, if you can hear me
but can't see me, you may
have a vision problem. "'
· And S&lt;J on.
Just for the record , the
game-playing lsn 'I restricted
to the legislature . Gov.
Rhodes jetted back from
Europe last week and was
asked how his trip enhanced
Ohio's chances of attracting a
Volkswagen plant - one of
his prime missions.
"The chances are about the
same as they were before we
went over, more or )ess,"
said I be governor, diverting
attention to another "great
prospect" he may have sold
on Ohio lor an industrial site.
What was the name of the
company? Rhodes wouldn't
say, so if the deal falls
through, nobody will know.l
~

.•

t

�19- The Sunday Times. S.ntinel,liunday, March 21, 1976

!!!

Your Wayne National Forest
By T. Allan Woller
District Ranger
ffiONTON - The third week in
March has been designated National
Wildlife Week. Thirty-nine years
ago, then President Franklin D.
Roosevelt proclaimed the first such
Observance:
A lot of wildlife has fallen to
hunters ' guns, old age, and disease
but the roots of wildlife management
go back much farther than
Roosevelt's time. Let 's look at .
significant events in American
wildlife history.
1782 - OUR NEW republic
makes the American bald eagle our
national symbol by putting It on the
official seal. It's believed the bird
once lived in all states but Hawaii.
Now It nests in just a few.
1804
JOHN JAMES
AUDUBON, artist - writer naturalist, performs first bird·
banding experiments in North
America. Banding means putting a
small metal ring around a bird's leg
so that when the bird is recovered
you can tell where it came from and
: how long ago it was tagged. Such
.. facts help science plan for birds'
survival.
1886 - DR. WILLIAM T. Hornaday, naturalist, tours United
States to count bison, finds only 541
left of millions which once roamed
the prairie. His American Bison
Society later helps restore animal to
a safe popula lion level.
1896 - U. S. SUPREME Court
rules that the states, not private
landowners, own wildlife. The
decision gives states the right to
protect wildlife living on private or

public land.
1903
PRESIDENT
THEODORE Roosevelt establishes
the first federal wildlife refuge at
Petican Island, Florida, to shield
nesting grounds of brown pelican.
To&lt;lay there are over 375 federal
wildlife refuges covering about
32,000,000 acres and protecting
almost every kind of wildlife.
1933 - ALDO LEOPOLD
becomes America 's first professor
of game management, at University
of Wisconsin ; publishes textbook,
"Game Management." He wrote :
" ... Game is a crop, which Nature
will grow and grow abundantly,
provided only we furnish the seed
and a suitable environment."
1934 - MIGRATORY BIRD
Hunting Stamp Act (Duck Stamp
Act) requires hunters of ducks,
geese to buy fed eral license .
Revenue, earmarked to bu y
waterfowl refuges and rese~rch ,
amount.s to $163,960,000 by June 30,
1975.
1936
PRESIDENT
FRANKLIN D. Roosevelt calls for
North American Wildlife Conference
to chart action for restoring once
plentiful wildlife . The National
Wildlife Federation is formed the
same year as a direct result.
1937- PITTMAN-ROBERTSON
Act taxes sport arms and ammunition to raise money for states to
buy and develop wildlife areas. By
June 30, 1975 the states had received
$593,966,000. Dlngeli-Johnson Act in
1950 does same thing for fish
management, !.axing fishing gear
and raising $182,701,000 for the
states by June 30, 1975.

1962 - RACHEL L. CARSON,
biologist-author, publishes Silent
Spring, putting public on notice of
dangerous side effects of pesticides
on wildlife .
1966 - U. S. ADOPTS its first
legislation to help endangered
species, requiring listing of native
animals facing extinction. Later
amendment.s call for other lists:
threatened species, foreign endangered species, threatened and
endangered U. S. plants.
Where are we at today and what
· about the future of wildlife '
From my point of view there 's
goo&lt;l news and bad news. Bad news
first. We are still losing about one
million acres of wildlife habitat a
year to highways, supermarkets and
urban sprawl to name but a few.
There are 126 wildlife species on the
endangered 'list. Like the person(s)
who left a dead deer on the door step
of a Southern Hills Sportsman's
Club member's home last week with
a note roi;Iere 's something for your
vigilanlies (sic) to eat on till you
catch us" signed "United Poachers
of Southern Ohio."
The goo&lt;l news is awareness and
concern at all levels right down to
the man in the street. Every state
now has a Division of Wildlife with
trained scientists who have devoted
.their lives to the study and perpetuation of all wildlife. Recently,
the Ohio Division of Wildlife added a
non-game biologist to their sta ff.
TD&lt;lay there are more deer and
turkey than at any other time in U.
S. history . Most other game
populations are healthy. There is
cause for guarded optimism.

New wrinkles in vehicle
registration are explained
COLUMBUS - The 1!116
vehicle registration is now
underway, and the Bureau of
Motor Vehicles is. making a
special effort to familiarize
Ohio motorists with important details of this year 's
licensing program . Following
are
the
answers
to
registration procedures.
Q: Is the state issuing new
license plates this year?
A: Yes. This year, Ohio
vehicle owners will be
receiving new heavy-gauge,
!11Siproof aluminum plates
which are designed to remain
in use for at least three years.
. These undated, red-and-white
Plates will be renewed with
plastic validation stickers In
1977, 1978 and possibly
several additional years.
Q: Why the change to
multi-year plates?
A: Because multi-year
plates will save money .
Validation stickers can be
obtained for a tiny fraction of
what it costs to make new
metal tags each year. By
Issuing heavy.([uty alwninum
. plates, then renewing them
for several years with simple
plastic stickers, the state can
save millions - and keep
Ohio's yearly license fees
among the · very lowest
anywhere.
Q:
How
does
the
"staggered" licensing
s:hedule work ?
A: Passenger Cars - Ohio
passenger car owners are
divided into two distinct
registration groups according to the beginning
letter of their last names.
Those whosl!' last names
begin with A through K must
buy and attach their new
Ucerise plates between April I
and midnight, April 30. Those
In the L·Z ai{Xlabelical group
will then have fr&lt;m May I
tlrough May 31 to visit local
license agencies and complete 1976 registration.
Non-Passenger Vehicles Regardless of the owner's
Jut name, non-passenger
vehicles
(i.e.,
trucks,
trailers, house vehicles, farm
vehicles and motorcycles)
may be registered any time
be tween March I and May 31.
The month of March has been
set aside as a special
"earlyblrd" licensing period
for motorists who don't own a
passenger car and only need
plates for a truck, house
vehicle, motorcycle or oiher
non11aasenger vehicle. These
people we under no legal
obligation to buy their 1976
platea during March - but
they can avoid the possibility
of being caught In long
walling Hnes later by taking
- . of their plate purchases
befll'e the license seuon for
pauenger cars gel underway.
,
Ohioans wilo own both a
Jllllllll&amp;r c.- and a nonJIIIIIIII&amp;r vehicle can buy
..... I« both vehicles in a
.qle trip II they walt untJI ·
tbelr IIQned passenger car
month lAirD or l\fay ,

.Uc••••

depending on the owner's last
name) . This cannot be accomplished during the month
r1 March because passenger
car plates. cannot be issued
before April I.
Q: Will the April 30th
deadline for A-K passenger
car owners be sirictly enforced this year?
· A: Yes. Because last year
was the first year of
"staggered" registration,
Ohio Jaw enforcement Of·
fleers were asked to be
lenient in dealing with A-K
passenger car owners who
missed the April 30th
deadline and continued to
drive on explr.ed plates
during the month 'of May.
There will be no such "grace
period" this year . Anyone in
the A·K group who fails to
display 1976 passenger car
plates after midnight, April
lith can and w!U be ticketed
by a police officer for driving
m an expired registration.
The uswl court fine for this
rJ.fense is $25 - considerably
more than it cost.s to buy
license tags. In many
jurisdictions, an improperly
plated vehicle wlll be impounded at the owner's expense until he or she has
complied with state licensing
requirements.
Q: Can persons with L-Z
lasi names buy their
passenger car plates in
April ?
A: No. Deputy registrars
may not issue new passenger
car plates to anyone In the L·
Z alphabetical group until
May llit. This is not an arbitrary policy set by the
Bureau. of Motor Vehicles or
local deputies - it is a
specific provision of state
law.
Q: What about passenger
cars owned by business
firms?

A:
Company-owned
passenger cars should be
registered according to the A·
K-L·Z schedule - using the
corporate name which appears on the vehicle title as
the "owner's name".
Example .- Cars titled In
the name of "Consolidated
Enterprises" should .. be
registered In April. (Owner's
last name begins with letter
C) . Cars ti lied in the name of
"Smith, Murphy and Baker,
Inc." should be registered In
May . (Owner's name begins
with letter S).
Q: How much will it cost to
register a passenger car?
A: The state puSEIIger car
registration fee Is $11 .00
(eleven doiJars). This In·
eludes both the iifty-&lt;!ent
deputy registrar fee and the
flfty&lt;ent reflectorlzaUon tee
charged each time new metal
plates (rather than validation·
slickers) are Issued. An
additional $5.00 local permiiiSive tax is levied in 60 of
Ohio's 88 counties. In these
permissive tax districts, the
total cost of a set of passenger
car plates wUJ be $18.00
(sixteen ~ars) . Since each

deputy registrar is personally
liable to the state for any
"bad" checks he or she accepts, many deputies will not
accept checks in payment of
registration fees. To ~void
inconvenien~e , the Bureau
strongly suggests that vehicle
owners bring along enough
cash to cover all their fees
when they visit the local
license agency.

UTILITY RATES

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Sen.
J . Timothy McCormack, DEuclid, is upset the House
Utilities committee has
of
added
a
series
amendments to his bill ut ility
rate bill which he says
weaken it and would allow the
utility industry high profits.
Wednesday, Rep. William
E . Hinig , D-Perrysburg,
chairman of the committee,
requested McCormack , by
letter, to appear before the
committee March 23 to
"answer questions" from the
committee about the bill .
Hinig added he would like a
response to his request.

New device pins
down freebee calls

They'll American League
fight
going to Toronto
hard

NEW YORK i UP!) - The
American League baseball
owners, beating the rival
National League to the
By TIM MeG IRK
EL AAIUN, Western punch, voted Saturday to
Sahara i UP! ) - They expand toTorontofor the 1977
squatted around a coal fire . season .
"Resolved : That the
that glowed bright orange. In
American
League hereby
the coals la y a bent,
intends
to
expand
to 14 clubs
blackened tin pot used to
with
the
!4th
being
Toronto to
brew sweet mint tea .
commence
in
the
1977
These are the Saharans
seaSon,"
American
League
who remained in this
deserted capital after President Lee MacPhail read
Morocco and Mauritania took from a resolution presented
over the Western Sahara in in a joint session with the
February, as agreed with the · N.L. and Commissioner
territory 's former colonial Bowie Kuhn.
The A. L. vote to expand
ruler, Spain.
was
11-1 in favor, more than
They are here, they said, to
the
ntne·Vote majority
watch out for the families of
needed.
the men who have joined the
MacPhail Said at least two
independence - seeking
groups are bidding for the
Polisario guerrillas. Another reason th ey're A.L. franchise in Toronto.
here, they said, is to keep One of the grQups is Labatl's
watch on the Moroccan Breweries. Inc., the same
military presence and report group which attempted to
purchase, the San Francisco
Giants and move them to
Toronto .
MacPhail , h owever,
declined to identify the other
to the Polisario 's desert group.
command.
No price Was set for the
fra
nchise.
They live in the eastern
Chub Feeney, the National
sector of El Aaaiun. When
Spain agreed Nov. 14 to hand League president, responded
over th e territory' 25,000 by saying hos league also was
Saharans were estimated to consideeing expansion and
be crowded in this part of was impressed by the Labatt
town. Now, less than 4,000 group.
remain:
Feeney said the N.L. was
Trapped by endless rows of interested in Toronto as a site
white houses, the sun that for expansion, too , and was
burns down on 'this city is considering Washington , D.
blinding. Rutted dirt paths C., as w~ll . although he said
lea d to the Saharan section of there was no prospective
town. It was a sprawling b~yer there.
, ghetto when the Spaniards
"We haven 't voted to exwere here, and the Spanish pand, but we could call such a
troops assigned to patrol it meeting. on a day's notice,"
considered it hardship duty. Feeney said.
The Saharans around the
"Whoever gets control of
fir e - an old woman garbed the . lease t~ere . for th~ir
in black sat on a stoopoutside stadoum , that woll decode
· the shack as if guarding it _ , , which league woll expand to
said they 'fiercely oppose any Toronto, " MacPhail sa id .
overseer for the .territory, be
The Arnencan Leagu e
it Spain, Morocco or Algeria. previously has expanded to
"Algeria offers us weapons seatUe tor th.e 1977 season,
now and we take them "said crcahng a 13-team lea gue.
a youth with thick ~atted The seattle franchise was
black hair. "At this point pur chased for 6.3 million and
we'd take help from the devil will not share in nati onal
himself."
television revenues for the
They wore flowing blue and first thr ee Years of its
white hooded robes called existence.
djellabas and drank lots of
"A majority or the owners
sticky sweet tea. They said feel tha t !3 •s an unwor kable
they'd rather be out in the number for a league, "
desert, fighting.
Ma cPhail. " Several ci ti es
"We have. ·10,000 fighting contacted u~ . Toronto was
men and women '·' one· of ow- first chotce." ·
them said. "Thai isn't so
'' If we do decide to expand,

a visit with
the Saharans

we are interested in Toronto
and Washington, " Feeney
saod. .
Earlier Saturday, the
Major League owners met m
joint session and withdrew
the "best and final" proposal
already rejected by the
Players Association. .
"The 'best and !mal '
propos~! has bee.n with"
drawn,
MacPhaol saod .
HWe'll wait to hear their's
next."
Ed Fitzgerald, chairman of
the board of the Milwaukee
Brewers and spokesmen for
the owners' players relations
committee, said , " The
owners directed the committee to press on in an attempt to ·gain a resolution of
the problem as quickly as
possi ble and · gave a
unanimous vote of confidence
to the players relations
committee."
Despite the endorsement,
Fitzgerald added there were
owners present at the
meeting who felt the committee had gone too far on
some of the pr ovisions contained in the "best and final"
proposal.
" There was a sizeab le
group," Fitzgerald said. •·r

can 't say how many, but
there were people who fell
that way."
The proposal advanced .
Tuesday was reviewed by
Marvin Miller, executive
director of the Players
Association and his executive
board. The players agreed
with several of the provisions
and indicated willingness to
compromise on some of the
others, but refused to endorse
the whole proposal.
M~nwhile, Kuhn , seeing
what he felt was substantial
progress in the negotiations
and declaring "The fans are
the most important people
around,'' ordered. spring
training camps open Wed·
nesday night, en ding the
owners' 17-day lockout.
Kuhn's action was what
precipitated Saturday ' s
owners' meeting.
The last of · the camps
opened Saturday, with the
San Francisco Giants and
Oa kland A's starting formal
workouts . The first exhibition
games are scheduled for
Tuesday.
The playe rs relations
committee now will caucus
over the weekend to decide
the next step and is expected
to renew negotiations during
the upcoming week. But there
is no indication as to how the
players would respond. The
basic agreement between the
owners and players expired
Dec. 31, 1975.

'

POMEROY - Fifteen
school champions wiiJ
compete for honors at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at the
Salisbury Elementary School
when the annual Meigs
County Spelling Bee Is held.
Dwight Goins, speech and
music teacher at Meigs High
School, has been selected to
pronounce the words for the
15 school champions with the
three local school district
superintendents serving as
the panel of judges. They
include
John
Riebel,
Eastern; Charles Dowler ,
Meigs, and Bob Ord ,
Southern. Mrs. Greta Suttle,
county school supervisor, is
the chairperson for the annual event with the awards to
be presented by Meigs
County Supt. Robert E.
Bowen.
The first place winner in
this year's speUing contest
will win a trophy, a plaque for
the school attended and will

represent the county in the
annual state contest to be
held May 8 at Fawcett Center
in Columbus. An innovation
to the county contest this year
will be the presentation of a
trophy to the runnerup. Each
school champion will receive
a certificate of award.
In each school, an alternate
has been chosen to represent
case the
the school in
champion is unable to appear. The school champions,
listed first for each school,
and the alternate of the
respective school include:
Chester Elementary Tina Beaver, sixth grader,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Griffith, Long Bottom;
Gary Ginther, sixth grader,
son of Mr . and Mrs. John
Ginther, Long Bottom.
Eastern Junior High Teresa Spencer , eighth
grader, daughter of Mr . and
Mrs. Gilbert Spencer,
pomeroy; Jeannie Craft,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Board fails to
name super
. POINT PLEASANT _
Everyone at the Mason
County School Board meeting
Friday evening expected the
naming of the new school
,superintendent.
It was to come following a
closed door executive
session . However, as the
doors were opened and the
public was allowed in, only
two things happened: the
settingofthetimeanddateof
.the next board meeting and
adjournment of the meeting .
Two months ago when the
board began setting up
procedures to hire a new
superintendent to repla ce
Charles Withers, who is
retiring, !,he board hoped one
would be hired before , the
budget meetings.
Those meetings begin this
Wednesday and the feeling is
that a superintendent will not
be hired between now and
then.
Prior to the executive
session which started at 7:30
and lasted until 9 p.m. the
board approved motions
r ecom mended
by
Superintendent Withers:
The fund raising
activities of the Wahama
American Studies Classes:

many against
the. But
massive
BOSTON (UP! ) - Those automatic control factor ," Moroccan
invasion
this • • • • • - • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
freebee calls you've been said Miss Schein . " Most is our war, in our desert.
making on the company tele- business calls can be made
"We are desert creatures,
phone to Aunt Alice in Within five minutes."
like the camel. We can do
Chicago and Uncle Bill in
" All operations costs are ·without food or water for six
Miami could prove an rising so fa st that companies days. We know what plants
embarassment one of these must get fuJI valu e for every give food, even water. The
days.
one . of their business Saharans can hold out."
A Natjck, Mass. firm has on expenses," sai d Joel H.
The
Saharans
said
the market a system whiCh · Berman,
president
of Polisario ranks have been
gives a daily readout of who Telecomm. "Telephone use filled out with 1,000 former
made what call, when and long has beeri an almost slaves.
how much 'it cost the uncontrollable variable i~ the•
Brought here in caravans
company.
cost structure, but thi s from northwest Africa, black
The printout is available system will help bring it slaves bring up to $5,000. Both
the day after the calls are Wld.er control."
Spain and Morocco have
made, so the boss can
Th e AIOD immediate prin- outlawed the slave trade
immediately confront tout, accordin g to Miss here, but it is said to go on
employes making personal Schein, contrasts with a anyway.
1•)'\lj··
•
calls on company phones.
month or more required by
The Saharans said many of
That's not its only use, other systems now used on a the slaves with the Polisario
however. Connie Schein, limited basis in Europe and are runaways. Others, they
spokeswoman for L. M. Eric- on the West Coast. Cost is . said, were sent by owners
sson Telecomm, Inc., said the about one-third - a starting who live among the the
real savings are realized price of $30,000 for AIOD, Morocca ns but want to be on
after the system has been in contrasted with a $100,000 the Polisario's good side if, in.
use for several months since range for the others, she said. the end, it wins.
Telecomm can analyze the
The savings are attributed
A young man with hawkphOne calls made by a to the fact AIOD's computer like lea tures and dusky skin
company and recommend can be directly attached . to pored wide arcs of tea into
less expensive ways to handle any printing device, reducjng small glasses arranged
them.
the amount of software neatly on a tray .
Called Automatic between the computer and
"We wlU get Morocco out of
Identification of Outward the printout.
our land if we have to pull her
Dialing, the system can cut
"The equipment will assist out by the tail," another said.
costs 15 to 30 per cent for the client user in .more "We'll keep fighting for in·
firms with $5,000 a month or effective ways to use wats dependence uniil the last
more in toll calls, according lines and foreign exchange Saharan is wiped off the
to Telecomm.
trunks, " said Ernest Lander, desert."
Developed , by Bilek Telecomm marketing
International Corp. of Long director and communications
Beach, Calif., the system Is consultant. It will enable a
being offered for the first user to determine during
time on the East Coasi which days and hours of the
through Telecomtn, a wholly- day it is best to make
·continued from page 17
6" IN THE CEILING
owned subsidiary of L.M. expensive telephone ca lls . "There has been a policy In
· Ericsson, the Swedish based "This is caJied a proper th e defense of this case,
international communica- network design, " Lander insofar as possible, to see that
tions system, and New En- said.
people . didn't
become
gland's I a r g e s t private
He said the system would corrupted ,by the smeU of
telephone company.
· be · valuable also
to black ink and gouge the
AIOD can be adapted easily businesses, such as Jaw, Hearsts for all theY. could get.
to any present phone system, accounting and engineering
"Experts were told that
according to Telecomm.
firms, which charge their their fees could be no greater
Each tbne an extension is clients for telephone calls. than in any other case. But to
picked up and "a call placed, Posting exact charges say that it was not · an
an in-house minicomputer weekly, rather than having to expensive case would be
automatically registers wait several montha, Lander . foolish . I'm sure it's several
which phone Is making the said, would imlJrove cash hundred thousand dollars. "
call, the day, date, flow·. .
Asked whether ·he would
destination and time the caJI
represent Miss Hearst in Los
began, lime the caJI ended
UNDERWOO,D NAMED
Angeles, where she stlJI faces
and the cost. At midnight, a
COLUMBUS ( UP!)
state charges of kidnaping,
Jl"lntout of aU the Information Wade
Underwood,
40, robbery and assault, Bailey
Is obtained from the president of the Ohio · said:
computer.
Education Association, was
"My contract with her was
Although It doesn 't monitor named Satwday executive for all charges which were
the content of the ·calls, secretary of the OEA to pending when I took the case,
"People wilo know It's there succeed Stayner F. Brighton and It does include Los
won't talk as malch. It's an who will retire &amp;!pt. 1·.
Angeles .•

Swisher now managing

Fifteen c}:tampions to meet
Wednesday in spelldown

- A proposed education
tour to historical spots in
· Virginia and Washington, D.
C. by the Point Pleasant
Junior High Student.s ;
The tran~portation
request of the Wahama
American Studies classes to
the Huntington Galleries ;
- Transportation request
of Mason Elementarv to
Charleston;
The transportation
request of Wahama band to
Hunting ton;
- Accepted the resignation
of Mrs. Sue Thacker ;
- Employed Willie Lane as
a custodian at. New Haven
Elementary;
- Rescinded the board 's
action in approving the New
York City trip planned by
.Point Pleasant High School
senior class and to approve a
trip to King's Island ;
- Set the next board
meeting for March 24 .
P r e s en t
we r e
Superintendent Charles
Wi the r s , As s i s t a n t
Superintendent Charles
Chambers, Board President
Harry
Siders,
Board
members Bill Brady, Paul
Watkins, Robert Adkins and
Ray Fields .

BAYVIEW

Robert Craft, Reedsville.
Riverview Elementary
Kila Young, sixth grader,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Young, .Long Bottom; Scotty
Dillon , sixth grader, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Dillon,
Long Bottom.
TUPPERS PLAINS Helen Myers, sixth grader,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Alvin Myers, Jr., Reedsville;
Sarah Jane Goebel, sixth
grader , daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Frederick Goebel,
Reedsv.iJJe.
Bradbury - Steve Hood,
sixth grader, son of Mr. and
Mrs . Arthur Hood, Middleport; Eddie Daniels, sixth
grader , son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Daniels, Middleport.
Harrisonville - Mark
Oine, sixth grader, son of Mr.
an d Mrs . Jerry Clin e,
Pomeroy; Bradford Largent,
fifth grader, son of Mr. and
Mrs. John Scragg, Rutland .
Meigs Junior High - Jayne
Lee Hoeflich , seventh
grader, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Hoeflich, Pomeroy;
Beth Perrin, seventh grader,
daughter of Rev. and Mrs . W.
H. Perrin , Pomeroy.
Pomeroy Elementary Gregory Th omas, sixth
grader , son of Mr. and Mrs .
Don Thomas, Pomeroy;
Tracy Harding , fifth grader ,
daughter of Mrs. Bonnie
Harding, Pomeroy.
Rutland -' Becky Tillis,
sixth grader, daughter of Mr .
and Mrs . Amos Tillis,
Rutland; Ronda Mitchell ,
fifth grader, daughter of Mr .
and Mrs . Clair Mitchell ,
Rutland .
Salem Center - Timothy
Jarrell, sixth grader , son of
Mrs. Sar;Uo Jarrell, Langsville ; Denise Turner, sixth
grader, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Turner, Langsville .
Salisbury - John Smith,
fifth grader, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Oscar Smith, Pomeroy,
and alternate , a sister of ,
John's, Laura Smith, sixth
grader, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Oscar Smith .
Letart - Randall Tucker ,
sixth grader, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Glen Tucker, Racine;
Jenny Manuel, sixth grader ,
Mr. and Mrs . Charles
Manuel, Racine.
Portland - Sherry Beegle,
sixth grader, daughter of Mr .
and Mrs. Roger Beegle,
Racine ; Kelley Pickens, sixth
grader, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. John Pickens, Portland.
Southern Junior High Peggy Bush, seventh grader, ·
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Bush , Racine; Susie
Sellers, seve nth grader,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Rowe, Racine.
SyracuSe Elementary Ann Williams, sixth grader,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs,
Freeman Williams, Minersville ; Teresa Grueser, sixth
grader, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Grueser, Minersville.
The county event is open to
the public.

12x60 MOBILE HOME

Mason Auto Mart fir1n

into rate move

VERNON DEWEESE, retiring advertising manager
of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, was presented a golf
putter and full set of irons by fellow employes at a
surprise retirement party Friday evening .

Surprise party given
Deweese upon retiring
POINT PLEASANT - W.
Vernon Deweese was honored
with a surprise retiremeni
party at the Moose Hall here
Friday evening hosted by
more than 40 employes of The
Ohio Valley . Publishing Co.
Deweese,' retirin g as
advertising manager of the
Gallipolis Daily . Tribune
jo~ed the Tribune staff Jan:
8, 1949.
TEACHER RATIOS
. CO LUMBUS !UPI )
Among th e bills on the Ohio
senate's calendar :Jbursday
is a measure to limit pupilteacher ratios in the grades
one, two and three in Ohio
public schools to no more
than 27 to I, with a five-pupil
deviation allowed.
Current Ohio law limits
pupil-teacher ratios to about
28 to I. That was changed to
25 to I in a bill passed by the
legislature, but later vetoed
by th e governor. The veto is
being challenged before the
Ohio Supreme Court.
Th e Legislative Service
Commission
says
implementation of the bill
before the senate would cost
Ohio between $5.2 million and
$8.2million a year to hire new
teachers, mostly in northeast
Ohio.

Following dinner, Deweese
was presented a golf, putter
and a full set of irons, a
trophy and a memory book
Which was read to the group
by his wife, Ellen. Making the
presen tations were Mrs.
Philip Foster and Larry
Boyer.
Dancing to music from the
1930s to 70s was enjoyed by
the group during the evening.
Decorations along the wall
remininsced his 27 year
with
the
assoc iation
newwaper.
Attending were : Mr. and
Mrs. Hobart Wilson, Jr., Mr.
and Mrs. Gayland Bush, Mr.
and Mrs. Otho Mattox , Don
Coleman, Mr. · and Mrs .
Charles Snodgrass, Jim
Crump, Mr .. and Mrs. Dick
Owen, Tom Skinner, Mr. and
Mrs. L&lt;irry Boyer, Mr. and
Mrs. James E. Danner; Mr.
and · Mrs. Philip Foster,
Emma Lou Davis, Helen
Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Cbet
Tannehill, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Lisle, Sharon Wilson,
Mr. and Mrs . Dave Buskirk,
]Wb Wingett, Mr. and Mrs.
William R. Thompson, Milidy
Raynes, Sharon Beaver,
Thomas Roach, Phyllis
Roach, Dale Rothgeb, Jr.,
Debbie Bennett, Billy Sue
Dailey, Sarah Carsey, Mr.
· and Mrs. Steve Halstead. ·

~2

BIUS
COLUMBUS (UP!)- As of
the end of the week, 523 bills
had· been introduced in the
Ohio Senate, of which 164, or
slightly over 30 per cent, had
been passed.
In
the
Hou'se ,
representatives had
introduced 1,411 separate

bills and had passed 311 , or 22
per cent.
Of the total number passed
by each chamber, 197 ·had
been signed into Jaw by Gov.
.James A. Rhodes and four
more bills had become law
without the governor's
signature.

WASHINGTON (UP!) Federal
ComThe
muniCations Commission
investigaordered an
. lion . Friday into a $6
million
rate
increase
proposed by the American
Telephone and Telegraph Co.
for certain private data
transmission lines.
The increase would result
from modifications AT&amp;T
Jl"Oposed in its rate structure
and levels for series 1000 subvoice grade private line
service.
United Press International,

Findings

• Full House Insulation e

WIDE SELECTION OF FLOOR PLANS

$

Why Poy Rent?

Swisher

In addition to ordering the
investigation, the FCC
delaYed imposition of the
revised rates one day from
March 22 to March 23.

the Associated
Press,
Commodity News Service
and other firms petitioned the
FCC to suspend and
investigate the proposed
tariff revisions.

Probe ordered

RESID
Streakless Machine Wall Washing
Upholsterv - Windows - l=toors
Complete Line of . . .
Cleaning Equipment &amp;_Supplies

1
1
1
I

ADVANCED CLEANING SERVICE

:

FOR FRIENDLY I=~EE ESTIMATES

I
I

Call 675·5572 After 4 P.M.

I

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

LARGE SELECTION
OF SIZES AND WIDTHS

IRED WING I·~($VI
Trv them on at

DAN THOMAS &amp;SON
324 Second

Ave ~

I

'
r-----------------------··········-,·-·····
·'

!
i

YOU CAN'T~
BETTER ANYWHERE

1~-· When
I
I
I

II
I
I
I
I
I
I

It Comes To··--~--·--...~-·-----..,

•SAVING WITH GROWTH
AND SECURITY

eHOME IMPROVEMENT
LOANS
•BUSINESS LOANS
•PERSONAL LOANS
eAUTO LOANS
eBANK AMERICARD

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY

eMONEY ORDERS

MARCH 21 THRU MARCI-l 27th

LUNCH TIME GOODIE. ..
TO FILM SHOW - Donald W. Manuel, Racine, author
of "Love, Hate and War, Life of an Ex-P.O .W.", will be
going to Huntington Monday to film his appearance on the
Pam Huff Show viewed each morning at 9:30 a.m. on
Channel 3. The program will be in promotion of his book
which outlines his ad.ventutes during the Korean War, hts
experiences as a prisoner of war, and his early life on his
father's farm in Ohio. Manuel, an employe of the Kaiser
Aluminum Corp., Ravenswood, W. Va. , resides in Racine
with his wife, the former Joyce' Hat!, and the'lr two
daughters, Donlta Joy, 5, and Robin Dawn, 2.1t is believed
that the ftirn on Manuel will be shown on Tuesday, March

23.

•

HUNT ARRESTED

COLUMBUS (UPI) - A 26year-old man Indicted by a
Pille County, Ky., grand jury
for flnt-degree IISSIIult was
being held at the Franklin
County jail Thursday night
awaiting extradition procee-

dings.
David L. Hunt was arrested
during the day by t~ FBI and
charged wllh wtllwful flight
to avoid prosecution.
Hunt was unarmed when
taken Into cllltody near a
Columbus shopping center,

llaid the FBI .
A federll magistrate set
bond at

•.ooo.

LABOR PROBLEM
MCARTHUR, Ohio (UP! )
- Some 275 members of
Teamsters Union Local 413
say they will not retwn to
work at the Austin Powder.
Co. until a foreman, who
allegedly struck an employe,
is fired.
.
Thursday's walkout represented an illegal work stoppage, said a company
spokesman, adding that employes must return to work
before the grievance is
settled.
About 500 persons are em·
ployed at the gunpowder
manufacturing firm .

eNO SERVICE DfARGE
CHECKING ACCOUNTS

•HOT DOG
(Regular Size)

eFRENCH FRIES
eDRINK

~
·--,-

(Small Size)
of your choice

·

TO GO OR EAT HERE

•TRAVELERS CHECKS
1

.,__ _

Than You Can At_
._

99~

3 LOCATIONS TO
SERVE YOU!

No Subt.
No Coupons - No Lim1t

I

MAIN OFFICE • SECOND AVE.
PfPIUI

AUTO BANK ·THIRD AVE.
VINTON BRANCH· VINTON

UUIY

2nd &amp;OM

•

••

:

NO LACES!

-

2 BEDROOM HOME. COMPLETELY
FURNISHED, TOTAL ELECTRIC .

recently was employed by
Ameron Corp. as the
Manager of the Automotive
Dept. at Woolco Department
Stores in Columbus.
John now resides in Mason
with his wife Metto, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. George Rush ,
Grove City, Ohio, and two
daughters Kim and Karen .
Mason Auto Mart, besides
having fine used cars, has
expanded to carry a fuil line
of automotive parts, supplies
and services to the Bend
Area.

MASON , W. Va. - John
Allon Swisher, 28, has
become manager and sales
representative of the Mason
Auto Mart, Mason, W.Va. for
Frank M. (Buddy ) Reynolds,
owner.
John was born in Galllpolis,
Ohio and is the son of All on E.
Swisher, Gallipolis, 0 .
He graduated from Kyger
Creek High School in 1966 and
attended Morehead State
University.
He moved to Columbus,
Ohio in !969 and worked for
City Loan and Savings as a
Credit Manager and most

0.

"Your Full Service People To People Bank "
tl•

Jl

~

'

�19- The Sunday Times. S.ntinel,liunday, March 21, 1976

!!!

Your Wayne National Forest
By T. Allan Woller
District Ranger
ffiONTON - The third week in
March has been designated National
Wildlife Week. Thirty-nine years
ago, then President Franklin D.
Roosevelt proclaimed the first such
Observance:
A lot of wildlife has fallen to
hunters ' guns, old age, and disease
but the roots of wildlife management
go back much farther than
Roosevelt's time. Let 's look at .
significant events in American
wildlife history.
1782 - OUR NEW republic
makes the American bald eagle our
national symbol by putting It on the
official seal. It's believed the bird
once lived in all states but Hawaii.
Now It nests in just a few.
1804
JOHN JAMES
AUDUBON, artist - writer naturalist, performs first bird·
banding experiments in North
America. Banding means putting a
small metal ring around a bird's leg
so that when the bird is recovered
you can tell where it came from and
: how long ago it was tagged. Such
.. facts help science plan for birds'
survival.
1886 - DR. WILLIAM T. Hornaday, naturalist, tours United
States to count bison, finds only 541
left of millions which once roamed
the prairie. His American Bison
Society later helps restore animal to
a safe popula lion level.
1896 - U. S. SUPREME Court
rules that the states, not private
landowners, own wildlife. The
decision gives states the right to
protect wildlife living on private or

public land.
1903
PRESIDENT
THEODORE Roosevelt establishes
the first federal wildlife refuge at
Petican Island, Florida, to shield
nesting grounds of brown pelican.
To&lt;lay there are over 375 federal
wildlife refuges covering about
32,000,000 acres and protecting
almost every kind of wildlife.
1933 - ALDO LEOPOLD
becomes America 's first professor
of game management, at University
of Wisconsin ; publishes textbook,
"Game Management." He wrote :
" ... Game is a crop, which Nature
will grow and grow abundantly,
provided only we furnish the seed
and a suitable environment."
1934 - MIGRATORY BIRD
Hunting Stamp Act (Duck Stamp
Act) requires hunters of ducks,
geese to buy fed eral license .
Revenue, earmarked to bu y
waterfowl refuges and rese~rch ,
amount.s to $163,960,000 by June 30,
1975.
1936
PRESIDENT
FRANKLIN D. Roosevelt calls for
North American Wildlife Conference
to chart action for restoring once
plentiful wildlife . The National
Wildlife Federation is formed the
same year as a direct result.
1937- PITTMAN-ROBERTSON
Act taxes sport arms and ammunition to raise money for states to
buy and develop wildlife areas. By
June 30, 1975 the states had received
$593,966,000. Dlngeli-Johnson Act in
1950 does same thing for fish
management, !.axing fishing gear
and raising $182,701,000 for the
states by June 30, 1975.

1962 - RACHEL L. CARSON,
biologist-author, publishes Silent
Spring, putting public on notice of
dangerous side effects of pesticides
on wildlife .
1966 - U. S. ADOPTS its first
legislation to help endangered
species, requiring listing of native
animals facing extinction. Later
amendment.s call for other lists:
threatened species, foreign endangered species, threatened and
endangered U. S. plants.
Where are we at today and what
· about the future of wildlife '
From my point of view there 's
goo&lt;l news and bad news. Bad news
first. We are still losing about one
million acres of wildlife habitat a
year to highways, supermarkets and
urban sprawl to name but a few.
There are 126 wildlife species on the
endangered 'list. Like the person(s)
who left a dead deer on the door step
of a Southern Hills Sportsman's
Club member's home last week with
a note roi;Iere 's something for your
vigilanlies (sic) to eat on till you
catch us" signed "United Poachers
of Southern Ohio."
The goo&lt;l news is awareness and
concern at all levels right down to
the man in the street. Every state
now has a Division of Wildlife with
trained scientists who have devoted
.their lives to the study and perpetuation of all wildlife. Recently,
the Ohio Division of Wildlife added a
non-game biologist to their sta ff.
TD&lt;lay there are more deer and
turkey than at any other time in U.
S. history . Most other game
populations are healthy. There is
cause for guarded optimism.

New wrinkles in vehicle
registration are explained
COLUMBUS - The 1!116
vehicle registration is now
underway, and the Bureau of
Motor Vehicles is. making a
special effort to familiarize
Ohio motorists with important details of this year 's
licensing program . Following
are
the
answers
to
registration procedures.
Q: Is the state issuing new
license plates this year?
A: Yes. This year, Ohio
vehicle owners will be
receiving new heavy-gauge,
!11Siproof aluminum plates
which are designed to remain
in use for at least three years.
. These undated, red-and-white
Plates will be renewed with
plastic validation stickers In
1977, 1978 and possibly
several additional years.
Q: Why the change to
multi-year plates?
A: Because multi-year
plates will save money .
Validation stickers can be
obtained for a tiny fraction of
what it costs to make new
metal tags each year. By
Issuing heavy.([uty alwninum
. plates, then renewing them
for several years with simple
plastic stickers, the state can
save millions - and keep
Ohio's yearly license fees
among the · very lowest
anywhere.
Q:
How
does
the
"staggered" licensing
s:hedule work ?
A: Passenger Cars - Ohio
passenger car owners are
divided into two distinct
registration groups according to the beginning
letter of their last names.
Those whosl!' last names
begin with A through K must
buy and attach their new
Ucerise plates between April I
and midnight, April 30. Those
In the L·Z ai{Xlabelical group
will then have fr&lt;m May I
tlrough May 31 to visit local
license agencies and complete 1976 registration.
Non-Passenger Vehicles Regardless of the owner's
Jut name, non-passenger
vehicles
(i.e.,
trucks,
trailers, house vehicles, farm
vehicles and motorcycles)
may be registered any time
be tween March I and May 31.
The month of March has been
set aside as a special
"earlyblrd" licensing period
for motorists who don't own a
passenger car and only need
plates for a truck, house
vehicle, motorcycle or oiher
non11aasenger vehicle. These
people we under no legal
obligation to buy their 1976
platea during March - but
they can avoid the possibility
of being caught In long
walling Hnes later by taking
- . of their plate purchases
befll'e the license seuon for
pauenger cars gel underway.
,
Ohioans wilo own both a
Jllllllll&amp;r c.- and a nonJIIIIIIII&amp;r vehicle can buy
..... I« both vehicles in a
.qle trip II they walt untJI ·
tbelr IIQned passenger car
month lAirD or l\fay ,

.Uc••••

depending on the owner's last
name) . This cannot be accomplished during the month
r1 March because passenger
car plates. cannot be issued
before April I.
Q: Will the April 30th
deadline for A-K passenger
car owners be sirictly enforced this year?
· A: Yes. Because last year
was the first year of
"staggered" registration,
Ohio Jaw enforcement Of·
fleers were asked to be
lenient in dealing with A-K
passenger car owners who
missed the April 30th
deadline and continued to
drive on explr.ed plates
during the month 'of May.
There will be no such "grace
period" this year . Anyone in
the A·K group who fails to
display 1976 passenger car
plates after midnight, April
lith can and w!U be ticketed
by a police officer for driving
m an expired registration.
The uswl court fine for this
rJ.fense is $25 - considerably
more than it cost.s to buy
license tags. In many
jurisdictions, an improperly
plated vehicle wlll be impounded at the owner's expense until he or she has
complied with state licensing
requirements.
Q: Can persons with L-Z
lasi names buy their
passenger car plates in
April ?
A: No. Deputy registrars
may not issue new passenger
car plates to anyone In the L·
Z alphabetical group until
May llit. This is not an arbitrary policy set by the
Bureau. of Motor Vehicles or
local deputies - it is a
specific provision of state
law.
Q: What about passenger
cars owned by business
firms?

A:
Company-owned
passenger cars should be
registered according to the A·
K-L·Z schedule - using the
corporate name which appears on the vehicle title as
the "owner's name".
Example .- Cars titled In
the name of "Consolidated
Enterprises" should .. be
registered In April. (Owner's
last name begins with letter
C) . Cars ti lied in the name of
"Smith, Murphy and Baker,
Inc." should be registered In
May . (Owner's name begins
with letter S).
Q: How much will it cost to
register a passenger car?
A: The state puSEIIger car
registration fee Is $11 .00
(eleven doiJars). This In·
eludes both the iifty-&lt;!ent
deputy registrar fee and the
flfty&lt;ent reflectorlzaUon tee
charged each time new metal
plates (rather than validation·
slickers) are Issued. An
additional $5.00 local permiiiSive tax is levied in 60 of
Ohio's 88 counties. In these
permissive tax districts, the
total cost of a set of passenger
car plates wUJ be $18.00
(sixteen ~ars) . Since each

deputy registrar is personally
liable to the state for any
"bad" checks he or she accepts, many deputies will not
accept checks in payment of
registration fees. To ~void
inconvenien~e , the Bureau
strongly suggests that vehicle
owners bring along enough
cash to cover all their fees
when they visit the local
license agency.

UTILITY RATES

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Sen.
J . Timothy McCormack, DEuclid, is upset the House
Utilities committee has
of
added
a
series
amendments to his bill ut ility
rate bill which he says
weaken it and would allow the
utility industry high profits.
Wednesday, Rep. William
E . Hinig , D-Perrysburg,
chairman of the committee,
requested McCormack , by
letter, to appear before the
committee March 23 to
"answer questions" from the
committee about the bill .
Hinig added he would like a
response to his request.

New device pins
down freebee calls

They'll American League
fight
going to Toronto
hard

NEW YORK i UP!) - The
American League baseball
owners, beating the rival
National League to the
By TIM MeG IRK
EL AAIUN, Western punch, voted Saturday to
Sahara i UP! ) - They expand toTorontofor the 1977
squatted around a coal fire . season .
"Resolved : That the
that glowed bright orange. In
American
League hereby
the coals la y a bent,
intends
to
expand
to 14 clubs
blackened tin pot used to
with
the
!4th
being
Toronto to
brew sweet mint tea .
commence
in
the
1977
These are the Saharans
seaSon,"
American
League
who remained in this
deserted capital after President Lee MacPhail read
Morocco and Mauritania took from a resolution presented
over the Western Sahara in in a joint session with the
February, as agreed with the · N.L. and Commissioner
territory 's former colonial Bowie Kuhn.
The A. L. vote to expand
ruler, Spain.
was
11-1 in favor, more than
They are here, they said, to
the
ntne·Vote majority
watch out for the families of
needed.
the men who have joined the
MacPhail Said at least two
independence - seeking
groups are bidding for the
Polisario guerrillas. Another reason th ey're A.L. franchise in Toronto.
here, they said, is to keep One of the grQups is Labatl's
watch on the Moroccan Breweries. Inc., the same
military presence and report group which attempted to
purchase, the San Francisco
Giants and move them to
Toronto .
MacPhail , h owever,
declined to identify the other
to the Polisario 's desert group.
command.
No price Was set for the
fra
nchise.
They live in the eastern
Chub Feeney, the National
sector of El Aaaiun. When
Spain agreed Nov. 14 to hand League president, responded
over th e territory' 25,000 by saying hos league also was
Saharans were estimated to consideeing expansion and
be crowded in this part of was impressed by the Labatt
town. Now, less than 4,000 group.
remain:
Feeney said the N.L. was
Trapped by endless rows of interested in Toronto as a site
white houses, the sun that for expansion, too , and was
burns down on 'this city is considering Washington , D.
blinding. Rutted dirt paths C., as w~ll . although he said
lea d to the Saharan section of there was no prospective
town. It was a sprawling b~yer there.
, ghetto when the Spaniards
"We haven 't voted to exwere here, and the Spanish pand, but we could call such a
troops assigned to patrol it meeting. on a day's notice,"
considered it hardship duty. Feeney said.
The Saharans around the
"Whoever gets control of
fir e - an old woman garbed the . lease t~ere . for th~ir
in black sat on a stoopoutside stadoum , that woll decode
· the shack as if guarding it _ , , which league woll expand to
said they 'fiercely oppose any Toronto, " MacPhail sa id .
overseer for the .territory, be
The Arnencan Leagu e
it Spain, Morocco or Algeria. previously has expanded to
"Algeria offers us weapons seatUe tor th.e 1977 season,
now and we take them "said crcahng a 13-team lea gue.
a youth with thick ~atted The seattle franchise was
black hair. "At this point pur chased for 6.3 million and
we'd take help from the devil will not share in nati onal
himself."
television revenues for the
They wore flowing blue and first thr ee Years of its
white hooded robes called existence.
djellabas and drank lots of
"A majority or the owners
sticky sweet tea. They said feel tha t !3 •s an unwor kable
they'd rather be out in the number for a league, "
desert, fighting.
Ma cPhail. " Several ci ti es
"We have. ·10,000 fighting contacted u~ . Toronto was
men and women '·' one· of ow- first chotce." ·
them said. "Thai isn't so
'' If we do decide to expand,

a visit with
the Saharans

we are interested in Toronto
and Washington, " Feeney
saod. .
Earlier Saturday, the
Major League owners met m
joint session and withdrew
the "best and final" proposal
already rejected by the
Players Association. .
"The 'best and !mal '
propos~! has bee.n with"
drawn,
MacPhaol saod .
HWe'll wait to hear their's
next."
Ed Fitzgerald, chairman of
the board of the Milwaukee
Brewers and spokesmen for
the owners' players relations
committee, said , " The
owners directed the committee to press on in an attempt to ·gain a resolution of
the problem as quickly as
possi ble and · gave a
unanimous vote of confidence
to the players relations
committee."
Despite the endorsement,
Fitzgerald added there were
owners present at the
meeting who felt the committee had gone too far on
some of the pr ovisions contained in the "best and final"
proposal.
" There was a sizeab le
group," Fitzgerald said. •·r

can 't say how many, but
there were people who fell
that way."
The proposal advanced .
Tuesday was reviewed by
Marvin Miller, executive
director of the Players
Association and his executive
board. The players agreed
with several of the provisions
and indicated willingness to
compromise on some of the
others, but refused to endorse
the whole proposal.
M~nwhile, Kuhn , seeing
what he felt was substantial
progress in the negotiations
and declaring "The fans are
the most important people
around,'' ordered. spring
training camps open Wed·
nesday night, en ding the
owners' 17-day lockout.
Kuhn's action was what
precipitated Saturday ' s
owners' meeting.
The last of · the camps
opened Saturday, with the
San Francisco Giants and
Oa kland A's starting formal
workouts . The first exhibition
games are scheduled for
Tuesday.
The playe rs relations
committee now will caucus
over the weekend to decide
the next step and is expected
to renew negotiations during
the upcoming week. But there
is no indication as to how the
players would respond. The
basic agreement between the
owners and players expired
Dec. 31, 1975.

'

POMEROY - Fifteen
school champions wiiJ
compete for honors at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at the
Salisbury Elementary School
when the annual Meigs
County Spelling Bee Is held.
Dwight Goins, speech and
music teacher at Meigs High
School, has been selected to
pronounce the words for the
15 school champions with the
three local school district
superintendents serving as
the panel of judges. They
include
John
Riebel,
Eastern; Charles Dowler ,
Meigs, and Bob Ord ,
Southern. Mrs. Greta Suttle,
county school supervisor, is
the chairperson for the annual event with the awards to
be presented by Meigs
County Supt. Robert E.
Bowen.
The first place winner in
this year's speUing contest
will win a trophy, a plaque for
the school attended and will

represent the county in the
annual state contest to be
held May 8 at Fawcett Center
in Columbus. An innovation
to the county contest this year
will be the presentation of a
trophy to the runnerup. Each
school champion will receive
a certificate of award.
In each school, an alternate
has been chosen to represent
case the
the school in
champion is unable to appear. The school champions,
listed first for each school,
and the alternate of the
respective school include:
Chester Elementary Tina Beaver, sixth grader,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Griffith, Long Bottom;
Gary Ginther, sixth grader,
son of Mr . and Mrs. John
Ginther, Long Bottom.
Eastern Junior High Teresa Spencer , eighth
grader, daughter of Mr . and
Mrs. Gilbert Spencer,
pomeroy; Jeannie Craft,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Board fails to
name super
. POINT PLEASANT _
Everyone at the Mason
County School Board meeting
Friday evening expected the
naming of the new school
,superintendent.
It was to come following a
closed door executive
session . However, as the
doors were opened and the
public was allowed in, only
two things happened: the
settingofthetimeanddateof
.the next board meeting and
adjournment of the meeting .
Two months ago when the
board began setting up
procedures to hire a new
superintendent to repla ce
Charles Withers, who is
retiring, !,he board hoped one
would be hired before , the
budget meetings.
Those meetings begin this
Wednesday and the feeling is
that a superintendent will not
be hired between now and
then.
Prior to the executive
session which started at 7:30
and lasted until 9 p.m. the
board approved motions
r ecom mended
by
Superintendent Withers:
The fund raising
activities of the Wahama
American Studies Classes:

many against
the. But
massive
BOSTON (UP! ) - Those automatic control factor ," Moroccan
invasion
this • • • • • - • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
freebee calls you've been said Miss Schein . " Most is our war, in our desert.
making on the company tele- business calls can be made
"We are desert creatures,
phone to Aunt Alice in Within five minutes."
like the camel. We can do
Chicago and Uncle Bill in
" All operations costs are ·without food or water for six
Miami could prove an rising so fa st that companies days. We know what plants
embarassment one of these must get fuJI valu e for every give food, even water. The
days.
one . of their business Saharans can hold out."
A Natjck, Mass. firm has on expenses," sai d Joel H.
The
Saharans
said
the market a system whiCh · Berman,
president
of Polisario ranks have been
gives a daily readout of who Telecomm. "Telephone use filled out with 1,000 former
made what call, when and long has beeri an almost slaves.
how much 'it cost the uncontrollable variable i~ the•
Brought here in caravans
company.
cost structure, but thi s from northwest Africa, black
The printout is available system will help bring it slaves bring up to $5,000. Both
the day after the calls are Wld.er control."
Spain and Morocco have
made, so the boss can
Th e AIOD immediate prin- outlawed the slave trade
immediately confront tout, accordin g to Miss here, but it is said to go on
employes making personal Schein, contrasts with a anyway.
1•)'\lj··
•
calls on company phones.
month or more required by
The Saharans said many of
That's not its only use, other systems now used on a the slaves with the Polisario
however. Connie Schein, limited basis in Europe and are runaways. Others, they
spokeswoman for L. M. Eric- on the West Coast. Cost is . said, were sent by owners
sson Telecomm, Inc., said the about one-third - a starting who live among the the
real savings are realized price of $30,000 for AIOD, Morocca ns but want to be on
after the system has been in contrasted with a $100,000 the Polisario's good side if, in.
use for several months since range for the others, she said. the end, it wins.
Telecomm can analyze the
The savings are attributed
A young man with hawkphOne calls made by a to the fact AIOD's computer like lea tures and dusky skin
company and recommend can be directly attached . to pored wide arcs of tea into
less expensive ways to handle any printing device, reducjng small glasses arranged
them.
the amount of software neatly on a tray .
Called Automatic between the computer and
"We wlU get Morocco out of
Identification of Outward the printout.
our land if we have to pull her
Dialing, the system can cut
"The equipment will assist out by the tail," another said.
costs 15 to 30 per cent for the client user in .more "We'll keep fighting for in·
firms with $5,000 a month or effective ways to use wats dependence uniil the last
more in toll calls, according lines and foreign exchange Saharan is wiped off the
to Telecomm.
trunks, " said Ernest Lander, desert."
Developed , by Bilek Telecomm marketing
International Corp. of Long director and communications
Beach, Calif., the system Is consultant. It will enable a
being offered for the first user to determine during
time on the East Coasi which days and hours of the
through Telecomtn, a wholly- day it is best to make
·continued from page 17
6" IN THE CEILING
owned subsidiary of L.M. expensive telephone ca lls . "There has been a policy In
· Ericsson, the Swedish based "This is caJied a proper th e defense of this case,
international communica- network design, " Lander insofar as possible, to see that
tions system, and New En- said.
people . didn't
become
gland's I a r g e s t private
He said the system would corrupted ,by the smeU of
telephone company.
· be · valuable also
to black ink and gouge the
AIOD can be adapted easily businesses, such as Jaw, Hearsts for all theY. could get.
to any present phone system, accounting and engineering
"Experts were told that
according to Telecomm.
firms, which charge their their fees could be no greater
Each tbne an extension is clients for telephone calls. than in any other case. But to
picked up and "a call placed, Posting exact charges say that it was not · an
an in-house minicomputer weekly, rather than having to expensive case would be
automatically registers wait several montha, Lander . foolish . I'm sure it's several
which phone Is making the said, would imlJrove cash hundred thousand dollars. "
call, the day, date, flow·. .
Asked whether ·he would
destination and time the caJI
represent Miss Hearst in Los
began, lime the caJI ended
UNDERWOO,D NAMED
Angeles, where she stlJI faces
and the cost. At midnight, a
COLUMBUS ( UP!)
state charges of kidnaping,
Jl"lntout of aU the Information Wade
Underwood,
40, robbery and assault, Bailey
Is obtained from the president of the Ohio · said:
computer.
Education Association, was
"My contract with her was
Although It doesn 't monitor named Satwday executive for all charges which were
the content of the ·calls, secretary of the OEA to pending when I took the case,
"People wilo know It's there succeed Stayner F. Brighton and It does include Los
won't talk as malch. It's an who will retire &amp;!pt. 1·.
Angeles .•

Swisher now managing

Fifteen c}:tampions to meet
Wednesday in spelldown

- A proposed education
tour to historical spots in
· Virginia and Washington, D.
C. by the Point Pleasant
Junior High Student.s ;
The tran~portation
request of the Wahama
American Studies classes to
the Huntington Galleries ;
- Transportation request
of Mason Elementarv to
Charleston;
The transportation
request of Wahama band to
Hunting ton;
- Accepted the resignation
of Mrs. Sue Thacker ;
- Employed Willie Lane as
a custodian at. New Haven
Elementary;
- Rescinded the board 's
action in approving the New
York City trip planned by
.Point Pleasant High School
senior class and to approve a
trip to King's Island ;
- Set the next board
meeting for March 24 .
P r e s en t
we r e
Superintendent Charles
Wi the r s , As s i s t a n t
Superintendent Charles
Chambers, Board President
Harry
Siders,
Board
members Bill Brady, Paul
Watkins, Robert Adkins and
Ray Fields .

BAYVIEW

Robert Craft, Reedsville.
Riverview Elementary
Kila Young, sixth grader,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Young, .Long Bottom; Scotty
Dillon , sixth grader, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Dillon,
Long Bottom.
TUPPERS PLAINS Helen Myers, sixth grader,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Alvin Myers, Jr., Reedsville;
Sarah Jane Goebel, sixth
grader , daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Frederick Goebel,
Reedsv.iJJe.
Bradbury - Steve Hood,
sixth grader, son of Mr. and
Mrs . Arthur Hood, Middleport; Eddie Daniels, sixth
grader , son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Daniels, Middleport.
Harrisonville - Mark
Oine, sixth grader, son of Mr.
an d Mrs . Jerry Clin e,
Pomeroy; Bradford Largent,
fifth grader, son of Mr. and
Mrs. John Scragg, Rutland .
Meigs Junior High - Jayne
Lee Hoeflich , seventh
grader, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Hoeflich, Pomeroy;
Beth Perrin, seventh grader,
daughter of Rev. and Mrs . W.
H. Perrin , Pomeroy.
Pomeroy Elementary Gregory Th omas, sixth
grader , son of Mr. and Mrs .
Don Thomas, Pomeroy;
Tracy Harding , fifth grader ,
daughter of Mrs. Bonnie
Harding, Pomeroy.
Rutland -' Becky Tillis,
sixth grader, daughter of Mr .
and Mrs . Amos Tillis,
Rutland; Ronda Mitchell ,
fifth grader, daughter of Mr .
and Mrs . Clair Mitchell ,
Rutland .
Salem Center - Timothy
Jarrell, sixth grader , son of
Mrs. Sar;Uo Jarrell, Langsville ; Denise Turner, sixth
grader, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Turner, Langsville .
Salisbury - John Smith,
fifth grader, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Oscar Smith, Pomeroy,
and alternate , a sister of ,
John's, Laura Smith, sixth
grader, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Oscar Smith .
Letart - Randall Tucker ,
sixth grader, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Glen Tucker, Racine;
Jenny Manuel, sixth grader ,
Mr. and Mrs . Charles
Manuel, Racine.
Portland - Sherry Beegle,
sixth grader, daughter of Mr .
and Mrs. Roger Beegle,
Racine ; Kelley Pickens, sixth
grader, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. John Pickens, Portland.
Southern Junior High Peggy Bush, seventh grader, ·
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Bush , Racine; Susie
Sellers, seve nth grader,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Rowe, Racine.
SyracuSe Elementary Ann Williams, sixth grader,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs,
Freeman Williams, Minersville ; Teresa Grueser, sixth
grader, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Grueser, Minersville.
The county event is open to
the public.

12x60 MOBILE HOME

Mason Auto Mart fir1n

into rate move

VERNON DEWEESE, retiring advertising manager
of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, was presented a golf
putter and full set of irons by fellow employes at a
surprise retirement party Friday evening .

Surprise party given
Deweese upon retiring
POINT PLEASANT - W.
Vernon Deweese was honored
with a surprise retiremeni
party at the Moose Hall here
Friday evening hosted by
more than 40 employes of The
Ohio Valley . Publishing Co.
Deweese,' retirin g as
advertising manager of the
Gallipolis Daily . Tribune
jo~ed the Tribune staff Jan:
8, 1949.
TEACHER RATIOS
. CO LUMBUS !UPI )
Among th e bills on the Ohio
senate's calendar :Jbursday
is a measure to limit pupilteacher ratios in the grades
one, two and three in Ohio
public schools to no more
than 27 to I, with a five-pupil
deviation allowed.
Current Ohio law limits
pupil-teacher ratios to about
28 to I. That was changed to
25 to I in a bill passed by the
legislature, but later vetoed
by th e governor. The veto is
being challenged before the
Ohio Supreme Court.
Th e Legislative Service
Commission
says
implementation of the bill
before the senate would cost
Ohio between $5.2 million and
$8.2million a year to hire new
teachers, mostly in northeast
Ohio.

Following dinner, Deweese
was presented a golf, putter
and a full set of irons, a
trophy and a memory book
Which was read to the group
by his wife, Ellen. Making the
presen tations were Mrs.
Philip Foster and Larry
Boyer.
Dancing to music from the
1930s to 70s was enjoyed by
the group during the evening.
Decorations along the wall
remininsced his 27 year
with
the
assoc iation
newwaper.
Attending were : Mr. and
Mrs. Hobart Wilson, Jr., Mr.
and Mrs. Gayland Bush, Mr.
and Mrs. Otho Mattox , Don
Coleman, Mr. · and Mrs .
Charles Snodgrass, Jim
Crump, Mr .. and Mrs. Dick
Owen, Tom Skinner, Mr. and
Mrs. L&lt;irry Boyer, Mr. and
Mrs. James E. Danner; Mr.
and · Mrs. Philip Foster,
Emma Lou Davis, Helen
Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Cbet
Tannehill, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Lisle, Sharon Wilson,
Mr. and Mrs . Dave Buskirk,
]Wb Wingett, Mr. and Mrs.
William R. Thompson, Milidy
Raynes, Sharon Beaver,
Thomas Roach, Phyllis
Roach, Dale Rothgeb, Jr.,
Debbie Bennett, Billy Sue
Dailey, Sarah Carsey, Mr.
· and Mrs. Steve Halstead. ·

~2

BIUS
COLUMBUS (UP!)- As of
the end of the week, 523 bills
had· been introduced in the
Ohio Senate, of which 164, or
slightly over 30 per cent, had
been passed.
In
the
Hou'se ,
representatives had
introduced 1,411 separate

bills and had passed 311 , or 22
per cent.
Of the total number passed
by each chamber, 197 ·had
been signed into Jaw by Gov.
.James A. Rhodes and four
more bills had become law
without the governor's
signature.

WASHINGTON (UP!) Federal
ComThe
muniCations Commission
investigaordered an
. lion . Friday into a $6
million
rate
increase
proposed by the American
Telephone and Telegraph Co.
for certain private data
transmission lines.
The increase would result
from modifications AT&amp;T
Jl"Oposed in its rate structure
and levels for series 1000 subvoice grade private line
service.
United Press International,

Findings

• Full House Insulation e

WIDE SELECTION OF FLOOR PLANS

$

Why Poy Rent?

Swisher

In addition to ordering the
investigation, the FCC
delaYed imposition of the
revised rates one day from
March 22 to March 23.

the Associated
Press,
Commodity News Service
and other firms petitioned the
FCC to suspend and
investigate the proposed
tariff revisions.

Probe ordered

RESID
Streakless Machine Wall Washing
Upholsterv - Windows - l=toors
Complete Line of . . .
Cleaning Equipment &amp;_Supplies

1
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ADVANCED CLEANING SERVICE

:

FOR FRIENDLY I=~EE ESTIMATES

I
I

Call 675·5572 After 4 P.M.

I

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

LARGE SELECTION
OF SIZES AND WIDTHS

IRED WING I·~($VI
Trv them on at

DAN THOMAS &amp;SON
324 Second

Ave ~

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·'

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YOU CAN'T~
BETTER ANYWHERE

1~-· When
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It Comes To··--~--·--...~-·-----..,

•SAVING WITH GROWTH
AND SECURITY

eHOME IMPROVEMENT
LOANS
•BUSINESS LOANS
•PERSONAL LOANS
eAUTO LOANS
eBANK AMERICARD

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY

eMONEY ORDERS

MARCH 21 THRU MARCI-l 27th

LUNCH TIME GOODIE. ..
TO FILM SHOW - Donald W. Manuel, Racine, author
of "Love, Hate and War, Life of an Ex-P.O .W.", will be
going to Huntington Monday to film his appearance on the
Pam Huff Show viewed each morning at 9:30 a.m. on
Channel 3. The program will be in promotion of his book
which outlines his ad.ventutes during the Korean War, hts
experiences as a prisoner of war, and his early life on his
father's farm in Ohio. Manuel, an employe of the Kaiser
Aluminum Corp., Ravenswood, W. Va. , resides in Racine
with his wife, the former Joyce' Hat!, and the'lr two
daughters, Donlta Joy, 5, and Robin Dawn, 2.1t is believed
that the ftirn on Manuel will be shown on Tuesday, March

23.

•

HUNT ARRESTED

COLUMBUS (UPI) - A 26year-old man Indicted by a
Pille County, Ky., grand jury
for flnt-degree IISSIIult was
being held at the Franklin
County jail Thursday night
awaiting extradition procee-

dings.
David L. Hunt was arrested
during the day by t~ FBI and
charged wllh wtllwful flight
to avoid prosecution.
Hunt was unarmed when
taken Into cllltody near a
Columbus shopping center,

llaid the FBI .
A federll magistrate set
bond at

•.ooo.

LABOR PROBLEM
MCARTHUR, Ohio (UP! )
- Some 275 members of
Teamsters Union Local 413
say they will not retwn to
work at the Austin Powder.
Co. until a foreman, who
allegedly struck an employe,
is fired.
.
Thursday's walkout represented an illegal work stoppage, said a company
spokesman, adding that employes must return to work
before the grievance is
settled.
About 500 persons are em·
ployed at the gunpowder
manufacturing firm .

eNO SERVICE DfARGE
CHECKING ACCOUNTS

•HOT DOG
(Regular Size)

eFRENCH FRIES
eDRINK

~
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(Small Size)
of your choice

·

TO GO OR EAT HERE

•TRAVELERS CHECKS
1

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Than You Can At_
._

99~

3 LOCATIONS TO
SERVE YOU!

No Subt.
No Coupons - No Lim1t

I

MAIN OFFICE • SECOND AVE.
PfPIUI

AUTO BANK ·THIRD AVE.
VINTON BRANCH· VINTON

UUIY

2nd &amp;OM

•

••

:

NO LACES!

-

2 BEDROOM HOME. COMPLETELY
FURNISHED, TOTAL ELECTRIC .

recently was employed by
Ameron Corp. as the
Manager of the Automotive
Dept. at Woolco Department
Stores in Columbus.
John now resides in Mason
with his wife Metto, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. George Rush ,
Grove City, Ohio, and two
daughters Kim and Karen .
Mason Auto Mart, besides
having fine used cars, has
expanded to carry a fuil line
of automotive parts, supplies
and services to the Bend
Area.

MASON , W. Va. - John
Allon Swisher, 28, has
become manager and sales
representative of the Mason
Auto Mart, Mason, W.Va. for
Frank M. (Buddy ) Reynolds,
owner.
John was born in Galllpolis,
Ohio and is the son of All on E.
Swisher, Gallipolis, 0 .
He graduated from Kyger
Creek High School in 1966 and
attended Morehead State
University.
He moved to Columbus,
Ohio in !969 and worked for
City Loan and Savings as a
Credit Manager and most

0.

"Your Full Service People To People Bank "
tl•

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�20- The Sundav Times- Sentinel, Sunday, March 21. 1976
21 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, March 21, 1976

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SENIOR basketball girls and special awards are: Coach Susie Thompson, Denise Dean,
Jan Wilson, Sherry Epple, Janet Ambrose, Teresa Edwards and Vicki Epple,

;;
.J

Eastern athletes honored
BY GREG BAU..EV
successful." He closed his
TUPPERS PLAINS - Ohio address by commenting that
. State University basketball "the only thing between you
star Craig Taylor visited the and the top of Ute ladder, is
Eastern gym Friday night to the ladder."
deliver the address at the
After Taylor's address,
annual
winter
sports Coach
Duane
Wolfe
banquet. The 6'11" center, for presented the seventh and
this
year's
Buckeyes eighl21 grade awards,
averaged IS points per outing followed by the presentation
and nine rebounds, despite of the freshmen awards by
numerous injuries. He had Coach Joe Mitchum. The
the honor of being captain or Eagles' Freshmen Team won
his team this year and was the SVAC title this year.
voted the Most Valuable
Larry Heines, reserve
Player on the team. He has coach, recognized his team
had nwnerous professional and presented them with
offers, but said nothing is yet awards before Head Coach
definite.
Wolle introduced his Varsity
In his senior year at Team and Manager Nick
Springfield North High Leonard. Wolfe recognized
Don
School, he was selected by the three seniors
AP as the AAA High School Eichinger, Brian Conde, and
Player of the Year.
Steve Nelson· - who aU
In his short address to the lettered for the first time in
young men and women their basketball careers.
athlete~ of Eastern, he After introducing the rest of
compared the Eagles' season the Varsity squad, he
to that of this year's presented the annual special
Buckeyes', by saying that awards.
success comes in many
Best Foul Shooting award
for!Tl'l. Both clubs had losing went
to
senior Don
records, but both were Eichinger; Best Rebounder
successful in lots of Award was given to junior
important ways.
Bruce Riffle; The "100"
"Success," says Taylor, award
(s ignifying
"comes from having pride in consistency, effort, and team
your school and yourself." He contribution) went to senior
!Qld the athletes Utat success Brian Conde; Best Defensive
is an "all-t.he·time" thing.
Player Award went to
"Anyone who is truly sophomore Joe Kuhn; and
successful never gives less The Most Improved · Player
than his best, and that's what was sophol!lore Gary Nelson.
made Ohio State's and . All.SVAC Awards went to
E.astern's
seasons

Lola
Walker.
Caplaln ,
Conde, who was voted the Putman , Kennv Chapman,
Katrina
Batey ,
first
R ic hard van Meter, Gene
Third Team,and Bruce Riffle Cole , Bob Barr inger , Ken semester , Diana 8enedum ,
Avis Bls5ell, D i ana Jones,
was recogni2ed for receiving Larkins . Tony Kennedy , Joe
Peggy
Trussell. sec;ond
.
Hooorable Mention in the Bowers
semester , Jan Wilson .
Girl5 Ba5ketblll JCIIn
Fres"mtn
Brenda
League voting.
Wilson,
Sherry
Epple ,
Frec;ker,
Captain,
Val
Fitch ,
Julie
Girls' basketball Coach Tammv
LaBonte, Karen Probert ,
Whitehead, Teresa Buc kley ,
Sue Thompson introduced her Kim Batey , Lori Matthews , Betsv Riffle, Berti Headlty,
girls who went 9-4 on the Denise Dean, Teresa Ed . alternate.
Resuve - Peggy Trussell,
J anet
Ambrose ,
year. Special plaques went to wards.
captain , tlrst semester;
Jewell Blilke, VIcky Epple ,
Sonia 8eavtr, Cln~y 0111,
Teresa Edwards for Best Terr i Ste vei'\S .
Diana
Epple, Cindy Rltchlt.
Cheerleiiders - VirsityRebounder, Janet Ambrose
Junior High - sonJa Carr ,
for Most Improved Player
ca pta in, laura Eichinger ,
Jean M cClure, Traci savre.
and Vicki Epple for Best Foul
Mos t
Outstanding
NBA
Standings
Shooter.
Cheerleader - Cindy Dill.
By United Press International
Statisticians
197S· 19U
Junior
Cheerleading
Eastern Conference
Butcetbilll VanJty
and
Aflintlc Division
awards and pins were
Reserve Nesel Duvall ,
W.. L. . Pet. gb Pam Kautz, Deanna Baker ,
awarded by Mrs. Long to Boston
44 12 .661
Debbie Windon .
Sonia Carr, Laura Eichinger, Philadelphia 40 30 .571 6
Fresttmen Robin R if ·
1
Buttalo
38 31 .551 7 17 chie
Jeanne McClure, and Traci New
, Vida Weber , Dawn
York
33 37 .471 13
Sorden , Diana Evans. Arlene
Sayre. Varsity, Reserve, and
Centr•l Division
Connolly .
W
.
.
L
..
Pet.
gb
Freshmen cheering awards
Junior High Robin
Weshingto11
0 26 .623
Elkins , Robin Ritchie, VIda
were presented by Miss King, Cleveland
40 '28 .588 2lf2 Weber, Pam Spurlock .
36 35 .507 a
and a special award for the Houston
Girls Athletic AnoclatlonNew Orleans 33 38 ,465 11
KathV Fotlrod, Nola Young ,
Most Outstanding Atlanta
28 41 .406 15
Jayne Smi th , suzy Goebel,
Cheerleader went to Cindy
Western Conference
Rachel Hunter .
Midwest Division
Dill.
w.. L. . Pet . gb
All the coaches and Milwaukee
30 38 .4.41
cheerleader advisors were Kansas City 27 43 .386 41
26 .43 .3 77
4 /'
presented gilts by the players Oetroit
Chicago ·
22 47 · 319 gv.,
ABA Stanctln"s
and cheerleaders, and it was
PiiCiflc Division
•
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__.
w
..
L
·
Pet.
GB
By
United
Press tnterni!tional
announced that there will be Golden State 50 20 .714
W.. L. . Pel. gb
a Girls' Track Team this Los Angeles 36 35 .507 14'12 Denver
53 20 .726
35 35 .500 15
New York
47 27 .635 61!:1
year. Master of Ceremonies seattle
Ph~nhc
33 36 .478 161,12 S,e~n Antonio
42 31 .575 11
lor the event was Principal POrtland
31 40 .437 19'12 Kentucky
41 33 .SS-4 121;?
Friday's Results
. Indiana
36 39 .480 18
Chester Gooding, and the
108 Atlanta 101
St. LOUIS
3.. 41 .453 20
Reverend John Coffman gave Chicago
New Orleans 103 Cleve l.!l nd 81
Virginia
12 61 . 164 41
the
invocation
and Boston 120 Kan Citv IH , ot
Friday'a Results
Portland 111 Houston lOS
Kentucky 104 New York 97
benediction: The · Los
Angeles 122 Detroit 107
Denver 113·VIrg lnla 108
smorgasbord meal was
Sunday 's Games
at NorfOlk
$t . louis 125 San Antonio 100
prepared by the parents and Philadelph ia at Boston
at Cleveland
at Salt Lake ~ity
Boosters,
while
the Washingtcm
Buffalo at Detroit
Sunday's Ga-;;;;;'
cheerleaders worked with Chicago at Kansas ~ity
Virginia at Kentucky
Mitwauke~ at Los Angeles
St. Louis at Derwer
decorations and favors :
Houston at Seattle
Indiana at san Antonio
Individuals honored were:
BASKETBALL
Varsity Team -

Pettisville in A finals
AMONG those honored at Eastern Friday night were the following senior cheerleaders
- Carol King, advisor; Lola Walker, Peggy Truasell, Jan Wilson and Avis Bissell.

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BOYS SPECIAL AWARDS - Eastern cagers receiving special awards Friday are
pictured with Coach Wolfe. They are: Don Eichinger, Brian Conde, Gary Nelson, Bruce
Riffle and Joe Kuhn.

BOWIJNG GREEN, Ohio
fUPI) - Substitute Dean
Genter came off the bench to
score 19 poiilts to lead oncebeaten Pettisville to a
relatively easly 65-49 victory
over Fort Jennings in the
Class
A
regional
championship here.
GentP.r, a 6-foot senior, Was
pressed into service at center
for the Blackbirds when
Marv Meek got into foul
trouble and fouled out with
4:23 left and Pettisville
holding a 48-45 lead.
However, the Blackbirds
were awesome down the
stretch as they outscored

Fort Jennings 17-4 in the last
four rhinutes.
Following Genter in the
scoring column were Meek
with 14, Kim Selgo with 13
and Phil NoWger with 12.
Mike lnkrott, 6-10 center
for Fort Jennings who had
scored 34 points in the
Muskies' semifinal win over
Ada, finished with 16 points in
the game. Steve Saum was
the only other Muskie in
double figures with 10.
Fort Jennings called it
quits at 16-IOwhile Pettisville
will make its first trip to the
state tournament with a 24-1
record.

Drake loses top

Weaver accepts

ground gainer

new position

DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI)
- Jim Herndon, Drake 's
leading ground gainer last
fall, has been dropped from
the football team, Coach Jack
Wallace announced Friday.
Walla ce refused to disclose
the reason for the action .
"This is strictly a matter
between Jim Herndon and
myself," Wallace said. "Jim
· is an outstanding ball carrier
and we do not like the idea of
lo sing him for the 1976
season. He and I have met
and discussed the situation
·and what was said is a matter
between the two of us."

Don

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8 A.M. Wednesdav. ......•.•. and
8 A.M. Thursday.•...........•. and ·

I

'

Game cancelled,
umps fail to show

'

LOS ANGELES (UP!) Cal State Dominguez's
baseball team is beginning to
wonder.
For the third time this
season, the Toros had a game
postponed Friday because
the umpires didn't show up.
Dominguez has an 8-17
record.
"Maybe they're trying to
tell us something," a Toros'
piayer said.
·

CRAIG Taylor, Ohio
Slate basketball player,
was guest speaker at
Eutem's athletic banquet
Friday night.

{

~·

MOST outs.tandlng
cheerleader Cindy Dill
poses lor Times-Sentinel
picture during Eastern
banquet Friday night.

"

8 A.M. Frldav....•.•..... ~ •...... and

~

SPECIAL AWARD
HOLLYWOOD ( UPI )
Mary Pickford, "America's
swee !heart" of the silent
screen, may break ten yelli's
of seclusion to attend the
Academy awards.
The
Motion
Picture
Academy voted the 81-yearold actress a special award
this year In "recognition of
ber unique contributions to
development of film as an
artistic medium ."

(

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I 8100 A.M.-1100 P.M...................... Thunclay
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I 8100 A.M. -3100 P.M ..................... Saturday

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Memtllr : FDIC

J

,

The Warriors, however,
back again and
reduced the deficit to three
points, 55-52, before May
connected on a bucket to give
Indiana" a more comfortable
cushion and set up a final
series of free throws that
extended the Hoosiers'
winning margin.
Marquette was pampered
all day by Indiana's tight
defense, which reduced the
Warriors' attack to a series of
long jump shots. And the
Warriors we.re also troubled
by two technical fouls called
against Coach AI McGuire,
the last one coming in the
final minute of play and
removing aU doubt as to the
outcome.
Indiana will take a 31Hl
record Into Saturday 's NCAA

GREENSBORO, N. C..
(UP!) - Rutgers coach Tom
Young Immediately turned
his attention to next week's
NCAA National Semifinals in
Philadelphia after the undefeated Scarlet Knights
made VMI their 31st victim of
the season to win the Eastern
Regional Championship.
"My team is playing as
well now as it has all year,"
Young said after the Scarlet
Knights' 91-75 victory over
VML "I think we are in good
shape
going
into
Philadelphia.
Rut~ers
will
meet

but the Keydets rallied and
managed to take a 27-26 lead
with 4:45 left. But Rutgers
outscored VMI, 22-7, in the
closing minutes, with Jordan
scoring eight poin Is. He got
one basket on a steal, one on a
jumper and four on free
throws during that stretch.
The Knights had 48-34
advantsge at halftime.
Rutgers increased its
margin to 62-41 early in the
second half. Then Bynum led
VMI's desperate rally . The 66 junior from Swnter, S. C.,
popped in jump shots from all
over the floor and VMI cut the
margin to, 68-58, . midway
Utrough the half.
Dabney wrapped up the
game for the Scarlet Knights,
scoring 10 of Rutgers' final 23
points. Three of his baskets
Greenwood chipped in with came when he outraced the
VMI de fenders for easy
10.
Herman Harris led the · layups.
In addition to his 23 points,
Western Athletic Conference
titilsts with 18 points whil.e AI Jordan had·six steals and five
Fleming and Phil Tay1or assists. Phil Sellers scored 16
points and gra~bed 12
each had 14.
rebounds for Knights.

Michigan Saturday in the the team on offense as each
National Semifinals.
scored 23 points.
Rutgers' pressure defense
Third-ranked Rutgers built
and fast-break offense caused a 2l-point lead in the second
VMI's Ron Carter and Will half and the closest the
Bynwn to get into early foul Keydets were able to get
trouble. Bynum scored 34 after that was 10 points.
points, but played '!!most the
Rutgers
goes
to
entire second half wiUt four Philadelphia next week for
fouls.
the
NCAA
National
"Rutgers has blown many Semifinals and will play
people out, but didn't blow us Michigan.
out," VMI coach Bill Blair
VMI was led by Will
sa id alter the game. "II we Bymun, who scored 34 points,
hadn't · gotten into foul 20 of them in the second half
trouble who knows?"
desP.ite playing most of that
For 'the second straight - session with four fouls.
.
game, Rutgers guards Ed
Rutgers jumped off to a 19Jtn'dan and Mike Dabney led , II lead early in the f1rst half,

BELPRE - Coach Bob
Glllespie;s Gallipolis entry in
the annual Belpre Basketball
Tournament for II and 12
year..,lds captured its second
straight victory Saturday iii
the double-elimination event .
Gallipolis downed the
Marietta Cadets 55-22 to
move up In the winners
bracket. In their opening
game last Saturday, the
Gallians downed Athens'
·
Bobcats, 48-22.
Today, Gallipolis will take
on
powerful
Athens
Landmark in a 4 p.m. contest
at BeljX'e South Elementary
gym. Athens beat defending
champion Belpre North in a
Saturday · morning contest.
In Gallla's win over
Marietta, the French City
entry led Ill-$, 18-15 and 26-17,
at
the
quartermarks.
Galllpolls outacored Marietta
23-5 in the final period to win
going away.
Box score :

Thursday night, went six
minutes without scori ng
before Elliot hit a basket with
·2:20 to go.
The Paclfic-8 powerhouse,
winners of 10 NCAA championships in a dozen years
under John Wooden, got
double figures from four of Amherst eager
their starters . Raymond
Townsend scored IG points, ·player-of-year
mostly on jumpers from the
CENTERVILLE, Mass.
outside, Marques Jo~nson (UP() - Amherst junior Jim
muscled his way in for 14 and Rehnquist, son of a Supreme
&amp;.10 freshman center David Court justice, Friday was
named basketball Player of
. .. over 12,500 penons •very
the Year iii Division IU of the
year and maims or Injures ·
Seeks new image Eastern College Athletic Con1,800,000 more .
ference .
NEW YORJ((UPI) - Chris
The 6-3 forward from
learn how you can protect
Evert, who at Ute age of 20 McLean, Va., averaged 27.3
your Children ~rom the ravage•
of fire ,
has learned that winning points a game. Hamilton
doesn't breed popularity, is freshman Cedric Oliver, who
seeking a new image for averaged.l8.8 points and 13.1 ·
herself on the tennis courts. rebounds per game, was a
''I'm becoming more unanimous selection as
'aggressive," Evert said Rookie of the Year.
Friday before collecting a
'10,000 check as the first
Dodgers to
winner of the Haig and Ha ig
Woman Athlete of the World
play Expos
award. "I'm gambling more
on my shots and trying to be
VERO BEACH, Fla. (UPI)
crea live on court. I'm tired of
The Los Angeles Dodgets
fOr ·a
copy of the
getting uptight before each
announced
Fr'iday they'll
Homo Fire SaNty Hondbook
match. I want to be loose
open their Grapefruit League
and a no obligation Rre
when I play."
·
season
next
Wednesday
at
JQfety survey; ~nract:
Evert . was .a resounding
Daywna
Beach,
Fla.,
against
SECURITY
&amp; SAFETY
choice for Ute award alter
the
Montreal
Expos.
earning a record ~2,227 in
Dodger Vice Pre!Jident AI
SERVICES
prize money in 1975, a year Campanis
said he was
1614) 446-9881-24 Hrs.
that silw her win, among
ROSS E. HAMRICk
O~NER
other championships, the informed by Mike MarShall's
iltwrney,
Tom
Downs,
that
2SS
Third Ave.
U.S., Italian and French
Marshall will report to :Vero
Ga 11
championships.
Beach, Fla., next Thursday . . .....iiiiiiiiliiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiii--

Williams 2; Carloon 3; Eddy

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Marlette
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GALLIPOLIS
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Masun 0; Wilson 0.
MARIETTA
(221

_._~~

.

•

Bruins in Hoosier rematch

Gllleafle,

I
I
I

semifinals as the Hoosiers a delay game to force the
seek their third national title. Warriors out of their zone
and
altho~gh
Marquette, which ran defense
behind Indiana all year in the Indiana grew cold from the
national ran kings, finished its field, Marquette could only
season with a 27-2 record.
. score live points during the
The Hoosiers jumped to a six-minute stretch in which
30-19 lead early on the Indiana went scoreless.
shooting of the &amp;-11 Benson,
May scored 15 for the
who hit 12 points in tlie first Hoosiers, followed by Tom
balf and finished with 18.
Abernethy with 12 and Quinn
Marquette came back to Buckner with nine.
score 10 straight points and
Marquette's Earl Tatum
reduce the deficit to 36-35 at led all scorers with 22.
half.
Bo Ellis backed up Tatum
May had been out of the with nine points and Butch
game for more than 13 Lee scored eight.
minutes of the first half with
Marquette led only once
Utree personal fouls, but his duriilg the contest, holding a
presence
was
felt oneiloint advantage early in
inunediately at the start of the second half . alter a
the secood half as Indiana jumper by Lee.
raced to a 51-41 lead.
But May Immediately hit
The Hoosiers then went in to two straight buckets to give
Indiana the lead for good.

sto~med

Rutgers humbles VMI

Gallipolis
advances
•
ln tourney

8 A.M. Tuesdav•.•.•..•••.......and

ic

BATON ROUGE, La .
(UP!) - All - Americans
Kent Benson and Scott May
took turns firing up the topranked Indiana Saturday as
they stopped
No.
2
Marquette, 65-56, in the
Mideast Regional Final and
escorted the Hoosiers in!Q the
NCAA National Semifiilals at
Philadelphia next Thursday .
The undefeated Hoosiers
owned a \().point lead with 10
minutes remaining iii the
showdown between the
nation 's top two collegiate
teams, but Indiana went
almost six minutes without
scoring to allow Marquette to
dose to within five points at ·
51-46. .
But Benson hit four straight
points to give Ute Big Ten
chwnpion Hoosiers a ninepoint advantage.

LOS ANGELES ( UPI)
Defending NCAA .champion
UCLA, getting a 22-point
performance from All- .
America
Richard
Washington, broke open a
close game in the final eight
minutes Saturday to beat the
Arizona Wildcats, 82-$, in the
West Regional Championship
and set up a rematch with
top-ranked Indiana in Ute
national semifinals.
The filth-ranked Bruins
were blown out by 20 points
against the Hoosiers in the
season opener in St. Louis
Nov. 29. They needed a
devastating finish against
Arizona, however , to ga in the
NCAA's final round of four.
The score was tied 58-511
alter Bob Elliott, the Wildca ts' 6-10 center , scored on a
five-footer over 7·2 Ralph
Drollinger with 8:21 left.
But the Bruins then poured
in 12 straight points to tske a
commanding 70-58 lead with
21', minutes left .
Arizona, which got I no the
regional finale by upending
No. 4 Nevada-Las Vegas

Gary

ATLANTA
(UPI)
Douglas W. Weaver, athletic
director at Southern Illinois,
has been named· to head the
Athletics , Department of
Georgia Tech.
Weaver, 45, a close friend
of Tech football Coach
.Pepper Rodgers, succeeds
the retiring Bobby Dodd, who
ends a 4:&gt;-year career at
Georgia Tech July 1.
Weaver, who played
football at Michigan State,
said he is "elated" at his new
position and currently
contemplates no changes in
the coaching stall.

PiCTURED WITH TAYLOR - Senior Eastern cagers are pictured here with guest
speaker O'aig Taylor.lbey are Don Eichinger, Brian Conde, Taylor, and Steve Nelson.

Hoosiers topple
Warriors, 65-56

More Than Just A Lumber Yard
Lots More
RT. 2 BY PASS POINT PLEASANT

�20- The Sundav Times- Sentinel, Sunday, March 21. 1976
21 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, March 21, 1976

\

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I

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SENIOR basketball girls and special awards are: Coach Susie Thompson, Denise Dean,
Jan Wilson, Sherry Epple, Janet Ambrose, Teresa Edwards and Vicki Epple,

;;
.J

Eastern athletes honored
BY GREG BAU..EV
successful." He closed his
TUPPERS PLAINS - Ohio address by commenting that
. State University basketball "the only thing between you
star Craig Taylor visited the and the top of Ute ladder, is
Eastern gym Friday night to the ladder."
deliver the address at the
After Taylor's address,
annual
winter
sports Coach
Duane
Wolfe
banquet. The 6'11" center, for presented the seventh and
this
year's
Buckeyes eighl21 grade awards,
averaged IS points per outing followed by the presentation
and nine rebounds, despite of the freshmen awards by
numerous injuries. He had Coach Joe Mitchum. The
the honor of being captain or Eagles' Freshmen Team won
his team this year and was the SVAC title this year.
voted the Most Valuable
Larry Heines, reserve
Player on the team. He has coach, recognized his team
had nwnerous professional and presented them with
offers, but said nothing is yet awards before Head Coach
definite.
Wolle introduced his Varsity
In his senior year at Team and Manager Nick
Springfield North High Leonard. Wolfe recognized
Don
School, he was selected by the three seniors
AP as the AAA High School Eichinger, Brian Conde, and
Player of the Year.
Steve Nelson· - who aU
In his short address to the lettered for the first time in
young men and women their basketball careers.
athlete~ of Eastern, he After introducing the rest of
compared the Eagles' season the Varsity squad, he
to that of this year's presented the annual special
Buckeyes', by saying that awards.
success comes in many
Best Foul Shooting award
for!Tl'l. Both clubs had losing went
to
senior Don
records, but both were Eichinger; Best Rebounder
successful in lots of Award was given to junior
important ways.
Bruce Riffle; The "100"
"Success," says Taylor, award
(s ignifying
"comes from having pride in consistency, effort, and team
your school and yourself." He contribution) went to senior
!Qld the athletes Utat success Brian Conde; Best Defensive
is an "all-t.he·time" thing.
Player Award went to
"Anyone who is truly sophomore Joe Kuhn; and
successful never gives less The Most Improved · Player
than his best, and that's what was sophol!lore Gary Nelson.
made Ohio State's and . All.SVAC Awards went to
E.astern's
seasons

Lola
Walker.
Caplaln ,
Conde, who was voted the Putman , Kennv Chapman,
Katrina
Batey ,
first
R ic hard van Meter, Gene
Third Team,and Bruce Riffle Cole , Bob Barr inger , Ken semester , Diana 8enedum ,
Avis Bls5ell, D i ana Jones,
was recogni2ed for receiving Larkins . Tony Kennedy , Joe
Peggy
Trussell. sec;ond
.
Hooorable Mention in the Bowers
semester , Jan Wilson .
Girl5 Ba5ketblll JCIIn
Fres"mtn
Brenda
League voting.
Wilson,
Sherry
Epple ,
Frec;ker,
Captain,
Val
Fitch ,
Julie
Girls' basketball Coach Tammv
LaBonte, Karen Probert ,
Whitehead, Teresa Buc kley ,
Sue Thompson introduced her Kim Batey , Lori Matthews , Betsv Riffle, Berti Headlty,
girls who went 9-4 on the Denise Dean, Teresa Ed . alternate.
Resuve - Peggy Trussell,
J anet
Ambrose ,
year. Special plaques went to wards.
captain , tlrst semester;
Jewell Blilke, VIcky Epple ,
Sonia 8eavtr, Cln~y 0111,
Teresa Edwards for Best Terr i Ste vei'\S .
Diana
Epple, Cindy Rltchlt.
Cheerleiiders - VirsityRebounder, Janet Ambrose
Junior High - sonJa Carr ,
for Most Improved Player
ca pta in, laura Eichinger ,
Jean M cClure, Traci savre.
and Vicki Epple for Best Foul
Mos t
Outstanding
NBA
Standings
Shooter.
Cheerleader - Cindy Dill.
By United Press International
Statisticians
197S· 19U
Junior
Cheerleading
Eastern Conference
Butcetbilll VanJty
and
Aflintlc Division
awards and pins were
Reserve Nesel Duvall ,
W.. L. . Pet. gb Pam Kautz, Deanna Baker ,
awarded by Mrs. Long to Boston
44 12 .661
Debbie Windon .
Sonia Carr, Laura Eichinger, Philadelphia 40 30 .571 6
Fresttmen Robin R if ·
1
Buttalo
38 31 .551 7 17 chie
Jeanne McClure, and Traci New
, Vida Weber , Dawn
York
33 37 .471 13
Sorden , Diana Evans. Arlene
Sayre. Varsity, Reserve, and
Centr•l Division
Connolly .
W
.
.
L
..
Pet.
gb
Freshmen cheering awards
Junior High Robin
Weshingto11
0 26 .623
Elkins , Robin Ritchie, VIda
were presented by Miss King, Cleveland
40 '28 .588 2lf2 Weber, Pam Spurlock .
36 35 .507 a
and a special award for the Houston
Girls Athletic AnoclatlonNew Orleans 33 38 ,465 11
KathV Fotlrod, Nola Young ,
Most Outstanding Atlanta
28 41 .406 15
Jayne Smi th , suzy Goebel,
Cheerleader went to Cindy
Western Conference
Rachel Hunter .
Midwest Division
Dill.
w.. L. . Pet . gb
All the coaches and Milwaukee
30 38 .4.41
cheerleader advisors were Kansas City 27 43 .386 41
26 .43 .3 77
4 /'
presented gilts by the players Oetroit
Chicago ·
22 47 · 319 gv.,
ABA Stanctln"s
and cheerleaders, and it was
PiiCiflc Division
•
.
__.
w
..
L
·
Pet.
GB
By
United
Press tnterni!tional
announced that there will be Golden State 50 20 .714
W.. L. . Pel. gb
a Girls' Track Team this Los Angeles 36 35 .507 14'12 Denver
53 20 .726
35 35 .500 15
New York
47 27 .635 61!:1
year. Master of Ceremonies seattle
Ph~nhc
33 36 .478 161,12 S,e~n Antonio
42 31 .575 11
lor the event was Principal POrtland
31 40 .437 19'12 Kentucky
41 33 .SS-4 121;?
Friday's Results
. Indiana
36 39 .480 18
Chester Gooding, and the
108 Atlanta 101
St. LOUIS
3.. 41 .453 20
Reverend John Coffman gave Chicago
New Orleans 103 Cleve l.!l nd 81
Virginia
12 61 . 164 41
the
invocation
and Boston 120 Kan Citv IH , ot
Friday'a Results
Portland 111 Houston lOS
Kentucky 104 New York 97
benediction: The · Los
Angeles 122 Detroit 107
Denver 113·VIrg lnla 108
smorgasbord meal was
Sunday 's Games
at NorfOlk
$t . louis 125 San Antonio 100
prepared by the parents and Philadelph ia at Boston
at Cleveland
at Salt Lake ~ity
Boosters,
while
the Washingtcm
Buffalo at Detroit
Sunday's Ga-;;;;;'
cheerleaders worked with Chicago at Kansas ~ity
Virginia at Kentucky
Mitwauke~ at Los Angeles
St. Louis at Derwer
decorations and favors :
Houston at Seattle
Indiana at san Antonio
Individuals honored were:
BASKETBALL
Varsity Team -

Pettisville in A finals
AMONG those honored at Eastern Friday night were the following senior cheerleaders
- Carol King, advisor; Lola Walker, Peggy Truasell, Jan Wilson and Avis Bissell.

'

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1
1

BOYS SPECIAL AWARDS - Eastern cagers receiving special awards Friday are
pictured with Coach Wolfe. They are: Don Eichinger, Brian Conde, Gary Nelson, Bruce
Riffle and Joe Kuhn.

BOWIJNG GREEN, Ohio
fUPI) - Substitute Dean
Genter came off the bench to
score 19 poiilts to lead oncebeaten Pettisville to a
relatively easly 65-49 victory
over Fort Jennings in the
Class
A
regional
championship here.
GentP.r, a 6-foot senior, Was
pressed into service at center
for the Blackbirds when
Marv Meek got into foul
trouble and fouled out with
4:23 left and Pettisville
holding a 48-45 lead.
However, the Blackbirds
were awesome down the
stretch as they outscored

Fort Jennings 17-4 in the last
four rhinutes.
Following Genter in the
scoring column were Meek
with 14, Kim Selgo with 13
and Phil NoWger with 12.
Mike lnkrott, 6-10 center
for Fort Jennings who had
scored 34 points in the
Muskies' semifinal win over
Ada, finished with 16 points in
the game. Steve Saum was
the only other Muskie in
double figures with 10.
Fort Jennings called it
quits at 16-IOwhile Pettisville
will make its first trip to the
state tournament with a 24-1
record.

Drake loses top

Weaver accepts

ground gainer

new position

DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI)
- Jim Herndon, Drake 's
leading ground gainer last
fall, has been dropped from
the football team, Coach Jack
Wallace announced Friday.
Walla ce refused to disclose
the reason for the action .
"This is strictly a matter
between Jim Herndon and
myself," Wallace said. "Jim
· is an outstanding ball carrier
and we do not like the idea of
lo sing him for the 1976
season. He and I have met
and discussed the situation
·and what was said is a matter
between the two of us."

Don

MODULAR HOME

Eichinger, Steve
Nelson ,
Phillip
LaComb ,
Kevin
Barton , M i ke Smith. ·Garv
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Riffle, Mark Hawk, John
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Freshman - Jeff Goe:bel ,
Rustv W igal. Mike Hayman ,

9/Wiot ~~

Joe Boyles , Lowell Ridenour ,
Bill Kautz, Mgr., Oan
SpE!n~e r , Steve ·Little, Ron
Masters. B.ruce conde , Roger
Riebel .
Eighth Grade '-- BriM
Teaford , Br i an Bissell. Mark.

MOBILE HOMES INC.

Norton, Don Putman . Mike
Griggs, Don Barririger , Da11e

Putman , Tim Enevoldsen ,
Leon5rd Myers , T im D i llion ,
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Seventh

Gn1de Brett
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Gary

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See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
Phone 446·9340
Gallipolis, Ohio

8 A.M. Monday.••,. .......~ ..•••_
. and

8 A.M. Wednesdav. ......•.•. and
8 A.M. Thursday.•...........•. and ·

I

'

Game cancelled,
umps fail to show

'

LOS ANGELES (UP!) Cal State Dominguez's
baseball team is beginning to
wonder.
For the third time this
season, the Toros had a game
postponed Friday because
the umpires didn't show up.
Dominguez has an 8-17
record.
"Maybe they're trying to
tell us something," a Toros'
piayer said.
·

CRAIG Taylor, Ohio
Slate basketball player,
was guest speaker at
Eutem's athletic banquet
Friday night.

{

~·

MOST outs.tandlng
cheerleader Cindy Dill
poses lor Times-Sentinel
picture during Eastern
banquet Friday night.

"

8 A.M. Frldav....•.•..... ~ •...... and

~

SPECIAL AWARD
HOLLYWOOD ( UPI )
Mary Pickford, "America's
swee !heart" of the silent
screen, may break ten yelli's
of seclusion to attend the
Academy awards.
The
Motion
Picture
Academy voted the 81-yearold actress a special award
this year In "recognition of
ber unique contributions to
development of film as an
artistic medium ."

(

10 h.p. Wheel Horae tractorcomplete with 38" mower and
electric atart; regularly $1210.

8 A.M. Saturday?

save
$301
• Cl\llet muller, cull noiH

• ••tt•wtdl, llllf.UW!ng .....
• lour·•PMII tr.,..miHion
•

ll~t~ltei

on... fOOd only lint

April '· 1171
Thl• powerful A· 100 Wheel Horae lawn tractor will give you
years at dependable service. Cut Iron tront axle follows the
terrain and soaks up bumps. Big, one and a-half gallon
capacity gas tank, piu&amp; ffulh mounted headlights for addMI
con~tenlenct .

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----

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Gallipolis. Ohio

r-------·¥,MINI-lANK CtiSJOMER HOURS --:-------i

: 8~ A.M.-6100 P.M ............ Mon thru Wed.
I 8100 A.M.-1100 P.M...................... Thunclay
: 8100 A.M.-71Q0 P.M .......................... Frlclay
I 8100 A.M. -3100 P.M ..................... Saturday

..._ ________________________________
_.~~.

l

Memtllr : FDIC

J

,

The Warriors, however,
back again and
reduced the deficit to three
points, 55-52, before May
connected on a bucket to give
Indiana" a more comfortable
cushion and set up a final
series of free throws that
extended the Hoosiers'
winning margin.
Marquette was pampered
all day by Indiana's tight
defense, which reduced the
Warriors' attack to a series of
long jump shots. And the
Warriors we.re also troubled
by two technical fouls called
against Coach AI McGuire,
the last one coming in the
final minute of play and
removing aU doubt as to the
outcome.
Indiana will take a 31Hl
record Into Saturday 's NCAA

GREENSBORO, N. C..
(UP!) - Rutgers coach Tom
Young Immediately turned
his attention to next week's
NCAA National Semifinals in
Philadelphia after the undefeated Scarlet Knights
made VMI their 31st victim of
the season to win the Eastern
Regional Championship.
"My team is playing as
well now as it has all year,"
Young said after the Scarlet
Knights' 91-75 victory over
VML "I think we are in good
shape
going
into
Philadelphia.
Rut~ers
will
meet

but the Keydets rallied and
managed to take a 27-26 lead
with 4:45 left. But Rutgers
outscored VMI, 22-7, in the
closing minutes, with Jordan
scoring eight poin Is. He got
one basket on a steal, one on a
jumper and four on free
throws during that stretch.
The Knights had 48-34
advantsge at halftime.
Rutgers increased its
margin to 62-41 early in the
second half. Then Bynum led
VMI's desperate rally . The 66 junior from Swnter, S. C.,
popped in jump shots from all
over the floor and VMI cut the
margin to, 68-58, . midway
Utrough the half.
Dabney wrapped up the
game for the Scarlet Knights,
scoring 10 of Rutgers' final 23
points. Three of his baskets
Greenwood chipped in with came when he outraced the
VMI de fenders for easy
10.
Herman Harris led the · layups.
In addition to his 23 points,
Western Athletic Conference
titilsts with 18 points whil.e AI Jordan had·six steals and five
Fleming and Phil Tay1or assists. Phil Sellers scored 16
points and gra~bed 12
each had 14.
rebounds for Knights.

Michigan Saturday in the the team on offense as each
National Semifinals.
scored 23 points.
Rutgers' pressure defense
Third-ranked Rutgers built
and fast-break offense caused a 2l-point lead in the second
VMI's Ron Carter and Will half and the closest the
Bynwn to get into early foul Keydets were able to get
trouble. Bynum scored 34 after that was 10 points.
points, but played '!!most the
Rutgers
goes
to
entire second half wiUt four Philadelphia next week for
fouls.
the
NCAA
National
"Rutgers has blown many Semifinals and will play
people out, but didn't blow us Michigan.
out," VMI coach Bill Blair
VMI was led by Will
sa id alter the game. "II we Bymun, who scored 34 points,
hadn't · gotten into foul 20 of them in the second half
trouble who knows?"
desP.ite playing most of that
For 'the second straight - session with four fouls.
.
game, Rutgers guards Ed
Rutgers jumped off to a 19Jtn'dan and Mike Dabney led , II lead early in the f1rst half,

BELPRE - Coach Bob
Glllespie;s Gallipolis entry in
the annual Belpre Basketball
Tournament for II and 12
year..,lds captured its second
straight victory Saturday iii
the double-elimination event .
Gallipolis downed the
Marietta Cadets 55-22 to
move up In the winners
bracket. In their opening
game last Saturday, the
Gallians downed Athens'
·
Bobcats, 48-22.
Today, Gallipolis will take
on
powerful
Athens
Landmark in a 4 p.m. contest
at BeljX'e South Elementary
gym. Athens beat defending
champion Belpre North in a
Saturday · morning contest.
In Gallla's win over
Marietta, the French City
entry led Ill-$, 18-15 and 26-17,
at
the
quartermarks.
Galllpolls outacored Marietta
23-5 in the final period to win
going away.
Box score :

Thursday night, went six
minutes without scori ng
before Elliot hit a basket with
·2:20 to go.
The Paclfic-8 powerhouse,
winners of 10 NCAA championships in a dozen years
under John Wooden, got
double figures from four of Amherst eager
their starters . Raymond
Townsend scored IG points, ·player-of-year
mostly on jumpers from the
CENTERVILLE, Mass.
outside, Marques Jo~nson (UP() - Amherst junior Jim
muscled his way in for 14 and Rehnquist, son of a Supreme
&amp;.10 freshman center David Court justice, Friday was
named basketball Player of
. .. over 12,500 penons •very
the Year iii Division IU of the
year and maims or Injures ·
Seeks new image Eastern College Athletic Con1,800,000 more .
ference .
NEW YORJ((UPI) - Chris
The 6-3 forward from
learn how you can protect
Evert, who at Ute age of 20 McLean, Va., averaged 27.3
your Children ~rom the ravage•
of fire ,
has learned that winning points a game. Hamilton
doesn't breed popularity, is freshman Cedric Oliver, who
seeking a new image for averaged.l8.8 points and 13.1 ·
herself on the tennis courts. rebounds per game, was a
''I'm becoming more unanimous selection as
'aggressive," Evert said Rookie of the Year.
Friday before collecting a
'10,000 check as the first
Dodgers to
winner of the Haig and Ha ig
Woman Athlete of the World
play Expos
award. "I'm gambling more
on my shots and trying to be
VERO BEACH, Fla. (UPI)
crea live on court. I'm tired of
The Los Angeles Dodgets
fOr ·a
copy of the
getting uptight before each
announced
Fr'iday they'll
Homo Fire SaNty Hondbook
match. I want to be loose
open their Grapefruit League
and a no obligation Rre
when I play."
·
season
next
Wednesday
at
JQfety survey; ~nract:
Evert . was .a resounding
Daywna
Beach,
Fla.,
against
SECURITY
&amp; SAFETY
choice for Ute award alter
the
Montreal
Expos.
earning a record ~2,227 in
Dodger Vice Pre!Jident AI
SERVICES
prize money in 1975, a year Campanis
said he was
1614) 446-9881-24 Hrs.
that silw her win, among
ROSS E. HAMRICk
O~NER
other championships, the informed by Mike MarShall's
iltwrney,
Tom
Downs,
that
2SS
Third Ave.
U.S., Italian and French
Marshall will report to :Vero
Ga 11
championships.
Beach, Fla., next Thursday . . .....iiiiiiiiliiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiii--

Williams 2; Carloon 3; Eddy

I

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3 WEEKS

MARCH 17th TO APRIL 3RD

Turf

Builder

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MEN'S
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5 ; Urbenk 2; Neader 5;
Walton 4.
' Score by quarters:
Gallipolis
tO 8 U 23- 55
Marlette
9 6 2 5-- 22

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It ' a Trionlzed &amp;o provide prolonged feeding and
eliminate spindly surge growth. Helps develop
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Used •• directed 1 it will not burn gra.. 1n any
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p.m . Thurs., Fri., Sol. 9 te
9 p.m. Su&gt;lhy 1 te 7 p.m.

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GALLIPOLIS
(511
3; Skidmore 4;
Nlber II ; Marchi 8 ; King 9;
Foster 18; Alltn '2; Sendtrs 0;
Masun 0; Wilson 0.
MARIETTA
(221

_._~~

.

•

Bruins in Hoosier rematch

Gllleafle,

I
I
I

semifinals as the Hoosiers a delay game to force the
seek their third national title. Warriors out of their zone
and
altho~gh
Marquette, which ran defense
behind Indiana all year in the Indiana grew cold from the
national ran kings, finished its field, Marquette could only
season with a 27-2 record.
. score live points during the
The Hoosiers jumped to a six-minute stretch in which
30-19 lead early on the Indiana went scoreless.
shooting of the &amp;-11 Benson,
May scored 15 for the
who hit 12 points in tlie first Hoosiers, followed by Tom
balf and finished with 18.
Abernethy with 12 and Quinn
Marquette came back to Buckner with nine.
score 10 straight points and
Marquette's Earl Tatum
reduce the deficit to 36-35 at led all scorers with 22.
half.
Bo Ellis backed up Tatum
May had been out of the with nine points and Butch
game for more than 13 Lee scored eight.
minutes of the first half with
Marquette led only once
Utree personal fouls, but his duriilg the contest, holding a
presence
was
felt oneiloint advantage early in
inunediately at the start of the second half . alter a
the secood half as Indiana jumper by Lee.
raced to a 51-41 lead.
But May Immediately hit
The Hoosiers then went in to two straight buckets to give
Indiana the lead for good.

sto~med

Rutgers humbles VMI

Gallipolis
advances
•
ln tourney

8 A.M. Tuesdav•.•.•..•••.......and

ic

BATON ROUGE, La .
(UP!) - All - Americans
Kent Benson and Scott May
took turns firing up the topranked Indiana Saturday as
they stopped
No.
2
Marquette, 65-56, in the
Mideast Regional Final and
escorted the Hoosiers in!Q the
NCAA National Semifiilals at
Philadelphia next Thursday .
The undefeated Hoosiers
owned a \().point lead with 10
minutes remaining iii the
showdown between the
nation 's top two collegiate
teams, but Indiana went
almost six minutes without
scoring to allow Marquette to
dose to within five points at ·
51-46. .
But Benson hit four straight
points to give Ute Big Ten
chwnpion Hoosiers a ninepoint advantage.

LOS ANGELES ( UPI)
Defending NCAA .champion
UCLA, getting a 22-point
performance from All- .
America
Richard
Washington, broke open a
close game in the final eight
minutes Saturday to beat the
Arizona Wildcats, 82-$, in the
West Regional Championship
and set up a rematch with
top-ranked Indiana in Ute
national semifinals.
The filth-ranked Bruins
were blown out by 20 points
against the Hoosiers in the
season opener in St. Louis
Nov. 29. They needed a
devastating finish against
Arizona, however , to ga in the
NCAA's final round of four.
The score was tied 58-511
alter Bob Elliott, the Wildca ts' 6-10 center , scored on a
five-footer over 7·2 Ralph
Drollinger with 8:21 left.
But the Bruins then poured
in 12 straight points to tske a
commanding 70-58 lead with
21', minutes left .
Arizona, which got I no the
regional finale by upending
No. 4 Nevada-Las Vegas

Gary

ATLANTA
(UPI)
Douglas W. Weaver, athletic
director at Southern Illinois,
has been named· to head the
Athletics , Department of
Georgia Tech.
Weaver, 45, a close friend
of Tech football Coach
.Pepper Rodgers, succeeds
the retiring Bobby Dodd, who
ends a 4:&gt;-year career at
Georgia Tech July 1.
Weaver, who played
football at Michigan State,
said he is "elated" at his new
position and currently
contemplates no changes in
the coaching stall.

PiCTURED WITH TAYLOR - Senior Eastern cagers are pictured here with guest
speaker O'aig Taylor.lbey are Don Eichinger, Brian Conde, Taylor, and Steve Nelson.

Hoosiers topple
Warriors, 65-56

More Than Just A Lumber Yard
Lots More
RT. 2 BY PASS POINT PLEASANT

�..

22 - The Sunday TinJes . Sentinel, Sw1day , March 21 , 1976

Pirates gain finals

Memorial Field, renovation project continues

A1'HENS - Coach Mike
Hughes ' Wheelersburg
Pirates edged Columbus St.
Char, es 66-65 in Friday
night's opening round game
of the 1976 Class AA Regional
Basketball Tournament at
Ohio University's Convocation Center.
The Pira tes, now 23·0,
played unbea ten Wellsville
(2HJ- for the reg ional title
and a trip to the 1976 Ohio
Class AA state championship
tournament slated thi s
weekend at St. John Arena in
Columbus.

\J ,.,

...qt

'"

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.,,,.

-••

BANQUET MONDAY
GALLIPOLIS - The
annual
post-se ason
basketball banquet lor the
GAHS Blue Devils will be
held In the Gallipolis gym,
beginning at 6:30 p.m.
Monday. Members of the

GALLIPOUS' Memorial Field is being renovated for
the first time since the field was dedicated in October,
1948. The project is under the direction of the Blue Devil
Boosters Club. After top soil (above) is scraped off,
boosters and volunteer workers will add new soil and
recrown the GAllS .gridiron. The field is expected to be
ready for Gallia's fJrst horne football game on Sept. 17.

Work is also being done on the Memorial Field baseball
diamond according to Ike Wiseman, president of the
boosters. Debris has been cleaned up around the fence
surrounding the field. Other projects planned by the
boosters include a new dressing room facility, new grid
lights, repairs to the broken down fence, repainting of the
bleachers and renovation of the field's 28-year-&lt;Jld track.

Coach Wally Teeters'
Cardinals led 17·15 after one
period. The Burg knotted the
coun t at 33-all just before the
halftime intermission .
Wheelersburg outscored St.
Charles 12-8 in the third
period for a 45-41 advantage.
The Pirates never trailed
during the final period of
play.
Joe Rase paced the Pirates
with 22 points. Brian Bays
added J7, Dean Miller 13 and
Jeff Meadows 12.
Marquis Miller had 28 for

Pepitone belts
2 long homers
YUMA, Ariz. (UPI) -Non·
roster invitee Joe Pepitone

hit two long home runs in
batting practice Friday as
the San Diego Padres sent 37
players through a three-hour
workout.
freshman, reserves and
Pepitone, 35, has not played
vars it y
squads.
in
tbe major leagues since
cheerleaders, trainers and
1973
and last played in Japan
managers will be honored.
in
1974'
. He is on the roster of
It will be a potluck affair.
the Padres' triple A affiliate
:-:·:·:·:·:::·:::•:·:::::::·:::·:·:::::::·:::::::::::::;::::::::.'::::::·::::: in Hawaii.

Tournament scores.
Ohio High School Girt s
Bask etball Tournam ent
R es ults
United Pr ess International
CLASS AAA
.
{At Oaytonl
Wayne 38 Sp r i n g f iel d South 36
(At N Ridgevill e)
Bay 46 M id view 44
(A t M eh torl
Mentor 38 W ill oughby South
30
CAt Cleveland )
Cle Kennedy 45 Cl e Co llin ·
wood JO
(At Parmal
Medina · 73 Cl e · L inc oln west
53
Cle
John
Marshall
50
BrUJlS.w ic k 39
CLASS AA.
(At Westervill e)
River Va ll ey 37 Col OeSa les

OWA students are busy cleaning up debris around the

-...-·

fence surrounding Memorial Field in connection with the
Blue Devil Booster Club's renovation project.
'

Cage standings

I

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---..f

65

-College Bask etball Results
By United Press International
NtAA Divi si on 3
f Semifinals)
Wiltnbg 11 Plattsbg SL 58
Sc ranton 76 Augustana 65
· (End Oiv . 3)
NCAA Division 2
(Championship )
Pug et Snd 83 T enn ,- Cha t 74
( Consolatian Game)
Esn . Ill . 78 Old Domin ion 74
fEnd Div . 2)

:
:

AFTER making one round with a huge scraper, Russ Miller, right, confers with GAHS
grid co~ch Willard (J!klddy ) Moore to see if e~erything is alright as work began on the
renovatwn of the pJaymg surface of Memonal FJeld last week. The project is being done by
members of the GAllS Blue Devil Boosters Club and other volunteer workers.

II Sparky must make
..~ quick decisions

-

:

All GAMES
.
W l
P
OP
W'burg
23 0 1551 1204
I ront on
20 3 1267 107 9
Pt . Pl eas .
14 a 1406 1315 .
Gailipol is
13 a 1175 1076
Wave rl y
13 8 1168 11 61
Portsmout h
11 a 1183 11 62
Meigs
12 10 13 14 1232
Logan
8 11 1129 1208
Sout h Point
8 11 t 139 lt 76
A the ns
7 12 935 1017
Jackson
6 13 1068 1088
Wel l ston
4 14 940 1104
.Friday's Res ult :
Whee lersb urg 66 S t . Char les

(AI

Bowling Green)

Pettisville
4~

65 Fort Jenn ings

TEAM

st

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:

OHIO H IGH SCHOOL
Basketball Tournament
Results
United Press Internati onal
Class AAA
CAt Canton)
Ba rb e rton
77
Canton
McKinley 70 _
Class A
·

-....

....

WATERVIU.E VAI..LEY,
N.H. (UPI) - Richard Woodworth of Stratton Mountain,
Vt. , and Heidi Preuss of
'Lakeport have woo tbe men's
and women's giant slalom
events in the amateur skiing
the losers.
championships at Waterville
Wheelersburg hit 21 of 45 Valley ski area.
field goal attempts for 46
Preuss, 15, won her singlepercent. The Burg was 24 of run event Friday in 1:24.33
28 at the foul line for a sizZling over the 481late course and
85 percent. WHS had 24 Woodworth, 18, took the .
rebounds, 10 by Bays.
men's two-run event in
St. Charles hit 30 of 58 field 2:35.74.
goal attempts for 51 percent.
TIANT SATISFIED
The losers were five of six at
BOSTON ( UPI) - Luis
tlle foul line and had 32
Tiant, the 35-year old
rebounds, 11 by M. Miller.
mainstay of the Boston Red
Box score:
WHEELERSBURG &lt;Ut _
Sox pitching staff who
Meadows , 4 4 12 ; Mil l er , 5 3- tllreatened not to return to
13 ; Bailey , 1 o 2 : Rase , 7. 8-22 :
the club unless his two~ye8r
Bays , 4-9 -17 . TOTAL S 21 · 24·
" .
con tract was extended, has
ST. CHARLES (65) S_
d to terrn ht' Ito
Milt., , ' ·0·2: Ke lly , 3·0·6 : agree
s, sa rney
Cream er , S-0 -10 : Kunzen , 5-0- sai d Saturday.
10 ; M . Cr.eam er , 2·0 -4 ; Byrne ,
" Luis was very satisfied
~·g;.2~ L ~ io . ~~j~" · 12.4 ' 28 · with the terms {)f his contract
Sc ••• by """''"'"
· and Mr. {Tom) Yawkey is the
Whe e r ,
15 18 12 21 - 66 f'
t
. b b II ..
st. Char l es
17 1 &lt;~ a 26---'- 65
mes own er In ase a '
said Attorney Bob Woolf.

in AA regional play

•

..

Final proposal
is withdrawn

Slalom winners
are announced

TAMPA, · Fla. (UPI) _
Cincinnati Reds manager
Sparky Anderson, because of
the abbreviated spring
training, has less tiJJJe than
expected to make decisions
about which players to keep
on tbe ~an squad.
·
Trading away pitchers
Clay Carroll and ClaY Kirby
has opened up two pitching
vacancies.
''I've got to decide who·u
fill them and, as 1 see it now
the four top candidates ~
Tom Carroll, Rich Hinton
(picked up from the Chicago
White Sox In tbe Clay Carron
deal), Santo Alcala and Pat
Zac~ .

"What makeS the decision-

:!'· .even tougher is tbe fact

that
- the options of 1\lcala and
: Zachry have expired," addect
: Sparky. "But I can't let that
: sway'my thinking. I've got to
: plcll the pitchers I lbillk Will
• help us most."
:
Andenon also is yet to
: decide who 1 couple of his
.. "eJ&lt;tra'' players wm be.
C " It woo't be easy bee&amp;Use
: tiJere will be ooly seven
:.. openin8s and I've got to
~cede that ~m Plummer,

Bob Bailey, Dan Driessen,
Mike Lum and Doug Flynn
have locks on five of the
spots, " he sa id.
So, fighting for the two ,.
vacant spots will be veter;ins
Merv Reltenmund, Terry
Crowley and Ed Armbrister,
·along with newcomers Joel
Youngblood, Arturo
DeFreitas and Ray Knight.
Cincinnati, which hosts
baseball's regular seasori
opener April 8 against
Houston, begins its shortened
14-game exhibition game
schedule next Wednesday
night against the Baltimore
Orioles in Miami.
KKK LYNCHER
TACOMA, Wash. (UPI) Samuel Bowes, convicted in
the 1964 lynching of three
young civil rights workers, is
getting out of Jail MOnday four years before his 10-year
rerm is up . He will be on
probation until 1979.
Bowes, 51, who was imperial wizard of the klan,
received a college degree in
reUgion while he was at
McNeil Island Federal
Penitentiry.

International Hock ey
Leagu e Standings
United Pr ess tnternatfonal
Nor,th :
W L T Pi s G F G.4
Sag inaw 41 22 9 9 1 3 18 258
P I. Huron 34 27 11 79 280 260
Flint
31 28 13 75 255 735
Mu sk .
31 29 12 74 24 0 223
Ka la ma . 25 28 JO 60 258 J09
So uth
W L P Ph GF GA
Dayton
43 21 10 96 3 14 7:18
F t. Wayne27 33 13 67 272 288
To ledo
24 l6 13 61 245 278
Col umbu s 23 45 7 53 242 345
Friday's Results
Dayton 7 Toledo s
Fli n t' 6 Col umb us 5
Muskegon 5 POrt Huron 2
Sunday's Games
MuskegQn at Flint
Sag inaw at Columbus
Toledo at Fort Wa yne
Kalamazoo at Port Hur on

PROTECT YOUR FAMILY • • •

GORILLA?

NEW OFFICERS - Tbe Gallia County Conservation Association
recently elected new officers and ~tteemen . They are, left to right:
Oscar Bastmam, program cbauman; Bob Evans, stste wildlife

Michigan advances ·to semifinals
LOUISVILLE, .Ky. (UPI )
- Ninth-ranked Michigan
weathered a 43-point performance by Missouri's
Willie Smith Saturday 1o beat
the Tigers, 95-88, in the NCAA
Midwest Regional Championship game and ea rn a
berth in next week's National

• •

30
Co l Hart l ey 49 Ut'ica 43
{ At Hudso n)
E l ms 23 Akron Sf Vi nc en t -Sf
Mary 22
CLASS A
CAtl&lt;ent)
Northwestern 3 3 Uni ted Lo cal

28

I At Lir'na(

Semifin11ls.
Michigan's superior team
balance proved the difference
as the Wolverines overcame
a 76-71 Missouri lead in the
final eight mi r.ates after
leading 50-37 at the hall.
Rickey Green penetrated
the
Missouri
,defense

Crestview 49 Adn 44

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Pirates now have
31 men in cam 'p
BRAN DENTON, . Fla .
{UPIJ - Relief pitcher
Ramon Hernandez, catcher
Duffy Dyer and rookie in·
fielder
Jimmy Sexton
reported
for
practice
Saturday, bringing to 31 the
number of players in the
Pitts burgh Pirates spri ng
training camp .
Among the six players still
absent were outfielder Dave
Parker .and utility Infielder
Frank Taveras.
The other four players are
minor leaguers.
Manager Danny Murtaugh
worked the Pirates for more
than three hours Saturday,
co ncentrating on ge tting
pitchers into condition for
Tuesday's ex hibition season
opener against the Chicago
Whi te Sox here.
Outfielder Richie Zisk was
hit on the left ankle with a
pitch and taken to ·a local
hospital where X·rays were
negative.

The nome is
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fAt Canton )
Green d5 Per r y JJ

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Ohio High Schoo l Boys

CLASS AAA
(At Columbus)
Defiance 65 Col Cent ral 56 .
Co l Lind e n 67 C hill icot h e 52
(At Kent)

Tol edo

Sc ott 57

1\:o charge to Ga lli a Co unty residents. other than

P.roperly tax payment, for lransportal ion to the
. p1tal for . emergen~y lrea tmcnl .
· ·
·

CLASS AA
(At Athens)
Wheelersb u rg 66 Co l S f
Cha rl es 65
(At Bowling Green }
Van Wert 53 Willard 44
Lor ain Calh 75 Elmwood 62
(At canton l
Br oo kf ie ld 80 C te Cathedr&amp; l
L at in 76
CLASS A
(At Canton}
Wi nd ham 76 H i llsda l e 67
CLASS AAA
(At Kent)
East Cle Sh aw 56 L orai n
Sout hv iew 48

CLASS AA
CAt D.JytonJ
Cir c l evil le 63 versailles 48
Dayton
Roth - 64
Cl n
G r een h i lls 58
(At Canton}
A kron Sf Vincent -Sf Mary 69
E Pales t ine 57
(At Ath ens )
Wel lsville 60 Coshocton 42

CLASS A
(At Steubenville)
L ucasvi ll e Va l ley 6 1 In dian
Valley N 56
Indi an Va ll ey S 53 F ran k forl
Adena 38
fAt canton)
Monroeville 83 Cu yahoga
H,i!ig hts 81
t

+

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P. 0. Box 172, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
(UP!) - Nine more St. Louis
players arrived for spring
training ~turday, bringing
the number in the Cardinals'
camp to 32.
A spokesman for the
Cardinals said the team had
been told by National League
President Chub Feeney to
play its first exhlbitlon game
with · Detroit' Wednesday so
that all major-league clubs
would start exhibition play at
the same time. The Cards and
their spring training neigh.
bors, the New York Meta, had
planned a delayed first game
In Campbell Park.
Cardinals
in
camp
Saturday for the first time
were outfielders Reggie
Smith, Bake McBtide, Willie
Crawford, Larry Mumphrey
and Charlie Chant, pitchers
Johnny DeMy, Uoyd Allen
and Ken · Reynolds and third
baseman Hector Cruz.

LOUISVILLE, Ky . (UPI)
- Michigan Coach John Orr
said before the NCAA Midwest R~gional Final Saturday
afternoon that his team had
no one to match Missouri's
Willie Smi lb.
He was right. Smith scored
43 points and turned in one of
the outstanding games in
NCAA Tournament history.
But what Michigan did
have was team balance and
that was more than a rna tch

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convenience.

..

Otterbein, Mark Ventstra of
Calvin {Mich.) College,
James Abrams of Akron
University, Bob Grote ·of
Wright State and Merlin
Friend of Oberlin.
Named to the third team
were Jo Joe . MacRae of
Ashland College, Jeff Furry
of
Eastern
Illinois
University, Ron Ripley of the
University of WisconsinGreen Bay, Tommy Fawlkes
of Western Illinois and Todd
Harris of Denison .

LEAKPROOF BUDGET
WASHINGTON (UPI) CIA director George Bush
says he refuses to leak the
agency's budget to Soviet
intelligence.
"Our budget figures are not
made public," Bush told the
National Newspaper
Association Friday. "I don 't
want to help the KGB ."
He said statistics on CIA
spending were supplied " in
enormous
detail
to
congressional committees total disclosure."
Public disclosure, Bush
said, would reveal the
agency's methods and
sources.

saying he felt there had been
sufficient progress in the
negotiations to warrant this
action.
,
Kuhn met with the owners,
the two league presidents,
MacPhail and NL prexy Chub
Feeney, and chief negotiator
John Gaherin Saturday
mor~ing .
The two leagues then split

for individual caucuses. they
were expected to discuss the
manner of expaliBlon as well
as possible consideration of
further negotiations with the
players.
In the expansion talks, the
owners are expected tQ ex~
plore 14-team leagues and the
possibility of lnterleague
play.

'•

•
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Aprtll, 1t711

FOR IDOFS. MASOIIY and
RUSTED MUll IURFICES

S-801a

MARat 30th

Nine more Cards

Ohio Athletic Conference,
was a leading player named
Saturday to the District Four
AU-Star . team picked by
district coaches.
Others on tthe first ' time
were
Tom
Dunn
of
Wittenberg University, Jeff
Covington of Youngstown
State University, AI Dono!! of
Ohio Northern University and
Dimo Comley of Northern
Michigan University.
Named to lbe second team
were David Broomley of

• Ulrl411cH, tll11· 11Wing Urel

.-

I YESJ

DEFIANCE, Ohio (UP!) Tim Appleton of Kenyon
College, a top scorer in the

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SMJEMS amiJulan ~·e is an emergenc}'·room·On·
l"·neel8 . It •• m ron slanl ra~io contact with the hos.
to rece ive vitaJ life·saving instructions.

send Mi~ouri into. its only after being down by 18 points
read of the game at 76-71.
in the first half.
.
Michigan stormed back to
" I thought Green and
regain the lead at 81-78 on a Hubbard were especially
pair of buckets by Green, four outstanding for us ," he said.
free throws by Robinson and
Missouri lost three starters
a layup by Hubbard.
on fouls - forwards Kim
The Wolverines advanced Anderson and Jim Kennedy
to the final four in and guard Jeff Currie.
Philadelphia Saturday with a . Kennedy was second high
24-li record . They will meet for the Tigers witll 16 points
undefeated Rutgers, the East and freshman center Stan
Regional Charppion, in the Ray came off the bench to
National Semifinals.
contribute 13. points and
The first Missouri team to hauled down 15 rebounds.
reach the NCAA Regionals ·tn
Michigan outrebounded
32 years will return home Missouri 49-45, but the Tigers
with a 26-5 record.
had a slight edge in shooting,
11
This w.a s a great victory 49.4 per cent to 46.7 per cent.
for us," Orr said, 11 But I give
Smith hit 18 of his 35 shots
Missouri a lot of credit the from the field and canned
way they came back on us seven of 11 free throws.

save
$301

East lake

Nortl'1 5J

to score 23 poin\s,
htgh for the winners.
Johnny Robinson added 21
points and freshman center
Phil Hubbard tallied 20 for
the Wolverines.
Michigan coach John Orr
paid tribute to Smith for one
.of the outstanding games in
NCAA Tournament history ,
but he added "We shut him
out when it counted."
Smith, a 6-2 lefthander
expected to be drafted in the
first . round by ihe pros,
collected .29 poinis in the last
half when he took complete
charge of a Missouri team in
heavy foul trouble.
During the stretch when the
tigers overtook Michigan, he
scored nine straight points to

arrive in camp

result.~

Unite d Press International

r~peatedly

Come in and see the PENtHOUSE!

Girls cage

Ba s ketball Tournam e nt
Results
.

committeeman; Merrill Saunders, vice president and treasurer · Jack
Mink, president; Nick Johnson, recording secretary and Ken Tomhnson
stare game protector. Not pictured - Gilbert Meal, secretary.
'

NEW YORK (UPI) Major League baseball .
owners, afrer giving their
Player Relations Commit·
tee a unanimous vote
of
confidence,
antoday
that
nounced
their "best and final
proposal" has been withdrawn from consideration by
the Players Association.
"That proposal has been
withdrawn," said American
League ·President Lee
MacPhail. "We'll wait to
hear theirs now. "
The owners also decided
th.e committee should press
ahead in an attempt to gain
settlement as quickly as
possible.
The "final proposal " by the
owners had included the
''one-and-onC" clause that
the players sought, allowing a
player to become a free agent
one year after his present
contract expired, but limited
his negotiation rights to only
eight teams - in effect, the
eight worst clubs in Major
I..eague Baseball.
After that proposal was
submitted last week, Marvin
Miller, executive director of
t11e Players Associa tion, said
he and his board would take a
se rious look at its contents .
The
players
representatives met all day
Wednesady before rejecting
the offer.
Meanwhile, Baseball
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn
ordered spring training
camps to open after the
ow ners ' 17-day lockout,

for the gallant Tigers.
As a result, Michigan won
95-811, and became the first
Big Ten Conference runnerup
ever to reach the NCAA
National Semifinals . The
Wolverines, now ~. will
meet Rutg ers , the East
Region Champion, in the
NCAA Semis at Philadelphia
Thursday.
"Willie Smith put on· the
best one-man show I've ever
seen/' Orr said. "However,
Dave Baxter saved us in the
last five minutes by holding
· Smith to one goal. Baxter did
a great job coming off the
bench for 18 points after
Steve Grote got in foul
trouble."
A dejected Smith told
reporters, " I'm just not used
to losing - never have been .
We could have gone either
way, bull can't take anything
away from them, they're a
, great team."
Richey Green led Michigan
with 23 points, while team·
mates Johnny Robinson
added 21 points and freshman
center Phil Hubbard contributed 20.

Lonborg looks
good on mound
CLEARWATER, Fla.
( UPJ) - Right-hander Jim
Lonborg pitched three impressive innings Saturday
during the Philadelphia
Phlilies' second intrasquad
game of the season, a 1.0 win
by the Bobby Wines over the
Ray Ripplemyers.
Lonborn, whose season
ended prematurely last
season because of a sore
shoulder, allowed two hits,
struck out three and threw
hard.

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�..

22 - The Sunday TinJes . Sentinel, Sw1day , March 21 , 1976

Pirates gain finals

Memorial Field, renovation project continues

A1'HENS - Coach Mike
Hughes ' Wheelersburg
Pirates edged Columbus St.
Char, es 66-65 in Friday
night's opening round game
of the 1976 Class AA Regional
Basketball Tournament at
Ohio University's Convocation Center.
The Pira tes, now 23·0,
played unbea ten Wellsville
(2HJ- for the reg ional title
and a trip to the 1976 Ohio
Class AA state championship
tournament slated thi s
weekend at St. John Arena in
Columbus.

\J ,.,

...qt

'"

--

.,,,.

-••

BANQUET MONDAY
GALLIPOLIS - The
annual
post-se ason
basketball banquet lor the
GAHS Blue Devils will be
held In the Gallipolis gym,
beginning at 6:30 p.m.
Monday. Members of the

GALLIPOUS' Memorial Field is being renovated for
the first time since the field was dedicated in October,
1948. The project is under the direction of the Blue Devil
Boosters Club. After top soil (above) is scraped off,
boosters and volunteer workers will add new soil and
recrown the GAllS .gridiron. The field is expected to be
ready for Gallia's fJrst horne football game on Sept. 17.

Work is also being done on the Memorial Field baseball
diamond according to Ike Wiseman, president of the
boosters. Debris has been cleaned up around the fence
surrounding the field. Other projects planned by the
boosters include a new dressing room facility, new grid
lights, repairs to the broken down fence, repainting of the
bleachers and renovation of the field's 28-year-&lt;Jld track.

Coach Wally Teeters'
Cardinals led 17·15 after one
period. The Burg knotted the
coun t at 33-all just before the
halftime intermission .
Wheelersburg outscored St.
Charles 12-8 in the third
period for a 45-41 advantage.
The Pirates never trailed
during the final period of
play.
Joe Rase paced the Pirates
with 22 points. Brian Bays
added J7, Dean Miller 13 and
Jeff Meadows 12.
Marquis Miller had 28 for

Pepitone belts
2 long homers
YUMA, Ariz. (UPI) -Non·
roster invitee Joe Pepitone

hit two long home runs in
batting practice Friday as
the San Diego Padres sent 37
players through a three-hour
workout.
freshman, reserves and
Pepitone, 35, has not played
vars it y
squads.
in
tbe major leagues since
cheerleaders, trainers and
1973
and last played in Japan
managers will be honored.
in
1974'
. He is on the roster of
It will be a potluck affair.
the Padres' triple A affiliate
:-:·:·:·:·:::·:::•:·:::::::·:::·:·:::::::·:::::::::::::;::::::::.'::::::·::::: in Hawaii.

Tournament scores.
Ohio High School Girt s
Bask etball Tournam ent
R es ults
United Pr ess International
CLASS AAA
.
{At Oaytonl
Wayne 38 Sp r i n g f iel d South 36
(At N Ridgevill e)
Bay 46 M id view 44
(A t M eh torl
Mentor 38 W ill oughby South
30
CAt Cleveland )
Cle Kennedy 45 Cl e Co llin ·
wood JO
(At Parmal
Medina · 73 Cl e · L inc oln west
53
Cle
John
Marshall
50
BrUJlS.w ic k 39
CLASS AA.
(At Westervill e)
River Va ll ey 37 Col OeSa les

OWA students are busy cleaning up debris around the

-...-·

fence surrounding Memorial Field in connection with the
Blue Devil Booster Club's renovation project.
'

Cage standings

I

'

.-;... .

•

[

---..f

65

-College Bask etball Results
By United Press International
NtAA Divi si on 3
f Semifinals)
Wiltnbg 11 Plattsbg SL 58
Sc ranton 76 Augustana 65
· (End Oiv . 3)
NCAA Division 2
(Championship )
Pug et Snd 83 T enn ,- Cha t 74
( Consolatian Game)
Esn . Ill . 78 Old Domin ion 74
fEnd Div . 2)

:
:

AFTER making one round with a huge scraper, Russ Miller, right, confers with GAHS
grid co~ch Willard (J!klddy ) Moore to see if e~erything is alright as work began on the
renovatwn of the pJaymg surface of Memonal FJeld last week. The project is being done by
members of the GAllS Blue Devil Boosters Club and other volunteer workers.

II Sparky must make
..~ quick decisions

-

:

All GAMES
.
W l
P
OP
W'burg
23 0 1551 1204
I ront on
20 3 1267 107 9
Pt . Pl eas .
14 a 1406 1315 .
Gailipol is
13 a 1175 1076
Wave rl y
13 8 1168 11 61
Portsmout h
11 a 1183 11 62
Meigs
12 10 13 14 1232
Logan
8 11 1129 1208
Sout h Point
8 11 t 139 lt 76
A the ns
7 12 935 1017
Jackson
6 13 1068 1088
Wel l ston
4 14 940 1104
.Friday's Res ult :
Whee lersb urg 66 S t . Char les

(AI

Bowling Green)

Pettisville
4~

65 Fort Jenn ings

TEAM

st

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OHIO H IGH SCHOOL
Basketball Tournament
Results
United Press Internati onal
Class AAA
CAt Canton)
Ba rb e rton
77
Canton
McKinley 70 _
Class A
·

-....

....

WATERVIU.E VAI..LEY,
N.H. (UPI) - Richard Woodworth of Stratton Mountain,
Vt. , and Heidi Preuss of
'Lakeport have woo tbe men's
and women's giant slalom
events in the amateur skiing
the losers.
championships at Waterville
Wheelersburg hit 21 of 45 Valley ski area.
field goal attempts for 46
Preuss, 15, won her singlepercent. The Burg was 24 of run event Friday in 1:24.33
28 at the foul line for a sizZling over the 481late course and
85 percent. WHS had 24 Woodworth, 18, took the .
rebounds, 10 by Bays.
men's two-run event in
St. Charles hit 30 of 58 field 2:35.74.
goal attempts for 51 percent.
TIANT SATISFIED
The losers were five of six at
BOSTON ( UPI) - Luis
tlle foul line and had 32
Tiant, the 35-year old
rebounds, 11 by M. Miller.
mainstay of the Boston Red
Box score:
WHEELERSBURG &lt;Ut _
Sox pitching staff who
Meadows , 4 4 12 ; Mil l er , 5 3- tllreatened not to return to
13 ; Bailey , 1 o 2 : Rase , 7. 8-22 :
the club unless his two~ye8r
Bays , 4-9 -17 . TOTAL S 21 · 24·
" .
con tract was extended, has
ST. CHARLES (65) S_
d to terrn ht' Ito
Milt., , ' ·0·2: Ke lly , 3·0·6 : agree
s, sa rney
Cream er , S-0 -10 : Kunzen , 5-0- sai d Saturday.
10 ; M . Cr.eam er , 2·0 -4 ; Byrne ,
" Luis was very satisfied
~·g;.2~ L ~ io . ~~j~" · 12.4 ' 28 · with the terms {)f his contract
Sc ••• by """''"'"
· and Mr. {Tom) Yawkey is the
Whe e r ,
15 18 12 21 - 66 f'
t
. b b II ..
st. Char l es
17 1 &lt;~ a 26---'- 65
mes own er In ase a '
said Attorney Bob Woolf.

in AA regional play

•

..

Final proposal
is withdrawn

Slalom winners
are announced

TAMPA, · Fla. (UPI) _
Cincinnati Reds manager
Sparky Anderson, because of
the abbreviated spring
training, has less tiJJJe than
expected to make decisions
about which players to keep
on tbe ~an squad.
·
Trading away pitchers
Clay Carroll and ClaY Kirby
has opened up two pitching
vacancies.
''I've got to decide who·u
fill them and, as 1 see it now
the four top candidates ~
Tom Carroll, Rich Hinton
(picked up from the Chicago
White Sox In tbe Clay Carron
deal), Santo Alcala and Pat
Zac~ .

"What makeS the decision-

:!'· .even tougher is tbe fact

that
- the options of 1\lcala and
: Zachry have expired," addect
: Sparky. "But I can't let that
: sway'my thinking. I've got to
: plcll the pitchers I lbillk Will
• help us most."
:
Andenon also is yet to
: decide who 1 couple of his
.. "eJ&lt;tra'' players wm be.
C " It woo't be easy bee&amp;Use
: tiJere will be ooly seven
:.. openin8s and I've got to
~cede that ~m Plummer,

Bob Bailey, Dan Driessen,
Mike Lum and Doug Flynn
have locks on five of the
spots, " he sa id.
So, fighting for the two ,.
vacant spots will be veter;ins
Merv Reltenmund, Terry
Crowley and Ed Armbrister,
·along with newcomers Joel
Youngblood, Arturo
DeFreitas and Ray Knight.
Cincinnati, which hosts
baseball's regular seasori
opener April 8 against
Houston, begins its shortened
14-game exhibition game
schedule next Wednesday
night against the Baltimore
Orioles in Miami.
KKK LYNCHER
TACOMA, Wash. (UPI) Samuel Bowes, convicted in
the 1964 lynching of three
young civil rights workers, is
getting out of Jail MOnday four years before his 10-year
rerm is up . He will be on
probation until 1979.
Bowes, 51, who was imperial wizard of the klan,
received a college degree in
reUgion while he was at
McNeil Island Federal
Penitentiry.

International Hock ey
Leagu e Standings
United Pr ess tnternatfonal
Nor,th :
W L T Pi s G F G.4
Sag inaw 41 22 9 9 1 3 18 258
P I. Huron 34 27 11 79 280 260
Flint
31 28 13 75 255 735
Mu sk .
31 29 12 74 24 0 223
Ka la ma . 25 28 JO 60 258 J09
So uth
W L P Ph GF GA
Dayton
43 21 10 96 3 14 7:18
F t. Wayne27 33 13 67 272 288
To ledo
24 l6 13 61 245 278
Col umbu s 23 45 7 53 242 345
Friday's Results
Dayton 7 Toledo s
Fli n t' 6 Col umb us 5
Muskegon 5 POrt Huron 2
Sunday's Games
MuskegQn at Flint
Sag inaw at Columbus
Toledo at Fort Wa yne
Kalamazoo at Port Hur on

PROTECT YOUR FAMILY • • •

GORILLA?

NEW OFFICERS - Tbe Gallia County Conservation Association
recently elected new officers and ~tteemen . They are, left to right:
Oscar Bastmam, program cbauman; Bob Evans, stste wildlife

Michigan advances ·to semifinals
LOUISVILLE, .Ky. (UPI )
- Ninth-ranked Michigan
weathered a 43-point performance by Missouri's
Willie Smith Saturday 1o beat
the Tigers, 95-88, in the NCAA
Midwest Regional Championship game and ea rn a
berth in next week's National

• •

30
Co l Hart l ey 49 Ut'ica 43
{ At Hudso n)
E l ms 23 Akron Sf Vi nc en t -Sf
Mary 22
CLASS A
CAtl&lt;ent)
Northwestern 3 3 Uni ted Lo cal

28

I At Lir'na(

Semifin11ls.
Michigan's superior team
balance proved the difference
as the Wolverines overcame
a 76-71 Missouri lead in the
final eight mi r.ates after
leading 50-37 at the hall.
Rickey Green penetrated
the
Missouri
,defense

Crestview 49 Adn 44

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Pirates now have
31 men in cam 'p
BRAN DENTON, . Fla .
{UPIJ - Relief pitcher
Ramon Hernandez, catcher
Duffy Dyer and rookie in·
fielder
Jimmy Sexton
reported
for
practice
Saturday, bringing to 31 the
number of players in the
Pitts burgh Pirates spri ng
training camp .
Among the six players still
absent were outfielder Dave
Parker .and utility Infielder
Frank Taveras.
The other four players are
minor leaguers.
Manager Danny Murtaugh
worked the Pirates for more
than three hours Saturday,
co ncentrating on ge tting
pitchers into condition for
Tuesday's ex hibition season
opener against the Chicago
Whi te Sox here.
Outfielder Richie Zisk was
hit on the left ankle with a
pitch and taken to ·a local
hospital where X·rays were
negative.

The nome is
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CLASS AAA
fAt Canton )
Green d5 Per r y JJ

CLASS AA
fAt canton l
Doyles town 53 Nor t hwest d9

10 h.p. Wheel Horse tractorcomplete with 38" mower and
electric start; regularly $1250.

Ohio High Schoo l Boys

CLASS AAA
(At Columbus)
Defiance 65 Col Cent ral 56 .
Co l Lind e n 67 C hill icot h e 52
(At Kent)

Tol edo

Sc ott 57

1\:o charge to Ga lli a Co unty residents. other than

P.roperly tax payment, for lransportal ion to the
. p1tal for . emergen~y lrea tmcnl .
· ·
·

CLASS AA
(At Athens)
Wheelersb u rg 66 Co l S f
Cha rl es 65
(At Bowling Green }
Van Wert 53 Willard 44
Lor ain Calh 75 Elmwood 62
(At canton l
Br oo kf ie ld 80 C te Cathedr&amp; l
L at in 76
CLASS A
(At Canton}
Wi nd ham 76 H i llsda l e 67
CLASS AAA
(At Kent)
East Cle Sh aw 56 L orai n
Sout hv iew 48

CLASS AA
CAt D.JytonJ
Cir c l evil le 63 versailles 48
Dayton
Roth - 64
Cl n
G r een h i lls 58
(At Canton}
A kron Sf Vincent -Sf Mary 69
E Pales t ine 57
(At Ath ens )
Wel lsville 60 Coshocton 42

CLASS A
(At Steubenville)
L ucasvi ll e Va l ley 6 1 In dian
Valley N 56
Indi an Va ll ey S 53 F ran k forl
Adena 38
fAt canton)
Monroeville 83 Cu yahoga
H,i!ig hts 81
t

+

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P. 0. Box 172, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
(UP!) - Nine more St. Louis
players arrived for spring
training ~turday, bringing
the number in the Cardinals'
camp to 32.
A spokesman for the
Cardinals said the team had
been told by National League
President Chub Feeney to
play its first exhlbitlon game
with · Detroit' Wednesday so
that all major-league clubs
would start exhibition play at
the same time. The Cards and
their spring training neigh.
bors, the New York Meta, had
planned a delayed first game
In Campbell Park.
Cardinals
in
camp
Saturday for the first time
were outfielders Reggie
Smith, Bake McBtide, Willie
Crawford, Larry Mumphrey
and Charlie Chant, pitchers
Johnny DeMy, Uoyd Allen
and Ken · Reynolds and third
baseman Hector Cruz.

LOUISVILLE, Ky . (UPI)
- Michigan Coach John Orr
said before the NCAA Midwest R~gional Final Saturday
afternoon that his team had
no one to match Missouri's
Willie Smi lb.
He was right. Smith scored
43 points and turned in one of
the outstanding games in
NCAA Tournament history.
But what Michigan did
have was team balance and
that was more than a rna tch

llenry Block has
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capacity gas tank, plu s Hush mounted headlights for added
convenience.

..

Otterbein, Mark Ventstra of
Calvin {Mich.) College,
James Abrams of Akron
University, Bob Grote ·of
Wright State and Merlin
Friend of Oberlin.
Named to the third team
were Jo Joe . MacRae of
Ashland College, Jeff Furry
of
Eastern
Illinois
University, Ron Ripley of the
University of WisconsinGreen Bay, Tommy Fawlkes
of Western Illinois and Todd
Harris of Denison .

LEAKPROOF BUDGET
WASHINGTON (UPI) CIA director George Bush
says he refuses to leak the
agency's budget to Soviet
intelligence.
"Our budget figures are not
made public," Bush told the
National Newspaper
Association Friday. "I don 't
want to help the KGB ."
He said statistics on CIA
spending were supplied " in
enormous
detail
to
congressional committees total disclosure."
Public disclosure, Bush
said, would reveal the
agency's methods and
sources.

saying he felt there had been
sufficient progress in the
negotiations to warrant this
action.
,
Kuhn met with the owners,
the two league presidents,
MacPhail and NL prexy Chub
Feeney, and chief negotiator
John Gaherin Saturday
mor~ing .
The two leagues then split

for individual caucuses. they
were expected to discuss the
manner of expaliBlon as well
as possible consideration of
further negotiations with the
players.
In the expansion talks, the
owners are expected tQ ex~
plore 14-team leagues and the
possibility of lnterleague
play.

'•

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Balance was
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Aprtll, 1t711

FOR IDOFS. MASOIIY and
RUSTED MUll IURFICES

S-801a

MARat 30th

Nine more Cards

Ohio Athletic Conference,
was a leading player named
Saturday to the District Four
AU-Star . team picked by
district coaches.
Others on tthe first ' time
were
Tom
Dunn
of
Wittenberg University, Jeff
Covington of Youngstown
State University, AI Dono!! of
Ohio Northern University and
Dimo Comley of Northern
Michigan University.
Named to lbe second team
were David Broomley of

• Ulrl411cH, tll11· 11Wing Urel

.-

I YESJ

DEFIANCE, Ohio (UP!) Tim Appleton of Kenyon
College, a top scorer in the

• lour·•P"d tranutlulon

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Appleton leading player

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SMJEMS amiJulan ~·e is an emergenc}'·room·On·
l"·neel8 . It •• m ron slanl ra~io contact with the hos.
to rece ive vitaJ life·saving instructions.

send Mi~ouri into. its only after being down by 18 points
read of the game at 76-71.
in the first half.
.
Michigan stormed back to
" I thought Green and
regain the lead at 81-78 on a Hubbard were especially
pair of buckets by Green, four outstanding for us ," he said.
free throws by Robinson and
Missouri lost three starters
a layup by Hubbard.
on fouls - forwards Kim
The Wolverines advanced Anderson and Jim Kennedy
to the final four in and guard Jeff Currie.
Philadelphia Saturday with a . Kennedy was second high
24-li record . They will meet for the Tigers witll 16 points
undefeated Rutgers, the East and freshman center Stan
Regional Charppion, in the Ray came off the bench to
National Semifinals.
contribute 13. points and
The first Missouri team to hauled down 15 rebounds.
reach the NCAA Regionals ·tn
Michigan outrebounded
32 years will return home Missouri 49-45, but the Tigers
with a 26-5 record.
had a slight edge in shooting,
11
This w.a s a great victory 49.4 per cent to 46.7 per cent.
for us," Orr said, 11 But I give
Smith hit 18 of his 35 shots
Missouri a lot of credit the from the field and canned
way they came back on us seven of 11 free throws.

save
$301

East lake

Nortl'1 5J

to score 23 poin\s,
htgh for the winners.
Johnny Robinson added 21
points and freshman center
Phil Hubbard tallied 20 for
the Wolverines.
Michigan coach John Orr
paid tribute to Smith for one
.of the outstanding games in
NCAA Tournament history ,
but he added "We shut him
out when it counted."
Smith, a 6-2 lefthander
expected to be drafted in the
first . round by ihe pros,
collected .29 poinis in the last
half when he took complete
charge of a Missouri team in
heavy foul trouble.
During the stretch when the
tigers overtook Michigan, he
scored nine straight points to

arrive in camp

result.~

Unite d Press International

r~peatedly

Come in and see the PENtHOUSE!

Girls cage

Ba s ketball Tournam e nt
Results
.

committeeman; Merrill Saunders, vice president and treasurer · Jack
Mink, president; Nick Johnson, recording secretary and Ken Tomhnson
stare game protector. Not pictured - Gilbert Meal, secretary.
'

NEW YORK (UPI) Major League baseball .
owners, afrer giving their
Player Relations Commit·
tee a unanimous vote
of
confidence,
antoday
that
nounced
their "best and final
proposal" has been withdrawn from consideration by
the Players Association.
"That proposal has been
withdrawn," said American
League ·President Lee
MacPhail. "We'll wait to
hear theirs now. "
The owners also decided
th.e committee should press
ahead in an attempt to gain
settlement as quickly as
possible.
The "final proposal " by the
owners had included the
''one-and-onC" clause that
the players sought, allowing a
player to become a free agent
one year after his present
contract expired, but limited
his negotiation rights to only
eight teams - in effect, the
eight worst clubs in Major
I..eague Baseball.
After that proposal was
submitted last week, Marvin
Miller, executive director of
t11e Players Associa tion, said
he and his board would take a
se rious look at its contents .
The
players
representatives met all day
Wednesady before rejecting
the offer.
Meanwhile, Baseball
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn
ordered spring training
camps to open after the
ow ners ' 17-day lockout,

for the gallant Tigers.
As a result, Michigan won
95-811, and became the first
Big Ten Conference runnerup
ever to reach the NCAA
National Semifinals . The
Wolverines, now ~. will
meet Rutg ers , the East
Region Champion, in the
NCAA Semis at Philadelphia
Thursday.
"Willie Smith put on· the
best one-man show I've ever
seen/' Orr said. "However,
Dave Baxter saved us in the
last five minutes by holding
· Smith to one goal. Baxter did
a great job coming off the
bench for 18 points after
Steve Grote got in foul
trouble."
A dejected Smith told
reporters, " I'm just not used
to losing - never have been .
We could have gone either
way, bull can't take anything
away from them, they're a
, great team."
Richey Green led Michigan
with 23 points, while team·
mates Johnny Robinson
added 21 points and freshman
center Phil Hubbard contributed 20.

Lonborg looks
good on mound
CLEARWATER, Fla.
( UPJ) - Right-hander Jim
Lonborg pitched three impressive innings Saturday
during the Philadelphia
Phlilies' second intrasquad
game of the season, a 1.0 win
by the Bobby Wines over the
Ray Ripplemyers.
Lonborn, whose season
ended prematurely last
season because of a sore
shoulder, allowed two hits,
struck out three and threw
hard.

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.,•·

�24 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, March 21. 1976

• •

.

•

'

•

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

CAPTA1N FMY
.:'L).,. f i1AT ..JCI~ TO 1'H.f!' R !'SEAR.O::I'I
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'
:'••

SUNDA 1'. M.. rdo 21. 1976

•

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~\ C R OSS

•••'

"

73 co ... erea w11r\
beaas
75 8 1bhcaiQancer
77 Oantsh ISland
78 Wr i1mg tab let
80 Slage whrsp er
8 I ADstt'act Demg
8 2 Slrgmallled
8o1Edrt
86 Experl
87Restore
strength
89 Tne ka¥a
92 Sh()wy !lower
95 Clloose
98 Part ol s1 ove
99 Punctu at1on
mark
101 SQuanders
103 Brother ol Jacob
104 Pedormed
1OS Metal strand
106 Note otscale
107 Spanish lor
" yes "
'
108 Erase (prtnlingl
110 TransgreS$ ion
111 Spanish art icle
11 2 Rocky hiiiS
113 Mass 1ve
115 Sun gOd
111 Girl's name
t t9.Compasspo int
120 Ireland
12 1 Mournrn g
greatly
124 l iQU id rneasure
126 Winler 11eh ic le
127 Novel
128 Powerful

''
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.;
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•

•
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•
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•
•

.... '' .
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'&lt;·'.
•
'

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p~ r sons

1.

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56 Un c over e~

DOWN

sladh,m'1 seats
59 Assaulted
1 A month
60 Mud
2 Per la tnt ng to a
61 Footless
bnde
63 Stunled
3 True to 1t1e lace
65 Ftnal
4 Old French corn
67 Poem
5Papermeasure
69Prelix Wllh
6 Near
70 Make amends
7 Boy
for
8 Reg1on
7 2 Strict
9Enveloo
7 4RomanQOds
10 Church council
76 legal seal
11 Nalt Ye of Lalv ia
!abbr.)
12 Those holdmg
77 Gtve extreme
olttce
unct ion to
13 Manus crtp\
79 Dut ch !own
(abb r I
· 83 De11oured
14 Ja rgon
85 Oes 1re wtlh
I S Worthless
eagerness
lea¥ing
66 Repair
16 Sham
87 Was borne
11 Sp an ish Iitie
Bad
loU
sloth

130 Cr ies l_
i ke dove
132 tmllates
133 Sleeveless
cloak
134 Su 11
18F rntshed
135 Simila r
20
opening
;;;;;;~~·:·,..137 D i llseed~r,-..,/.2.;3~~~"1ii'-,ri~

: : I

•••

139 Knave at card !I
25 P1$Ce
140 Cronres (collOQ t 27 As sen
1•1 Venom
;&gt;S Male swan (pi I
143 levan tme ketch
31 Mergans.er
145 GolF mound
33 Foreman
146 Make read y
36 Elptreo
1~8 Adorned w 1th
38 Uan·s name
panehng
40 Young gu l
t50Seanympns
41W01kman
152 Grrl s name
43 Beauly (Slang)
153Horsesneck
450penend
hatr
46 Gtrl' s name
15 4 The sweet sop
4 7 Monelary
156 Seal
pena lly
1S7 Chemic al
49 Bespaller
compound
51 Fall tnto drsuse
1?8 War god
52 Bod1es of water
159 Rage
53Mou ntams ot
160 South Alrrcan
Europe
Dutchmen
54 Face of watch

.
•

93 ErHhUI!iliSm
9 4 Symbol 101
te llurium
96 Son ot Adam
97 Melody
100 Note ot ecale
102 Weak food
105 Patt ot speech
109 Man' anama
112 Stalemates
113Heatthy
I 141 All
116 Collectiona ot
I acts
118 0~ ol C•lebe.
120 lngretfienl
121 Turns around
track
1221nname 'only
122 Afucan
antelopes
125 F01m of
Insurance
126 Extras
127 SIOfY
129 Peruae
131 Sower
132 fru 11
lJJSoHtude
134 Monetary
pena1tie1
t36Hastens
138 Tnats ·
140 Young salmon
141 Weather

The Aln!aaac
By
United
Press
United Press International
Today is Sunday, March 21,
\he 81st day o1!976 wi\h 285 to
follow .
The moon is approaching
its last quarter .
The morning stars are
Mercury and Venus.
The evening stars are
Mars, Saturn and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are
under U!e sign of Aries.
On tllis day in history:
In 1790, Thomas Jefferson
of Virginia became the first
U.S. Secretary of State. He
Ia ter became the third
president of the United
States.
In 1918, American and German soldiers fought the key
World War ·I !latlle of the
Somme.
1n 1945, 7,000 Allied planes
dropped more than 12,000
tons of explosives on

Germany in a World War II
daytime bombing raid.
In 1962, Soviet Premier
Nik:ita Khrushchev pledged
that Russia would cooperate
wi\h \he United States In
peaceful exploration of
space. (A joint AmericanSoviet space mission was
conducted In July, 1915).

COME IN AND REGimR

PANELING

FOR FREE DOOR PRIZES
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

·SALE STARTS MARCH 22-23-24
-25-26-27-29-30-31
APRIL 1-2~AND 3rd

HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS The U .S. Navy CACHE
program lets vou choose
your
field
now
for
guarenteed training this
summer . Get the lump on
summer job hunters . Pay
star IS at 1360 per mo . from
day you report and we
furnish quarters , food and
health care . To check it out
ca l l or visit your Navvman
al :

1ST PRIZE-15 PCS. PANELING
'89.95 VALUE

2ND PRIZE-"SUNBEAM" COFFEE POT
'25.95 VALUE

3RD PRIZE-DOMINION HAND MIXER

Navy Recruiting Slt~tion
21 1 Columbus Ro,ad
Athens , Oh . 4.5701
(6141 593 ·3566

'11.95 VALUE

ln(b cator

!:4 Br islla
2
144 Bab y'&amp; bed
14 '7 American
essayist
148EQualil y
149 lalf
151 The sell

LAWN
BOY ···

s
A

E

I •

'

.4"x15"

••••' .
•

INSU~

SO SQ. FT. PER ROLL

•!

:·

REG.I

••
• •

8 FT. FURRING

TILE

REG. 59c

SALE

'4.99

T-50 ARROW
STAPLERS

STRIPS

3c: Off

v

153 Parent koll oQ.)
155 Saint fabbr)

BARK
CEILING

ALL

CeiHng Tile

12 SQ. FT.

~ 12"X 12,''

OTHER
TILE IN
STOCK

' ' ..

• :

I

••~:• • .,
•

:·•
••
••.•
!•

SOLID STATE self-propelled 21",
Model8234.

ULABNER

•••

....::
.
••

ANSWE'RED 1&gt;-IAT MfiR.RY
QLJIPr-

•'
•'
·'
~ "'

.

...
.••' '
'

''.•
'

Prefinished

The mower that pushes itself' Sh1elded . all-gear
drive elimtnates belts and pulleys. Appltes power
to t he rear wheels where tt belongs. Mechamcal
tn terlock prevents engtne from starting with
drtve engaged. Solid State tgnttion for quick
start s. under-the-deck muffler for extra-quiet
operation. The dependable LAWN-BOY that
takes the pu sh out of mowing.

HO!Hor-IFI DIDN'f Kl\OW 'JCU
WER~ aoE OF11-IE5MARr!SSf
WO!rlfEN ALIVE' I M16HT HAV~

METLWOOD
DISAPPEARING

SALE
PANELS

SALE

~LING

SPECIALS
4ft.x8ft.

STAIRWAY

GOOD QUALITY LATEX HOUSE PAINT

"STARTING" AT
WOOD PANELING

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

'

.,•'' ..
.'
''

CHESTER

Medium Lauan
OHIO

985-3308

••

IC89·
$43.19

LCNOW
RECEPTAQ.E

-:

.....'' '
.•••..''.•
•

'

'

'.•

1•

I

....•• '
.' .

NOT LETHAL

'

.....'

ENOUGH FOR
HOODS,

'

CLOSE

NO IITII
• J 10 7

RANGE .

20

r' •

WEST
. 9U5i :t
y ~6
.

,.

•

::'

t 103

' •'

o~o Q.l l 08

EAST
•H
¥ .J 10 A 5
• .1 ~87
o!oK 974

So uT II lOt
4 AK (j 2
¥A Q J 2
t A62
4 A5

••

••

l ••

••
•

Both vulnerable

••••

:~
••

•'·
••
,.
•••
'.
••

::
••

I Y, MILES NORTHWEST OF GALLIPOLIS ST. RT. 35

• f • •

••••••

SPECTACULAR NEW IMPROVED TRACK LAYOUT

•••

.....••

RACES

'

RAIN

..

'
:;,
,,

__

•

MARCH 28
MOTOCROSS

JULY 11
MOTOCROSS

APRIL 11
MOTOCROSS

JULY

..

MAY 9
MOTHERS DAY MOTOCROSS

..•.

JUNE 13
MOTOCROSS

=·
••
••••
••
••

Each

ti

N. T. P&lt;tss

Pass

;

•'

• A KQ.J7 65 ¥ 2 . 2 olo J 1098

••'

We wou ld open fotir spades
whether vulnerable or not and
hope for· the best
·

'

4 PLY POLYESTER CORD
WHITEWAll
PERFORMANCE 78

((J o you have a question
lor th e experts? Write "Ask
th e Ja cobys" care o f this
newspaper The Jacobys will
answer indivi dual questions
i f stamped, self-addressed
en velopes are enclosed. The
mosr interesring questions
will be used in this column
and . will recei ve copies -or
JACODY MODERN.)

AS LOW AS

$1795
A78-13
WHITEWALL

PWS '1.74 FET
AND OLD TIRE

South can still make his contract if he can develop a
sq ueeze. The sq ueeze · will
develop · if one opponent stops
both suits. It will fail miserably
if each opponent has a red-sui t
stopper.

'

•'
••'
'•

20%

''

I

•

l/4
''

Red

Bri~ (Cica!out)

114 White Bric:k (Closeout)

f

I

4 PLY POLYESTER

SIZE

It will fa il even more mis~
• Super

19.95
19.95

sires!
perlonner

Srnomrf triple
cy ltnder power

•

E78x14

F.E.T. EACH

1.98

2.25

Cornlortat;lle m:llng '
gr eat handl!ng

•
. ''
'
I

OVER 3500 HUNDRED

ALL AMEROCK

GUnER

E25%

In Stock

REG.

llACI 01 Wtlllt
mtRIOI VIWYL

WHITE PAINT E D
ALUMINUM
SPECIAL
SALE

....... 40%

CARTER AND EVANS INC.

....•'''
o&lt;I

•••'

28c Ft.

•

Adrustabtc tor k and shock s

• Slim des1gn - StiHdy
hghtwctght Jrante
Prier&gt; ~ Plus Freight

1\ 1 OH\1 I l iP\

•••
•••

HIDDEN HIL LS RA CEWA Y

·!·!

PHONE : (614) 44 6·988 1

P . 0 . Bu 732
GaOipo lh, Oh io 456ll

\

,{

sA\.£
C Ft.

87 OLIVE ST.

COMPARE

J&amp;R SPORT
SHOP

,.

$4995

STORE HOURS

0.

~••u.nos

1

PHONE

J

~~~

MEIGS

TIRES

·TIRE CENTER INC.

-

.

PH 992-2101
.j

~46-4464

CASH &amp; CARRY

POMEROY, OHIO

· ·~

.,

'l .

.SALE $319 ...
''Q)MPARE"

5 GAL MOBIL
HOME ROOF OOATING
sA\.£

3-0 6-8-2-8 6-8

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

• Power and haliiilllng
take on any te rrain

And Dl•f'l1•r Pre p;~ ration

I 0I
t I r•

32C Ft .

CROSS BUCK
STORM DOORS

S-turday 7:30 A.M.-4.P. M.

OCTOBER 3
MOTOCROSS
I IOIU

REG. 37c Ft.

REG. '3.99 SHEET

SHEET

Mon.-Fri. 7:30 A.M.-5 P.M.

SEPT. 4 , 5, 6
LABOR DAY RACING WEEKEND

I 01{

"GUTTER"

DOWNSPOUT

RETAIL PRICI::.

$2129

524.99 .

O/ OFF REG •
/0 PRICE

nunc

CABINET GRADE
BIRDt PLYWOOD
sALE

AUGUST 22

JUNE 27
MOTOCROSS

•• •

PIPE
%" 4 ft.x8 ft.

AAll Accessones ·

OFF

(All mothers admitted free)

•••'•.

SEWER &amp; DRAIN
10 FT.

30
$5.99 •4.79

Brandy Birth

OFF

ALL VANITIES
IN STOCK

Ume Paneling
Mint Paneling
Mocha

PANELS IN STOCK
.SAVE-SAVE-SAVE

cards and poor East has to
chuck a diamond or heart
whereupon South runs off the

15.50 ••••
15.50 ••••
$5.99

Size, 4 in c hes .

ALL
HAND TOOLS

Avocado
REG. '35.95

••

Balanced Free.

proct'&lt;.'l h to run off four spades .
J·:veryone is down to seven

2·5

•
'

t

erably if South wins the first
club. South only has II winners
· and must lose the first in order
lo't!O tlJrough the process known
as rectifYing the count.
AnY smart declarer is not g&lt;&gt;ing to worry abou t giving up an
overtnck When the contract is a
slam so South ducks the first
club.
• He wi ns th e second and

SHINE

'

••
.,

."

.OR

NEVER C.I\NCELLED

:••';

=
••·

sii&gt;'-E

A Georgi&lt;J reader wants to

know what to bid as dea ler
with . -

behave'!

::

r

~·

44e

'

TIRES

South can countl3 easy tricks
if hearts and diamonds both
break 3·3. He can count 12 if
either suit breaks. Suppose both
suits are Unkind enough to mis-

.;r,

...

trieks.

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

••'•'

••
,•••• ,
•

P&lt;tSS

South

Opening lead - Q .,.

:'
·~·
'•'
... ••
t.
' l:,.

•

No rth f:ust

Pass

'.
••

..'.•••'

West

2 N. T

••

rest of U1e

·~ " ''"l"' t •
.... ._ f"'lll"'l,~~
.t".i::.'A. • · ,-::; ~v....l~~

.. K 7 4
t K Q 54
... 6 3 2

'

.•••• •
I

l ';I IP~J.~ .

39c:

Squeeze of last resort

USED AT

~

•

':' •

11

UNLESS

'

' I &lt;..

Slc

WIN AT BRIDGE

. &lt;'
I

'\. CEILING BOXES
v
)"
,)
I:j' .C ·.''i : REG . 66c

SALE
REG.

STEEL CITY

-~

t;;,.c/.~

BOXES

• ,. i

'

.--r r

REG.

'19.95

$16

59

SOCKET

�24 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, March 21. 1976

• •

.

•

'

•

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

CAPTA1N FMY
.:'L).,. f i1AT ..JCI~ TO 1'H.f!' R !'SEAR.O::I'I
l ~&amp; -· Atr.JP Yfi.L DR . FA~QUAR. TO
CO'Mf TO IN.f OFF ICE ,,_,,MEDIATSL't'!

'
:'••

SUNDA 1'. M.. rdo 21. 1976

•

....

~\ C R OSS

•••'

"

73 co ... erea w11r\
beaas
75 8 1bhcaiQancer
77 Oantsh ISland
78 Wr i1mg tab let
80 Slage whrsp er
8 I ADstt'act Demg
8 2 Slrgmallled
8o1Edrt
86 Experl
87Restore
strength
89 Tne ka¥a
92 Sh()wy !lower
95 Clloose
98 Part ol s1 ove
99 Punctu at1on
mark
101 SQuanders
103 Brother ol Jacob
104 Pedormed
1OS Metal strand
106 Note otscale
107 Spanish lor
" yes "
'
108 Erase (prtnlingl
110 TransgreS$ ion
111 Spanish art icle
11 2 Rocky hiiiS
113 Mass 1ve
115 Sun gOd
111 Girl's name
t t9.Compasspo int
120 Ireland
12 1 Mournrn g
greatly
124 l iQU id rneasure
126 Winler 11eh ic le
127 Novel
128 Powerful

''
.'•

.;
••
:• :·
•

•
•
••

·.

•
••

•
•

.... '' .
•s • •

'&lt;·'.
•
'

..
..

p~ r sons

1.

=·..
.: '
....' ''' .

56 Un c over e~

DOWN

sladh,m'1 seats
59 Assaulted
1 A month
60 Mud
2 Per la tnt ng to a
61 Footless
bnde
63 Stunled
3 True to 1t1e lace
65 Ftnal
4 Old French corn
67 Poem
5Papermeasure
69Prelix Wllh
6 Near
70 Make amends
7 Boy
for
8 Reg1on
7 2 Strict
9Enveloo
7 4RomanQOds
10 Church council
76 legal seal
11 Nalt Ye of Lalv ia
!abbr.)
12 Those holdmg
77 Gtve extreme
olttce
unct ion to
13 Manus crtp\
79 Dut ch !own
(abb r I
· 83 De11oured
14 Ja rgon
85 Oes 1re wtlh
I S Worthless
eagerness
lea¥ing
66 Repair
16 Sham
87 Was borne
11 Sp an ish Iitie
Bad
loU
sloth

130 Cr ies l_
i ke dove
132 tmllates
133 Sleeveless
cloak
134 Su 11
18F rntshed
135 Simila r
20
opening
;;;;;;~~·:·,..137 D i llseed~r,-..,/.2.;3~~~"1ii'-,ri~

: : I

•••

139 Knave at card !I
25 P1$Ce
140 Cronres (collOQ t 27 As sen
1•1 Venom
;&gt;S Male swan (pi I
143 levan tme ketch
31 Mergans.er
145 GolF mound
33 Foreman
146 Make read y
36 Elptreo
1~8 Adorned w 1th
38 Uan·s name
panehng
40 Young gu l
t50Seanympns
41W01kman
152 Grrl s name
43 Beauly (Slang)
153Horsesneck
450penend
hatr
46 Gtrl' s name
15 4 The sweet sop
4 7 Monelary
156 Seal
pena lly
1S7 Chemic al
49 Bespaller
compound
51 Fall tnto drsuse
1?8 War god
52 Bod1es of water
159 Rage
53Mou ntams ot
160 South Alrrcan
Europe
Dutchmen
54 Face of watch

.
•

93 ErHhUI!iliSm
9 4 Symbol 101
te llurium
96 Son ot Adam
97 Melody
100 Note ot ecale
102 Weak food
105 Patt ot speech
109 Man' anama
112 Stalemates
113Heatthy
I 141 All
116 Collectiona ot
I acts
118 0~ ol C•lebe.
120 lngretfienl
121 Turns around
track
1221nname 'only
122 Afucan
antelopes
125 F01m of
Insurance
126 Extras
127 SIOfY
129 Peruae
131 Sower
132 fru 11
lJJSoHtude
134 Monetary
pena1tie1
t36Hastens
138 Tnats ·
140 Young salmon
141 Weather

The Aln!aaac
By
United
Press
United Press International
Today is Sunday, March 21,
\he 81st day o1!976 wi\h 285 to
follow .
The moon is approaching
its last quarter .
The morning stars are
Mercury and Venus.
The evening stars are
Mars, Saturn and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are
under U!e sign of Aries.
On tllis day in history:
In 1790, Thomas Jefferson
of Virginia became the first
U.S. Secretary of State. He
Ia ter became the third
president of the United
States.
In 1918, American and German soldiers fought the key
World War ·I !latlle of the
Somme.
1n 1945, 7,000 Allied planes
dropped more than 12,000
tons of explosives on

Germany in a World War II
daytime bombing raid.
In 1962, Soviet Premier
Nik:ita Khrushchev pledged
that Russia would cooperate
wi\h \he United States In
peaceful exploration of
space. (A joint AmericanSoviet space mission was
conducted In July, 1915).

COME IN AND REGimR

PANELING

FOR FREE DOOR PRIZES
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

·SALE STARTS MARCH 22-23-24
-25-26-27-29-30-31
APRIL 1-2~AND 3rd

HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS The U .S. Navy CACHE
program lets vou choose
your
field
now
for
guarenteed training this
summer . Get the lump on
summer job hunters . Pay
star IS at 1360 per mo . from
day you report and we
furnish quarters , food and
health care . To check it out
ca l l or visit your Navvman
al :

1ST PRIZE-15 PCS. PANELING
'89.95 VALUE

2ND PRIZE-"SUNBEAM" COFFEE POT
'25.95 VALUE

3RD PRIZE-DOMINION HAND MIXER

Navy Recruiting Slt~tion
21 1 Columbus Ro,ad
Athens , Oh . 4.5701
(6141 593 ·3566

'11.95 VALUE

ln(b cator

!:4 Br islla
2
144 Bab y'&amp; bed
14 '7 American
essayist
148EQualil y
149 lalf
151 The sell

LAWN
BOY ···

s
A

E

I •

'

.4"x15"

••••' .
•

INSU~

SO SQ. FT. PER ROLL

•!

:·

REG.I

••
• •

8 FT. FURRING

TILE

REG. 59c

SALE

'4.99

T-50 ARROW
STAPLERS

STRIPS

3c: Off

v

153 Parent koll oQ.)
155 Saint fabbr)

BARK
CEILING

ALL

CeiHng Tile

12 SQ. FT.

~ 12"X 12,''

OTHER
TILE IN
STOCK

' ' ..

• :

I

••~:• • .,
•

:·•
••
••.•
!•

SOLID STATE self-propelled 21",
Model8234.

ULABNER

•••

....::
.
••

ANSWE'RED 1&gt;-IAT MfiR.RY
QLJIPr-

•'
•'
·'
~ "'

.

...
.••' '
'

''.•
'

Prefinished

The mower that pushes itself' Sh1elded . all-gear
drive elimtnates belts and pulleys. Appltes power
to t he rear wheels where tt belongs. Mechamcal
tn terlock prevents engtne from starting with
drtve engaged. Solid State tgnttion for quick
start s. under-the-deck muffler for extra-quiet
operation. The dependable LAWN-BOY that
takes the pu sh out of mowing.

HO!Hor-IFI DIDN'f Kl\OW 'JCU
WER~ aoE OF11-IE5MARr!SSf
WO!rlfEN ALIVE' I M16HT HAV~

METLWOOD
DISAPPEARING

SALE
PANELS

SALE

~LING

SPECIALS
4ft.x8ft.

STAIRWAY

GOOD QUALITY LATEX HOUSE PAINT

"STARTING" AT
WOOD PANELING

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

'

.,•'' ..
.'
''

CHESTER

Medium Lauan
OHIO

985-3308

••

IC89·
$43.19

LCNOW
RECEPTAQ.E

-:

.....'' '
.•••..''.•
•

'

'

'.•

1•

I

....•• '
.' .

NOT LETHAL

'

.....'

ENOUGH FOR
HOODS,

'

CLOSE

NO IITII
• J 10 7

RANGE .

20

r' •

WEST
. 9U5i :t
y ~6
.

,.

•

::'

t 103

' •'

o~o Q.l l 08

EAST
•H
¥ .J 10 A 5
• .1 ~87
o!oK 974

So uT II lOt
4 AK (j 2
¥A Q J 2
t A62
4 A5

••

••

l ••

••
•

Both vulnerable

••••

:~
••

•'·
••
,.
•••
'.
••

::
••

I Y, MILES NORTHWEST OF GALLIPOLIS ST. RT. 35

• f • •

••••••

SPECTACULAR NEW IMPROVED TRACK LAYOUT

•••

.....••

RACES

'

RAIN

..

'
:;,
,,

__

•

MARCH 28
MOTOCROSS

JULY 11
MOTOCROSS

APRIL 11
MOTOCROSS

JULY

..

MAY 9
MOTHERS DAY MOTOCROSS

..•.

JUNE 13
MOTOCROSS

=·
••
••••
••
••

Each

ti

N. T. P&lt;tss

Pass

;

•'

• A KQ.J7 65 ¥ 2 . 2 olo J 1098

••'

We wou ld open fotir spades
whether vulnerable or not and
hope for· the best
·

'

4 PLY POLYESTER CORD
WHITEWAll
PERFORMANCE 78

((J o you have a question
lor th e experts? Write "Ask
th e Ja cobys" care o f this
newspaper The Jacobys will
answer indivi dual questions
i f stamped, self-addressed
en velopes are enclosed. The
mosr interesring questions
will be used in this column
and . will recei ve copies -or
JACODY MODERN.)

AS LOW AS

$1795
A78-13
WHITEWALL

PWS '1.74 FET
AND OLD TIRE

South can still make his contract if he can develop a
sq ueeze. The sq ueeze · will
develop · if one opponent stops
both suits. It will fail miserably
if each opponent has a red-sui t
stopper.

'

•'
••'
'•

20%

''

I

•

l/4
''

Red

Bri~ (Cica!out)

114 White Bric:k (Closeout)

f

I

4 PLY POLYESTER

SIZE

It will fa il even more mis~
• Super

19.95
19.95

sires!
perlonner

Srnomrf triple
cy ltnder power

•

E78x14

F.E.T. EACH

1.98

2.25

Cornlortat;lle m:llng '
gr eat handl!ng

•
. ''
'
I

OVER 3500 HUNDRED

ALL AMEROCK

GUnER

E25%

In Stock

REG.

llACI 01 Wtlllt
mtRIOI VIWYL

WHITE PAINT E D
ALUMINUM
SPECIAL
SALE

....... 40%

CARTER AND EVANS INC.

....•'''
o&lt;I

•••'

28c Ft.

•

Adrustabtc tor k and shock s

• Slim des1gn - StiHdy
hghtwctght Jrante
Prier&gt; ~ Plus Freight

1\ 1 OH\1 I l iP\

•••
•••

HIDDEN HIL LS RA CEWA Y

·!·!

PHONE : (614) 44 6·988 1

P . 0 . Bu 732
GaOipo lh, Oh io 456ll

\

,{

sA\.£
C Ft.

87 OLIVE ST.

COMPARE

J&amp;R SPORT
SHOP

,.

$4995

STORE HOURS

0.

~••u.nos

1

PHONE

J

~~~

MEIGS

TIRES

·TIRE CENTER INC.

-

.

PH 992-2101
.j

~46-4464

CASH &amp; CARRY

POMEROY, OHIO

· ·~

.,

'l .

.SALE $319 ...
''Q)MPARE"

5 GAL MOBIL
HOME ROOF OOATING
sA\.£

3-0 6-8-2-8 6-8

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

• Power and haliiilllng
take on any te rrain

And Dl•f'l1•r Pre p;~ ration

I 0I
t I r•

32C Ft .

CROSS BUCK
STORM DOORS

S-turday 7:30 A.M.-4.P. M.

OCTOBER 3
MOTOCROSS
I IOIU

REG. 37c Ft.

REG. '3.99 SHEET

SHEET

Mon.-Fri. 7:30 A.M.-5 P.M.

SEPT. 4 , 5, 6
LABOR DAY RACING WEEKEND

I 01{

"GUTTER"

DOWNSPOUT

RETAIL PRICI::.

$2129

524.99 .

O/ OFF REG •
/0 PRICE

nunc

CABINET GRADE
BIRDt PLYWOOD
sALE

AUGUST 22

JUNE 27
MOTOCROSS

•• •

PIPE
%" 4 ft.x8 ft.

AAll Accessones ·

OFF

(All mothers admitted free)

•••'•.

SEWER &amp; DRAIN
10 FT.

30
$5.99 •4.79

Brandy Birth

OFF

ALL VANITIES
IN STOCK

Ume Paneling
Mint Paneling
Mocha

PANELS IN STOCK
.SAVE-SAVE-SAVE

cards and poor East has to
chuck a diamond or heart
whereupon South runs off the

15.50 ••••
15.50 ••••
$5.99

Size, 4 in c hes .

ALL
HAND TOOLS

Avocado
REG. '35.95

••

Balanced Free.

proct'&lt;.'l h to run off four spades .
J·:veryone is down to seven

2·5

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erably if South wins the first
club. South only has II winners
· and must lose the first in order
lo't!O tlJrough the process known
as rectifYing the count.
AnY smart declarer is not g&lt;&gt;ing to worry abou t giving up an
overtnck When the contract is a
slam so South ducks the first
club.
• He wi ns th e second and

SHINE

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NEVER C.I\NCELLED

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A Georgi&lt;J reader wants to

know what to bid as dea ler
with . -

behave'!

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TIRES

South can countl3 easy tricks
if hearts and diamonds both
break 3·3. He can count 12 if
either suit breaks. Suppose both
suits are Unkind enough to mis-

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trieks.

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

••'•'

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Squeeze of last resort

USED AT

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WIN AT BRIDGE

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SALE
REG.

STEEL CITY

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BOXES

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'19.95

$16

59

SOCKET

�26 - The Sunday Tunes Senltnel Sunda} Ma rch 21 1976

County agent's corner
POMEROY - Dave Boothe Vtnton County agrtt11ltural
agent ts conducting a tour to COBA Select Sires on Fnday
March 26
In the mornmg actual operations mvolved tn semen
collection bull handlln~ and all the beef and datry stres
housed at thetr factltties m Columbus wtll be observed
Followmg lunch there wlll be an opporturuty to learn how
semen Is processed for later use by cattleman and to ask any
questions on setung up an A I program for a herd learmng to
do A I oneself costs etc
They will pool ndes meeting m front of the Courthouse m
McArthur at 8 30 a m Dave wtll have detatled maps and
programs at thai time
If anyone from Metgs County ts mterested m gomg please
call 596-5606 or 384-4527
VETERINARIANS IN Jackson 1\Utens Metgs Vmton
and surrounding counttes m Southern Ohto are reportmg an
unusually htgh mctdence of blackleg mfectwn tn cattle durmg
the last few weeks
Blackleg IS caused by a bactenal orgamsm whtch can
survive m the sotl for many years Suscepltble cattle may
contact the orgamsrn and develop the mfeclton
Blackleg lS a very acute mfeclton of the heavy muscles of
Ute animal Sudden death ts usually the ftrst md rotton of

By John C Rice

County Extension
Agent Agriculture
mfectton m the herd Anunals less than two years of age are
most susceptible to the dtsease The disease IS seen most
common!} on pasture but may occur m dry lot
The present blackleg outbreak appears to he rather
widespread earlier m the year than usual and m dry lot and
pasture A safe and eflecttve \ accme 1s avatlable for blackleg
Herd history and management pract1ces determme the best
bme to gtve the vaccme to calves
Herd owners who are concerned about lhts condihon or
who have experienced losses should contact !hetr local
veterinarian for d1agnos1s and proper recommendations for
vaccmat1on
Some calves that have been vaccmated at a very early age
may have to he revaccmated Several cases have been seen m
cattle whtch were vaccmated as very small calves Your
veterinarian can advise you as to the need for revaccmation m

By Bryson R 1Bud) Carter
Galh • County Extens10n Agent
GALUPOUS - An tn
tensive
two year datry
program 1s offered at the
Agncultural Techmcal In
stitute (ATI) tn Wooster ATI
a un1 t of the Ohto State
Umverstly
College
of
Agnculture and
Home
awards an
Economtcs
Assoctale Degree to students
completmg tls two year
spec1ahzed curriculum
Students concentrate on
Ute techmcal datry related
subjects such as datry cattle
production judgmg anatomy
and phystology agronomy
nutritton genetics fteld crop
produchon datry cattle
heallh mtlk produclton and
sanltatton datry cattle
breeding and datry operatiOn
management Yet support
areas
such
as
com
mumcallons math natural
and
soctal
sc1ences
agncultural busmess and
mechanics are also 1m
portant
Emphasis 1s placed on
students abiltly to appl)
Utese pnnctples m pracltcal
situallons As much hands
on expertence as poss1 ble is
provided where the students
work directly wtth the
animals The Institute plus
1ts students manage 1 600
acres of farmland whtch
prov1des an excellent lear
nmg laboratory ATI also
cooperates w1th Ute OARDC
whtch 1s adJacent to the In
stitute m the use of the1r
anunals and facthltes
In addition each student
must par!tctpate m an on the
job mternsh1p exper1ence
whtch usually lakes place the
summer between the ftrst
and second year of classes for
Ute datry students Durmg
thts time students fmd a JOb
in Ute dairy mdustry and
rece1ve pay as a regular
employee whtle gammg
practical expenence
The students have formed
an active A I Datry Club
whtch
sponsored an
I wt!h the
FFA judgmg c
AT! Uvestock
ub at the
Franklin County Fairgrounds
February 28 The club took a
successful tr1p last year over
Sprmg break to VISit some of
Ute outstandmg New England
dalry operations The group
plans to make thts tr1p an
annual event
perhaps
vtst!tng datry farms m
M1ch1gan and Wtsconsm th1s
year
Many graduates of ATI s
Datry Technology return to a
home datry farm or to a farm
of their own Others fmd JObs
as datry herdsmen sales
represenla!tves technicians

mspeclors or manag rs
AT! s job placement rate on
the whole and m the dairy
program tn parllcular has
been excellent
Chuck Covert son of Mr
and Mrs Ernest Covert of
Rw Grande 1s currently
enrolled m the L vestock
Production program at ATI
Chuck w1ll be leavmg soon for
Nebraska for on the JOb
trammg at the Umted States
Research Center
For more tnformatton on
AT! s datry technology or
mternsh1p programs call me
at the Galha County Ex
tens1on Office at 446-4612
extenston 32 or contact Mr
Ernest Oelker Datry Tech
Head
The Agncultural
Techmcal Institute Wooster
Oh10 44691 or call (216) 264
3911

Local Bowling
WED AFTER NOON

FOURSOME
Sky I ne Lanes
March 17 1976
Won Lost
Foun an of Youth
130
86
Na on a M ne Se rv 130
86
Georges Grocery
12 7
89
Bllsy Beaul y Salon
7
99
Sparky s Sunoco
107
0
So mevleRE
05
The Hoo Ow s
76
30
Lee Supp y
72
44
Ed th Jackson had h gh
game and ser es 208 5 4
Sparky s Su noco had h gh
team game and se es 749
2039
Sparky s Sunoco ook s x
po n s fro m Founta n of
Youth A I ce Chapman had
h gh game and ser es 208 514
for Founta n of You h
Busy Beau y Sa on l ook
e ght po n s from Lee Suppl y
Joy ce Mooney had h gh game
6d and se es d60 fo Busy
Beau y Sa on Je an tra g had
h gh game and se es 141 381
for L ee Supp y
Nat ona M ne Se v ce ook
s x po n s from Some rv le
Rea Es ate J nny W ams
had ll gil game and ser es 7
463 for. Na on a M ne Ser
v ce
Jane Bowes had h gh qame
and
ser es
69 4 5
for
Somerv I e Real Estate
Georges G ocery took s x
po n s from The Hoot Ow s
Marlyn Sm tllllad h gil game
and
ser es
67 438
for
Georges G ace y V g n a
Darst had h gh game and
ser es 135 364 fo the Hoo
Owls
A ce Chapman p eke d up
the 4 10 and he 3 7 spl s
Skyl ne Lanes
Thursday Afternoon
Sw ngers Bowhng League
March 11 '176
Comm &amp; Sav ngs
l-42 58
Johnson s Mkt H
125 75
S ar e Inn
120 80
He ner s Bakery
119 81
Bur~er Chef
107 93
Eve yn s Beauty Sho p 10
99
Rard n s Shoe Center 100 100
B J Bu lders
9 109
Johnson s Mkl P P t 86 114
Pt P Reg ster
86 114
Robb ns &amp; Meye s
67 133
HOI ey B OS Con s
54 146
H gh
eam !ier es
Commerc a &amp; Sav ngs l 7S7
Johnson s PI Pleasant 1 712
Heners
1649
lnd v dual h gh ser es
Mev Ward 585 0 Hern 544
J Gray 523 N Marcum 622
P Sommer 616 V Jordan

Television Log

l:ly JOHN COOPER
Soil Conservation Service
POINT PLEASANT - We
have
ass1sted
the
Agncultural Stablhzalton
and Conservation Servtce m
trammg people m the use of
Tordon the herb1c1de used
currently for the control and
eradtcatwn of mulhftora
rose Tordon has been used
expenmentally for about four
years and has been proven to

SUNDAY MARCH 21
13
6 3D-This Week

4 Gospe S nglng Jubilee 6
Viewpoint 8 Public Polley Forum 10
7 CJO-Chrlstopher Closeup 3 Film 4 Talking Hands 8
Spring Street USA 13
7 3D-Tills Is the Lite 3 Your Health 4 Jerry Falwell
8 Revival Fires 6 Camera Three 10 Newsmaker

75 13
7 55-Black Cameo 4
8 DO-Mormon Choir 3 Day of Discovery 4 Gospe
Caravan 6 Church Service 10 REv Homer Click

be very effech ve Ex
your area
penmental evtdence has
Smce blackleg lives m the sotl for years tl 1s tmport.ant shown that when 1! 1s used as
that ammals whtch dte of thts condttion be disposed of
dtrected 1t 1s safe wt!h no
promptly and properly m order to prevent spread of the
adverse stde effects
disease to ftelds and pastures Dead ammals should be either
Mrs Vtrglma Rayburn of
buried deeply after covermg w1Ut lune or completely Ute ASCS offtce satd 275
mcmerated Thlgs btrds etc should not be allowed to feed on landowners m Mason County
the carcasses of arumals which dte
have requested cost sharmg
TALK BUSINESS -Earl Durham manager of Ute Gallipolis Central Soya and Terry
through that agency for the
Lakin
prestdentof the Gallta County Amencan Prtvate Enterprise Study Group dtscussed
apphcallon of Tordon She
the
program
top1c at Thursday s study sessiOn at Rto Grande College
can accept requests for
another week or ten days
from people who have not
already made apphcahon for
cost sharmg All landowners
expectmg to use Tordon
GAlLIPOLIS
Earl tictpated 1n programs s1mllar and Doug Mtller
through the cost sharmg are
Rtck Alhzer program
supply
problems
was requtred to attend the Durham manager of Central to the one m Galha County
By BERNARD BRENNER
leader
sa1d the next meeting
Soya m Ga lhpohs meeting
Youth scholars present at
underlmed by the fact that m trammg meetmg
UP! Farm Editor
be
held
m the President s
wtll
Prestdent Ford s budget
ORDERS HAVE been Thursday evemng w1th the lhe sesston last Thursday
WASHINGTON (UP!) board
room
at Rto Grande
The Senate Agriculture proposals the Agrtculture commg m for the wtldhfe Galha County Amencan mght were Becky Layne
College
March
25 when the
Committee ts urgmg Senate Department 1s the only maJor packets avatlable through the Prtvate Enterprise Study Jun10r Leader Sherte Cox
w1ll
be
The
top1c
budget leaders to appropriate federal agency showmg a cut Western Sotl Conservahon Group at Rto Grande College Usa Wells Judy Cox Betsy
Relahonship
of
Government
$2 7 btlhon more than m spendmg authority from Distr1ct However there are discussed Busmess m the cams Gmny Powell Ant!a
to Prtvate Busmess
and
Tom Cams
Prestdent Ford wants to five years ago
s!tll some that can he sold to Un ted States and the Campbell
of
Orgamzmg
to
do
Ways
Contrast thts to the budget addi!tonal people who would Essenltals for a Succjlssful Debbte Stapleton Terry
spend on AgriCulture Depart
Busmess
11
ith
Dr
Busmess
Lakin Lynne Lew1s Beth
ment farm and food request for the Department of hke to have them
Lawrence Butcher m charge
Queshomng from the youth Harnson Rtchard Ingles
programs m Ute 1977 ftscal Housmg and Urban Develop
Some of the Colorado blue
co ncerned
ment which 1s up more than spruce and whtte pme have sc hol ars
year
ngred1ents for success m
The panel m a report to the ftve fold Labor and State already been dehvered to the
Senate Budget Committee which have more than d1slrtct and are hemg kept m bus ness and conditiOns
which must soon set a doubled and NASA whtch 1s cold storage unttl Ute other needed for success Durham
tentat1ve overall level for recetvtng more dollars today trees and shrubs are expressed hiS confidence m
government spendmg m m a phasedown period than 1! recetved The packets w1ll be Ute free enterprise system
f1scal 1977 sa1d about a lhtrd was f1ve years ago when tt made up after all trees and and the economiC pnncipal of
supply and demand
of 1ts proposed mcrease "as was shootmg for the moon
shrubs have heen recetved
After
the
tn depth
suggested because 1t heheves the Agriculture Committee
The plants avallable m thts
report sa1d
wtldhfe packet are Colorado discussion sessiOn the youth
Under Ford s budget Blue Spruce Norway Spruce
scholars took one of several
Invited
proposals
Agrtculture
qwzzes to be g1ven durmg the
Ford overestunated probable
Scotch Pine Whtte Pine
savmgs m the food stamp Department spendmg of Chmese Chestnut Stlky 10 week semmar Top per
$14 680 btlhon m the current Dogwood F tlbert Wayfarmg formers on these qwzzes will
program
But m many other areas 1976 ftscal year would be cut Tree
Vtburnum
and he awarded a tnp to Purdue
Umverslty m Lafayette
to
$11
8
b1U1on
for
the
1977
the farm bloc lawmakers satd
Sawtooth Oak
budget
year
whtch
begms
they recommend mcreases
Orders are still bemg taken Ind where they w1ll par
Oct
1
The
Senate
because the admtrustrahon
at the Distnct office 230 \2 tic1pate in competitiOn for
Agriculture
Commtt!ee
satd
college scholarships and cash
has proposed til advtsed
Mam Street Pt Pleasant
1ts
recommendatiOns
would
reductions m other food
The pnce 1s $7 each payable awards wt!h young people
brmg
the
f1gure
back
to
from Oh o Indtana and
ass1stance and m spending
1n advance
$14
609
b1lhon
shghtly
below
for farm programs rangmg
THE WESTERN SOIL Tennessee who have par
the
current
year
from conservation to rural
ConservatiOn D1stnct Board - - - ' - - - - - - - .1'7
241hru27
While the food stamp and of Superv1sors held 1ts prov1ded to landowners by 1--:
econom1c development
The Senate report showed other consumer a1d programs regular meetmg 1n Pt the Western So1l Con
most of Ute proposed mcrease currently take a much Pleasant Several 1tems of servation Dtstrtc! and IS .,r.;
over admmtslratton spending greater share of the mterest were discussed at the owned by the State So1l 1-§
7
Department meetmg
Conservation Comm 1ttee
'}'......r
proposals - nearly $2 3 Agriculture
bllhon - was m food atd budget Utan tn the past the
One of these was that the wh tle the techmcal ass1stance
sa1d
11
was
Senate
Comm1ttee
to landowners 1s provtded by
programs
where
the
Dtstrtc! would be a co
not
seekmg
to
blame
that
Sotl
ConservatiO n Service
lawm akers
tndtcated
sponsor for a Grassland Fteld
development
for
declmes
m
personnel
Congress was unhkely to
Day wh1ch w1ll be held m
THERE WAS considerable
accept all cuts proposed by fa rm related spe ndmg It Jackson County on May 29 at
NO PURCHASE
dLscusswn concernmg the two
the Wlute House Less than satd Ute problem hes m the Ute Estel Stmmons farm
NECESSARY
$500 million of the mcrease fact that such spendmg would John Smtih Grassland watersheds that the dls!rtc! 1s
Just
co me n o wnte
mcludtng $121 mtlhon for get less than one hall of 1 per Spectal st of the West co-sponsormg These are the
n
to
eg s le dur ng
added agncultural research cent of the total federal V~rgmta Department of Pocatalu;o Watershed part
B rthday Pa ty Sale
budget
under
Ford s
mvolved farm programs
L m t one ent y per
Agnculture was present and of whtch 1s 10 Jackson County
p erson
The
report
sa1d proposals compared .. lth 2 3 talked over detatls of the and the Mtll Creek Watershed
admmtstration planners have per cent m ftscal 1972
Fteld Day w1th Ute dtstnct n Jackson County
One example Agrtcultural
not gtven a h1gh enough
The D1str~ct ts agam
superv1sors
pr10r1ty to farm programs m research
Thts fteld day would be sponsonng a conservation
The senate report sa1d such
vtew of the growmg urgency
Slmtlar
to the one held on the test Which Wlll be held m all
Serv1ng Me1gs Gall1a
of mcreasmg food produchon studies are of prune unpor Gus Douglass fann m Mason lhe btology classes of the
&amp; Mason Count1es
to meet mmg domest1c and lance to mcreasmg food Coun ty last year However 11 dtstnct Michael Whalen
Jack W Carsey Mgr
productiOn but the support
world needs
of Secondary
Ph 992 2181
was brought out by Mr Smtih Director
Wtthout
adequate for agncultural research that Utat more ed uca\ tonal m Education 1n Mason County
Store Hou rs
Store Open 8 30 5 30
programs m agnculture the Prestdent 1s requestmg 1s formahon
would
be 1s working with the dts!rtc! to
Mill Closes at S p m
many of the other (federal ) m real terms substantia Uy presented
brmg
about
the
ad
~rVtnJ.: Oh u,l A,.;nculrurc
for over -It\ Yc 1rs
programs w1ll soon become below ftve years ago
mtmstrahon of the test m all
Depart
George
Warrtck
In
constant
dollars
moot
Ute report charged
menl of Natural Resources Ute Mason County Bwlogy
Agnculture Comm1ttee ( discounlmg inflalton) the Reclamalton Inspector was classrooms
v
spo kesmen
sa 1d
the budget request for the present and dtscussed wtlh
Agrtcultural
Research
admtmstra twn s lack of
Ute board posstbihtles for
You Can Save Now Our
concern for farm and food serviCe 1s down 40 per ce nt reclamation on some of the
from a decade ago the report
strip mmed areas m Mason
S&amp;ld
607
These facts stand out as County that have not been
H gh earn game
Burger
Chef62 1 Johnson s P P 614
the stark md1cators of a revegelated to thls hme
Com mere a &amp; Sav ings 613
We were there and reported
dilemna soybeans and corn
l ndlv d ua l h gh game - M
to
the board that 46 000 feet of
Ward 229 H Marcum 223 0
research are less glamorous
Hern
N Marcum 250
S
tile
had been Installed on 13
than
research
on
F' e ds 24 1 P Sommer 236
landowners
farms m Mason
Sp ts p eked up - Helen mlSSies but 1t Is research
County
m
recent
months and
Lyon s 56 V rg n a Grover 5
that y1elds meanmgful
7
Mev Wa d 56
Neva
that
30
000
feel
of
hie had
Casella 2 8 1 and 3 10 Lo s beneftts and mcreases the
Installed
on
the
Jack
been
Rob nette 3 10 Opal Caslo 5
food supply Ute Agrtculture
7 Pa Harr s 54 7
Crank
farm
We
would
pomt
Conunttlee argued
t that the dttcher 1s

13
8 3~ral Roberts 3 Yours lor the Asking 4 Day of
Discovery 8 James Rob son Presents 10 Rex

Humbard 13 Open Bible IS
9 oo-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3 Hour of Power 4 Oral
Roberts10 Re• Hum bard 6 REv Leonard Repass
8 Across the Fnce 15
9 3D-What Does the Bible Plainly Say? 8 Ills Wr lien
10
10 oo--church Service 3

Successful business is study topic

You're

11 3D-TV Chapel 3

4

tacular 8 10

4 3D-Movie
S oo-Window

American

:

Clyde B Walker Mgr

•

Strangers tn lhe

Ourstory 33

Outdoorsman

15

American

I ssues

Sonny &amp; Cher 8 10 Nova 20 33
9 DO-McCloud 3 4 15 Movie Charlie s Angels 6 3
KoJaK 8 10 Masterp ece Theatre 20 33
10 0!1--'-Bronk 8 10 Bill Moyers Journa 20 33
10 JD-Mov1e Mosl Wanled 6 13
11 oo-News 3 ~ 8 10 15 Monty Pylhon sF ylng C reus
20 Kup s Show 33
II 1s-&lt;:BS News 8 10 PMA Pulse 15
11 Jo--Star Trek J Bonanza 4 Move Irish Eyes Are
Smiling 8 Face the Nat on 10 Don Kirshner s

Rock Concert 15 Soundstage 20
12 DO-ABC News 6 Hawaii Five 0 10
Janak! 33
12 15--B g Valley 6
12 30--Bonanza 4

Ironside 13

News

3

News 20

1 3D-Peyton Place 4 ABC News 13

Farmllme 10
6 45--Mornlng Report 3
6 ss-&lt;:huck While Reports 10 Good Morn ng Tr
Sta le 13 7 00- Today 3 4 IS Good Morn ng
America 6 13 CBS News 8 Bugs Bunny &amp; Fr ends
10
7 3D-Schoolles o
7 45--Sesame Sf 33
Kangaroo 8 10

8 3D-Btg Valley 6
9 DO-Not lor Women Only 3 Phil Donahue 4 15 Lucy
Show 8 Mike Douglas 10 Morning with 0 J 13
9 3D-A M 3 One Life to Live 6 Tattletales 8 Mike
;

Douglas 13

;, 10 ()()-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3 4 IS Edge of Night 6
~
Price Is Right 8 10
10 3D-High Rollers 3 4 IS Olnah 6
~ 11 oo-Wheel of Fortune 3 15 Weekday 4 Gamb t

•
..

8 10

Farmers Daughter 13

Elec Co 20

: 11 3D-Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Happy Days 13 Love
•
of Life 8 10 Sesame S 20 33
~ 11 55-Take Kerr 8 Oan Imel s World 10

..~ 12 oo-Magnlflcenl Marble Mach ine 3 15 Let s Make a
:
Deal13 Bob Braun s50 50Ciub4 News6 8 tO
• 12 3D-Take My Advice 3 15 All My Ch ldren 6 13
:

Search for Tomorrow 8 10

::.~ 12

•
:
•
••

45--E lee Co 33
12 55-NBC News 3 15
1 oo-News 3 Ryans Hope 6 13 Phil Donahue 8
Young &amp;the Restless 10 Not lor Women Only 15
1 3D-Days of Our Lives 3 4 15 Rhyme &amp; Reason 6 13
As the World Turns 8 10

2 ()()-$20 000 Pyramid 13 Formby s Antique Fur
nlfure Workshop 6
2 3D-Doctors 3 • 15 Neighbors 6 13 Guiding Light
8 10
3 oo-Another World 3 4 15 General Hospital 6 13 All
In The Family 8 10 Woman 20
3 JO-Onellle fo live 1• Mickey Mouse Club 6 Match
Game 8 10 Consumer Survival Kit 20 4 oo-Mister
Cartoon 3 Merv Gr ffln 4

=

Somerset 15

Max B

Nimble 6 Mickey Mouse Club 8 Mister Rogers
:
20 33 Movie Tension at Table Rock 10 Dinah 13
• • 3D-Bewitched 3 Mod Squad 6 Partridge Fam lly 8
~
Sesame St 20 33 Fllnlslones 15
DO-Bonanza 3 Family Affair 8 Star Trek 15
• 5 3D-Adam 12 4 13 Neewd 6 Bverly Hillbillies 8
:
Elec Co 20 33
• 6 oo-News 3 • 8 10 13 15 ABC News 6 Zoom 20
:
Special education 33
• 6 30-NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 13 Andy Griffith 6
;
CBS News 8 10 Hodgepodge Lodge 20
:1 7 oo--Truth or Cons l To Tell the Truth 4 Bowling for
..
Dollars6 Buck Owens 8 News 10 Candid Camera
13 Family Affair 15 On Aging 20 Resourceful
•
Wesf Vlrglnle 33 7 3D-That Good Ole Nashville
Music 3 Don Adams Screen Test 4 Match Game
•
PM 6 Price Is Right 8 10 Evening Edition w th
e
• Martin Aronsky 20 High Road to Adventure 10 To

:: 5

Economy means easy to own as well
as to buy And brother these are true
economy tractors low purchase pnce
lillie or .no upkeep And they keep gomg
season after season

case of 4 Gallons

The Cadet76 IS easy to operate
standard shift w1th one pedal clutch
and brake No sh It hydrostatic dr ve
makes the Cadet 80 even eas er
Cult ng the grass Is what they do
more of So Ihe mower s Included But
1 n1ouung, lert ltzing remov ng snow
all that and more Just attach a

lew
of optional work equipment,
and start saving I me effort and money
All year long Year alter year alter year
Cadet economy lawn tractors Savings
slllrt at

'695

3'
•

CEITIII.IIrl

:
~
~

G1lplllis. Ollit

3
"

., .........

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.
POMEROY, OHIO

•

~

:
•

Tell the Truth 13

friends of

Man

WE

WISH

15

Marco

Sportllte 33
1 DO-Bobby Vinton 3 On the Rocks o 13 Rick Little
• 15 Gunsmoke 8 US A People &amp; Politics 20 33
Sara 10
8 3~WE Think You Should Know 3 Good Heavens
6 13 Ourstory 20 33
9 OQ--Joe Forreste• 3 • 15 Movie Buster &amp; Billie
6 13 All In The Family 8 10 Sing America Sing
20,33

For Rent

SE NIOR CITIZEN des res
room board and laiJnd,.y
Mus oe downsta rs room
Ca I C C Cuck er 992 7244
3 18 4 c

., AND 4 ~M turn shed ana
unfurn shed ap s Phone 997
5434
11 9 lfc

MUSICIAN
t dd e or
mando n
o
young 8 ue
Grass Band
T m ng
m
por an Ca l 742 27'16
3 17 6 c

COUNTR
;
Park RlY 33 Mob
len Imiles
norlh
of Pomeroy Large lots w lh
concret e pa los s dewalks
rur\ners and off stree
pa,.kng Phone 9917479
2 31 ltc

o

Not1ce

Wanted To Buy

w LL ca e fore derly woman
n my hom e Phone 992 7314
3 7 6tc
MAKE SURE you ge every
poss be dedu c on h s yea
Have your Fe de a l and
S a e ncome Ta~ rctu n by
an pccoun an
Phone 992
6 73
I 2 52tc

---------

OLD furn ure
ce boxPS
brass
beds
o d
wa
e ephones and parts or
con l)le e househo ds Wr e
M
0
M le
Rt
2
Pom eroy Oh o Cal 992
7760

3 7 tfc

Employment Wanted
PA NT N G ns de ou
and
roofs Phone Mason
304
77J 5626
3 2 6t c

Found
BLACK PONY wear ng blue
ha tr found on R I
43
Harr sonv le Road al Lew s
Sm th es dence Phone 992
3183
~ s 6tc

SOUTHERN
'ye low
pne
pos s Now buy ng scvcra
s es
con ac
\u kc
Par so ns
Bow by Co p P
0 BO)( 39 Spence r W Va
~7 6
PhO e 30
92
250
o e 'Jen nQS
30
354 7694
3 2 1 p

Auto Sales

968 CHEVY Van w th 1970
mo or 6 cy
carpeted
pane ed s ereo ape deck
FM rad o mag whee ls n
good
cond to n
$1 300
Phone 992 3710
3 1 4tp

- -------1975 OLDSMOBILE Start re
"--

m ut set

A~H pad for a l makes arld
modes ot mob le homes
Phone area code 614 423
953
4 3 tfc

Lo s T n Beech Grove area
Ru and
Buff Cole an
swers o Spa rky
Anyone
know ng he whereabouts of
h s dog please c.a 992 3587
or 747 2315 Reward offe ed
3 19 6 c

969
NTERNATIONAL
p ck up
complete
new
e~t:haust system Carburetor
overhau ed Phone 992 7149
3 21 61c

pups Phone

___________ _
3 21 6

c

CH H UAH UA dogs 2 fema les
6 months old Phone 742
2962
3 9 3tc
AKC REG fema le Ch huahua
go den fawn S75 4 yea s
o d P ho ne 992 2265
3 9 6 p

AKCR;gs-;redCOiTe- s ud
K ng
3 16 fc

For Rent
TRA I LER space 3• m e
nor h of Me gs H gh Schoo l
on o d R 13 PJ1one 992 294
3 21 1 c

----·-

FURN I SHED
2
bedrm
apar men
adu Is on y
n
M ddleport Phone 992 3874
3 12 fc
4 ROOMS on East Man St
Phone 992 238
4 18 3tc
ENJOY grac ous I v ng a1
V ll age Manor
n M d
dlepor tor as ow as $130
pe
on h
w h
al
u
es
pa d
Thes~
a e brand n ew h gh Qual ly
apartments a pr ces you
can affo d Your rent n
c udes month
o mon h
eases all e ec
1 v ng
carpel ng
range
and
retr gerator
f ree 1 as h
p ckup cab e TV a your
expense
and
on s te
aundry fac I I es
Con
venlen o shopping on Third
and M 1 Streets n M d
d eport See he manager al
R vers de Apar ments or
ca l
992 3273
Furn shed
apartments
are
a so
ave tab le
2 2 7Btc

------- -

UNt--URNI SHED
ap
n
Pome oy '1. b ed m new y
redecora ed fully car peted
Ca l n he ea rly am 992

2288
2 BEDRM Ira ler
Phone 992 3324

2 22 He
rea l n
3 2

ce
tc

J BEDRM house w lh bah n
Ru l and Phone 992 5858
3 9 He

PONTIAC
Catal na
970
ha rd op coupe p b
'P s
a c v 8 motor S7.50 Phone
949 2589
J 21 Jtc

J

NOTICE TO
DEPARTMENT OF

TRANSPORTATION
Columbus Oh o
Much 12 1976
Contract Sales Legal Copy
No 76 101

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

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

--

0 RECTOR
Rev

8 11 73

3 1 121p

----------- -IN DASH 23 channe CB 8
track AM FM rad o Call
992 3965
3 18 He

28

9 3D-Maude 8 10

10 OD-J gsaw John 3 4 15 Medical Center ~ Red
Wh te &amp; Wow 10 News 20 Bl Ways 33
10 3D-Lock Stock &amp; Barrel 20 Catch 33 33
11 OD-News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 ABC News 33
11 3D-Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Clifton Dav s 6 13 Movie
Where the Boys Are 8 Movie That Kind of
Woman 10 Janak! 33

REG STEREO
Pol l ed
Hereford bu IS breed ng
age Roya Oak Far m s 992
267 1
3 18 Jtc
EUREKA upr ght sweeper
530 00 Ca 742 2695 or 992

6137

3 II Jtc

News 13

HANN
CHANNEL FIVE
9 oo-The 700 Club
7 OG-PVH Groundbreaklng
7 JG--Speclal Edition
8 oo--oayllme
9 OQ--Washlngton Debates
10 oo-100 Club

---------

5

~

PIECE H ckory FamiiV
room ut
Custom made
canopy approx 15x15 2 '2
HP Jet propelled outboard
motor Folty Retl mower
gr nder large
McCulloch
chain sew M•c 1 10 F&gt;hone
(6141 678 2166
J 18 61p

REPLACEMENT

WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING SOFFITT

For Sale

GUTTERS AWNINGS

R&amp;J COINS

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

LARRY LAVENDER

Rutland742 2331
Roger Wamstey
3 1 lmo

Pomeroy

WANT TO

Syracuse Ohto
Ph n2 nn
4 10 1 m o

D&amp;D

BULK WATER
AVAl~ABLE

SAVE MONEY?

Tuppers Pia ns Chest er
Wa er D str ct now se ng
bulk water to tanks on
trucks at our new oft ce
Localed on S R t 7
1M le Nortn of
Eas ern H gh Schoof
Ser ve Yourself 0 Spenser
Tak ng quarters on y one
at a t me for 250 ga ons of
water
Open al he T me
for your conven ence
3 1 1mo

Take advantage of our
pr1ces
Quality
built
homes Ntc~ lots available
tn n1ce locations

BISSELL BUILDERS
Ph (614) 985 4102

CONSTRUCTION
From 1 shelf to • Muse ~II
types of bu1ldlng and
remodeling
tram
the
toundat on up Adchllons
c•rpet ng painting s dtnt
roofing
panel ng
paper
hangtng etc

Ph 949 202J or 843 1"7

2 12 1 mo

2 19

SLOAN'S
CARPETING

Aprtl 17th

begtnn~ng

oo a m

10

Watch for Ust
Items Later

Phone day or n1ght
1 '

.,.,o

6149922206

PUBUC

Orange Twp Volunteer
F1re Dtpartment wtll hold
a consignment auc;t1on at
the fin house located tn
Tuppers Plams Oh1o on

Free estimates on car
peltng and .nstallahon
We II brmg sarnples to your
home wtth no obhgat1on
See how you can really
save
M1ke Young Manager
Sales and InstallatiOn

mo

lARRY WHOBREY

AUCTION SALE

AaDJNiANT
Now acceptmg clients
for bookkeeping and
tax serv1ce

ar

of

PH. 992-6173
J 18 1 mo

3 17 1 mo
.

EXCAVATING
BACKHOES WILL
eta
AND DOZER LARGE AND
struct on
SMALL
SEPT C TANKS
heat ng No
INSTALLED
BILL
oo sma
PULL NS PHONE 992 2478

NIGHT
__ __________
_
DAY OR
_...

roof ng
con
p umb ng and
ob loo arge or
Phone 7422348
3 19 261c

SAM'S

PIZZA SHOP

2 22 52tp

llaltan.Style Pm

For Sale

For Sale
cuB Fa rm a) t w th mower and
plow Camper hat will fit a
6ft bed truck Phone 1614
985 3924
3 21 6 p
----·-·--- -- , - - - - - - FARMA L L Super C tractor
w t h w n p ows and mower
qu tk h tch Phone 614) 661

3709

3 71 3tp
- ------------RUGS of all s zes Cal Mason
{30.4 77J S626
3216tc:

Real

~.t~t

""'"!' 8

7 ROOM house w th bath good
locat on ful basement 39
Sou h Seconet M ddlepor
Phone 992 2265
3211'2 p
:l

Real Estate

BR HOME
IUS f n sh ed
remade ng
Salem
Sf
Ru tla nd
Phone 142 2306
after .t p rn or see M lo B
H u ch nson
10 9 tfc

TUPPERS PLAINS New 3
bedrm
houses carpeted
ran ge garage large lots
FHA f nanc ng ava !able
S21 900
Phone (614
667
6304
3 14 26tp

----

9

MUST SELL - 22 ' acres
- 1 home &amp; 2 apartments
and own
1 Mob1le

Home All rented at a ll
t mes S420 00 per month
plus gas well
Askmg

S25 000
MAKE
AN
OFFER
MIDDLEPORT - S BR
1 1 baths Insulated storm
doors &amp; windows
N G

heal garage &amp; carport
Good condtt on 12 glassed
porches small basement)

$12 000
FORKED RUN LAKE F shmg cab n 3 rooms 2
porches and a path (needs
some repa r) $2 800

POMEROY

room

1

frame -

NEW furnace

carpel ng

I le

pane ng

s ding
storm doors &amp;
windows
Porches
ful
basement 2 car garage

Budget gas b II $35 00
EXCELLENT
CONDITION $18 500
WE
NEED
NEWER
HOMES
992 2259 or 992 2568

ACRES 2 good we s 2
bcdrm
a l er WI se w h
ra l er o w hou Ca ll 742
22 17afer4 pm PrceS7 500
for bo h
) 12 12 p

HOME for Sl!l l e by pr vale
owne
3 2
ac es
4
bedrooms barn on b ack op
road gas and wa er Phone

949 2023

-3

Ph 949-2404
OPEN TUES THRU SAT

For Sale

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

has free gas
water systems

Call n orders •nd pick up
n twenty minutes
Located 11329 lrd Street
Racrne Oh10

COAL limes to ne and all ypes
of sa and rock sa t tor Ice
and snow removal
Ex
ce s or Salt Wo ks
East
Ma n St
Pomeroy Oh o
Phone 992 389
2 7 lfc

For Sale

-----------

WINDOWS &amp; DOORS

or

NAthan Biggs
Rad1.1tor Spec illtst

H &amp; N day old or started
Leghorn pul ets Bo h f oor
or cage grown ava !able
Poultry
hous ng
and
automa on
Modern
Poultry
399 W
Ma n
Pomeroy 992 2164
3 21 ltc

NEW Bearcat
II Pol ce
sea ed proposa s w
be
Scanner Phone 992 6 01
rece ved a the off ce of the
3 21 Jtc
D rec or of he Oh o Depart
m ent
of
Transportal on
23 CHANNEL C B Rad QS
Co lumbus Oh o un 1 10 oo
SI 09 95 up antenna S14 95
A M
Oh o S andard T me
up 4 t I 9 Tuespay lhru
Tuesday Apr
6
916 tor
Fr day 12 t II 6 Saturday 60
mprovements n
Central Ave Athens Oh o
Athens Gallia Ha cking
3 21 10tp
Me gs Monroe Noble V nton
and Wash ng on Coun t es
WHEAT back penn es 85c per
Ohio on var ous sect on n
ro I
51 00
silver cer
ATH US Rou es33 SO Sate
1 f cates Sl 25 each u s
Rou es 13 56 78 346 550 682
$5 00 gold r,leces S88 each
and 691 n Athens county
510 gold p eces $130 each
GAL
U S Route 3.5 State
$20 gold ~ eces $220 each
Rou es 7 60 and 554 n Ga 1 a
W II allow J times face lor
Cou n y HOC U S Route 33
964 and older 5 ver coms
Sate Routes 56 93 and 80 n
on tntde Ca l Roger Warns
Hock no C:n nt v MEG U S
ley 742 2331
Rou e 33 State Rou es 7 14J
3 21 lip
and 346 n Me gs County MOE
Sta e Route 78 n Monroe
County MRG
State Roules GU TAR camp ete bed 20
g rl s b ke two 13 nch t res
78 and 669 In Morgan County
~g al on ce cream freezer
NOB
Intersta te Route 77
d sh es of all ki nd s and other
State Routes 340 and 821 n
m sc PhOne 742 2078
Noble County
VIN
State
Route 346 In v nton Coun t y
2 19 2 c
WAS Inters tate Route 77 u
S Route 50 S ale Route 7 n 30 NCH Kenmore e ec range
Phone 992 6 162
Washington County by ap
ply ng edge I nes lane nes
3 19 Jtc
railroad cross ng mark ngs
973 HON OA ,.oad b ke ex
c ur b
mark ng s
sand
cellent condl t on
3 900
mark ngs transverse lines
m les ot of e)Ctras Phone
and 8 Inch channe t zing I nes
742 2211 after 5 pm call
Pavement W dth - Varies
742 2201
F&gt;roject and Work Length Vorv
3 19 6tc
"the dale se for complet on
of h s work sha l be as se t GOOD hay never wet Phone
forth n the b dd ng proposal
949 2523
Each
b dder s hall
be
3 10 12tc
requ r ed to f e w t h h s b d a
cer f ed check or cash ier s COAL F OR !).1\LE CAB Coa
check for an amount equa to
Company
m le north of
five per cent of h s b d but n
Chesh re on Rt 7 P ck you
no evenl more tha n f tty
own S20 per ton Open 6 days
thou sa net do Iars or a bond for
per week or ca ll 6 41 367
ten per cent of h • b1d payab le
733 0 tor further nformat on
to the D rector
1 a 78tc
B dders must apply on the
proper forms for qual t cat on TENNA 8 track
FM stereo
at least ten days prior to the
rad o combinati on for car
date set for open ng bids n
Speakers
n c l lleted
$50
accordance with Chapter 5525
Phone 949 2322
Oh o Rev sed Code
3 17 6tc
Plans and spec If cat ons are
on f e n the Department of
Transportation and the off ce 14 x 60 RIBSTONE S LO
EVERYTHING
N
of
he
D str ct
Deputy
CLUDED Phone 949 2542
0 rector
3 16 6tc
The Director reserves the
r gh l ore ect any and all b ds
HAY never been we Phone
6 4) 378 620.5 affer 6 p m
RICHARD 0 JACKSON

March 21

1 00- Tomorrow 3 4

Sup reme
3 12 l c

Chester Ot110
New v redecorated tu 1y
car peted moslly t urn shed
Shown 12 to 4 March 27th
Reasonab e rent
Ca l
1
(314) 866 173
3 19 7 c

CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO

992 7692
3 7 4tc

970 CUTLA SS
Phone 997.31 0

--.---------- For Rent
lost
HOUSE
n
REDBONE coon hound male
In Langsv tea ea Cal 742
2848 or 992 7894
R
T
5 ewar
3 6 6 p

Ca

From fl1e largest Truck or
B Jlldozer'" Rad ;,tor to the
sm a test He!Afer Core

Ph 992 2114

F nanc1ng Au lable
Blown 1nto Walls&amp; Attics
STORM

F1nd buried treJsure
coins rings s lver gold
con&amp; Mttal
Detectors
For Rent

Rl 3 Pomeroy Oh•o 45769

1974 DATSUN 8210 Fas back
4 speed has rad al
res
AM F M stereo 8 track
ke
new ca I Char e Ma thews
992 2257
3 19 5 c

Blown
lnsulattortServtces

BUY SELL or TRADE

Help Wanted

Mobile Homes For Sale

Se rv ce
St ardus
Pho ne (6 1-4 985 4248

Business Services

H;;.,,. "rL:~-.::::;:=--::====;:-:;;::=========~~=========~
FREE ESTIMATES
COINS

express our
I hanks
to relal ves and friends for
the expreSs on ot sympathy
3 BEDRM house on 1662
and k ndness shown dur ng MEAT CUTTER - for fh s
Linea n H
ll25 per month
area
Slate
ex
per
ence
and
the pass ng of our beloved
Ca l I 304 7684041
qual
t
ca
Ions
n
your
letter
husband and father Haro d
3 14 6tp
o Box 500 co Sunday T mes
F Erlew ne We apprec a e
Sen lne
Gal lpol s Ohio
al the beaut fu floral of
.A5631
fe nQsandtt'lefood We a so
3 2 3tc
want lo express spec a
thanks to Rev
George
74 )( 65 MOBILE home for sale
Hoschar
the pal bearers FOREMAN WANTED We
For more ntormat on ca 1
are seek ng an experienced
W lcoxen Fun era Home and
992 7256
sup~rv sor
for a I ght
Blower Funeral Home May
3 21 .4tp
assemb y factory located n
God bless each of you Mrs
Gall
pols
Pont
Pleasan
Char lot e Erlew ne and
area
Must be abe to VINDAI,.E 12 x 68 3 bedrm
en ldren
ba h &amp; 2 14ft e~t:pando 25
mo
lvate
employees and be
J 18 3 p
ft awn ng and porch tu ly
qual ty consc ous
s~ nd
carpeted
Phone 742 2882
resume o Pont P easan
3 21 6tc
Reg ster Box P 0
2
n
el ud e past sala y h story
SOUTHEASTER N
Oh o
3 18 3 c 1970 MOB LE home tor sate 2
Po led He eford Assn o be
bedrm Par ally turn shed
held Fr day even ng A pr
gas hea
Phone 3041 773
2 at 7 p m Sa le w 1 be held PERSON o cook clean and
5460 or 992 5001
cere for s ck woman L 11 ng
al
l he
Rock
Spr ngs
3 14 6tp
n s opl on a
Phone 992
Fa rgrounds
Pomeroy
---2218
Oh o Wa ch fo future ads
ra ler b ue
3 18 3 c 1974 SKY LINE
32 1(
and wh e turn shed S4 500
---~-----0
ake over payments
WANT Vaca on ';I Need chores SOMEONE
o work as a
Phone 949 2860
done';!
For
more
n
he per on a paper ube route
format on ca
6 4) 985
3 17 4 c
about 5 hrs each afternoon
428
and eve n ng Cal 992 2776
UN F URN SHED 14 x 70
3 2 61p
after 7 30 p m
mo b e home
ola elec
3
3 18 3tc
on cen raJ a r co nd oner
WILLgvepanolessons nmy
excellen cond I on Phon e
hom e Ca 742 213
RELIABLE
babvs ter
247 2684 or 247 2664
3 21 6 c
wanted In M ddteport area
3 10 fc
Phone 992 2220 after 6 p m
SHOOT I NGMa ch ustoffRI
3 17 4 c
7 nea
Rock
Spr ngs
14x65MOBILE home tor sale
Cemete y
eve r y Sunday
For more nformat on call
2 30 p m
992 7256
3 19 2 (
3 17 4 p
MONEY n our ce lar., at c';l
SHOOTING Malch Ru and
barn' Pay up o Sl 000 each
1973
4 x 70 TRA LER
3
Gun C ub
h gh powered
for ce a n old bot les A so
bedrooms
1 2
baths
r f es
330 ya ds
sco pe
wan
German W
W
I
Assume payments Sll2 90
s gh son y
p m Sunday
F ags medals swords etc
Phone 992 3388
Eve ryon e we come
Phone 992 2592 af er 5 p m
J 9 41p
3 19 2 (
3 25 Jtc

s ncere and heartte

992 78 0

6 4~unce of Prevention 10

Capt

1 w SH o hank al of my
tam ly and fr ends tor
remember ng me
n my
!ness and
he beau ful
card s and praye s for my
861h b rfhday May God give
eac h ot you a r ch b ess ng
for you th oughtfulness
S ncere y Edna Margan
3 21 ltp

...._

6 JG-Columbus Today 4 N ews 6 Sunr se Semester 8

8 QO....-Lassle 6

Wanteo

Card of Thanks

Pets
TWO coQn hound

MONDAY MARCH 22 19)6
6 oo-Sunrlse Semester 10
6 15--Farm Report 13
6 2D-Good News 13

::'.
•
:
:

PH 992 2176

t

IHe World 4

Beat 33

•

Also Reduced Prices on

• Super Powder Plus

3 W de World ot Sports

7 3D-W ld W1ld World of An 1ma ls 33
8 oo-E llery Queen 3 4 15 S x M II on Dol ar Man 6 3

:

... are more than money!

228 Upper R1ver Road
P 0 Box207 Galhpohs
Phone 446 0203

5

7 oo-world of Disney 3.4 15 Sw 1ss Family Robinson
6 13 60 M nures 8 10 Austin City L m Is 20 Cap lol

~

efoamcheck
eKieen-Ezy

Geste

To Be Announced

Forum 33
6 3D-NBC News 3 4 15 News 6 High School ow 8
Gilligan s Island 13 World Press 33

:

elosan

o~

Home and 15

h

Federal Land Bank Loans are long term and
are available at a reasonable rate w1th repayment schedules tailored to your farm 1n
come flow mcludmg prepayment pnv1leges
without penalty- all advantages to the
member borrower

B~au

NBA

Guppies to Groupers 33
6 DO-Search 3 News 4 4 OAv1d N ven s World 6
CHSTVReport8 SammytO lssues&amp;Answers 3

Chevette

LIMITED TIME ONl.Y

8

6 13 To Be Announced 4 rench Chef 33

1976

®

Fish ng

Onedln Line 33

4 oo-Davld N ven s World 3
Musical Encounter 33

FIRST PRIZE:

YARD SALE

Championship

3 oo-R vals of Sher lock Holmes 33
3 3o-Gandstand 3 15 Aulo rAcing 6 13
Basketball 8 10 8 10

117

Pre-Season

6

Commun que

Flshln Hole 13 Adams Chronicles 33
I 3D-Tennis 3 15 Bobby V nton 4 Aware 6 Joedy
Gardner BasketballS Mulrlleld The Magnlllcenr
Oream 10 Sportsma~ s Fnend 13
2 DO-Superstars 6 13 WHA Hockey 4 Sports Spec

PRIZES!

In

Focus on

Fee the Nat on 8 Lower l ghthouse 13 Breath of
L le 15 12 3D-Meet the Press 3 4 t5 D red 1ons 6
World of Survival 8 Co umbus Tow~ Meet ng 10
Garner Ted Armstrong 13
1 DO-Grandstand 3 1S Probe The World Around Us

MARCH

{l

Make a Wtsh 6

Columbus 4 Rev Calv n Evans 13
12 ()()-At Issue 3 F sh n Hoe 4 Issues &amp; Answers 6

to LANDMARK'S

BmMHDlY
SAlE!

Leroy

V ew 6 Rex Humbard 8 15 Rv Henry Mahan 13

TODAY'S NEWSPAPER

the fann front

Church Service 4

Jenkins 6 Christian Center 8 Movie Nine Hours
to Rama 10 Jimmy Swaggart 13 Faith for Today
15
10 3D-Big Blue Marble 3 Garner Ted Armstrong 4
Jimmy Swaggart 6 Th nklng tn he Black 8 Blue
Ridge Quartet 13 This s the L fe 15
11 oo-Vegetable Soup 3 Ooctors on Call 4 Point of

See Our Insert In

Effect1ve, economical
Tamed Iodine®
Teat Dip for
dairy cows.

19~

6 DO-Film 4 This the Life 10 Publ c Pol cy Forums

lay of the land

Farm bloc pushes
our commrmity greater spending

Agriculture and

Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

Tordon
is safe

3 1 26 p

-------..----BEORM
hom e
us

f n shed remode l ng Sa lem
S
Rutland Phone 742 2306
after 4 p m or see M lo B
Hu ch son
9 73 lfc
MODERN home n Ches er 8
room s 2 ba hs 2 porches
sunporch 2 basement c y
and wei water na ural gas
garage
Pr ced
o sel
Phone (614&gt; 985 4 02
2 4 fc
5 ROOM house and bah on 150
x 100 f lo toea ed on 120
Sta e St
Pomeroy S6 000
Phone 992 5786
3 6 Me

630Tit1000
3 17 1 mo
WILL TR M or cu
rees and
shrubbery Phone 949 2545
or 742 3167
2 27 "2 61c
EXCAVATING dozer IO.! ltl:'
and backhoe work
sept c
tanks -i n sta l ed
dumo
rucks and lo boys tor h re
w I haul f 11 d
o p so
mestone ahd gravel Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers day
phone 992 7089 n gh phone
992 3525 or 992 5232
2 11 lfc
LUCKETT Farm Equ pment
West
Wash n gton
St
A bany Phone (614 698 3032
or 698 788
2 18 26 tc
C

BRADFOR 0 A uct oneer
Camp e e Serv ce
Phon e
949 2487 or 949 2000 R ac ne
Oh o Cr t Bradford
10 9 tc

REMODEL NG
P umb g
heat ng and a
types df
general
repa r
Work
guaran eed
20 years ex
per ence
Phone 992 2409
6 1 ltc
EXCAVATING
dozer
backhoe
and
d tcher
Char es R Ha f elet Back
Hoe Serv ce Rut and Oh o
Phone 742 2008
11 30 78tc
D &amp; D TREE Trimm ng 20
yea r s ex per tnce In su r ed
free es males Ca l 992 2384
or 6 4) 698 7257 A bany
10 15 fc
SEW IN G MACHINE Repa rs
serv ce a ll makes 992 2284
The Fab c ShOp Pomeroy
Author zed S nger Sales and
Serv ce
We
Sharpen
Sc ssors
3 29 tfc

HOM E for sa e spac ous R E A"DY M X CON I': t:."T""r-del vered
gh
to vour
I v ng room d n ng room 2
pro ect F as and easy F'ree
bedrm
arge kitchen
es m a es Phone ~9 2 3284
fam ly room
new ba hs
Goegle n Ready M » .)Co
priced o se
Phone 992
M ddleport Oh o
7394
6 30 fc
3 16 5tp

----

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

'rEA FORD

Virgil B Sr Broker
110Mechanlc Pomeroy 0

Strout

Realty"

Pllone992 3325

kEAL OAK FLOORS- In
3 8 R S

mce carpet ng 1n

lvlng &amp; fa mily Rms Only 4
yrs ol~24 soo
MODERN
3 Brs lge
kit wtth bar d n ng with
slid ng glass drs
2
ceram c t1le baths
full

NcaaPO••\T&amp;O

NO 160 - Very mce 2 BR
hom e

scree n ed

porch

elec heat fully nsulaled
garage a:. a land
big
garden spot ntce for small

fam1ly $16 000 00

basement and dbl garage

$38 000
RIVER FRONT LOT Water e ectnc and sma ll

build ng $4 ooo
LARGE - 9 rms

3 Brs

11 2 baths hot water hea t
Ltv ng across f ront of
house Lots of closets
Large lot and beautiful

view S16 SOO
FIVE POINTS - Modern 3
Brs all paneled lge bath
garage and lge lot S2S,5oo
RACINE - Nice 3 15rs
large ktt din ng full
basement 1 ' balhs Obi
garage plus Almost I h
acres $31

soo

49 ACRES - 3 yrs old 2
hedroom home bath birch
kitchen carport and lull
basement S31 500
IF
YOU
WANT
PROFESSIONAL
AOVICE HIRE ONE IT
WILL PAY YOU

NO 159 - 3 BR all elec
full basement front porch
lge yard ready to move

Into S23 000 00
NO 114 - 115a w1lhlarm
pond
ge
barn
qutef
country sett•ng
shade
rtver borders property for
f shmg also nas new gas
well good spot for ret1ree

or campsite S32 000 00
NO 161 - Small home with
large yard close to stores
all on 1 floor on qu e t

$lreet S8 600 00

804W
Pomeroy

~am

992 2298

After Hours Call
992 7133
CONTACT
LOIS Pauley

- Sweepers toasters rons
a I sm a I app l ances Lawn
mower nex t o Sta te H flh
way Garage on Route 7
Phone t85 3825
4 16 I C
SEPT IC TANK S cleaned
Mode n San al on 992 3954
or 992 7349
9 18 tfc
R EU DOG 1 mestone gravel
and f I
d r
del vered
Phone B 1 Pul ns 992 2478
2 19 26tc
WILL ao Odd JObS roofmg
pan ng haul ng tre ework
and mow ng Ca
992 7409
3 2 26tc
0 DELL A l lnemen
located
beh net
Rutland
Grade
Sch oo
Tuneup brakes
wheel balanc ng a lnement
Phone 742 2004
11 16 tfc

Real Estate for Sale
FOR SA LE near Langsville 5
room house root cellar with
room over 2 bey detached
garage
s acres no bath
hot and cold water n k t
chen L P vas heat heaters
w th house ca
742 2819
atter5pm
3 17 7fp

-------- -

7 ROOM Mouse w th ba1h good
local on Ful basement 39
South Second M ddlepor
Phone 992 2265

-- \ ___ _:!.._ l~tp

�26 - The Sunday Tunes Senltnel Sunda} Ma rch 21 1976

County agent's corner
POMEROY - Dave Boothe Vtnton County agrtt11ltural
agent ts conducting a tour to COBA Select Sires on Fnday
March 26
In the mornmg actual operations mvolved tn semen
collection bull handlln~ and all the beef and datry stres
housed at thetr factltties m Columbus wtll be observed
Followmg lunch there wlll be an opporturuty to learn how
semen Is processed for later use by cattleman and to ask any
questions on setung up an A I program for a herd learmng to
do A I oneself costs etc
They will pool ndes meeting m front of the Courthouse m
McArthur at 8 30 a m Dave wtll have detatled maps and
programs at thai time
If anyone from Metgs County ts mterested m gomg please
call 596-5606 or 384-4527
VETERINARIANS IN Jackson 1\Utens Metgs Vmton
and surrounding counttes m Southern Ohto are reportmg an
unusually htgh mctdence of blackleg mfectwn tn cattle durmg
the last few weeks
Blackleg IS caused by a bactenal orgamsm whtch can
survive m the sotl for many years Suscepltble cattle may
contact the orgamsrn and develop the mfeclton
Blackleg lS a very acute mfeclton of the heavy muscles of
Ute animal Sudden death ts usually the ftrst md rotton of

By John C Rice

County Extension
Agent Agriculture
mfectton m the herd Anunals less than two years of age are
most susceptible to the dtsease The disease IS seen most
common!} on pasture but may occur m dry lot
The present blackleg outbreak appears to he rather
widespread earlier m the year than usual and m dry lot and
pasture A safe and eflecttve \ accme 1s avatlable for blackleg
Herd history and management pract1ces determme the best
bme to gtve the vaccme to calves
Herd owners who are concerned about lhts condihon or
who have experienced losses should contact !hetr local
veterinarian for d1agnos1s and proper recommendations for
vaccmat1on
Some calves that have been vaccmated at a very early age
may have to he revaccmated Several cases have been seen m
cattle whtch were vaccmated as very small calves Your
veterinarian can advise you as to the need for revaccmation m

By Bryson R 1Bud) Carter
Galh • County Extens10n Agent
GALUPOUS - An tn
tensive
two year datry
program 1s offered at the
Agncultural Techmcal In
stitute (ATI) tn Wooster ATI
a un1 t of the Ohto State
Umverstly
College
of
Agnculture and
Home
awards an
Economtcs
Assoctale Degree to students
completmg tls two year
spec1ahzed curriculum
Students concentrate on
Ute techmcal datry related
subjects such as datry cattle
production judgmg anatomy
and phystology agronomy
nutritton genetics fteld crop
produchon datry cattle
heallh mtlk produclton and
sanltatton datry cattle
breeding and datry operatiOn
management Yet support
areas
such
as
com
mumcallons math natural
and
soctal
sc1ences
agncultural busmess and
mechanics are also 1m
portant
Emphasis 1s placed on
students abiltly to appl)
Utese pnnctples m pracltcal
situallons As much hands
on expertence as poss1 ble is
provided where the students
work directly wtth the
animals The Institute plus
1ts students manage 1 600
acres of farmland whtch
prov1des an excellent lear
nmg laboratory ATI also
cooperates w1th Ute OARDC
whtch 1s adJacent to the In
stitute m the use of the1r
anunals and facthltes
In addition each student
must par!tctpate m an on the
job mternsh1p exper1ence
whtch usually lakes place the
summer between the ftrst
and second year of classes for
Ute datry students Durmg
thts time students fmd a JOb
in Ute dairy mdustry and
rece1ve pay as a regular
employee whtle gammg
practical expenence
The students have formed
an active A I Datry Club
whtch
sponsored an
I wt!h the
FFA judgmg c
AT! Uvestock
ub at the
Franklin County Fairgrounds
February 28 The club took a
successful tr1p last year over
Sprmg break to VISit some of
Ute outstandmg New England
dalry operations The group
plans to make thts tr1p an
annual event
perhaps
vtst!tng datry farms m
M1ch1gan and Wtsconsm th1s
year
Many graduates of ATI s
Datry Technology return to a
home datry farm or to a farm
of their own Others fmd JObs
as datry herdsmen sales
represenla!tves technicians

mspeclors or manag rs
AT! s job placement rate on
the whole and m the dairy
program tn parllcular has
been excellent
Chuck Covert son of Mr
and Mrs Ernest Covert of
Rw Grande 1s currently
enrolled m the L vestock
Production program at ATI
Chuck w1ll be leavmg soon for
Nebraska for on the JOb
trammg at the Umted States
Research Center
For more tnformatton on
AT! s datry technology or
mternsh1p programs call me
at the Galha County Ex
tens1on Office at 446-4612
extenston 32 or contact Mr
Ernest Oelker Datry Tech
Head
The Agncultural
Techmcal Institute Wooster
Oh10 44691 or call (216) 264
3911

Local Bowling
WED AFTER NOON

FOURSOME
Sky I ne Lanes
March 17 1976
Won Lost
Foun an of Youth
130
86
Na on a M ne Se rv 130
86
Georges Grocery
12 7
89
Bllsy Beaul y Salon
7
99
Sparky s Sunoco
107
0
So mevleRE
05
The Hoo Ow s
76
30
Lee Supp y
72
44
Ed th Jackson had h gh
game and ser es 208 5 4
Sparky s Su noco had h gh
team game and se es 749
2039
Sparky s Sunoco ook s x
po n s fro m Founta n of
Youth A I ce Chapman had
h gh game and ser es 208 514
for Founta n of You h
Busy Beau y Sa on l ook
e ght po n s from Lee Suppl y
Joy ce Mooney had h gh game
6d and se es d60 fo Busy
Beau y Sa on Je an tra g had
h gh game and se es 141 381
for L ee Supp y
Nat ona M ne Se v ce ook
s x po n s from Some rv le
Rea Es ate J nny W ams
had ll gil game and ser es 7
463 for. Na on a M ne Ser
v ce
Jane Bowes had h gh qame
and
ser es
69 4 5
for
Somerv I e Real Estate
Georges G ocery took s x
po n s from The Hoot Ow s
Marlyn Sm tllllad h gil game
and
ser es
67 438
for
Georges G ace y V g n a
Darst had h gh game and
ser es 135 364 fo the Hoo
Owls
A ce Chapman p eke d up
the 4 10 and he 3 7 spl s
Skyl ne Lanes
Thursday Afternoon
Sw ngers Bowhng League
March 11 '176
Comm &amp; Sav ngs
l-42 58
Johnson s Mkt H
125 75
S ar e Inn
120 80
He ner s Bakery
119 81
Bur~er Chef
107 93
Eve yn s Beauty Sho p 10
99
Rard n s Shoe Center 100 100
B J Bu lders
9 109
Johnson s Mkl P P t 86 114
Pt P Reg ster
86 114
Robb ns &amp; Meye s
67 133
HOI ey B OS Con s
54 146
H gh
eam !ier es
Commerc a &amp; Sav ngs l 7S7
Johnson s PI Pleasant 1 712
Heners
1649
lnd v dual h gh ser es
Mev Ward 585 0 Hern 544
J Gray 523 N Marcum 622
P Sommer 616 V Jordan

Television Log

l:ly JOHN COOPER
Soil Conservation Service
POINT PLEASANT - We
have
ass1sted
the
Agncultural Stablhzalton
and Conservation Servtce m
trammg people m the use of
Tordon the herb1c1de used
currently for the control and
eradtcatwn of mulhftora
rose Tordon has been used
expenmentally for about four
years and has been proven to

SUNDAY MARCH 21
13
6 3D-This Week

4 Gospe S nglng Jubilee 6
Viewpoint 8 Public Polley Forum 10
7 CJO-Chrlstopher Closeup 3 Film 4 Talking Hands 8
Spring Street USA 13
7 3D-Tills Is the Lite 3 Your Health 4 Jerry Falwell
8 Revival Fires 6 Camera Three 10 Newsmaker

75 13
7 55-Black Cameo 4
8 DO-Mormon Choir 3 Day of Discovery 4 Gospe
Caravan 6 Church Service 10 REv Homer Click

be very effech ve Ex
your area
penmental evtdence has
Smce blackleg lives m the sotl for years tl 1s tmport.ant shown that when 1! 1s used as
that ammals whtch dte of thts condttion be disposed of
dtrected 1t 1s safe wt!h no
promptly and properly m order to prevent spread of the
adverse stde effects
disease to ftelds and pastures Dead ammals should be either
Mrs Vtrglma Rayburn of
buried deeply after covermg w1Ut lune or completely Ute ASCS offtce satd 275
mcmerated Thlgs btrds etc should not be allowed to feed on landowners m Mason County
the carcasses of arumals which dte
have requested cost sharmg
TALK BUSINESS -Earl Durham manager of Ute Gallipolis Central Soya and Terry
through that agency for the
Lakin
prestdentof the Gallta County Amencan Prtvate Enterprise Study Group dtscussed
apphcallon of Tordon She
the
program
top1c at Thursday s study sessiOn at Rto Grande College
can accept requests for
another week or ten days
from people who have not
already made apphcahon for
cost sharmg All landowners
expectmg to use Tordon
GAlLIPOLIS
Earl tictpated 1n programs s1mllar and Doug Mtller
through the cost sharmg are
Rtck Alhzer program
supply
problems
was requtred to attend the Durham manager of Central to the one m Galha County
By BERNARD BRENNER
leader
sa1d the next meeting
Soya m Ga lhpohs meeting
Youth scholars present at
underlmed by the fact that m trammg meetmg
UP! Farm Editor
be
held
m the President s
wtll
Prestdent Ford s budget
ORDERS HAVE been Thursday evemng w1th the lhe sesston last Thursday
WASHINGTON (UP!) board
room
at Rto Grande
The Senate Agriculture proposals the Agrtculture commg m for the wtldhfe Galha County Amencan mght were Becky Layne
College
March
25 when the
Committee ts urgmg Senate Department 1s the only maJor packets avatlable through the Prtvate Enterprise Study Jun10r Leader Sherte Cox
w1ll
be
The
top1c
budget leaders to appropriate federal agency showmg a cut Western Sotl Conservahon Group at Rto Grande College Usa Wells Judy Cox Betsy
Relahonship
of
Government
$2 7 btlhon more than m spendmg authority from Distr1ct However there are discussed Busmess m the cams Gmny Powell Ant!a
to Prtvate Busmess
and
Tom Cams
Prestdent Ford wants to five years ago
s!tll some that can he sold to Un ted States and the Campbell
of
Orgamzmg
to
do
Ways
Contrast thts to the budget addi!tonal people who would Essenltals for a Succjlssful Debbte Stapleton Terry
spend on AgriCulture Depart
Busmess
11
ith
Dr
Busmess
Lakin Lynne Lew1s Beth
ment farm and food request for the Department of hke to have them
Lawrence Butcher m charge
Queshomng from the youth Harnson Rtchard Ingles
programs m Ute 1977 ftscal Housmg and Urban Develop
Some of the Colorado blue
co ncerned
ment which 1s up more than spruce and whtte pme have sc hol ars
year
ngred1ents for success m
The panel m a report to the ftve fold Labor and State already been dehvered to the
Senate Budget Committee which have more than d1slrtct and are hemg kept m bus ness and conditiOns
which must soon set a doubled and NASA whtch 1s cold storage unttl Ute other needed for success Durham
tentat1ve overall level for recetvtng more dollars today trees and shrubs are expressed hiS confidence m
government spendmg m m a phasedown period than 1! recetved The packets w1ll be Ute free enterprise system
f1scal 1977 sa1d about a lhtrd was f1ve years ago when tt made up after all trees and and the economiC pnncipal of
supply and demand
of 1ts proposed mcrease "as was shootmg for the moon
shrubs have heen recetved
After
the
tn depth
suggested because 1t heheves the Agriculture Committee
The plants avallable m thts
report sa1d
wtldhfe packet are Colorado discussion sessiOn the youth
Under Ford s budget Blue Spruce Norway Spruce
scholars took one of several
Invited
proposals
Agrtculture
qwzzes to be g1ven durmg the
Ford overestunated probable
Scotch Pine Whtte Pine
savmgs m the food stamp Department spendmg of Chmese Chestnut Stlky 10 week semmar Top per
$14 680 btlhon m the current Dogwood F tlbert Wayfarmg formers on these qwzzes will
program
But m many other areas 1976 ftscal year would be cut Tree
Vtburnum
and he awarded a tnp to Purdue
Umverslty m Lafayette
to
$11
8
b1U1on
for
the
1977
the farm bloc lawmakers satd
Sawtooth Oak
budget
year
whtch
begms
they recommend mcreases
Orders are still bemg taken Ind where they w1ll par
Oct
1
The
Senate
because the admtrustrahon
at the Distnct office 230 \2 tic1pate in competitiOn for
Agriculture
Commtt!ee
satd
college scholarships and cash
has proposed til advtsed
Mam Street Pt Pleasant
1ts
recommendatiOns
would
reductions m other food
The pnce 1s $7 each payable awards wt!h young people
brmg
the
f1gure
back
to
from Oh o Indtana and
ass1stance and m spending
1n advance
$14
609
b1lhon
shghtly
below
for farm programs rangmg
THE WESTERN SOIL Tennessee who have par
the
current
year
from conservation to rural
ConservatiOn D1stnct Board - - - ' - - - - - - - .1'7
241hru27
While the food stamp and of Superv1sors held 1ts prov1ded to landowners by 1--:
econom1c development
The Senate report showed other consumer a1d programs regular meetmg 1n Pt the Western So1l Con
most of Ute proposed mcrease currently take a much Pleasant Several 1tems of servation Dtstrtc! and IS .,r.;
over admmtslratton spending greater share of the mterest were discussed at the owned by the State So1l 1-§
7
Department meetmg
Conservation Comm 1ttee
'}'......r
proposals - nearly $2 3 Agriculture
bllhon - was m food atd budget Utan tn the past the
One of these was that the wh tle the techmcal ass1stance
sa1d
11
was
Senate
Comm1ttee
to landowners 1s provtded by
programs
where
the
Dtstrtc! would be a co
not
seekmg
to
blame
that
Sotl
ConservatiO n Service
lawm akers
tndtcated
sponsor for a Grassland Fteld
development
for
declmes
m
personnel
Congress was unhkely to
Day wh1ch w1ll be held m
THERE WAS considerable
accept all cuts proposed by fa rm related spe ndmg It Jackson County on May 29 at
NO PURCHASE
dLscusswn concernmg the two
the Wlute House Less than satd Ute problem hes m the Ute Estel Stmmons farm
NECESSARY
$500 million of the mcrease fact that such spendmg would John Smtih Grassland watersheds that the dls!rtc! 1s
Just
co me n o wnte
mcludtng $121 mtlhon for get less than one hall of 1 per Spectal st of the West co-sponsormg These are the
n
to
eg s le dur ng
added agncultural research cent of the total federal V~rgmta Department of Pocatalu;o Watershed part
B rthday Pa ty Sale
budget
under
Ford s
mvolved farm programs
L m t one ent y per
Agnculture was present and of whtch 1s 10 Jackson County
p erson
The
report
sa1d proposals compared .. lth 2 3 talked over detatls of the and the Mtll Creek Watershed
admmtstration planners have per cent m ftscal 1972
Fteld Day w1th Ute dtstnct n Jackson County
One example Agrtcultural
not gtven a h1gh enough
The D1str~ct ts agam
superv1sors
pr10r1ty to farm programs m research
Thts fteld day would be sponsonng a conservation
The senate report sa1d such
vtew of the growmg urgency
Slmtlar
to the one held on the test Which Wlll be held m all
Serv1ng Me1gs Gall1a
of mcreasmg food produchon studies are of prune unpor Gus Douglass fann m Mason lhe btology classes of the
&amp; Mason Count1es
to meet mmg domest1c and lance to mcreasmg food Coun ty last year However 11 dtstnct Michael Whalen
Jack W Carsey Mgr
productiOn but the support
world needs
of Secondary
Ph 992 2181
was brought out by Mr Smtih Director
Wtthout
adequate for agncultural research that Utat more ed uca\ tonal m Education 1n Mason County
Store Hou rs
Store Open 8 30 5 30
programs m agnculture the Prestdent 1s requestmg 1s formahon
would
be 1s working with the dts!rtc! to
Mill Closes at S p m
many of the other (federal ) m real terms substantia Uy presented
brmg
about
the
ad
~rVtnJ.: Oh u,l A,.;nculrurc
for over -It\ Yc 1rs
programs w1ll soon become below ftve years ago
mtmstrahon of the test m all
Depart
George
Warrtck
In
constant
dollars
moot
Ute report charged
menl of Natural Resources Ute Mason County Bwlogy
Agnculture Comm1ttee ( discounlmg inflalton) the Reclamalton Inspector was classrooms
v
spo kesmen
sa 1d
the budget request for the present and dtscussed wtlh
Agrtcultural
Research
admtmstra twn s lack of
Ute board posstbihtles for
You Can Save Now Our
concern for farm and food serviCe 1s down 40 per ce nt reclamation on some of the
from a decade ago the report
strip mmed areas m Mason
S&amp;ld
607
These facts stand out as County that have not been
H gh earn game
Burger
Chef62 1 Johnson s P P 614
the stark md1cators of a revegelated to thls hme
Com mere a &amp; Sav ings 613
We were there and reported
dilemna soybeans and corn
l ndlv d ua l h gh game - M
to
the board that 46 000 feet of
Ward 229 H Marcum 223 0
research are less glamorous
Hern
N Marcum 250
S
tile
had been Installed on 13
than
research
on
F' e ds 24 1 P Sommer 236
landowners
farms m Mason
Sp ts p eked up - Helen mlSSies but 1t Is research
County
m
recent
months and
Lyon s 56 V rg n a Grover 5
that y1elds meanmgful
7
Mev Wa d 56
Neva
that
30
000
feel
of
hie had
Casella 2 8 1 and 3 10 Lo s beneftts and mcreases the
Installed
on
the
Jack
been
Rob nette 3 10 Opal Caslo 5
food supply Ute Agrtculture
7 Pa Harr s 54 7
Crank
farm
We
would
pomt
Conunttlee argued
t that the dttcher 1s

13
8 3~ral Roberts 3 Yours lor the Asking 4 Day of
Discovery 8 James Rob son Presents 10 Rex

Humbard 13 Open Bible IS
9 oo-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3 Hour of Power 4 Oral
Roberts10 Re• Hum bard 6 REv Leonard Repass
8 Across the Fnce 15
9 3D-What Does the Bible Plainly Say? 8 Ills Wr lien
10
10 oo--church Service 3

Successful business is study topic

You're

11 3D-TV Chapel 3

4

tacular 8 10

4 3D-Movie
S oo-Window

American

:

Clyde B Walker Mgr

•

Strangers tn lhe

Ourstory 33

Outdoorsman

15

American

I ssues

Sonny &amp; Cher 8 10 Nova 20 33
9 DO-McCloud 3 4 15 Movie Charlie s Angels 6 3
KoJaK 8 10 Masterp ece Theatre 20 33
10 0!1--'-Bronk 8 10 Bill Moyers Journa 20 33
10 JD-Mov1e Mosl Wanled 6 13
11 oo-News 3 ~ 8 10 15 Monty Pylhon sF ylng C reus
20 Kup s Show 33
II 1s-&lt;:BS News 8 10 PMA Pulse 15
11 Jo--Star Trek J Bonanza 4 Move Irish Eyes Are
Smiling 8 Face the Nat on 10 Don Kirshner s

Rock Concert 15 Soundstage 20
12 DO-ABC News 6 Hawaii Five 0 10
Janak! 33
12 15--B g Valley 6
12 30--Bonanza 4

Ironside 13

News

3

News 20

1 3D-Peyton Place 4 ABC News 13

Farmllme 10
6 45--Mornlng Report 3
6 ss-&lt;:huck While Reports 10 Good Morn ng Tr
Sta le 13 7 00- Today 3 4 IS Good Morn ng
America 6 13 CBS News 8 Bugs Bunny &amp; Fr ends
10
7 3D-Schoolles o
7 45--Sesame Sf 33
Kangaroo 8 10

8 3D-Btg Valley 6
9 DO-Not lor Women Only 3 Phil Donahue 4 15 Lucy
Show 8 Mike Douglas 10 Morning with 0 J 13
9 3D-A M 3 One Life to Live 6 Tattletales 8 Mike
;

Douglas 13

;, 10 ()()-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3 4 IS Edge of Night 6
~
Price Is Right 8 10
10 3D-High Rollers 3 4 IS Olnah 6
~ 11 oo-Wheel of Fortune 3 15 Weekday 4 Gamb t

•
..

8 10

Farmers Daughter 13

Elec Co 20

: 11 3D-Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Happy Days 13 Love
•
of Life 8 10 Sesame S 20 33
~ 11 55-Take Kerr 8 Oan Imel s World 10

..~ 12 oo-Magnlflcenl Marble Mach ine 3 15 Let s Make a
:
Deal13 Bob Braun s50 50Ciub4 News6 8 tO
• 12 3D-Take My Advice 3 15 All My Ch ldren 6 13
:

Search for Tomorrow 8 10

::.~ 12

•
:
•
••

45--E lee Co 33
12 55-NBC News 3 15
1 oo-News 3 Ryans Hope 6 13 Phil Donahue 8
Young &amp;the Restless 10 Not lor Women Only 15
1 3D-Days of Our Lives 3 4 15 Rhyme &amp; Reason 6 13
As the World Turns 8 10

2 ()()-$20 000 Pyramid 13 Formby s Antique Fur
nlfure Workshop 6
2 3D-Doctors 3 • 15 Neighbors 6 13 Guiding Light
8 10
3 oo-Another World 3 4 15 General Hospital 6 13 All
In The Family 8 10 Woman 20
3 JO-Onellle fo live 1• Mickey Mouse Club 6 Match
Game 8 10 Consumer Survival Kit 20 4 oo-Mister
Cartoon 3 Merv Gr ffln 4

=

Somerset 15

Max B

Nimble 6 Mickey Mouse Club 8 Mister Rogers
:
20 33 Movie Tension at Table Rock 10 Dinah 13
• • 3D-Bewitched 3 Mod Squad 6 Partridge Fam lly 8
~
Sesame St 20 33 Fllnlslones 15
DO-Bonanza 3 Family Affair 8 Star Trek 15
• 5 3D-Adam 12 4 13 Neewd 6 Bverly Hillbillies 8
:
Elec Co 20 33
• 6 oo-News 3 • 8 10 13 15 ABC News 6 Zoom 20
:
Special education 33
• 6 30-NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 13 Andy Griffith 6
;
CBS News 8 10 Hodgepodge Lodge 20
:1 7 oo--Truth or Cons l To Tell the Truth 4 Bowling for
..
Dollars6 Buck Owens 8 News 10 Candid Camera
13 Family Affair 15 On Aging 20 Resourceful
•
Wesf Vlrglnle 33 7 3D-That Good Ole Nashville
Music 3 Don Adams Screen Test 4 Match Game
•
PM 6 Price Is Right 8 10 Evening Edition w th
e
• Martin Aronsky 20 High Road to Adventure 10 To

:: 5

Economy means easy to own as well
as to buy And brother these are true
economy tractors low purchase pnce
lillie or .no upkeep And they keep gomg
season after season

case of 4 Gallons

The Cadet76 IS easy to operate
standard shift w1th one pedal clutch
and brake No sh It hydrostatic dr ve
makes the Cadet 80 even eas er
Cult ng the grass Is what they do
more of So Ihe mower s Included But
1 n1ouung, lert ltzing remov ng snow
all that and more Just attach a

lew
of optional work equipment,
and start saving I me effort and money
All year long Year alter year alter year
Cadet economy lawn tractors Savings
slllrt at

'695

3'
•

CEITIII.IIrl

:
~
~

G1lplllis. Ollit

3
"

., .........

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.
POMEROY, OHIO

•

~

:
•

Tell the Truth 13

friends of

Man

WE

WISH

15

Marco

Sportllte 33
1 DO-Bobby Vinton 3 On the Rocks o 13 Rick Little
• 15 Gunsmoke 8 US A People &amp; Politics 20 33
Sara 10
8 3~WE Think You Should Know 3 Good Heavens
6 13 Ourstory 20 33
9 OQ--Joe Forreste• 3 • 15 Movie Buster &amp; Billie
6 13 All In The Family 8 10 Sing America Sing
20,33

For Rent

SE NIOR CITIZEN des res
room board and laiJnd,.y
Mus oe downsta rs room
Ca I C C Cuck er 992 7244
3 18 4 c

., AND 4 ~M turn shed ana
unfurn shed ap s Phone 997
5434
11 9 lfc

MUSICIAN
t dd e or
mando n
o
young 8 ue
Grass Band
T m ng
m
por an Ca l 742 27'16
3 17 6 c

COUNTR
;
Park RlY 33 Mob
len Imiles
norlh
of Pomeroy Large lots w lh
concret e pa los s dewalks
rur\ners and off stree
pa,.kng Phone 9917479
2 31 ltc

o

Not1ce

Wanted To Buy

w LL ca e fore derly woman
n my hom e Phone 992 7314
3 7 6tc
MAKE SURE you ge every
poss be dedu c on h s yea
Have your Fe de a l and
S a e ncome Ta~ rctu n by
an pccoun an
Phone 992
6 73
I 2 52tc

---------

OLD furn ure
ce boxPS
brass
beds
o d
wa
e ephones and parts or
con l)le e househo ds Wr e
M
0
M le
Rt
2
Pom eroy Oh o Cal 992
7760

3 7 tfc

Employment Wanted
PA NT N G ns de ou
and
roofs Phone Mason
304
77J 5626
3 2 6t c

Found
BLACK PONY wear ng blue
ha tr found on R I
43
Harr sonv le Road al Lew s
Sm th es dence Phone 992
3183
~ s 6tc

SOUTHERN
'ye low
pne
pos s Now buy ng scvcra
s es
con ac
\u kc
Par so ns
Bow by Co p P
0 BO)( 39 Spence r W Va
~7 6
PhO e 30
92
250
o e 'Jen nQS
30
354 7694
3 2 1 p

Auto Sales

968 CHEVY Van w th 1970
mo or 6 cy
carpeted
pane ed s ereo ape deck
FM rad o mag whee ls n
good
cond to n
$1 300
Phone 992 3710
3 1 4tp

- -------1975 OLDSMOBILE Start re
"--

m ut set

A~H pad for a l makes arld
modes ot mob le homes
Phone area code 614 423
953
4 3 tfc

Lo s T n Beech Grove area
Ru and
Buff Cole an
swers o Spa rky
Anyone
know ng he whereabouts of
h s dog please c.a 992 3587
or 747 2315 Reward offe ed
3 19 6 c

969
NTERNATIONAL
p ck up
complete
new
e~t:haust system Carburetor
overhau ed Phone 992 7149
3 21 61c

pups Phone

___________ _
3 21 6

c

CH H UAH UA dogs 2 fema les
6 months old Phone 742
2962
3 9 3tc
AKC REG fema le Ch huahua
go den fawn S75 4 yea s
o d P ho ne 992 2265
3 9 6 p

AKCR;gs-;redCOiTe- s ud
K ng
3 16 fc

For Rent
TRA I LER space 3• m e
nor h of Me gs H gh Schoo l
on o d R 13 PJ1one 992 294
3 21 1 c

----·-

FURN I SHED
2
bedrm
apar men
adu Is on y
n
M ddleport Phone 992 3874
3 12 fc
4 ROOMS on East Man St
Phone 992 238
4 18 3tc
ENJOY grac ous I v ng a1
V ll age Manor
n M d
dlepor tor as ow as $130
pe
on h
w h
al
u
es
pa d
Thes~
a e brand n ew h gh Qual ly
apartments a pr ces you
can affo d Your rent n
c udes month
o mon h
eases all e ec
1 v ng
carpel ng
range
and
retr gerator
f ree 1 as h
p ckup cab e TV a your
expense
and
on s te
aundry fac I I es
Con
venlen o shopping on Third
and M 1 Streets n M d
d eport See he manager al
R vers de Apar ments or
ca l
992 3273
Furn shed
apartments
are
a so
ave tab le
2 2 7Btc

------- -

UNt--URNI SHED
ap
n
Pome oy '1. b ed m new y
redecora ed fully car peted
Ca l n he ea rly am 992

2288
2 BEDRM Ira ler
Phone 992 3324

2 22 He
rea l n
3 2

ce
tc

J BEDRM house w lh bah n
Ru l and Phone 992 5858
3 9 He

PONTIAC
Catal na
970
ha rd op coupe p b
'P s
a c v 8 motor S7.50 Phone
949 2589
J 21 Jtc

J

NOTICE TO
DEPARTMENT OF

TRANSPORTATION
Columbus Oh o
Much 12 1976
Contract Sales Legal Copy
No 76 101

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

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

--

0 RECTOR
Rev

8 11 73

3 1 121p

----------- -IN DASH 23 channe CB 8
track AM FM rad o Call
992 3965
3 18 He

28

9 3D-Maude 8 10

10 OD-J gsaw John 3 4 15 Medical Center ~ Red
Wh te &amp; Wow 10 News 20 Bl Ways 33
10 3D-Lock Stock &amp; Barrel 20 Catch 33 33
11 OD-News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 ABC News 33
11 3D-Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Clifton Dav s 6 13 Movie
Where the Boys Are 8 Movie That Kind of
Woman 10 Janak! 33

REG STEREO
Pol l ed
Hereford bu IS breed ng
age Roya Oak Far m s 992
267 1
3 18 Jtc
EUREKA upr ght sweeper
530 00 Ca 742 2695 or 992

6137

3 II Jtc

News 13

HANN
CHANNEL FIVE
9 oo-The 700 Club
7 OG-PVH Groundbreaklng
7 JG--Speclal Edition
8 oo--oayllme
9 OQ--Washlngton Debates
10 oo-100 Club

---------

5

~

PIECE H ckory FamiiV
room ut
Custom made
canopy approx 15x15 2 '2
HP Jet propelled outboard
motor Folty Retl mower
gr nder large
McCulloch
chain sew M•c 1 10 F&gt;hone
(6141 678 2166
J 18 61p

REPLACEMENT

WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING SOFFITT

For Sale

GUTTERS AWNINGS

R&amp;J COINS

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

LARRY LAVENDER

Rutland742 2331
Roger Wamstey
3 1 lmo

Pomeroy

WANT TO

Syracuse Ohto
Ph n2 nn
4 10 1 m o

D&amp;D

BULK WATER
AVAl~ABLE

SAVE MONEY?

Tuppers Pia ns Chest er
Wa er D str ct now se ng
bulk water to tanks on
trucks at our new oft ce
Localed on S R t 7
1M le Nortn of
Eas ern H gh Schoof
Ser ve Yourself 0 Spenser
Tak ng quarters on y one
at a t me for 250 ga ons of
water
Open al he T me
for your conven ence
3 1 1mo

Take advantage of our
pr1ces
Quality
built
homes Ntc~ lots available
tn n1ce locations

BISSELL BUILDERS
Ph (614) 985 4102

CONSTRUCTION
From 1 shelf to • Muse ~II
types of bu1ldlng and
remodeling
tram
the
toundat on up Adchllons
c•rpet ng painting s dtnt
roofing
panel ng
paper
hangtng etc

Ph 949 202J or 843 1"7

2 12 1 mo

2 19

SLOAN'S
CARPETING

Aprtl 17th

begtnn~ng

oo a m

10

Watch for Ust
Items Later

Phone day or n1ght
1 '

.,.,o

6149922206

PUBUC

Orange Twp Volunteer
F1re Dtpartment wtll hold
a consignment auc;t1on at
the fin house located tn
Tuppers Plams Oh1o on

Free estimates on car
peltng and .nstallahon
We II brmg sarnples to your
home wtth no obhgat1on
See how you can really
save
M1ke Young Manager
Sales and InstallatiOn

mo

lARRY WHOBREY

AUCTION SALE

AaDJNiANT
Now acceptmg clients
for bookkeeping and
tax serv1ce

ar

of

PH. 992-6173
J 18 1 mo

3 17 1 mo
.

EXCAVATING
BACKHOES WILL
eta
AND DOZER LARGE AND
struct on
SMALL
SEPT C TANKS
heat ng No
INSTALLED
BILL
oo sma
PULL NS PHONE 992 2478

NIGHT
__ __________
_
DAY OR
_...

roof ng
con
p umb ng and
ob loo arge or
Phone 7422348
3 19 261c

SAM'S

PIZZA SHOP

2 22 52tp

llaltan.Style Pm

For Sale

For Sale
cuB Fa rm a) t w th mower and
plow Camper hat will fit a
6ft bed truck Phone 1614
985 3924
3 21 6 p
----·-·--- -- , - - - - - - FARMA L L Super C tractor
w t h w n p ows and mower
qu tk h tch Phone 614) 661

3709

3 71 3tp
- ------------RUGS of all s zes Cal Mason
{30.4 77J S626
3216tc:

Real

~.t~t

""'"!' 8

7 ROOM house w th bath good
locat on ful basement 39
Sou h Seconet M ddlepor
Phone 992 2265
3211'2 p
:l

Real Estate

BR HOME
IUS f n sh ed
remade ng
Salem
Sf
Ru tla nd
Phone 142 2306
after .t p rn or see M lo B
H u ch nson
10 9 tfc

TUPPERS PLAINS New 3
bedrm
houses carpeted
ran ge garage large lots
FHA f nanc ng ava !able
S21 900
Phone (614
667
6304
3 14 26tp

----

9

MUST SELL - 22 ' acres
- 1 home &amp; 2 apartments
and own
1 Mob1le

Home All rented at a ll
t mes S420 00 per month
plus gas well
Askmg

S25 000
MAKE
AN
OFFER
MIDDLEPORT - S BR
1 1 baths Insulated storm
doors &amp; windows
N G

heal garage &amp; carport
Good condtt on 12 glassed
porches small basement)

$12 000
FORKED RUN LAKE F shmg cab n 3 rooms 2
porches and a path (needs
some repa r) $2 800

POMEROY

room

1

frame -

NEW furnace

carpel ng

I le

pane ng

s ding
storm doors &amp;
windows
Porches
ful
basement 2 car garage

Budget gas b II $35 00
EXCELLENT
CONDITION $18 500
WE
NEED
NEWER
HOMES
992 2259 or 992 2568

ACRES 2 good we s 2
bcdrm
a l er WI se w h
ra l er o w hou Ca ll 742
22 17afer4 pm PrceS7 500
for bo h
) 12 12 p

HOME for Sl!l l e by pr vale
owne
3 2
ac es
4
bedrooms barn on b ack op
road gas and wa er Phone

949 2023

-3

Ph 949-2404
OPEN TUES THRU SAT

For Sale

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

has free gas
water systems

Call n orders •nd pick up
n twenty minutes
Located 11329 lrd Street
Racrne Oh10

COAL limes to ne and all ypes
of sa and rock sa t tor Ice
and snow removal
Ex
ce s or Salt Wo ks
East
Ma n St
Pomeroy Oh o
Phone 992 389
2 7 lfc

For Sale

-----------

WINDOWS &amp; DOORS

or

NAthan Biggs
Rad1.1tor Spec illtst

H &amp; N day old or started
Leghorn pul ets Bo h f oor
or cage grown ava !able
Poultry
hous ng
and
automa on
Modern
Poultry
399 W
Ma n
Pomeroy 992 2164
3 21 ltc

NEW Bearcat
II Pol ce
sea ed proposa s w
be
Scanner Phone 992 6 01
rece ved a the off ce of the
3 21 Jtc
D rec or of he Oh o Depart
m ent
of
Transportal on
23 CHANNEL C B Rad QS
Co lumbus Oh o un 1 10 oo
SI 09 95 up antenna S14 95
A M
Oh o S andard T me
up 4 t I 9 Tuespay lhru
Tuesday Apr
6
916 tor
Fr day 12 t II 6 Saturday 60
mprovements n
Central Ave Athens Oh o
Athens Gallia Ha cking
3 21 10tp
Me gs Monroe Noble V nton
and Wash ng on Coun t es
WHEAT back penn es 85c per
Ohio on var ous sect on n
ro I
51 00
silver cer
ATH US Rou es33 SO Sate
1 f cates Sl 25 each u s
Rou es 13 56 78 346 550 682
$5 00 gold r,leces S88 each
and 691 n Athens county
510 gold p eces $130 each
GAL
U S Route 3.5 State
$20 gold ~ eces $220 each
Rou es 7 60 and 554 n Ga 1 a
W II allow J times face lor
Cou n y HOC U S Route 33
964 and older 5 ver coms
Sate Routes 56 93 and 80 n
on tntde Ca l Roger Warns
Hock no C:n nt v MEG U S
ley 742 2331
Rou e 33 State Rou es 7 14J
3 21 lip
and 346 n Me gs County MOE
Sta e Route 78 n Monroe
County MRG
State Roules GU TAR camp ete bed 20
g rl s b ke two 13 nch t res
78 and 669 In Morgan County
~g al on ce cream freezer
NOB
Intersta te Route 77
d sh es of all ki nd s and other
State Routes 340 and 821 n
m sc PhOne 742 2078
Noble County
VIN
State
Route 346 In v nton Coun t y
2 19 2 c
WAS Inters tate Route 77 u
S Route 50 S ale Route 7 n 30 NCH Kenmore e ec range
Phone 992 6 162
Washington County by ap
ply ng edge I nes lane nes
3 19 Jtc
railroad cross ng mark ngs
973 HON OA ,.oad b ke ex
c ur b
mark ng s
sand
cellent condl t on
3 900
mark ngs transverse lines
m les ot of e)Ctras Phone
and 8 Inch channe t zing I nes
742 2211 after 5 pm call
Pavement W dth - Varies
742 2201
F&gt;roject and Work Length Vorv
3 19 6tc
"the dale se for complet on
of h s work sha l be as se t GOOD hay never wet Phone
forth n the b dd ng proposal
949 2523
Each
b dder s hall
be
3 10 12tc
requ r ed to f e w t h h s b d a
cer f ed check or cash ier s COAL F OR !).1\LE CAB Coa
check for an amount equa to
Company
m le north of
five per cent of h s b d but n
Chesh re on Rt 7 P ck you
no evenl more tha n f tty
own S20 per ton Open 6 days
thou sa net do Iars or a bond for
per week or ca ll 6 41 367
ten per cent of h • b1d payab le
733 0 tor further nformat on
to the D rector
1 a 78tc
B dders must apply on the
proper forms for qual t cat on TENNA 8 track
FM stereo
at least ten days prior to the
rad o combinati on for car
date set for open ng bids n
Speakers
n c l lleted
$50
accordance with Chapter 5525
Phone 949 2322
Oh o Rev sed Code
3 17 6tc
Plans and spec If cat ons are
on f e n the Department of
Transportation and the off ce 14 x 60 RIBSTONE S LO
EVERYTHING
N
of
he
D str ct
Deputy
CLUDED Phone 949 2542
0 rector
3 16 6tc
The Director reserves the
r gh l ore ect any and all b ds
HAY never been we Phone
6 4) 378 620.5 affer 6 p m
RICHARD 0 JACKSON

March 21

1 00- Tomorrow 3 4

Sup reme
3 12 l c

Chester Ot110
New v redecorated tu 1y
car peted moslly t urn shed
Shown 12 to 4 March 27th
Reasonab e rent
Ca l
1
(314) 866 173
3 19 7 c

CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO

992 7692
3 7 4tc

970 CUTLA SS
Phone 997.31 0

--.---------- For Rent
lost
HOUSE
n
REDBONE coon hound male
In Langsv tea ea Cal 742
2848 or 992 7894
R
T
5 ewar
3 6 6 p

Ca

From fl1e largest Truck or
B Jlldozer'" Rad ;,tor to the
sm a test He!Afer Core

Ph 992 2114

F nanc1ng Au lable
Blown 1nto Walls&amp; Attics
STORM

F1nd buried treJsure
coins rings s lver gold
con&amp; Mttal
Detectors
For Rent

Rl 3 Pomeroy Oh•o 45769

1974 DATSUN 8210 Fas back
4 speed has rad al
res
AM F M stereo 8 track
ke
new ca I Char e Ma thews
992 2257
3 19 5 c

Blown
lnsulattortServtces

BUY SELL or TRADE

Help Wanted

Mobile Homes For Sale

Se rv ce
St ardus
Pho ne (6 1-4 985 4248

Business Services

H;;.,,. "rL:~-.::::;:=--::====;:-:;;::=========~~=========~
FREE ESTIMATES
COINS

express our
I hanks
to relal ves and friends for
the expreSs on ot sympathy
3 BEDRM house on 1662
and k ndness shown dur ng MEAT CUTTER - for fh s
Linea n H
ll25 per month
area
Slate
ex
per
ence
and
the pass ng of our beloved
Ca l I 304 7684041
qual
t
ca
Ions
n
your
letter
husband and father Haro d
3 14 6tp
o Box 500 co Sunday T mes
F Erlew ne We apprec a e
Sen lne
Gal lpol s Ohio
al the beaut fu floral of
.A5631
fe nQsandtt'lefood We a so
3 2 3tc
want lo express spec a
thanks to Rev
George
74 )( 65 MOBILE home for sale
Hoschar
the pal bearers FOREMAN WANTED We
For more ntormat on ca 1
are seek ng an experienced
W lcoxen Fun era Home and
992 7256
sup~rv sor
for a I ght
Blower Funeral Home May
3 21 .4tp
assemb y factory located n
God bless each of you Mrs
Gall
pols
Pont
Pleasan
Char lot e Erlew ne and
area
Must be abe to VINDAI,.E 12 x 68 3 bedrm
en ldren
ba h &amp; 2 14ft e~t:pando 25
mo
lvate
employees and be
J 18 3 p
ft awn ng and porch tu ly
qual ty consc ous
s~ nd
carpeted
Phone 742 2882
resume o Pont P easan
3 21 6tc
Reg ster Box P 0
2
n
el ud e past sala y h story
SOUTHEASTER N
Oh o
3 18 3 c 1970 MOB LE home tor sate 2
Po led He eford Assn o be
bedrm Par ally turn shed
held Fr day even ng A pr
gas hea
Phone 3041 773
2 at 7 p m Sa le w 1 be held PERSON o cook clean and
5460 or 992 5001
cere for s ck woman L 11 ng
al
l he
Rock
Spr ngs
3 14 6tp
n s opl on a
Phone 992
Fa rgrounds
Pomeroy
---2218
Oh o Wa ch fo future ads
ra ler b ue
3 18 3 c 1974 SKY LINE
32 1(
and wh e turn shed S4 500
---~-----0
ake over payments
WANT Vaca on ';I Need chores SOMEONE
o work as a
Phone 949 2860
done';!
For
more
n
he per on a paper ube route
format on ca
6 4) 985
3 17 4 c
about 5 hrs each afternoon
428
and eve n ng Cal 992 2776
UN F URN SHED 14 x 70
3 2 61p
after 7 30 p m
mo b e home
ola elec
3
3 18 3tc
on cen raJ a r co nd oner
WILLgvepanolessons nmy
excellen cond I on Phon e
hom e Ca 742 213
RELIABLE
babvs ter
247 2684 or 247 2664
3 21 6 c
wanted In M ddteport area
3 10 fc
Phone 992 2220 after 6 p m
SHOOT I NGMa ch ustoffRI
3 17 4 c
7 nea
Rock
Spr ngs
14x65MOBILE home tor sale
Cemete y
eve r y Sunday
For more nformat on call
2 30 p m
992 7256
3 19 2 (
3 17 4 p
MONEY n our ce lar., at c';l
SHOOTING Malch Ru and
barn' Pay up o Sl 000 each
1973
4 x 70 TRA LER
3
Gun C ub
h gh powered
for ce a n old bot les A so
bedrooms
1 2
baths
r f es
330 ya ds
sco pe
wan
German W
W
I
Assume payments Sll2 90
s gh son y
p m Sunday
F ags medals swords etc
Phone 992 3388
Eve ryon e we come
Phone 992 2592 af er 5 p m
J 9 41p
3 19 2 (
3 25 Jtc

s ncere and heartte

992 78 0

6 4~unce of Prevention 10

Capt

1 w SH o hank al of my
tam ly and fr ends tor
remember ng me
n my
!ness and
he beau ful
card s and praye s for my
861h b rfhday May God give
eac h ot you a r ch b ess ng
for you th oughtfulness
S ncere y Edna Margan
3 21 ltp

...._

6 JG-Columbus Today 4 N ews 6 Sunr se Semester 8

8 QO....-Lassle 6

Wanteo

Card of Thanks

Pets
TWO coQn hound

MONDAY MARCH 22 19)6
6 oo-Sunrlse Semester 10
6 15--Farm Report 13
6 2D-Good News 13

::'.
•
:
:

PH 992 2176

t

IHe World 4

Beat 33

•

Also Reduced Prices on

• Super Powder Plus

3 W de World ot Sports

7 3D-W ld W1ld World of An 1ma ls 33
8 oo-E llery Queen 3 4 15 S x M II on Dol ar Man 6 3

:

... are more than money!

228 Upper R1ver Road
P 0 Box207 Galhpohs
Phone 446 0203

5

7 oo-world of Disney 3.4 15 Sw 1ss Family Robinson
6 13 60 M nures 8 10 Austin City L m Is 20 Cap lol

~

efoamcheck
eKieen-Ezy

Geste

To Be Announced

Forum 33
6 3D-NBC News 3 4 15 News 6 High School ow 8
Gilligan s Island 13 World Press 33

:

elosan

o~

Home and 15

h

Federal Land Bank Loans are long term and
are available at a reasonable rate w1th repayment schedules tailored to your farm 1n
come flow mcludmg prepayment pnv1leges
without penalty- all advantages to the
member borrower

B~au

NBA

Guppies to Groupers 33
6 DO-Search 3 News 4 4 OAv1d N ven s World 6
CHSTVReport8 SammytO lssues&amp;Answers 3

Chevette

LIMITED TIME ONl.Y

8

6 13 To Be Announced 4 rench Chef 33

1976

®

Fish ng

Onedln Line 33

4 oo-Davld N ven s World 3
Musical Encounter 33

FIRST PRIZE:

YARD SALE

Championship

3 oo-R vals of Sher lock Holmes 33
3 3o-Gandstand 3 15 Aulo rAcing 6 13
Basketball 8 10 8 10

117

Pre-Season

6

Commun que

Flshln Hole 13 Adams Chronicles 33
I 3D-Tennis 3 15 Bobby V nton 4 Aware 6 Joedy
Gardner BasketballS Mulrlleld The Magnlllcenr
Oream 10 Sportsma~ s Fnend 13
2 DO-Superstars 6 13 WHA Hockey 4 Sports Spec

PRIZES!

In

Focus on

Fee the Nat on 8 Lower l ghthouse 13 Breath of
L le 15 12 3D-Meet the Press 3 4 t5 D red 1ons 6
World of Survival 8 Co umbus Tow~ Meet ng 10
Garner Ted Armstrong 13
1 DO-Grandstand 3 1S Probe The World Around Us

MARCH

{l

Make a Wtsh 6

Columbus 4 Rev Calv n Evans 13
12 ()()-At Issue 3 F sh n Hoe 4 Issues &amp; Answers 6

to LANDMARK'S

BmMHDlY
SAlE!

Leroy

V ew 6 Rex Humbard 8 15 Rv Henry Mahan 13

TODAY'S NEWSPAPER

the fann front

Church Service 4

Jenkins 6 Christian Center 8 Movie Nine Hours
to Rama 10 Jimmy Swaggart 13 Faith for Today
15
10 3D-Big Blue Marble 3 Garner Ted Armstrong 4
Jimmy Swaggart 6 Th nklng tn he Black 8 Blue
Ridge Quartet 13 This s the L fe 15
11 oo-Vegetable Soup 3 Ooctors on Call 4 Point of

See Our Insert In

Effect1ve, economical
Tamed Iodine®
Teat Dip for
dairy cows.

19~

6 DO-Film 4 This the Life 10 Publ c Pol cy Forums

lay of the land

Farm bloc pushes
our commrmity greater spending

Agriculture and

Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

Tordon
is safe

3 1 26 p

-------..----BEORM
hom e
us

f n shed remode l ng Sa lem
S
Rutland Phone 742 2306
after 4 p m or see M lo B
Hu ch son
9 73 lfc
MODERN home n Ches er 8
room s 2 ba hs 2 porches
sunporch 2 basement c y
and wei water na ural gas
garage
Pr ced
o sel
Phone (614&gt; 985 4 02
2 4 fc
5 ROOM house and bah on 150
x 100 f lo toea ed on 120
Sta e St
Pomeroy S6 000
Phone 992 5786
3 6 Me

630Tit1000
3 17 1 mo
WILL TR M or cu
rees and
shrubbery Phone 949 2545
or 742 3167
2 27 "2 61c
EXCAVATING dozer IO.! ltl:'
and backhoe work
sept c
tanks -i n sta l ed
dumo
rucks and lo boys tor h re
w I haul f 11 d
o p so
mestone ahd gravel Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers day
phone 992 7089 n gh phone
992 3525 or 992 5232
2 11 lfc
LUCKETT Farm Equ pment
West
Wash n gton
St
A bany Phone (614 698 3032
or 698 788
2 18 26 tc
C

BRADFOR 0 A uct oneer
Camp e e Serv ce
Phon e
949 2487 or 949 2000 R ac ne
Oh o Cr t Bradford
10 9 tc

REMODEL NG
P umb g
heat ng and a
types df
general
repa r
Work
guaran eed
20 years ex
per ence
Phone 992 2409
6 1 ltc
EXCAVATING
dozer
backhoe
and
d tcher
Char es R Ha f elet Back
Hoe Serv ce Rut and Oh o
Phone 742 2008
11 30 78tc
D &amp; D TREE Trimm ng 20
yea r s ex per tnce In su r ed
free es males Ca l 992 2384
or 6 4) 698 7257 A bany
10 15 fc
SEW IN G MACHINE Repa rs
serv ce a ll makes 992 2284
The Fab c ShOp Pomeroy
Author zed S nger Sales and
Serv ce
We
Sharpen
Sc ssors
3 29 tfc

HOM E for sa e spac ous R E A"DY M X CON I': t:."T""r-del vered
gh
to vour
I v ng room d n ng room 2
pro ect F as and easy F'ree
bedrm
arge kitchen
es m a es Phone ~9 2 3284
fam ly room
new ba hs
Goegle n Ready M » .)Co
priced o se
Phone 992
M ddleport Oh o
7394
6 30 fc
3 16 5tp

----

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

'rEA FORD

Virgil B Sr Broker
110Mechanlc Pomeroy 0

Strout

Realty"

Pllone992 3325

kEAL OAK FLOORS- In
3 8 R S

mce carpet ng 1n

lvlng &amp; fa mily Rms Only 4
yrs ol~24 soo
MODERN
3 Brs lge
kit wtth bar d n ng with
slid ng glass drs
2
ceram c t1le baths
full

NcaaPO••\T&amp;O

NO 160 - Very mce 2 BR
hom e

scree n ed

porch

elec heat fully nsulaled
garage a:. a land
big
garden spot ntce for small

fam1ly $16 000 00

basement and dbl garage

$38 000
RIVER FRONT LOT Water e ectnc and sma ll

build ng $4 ooo
LARGE - 9 rms

3 Brs

11 2 baths hot water hea t
Ltv ng across f ront of
house Lots of closets
Large lot and beautiful

view S16 SOO
FIVE POINTS - Modern 3
Brs all paneled lge bath
garage and lge lot S2S,5oo
RACINE - Nice 3 15rs
large ktt din ng full
basement 1 ' balhs Obi
garage plus Almost I h
acres $31

soo

49 ACRES - 3 yrs old 2
hedroom home bath birch
kitchen carport and lull
basement S31 500
IF
YOU
WANT
PROFESSIONAL
AOVICE HIRE ONE IT
WILL PAY YOU

NO 159 - 3 BR all elec
full basement front porch
lge yard ready to move

Into S23 000 00
NO 114 - 115a w1lhlarm
pond
ge
barn
qutef
country sett•ng
shade
rtver borders property for
f shmg also nas new gas
well good spot for ret1ree

or campsite S32 000 00
NO 161 - Small home with
large yard close to stores
all on 1 floor on qu e t

$lreet S8 600 00

804W
Pomeroy

~am

992 2298

After Hours Call
992 7133
CONTACT
LOIS Pauley

- Sweepers toasters rons
a I sm a I app l ances Lawn
mower nex t o Sta te H flh
way Garage on Route 7
Phone t85 3825
4 16 I C
SEPT IC TANK S cleaned
Mode n San al on 992 3954
or 992 7349
9 18 tfc
R EU DOG 1 mestone gravel
and f I
d r
del vered
Phone B 1 Pul ns 992 2478
2 19 26tc
WILL ao Odd JObS roofmg
pan ng haul ng tre ework
and mow ng Ca
992 7409
3 2 26tc
0 DELL A l lnemen
located
beh net
Rutland
Grade
Sch oo
Tuneup brakes
wheel balanc ng a lnement
Phone 742 2004
11 16 tfc

Real Estate for Sale
FOR SA LE near Langsville 5
room house root cellar with
room over 2 bey detached
garage
s acres no bath
hot and cold water n k t
chen L P vas heat heaters
w th house ca
742 2819
atter5pm
3 17 7fp

-------- -

7 ROOM Mouse w th ba1h good
local on Ful basement 39
South Second M ddlepor
Phone 992 2265

-- \ ___ _:!.._ l~tp

�29 - Tbe Sunday Tlrnes - Sentinel, Sunday, March 21 , 1976
28- The Sunday Times - Sentinel, Sw1day, March 21, 1976

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Card of Thanks

Card of Thanks

WE WOULO l i ke to thank
relatiyes . frienas and n e igh
bors tor the i r sympclllhy and
kindness before and afler
the death of m v husband and

our brother . West St asa
Powel l. Our deep a p
caras

and

other tokens of sympatnv .
Spec i al th anks to ReY . Pa ul

Ha w ks . St Mary ' s Hospila t
and" sta ff and Dr

Huntington ,
H os p i tal

w.

Si alo.i of

Va ._, Ho lze r

Staff

and Dr
Abe ts, The Southeast Ohio

EmerQency
Ylce .

Mea icat

Ser
waugh -Httlley Wood

Fvner a l
H om e .
MPigs
Memo r i a l Gardens. Also
w i sh to express appreciat ion
to all the motor ists who very
res pec lt u!IY stopped th eir
cars i"r.d w aited for West
St as a
Powell
f u n e ral
pr ocess ion to pass . This kind
of cour t esy Is a rarety in
toctay ' s busy world . It is all
the more appr eci ated . The
se r v ic e of th e Law en
f orceme n t o ff icers wa s
eQua l ly appreciated .
Th e Powe l l Fam ily
68 1
-~-------"- ----·
-~-W E W I SH to thank all our
fr iend s and ne ig hbors, a ll
who sent f ood or flora l gifts .
thank s to D r . Va ll ee , a-I t th e
nur se s an d ai d es at H olLer
H osp it al wh o h-el p ed in any
wa y in the sic kn ess and
d ea th of o u r wife and
m ot h er Mr s . Doro t hy F .
Hou ck, a sp ecial t hanks to
Fi r s t Churc h o f GOCI , Re v .
c on l ey , c;;a y e an d Tom l or
th e mu sic. a ll th e p r ayer s,
th an k s to th e p a l lb ea r ers
an d Wil lis Fune r al H ome .
Ma y G od Bless You All
No eh D a le Hou ck and
fami ly
68 - 1

AstraGraph
Bede

Oso l

ARIES (March 21-April 19, Today. you ma y find another's
philosophica l ou tlook m conflic t with yours. Solutions will
nOt be fo und in a heated e)(change .

TAURUS (April 20-May 20,
Today, try not to mter fere 1n
m atter s n ot directly concerned
with you . You may be asking
fo r som ethi ng tha t cou ld be
avoi d ed .

Wanted To Do

GEMINI (May 21-June 20,
Se l ect compan1ons today
·whose aims co1nC1de w it h
, yours . Associates wl1ose views
ar e not 1,., h-armony could prove
fr ustrating . ·

.

.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Don I

Real Estate For Sale

-·

Your dom estic tranqu1l1ty cou ld

be disru pt ed tod ay if you b r ing
u p old . controve r sial issues .
Le t sleep ing dogs tie
other s l o coope r ote today. try
mak ing su g ges t ions ra ther
than com m and$ . Pushing too
hard c o ul d have a reverse
eff ect.
1t's · necessary to make some
hasty r e pair s around home to da y. be sure to use the proper
tool s l or each j ob .
21) Enjo y your self tod ay, bu t
do n't oven nd ul ge 1n the good
l hmg s of life. Pr actice moderation in all ar eas .

22-Jan.

some a dj u s tm en t s In you r
plan s tod ay in orde r to suit
someon e else. Don 't make too
b1g a th ing of it.

IN TOWN V ery nice
bed r oom hom e, bat h ,
ga s h eat , uti li ty r o
c arpo r t . Tt1 is prop er ty
h ad e x cel lent c a r e . Pr ic
$16, 000 .

19)

N orma ll y y ou a r e r a t h e r
easy goi n g. but today yo u co ul d
be !r ill e. too 1ns1sten t upo n havmg you r own way .

1""'
-----------i
rhe4
·
FRANKLIN

•A

IRIS H Sll'tter , owner may
cla i m an d pick up . P h . AA6
4358 .
J05 I f ,
68 · 1

AKC Reg

Collie pups . Ph . 256

-----.-----

1969 CH EVY 1an do ne h alf ton
tru c k . V 8 d u mp bed 5675,
1970 1972 Ch evelle partS ,
1966 Fo r d V a auto . , goo d
sh ap e , S475 . 446 96 54.
673

· 1?69LI N COLN Con t . Ma..-k I ll .
all power , c r uise contro l.
AM FM ster eo radio , good
tir:es . N eeds some r e pa irs
$1,595. H6 0390 .
J5 l l
196 9 O L D:, , 4 dr .• Lu x·ur y
sed an , pw . ac , ps, pb . a i r
power , low mi leage . 446 1615
a ll er 5, ~46 174 4.
65 II
1975 CH EV . Ch eyenne- 1, Ton

p ick up, bl ack wit h p s-pb ,
aut o . trans _, J 50 V8 , 8,400
miles . 446 13 70 alter 5 .
65 6

74 A M BA SS ADOR.

HT . ai r ,

power , l in e sh ape . See Mr .
Sh a w , up s tai r s, 9 19 Sec ond
Ave . 10 4
656

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

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

6420.
67 -6
AKC DOberman s tud ser v ic e .
Red and rust Ca ll 446 4654 ,
49 If

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

AKC Ger m an Shor r Haired
Po in te r f em a le, 15 mos . old.
loves k id s, need s country
at mosp he r e . Call .&amp; A6 .1Hl.

----------'-------1973 FORD To r'irio Spor t 2 D r .
H T . exc . c ond ., mu s t se ll .
Ph . 245 94 80 aft er 5 p .m

68 3

~ 4 5 - 9296 .

setti n g on ~.4 . a.c re s. Ca r~ t.ed through ou t•, qfu'"i;'
,;',:dl ~~l.
n ice _lt vmg room . dm 1ng r oom . full y
k itc h en . f our bedroom s, fam il y room w ith mepoac•e,
• div i ded ba sement, recreation r oom , 2 c ar garage
two pat ios.

Find More House
For The Money

5 ACR E S - L o v el y tra c t of
land clos e t o . Rio Gra nd e .
cll y sc hool d ist r ic t ' Good
bu y fo r $7·, 500.
AC RES If yo u are
i ng for a n ice place
acreag e, look th is
. L eve l\' .' 4 b edroo m
om e, ba t h wit h sh ower.
Ice k itc hen with bu il l -In
e an d ov en , f orced air
e,
lo v e l y
shag
l c.or&lt;let~ Locat ed in c ity
1 d i s t r i c t , c los e t o
L ak ~. This wo n ' t
IOn ' i .'I I $35, 90 0.

WE BUY, SE LL, TRA DE
E v eninq s Call
J o hn Full er 446 -43 27
Lee J o~ n s on 256 -6740
Doug W elherh olt 446 -42H
Ear l T . Win_ters 446-382 8

1975 Chev. ESTATE WAGON ..... s6095
D ark red , sim u la t ed wood tr im , 3 sea t, f u l ly eq u i pped
w ith eve r y Chev. op t ion , low m i les. n ew titl e. b oss's
wi f e's car . St icker $7 ,400 .00

1975 PINTO MPG ..................12895
Whit e 2 dr , 4 sp eed t r a n s .. r a dio , bod y mouldings, W· S·
w fires. It's l ike new wi th less tha n 5,200 m iles .

Pomeroy, Ohio Ph. 992-2174

75 FORD MAVERICK................s3395

'4 ~oo r, 6 cy l ., auto .• P .S., 'radio , w -w rad ial s, d e lu )l e
t n _m pk g. a n d mold ing , del. bumpe r s &amp; g ua r ds, 6,600
mtl es by loca l ow n er. Clean a s new car .

1974 CHEV. BELAIR 4 DR.. .....s1095

~

Camping Equipment

Au t o .

va.

4 door ,
auto ma t ic, 'p _stee ring a nd b r a k es ,- f ac tor y
a i r , cr ui se con t r o l. sharp, 1 owner local car. d ark
green .

TRUCK SPECIALS

• SEE : Fred Bla ettn ar , Pat Hill , Me lvin Little;
or Dan Thorn pson

1972
CHEVROLET 2-TON C&amp;C
.
. •..S2995
102" C. A., h eav y dut y sp r ing s, 292-6 cy l. e ngine, 15, 000
lb . 2 speed rea r a x le. foam sea t. mirrors, clean cab .

Open Even ings Tii6.:00
Except Thurs. and Sat. Ti l 5: 00

•

1973 CHEVY VAN ................; s2495

DAN THOMPSON
FORD

__ __

An d now it can b e yours -

Be t he f i r st t o

Phone
992-2196

see t hi s l ove ly

3 bedr.o om q ua lity bui lt Colo nia l. l nt l udes larg e livi ng
r oom . formal di ni ng , playroom , large fa m i l y room ,
k it c h en combi n ation , 2 fj..-epla ces and ba sem e n t with
famil y room . Idea l lo cat i on from 1 to 3 ac r es of fla t
land .

8 c yl. , au toma t ic , P . st eering, good t i r es. w hi t e f i ni sh .

1973 INTERNATIONAL ...... ;....s3895
l 600 Ser ies, 102" ca b t o a x le, 2 sp eed, R . a xl e, 6 speed ,
good 900 x20 t i r es, frame r ein f orced , V -8 eng i ne, hea t er ,
r eady t o wor k .

461 5. 3rd
Middleport

r

~ ~r :

I

I' ------------------------ I
1: 73 Cadillac Elderado Cpe. I
1

Merrill Carter
Associate

· Ph . Home 379-2184

1
Loved For More Than 100 Years

I:
I·

•

II

'

'('

••
•

I

C)c School District . $28,900 .00.

I

73 Cadillac Co.upe DeVille

I

Whit e, blue v i nyl l op, blue Cloth infer ior , fu ll power
':;'!~~:;~ a ir , T&amp; T wheel , full s t er eo, rad i a l ti r E.&gt;s, o n e

Lost

for Rent

For Rent

LOS T

TARA
TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS
2 Bedroom
TownhOuses
1'12 Baths
Pay 01)1y One Ut ility
Addison. Ohio
For lnlormatiol) ·
Call Shirle·y Adkin s

367-7250

YO UR ye st erday It c oul d 10 )( 50 2 BR . t rai ler , a ir co.n d .,
h ave been save d for e v er
edg_e of town on Rt 5B8 . S11 0
w i th
a p o rt ra i t f ro m
p er m ontt] p lus u ti l i t ies , dep .
Grov e r · ~ Stu d i o. Ca ll
446 reQ. 446-oan .
Tu es d a y
74 94 . Open
683
Sa t u r dr~y 10-51 u nt i l 8 p .m .
on T hur sd a y :
OF rI C E s p ace for r e11L
35 ll
dow n to wn Ph . &lt;14 6 0008.
237 I f

For Rent

i'1lt:50 MOB I LE H OME , 2 BR
g r q un o floor apt .• -146 0952
EFF I CI E N C Y ap t . tu rn . I
a ft e- r 5
a d u lt , 2 br M H ove rl o-oki n g
.12 I f
&lt;146 OJJ!:l .
'r iver . Ph . _
53 ! l
NEW R e g e n cy ~ I n c Clpar t
DOZE R wi th b ru sh hog ro t a ry
rne n l S, 2 IH! , P h . 675 510&lt;1,
mower for re nt . Ph . 446
675 .SJ 86 . 675 '? 608 . S1l9 pe r
9!HI2, 'l p .m , 5 p .m ., aft er 5
mont h Sa nd Hi ll Rd ., Pt .
p. m .• 245 554-1.
Pleasa nt , w va .
613
-1 tf
... __....
~---

~--

____ _

I

•

1:
'1995
l
l, i KARR ~.. ,~~~~!J'NDT I Look who ...,..__..,

f • 992 -Sl42
I

I

I

~

I

GMAC Financing Ava ilable

t

Pome ro\

Open Eves . Ti16_: Til S p.m . Sat.
'' YciU 'll Like Our Q.Jlll itYWay o f

See on~ of these courteous salesmen :
•Pete Burns
Lloyd Mclaughlin

L~-~-~~-~:~~=~. ~.':..
.•
For Rent

Number 1!

1
1

Doin g B u sin ess"

I
1

Have Always
Charming 60 a c . farm w.i th cropland, pastur e and
woodland . 3 Bedroom remodeled home w ith for ced air
fu rna ce ••fully c arpeted, modern ki f ch en , famil y r oom ,
l a~ n~r y room, bath and ' f i r eplaces . Larg e .b arn, outbu i_L.dmg s. w ith a tobac co b a se, ju st 9 m i les fro m tow n
Pr ic ed at $36,()(]0.
·

2~EoRoOMS.~f~;~.

mobil e
!h om e, at Qu a il Cr eek, to t al
. ) t.ec t r ic . Ph . 24 5-502 1.
64 -tf

•

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

5 IR M . HOU SE wilh ba th , f ull
:!&gt;_as e m en t w i t h g ar a g e ,
.wc et ed 6 mi . W . of Cen
M rvill e 'o11 St . R t . 279 . $ 150
~ er mo. 682.6010.

•
•

••'

owner of the attractive 3 bedroom home Is Very
.-an ~tous to seU . It in~ludes a large kitchen famUy r oom

. . •*

E X TR A nice un f u r . 2 br _, ga_r .
a pt . AO u lts pre ferr ed . $125
mo . C al l 446 -23 00. r ·.. ,
67 -I f
1?. )( 60 MOBIL E home loc at ed
in R io · G r a nd e . ma rri eO
coup l e on l y, chi ldre n ac ce p ted . Ph . 245 5267 .
6-7 .J
HOU SE ,I r oom s and bat h i n
ci t y , basemen t. c arp et. ha S
fur nace . Ad u lt s. Ph . 446-09 58
or 446 3553.

SPRING VAUEY
GREEN APT.
Rent s1arts at S129
month ,

'':'r,
I

!

A ccordi n g to do mestic new-ca r sa les

(f rom January 1-31, 1976) , Olds Cutlass

PH. 446-1599

h as b ecom e America 's best se ller! And
it's easy t o see w hy _

The beauti ful Cu tlass styling is highly
popular. Its l rlm, mi d-size oilers the kind
o f d r ivi n g a n d par k ing ease you li ke .'

- FOR RENT

Inside, there's room for a famil y. And
lra de·i n va lue is traditi onally hig h.
Yo u'll li ke the mileage, too ! Cutlass
got 25 mpg• in hig hway tests, 17 mpg•

: Park Lane Mobile Home Court, 4 mi. west of
~ Gallipolis, Rt 35. Blacktop streets .
: completely mo~ern facilities; excellent
: living conditions. Gallipolis City School
: District. Electric or natural gas, City water
~ and City sewer. $45 per mo. Phone 446-3345
! after 3: 30p.m. Richard Bowman, Manager ,

in c ity tests - acco rdi n g to the E PA
Buye r' s Guide.
You can c h oose the mode l to suit y o ur
needs-f rom sporty C u tl as s S to lu xu r i·
o u s Broug h am and e lega n t Supreme .
T h e pric e? Wi thi n the reach o f a lm o s t
e very n ew-c a r buye r.
If you ' re look ing fo r va lu e, ta ke a lOok at
Cu tl ass. W e h a ve a good se lect io n now.
C ome in ·a n d get ou r ' " N u m ber 1 " dea l!

•s1d. l6 engine &amp;nd IT\II nusl transm•ssion Remember. lhcse m11eage hgures are EPA
esllmal.es, The actu111 mlle&lt;~.ge )lOu get W(ll vary depending on Ihe 1ype of d10vm9 you do,
your df!Y1ng hAb1 ts. your t ar s cond1hon, and a.Yal l ~ble eQuloment.

We're dealing to keep Olds Cutlass Number 1!

KARl &amp; VAN ZANDT MOTOR SALES
242 W. MAIN

•
;.
•

Olds Cutlass: America's
best selling model

r92-5l42

POMEROY

"Your Chevy Dealer"
0 f)e n Eves : Til&amp;
Pomeroy•

For Sale

For Sale

O LD BOT TLE~ . da t ing b ack 24 " boy ' s , '16 " gi rl ' s , b ikeS.
excel len t c on d. Ca ll 446 -4314.
.to 1600, f o un d on ·a n o ld
.
.
68 ·3
Spani sh wr ec k on toa s t of
F lorida . Ca l l ll : 30a . m 44 6·
G I R L'S Sp id er b ike , l i ke ne w ,
7935 .
$25, l arge w al n u t off ic e d es k
663
$25. P h . 446 -7801.
'
... ~-----~-- ------68-2
194 7 V AGA B O ND c amp i n g
tr a i le r Wit h kit c h en , h ea t er , ---~-------- -----otso 24 " g irt s' b ike . 256 -1501. US E Di umber2x 10b y 14. Ph .
367 -714 8.
66 -]
68 -1
-~------.-------1972
F ORD
E X P LO RE R
p ickup . EH . con d ., low 50'.' PUL L o r w ork Pon y
A p pr O)( . 50". Ph , 379 -23 11 .
mi leag e, 446 -1522 or 446

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

-

1703 ..

68 -3

66J
- - - - - - - - - -..,.--""'

"·~

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

Sa le pr ice on a ll 3 pt . d i sc
Ha r row a nd Plo w
.
25 Used t ra c to r s i n ·s tock
GA l l l fl' OLI S TRA C TOR
SALE S, INC .
UPP E R RT . 7
G AlLIPOLI S, OHIO
PH . 44 6-1044
68-1

MOBILE h ome spa ce tor re nt .
·146 0008
.
23 7 If

6for Sl.OO

r oom .

~ ...,

US ED FURN I TUR E, 2 pi ece
l iv in g r oom su i t e. d i ne t i e
ser. 4 ch airs , ro ll -aw a y b ed ,
N E W FUR N I T U RE
9x 12 L inol eu m rugs .
Cor bin &amp; Sn yder
446 -117 1
95 5 Second A ve.
6611
19]) M A SSEY Ferg. 150, 11UO
hour s, 4 el y . gas, 3 bo tt orn
p low , 5 ft . b ru sh h og 54200 ,
goo d dr ag d isc $275 . Olive r
m owe r 3 pt h itc h , $250 , 2
-r ow F ~ r g c ulti va tors , S175
Cal l 256 1444.
66 3
o ROO M S, b at h , qarage , barn ,
2 out buildi n gs, 1 a cr e,
$15, 00 0, or '1 a cres, S17,00 0. 5
m il es out o f R io Gra nde at
((I nf er P oi n l. Ph . 68 2 6944 .

1L OF T Y p ile, free from so i l
is t he c arpet cleane d w i t h
B l ue L us tre . Rent elect r ic
s h a mpo o e r
Sl.
Centr al
Sup pl y Co .
2 R E G . Ang us BUl lS , 30 mos .
a nd 10 m os . Ma r shai i · Y ·
Breedi n g .
R e aso n ably
p riced . Ph . 245 5-4 77 .
68 -1

Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
825 Third 'A ve .
· Ga llipolisr 0 .

·-----

For Sale

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

2lr

R M Br ick home , 2 ca r
g ar age n ear hos p ital . Wi l l
r ent lea se on co ntract 5200,
p er month . P h . 4d6 4 127 .
66-3

---------

\969
1970
1970
1974
197&lt;t
1974
197 1
1969
1967
1971
196 9
197 0
1969
1973
1973
1973
197J

N ew GMC
Tr u ck H ea dquar t ers
11 T . Ch ev . P ic kup
F ord Pi ck up
Monte Carlo
17 T . GMC P ic kup
1 1
T Chev rol et P ic ku p
I 1 T.. GMC Pic k up
G M C Sub ur ban
F600 Ford Dump
F 1000 F ord T ractor
J .• T . GM C P .U .
~~ T . Ch e v . P .U .
Ff.OO Ford Dump
1 1 T . Ford P iC kup
1 " T , In tern at . P ick up
' , T . D odge- Cl ub Cab
GMC Sub urb an
1 J T
Ch~v . P . U .
SOMME R S GMC
T ru cl&lt;s. I nc .
13 ~ F'ineS1 ·

._._.....,

____ _

10· If

I NT E RN AT I O N A L
doze r .
in d us tri al I y p e , T 34 0, in
ve r y good con d . 2~6 - 1318 .
65 6

·w

VI\ Ch-un k s
Th e.pr'ice is
no t too h igh , t he qua l i t y is
f i r s t rat e P erf ect coa l lor
fire pl aces . Medium size
6"x8" Fos ter Coa t, .1.16 2783 .

12 11

•\.

1975 A N D 76 2 Brock way
t r actors , b o t h 350 C u m m in gs en g ines l ess th a n
18,000 m i tes on t hem . 2 1976 c it y tr ail er s t ri -a x l e .
30 1 1 fl lon g , S15. 000 fo r all
an d tak e o ve r p ay m en ts .
Ca ll 614 757 223 9 o r 6 t 4 75723d4 .
64 - 12

OLD- eOil les~ d a t i~ g--.- ba~k-to
1600 , fou nd on old Sp an ish
w rec k on co ast of F lor i da .
Call ti tt er 11: 30 e . m
4d6 1935 .
68·3

------------BROW NIN G Cilori
o v er and
under 12 ga . sh otgun , Like
ne.w co n dit i on . 446 39 33 .
50 l.f
,_

(0/\L. C.A B

-

--~--

... -

~-

Coa l L orp ., I
milenort:,of Ch esh ire , on Rt .·
7 P ic k your ow n . S20 p er ton .
Open 6 days a wee k , 367 7330
t o r turt h e r in form a ti on .
6 1f

~~ ~6 - 2532

__

657
1975MO DEL 450 cc Hu q uarn a
Motorcyc le M in t c ond . wit h
e/l.t ra s. Call .t-16 4-19 5. ask for
Je rry

S P E C IALS
N ew 10 fl. brush hog
tran sport dis c
Ha rro w ,
$1.225. 00.
•

r

USE D O F F SE T P LATES
HAV E
MANY USES

78 -1f

••• based on January new-car sales!

per

992-2126

LOW we ek, l y and mo n thl y
r a t es at Libby H otel. 446
17 .-13 .
244 I f

3

••' Limited number of Lots available ; 40' x70',

LO'•ely Cou1ntry House On 2 Acres

E . N. w' iu man 446 -4500 . .
Bud McGhee 446-1255

SLEEP IN G R ooms , wee k l y
r at r.s . P ar k Cent ra l H O·t el .
306-t t

LI G HT h Ou sek ee pi n g
Park Cent r a l Hote l

. - . -..-..- ·J

- F='---- - ---- ~------

Evenings C•ll
Ike W h em•n 446 · 37~6

203 -lf

-2-: Rfd lER spaces lo c ate d in
Ch eshi r e . r eaoy t or hook up
Ph one 367 0505
302 I '

L 1VE r ent tr e~ in e xc hang e NIC E 3 BR h o me- , loc ated on
St . R 1 7, near Shoppi n g
t or coo king and lig h t h ou se
cente r . Adu l ts on ly , no p el s,
tk eepin g . Country ho me w it h
5150 a mo nt h p lus sec . dep .,
Dr i v a t e b~drOom . si t t ing
re f .. r eq ., 446 -1044 o r 446l oom adlo lnln g bath . Call
1322.
1&amp;46 · 1593 after 4: JO.
" ·3
'
64 6

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

~ee k l y

MOBIL E ho m e, 2 b r ., Ph , 1
m i l e f r om h ospital . 446 3812_
67 -11

for• Rent

Ott ice -t46 -l6 4l

SLEEP I N G R Oom.
r at e. Ga ll ia H ot el.

FURN . a p t. in ci ty , w it h
w ash er and dr y er. ad u l ts.
Call D ic k R oderic k , &lt;146 06 44
d ur ing d a y .
67 .J

fa c to r y i'l,tr', T &amp; T w heel. A M - F M radi o, r ad ial t ires .

•

.,.combination, formal dining , t'l&gt; baths, large living It
room and most attractive setting. Look at th is today
buy yourself a bargain .
It

For Rent

5 RM . F U R N . h o u se, ad u lt s
.only , 10 1~ Edg e m o n t Dr . 446 0J69 .

wlt~wi~~i!!~~oo~~~!~ inP!Y~!!. ~

ll
I

•

Quality Construction That You Can Afford

I

* Reliable Service after the deal

ster eo.

•

· Here is a very f in e 3 bed roo m h om e th a t has b een ke pt
in ('m int condit ion . Ve r y ni ce ki t chen. u ti lity roo m ,
gara g e a nd ca rport . T h i s ho m e is f ully carpete d a nd Is
locate d on very nice larg e fl a t lot w ith ga r den sp ot . Ky .

'5495

owner .

*We _have the right deal for you

..

'

;I

'J Ponds, •- 8 rop m home . F orce d ai r furnace, 2 los with
auto . ~ n~ oade r &amp; f eeder . 350 gal . S. S.. coo ler ; 2 barns 9
o~ fb~ lld tngs, t oba c c o b ase, milk ing parlor wl,th
P•~el l n e . Pond s sto ck ed wi th bass and B!' e G'll S
lh1s
u
1 s . . ee

ij

Dark brown -t a n V -top, br own lea th er in te rior , f u ll
power . fac t or y r.i r 1 T&amp; T whee l. AM FM si ereo, 1 loca l

I
I
'4495
II
I
II:Wll~ w~~m!f'2495
f u~~P..~ ~~~1£ l
I

'.

104 Acre Dairy Farm

NEW - 4-Wheel Drive and Luv Trucks In Stock

r. --:-:----·-.---·----·:-·--1

)

P .S., P . B.. air , pol ice ca r .

1972 DODGE POLARA aJSTOM s1995
·

MANY MORE

•

oi

R ed and w h ite fi n ish , doubl e a i r, loa d ed wi th every
Chev. op tion, low m i leage, n ever t ilted, Co . Demo.
St ick er Over $8,000 .00

lblge Custom PoiOra ••••••• '1395

&amp; Used 1975 models .

;

Ci t y wa ter , 7 r oom t il e block nic e h om e , forced a ir
l u r na ce, ~ase~ e nt , st orm doors . st or m wi n dow s,
w ood -burn mg firepl ace, sto re bu ild ing, m i lk ing hou se
and pa r lor, c or n cr ib, 35 ac r es bott oni land . R ea l n ice
farm .
BEAU·TtFUL
MODERN 6 ROOM S
3 BEDROOMS
HWY . 3S
J or 4 bedroo m, 1 1 ~ bath
Full base m ent wi th a la r g e
m odern k i t c h ~ n w ith lot s
fam i l y roo rn, 2 ba t hs ,
ca b ine ts and b u i ll in ran g e
garage, cen tr a l a ir. n ic e
an d wal l o v en , fi r ep la c e ,
c arp eti n g , rea l nice k i t b~ seme n!. 2 c ar ga r ag e
cheh . Loca t ed on a la r ge
w.1th auto . · do~ r op ener,
lot . A p P, r o )( . 2 yea r s o ld .
n~c e la r ge lo t be tw een n ew
You m u s t see the i n s ide o f
h 1ghwa y 35 and ol d JS
th is hou se !o a ppr eci ate i t
Pri ced rea son a ble
'
Pr ice r edu ced t or q uic k
sal e .
GA LLI PO LI S SC HOOL
D IS T R I CT
4 BE DROOM $
7 la rge
room s .
J
7 rooms , r em od eled o ld
b ed r oom s. f am i l v r oom
sty l e h o me (nice ). b at h
~aseme n t, oal . gas f orced wi th shower , sun por ch ,
a1r furna ce, ci ty wate r
bui lt -l n cab i ne t s , c ook
g ar t"~e . larg e yard . Ju s!
stov e, air c o n d itioner ,
ou t c · Gal lipo lis Ci ty l imi ts
for ce d air fur n a c e , b ar n ,
on R t 14 1. Mode rn k i tche n
fi rep la ce, was h h o u se . You
A r ea l b argain . Cal l now .
mu s t see th is h om ~. Only
s18,500.
i 80 AC R ES P LU S
A wo odla n d
V aca n l
BEA U T I F U L H OME SI TE
won d er l and
so me
Jus t o ff 160 Evergreen 36
pastur e a n d t illab le land .
a ~ r e s, al ost e ll t il lable .
Le-ss tha n Sl 60 00 p er ac r e .
N 1ce h

1975 CHEVROLET Suburban .....s6695

Special Clearance of ALL NEW, Demos.

Her e i s a d an d y 4 be d room home with di n i ng roo m ,
fully eq uipped ki t chen , 2 bath s, c a r pet i ng t hroughout ,
plus a n ew ga r age a nd shop b u ildi ng . Priced well under
th e mar ket. Owner m ust se ll Imm ed ia te l y .

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

OWN YOUR OWl&lt;
tl-U!iiNESS CARRYOUT
No . 7, J r e ntal trailer
spa c es. All sttX.k , equ ip .
It sh ~uld P• Y f o r i tse- lf
wi lh ln a f e w ye ars. . . 17 .,ere
m~ n t and bi~O - ooes . Buy
now .
fr o.,tag e · on Sl. H i ~.:~ h wav
F A ST DEVELOP' lNG
ClO SE TO HO SPITAL
A REA ON HWV . 35
Re a l nic e h ome , 6 r oo m s ,-2
155 ft . fr ontag e by 160' deep
b at hs, n at . gas h eat , J
leve l lo t with a b ea utiful
bed r ooms, n ice leve l lot ,
h o me . Short d i st an c e to
I OO'x 160'. c ity w ate r an d
l 'os pll al . Close to Spring
se wer . 150 ' fr om H Wy . 35 .
V al le y sn op p ing Piau .
P r ic·ed only $19,900 .00
OV E R 200 A . DAIR Y
3 ACRES
Som·e bott on , lo t s ·or li lla b le
12' x65 ' 3 Be d roo m Mo bil f:
land , m os tl y all c lean , n ew
Hom e. 231' fr o ntage on
mi lki n g pa rl o r , lar ge , li k e
Bu l aville -A d diso n
Rd .
ne W silo , 2 hou ses, 2 b arns ,
Leve l. Ga s c ook sl o\l e,
pon d , t oba cc o b ase, some
ru r a l w at er , pal'io , O nly
li mbe r . .P r iced lo w . .
., 0 , 900.00.
- tN GAL L.tPou' s
B'ABY FARM$
5 r oo m hou se on a· p ea ce fu l
5 a cr e--s or m o r e . H o.me
s tre e t, Porch , na t . g as,
build if'\9 si t ~ s . leve l lan a,
f urna ce~ buil t in c ab i n e ts,
3pprox . . 4 mil e off Rt . 35 .
fenced 1n ya rd , p len ty of
r ura l wa t er , c all for in
Qard en spa ce . A rea l bu y
f or m a tion .
R educe d . No w Or"l y SIJ ,SOO .
139 Ati! E S
. 3800 lb . to ba cc o ba ~e , lots
3 8 E D Ffb0M
of c oa l. lot s o f wood s, good
Acre p lus
level , a p
pa sture- , la r g e barn , w el l.
p ro x . 11 ,
mil es
from
good p lace for a hom e
Hosp i ta l on Bl a ck to p Rd .
away fr o m o th ~r p eop('!
P len t y o f ga r d e- n space,
4BEbROOMS
ru r al wa te r , c oun.tr y liv ing .
APP{ O)( . 11" a c res . L a roe
Close to G a ! li p ol( s. P ric ed
m od ern klt c l'l en , g a s fur .
on ly S18,000 .00
nace , base men t p an e led ,
V A C A NT LOTS
Jots of shad tre es, garden
Jn Resl r ic ted Su b -D i vision
room.
·
Ca ll t or d e ta i ls

~~~ ~:re~~ .. , , ,;,,,,, . . , . ........'39 5

2 Dr Ha r dt op, A.T., P.S. Ex tra c lea n .

J U N K a utos an d sc ra p m et al.
Ca l l 38 8 877 6.
. 41 26

SPACE RESERVED ~R A
PICTURE OF YOUR HOME.
LIST WITH GAU.IA COUNTY'S
FASTEST GROWING
REAl. ESTATE AGENCY.

Classic 4 door, co . demo wit h low m i leage, l 1g n l green
w ith green v iny l roo f , power door locks, wi ndow s,
br akes, f actor y air , t ln t g lass, con f ort llt, cr uise
con t r o l. A M ra dio &amp; t ape, it ' s loaded a nd i t's n ice .

1972 Dodge V8 Charger ••••••••••• s2295

•

Ver y nt ce modern ho m e, 7 r oom s and ba th 3
bed_room s, f~rced air f u r nace,' bea u tifu l carpe t , v~r y
des1r ab le bu tl d-_i n k i tc hen . la rge a tt ract ive c arport .
Good b~rn - load mg sh ed , modern m ilk hou se, h ig hl y
pr? duct 1ve IJ.J ue gr a ss p astu r e, p len t y o f good wa ter
on ced r easonabl e.
'

1975 CHEVROLET Chevelle .......'4895

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

Ext ra n i ce .

V-8, 4 d r . sedan, sh owS be st o f care .

895

"Your Friendly Dealer "

6 cy l . auto . trans .• exce ption a l.

T i'M BER . Top p r icE:' tor
st and irg sa w timbe r . Call
446 8570
56 It

&lt;~door, co , car, low m il eage , san dsl one f in i sh, v in y l top
an d in terio r . ai r conditio n ing, power windows &amp; door
locks, tilt steering wheel. c rui se con t rol. A M r a dio &amp;
tape , tr u l y a loaded car and has good eye appeal .

SEE ONE OF OUR FRIENDLY SALESMEN:
CEWARD CALVERT, J. D. STORY, BILL NELSON

1973 Ford Maverick 2 Dr.•••• ••••• s2495

A ir con d .

'

One Man Dairy Farm

•.

1975 CHEVROLET Caprig! ....... s5295

1967 Olds Cutlass

1495

D r . h ard top .

l o ve l y o ld hom e was used a s a n off icers cl ub
li &lt;luri nq t he Ci vil W ar and It ' s r u mmered t o ha ve b een
a li nk in th e unde r g r ound r ail r oad duri n g the
e ra . It h as b een kep t In excell en t cond it iol') and
inc:lucjes large :Om fOrtabl e l ivi ng room w it h w -b
fi r epl ace. for m a l d ini ng o r f am i l y room , glassed -In
~ unpor ch , m ode rn k i t ch en , Jl 1 ba t h s and 3 bed r oom s.
Loc at ed on a la rge lot i n t own . $36,900.00 .

.

Extra clean ...... . .... ... .

1971
Ford V8 Torino ·········~ · ··Jl495
2
1970 Buick Electra 4 Dr.••••••••• 11595

08·3 .
' ffA ~C RA FT
50 PONT I AC. Sed an . a l so 5 1 TRAVE L Tr aile r s , f Old Oown
· M an y moto r h omes , Cam P
Pon tiac . b est o f f er buys . 446 ·
Con ley St ar cra ft Sa l es. Rt.
4986 .
6~ N of P t . P le a san t .
68 -2
51 -If

GALLIPOliS

,

One very car efu l local owne r , low mil e age .

Jt entra nce

~970

Real Estate for Sale

2 Dr . H. T.

1973 Pinto 2 Dr•••••••••••••••••• s2195

Wanted To Buy

-'-r-~-_,__.._,....

2 Dr . H.T.,
,
V ~S , auto ... .. . ............ .... .. ,

A Dr . Sedan . Sheriff's ca r . Look s good .
new f rame and brick h om e . Beauti f u l

Dr .,
stand. tr an s ..... , .... ........ .

Dr. Sedan , 6 cyl.,
,
auto., low mi leage .. .. , .•

1895

Classic coupe , less than 7,000 miles. deluxe bel t s, tinted
glass. air -condi t ioned, de l vxe bumoers &amp; auards.
remote LH + RH mirrors , 400-4bbl, VB. AM rad io &amp;
tape, auld lightinq, co m fortilt , dark r ed wi t h black
vinyl roof. lik e new
a real sha r oi e.

'1295

2

1969 Pontiac LeMans

1970 Pontiac LeMans

One o wn er.

1975 CHEVROLET Caprice ........'5295

1971 Chevy Nova

1974 Ford V8 Custom 500········'1995
Jt Br and

2495

4

t on P ick up . Rea ll y sh a rp .

Dr .,

-- --------"-

Real Estate For Sale

1/ 2

,

and white, extra clean .

1974
Ford V8 Gran Torino·········s2995
4
P .S .. P.B., A.T.

B OAI&lt; OIN G , AKC WES T Y
AND P'UG PUP' , C I RCLE! L
KENNEL RT 141, 446 -4824 .
28 1 I f

- -

2 Dr . H.T., maroon

1974
P~outh ~er············J~5
? Dr . Hardtop .

P'R OWL ER
6BJ TR AV EL tra i ler s. see the No .
1 seller in th~ U SA . Sm it h ' s
1971 PON T I A C La Ma ns
Honda Sal es, St. R t . 7,
Spor t , 2 d r .• HT . m any
Gal lipo lis. Oh io . 446 2'2 40 .
e)( tr as . Ca l l 361 046 9 aft er
01-t f

U O.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS
1973 Buick LeSabre
1970 Ford Maverick

1974 Ford Four Wheel Drive ••••••• .S3995
lb
1973 GMC Sierra Grande••••• ••••• !3495
:T"om of Llne,

--~-....:..----- -- ·---

19'68 OLD SM OBI LE 3 n ew
tir es, bod y rou g h, r un s g ood .

" THE FRIENDLY DEALER"

EXTRA VALUE

BRIARPATC H KENNELS
MAL E Gor don Se1ter Pup'p y,
Ma le
En g l is h
Coc k e r
Spani el P Lt pp ie-s . D is tr i butor
fo r Mr . Groom . D og. c at.
horse pr oduc ts. P h . 446 4191.
56 I f

P IN E R ID GE COLL · ~ "' ­
A KC Reg . Co l lie pups . Sabl e
and w t~ i t e 256 1267 .
307 .If

'
'

FROM

'

AKC CA I R N te rr ie r s, 2 ma l es ,
3 m os ., sh o ts, p ap ers." 446 0946 .
68 -3

BOBB I 'S Poo d le Bou l iq ue .'
Prof essio n al g r ooming b y
ap poi nt men t Ph 446·1944 .
1111

GREAT CAR VA LUES

t on , low mi leage. Shows good ca r e.

Gallia County 's Fmites't Growir1g R eal Estate Agency

MILL CREEK RD . - Good
hom e wit h 2 b edr ooms ,
h ardwood fl oor s, fu r nitu r e
·indu d e-d . pri ce $.15,300.
EUREKA
Go oo
3
bedroom s hom e, nice ba th ,
l a r ge ga ra g e, ni ce l o t .
Good b u y fo r $ 14, 500 .

BUY NOW FOR

•
•
•
THE WISEMAN AGENCY

PETS FOR SALE A KC
Reg . Ch inese Pug pups , Ca ll
675 1595 or 675 - 1179 .
66 -9

197 5 C H EV ELLE
Ma l i b u
Classic , Landa u roof. PB , GOOD' used p ia n o . 256 -1173.
P S, a u fo . tnm s., e ir. steel
68-6
belt e d ra d i al s, will se l l
ou t right
or
t ak e
ove r US ED 12 ft . V -bo tt om Game
pay men t s . C al l 388 -90 17
f ish erm an boat w i th bu ilt ln
afte r 6 p . m .
ba it w el l. Phon e 388 -8713
68 '
64 -6

~-~~"'-.-

USED CARS

1965 BO NN EV I LLE . P S. PB .
an d a ir . 44 6-7619 .

68 -3

1972 D O D GE 9 pass . wago n ,
gqod ti r es . Ph . 446 378 0.
646

512 2ND AVE. 446-7699

fence~

AC R ES L o vel y a ll
elec tric ran ch , 3 bedrooms ,
farge f ami l y r oom wil h
f i r e p l ace . f u l ly c ar pe teo ,
l a r ge gara g e . Lo ca t e d
c lose lo Ches hi re . Pr ic e
$) 1, 600 .

~e

Auto Sales

B OA RDIN G &amp; AK C P UPPIES
K &amp; P Kennels, 388 8274 , R l.
. ~5&lt;1 , 11 mi . east of Por t er

port
ic.e
yard, _ nPr
ice $26 , 00 0.In

2' ~

Ben and asKed
''What Kind af a
government are
you givin u~ ?oo

Willis T. Leadingham
Realtor

207 KIN E ON - N ice r anc h I
w i th 3 b e-d r oom s, bat h
sh owe r , utili t y r m .,

BIDWELL GoOd home
Wi t h 3 be d r oom S·, bath ,
g ar age . co un t y wa t e r ,
g ar den
spa ce .
Pr i ce
$ 14, 900 .

0nedey a
woman stl&gt;pped

-----------

LEADINGHAM
REAL ESTATE

LOVEL Y BRICK R A NCH
- L ookin g f or a n jce ho.me
your
fami l y ,
3
for
be dr oo m s, 11 7 b a t h s, f u ll y
car p e ted , cen t ra l a ir , 2
g arage , n ice lot . P" icel
$34 .500.

PISCE S (Feb. 20-Mareh 201

BEN~

HI G H SC H OOL
SENIOR S
THE U . .S
Navy CACHE
pr ogram leis you ·choose
your
f iel d
now
for
guaranteed training th i s
su mmer . Gel the iuinp on
summer job hUnters . Pay
starts at SJ60 per mo . from
day you repor t and w e
l ur nis h qua rt er s, f ood and
h ea lth care . To check iLoul
cal!-. or v isi t your Navyman
at NAVY RECRUITING
STATION ,
22 1 NORTH
COLUMBUS
ROAD
ATH E N S,
OHIO
45 101:
CA~L COLLECT 59] . ].U6 .
6'1 -12

For Sale or Trade

found

---- -,-_ - . - , - - : - -

IN
T OWN
P r ic
r e du ce d , n o f a i r o ff er
r e fu se d . N ic e 3 bed rooms ,
bath , parli a l ·c ar,.p e t, l en ced
lo t . P r ice $13,000 Good buy
f o,.- ho me or in ve st m ent
p ro per l y .

19) Yo u m ay have to ·m ak e

1

Pel$

E W IN GTON r Tll is is
ve ry n ice 14x7 0 m ob i l
hom e, has 3 be droom
fu lly ca r pe ted , 2
lar ge . fam i l y roo m
i
f ire pl ace, ful ly f urni sh
Price rig h t a t 519, 900.

SAGITTARIU S (Nov. 23-Dee.

Don 't b e tempt ed toda y to
spend more than you should
for thmgs you feel m 1ght impress oth e rs. People like you
the way .yo u are.

·

PRI CE
RE DU C ED
O w ner sav s se l l !h is n ic e
be droo m h ome w it h b al h
f ull b asement , g ar a g e
Ho use ha s.. n ic e a l um i n
s id i n g . Goo d
b uy
fo
$10.800.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) If

20 -~e b.

"-

m446-3434

LIBRA (Sept. 23 Oei 23)To-get

AQUARIUS (Jan .

~-....--

OHIO RIVER
REALTY INC.

VIRGO (Aug. 23 -Sept. 22)

(Oee.

____

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate for Sale

tak e u n nec essa r y r isk-s on
a n o th er 's Id eaS tOday, 85pcc iaJiy if th1s person has
bun gled th ings in the p ast.
Keep h is tr ac k record in mi nd .

CAPRICORN

--

·------

CANCER (June 21 -July 221

Help Wanted

" ' ----

"'

For Sunday , M arch 21, 1976

Ta sk s that you hoped another
would an en d to today may be
lel t u n done . R ely mo r e on
your self t han your helpmate-s .

to

Help Wanted

-----"'-"--- -- ----

Bern1c e

W ISH

'iotice

preclarion for the prayers
o ff ered ,
the
beaut i ful

flo w ers , food .

Wanted To Od

e"'press our
I· I I ' .. JI~ !i'IV'/11 II IOW ( r!&gt; iH IIl
s1ncere thanl!.s t o Rc\1
•,J t, • · ' t l I ourlh 1".vrRa l ph Mahoney , Kanauga
l1l t:•
Commun ity , Riv er Land i ng
Walfons ,
Crew , Hom er
GOT a problem with your c ar ?
D oc t o rs and Nurs es or
Pl ea san• vall@y Hosp i t
al .
Ma lor or m inor repa irs .
Mor
Reasonable rates , all work
M iller ' s
WE
SELL
fr oni
Si m co
guaranteed . P ic kup and
tuary .
and
the
many
Catalogs , l eath er produ c t s
delivery Call '156 19'21 day
friends for th e kinoness
B &amp; E S~ oe Serv ic(.' . Ph 446
or n ighl.
Shown during the illness and
417'2 ,
646
death of our Mother , Wife
613
and Sis ter , Mrs
Mabel
Reynolds wh o passed away
PUB LIC N OTI CE
BABYSITTING ,
ex
March 7, 1976
54 ACRES are ~vailabh. for
per1en ced . good re f ., hot
The fam ily and r ela t ives.
c ropp in g on the Ty c otln
meals , good w i th ch i ld r en .
68 1
Lake w il df ife area begin
JJ6 0708 .
ning Apr i l 1, 19 76 . This is a 2
64 6
year
ro
t
ation
(Corn
Idle)
.
THE FA MI L Y Of Robert L ee
B
id
f
orms
are
avai
l
able
DOZER , ba c ~hoe .
ditch
Long would l i ke to thank
from G P . Honch ul , Rt . 1
w itch , landscaping, se w·age 1
neighbors. fr iends, relat i ves
Oak
Hi
l
l.
Phone
682
7524
.
sys tem s. dra inag e di tches ,
for the toed . c ards . flow en .
B ids to be opened 3 :00P .M .
roadways . Ph . 446 9882, 2
donat ions and Gallia County
Apr
il
1,
1976.
p .m . to5p .m . . afler 5 p _m .
Senior Citizens and other
68 3
245 55 4J
acts of sy mpathy . Your
k i ndness w i l l n eve r b e
F-o r M a11ionu m Sr c ur i t y use
forgotten .
T ie
rJ ow n
An chon
1o
68 1
P r o tec t Your Mobi le Ho m e.
Co m pll' t c Ser vic e. Ca ll Ron
R E CORD PRODUCTION
Sk 1d m ore, 37 9-2 152 or 4'16WE WOULD li k e to t ake th is
SCREEN I NG NEW
17 56.
opportun ity to tha n k every
SIN GER S AND
270. 11
one who c a me to pay t h eir
t;R O LIP~C" A il.
last respe Ct s to Sgt . David
'( 404) 43 3-1958
L P roffit . A l so to r- th e many
D Efi. D S lo e~ r emoved . No
beaut iful f loral offerings ,
charge Ca l l 74 5 551J b efo re
-------~food , cards an d prayers
9 am
dur i ng h is brie f stay in
)77 IJ
FOREMAN W ANTED
H ol ze r Medical Cen te r .
We a r e seekin g a n ex
Special than k s t o t he WE DO ea r pe r cin g , sa f e an d
pe ri enced super visor t or a
n u rses an d aides in t he
pa i n less
$10 .
tncu d i n g
lig ht assembly
f act or y
CarOi ac ca re unit , Dr . Ralph
earrinqs .
Tawney 's
loc a t ed in Ga ll ipol is Poi n t
B . Burner and Or , I . C.
.. Ple-asa n t a r ea . Mus t b e a bl e
Jewelers
Wa l ker who so tenderly
57 If
to motiva t e emp loyees a nd
c ar ed for h im , a l l members
be qual ity co n sc ien ce . In
dn d units of the Ohio Sta t e
elu d e past sa la r y h isto r y .
BEG I ~ your spri ng c le an ing
Highway Patro l througho u t
Wri
t e to Box 400, Ga ll ipo l is
py
tlavin
g
vour
c
arpels
th e state. Espe-cially L t .
cle.aned by bes t me thod Tr i b une .
Er n es t W igg le swort h. and
66 3
known . Re move all the dir t,.
Ca p t. Wilson for the-ir help
Make y our car p et look new - - -; -- - - -- -- - and visits to our home and
ag ain . For fr ee estimate , L ADIE s needed , part time .
the hospi_tal
The West
Chose your own hours . 2
c all 37 9 2682
Vi r gini a State P olice , P o in t
51 I t
days a week . d46 - 1S ;z2 ,
P l e as a nt
~o t ice
Dept ,
Mason Co . Sheri ff' s of f i ce,
663
Me igs Co . She r iff's of f i ce , SW .E t:PE.R
and
sewing
M iddleport and Pome r oy
ma c h ine repai r , part s and T EX AS OI L COMPA N Y n ee d s
P olice Dept . , Ga ll ipolis City
s u pp lies .
Pick up _ and
dep end abl e pe r son M F' who
Po l ice Dep t ., Galt ia Co .
d e l ivery. Dav i s Vacu u m
can Wo rk witho ul super
1
Sh erif f 's
o f fice ,
The
Clean er , .• mile up George~
vision in Ga ll ip o l is . C:ont act
Sec u r i ty Police o f the
Cr ee k Rd . P h . 4•16 02 9-L
cus t omers .
Ageun im
Ga l li pol is St a te I ns titute , A ll
45 ·I f
~ o rt a nt . bu t m a t ur i t y is . We
D ep art m ents o f the Ohio
r a i n . Wri te J . J . D i~ k ,
Be ll T eleph one Co .• th e Fi r s t THURM A N
Pr e s . .
Southwes t e rn
House
ru rn .
Gr a ce
B aptis t Ch urch.
P~tro l eum . r=- t . Wo r th , T x .
St ripp ing , 1\ nliques boughl
U11ited Me thod ist Ch urch ,
E O.E
and
sold .
pi c kup
and
R ev Charles W . L usher a nd
de 1 ivery Pau l IJ urnctt , 245
P asto r W i lson W all I for thei r
9.17 9 . Ma r lin Ros e. 2·15 95 37
c o ns olin g
w o rd s ,
T om
EARN eX tra$ $$ . B e iu s t part
K ess ell for. hi s be autifu l
' If
t i m e or full li m e Iabr ie,
song s, Rut h An n Cor b in for
TAW N EY' S Jewe ler s and
craft , and N a t ion 's p a rt y
t he org a n rnusic: , R ev .
p la n , Sup er vi sor and part y
S tud i os .. Ca meras , p hoto
D e nny Co burn f o r his v isits
f inishing , diamo n ds , etc .
p eop le ne-eded n ow
For
and pra yers . M an y than k s
Second Ave 446 1615
in f o r m a ti on w rite Sim
t o t he pa ll be ar er s. hono r ar y
plicity Fab r i cs , 249 W .
55 If
p allb eare r s, h on or gua rd s
Ce- ntr a l St . . M a r l o.n , Oh io
an d a l l w h o he lped in our
43302
T R I COU NT Y Spo r t s St1op
h o me in an y way .
68 J
Pro f essiona l :~r c hery an d
Sp ecia l t h an ks to F r ed
r e loa Oin g supplies . 675 2988 .
a nd Joan Woo.d for thei r
FOUR house w ives need ed , 4
36 1f
mos t eff icie n t se r vice and
da ys a week, 4 h rs . a d ay , U
fo. i n dness du r ing the loss o f
an .h ou r Gall 992-7269 for
th e on e we love d so de ar .
in t er vie w .
Ag ain tha nk s ~o
all who
68 -3
h el pe d in any w ay t o h e l p
- · ' - --·-._;_...,...
..;......
.....;
ma k e our bur den just a l ittle BOOKK EEP I N G f or sm a l l B .r. ~s Player wanted t or
bi t t igh te r . May God bless
b usi n ess a n d individua l t ax
establish ed younq roc I!. band
you all aways
r eturns . 446 7935.
ag e 16 21 Ph 675 2653
Wi f e, Marv. d aughte r s
36 3-!
P en n y and Jac k ie , Mo ther .
~ -------~,
Mrs .
H elen
Proff it,
b r oth er s. To. m arid H enr. y ,
Sis t er , M rs . Orv i ll e Frost ,
1 mo th er i n l a w
M rs Ruth
Ross . br ot he r s -in -ta w and
s ist ers -in law . n ieces a nd
ne ph ew s
68 -1
WE

DAN
THOMPSON

l!

~

B E G ENTL E . be k ind , to th at
elt: p en sive c arpei, c lean it
w ith Bl u e Lu s tre . R e n t
s ham pooe r
Sl .
e l ec tr ic
Cen tr al Sup pl y Co,

A L L T Y PC: S of b uil d i n g
mate r ia l s . bl oc k , brick ,
sewer
pi pes.
win dows ,
lintels, e t c . Cl au de W in t ers .
Ri o Grano c . 0 Phon e 245 512 1 al t er 5.
12 3 If
~

- - --

.

�29 - Tbe Sunday Tlrnes - Sentinel, Sunday, March 21 , 1976
28- The Sunday Times - Sentinel, Sw1day, March 21, 1976

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Card of Thanks

Card of Thanks

WE WOULO l i ke to thank
relatiyes . frienas and n e igh
bors tor the i r sympclllhy and
kindness before and afler
the death of m v husband and

our brother . West St asa
Powel l. Our deep a p
caras

and

other tokens of sympatnv .
Spec i al th anks to ReY . Pa ul

Ha w ks . St Mary ' s Hospila t
and" sta ff and Dr

Huntington ,
H os p i tal

w.

Si alo.i of

Va ._, Ho lze r

Staff

and Dr
Abe ts, The Southeast Ohio

EmerQency
Ylce .

Mea icat

Ser
waugh -Httlley Wood

Fvner a l
H om e .
MPigs
Memo r i a l Gardens. Also
w i sh to express appreciat ion
to all the motor ists who very
res pec lt u!IY stopped th eir
cars i"r.d w aited for West
St as a
Powell
f u n e ral
pr ocess ion to pass . This kind
of cour t esy Is a rarety in
toctay ' s busy world . It is all
the more appr eci ated . The
se r v ic e of th e Law en
f orceme n t o ff icers wa s
eQua l ly appreciated .
Th e Powe l l Fam ily
68 1
-~-------"- ----·
-~-W E W I SH to thank all our
fr iend s and ne ig hbors, a ll
who sent f ood or flora l gifts .
thank s to D r . Va ll ee , a-I t th e
nur se s an d ai d es at H olLer
H osp it al wh o h-el p ed in any
wa y in the sic kn ess and
d ea th of o u r wife and
m ot h er Mr s . Doro t hy F .
Hou ck, a sp ecial t hanks to
Fi r s t Churc h o f GOCI , Re v .
c on l ey , c;;a y e an d Tom l or
th e mu sic. a ll th e p r ayer s,
th an k s to th e p a l lb ea r ers
an d Wil lis Fune r al H ome .
Ma y G od Bless You All
No eh D a le Hou ck and
fami ly
68 - 1

AstraGraph
Bede

Oso l

ARIES (March 21-April 19, Today. you ma y find another's
philosophica l ou tlook m conflic t with yours. Solutions will
nOt be fo und in a heated e)(change .

TAURUS (April 20-May 20,
Today, try not to mter fere 1n
m atter s n ot directly concerned
with you . You may be asking
fo r som ethi ng tha t cou ld be
avoi d ed .

Wanted To Do

GEMINI (May 21-June 20,
Se l ect compan1ons today
·whose aims co1nC1de w it h
, yours . Associates wl1ose views
ar e not 1,., h-armony could prove
fr ustrating . ·

.

.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Don I

Real Estate For Sale

-·

Your dom estic tranqu1l1ty cou ld

be disru pt ed tod ay if you b r ing
u p old . controve r sial issues .
Le t sleep ing dogs tie
other s l o coope r ote today. try
mak ing su g ges t ions ra ther
than com m and$ . Pushing too
hard c o ul d have a reverse
eff ect.
1t's · necessary to make some
hasty r e pair s around home to da y. be sure to use the proper
tool s l or each j ob .
21) Enjo y your self tod ay, bu t
do n't oven nd ul ge 1n the good
l hmg s of life. Pr actice moderation in all ar eas .

22-Jan.

some a dj u s tm en t s In you r
plan s tod ay in orde r to suit
someon e else. Don 't make too
b1g a th ing of it.

IN TOWN V ery nice
bed r oom hom e, bat h ,
ga s h eat , uti li ty r o
c arpo r t . Tt1 is prop er ty
h ad e x cel lent c a r e . Pr ic
$16, 000 .

19)

N orma ll y y ou a r e r a t h e r
easy goi n g. but today yo u co ul d
be !r ill e. too 1ns1sten t upo n havmg you r own way .

1""'
-----------i
rhe4
·
FRANKLIN

•A

IRIS H Sll'tter , owner may
cla i m an d pick up . P h . AA6
4358 .
J05 I f ,
68 · 1

AKC Reg

Collie pups . Ph . 256

-----.-----

1969 CH EVY 1an do ne h alf ton
tru c k . V 8 d u mp bed 5675,
1970 1972 Ch evelle partS ,
1966 Fo r d V a auto . , goo d
sh ap e , S475 . 446 96 54.
673

· 1?69LI N COLN Con t . Ma..-k I ll .
all power , c r uise contro l.
AM FM ster eo radio , good
tir:es . N eeds some r e pa irs
$1,595. H6 0390 .
J5 l l
196 9 O L D:, , 4 dr .• Lu x·ur y
sed an , pw . ac , ps, pb . a i r
power , low mi leage . 446 1615
a ll er 5, ~46 174 4.
65 II
1975 CH EV . Ch eyenne- 1, Ton

p ick up, bl ack wit h p s-pb ,
aut o . trans _, J 50 V8 , 8,400
miles . 446 13 70 alter 5 .
65 6

74 A M BA SS ADOR.

HT . ai r ,

power , l in e sh ape . See Mr .
Sh a w , up s tai r s, 9 19 Sec ond
Ave . 10 4
656

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

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

6420.
67 -6
AKC DOberman s tud ser v ic e .
Red and rust Ca ll 446 4654 ,
49 If

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

AKC Ger m an Shor r Haired
Po in te r f em a le, 15 mos . old.
loves k id s, need s country
at mosp he r e . Call .&amp; A6 .1Hl.

----------'-------1973 FORD To r'irio Spor t 2 D r .
H T . exc . c ond ., mu s t se ll .
Ph . 245 94 80 aft er 5 p .m

68 3

~ 4 5 - 9296 .

setti n g on ~.4 . a.c re s. Ca r~ t.ed through ou t•, qfu'"i;'
,;',:dl ~~l.
n ice _lt vmg room . dm 1ng r oom . full y
k itc h en . f our bedroom s, fam il y room w ith mepoac•e,
• div i ded ba sement, recreation r oom , 2 c ar garage
two pat ios.

Find More House
For The Money

5 ACR E S - L o v el y tra c t of
land clos e t o . Rio Gra nd e .
cll y sc hool d ist r ic t ' Good
bu y fo r $7·, 500.
AC RES If yo u are
i ng for a n ice place
acreag e, look th is
. L eve l\' .' 4 b edroo m
om e, ba t h wit h sh ower.
Ice k itc hen with bu il l -In
e an d ov en , f orced air
e,
lo v e l y
shag
l c.or&lt;let~ Locat ed in c ity
1 d i s t r i c t , c los e t o
L ak ~. This wo n ' t
IOn ' i .'I I $35, 90 0.

WE BUY, SE LL, TRA DE
E v eninq s Call
J o hn Full er 446 -43 27
Lee J o~ n s on 256 -6740
Doug W elherh olt 446 -42H
Ear l T . Win_ters 446-382 8

1975 Chev. ESTATE WAGON ..... s6095
D ark red , sim u la t ed wood tr im , 3 sea t, f u l ly eq u i pped
w ith eve r y Chev. op t ion , low m i les. n ew titl e. b oss's
wi f e's car . St icker $7 ,400 .00

1975 PINTO MPG ..................12895
Whit e 2 dr , 4 sp eed t r a n s .. r a dio , bod y mouldings, W· S·
w fires. It's l ike new wi th less tha n 5,200 m iles .

Pomeroy, Ohio Ph. 992-2174

75 FORD MAVERICK................s3395

'4 ~oo r, 6 cy l ., auto .• P .S., 'radio , w -w rad ial s, d e lu )l e
t n _m pk g. a n d mold ing , del. bumpe r s &amp; g ua r ds, 6,600
mtl es by loca l ow n er. Clean a s new car .

1974 CHEV. BELAIR 4 DR.. .....s1095

~

Camping Equipment

Au t o .

va.

4 door ,
auto ma t ic, 'p _stee ring a nd b r a k es ,- f ac tor y
a i r , cr ui se con t r o l. sharp, 1 owner local car. d ark
green .

TRUCK SPECIALS

• SEE : Fred Bla ettn ar , Pat Hill , Me lvin Little;
or Dan Thorn pson

1972
CHEVROLET 2-TON C&amp;C
.
. •..S2995
102" C. A., h eav y dut y sp r ing s, 292-6 cy l. e ngine, 15, 000
lb . 2 speed rea r a x le. foam sea t. mirrors, clean cab .

Open Even ings Tii6.:00
Except Thurs. and Sat. Ti l 5: 00

•

1973 CHEVY VAN ................; s2495

DAN THOMPSON
FORD

__ __

An d now it can b e yours -

Be t he f i r st t o

Phone
992-2196

see t hi s l ove ly

3 bedr.o om q ua lity bui lt Colo nia l. l nt l udes larg e livi ng
r oom . formal di ni ng , playroom , large fa m i l y room ,
k it c h en combi n ation , 2 fj..-epla ces and ba sem e n t with
famil y room . Idea l lo cat i on from 1 to 3 ac r es of fla t
land .

8 c yl. , au toma t ic , P . st eering, good t i r es. w hi t e f i ni sh .

1973 INTERNATIONAL ...... ;....s3895
l 600 Ser ies, 102" ca b t o a x le, 2 sp eed, R . a xl e, 6 speed ,
good 900 x20 t i r es, frame r ein f orced , V -8 eng i ne, hea t er ,
r eady t o wor k .

461 5. 3rd
Middleport

r

~ ~r :

I

I' ------------------------ I
1: 73 Cadillac Elderado Cpe. I
1

Merrill Carter
Associate

· Ph . Home 379-2184

1
Loved For More Than 100 Years

I:
I·

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II

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'('

••
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C)c School District . $28,900 .00.

I

73 Cadillac Co.upe DeVille

I

Whit e, blue v i nyl l op, blue Cloth infer ior , fu ll power
':;'!~~:;~ a ir , T&amp; T wheel , full s t er eo, rad i a l ti r E.&gt;s, o n e

Lost

for Rent

For Rent

LOS T

TARA
TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS
2 Bedroom
TownhOuses
1'12 Baths
Pay 01)1y One Ut ility
Addison. Ohio
For lnlormatiol) ·
Call Shirle·y Adkin s

367-7250

YO UR ye st erday It c oul d 10 )( 50 2 BR . t rai ler , a ir co.n d .,
h ave been save d for e v er
edg_e of town on Rt 5B8 . S11 0
w i th
a p o rt ra i t f ro m
p er m ontt] p lus u ti l i t ies , dep .
Grov e r · ~ Stu d i o. Ca ll
446 reQ. 446-oan .
Tu es d a y
74 94 . Open
683
Sa t u r dr~y 10-51 u nt i l 8 p .m .
on T hur sd a y :
OF rI C E s p ace for r e11L
35 ll
dow n to wn Ph . &lt;14 6 0008.
237 I f

For Rent

i'1lt:50 MOB I LE H OME , 2 BR
g r q un o floor apt .• -146 0952
EFF I CI E N C Y ap t . tu rn . I
a ft e- r 5
a d u lt , 2 br M H ove rl o-oki n g
.12 I f
&lt;146 OJJ!:l .
'r iver . Ph . _
53 ! l
NEW R e g e n cy ~ I n c Clpar t
DOZE R wi th b ru sh hog ro t a ry
rne n l S, 2 IH! , P h . 675 510&lt;1,
mower for re nt . Ph . 446
675 .SJ 86 . 675 '? 608 . S1l9 pe r
9!HI2, 'l p .m , 5 p .m ., aft er 5
mont h Sa nd Hi ll Rd ., Pt .
p. m .• 245 554-1.
Pleasa nt , w va .
613
-1 tf
... __....
~---

~--

____ _

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1:
'1995
l
l, i KARR ~.. ,~~~~!J'NDT I Look who ...,..__..,

f • 992 -Sl42
I

I

I

~

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GMAC Financing Ava ilable

t

Pome ro\

Open Eves . Ti16_: Til S p.m . Sat.
'' YciU 'll Like Our Q.Jlll itYWay o f

See on~ of these courteous salesmen :
•Pete Burns
Lloyd Mclaughlin

L~-~-~~-~:~~=~. ~.':..
.•
For Rent

Number 1!

1
1

Doin g B u sin ess"

I
1

Have Always
Charming 60 a c . farm w.i th cropland, pastur e and
woodland . 3 Bedroom remodeled home w ith for ced air
fu rna ce ••fully c arpeted, modern ki f ch en , famil y r oom ,
l a~ n~r y room, bath and ' f i r eplaces . Larg e .b arn, outbu i_L.dmg s. w ith a tobac co b a se, ju st 9 m i les fro m tow n
Pr ic ed at $36,()(]0.
·

2~EoRoOMS.~f~;~.

mobil e
!h om e, at Qu a il Cr eek, to t al
. ) t.ec t r ic . Ph . 24 5-502 1.
64 -tf

•

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

5 IR M . HOU SE wilh ba th , f ull
:!&gt;_as e m en t w i t h g ar a g e ,
.wc et ed 6 mi . W . of Cen
M rvill e 'o11 St . R t . 279 . $ 150
~ er mo. 682.6010.

•
•

••'

owner of the attractive 3 bedroom home Is Very
.-an ~tous to seU . It in~ludes a large kitchen famUy r oom

. . •*

E X TR A nice un f u r . 2 br _, ga_r .
a pt . AO u lts pre ferr ed . $125
mo . C al l 446 -23 00. r ·.. ,
67 -I f
1?. )( 60 MOBIL E home loc at ed
in R io · G r a nd e . ma rri eO
coup l e on l y, chi ldre n ac ce p ted . Ph . 245 5267 .
6-7 .J
HOU SE ,I r oom s and bat h i n
ci t y , basemen t. c arp et. ha S
fur nace . Ad u lt s. Ph . 446-09 58
or 446 3553.

SPRING VAUEY
GREEN APT.
Rent s1arts at S129
month ,

'':'r,
I

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A ccordi n g to do mestic new-ca r sa les

(f rom January 1-31, 1976) , Olds Cutlass

PH. 446-1599

h as b ecom e America 's best se ller! And
it's easy t o see w hy _

The beauti ful Cu tlass styling is highly
popular. Its l rlm, mi d-size oilers the kind
o f d r ivi n g a n d par k ing ease you li ke .'

- FOR RENT

Inside, there's room for a famil y. And
lra de·i n va lue is traditi onally hig h.
Yo u'll li ke the mileage, too ! Cutlass
got 25 mpg• in hig hway tests, 17 mpg•

: Park Lane Mobile Home Court, 4 mi. west of
~ Gallipolis, Rt 35. Blacktop streets .
: completely mo~ern facilities; excellent
: living conditions. Gallipolis City School
: District. Electric or natural gas, City water
~ and City sewer. $45 per mo. Phone 446-3345
! after 3: 30p.m. Richard Bowman, Manager ,

in c ity tests - acco rdi n g to the E PA
Buye r' s Guide.
You can c h oose the mode l to suit y o ur
needs-f rom sporty C u tl as s S to lu xu r i·
o u s Broug h am and e lega n t Supreme .
T h e pric e? Wi thi n the reach o f a lm o s t
e very n ew-c a r buye r.
If you ' re look ing fo r va lu e, ta ke a lOok at
Cu tl ass. W e h a ve a good se lect io n now.
C ome in ·a n d get ou r ' " N u m ber 1 " dea l!

•s1d. l6 engine &amp;nd IT\II nusl transm•ssion Remember. lhcse m11eage hgures are EPA
esllmal.es, The actu111 mlle&lt;~.ge )lOu get W(ll vary depending on Ihe 1ype of d10vm9 you do,
your df!Y1ng hAb1 ts. your t ar s cond1hon, and a.Yal l ~ble eQuloment.

We're dealing to keep Olds Cutlass Number 1!

KARl &amp; VAN ZANDT MOTOR SALES
242 W. MAIN

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Olds Cutlass: America's
best selling model

r92-5l42

POMEROY

"Your Chevy Dealer"
0 f)e n Eves : Til&amp;
Pomeroy•

For Sale

For Sale

O LD BOT TLE~ . da t ing b ack 24 " boy ' s , '16 " gi rl ' s , b ikeS.
excel len t c on d. Ca ll 446 -4314.
.to 1600, f o un d on ·a n o ld
.
.
68 ·3
Spani sh wr ec k on toa s t of
F lorida . Ca l l ll : 30a . m 44 6·
G I R L'S Sp id er b ike , l i ke ne w ,
7935 .
$25, l arge w al n u t off ic e d es k
663
$25. P h . 446 -7801.
'
... ~-----~-- ------68-2
194 7 V AGA B O ND c amp i n g
tr a i le r Wit h kit c h en , h ea t er , ---~-------- -----otso 24 " g irt s' b ike . 256 -1501. US E Di umber2x 10b y 14. Ph .
367 -714 8.
66 -]
68 -1
-~------.-------1972
F ORD
E X P LO RE R
p ickup . EH . con d ., low 50'.' PUL L o r w ork Pon y
A p pr O)( . 50". Ph , 379 -23 11 .
mi leag e, 446 -1522 or 446

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

-

1703 ..

68 -3

66J
- - - - - - - - - -..,.--""'

"·~

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

Sa le pr ice on a ll 3 pt . d i sc
Ha r row a nd Plo w
.
25 Used t ra c to r s i n ·s tock
GA l l l fl' OLI S TRA C TOR
SALE S, INC .
UPP E R RT . 7
G AlLIPOLI S, OHIO
PH . 44 6-1044
68-1

MOBILE h ome spa ce tor re nt .
·146 0008
.
23 7 If

6for Sl.OO

r oom .

~ ...,

US ED FURN I TUR E, 2 pi ece
l iv in g r oom su i t e. d i ne t i e
ser. 4 ch airs , ro ll -aw a y b ed ,
N E W FUR N I T U RE
9x 12 L inol eu m rugs .
Cor bin &amp; Sn yder
446 -117 1
95 5 Second A ve.
6611
19]) M A SSEY Ferg. 150, 11UO
hour s, 4 el y . gas, 3 bo tt orn
p low , 5 ft . b ru sh h og 54200 ,
goo d dr ag d isc $275 . Olive r
m owe r 3 pt h itc h , $250 , 2
-r ow F ~ r g c ulti va tors , S175
Cal l 256 1444.
66 3
o ROO M S, b at h , qarage , barn ,
2 out buildi n gs, 1 a cr e,
$15, 00 0, or '1 a cres, S17,00 0. 5
m il es out o f R io Gra nde at
((I nf er P oi n l. Ph . 68 2 6944 .

1L OF T Y p ile, free from so i l
is t he c arpet cleane d w i t h
B l ue L us tre . Rent elect r ic
s h a mpo o e r
Sl.
Centr al
Sup pl y Co .
2 R E G . Ang us BUl lS , 30 mos .
a nd 10 m os . Ma r shai i · Y ·
Breedi n g .
R e aso n ably
p riced . Ph . 245 5-4 77 .
68 -1

Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
825 Third 'A ve .
· Ga llipolisr 0 .

·-----

For Sale

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

2lr

R M Br ick home , 2 ca r
g ar age n ear hos p ital . Wi l l
r ent lea se on co ntract 5200,
p er month . P h . 4d6 4 127 .
66-3

---------

\969
1970
1970
1974
197&lt;t
1974
197 1
1969
1967
1971
196 9
197 0
1969
1973
1973
1973
197J

N ew GMC
Tr u ck H ea dquar t ers
11 T . Ch ev . P ic kup
F ord Pi ck up
Monte Carlo
17 T . GMC P ic kup
1 1
T Chev rol et P ic ku p
I 1 T.. GMC Pic k up
G M C Sub ur ban
F600 Ford Dump
F 1000 F ord T ractor
J .• T . GM C P .U .
~~ T . Ch e v . P .U .
Ff.OO Ford Dump
1 1 T . Ford P iC kup
1 " T , In tern at . P ick up
' , T . D odge- Cl ub Cab
GMC Sub urb an
1 J T
Ch~v . P . U .
SOMME R S GMC
T ru cl&lt;s. I nc .
13 ~ F'ineS1 ·

._._.....,

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10· If

I NT E RN AT I O N A L
doze r .
in d us tri al I y p e , T 34 0, in
ve r y good con d . 2~6 - 1318 .
65 6

·w

VI\ Ch-un k s
Th e.pr'ice is
no t too h igh , t he qua l i t y is
f i r s t rat e P erf ect coa l lor
fire pl aces . Medium size
6"x8" Fos ter Coa t, .1.16 2783 .

12 11

•\.

1975 A N D 76 2 Brock way
t r actors , b o t h 350 C u m m in gs en g ines l ess th a n
18,000 m i tes on t hem . 2 1976 c it y tr ail er s t ri -a x l e .
30 1 1 fl lon g , S15. 000 fo r all
an d tak e o ve r p ay m en ts .
Ca ll 614 757 223 9 o r 6 t 4 75723d4 .
64 - 12

OLD- eOil les~ d a t i~ g--.- ba~k-to
1600 , fou nd on old Sp an ish
w rec k on co ast of F lor i da .
Call ti tt er 11: 30 e . m
4d6 1935 .
68·3

------------BROW NIN G Cilori
o v er and
under 12 ga . sh otgun , Like
ne.w co n dit i on . 446 39 33 .
50 l.f
,_

(0/\L. C.A B

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... -

~-

Coa l L orp ., I
milenort:,of Ch esh ire , on Rt .·
7 P ic k your ow n . S20 p er ton .
Open 6 days a wee k , 367 7330
t o r turt h e r in form a ti on .
6 1f

~~ ~6 - 2532

__

657
1975MO DEL 450 cc Hu q uarn a
Motorcyc le M in t c ond . wit h
e/l.t ra s. Call .t-16 4-19 5. ask for
Je rry

S P E C IALS
N ew 10 fl. brush hog
tran sport dis c
Ha rro w ,
$1.225. 00.
•

r

USE D O F F SE T P LATES
HAV E
MANY USES

78 -1f

••• based on January new-car sales!

per

992-2126

LOW we ek, l y and mo n thl y
r a t es at Libby H otel. 446
17 .-13 .
244 I f

3

••' Limited number of Lots available ; 40' x70',

LO'•ely Cou1ntry House On 2 Acres

E . N. w' iu man 446 -4500 . .
Bud McGhee 446-1255

SLEEP IN G R ooms , wee k l y
r at r.s . P ar k Cent ra l H O·t el .
306-t t

LI G HT h Ou sek ee pi n g
Park Cent r a l Hote l

. - . -..-..- ·J

- F='---- - ---- ~------

Evenings C•ll
Ike W h em•n 446 · 37~6

203 -lf

-2-: Rfd lER spaces lo c ate d in
Ch eshi r e . r eaoy t or hook up
Ph one 367 0505
302 I '

L 1VE r ent tr e~ in e xc hang e NIC E 3 BR h o me- , loc ated on
St . R 1 7, near Shoppi n g
t or coo king and lig h t h ou se
cente r . Adu l ts on ly , no p el s,
tk eepin g . Country ho me w it h
5150 a mo nt h p lus sec . dep .,
Dr i v a t e b~drOom . si t t ing
re f .. r eq ., 446 -1044 o r 446l oom adlo lnln g bath . Call
1322.
1&amp;46 · 1593 after 4: JO.
" ·3
'
64 6

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

~ee k l y

MOBIL E ho m e, 2 b r ., Ph , 1
m i l e f r om h ospital . 446 3812_
67 -11

for• Rent

Ott ice -t46 -l6 4l

SLEEP I N G R Oom.
r at e. Ga ll ia H ot el.

FURN . a p t. in ci ty , w it h
w ash er and dr y er. ad u l ts.
Call D ic k R oderic k , &lt;146 06 44
d ur ing d a y .
67 .J

fa c to r y i'l,tr', T &amp; T w heel. A M - F M radi o, r ad ial t ires .

•

.,.combination, formal dining , t'l&gt; baths, large living It
room and most attractive setting. Look at th is today
buy yourself a bargain .
It

For Rent

5 RM . F U R N . h o u se, ad u lt s
.only , 10 1~ Edg e m o n t Dr . 446 0J69 .

wlt~wi~~i!!~~oo~~~!~ inP!Y~!!. ~

ll
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Quality Construction That You Can Afford

I

* Reliable Service after the deal

ster eo.

•

· Here is a very f in e 3 bed roo m h om e th a t has b een ke pt
in ('m int condit ion . Ve r y ni ce ki t chen. u ti lity roo m ,
gara g e a nd ca rport . T h i s ho m e is f ully carpete d a nd Is
locate d on very nice larg e fl a t lot w ith ga r den sp ot . Ky .

'5495

owner .

*We _have the right deal for you

..

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'J Ponds, •- 8 rop m home . F orce d ai r furnace, 2 los with
auto . ~ n~ oade r &amp; f eeder . 350 gal . S. S.. coo ler ; 2 barns 9
o~ fb~ lld tngs, t oba c c o b ase, milk ing parlor wl,th
P•~el l n e . Pond s sto ck ed wi th bass and B!' e G'll S
lh1s
u
1 s . . ee

ij

Dark brown -t a n V -top, br own lea th er in te rior , f u ll
power . fac t or y r.i r 1 T&amp; T whee l. AM FM si ereo, 1 loca l

I
I
'4495
II
I
II:Wll~ w~~m!f'2495
f u~~P..~ ~~~1£ l
I

'.

104 Acre Dairy Farm

NEW - 4-Wheel Drive and Luv Trucks In Stock

r. --:-:----·-.---·----·:-·--1

)

P .S., P . B.. air , pol ice ca r .

1972 DODGE POLARA aJSTOM s1995
·

MANY MORE

•

oi

R ed and w h ite fi n ish , doubl e a i r, loa d ed wi th every
Chev. op tion, low m i leage, n ever t ilted, Co . Demo.
St ick er Over $8,000 .00

lblge Custom PoiOra ••••••• '1395

&amp; Used 1975 models .

;

Ci t y wa ter , 7 r oom t il e block nic e h om e , forced a ir
l u r na ce, ~ase~ e nt , st orm doors . st or m wi n dow s,
w ood -burn mg firepl ace, sto re bu ild ing, m i lk ing hou se
and pa r lor, c or n cr ib, 35 ac r es bott oni land . R ea l n ice
farm .
BEAU·TtFUL
MODERN 6 ROOM S
3 BEDROOMS
HWY . 3S
J or 4 bedroo m, 1 1 ~ bath
Full base m ent wi th a la r g e
m odern k i t c h ~ n w ith lot s
fam i l y roo rn, 2 ba t hs ,
ca b ine ts and b u i ll in ran g e
garage, cen tr a l a ir. n ic e
an d wal l o v en , fi r ep la c e ,
c arp eti n g , rea l nice k i t b~ seme n!. 2 c ar ga r ag e
cheh . Loca t ed on a la r ge
w.1th auto . · do~ r op ener,
lot . A p P, r o )( . 2 yea r s o ld .
n~c e la r ge lo t be tw een n ew
You m u s t see the i n s ide o f
h 1ghwa y 35 and ol d JS
th is hou se !o a ppr eci ate i t
Pri ced rea son a ble
'
Pr ice r edu ced t or q uic k
sal e .
GA LLI PO LI S SC HOOL
D IS T R I CT
4 BE DROOM $
7 la rge
room s .
J
7 rooms , r em od eled o ld
b ed r oom s. f am i l v r oom
sty l e h o me (nice ). b at h
~aseme n t, oal . gas f orced wi th shower , sun por ch ,
a1r furna ce, ci ty wate r
bui lt -l n cab i ne t s , c ook
g ar t"~e . larg e yard . Ju s!
stov e, air c o n d itioner ,
ou t c · Gal lipo lis Ci ty l imi ts
for ce d air fur n a c e , b ar n ,
on R t 14 1. Mode rn k i tche n
fi rep la ce, was h h o u se . You
A r ea l b argain . Cal l now .
mu s t see th is h om ~. Only
s18,500.
i 80 AC R ES P LU S
A wo odla n d
V aca n l
BEA U T I F U L H OME SI TE
won d er l and
so me
Jus t o ff 160 Evergreen 36
pastur e a n d t illab le land .
a ~ r e s, al ost e ll t il lable .
Le-ss tha n Sl 60 00 p er ac r e .
N 1ce h

1975 CHEVROLET Suburban .....s6695

Special Clearance of ALL NEW, Demos.

Her e i s a d an d y 4 be d room home with di n i ng roo m ,
fully eq uipped ki t chen , 2 bath s, c a r pet i ng t hroughout ,
plus a n ew ga r age a nd shop b u ildi ng . Priced well under
th e mar ket. Owner m ust se ll Imm ed ia te l y .

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

OWN YOUR OWl&lt;
tl-U!iiNESS CARRYOUT
No . 7, J r e ntal trailer
spa c es. All sttX.k , equ ip .
It sh ~uld P• Y f o r i tse- lf
wi lh ln a f e w ye ars. . . 17 .,ere
m~ n t and bi~O - ooes . Buy
now .
fr o.,tag e · on Sl. H i ~.:~ h wav
F A ST DEVELOP' lNG
ClO SE TO HO SPITAL
A REA ON HWV . 35
Re a l nic e h ome , 6 r oo m s ,-2
155 ft . fr ontag e by 160' deep
b at hs, n at . gas h eat , J
leve l lo t with a b ea utiful
bed r ooms, n ice leve l lot ,
h o me . Short d i st an c e to
I OO'x 160'. c ity w ate r an d
l 'os pll al . Close to Spring
se wer . 150 ' fr om H Wy . 35 .
V al le y sn op p ing Piau .
P r ic·ed only $19,900 .00
OV E R 200 A . DAIR Y
3 ACRES
Som·e bott on , lo t s ·or li lla b le
12' x65 ' 3 Be d roo m Mo bil f:
land , m os tl y all c lean , n ew
Hom e. 231' fr o ntage on
mi lki n g pa rl o r , lar ge , li k e
Bu l aville -A d diso n
Rd .
ne W silo , 2 hou ses, 2 b arns ,
Leve l. Ga s c ook sl o\l e,
pon d , t oba cc o b ase, some
ru r a l w at er , pal'io , O nly
li mbe r . .P r iced lo w . .
., 0 , 900.00.
- tN GAL L.tPou' s
B'ABY FARM$
5 r oo m hou se on a· p ea ce fu l
5 a cr e--s or m o r e . H o.me
s tre e t, Porch , na t . g as,
build if'\9 si t ~ s . leve l lan a,
f urna ce~ buil t in c ab i n e ts,
3pprox . . 4 mil e off Rt . 35 .
fenced 1n ya rd , p len ty of
r ura l wa t er , c all for in
Qard en spa ce . A rea l bu y
f or m a tion .
R educe d . No w Or"l y SIJ ,SOO .
139 Ati! E S
. 3800 lb . to ba cc o ba ~e , lots
3 8 E D Ffb0M
of c oa l. lot s o f wood s, good
Acre p lus
level , a p
pa sture- , la r g e barn , w el l.
p ro x . 11 ,
mil es
from
good p lace for a hom e
Hosp i ta l on Bl a ck to p Rd .
away fr o m o th ~r p eop('!
P len t y o f ga r d e- n space,
4BEbROOMS
ru r al wa te r , c oun.tr y liv ing .
APP{ O)( . 11" a c res . L a roe
Close to G a ! li p ol( s. P ric ed
m od ern klt c l'l en , g a s fur .
on ly S18,000 .00
nace , base men t p an e led ,
V A C A NT LOTS
Jots of shad tre es, garden
Jn Resl r ic ted Su b -D i vision
room.
·
Ca ll t or d e ta i ls

~~~ ~:re~~ .. , , ,;,,,,, . . , . ........'39 5

2 Dr Ha r dt op, A.T., P.S. Ex tra c lea n .

J U N K a utos an d sc ra p m et al.
Ca l l 38 8 877 6.
. 41 26

SPACE RESERVED ~R A
PICTURE OF YOUR HOME.
LIST WITH GAU.IA COUNTY'S
FASTEST GROWING
REAl. ESTATE AGENCY.

Classic 4 door, co . demo wit h low m i leage, l 1g n l green
w ith green v iny l roo f , power door locks, wi ndow s,
br akes, f actor y air , t ln t g lass, con f ort llt, cr uise
con t r o l. A M ra dio &amp; t ape, it ' s loaded a nd i t's n ice .

1972 Dodge V8 Charger ••••••••••• s2295

•

Ver y nt ce modern ho m e, 7 r oom s and ba th 3
bed_room s, f~rced air f u r nace,' bea u tifu l carpe t , v~r y
des1r ab le bu tl d-_i n k i tc hen . la rge a tt ract ive c arport .
Good b~rn - load mg sh ed , modern m ilk hou se, h ig hl y
pr? duct 1ve IJ.J ue gr a ss p astu r e, p len t y o f good wa ter
on ced r easonabl e.
'

1975 CHEVROLET Chevelle .......'4895

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

Ext ra n i ce .

V-8, 4 d r . sedan, sh owS be st o f care .

895

"Your Friendly Dealer "

6 cy l . auto . trans .• exce ption a l.

T i'M BER . Top p r icE:' tor
st and irg sa w timbe r . Call
446 8570
56 It

&lt;~door, co , car, low m il eage , san dsl one f in i sh, v in y l top
an d in terio r . ai r conditio n ing, power windows &amp; door
locks, tilt steering wheel. c rui se con t rol. A M r a dio &amp;
tape , tr u l y a loaded car and has good eye appeal .

SEE ONE OF OUR FRIENDLY SALESMEN:
CEWARD CALVERT, J. D. STORY, BILL NELSON

1973 Ford Maverick 2 Dr.•••• ••••• s2495

A ir con d .

'

One Man Dairy Farm

•.

1975 CHEVROLET Caprig! ....... s5295

1967 Olds Cutlass

1495

D r . h ard top .

l o ve l y o ld hom e was used a s a n off icers cl ub
li &lt;luri nq t he Ci vil W ar and It ' s r u mmered t o ha ve b een
a li nk in th e unde r g r ound r ail r oad duri n g the
e ra . It h as b een kep t In excell en t cond it iol') and
inc:lucjes large :Om fOrtabl e l ivi ng room w it h w -b
fi r epl ace. for m a l d ini ng o r f am i l y room , glassed -In
~ unpor ch , m ode rn k i t ch en , Jl 1 ba t h s and 3 bed r oom s.
Loc at ed on a la rge lot i n t own . $36,900.00 .

.

Extra clean ...... . .... ... .

1971
Ford V8 Torino ·········~ · ··Jl495
2
1970 Buick Electra 4 Dr.••••••••• 11595

08·3 .
' ffA ~C RA FT
50 PONT I AC. Sed an . a l so 5 1 TRAVE L Tr aile r s , f Old Oown
· M an y moto r h omes , Cam P
Pon tiac . b est o f f er buys . 446 ·
Con ley St ar cra ft Sa l es. Rt.
4986 .
6~ N of P t . P le a san t .
68 -2
51 -If

GALLIPOliS

,

One very car efu l local owne r , low mil e age .

Jt entra nce

~970

Real Estate for Sale

2 Dr . H. T.

1973 Pinto 2 Dr•••••••••••••••••• s2195

Wanted To Buy

-'-r-~-_,__.._,....

2 Dr . H.T.,
,
V ~S , auto ... .. . ............ .... .. ,

A Dr . Sedan . Sheriff's ca r . Look s good .
new f rame and brick h om e . Beauti f u l

Dr .,
stand. tr an s ..... , .... ........ .

Dr. Sedan , 6 cyl.,
,
auto., low mi leage .. .. , .•

1895

Classic coupe , less than 7,000 miles. deluxe bel t s, tinted
glass. air -condi t ioned, de l vxe bumoers &amp; auards.
remote LH + RH mirrors , 400-4bbl, VB. AM rad io &amp;
tape, auld lightinq, co m fortilt , dark r ed wi t h black
vinyl roof. lik e new
a real sha r oi e.

'1295

2

1969 Pontiac LeMans

1970 Pontiac LeMans

One o wn er.

1975 CHEVROLET Caprice ........'5295

1971 Chevy Nova

1974 Ford V8 Custom 500········'1995
Jt Br and

2495

4

t on P ick up . Rea ll y sh a rp .

Dr .,

-- --------"-

Real Estate For Sale

1/ 2

,

and white, extra clean .

1974
Ford V8 Gran Torino·········s2995
4
P .S .. P.B., A.T.

B OAI&lt; OIN G , AKC WES T Y
AND P'UG PUP' , C I RCLE! L
KENNEL RT 141, 446 -4824 .
28 1 I f

- -

2 Dr . H.T., maroon

1974
P~outh ~er············J~5
? Dr . Hardtop .

P'R OWL ER
6BJ TR AV EL tra i ler s. see the No .
1 seller in th~ U SA . Sm it h ' s
1971 PON T I A C La Ma ns
Honda Sal es, St. R t . 7,
Spor t , 2 d r .• HT . m any
Gal lipo lis. Oh io . 446 2'2 40 .
e)( tr as . Ca l l 361 046 9 aft er
01-t f

U O.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS
1973 Buick LeSabre
1970 Ford Maverick

1974 Ford Four Wheel Drive ••••••• .S3995
lb
1973 GMC Sierra Grande••••• ••••• !3495
:T"om of Llne,

--~-....:..----- -- ·---

19'68 OLD SM OBI LE 3 n ew
tir es, bod y rou g h, r un s g ood .

" THE FRIENDLY DEALER"

EXTRA VALUE

BRIARPATC H KENNELS
MAL E Gor don Se1ter Pup'p y,
Ma le
En g l is h
Coc k e r
Spani el P Lt pp ie-s . D is tr i butor
fo r Mr . Groom . D og. c at.
horse pr oduc ts. P h . 446 4191.
56 I f

P IN E R ID GE COLL · ~ "' ­
A KC Reg . Co l lie pups . Sabl e
and w t~ i t e 256 1267 .
307 .If

'
'

FROM

'

AKC CA I R N te rr ie r s, 2 ma l es ,
3 m os ., sh o ts, p ap ers." 446 0946 .
68 -3

BOBB I 'S Poo d le Bou l iq ue .'
Prof essio n al g r ooming b y
ap poi nt men t Ph 446·1944 .
1111

GREAT CAR VA LUES

t on , low mi leage. Shows good ca r e.

Gallia County 's Fmites't Growir1g R eal Estate Agency

MILL CREEK RD . - Good
hom e wit h 2 b edr ooms ,
h ardwood fl oor s, fu r nitu r e
·indu d e-d . pri ce $.15,300.
EUREKA
Go oo
3
bedroom s hom e, nice ba th ,
l a r ge ga ra g e, ni ce l o t .
Good b u y fo r $ 14, 500 .

BUY NOW FOR

•
•
•
THE WISEMAN AGENCY

PETS FOR SALE A KC
Reg . Ch inese Pug pups , Ca ll
675 1595 or 675 - 1179 .
66 -9

197 5 C H EV ELLE
Ma l i b u
Classic , Landa u roof. PB , GOOD' used p ia n o . 256 -1173.
P S, a u fo . tnm s., e ir. steel
68-6
belt e d ra d i al s, will se l l
ou t right
or
t ak e
ove r US ED 12 ft . V -bo tt om Game
pay men t s . C al l 388 -90 17
f ish erm an boat w i th bu ilt ln
afte r 6 p . m .
ba it w el l. Phon e 388 -8713
68 '
64 -6

~-~~"'-.-

USED CARS

1965 BO NN EV I LLE . P S. PB .
an d a ir . 44 6-7619 .

68 -3

1972 D O D GE 9 pass . wago n ,
gqod ti r es . Ph . 446 378 0.
646

512 2ND AVE. 446-7699

fence~

AC R ES L o vel y a ll
elec tric ran ch , 3 bedrooms ,
farge f ami l y r oom wil h
f i r e p l ace . f u l ly c ar pe teo ,
l a r ge gara g e . Lo ca t e d
c lose lo Ches hi re . Pr ic e
$) 1, 600 .

~e

Auto Sales

B OA RDIN G &amp; AK C P UPPIES
K &amp; P Kennels, 388 8274 , R l.
. ~5&lt;1 , 11 mi . east of Por t er

port
ic.e
yard, _ nPr
ice $26 , 00 0.In

2' ~

Ben and asKed
''What Kind af a
government are
you givin u~ ?oo

Willis T. Leadingham
Realtor

207 KIN E ON - N ice r anc h I
w i th 3 b e-d r oom s, bat h
sh owe r , utili t y r m .,

BIDWELL GoOd home
Wi t h 3 be d r oom S·, bath ,
g ar age . co un t y wa t e r ,
g ar den
spa ce .
Pr i ce
$ 14, 900 .

0nedey a
woman stl&gt;pped

-----------

LEADINGHAM
REAL ESTATE

LOVEL Y BRICK R A NCH
- L ookin g f or a n jce ho.me
your
fami l y ,
3
for
be dr oo m s, 11 7 b a t h s, f u ll y
car p e ted , cen t ra l a ir , 2
g arage , n ice lot . P" icel
$34 .500.

PISCE S (Feb. 20-Mareh 201

BEN~

HI G H SC H OOL
SENIOR S
THE U . .S
Navy CACHE
pr ogram leis you ·choose
your
f iel d
now
for
guaranteed training th i s
su mmer . Gel the iuinp on
summer job hUnters . Pay
starts at SJ60 per mo . from
day you repor t and w e
l ur nis h qua rt er s, f ood and
h ea lth care . To check iLoul
cal!-. or v isi t your Navyman
at NAVY RECRUITING
STATION ,
22 1 NORTH
COLUMBUS
ROAD
ATH E N S,
OHIO
45 101:
CA~L COLLECT 59] . ].U6 .
6'1 -12

For Sale or Trade

found

---- -,-_ - . - , - - : - -

IN
T OWN
P r ic
r e du ce d , n o f a i r o ff er
r e fu se d . N ic e 3 bed rooms ,
bath , parli a l ·c ar,.p e t, l en ced
lo t . P r ice $13,000 Good buy
f o,.- ho me or in ve st m ent
p ro per l y .

19) Yo u m ay have to ·m ak e

1

Pel$

E W IN GTON r Tll is is
ve ry n ice 14x7 0 m ob i l
hom e, has 3 be droom
fu lly ca r pe ted , 2
lar ge . fam i l y roo m
i
f ire pl ace, ful ly f urni sh
Price rig h t a t 519, 900.

SAGITTARIU S (Nov. 23-Dee.

Don 't b e tempt ed toda y to
spend more than you should
for thmgs you feel m 1ght impress oth e rs. People like you
the way .yo u are.

·

PRI CE
RE DU C ED
O w ner sav s se l l !h is n ic e
be droo m h ome w it h b al h
f ull b asement , g ar a g e
Ho use ha s.. n ic e a l um i n
s id i n g . Goo d
b uy
fo
$10.800.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) If

20 -~e b.

"-

m446-3434

LIBRA (Sept. 23 Oei 23)To-get

AQUARIUS (Jan .

~-....--

OHIO RIVER
REALTY INC.

VIRGO (Aug. 23 -Sept. 22)

(Oee.

____

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate for Sale

tak e u n nec essa r y r isk-s on
a n o th er 's Id eaS tOday, 85pcc iaJiy if th1s person has
bun gled th ings in the p ast.
Keep h is tr ac k record in mi nd .

CAPRICORN

--

·------

CANCER (June 21 -July 221

Help Wanted

" ' ----

"'

For Sunday , M arch 21, 1976

Ta sk s that you hoped another
would an en d to today may be
lel t u n done . R ely mo r e on
your self t han your helpmate-s .

to

Help Wanted

-----"'-"--- -- ----

Bern1c e

W ISH

'iotice

preclarion for the prayers
o ff ered ,
the
beaut i ful

flo w ers , food .

Wanted To Od

e"'press our
I· I I ' .. JI~ !i'IV'/11 II IOW ( r!&gt; iH IIl
s1ncere thanl!.s t o Rc\1
•,J t, • · ' t l I ourlh 1".vrRa l ph Mahoney , Kanauga
l1l t:•
Commun ity , Riv er Land i ng
Walfons ,
Crew , Hom er
GOT a problem with your c ar ?
D oc t o rs and Nurs es or
Pl ea san• vall@y Hosp i t
al .
Ma lor or m inor repa irs .
Mor
Reasonable rates , all work
M iller ' s
WE
SELL
fr oni
Si m co
guaranteed . P ic kup and
tuary .
and
the
many
Catalogs , l eath er produ c t s
delivery Call '156 19'21 day
friends for th e kinoness
B &amp; E S~ oe Serv ic(.' . Ph 446
or n ighl.
Shown during the illness and
417'2 ,
646
death of our Mother , Wife
613
and Sis ter , Mrs
Mabel
Reynolds wh o passed away
PUB LIC N OTI CE
BABYSITTING ,
ex
March 7, 1976
54 ACRES are ~vailabh. for
per1en ced . good re f ., hot
The fam ily and r ela t ives.
c ropp in g on the Ty c otln
meals , good w i th ch i ld r en .
68 1
Lake w il df ife area begin
JJ6 0708 .
ning Apr i l 1, 19 76 . This is a 2
64 6
year
ro
t
ation
(Corn
Idle)
.
THE FA MI L Y Of Robert L ee
B
id
f
orms
are
avai
l
able
DOZER , ba c ~hoe .
ditch
Long would l i ke to thank
from G P . Honch ul , Rt . 1
w itch , landscaping, se w·age 1
neighbors. fr iends, relat i ves
Oak
Hi
l
l.
Phone
682
7524
.
sys tem s. dra inag e di tches ,
for the toed . c ards . flow en .
B ids to be opened 3 :00P .M .
roadways . Ph . 446 9882, 2
donat ions and Gallia County
Apr
il
1,
1976.
p .m . to5p .m . . afler 5 p _m .
Senior Citizens and other
68 3
245 55 4J
acts of sy mpathy . Your
k i ndness w i l l n eve r b e
F-o r M a11ionu m Sr c ur i t y use
forgotten .
T ie
rJ ow n
An chon
1o
68 1
P r o tec t Your Mobi le Ho m e.
Co m pll' t c Ser vic e. Ca ll Ron
R E CORD PRODUCTION
Sk 1d m ore, 37 9-2 152 or 4'16WE WOULD li k e to t ake th is
SCREEN I NG NEW
17 56.
opportun ity to tha n k every
SIN GER S AND
270. 11
one who c a me to pay t h eir
t;R O LIP~C" A il.
last respe Ct s to Sgt . David
'( 404) 43 3-1958
L P roffit . A l so to r- th e many
D Efi. D S lo e~ r emoved . No
beaut iful f loral offerings ,
charge Ca l l 74 5 551J b efo re
-------~food , cards an d prayers
9 am
dur i ng h is brie f stay in
)77 IJ
FOREMAN W ANTED
H ol ze r Medical Cen te r .
We a r e seekin g a n ex
Special than k s t o t he WE DO ea r pe r cin g , sa f e an d
pe ri enced super visor t or a
n u rses an d aides in t he
pa i n less
$10 .
tncu d i n g
lig ht assembly
f act or y
CarOi ac ca re unit , Dr . Ralph
earrinqs .
Tawney 's
loc a t ed in Ga ll ipol is Poi n t
B . Burner and Or , I . C.
.. Ple-asa n t a r ea . Mus t b e a bl e
Jewelers
Wa l ker who so tenderly
57 If
to motiva t e emp loyees a nd
c ar ed for h im , a l l members
be qual ity co n sc ien ce . In
dn d units of the Ohio Sta t e
elu d e past sa la r y h isto r y .
BEG I ~ your spri ng c le an ing
Highway Patro l througho u t
Wri
t e to Box 400, Ga ll ipo l is
py
tlavin
g
vour
c
arpels
th e state. Espe-cially L t .
cle.aned by bes t me thod Tr i b une .
Er n es t W igg le swort h. and
66 3
known . Re move all the dir t,.
Ca p t. Wilson for the-ir help
Make y our car p et look new - - -; -- - - -- -- - and visits to our home and
ag ain . For fr ee estimate , L ADIE s needed , part time .
the hospi_tal
The West
Chose your own hours . 2
c all 37 9 2682
Vi r gini a State P olice , P o in t
51 I t
days a week . d46 - 1S ;z2 ,
P l e as a nt
~o t ice
Dept ,
Mason Co . Sheri ff' s of f i ce,
663
Me igs Co . She r iff's of f i ce , SW .E t:PE.R
and
sewing
M iddleport and Pome r oy
ma c h ine repai r , part s and T EX AS OI L COMPA N Y n ee d s
P olice Dept . , Ga ll ipolis City
s u pp lies .
Pick up _ and
dep end abl e pe r son M F' who
Po l ice Dep t ., Galt ia Co .
d e l ivery. Dav i s Vacu u m
can Wo rk witho ul super
1
Sh erif f 's
o f fice ,
The
Clean er , .• mile up George~
vision in Ga ll ip o l is . C:ont act
Sec u r i ty Police o f the
Cr ee k Rd . P h . 4•16 02 9-L
cus t omers .
Ageun im
Ga l li pol is St a te I ns titute , A ll
45 ·I f
~ o rt a nt . bu t m a t ur i t y is . We
D ep art m ents o f the Ohio
r a i n . Wri te J . J . D i~ k ,
Be ll T eleph one Co .• th e Fi r s t THURM A N
Pr e s . .
Southwes t e rn
House
ru rn .
Gr a ce
B aptis t Ch urch.
P~tro l eum . r=- t . Wo r th , T x .
St ripp ing , 1\ nliques boughl
U11ited Me thod ist Ch urch ,
E O.E
and
sold .
pi c kup
and
R ev Charles W . L usher a nd
de 1 ivery Pau l IJ urnctt , 245
P asto r W i lson W all I for thei r
9.17 9 . Ma r lin Ros e. 2·15 95 37
c o ns olin g
w o rd s ,
T om
EARN eX tra$ $$ . B e iu s t part
K ess ell for. hi s be autifu l
' If
t i m e or full li m e Iabr ie,
song s, Rut h An n Cor b in for
TAW N EY' S Jewe ler s and
craft , and N a t ion 's p a rt y
t he org a n rnusic: , R ev .
p la n , Sup er vi sor and part y
S tud i os .. Ca meras , p hoto
D e nny Co burn f o r his v isits
f inishing , diamo n ds , etc .
p eop le ne-eded n ow
For
and pra yers . M an y than k s
Second Ave 446 1615
in f o r m a ti on w rite Sim
t o t he pa ll be ar er s. hono r ar y
plicity Fab r i cs , 249 W .
55 If
p allb eare r s, h on or gua rd s
Ce- ntr a l St . . M a r l o.n , Oh io
an d a l l w h o he lped in our
43302
T R I COU NT Y Spo r t s St1op
h o me in an y way .
68 J
Pro f essiona l :~r c hery an d
Sp ecia l t h an ks to F r ed
r e loa Oin g supplies . 675 2988 .
a nd Joan Woo.d for thei r
FOUR house w ives need ed , 4
36 1f
mos t eff icie n t se r vice and
da ys a week, 4 h rs . a d ay , U
fo. i n dness du r ing the loss o f
an .h ou r Gall 992-7269 for
th e on e we love d so de ar .
in t er vie w .
Ag ain tha nk s ~o
all who
68 -3
h el pe d in any w ay t o h e l p
- · ' - --·-._;_...,...
..;......
.....;
ma k e our bur den just a l ittle BOOKK EEP I N G f or sm a l l B .r. ~s Player wanted t or
bi t t igh te r . May God bless
b usi n ess a n d individua l t ax
establish ed younq roc I!. band
you all aways
r eturns . 446 7935.
ag e 16 21 Ph 675 2653
Wi f e, Marv. d aughte r s
36 3-!
P en n y and Jac k ie , Mo ther .
~ -------~,
Mrs .
H elen
Proff it,
b r oth er s. To. m arid H enr. y ,
Sis t er , M rs . Orv i ll e Frost ,
1 mo th er i n l a w
M rs Ruth
Ross . br ot he r s -in -ta w and
s ist ers -in law . n ieces a nd
ne ph ew s
68 -1
WE

DAN
THOMPSON

l!

~

B E G ENTL E . be k ind , to th at
elt: p en sive c arpei, c lean it
w ith Bl u e Lu s tre . R e n t
s ham pooe r
Sl .
e l ec tr ic
Cen tr al Sup pl y Co,

A L L T Y PC: S of b uil d i n g
mate r ia l s . bl oc k , brick ,
sewer
pi pes.
win dows ,
lintels, e t c . Cl au de W in t ers .
Ri o Grano c . 0 Phon e 245 512 1 al t er 5.
12 3 If
~

- - --

.

�30 - The Sundav Times- Sentinel, Sunday. Ma rch 21 , 1976

Classified~:

For Fast Results Use The .')unday Times-Sentinel

Times · Sentinel, Sunday, March 21, 1976

PRE-OWNED

'

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate for Sale

MASSIE

I

!

RUSSELL
WOOD
REALTOR

Realty, 32 State St
Tel. 614 446-1998
ST.

AT. 35 -

All

b ric k

home , w ll h everyt h in g :

ADELAIDE
DRIVE L ov e l y 3 B R ra n ch ha s H W
floor s "" ' 'h ·n e w c arpel m
LR , g a s h eaL a.tr c ond . ,

LOW DOWN PAYME,NT N ew do Ubl e w tde mobi le
home ott ers J BR s, l arg e
LR . oR . lr. i tc hen Wt th s tove

g ara g e ,
la u ndr y
and
equtppcd k dc h e n P rtccd at
S23 . 000 w tt h
flnan ct n g

OWNER W I LL F IN A N CE
S'i acr es adt o• nmg t h e
Ct ty limtt s of R io Gr an dE'
L ot s of po rc n t ral

R A CCOON

and r et . and n tce ca b me ts .

MERCERVILLE AREA -

BUY AND DEVELOP- 6
v ac an t tot s on Ch est nut St
Zon ed r es,dentia l 112 .000 .

Sam e a s new 3 bdrm .
Mob de h o m e , tu l l f u r
n ish ed , el ec fur n ., ce n ·a ir ,
und e rpin n.e d .
me tal
s tora g e b ldg and loc ated
on a large lot Pn ce S1 2,900

sh aQ c arp e rs an d at/ a t lo f.
Wt ll trad e tor farm
•

i) va tla bl e

PERRY TWp - 2 18 acr e
fa rm . c omplete l y f en ced ,
50 A li l li!j bl e, 2 po nds, 7
b ar n s . cor n cribs , good 7
rm hQm e

CR EEK

FRON'TAGE 13 ac re s
f l a t bott om l and •S al l
ltl l abt e exc e pl tor th e
sha dy cr eek b ank l arg e
barn •nc l u d ed t or the
bar g a•n pri ce of S.lJ ,OOO

D A IR Y FARM - 222 A , &lt;1 5
A
b ot torn , b a l a nce is
m os tl y c lean ro !l •ng la n d ,
n ew mtl k1n g pa rl or 20X 60
S il O , 2 bar n s, 6 rm house ,
lar ge p on d and tob ba se .

RAR E CO UNTR Y tiOM E
3 .B R br1 c k r anc h
f eat ures larg e LR w tl h
f tr e p l ace , eq ur pp ed 1&lt;.11
ch en , d 1n1ng rm , 2' , baths ,
l a r g e f amily rm , w rlh
•firep l ace
c ent
a •r and
g ar age A n tc e dnve to th e
m 1n es or Cavtn

DAIRY FARM 163 A
fla t and r oll ,ng l and loc at ed
s. ou th of ~•o Gran d e with
lots o f · r oa d frontage
Speo a l te a 1 ur e ~ ar e pond .
spr.ng s, c oun t y water , t ob .
ba se . good J rm h o use wtlh
n ew kt iC hen , la rge barn
an d $ •10

E VAN S HEIGHT S - N ice
B R hom e o ff er s g oo d
in l! :-; p enstve
11 v •ng
to
som eon e, Feat ur es kn ol t y
P• n e liv tng r o om W1 th
w o o d b ur n .n g
f 1r !;,' pla ce
O N L Y ~ 1 5 90 0
'l

ROUTE
3S WEST
Al mo st n ew 3 BR brtck
ran ch •S ve ry ap p ea1 1ng
an d c an b e yo ur dream
home
La r ge eq u 1pped
k1 tc hen I ' , b at hs . Qual ll y
car p e l t t1roug hoUI . c en tral
a ~r la r 9 E' L R , d tn 1ng area .
gMaqc . f u ll b asemen t

PRI CE
R E DU CE D
Own e r !'. &lt;t ')oS se ll lh ts lov el y
J BR br tc k r anch wll h
atm os r 1 JOO sq ft o f l •vmg
ar ea pl us a full b asem en t
and a 7 car g ara ge A l l th ,s
p lu s a l ar t,Jc f la t w el l la n d
sc a pe d lo t w ll h 7 la r g e
sha de tr ees

SHAD Y LOT on Ra cc oon
Cr ee k
IS
pe rf ect
for
\l a c atton . r ct tr em en t or
p ermanen t l tv tn 9 L o c at ed
on a p rt 'ola t e r d 1S t h is
b ea uti f ul 11 )I; 65 m ob ile
hom e wtth w es t er n dec or
co m pl e t e l y
f ur n tsh ed
Don ' l watl to see th iS on e

CLOSE TO MINES 116
A
fa rm , m os tl y cl ean .
leve l an d rolling l and Good
7 r m
h ome p a r t •a t l y
r emod eled $.:2 ,000

NEW l l s a
' 1G - $~3 , 500 Be th r
.... see th 1s
m od er
' ed on a
ntce Clo
(..i
oYll OUt
Sp ec ta l r...
are Jl -.
bat h s . ce n t ..
co mpl ete
kt t ch en . f atr~r\y rm , 3 B R s
an d p ai•O door s
NEAR RIO GRANDE ov.er 4 acres l ev el to r o ll •ng
gr o un d w •t h an al m ost ne w
mo d u l a r h ome f e atu res
1 344 sq
ft
ot mo dern
l1v .n g A l so m c l uded ts a
new 2 c a r gara g e apt

MOBILF ._.OME ~ r eady
to m o ve ~ . .., x 55 beau t y
Is c a rr
,n~ ··rn• shed
and f
~ / ) ash er ,
d r y er ,
, , un
d e r sktr l t n ~ .
10 nnd
, awnm g $2,500

rJ/)

FHA
APPROV E D
al mos t ne w ran ch h as lo t s
to o ff er for on l y $21 400
To t a l
elec l rt c
h ome
fea t ur es 3 BR !l 1 la undr y
rm , n •c c k ll che n wd h
bu1 ) t ' "ran ge , WW c ar p et,
ce n t ra l wa t er.: a n d se wage
a nd l o ca t ed m Rodn e y
Vil l age II

66 ACRES A b o ut on e
l h trd c l ea r ed . balan ce
woode d ht/1 lan d 1 front s on
2 rd s tn Har r •son twp
$12 ,90 0

182 ACRE DA I RY FARM
- Lot s of tillab l e groun d ,
mod e rn 8 cow mIlk par lor ,
lar ge
barn ,
seve r a l
bu tldtn gs silo , pon d , ho u se
n ee d s r epa i r $58 ,000

FOR SALE OR TRADE COMMERCIAL
BUILDING 2 g arag es
off ~e e, sh owroom &amp; 1z b ath
downst a~r s p l us a lov el y 6
r m a pt ups ta i r s Located
about 2 m •les fr om to wn

PASTURE FARM ~ 40 A ,
at / cl ean r ollin g g r ass la nd ,
good f ences , front s on 2
rds , co wat e r a v i!l llab l e
$19,500

84
ACREs
mostly
t• llabl e .
no
butldt n g s ,
loc a te d •n Morg an Twp
$22 ,000

102 Acre s, ab out • ~ lt lla b iP
fron ts on Racco on Gr eek ,
pond , 5 rm home , large
sh ed , S26,000

F A G as h ea t , Cen . a ir , f ull
bil se . w rth f tnish ed fa mily
r m , a l so n ew t am i l y r m
on m a 1n floor 16' lC. 24' w it h
Ston e F P , 3 bd rms , J1 1
bath s, 2 c ar gar w i t h t!l ec
d r L oc a te d on .7 A . corner
lo t Pr iced tn m id 40s .

LISTINGS NEEDED_
WE
ADVERTISE
NA TIONALL'y - BE BUY_
SELt - T~ADE.

RANNY BLACI&lt;BURN,
. BRANCH MANA_GEFJ

DEBBY DR - 4 yrs . o ld ,
all e lec fr ame Wt lh ce da r
St d m g , 6 btg rms ,, 2 full
b at hs , p lenty s tor age , l iv
16 ' ~~:3 1 ',
ccn a.r , wall s
pane l ed an d dr y wa ll 100
pe t Acry l on ca r pet . e lec .
F P , b •g kll eq uippe d wtt h
D w
d ts an d sel f clea n
ove n w tth Rot tssc r te Thi S
ho me h a s m an y un •q u e
f eatur es an d c an b e bo ught
for tess than r ep lac e ment
co s t
BULAVILLE RD ~ A l l
brt c k R an ch, 2 yrs o ld ,
1500 ' sq f t liv a r ea . large
u t tl 1l y rm cou ld be used t or
work ar ea for th e M rs
Good 9 1dd e of c arp e l , ntce
k t tche n c ab tne ts, Ce n atr ,
rura l wa t er plus dr w e ll
12 'x 16' blo c k o ut b ldg
Bea .ull ful se llin g on 1 A
good ga rd en lan d Pr i ce in
m td th trl tes
CHATHAM AVE 2DH 1t
Ext ra n tee 5 r m
fr a m e
h ome , a pP.ro x 12 yr o ld.
n e w c ar Pe t o ve r H W
F lo or s , n e w F A
gas
f urnac e &amp; c opper plum
b ing Sma ll ou t. bl dg Pr1 ce

$16.500
yo un g 6
rm s
I ' · b at h s c en a tr ,
sel f c l ea n ov e n
d ts h
w as h e r
d• sp o sa l
and
dr apes 8 tg lot Don 't JUdg e
f rom ou ls td e app ea r an ce
P rt ce $31 'i&gt;OO
JAY OR

-

7 yr

: tTY 82 1 2n d /\ ve 2
, tor y 6 r m old er h ome
tie b loc k storag e bl dg a n d
1a r L oc a t ed on a l ar ge lot
" g oo d b u y at $17 000 .
-tEOGEWOOO DR O wn er
;ay s se ll now 7 rm f ram e
•n lar ge lot H w , fl o,o rs
11 b at h s b ase sto r m d r s
ard wtn Make an offer
COUNTRY LIV - I mt Oft
S! , R I 77 5 on H T R d 1 Yr
ol d fram e 5 bt g rm s, 1' ;
b a th s , a ll c arp et , all el ec
w it h ce ll a r base St orag e
b ldg 10' )( 16' Ap pro x 2 A
goo d lev el gard en land
( Grow what you eat l Th 1E.
hou se ha s 1400 sq II 1/v
ar ea and c an be boUght for
$3 1,000
ROONEY -Com f or t a ble &amp;
eco nom• c al l• v •I"I Q 1S wha t
yo u c an g et for $16,000, tf
y ou buy t hts 2 s tory , 6 bi g
r ms , co mpl e t ely r ed on e
olde r h o me Call on lh 1S

on e
CR CT ' Y Good 3 bt g
rms &amp; bath Id eal for a
r e11r ed couple or newly
we d Pri c e $8, 500
HAVE
A
LUCRATIVE
BUSINESS FOR
SALE,
COME IN AND DISCUSS
WITH ME
. ANY H R 446 1998

For
Lease
1&lt;11 SQ F T
For Sale

For Sales
NEW 5 ~IECE DINETTE
SET, S49 95 REG
$69 95
THIS
W E EK
ONLY
RICE ' S NEW &amp;
USED
FURN , 854 SECOND AVE
H6 · 9S23 .
64' 1f

TRUCK TOP SALE
M oby A IV T op s - SI 79 95
Moby F tb ergta ss B tl , $3 85
Outdo or s To p s •n - $285
CAMPING SUPPLIES

__,

J a cobsen L awn an d
G ard en Tra c to r s
A ll top s are g u ar an teed
we ser v tce w h a t w e sell

LI ME ST O N E tor dn ve w ays .
Car l W tn t.er s Ph one 245
511 5
27 0 I f

ALSO
Goo d used l tne of
F arm Eq u tp m en t

4 IN CH perfora te d or so ltd
p l ast te p tpe , l eft o ver fr om
con stru c tiOn to b W tll sell
l ess than co st. only 3,000 ft
Ph 446 988 2 7 p m 5 p m
ufl er 5 P tr1 245 5544 .
67 3

Op en 6 da y s a w ee k , close d on
Sun d ay so you m ay all en d
the chu r c h of y our chotee
VALLEY AUTO&amp;

IN T ER N AT ION A L
TO 3 40
dies el Wtth 3 po tn t h tlch and
po w er t ake off F or bru sh
h og , plow , et c
Excell ent
un it t or f armer $6 ,00 0, ex c
cond Ph 44 6 9882 2 p m . 5
p m , af t er s p m 2.45 5544
67 3

IMP . SALES
5 m ! les W of G all tpOIIS
Rt 35, Ph 446.3417
61 12

·-·------------

________ ------

-~ _ .

---

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN

----

---

-~-

7 DOU B LE se t s o f Pony
sho w h ar n esse s
4&lt;1 6 d17 2
67 -3

We
se ll an Ythtng
for
anybod y at our Auclton
Barn or i'h your home For
tnformat t on and p1 c kup
servt cc call 256 1967 .
Sal e E \i ery Sa turday
Ntghtat7pm

17 F T C R E STLINER bo a t,
Wtlh f ull top an d all a cce ss ,
196 3 Ch ev , I m pala , 2 dr ,
h ardtOP 367 0418
67 6

--

---- --

-~-

--

CH IMN EY B loc k s. W Va &amp;
Oh lO LU ITl p Co a l Galli pOl i S
Block Co , 4 ~6 27 83
77 3 I f

SWAIN

AUCTION
SERVICE
K e nneth Swa.n , Au c t.
Corner Thtrd &amp; Olive

REG Morg a n mare
367 7438 or 446 387 9

P hon e

64 5
USED A.PPJ_IANCES"
Washers a n d dry ers , A 1 cond
$40a n d up L&amp;A Ap p l tan ces,
300 4th A\i e, R ear Ph 446
7398
18 If

PUBLIC
AUCTION

--

SAT., APRILJ

Slarftng At 10 A . M .
Ra1n or Shine
Selling t he Es tat e of the
l ate van Bunard . F r om
Slat e Rout e 7 o n th e
Pom e rov ·Mtdd le porl
By
p&amp;ss , tak e Rou t e 14J a bout
15 miles to th e ra ilro ad
cro ss ing in C arp ent er
Then turn left on County
Road 10, go 111:.&gt; m 1! es
wat c h tor Sal e S1gn s F'or a
complete
Jt st ing
of
hous e hold good s , f a rm
mach inery
and
other
items . see Ad in th is p al)er
Sunday , Mar ch 28 T h
A&lt;;im intslrater l c •e Buz .
zerd wtll also off er the 1H
acre
farm
tor
salt
privately ()n day ot sate
Auctioneers
Col. R , E . Knotts &amp; Son

Dn·e

.

~----

--~

~·wo Ca r ry on I lt l;lh l Bilg s
New , N e ver use d P erfe c t
y 1f : f or t rave l er P hone 245
5620 a fl ~ r 5
293 If

vacant
lots,
beautiful home sites,

localed at the top of holt
on
Circle Dnve in
Plants
Subdtvtsian~
'Nhich
is
just
Bulaville
Road .
Propert-;
ltnes
are
marked with
whrte
stakes .
Owner
will
ftnance one lot are all
three .

on

Phone 446·2917

offi ce m lo bby of
l tb b y Hot el 5.75 mo Call
dd6 17 .13
283 If

Mobile Homes for Sale
USED MOBILE HOMES
Call 576 271 1.
67-If

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

TWO bedroom mobtle home
In g ood condit ion Ph . 4&lt;16

1165

68 3
~---- -------- -

TRI ST A TE l'v' o b1 l e Horo 1e
Cl £' aran c e Sal e, u sed mobile
homes , 8, 10 , 1 ~ , wlde s P h ~ .
446 75 7'2 Bank f1nan cmg
306 If
AU L T ' S
MOBILE
Home
Se r v •c e ,
Sk tr tmg ,
roof
c o a t i ng , patio s , awn.ngs ,
an ch ors . c em ent w ork F ree
es l 1mat es Call 245.941 1 or
145 94 72 after 4 30 p m
2 15 If
ECONOMIZE on fue~
underprn your mobtle home
and anchor for safety
Fo"Ster Mobile Home Ser
vtce , 446 -2783 , or Elmer
Skrdmore 446- 3479
27 4 If

T(J

B&amp;SMOBILE HOMES
1976 NOV 1\ 12 X60 3 br , all'

Real Estate For Sale

j

I

446-1066

~it end re in; on the bitc on 'i
at
t h is
t w o , b ed ro om ,
car p etecf ho me , sil u ated on
a 75 ' x 300 ' lot eK 1en d tn g to
Ra c c oon Creek . E lec t ric
he a t. Ins u lated , m o de rn
kitc-h en , p anele d ; c an b e
used as a sum mer home or
f or permanen t occ upancy
Ap pro x tma t e l y t en mmu t es
f r om G all tp OI I S P r i c ed
$ 28. 000
Sh own by ap .
po mtm en t onl y
Smal l F"arm , l 6 1 1 acr es ,
R I 160, near Ev er green
Th r ee bedroom s , carpe1M
h o m e! , f tr ep ! a ce
P r 1cc
$31 ,500
Bedr oom tr am e hom e
Jo c a •c d .n Ct! y
n ew l y
r em od eled new f ur n aces,
pan el ed , ~;&gt; t c P r iCe $ 15,000
'I

Und er con st ru ctto n , l h ts
th ree be d ro om
" n e W"
hom e 1S loca t ed in Green
Ac r es Su b d1 v i s ton
Th e
n atur a l f tnt sh ed ce d ar
S1dtng bl en ds gra cef u ll y
w tl h t h e p eace f u l a t
m o s ph ere
of
the
su rr ound tn g hill s F ull y
c ar p e t ed .
tn su t a t ed ,
e l ec tr 1c al! y h e at ed , Ct!y
wa t er , m od ern ktl chcn a nd
all ac h ed gar a g e , Gall tpol ts
C tt y Sc h ool D1 s t n c t A r ea l
buy fo r s~ a . s oo oo
Sp r tn g 1S l ess t han stx t y
d ays awa y an d w e h ave a
seven acr e tra ct of lan d •n
H a rr tson T w p , m clud tn g a
20 f eet rtgh t ot w a y to
Ra ccoon Cree k , i deal for a
sum m er w ee ken d r e tr ea l
Pn ce SJ 000, or 15 Acres for

$6 .000

B us in ess Pr op er t y loc a te d
at l h e tnt e rs ec t ton m
Ce nt e rp o tnt , l ar g e s t o r e
bu il d tn g ,
wilh
lt v i n g
qua r t ers
and
s o me
eq u •p ment s tfueted on 1 1
ac r e lot. can b e purcha sed
for $17 ,900 00 A ddtt•onau,- ,
one 14 'x 70 ', three bedroo m
mobi le hom e c an be pur
cha se d se parat e ly , or wt t h
th e b u sm ess p ro perl y , for
\7 .000 00 Tot a l prt ce for
b us tn ess pr o p er t y and
m o b i l e home , $24,900 00

'

N e w . mod ern , ins ulat ed
and
ca rpe ted ,
t h re e
b edroom ..( br iC k ho me ,
he at ed.
e le c t rt c atly
loca t ed on St at e Rt 588 ,
n ear th e U S Rt 35 tn ter se ctton a t Rodn ey , 110'
f ro nta ge a long R t. 588 ,
Ga ll •p ol ts Ct ! Y Sc h o ol
D tslr• c t Pn ced S3 1,600 00
Two b ed r oom home on
Se cond
A v e nu e , la rge
fl n t sh ed room upsta 1r s.
g a r ag e ba sem ent , ce ntra I
a•r c ondt l 10n1ng , t h r ee
roo m wtth bath r ental on
r ea r of p r op er ty , pn ce d
$35, 000
Shown by ap
po1ntm ent on l y
Thre e b edroom . c arp e te d
h o m es loc a te d o n 75 ' x 110 '
lo i s
a tl a che d ga rage ,
modfrn k llc hen , $2 0,000
Gal11p o lts C tly
Scho o l
D ts lrtCI
How abo ut l h ts for ' "
' ltlo' e 1n '
v es tm e n t or
prop erl y ' One ac r e tra c t o r
land w t! h \04' frontag e on
n ew Rout e 160, 80 ' fr on tag e
on o ld R ou te 160, 490 ' dee p
H as lwo mo bil e h om es , on e
1S a two b edroom fu l ly
c arpet ed , 19 73 model wilh
ce ntral a~r condti!Ontn g ,
th e oth er IS a one b edroom
old e r m o de l
A lso , has
lar ge 2d ' x2 8' b lo ck butld tng
w 1th f urn a c e whtch can be
u se d as tw o c ar garag e or
w o rk sh op R ur a l w a t e r
Own e r m ov mg , will sell for
$19,000 00
Wh1t e brt c k h om e loc ated
at c or ne r of Ol1ve and
F ou r th
Avenue
tn
Ga !ltpo lts Owner will se ll
for t 10.500 A good bu y d
you' re looktn g tor a sma ll
ho m e,
or
Inv est m en t
propert y
120 A cre s of paperwood
timb er lan d, loc ate d tn
walnut
Twp
Pr 1c ed
$2 5,000
Tw o lot s lo cat ed m Cr o wn
Ctly , fronta ge on Rou t e 7.
bo t h for $6 ,000
Farm you can buy 3 wa,-s
8 r oom , 2 s tory farm hou se
with 3 outbu tld tngs loca t ed
on 3 acres of land , pr:r ced
S. 21,800 , or 8 room farm
house w 1lh 3 outbuildm g s, l
barn . Stluated on 17 acre s
of land , prtc ed $27 ,sao; or 8
room farm house , 3 ou t
building s, 1 barn , ap
prox 1mat e ly 2, 50 0 lb s
toba cc o bas e, with 40 acr es
of land prtced $39 ,900
you are Interested m
seiJ,ng your home , farm or
bus tness proper I,- , call We
have a ltst of polent lal
buvers

808 LANE
BRANCH MANAGER
437 11 SE COND AV E
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
.... 6-7900
LISTINGS NEEDED NOW
TO FIT OUR BUY E RS '
NEEDS.
LARGE SUPERMARKET
wtth great potent tal in h1gh
traffic area. EQuipped wtlll
ga s pump s Wtll se ll Wtlh or
wttho.u t $lock . Own er ha s
oth e r full · tlm e bu s tn e s s
•nt e r f&gt;s t . Wond er ful op p o rtun•tv for the r l ghl
per son
TWO BEDROOM HOME ,
th re e other buildmgs , on
two acres of lana in Crown
Ctty V ery ntce for com m er ci al use su c h as a
branch bank .
BEAUT ' - uL
THREE
BEDRO' s.a;ICK Wllh 2
ba th s, t ...
·~ n t , t w(l
ftr epla ce s
1) wo c ar
gar age lo c at e~. ~ ar to w n
545, 800
THRE'
._EDROOM
MODUl
Wt l h '}
ba t hs
1
ex cepl ·
ltv tng r o om :,. ..
15

So-l-D -.:

VERY NICE BUILDING
SITE on Rout e 7 nea r
G all•po l t s
Dam
I OO'
front age x 320' d epth
VERY
SELECT
2
BEDROOM m ob il e hom e
•n Cen l en ary on 80 ' 11. I SO'

lo l

ALMOST NEW THREE
BEDROOM Close to town ,
exce ll en t
fr ame
c on
s tr uclt on
w tth
full
ba ~ em e nl
P r 1c ed lo Se ll
NATIONAL
AD VERTISING
wtth
the
Gallery of Hom es

25'12 locust St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-3636
RIV E RVIEW 5 r ooms and
b ath over look m g th e Oh to
R tver Jn V tlla ge o f Ad d 1son .
Won ' t b e on th e ma r ket
lon g a t SI 6,500

PRICE REDUCED : Sup er
gro ce r y b u s m ess loca ted m
Gall t polts most rap t dl y
g r o wtn g bu s1ness are a
W 1th 1n w a lkmg d ts t ance o f
h e a vi lv
p opu l a t e d
r esi den ti al are.a M a n and
W1f e Oj9era tto n w tl h ve ry
ntce 6 r oo m ap t on se c ond
fl oor an d r ent al d w el h n g on
r ear of lot A m ple pa rk mg
Ow ner must sell due to
•II ne ss
BRAND NEW fr ame Wl t l"t
br tc k
fron t ,
b ea utiful
m ode r n ki t c h en w ith sl a v e,
diShwa she r an d garb age
d ispos al 3 bedrooms , 111
b a th s,
f u ll y
c a rpe t ed
L oo:a t ed on ' • a c re lot in
sma ll subdi VISIOn $26.000
CHESHIRE t rad er co ur t ,
near Ga \i1 n an d
K yge r
Creek Pl an l s
18 tr at l er
sp aces wt! h t wo tra tl er s
tn c l u d e d
L a undry
ta c iltd es Goo d m co me
prop ert y ,

3 B R h o m e on s eve n
th.enth s. A lo t n ear ct t"f
Total
e le c lr te
20 x 12
ou t bu ddt n g $2•1 sao

511.900 Wi ll buy f 1ve roo ms
and b a t, m Ct l y Ca ll for
more de t a il s

3 BR h o m e ne a r
RIO
Gra n d e
To t a l el ect rtc .
a c, 21. ba ths ba sem en! ,
l tr ep tu c c S4 5,000

NEAR RT
lS
Se ve nt y
ac r es f ar m l an d , 36 a c r es
til labl e, r es t pa s tur e
2
barn s Go od b utl d 1ng St i es

5 miles tr om Holz er 3 B R
h om e
&amp;
l ot
~ 16 , 500
V Ill ager 6 5 x 17 ' 3 B R M
Hom e an d lot $11 ,500 ' 6'}
K trk woo d , S'1 x 17 ', J O R M
Ho m e Wtth atta ch ed r oo rn s
on 11 a lot for Sl 5, 00 0

CHEAPIE 83 1 ; acres at
i1 62 pe r ac r e , M or g an T w p
No b ui ldmgs

~ r oom s

S3,000

a n d b al h 1n Ct t y

LAND, no build mg5 , on
b l ackt op road 10 miles
fr om Ga l l tpo l ts 48 a cr es

SI0.500
RELAX an d b e yo ur ow n
th 1S mon e y
bos s Wtth
m ak mg bu si ness a t Ty c oon
L ak e Ba it st or e W1 t h l t\itng
q u art er s on p r em tses

Off ttl' Ph 446 169 4
Even1ng s
Charl es M Ncal 44615 46
J MlchaetN c at446 -I SO"
Sam Neal , 446 -73S8

IMMEDI "

REAL ESTA:TE LOANS
VA F H A 30 yr loan s , Pa r k
Mort g a ge , 77 E
St a te ,
At hens Ph 592 3052
67 '
LI K E n ew 2 y r s old fram e
ho m e , 3 br s , ve r y n .ce .
ktlch en , garage, wa l l to wall
c arpel . all elec tn c On e a nd
one half lo t s, Gr een A cres
Sub dt VJ Ston P nced t o sell
tmm ed. a t el y Call 446 47 93

676

7 R OOM ho use w1 1h bath , on 1
a cr e lo t , larg e ga rd en spo l , 3
ou tb u ild i ngs , lo ca t ed on 5 1
R l 7 tn T u pp er s Platn s.
Oh 10 M Mollonan , 667 6114
673
THREE bedr oo m ho rn e and
e:..tra lot 67 K 132 f l. on
Cen t ral Ave , R1o G ra nde
Ph 446 29 64
67 3

For Sale
BAG GED Fer t!11zer 17 17 17
Sldd per ton , 12 12 12$ 129 75
per ton . 10 20 20 $ 153 25 per
ton , 6 2.1 2.:1 i 156 80 p er ton
A m m on tu m N ttrat e $ 1JO per
ton
5 10 15 s , Tobac c o
$ 127 50 per ! on
central Soya
446 ·2463

C'\._

POS ·
SESSIO~"
' ~v •s and
bat h wi
\,~
.~e nt on
lar ge lot
. y O wn er
. f tnan c ing
w ill h elp
12 ACRES Wt fh b ea ut tfu l
m odern e l ec tn c ho m e 3
bed r oQ m and 11 1 b ath s
Less th an 12 m tnule s from
Galltp o ll s Sh o wn by ap
POLn trne nt onl y

I W O V'IH Y' tHld iOS ~ al eS &amp;
Ser\i tce , N ew &amp; u sed CO ' s ,
po ltee m ont l ors , an t enn as,
etc
Bo b' s Cilt zen s B and
R ad •o
Eq u ip , Geo rg es
Cr eek Rd ·, Ga lli poli s . Oht o
446.15 1}
212 tl
t:l cu r tc Portable
E l ectr1 C Alterna t or and.
Power ~lan t s Ph 446 1716
l0!6tt

w

65 6

ANNOUNCEMENT

BOGGS EXTERMINATING CO.
.---sUCCESSOR TO
O'Dell Pest Control
Jim O'Dell- Gallipolis, Ohio
EDGIL BOGGS, owner
Qak Hi)~, O. ·

Route 3

PHONE (614) 682-6249 (Collect)
Roaches. ants. water bugs, termites and VA
and FI-lA inspection.

JACKSON, OHIO

WE'LL STAKE
OUR REPUTATION
ON YOU!. .•
HYou're The Man We're looking for.
WE NEED AGOOD MAN TO TAKE OVER

OUR GROWING BUSINESS IN THIS AREA.
W e' r e Jooktn£ f o r the ri ght man . . one who ts
re·
liable m t er~s led in servrng the needs o f his commumty , . • and

abov ~ all , a man

w tlh high JRtegnty who will prote ct and mam·
tam an estabhsh et.i reputat to n { f o r honest dcahngs and aood
servtce) whtch EXTERMlTAL has enJOyed smce 1936.

Jf yo u are that man, we now o ffer you a rare o pportunity
to take over an o pening in t his area in ou r exclustve , pr01ected
f1 anchr se operati o n You can step into a grow mg and profitable
bu stn ess of your o wn and enJO Y quick earnrn ~s Wtlh a mtnimuffi

AOOUSS - - - - - -

Clr'( - - -

STATE - - - - ZIP -

rHO,..f -

-

-

IANliH

L------- - --------------·•••••••-~

SAT., MAR. 27 &amp; SUN., MAR. 28
Poor Goroge. 6 miles eost of Jackson, Ohio on Old St. Rl. JS
awards Rio Grande. Selling the complete invetttory of
garage equipment, tools, hardware, office equipment •nd~
ant1que car parts iiS listed :

Miller 180 amp. elec. welder , bubble balancer, floor

9~16

62 7

PUBLIC AUCTION
(CHAROlAIS CAmE, FARM MAQUNERY)

FRIDAY, MAROt 26 AT 11 O'CLOCK A.M.
4 miles west of Somerset, Ohio on St. Rt. 22
towards lancaster or 12 miles east of
Lancaster on St. Rt. 22 at the Maple View
Dairy Farm.
HAVING SOLD FARM WILL SELL 16
HEAD Charolais cows due to start
freshening by day of sale. 1 registered
Charolais bull w-papers. Massey Ferguson
Super 90 diesel tractor; International 300
tractor ; 1500 bale lift mover; Hawk Bilt
large round baler runs w-HYD · motor;
Hesston hay conditioner PT 10 like new,
plus other machinery, a complete line. A lot
small tools, and some household furniture.
SEE THE COLUMtUS DISPATCH
SUNDAY, MARCH 21 FOR COMPLETE
LISTING.
Lunch. Nothing shown before day of sale.
Positive J.D. Terms- cash day of sale.
Not responsible for accidents.
Owners- Mr. and MTs. Ron Walsh
Auctioneer-Bill Janes
Phone 962-4377 or 557-3411

stands.

Gremlin. auto .• P.S., 19,305 miles.
Dod~e SWinger. auto., P. S., vinyl roof.
Capn V-6, 4 speed, 42,300 miles.
Chev. C-10 Pickup, V-8.
72 Chev. Jmpa)a, 1 owner car.
72 Ford Gran Tprino, auto., A. C., P. s.
73 V. W. Super Beetle.

~

72 International Pickup ........... ·....... • '1895

~

~

NEW AUTO PARTS
Fuel &amp; water pumps . points, plugs. distributors, tune -up;
carburetors , ignition parts, rebuilt generators, copper

tubing. asst . radiator &amp; heat..- hoses. asst . fan bell$, light
bulbs, cablnels to be sold with parts, Ignition paris together,
oot fillers, grease fittings, bearing brake parts, brake linings,
bin of cotter pins. ass I. head ga•kets, new &amp; used truck &amp; car
tires (9 : 00x20 &amp; 8: 25K20) ; muffler &amp; tall pipes, springs,
clamps, unlv . joints, truck chains, cycle grinder, 8" table
saw w · mtr ., band saw w mtr .. jointer w mtr ., many other
Items not listed.
ANTIQUE CAR PARTS
New 18" Model A lire, rings, king pins, head gaskets,
elc , used head lights, used model T. eng , used Model
A eng , radiators, Jeep trans w -transfer case .

•

~Real Estate For Sale

lge.

Real Estale For Sale

•

74 Jeep
75 V. W.
74 V. W.
73 V. W.

Renegade
Rabbit. auto., 15,600 miles.
Type 4 Sta. Wag .. 19,300 miles.
Van. red &amp; wht., 43,600 miles.

Nrce modern 3

I'

BR

home, ready to move into, near Golf

Cours~, large kitchen , plenty of cabinets, disposal,
electnc range , and hood, large utility room with
cabmets , 4 room s carpeted, nrce lot, natural gas heat,
central air cond .

NEW3 BR BRICK HOME
Just completed, carpet throughout , l'll baths, all

asst.

carnage bolls, stove bolts, Hex bolls, nuts, etc., light bulbi,

elec.

fixtures, furnace &amp; stove pipe, devises, chains, gas
caps. es, paint brushes, several brass valves &amp; other

plumbing tiKI , new garden seeder, some lumber. used Novo
pwr un ll eng., hand spra . or fils on back of tractor, plastic

,.
J

hose, kerosene dispenser rtrum , asst . new rope In rolls,
platform scales, 2 counter scales. ax handles, ant . nails &amp;
spikes, revolving nail bin, paint &amp; thinner, lanterns, aut.

pipe fittings, gatv . buckels &amp; tubs, new wrench .. , hammers,
pipe wrenches, hand tools, new Franklin stove .
STARTING ATI0:3DA.M. SUNDAY, MARCH21
WILL SELL OFFICE EQUIP.:
Good lge. roll top desk, 2 swivel chairs, 3&lt;1" safe, file cab.,
typewriter. old style cuh reg .• counters, chest cooler, chest
type Coke mach., 2 upright pop mach.
511., March 27 and Sunday, March 21., ID :JO A.M. Nothing
shown lllforo day of sole. Some oflllt alii .. Items Will be sold
In lots &amp; 1roups. This wttlllet-lull•ysNit.

ceramic ftle, large kitchen and dinmg area, plenty of
cabinets , dtshwasher, disposal, electric range. Central
arr, large garage, on V:z acre ni(e lot, good location, 11/:z
miles from Hospital on Mtfchell Rd . lnqurre at Corbin
and Snyder Furniture, 446.1171 after S1 4~ -2573.

FOR SALE

Notroopanllbltfwacddenh.

POSITIVE J.D.
TERM~Calheach DlyofS.le
OWNER$-ACE AND MARY McCARTY
fiUCTIONEER-IILL JANES-MZ-4l77orSI7·M11

"

I

2 Or ., 27,972 miles, 6 cyl. ,
st andard, lot of econom y
her e.

2 hdtp., rege ncy. AM FM,

Buy from the owner and save.
Beautiful Redwood 3 or 4 bedroom
~ ranch. Gas heat; central air and a
wood-burning fireplace. 1112 baths on
., a large landscaped lot with 2 patios.
Within walking distance of the
Hospital.
PHONE 446-1079
f

1974 Audi

'2395

'3995

1974 Chev. Vega

1974 Mustang II
Ghia

U a la x i e
hardtop ,

black

roof,

'1995

'2995

1973 Buick Electra

1973 Buick Riv.
Atr , bu rgundy , w hite v in yl
top, power seats, wi ndo ws,
ne w tires, ni ce .

'4295

'3795

'3495

1973 Buick
LeSabre

1972 Cadillac

Q.OSE.OUT
On At(

4 hdtp , loaded wi'th extras.
One local owner .

VOLKSWAGENS
7 TO CHOOSE FROM.

'2695

MAKE OFFER

60 LATE MODEL CARS IN STOCK

500 , d
door ,
yellow fin t sh ,

vmyl

A utoma tic, ai r cond , V 6
eng , v iny l to p, sharp .

2 dr , automat tc , 26,000
mil es , e)(cept1on a l y cl ean

'2495
1974 FORD

wr ndows , sea l s,
doorlocks, 30,604 c a refu l
dr iven m iles, sh arp.

limited ,
loaded
with
ext ra s, cream , with white
v tnyl top , loc al business ·
man s trade, extra , e x tra
sharp.

4 dr , air cond , w e sold Jt
new , real sharp . Nice
famtly c ar.

Duster , 2 door , 8 c:yl , 318 V8, standard shiff, radio ,
tess tha n 13, 000 mtles. dark
green

power

black

GMAC &amp;

interio r , V8 , a u toma't 1c
P
P B , fa c t a ~r
'

s..

'3195

.Sunday
Shoppers -Welcome
.
Come In and Brow.- Around

1974 CHRYSLER
lmperr a l LeBaron , d doOr.
full pow er . with arr, less
than 2 1. 000 miles, dark blue
w1th
w hite
leather
ov e r stuffed seat wtfh vinyl
roof .
'

'5595
1974 CHRYSLER

LIMITED TIME OFFER:

New Yorker, 2 door, hara
top , fu ll powe r ~ air. black black vinyl root. whrte
mtenor

Free A-COn 1976 Pacers
Free Soft Tops on CJ-5's

DON WAns

INC.

1976 FORD

RIVERSIDE AMC.JEEP
Upper Rt. 7

Gallipolis. Ohio

Street v an , auto ., P S ,
headers , Am . F rr:t st ereo,
C B radio combination
delu~&lt;e imron special
rnt :
fully dec orated
r
out. front

rGA*i.LiPOiiS·····--·i
i

CHRYSLER-

back cal&gt;la •in
less

Services Offered
RE G QU A RTER stu d
v1 ce , Leo &amp; Ktn g br ed
446 4654

ser
the
Catl
owner and save Beaut tful
redwood 3 or 4 bedroom
49 If
rench Gas h eat , central air
and
a
wood
burn i ng
ftrepfa ce 117 baths on a
Boggs Ex1ermtnatint Co.
large landscap ed lot with 2 TERMITES ,
ANTS ,
paftos
Within
Walk tng
W A TER BUG S VA and FHA
d isl an ce of tne i1osp1tal.
mspection Call c olle c t 1-682
Phone 4&lt;16· 1079
6249 , R I . 3. Oak Hill , Ohio
_..
66 3
62·1f

3 B R BRI C K h(lme on Sanders .
ALBERT EHMAN
H tll
Large llvtng , din i ng
Wa t er Del1very Serv tc e
room , comb kitchen w l lh
Pa t rtot Star Gall ipoli S'
range and refrlg Family
Ph 379. 2133
room , all draperie s in
243 I f
el uded Ph 446 4915 SJI,OOO
66 3
KOTALIC LANDSCAPING
.......
RIO GRANDE , OtiiO
4 BR HOU SE on l acre tot , COMPLETE PROG~ESSIVE
Ph 386 8746
LANDSCAPING
65 -6 SHRUB S , TREE S, ROCK
_.
.,...

-·------

_______

--------

__

-------

Services Offered
P A SQUALE . Efectri c al &amp;
Insu l ating
103 Ce dar St..
Gall 1polt s Ph 446·2116
\16 tf

-----.a--- -------IN TOWN

HARDWARE SUPPLIES
Pilch forks, shovels, rakes, hoes, axes. sledges, picks,
asst . hinges.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO :

~ ..............~............:

••

supplies on S.turdiry.

ladders,

r----UNDER '4000·----.

~ _________ ______ _ --------------

69 Chev. Pickup, Real Nice ....... ......... 11395 •

ft 50 STATE STREET

BLACKSMITH - Forge, tongs, toots, etc .
If time P9rmots, witt sto.l Hlllng hlrdwore &amp; plumbing

ext.

•

.
i
.
i CARROLL NORRIS DODGE i
~ 72 Dodge Pickup 6 cyl, std. shift ......... 2295 •
:

furna ce , lge pot bel11ed stove .

Lunc~

74
73
73
73

:

1

books daling back lo 1929. drill bits, stoker !Sioke·amallcl

maddoc:ks. alum .

Triumph 'Spitfire' Conv't .
Pinto Runabout. 4 speed.
MG 'Midget• Convertible
Pontiac Catalina Sed ., auto., A. C., P. S.
Ply . Satellite H.T., auto ., A. C., P.S.
Chev. C-10 Pickup.
Ford '12 To11 Pick
'6', 3 speed.

r---UNDER '3000----..

i

•
~ of 2 .. .... .. ...... ........ .. ................. '2395:

Acely gauges &amp; hose , portable batt chgr., Hyd jacks, Sioux

7 STORY hou!le tor sa le 3 br , 2
ltving rooms and l1replace ,
k 1t chen , bath , u t i lity wall to
w&amp;ll c &amp;rpels , paneltng ,
c arp ort , 2 porch es, treiler
spa c e and s el u p loc ated
c orn er lot , Vinton , 0 388

71

~ 72 Ford Pickup V8, std. shift. Choice

valve gr inder. 2 floor grinders, head grinder, dnll press. 1 T
chain hoist , bench vise, ant 1 cyl. gas eng ., floor model pre55,
rease guns. hand tools , sockets, wrenches , etc , welding rod,
lge . anvil , metal lathe. armature tester. atr comp .. lpfn
heel bal , Allen tester, manual front end alignment, 2
creepers , hand drip press, a lot manual parts, labor , &amp; shop

446-3636
Any Hour

Grefnlin , 2 door , 6 cylinder ,
auto .. P S , factory arr,
luggage rack , less than
1, 100 ac tu a l mi les, 1 local
o wn er .

Real Estate For Sale
~ trans................ .... .. .... ............... 12895: FOR
SALE .._ BUY from

Startong AIIO: 30 A-M. Slturdov, Much 27 Witt S..ll:
GARfiGE EQUIP .. TOOLS&amp; AUTO PARTS
Front end 1111 T bumper jack, front end air bubble balancer,
front end air lift tack, air wrench, 2 floor jacks, tire changer,

blue vr nyl top. 27,000 miles
Real c ream p u ff

71 AMC Matador Sedan-auto .• P.S.
69 Ford LTD, auto .• A. C.• P. S., 50,300 miles.

=1 72 Dodge, 1 Ton Stake body V8 motor, 4 sp. :

ld Winchester c;.rage.

D e V i l le , 28,000
miles ,
loaded w1 th e ~&lt;tr as , l ea th er
int erl o r ,
loca l
owne r ,
El ect ra t r a de

auto ,

1975 AMC

73
69

•
•

TRUCKS

v.a,

.----UNDER •1000---..

72

;: :11

~

Exrl off Appalachian Highwoy ( Rt. 344) at rnlerseclion of Rl.
327 and Rt. 35. Follow srgn• Vz mile south of old Rl. 35 to tiM

1974 Olds '98'

P.S , P D , speed control,
AM. FM, blue w1th dark

,..._ _ _ UNDER

Dodge Dart 2 dr, 6 cyl.~ .......... -.. -·· 11795 .•
:• 71 Ford Pinto 2 dr Runabout ........... -. '1695 :
••
~ 70 Dodge Polara 4 dr, power, air........... '1495 •
~ 70 Ford Galaxie 2 dr, power, air ............ '1395

HOLLOW

REALTOR

75 Ford Pinto Stw ., auto, 6 cyl. 5,000
:
' miles, PS .... ....... -..... ....... .. .. .... .... .13695:
74 AMC Hornet t dr, HT, auto., power, air 13095:
74 Dodge Colt Stw ................ ... .. ..... 12795!
: 73 Plymouth Gran Coupe, power, air....... '2895:
: 73 Dodge Dart 2 dr, HT, auto., power .... '2695 :
'
'I f73 Javelin, AMX 2 Dr. Hdtp ................ '2495:
)
: 73 Olds Custom Cruiser Wagon, air,
:
I
I
I
• power, auto......... .-..... ... ............... 12795:
''
73 Ford Maverick, 2 dr, HT, Std. Shift,
:
• 6 c~ .. ..... .... ............. .............. .... '2495:
f 72 Dodge Polara Sta Wag., power, atr" ..... '2695:
: 72 Dodge Coronel, power, air... ... ......... 12695 :
72 Chrysler Newport 2 Dr., power, air ..... 12595:
:.- • 72 Dodge Demon, 2 dr HT, power, air ..... 12295f
~: 72 Datsun 2 dr, COupe ... .......... .. ...... 12095 :
:·. h2 Torino 2 dr HT, auto., power ............ 12295 •
•. •
'
$1895.:
: ~ t72 Chevrolet Chevelle 4 dr, power, an ... .. ..
:: h2 Dodge Colt 4 dr, sedan .................. '1995:
Dodge Monaq~ 4 dr, power, air ......... 1 21S~t
c.-_j71 Ford LTD, 4 dr, sedan, power, air.. .. .. .. 12195:
" 71 Plymouth Satellite, l dr, power .. .. ..... 111195 :
~· 71 Dodge Dart 2 dr HT, power, air......... 12195:
~: 71 Dodge Dart 2 dr, HT, AIR .............. '2195:
:: 71 Dodge Dart 4 dr, sedan, 6 cyl .......... 11895 :

••• 71
=
:.

Old Country Garage and HardwAre Store, formerly Max

1974 Chev. Nova

'5995

M averi c k . 2 door , hard top.
6 cy l , au to ., P. S.. dark gold
patnt, lrght gol d v tn y l roo f.
d el u)( e mfe rtor packag e .

PRE-QWNED CARS

:
:
::
:

J

NAME

1974 f.ldillac Cpe.

Halchback , 25,652 mi les , 4

f

i

benefi c ial t o Home Owners, Schools,
ChUtches. C ommerc1al and Pu bh c Buildings. It rs rt:(jUJ r ed by
F.H A and V.A . ro r completion of loan s.

LAND
CONTRACT
4
ro o m s
and , b at h
on
Cht llrc othe Roa d
N eeds
som e r epa i r , $5,000

RON CANADAY

f USED CAR SPECIALS

.

ating bu sine ss
Our ser vace is

2 DAY SALE 2
10:30 A.M. EACH DAY .

CHILLICOTHE ROAD 6
room s an d bath •n c 1ty
$6,500

roo f

THE FINEST IN

i

Th1 s IS an tdeal sttuatlo n f o r an yone f amahar wtth t he
buald mg t rades A ge as no facto r , but you mu s1 be phy srcally
capab le of performan g a dail y sal es· servi ce routtne To get you
started we wd l tra in you and gi ve y ou every poss ible assistance
includtn g sales aids, ad verli sing, and o ftice operation help. This
is a full · t1me occu pation, but we will consider a part ·llme ap·
phc anl if th1 s se r vice ts added to a compatible ,' presently oper·

CITY SCHOOLS
D up l ex ea c h s id e h as f 1v e
r oo m s, I' 7 b a tn s pn v at e
dr'l \le way

acr~
wtth
sp ac1o u s
d o u bl e
w td e
mobtl c hom e on p er m a ne nt
tou nda t 1on ,

windows , si l ver , d ark red
lea th er sea t s, red vi n y l

Monaco 2 Dr .,

'I

of finam:mg There rs no investment - no fram::ha5e fee - all you
need are the too ls and ner;:e Ss.ary cqu1pment. and to i!Ct you
staued we wall e ve n help you sco; ur e them .

'4195

spe ed, gas sa v er .

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
i'

'4695

W.VA.

,-

miles ,

the besl

V-8, a ulo, P.S., P 8 ., facl
atr . power sea t s, power

THE CORNER OF ROUTEs 2 &amp; 35, PT. PLEASANT,

BILl WALKER - PAUL GREEN

11.294

showroom con d

l,...or doba . 2 door , h ard top,

BETWEEN THE SILVER BRIDGE AND SHADLE BRIDGE AT

Air , a u t omati c, Ra lly e
w heel s, 6.900 m i les , sli ver
wr th black \i l nyl top , expect

Whrte, wi n e top, air co nd ,

AM. F M,

1975 FORD

286-6082 I 682-7498

If YOU'RE THE MAN
WE'RE LOOKING FOR . . .
SOMEONE WE CAN STAKE
OUR REPUTATION ON ...
fill OUT THE COUPON
AND MAlliN TO ME
IODAYI

1975 Monte Carlo 1975 AMC Pacer X

G r anada G h ia , 4 d o o r ,
auto , P. S .. at r , P. B. ,
fa c t ory a ir , v m yl r oo f.
d el uxe v iny l rn oldtng a nd
less th an 1.300 m 11es , d ark
brown wit h
top. b e ige
mte n o r

1975 CHRYSLER

CHRYSLER, NEW YORKER 4 DOOR, NEWPORT,
SWINGERS, CHARGER, VOLARE', 4SPEN~ SCAMP,
CORDOBAS

DOZER
BACKHOE
SEPTIC
UNDERPINNING

DESIGN
ESTIMATING
LANDSCAPING
CONSULTING

t-, t AR

KEMPER
ROAD e ri e

OUNTAIN STATE CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
ON DISPLAY

PUBLIC AUCTION

41 ACRES L o t s of road
fr ontage 1n Cllesh trc Twp
Som e
bu il d i n gs ,
no
d w e lltn g on b l ack t op road

1 PM TO 6 PM

~8 . 1

h e lp p ay for l h1 S 5 ropm s
an d b a th w 1t h ld a c re s
Clay Twp , S18 ,000

t- M .J "'uHL c

CORN fed free zer Bee f Carl.
W 10 t er s , R io Grande 245
51 I 5
287 If

7206.

PLAT DEVELOPMENT .
NEW COMMERCIAL
NEW RESIDENTIAL

1,000 LB Toba c c o Base wtll

40 lj
--~-------~

HOME In Chesh ire ,
overlooki ng Oh io R i ver , J1.12
b ath s, c entral air , ;es heat ,
f am i ly r oom in basemen t ,
new kit c hen w it h d i sh
wa sher , double self .c teaning
oven . buil t in rangr . W W
ca r pet. must see th is house
Ins i de to appr ec iete. 367

DESIGNER/BUILDER SERVICES

121 ACRE FARM. 38 acres
cr ee k bo tt om and 75 a cres
wood ed
Si x room f ar m
dwelltng Near Addav tl le
Sc hoo l 1n Add•so n T wp
BUSINESS
OP PORTUNITY 12 s p ace
m ob Ue ho me cour t with 12
! raile r s r e ady to r enl
L oc a t ed in Ct l y Call for
a p po tn tmen l

CAR

.

J BR

60 12

WATCH THE BOATS sa!l
do w n th e be au t tful Oh to
fr om th •s 3 acre lo t Perf ec t
lo c al 1on for tha i dream
ho m e Prt ce •S rt gh t '

Neal Realty

Real Estate For S.

190 AC R E O al r y F ar m . Surge
M ilk •no P arl or , BOO ga l. milk
t enk, a nd els o 300 acr es
gra in an d s toc k fa rm w ith
' 50 ,000 f eed tot. 120 Oe ir y
Cow s t o be au c tioned Ma rc h
2~t h
Co nta ct
Ern es t
N ew som an d Son . Jac k son ,
Oh lo , R R 3, Box 38, P h . 286
.1398 or 286·5133

CANADAY
REALTY

It

et ec: tn c
197 6 lll o va 12x 60 2 BR all
elec lrt c
1969 Rilz cr afl 12x 60 2. B r
19 70 Ktl 12)( 47 2 Br
1968 St y le Mar 12x 52 2 Br
1967 F le e twood 12)1; 60 2 Br
1971 Con c ord 12 ~~:6 5 M H
1968 Commodogc 12x52 M H
1959 Co ton1al 10)1; 50 M H
B&amp; S Mobile
3 BR HOME hardwood floors.
Home sat es
l&amp;rge kttchen. uttltly room ,
Pt Pleuant,
va .
and c arport , natural gas and
23 7 tf .
c tty water , $28 ,000 446 4652

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate for Sale

H O W A RD
P ec lt . Water .
D eli v ery day- or ntQh t 24 59315 or 388 8262
29 2 If

------

.,PPL!ANCE
REPAIR SERVICf2
,
W AS H E R S, dryer s, etf.!t: lriC
r an ge , L&amp;A /\ ppt ta n ces dJ6
73 98, 245 56&lt;10

- --.,.

611

EXC A VATING .
ao ze r ,
backhoe
and
ditcher
Chitrles R Hatfield , Ba c k
Hoe Service, Rutland , OhtO
14 2 200' or 446 ·7687 .
&lt;jQ . tf

·-----------,.._

FOR THE BE ST In ar
ch i tectural de'S ign Of new
homes , !!mall comrnerciel
buildings ,
aP.:IS ,
or
remodeling wltli- state ap .
proval ot plans Bill Walker ,
I 682 -7498
65 If

- --------- --·-

TV REPAIRS&amp; RENTALS
PICTURE TUBE
SPECIALISTS
HARTWELL ELECTRONICS
245·5J6 5

o·aRtEN

--- ·-

60 If
~ ---

ELECTRtc:

SERVICE

-

24 Hour Service
Anyth ing In electricity
446 .8603
•
JO tf

-·------------ --

GARDEN S .

CU STOM R E MODELING , 20
years e x per 1ence 388 8308
, New dry wall c eiling W1lh
swtrl or texture des igns
Other dry wall. repair , v inyl
wallpaRering , new bGths ,
new ktlchens A nyth lnq in
rem ode. lng or repair .
II I f
-------~-

THE TOP SHOP
Custom Buill Roof Truss es,
F ormi c a Count e rt o p s &amp;
Cabinets , Coolville , Ohto ,
667 3186
256 If
~

'695
1973

v.w.

4 door , auto , air cond .,
wheel
covers ,
mmac u late condltron .

WAS $2895 .00

1974 DODGE
Uart , Swtnger , 2 door , hard

1op ,

slanl

6,

P . S ..

a u tomatic , red , black
interior , black vinyl root

- -·- .. ---·-------D. DAY

-

Monte Carlo, 2 door, hard
top V8 aulomatl c, P.S ,
factory air, gold,
black rnterlor , black vtnyl
roof. l ow mileaqe , 1 owner

P.B,

REFRIGERATION

IGARATION healing ,
e lectric , 17 years e}l;p 388
6274 .
258 If

C ARPENTER work , house
r e m odeling ,
wiring ,
plumbing , pain t tng Ph 446
2910
259 It
DOZER work , e~~: c avating ,
land clearing Ph Jd6 0051
290 If
WAll

PAPER ,

VINYL

HANGING, AND PAINT·
lNG ,
FAST
AND
RELIABLE . CALL 2lJ' 6342 .
.

26.J f

Over 60 Nice Clean Late Models To Choose Fron-

:GALLIPOLIS CHRYS~ER-PLYMOUTH 1
:
1639 EASTERN AVENUE, GALUPOLIS, 446-3273
~
~*********************************************~
Services Offered
Services Offered
SelVices Offered
fr eee st tm a t es Ca ll 256-6364
256 If

TRUCK SPICIALI

THURMAN
FURNITURE MFG

1974 FORD
Custom: red and
white , red Interior , 6 cyl.,
standard, radro, d new
ftres . full wheel covers,
bumper . western

mlrrc&gt;rs, local

, low
com e

FACTORY
REUPHOLSTERING
Qual ity Workmanship
10 Pet . Discount on a l l Fabrtc s

FREE ESTIMATES PICK · U p. DELIVERY

FOR THE BEST PRICES
IN TOWN

CALL 367 · 0494
6B ·ff
-- --- - ------~--

MOUNTAIN STATE
CHRYSLER

PLYMOUTH

I

i
IN STOCK !

6 PICKUP T

1-(QQ F lNG , a fu m mum . Stdmg ,

t- · 100

REG~

~

DISCOUNT ON
1976 CHRYSLER$
CALL-

'2895

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

C OUGHENOUR
Wa te r
Deli v er y 446 3962 , 446 4262
any t i m e
244 If

i

t

NOW

ALL

GUARANTEED Patio and
po ol land5caping , Stone
sand
tool ,
s hrubb e ry
trimming
Dump t ru c k
servic es 24 5 9 13 1
187 -If

-- . - ---

~--~

IN STOCK
LESS THAN

end of the

SANOY AND BE A VER I n
surance Co
has offer ed
services for F ire Insurance
coverage In Ga ll la County
for &lt;!'limos! a c entury
Farms , homes anct p ersona l
pr o p~rty
c o ve r ag es a-r e
a v ailable to meet Indi vi dua l
needs
Conta c t Eugene
Holley , your ne igh bor a"\P
ag ent.
J

66 6

BOB
L A NE ' S
Comp l et e
Bo o kk eep.ng
and
TaK
Service . 43 7 1 ~ Second Av e
(A cross from Post O fl 1ceJ
G alltpot i s , Ph . 44 6 790 0
Weekly and monthly serv i ce
t o r comm er c ial accoun t s
In co m e Tax Preparation
67 3
---------~----

S P ECIA L off s eas on prices on
Furnitur e Upholst ering now
to f1rst of march 1976 Call
now
Sa \ie $
Mowr e y ' s
Furn d ur e and Uphol s ter ing
Phone 675 4154
306 If

----------- -----THURMAN

FURNITURE MFG
FACTORY
UPHOLSTER I NG
FREE ESTIMATES PICK- UP - DELI\IE RY
FOR THE BEST PRICES
IN TOWN
CALL l67·04~

--- ··-~-.

Se rvice
Com mer c 1a1 an d
Restdential Specta lt zl ng m
op erators L oca l
256 64 72
20 If

Plumbini &amp; Heating
.CA RTER 'S PLUMBIN-G
A ND HE A TING
Cor F ou rtl"t &amp; Ptn e
Phone 4&lt;16 38 BSor d46 4477
165 , ,

- -- -Tr.i:N"D'AR"oPtum b ing H eattng
21.5 Th•rd Ave , 44 6-3782
187.f'

------------ - -GENE PLANTS&amp; SON

Quality Workmanship
10 Pet Discount on all Fabrics

-- --·- ---

BORD'E R ' S GARA G E DOOR

67 If

Pb.UMBING - HetHin g - A ir
Condit i oning 300 F ourth
Ave Ph , 446 1637
d8 If
~-

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

, DCWITT ' S P LU MB I NG
AND HE A TING
Route 160 N Evergreen
Phon e b46 27JS
18 7 I f

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

'

�30 - The Sundav Times- Sentinel, Sunday. Ma rch 21 , 1976

Classified~:

For Fast Results Use The .')unday Times-Sentinel

Times · Sentinel, Sunday, March 21, 1976

PRE-OWNED

'

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate for Sale

MASSIE

I

!

RUSSELL
WOOD
REALTOR

Realty, 32 State St
Tel. 614 446-1998
ST.

AT. 35 -

All

b ric k

home , w ll h everyt h in g :

ADELAIDE
DRIVE L ov e l y 3 B R ra n ch ha s H W
floor s "" ' 'h ·n e w c arpel m
LR , g a s h eaL a.tr c ond . ,

LOW DOWN PAYME,NT N ew do Ubl e w tde mobi le
home ott ers J BR s, l arg e
LR . oR . lr. i tc hen Wt th s tove

g ara g e ,
la u ndr y
and
equtppcd k dc h e n P rtccd at
S23 . 000 w tt h
flnan ct n g

OWNER W I LL F IN A N CE
S'i acr es adt o• nmg t h e
Ct ty limtt s of R io Gr an dE'
L ot s of po rc n t ral

R A CCOON

and r et . and n tce ca b me ts .

MERCERVILLE AREA -

BUY AND DEVELOP- 6
v ac an t tot s on Ch est nut St
Zon ed r es,dentia l 112 .000 .

Sam e a s new 3 bdrm .
Mob de h o m e , tu l l f u r
n ish ed , el ec fur n ., ce n ·a ir ,
und e rpin n.e d .
me tal
s tora g e b ldg and loc ated
on a large lot Pn ce S1 2,900

sh aQ c arp e rs an d at/ a t lo f.
Wt ll trad e tor farm
•

i) va tla bl e

PERRY TWp - 2 18 acr e
fa rm . c omplete l y f en ced ,
50 A li l li!j bl e, 2 po nds, 7
b ar n s . cor n cribs , good 7
rm hQm e

CR EEK

FRON'TAGE 13 ac re s
f l a t bott om l and •S al l
ltl l abt e exc e pl tor th e
sha dy cr eek b ank l arg e
barn •nc l u d ed t or the
bar g a•n pri ce of S.lJ ,OOO

D A IR Y FARM - 222 A , &lt;1 5
A
b ot torn , b a l a nce is
m os tl y c lean ro !l •ng la n d ,
n ew mtl k1n g pa rl or 20X 60
S il O , 2 bar n s, 6 rm house ,
lar ge p on d and tob ba se .

RAR E CO UNTR Y tiOM E
3 .B R br1 c k r anc h
f eat ures larg e LR w tl h
f tr e p l ace , eq ur pp ed 1&lt;.11
ch en , d 1n1ng rm , 2' , baths ,
l a r g e f amily rm , w rlh
•firep l ace
c ent
a •r and
g ar age A n tc e dnve to th e
m 1n es or Cavtn

DAIRY FARM 163 A
fla t and r oll ,ng l and loc at ed
s. ou th of ~•o Gran d e with
lots o f · r oa d frontage
Speo a l te a 1 ur e ~ ar e pond .
spr.ng s, c oun t y water , t ob .
ba se . good J rm h o use wtlh
n ew kt iC hen , la rge barn
an d $ •10

E VAN S HEIGHT S - N ice
B R hom e o ff er s g oo d
in l! :-; p enstve
11 v •ng
to
som eon e, Feat ur es kn ol t y
P• n e liv tng r o om W1 th
w o o d b ur n .n g
f 1r !;,' pla ce
O N L Y ~ 1 5 90 0
'l

ROUTE
3S WEST
Al mo st n ew 3 BR brtck
ran ch •S ve ry ap p ea1 1ng
an d c an b e yo ur dream
home
La r ge eq u 1pped
k1 tc hen I ' , b at hs . Qual ll y
car p e l t t1roug hoUI . c en tral
a ~r la r 9 E' L R , d tn 1ng area .
gMaqc . f u ll b asemen t

PRI CE
R E DU CE D
Own e r !'. &lt;t ')oS se ll lh ts lov el y
J BR br tc k r anch wll h
atm os r 1 JOO sq ft o f l •vmg
ar ea pl us a full b asem en t
and a 7 car g ara ge A l l th ,s
p lu s a l ar t,Jc f la t w el l la n d
sc a pe d lo t w ll h 7 la r g e
sha de tr ees

SHAD Y LOT on Ra cc oon
Cr ee k
IS
pe rf ect
for
\l a c atton . r ct tr em en t or
p ermanen t l tv tn 9 L o c at ed
on a p rt 'ola t e r d 1S t h is
b ea uti f ul 11 )I; 65 m ob ile
hom e wtth w es t er n dec or
co m pl e t e l y
f ur n tsh ed
Don ' l watl to see th iS on e

CLOSE TO MINES 116
A
fa rm , m os tl y cl ean .
leve l an d rolling l and Good
7 r m
h ome p a r t •a t l y
r emod eled $.:2 ,000

NEW l l s a
' 1G - $~3 , 500 Be th r
.... see th 1s
m od er
' ed on a
ntce Clo
(..i
oYll OUt
Sp ec ta l r...
are Jl -.
bat h s . ce n t ..
co mpl ete
kt t ch en . f atr~r\y rm , 3 B R s
an d p ai•O door s
NEAR RIO GRANDE ov.er 4 acres l ev el to r o ll •ng
gr o un d w •t h an al m ost ne w
mo d u l a r h ome f e atu res
1 344 sq
ft
ot mo dern
l1v .n g A l so m c l uded ts a
new 2 c a r gara g e apt

MOBILF ._.OME ~ r eady
to m o ve ~ . .., x 55 beau t y
Is c a rr
,n~ ··rn• shed
and f
~ / ) ash er ,
d r y er ,
, , un
d e r sktr l t n ~ .
10 nnd
, awnm g $2,500

rJ/)

FHA
APPROV E D
al mos t ne w ran ch h as lo t s
to o ff er for on l y $21 400
To t a l
elec l rt c
h ome
fea t ur es 3 BR !l 1 la undr y
rm , n •c c k ll che n wd h
bu1 ) t ' "ran ge , WW c ar p et,
ce n t ra l wa t er.: a n d se wage
a nd l o ca t ed m Rodn e y
Vil l age II

66 ACRES A b o ut on e
l h trd c l ea r ed . balan ce
woode d ht/1 lan d 1 front s on
2 rd s tn Har r •son twp
$12 ,90 0

182 ACRE DA I RY FARM
- Lot s of tillab l e groun d ,
mod e rn 8 cow mIlk par lor ,
lar ge
barn ,
seve r a l
bu tldtn gs silo , pon d , ho u se
n ee d s r epa i r $58 ,000

FOR SALE OR TRADE COMMERCIAL
BUILDING 2 g arag es
off ~e e, sh owroom &amp; 1z b ath
downst a~r s p l us a lov el y 6
r m a pt ups ta i r s Located
about 2 m •les fr om to wn

PASTURE FARM ~ 40 A ,
at / cl ean r ollin g g r ass la nd ,
good f ences , front s on 2
rds , co wat e r a v i!l llab l e
$19,500

84
ACREs
mostly
t• llabl e .
no
butldt n g s ,
loc a te d •n Morg an Twp
$22 ,000

102 Acre s, ab out • ~ lt lla b iP
fron ts on Racco on Gr eek ,
pond , 5 rm home , large
sh ed , S26,000

F A G as h ea t , Cen . a ir , f ull
bil se . w rth f tnish ed fa mily
r m , a l so n ew t am i l y r m
on m a 1n floor 16' lC. 24' w it h
Ston e F P , 3 bd rms , J1 1
bath s, 2 c ar gar w i t h t!l ec
d r L oc a te d on .7 A . corner
lo t Pr iced tn m id 40s .

LISTINGS NEEDED_
WE
ADVERTISE
NA TIONALL'y - BE BUY_
SELt - T~ADE.

RANNY BLACI&lt;BURN,
. BRANCH MANA_GEFJ

DEBBY DR - 4 yrs . o ld ,
all e lec fr ame Wt lh ce da r
St d m g , 6 btg rms ,, 2 full
b at hs , p lenty s tor age , l iv
16 ' ~~:3 1 ',
ccn a.r , wall s
pane l ed an d dr y wa ll 100
pe t Acry l on ca r pet . e lec .
F P , b •g kll eq uippe d wtt h
D w
d ts an d sel f clea n
ove n w tth Rot tssc r te Thi S
ho me h a s m an y un •q u e
f eatur es an d c an b e bo ught
for tess than r ep lac e ment
co s t
BULAVILLE RD ~ A l l
brt c k R an ch, 2 yrs o ld ,
1500 ' sq f t liv a r ea . large
u t tl 1l y rm cou ld be used t or
work ar ea for th e M rs
Good 9 1dd e of c arp e l , ntce
k t tche n c ab tne ts, Ce n atr ,
rura l wa t er plus dr w e ll
12 'x 16' blo c k o ut b ldg
Bea .ull ful se llin g on 1 A
good ga rd en lan d Pr i ce in
m td th trl tes
CHATHAM AVE 2DH 1t
Ext ra n tee 5 r m
fr a m e
h ome , a pP.ro x 12 yr o ld.
n e w c ar Pe t o ve r H W
F lo or s , n e w F A
gas
f urnac e &amp; c opper plum
b ing Sma ll ou t. bl dg Pr1 ce

$16.500
yo un g 6
rm s
I ' · b at h s c en a tr ,
sel f c l ea n ov e n
d ts h
w as h e r
d• sp o sa l
and
dr apes 8 tg lot Don 't JUdg e
f rom ou ls td e app ea r an ce
P rt ce $31 'i&gt;OO
JAY OR

-

7 yr

: tTY 82 1 2n d /\ ve 2
, tor y 6 r m old er h ome
tie b loc k storag e bl dg a n d
1a r L oc a t ed on a l ar ge lot
" g oo d b u y at $17 000 .
-tEOGEWOOO DR O wn er
;ay s se ll now 7 rm f ram e
•n lar ge lot H w , fl o,o rs
11 b at h s b ase sto r m d r s
ard wtn Make an offer
COUNTRY LIV - I mt Oft
S! , R I 77 5 on H T R d 1 Yr
ol d fram e 5 bt g rm s, 1' ;
b a th s , a ll c arp et , all el ec
w it h ce ll a r base St orag e
b ldg 10' )( 16' Ap pro x 2 A
goo d lev el gard en land
( Grow what you eat l Th 1E.
hou se ha s 1400 sq II 1/v
ar ea and c an be boUght for
$3 1,000
ROONEY -Com f or t a ble &amp;
eco nom• c al l• v •I"I Q 1S wha t
yo u c an g et for $16,000, tf
y ou buy t hts 2 s tory , 6 bi g
r ms , co mpl e t ely r ed on e
olde r h o me Call on lh 1S

on e
CR CT ' Y Good 3 bt g
rms &amp; bath Id eal for a
r e11r ed couple or newly
we d Pri c e $8, 500
HAVE
A
LUCRATIVE
BUSINESS FOR
SALE,
COME IN AND DISCUSS
WITH ME
. ANY H R 446 1998

For
Lease
1&lt;11 SQ F T
For Sale

For Sales
NEW 5 ~IECE DINETTE
SET, S49 95 REG
$69 95
THIS
W E EK
ONLY
RICE ' S NEW &amp;
USED
FURN , 854 SECOND AVE
H6 · 9S23 .
64' 1f

TRUCK TOP SALE
M oby A IV T op s - SI 79 95
Moby F tb ergta ss B tl , $3 85
Outdo or s To p s •n - $285
CAMPING SUPPLIES

__,

J a cobsen L awn an d
G ard en Tra c to r s
A ll top s are g u ar an teed
we ser v tce w h a t w e sell

LI ME ST O N E tor dn ve w ays .
Car l W tn t.er s Ph one 245
511 5
27 0 I f

ALSO
Goo d used l tne of
F arm Eq u tp m en t

4 IN CH perfora te d or so ltd
p l ast te p tpe , l eft o ver fr om
con stru c tiOn to b W tll sell
l ess than co st. only 3,000 ft
Ph 446 988 2 7 p m 5 p m
ufl er 5 P tr1 245 5544 .
67 3

Op en 6 da y s a w ee k , close d on
Sun d ay so you m ay all en d
the chu r c h of y our chotee
VALLEY AUTO&amp;

IN T ER N AT ION A L
TO 3 40
dies el Wtth 3 po tn t h tlch and
po w er t ake off F or bru sh
h og , plow , et c
Excell ent
un it t or f armer $6 ,00 0, ex c
cond Ph 44 6 9882 2 p m . 5
p m , af t er s p m 2.45 5544
67 3

IMP . SALES
5 m ! les W of G all tpOIIS
Rt 35, Ph 446.3417
61 12

·-·------------

________ ------

-~ _ .

---

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN

----

---

-~-

7 DOU B LE se t s o f Pony
sho w h ar n esse s
4&lt;1 6 d17 2
67 -3

We
se ll an Ythtng
for
anybod y at our Auclton
Barn or i'h your home For
tnformat t on and p1 c kup
servt cc call 256 1967 .
Sal e E \i ery Sa turday
Ntghtat7pm

17 F T C R E STLINER bo a t,
Wtlh f ull top an d all a cce ss ,
196 3 Ch ev , I m pala , 2 dr ,
h ardtOP 367 0418
67 6

--

---- --

-~-

--

CH IMN EY B loc k s. W Va &amp;
Oh lO LU ITl p Co a l Galli pOl i S
Block Co , 4 ~6 27 83
77 3 I f

SWAIN

AUCTION
SERVICE
K e nneth Swa.n , Au c t.
Corner Thtrd &amp; Olive

REG Morg a n mare
367 7438 or 446 387 9

P hon e

64 5
USED A.PPJ_IANCES"
Washers a n d dry ers , A 1 cond
$40a n d up L&amp;A Ap p l tan ces,
300 4th A\i e, R ear Ph 446
7398
18 If

PUBLIC
AUCTION

--

SAT., APRILJ

Slarftng At 10 A . M .
Ra1n or Shine
Selling t he Es tat e of the
l ate van Bunard . F r om
Slat e Rout e 7 o n th e
Pom e rov ·Mtdd le porl
By
p&amp;ss , tak e Rou t e 14J a bout
15 miles to th e ra ilro ad
cro ss ing in C arp ent er
Then turn left on County
Road 10, go 111:.&gt; m 1! es
wat c h tor Sal e S1gn s F'or a
complete
Jt st ing
of
hous e hold good s , f a rm
mach inery
and
other
items . see Ad in th is p al)er
Sunday , Mar ch 28 T h
A&lt;;im intslrater l c •e Buz .
zerd wtll also off er the 1H
acre
farm
tor
salt
privately ()n day ot sate
Auctioneers
Col. R , E . Knotts &amp; Son

Dn·e

.

~----

--~

~·wo Ca r ry on I lt l;lh l Bilg s
New , N e ver use d P erfe c t
y 1f : f or t rave l er P hone 245
5620 a fl ~ r 5
293 If

vacant
lots,
beautiful home sites,

localed at the top of holt
on
Circle Dnve in
Plants
Subdtvtsian~
'Nhich
is
just
Bulaville
Road .
Propert-;
ltnes
are
marked with
whrte
stakes .
Owner
will
ftnance one lot are all
three .

on

Phone 446·2917

offi ce m lo bby of
l tb b y Hot el 5.75 mo Call
dd6 17 .13
283 If

Mobile Homes for Sale
USED MOBILE HOMES
Call 576 271 1.
67-If

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

TWO bedroom mobtle home
In g ood condit ion Ph . 4&lt;16

1165

68 3
~---- -------- -

TRI ST A TE l'v' o b1 l e Horo 1e
Cl £' aran c e Sal e, u sed mobile
homes , 8, 10 , 1 ~ , wlde s P h ~ .
446 75 7'2 Bank f1nan cmg
306 If
AU L T ' S
MOBILE
Home
Se r v •c e ,
Sk tr tmg ,
roof
c o a t i ng , patio s , awn.ngs ,
an ch ors . c em ent w ork F ree
es l 1mat es Call 245.941 1 or
145 94 72 after 4 30 p m
2 15 If
ECONOMIZE on fue~
underprn your mobtle home
and anchor for safety
Fo"Ster Mobile Home Ser
vtce , 446 -2783 , or Elmer
Skrdmore 446- 3479
27 4 If

T(J

B&amp;SMOBILE HOMES
1976 NOV 1\ 12 X60 3 br , all'

Real Estate For Sale

j

I

446-1066

~it end re in; on the bitc on 'i
at
t h is
t w o , b ed ro om ,
car p etecf ho me , sil u ated on
a 75 ' x 300 ' lot eK 1en d tn g to
Ra c c oon Creek . E lec t ric
he a t. Ins u lated , m o de rn
kitc-h en , p anele d ; c an b e
used as a sum mer home or
f or permanen t occ upancy
Ap pro x tma t e l y t en mmu t es
f r om G all tp OI I S P r i c ed
$ 28. 000
Sh own by ap .
po mtm en t onl y
Smal l F"arm , l 6 1 1 acr es ,
R I 160, near Ev er green
Th r ee bedroom s , carpe1M
h o m e! , f tr ep ! a ce
P r 1cc
$31 ,500
Bedr oom tr am e hom e
Jo c a •c d .n Ct! y
n ew l y
r em od eled new f ur n aces,
pan el ed , ~;&gt; t c P r iCe $ 15,000
'I

Und er con st ru ctto n , l h ts
th ree be d ro om
" n e W"
hom e 1S loca t ed in Green
Ac r es Su b d1 v i s ton
Th e
n atur a l f tnt sh ed ce d ar
S1dtng bl en ds gra cef u ll y
w tl h t h e p eace f u l a t
m o s ph ere
of
the
su rr ound tn g hill s F ull y
c ar p e t ed .
tn su t a t ed ,
e l ec tr 1c al! y h e at ed , Ct!y
wa t er , m od ern ktl chcn a nd
all ac h ed gar a g e , Gall tpol ts
C tt y Sc h ool D1 s t n c t A r ea l
buy fo r s~ a . s oo oo
Sp r tn g 1S l ess t han stx t y
d ays awa y an d w e h ave a
seven acr e tra ct of lan d •n
H a rr tson T w p , m clud tn g a
20 f eet rtgh t ot w a y to
Ra ccoon Cree k , i deal for a
sum m er w ee ken d r e tr ea l
Pn ce SJ 000, or 15 Acres for

$6 .000

B us in ess Pr op er t y loc a te d
at l h e tnt e rs ec t ton m
Ce nt e rp o tnt , l ar g e s t o r e
bu il d tn g ,
wilh
lt v i n g
qua r t ers
and
s o me
eq u •p ment s tfueted on 1 1
ac r e lot. can b e purcha sed
for $17 ,900 00 A ddtt•onau,- ,
one 14 'x 70 ', three bedroo m
mobi le hom e c an be pur
cha se d se parat e ly , or wt t h
th e b u sm ess p ro perl y , for
\7 .000 00 Tot a l prt ce for
b us tn ess pr o p er t y and
m o b i l e home , $24,900 00

'

N e w . mod ern , ins ulat ed
and
ca rpe ted ,
t h re e
b edroom ..( br iC k ho me ,
he at ed.
e le c t rt c atly
loca t ed on St at e Rt 588 ,
n ear th e U S Rt 35 tn ter se ctton a t Rodn ey , 110'
f ro nta ge a long R t. 588 ,
Ga ll •p ol ts Ct ! Y Sc h o ol
D tslr• c t Pn ced S3 1,600 00
Two b ed r oom home on
Se cond
A v e nu e , la rge
fl n t sh ed room upsta 1r s.
g a r ag e ba sem ent , ce ntra I
a•r c ondt l 10n1ng , t h r ee
roo m wtth bath r ental on
r ea r of p r op er ty , pn ce d
$35, 000
Shown by ap
po1ntm ent on l y
Thre e b edroom . c arp e te d
h o m es loc a te d o n 75 ' x 110 '
lo i s
a tl a che d ga rage ,
modfrn k llc hen , $2 0,000
Gal11p o lts C tly
Scho o l
D ts lrtCI
How abo ut l h ts for ' "
' ltlo' e 1n '
v es tm e n t or
prop erl y ' One ac r e tra c t o r
land w t! h \04' frontag e on
n ew Rout e 160, 80 ' fr on tag e
on o ld R ou te 160, 490 ' dee p
H as lwo mo bil e h om es , on e
1S a two b edroom fu l ly
c arpet ed , 19 73 model wilh
ce ntral a~r condti!Ontn g ,
th e oth er IS a one b edroom
old e r m o de l
A lso , has
lar ge 2d ' x2 8' b lo ck butld tng
w 1th f urn a c e whtch can be
u se d as tw o c ar garag e or
w o rk sh op R ur a l w a t e r
Own e r m ov mg , will sell for
$19,000 00
Wh1t e brt c k h om e loc ated
at c or ne r of Ol1ve and
F ou r th
Avenue
tn
Ga !ltpo lts Owner will se ll
for t 10.500 A good bu y d
you' re looktn g tor a sma ll
ho m e,
or
Inv est m en t
propert y
120 A cre s of paperwood
timb er lan d, loc ate d tn
walnut
Twp
Pr 1c ed
$2 5,000
Tw o lot s lo cat ed m Cr o wn
Ctly , fronta ge on Rou t e 7.
bo t h for $6 ,000
Farm you can buy 3 wa,-s
8 r oom , 2 s tory farm hou se
with 3 outbu tld tngs loca t ed
on 3 acres of land , pr:r ced
S. 21,800 , or 8 room farm
house w 1lh 3 outbuildm g s, l
barn . Stluated on 17 acre s
of land , prtc ed $27 ,sao; or 8
room farm house , 3 ou t
building s, 1 barn , ap
prox 1mat e ly 2, 50 0 lb s
toba cc o bas e, with 40 acr es
of land prtced $39 ,900
you are Interested m
seiJ,ng your home , farm or
bus tness proper I,- , call We
have a ltst of polent lal
buvers

808 LANE
BRANCH MANAGER
437 11 SE COND AV E
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
.... 6-7900
LISTINGS NEEDED NOW
TO FIT OUR BUY E RS '
NEEDS.
LARGE SUPERMARKET
wtth great potent tal in h1gh
traffic area. EQuipped wtlll
ga s pump s Wtll se ll Wtlh or
wttho.u t $lock . Own er ha s
oth e r full · tlm e bu s tn e s s
•nt e r f&gt;s t . Wond er ful op p o rtun•tv for the r l ghl
per son
TWO BEDROOM HOME ,
th re e other buildmgs , on
two acres of lana in Crown
Ctty V ery ntce for com m er ci al use su c h as a
branch bank .
BEAUT ' - uL
THREE
BEDRO' s.a;ICK Wllh 2
ba th s, t ...
·~ n t , t w(l
ftr epla ce s
1) wo c ar
gar age lo c at e~. ~ ar to w n
545, 800
THRE'
._EDROOM
MODUl
Wt l h '}
ba t hs
1
ex cepl ·
ltv tng r o om :,. ..
15

So-l-D -.:

VERY NICE BUILDING
SITE on Rout e 7 nea r
G all•po l t s
Dam
I OO'
front age x 320' d epth
VERY
SELECT
2
BEDROOM m ob il e hom e
•n Cen l en ary on 80 ' 11. I SO'

lo l

ALMOST NEW THREE
BEDROOM Close to town ,
exce ll en t
fr ame
c on
s tr uclt on
w tth
full
ba ~ em e nl
P r 1c ed lo Se ll
NATIONAL
AD VERTISING
wtth
the
Gallery of Hom es

25'12 locust St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-3636
RIV E RVIEW 5 r ooms and
b ath over look m g th e Oh to
R tver Jn V tlla ge o f Ad d 1son .
Won ' t b e on th e ma r ket
lon g a t SI 6,500

PRICE REDUCED : Sup er
gro ce r y b u s m ess loca ted m
Gall t polts most rap t dl y
g r o wtn g bu s1ness are a
W 1th 1n w a lkmg d ts t ance o f
h e a vi lv
p opu l a t e d
r esi den ti al are.a M a n and
W1f e Oj9era tto n w tl h ve ry
ntce 6 r oo m ap t on se c ond
fl oor an d r ent al d w el h n g on
r ear of lot A m ple pa rk mg
Ow ner must sell due to
•II ne ss
BRAND NEW fr ame Wl t l"t
br tc k
fron t ,
b ea utiful
m ode r n ki t c h en w ith sl a v e,
diShwa she r an d garb age
d ispos al 3 bedrooms , 111
b a th s,
f u ll y
c a rpe t ed
L oo:a t ed on ' • a c re lot in
sma ll subdi VISIOn $26.000
CHESHIRE t rad er co ur t ,
near Ga \i1 n an d
K yge r
Creek Pl an l s
18 tr at l er
sp aces wt! h t wo tra tl er s
tn c l u d e d
L a undry
ta c iltd es Goo d m co me
prop ert y ,

3 B R h o m e on s eve n
th.enth s. A lo t n ear ct t"f
Total
e le c lr te
20 x 12
ou t bu ddt n g $2•1 sao

511.900 Wi ll buy f 1ve roo ms
and b a t, m Ct l y Ca ll for
more de t a il s

3 BR h o m e ne a r
RIO
Gra n d e
To t a l el ect rtc .
a c, 21. ba ths ba sem en! ,
l tr ep tu c c S4 5,000

NEAR RT
lS
Se ve nt y
ac r es f ar m l an d , 36 a c r es
til labl e, r es t pa s tur e
2
barn s Go od b utl d 1ng St i es

5 miles tr om Holz er 3 B R
h om e
&amp;
l ot
~ 16 , 500
V Ill ager 6 5 x 17 ' 3 B R M
Hom e an d lot $11 ,500 ' 6'}
K trk woo d , S'1 x 17 ', J O R M
Ho m e Wtth atta ch ed r oo rn s
on 11 a lot for Sl 5, 00 0

CHEAPIE 83 1 ; acres at
i1 62 pe r ac r e , M or g an T w p
No b ui ldmgs

~ r oom s

S3,000

a n d b al h 1n Ct t y

LAND, no build mg5 , on
b l ackt op road 10 miles
fr om Ga l l tpo l ts 48 a cr es

SI0.500
RELAX an d b e yo ur ow n
th 1S mon e y
bos s Wtth
m ak mg bu si ness a t Ty c oon
L ak e Ba it st or e W1 t h l t\itng
q u art er s on p r em tses

Off ttl' Ph 446 169 4
Even1ng s
Charl es M Ncal 44615 46
J MlchaetN c at446 -I SO"
Sam Neal , 446 -73S8

IMMEDI "

REAL ESTA:TE LOANS
VA F H A 30 yr loan s , Pa r k
Mort g a ge , 77 E
St a te ,
At hens Ph 592 3052
67 '
LI K E n ew 2 y r s old fram e
ho m e , 3 br s , ve r y n .ce .
ktlch en , garage, wa l l to wall
c arpel . all elec tn c On e a nd
one half lo t s, Gr een A cres
Sub dt VJ Ston P nced t o sell
tmm ed. a t el y Call 446 47 93

676

7 R OOM ho use w1 1h bath , on 1
a cr e lo t , larg e ga rd en spo l , 3
ou tb u ild i ngs , lo ca t ed on 5 1
R l 7 tn T u pp er s Platn s.
Oh 10 M Mollonan , 667 6114
673
THREE bedr oo m ho rn e and
e:..tra lot 67 K 132 f l. on
Cen t ral Ave , R1o G ra nde
Ph 446 29 64
67 3

For Sale
BAG GED Fer t!11zer 17 17 17
Sldd per ton , 12 12 12$ 129 75
per ton . 10 20 20 $ 153 25 per
ton , 6 2.1 2.:1 i 156 80 p er ton
A m m on tu m N ttrat e $ 1JO per
ton
5 10 15 s , Tobac c o
$ 127 50 per ! on
central Soya
446 ·2463

C'\._

POS ·
SESSIO~"
' ~v •s and
bat h wi
\,~
.~e nt on
lar ge lot
. y O wn er
. f tnan c ing
w ill h elp
12 ACRES Wt fh b ea ut tfu l
m odern e l ec tn c ho m e 3
bed r oQ m and 11 1 b ath s
Less th an 12 m tnule s from
Galltp o ll s Sh o wn by ap
POLn trne nt onl y

I W O V'IH Y' tHld iOS ~ al eS &amp;
Ser\i tce , N ew &amp; u sed CO ' s ,
po ltee m ont l ors , an t enn as,
etc
Bo b' s Cilt zen s B and
R ad •o
Eq u ip , Geo rg es
Cr eek Rd ·, Ga lli poli s . Oht o
446.15 1}
212 tl
t:l cu r tc Portable
E l ectr1 C Alterna t or and.
Power ~lan t s Ph 446 1716
l0!6tt

w

65 6

ANNOUNCEMENT

BOGGS EXTERMINATING CO.
.---sUCCESSOR TO
O'Dell Pest Control
Jim O'Dell- Gallipolis, Ohio
EDGIL BOGGS, owner
Qak Hi)~, O. ·

Route 3

PHONE (614) 682-6249 (Collect)
Roaches. ants. water bugs, termites and VA
and FI-lA inspection.

JACKSON, OHIO

WE'LL STAKE
OUR REPUTATION
ON YOU!. .•
HYou're The Man We're looking for.
WE NEED AGOOD MAN TO TAKE OVER

OUR GROWING BUSINESS IN THIS AREA.
W e' r e Jooktn£ f o r the ri ght man . . one who ts
re·
liable m t er~s led in servrng the needs o f his commumty , . • and

abov ~ all , a man

w tlh high JRtegnty who will prote ct and mam·
tam an estabhsh et.i reputat to n { f o r honest dcahngs and aood
servtce) whtch EXTERMlTAL has enJOyed smce 1936.

Jf yo u are that man, we now o ffer you a rare o pportunity
to take over an o pening in t his area in ou r exclustve , pr01ected
f1 anchr se operati o n You can step into a grow mg and profitable
bu stn ess of your o wn and enJO Y quick earnrn ~s Wtlh a mtnimuffi

AOOUSS - - - - - -

Clr'( - - -

STATE - - - - ZIP -

rHO,..f -

-

-

IANliH

L------- - --------------·•••••••-~

SAT., MAR. 27 &amp; SUN., MAR. 28
Poor Goroge. 6 miles eost of Jackson, Ohio on Old St. Rl. JS
awards Rio Grande. Selling the complete invetttory of
garage equipment, tools, hardware, office equipment •nd~
ant1que car parts iiS listed :

Miller 180 amp. elec. welder , bubble balancer, floor

9~16

62 7

PUBLIC AUCTION
(CHAROlAIS CAmE, FARM MAQUNERY)

FRIDAY, MAROt 26 AT 11 O'CLOCK A.M.
4 miles west of Somerset, Ohio on St. Rt. 22
towards lancaster or 12 miles east of
Lancaster on St. Rt. 22 at the Maple View
Dairy Farm.
HAVING SOLD FARM WILL SELL 16
HEAD Charolais cows due to start
freshening by day of sale. 1 registered
Charolais bull w-papers. Massey Ferguson
Super 90 diesel tractor; International 300
tractor ; 1500 bale lift mover; Hawk Bilt
large round baler runs w-HYD · motor;
Hesston hay conditioner PT 10 like new,
plus other machinery, a complete line. A lot
small tools, and some household furniture.
SEE THE COLUMtUS DISPATCH
SUNDAY, MARCH 21 FOR COMPLETE
LISTING.
Lunch. Nothing shown before day of sale.
Positive J.D. Terms- cash day of sale.
Not responsible for accidents.
Owners- Mr. and MTs. Ron Walsh
Auctioneer-Bill Janes
Phone 962-4377 or 557-3411

stands.

Gremlin. auto .• P.S., 19,305 miles.
Dod~e SWinger. auto., P. S., vinyl roof.
Capn V-6, 4 speed, 42,300 miles.
Chev. C-10 Pickup, V-8.
72 Chev. Jmpa)a, 1 owner car.
72 Ford Gran Tprino, auto., A. C., P. s.
73 V. W. Super Beetle.

~

72 International Pickup ........... ·....... • '1895

~

~

NEW AUTO PARTS
Fuel &amp; water pumps . points, plugs. distributors, tune -up;
carburetors , ignition parts, rebuilt generators, copper

tubing. asst . radiator &amp; heat..- hoses. asst . fan bell$, light
bulbs, cablnels to be sold with parts, Ignition paris together,
oot fillers, grease fittings, bearing brake parts, brake linings,
bin of cotter pins. ass I. head ga•kets, new &amp; used truck &amp; car
tires (9 : 00x20 &amp; 8: 25K20) ; muffler &amp; tall pipes, springs,
clamps, unlv . joints, truck chains, cycle grinder, 8" table
saw w · mtr ., band saw w mtr .. jointer w mtr ., many other
Items not listed.
ANTIQUE CAR PARTS
New 18" Model A lire, rings, king pins, head gaskets,
elc , used head lights, used model T. eng , used Model
A eng , radiators, Jeep trans w -transfer case .

•

~Real Estate For Sale

lge.

Real Estale For Sale

•

74 Jeep
75 V. W.
74 V. W.
73 V. W.

Renegade
Rabbit. auto., 15,600 miles.
Type 4 Sta. Wag .. 19,300 miles.
Van. red &amp; wht., 43,600 miles.

Nrce modern 3

I'

BR

home, ready to move into, near Golf

Cours~, large kitchen , plenty of cabinets, disposal,
electnc range , and hood, large utility room with
cabmets , 4 room s carpeted, nrce lot, natural gas heat,
central air cond .

NEW3 BR BRICK HOME
Just completed, carpet throughout , l'll baths, all

asst.

carnage bolls, stove bolts, Hex bolls, nuts, etc., light bulbi,

elec.

fixtures, furnace &amp; stove pipe, devises, chains, gas
caps. es, paint brushes, several brass valves &amp; other

plumbing tiKI , new garden seeder, some lumber. used Novo
pwr un ll eng., hand spra . or fils on back of tractor, plastic

,.
J

hose, kerosene dispenser rtrum , asst . new rope In rolls,
platform scales, 2 counter scales. ax handles, ant . nails &amp;
spikes, revolving nail bin, paint &amp; thinner, lanterns, aut.

pipe fittings, gatv . buckels &amp; tubs, new wrench .. , hammers,
pipe wrenches, hand tools, new Franklin stove .
STARTING ATI0:3DA.M. SUNDAY, MARCH21
WILL SELL OFFICE EQUIP.:
Good lge. roll top desk, 2 swivel chairs, 3&lt;1" safe, file cab.,
typewriter. old style cuh reg .• counters, chest cooler, chest
type Coke mach., 2 upright pop mach.
511., March 27 and Sunday, March 21., ID :JO A.M. Nothing
shown lllforo day of sole. Some oflllt alii .. Items Will be sold
In lots &amp; 1roups. This wttlllet-lull•ysNit.

ceramic ftle, large kitchen and dinmg area, plenty of
cabinets , dtshwasher, disposal, electric range. Central
arr, large garage, on V:z acre ni(e lot, good location, 11/:z
miles from Hospital on Mtfchell Rd . lnqurre at Corbin
and Snyder Furniture, 446.1171 after S1 4~ -2573.

FOR SALE

Notroopanllbltfwacddenh.

POSITIVE J.D.
TERM~Calheach DlyofS.le
OWNER$-ACE AND MARY McCARTY
fiUCTIONEER-IILL JANES-MZ-4l77orSI7·M11

"

I

2 Or ., 27,972 miles, 6 cyl. ,
st andard, lot of econom y
her e.

2 hdtp., rege ncy. AM FM,

Buy from the owner and save.
Beautiful Redwood 3 or 4 bedroom
~ ranch. Gas heat; central air and a
wood-burning fireplace. 1112 baths on
., a large landscaped lot with 2 patios.
Within walking distance of the
Hospital.
PHONE 446-1079
f

1974 Audi

'2395

'3995

1974 Chev. Vega

1974 Mustang II
Ghia

U a la x i e
hardtop ,

black

roof,

'1995

'2995

1973 Buick Electra

1973 Buick Riv.
Atr , bu rgundy , w hite v in yl
top, power seats, wi ndo ws,
ne w tires, ni ce .

'4295

'3795

'3495

1973 Buick
LeSabre

1972 Cadillac

Q.OSE.OUT
On At(

4 hdtp , loaded wi'th extras.
One local owner .

VOLKSWAGENS
7 TO CHOOSE FROM.

'2695

MAKE OFFER

60 LATE MODEL CARS IN STOCK

500 , d
door ,
yellow fin t sh ,

vmyl

A utoma tic, ai r cond , V 6
eng , v iny l to p, sharp .

2 dr , automat tc , 26,000
mil es , e)(cept1on a l y cl ean

'2495
1974 FORD

wr ndows , sea l s,
doorlocks, 30,604 c a refu l
dr iven m iles, sh arp.

limited ,
loaded
with
ext ra s, cream , with white
v tnyl top , loc al business ·
man s trade, extra , e x tra
sharp.

4 dr , air cond , w e sold Jt
new , real sharp . Nice
famtly c ar.

Duster , 2 door , 8 c:yl , 318 V8, standard shiff, radio ,
tess tha n 13, 000 mtles. dark
green

power

black

GMAC &amp;

interio r , V8 , a u toma't 1c
P
P B , fa c t a ~r
'

s..

'3195

.Sunday
Shoppers -Welcome
.
Come In and Brow.- Around

1974 CHRYSLER
lmperr a l LeBaron , d doOr.
full pow er . with arr, less
than 2 1. 000 miles, dark blue
w1th
w hite
leather
ov e r stuffed seat wtfh vinyl
roof .
'

'5595
1974 CHRYSLER

LIMITED TIME OFFER:

New Yorker, 2 door, hara
top , fu ll powe r ~ air. black black vinyl root. whrte
mtenor

Free A-COn 1976 Pacers
Free Soft Tops on CJ-5's

DON WAns

INC.

1976 FORD

RIVERSIDE AMC.JEEP
Upper Rt. 7

Gallipolis. Ohio

Street v an , auto ., P S ,
headers , Am . F rr:t st ereo,
C B radio combination
delu~&lt;e imron special
rnt :
fully dec orated
r
out. front

rGA*i.LiPOiiS·····--·i
i

CHRYSLER-

back cal&gt;la •in
less

Services Offered
RE G QU A RTER stu d
v1 ce , Leo &amp; Ktn g br ed
446 4654

ser
the
Catl
owner and save Beaut tful
redwood 3 or 4 bedroom
49 If
rench Gas h eat , central air
and
a
wood
burn i ng
ftrepfa ce 117 baths on a
Boggs Ex1ermtnatint Co.
large landscap ed lot with 2 TERMITES ,
ANTS ,
paftos
Within
Walk tng
W A TER BUG S VA and FHA
d isl an ce of tne i1osp1tal.
mspection Call c olle c t 1-682
Phone 4&lt;16· 1079
6249 , R I . 3. Oak Hill , Ohio
_..
66 3
62·1f

3 B R BRI C K h(lme on Sanders .
ALBERT EHMAN
H tll
Large llvtng , din i ng
Wa t er Del1very Serv tc e
room , comb kitchen w l lh
Pa t rtot Star Gall ipoli S'
range and refrlg Family
Ph 379. 2133
room , all draperie s in
243 I f
el uded Ph 446 4915 SJI,OOO
66 3
KOTALIC LANDSCAPING
.......
RIO GRANDE , OtiiO
4 BR HOU SE on l acre tot , COMPLETE PROG~ESSIVE
Ph 386 8746
LANDSCAPING
65 -6 SHRUB S , TREE S, ROCK
_.
.,...

-·------

_______

--------

__

-------

Services Offered
P A SQUALE . Efectri c al &amp;
Insu l ating
103 Ce dar St..
Gall 1polt s Ph 446·2116
\16 tf

-----.a--- -------IN TOWN

HARDWARE SUPPLIES
Pilch forks, shovels, rakes, hoes, axes. sledges, picks,
asst . hinges.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO :

~ ..............~............:

••

supplies on S.turdiry.

ladders,

r----UNDER '4000·----.

~ _________ ______ _ --------------

69 Chev. Pickup, Real Nice ....... ......... 11395 •

ft 50 STATE STREET

BLACKSMITH - Forge, tongs, toots, etc .
If time P9rmots, witt sto.l Hlllng hlrdwore &amp; plumbing

ext.

•

.
i
.
i CARROLL NORRIS DODGE i
~ 72 Dodge Pickup 6 cyl, std. shift ......... 2295 •
:

furna ce , lge pot bel11ed stove .

Lunc~

74
73
73
73

:

1

books daling back lo 1929. drill bits, stoker !Sioke·amallcl

maddoc:ks. alum .

Triumph 'Spitfire' Conv't .
Pinto Runabout. 4 speed.
MG 'Midget• Convertible
Pontiac Catalina Sed ., auto., A. C., P. S.
Ply . Satellite H.T., auto ., A. C., P.S.
Chev. C-10 Pickup.
Ford '12 To11 Pick
'6', 3 speed.

r---UNDER '3000----..

i

•
~ of 2 .. .... .. ...... ........ .. ................. '2395:

Acely gauges &amp; hose , portable batt chgr., Hyd jacks, Sioux

7 STORY hou!le tor sa le 3 br , 2
ltving rooms and l1replace ,
k 1t chen , bath , u t i lity wall to
w&amp;ll c &amp;rpels , paneltng ,
c arp ort , 2 porch es, treiler
spa c e and s el u p loc ated
c orn er lot , Vinton , 0 388

71

~ 72 Ford Pickup V8, std. shift. Choice

valve gr inder. 2 floor grinders, head grinder, dnll press. 1 T
chain hoist , bench vise, ant 1 cyl. gas eng ., floor model pre55,
rease guns. hand tools , sockets, wrenches , etc , welding rod,
lge . anvil , metal lathe. armature tester. atr comp .. lpfn
heel bal , Allen tester, manual front end alignment, 2
creepers , hand drip press, a lot manual parts, labor , &amp; shop

446-3636
Any Hour

Grefnlin , 2 door , 6 cylinder ,
auto .. P S , factory arr,
luggage rack , less than
1, 100 ac tu a l mi les, 1 local
o wn er .

Real Estate For Sale
~ trans................ .... .. .... ............... 12895: FOR
SALE .._ BUY from

Startong AIIO: 30 A-M. Slturdov, Much 27 Witt S..ll:
GARfiGE EQUIP .. TOOLS&amp; AUTO PARTS
Front end 1111 T bumper jack, front end air bubble balancer,
front end air lift tack, air wrench, 2 floor jacks, tire changer,

blue vr nyl top. 27,000 miles
Real c ream p u ff

71 AMC Matador Sedan-auto .• P.S.
69 Ford LTD, auto .• A. C.• P. S., 50,300 miles.

=1 72 Dodge, 1 Ton Stake body V8 motor, 4 sp. :

ld Winchester c;.rage.

D e V i l le , 28,000
miles ,
loaded w1 th e ~&lt;tr as , l ea th er
int erl o r ,
loca l
owne r ,
El ect ra t r a de

auto ,

1975 AMC

73
69

•
•

TRUCKS

v.a,

.----UNDER •1000---..

72

;: :11

~

Exrl off Appalachian Highwoy ( Rt. 344) at rnlerseclion of Rl.
327 and Rt. 35. Follow srgn• Vz mile south of old Rl. 35 to tiM

1974 Olds '98'

P.S , P D , speed control,
AM. FM, blue w1th dark

,..._ _ _ UNDER

Dodge Dart 2 dr, 6 cyl.~ .......... -.. -·· 11795 .•
:• 71 Ford Pinto 2 dr Runabout ........... -. '1695 :
••
~ 70 Dodge Polara 4 dr, power, air........... '1495 •
~ 70 Ford Galaxie 2 dr, power, air ............ '1395

HOLLOW

REALTOR

75 Ford Pinto Stw ., auto, 6 cyl. 5,000
:
' miles, PS .... ....... -..... ....... .. .. .... .... .13695:
74 AMC Hornet t dr, HT, auto., power, air 13095:
74 Dodge Colt Stw ................ ... .. ..... 12795!
: 73 Plymouth Gran Coupe, power, air....... '2895:
: 73 Dodge Dart 2 dr, HT, auto., power .... '2695 :
'
'I f73 Javelin, AMX 2 Dr. Hdtp ................ '2495:
)
: 73 Olds Custom Cruiser Wagon, air,
:
I
I
I
• power, auto......... .-..... ... ............... 12795:
''
73 Ford Maverick, 2 dr, HT, Std. Shift,
:
• 6 c~ .. ..... .... ............. .............. .... '2495:
f 72 Dodge Polara Sta Wag., power, atr" ..... '2695:
: 72 Dodge Coronel, power, air... ... ......... 12695 :
72 Chrysler Newport 2 Dr., power, air ..... 12595:
:.- • 72 Dodge Demon, 2 dr HT, power, air ..... 12295f
~: 72 Datsun 2 dr, COupe ... .......... .. ...... 12095 :
:·. h2 Torino 2 dr HT, auto., power ............ 12295 •
•. •
'
$1895.:
: ~ t72 Chevrolet Chevelle 4 dr, power, an ... .. ..
:: h2 Dodge Colt 4 dr, sedan .................. '1995:
Dodge Monaq~ 4 dr, power, air ......... 1 21S~t
c.-_j71 Ford LTD, 4 dr, sedan, power, air.. .. .. .. 12195:
" 71 Plymouth Satellite, l dr, power .. .. ..... 111195 :
~· 71 Dodge Dart 2 dr HT, power, air......... 12195:
~: 71 Dodge Dart 2 dr, HT, AIR .............. '2195:
:: 71 Dodge Dart 4 dr, sedan, 6 cyl .......... 11895 :

••• 71
=
:.

Old Country Garage and HardwAre Store, formerly Max

1974 Chev. Nova

'5995

M averi c k . 2 door , hard top.
6 cy l , au to ., P. S.. dark gold
patnt, lrght gol d v tn y l roo f.
d el u)( e mfe rtor packag e .

PRE-QWNED CARS

:
:
::
:

J

NAME

1974 f.ldillac Cpe.

Halchback , 25,652 mi les , 4

f

i

benefi c ial t o Home Owners, Schools,
ChUtches. C ommerc1al and Pu bh c Buildings. It rs rt:(jUJ r ed by
F.H A and V.A . ro r completion of loan s.

LAND
CONTRACT
4
ro o m s
and , b at h
on
Cht llrc othe Roa d
N eeds
som e r epa i r , $5,000

RON CANADAY

f USED CAR SPECIALS

.

ating bu sine ss
Our ser vace is

2 DAY SALE 2
10:30 A.M. EACH DAY .

CHILLICOTHE ROAD 6
room s an d bath •n c 1ty
$6,500

roo f

THE FINEST IN

i

Th1 s IS an tdeal sttuatlo n f o r an yone f amahar wtth t he
buald mg t rades A ge as no facto r , but you mu s1 be phy srcally
capab le of performan g a dail y sal es· servi ce routtne To get you
started we wd l tra in you and gi ve y ou every poss ible assistance
includtn g sales aids, ad verli sing, and o ftice operation help. This
is a full · t1me occu pation, but we will consider a part ·llme ap·
phc anl if th1 s se r vice ts added to a compatible ,' presently oper·

CITY SCHOOLS
D up l ex ea c h s id e h as f 1v e
r oo m s, I' 7 b a tn s pn v at e
dr'l \le way

acr~
wtth
sp ac1o u s
d o u bl e
w td e
mobtl c hom e on p er m a ne nt
tou nda t 1on ,

windows , si l ver , d ark red
lea th er sea t s, red vi n y l

Monaco 2 Dr .,

'I

of finam:mg There rs no investment - no fram::ha5e fee - all you
need are the too ls and ner;:e Ss.ary cqu1pment. and to i!Ct you
staued we wall e ve n help you sco; ur e them .

'4195

spe ed, gas sa v er .

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
i'

'4695

W.VA.

,-

miles ,

the besl

V-8, a ulo, P.S., P 8 ., facl
atr . power sea t s, power

THE CORNER OF ROUTEs 2 &amp; 35, PT. PLEASANT,

BILl WALKER - PAUL GREEN

11.294

showroom con d

l,...or doba . 2 door , h ard top,

BETWEEN THE SILVER BRIDGE AND SHADLE BRIDGE AT

Air , a u t omati c, Ra lly e
w heel s, 6.900 m i les , sli ver
wr th black \i l nyl top , expect

Whrte, wi n e top, air co nd ,

AM. F M,

1975 FORD

286-6082 I 682-7498

If YOU'RE THE MAN
WE'RE LOOKING FOR . . .
SOMEONE WE CAN STAKE
OUR REPUTATION ON ...
fill OUT THE COUPON
AND MAlliN TO ME
IODAYI

1975 Monte Carlo 1975 AMC Pacer X

G r anada G h ia , 4 d o o r ,
auto , P. S .. at r , P. B. ,
fa c t ory a ir , v m yl r oo f.
d el uxe v iny l rn oldtng a nd
less th an 1.300 m 11es , d ark
brown wit h
top. b e ige
mte n o r

1975 CHRYSLER

CHRYSLER, NEW YORKER 4 DOOR, NEWPORT,
SWINGERS, CHARGER, VOLARE', 4SPEN~ SCAMP,
CORDOBAS

DOZER
BACKHOE
SEPTIC
UNDERPINNING

DESIGN
ESTIMATING
LANDSCAPING
CONSULTING

t-, t AR

KEMPER
ROAD e ri e

OUNTAIN STATE CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
ON DISPLAY

PUBLIC AUCTION

41 ACRES L o t s of road
fr ontage 1n Cllesh trc Twp
Som e
bu il d i n gs ,
no
d w e lltn g on b l ack t op road

1 PM TO 6 PM

~8 . 1

h e lp p ay for l h1 S 5 ropm s
an d b a th w 1t h ld a c re s
Clay Twp , S18 ,000

t- M .J "'uHL c

CORN fed free zer Bee f Carl.
W 10 t er s , R io Grande 245
51 I 5
287 If

7206.

PLAT DEVELOPMENT .
NEW COMMERCIAL
NEW RESIDENTIAL

1,000 LB Toba c c o Base wtll

40 lj
--~-------~

HOME In Chesh ire ,
overlooki ng Oh io R i ver , J1.12
b ath s, c entral air , ;es heat ,
f am i ly r oom in basemen t ,
new kit c hen w it h d i sh
wa sher , double self .c teaning
oven . buil t in rangr . W W
ca r pet. must see th is house
Ins i de to appr ec iete. 367

DESIGNER/BUILDER SERVICES

121 ACRE FARM. 38 acres
cr ee k bo tt om and 75 a cres
wood ed
Si x room f ar m
dwelltng Near Addav tl le
Sc hoo l 1n Add•so n T wp
BUSINESS
OP PORTUNITY 12 s p ace
m ob Ue ho me cour t with 12
! raile r s r e ady to r enl
L oc a t ed in Ct l y Call for
a p po tn tmen l

CAR

.

J BR

60 12

WATCH THE BOATS sa!l
do w n th e be au t tful Oh to
fr om th •s 3 acre lo t Perf ec t
lo c al 1on for tha i dream
ho m e Prt ce •S rt gh t '

Neal Realty

Real Estate For S.

190 AC R E O al r y F ar m . Surge
M ilk •no P arl or , BOO ga l. milk
t enk, a nd els o 300 acr es
gra in an d s toc k fa rm w ith
' 50 ,000 f eed tot. 120 Oe ir y
Cow s t o be au c tioned Ma rc h
2~t h
Co nta ct
Ern es t
N ew som an d Son . Jac k son ,
Oh lo , R R 3, Box 38, P h . 286
.1398 or 286·5133

CANADAY
REALTY

It

et ec: tn c
197 6 lll o va 12x 60 2 BR all
elec lrt c
1969 Rilz cr afl 12x 60 2. B r
19 70 Ktl 12)( 47 2 Br
1968 St y le Mar 12x 52 2 Br
1967 F le e twood 12)1; 60 2 Br
1971 Con c ord 12 ~~:6 5 M H
1968 Commodogc 12x52 M H
1959 Co ton1al 10)1; 50 M H
B&amp; S Mobile
3 BR HOME hardwood floors.
Home sat es
l&amp;rge kttchen. uttltly room ,
Pt Pleuant,
va .
and c arport , natural gas and
23 7 tf .
c tty water , $28 ,000 446 4652

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate for Sale

H O W A RD
P ec lt . Water .
D eli v ery day- or ntQh t 24 59315 or 388 8262
29 2 If

------

.,PPL!ANCE
REPAIR SERVICf2
,
W AS H E R S, dryer s, etf.!t: lriC
r an ge , L&amp;A /\ ppt ta n ces dJ6
73 98, 245 56&lt;10

- --.,.

611

EXC A VATING .
ao ze r ,
backhoe
and
ditcher
Chitrles R Hatfield , Ba c k
Hoe Service, Rutland , OhtO
14 2 200' or 446 ·7687 .
&lt;jQ . tf

·-----------,.._

FOR THE BE ST In ar
ch i tectural de'S ign Of new
homes , !!mall comrnerciel
buildings ,
aP.:IS ,
or
remodeling wltli- state ap .
proval ot plans Bill Walker ,
I 682 -7498
65 If

- --------- --·-

TV REPAIRS&amp; RENTALS
PICTURE TUBE
SPECIALISTS
HARTWELL ELECTRONICS
245·5J6 5

o·aRtEN

--- ·-

60 If
~ ---

ELECTRtc:

SERVICE

-

24 Hour Service
Anyth ing In electricity
446 .8603
•
JO tf

-·------------ --

GARDEN S .

CU STOM R E MODELING , 20
years e x per 1ence 388 8308
, New dry wall c eiling W1lh
swtrl or texture des igns
Other dry wall. repair , v inyl
wallpaRering , new bGths ,
new ktlchens A nyth lnq in
rem ode. lng or repair .
II I f
-------~-

THE TOP SHOP
Custom Buill Roof Truss es,
F ormi c a Count e rt o p s &amp;
Cabinets , Coolville , Ohto ,
667 3186
256 If
~

'695
1973

v.w.

4 door , auto , air cond .,
wheel
covers ,
mmac u late condltron .

WAS $2895 .00

1974 DODGE
Uart , Swtnger , 2 door , hard

1op ,

slanl

6,

P . S ..

a u tomatic , red , black
interior , black vinyl root

- -·- .. ---·-------D. DAY

-

Monte Carlo, 2 door, hard
top V8 aulomatl c, P.S ,
factory air, gold,
black rnterlor , black vtnyl
roof. l ow mileaqe , 1 owner

P.B,

REFRIGERATION

IGARATION healing ,
e lectric , 17 years e}l;p 388
6274 .
258 If

C ARPENTER work , house
r e m odeling ,
wiring ,
plumbing , pain t tng Ph 446
2910
259 It
DOZER work , e~~: c avating ,
land clearing Ph Jd6 0051
290 If
WAll

PAPER ,

VINYL

HANGING, AND PAINT·
lNG ,
FAST
AND
RELIABLE . CALL 2lJ' 6342 .
.

26.J f

Over 60 Nice Clean Late Models To Choose Fron-

:GALLIPOLIS CHRYS~ER-PLYMOUTH 1
:
1639 EASTERN AVENUE, GALUPOLIS, 446-3273
~
~*********************************************~
Services Offered
Services Offered
SelVices Offered
fr eee st tm a t es Ca ll 256-6364
256 If

TRUCK SPICIALI

THURMAN
FURNITURE MFG

1974 FORD
Custom: red and
white , red Interior , 6 cyl.,
standard, radro, d new
ftres . full wheel covers,
bumper . western

mlrrc&gt;rs, local

, low
com e

FACTORY
REUPHOLSTERING
Qual ity Workmanship
10 Pet . Discount on a l l Fabrtc s

FREE ESTIMATES PICK · U p. DELIVERY

FOR THE BEST PRICES
IN TOWN

CALL 367 · 0494
6B ·ff
-- --- - ------~--

MOUNTAIN STATE
CHRYSLER

PLYMOUTH

I

i
IN STOCK !

6 PICKUP T

1-(QQ F lNG , a fu m mum . Stdmg ,

t- · 100

REG~

~

DISCOUNT ON
1976 CHRYSLER$
CALL-

'2895

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

C OUGHENOUR
Wa te r
Deli v er y 446 3962 , 446 4262
any t i m e
244 If

i

t

NOW

ALL

GUARANTEED Patio and
po ol land5caping , Stone
sand
tool ,
s hrubb e ry
trimming
Dump t ru c k
servic es 24 5 9 13 1
187 -If

-- . - ---

~--~

IN STOCK
LESS THAN

end of the

SANOY AND BE A VER I n
surance Co
has offer ed
services for F ire Insurance
coverage In Ga ll la County
for &lt;!'limos! a c entury
Farms , homes anct p ersona l
pr o p~rty
c o ve r ag es a-r e
a v ailable to meet Indi vi dua l
needs
Conta c t Eugene
Holley , your ne igh bor a"\P
ag ent.
J

66 6

BOB
L A NE ' S
Comp l et e
Bo o kk eep.ng
and
TaK
Service . 43 7 1 ~ Second Av e
(A cross from Post O fl 1ceJ
G alltpot i s , Ph . 44 6 790 0
Weekly and monthly serv i ce
t o r comm er c ial accoun t s
In co m e Tax Preparation
67 3
---------~----

S P ECIA L off s eas on prices on
Furnitur e Upholst ering now
to f1rst of march 1976 Call
now
Sa \ie $
Mowr e y ' s
Furn d ur e and Uphol s ter ing
Phone 675 4154
306 If

----------- -----THURMAN

FURNITURE MFG
FACTORY
UPHOLSTER I NG
FREE ESTIMATES PICK- UP - DELI\IE RY
FOR THE BEST PRICES
IN TOWN
CALL l67·04~

--- ··-~-.

Se rvice
Com mer c 1a1 an d
Restdential Specta lt zl ng m
op erators L oca l
256 64 72
20 If

Plumbini &amp; Heating
.CA RTER 'S PLUMBIN-G
A ND HE A TING
Cor F ou rtl"t &amp; Ptn e
Phone 4&lt;16 38 BSor d46 4477
165 , ,

- -- -Tr.i:N"D'AR"oPtum b ing H eattng
21.5 Th•rd Ave , 44 6-3782
187.f'

------------ - -GENE PLANTS&amp; SON

Quality Workmanship
10 Pet Discount on all Fabrics

-- --·- ---

BORD'E R ' S GARA G E DOOR

67 If

Pb.UMBING - HetHin g - A ir
Condit i oning 300 F ourth
Ave Ph , 446 1637
d8 If
~-

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

, DCWITT ' S P LU MB I NG
AND HE A TING
Route 160 N Evergreen
Phon e b46 27JS
18 7 I f

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

'

�Grey announces
judge candidacy
ATHENS - Athe!l.'l City
Solic1tor La wrence Grey
Saturday an noun ced his
for
the
can d1 dacy
Democra tic nommallon for
J udge of the Fourth District
Court of Appeals. Grey is
seekmg the position vacated
by Gordon Gray, Athens, who
1s retirmg from the court
Grey w~s elected Athens
City Solicitor in November
1975 after being appointed to

cases presented to the ap·
pellate courts and the
number of counties served by
the Fourth District court of
Appeals require vigorous
act! v!ty by the appellate
judges.
Prior to being elected
Athens City Solicitor, Grey
served as a U.S. Attorney in
the Department of Justice, a
staff attorney for the Legal
A1d Society and Athens
County Public Defender.
A member of the Ohio State
Bar Association, Grey had
been admi I ted to practice
before the Ob1o Supreme
Court. He holds a Doctor of
Law l)egree from Cleveland
State Umversity and a
Bachelor of Arts Degree from
Ohio University. He IS also a

the position earlier m the'

year .
C1hng hi s extensive ex·
perience m appellate

pra c~

ticc, Grey said that he Is
fam1har with the variety of
issues the Court of Appeals is
required to consider.
He said that the dramatic
mcrease m the number of

Bt·at...

Of the

LAWRENCE GREY
lecturer in law at Ohio
University. Grey is married
and bas one child.
The Fourth District Court
of Appeals includes 15
Southeastern Ohio counties Adams, Athen s, Brown,
Gallia, Highland, Hocking,
Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs,
Pickaway, Pike, Ross, Scioto,
Vmton and Washington .

press to conclude deals

11
1 am frustrated, embar·
rassed and outraged to have
to report that no agreement
bas been reached," Coleman

said at as news conference

called to place pressure on all
He
said
the
sides.

ne go t iations

"have

deterioriated into an exerctse
in nit picking!'
If no agreements are
reached by March '!1, some
2,500 miles that would have
gone to the Chessie and
Southern must be acquired by
Conl!ail the new northeastern
railroad system which is
scheduled to take over seven
bankrupt raiirods on April L
Th1s would mean that much
of the 2,500 m1le would he
downgraded or abandoned in·
stead of rehabilitated as
Southern and Chessie bad
planned.
Problems arose because
Congress said that neither
Southern nor ChesSle, could

acqUire the lines without first
reaching labor agreements.
Asked whether be felt an
agreement could be reached,
Coleman sa1d "I'm so
damned mad I can't make a
judgment whether I'm
optimistic or pessimistic."
Coleman said he bad deve·
loped a model contract for the
Southern and he demanded
that an agreement be
reached based on the
docwnent by 10 a.m. Monday
mornmg .
Otherwise, he said he would
release the document and
"leave it to the American
people to decide whether the
railroads and labor have not
been quite irresponsible."
The Southern was to
purchase 460 miles of Penn
Central track along the
Delmarva Peninsula of
Deleware, Maryland and
Virginia and spend $30
million rehabilitating it
ConRail would operate 185
miles of that land.
The Southern purchase is
considered vital to the
economic growth of the
largely rural area.
The Chessle purchase
would involve most of ·the
Erie-Lackawanna
and
Reading railroads plus Penn
Centr~l
lines m West
Virginia. This purchase was
designed to give ConRail
competition
in
the
Pennsylwnla and New York
areas.
Coleman announced that
Chessie and the unions had
agreed
to
resume
negotiations at 10 a.m
Saturday in Baltimore "and
cmtlnue around the clock."
He said some agreement
must be reached by March 'll
m the Chessle case.

gives you
performance
and ultrasmooth ride.

The major bangup In the
negotiations has been
whether the unions will give
up some oJ the r~ghts and pay
which they received under
the bankrupt lines. Chessle
and Southern said they could
not agree to old contract
provisloriS which their own
employees did not receive.

FEWER CLAIMS
COLUMBUS (UP!) _ Ohio
Bureau of Employment SerVICes Administrator Albert
Giles says nearly 600 of the
initial
claims
for
unemployment hene!1ts last
week resulted from lack-oforders layoffs in the steel
Industry.
Ohioans filing first claims
for uneiJlployment benefits
totaled 15,041, a 13.2 per cent
drop from the prior week.
Initial claims under all other
state and federal benefits
programs nwnbered 7,676 for
an overall total of 22, a u .8 per
cent decline from the
previous week.
Continued claims were es·
tlmated at 239,850, for a 1.1
per cent drop. There were
8,661 persons who exhausted
benefits last week.

Mohawk Ultlsslmo
Polyester ontr

a E78-14 whitewall
Plus 2.25 F. E. T.
For
WldoTrack
Treod

Wide tread Improves stability,
control and mile-

age.

AU. SIZES
AT

CIVIL SERVICE
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Sen.
Marigene Valiquette, D·
Toledo, said Wednesday that
the staff of her joint
committee investigating
state civil serVIce abuses was
continuing to evaluate the
months of testimony heard by
the special panel.
Testimony ended March 15
and a final report, which
Valiquette said wm!ld be
Issued on time, is due m
April.

OHIO
Ph. 992-7161

)

TMMtnfft
ManiMrO...
BoiiiWOwners

...........

II you're lookmg for the best
value in homeowners msurance
- you'll find 1t at State Farm.
Give me a call today. You'll
discover whit's made State Farm
the number one homeowners insurer in the world.

CARitOI K. SNOWDEN
Strllf

GENERAL TIRE SALES
MIDDLEPORT

SIAIE FARM·

24 stall

TERRIFIC SAVINGS

I
I
I
I
I
I

~•

truck has JUSt grown by leaps and bounds, particularly since
the house-t&lt;Hlouse canvass in Pomeroy and Middleport. Grace
Pratt headed the Pomeroy drive w1th Faye Wildermuth and
was Joined by her daughter , Ruth Powers to head the drive in
Mi&lt;ldleport. Well - at least with so many contributing to the
fund - the truck has certainly turned out to be a "people
project."
All three chapters of Beta S1gma Phi Sorority - Ohio Eta
Phi, Xi Ganuna Mu and Preceptor- have joined bands to
help w1th the dr1ve. The three chapters will stage a public
games party at 7.15 p.m. on Apnl 13 at the Sacred Heart
ChUrch Auditorium with all proceeds going to the fund.
Refreshments will be available during the party throngh the
sorority also.

THE STIFFLER DEPARTMENT Store demolished by the
Jan, 28 fire will reopen for busmess Thursday. The operation
will be carried on temporarily at 236 E. Main St., Pomeroy,
Wltil the former location can be rebuilt
AND - THE POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE will be
closing on March 31 according to an announcement from Sen.
Oakley Collins. The closmg brings headaches and problems for
many. The reoperung will not be until Labor Day or perhaps,
shortly before.

Gallipolis
J'hone 446-4290
Horne 446·45tl
Ltll I lf(M llf ';IIIII.

.....

SIIN -.~ ,._
11111.11 ••••

A

--

Hll. .l•tt,

Fill 111d Casually Ca ... llr
Hrlme Olllt•
fliDOIIIifiiiiOII llhntlil

r7402

· ~--

Dateline
By Hobart Wilson Jr.

AFTER serving Ohio Valley Bank 29 years, 22 as
president, Emerson E . Evan~ is now chairman of the board.
Evans in this new capacity, will continue to work closely with
offi~ and directors of Gallia's second oldest financial
Institution.

)

MOST Importantly, however, it wiD give him more time to
enjoy what he has helped develop during the past 40 years - a
better place to live in Gallia County.

'

+++

+++

QUENTIN LOCKWOOD

Fifteen new
churches
wanted in
five years

BUT THEN - are thmgs really so tough' I guess you can
be thankful, at least, that it's not 1889 The followmg account of
the expenences of Henry Bailey, grandfather of Don Bailey, 1s
self explanatory and should Wipe away any sympathy you
m•ght be feeling for yourself:
"HenrY Ba1ley, 65, a farmer of Rock Springs, w discussmg
the Present busmess depression ( 1934 ) yesterday said · 'l do
not believe the situation is as bad as some people think as
compared with depressions within my recollection In 1889,
when I was first married and had one little youngster, I rented
land from the Weyersnullers at Rock Sprmgs I paid them '25
a year for house rent, cow pasture and garden. I carried my
butter and eggs three miles to Pomeroy walkmg, and sold
them to the first produce house established there which was
located at the rear on the lot occupied by the new Martin Hotel
(now the Meigs Inn)
I sold the eggs at seven cents a dozen and the
butter at e1ght cents a pound. f worked at 50 cents a day to pay
.
rent which took 50 days each year and they seemed like
m•ghtly long days to me. Often I hurned to town to complete
my ruarketmg and got back to my home by 9 a m and then put
m three~uarters of a day of work for 37% cents. Still my
family got along reasonably well The things we bought were
comparatively few. The trouble today, as I see it, •s that we
think we must bave thmgs that we don 't need"'

mr

IN OBSERVANCE OF the bicentennial, personnel of the
Pomeroy Nallonal Bank w11l he stagmg special observances on
each holiday through the year. Women of the bank are all 1n
the Process of getting biCentenmal gowns to wear at the special
observances for the public through the year. The women bad
similar period gowns made some four years ago when the bank
observed 1ts !DOth anniversary.
IV!EiGS COUNTY WOMEN can get a free pap and breast
examination at the cancer cliniGto be held Thursday, March
25, at Meigs General HospitaL The exammat10n IS free
regardless of your fmancial status and these days everyone
should be made pretty aware of the importance of such
exammations. To make an appomtrnent call 992-7531, Monday
through Friday, the cancer off1ce m Middleport, or m the
evenmgs you can cali ·Jan Judge at 992-'ill32.

A CARD SHOWER WOULD be appreciated for Omer Hess
of Cherry Ridge. Mr. Hess IS now confined to the Wooster
Comruumty Hospital at Wooster, Ohio Cards may be sent
there or to the home of his son, Drexel Hess, Route 1, Burbank,
Ohio.
TED LEHEW, SON of Mr. and Mrs. Wllll8m Lehew,
Pomeroy, is doing h1s student teachmg this semester at Walnut
Ridge H1gh School In Columbus. Ted is a senior at Cap1tal
University In Columbus .
MIDDLEPORT EMERGENCY SQUAD members are
search1ng for an "ambu bag" apparently left on the scene of an
emergency run recently, The bag is an a1d to breathing and is
desperately needed for the squad's work . Anyone who knows
anything about the piece of equipment is asked to call any
Middleport hreman or the mayor's off1ce m Middleport.
SOME STRANGE WEATHER occurred in 1932 according
to excerpts from the d1ary of Catherme Grueser, Route 2,
Pomeroy. We had no snow at all until the 6th of March. We
finished husking the corn on the 25th of March. April started
out warm and many wild flowers were in bloom. We made our
garden and planted seeds. Then we had heavy frosts on the
12th, 13th, 14th and 15th and again on the 17th, 16th and 19th,
Then, it warmed up and we put out tomato plants. They froze
on the 3rd of May and a little frost took place on the 24th and
JJth of May bot it d1dn't freeze anything. Then, it turned bot
and dry and no rain until the 18th of June. Starting cutting
wheat on Ute 21st of July and finished on the 25th. A very hard
rain on the 6th of July washed out bridges and damaged crops,
Tben it turned very hot and dry - no rain til tbe first of
September Then, no rain again unt•l the 27th. We were blading
cane anct got soakmg wet. Had a partial eclipse of the sun, Aug.
31. We got eight cents a dozen for eggs at this time and we
gathered chestnuts After this the trees blighted and all the
chestnut trees died. Roosevelt was elected president defeating
Hoover. The temperature was down to l3degrees on the 28th of
November. December was QUite warm that vear and there waB
verY little snow."

BOB AND RUSSELL GRIMM, sons of Bert and Chlorus
Grimm, Letart Falls, Ohio seriously Injured in an auto
accident recently in Miami, Fla., returned to their respectiVe
oomes in Columbus and St. Clairsville Thursday. They bad
been in Florida where they were called by the hospitalization
or their parents.
In a telephone call to The Sentinel Friday, Bob said both of
his parents have been removed from intensive care un1ts and
appear Ill be progressing daily althoogh 11 will be sometime
before either is released from Florida hospitals.
Bob and RllSII!ll are sort of "playing it by ear" on what
their next moves will be in regard to further trws to Florida
and the eventual return of their folks to Letart Falls.
Chlorus is confined to Room 709, American Hospital, 11750
Byrd Rd , Village Gret!n, Miami, Fla., 33175, and Bert is In
room 44!-ll at Baptist Hospital, R900 North Kendall Drive,
Miami, Fla., 32175. t
~

DURING the past four decades, Evans bas been involved
in nwnerous coiiUDunity projects aimed at Improvements in
Galli&amp; County. His expert guidance and organization and
ability to see well into the future has made him a legend in his
own time. He seldom took credit for tbe many successful
projects he headed down through the years. "I'm JUS! an old
country boy trying to help out," he would say when praised for
a job well done .

•

+++

EVANS has been instrumental in making Impossible
dreams a reality In aU walks of life during the past 40 years.
Involvement in community affairs is no easy task and requires
much time on an indiVIdual's part. Evans was always willing
to take that time if he felt the project would benefit all Gallia
County.

WAVERLY - Southern
+++
Baptists from • 10 county
NO doubt he will continue to help promote his first love,
area will gather In Jackson, Galtia County, but the time has come when he must slow down.
Tuesday, March 23, at 7 p. m He'll never stop helpmg people. It's not in hiS blood.
for a Church Extension
+++
Conference in the Emmanuel
TO give newcomers to the area an idea how Evans 1S
Baptist Chwch, 1911 North involved, here are just a few projects or activities he has been
Olestnut St.
associated with down through the years .
Goal of the c011!erence is to
+++
establish 15 new churches
SERVED as treasurer of Holier llospltal Foundation from
with 10 missions in the nezt May, 1971, until January, 1976; presenUy a trustee and second
five years.
vice chairman of Holzer Hospital Foundation ; served as a
Featured speaker will he member of board of trustees of the Ohio Valley Health Services
Quentin Lockwood, Assoc. F8undatlon, Inc., from 1966 through 1975. '
Director m the Deparbnent of
+++
Church Ex tensiOn of the
SERVED as cha!nnan of tbe board of Bub Evaos Farms,
Southern Baptist Home Inc., from its begmning in 1953 until 1971 ; present director ,
M!ss1111 Board, Atlanta, Ga. senior vice president and chairman of the finance comm1ttee;
He serves as administrator in co-founder of Evans Packing Co., m 1937, served as president
the Eastern United Sates,
and director of that hrm.
Other conference persomel
+++
are M1ke Collins, State
MEMBER of The President's Club, Oh1o State University;
Sunday School Director, and recipient of The Ohio State University College of AgriCulture
Arthur Walker,
State and Home Economics Centennial Award for Distinguished
Missions Dll'ector of the State SerVIce; recipient of the Galha County Soil and Water
Convent! on of Baptist in Conservation District Award for Distinguished Service In
Ohio; Clifford Coleman, Area promoting conservation
++ +
Superintendent of Missions m
Scioto Valley Baptist
RECIPIENT of "Honorary Chapter Farmer" of the
Association; Wilham James, Gallipolis FFA Chapter in !972 ; staunch supporter of the
Associallonal
Brotherhood Gallla County Junior Fair's steer, lamb and pork sales as well
Director ; Mary Shearea, as working for mamtenance and unprqvement of the
Associatlonal Women's
fairgrounda and its facilities ; member of the Galllll County
Missionary Umon Director, Community Development Study Conumttee and Southeastern
and Richard P. Pamter , Ohio Regional CounciL
Chairman
of
the
+++
Asso c18tional Missions
EVANS was also instrumental m gettmg R•o Grande
Committee.
conununity College established two years ago, He served as a
Churches partic1patmg are member of the board of education for the Gallipolis q ty
F~rst
Baptist, Athens ; DIStrict from 1946 through !949 and Is a member of the
Calvary Baptist, P1keton; Gallipolis Area Chamber of Conunerce.
Chillicothe Baptist,
+++
Chillicothe ; Cook Road
THERE'S more. He's president of Evans Enterprises, Inc .
Baptist, Lucasville; Em- lie has actively engaged for a number of years m breeding,
manuel Baptist, Jackson; researching and promoting various breeds of cattle ; breeding
French
City
Baptist, and showing graoo champions and has been a member and
Gallipolis;
Good News officer of various local, state and nallonal cattle associallons.
Bapt1st, Gallipolis ; Grace
++ +
HE is a co-winner of National Recogrutlon Award for
Baptist, McArthur and First
Baptist , Logan; First promotion of the Cbarolais Breed, q member of the First
Southern Baptist of Meigs Baptist Church and a 32nd Degree Mason. He is a leader m
County, Pomeroy; Seven- cultural activities and has always been active m the support ol
teenth Street Baptist, Ports· area scouting,
mouth ; Sharon Baptist,
EVANS has earned a high place m the annals oJ Ga U1a
Ironton; First Baptist,
Waverly, ood First Baptist, County history. We wish him continued success in the future.
West P&lt;rtsmouth.
Missions par Ucipating are
F1rst
Baptist Chapel,
Wheelersburg ; Faith Baptist
Olapel, Wellston; Fairland
Southern Baptist Chapel,
Proctorville ; Good News
Baptist Chapel, SciotoviUe;
WAVERLY - Mayor Clark counly cauc\l.es and selected
Frankfort Baptist Ctiapel,
Frankfort;
Nelsonville Alexander ol ChilliCothe was members for County comand
elected
MISSion, Nelsonville; Ireland elected chrurman of the Ohio mittees
Baptist Chapel, Coolville ; ValleY. Regional Develop· r epresental1 ves to the
Burlingham Southern Baptist ment Commission succeeding Executive Comm1ttee.
OVRDC's standing com.
Olapel, Shade ; Murray City the Pike County ComMission, M~rray City, and m issloner Sam Hughes at the mittees w1ll be selected at the
Faith Baptist Mission, comnussion meeting at the next meeting , Chairman
Waverly North Elementary Alexander said.
Mason, W Va ,
The Executive Comin!ttee
School this week.
Joe Barsotti, Gallia unanimously passed a
A thought for the day: County, was re,.,lected vice- resolution stressing the
British novelist William dlairman, and Wilbur Rase, unportance of funding for the
Thackeray
said, ' 11 Tis Scioto County Conunissioner WilkesVIlle sewer project, in
strange what a man can do, was re-elected treasurer .
Vinton County, terming it an
and women yet think him an
Following the elecllon, extremely high priority
angel."
Olmrnl!lllion members held (ioject.

Chillicothe's mayor is
chairman of OVRDC

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
New Shipment

REDMON
CLOTHES
HAMPERS

P!liES.ENITE:D PLAQUE - A plaque from the National Retired Teachers Assn. was
presented to Mlao Lucille Smith Saturday afternoon at a meeting of the Meigs County
Retired Teachers Assn . at the MeiRs Museum . Sbown, 1-r, are Mrs. Donna Stanley, district
director, who presented the plaque; Miss Smith, and Mrs. Pearl Reynolds, local president.
The plaque was In appreciation for Significant and valued contributions to the enr1ctunent of
retlrerbent living. See page 4 today
'

.

~XVII

VOL

at y

e

I

NO. 239

In the Philadelphia case,
Francis McCarthy , a
lieutentant in the fire
department, moved h1s wife
and nine of their 10 children
to New Jersey after tbell'
Philadelphia neighborhood
deteriorated and McCarthy
feared for his family's safety.
In 1973, McCarthy lost his
job when the city civil service
commission ruled he no
longer was a bona fide
resident of Philadelphia.
McCarthy alleged that his
constitutional right to travel
freely
in
interstate
commerce was infringed by
the ordinance, but the
ordmance was upheld by the
Pennsylvania Common·
wealth Court.
Today, the Supreme Court
affirmed the action, holding
that there "ts no support m
our cases" for Ute claim that

-

.IN POMEROY

simtlar

ordinance

as

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

laws

Fire takes
Chippewas
POINT PLEASANT - A
$250,000 tow boat wa s
destroyed by fire on the OhiO
River early Sunday mormng.
The tow boat Chippewas,
owned by G&amp;C Towmg, Inc.
11 Henderson and captained
by Bob Sm1th, caught fire as
it was coming up-riVer from
Huntmgton, according to the
U S Coast Guard.
The boat was four m1les
south of here when the blaze
broke out.
Officials SBid all members
11 the eight-man crew got off
the boat safely.
Asmall boa !from the Coast
Guard station arrived on the
scene at 2:05a.m. II was soon
joined by the bigger boat,
Oleander, which eventually
put the blaze out.
cause of the !ire was not
known th1s morning , ac-

cordmg to a Coast Guard
spokesman. The boat was
pushmg e1ght barges of coal.
The
Co ast
Guard
spokesman said the men
figh ting the !Ire were bam·
pered by h1gh wmds which
gusted up to 20 m1les per
hour There was also a heavy
downpour of rain .
Pomt Pleasant volunteer
firemen responded to the call
and aided the Coast Guard
Officers of the Mason County
Sheriff's Dept. also were on
the scene.
BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Syracuse-MinersVIlle
Booster Assn . will meet
March 23, at 7 30 p.m. at the
Syracuse Municipal Building.
Anyone having Pony League
un1!orms from last year is
asked to contact Lowell
McNickle at 949-2442.

,.,.,.,. .,., .,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,., , , ,.,_,,,,, , , H • h
. . . . .=.=, ,.,.,.,.,.,. ,=
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· · =,. ,., .,.,. =
·= . . . =· .' =.=
·=.,. ..,_,=
·=
··=·=
·=
·==
·=· · =
·=· :· =·=·=·=·=·=·=
·=·=·=· =·=·=·=· ·=··=·=- =·=
·=·=
·=·=
·=·=
·=··= . ,..,., ,..,.,··=..,.=
·=
·=·=·=·= ·=· .,., =·=· =·=· .=
·=
· ,.,. ,.,.,.,.,.,. . .,.· :·=
::
,,N~ws. . . in Briefs' Ig ways ·;=: Third party whispers persist around Reagan, Wallace =;~:
.
!
work pool)~·~

.,,.,,,,,,,~,,,,,,[,,,,,,,,,,~,,,,,,,.,,,,,.,

·:·

:..

By Uolted Proso International
CINCINNATI- THERE WAS SUPPOSED to be a new
black presidential candidate today. There isn't.
The lone nominee of a fledgling black political party has
declined tbe nomination. Rep. Ronald V DelluniS, ~aiif.,
trough( the National Black Political Assembly's national
convention to an unusual close just before midrught Saturday
by IUI'!Jinl! down the delegates' emotional request that he run
for prerident of the United States. Althou&amp;h DelluniS explained
in a Jerigthy speech he had miXed feelings on whether to accept
the nomination, he concluded, " I am unequivocal in my desire
not ~run . "
" 'lb Is not my role and not my moment," said Dellums, 40,
a thr -term black congressman from Berkeley, Calli.

:::
:·:
;:;

prOmiSed ::~::;::
•

T COLUMtBUS n(UPID) •reocthioor
ranspor a 110
Richard D. Jackson today announced new procedures to
expedite highway projects.
In a letter to county and

;:.:~::'1 :~~:a~~e~~!k":,~

;:;
:_::
:::
:::
::·

From the right and from the left, there is
continuing talkofthirdpartymovemen!sthis
election year
George Wallace insists he w1ll not lead such
an effort agam, despite his struggle In the
early primaries. But in New York State, the
rumor insists he already .. workmg to set up
tho machinery to get on the ballot as a third
party candidate.
And the rumor comes from elsewhere, too,
that wallace might be the candidate of the
American Independence Party - a splmter
group of the American Party.
Gov.MeldrimTbomsonofNewHampshire,
a conservative who backed Ronald Reagan in

~e ~=ti::::!r\~~ ';:~r:~~~.';.i~g ~~~.,:'!

Commission, his campaign is at a standstill.

If Sen. Henry M. Jackson wakes up Jan, 21,
1977, as President, he's going to have to make
up his mind.
"The first order of boslni!Sll for the next
administration must be to turn the nation's
economy around, to bring unemployment
down and to stop ipfiation dead in its tracks,"
Jackson said Nov. 23, 1975 at a candidate's
forum In Louisville.
"I Intend to make health care ... the No. I
program of my administration as President,"
Jackson said Jan. 23, 1976ln Washington.
In Rochester, N.Y., on March 15, Jackson

::~1:~~: ~;;:~.;~u~~~l a;o!':=:~:

president Taurms said he filed to give
Nebraskans "a chance to protest President
Richard M Nixon's martyrdom by media ."

·:·
)
::::

·For lack of 35 signatures out of 5,500 needed,
Rep, Morris Udall may not he on the Indiana
primary ballot May 4.
The signatnres were tucked Into 14
envelopes and g1ven to the Indiana State
Election Board last week, In 10 congressional
districts, Udall had more than the 500
reqwred to qualify. But in the 6th district,
only 465 signatures were found. Udall
spokesmen claimed there were 667 signatures

~eU:~~!~~t

J4RAIN, OHIO _ LORAIN CITY SCHOOLS reopened
:::
when the names were put in
today rollowlng acceptance Sunday night by members of the said the state now will
will hold talks soon with American Party
assume full responsibiHty of the cost of
Jackson, Carter, Wallace and antl8bortion
:::
Lotllb] Education Asaociatlon, wbo had struck for two weeks, mamtain a work pool of $200
chall'man Tom Anderson m Pigeon Forge,
welfare."
candidate Ellen McCormack already have ' ;:,
~. ed2perthacten54ttpaych raise dThdmec~~ptrorrut·se agrleedmbee~t :~f~ million worthctof JOdbs wht;:;;
Tenn.
"Housing will be our No. I priority,"
been certified for the primary.
, :_,:,_:,.
ope
ea ers an a 1rus ra ors wou
'
will be contra -rea Y as
Reagan also has disavowed any third party
Jackson said in Harlem March 18.
' llllbool board in an economy move, rather than the 85 money becomes available. ·::
effort, shoUld his challenge to 'Ford continue
,.
Tormer Oklahoma Sen. Fred Harris added
1
lnlt~oougbt.
Jackson sa1d he and top
to f .1 · the R bl!
·
On May 11, voters in Nebraska will have a
his bit to muddy'"g the language thiS week.
•
•
1
al Ill
epu can prunar es.
••
included Is a ProviSl'on for no teacher strikes through de partrnent a dmiru'strators · ,..·=:
F o r m e r Sen. Eugene McCarthy already
chance to vote for Richard M. Nixon.
Campaigrung in Philadelphia, Harris called
AuiWfl, 1977, and that laid"'!! teachers would have the fll'st have reVIewed the entll'e ·:.
has announced his independent candi~acy for
Peteris Taurins of Lincoln, Neb., has won a
Pennsylvania "a rather large microcosm of
chande at future openings on a seniority basis The system, projects Inventory of 900 jobs ::'
the presidency _ but according to fmancial
place on the state p-imary ballot as a
the whole country."
with ~I schools and about 15,800 pupils, remained open during estimated at several billions :_:_:
statements filed with the Federal Election
Republican delegate pledged to the former
the ..rtlte bot attendance eventually dropped to about 5 per of dollars.
cent.
but about 40 of the 788 teachers are members of the
"As a result of that reVIew,
8880Cfa.tion ,
. the department now will
concentrate on some 500 pro• EW YORK - GEORGIE GIRL, a blue cream Persian jects capable of being pro·
femll eowned by the Werner Kachel family of Dayton, Ohio, cessed to contract readiness
Sun y was named the best cat m the Sixth Annual pending the availability of
WATERTOWN, Mass.,
The Meigs County Hetired check on the well being of that everyone who needs or
March 21 - The colonial
Invl tional Cat Show at Madison Square Garden.
funds," Jackson said.
Senior Volunteer program elderly or · mcapacllated wants the serv1ce has an
conneD ordered &amp;lion's
"i spokesman lor the Knickerbocker Cat Fanc1ers Club,
"In additiOn, ODOT executoday announced a new persons who live alone. U the opportunity to s1gn up. For
selectmen to isolate a
whi~ oponsored the show, announced the other finalists · No
tives now will conduct a
service, the "Reassurance client does not answer at the further information, or to
growing
number
of
small2, N poleon of Mirza, a blue Persian male, owned by Dr quarterly review of the
Telephone
Volunteer appointed time, a neighbor or enroll in the free program,
pox victims In special
Jua ta Lamar of Brookline, Mass.; No., 3, Maredydd, a projects inventory," said
Program," des1gned to help pohceman makes a house call call Doug Lizon, RSVP
houses
and
take
measures
tortoise-shell Manx female, owned by Da v!d and Elree Kellogg Jackson. "There will be no
the thousands of older or according to a pre-arranged Director, at 992-7884.
Mrs.
John
(Roseann)
Sebo,
needed
to
hall
the
spread
of
of L&lt;f.es Park, Ill.; No.4, Red Buttons, a red Persian male, more highway projects in
handiCapped persons who plan. Should a medical en sis ···:·:·.;.·:·:-:::·:·.·.. ·:·..•; ·:·.·.·:·:;.··:::·:·:·:·:·.·=·:·:
owneil by Joe and Carol Gianuzzi of Syracuse, and No. 5, limbo. They will be classified 208 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, the disease.
prefer to live out their bonus be discovered, the volunteer
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
is in critical condition today
Plpptl, a male silver American Shortbair tabby, owned by m the process." ,
years m independence caller is ready to ass•st by
Wednesday througb
Adam Frecowskl of Chicago •Heights, Ill.
But he said it would in St. Mary's Hospital,
without worrying about the supplying such cr~tical mFriday,
a chance of
dangers that livmg alone formahon as the name or the
!
"depend on local interest and Huntington, W. Va., with
showers
Thursday
but fair
$LUMBUS - COLUMBUS TEACHERS approved a financing" to determine how injuries suffered Saturday
entails.
doctor
to
be
called
and
Wednesday
and
Friday.
thre&amp;.year contract with increases of 15.7 per cent over the life fast the p-ojects progress night in a head-&lt;&gt;n collision
A telephone reassurance relatives to be not1fied.
Highs will be In the &amp;Os to
of~ agreement at a mass meeting Sunday.
toward contract readiness, near Glenwood. W. Va.
plan is a protective service
A
telephone
reassurance
the lower 70s and lows will
State police said Mrs. Sebo,
&lt;jolwnbus Education Association (CEA) negotiators
He added that "barj'ing
wherem daily telephone calls service for Meigs COunty IS
OhiO
Highway
Patrolman
be In the upper 30s to the
deiiC!j!bed the contract as a compromise while Columbus unforeseen circumstances, a 41, was driving north on
are made by a volun leer ready to go mto operahon,
Bruce
Wallace
of
Gallipolis,
40s.
SchoOl Supt. John Ellis said it allows the community an limited number of projects Route 2with her husband as a
caller at an appomted t~me to but RSVP is most anx1ous
·:·: :·:···· :·:··:·:· ·:·: ··: ::: ····:·: : y ·.; ..•.:
utended period of good teacher-board relations . A six per cent will he made contract-ready passenger in heavy rain. IOJured in the Point Pleasant
jail
explosion,
was
moved
pay ihcreaae is set for Jan. I, 1977, with five and four per cent In this construction season ." About two miles south of
CWSING ON 30TH
roi.sell coming the second and third years. It was the first time
"ODOT bas planned to Glenwood a car dnven by from the Pleasant Valley
M1tchell,
3200 Hospital at Point Pleasant
The Pomeroy-Mason
Col~bus teachers had approved a multi-year contract.
ready $103 million worth of Walter
Sunday to St. Mary's Hospital
bridge will close to tralflc
'
projects for sale In this fiscal Riverside Drive, Huntington,
at 9 a. m. on March 30,
+'wEN, COLO. - VLADIMIR "SPIDER" SABICH, year ending June 30" by veering left of center struck in Huntington, W. Va.
According to his parents,
Phillip Roberts, Patriot,
l~r world professional skiing champion, was shot to death
combining known and her car. Mrs. Sebo suffered
Mr.
and Mrs . Dwight
project engineer of the
Sun"'y, and a sheriff's spokesman said French-born singer- anticipated revenU.s, state mjuries to her head and jaw
Middleport, Bruce
Ohio Department of Highactr'll' Claudine Lonaet was In custody and will he charged funds with federal and local and multiple lacerations and Wallace,
abrasions to her face, a will undergo surgery on his
Golf equipment valued at oo Eastern Ave. Officers ,said
ways, said today.
todaf with homicide In the shooting, Sabich, 31, was shot once (llnds, he said,
hospital spokeswoman said right leg there sometime this
The bridge will be closed $1,720 was taken m a entry was made by breaking
llomach at his f25(),000 home in Starwood, an exclus1ve
The couple had been week . The orthopedic
from tbat day until about breaking and entering early a front wmdow. Once insice,
subdlv!s!on. An autopsy was ordered .
v1sitng
Mr . Sebo's mother, a surgeon to perform the
Labor Day for repairs. today at the Gallipolis Golf Intruders attempted to pry a
Longet, 35, the former wife of entertainer Andy
patient in St. Mary's operation will be Dr. Thomas
Roberts is formerly of Club's clubhouse on Baslla01 juke box open.
WU~, has lived with Sabich for the past two years. Pitkin
Clear and not as cool
Manmng Wetherholt, 409
County Dlatr!ct AttDrney Frank Tucker said she reported the tonight, lows in the mid 30s. Hospital. Mr . Sebo, who was Scott, Jr . Mr. and Mrs.
Raeine.
Dr.
Joe Fenderbos c h , Frrst Ave, reported someone
"'""ling late Sunday afternoon . Aspen City Manager Phillips Sunny and warmer Tuesday, not injured, IS an engineer Wallace report that contrary
association member, told city unhooked the cable and aerial
Mah!Jney asid Mlao Longe! gave sheriff's deputies a statement highs in the upper 50s, employed at the Sporn Power to rumor, Bruce had no injury
police entry was made by for hts CB radto from his car
being taken to an undisclosed location. He sa1d no cause Probability of precipitation Plant in Mason County, He to his left leg.
He was transferred to
breaking a door glass The radto was not removed.
fort klllinll waa known, although early reports indipated it 10 per cent today, near zero remained in Huntington to be Huntlngton by the GallipoliS
with Mrs. Sebo .
John C. Utterback, pastor
sometime between 2 and 6:46
wu n accident.
tonight and Tuesday.
Emergency Squad His room
of the F~rst Church of the
a.m.
number is 328 for those who
This apparently was the Nazarene, reported someone
ASHINGTON - U. S. MARINES HAVE "terrible drug
want to send cards.
BOOSTERS
TO
MEET
most
serious of eight cnmes broke the rear wmdow of h1s
and k!!sclpline problems" and are deserting at a rate more
There
will
be
a
special
LOCAL
TEMPS
to authorities since car parked m the church
reported
three times higher than during the Vietnam war,
NOW YOU KNOW
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Sen Saturday . Included wer e parking lot.
The
temperature 1n meeting of the Southern High
·l.'lf&lt;llnc to Rep. Lea Alpin, 0-Wis.
The Philipppines has the Robert Taft Jr. , R-Ohio, said
band Boosters this
John Ingles, 44 Sycamore
''nle Marines' terrible drug and discipline problelll8, downtown Pomeroy at II a . School
lowest
traffic fatality rate m today Ronald Reagan should several other breakings and
evening at 7:30 at the high
St.
reported he was assaulted
m.
Monday
was
42
degrees
an
assault
on
a
enterings,
. ....,.. to riling desertionll, paint a dismal portrait of a badly
the world, 1.5 deaths per continue to be a candidate for
outside a home at 1636
under
sunny
skies:
school.
pedestrian
by
two
unknown
tated Corpa," Alpin said. Alpin, member of the House
!00,000 population
the Republican presidential men, and assorted acts of Chatham ,Ave. by two
Anried Services Committee and self-lllyled gadfly of the
nomination because 11 will vandalism
unknown men.
mill
, said In a llatement Sunday Pentagon figures showed
give the party visibility and
Meanwhile, Gallia .County
Missing
from
the
golf
that or every IOOmen In marine uniform last year, there were
help toughen President Ford clubhouse was a set of Wilson shenff's deputies said two
Ill ' s of ablenteellm.
for the general election 1200 clubs with nine ~rons and acts of vandalism were in10111e cues, the men would he AWOL for only a day or
four woods valued at $495; a vesbgated over the weekend
Minerals
showed
the
Scotia
LEXINGTON, Ky. (UPI)
last week. The lowest mme campaign.
but In 11 cues of each 30 cited, the absence lasted more
"I
see
no
reason
why
he
Depuhes said three Win·
set of Wilson Patty Berg golf
Coal
Co
.
mine
in
Letcher
section, where tlle explosions
:lo days ~ was administratively considered desertion[ - A Southeastern Kentucky
(Reagan)
shouldn
't
continue
dows
were broken out of the
clubs
w1th
nine
Irons
and
four
County
was
the
site
of
at
least
coal mine where 26 men were
occurred March 9 and March
killed In two explosions seven fatal injuries during II , was ordered sealed by 1n the race," Taft told a news woods valued at $200, 37 basement at the Spnngfield
federal officials for safety conference as he filed dozen golf balls valued at Grange Hall located on the
earlier this month was cited that 11-year period,
nominatmg petitions for his $555; 50 pair of men's and Kerr·Harnsburg Rd.
CONCERT PLANNED
The
violations
listed
led
to
for unsafe working conditions
reasons.
own re,.,leclion campaign, women's golf gloves valued
Gordon SWISher of sw:sher
the
partial
closure
of
tbe
The
bodies
of
II
men
killed
1
by
state
inspectors
more
than
· M~N - The Wahama Breugnon, Selections from
"I
think
President
Ford
bas
Implement
Company, Upper
$3ii0,
and
four
golf
bags
at
mine,
owned
by
the
Blue
in
the
second
explosion
while
.lull and Senior Banda will 1776, Finale from the Sym· 900 times since 1965, The
the
normnation
pretty
well
River
Rd
.,
said
a window was
valued
at
$120.
Police
are
Diamond
Mining
Co
.
of
invesllgatlng
the
f1rst
blast
rit a concert at 7:30 p. phony in B-Flat, and the Lexington Herald reported
sewed
up,"
Taft
said.
"I
don't
broken
out
of
a
back door at
mvesllgating,
Knoxville,
Tenn.,
more
than
a
were
entombed
In
the
m1ne
today.
IJ:In~lay at the high Kimberly Overture . Adsee
Reagan
as
bemg
a
senous
his
business.
In
both mthe
weekend,
a
Over
dozen
times,
the
paper
section
which
was
seal~
The Herald said a check of
• The concert band will mission is :;o cents for adults
threat
any
more
,
but
he
ctdents,
hmestone
was
used
entenng
was
breaking
and
Fnday.
reported.
the files of the Kentucky
Valdreo, Carnival of and 25 cents for children.
to
break
the
glass.
serves
a
function
investigated
Sunday
at
Gino's
Work
at
the
mine
resumed
Overture to Colas
Department of Mines and

a

tJl

Mrs. Sebo
injured in

ij

Dateline 1776

Free call service offered

collision

Wallace moved
to Huntington

Golf Club heist
valued at $1,720

=

Weather

¥iao

be'*

Taft files,
wants Reagan
to keep on

l

Housewares Department on the 1st Floor

a

applied to police officers
hired priOr to Jan . 20, 1972
But the Ohio court upheld the
law when applied to officers
hired after that date, saying
the city had a compelling
interest m makmg policemen
live close enongh to the city to
respond to emergencies.

enttne

MONDAY, MARCH 22, 1976

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

the nght to travel is burdened
by such ordinances.
McCarthy c1ted recent high
court rulings which struck
down state
residency
requirements to obtain
welfare and free pubhc
hospital care. But the high
court sa1d this was not the
same as requiring permanent
residency for continued
employment.
In the Youngstown case,
the court let stand an Ohio
court decision striking down

•

•

I

I

WASHING'I'ON (UPI) The Supreme Court ruled
today that local ordinances
requiring city employes to
live in the city do not violate
the constitutional r~ght to
travel.
The court acted In a threepage, unsigned opinion
upholding a Philadelphia
ordmance requiring city
employes to live within the
city limits.
At the same tune , the
justices let stand an Ohio
court ruling Which struck
down a similar ordinance by
Youngstown, Ohio, msofar as
it applied to policemen hll'ed
before the law went into
effect.
Two justices suggested the
Ohio
decis ion
rested
sufficiently on state law
rather than the federal
constitution

Mine was cited 900 times

Lined smooth interior
completely ventilated
clean easily with a
damp
cloth.
Good
selection of styles and ,
colors.
Ideal
for
bedroom or bath.

~pholds

fixing where workers live

Gallia

I

..

liEY - CHARMA BUCK, who was "high pomt girl" for
OHIO BELL
New
Lexlllgton, the champion team of the tournament held at
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Me•gs
H1gh School is no stranger to Meigs residents. Miss
Public Utilities CommissiOn
Buck
visits
her grandmother, Mrs Beatrice Buck at Route 3,
wUl hold the final day of
public testimony Thursday In Pomeroy, quite often and also her uncle, Gail Buck, and
Ohio Bell Telephone Co.'s cousms, Jon Buck and Gloria Wallace Charma also has a
$216 million rate increase number of other relatives in the county Her father is Bennie
suck who was a former football player for Pomeroy High
request.
SChool.
Charma's sister, Cmdy. a freshman, also saw action in
Hearings began last Nov 17
and Thursday's will be the the lOcal tournament
75th day of public testimo~y.
BoTTLE COLLECTORS will he green with envy,
A PUCO decision on the
request will
not be . probably Bill Hams working land near hiS home recently
forthcoming until m•d· uncovered one of the old glass bottles used many years ago by
W. S. Pnce m his drug business which was mPomeroy.
summer at the earliest .

Four full piles of rugged
polyester cord smooth
out every m1le Wide
tread for traction and

mileage. New, modern
,85" Whllewall.

1

PO ME HOY - The public fund drive for t 1e aerial ladder

Southern, Chessie Systems
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Sa ying he was
" damned mad ," Transportation
Secretary
William T. Coleman Jr.
demanded Friday that
two profitable railroads
and
rail
unions
Immediately reach
agreement to allow
purchase of almost 2,500
miles of bankrupt north·
eastern railroads .
said
C oleman
Pr esident Ford had
tak en
a
personal
interest in the failure of
the Southern and the
Chessie systems and
various unions to come
to terms.

. ~*~
Bend -~- - · ~

~~~- IJob /lmjlir·h

Supreme Cou1·t

,..---------------------

32- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, March 21, 1976

I

-

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