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rtw I&gt;all~ S..•nt lilt' !, Muldll'porl-1'umt• r u~, ( )., Vnda_\ .. lurw I, I!m;

c

/1 strike voted out in COlumbus

U1rif i.'ll l' n·..,s lntcrnaLimud

Bl'll

syrnpt1 lhy t·vt·n IJl'fu n· t il~
\ 'll lt ' Wit .'{ I akl'll .
Pit kct lmes Wl'rt.' set up in
Tolt:(lo uut l'i idt• lhl' m~in Ohiu

l\·\,·plroll1' t'P,. report edly
.I\Vnh 11~&lt; \ ;tl lt•ast 2,400 union

Be II Teleph one il usi ness
officijS Thursday.

t\

('nrnnr un it•;rtiuns

Wr ~rkr

, .., r•r Ar rlt' ri l·rr st rikt·

lht•

~ ~ .1111 ',1

'I H

Oiliu

tl!b( 1., Thur·stlay engulfed
Ohio iHld

!IHISl uf nurl ht•m
J).l~'lut l

htJI Wii.S \' U\etJ duwn in
{ '(•hunbus
Tht· \.,d\wut tllc1! ht.'I!UJ11ast

l'rida\
W t•dtrP,l!dd~'

ln
f.-' lt•v t&gt;land
spre;Jd tu tht•

Pi c kets

a hm

Wt' i'l'

&lt;'Sta hli sht•d
by
CWA
JJil•mhcrs around Ohio Bell
in Akrm1, bu t it was
nul determined how many
wor kt·rs were uff the job

A\.; r~tr r

('UII llnunity rc l e~ tion s fur Ohio
111 ( 'r r\urn lrus, huweV('f' , a Bl' ll
i11 , Day ton, EJ~.
'sHb·:ta tl l J;l! nurnlx_•r " of the Clotfr ldcr , sa id there was an
·rppro,'\itli:Jt(•ly 45U llll'I~IIK• r s 11nauthurized wo rk stupp&lt;.~ ge
('\\' A I ~wc1l 4:\20 wilu
-.llov. t·tl up fur ;1 !T it'l'ling
J'httrsdHy mgll t n'Jl'C lPd tht•
1i

Hlt• il

uJ d

Sll'lkP .

Loc;1l ~:! :1 11 Pn•sid rnl John
ll :t)\llt'r wuult l nut providt•
p •eifw \uling n·s ults . The
( 'olmnhn.; lnt·a l n 'JH·cst1 nts
ahour !10\l wo r·kl•rs. There
Wt' t'l' so m ~· ·15 union ll·lt'lllhers
:11 :1 Ci! llll nbus suppl y room
1\ ll'n
W{' I'P
striking in

(Continued from page 1)
asked if he as chief had th e

fMEIGS THEATRE

J.on&lt;lon. ' J·: ber

IONIGfJr

~.l tu rrt,,., ,

W,1 Jt 01 sney 's

) IH"'W Slo1 rt s ,tl 1 p.m .

,\Y'C ''"'~'".J~~m ,....,.

bui ldings.

Pi ckens.

McCoy

;111d

r.:u uncil

I J Wlll bc r ~.

The Administration- Ma yor Fred Hoffman and Counciltoday urgl'd Middleport residents to support Jhe :l-mill
"J!Cnllion CXJlCnse levy on the ballot June 8.
This levy will provide $24,000 per year over a fiv'e-yea r
period : $1 2,000 per year of this would be used for maintenance
and improvement of slre.ls in the village. During 1976 the
village street fund had receipts of $26,796.05 against absolut ely
necessa ry expenditures of $31,156.81.
·
Proper maintenance of streets cannot be made without
additional revenue. The village in 1976 is paying only one
employee from the street fund in order to use more available
money for me~tcrials and maintenance.
Costs of street repair have been zooming upward for
several years with no increase in revenue in tllis fund , Street
Department •·evenue comes from the gasoline tax, license
paite fees and the general fund.
Heside11ts are •·eminded that other villages have operation
expe nse levies and Middleport does not. Local tax rates are
among the lowest in the county ,
"Id's all get behind this levy and show that we are willing to
pay a lillie more tax for the operation of our village government . Other villages do, why can't we 7 , " said Mayor Hoffma n.

Kathryn Crow,
Mr . iHH.I

Polllt•rov Souther n Ba ptist
whu upc.JICd the ll lt'Cti llg with
pnJyc r . and rvt ary Chtl llCey,

G

~.JO'~i.r.t:'J»t"'J·-----·

I

~..:uud t• nm

Dre111 , Ura !.ar gent. Oris

I ··) li !l!l li'. !I ~ F S T of lt1e111
/ .1 1 1 ,j,JJ. W~1ile. Do J,&gt; t&gt;y.
1fl.t ,f,!•JI '·ll"•'ty. S I~Pp y
.]

right 1u

( 'uuncil adv ised thu l tul ordi nam:e wo uld h&lt;.Jve tu he
pre parl'd and passed tu give
hi Ill Lhi~, pmve r· .
1\ Ut' !H i lfl~ we re Mnyo r·

Hubbard. Hollie Ste war t,
Hud y S!cwHr!. Pat Pettlc1·son,
.Jr :m Uuerr , llic Hev . Smitli of

{ TI 'C hlli CO io r )

,,

Road

vote operation levy

Mrs. \V;tller Housh, Janice

SIWW WI1,1T E &amp;
Hi!" I[ V£ N DWARFS

'·t''I IIP/ Dor.

Taxpayers urged to

,JillllllY Joe Hemsley, Burry

Sund ,ly

.Ju n e S 6

~ ~ 1.!;) 1 7

(Jssisumce personnel there.

l'll'rk.

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _"'l

Oscar V. Robinson, 71, dies
SYHACUSE

Oscar

Vernon Huberh;on , 71, died

Friday morning a t l1is Fifth
Sl. res idence in Syracuse
following a lingering illn ess .
He was born May 27, ID05 to
tile late Peter A. and Letha
Hatfield Robertson.
Besides his parents, l1e was

I

IN BY 1:30

preceded in death by three
brothers and one sisler.
Mr . Robertson had resided
in Syracuse the past 18 years.
He, his wife and daughter.
Mrs. Jea n Stout , had owned
m1d operated the Syracuse
Nursing Home for ll1e past 15
years.
.Sur viving are his wife ,

Hallie Bradbury Robertson,
whom he marl'ied Nov. 4,

,,

1924 : two daughters, Mrs.
Stout and Mrs . Kenneth
(Freda 1 Wilson, Stocktown,
Ohio· three brothers, Cecil
and Albert, both of Oak Hill ,
W. Va ., and Bill, Vienna, W.
Va ,: three sisters, Mrs . Lula
Price, Mrs . Flossie Shrewsberry, Oak Hill, W. Va., and
Mrs . Marie Hill, White
Water, Wisconsin .
Funeral services will be
held 2 p.m. Sunday at the
Ewi ng Funeral Home with
the Rev . David Hinson offi ciating . Burial will be in the
School Lot Ceme tery at
Carpenter. The family will
receive friends from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday at
the fun era l home.

Ella May Epple Reuter dies

\

~~

The wa lk11ut
affec ted
telephone customers (n the
Dayton,
Xen ia
a nd

uffi ct'~

there, CWA I••cal 4302 in
Vuurr t ' ~, llt\\' ll
:ut•a
;uu.l Ak rur1 lms 1,600 rncmre rs.
i'hu rsda~ to 'l'ult·do, D;ryton
Ttw
!I Hina ~-:c r
fo r
lfld

Thur sday tJy Bell 's Io n ~
di sl a n e~
an d ditectory

oc
, UT BY 1:33
Wa1 11 to dawdle . .. com e on inside.
But if you·J'C on the run ,
1ry t&gt;ur Drive- in Window
F; ist. Accurate. Efficient.

Mrs. Ell a May Epp le 1Lid a ) Beryl Drumheller,
Reuter, 89, Brownell Ave., Everett, Wash.; 12 grandMiddleport , died early today childr en,
19
greatal the Veterans Memorial grandchildr en, and two
Hospital. Born May 4, 1887, in great-great-grandchildren .
Bedford Township, she was
She was a member of the
the daugh ter of the late John Middleport Church of Christ.
S, and Eliza Miser Epple. Her
Tentative funeral services
husband , William He nry are set for Sunday at 2 p.m. at
Epple, died in 1970.
the Rawlings-Coals Funeral
Survivors include two sons, Home with the Rev . Raul in
Ric hard M., at home, nd Moyer officiating. Burial will
Gerald E., Pomeroy : lwo be in the Riverv iew
dau~hlers , Mr s. John S. Cemetery. Friends may call
I Madeline ) James, Dall as, at the funeral home Saturday
Texas . and Mr s, George from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m .

Things wholesale
up 0.3% .in May
pomeroy

pomeroy

tu~~~ C:~~na
the bcncd
the«*1tury

lttablllhtd 1872

Mt·mher FDIC

,.

........____________.

~ By LEONARD CURRY
WASHINGTON I UPI) -

Incentive price cuts to auto
dealers and suppliers of home
building materia ls helped
hold the increase in wholesale
prices to 0.3 per cent in May,
less than ha lf the rate for
Apr il , the Labor Department
reported today.
The May in crease dropped
from 0.8 per cent in April and
indicated any renewed
inflation would be stalled
until at least late summer .
President 'Ford has called
an economic summit with

U.S. trading partners later
this month to discuss the
prospect of renewed inflation
that co uld thwar t the

economic recovery, now in its
second year.
May's unusual price
declines for lumber products
a nd transportation
equipment prevented an
anticipated sharper increase
in the Whole!!ale Price Index,
which stood ~t 181.8 on a 1967
scale of 100. The WPI was up
only 5 per cent from a year
ago.
But government analysts
said price rises for steel,
copper, lead and other metals
establis hed a "stubborn "
inflationary trend that would
show up later this summer in
finished metal products such
as refrigerators, stoves, cars
and housing materials.
'The WPI measures prices
that producers charge for
sales in large quantities to
wholesalers, jobbers and
distributors. The prices
ultimately will be passed on
to consumers at the retail
level.
A department analyst said
auto manufacturers' offered,
price cuts in the form of
rebates and other incentives
to auto dealers to encourage
retail sales of new cars in the
dosing months of the model
year. The analyst said tllese
spring incentives, which used
to be traditional, had not been
offered for the past two or
three years.
Wholesale prices of lumber
and wood products also fell in
May beca use of excess
building supplies due lo the
weak home constr uction
market . Builde1·s have begun
construction again and
w)10lesalers were taking
advantage of the renewed
demaud fnr sales to clear
invcnl•,rits.

MiddleLoWII areas.
Glotfelder sai d he did not
know how ma ny. CWA

workers left th eir jobs. He
said assista nce on long
distant-e . and directory calls

Local news, in briefs
Pomeroy Lod9e 164,
F&amp;AM. will meet tn specia l
session at 7:30p.m, Monday.

All Ma ster Masons are in -

vi ted.

RACI NE Chapler 134,,0ES ,
will mee t in regular session

at 8 p.m. Monday at the
temple to make plans for the
75th annual inspec ti on.

RACINE Ma sonic Lodge
461 , F&amp;AM. will meet in
regular session at 7: 30 p.m .

Tuesday at the templ e.

THE SYRA CUSE ER
squad tran sported Doug
Houston, 15, Syracuse, to
Holze r
Medi cal · Center

Martha
Mitchell

buried
By ROBERT CAREY
PINE BLUFF, Ark . I UP I)
- The funeral of Martha
Mitchell unwound like her life
- with drama, spirit and
overtones of mystery and
pathos.
Of all the in-crowd of
Nixon's Washington a t the
time of the Watergate , she
was the most outspoken. She
told a nyone who was
prepared to listen of the truth
of the scandal as she saw it.
She was the first to urge
Richard Nixon to resign the
presidency.
" I never learned how to
lie ," she told a reporter at the
lime when her role as the
blithe Southern Belle of the
Nixon administration was
growing sour .
• Her forthrightness ca used
her to be shunned and
isolated. No family member
or fri end was at her bedside
when she died at age 57 of
bone cancer in a New York
hos pital Monday. At her
funeral Thursday there were
only seven persons sitting in
the space reserved for family
and friends .
One of the family members
attending the funeral was her
es tra nged hu sba nd, John
Mitchell, Nixon's attorney
general. Mitchell stared at
his feet throughout the
service. He shed no tears and
showed no emotion .
He spoke only to the two
ministers who officiated at
the services when thev
offered th eir condolonces. H~
did not speak lo other
mourners or to newsmen. He
left quickly.
It was up to others to
eulogize Martha Mitchell.
First there was the spray of
flow ers,
white
chrysa nthemums set on a
field of bright green ferns at
the cemetery which spelled

Thursday at 3 p.m. after
be ing struck by a ( f1r across

from Syracuse pjtrk on SR
12&lt;. It was rf ported he

sustained a bro~ e n leg . The
accident VIla s investigated by

the Stale Highway Patrol.
~

RACINE -

The Ladies

Aux iliary of th e Racine Fire
Department will serve an
election day dinner Tuesday
at the fire house. Serving will
begin at 9 a.m. The menu
in cl udes chi cken
sa lad
sandw ic hes, soup, baked
bean s, cake , pie, coffee and
homemade
ice
cream .
Donations of cakes and pies

are be ing accepted

ACTIONS FILED
An action for trespass,
forcible entry and detainer
for damages has been filed by
Halph Emerso n Doug las,
Coolville, against Adelio
Zamorano and Bertha
Zamorano, Shade, in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Theima Diane Sams, Middleport, fil ed for divorce
against Brady Calvin Sams,
Athens and Phyllis S. Dugan ,
Rutland, and Robert L.
Dugan , Rutland filed for
dissolutiOn of marriage.

would be ma de on an
emergency basis.
In Cleveland last Frida y,
members of CWA Loca l 4309
protested a decision by the
con.pany to allow service
representatives to assemble
and sell telephones in new
Ohio Bell retail store s.
Telephone assembly ''is a
primary job responsibility of
a tel eph one in stall er or

Wagon train is big hit

repairman," said a Local
4309 spokesman.
The issue was not covered
by Ohio Bell ~s contra ct with
the CW A, maintained the
company, because Ule retail
stores are a new venture.
About 1, 200 persons in
Greater Cleveland and some
opera tors and servi ce
representatives .in Can ton
were involved.

BY BOB HOEFLICH
: POMEROY. - The National Bicentennial Wagon Trajn came to Pomeroy and
Middleport Saturday, and it was
delighUul .
Actually, the crowd drawn by the train
wa s consider~bly under the number expected However, those who dld stir
themselves outside for the parade which
left the Middleport Community Park with
entertainment built around a bicentennial
theme, and performed on the upper
parking lot in Pomeroy by a troupe from
Pennsylvania State University , loved
every minute of it.
All of the music for the program was
composed especially for the wagon train
trek which bj!gan last June in Oregon : 'The
train - one of fi~e making the trip to

News •• in Briefs
(Continued from page I)
two JapaneS&lt;: automakers 1Dalsun, Toyota) slipped pa'st tiny
American Motors into lh e fourth and fifth sales spots.
Combined May sales reports Thursday by domestic and
foreign automakers totaled 920,000 new cars - the highest
sales rate since October, 1973, when the start of the Arab oil
embargo u·igger e&lt;l an industry-wide slump.
While the four major U. S. automakers were reporting a 37
per cent again over last May, tile eighth straight month in
which sales have topped year-earlier periods, the foreign
companies said sales were off 4 per cent. Only record-selling
performances by the Japanese Toyota and Da tsun prevented
the foreign share from slipping further.

Elberfelds In ·Pomeroy
I

,

OPEN TONIGHT TIL 8 PM

Bids ·to be opened on June 15
MRS. BETTY MOORE AND
'DAUGIITER, Mary Ann, were among
residents who appeared In costume for
Saturday's bicentennial observance.
Mrs. Moore made the pink and white
gowns especially for SaturdaY's event.

Weather
Sunny and mild Sunday and
Monday . Highs in the 70s and
low 80s. Clear Sunday night.
Lows in the upper !Os and 5~ .

GALUPOLIS - State Senator Oakley
C. Collins (R-Ironton) Saturday said the
Ohio Department of Transportation will
open bids June 15 for construction projects
in Hocking, Fayette and Gallia Counties.
Two bridges on Ohio 93 in Falls Gore
Township, Hocking County , wi,ll -be open
for construction bidding. Approximately
6,386 feet of pavement is needed.

unba

Bridges on.Good Hope - New Holland
Hoads (CR 145) over Compton and Paint
Creeks in Fayette County (Marion and
Wayne Twps .), will be open for construction work bidding. The bridges need
to be replaced.
Bids for the resurfacing o[ 2.33 miles of
Ohio 553 in Gallia County, will be open.

- Paid for by the Citizens of Community
Menta I Health.

At The Inn

UTIGRESS"

tmts

NO. 19

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

GIVES YOU A CHOICE
SO YOU CAN SET THE
CLEANER FOR THE
CARPET NAP.
Reg. 174"' UPRIGHT
Reg. 119\'j ATTACHMENTS
Total Value 194!11

GUNS VS. BOITLES
NABLUS, Israeli - ~cupled Jordan
(UP! 1 - Israeli troops clashed Saturday
with botUe-throwing, tire-burning teenage
Arabs demonstrating on the anniversary
of the start of the 1967 Middle East war

•

•

which ended in the Israeli occupation. It
was the only trouble reported on the West
Bank of Jordan , where nlne Arabs have
died and dozens more have been Injured In
recent wa~es of ~tntl-lsraell violence.

Y(Jur Invited Guest
Reaching More
Than 12,000
Families

entmt
MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

· PRICE 25 CENTS

Heavy turnout of
voters expected
election, voters approved additiona l through the Gallla County Commls•lon
BY DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
(:Al.LIPOLIS '-- A large turnout is millage by 635 votes, 2,244 for compared to and better orgfinlzatl&lt;in within the sheriff's
department.
.
e"''etled Tuesday for the June Primary 1,60!l no votes .
Commissioner
candidates
stumped on
Since 1970, residents have voted on two
Election in Gallia County. As of the noon
the
plaUorm
of
bette1
·
roads,
better
fiscal
deadline Saturday, over. 375 persons had permanent Improvement issues as well as
management
and
better
law
enforcement.
for
the
joint
vocational
school
and
millage
voted absentee ballots with the Board of
Incumbent Democrat commluloner
community college. The June Primary
Elections.
Polls will open at 6:30 a.m. and close features races for sheriff, county com- Joe Stewart Is not seeking reelection. The
at '7:30 p.m. Due to the large number of missioner, prosecuting attorney and clerk job pays ttl.OOO per year.
Two Interesting races are also on the
issues, final results are not expected until of courts.
Hepubllcan
ba llot .where Incumbent
No less than 13persons are seeking the
early Wednesday morning .
ProsecuUng
Attorney
Gene Wetherholt Is
Gallla's registered voters will cast sheriff's nomination, five Democrats,
opposed
by
Hamlin
C. l&lt;lng and
seven
Republicans
and
one
Independent
their ballots for the Repbllcan and
REPRESENTATIVES OF THE Bicentennial Wavnn
commission members Charles Bostic and Thelma Elliott,
lncwnbent
Clerk
of
Court,
Louise Burger,
filed
before
Ute
deadline
on
March
25.
Train Pilgrimage t.o Pennsylvania met with the Gallia Co.
Democratic presidential candidates,- all
Toby Cunningham, captain of the boat, "The Vic!9ry,"
bas
Republican
opposition
from
newsman
Incumbent
Oscar
C.
Baird,
Re~ubllcan,
Is
·
state
issues,
the
local,
district,
state,
and
Bicentennial Commission Friday afternoon and related Uleir
carrying the wagons; Marllyn Robison, national trails
Dick Thomas. ,
not seeking reelectloo .
·
national races.
experiences on the ·wagon train. The train of Conestoga
coordinator for the pilgrimage; Rollie Hebel, national wagon
Running unopposed $re Incumbent
Sheriff candidates are: Democrats,
In addition, central committeemen
wagons, which is traveling up the Ohio River to Valley Forge,
master; Charles Adkins and Thomas Moulton, commission
County
Recorder, Mrs. ll:valee Myers, a
Nell
McMahon,
James
M.
Montgomery,
· Pa. on barge, was in the Gallipolis-Point Pleasant Area
will be elected In each precinct and In the
co-chairmen, and .members Diane Matthews and Manning
Republican;
Dr. Oonahl R. Warehime,
James
G.
Scott,
Sld
Vance
and
George
E.
'Thursday and Friday. Pictured here, from the left, are
Wetllerholt.
·
Gallipolis City School· System, voters wlll
Galli
a
County
Republican coroner; Frank
Woodyard
.
decide the fate of a four mlll operating
Republican candidates are R. Bill H. Mills, Jr ., Republican, seeking his first
levy.
Interest has increased ln recent Angell, Jim Baldwin, Allen Monroe Cox, term as Gallla County TI'easurer and
weeks, on the passage of the city school Gilbert R. Plants, Paul J. Plymale, Ray James P. Baird, a Republican seeking his
Roberts, and Denver A. Walker. The four- first term as county engineer.
levy .
Mills will be replaci ng veteran
year
term pays $$,200 per year .
A spokesman for the Gallipolis City
treasurer
Oty M. Stewart of Vinton, who
Two
county
commissioners
will
be
Board of Education said this is the first
BY BOB HOEFLICH
did
IMJt
seek
reelection .
only Democrat candidate.
elected
in
November
to
begin
four-year
ce ntral committee, post races. One is in levy sought for operational purposes In the
POMEROY - Meigs County polling
Baird Is seeking the engineer's post
Republican sheriff incumbent, Robert Olive Precinct where Clifford l..&lt;lngenette school district since Nov . 3, 1970. In that terms on different days .
places will open at 6:30a .m. Tuesday as C. Hartenbach will be 'opposed in the
Seeking the Republican nod for the ctlrrcntly held by Paul Stull. Stull, a
the first June primary election in the state Tuesday primary by Republican Bruce is opposing Francis H. Andrew. The
Jan. 2 term ate Gilbert Caldwell, Uoyd E. Republican, could not seek the elected
second is in Letart Pet. where Pauline
gets underway.
Danner, BUley L. Halley, lind George E. position since he lives ln Jackson County.
Davis of Rutland. The winner of the
Some 13,000 voters are eligible to cast nomination will be opposed in the fall by Wolfe is opposing l&lt;lla J . Proffitt. ·
Salaries for Ule elected officers are :
Woodward. Republicans seeking the Jan. 3
Unopposed Democratic candidates for
ballots in the Tuesday primary and polls the one Democrat candidate for the
Recorder, $8,900 per ·year; Prosecuting
term
are
Clarence
E.
Johnson
will b~ open un til 7:30p.m. for the con- sheriff's post, James J. Proffitt, Route 4, central committee include: David M.
(incumbent), Paul Dean Niday and ·Bruce Atty., $8,000; Treasurer, $~,000; Clerk of
Brickles, West Bedford; Henry L. Hunter,
s.
Stout. ·
· Courts, $9,300 and County Engineer,
venience of voters. No registration is Pomeroy.
North Chester: Ceila Bailey, South
required in Meigs Coulnty ; a voter must
Democrats going for Jan. 2 are l&lt;lnnle $15,700.
Chester; Vicki Proffitt, Lebanon; Chester·
GALLIPOLIS
Gallla
County
only be a citizen and a resident of the
There will be four separate battles for
Burger
and William I.. Walters. Archie E.
The fourth race facing Republicans on E. Wells, Reedsville; Norman 0. Weber,
sheriff's
deputies
Friday
Investigated
precinct for 30 days to vote.
central
committeemen posts. There are
Meadows
and
Donald
Wright
are
opposing
the county level Tuesday Is that of
On the county level there are four nominating a prosecuting attorney can- Orange; Samuel B. May, Rutland Vlllage; vandalism at Macedonia Church located each other for the Jan. 3 term on the three races In the Republican circles and
one Democratic race.
Republican races on which voters will didate . The candidates are incumbent, Norman C. Will, Wesl Rulland ; Sam on Macedonia Rd. off Uttle Bullskin. Democratic Uckel.
Hicks, Jr., Salem: . John David Gerard,
In Addison\Twp. Clarence E. Shriver, "
decide.
Sheriff candidates have campaigned
Bernard V. Fultz , Middleport, and Middleport first; Kenneth E. Imboden, Deputies said someone shot 15 holes
through the front door.
Seeking the nomination to run for the Frederick W. Crow, Ill, Route 2, Racine.
and
Ray Haskins, are seeking the
011 law and order, using literature focused
Three bullets allegedly fi red from a .22 011 vandalism, breaking and enterlilgs, Republican nod while Steven Betz 18
county commissioner post, term beginning The nominee will be unopposed in the fall. Middleport second; Lewis l..&lt;lng, Middleport 1hird ; Lawrence M. Stewart,
Jan. 2, 1977, are five candidates, James R.
Candidates on the county level who are Middleport fourth; Audrey Young, caliber gun were found Inside some of the drug traffic and abuse, professlonalizatlon opposing Lenora Mooney on the Democrat
church furniture .
Frecker, Route 3, Pomeroy; Ralph W. unopposed are all Republicans and all are
and upgrading the sheriff's department to side.
Pomeroy
first:
Olin
D.
Boothe,
Pomeroy
A fuel oll tank near the church had cooperation with community residents.
In Gallipolis · Twp. Republicans
Ours, Route 1, l..&lt;lng Bottom, the in- incumbents. They are Larry E. Spencer,
'cumbent ; Robert F. Sno.wden, Rutland; Racine ,' clerk of courtrs; John C. Bacon, second ; Virginia V. Blazewicz, Pomeroy been drained aecory:llng to deputies.
(CGntlnued on page 2)
Other blg Issues include financial support
Charles R. Hysell, Route I, Middleport, Route 4, Pomeroy, judge of the common third ; Catherine L. Welsh, Pomeroy
and Charles H. Bartels, Pomeroy. The pleas court; Eleanor Robson, Minersville, fourth; Evelyn B. Thomas, Bradbury;
nominee of tile Republicans will be op- county recorder; George M. Colllns, Route Eliza Powell, Harrisonville ; Ernest A.
posed In November by James E. Roush, I, Reedsville, county treasurer; Wesley A. Wingett, Racine Village; Woodrow T.
Zwllling, Syracuse Village; VIrginia A.
the only Democrat candidate.
·
Buehl, Pmeroy, engineer; Rankin Ray Fisher, Minersville, and Edwin S. Cozart,
Two Republicans seek the nomination Pickens, Pomeroy, coroner. Not only are
to run for the county commissioner post, the listed incumben ts unopposed in lhe Racine Precinct.
Republicans have eight races in that
term beginning Jan . 3, 197LThey are primary but also in the fall.
many
precincts come June 8 for the
Richard E. Jones of Pomeroy and the
The Democrats will also elect central central committee of that party . Those
inc umbent, Bernard D. Gilkey. The comniltteemen at the June primary . 'There
nominee will be opposed in the fa ll by are five precincts in which there are no precincts and candidates are Helen M. _
James Bailey, Route 1, l&lt;lng Bottom, the candidates. 'The Democrats have two Quivey and Richard W. Sargent, E.
Bedford: Gary Dennis Evans, Clarence
Lawrence, Lebanon; Harry Hill , Kathryn
Philson, Letart : 0. J . Pennington and
William H. Chapman, Orange; Rogert G.
Swick and James R. Sheets, West
Rutland; · George A. Meinhart and
Haymond A. Klbes, Middleport First
POMEROY - Two county-wide tax that the levy would provide funds for street Ward; George Nesselroad Jr., and George
111easures will face Meigs Coynty voters ligh ts and street maintenance. The second H. Warner , Rock Springs; Earold Dean
Tuesday and four others will be decided issue in Middleport is a one mill l ev~ .for and Harold G. Norris , Pageville; Otis F.
Knopp and Douglas Wickline, Racine
upon in two subdivisions.
the fire department.
Precinct.
All county voters will east ballots on a
The fire departm ent has Indicated,
Unnopposed Rep ublicans for central
two-lentils of a mill levy ( 10 years) to however, that It prefer voters support a
committee
and their respective precincts
provide funds'for continued operation of large tax measure later on when a new fire
are:
Robert
L. Jones , West Bedford;
me M utneastern. Uhlo Emergency truck wlll be needed. The department has
Robert
Wood,
North Chester : David
Medical Service which handles emergency Indicated that II would prefer voters
Koblentz,
South
Chester;
Granville Lyons,
medical care and hospital transfer ser- choose the street maintenance and street
Columbia; Faul F. Andrews, Olive ; Alvin
vice.
'lighting levy at this time.
Reed,
Reedsville;
Eli zabeth
All voters also wjll decide on a twoThe third tax .measure before voters Hobstetter, Rutland Village ; Pearl
tenths of one mill me~tal health levy with Tuesday in Middleport is for one-half mill
E. Wlle, East Rutland: Alva Swick,
proceeds to be Meigs county's sharf of the which would be used for recreation.
Salem
: David Ohlin ger, Middleport
money needed for the mental health
In the Soulthern Local School District,
Second
; Bernard D. Gilkey, Middleport
program which Is conducted cooperatively a $420,000 bond' issue - 3.32 mills for 20
111ird;
Dorothy !'· McGuffin, Middleport
tor Meigs, Jackson and Gallia Counlles. years - will face voters for the second
Fourth;
Eldon Morris, Bradbury; Lola
Middleport Village will have three tax time. The funds would provide for conClark,
Harrisonville:
Cora B. Beegle,
questions to settle. Each would be in effect structing, furnishing and equipping an
Racine
Village
:
Ern
est
E. Sisson .Jr ., ·
for five years. A three mill levy wlll be addition to Southern High School in Racine
. MEIGS BASEBALL FANS followed Coach Dale
High Sc~l Tournament. The Marauders dropped a 1-11
listed on the ballot for current expenses. and for the pu~chase of bleachers [or the Syracuse; William F. Harris. Minersville;
heartbreaker despite a one-bitter by Meigs hurler Jeff
Harrison's Marauders to Columbus Friday where MHS
(ConUnued on page 2)
However, villa~e officials have indicated high school gymnasium.
ll!eKinney. See details on Page 20 (Photo by Jim Hamm) .
t.Jttlcd Elida in the 1976 Class AA semifinal·
the Ohio

Polls open at 6:30 on

Tuesd~y

Church windows near
Little Bullskin shot

Cleans
Shags!

ADJUSTS TO DEEPCLEAN ANY CARPET
FROM THE LOWEST
NAP TO THE
THICKEST Sl lAG.
Reg. 179"' UPRIGHT
Reg. 11911 ATTACHMENTS
Total Value 19911

$7 4~~.
1424-B

CLEANS

TONIGHT
8:30 TIL 12:30

The MEIGS INN
. Ph. 992-3629

OHIO WAGON - The Ohio Wagon pulled by white mules was one of the
wagoos taking part in the National Blcentennlal Wagon Train Saturday mQrnlng .

SUNDAY, MAY 6, 1976

COMBINATION OFFER! POW
L
UPRIGHT WITH CLEANING TOOLS

3 GALS
FROM PARKERSBURG

Among residents attending the
Saturday celebration were some In old
fashioned costumes.
A barge holding the 20 state wagons,
not participating in the parade, was
moored above Pomeroy for viewing
beginning at 4 a.m. Saturday.. The observance in Pomeroy was concluded about
noon and the unit moved on towards
Ravenswood , W. Va .
Pictures here and on page 2show some
highli~hts of Saturday's events.

.I

NOTICE
TO THE MINERS OF
MEIGS COUNTY
YOUR CONTINUED SUPPORT AND
VOTE FOR THE MENTAL HEALTH
LEVY IS NEEDED
TUESDAY, JUNE 8TH

Pomeroy firemen staged a chicken
barbecue in connection with Saturday's
event and a souvenir stand - part of the
wagon train - operated on the upper
parJ&lt;ing lot with 10 percent of t~e proceeds
to go to the local bkentennial commission
headed by John Rice .
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman and
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
presented the certificates of redl'&lt;licatiun .

+

Reeves .

out : "Martha was right."
The•·e was no card. The
fun eral h'.•1!e sa id John
Mitchell had picked up a lithe
cards becaU&gt;e he did not want
the public to know the donors.
As Mrs. Mitchell's casket
was carried from the church ,
a black woman cried out ,
"'Oh, Martha , Martha, " and
sobbed uncontrollably.
Outside tile church she
identified herself as Fanny B.
Co leman of Manchester ,
Ohio, a childhood playmate of
Martha Mitchell. Mrs.
Coleman sai d her mother had
"raised" Martlla Mi\chell,
helping in the big two-story
house on the tree-lined street
where Martha lived.
·,. will always remember
her as a deep-dimpled,
happy-go-lucky, forev ersmiling , girl ," Mrs. Coleman
said.
Earlier the Rev . Richard A.
Dodds told a bout 450
carefull y groomed and
prosperous looking mourners
who fill ed to about threefourths capacity the church
where Martha Mitchell was
baptized :

Hebel, rece ived ce rt ificates of
rededication to America signed by local
residents.
These will be taken to ,Valley Forge,
microfilmed, and placed in a time capsule
to be opened in 100 years. Also, members
of .llie local committee were presented
certificates O[ appreciation from the
wagon train personnel.

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohw 'V11lley
VO. 11

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED Wyllis ·
Davis , Middleport ; Li la
Carman , Chaun cey; Dorothy
Johnson , Racine; Eva
Barrett, La ngsville ; Edith
McCoy, Syracuse .
DISCHARGED - Larry
Thomas, Janice Young,
William Rice , Helen Johnson,
Yvonne Se llers, Car olyn

Valley Forge, Pa.- wintered over before
resuming the jaunt to Valley Forge in
March.
The tr ain visiting Pomeroy ls
traveling via water in order to emphasize
tlle importance of water travel in the
early settling of the nation.
The parade of three state wagons Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Ohio was joined by several local entries Including two w~gon type vehicles, and
v.arious organizations with entries including fire equipment. The S!luthern High
School Band was also on hand as a unit in
the parade.
The upper parking lot was blocked off
!rmil traffic for Ule morning and the
musical program . was presented there .
The wagon master of the train, Rollie

SHOP SATURDAY 9:30 TO 5 PM

POMEROY

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Two levies in Meigs

•

.,
l

·'
''

'··

.,

�3- The Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sunday, June 6. 1976

--

•

~;

I

Ohio may put· final approval Eight rn
court to
on ·Presidential candidates

Almost impossible
Ms Penelope .
to answer byMacGillicuty

0 [ '1\

Dea.r Readers:

_
Many letters are coming in from all over the United States
pertaining to the Most Interesting Personality in Meigs County
for the year 1976. Next week we will publish the results of
voting so far in Osltosh, Wisconsin. For the benefit of the
readers who do not know the names of the nominees for the
Most Interesting Personality in Meigs County for 1916, the
following form sheet is sutmitted :
Edison Hobslettet - even money - an early favorite.
Rodney Downing - even money - is a cofavorite because
his father was adose personal friend of Bernard Baruch.
John Wolfe - :1-1 - Slow ·starter.
Jim Clatworthy - long shot - due to the fa ct that he is a
former CIA agent - odds, 3().1.
Wallace Bradford - :1-1 in betting - has serious following
with Santa Claus and children.
George Carpter - runs well in stretch - odds, 3-I.
Thereon Johnson - ofi his feed, odds, 3-1.
John Fick - even money , has a great following in Europe .
Whiskers Kibble - dark horse - odds, 10-1.
Red Carr - has not been running well latelY.- odds, H .
Gayle Price - good stretch runner - odds, 4-1.
David Ohlinger - woo last time out - odds, :1-1 .
Edward Frccker - could be a realsleeper, odds :1-1.
Eugene Fink - good distance runner, odds 4-1.
Orion Roush - good breeding, odds 2-1.
Pete Shields - good mudder , odds 2-1.
Ben "Chummy" Quisenberry.- has fllll ~ny fine races
·- one at Syracuse Downs, odds, S.l.
PhU Kelly - areal dark horse - does well at night , odds 01.
Ben Batey - a heavy favorite - he will get heavy backing
in Middleport because of his popularity - even money.
Odds by Leo the Greek - Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.
Signed: Big Mac

THIS PONY PULLED CART of the Meigs County 4-H Pleasure Riders was another
excellent entry in Saturday's bicentennial wagon train parade.

. •POMEROY MAYOR CLARENCE ANDREWS, Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffma n, and
John Rice, Meigs Bicentennial chainnan, Ito r, pictured in conference during a lull in
activities at the wagon train bicentennial observance Saturday .

I'ITIING RIGHT INTO th e covered wagoll-parade
Saturday was this wagon entry from the Rock Springs
Grange. Grange mem bers in costumes walked beside the
impressive wagon.
·

Officials only are permitted
GALLI POLIS - Unless it's
official business, no one will
be perrnitted inside the Galli a
County Election Board office
Tuesday night once election
returns start coming in ac cording to election board
offi cials.
In recent elec tions, officials
said too many outsiders have
fill ed th e offi ce, ca usin g
much confusion and conn tin£
delays for. the board and its
clerks.
Local and outside news
media represe ntatives will be
given ta lly sheets 1n an ad·

joining room after precinct
result s a re tab ula ted by
board offi cials.
No one other th an election
board offici als will be permitted to use telephones in
the election board offi ce .
Presiding judges in Galli a's
36 precincts ·are t•equlred to
call in all stale and regional
results before bringing in
their tally sheets. thus the
election board phone line
must be kept clear at all
times .

Election board offi cia ls
have also requested th a t

Heavy turnout
(Continued from page I)
Charles M. Neal and James H. Walker are
opposing each other. Willard Clagg and
incumbent Eugene Stevens have locked
horns in the Republican committeemen's
race ln Bidwell Pet.
ln.Clay Twp. two Republicans, Connie
L. Hemphill and Vance Baker a re seeking
nomination.
Independent ca ndidates
who
automa,ticaliy go to the November General
Election ballot are Vernon Kuhn , sheriff's
candidate and James C. Saunders,
ca ndidate for county commissioner.
'

Li sted below are pr ecinc t wo rkers for
Tuesday's Pr imar y. The fi r st p~rson in
each group wi ll serve as presi ding judge.
Wor ke r s are :
Add ison Twp. - Ora Elliott, Ber·
nadine Shr iv er . Eve lyn Pen nington,
Barbara Russell , Ela ine Jividen and
Pauline Shaver .
Addison Pet. - Jan et Hughes , Ru by
Luc as. M arg ueri t e La whon Eve l yn
Sisson, Jun e Quil len an d Artie R. Ra lke.
Cheshire Twp. - Fred Sisson, Leo
Rupe, Wilm a Weiman, Zefli e Loveday ,
Caro lyn El kin s and Joan Conkle.
Cheshire Pel.- Har tle H. Roush, Lui a
Pres ton. Heleh Pres ton , Forest Gi l lenwater , Jewe ll Mart in and Helen A. Spears.
Clay Twp. - Virginia McCalla , Emma
Newm an, Nan cy Evan s, Wilma J .
M ooney , Marian Smi th and Dary l Sheets.
1

Polls .open
(Continued from page I)
Evelyn Clark, Pomeroy First ; Robert
Hysell , Pomeroy Second; Charles W.
Legar Sr .. Pomeroy Third ; Leslie F. Fultz.
Pomeroy Fourth .
Meigs Coun ty Republicans will also
· vote either lor Ronald Reagan or Gerald
Ford for President and the following other
candidates :
Robert Taft ,.Jr ., unopposed for U. S.
Senator ; Clarence E. Miller, unopposed
for lOth District Congressional seat ; Don
P. Brown, William J. McCrone, John W.
Po!ter, justice . of Supreme Court , term
beginning Jan . I, 1977; J . Gareth Hitch- ·
cock, William J . Morrissey, Jr ., justice of
the Supreme Court, term beginning Jan . 2.
1977; Ronald R. Calhoun , Thomas W.
Mitchell , John Donald Ratcliff, Franklin
Sheeler. for fourth district judge of the
Court of Appeals; William A. Keslar or
Ralph P. Triplett for state central committeeman post; Marian S. Sinsel for
woman member of state central committee; Harold &amp;hritter, Merrll Triplett
for state representative, 92nd district.
Meigs Coun ty Democrats will vo te on
four candidates seeking nomination to run
for United States Senator. They are
Richard B. Kay, Howard M. Metzenbaum ,
James D. Nolan and James V. Stanton.
Other candidates Democrats will vote on
include: J. Kermit Gatten, James A.
Plummer, for representative to Congress,
lOth District ; Robert E. Cook, John F.
Corrigan , A. William Sweeney, Supreme
Court Juslice, term beginning Jan. I. 1977:
John D. Judge , RalphS. Lochar , Russell
H. Volkema , Supreme Court Justice, term
beginning Jan . 2, 1977; Lawrence Grey,
Fourth District Court of Appeals ; William
A. Lavelle, for state committeeman;
Alicia J . Brown, Mary C. Gallaher, state
committee woman; Ronald H. James ,
state representative, 92nd district.

in terested indivi duals refrain
fr om callin g the electi on
board office Tuesday night
for inform ation on vari ous

a. m. and close at 7: 30p.m.
Poll ing places ar e as
follows:
1-A - Gallipolis Motor Co.,
236-2nd Ave.
1-8 - Old school building
below the Washington School
Bldg .
2·A - Ci ty Building.
2·8 Bob Sa unders

races . Due to th e large
number of ball ots and the
expec ted big voter turnout,
offi cials
need
th is
cooperation 111 order to make
post-elec tion work as smooth
as possible.
Quaker Sta te , corner 2nd lind
The Gili lia Cowtty Board of
Elections Saturday named
the various polling places
in side the city limits for
Tuesday's Primary. Voting
precincts will open at 6:30

Clay Pet. -

......

..

Pine St.
. 3-A - Washington &amp;hool
Building.
3-B - Mary's Beauty
Salon, 17 Vinton St.
4-A - Uni on Bldg:, upper
2nd and Mill Creek.
4-B City Garage,
Ches tnut St.
4-C - Bastiani Building, 95
Sycamore St.
Ga llipoli s Township Court House .
Kanauga Precinct - Court
House.

~

Mystery Guest last week - Louise Hines.
Dear Ms. Mac Gillicuty,
Your mystery guest who is a leading politician in ~elgs
County and ·a close friend of Hu~rt Humphrey 1s Jack C~!Sp of
Langsville, 0. - Thank you , Vicky Fink, Rio Grande, Ohto.
P.S. - My father-in~aw is one of yout candidates for most
interesting people Of Meigs County Eug~ne M. Fink.
1Columbia Gas l.
'

Kyle Donnall y, Esther DaVIS, Thelma
Gar Iic and Lynn An get.
Gallipolis Twp. - Wltdred Durham ,

TWENTY WAGON TRAINS on barges with the boat in the back were moored near the
Pomeroy levee Saturday morning for area residents to view. Residents were not permitted
to board the barge, however.

Fresher coffee
from the freezer

approval on the two
candidates lvho will square
off in the fall .
Both President Ford and
Jimmy Carter are aiming to
put unapJroachable distance
between themselves and their
adversaries by capturing
hefty chunks of the 97
Republican
and
152
Democrati c convention
delegates at stake .
They have made no secret
of the fact that solid victories
in Ohio, coupled with wins or
strong showings in New
Jersey, could put them within
handshaking range of
nomination
at
their
respective conventions this

swruner.
· Backers

of

former

INI'LATION FIGHTER
economi cal than painting.
0..' (... " \-;, 0 •
Bradshaw.
·
DEAR POLLY - Co!!ee is Also, ! had a clear conscience
Kanouga Pet.- Dorlha Adams, Ethel now so expensive. My mother
1-.v.."""'" ~ "'""'s.o.l...... ~
about buyin g a new cloth, ·
Bra dbur y, Pina Ward , Bess ie Berr idge.
U
&lt;'1 \&lt;.:;s W Q. ~&gt;• ~· -th; " \ ~ u '1 1 o u..r \1(,\ O.s
gave
me
an
idea
for
keepmg
since nothing was wasted. Karen Brownell and Evelyn Rothgeb.
""' ~"'t ~ ~ "' i"'j
loa_,..._ &lt;;;.\-,Q.\I) &lt;,s
Centerville Pet . - Ba rba ra Lewis. it tasting fresh even aft er it is ELIZABETH
Opal Ferrell , John W.· Eva ns. Carolee V. a few days old . Rather than
,
.-&lt;?.x\
-lo ~\.,~ h&lt;&gt;'&lt;\&lt;.. " " 01'" """'"&gt;'\.'\' w'r,'1 t..h, c ~" ro.i" t::J
DEAR
POLLY
I
instead
Lewis, ~ n .Dan iels and Judy Hall .
Sprtngltetd Twp. - Mary AI ice brew a fres h pot each day I I of throwing away expensive
po..v~ """..._ \NO..~
Ski dm ore , Li zz ie Fanning . E. L. Fi sh, only drink one or two cups) , I leftover coffee, freeze it in ice
" I"'"' .!&gt; "'"' ..
Allee Spr ague , Gold ie Swisher and make a lull pot and have my cube trays. Use these cubes
Promolia Sm ith .
de c ~ {.., '*•:J
one cup. I pour th e remaining to serve in iced coffee and the
Bidwett Pel. - Vivian Schult z. Mar y coffee into a glass percolator
be verage will not become
Jean Black. Joanne Bass, Judy Hami lton ,
or jar and let it cool. Then I weak when the ice melts. Mari e Wagner and Ada Payne.
Walnut Twp. - Ellis Thornton, Chloe put it in the refri gerator.
M. M.
Fe Ilure. Dan Wagon er , Dan Stewar t.
Whenever l want a cup of
Polly will send you one of
Carroll Mitter and Elva Gn be .
coffee
I
pour
only
the
needed
her
" peachy" thank·you
Gr~en Twp. Carot yn Ca ldwell ,
Helen Burnett, Bonnie Cr emeens, Lyda am ount .into a small pot and card s, Ideal for framing or
Hud so n , Ja net Pe ttu s and Th elm a warm it. This keeps what placing In your family scraP'
'
I
Wooward .
•
I
remains free of that stale book, if she uses your favorite
Green Pet. No. 1 - Donna L. Youn g,
Patty Jones. RoK ie Salzman , Evelyn coffee taste that develops Pointer, Peeve or Problem In
1 o're '-l &lt; s &gt;;:;, • 1:-\-.e.. · \., v ':\ (=&gt;u:\ ll'&gt; 1" "u...from standing in a metal her column. Write Polly's
Elli ott. Thelma Cox an d Betty Smith.
Green Pel. No. 2 - Helen Eil een percolator. It saves time, Pointers in care of this news1
.
~ \ 3hlM~~
Carter , Louise Ellio1t, ,Daniel N. Greene, helps conserve and cuts down paper.
0
f
\:.&lt;..,.
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s;-"
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"""- I( i o..s
Car lene Greene , Noe l F. Ma ssie and on my food bill. - OLGA.
Donna Neal .
.,,... "'i ~.,.... 1-.~ ..... ""' l\QL
Green Pet. No. 3 - Beul ah Mil ls,
1.,.. ~&lt;:&gt;...&lt;..,._~,..~
C..• &lt;.. " "''"~
'o.sJ,. - "'"' \-\,a.\: ._. W-&lt;.
Barbara Weeks . El ea nor Tho m as ,
DEAR . POLLY - An old
~
~00"'1 (ll.S~ ~S.!;J ~
Patri cia Johnston , Dorothy Sheets and sui tcas e ll1at looks very
Jean L. Henderson.
o\11c
o...&gt;,:,o.-,
s
\.i\1
""'d~
•
..,,
"""""'-t""'"\
"'~"~"~.k - +\.,,.,.._
Greenfield Twp. Foste'r Lewis , shabby can be made to look
\
s.
no
o
-t\..t-1""
C. LV'(.
Roscoe Pierson . Bertha Carter , Juli a almost lik e new wh en
Roese,. Marve l Haney and Ca rol yn Sue covered with that adhesive
Potter.
·
backed paper. One is also
Guyan Twp. - Cr ystal Capper, Eil een
sometimes
sa ved the cost of
Montgomery , Doroth y Bea ver , Ha ze l
Montgomery, Shirley Lill y and Nan cy buyin g a new one . - ROSE .
CHARLES E. PRIODE
Ca mobelt .
DEAR POLLY - Rubbing
YOR K, Pa. - Charles E.
Guyan Pct.- Carri e Wil liam s, Velda alcohol is an inexpensive
Prlode , a former resident of
Si mm s. Edna Montgomery, Eli za beth
Zl- &lt;locQJ'
Wood yard , Delta Moste ller and Loretta bathroom cleaner. I use it in Pomeroy, died here Saturday
· e. s~"""'' "'\1'"\ ~n ) '\" "''- 'i!. ~ "' ~~~.. \\- loCMwn '» u, '1~-..r 11 1( 1
Ran kin .
between thorough scrubbing morn ing follow ing a lingering
illness.
Harrison Twp. - Chris t Artus, ·lla jobs and it cleans, disinfects,
S o en.~x ~·~\d..T-tn c:.a.. . . . _ o. c: . "-\-ct\J~ \J.t i..Y,..,I.)\J...\ C..'f\ '' o~t.Y ...-\- \ t;) l"\o,j_ 11
He wa s pre'ceded In death
Artus, Cathy M artin , Garnet Queen, shines and leaves the bath by his parents, Mr . .and Mrs .
\-1'\ ~1" \ "t'f\ i
~~ \-Q)(" ,
Darlene Cremean s and Shirl ey Boster.
E. H. Prlode ; hts w1fe , Ruth ,
Huntington Twp. - · Esta M. Dee t, room smell ing .clean. in 1975, and a hatf.brother,
Lavina Swisher. 'llelma Huntley , Margaret BETTY.
Si)l1 ms. Desta Potstey and Lil lian M. Rece.
DEAR POLLY - 1find that Harold ITag ) Long.
!:&gt;urvivlng are a aaugnter,
Huntington Pet. - Marian L. Me. those sheets of fabric softener
Sue Schroeder ; a son -in-law,
Carley, Cynth ia Cardwel l, Evel yn Daft ,
Bonnie Denney , Lucy Wilfong and Verna tha t go in the dryer can be Lynn Schroeder, and a 1
Letters of oplolou are welcomed. Tbey should be 1
torn in half lengthwise. Each grandson , Andy Schroeder:
Chamberla in.
two
sisters.
Mrs.
Russell
1
less
lban 300 words Ioag (or be subject to ftductloo by 1
Morgan Twp. - Maur ice Thomas, half is sufficient for a load of
Margaret L. Mitchell , Glen na Long , Becky clothes. The static cling is (Jane) Brown, Pomeroy. and I lbe editor) and must be slgaed willl die slpee•s ad- I
Mrs . Robert ILeona) DorDenney , Tommy Sue Knight and Vickie E.
gone and the roll gues twice man , Corning, N. Y .; a I dress. Names may' be withheld upoo pabUeatiGII, I
Meade.
brother, James. South Point,
However, ou reqaetl, names wiD be dlaclosed. Lelten I
Ohio Twp. - Sad ie Ri ehle. Grace as far. - ALICE.
and
·
se
veral
nieces
and
Shaler , Lyla Waugh. Juanita Craig , Herba
DEAR POLLY- When you nephews .
1 sboald be ID good lisle, addresslag luaes, not perWaugh end Norma Bea ver.
1 sooalltles.
1
have been fishin g, and part of
Funeral
services
will
be
Perry Twp . - Dav id Jones . Marv your catch is inedible or does
he ld 2 p.m. Tuesday In York , I
Jane McNeil , Charles Ric ha rds, Edward
0
I
not seem fre sh enough to Pa .
Lynch, Irene hansen and Gwen Carter .
Mr . and Mrs . Russell
Raccoon Two. - John .Howard , cook. you will find your
George Wm . Miller. Edward West, Ruth garden is the silver lining. · Brown left Pomeroy today to
MASON - Wahama High
attend the services.
Copley. Shirley Sm ith and Betty Lanier.
I •••
..
&amp;hool is developing a drug
Fish
makes
great
fertilizer.
It
R1o Grande Pet. - Irene M. Brannon ,
I
I education program for next
Juan ita Petrie. Audrey Wickline , Mildred co ntains ph osphorous and
I
I
fall. The school is not billing
Wickl ine, Walter Da vidson and Jennie M. will release lots of nitrogen
· into the soil as it decomposes.
Myers.
itself as a "driving comPlea
made
to
support
levy
City 1-A- Mary M. Will is. Ann Notter,
IGNORE CONGRESS?
munity force" for drug
Beatrice Evan s, Ann is Tabor, Dorothy Be sure to bury the fish deep
education . It expects,
TOLEDO, Ohio IUP!) - If Dear Sir:
enough so the neighborhood
Hecker and Verdon O' Dell.
elected president, Sen. Frank
As general chairman of the Gallipolis City School therefore, other community
City 1-B - Esta Reese , Neva O' Dell. cats will not be attracted.
Betty Meadows, Twiia Harrison, Eleanor
An old card ta bie can be · Church, !).Idaho, says h~ Improvement Committee, I have been involved in the effort to gro~ps and leaders will
Atk ins and Muriel Alli son.
become involved.
recycled and made into would tell American com- pass the school levy that will appear on the June 8ballot.
City 2-A - Elsi e M. Neat. Elmer something very useful. pa nies th ey co uld invest
I hijve seen many people from aU walks of life, yowtg and
The school was forced into
Caldwell, Louise Hattelt. Joan St ites and
overseas
but
they
would
have
old
,
involved
in
this
effort.
All
of
us
are
concerned,
not
for
acknowledging
its problem in
Remove the center top and
Vivian E. Ri chards.
to
assume
all
the
risks
and
ourselves,
but
for
our
children.lmproving
our
schoois
will
help
April
when
seven
students
, City 2· B -:- Hortense E~ llng , Grace replace with plastic screen
Bradbur y. Ed1fh Jackson. Thelma Sk id- wire. It is great for drying would have to pay the same give our children the needed opportunities to compete for were hospitalized after first
more, Marga ret Pasqual e and Edna sweaters, socks and other tax rate on foreign earnings better jobs or to prepare for higher education.
period classes.
North .
.
as
they
do
on
domestic
inMnch
of
this
involvement
and
concern
also
arises
from
Principal Larry Sawyers
City 3·A - Ma rtha Mac Kenzie , knits quickly. The air cir·
pride - pride in our schools, pride in Gallipolis and Gallia hopes to add new ideas to the
Pribbl e Wilson. Gladys Amsbary, Verna ~ul ates around the garment, come.
Jean Snowden . Frank Ha yes and Beverly which can be laid flat on the
County, pride in thi s whole area which is such a great place in program when he returns
Wilson .
which to live. I want to be proud of a school system that does from a seminar on alcohol
TAI'T IN ACTION
screen
and
pa
tted
in
to
shape.
City . 3-B - Mary Austin, Bett y
more than just meet the minimum requirements - that does and drug problems at West
WASHINGTON I UP! )
Spe ncer, Barbara M, Scoff, Iantha S. Such a table is also excellent
Garnes, Mel vina Johnson and Lucil le for drying herbs . - MABEL Legislation that would in- more than just get by. I want to be proud of a school system Virginia University June 13Casey.
. M.
crease the tax exemption that will'provide superior educational facilities for everyone. 18. The Mason County Health
City 4-A - Edith Gilkey, Jean Saun .
I would like to ask everyone who plans to vote on June 8 to Department and lbe State
on
estate
DE AR POLLY - My allowed
ders,. Ella Candee, Mildred Finley, pla stic kitchen tabl ecloth was inheritances has been co- sha re in this pride by voting yes for the levy, yes for the young Police are expected ·to assist.
Georg1a 6urrls and Joan Wood
Tentative pl8ns go beyond
City 4-B - Phyl lis t&lt;owtana, 'ihetma still i.n gnod condition and psonsored by Sen . Robert people, yes for better schools. - William B. Thomas.
Harrington, Virgin ia Roush , Luci ll e attractive, but l was tired of Taft , Jr., R-Ohio. In a news
speakers visiting classrooms
Saunders, Sue While and Lanan Chapm an. it. So I cut it in strips wide , release Friday, Taft said
plates both through the mail or appearing at assemblies;
MAY GO MODERN
City 4-C - Ferne Gardner, Thelma
current
law
sets
estate
·tax
to
c.over
my
cabinet
t•nough
and
through
deputy rather, special evening or
Pl ummer, Lawrence McQua id, Geraldine
ELYRIA, Ohio !UP! )
Crall, Rose M. McQua id and Nan cy shelves. A few staples in exemption at $60,000. His bill The Ohio Bureau of Motor registrars, the Elyria Saturday sessions directed to
Houck .
adults and covering the same
stra tegic poin ts made the job would increase the allowable
Vehicles is considering going Chronicle-Telegram said in a material students study are
quick to do. It was more exemption to $200,000.
modern by issuing license copyrighted story Saturday. contemplated .

By BARRY JAMES
MOSCOW IUPI) - From
the sound of this story,
someone in the Russian
Federation Food Ministry
JX'Obably could use a stiff
drink. But, please, no beer.
It began in 1969 when a
foreign manufacturer
brought . an auloma!ed
machine for canning beer to
an industrial exhibition in
Moscow.
. The newspaper Izvestia
said the Food Ministry
decided to part with some of
its hard currency to buy the
machine to use in canning
Kvass, a mildly fermented
summer drink popular
throughout the Soviet Union.
An old production line, that

annually produced ffve
mUlion liters of Kvass, w,as
dismantled tO make way for
the new machine.
However, Izvestia said, the
new production line "had
neither beginning nor end."
In other words, the factory
had to spend three times as
much money on auxiliary
equipment to make the thing
work.
This done, the canning
process was ready to roll by
1971. One problem: No cans,
hence no Kvass.
So a factory in the Ukraine
was ordered to produce the
necessary containers.
However ...
"Out of 7,128 cans fUled
with Kvass, 7,128 were
rejected because it turned out
Ti
;...
t&gt;--tinel
the
tinplate could not take the
SURdaJ 1m~n
pressure," Izvestia said.
Publ i shed ev~ry · iunday "And since they were not
by
The Oh •O \/alley
Publishing Co.
properly lacquered inside,
GALLIPOLIS
' ange an d
DAILY TRIBUNE
theKvasstasted str
0 ~12s.,.~~~~d ~ve .. Gatti polis, smelled unpleasant."
i
P~btlshed 'every weekday Factory directors then
evening
except Saturday . decided to reduce their
second Class Postage Paid
' at Galli~Oti&amp;, Ohio 456Jt.
· product to a gooey
THE
DAILY
SENTINEL'
coocentrate
and can that
111 Court-st., P,omeroy , O. , .
d
45769. Publlsl1ed every wee~ - mstea .
day evening e)(cept Satur day . Entered as second class
mailing 'matter at Pomeroy ,
t&gt;hlo Post Office.
By cafrier daily !!lnd
Sunday 7lc~~r week . Motor ,
route s3.2s "Arronlh.
SUBSCR PTtON RATES
The
Gal l ipolis
RACINE - Approxuna
· tel Y
Tribune
In Ohio and Dally
West
VIrginia one year S22.00; Si K $700 has been received by the
rnonths_..$11 .50; three months Racine
v0 1u n tee r
S7 .00 . ~lsewtlere $26.00 per
year ; six months Sl3.50) Emergency Squad for the
three S3months
SUO.; m:otor
Walter Cleland Memorial
25 monthly
.
route
The 0ally Senthtlel. one Bw'ldm
' g Fund
year $22.00 ; Six 'll'ionths 1
•
Sil.lO; three months s1.00.
Latest contributors are
Elsewhere $26 .00 ; six • Emma Adams, Don Bell,
V~S'o~ho S1l.l0: tl&gt;ree month! Fritz Buck, Jake Lee,
The UniJetf Press ..1,..
lernatlonal
IS tKctustvely wes1cyan u01'ted Me thod'ISt
entilted ·to the use lot Church Women, E. A.
j publication of all news Wingett Mt'llard Van Meter
· dispatches credited to the
•
•
I newspaper and also the local Maxine Sellers, Ralph
news ubtished herein .
Henderson, Carroll &amp;lyre,
1

V

*'"-'"

Area
Deaths

1!'

1
'

,V,.,.,. , '\~"" . "\.. ~1. 5\-,ou..~ ;~ . \o"~ o."~ S"'- • "-~

,---------------------------1

i

I

I

AI~..I..Y:.._.
~ ~=

I
I

help building

drug-edplan

,.

"In the swru'ner of 1973,
they prepared to celebrate
their total victory over . the
foreign machinery," Izvestia
said. "But instead of the
planned capacity of 4,000
cans an hour, the machinery
produced 4,782 cans in four
months and after that It
stopped completely . It seems
that equipment constructed
to handle liquid could not
handle thick ~yrup."
Frustrated, the Food
Ministry imported 600 tons of
tinplate and told the factory
to go back to the original plan
of producing carined Kvass.
But someone apparently
forgot that the Soviet Union
has no machinery to turn the
tinplate into cans.
Finally, the useless production line was dismantled and
the various parts of it
distributed to factories and
stores, Izvestia said.
Now the factories and
stores have pieces of the
equipment, but that doesn't
do them much good.
The equipment only works
as a whole unit. .

David Huddleston, Frances
Roberts, Charles Beegle in
memory of Isabel Simpson ;
Bill Hayman, Blythe Theiss ,
llavid Zerkle, Hattie Roush ,
Uoyd Harris, Ralph Ours,
Bob Fisher and David Sayre.
Anyone wishing to contribute may send their
contribution marked to the ·
Cleland Building Fund to the
Racine Emergency Sqund,
Racine, 45771.

1.

!
•
:
:
:

SUNDAY SPECIAL
GROUP OF

~·

l

LADIES

•·
:
~

DRESS &amp; CASUAL

:
:
•
:

SHOES

~

VALUES TO 114.99

:
•
~

:
:
•
:
~

~

:
•
~

ssoo

"*•

.

FOI{rmTE
SHOES
SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA

FQrd..
And Car ter' s principal
Democratic · challenger s,
Rep. Morris K. Udall . of
Arizona and Sen . Frank
Church of Idaho, regard Ohio
as the key to maintaining any
"stop Carter" sentiment .
Evidence of Ohio 's importance is reflected in the
constant
personal.
appearances
by
the
candidates during the past
week and the amowit of
money, probably more than
$1 million, being spent here
by the five candidates.
Ohio's regular Republican
organization,
working
vigorowly to gel out the vote
for the President, seems to
have generated enough
steam to carry the state
heavily for Ford.
Gov. James A. Rhodes• 10stop flying tour of the state
complemented visits by
Ford, his wife Betty, his son
Jack and his brother Tom,
more than offsetting a single
twCHiay tour of Ohio by
Reagan and his pal, movie
star Jimmy Stewart.
As Peter Voss, Reagan's

Ohio campai gn ma nager,
acidly observed, about the
ooly member of the Ford
family who failed t.o show up
in Ohio was the President 's
dog, Liberty.
Carter also presented· his
wife' and son , as well . as
himself, to the voters of Ohio .
Udall brought his wife and
daughter into the state and
Church was accompanied by
his wife .
One sunrise guest who
showed up in Carter's behaU
was former Gov . Jolin J .
Gilligan, who said in the past
he was unsure whether his
endorsement was a blessing
or a curse.
Carter was eitiler blessed
or cursed with Gill~an's
approval last week in
Cleveland.
U&lt;lall said he wa s
disappointed and thought
Gilligan was more in tune
with his own philosophies.
Ted Celeste, Carter's campaign manager in Ohio, said
the endorsement of any
major state political figure
was bound to be a plus.
Carter accepted the
endorsement and then kept
quiet, which was probably a
smart thing to do .
"He dido 't seek the endorsement, and therefore he's
not going to flaunt it, " said
Celeste.

pay fi~e

Celeste's brother, Richard ,
the lieutenant governor, expressed no public preference
POMEROY
Eig ht
but introduced Carter at a
Statehouse rally Friday as "a defendants were fi nl'&lt;l and 14
determined long-d istance others forfeited bonds in
flllln er who is with. us in the Meigs County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Robert E.
last lap of his race."
Buck
were HH~llen Smith,
The "favorite-daughter"
Ga
llipolis
, $111"' and costs,
candidacy of state Treasurer
passing
a
t in tersection ;
Gertrud e W..
Donahey
Willi
am
R.
Imboden,
apparently never got off the
Colwubus,
SI
O
un
d cos ts ,
gro\llld and barring a minor
illegal
parking:
Tommy
M.
miracle, a number of top
Pennington,
Monaville,
W.
state Democrats will not be
COMMANDER I'RIEST
·
Va.,
$10
and
costs,
stop
sign;
on the convention floor when
Geor
ge
B.
Arnott
,
MidPOMEROY - State
the national party meeting
dleport, $25 a nd ,~;osts, failure Commander James R. Prle•l '
convenes next month.
They believed last winter to yield; Ronaldl) . Arms, IU . ol th e Ohio Disabled ·
that the wisest course was to 4, Pomeroy, $15 and costs, Am erican Veteranv will be.
remain uncommitted, hoping illegal parking; Wilkie G. the leaturc&gt;d speaker at a
for Sen . Hubert H. Humphrey Hnyd, Rt. 3, Albany, $1 3 and meeting of Pomeroy Chapter
to emerge as a compromise costs, speedin g; Roger · No. 53 I&gt;A \1, al 124 Butternut
Winebre nner ,
Hl.
4, Ave. Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
candidate.
Commander Priest aerved
Pomeroy,
$100
and
costs,
$75
Without Humphrey or Calisuspended,
six
months
over tiiree years In the army
fornia Gov . r~ dmund G.
probation,
no
valid
operator
's
du
ring WW II , receiving
Brown to ride to the
license;
·c
alvin
Spi
res
,
three
battle stars lor
convention, they were left
Hamden,
$150
and
cos
ts
,
Guudalcanal,
. the Northern
without a horse and they
thre
e
days
confinement
,
Solomons
and
th~ Phlllpplni.'s
refused to participate In any
res
tr
ic
ted
drivin
g,
li
cense
and
was
honorably
''stop-Carter'' movement.
suspended
for
six
months,
dls&lt;
·harged
In
1945
with a
To top it off , the
servke-connerted disability.
Wash i ngton scandal driving while Intoxicated.
Forfeiting bonds were June
surrounding "favorite son"
candidate and longtime A. Prunty, Tallmadge, $27 .50,
Congressman Wayne L. Hays Illegal parking ; Arn old R.
of Flushing added spice and Knight, Pomeroy , and Larry
national flavor to the· Ohio E. Hoffman , Rt . J, Pomeroy,
primary campaign which $27.50each, speeding ; Harold
may be remembered for Shor tridge, Thurman, $27,50,
insecure load ; 0. L.
years to come.
POMEROY - Information
Lemaster , Pomeroy and concernin g the Hocking
Myrta J . Queen, Pomeroy , Valley &amp;enlc Railway at
$22.50 each, illegal parkin g; NelSonville may be obtained
Harley Linthicum , Rt. I, at the Pomeroy Chamber of
Reedsville, $31.50, speeding; Comm erce Office ut the
Connie R. Reed , Columbus, Meigs County Cour t House In
$32.50, speeding ; Kathleen E. Pomeroy . The Chamb er
Watson, Dunbar and Thomas office ha ~ a g9od supply ul
E. Walker, Rittman , $27.50 Hocking Valley brochur es
the border.
But most of the young men each, speeding ; Elmer E. giving operating schedules
doing their 18 months VanMeter, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, and other related In compulsory military training $357 .50, driving while in - formation . The Office is open
seem to look forward to toxicated ; Betty Imboden, all day Monday and Wed·
Rutland, $50, assault; 'l'lm nesday and until noon on
action .
"Let's get down to the Warren, Albany, $100, petty Thursday and ulso has in·
serious busin ess of !err- theft; Ned Bartley, Colum- formation related to a
zapping 1kill,lng terrorists )," bus, $100, reckless operation. number of other tourist atLance
Cpl.
Howard
. tractions and the B:g Bend
Bcnkensteln said recently at
Regatta .
the end of his basic training .
Although Rhodesia is
coping with the situation at can't win this war and that it.
the momen t and might is driving people, good
continue as before for several people, away and when the
~
..
llll·tt/1,
years there is growing and blacks do eventually take
power
by
force
,
,
then
there
persistent questioning of
really will be chaos and
whether it is all wor th it.
TONIGHT thru
disaster
."
"We're at the mercy of a
Tuesday
small number of . very
stubborn men who say there
will be chaos and disaster if
black ruie comes," said a
Salisbury businessman who
asked not to he nameil. "I'm
not too sure of that.
" But I am sure that we
Sunday-Monday

Scenic railway
data avni1able

Rhodesians waiting for Armageddon

Estimated $700 is received

School invites

California Gov. Ronald
Reaga n have COilei1ded their
man must combine a strong
showing in Ohio with a
victorv in his horne state to
retain any hope of denying
the Republican nomination to

thinking people luJve left. •.

Ivan, pass the beer!

Elma Dexter, Gertrude Evans, Inez Mae
Betz , Virginia Ban e and Marjori e Lee

I· .

Ohio politics

Dear Ms. Penelope MacGillicuty:
In 100 pet. seriousness, there is no way that NORMA By ERIK VAN EES
GOODWIN could have been omitted from your listing of
SALISBURY, Rhodesia
interesting Meigs Co. people; of course, consider.ing that &lt;UP!) - The photographs
interesting means gracious, loving, understanding and ana copper plaques of the
helpful. Bill Bartel;, 5290 Cleveland, Stevensville, Mich. 49127. face of Premier Ian Smith

Polly's Pointers

Irene Hi vely, Mary Call ,

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
OOLUMBUS I UP! ) - It
has been Ohio's week to take
a whirl in the nationa l
spotlight of presidential
politics, and lbal week will
end abruptly next Tuesday
night.
But before it ends, the
Buckeye Slate, playing host
to its wildest presidential
primary campaign yet, ll)ay
have put the final stamp of

•

Mon. thru Sat. 10 to 9

Sunday 1 to 5

have gone from the shop
windows, and with them the
defiant euphoria tbat
followed Rhodesia 's break
with Britain more than 10
years ago.
Then there was a bubbling
confidence Rhodesia would
win through, over come
san ctions and keep the
government "in r~onsibie
white hands, " as Smith put it.
Now many Rhodesians
aren't too sure. The pressure
is on and Rhodesia is at war,
fighting
a
guerrilla
movement that wants to force
change at the point of a gun .
United Nations sanctions
have some effect but a
Salisbury housewife says ,
"They arc pinpricks. There's
no hardship because of that."
Whiskey, batteries, good
razor blades, light bulbs,
cheese are hard to get. The
waiting list for a new Peugeot
404 car is at least two years. A
new Volkswagen bough t in
neighboring South Africa for
$4,600 fetches twice that 'in
Salisbury.
Rhodesia still offers whites
the good life - cheap
housing, servants, swimming
pools, an orderly society. But
most white Rhodesians
rca lizc this can 'I last.
Alan Savory is an experienced guerrilla fighter, a
former member of the ruling
Rhodesian Front party and
now vice president of the
liberal Rhodesia party . He
said recently, "All thinking
Rhodesians are leaving the
country." But, he said,
"There are constructive
alternatives to a war they
carmol win .''

You ' ll
tract it dawn
much faster
lith •

WANT AD

Some published figures re. Oect Rhodesians• sense of
depression : In April a net
total of 817 whites. left the
CQUntry , the biggest single
exodus sine~ Smith issued his
unilateral declaration of
independence Nov. II, 1965.
May casualty figures from
the fighting fron t on the
eastern
border
with
·Mozambique were the
highest in 3- 1 , years of
fighting - 18 Rhodesians
killed for the death of 105
guerrillas.
Yet there's not a gun to be
seen in Salisbury's wide,
clean streets. A handful of
unarmed off-duty soldiers in
camouflage uniforms and an
occasional policeman, also
unarmed , mingle with the
shoppers outside Whitlow's
men's shop sale 1suit prices
were $39.00, .now $23.62) or
checking out the specials at
Beatlles Hereford and Angus
butcher trump steak, super
grade at 33 cents per
pound).
The traffic is as heavy as in
any city
of
569,000
inhabitants . There is a
parking problem for the
vehicles which are mostly
several years old but include
a sprinkling of super luxury
models. There's no apparent
glut of office space .
Jackhammers stutter on
high-rise buildings under
construction.
Suburban streets are patrolled by members of "Dad's
Army" - a civil defense-type
home guarp providing
protection and reassurance
for families where husbands
and fathers are doing duty on
the borders.
Salisbury's Rhodesia
Herald has a new classified
advertisement column
• headed "killed in action"
while another is usually filled
with condolences for security
force members who died on

.
COLO\' ·

MEIGS THEATRE

&amp; Tuesday

TONIGHT
JUNE 6th
Watt Disney's
SNOW WHITE&amp;
THE SEVEN DWARFS
(Tecnnicolor)
Still the FAIREST ot them
ALL! Snow. White , Dopey,
Bashful. Sneezy, Sleepy.
Happy, Grumpy, Doc. G
Show s,arts at 7 p.m.

....

STAI'{!,EY IQJBRICK
u,..~NO'N!AL

... 'MARI§A 'BEI\tNSON"
lliil• .... w.....
. . w. .. c............ c...r
Rruce uern

II

CARTOON

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY
JUNE 6TH THRU 12TH

MARK YOUR BALLOT
JUNE 8 FOR
IXICLARENCE E. JOHNSON I
GALLIA COUNTY COMMISSIONER
JANUARY 3 TERM
REPUBLICAN
4 yr . Veteran, served ETO World War II 26
mo., member V. F. W. American Legion
Centenary Grange, Centenary U. M.
Church, lives at Centenary, Community
Improvement Committee. Has served all
the citizens with honesty and fairness . Your
vote and support appreciated.

DINN.ER BOX
3 PIECES CHICKEN
•MASHED POTATOES
&amp; GRAVY
•SLAW
No Subt.
•ROLL
No Couoons · No Lim it .

GALLIA COUNTY NEEDS

...... &amp;I

Utili!

CLARENCE E. JOHNSON
FOR COMMISSIONER
REPUBLICAN

Pd. Pol. Ad.

-

Ga16polis, 0.

�3- The Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sunday, June 6. 1976

--

•

~;

I

Ohio may put· final approval Eight rn
court to
on ·Presidential candidates

Almost impossible
Ms Penelope .
to answer byMacGillicuty

0 [ '1\

Dea.r Readers:

_
Many letters are coming in from all over the United States
pertaining to the Most Interesting Personality in Meigs County
for the year 1976. Next week we will publish the results of
voting so far in Osltosh, Wisconsin. For the benefit of the
readers who do not know the names of the nominees for the
Most Interesting Personality in Meigs County for 1916, the
following form sheet is sutmitted :
Edison Hobslettet - even money - an early favorite.
Rodney Downing - even money - is a cofavorite because
his father was adose personal friend of Bernard Baruch.
John Wolfe - :1-1 - Slow ·starter.
Jim Clatworthy - long shot - due to the fa ct that he is a
former CIA agent - odds, 3().1.
Wallace Bradford - :1-1 in betting - has serious following
with Santa Claus and children.
George Carpter - runs well in stretch - odds, 3-I.
Thereon Johnson - ofi his feed, odds, 3-1.
John Fick - even money , has a great following in Europe .
Whiskers Kibble - dark horse - odds, 10-1.
Red Carr - has not been running well latelY.- odds, H .
Gayle Price - good stretch runner - odds, 4-1.
David Ohlinger - woo last time out - odds, :1-1 .
Edward Frccker - could be a realsleeper, odds :1-1.
Eugene Fink - good distance runner, odds 4-1.
Orion Roush - good breeding, odds 2-1.
Pete Shields - good mudder , odds 2-1.
Ben "Chummy" Quisenberry.- has fllll ~ny fine races
·- one at Syracuse Downs, odds, S.l.
PhU Kelly - areal dark horse - does well at night , odds 01.
Ben Batey - a heavy favorite - he will get heavy backing
in Middleport because of his popularity - even money.
Odds by Leo the Greek - Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.
Signed: Big Mac

THIS PONY PULLED CART of the Meigs County 4-H Pleasure Riders was another
excellent entry in Saturday's bicentennial wagon train parade.

. •POMEROY MAYOR CLARENCE ANDREWS, Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffma n, and
John Rice, Meigs Bicentennial chainnan, Ito r, pictured in conference during a lull in
activities at the wagon train bicentennial observance Saturday .

I'ITIING RIGHT INTO th e covered wagoll-parade
Saturday was this wagon entry from the Rock Springs
Grange. Grange mem bers in costumes walked beside the
impressive wagon.
·

Officials only are permitted
GALLI POLIS - Unless it's
official business, no one will
be perrnitted inside the Galli a
County Election Board office
Tuesday night once election
returns start coming in ac cording to election board
offi cials.
In recent elec tions, officials
said too many outsiders have
fill ed th e offi ce, ca usin g
much confusion and conn tin£
delays for. the board and its
clerks.
Local and outside news
media represe ntatives will be
given ta lly sheets 1n an ad·

joining room after precinct
result s a re tab ula ted by
board offi cials.
No one other th an election
board offici als will be permitted to use telephones in
the election board offi ce .
Presiding judges in Galli a's
36 precincts ·are t•equlred to
call in all stale and regional
results before bringing in
their tally sheets. thus the
election board phone line
must be kept clear at all
times .

Election board offi cia ls
have also requested th a t

Heavy turnout
(Continued from page I)
Charles M. Neal and James H. Walker are
opposing each other. Willard Clagg and
incumbent Eugene Stevens have locked
horns in the Republican committeemen's
race ln Bidwell Pet.
ln.Clay Twp. two Republicans, Connie
L. Hemphill and Vance Baker a re seeking
nomination.
Independent ca ndidates
who
automa,ticaliy go to the November General
Election ballot are Vernon Kuhn , sheriff's
candidate and James C. Saunders,
ca ndidate for county commissioner.
'

Li sted below are pr ecinc t wo rkers for
Tuesday's Pr imar y. The fi r st p~rson in
each group wi ll serve as presi ding judge.
Wor ke r s are :
Add ison Twp. - Ora Elliott, Ber·
nadine Shr iv er . Eve lyn Pen nington,
Barbara Russell , Ela ine Jividen and
Pauline Shaver .
Addison Pet. - Jan et Hughes , Ru by
Luc as. M arg ueri t e La whon Eve l yn
Sisson, Jun e Quil len an d Artie R. Ra lke.
Cheshire Twp. - Fred Sisson, Leo
Rupe, Wilm a Weiman, Zefli e Loveday ,
Caro lyn El kin s and Joan Conkle.
Cheshire Pel.- Har tle H. Roush, Lui a
Pres ton. Heleh Pres ton , Forest Gi l lenwater , Jewe ll Mart in and Helen A. Spears.
Clay Twp. - Virginia McCalla , Emma
Newm an, Nan cy Evan s, Wilma J .
M ooney , Marian Smi th and Dary l Sheets.
1

Polls .open
(Continued from page I)
Evelyn Clark, Pomeroy First ; Robert
Hysell , Pomeroy Second; Charles W.
Legar Sr .. Pomeroy Third ; Leslie F. Fultz.
Pomeroy Fourth .
Meigs Coun ty Republicans will also
· vote either lor Ronald Reagan or Gerald
Ford for President and the following other
candidates :
Robert Taft ,.Jr ., unopposed for U. S.
Senator ; Clarence E. Miller, unopposed
for lOth District Congressional seat ; Don
P. Brown, William J. McCrone, John W.
Po!ter, justice . of Supreme Court , term
beginning Jan . I, 1977; J . Gareth Hitch- ·
cock, William J . Morrissey, Jr ., justice of
the Supreme Court, term beginning Jan . 2.
1977; Ronald R. Calhoun , Thomas W.
Mitchell , John Donald Ratcliff, Franklin
Sheeler. for fourth district judge of the
Court of Appeals; William A. Keslar or
Ralph P. Triplett for state central committeeman post; Marian S. Sinsel for
woman member of state central committee; Harold &amp;hritter, Merrll Triplett
for state representative, 92nd district.
Meigs Coun ty Democrats will vo te on
four candidates seeking nomination to run
for United States Senator. They are
Richard B. Kay, Howard M. Metzenbaum ,
James D. Nolan and James V. Stanton.
Other candidates Democrats will vote on
include: J. Kermit Gatten, James A.
Plummer, for representative to Congress,
lOth District ; Robert E. Cook, John F.
Corrigan , A. William Sweeney, Supreme
Court Juslice, term beginning Jan. I. 1977:
John D. Judge , RalphS. Lochar , Russell
H. Volkema , Supreme Court Justice, term
beginning Jan . 2, 1977; Lawrence Grey,
Fourth District Court of Appeals ; William
A. Lavelle, for state committeeman;
Alicia J . Brown, Mary C. Gallaher, state
committee woman; Ronald H. James ,
state representative, 92nd district.

in terested indivi duals refrain
fr om callin g the electi on
board office Tuesday night
for inform ation on vari ous

a. m. and close at 7: 30p.m.
Poll ing places ar e as
follows:
1-A - Gallipolis Motor Co.,
236-2nd Ave.
1-8 - Old school building
below the Washington School
Bldg .
2·A - Ci ty Building.
2·8 Bob Sa unders

races . Due to th e large
number of ball ots and the
expec ted big voter turnout,
offi cials
need
th is
cooperation 111 order to make
post-elec tion work as smooth
as possible.
Quaker Sta te , corner 2nd lind
The Gili lia Cowtty Board of
Elections Saturday named
the various polling places
in side the city limits for
Tuesday's Primary. Voting
precincts will open at 6:30

Clay Pet. -

......

..

Pine St.
. 3-A - Washington &amp;hool
Building.
3-B - Mary's Beauty
Salon, 17 Vinton St.
4-A - Uni on Bldg:, upper
2nd and Mill Creek.
4-B City Garage,
Ches tnut St.
4-C - Bastiani Building, 95
Sycamore St.
Ga llipoli s Township Court House .
Kanauga Precinct - Court
House.

~

Mystery Guest last week - Louise Hines.
Dear Ms. Mac Gillicuty,
Your mystery guest who is a leading politician in ~elgs
County and ·a close friend of Hu~rt Humphrey 1s Jack C~!Sp of
Langsville, 0. - Thank you , Vicky Fink, Rio Grande, Ohto.
P.S. - My father-in~aw is one of yout candidates for most
interesting people Of Meigs County Eug~ne M. Fink.
1Columbia Gas l.
'

Kyle Donnall y, Esther DaVIS, Thelma
Gar Iic and Lynn An get.
Gallipolis Twp. - Wltdred Durham ,

TWENTY WAGON TRAINS on barges with the boat in the back were moored near the
Pomeroy levee Saturday morning for area residents to view. Residents were not permitted
to board the barge, however.

Fresher coffee
from the freezer

approval on the two
candidates lvho will square
off in the fall .
Both President Ford and
Jimmy Carter are aiming to
put unapJroachable distance
between themselves and their
adversaries by capturing
hefty chunks of the 97
Republican
and
152
Democrati c convention
delegates at stake .
They have made no secret
of the fact that solid victories
in Ohio, coupled with wins or
strong showings in New
Jersey, could put them within
handshaking range of
nomination
at
their
respective conventions this

swruner.
· Backers

of

former

INI'LATION FIGHTER
economi cal than painting.
0..' (... " \-;, 0 •
Bradshaw.
·
DEAR POLLY - Co!!ee is Also, ! had a clear conscience
Kanouga Pet.- Dorlha Adams, Ethel now so expensive. My mother
1-.v.."""'" ~ "'""'s.o.l...... ~
about buyin g a new cloth, ·
Bra dbur y, Pina Ward , Bess ie Berr idge.
U
&lt;'1 \&lt;.:;s W Q. ~&gt;• ~· -th; " \ ~ u '1 1 o u..r \1(,\ O.s
gave
me
an
idea
for
keepmg
since nothing was wasted. Karen Brownell and Evelyn Rothgeb.
""' ~"'t ~ ~ "' i"'j
loa_,..._ &lt;;;.\-,Q.\I) &lt;,s
Centerville Pet . - Ba rba ra Lewis. it tasting fresh even aft er it is ELIZABETH
Opal Ferrell , John W.· Eva ns. Carolee V. a few days old . Rather than
,
.-&lt;?.x\
-lo ~\.,~ h&lt;&gt;'&lt;\&lt;.. " " 01'" """'"&gt;'\.'\' w'r,'1 t..h, c ~" ro.i" t::J
DEAR
POLLY
I
instead
Lewis, ~ n .Dan iels and Judy Hall .
Sprtngltetd Twp. - Mary AI ice brew a fres h pot each day I I of throwing away expensive
po..v~ """..._ \NO..~
Ski dm ore , Li zz ie Fanning . E. L. Fi sh, only drink one or two cups) , I leftover coffee, freeze it in ice
" I"'"' .!&gt; "'"' ..
Allee Spr ague , Gold ie Swisher and make a lull pot and have my cube trays. Use these cubes
Promolia Sm ith .
de c ~ {.., '*•:J
one cup. I pour th e remaining to serve in iced coffee and the
Bidwett Pel. - Vivian Schult z. Mar y coffee into a glass percolator
be verage will not become
Jean Black. Joanne Bass, Judy Hami lton ,
or jar and let it cool. Then I weak when the ice melts. Mari e Wagner and Ada Payne.
Walnut Twp. - Ellis Thornton, Chloe put it in the refri gerator.
M. M.
Fe Ilure. Dan Wagon er , Dan Stewar t.
Whenever l want a cup of
Polly will send you one of
Carroll Mitter and Elva Gn be .
coffee
I
pour
only
the
needed
her
" peachy" thank·you
Gr~en Twp. Carot yn Ca ldwell ,
Helen Burnett, Bonnie Cr emeens, Lyda am ount .into a small pot and card s, Ideal for framing or
Hud so n , Ja net Pe ttu s and Th elm a warm it. This keeps what placing In your family scraP'
'
I
Wooward .
•
I
remains free of that stale book, if she uses your favorite
Green Pet. No. 1 - Donna L. Youn g,
Patty Jones. RoK ie Salzman , Evelyn coffee taste that develops Pointer, Peeve or Problem In
1 o're '-l &lt; s &gt;;:;, • 1:-\-.e.. · \., v ':\ (=&gt;u:\ ll'&gt; 1" "u...from standing in a metal her column. Write Polly's
Elli ott. Thelma Cox an d Betty Smith.
Green Pel. No. 2 - Helen Eil een percolator. It saves time, Pointers in care of this news1
.
~ \ 3hlM~~
Carter , Louise Ellio1t, ,Daniel N. Greene, helps conserve and cuts down paper.
0
f
\:.&lt;..,.
""'"
.,
~-o.,_..,._
s;-"
\
1:&gt;
......
d~
"'
1-e
"
*"'C'&lt;.
"""- I( i o..s
Car lene Greene , Noe l F. Ma ssie and on my food bill. - OLGA.
Donna Neal .
.,,... "'i ~.,.... 1-.~ ..... ""' l\QL
Green Pet. No. 3 - Beul ah Mil ls,
1.,.. ~&lt;:&gt;...&lt;..,._~,..~
C..• &lt;.. " "''"~
'o.sJ,. - "'"' \-\,a.\: ._. W-&lt;.
Barbara Weeks . El ea nor Tho m as ,
DEAR . POLLY - An old
~
~00"'1 (ll.S~ ~S.!;J ~
Patri cia Johnston , Dorothy Sheets and sui tcas e ll1at looks very
Jean L. Henderson.
o\11c
o...&gt;,:,o.-,
s
\.i\1
""'d~
•
..,,
"""""'-t""'"\
"'~"~"~.k - +\.,,.,.._
Greenfield Twp. Foste'r Lewis , shabby can be made to look
\
s.
no
o
-t\..t-1""
C. LV'(.
Roscoe Pierson . Bertha Carter , Juli a almost lik e new wh en
Roese,. Marve l Haney and Ca rol yn Sue covered with that adhesive
Potter.
·
backed paper. One is also
Guyan Twp. - Cr ystal Capper, Eil een
sometimes
sa ved the cost of
Montgomery , Doroth y Bea ver , Ha ze l
Montgomery, Shirley Lill y and Nan cy buyin g a new one . - ROSE .
CHARLES E. PRIODE
Ca mobelt .
DEAR POLLY - Rubbing
YOR K, Pa. - Charles E.
Guyan Pct.- Carri e Wil liam s, Velda alcohol is an inexpensive
Prlode , a former resident of
Si mm s. Edna Montgomery, Eli za beth
Zl- &lt;locQJ'
Wood yard , Delta Moste ller and Loretta bathroom cleaner. I use it in Pomeroy, died here Saturday
· e. s~"""'' "'\1'"\ ~n ) '\" "''- 'i!. ~ "' ~~~.. \\- loCMwn '» u, '1~-..r 11 1( 1
Ran kin .
between thorough scrubbing morn ing follow ing a lingering
illness.
Harrison Twp. - Chris t Artus, ·lla jobs and it cleans, disinfects,
S o en.~x ~·~\d..T-tn c:.a.. . . . _ o. c: . "-\-ct\J~ \J.t i..Y,..,I.)\J...\ C..'f\ '' o~t.Y ...-\- \ t;) l"\o,j_ 11
He wa s pre'ceded In death
Artus, Cathy M artin , Garnet Queen, shines and leaves the bath by his parents, Mr . .and Mrs .
\-1'\ ~1" \ "t'f\ i
~~ \-Q)(" ,
Darlene Cremean s and Shirl ey Boster.
E. H. Prlode ; hts w1fe , Ruth ,
Huntington Twp. - · Esta M. Dee t, room smell ing .clean. in 1975, and a hatf.brother,
Lavina Swisher. 'llelma Huntley , Margaret BETTY.
Si)l1 ms. Desta Potstey and Lil lian M. Rece.
DEAR POLLY - 1find that Harold ITag ) Long.
!:&gt;urvivlng are a aaugnter,
Huntington Pet. - Marian L. Me. those sheets of fabric softener
Sue Schroeder ; a son -in-law,
Carley, Cynth ia Cardwel l, Evel yn Daft ,
Bonnie Denney , Lucy Wilfong and Verna tha t go in the dryer can be Lynn Schroeder, and a 1
Letters of oplolou are welcomed. Tbey should be 1
torn in half lengthwise. Each grandson , Andy Schroeder:
Chamberla in.
two
sisters.
Mrs.
Russell
1
less
lban 300 words Ioag (or be subject to ftductloo by 1
Morgan Twp. - Maur ice Thomas, half is sufficient for a load of
Margaret L. Mitchell , Glen na Long , Becky clothes. The static cling is (Jane) Brown, Pomeroy. and I lbe editor) and must be slgaed willl die slpee•s ad- I
Mrs . Robert ILeona) DorDenney , Tommy Sue Knight and Vickie E.
gone and the roll gues twice man , Corning, N. Y .; a I dress. Names may' be withheld upoo pabUeatiGII, I
Meade.
brother, James. South Point,
However, ou reqaetl, names wiD be dlaclosed. Lelten I
Ohio Twp. - Sad ie Ri ehle. Grace as far. - ALICE.
and
·
se
veral
nieces
and
Shaler , Lyla Waugh. Juanita Craig , Herba
DEAR POLLY- When you nephews .
1 sboald be ID good lisle, addresslag luaes, not perWaugh end Norma Bea ver.
1 sooalltles.
1
have been fishin g, and part of
Funeral
services
will
be
Perry Twp . - Dav id Jones . Marv your catch is inedible or does
he ld 2 p.m. Tuesday In York , I
Jane McNeil , Charles Ric ha rds, Edward
0
I
not seem fre sh enough to Pa .
Lynch, Irene hansen and Gwen Carter .
Mr . and Mrs . Russell
Raccoon Two. - John .Howard , cook. you will find your
George Wm . Miller. Edward West, Ruth garden is the silver lining. · Brown left Pomeroy today to
MASON - Wahama High
attend the services.
Copley. Shirley Sm ith and Betty Lanier.
I •••
..
&amp;hool is developing a drug
Fish
makes
great
fertilizer.
It
R1o Grande Pet. - Irene M. Brannon ,
I
I education program for next
Juan ita Petrie. Audrey Wickline , Mildred co ntains ph osphorous and
I
I
fall. The school is not billing
Wickl ine, Walter Da vidson and Jennie M. will release lots of nitrogen
· into the soil as it decomposes.
Myers.
itself as a "driving comPlea
made
to
support
levy
City 1-A- Mary M. Will is. Ann Notter,
IGNORE CONGRESS?
munity force" for drug
Beatrice Evan s, Ann is Tabor, Dorothy Be sure to bury the fish deep
education . It expects,
TOLEDO, Ohio IUP!) - If Dear Sir:
enough so the neighborhood
Hecker and Verdon O' Dell.
elected president, Sen. Frank
As general chairman of the Gallipolis City School therefore, other community
City 1-B - Esta Reese , Neva O' Dell. cats will not be attracted.
Betty Meadows, Twiia Harrison, Eleanor
An old card ta bie can be · Church, !).Idaho, says h~ Improvement Committee, I have been involved in the effort to gro~ps and leaders will
Atk ins and Muriel Alli son.
become involved.
recycled and made into would tell American com- pass the school levy that will appear on the June 8ballot.
City 2-A - Elsi e M. Neat. Elmer something very useful. pa nies th ey co uld invest
I hijve seen many people from aU walks of life, yowtg and
The school was forced into
Caldwell, Louise Hattelt. Joan St ites and
overseas
but
they
would
have
old
,
involved
in
this
effort.
All
of
us
are
concerned,
not
for
acknowledging
its problem in
Remove the center top and
Vivian E. Ri chards.
to
assume
all
the
risks
and
ourselves,
but
for
our
children.lmproving
our
schoois
will
help
April
when
seven
students
, City 2· B -:- Hortense E~ llng , Grace replace with plastic screen
Bradbur y. Ed1fh Jackson. Thelma Sk id- wire. It is great for drying would have to pay the same give our children the needed opportunities to compete for were hospitalized after first
more, Marga ret Pasqual e and Edna sweaters, socks and other tax rate on foreign earnings better jobs or to prepare for higher education.
period classes.
North .
.
as
they
do
on
domestic
inMnch
of
this
involvement
and
concern
also
arises
from
Principal Larry Sawyers
City 3·A - Ma rtha Mac Kenzie , knits quickly. The air cir·
pride - pride in our schools, pride in Gallipolis and Gallia hopes to add new ideas to the
Pribbl e Wilson. Gladys Amsbary, Verna ~ul ates around the garment, come.
Jean Snowden . Frank Ha yes and Beverly which can be laid flat on the
County, pride in thi s whole area which is such a great place in program when he returns
Wilson .
which to live. I want to be proud of a school system that does from a seminar on alcohol
TAI'T IN ACTION
screen
and
pa
tted
in
to
shape.
City . 3-B - Mary Austin, Bett y
more than just meet the minimum requirements - that does and drug problems at West
WASHINGTON I UP! )
Spe ncer, Barbara M, Scoff, Iantha S. Such a table is also excellent
Garnes, Mel vina Johnson and Lucil le for drying herbs . - MABEL Legislation that would in- more than just get by. I want to be proud of a school system Virginia University June 13Casey.
. M.
crease the tax exemption that will'provide superior educational facilities for everyone. 18. The Mason County Health
City 4-A - Edith Gilkey, Jean Saun .
I would like to ask everyone who plans to vote on June 8 to Department and lbe State
on
estate
DE AR POLLY - My allowed
ders,. Ella Candee, Mildred Finley, pla stic kitchen tabl ecloth was inheritances has been co- sha re in this pride by voting yes for the levy, yes for the young Police are expected ·to assist.
Georg1a 6urrls and Joan Wood
Tentative pl8ns go beyond
City 4-B - Phyl lis t&lt;owtana, 'ihetma still i.n gnod condition and psonsored by Sen . Robert people, yes for better schools. - William B. Thomas.
Harrington, Virgin ia Roush , Luci ll e attractive, but l was tired of Taft , Jr., R-Ohio. In a news
speakers visiting classrooms
Saunders, Sue While and Lanan Chapm an. it. So I cut it in strips wide , release Friday, Taft said
plates both through the mail or appearing at assemblies;
MAY GO MODERN
City 4-C - Ferne Gardner, Thelma
current
law
sets
estate
·tax
to
c.over
my
cabinet
t•nough
and
through
deputy rather, special evening or
Pl ummer, Lawrence McQua id, Geraldine
ELYRIA, Ohio !UP! )
Crall, Rose M. McQua id and Nan cy shelves. A few staples in exemption at $60,000. His bill The Ohio Bureau of Motor registrars, the Elyria Saturday sessions directed to
Houck .
adults and covering the same
stra tegic poin ts made the job would increase the allowable
Vehicles is considering going Chronicle-Telegram said in a material students study are
quick to do. It was more exemption to $200,000.
modern by issuing license copyrighted story Saturday. contemplated .

By BARRY JAMES
MOSCOW IUPI) - From
the sound of this story,
someone in the Russian
Federation Food Ministry
JX'Obably could use a stiff
drink. But, please, no beer.
It began in 1969 when a
foreign manufacturer
brought . an auloma!ed
machine for canning beer to
an industrial exhibition in
Moscow.
. The newspaper Izvestia
said the Food Ministry
decided to part with some of
its hard currency to buy the
machine to use in canning
Kvass, a mildly fermented
summer drink popular
throughout the Soviet Union.
An old production line, that

annually produced ffve
mUlion liters of Kvass, w,as
dismantled tO make way for
the new machine.
However, Izvestia said, the
new production line "had
neither beginning nor end."
In other words, the factory
had to spend three times as
much money on auxiliary
equipment to make the thing
work.
This done, the canning
process was ready to roll by
1971. One problem: No cans,
hence no Kvass.
So a factory in the Ukraine
was ordered to produce the
necessary containers.
However ...
"Out of 7,128 cans fUled
with Kvass, 7,128 were
rejected because it turned out
Ti
;...
t&gt;--tinel
the
tinplate could not take the
SURdaJ 1m~n
pressure," Izvestia said.
Publ i shed ev~ry · iunday "And since they were not
by
The Oh •O \/alley
Publishing Co.
properly lacquered inside,
GALLIPOLIS
' ange an d
DAILY TRIBUNE
theKvasstasted str
0 ~12s.,.~~~~d ~ve .. Gatti polis, smelled unpleasant."
i
P~btlshed 'every weekday Factory directors then
evening
except Saturday . decided to reduce their
second Class Postage Paid
' at Galli~Oti&amp;, Ohio 456Jt.
· product to a gooey
THE
DAILY
SENTINEL'
coocentrate
and can that
111 Court-st., P,omeroy , O. , .
d
45769. Publlsl1ed every wee~ - mstea .
day evening e)(cept Satur day . Entered as second class
mailing 'matter at Pomeroy ,
t&gt;hlo Post Office.
By cafrier daily !!lnd
Sunday 7lc~~r week . Motor ,
route s3.2s "Arronlh.
SUBSCR PTtON RATES
The
Gal l ipolis
RACINE - Approxuna
· tel Y
Tribune
In Ohio and Dally
West
VIrginia one year S22.00; Si K $700 has been received by the
rnonths_..$11 .50; three months Racine
v0 1u n tee r
S7 .00 . ~lsewtlere $26.00 per
year ; six months Sl3.50) Emergency Squad for the
three S3months
SUO.; m:otor
Walter Cleland Memorial
25 monthly
.
route
The 0ally Senthtlel. one Bw'ldm
' g Fund
year $22.00 ; Six 'll'ionths 1
•
Sil.lO; three months s1.00.
Latest contributors are
Elsewhere $26 .00 ; six • Emma Adams, Don Bell,
V~S'o~ho S1l.l0: tl&gt;ree month! Fritz Buck, Jake Lee,
The UniJetf Press ..1,..
lernatlonal
IS tKctustvely wes1cyan u01'ted Me thod'ISt
entilted ·to the use lot Church Women, E. A.
j publication of all news Wingett Mt'llard Van Meter
· dispatches credited to the
•
•
I newspaper and also the local Maxine Sellers, Ralph
news ubtished herein .
Henderson, Carroll &amp;lyre,
1

V

*'"-'"

Area
Deaths

1!'

1
'

,V,.,.,. , '\~"" . "\.. ~1. 5\-,ou..~ ;~ . \o"~ o."~ S"'- • "-~

,---------------------------1

i

I

I

AI~..I..Y:.._.
~ ~=

I
I

help building

drug-edplan

,.

"In the swru'ner of 1973,
they prepared to celebrate
their total victory over . the
foreign machinery," Izvestia
said. "But instead of the
planned capacity of 4,000
cans an hour, the machinery
produced 4,782 cans in four
months and after that It
stopped completely . It seems
that equipment constructed
to handle liquid could not
handle thick ~yrup."
Frustrated, the Food
Ministry imported 600 tons of
tinplate and told the factory
to go back to the original plan
of producing carined Kvass.
But someone apparently
forgot that the Soviet Union
has no machinery to turn the
tinplate into cans.
Finally, the useless production line was dismantled and
the various parts of it
distributed to factories and
stores, Izvestia said.
Now the factories and
stores have pieces of the
equipment, but that doesn't
do them much good.
The equipment only works
as a whole unit. .

David Huddleston, Frances
Roberts, Charles Beegle in
memory of Isabel Simpson ;
Bill Hayman, Blythe Theiss ,
llavid Zerkle, Hattie Roush ,
Uoyd Harris, Ralph Ours,
Bob Fisher and David Sayre.
Anyone wishing to contribute may send their
contribution marked to the ·
Cleland Building Fund to the
Racine Emergency Sqund,
Racine, 45771.

1.

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SUNDAY SPECIAL
GROUP OF

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LADIES

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DRESS &amp; CASUAL

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SHOES

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VALUES TO 114.99

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ssoo

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FOI{rmTE
SHOES
SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA

FQrd..
And Car ter' s principal
Democratic · challenger s,
Rep. Morris K. Udall . of
Arizona and Sen . Frank
Church of Idaho, regard Ohio
as the key to maintaining any
"stop Carter" sentiment .
Evidence of Ohio 's importance is reflected in the
constant
personal.
appearances
by
the
candidates during the past
week and the amowit of
money, probably more than
$1 million, being spent here
by the five candidates.
Ohio's regular Republican
organization,
working
vigorowly to gel out the vote
for the President, seems to
have generated enough
steam to carry the state
heavily for Ford.
Gov. James A. Rhodes• 10stop flying tour of the state
complemented visits by
Ford, his wife Betty, his son
Jack and his brother Tom,
more than offsetting a single
twCHiay tour of Ohio by
Reagan and his pal, movie
star Jimmy Stewart.
As Peter Voss, Reagan's

Ohio campai gn ma nager,
acidly observed, about the
ooly member of the Ford
family who failed t.o show up
in Ohio was the President 's
dog, Liberty.
Carter also presented· his
wife' and son , as well . as
himself, to the voters of Ohio .
Udall brought his wife and
daughter into the state and
Church was accompanied by
his wife .
One sunrise guest who
showed up in Carter's behaU
was former Gov . Jolin J .
Gilligan, who said in the past
he was unsure whether his
endorsement was a blessing
or a curse.
Carter was eitiler blessed
or cursed with Gill~an's
approval last week in
Cleveland.
U&lt;lall said he wa s
disappointed and thought
Gilligan was more in tune
with his own philosophies.
Ted Celeste, Carter's campaign manager in Ohio, said
the endorsement of any
major state political figure
was bound to be a plus.
Carter accepted the
endorsement and then kept
quiet, which was probably a
smart thing to do .
"He dido 't seek the endorsement, and therefore he's
not going to flaunt it, " said
Celeste.

pay fi~e

Celeste's brother, Richard ,
the lieutenant governor, expressed no public preference
POMEROY
Eig ht
but introduced Carter at a
Statehouse rally Friday as "a defendants were fi nl'&lt;l and 14
determined long-d istance others forfeited bonds in
flllln er who is with. us in the Meigs County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Robert E.
last lap of his race."
Buck
were HH~llen Smith,
The "favorite-daughter"
Ga
llipolis
, $111"' and costs,
candidacy of state Treasurer
passing
a
t in tersection ;
Gertrud e W..
Donahey
Willi
am
R.
Imboden,
apparently never got off the
Colwubus,
SI
O
un
d cos ts ,
gro\llld and barring a minor
illegal
parking:
Tommy
M.
miracle, a number of top
Pennington,
Monaville,
W.
state Democrats will not be
COMMANDER I'RIEST
·
Va.,
$10
and
costs,
stop
sign;
on the convention floor when
Geor
ge
B.
Arnott
,
MidPOMEROY - State
the national party meeting
dleport, $25 a nd ,~;osts, failure Commander James R. Prle•l '
convenes next month.
They believed last winter to yield; Ronaldl) . Arms, IU . ol th e Ohio Disabled ·
that the wisest course was to 4, Pomeroy, $15 and costs, Am erican Veteranv will be.
remain uncommitted, hoping illegal parking; Wilkie G. the leaturc&gt;d speaker at a
for Sen . Hubert H. Humphrey Hnyd, Rt. 3, Albany, $1 3 and meeting of Pomeroy Chapter
to emerge as a compromise costs, speedin g; Roger · No. 53 I&gt;A \1, al 124 Butternut
Winebre nner ,
Hl.
4, Ave. Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
candidate.
Commander Priest aerved
Pomeroy,
$100
and
costs,
$75
Without Humphrey or Calisuspended,
six
months
over tiiree years In the army
fornia Gov . r~ dmund G.
probation,
no
valid
operator
's
du
ring WW II , receiving
Brown to ride to the
license;
·c
alvin
Spi
res
,
three
battle stars lor
convention, they were left
Hamden,
$150
and
cos
ts
,
Guudalcanal,
. the Northern
without a horse and they
thre
e
days
confinement
,
Solomons
and
th~ Phlllpplni.'s
refused to participate In any
res
tr
ic
ted
drivin
g,
li
cense
and
was
honorably
''stop-Carter'' movement.
suspended
for
six
months,
dls&lt;
·harged
In
1945
with a
To top it off , the
servke-connerted disability.
Wash i ngton scandal driving while Intoxicated.
Forfeiting bonds were June
surrounding "favorite son"
candidate and longtime A. Prunty, Tallmadge, $27 .50,
Congressman Wayne L. Hays Illegal parking ; Arn old R.
of Flushing added spice and Knight, Pomeroy , and Larry
national flavor to the· Ohio E. Hoffman , Rt . J, Pomeroy,
primary campaign which $27.50each, speeding ; Harold
may be remembered for Shor tridge, Thurman, $27,50,
insecure load ; 0. L.
years to come.
POMEROY - Information
Lemaster , Pomeroy and concernin g the Hocking
Myrta J . Queen, Pomeroy , Valley &amp;enlc Railway at
$22.50 each, illegal parkin g; NelSonville may be obtained
Harley Linthicum , Rt. I, at the Pomeroy Chamber of
Reedsville, $31.50, speeding; Comm erce Office ut the
Connie R. Reed , Columbus, Meigs County Cour t House In
$32.50, speeding ; Kathleen E. Pomeroy . The Chamb er
Watson, Dunbar and Thomas office ha ~ a g9od supply ul
E. Walker, Rittman , $27.50 Hocking Valley brochur es
the border.
But most of the young men each, speeding ; Elmer E. giving operating schedules
doing their 18 months VanMeter, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, and other related In compulsory military training $357 .50, driving while in - formation . The Office is open
seem to look forward to toxicated ; Betty Imboden, all day Monday and Wed·
Rutland, $50, assault; 'l'lm nesday and until noon on
action .
"Let's get down to the Warren, Albany, $100, petty Thursday and ulso has in·
serious busin ess of !err- theft; Ned Bartley, Colum- formation related to a
zapping 1kill,lng terrorists )," bus, $100, reckless operation. number of other tourist atLance
Cpl.
Howard
. tractions and the B:g Bend
Bcnkensteln said recently at
Regatta .
the end of his basic training .
Although Rhodesia is
coping with the situation at can't win this war and that it.
the momen t and might is driving people, good
continue as before for several people, away and when the
~
..
llll·tt/1,
years there is growing and blacks do eventually take
power
by
force
,
,
then
there
persistent questioning of
really will be chaos and
whether it is all wor th it.
TONIGHT thru
disaster
."
"We're at the mercy of a
Tuesday
small number of . very
stubborn men who say there
will be chaos and disaster if
black ruie comes," said a
Salisbury businessman who
asked not to he nameil. "I'm
not too sure of that.
" But I am sure that we
Sunday-Monday

Scenic railway
data avni1able

Rhodesians waiting for Armageddon

Estimated $700 is received

School invites

California Gov. Ronald
Reaga n have COilei1ded their
man must combine a strong
showing in Ohio with a
victorv in his horne state to
retain any hope of denying
the Republican nomination to

thinking people luJve left. •.

Ivan, pass the beer!

Elma Dexter, Gertrude Evans, Inez Mae
Betz , Virginia Ban e and Marjori e Lee

I· .

Ohio politics

Dear Ms. Penelope MacGillicuty:
In 100 pet. seriousness, there is no way that NORMA By ERIK VAN EES
GOODWIN could have been omitted from your listing of
SALISBURY, Rhodesia
interesting Meigs Co. people; of course, consider.ing that &lt;UP!) - The photographs
interesting means gracious, loving, understanding and ana copper plaques of the
helpful. Bill Bartel;, 5290 Cleveland, Stevensville, Mich. 49127. face of Premier Ian Smith

Polly's Pointers

Irene Hi vely, Mary Call ,

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
OOLUMBUS I UP! ) - It
has been Ohio's week to take
a whirl in the nationa l
spotlight of presidential
politics, and lbal week will
end abruptly next Tuesday
night.
But before it ends, the
Buckeye Slate, playing host
to its wildest presidential
primary campaign yet, ll)ay
have put the final stamp of

•

Mon. thru Sat. 10 to 9

Sunday 1 to 5

have gone from the shop
windows, and with them the
defiant euphoria tbat
followed Rhodesia 's break
with Britain more than 10
years ago.
Then there was a bubbling
confidence Rhodesia would
win through, over come
san ctions and keep the
government "in r~onsibie
white hands, " as Smith put it.
Now many Rhodesians
aren't too sure. The pressure
is on and Rhodesia is at war,
fighting
a
guerrilla
movement that wants to force
change at the point of a gun .
United Nations sanctions
have some effect but a
Salisbury housewife says ,
"They arc pinpricks. There's
no hardship because of that."
Whiskey, batteries, good
razor blades, light bulbs,
cheese are hard to get. The
waiting list for a new Peugeot
404 car is at least two years. A
new Volkswagen bough t in
neighboring South Africa for
$4,600 fetches twice that 'in
Salisbury.
Rhodesia still offers whites
the good life - cheap
housing, servants, swimming
pools, an orderly society. But
most white Rhodesians
rca lizc this can 'I last.
Alan Savory is an experienced guerrilla fighter, a
former member of the ruling
Rhodesian Front party and
now vice president of the
liberal Rhodesia party . He
said recently, "All thinking
Rhodesians are leaving the
country." But, he said,
"There are constructive
alternatives to a war they
carmol win .''

You ' ll
tract it dawn
much faster
lith •

WANT AD

Some published figures re. Oect Rhodesians• sense of
depression : In April a net
total of 817 whites. left the
CQUntry , the biggest single
exodus sine~ Smith issued his
unilateral declaration of
independence Nov. II, 1965.
May casualty figures from
the fighting fron t on the
eastern
border
with
·Mozambique were the
highest in 3- 1 , years of
fighting - 18 Rhodesians
killed for the death of 105
guerrillas.
Yet there's not a gun to be
seen in Salisbury's wide,
clean streets. A handful of
unarmed off-duty soldiers in
camouflage uniforms and an
occasional policeman, also
unarmed , mingle with the
shoppers outside Whitlow's
men's shop sale 1suit prices
were $39.00, .now $23.62) or
checking out the specials at
Beatlles Hereford and Angus
butcher trump steak, super
grade at 33 cents per
pound).
The traffic is as heavy as in
any city
of
569,000
inhabitants . There is a
parking problem for the
vehicles which are mostly
several years old but include
a sprinkling of super luxury
models. There's no apparent
glut of office space .
Jackhammers stutter on
high-rise buildings under
construction.
Suburban streets are patrolled by members of "Dad's
Army" - a civil defense-type
home guarp providing
protection and reassurance
for families where husbands
and fathers are doing duty on
the borders.
Salisbury's Rhodesia
Herald has a new classified
advertisement column
• headed "killed in action"
while another is usually filled
with condolences for security
force members who died on

.
COLO\' ·

MEIGS THEATRE

&amp; Tuesday

TONIGHT
JUNE 6th
Watt Disney's
SNOW WHITE&amp;
THE SEVEN DWARFS
(Tecnnicolor)
Still the FAIREST ot them
ALL! Snow. White , Dopey,
Bashful. Sneezy, Sleepy.
Happy, Grumpy, Doc. G
Show s,arts at 7 p.m.

....

STAI'{!,EY IQJBRICK
u,..~NO'N!AL

... 'MARI§A 'BEI\tNSON"
lliil• .... w.....
. . w. .. c............ c...r
Rruce uern

II

CARTOON

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY
JUNE 6TH THRU 12TH

MARK YOUR BALLOT
JUNE 8 FOR
IXICLARENCE E. JOHNSON I
GALLIA COUNTY COMMISSIONER
JANUARY 3 TERM
REPUBLICAN
4 yr . Veteran, served ETO World War II 26
mo., member V. F. W. American Legion
Centenary Grange, Centenary U. M.
Church, lives at Centenary, Community
Improvement Committee. Has served all
the citizens with honesty and fairness . Your
vote and support appreciated.

DINN.ER BOX
3 PIECES CHICKEN
•MASHED POTATOES
&amp; GRAVY
•SLAW
No Subt.
•ROLL
No Couoons · No Lim it .

GALLIA COUNTY NEEDS

...... &amp;I

Utili!

CLARENCE E. JOHNSON
FOR COMMISSIONER
REPUBLICAN

Pd. Pol. Ad.

-

Ga16polis, 0.

�.\
4- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, S1111day, June 6, 1976

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
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RA C photo /air scheduled

Woman 's World

for River Recreation Festival
•·

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GALLIPOLIS
The
French Art Colony will have
Its annual Photo Fair booth at
the
River
Recreation
Festival exllibit.over the July
4th holiday weekend. Donald
and Carolyn Hippensteel wiJIIi
CO&lt;hair this event that wi!J
have appeal for both children'
and adults on Saturday, July
3 from 4 p.m. until dark, and
again on Sunday, July 4, from
12 :30 p.m. unlil _dark.
Decorated nats featuring
favorite animals from last
year 's Photo Fair plus new

ones based on the bicen- French Art Colony include an
tennial theme will be located Indian , Paul Revere un his
at the booth on the First horse, George and Marth"
Ave . upriver side of the City Washington , and others. For
Park. Animals that many will famil y groups, there will be a
remember fr om last year are State of Ohio outline with the
the tiger , the hippopotamus bicentennial emblem to use
and Donald Duck. The an- as a background .
.
tique car will be there and
Charge for each picture
those who wish may have will be $1 . Children and adults
their picture t.aken inside or can enjoy having their picbeside the car.
tures t.aken at the French Art
Colony Photo Fair Boo th as
New flats being painted this remembrances of the 1976
year by the members of the River Recreati on Festival.

Senior nurses help people at
Gallia Senior Citizen ceflter
GALLIPOLIS - Thirty •
five members of the senior
class. of Holzer Medical
Center School of Nursing
have helped and observed the
work at the Gallla County
seni&lt;lr citizens center - with
Friday the 'last day prior to
next
Friday's
commencement exercises.
The two girls last Friday
were Sherry Dillon and Jerry
England. The other 33 came
on scheduled dates starling
April 4.
It was practical experience

in gerontology for the seniors,
according to Jean Niday,
center director_,who said that
the nursing school seniors
either actively took part or
observed every aspect of the
center.
They went out with the
drivers in the senior homedelivered meal program, aild
IIley rode the complete circuit of the other van which
has a scheduled route daily.
They escorted the elderly to
their doc tors' offices for
appointments.

j

•
r . .. , yuw ....lf to tkt bt~l t a nln.rltol curli"t

p&lt; IH tUt t . ' AI ~trll'll ce "" pi•lew •l~ l~ol'llpoo ,
t ill I 1111to l •bt l olo your ho r l

'10 .... ....

Form l _
no

,.,,~ .

Offt r Good

Gim111e Curl

June6 thru 12

Also , they helped the
homemaker aide in cleaning
house and simply visiting
with the homebound aged.
They help ed with meal
prepar ation in the home
kitchens of the old. They went
to drug stores to pick up
medicines for senior citizens .
They observed the art class
every Friday . When the
regular RN 's were abse nt,
they gav e bl ood -pressure
measuremenets. They observed the co-op store in the
basement. They conversed
with the elderly.
Prior to the visit of Sherry
Dillon and Jerry England last
Friday therefwere these
Holzer nurse students:
Melinda Burk , Ca th y
Ridenour , Vicki Riel, Lisa
Bunch, Diana Sharp, Kathe
Steiner, Gloria Young, Cia thy
Glassco, Jean Golden, Amy
Legar. Ruby Fletcher, Anise
Leigh
lrb y,
Gothard,
Charlotte Grimm , Cindy
Heyman, Diane Tackett.
Debbie Barnette, Jill Detty,
Lisa
Dobbins,
Rin'da
Pinkerman, Vic ki e
Tomlinson, Tina Coffman,
Melissa Burger, Patti
Christian, Alicia Tucker ,
Corky Werr y, Stephani e
Alfrey, Nancy Buskirk, Dawn
Elkins, Mary Beth Fischer,
Jayn e Wigglesworth, Barbara Bach, Denise Broyles .

junior woman s
club supports
school levy

Sears

SAVE
and give Dad our
fastest-cutting
electric chain saw

GALLIPOLIS
Th e
Gallipolis Junior Woman's
Club voted at its May
mee ting to pledge support
to the four mill city school
levy.
According to club president
J udy Harriso n, indi vid ual
club membe rs also par ticipated in the door to door
·campaign to inform citi zens
about the levy.
The club urged all citizens
to show their support by
voting yes on Tuesday, June

'

Sarah Carsey 1Charlene
Hoeflich
•

••

: Gallipolis-Point Pleasantj
:•
446-2342

~~

I
I I
I
I

I
I

fNtorlnjj
Anlllt Anybody

I
I

POMEROY - Assistance
with the restoration of th e
Chesler Cow·thouse is th e
bicelllennial project of th e
Middleport . Pomeroy Area .

Downie, Mrs . Bernice Carpenter and Mrs . Carla Shuler.
It was noted th at Mrs .
Downie had received a note of
thanks for her work as
Bran ch of the Amer ic &lt;.tn chairman of the international
Association of Univers ity relations committee from the
Women.
state chairman.
Meeting recenlly in th e
"Third World.Woman" was
Meigs High Sc hool libra ry, the program theme with the
Mrs . Maxin e Winge tt, topic, " Master of Own
communily
comm it te e Destiny" presented by the
~hairman . reported on plans
Woman's Committee headed
to raise fund s for the'project. by Mrs. Roberta Wilson. Mrs.
Bicentennial 'activities Anna Turner reported on an
were discussed with Mrs . abstract published in Rome
Martha Husted and Miss on rural life for women, Miss
Helen Sm ith, to head a Carolyn Smith on "American
committee to plan even ts in Women on the Move," Mrs .
July . Serving on the com- Woodard on the 1975
mittee will be Mrs. Dorothy Woman 's International Year.

I

to start

either Miller, 1-286-3733 in
.Jackson, or Suiter, 446-09114 in
Gallipolis, or call the office of
the Gallia Dramatic . Arts
Society, 446-2200.
This. year, "Gallia Country" will be presented four
weekends. in July : the 9th,'
16th, 23rd and 30th. Tickets
will be on sale in area
Chamber of Commerce of·
!ices. Prices: $3 for adults I $4
at the gate) , children, 18
years and under, $2. Special
rates for groups of 20 or
more, $2 each. Further lnformatiun m~y be obt.a ined
by calling the Chamber of
Commerce office, State
Street, Gallipolis.-

Group to assist restoration

Mr s

Donna Skidmore
BETROTHED - Mr. and Mrs. James H. Skidmore,
Rt. 3, Gallipolis, ~ re announcing the engagement and
forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Donna, to John
tipton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Morris Tipton, Portsmouth.
The bride-elect is a senior at MarilhaU University and
employed at Robbins and M~ers as a cost account.ant.
Mr. Tipton is a graduate of Rio Grande College, and is a
teacher and coach at Northwest HighSchool in Lucasville.
Plans are being made fer an August wedding.

and Mrs . Robert Wilson on
the woman manager, obstacles an d opportunities
from an address given by Dr .
Jordan a I the AA UW Branch
in New York City.
Due to the absence of the
advisor, the inst.allatiori of
new officers was postponed
until the fall meeting.
Hostesses were Mrs.
Wingett, Mrs . Downie, Mrs.
Lee Lee , Mrs. Nancy Reed,
and Mrs. Margaret Ella
Lewis. Others at the meeting
were Ann Elizabeth Turner ,
Mrs . Kate Jarrell , Mrs.
Margaret Parsons, Mrs . .
Sibley Slack, Mrs. Kathryn
Knight, and Mrs . Fay Sauer.

Say YES to the
School Levy June 8th.

YOU RECEIVE A FREE PAIR OF
SLACKS Willi ANY

Receive FreePair of Slacks

$12 to $16
Value

Receive Free
Pair of Slacks

$18 to $22
Value

to $90
SPORTCOAT

Recieve Free
Pair of Slacks

S2Z to $30
Value

FOR
GALLIPOLIS

$9S to $120
SPORTCOAT

Receive Free
Pair of Slacks

$30 to $32.50
Value

SCHOOL LEVY
JUNE 8th

sao

The job of Sheriff must not be turned aver to an
full

..

VOTE
YES

$60 to S75
SPORTCOAT

lime, dedicated Sheriff, and

we need him no w. Crime in Our county is out of hand,
and with your help , I propose to do something about it.
I would not ask for a larger force of men ; but, 1would
ask for a Jew gQod me n of character, energy and

Favorite Pop Pleasers!

ability . A g?oup of men who are dedicated and want to

••

••

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VOTE FOR
-

Our electric chain saws
regularly stort as tow as 121.95
Sears has a credit plan to suit most every need
• Price• are eatal_ol( prioos

( 'ttltVl•nil •nt ' SJ'" I' S ·. ot_~
c .....l.._ hv l'hm &gt;~ • 446- 27'70

• Shipping ut.ra

Silver Bri~ Plaza
Ph. 446-2770

"•
~

A LARGE SHIPMENT OF

••
•
••
••
•

'

Was $97.9S Dad will really appreciate this
saw's instant cutting power. No fuel for him
to m ix, no starter he has to tug. With dual
oiling system . .. automatic for normal use
and manual for heavy cutting. Power-Sharp'
system lets him sharpen the saw in about 5
seconds, without tedtous honing. Saw has a
powerful 2-H.P. motor and is double-insulated
so it doesn't need to be grounded . Barracuda
chain, and bar sent unattached., Now on sale.

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE

FOR

FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE

Famous Arrow Shirts
make a nice gift for
that Special Day . A
large
variety
to
choose from .
From

$r-

TUESDAY
ELECTION DAY dinner
and bake sale Tuesday at
Orange Township !"ire House
sponsored by the Tuppers
Plains Commun ity Club.

Swimwear for the
man in your family,
him a pair of
famous
brands such
Walk Shorts for that .
as
McGregor,
and
Special
Day .
.
Campus.
Wrangler
and
Campus.
From

Business'm an -· Has belong ed lo Unil ed S tee lwo rl\ers Operating
Engineers Loc a l 18, Belongs to Masonic Organizations. Lions Club,
Commander of South P oint Vete rans of Fore ign Wars No . 9642, Oh io
State Assoc'iation of Township Trustees and Clerks , League of Ohio
Sportsmen , Me mbe r of Lawrence. Galli a and Meigs Senior Citizens
Organizations.

._,....,..,,:JI

.·.

7'6

Pnce Good
tl uu h1esday

*Use Vour MASl E'R CttAR GF.C111 r1
.

.303 . pper River Road

Across from Silv er Bridg e PI&amp; Iii
Ca llipo l is , Op e n Mon . thru Sat . 1011 19

- -:-Get to know us; yc)u'llllkc us. r1 ~-

tkat Salj a Little more

.,\. ,~,1
!"!"'...,;~ If:

' ,,,~~~.:?:ii:Z.i

~
fi.L,,b_)~}

I

l

~l~~~'~""' t
'

......,_

i: _-

A bea uti ful recept ion - that's what ou'
weddtng gifts get flom even the choosiest

br ide. Her thank you note wi ll practical ly
write itself' Why' Because from the time •
she first set the date . just about every briqe
in town becomes acquainted with our
staff' s courteous and sound advice . .. and
the high standards we demand of every
item we show.
«&gt;&lt;1 SECONO

A~ENUE

•

U(H8•7 C

.t

,,

i

'

l•

has an extraordinary offer for you

I

THE YOUTH-DEW RECENCY COMPACT
FOR SOLID PERFUME

,.

Estee Lauder purchas~

'[I-l lS IS YOU &amp;OR DER FQRM':

Please send me l hc Youlh-Dew Regency Cnmp.1c1 (or
only 3.50 with my order of .1ny of th e followi ng:
Es !OCfcrmr-c reml'
2 01.. 9.00 0
Es !oderm e [mulsinn
2 0&gt; . 8.50 0
Dry Dry Skin A&gt;t ll ngcnl
II 0 1 . 7.00 0
MAKfU P
Soft Fi lm ComtJJCI Rouge
4.7,
Suntanned Ap rico t 0 Pinked Ked 0 Brandi ed Rose 0
Count•y-M i&gt;t Li qu id Makeup
1 0 1.. ·to.on
Country Be1ge 0
Golden Bc• 1gt' 0
Mi &gt;ly Tan 0
YOLI1J:I:DEW
Boui i({Ul' Ea u de P.1rf um Spr.ty
2 '/1 oz. [1.50 IJ
Bath Oi l
1/1 oz. 's. 75 o
Body Satin1'c
4 f)f 1.7 1 0
II oz. 11.75 0
Pu r~ Fragrann: SprJy
2 °/4 Oi . '10.00 0
ESTE E
I
Supe r Cologne Spray
2 oz. 'I '1.00 0

~

••
••
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••

master

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cha

I~ '"IIRIUI~

(

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LAYAWAY
OPEN MONDAY
TIL 8 PM

LANE CHESTS
.

'

•••
•
'•

Pure Fragrance Spray
Sup er Cologne Pur se Spray
r o; tl•e D.t ytimc Fragran c:c Spray

2 0/.. "12.'&gt;0

0

•; , oz . (,,(]() 0
·t '/• oz. 1li.OO 0

()1\o • o !ll•f Ito ,o IU•I• 'rlll"l

(l(lt'f 1'' )11! 1' \ - - - - - - - - All p rtorlw h fl l,tt lt • 111 l 1 (, A l'rh I'' •llhl"t t t' o , lo ,onp• 1\ 11111 1111 n .. m ,. ( llll •r
~tood 11 IHit• 'llfl)l l\' I,,, I,

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va lue fo r onl y 3.50 and any

~

.

P• ld Pol Adv . by ( ili7en &gt; lo Elect Schritt er. Don Schr iller , Treas urer.

r1og S 10 97

wedding oift§

'~
r:;;;,- ·-~ -

From

B1own Lei.Jther Women's

Teons· S ilOS
SAVE $3.3t

we have

•

by Farah, McGregor,
and Donega I. 'Get that
man' In style.

Summer
Natural
New Sandal Has Ncgntrve
Sola lor Natural Wa lk•no.

GALLI POLlS - Mr . and
Mr s . Hobart ~il son , Sr .,
r. allipolis , obse rved their
58th weddin g an niv ersa ry
Fr iday and also the 19th
birthday of lheir only granddaughter , Miss Brenda
Wilson. Attendin g a dinner in
observan ce of th e an niversaries were Mr . and
Mrs. Hobart Wilson, Sr., Mr .
and Mrs. Hobart Wilson , Jr ..
their daughtet·, Brenda , and
Mi ss Pam Eshcnaur.

•

$]00

92ND DISTRICT
Farm Owner, Con s truction Business. Has A Good Record in
Education, Labor, Farming Business.

·John A. Bryunt is the
pas tor. 1lle public is invited .

TR EATME NT

JUST IN TIME FOR
GRADUATION

.•

Pd. Pol. Ad v .

HAROLD SCHRITTER

POMEROY - Nuthan
Ma (thew Br own, son of Dr.
and Mr s. Harold Brown,
Pomeroy, observed his first
birthday Saturday, ·May 29,
with a party at the Brown
home.
The party carri ed out a
Walt Disney theme of Donald
Duck and Mickey Mouse,
with nursery songs being
played for the entertainment
of the children.
Cake and ice cream were
served the honoree 's greatgrandmo ther , Mrs . Sarah
Eli zabeth Br own , Minersvill e; his grandmo thers, Mrs.
Agnes Brown, Pomeroy, and
Mrs . Bet ty Sayre, West
· Colwnbia, W. Va.; Mr . and
Mrs. Marvin Hill and Andy .
Racine: Mr . and Mrs . Harold
·Sayre, Poin t Pleasa nt ; Joe
Reynold s, Mrs. William
Reynolds and Mike Reynolds ,
Middleport; Mrs . Armo
Morrison , Mrs . Ca therine
Thomas ,. Mrs. Glenna Mitchell, Mrs. Maria Mitchell
and Tina Mitche ll , West
Colwnbia, W. Va. ; Mr . and
Mrs . Cli fford Phillips,
Minersville, and Mr . and
Mrs. Babe McClaskey,
Pennsylvania . ·
Sending gifts were Mrs . C.
M. Templeton, Mr. and Mrs .
Alfred Ha ge, New Jersey:
Mr. and Mrs . Russell Brown.
Pomeroy: Dr. and Mrs .
Robert Brown and Bobby,
Dayton ; Mrs . Lucinda
Mitch ell , West Columbi a ;
Rupert Sayre, Letart, W. Va.,
and Or . and Mrs. N. W.
Compto~, Pomeroy .

.Jesus~"

Open Sundav 1 to 6 p.m.

Seen &amp; Heard

!-

turn thi s crime rate around and head ba·ck to law and
order again ..
Re-elect a good , experie nced Sheriff - Denver
Walker , Republican .

Ideal for pruning, trimming

SALE

Birthday
observed

ac tivities as song time. lliblt•
stud y, visual demonstrations.
rap sessions, craft making .
and other methods that tcudi
the concept , "G1xl's l.OVI' ts

!

SPORT COAT PURCHASED!
$40 to SSS

amateur. We need a

-

NATHAN BIIOWN

Vacation llibie School is this:.
"That souls be won to Christ
rutd grow in Christ. "
Bible-based lcs:;ons will be
taU~; hl through the usc of
advanced tem·h i n ~ mcthl)ds.
Studenr,; will_ llc challenged
and involved through such

..

8.

HOLlO AY GUESTS
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Vanderhoof ,
Waldo , were Memorial Day
weekend gues Is of Mr. and
Mrs . Lee McComas. The visit
marked the 35th wedding
anniversary of the Vanderhoofs and on Sunday the
Vanderhoof children came to
tile McComas home for a
dinner party. Attending were
Mr. · and Mrs . Charles
Gruber, daughter, Denise,
Colwnbus; Mr . end Mrs.
Floyd Vanderhoof and Mark
Vanderhoof , Waldo. They
were joined by Mrs. Dianne
George and children, Brian,
Brent, David, Christopher
and Margaret.

Calendar

·FREE!

EXPERIENCE COUNTS

~AI.C.

.._l:trmlat

Nuptial vows read

BUY A SPORTCOAT
AND GET A
PAIR OF SLACKS

a

1

Mr. and Mrs. George Norris

Young people
set to perform
year's recital theme is "200
Years - We 've Come This
Far By ~'ai th . " It is intended
to inspire the audience's
patriotism by use of music
dan ce and visual impressions
of the red, white and blue.
Mrs. Moore 's students will
end the program with
dramatic modern ballet
saluting America's herita ge
and today's mood.
From a baton opening to
the ba llet closing the
Gallipolis Performing Arts
Center's s tudents hope to
delight the audience with
each nwnber.

,

IY IIEiTIE CIAJU[

SUMMERIZE YOUR HOME
GAJ ,LJPOLIS.- We're a great believer in eosy living in
the summertime. That's what the warm weather is for. So
now 's the time to cut housekeeping, and housecleanin~, to the
barest possible minimum. And keep it that way 1
A clean , uncluttered look makes a house more comfortable
when the thermometer soars. This means putting awa y as
many winter-y furnishings as possible, and replacing them
with coo l, summertime things. Take down heavy figurines,
bric-a-brac and other dust-catchers tyou 'll be amazed to find
out how badly they may be in need of a good washing I and
replace them with a bowl or two of fresh flowe rs from your
garden , or a green plant. Remove massive andh'ons and
screen from the fireplace, and fill it with broad-leaved folia ge.
Afeeling of cool comf..-t will fill the room.
. Another way to give a room the. "summer look " is to take
down curtains, draperies, and Venetians blinds, replacing
them with simple wood shu tters finished with washable paint .
You'll get the full benefit of wide open windows, and the ·
louvers can be adjusted to catch and direct the breeze . These
shutters can be kept fresh and immaculate with the greatest of
ease - just go over them occasionally with a well-sudsed
sponge, then wiping with a rinsed sponge. When autwnn rolls
around , and you remove the shutters, you'll find that the
hinges are very inconspicuous and can be concealed by
RACINE -:- Marriage vows
A reception was held in the curtains or draperies.
were exchanged at 8:30 p.m. church hall with a late buffet
Sheer or net no-iron curtains or bamboo shades will give a
on Dec. 26, by Joy Bigler, supper, three tiered cake and light airy look to a room. If curtains are needed for privacy or
daughter of Mr . and Mrs . Roy a varie ty of homema de decorations, buy some of the inexpensive and attractive
Bigler, Canton, and George cookies. Music was by the plastic or plastic-eoated paper draperies. These can be wiped
Norris, son of Mr. and Mrs . Skylarks .
clean with a sudsy cloth, will last all swnmer, and can be
Howard Norris, R\. 2, Racine .
The bride and groom left discarded at the end of the season.
'
The Rev. Robert Coleman following ihe Wedding for a
You can cpver a sofa ~nd chairs with light-fitting slipofficiated in St. Paul's trip to Atwood Lodge.
covers made of a washable stain-resistant material. These
Catholic Church, Canton.
Mrs . Norris graduated fabrics come in a wide 'range of lively colors or cool-asThe bride was given in from St. Thomas Aquinas lemonade prints, and can be sipped off and laundered as often
marriage by her father who High School, Canton , and · as necessary. A good trick is to put them back on while they're
wore a black suit for the Louisiana Tech. She is the still damp - they'll dry without a wrinkle.
occasion. The bride's gown instrumental music teacher
Accent or arell rugs , placed on a scrubbed and polished
was vanilla double-knit and band di rector for · floor in pla ce of a thick , room-sized rug, will perk up a room ·
trimmed with lace and a Southern Local Schools . Mr . beyond your expectations. Bath shop departments stock these
matching mantilla. She Norris was graduated from in such sophist icated colors, shapes and designs that no one
carried
a
poinsettia · Southern High School, . at- will know they weren't originally intended for other rooms in
' . surrounded with holly, tiny tended Ohio University , and the house. These are less expensive than " real" rugs, and are
.
' pineones, bells, white is employed as a surveyor for .a breeze to machine wash a nd dry.
You 'II find that a summer do-&lt;Jver for bedrooms may be
stephanotis and baby's Southern Ohio Coal Co.
breath.
The couple resides in accomplished by simply changing bedspreads and curtains.
Her only jewelry was a pair Racine but will tie moving to Remove heavy spreads and draperies, and try bringing
of ·white glass-beaded ear- another area in the near swnmer atmosphere indoors with crisp chintz, soft nylon , o~
;- rings trimmed with rose future .
durable press cotton in cool shades of green, blue or perhllps
shell pink.
·• colored beads made by her
•• broth.er, Roy Bigler.
Durable press sheel• and pillow cases, fitted sheets that
:
The bride's sister, Jeanne
"iron" themselves smooth over the mattress, lightweight
: Tarzan, was ma.tron of honor
acrylic blankets, and polyester filled summer comforters help
~ and wore a printed long dress
to make life a dream - both for sleeping and for easy care.
~ in cream color trimmed with
The beauty of all these summertime changes lies partially
•• a deep rose velvet vest. Her
in their easy washability. Curtains, slipc overs, area rugs and
; bouquet included a large red
bedspreads can all go into your 'washer and most into your
automat ic dryer, as well.
: rose, pink stephanotis and
= baby's breath. She also wore
SUNDAY
• baby's breath in her hair .
ROLLING Hills Chapter
~
The groom wore a t.an 838, Parents Without Part- home of Mrs. J. W. Morris, 75th annual inspection to be
: vested suit with a dark brown ners, will hold a potluck and Mrs. Charl es McDaniel , made.
: · spirt and coordinating family picnic at Lake Alma assisting hostess .
TU ESDAY
"'... necktie. Pete Simpson served near Wellston Sunday, 2 p.m.
RACINE
MASONIC Lodge
SPECIAL MEETING ,
, . as best man in a light brown Bring table service, beverage · Southern
461
F&amp;AM
,
regular meeting,
Local
Band
: pin-striped suit with a deep and covered dish. Also bring Boosters, 7:30 p.m. Monday Tuesday, 7:30 p.m .
: rose shirt and coordinating bathing suits, fishing poles at high school. Final plans for
• necktie.
and frisbees. There will be a CB Radi o Roundup and
"
For her daughter's wed- frisbee contest at 4 p.m.
discussion on band camp and
~ ding, Mrs. Bigler wore a long
A SERIES of eight lectures other matters . All interested
~ mint green dress with jacket,
parents invited.
: while the groom 's mother on Abraham's Land Grant
NEWLY FORMED
Promises
will
be
held
at
the
;, was in a long sky blue dress.
First Church of God, Western Boot Citizens Band
Both had corsages of white
Syracuse, each Sunday night Radio Club will hold . a
• roses.
at 7:30 p. Jll. Public invited. meeting, 8 p.m. Monday at
:
Altar decorations included
Roush . Landing, one mile
• poinsettias aild pines. Carols George S. Oiler , pas tor, west of Racine on Route 124;
: were played softly on the speaker.
sign posted; those interested
MONDAY
: organ before the ceremony.
in joining are welcome.
TRI-COUNTY C-B meeting
: Assisted by the groom, the
MEIGS COUNTY Fair
~· bride composed the wedding Monday, 7 p. m. at motorBoard meeting, 8 p.m.
• • processional and recessional. cyc le club, Peach Fork Road , Monday at secretary 's offic e,
; : She presented a white rose to county road 19 . Potluck Rock Springs Fairgroun(ls . .
: ~ her mother during the dinn er to follow. Brjng
REVIVAL at Zion Church
• pr ocessional and to the covered dish, beverages, of Christ , 7:30p .m. Monday
~·
: : groom 's mother during the t.able service. Coffee will be through Friday. Tony Maple,
provided. Members and
. , recessional.
North Terrace Church of
A 15.00
: ' The selection on marriage guests invited.
Christ, Zanesville, speaking;
: in the Prophet by Kahil
BIBLE Schoo! at th e public invited.
• Gibran was relld by the Middleport United PenPOMEROY LODGE 164,
•• bride's brother, Roy Bigler.
tecostal Church, South Third F&amp;AM, special meeting, 7:30
: After vows were exchanged, Ave ., Middleport, 9:30 lo p.m. Monda y; Ma ster
·: Mr . and Mrs. Norris visited 11: 30 a.m . Monday through Masons invited.
: the Holy Family in the Friday.
·
RACINE CHAPTER 134,
• Christmas Manger before the
MIDDLEPORT Gar!len OES, regular meeting, 8 p.m .
: recessional.
·
Club, 7:30 Monday at the Monday at temple_!_p~ans for

HHr hfl(' \

GALLIPOLIS - Young
people, three to 20 years old
who have be en studying
ballet, tap, acrobatics and
halon twirling from Patty
Fellure and Gillian Mom·e
will give a public perform ance Wednesday, June 9 at
7: 30 p.m . in the Washington
E l eme nta ry Sc h oo l
Auditorium .
Contemporary music and
patriotic melodies will make
up the pr ograht for the
Gallipolis Performing Arts
.Ce nter's first annual spring
rec ital. To celebrate the
nation 's bicentenn ial this

VINTON
An excit ing
has been promised
fo r Vacati on Bible School to
be held Jww 7 thro u~ h 11 at
the Vinton Unit ed Metltl)dist
Chur ch.
"GI)d 's Love is Jesus" is
th e theme for Ute sc hool.
Hom·s arc 9 to 11 a.m. each
day . Classes will be offered
for all ages from mrr~e ry
1ages 2-3 ) through high
school.
A spokesman for the clmrch
said the cen tral ~oa t of
1&gt;ro~ rn m

I
I

GALLIPOLIS
The with
Nian
Cadman,
rehearsa l schedule for chorus choreographer , in charge.
members of "Gallia Coun - Other dancers, plus those
try " has been announced . dancers who have auditioned
Rehearsals wil l be th e already, should also report to
evenings - June 7, 10 and 14 the amphitheatre between 6
in Community Hall at Ri o and 7 p.m. on •June 14. The
Grande College .
amphith eatre is located
If anyone is interested in across from the Bob Evans
ta ki ng part, attend rehearsal Sausage Shop on Rt. 35 at Rio
and report to Kimball I Red 1 GrMde.
Suiter, mu sical director , or
Since the Director is
Greg Miller , director of this double-casting the main roles
year :s production,
this year for the first time, so
Try -&lt;Juts for the "Doodle-. I hal every performer will not
up s" wi ll be condu cted be asked to perform for each
Monday, June H, from 6 to 7 night of the four week
p.m. Any boy or girl up to to schedule, more people can be
years or age is invited to utilized. If anyone is ina ttend the a udi tions in the terested in taking part in the
amphitheatre .a t Rio C.r:1 nr!f' . production , you may contact

Woodard ,

Exciting program promised

Homemakers'
Circle

Pomeroy-Middleport
•
992-2156
•

reh~arsals

Pageant

I

Nam e__

Eve ry de tail of lhi&gt; ltmitecl edi tion co mpac t
foll ows lhc in,tr kat c scrollwork and e nam elin t; of an 1Hih -ce ntury French wai st orna . men I. In side is w;Jrlll , h 1·~utiful Yn 11 1h-Dew
So li d Pe rfume .

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....

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Add ress_,
Cl ly__
C h ar~c -

-

___ Stat e_ . • . _
Clwck_

Zip_

__ M () _ _ _ c. o.D._.

· lJ"tudi&amp;\1~

One of Southeastern Ohio's Fine,ores
Lafayene Matt •
,
JOOSecond Av o. .
·
, ollipolls, Ohio

�.\
4- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, S1111day, June 6, 1976

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
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RA C photo /air scheduled

Woman 's World

for River Recreation Festival
•·

r.

GALLIPOLIS
The
French Art Colony will have
Its annual Photo Fair booth at
the
River
Recreation
Festival exllibit.over the July
4th holiday weekend. Donald
and Carolyn Hippensteel wiJIIi
CO&lt;hair this event that wi!J
have appeal for both children'
and adults on Saturday, July
3 from 4 p.m. until dark, and
again on Sunday, July 4, from
12 :30 p.m. unlil _dark.
Decorated nats featuring
favorite animals from last
year 's Photo Fair plus new

ones based on the bicen- French Art Colony include an
tennial theme will be located Indian , Paul Revere un his
at the booth on the First horse, George and Marth"
Ave . upriver side of the City Washington , and others. For
Park. Animals that many will famil y groups, there will be a
remember fr om last year are State of Ohio outline with the
the tiger , the hippopotamus bicentennial emblem to use
and Donald Duck. The an- as a background .
.
tique car will be there and
Charge for each picture
those who wish may have will be $1 . Children and adults
their picture t.aken inside or can enjoy having their picbeside the car.
tures t.aken at the French Art
Colony Photo Fair Boo th as
New flats being painted this remembrances of the 1976
year by the members of the River Recreati on Festival.

Senior nurses help people at
Gallia Senior Citizen ceflter
GALLIPOLIS - Thirty •
five members of the senior
class. of Holzer Medical
Center School of Nursing
have helped and observed the
work at the Gallla County
seni&lt;lr citizens center - with
Friday the 'last day prior to
next
Friday's
commencement exercises.
The two girls last Friday
were Sherry Dillon and Jerry
England. The other 33 came
on scheduled dates starling
April 4.
It was practical experience

in gerontology for the seniors,
according to Jean Niday,
center director_,who said that
the nursing school seniors
either actively took part or
observed every aspect of the
center.
They went out with the
drivers in the senior homedelivered meal program, aild
IIley rode the complete circuit of the other van which
has a scheduled route daily.
They escorted the elderly to
their doc tors' offices for
appointments.

j

•
r . .. , yuw ....lf to tkt bt~l t a nln.rltol curli"t

p&lt; IH tUt t . ' AI ~trll'll ce "" pi•lew •l~ l~ol'llpoo ,
t ill I 1111to l •bt l olo your ho r l

'10 .... ....

Form l _
no

,.,,~ .

Offt r Good

Gim111e Curl

June6 thru 12

Also , they helped the
homemaker aide in cleaning
house and simply visiting
with the homebound aged.
They help ed with meal
prepar ation in the home
kitchens of the old. They went
to drug stores to pick up
medicines for senior citizens .
They observed the art class
every Friday . When the
regular RN 's were abse nt,
they gav e bl ood -pressure
measuremenets. They observed the co-op store in the
basement. They conversed
with the elderly.
Prior to the visit of Sherry
Dillon and Jerry England last
Friday therefwere these
Holzer nurse students:
Melinda Burk , Ca th y
Ridenour , Vicki Riel, Lisa
Bunch, Diana Sharp, Kathe
Steiner, Gloria Young, Cia thy
Glassco, Jean Golden, Amy
Legar. Ruby Fletcher, Anise
Leigh
lrb y,
Gothard,
Charlotte Grimm , Cindy
Heyman, Diane Tackett.
Debbie Barnette, Jill Detty,
Lisa
Dobbins,
Rin'da
Pinkerman, Vic ki e
Tomlinson, Tina Coffman,
Melissa Burger, Patti
Christian, Alicia Tucker ,
Corky Werr y, Stephani e
Alfrey, Nancy Buskirk, Dawn
Elkins, Mary Beth Fischer,
Jayn e Wigglesworth, Barbara Bach, Denise Broyles .

junior woman s
club supports
school levy

Sears

SAVE
and give Dad our
fastest-cutting
electric chain saw

GALLIPOLIS
Th e
Gallipolis Junior Woman's
Club voted at its May
mee ting to pledge support
to the four mill city school
levy.
According to club president
J udy Harriso n, indi vid ual
club membe rs also par ticipated in the door to door
·campaign to inform citi zens
about the levy.
The club urged all citizens
to show their support by
voting yes on Tuesday, June

'

Sarah Carsey 1Charlene
Hoeflich
•

••

: Gallipolis-Point Pleasantj
:•
446-2342

~~

I
I I
I
I

I
I

fNtorlnjj
Anlllt Anybody

I
I

POMEROY - Assistance
with the restoration of th e
Chesler Cow·thouse is th e
bicelllennial project of th e
Middleport . Pomeroy Area .

Downie, Mrs . Bernice Carpenter and Mrs . Carla Shuler.
It was noted th at Mrs .
Downie had received a note of
thanks for her work as
Bran ch of the Amer ic &lt;.tn chairman of the international
Association of Univers ity relations committee from the
Women.
state chairman.
Meeting recenlly in th e
"Third World.Woman" was
Meigs High Sc hool libra ry, the program theme with the
Mrs . Maxin e Winge tt, topic, " Master of Own
communily
comm it te e Destiny" presented by the
~hairman . reported on plans
Woman's Committee headed
to raise fund s for the'project. by Mrs. Roberta Wilson. Mrs.
Bicentennial 'activities Anna Turner reported on an
were discussed with Mrs . abstract published in Rome
Martha Husted and Miss on rural life for women, Miss
Helen Sm ith, to head a Carolyn Smith on "American
committee to plan even ts in Women on the Move," Mrs .
July . Serving on the com- Woodard on the 1975
mittee will be Mrs. Dorothy Woman 's International Year.

I

to start

either Miller, 1-286-3733 in
.Jackson, or Suiter, 446-09114 in
Gallipolis, or call the office of
the Gallia Dramatic . Arts
Society, 446-2200.
This. year, "Gallia Country" will be presented four
weekends. in July : the 9th,'
16th, 23rd and 30th. Tickets
will be on sale in area
Chamber of Commerce of·
!ices. Prices: $3 for adults I $4
at the gate) , children, 18
years and under, $2. Special
rates for groups of 20 or
more, $2 each. Further lnformatiun m~y be obt.a ined
by calling the Chamber of
Commerce office, State
Street, Gallipolis.-

Group to assist restoration

Mr s

Donna Skidmore
BETROTHED - Mr. and Mrs. James H. Skidmore,
Rt. 3, Gallipolis, ~ re announcing the engagement and
forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Donna, to John
tipton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Morris Tipton, Portsmouth.
The bride-elect is a senior at MarilhaU University and
employed at Robbins and M~ers as a cost account.ant.
Mr. Tipton is a graduate of Rio Grande College, and is a
teacher and coach at Northwest HighSchool in Lucasville.
Plans are being made fer an August wedding.

and Mrs . Robert Wilson on
the woman manager, obstacles an d opportunities
from an address given by Dr .
Jordan a I the AA UW Branch
in New York City.
Due to the absence of the
advisor, the inst.allatiori of
new officers was postponed
until the fall meeting.
Hostesses were Mrs.
Wingett, Mrs . Downie, Mrs.
Lee Lee , Mrs. Nancy Reed,
and Mrs. Margaret Ella
Lewis. Others at the meeting
were Ann Elizabeth Turner ,
Mrs . Kate Jarrell , Mrs.
Margaret Parsons, Mrs . .
Sibley Slack, Mrs. Kathryn
Knight, and Mrs . Fay Sauer.

Say YES to the
School Levy June 8th.

YOU RECEIVE A FREE PAIR OF
SLACKS Willi ANY

Receive FreePair of Slacks

$12 to $16
Value

Receive Free
Pair of Slacks

$18 to $22
Value

to $90
SPORTCOAT

Recieve Free
Pair of Slacks

S2Z to $30
Value

FOR
GALLIPOLIS

$9S to $120
SPORTCOAT

Receive Free
Pair of Slacks

$30 to $32.50
Value

SCHOOL LEVY
JUNE 8th

sao

The job of Sheriff must not be turned aver to an
full

..

VOTE
YES

$60 to S75
SPORTCOAT

lime, dedicated Sheriff, and

we need him no w. Crime in Our county is out of hand,
and with your help , I propose to do something about it.
I would not ask for a larger force of men ; but, 1would
ask for a Jew gQod me n of character, energy and

Favorite Pop Pleasers!

ability . A g?oup of men who are dedicated and want to

••

••

I

·•.

VOTE FOR
-

Our electric chain saws
regularly stort as tow as 121.95
Sears has a credit plan to suit most every need
• Price• are eatal_ol( prioos

( 'ttltVl•nil •nt ' SJ'" I' S ·. ot_~
c .....l.._ hv l'hm &gt;~ • 446- 27'70

• Shipping ut.ra

Silver Bri~ Plaza
Ph. 446-2770

"•
~

A LARGE SHIPMENT OF

••
•
••
••
•

'

Was $97.9S Dad will really appreciate this
saw's instant cutting power. No fuel for him
to m ix, no starter he has to tug. With dual
oiling system . .. automatic for normal use
and manual for heavy cutting. Power-Sharp'
system lets him sharpen the saw in about 5
seconds, without tedtous honing. Saw has a
powerful 2-H.P. motor and is double-insulated
so it doesn't need to be grounded . Barracuda
chain, and bar sent unattached., Now on sale.

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE

FOR

FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE

Famous Arrow Shirts
make a nice gift for
that Special Day . A
large
variety
to
choose from .
From

$r-

TUESDAY
ELECTION DAY dinner
and bake sale Tuesday at
Orange Township !"ire House
sponsored by the Tuppers
Plains Commun ity Club.

Swimwear for the
man in your family,
him a pair of
famous
brands such
Walk Shorts for that .
as
McGregor,
and
Special
Day .
.
Campus.
Wrangler
and
Campus.
From

Business'm an -· Has belong ed lo Unil ed S tee lwo rl\ers Operating
Engineers Loc a l 18, Belongs to Masonic Organizations. Lions Club,
Commander of South P oint Vete rans of Fore ign Wars No . 9642, Oh io
State Assoc'iation of Township Trustees and Clerks , League of Ohio
Sportsmen , Me mbe r of Lawrence. Galli a and Meigs Senior Citizens
Organizations.

._,....,..,,:JI

.·.

7'6

Pnce Good
tl uu h1esday

*Use Vour MASl E'R CttAR GF.C111 r1
.

.303 . pper River Road

Across from Silv er Bridg e PI&amp; Iii
Ca llipo l is , Op e n Mon . thru Sat . 1011 19

- -:-Get to know us; yc)u'llllkc us. r1 ~-

tkat Salj a Little more

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A bea uti ful recept ion - that's what ou'
weddtng gifts get flom even the choosiest

br ide. Her thank you note wi ll practical ly
write itself' Why' Because from the time •
she first set the date . just about every briqe
in town becomes acquainted with our
staff' s courteous and sound advice . .. and
the high standards we demand of every
item we show.
«&gt;&lt;1 SECONO

A~ENUE

•

U(H8•7 C

.t

,,

i

'

l•

has an extraordinary offer for you

I

THE YOUTH-DEW RECENCY COMPACT
FOR SOLID PERFUME

,.

Estee Lauder purchas~

'[I-l lS IS YOU &amp;OR DER FQRM':

Please send me l hc Youlh-Dew Regency Cnmp.1c1 (or
only 3.50 with my order of .1ny of th e followi ng:
Es !OCfcrmr-c reml'
2 01.. 9.00 0
Es !oderm e [mulsinn
2 0&gt; . 8.50 0
Dry Dry Skin A&gt;t ll ngcnl
II 0 1 . 7.00 0
MAKfU P
Soft Fi lm ComtJJCI Rouge
4.7,
Suntanned Ap rico t 0 Pinked Ked 0 Brandi ed Rose 0
Count•y-M i&gt;t Li qu id Makeup
1 0 1.. ·to.on
Country Be1ge 0
Golden Bc• 1gt' 0
Mi &gt;ly Tan 0
YOLI1J:I:DEW
Boui i({Ul' Ea u de P.1rf um Spr.ty
2 '/1 oz. [1.50 IJ
Bath Oi l
1/1 oz. 's. 75 o
Body Satin1'c
4 f)f 1.7 1 0
II oz. 11.75 0
Pu r~ Fragrann: SprJy
2 °/4 Oi . '10.00 0
ESTE E
I
Supe r Cologne Spray
2 oz. 'I '1.00 0

~

••
••
"'..•
w
••

master

~----

cha

I~ '"IIRIUI~

(

··-

LAYAWAY
OPEN MONDAY
TIL 8 PM

LANE CHESTS
.

'

•••
•
'•

Pure Fragrance Spray
Sup er Cologne Pur se Spray
r o; tl•e D.t ytimc Fragran c:c Spray

2 0/.. "12.'&gt;0

0

•; , oz . (,,(]() 0
·t '/• oz. 1li.OO 0

()1\o • o !ll•f Ito ,o IU•I• 'rlll"l

(l(lt'f 1'' )11! 1' \ - - - - - - - - All p rtorlw h fl l,tt lt • 111 l 1 (, A l'rh I'' •llhl"t t t' o , lo ,onp• 1\ 11111 1111 n .. m ,. ( llll •r
~tood 11 IHit• 'llfl)l l\' I,,, I,

••~
•••

'••••
••

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

••

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'

'

va lue fo r onl y 3.50 and any

~

.

P• ld Pol Adv . by ( ili7en &gt; lo Elect Schritt er. Don Schr iller , Treas urer.

r1og S 10 97

wedding oift§

'~
r:;;;,- ·-~ -

From

B1own Lei.Jther Women's

Teons· S ilOS
SAVE $3.3t

we have

•

by Farah, McGregor,
and Donega I. 'Get that
man' In style.

Summer
Natural
New Sandal Has Ncgntrve
Sola lor Natural Wa lk•no.

GALLI POLlS - Mr . and
Mr s . Hobart ~il son , Sr .,
r. allipolis , obse rved their
58th weddin g an niv ersa ry
Fr iday and also the 19th
birthday of lheir only granddaughter , Miss Brenda
Wilson. Attendin g a dinner in
observan ce of th e an niversaries were Mr . and
Mrs. Hobart Wilson, Sr., Mr .
and Mrs. Hobart Wilson , Jr ..
their daughtet·, Brenda , and
Mi ss Pam Eshcnaur.

•

$]00

92ND DISTRICT
Farm Owner, Con s truction Business. Has A Good Record in
Education, Labor, Farming Business.

·John A. Bryunt is the
pas tor. 1lle public is invited .

TR EATME NT

JUST IN TIME FOR
GRADUATION

.•

Pd. Pol. Ad v .

HAROLD SCHRITTER

POMEROY - Nuthan
Ma (thew Br own, son of Dr.
and Mr s. Harold Brown,
Pomeroy, observed his first
birthday Saturday, ·May 29,
with a party at the Brown
home.
The party carri ed out a
Walt Disney theme of Donald
Duck and Mickey Mouse,
with nursery songs being
played for the entertainment
of the children.
Cake and ice cream were
served the honoree 's greatgrandmo ther , Mrs . Sarah
Eli zabeth Br own , Minersvill e; his grandmo thers, Mrs.
Agnes Brown, Pomeroy, and
Mrs . Bet ty Sayre, West
· Colwnbia, W. Va.; Mr . and
Mrs. Marvin Hill and Andy .
Racine: Mr . and Mrs . Harold
·Sayre, Poin t Pleasa nt ; Joe
Reynold s, Mrs. William
Reynolds and Mike Reynolds ,
Middleport; Mrs . Armo
Morrison , Mrs . Ca therine
Thomas ,. Mrs. Glenna Mitchell, Mrs. Maria Mitchell
and Tina Mitche ll , West
Colwnbia, W. Va. ; Mr . and
Mrs . Cli fford Phillips,
Minersville, and Mr . and
Mrs. Babe McClaskey,
Pennsylvania . ·
Sending gifts were Mrs . C.
M. Templeton, Mr. and Mrs .
Alfred Ha ge, New Jersey:
Mr. and Mrs . Russell Brown.
Pomeroy: Dr. and Mrs .
Robert Brown and Bobby,
Dayton ; Mrs . Lucinda
Mitch ell , West Columbi a ;
Rupert Sayre, Letart, W. Va.,
and Or . and Mrs. N. W.
Compto~, Pomeroy .

.Jesus~"

Open Sundav 1 to 6 p.m.

Seen &amp; Heard

!-

turn thi s crime rate around and head ba·ck to law and
order again ..
Re-elect a good , experie nced Sheriff - Denver
Walker , Republican .

Ideal for pruning, trimming

SALE

Birthday
observed

ac tivities as song time. lliblt•
stud y, visual demonstrations.
rap sessions, craft making .
and other methods that tcudi
the concept , "G1xl's l.OVI' ts

!

SPORT COAT PURCHASED!
$40 to SSS

amateur. We need a

-

NATHAN BIIOWN

Vacation llibie School is this:.
"That souls be won to Christ
rutd grow in Christ. "
Bible-based lcs:;ons will be
taU~; hl through the usc of
advanced tem·h i n ~ mcthl)ds.
Studenr,; will_ llc challenged
and involved through such

..

8.

HOLlO AY GUESTS
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Vanderhoof ,
Waldo , were Memorial Day
weekend gues Is of Mr. and
Mrs . Lee McComas. The visit
marked the 35th wedding
anniversary of the Vanderhoofs and on Sunday the
Vanderhoof children came to
tile McComas home for a
dinner party. Attending were
Mr. · and Mrs . Charles
Gruber, daughter, Denise,
Colwnbus; Mr . end Mrs.
Floyd Vanderhoof and Mark
Vanderhoof , Waldo. They
were joined by Mrs. Dianne
George and children, Brian,
Brent, David, Christopher
and Margaret.

Calendar

·FREE!

EXPERIENCE COUNTS

~AI.C.

.._l:trmlat

Nuptial vows read

BUY A SPORTCOAT
AND GET A
PAIR OF SLACKS

a

1

Mr. and Mrs. George Norris

Young people
set to perform
year's recital theme is "200
Years - We 've Come This
Far By ~'ai th . " It is intended
to inspire the audience's
patriotism by use of music
dan ce and visual impressions
of the red, white and blue.
Mrs. Moore 's students will
end the program with
dramatic modern ballet
saluting America's herita ge
and today's mood.
From a baton opening to
the ba llet closing the
Gallipolis Performing Arts
Center's s tudents hope to
delight the audience with
each nwnber.

,

IY IIEiTIE CIAJU[

SUMMERIZE YOUR HOME
GAJ ,LJPOLIS.- We're a great believer in eosy living in
the summertime. That's what the warm weather is for. So
now 's the time to cut housekeeping, and housecleanin~, to the
barest possible minimum. And keep it that way 1
A clean , uncluttered look makes a house more comfortable
when the thermometer soars. This means putting awa y as
many winter-y furnishings as possible, and replacing them
with coo l, summertime things. Take down heavy figurines,
bric-a-brac and other dust-catchers tyou 'll be amazed to find
out how badly they may be in need of a good washing I and
replace them with a bowl or two of fresh flowe rs from your
garden , or a green plant. Remove massive andh'ons and
screen from the fireplace, and fill it with broad-leaved folia ge.
Afeeling of cool comf..-t will fill the room.
. Another way to give a room the. "summer look " is to take
down curtains, draperies, and Venetians blinds, replacing
them with simple wood shu tters finished with washable paint .
You'll get the full benefit of wide open windows, and the ·
louvers can be adjusted to catch and direct the breeze . These
shutters can be kept fresh and immaculate with the greatest of
ease - just go over them occasionally with a well-sudsed
sponge, then wiping with a rinsed sponge. When autwnn rolls
around , and you remove the shutters, you'll find that the
hinges are very inconspicuous and can be concealed by
RACINE -:- Marriage vows
A reception was held in the curtains or draperies.
were exchanged at 8:30 p.m. church hall with a late buffet
Sheer or net no-iron curtains or bamboo shades will give a
on Dec. 26, by Joy Bigler, supper, three tiered cake and light airy look to a room. If curtains are needed for privacy or
daughter of Mr . and Mrs . Roy a varie ty of homema de decorations, buy some of the inexpensive and attractive
Bigler, Canton, and George cookies. Music was by the plastic or plastic-eoated paper draperies. These can be wiped
Norris, son of Mr. and Mrs . Skylarks .
clean with a sudsy cloth, will last all swnmer, and can be
Howard Norris, R\. 2, Racine .
The bride and groom left discarded at the end of the season.
'
The Rev. Robert Coleman following ihe Wedding for a
You can cpver a sofa ~nd chairs with light-fitting slipofficiated in St. Paul's trip to Atwood Lodge.
covers made of a washable stain-resistant material. These
Catholic Church, Canton.
Mrs . Norris graduated fabrics come in a wide 'range of lively colors or cool-asThe bride was given in from St. Thomas Aquinas lemonade prints, and can be sipped off and laundered as often
marriage by her father who High School, Canton , and · as necessary. A good trick is to put them back on while they're
wore a black suit for the Louisiana Tech. She is the still damp - they'll dry without a wrinkle.
occasion. The bride's gown instrumental music teacher
Accent or arell rugs , placed on a scrubbed and polished
was vanilla double-knit and band di rector for · floor in pla ce of a thick , room-sized rug, will perk up a room ·
trimmed with lace and a Southern Local Schools . Mr . beyond your expectations. Bath shop departments stock these
matching mantilla. She Norris was graduated from in such sophist icated colors, shapes and designs that no one
carried
a
poinsettia · Southern High School, . at- will know they weren't originally intended for other rooms in
' . surrounded with holly, tiny tended Ohio University , and the house. These are less expensive than " real" rugs, and are
.
' pineones, bells, white is employed as a surveyor for .a breeze to machine wash a nd dry.
You 'II find that a summer do-&lt;Jver for bedrooms may be
stephanotis and baby's Southern Ohio Coal Co.
breath.
The couple resides in accomplished by simply changing bedspreads and curtains.
Her only jewelry was a pair Racine but will tie moving to Remove heavy spreads and draperies, and try bringing
of ·white glass-beaded ear- another area in the near swnmer atmosphere indoors with crisp chintz, soft nylon , o~
;- rings trimmed with rose future .
durable press cotton in cool shades of green, blue or perhllps
shell pink.
·• colored beads made by her
•• broth.er, Roy Bigler.
Durable press sheel• and pillow cases, fitted sheets that
:
The bride's sister, Jeanne
"iron" themselves smooth over the mattress, lightweight
: Tarzan, was ma.tron of honor
acrylic blankets, and polyester filled summer comforters help
~ and wore a printed long dress
to make life a dream - both for sleeping and for easy care.
~ in cream color trimmed with
The beauty of all these summertime changes lies partially
•• a deep rose velvet vest. Her
in their easy washability. Curtains, slipc overs, area rugs and
; bouquet included a large red
bedspreads can all go into your 'washer and most into your
automat ic dryer, as well.
: rose, pink stephanotis and
= baby's breath. She also wore
SUNDAY
• baby's breath in her hair .
ROLLING Hills Chapter
~
The groom wore a t.an 838, Parents Without Part- home of Mrs. J. W. Morris, 75th annual inspection to be
: vested suit with a dark brown ners, will hold a potluck and Mrs. Charl es McDaniel , made.
: · spirt and coordinating family picnic at Lake Alma assisting hostess .
TU ESDAY
"'... necktie. Pete Simpson served near Wellston Sunday, 2 p.m.
RACINE
MASONIC Lodge
SPECIAL MEETING ,
, . as best man in a light brown Bring table service, beverage · Southern
461
F&amp;AM
,
regular meeting,
Local
Band
: pin-striped suit with a deep and covered dish. Also bring Boosters, 7:30 p.m. Monday Tuesday, 7:30 p.m .
: rose shirt and coordinating bathing suits, fishing poles at high school. Final plans for
• necktie.
and frisbees. There will be a CB Radi o Roundup and
"
For her daughter's wed- frisbee contest at 4 p.m.
discussion on band camp and
~ ding, Mrs. Bigler wore a long
A SERIES of eight lectures other matters . All interested
~ mint green dress with jacket,
parents invited.
: while the groom 's mother on Abraham's Land Grant
NEWLY FORMED
Promises
will
be
held
at
the
;, was in a long sky blue dress.
First Church of God, Western Boot Citizens Band
Both had corsages of white
Syracuse, each Sunday night Radio Club will hold . a
• roses.
at 7:30 p. Jll. Public invited. meeting, 8 p.m. Monday at
:
Altar decorations included
Roush . Landing, one mile
• poinsettias aild pines. Carols George S. Oiler , pas tor, west of Racine on Route 124;
: were played softly on the speaker.
sign posted; those interested
MONDAY
: organ before the ceremony.
in joining are welcome.
TRI-COUNTY C-B meeting
: Assisted by the groom, the
MEIGS COUNTY Fair
~· bride composed the wedding Monday, 7 p. m. at motorBoard meeting, 8 p.m.
• • processional and recessional. cyc le club, Peach Fork Road , Monday at secretary 's offic e,
; : She presented a white rose to county road 19 . Potluck Rock Springs Fairgroun(ls . .
: ~ her mother during the dinn er to follow. Brjng
REVIVAL at Zion Church
• pr ocessional and to the covered dish, beverages, of Christ , 7:30p .m. Monday
~·
: : groom 's mother during the t.able service. Coffee will be through Friday. Tony Maple,
provided. Members and
. , recessional.
North Terrace Church of
A 15.00
: ' The selection on marriage guests invited.
Christ, Zanesville, speaking;
: in the Prophet by Kahil
BIBLE Schoo! at th e public invited.
• Gibran was relld by the Middleport United PenPOMEROY LODGE 164,
•• bride's brother, Roy Bigler.
tecostal Church, South Third F&amp;AM, special meeting, 7:30
: After vows were exchanged, Ave ., Middleport, 9:30 lo p.m. Monda y; Ma ster
·: Mr . and Mrs. Norris visited 11: 30 a.m . Monday through Masons invited.
: the Holy Family in the Friday.
·
RACINE CHAPTER 134,
• Christmas Manger before the
MIDDLEPORT Gar!len OES, regular meeting, 8 p.m .
: recessional.
·
Club, 7:30 Monday at the Monday at temple_!_p~ans for

HHr hfl(' \

GALLIPOLIS - Young
people, three to 20 years old
who have be en studying
ballet, tap, acrobatics and
halon twirling from Patty
Fellure and Gillian Mom·e
will give a public perform ance Wednesday, June 9 at
7: 30 p.m . in the Washington
E l eme nta ry Sc h oo l
Auditorium .
Contemporary music and
patriotic melodies will make
up the pr ograht for the
Gallipolis Performing Arts
.Ce nter's first annual spring
rec ital. To celebrate the
nation 's bicentenn ial this

VINTON
An excit ing
has been promised
fo r Vacati on Bible School to
be held Jww 7 thro u~ h 11 at
the Vinton Unit ed Metltl)dist
Chur ch.
"GI)d 's Love is Jesus" is
th e theme for Ute sc hool.
Hom·s arc 9 to 11 a.m. each
day . Classes will be offered
for all ages from mrr~e ry
1ages 2-3 ) through high
school.
A spokesman for the clmrch
said the cen tral ~oa t of
1&gt;ro~ rn m

I
I

GALLIPOLIS
The with
Nian
Cadman,
rehearsa l schedule for chorus choreographer , in charge.
members of "Gallia Coun - Other dancers, plus those
try " has been announced . dancers who have auditioned
Rehearsals wil l be th e already, should also report to
evenings - June 7, 10 and 14 the amphitheatre between 6
in Community Hall at Ri o and 7 p.m. on •June 14. The
Grande College .
amphith eatre is located
If anyone is interested in across from the Bob Evans
ta ki ng part, attend rehearsal Sausage Shop on Rt. 35 at Rio
and report to Kimball I Red 1 GrMde.
Suiter, mu sical director , or
Since the Director is
Greg Miller , director of this double-casting the main roles
year :s production,
this year for the first time, so
Try -&lt;Juts for the "Doodle-. I hal every performer will not
up s" wi ll be condu cted be asked to perform for each
Monday, June H, from 6 to 7 night of the four week
p.m. Any boy or girl up to to schedule, more people can be
years or age is invited to utilized. If anyone is ina ttend the a udi tions in the terested in taking part in the
amphitheatre .a t Rio C.r:1 nr!f' . production , you may contact

Woodard ,

Exciting program promised

Homemakers'
Circle

Pomeroy-Middleport
•
992-2156
•

reh~arsals

Pageant

I

Nam e__

Eve ry de tail of lhi&gt; ltmitecl edi tion co mpac t
foll ows lhc in,tr kat c scrollwork and e nam elin t; of an 1Hih -ce ntury French wai st orna . men I. In side is w;Jrlll , h 1·~utiful Yn 11 1h-Dew
So li d Pe rfume .

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Add ress_,
Cl ly__
C h ar~c -

-

___ Stat e_ . • . _
Clwck_

Zip_

__ M () _ _ _ c. o.D._.

· lJ"tudi&amp;\1~

One of Southeastern Ohio's Fine,ores
Lafayene Matt •
,
JOOSecond Av o. .
·
, ollipolls, Ohio

�7- The Sundav Times- Sentinel, Sunday, June 6,1976

28 attend tea
BY RENE BROYLES
Twenty-&lt;!ight persons attended the RSVP ap preciati on tea at Grace
United Methodi st Church
Monday, May 24.
Alter light · refreshmenl.&lt;i,
Maye Roush, Gallia County
Coordinato~ intrOduced the
following speakers : Florence
McDaniel on the Senior
Citizens Nutrition Program;
Bill Menshouse and me on the
Veterans Administration
Facility at Chillicothe;
Walter Bartram on the
Holzer Medical Center;
Roger Campbell, Ga.Ilia
County Volunteer
Emergency Squad; and Ruth
· Crup pbell on the Guiding
Hand School. Mr . Menshouse
also spoke of the Senior Expo
Nutrition Fair to be held at
the fairgrounds at Chillicothe
on Wednesday, June 9.
Mary Kathryn Smalley,
Graduating nurses at the Holzer Medical Center
School of Nu rsing are :
First row, tleftto right ), Mary Beth Fischer, De ni se
Broyles, Lisa Dobbins, Jill Detty, Gerry ~ ngland ,
Ba rbara Bach, Diane Sharp, Victoria Tomlinson, Nancy
Buskirk, Cindy Hey man, Amy Legar; (second row ), Tina
Coffman, Jay ne Wigg lesworth, Dawn !Clkins, Sherry

graduation ceremony .

Dr . Thom as P. Price ,
member of th e Holzer
Medical Center Staff, will be
the gues t speaker for the
evenin g. Executive Vice
President, Hugh P. Kirkel
. wi ll
pr eside a t th e

ceremonies.
The graduating class wi ll
be presented by Miss
Bere nice D. Skehan , Direc tor

GOSPEL
MEETING
CHURCH OF
CHRIST

On Success Road

JUNE 7 THRU 16
7: 30p .m.
Jose ph Hoskinn .
Speaker

of Nw·sing Education. They
will receive their diplomas
fr om Dr. Charles E. Holzer,
pres iden t of the medi ca l
staff, and th eir pins from
Mrs . Donna Reynolds, class
advisor, and Mrs. Barbara
McKinley. ins tructor .
Musical selections will be
providl'&lt;i by Merlyn Ro.ss.
Mrs. Merlyn Hoss will
prese nt the processional and
recessional.
Chaplain Arthur Lund of
the Holzer Medica l Center
w-ill pronounce the invocation
and the benediction .
During the evening two
awards will be presen!A!d to
the graduating seniors. The
stud ent with the hi ghest
scholastic average will
receive a gift presented by
the Gallia County Medical
Society. The Holzer Medical .
Center Clinic will present an
a ward to the best all around
student.
Students graduating include : Stephanie Ellen
Alfr ey , Ironton ; Barbara
Jea nne Bach, •Circleville;
Deburah Kay Barnett ,
Gal lipoli s.; Denise Wright
·Broyles, Gallipolis; Usa· May
Bunch, Urbana; Melissa Ann

SPECIAL FROM
CAROL'S COIFFURES
UNI-PERM
PERMANENTS
REG . '20.00

~

."'...

-......
..''

••

SPECIAL IN EFFECT JUNE8'·12th

CAROL'S COIFFURES
MASON , W. VA .

Burger, Vi enna, W. Va .;
Meiinda Voge lsong Burk,
Portsmouth ; Nancy Su e
Buskirk, Middleport ;
Patricia Ann Christian,
Iron ton ; and Tina Marie
Coffman , Nelsonville.
Other gradua tes are : Jill
Suzanne Detty , Heath ;
Sherry
Renee
Dillon,
Chesapeake ; Lisa Ann
Dobbins, Portsmouilh ; Dawn
Elaine Elkins , Portsmouth ;
Gerry Ann England , Belpre ;
Mary
Beth
Fisc her ,
Gallipolis ; Ruby Irene
Fletcher, Athens; Cathy Jo
Glassco, Chillicothe; Mary
Jean Golden, Bridgeport, W.
Va.; Anise Gayle Gothard ,
Barboursville, W. Va .;

..-----------......
D&amp;J's House of Fabrics

• •.
..···

PHONE 992·2110 ·

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Here are more sale bargains as we
clear out from stock to make room

June 7 to 12

- POLY AND
COITON

ForT-Shirts
Reg . S1.98 yd
$}19

'

$100
POLYESTER KNITS
YD.
$2
1 TABLE POL VESTER
DOUBLE KNIT, Reg . 12.98.......... ·Yd.

,
0:,

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Yd .

20% OFF
'

POLY/COTTON
4l" Wide

'

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10% OFF
ON ALL

1 TABLE .

D&amp;J's

ON ALL

I

The sons of a concert
pianist mother, both Elgart
brothers were playing the
piano before they were 10
years old. Les switched to
trumpet arid was the
president of the high school
dance band. Larry tackled
the flute , clarine t, and alto
saxophone. He was playing in
bands 'like Tommy Dorsey,
Rod Norvo and Woody
Hennan from· age 17 on.
During the 30s and 40s, the
Elgarts went from one top
band to another, but, even so,
disenchantment set in. In
1945, they formed a band of
their own. Three years later,
despi!A! artistic success, the
band folded . The years to
come were lean: one night
·stands, studio work, even
playing in the pits. But the
Elgarts never lost sight of
their goal.
In 1952, they put together
the lop personnel their format required and formed
their new orchestra. George
Avakian, then head of
Columbia Records heard and
liked the Elgart band, and
gambled and cut an album .
The reaction was beyond
Avakian 's wildest hopes. The
band was famous overnight,
and its records were high on
the charts year after year . In
1956, the band name changed
to the Les and Larry Elgart
orchestra.
In Gallipolis, tickel.&lt;i can
be purchased at Carl 's Shoe
Store and the Hallmark Card
Shop . in the Silver Bridge
Plaza.

for new shipments of fabrics . Shop

60" Wide

,,'

Yvonne Grimm,
Letart, W. Va .; and Amy
Beth Legar, Middleport.
Additional
graduating
seniors: Lucinda Heyman ,
Coal Grove; Cathy Hoff
Ridenour, Pomeroy; Lona
Leigh lrby , Letart, W. Va .;
Rinda Ann Pinkerman, Kitts
Hill; Vi cki Rae Riel,
Parkersburg, W.Va .; Brenda
Diane Sharp, Jackson; Kathe
Sue Steiner, Akron; Diane
Ga le Tackett, Waverly;
Victoria Lynn Tomlinson,
Bidwell ; Alicia Jeffers
Tucker, SpringfieW ; Ruby
"Corky" Werry, Hemlock
Grove ; Jayne Anne Wigglesworth, Gallipolis and Gloria
Ann Young, Pennsville, Ohio.

HOUSE OF
FABRICS

FREE!
1 Spool
of Thread
With each

$5

purcnase.

45" Wide

NO ROLL
ELASTIC
ID YAROS
FOR
'1.00
( This1s in

DENIM
Reg. S2.49

$}S9Yd.

REMNANTS
pieces)
1 Mile Below Middleport On State Rt. 7
·I

REVIVAL SET
POMEROY - A revival
will be held at the Carleton
Church beginning Monday
and running throu~h June 6 at
7:30 each evening. Friday
night will feature special
singing by the Gospel Tones,
Charleston. John Lanier will
be evangelist. The pastor,
Gary King, welcomes the
publie.

Columbus, and Mr . and Mrs.
Gerald Powell, Pomeroy.
Great-grandparenl.&lt;i are Mrs. ·
Ruth Stace, Winter Haven,
Fla., and Mrs. Hattie Powell,
Racine . The paternal · greatgrandparenl.&lt;i are Mr. and
Mrs. Elmer Meyers of Grand
Rapids, Mich.

:
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r~ms;:''?;i;~:;7,.
Calendar

PLAZA

GIVE DAD HISI

STORE WHERE HE
SHOPS

----

THE
UNIFORM
CENTER
.

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faster and more economical
with the Sheet that's 66 percent lighter
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Twin-Rib, the world's largest-selling aluminum farm
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Check Our Price
economicaL

Karen Louise Lemley

Lemley-Pyles engaged
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and'
Mrs. Andrew Lemley,
Gallipolis, are announcing
the engagement · and forthcoming marriage of their
daughter, Karen Louise, to
Charles Fredrick (Buddy r
Pyles, Jr. , son"of Mayor and
Mrs. Charles F. Pyles,
Racine .
Miss Lemley , a 1971 '
graduate of Gallia Academy

High School, attended Lear
Seigler Institute, Maryland,
for
medical
assistant
training . She is employed at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
in Pomeroy.
Pyles is a 1971 graduate of
Southern High School, the
Nashville Auto Diesel
College, Nashville, Tenn.
The wedding will be an
event of Sunday, JiJ.ly 18 at
2:30 p.m. at Grace United
Methodist
Church
in
Gallipolis with the Rev. Paul
MIDDLEPORT
A
campout and slumber party Hawks offi~iating . The
gracious custom of open
were planned for JiJ.ly 9 and
church
will be observed.
10 at the Tuesday night
meeting of the Bradford
Teens at the Bradford Church
of Christ parsonage .
Greg Browning presided at
the meeting with Vicki
Pickens
giving
the
secretary's report and Cherie
Lightfoot, treasurer's re(iort.
The youth also planned a
singspiralion to be held Aug .
13 at 7:30 p.m. to make
money for youth revivals .
Devotions were by Greg
Browning and Beverly
Wilcox . Banana splits were
served following the meeting.
The next meeting will be at
the home of Vicki Pickens
with a softball game to be
played at that time. At·
tending the meeting were
those named and Jack and
Kitty Perry, Tammy, John
and Chuckie Blake, Carol
Morris, Mike Wayland,
Danny Harrison and Herbie
Noel .

TWIN RIB"+·PL/JS

PER 4'K8' SHEET

SUMMER
SHIFTS
For

;

•
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POMEROY LANDMARK
Serving Meigs, Gallia &amp; Mason Counties
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
PH . .992-2181
POMEROY,OHIO

Activities set

t

.....

t1

~-

WIWW&amp;iW.llei'OIJIVOED

DWIIED

•

CDNTRDlUD

You ~re heading in the
: right direction ...
'

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have always attempted

to be:

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NEW TRAVEL· SIZES

--- t;'CC.

.._!111

&gt;-TO SET A TABLE

c
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....::)

Nancy .Ann .Cottrill

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Peddler's Pantry

Aspring theme was used in
the decorations. Games were
played with prizes going to
Mrs . · Colmer,
Evelyn
Johnson, Joyce Redman and
EiJ.lah Redman .
Cake, mmts, and punch
were served to those named
and Brenda Templeton, Carol
'Lunsford, and Kenny, Anita
Van Cooney, Nora Nitz, Joyce
Hall, Judy ·Eblin, Eunice
Eblin, Betty Brown, Frieda
Mossman, Shari Colmer,
Deloris Elliott, Cindy Black-.
well, Vicki Miller and April,
Cindy FaiJ.lk, Lori Redman,
Mamie Stephenson·, David
Johnson and the Rev. Clyde
Henderson . Gil.&lt;! were sent by
several who were unable to
attend. ·

SUN .• JUNE 20th

••

•

Brazilian Tan

Treat your
feet while you
treat yourself .
With Iatlgo leather.
wood wedges. crepe soles.
Great going for your jeans.
Try a pair. Peawln
refreshes best.

• Effective
• hnpartial

In 1972, the. Supreme Court · of Ohio honored my
performance as Prosecuting Attorney with an award for
''excellent service in the advancement of criminal
justice". I pledge to continue my dedication to Meigs
County if reelected. Your support is appreciated.

If you're headil'lg to Commercial &amp; Savings Bank to
deposit your money .
Invest your money in an account which pays the maximum
interest. A savings account lets you put money away for
the future, insuring your savings up to $40,000. It's a great
way to save and Commercial &amp; Savings Bank is a great
place to save.

REELECT BERNARD V. FULTZ

MEMBER FDIC

MEIGS COUNTY PROSECUTING AITORNEY

i XI

BERNARD V. FULTZ

I

••
'-----~. . . . . . . . . . . .- .. . . ..-&lt;.P.ai•d•F•o•r•B~y--Th•e•Ca._n.d.id•a•te.J_,~

Avenlltl

pr esident , byopened
the '
_J
'il C SHUI(I(A
estRs
meeting
members
repealing the club collect.
Mrs . !!riggs Kirby ~ave for
devotions a reading, "A well
used memory is a Holy
by Rev/on
Thing ," and '' How We Can
Make Memorial Day More ~
MeaningfiJ.l."
The roll call was answered
by nine members naming
their fa vorite cactus . The
Christmas cactus was a IGaHj....Jio Ohio • • - .,.____..•
favorite named. Mrs. Kirby
1"""'t
•
read the secretar y and
treasury reports. .
The pre~iden't reported that
' 10 arrangemenl.&lt;i were made
for t.he alumni banquet. The
county flower show and bake
sale was discusSed and plans
made. Miss Reese read an
'
invitation
from Mrs. Sharon
PLAN TO WE!}- Mr. and Mrs. Emery D. Cottrill of
.
Johnson
to
an open meeting
.
Marieita annoWice the engagement of their daughter,
at
St.
Peter
's Episcopal
Nancy Ann, to Fred Ruth, son ol Mr . and Mn. James F.
II.
Church June 10.
Ruth, Smithfield. Miss Cottrill graduated m 1971 from
The
July
meeting
and
the
Marietta High School and from Muskingurn College in
annual picnic will be July 11
197S. She is currently employed as a teacher by Warren
at the home of Mr. and Mrs .
Local School District, Vincent. Mr. Ruth graduated m 1968
James Conkle.
from Smithfield High School and from Mount Union
The guest speaker was
College in 1972. He was Iormerly employed a~ assista~l
Mrs
. Eugene Moore who
Ill
band direclor of Meigs boca! School DistriCt. He IS
spoke
on cactuses and succurrenUy band director at the Warren Local Schools in
' . .... - ·~
ciJ.lents. She said, according
f
Vincent. The wedding isplarmed for July 24at I :30 p.m. at
lo bOoks, there are 2,000cacti:
the Marietta Bible Center Church. The custom of open
Mrs. Moore had 108 different
church will be observed.
kinds and had a display of 50
with her.
A succulent is a plant that
------·-·-·----··-··~
has a lot of liqiJ.ld and most
cacti have no liqiJ.ld . Aloe , or
LOOK AT THIS BEAUTY FOR
the healing plan t, is a sue·
DRINKING
. It holds 16 oz. and is
ciJ.lent and Mary and Martha
on 11 Everythlng Glitss! '' It's a grent
put it on Jesus's wounds at
idea from France. This 500 mill ·
the Cross. Good for burns and
lelen~ Mize is perrect for double Old
sores, it is also called the
Fushioneds or High B1111' - and just
miracle plant and a small
abou t every sort drink you can
want. Including iced t~a .
amount is used in cosmetics.
I Mrs. Moore showed the
These jumbo crys tal tumble r"
Calendar
are · urwd in France for icc crenm
group how to graft cacti using
EXHffilT for lh~ month of JUNE : Old Bergen Art Guild, two different kinds. She· said
and puddinKS. Why nol here ,
Mulli'&lt;lledia Exhibit, Riverby. ·
.
.
not tb let a drop of water on
8 PC. 5El..~ ..................'.10.00
'GALLERY HOURS: Saturdays and Sundays, I until 5 where the gnifting is done.
p.m.; Tuesdays and Thursdays, !Oa .m. until3p.m.
Use 11 sharp knife, making a
WHERE ELSE
June IS, Tuesday, 8 p.m. - F.A.C. lnterdepartmchtal Von one and do not use metal
Meeting , Riverby .
.
·.
to hold. Use toothpicks or
June 18 Friday - Deadline for entry forms for River thread .
Recreation Festival E~hibit in 'the City Park on July 4 to be
sent to Mrs. Jan Thaler, Route 2, Box 112, Galli!X'liil, Ohio
State &amp; Third________ Gallipolis, Ohio
~~.
.
June 22, Tuesday, 8 p.m. - F.A.C. Trustees Meetmg,
Riverby ,
.
. June 24, Thursday, 9 .JI a .m. - Christmas Cormmtlee,
Riverby ,
July 4, Sunday, 11 a.m ..:! p.m . - River Recreation
Festival Exhibit, City Park.

• Dedicated

Tina Calloway, Mary Belle
Martin, Susan Petrie, Ellen
Waugh.
Donna Persinger, Patty
Patrick, Cindy Mink, Diana 1
Kessel, Maria Singer, Lori ,
Naskey , June Ellcessor,
Diane Holley.

water from the bOttom. Good
drainage is also needed. 'Ole
most Irripl)rtant thing Is to
know your planl, she said.
Mrs . Moore was presented a
gift. Mrs . Shaver served
refreshment$, coffee and ten.

-·.~• 330 ·Second

~~

Miss Marilyn Reese, the

~alzeit~eclctt. .~~~

• Competent

~enlion·.

\'ines.

Marzetti, tossed salad and
dressing, cornbread, butler,
· canned pears, milk.
· Fridljy - Fried fish ,
escalloped potatoes, buttered
spinach, bread, butter, citrus
sections and sugar cookie,
milk.
Choice of beverage served
with each meal.

• Considerate

Make the cut slantways.
When one makes cuttings, the
. plant must ~eal over before
dirt is put in or Uiey will rot.
She told the group most
people water their cacti too
much and one should always

several African violel.&lt;i in , - : ; ; ' ;
addition to other flow ers al}d

POMEROY - A bridal
shower was held recentiy at
the home of Frieda Henderson honoring Tammy
Snider, bride-elect of David
Johnson . Hoste~ses were
Mrs. Henderson, and sis!A!rs
of the bride-elect, PaiJ.letle
Farley, Nancy Whjltek.ing
and Barbara Colmer.

For Meigs County,

HOSTS VISITORS
POMEROY ..,. Mrs. Ronald
Grindley of Minersville had
as recent guests, her foster
daughter , Mrs . Stanley
James and daughter, Nancy, '
Toledo ; Miss Donna Case of
Columbus; Mr . and Mrs .
David Case and Mrs .
Elizabeth Ely, Pittsburgh,
Pa.; the Rev . · and Mrs .
Ronald Grindley, Columbus;
Donnie Newlon and daughter,
Mount Vernon, ·and Mr. and
Mrs. Eber Grindley of Akron .
Miss Case, who attended the
Racine Schools, fs employed
in the office of Gertrude
Donahey, state treasurer,
and delegate at large to the
,National Democral Con-

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs .
Stanley Shaver's new
sunroo nr was enjoyed
by members of the
Wayside Garden Club
Tuesday evening at her
home . Mrs. Shaver has

Miss Snider feted

..

FARMER /.'ARMER/ FARMER

I, Bernard V. Fultz,
as Prosecuting Attorney

New staff named
GALLIPOLIS - Faculty
advisor Stanley Krulia has
named the 1976-77 business
staff at Gallia Academy High
School.
They are :
Business manager , Eugene
Rutz ; assistant manager,
Colleen Turner; Pam McMahon , Kim Henderson,
Cindy Musgrove, Renee
Smith, Sandy Sowers, Lu Ami
Evans, Lou Ann Willis, Kim
Notter.
Sheree King, Jane Kerr ,
Tami Bush, Lisa Stewart,
Jane Circle, Lisa Niday,
1.orrieSager, Patrice Wright, .

••~

r-------~------~~~~------, ;

ear ly/ you'll save big!

6 BIG DAYS
'

Charlot~&gt;!

'

POINT PLEASANT, W.
Va . - Advance ticket sales
have started for the Mason
Coun ly Bicentennial Ball to
be held JiJ.ly 3.
In keeping with the
bi cen tennial theme, the ·
advanced tickets will case
$1 7.76 and at the door, $19.76.
There will be no reserved
tables and the only ~ay to be
assured seating is to · pur.chase tickets early, as only
200 tickets will be available
due to the renovation at the
armory.
The Les and Larry
Elgart Orchestra will provide
the music. In speaking of the
band, Larry Elgart says,
" We felt there was a
big
need
in
music
for a band that could
be aimed at a large segment
Of the public and could play
the best hotels, colleges,
social events, you name it,
without sounding like a
society band or just another
imitation of Glenn Miller."
Elgart · feels that at the
same time it could be a band
in which good musicians
including good jazz men,
could work and keep their
heads up at the end of the
night.

MARRIAGE ANNOUNCED - Mrs. Jack Ferrell of ".,
325 Lincoln St. , Middle!X'rl, is announcing the marriage of
her daughter, Terry Lynn George to Junior Hopson. The
groom is the son of ~ine a lid Gladys Hopson of Delaware, ":
Ohio. The couple will make the.ir home in Delaware, Ohio. :
FIRST CHILD BORN
POMEROY - Mr. and
Mrs. Steven Raymond ,
Pomeroy, are announcing the
· birth of their first child, a son,
Jeremy PaiJ.l, May 21 at
Holzer Medical Center .
Grandparents are the late
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Raymond ,

uance tzcketS on Sate1
n

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Holzer nurses graduating Friday
GA LLI PO LI S - Co mmencement cKercises for the
Holzer Medical Ce nter School
of Nursing will be held on
Friday, June II , at Grace
United Methodis t Church in
Gallipolis. Beginning at 8
p.m., :J5 seniors will re'ceive
dipl omas at th e annual

Mr. and Mrs. junior Hopson

olbera.

'

Shaver sunroom toured

Park manager talks
to Riverview club -

direclor of the four county
RSVP, conducted a question
and answer period.
Mrs. Roush wishes to.thank
Pearl Bowen,. Eleanor
Benedict, Irene Smeltzer and
Mrs. Smalley for assisting
her in the preparation of the
tea .
On Friday, . May 28, a
similar cOffee was held at lhe
MI. Carmel Church in Bid·
well. Twenty-&lt;Jne members
were present aod Mrs . Roush
wishes to thank Ada Payne,
Edna Payne and Dorothy
Thomas for their assistance
and gracious hospitality
throughout the meeting.
Mrs . Roush in traduced ihe
following speakers: Nora
Knotts and Reva Evans. They
spoke of the need for
volunteers in different
departmen 1.&lt;1 of the Holzer
Medical Center and the
pleasure they have of helping

Dillon, Corky Werry, Kathe Steiner, Melissa Burger,
Cathy Ridenour, Leigh Irby, Charlotte Grimm, Ruby
Fletcher; 1 third row) , Melinda Burk, Rinda Pinkerman,
Vicki Riel, Debbie Barnett, Stephanie E. Alfrey, Cathy
Glassco, Anise Gothard, Lisa Bunch, Diane Tackell, Jean
Golden, Patricia Christian, Gloria Young. Not pictured •
is Alicia Tucker, Springfield.

were ~onduc ted by Mrs .
Hannum during the social
hour . Prizes went to Mrs.
Frank Bise, Mrs. Frank. Mrs .
Ronald Cowdery and Mrs .
Dorsel Riebel. Door prize was
awarded to Mrs. Bise.
Cake, punch, mini.&lt;! and
nuts were served to Mrs .
REEDSVILLE - Doyle Band banquet.
Smales, manager of Forked
Making up the program Bise, Mrs. ·Chadwell, ~s.
RWJ Slate Park, presented planning committee were Cowdery, Mr~. Frank, Mrl
lhe program at the May Mrs. David Chadwell, Mrs. Grossnickle, Mrs . Roy
meeting of · the Riverview Gene Young , Mrs. Harliss Hannum , Mrs . Donald
Garden Club at lhe home of Frank, Mrs . Whitehead and Myers , Mrs. Putman, Mrs.
Spencer,
Mrs .
Mrs. Walter Brown with Mrs. Mrs. · Donald Putman. The Tom
Whitehead
,
Mrs
.
Gene
Sieve Cowdery as co-hostess. club will eat at the ·Wilmar
Mr. Smales showed slides of June IS and lour Fenlon Wilson, Mrs. Young, Mrs. R.
Forked Run Sl&lt;lte Park and a Glass Co. at Williamstown, L. Larkins , Mrs . R. H.
Hannum, Mrs. R. E.
movie, ~~sweet Ohio/' en- W. Va ,
joyed by all.
An auction of home articles Williams, Mrs. Riebel, and
The business meeting · wiJI .be held at th.e June · 24 Mrs. Balderson. Guests in·
opened with devotions by meeting with Mrs. Claremont cluded Charlene Chadwell
Mrs. Lyle Balderson, who Harris and Mrs . Herman and Christopher Cowdery.
gave a reading, "I am so Grossnickle. ·
Busy, Lord." Response to the
The ·flowers which the club
roll call was made by had provided for the commembers naming a wild mencement at Eastern High ::::
flower they brought to the School were given to the ~
=:--:
.
.
meeting.
County
Infirmary
at
GALLIPOLIS
The
Mr-s, Roy Hannum thanked Pomeroy.
Senior Citizens Center,
members for arrangements
Mrs . Chadwell, vice located at 220 Jackson Pike in
they made for the Eastern president, presided. Games
the County Home Building, is
open Monday through Friday
from 9 a.m . to 3 p.m. The
sc
hediJ.le of a eli vities for this
IN THE
week is as follows :
Monday, June 7- Physical
SILVER BRIDGE Fitness,
11:30 a.m.; Blood
Pressure Check, 1·2 p.m.;
Olde Tyme Chorus Practice,
1-3 p.m.
Tuesday, June 8- Election
Day (VOTE ); Visiting, 9
a.m.-3 p.m.; Garden Club
Organization, 1 p.m.
Wednesday , June 9 - Expo
'76. Bus leaves the Center at
8:30a.m.; Physical Fitness,
(HE'LL BE GLAD 11:30 a.m.; Card Games, 1·3
p.m .
YOU DID)
Thursday, June 10 QiJ.llling and Visiting, 9 a.m.-3
p.m.; Potluck Supper, 6:30
p.m.
Friday, June 11 - Art
Class, !.3 p.m.; Cincinnati·
Reds Game Trip. Bus leaves
Center at 3 p.m.; Social Hour,
7 p.m.
Seniors' Co-op is open each
day from 12:30-1:30 p.m.
The Senior Nutrition
Program serves meals at 12
hasnoon . The menu for the week
is as follows:
Monday - Macaroni and
cheese with ham chunks,
j buttered broccoli, sliced
lorna to · salad on lettuce,
bread,
butter, prune cake,
"]iust
You '•
milk.
·
Tuesday - Pot roast of
beef, gravy, buttered
''By
steamed potatoes, buttered
I
:
mixed vegetables, roll ,
butter, canned apricots, milk.
Wednesday - Chicken with
''
gravy mashed potatoes,
butler~d peas, jellied
CAI.IFORNM
cranberry salad, bread ,
butter, ice cream, milk.
366 Second Avenue-- Gallipolis, Ohio
Thursday Johnny

COMMERCIAL &amp;SAVINGS BANK
COURT STREET
'

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

Buy One Pipe ·at ~egular Price and
Gel the 2nd Pipe •12 Price.
.
Must Be of Equal · Price or Less. ,

~ANKAMERICARD

rAJ

maste
THf

IMII~I&amp;

g

..o UO

I
--

TAWNEY JEWELERS
422 Second Ave.

Gallipolis

Mon . &amp; FrU :JOtiiBp.m.
Tues. Wed. Sai.9 :301!1Sp.m.
Thursday 9: 3D llli2 n.On
Leather re.lms t(I IIPPI.!U

I

· - ,.1

�7- The Sundav Times- Sentinel, Sunday, June 6,1976

28 attend tea
BY RENE BROYLES
Twenty-&lt;!ight persons attended the RSVP ap preciati on tea at Grace
United Methodi st Church
Monday, May 24.
Alter light · refreshmenl.&lt;i,
Maye Roush, Gallia County
Coordinato~ intrOduced the
following speakers : Florence
McDaniel on the Senior
Citizens Nutrition Program;
Bill Menshouse and me on the
Veterans Administration
Facility at Chillicothe;
Walter Bartram on the
Holzer Medical Center;
Roger Campbell, Ga.Ilia
County Volunteer
Emergency Squad; and Ruth
· Crup pbell on the Guiding
Hand School. Mr . Menshouse
also spoke of the Senior Expo
Nutrition Fair to be held at
the fairgrounds at Chillicothe
on Wednesday, June 9.
Mary Kathryn Smalley,
Graduating nurses at the Holzer Medical Center
School of Nu rsing are :
First row, tleftto right ), Mary Beth Fischer, De ni se
Broyles, Lisa Dobbins, Jill Detty, Gerry ~ ngland ,
Ba rbara Bach, Diane Sharp, Victoria Tomlinson, Nancy
Buskirk, Cindy Hey man, Amy Legar; (second row ), Tina
Coffman, Jay ne Wigg lesworth, Dawn !Clkins, Sherry

graduation ceremony .

Dr . Thom as P. Price ,
member of th e Holzer
Medical Center Staff, will be
the gues t speaker for the
evenin g. Executive Vice
President, Hugh P. Kirkel
. wi ll
pr eside a t th e

ceremonies.
The graduating class wi ll
be presented by Miss
Bere nice D. Skehan , Direc tor

GOSPEL
MEETING
CHURCH OF
CHRIST

On Success Road

JUNE 7 THRU 16
7: 30p .m.
Jose ph Hoskinn .
Speaker

of Nw·sing Education. They
will receive their diplomas
fr om Dr. Charles E. Holzer,
pres iden t of the medi ca l
staff, and th eir pins from
Mrs . Donna Reynolds, class
advisor, and Mrs. Barbara
McKinley. ins tructor .
Musical selections will be
providl'&lt;i by Merlyn Ro.ss.
Mrs. Merlyn Hoss will
prese nt the processional and
recessional.
Chaplain Arthur Lund of
the Holzer Medica l Center
w-ill pronounce the invocation
and the benediction .
During the evening two
awards will be presen!A!d to
the graduating seniors. The
stud ent with the hi ghest
scholastic average will
receive a gift presented by
the Gallia County Medical
Society. The Holzer Medical .
Center Clinic will present an
a ward to the best all around
student.
Students graduating include : Stephanie Ellen
Alfr ey , Ironton ; Barbara
Jea nne Bach, •Circleville;
Deburah Kay Barnett ,
Gal lipoli s.; Denise Wright
·Broyles, Gallipolis; Usa· May
Bunch, Urbana; Melissa Ann

SPECIAL FROM
CAROL'S COIFFURES
UNI-PERM
PERMANENTS
REG . '20.00

~

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SPECIAL IN EFFECT JUNE8'·12th

CAROL'S COIFFURES
MASON , W. VA .

Burger, Vi enna, W. Va .;
Meiinda Voge lsong Burk,
Portsmouth ; Nancy Su e
Buskirk, Middleport ;
Patricia Ann Christian,
Iron ton ; and Tina Marie
Coffman , Nelsonville.
Other gradua tes are : Jill
Suzanne Detty , Heath ;
Sherry
Renee
Dillon,
Chesapeake ; Lisa Ann
Dobbins, Portsmouilh ; Dawn
Elaine Elkins , Portsmouth ;
Gerry Ann England , Belpre ;
Mary
Beth
Fisc her ,
Gallipolis ; Ruby Irene
Fletcher, Athens; Cathy Jo
Glassco, Chillicothe; Mary
Jean Golden, Bridgeport, W.
Va.; Anise Gayle Gothard ,
Barboursville, W. Va .;

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D&amp;J's House of Fabrics

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PHONE 992·2110 ·

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Here are more sale bargains as we
clear out from stock to make room

June 7 to 12

- POLY AND
COITON

ForT-Shirts
Reg . S1.98 yd
$}19

'

$100
POLYESTER KNITS
YD.
$2
1 TABLE POL VESTER
DOUBLE KNIT, Reg . 12.98.......... ·Yd.

,
0:,

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Yd .

20% OFF
'

POLY/COTTON
4l" Wide

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10% OFF
ON ALL

1 TABLE .

D&amp;J's

ON ALL

I

The sons of a concert
pianist mother, both Elgart
brothers were playing the
piano before they were 10
years old. Les switched to
trumpet arid was the
president of the high school
dance band. Larry tackled
the flute , clarine t, and alto
saxophone. He was playing in
bands 'like Tommy Dorsey,
Rod Norvo and Woody
Hennan from· age 17 on.
During the 30s and 40s, the
Elgarts went from one top
band to another, but, even so,
disenchantment set in. In
1945, they formed a band of
their own. Three years later,
despi!A! artistic success, the
band folded . The years to
come were lean: one night
·stands, studio work, even
playing in the pits. But the
Elgarts never lost sight of
their goal.
In 1952, they put together
the lop personnel their format required and formed
their new orchestra. George
Avakian, then head of
Columbia Records heard and
liked the Elgart band, and
gambled and cut an album .
The reaction was beyond
Avakian 's wildest hopes. The
band was famous overnight,
and its records were high on
the charts year after year . In
1956, the band name changed
to the Les and Larry Elgart
orchestra.
In Gallipolis, tickel.&lt;i can
be purchased at Carl 's Shoe
Store and the Hallmark Card
Shop . in the Silver Bridge
Plaza.

for new shipments of fabrics . Shop

60" Wide

,,'

Yvonne Grimm,
Letart, W. Va .; and Amy
Beth Legar, Middleport.
Additional
graduating
seniors: Lucinda Heyman ,
Coal Grove; Cathy Hoff
Ridenour, Pomeroy; Lona
Leigh lrby , Letart, W. Va .;
Rinda Ann Pinkerman, Kitts
Hill; Vi cki Rae Riel,
Parkersburg, W.Va .; Brenda
Diane Sharp, Jackson; Kathe
Sue Steiner, Akron; Diane
Ga le Tackett, Waverly;
Victoria Lynn Tomlinson,
Bidwell ; Alicia Jeffers
Tucker, SpringfieW ; Ruby
"Corky" Werry, Hemlock
Grove ; Jayne Anne Wigglesworth, Gallipolis and Gloria
Ann Young, Pennsville, Ohio.

HOUSE OF
FABRICS

FREE!
1 Spool
of Thread
With each

$5

purcnase.

45" Wide

NO ROLL
ELASTIC
ID YAROS
FOR
'1.00
( This1s in

DENIM
Reg. S2.49

$}S9Yd.

REMNANTS
pieces)
1 Mile Below Middleport On State Rt. 7
·I

REVIVAL SET
POMEROY - A revival
will be held at the Carleton
Church beginning Monday
and running throu~h June 6 at
7:30 each evening. Friday
night will feature special
singing by the Gospel Tones,
Charleston. John Lanier will
be evangelist. The pastor,
Gary King, welcomes the
publie.

Columbus, and Mr . and Mrs.
Gerald Powell, Pomeroy.
Great-grandparenl.&lt;i are Mrs. ·
Ruth Stace, Winter Haven,
Fla., and Mrs. Hattie Powell,
Racine . The paternal · greatgrandparenl.&lt;i are Mr. and
Mrs. Elmer Meyers of Grand
Rapids, Mich.

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r~ms;:''?;i;~:;7,.
Calendar

PLAZA

GIVE DAD HISI

STORE WHERE HE
SHOPS

----

THE
UNIFORM
CENTER
.

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Check Our Price
economicaL

Karen Louise Lemley

Lemley-Pyles engaged
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and'
Mrs. Andrew Lemley,
Gallipolis, are announcing
the engagement · and forthcoming marriage of their
daughter, Karen Louise, to
Charles Fredrick (Buddy r
Pyles, Jr. , son"of Mayor and
Mrs. Charles F. Pyles,
Racine .
Miss Lemley , a 1971 '
graduate of Gallia Academy

High School, attended Lear
Seigler Institute, Maryland,
for
medical
assistant
training . She is employed at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
in Pomeroy.
Pyles is a 1971 graduate of
Southern High School, the
Nashville Auto Diesel
College, Nashville, Tenn.
The wedding will be an
event of Sunday, JiJ.ly 18 at
2:30 p.m. at Grace United
Methodist
Church
in
Gallipolis with the Rev. Paul
MIDDLEPORT
A
campout and slumber party Hawks offi~iating . The
gracious custom of open
were planned for JiJ.ly 9 and
church
will be observed.
10 at the Tuesday night
meeting of the Bradford
Teens at the Bradford Church
of Christ parsonage .
Greg Browning presided at
the meeting with Vicki
Pickens
giving
the
secretary's report and Cherie
Lightfoot, treasurer's re(iort.
The youth also planned a
singspiralion to be held Aug .
13 at 7:30 p.m. to make
money for youth revivals .
Devotions were by Greg
Browning and Beverly
Wilcox . Banana splits were
served following the meeting.
The next meeting will be at
the home of Vicki Pickens
with a softball game to be
played at that time. At·
tending the meeting were
those named and Jack and
Kitty Perry, Tammy, John
and Chuckie Blake, Carol
Morris, Mike Wayland,
Danny Harrison and Herbie
Noel .

TWIN RIB"+·PL/JS

PER 4'K8' SHEET

SUMMER
SHIFTS
For

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POMEROY LANDMARK
Serving Meigs, Gallia &amp; Mason Counties
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
PH . .992-2181
POMEROY,OHIO

Activities set

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WIWW&amp;iW.llei'OIJIVOED

DWIIED

•

CDNTRDlUD

You ~re heading in the
: right direction ...
'

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have always attempted

to be:

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NEW TRAVEL· SIZES

--- t;'CC.

.._!111

&gt;-TO SET A TABLE

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Nancy .Ann .Cottrill

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Peddler's Pantry

Aspring theme was used in
the decorations. Games were
played with prizes going to
Mrs . · Colmer,
Evelyn
Johnson, Joyce Redman and
EiJ.lah Redman .
Cake, mmts, and punch
were served to those named
and Brenda Templeton, Carol
'Lunsford, and Kenny, Anita
Van Cooney, Nora Nitz, Joyce
Hall, Judy ·Eblin, Eunice
Eblin, Betty Brown, Frieda
Mossman, Shari Colmer,
Deloris Elliott, Cindy Black-.
well, Vicki Miller and April,
Cindy FaiJ.lk, Lori Redman,
Mamie Stephenson·, David
Johnson and the Rev. Clyde
Henderson . Gil.&lt;! were sent by
several who were unable to
attend. ·

SUN .• JUNE 20th

••

•

Brazilian Tan

Treat your
feet while you
treat yourself .
With Iatlgo leather.
wood wedges. crepe soles.
Great going for your jeans.
Try a pair. Peawln
refreshes best.

• Effective
• hnpartial

In 1972, the. Supreme Court · of Ohio honored my
performance as Prosecuting Attorney with an award for
''excellent service in the advancement of criminal
justice". I pledge to continue my dedication to Meigs
County if reelected. Your support is appreciated.

If you're headil'lg to Commercial &amp; Savings Bank to
deposit your money .
Invest your money in an account which pays the maximum
interest. A savings account lets you put money away for
the future, insuring your savings up to $40,000. It's a great
way to save and Commercial &amp; Savings Bank is a great
place to save.

REELECT BERNARD V. FULTZ

MEMBER FDIC

MEIGS COUNTY PROSECUTING AITORNEY

i XI

BERNARD V. FULTZ

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Avenlltl

pr esident , byopened
the '
_J
'il C SHUI(I(A
estRs
meeting
members
repealing the club collect.
Mrs . !!riggs Kirby ~ave for
devotions a reading, "A well
used memory is a Holy
by Rev/on
Thing ," and '' How We Can
Make Memorial Day More ~
MeaningfiJ.l."
The roll call was answered
by nine members naming
their fa vorite cactus . The
Christmas cactus was a IGaHj....Jio Ohio • • - .,.____..•
favorite named. Mrs. Kirby
1"""'t
•
read the secretar y and
treasury reports. .
The pre~iden't reported that
' 10 arrangemenl.&lt;i were made
for t.he alumni banquet. The
county flower show and bake
sale was discusSed and plans
made. Miss Reese read an
'
invitation
from Mrs. Sharon
PLAN TO WE!}- Mr. and Mrs. Emery D. Cottrill of
.
Johnson
to
an open meeting
.
Marieita annoWice the engagement of their daughter,
at
St.
Peter
's Episcopal
Nancy Ann, to Fred Ruth, son ol Mr . and Mn. James F.
II.
Church June 10.
Ruth, Smithfield. Miss Cottrill graduated m 1971 from
The
July
meeting
and
the
Marietta High School and from Muskingurn College in
annual picnic will be July 11
197S. She is currently employed as a teacher by Warren
at the home of Mr. and Mrs .
Local School District, Vincent. Mr. Ruth graduated m 1968
James Conkle.
from Smithfield High School and from Mount Union
The guest speaker was
College in 1972. He was Iormerly employed a~ assista~l
Mrs
. Eugene Moore who
Ill
band direclor of Meigs boca! School DistriCt. He IS
spoke
on cactuses and succurrenUy band director at the Warren Local Schools in
' . .... - ·~
ciJ.lents. She said, according
f
Vincent. The wedding isplarmed for July 24at I :30 p.m. at
lo bOoks, there are 2,000cacti:
the Marietta Bible Center Church. The custom of open
Mrs. Moore had 108 different
church will be observed.
kinds and had a display of 50
with her.
A succulent is a plant that
------·-·-·----··-··~
has a lot of liqiJ.ld and most
cacti have no liqiJ.ld . Aloe , or
LOOK AT THIS BEAUTY FOR
the healing plan t, is a sue·
DRINKING
. It holds 16 oz. and is
ciJ.lent and Mary and Martha
on 11 Everythlng Glitss! '' It's a grent
put it on Jesus's wounds at
idea from France. This 500 mill ·
the Cross. Good for burns and
lelen~ Mize is perrect for double Old
sores, it is also called the
Fushioneds or High B1111' - and just
miracle plant and a small
abou t every sort drink you can
want. Including iced t~a .
amount is used in cosmetics.
I Mrs. Moore showed the
These jumbo crys tal tumble r"
Calendar
are · urwd in France for icc crenm
group how to graft cacti using
EXHffilT for lh~ month of JUNE : Old Bergen Art Guild, two different kinds. She· said
and puddinKS. Why nol here ,
Mulli'&lt;lledia Exhibit, Riverby. ·
.
.
not tb let a drop of water on
8 PC. 5El..~ ..................'.10.00
'GALLERY HOURS: Saturdays and Sundays, I until 5 where the gnifting is done.
p.m.; Tuesdays and Thursdays, !Oa .m. until3p.m.
Use 11 sharp knife, making a
WHERE ELSE
June IS, Tuesday, 8 p.m. - F.A.C. lnterdepartmchtal Von one and do not use metal
Meeting , Riverby .
.
·.
to hold. Use toothpicks or
June 18 Friday - Deadline for entry forms for River thread .
Recreation Festival E~hibit in 'the City Park on July 4 to be
sent to Mrs. Jan Thaler, Route 2, Box 112, Galli!X'liil, Ohio
State &amp; Third________ Gallipolis, Ohio
~~.
.
June 22, Tuesday, 8 p.m. - F.A.C. Trustees Meetmg,
Riverby ,
.
. June 24, Thursday, 9 .JI a .m. - Christmas Cormmtlee,
Riverby ,
July 4, Sunday, 11 a.m ..:! p.m . - River Recreation
Festival Exhibit, City Park.

• Dedicated

Tina Calloway, Mary Belle
Martin, Susan Petrie, Ellen
Waugh.
Donna Persinger, Patty
Patrick, Cindy Mink, Diana 1
Kessel, Maria Singer, Lori ,
Naskey , June Ellcessor,
Diane Holley.

water from the bOttom. Good
drainage is also needed. 'Ole
most Irripl)rtant thing Is to
know your planl, she said.
Mrs . Moore was presented a
gift. Mrs . Shaver served
refreshment$, coffee and ten.

-·.~• 330 ·Second

~~

Miss Marilyn Reese, the

~alzeit~eclctt. .~~~

• Competent

~enlion·.

\'ines.

Marzetti, tossed salad and
dressing, cornbread, butler,
· canned pears, milk.
· Fridljy - Fried fish ,
escalloped potatoes, buttered
spinach, bread, butter, citrus
sections and sugar cookie,
milk.
Choice of beverage served
with each meal.

• Considerate

Make the cut slantways.
When one makes cuttings, the
. plant must ~eal over before
dirt is put in or Uiey will rot.
She told the group most
people water their cacti too
much and one should always

several African violel.&lt;i in , - : ; ; ' ;
addition to other flow ers al}d

POMEROY - A bridal
shower was held recentiy at
the home of Frieda Henderson honoring Tammy
Snider, bride-elect of David
Johnson . Hoste~ses were
Mrs. Henderson, and sis!A!rs
of the bride-elect, PaiJ.letle
Farley, Nancy Whjltek.ing
and Barbara Colmer.

For Meigs County,

HOSTS VISITORS
POMEROY ..,. Mrs. Ronald
Grindley of Minersville had
as recent guests, her foster
daughter , Mrs . Stanley
James and daughter, Nancy, '
Toledo ; Miss Donna Case of
Columbus; Mr . and Mrs .
David Case and Mrs .
Elizabeth Ely, Pittsburgh,
Pa.; the Rev . · and Mrs .
Ronald Grindley, Columbus;
Donnie Newlon and daughter,
Mount Vernon, ·and Mr. and
Mrs. Eber Grindley of Akron .
Miss Case, who attended the
Racine Schools, fs employed
in the office of Gertrude
Donahey, state treasurer,
and delegate at large to the
,National Democral Con-

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs .
Stanley Shaver's new
sunroo nr was enjoyed
by members of the
Wayside Garden Club
Tuesday evening at her
home . Mrs. Shaver has

Miss Snider feted

..

FARMER /.'ARMER/ FARMER

I, Bernard V. Fultz,
as Prosecuting Attorney

New staff named
GALLIPOLIS - Faculty
advisor Stanley Krulia has
named the 1976-77 business
staff at Gallia Academy High
School.
They are :
Business manager , Eugene
Rutz ; assistant manager,
Colleen Turner; Pam McMahon , Kim Henderson,
Cindy Musgrove, Renee
Smith, Sandy Sowers, Lu Ami
Evans, Lou Ann Willis, Kim
Notter.
Sheree King, Jane Kerr ,
Tami Bush, Lisa Stewart,
Jane Circle, Lisa Niday,
1.orrieSager, Patrice Wright, .

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ear ly/ you'll save big!

6 BIG DAYS
'

Charlot~&gt;!

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POINT PLEASANT, W.
Va . - Advance ticket sales
have started for the Mason
Coun ly Bicentennial Ball to
be held JiJ.ly 3.
In keeping with the
bi cen tennial theme, the ·
advanced tickets will case
$1 7.76 and at the door, $19.76.
There will be no reserved
tables and the only ~ay to be
assured seating is to · pur.chase tickets early, as only
200 tickets will be available
due to the renovation at the
armory.
The Les and Larry
Elgart Orchestra will provide
the music. In speaking of the
band, Larry Elgart says,
" We felt there was a
big
need
in
music
for a band that could
be aimed at a large segment
Of the public and could play
the best hotels, colleges,
social events, you name it,
without sounding like a
society band or just another
imitation of Glenn Miller."
Elgart · feels that at the
same time it could be a band
in which good musicians
including good jazz men,
could work and keep their
heads up at the end of the
night.

MARRIAGE ANNOUNCED - Mrs. Jack Ferrell of ".,
325 Lincoln St. , Middle!X'rl, is announcing the marriage of
her daughter, Terry Lynn George to Junior Hopson. The
groom is the son of ~ine a lid Gladys Hopson of Delaware, ":
Ohio. The couple will make the.ir home in Delaware, Ohio. :
FIRST CHILD BORN
POMEROY - Mr. and
Mrs. Steven Raymond ,
Pomeroy, are announcing the
· birth of their first child, a son,
Jeremy PaiJ.l, May 21 at
Holzer Medical Center .
Grandparents are the late
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Raymond ,

uance tzcketS on Sate1
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Holzer nurses graduating Friday
GA LLI PO LI S - Co mmencement cKercises for the
Holzer Medical Ce nter School
of Nursing will be held on
Friday, June II , at Grace
United Methodis t Church in
Gallipolis. Beginning at 8
p.m., :J5 seniors will re'ceive
dipl omas at th e annual

Mr. and Mrs. junior Hopson

olbera.

'

Shaver sunroom toured

Park manager talks
to Riverview club -

direclor of the four county
RSVP, conducted a question
and answer period.
Mrs. Roush wishes to.thank
Pearl Bowen,. Eleanor
Benedict, Irene Smeltzer and
Mrs. Smalley for assisting
her in the preparation of the
tea .
On Friday, . May 28, a
similar cOffee was held at lhe
MI. Carmel Church in Bid·
well. Twenty-&lt;Jne members
were present aod Mrs . Roush
wishes to thank Ada Payne,
Edna Payne and Dorothy
Thomas for their assistance
and gracious hospitality
throughout the meeting.
Mrs . Roush in traduced ihe
following speakers: Nora
Knotts and Reva Evans. They
spoke of the need for
volunteers in different
departmen 1.&lt;1 of the Holzer
Medical Center and the
pleasure they have of helping

Dillon, Corky Werry, Kathe Steiner, Melissa Burger,
Cathy Ridenour, Leigh Irby, Charlotte Grimm, Ruby
Fletcher; 1 third row) , Melinda Burk, Rinda Pinkerman,
Vicki Riel, Debbie Barnett, Stephanie E. Alfrey, Cathy
Glassco, Anise Gothard, Lisa Bunch, Diane Tackell, Jean
Golden, Patricia Christian, Gloria Young. Not pictured •
is Alicia Tucker, Springfield.

were ~onduc ted by Mrs .
Hannum during the social
hour . Prizes went to Mrs.
Frank Bise, Mrs. Frank. Mrs .
Ronald Cowdery and Mrs .
Dorsel Riebel. Door prize was
awarded to Mrs. Bise.
Cake, punch, mini.&lt;! and
nuts were served to Mrs .
REEDSVILLE - Doyle Band banquet.
Smales, manager of Forked
Making up the program Bise, Mrs. ·Chadwell, ~s.
RWJ Slate Park, presented planning committee were Cowdery, Mr~. Frank, Mrl
lhe program at the May Mrs. David Chadwell, Mrs. Grossnickle, Mrs . Roy
meeting of · the Riverview Gene Young , Mrs. Harliss Hannum , Mrs . Donald
Garden Club at lhe home of Frank, Mrs . Whitehead and Myers , Mrs. Putman, Mrs.
Spencer,
Mrs .
Mrs. Walter Brown with Mrs. Mrs. · Donald Putman. The Tom
Whitehead
,
Mrs
.
Gene
Sieve Cowdery as co-hostess. club will eat at the ·Wilmar
Mr. Smales showed slides of June IS and lour Fenlon Wilson, Mrs. Young, Mrs. R.
Forked Run Sl&lt;lte Park and a Glass Co. at Williamstown, L. Larkins , Mrs . R. H.
Hannum, Mrs. R. E.
movie, ~~sweet Ohio/' en- W. Va ,
joyed by all.
An auction of home articles Williams, Mrs. Riebel, and
The business meeting · wiJI .be held at th.e June · 24 Mrs. Balderson. Guests in·
opened with devotions by meeting with Mrs. Claremont cluded Charlene Chadwell
Mrs. Lyle Balderson, who Harris and Mrs . Herman and Christopher Cowdery.
gave a reading, "I am so Grossnickle. ·
Busy, Lord." Response to the
The ·flowers which the club
roll call was made by had provided for the commembers naming a wild mencement at Eastern High ::::
flower they brought to the School were given to the ~
=:--:
.
.
meeting.
County
Infirmary
at
GALLIPOLIS
The
Mr-s, Roy Hannum thanked Pomeroy.
Senior Citizens Center,
members for arrangements
Mrs . Chadwell, vice located at 220 Jackson Pike in
they made for the Eastern president, presided. Games
the County Home Building, is
open Monday through Friday
from 9 a.m . to 3 p.m. The
sc
hediJ.le of a eli vities for this
IN THE
week is as follows :
Monday, June 7- Physical
SILVER BRIDGE Fitness,
11:30 a.m.; Blood
Pressure Check, 1·2 p.m.;
Olde Tyme Chorus Practice,
1-3 p.m.
Tuesday, June 8- Election
Day (VOTE ); Visiting, 9
a.m.-3 p.m.; Garden Club
Organization, 1 p.m.
Wednesday , June 9 - Expo
'76. Bus leaves the Center at
8:30a.m.; Physical Fitness,
(HE'LL BE GLAD 11:30 a.m.; Card Games, 1·3
p.m .
YOU DID)
Thursday, June 10 QiJ.llling and Visiting, 9 a.m.-3
p.m.; Potluck Supper, 6:30
p.m.
Friday, June 11 - Art
Class, !.3 p.m.; Cincinnati·
Reds Game Trip. Bus leaves
Center at 3 p.m.; Social Hour,
7 p.m.
Seniors' Co-op is open each
day from 12:30-1:30 p.m.
The Senior Nutrition
Program serves meals at 12
hasnoon . The menu for the week
is as follows:
Monday - Macaroni and
cheese with ham chunks,
j buttered broccoli, sliced
lorna to · salad on lettuce,
bread,
butter, prune cake,
"]iust
You '•
milk.
·
Tuesday - Pot roast of
beef, gravy, buttered
''By
steamed potatoes, buttered
I
:
mixed vegetables, roll ,
butter, canned apricots, milk.
Wednesday - Chicken with
''
gravy mashed potatoes,
butler~d peas, jellied
CAI.IFORNM
cranberry salad, bread ,
butter, ice cream, milk.
366 Second Avenue-- Gallipolis, Ohio
Thursday Johnny

COMMERCIAL &amp;SAVINGS BANK
COURT STREET
'

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

Buy One Pipe ·at ~egular Price and
Gel the 2nd Pipe •12 Price.
.
Must Be of Equal · Price or Less. ,

~ANKAMERICARD

rAJ

maste
THf

IMII~I&amp;

g

..o UO

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TAWNEY JEWELERS
422 Second Ave.

Gallipolis

Mon . &amp; FrU :JOtiiBp.m.
Tues. Wed. Sai.9 :301!1Sp.m.
Thursday 9: 3D llli2 n.On
Leather re.lms t(I IIPPI.!U

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�8- The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, .June 6, 1976

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Mr. and.Mrs. DanieI E. Ratrue-n

Couple repeat vows
in Virginia ceremony
NEW HAVEN , W. Va . - parents, the bride was attired
Miss Sandra Kay Weaver and in a pink polyester streetDaniel Edward Rairden were length dress with empire
WJi ted in marriage in a ' waist and pulled sleeves
candlelight ceremony March trimmed in white lace , with a
2!1 at the St. Paul's Methodist white lace picture hat. She
Church, Christiansburg , Va . carried a bouquet of pink
The Rev. J oh n Floyd carnations surrounded by
Ca rroll officiated at the baby 's breath.
The bride is the daughter of
double ring ceremony.
Given In marriage by her Mr. and Mrs. Foster Weaver
of Letart, W. Va . The groom
is a ·1976 graduate of Wahama
VACATION
BIBLE SCHOOL
High School and is the son of
Cheshire Baptist Church in
Mr. and Mrs. Carl H. Rairden
cooperation with the
of Hartford, W. Va .
Methodist Church will be
The couple resides in New
having vacation Bible
Haven
, W. Va .
school June 7 through 12th,
6:30 till 8:30 In evening.
Classes offered through
ages 2 'to 14, also class for

mentally retarded. June 5,
there will be a parade at

1:30p.m. Everyone to meet
at the playground at 1:15 .
Bring signs, bicycles ,
tractors, wagons, etc .

Registration 3 p.m . at the
Cheshire Baptist Church,

refreshments

served .

Transportation will

provided. For more

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formation

~e

In-

contact

Director, Sandy ScoH, Rt.
!, Pomeroy. Phone t614)
992-3901 or t614) 367-7615.

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TUPPERS PLAINS The Orange Township
Volunteer Fire Department and the Tuppers
Plains Communlly Club
will sponsor a horse show
Sunday, June 13 at the Bar
30 · show grounds. Rain or
shine, the show starts at
9:30 a.m. There will be 49
classes. Admission Is $1.
Food will be served by
Tuppers Pta?ns Com·
munlty Club.

9- The SUnday Times· Sentinel, Sundlly, Jull(' 6, 1976

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SUNDAY
COFFEE Break sponsored
by Gallia County React Team
3236 Sunday, 1-5 p.m. at the
Crown City Roadside Park on
Rt. 7. Prizes to be given away
incliide a CB. Rain date is
June 13.
OLD-FASHIONED Day at
Elizabeth Chapel Church
Sunday in honor of senior
citizen members . Sunday
school, 10 a .m. Worship
service, t1 a.m. Dinner on the
grounds, 12:30 p.m, Rev .
Charles Lusher will bring the
afternoon message. Pastor is
Alfred Holley. Public invited .
HOMECOMING at the White
Oak Baptist Church Sunday.
All day meeting with basket
dinner at noon . The Rev . Bud
Hatfield will be the speaker.
Two quartets from Columbus
will sing.
OLD TIME songfest Sunday
at Fairview Christi an
Church, Centerpoint, 2 p.m.
Everyone welcome .
GOSPEL MESSEN GE RS
will sing at the Silver
Memorial Free Will Baptist
Church in Kanauga Sunday, 2
p.m. Everyone welcome.
LEONARD
PRESTON'S
Gospel Bell Quartet will sing
Sunday, 2 p.m. at Westerman
Uni ted Methodi st Church.
Everyone welcome.
MEMORIAL Services will be
held at the White Cemetery
SWJday at 11 a.m.

GRACE UNITED Methodist Church will celebrate its tOOth anniversary in its pre~en t
location at the corner of Second Ave. and Cedar St. today. The congregatiOn at worsh1p Js
pictured above.

Church celebrating centennial

GALLIPOLIS - G rnc~
United Methodist Church will
be celebrating 100" yea rs
today in its present location
at the corner of Second Ave.
and Cedar St., Gallipolis.
The first
Methodist
preaching in this vicinity
started around the year 1817
in a log house at the mouth of
Mill Creek just outside of the
city's corporation limits. In
1821 the first church was
built.
It stood on the ground
ROLLING HILLS Chapter
which
is occupied by the
836 of Parents Without
parking lot. The
church's
Partners will hold a potluck
deed
dates
back fr om May 7,
and family picnic at Lake
1793,
from
George
Alma near Wellston Sunday ,
Washington
and
Thomas
2 p.m. Bring table service,
beverage and a covered dish. Jefferson and also through a
Also bring bathing suites , number of other owners. The
fishing poles and frisbees . · present church was started in
There will be a frisbee eon- the summer of 1875. Dw-ing
the building of the church the
test at'4 p.m.
congrega tion worshipe~ at
MONDAY
VACATION Bible School at the courthouse. On January I,
Bell Chapel Church begins' 1876, the membership and
Monday and will continue friends of the church, headed
through Friday, 9 to 11 a.m . by the board and the pas tor,
each day. Theme is "God 's marched into the completed
Love is Jesus." Classes will

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ElEANOil

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~roNBaptistCh~ch

ROBSON

REPUBLICAN
l'OR MEIGS COUNTY

RECORDER

Your Vote Will Be Appreciated!

Pd . Pol . Adv .

Bible School Monday through
Friday, 9:30a.m. to 12 noon.
Program and crafts night will
be Saturday, June 12, 7 p.m.
Everyone Welcome. "Jransportatlon provided.
VINTON Senior atizens will
meet Monday, 7:30 p.m. at
the Vinton town hall . Visitors
welcome.
VACATION Bible School
begins Monday at Centerville
Grade School sponsored by
Thurman United Methodist
Church, 9 to 11:30 a.m.
FRENCH Colony Chapter
DAR will meet Monday , a:30
p.m. for a picnic. Hostess will
be Mrs. Kenneth Tomlinson,
Tycoon Road .
nJESDAY
FOOT WNG hot dog and
bake sale at the Bradbury
building sponsored by The
Golden Rule Class of the Old
Kyger Free Will Baptist
Chw-ch Tuesday, 10 a.m. to 6
p.m. Hot dogs, 50 cents.
MARTHA UNIT of Grace
United Methodist Church will
meet at 12 noon Tuesday at
the church to go to the home
of Phyllis Sheets for a potluck
lunch. ·

VOTERS OF
MEIGS COUNTY
Time has run out. I wanted to tell you personally the following facts .
I am well into my second year as your county commissioner
during that time, with my colleagues we have repaired many
bridges, paved 68 miles of county roadway . now engaged in dusting
control where unpaved, and we anticipate further blacktopping and
road construction in that connection.
We are making serious plans to obtain a nursing home for Meigs
elderly. I have devoted a lot of time and effort to help obtain a
$160,000 grant, which has been approved for the "New Senior
Citizens Building".
At present time tam devoting fetll time to my county duties . My
past experience in trucking, roadbuilding has been invaluable jlt the
county garage, with advice, direction and financing .
Background of 13 years in township office in Salisbury combined
with almost constant cooperation with county officials has been
invaluable as I operate for you in local government.
You will find an economical. effic ient administration in all of my
past public service . We can't please everybody, but you will have to
admit we have t ried.
To put your tax dollar where i.l will serve the majority o'f our
people, and most likely yourself, put an X where you find BERNARD
GILKEY on the Republican ballot.

TUESDAY
ABIGAIL UNIT of Grace
United Methodist Church, 12
noon Tuesday at the church to
go to the cabin of Mildred
Thomas for a potluck lunch.
WEDNESDAY
MARY OF BETHANY Unit of
Grace United Methodi st
Church Wednesday, 6:30p.m.
at the home of Maxine Stutes
for a potluck meal.
DEBRA UNIT of Grace
United Methodist Church
Wednesday 6:30 p.m. for a
potluck at the home of
Geneva Carter.
picnic on the grounds.
Preac her is Rev. 0. G.
McKinney . Services are 7:30
each evening . Special
singing.
WEEKEND Revival begins.
Wednesday at Morgan Center
Gospel Mission. Homecoming
will be Sunday June 13 with a
THURSDAY
HARRIS GRANGE Thursday, 8 p.m. Annual inspection
will be held . Potluck lunch.
THE -GALLIPOLIS-PT.
PLEASANT Stamp Club will
meet Thursday, 7 p.m. at St ..
Peter's Episcopal Church in
Gallipolis. The program will
be a slide presentation of
stamps of Great Britain.
Anyone who is a stamp
collector is welcome to attend.
CHRISTIAN Women's Club
guest night dinner at the
Holiday Inn , 7:30 p.m.
Everyone is in vited and
asked to brin g a friend
(husband too') Chuck
Melcher from Huntington will
speak. Lt. Wigglesworth will
sing. No babysitting. Make
reservation by calling Esther
Bechtel, 446-4713.

basement of the new church.
The congregation was led in
the singing of the Doxology.
By 1882 the church was
completely free of its debt:
In 1926 a new addition was
added to the church under the
pas torate of Rev . W. S.
Wes terman . In 1929 the ·
depression came, and the
church was finally free of
debt again in 1940.
Then in 1958 another ad,
dition was built, this time an
educational unit. In 1974 the
church was restored to its
original beauty.
A spokesman for the
church said, "Grace United
Me thodist Church has grown
with lhe city of Gallipolis
down through the years . It
cherishes its history of the
past but looks forward a nd

future. We would hope that
the church would stand lor all
that is right a.nd all that is
good in the Christian
message, that the Gospel of
C hri~ t would continue to be
prt&gt;c laimed ,"
The · membership invites
the residenIs of the Gallipolis
area to be a part of this
special celebration which
begins today• iii the 10:45
worship service. After the
worship
se rvice
.the
congregation will go to the
park front for an old
fashioned
picnic . The
congregation is encouraged
to wear the costume of the
1870s and 80s, and it is hoped
many will be able to par·
ticipate. Rev . Hawks will be
preaching on the theme "The
Next 100 Years."

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e. MAIN
COMPLETE
WEDDING
SERVICE

GALLIPOLIS · Phil welcomed into the club as
Underwood~ Sharon Hill and new members. ·The next
Andy Fisher, members of the eampout for the local club
Gallia County Emergency will be at Pike Lake June ll,
Squad, presented a program 12, I:i. Those members who
and demonstration for the will be going to this campout
French City Campers when · will meet on Friday at 9:30
they · held their regular a.m . at the Gallia County
meeting Thursday at the Fair Grounds and will travel
roadside park in Kanauga . in a caravan with Wilford
They gave several pointers Evans as wagon master.
on what to do for · victims of
The next meeting will be
accidents
or
other July I at the roadside park in
emergencies until help Kanauga with a potluck
arrives . They showed several dinner at 6:30 p.m. and a
splints that could be used for business meeting at 7:30p.m.
br oken
bones.
The
emerge ncy vehicle was ·
A thought lor the day:
opened for the campers to Supreme Allied commander,
view and many questions Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower,
were answered by the said, "In the final choice, a
members of the squad.
soldier's pack is not so heavy
Immediately following a as a prisoner's chains.''
potluck dinner, the metting
was called to order by the
president, Jim King with the
opening prayer by Chaplain,
Marion .Williams and pledge
to the flag given by all . Art
Wroblewski read ·the minutes
of the previous meeting and
24 members answered roll
call. There were five visitors
at this meeting. Wayne Amsbary gave the treasurer 's
report.
Harland Sanders reported
on the Ohio Spring State-Wide
Camporee attended by
several members of the local
club in May near Logan .
Jim King awarded merit
stripes to those members who
had earned them for forestry
and air conservation . GDidie
King was appointed chairperson of a committee for the
making of lady bug pins to be
used as favors for the
National Campvention to be
held in July near Duquoin, 111.
Neal and Jean Clark were

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TRAil FULL OR§
PARTTIIE ~

•11,ooo:

per year an!:J up. 13 weeks in a :

FULL TIME ritsident training
program).

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REVCO Tractor Trail1r Tr1ining, Inc . will train you on mod - _,.

ern, professional equipment. :
and . Placement assistance is 1:c
~~
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available upon graduation ,
CALL NOW!

Parkersburg

422-408~ ·

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Charles R. (Chuck)
. Hysell
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FOR

Meigs County Commissioner

it carries a high price and
people must be willing to pay
it.
.
After her message , she
presented the charter to the
Gallia County pre sident,
Gilbert Craig, Jr. Other of.
fleers and members of the
Executive BQ8rd accepting
the charter were: Jim Mitchell, ~eoond vice president;
VadaMayo,secretary ; Andy
Gilmore
chairman of
Commu~ity Coordination,
and Gene Armstrong,
chairman of legal redress.
Craig presented spec1al
plaques to Rev. Charles
· Smith and James Crump for
their inspiration, concern,
and endless efforts in helping
to form the Gallia County
·Chapter.
The N.A.A .C.P. (National
Association for the Advancement of. Colored
People) has been m e~1stenee
since 1907. The organization
made its debut in GaiHa
County this year.
A spokesman for the
organizatio? said, "Let us
hope that 1ts purpose - to
bring equality to every
human . being - is fulfilled.
The statement that the
N.A.A.C.P. is ft'll!de up of only
. blacks and serves only blacks
is totally false . . The
N.A.A.C.P. is composed of all
races and it seeks to protect ·
and serve the same_. "

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GALUPOUS - Officers committee, Urban and Mary
for 1976-77 were elected Baldwin, Sue and John
Thursday night by the French Persinger, Margo and Larry
City Swingers Square Dance Prater. ·
Club.
Banner steal con\mittee,
Officers include Tom John and Wan~a Fellure, Jo
Pasquale, president; Bob Ann and Dave McQuaid, Jim
Donnally, vice president; Sue and Arlene Thompson;
Donnally, secretary, and membership committee,
John and Wanda Waugh, Helen and Dan Rollins , Jane
treasurers .
and Roger Brumfield;
The club discussed its monthly announcements to
annual family potluck picnic other clubs, Sue Persinger;
to be held Sunday, June 13 at calling committee, Wanda
the Kyger O'eek Employees Steele, Becky Pasquale and
Club. Hamburgers, hot dogs ·Mev Ward.
and buns will be furnished by
Fund raising committee,
the club.
Wally and Ginny Henry, John
Wanda Steele, treasurer for and Becky Pasquale, Steve
the past year, gave a detailed and Parkana Wood, Carl and
'financial statement.
Wanda Steele.
The club announced the
The club discussed the .
square dance lessons slated upcoming "Rio Grande
'for the fall and tentatively Fljng" June 18, 19 and 20 at
rented the K of P Hall for the the Buckeye Hills Vocational
lessons. Any persons In- School. Club caller Bill Evans
terested in taking lessons will be one of the callers for
should· call 446-4002 or 446- the event.
0619 for more information.
The club publicly thanked
Other committees named Jim Baldwin for the printing
by President Pasquale for the of the 1976-77 square dance
upcoming year "include : calendars.
hostess committee, Bob and
A booth at the Fourth of
Joyce Bartimus ; public July Festival was discussed
relations, Phyllis Mason; and approved as one of the
hlrin2 committee, Urban club's money
making
Baldwin, Winford Ward and projects.
Bob Dorinally; recrea lion

.!
' OFF
ALL FABRICS
(Except Our Recent New Arrivals)

Hurry in tomorrow and choose coHon knits,
polyester knits, velvets, cordoroys, dotted
swiss, new wrinkle cloths, polyester crepe in
prints, designs and plains, etc. Save 1-3 off
now.

11S W. ~cond

Pomeroy

Ph. 992-2214.

• A Ttademark o f THE SINGER COMPA~

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' Gal/ian staff chosen
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YOUH Exmt. mtJCH FTI)fUST

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taken from II Timothy 3:16,
17, 1 Corin thians 2:14-16, II
Peter 1:21, Hebrews 4:12, II
Timothy 2: 15.
Get-well cards were signed
and offerings. taken . The
meetings closed with prayer
by al l.
HACK IN }' LORIDA
BIDWELL - Mr . and Mrs.
James Denney and son Billy
have returned to their hon1c
in Port Lauderdale, Fla., '
after visi ti ng her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. l v~r Morehouse Bidwell, and Mrs.
Cora ' Denney and Mrs .
Virgin ia Casto and· famili es
and their relatives and
fri ends. While here Mr . and
Mrs. Denney ·attended the
alwnni banquet at North
Galliu and were awarded Jl
prize for being the ones
farthes t away to attend .

GALLIPOLIS - Editorial Stelnbrunner,
Bridget
staff members for the 1976-77 Hennessey' Meg Thomas,
Gallian at Gallla Academy Sheri Wade, Mae Kemp:
High School have been anPhotographers are Steve
nounced by faculty advisor · Pyles Steve Wilson, . Todd
Jennie White.
Osbor'ne and Art~ur Al.lison.
They are:
Editor, Becky Call ;
CLASSES S~ARTING
assistant editor, · Debbie
MIDDLEPORT
Johnson; Kati~ Hennessey, Vacation llible School will be
Kathie McCoy, Amy Knicely, held at the Bradford Church
Jpdee Collins, Annida Camp- of Christ June 8 to 18 from 9 to
bell, Beth Abels, Colleen 11 :30 a.m. each day. Classes·
Turner, Lu Ellen Saunders, will be held for children from
Libby Salyer, Jill Collier.
preschool age through high
. Brenda Call, Catherine school. For further inSchmidt, Tina Nibert, Ann formalion residents may
Wood Dixl_r. Martin, Karen telephone 992•5942 or 992-5778.

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HART MAPLE CHESTS

You'll enjoy shopping at
the "Country Store" .. .
Rutland
Furniture
Store. You'll probably
save more money right
here an nationally
advertised brands, too.
Come and see us ...
you'll get low prices, ·
courtesy and the best
service anywhere. Our
motto is sales with
service.

4 DRAWER

95

$

5 DRAWER

'49'
how to make
any room a. ·

5

MAPLE
VALUE!

·~ · bedroom

French City Swingers
select new officers

Term Jan. 2, 1977
Honest, reliable, sober. twill be a full time
servant. Your vote and support appreciated
in the June 8 Republican Primary.
, Thank You .
Pd. Pol. Adv .

l

Ar&gt;rtiOYCOitrrtallt UE-'l£11

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GALLIPOLIS - On May
15, the Galtia County Chapter
of the N.A.A.C.P. held its
charter presentation dinner
at the Holiday Inn. Edward
Howard was master of
ceremonies. Dignitaries
acknowledged included
Elaine Rouse, candidate for
delegate for Morris Udall;
Ron .
James,
.State
Representative;
Jim
Plummer, candidate for
Democratic nomination for
Congressman; James
Crw!lp, District II Chairman
of N.A .A.C.P.; William
Bourne,
president
of
Lawrence County Branch,
N.A.A.C.P.; Andy Gilmore,
President F.O.C.U.S., Inc.;
Rev. Charles Smith, member
of Executive Board of
N.A.A.C.P.; Charles Howard,
vice-president of Jackson
County N.A.A.C.P., and Alisa
Brown
candidate for
delegat~ for Morris Udall for
President.
Guest speaker Gertrude
Gorman Field Director at
Large for the N.A.A.C.P.,
stressed the importance of
having a N.A.A.C.P. chapter
in Gallla County. She also
explained how it could
strengthen the organization's
cause and the community,
She
emphasized · that
members must· study the
Constitution
of
the
N.A.A.C.P. She also pointed
out that freedom is not free -

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• POMEROY, OHIO

VINTON - The l.adies meetings in the absence of
Prayer Circle of Fellowshir 1he pre$ldent and vice
Chapel gathered recently for president.
its weekly meetings. On May
Devotion~ an d a teaching
20 lhe group met ~t the home were taken from Matthew
of Charolette Sperry and sang 22:·1-10.
"Hallejujah Arry How," and
On May 29 they rnct at the
"I want More of Jesus ."
hOme of Mrs. Roger Smith
Mrs. Elmer Geiser led the with nine members present .
Mrs. \\be Spencer led the
pra yer.
The group again sa ng
ANNOUNCE BIRTH
C'OLUMBUS - Mr . and "Hallelujah" and " I Want
Mrs. Richard Bradbury of More of Jesus." Devotions
Colwnbus arc announcing lhe were taken from Daniel
birth of their fil·st child , a chapter 1 wi th u teaching and
daug hter, May .27 at Mt . sharing thoughts on the entire
.Carmel Hospital. The baby chapter.
.
.
weighed eig ht pow1ds, seven
On June 3 they met with
ounces, and has been named Mrs. Russell Slayton . '11Jcrc
present. Mrs.
Lori Ann . Maternal grand- were six
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Geiser MBVC a teaching on
Wayn e Sisson. Paternal ''The Bible - The Word of
grandparents ·arc Mr . and God," taken from " The
J.ife "
New '
Mrs. Wendell Bradbury, all or Chri stian
Kyger.
Testament. Scriptw-es were

presented charter

You don't have to quit your :t
present job to train to drive a :
trac:toNrailer. In only 7 to 8 to.
wee kends PART TIPaE tr.alning ~
{Saturdays &amp; Sundayd a qual- .,
ified driver can bt earning :

June Fabric

FLORIST

DOVER - Ohio's Official raged all about Ihem .
breathe new life and meaning
Bicentennial Play, "Trwnpel
Led
by
Moravian into lhe people, events and
In The Land," ha s ·announced mi ss i onary David , ideas that gave birth to the
its 1976 season.
l',cisberger, the inhabilants of American drea m of uure,
The colorful Paul Green Schuenbrunn met all men as Libert y, and the pw·suit of
saga of the Revolutionary brothers and vowed not to Happiness .•,
War on America's first take up weapons agai nsl their·
Information r egar ding
frontier will be presented fellow men. Their fri end- advance reservations fur
nightly except Mondays from liness to all and their neutral individuals and groups may
June 29 through Sept. 5. Now sta nce in th e Revol ution be obtain ed by writing
in its seventh season , the crea ted s u sp i cio u~ among • '"i~umpet In The Land," P.
outdoor drama will be per- bolh British and Americans. 0. BoK.275: Dover, Ohio H622,
formed at 8:45 p.m. in the and resulted, finally , in the or by calling t216) 364-Slll .
1,600 seat Schoen brunn bloodiest massacre of the
Amphitheatre just south of entire Revolutionary War .
New Philadelphia.
Though 93 of these innocent
The agonizing birth of a settlers were brutally
new nation forms the back- ·slaughtered, their philosophy
VRS CONTINUES
ground against which · this of peace and brotherhood
KANAUGA
The
powerful talc is played. Here, became one of the fu nKanauga
United
Methodist
in the village of Schocnbrunn, damental principles of our
Hible School will continue
from 1772 to 1782a small band new nation_
Friday, June II, 6 to
lhrough
of courageous white and
Nearly 100 actors, singers.
8:30
each
eve ning. The
Indian men and woman dancers and technicians
program
will
be Friday
strugg led mightily to remain recreate this thrilling chapter
evening
at
7:30p.m
. .
free of the conflict which of 'America's history . They

Local NAACP

Now at the Fabric

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Pd. Pol. Adv . by Candil!ate

cHARTER RECEIVED - The Gallia County Chapter
of the NMCP received its charter at a recent dinner.
Gilbert Craig, Jr., left, president of the local chapter
received the presentation from Gertrude Gorman , field
director at large for the NMCP. Jim Mitchell, second·
vice president of theGaUia group, is also pictured.

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~ ''l!l's~!!t~.~S~pl!t~~!!

BERNARD GILKEY

."

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BRIDAL POLICY
Wedding and engagement
notices for the Sunday Times
Sentinel must be In our hands
.by 12 noon on the Thursday
preceding publication.
Information may be turned In
or mailed 'to the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune or Pomeroy
Dally Sentinel. Engagement
and wedding forms are also
available on request.

,.

Squad presentsprogram
to French City Campers

/taltf!,/4-J
'IU.

recommended cards only be
sent In case of illness of a
Par Iller, and that eliJ)ellSI!J
incurred by L' Archiviste be
paid. All recommendations
were adopted.
•
The next meeting of the
Salon will he a picnic and
ins lallation of officers at the
home of lnes Marchi, August
5. There will be no July
meeting.
Refr e shments of
strawberry pie, mints ancl
coffee were served by the r
hostess, and favors of shells.
brought from Florida were
given. Dorothy Hecker won
"11'1
the door pr1ze.
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GALLIPOLIS - Partners
of Gallia County Salon 612,
Eight and Forty gathered at
the home of Mabel Brown for
their June meeting. Le Petit
Chapeau Erma Smith,
presiding , opened the
meeting in ritualistic manner.
Communications read were
from
De~art e mental
Secretaire acknowledging
receipt of assessments and
registration fees. The call to
Marclie Departementale to
be held in Neil House,
Colwnbus, July ll and 12 and
an invitation to the 17th anniversary of Athens County
Salon 676 to be held at Athens
Legion Home June 23 were
read. Several Partners will
attend this dinner meeting.
One new Partner was approved and needed changes
in constitution and by-laws
were discussed.
Ways and means chairman
Faye Wildermuth recom·mended that the practice of
each Partner give $I a month
rather than having money
making activit'es be continued. Flower and Cards
Chairman Dor thy Hecker,

dreams of an tven bri ghter

Let us put
your wedding
in bloom.

Reserve Your Date Today

IX I

Bicentennial play to open Prayer circle reports meetings

Mabel Brown entertains
Gallia County Salon

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OPEN FRIDAYS TIL SPM

�8- The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, .June 6, 1976

i',~eo
·~·

·~

I
::::

· .J_
Mr. and.Mrs. DanieI E. Ratrue-n

Couple repeat vows
in Virginia ceremony
NEW HAVEN , W. Va . - parents, the bride was attired
Miss Sandra Kay Weaver and in a pink polyester streetDaniel Edward Rairden were length dress with empire
WJi ted in marriage in a ' waist and pulled sleeves
candlelight ceremony March trimmed in white lace , with a
2!1 at the St. Paul's Methodist white lace picture hat. She
Church, Christiansburg , Va . carried a bouquet of pink
The Rev. J oh n Floyd carnations surrounded by
Ca rroll officiated at the baby 's breath.
The bride is the daughter of
double ring ceremony.
Given In marriage by her Mr. and Mrs. Foster Weaver
of Letart, W. Va . The groom
is a ·1976 graduate of Wahama
VACATION
BIBLE SCHOOL
High School and is the son of
Cheshire Baptist Church in
Mr. and Mrs. Carl H. Rairden
cooperation with the
of Hartford, W. Va .
Methodist Church will be
The couple resides in New
having vacation Bible
Haven
, W. Va .
school June 7 through 12th,
6:30 till 8:30 In evening.
Classes offered through
ages 2 'to 14, also class for

mentally retarded. June 5,
there will be a parade at

1:30p.m. Everyone to meet
at the playground at 1:15 .
Bring signs, bicycles ,
tractors, wagons, etc .

Registration 3 p.m . at the
Cheshire Baptist Church,

refreshments

served .

Transportation will

provided. For more

,,

formation

~e

In-

contact

Director, Sandy ScoH, Rt.
!, Pomeroy. Phone t614)
992-3901 or t614) 367-7615.

''' ~~;;;·~8~~@Gri'''''' '
TUPPERS PLAINS The Orange Township
Volunteer Fire Department and the Tuppers
Plains Communlly Club
will sponsor a horse show
Sunday, June 13 at the Bar
30 · show grounds. Rain or
shine, the show starts at
9:30 a.m. There will be 49
classes. Admission Is $1.
Food will be served by
Tuppers Pta?ns Com·
munlty Club.

9- The SUnday Times· Sentinel, Sundlly, Jull(' 6, 1976

.

SUNDAY
COFFEE Break sponsored
by Gallia County React Team
3236 Sunday, 1-5 p.m. at the
Crown City Roadside Park on
Rt. 7. Prizes to be given away
incliide a CB. Rain date is
June 13.
OLD-FASHIONED Day at
Elizabeth Chapel Church
Sunday in honor of senior
citizen members . Sunday
school, 10 a .m. Worship
service, t1 a.m. Dinner on the
grounds, 12:30 p.m, Rev .
Charles Lusher will bring the
afternoon message. Pastor is
Alfred Holley. Public invited .
HOMECOMING at the White
Oak Baptist Church Sunday.
All day meeting with basket
dinner at noon . The Rev . Bud
Hatfield will be the speaker.
Two quartets from Columbus
will sing.
OLD TIME songfest Sunday
at Fairview Christi an
Church, Centerpoint, 2 p.m.
Everyone welcome .
GOSPEL MESSEN GE RS
will sing at the Silver
Memorial Free Will Baptist
Church in Kanauga Sunday, 2
p.m. Everyone welcome.
LEONARD
PRESTON'S
Gospel Bell Quartet will sing
Sunday, 2 p.m. at Westerman
Uni ted Methodi st Church.
Everyone welcome.
MEMORIAL Services will be
held at the White Cemetery
SWJday at 11 a.m.

GRACE UNITED Methodist Church will celebrate its tOOth anniversary in its pre~en t
location at the corner of Second Ave. and Cedar St. today. The congregatiOn at worsh1p Js
pictured above.

Church celebrating centennial

GALLIPOLIS - G rnc~
United Methodist Church will
be celebrating 100" yea rs
today in its present location
at the corner of Second Ave.
and Cedar St., Gallipolis.
The first
Methodist
preaching in this vicinity
started around the year 1817
in a log house at the mouth of
Mill Creek just outside of the
city's corporation limits. In
1821 the first church was
built.
It stood on the ground
ROLLING HILLS Chapter
which
is occupied by the
836 of Parents Without
parking lot. The
church's
Partners will hold a potluck
deed
dates
back fr om May 7,
and family picnic at Lake
1793,
from
George
Alma near Wellston Sunday ,
Washington
and
Thomas
2 p.m. Bring table service,
beverage and a covered dish. Jefferson and also through a
Also bring bathing suites , number of other owners. The
fishing poles and frisbees . · present church was started in
There will be a frisbee eon- the summer of 1875. Dw-ing
the building of the church the
test at'4 p.m.
congrega tion worshipe~ at
MONDAY
VACATION Bible School at the courthouse. On January I,
Bell Chapel Church begins' 1876, the membership and
Monday and will continue friends of the church, headed
through Friday, 9 to 11 a.m . by the board and the pas tor,
each day. Theme is "God 's marched into the completed
Love is Jesus." Classes will

,.--------~·::::~::::.':';.':':.':':.':':.•:•:.·: : .•:•:.,;::::•::::.::::.::::.::::.:: .:::-•.:::-•.::::,:::: ~~~f:;~~r~~g~ 1 ~i~~e:c~~o~

ElEANOil

~~

~roNBaptistCh~ch

ROBSON

REPUBLICAN
l'OR MEIGS COUNTY

RECORDER

Your Vote Will Be Appreciated!

Pd . Pol . Adv .

Bible School Monday through
Friday, 9:30a.m. to 12 noon.
Program and crafts night will
be Saturday, June 12, 7 p.m.
Everyone Welcome. "Jransportatlon provided.
VINTON Senior atizens will
meet Monday, 7:30 p.m. at
the Vinton town hall . Visitors
welcome.
VACATION Bible School
begins Monday at Centerville
Grade School sponsored by
Thurman United Methodist
Church, 9 to 11:30 a.m.
FRENCH Colony Chapter
DAR will meet Monday , a:30
p.m. for a picnic. Hostess will
be Mrs. Kenneth Tomlinson,
Tycoon Road .
nJESDAY
FOOT WNG hot dog and
bake sale at the Bradbury
building sponsored by The
Golden Rule Class of the Old
Kyger Free Will Baptist
Chw-ch Tuesday, 10 a.m. to 6
p.m. Hot dogs, 50 cents.
MARTHA UNIT of Grace
United Methodist Church will
meet at 12 noon Tuesday at
the church to go to the home
of Phyllis Sheets for a potluck
lunch. ·

VOTERS OF
MEIGS COUNTY
Time has run out. I wanted to tell you personally the following facts .
I am well into my second year as your county commissioner
during that time, with my colleagues we have repaired many
bridges, paved 68 miles of county roadway . now engaged in dusting
control where unpaved, and we anticipate further blacktopping and
road construction in that connection.
We are making serious plans to obtain a nursing home for Meigs
elderly. I have devoted a lot of time and effort to help obtain a
$160,000 grant, which has been approved for the "New Senior
Citizens Building".
At present time tam devoting fetll time to my county duties . My
past experience in trucking, roadbuilding has been invaluable jlt the
county garage, with advice, direction and financing .
Background of 13 years in township office in Salisbury combined
with almost constant cooperation with county officials has been
invaluable as I operate for you in local government.
You will find an economical. effic ient administration in all of my
past public service . We can't please everybody, but you will have to
admit we have t ried.
To put your tax dollar where i.l will serve the majority o'f our
people, and most likely yourself, put an X where you find BERNARD
GILKEY on the Republican ballot.

TUESDAY
ABIGAIL UNIT of Grace
United Methodist Church, 12
noon Tuesday at the church to
go to the cabin of Mildred
Thomas for a potluck lunch.
WEDNESDAY
MARY OF BETHANY Unit of
Grace United Methodi st
Church Wednesday, 6:30p.m.
at the home of Maxine Stutes
for a potluck meal.
DEBRA UNIT of Grace
United Methodist Church
Wednesday 6:30 p.m. for a
potluck at the home of
Geneva Carter.
picnic on the grounds.
Preac her is Rev. 0. G.
McKinney . Services are 7:30
each evening . Special
singing.
WEEKEND Revival begins.
Wednesday at Morgan Center
Gospel Mission. Homecoming
will be Sunday June 13 with a
THURSDAY
HARRIS GRANGE Thursday, 8 p.m. Annual inspection
will be held . Potluck lunch.
THE -GALLIPOLIS-PT.
PLEASANT Stamp Club will
meet Thursday, 7 p.m. at St ..
Peter's Episcopal Church in
Gallipolis. The program will
be a slide presentation of
stamps of Great Britain.
Anyone who is a stamp
collector is welcome to attend.
CHRISTIAN Women's Club
guest night dinner at the
Holiday Inn , 7:30 p.m.
Everyone is in vited and
asked to brin g a friend
(husband too') Chuck
Melcher from Huntington will
speak. Lt. Wigglesworth will
sing. No babysitting. Make
reservation by calling Esther
Bechtel, 446-4713.

basement of the new church.
The congregation was led in
the singing of the Doxology.
By 1882 the church was
completely free of its debt:
In 1926 a new addition was
added to the church under the
pas torate of Rev . W. S.
Wes terman . In 1929 the ·
depression came, and the
church was finally free of
debt again in 1940.
Then in 1958 another ad,
dition was built, this time an
educational unit. In 1974 the
church was restored to its
original beauty.
A spokesman for the
church said, "Grace United
Me thodist Church has grown
with lhe city of Gallipolis
down through the years . It
cherishes its history of the
past but looks forward a nd

future. We would hope that
the church would stand lor all
that is right a.nd all that is
good in the Christian
message, that the Gospel of
C hri~ t would continue to be
prt&gt;c laimed ,"
The · membership invites
the residenIs of the Gallipolis
area to be a part of this
special celebration which
begins today• iii the 10:45
worship service. After the
worship
se rvice
.the
congregation will go to the
park front for an old
fashioned
picnic . The
congregation is encouraged
to wear the costume of the
1870s and 80s, and it is hoped
many will be able to par·
ticipate. Rev . Hawks will be
preaching on the theme "The
Next 100 Years."

•

e. MAIN
COMPLETE
WEDDING
SERVICE

GALLIPOLIS · Phil welcomed into the club as
Underwood~ Sharon Hill and new members. ·The next
Andy Fisher, members of the eampout for the local club
Gallia County Emergency will be at Pike Lake June ll,
Squad, presented a program 12, I:i. Those members who
and demonstration for the will be going to this campout
French City Campers when · will meet on Friday at 9:30
they · held their regular a.m . at the Gallia County
meeting Thursday at the Fair Grounds and will travel
roadside park in Kanauga . in a caravan with Wilford
They gave several pointers Evans as wagon master.
on what to do for · victims of
The next meeting will be
accidents
or
other July I at the roadside park in
emergencies until help Kanauga with a potluck
arrives . They showed several dinner at 6:30 p.m. and a
splints that could be used for business meeting at 7:30p.m.
br oken
bones.
The
emerge ncy vehicle was ·
A thought lor the day:
opened for the campers to Supreme Allied commander,
view and many questions Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower,
were answered by the said, "In the final choice, a
members of the squad.
soldier's pack is not so heavy
Immediately following a as a prisoner's chains.''
potluck dinner, the metting
was called to order by the
president, Jim King with the
opening prayer by Chaplain,
Marion .Williams and pledge
to the flag given by all . Art
Wroblewski read ·the minutes
of the previous meeting and
24 members answered roll
call. There were five visitors
at this meeting. Wayne Amsbary gave the treasurer 's
report.
Harland Sanders reported
on the Ohio Spring State-Wide
Camporee attended by
several members of the local
club in May near Logan .
Jim King awarded merit
stripes to those members who
had earned them for forestry
and air conservation . GDidie
King was appointed chairperson of a committee for the
making of lady bug pins to be
used as favors for the
National Campvention to be
held in July near Duquoin, 111.
Neal and Jean Clark were

~

TRAil FULL OR§
PARTTIIE ~

•11,ooo:

per year an!:J up. 13 weeks in a :

FULL TIME ritsident training
program).

:_

!.

REVCO Tractor Trail1r Tr1ining, Inc . will train you on mod - _,.

ern, professional equipment. :
and . Placement assistance is 1:c
~~
~:

available upon graduation ,
CALL NOW!

Parkersburg

422-408~ ·

::.::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

Charles R. (Chuck)
. Hysell
~

FOR

Meigs County Commissioner

it carries a high price and
people must be willing to pay
it.
.
After her message , she
presented the charter to the
Gallia County pre sident,
Gilbert Craig, Jr. Other of.
fleers and members of the
Executive BQ8rd accepting
the charter were: Jim Mitchell, ~eoond vice president;
VadaMayo,secretary ; Andy
Gilmore
chairman of
Commu~ity Coordination,
and Gene Armstrong,
chairman of legal redress.
Craig presented spec1al
plaques to Rev. Charles
· Smith and James Crump for
their inspiration, concern,
and endless efforts in helping
to form the Gallia County
·Chapter.
The N.A.A .C.P. (National
Association for the Advancement of. Colored
People) has been m e~1stenee
since 1907. The organization
made its debut in GaiHa
County this year.
A spokesman for the
organizatio? said, "Let us
hope that 1ts purpose - to
bring equality to every
human . being - is fulfilled.
The statement that the
N.A.A.C.P. is ft'll!de up of only
. blacks and serves only blacks
is totally false . . The
N.A.A.C.P. is composed of all
races and it seeks to protect ·
and serve the same_. "

•..
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r

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r.
'

GALUPOUS - Officers committee, Urban and Mary
for 1976-77 were elected Baldwin, Sue and John
Thursday night by the French Persinger, Margo and Larry
City Swingers Square Dance Prater. ·
Club.
Banner steal con\mittee,
Officers include Tom John and Wan~a Fellure, Jo
Pasquale, president; Bob Ann and Dave McQuaid, Jim
Donnally, vice president; Sue and Arlene Thompson;
Donnally, secretary, and membership committee,
John and Wanda Waugh, Helen and Dan Rollins , Jane
treasurers .
and Roger Brumfield;
The club discussed its monthly announcements to
annual family potluck picnic other clubs, Sue Persinger;
to be held Sunday, June 13 at calling committee, Wanda
the Kyger O'eek Employees Steele, Becky Pasquale and
Club. Hamburgers, hot dogs ·Mev Ward.
and buns will be furnished by
Fund raising committee,
the club.
Wally and Ginny Henry, John
Wanda Steele, treasurer for and Becky Pasquale, Steve
the past year, gave a detailed and Parkana Wood, Carl and
'financial statement.
Wanda Steele.
The club announced the
The club discussed the .
square dance lessons slated upcoming "Rio Grande
'for the fall and tentatively Fljng" June 18, 19 and 20 at
rented the K of P Hall for the the Buckeye Hills Vocational
lessons. Any persons In- School. Club caller Bill Evans
terested in taking lessons will be one of the callers for
should· call 446-4002 or 446- the event.
0619 for more information.
The club publicly thanked
Other committees named Jim Baldwin for the printing
by President Pasquale for the of the 1976-77 square dance
upcoming year "include : calendars.
hostess committee, Bob and
A booth at the Fourth of
Joyce Bartimus ; public July Festival was discussed
relations, Phyllis Mason; and approved as one of the
hlrin2 committee, Urban club's money
making
Baldwin, Winford Ward and projects.
Bob Dorinally; recrea lion

.!
' OFF
ALL FABRICS
(Except Our Recent New Arrivals)

Hurry in tomorrow and choose coHon knits,
polyester knits, velvets, cordoroys, dotted
swiss, new wrinkle cloths, polyester crepe in
prints, designs and plains, etc. Save 1-3 off
now.

11S W. ~cond

Pomeroy

Ph. 992-2214.

• A Ttademark o f THE SINGER COMPA~

(
!

' Gal/ian staff chosen
~

I
l

I
I
t

I
~.

'
(
l
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~

i

I
(
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6

*

YOUH Exmt. mtJCH FTI)fUST

''

taken from II Timothy 3:16,
17, 1 Corin thians 2:14-16, II
Peter 1:21, Hebrews 4:12, II
Timothy 2: 15.
Get-well cards were signed
and offerings. taken . The
meetings closed with prayer
by al l.
HACK IN }' LORIDA
BIDWELL - Mr . and Mrs.
James Denney and son Billy
have returned to their hon1c
in Port Lauderdale, Fla., '
after visi ti ng her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. l v~r Morehouse Bidwell, and Mrs.
Cora ' Denney and Mrs .
Virgin ia Casto and· famili es
and their relatives and
fri ends. While here Mr . and
Mrs. Denney ·attended the
alwnni banquet at North
Galliu and were awarded Jl
prize for being the ones
farthes t away to attend .

GALLIPOLIS - Editorial Stelnbrunner,
Bridget
staff members for the 1976-77 Hennessey' Meg Thomas,
Gallian at Gallla Academy Sheri Wade, Mae Kemp:
High School have been anPhotographers are Steve
nounced by faculty advisor · Pyles Steve Wilson, . Todd
Jennie White.
Osbor'ne and Art~ur Al.lison.
They are:
Editor, Becky Call ;
CLASSES S~ARTING
assistant editor, · Debbie
MIDDLEPORT
Johnson; Kati~ Hennessey, Vacation llible School will be
Kathie McCoy, Amy Knicely, held at the Bradford Church
Jpdee Collins, Annida Camp- of Christ June 8 to 18 from 9 to
bell, Beth Abels, Colleen 11 :30 a.m. each day. Classes·
Turner, Lu Ellen Saunders, will be held for children from
Libby Salyer, Jill Collier.
preschool age through high
. Brenda Call, Catherine school. For further inSchmidt, Tina Nibert, Ann formalion residents may
Wood Dixl_r. Martin, Karen telephone 992•5942 or 992-5778.

'

l'

HART MAPLE CHESTS

You'll enjoy shopping at
the "Country Store" .. .
Rutland
Furniture
Store. You'll probably
save more money right
here an nationally
advertised brands, too.
Come and see us ...
you'll get low prices, ·
courtesy and the best
service anywhere. Our
motto is sales with
service.

4 DRAWER

95

$

5 DRAWER

'49'
how to make
any room a. ·

5

MAPLE
VALUE!

·~ · bedroom

French City Swingers
select new officers

Term Jan. 2, 1977
Honest, reliable, sober. twill be a full time
servant. Your vote and support appreciated
in the June 8 Republican Primary.
, Thank You .
Pd. Pol. Adv .

l

Ar&gt;rtiOYCOitrrtallt UE-'l£11

/J

GALLIPOLIS - On May
15, the Galtia County Chapter
of the N.A.A.C.P. held its
charter presentation dinner
at the Holiday Inn. Edward
Howard was master of
ceremonies. Dignitaries
acknowledged included
Elaine Rouse, candidate for
delegate for Morris Udall;
Ron .
James,
.State
Representative;
Jim
Plummer, candidate for
Democratic nomination for
Congressman; James
Crw!lp, District II Chairman
of N.A .A.C.P.; William
Bourne,
president
of
Lawrence County Branch,
N.A.A.C.P.; Andy Gilmore,
President F.O.C.U.S., Inc.;
Rev. Charles Smith, member
of Executive Board of
N.A.A.C.P.; Charles Howard,
vice-president of Jackson
County N.A.A.C.P., and Alisa
Brown
candidate for
delegat~ for Morris Udall for
President.
Guest speaker Gertrude
Gorman Field Director at
Large for the N.A.A.C.P.,
stressed the importance of
having a N.A.A.C.P. chapter
in Gallla County. She also
explained how it could
strengthen the organization's
cause and the community,
She
emphasized · that
members must· study the
Constitution
of
the
N.A.A.C.P. She also pointed
out that freedom is not free -

••

• POMEROY, OHIO

VINTON - The l.adies meetings in the absence of
Prayer Circle of Fellowshir 1he pre$ldent and vice
Chapel gathered recently for president.
its weekly meetings. On May
Devotion~ an d a teaching
20 lhe group met ~t the home were taken from Matthew
of Charolette Sperry and sang 22:·1-10.
"Hallejujah Arry How," and
On May 29 they rnct at the
"I want More of Jesus ."
hOme of Mrs. Roger Smith
Mrs. Elmer Geiser led the with nine members present .
Mrs. \\be Spencer led the
pra yer.
The group again sa ng
ANNOUNCE BIRTH
C'OLUMBUS - Mr . and "Hallelujah" and " I Want
Mrs. Richard Bradbury of More of Jesus." Devotions
Colwnbus arc announcing lhe were taken from Daniel
birth of their fil·st child , a chapter 1 wi th u teaching and
daug hter, May .27 at Mt . sharing thoughts on the entire
.Carmel Hospital. The baby chapter.
.
.
weighed eig ht pow1ds, seven
On June 3 they met with
ounces, and has been named Mrs. Russell Slayton . '11Jcrc
present. Mrs.
Lori Ann . Maternal grand- were six
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Geiser MBVC a teaching on
Wayn e Sisson. Paternal ''The Bible - The Word of
grandparents ·arc Mr . and God," taken from " The
J.ife "
New '
Mrs. Wendell Bradbury, all or Chri stian
Kyger.
Testament. Scriptw-es were

presented charter

You don't have to quit your :t
present job to train to drive a :
trac:toNrailer. In only 7 to 8 to.
wee kends PART TIPaE tr.alning ~
{Saturdays &amp; Sundayd a qual- .,
ified driver can bt earning :

June Fabric

FLORIST

DOVER - Ohio's Official raged all about Ihem .
breathe new life and meaning
Bicentennial Play, "Trwnpel
Led
by
Moravian into lhe people, events and
In The Land," ha s ·announced mi ss i onary David , ideas that gave birth to the
its 1976 season.
l',cisberger, the inhabilants of American drea m of uure,
The colorful Paul Green Schuenbrunn met all men as Libert y, and the pw·suit of
saga of the Revolutionary brothers and vowed not to Happiness .•,
War on America's first take up weapons agai nsl their·
Information r egar ding
frontier will be presented fellow men. Their fri end- advance reservations fur
nightly except Mondays from liness to all and their neutral individuals and groups may
June 29 through Sept. 5. Now sta nce in th e Revol ution be obtain ed by writing
in its seventh season , the crea ted s u sp i cio u~ among • '"i~umpet In The Land," P.
outdoor drama will be per- bolh British and Americans. 0. BoK.275: Dover, Ohio H622,
formed at 8:45 p.m. in the and resulted, finally , in the or by calling t216) 364-Slll .
1,600 seat Schoen brunn bloodiest massacre of the
Amphitheatre just south of entire Revolutionary War .
New Philadelphia.
Though 93 of these innocent
The agonizing birth of a settlers were brutally
new nation forms the back- ·slaughtered, their philosophy
VRS CONTINUES
ground against which · this of peace and brotherhood
KANAUGA
The
powerful talc is played. Here, became one of the fu nKanauga
United
Methodist
in the village of Schocnbrunn, damental principles of our
Hible School will continue
from 1772 to 1782a small band new nation_
Friday, June II, 6 to
lhrough
of courageous white and
Nearly 100 actors, singers.
8:30
each
eve ning. The
Indian men and woman dancers and technicians
program
will
be Friday
strugg led mightily to remain recreate this thrilling chapter
evening
at
7:30p.m
. .
free of the conflict which of 'America's history . They

Local NAACP

Now at the Fabric

~.. ...,~

Pd. Pol. Adv . by Candil!ate

cHARTER RECEIVED - The Gallia County Chapter
of the NMCP received its charter at a recent dinner.
Gilbert Craig, Jr., left, president of the local chapter
received the presentation from Gertrude Gorman , field
director at large for the NMCP. Jim Mitchell, second·
vice president of theGaUia group, is also pictured.

•

~ ''l!l's~!!t~.~S~pl!t~~!!

BERNARD GILKEY

."

~

::::;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:·

BRIDAL POLICY
Wedding and engagement
notices for the Sunday Times
Sentinel must be In our hands
.by 12 noon on the Thursday
preceding publication.
Information may be turned In
or mailed 'to the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune or Pomeroy
Dally Sentinel. Engagement
and wedding forms are also
available on request.

,.

Squad presentsprogram
to French City Campers

/taltf!,/4-J
'IU.

recommended cards only be
sent In case of illness of a
Par Iller, and that eliJ)ellSI!J
incurred by L' Archiviste be
paid. All recommendations
were adopted.
•
The next meeting of the
Salon will he a picnic and
ins lallation of officers at the
home of lnes Marchi, August
5. There will be no July
meeting.
Refr e shments of
strawberry pie, mints ancl
coffee were served by the r
hostess, and favors of shells.
brought from Florida were
given. Dorothy Hecker won
"11'1
the door pr1ze.
,.

GALLIPOLIS - Partners
of Gallia County Salon 612,
Eight and Forty gathered at
the home of Mabel Brown for
their June meeting. Le Petit
Chapeau Erma Smith,
presiding , opened the
meeting in ritualistic manner.
Communications read were
from
De~art e mental
Secretaire acknowledging
receipt of assessments and
registration fees. The call to
Marclie Departementale to
be held in Neil House,
Colwnbus, July ll and 12 and
an invitation to the 17th anniversary of Athens County
Salon 676 to be held at Athens
Legion Home June 23 were
read. Several Partners will
attend this dinner meeting.
One new Partner was approved and needed changes
in constitution and by-laws
were discussed.
Ways and means chairman
Faye Wildermuth recom·mended that the practice of
each Partner give $I a month
rather than having money
making activit'es be continued. Flower and Cards
Chairman Dor thy Hecker,

dreams of an tven bri ghter

Let us put
your wedding
in bloom.

Reserve Your Date Today

IX I

Bicentennial play to open Prayer circle reports meetings

Mabel Brown entertains
Gallia County Salon

mmg
Events

7- - -)

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OPEN FRIDAYS TIL SPM

�11 - TheSundayTimes-Sentinel,Sunday, June&amp;, 1976•

10- The SWlday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, June 6, 1976

Merri Ault is installed as queen

Sarah's

Gallia Diary
by Sarah Carsey
446-2342

POMEROY - Merri Ault, Mandy Sisson, guide, and
daflllhter of Mr. and Mrs. Beth Ann Weaver, marshall.
William Ault, Middleport,
Appointed officers installed
was i ns ~lled as honored were Vanessa Folmer,
que en of Bethel 62, In - chaplain ; Mary Sue. Durst,
ternational Order of Job's reco rder ; Suzie Zirkle,
Da ughte rs in installation treasurer ; Jona Mur ray ,
cerem onie s conducted musician : Kim Sebo, first
Friday night at the Pomeroy messenger ; Kenda Braun,
Masonic Temple.
seco nd messenger; Mary
Other elected officers in- Ann
Hoffman ,
third
stalled
were
Pau la messenger ; Tracey Jeffers,
Eichinger, senior princess; fourth messenger ; Jennifer
lni Wood ,. junior princess:

Wise, fifth messenger; Lani
Vellincia, librarian ; Beverly
Wilcox , senior custodian ;
Dee Sims, junior custodian;
Cindy Richards, inner guard;
Juli Velllncia, outer guard,
and ·Martba Carson , Usa
Thomas and Angie Sisson,
choir.
Miss Sisson, retiring
honored queen, was the installing officer. Others
assisting were Debbie Glaze,
guide; Diana Carsey, mar.
shall ; · Brenda Taylor,
chaplain; Carolyn Smellz&lt;!r,
senior custodian : Debbie
Finla w, .j unior custodian ;
Cathy Rayburn, recorder;
Sherry King, musician; Usa
Thomas, flag bearer, and
Beverly Wilcox and Paula
Eichinge r , soloists, accompanied by Mrs. Maryl n
Wilcox.
·
The guardian council is
composed of Kathy Miller,
guardian ; Bill Qu ic kel,
associa te guardia n, II a
Darnell, guardian secretary:

FRIGIDAIRE

Sgt. and Mrs. Jeffery D. Grate
COUPLE WED - Announcement is being made of the
marriage of Ka thleen Rizer , daug hter of Mr. and Mrs .
Marion Rizer, Mason, W. Va ., to Sg t. Jeffery D. Grate, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Charles La they, Langsville. The wedding
was an event of May 8 in Grundy, Va. with the Hev.
Charles M. Sublett performing the ceremony. The bride is
a graduate of Wabama High School, class of !975
currently employed at Veterans Memorial Hospfl&lt;ll. Sgt.
Grate, a 1974 graduate of Meigs High School, is stationed
with the U. S. Army in Frankfort, Germany.

ARE YOU A
WINNER?
Below is a list of the door prize
winners for our 5th Anniversary
drawing . If your name · is listed
below please call or stop in to claim
your prize.

Beulah Schultz
Char Atlhouse
Becky Mankin
Buck Deloney
Charles Allison
Eve~n Miller
laura Pickens
Barbara Sargent
Henry L Hetzer
larry Hill
Catherine Whne ·
P. B. Morrissey

C. V. Pinkerman
Jim Dillon
Karen Dorst
Galdin Clindein
Foe life
Barbara Leffingwell
Tom Karr
Phillip w
. Whne
Ernest E. Johnson
Timmy Jerrell
G. L. Franklin

Remember we will hav e specials the whole
.s ummer long .
Many , many thanks to all who have made
our Sth Anniversary ver y special to both of
us.
Jake &amp; Mid Gaul

GAULS SHAKE HAVEN
ST. ROUTE 7

CHESTER, 0.

I L'dcra l

r egulat ion s

req uire a su bstant ial
pena lty for pr ematu r e

wllhdrawal of ce r
li'fi cat e funds.

Certificates
of DepcM.
Minimum $1.000

Economic Rooms Of Our Local High Schools

Save

HERDMAN brings with him to "Gallia Country" a great
deal of theatrical background . He worked with Lee Durieux,
the pagea nt's author, in "Birth of Dixie" when it played in
Mount Vcrnon in 1969 and 1970. He was a member of the Mansfield Playhouse and did swnmer stock in Provincetown, Mass.
He served as master of ceremonies in the late 1950s for the Air
Force talent show whlch traveled all over the world. He has
done almost everything from the cowardly role to the
psycopa thic killer type to pulling a curtain for the Broadway
show, "Mary, Mary" in 1950.
ATHEATRE GUILD for the Gallipolis area is one of his
dreams for the future and he asks anyone who might be
intereSted in starting such a group to con ~ et him at 446-9533.
. He and his wife, Phyllis bave two children, Lynne, 16 and
Robby, 12.

•ao to •100

On These Uke New Frigidaire

.He will portray Burford and Judge Bradbury on different
nights. Herdma n is employed as a security officer at Holzer
Medical Center and the hospital has agreed to give him time
off so he ca n lake part in the outdoor musica l pageant . Herdnian says Bradbury will introduce the scenes in this year's
show and he thinks the drama is going to be very interesting.
Rehea rsals started Thursday .

•REFRIGERA TORS
•FREEZERS
eRANGE$
•WASHERS
eDRYERS

MERRI AULT, honored .queen of Be thel 62,
International Order of Job's Daughters.

REUN ION PLANNED
DEGREE RECEIVED
GALLIPOLIS - The Clark
GALLIPOLIS - Mark T.
Family will hold its 57th Eplin g
of
Gallipoli s
reunion Sunday, June 13 at graduated Saturday frorb
the Gallia County Junior · Virgi nia Polytechnic InFa irg r o unds. Fa mily stitute and S~ te University
members are asked to bring in Blacksburg, Va. Epling
any small items, including · received the ba chelor of
snapshots, for an early architecture degree from
. Ameri can exhibi t. Dinner Virginia Tech.
will be served at 12: 30 p.m.

eDISHWASHERS

A Once A Year Opportunity

BAKER FURNITURE
Middleport; Ohio

"THE MOST THRILLmG feeling she ever bad" is how
Brenda Finnicwn describes her fir st adventure into the world
of parachu ting. Brenda, daughter of Mr. and, Mrs: Jack
Finnicum of Kanauga and a sophomore majoring in nursing at
Ohw Stale, parachuted for the first time two weeks ago. She
jumped 2,800 feet after instruction by the Green County
Parachut e Club near Xenia .

Youngs observe
40th anniversary
RU:rLAND - Mr. and Mrs. with a surprise celebration at
Frank Youn g .observed their their home in Rutland.
40th weddin g anniversa ry
Those attending were their
daughter and family , Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Clark, Bobby and
Richie, New Haven , W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Young,
Tr oy ; Mr.· and Mrs . Wilbur
YoWl g, Mrs. Susan Cleland ,
Greg and Mary, Mindy
Youn g, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Haptons~ll. Dorothy Young,
Mr. and Mrs . William Bailey,
Mrs . Nancy Pope, Tracy and
Toni, Middleport ; Mrs.
Lurene Kennedy, Galena ;
Mrs. Francis Youn g, Mr. and
Mrs . Joe W. Young, Mr. and
Mr s .
James
Quivey,
Pomeroy; Mr . and Mrs. Joe
Youn g, Cambridge; Mr. and
Mrs . Galen Will, Stephen and
Jennifer, Mr. and Mrs. Keith
Casdorph, Colwnbus ; Rev.
' Eve rett Dulaney , Gallipolis;
Mr . and Mrs. Kirby Smith
and Brian , New Haven, W.
Va.; Mr . and Mrs . William
Buck, Mr.' and Mrs . Norman
Will , Duane Will, Pastor Carl
Peak, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Rice, Mrs . Pauline Atkins,
Mrs. Ruby Halliday, Mrs.
Margaret Belle Weber, Mrs .
Marjorie Milhoan , Mr . and
Mrs. Seth Nicholson, Mr. arid
Mrs. Charles Barnett, Mrs.
Beulah Grate, rutland.
Sending gifts were Mr. and
._..
Mrs. Jim Haley, Mrs. Pauline
Markins, Edna Mae Swick,
Rutland ; Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Bintz and Amanda , Cambridge; Mrs. Carol Buck and
family, Cheshire; Mr. and
Mrs. Leo · Young, Mr. and
Mr s. Walter Baskieweiz,
Marion ; Mr. and Mrs, Dwight
Brown , St. Albans, W. Va.

..........

. STATE WINNER - First place state winner in
Americanism programs conducted by Junior American
Legion Auxiliary unibl went to Pomeroy's Drew Weli6ter
Post 39. Mrs. Harry Davis, junior advisor ,. seated,
accepted the trophy award from Mrs. Jane Balzhiser,
Department of Ohio president, at the Thursday summer

EARLY WEEK

PRICES GOOD SUN.; MON., TUES., JUNE 6, 7, and 8

GOLDEN ISLE

BUTTER
LB.
PKG.' 99~
GOLDEN RIPE

BANANAS
51J. $100

FROSTIE
ROOT BEER OR
ORANGE CRUSH

89'~

.6

16 oz.
BTL CTN.

Many awards recognize programs
POMEROY ...:. Nwnerous
awards in re cognition of
•Americanism , commWJity
service, and membership
programs were presented to
American Legion Auxiliary
junior and senior units at the
Eighth District · summe r
convention in Athens Thursday.
Mrs. Arnold Richards ,
Elgith District president,
presided at the convention
which featured Mrs. Jack
Balzhiser, Department of
Ohio president, as· the guest
speaker . Mrs . Balzhiser
spoke on the Declaration of
Independence and the price
of freedom and commented
on the disorientation and
confusion of Americans today
l!lld the attitude of demanding a living without working
for it.
Receiving the largest
nwnber of awards at the
convention were the juniors
of Drew Webster Post 39,
Pomeroy. Mrs. Balzhiser
made the presentations to
Mrs. Harry Davis, junior
advisor , on behalf of
representatives of the 25th
annual junior conference
committee.

Top award to the juniors
was the Dorothy McCullough .
Revolving Trophy, given to
the unit for achieving the first
place in s~te competition for
the
Iiest
all-around
Americanism program.
Other
state awards
received by the Pomeroy
girls were Robin Campbell,
second, and Fae Reibel, third
in conference covers ; Robin
Lehe.w, first, and Robin
Campbell, second in bicentennial coloring book; Robin
Lehew, first in the All
American coloring book
contest; Rhonda Reuter and
Lori Wood second in the
foreign rel~tions scrapbook.
Unit awards were second in
ihe book of prayers ; first and
second places in the handwork contest, and third place
in the state in the Marie
Moore Revolving Trophy
award for the best over-all
program in the state.
Awards received by the
Senior Unit 39, Pomeroy,
were a goal ribbon, birthday
roll ca ll certificate and
certificate of achievement,
all membership awards ; both
depar tment and national
citations for meritori ous

(

; POINT PLEASANT, W.
Va.- Dr. Jim Vineyard, the
bus pes tor of the First Baptist
Church, Hammond, Indiana,
will be the featured speaker
at the second annual Bus and
Soulwinning Conference at
the Grace Bible Baptist
Church,
Monday
and
Tuesday, in Point Pleasant.
, Brother Vineyard was an
associate to Dr. John
Rawlings at the Landmark
Baptist Temple in Cincinnati,
and Dr. Jerry Falwell at
Thomas Road Baptist Church
in Lynchburg , Va., before
moving to Hammond to work
ill the ministry of Dr. Jack
l!yles.
During the 1975 spring
Sunday School drive, the
average attendance on the
buses was 9,513 with 220 buses
running per Sunday. On a
high day the buses brought in
15,339 on 247 buses.
~ Brother Vineyard is a
5peciali:;t in Junior Church,
Qreaching to 2,500 youn~sters

every week. He travels
throughout America and
Canada prea ching over 120
conferences each year and is
the author of numerous
books, records, and tapes on
soul winning and the Bus
Ministry . Presently he serves
as Vice President of
Evang elism at HylesAnderson College in Crown
Point, Ind.
There will be teaching
sessions on Bus Ministry and
Junior Church each evening
at 6:30 p.m. followed by a
preaching service at 7:30
p.m. On Tuesday morning
there will be teaching
sessions at 10 and 11 a.m.,
followed by a time of refreshment.
An adult staffed nursery
will be provided for · each
session. Everyone is invited
to attend in the new facilities
of the Grace Bible Baptist
Church, located four miles
north of Point Pleasant on St.
Rt. 62 at the traffic circle.

VOTE "Y~s" FOR
SCHOOL LEVY TUES., JUNE 8TH

SUPERIORS
DART

BACON
SUNDAY. JUNE 2oth

l"IUNCJ·~

GAH D.:VIDU~
•

.......

11, I!J, 1. tJt 'W S[W IJt' l' heires.~
1'; 11 r it· w lh ~H rst was indicled

r.. , '"'ll lt'&lt;l robbery in the
Atwi l 15th robbe ry uf a S:on
FrHr Jd sco -bank.
I)

''

and ci~ti ons for membership
goal along with awards of
honorable mention for Ute
children and youth and
c ommuni ty se r v i ce
programs.
Held a( the K. T. Crossen
Post, Athens, the meeting
convened at 1 p.m . with Mrs.
Bernard Cooley giving the
call to order. Registration
was handled by Mrs. Jo
Rider, Helen Long and Mrs.
Wiley King, all of the hos t
unit. Mrs .
Neutzlin g,
Pomeroy, was conven ti on
pianist. Advancement of the
colors was under the direction of Mrs. Eugene Poppenhaeger, sergean t at arms arid
invocation was given by Mrs.
Harley Moler,
Mrs. Carl Wilson extended
the welcome with Mrs. Mabel
Brown of Unit 27, Gallipolis,
giving the response . The
credentials committee , Mrs.
Wilson, Athens ; Mrs. Charles
Kessinger, Middleport, and
Mrs. Clifford Behrens,
Lancaster, was introduced by
Mrs. Ricbards, the presiding
officer.
Introduced and bringing
greetings were Tom Ruth,
commander of the Athens
Post ; the Mayor, of Athens,
Donald Barrett, and William
Hubbell, Junction Ci ty,
Eighth District commander.
District chairmen giving
. reports were Mrs. Terrance
Carroll , Amanda,
Americanism ; Mrs. Rolland
Moose, Jun cti on City,
children and youth ; Mrs.
Allan Hampton, Middleport,
community service ; Mr s.
(Continued on page 1Z)

GENE WETHERHOLT
FAMILYc
GENE, JAN, SARA, ELLEN, .VALERIE AND KRISTIN

A NATIVE OF
GALLIA COUNTY
FOR
GALLIA COUNTY

WEDDING!
CAPTURED WITH
PHOTOGRAPH S BY
GROVERS
COMPLETE WITH

~~~~~·

·,
•

••
•

STARTING

'

$7995
GROVER'S
STUDIO

r
•
'

PROFESSIONAL
PHOTOGRAPHY
Spring Valley Plaza
Ga tlipotis, Ohio
Phone 446·7n4
Open Tues.-Sat . to.s
'Tilt BOn Thurs.

·Holly Park, Schult

PROSECUTING AnORNEY

GENE WETHERHOLT

COME IN AND SEE
Mon.-Sat. 9a.m.

9p.m.

Sunday 9 a :m .-6 p.m .

CLARK'S JEWELRY STORE
342 Second

••

OF YOUR

Featuring

Open ·

.•

THE STORY

HOME PARK &amp;SALES

t. Co,

2H W. 2nd St.
Pom~n~y, Olllo-4S76f
RICHARD E. JONES, 'MANAG!It

service; a certificate for
outs~nding contributions to
Americanism ; a certificate
for outs~nding children and
youth prog rams. Mrs, Grace
Pratt and Mrs. Harry Davis
received half-century cards
for collectin g over 50
membership dues, while
Carrie Neutzling. Mrs. Pearl
Knapp and Mrs . Fay e
Wildermuth were recognized
lor membership collection
work.
Mrs. William Curl, Eighth
Distric t chairman, made a
special presentation to Mrs.
Neutzllng in recognition of
her outs tanding work in
veterans
affairs
and
rehabilitation . Represe nting
the Pomeroy unit at the
convention were Mrs . Neutz.
ling, Mrs. Rhoda Hackett,
Mrs. Catherine Welsh, Mrs.
Marge Goett, Mrs. Pratt,
Ml'l&gt;. Davis and Miss Erma
Smith .
Awards received by the
Middleport unit of FeeneyBennett Post 123 included a
century card to Mrs. Albert
Roush for obtaining over 100
renewals in memberships,
and a cer tificate in
recognition of collecting 46
renewals.
The senior uni t als o
received certificates for
outs~nding contributions to
the Americanism program,
for commWJity service, and
for children and youth activities. A goal membership
ribbon was also received by
the junior unit. Presen t at the
convention to accept the
awards were Mrs . Gerri
Kessinger, Mrs. Bonnie
Dailey and Mrs. Freda Clark,
seniors, and Paula Cunning.
ham, Melinda Thomas,
Angela Dailey, Kim and Lois
Ann Roush, Myra and Joy ce
Lawson , and Christi Smith,
juniors.
Lewis Manley Auxiliary 263
received a certificate for
making goal, a citation for
achieving the birthday honor
roll with membership
reported by Nov. 10, 'along
with both department and
national citations for having
made goal by Jan. 31. The
llnit also received a \community service award . From
the unit at the convention
were Mrs . Ricbards, Mrs.
Allen Hampton and Mrs.
Ernest Bowles.
Racine Auxiliary 602 also
received a certificate for
making goal, one for the
birthday honor roll, the
department and national
citations for membership,
and the national goal ribbon .
Individual membership
awards were presented to
Mrs. Herschel Norris, Mrs.
Virgil Roush and Mrs. Myrtle
Walker. Mrs. Eunie Brinker
of the Racine unit also attended.
The Gallipolis Unit 27 also
received all of the certificates

K&amp;K Mobile

MEIGS BRANDl
AtiM Qudy Slinp I

convention of the Eighth District in Athens. Numerous
other certificate awards were received by the juniors,
pictured left to right, Jenni Couch, Tracey Jeffers, Robin
Campbell, Anna Wiles and Lori Wood. Others who worked
on the projects which won the awards were Paula Kloes,
Pam Powers, Denise and Sherrie-Marshall .
·

.I

Dr. Vineyard speaking
at Baptist conference

THE AAUWtour of homes will be held next SWlday. The
tour of historic or interesting Gallipolis homes includes
"Riverby," the hom e of Dr. and Mrs. Charles Holzer, Jr., the
McGinness home, Our House, and the Morris E. Haskins
home. The local AA UW uses the proceeds for scholarships and
community projects. They are one of the top four Ohlo
branches in money contributed to fellowship funds according
to Connie Wells.
'

Let Your Dollars Work For You
At The Highest Rate For Savings

1-Year

Tested &amp; Proven in the Home

BOB HERDMAN
GALLIPOI.JS - "Gallia Country " promises to be a new
and exciting production this year, and one of the additions
which will make it a success is Bob Herdman of 363 Ridge
Drive in Gallipolis. Originally from Athens, Bob moved here
with his family a year ago after living in Mansfi eld for 13
years.

Be.Good to Yourself!

..

Catolyn Thomas, guardian
treasurer , and Maryln
Wilcox , directress of music.
Associate Guardian
Council members are Maria
Romine , promoter of
sociability ; Mary Carson,
custodian of paraphernalia;
Audrey Wood, promoter of
hospitality ; June Eichinger,
director of finance.
Registrars for the installation were Kathleen
Anthony, past worthy matron
of Middleport Eva ngeline
Chapter, O.E.S. and Sue
Floyd, worthy ma tron,
Evangeline Chapter .
The new honored queen
made the program a
memorial to the late Mrs. C.
H. (Kathryn) Wise. Her
colors for the term are red
and white, the emblem, a
single white candle; her
flower, the red rose, and her
motto, sweetness .
Refreshments were served
following the insta llation
ceremony.

OUR LARGE SELECTION

PD. FOR BY GENE WETHERHOLT RE-ELECTION COMMITIIE .
.' .
James Thaler-Treas.
' .

�11 - TheSundayTimes-Sentinel,Sunday, June&amp;, 1976•

10- The SWlday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, June 6, 1976

Merri Ault is installed as queen

Sarah's

Gallia Diary
by Sarah Carsey
446-2342

POMEROY - Merri Ault, Mandy Sisson, guide, and
daflllhter of Mr. and Mrs. Beth Ann Weaver, marshall.
William Ault, Middleport,
Appointed officers installed
was i ns ~lled as honored were Vanessa Folmer,
que en of Bethel 62, In - chaplain ; Mary Sue. Durst,
ternational Order of Job's reco rder ; Suzie Zirkle,
Da ughte rs in installation treasurer ; Jona Mur ray ,
cerem onie s conducted musician : Kim Sebo, first
Friday night at the Pomeroy messenger ; Kenda Braun,
Masonic Temple.
seco nd messenger; Mary
Other elected officers in- Ann
Hoffman ,
third
stalled
were
Pau la messenger ; Tracey Jeffers,
Eichinger, senior princess; fourth messenger ; Jennifer
lni Wood ,. junior princess:

Wise, fifth messenger; Lani
Vellincia, librarian ; Beverly
Wilcox , senior custodian ;
Dee Sims, junior custodian;
Cindy Richards, inner guard;
Juli Velllncia, outer guard,
and ·Martba Carson , Usa
Thomas and Angie Sisson,
choir.
Miss Sisson, retiring
honored queen, was the installing officer. Others
assisting were Debbie Glaze,
guide; Diana Carsey, mar.
shall ; · Brenda Taylor,
chaplain; Carolyn Smellz&lt;!r,
senior custodian : Debbie
Finla w, .j unior custodian ;
Cathy Rayburn, recorder;
Sherry King, musician; Usa
Thomas, flag bearer, and
Beverly Wilcox and Paula
Eichinge r , soloists, accompanied by Mrs. Maryl n
Wilcox.
·
The guardian council is
composed of Kathy Miller,
guardian ; Bill Qu ic kel,
associa te guardia n, II a
Darnell, guardian secretary:

FRIGIDAIRE

Sgt. and Mrs. Jeffery D. Grate
COUPLE WED - Announcement is being made of the
marriage of Ka thleen Rizer , daug hter of Mr. and Mrs .
Marion Rizer, Mason, W. Va ., to Sg t. Jeffery D. Grate, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Charles La they, Langsville. The wedding
was an event of May 8 in Grundy, Va. with the Hev.
Charles M. Sublett performing the ceremony. The bride is
a graduate of Wabama High School, class of !975
currently employed at Veterans Memorial Hospfl&lt;ll. Sgt.
Grate, a 1974 graduate of Meigs High School, is stationed
with the U. S. Army in Frankfort, Germany.

ARE YOU A
WINNER?
Below is a list of the door prize
winners for our 5th Anniversary
drawing . If your name · is listed
below please call or stop in to claim
your prize.

Beulah Schultz
Char Atlhouse
Becky Mankin
Buck Deloney
Charles Allison
Eve~n Miller
laura Pickens
Barbara Sargent
Henry L Hetzer
larry Hill
Catherine Whne ·
P. B. Morrissey

C. V. Pinkerman
Jim Dillon
Karen Dorst
Galdin Clindein
Foe life
Barbara Leffingwell
Tom Karr
Phillip w
. Whne
Ernest E. Johnson
Timmy Jerrell
G. L. Franklin

Remember we will hav e specials the whole
.s ummer long .
Many , many thanks to all who have made
our Sth Anniversary ver y special to both of
us.
Jake &amp; Mid Gaul

GAULS SHAKE HAVEN
ST. ROUTE 7

CHESTER, 0.

I L'dcra l

r egulat ion s

req uire a su bstant ial
pena lty for pr ematu r e

wllhdrawal of ce r
li'fi cat e funds.

Certificates
of DepcM.
Minimum $1.000

Economic Rooms Of Our Local High Schools

Save

HERDMAN brings with him to "Gallia Country" a great
deal of theatrical background . He worked with Lee Durieux,
the pagea nt's author, in "Birth of Dixie" when it played in
Mount Vcrnon in 1969 and 1970. He was a member of the Mansfield Playhouse and did swnmer stock in Provincetown, Mass.
He served as master of ceremonies in the late 1950s for the Air
Force talent show whlch traveled all over the world. He has
done almost everything from the cowardly role to the
psycopa thic killer type to pulling a curtain for the Broadway
show, "Mary, Mary" in 1950.
ATHEATRE GUILD for the Gallipolis area is one of his
dreams for the future and he asks anyone who might be
intereSted in starting such a group to con ~ et him at 446-9533.
. He and his wife, Phyllis bave two children, Lynne, 16 and
Robby, 12.

•ao to •100

On These Uke New Frigidaire

.He will portray Burford and Judge Bradbury on different
nights. Herdma n is employed as a security officer at Holzer
Medical Center and the hospital has agreed to give him time
off so he ca n lake part in the outdoor musica l pageant . Herdnian says Bradbury will introduce the scenes in this year's
show and he thinks the drama is going to be very interesting.
Rehea rsals started Thursday .

•REFRIGERA TORS
•FREEZERS
eRANGE$
•WASHERS
eDRYERS

MERRI AULT, honored .queen of Be thel 62,
International Order of Job's Daughters.

REUN ION PLANNED
DEGREE RECEIVED
GALLIPOLIS - The Clark
GALLIPOLIS - Mark T.
Family will hold its 57th Eplin g
of
Gallipoli s
reunion Sunday, June 13 at graduated Saturday frorb
the Gallia County Junior · Virgi nia Polytechnic InFa irg r o unds. Fa mily stitute and S~ te University
members are asked to bring in Blacksburg, Va. Epling
any small items, including · received the ba chelor of
snapshots, for an early architecture degree from
. Ameri can exhibi t. Dinner Virginia Tech.
will be served at 12: 30 p.m.

eDISHWASHERS

A Once A Year Opportunity

BAKER FURNITURE
Middleport; Ohio

"THE MOST THRILLmG feeling she ever bad" is how
Brenda Finnicwn describes her fir st adventure into the world
of parachu ting. Brenda, daughter of Mr. and, Mrs: Jack
Finnicum of Kanauga and a sophomore majoring in nursing at
Ohw Stale, parachuted for the first time two weeks ago. She
jumped 2,800 feet after instruction by the Green County
Parachut e Club near Xenia .

Youngs observe
40th anniversary
RU:rLAND - Mr. and Mrs. with a surprise celebration at
Frank Youn g .observed their their home in Rutland.
40th weddin g anniversa ry
Those attending were their
daughter and family , Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Clark, Bobby and
Richie, New Haven , W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Young,
Tr oy ; Mr.· and Mrs . Wilbur
YoWl g, Mrs. Susan Cleland ,
Greg and Mary, Mindy
Youn g, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Haptons~ll. Dorothy Young,
Mr. and Mrs . William Bailey,
Mrs . Nancy Pope, Tracy and
Toni, Middleport ; Mrs.
Lurene Kennedy, Galena ;
Mrs. Francis Youn g, Mr. and
Mrs . Joe W. Young, Mr. and
Mr s .
James
Quivey,
Pomeroy; Mr . and Mrs. Joe
Youn g, Cambridge; Mr. and
Mrs . Galen Will, Stephen and
Jennifer, Mr. and Mrs. Keith
Casdorph, Colwnbus ; Rev.
' Eve rett Dulaney , Gallipolis;
Mr . and Mrs. Kirby Smith
and Brian , New Haven, W.
Va.; Mr . and Mrs . William
Buck, Mr.' and Mrs . Norman
Will , Duane Will, Pastor Carl
Peak, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Rice, Mrs . Pauline Atkins,
Mrs. Ruby Halliday, Mrs.
Margaret Belle Weber, Mrs .
Marjorie Milhoan , Mr . and
Mrs. Seth Nicholson, Mr. arid
Mrs. Charles Barnett, Mrs.
Beulah Grate, rutland.
Sending gifts were Mr. and
._..
Mrs. Jim Haley, Mrs. Pauline
Markins, Edna Mae Swick,
Rutland ; Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Bintz and Amanda , Cambridge; Mrs. Carol Buck and
family, Cheshire; Mr. and
Mrs. Leo · Young, Mr. and
Mr s. Walter Baskieweiz,
Marion ; Mr. and Mrs, Dwight
Brown , St. Albans, W. Va.

..........

. STATE WINNER - First place state winner in
Americanism programs conducted by Junior American
Legion Auxiliary unibl went to Pomeroy's Drew Weli6ter
Post 39. Mrs. Harry Davis, junior advisor ,. seated,
accepted the trophy award from Mrs. Jane Balzhiser,
Department of Ohio president, at the Thursday summer

EARLY WEEK

PRICES GOOD SUN.; MON., TUES., JUNE 6, 7, and 8

GOLDEN ISLE

BUTTER
LB.
PKG.' 99~
GOLDEN RIPE

BANANAS
51J. $100

FROSTIE
ROOT BEER OR
ORANGE CRUSH

89'~

.6

16 oz.
BTL CTN.

Many awards recognize programs
POMEROY ...:. Nwnerous
awards in re cognition of
•Americanism , commWJity
service, and membership
programs were presented to
American Legion Auxiliary
junior and senior units at the
Eighth District · summe r
convention in Athens Thursday.
Mrs. Arnold Richards ,
Elgith District president,
presided at the convention
which featured Mrs. Jack
Balzhiser, Department of
Ohio president, as· the guest
speaker . Mrs . Balzhiser
spoke on the Declaration of
Independence and the price
of freedom and commented
on the disorientation and
confusion of Americans today
l!lld the attitude of demanding a living without working
for it.
Receiving the largest
nwnber of awards at the
convention were the juniors
of Drew Webster Post 39,
Pomeroy. Mrs. Balzhiser
made the presentations to
Mrs. Harry Davis, junior
advisor , on behalf of
representatives of the 25th
annual junior conference
committee.

Top award to the juniors
was the Dorothy McCullough .
Revolving Trophy, given to
the unit for achieving the first
place in s~te competition for
the
Iiest
all-around
Americanism program.
Other
state awards
received by the Pomeroy
girls were Robin Campbell,
second, and Fae Reibel, third
in conference covers ; Robin
Lehe.w, first, and Robin
Campbell, second in bicentennial coloring book; Robin
Lehew, first in the All
American coloring book
contest; Rhonda Reuter and
Lori Wood second in the
foreign rel~tions scrapbook.
Unit awards were second in
ihe book of prayers ; first and
second places in the handwork contest, and third place
in the state in the Marie
Moore Revolving Trophy
award for the best over-all
program in the state.
Awards received by the
Senior Unit 39, Pomeroy,
were a goal ribbon, birthday
roll ca ll certificate and
certificate of achievement,
all membership awards ; both
depar tment and national
citations for meritori ous

(

; POINT PLEASANT, W.
Va.- Dr. Jim Vineyard, the
bus pes tor of the First Baptist
Church, Hammond, Indiana,
will be the featured speaker
at the second annual Bus and
Soulwinning Conference at
the Grace Bible Baptist
Church,
Monday
and
Tuesday, in Point Pleasant.
, Brother Vineyard was an
associate to Dr. John
Rawlings at the Landmark
Baptist Temple in Cincinnati,
and Dr. Jerry Falwell at
Thomas Road Baptist Church
in Lynchburg , Va., before
moving to Hammond to work
ill the ministry of Dr. Jack
l!yles.
During the 1975 spring
Sunday School drive, the
average attendance on the
buses was 9,513 with 220 buses
running per Sunday. On a
high day the buses brought in
15,339 on 247 buses.
~ Brother Vineyard is a
5peciali:;t in Junior Church,
Qreaching to 2,500 youn~sters

every week. He travels
throughout America and
Canada prea ching over 120
conferences each year and is
the author of numerous
books, records, and tapes on
soul winning and the Bus
Ministry . Presently he serves
as Vice President of
Evang elism at HylesAnderson College in Crown
Point, Ind.
There will be teaching
sessions on Bus Ministry and
Junior Church each evening
at 6:30 p.m. followed by a
preaching service at 7:30
p.m. On Tuesday morning
there will be teaching
sessions at 10 and 11 a.m.,
followed by a time of refreshment.
An adult staffed nursery
will be provided for · each
session. Everyone is invited
to attend in the new facilities
of the Grace Bible Baptist
Church, located four miles
north of Point Pleasant on St.
Rt. 62 at the traffic circle.

VOTE "Y~s" FOR
SCHOOL LEVY TUES., JUNE 8TH

SUPERIORS
DART

BACON
SUNDAY. JUNE 2oth

l"IUNCJ·~

GAH D.:VIDU~
•

.......

11, I!J, 1. tJt 'W S[W IJt' l' heires.~
1'; 11 r it· w lh ~H rst was indicled

r.. , '"'ll lt'&lt;l robbery in the
Atwi l 15th robbe ry uf a S:on
FrHr Jd sco -bank.
I)

''

and ci~ti ons for membership
goal along with awards of
honorable mention for Ute
children and youth and
c ommuni ty se r v i ce
programs.
Held a( the K. T. Crossen
Post, Athens, the meeting
convened at 1 p.m . with Mrs.
Bernard Cooley giving the
call to order. Registration
was handled by Mrs. Jo
Rider, Helen Long and Mrs.
Wiley King, all of the hos t
unit. Mrs .
Neutzlin g,
Pomeroy, was conven ti on
pianist. Advancement of the
colors was under the direction of Mrs. Eugene Poppenhaeger, sergean t at arms arid
invocation was given by Mrs.
Harley Moler,
Mrs. Carl Wilson extended
the welcome with Mrs. Mabel
Brown of Unit 27, Gallipolis,
giving the response . The
credentials committee , Mrs.
Wilson, Athens ; Mrs. Charles
Kessinger, Middleport, and
Mrs. Clifford Behrens,
Lancaster, was introduced by
Mrs. Ricbards, the presiding
officer.
Introduced and bringing
greetings were Tom Ruth,
commander of the Athens
Post ; the Mayor, of Athens,
Donald Barrett, and William
Hubbell, Junction Ci ty,
Eighth District commander.
District chairmen giving
. reports were Mrs. Terrance
Carroll , Amanda,
Americanism ; Mrs. Rolland
Moose, Jun cti on City,
children and youth ; Mrs.
Allan Hampton, Middleport,
community service ; Mr s.
(Continued on page 1Z)

GENE WETHERHOLT
FAMILYc
GENE, JAN, SARA, ELLEN, .VALERIE AND KRISTIN

A NATIVE OF
GALLIA COUNTY
FOR
GALLIA COUNTY

WEDDING!
CAPTURED WITH
PHOTOGRAPH S BY
GROVERS
COMPLETE WITH

~~~~~·

·,
•

••
•

STARTING

'

$7995
GROVER'S
STUDIO

r
•
'

PROFESSIONAL
PHOTOGRAPHY
Spring Valley Plaza
Ga tlipotis, Ohio
Phone 446·7n4
Open Tues.-Sat . to.s
'Tilt BOn Thurs.

·Holly Park, Schult

PROSECUTING AnORNEY

GENE WETHERHOLT

COME IN AND SEE
Mon.-Sat. 9a.m.

9p.m.

Sunday 9 a :m .-6 p.m .

CLARK'S JEWELRY STORE
342 Second

••

OF YOUR

Featuring

Open ·

.•

THE STORY

HOME PARK &amp;SALES

t. Co,

2H W. 2nd St.
Pom~n~y, Olllo-4S76f
RICHARD E. JONES, 'MANAG!It

service; a certificate for
outs~nding contributions to
Americanism ; a certificate
for outs~nding children and
youth prog rams. Mrs, Grace
Pratt and Mrs. Harry Davis
received half-century cards
for collectin g over 50
membership dues, while
Carrie Neutzling. Mrs. Pearl
Knapp and Mrs . Fay e
Wildermuth were recognized
lor membership collection
work.
Mrs. William Curl, Eighth
Distric t chairman, made a
special presentation to Mrs.
Neutzllng in recognition of
her outs tanding work in
veterans
affairs
and
rehabilitation . Represe nting
the Pomeroy unit at the
convention were Mrs . Neutz.
ling, Mrs. Rhoda Hackett,
Mrs. Catherine Welsh, Mrs.
Marge Goett, Mrs. Pratt,
Ml'l&gt;. Davis and Miss Erma
Smith .
Awards received by the
Middleport unit of FeeneyBennett Post 123 included a
century card to Mrs. Albert
Roush for obtaining over 100
renewals in memberships,
and a cer tificate in
recognition of collecting 46
renewals.
The senior uni t als o
received certificates for
outs~nding contributions to
the Americanism program,
for commWJity service, and
for children and youth activities. A goal membership
ribbon was also received by
the junior unit. Presen t at the
convention to accept the
awards were Mrs . Gerri
Kessinger, Mrs. Bonnie
Dailey and Mrs. Freda Clark,
seniors, and Paula Cunning.
ham, Melinda Thomas,
Angela Dailey, Kim and Lois
Ann Roush, Myra and Joy ce
Lawson , and Christi Smith,
juniors.
Lewis Manley Auxiliary 263
received a certificate for
making goal, a citation for
achieving the birthday honor
roll with membership
reported by Nov. 10, 'along
with both department and
national citations for having
made goal by Jan. 31. The
llnit also received a \community service award . From
the unit at the convention
were Mrs . Ricbards, Mrs.
Allen Hampton and Mrs.
Ernest Bowles.
Racine Auxiliary 602 also
received a certificate for
making goal, one for the
birthday honor roll, the
department and national
citations for membership,
and the national goal ribbon .
Individual membership
awards were presented to
Mrs. Herschel Norris, Mrs.
Virgil Roush and Mrs. Myrtle
Walker. Mrs. Eunie Brinker
of the Racine unit also attended.
The Gallipolis Unit 27 also
received all of the certificates

K&amp;K Mobile

MEIGS BRANDl
AtiM Qudy Slinp I

convention of the Eighth District in Athens. Numerous
other certificate awards were received by the juniors,
pictured left to right, Jenni Couch, Tracey Jeffers, Robin
Campbell, Anna Wiles and Lori Wood. Others who worked
on the projects which won the awards were Paula Kloes,
Pam Powers, Denise and Sherrie-Marshall .
·

.I

Dr. Vineyard speaking
at Baptist conference

THE AAUWtour of homes will be held next SWlday. The
tour of historic or interesting Gallipolis homes includes
"Riverby," the hom e of Dr. and Mrs. Charles Holzer, Jr., the
McGinness home, Our House, and the Morris E. Haskins
home. The local AA UW uses the proceeds for scholarships and
community projects. They are one of the top four Ohlo
branches in money contributed to fellowship funds according
to Connie Wells.
'

Let Your Dollars Work For You
At The Highest Rate For Savings

1-Year

Tested &amp; Proven in the Home

BOB HERDMAN
GALLIPOI.JS - "Gallia Country " promises to be a new
and exciting production this year, and one of the additions
which will make it a success is Bob Herdman of 363 Ridge
Drive in Gallipolis. Originally from Athens, Bob moved here
with his family a year ago after living in Mansfi eld for 13
years.

Be.Good to Yourself!

..

Catolyn Thomas, guardian
treasurer , and Maryln
Wilcox , directress of music.
Associate Guardian
Council members are Maria
Romine , promoter of
sociability ; Mary Carson,
custodian of paraphernalia;
Audrey Wood, promoter of
hospitality ; June Eichinger,
director of finance.
Registrars for the installation were Kathleen
Anthony, past worthy matron
of Middleport Eva ngeline
Chapter, O.E.S. and Sue
Floyd, worthy ma tron,
Evangeline Chapter .
The new honored queen
made the program a
memorial to the late Mrs. C.
H. (Kathryn) Wise. Her
colors for the term are red
and white, the emblem, a
single white candle; her
flower, the red rose, and her
motto, sweetness .
Refreshments were served
following the insta llation
ceremony.

OUR LARGE SELECTION

PD. FOR BY GENE WETHERHOLT RE-ELECTION COMMITIIE .
.' .
James Thaler-Treas.
' .

�12 - The Stmday Times- sent im{ Sunda~ . .June li, 107fi

AA uw·sponsoring homes tour II'*'~G:~=;t;;;' vii:~~=~:::::,::;:l

THE llOM8 of Mrs. Charles McGinness in Ga llipolis will be open to 1he public during
the homes tour Sunday, June 13 sponsored by the Gallipolis AAUW . Mrs. McG inness ' home
is best rerne1nbered as· Ute "Bean" home.

..

11lE MORRIS E. HASKI NS home, I Vine St., Ga llipolis is the newest home of the

seventh AAUW homes tour Su nday, June 13. The r·iver lot the home ts built on ha s a history
which da tes back to Pau l Feanng and Return Johnalha n Me i ~s before Ohio became a sta te.

GI\LLJPOLJS
The McCunns. The McCunns ha d
Gallip oli s Bra nch of the come to Gallipo lis Ar~m
Am e ri c ~:tn A$SOC ii!ti On of Engla nd an d bought the
University Women will host house on Nuv. 2, 111!i2, for
its seventh tour · of homes $1,301. They r,eturned to
Sunday, June IJ from I to 5 England suddenly and left the
p.m. Four Gallipolis homes house to be sold for taxes . R.
including the musem, " Our M. Switzer bought the house
House," are induded on the at that time, and later sold il
tour.
to · Chauncey Fife, coun ly
,\The homes arc within surveyor.
walking distance of one
It was from Fife that Dr.
another. The older homes are an d Mrs . Leo Bean purchased
the Dr. and Mrs. Charles E. the house. They found il
Holzer, Jr. home at 525 First needed remodeling, and they
Ave ., th e Mrs: Charl es extensively remodeled it in
McGinness home , 449 First 1921, rei&lt;li'ling the woQdwork,
Ave., "Hiverby ," home of the the sl&lt;!ircase and the fireFrench Art Colony and Our places. They retained the
House. The new hume on the arrangement of the rooms,
tow· belongs to Mr . and Mrs . but made a few small ad·
Morris E. Haskins of 1 Vine ditions, including a sunroom
St.
and a garage win g.
Tickel•, at a cos t of $2.50,
The entrance features a
may be purchased at the park Connecticut portico and the
front on the day of the tour or old front door. The large
in advance, by contacting antique key is hanging near
Mrs. David Johnson, 74 Cedar the done to remind us of the
St., Gallipolis. Tickets are past it has unlocked. The
also on sale at PJ 's and the curving staircase dominates
Commercial and Savi ngs the ce nter hall and one can
Bank . Children 12 and older see from one end of the main
are perm itted on the tour .
floor to the other from this
Proceeds go to young entrance hall. The view of the
people in Ga llia County Ohio Hiver can be glimpsed
throu gh scholarships and from nearly every room.
wo r thwhil e co mmunity
The land on which the
proje cts . The Gallipolis Morris Haskins have built
AAUW is in the top four their new home has, in some
branches in the state in ways much in common with
moni es contributed to the the oth er river bank
fellowships fund per capita of pro perti es which are the
members.
oldest of our land transAs a high light of the lour , actions . Yet, some of its story
visitors will be direc ted to is very differenI.
Fortification Hill which overLike most of the river lots,
looks the Ohio River and its his tory goes back to Paul
Gall ipolis, an d Hiverby will Fearing and Return Jonathan
be th e hospita lity center Meigs and the years before
where refreshments will be Ohio became a slate. On Der .
served.
26, 1776 Fearing and Meigs
The home of Mrs. Charles sold these two lots to two
McGinness is bes t remem. differen t sets of people. These
bcred as the "Bean Home " to deeds were filed in Marietta
those wh o have been In the in the . Washington County
area for many years. Ac- Cour l Records in those last
cordin g to Mr . Wallm a letter days of 1796. And from then
to Mrs. Bean, the house was on the similarity in bank land
built about 1802 by a James history varies. These two lots
Wilson. The original owners each wen t its own way ,
of the land were the Trustees changing hands fr equently .
of the Ohio Company.
Most of the bank land stayed
The house has had many in the same hands for years
prominent owners during its at a time with one family
long history. Among them owning or living on each for
were J. T. Brazee, a lawyer, quite a length of lime. Not so
Alonzo Cushing, and Thomas with lots No . 125 and No . 126.

They changed hands often
and several times one of them
was sold at public auction,
and once even by a sheriff
sale for taxes.
The
lot
bordering
Chi ckamauga Creek turned
hands milS\ frequenUy. It was
sold by Fearing and Meigs on
that day in 1796 to Louis
Vimout, and his wife Rosaline
of Millersburg , Kentucky .
This deed was recorded in
Washington County and when
the Vimouts sold to Cornelius
Menager in 1807, the sale was
recorded in Bourbon County,
Kentucky at Millersburg. The
following years of ownership
cha nges in clude such interestin·g and familiar or
French names as Romaine,
Abraham Cooper, Moses
Hayes, Blazer warlh Martin,
Vanden and Petrat.
Lot 126 changed hands less
frequ ently . Fea rin g and
Meigs sold it on the same
December day in 1796 to
Peter LaForge who in turn
held it untill8 16 when he sold
it to Francois Vaiodin and his
wife Margaret G. C.
Cham pagne Valodin . On
down the line it includes such
nam es as Menage r and
Henkings and Priestly and
quoting publicity in the
Democ ratic
Dispatch ,
published in Calha county in
1856.
It is not certain when the
old brick ho 0se at I VIne
Street was built , but
"Grandma·Lupton" who was
a Holc omb was born in it
some li me in lhe 1830s and it
was among the earlier of the
homes of Gallipolis . The
house was
built · by
John Tillayea acc ord·
in g to the Lupton · fam.
ily re co rds. One of the
square nails from the
structure is now among the
Haskins relics. Of recent
years it was known as the
Mabel Thomas house. Mabel
Thomas who bought it in 1914,
from the Priestley heirs, was
well known in county and city
and legal circles. Her estate,
in town, sold to the Haskins
family whose new home now
graces the north central part
of the lots below the old brick
hme which has been razed.

Hot dog, bake sale planned
CHESHIRE - The hot dog
and bake sa le to be held
Tuesday was discussed wh en
the Golden Rule Class of the
Old Kyger Church met
Wednesday afternoon with
Mrs. Edward Spea rs. The
sale will be at the Bradburv
· bui lding.
·
The mee ting was opened by
singing "Blessed Assurance'' Members repea ted the
.::;::::::::: ::::::::;:: :::::::::;.;.;::::.:::·:·!·!::·:·:·:·: ~=:~:::;:;:

Sr. Citizens =~=~
~
:·~.:·. Cleda
an r :~~:
:=:

POMEROY - The Meigs
Senior Citizens Center activiti es loca ted at the
Pomeroy Junior High School,
is open 9 a.m.-4 p.m, Monday through Friday.
Monday , .Jun e 7 - Mental
Health , Maxine Plwmner,
11 :15 .m.; Square Dance,
.12 :30-3 p ..
Tuesday, Jun e B
Electio n Da y - VOT E;
Mari ella Tri p, Leave Center
at 8:30 a.m.; Chorus, 12:30·2
p.m.
Wednesday, June 9 Cards. liH l ::10 a.m.; Games ,
12:30·2 p.m.
Th ur sday, Jun e 10 Physical Fitness, 10:45 a.m.;
Horseshoes, !2:30p .m.; Si~ ·
A-Long, 12 noon.
Friday, June 11 - Art
Class, 10-11 :30 a.m.; Horseshoes, 10 :30-11::10 a.m.; Sing.
A-Long, 12 noon; Bowl ing, 1·3
p.m.
Senior Olizens Nutrition
Program 11 :30 a .m.-12:30
p.m. Monday through Friday.
Monday - Macaroni and
cheese with ham chunks,
buttered br oc coli , sliced
toma to sa lad on lett uce,
prune ca ke, bread, butter,
milk.
Tuesday - Pol roas t of
beef with gravy, buttered
steamed potatoes, buttered
fr.ozen mixed vege ta bles,
canned apricots, roll , buller.
milk .
Wednesday - Hot turkey
san dw ich with gravy,
mashed potatoes, buttered
peas and jellied cranberry
salad, ice cream , milk.
Thursda y
J ohnny
Marzelti, tossed salad and
dressing, canned pears, corn·
bread, butter, milk.
Friday - Baked pork chop,
escalloped potatoes, Harvard
beets, citrus sections, and
sugar cookie, bread, butter,
milk. Coffee, tea and but·
termilk served daily .

"

2:1rcl Psalm .
Mrs . Fred Sisson rea d
scripture fr om the book of
James . The roll call was
favorite Bible verses.
Mrs. George Gardner rea d
the secretary's report , and
U1ank you notes were read
fr om the graduates who were
g iv ~n Bibles for graduation.
A card was signed for Tom
Joh nson who is ill.
Mrs. Robert Price had
prepared Bible questions
from the book of James and a

re prese ntati ve .

Mr s . Richar ds gave a
report of the year 's work in
the district. She will serve as
de lega te to th e national
convention with Mrs . Devon
Tipple to se rve as th e
alternate.
For the slate convention to
be held July 9- ll in Columbus
Mrs. Ri chards appo inted
Mrs. Carroll to serve on the
Am eri ca nism committe e;
Mrs .
William
Trace,
Well ston, children and you th ;
Miss Erma Smi lh, Pomeroy,
community se r vice; Mrs.

'51 QOO

BOOKING DEADLINE JULY 1
446.()699

.

be~~~m . M1to

Green Acres and back to
· town . Those interested in
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·
NO:r THE SAME
GALLlPOLIS - Julia
Caldwell .of Eureka Star Rt.,
Gallipolis, is not the Julia
Caldwell of Gallipolis who
celebrated her birthday last
week.

VOTE
IN THE
REPUBLICAN
PRIMARY
LOUISE BURGER

'

ONLY

June
7-11 from are
6:30available
to 9:30
p.m. Teachers
for age groups 4-16. A bus will

CLERK OF COURTS '
Appo1n ted Clerk of Courts in January
after having served 12 years as a Deputy
Clerk.
·
I am the. daughter of Henry and Mary
· Skidmore. and the wife of Robert Earl
Burger. We have a son mike, in the 7th
grade at Gallia Academy .
There are many involved and ~,
complicated procedures in the Clerk's office ~
which· require experience and care. My
staff and I have that experience. and we feel
that it is in the interest of you, the public, to
vote to maintain the present high ievel of
efficiency.
Please vote to keep Louise Burger, as
Clerk of Courts.
Pd. Pol. Adv

Control

~

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otte

Bride-elect entertained

Church of God, Garfield Ave ., transportation should call
Gallipolis, will be conducted 446-3714.

FOR

Travel Agency

Air Fare · Motorcoach to Columbus .
Extensive Sightseeing · First
Class Hotels · Tips · Transfers Continental Breakfast Dai~

ue

B

Barb.ara Twyman, Betty
Twyman, Donna Kunath,
Patty Kunath, Tammy
Kunath, Janel White, Pearlie
McComas, Paul Ring, Rev.
Elmer Geiser, Howard ·
Wellington, Renea Bickers,
Lillian Rece, Reginia
Robinette.
Sending gifts were Esta
Downard, George and Irene
Robinette
and
David
Robinette . .

. OIL AND GAS LEASES .

. ~WORLD-WIDE

AUGUST 20-28 1976

e en an

dS

WANTED- WANTED

Hampton, constitution and
bylaws; Mrs. Bill Mohl er,
junior acitivitcs; Mrs. Alex
VBS SLATED
Blair , veterans affairs and
GALLIPOLIS - Vacation
re habilitation; Mrs . Dorothy
Hecker, resolutions, and Mrs. Bible School at the First
Brown, Mrs. Atkins and Mrs.
Willford Grant , unit ac- giving
re por ts
were
tivi ti es ; Mrs. Kessinger , placement; Mrs. John Mcte ll er, a nd Mrs. Ri chard Vey, Mrs. Hecker and Mrs.
Barnes, Lancas ter, Spirit of Norris; tellers, Mrs. Blair,
'76.
Mrs. William Mohler, and
Pas t dis trict pre stdents Mrs. James Gatewood, and
recog ni zed incl uded Mrs. resolutions, Mrs. Pratt, Mrs.
Wilson Carr and Mrs. Boy d Flowers, and Mrs.
William Stewart , Athens: Adkins.
Mrs. Neulzling, Pomerov·
A tea was served by the
Mrs. Kessinge r, Middlepo~t : host unit following the
Mrs. Tipple, Lancaster; Mrs. meetin g. ·
Brown , Gallipolis; Mrs .
Adkins , Crooksville ; Mrs .
Erma Powers, Logan . Mrs.
Harley Moler conducted a
memorial service fo r
deceased members.
Co nv en tion committees

Hosted by Miss Margaret Ferrell

Y

J.

It's Called the Newlywed Game
RAP :
"Love means never saying you 're sorry" is a bunch of
chicken soup. My husband will do something to make me mad,
but he won't apologize. Instead Jerry does lhe turnabout game
- acting hurt until !finally make up to him (if he'll accept my
apologies) . Otherwise be makes me feel guilty, playing the
injured party. In six months of marriage, he's never admitted
he was wrong,
He knows I can't stay mad long, and he takes advantage.
Sure, sometimes it's my fault , but must I always be - THE
"SORRY" ONE'
SORRY ONE :·
Ah , male supremacy . . . it creates so may foolish
problems.
Why don't you brealt lhe silence by saying, "I accept your
apology, honey," Maybe Jerry means it, bullhe words ecme
llard. - HELEN
WORD FROM SUE: Why don 'l you discuss the apology
lhing sometime when you're both in a particularly good mood ?
Men should be able to admit lhey're wrong (when they are). U
yo u re-program Jerry now, you'll save many hurt feelings
later on. ·
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
Every time I come close to this girl at !he office, I start
sneezing. It's her perfwne ? She must bathe in the stuff, and
I'm allergic.
Several others are bothered by it , but if we complain, she'll
either be hurt or slather more on to spite us. Suggestions? _
N.H.
DEAR N.:
Take a chance : explain your snC\lzes. Most people aren't
as touchy as you think - when you have a good reason for
complaining. - HELEN
NOTE FROM SUE : Trouble with heavy perfwne users is,
they can't smell the stuff on lhemselves after lhe first few
minutes,so they apply more, thinking !he scentisgone,
You might be doing this girl a favor if you tell her she wafts
too strong. Try it.
DEAR RAP:
"Grandma Age " shouldn't worry about being an "elderly
mother." It's the attitude that counts.
My parents were in their mid-forties when I was born. My
brolhers and sister were bolh married so you can imagine the
age difference involved.
My childhood memories are almost total happiness and
love. Mom says raising me was a joy. We could do so many '
things t~al my parents couldn't do with !he older kids because
money and time were scarce back then ,
·
Now here I am in my ~ and Mom, Widowed, is
approaching 70. I can trulhfully say she is my very best friend .
She has a youthful outlook on life - she's open-minded and
understanding. In general, she knows more about what's
happening with today's yorilh than 1110s! so-called authorities.
She listens to rock music. We go to concerts and shows
together, travel a lot. Yet our ~cial relationship never
prevents us from having other friends and leading our own
lives.
,
But this is a two-way street. Because of Mom, I have
learned to really listen to her generation. I appreciate my
youth, but I admire the thoughts and opinions of elders. I Jove
to share memories with someone who lived·in the 20s. (But is
not living there now!)- PROUD OF MY MOM

STUDENTS of Gillian Moore and Patty Fellure will present a public performance
Wednesday at 7:30p.m. in lhe Washington School auditorium, Shown here are some of the
young dancers whc will be performing .

"OLDE LONDON TOWNE"

B H

GALLIPOLIS - A wedding
shower was given for Debbie
Stapleton and Larry Justice
at Fellowship Chapel on May
20.
Games were played and
prizes won by Debbie
Stapleton and Betty Twyman .
The door prize was awarded
to Ann Slayton.
Attending were : Goldie
Geiser, Ann Layton, Erma
Lou Ring , Lorrine Bryant,

· .discussion fol lowed each
question:
Rea di ngs in clud ed :
"Understanding," Mrs. Fred
Sisson :
" Ad vice
To
Graduates ," Mr s. Dale
Mulford ; "Pray and Toi l,"
Mrs. Louise Roush : "Ad·
vice," Mrs. Gardner; "Gel
Glow ing, " Mr s. Hortie
Roush;
··what is, Is," by Mr s.
Spears.
The hostess served cake ,
party crackers , cheese,
r offll&lt;! an d Kool-Aid.

Many awards
(Continued from page 11)
Myrtl e Walk er , Haci ne,
junior activities; Mrs. Curl ,
Crooksville, veterans affair s
and re habilitation: and Mrs.
Nea te M. Billings, Athens ,
Athens Menl&lt;l l Health Cente r

:§:;:;

13 - The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, June 6, 1976

The following townships are
urgently needed for lease: Ohio,
Guyan, Clay, Harrison, Green,
Gallipolis. Also we will consider :
all other locations. Write
••
U nlversal Petroleum, 8ol(4l,
~
Care of The Dally Tribune.
;

hegins
By Frank HUI .
GALLIPOLIS - Around
"' the turn of the century . our
·. city had its own circus. This
,, ,was the famous McCorm ick
Bros. "Nickel Plated" Cir,_cus. The large brick building
?: .iust below lhe old high school
on Fourth ' Ave. was the
storage building for it~
,.,. wagons. A plumbing finn
now is lilca ted !here.
II seems years ago the
circus was stranded here and
the McCormi.ck Bros. bought
it.
The circus mainly Ira veled
i• from village lo village in
, .. southern Ohio. II ws always a

My opponl)nts are tarring me with some feathers
which I do not believe will stick!
They have indicted me for my usually unanimous
vote when inter-county cooperation with our sister
county has served the best interest of my constituents.
AIRPORT:
Cincinnati is served by a Kentucky airfield. Hardly
any CITY is served by an air facility that residents can
reach in less than half an hour .
Meigs air patrons can hit the by-pass, reach its air
facility in hardly more than 15 minutes .
Time has proven this 8 year old .decision wise.
Jackson tried to go it. alone without a survey of
prospective use and patrons! The , Jackson County
general fund was crippled, in the red for years. Just now
recovering. Taxpayers still subsidize operations.
CHILD WELFARE:
The county had a budget of more than $36,000 last
year of operation of the children's home, for less than a
dozen children . The number today is six . The deal was:
Meigs receives the Gallia elderly into its well-run county
home. Gallia receives Meigs wards in a well run home
your candidate has inspected.
You know your tax moneys are efficiently allocated
to priorities best serving you of Meigs County . .

PLEASE VOTE FOR

County Commissioner
RALPH W. OURS
Issued By the Candidate himself
'

P.S. How can that airport thing be an issue? You reelected me to another term as commissioner since 1
made that decision.
Yours, "Warden."

:
"

:
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town.
· His son Henry; buill the
Gillingham Drug Store
building and many other

· Lafayette's visit recalled
By James Sands
Gallla County Historical Society
GALLIPOLIS - Sunday, May 23, was
, . the !51st anniversary of Lafayette's visit to
.. Gallipolis.
_
Lafayette traveled norlh from New
"Orleans on the steamboat Herald. As the
Herald approached the town a swivel gun
was discharged, and those who lined the
banks saw waving from \he front of the
steamer two large American flags . Meeting
" Lafayette at the shore were N. S. Cushing,
"· James Beale, Peter Menager , and Lewis
Newsom, who were representing the tOWn .
"'
As Lafayette shook hands with the
. greeters he expressed his pleasure at the
·· chance to visit Galltpolis:
·

uGentlemen, it is to me an unex.. • pres8a ble pleasure to visit Gallipolis. I knew
.. (when in France) of lhe departure of many
c.of my countrymen to this place, and now , to
·· 'visit them under their own vine and fig tree
·is one of the pleasures of my life."
· • The General's entourage was escorted
1 •to Our House where about . 100 persons
"•waited to be introduced to him. Upon being
introduced to Rene Carel, Carel explained to
"'Lafayette !hat he (Carel) was "a subject of
·· France in some of the darkest moments of
' •his life, that he always loved the name of
,: Lafayette, on account of his devotedness to
liberty and to equal rights of men."
After a stay of 21&gt; hours Lafayette was
escorted back to his boat and as lhe boat was
leaving the short the people gave him three
cheers accompanied by three discharges
from the town militia's cannon.
"
Living in Gallipolis at this time were at
, -least two former comrades of Lafayette,
, •Nicholas Thevenin whom Lafayette knew in
.. France, and Robert Hereford who fought
with Lafayette at Yorktown . Hereford, in
' '"Partnership with Robert Warth, ran a store
on the river bank.
" , Had Lafayette taken a walk around .
town , what would he have seen' The present
···public square was the site of the courthouse
,, and the market house where farm products
, were bought and sold - William Cavin ran
lhe market. It was open from 4 a.m. to 9
r a.m. each Wednesday and Saturday. On lhe
1 ..COurt street side of the square between
j ~Second and First were these businesses. On
l the corner was Chapdu's harness shop.
Chapdu had been born in Haiti and hisfather

I

had dfed in the French Revolution . Also
there was Carel's dry goods which also sold
plows made at Carel's foundry on Second.
Daniel Hovey ran a cabinet making
shop about the middle of the block ond
employed 17 apprentices. Tbe Gallipolis
Free Press news office was on this block
as was John Sanns' dry goods and bakery
store. Sanns sold such baked items' as
gingerbread, crackers, pickled pork,
Gennan blackball and loaves of bread. A·
.watch repairman occupied the top floor of
the Sanns building . On the corner was
LeCierqc's store .
Across from. LeCierqc 's and running
several lots downriver was the Menager's
property, Here was located Menager's mill
and Menager's American House Hotel.
Down from Menager;s was Gandy 's
chainnaking business . On Grape was
Newsom's tannery and Walker's cabinetmaking shop.
·
Across · the square on Secood was
located Cruezet's store, lhe tinning shop of
Hiram Fisher, Heaton's Hotel and Wort.
man 's blacksmith shop. On lhe corner of
Second Ave. and Slate was doctor and
pharmacist Ja.cob Kittredge. On State be·
tween Second and First was Tupper 's store,
Smithers' tinning shop, Black's blacksmith
shop, the livery and Bljl'eau's store.
On Front street (Firsn starting at Stale
was a lot used to keep wood for steamboat
use . Then came · Warth's store , then
DeVacht's shops, the post office, Gate's
Eag Ie Tavern• Balbell's hat shop ' the law
offices of Sam Vinton and John, Brazee.
Further down w?s Vandenbemden .s wago,n
shop, Ferguson:s cooper shop, ~ague! s
store, Damann s store, Shep~erd s brtckmaking store and Shepherds carpentry
shop.
. '
, ·. .
On the other ~~d~ of Frbnt begrnmng at
State, was Cushmg s, store, Ba~ter and
Darts bakery, Varner~ dressmaking shop,
Our House, and Lepme s tailor shop.
,
.other shops of note were H~yward s
cabmelmaking shop, the blac~snuth shops
of Moses Gates and Henry Miller, George
House's hotel, Neal and Payne's carding
mtll, Rodgers' blacksrrulh shop and the
distillery of Christopher Etienne. Also a
number of small mills and olher businesses
t 'd of t
were Ioca ted jus I ou s1 e
own.

~

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BUY AMODULAR HOME

•I
•

TODAY .
30 YEAR FINANCING
AVAII.ABLI

•

~

IN 1869 A MR: BEALL and
his wife and eight children
arrived in town. Mr. Beall
soon purchased 22 acres of
land in the vicinity of Neil
Ave. and on back to the hill.
He paid '10,500 for the tract
and erected !he fine brick
home still standing on the
lower corner of Fourth An~
Neil Ave. II was the first
house built In that section of

&amp;.-,~~~
MOBILE HOMES INC.
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
Phone 446-9340
Gallipolis. Ohio

'•

ELECT
NEIL
McMAHON
SHERIFF

".

Bend
Area~s
• •

citiZens
meet

at home
MIODI.EPOHT - Abuse of
alcohol and drugs really can
be controlled only · lhrough
parents - the home - according to Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney Bernard Fultz:
At , the same time, law
enforcement agencies, while
they actually only are catching the horse after he's out
of lhe barn, need more
freedom In · search and
seizure if the traffic in drugs
is to be attacked succeufully.
These points were the
substance of remarks made
by the prosecutor in an open
discuuion 'Friday evening at
Heath United Methodist
Church with other members
of the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club following dinner
served by ladles of the ·
church,
The discussion · also
followed showing of a fiim
provided by Meigs County
Juvenile Officer Carl Hysell
on the same topic, "Abu.se of

STORE HOURS
8 AM-10 PM

MO.,.-SA.

JO A.M.-~0 P.M. SUNDAY

Prices Effective

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO Thru June 12, 1976 ·

~s . "

President Vernon Weber
·, presided. One guest, Charles
Gaskill of Wellston was intrOduced.

MASON _ The Hend Area
Coocerned Gitlzensmetin the
BATIERY STOLEN
WahiUlla High School gym
POMEHOY - A battery
Tuesday with Luther Tucker was stolen from a car owned .
presiding and the Rev . by Charles Griffith, RD,
Walter Cloud giving a prayer. Pomeroy, while parked a l
Volunteers to donate steel Bradbury between 3:15 a .m.
drwns to be decorated by the and 4:45 p.m. Friday the
students and used for Utter Meigs County Sheriff's
were Paul Stodola, Charles Department reported .
Stanley and Dallas Cadle,
and Mrs. Delores Bond and
Mrs . Phyllis Gilkey volunleered to join lhe ParentTeacher Advisory Committee.
k
Vo1unteers as ed to go
before the school board to
request items needed by the
h
h
teac ers and sc ool we~e
.Rev. Walter Cloud, chatr·
man· Mrs Delores Bond
Luther T~cker Charle~
Stanley, Bob Ayers and
!Uc!urrd Gilkey.
A recent documentary on
TV about schools was
discussed. It was decided that.
the Parent-Teacher Advisory
Committee jointly decide on
a test that wotlld be given to
seventh graders and seniors
each year to detemiine clasS
average. The results would
be compared with the
previous year's test results so
.
. ·
parents wotlld know .1f the
average grades a~ gomg up
or down or remamlng con.
stan l,

and what is the · state
. ,
legislature doing'
Damron said he has, and
will again sponsor legislation
setting a minimwn reading
level for graduation and will
try for legislation reducing
the nwnber of years a school
board member's term will
last.' He also said if anyone
wants more information on
legislation activities pertaining to education, they can
write to him and he will send
the information to them. It
was suggested that Luther
Tucker, committee Chair·
man, receive all the l,nformalion so he can keep the
parents committee informed.
Troy Hoffman was asked
questions by the parents on
smoking at school, search of
student lockers and what to
do wilh a drunk stude~t on
Areport was given by Rev, campus.
Walter Cloud on the meetings
Damron poiri ted out the
of lhe Judicial Committee ooly thing that caused a
with Jaw enforcement of. person to obey lhe law is lhelr
ficlals .
respect and fear of it. The
Charles Damron, House of people have to cause the laws
HERE WEDNESDAY
Delegates, and Troy Hoff. to be enforced.
POMEROY
A man 1 candidate for . sheriff 1
Tucker pointed out that it is
represen tat '.1ve from ·· were present to answer now the function of the new
Congressma,n Clarence E. questions from the floor.
officers to keep the group
Miller's office wi!l conduct an
Daniron was asked, "Why together . Meetings will be
open door seu1oo from 1~ a new jail couldn't include il held once every four to six
a.m.-12 noon 1n the cour
place for juveniles?" Is state weeks during the summer,
house in Pom~roy on, June 9· mone~ avail~ble to send All interested parents are
Ally one , havmg questions Wlmllnageable juveniles to a. invited.
The
original
concernmg the Federal detention center when delesation to the school board
Government, should slop by parents ask for help? , and and lhe steering commiltee
to discuss them.
where does school money go have been dissolved .

Canoe races feature program
POMEROY - Canoe races will
feature river activities on Sunday, June 20, .
R,egatta weekend Tom Reed, chairman ,
announced today .
Due to the f.rry service between
Pomeroy and Mason the power boat races
will not be held !his year during the Regatta,
Each two man canoe will travel from
the levee in Pomeroy downriver to the
Pomeroy-MaSon Bridge and return to the
levee.

· The race Is open to any group or
individual who feel qualified to enter the
race. First place will be awarded $25,
second place $15 and $10 to the third place
winner.
.
Contestants will be required to furnish
!heir own canoe and life jackets. Time of the
event will be announced later. For tbose who
wish (9enter, the coupon below is to be filled
out and mailed to Mr, Reed .

Superiors Bulk

c

WIENERS ..... !·
1

I

79

20 lb. Average

WATERM ELON ••••• ::C.h••
L

J

COUPON

''

CLOROX
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" ~,~.
"""'
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COUPON

j

COFFEE BUYI

Maxwell House

Name _____~~~--------------------------Addresss _____________;,.,_ _ _ _ __,__ __

Gal.

Phone _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Limit 1 Per ·customer
Good only at Powell's
Offer Expires: 6·12-76

With
Coupon

3 lb.
Can

$]99
·

With
Coupon

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good only at Powell's
Offer Expifes: 6-12-76

Personal Qualification and Experience

A re5ident of Gallla County lor 28 yrs. havinq moved
here from Lawrence County willl my parents when 1
Was 10 yrs. old. After graduation from Gallia Academy
in 1957 I became associated with my parents in lire
' Central Supply Co. My two daughters live here and
attend Gallia Academy . I have had the t..osic llw
enforcement training consisting of :U! hr. at Rio
Grande College . Anended 40 hrs. Ohio Revised Code
Study, worked as a deputy · under . Jim Saunders,
member of Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Dept lor six
years, charter member of Gallipolis Jaycees, charier
member of Gallla County Volunteer Emergency
Squa~, member of board of director of Go lila Vol. E. R.
Squad, a member of the Gallipolis Kiwanis Club and
was preside~! i" 1965. Gallla County is a growing
community a~d I would like to help il be a bener place
to live.

'

·

Pd. pol. Adv .

.'

famous Cafe here in town
around 1900. 11 was owned by ·
a Mr . Hudlin and managed by
a Mr. Varney. The cafe also
catered to banquets. It
received its name from the
fine oak lwnber used inside.
The Gallipolis tannery was
located ~n Vine St. near
where Johnson's Market Is . II
was started in IBM and made
all sorts of fancy leather
goods. Mr. Charles Mack
bought it In 189f. His
spetialty was lace leather
which he shipped all over the
country.
·
The answer to last week 's
question :
The Geneva Hotel was
located in the large brick
building on the corher of
Third Ave . and Grape St. now
-occupied by Motor Parts.
Something to think about :
Who was W. A. Slaymaker?

Organization represented tif any)._ __,;._ _ _ _ _ __

Pd. Poi. Adv .,by the Candidate

.

buildings abOut town.
Years ago I was told !hat
Maybelle Small (later Mrs.
0. o.· Mrlntyre) was born
next door below i~ ,a house
erected later. I was told this
grand lady received her first
name . "Maybelle"
in
• remembrance of her good
neighbors the Bealls.
If I am wrong, Mrs .
Mcintyre will correct me. I
certainly want to thank Mrs.
Mcintyre for her kind
remarks to me recently about
lhese articles.
To those who may be interested:
The Oak Palaee was a

:·- 15lst anniversary

1,..•••.-•••••••••••••••••••••••-!11
TO THE MEIGS VOTERS:

gala event when the circus
arrived,

Mail to Tom Reed, 141 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy , 0 . 45769.
COUPON

PLEASANT.VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Fredrick
Christian, Point Pleasant; '
Glenda Lawson, Minersville,
0.; Jalone Hoffman, Letart ;
Mrs. James Cheesebrew,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Roser
· Deal , Glenwood; Pamela
Garnes, Letart; Gregory
Pysarchuk, Point Pleasant ;
David Jones , New Haven ;
Clara Moore, Har tford; and
Mrs. Ralph Harbour, Apple
Grovf .

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PINTO .BEANS
4 lb.

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MIRACLE WHIP
32.oz.
jar

69
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~ With
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Limit I Per Customer
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Offer Expires: 6:12-76

�12 - The Stmday Times- sent im{ Sunda~ . .June li, 107fi

AA uw·sponsoring homes tour II'*'~G:~=;t;;;' vii:~~=~:::::,::;:l

THE llOM8 of Mrs. Charles McGinness in Ga llipolis will be open to 1he public during
the homes tour Sunday, June 13 sponsored by the Gallipolis AAUW . Mrs. McG inness ' home
is best rerne1nbered as· Ute "Bean" home.

..

11lE MORRIS E. HASKI NS home, I Vine St., Ga llipolis is the newest home of the

seventh AAUW homes tour Su nday, June 13. The r·iver lot the home ts built on ha s a history
which da tes back to Pau l Feanng and Return Johnalha n Me i ~s before Ohio became a sta te.

GI\LLJPOLJS
The McCunns. The McCunns ha d
Gallip oli s Bra nch of the come to Gallipo lis Ar~m
Am e ri c ~:tn A$SOC ii!ti On of Engla nd an d bought the
University Women will host house on Nuv. 2, 111!i2, for
its seventh tour · of homes $1,301. They r,eturned to
Sunday, June IJ from I to 5 England suddenly and left the
p.m. Four Gallipolis homes house to be sold for taxes . R.
including the musem, " Our M. Switzer bought the house
House," are induded on the at that time, and later sold il
tour.
to · Chauncey Fife, coun ly
,\The homes arc within surveyor.
walking distance of one
It was from Fife that Dr.
another. The older homes are an d Mrs . Leo Bean purchased
the Dr. and Mrs. Charles E. the house. They found il
Holzer, Jr. home at 525 First needed remodeling, and they
Ave ., th e Mrs: Charl es extensively remodeled it in
McGinness home , 449 First 1921, rei&lt;li'ling the woQdwork,
Ave., "Hiverby ," home of the the sl&lt;!ircase and the fireFrench Art Colony and Our places. They retained the
House. The new hume on the arrangement of the rooms,
tow· belongs to Mr . and Mrs . but made a few small ad·
Morris E. Haskins of 1 Vine ditions, including a sunroom
St.
and a garage win g.
Tickel•, at a cos t of $2.50,
The entrance features a
may be purchased at the park Connecticut portico and the
front on the day of the tour or old front door. The large
in advance, by contacting antique key is hanging near
Mrs. David Johnson, 74 Cedar the done to remind us of the
St., Gallipolis. Tickets are past it has unlocked. The
also on sale at PJ 's and the curving staircase dominates
Commercial and Savi ngs the ce nter hall and one can
Bank . Children 12 and older see from one end of the main
are perm itted on the tour .
floor to the other from this
Proceeds go to young entrance hall. The view of the
people in Ga llia County Ohio Hiver can be glimpsed
throu gh scholarships and from nearly every room.
wo r thwhil e co mmunity
The land on which the
proje cts . The Gallipolis Morris Haskins have built
AAUW is in the top four their new home has, in some
branches in the state in ways much in common with
moni es contributed to the the oth er river bank
fellowships fund per capita of pro perti es which are the
members.
oldest of our land transAs a high light of the lour , actions . Yet, some of its story
visitors will be direc ted to is very differenI.
Fortification Hill which overLike most of the river lots,
looks the Ohio River and its his tory goes back to Paul
Gall ipolis, an d Hiverby will Fearing and Return Jonathan
be th e hospita lity center Meigs and the years before
where refreshments will be Ohio became a slate. On Der .
served.
26, 1776 Fearing and Meigs
The home of Mrs. Charles sold these two lots to two
McGinness is bes t remem. differen t sets of people. These
bcred as the "Bean Home " to deeds were filed in Marietta
those wh o have been In the in the . Washington County
area for many years. Ac- Cour l Records in those last
cordin g to Mr . Wallm a letter days of 1796. And from then
to Mrs. Bean, the house was on the similarity in bank land
built about 1802 by a James history varies. These two lots
Wilson. The original owners each wen t its own way ,
of the land were the Trustees changing hands fr equently .
of the Ohio Company.
Most of the bank land stayed
The house has had many in the same hands for years
prominent owners during its at a time with one family
long history. Among them owning or living on each for
were J. T. Brazee, a lawyer, quite a length of lime. Not so
Alonzo Cushing, and Thomas with lots No . 125 and No . 126.

They changed hands often
and several times one of them
was sold at public auction,
and once even by a sheriff
sale for taxes.
The
lot
bordering
Chi ckamauga Creek turned
hands milS\ frequenUy. It was
sold by Fearing and Meigs on
that day in 1796 to Louis
Vimout, and his wife Rosaline
of Millersburg , Kentucky .
This deed was recorded in
Washington County and when
the Vimouts sold to Cornelius
Menager in 1807, the sale was
recorded in Bourbon County,
Kentucky at Millersburg. The
following years of ownership
cha nges in clude such interestin·g and familiar or
French names as Romaine,
Abraham Cooper, Moses
Hayes, Blazer warlh Martin,
Vanden and Petrat.
Lot 126 changed hands less
frequ ently . Fea rin g and
Meigs sold it on the same
December day in 1796 to
Peter LaForge who in turn
held it untill8 16 when he sold
it to Francois Vaiodin and his
wife Margaret G. C.
Cham pagne Valodin . On
down the line it includes such
nam es as Menage r and
Henkings and Priestly and
quoting publicity in the
Democ ratic
Dispatch ,
published in Calha county in
1856.
It is not certain when the
old brick ho 0se at I VIne
Street was built , but
"Grandma·Lupton" who was
a Holc omb was born in it
some li me in lhe 1830s and it
was among the earlier of the
homes of Gallipolis . The
house was
built · by
John Tillayea acc ord·
in g to the Lupton · fam.
ily re co rds. One of the
square nails from the
structure is now among the
Haskins relics. Of recent
years it was known as the
Mabel Thomas house. Mabel
Thomas who bought it in 1914,
from the Priestley heirs, was
well known in county and city
and legal circles. Her estate,
in town, sold to the Haskins
family whose new home now
graces the north central part
of the lots below the old brick
hme which has been razed.

Hot dog, bake sale planned
CHESHIRE - The hot dog
and bake sa le to be held
Tuesday was discussed wh en
the Golden Rule Class of the
Old Kyger Church met
Wednesday afternoon with
Mrs. Edward Spea rs. The
sale will be at the Bradburv
· bui lding.
·
The mee ting was opened by
singing "Blessed Assurance'' Members repea ted the
.::;::::::::: ::::::::;:: :::::::::;.;.;::::.:::·:·!·!::·:·:·:·: ~=:~:::;:;:

Sr. Citizens =~=~
~
:·~.:·. Cleda
an r :~~:
:=:

POMEROY - The Meigs
Senior Citizens Center activiti es loca ted at the
Pomeroy Junior High School,
is open 9 a.m.-4 p.m, Monday through Friday.
Monday , .Jun e 7 - Mental
Health , Maxine Plwmner,
11 :15 .m.; Square Dance,
.12 :30-3 p ..
Tuesday, Jun e B
Electio n Da y - VOT E;
Mari ella Tri p, Leave Center
at 8:30 a.m.; Chorus, 12:30·2
p.m.
Wednesday, June 9 Cards. liH l ::10 a.m.; Games ,
12:30·2 p.m.
Th ur sday, Jun e 10 Physical Fitness, 10:45 a.m.;
Horseshoes, !2:30p .m.; Si~ ·
A-Long, 12 noon.
Friday, June 11 - Art
Class, 10-11 :30 a.m.; Horseshoes, 10 :30-11::10 a.m.; Sing.
A-Long, 12 noon; Bowl ing, 1·3
p.m.
Senior Olizens Nutrition
Program 11 :30 a .m.-12:30
p.m. Monday through Friday.
Monday - Macaroni and
cheese with ham chunks,
buttered br oc coli , sliced
toma to sa lad on lett uce,
prune ca ke, bread, butter,
milk.
Tuesday - Pol roas t of
beef with gravy, buttered
steamed potatoes, buttered
fr.ozen mixed vege ta bles,
canned apricots, roll , buller.
milk .
Wednesday - Hot turkey
san dw ich with gravy,
mashed potatoes, buttered
peas and jellied cranberry
salad, ice cream , milk.
Thursda y
J ohnny
Marzelti, tossed salad and
dressing, canned pears, corn·
bread, butter, milk.
Friday - Baked pork chop,
escalloped potatoes, Harvard
beets, citrus sections, and
sugar cookie, bread, butter,
milk. Coffee, tea and but·
termilk served daily .

"

2:1rcl Psalm .
Mrs . Fred Sisson rea d
scripture fr om the book of
James . The roll call was
favorite Bible verses.
Mrs. George Gardner rea d
the secretary's report , and
U1ank you notes were read
fr om the graduates who were
g iv ~n Bibles for graduation.
A card was signed for Tom
Joh nson who is ill.
Mrs. Robert Price had
prepared Bible questions
from the book of James and a

re prese ntati ve .

Mr s . Richar ds gave a
report of the year 's work in
the district. She will serve as
de lega te to th e national
convention with Mrs . Devon
Tipple to se rve as th e
alternate.
For the slate convention to
be held July 9- ll in Columbus
Mrs. Ri chards appo inted
Mrs. Carroll to serve on the
Am eri ca nism committe e;
Mrs .
William
Trace,
Well ston, children and you th ;
Miss Erma Smi lh, Pomeroy,
community se r vice; Mrs.

'51 QOO

BOOKING DEADLINE JULY 1
446.()699

.

be~~~m . M1to

Green Acres and back to
· town . Those interested in
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·
NO:r THE SAME
GALLlPOLIS - Julia
Caldwell .of Eureka Star Rt.,
Gallipolis, is not the Julia
Caldwell of Gallipolis who
celebrated her birthday last
week.

VOTE
IN THE
REPUBLICAN
PRIMARY
LOUISE BURGER

'

ONLY

June
7-11 from are
6:30available
to 9:30
p.m. Teachers
for age groups 4-16. A bus will

CLERK OF COURTS '
Appo1n ted Clerk of Courts in January
after having served 12 years as a Deputy
Clerk.
·
I am the. daughter of Henry and Mary
· Skidmore. and the wife of Robert Earl
Burger. We have a son mike, in the 7th
grade at Gallia Academy .
There are many involved and ~,
complicated procedures in the Clerk's office ~
which· require experience and care. My
staff and I have that experience. and we feel
that it is in the interest of you, the public, to
vote to maintain the present high ievel of
efficiency.
Please vote to keep Louise Burger, as
Clerk of Courts.
Pd. Pol. Adv

Control

~

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otte

Bride-elect entertained

Church of God, Garfield Ave ., transportation should call
Gallipolis, will be conducted 446-3714.

FOR

Travel Agency

Air Fare · Motorcoach to Columbus .
Extensive Sightseeing · First
Class Hotels · Tips · Transfers Continental Breakfast Dai~

ue

B

Barb.ara Twyman, Betty
Twyman, Donna Kunath,
Patty Kunath, Tammy
Kunath, Janel White, Pearlie
McComas, Paul Ring, Rev.
Elmer Geiser, Howard ·
Wellington, Renea Bickers,
Lillian Rece, Reginia
Robinette.
Sending gifts were Esta
Downard, George and Irene
Robinette
and
David
Robinette . .

. OIL AND GAS LEASES .

. ~WORLD-WIDE

AUGUST 20-28 1976

e en an

dS

WANTED- WANTED

Hampton, constitution and
bylaws; Mrs. Bill Mohl er,
junior acitivitcs; Mrs. Alex
VBS SLATED
Blair , veterans affairs and
GALLIPOLIS - Vacation
re habilitation; Mrs . Dorothy
Hecker, resolutions, and Mrs. Bible School at the First
Brown, Mrs. Atkins and Mrs.
Willford Grant , unit ac- giving
re por ts
were
tivi ti es ; Mrs. Kessinger , placement; Mrs. John Mcte ll er, a nd Mrs. Ri chard Vey, Mrs. Hecker and Mrs.
Barnes, Lancas ter, Spirit of Norris; tellers, Mrs. Blair,
'76.
Mrs. William Mohler, and
Pas t dis trict pre stdents Mrs. James Gatewood, and
recog ni zed incl uded Mrs. resolutions, Mrs. Pratt, Mrs.
Wilson Carr and Mrs. Boy d Flowers, and Mrs.
William Stewart , Athens: Adkins.
Mrs. Neulzling, Pomerov·
A tea was served by the
Mrs. Kessinge r, Middlepo~t : host unit following the
Mrs. Tipple, Lancaster; Mrs. meetin g. ·
Brown , Gallipolis; Mrs .
Adkins , Crooksville ; Mrs .
Erma Powers, Logan . Mrs.
Harley Moler conducted a
memorial service fo r
deceased members.
Co nv en tion committees

Hosted by Miss Margaret Ferrell

Y

J.

It's Called the Newlywed Game
RAP :
"Love means never saying you 're sorry" is a bunch of
chicken soup. My husband will do something to make me mad,
but he won't apologize. Instead Jerry does lhe turnabout game
- acting hurt until !finally make up to him (if he'll accept my
apologies) . Otherwise be makes me feel guilty, playing the
injured party. In six months of marriage, he's never admitted
he was wrong,
He knows I can't stay mad long, and he takes advantage.
Sure, sometimes it's my fault , but must I always be - THE
"SORRY" ONE'
SORRY ONE :·
Ah , male supremacy . . . it creates so may foolish
problems.
Why don't you brealt lhe silence by saying, "I accept your
apology, honey," Maybe Jerry means it, bullhe words ecme
llard. - HELEN
WORD FROM SUE: Why don 'l you discuss the apology
lhing sometime when you're both in a particularly good mood ?
Men should be able to admit lhey're wrong (when they are). U
yo u re-program Jerry now, you'll save many hurt feelings
later on. ·
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
Every time I come close to this girl at !he office, I start
sneezing. It's her perfwne ? She must bathe in the stuff, and
I'm allergic.
Several others are bothered by it , but if we complain, she'll
either be hurt or slather more on to spite us. Suggestions? _
N.H.
DEAR N.:
Take a chance : explain your snC\lzes. Most people aren't
as touchy as you think - when you have a good reason for
complaining. - HELEN
NOTE FROM SUE : Trouble with heavy perfwne users is,
they can't smell the stuff on lhemselves after lhe first few
minutes,so they apply more, thinking !he scentisgone,
You might be doing this girl a favor if you tell her she wafts
too strong. Try it.
DEAR RAP:
"Grandma Age " shouldn't worry about being an "elderly
mother." It's the attitude that counts.
My parents were in their mid-forties when I was born. My
brolhers and sister were bolh married so you can imagine the
age difference involved.
My childhood memories are almost total happiness and
love. Mom says raising me was a joy. We could do so many '
things t~al my parents couldn't do with !he older kids because
money and time were scarce back then ,
·
Now here I am in my ~ and Mom, Widowed, is
approaching 70. I can trulhfully say she is my very best friend .
She has a youthful outlook on life - she's open-minded and
understanding. In general, she knows more about what's
happening with today's yorilh than 1110s! so-called authorities.
She listens to rock music. We go to concerts and shows
together, travel a lot. Yet our ~cial relationship never
prevents us from having other friends and leading our own
lives.
,
But this is a two-way street. Because of Mom, I have
learned to really listen to her generation. I appreciate my
youth, but I admire the thoughts and opinions of elders. I Jove
to share memories with someone who lived·in the 20s. (But is
not living there now!)- PROUD OF MY MOM

STUDENTS of Gillian Moore and Patty Fellure will present a public performance
Wednesday at 7:30p.m. in lhe Washington School auditorium, Shown here are some of the
young dancers whc will be performing .

"OLDE LONDON TOWNE"

B H

GALLIPOLIS - A wedding
shower was given for Debbie
Stapleton and Larry Justice
at Fellowship Chapel on May
20.
Games were played and
prizes won by Debbie
Stapleton and Betty Twyman .
The door prize was awarded
to Ann Slayton.
Attending were : Goldie
Geiser, Ann Layton, Erma
Lou Ring , Lorrine Bryant,

· .discussion fol lowed each
question:
Rea di ngs in clud ed :
"Understanding," Mrs. Fred
Sisson :
" Ad vice
To
Graduates ," Mr s. Dale
Mulford ; "Pray and Toi l,"
Mrs. Louise Roush : "Ad·
vice," Mrs. Gardner; "Gel
Glow ing, " Mr s. Hortie
Roush;
··what is, Is," by Mr s.
Spears.
The hostess served cake ,
party crackers , cheese,
r offll&lt;! an d Kool-Aid.

Many awards
(Continued from page 11)
Myrtl e Walk er , Haci ne,
junior activities; Mrs. Curl ,
Crooksville, veterans affair s
and re habilitation: and Mrs.
Nea te M. Billings, Athens ,
Athens Menl&lt;l l Health Cente r

:§:;:;

13 - The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, June 6, 1976

The following townships are
urgently needed for lease: Ohio,
Guyan, Clay, Harrison, Green,
Gallipolis. Also we will consider :
all other locations. Write
••
U nlversal Petroleum, 8ol(4l,
~
Care of The Dally Tribune.
;

hegins
By Frank HUI .
GALLIPOLIS - Around
"' the turn of the century . our
·. city had its own circus. This
,, ,was the famous McCorm ick
Bros. "Nickel Plated" Cir,_cus. The large brick building
?: .iust below lhe old high school
on Fourth ' Ave. was the
storage building for it~
,.,. wagons. A plumbing finn
now is lilca ted !here.
II seems years ago the
circus was stranded here and
the McCormi.ck Bros. bought
it.
The circus mainly Ira veled
i• from village lo village in
, .. southern Ohio. II ws always a

My opponl)nts are tarring me with some feathers
which I do not believe will stick!
They have indicted me for my usually unanimous
vote when inter-county cooperation with our sister
county has served the best interest of my constituents.
AIRPORT:
Cincinnati is served by a Kentucky airfield. Hardly
any CITY is served by an air facility that residents can
reach in less than half an hour .
Meigs air patrons can hit the by-pass, reach its air
facility in hardly more than 15 minutes .
Time has proven this 8 year old .decision wise.
Jackson tried to go it. alone without a survey of
prospective use and patrons! The , Jackson County
general fund was crippled, in the red for years. Just now
recovering. Taxpayers still subsidize operations.
CHILD WELFARE:
The county had a budget of more than $36,000 last
year of operation of the children's home, for less than a
dozen children . The number today is six . The deal was:
Meigs receives the Gallia elderly into its well-run county
home. Gallia receives Meigs wards in a well run home
your candidate has inspected.
You know your tax moneys are efficiently allocated
to priorities best serving you of Meigs County . .

PLEASE VOTE FOR

County Commissioner
RALPH W. OURS
Issued By the Candidate himself
'

P.S. How can that airport thing be an issue? You reelected me to another term as commissioner since 1
made that decision.
Yours, "Warden."

:
"

:
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•

town.
· His son Henry; buill the
Gillingham Drug Store
building and many other

· Lafayette's visit recalled
By James Sands
Gallla County Historical Society
GALLIPOLIS - Sunday, May 23, was
, . the !51st anniversary of Lafayette's visit to
.. Gallipolis.
_
Lafayette traveled norlh from New
"Orleans on the steamboat Herald. As the
Herald approached the town a swivel gun
was discharged, and those who lined the
banks saw waving from \he front of the
steamer two large American flags . Meeting
" Lafayette at the shore were N. S. Cushing,
"· James Beale, Peter Menager , and Lewis
Newsom, who were representing the tOWn .
"'
As Lafayette shook hands with the
. greeters he expressed his pleasure at the
·· chance to visit Galltpolis:
·

uGentlemen, it is to me an unex.. • pres8a ble pleasure to visit Gallipolis. I knew
.. (when in France) of lhe departure of many
c.of my countrymen to this place, and now , to
·· 'visit them under their own vine and fig tree
·is one of the pleasures of my life."
· • The General's entourage was escorted
1 •to Our House where about . 100 persons
"•waited to be introduced to him. Upon being
introduced to Rene Carel, Carel explained to
"'Lafayette !hat he (Carel) was "a subject of
·· France in some of the darkest moments of
' •his life, that he always loved the name of
,: Lafayette, on account of his devotedness to
liberty and to equal rights of men."
After a stay of 21&gt; hours Lafayette was
escorted back to his boat and as lhe boat was
leaving the short the people gave him three
cheers accompanied by three discharges
from the town militia's cannon.
"
Living in Gallipolis at this time were at
, -least two former comrades of Lafayette,
, •Nicholas Thevenin whom Lafayette knew in
.. France, and Robert Hereford who fought
with Lafayette at Yorktown . Hereford, in
' '"Partnership with Robert Warth, ran a store
on the river bank.
" , Had Lafayette taken a walk around .
town , what would he have seen' The present
···public square was the site of the courthouse
,, and the market house where farm products
, were bought and sold - William Cavin ran
lhe market. It was open from 4 a.m. to 9
r a.m. each Wednesday and Saturday. On lhe
1 ..COurt street side of the square between
j ~Second and First were these businesses. On
l the corner was Chapdu's harness shop.
Chapdu had been born in Haiti and hisfather

I

had dfed in the French Revolution . Also
there was Carel's dry goods which also sold
plows made at Carel's foundry on Second.
Daniel Hovey ran a cabinet making
shop about the middle of the block ond
employed 17 apprentices. Tbe Gallipolis
Free Press news office was on this block
as was John Sanns' dry goods and bakery
store. Sanns sold such baked items' as
gingerbread, crackers, pickled pork,
Gennan blackball and loaves of bread. A·
.watch repairman occupied the top floor of
the Sanns building . On the corner was
LeCierqc's store .
Across from. LeCierqc 's and running
several lots downriver was the Menager's
property, Here was located Menager's mill
and Menager's American House Hotel.
Down from Menager;s was Gandy 's
chainnaking business . On Grape was
Newsom's tannery and Walker's cabinetmaking shop.
·
Across · the square on Secood was
located Cruezet's store, lhe tinning shop of
Hiram Fisher, Heaton's Hotel and Wort.
man 's blacksmith shop. On lhe corner of
Second Ave. and Slate was doctor and
pharmacist Ja.cob Kittredge. On State be·
tween Second and First was Tupper 's store,
Smithers' tinning shop, Black's blacksmith
shop, the livery and Bljl'eau's store.
On Front street (Firsn starting at Stale
was a lot used to keep wood for steamboat
use . Then came · Warth's store , then
DeVacht's shops, the post office, Gate's
Eag Ie Tavern• Balbell's hat shop ' the law
offices of Sam Vinton and John, Brazee.
Further down w?s Vandenbemden .s wago,n
shop, Ferguson:s cooper shop, ~ague! s
store, Damann s store, Shep~erd s brtckmaking store and Shepherds carpentry
shop.
. '
, ·. .
On the other ~~d~ of Frbnt begrnmng at
State, was Cushmg s, store, Ba~ter and
Darts bakery, Varner~ dressmaking shop,
Our House, and Lepme s tailor shop.
,
.other shops of note were H~yward s
cabmelmaking shop, the blac~snuth shops
of Moses Gates and Henry Miller, George
House's hotel, Neal and Payne's carding
mtll, Rodgers' blacksrrulh shop and the
distillery of Christopher Etienne. Also a
number of small mills and olher businesses
t 'd of t
were Ioca ted jus I ou s1 e
own.

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BUY AMODULAR HOME

•I
•

TODAY .
30 YEAR FINANCING
AVAII.ABLI

•

~

IN 1869 A MR: BEALL and
his wife and eight children
arrived in town. Mr. Beall
soon purchased 22 acres of
land in the vicinity of Neil
Ave. and on back to the hill.
He paid '10,500 for the tract
and erected !he fine brick
home still standing on the
lower corner of Fourth An~
Neil Ave. II was the first
house built In that section of

&amp;.-,~~~
MOBILE HOMES INC.
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
Phone 446-9340
Gallipolis. Ohio

'•

ELECT
NEIL
McMAHON
SHERIFF

".

Bend
Area~s
• •

citiZens
meet

at home
MIODI.EPOHT - Abuse of
alcohol and drugs really can
be controlled only · lhrough
parents - the home - according to Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney Bernard Fultz:
At , the same time, law
enforcement agencies, while
they actually only are catching the horse after he's out
of lhe barn, need more
freedom In · search and
seizure if the traffic in drugs
is to be attacked succeufully.
These points were the
substance of remarks made
by the prosecutor in an open
discuuion 'Friday evening at
Heath United Methodist
Church with other members
of the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club following dinner
served by ladles of the ·
church,
The discussion · also
followed showing of a fiim
provided by Meigs County
Juvenile Officer Carl Hysell
on the same topic, "Abu.se of

STORE HOURS
8 AM-10 PM

MO.,.-SA.

JO A.M.-~0 P.M. SUNDAY

Prices Effective

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO Thru June 12, 1976 ·

~s . "

President Vernon Weber
·, presided. One guest, Charles
Gaskill of Wellston was intrOduced.

MASON _ The Hend Area
Coocerned Gitlzensmetin the
BATIERY STOLEN
WahiUlla High School gym
POMEHOY - A battery
Tuesday with Luther Tucker was stolen from a car owned .
presiding and the Rev . by Charles Griffith, RD,
Walter Cloud giving a prayer. Pomeroy, while parked a l
Volunteers to donate steel Bradbury between 3:15 a .m.
drwns to be decorated by the and 4:45 p.m. Friday the
students and used for Utter Meigs County Sheriff's
were Paul Stodola, Charles Department reported .
Stanley and Dallas Cadle,
and Mrs. Delores Bond and
Mrs . Phyllis Gilkey volunleered to join lhe ParentTeacher Advisory Committee.
k
Vo1unteers as ed to go
before the school board to
request items needed by the
h
h
teac ers and sc ool we~e
.Rev. Walter Cloud, chatr·
man· Mrs Delores Bond
Luther T~cker Charle~
Stanley, Bob Ayers and
!Uc!urrd Gilkey.
A recent documentary on
TV about schools was
discussed. It was decided that.
the Parent-Teacher Advisory
Committee jointly decide on
a test that wotlld be given to
seventh graders and seniors
each year to detemiine clasS
average. The results would
be compared with the
previous year's test results so
.
. ·
parents wotlld know .1f the
average grades a~ gomg up
or down or remamlng con.
stan l,

and what is the · state
. ,
legislature doing'
Damron said he has, and
will again sponsor legislation
setting a minimwn reading
level for graduation and will
try for legislation reducing
the nwnber of years a school
board member's term will
last.' He also said if anyone
wants more information on
legislation activities pertaining to education, they can
write to him and he will send
the information to them. It
was suggested that Luther
Tucker, committee Chair·
man, receive all the l,nformalion so he can keep the
parents committee informed.
Troy Hoffman was asked
questions by the parents on
smoking at school, search of
student lockers and what to
do wilh a drunk stude~t on
Areport was given by Rev, campus.
Walter Cloud on the meetings
Damron poiri ted out the
of lhe Judicial Committee ooly thing that caused a
with Jaw enforcement of. person to obey lhe law is lhelr
ficlals .
respect and fear of it. The
Charles Damron, House of people have to cause the laws
HERE WEDNESDAY
Delegates, and Troy Hoff. to be enforced.
POMEROY
A man 1 candidate for . sheriff 1
Tucker pointed out that it is
represen tat '.1ve from ·· were present to answer now the function of the new
Congressma,n Clarence E. questions from the floor.
officers to keep the group
Miller's office wi!l conduct an
Daniron was asked, "Why together . Meetings will be
open door seu1oo from 1~ a new jail couldn't include il held once every four to six
a.m.-12 noon 1n the cour
place for juveniles?" Is state weeks during the summer,
house in Pom~roy on, June 9· mone~ avail~ble to send All interested parents are
Ally one , havmg questions Wlmllnageable juveniles to a. invited.
The
original
concernmg the Federal detention center when delesation to the school board
Government, should slop by parents ask for help? , and and lhe steering commiltee
to discuss them.
where does school money go have been dissolved .

Canoe races feature program
POMEROY - Canoe races will
feature river activities on Sunday, June 20, .
R,egatta weekend Tom Reed, chairman ,
announced today .
Due to the f.rry service between
Pomeroy and Mason the power boat races
will not be held !his year during the Regatta,
Each two man canoe will travel from
the levee in Pomeroy downriver to the
Pomeroy-MaSon Bridge and return to the
levee.

· The race Is open to any group or
individual who feel qualified to enter the
race. First place will be awarded $25,
second place $15 and $10 to the third place
winner.
.
Contestants will be required to furnish
!heir own canoe and life jackets. Time of the
event will be announced later. For tbose who
wish (9enter, the coupon below is to be filled
out and mailed to Mr, Reed .

Superiors Bulk

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WIENERS ..... !·
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20 lb. Average

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Name _____~~~--------------------------Addresss _____________;,.,_ _ _ _ __,__ __

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With
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Offer Expifes: 6-12-76

Personal Qualification and Experience

A re5ident of Gallla County lor 28 yrs. havinq moved
here from Lawrence County willl my parents when 1
Was 10 yrs. old. After graduation from Gallia Academy
in 1957 I became associated with my parents in lire
' Central Supply Co. My two daughters live here and
attend Gallia Academy . I have had the t..osic llw
enforcement training consisting of :U! hr. at Rio
Grande College . Anended 40 hrs. Ohio Revised Code
Study, worked as a deputy · under . Jim Saunders,
member of Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Dept lor six
years, charter member of Gallipolis Jaycees, charier
member of Gallla County Volunteer Emergency
Squa~, member of board of director of Go lila Vol. E. R.
Squad, a member of the Gallipolis Kiwanis Club and
was preside~! i" 1965. Gallla County is a growing
community a~d I would like to help il be a bener place
to live.

'

·

Pd. pol. Adv .

.'

famous Cafe here in town
around 1900. 11 was owned by ·
a Mr . Hudlin and managed by
a Mr. Varney. The cafe also
catered to banquets. It
received its name from the
fine oak lwnber used inside.
The Gallipolis tannery was
located ~n Vine St. near
where Johnson's Market Is . II
was started in IBM and made
all sorts of fancy leather
goods. Mr. Charles Mack
bought it In 189f. His
spetialty was lace leather
which he shipped all over the
country.
·
The answer to last week 's
question :
The Geneva Hotel was
located in the large brick
building on the corher of
Third Ave . and Grape St. now
-occupied by Motor Parts.
Something to think about :
Who was W. A. Slaymaker?

Organization represented tif any)._ __,;._ _ _ _ _ __

Pd. Poi. Adv .,by the Candidate

.

buildings abOut town.
Years ago I was told !hat
Maybelle Small (later Mrs.
0. o.· Mrlntyre) was born
next door below i~ ,a house
erected later. I was told this
grand lady received her first
name . "Maybelle"
in
• remembrance of her good
neighbors the Bealls.
If I am wrong, Mrs .
Mcintyre will correct me. I
certainly want to thank Mrs.
Mcintyre for her kind
remarks to me recently about
lhese articles.
To those who may be interested:
The Oak Palaee was a

:·- 15lst anniversary

1,..•••.-•••••••••••••••••••••••-!11
TO THE MEIGS VOTERS:

gala event when the circus
arrived,

Mail to Tom Reed, 141 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy , 0 . 45769.
COUPON

PLEASANT.VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Fredrick
Christian, Point Pleasant; '
Glenda Lawson, Minersville,
0.; Jalone Hoffman, Letart ;
Mrs. James Cheesebrew,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Roser
· Deal , Glenwood; Pamela
Garnes, Letart; Gregory
Pysarchuk, Point Pleasant ;
David Jones , New Haven ;
Clara Moore, Har tford; and
Mrs. Ralph Harbour, Apple
Grovf .

'i
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I

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Upholstery . Windows· Floors
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4 lb.

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32.oz.
jar

69
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Limit I Per Customer
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Offer Expires: 6:12-76

�14 - The Sundav Times. S.nlifll&gt;l. SWld•y, June 6,197ti

•

ELECT

Teenager hurt in
traffic accident
GALLIPOLIS - Ellubeth unidentified vehicle.
The Carnahan car struck
was slightly injured in 8 the front of the Perry car
lraflic accident al 7 p.m. causing il ·lo go off the left
Friday on County Road 45, · side of the highway into a
one and one tenth miles north guardrail. There was minor
of Rt . 124 in Meigs County. damage a~ no one was InThe Gallia-Meigs Post )ured or etted.
Stale Highway Patrol said
A Gailia County accident
Miss Mould was a passenger occurred on Rt: liO, seven
in a car driven by Krisly tenths ofa mile south of Rt. 35
Jones, 16, Rt . I, Dexter. Miss where an auto driven by
Jones lost control of the car Robert L. Cornwell, 62,
~n a curve in loose gravel.
GaiUpolls, stopped to make a
The vehicle ran off the right left turn.
side of the roadway into a
An auto driven by Huel M.
ditch and overturned. There Freeman, 59, Columbus,
was moderate damage. No attempted to avoid hitting the
charges were flied.
Cornwell car in the rear . She
Another Meigs County lost control of her vehicle
mishap occurred at 8:25p.m. which slid off the highway
on Rl. 33, one mile south of into a ditch. There was no
Rl. 681 where cars driven by contact between the two
Larry D. Carnahan, 44, Rt. 1, vehicles.
Long Bottom, and William
Thomas Perry, 50, Rt. I,
Athens, sideswiped when
attempting to pulled into the
passing lane to pass an
J . Mould , 15, Rt. I, Dexter,

Voters
asked
to help

FOR
STATE
REPRESENTATIVE

Republican
92nd
District

Education, Business,.
Farming and Labor.

AStrong Voice for

MIDDLEPORT - Village
officials reminded Mid·
dleport residents today of the
3 mi.ll operation expen1e levy
which will be on the ballot
JlUle 8. Everyone is OrBed to
support this levy in order that
street lighting may be continued and more street
maintenance and
improvements accomplished.
Mayor Fred Hoffman and
Council make lhe following
statement:
"This levy would provide
$24,000 per year over a fiveyear period for operation
expense of the village.
"Of the $24,000, $12,000 per
year would be used to pay the
entire electric bill for the
street lights, approximately
$1,000 per month . Residential
customers are paying 40
cents per month and commercial customers are
paying $1 per month on their
electric bill at the present
lime for street lights. This
does not pay the entire bill, as
the village still pays a
balance or approximately
$3110 per month. The electric
company wishes .to discontinue this collection from
their customers so the ~IUage
would then have to pay the
enti~

- TheSlUlday Tirnes -Sentinei,Sunda)·

Westem Meigs may lose E-R service
RACINE - Del Reeves and
the Good Time Charlies, a
country music show. will be
prese n~ at Southern High
School here on Saturday, July
3 al a p.m.
Pete Simpson of the local
fire department said advance
tickets, $5 for adults and $2.50
for students, may be purchased at Dutton Drug Store,
Middleport , Kay's Beauty
Salon, Middleport; Bob's CB
Radio, Gallipolis, Meigs Inn,
Paul's Barber Shop, Racine ,
and from any member of the
Racine Fire ·Departmebl .
Tickets at the door will be $6
and $3.50.
The Fire Department will
also sponsor the annual 4th of
July parade to be held on
Sunday, July 4.
At II a.m. comb:ned church
services will be held on the

football field at the high
school, In case of rain they
will be' held in the gym; at
noon barbecue chicken will
be served at the fire station,
the menu also includes slaw
baked beans, ice cream, cak~
•nd beverages; 12:30 a
garden tractor pull behind
the fire sta tion; 1:45 p.m. a
flag raising at the hi g~

DRIVER SKIPPED
. GALI.IPOI.IS - A hil-sklp
accident was investigated at
9:40 p.m. Friday by city
police here at 44 Olive St.
Officers said an unknown
vehicle struck a parked car
owned by Lawrence E.
Saunders, Rt. I, Crown City.
There
wa s
moderate
damage.

school; 2p.m.the parade will
·leave froni the high school; 4
p.m . games at the junior
high; 7:30p.m. a hymn sing
at the high school; 10 p.m.
fireworks display at the
junior high.
The parade will be in the
following categories and cash
awllJ'ds will be given in all
categories with the exception
of marching units and bicycle
winners who will be given
trophies.
There will .be a first and
second place winner In the
best Bicentennial theme,
church group; first and
second In best . Bicentennial,
non-church; first place In
open commercial, first place
in best marching unit and
firs t, second and third for
best decorated bike.

An invitation is extended to

ali thase who wish to par·
ticipate. Those who wish to
to lake part are to call
Simpson at 949-2118 after 5
p.m.

/

/

STEEl. PRICES UP
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - U.
S. Steel Corp ., the country's
largest steelmaker, says it
will raise prices $20 to $25 a
ton on several lines of
products, effective July 16.
Another Pittsburgh · based
major steel producer, Jones
&amp; Laughlin Steel Corp., also
says it will raise prices July
16, by $20 to $30 a ton on its
structural steel ·products .
Both companies announced
the increases Friday, and
other major steel producers
were expected to follow sui I
shortiy.

TOGETHER AGAIN - The 11 children of the late
Willi~ A. and Edna Garen Will were together Monday,

(absent was Louise Fisher Will, Greenfield) and standing
Willlam L. Will; Pomeroy RD; Milton G. Will, Canai
Winchester; Philip F. Will, Columbus; Victor L. Will ,
Canal Winchester; Montgomery Will, Canal Winchester ;
John M. Will, at home, and Roland G. Will, Lexington ,
Mass.

Memortai Day, at the Will Homestead In the Telll!s
community. Seated, 1-r, are Betty F. Loucks Mary Will
Kilpatrick, and Florence Ferrel WUI, all of Columbcs

~·Will family

HERE FOR WEEK
POMEROY - T. Sgt. and
Mrs. Sherman Roberts and
Sherri
of
daughter,
Mrs. Juanita Soghikian, Oklahoma City, Okla. spent a
Sandra Soghiklan, Mr. and week here with their parents,
Mrs. John R. Beaver and son Mr . and Mrs. Sherman !.
Brad, and Roland G. Will, Roberts, Pomeroy, Route 4,
Lexington, Mass.; Mrs. and Mr. and Mrs . Walter
Helen
K.
Wilson France, Rutland . The family
of Rensselaer , N. Y.; came especially for the
Mr . and Mrs. James wedding of Mrs. Roberts'
Hedges and children, Jill, brother, Greg France, to Hila
Kile and Kurt of Lancaster, Birchfield.
Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Mullen and children, Shannon, Patrick and Christopher
SEEN ANO HEARD
of Uthopolis; Mr. and Mrs.
GALLIPOLIS
·Miss
John Nicholson and son,
Hively
of
Gallipolis
is a
I.otlle
Jeffrey, Stafford, Ohio, and
surgical
patient
at
Holzer
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Wysong,
Medical Center.
Thornville, Ohio.

reunited at home

~:

POMEROY - The II Will and sons Michael and
ehildren of the late William Brett, Canal Winchester ; Mr .
A. and Edna Garen Will and and Mrs. Jack Kilplttrick,
Their families were reunited Mr . and Mrs. Fred Ferrell,
idonday, May 31 at the "Will Mr . Donald Ferrell and son
~omestead" in the Texas
William, Mrs . Betty Loucks
Community with John Will as and daughter Jane, Mr . and
b&lt;ist. Present were John M. Mrs. Gene Bor ton and
,Will, Mr. and Mrs . William L. children, Bridget and Kerry,
)Viii, Mr. and Mrs. Dan T. Bexley.
)Viii, William M. Will,
Also, Philip )'. Will, Mr .
Pomeroy; Mrs , Louise Fisher and Mrs . Michael Bordner
and son Milton l.ee of Green- and children , Scott and
iield, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Alison, Colwnbus; Mr. and
Montgomery Will, Mr. and Mrs. J;:dward B. Greco,
l\frs. Vl~lor I.. Will,' Mr. and Patricia Greco, Louise Greco
Mrs. Milton G. Will, Mr . and and Steven Greco, Roslyn
.¥rs. Thomas Krauss, James Heights, New York.

NOTICE

. GALI.IPOI.IS - Raymond

or Ohio, in ceremonies at the ·

M. Jones, member of Mor .. MasQD ic temple here .·

ning Dawn Lodge No. 7
Thursday evening was
a\Varded a 60-year presentation by the Free and Accepted Masons, Grand Lodge

;: .

) LLVlQ.

4• 1q7 6

'"0 1&amp;&amp;6

10 7

d 1q57 -

ELECT
NEIL McMAHON

a.Vl

'

DEMOCRAT

SHERIFF

bill.

' Pd. Pol. Adv.

This would be very difficult, unless 'additional
revenue is forthcoming. This
$4.80 yearly would be
deducted from residential
customers electric bill, so
the slight Increase In taxes
would be offset by the
decrease in the electric bill.
"Also, $12,000 yearly would
be provided by this levy for
matntenance and
improvement of streets. The
price of materials for street
repair have increased just as
every thing else has and the
village does not have the
money to properly maintain
streets and pave those which
do
need
resurfacing.
Blacktop for street repair
cools $18 per ton and one ton
does not go very far .
"During the past two years,
we have made every effort to
conserve money and this year
we have only one employee
being paid from the Street
Department.
"We have several ~!reels In
the village which need
resW"facing and others which
need patching. Some of this
could be done with this added
revenue.
"We feel that OW" street
department has done an
excellent job wilh the money
which they have had to wort
with, but they could do much
more if money were
available.
"The cost to the average
taxpayer would\ be small
compared In what could be
accomplished with this added
revenue .. We need your help
and ask for your vote and
support for this 3-mill
operation e~pense levy."

county afler are·a volunteer
units n•quested the county
commissioners to financially
support the system.
"The ex treme northern
areas or the cowtty are no
longer served by SEOEMS .. "
Stewart said, 11 but anyone
wilh an emergency can still
call SEOEMS if In doubt of
which squad serves their
area because SEOEMS will
lake the informnlion, then
notify the correct squad , be it
SEOEMS or Vohu• teer."
The Hullnnd unit hns two
e merg e ncy ve hi c le s
·avai lable from its station.
-:-:·:·:-:-:.:-:-:-:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:·::::::::::::::&gt;:::::::·:::::·:::: Although a charge is made 10
STRIKE DELAYED
persons receiv ing U1c serDATES GIVEN
A strike by some 5,000 .
vice,
the emergency medical
POMEROY
Trans World Airlines flight Rehearsals for " Ring All te chni cians pr ovid e the ir
attendants, which threatened the Bells of Freedom" to be services free-of-chnrgc. The
to shut down the airline, was presented at8 p.m. on July money collected goes for
postponed late Friday night. 4 at Royal Oak Park will be
Contract ta lks continued be- held for the nut month on
twee n TWA and the a t- Tuesdays at 8 p.m. and on
tendan ts' union. The Trans- Wednesday s at 8:15 p.m.
port Workers Union had Mrs. Harvey Van Vranken,
threatened to strike at 12:01 director, urges that all
a.m. EDT Saturday unless an members of the 48 voice
agreement on a new contract choir be present for the
was reached, the UP! said. rehearsals. At the park the ·
The stewarns and steward- program will he presented
esses have been working on the basketball court
wi thout a contract ror the with mcmben of the choir
pasl!Omonths and IBiks have seated on haywagons .
been Underway for 14 months.

Worshipful Brother Jones
became a Master Mason in
1914 at Patriot Lodge where
he served as Worshipful
Master. He then transferred
his membership into Morning
Dawn Lodge No . 7here where
he served as Master. During
his long membership; he also
served as High Priest of
Gallipolis Chapter No . 72,
RAM; Past · Master of
· Moriah
Council
No .
32,
Royal
and
Select Masters; Eminent
Commander of The Rose
Commandery, Knight
Templar or Ohio and sub·
sequently became a Knight of
the York Cross of Honour.
Thereafter he served as
Secretary of Morning Dawn
No. 7 for 25 years in addition
to holding the Recorder
position of Moriah Council
No. 32 for· some lime .

Grand Lodge of Ohio was
represented by Right Worshipful Brother Clifford
Edwards, District Deputy
Grand Master of the 12th
Masonic District. Also at' tending was Dr. and Mrs.
Catherine McMaster · of
Cincinnati, daughter of
Brother Raymond and Mrs.
Jones . Mrs. Jones was
presented a bouquet of roses
by the brothers of Morning

"'JUlpmenl and fuel.
.. Although everyone Is
under
''
heavy
tax
burden ,
the
average
fami ly's tux won't In·
crease as much as the price
of a six-pack of pop," Stewart
said . "The cost of medical
Insurance policy would be
many times grea ter than this
·amount to make emergency
service av1tilable year
uround, 24 hours a day ."
The Hu tland unit was
es1!tblishcd In ()('Lober 1974. It
was recently commended tor
nearly "breaking even" In
station cosl• in 1975 by the
Sf.OEMS Bonnl of Trustees.
','We are now here and hope
lo stay here to service Meigs
Cou11l y. But good public
support is 11eeded," Mrs.
Stewart Slt id.

ELECT
NEIL
McMAHON·
SHERIFF

:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:::;:;:::::::::;:::::::::·:::::::

- Proposed Ideas ·and plans for bett erment of office .

- Gain support and respect of the Citizens of Gallla
County .
- Answer all complaints quickly .
- Patrol the County roads on a staggered basis .
~ Gallla County hulls share of Hard Drugs. I tee! that
law enforcement should be concentrated upon the
pusher, not the ill advised or sick user. If possible the
dept . should work with the County Community
Mental Health Cllnlc to offer the user help.
- BeHer training of ofliclals of the dept. Use State and
Federal Agoncy to help .
- The deputies themselvts should be representative of
government that our Citizens should feel proud of .

Dawn No. 7 in recognition of
her long devotion 'to Free
Masonry. Prior to the
ceremonies, the masons with
their ladies and families
enjoyed dinner at the temple.

Pd . Pol. Adv .

BACK HOME
POMEROY - •Mr . and
Mrs. David Wiley, .Parkersburg, W. Va. have retiU"ned
from a two week vacation in
Florida . Their
small
daughter, Angela Rae,
visited her grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs . Wilbur Bailey;
Athens Road, during the
vacation time.

CWho'll help you fix the
rumbling plumbing?

,.

•

''

lt5 me again.
.J
figured out how
can keep our visits
tolOminutes each.''

w~ Ohio ~'!!!~Y Ba~

If you keep your calls to ten minutes
each, yo~;~ can talk to your faraway friends
more often. And by dialing direct, without
operator assistance, after 5 P.M., a
10-minute call to any state outside Ohio,
ex~ept Alaska or Hawaii, costs just $2.57
or less, plus tax. Prices are even lower after
11 P.M. and'on weekends. It takes a long time
to make a good' friend. For $2.57 or less,

BRADLEY HONORED
LOS ANGELES tUPI) Gen. Omar Bradley, the otlly
living U. S. five-star general,
was wheeled into the City
Council chambers Friday to
be presented a re!olulion or
appreciation. Bradley, 83,
s food to receive a copy o{ the
resolution and thank council
member,~ .

sl•o warned.
"Many area residents have
been told that we only serve
the Meigs Mines. which is not
true . We have ·and will go
anvwhere In this area ."
SEOEMS serv ice to much
of Meigs County was
discontinued early this year
when the Pomeroy station
was closed due to lack of
county finan cial support , also
depriving the county of long
distan ce out of area transfer
service.. Present plans call
for re~s tablishment of iri·
valid transfer service to the

]Masons honor·Raymond Jones

Southern Ohio

Pd. Pol. Adv.

POMF.HQY - Emerg ency
medical squad· service to
western Meigs County' faces
probable discontinuation and
the invalid transfer service
for Meigs County may no~
continue after 1976 if a twotenths mill is turned down by
voters Tuesday , according to
Rutland station chief Joan
Stewart.
"The levy ma y well fai l due
to the misinformation ci rculating among the public,"

take 10 minutes to keep a good friend.
Visit often, by phone.
Dial-direct rates apply on all Interstate calls (eKcluding
Alaska) completed from a residence or business phone wilhoul
operator assistance. They also apply on calls placed with an
opera! or from a residence or business phone where dial-direct

facilities are not available. For dial-direct rates 10 Hawaii. check
your operator. Dial-direct rates do not apply to t&gt;erson-lo-person.
coin, hotel-guest. credit ca rd or collect ~illls , or

llt

ca lls charged

to another number, because an operator muSt assist on such ca lls.

.Take ten minutes _,stay in touch.
! :

I.

@ohio Bell

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�14 - The Sundav Times. S.nlifll&gt;l. SWld•y, June 6,197ti

•

ELECT

Teenager hurt in
traffic accident
GALLIPOLIS - Ellubeth unidentified vehicle.
The Carnahan car struck
was slightly injured in 8 the front of the Perry car
lraflic accident al 7 p.m. causing il ·lo go off the left
Friday on County Road 45, · side of the highway into a
one and one tenth miles north guardrail. There was minor
of Rt . 124 in Meigs County. damage a~ no one was InThe Gallia-Meigs Post )ured or etted.
Stale Highway Patrol said
A Gailia County accident
Miss Mould was a passenger occurred on Rt: liO, seven
in a car driven by Krisly tenths ofa mile south of Rt. 35
Jones, 16, Rt . I, Dexter. Miss where an auto driven by
Jones lost control of the car Robert L. Cornwell, 62,
~n a curve in loose gravel.
GaiUpolls, stopped to make a
The vehicle ran off the right left turn.
side of the roadway into a
An auto driven by Huel M.
ditch and overturned. There Freeman, 59, Columbus,
was moderate damage. No attempted to avoid hitting the
charges were flied.
Cornwell car in the rear . She
Another Meigs County lost control of her vehicle
mishap occurred at 8:25p.m. which slid off the highway
on Rl. 33, one mile south of into a ditch. There was no
Rl. 681 where cars driven by contact between the two
Larry D. Carnahan, 44, Rt. 1, vehicles.
Long Bottom, and William
Thomas Perry, 50, Rt. I,
Athens, sideswiped when
attempting to pulled into the
passing lane to pass an
J . Mould , 15, Rt. I, Dexter,

Voters
asked
to help

FOR
STATE
REPRESENTATIVE

Republican
92nd
District

Education, Business,.
Farming and Labor.

AStrong Voice for

MIDDLEPORT - Village
officials reminded Mid·
dleport residents today of the
3 mi.ll operation expen1e levy
which will be on the ballot
JlUle 8. Everyone is OrBed to
support this levy in order that
street lighting may be continued and more street
maintenance and
improvements accomplished.
Mayor Fred Hoffman and
Council make lhe following
statement:
"This levy would provide
$24,000 per year over a fiveyear period for operation
expense of the village.
"Of the $24,000, $12,000 per
year would be used to pay the
entire electric bill for the
street lights, approximately
$1,000 per month . Residential
customers are paying 40
cents per month and commercial customers are
paying $1 per month on their
electric bill at the present
lime for street lights. This
does not pay the entire bill, as
the village still pays a
balance or approximately
$3110 per month. The electric
company wishes .to discontinue this collection from
their customers so the ~IUage
would then have to pay the
enti~

- TheSlUlday Tirnes -Sentinei,Sunda)·

Westem Meigs may lose E-R service
RACINE - Del Reeves and
the Good Time Charlies, a
country music show. will be
prese n~ at Southern High
School here on Saturday, July
3 al a p.m.
Pete Simpson of the local
fire department said advance
tickets, $5 for adults and $2.50
for students, may be purchased at Dutton Drug Store,
Middleport , Kay's Beauty
Salon, Middleport; Bob's CB
Radio, Gallipolis, Meigs Inn,
Paul's Barber Shop, Racine ,
and from any member of the
Racine Fire ·Departmebl .
Tickets at the door will be $6
and $3.50.
The Fire Department will
also sponsor the annual 4th of
July parade to be held on
Sunday, July 4.
At II a.m. comb:ned church
services will be held on the

football field at the high
school, In case of rain they
will be' held in the gym; at
noon barbecue chicken will
be served at the fire station,
the menu also includes slaw
baked beans, ice cream, cak~
•nd beverages; 12:30 a
garden tractor pull behind
the fire sta tion; 1:45 p.m. a
flag raising at the hi g~

DRIVER SKIPPED
. GALI.IPOI.IS - A hil-sklp
accident was investigated at
9:40 p.m. Friday by city
police here at 44 Olive St.
Officers said an unknown
vehicle struck a parked car
owned by Lawrence E.
Saunders, Rt. I, Crown City.
There
wa s
moderate
damage.

school; 2p.m.the parade will
·leave froni the high school; 4
p.m . games at the junior
high; 7:30p.m. a hymn sing
at the high school; 10 p.m.
fireworks display at the
junior high.
The parade will be in the
following categories and cash
awllJ'ds will be given in all
categories with the exception
of marching units and bicycle
winners who will be given
trophies.
There will .be a first and
second place winner In the
best Bicentennial theme,
church group; first and
second In best . Bicentennial,
non-church; first place In
open commercial, first place
in best marching unit and
firs t, second and third for
best decorated bike.

An invitation is extended to

ali thase who wish to par·
ticipate. Those who wish to
to lake part are to call
Simpson at 949-2118 after 5
p.m.

/

/

STEEl. PRICES UP
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - U.
S. Steel Corp ., the country's
largest steelmaker, says it
will raise prices $20 to $25 a
ton on several lines of
products, effective July 16.
Another Pittsburgh · based
major steel producer, Jones
&amp; Laughlin Steel Corp., also
says it will raise prices July
16, by $20 to $30 a ton on its
structural steel ·products .
Both companies announced
the increases Friday, and
other major steel producers
were expected to follow sui I
shortiy.

TOGETHER AGAIN - The 11 children of the late
Willi~ A. and Edna Garen Will were together Monday,

(absent was Louise Fisher Will, Greenfield) and standing
Willlam L. Will; Pomeroy RD; Milton G. Will, Canai
Winchester; Philip F. Will, Columbus; Victor L. Will ,
Canal Winchester; Montgomery Will, Canal Winchester ;
John M. Will, at home, and Roland G. Will, Lexington ,
Mass.

Memortai Day, at the Will Homestead In the Telll!s
community. Seated, 1-r, are Betty F. Loucks Mary Will
Kilpatrick, and Florence Ferrel WUI, all of Columbcs

~·Will family

HERE FOR WEEK
POMEROY - T. Sgt. and
Mrs. Sherman Roberts and
Sherri
of
daughter,
Mrs. Juanita Soghikian, Oklahoma City, Okla. spent a
Sandra Soghiklan, Mr. and week here with their parents,
Mrs. John R. Beaver and son Mr . and Mrs. Sherman !.
Brad, and Roland G. Will, Roberts, Pomeroy, Route 4,
Lexington, Mass.; Mrs. and Mr. and Mrs . Walter
Helen
K.
Wilson France, Rutland . The family
of Rensselaer , N. Y.; came especially for the
Mr . and Mrs. James wedding of Mrs. Roberts'
Hedges and children, Jill, brother, Greg France, to Hila
Kile and Kurt of Lancaster, Birchfield.
Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Mullen and children, Shannon, Patrick and Christopher
SEEN ANO HEARD
of Uthopolis; Mr. and Mrs.
GALLIPOLIS
·Miss
John Nicholson and son,
Hively
of
Gallipolis
is a
I.otlle
Jeffrey, Stafford, Ohio, and
surgical
patient
at
Holzer
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Wysong,
Medical Center.
Thornville, Ohio.

reunited at home

~:

POMEROY - The II Will and sons Michael and
ehildren of the late William Brett, Canal Winchester ; Mr .
A. and Edna Garen Will and and Mrs. Jack Kilplttrick,
Their families were reunited Mr . and Mrs. Fred Ferrell,
idonday, May 31 at the "Will Mr . Donald Ferrell and son
~omestead" in the Texas
William, Mrs . Betty Loucks
Community with John Will as and daughter Jane, Mr . and
b&lt;ist. Present were John M. Mrs. Gene Bor ton and
,Will, Mr. and Mrs . William L. children, Bridget and Kerry,
)Viii, Mr. and Mrs. Dan T. Bexley.
)Viii, William M. Will,
Also, Philip )'. Will, Mr .
Pomeroy; Mrs , Louise Fisher and Mrs . Michael Bordner
and son Milton l.ee of Green- and children , Scott and
iield, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Alison, Colwnbus; Mr. and
Montgomery Will, Mr. and Mrs. J;:dward B. Greco,
l\frs. Vl~lor I.. Will,' Mr. and Patricia Greco, Louise Greco
Mrs. Milton G. Will, Mr . and and Steven Greco, Roslyn
.¥rs. Thomas Krauss, James Heights, New York.

NOTICE

. GALI.IPOI.IS - Raymond

or Ohio, in ceremonies at the ·

M. Jones, member of Mor .. MasQD ic temple here .·

ning Dawn Lodge No. 7
Thursday evening was
a\Varded a 60-year presentation by the Free and Accepted Masons, Grand Lodge

;: .

) LLVlQ.

4• 1q7 6

'"0 1&amp;&amp;6

10 7

d 1q57 -

ELECT
NEIL McMAHON

a.Vl

'

DEMOCRAT

SHERIFF

bill.

' Pd. Pol. Adv.

This would be very difficult, unless 'additional
revenue is forthcoming. This
$4.80 yearly would be
deducted from residential
customers electric bill, so
the slight Increase In taxes
would be offset by the
decrease in the electric bill.
"Also, $12,000 yearly would
be provided by this levy for
matntenance and
improvement of streets. The
price of materials for street
repair have increased just as
every thing else has and the
village does not have the
money to properly maintain
streets and pave those which
do
need
resurfacing.
Blacktop for street repair
cools $18 per ton and one ton
does not go very far .
"During the past two years,
we have made every effort to
conserve money and this year
we have only one employee
being paid from the Street
Department.
"We have several ~!reels In
the village which need
resW"facing and others which
need patching. Some of this
could be done with this added
revenue.
"We feel that OW" street
department has done an
excellent job wilh the money
which they have had to wort
with, but they could do much
more if money were
available.
"The cost to the average
taxpayer would\ be small
compared In what could be
accomplished with this added
revenue .. We need your help
and ask for your vote and
support for this 3-mill
operation e~pense levy."

county afler are·a volunteer
units n•quested the county
commissioners to financially
support the system.
"The ex treme northern
areas or the cowtty are no
longer served by SEOEMS .. "
Stewart said, 11 but anyone
wilh an emergency can still
call SEOEMS if In doubt of
which squad serves their
area because SEOEMS will
lake the informnlion, then
notify the correct squad , be it
SEOEMS or Vohu• teer."
The Hullnnd unit hns two
e merg e ncy ve hi c le s
·avai lable from its station.
-:-:·:·:-:-:.:-:-:-:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:·::::::::::::::&gt;:::::::·:::::·:::: Although a charge is made 10
STRIKE DELAYED
persons receiv ing U1c serDATES GIVEN
A strike by some 5,000 .
vice,
the emergency medical
POMEROY
Trans World Airlines flight Rehearsals for " Ring All te chni cians pr ovid e the ir
attendants, which threatened the Bells of Freedom" to be services free-of-chnrgc. The
to shut down the airline, was presented at8 p.m. on July money collected goes for
postponed late Friday night. 4 at Royal Oak Park will be
Contract ta lks continued be- held for the nut month on
twee n TWA and the a t- Tuesdays at 8 p.m. and on
tendan ts' union. The Trans- Wednesday s at 8:15 p.m.
port Workers Union had Mrs. Harvey Van Vranken,
threatened to strike at 12:01 director, urges that all
a.m. EDT Saturday unless an members of the 48 voice
agreement on a new contract choir be present for the
was reached, the UP! said. rehearsals. At the park the ·
The stewarns and steward- program will he presented
esses have been working on the basketball court
wi thout a contract ror the with mcmben of the choir
pasl!Omonths and IBiks have seated on haywagons .
been Underway for 14 months.

Worshipful Brother Jones
became a Master Mason in
1914 at Patriot Lodge where
he served as Worshipful
Master. He then transferred
his membership into Morning
Dawn Lodge No . 7here where
he served as Master. During
his long membership; he also
served as High Priest of
Gallipolis Chapter No . 72,
RAM; Past · Master of
· Moriah
Council
No .
32,
Royal
and
Select Masters; Eminent
Commander of The Rose
Commandery, Knight
Templar or Ohio and sub·
sequently became a Knight of
the York Cross of Honour.
Thereafter he served as
Secretary of Morning Dawn
No. 7 for 25 years in addition
to holding the Recorder
position of Moriah Council
No. 32 for· some lime .

Grand Lodge of Ohio was
represented by Right Worshipful Brother Clifford
Edwards, District Deputy
Grand Master of the 12th
Masonic District. Also at' tending was Dr. and Mrs.
Catherine McMaster · of
Cincinnati, daughter of
Brother Raymond and Mrs.
Jones . Mrs. Jones was
presented a bouquet of roses
by the brothers of Morning

"'JUlpmenl and fuel.
.. Although everyone Is
under
''
heavy
tax
burden ,
the
average
fami ly's tux won't In·
crease as much as the price
of a six-pack of pop," Stewart
said . "The cost of medical
Insurance policy would be
many times grea ter than this
·amount to make emergency
service av1tilable year
uround, 24 hours a day ."
The Hu tland unit was
es1!tblishcd In ()('Lober 1974. It
was recently commended tor
nearly "breaking even" In
station cosl• in 1975 by the
Sf.OEMS Bonnl of Trustees.
','We are now here and hope
lo stay here to service Meigs
Cou11l y. But good public
support is 11eeded," Mrs.
Stewart Slt id.

ELECT
NEIL
McMAHON·
SHERIFF

:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:::;:;:::::::::;:::::::::·:::::::

- Proposed Ideas ·and plans for bett erment of office .

- Gain support and respect of the Citizens of Gallla
County .
- Answer all complaints quickly .
- Patrol the County roads on a staggered basis .
~ Gallla County hulls share of Hard Drugs. I tee! that
law enforcement should be concentrated upon the
pusher, not the ill advised or sick user. If possible the
dept . should work with the County Community
Mental Health Cllnlc to offer the user help.
- BeHer training of ofliclals of the dept. Use State and
Federal Agoncy to help .
- The deputies themselvts should be representative of
government that our Citizens should feel proud of .

Dawn No. 7 in recognition of
her long devotion 'to Free
Masonry. Prior to the
ceremonies, the masons with
their ladies and families
enjoyed dinner at the temple.

Pd . Pol. Adv .

BACK HOME
POMEROY - •Mr . and
Mrs. David Wiley, .Parkersburg, W. Va. have retiU"ned
from a two week vacation in
Florida . Their
small
daughter, Angela Rae,
visited her grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs . Wilbur Bailey;
Athens Road, during the
vacation time.

CWho'll help you fix the
rumbling plumbing?

,.

•

''

lt5 me again.
.J
figured out how
can keep our visits
tolOminutes each.''

w~ Ohio ~'!!!~Y Ba~

If you keep your calls to ten minutes
each, yo~;~ can talk to your faraway friends
more often. And by dialing direct, without
operator assistance, after 5 P.M., a
10-minute call to any state outside Ohio,
ex~ept Alaska or Hawaii, costs just $2.57
or less, plus tax. Prices are even lower after
11 P.M. and'on weekends. It takes a long time
to make a good' friend. For $2.57 or less,

BRADLEY HONORED
LOS ANGELES tUPI) Gen. Omar Bradley, the otlly
living U. S. five-star general,
was wheeled into the City
Council chambers Friday to
be presented a re!olulion or
appreciation. Bradley, 83,
s food to receive a copy o{ the
resolution and thank council
member,~ .

sl•o warned.
"Many area residents have
been told that we only serve
the Meigs Mines. which is not
true . We have ·and will go
anvwhere In this area ."
SEOEMS serv ice to much
of Meigs County was
discontinued early this year
when the Pomeroy station
was closed due to lack of
county finan cial support , also
depriving the county of long
distan ce out of area transfer
service.. Present plans call
for re~s tablishment of iri·
valid transfer service to the

]Masons honor·Raymond Jones

Southern Ohio

Pd. Pol. Adv.

POMF.HQY - Emerg ency
medical squad· service to
western Meigs County' faces
probable discontinuation and
the invalid transfer service
for Meigs County may no~
continue after 1976 if a twotenths mill is turned down by
voters Tuesday , according to
Rutland station chief Joan
Stewart.
"The levy ma y well fai l due
to the misinformation ci rculating among the public,"

take 10 minutes to keep a good friend.
Visit often, by phone.
Dial-direct rates apply on all Interstate calls (eKcluding
Alaska) completed from a residence or business phone wilhoul
operator assistance. They also apply on calls placed with an
opera! or from a residence or business phone where dial-direct

facilities are not available. For dial-direct rates 10 Hawaii. check
your operator. Dial-direct rates do not apply to t&gt;erson-lo-person.
coin, hotel-guest. credit ca rd or collect ~illls , or

llt

ca lls charged

to another number, because an operator muSt assist on such ca lls.

.Take ten minutes _,stay in touch.
! :

I.

@ohio Bell

.,

•

{\
'

..

J

&lt;

•

�Newest Ford ads hit Reagan
with his troops issue 1lown

16 - The Sunday Times -Sentinel , Sundil}. Jn nt• 6, 197fl
~---------------- ---------- 1

! · Area Deaths
WILliAM C. MASSIE
GALLI POLIS - Will iam

!
I

Sat urday .
He wa~ born April 29, 1900,

In VInton , son of the tate G. F. .
and
Ca thryn
McGhee

Car ter Ma ssie, 68, a resident
of 345 Fourth Ave . died al l : 15
a.m. Saturday at his home

Richards.

following an apparent heart

He married

Marga ret

Elizabe th Evans ol Whales in
1917 . She prececed him in
deal h.

attack . He ha d been in failing
health one month .

Mr . Massie was a retired

teacher and super in tendent

Su rv iv or s Inc lude two
sis ters, Mrs. Lena Booth
Myers, Gallipolis and Mrs.

in both the Ga llia and
Lawren ce Count:v School
Systems . Hi s last superin tendency was in the term er
Nor th Ga l l ia School Dis tri ct.
He retired there in the early

Salty Heber , Wellston. One
sister preceded him in death .

60s .

Typographical
Dayton.

Mr . Richards was a retired
printer and a member of th e

Fot.towing his retirement ,
he establ ished the Massie

Union

in

He was a member of the
Presbyterian Church in
Cleveland, and a l'flember of

Realty Company , which he

operated fhP t.v;;t eiaht vears .

He was born Feb . 2, 1908 in

the Modern Woodmen Lodge
in Gallipolis.

Greasy Ridge Community of
Lawrence County , son of the
L. Massie and

Private

late Otha

f uneral

services

at the McCoy -Moore Funeral
Hom e, Vinton wi th Rev .
Jerr y Neal officiating . Burial
will be in Vinton Memor ial

Park .
There wil l be no calling

He had resided in the

Syracuse Nursing Home the
past several year s. Friends
may call at Ewing 's Funeral
Home in Pmeroy 6 p.m .

Sun day .

Graveside ser vices will be

held 2 p.m. Monday at
Glouster Ce metery .

on Greasy RidQe with Re v .

Earl Hink le and Rev . Wil son

Wahl off iciating . Burial will
be in church ce metery .
Friends may call at the

CHE STER -

Wood

$27.96

, . JIWRIY WT.

SIOITS,T.

Emmet and Bertha Parker
Hecm( , he was born March ·II ,

1895al Chesler . He graduated

PRO
TBtiiSSOCKS

from
Ohio
Northern
University and marri ed Mary

VERBA G. STEVERS
GALLIPOLIS - Verba
Gertrude Sievers. 89 , of 758
First Ave .. died at 3 p.m.
Frida y at her horne . She had

Kenton,

Oh io.

He

was

asc

a

member of Malia Lodge,
F&amp;AM.
Surviving besides his wife

are five sons; Dale. Wich ita .
Kan .; Donald, Farmington,
Ill. : Robert and Lor;n , both ol
Rockford . Ill.. and Francis of

weeks .

She an d her husband

operated a grocery store · in
Crown City several years .

HICK'S RIG.

$1.06
IIOIISEWAB IBT. .

Burlington ; four daugh ters ,

She was born March 26,
1887 , in Ga ll ia County ,

Mary Chaney , Rockford ;

daugh ter of the late Rev . Ira

Tex .; Myrna Spiedel, Vinton ,
and Bertha
Gladman,

S teve r ~. who preceded her In

Jones, Mar ion, Ohio, 26
grandchildren and eight
great.grandch lldren .

Nellora

and Martha Fillinger Sheets.
She married Lester A.

Davi s,

Smithfield,

Funeral services were held

slep·daughfer, Mrs , Hasklll
!Bel va ) Wells , Gallipolis;
two grandchildren, and three
greal .grandchlldren ; a sister

at lhe Lunnlng Chapel In
Burlington with the Rev.
Laurence Garrett officiating .

HICK'S
RIG.
$1.67

99(

he said, " is irreversible."

/101/SIWAII · , . ,

prin!t. Sjzes

member of

secretary . a

Richards, 76, a resident of
Cincinnati, and a native of
Vinton, di ed In a Cincinnati

H.ck's

Rev .

member of

Siloam Baptist Church.
Glenwood United Methodist
Funeral services will be Church, Columbus, so.year
held I p.m. Monday at member of Minear Chapter
Mercerville Baptist Church 274, Order of Eastern Stars,
with Rev . Charles Lusher Guysville, Ohio. .
officiating . Burial will be In
She w~s born tn Chester,
Ridgetawn Cemetery , the daughter of the late .Davld
Mercerv ill e.
S. · Kimes and Ida Carr
Fri ends may call at the Kimes .
Waugh - Halle y . Wood
She Is survived by fwo
Funeral Home from 3·5 and 7- brothers, Ralph and Chase
9 p.m. Sunday.
Kimes, two sisters, Mrs. Ruth
Jones and Mrs. Mary Orre,
GEORGE G. RICHARDS
all of Columbus and several
GALLIPOLIS - George G. nephews .

S.M.l.

$317

Sc i oto Crest Convalescent

sister preceded her In death .

Payments made

CLOTHING
D£1'1.

LlTPERMANENT

eiS.eS.ReGIIITU

HIQ('S
IIG.

$2.09

COSMITIC
/ST.

to Ohio vets

THIS IS HOW IT WAS
TIJURMAN - Suzanne Cherrington of Thurman Ohio a
member of The Gallia County Historical Society offers the
following item of Hist.ory :
Mrs. Paul E. Smith, daughter of Frank Ruff is the granddaughter of Captain Joshua Roof who served in 'the Civil War
as a second lieutenant, then a first lieutenant and was
commissioned Captain at the close of the war, He was one of
the guarda at the execution of Mrs. Surratt in Washington D. C.
She was hanged as one of the accomplices of John Wilkes
Booth.
. Captain Joshua Roof is buried in the old cemetery in the
VIllage of Centrevtlle, Gallia County, Ohio.
The name "Roof•: was changed to "Ruff" many years ago.

BURIAL INSURANCE

$2,000.00
No M•dlcallxam Required.

to 15

Cll' rltll •• IN 111111 wltlllll .. , • .,,,, aiMIAit•
If rural gfvc direction s to residence.

INVISTOIJ HIIITAGI
P.O. Box 196, McArthur, Ohio

Heck's Reg. •3.99

$4 .99

Funeral services wil l be

Mcnday at 1 p.m. at he Glen·
wood United Methodist
hospital around 1:30 a.m. Church Chapel with the Rev .
Herman A. Emmert and the
Rev . R. Rober! Kimes of·
flclallng . Burial will be In
Sunset Cemetery, Columbus.
Friends may calf at the
Schoedlnger Hilltop 'Chapel,
3030 W. Broad St., Columbus,
Sunday 2 to 4 and 7 fo 9 p.m.
COLUMBUS - More than
382,000 bonus payments have
been made to Ohio Vietnam
"TOO SOON"
Era veterans and next-of-kin
OAKLAND,
Calif. (UP! ) of deceased vererans since
the first check was issued two Betty Ford says she thinks "it
years ago accordin g to is a little too soon" to elect a
Commission Director Ran- woman vice president.
Campaigning in California
dall W. Sweeney.
In Gallia County, 642 Friday for her husband, Mrs.
claims were paid totaling Ford was asked her views on
$24 2, 046 .56. Other area women in high office, "I'm
couli ties were : Meigs, 612 definitely in favor · of women
claim s ror $218,588.28; in government/' Mrs. Ford
Athens, 1,417 claims for said. "And I think a female
$570,201.46 ; Jackson, 912 vice president would be fine.
claims for ·$330,526.15 and But I think it's a little too soon
Lawrence, I ,477 claims for to vole for a female for vice
president.''
$543,353:0&lt;l.

ZIP-LOC BAGS

dolls. DCKron
poly"ter and co~on
bltndt. Solids oM

Center, Hilliard, Ohio. Miss
Kimes was a re fired

Five brothers and one

we~III

I•"Uitl gown&amp;~ bob~

MISS ETA KIMES
HILLIARD - Miss Eta
Kimes, 87, died Friday at

Isaac and Claude Sheets, both
of Gallipol is.

RJJ$1

SLEEPWEAR
Choos• from

Clothing Dept.

BID PILLOWS ot

Thete fluffy docron pillo-...~ W1!or the QyPonl "Red Lobel", o sign quolilr or
ih best. These pillows are 100"' Virg in DuPont docron polytsler frber lill.
Pamper yourulf whh a pillow thai's non-allergenic . mot resistonl . resilier~t ood
odot leu.

Heck's Reg .
$3.99 .

1501.

CLAIROL

JERGENS
LOTION

BALSAM COLOR

~~::s $ J28
$1.79
lOSMITIC IIIPT.

GIRL'S
HALTER TOPS

~97
CLOtHING DEPT .

Wri'ISDUI&amp;

s138
HICK'S lEG.

$1.17

COSMETIC
.IIIPT.

\

Heck's Reg.
88' ea.

CLOTHING DEPT.

oz.
_,_.
9

BABY
POWDER

76C
HICK'S RIG.

1jd'lllll.ll\
1

ltuhr
I'' J\l'lil 'I'

~

$1.01

COSMETIC,., "-

YINTILATID
Will

BUCKET SEAT
CUSHION

NIWFROM MIRACLI-GRO®

STERIS THERAPY'm
FOR HOUSE PLANTS

$4"

$118

$'·"

Heck's Reg.

HICK'S
RIG.

. His heir apparent for the
speaker's chair is Thomas
"Tip" O'Neill, the House
Democratic leader from
Massachusetts. He called
Albert "one of the great
speakers of all Ume" and said
he had been "maligned" by ·
critics calling him weak.
O'Neill said he woUld
foi-mally announce his own
candidacy for speaker on
Monday, backed by 165
"lUlsollcited" endorsements
from House members. But
White House sources said
they expect rivals to give·
O'Neill a battle.

One possible challenger is
Rep . Phillip Burt.on of
California, leader of the
House Democratic Caucus. In
any event a scramble is
certain for the secondranking position if O'Neill
moves up, with Democrats
Burton, Richard Bolling of
Missouri, John McFall of
California
the
main
contenders and several
others.
In a retirement announcement released at the Capitol
and in Oklahoma, Albert
said, "During my leadership,
the HoWle has become a more

.$1.55
Hardware Dept;

said that he would send
American troops to Rhodesia.
On Thursday, he clarified
that : He said they could be
observers or advisers . What
does he think happened' ln
Vietnam ·! ... When you vote
next Tuesday, remember,
Governor Reagan could not
start a war - President
, Reagan could."
Reagan's Callfornla cam-·
paign director Lyn Nofziger
asked television and radio
stations not to "run libelous
corrunercials by the Ford
campaign committee
accusing Ronald Reagan of
being ready to start a war in
Rhodesia ."
Nofziger also wired Ford to
ask him to pull the commercials, saying, "This Is a dirty
trick ploy beneath the dignity
of the presidency ."
He also complained to the
Federal Communications
Commission and the Fair
Ca mpaign Practices

At the White House, President Ford called Albert "a
very dear friend of mine and
I'm of course sorry th11t he is
going to leave public service
enough," he said.
':I am now 68 years old, in ... He'll be missed."
O'Nelll, releasing a
good health and there are
statement
through aides,
other things I want to do
.
said
:
"History
will record
while I am young enough to
him
as
one
of
the great
do them. I want to spend
. more time with my family speakers of all time. He has
and life-long friends. I want been maligned by those who
to be close to them because I cover Washington , but under
love them dearly. I shall Carl Albert, we replaced
return to the scenes of my President Nixon and Vice
childhood in Oklahoma and President Agnew ...
live in the community where I · "We have passed at least 50
historic
pieces
of
grew up."
legislation ,"
Albert rose from boyhood
poverty in rural Oklahoma to ·
win a Phi Beta Kappa key ; a
Rhodes Scholarship, a law
degree and a congressional
United States did not know in career that brought him one
advanceofSyria'sinvasion of step from the presidency
Lebanon and that Washington when first Richard Nixon and
opposed it. Kissinger said then Gerald Ford briefly
U.S. policy "has been to lacked vice presidents. He
oppose outside Interven- has said the prospect of
tiOn.")
succeeding to the White
• Jumblatt also said he had House gave him ·his worst
conferred by telephone with
Palestinian guerrilla chief :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;.;.;:;:;:;::·:·:·
Vasser Arafat, Libyan EXEMPTIONS OFFERED
Premier Abdel Salam Jalloud
GALLIPOLIS - Clly
and Algerian and Iraqi school board officials
officials, and that a Saturday reminded clly
"tripartite delegation" would district property ownertl 65
fly to Damasclll! to plead the years or older that they are
leftists' case. He did not eligible lor homestead
specify who would be exemptions, providing they
included in the delegation. meet certain criteria under
The 12,000 Syrian Army the Homestead Exemption
regulars occupying the broad Act.
eastern Bekaa valley and the
However, owners must
northern Akkar .region dug file lor reduction of
into their positions but made valuation of their property
no move to adv.ance further at the Gallla County
against the leftist forces who Auditor's office.
have so far retreated before
:::::::::::::::::·:::::::::·:·:·:::::::=::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;
every Syrian move .
democratic and open institution," and noted he had
served tor three decades.
"For my part, that is long

Syrian troops dig in to stay

LADIES'

Burial was in Aspen Grove

Huntington , W . Va _. , and

. At• I

LETTUCE CRISPER

conoli

Cemetery.

Mrs.

James I Lui a) Landon, Table
Rock. Neb .: Okey Sheets.

.

PLASTIC

Burlington ; a sister, Carol

death in November, 1960.
Surviv ing are a son, Paul
Stever s, Dunbar, W. Va .; one

I

DOW

asking him to withdraw the
ads .
As the controversy hit the
two candidates for the
Republican presidential
nomination , Democrats
plugged away in Ohio and
New Jersey before next
Tuesday 's triple-header with
California.
Reagan was favored in the
winner-take-all race for
California's 167 delegates on
the COP side and Gov.
,Edmund Brown Jr. was
expected to take most of the
280 Democratic delegates at
stake in the Golden State.
Reagan, arriving to
campaign in Ohio, said the
Ford commercial ' s
representation of his views is
"an aboolute fabrication. It 's
a misstatement of fact ... I
wish they had campaigned on
a higher plane."
In the Ford commercial a
voice
says :
"Last
Wednesday, Ronald Reagan

Conunittee.
Reagan told reporters in
Colwnbus, Ohio, his original
statement on Rhodesia was a
, mistake and he would not use
troops .
In the Democratic race ,
Jimmy
Carter,
characteristically taking
nothing for granted , tried to
prove himself among the
ethnics ·of industrial New
Jersey .
But Ohio was the Jroving
ground - and even front runnner Carter plunned to
return Sunday and Monday.
.Ford was going there
Stuinday for two days to
offset his anticipated loss to
Reagan in California.
Democrat Morris Udall
stayed in Ohio, U1e last slate
in which 'he has a chance of
beating Carter after eight
second-place finishes . Frank
Church, who has bea ten
Carter four times, was
dogged by 11 viral infedion
but also campaigned in the
Buc~eye State, seeking votes
from the same anti-Carter
voters as Udall.
Edmund G. Brown Jr., the
popular
governor
of
Ca lifornia, confident of
taking a majQrlty of his
slate's 280 delegates, plam1ed
election-eve campaigning In
New Jersey, where Carter Is
facing an uncommitted slate
favorable to Brown or Huber t
Humphrey.
Humphrey
was
in
Minnesota Saturday
accepting the endorsement of
the Democratic-FarmerLabor Party for a fifth Senate
term.
Going into the weekend,
Ford had 822 delegates to
Reagan's 654, with 132
uncommitted.
On
the

House power fight for job is predicted
By ELMER LAMMI
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Speaker Carl Albert, 68, annolUlced Saturday he will
retire at year's end and go
home tn Bug Tussle, Okla.,
raising prospects of a HoWle
leadership power struggle
during the Wayne Hays sex
scandal.
The ~foot-! inch Rhodes
Scholar with the sing-song
drawl said he had served long
enough - 30 years in
Congress, five as speaker and had achieved his highest
career goal. tlMy decision,"

170Z.

BATHROOM
CLEA•R

Sel tz oli April 19, 1918 at

been in failing hea!th two

j

M8405

Works. formerly of Chester .

the fun er al hom e.

l•

HICK'SRIG.

$6.51

Leon C.

died April 4 at the Burlington
Medica l Center, Itttnols.
The son of the late Omar

by Waterloo Lodge wilt ·be
held af 7: 30 p.m. Monday af

'l

~~L.~ll~N~0-~1~9__________S~U~ND_AY~,~MA~Y~6,~1~
97~6--------~--~
PA=GE~l7

the Burlington Wilbert Vault

The body wi ll li e in state at

a

$2299

HICK'S RIG.
$2.97

HICK'S
IIG.

Hecox, Bl .year -old founder of

the church one hour before
the servi ce. Masonic servi ce

was

CASSETTE RECORDO

LEON C. HECOX

Funera l Home f rom 2 to 9
p.m . Monday .

She

GEIRAL ELECmC

$222

Saturday
morning
in
Veterans Memoria l Hospital.

held at 2 p.m. Tuesday af fhe
MI. Pleasant Baptist Church

brothers ,

GYM SHORTS

HALLEY HAMBEL
POMEROY
Hall ey
Hambel , 83, Glouster, died

Lrxlge . and Wilgus Grange .
Funeral se rvices wi ll be

three

cono•

hours.

ol the MI. Pleasant Baptist
ChurctJ . j ocated on Greasy
Ridg e, Water loo Masonic

and

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUNDAY ·&amp; MONDAY

will be held II a.m. Tuesday

Alcosta Dunfee Massie .
He is survived by his wife ,
Jewe ll Myers , a daughter ,
Mrs . Keith (Dori s) Getteys of
Sou th Poin t ; two sons ,
Herman Massie of Columbus
and Gordon Massie of Cir .
clevi ll e; two grandchildren ;
two sis ter s, Mrs . Gladys
Callicoat of Iron ton, and Mrs .
Ernest (Ve rna Shaff er ,
Ironton .
TwO brothers
preceded him in death ,
Mr . Massie was a member

Waugh . Halley

By IRA R. ALLEN
United P~s Intemallnal
The Republican
presidential campaign look a
turn toward the nasty
Salw-day with the unveiling
of President Ford's new
broadcast commercia ls
aimed at Ronald Reagan's
slated willingness to send
troops to Rhodesia .
A Reagan aide called the
commercials, to be aired
starting SUnday, three days ·
before the
California
TillS IS ONE OF 1WO VEHICLES wrecked in one week in the area along SR 124 that • primary, "reminisCent of the
residents of Syracuse complained about recently to village council. They called the area
dirty trick tactics that we
hazardous, with some justiflcaUon. The area they refer to is said to be too narrow. Residents
threw out of the White
contend that it should be widened four feet for approximately ISO feet. Contacts are going to
House;" and wired Ford
be made with State Highway of!lcials and elected officials.

By DOYLE M~MANUS
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UP! )
- Syrian forces ·set up a
headquarters in the foothills
of Mount Lebanon Saturday
and dug in frontline positions
for an apparent extended
stay.
Moslem leftists
appealed to the U.N. for help
in getting the Syrians to
leave.
Moslem Lefitsl and
Palestinian leaders met
under Soclalisi leader Kamal
Jwnblatt and sent an appeal
to U.N. Secretary General
Kurt Waldheim saying the
Syrians were "preparaing a
horrible massacre" and
asking his help in getting the
Syrian troops out of Lebanon.
Ul'l correspondent Michael
Ross toured the Syrian-held
Bekaa and reported that the
occupying army set up a
headquarters at the Lebanese
air base at Riyak, ·14 miles
from their. forward positions
in the Mount Lebanon

foothills and 34 miles east ·of
Beirut.
Jeeps and armored
personnel carriers roared up
and down the roads leading
into the base and bulldozers
dug roadside emplacements
for the two dozen tanks
stationed in the immediate
area.
Maj. Malunoud Mattar, an
officer in the Syriansponsored "Vanguard of the
Lebanese Arab Army"-a
new group the Syrians have
formed from Lebanese forces
they overtook in their
advance
explained
Damascus' strategy,
The Syrians' aiffi, Mattar
told Ross, is "to move slowly,
neutralizing areas first by a
show of force, then by a
threat of force and as a last
resort by using force
sternly."
Farther south in the Bekaa,
a leftist soldier 111anning a

roadblock adffiitted that if the
Syrians attacked his position ,
"we would ask them to turn
hack, But if they insisted,
well,
we 'd
have
to

surrender.''
The leftist parties asked
Waldheim "to intervene im·
mediately to stop the invasion
of our country and demand
the withdrawal of the Syrian
forces."
"This military invasion has
taken place without any legal
justification and without any
request from a responsible
Lebanese authority," the
message to Waldheim said.
"Instead of restoring order,
this (Syrian ) army is
preparing
a
horrible
massacre of the Lebanese
and Palestinian peoples," the
message said.
(AI the U.N ., Secretary of
State Henry A. Kissinger
conferred with Waldheim and
said afterwards that the

moments in public life, and
some critics rated him a
weak leader who often
duck ed controversial
decisions.
.
Some of that criticism
stemmed from the fact the
Democratic • dominated
House could override few of
Ford's vetos. Other critics
said Albert tried and failed tc
persuade Hays last week to
resign a key committee
chairmanship pending
investigation of Elizabeth
Ray's mistres!Hln~he payroll
charges. O'Neill failed at the
same tasll .
Supporters said the critics
mislUlderstood Albert, that
his conciliatory manner
masked a shrewd political
tactician . But Albert felt the
b!lrbs and said early this year
that 1975 had been "a
miserable year, one of the
most frustrating I've seen" raising speculation he would
retire
despite
his
dlsclalrQers.

All agree
about Hays
WASHINGTON (UP!) House Democrats and
possibly Wayne Hays himself
are agreed: He should step
down as chairman of the
sensitive Administration
Commitree because of the
Elizabeth Ray affair . But
they're fussing over just how
it should be. done.
Hays' future in the power
structure of the House of
Representatives, where he is
now near the top, ls at stake.
The Ohio Democrat is
expected to offer to step aside
at a meeting of the committee
to be held Wednesday or
Thursday as a face-saving
response to ·his admitted
affair with Miss Ray, who
was on the committee's
1
payroll.
II would be an offer the
Democrats cquldn'l refuse.

marshalled his forces in three profound effect on the
early.and successful primary decisions made by the
batt I e s - Iowa , New WJcommitted delegates" at
Hampshire and Florida- to the July convention in New
boost
his
fledgling York City,
candidac·y, the state · that
His two challengers here,
has come to symbolize Sen. Frank Church and Rep.
Middle America similarly Morris Udall, both agree if
had to be won, and won Carter wins Ohio he will be
convincingly, at the dramatic virtually unstoppable at the
finish .
convention .
This is what Carter is
ThUll, more than any other
looking for as he has state, this is Carter's "big
repeatedly barnstormed the casino" where he hnpes that
state, devoting far more "' by winning the lion's share of
personal time to Ohio than to the delegates- perhaps as
the two other remaining many as 100-he will be
primaries also tn be held placed within easy reach of
Tuesday in California and the magic 1,505 delegates
New Jersey.
needed to capture the
"This is the important nomination.
one," he has told voters here,
And the impact of Ohio,
"because it will have a together with a good showing

in California and in New
Jersey, will be "a convincing
argument"
to
the
uncommitted, according to
Carter, that he has earned the
nomination.
Moreover, Ford's expected
win here over Reagan will
demonstrate
that
he
commands the support of the
Republican Pany's
heartland and will help to
blunt Reagan's expected
victcry in his honiestate of
California.
Ford has the overwhelming
support of virtually the
state's entire GOP leadership
from Gov. James A. Rhodes
on down .
AI best, Reagan's forces
have talked about winning
perhaps 10 to 15 of Ohio's 97

President disturbed about _Hays
may have used money for sex
Department of Justice and station K~· MB-TV . of San
WASHINGTON IUPI) President Ford said Saturday the House of Representatives Diego when he was asked
he was "disturbed " by and I make no accusations." whether he was surprised by·
" It's disturbing that news the scandal.
reading that Rep. Wayne
''Yes, it did surprise,'' Ford
Hays may have used the stories indicate that public
replied
. "And I think there is
public payroll to support a funds are being involved and
a
very
fundamental problem
woman with whom he was I think that ought to ~ inveshere.
The problem is
tigated."
having an affair.
utilization
of taypayers '
When
asl:ed
.if
he
thought
The President said he was
money
for
the admitted
Hays'
p·:ivate
life
was
not making any accusations
·situation.
That
I think, is
nobody\
business,
Ford
when he said Friday that he
what
disturbs
the
American
replied
·
"As
long
as
there
are
was surprised by the scandal.
people
a
great
deal. II
no
vio!ations
of
the
law."
Asked
if
he was
disturbs me. The other aspect
Fo~·d had taken the position
"convicting" anyone, he
scandal
was
a of it, those are persmal
replied: "Oh, no, I simply the
said I was disturbed by wha I I "haiisekeeping" matter for matters, but the utilization ol
read.
There
are tt.e HoWle. But he broke more taxpayers' money for that
inve»tigatlons going,on by the ice in ~'riday's interview with purpose is very disturbin g."

395.
The primaries T\lesday in
New Jersey, Ohio and Call. fornla ate the last in a record
series of 32 tc help U1e parties
deCide on a nominee and t~
most irnp&lt;)rlant h) terms of
sheer numbers.
California senda 280 Demoera tic and 167 Republican
del egates to the national
conventions, Ohio 152 Democratic, and 97 Republican
delegates and New Jersey 108
Democratic
and
67
-Republican delegates. It
lllkes 1,505 delegates for the
Democratic nomination and
1,130 for the GOP nomination.
Although Carter said Ohio
was the most lmportWJt of the
three, he went to New Jersey
, Saturday . Under attack for
supposed vaguen~ss on issues
and
his
less
than
overwhelming showings in
northern Industrial states, he
campa igned in blue -c ollar
ethnic neighborhoods In New
Jersey Saturday ,
He said the Helsinki treaty
" ratifi ed the takeover of
Eastern Europe by the Soviet
Union" while the United
States "got very little in

By DONALD LAMBRO
COLUMBUS (UP! )
TERRORISTS HUNTED
Ronald Reagan Saturday
ECATEPEC,
M·exico blasted President Ford for a
( UPI) Pollee using radio commercial belrig aired
helicopters hun led Saturday on Ford's behalf In California
for a band of terrorists who concerning Reagan's position
killed six pollce.rilen In a on Rhodesia, cajllng It "an
submachlne gun attack on a absolute fabrication."
police guard post. Police
Reagan, after arriving for
identified the terrorists as a twiH!ay campaign swing
members of the September 23 for Tuesday's Ohio Jrimary,
Communist League, who told
reporters
the
kidnaped the Belgian am- commercial
was
'a
bassador's daughter last misstatement of fact. I wish
week and killed nine persons they had campaigned on a
May 6 in ari attack on a higher plane."
Mexico City restaurant and
The commercial concerns
Treasury Department Reagan 's recent statement,
branch.
·
·
which he has since retracted,
that he would ·use United
'
Stales troops to help maintain
the peace In Rhodesia.
The Ford radio commercial
purportedly says, "When you
next
Tuesday,
delegates and conceded they and Udall splitting the vote
party's
liberal
vote
.
would "take a lacing" in
carter has won the
Ohio.
endorsement
of former Gov .
But Reagan, confident of
John
Gilligan,
and state
easily carrying his own state,
Democratic
Chairman
Paul
has returned for a weekend of
active campaigning in the Tipps, who is neutral in the
Buckeye State, with his race, has openly predicted
strategists now hoping to pick . Carter will probably win.
"He's the heavy favorite,
up as many as 20 delegates.
Ford, taking nothing for Tipps said. "That's just a
IDAHO FALLS, !daho
granted,
has
also statement of fact."
tUPI)
- The Teton Darn
Udall
has
United
Auto
undersc.ored Ohio's
which
had
been the target of
Workers
support
in
the
stale,
importance
with
his
lawsuits
by
ecologists, burst
but
even
in
Cleveland,
where
scheduled election eve return
Saturday,
flooding
the Upper
he
finds
his
strongest
he&lt;e Monday for an arduous
Snake
River
Valley
and
support,
Carter
is
also
well250-rnile motorcade through
forcing
the
evacuation
of
organized,
western Ohio where Reagan
some
30,000
persons,
Party
leaders
in
Toledo,
is considered strongest.
There were no immediate
Carter, also planned to moreover, say Carter is far
reports
of injuries or deaths.
better
organized
in
that
city
return here Sunday night and
However,
many herda of
than
Udall,
even
though
this
througliout the day Monday.
cattle
were
wiped out.
area
went
for
George
McGovThe former Georgia
Moving at the rate of 15
governor is considered to be ern over Richard Nixon in
. miles per hour, the flood
well organized In the . state 1972,
Ohio democrats will elect •waters forced evacuation of
and is expected to be helped
residents in the towns of
Continued on page 18 ,
greatly as a result of Church
Ririe, Teton, Rexburg,
Menan , St. AnthOny and
Sugar City, downstream from
the 310-foot, earth-fill
structure.
The multi-mlllion-i!ollar
·~motel row" in downtown
Idaho Falls on the banks of
the Snake River was
UNITED NATIONS (UP!) meeting.
- Secretary of State Henry
"Our consisrenl position threa lened by the swirling
A. Kissinger said Saturday has been to oppose outside waters.
Pilots flying over the
the United States had not Intervention and urged that
stricken
area said both the
been consulted shout Syria's outside parties should
towns
of
Teton
and Sugar City
greatest
Invasion of Lebanon and . exercise the
were
under
water.
A Ill-foot
opposed it,
restraint."
w•ll
of
water
moved
toward
Kissinger flew to New York
Kissinger also said there is
Idaho
Falls,
and
aqthorltles
for talks with U.N. Secretary no specific new Middle East
General Kurt Waldheim peace initiative under evacuated the downtown area
devoted largely to the Middle discussion and he does not of this city of 40,000 within
East.
foresee a Geneva conference two blocks of the river . The
"We were not consulted on on the Middle East in the near Mormon Temple on the east
side of the river, however,
the latest military muves In future.
apparently was safe.
. Lebanon," he said after the
1

return."
" Mr. Kissinger equalc'!l his
own personal popularity wlU1
the highly publicized result of
detente."
Church
said
the
Democrats' vice presidential
nominee mlllll come from
among the primary winners,
namely Carter, Brown or
himself: "If the convention
turns its bock on the prbnary
results, we could have a
serious backlash against the
ticket ."

remember, Gov . Reagan
.couldn't start a war.
President Reagan could."
Before addressing an audl·
ence of I,500 supporters In the
Ohio . Theater. Reagan
angrlly told reporters, "I
made a mistake. My P9Sitlon
is there would be no
involvement
of · any
Americans in any kind of
hostility
or
troop.,

movement.''
Reagan insisted he would
as president "seek to
maintain the pea ce in
Rhodesia" and attempt a
settlement of racial conflicts
there. " I think that President
Ford knows this," Reagan
said.
"It is· an absolute fabrication," Reagan said of the
commercial. " It is a
misstatement of fact. "

Dam bursts in
Snake Valley

Ki~singer . ignored by

invading Syrian force

·,

"

248, George Wallace 168,
others 285 and uncommitted

Reagan says
Ford lies

Carter, Ford favored to win pivotal Ohio primaries
By DONALD LAMBRO
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Jimmy Carter, like President
.Ford, is the "heavy favorite"
in
Tuesday's
Ohio
Jresidential primary.
But the strategic effect of
Carter's expected victory
here will mean far more than
the rich lode of 152
democratic delegates at
stake,
From the start of Carter's
campaign for the presidency,
according to his strategists,
Ohio has been "a key state
that has to be won ."
Just as Carter meticulously

Democratic side, Carter had
907, Udall 305, Henry Jackson

Idaho Gov. Cecil D, Andrus
declared a state of
emergency, called out the
National Guard and flew to
eastern Idaho for a first-hand'
appraisal ofthe disaster. Sen.
wired
Frank . Church
President Ford willie on hi!
campaign for the Democratic
Continued on page 18

They got wonl
frOm back home
. LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPi)
- Rep. Rotnano Mazzoll, 0Ky., who gained nationwide
attention with his call for
Rep . Wayne Hays, D-Ohlo, tc
resign from Congress, said
Saturday his congressional
colleagues are no longer
snubbing him,
Mazwli said he ~ot tbe
"cold•shoulder treaiment"
from many of hi! fellow
congressmen after his
demand
for
Hays'
resignation, "but now they're
welcoming me back into tbe
club."
"The reason is they've
heard Iron\ back home and
now know how strongly their
constituents feel about the
whole Hays , affair," the
Louisville Democrat said.

�Newest Ford ads hit Reagan
with his troops issue 1lown

16 - The Sunday Times -Sentinel , Sundil}. Jn nt• 6, 197fl
~---------------- ---------- 1

! · Area Deaths
WILliAM C. MASSIE
GALLI POLIS - Will iam

!
I

Sat urday .
He wa~ born April 29, 1900,

In VInton , son of the tate G. F. .
and
Ca thryn
McGhee

Car ter Ma ssie, 68, a resident
of 345 Fourth Ave . died al l : 15
a.m. Saturday at his home

Richards.

following an apparent heart

He married

Marga ret

Elizabe th Evans ol Whales in
1917 . She prececed him in
deal h.

attack . He ha d been in failing
health one month .

Mr . Massie was a retired

teacher and super in tendent

Su rv iv or s Inc lude two
sis ters, Mrs. Lena Booth
Myers, Gallipolis and Mrs.

in both the Ga llia and
Lawren ce Count:v School
Systems . Hi s last superin tendency was in the term er
Nor th Ga l l ia School Dis tri ct.
He retired there in the early

Salty Heber , Wellston. One
sister preceded him in death .

60s .

Typographical
Dayton.

Mr . Richards was a retired
printer and a member of th e

Fot.towing his retirement ,
he establ ished the Massie

Union

in

He was a member of the
Presbyterian Church in
Cleveland, and a l'flember of

Realty Company , which he

operated fhP t.v;;t eiaht vears .

He was born Feb . 2, 1908 in

the Modern Woodmen Lodge
in Gallipolis.

Greasy Ridge Community of
Lawrence County , son of the
L. Massie and

Private

late Otha

f uneral

services

at the McCoy -Moore Funeral
Hom e, Vinton wi th Rev .
Jerr y Neal officiating . Burial
will be in Vinton Memor ial

Park .
There wil l be no calling

He had resided in the

Syracuse Nursing Home the
past several year s. Friends
may call at Ewing 's Funeral
Home in Pmeroy 6 p.m .

Sun day .

Graveside ser vices will be

held 2 p.m. Monday at
Glouster Ce metery .

on Greasy RidQe with Re v .

Earl Hink le and Rev . Wil son

Wahl off iciating . Burial will
be in church ce metery .
Friends may call at the

CHE STER -

Wood

$27.96

, . JIWRIY WT.

SIOITS,T.

Emmet and Bertha Parker
Hecm( , he was born March ·II ,

1895al Chesler . He graduated

PRO
TBtiiSSOCKS

from
Ohio
Northern
University and marri ed Mary

VERBA G. STEVERS
GALLIPOLIS - Verba
Gertrude Sievers. 89 , of 758
First Ave .. died at 3 p.m.
Frida y at her horne . She had

Kenton,

Oh io.

He

was

asc

a

member of Malia Lodge,
F&amp;AM.
Surviving besides his wife

are five sons; Dale. Wich ita .
Kan .; Donald, Farmington,
Ill. : Robert and Lor;n , both ol
Rockford . Ill.. and Francis of

weeks .

She an d her husband

operated a grocery store · in
Crown City several years .

HICK'S RIG.

$1.06
IIOIISEWAB IBT. .

Burlington ; four daugh ters ,

She was born March 26,
1887 , in Ga ll ia County ,

Mary Chaney , Rockford ;

daugh ter of the late Rev . Ira

Tex .; Myrna Spiedel, Vinton ,
and Bertha
Gladman,

S teve r ~. who preceded her In

Jones, Mar ion, Ohio, 26
grandchildren and eight
great.grandch lldren .

Nellora

and Martha Fillinger Sheets.
She married Lester A.

Davi s,

Smithfield,

Funeral services were held

slep·daughfer, Mrs , Hasklll
!Bel va ) Wells , Gallipolis;
two grandchildren, and three
greal .grandchlldren ; a sister

at lhe Lunnlng Chapel In
Burlington with the Rev.
Laurence Garrett officiating .

HICK'S
RIG.
$1.67

99(

he said, " is irreversible."

/101/SIWAII · , . ,

prin!t. Sjzes

member of

secretary . a

Richards, 76, a resident of
Cincinnati, and a native of
Vinton, di ed In a Cincinnati

H.ck's

Rev .

member of

Siloam Baptist Church.
Glenwood United Methodist
Funeral services will be Church, Columbus, so.year
held I p.m. Monday at member of Minear Chapter
Mercerville Baptist Church 274, Order of Eastern Stars,
with Rev . Charles Lusher Guysville, Ohio. .
officiating . Burial will be In
She w~s born tn Chester,
Ridgetawn Cemetery , the daughter of the late .Davld
Mercerv ill e.
S. · Kimes and Ida Carr
Fri ends may call at the Kimes .
Waugh - Halle y . Wood
She Is survived by fwo
Funeral Home from 3·5 and 7- brothers, Ralph and Chase
9 p.m. Sunday.
Kimes, two sisters, Mrs. Ruth
Jones and Mrs. Mary Orre,
GEORGE G. RICHARDS
all of Columbus and several
GALLIPOLIS - George G. nephews .

S.M.l.

$317

Sc i oto Crest Convalescent

sister preceded her In death .

Payments made

CLOTHING
D£1'1.

LlTPERMANENT

eiS.eS.ReGIIITU

HIQ('S
IIG.

$2.09

COSMITIC
/ST.

to Ohio vets

THIS IS HOW IT WAS
TIJURMAN - Suzanne Cherrington of Thurman Ohio a
member of The Gallia County Historical Society offers the
following item of Hist.ory :
Mrs. Paul E. Smith, daughter of Frank Ruff is the granddaughter of Captain Joshua Roof who served in 'the Civil War
as a second lieutenant, then a first lieutenant and was
commissioned Captain at the close of the war, He was one of
the guarda at the execution of Mrs. Surratt in Washington D. C.
She was hanged as one of the accomplices of John Wilkes
Booth.
. Captain Joshua Roof is buried in the old cemetery in the
VIllage of Centrevtlle, Gallia County, Ohio.
The name "Roof•: was changed to "Ruff" many years ago.

BURIAL INSURANCE

$2,000.00
No M•dlcallxam Required.

to 15

Cll' rltll •• IN 111111 wltlllll .. , • .,,,, aiMIAit•
If rural gfvc direction s to residence.

INVISTOIJ HIIITAGI
P.O. Box 196, McArthur, Ohio

Heck's Reg. •3.99

$4 .99

Funeral services wil l be

Mcnday at 1 p.m. at he Glen·
wood United Methodist
hospital around 1:30 a.m. Church Chapel with the Rev .
Herman A. Emmert and the
Rev . R. Rober! Kimes of·
flclallng . Burial will be In
Sunset Cemetery, Columbus.
Friends may calf at the
Schoedlnger Hilltop 'Chapel,
3030 W. Broad St., Columbus,
Sunday 2 to 4 and 7 fo 9 p.m.
COLUMBUS - More than
382,000 bonus payments have
been made to Ohio Vietnam
"TOO SOON"
Era veterans and next-of-kin
OAKLAND,
Calif. (UP! ) of deceased vererans since
the first check was issued two Betty Ford says she thinks "it
years ago accordin g to is a little too soon" to elect a
Commission Director Ran- woman vice president.
Campaigning in California
dall W. Sweeney.
In Gallia County, 642 Friday for her husband, Mrs.
claims were paid totaling Ford was asked her views on
$24 2, 046 .56. Other area women in high office, "I'm
couli ties were : Meigs, 612 definitely in favor · of women
claim s ror $218,588.28; in government/' Mrs. Ford
Athens, 1,417 claims for said. "And I think a female
$570,201.46 ; Jackson, 912 vice president would be fine.
claims for ·$330,526.15 and But I think it's a little too soon
Lawrence, I ,477 claims for to vole for a female for vice
president.''
$543,353:0&lt;l.

ZIP-LOC BAGS

dolls. DCKron
poly"ter and co~on
bltndt. Solids oM

Center, Hilliard, Ohio. Miss
Kimes was a re fired

Five brothers and one

we~III

I•"Uitl gown&amp;~ bob~

MISS ETA KIMES
HILLIARD - Miss Eta
Kimes, 87, died Friday at

Isaac and Claude Sheets, both
of Gallipol is.

RJJ$1

SLEEPWEAR
Choos• from

Clothing Dept.

BID PILLOWS ot

Thete fluffy docron pillo-...~ W1!or the QyPonl "Red Lobel", o sign quolilr or
ih best. These pillows are 100"' Virg in DuPont docron polytsler frber lill.
Pamper yourulf whh a pillow thai's non-allergenic . mot resistonl . resilier~t ood
odot leu.

Heck's Reg .
$3.99 .

1501.

CLAIROL

JERGENS
LOTION

BALSAM COLOR

~~::s $ J28
$1.79
lOSMITIC IIIPT.

GIRL'S
HALTER TOPS

~97
CLOtHING DEPT .

Wri'ISDUI&amp;

s138
HICK'S lEG.

$1.17

COSMETIC
.IIIPT.

\

Heck's Reg.
88' ea.

CLOTHING DEPT.

oz.
_,_.
9

BABY
POWDER

76C
HICK'S RIG.

1jd'lllll.ll\
1

ltuhr
I'' J\l'lil 'I'

~

$1.01

COSMETIC,., "-

YINTILATID
Will

BUCKET SEAT
CUSHION

NIWFROM MIRACLI-GRO®

STERIS THERAPY'm
FOR HOUSE PLANTS

$4"

$118

$'·"

Heck's Reg.

HICK'S
RIG.

. His heir apparent for the
speaker's chair is Thomas
"Tip" O'Neill, the House
Democratic leader from
Massachusetts. He called
Albert "one of the great
speakers of all Ume" and said
he had been "maligned" by ·
critics calling him weak.
O'Neill said he woUld
foi-mally announce his own
candidacy for speaker on
Monday, backed by 165
"lUlsollcited" endorsements
from House members. But
White House sources said
they expect rivals to give·
O'Neill a battle.

One possible challenger is
Rep . Phillip Burt.on of
California, leader of the
House Democratic Caucus. In
any event a scramble is
certain for the secondranking position if O'Neill
moves up, with Democrats
Burton, Richard Bolling of
Missouri, John McFall of
California
the
main
contenders and several
others.
In a retirement announcement released at the Capitol
and in Oklahoma, Albert
said, "During my leadership,
the HoWle has become a more

.$1.55
Hardware Dept;

said that he would send
American troops to Rhodesia.
On Thursday, he clarified
that : He said they could be
observers or advisers . What
does he think happened' ln
Vietnam ·! ... When you vote
next Tuesday, remember,
Governor Reagan could not
start a war - President
, Reagan could."
Reagan's Callfornla cam-·
paign director Lyn Nofziger
asked television and radio
stations not to "run libelous
corrunercials by the Ford
campaign committee
accusing Ronald Reagan of
being ready to start a war in
Rhodesia ."
Nofziger also wired Ford to
ask him to pull the commercials, saying, "This Is a dirty
trick ploy beneath the dignity
of the presidency ."
He also complained to the
Federal Communications
Commission and the Fair
Ca mpaign Practices

At the White House, President Ford called Albert "a
very dear friend of mine and
I'm of course sorry th11t he is
going to leave public service
enough," he said.
':I am now 68 years old, in ... He'll be missed."
O'Nelll, releasing a
good health and there are
statement
through aides,
other things I want to do
.
said
:
"History
will record
while I am young enough to
him
as
one
of
the great
do them. I want to spend
. more time with my family speakers of all time. He has
and life-long friends. I want been maligned by those who
to be close to them because I cover Washington , but under
love them dearly. I shall Carl Albert, we replaced
return to the scenes of my President Nixon and Vice
childhood in Oklahoma and President Agnew ...
live in the community where I · "We have passed at least 50
historic
pieces
of
grew up."
legislation ,"
Albert rose from boyhood
poverty in rural Oklahoma to ·
win a Phi Beta Kappa key ; a
Rhodes Scholarship, a law
degree and a congressional
United States did not know in career that brought him one
advanceofSyria'sinvasion of step from the presidency
Lebanon and that Washington when first Richard Nixon and
opposed it. Kissinger said then Gerald Ford briefly
U.S. policy "has been to lacked vice presidents. He
oppose outside Interven- has said the prospect of
tiOn.")
succeeding to the White
• Jumblatt also said he had House gave him ·his worst
conferred by telephone with
Palestinian guerrilla chief :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;.;.;:;:;:;::·:·:·
Vasser Arafat, Libyan EXEMPTIONS OFFERED
Premier Abdel Salam Jalloud
GALLIPOLIS - Clly
and Algerian and Iraqi school board officials
officials, and that a Saturday reminded clly
"tripartite delegation" would district property ownertl 65
fly to Damasclll! to plead the years or older that they are
leftists' case. He did not eligible lor homestead
specify who would be exemptions, providing they
included in the delegation. meet certain criteria under
The 12,000 Syrian Army the Homestead Exemption
regulars occupying the broad Act.
eastern Bekaa valley and the
However, owners must
northern Akkar .region dug file lor reduction of
into their positions but made valuation of their property
no move to adv.ance further at the Gallla County
against the leftist forces who Auditor's office.
have so far retreated before
:::::::::::::::::·:::::::::·:·:·:::::::=::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;
every Syrian move .
democratic and open institution," and noted he had
served tor three decades.
"For my part, that is long

Syrian troops dig in to stay

LADIES'

Burial was in Aspen Grove

Huntington , W . Va _. , and

. At• I

LETTUCE CRISPER

conoli

Cemetery.

Mrs.

James I Lui a) Landon, Table
Rock. Neb .: Okey Sheets.

.

PLASTIC

Burlington ; a sister, Carol

death in November, 1960.
Surviv ing are a son, Paul
Stever s, Dunbar, W. Va .; one

I

DOW

asking him to withdraw the
ads .
As the controversy hit the
two candidates for the
Republican presidential
nomination , Democrats
plugged away in Ohio and
New Jersey before next
Tuesday 's triple-header with
California.
Reagan was favored in the
winner-take-all race for
California's 167 delegates on
the COP side and Gov.
,Edmund Brown Jr. was
expected to take most of the
280 Democratic delegates at
stake in the Golden State.
Reagan, arriving to
campaign in Ohio, said the
Ford commercial ' s
representation of his views is
"an aboolute fabrication. It 's
a misstatement of fact ... I
wish they had campaigned on
a higher plane."
In the Ford commercial a
voice
says :
"Last
Wednesday, Ronald Reagan

Conunittee.
Reagan told reporters in
Colwnbus, Ohio, his original
statement on Rhodesia was a
, mistake and he would not use
troops .
In the Democratic race ,
Jimmy
Carter,
characteristically taking
nothing for granted , tried to
prove himself among the
ethnics ·of industrial New
Jersey .
But Ohio was the Jroving
ground - and even front runnner Carter plunned to
return Sunday and Monday.
.Ford was going there
Stuinday for two days to
offset his anticipated loss to
Reagan in California.
Democrat Morris Udall
stayed in Ohio, U1e last slate
in which 'he has a chance of
beating Carter after eight
second-place finishes . Frank
Church, who has bea ten
Carter four times, was
dogged by 11 viral infedion
but also campaigned in the
Buc~eye State, seeking votes
from the same anti-Carter
voters as Udall.
Edmund G. Brown Jr., the
popular
governor
of
Ca lifornia, confident of
taking a majQrlty of his
slate's 280 delegates, plam1ed
election-eve campaigning In
New Jersey, where Carter Is
facing an uncommitted slate
favorable to Brown or Huber t
Humphrey.
Humphrey
was
in
Minnesota Saturday
accepting the endorsement of
the Democratic-FarmerLabor Party for a fifth Senate
term.
Going into the weekend,
Ford had 822 delegates to
Reagan's 654, with 132
uncommitted.
On
the

House power fight for job is predicted
By ELMER LAMMI
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Speaker Carl Albert, 68, annolUlced Saturday he will
retire at year's end and go
home tn Bug Tussle, Okla.,
raising prospects of a HoWle
leadership power struggle
during the Wayne Hays sex
scandal.
The ~foot-! inch Rhodes
Scholar with the sing-song
drawl said he had served long
enough - 30 years in
Congress, five as speaker and had achieved his highest
career goal. tlMy decision,"

170Z.

BATHROOM
CLEA•R

Sel tz oli April 19, 1918 at

been in failing hea!th two

j

M8405

Works. formerly of Chester .

the fun er al hom e.

l•

HICK'SRIG.

$6.51

Leon C.

died April 4 at the Burlington
Medica l Center, Itttnols.
The son of the late Omar

by Waterloo Lodge wilt ·be
held af 7: 30 p.m. Monday af

'l

~~L.~ll~N~0-~1~9__________S~U~ND_AY~,~MA~Y~6,~1~
97~6--------~--~
PA=GE~l7

the Burlington Wilbert Vault

The body wi ll li e in state at

a

$2299

HICK'S RIG.
$2.97

HICK'S
IIG.

Hecox, Bl .year -old founder of

the church one hour before
the servi ce. Masonic servi ce

was

CASSETTE RECORDO

LEON C. HECOX

Funera l Home f rom 2 to 9
p.m . Monday .

She

GEIRAL ELECmC

$222

Saturday
morning
in
Veterans Memoria l Hospital.

held at 2 p.m. Tuesday af fhe
MI. Pleasant Baptist Church

brothers ,

GYM SHORTS

HALLEY HAMBEL
POMEROY
Hall ey
Hambel , 83, Glouster, died

Lrxlge . and Wilgus Grange .
Funeral se rvices wi ll be

three

cono•

hours.

ol the MI. Pleasant Baptist
ChurctJ . j ocated on Greasy
Ridg e, Water loo Masonic

and

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUNDAY ·&amp; MONDAY

will be held II a.m. Tuesday

Alcosta Dunfee Massie .
He is survived by his wife ,
Jewe ll Myers , a daughter ,
Mrs . Keith (Dori s) Getteys of
Sou th Poin t ; two sons ,
Herman Massie of Columbus
and Gordon Massie of Cir .
clevi ll e; two grandchildren ;
two sis ter s, Mrs . Gladys
Callicoat of Iron ton, and Mrs .
Ernest (Ve rna Shaff er ,
Ironton .
TwO brothers
preceded him in death ,
Mr . Massie was a member

Waugh . Halley

By IRA R. ALLEN
United P~s Intemallnal
The Republican
presidential campaign look a
turn toward the nasty
Salw-day with the unveiling
of President Ford's new
broadcast commercia ls
aimed at Ronald Reagan's
slated willingness to send
troops to Rhodesia .
A Reagan aide called the
commercials, to be aired
starting SUnday, three days ·
before the
California
TillS IS ONE OF 1WO VEHICLES wrecked in one week in the area along SR 124 that • primary, "reminisCent of the
residents of Syracuse complained about recently to village council. They called the area
dirty trick tactics that we
hazardous, with some justiflcaUon. The area they refer to is said to be too narrow. Residents
threw out of the White
contend that it should be widened four feet for approximately ISO feet. Contacts are going to
House;" and wired Ford
be made with State Highway of!lcials and elected officials.

By DOYLE M~MANUS
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UP! )
- Syrian forces ·set up a
headquarters in the foothills
of Mount Lebanon Saturday
and dug in frontline positions
for an apparent extended
stay.
Moslem leftists
appealed to the U.N. for help
in getting the Syrians to
leave.
Moslem Lefitsl and
Palestinian leaders met
under Soclalisi leader Kamal
Jwnblatt and sent an appeal
to U.N. Secretary General
Kurt Waldheim saying the
Syrians were "preparaing a
horrible massacre" and
asking his help in getting the
Syrian troops out of Lebanon.
Ul'l correspondent Michael
Ross toured the Syrian-held
Bekaa and reported that the
occupying army set up a
headquarters at the Lebanese
air base at Riyak, ·14 miles
from their. forward positions
in the Mount Lebanon

foothills and 34 miles east ·of
Beirut.
Jeeps and armored
personnel carriers roared up
and down the roads leading
into the base and bulldozers
dug roadside emplacements
for the two dozen tanks
stationed in the immediate
area.
Maj. Malunoud Mattar, an
officer in the Syriansponsored "Vanguard of the
Lebanese Arab Army"-a
new group the Syrians have
formed from Lebanese forces
they overtook in their
advance
explained
Damascus' strategy,
The Syrians' aiffi, Mattar
told Ross, is "to move slowly,
neutralizing areas first by a
show of force, then by a
threat of force and as a last
resort by using force
sternly."
Farther south in the Bekaa,
a leftist soldier 111anning a

roadblock adffiitted that if the
Syrians attacked his position ,
"we would ask them to turn
hack, But if they insisted,
well,
we 'd
have
to

surrender.''
The leftist parties asked
Waldheim "to intervene im·
mediately to stop the invasion
of our country and demand
the withdrawal of the Syrian
forces."
"This military invasion has
taken place without any legal
justification and without any
request from a responsible
Lebanese authority," the
message to Waldheim said.
"Instead of restoring order,
this (Syrian ) army is
preparing
a
horrible
massacre of the Lebanese
and Palestinian peoples," the
message said.
(AI the U.N ., Secretary of
State Henry A. Kissinger
conferred with Waldheim and
said afterwards that the

moments in public life, and
some critics rated him a
weak leader who often
duck ed controversial
decisions.
.
Some of that criticism
stemmed from the fact the
Democratic • dominated
House could override few of
Ford's vetos. Other critics
said Albert tried and failed tc
persuade Hays last week to
resign a key committee
chairmanship pending
investigation of Elizabeth
Ray's mistres!Hln~he payroll
charges. O'Neill failed at the
same tasll .
Supporters said the critics
mislUlderstood Albert, that
his conciliatory manner
masked a shrewd political
tactician . But Albert felt the
b!lrbs and said early this year
that 1975 had been "a
miserable year, one of the
most frustrating I've seen" raising speculation he would
retire
despite
his
dlsclalrQers.

All agree
about Hays
WASHINGTON (UP!) House Democrats and
possibly Wayne Hays himself
are agreed: He should step
down as chairman of the
sensitive Administration
Commitree because of the
Elizabeth Ray affair . But
they're fussing over just how
it should be. done.
Hays' future in the power
structure of the House of
Representatives, where he is
now near the top, ls at stake.
The Ohio Democrat is
expected to offer to step aside
at a meeting of the committee
to be held Wednesday or
Thursday as a face-saving
response to ·his admitted
affair with Miss Ray, who
was on the committee's
1
payroll.
II would be an offer the
Democrats cquldn'l refuse.

marshalled his forces in three profound effect on the
early.and successful primary decisions made by the
batt I e s - Iowa , New WJcommitted delegates" at
Hampshire and Florida- to the July convention in New
boost
his
fledgling York City,
candidac·y, the state · that
His two challengers here,
has come to symbolize Sen. Frank Church and Rep.
Middle America similarly Morris Udall, both agree if
had to be won, and won Carter wins Ohio he will be
convincingly, at the dramatic virtually unstoppable at the
finish .
convention .
This is what Carter is
ThUll, more than any other
looking for as he has state, this is Carter's "big
repeatedly barnstormed the casino" where he hnpes that
state, devoting far more "' by winning the lion's share of
personal time to Ohio than to the delegates- perhaps as
the two other remaining many as 100-he will be
primaries also tn be held placed within easy reach of
Tuesday in California and the magic 1,505 delegates
New Jersey.
needed to capture the
"This is the important nomination.
one," he has told voters here,
And the impact of Ohio,
"because it will have a together with a good showing

in California and in New
Jersey, will be "a convincing
argument"
to
the
uncommitted, according to
Carter, that he has earned the
nomination.
Moreover, Ford's expected
win here over Reagan will
demonstrate
that
he
commands the support of the
Republican Pany's
heartland and will help to
blunt Reagan's expected
victcry in his honiestate of
California.
Ford has the overwhelming
support of virtually the
state's entire GOP leadership
from Gov. James A. Rhodes
on down .
AI best, Reagan's forces
have talked about winning
perhaps 10 to 15 of Ohio's 97

President disturbed about _Hays
may have used money for sex
Department of Justice and station K~· MB-TV . of San
WASHINGTON IUPI) President Ford said Saturday the House of Representatives Diego when he was asked
he was "disturbed " by and I make no accusations." whether he was surprised by·
" It's disturbing that news the scandal.
reading that Rep. Wayne
''Yes, it did surprise,'' Ford
Hays may have used the stories indicate that public
replied
. "And I think there is
public payroll to support a funds are being involved and
a
very
fundamental problem
woman with whom he was I think that ought to ~ inveshere.
The problem is
tigated."
having an affair.
utilization
of taypayers '
When
asl:ed
.if
he
thought
The President said he was
money
for
the admitted
Hays'
p·:ivate
life
was
not making any accusations
·situation.
That
I think, is
nobody\
business,
Ford
when he said Friday that he
what
disturbs
the
American
replied
·
"As
long
as
there
are
was surprised by the scandal.
people
a
great
deal. II
no
vio!ations
of
the
law."
Asked
if
he was
disturbs me. The other aspect
Fo~·d had taken the position
"convicting" anyone, he
scandal
was
a of it, those are persmal
replied: "Oh, no, I simply the
said I was disturbed by wha I I "haiisekeeping" matter for matters, but the utilization ol
read.
There
are tt.e HoWle. But he broke more taxpayers' money for that
inve»tigatlons going,on by the ice in ~'riday's interview with purpose is very disturbin g."

395.
The primaries T\lesday in
New Jersey, Ohio and Call. fornla ate the last in a record
series of 32 tc help U1e parties
deCide on a nominee and t~
most irnp&lt;)rlant h) terms of
sheer numbers.
California senda 280 Demoera tic and 167 Republican
del egates to the national
conventions, Ohio 152 Democratic, and 97 Republican
delegates and New Jersey 108
Democratic
and
67
-Republican delegates. It
lllkes 1,505 delegates for the
Democratic nomination and
1,130 for the GOP nomination.
Although Carter said Ohio
was the most lmportWJt of the
three, he went to New Jersey
, Saturday . Under attack for
supposed vaguen~ss on issues
and
his
less
than
overwhelming showings in
northern Industrial states, he
campa igned in blue -c ollar
ethnic neighborhoods In New
Jersey Saturday ,
He said the Helsinki treaty
" ratifi ed the takeover of
Eastern Europe by the Soviet
Union" while the United
States "got very little in

By DONALD LAMBRO
COLUMBUS (UP! )
TERRORISTS HUNTED
Ronald Reagan Saturday
ECATEPEC,
M·exico blasted President Ford for a
( UPI) Pollee using radio commercial belrig aired
helicopters hun led Saturday on Ford's behalf In California
for a band of terrorists who concerning Reagan's position
killed six pollce.rilen In a on Rhodesia, cajllng It "an
submachlne gun attack on a absolute fabrication."
police guard post. Police
Reagan, after arriving for
identified the terrorists as a twiH!ay campaign swing
members of the September 23 for Tuesday's Ohio Jrimary,
Communist League, who told
reporters
the
kidnaped the Belgian am- commercial
was
'a
bassador's daughter last misstatement of fact. I wish
week and killed nine persons they had campaigned on a
May 6 in ari attack on a higher plane."
Mexico City restaurant and
The commercial concerns
Treasury Department Reagan 's recent statement,
branch.
·
·
which he has since retracted,
that he would ·use United
'
Stales troops to help maintain
the peace In Rhodesia.
The Ford radio commercial
purportedly says, "When you
next
Tuesday,
delegates and conceded they and Udall splitting the vote
party's
liberal
vote
.
would "take a lacing" in
carter has won the
Ohio.
endorsement
of former Gov .
But Reagan, confident of
John
Gilligan,
and state
easily carrying his own state,
Democratic
Chairman
Paul
has returned for a weekend of
active campaigning in the Tipps, who is neutral in the
Buckeye State, with his race, has openly predicted
strategists now hoping to pick . Carter will probably win.
"He's the heavy favorite,
up as many as 20 delegates.
Ford, taking nothing for Tipps said. "That's just a
IDAHO FALLS, !daho
granted,
has
also statement of fact."
tUPI)
- The Teton Darn
Udall
has
United
Auto
undersc.ored Ohio's
which
had
been the target of
Workers
support
in
the
stale,
importance
with
his
lawsuits
by
ecologists, burst
but
even
in
Cleveland,
where
scheduled election eve return
Saturday,
flooding
the Upper
he
finds
his
strongest
he&lt;e Monday for an arduous
Snake
River
Valley
and
support,
Carter
is
also
well250-rnile motorcade through
forcing
the
evacuation
of
organized,
western Ohio where Reagan
some
30,000
persons,
Party
leaders
in
Toledo,
is considered strongest.
There were no immediate
Carter, also planned to moreover, say Carter is far
reports
of injuries or deaths.
better
organized
in
that
city
return here Sunday night and
However,
many herda of
than
Udall,
even
though
this
througliout the day Monday.
cattle
were
wiped out.
area
went
for
George
McGovThe former Georgia
Moving at the rate of 15
governor is considered to be ern over Richard Nixon in
. miles per hour, the flood
well organized In the . state 1972,
Ohio democrats will elect •waters forced evacuation of
and is expected to be helped
residents in the towns of
Continued on page 18 ,
greatly as a result of Church
Ririe, Teton, Rexburg,
Menan , St. AnthOny and
Sugar City, downstream from
the 310-foot, earth-fill
structure.
The multi-mlllion-i!ollar
·~motel row" in downtown
Idaho Falls on the banks of
the Snake River was
UNITED NATIONS (UP!) meeting.
- Secretary of State Henry
"Our consisrenl position threa lened by the swirling
A. Kissinger said Saturday has been to oppose outside waters.
Pilots flying over the
the United States had not Intervention and urged that
stricken
area said both the
been consulted shout Syria's outside parties should
towns
of
Teton
and Sugar City
greatest
Invasion of Lebanon and . exercise the
were
under
water.
A Ill-foot
opposed it,
restraint."
w•ll
of
water
moved
toward
Kissinger flew to New York
Kissinger also said there is
Idaho
Falls,
and
aqthorltles
for talks with U.N. Secretary no specific new Middle East
General Kurt Waldheim peace initiative under evacuated the downtown area
devoted largely to the Middle discussion and he does not of this city of 40,000 within
East.
foresee a Geneva conference two blocks of the river . The
"We were not consulted on on the Middle East in the near Mormon Temple on the east
side of the river, however,
the latest military muves In future.
apparently was safe.
. Lebanon," he said after the
1

return."
" Mr. Kissinger equalc'!l his
own personal popularity wlU1
the highly publicized result of
detente."
Church
said
the
Democrats' vice presidential
nominee mlllll come from
among the primary winners,
namely Carter, Brown or
himself: "If the convention
turns its bock on the prbnary
results, we could have a
serious backlash against the
ticket ."

remember, Gov . Reagan
.couldn't start a war.
President Reagan could."
Before addressing an audl·
ence of I,500 supporters In the
Ohio . Theater. Reagan
angrlly told reporters, "I
made a mistake. My P9Sitlon
is there would be no
involvement
of · any
Americans in any kind of
hostility
or
troop.,

movement.''
Reagan insisted he would
as president "seek to
maintain the pea ce in
Rhodesia" and attempt a
settlement of racial conflicts
there. " I think that President
Ford knows this," Reagan
said.
"It is· an absolute fabrication," Reagan said of the
commercial. " It is a
misstatement of fact. "

Dam bursts in
Snake Valley

Ki~singer . ignored by

invading Syrian force

·,

"

248, George Wallace 168,
others 285 and uncommitted

Reagan says
Ford lies

Carter, Ford favored to win pivotal Ohio primaries
By DONALD LAMBRO
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Jimmy Carter, like President
.Ford, is the "heavy favorite"
in
Tuesday's
Ohio
Jresidential primary.
But the strategic effect of
Carter's expected victory
here will mean far more than
the rich lode of 152
democratic delegates at
stake,
From the start of Carter's
campaign for the presidency,
according to his strategists,
Ohio has been "a key state
that has to be won ."
Just as Carter meticulously

Democratic side, Carter had
907, Udall 305, Henry Jackson

Idaho Gov. Cecil D, Andrus
declared a state of
emergency, called out the
National Guard and flew to
eastern Idaho for a first-hand'
appraisal ofthe disaster. Sen.
wired
Frank . Church
President Ford willie on hi!
campaign for the Democratic
Continued on page 18

They got wonl
frOm back home
. LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPi)
- Rep. Rotnano Mazzoll, 0Ky., who gained nationwide
attention with his call for
Rep . Wayne Hays, D-Ohlo, tc
resign from Congress, said
Saturday his congressional
colleagues are no longer
snubbing him,
Mazwli said he ~ot tbe
"cold•shoulder treaiment"
from many of hi! fellow
congressmen after his
demand
for
Hays'
resignation, "but now they're
welcoming me back into tbe
club."
"The reason is they've
heard Iron\ back home and
now know how strongly their
constituents feel about the
whole Hays , affair," the
Louisville Democrat said.

�19- The Sunday Times . Se~tinel, Sunday' June 6, 1976
'

18 - The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Sundar. June 6, 1976
Della Pi
Ed ucation
Honorary and Dell&lt;! Kappa
Gamma
Teachers
Honorary . She also belongs lo
Ohio University , her M.A. in at various times for Athens Leaders and Noteworth y the Ohio Ass ociation of
Special Education fro m City , Athens County, Morgan Americans, and in National Spe cial Education Ad·
mi nistra tors, the National
Marshall University, and did County, Meigs County, Gallia Economics Yearbook.
Coun
cil for Exceptional
post.graduate work at Ohio County, and Jackson County.
Mrs .
Gardner
wa s Children Council of Special
University, the University of Mrs. Gardner has also been a secretary during 1974-75 for
Education Administrators,
Chicago , and
Indiana Proj.ect
Breakthrough the Appalachian Readin g
and
the National Department
Universi ty .
teacher .
CoWlcil. She belon~s to tlie of Mental Re tardation of
Mrs. Gardner has taught
Mrs . Gardner has received Ohio Reading CoWlcil and Council for Exce ptional
all grade levels. She was the Amy Allen Award for Int ernati onal
Rea din g
Special Education teacher at Special Educa tion , the Coun cil , Southeastern Ohio Children.
Mrs . Gardner is one of the
Rio Grande and Ohio Kazanjaiian Award (National Chapter of Council for Ex·
supervisors
in the Athens
Univer sity , and s he also Economic Foundation ); she ceptional Children and the
office
of
the
Southeastern
taught Special Education at was in the first edition of National COWlCil of COWlCil
Ohio
Special
Ed ucation
Gallia Academy Jr . High. She Buckeye Li ves, in the 1973-74 for Exceptional Children.
Project.
She
is
an Area
has been the EMR supervisor edition of Co mmunity
She is a member of Kappa

Mrs. Gardner has '76 alumni award
RI O GRANDE - In
recognition and appreciation
of her outstandingly loyal and
continuous service in the
interest of Ri o Grande
College , the Rio Gra nde
College Alwnni Association
has anrioWlced that Mrs.
Eugenia Gardner has been
awarded the Rio Grande
College Alwnni Award for
1976.
Mrs. Gardner attended Rio
Grande two years, received
her B.S. in Education from

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

VOTE FOR

SUNDAY, June 6. 1976

BRUCE S.

ACROSS
1 Overse~s

message
6 Pre lends

STOUT
REPUBLICAN
Candidate lor County Commissioner.
A candidate who will remember- the people
AFTER THE ELECTION
Pd Pol. Adv.

11 Momu\er y
church
18 T ur~rsh pr mce
19\mphed
20 Enl1ven
21 Come rnto vrew
238eer rngredrel'lt
24 FreQ~Jent (poet !
26Chrnesewal(
27 Note of scale
291nclrna,tron
'3 :) Separat e
31lrberate
32Everyone
33 Ethrop •an l !lte

34 Cr~rt

rn1ury

~5 Saucy

36 Portable ovens

36 Su!lerers !rom

~

CITIZENS OF

l s ~~!~lo~~h~~mber

ln• • ,t
of .
people who are in the ra ce for sheriff of Ga llIa Coun ty.
As you know, some of the se men ha ve tried to assume
th is· office and fai led because they did not have wha t
the people of Gal lia Coun ty want In a sheriff.
Thi s is the first time that I have consi dered an
offi ce of any kind, and I assure you it is for no other
reason than to do tnY part to make Gal lia Coui nty a
better place to li ve. I have not been talked into it by any
po lifical party , and I am not seeking prestige. I'm
con fident 1 possess the leadersh ip ability and the
knowledge To do a good job for the people of Gallia
County in the office of Sheriff .
I have already begun to formulate plans for
red uc ing theft and vandali sm in our county . Another
ma jor concer n i s the drug related offenses that need to
be dea lt with immediatel y!
I 'have gi ven much thought to this probl em that
involves eve ryone in our county, and I believe that
given th e·apportunity , I can play a big part In help ing
to curb the drug traftlc and rela ted violations. This is
something I hat despera tely needs to be done now! We
ca nnot afford to wait, and we ca nnot afford to put
someone in th is very importan t olfice who will just let
things S( ide along and hope for the best . .
We cannot just have faith that thing s will change,
we must world or the chanqe ·ou(selves. The Bib le tell s
us that l dith wit hout work s is dead, and I' m afraid
unless we w t~ke up and make some sound changes in
Galli~ Count y the generat ion following us wi ll never be
able to see th e taws enforced in our county.
Please do your part· and elect a person who is
capable to bri nging about some of the changes that we
desperately need . Vote for and elect Gilbert R. Pl ants
Sheri ff of Gallia County, and then stand behind him in
his decisions and watch our county change for the
better .
You r vote fQr Gi lbert R . P(ants on June 8th will be
· th e first major step in slowing the crime rate in Gall ia
County .
Thank You Very Much ,
GILBERT R. PLANTS
For Sherif! of Gailia County
Pd . Po l Adv.

HaMe n s
arsease
40 Worm
41 Frnat
42 Parcels o l l and
43 Short sleep
45 Prooonr'on
46 A conhnent
(abbr l
47 Datum
48 Pt!Ch
49 WalkrnQ st rcks
51 Falsrher
52 Roman gods
53 Emmet
54 Urge on
55 Yrelds
57 Unrt ol Sramese
currenc y
58 Fnght an
60 Total de te at
6 I Edrble seed

1'26 Througl'l
64 St eamShiP labO r I I '27 Appr oached
1'29 Bounda nes
65 Comoas5 PO•fll
13\Lease
661s rll
132 Toward snel1er
67 Unl •dY
133 Sons ot tne
69 Dwell
Amencan
7 I Rear ol shop
Rev olution
73 Wr1tes
labbr 1
74 Go II mound s
134 Qpenw orll laC r•c
76 Fnend of Sam
136 Cove rs
79 1 hreshOid s
1)7 Female r.p rM
81 Fr ench tor
138 Abo unos
summer
139 Latrn cont OJnclron
82 Devoured ,
14 0 ~ske rs
6d We t
14 I Hri iiiJh ll '~
85 Make s wono
142Cremon~·
8 7 L ampr e~s
00 Commemoratrve 143 8 01,1
144 Pretact:
m ar ct~ es
146 AnQry
92 Born
148 European capl1 at
9J Lasso
149 Swell ·
95 Floats 111 arr
97 Hold on proper tv ISO Fameel
IS 1 Wrld b~J I Ia to ol
98 Stamp ol
ln(lt 8
aoorovat
99Beno tel 1
DO WN
101 Breaii.Uuddenl y
103 A state tabOr J
1 Frolic ~
104 Part ol ct a11net
2 Catkm
105 Fertrle spo\s rn
3 Tr111ket
desert
4Gael1C sea g od
t OBSull rll tendlllQ\ 0
5 Teu tonrc de1 ty
I t O Far
6 Beljjlrn
t t2 C onta rncrs
I Stop
tt3Possesses
8 Per to rm
\14 Compass porn!
9 Note ot sc ate
115Grveup
. tOLong · teggea
t t7Want s
btrdS
118 Suspena
11 Mothert y
119 Veh• cte
12 Preposrtr o(l
120 Sy moot tor
13 East lndran oatm
tellurrum
14 Odor
121 Potent rat energ','
15 Hryher
123 Frrend ot Penro d
16 Ore ell. teller
124 Frurt see ds ·
17 Not e ot ·scale
125 Anrmat coats
62

Mar ~

unusual

69 Season•nQ
9J POSISCf iPI laDOI )
91 Pnnter s measure

2 \ l spresent

22 Unutlagu\at •ve
23 Place tor trade
25 Toll
21 Lassos

94 Pan ol church lpt l
96 Sun god

28CiaSSI IIE!S

30 Nur sance
31 OooriT
Jj Nerve networKs

9B K1ln
99 PIIYIIege
tOO Eal to e.~;cess

102 Take unl awi!JII Y
104 Prohrbrts
3SAgreement
105 Paddles
361 re
106 Holds rn h•gh
37 More ra1rona t
regard
39 Crony (collOQ I
107 Prophetess
41 Patn
109 Man s name
42 Booty
11 1 ConcedEid
44 Pert arnmg to
112 Headgear (pt l
punrshmer1 t
113Aabbrt
47 Journey forth
116 Organ ot heartng
48 Those who
manage pr operty 118 Strrkes
l Or other s
119 Heat .
122 Part ot camera
49 Halt
lpll
50 Oei'I!J de
12 4 varrety ot apple
5 4 Cou r1eous
55 Remarnder
125 Conltagra1 ron
56 Cuts
126Gratrl y
59 Deer shOrn
126 Aooon roned
60 Be bo rne
130 E•trnct lhgn Ues s
61 Hebrew tetter
btrd
63 AockltSh
131 Detested
66 A. rtrcte
132 Eagles nest
67 Manuscrrot
135 E•aCI
(aoor l
68 voung r.orse
137 Sma ll amount
70 Ouatfs
138Fhpped
7 I Beas1 of our den
140 Comb l or m
72 Sur table
bOundary·
73 Land su rro unded
142A oden1
by wah!l
143 Detace
75 Steos
144 Po tree
77 Number
Department
78 Change color ol
80 Hav.a na n wreaths
(abbr I
63 Paradrse
t450ur Lord l abbr)
66 Btem1Sh
147 Arl!lrcraltanguage
sa Gr ants use ol
148Parent (colloq I

WILLIAM A. KESLAR

•NOW SERV ING AS STATE CENTRAL
COMITIEEMAN

REPUBLICAN VOTERS

Weare at the in1er sectlon. If we make a mistake
and take the wrong road. we will not be able to change
our course for four long years. Can we afford to gamble
on a new road or shou ld we stick with the road we have
trave!ed successfu ll y before ? We believe that the right
road ts the one that leads to th e nomina tion of Sheriff
Walk.er again . Let us un ite behin d one ,good solid
candtdate.
VOTE DENVER A. WALKER
Pd. Pol. Adv.

•HAS SERVED ASCHAIRMAN OF
MUSKINGUM COUNTY EXECUTIVE
COMMITIEE FOR 8 YEARS.

CALHOUN

PERRY AND VINTON COUNTY.

VOTE FOR
FOR STATE CENTRAL COMMITTEE
HERMAN BOETCHER, PHILO, 0 . CHAIRMA N,
KESLAR FOR CENTRAL COMM ITT EE

NUKE BATTLE JOINED
SACARMENTO, Calif.
(UPI) - The battle over the
future of atomic energy
centers in California Tuesday
w1th voters deciding the
nati on 's firs t-ever ballot
proposition on nuclear power.
Opponents of the measure,
Prop?sition 15, say, If passed,
1t wdl shut down atomic
power plan·ts in California.
Supporters say it will
guara nt ee
nu clear
safeguards for the state's 21
million residents .

. JUDGE RONALD R..

•ENDORSED BY THE EXECUTIVE COMMITIEE
OF MUSKINGUM, MORGAN, lAWRENCE, ·

William A. Keslar

SOLDIER HONORED
CLIFTON, W.Va.- T.Sgt.
Nicholson, whose mother is
Mrs. Asa P. Nicholson, has
been accorded special
recognition in his unit at
McGuire AFB , N. J . A
command and control
technician
with
Headquarters, Twenty-First
Air force , he was named
t&gt;utstanding
Noncommissioned
Officer·
of
the Year for leadership,
professional skill and duty
performance .
A 1961
graduate of Wahama High
School, the sergeant has
studied at the University of
New Mexico , and the
University of Delaware .

"

CHILD KILLED
TREASURE ISLAND, Fla.
(U PI) - A 2-year.olq Ohio
girl was killed early Saturday
when she slipped out of her
motel room and wandered
into the path of a car.
Catherine June Baker,
daughter of . a Columbus,
.Ohio, police officer, had just
arrived with her parents for a
vacation. Police said she had
been put to bed, but ap·
parently became restless
alter her parents, Wayne and
Carolyn Baker, fell asleep.

Dam bursts

Continued on page 17
presidential nomination, ask·
ing all possible help.
"It's destroying everything
in its path.," State Trooper
Duane Sammons said.
"Several hundred vehicles
were swept away, and I feel
sure there are people who
have drowned. The dam
totally gave way and the
water is still moving south ."
He said the.rnajor problem
was looting.
Idaho FaDs Civil Defense
Director Jerry Wadsworth
said Palisades Dam along the
Wyoming border was shut
down io prevent lilly more
water moving into the Snake.
He said ooe dam south of
~daho Falls was opened to
release some of the water. •
The water was four to five
feet high and two miles wide ,
10 minutes before · it hit ;
Rexburg, a small farming :
and college town northeast
Idaho Falls. Buses, mobile ,
homes and cars were swept :
away.
'
Wadsworth
reported &gt;
lroken glls mains caused five :;
fires in Rexburg. Water in •
Rexburg was five feet deep :
by mid-afternoon,
:
State Pollee discouraged •
all traffic north of Idaho FaDs ~
and closed all roads heading :
north. Wadsworth requested :
12,000 to 15,000 units of ~
tetanus vaccine and reported
1,200 units dispatched to ·
Rexburg.
:
Pilots reported both Sugar :
City and Teton urxler water- •
only the tops of houses and :
grain elevators visible above .
the turbulent, muddy \!Biers. ' .

~Orioles

bomb
Twins, 5-l

BALTIMORE (UPI) - Lee
Mliy clubbed his eighth horne
run and sparked a threHun
seventh inning with a rWlscoring single whQe Ken
Holtzman scattered five hits
as the Baltimore Orioles·
defeated the Minnesota
Twins 5-1 Sat!ll'day.
. May swatted a solo homer
off losing pitcher Joe Decker
in the fourth inning and
Oriole third baseman Dolig
Decinces singled across an

Ronald R. Calhoun

FOR
COURT OF APPEALS
REPUBLICAN PRIMARY

Gallia County has never had a Judge on the Court of
Appeals. If ~fected I will remain in Gallia County as your
representative on the Court of Appeals. 1 ask for your
support on June Sth .
Pd . Pol. Adv .

COLUMBUS - Striking
miners at Meigs Mine
Number 1 will be fined $35 a
day if they do not return to
work Monday, according to
an order issued Friday by U.
S. District Cour t Judge
Robert M. Duncan.
The order was one of two
issued in an attempt to get
I,m miners back to work at
th e So uthern Ohio Coal
Company 's three mines in
Meigs and Vinton Counties.
The company supplies most
of the coal for the James M.
Gavin Plant at Cheshire.
According
to Susan
Richards, clerk for Judge
Duncan, fines will be levied
agai nst members of United
Mine Workers Local 1890 if
they do not, returnto work
Monday.
The rulings carne after the
court decided the union was
in contempt of a temporary
restraining order against
picketing at the mines issued
Sept, 9, 1975.
Last week, a $5,000 a day
fine was levied against the
local by Judge Duncan who
made the ruling May 27.
Judge Duncan also issued
orders instructing four of the
local's officers to appear
before him Monday at 4:30
p.m. to explain why they have
not returned to work.
The four officers are Bill
Wooten, president; Albert
Perky, vice-president;
Robert Manley, secretary
and Lloyd Grey, treasurer.
Hearings were held late
f riday for UMW Locals 1896
and 1957 but Judge DWlcan
could not be reached
Saturday for comment on
disposition of those hearings .
Local 1890 walked off its
jobs at Meigs Mine No. I over
a dispute in which a miner
was fired from his job. The
company said he refused to
·obey an order of his foreman.
The Wlion claims the fired
employee wanted to check for
methane gas.
·
An arbitrator upheld the
company but that decision
dissatisfied the union in.
volved.
·
Union employees of Meigs
Mine No. 3 walked off their
jobs May 23.
They were joined by miners
at Meigs Mine No. 2, who ·
accordin g to Gene Oiler
president of Local 1896 Iefi
their jobs beca use of bomb
threats made agai nst the .
mine.

NOW VOU KNOW
The first written reference .·
to the concept of automobile
can be found in Homer 's
fliad .

'

Oriole run in the sixth inning
to break a J.J lie before
Baltimore j~ped on reliever
Bill Campbell in the seventh.
Bob Grich tripled in Mark
Belanger, who had walked,
and after Reggie Jackson
drew a walk, May singled
home Grich and Tony Moser
scored Jackson with a
sacrifice fly .
Holtzman, 5-J, went the
route, walking three and
stri~ing one out.

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----R•E•P•U•B•li•C•AN
_ _ _ _..,..

~OIJ..I'IItS

[!l

Ccntlnued on p113e 17
114 delegates in 23
congressional districts in
addition to 38 at large
delegates .
There are winner-take-all
aspects .to the democratic
primary here in thai whoever
wins In each district wins all
of its delegates.
The primary, however, is
further complicated by
favorite son candidates
rwming in ll districts with 54
delegates at stake.
Rep. Wayne Hays, [).{)hio,
who
resigned
his
chairmanship of the House
Democratic Ccngressional
Campaign Committee Friday
because of his involvement in
a sex scandal, Is one of the
favorite son candidates,
favoring
Sen.
Hubert
Humphrey in six Ohio
districts.
But many believe the
scandal )las doomed his
chances of winning any but
his own district.
State Treasurer Gertrude
Donahey heads another slate
looking for a share of the 38
at-large delegates, but is
believed to have little chance
of winning the 15 per cent
needed for a share.
Carter has delegates in all
2:! districts, Udall is in 22
districts and Church in is 14
districts.

Supervisor for Gallia Coun ty,
Gallipolis City, and Meigs
Local Schools. She serves 3
school districts and 39
teachers.
Mrs. Gardn er received her
award at the IOOth An·
niversary Alumni Banquet at
Rio Grande College on May
29.

REPUBLICANS

&lt;#' Jd

Carter-Ford

Miners ·
face
.$35 finLl&gt;I...

!

RETURN TO
State Central Committee

MEIGS IN FRONT
Jim
Harder,
fi eld
representative of the Golden
Buckeye Program, has In·
formed the Meigs County
RSVP that Mei~s County is in
front in the percentage of
persons registering for
Golden Buckeye cards. The
Meigs County ReUred Senior
Volunteer Program would
like to see Meigs Ccunty
reach the state goal of 60 pet.
first. Persons who· have
not registered for their Gold·
.en l!uckeye card should by
June 21, at the Meigs County
. Senior Citizens Center,
Pomeroy or at
the
registration booth which will
. be set up during R,egatta.
celebrations.

when you check the construction you will
see why.
We also have two late model trade-ins
that are like new.
A 1974 Hillcrest 2 BR
A 1975 Skyline2 BR

COUNTY COMMISSIONER
FOR JAN. 3rd TERM

Bold Forbes cops Belmont Stakes
NEW YORK iUPI) · E. Rodriguez Tizol 's Bold
Kentucky Derby winner Bold , Forbes. whose stamina for
Forbes built a tremendous I'&gt; mile lest had been
lead over nine rivals in the questioned, had just enough
Belmont Stakes Saturday and left at the end to hold off Mrs.
held off fast closing Douglas Carver's McKenzie
McKenzie Bridge by a half Bridge,
with
Howard
length to win the final Jewel Wilson 's Great Contractor
of the Triple Crown .
only another length back.

Red Sox nip
Angels, 4-3
BOSTON ( UPI) - Rick
Burleson's two-out ninth
inning single drove home
Doug Griffin with the winning
run Saturday and gave the
Boston Red Sox a 4-3 victory
over the California Angels
qehind the five-hit pitching of
ferguson Jenkins.
Burleson, who stroked a
solo homer in the fifth for Red
Sox' third run, delivered his
game-winning hit after
Griffin walked and advanced ·
to second on a passed ball by
Angels' catcher Ed Herr·
mann. Jenkins, in outdueling
Angel ace frank Tanana.

Shaker
Heights
champ

PAUL D. NIDAY
Youth · Experience· Family. Man · Farmer
· Life Time County Resident.
Your Vole will be appreciated June 8.
Pd. Pol. Adv.

"QUALITY ALWAYS"
Pomeroy
992·7034
Ohio
Pearl Ash 992·2323, Roger Davis, 992·7671

Cleveland
tops Chisox

COLUMBUS (UPI)- John
Stickley knocked in AI
Pearlman'with a siligle to left
in the bottom of the ninth
inning Saturday to lift Shaker
Heights to a 5-4 victory over
Youngstown Chaney in the
' Class AAA state high school
base ball
tournament
championship game.
Pearlman had led off the
last frame witlr a walk and
was sacrificed to second by
Tom Haskell on a bunt.
Bob Bartlett, 11·1, went the
distance for Shaker, 28-8.
Tim fenisey, 7·3, took the
loss in relief for Youngstown,
22-5.
The title Is Shaker Heights'
second. The other came in
1965.
.
'

For that vacation site, or a starter home, we
have two 8' wide units that are priced to sell.

NOMINATE
LONNIE W. BURGER
FOR
COUNTY
COMMISSIONER
Term Beginning Januory 2,
t977.

s.truck out five to up his
record to 5-6. Tanana, '!"ho
struck out nine, is now 7-4 . .
The Angels tied the game
with two outs in their half of
the ninth when 37-year.oid
designated hitter Tommy
Davis stroked a two-run
horner over the leftfield wall.
Davis' homer, his first of the
season, came after Cecil
Cooper threw wild to Jenkins
covering first on rookie Bob
Jones' grounder.
Cooper had .helped Jenkins
to the 3-1lead he took into the
ninth with a two-run single in
the fourth inning. California
also scored its first run on a
homer, rookie Ron Jackson's
second in as many games in
the. eighth.

.

Pd. Pol. Adv,

••

CHICAGO (UP! ) - John
Lowenstein's · run-scoring
triple ignited a two-run tenth
inning rally Saturday which
sent the Cleveland Indians off
to a 5-3 victory over the
Chicago While Sox .
Lowenstein 's triple, which
came after Buddy Bell
walked, saddled White Sox
reliever Clay Carroll with his
second defeat against three
wins and gave Jim Kern , who
worked only 1 1-3 innings, his '
fourth victory in six
decisions. Lowenstein came
home with the other run ol the
inning on a passed ball by
catcher Brian Downing.
The White Sox scored first
in the second on Jim Spencer's homer and added
another rWl in the fifth when
Brian Downing singled,
advanced on a walk and
scored on Pat Kelly's single .
But Cleveland bunched four
of their seven hits off Terry
Forster for three runs in the
sixth when George Hendrick
singled and scored on Rico
Carty's double, Charlie
Spikes singled to score Carty
and after a walk, Rick
Manning singled to score
Spikes. Chicago tied it in the
eighth when Nyls Nyman
singled, stole second and
scored on Chet Lemon's
double.

UNOFFICIAL REPUBLICAN SAMPLE BALLOl
ISSUED BY THE MEIGS COUNlY REPUBLICAN EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
LESLIE F. FULTZ, 110 HIGH STREET, POMEROY, OHIO, CHAIRMAN ·

For Justice of Supreme Court

For Judge of the Court of Appeals
(4th District)

(Full Term Commencing January 1, 1977)

Full Term Commencing February 9, 1977

Darrell McHargue, made an
especially strong bid on the
outside ,
bnt
Cordero
managed to keep the tiring
Bold forbes in front.
The victory was Bold
Forbes' 12th in 16 starts.
Honest
Alter
beating
Pleasure ln the Kentucky
Derby by a Iengt11, Bold
Forbes wa s the victim of his
own furious pace in the
Preakness and finished third ·
behind winner Elocutionist.
The . Triple Crown Cam·
paign took its toll on the
others as Honest Pleasure
was passed up for the
Belmont for a rest and
Elocutionist was taken &lt;lUI
with a slight injury .
Bold Forbes suffered a
serious cut on his left hind
hoof in the Preakness U1ree

X

weeks ago, but trainer Laz
Barrera was able to get the
three·year.old son of Irish
Castle-Comely Nell back In
shape for the Belmont.
Majestic Light, who
finished more than eight11
lengths behind the · three
leaders , was lourth with
Aeronaut fifth and Preakness
runner-up Play the Red sixth.
The rest of U1e order of finish
W(os Mullineaux, Best Laid
Plans, Close to Noon and
Qui ~ k Card.

WANTED
SALES MAN wanted l•r
estab lished busi~eu In
Pomeroy , good starting
s~ la ry, m.usl have good
personality lo mnt !he
.•Rvb lic and willlratn. Send
resume to P.O. Box !14,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769.

A's shade NY
NEW YORK (UP!) .:_ Don
Baylor dashed home with the
winning rWl in the ninth in·
ning on a stolen base and a
throwing error by New York
catcher Thurman Munson
Saturday to give the .Oakland
A's a 7-0 triumph over the
Yankees.
With two out,' Baylor beat
out a hard smash to third for
a single. He then stole second
and when Munson's throw
.
went into center field, came
all the .way around to score
the winning r~n . Holli e
fingers, the last of three A's
pitchers gained his third win
in eight ~ecisions, while
Sparky Lyle, 4-4, look the
loss.
The A's parlayed four hitsand Mickey Rivers ' throwing
error for three runs in the
second inning, and the Yanks
came back with a pair in their
ha\f of the inning on a walk,
two singles and an infield out.
The A's took a 4·2 lead in
the next inning on two walks

the Yanks 'scored again in the
sixth on three sineles. Phil
Garner touched Lyle for a
two-run triple In the eighth to

he the score at r&gt;-G for
Oakland, selling lhe sta@e for
Baylor's game-winnlnM ru cc
for home.

RETAIN EXPERIENCE IN YOUR
COMMISSIONERS OFFICE

VO:~rden Ours, Republican Incum bent , serving as Meigs Count'y Commissioner
l_here 1s no substitute for experience to meet the County's neods ·1·n the comt 11g
years .
Ours In seeking another term In the June Primary; stales "during my term In
~tflce tne Lounty Com missioners have completed and are now operallng the County
Landfill. remodeled tile County Court House, remodeled th e Coun ty Jail bui ll
additions to the Veterans Memor ia l Hospllol. Insta ll ed a spr inkling system 'at the
County Inf irma ry, black lopped several County Roads . and repaired severa l bridg es
These pro jec ts were all completed withou Tan Increa se In taxes "
.
" "!he pr~jects the Commissioners are now working on Is th~ construction ol a new
Sen•or Cit iZens Building. a new road from the foot of Children's Home Hill across to
Un ion Avenue. Th is road witt provide egress and Ingress for possibly a new Rest
Home. and additi onal housing for Meigs County "
" During my term In office the Commissioner's have provided money tor Fam ll
Planning, SEOE MS, Senior Cltl&lt;ens, Fire Departments. Retarded Children "
Y
Ours states . "the County Is big business, and making the money aval tabl.e go as
far as possible rs a task . The decisions t make Is always In the best Interest of the
taxpayer."
'
Ours has served as lrustee, member of the Count y Election Board and a member
~h~s~e;~ ~~h~eltare Board . He Is married to the former Murl Trussell , they reside at
feels

and Gene Tenace's RBI
Mr. Ours pledges, " I have tried to honest ly do my best tor Meigs County and wi ll
single. However, Roy White
contlnuetoserve to thebeslofmy ablt.ttylf eiected. "
.
climaxed a three-run fifth
inning rally for New York • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • l l l l i i •.••••P•dii.i.Polltl..Alldllvl.
.with a two-run double, and

.l

Vote Crow for Prosecuting Attorney

PROGRAM

TERM OF OFFICE

. I will bear down on drug violators, ·
especially pushers or . sellers of
drugs.

I am seeking my first term as
Prosecutor of Meigs County.

I will cooperate with the Sheriff's
Office, County Officials,' Township
Trustees, school offici a Is, and all
other interested individua Is.
It is my opinion that more police
protection ' should be . provided for
Meigs County . There are 26 miles in
.area from the East end of fhe County
to the West. Under t.he Ohio Revi'sed
Code Meigs County can establish
Township Police Districts. If the
Township officials desire, I will
assist them in establishing Township
policemen .
There are also additional federal
monies available for additional
police protection. I will do
everything I can to obtain same for
the County.

My opponent has held this office for
16 years and is seeking a fifth term
for four additional years in office.
He has qualified for a State
Employees Retirement Pension.
The Prosecutor should be a young
man and should devote full time to
the job.
My sole employement is that of
practicing law, and I will devote full
time to the practice of law.

-------------My Name Stands
and
For Honesty
Integrity

-------------BACKGROUND

(Vote for not more than one)

MOBILE HOME

Jockey Angel Cordero took one. However , the question of
his " Puerto Rican Rolls BOld Forbes' endurance
. Royce " right to the lead and encouraged several trainers
opened up a tremendous to take a shot at the Belmont,
advantage before the margin particularly with a rich
decreased alarmingly in the second place prize of $42,900.
stretch.
The race developed exactly
In win'ning the $195,1100 as expected with Bold Forbes
Belmont as the 4-5 favorite of breaking smartly from the
the 57,519 fans at Belmont gate and taking a two-length
Park, Bold Forbes added lead after the first quarter of
$117,000 to his career ear- a mile. Best Laid Plans was
nings, bringing his total to the only member of the field
to race anywhere near Bold
$49&amp;,639.
Bold Forbes , who was Forbes in the early going, but
times in 2:29, paid $3.80, $3.40 paid the price In lite stretch
and $2.80. McKenzie Bridge as he faded to eighth.
At the top ol tile stretch,
paid $5.00 and $3.80. with
Creal Contractor returning Bold forbes held a ccm$3.80. The 11-2 exacta of Bold rilanding six-length lead, with
Forbes and McKenzie Bridge McKenzie Bridge and Great
paid $2:!.40.
.
Contractor beginning to move
· Except for Bold forbes , the up to make their challenge.
field was an undislinRuished McKenzie Bridge, under

IRED

"Ric~•

W.

lifelong resident of Meigs County, except
for working three years in Dayton, Ohio.

CROW III

Raised in Syracuse and now lives in letart
Falls.

Candidate For

•

Repubflcan

MEIGS COUNTY

TOTAL ELECT~IC, 2

X

For State Representative
(92nd District)

BEDROOM HOUSE TYPE
WINDOWS, DELUXE MODEL

'7995
UNFURNISHED

Candidates Marked With An "X" Have Been Endorsed by ttie
Republican Executive Committee

.Oip This B~ot
IT IS LEGAL TO TAKE IT INTO lllE VOTING BOOlll WHEN YOU VOTE ON ELECTION DAY
Pd. Pol. Adv.

Proud of his family 's contribution to Meigs
County : ·
Great Grandfather, Charles Crow, was
County Commissioner;
. Great Grandmother, Mary D. Hayman .
Grandfather, Judge Fred . W. Crow, was
County Prosecutor and Common Pleas
Judge;
Grandfather, Irving Karr, was County
Commissioner;
Father, Fred W. Crow, Jr ., is ·a ttorney
and active in civil affairs;
Mother, Eleanor Karr Crow, was a public '
school teacher for many. years .

Prosecuting Altorney
Your Support &amp; Influence Would Be Appreciated

I am a · member of the ·Meigs County
Jaycees; M.A. R. C.; Boar,d of Mental
Retardation; , a Pee Wee baseball coach;
a!'ld has farmed ior the last three years.

I

FRE~ERICK

QUALIFICATIONS
Graduale&lt;lf Oh io University and Ohio State University
Law Shoot .
First pollee legal advisor In the State of Ohio.
Dayton Pollee Academy Instructor.
Sole legal advisor ·for the City of Dayton's Poflce
Department 425 man force .
Graduat e of Pollee Community Re lations Training
Probram given by Xavier University.
Graduate of Special Training Program for Pollee .
Legal Advisors given by the Int ernational Associa tion
of Chiefs at' Police, tnc . and Northwestern Unl-.rslty.
Served as Ohio Assistant Attorney General .
No)\' a practicing attorney with the firm of Crow, Crow
&amp; Porter.

w. CROW

I

Ill

I

Pd . Pol. Adv·'. by the Candidate

"WE ARE THE OLDEST MOBILE HOME
OEALE R IN S. E.
"\

.,

,,'''

'

I

'

�19- The Sunday Times . Se~tinel, Sunday' June 6, 1976
'

18 - The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Sundar. June 6, 1976
Della Pi
Ed ucation
Honorary and Dell&lt;! Kappa
Gamma
Teachers
Honorary . She also belongs lo
Ohio University , her M.A. in at various times for Athens Leaders and Noteworth y the Ohio Ass ociation of
Special Education fro m City , Athens County, Morgan Americans, and in National Spe cial Education Ad·
mi nistra tors, the National
Marshall University, and did County, Meigs County, Gallia Economics Yearbook.
Coun
cil for Exceptional
post.graduate work at Ohio County, and Jackson County.
Mrs .
Gardner
wa s Children Council of Special
University, the University of Mrs. Gardner has also been a secretary during 1974-75 for
Education Administrators,
Chicago , and
Indiana Proj.ect
Breakthrough the Appalachian Readin g
and
the National Department
Universi ty .
teacher .
CoWlcil. She belon~s to tlie of Mental Re tardation of
Mrs. Gardner has taught
Mrs . Gardner has received Ohio Reading CoWlcil and Council for Exce ptional
all grade levels. She was the Amy Allen Award for Int ernati onal
Rea din g
Special Education teacher at Special Educa tion , the Coun cil , Southeastern Ohio Children.
Mrs . Gardner is one of the
Rio Grande and Ohio Kazanjaiian Award (National Chapter of Council for Ex·
supervisors
in the Athens
Univer sity , and s he also Economic Foundation ); she ceptional Children and the
office
of
the
Southeastern
taught Special Education at was in the first edition of National COWlCil of COWlCil
Ohio
Special
Ed ucation
Gallia Academy Jr . High. She Buckeye Li ves, in the 1973-74 for Exceptional Children.
Project.
She
is
an Area
has been the EMR supervisor edition of Co mmunity
She is a member of Kappa

Mrs. Gardner has '76 alumni award
RI O GRANDE - In
recognition and appreciation
of her outstandingly loyal and
continuous service in the
interest of Ri o Grande
College , the Rio Gra nde
College Alwnni Association
has anrioWlced that Mrs.
Eugenia Gardner has been
awarded the Rio Grande
College Alwnni Award for
1976.
Mrs. Gardner attended Rio
Grande two years, received
her B.S. in Education from

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

VOTE FOR

SUNDAY, June 6. 1976

BRUCE S.

ACROSS
1 Overse~s

message
6 Pre lends

STOUT
REPUBLICAN
Candidate lor County Commissioner.
A candidate who will remember- the people
AFTER THE ELECTION
Pd Pol. Adv.

11 Momu\er y
church
18 T ur~rsh pr mce
19\mphed
20 Enl1ven
21 Come rnto vrew
238eer rngredrel'lt
24 FreQ~Jent (poet !
26Chrnesewal(
27 Note of scale
291nclrna,tron
'3 :) Separat e
31lrberate
32Everyone
33 Ethrop •an l !lte

34 Cr~rt

rn1ury

~5 Saucy

36 Portable ovens

36 Su!lerers !rom

~

CITIZENS OF

l s ~~!~lo~~h~~mber

ln• • ,t
of .
people who are in the ra ce for sheriff of Ga llIa Coun ty.
As you know, some of the se men ha ve tried to assume
th is· office and fai led because they did not have wha t
the people of Gal lia Coun ty want In a sheriff.
Thi s is the first time that I have consi dered an
offi ce of any kind, and I assure you it is for no other
reason than to do tnY part to make Gal lia Coui nty a
better place to li ve. I have not been talked into it by any
po lifical party , and I am not seeking prestige. I'm
con fident 1 possess the leadersh ip ability and the
knowledge To do a good job for the people of Gallia
County in the office of Sheriff .
I have already begun to formulate plans for
red uc ing theft and vandali sm in our county . Another
ma jor concer n i s the drug related offenses that need to
be dea lt with immediatel y!
I 'have gi ven much thought to this probl em that
involves eve ryone in our county, and I believe that
given th e·apportunity , I can play a big part In help ing
to curb the drug traftlc and rela ted violations. This is
something I hat despera tely needs to be done now! We
ca nnot afford to wait, and we ca nnot afford to put
someone in th is very importan t olfice who will just let
things S( ide along and hope for the best . .
We cannot just have faith that thing s will change,
we must world or the chanqe ·ou(selves. The Bib le tell s
us that l dith wit hout work s is dead, and I' m afraid
unless we w t~ke up and make some sound changes in
Galli~ Count y the generat ion following us wi ll never be
able to see th e taws enforced in our county.
Please do your part· and elect a person who is
capable to bri nging about some of the changes that we
desperately need . Vote for and elect Gilbert R. Pl ants
Sheri ff of Gallia County, and then stand behind him in
his decisions and watch our county change for the
better .
You r vote fQr Gi lbert R . P(ants on June 8th will be
· th e first major step in slowing the crime rate in Gall ia
County .
Thank You Very Much ,
GILBERT R. PLANTS
For Sherif! of Gailia County
Pd . Po l Adv.

HaMe n s
arsease
40 Worm
41 Frnat
42 Parcels o l l and
43 Short sleep
45 Prooonr'on
46 A conhnent
(abbr l
47 Datum
48 Pt!Ch
49 WalkrnQ st rcks
51 Falsrher
52 Roman gods
53 Emmet
54 Urge on
55 Yrelds
57 Unrt ol Sramese
currenc y
58 Fnght an
60 Total de te at
6 I Edrble seed

1'26 Througl'l
64 St eamShiP labO r I I '27 Appr oached
1'29 Bounda nes
65 Comoas5 PO•fll
13\Lease
661s rll
132 Toward snel1er
67 Unl •dY
133 Sons ot tne
69 Dwell
Amencan
7 I Rear ol shop
Rev olution
73 Wr1tes
labbr 1
74 Go II mound s
134 Qpenw orll laC r•c
76 Fnend of Sam
136 Cove rs
79 1 hreshOid s
1)7 Female r.p rM
81 Fr ench tor
138 Abo unos
summer
139 Latrn cont OJnclron
82 Devoured ,
14 0 ~ske rs
6d We t
14 I Hri iiiJh ll '~
85 Make s wono
142Cremon~·
8 7 L ampr e~s
00 Commemoratrve 143 8 01,1
144 Pretact:
m ar ct~ es
146 AnQry
92 Born
148 European capl1 at
9J Lasso
149 Swell ·
95 Floats 111 arr
97 Hold on proper tv ISO Fameel
IS 1 Wrld b~J I Ia to ol
98 Stamp ol
ln(lt 8
aoorovat
99Beno tel 1
DO WN
101 Breaii.Uuddenl y
103 A state tabOr J
1 Frolic ~
104 Part ol ct a11net
2 Catkm
105 Fertrle spo\s rn
3 Tr111ket
desert
4Gael1C sea g od
t OBSull rll tendlllQ\ 0
5 Teu tonrc de1 ty
I t O Far
6 Beljjlrn
t t2 C onta rncrs
I Stop
tt3Possesses
8 Per to rm
\14 Compass porn!
9 Note ot sc ate
115Grveup
. tOLong · teggea
t t7Want s
btrdS
118 Suspena
11 Mothert y
119 Veh• cte
12 Preposrtr o(l
120 Sy moot tor
13 East lndran oatm
tellurrum
14 Odor
121 Potent rat energ','
15 Hryher
123 Frrend ot Penro d
16 Ore ell. teller
124 Frurt see ds ·
17 Not e ot ·scale
125 Anrmat coats
62

Mar ~

unusual

69 Season•nQ
9J POSISCf iPI laDOI )
91 Pnnter s measure

2 \ l spresent

22 Unutlagu\at •ve
23 Place tor trade
25 Toll
21 Lassos

94 Pan ol church lpt l
96 Sun god

28CiaSSI IIE!S

30 Nur sance
31 OooriT
Jj Nerve networKs

9B K1ln
99 PIIYIIege
tOO Eal to e.~;cess

102 Take unl awi!JII Y
104 Prohrbrts
3SAgreement
105 Paddles
361 re
106 Holds rn h•gh
37 More ra1rona t
regard
39 Crony (collOQ I
107 Prophetess
41 Patn
109 Man s name
42 Booty
11 1 ConcedEid
44 Pert arnmg to
112 Headgear (pt l
punrshmer1 t
113Aabbrt
47 Journey forth
116 Organ ot heartng
48 Those who
manage pr operty 118 Strrkes
l Or other s
119 Heat .
122 Part ot camera
49 Halt
lpll
50 Oei'I!J de
12 4 varrety ot apple
5 4 Cou r1eous
55 Remarnder
125 Conltagra1 ron
56 Cuts
126Gratrl y
59 Deer shOrn
126 Aooon roned
60 Be bo rne
130 E•trnct lhgn Ues s
61 Hebrew tetter
btrd
63 AockltSh
131 Detested
66 A. rtrcte
132 Eagles nest
67 Manuscrrot
135 E•aCI
(aoor l
68 voung r.orse
137 Sma ll amount
70 Ouatfs
138Fhpped
7 I Beas1 of our den
140 Comb l or m
72 Sur table
bOundary·
73 Land su rro unded
142A oden1
by wah!l
143 Detace
75 Steos
144 Po tree
77 Number
Department
78 Change color ol
80 Hav.a na n wreaths
(abbr I
63 Paradrse
t450ur Lord l abbr)
66 Btem1Sh
147 Arl!lrcraltanguage
sa Gr ants use ol
148Parent (colloq I

WILLIAM A. KESLAR

•NOW SERV ING AS STATE CENTRAL
COMITIEEMAN

REPUBLICAN VOTERS

Weare at the in1er sectlon. If we make a mistake
and take the wrong road. we will not be able to change
our course for four long years. Can we afford to gamble
on a new road or shou ld we stick with the road we have
trave!ed successfu ll y before ? We believe that the right
road ts the one that leads to th e nomina tion of Sheriff
Walk.er again . Let us un ite behin d one ,good solid
candtdate.
VOTE DENVER A. WALKER
Pd. Pol. Adv.

•HAS SERVED ASCHAIRMAN OF
MUSKINGUM COUNTY EXECUTIVE
COMMITIEE FOR 8 YEARS.

CALHOUN

PERRY AND VINTON COUNTY.

VOTE FOR
FOR STATE CENTRAL COMMITTEE
HERMAN BOETCHER, PHILO, 0 . CHAIRMA N,
KESLAR FOR CENTRAL COMM ITT EE

NUKE BATTLE JOINED
SACARMENTO, Calif.
(UPI) - The battle over the
future of atomic energy
centers in California Tuesday
w1th voters deciding the
nati on 's firs t-ever ballot
proposition on nuclear power.
Opponents of the measure,
Prop?sition 15, say, If passed,
1t wdl shut down atomic
power plan·ts in California.
Supporters say it will
guara nt ee
nu clear
safeguards for the state's 21
million residents .

. JUDGE RONALD R..

•ENDORSED BY THE EXECUTIVE COMMITIEE
OF MUSKINGUM, MORGAN, lAWRENCE, ·

William A. Keslar

SOLDIER HONORED
CLIFTON, W.Va.- T.Sgt.
Nicholson, whose mother is
Mrs. Asa P. Nicholson, has
been accorded special
recognition in his unit at
McGuire AFB , N. J . A
command and control
technician
with
Headquarters, Twenty-First
Air force , he was named
t&gt;utstanding
Noncommissioned
Officer·
of
the Year for leadership,
professional skill and duty
performance .
A 1961
graduate of Wahama High
School, the sergeant has
studied at the University of
New Mexico , and the
University of Delaware .

"

CHILD KILLED
TREASURE ISLAND, Fla.
(U PI) - A 2-year.olq Ohio
girl was killed early Saturday
when she slipped out of her
motel room and wandered
into the path of a car.
Catherine June Baker,
daughter of . a Columbus,
.Ohio, police officer, had just
arrived with her parents for a
vacation. Police said she had
been put to bed, but ap·
parently became restless
alter her parents, Wayne and
Carolyn Baker, fell asleep.

Dam bursts

Continued on page 17
presidential nomination, ask·
ing all possible help.
"It's destroying everything
in its path.," State Trooper
Duane Sammons said.
"Several hundred vehicles
were swept away, and I feel
sure there are people who
have drowned. The dam
totally gave way and the
water is still moving south ."
He said the.rnajor problem
was looting.
Idaho FaDs Civil Defense
Director Jerry Wadsworth
said Palisades Dam along the
Wyoming border was shut
down io prevent lilly more
water moving into the Snake.
He said ooe dam south of
~daho Falls was opened to
release some of the water. •
The water was four to five
feet high and two miles wide ,
10 minutes before · it hit ;
Rexburg, a small farming :
and college town northeast
Idaho Falls. Buses, mobile ,
homes and cars were swept :
away.
'
Wadsworth
reported &gt;
lroken glls mains caused five :;
fires in Rexburg. Water in •
Rexburg was five feet deep :
by mid-afternoon,
:
State Pollee discouraged •
all traffic north of Idaho FaDs ~
and closed all roads heading :
north. Wadsworth requested :
12,000 to 15,000 units of ~
tetanus vaccine and reported
1,200 units dispatched to ·
Rexburg.
:
Pilots reported both Sugar :
City and Teton urxler water- •
only the tops of houses and :
grain elevators visible above .
the turbulent, muddy \!Biers. ' .

~Orioles

bomb
Twins, 5-l

BALTIMORE (UPI) - Lee
Mliy clubbed his eighth horne
run and sparked a threHun
seventh inning with a rWlscoring single whQe Ken
Holtzman scattered five hits
as the Baltimore Orioles·
defeated the Minnesota
Twins 5-1 Sat!ll'day.
. May swatted a solo homer
off losing pitcher Joe Decker
in the fourth inning and
Oriole third baseman Dolig
Decinces singled across an

Ronald R. Calhoun

FOR
COURT OF APPEALS
REPUBLICAN PRIMARY

Gallia County has never had a Judge on the Court of
Appeals. If ~fected I will remain in Gallia County as your
representative on the Court of Appeals. 1 ask for your
support on June Sth .
Pd . Pol. Adv .

COLUMBUS - Striking
miners at Meigs Mine
Number 1 will be fined $35 a
day if they do not return to
work Monday, according to
an order issued Friday by U.
S. District Cour t Judge
Robert M. Duncan.
The order was one of two
issued in an attempt to get
I,m miners back to work at
th e So uthern Ohio Coal
Company 's three mines in
Meigs and Vinton Counties.
The company supplies most
of the coal for the James M.
Gavin Plant at Cheshire.
According
to Susan
Richards, clerk for Judge
Duncan, fines will be levied
agai nst members of United
Mine Workers Local 1890 if
they do not, returnto work
Monday.
The rulings carne after the
court decided the union was
in contempt of a temporary
restraining order against
picketing at the mines issued
Sept, 9, 1975.
Last week, a $5,000 a day
fine was levied against the
local by Judge Duncan who
made the ruling May 27.
Judge Duncan also issued
orders instructing four of the
local's officers to appear
before him Monday at 4:30
p.m. to explain why they have
not returned to work.
The four officers are Bill
Wooten, president; Albert
Perky, vice-president;
Robert Manley, secretary
and Lloyd Grey, treasurer.
Hearings were held late
f riday for UMW Locals 1896
and 1957 but Judge DWlcan
could not be reached
Saturday for comment on
disposition of those hearings .
Local 1890 walked off its
jobs at Meigs Mine No. I over
a dispute in which a miner
was fired from his job. The
company said he refused to
·obey an order of his foreman.
The Wlion claims the fired
employee wanted to check for
methane gas.
·
An arbitrator upheld the
company but that decision
dissatisfied the union in.
volved.
·
Union employees of Meigs
Mine No. 3 walked off their
jobs May 23.
They were joined by miners
at Meigs Mine No. 2, who ·
accordin g to Gene Oiler
president of Local 1896 Iefi
their jobs beca use of bomb
threats made agai nst the .
mine.

NOW VOU KNOW
The first written reference .·
to the concept of automobile
can be found in Homer 's
fliad .

'

Oriole run in the sixth inning
to break a J.J lie before
Baltimore j~ped on reliever
Bill Campbell in the seventh.
Bob Grich tripled in Mark
Belanger, who had walked,
and after Reggie Jackson
drew a walk, May singled
home Grich and Tony Moser
scored Jackson with a
sacrifice fly .
Holtzman, 5-J, went the
route, walking three and
stri~ing one out.

~IDE AWAYA 1JMgailt
&lt;:1 ·76 Kawasaki

of.:

K%400 SPECIAL Street Bike
•

Ou r ~t

four-stroke
OHC 398cc eng ine.

• Tuned 2-i nto· l exhaust
system boosts mileage
while it cuts costs.
• A beautrful blend
of size. performance
and economy.

Choose yours today at ...

J&amp;R SPORT SHOP
Open Friday Evening Til8
748 E. Main
992 -2194

0.

NEED WHEELS?

IF YOU ARE IN THE
MARKET FOR AHOUSE,
COME IN AND SEE OUR
DOUB~EWIDE DISPLAY
HOMES.
Our 24xS6 Penthouse is FHA approved and

Ca II 446-3211 or 446·
3214
for
trans portation to the polls
on June 8th.

..'

----R•E•P•U•B•li•C•AN
_ _ _ _..,..

~OIJ..I'IItS

[!l

Ccntlnued on p113e 17
114 delegates in 23
congressional districts in
addition to 38 at large
delegates .
There are winner-take-all
aspects .to the democratic
primary here in thai whoever
wins In each district wins all
of its delegates.
The primary, however, is
further complicated by
favorite son candidates
rwming in ll districts with 54
delegates at stake.
Rep. Wayne Hays, [).{)hio,
who
resigned
his
chairmanship of the House
Democratic Ccngressional
Campaign Committee Friday
because of his involvement in
a sex scandal, Is one of the
favorite son candidates,
favoring
Sen.
Hubert
Humphrey in six Ohio
districts.
But many believe the
scandal )las doomed his
chances of winning any but
his own district.
State Treasurer Gertrude
Donahey heads another slate
looking for a share of the 38
at-large delegates, but is
believed to have little chance
of winning the 15 per cent
needed for a share.
Carter has delegates in all
2:! districts, Udall is in 22
districts and Church in is 14
districts.

Supervisor for Gallia Coun ty,
Gallipolis City, and Meigs
Local Schools. She serves 3
school districts and 39
teachers.
Mrs. Gardn er received her
award at the IOOth An·
niversary Alumni Banquet at
Rio Grande College on May
29.

REPUBLICANS

&lt;#' Jd

Carter-Ford

Miners ·
face
.$35 finLl&gt;I...

!

RETURN TO
State Central Committee

MEIGS IN FRONT
Jim
Harder,
fi eld
representative of the Golden
Buckeye Program, has In·
formed the Meigs County
RSVP that Mei~s County is in
front in the percentage of
persons registering for
Golden Buckeye cards. The
Meigs County ReUred Senior
Volunteer Program would
like to see Meigs Ccunty
reach the state goal of 60 pet.
first. Persons who· have
not registered for their Gold·
.en l!uckeye card should by
June 21, at the Meigs County
. Senior Citizens Center,
Pomeroy or at
the
registration booth which will
. be set up during R,egatta.
celebrations.

when you check the construction you will
see why.
We also have two late model trade-ins
that are like new.
A 1974 Hillcrest 2 BR
A 1975 Skyline2 BR

COUNTY COMMISSIONER
FOR JAN. 3rd TERM

Bold Forbes cops Belmont Stakes
NEW YORK iUPI) · E. Rodriguez Tizol 's Bold
Kentucky Derby winner Bold , Forbes. whose stamina for
Forbes built a tremendous I'&gt; mile lest had been
lead over nine rivals in the questioned, had just enough
Belmont Stakes Saturday and left at the end to hold off Mrs.
held off fast closing Douglas Carver's McKenzie
McKenzie Bridge by a half Bridge,
with
Howard
length to win the final Jewel Wilson 's Great Contractor
of the Triple Crown .
only another length back.

Red Sox nip
Angels, 4-3
BOSTON ( UPI) - Rick
Burleson's two-out ninth
inning single drove home
Doug Griffin with the winning
run Saturday and gave the
Boston Red Sox a 4-3 victory
over the California Angels
qehind the five-hit pitching of
ferguson Jenkins.
Burleson, who stroked a
solo homer in the fifth for Red
Sox' third run, delivered his
game-winning hit after
Griffin walked and advanced ·
to second on a passed ball by
Angels' catcher Ed Herr·
mann. Jenkins, in outdueling
Angel ace frank Tanana.

Shaker
Heights
champ

PAUL D. NIDAY
Youth · Experience· Family. Man · Farmer
· Life Time County Resident.
Your Vole will be appreciated June 8.
Pd. Pol. Adv.

"QUALITY ALWAYS"
Pomeroy
992·7034
Ohio
Pearl Ash 992·2323, Roger Davis, 992·7671

Cleveland
tops Chisox

COLUMBUS (UPI)- John
Stickley knocked in AI
Pearlman'with a siligle to left
in the bottom of the ninth
inning Saturday to lift Shaker
Heights to a 5-4 victory over
Youngstown Chaney in the
' Class AAA state high school
base ball
tournament
championship game.
Pearlman had led off the
last frame witlr a walk and
was sacrificed to second by
Tom Haskell on a bunt.
Bob Bartlett, 11·1, went the
distance for Shaker, 28-8.
Tim fenisey, 7·3, took the
loss in relief for Youngstown,
22-5.
The title Is Shaker Heights'
second. The other came in
1965.
.
'

For that vacation site, or a starter home, we
have two 8' wide units that are priced to sell.

NOMINATE
LONNIE W. BURGER
FOR
COUNTY
COMMISSIONER
Term Beginning Januory 2,
t977.

s.truck out five to up his
record to 5-6. Tanana, '!"ho
struck out nine, is now 7-4 . .
The Angels tied the game
with two outs in their half of
the ninth when 37-year.oid
designated hitter Tommy
Davis stroked a two-run
horner over the leftfield wall.
Davis' homer, his first of the
season, came after Cecil
Cooper threw wild to Jenkins
covering first on rookie Bob
Jones' grounder.
Cooper had .helped Jenkins
to the 3-1lead he took into the
ninth with a two-run single in
the fourth inning. California
also scored its first run on a
homer, rookie Ron Jackson's
second in as many games in
the. eighth.

.

Pd. Pol. Adv,

••

CHICAGO (UP! ) - John
Lowenstein's · run-scoring
triple ignited a two-run tenth
inning rally Saturday which
sent the Cleveland Indians off
to a 5-3 victory over the
Chicago While Sox .
Lowenstein 's triple, which
came after Buddy Bell
walked, saddled White Sox
reliever Clay Carroll with his
second defeat against three
wins and gave Jim Kern , who
worked only 1 1-3 innings, his '
fourth victory in six
decisions. Lowenstein came
home with the other run ol the
inning on a passed ball by
catcher Brian Downing.
The White Sox scored first
in the second on Jim Spencer's homer and added
another rWl in the fifth when
Brian Downing singled,
advanced on a walk and
scored on Pat Kelly's single .
But Cleveland bunched four
of their seven hits off Terry
Forster for three runs in the
sixth when George Hendrick
singled and scored on Rico
Carty's double, Charlie
Spikes singled to score Carty
and after a walk, Rick
Manning singled to score
Spikes. Chicago tied it in the
eighth when Nyls Nyman
singled, stole second and
scored on Chet Lemon's
double.

UNOFFICIAL REPUBLICAN SAMPLE BALLOl
ISSUED BY THE MEIGS COUNlY REPUBLICAN EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
LESLIE F. FULTZ, 110 HIGH STREET, POMEROY, OHIO, CHAIRMAN ·

For Justice of Supreme Court

For Judge of the Court of Appeals
(4th District)

(Full Term Commencing January 1, 1977)

Full Term Commencing February 9, 1977

Darrell McHargue, made an
especially strong bid on the
outside ,
bnt
Cordero
managed to keep the tiring
Bold forbes in front.
The victory was Bold
Forbes' 12th in 16 starts.
Honest
Alter
beating
Pleasure ln the Kentucky
Derby by a Iengt11, Bold
Forbes wa s the victim of his
own furious pace in the
Preakness and finished third ·
behind winner Elocutionist.
The . Triple Crown Cam·
paign took its toll on the
others as Honest Pleasure
was passed up for the
Belmont for a rest and
Elocutionist was taken &lt;lUI
with a slight injury .
Bold Forbes suffered a
serious cut on his left hind
hoof in the Preakness U1ree

X

weeks ago, but trainer Laz
Barrera was able to get the
three·year.old son of Irish
Castle-Comely Nell back In
shape for the Belmont.
Majestic Light, who
finished more than eight11
lengths behind the · three
leaders , was lourth with
Aeronaut fifth and Preakness
runner-up Play the Red sixth.
The rest of U1e order of finish
W(os Mullineaux, Best Laid
Plans, Close to Noon and
Qui ~ k Card.

WANTED
SALES MAN wanted l•r
estab lished busi~eu In
Pomeroy , good starting
s~ la ry, m.usl have good
personality lo mnt !he
.•Rvb lic and willlratn. Send
resume to P.O. Box !14,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769.

A's shade NY
NEW YORK (UP!) .:_ Don
Baylor dashed home with the
winning rWl in the ninth in·
ning on a stolen base and a
throwing error by New York
catcher Thurman Munson
Saturday to give the .Oakland
A's a 7-0 triumph over the
Yankees.
With two out,' Baylor beat
out a hard smash to third for
a single. He then stole second
and when Munson's throw
.
went into center field, came
all the .way around to score
the winning r~n . Holli e
fingers, the last of three A's
pitchers gained his third win
in eight ~ecisions, while
Sparky Lyle, 4-4, look the
loss.
The A's parlayed four hitsand Mickey Rivers ' throwing
error for three runs in the
second inning, and the Yanks
came back with a pair in their
ha\f of the inning on a walk,
two singles and an infield out.
The A's took a 4·2 lead in
the next inning on two walks

the Yanks 'scored again in the
sixth on three sineles. Phil
Garner touched Lyle for a
two-run triple In the eighth to

he the score at r&gt;-G for
Oakland, selling lhe sta@e for
Baylor's game-winnlnM ru cc
for home.

RETAIN EXPERIENCE IN YOUR
COMMISSIONERS OFFICE

VO:~rden Ours, Republican Incum bent , serving as Meigs Count'y Commissioner
l_here 1s no substitute for experience to meet the County's neods ·1·n the comt 11g
years .
Ours In seeking another term In the June Primary; stales "during my term In
~tflce tne Lounty Com missioners have completed and are now operallng the County
Landfill. remodeled tile County Court House, remodeled th e Coun ty Jail bui ll
additions to the Veterans Memor ia l Hospllol. Insta ll ed a spr inkling system 'at the
County Inf irma ry, black lopped several County Roads . and repaired severa l bridg es
These pro jec ts were all completed withou Tan Increa se In taxes "
.
" "!he pr~jects the Commissioners are now working on Is th~ construction ol a new
Sen•or Cit iZens Building. a new road from the foot of Children's Home Hill across to
Un ion Avenue. Th is road witt provide egress and Ingress for possibly a new Rest
Home. and additi onal housing for Meigs County "
" During my term In office the Commissioner's have provided money tor Fam ll
Planning, SEOE MS, Senior Cltl&lt;ens, Fire Departments. Retarded Children "
Y
Ours states . "the County Is big business, and making the money aval tabl.e go as
far as possible rs a task . The decisions t make Is always In the best Interest of the
taxpayer."
'
Ours has served as lrustee, member of the Count y Election Board and a member
~h~s~e;~ ~~h~eltare Board . He Is married to the former Murl Trussell , they reside at
feels

and Gene Tenace's RBI
Mr. Ours pledges, " I have tried to honest ly do my best tor Meigs County and wi ll
single. However, Roy White
contlnuetoserve to thebeslofmy ablt.ttylf eiected. "
.
climaxed a three-run fifth
inning rally for New York • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • l l l l i i •.••••P•dii.i.Polltl..Alldllvl.
.with a two-run double, and

.l

Vote Crow for Prosecuting Attorney

PROGRAM

TERM OF OFFICE

. I will bear down on drug violators, ·
especially pushers or . sellers of
drugs.

I am seeking my first term as
Prosecutor of Meigs County.

I will cooperate with the Sheriff's
Office, County Officials,' Township
Trustees, school offici a Is, and all
other interested individua Is.
It is my opinion that more police
protection ' should be . provided for
Meigs County . There are 26 miles in
.area from the East end of fhe County
to the West. Under t.he Ohio Revi'sed
Code Meigs County can establish
Township Police Districts. If the
Township officials desire, I will
assist them in establishing Township
policemen .
There are also additional federal
monies available for additional
police protection. I will do
everything I can to obtain same for
the County.

My opponent has held this office for
16 years and is seeking a fifth term
for four additional years in office.
He has qualified for a State
Employees Retirement Pension.
The Prosecutor should be a young
man and should devote full time to
the job.
My sole employement is that of
practicing law, and I will devote full
time to the practice of law.

-------------My Name Stands
and
For Honesty
Integrity

-------------BACKGROUND

(Vote for not more than one)

MOBILE HOME

Jockey Angel Cordero took one. However , the question of
his " Puerto Rican Rolls BOld Forbes' endurance
. Royce " right to the lead and encouraged several trainers
opened up a tremendous to take a shot at the Belmont,
advantage before the margin particularly with a rich
decreased alarmingly in the second place prize of $42,900.
stretch.
The race developed exactly
In win'ning the $195,1100 as expected with Bold Forbes
Belmont as the 4-5 favorite of breaking smartly from the
the 57,519 fans at Belmont gate and taking a two-length
Park, Bold Forbes added lead after the first quarter of
$117,000 to his career ear- a mile. Best Laid Plans was
nings, bringing his total to the only member of the field
to race anywhere near Bold
$49&amp;,639.
Bold Forbes , who was Forbes in the early going, but
times in 2:29, paid $3.80, $3.40 paid the price In lite stretch
and $2.80. McKenzie Bridge as he faded to eighth.
At the top ol tile stretch,
paid $5.00 and $3.80. with
Creal Contractor returning Bold forbes held a ccm$3.80. The 11-2 exacta of Bold rilanding six-length lead, with
Forbes and McKenzie Bridge McKenzie Bridge and Great
paid $2:!.40.
.
Contractor beginning to move
· Except for Bold forbes , the up to make their challenge.
field was an undislinRuished McKenzie Bridge, under

IRED

"Ric~•

W.

lifelong resident of Meigs County, except
for working three years in Dayton, Ohio.

CROW III

Raised in Syracuse and now lives in letart
Falls.

Candidate For

•

Repubflcan

MEIGS COUNTY

TOTAL ELECT~IC, 2

X

For State Representative
(92nd District)

BEDROOM HOUSE TYPE
WINDOWS, DELUXE MODEL

'7995
UNFURNISHED

Candidates Marked With An "X" Have Been Endorsed by ttie
Republican Executive Committee

.Oip This B~ot
IT IS LEGAL TO TAKE IT INTO lllE VOTING BOOlll WHEN YOU VOTE ON ELECTION DAY
Pd. Pol. Adv.

Proud of his family 's contribution to Meigs
County : ·
Great Grandfather, Charles Crow, was
County Commissioner;
. Great Grandmother, Mary D. Hayman .
Grandfather, Judge Fred . W. Crow, was
County Prosecutor and Common Pleas
Judge;
Grandfather, Irving Karr, was County
Commissioner;
Father, Fred W. Crow, Jr ., is ·a ttorney
and active in civil affairs;
Mother, Eleanor Karr Crow, was a public '
school teacher for many. years .

Prosecuting Altorney
Your Support &amp; Influence Would Be Appreciated

I am a · member of the ·Meigs County
Jaycees; M.A. R. C.; Boar,d of Mental
Retardation; , a Pee Wee baseball coach;
a!'ld has farmed ior the last three years.

I

FRE~ERICK

QUALIFICATIONS
Graduale&lt;lf Oh io University and Ohio State University
Law Shoot .
First pollee legal advisor In the State of Ohio.
Dayton Pollee Academy Instructor.
Sole legal advisor ·for the City of Dayton's Poflce
Department 425 man force .
Graduat e of Pollee Community Re lations Training
Probram given by Xavier University.
Graduate of Special Training Program for Pollee .
Legal Advisors given by the Int ernational Associa tion
of Chiefs at' Police, tnc . and Northwestern Unl-.rslty.
Served as Ohio Assistant Attorney General .
No)\' a practicing attorney with the firm of Crow, Crow
&amp; Porter.

w. CROW

I

Ill

I

Pd . Pol. Adv·'. by the Candidate

"WE ARE THE OLDEST MOBILE HOME
OEALE R IN S. E.
"\

.,

,,'''

'

I

'

�21 - The SundayTimes-Sentinei,Sunday, June 6. 1976

20 - The Sunday Times - Sentinel, Sunday. June 6, 197ti

•

Eli a nine ousts
Forest Run gals win
MINERSVILLE - The
Forest Run Girls' Softball
team delea ted M&amp;R (Meigs)
at Minersville field Thursday
9U&gt;4'.
Leading hitler lor the
winners was Annette Mills
with a triple, double, and two
singles. Leading hitter lor
Meigs was Missy (:ale with a
double and two singles. The
winning pitcher was Kim
Grueser.
Others collectln~ hits !or

•I

I

l,

VOTE FOR

R. BILL ANGELL

FOR
Republican

SHERIFF
For
Gallia County

''

Pd. Pol. Ad

I

,•'

I 'i

PLAY BALL - Meigs Marauder baseball players
prepare to take the field following introduction of players
prior to Friday's Class AA semifinal game in the 1976 Ohio
Baseball Tournament at Ohio State University. On left is
Meigs' Kenneth Wyant. Others in the crowd include

Runner, a righthander for
Coach
Dick
Prince's
Bulldogs, struck out six,
walked one and one
Marauder was able to reach
on an error during the one
hour, 20 minute contest.
Elida, 2li-ll, plated its only
.run in the filth inning on a
triple by first baseman Jim
· Van Demark and a sacrifice
fly off the bat of DH Tim
Priddy.
Rlghty Jeff McKinney
suffered the heartbreaking
loss. He yielded just one
hit, Van Demark's triple In
his
seven
Innings.
McKinney fanned 10 and
issued just one walk. It
came in the first to Joe
Scheele who was cut down
on bis steal attempt by a
fine throw by Kenny
Mankin.
McKinney retired seven out
of the first eight batters via
the strikeout route.
Meigs put a runner on in the
third when Greg Smith
walked but he was erased on
McKinney's popped bunt
attempt.
In the fourth, Brian
Hamilton was safe on an
error but was left when Mick
· Davenport fouled out. Elida's
Rumer finished strong
fanning lour of the last six
Marauders to face him.
Meigs finished its season at
14-12. Here 's a play-by-play
account of the contest:

Charles Chancey, football coach and athletic director
!with back U&gt; camera); Mick Davenport (2) and Charles
Marshall I i ). Meigs dropped a I-ll heartbreaker to Elida.
I Jim Hamm photos).

McKay resigns

.,

Now you can enjoy t he
handling abilities thRt '
made radial tireB famous
R a dial :l6S tir es tuw e
rond · h.u!(adnM co ntro l,
Rnd f'ven

A

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h.. lt. HurrY in tod11y!

..,.

31.80
37.83
40.30

7.35-13
7.75-14
8.25-14
8.55-U
8.25-10

13.43
41.$_$

ll.37

• signs
Rivera
with 'Frisco
SAN FRANCISCO.i UP!) California wide-receiver
Steve Rivera Friday signed a
contract with the San
Francisco 49ers, a club
spokesman said.
Rivera, 21, an Ail-America
. receiver and a fourth.,olUid
~9er draft choice, was the
third leading receiver in
major college competition
last year. He shattered all of
Cal's receiving records,
including most receptions in
a ~ingle season, 57 for 790
yards and four U&gt;uchdowns.

Second Inning

JEFF )lkKinney, sen ior righthander for the Meigs Marauders, allowed only one hit in
Friday's Class AA semifinal game in the 1976 Ohio State Baseball Tournament in Columbus,
but th e Marauders were held hitless and scoreless in a I-ll setback to Elida. McKinnev
fanned 10 and walked only one.
·

11.57

Sears has a credit plan to suit most every need

·~ ~
··
•,

:, T .

'
I

'

' •

-~

. \1

European crown

AND CO .

'I

ALL MEIGS COUNTY VOTERS
My name i~ Charles "Chuck" Bartels. I am a Republican candidate lor Meigs
County commissioner . I am 26 yrs . old, married, andthe father of two young chi ldren .

Lj
I

I am a graduate of Pomeroy High School and a11ended Rio Grande College.
I would like your support In the coming election. II I am elected, I will work lo
serve the entire county to the best of my ability , I believe that Meigs Count inns
wortlng together can make Meigs County a more productive and attractive area for ~

all Its people.
I will try to prov ide rnore jobs by establishing an industrial consultants ott ice.
through which Industry could be encouraged to settle in the county. more jobs·wOuld
enable Meogs County to keep many o~ lis younger people in the county and to

encourage them to become involved in the many organizations working for th e
improvement of the county .
I would also seek a way to provide a low-cost ambulance service for al l M eig s

Countlans. The ambulance could be housed at Veterans Memorial Hospital wi th the
attendants helping oul in the ~ospltal when not on call . I believe a schedule needs to
be arranged with the hospital so that a doc/or Is always there on duly . I wi ll al so work

to secure more doctors for the county .
I will work to seek more federal and state aid for housing for our elderly ci1izens
recreation for our youth. and the up.gradlng of our county service s.
'
I will work with and encourage our law enforcement per sonnel and ci tiz en s
groups to schedule rri~tlngs and become better acquainted with each other 's

problems and work together to find solutions. This would be especially helpfullo our
smaller communities within the county .

~

.

I will work lor /he Improvement of our roads, both county and slate highways . It
IS 111y contenllon /hal we should meet wllh state officials and make Meigs Counly a

priority county fOr hlg~way construcllon and e)(panslon .

.

· These are the main ol&gt;jectlves for which I seek ·the olfice of Meigs Co
commissioner . Again, I ask for your support.

Thank You.

·

Sincere~,

SALESMAN w~nled for
established business in
Pom.eroy , gooc:l starting
1alary, must have good

personality to meet the
public and will train. Send
resume to P. o. Box 534 ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Chud! ~ .

Pd.'Pol Adv .
t

VOTE FOR

Earned Run Average
(based an 45 innings pitched)

National Lugue: Zachry, Cin

l.J3 ; Jones , SD 2.11 ' Rau. LA
2.17 ; Lonborg . Phi l 2.64;

Montefusco, SF 2.1l.

GEORGE E. WOODWARD
FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER
FOR JAN. 2 TERM
Vote For A Hard Working
Man and He Will Work Hard

You. Your Suppmt Appreciated

Pd. Pol. Adv.

A·merlcan

lugue:

Fifth Inning
•
ELIDA - Becker fl ied outoi
to left. Van Demark got flrs C
hit of game, triple lo rlghfoo
center. Designated hitte r!
Priddy sacrificed Vano
Demark home on a long fly I~
right. Staas lofted fly to /efllooo
end the Inning.
•
MEIGS
. Howard:
grounded to short. Bachner•
flew

to

center.

flew to center .

•

Seventh Inning
~
· ELIDA - Prince grounded :
out to second. C/eari -up =
Becker fanned . Van. Demark •
flew to center.

•

MEIGS - Hamilton got a =
called third strike. Soulsb.y ;
fanned . Davenport hit high. ~
chopper to third.
~
LINE-UPS
~
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•

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Grass catcher assembly optional.

~idenour

"'

Clev 1.88 ; Trav ers, Mil 1.96 ;
Kern . Clev 2.20; Wood , Chi
'

For the Term

Starting

January 2, 1977

What the candidate fails to. fell the voters is tnat the
salary of a Commissioner will be eight thousand eight
hundred dollars a year. I can take the salary of a
Comiss/oner and make a good living and do the job 1

Cal 94 ; Ryan, Cal 91 ; Blylev en,
lex 74 ; Hunter, NY 66;
Gosuge. Chi ~0 .

am elected for . I have no businesses to run, therefore 1 4
lle~1 Co.mmlssioner ..This Is my second
t1~e to run for th1sofflce. The reason I am running for

c.an be a full

TREES PLANTED
REEDSVILLE - Coolville
Boy Scout Truop 76 planted
approximately 1600 flowers
at Forked Rw1 Stale Park on
May 26 under the supervision
of Scoutmaster Joe Owens.
Scouts helping were Bill
Humphrey, Ben Voglesong,
Doug Vogl esong, Brian
Russell, Brian Reed, Tim
Tanthorey
and
Brian
Ridenour.

Supply

Chester, Ohio
Ph. 985-3308

CITIZENS
OF
SOUlHERN
LOCAL
SCHOOL
DISTRICl

CHESHIRE - In the girls
second annual Cla ss A
District track meet held May
29 at Rio Grande College,
Vicki Stroud from Kyger
Creek placed in the tOO yard
dash and 220 yard dash in
order to advance to the state
meet this weekend in
Columbus.
Vicki won the 100 yard dash
In the time ll.6 selling a new
. district record. In the 220
yard dash she placed second
with the time:27.0. However,
since Class A ge ts to send two
represe ntatives from each
event Vicki ran this event at
state yesterday.
1
Miss Stroud ran In the
semi-finals Friday ( 100 yard
dash) and (220 yard dash) at
Ohio State University . Finals
were Saturday.

Gallipolis field day
DELUXE 19". Modei5239F.
Without Catcher.

Miss Stroud
in state 'A'
track meet

GREEN Elementary winners in the recent Gallipolis City School District's Field Dav
were, front row, left to right, Sherry Scott and Allison Woods. Rear - Cris Smith, Kevin
Johnson, Jerry Eusller and Terry Oliver.

Mankin:

grounded to second.
•
Sixth Inning
:
ELIDA - Zub.er fanned .•
Rumer was put out.on a throw:
from Davenport deep in the•
hole at short. Sodders safe on:
bad throw by Davenport. But.
Scheele lined to center to end ~
the threat.
•
MEIGS
Smith and •
McKinney fanned. Marshall ~

JUNE 8 FOR
COUNTY
COMMISSIONER .

Strikeouts
Natianal League : Seaver , NY
79 ; Messersmith , Atl , Richard ,
Hou and MontefuSco. SF 57;
Lolich , NY sn.
American League: Tanan a,

WASHINGTON Elementary School pupils posting wins in the recenl Gallipolis City
Schools' Field Day on Memorial Field were, front row, left to right, Phil King, Mike
Williams and Kenny Russell. Rear - Joe r,tulato, Martha Prose, Crystal Green and Yvell e
Marlin.

error . Davenport fouled OUWj
to first.
:

Srown.

2.25 ; Alexander , Ba ll 2.29 .

DALLAS IUP! ) - The
Dallas Cowboys Friday
announced the signing of two
more · I 976 draft choices ,
fourth-round pick Tom
Rafferty of Penn State and
14th.,ound . selection Larry
Mushinskie of Nebraska.
Rafferty is a 6-3, 248-pound
guard who was an aile
America as a senior at Penn
State.
Munshinskie , a 6-3, 217pound tight · end from
Nebraska, is seen as a
possible linebacker prospect
by the Cowboys.

RIO GRANDE trophy winners in the recent Gallipolis City School Districl 's rleld du y
are, front row, left to right, Cora Wolfe, Cindy Reese and David Wolf . Rear .lur k Vunee,
Lisa Woodall and Robbie Morrison~

ELIDA
Sodder!lr
grounded to second; Scheel&lt;!!:
popped out to short. Pr.lnc~~o
fanned after count was 3·0~
MEI.GS - Marshall out l&lt;jl
right field. Hamilton safe Or!'
ball knocked down by pitcher;

NOMINATE
.WILLIAM
WALTERS

PAT Souls by, right fielder for the Meigs Marauders, fanned twice arid was credited with
a sacrifice in the fourth inning of Friday's Class AA semifinal baseball game in the 1976 Ohio
Righ School Tournament.

Press

WANTED

big success recently
GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallip_olis City School SysteJII
recently held its annual fie1d
day activities for grades 4, 5,
and 6.
In the morning, rooms from
each of the district's four
schools; Washington, Clay,
Green, and Rio Grande,
competed among themselves
for first, second, and thi~d
place in each of five events.
The boys and girls competed separately in the SO
yard dash , 100 yard dash,
running broad jwnp, softball
throw, and the sack race.
At the conclusion of the
morning activities, a ribbon

presentation was held with
blue, red, and white ribbons
going to the first, second, and
third
place
winners,
respectively.
In the afternoon, the finals
were held with the ribbon
winners of the morning
competing in each of the five
events.
First, second, and third
place winners, for the
Gallipolis City School .System
were determined. Trophies
were awarded to the first
place winners in the finals .
Ribbons were presented to
the top three winners in eac h
event.

DETROIT IUP! )
The
Detroit Lions Friday signed
Univ~rsity · of
Wyoming
fullback LawreQce Gaines
and Univer.sity of Hawaii
defensive tackle John
Woodcock for the 1976 season.
The Uons now have 10 of
their 19 draft choices under
contract.

Hafner accepts
new position
GREEN BAY, Wis. (liP!)
- Doug Hafner, who has been
assistant director of player
personl)el for the Cincinnati
Bengals since 1969, Friday
was named director of player
personnel for the Green Bay ·
Packers.
In the post, Hafner will
direct college draft efforts by
Green Bay.

r

J

•.• AND I DESERVE AGOOD
EDUCATION
MY NAME ISN'T ON THE BALLOT,

I

BUT AVOTE

.•.

t
j

•

't'

is a VOTE for ME
Poid For b.y Friends of Southern Loco/

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

,,.,

~®w Water Heater. '

Insulation ·Kit
Quickly pays for itself in energy savings!

VOTE REPUBLICAN
VOTE FOR

ROBERT F. ·(BOB) SNOWDEN
FOR
'MEIGS COUNTY

Robert F. Snowden
Republican Candidate For

95
Only

Folks, we must start a county supported
youth program- Meigs County is one of the
two counties of Ohio that has no such
program.
,
let's spend some of our county's money
on our county's future by spending it on our
county's youth .
let's aid 4-H, mental health, facilities
for youth, let's get a Meigs County
Children's Home.
let's improve our health department
and Meigs County's Hospital. We . need a
Meigs County unemployment office.
let's improve our police units in all of
Meigs County.
·
Let's work together to search out the
waste in all the county's departments- the
removal of such waste can finance many of
our 'county's n'eeds.
There are many federally supported

Voter-~lease

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all year long .. every year . Stop the
waste and start saving money with
the new Water H.ter Insulation Kit
from Johns-ManVUie. The vinyl -faced
fiber glass is designed for quick,
easy insta llation . Do-it-yourself today .
Just fol low the simple Instructions
in the kit.

COMMISSIONER
Primary Election _: fune 8,

).gf6

programs that we need -let's hire a county
employee to get these programs for us. We
will have more at less cost to the county if
we can get this aid.
Let's pay our county employees a living
wage - let's give them job s~curity if at a II
possible, if they are goin)i to serve us in
Meigs County, then lei'$ pay for these
services. ·
We must have a county supported lire
department and an emergency unit. We are
asking too much of our volunteers. Let's do
the transporting with the county unit. let's
buy the expensive fire equipment from
county funds that single v' liage units can't
alford.
Let's elect county officials that wi II
constantly put political pressure on our
stall! officials to improve all the state
facilities in Meigs County.

Carolina

Pd . Pol. Adv.

STORE HOURS:
(I

MOND~Y-FRIDA'Y

~.

!Jll

8:00-5:00 SATURDAY 8:01).12:00

.,

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Johns ·Monvill,

Anoth er energy - and money-saving product from Johns-Manville

.,

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.

312 6TH ST. POINT PLEASANT
675-1160

remember-a vote for me is a vote for you-for 1.will not lie

'

t

''

Lumber
and
Supply Co.

to you nor steal from you.

I •I •

Kit

MEIGS COUNTY

COMMISSIONER

If you will help me you will see a better
Gallia · County. I am a mell)ber of Masonic
lodge 131, Vinton, Ohio . Please help me so I
may help you!
Pd . Pol. Adv . by the Candidate
I

!

FOR
the LEVY •

thos office now Is because I am interested In what
happens in Gallia County.
I think the Commissioners office should be 'open five
days a w,.k . If elected I will be a full flme
Commissioner and not just on Mondays . I will work lOG
. per c.ent/n behalf ol the taxpayer and 1 wil l go to the
people and see to their needs.
.

I

I

••

•

ATTENTION

'

:

...

Se

•

· Third Inning
1
ELIDA Staas ouP
sw inging ; Zuber caugh~
looking; Rumer . hit first lair'
ball off McKinney after:
Me Kinney had fanned 7 of)
first eight.
:
MEIGS
Man kino
grounded to third. Smlt~
walked, out on DP on
Me Kinney's pop up on bunt
attempt. McKinney ppppe&lt;t.
out.
,..

=
.

MILAN, Italy IUPI) Italy 's Angelo Jacopucci
Satisfaction Guarantffd or Your Money Back
defeated Britain's Bunny
Sterling on points Friday
Silver Bridge Plaza night to wln the European
Ph. 446·2110
middleweight boxing title.

t:onvtnif'nt: Shou Sfo!llf'll
'at •kll by l'l ml'le 446-:l170

!

United
, lnteroallonal

· By

Lemrt Falls
wins, 25 to 5

prices include Installation
• Now on aale

. .•

Cowboys sign 2 more prospects

=

]acopucci claims

f

Call 446-3250 or 446.9284 if any qestions arise.
I School)
I Home)

'

Fourth l.nning

---

Send to Jim Osborne, Gallia Academy H S Gal/ipo/o's

0 . 41631

swinging; D. H. Priddy wen!'
down swinging.
,
MEIGS Davenporl
fanned ; Howard out t4
shortstop; Bachner oul to

first baseman .

PHONE

Parent's or Guardian Signature _ _ _ __;__ __

..
Avg. ;
ELIDA- Becker fanned on . .
1.257} C
three straight r/lches; 38-Mike Sodders
(.3281 0
VanDemar~
wen , down 2B- Joe Scheele
CF- Randy Prince
(.3971 o
C- Roger Becker
(.327!
1B-Jim VanDemark 1.3761 •
DH- Tim Priddy
(.245) =
RB- Don Staas
(.3331 •
SS- Jan Zuber
1.3471 =
P- Rick Rumer (.318, 10·2o
record)
•
Home-Meigs (14.111 ,..
PORTLAND - In ThursAvg.
day night pee wee action the 3B- Charlie Marshall, sr .. 44l,;
Letart Falls Farmers posted 1B- Brlan Hamilton, jr . .25Qil!
.2so;
an impressive 25 Ul 5 vicU&gt;ry RB- Pat Soulsby,sr.
SS.,-Mick
Davenport,
sr
over Portland, the home CB- Jim Howard, sr. .313;,..
team .
2B- Steve Bachner; sr. .2000.
Collecting hits for Letart
C- Kenny Mankin. sr. .200::
.428,.
were Scott Wickline, 2 home LF- Greq Smith, jr.
P- Jeff Me Kinney, sr ·
•
runs, a single; Mark Jarrell,
(9·4)
.307
Eric Milliron and Scott Kiser
each a single.
Jay Dodderer had a double
and single for Portland.
Classified Ads
Letart pitchers were Scott
Wickline and Keith Allen .
Mark Jarrell and Scott
brln&amp; you
Wickline were the catchers.
extra cash
On the mound for Portland
was Randy Beegle and Bruce
far
Wolfe was behind the plate.
shoppin&amp; sprees
Letart Falls
660 67-25
Portland
011 12- 5

49.68

8.85-15

'

First Inning

Ell DA- Sodders, called
third strike' Scheele drew •
walk, full coon!, out stealing ,
fine throw by Man kin.
Prince, out swinging.
MEIGS - Marshall pop.
out; Hamilton grounded to
third ; Soulsby went down
swinging.

17.80

8.~5-16

AGE

COLUMBUS
Close only counts in
horseshoes, and if its any .consolation tile Meigs
Marauders came close here Friday to advancing
to the finals of the Class AA Regional State
Baseball Tournament, but a no-hit pitching
performance by Elida's Rick Rumer eljminateq ·
Meigs, 1-0.
'

TAMPA, Fla. 1UP!) - J.
K. McKay resigned as
assistant football coach at
Oregon State Friday and
Signed as a player with the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers,
coached by his father John
McKay, the Bucs announced.
Shortly alter he was picked
by the Bucs in the Natiomil
Football League's veterans
allocation dra!t, McKay said
he intended to pass u·p pro
football and continue his
coaching career but Friday
he changed his mind.

Our biggest
price cut ever

NAME--------ADDRESS,_ __

hit in defeat

Oregon post

,.'

Please check your chetice

M~rauder ·ace ·
•
.gtves up one
..

..

#

the winners were Patty
Robinson, one double and two
singles; Kim Grueser, two
doubles and one single;
Sandy Hamilton, one double,
two singles; Pam Bralier,
two singles and Unda Fisher,
two singles.
For Meigs Mary Boggs,
three singles; Beth Vaughan,
two singles; Kellle Burdette,
two doubles ; Cindy Hlndy,
two singles; Megan Miller,
Kathy Howard , Tracy
Burdette and Glenda Brown,
each a single.
In second game action the
Hit &amp; Misses defeated New
Haven Hitters 13 U&gt; o.
Leading hitter lor the
winners was Holsinger with
two singles. Leading hitter
lor New Haven was Cathy
Roush with one double and
one single. The winning
pitcher was Jean Ritchhart.
In other action Thursday
the Syracuse seniors defeated
Pomeroy 22 Ul 8 at the Meigs
High School field.
Leading hitter !or Syracuse
was Tonya Ash with one
triple and four singles.
Leading hitter lor Pomeroy
was Nancy Smith with two
singles. The winning pitcher
was Carla Teaford.
Other hitters for Syracuse
were Kim Dugan, one triple,
three singles; Vicky Cundiff,
four singles; Kim Riffle,
three singles; Becky Crow,
one double and two singles.

Third Annual Gallipolis Basketball Camp
'When: July ll·l31'd
July 16-30, 4·1l Grade
Where: GAHS Gym
· If enough enrolled
Who: GradeSI, 5, 6, 7. 8 nexl year:
Cost : $35 With Ball &amp; T.Shirt
525 Without Bali &amp; T·Shirt
515 Deposit &amp; Balance due July .19th

(I

�21 - The SundayTimes-Sentinei,Sunday, June 6. 1976

20 - The Sunday Times - Sentinel, Sunday. June 6, 197ti

•

Eli a nine ousts
Forest Run gals win
MINERSVILLE - The
Forest Run Girls' Softball
team delea ted M&amp;R (Meigs)
at Minersville field Thursday
9U&gt;4'.
Leading hitler lor the
winners was Annette Mills
with a triple, double, and two
singles. Leading hitter lor
Meigs was Missy (:ale with a
double and two singles. The
winning pitcher was Kim
Grueser.
Others collectln~ hits !or

•I

I

l,

VOTE FOR

R. BILL ANGELL

FOR
Republican

SHERIFF
For
Gallia County

''

Pd. Pol. Ad

I

,•'

I 'i

PLAY BALL - Meigs Marauder baseball players
prepare to take the field following introduction of players
prior to Friday's Class AA semifinal game in the 1976 Ohio
Baseball Tournament at Ohio State University. On left is
Meigs' Kenneth Wyant. Others in the crowd include

Runner, a righthander for
Coach
Dick
Prince's
Bulldogs, struck out six,
walked one and one
Marauder was able to reach
on an error during the one
hour, 20 minute contest.
Elida, 2li-ll, plated its only
.run in the filth inning on a
triple by first baseman Jim
· Van Demark and a sacrifice
fly off the bat of DH Tim
Priddy.
Rlghty Jeff McKinney
suffered the heartbreaking
loss. He yielded just one
hit, Van Demark's triple In
his
seven
Innings.
McKinney fanned 10 and
issued just one walk. It
came in the first to Joe
Scheele who was cut down
on bis steal attempt by a
fine throw by Kenny
Mankin.
McKinney retired seven out
of the first eight batters via
the strikeout route.
Meigs put a runner on in the
third when Greg Smith
walked but he was erased on
McKinney's popped bunt
attempt.
In the fourth, Brian
Hamilton was safe on an
error but was left when Mick
· Davenport fouled out. Elida's
Rumer finished strong
fanning lour of the last six
Marauders to face him.
Meigs finished its season at
14-12. Here 's a play-by-play
account of the contest:

Charles Chancey, football coach and athletic director
!with back U&gt; camera); Mick Davenport (2) and Charles
Marshall I i ). Meigs dropped a I-ll heartbreaker to Elida.
I Jim Hamm photos).

McKay resigns

.,

Now you can enjoy t he
handling abilities thRt '
made radial tireB famous
R a dial :l6S tir es tuw e
rond · h.u!(adnM co ntro l,
Rnd f'ven

A

rugJ(ed stPel

h.. lt. HurrY in tod11y!

..,.

31.80
37.83
40.30

7.35-13
7.75-14
8.25-14
8.55-U
8.25-10

13.43
41.$_$

ll.37

• signs
Rivera
with 'Frisco
SAN FRANCISCO.i UP!) California wide-receiver
Steve Rivera Friday signed a
contract with the San
Francisco 49ers, a club
spokesman said.
Rivera, 21, an Ail-America
. receiver and a fourth.,olUid
~9er draft choice, was the
third leading receiver in
major college competition
last year. He shattered all of
Cal's receiving records,
including most receptions in
a ~ingle season, 57 for 790
yards and four U&gt;uchdowns.

Second Inning

JEFF )lkKinney, sen ior righthander for the Meigs Marauders, allowed only one hit in
Friday's Class AA semifinal game in the 1976 Ohio State Baseball Tournament in Columbus,
but th e Marauders were held hitless and scoreless in a I-ll setback to Elida. McKinnev
fanned 10 and walked only one.
·

11.57

Sears has a credit plan to suit most every need

·~ ~
··
•,

:, T .

'
I

'

' •

-~

. \1

European crown

AND CO .

'I

ALL MEIGS COUNTY VOTERS
My name i~ Charles "Chuck" Bartels. I am a Republican candidate lor Meigs
County commissioner . I am 26 yrs . old, married, andthe father of two young chi ldren .

Lj
I

I am a graduate of Pomeroy High School and a11ended Rio Grande College.
I would like your support In the coming election. II I am elected, I will work lo
serve the entire county to the best of my ability , I believe that Meigs Count inns
wortlng together can make Meigs County a more productive and attractive area for ~

all Its people.
I will try to prov ide rnore jobs by establishing an industrial consultants ott ice.
through which Industry could be encouraged to settle in the county. more jobs·wOuld
enable Meogs County to keep many o~ lis younger people in the county and to

encourage them to become involved in the many organizations working for th e
improvement of the county .
I would also seek a way to provide a low-cost ambulance service for al l M eig s

Countlans. The ambulance could be housed at Veterans Memorial Hospital wi th the
attendants helping oul in the ~ospltal when not on call . I believe a schedule needs to
be arranged with the hospital so that a doc/or Is always there on duly . I wi ll al so work

to secure more doctors for the county .
I will work to seek more federal and state aid for housing for our elderly ci1izens
recreation for our youth. and the up.gradlng of our county service s.
'
I will work with and encourage our law enforcement per sonnel and ci tiz en s
groups to schedule rri~tlngs and become better acquainted with each other 's

problems and work together to find solutions. This would be especially helpfullo our
smaller communities within the county .

~

.

I will work lor /he Improvement of our roads, both county and slate highways . It
IS 111y contenllon /hal we should meet wllh state officials and make Meigs Counly a

priority county fOr hlg~way construcllon and e)(panslon .

.

· These are the main ol&gt;jectlves for which I seek ·the olfice of Meigs Co
commissioner . Again, I ask for your support.

Thank You.

·

Sincere~,

SALESMAN w~nled for
established business in
Pom.eroy , gooc:l starting
1alary, must have good

personality to meet the
public and will train. Send
resume to P. o. Box 534 ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Chud! ~ .

Pd.'Pol Adv .
t

VOTE FOR

Earned Run Average
(based an 45 innings pitched)

National Lugue: Zachry, Cin

l.J3 ; Jones , SD 2.11 ' Rau. LA
2.17 ; Lonborg . Phi l 2.64;

Montefusco, SF 2.1l.

GEORGE E. WOODWARD
FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER
FOR JAN. 2 TERM
Vote For A Hard Working
Man and He Will Work Hard

You. Your Suppmt Appreciated

Pd. Pol. Adv.

A·merlcan

lugue:

Fifth Inning
•
ELIDA - Becker fl ied outoi
to left. Van Demark got flrs C
hit of game, triple lo rlghfoo
center. Designated hitte r!
Priddy sacrificed Vano
Demark home on a long fly I~
right. Staas lofted fly to /efllooo
end the Inning.
•
MEIGS
. Howard:
grounded to short. Bachner•
flew

to

center.

flew to center .

•

Seventh Inning
~
· ELIDA - Prince grounded :
out to second. C/eari -up =
Becker fanned . Van. Demark •
flew to center.

•

MEIGS - Hamilton got a =
called third strike. Soulsb.y ;
fanned . Davenport hit high. ~
chopper to third.
~
LINE-UPS
~
Visitors-Elida (23-12)
•

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adjustments. Extra-quiet. under-the-deck muffler.
Lightweight deck. easy-roll wheels. Patented
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Grass catcher assembly optional.

~idenour

"'

Clev 1.88 ; Trav ers, Mil 1.96 ;
Kern . Clev 2.20; Wood , Chi
'

For the Term

Starting

January 2, 1977

What the candidate fails to. fell the voters is tnat the
salary of a Commissioner will be eight thousand eight
hundred dollars a year. I can take the salary of a
Comiss/oner and make a good living and do the job 1

Cal 94 ; Ryan, Cal 91 ; Blylev en,
lex 74 ; Hunter, NY 66;
Gosuge. Chi ~0 .

am elected for . I have no businesses to run, therefore 1 4
lle~1 Co.mmlssioner ..This Is my second
t1~e to run for th1sofflce. The reason I am running for

c.an be a full

TREES PLANTED
REEDSVILLE - Coolville
Boy Scout Truop 76 planted
approximately 1600 flowers
at Forked Rw1 Stale Park on
May 26 under the supervision
of Scoutmaster Joe Owens.
Scouts helping were Bill
Humphrey, Ben Voglesong,
Doug Vogl esong, Brian
Russell, Brian Reed, Tim
Tanthorey
and
Brian
Ridenour.

Supply

Chester, Ohio
Ph. 985-3308

CITIZENS
OF
SOUlHERN
LOCAL
SCHOOL
DISTRICl

CHESHIRE - In the girls
second annual Cla ss A
District track meet held May
29 at Rio Grande College,
Vicki Stroud from Kyger
Creek placed in the tOO yard
dash and 220 yard dash in
order to advance to the state
meet this weekend in
Columbus.
Vicki won the 100 yard dash
In the time ll.6 selling a new
. district record. In the 220
yard dash she placed second
with the time:27.0. However,
since Class A ge ts to send two
represe ntatives from each
event Vicki ran this event at
state yesterday.
1
Miss Stroud ran In the
semi-finals Friday ( 100 yard
dash) and (220 yard dash) at
Ohio State University . Finals
were Saturday.

Gallipolis field day
DELUXE 19". Modei5239F.
Without Catcher.

Miss Stroud
in state 'A'
track meet

GREEN Elementary winners in the recent Gallipolis City School District's Field Dav
were, front row, left to right, Sherry Scott and Allison Woods. Rear - Cris Smith, Kevin
Johnson, Jerry Eusller and Terry Oliver.

Mankin:

grounded to second.
•
Sixth Inning
:
ELIDA - Zub.er fanned .•
Rumer was put out.on a throw:
from Davenport deep in the•
hole at short. Sodders safe on:
bad throw by Davenport. But.
Scheele lined to center to end ~
the threat.
•
MEIGS
Smith and •
McKinney fanned. Marshall ~

JUNE 8 FOR
COUNTY
COMMISSIONER .

Strikeouts
Natianal League : Seaver , NY
79 ; Messersmith , Atl , Richard ,
Hou and MontefuSco. SF 57;
Lolich , NY sn.
American League: Tanan a,

WASHINGTON Elementary School pupils posting wins in the recenl Gallipolis City
Schools' Field Day on Memorial Field were, front row, left to right, Phil King, Mike
Williams and Kenny Russell. Rear - Joe r,tulato, Martha Prose, Crystal Green and Yvell e
Marlin.

error . Davenport fouled OUWj
to first.
:

Srown.

2.25 ; Alexander , Ba ll 2.29 .

DALLAS IUP! ) - The
Dallas Cowboys Friday
announced the signing of two
more · I 976 draft choices ,
fourth-round pick Tom
Rafferty of Penn State and
14th.,ound . selection Larry
Mushinskie of Nebraska.
Rafferty is a 6-3, 248-pound
guard who was an aile
America as a senior at Penn
State.
Munshinskie , a 6-3, 217pound tight · end from
Nebraska, is seen as a
possible linebacker prospect
by the Cowboys.

RIO GRANDE trophy winners in the recent Gallipolis City School Districl 's rleld du y
are, front row, left to right, Cora Wolfe, Cindy Reese and David Wolf . Rear .lur k Vunee,
Lisa Woodall and Robbie Morrison~

ELIDA
Sodder!lr
grounded to second; Scheel&lt;!!:
popped out to short. Pr.lnc~~o
fanned after count was 3·0~
MEI.GS - Marshall out l&lt;jl
right field. Hamilton safe Or!'
ball knocked down by pitcher;

NOMINATE
.WILLIAM
WALTERS

PAT Souls by, right fielder for the Meigs Marauders, fanned twice arid was credited with
a sacrifice in the fourth inning of Friday's Class AA semifinal baseball game in the 1976 Ohio
Righ School Tournament.

Press

WANTED

big success recently
GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallip_olis City School SysteJII
recently held its annual fie1d
day activities for grades 4, 5,
and 6.
In the morning, rooms from
each of the district's four
schools; Washington, Clay,
Green, and Rio Grande,
competed among themselves
for first, second, and thi~d
place in each of five events.
The boys and girls competed separately in the SO
yard dash , 100 yard dash,
running broad jwnp, softball
throw, and the sack race.
At the conclusion of the
morning activities, a ribbon

presentation was held with
blue, red, and white ribbons
going to the first, second, and
third
place
winners,
respectively.
In the afternoon, the finals
were held with the ribbon
winners of the morning
competing in each of the five
events.
First, second, and third
place winners, for the
Gallipolis City School .System
were determined. Trophies
were awarded to the first
place winners in the finals .
Ribbons were presented to
the top three winners in eac h
event.

DETROIT IUP! )
The
Detroit Lions Friday signed
Univ~rsity · of
Wyoming
fullback LawreQce Gaines
and Univer.sity of Hawaii
defensive tackle John
Woodcock for the 1976 season.
The Uons now have 10 of
their 19 draft choices under
contract.

Hafner accepts
new position
GREEN BAY, Wis. (liP!)
- Doug Hafner, who has been
assistant director of player
personl)el for the Cincinnati
Bengals since 1969, Friday
was named director of player
personnel for the Green Bay ·
Packers.
In the post, Hafner will
direct college draft efforts by
Green Bay.

r

J

•.• AND I DESERVE AGOOD
EDUCATION
MY NAME ISN'T ON THE BALLOT,

I

BUT AVOTE

.•.

t
j

•

't'

is a VOTE for ME
Poid For b.y Friends of Southern Loco/

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

,,.,

~®w Water Heater. '

Insulation ·Kit
Quickly pays for itself in energy savings!

VOTE REPUBLICAN
VOTE FOR

ROBERT F. ·(BOB) SNOWDEN
FOR
'MEIGS COUNTY

Robert F. Snowden
Republican Candidate For

95
Only

Folks, we must start a county supported
youth program- Meigs County is one of the
two counties of Ohio that has no such
program.
,
let's spend some of our county's money
on our county's future by spending it on our
county's youth .
let's aid 4-H, mental health, facilities
for youth, let's get a Meigs County
Children's Home.
let's improve our health department
and Meigs County's Hospital. We . need a
Meigs County unemployment office.
let's improve our police units in all of
Meigs County.
·
Let's work together to search out the
waste in all the county's departments- the
removal of such waste can finance many of
our 'county's n'eeds.
There are many federally supported

Voter-~lease

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all year long .. every year . Stop the
waste and start saving money with
the new Water H.ter Insulation Kit
from Johns-ManVUie. The vinyl -faced
fiber glass is designed for quick,
easy insta llation . Do-it-yourself today .
Just fol low the simple Instructions
in the kit.

COMMISSIONER
Primary Election _: fune 8,

).gf6

programs that we need -let's hire a county
employee to get these programs for us. We
will have more at less cost to the county if
we can get this aid.
Let's pay our county employees a living
wage - let's give them job s~curity if at a II
possible, if they are goin)i to serve us in
Meigs County, then lei'$ pay for these
services. ·
We must have a county supported lire
department and an emergency unit. We are
asking too much of our volunteers. Let's do
the transporting with the county unit. let's
buy the expensive fire equipment from
county funds that single v' liage units can't
alford.
Let's elect county officials that wi II
constantly put political pressure on our
stall! officials to improve all the state
facilities in Meigs County.

Carolina

Pd . Pol. Adv.

STORE HOURS:
(I

MOND~Y-FRIDA'Y

~.

!Jll

8:00-5:00 SATURDAY 8:01).12:00

.,

'

:l

Johns ·Monvill,

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.,

.~ t:

.

312 6TH ST. POINT PLEASANT
675-1160

remember-a vote for me is a vote for you-for 1.will not lie

'

t

''

Lumber
and
Supply Co.

to you nor steal from you.

I •I •

Kit

MEIGS COUNTY

COMMISSIONER

If you will help me you will see a better
Gallia · County. I am a mell)ber of Masonic
lodge 131, Vinton, Ohio . Please help me so I
may help you!
Pd . Pol. Adv . by the Candidate
I

!

FOR
the LEVY •

thos office now Is because I am interested In what
happens in Gallia County.
I think the Commissioners office should be 'open five
days a w,.k . If elected I will be a full flme
Commissioner and not just on Mondays . I will work lOG
. per c.ent/n behalf ol the taxpayer and 1 wil l go to the
people and see to their needs.
.

I

I

••

•

ATTENTION

'

:

...

Se

•

· Third Inning
1
ELIDA Staas ouP
sw inging ; Zuber caugh~
looking; Rumer . hit first lair'
ball off McKinney after:
Me Kinney had fanned 7 of)
first eight.
:
MEIGS
Man kino
grounded to third. Smlt~
walked, out on DP on
Me Kinney's pop up on bunt
attempt. McKinney ppppe&lt;t.
out.
,..

=
.

MILAN, Italy IUPI) Italy 's Angelo Jacopucci
Satisfaction Guarantffd or Your Money Back
defeated Britain's Bunny
Sterling on points Friday
Silver Bridge Plaza night to wln the European
Ph. 446·2110
middleweight boxing title.

t:onvtnif'nt: Shou Sfo!llf'll
'at •kll by l'l ml'le 446-:l170

!

United
, lnteroallonal

· By

Lemrt Falls
wins, 25 to 5

prices include Installation
• Now on aale

. .•

Cowboys sign 2 more prospects

=

]acopucci claims

f

Call 446-3250 or 446.9284 if any qestions arise.
I School)
I Home)

'

Fourth l.nning

---

Send to Jim Osborne, Gallia Academy H S Gal/ipo/o's

0 . 41631

swinging; D. H. Priddy wen!'
down swinging.
,
MEIGS Davenporl
fanned ; Howard out t4
shortstop; Bachner oul to

first baseman .

PHONE

Parent's or Guardian Signature _ _ _ __;__ __

..
Avg. ;
ELIDA- Becker fanned on . .
1.257} C
three straight r/lches; 38-Mike Sodders
(.3281 0
VanDemar~
wen , down 2B- Joe Scheele
CF- Randy Prince
(.3971 o
C- Roger Becker
(.327!
1B-Jim VanDemark 1.3761 •
DH- Tim Priddy
(.245) =
RB- Don Staas
(.3331 •
SS- Jan Zuber
1.3471 =
P- Rick Rumer (.318, 10·2o
record)
•
Home-Meigs (14.111 ,..
PORTLAND - In ThursAvg.
day night pee wee action the 3B- Charlie Marshall, sr .. 44l,;
Letart Falls Farmers posted 1B- Brlan Hamilton, jr . .25Qil!
.2so;
an impressive 25 Ul 5 vicU&gt;ry RB- Pat Soulsby,sr.
SS.,-Mick
Davenport,
sr
over Portland, the home CB- Jim Howard, sr. .313;,..
team .
2B- Steve Bachner; sr. .2000.
Collecting hits for Letart
C- Kenny Mankin. sr. .200::
.428,.
were Scott Wickline, 2 home LF- Greq Smith, jr.
P- Jeff Me Kinney, sr ·
•
runs, a single; Mark Jarrell,
(9·4)
.307
Eric Milliron and Scott Kiser
each a single.
Jay Dodderer had a double
and single for Portland.
Classified Ads
Letart pitchers were Scott
Wickline and Keith Allen .
Mark Jarrell and Scott
brln&amp; you
Wickline were the catchers.
extra cash
On the mound for Portland
was Randy Beegle and Bruce
far
Wolfe was behind the plate.
shoppin&amp; sprees
Letart Falls
660 67-25
Portland
011 12- 5

49.68

8.85-15

'

First Inning

Ell DA- Sodders, called
third strike' Scheele drew •
walk, full coon!, out stealing ,
fine throw by Man kin.
Prince, out swinging.
MEIGS - Marshall pop.
out; Hamilton grounded to
third ; Soulsby went down
swinging.

17.80

8.~5-16

AGE

COLUMBUS
Close only counts in
horseshoes, and if its any .consolation tile Meigs
Marauders came close here Friday to advancing
to the finals of the Class AA Regional State
Baseball Tournament, but a no-hit pitching
performance by Elida's Rick Rumer eljminateq ·
Meigs, 1-0.
'

TAMPA, Fla. 1UP!) - J.
K. McKay resigned as
assistant football coach at
Oregon State Friday and
Signed as a player with the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers,
coached by his father John
McKay, the Bucs announced.
Shortly alter he was picked
by the Bucs in the Natiomil
Football League's veterans
allocation dra!t, McKay said
he intended to pass u·p pro
football and continue his
coaching career but Friday
he changed his mind.

Our biggest
price cut ever

NAME--------ADDRESS,_ __

hit in defeat

Oregon post

,.'

Please check your chetice

M~rauder ·ace ·
•
.gtves up one
..

..

#

the winners were Patty
Robinson, one double and two
singles; Kim Grueser, two
doubles and one single;
Sandy Hamilton, one double,
two singles; Pam Bralier,
two singles and Unda Fisher,
two singles.
For Meigs Mary Boggs,
three singles; Beth Vaughan,
two singles; Kellle Burdette,
two doubles ; Cindy Hlndy,
two singles; Megan Miller,
Kathy Howard , Tracy
Burdette and Glenda Brown,
each a single.
In second game action the
Hit &amp; Misses defeated New
Haven Hitters 13 U&gt; o.
Leading hitter lor the
winners was Holsinger with
two singles. Leading hitter
lor New Haven was Cathy
Roush with one double and
one single. The winning
pitcher was Jean Ritchhart.
In other action Thursday
the Syracuse seniors defeated
Pomeroy 22 Ul 8 at the Meigs
High School field.
Leading hitter !or Syracuse
was Tonya Ash with one
triple and four singles.
Leading hitter lor Pomeroy
was Nancy Smith with two
singles. The winning pitcher
was Carla Teaford.
Other hitters for Syracuse
were Kim Dugan, one triple,
three singles; Vicky Cundiff,
four singles; Kim Riffle,
three singles; Becky Crow,
one double and two singles.

Third Annual Gallipolis Basketball Camp
'When: July ll·l31'd
July 16-30, 4·1l Grade
Where: GAHS Gym
· If enough enrolled
Who: GradeSI, 5, 6, 7. 8 nexl year:
Cost : $35 With Ball &amp; T.Shirt
525 Without Bali &amp; T·Shirt
515 Deposit &amp; Balance due July .19th

(I

�22

'

The Sunday Times- Se lll!nel , Sw•day, Junt• 6, 1976

•

Celtics edge Suns 128-126 zn
~ thrilling triple overtime
•

Boston built the. lead to 22
poinls. 42-20, before the hardaudience and 14,000 fan s in nosed Suns quickly brought
Phoenix. If a seventh game is the advantage down to seven
necessary, it will be Wed- po ints. Boston fattened the
n esd~y night in Boston .
margin to 16 points, 61-45 at
·• Jt wtl s tm uutstancling ball halftime but the · Su ns
never seen :mytl1ing of the
kind in his 14 ycw·s of pro game . I don't kn ow how a outhustled Boston to lie the
game ean be mure exc iting ~arne, 68-68, midway through
basketball.
' And if the Bus t"" Celtics ttwn that ," sa id Phoenix the third period .
Then the ~ame started. The
were stunned by lhe goings· Coa ch J ohn Ma cLeod .
on, think how the Phoenix "There t~re some things that Cel tics led by nine points, 92Stu• s felt afte1· IIIIJUIIting six happened 0 11 thai cour t th ai I 83 , with 3:46 left in
sl&lt;lr lling comebacks only lo . cuulrln 't believe . There were regulation . From that poin t,
lose lhe n;;~ tiurw ll y televised so many lhings you could talk forme r Celtic Paul Westphal
fifth ga me of lhc NBA about : just take your pick." scored nine points to bring
Let's star t with Bos ton's the ~uns to a 95-95 tie.
playoffs. 128-126, in triple
smoking fast brea k that put
The score wa s knotted
ovcrti1nc .
Boston tries to IITap up its Phoenix be hind by 20 points, again, tOl-101 , after the first
p th league title Stmday af- 10 minutes into lhe game. fiv e-minute overtime but the

" BOSTON (UP!) - Ju Jo
\'lhite was a baskel case by
the time it was over : Coach
t om Heinsohn swooned fr om
exhau sti on, and
John
tlav licek munered he had

ternmm :1::10 EDT hcfore
another national television

Ce llics s~e med to have the

game salted away with one

VOTE FOR
BILLY L; HALLEY

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE
GALLIA COUNTY COMMISSIONER
Ja n. 2nd Term
" Your Vo t e a nd Suppo r t App rec ia ted "

Pd. Pol . Adv .

second left in the second
overtime when Havlicek 22
point s hit an 18-foot bank
shot.
Phoenix Coac h John
MacLeod then called a time
uiJI it didn't have , and wa s
assessed a techn ica l foul that
pr oved beneficial. Ju Jo
White made the fr ee throw to
~ive Boslon a 112-110 lead but
the Suns got to pass the ball in
fro m midcourt instead of
behind its own basket.
The pass went to Gar
Heard. who popped a 20fo otcr in to relic the game.
In the second overtime ,
thoug h, White and unlikely
hero Glenn McDonald scored
six points apiece to win the
game.
Even after Boston took a
12&amp;-124 lead with :10 seconds
Jell , the Sun s almost pulled

STATE
REPRESENTATIVE
,_
RONALD JAMES SAYS
VOTE ON JUNE 8th
Although Rep. James is Unopposed in

PNO E NI )( ( 126) 10 3 23 ;
Heard ,

Perry ,
8 I 17 :

Adams, ~ 2 20 ; Sob ers , 11 3
24 ; Westpha l , 11 3 25 : Van

Ardsdale 1 1 3 5 : Erickson , 0
0 0 ; Awt r ey , 2 3 7 ; Lumpkin ,
0 0 0;
H awthorn e ,
1 2 4.
Tot a ls 53· 20· 126 .
BOS TON ( 128 ) - Havli ce k ,
8 622 : Silas, 81 17 ; Cowens ,
9 8 2/J ; Whit e , IS J 33 ; Scoll, J.
0 6: McDona ld , 3-2 8 : Ard , 3
2 8: Ku berski, 2 0-4; Sta com,
0 0 0; N elson, 1 2 4. To t al s 52 24 · 128.
P hoe . 16 27 27 23 6 11 14- 126
Boston 36 25 16 18 6 11 \6- 128
Fouled out : Scott, Adams,
Cowens,
Awtrey,
Silas .
Persona l l ou is · Phoeni&gt;c 28
Bos.ton 26. A : 15 ,320.

N BA Pt ayott :Han om gs.
By Un ited Pr es.s Interna tio nal
I F inal s- Bt:s l of Seve n)
Bos t(ln l ead s Phoenix 3-2
May 2J .Boston 98 Ph oeniJC. 87
May 27 -Bos ton 105 Phoeni x 90
. May 30 Phoenix 105 Basion 98
June 2 Phoen ix 109 Boston 107
June 4 Bstn 128 Ph n iJC. 126, 3 ot
June 6.at Phoenix , aft .
JC. June 9 a t Boston
x · i~ necessa r y

Important That Everyone Go To The

Of

Their Choice.
Th ose of us who s uppo rt Ron James' r e-election feel a s he does about
p r im a ry election s that's why the committee to elect Ronald James
paid for thi s ad .

OXFORD
OR SLIPON
STYLE

$ 33

REG.

4.99

1

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comfort cushioned
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thick bouncy
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soles.

Sale Prices Thru Wed., June 9th

WORK BOOTS
BUTIERNUT

BLUE,
BLACK OR
BROWN
MEN'S SIZESTO 12

88
$}0 REG.

16.97

.1

Reinforced
stitching,
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welt construction
SIZES TO 12

$}288
REG. 118.97
" BOOT
Leather uppers,
Rugged soles
Sizes to 12

,J

BUTIERNUT
COLOR

Bidwell topples Vinton S~mmer

El ida

000 010 0- 1 I 1
Pom . Meigs 000 000 0- 0 Q 1
RUme r
and
Becker ,
M c Kinney and Milnkin . WP
Rumer . LP
McKinney .

BIDWELL - Bidwell's
Pony League .team defeated
Vinton 15-5 in a Gallia County
Pony League contest Friday
· evening. Bidwell is 1-0.
Vinton is 0-2 on the year.
Winning pitcher was Marty
Glassburn. Top hitters for the
winners were Glassburn,

Class AAA
110 100 O ~ J 6 2
Youngstown
Chaney
20 1 001 &gt;c: - 4 6 0
J im Logsdon and Bob
Lambert ; T im Fe n isey , Scott
Bass 5 and Jim Fedors ln . WP
Bass . L P - Logsdon .
F indlay

The Flying Aces Roller
hockey team Of Parkersburg
played in a national tournament in Dayton, Ohio May
29-30-31 against teams from
Chagrin Falls, Ohio , Dayton,
Ohio No ..I, Dayton, Ohio No.
2, Seneca, Pa ., Tampa Bay,
Fla., (Hawks) Louisville ,
Ohio, (Rascals l Louisville,
Ohio and New Buffalo, Mich.
First place went to the
Hawks, second to New
Buffalo, and third to Dayton
No. 1.
Chosen as outstanding
players to make up an All-

REPRESENTATIVE

beginner swi mmin g ski lls as
outlined by the American Red
Cross.
There will be no advanced
regis tra ti on. Reg istra ti on
wtll only be accepta ble at the
prescri bed registration times
listed below.
The registration fee is $10
per child which must be paid
in full at lime of registration.
A limit of 35 swimmers will
be accepted each session on a
first come, first serve basis.
Session One
Reg istrati on Per io d :
Tuesday, June 15 - 4: 30-6
p.m. Lyne Center Physical
' Ed ucation Building.
Class Sess ion s: Wednesda y, June 16-June 30 1MF. 10:30 a.m."!l :30 a.m.)
Session Two
Reg is tra tion P erio d :
· Thursday, July I - 4:30-6
p.m. Lyne Center Physical
Education Building.
Class Sessions : Tuesday,
July 6-July 20 IM-F. .10 :30
a.m. - 11 :30 a.m.)
Sesst.on Three
Reg is trat ion Per iod :
Tuesday, July 20 - 4:30-6
p.m. Lyne Center Physical
Education Building.
Class Sess ions: Wednesday, July 21-August 4 1M·
F, 10:30 a.m.-11 :30 a.m.)
Session Four
Reg istr at ion Pe r io d :
Wednesday, August 4 - 4:306 p.m. Lyne Center Physical
Education Building.
"
Class Sessions: Thursday,
Aug ust 5-August 19 (M-F,
10: 30 a.m.-11:30 a.m.)
(\dul t swimming lessons
will be taughl each summer
term at Rio Grande CollegeRio Gran de Co mmuhil y
Co llege . Begi nning swimmin g classes start on
Tuesday. June 15 from 1-2
p.m. These classes will be
l&lt;lught M-Th. for five weeks.
Registration for this swim.
1'
ming class will be Monday,
Jun e 14 at the College Administration Office.
Intermediate swimming
adult classes wjll be taught
dlD'ing the second summer
term on each Monday and
Wednesday evening from IHI
p.m., begi nn i n ~ Wednesday,
July 21 with reg istration on
Mon day, Jul y 19 at the
College Admissions Office.
·Bo th adult classes will be
cerl ified by the American
Red Cross. Adults living in
lh e Comm unity Coll ege
Distric t pay only $13 cost per
course.

I'

Cu h a . HI S
100 000 4- 5 10 J
r: r.,f!.iev iew 012 000 0- 3 2 3

SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS IUPI) - Take
Five came on strong in tbe
finixh Friday night wwin the
$8,000 feature trot at Scioto
Downs by ~• -length ov er
Dancing Party.
.
Driven by Hillis Pickett,
thq.horse covered the.mile in
2:03 wreturn $16.60, $4.40 and
$3.20.
Dancing Pa rty paid $2.60
and $2.40 while the show
horse Woody Who paid $3.80.
A 3-3 daily double of In
Determina tion a nd Miss
Dusty Son paid $102.40.
The 6,424 fans bet $399,303.

with two sing les and a triple;
Bill Lookado. two doubles:
Tim Howell, a double and
single and Joe . Gibbs, a
double and single..
Losing pitcher was Petrie.
Top hiller for Vin ton was B.
Hamilton with two singles.
Bidwell will host Hannan
Trace Tuesday.

programs
to start Monday

are : Monday, beginnin~
rlasses !registration); 9:00
a.m., 12 and older ; 10 :00
a.m.• under 12 and II :00 a.m.
adults .
Tuesday - 9a .m .. women's
league 1beginning and inlennedia te players who want
wplay challenge matches in
singles and doubles. No age
games and lost three, tieing limits ); !Oa .m., boys ' league
Tampa Bay for fourth place. and II a.m., internicdia te
The Parkersburg team will lesson 1registration to see if
go to Cumberland, Md. June there is interest in a class on
5th and Gth for five practice the intermediate level. 1
Monday and Tuesday will
games . .
be registration days only with
classes to begin June 9 and io.
Fees of $5 for s tuden Is to $1 o
. for adults ar~ payable at
registration or during the
first week.
Girls' softball teams have
been
organ ized and will
GALLIPOLIS - Willard
practice
June 7- 11 if the
1Buddy) Moore, summer
learns
have
not met. There
playground director , anwill
be
six
junior
teams ages
nounced Sa turday that action
7-11
and
four
se
ni
or teams
will begi n Monday in the
ages
12-17.
A
nyone
in
terested
Gallipolis Little League and
in
playing
softba
ll
must
Pony League on Memorial
register
June
7
or
8
to
be
Field.
placed
on
a
roster
.
First Little League game at
Registration will be held
6 .pits the Cubs agains t the
between
9 a.m . to 12 June 7
Athletics Monday . In Pony
ahd
8. Softball fees are
League play. the Dodgers
l&lt;lke on the Phillies at 6:30 payable to the team manager
before the first game.
p.m.
Tournaments for tenn is in
Tuesday, the Yanks meet
all
age groups wiiJ be held the
the Red Sox at 6 in LL action.
.last of July.
Two games a re slated
Wednesday. The Whi te Sox
play the Senators at 6 and the
BREAKS RECORD
Athletics mee t the Yankees
PHILADELPHIA I UP!) at 8:15 under the lights.
Dwight Stones Of Long Beach
Thursday, the Tigers meet State broke his own world
the Cubs at 6. On Friday, the record Saturday in the hig h
Senators battle the Tigers at jwn p with a leap of 7-7 at the
6, and the White Sox battle NCAA Trac k and Fie ld
the Red Sox at 8:15.
Championships.
In other Po ny League
Stones, participating in the
gam es, the Reds meet the duel wi th unknown Mike
Braves Tuesda y: Dodgers vs. Winson of Central Michigan,
Giants Wednesday : Phillies cleared the height on his first
vs. Reds Thursday a nd attempt to break the record
Giants vs. Braves Friday.
of 7-6 1 , he set in 1973.
GAJ,I.IPOLIS - Summer
recreation programs will
begin Monda)c on Memorial
Field according to Jackie
Knighl, director.
. Tennis classes: schedules

Roller hockey team finishes in 4th place

HAROLD SCHRITTER

Rio to offer
RIO GRAN DE - Rio
Grande College-Rio Gran de
Communi ty College will offer
another summer swimming
program for both youths and
adults Jiving in the local
commWlities.
There are four separate
youth sw im ming sessio ns
wh ich wi ll be extended
thr oug hout the summ er
mpnths, teaching· beg inning ,
internlediate and advanced

23 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sw1day , June G. 1976

sacrifice !ly by Tim Purdy. - ·Paul Foote and Dav e
COLUMBUS IUPI )
Shubert ; Terry Stone , Steve
Rumer. a 6-2, 219-iJound Murry 7 and J elf Craycra f t .
Youngstown Chaney look a
1!).4 record in Saturday's 1 junior, gained his 12th win WP - Foote. LP . Slone . HR Shake r HIS . 300 000 0- 3 5 l
Carl casavecch 1it. 7th·, lwo
p.m. finals against Shaker against two defeats.
Beav er creek 000 000 0- 0 4 3
on
Dav e Schwartz and Jerr y
Heights , 27-&lt;1, for the Class
In the olber double-A game,
Cyncynatus ; Ed Volk and
Cla~ s AA
AAA state high school Deer Park's Jim Gross had a
000 003 0- 3 2 0 Chris Davis .
baseball tournament.
no-llit game going unW an Or vi ll e
Elida met Orrville in AA, error on what would have
and Leipsic t27-1) battled · been the third out or the sixth
VOTE FOR
Cuyahoga Heights 124.;!) in. inning let in a run, making
the score 1-L
single-A.
Randy Billiter and Jim
Bill Fedorsin's second hit of
the game scored Ray Smesko Haun the n each drove in runs
from second base in the with singles to close out the
bottom of the sixth inning scoring.
Late inning home runs
Friday to give Chaney a 4-3
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE
Leipsic
and
decision over Findlay in the carried
Cuya hoga Heights w victory
Class AAA semifinals.
FOR
In lhe other AAA contest, Friday in the semifinals of
the
Class
A
wurney.
Shaker Heights scored three
Leips ic beat Chillicothe
unearned runs in the first
ST~TE
inn ing and Dave Schwartz Bishop Flaget 3-2 in one of the
made them stand up for a 3-ll semis, with the winning run
92nd DISTRICT
coming on a 355-foot homer in
win over Beavercreek.
Cha ney's win ning run, the fifth inn ing by Duane
Farm Owner, Constru ction Busi ness, Has A GO&lt;J-..
which broke a 3-3 tie, was . Tooman.
Record in Education, Labor, Farming Bu siness t
In the other game,
unearned and set up when
Paid Pol. Adv . by Citi zens to elect Schri tter. Don
Smesko reached on an error . Cuyahoga Heights nipped
Schri tter, Treas urer
Beavercreek, held w only Jamestown Greeneview, 5.;!,
four hits by Schwartz, threat- scoring four times in the top
ened in the seventh inning, of the seventh inning . Three
loading lhe bases, but of the four runs came on a
homer by designated hitter
couldn't score.
Carl
Cassavecchia.
Scott Bass, who relieved
Flaget sent eight men to the
starter Tim Fenisey in the
fifth inning, picked up the win plate in the final inning,
for Chaney, while Jim scoring both its runs, but
Logsdon, who went the relief pitcher Denny . Maag
dista nce fo r Findlay , fanned Larry White with the
bases loaded.
sufferred the defeat.
Rubin Gonzales picked up
Schwartz bested Beavercr eek's Ed Yolk in Shaker Ute win for Leipsic while Bret
Mavis took the loss.
Heights' win .
Dea r Voters :
Cuyahoga Heights' Paul
In Class AA, Elida 's Rick
Com e J uneS you as a ci t izen of Gallia Co un ty have
Ru mer fired a no-hitter , Foote limited Greeneview w
th
e
ri
g ht to cast a vot e for whoever you want to serve
·
only
two
hits
in
pitching
his
striking out six and walking
th e next four yea rs as Sher iff. As a candid ate for the
one, and the Bulldogs edged team to victory . Heights
Sheriff's Off ice I have had to re ly on using the ra dio
pounded out 10 hits off Terry
Pomeroy Meigs HI.
and newspaper as means of mak ing contact with you. I
Orrville bea t Cincinna ti Slone and reliever Steve Murapologize for not hav ing t he t ime to co ntact you in
Deer Park 3-1 in the other AA ray.
person bu t with worki ng at Rio Gra nde College e ig ht
semifinals game.
hour s pl us and teac hing th e Basic Law Enforcem ent
COLU MBUS IUPI I
class three ni ghts a week four hours per night I have --·
In the Elida-Pome roy · Li nescores o l Friday's sl ate
high sc hool baseball to ur fa llen short on l im e .
pitching duel, Meigs' Jeff nament :
1would like for you as a voter to take a took at the
CLA SS A
McKinney tossed a oneLeipsi c
000 210 0- 3 4 2
ot her candi dates' quali fi ca t ions. We have .some w ho
hitter. struck out 10 and Ch;t
t. Flao. 00 0 ooo 2- 2 ' 1
has never been in vo lve d In l aw enfor cem ent. We have
walked one. The only. hit off
Ru bi n Go n za lez , D en ny
some who has bee n in law enfor cement but has not ·
Maag
7
an
d
B
ru
ce
Meyer
;
him was a triple by Jim
r
ecei ved th e proper trai nin g to m ake a legal arrest .
Br e i Mavis and Bil l Bonner .
Vandemark, who scored on a WP
- Go nza lez . L P - Mavis .
Some are st il l l ak ing th eir tr ai ning at the present tim e.
HR Dua n e T oo m a n ,
L eipsic. 5t h , no ne on .

MEN'S HOPSACK CASUALS

6" BOOT

Orville, Elida
gain AA finals

swim lessons

the Primary, He Feels That It Is

Polls and Support The Candidates

uff "".other miracle. Westphal, who tied teammate
Hicky Sobers with 25 points,
made two more baskets, the
last 15 seconds to play but
White, who led all scorers
with 3:1 points, dribbled out
the cloc k.
Dave Cowens added 26
points for Boston and Paul
Silas 17 while Curtis Perry
added 23 for Phoenix.
"I don' I remember no part
of it ," said a dazed White
trying to recall the events of
the G:!-minutes. " It l&lt;lkes a
little bit out of you when you
have a lead, then it goes."
Heinsohn, trying to stay
calm on the be nch, withered
fr om the heat and pressure or
thecontesl. The Boston coach
collapsed in the Celtics'
locker room from exha ustion
and dehydration but was
expected to be ready for
bench duty on Sunday.
Havlicek walked around
the JockerruOm multeri ng,
"I've never been in a game
like that. They came up with
shots that were unbelievable,
as we did ."

Deer Park
001 000 0- 1 6 2
Ch i rumbol and Brock ;
Gros s and wetage . WP Ch irumbol. L P - Gross .

Star Team were, Goalie.
Fred Baroni,
Hawk s;
Defenseman , John Maxson of
the Flying Aces. (John
resides at Rt. 1, Reedsville,
Ohio ); Forwards, Bob
Bowman of Dayton No. I,
Frank Daily-, Hawks, and
Jackie Rutherford , Tampa
Bay.
Other members of the
Parkersb urg team who
reside in Ohio are Raymond
and Ray Allen Maxson of Rt .
I Reedsville, and Dave
Ridgway. Pomeroy.
The Flying Aces won five

HOW DO WE COMPARE
WITH OTHER SCHOOL DISTRICTS
IN OUR AREA?
ANNUAL
COST PER PUPIL
Slate Average
Athens
Gallia Co. Local
Ir onton

Wellston
Jack son

Vinton Co.

Gallipoli s City
$800 $900 $1000 $1100 $ 1200,

LOCAL MILLAGE
State Average

GREEN TRIUMPHS
GALLIPOLIS - Green's
Pony League Team defeated
Hannan Trace Thursday 6-0.
Winning pitcher for Green

Athens

Th e t im e has been a factor in my campaign as we ll
as money. I h ~ve to wor k to suppor t my family
th erefore I ca nnot aff ord a bea uty pageant on ma in
·st r eet in order to rece i ve recogni,!J..Qn, neith e_r can I
afford to b uy you a dr ink. nor can l pay you to vot e for
m e. However if I had enough mo'n ey ·to do these things
you would still be di sappointed because I do not be lieve
in trying to buy your way into a position or job. It i s
m oral ly w r ong when society expect s to be
compen sa t ed for voti ng when it i s one of th e ver y few
th ings w hich i s fr ee in our count r y today.

Baseball play
starts Monday

Ironton

Logan

was Kenny Brown. Mark Van
Sickl e had a two-r un double
for Green. T. Beaver pitched
for Han nan Trace.

Weifston

ALLEN M.

Marietta

Nelsonville

candidates r unning for the Sheri ff's Offi ce and ca st a
vote for th e per son who is qua l if ied and wi ll ing to ser ve

Gallipolis City

you tor th e next lour years . Havi ng had the following
background I feel I ca n make a good Sheriff for all th e
people of Gallia County: fifteen years at Rio Grand e

lS 18 21

Center vi lle Lodge No. 371, F ree and Accep ted Masons.
I have been a Specia l Deputy for si &gt;c: years as I a m a

VOT~

"YES" FOR JHE
4 MILL SCHOOL LEVY

law enfor cement , fairness and dedication .

Pd. Pol. Adv.

•:Jii~

eiech'~c

$25995

-FREEELECTRIC START

Bolens. Mulching Mower"' does m.o re
than jusl c ui the grass. It also cuts
and re-cuts the clippi ngs irto a fiM
mulch and bl ows it down intv the lawn.
Out of sight. No bagg 111 g. No raki ng.
No excessive thatch build- up. And
your lawn is cont inuously fed wilh it s
own nitrogen-rich mulch. Bolens Mulch·
ing Mower is avail able in 22" self·
prope lled

Consumer
Products

NOW

June 8th Primary
"Your Vote and Support Appreciated"
Pd . Pol. Adv .

Pd . for by G.C.S.I.C. W. B. Thomas, Chai rman

SINGLE BLADE ELECTRIC

DO YOU SOME. TIMES FIND IT
DIFFICULT GETTING 't o
THE -BANK DURING REGULAR
BANKING HOURS?

The Prosecutor's Race Is A

•4000

Red, White and Blue
Super·Starter
IS
NOW

FOR SHERIFF

•

member of the Bi dwell United Methodist Church.
A vote for Ray Roberts is a vote for experienced

SAVE

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE

LET'S GIVE OUR CHILDREN
AN EQUAL CHANCE

Coll ege Ser ur; ty Assoc .. Buckeye Sheriff s Assoc .,

.. LIBERTY MACHINE'

24 27 30 33 36

MILLS

Coll ege, 450 hour s in l aw enforcement tra in i ng.
M em_ber o f t he fol low ing organ iza t ions: Ohio Privat e

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Republican
FOR GALLIA COUNTY
PROSECUTOR
More Criminal Prosec utions
More Service to Public OUicials
Reinstitution ofa Drug Program

SALE
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Pd. Pol. Adv.

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

Sun. 1-7
Mon., Tues., Wed 9-6
Sat. 9-9

"Your Full Seroice Peopl~ To People Bank"
'"

RT. 2 BYPASS, POINT PLEASANT

�22

'

The Sunday Times- Se lll!nel , Sw•day, Junt• 6, 1976

•

Celtics edge Suns 128-126 zn
~ thrilling triple overtime
•

Boston built the. lead to 22
poinls. 42-20, before the hardaudience and 14,000 fan s in nosed Suns quickly brought
Phoenix. If a seventh game is the advantage down to seven
necessary, it will be Wed- po ints. Boston fattened the
n esd~y night in Boston .
margin to 16 points, 61-45 at
·• Jt wtl s tm uutstancling ball halftime but the · Su ns
never seen :mytl1ing of the
kind in his 14 ycw·s of pro game . I don't kn ow how a outhustled Boston to lie the
game ean be mure exc iting ~arne, 68-68, midway through
basketball.
' And if the Bus t"" Celtics ttwn that ," sa id Phoenix the third period .
Then the ~ame started. The
were stunned by lhe goings· Coa ch J ohn Ma cLeod .
on, think how the Phoenix "There t~re some things that Cel tics led by nine points, 92Stu• s felt afte1· IIIIJUIIting six happened 0 11 thai cour t th ai I 83 , with 3:46 left in
sl&lt;lr lling comebacks only lo . cuulrln 't believe . There were regulation . From that poin t,
lose lhe n;;~ tiurw ll y televised so many lhings you could talk forme r Celtic Paul Westphal
fifth ga me of lhc NBA about : just take your pick." scored nine points to bring
Let's star t with Bos ton's the ~uns to a 95-95 tie.
playoffs. 128-126, in triple
smoking fast brea k that put
The score wa s knotted
ovcrti1nc .
Boston tries to IITap up its Phoenix be hind by 20 points, again, tOl-101 , after the first
p th league title Stmday af- 10 minutes into lhe game. fiv e-minute overtime but the

" BOSTON (UP!) - Ju Jo
\'lhite was a baskel case by
the time it was over : Coach
t om Heinsohn swooned fr om
exhau sti on, and
John
tlav licek munered he had

ternmm :1::10 EDT hcfore
another national television

Ce llics s~e med to have the

game salted away with one

VOTE FOR
BILLY L; HALLEY

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE
GALLIA COUNTY COMMISSIONER
Ja n. 2nd Term
" Your Vo t e a nd Suppo r t App rec ia ted "

Pd. Pol . Adv .

second left in the second
overtime when Havlicek 22
point s hit an 18-foot bank
shot.
Phoenix Coac h John
MacLeod then called a time
uiJI it didn't have , and wa s
assessed a techn ica l foul that
pr oved beneficial. Ju Jo
White made the fr ee throw to
~ive Boslon a 112-110 lead but
the Suns got to pass the ball in
fro m midcourt instead of
behind its own basket.
The pass went to Gar
Heard. who popped a 20fo otcr in to relic the game.
In the second overtime ,
thoug h, White and unlikely
hero Glenn McDonald scored
six points apiece to win the
game.
Even after Boston took a
12&amp;-124 lead with :10 seconds
Jell , the Sun s almost pulled

STATE
REPRESENTATIVE
,_
RONALD JAMES SAYS
VOTE ON JUNE 8th
Although Rep. James is Unopposed in

PNO E NI )( ( 126) 10 3 23 ;
Heard ,

Perry ,
8 I 17 :

Adams, ~ 2 20 ; Sob ers , 11 3
24 ; Westpha l , 11 3 25 : Van

Ardsdale 1 1 3 5 : Erickson , 0
0 0 ; Awt r ey , 2 3 7 ; Lumpkin ,
0 0 0;
H awthorn e ,
1 2 4.
Tot a ls 53· 20· 126 .
BOS TON ( 128 ) - Havli ce k ,
8 622 : Silas, 81 17 ; Cowens ,
9 8 2/J ; Whit e , IS J 33 ; Scoll, J.
0 6: McDona ld , 3-2 8 : Ard , 3
2 8: Ku berski, 2 0-4; Sta com,
0 0 0; N elson, 1 2 4. To t al s 52 24 · 128.
P hoe . 16 27 27 23 6 11 14- 126
Boston 36 25 16 18 6 11 \6- 128
Fouled out : Scott, Adams,
Cowens,
Awtrey,
Silas .
Persona l l ou is · Phoeni&gt;c 28
Bos.ton 26. A : 15 ,320.

N BA Pt ayott :Han om gs.
By Un ited Pr es.s Interna tio nal
I F inal s- Bt:s l of Seve n)
Bos t(ln l ead s Phoenix 3-2
May 2J .Boston 98 Ph oeniJC. 87
May 27 -Bos ton 105 Phoeni x 90
. May 30 Phoenix 105 Basion 98
June 2 Phoen ix 109 Boston 107
June 4 Bstn 128 Ph n iJC. 126, 3 ot
June 6.at Phoenix , aft .
JC. June 9 a t Boston
x · i~ necessa r y

Important That Everyone Go To The

Of

Their Choice.
Th ose of us who s uppo rt Ron James' r e-election feel a s he does about
p r im a ry election s that's why the committee to elect Ronald James
paid for thi s ad .

OXFORD
OR SLIPON
STYLE

$ 33

REG.

4.99

1

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Sale Prices Thru Wed., June 9th

WORK BOOTS
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BLUE,
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MEN'S SIZESTO 12

88
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SIZES TO 12

$}288
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,J

BUTIERNUT
COLOR

Bidwell topples Vinton S~mmer

El ida

000 010 0- 1 I 1
Pom . Meigs 000 000 0- 0 Q 1
RUme r
and
Becker ,
M c Kinney and Milnkin . WP
Rumer . LP
McKinney .

BIDWELL - Bidwell's
Pony League .team defeated
Vinton 15-5 in a Gallia County
Pony League contest Friday
· evening. Bidwell is 1-0.
Vinton is 0-2 on the year.
Winning pitcher was Marty
Glassburn. Top hitters for the
winners were Glassburn,

Class AAA
110 100 O ~ J 6 2
Youngstown
Chaney
20 1 001 &gt;c: - 4 6 0
J im Logsdon and Bob
Lambert ; T im Fe n isey , Scott
Bass 5 and Jim Fedors ln . WP
Bass . L P - Logsdon .
F indlay

The Flying Aces Roller
hockey team Of Parkersburg
played in a national tournament in Dayton, Ohio May
29-30-31 against teams from
Chagrin Falls, Ohio , Dayton,
Ohio No ..I, Dayton, Ohio No.
2, Seneca, Pa ., Tampa Bay,
Fla., (Hawks) Louisville ,
Ohio, (Rascals l Louisville,
Ohio and New Buffalo, Mich.
First place went to the
Hawks, second to New
Buffalo, and third to Dayton
No. 1.
Chosen as outstanding
players to make up an All-

REPRESENTATIVE

beginner swi mmin g ski lls as
outlined by the American Red
Cross.
There will be no advanced
regis tra ti on. Reg istra ti on
wtll only be accepta ble at the
prescri bed registration times
listed below.
The registration fee is $10
per child which must be paid
in full at lime of registration.
A limit of 35 swimmers will
be accepted each session on a
first come, first serve basis.
Session One
Reg istrati on Per io d :
Tuesday, June 15 - 4: 30-6
p.m. Lyne Center Physical
' Ed ucation Building.
Class Sess ion s: Wednesda y, June 16-June 30 1MF. 10:30 a.m."!l :30 a.m.)
Session Two
Reg is tra tion P erio d :
· Thursday, July I - 4:30-6
p.m. Lyne Center Physical
Education Building.
Class Sessions : Tuesday,
July 6-July 20 IM-F. .10 :30
a.m. - 11 :30 a.m.)
Sesst.on Three
Reg is trat ion Per iod :
Tuesday, July 20 - 4:30-6
p.m. Lyne Center Physical
Education Building.
Class Sess ions: Wednesday, July 21-August 4 1M·
F, 10:30 a.m.-11 :30 a.m.)
Session Four
Reg istr at ion Pe r io d :
Wednesday, August 4 - 4:306 p.m. Lyne Center Physical
Education Building.
"
Class Sessions: Thursday,
Aug ust 5-August 19 (M-F,
10: 30 a.m.-11:30 a.m.)
(\dul t swimming lessons
will be taughl each summer
term at Rio Grande CollegeRio Gran de Co mmuhil y
Co llege . Begi nning swimmin g classes start on
Tuesday. June 15 from 1-2
p.m. These classes will be
l&lt;lught M-Th. for five weeks.
Registration for this swim.
1'
ming class will be Monday,
Jun e 14 at the College Administration Office.
Intermediate swimming
adult classes wjll be taught
dlD'ing the second summer
term on each Monday and
Wednesday evening from IHI
p.m., begi nn i n ~ Wednesday,
July 21 with reg istration on
Mon day, Jul y 19 at the
College Admissions Office.
·Bo th adult classes will be
cerl ified by the American
Red Cross. Adults living in
lh e Comm unity Coll ege
Distric t pay only $13 cost per
course.

I'

Cu h a . HI S
100 000 4- 5 10 J
r: r.,f!.iev iew 012 000 0- 3 2 3

SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS IUPI) - Take
Five came on strong in tbe
finixh Friday night wwin the
$8,000 feature trot at Scioto
Downs by ~• -length ov er
Dancing Party.
.
Driven by Hillis Pickett,
thq.horse covered the.mile in
2:03 wreturn $16.60, $4.40 and
$3.20.
Dancing Pa rty paid $2.60
and $2.40 while the show
horse Woody Who paid $3.80.
A 3-3 daily double of In
Determina tion a nd Miss
Dusty Son paid $102.40.
The 6,424 fans bet $399,303.

with two sing les and a triple;
Bill Lookado. two doubles:
Tim Howell, a double and
single and Joe . Gibbs, a
double and single..
Losing pitcher was Petrie.
Top hiller for Vin ton was B.
Hamilton with two singles.
Bidwell will host Hannan
Trace Tuesday.

programs
to start Monday

are : Monday, beginnin~
rlasses !registration); 9:00
a.m., 12 and older ; 10 :00
a.m.• under 12 and II :00 a.m.
adults .
Tuesday - 9a .m .. women's
league 1beginning and inlennedia te players who want
wplay challenge matches in
singles and doubles. No age
games and lost three, tieing limits ); !Oa .m., boys ' league
Tampa Bay for fourth place. and II a.m., internicdia te
The Parkersburg team will lesson 1registration to see if
go to Cumberland, Md. June there is interest in a class on
5th and Gth for five practice the intermediate level. 1
Monday and Tuesday will
games . .
be registration days only with
classes to begin June 9 and io.
Fees of $5 for s tuden Is to $1 o
. for adults ar~ payable at
registration or during the
first week.
Girls' softball teams have
been
organ ized and will
GALLIPOLIS - Willard
practice
June 7- 11 if the
1Buddy) Moore, summer
learns
have
not met. There
playground director , anwill
be
six
junior
teams ages
nounced Sa turday that action
7-11
and
four
se
ni
or teams
will begi n Monday in the
ages
12-17.
A
nyone
in
terested
Gallipolis Little League and
in
playing
softba
ll
must
Pony League on Memorial
register
June
7
or
8
to
be
Field.
placed
on
a
roster
.
First Little League game at
Registration will be held
6 .pits the Cubs agains t the
between
9 a.m . to 12 June 7
Athletics Monday . In Pony
ahd
8. Softball fees are
League play. the Dodgers
l&lt;lke on the Phillies at 6:30 payable to the team manager
before the first game.
p.m.
Tournaments for tenn is in
Tuesday, the Yanks meet
all
age groups wiiJ be held the
the Red Sox at 6 in LL action.
.last of July.
Two games a re slated
Wednesday. The Whi te Sox
play the Senators at 6 and the
BREAKS RECORD
Athletics mee t the Yankees
PHILADELPHIA I UP!) at 8:15 under the lights.
Dwight Stones Of Long Beach
Thursday, the Tigers meet State broke his own world
the Cubs at 6. On Friday, the record Saturday in the hig h
Senators battle the Tigers at jwn p with a leap of 7-7 at the
6, and the White Sox battle NCAA Trac k and Fie ld
the Red Sox at 8:15.
Championships.
In other Po ny League
Stones, participating in the
gam es, the Reds meet the duel wi th unknown Mike
Braves Tuesda y: Dodgers vs. Winson of Central Michigan,
Giants Wednesday : Phillies cleared the height on his first
vs. Reds Thursday a nd attempt to break the record
Giants vs. Braves Friday.
of 7-6 1 , he set in 1973.
GAJ,I.IPOLIS - Summer
recreation programs will
begin Monda)c on Memorial
Field according to Jackie
Knighl, director.
. Tennis classes: schedules

Roller hockey team finishes in 4th place

HAROLD SCHRITTER

Rio to offer
RIO GRAN DE - Rio
Grande College-Rio Gran de
Communi ty College will offer
another summer swimming
program for both youths and
adults Jiving in the local
commWlities.
There are four separate
youth sw im ming sessio ns
wh ich wi ll be extended
thr oug hout the summ er
mpnths, teaching· beg inning ,
internlediate and advanced

23 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sw1day , June G. 1976

sacrifice !ly by Tim Purdy. - ·Paul Foote and Dav e
COLUMBUS IUPI )
Shubert ; Terry Stone , Steve
Rumer. a 6-2, 219-iJound Murry 7 and J elf Craycra f t .
Youngstown Chaney look a
1!).4 record in Saturday's 1 junior, gained his 12th win WP - Foote. LP . Slone . HR Shake r HIS . 300 000 0- 3 5 l
Carl casavecch 1it. 7th·, lwo
p.m. finals against Shaker against two defeats.
Beav er creek 000 000 0- 0 4 3
on
Dav e Schwartz and Jerr y
Heights , 27-&lt;1, for the Class
In the olber double-A game,
Cyncynatus ; Ed Volk and
Cla~ s AA
AAA state high school Deer Park's Jim Gross had a
000 003 0- 3 2 0 Chris Davis .
baseball tournament.
no-llit game going unW an Or vi ll e
Elida met Orrville in AA, error on what would have
and Leipsic t27-1) battled · been the third out or the sixth
VOTE FOR
Cuyahoga Heights 124.;!) in. inning let in a run, making
the score 1-L
single-A.
Randy Billiter and Jim
Bill Fedorsin's second hit of
the game scored Ray Smesko Haun the n each drove in runs
from second base in the with singles to close out the
bottom of the sixth inning scoring.
Late inning home runs
Friday to give Chaney a 4-3
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE
Leipsic
and
decision over Findlay in the carried
Cuya hoga Heights w victory
Class AAA semifinals.
FOR
In lhe other AAA contest, Friday in the semifinals of
the
Class
A
wurney.
Shaker Heights scored three
Leips ic beat Chillicothe
unearned runs in the first
ST~TE
inn ing and Dave Schwartz Bishop Flaget 3-2 in one of the
made them stand up for a 3-ll semis, with the winning run
92nd DISTRICT
coming on a 355-foot homer in
win over Beavercreek.
Cha ney's win ning run, the fifth inn ing by Duane
Farm Owner, Constru ction Busi ness, Has A GO&lt;J-..
which broke a 3-3 tie, was . Tooman.
Record in Education, Labor, Farming Bu siness t
In the other game,
unearned and set up when
Paid Pol. Adv . by Citi zens to elect Schri tter. Don
Smesko reached on an error . Cuyahoga Heights nipped
Schri tter, Treas urer
Beavercreek, held w only Jamestown Greeneview, 5.;!,
four hits by Schwartz, threat- scoring four times in the top
ened in the seventh inning, of the seventh inning . Three
loading lhe bases, but of the four runs came on a
homer by designated hitter
couldn't score.
Carl
Cassavecchia.
Scott Bass, who relieved
Flaget sent eight men to the
starter Tim Fenisey in the
fifth inning, picked up the win plate in the final inning,
for Chaney, while Jim scoring both its runs, but
Logsdon, who went the relief pitcher Denny . Maag
dista nce fo r Findlay , fanned Larry White with the
bases loaded.
sufferred the defeat.
Rubin Gonzales picked up
Schwartz bested Beavercr eek's Ed Yolk in Shaker Ute win for Leipsic while Bret
Mavis took the loss.
Heights' win .
Dea r Voters :
Cuyahoga Heights' Paul
In Class AA, Elida 's Rick
Com e J uneS you as a ci t izen of Gallia Co un ty have
Ru mer fired a no-hitter , Foote limited Greeneview w
th
e
ri
g ht to cast a vot e for whoever you want to serve
·
only
two
hits
in
pitching
his
striking out six and walking
th e next four yea rs as Sher iff. As a candid ate for the
one, and the Bulldogs edged team to victory . Heights
Sheriff's Off ice I have had to re ly on using the ra dio
pounded out 10 hits off Terry
Pomeroy Meigs HI.
and newspaper as means of mak ing contact with you. I
Orrville bea t Cincinna ti Slone and reliever Steve Murapologize for not hav ing t he t ime to co ntact you in
Deer Park 3-1 in the other AA ray.
person bu t with worki ng at Rio Gra nde College e ig ht
semifinals game.
hour s pl us and teac hing th e Basic Law Enforcem ent
COLU MBUS IUPI I
class three ni ghts a week four hours per night I have --·
In the Elida-Pome roy · Li nescores o l Friday's sl ate
high sc hool baseball to ur fa llen short on l im e .
pitching duel, Meigs' Jeff nament :
1would like for you as a voter to take a took at the
CLA SS A
McKinney tossed a oneLeipsi c
000 210 0- 3 4 2
ot her candi dates' quali fi ca t ions. We have .some w ho
hitter. struck out 10 and Ch;t
t. Flao. 00 0 ooo 2- 2 ' 1
has never been in vo lve d In l aw enfor cem ent. We have
walked one. The only. hit off
Ru bi n Go n za lez , D en ny
some who has bee n in law enfor cement but has not ·
Maag
7
an
d
B
ru
ce
Meyer
;
him was a triple by Jim
r
ecei ved th e proper trai nin g to m ake a legal arrest .
Br e i Mavis and Bil l Bonner .
Vandemark, who scored on a WP
- Go nza lez . L P - Mavis .
Some are st il l l ak ing th eir tr ai ning at the present tim e.
HR Dua n e T oo m a n ,
L eipsic. 5t h , no ne on .

MEN'S HOPSACK CASUALS

6" BOOT

Orville, Elida
gain AA finals

swim lessons

the Primary, He Feels That It Is

Polls and Support The Candidates

uff "".other miracle. Westphal, who tied teammate
Hicky Sobers with 25 points,
made two more baskets, the
last 15 seconds to play but
White, who led all scorers
with 3:1 points, dribbled out
the cloc k.
Dave Cowens added 26
points for Boston and Paul
Silas 17 while Curtis Perry
added 23 for Phoenix.
"I don' I remember no part
of it ," said a dazed White
trying to recall the events of
the G:!-minutes. " It l&lt;lkes a
little bit out of you when you
have a lead, then it goes."
Heinsohn, trying to stay
calm on the be nch, withered
fr om the heat and pressure or
thecontesl. The Boston coach
collapsed in the Celtics'
locker room from exha ustion
and dehydration but was
expected to be ready for
bench duty on Sunday.
Havlicek walked around
the JockerruOm multeri ng,
"I've never been in a game
like that. They came up with
shots that were unbelievable,
as we did ."

Deer Park
001 000 0- 1 6 2
Ch i rumbol and Brock ;
Gros s and wetage . WP Ch irumbol. L P - Gross .

Star Team were, Goalie.
Fred Baroni,
Hawk s;
Defenseman , John Maxson of
the Flying Aces. (John
resides at Rt. 1, Reedsville,
Ohio ); Forwards, Bob
Bowman of Dayton No. I,
Frank Daily-, Hawks, and
Jackie Rutherford , Tampa
Bay.
Other members of the
Parkersb urg team who
reside in Ohio are Raymond
and Ray Allen Maxson of Rt .
I Reedsville, and Dave
Ridgway. Pomeroy.
The Flying Aces won five

HOW DO WE COMPARE
WITH OTHER SCHOOL DISTRICTS
IN OUR AREA?
ANNUAL
COST PER PUPIL
Slate Average
Athens
Gallia Co. Local
Ir onton

Wellston
Jack son

Vinton Co.

Gallipoli s City
$800 $900 $1000 $1100 $ 1200,

LOCAL MILLAGE
State Average

GREEN TRIUMPHS
GALLIPOLIS - Green's
Pony League Team defeated
Hannan Trace Thursday 6-0.
Winning pitcher for Green

Athens

Th e t im e has been a factor in my campaign as we ll
as money. I h ~ve to wor k to suppor t my family
th erefore I ca nnot aff ord a bea uty pageant on ma in
·st r eet in order to rece i ve recogni,!J..Qn, neith e_r can I
afford to b uy you a dr ink. nor can l pay you to vot e for
m e. However if I had enough mo'n ey ·to do these things
you would still be di sappointed because I do not be lieve
in trying to buy your way into a position or job. It i s
m oral ly w r ong when society expect s to be
compen sa t ed for voti ng when it i s one of th e ver y few
th ings w hich i s fr ee in our count r y today.

Baseball play
starts Monday

Ironton

Logan

was Kenny Brown. Mark Van
Sickl e had a two-r un double
for Green. T. Beaver pitched
for Han nan Trace.

Weifston

ALLEN M.

Marietta

Nelsonville

candidates r unning for the Sheri ff's Offi ce and ca st a
vote for th e per son who is qua l if ied and wi ll ing to ser ve

Gallipolis City

you tor th e next lour years . Havi ng had the following
background I feel I ca n make a good Sheriff for all th e
people of Gallia County: fifteen years at Rio Grand e

lS 18 21

Center vi lle Lodge No. 371, F ree and Accep ted Masons.
I have been a Specia l Deputy for si &gt;c: years as I a m a

VOT~

"YES" FOR JHE
4 MILL SCHOOL LEVY

law enfor cement , fairness and dedication .

Pd. Pol. Adv.

•:Jii~

eiech'~c

$25995

-FREEELECTRIC START

Bolens. Mulching Mower"' does m.o re
than jusl c ui the grass. It also cuts
and re-cuts the clippi ngs irto a fiM
mulch and bl ows it down intv the lawn.
Out of sight. No bagg 111 g. No raki ng.
No excessive thatch build- up. And
your lawn is cont inuously fed wilh it s
own nitrogen-rich mulch. Bolens Mulch·
ing Mower is avail able in 22" self·
prope lled

Consumer
Products

NOW

June 8th Primary
"Your Vote and Support Appreciated"
Pd . Pol. Adv .

Pd . for by G.C.S.I.C. W. B. Thomas, Chai rman

SINGLE BLADE ELECTRIC

DO YOU SOME. TIMES FIND IT
DIFFICULT GETTING 't o
THE -BANK DURING REGULAR
BANKING HOURS?

The Prosecutor's Race Is A

•4000

Red, White and Blue
Super·Starter
IS
NOW

FOR SHERIFF

•

member of the Bi dwell United Methodist Church.
A vote for Ray Roberts is a vote for experienced

SAVE

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE

LET'S GIVE OUR CHILDREN
AN EQUAL CHANCE

Coll ege Ser ur; ty Assoc .. Buckeye Sheriff s Assoc .,

.. LIBERTY MACHINE'

24 27 30 33 36

MILLS

Coll ege, 450 hour s in l aw enforcement tra in i ng.
M em_ber o f t he fol low ing organ iza t ions: Ohio Privat e

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Jackson

Be twee n now and June Btake a good look at th e

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THIS WINDOW IS LOCATED JUST INSIDE THE REAR ENTRANCE OF THE MAIN BANK.
IT IS OPEN FROM 8 AM-9 AM AND• 3 PM-4:30 PM EVERY BANKING DAY.
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Reinstitution ofa Drug Program

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Sun. 1-7
Mon., Tues., Wed 9-6
Sat. 9-9

"Your Full Seroice Peopl~ To People Bank"
'"

RT. 2 BYPASS, POINT PLEASANT

�24 - The SWJdaYTimes ~ Sentine1. SWlda v. June 6. 1976

25 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sw1dar. June6, 1976

~;;::::::::::·:=:·:·::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:'.:~:~~;:::::::::::::::~:=~~:=-;~:=:~:~;:-.&lt;:~

F oyt seeks·Texas 500 crown Ithe scoREBOARD E~= I
COLLEGE STATION, Tex.
(UP! ) - Racing 's millionaire
driver A. J . Foyt of Houston,
still seeUling over a rainshortened Memorial Day
Classic a I Indianapolis,
·meets .Indy 500 winner
Johnny Rutherford today in
Ule fourth renewal of the
Texas 500.
Drivers of the race for late
model stock cars will take the
green Oag at I p.m. for 250
laps around the h1gh-ba nked
two-mile oval.
Foyl will be gunning for his
first VIctory at the Tc•as

World Speedway Track in one Indy winner Gordon John- second margin when the
of the few races he has never cock, and Roger McCluskey, green light flashed again.
won. In the last 500 mile race !975 National Champion of
"! wouldn' t want to win a
held in Texas, Foyt lost to the United States Auto Club. race thai way," Foyt said
Foyt drove the fastest lap later. "I feel I was cluialed ."
Charlotte 's Buddy Baker by a
of the Indy 500 last week,
mere 16 inches.
Also entered in the race will
"Judging by some of the clocking 186.027 miles · per
letters and telephone calls hour on the second lap. He be two ·women drivers,
we 've received, all Texas is will be driving a new car buill Martha Wideman of Lufkin ,
pulling for A. J . to win this for the USAC event. Tex ., and Californian Arlene
one," s pee dway president Rutherford won the· 255-mile Hiss, who was the target of
some harsh comments from a
rain aoorted Indy 500.
Richard Conole said.
nlUilber of male drivers s he
Foyt
's
chances
were
Joining the three-time Indy
damaged
when
he
went
into
competed
against in a USAC
500 winner will be veteran
Championship
Division race
the
pit
on
a
yellow
light
Bobby Allison of Hueytown,
earlier
this
year. Mrs.
leading
by
22
seconds
and
Ala ., 1975 National Champion
Wideman,
the
mother
of two
was
credited
with
only
a
sixRamo Stoll along with former

Major league Standings

lt'en-agers, has been racing
since !964.
Janel Guthrie, who passed
her rookie · test at Indy but
failed to reach the qualifying
stage when she couldn't ge t
180-mile speeds out of her
car, was refused any entry ih
the Texas 500 by Speedway.
officials over 1f cash appearance offer sponsored by
another racing organization.

United Press International
National league

East

Phila .
Pitts.
New York

Chicago.
St. Louis
Montreal

W. L. Pet. GB

32
28
25
22

13
20
27
26
22 27
·u 26
West

A high sc hool baseball
championship.
Leipsic, which finished
wiUl a 211-1 record, got what
proved to be the winning run
in the top of Ule seventh

without benefit of a hit.
Roger Meyer walked and
stole second. Bruce Meyer,
Roger's brother, then hit a
grounder to shortstop Joe
Pickett, but the ball oounced

off his glove into left field,
Roger scoring.
Cuyahoga Heights, which
lxlwed out with a 24-3 record,
scored I wice in the bottom of

Lanham honored by Alumni
·I

RIO GRANDE - For his
ou tstandi ng , fa ll~ful and
dedi cated service' on the
faculty of Rio Grande College
for 17 years, the Rio Grande
College Alumni Association
announced Saturday that Art
Lanham has been awarded
the Rio Grande College

Faculty Citation for 1976.L
Lanham, who serves as
athletic director, owns Coach
of the Year honors in both the
KIAC, when his learn
achieved an II-I record, and
the MOC, with a 6-2 record. In
1969, he led Rio to his bestever record of 22-7.

The Redmen, under Coach
Lanham, have been in the
NAIA District 22 Playoffs
four times in the last five
years . His lifetime record is
169 wins and 126 losses.
Lanham has also coached
Ule varsity baseball, golf and
track teams at Rio Grande .

II •;,

12
14
GB

24 28

l lf2

Cincin.
30 19 .612
Los Angeles 30 21 .588 I
S~n Diego
2• 23 .511 5
Houston

.462

San Fran . 20 32 .385 11'1&gt;
18 30 .375 ll 'h
The Texas 500 is the Atlanta
Saturday's
results
season 's first major USAC Philadelphia at San: Fran stock car race.
cisco, lwil ight
Chicago at Hou ston, night
San Diego at Pittsburgh,
night
Cincinnati at St. Louis, night
Atlanta at Montreal. night
New York at Los Angeles,
night

the seventh on a leadoff
double by Andy Harsh, a
triple by Jeff Piasecki and a
fielder's choice.
Paul Foote Ulen walked
with one out, but the Redskins
couldn't bring him aroWJd.
Leipsic scored three runs in
the first inning off starter and
loser Kevin Domzalski, who
struck out 14 but walked five
before being relieved by
Foote in Ule sevenUl.
Cuyahoga Heights tied it
w1Ul three runs in the third off
Denny Maag, who went tbe
distance for his tenth win
without a loss. But that was
all the Redskins got until the
seventh when they came up
one short. ·
Maag fanned II and walked
only two.

Sunday' s games :

Ch ic ago

000 000 ooo-- 0

61

Houston
010 000 OOx- I 2 0
R Reuschel (5 -.4 ) lind M itter wald ;
Cosg rove
(2 -31 and
Johnson .

14) ,

Hiller

(7)

•

.• __')

.....

·1 would like to take this opportunity to apologize to

the residents of Gallla County for not being able to
personally come around to see each resident.
I

have

t~aveled

many miles and talked to many

people, but ttY.ing to see and talk to every resident in

&lt;;allia County Is virtually impossible. Your vote and
support on June 8t~ would be appreciated .
Sincerely

James G. Scott
Oemocrat Candidate
For Gallia,Co. Sheriff
Pd. Pol. Adv .

THE CALDWELL'S
Would All Appreciate
Your Vote

4l. LP- Loxton 10·4). HRTeKllS , Thompson ( 1).

Major Le1gue Leaders
By United Press International
Batting
(based on 100 at bats I
National League
G. AB R. H. Pet
Robinson , Pi t 33 10.4 15 39 .375

·

Milner, NY

3411 3

20

38 .336

GILBERT CAU71JELL
TIM

FOR

COUNTY COMMISSIONER
REPUBLICAN

Jan. 2 Term

40 165
45 186
36 135
41 151
44 188
45 170
42 158
45 159

25 57 .345
28 64 . 34~

21 46 .341

23

26
25
35
20

~9 .~)5

61 . 3~4
55 .JU
50 .316
50 .JU

Atlanta IMoret 2·1) at
, Garrett (2) , Herrmann Randolph , NY 43 153 25 48 .;114
Montreal IW~rthen 1-5), 2: 15 ren
{10 ); Wise , House 19 l. Wil Home Runs
p.m.
loughby ( 101 and Fisk . WPNational League : Kingman,
San Diego .IStrom 5-3) at Sc ott (1 -0) LP- Willoughby (1 - NY 20 ; Schmidt, Phil 15 ;
Pittsburgh !Candelaria 4-3 ), J)). HRs- Ca liforn ia, Jackson Monday 1 Ch 1 and · Foster, Cln
( I) . Boston, Evans (4) .
1:35 p.m.
10; Cey , LA and Smith, St .L 8.
American League : Otlsi t&lt;C
Cincinnati IZachary 4-ll at
innings)
10; Banda, Oak 9; Yestrzem~kl,
St. Louis I Falcone 4-3), 2:15 110
Minn
001 130 001 2- 8 1~ 2 Bas, Hendrick, Clev, Fotd,
p.m.
330 000 ooo o-- 6 15 o Minn. and Burroughs, Tex o . ~
Philadelphia I Kaat 3-2) at Bait
Goltz, Burgmeier (2 ), Camp Runs Batted In
San Francisco (Montefusco 6- bell (9) and Wynegar ; Alexan - National Lugue: Foster , Cln
4) , 4:05p.m.
der, Flanagan (5) and Duncan . 47 ; Kingman. NY 46; Schmidt,
New York I Koosman 6-2) at WP - Campbell l6-2i . LP - Phil37 ; Perez, Cin 36 ; Morgan,
..
Los Angeles (Sutton 4-6), 4 Flanagan (O. J ), HR - Min- Cin 35.
nesota -Hisle (4) .
A m er i c a n League: 8\lrp.m.
roughs , Tex 38 ; Munson, NY
Chicago I Bonham 4-2 and (11 innings)
37 ; Chambliss, NY 35 ; Ot iS, KC
Fraillng 1-1) at Houston Oak
020 000 020 02- 6 8 2 34 ; Horton, Oet and Rudl, Oek
!Andujar 1-2and Rondon 1-1) , N.Y.
013 000 000 DO-- 4 13 I 33.
2, 3:05p.m.
Mitchell , Lindblad ( 3), Todd
Stolen Bases

-·z

for bout

DON'T BE MISLED

..

Ramsey says
officiating
oot up to par

wecan

yau

DO·IT YOURSElf·

CARTER &amp; EVANS BUILDING SUPPLIES

,,

•

production is July I, 1976.
Contact the ASCS Office in
Pomeroy , Ohio for further
details.

newly-acquired skills, hew
new purposes ;n
life - fWl !
Camping in 4-H makes a
contribution to boys and girl s
in many way s . Camping
contributions to good health
through supervised activity,
sufficient rest, good loud and
wholesome companionship.
Spiritual developm ent Is
gained by campers as they
recognize and appreciate the
handiwork of God in the out-·
of-doors and through vesper
program s. ·
Campers learn how to deal
practically and effectively
friend~hips,

Musl
4-H
ca mpin~
pr&lt;Jg ra ms arc cen teretl
aroWJd the bal anced four-fold
dev elopm ent
I mental ,
physical , social and spiritual )
uf lhe ooy and girl.
Ca nipin~ further
conlribules to good cilizenship
training through flag services
and s pecial program s.
Citizen ship is further
e nhan ce d through
democratic participation in
decision-makin g, group
planning , and carrying out of
activities . These experiences
plus being a)Vay !rum horne
and parents contributes to the
development of the boy and
girl.
Four-H Camp is said to be a
lab for lear-ning - an ex-

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state meeting

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Social
Calendar
SUNDAY
HOMECOMING AT Vinton
Fellowship Chapel Sunday.
The Rhythm Masters of
Cincinnati will be the
featured singers · in the
morning and afternoon. A
potluck dinner will be served
at noon. Rev. Elmer Geiger,
pastor and the congregation
invite the public.
TUESDAY
ELECTION Day dinner
Tuesday at Racine Fire
House beginning at 9 a.m . .
sponsored
bY Ladles
Auxiliary.
ELECTION Day dinner
Tuesday at Forest Run
United Methodist Church.
Menu includes bean and
vegetable soup, sandwiches,
pie and cake.

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MIDDLEPORT CHILD
Conservation League, old
fashioned family picnic at.
Route 33 roadside park, 6:30
p.m.
Tuesday. White
elephant sale wbe held aild
new officers to be installed.
Everyone to tske a covered
dish and table service.

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Tuesday
at Syracuse
Municipal building sponsored
by the ladies of the
Presbyterian Olurch.
WEDNESDAY
WHll'E ROSE LODGE,
I: 30 Wednesday afternoon at
the American Legion Hall In
Middleport.
BAKE -SALE ,
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers Plains CotnmWJlty
Club wUI hold a bake sale in
conjanctlon with an election
day dinner Tuesday at the
Orange · Township Fire

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· GALLIPOLIS - Manager
and Mrs. Robert T. Hennesy
~
of the City Loan and Savings
• Co. here , and Bob Miller,
~ mllf\ager of the Pomeroy
j office, attended a recent
biennial management
meeting of the firm in
Colwnbus. Branch managers
and their wives from the
company's statewide nel of
188 offices were guests.
Richard D. Hoffmann,
chalnnan and president, told
the managers new business
volwne for , the .first four
months of 1976 exceeded all
past performance, setting
new corporate records. In
total operations, City Loan
companies now have loan
~ 0\ltstandings of $356.6 million,
" with total assets exceeding
'• $392 million.
&lt;
'
New records also have been
•\' established in savings, with
, total deposits passing the $!72
~ million mark. The company
t presently handles some 50,000
• savings passbook 1111d cer1 tificate of deposit accoWJis.

this ycctr ilre:
Bc~ inners Camp - Jw1e 12·
15 and is for 8, 9 and 10 year
old memiJcrs who have never
been to 4-H Camp . Ten year
olds who wenl to camp last
year may go to Beginners
Camp again this year, or they
may go lo JWJior Camp if
they prefer . Gallia CoWJt y
Beginners Camp with 4-H
members rrom five other
cow1ties. Deadline to re~i ster
for this camp has been extended to Tuesday, June 6
and the fee is $14.
Junior Cnmp - JWJe 15-19
and is for all 4-H members
who are too old for Beginners
Camp and loo yoWJg for Teen
Camp. Gallia CoWJty 4-H
members camp with 4-H
members fr om Me igs

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Counly. Deadline tu rcglSICr
for this ca mp is June 8 and
tile fee is $20.
Teen Camp - JWJe 23.27
and is for iliKh sthool freshmen and older. Gallla County
4-H members will &lt;'amp w1lh
4-li'ers from 7 other southern
Ohio counties at this camp .
Deadline Ia register for this
camp is Jun e 14 nnd the fee is
$20.
Outdoor Adventure Camp
- July 1!1-22.. . This camp will
be at Canler's Cave 4-H Camp
and it will be open to any 4-H
member.&lt; in Ohio, ages 12-19.
Thi s camp w11l deal with the
outdoors nnd it will be differen t from the trmtilionili 4H Camp. If you are interested, call U1e Extensi on
Office for more inftmnation
and a camp reservation
blank.
All four of these camps m·e

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Foreman
prepares

1

POMEROY - The basic following year is July I.
provisions for proven wheat
The date by which wheal
yields are continued under acreage must be reported to
the Agriculture and Con- prove
current
year
swner Protection Act of 1973.
Farmers may elect to
establish a yield for their
farm ~aslj.d on actual
production rather than use
Ule yield established by the
county committee on a
judgment basis.
If a farmer wishes to have a
proven wheat yield for any of
the five program years
beginning two years hence,
IU
he must furnish current year
production data for the wheat
acreage he has reported, best
done this year, or be
responsible for furnishing it
later. Acceptable production
I ll.
evidence is limited to a
IU
record of disposition such as,
bin measurements, sales, or
warehouse receipts or ware
house ledger sheets. Adjustments may be necessary for
dockage and high moisture
content.
The date by which one must
request a proven yield for the

ooo-

Le Flore, Det
Brett, KC
American League
Bostock, Min
(10 innings)
early, Cle
Calif
200 001 010 1- 5 9 0 Munson , NY
Boston
003 000 010 o-- 4 15 I McRae, KC
K irkwood, Hartzel l (3), Scott Hargrove, Tx
(9), Drago OO J and Etc hebllr- Stoub, Oet·

site, a dining lodge - I hi s 1s
cam p. Ca mp is also a
program - citizenship,
nature appreciation, social
development, recreation and
leadership training . Camp
also includes what happens to
campers , th e memories.

Proven yields offered

Crawfrd, St .L 41 132 22 U .333
Phladelphio 000 010
I 7 o Johnstne, Phil 34 11.5 25 37 .322
40 140 17 .45 .321
San Frncisco 400 010 OOx- S 11 2 Rader , SO
American League
Lonborg , Schueler 171 and
.
G. AB R. H. Pet
Boon e; Barr (3 -4) and Rader.
Lynn , 8os
36 135 19 47 .3'48
LP- Lonborg (8 -ll .

WE'VE

GILBERT

By FredDeel
parent s throughout lhe
Ext. 4-H Agent
Jackson Area · are looking
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia forward to their first ever
CoWJty 4-H'ers are ·being camping experience. They
reminded of the camping want Ia know what camping
opportunities available to 4-H is. We might say 4-H camp is
members.
a place - the green woods, a
Many 4-H members and swimming pool, a campfire

New York · 000 250 30 1- 111.4 0
Los Angeles 000 000 ooo- 0 3 1
Seaver (5 4) and Grote ; McBride, St.L 33 128 20 46 .359
44 169 42 58 .343
Hooton, Wall 15), Down ing 11) Gr iffey, Cin
42114 17 39 .342
and Ferguson , Rodriguez (7). Torre , NY
49 198 44 SB .liB
LP---Hooton (4 -Sl. HRs- New Rose, Cin
44 175 26 59 .337
York , Kingman 3 (20) , Krane· Fos ter , Cin

pool 14) .

ment.

Local ·c amping season opening ·soon

ond KJmm;

Anderson pleased

AMESSAGE
TO lHE RESIDENTS
OF GALLIA COUNTY

4-H Clubs• • .in .Gallia

Perry, Hargan (7) and Sund berg , Fohev 19) . WP- Perry 15·

Lanham received his
bachelor's degree at Union
University and his M.A. at
(8 ) and Haney, Hosley (8);
National League:
Cedeno,
Eastern Kentucky UniverHun ter, .Lyle (10) and MUnson . Hou 21 ; Morgan, Cin 19;
sity. While at Union, he was
WP- Todd 14-4) . LP- Lyle 14- Griffey, Cin 15 , Mangual, Mtl
3) . HR - Oakland , Washington and Brock, St.L 12.
...
Anlerican league
the basketball learn captain
12 ).
American League:
Nor.th,
East
for three years and was
Oak 28 ; Patek , KC and Baylor,
W. L. Pet. GB
( 10 innings )
Oak 23; Campaneris, Oak ~0;
named to the All-Smoky
New York
27 18 600
Milw
000 110 100 o-- 3 70
19 .
.,
Mountain Athletic ConBaltimore 24 22 .521 3'12 Kan Ci t y 000 210 000 1- 4 B 0 Carew, MinnPitching
t~~
Cleve.
21 23 .477 5'12
Slaton (7-2) and Porter ;
ference team and th e
Most VIctories
Boston
Leonard (51) and StinSon HR
21 24 .466 6
fljational Leaguf: Jones, ~D
Methodist College All- Kansas City , Otis (10)
Detroit
10-2, Lonborg, Phil 8· 1; Hough,
20 25 .444 7
American team .
LA 7-0: Koosman, NY, ChrisMilwau.
17 24 .415 8
000 010 ooo- 1 9 3 tenson , Phi l and Rooker, Pitt 6Cleveland
He is a member of the
West
cago
200 020 oox- 4 a o 2; Fryman, Mtl 6-3; Reuss, PJ.tt
W. L. Pet. GB Chi'Eckersley
Athletic Council at Rio
, Wa 1ts (5). Thomas and Montefusco , SF 6·4.
G
Kan . City
28 17 .622
(8) and Ashby ; Gossage (4-3)
American League:
Slaton,
Grande; is an "R" Club
Texas
26 19 .578 2
and Essian . LP- Eckersley (3- Mil 7-2; Tanana , Cal 7-3; Tlaht,
Forward Curtis Perry said, Booster; belongs to the Elks
· Chicago
23 20 .535 4
4) .
Bas 7-3; Bird. KC '6 -1; Travers,
"I feel we can beat them in and the Centerville Lodge
Mil Md Campbell, M inn 6.2;.
Minn .
22 24 .479 6'1&gt;
000 001 20o- 3 5 I Figueroa , NY 6-3; Palmeri
Phoenix like we did in the 371. He is also a Kentucky
Oakland
23 27 .451 7'1&gt; Detroi t
040 802 OOx- 14 IS 2 Bait, Hunter, NY end Torre!,
Texas
Calif.
22 31 .415 10
other games. This game Colonel.
Laxton , Grilli (4), Crawford Oak 6-5.
~
Saturday's results:
doesn't make me sad.
The award was presented
Baltimore 5 Minnesota I
Nobody's down . Everybody to Coach Lanham at the IOOth
Boston 4 California 3
can't wait to play the sixth Anniversary AllUilm Banquet
Oakland 7 New York 6
UNIONDALE, N.Y. (UP!) Cleveland 5 Chicago 3
game."
at Rio Grande College on May
- George Foreman, who Milwaukee at Kansas City, 2,
The SWJs, in the Playoffs 29.
twilight
•
fights Joe Frazier June 15 at Detroit
for only the second time in the
at Texas, night
the Nassau Coliseum, arrived
eight-year history , will be
Today's games:
California (Ryan 4-6) at
in New York Saturday and
trying to send the Series into
32 Americans
was mel by his trainer, Gil Boston I Pole 1-3 ), 2 p.m .
a deciding seventh game at
Milwaukee (Colborn 2-7) at
Clancy.
Boston Wednesday.
Kansas City !Bird 6-11. 2:30
Clancy, impressed with the p.m.
in 4-day event
Detroit (Coleman 2·4) at
way foreman looked, said the
former heavywe ight Texas I Briles 4-2), 9: OS p.m.
SALT LAKE CJTY iUPI)
Minnesota !Redfern 1-2 and
champion would begin his Decker
- University of Utah ski
LAS VEGAS !UP!) 2-3 or Hughes 1-6) at
coach Phil Klingsmith Thirty-two of America 's daily training sessions at the Baltimore !Cuellar 2-5 ond
resigned Friday.
leading athletes from eight Nassau Coliseum SWJday at 2 Palmer 6-5). 2, 2 p.m.
Oak land I Blue 5-5 and
Klingsmith, 26, who turned different sports will compete p.m. The training sessions
Bahnsen
at New York
the Utes into a collegiate ski in the sixth annual Dewar's are open to the public at no I Figueroa2-2)
6-3 and Pagan 0-0),
power in the past three Sports Celebrity Tennis charge . Before his first 2, 1 p.m .
seasons, quit the post Championships at the Hotel workout here, Foreman will
Cleveland I Kern 3-2 and
effective Aug. I. No reason Riviera Monday through jog at Jones Beach at noon. Brown 5-I) at Chicago
3-1 and Brett 2-0),
Thursday.
was given for his decision .
Foreman, who went to see 2.(Vukovich
1:30 p.m .
The annual star of the the Belmont Stakes Saturday
Dewar's is baseball Hall of before heading for the house
I ·have just listened to and read several sheriff
Fame
slugger
Hank he has rented in Hempstead,
Major League Results
candidates
commercials and can assure you that they
United Press International
Greenberg, who hit 58 home was asked for his assessment By
don't know what they are talking about. No SheriH has
.
National League
rWJs for Ule Detroit Tigers in of the upcoming battle with Atlanta
101 000 Ooo- 2 8 1
the lime lo promote social programs and do the job he
streaky."
000 000 ooo- 0 1 0
1938. Greenberg has been in Frazier and replied, "I'm in Man 1rea I
was elected to do.
Messersmith D -5 ) and Wil Anderson was pleased with the finals in all five previous better condition and I'm a l iams
Make your choice of a sheriff candidate on his past
; Carrithers , Murray (7)
Ule 18-hil attack the Reds events.
record ol character, honesty and accomplishment.and
better figh~r than I was in and Foote. LP- Ca rrifh ers ( 1not on his pre-election evaluation of himself.
llSed W wipe out the St. Louis
"Now when kids ask for my 1973, wheri I knocked out Joe 4 ).
I wou ld ask you to consider my candidacy on the
Cardinals, I1-2, Friday night. autograph," said Greenberg, Frazier in two roWJds, and I San Diego 000 200 ooo- 2 4 1
above standards . Thank you f~r your consideration on
George Foster led the on- 65, of Beverly Hills, Calif., don't think he's any better Pittsburgh 040 010 02x- 7 12 0
June 8 Primary.
Freisleben , Reynolds
( 2).
slaught with a three-run and now in the investment then he was then. I'm not Folkers
(5). Metzger (8) and
DENVER A. WALKER
homer and a ru~..scoring business, "they ask me w saying that he has gone back, Kendall ; Reuss (6 -41 and
Pd. Pol. Adv.
Sanguillen
.
L-F'
Freisleben
{2
single and Dave Concepcion add, 'Tennis Champion.' but he's certainly no better. 1) .
had five hits in six tri115 wthe They aren't aware that I had For that reason, I'll knock
Cincinnati
soo 300 30()--11 18 1
plate.
played some baseball in my him out again,"
I
St. Louis
000 020 ooo-- 2 7 1
,,'"
"The last two weeks, he's time."
played
outstanding
baseball," Anderson said of
Concepcion. "He got off to
such a bad start. He was
hitting .170 and must have
come up 100 points."
Anderson described Foster
as "one of the best yoWJg
hitters around."
The Reds came up wiUl five
nms in tbe first inning w
PORTLAND iUPI) - New
knock out St. Louis starter
Ly!Ul McGlothen, now 5-4, Portland Trail Blazers coach
and enable Gary Nolan to Jack Ramsey said Friday the
only .thing wrong with
raise his record to 4-3.
Nolan, who scattered seven National Basketball
hits and didn't walk a batter, Association play is that Ulere
stymied the Cardinals with are not enough good officials.
Ramsey, named Tuesday
his breaking balls and
as
Blazer Coach, said, " It
changeups in winning his first
game since May 11. He INBA) is the best basketball
allowed no walks and retired game going. I coached for II
years in college but I have
the last 14 batters.
got~n to the point now where
I get bored by the college
game.
"The execution (In the
NBA) has gotten better and
there has been much more of
an effort toward team play.
Teams are playing better
defense as WJits .
"People around the league
have come to realize that you
.can't win wlth oneoo(m.&lt;Jne
basketball. That has made
the game better."
Ramsey said, "There is
only one way to get better
officiating and that is to get
better people. We have some
COT 'EM!
good ones now but not entlllgh
PRICED
of them ."
He sa1d a proposal made by
RIGHT!
the Sea tie Sonics for a college
scholarship program to train
'
prospective referees is a good
"
one " But I don't know
SCOTT
whether it will be approved
because of the money."
OLIVE ST.
Ramsey also announced a
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
camp for rookies and free
Pd. Pol. Adv.
agenls July 1().13 probably at
MON. THRU FRI. 7:30 A.M. TIL 5:00 P.M. SAT.
lhc University of Porlland :

Boston eyes 13th ·crown
PHOENIX
( UP! team wiUl the experience and
) - The Boston Celtics can all . We got guys that just
claim their 13th NBA Crown won' t quit."
this afternoon, but standing
Although they lost, the SWls
in their way are: the sur- gained confidence from the
prisingly stuboorn Phoenix close' contest in Boston
Suns and a homecourt ad- Garden, where they were
van !age which has held true convincingly beaten in the
in the first five games of the opening two games of the
Championship Series.
series.
11
The Cellics lead the BestHow can you say we don't
of-Seven Series 3-2 after a 128- belong here?" asked forward
126 win in an WJbelievable Gar Heard, the most contriple overtime contest at sistent player for Phoenix
Boston Garden Friday night. duri~g the series. "We came
The SWJs' comeback from a from the bottom to where we
2().point deficit in the first are now and I guess you can
quarter and their composure say that after this game the
in the final minutes gave the Cellics know we are a good
Cellics more respect for the team that belongs in the same
Western Conference ' s league they are . I know
Wildcard en try in the Boston is going to come out
Playoffs.
and try and blow us away
·'We were the favorites today. I don 't think Friday's
going into the series, so Ule game is going to be forgotten
goal was set. But now you've for a long lime ."
got to give them credit.
They're a phenomenal
' team," said Boston's Paul
Silas.
"Every time I thought they
would crack, they'd make a
Sf. LOUIS I UP! ) - It's
shot," said guard Ju Jo going to be a long, hot
White .
summer for the rest of the
Phoenix Coach John Mac- National League if Sparky
Leod thought the respect was Anderson's prediction comes
deserved .
true.
" If we don't belong after
"When warm weaUler gets
Friday night, then everyoody here, we'll start hitting," said
can just go jump in a lake ," the Cincinnati manager .
said MacLeod. "The Celtics "We've been off and on. We
on paper definitely were hit it real good one game and
supposed to be the better not the next. Kind of

5'1&gt;

10'1&gt;

W. L. Pel.

Leipsic crowned Class A champion
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Leipsic, outhit 13 to 4, scored
si ngle rWJs in the final Ulree
innings Saturday for a !Hi
victory over Cuyahoga
Heighls to win Ule state Class

.711
.583
.481
.458
.449
.395

NOlan 14 Jl ano Plumm er ;
McG lothen, Rasmussen
( l l.
Walla c;e (4),
Frisel la
(6),
Hrabosky (9J ·and Rudolph . LP
- McGlothen (5 -.4 ). HR - Cinc innati, Foster (1()).

wuh living situa tions as perience in ,living - and a
provides an op- classroom without walls.
The dates for 4-H Camp
ourlun ity for social develop-

cr~mp i ng

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at Canter's Cave 4-H Camp
located 5 miles northwest of
Jackson, Ohio just off Route
:15. Cllf\ ler 's Cuv~ 4-H Camp is
owned by the 4-II Clubs in
Gallla , Mei gs, Jac kson ,
Lawrence; High land and
Adams CoWJiies and it Is
noted for it s out standin g
nature setting . ·
Members interested in
participating in Gallia
County's 4-H campinR
pr og rams should contact
ll1eir CoWJi y Extension Office
located in the Courthouse,
phone 446-4612, extension 32
for details such as dales, cost,
etc .
We hope many 4-H members will join the more than
17,000 boys and girls across
Ohio who will enroll In 4-H
cnmps nnd have the time of
their life this swmner .
4-H CAMP IS FUN !! !

�24 - The SWJdaYTimes ~ Sentine1. SWlda v. June 6. 1976

25 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sw1dar. June6, 1976

~;;::::::::::·:=:·:·::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:'.:~:~~;:::::::::::::::~:=~~:=-;~:=:~:~;:-.&lt;:~

F oyt seeks·Texas 500 crown Ithe scoREBOARD E~= I
COLLEGE STATION, Tex.
(UP! ) - Racing 's millionaire
driver A. J . Foyt of Houston,
still seeUling over a rainshortened Memorial Day
Classic a I Indianapolis,
·meets .Indy 500 winner
Johnny Rutherford today in
Ule fourth renewal of the
Texas 500.
Drivers of the race for late
model stock cars will take the
green Oag at I p.m. for 250
laps around the h1gh-ba nked
two-mile oval.
Foyl will be gunning for his
first VIctory at the Tc•as

World Speedway Track in one Indy winner Gordon John- second margin when the
of the few races he has never cock, and Roger McCluskey, green light flashed again.
won. In the last 500 mile race !975 National Champion of
"! wouldn' t want to win a
held in Texas, Foyt lost to the United States Auto Club. race thai way," Foyt said
Foyt drove the fastest lap later. "I feel I was cluialed ."
Charlotte 's Buddy Baker by a
of the Indy 500 last week,
mere 16 inches.
Also entered in the race will
"Judging by some of the clocking 186.027 miles · per
letters and telephone calls hour on the second lap. He be two ·women drivers,
we 've received, all Texas is will be driving a new car buill Martha Wideman of Lufkin ,
pulling for A. J . to win this for the USAC event. Tex ., and Californian Arlene
one," s pee dway president Rutherford won the· 255-mile Hiss, who was the target of
some harsh comments from a
rain aoorted Indy 500.
Richard Conole said.
nlUilber of male drivers s he
Foyt
's
chances
were
Joining the three-time Indy
damaged
when
he
went
into
competed
against in a USAC
500 winner will be veteran
Championship
Division race
the
pit
on
a
yellow
light
Bobby Allison of Hueytown,
earlier
this
year. Mrs.
leading
by
22
seconds
and
Ala ., 1975 National Champion
Wideman,
the
mother
of two
was
credited
with
only
a
sixRamo Stoll along with former

Major league Standings

lt'en-agers, has been racing
since !964.
Janel Guthrie, who passed
her rookie · test at Indy but
failed to reach the qualifying
stage when she couldn't ge t
180-mile speeds out of her
car, was refused any entry ih
the Texas 500 by Speedway.
officials over 1f cash appearance offer sponsored by
another racing organization.

United Press International
National league

East

Phila .
Pitts.
New York

Chicago.
St. Louis
Montreal

W. L. Pet. GB

32
28
25
22

13
20
27
26
22 27
·u 26
West

A high sc hool baseball
championship.
Leipsic, which finished
wiUl a 211-1 record, got what
proved to be the winning run
in the top of Ule seventh

without benefit of a hit.
Roger Meyer walked and
stole second. Bruce Meyer,
Roger's brother, then hit a
grounder to shortstop Joe
Pickett, but the ball oounced

off his glove into left field,
Roger scoring.
Cuyahoga Heights, which
lxlwed out with a 24-3 record,
scored I wice in the bottom of

Lanham honored by Alumni
·I

RIO GRANDE - For his
ou tstandi ng , fa ll~ful and
dedi cated service' on the
faculty of Rio Grande College
for 17 years, the Rio Grande
College Alumni Association
announced Saturday that Art
Lanham has been awarded
the Rio Grande College

Faculty Citation for 1976.L
Lanham, who serves as
athletic director, owns Coach
of the Year honors in both the
KIAC, when his learn
achieved an II-I record, and
the MOC, with a 6-2 record. In
1969, he led Rio to his bestever record of 22-7.

The Redmen, under Coach
Lanham, have been in the
NAIA District 22 Playoffs
four times in the last five
years . His lifetime record is
169 wins and 126 losses.
Lanham has also coached
Ule varsity baseball, golf and
track teams at Rio Grande .

II •;,

12
14
GB

24 28

l lf2

Cincin.
30 19 .612
Los Angeles 30 21 .588 I
S~n Diego
2• 23 .511 5
Houston

.462

San Fran . 20 32 .385 11'1&gt;
18 30 .375 ll 'h
The Texas 500 is the Atlanta
Saturday's
results
season 's first major USAC Philadelphia at San: Fran stock car race.
cisco, lwil ight
Chicago at Hou ston, night
San Diego at Pittsburgh,
night
Cincinnati at St. Louis, night
Atlanta at Montreal. night
New York at Los Angeles,
night

the seventh on a leadoff
double by Andy Harsh, a
triple by Jeff Piasecki and a
fielder's choice.
Paul Foote Ulen walked
with one out, but the Redskins
couldn't bring him aroWJd.
Leipsic scored three runs in
the first inning off starter and
loser Kevin Domzalski, who
struck out 14 but walked five
before being relieved by
Foote in Ule sevenUl.
Cuyahoga Heights tied it
w1Ul three runs in the third off
Denny Maag, who went tbe
distance for his tenth win
without a loss. But that was
all the Redskins got until the
seventh when they came up
one short. ·
Maag fanned II and walked
only two.

Sunday' s games :

Ch ic ago

000 000 ooo-- 0

61

Houston
010 000 OOx- I 2 0
R Reuschel (5 -.4 ) lind M itter wald ;
Cosg rove
(2 -31 and
Johnson .

14) ,

Hiller

(7)

•

.• __')

.....

·1 would like to take this opportunity to apologize to

the residents of Gallla County for not being able to
personally come around to see each resident.
I

have

t~aveled

many miles and talked to many

people, but ttY.ing to see and talk to every resident in

&lt;;allia County Is virtually impossible. Your vote and
support on June 8t~ would be appreciated .
Sincerely

James G. Scott
Oemocrat Candidate
For Gallia,Co. Sheriff
Pd. Pol. Adv .

THE CALDWELL'S
Would All Appreciate
Your Vote

4l. LP- Loxton 10·4). HRTeKllS , Thompson ( 1).

Major Le1gue Leaders
By United Press International
Batting
(based on 100 at bats I
National League
G. AB R. H. Pet
Robinson , Pi t 33 10.4 15 39 .375

·

Milner, NY

3411 3

20

38 .336

GILBERT CAU71JELL
TIM

FOR

COUNTY COMMISSIONER
REPUBLICAN

Jan. 2 Term

40 165
45 186
36 135
41 151
44 188
45 170
42 158
45 159

25 57 .345
28 64 . 34~

21 46 .341

23

26
25
35
20

~9 .~)5

61 . 3~4
55 .JU
50 .316
50 .JU

Atlanta IMoret 2·1) at
, Garrett (2) , Herrmann Randolph , NY 43 153 25 48 .;114
Montreal IW~rthen 1-5), 2: 15 ren
{10 ); Wise , House 19 l. Wil Home Runs
p.m.
loughby ( 101 and Fisk . WPNational League : Kingman,
San Diego .IStrom 5-3) at Sc ott (1 -0) LP- Willoughby (1 - NY 20 ; Schmidt, Phil 15 ;
Pittsburgh !Candelaria 4-3 ), J)). HRs- Ca liforn ia, Jackson Monday 1 Ch 1 and · Foster, Cln
( I) . Boston, Evans (4) .
1:35 p.m.
10; Cey , LA and Smith, St .L 8.
American League : Otlsi t&lt;C
Cincinnati IZachary 4-ll at
innings)
10; Banda, Oak 9; Yestrzem~kl,
St. Louis I Falcone 4-3), 2:15 110
Minn
001 130 001 2- 8 1~ 2 Bas, Hendrick, Clev, Fotd,
p.m.
330 000 ooo o-- 6 15 o Minn. and Burroughs, Tex o . ~
Philadelphia I Kaat 3-2) at Bait
Goltz, Burgmeier (2 ), Camp Runs Batted In
San Francisco (Montefusco 6- bell (9) and Wynegar ; Alexan - National Lugue: Foster , Cln
4) , 4:05p.m.
der, Flanagan (5) and Duncan . 47 ; Kingman. NY 46; Schmidt,
New York I Koosman 6-2) at WP - Campbell l6-2i . LP - Phil37 ; Perez, Cin 36 ; Morgan,
..
Los Angeles (Sutton 4-6), 4 Flanagan (O. J ), HR - Min- Cin 35.
nesota -Hisle (4) .
A m er i c a n League: 8\lrp.m.
roughs , Tex 38 ; Munson, NY
Chicago I Bonham 4-2 and (11 innings)
37 ; Chambliss, NY 35 ; Ot iS, KC
Fraillng 1-1) at Houston Oak
020 000 020 02- 6 8 2 34 ; Horton, Oet and Rudl, Oek
!Andujar 1-2and Rondon 1-1) , N.Y.
013 000 000 DO-- 4 13 I 33.
2, 3:05p.m.
Mitchell , Lindblad ( 3), Todd
Stolen Bases

-·z

for bout

DON'T BE MISLED

..

Ramsey says
officiating
oot up to par

wecan

yau

DO·IT YOURSElf·

CARTER &amp; EVANS BUILDING SUPPLIES

,,

•

production is July I, 1976.
Contact the ASCS Office in
Pomeroy , Ohio for further
details.

newly-acquired skills, hew
new purposes ;n
life - fWl !
Camping in 4-H makes a
contribution to boys and girl s
in many way s . Camping
contributions to good health
through supervised activity,
sufficient rest, good loud and
wholesome companionship.
Spiritual developm ent Is
gained by campers as they
recognize and appreciate the
handiwork of God in the out-·
of-doors and through vesper
program s. ·
Campers learn how to deal
practically and effectively
friend~hips,

Musl
4-H
ca mpin~
pr&lt;Jg ra ms arc cen teretl
aroWJd the bal anced four-fold
dev elopm ent
I mental ,
physical , social and spiritual )
uf lhe ooy and girl.
Ca nipin~ further
conlribules to good cilizenship
training through flag services
and s pecial program s.
Citizen ship is further
e nhan ce d through
democratic participation in
decision-makin g, group
planning , and carrying out of
activities . These experiences
plus being a)Vay !rum horne
and parents contributes to the
development of the boy and
girl.
Four-H Camp is said to be a
lab for lear-ning - an ex-

~

Hennesys go to
state meeting

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Social
Calendar
SUNDAY
HOMECOMING AT Vinton
Fellowship Chapel Sunday.
The Rhythm Masters of
Cincinnati will be the
featured singers · in the
morning and afternoon. A
potluck dinner will be served
at noon. Rev. Elmer Geiger,
pastor and the congregation
invite the public.
TUESDAY
ELECTION Day dinner
Tuesday at Racine Fire
House beginning at 9 a.m . .
sponsored
bY Ladles
Auxiliary.
ELECTION Day dinner
Tuesday at Forest Run
United Methodist Church.
Menu includes bean and
vegetable soup, sandwiches,
pie and cake.

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MIDDLEPORT CHILD
Conservation League, old
fashioned family picnic at.
Route 33 roadside park, 6:30
p.m.
Tuesday. White
elephant sale wbe held aild
new officers to be installed.
Everyone to tske a covered
dish and table service.

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ELECTION DAY dinner
Tuesday
at Syracuse
Municipal building sponsored
by the ladies of the
Presbyterian Olurch.
WEDNESDAY
WHll'E ROSE LODGE,
I: 30 Wednesday afternoon at
the American Legion Hall In
Middleport.
BAKE -SALE ,
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers Plains CotnmWJlty
Club wUI hold a bake sale in
conjanctlon with an election
day dinner Tuesday at the
Orange · Township Fire

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· GALLIPOLIS - Manager
and Mrs. Robert T. Hennesy
~
of the City Loan and Savings
• Co. here , and Bob Miller,
~ mllf\ager of the Pomeroy
j office, attended a recent
biennial management
meeting of the firm in
Colwnbus. Branch managers
and their wives from the
company's statewide nel of
188 offices were guests.
Richard D. Hoffmann,
chalnnan and president, told
the managers new business
volwne for , the .first four
months of 1976 exceeded all
past performance, setting
new corporate records. In
total operations, City Loan
companies now have loan
~ 0\ltstandings of $356.6 million,
" with total assets exceeding
'• $392 million.
&lt;
'
New records also have been
•\' established in savings, with
, total deposits passing the $!72
~ million mark. The company
t presently handles some 50,000
• savings passbook 1111d cer1 tificate of deposit accoWJis.

this ycctr ilre:
Bc~ inners Camp - Jw1e 12·
15 and is for 8, 9 and 10 year
old memiJcrs who have never
been to 4-H Camp . Ten year
olds who wenl to camp last
year may go to Beginners
Camp again this year, or they
may go lo JWJior Camp if
they prefer . Gallia CoWJt y
Beginners Camp with 4-H
members rrom five other
cow1ties. Deadline to re~i ster
for this camp has been extended to Tuesday, June 6
and the fee is $14.
Junior Cnmp - JWJe 15-19
and is for all 4-H members
who are too old for Beginners
Camp and loo yoWJg for Teen
Camp. Gallia CoWJty 4-H
members camp with 4-H
members fr om Me igs

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Counly. Deadline tu rcglSICr
for this ca mp is June 8 and
tile fee is $20.
Teen Camp - JWJe 23.27
and is for iliKh sthool freshmen and older. Gallla County
4-H members will &lt;'amp w1lh
4-li'ers from 7 other southern
Ohio counties at this camp .
Deadline Ia register for this
camp is Jun e 14 nnd the fee is
$20.
Outdoor Adventure Camp
- July 1!1-22.. . This camp will
be at Canler's Cave 4-H Camp
and it will be open to any 4-H
member.&lt; in Ohio, ages 12-19.
Thi s camp w11l deal with the
outdoors nnd it will be differen t from the trmtilionili 4H Camp. If you are interested, call U1e Extensi on
Office for more inftmnation
and a camp reservation
blank.
All four of these camps m·e

l

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~

Foreman
prepares

1

POMEROY - The basic following year is July I.
provisions for proven wheat
The date by which wheal
yields are continued under acreage must be reported to
the Agriculture and Con- prove
current
year
swner Protection Act of 1973.
Farmers may elect to
establish a yield for their
farm ~aslj.d on actual
production rather than use
Ule yield established by the
county committee on a
judgment basis.
If a farmer wishes to have a
proven wheat yield for any of
the five program years
beginning two years hence,
IU
he must furnish current year
production data for the wheat
acreage he has reported, best
done this year, or be
responsible for furnishing it
later. Acceptable production
I ll.
evidence is limited to a
IU
record of disposition such as,
bin measurements, sales, or
warehouse receipts or ware
house ledger sheets. Adjustments may be necessary for
dockage and high moisture
content.
The date by which one must
request a proven yield for the

ooo-

Le Flore, Det
Brett, KC
American League
Bostock, Min
(10 innings)
early, Cle
Calif
200 001 010 1- 5 9 0 Munson , NY
Boston
003 000 010 o-- 4 15 I McRae, KC
K irkwood, Hartzel l (3), Scott Hargrove, Tx
(9), Drago OO J and Etc hebllr- Stoub, Oet·

site, a dining lodge - I hi s 1s
cam p. Ca mp is also a
program - citizenship,
nature appreciation, social
development, recreation and
leadership training . Camp
also includes what happens to
campers , th e memories.

Proven yields offered

Crawfrd, St .L 41 132 22 U .333
Phladelphio 000 010
I 7 o Johnstne, Phil 34 11.5 25 37 .322
40 140 17 .45 .321
San Frncisco 400 010 OOx- S 11 2 Rader , SO
American League
Lonborg , Schueler 171 and
.
G. AB R. H. Pet
Boon e; Barr (3 -4) and Rader.
Lynn , 8os
36 135 19 47 .3'48
LP- Lonborg (8 -ll .

WE'VE

GILBERT

By FredDeel
parent s throughout lhe
Ext. 4-H Agent
Jackson Area · are looking
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia forward to their first ever
CoWJty 4-H'ers are ·being camping experience. They
reminded of the camping want Ia know what camping
opportunities available to 4-H is. We might say 4-H camp is
members.
a place - the green woods, a
Many 4-H members and swimming pool, a campfire

New York · 000 250 30 1- 111.4 0
Los Angeles 000 000 ooo- 0 3 1
Seaver (5 4) and Grote ; McBride, St.L 33 128 20 46 .359
44 169 42 58 .343
Hooton, Wall 15), Down ing 11) Gr iffey, Cin
42114 17 39 .342
and Ferguson , Rodriguez (7). Torre , NY
49 198 44 SB .liB
LP---Hooton (4 -Sl. HRs- New Rose, Cin
44 175 26 59 .337
York , Kingman 3 (20) , Krane· Fos ter , Cin

pool 14) .

ment.

Local ·c amping season opening ·soon

ond KJmm;

Anderson pleased

AMESSAGE
TO lHE RESIDENTS
OF GALLIA COUNTY

4-H Clubs• • .in .Gallia

Perry, Hargan (7) and Sund berg , Fohev 19) . WP- Perry 15·

Lanham received his
bachelor's degree at Union
University and his M.A. at
(8 ) and Haney, Hosley (8);
National League:
Cedeno,
Eastern Kentucky UniverHun ter, .Lyle (10) and MUnson . Hou 21 ; Morgan, Cin 19;
sity. While at Union, he was
WP- Todd 14-4) . LP- Lyle 14- Griffey, Cin 15 , Mangual, Mtl
3) . HR - Oakland , Washington and Brock, St.L 12.
...
Anlerican league
the basketball learn captain
12 ).
American League:
Nor.th,
East
for three years and was
Oak 28 ; Patek , KC and Baylor,
W. L. Pet. GB
( 10 innings )
Oak 23; Campaneris, Oak ~0;
named to the All-Smoky
New York
27 18 600
Milw
000 110 100 o-- 3 70
19 .
.,
Mountain Athletic ConBaltimore 24 22 .521 3'12 Kan Ci t y 000 210 000 1- 4 B 0 Carew, MinnPitching
t~~
Cleve.
21 23 .477 5'12
Slaton (7-2) and Porter ;
ference team and th e
Most VIctories
Boston
Leonard (51) and StinSon HR
21 24 .466 6
fljational Leaguf: Jones, ~D
Methodist College All- Kansas City , Otis (10)
Detroit
10-2, Lonborg, Phil 8· 1; Hough,
20 25 .444 7
American team .
LA 7-0: Koosman, NY, ChrisMilwau.
17 24 .415 8
000 010 ooo- 1 9 3 tenson , Phi l and Rooker, Pitt 6Cleveland
He is a member of the
West
cago
200 020 oox- 4 a o 2; Fryman, Mtl 6-3; Reuss, PJ.tt
W. L. Pet. GB Chi'Eckersley
Athletic Council at Rio
, Wa 1ts (5). Thomas and Montefusco , SF 6·4.
G
Kan . City
28 17 .622
(8) and Ashby ; Gossage (4-3)
American League:
Slaton,
Grande; is an "R" Club
Texas
26 19 .578 2
and Essian . LP- Eckersley (3- Mil 7-2; Tanana , Cal 7-3; Tlaht,
Forward Curtis Perry said, Booster; belongs to the Elks
· Chicago
23 20 .535 4
4) .
Bas 7-3; Bird. KC '6 -1; Travers,
"I feel we can beat them in and the Centerville Lodge
Mil Md Campbell, M inn 6.2;.
Minn .
22 24 .479 6'1&gt;
000 001 20o- 3 5 I Figueroa , NY 6-3; Palmeri
Phoenix like we did in the 371. He is also a Kentucky
Oakland
23 27 .451 7'1&gt; Detroi t
040 802 OOx- 14 IS 2 Bait, Hunter, NY end Torre!,
Texas
Calif.
22 31 .415 10
other games. This game Colonel.
Laxton , Grilli (4), Crawford Oak 6-5.
~
Saturday's results:
doesn't make me sad.
The award was presented
Baltimore 5 Minnesota I
Nobody's down . Everybody to Coach Lanham at the IOOth
Boston 4 California 3
can't wait to play the sixth Anniversary AllUilm Banquet
Oakland 7 New York 6
UNIONDALE, N.Y. (UP!) Cleveland 5 Chicago 3
game."
at Rio Grande College on May
- George Foreman, who Milwaukee at Kansas City, 2,
The SWJs, in the Playoffs 29.
twilight
•
fights Joe Frazier June 15 at Detroit
for only the second time in the
at Texas, night
the Nassau Coliseum, arrived
eight-year history , will be
Today's games:
California (Ryan 4-6) at
in New York Saturday and
trying to send the Series into
32 Americans
was mel by his trainer, Gil Boston I Pole 1-3 ), 2 p.m .
a deciding seventh game at
Milwaukee (Colborn 2-7) at
Clancy.
Boston Wednesday.
Kansas City !Bird 6-11. 2:30
Clancy, impressed with the p.m.
in 4-day event
Detroit (Coleman 2·4) at
way foreman looked, said the
former heavywe ight Texas I Briles 4-2), 9: OS p.m.
SALT LAKE CJTY iUPI)
Minnesota !Redfern 1-2 and
champion would begin his Decker
- University of Utah ski
LAS VEGAS !UP!) 2-3 or Hughes 1-6) at
coach Phil Klingsmith Thirty-two of America 's daily training sessions at the Baltimore !Cuellar 2-5 ond
resigned Friday.
leading athletes from eight Nassau Coliseum SWJday at 2 Palmer 6-5). 2, 2 p.m.
Oak land I Blue 5-5 and
Klingsmith, 26, who turned different sports will compete p.m. The training sessions
Bahnsen
at New York
the Utes into a collegiate ski in the sixth annual Dewar's are open to the public at no I Figueroa2-2)
6-3 and Pagan 0-0),
power in the past three Sports Celebrity Tennis charge . Before his first 2, 1 p.m .
seasons, quit the post Championships at the Hotel workout here, Foreman will
Cleveland I Kern 3-2 and
effective Aug. I. No reason Riviera Monday through jog at Jones Beach at noon. Brown 5-I) at Chicago
3-1 and Brett 2-0),
Thursday.
was given for his decision .
Foreman, who went to see 2.(Vukovich
1:30 p.m .
The annual star of the the Belmont Stakes Saturday
Dewar's is baseball Hall of before heading for the house
I ·have just listened to and read several sheriff
Fame
slugger
Hank he has rented in Hempstead,
Major League Results
candidates
commercials and can assure you that they
United Press International
Greenberg, who hit 58 home was asked for his assessment By
don't know what they are talking about. No SheriH has
.
National League
rWJs for Ule Detroit Tigers in of the upcoming battle with Atlanta
101 000 Ooo- 2 8 1
the lime lo promote social programs and do the job he
streaky."
000 000 ooo- 0 1 0
1938. Greenberg has been in Frazier and replied, "I'm in Man 1rea I
was elected to do.
Messersmith D -5 ) and Wil Anderson was pleased with the finals in all five previous better condition and I'm a l iams
Make your choice of a sheriff candidate on his past
; Carrithers , Murray (7)
Ule 18-hil attack the Reds events.
record ol character, honesty and accomplishment.and
better figh~r than I was in and Foote. LP- Ca rrifh ers ( 1not on his pre-election evaluation of himself.
llSed W wipe out the St. Louis
"Now when kids ask for my 1973, wheri I knocked out Joe 4 ).
I wou ld ask you to consider my candidacy on the
Cardinals, I1-2, Friday night. autograph," said Greenberg, Frazier in two roWJds, and I San Diego 000 200 ooo- 2 4 1
above standards . Thank you f~r your consideration on
George Foster led the on- 65, of Beverly Hills, Calif., don't think he's any better Pittsburgh 040 010 02x- 7 12 0
June 8 Primary.
Freisleben , Reynolds
( 2).
slaught with a three-run and now in the investment then he was then. I'm not Folkers
(5). Metzger (8) and
DENVER A. WALKER
homer and a ru~..scoring business, "they ask me w saying that he has gone back, Kendall ; Reuss (6 -41 and
Pd. Pol. Adv.
Sanguillen
.
L-F'
Freisleben
{2
single and Dave Concepcion add, 'Tennis Champion.' but he's certainly no better. 1) .
had five hits in six tri115 wthe They aren't aware that I had For that reason, I'll knock
Cincinnati
soo 300 30()--11 18 1
plate.
played some baseball in my him out again,"
I
St. Louis
000 020 ooo-- 2 7 1
,,'"
"The last two weeks, he's time."
played
outstanding
baseball," Anderson said of
Concepcion. "He got off to
such a bad start. He was
hitting .170 and must have
come up 100 points."
Anderson described Foster
as "one of the best yoWJg
hitters around."
The Reds came up wiUl five
nms in tbe first inning w
PORTLAND iUPI) - New
knock out St. Louis starter
Ly!Ul McGlothen, now 5-4, Portland Trail Blazers coach
and enable Gary Nolan to Jack Ramsey said Friday the
only .thing wrong with
raise his record to 4-3.
Nolan, who scattered seven National Basketball
hits and didn't walk a batter, Association play is that Ulere
stymied the Cardinals with are not enough good officials.
Ramsey, named Tuesday
his breaking balls and
as
Blazer Coach, said, " It
changeups in winning his first
game since May 11. He INBA) is the best basketball
allowed no walks and retired game going. I coached for II
years in college but I have
the last 14 batters.
got~n to the point now where
I get bored by the college
game.
"The execution (In the
NBA) has gotten better and
there has been much more of
an effort toward team play.
Teams are playing better
defense as WJits .
"People around the league
have come to realize that you
.can't win wlth oneoo(m.&lt;Jne
basketball. That has made
the game better."
Ramsey said, "There is
only one way to get better
officiating and that is to get
better people. We have some
COT 'EM!
good ones now but not entlllgh
PRICED
of them ."
He sa1d a proposal made by
RIGHT!
the Sea tie Sonics for a college
scholarship program to train
'
prospective referees is a good
"
one " But I don't know
SCOTT
whether it will be approved
because of the money."
OLIVE ST.
Ramsey also announced a
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
camp for rookies and free
Pd. Pol. Adv.
agenls July 1().13 probably at
MON. THRU FRI. 7:30 A.M. TIL 5:00 P.M. SAT.
lhc University of Porlland :

Boston eyes 13th ·crown
PHOENIX
( UP! team wiUl the experience and
) - The Boston Celtics can all . We got guys that just
claim their 13th NBA Crown won' t quit."
this afternoon, but standing
Although they lost, the SWls
in their way are: the sur- gained confidence from the
prisingly stuboorn Phoenix close' contest in Boston
Suns and a homecourt ad- Garden, where they were
van !age which has held true convincingly beaten in the
in the first five games of the opening two games of the
Championship Series.
series.
11
The Cellics lead the BestHow can you say we don't
of-Seven Series 3-2 after a 128- belong here?" asked forward
126 win in an WJbelievable Gar Heard, the most contriple overtime contest at sistent player for Phoenix
Boston Garden Friday night. duri~g the series. "We came
The SWJs' comeback from a from the bottom to where we
2().point deficit in the first are now and I guess you can
quarter and their composure say that after this game the
in the final minutes gave the Cellics know we are a good
Cellics more respect for the team that belongs in the same
Western Conference ' s league they are . I know
Wildcard en try in the Boston is going to come out
Playoffs.
and try and blow us away
·'We were the favorites today. I don 't think Friday's
going into the series, so Ule game is going to be forgotten
goal was set. But now you've for a long lime ."
got to give them credit.
They're a phenomenal
' team," said Boston's Paul
Silas.
"Every time I thought they
would crack, they'd make a
Sf. LOUIS I UP! ) - It's
shot," said guard Ju Jo going to be a long, hot
White .
summer for the rest of the
Phoenix Coach John Mac- National League if Sparky
Leod thought the respect was Anderson's prediction comes
deserved .
true.
" If we don't belong after
"When warm weaUler gets
Friday night, then everyoody here, we'll start hitting," said
can just go jump in a lake ," the Cincinnati manager .
said MacLeod. "The Celtics "We've been off and on. We
on paper definitely were hit it real good one game and
supposed to be the better not the next. Kind of

5'1&gt;

10'1&gt;

W. L. Pel.

Leipsic crowned Class A champion
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Leipsic, outhit 13 to 4, scored
si ngle rWJs in the final Ulree
innings Saturday for a !Hi
victory over Cuyahoga
Heighls to win Ule state Class

.711
.583
.481
.458
.449
.395

NOlan 14 Jl ano Plumm er ;
McG lothen, Rasmussen
( l l.
Walla c;e (4),
Frisel la
(6),
Hrabosky (9J ·and Rudolph . LP
- McGlothen (5 -.4 ). HR - Cinc innati, Foster (1()).

wuh living situa tions as perience in ,living - and a
provides an op- classroom without walls.
The dates for 4-H Camp
ourlun ity for social develop-

cr~mp i ng

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at Canter's Cave 4-H Camp
located 5 miles northwest of
Jackson, Ohio just off Route
:15. Cllf\ ler 's Cuv~ 4-H Camp is
owned by the 4-II Clubs in
Gallla , Mei gs, Jac kson ,
Lawrence; High land and
Adams CoWJiies and it Is
noted for it s out standin g
nature setting . ·
Members interested in
participating in Gallia
County's 4-H campinR
pr og rams should contact
ll1eir CoWJi y Extension Office
located in the Courthouse,
phone 446-4612, extension 32
for details such as dales, cost,
etc .
We hope many 4-H members will join the more than
17,000 boys and girls across
Ohio who will enroll In 4-H
cnmps nnd have the time of
their life this swmner .
4-H CAMP IS FUN !! !

�27 - The Sunday Tunes Sentlllel Sunday June 6 1976

26 - TheSund"y Junes Sentmel '"'"'" hut I IH71
+

Your Wayne National Forest
By 1 Allall Wnlttr
Dlstmt ll •nH"
IRONTON
All) Ill 1\l u IS
around teenagers nnu.h I ils he, rd
the son~ 50 \\Hys lo Lose Yu111
Lover ll at song I IS gone the" I)
Of \\hate1cr h lppens 10 lune s that
drop off the lop 40 ch"rt s lm
startmg I fll!W UJ C it S calh:d lO
Wa) s lo F'1 ghl Pollution rhe I nes
don t rhyme and there s no muSic
but 1t s 1 song that 11c should 111
kno11 1 few \crses of II goes I ke
tins
1 Usc He us"ble Conta ne1 s use 1 IWl(h ln x tn st~ad f pii)Jl!l
bt~g s Use re usable piHsh c ( m
ta~ne r s mstead of f01l and p! ISIIl
11 raps £01 slonng food
2 AvOid Overpac k 1ged ~ oods IndiVIdually 111 ap ped sel\ lngs nd
slices of food do not "'"ke ~oocl
ecologiL 1! se •se - and they cost

more too
3 - Choose Returnable Bottles
- Disposable bottles and cans too
oft en end up 1s Iiller and one llurd
to one half of the pncc may be f01
the cont uner
4 Run Wa she1s 1l F ull
Capac1ty both clisl 11 d d ll es
v. CJsl er It s 1ves powe w..lter 11d
clean ~n g agent
5 Buy and Usc Apph tnce s
W1 se ly - Ma ny gadgets and
spec1al features are expensl\ e
unnecessary

power wasters

6 Re-cycle Newsp 1pe1s Steel
Cans AJwnmum C ms and Glass lf there IS no collectiOn prog1Hill
where yo u Ill e ) ou can stHrl one
7 Contribute Usable GoO&lt;ts I o
Chant) - They w1ll be used Some
orgamzahuns Will piCk up 1tems and 1 epamng them l' l e&lt;Jtes JObs
6 Conse1ve I nwe1 - rwn off
lights and usc lower ' atlage whe1e
pO SS ibl e AVOid runnu t m aJOI
appli ances dUIIflg peak hours &gt;to 7
pm
9 Save F uel - We 1lhe r
slnppmg and ns 1lal nn p" f"

1hu1 tsul" s 111 fuel sa\lngs Close off
w usul f 1 ~~~~
y{)u II re.l!tl less
ht.: 11 less ttl f.( onchtJt rung
10 Hoycu ll P1 oducts f1om
I IHl ngered Species - Hefust to
IJUJ •h 1le and lurtlc products furs
from leop 1rds •nd other b1g ca\s
Illig 11or prod ucts
1
ll Conserve Waler - fix leaky
f HJC( ts usc a h 1se w1th an
[t ul umalu.: .shut-off nozzle
12 Use S md on lc ) Pavements
&amp;ill k1lls pi nt s and con tanunalcs
" ller supplies
I I Dnve fo conohcall} - C•r
pools !esse 1 II aff c Jams pa1 k111g
problems and em ss ons Don t let
engmc 1dle " ' en yo u re wal ling
14 Usc Mass l rans1t When
Possible - !rams busses and
planes tre less pollulmg than cars
I he) ustless fuel per passe nger and
11 e l~ss expel s1ve
l&gt; Make Your Car Lasl Hcgu lar n1a1ntenance smooth
an clcmtwn md braking moderate
speed s pcnod1c washmg and
w"x111g should help your car last
lunge•
II Keep Y 1u1 Car l wwd Pd lu 1cn C( niH I equtpmen t 1s ef
fcc live only when properly mam
lamed You can add anll pollutwn
devices to older cars
17 Use a Bike or Your Feet II s heal thy exercise no fuel bills or
p u k~n g problems and ma) not lake
much lr nge1 Brea k )OUI kids oflhe
dn ve me hab1 l too
16 Dispose of Worn-Out Cars
Wi sely
You m 'Y be able lo sell
some pa1ls Choose 1 &gt;~1ecke1 who
has spec1al cqwpmcnl for mn
polluhng cilsposHI
19 f ncr w "gc R1rds - Provide
vem uund s(lellcr and food They
u c fun to &gt;~al c h and the) are also
natw e s pesl control system
20 Walm W1sel) - Chose
'ane l1es r flowe1s and vegetables
h t.:es shr ubs and grass thctt thn\ e 1n

Agriculture and
•

our community
B} Bt yson R I Bud l Ca t let
Ga lha County £xtens10n Agent
GALLIPOLIS - We re at
the ttme or year where plan ts
and home garde n around the
home grounds and m the
fields begm showmg S) mp
tom s or some abnormal
condttwns Someltmes these
conditiOns are caused by
msects diseases cultural
practices or lack or nutn ents
nn the soil
I have had a nUillber or
requests lhe past week to
examme plan ts of van ous
sorts a nd diagnose the
problem Sometimes I can do
th1s here at the Extcnswn
Office but there are 11mes
however
wh en
pla nt
spec 1m ens must be sent to the
laboratory for diagnoSIS
I mentwned th1s serv1ce
becaust you may not have
been aware that 11 wa s
ava il able through your
County Extension Agent We
have excellen t cooperatwn
w1th The Umve1s1ly of

Ke nlucky regal dmg ass1st
ance 1n d1a gnos mg th e
problem m tobacco At Oh1o
State Umvers1ty 11 e have a
planl disease laboralory and
a large sta rr of spec1ahsls
wh o I elp 1dent1 f) pla nt
pr oblems
an d
mak e
recomn1er dal10ns for lhetr
control
There IS no charge for lh1s
service and I encourage you
to contact us If you need help
m d1agnosmg diseases n
sects and other problems or
)Our vegetables il ees corn
tobacco etc
HERE ARE 11 pomts
concc rnm g clea mng yo ur
co mb1ne before s tarling
gram harvest
- Mo\e the combme from
storage to a 11ashmg area
where a h1gh pressure water
hose can be ustd to flush out
all component s of the

WE CAN

Lawn &amp; Garden Tractors
Let S mpl c ly s Deluxe
8 hp Broadmoor do lhe
work You do the relax ng

)O ur llunale Walc1 dur1ng Jff.peak
hours and ust t1me r to renund when
to tur n off
21 Choose Pestlles1 stan1 Plants
- Most slrung smelling herbs repel
msccts Ccrtaw plants prule( I one
anol her Check seed catalogs get
advice from local garden clubs and

nursenes
22 Landscape Thoughtfully Sl1ulJS an d trees can help ""
uJrH!Jtaon yow- I ume screen out
d1rl and n01 se •nd also return
UX)gcn to the a1r
2! Use Na tural Pest Controls l adybug s
pray 1n g man l1ses
sp1le1 s some wasps and many
ulhers
kill
harmful
pes ts
CAUTION Che1 neal pestiCides kill
goO&lt;l bugs as well as the pests
24 Control N01se Pollution Keep machmes repaired be con
Slderate of othe1s Use md1v1dual
e 1r phones for hstenm g to rad1o at
beac h or camps1le
25
Part1 c1pa te m I oca l
Bca utlhcHtlon Profecls
Park
beach an d h1g hway clean up
campmgns m1111 parks and tree
plant10g bcne£11 everyone
26 Combat l1ller - When
you 1e at the beach 01 park or JUSl
laking a \\alk leave th1ngs as clean
as you found them or CI EANER
27 Don l OUillp Chemicals mlo
Se•ers - Your garage mecha mc
Will dispose of Ustd Oil for you
Synthetic pesllc1des can be disposed
of lhrough the Audubon Soc~ety or

other environmental group

County agent's corner
POMI ROY
F'armers whu hllve not yet begun hlly
harvesting ure advised to start at once
I v~nlf substantial ram fall should occ ur soon forage y1eld
'f 1ur drought shortened first cuttmg won t mc rease much by
wa1tmg because most grasses and legumes have come mto
head Aller heads form forage quahty drops m both dry
matter d1gest1b1lity and protem conlenl each day cultmg IS
delayed D1geshbly dry matter decreases 1 percent urut
pe r da y after headmg Plant s ugars and starches change to
und1gesl1ble cellulose and ligrun
Additionally hllrvestmg now w1ll permtt regrowth to begm
sooner thus mcreasmg seasonal production accordmg to John
~ Underwood Area ExtensiOn Agronomis t An application of
mtrogen&lt;onlammg fertthzer ca n further boost regrowth or
gra ss stands to those which ha ve not received one so far th1s

season

Last season many southeastern Ohto farmers \\ere unable

lay of the land

28 Perform Mamlena nce - On

plumbmg - to save w•ter On
furnace - to save fuel On car - to
save fuel
29 Stop Smokmg - lf pollutes
II e mr - 1t pollutes yo u
30 Encour age Llbrane s to
Promote Eco log) - Encourage
them to have conservatiOn dtsplays
Hnd to buy books on ecology for
ch1lrh en and ad ull s

machme
- Remove all tnspectJOn
covers from the mach1ne
- Open the clean-out doors
on the clean gram auger an d
the ta1 hngs auger
- Remove the cover fr om
lhe dram hole m the gram
lank
- Cle"n the stone trap On
some machmes you wdl have
to remove the feeder
assembly to do lh1s
- Use the h1gh pressure
water hose to dislodge and
flu sh out all grams and debriS
from the com bme The water
flu shing method works well
becaust the slream of w ~l er
w1ll dtslodge maler1al that
may have become caked
Also the flowmg water
carnes out th e debriS Pay
parh cula1 altentton to
cleanmg the raddle or con
veyor area under th e
Cl Iinder
- Alter the combme 1s
clean and the water has had a
chance to dram out starl the
combme and let tl run at half
throttle for about 15 mmules
TillS w1ll alf dry the ms1de
of the machme
- Replace all mspechon
covers and clean"'ut doors
- Lubricate all ftltin gs
w1th the recommended
lubncanl
- Reclean the combme
each lime yo u harvest a
different crop
Be sure to clean and
lubricate the combwe before
relurnmg 11 to storage at the
end uf lhe season

been Wh1le we have not kept
wrllten records of ramfall
we kn ow that April was one of
the dn est months on record
for th1s secbon of the slate
and March and early May
were not much better
In talkmg wtlh farmers
around Mason coun ty all of
them 11ere very concerned
about the productiOn or hay
pasture grass and other crops

thai they had planted We
noted that many farmers
have already put up hay The
hay that was cut and stored
has been h1gh quahty but not
much more than one half the
amoun ( that had been ex
pee led
Most of the recent 2 4 m
ches of ram soaked tnto the
ground The lh~rs ty sot! drank
11 up very readily and 1t was
fortunate that 1t fell
gradually to allow the s01l to
soak most of 1t
Incidentally the d1slnct
sllll has a few of these ram
gauges for sale at lhe dtstnct
office 2301, Mam Sl
We helped B E Kemper on
the head of Ten Mtle Creek
and Jack Rous h on Sand Fork
of !J'ab Creek w1th plannmg
use of lhe ~r land
The Kempers bought a 40acre farm from Jake
Somerv ille and are plannmg
to develop 1t for grassland
production and expect to
ra1se a few head of beef
cattle They moved here from

Squadmen show equipment, aid skills
Three members of the
Ga lh a County Vo lunteer
Emergency Squad who

lo harvest their first culling at prime lime due lo prolong,P

wet weather AnalysiS at 23 1975 hay samples showed a w1de
va r~at1on m crude protem and dry matter d1gesllb1hty I DMD J
prunarily due to date of harvests The earhesl harvested hay
had h1gher protem and DMD levels Crude protem range9
from 19 3 percent duwn to 5 3 percent while the OMD range4
from 76 9 percent down to 35 4 percent
Beef and sheep producers as well as datrymen need higlj
quality forages says Jun Clay Jackson Area Exlenswn
Arumal Industry Agent Beef cows wmtered on late cut hay
w1ll lose we1ght have weaker ca lves at birth produce less
m1lk while nursmg and may not cycle early m the breeding
season Rumtuant arurnals on an all forage program Dilen w1ll
not conswne enough poor quality hay to meet thelf needs
Since the ftrst cutttng of forages for the highest quahl)
harvest Is usually done tn May farmers should plan to wrap up
lh1s JOb soon

Rain is biggest news
By John Cooper
Soli Cons Service
POINT PLEASANT The
mosl Important news m the
conserva!ton f1eld th1s week
IS that the rams came
From May 29 unhl June 3
uur lrusly ram gauge m
d~eated 2 4 mches had fallen
Smce we got the ram gauge
from the Western So1l Con
serva tton Dlslncllast fall for
$2 25 we have watched 11
qwle regularly to see how
much prec1p1tatwn there has

prese nted a demonsllllon ot
firs t a1d sk1lls to the F'rench
C1ty Campers and H1kers

First of three
Pasture management is
really leaf management
By Boyd Ruth, District Conservationist
POMEROY - This ts the f1rst of a three part ser~es on one
aspect of pasture management Th e second part of I he senes
Will be m next week s colwnn
About 84 000 acres one-third of the total land area of
Me1gs County 1s used for pasture Th1s figure mcludes
permanent pastureland grazed woodland and land that IS
pastured as part of a crop rotatwn The management of land
used HS pasture IS usually not g1ven the atlen twn that tl
deserves In order to use the land to Its fullest potential one
must reahze that pasture management ts really leaf

management
It 1s extremely unportant that enough leaves remam all
durmg the growmg season lo manufac ture food Many fa ctors
Influence how much a plant grows Ra1nfall lempera ture so1l
depth smllexture topography and the tnh erent ab1hty of the
plant Itself
Yet even when these factors are opllmum a plant can t
grow without a large enough food.p roductng factor) leaves
Th1s 1s the crux of grass management The only maJor
factor affectmg grass growth that s fully m your conlrolts the
mamtcnance of the SIZe of the food factory

LEAVE HALF Except for grass you ltme and fertilize
all other growth mfluencmg factors depends on Natures
prov1s1ons Overgrazed grasses stmply can l remam healthy
vtgorous and productiVe any more than a feedlot steer can
gam well on on ly a mamlenance rat10n
This pomt stmple as 1t sounds IS somethmg I can l over
emphasize
The effect of lear defohal10n on plant development has
been studied many tunes In general there s agreement that
grass productiOn 1s substantially reduced when you remove
more than half the leaf volWT!e by grazing or mowmg during
the growmg season
I IONS TO MEET
Long ago successful cattlemen comed the phrase Take
Pomeroy
Middleport
half
and leave half
I IOns Club Will hold their
A
later adage The half you take wtll gradua lly get
regular mee ting and election
b1gger
1s one key lo greater productiOn
Wednesday noon al the Me1gs
An
mcrease
of one or two leaves on a grass plant when
Inn All L10ns are urged to
ll'lulllphed
by
millions
of plants ts the story of enhanced forage
attend
production tn a pasture

recentl y were Phtl Un
derwood Sharon Hill and
Andy F1sher
Included m the presen
tat10n was a h1st01 y of the
volun teer emergency squad
a demonstratiOn Of ItS
e quipm ent
ba nda gmg
techmques a nd a blood
pressure check A question
and answer sess1on followed
w1th 24 members of the
H1kers and Campers club
taking part
The
Ga lha
Coun ty
VolWiteer Emergency Squad
has speakers available for
demonstratiOns ana also has
made available a slide show
program
Int e res te d
organiZahons may call
Charles Camden at 446-4011 to
arrange for a speaker

Florida and expec t to live on
the farm and make the1r
home m Mason County
The Roush farm on Q-ab
!J'eek IS mostly grassland
Mr and Mrs Roush expect to
b111ld a house on the farm and
hve there when 11 IS com
pleted The mam purpose of
the aSSistance to the Roushes
was to help m the locahon of a
road to a home Site that they
had chosen The land on
whtch lhey had planned to
bwld a road was sleep and
had a shp hazard After a
careful exammahon and
explanatiOn of the hazards
mvolved they chose another
locatton for thetr future
home Durmg the v1s1t we
also looked at three loca tiOns
wh1ch were poss1bthhes for
constructiOn of ponds and
also at a sprmg as a
poss1b1hty for a home water
supply
DURING A RECENT VISII
to the Roy J1v1den farm near
Tr1bble Roger Powell of the
Western D1stnct found Mr
J1v1den to be still gomg
strong desptte the fact that he
1s m h1s m1d etght1es Not long
ago he had cleared three
acres for pasture 111th a bull
dozer and had sowed Ken

lucky 31 fescue on 1t
He had also used Tordon o~
multiflora rose to kill1t Mr
J1v1den still does much of h1s
work tncludtng the chppmg o(
pasture w1th h1s trusty teant
of mules However he told
Roger that one of h1s mules
had d1ed and he ts looking for
a replacement

LODGES TO MEET
Pomeroy Chapter No 80
RAM w1ll hold thetr statep
convocatiOn and elechon
Wednesday at 7 30 p m at the
Pomeroy Masomc Temple
All officers are requested IO
brmg lhe1r r1tuals Bosworth
Council No 46 Royal and
Select Maslers wtll hold their
stated assembly and elec
lion followmg at 8 30 p m
when all compamons and
offiCers also are urged to
brtng their n luals

SUBSIDIES COME
POMEROY - Cnmmal
cost substd y payments
amoun hng to $208 959 75 were
d1slnbuted to 64 co unty
clerks of court durmg May
Stale Audtlor Thomas E
Ferguson reported Of the
total Meigs County received
$94 50

For Sale

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

THE family of Jomoo D AbiO$ VEGETABLE plonls ol oil k.nds 10 DEPENDABLE bobys1t1ar to core
w shes to ••press their thanks
d1fferenl vor ehes ol tomatoes
lor 2 girls ages 5 and 8 n my
Pub! cat ton
to Hock "9 Valley Hasp tal and 1nclud1ng non acid wh te
home tn evemngs Phone 992
Monday 0@-adl ne 9
staff tne Heinlein and Brown
tomato Very large selection ol
3511
om
and Ewing Funeral Homes the bedd ng plants
Al so
CancelliiJ ton
Re\lerend E H Marlin songs Geromums and other potted
Correcltons w II be ac
by Mr James Bailey floral ol
plant s Hanging baskets
Situatiolls
cepted until 9 l!l m ror
fermgs k1ndness from fnends Cleland Forms and Green
D•v of Pubt cat on
n our time of sorrow
house Gerold ntt Cleland
WILL DO odd rob! roofing, po n
~liGULATIONS
11ng hauling treework or d
The Publisher reserves
Tha Abies f_!I~Y
Roc Ina
her ght to e&lt;tt or retect
mowmg Ph011e 99'1 7409
I WISH to thank all my fr ends for COAL I mestone and all types ol
any ads deemed ob
their
cords
flowers
and
kmd
soh
and
rQ(k
soh
lor
ce
and
Will
core fo elderly person m my
I eel onal The publisher
nome Phone 1 (6U) q95 3849
prayers Espec1ally Rev Gran
snow removal Excelsior Salt
will not be responsible for
more than one ncorrec 1
dollar hit most welcome vtslts Works Eau Man St Pomeroy
orm 3410
nsert on
and prayers and C W C for Oh1o Phone992 3891
WILL
do bobys II ng anyhm e
RATES
therr splr tual bouquet dunng MAKE spring cleomng prof1toble
Phone-992 71d
For Want Ad Servtce
my recent stay at Veterans turn unwanted 1rems tnto cash
5 cent s per word one
Will do bu ldmg and remodehng
Memorial Hospital Also
Adverhse m the Wont Ads
nser ion
roof ng plumb ng furnace
thanks to the nurses for the r
Minimum Charge $1 00
repo1 gas or o I o general
co a and kindness Also LOCUST posts round or spl t
14 ce nt s per word hr ee
repo1 r Free es t motes ond
consecu tve
nser tt ons
thanks to Or Telle -and Or
Phone 949 2774
26 cen s per word SIK
reasonable rates Phone
~~~aJ
_L.,?!?
(BeoJ
Zwilhng
H
&amp;
N
day
old
or
started
legho
n
consecu tve
tnsert ons
Charles S nclou (61_.) 965 4121
WE the family of Bert Romme pullets Both fl oor or cage
25 Per Cent D scount on
or 992 2221
would
Ike
to
t!lank
all
our
grown
ova
fable
Poultry
hous
pa d ads and ads patd
with n 10 days
fr ends
ne1gh bors and
ng and automation Modern
CARD OF THANKS
relatives for all the r kmdnen Poultry 399 W Man Pomeroy
&amp; OBITUARY
end svmpothy tney showed us
m 216.4
\2 00
tor
50
word
Spec1al
tnanks
to
the
Ewtng
GRAPEFRUIT
Pill w1th D oda x 7 rm hou~e w th both portly
m n mum
Funeral Home Rev JarviS the plan more con...ement than
Each add 1 on at word 3
carpeted new furnace hot
cents
1mgers and floral offenngs
gmpelrulh Eat sahsfy ng
water heater Iorge lot on lm
BLIND ADS
The Rom1ne F~~!Ymeals and lose we1ght Nelson
coin HII Phone 992 2071
Ad d t on a 1 25c Charge
WE wont to thank each and Drug
per Advert semen I
3 acres I 8 m1les on County Road
OFFICE HOURS
everyone who was so k1nd to REGJSTERto Angus herd Phone
4 Out of De• ter Pnone (6l4)
me during the loss of my hus
2789
8 30 a m to S 00 p m
982 4123
0
Da lly ~ 30 am to 12 00
bond Arthur Thanks to my 992
Noon Sa turday
dear s1ster and husband Roy 1968 Nova 6 cyhnder $175 Fuel 2 bedrm home ful y furmshed
Phone today 992 2156
Sea rls and our dear fr ends
o1l heater $75 Phone 7&lt;42
close to schoo and shopprng
W~nda and
J1m Mohler
2769
lnqu re 894 Pearl St M d
dlepqrt Oh1o
Pallbearers also Rev Grate FARMALL Super C cult 1vators
NOTICES
Rowlmgs Coots nurses of plows di sk corn planter No
A large home on Ash Street n
ATTN II
Veteran s Memorial Hasp tel
2500 mower McCormick No 2
M ddleport lor sale or trade for
ALL liOUSEWIVES
Or Telle and Or P ckens
hoy cond 1tioner No 250
All Yard Sales Rumm~g e
sma ller ho~..! Phone 992 7797
fhanks lo all my fr ends and Phone 1614) 37B 620S
Porch end Basement Porch
netghbors who brought food I
---~
3 bedrm house n M1ddleport
and Besement Sales etc
wrll always thmk of you God OLDER remodeled ali elec 3
near Park Sw mm ng pool and
must be PBtd m advance
Bless W1fe Mary Roberts
bedrm home $12 500 Call
Get your rn n euly by
stores Phone 992 7667
stoppmg by our off ice at
~!~~'2.. K!~~
m 5011'-c,---FOR SALE l5 acres w1th mce 8
The Da lly Sentinel
111
JUST
fre;h Guernsey m1lk cow
rm and both 3 bedrm home
Cour t St or wr hng So•
w th calf $350 f rm Contact
129 Pomeroy Oh1a .45769
newly remodeled :2 car
James Roy Parsons off Rae~n e
with vour rem1ttan ce
garage rural water gas well
Bas han Road
all m nero! nghts $3-4 000
RACINE F1re Department w II
Phone 1•2 2336
hove a gun shoot Saturday at ON~ dm.rlte se-1--e,-c-el'~le_n_l ,-o-ndl
6 30 p m at the1r new butld ng
hon Two end tables motchng HOUSE FOR SAlE 15 mtles from
off Basnan Rood
ant que bed and buffet drene
Pomeroy 3 BR ranch 2 baths
Phone 992 6092
I w-;,uidlik;to b'-al-e.~h-ay- ;., shores
OR onto redwood deck FR w th
woodburmng I ep ace llxl-4
In the vicinity of Co Rd 18 Call GIBSON Delu xe Frostfree
lONG BOTIOM OHIO THE
storage bu1ld1n~ on 1 acre lot
~_?201 a!!!!"~ p_m
refr ge ator SlOO G E Po
TRUSTEES OF SAND Hill
$27 000 Phon e !614) 667 3862
Scrubbe dtshwosher green
CEMETERY WISH TO THANK THE NOW open for Bus1ness The w1th cultmg boa d excel en t
6
room
house ve y well kepi 3
Town
I&lt;
lin
120
;,
East
Mom
Sf
PEOPLE WHO HAVE DONATED
cond 11on $t50 Phone 1614 )
bedrms
modern ~ tchen wall
Pomeroy
Onro
Greenware
THEIR MONEY OR TIME FOR TH E
667 3330 or 985 3988
to wall carpet H W fl oo s full
pa1nts cerom1c supphes
UPKEEP AND BEAUTIFICATION
basement new gas fur nace
classes Monday Tuesday Sm•lh and Wesson Model 41
OF THE BEAUTIFUL SAND Hill
small
lot to mow deal for
Wed
s
and
Fnday
1
0
t
I!
2
p
m
a1,1
to
22
col
to
get
prstol
new
CEM&lt;TERY THANKS AlSO FOR
older couple or small fom ly m
Evenrngs by appomtment Call $180 fi rm 1970 Dats un 510
YOUR DONATIONS TOWARD
good ne ighborhood 1n
'1'12 S9S. l1nda Mayer
sedan fa r cond1t on runs
OU~ NEW
CEMENT BlOCK
Pomeroy Call for oppomtrnen t
sTORAGE BUILDING SPECIAl O&amp;J-; H-;;C"s-;-;,JF;brlcs S-a,-le- _--,·.- good $500 Pol belly stove $65
Phone 992 3097
THANKS TO MR AND MRS JOE
make room for new sh1pment AKC Bnttony Sponte! fi eld
tramed
femal
e
2
yr
$45
BISSELL AND SON KENNEY
4 room house m letarl Al so cool
of fbbr u June 7 thru 12 1 m•le
Phone '1'12 7605
FOR THEIR SERVICE AND CON
and furn lure Contoct Todd
'S of M ddleport State Rt 7
CERN FOR THE CEMETERY
Rhodes Rocme
FARMALL
M
tro
-cl
o-r
r
un
s
good
TRUSTEES ULAH SWAN LEONE THE Pa1nt Box Now Open Solem
new
po
nt
fo
rubber
$825
3 bedrm house bath cellar and
St Rutland Oh1o F1bergloss
HENSLEY MAE MCPEEK JOHN
Phone 992 S264
ld ngs almost 4 acres of
repair body works custom
HENSLEY DORSEllARKINS
- om lm oulbu
land sou h end of Rutland See
po ntrng Pnone 1-42 3053 or IN Dash 23 channel CB
B II Sm1th at Sm1tn s Body Shop
742 3008
mp x rod1o 8 track stereo Coli
or pi, one 742 3135 or 9~2 7706
'1'12 3965
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
1969 No ... a 350 ~ speed block
STATE OF OHIO
v nyi to p
chrorne
ms
DEPARTMENT OF
neoders rebu It engtne A 1
lOST
wn11e
tom
cot
1n
Rose
TRANSPORTATION
Strout~
cond111on $1 000 Also 1974
Valley reward answers to the
Columbus Oh o
Kawasaki
100
$275
Phone
name of Snow BaH Ph m
Mav ll I 971
m7258
Contract Sales Legal Copy
3495
NCOIPORATIO
No 76 47J
LOST wedd ng rrng engraved on 1973 Hondo 350 four cyhnder
UNIT P~ICE CONTRACT
like new less than 2700 m les
ns1de Su:s1e and John March
~
~OSOOOS I I2 1
and extras $895 or best offer
1 ,_.., Sealed proposals w II be
WANT TO LIVE IN
3 1915 at Syracuse Cemetery
Phone 9•9 2181
~ rece ved a t the off ce of the
Pine Grove Cemeterv or Beecn
THE COUNTRY'
-----·-f Dir ector of the Oh o Depart
Gro'o'e Cemetery Phone 9.49 3 spead stereo all wood cob net
i ment of Tran spo r tatton
Heres
a 4 br 2 balhs J yr
211D
mahogany excellent ploymg
Ill Columbus Ohro unti l 10 00
old
brtck
ranch on 5 a of
cond ton $50 coll992 2376
• AM
Oh o Sta ndard T me
losT -T~;-c~lbTack;nd wh te
rolling
ground
large bu It
~ Tuesday Jun e 22 1976 for
part Sromese Svracuse Asn One 9 m-;;nth -old H;r;ford bull
~
Improvements n
n
k
fchen
carpeted
base
and College St area Name Shu
can be rag1stered Phone 992 ""
;1
Athens Galllct Hock no
fu II y com pi e ted w 1th
Shu
phone
9'12
2837
7S37
111 Me1gs and VInton Count1 es
fireplace love ly open
,l Ohio on various sect ons of U
YOUNG robb.~ S2 00 Call 1614) countryside good place to
tf s
Routes 33 and 50 State
378 6261 Re,!d" ~I! _C:h_o_~·-- rase fam ly n Chester
• Routes 7 56 78 93 124a nd 160
~ by constructing guardra tl on
5 h p rotot Uer $60 Call Athens area $42 000 oo
N
bridge approaches and WANT to rent dock space on Ohto
(614) 592 2158 33 Townsend
• upgrad ng some shoulders and
stde of nver w tn electr c1ty
Place
804 W Mam
• s gn ng
Phone 9'12 606 t
Pro1ect Length - 0 feet or 0
Pomeroy
992 2298
1973 &lt;45o Prototype Kowasok
m le
matarcross good cond1t on
After Hours Ca II
~
work Length - 0 tee or 0
$650 Phone m 3843
.t~ m le
992 7133
•
The Ohro Departme nt of
ONE chest type deep freezer
FURNISHED
2
bedrm
apartment
• Transporta l on
h er eby
CONTACT
almost new wtth content $17.$
adults only n Middleport
"- not t1es all bidders that I w II
Lots Paulev
one
full
s1ze
mattress
and
box
~ aff1rmat1ve1y nsure that n
Phone 992 3B7•
sprtngs
$20
one
Smger
elec
Branch
Manager
~ any contract entered
nto
-·c.. ched
- .- a-nd un
Inc sew ng machrne w1th
• pursua nt
to
lh s
ad 3 AND 4 RM t'-urn
cab net $60 one desk $20 old
furmshed opts Pnone 992
vert sement
m norrty
bus .ness enterpr ses w II be
love $BOt porch bench $20 old
S.3•
afforded full opportunity to
3 pc set ot W1cker lawn fur
COU-NTRY
M;;b.le
Home
Pork
Rl
sub m t b ds n respon se to this
n ture $45 k tcnen table and
33 ten m les north of Pomeroy
nv1tat on and w111 not be
cha rs $25 new grden push
d1scr m n;!lt ed agarnst on the
Large lots wUh concret po11os
plow wttn attachments $20 10
s1dewalka runners and off
or
gallon fish oqu w11h hood $IS
1:1~~~~~~;~~1s1,?o;t: 1 ~,race
n conscolor
derat on
!_!ree!_Parking Phone 992 7479
22 Caliber stud dnver $20
rates for ONE bedroom apartments at
Phone 742 3122
th s
1
e been
VillAGE MANOR tn Mtddleporl
predeter
as requ red y
for $1 ()4 monthly plus else or
law and are se t forth 1n the b d
$130
rncludmg electnc LOWER
proposal
RATES FOR SENOR CITIZENS OLD furniture 1ce boxes brau
The date set for comp let on
A HONEY FOR THE
Convenient to shopprng on beds old wall telephones and
of h s work shall be set for th
MONEY - 135 acres
Th rd and M1ll Streets n Mrd
rn the b dd1ng proposa
parts or complete households
Min era ls some limber
dleport Brand new h gh quail
Each bidd er shall be
Wnte M D Mdler Rt 2
requ ired lo frle W1th h1s b1d a
Wa ter available
t No
ty apar tments See the Pomeroy Oh o Call992 77tiJ
cer11f ed check or cash er s
manager at R1'o'ers1de Aport
build~ng sl On blacktop Rd
check for an ammounl equa l
ments or call 992 3273 Fur CASH pard for all makes and
$1 6 600
; to five per cent of l'lts btd but
ntShed aportmenh also mode ls of mob le homes
PRIVATE - 7;, h ll y acres
• m no event mo re than frfty
Phone area code 614 423 9531
ova loble
thou sand dollars or a bond for
!great for boby farm)
-'-·-----ten per cent of h1s b1d payab le One bedrm and 2 bedrm fur $$Cash$$$ for 1unked auto Frye s
Home has 5 BR bath own
to the Orrec tor
Truck
Auto
Parts
Rut
land
n
shed
apartment
s
Phone
water
w softener N G hot
B1dders must apply on the
Phone 7.C2 2081
m 3129 or '1'12 5•3•
..,.~' or,ooe.rl!&gt;rm s for qual f ca l on
water heat carpeting &amp;
-----·-en days prior to th e
etc Storage bldg $15 000
space for rent n M1d DEALERS m junk cars scrap 1ron
"-·- --• for open ng btds In rR:~tLER
melals
Phone
'
1
'
1
2
S4~9
dlepo
rl
Phone
'
1
'
1
2
5·~
RT 1q3 - Close n Mob le
accordance w lh Chapt er 5525
w kitchen ut ll ty &amp; garage
SMALL f~r-;; ~hed op--;.rlm'-en_l_f"o.-r J'ENNY lvn~-;,...apo~ ;;1r, bed
Oh o Revised Code
Plans and speciflcet1ons are
added ONn &amp; etty water
s ngle male Pnane 992 5786
~~ m_apl.!!!one ~ 2~
on f le m the Depertmen t of - --- --~
Lan csca ped 11~ acres
Transportat ion and lhe office FURNISHED 2 room apartment
$6 300
of the 0 str ct De puty
12b Mu lberry Ave adults and
DETAILED
FOR
D1 rector
references Phone 992 2030
The Dtrecl or reserves the
COMFORT - 3 BR Wile
evenrngs
or
992
2167
ngh t tore rec t any and a ll brds
k1fchen Ieat 1n )
RICHARD D JACKS ON 2 Bed~; mobtle:~~h. ~o:m~·.-·-p:ch·-o·n- oRIDICULOUS
floor
s (carpeted)
DIRE CTOR
A mator breakthrough m
'1'122834
the T1r e Industry? A llq u1d
Full basement w
LARGE3 ;;;.- f.;mshed apt a r that seats cools and
Rev 8 l7 73
illy $18 000
condttlomng 12 m1les from balan ces I res effecltve ly
May 30 Jun e 6
earni ng
Pomeroy on Rt 33 Ava1lable Except onat
pot e nt1 a l
Ex clusive
June 15 Phonem 6161
01 s tr1bul~r sh pi
No
2 bedrm a-;;d I bedrm furn~shed franchiSe fe es Com pany
apartment Phone 992 2288 or patd advert1slngt Local
tra in ng and support A
m23•B
m n1mum
nitral
in
vestment of S7 500 For
further 1nforma on on th s
rid culou s offer
ca t
CO LL ECT Mr Rich 305
MOB11:E-h~m;-od~lts ontv Phone 628 :1 15 1 Beacon Chem1ca1
Corporation 1850 Lee
'1'12 SSJS
Winter
Pa r le
Rc•d
--- ~; - f~rn;hed apartment
Flanda 32789
evervthmg po1d ups to rs aport
ment no pets or cntldren
Adults only Phone 9'9:2 5810 or
can be sMn at 81111 E Main St
Pomeroy
AVAILABLE
ONE bedrm furn1shed apt 134 /r
IMMEDIATELY
M~l~erry Av_!_Phon e992 5436
IN POMEROY
Would you lokt to make I
SALESMAN wanted for
MIDDLEPORT
change but can t do a lhtnt
established buSiness In
untH you sell your preMtll
AREA
Pomeroy good st1rhng
property• THEN LIST
For aggressive 1ndtv1dual
salary must have good
WITH US where a const1nt
who 1s w1il1ng to work long
personality to meet the
procesSion of buyers will
hou rs for good prohh
bring
action
public and Wilt tra1n Send
Small ~nvestment requ~red
A CALL WILL BRING ALL
resume to P 0 Box 534
- S2 000 For deta~ls and
DETAILS
Pomeroy &lt;lh1o 4$769
1971 J D 350 8 lint house past
Interview call Mr Adams
Weslevan Holmess Church on
992 2259 or 992 2S6B
1 Joq 375 qB9J evenmgs
Rl 1&lt;3
5

P M

Day

Before

Wanted

-

Rea It,

~

... the American Way
Two hundred years ago the farmer produced
food enough for one In 1976 he produces
enough for 55 Providing cred1t to put lnnovattons to work has been the matn JOb of
your Federal Land Bank for nearly 60 years
Lets dtscuss your plans for the years ahead

WATER PROBLEMS DUE
CINCINNATI - Severe
water quahl} problems m the
Ohto Rtver Valley are ex
peeled th1s summer unless
present low flow cond1t10ns
change accordmg to the Ohto
R1ver Valley Water San
1tahon CommissiOn

228 Upper Rtver Road
P 0 Box 207, Galhpohs
Phone 446 0203
Clyde B Walker, Mgr

•
i

-

mower makes short
work of lawn work

~11:1&gt;. The Gravely All Gear Dn ve con verttble tractor At
tad11nen ts to mow plow cu lti va te bull doze spray
move sn ow compost and more W&lt;ilk or attach
su lky a nd d t1al wheels to r1de Let us g1ve
yo u a dcmonstmtllln and show you wh y
Grave ly IS ltke nobody else

TRUCK TARPS
light Weight Hemmed W1th Grommets S1zes 10x20 12x20 12xl310x34

8 &amp; 10 HP Models In Stock

TARP STRAPS-SIZES 9-15-21-30

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

512 E. MAIN

SALfS &amp;SERVICE

POMEROY, OHIO
Open Mon

Meigs Equipment
Pome10y

~UT~Atn

ofOfllt,lla.,

s l;rlr. Ollit

Fn 8 S

30 -

Sat

992·2975

a2

~GRAVELY

LIKE NOBODY ELSE.

IVIRIBODY

Shops the

WANT AD WAY

WANTED

Business Franchise

.

RNI Estate for Sale

Help Wanted

-

Stand a d e ec r c starter
k cks t over w th the turn
of a key 36 rota y

Ph 992 2176

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

BY JOHNC RICE
County Ext Agent Aclcullure

HANDS TIED FOR
lACK OF CASHJ

~

Business Services

ROOMS tota lly lu n shed on
l ncoln Hgts exce llent shape
needs pont Lorge k1t chen
Ius!
orge basement
$10 qoo

Phone 992 7648

LARGE bu ldong lo1 lol SUITABLE
for 3 or more homes hos c y

and $On tory $ewoge
Phone 992 5786
ROOMY 7 vr old one,. story wood
fram e two bedrm home
locat ed between Coolv lie and
Tuppen Pia ns One acre lot
two cor garage City water gas
heat
ha rdwood
tloo s
carpetd II\! ng room n ce v ew
$21 000 Phone 16")667 3519
6 spaCIOUS roo ns remade ed
1ice yard Phone 992 7394
water

CODNER'S CAMPERS

SALES&amp; RENTAL
Travel Tratlers

R

V~rgol B Sr Realtor
110 Mechamc Pumeroy 0
Phone 991 J325
INVESTMENT - Bt.smess
room down and 5 room apt

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Codner

TEAFORD

~h

Complete B11dal
Semce
frH Consultation

Ann's Bndal and
Anniversary Serv1ces

MIDDL EPORT - 7 Rm s
2 bat hs 2 corne r lots w th
vew of river A REAL
LOCA Tl ON $27 500
BARGAIN - Nice 3 Brs
bath large k t and liVIng
Fam tl y room &amp; a ll u ft llf e s
On ly $6 500
SOLID - 12 Rms on 2 1ot s
5 Brs 2 baths enormous
Mod k1t w1th cook &amp; bake
un its Many ext ras $25 000
4 ACRES - Near school
Hou se has been renovated
2 car garage and lots ol
p nes S29 500
CHESHIRE - Mod 6 rm
Pal lo

love ly k1f

ba se ment

and

J

LARGE OLO HOME - 4
Brs 1 ' baths 2 I v ng s
d n ng uf hty basemen I
with garage Large yard
$20 000
RUTLAND - J Brs balh
new gas FA furnace 2
porch es

baseme nt and
large lot $12 000

49 ACRES -

New 2 Br
old b1 rch k t
wrth stove &amp; ref rtge rator
Ca rpo rt /l. full basem ent
NEW LISTING - Mod 3
Brs 2 ba ths hea tol afor
! ~r ep l ace
nice k1 t lull
basement 7 ca r garage 2
por c hes
&amp; large lot
$34 000
NEW LISTING - 4 Brs
bath nat gas heal new kof
wtth stove &amp; refr igerator a t
Rutland $13 000
COME
TO
SUNNY
SOUTHERN OHIO
START A HAPPY AND
BETTER WAY OF LIFE
home 3 yrs

WILL do rool1 ng, construct on
p umbmg and hea l ng No tab
too Iorge or too small Phone
742 234B
EXCAVATING dozer backhoe
and d tcher Charles R Hat
f1eld Back Hoe Serv ce
Rutland Oh o Phone 742 2008
GREG S CB SALES located at Er
w n s Gulf Ser\IICe M1 d
dleporl Oh1o Phone 992
2438
EXCAVATING BACKHOES AND
DOZER LARGE AND SMAll
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED Bill
PULLINS PHONE '1'12 2&lt;78 DAY
OR NIGHT
SEPTIC Systems mstalled by
licensed 1nsta ler Shepard
Contractors ~!hone 742 2409
FOR !he best m w;; r- well dnll
mg Phone Lemley Dr Iling
Company 742 2003
H
-AUliNG Or ve:o; mater ol
and hmestone or grovel fo rm
hme Ph Jr Darst 742 2850
CARPENTER floormg ce lmg
ponehng Phone 992 2759

The Complete
Remodeltng Serv1ce
For You r Home

AI. TROMM CONST.

iiCu sc Ohio
Ph 992 1991
I 10

Rutland
7422328
All Work Guaranteed
Free Esllmates
5 S I mo

Sy

4-3~1

mo

COINS
CURRENCY
SUPPLIES
METAL
DETECTORS
Buy Sell or Trade

R&amp;J COINS
~ullond Oh~

10

WILKIN SON'S
c omplet e

Sma ll

1.,~ Ei
~::~
•
Lawn

1~

~

1~ ~ TillersMow ersIt ~' Rldlng

1.' 'Ill~

NE~

Troclors

lawn Bov mow (!rs
Pnmeer McCullough chain

Bolen s Mow ers

uws

Merry

Tiller s

Ml~dleporl

561 mo

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating
Racine Ohro
roof or old
House roof
ba rn shtngles bu1id up
patnhng elcctncal work
gutters &amp; downspouts
furnac es water hea t er s
water softners msta llcd &amp;
repaired Sewage
Call us al949 2182
new

re patred?

or 949 2203

3 1U I mo

Siding Center
Sales &amp; Servtce
l01310ih Av e
Parkersburg W Va
304 485 OJ81
614 423 6474
Aluminum Vmyl Steel
Conflnuou$ Gutter
Replacement
Wtndows and Doors
Free Esttmates
We recommend and
Sell Quality
5 9 76

llu$iness Semees

SALVAGE

~

MTO

St
Ohio 9911092
s 76 1 mo

498 Locust

Rottr IIIIIIMJ

HALLS

Env

~Repair

Mowers

742ZI31

Need

STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS

LARRY LAVENDER

mzm

$46 soo

Alummum Sid1ng,
Roofing, Gutters,
Pa1nUng and Repar

GUTTERS AWNINGS

Boon Tltonln

lu ll
lo ts

FREE ESTIMATES

WINDOWS
ALUM IN UM
S IDIN G SOFFITT

91 ~310!

br ck veneer ranc h home

992 2111

REP LACE MENT

Phone AnRI B~tk""""

of r ver

Noble Summit Rd
Middleport
PHONE 9t1 5724
s 3 t mo

Blown
Insula lion Servtces
FH1niCtiQAVcllilbte
Blown nto W&lt;HI "&gt; &amp; All cs

And Annlltll.IIJ

nat

POMEROY - 3 br home
wdh 1' 1 ba ths hot wa ter
heat basement &amp; mce vtew

D. BUMGARDNER

OPEN
Days and eve nings ncept
Tu es
and Wed or by
5 21 1 mo

up Brick fi le const

Above and below ground
pool k1ts for the do It
yourself man
All pool supplies avallablt,
too

LONG BOTTOM

conhct~ng

SWIMMING
POOLS

Radiator·,;;;:~

Service

RAIN80W RIDGE
( Bastian Aru l

ownh

gas &amp; city wa ter S13 500

EXPERIENCED

H1gh prtces for scrap
autos motor s and
other m eta ls Phone
992 2228 Monday thru
Friday 8 3, Saturday
8 12
5 16 1 mo

I

SLOAN'S
I CARPETING

Med1c a l Oxyg en
a nd Supplies
ARE AVAILABLE
AT

r-r;ee estimates on

peflng and

lWIN CllY

car

~nstaflallon

We II brmg samples to your

MACHlNE SHOP
t7 Cole Stree t
Pomeroy Ohio 45769
Telephone t6W 992 3768
We Deliver

'25 1 mo

JUNE SPECIAL
6 CANS OF RC

•1.00 +

T..
W1th any $4 00 purchase
and thiS ad Good through
6 30 76

OONELli'S PIZZA
Middleport Olllo
992 6167
6 1 16 I month

Busmess Serv1ces

O&amp;D TREE Tr mm ng 20 years ex BRADFORD Ausllone• Co 11
plete Serv ce Phone 9~9 2487
penence Insured fr ee
or 949 2000 Rocme Ohro Cril l
est mates Call 992 238-4 or
Bradford
(614) 698 7257 Albony
SEWING MACHINE Repa rs ser ELWOOD SOWERS REPAIR Sweepers toasters Irons al l
vrce all makes 9&lt;12 2284 The
small oppl onces lawn mowe
Fobrt c Shop
Pomeroy
next to Slate Hghwoy Garoge
Author Jed Smger Soles and
on Rout e 7 Phone (614) 985
Serv1ce We sharpen Sc•ssors
3B2S
EXCAVATING dozer loader and
back hoe work dump trucks REMODELING Plumbing healing
ond aU ty pes of gene ra l repair
and lo boys for tire w II hau l
Work guaranteed 20 yea ra ex
f II d1rt top soli l1m es tone and
penenul Ph ana CJ92 2409
gravel Coli Bob or Roger Jef
fe s day phone 992 708'il
mght phone m 3525 or 992
5232
SEPTIC TANKS c eoned Modern
Son1tot lon 992 3954 Of f/92
2428

home w1lh no obllgatlor
See how vou can really
save

Mike Young Manager
Sa les and In sfa llaflon
Rl J Pomeroy OhiO q5769
Phone day or night
614 991 '22 06

II I

ltiO

Junk Batteries Sl 25
Motor Cast Clean
S3 SO Per Hundred
Copper l5c
Car Bodtes
Scrap Iron

RIDERS SALVAGE
St Rf 12q Pomeroy Ohio
Phone 992 S46B
6 3 1 month

CongrstuiJJtions
GrsdiUitea

Let DONE LL I 5 mtkl tile
for yllur eltor
groduatton porty Cell uti I
HZ 6167 ond we wtll make
your party aomttlllnt to
remember Chock our
porty rtiH

phu

Donelll'a Plua
lddleport, Ohio
Opon 4 p m dillY
Cloucl1tl dly Monday•

PUBLIC SALE
SAT., JUNE 12, 1976
10:00 A.M.
The personal property estate of the tate Dorset Sm1th
will be so ld at hiS farm 1n Hemlock Grove Oh1o 33
west !rom Pomeroy Ohio 1 5 miles to Co Rd 25 06 to
Co Rd 20 told 33) 3 8 m1les to Co Rd 39then I 4 miles
to Hemlock Grove Turn left on T 162 ftrst house on
right
ANTIQUE OR COLL ECTilR ITEMS
Cupboard h1gh headboard bed dressers stands wood
bed smok ng stand rockers wa ll te lephone wood
fold ng bed 6 plank bottom chairs mise chairs wash
sland cane bottom rocker Iron bed drop leaf tabl e
chest of drawers Vlc1or ta lking machme 4 records
old stam ps vtewer atr horn marb le top dresser
sewlflg machine '• wood bed 2 old radios boflles
Aladdm lamp wall 9 il lgh,t oil lamps /l. shades egg
basket coff ee grinder stone (ugs I /l. 2 gal sausage
grinder 1 Donaghho and other slooe Jars corn shell er
&amp; pbber ha ll tree ptdure frames
HOUSEHOLD
G bson 16 frost tree refr gerator Fr grda rre e lectriC
range table &amp; 4 chars e lectnc roaster chairs cou ch
table &amp; 4 cha rrs electr iC roaster chairs couch 2 pc
flv lng room su1te ptano &amp; bench tables sweeper
rugs lamps portable rad o B&amp;W Motorola TV desk
linens pots pans dtshes Maytag wringer washer
boUle gas stove kerosine 3 burner stove 20 n fan
sm all krtchen appliances
EQUIPMENT
8N Ford lracfor 3 pf mowmg mach1ne 2- 17 m plows 3
pi l pf cu lt ivators 3 pi rofo hoe doubl e d1sk New
Idea manure spreader flat bottom wagon elevators
PTO Cyclone seeder w1th top extentton rotottller
ho rse ha rness Myers deep well pump mtsc hand
fools
CASH
LUNCH
CARNAHAN AUCTION
D Sm1th
L Donohue App
J Carnahan
9!9 2033
742 3048
9q9 2708
Not responsibl e for :"!Ccidents or loss of property

JUNE SIZZLERS!
! 1l 2 P1ece Livtng Room Su1te
{ 1l Sofa at bargatn pnce
! 2) 2 Pc Ltvtng Room Suttes

39 9S

25 00

{I) Reverstble Wtndow Fan
! 1) Hoover Up Sweeper, ltke new

69 95 ea
20 00
69 95

~----sPECML----~
NEW 3 Ptece Ltvmg Room Su1te
3 B1g Tables

+2

Lamps

$39995

12) Fthng Cabmets heavy duty
11 l New Set Bunk Beds
Several Bedroom Su1tes

59 95 ea
139 95
88 00 UD

New Bedding,
Factory Seconds
BoK Sprmg &amp; Matress, queen stze
$58 OOeach
Ktng S11e
69 95set&amp; up

�27 - The Sunday Tunes Sentlllel Sunday June 6 1976

26 - TheSund"y Junes Sentmel '"'"'" hut I IH71
+

Your Wayne National Forest
By 1 Allall Wnlttr
Dlstmt ll •nH"
IRONTON
All) Ill 1\l u IS
around teenagers nnu.h I ils he, rd
the son~ 50 \\Hys lo Lose Yu111
Lover ll at song I IS gone the" I)
Of \\hate1cr h lppens 10 lune s that
drop off the lop 40 ch"rt s lm
startmg I fll!W UJ C it S calh:d lO
Wa) s lo F'1 ghl Pollution rhe I nes
don t rhyme and there s no muSic
but 1t s 1 song that 11c should 111
kno11 1 few \crses of II goes I ke
tins
1 Usc He us"ble Conta ne1 s use 1 IWl(h ln x tn st~ad f pii)Jl!l
bt~g s Use re usable piHsh c ( m
ta~ne r s mstead of f01l and p! ISIIl
11 raps £01 slonng food
2 AvOid Overpac k 1ged ~ oods IndiVIdually 111 ap ped sel\ lngs nd
slices of food do not "'"ke ~oocl
ecologiL 1! se •se - and they cost

more too
3 - Choose Returnable Bottles
- Disposable bottles and cans too
oft en end up 1s Iiller and one llurd
to one half of the pncc may be f01
the cont uner
4 Run Wa she1s 1l F ull
Capac1ty both clisl 11 d d ll es
v. CJsl er It s 1ves powe w..lter 11d
clean ~n g agent
5 Buy and Usc Apph tnce s
W1 se ly - Ma ny gadgets and
spec1al features are expensl\ e
unnecessary

power wasters

6 Re-cycle Newsp 1pe1s Steel
Cans AJwnmum C ms and Glass lf there IS no collectiOn prog1Hill
where yo u Ill e ) ou can stHrl one
7 Contribute Usable GoO&lt;ts I o
Chant) - They w1ll be used Some
orgamzahuns Will piCk up 1tems and 1 epamng them l' l e&lt;Jtes JObs
6 Conse1ve I nwe1 - rwn off
lights and usc lower ' atlage whe1e
pO SS ibl e AVOid runnu t m aJOI
appli ances dUIIflg peak hours &gt;to 7
pm
9 Save F uel - We 1lhe r
slnppmg and ns 1lal nn p" f"

1hu1 tsul" s 111 fuel sa\lngs Close off
w usul f 1 ~~~~
y{)u II re.l!tl less
ht.: 11 less ttl f.( onchtJt rung
10 Hoycu ll P1 oducts f1om
I IHl ngered Species - Hefust to
IJUJ •h 1le and lurtlc products furs
from leop 1rds •nd other b1g ca\s
Illig 11or prod ucts
1
ll Conserve Waler - fix leaky
f HJC( ts usc a h 1se w1th an
[t ul umalu.: .shut-off nozzle
12 Use S md on lc ) Pavements
&amp;ill k1lls pi nt s and con tanunalcs
" ller supplies
I I Dnve fo conohcall} - C•r
pools !esse 1 II aff c Jams pa1 k111g
problems and em ss ons Don t let
engmc 1dle " ' en yo u re wal ling
14 Usc Mass l rans1t When
Possible - !rams busses and
planes tre less pollulmg than cars
I he) ustless fuel per passe nger and
11 e l~ss expel s1ve
l&gt; Make Your Car Lasl Hcgu lar n1a1ntenance smooth
an clcmtwn md braking moderate
speed s pcnod1c washmg and
w"x111g should help your car last
lunge•
II Keep Y 1u1 Car l wwd Pd lu 1cn C( niH I equtpmen t 1s ef
fcc live only when properly mam
lamed You can add anll pollutwn
devices to older cars
17 Use a Bike or Your Feet II s heal thy exercise no fuel bills or
p u k~n g problems and ma) not lake
much lr nge1 Brea k )OUI kids oflhe
dn ve me hab1 l too
16 Dispose of Worn-Out Cars
Wi sely
You m 'Y be able lo sell
some pa1ls Choose 1 &gt;~1ecke1 who
has spec1al cqwpmcnl for mn
polluhng cilsposHI
19 f ncr w "gc R1rds - Provide
vem uund s(lellcr and food They
u c fun to &gt;~al c h and the) are also
natw e s pesl control system
20 Walm W1sel) - Chose
'ane l1es r flowe1s and vegetables
h t.:es shr ubs and grass thctt thn\ e 1n

Agriculture and
•

our community
B} Bt yson R I Bud l Ca t let
Ga lha County £xtens10n Agent
GALLIPOLIS - We re at
the ttme or year where plan ts
and home garde n around the
home grounds and m the
fields begm showmg S) mp
tom s or some abnormal
condttwns Someltmes these
conditiOns are caused by
msects diseases cultural
practices or lack or nutn ents
nn the soil
I have had a nUillber or
requests lhe past week to
examme plan ts of van ous
sorts a nd diagnose the
problem Sometimes I can do
th1s here at the Extcnswn
Office but there are 11mes
however
wh en
pla nt
spec 1m ens must be sent to the
laboratory for diagnoSIS
I mentwned th1s serv1ce
becaust you may not have
been aware that 11 wa s
ava il able through your
County Extension Agent We
have excellen t cooperatwn
w1th The Umve1s1ly of

Ke nlucky regal dmg ass1st
ance 1n d1a gnos mg th e
problem m tobacco At Oh1o
State Umvers1ty 11 e have a
planl disease laboralory and
a large sta rr of spec1ahsls
wh o I elp 1dent1 f) pla nt
pr oblems
an d
mak e
recomn1er dal10ns for lhetr
control
There IS no charge for lh1s
service and I encourage you
to contact us If you need help
m d1agnosmg diseases n
sects and other problems or
)Our vegetables il ees corn
tobacco etc
HERE ARE 11 pomts
concc rnm g clea mng yo ur
co mb1ne before s tarling
gram harvest
- Mo\e the combme from
storage to a 11ashmg area
where a h1gh pressure water
hose can be ustd to flush out
all component s of the

WE CAN

Lawn &amp; Garden Tractors
Let S mpl c ly s Deluxe
8 hp Broadmoor do lhe
work You do the relax ng

)O ur llunale Walc1 dur1ng Jff.peak
hours and ust t1me r to renund when
to tur n off
21 Choose Pestlles1 stan1 Plants
- Most slrung smelling herbs repel
msccts Ccrtaw plants prule( I one
anol her Check seed catalogs get
advice from local garden clubs and

nursenes
22 Landscape Thoughtfully Sl1ulJS an d trees can help ""
uJrH!Jtaon yow- I ume screen out
d1rl and n01 se •nd also return
UX)gcn to the a1r
2! Use Na tural Pest Controls l adybug s
pray 1n g man l1ses
sp1le1 s some wasps and many
ulhers
kill
harmful
pes ts
CAUTION Che1 neal pestiCides kill
goO&lt;l bugs as well as the pests
24 Control N01se Pollution Keep machmes repaired be con
Slderate of othe1s Use md1v1dual
e 1r phones for hstenm g to rad1o at
beac h or camps1le
25
Part1 c1pa te m I oca l
Bca utlhcHtlon Profecls
Park
beach an d h1g hway clean up
campmgns m1111 parks and tree
plant10g bcne£11 everyone
26 Combat l1ller - When
you 1e at the beach 01 park or JUSl
laking a \\alk leave th1ngs as clean
as you found them or CI EANER
27 Don l OUillp Chemicals mlo
Se•ers - Your garage mecha mc
Will dispose of Ustd Oil for you
Synthetic pesllc1des can be disposed
of lhrough the Audubon Soc~ety or

other environmental group

County agent's corner
POMI ROY
F'armers whu hllve not yet begun hlly
harvesting ure advised to start at once
I v~nlf substantial ram fall should occ ur soon forage y1eld
'f 1ur drought shortened first cuttmg won t mc rease much by
wa1tmg because most grasses and legumes have come mto
head Aller heads form forage quahty drops m both dry
matter d1gest1b1lity and protem conlenl each day cultmg IS
delayed D1geshbly dry matter decreases 1 percent urut
pe r da y after headmg Plant s ugars and starches change to
und1gesl1ble cellulose and ligrun
Additionally hllrvestmg now w1ll permtt regrowth to begm
sooner thus mcreasmg seasonal production accordmg to John
~ Underwood Area ExtensiOn Agronomis t An application of
mtrogen&lt;onlammg fertthzer ca n further boost regrowth or
gra ss stands to those which ha ve not received one so far th1s

season

Last season many southeastern Ohto farmers \\ere unable

lay of the land

28 Perform Mamlena nce - On

plumbmg - to save w•ter On
furnace - to save fuel On car - to
save fuel
29 Stop Smokmg - lf pollutes
II e mr - 1t pollutes yo u
30 Encour age Llbrane s to
Promote Eco log) - Encourage
them to have conservatiOn dtsplays
Hnd to buy books on ecology for
ch1lrh en and ad ull s

machme
- Remove all tnspectJOn
covers from the mach1ne
- Open the clean-out doors
on the clean gram auger an d
the ta1 hngs auger
- Remove the cover fr om
lhe dram hole m the gram
lank
- Cle"n the stone trap On
some machmes you wdl have
to remove the feeder
assembly to do lh1s
- Use the h1gh pressure
water hose to dislodge and
flu sh out all grams and debriS
from the com bme The water
flu shing method works well
becaust the slream of w ~l er
w1ll dtslodge maler1al that
may have become caked
Also the flowmg water
carnes out th e debriS Pay
parh cula1 altentton to
cleanmg the raddle or con
veyor area under th e
Cl Iinder
- Alter the combme 1s
clean and the water has had a
chance to dram out starl the
combme and let tl run at half
throttle for about 15 mmules
TillS w1ll alf dry the ms1de
of the machme
- Replace all mspechon
covers and clean"'ut doors
- Lubricate all ftltin gs
w1th the recommended
lubncanl
- Reclean the combme
each lime yo u harvest a
different crop
Be sure to clean and
lubricate the combwe before
relurnmg 11 to storage at the
end uf lhe season

been Wh1le we have not kept
wrllten records of ramfall
we kn ow that April was one of
the dn est months on record
for th1s secbon of the slate
and March and early May
were not much better
In talkmg wtlh farmers
around Mason coun ty all of
them 11ere very concerned
about the productiOn or hay
pasture grass and other crops

thai they had planted We
noted that many farmers
have already put up hay The
hay that was cut and stored
has been h1gh quahty but not
much more than one half the
amoun ( that had been ex
pee led
Most of the recent 2 4 m
ches of ram soaked tnto the
ground The lh~rs ty sot! drank
11 up very readily and 1t was
fortunate that 1t fell
gradually to allow the s01l to
soak most of 1t
Incidentally the d1slnct
sllll has a few of these ram
gauges for sale at lhe dtstnct
office 2301, Mam Sl
We helped B E Kemper on
the head of Ten Mtle Creek
and Jack Rous h on Sand Fork
of !J'ab Creek w1th plannmg
use of lhe ~r land
The Kempers bought a 40acre farm from Jake
Somerv ille and are plannmg
to develop 1t for grassland
production and expect to
ra1se a few head of beef
cattle They moved here from

Squadmen show equipment, aid skills
Three members of the
Ga lh a County Vo lunteer
Emergency Squad who

lo harvest their first culling at prime lime due lo prolong,P

wet weather AnalysiS at 23 1975 hay samples showed a w1de
va r~at1on m crude protem and dry matter d1gesllb1hty I DMD J
prunarily due to date of harvests The earhesl harvested hay
had h1gher protem and DMD levels Crude protem range9
from 19 3 percent duwn to 5 3 percent while the OMD range4
from 76 9 percent down to 35 4 percent
Beef and sheep producers as well as datrymen need higlj
quality forages says Jun Clay Jackson Area Exlenswn
Arumal Industry Agent Beef cows wmtered on late cut hay
w1ll lose we1ght have weaker ca lves at birth produce less
m1lk while nursmg and may not cycle early m the breeding
season Rumtuant arurnals on an all forage program Dilen w1ll
not conswne enough poor quality hay to meet thelf needs
Since the ftrst cutttng of forages for the highest quahl)
harvest Is usually done tn May farmers should plan to wrap up
lh1s JOb soon

Rain is biggest news
By John Cooper
Soli Cons Service
POINT PLEASANT The
mosl Important news m the
conserva!ton f1eld th1s week
IS that the rams came
From May 29 unhl June 3
uur lrusly ram gauge m
d~eated 2 4 mches had fallen
Smce we got the ram gauge
from the Western So1l Con
serva tton Dlslncllast fall for
$2 25 we have watched 11
qwle regularly to see how
much prec1p1tatwn there has

prese nted a demonsllllon ot
firs t a1d sk1lls to the F'rench
C1ty Campers and H1kers

First of three
Pasture management is
really leaf management
By Boyd Ruth, District Conservationist
POMEROY - This ts the f1rst of a three part ser~es on one
aspect of pasture management Th e second part of I he senes
Will be m next week s colwnn
About 84 000 acres one-third of the total land area of
Me1gs County 1s used for pasture Th1s figure mcludes
permanent pastureland grazed woodland and land that IS
pastured as part of a crop rotatwn The management of land
used HS pasture IS usually not g1ven the atlen twn that tl
deserves In order to use the land to Its fullest potential one
must reahze that pasture management ts really leaf

management
It 1s extremely unportant that enough leaves remam all
durmg the growmg season lo manufac ture food Many fa ctors
Influence how much a plant grows Ra1nfall lempera ture so1l
depth smllexture topography and the tnh erent ab1hty of the
plant Itself
Yet even when these factors are opllmum a plant can t
grow without a large enough food.p roductng factor) leaves
Th1s 1s the crux of grass management The only maJor
factor affectmg grass growth that s fully m your conlrolts the
mamtcnance of the SIZe of the food factory

LEAVE HALF Except for grass you ltme and fertilize
all other growth mfluencmg factors depends on Natures
prov1s1ons Overgrazed grasses stmply can l remam healthy
vtgorous and productiVe any more than a feedlot steer can
gam well on on ly a mamlenance rat10n
This pomt stmple as 1t sounds IS somethmg I can l over
emphasize
The effect of lear defohal10n on plant development has
been studied many tunes In general there s agreement that
grass productiOn 1s substantially reduced when you remove
more than half the leaf volWT!e by grazing or mowmg during
the growmg season
I IONS TO MEET
Long ago successful cattlemen comed the phrase Take
Pomeroy
Middleport
half
and leave half
I IOns Club Will hold their
A
later adage The half you take wtll gradua lly get
regular mee ting and election
b1gger
1s one key lo greater productiOn
Wednesday noon al the Me1gs
An
mcrease
of one or two leaves on a grass plant when
Inn All L10ns are urged to
ll'lulllphed
by
millions
of plants ts the story of enhanced forage
attend
production tn a pasture

recentl y were Phtl Un
derwood Sharon Hill and
Andy F1sher
Included m the presen
tat10n was a h1st01 y of the
volun teer emergency squad
a demonstratiOn Of ItS
e quipm ent
ba nda gmg
techmques a nd a blood
pressure check A question
and answer sess1on followed
w1th 24 members of the
H1kers and Campers club
taking part
The
Ga lha
Coun ty
VolWiteer Emergency Squad
has speakers available for
demonstratiOns ana also has
made available a slide show
program
Int e res te d
organiZahons may call
Charles Camden at 446-4011 to
arrange for a speaker

Florida and expec t to live on
the farm and make the1r
home m Mason County
The Roush farm on Q-ab
!J'eek IS mostly grassland
Mr and Mrs Roush expect to
b111ld a house on the farm and
hve there when 11 IS com
pleted The mam purpose of
the aSSistance to the Roushes
was to help m the locahon of a
road to a home Site that they
had chosen The land on
whtch lhey had planned to
bwld a road was sleep and
had a shp hazard After a
careful exammahon and
explanatiOn of the hazards
mvolved they chose another
locatton for thetr future
home Durmg the v1s1t we
also looked at three loca tiOns
wh1ch were poss1bthhes for
constructiOn of ponds and
also at a sprmg as a
poss1b1hty for a home water
supply
DURING A RECENT VISII
to the Roy J1v1den farm near
Tr1bble Roger Powell of the
Western D1stnct found Mr
J1v1den to be still gomg
strong desptte the fact that he
1s m h1s m1d etght1es Not long
ago he had cleared three
acres for pasture 111th a bull
dozer and had sowed Ken

lucky 31 fescue on 1t
He had also used Tordon o~
multiflora rose to kill1t Mr
J1v1den still does much of h1s
work tncludtng the chppmg o(
pasture w1th h1s trusty teant
of mules However he told
Roger that one of h1s mules
had d1ed and he ts looking for
a replacement

LODGES TO MEET
Pomeroy Chapter No 80
RAM w1ll hold thetr statep
convocatiOn and elechon
Wednesday at 7 30 p m at the
Pomeroy Masomc Temple
All officers are requested IO
brmg lhe1r r1tuals Bosworth
Council No 46 Royal and
Select Maslers wtll hold their
stated assembly and elec
lion followmg at 8 30 p m
when all compamons and
offiCers also are urged to
brtng their n luals

SUBSIDIES COME
POMEROY - Cnmmal
cost substd y payments
amoun hng to $208 959 75 were
d1slnbuted to 64 co unty
clerks of court durmg May
Stale Audtlor Thomas E
Ferguson reported Of the
total Meigs County received
$94 50

For Sale

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

THE family of Jomoo D AbiO$ VEGETABLE plonls ol oil k.nds 10 DEPENDABLE bobys1t1ar to core
w shes to ••press their thanks
d1fferenl vor ehes ol tomatoes
lor 2 girls ages 5 and 8 n my
Pub! cat ton
to Hock "9 Valley Hasp tal and 1nclud1ng non acid wh te
home tn evemngs Phone 992
Monday 0@-adl ne 9
staff tne Heinlein and Brown
tomato Very large selection ol
3511
om
and Ewing Funeral Homes the bedd ng plants
Al so
CancelliiJ ton
Re\lerend E H Marlin songs Geromums and other potted
Correcltons w II be ac
by Mr James Bailey floral ol
plant s Hanging baskets
Situatiolls
cepted until 9 l!l m ror
fermgs k1ndness from fnends Cleland Forms and Green
D•v of Pubt cat on
n our time of sorrow
house Gerold ntt Cleland
WILL DO odd rob! roofing, po n
~liGULATIONS
11ng hauling treework or d
The Publisher reserves
Tha Abies f_!I~Y
Roc Ina
her ght to e&lt;tt or retect
mowmg Ph011e 99'1 7409
I WISH to thank all my fr ends for COAL I mestone and all types ol
any ads deemed ob
their
cords
flowers
and
kmd
soh
and
rQ(k
soh
lor
ce
and
Will
core fo elderly person m my
I eel onal The publisher
nome Phone 1 (6U) q95 3849
prayers Espec1ally Rev Gran
snow removal Excelsior Salt
will not be responsible for
more than one ncorrec 1
dollar hit most welcome vtslts Works Eau Man St Pomeroy
orm 3410
nsert on
and prayers and C W C for Oh1o Phone992 3891
WILL
do bobys II ng anyhm e
RATES
therr splr tual bouquet dunng MAKE spring cleomng prof1toble
Phone-992 71d
For Want Ad Servtce
my recent stay at Veterans turn unwanted 1rems tnto cash
5 cent s per word one
Will do bu ldmg and remodehng
Memorial Hospital Also
Adverhse m the Wont Ads
nser ion
roof ng plumb ng furnace
thanks to the nurses for the r
Minimum Charge $1 00
repo1 gas or o I o general
co a and kindness Also LOCUST posts round or spl t
14 ce nt s per word hr ee
repo1 r Free es t motes ond
consecu tve
nser tt ons
thanks to Or Telle -and Or
Phone 949 2774
26 cen s per word SIK
reasonable rates Phone
~~~aJ
_L.,?!?
(BeoJ
Zwilhng
H
&amp;
N
day
old
or
started
legho
n
consecu tve
tnsert ons
Charles S nclou (61_.) 965 4121
WE the family of Bert Romme pullets Both fl oor or cage
25 Per Cent D scount on
or 992 2221
would
Ike
to
t!lank
all
our
grown
ova
fable
Poultry
hous
pa d ads and ads patd
with n 10 days
fr ends
ne1gh bors and
ng and automation Modern
CARD OF THANKS
relatives for all the r kmdnen Poultry 399 W Man Pomeroy
&amp; OBITUARY
end svmpothy tney showed us
m 216.4
\2 00
tor
50
word
Spec1al
tnanks
to
the
Ewtng
GRAPEFRUIT
Pill w1th D oda x 7 rm hou~e w th both portly
m n mum
Funeral Home Rev JarviS the plan more con...ement than
Each add 1 on at word 3
carpeted new furnace hot
cents
1mgers and floral offenngs
gmpelrulh Eat sahsfy ng
water heater Iorge lot on lm
BLIND ADS
The Rom1ne F~~!Ymeals and lose we1ght Nelson
coin HII Phone 992 2071
Ad d t on a 1 25c Charge
WE wont to thank each and Drug
per Advert semen I
3 acres I 8 m1les on County Road
OFFICE HOURS
everyone who was so k1nd to REGJSTERto Angus herd Phone
4 Out of De• ter Pnone (6l4)
me during the loss of my hus
2789
8 30 a m to S 00 p m
982 4123
0
Da lly ~ 30 am to 12 00
bond Arthur Thanks to my 992
Noon Sa turday
dear s1ster and husband Roy 1968 Nova 6 cyhnder $175 Fuel 2 bedrm home ful y furmshed
Phone today 992 2156
Sea rls and our dear fr ends
o1l heater $75 Phone 7&lt;42
close to schoo and shopprng
W~nda and
J1m Mohler
2769
lnqu re 894 Pearl St M d
dlepqrt Oh1o
Pallbearers also Rev Grate FARMALL Super C cult 1vators
NOTICES
Rowlmgs Coots nurses of plows di sk corn planter No
A large home on Ash Street n
ATTN II
Veteran s Memorial Hasp tel
2500 mower McCormick No 2
M ddleport lor sale or trade for
ALL liOUSEWIVES
Or Telle and Or P ckens
hoy cond 1tioner No 250
All Yard Sales Rumm~g e
sma ller ho~..! Phone 992 7797
fhanks lo all my fr ends and Phone 1614) 37B 620S
Porch end Basement Porch
netghbors who brought food I
---~
3 bedrm house n M1ddleport
and Besement Sales etc
wrll always thmk of you God OLDER remodeled ali elec 3
near Park Sw mm ng pool and
must be PBtd m advance
Bless W1fe Mary Roberts
bedrm home $12 500 Call
Get your rn n euly by
stores Phone 992 7667
stoppmg by our off ice at
~!~~'2.. K!~~
m 5011'-c,---FOR SALE l5 acres w1th mce 8
The Da lly Sentinel
111
JUST
fre;h Guernsey m1lk cow
rm and both 3 bedrm home
Cour t St or wr hng So•
w th calf $350 f rm Contact
129 Pomeroy Oh1a .45769
newly remodeled :2 car
James Roy Parsons off Rae~n e
with vour rem1ttan ce
garage rural water gas well
Bas han Road
all m nero! nghts $3-4 000
RACINE F1re Department w II
Phone 1•2 2336
hove a gun shoot Saturday at ON~ dm.rlte se-1--e,-c-el'~le_n_l ,-o-ndl
6 30 p m at the1r new butld ng
hon Two end tables motchng HOUSE FOR SAlE 15 mtles from
off Basnan Rood
ant que bed and buffet drene
Pomeroy 3 BR ranch 2 baths
Phone 992 6092
I w-;,uidlik;to b'-al-e.~h-ay- ;., shores
OR onto redwood deck FR w th
woodburmng I ep ace llxl-4
In the vicinity of Co Rd 18 Call GIBSON Delu xe Frostfree
lONG BOTIOM OHIO THE
storage bu1ld1n~ on 1 acre lot
~_?201 a!!!!"~ p_m
refr ge ator SlOO G E Po
TRUSTEES OF SAND Hill
$27 000 Phon e !614) 667 3862
Scrubbe dtshwosher green
CEMETERY WISH TO THANK THE NOW open for Bus1ness The w1th cultmg boa d excel en t
6
room
house ve y well kepi 3
Town
I&lt;
lin
120
;,
East
Mom
Sf
PEOPLE WHO HAVE DONATED
cond 11on $t50 Phone 1614 )
bedrms
modern ~ tchen wall
Pomeroy
Onro
Greenware
THEIR MONEY OR TIME FOR TH E
667 3330 or 985 3988
to wall carpet H W fl oo s full
pa1nts cerom1c supphes
UPKEEP AND BEAUTIFICATION
basement new gas fur nace
classes Monday Tuesday Sm•lh and Wesson Model 41
OF THE BEAUTIFUL SAND Hill
small
lot to mow deal for
Wed
s
and
Fnday
1
0
t
I!
2
p
m
a1,1
to
22
col
to
get
prstol
new
CEM&lt;TERY THANKS AlSO FOR
older couple or small fom ly m
Evenrngs by appomtment Call $180 fi rm 1970 Dats un 510
YOUR DONATIONS TOWARD
good ne ighborhood 1n
'1'12 S9S. l1nda Mayer
sedan fa r cond1t on runs
OU~ NEW
CEMENT BlOCK
Pomeroy Call for oppomtrnen t
sTORAGE BUILDING SPECIAl O&amp;J-; H-;;C"s-;-;,JF;brlcs S-a,-le- _--,·.- good $500 Pol belly stove $65
Phone 992 3097
THANKS TO MR AND MRS JOE
make room for new sh1pment AKC Bnttony Sponte! fi eld
tramed
femal
e
2
yr
$45
BISSELL AND SON KENNEY
4 room house m letarl Al so cool
of fbbr u June 7 thru 12 1 m•le
Phone '1'12 7605
FOR THEIR SERVICE AND CON
and furn lure Contoct Todd
'S of M ddleport State Rt 7
CERN FOR THE CEMETERY
Rhodes Rocme
FARMALL
M
tro
-cl
o-r
r
un
s
good
TRUSTEES ULAH SWAN LEONE THE Pa1nt Box Now Open Solem
new
po
nt
fo
rubber
$825
3 bedrm house bath cellar and
St Rutland Oh1o F1bergloss
HENSLEY MAE MCPEEK JOHN
Phone 992 S264
ld ngs almost 4 acres of
repair body works custom
HENSLEY DORSEllARKINS
- om lm oulbu
land sou h end of Rutland See
po ntrng Pnone 1-42 3053 or IN Dash 23 channel CB
B II Sm1th at Sm1tn s Body Shop
742 3008
mp x rod1o 8 track stereo Coli
or pi, one 742 3135 or 9~2 7706
'1'12 3965
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
1969 No ... a 350 ~ speed block
STATE OF OHIO
v nyi to p
chrorne
ms
DEPARTMENT OF
neoders rebu It engtne A 1
lOST
wn11e
tom
cot
1n
Rose
TRANSPORTATION
Strout~
cond111on $1 000 Also 1974
Valley reward answers to the
Columbus Oh o
Kawasaki
100
$275
Phone
name of Snow BaH Ph m
Mav ll I 971
m7258
Contract Sales Legal Copy
3495
NCOIPORATIO
No 76 47J
LOST wedd ng rrng engraved on 1973 Hondo 350 four cyhnder
UNIT P~ICE CONTRACT
like new less than 2700 m les
ns1de Su:s1e and John March
~
~OSOOOS I I2 1
and extras $895 or best offer
1 ,_.., Sealed proposals w II be
WANT TO LIVE IN
3 1915 at Syracuse Cemetery
Phone 9•9 2181
~ rece ved a t the off ce of the
Pine Grove Cemeterv or Beecn
THE COUNTRY'
-----·-f Dir ector of the Oh o Depart
Gro'o'e Cemetery Phone 9.49 3 spead stereo all wood cob net
i ment of Tran spo r tatton
Heres
a 4 br 2 balhs J yr
211D
mahogany excellent ploymg
Ill Columbus Ohro unti l 10 00
old
brtck
ranch on 5 a of
cond ton $50 coll992 2376
• AM
Oh o Sta ndard T me
losT -T~;-c~lbTack;nd wh te
rolling
ground
large bu It
~ Tuesday Jun e 22 1976 for
part Sromese Svracuse Asn One 9 m-;;nth -old H;r;ford bull
~
Improvements n
n
k
fchen
carpeted
base
and College St area Name Shu
can be rag1stered Phone 992 ""
;1
Athens Galllct Hock no
fu II y com pi e ted w 1th
Shu
phone
9'12
2837
7S37
111 Me1gs and VInton Count1 es
fireplace love ly open
,l Ohio on various sect ons of U
YOUNG robb.~ S2 00 Call 1614) countryside good place to
tf s
Routes 33 and 50 State
378 6261 Re,!d" ~I! _C:h_o_~·-- rase fam ly n Chester
• Routes 7 56 78 93 124a nd 160
~ by constructing guardra tl on
5 h p rotot Uer $60 Call Athens area $42 000 oo
N
bridge approaches and WANT to rent dock space on Ohto
(614) 592 2158 33 Townsend
• upgrad ng some shoulders and
stde of nver w tn electr c1ty
Place
804 W Mam
• s gn ng
Phone 9'12 606 t
Pro1ect Length - 0 feet or 0
Pomeroy
992 2298
1973 &lt;45o Prototype Kowasok
m le
matarcross good cond1t on
After Hours Ca II
~
work Length - 0 tee or 0
$650 Phone m 3843
.t~ m le
992 7133
•
The Ohro Departme nt of
ONE chest type deep freezer
FURNISHED
2
bedrm
apartment
• Transporta l on
h er eby
CONTACT
almost new wtth content $17.$
adults only n Middleport
"- not t1es all bidders that I w II
Lots Paulev
one
full
s1ze
mattress
and
box
~ aff1rmat1ve1y nsure that n
Phone 992 3B7•
sprtngs
$20
one
Smger
elec
Branch
Manager
~ any contract entered
nto
-·c.. ched
- .- a-nd un
Inc sew ng machrne w1th
• pursua nt
to
lh s
ad 3 AND 4 RM t'-urn
cab net $60 one desk $20 old
furmshed opts Pnone 992
vert sement
m norrty
bus .ness enterpr ses w II be
love $BOt porch bench $20 old
S.3•
afforded full opportunity to
3 pc set ot W1cker lawn fur
COU-NTRY
M;;b.le
Home
Pork
Rl
sub m t b ds n respon se to this
n ture $45 k tcnen table and
33 ten m les north of Pomeroy
nv1tat on and w111 not be
cha rs $25 new grden push
d1scr m n;!lt ed agarnst on the
Large lots wUh concret po11os
plow wttn attachments $20 10
s1dewalka runners and off
or
gallon fish oqu w11h hood $IS
1:1~~~~~~;~~1s1,?o;t: 1 ~,race
n conscolor
derat on
!_!ree!_Parking Phone 992 7479
22 Caliber stud dnver $20
rates for ONE bedroom apartments at
Phone 742 3122
th s
1
e been
VillAGE MANOR tn Mtddleporl
predeter
as requ red y
for $1 ()4 monthly plus else or
law and are se t forth 1n the b d
$130
rncludmg electnc LOWER
proposal
RATES FOR SENOR CITIZENS OLD furniture 1ce boxes brau
The date set for comp let on
A HONEY FOR THE
Convenient to shopprng on beds old wall telephones and
of h s work shall be set for th
MONEY - 135 acres
Th rd and M1ll Streets n Mrd
rn the b dd1ng proposa
parts or complete households
Min era ls some limber
dleport Brand new h gh quail
Each bidd er shall be
Wnte M D Mdler Rt 2
requ ired lo frle W1th h1s b1d a
Wa ter available
t No
ty apar tments See the Pomeroy Oh o Call992 77tiJ
cer11f ed check or cash er s
manager at R1'o'ers1de Aport
build~ng sl On blacktop Rd
check for an ammounl equa l
ments or call 992 3273 Fur CASH pard for all makes and
$1 6 600
; to five per cent of l'lts btd but
ntShed aportmenh also mode ls of mob le homes
PRIVATE - 7;, h ll y acres
• m no event mo re than frfty
Phone area code 614 423 9531
ova loble
thou sand dollars or a bond for
!great for boby farm)
-'-·-----ten per cent of h1s b1d payab le One bedrm and 2 bedrm fur $$Cash$$$ for 1unked auto Frye s
Home has 5 BR bath own
to the Orrec tor
Truck
Auto
Parts
Rut
land
n
shed
apartment
s
Phone
water
w softener N G hot
B1dders must apply on the
Phone 7.C2 2081
m 3129 or '1'12 5•3•
..,.~' or,ooe.rl!&gt;rm s for qual f ca l on
water heat carpeting &amp;
-----·-en days prior to th e
etc Storage bldg $15 000
space for rent n M1d DEALERS m junk cars scrap 1ron
"-·- --• for open ng btds In rR:~tLER
melals
Phone
'
1
'
1
2
S4~9
dlepo
rl
Phone
'
1
'
1
2
5·~
RT 1q3 - Close n Mob le
accordance w lh Chapt er 5525
w kitchen ut ll ty &amp; garage
SMALL f~r-;; ~hed op--;.rlm'-en_l_f"o.-r J'ENNY lvn~-;,...apo~ ;;1r, bed
Oh o Revised Code
Plans and speciflcet1ons are
added ONn &amp; etty water
s ngle male Pnane 992 5786
~~ m_apl.!!!one ~ 2~
on f le m the Depertmen t of - --- --~
Lan csca ped 11~ acres
Transportat ion and lhe office FURNISHED 2 room apartment
$6 300
of the 0 str ct De puty
12b Mu lberry Ave adults and
DETAILED
FOR
D1 rector
references Phone 992 2030
The Dtrecl or reserves the
COMFORT - 3 BR Wile
evenrngs
or
992
2167
ngh t tore rec t any and a ll brds
k1fchen Ieat 1n )
RICHARD D JACKS ON 2 Bed~; mobtle:~~h. ~o:m~·.-·-p:ch·-o·n- oRIDICULOUS
floor
s (carpeted)
DIRE CTOR
A mator breakthrough m
'1'122834
the T1r e Industry? A llq u1d
Full basement w
LARGE3 ;;;.- f.;mshed apt a r that seats cools and
Rev 8 l7 73
illy $18 000
condttlomng 12 m1les from balan ces I res effecltve ly
May 30 Jun e 6
earni ng
Pomeroy on Rt 33 Ava1lable Except onat
pot e nt1 a l
Ex clusive
June 15 Phonem 6161
01 s tr1bul~r sh pi
No
2 bedrm a-;;d I bedrm furn~shed franchiSe fe es Com pany
apartment Phone 992 2288 or patd advert1slngt Local
tra in ng and support A
m23•B
m n1mum
nitral
in
vestment of S7 500 For
further 1nforma on on th s
rid culou s offer
ca t
CO LL ECT Mr Rich 305
MOB11:E-h~m;-od~lts ontv Phone 628 :1 15 1 Beacon Chem1ca1
Corporation 1850 Lee
'1'12 SSJS
Winter
Pa r le
Rc•d
--- ~; - f~rn;hed apartment
Flanda 32789
evervthmg po1d ups to rs aport
ment no pets or cntldren
Adults only Phone 9'9:2 5810 or
can be sMn at 81111 E Main St
Pomeroy
AVAILABLE
ONE bedrm furn1shed apt 134 /r
IMMEDIATELY
M~l~erry Av_!_Phon e992 5436
IN POMEROY
Would you lokt to make I
SALESMAN wanted for
MIDDLEPORT
change but can t do a lhtnt
established buSiness In
untH you sell your preMtll
AREA
Pomeroy good st1rhng
property• THEN LIST
For aggressive 1ndtv1dual
salary must have good
WITH US where a const1nt
who 1s w1il1ng to work long
personality to meet the
procesSion of buyers will
hou rs for good prohh
bring
action
public and Wilt tra1n Send
Small ~nvestment requ~red
A CALL WILL BRING ALL
resume to P 0 Box 534
- S2 000 For deta~ls and
DETAILS
Pomeroy &lt;lh1o 4$769
1971 J D 350 8 lint house past
Interview call Mr Adams
Weslevan Holmess Church on
992 2259 or 992 2S6B
1 Joq 375 qB9J evenmgs
Rl 1&lt;3
5

P M

Day

Before

Wanted

-

Rea It,

~

... the American Way
Two hundred years ago the farmer produced
food enough for one In 1976 he produces
enough for 55 Providing cred1t to put lnnovattons to work has been the matn JOb of
your Federal Land Bank for nearly 60 years
Lets dtscuss your plans for the years ahead

WATER PROBLEMS DUE
CINCINNATI - Severe
water quahl} problems m the
Ohto Rtver Valley are ex
peeled th1s summer unless
present low flow cond1t10ns
change accordmg to the Ohto
R1ver Valley Water San
1tahon CommissiOn

228 Upper Rtver Road
P 0 Box 207, Galhpohs
Phone 446 0203
Clyde B Walker, Mgr

•
i

-

mower makes short
work of lawn work

~11:1&gt;. The Gravely All Gear Dn ve con verttble tractor At
tad11nen ts to mow plow cu lti va te bull doze spray
move sn ow compost and more W&lt;ilk or attach
su lky a nd d t1al wheels to r1de Let us g1ve
yo u a dcmonstmtllln and show you wh y
Grave ly IS ltke nobody else

TRUCK TARPS
light Weight Hemmed W1th Grommets S1zes 10x20 12x20 12xl310x34

8 &amp; 10 HP Models In Stock

TARP STRAPS-SIZES 9-15-21-30

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

512 E. MAIN

SALfS &amp;SERVICE

POMEROY, OHIO
Open Mon

Meigs Equipment
Pome10y

~UT~Atn

ofOfllt,lla.,

s l;rlr. Ollit

Fn 8 S

30 -

Sat

992·2975

a2

~GRAVELY

LIKE NOBODY ELSE.

IVIRIBODY

Shops the

WANT AD WAY

WANTED

Business Franchise

.

RNI Estate for Sale

Help Wanted

-

Stand a d e ec r c starter
k cks t over w th the turn
of a key 36 rota y

Ph 992 2176

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

BY JOHNC RICE
County Ext Agent Aclcullure

HANDS TIED FOR
lACK OF CASHJ

~

Business Services

ROOMS tota lly lu n shed on
l ncoln Hgts exce llent shape
needs pont Lorge k1t chen
Ius!
orge basement
$10 qoo

Phone 992 7648

LARGE bu ldong lo1 lol SUITABLE
for 3 or more homes hos c y

and $On tory $ewoge
Phone 992 5786
ROOMY 7 vr old one,. story wood
fram e two bedrm home
locat ed between Coolv lie and
Tuppen Pia ns One acre lot
two cor garage City water gas
heat
ha rdwood
tloo s
carpetd II\! ng room n ce v ew
$21 000 Phone 16")667 3519
6 spaCIOUS roo ns remade ed
1ice yard Phone 992 7394
water

CODNER'S CAMPERS

SALES&amp; RENTAL
Travel Tratlers

R

V~rgol B Sr Realtor
110 Mechamc Pumeroy 0
Phone 991 J325
INVESTMENT - Bt.smess
room down and 5 room apt

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Codner

TEAFORD

~h

Complete B11dal
Semce
frH Consultation

Ann's Bndal and
Anniversary Serv1ces

MIDDL EPORT - 7 Rm s
2 bat hs 2 corne r lots w th
vew of river A REAL
LOCA Tl ON $27 500
BARGAIN - Nice 3 Brs
bath large k t and liVIng
Fam tl y room &amp; a ll u ft llf e s
On ly $6 500
SOLID - 12 Rms on 2 1ot s
5 Brs 2 baths enormous
Mod k1t w1th cook &amp; bake
un its Many ext ras $25 000
4 ACRES - Near school
Hou se has been renovated
2 car garage and lots ol
p nes S29 500
CHESHIRE - Mod 6 rm
Pal lo

love ly k1f

ba se ment

and

J

LARGE OLO HOME - 4
Brs 1 ' baths 2 I v ng s
d n ng uf hty basemen I
with garage Large yard
$20 000
RUTLAND - J Brs balh
new gas FA furnace 2
porch es

baseme nt and
large lot $12 000

49 ACRES -

New 2 Br
old b1 rch k t
wrth stove &amp; ref rtge rator
Ca rpo rt /l. full basem ent
NEW LISTING - Mod 3
Brs 2 ba ths hea tol afor
! ~r ep l ace
nice k1 t lull
basement 7 ca r garage 2
por c hes
&amp; large lot
$34 000
NEW LISTING - 4 Brs
bath nat gas heal new kof
wtth stove &amp; refr igerator a t
Rutland $13 000
COME
TO
SUNNY
SOUTHERN OHIO
START A HAPPY AND
BETTER WAY OF LIFE
home 3 yrs

WILL do rool1 ng, construct on
p umbmg and hea l ng No tab
too Iorge or too small Phone
742 234B
EXCAVATING dozer backhoe
and d tcher Charles R Hat
f1eld Back Hoe Serv ce
Rutland Oh o Phone 742 2008
GREG S CB SALES located at Er
w n s Gulf Ser\IICe M1 d
dleporl Oh1o Phone 992
2438
EXCAVATING BACKHOES AND
DOZER LARGE AND SMAll
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED Bill
PULLINS PHONE '1'12 2&lt;78 DAY
OR NIGHT
SEPTIC Systems mstalled by
licensed 1nsta ler Shepard
Contractors ~!hone 742 2409
FOR !he best m w;; r- well dnll
mg Phone Lemley Dr Iling
Company 742 2003
H
-AUliNG Or ve:o; mater ol
and hmestone or grovel fo rm
hme Ph Jr Darst 742 2850
CARPENTER floormg ce lmg
ponehng Phone 992 2759

The Complete
Remodeltng Serv1ce
For You r Home

AI. TROMM CONST.

iiCu sc Ohio
Ph 992 1991
I 10

Rutland
7422328
All Work Guaranteed
Free Esllmates
5 S I mo

Sy

4-3~1

mo

COINS
CURRENCY
SUPPLIES
METAL
DETECTORS
Buy Sell or Trade

R&amp;J COINS
~ullond Oh~

10

WILKIN SON'S
c omplet e

Sma ll

1.,~ Ei
~::~
•
Lawn

1~

~

1~ ~ TillersMow ersIt ~' Rldlng

1.' 'Ill~

NE~

Troclors

lawn Bov mow (!rs
Pnmeer McCullough chain

Bolen s Mow ers

uws

Merry

Tiller s

Ml~dleporl

561 mo

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating
Racine Ohro
roof or old
House roof
ba rn shtngles bu1id up
patnhng elcctncal work
gutters &amp; downspouts
furnac es water hea t er s
water softners msta llcd &amp;
repaired Sewage
Call us al949 2182
new

re patred?

or 949 2203

3 1U I mo

Siding Center
Sales &amp; Servtce
l01310ih Av e
Parkersburg W Va
304 485 OJ81
614 423 6474
Aluminum Vmyl Steel
Conflnuou$ Gutter
Replacement
Wtndows and Doors
Free Esttmates
We recommend and
Sell Quality
5 9 76

llu$iness Semees

SALVAGE

~

MTO

St
Ohio 9911092
s 76 1 mo

498 Locust

Rottr IIIIIIMJ

HALLS

Env

~Repair

Mowers

742ZI31

Need

STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS

LARRY LAVENDER

mzm

$46 soo

Alummum Sid1ng,
Roofing, Gutters,
Pa1nUng and Repar

GUTTERS AWNINGS

Boon Tltonln

lu ll
lo ts

FREE ESTIMATES

WINDOWS
ALUM IN UM
S IDIN G SOFFITT

91 ~310!

br ck veneer ranc h home

992 2111

REP LACE MENT

Phone AnRI B~tk""""

of r ver

Noble Summit Rd
Middleport
PHONE 9t1 5724
s 3 t mo

Blown
Insula lion Servtces
FH1niCtiQAVcllilbte
Blown nto W&lt;HI "&gt; &amp; All cs

And Annlltll.IIJ

nat

POMEROY - 3 br home
wdh 1' 1 ba ths hot wa ter
heat basement &amp; mce vtew

D. BUMGARDNER

OPEN
Days and eve nings ncept
Tu es
and Wed or by
5 21 1 mo

up Brick fi le const

Above and below ground
pool k1ts for the do It
yourself man
All pool supplies avallablt,
too

LONG BOTTOM

conhct~ng

SWIMMING
POOLS

Radiator·,;;;:~

Service

RAIN80W RIDGE
( Bastian Aru l

ownh

gas &amp; city wa ter S13 500

EXPERIENCED

H1gh prtces for scrap
autos motor s and
other m eta ls Phone
992 2228 Monday thru
Friday 8 3, Saturday
8 12
5 16 1 mo

I

SLOAN'S
I CARPETING

Med1c a l Oxyg en
a nd Supplies
ARE AVAILABLE
AT

r-r;ee estimates on

peflng and

lWIN CllY

car

~nstaflallon

We II brmg samples to your

MACHlNE SHOP
t7 Cole Stree t
Pomeroy Ohio 45769
Telephone t6W 992 3768
We Deliver

'25 1 mo

JUNE SPECIAL
6 CANS OF RC

•1.00 +

T..
W1th any $4 00 purchase
and thiS ad Good through
6 30 76

OONELli'S PIZZA
Middleport Olllo
992 6167
6 1 16 I month

Busmess Serv1ces

O&amp;D TREE Tr mm ng 20 years ex BRADFORD Ausllone• Co 11
plete Serv ce Phone 9~9 2487
penence Insured fr ee
or 949 2000 Rocme Ohro Cril l
est mates Call 992 238-4 or
Bradford
(614) 698 7257 Albony
SEWING MACHINE Repa rs ser ELWOOD SOWERS REPAIR Sweepers toasters Irons al l
vrce all makes 9&lt;12 2284 The
small oppl onces lawn mowe
Fobrt c Shop
Pomeroy
next to Slate Hghwoy Garoge
Author Jed Smger Soles and
on Rout e 7 Phone (614) 985
Serv1ce We sharpen Sc•ssors
3B2S
EXCAVATING dozer loader and
back hoe work dump trucks REMODELING Plumbing healing
ond aU ty pes of gene ra l repair
and lo boys for tire w II hau l
Work guaranteed 20 yea ra ex
f II d1rt top soli l1m es tone and
penenul Ph ana CJ92 2409
gravel Coli Bob or Roger Jef
fe s day phone 992 708'il
mght phone m 3525 or 992
5232
SEPTIC TANKS c eoned Modern
Son1tot lon 992 3954 Of f/92
2428

home w1lh no obllgatlor
See how vou can really
save

Mike Young Manager
Sa les and In sfa llaflon
Rl J Pomeroy OhiO q5769
Phone day or night
614 991 '22 06

II I

ltiO

Junk Batteries Sl 25
Motor Cast Clean
S3 SO Per Hundred
Copper l5c
Car Bodtes
Scrap Iron

RIDERS SALVAGE
St Rf 12q Pomeroy Ohio
Phone 992 S46B
6 3 1 month

CongrstuiJJtions
GrsdiUitea

Let DONE LL I 5 mtkl tile
for yllur eltor
groduatton porty Cell uti I
HZ 6167 ond we wtll make
your party aomttlllnt to
remember Chock our
porty rtiH

phu

Donelll'a Plua
lddleport, Ohio
Opon 4 p m dillY
Cloucl1tl dly Monday•

PUBLIC SALE
SAT., JUNE 12, 1976
10:00 A.M.
The personal property estate of the tate Dorset Sm1th
will be so ld at hiS farm 1n Hemlock Grove Oh1o 33
west !rom Pomeroy Ohio 1 5 miles to Co Rd 25 06 to
Co Rd 20 told 33) 3 8 m1les to Co Rd 39then I 4 miles
to Hemlock Grove Turn left on T 162 ftrst house on
right
ANTIQUE OR COLL ECTilR ITEMS
Cupboard h1gh headboard bed dressers stands wood
bed smok ng stand rockers wa ll te lephone wood
fold ng bed 6 plank bottom chairs mise chairs wash
sland cane bottom rocker Iron bed drop leaf tabl e
chest of drawers Vlc1or ta lking machme 4 records
old stam ps vtewer atr horn marb le top dresser
sewlflg machine '• wood bed 2 old radios boflles
Aladdm lamp wall 9 il lgh,t oil lamps /l. shades egg
basket coff ee grinder stone (ugs I /l. 2 gal sausage
grinder 1 Donaghho and other slooe Jars corn shell er
&amp; pbber ha ll tree ptdure frames
HOUSEHOLD
G bson 16 frost tree refr gerator Fr grda rre e lectriC
range table &amp; 4 chars e lectnc roaster chairs cou ch
table &amp; 4 cha rrs electr iC roaster chairs couch 2 pc
flv lng room su1te ptano &amp; bench tables sweeper
rugs lamps portable rad o B&amp;W Motorola TV desk
linens pots pans dtshes Maytag wringer washer
boUle gas stove kerosine 3 burner stove 20 n fan
sm all krtchen appliances
EQUIPMENT
8N Ford lracfor 3 pf mowmg mach1ne 2- 17 m plows 3
pi l pf cu lt ivators 3 pi rofo hoe doubl e d1sk New
Idea manure spreader flat bottom wagon elevators
PTO Cyclone seeder w1th top extentton rotottller
ho rse ha rness Myers deep well pump mtsc hand
fools
CASH
LUNCH
CARNAHAN AUCTION
D Sm1th
L Donohue App
J Carnahan
9!9 2033
742 3048
9q9 2708
Not responsibl e for :"!Ccidents or loss of property

JUNE SIZZLERS!
! 1l 2 P1ece Livtng Room Su1te
{ 1l Sofa at bargatn pnce
! 2) 2 Pc Ltvtng Room Suttes

39 9S

25 00

{I) Reverstble Wtndow Fan
! 1) Hoover Up Sweeper, ltke new

69 95 ea
20 00
69 95

~----sPECML----~
NEW 3 Ptece Ltvmg Room Su1te
3 B1g Tables

+2

Lamps

$39995

12) Fthng Cabmets heavy duty
11 l New Set Bunk Beds
Several Bedroom Su1tes

59 95 ea
139 95
88 00 UD

New Bedding,
Factory Seconds
BoK Sprmg &amp; Matress, queen stze
$58 OOeach
Ktng S11e
69 95set&amp; up

�28 - The Sunday Times. St'llllnel , Suntl"y . .Jun&lt;' 6, 1976

-•
•

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRAN~POR TAllON
Colum bus ,u s, Ohio
Mav2LI976
,

Time Specials

tt's a mustang
STAMPEDE

Dealer
1975 Pontiac Ventura 4 dr .

• At Dan Thompson Ford - more and more people
; are buying : Mustangs , Pintos , Mav er icks.
, Granadas, Torinos , Elites. LTDs and Ford
~ Trucks, at lowest prices anywhere , and highest
: values , and since Milton Hood is back . combine~
· with Clifford Young on parts , they are finding
: best service. You get a good deal and good deal
: more at Dan Thompson Ford.

1974 Olds Cutlass Suprem e

sed .. 760, ve , auto .. P.S..
P B . air , baby blue Onl y

2 dr ., H.T., vinyl top. air,

8.811 miles 13995.00.

14295.00.

low

rni lage,

one

12895.00 .

1974 Ford Grand Torino 2

1974 Olds Toronado Custom
Th1 s i ~ one of the cleanest
car ; in t own , loaded
14895 .00 .

1974 Chev . lt4 Ton Pickup

dr ., H.T., auto .. P.S.. P. B..

tong bed, 4 speed, 2 ton e

viny l lop. extra nice one
owner Sli9S .OO .

paint. new
53895 .00.

GMC trade

.1973 CHEVROLET V8 ............................ 3945 .,._ _ _ _ _..__ _ _ _ _..__ _ _ _-1
1

Monte Carlo. 2 dr .. ha rd top. sharp mc1roon w ith whi t e top.

radio with tape player .

SOME GOOD OLDER MODELS

1974 PLYMOUTH DUSTER .................... .. 12995

1970
1067
1968
1972

6cyl ., 7 dr ., H T., power steering , r~ul o Iran '&gt; . l1k e ncw .

1974 MAVERICK 6 CYL........................ 12995

' 4dr . sedan, a'ir cond .. (lUI a t rrm ~, power stccrinQ, n1 cc.

Pontia c Grand Prix $1595 ,00
Chev . Station Wagon $595.00
$695.00
Ford F100 Pickup
1995.00
Bui c k Lesabr e 4 dr.

1969 LTO Ford 4 dr
1971 Chev . Nova 4 dr . 6
cyl.

$895.00
$1895.00

Buy your ned car from "Your Friendly Dealer" stop in and get a friendly deal f r om,
cewar d Ca lvert, J , D. Story , 1,\ill Nelson. We don't only want y:ou a s a custom er , we
wa nt you as a friend .

1

:1971 FORD V8 LTD .. .......................... 1795
7 dr . hard top, P. S., P B., A I , v 1n y I r oo t. beilu l it ul whi te c)nd

black vinyl roof. shrtrp .

'1975 FORD LTD V8 ........ ............. ........ ,14195
4 dr .. sedan . almost like the dn y it was so ld .

"Your Friendly Dealer"

1974 PINTO 4 DR................. .. ... ......... 2795
1

01e ca r.el .ul local

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

owner

1974 FORD V8 TORINO ........................ 12795

Pomeroy, Ohio Ph. 992·2174

4dr . sedan, A.T, P .S.. onecarelullocc'l l owner. ·

1n

every

~!!I.~,!.~G .. ~~~~~ ~

'1510

r----·=-·--·-·- -·- ----·--l

I

I

I1 -- --- ------------------- II
~!~t ~~~s~ o~~Ban~:~~~LINE VAN ............ 13495 I 75 Cadillac Coupe DeVille
1974 FORD TON PICKUP...... " ...... ..... 3495 I

Astra-

1974 FORD FOUR WHEEL DRIVE PICKUP.. .. . 3995

Shows good c.Jre

Bla ck with b lack cabr iol.et roo t , bla ck cloth interior ,
f ull power. fact . air. ful l ster eo, rad ia l fi res , 25 ,000
mi les .

1

1f2

01 e hal I lone, low mileage, one owner .

I

1969 DODGE 'h TON PICKUP.................. 11395 1

I
I
I
I

Like new l inish .

MANY MORE
SEE: Fred Blaettnar. Me lvin Little ,
or Pat Hill
Open Evenings Til6 : 00
Except Thurs. and Sat. Til5:00

I

II
461 S. 3rd
Middleport

1

II

$~4~~

'4295
71 Cadillac Eldorado Cp~.
Bl ue w ith bl ue V·roof. blue leather inte rior , f ull power,

'3695
69 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

Foru m 10,13.

7:()()--Christopher Closeup 3; Talk ing Hands 8.
7:3()-This Is The Li fe 3; Your Health 4; Jerry Falwell
B; Camera Three 10 ; Amazing Gr ace Bible Class

13.
7:5;-B iack Cameo 4 .
B:oo-Mormon Cha ir 3; Day of Discovery

4;

Rev iva l

Fires 6; Church Service 10; Rev . Homer Click 13.

B:30-0ral Roberts 3; Yours For The Asking 4: Gospel
Caravan 6; Day of Discovery 8; James Robison
Presents 10; Re• Humbard 13; Open Bible 15.
9: 00-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3; Hour of Power 4; Rex

Humbard 6; Rev . Leonard Repass B. Oral Roberts.
10; Across The Fence 15.
9:3()-Wha t The Bible Plainy Says 8; It is Written 10;
Christ Is The Answer 13; Insight 15 .
10:00-J im Fr~nklin 3; Church Se r ~ ice .4 ; Leroy
Jenk ins 6; Christian Cen'ter 8; Movi e " Green

I~

1
j

I

I

13; Soundstage 20: KUf'' Show 33.
12:()()--A BC News 6.
12 :3()-Bonanza 4; ABC News 13; News 20; Ja nak! 33.

/la r. e t. Wish 6; Focus on
Columbus 4, Re • Ca l n r1 E ~~rr~ 13.

11 :3cr-TV Chapel 1

(JY, 'er~nce A J , l!tsue'i and
k~· on ~ Lo•.o~t er Li ghthouse

1: J()-Peyton Place 4.

13; Happy Plat&lt; 1S

Garner

T~d

Pre:-!; ~

·: .J. ' 5 -,.
Ar ms.t r CA,'J ::

n ~ 1 fl q

· MONDAY, JUNE 7,1976

1n Blac k 8:

6:0()-Sum mer Semoster 10.
6: 1;-Farm Report 13..
6 23()-Good News 13.
6:3()-Colum bus Today 4; News 6; Summer Semester
e; Farmtlme 10.
6.4;-Morning Report 3.
6.50--Good Morning, West Virg inia 13.
6' s;.....C huck Whi te Reports 10;· Good Morning, Trl
Sta te 13.
7:()()--Today 3,4, 15; Good Morn ing, America 6, 13; CBS
News B; Bug s Bunny &amp; Fr le ndss 10.
7. 3()-Schoolles I0.
7:4;-Sesame St. 33.
a·oo--Lassie 6: Capt. Ka ngaroo B. tO.
8' 3()-B ig Valley 6.
9:()()--A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4; Lucy Show B; Mike
Douglas 10: Morn ing with D.J . 13; Phil Donahue 15;
.
.
Mister Rogers 33.
9 J()-Cros.-'1/its 3; One Life to Live 6: Tattleta les B;
Mike Douglas 13;' Vi lla Alegre 33.
to 1)()-o-(elebrity Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Edge of Night 6;
Pr ice is Right B, 10; Bit wi th Knit 25.
10 ·3()- High Roller&gt; 3,4, 15; Dinah 6; Lilias Yoga &amp; You
33.
1t ·()()--Wheel ol Fortune 3, 15; Wee kday 4; Gambit
e, 10; Farmer's Daughte r . 13; Lowell Thomas

1 :OQ-Amer ica I s J ·f:;. ';r~· U! .t V~mrr JfiiQIJe 6;
Christian Broadc.3~ T '"1? ~ - - ~ ~ '. '.l ."f: r:. NF L Ac
tl on ' 76 lJ , Wre st h rt9 ~ b
'I ~Jf!"' i. J~".l ; r n a l 1J
1:30-GreenAcre s J, t-n r;r r: ~ "· ·. ·//. 'l: ~ ~ -=,-,.-;,~ he
Nation 10; Spor't ;man ";. ;- r ~· ~~ ·:
2:0Q-Baseball War m to 1 ' -: Of: 1-·· o ."'"-LrJ. ~ ­

Point of View 6. W!lo l, ,t r '.: • ~ ·•

'·'~

·..

f

·; .

Onedin Line 33

2: 1()-Baseball 3,4
2:30-Amer ican Ang ler 6

Gdto• r. ~1; ')~",.:;

';.

r,. - ..; ,or

Topi cs 13..
t rrpo~~ ~ !J t t: 6.
To Be Announced 15. Riva ls o f Sher lod.. Holme!. ;3

3:00-lssues and Answer s- l l M i'.:rs.•on

3:3()-C hampionshlp Fishing 8; Mo'te 100 ·
4:oo--NFL Championsh ip Games i . NF L Cham
plonships B. Llckety Split·l3: World Charnpoon,h lp
of Mag ic 15; Le t' s Graw A Garden 33 .
4 :30-T enni s 6, 13; Broad cast Forum s 8; French Che f \

33.
4:4;-Green Acres 3; Scoreboard 4.
S : ~Movie " Rascals " 3; Window o f the World 4;

College for Ca nines 33.
5:3()-To Be Announced B; Guppies to Gropers 33.
6:0()-News 4; David Niven 's World 6; Sports
Challenge B; Burt Bac harach : Close To You 10:
Jacques Cousteau 13; Wally's Workshop 15; Walt
Street Week' 33.
6:3()-NBC News 3,4,15; News 6; WCH S.TV Repor t B;
World Press 33.
7:()()--World of Dis ney 3,4, 15; Jacques Cousteau 6; 60
Minutes 8, 10; America 13; Crockett 's Vic tory
Garden 20; Onedi n Li ne 33.
7:3()--Ant lques 20.
e:O()-E II eryQueen 3,4, 15; Six Million Dollar Man 6, 13;
Sonny &amp; Cher 8, 10; Nova 20,33.
9:0()-McCioud 3.4.15; Movie " XY B. Zee" 6,13 ; Koiak
B,10; Master piece Theatre 20.33 .
10:oo--B ronk 8,10; White House Transcripts 20 ;

Open Eves . Til6- Til5 p .m . Sat.
See one of these courteous salesmen :
Pete Burris
Lloyd, Mclaughlin
Marvin Keeba ugh

11 :3D-Star Trek 3; Bonanza 4;
Mov ie " Rose of
Washington Squar e" 8; Ha wa ii Five'O 10; Ironside

Is The Life 15.

6; Re)( Humbard a ,l 5 Re1 ~enry Mahan 13.

12:30-Meet The

" You ' ll Lik e OUr Qua l ity Way of Doing Business"

~ve n ing at Symphony 33.
11 :Oo-News 3,4,B, 10, 13, 15; FBI 6.
11:1;-C BS News 8,10; Don Kirs hner's Rock Concert
15.

11 :0()-Vegetable ~oup 3. Doctors on Cal l 4: Hot Fudge

12:00--At Iss ue l, N':Ht..
Answer s 6; Fac e T h~:

Pomeroy

1
1I

I

··- ·- · -·-·-·-·--··--·--·-·-·-·-·-·--··

Dolphin Street" 10; J immy Swaggart 13 ; Faith For
Today 15.
10 :3()-Big Blue Marb le 3. Garner Ted Armstrong 4 ;
Jimmy Swaggart 6, Rev Robert Schule r e;
T ni ~

Fi';.d~~::~ 0:vsa~t::\~

\

Remembers JJ .

11 3()-Hol lywood Squares 3,4,15 : Hoppy Days 13 ; Love
ot Lite e. 10; Biography 33.
11 :s;..... Take Kerr 8; Dan Imel's World 10.
12:0()-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3, 15: Let 's Make a
Deal 13; Bob Braun 4; News 6,e,10; Sesa me St. 33.
12 ·3()-Take My Advice 3,15 ; All My Children 6,13;
Search for to m orrow 8, 10.
12 · 55- NBC News 3, 15.
I 0()-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donahue B;
Young B. Ihe Restless 10; Not For Women On iy 15;
Elee. Co . 33.
1:3()-Days ot Our Lives 3,4, 15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6, 13;
As Tl1e World Turns B, lo1; Earthkeeplng 33.
2:0()-$20,000 Pyramid 6.13: It's About Time 33 .

Don 't ask for cr iticism today
from a friend who always tells It
l ike it is. un less you're
prepared to face the truth.

.4 wh . drive , l ike new interior, less t han 12,000 miles,

soo thing effect on others.

TAURUS (Aprtt 20-May 20)
Yo u may find someone willing

to help you wrap up an old tas,k

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22)
You function bes t as the power
behind the throne today - and
you enjoy it! EKposure will
le ssen yo u r c hances o f
success.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23· Dtc.
21) A group you' re affili ated
with may ask you to take on
added responsibilities today.
Don't shirk. Th ey really need

your help.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jin.
19) Chal lenge stimulate s you
today to the poin t where . you

HONDA

BILL

:• Hf.lJ!!!A

JOHNSON:

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO'S LARGEST QIRYSI.IR.PLYMOUTH DEALIR

~

ALL 1975
MODELS ON
SALE

350 v.a, automatic, P. steering &amp; brakes.

W· W t ires, wh .
cover s, step bumper, ch rome mirrors, m ldgs., AM
radio , clean sha.rp truck .

1974 FORD Fl00 ..................... ~~-~5
B' Styleslde, green iinish, good tir es, R. bumper ,
chrome gri lls &amp; fils bumper, 6 cyl. &amp; std. trans.

Smith Honda Sales

1973 CHEVROLET C10 ........... .. $2895

KANAGA, OHIO

v.a,

1975 MONTE CARLD .
A ir , landau top. skyroof. P . w !n&lt;1ows.

1975
PACER X
Air, 6900 miles, loaded.
1975 PONTIAC LeMANNS

3 pt . Cpe., air, vinyl top.

1974
OODGE DART C~E.
22.000 mites, vinyl top, p, steenng.
1974 HORNET 2 DR.

Hatchbilck, auto,. P. steering , 19,000 miles.

1974 MAVERICK 4 DR.

Auto ., P. stee ri ng, 25,000 m iles .

·~-------------------..*

automatic, power st eering &amp; brakes, good t ires , step
bumper, radio , c ustom trim &amp; mirrors.

1974 BUICK
CENTURY 4 DR.
P.
Ai r, aut o.,

102" C. A.. V-B, 5 speed, te,soo 2 speed. R. a Kie, 900 tires,
solid ca b, color w h i~.

'75 CHEV. NOVA

YOUR INVITATION TO ADVENTURE

1973
OLDS TORONAOO
Air , power .wi ndows, sea ts. vinyl top.

2 dr . Coupe, red fin ish with black Interior.
economical 6 cycle engine, auto. trans .•. P.

'Touring AM ER ICA is a call to adventure
few can resist . When you set out to explore
. . . to get away from it all take along
TRAVEL EQUIPMENT CORPORATION's
travel companion that has an eye for space.
a feel for family budge ts and a talen t for
depe ndable pe rformance - the TEC MINI ·
motorhome !

steering. w-s·w tires. Only 5,000 act. miles.
Extra new cond .

'3395

:;

72 CHRYSLER 4 DR. SEDAN

il

Air, P.S .. P.B.

•

•~

'1595

OVER 50 LATE CLEAN CUT MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM

~

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

t

1639 EASTERN AVENUE

1973 BUICK REGAL 2 DR HT
1972
CADIUAC DeVILlE
Dr . Hdtp., air, whi le, bla ck vi nyl top .
1971
VOLKS 411 ST. WAG.
Auto ., radio, blue.
'Air ~ tape. chrome wheels.

Eastern Ave. ·

Gallipolis,

GALLIPOLIS 446-3273 •

c!'::~: !::p:::::·~::::~.

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

&amp; BANK FINANCING

or\
In 1933,
this day
a motion
in history
picture
:
drive-in theater opened in
Camden, N.J .. the first of its
kind .
In 1944, hundreds of thousands of Allied lroops started
crossing the English Channel
in the " D-Day" invasion of
Na~i-occupied Europe. The
greatest invasion in history
was supported by thousands
of planes and ships.
In 1972, a coal mine
explosion in
Rhodesia
trapped
464
miners
underground and more than
425 of them died .

2: 3()-Doctors 3,4, 15; Break the Bank 6,13; Guiding
Light e, 10; Firing Line 33.
3:()()--Another World 3,4,15; General Hospltal6 ,13; All
tn The Fami ly e,10; Woman 20.
3:30-Cne Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Match
Game e, 10; Consumer Survival Kit 20 ; World Press
33.
.
4:QO-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
MaK B. Nimble 6; Mickey Mouse Club e; Mister
Roge&lt;S 20,33; Movie " The Gir l Can 't Help It " 10;
Dinah 13 .
4:3()-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Andy Griffith e;
Sesa me St. 20,33; Flintstones 15.
5:Q0-6onanza 3; Partridge Family e; Missi on : lm .
possible 15.
5:30-Adam-12 4; News 6; Family Affair e; Elec Co .
20,33; Ada m-12 13.
6:()()--News 3,4,B, 10, 13, 15 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
. 6:3o-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News e. 10 ; Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
Carrascolendas 33.
7:QO-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Buck Owens e; News 10; Candid Camera
13; Family Affair 15; Teaching Children to Read
20; Resou rceful West Virgin ia 33.
7:3()--That Good Ole Nashville Musi c 3; Bobby Vlntoo
. 4; Space: 19996; Price is R!ght e; Evening Edition
with Martin Agronsky 20; High Road to Adventure
10; To Tell the Truth 13; Friends of Man 15 ; Tennl~
for Everyone 33.
B:oo--Bobby Vinton 3; Viva Valdez 13 ; John Davidson
4,15; Gunsmoke B; U.S.A.: Peop le &amp; Pol itics 20.33;
Rhoda 10.'
e :J()-We Think You Should Know 3; Baseball 6;
Phyllis 10; Movie "Cool Hand Luke" 13 .
9:QO-Joe Forrester 3,4,15; !Ill. In The Fa mily e,10;
Wellsprings 33 ; Man Who Played Sprock 20
9:3()-Ma ude e, 10.
··
10 :0()-Jigsaw John 3,4, 15; Medical Center 8; Herb
Alpert &amp; the Tiiuana Brass 10; News 20: Bt-Ways
33.
10:3()-Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20; Catch·33 33.
10:4;-Testlmony Ti me Today 9.
11:0()-News 3,4.6,e,t10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :3()-Johnny Cfrson 3,4, 15; World Championship of
Tr ivia 6, 13; Movie " Mayert lng" B; Movie "The
Gatling Gun" 10; Janak l 33 .
1:QO-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
Channel Five
9 a.m. 700 Club lei
' 7 p.m. High and Wild (c)
7:30 - Musi c Connect lion (c)
B:O()-Cable Journa l (c)
9:0()-Washington Debates (c)
10 :0()-700.Ciub lei

Other TEC Chevrolet Conversion Vans and
' ' The Swing Turtle" by Turtle Top in stock
now.

*
*

Close-out on our 3 remaining NEW
1975 Rabbits and 1 '7S' Rabbit
demonstrator. We will show you our
actua I cost on these cars and will
accept trade-ins. ·

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
/'&gt;'\
l.v-'

0

USED CAR SPECIALS
C~~m ?u~~~agon.
G~~Co~~~~?.~~~. S ,air

These cars are tremendous
bargains. We are not only selling
these cars near cost, but the 76's had
a substantial price increase c&gt;Ver
these cars as well.

Pomeroy

·=;;;v.~;~~~~;~~~;;;~~
~OMOTE

0

WILL CONTNLJE-,!

ACIUAL .
COST

NEW - 4-Wbeel Drive and Luv Trucks In Stock
We have the right deal for you
Reliable Service after the deal

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. Til8

l APIE5 ANO G&amp; N TLEM6~ OF TH~
f'!lES5 •. OUR TV OE-MON5Tfo::Art0N

VOLI&lt;SWAGEN

$895

70 lATE MODEL CARS

June 6. 1976

SEE THIS ON OUR LOT

$1395
'995 $695

$1895

1970
PONTIAC 4 DR.
Catalina, auto ., P. sleerlno .
1970 CHEVEu.E
2 Dr . Hdtp ., 4 speed, black .

o.

'*********•*****~*****~•*********************~

$3
$2495
$2495
$2495
$2995
$36951$3195
$3495 $2995
$3395

4

WOOD MOTOR SALES

£GALLIPOLIS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH i .._______......

Your
\l}'Birthday
Important co n tac t s wil l be
developed this coming year
th ro u g h yo ur socia l tn volvements. You'll dO par·
ticular ly well with th ose older
than your self .
, I N~W S PAPt: R ENTERPRI SE ASSN . I

steerin g, briikes.

1974
BUICK .CENTURY 2 DR. HT
Air, vinyl lop, sport wheels.

1973 INTERNATIONAL 1600 .... $3895

A

The Almanac
United Press lnternallunal
Today is Sunda y, June 6,
the !58th day of 1976 with 208
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) They' ll to follow .
take notice today H you voice
The moon· is between its
an opin~on during a d iscussion.
first
quarter and full pha!!e.
Others se n se you 're no t given
The
morning stars are
to making id le remar ks .
Mercury,
Venus
and
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Stpl. 22) It
Jupiter.
you expect an old debt to be
The evening stars are Mars
repaid , call the person aside
today and give him a gentle and Sa turn.
reminder . O th erw ise, it just
Those born on this date are
won't happen .
under llle sign of Gemini.
Ainerican patriot Nathan
LIBRA (Sopt. 23 ,0cl . 23)
Stand up and be counted it Hale was born June 6, 1755.

any thing th rea te ns an o ld
fri'e nd
to d ay.
Your
realati onship has been a good
o.ne·. Your lo ya lt y wi l l
stren gthen it.

,..--~~-----.,

SPECIALI

1974 CHEV. C10 CHEYENNE ..... s3495

8' F leet si de, ,wh. over red , clea n inter ior, 350

•.

SPRING CLEARANCE

wh . over si lver. 250 v.e, automatic, power steering 8.
brakes , chrome mldgs ., bumper, e)Ct erior mirrors,
radio. See it now.

You are especia lly determined
tpday and wil l accomplish what
yoU set out to do. Surpri singly,
your best e ffOrts wi ll go to help'
Someone else.

Yo u k n ow how to get rea l
mileage out of a dollar today
-~n d co uld piCk up so me good
bargain s. This Is parlic-ularly
true of household Items.

(1) Coupe DeVille
(1) Eldorado (1) Sedan DeVille

m 5342 • GMC

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Fob. 19)

CANCER (Juno 21 -July 22)

I
1
I
I
I KARR &amp;VAN ZANDl I
I
I

presence will hav e a ve ry

Although you'll be in a
gregari ous mood today, you 'll
also want to be around serious
thi·nke rs
to exc hange
worthwh ile ideas.

Television Log
SUNDAY , JUNE 6, 1976
6:0()-This Is The Ute 10.
.
6:3()-Jerry Falwel l 4; Viewpoint 8; Public Policy

Normally . wherever you go yo u
generate action. Today your

GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20)

NOW

lac lory air and T&amp; T whee l.

For Sunday, Juno 6, 1178
ARIES (March 21·Aprt1 11)

you·ve been putting off . It will
be a welcom e r9l ief.

Whi.te , bl_ue viny l t op, blue cloth inter ior: fu ll Power
equ •p., a•r , T&amp; T wheel, fu l l ster eo, rad ia l ti res, .one
owner

I
I

Phone
992-2196

'7600
73 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

might volunteer to take on
things others run away from .
What's more, you'll do it!

1975 CHEV. BLAZER K-5 ....... }5295

PISCES (Ftb. 20-March 20)

1

Newsmaker '76 l3 ;

Sea led proposals will be
received ar the off ice of the
Dir ector of the OhiO Depart
ment o t Transporta t ion,
Co lumbus, Ohio , until 10 : 00.
AM . , Ohio Standard Time,
Tuesday , June IS, 1976, for
im pro vemen ts in :
Gallia County, on various
sec tions
GAL State Route
553 , in the Village of Crown
Citv . by resurfacing with
asphalt concrete .
Pavemen t Width - Varies .
Proiect and Work L ength 12 ,303 feet or 2.33 mites .
" The dale set f or compte lion
ot this work shall be as set
forth in the bidding proposal."
· Ea c h bi~der
Sha ll be
requi red to file '&gt;Vilh his bid a
ce r ti fi ed ct"leck or cashie r 's
check tor an amount e t~u" l to
fiv e per cen t of hi s bid; bu t In
no event more than f ifty
tt'lousand do II a rs , or a bond tor
ten p ercen t of his bid, payable
to the D irec tor .
Bidd er s must apply , an tht;&gt;
proper forms , for quali fi catlon
at l east te n days prior to the
date set for opening bids in
accordance wit h Chap t er 5525
Ohio Revised Code,
Plans and speci f ic ations are
on l ite in the Department of
Tr ansportation and the off ice
of
the
D i strict
D epu ty
D irector .
Th e Director reserves the
r ig ht to · reject any and a iL
bids .
RICHARD D. JACKSO N
. D IRECTOR
Rev . 8 17 73

'N{l.y .

Station Wa gon , auto . trans , show s good cMe.

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLER·
PLYMOUTH

No . 76 · 4l8
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

May 30 . June 6

1972 FORD LTD 4 DR. HT.. ................... 11995
Brougham , e&gt;:ceptiOr'lal

....-****************************************~

Confr,acl Sales Legal Copy

1974
Ford
Maverick
Grabber auto .. real good
little ca r . Priced rig ht

owner

29- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sundav. June 6, 1976

$2650
$2795

P. B.. P.S.. air .........................

ME TO

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

P~~IDENf!

''Jro·F~ioreC
_,

?.~po~~~!r~a~~~cyl.,

P.S .. P.B. .................... . ...

~2495 .

~.~a~t~~. ~P.~~~! ....... ................$2895

HAHAHAHAHA!~

I WONDER IF I
Tf\'ADE HER
TO CHARLIE FINlE'(...

?o~. v~~P~~~~r~~Y

COULD

.
1. New '75' Rabbit 2 dr ., blue, radio,
leatherette int., r . defogger, radial tires, vc. frt. disc .brakes - $150 over cost.

0
D

$AVING$

2. New '75' Rabbit 2 dr ., yellow, a-c, tinted
glass, leatherette int., r. defogger, radial·
tires, v -c, frl. disc brakes. $150 over cost.
3. New '75' Rabbit 4 dr., yellow, v-c,
leatherette int., r . defogger , radio, radial
tires, frt. disc brakes. $150 over cost .

''

CJ-5s

1974 Red, black top , 6 cyl., 1 BBL., tach, roll
bar , draw bar , loc·outs, new tires, radio,
rear seat. wheel lip ext.
1973 Green. black top . 6 cyl., 1 BBL. draw
bar , rear seat.

MINT (OND.
1971 Island Blue, New black top, V-6, roll
bar. draw bar , radio, loc·o· matics.

:
'
l
I

•

4. Demo '75' Ra.b bit 2 dr., green, r . defogger,
v-c. radial tires, front disc brakes. Actual
cost. ·
·

~

•;
tt

TO GIVE AWAY- Melg•' County

-~=-~~~~!.'_6-'.~.!'~m~---- ·--

CARROLL NORRIS
DODGE

A.K.C. Doberman Pinscher puppies, 6 w"ks old. Shots and

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Humane Society has one male
dog , medium sl:~e, about 10
months old, 2 kittens about 8
months old , on' black , one
black and white. Just shots and
worming will be furn ished . Call

1973 Commando, butterscotch gold &amp; white,
auto. , P.S., P . B., Lock-outs , 6 cyl., radio .

4 WD

Family Yard Sole, June 7

and 8 at Dennie Hill retideni::e,
Racine, Ohio. pass Sou thern
High School on Rout e 124.
1
Children's clothes. of all sizes.
~ a.dspreods, curtains, distle~
C and several other items . 9:00

JEEP DEALERSHIP
842Washlngton Awe.

Chillicothe, Ohio CM411

774-1111

·-----------------·
- -·
2 Black Poodle puppies, male,
$40. One Slberiq n Husky, male.

tll14100.
~v'A'Ros~;; ~?F'a~iivv~.:d-s~;;;,,

r
"'

Phone992·7185 .

3 locations. June 5th and 6th .
Oliver Bailey, Paul Life and
B'Jan Harris ,· Success Rd. 1 Co,

'
0 R . 46.
··--------··.
,.. Family Yard Sole,
:

CHILLICOTHE JEEP, INC.

wormed. Call (614) 533-0761 .

j

:
;
:

• . ... .. .. . ....... .....

Upper Rt, 7, Gallipolis, Ph. 446-9800

WAGONS

1974 Cherokee "S", metal I ic green , auto .,
P.S., P. B.• 360 V-8, carpeting , bucket seats,
cast " mag" whee ls , 18.000 actual miles.

$2250
?rc~up~~~~ 8~ .!~.~ ............................. $2295

~

1970 Island Blue, metal cab, V-6, roll bar,
.draw bar, loc-outs .

1974 Wagoneer Custom. yellow, Loaded,
power tailgate, new tires, carpet, A-C. P. S.,
P. B., auto ., 360 V-8 , roof rack.

~~up~~~~~~. :~}~~"'''

...........................
'' Don Watts Volkswagen
I

•

~1995

USED TRUtK SPECIALS

..

:•

sta nd shift, 4cyl. ............... . ........ .

~!. ~~~.~~~~~~~... . . . ........... . . ..:......$895

I

.,
•

•

1974 Green -black top, V-8, 304, 4 BBL.
headers, roll bar. draw bar, A-T, tires.

~~Co~~o~~~a~.

$3250

tow mlteage, one owner. ..............

Olds Cutla ss Svpreme,
31 .000 miles , $3300. ex cellent
co ndition . Phone (6lol } 8.43·

..

Tuppers
Plains in the Arbaugh AdditiOn,
June 7, 8ond91rom9a.m. ti11 4
p.m. For information phone

: (614) 667·3933.
:FIVE· F-;,;iiy ·y~;d S~1~.

1973

June 1 to
• II , clot"lng, dishes, furniture ,
I' crafts . 11 mile southeast of Hor·
:.. rison~ille , Ohio · on Stale Rt .
143, 8to6p .m.

350 engine with
"~~""' · wHI sacrifice at $1200.

..

Phone 843·2624.
·~ · ·· - .

·--· . •···

·-

-· ..

196.4 Catalina 4 dr., floor , 3
speed , $95 or best offer. Call
anyllme' Sunday and after 6
p .m. on weekdays . Phone
2958 .

m.

1956 Chev y Belair , 53,00 actual
miiA s. Phone ~·6092 .

2621.
1969 VW bug, $550. Phone 992.
1797 .
1970 Dodge Poloro , 4 dr ., a.c.,
p.1., p.b., a .f . Phonf!992·~413 .

2 power ta ke-off units .for Dodge
truck , $250. Right and left.
Phone 992-51 11 .
1969 Roadrunner, very good con di t ion . Ph01lC (6t 4) 367 7153 .

I

-~~~~m~~~~:

1~68

1975 Musta ng II , 2 dr . H.T.. 14 ,500
miles. exc. cond., $3350,
negotiable, good financing

Skyline trailer , 12Jt:60, ond
land. 3 bedrm . very good condi ·
lion, $8,000. Phone 992-5-491
ar 992·5972.

1972 Ford one-hall ton pi ckup ,

1969 Schultz mobile homes, 12k·
60, good cpndllion. Phone

V·8, automatic , radio, $500.
May be seen after 5 p.m . of

mobile home with 8)(pando.
Por tly furnished, Phone 992·

1973 Mon te Carlo, silver. low
mileage, e.cce llent co ndition .

1970 Commun ity Caravan, 12x52,
2 bedrm ., good condition,

available. Ph. 992-7101.

------

$1350 . Call (~14) 37e-.6349.
742-3018.
•
J ·-~--·----- ...... - ..... -.-------~
1968 Chevello Motlbu, 2 dr . h.l ., 1966 12x65 Vindale. 3 bodrm.
Che.,er. Catl(614) 985-3596.
Phone 992-2035 or 992-2971.

2821 or 992·2437.

- - - ....

Phone (6 14) 9B5-4294.

-

�28 - The Sunday Times. St'llllnel , Suntl"y . .Jun&lt;' 6, 1976

-•
•

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRAN~POR TAllON
Colum bus ,u s, Ohio
Mav2LI976
,

Time Specials

tt's a mustang
STAMPEDE

Dealer
1975 Pontiac Ventura 4 dr .

• At Dan Thompson Ford - more and more people
; are buying : Mustangs , Pintos , Mav er icks.
, Granadas, Torinos , Elites. LTDs and Ford
~ Trucks, at lowest prices anywhere , and highest
: values , and since Milton Hood is back . combine~
· with Clifford Young on parts , they are finding
: best service. You get a good deal and good deal
: more at Dan Thompson Ford.

1974 Olds Cutlass Suprem e

sed .. 760, ve , auto .. P.S..
P B . air , baby blue Onl y

2 dr ., H.T., vinyl top. air,

8.811 miles 13995.00.

14295.00.

low

rni lage,

one

12895.00 .

1974 Ford Grand Torino 2

1974 Olds Toronado Custom
Th1 s i ~ one of the cleanest
car ; in t own , loaded
14895 .00 .

1974 Chev . lt4 Ton Pickup

dr ., H.T., auto .. P.S.. P. B..

tong bed, 4 speed, 2 ton e

viny l lop. extra nice one
owner Sli9S .OO .

paint. new
53895 .00.

GMC trade

.1973 CHEVROLET V8 ............................ 3945 .,._ _ _ _ _..__ _ _ _ _..__ _ _ _-1
1

Monte Carlo. 2 dr .. ha rd top. sharp mc1roon w ith whi t e top.

radio with tape player .

SOME GOOD OLDER MODELS

1974 PLYMOUTH DUSTER .................... .. 12995

1970
1067
1968
1972

6cyl ., 7 dr ., H T., power steering , r~ul o Iran '&gt; . l1k e ncw .

1974 MAVERICK 6 CYL........................ 12995

' 4dr . sedan, a'ir cond .. (lUI a t rrm ~, power stccrinQ, n1 cc.

Pontia c Grand Prix $1595 ,00
Chev . Station Wagon $595.00
$695.00
Ford F100 Pickup
1995.00
Bui c k Lesabr e 4 dr.

1969 LTO Ford 4 dr
1971 Chev . Nova 4 dr . 6
cyl.

$895.00
$1895.00

Buy your ned car from "Your Friendly Dealer" stop in and get a friendly deal f r om,
cewar d Ca lvert, J , D. Story , 1,\ill Nelson. We don't only want y:ou a s a custom er , we
wa nt you as a friend .

1

:1971 FORD V8 LTD .. .......................... 1795
7 dr . hard top, P. S., P B., A I , v 1n y I r oo t. beilu l it ul whi te c)nd

black vinyl roof. shrtrp .

'1975 FORD LTD V8 ........ ............. ........ ,14195
4 dr .. sedan . almost like the dn y it was so ld .

"Your Friendly Dealer"

1974 PINTO 4 DR................. .. ... ......... 2795
1

01e ca r.el .ul local

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

owner

1974 FORD V8 TORINO ........................ 12795

Pomeroy, Ohio Ph. 992·2174

4dr . sedan, A.T, P .S.. onecarelullocc'l l owner. ·

1n

every

~!!I.~,!.~G .. ~~~~~ ~

'1510

r----·=-·--·-·- -·- ----·--l

I

I

I1 -- --- ------------------- II
~!~t ~~~s~ o~~Ban~:~~~LINE VAN ............ 13495 I 75 Cadillac Coupe DeVille
1974 FORD TON PICKUP...... " ...... ..... 3495 I

Astra-

1974 FORD FOUR WHEEL DRIVE PICKUP.. .. . 3995

Shows good c.Jre

Bla ck with b lack cabr iol.et roo t , bla ck cloth interior ,
f ull power. fact . air. ful l ster eo, rad ia l fi res , 25 ,000
mi les .

1

1f2

01 e hal I lone, low mileage, one owner .

I

1969 DODGE 'h TON PICKUP.................. 11395 1

I
I
I
I

Like new l inish .

MANY MORE
SEE: Fred Blaettnar. Me lvin Little ,
or Pat Hill
Open Evenings Til6 : 00
Except Thurs. and Sat. Til5:00

I

II
461 S. 3rd
Middleport

1

II

$~4~~

'4295
71 Cadillac Eldorado Cp~.
Bl ue w ith bl ue V·roof. blue leather inte rior , f ull power,

'3695
69 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

Foru m 10,13.

7:()()--Christopher Closeup 3; Talk ing Hands 8.
7:3()-This Is The Li fe 3; Your Health 4; Jerry Falwell
B; Camera Three 10 ; Amazing Gr ace Bible Class

13.
7:5;-B iack Cameo 4 .
B:oo-Mormon Cha ir 3; Day of Discovery

4;

Rev iva l

Fires 6; Church Service 10; Rev . Homer Click 13.

B:30-0ral Roberts 3; Yours For The Asking 4: Gospel
Caravan 6; Day of Discovery 8; James Robison
Presents 10; Re• Humbard 13; Open Bible 15.
9: 00-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3; Hour of Power 4; Rex

Humbard 6; Rev . Leonard Repass B. Oral Roberts.
10; Across The Fence 15.
9:3()-Wha t The Bible Plainy Says 8; It is Written 10;
Christ Is The Answer 13; Insight 15 .
10:00-J im Fr~nklin 3; Church Se r ~ ice .4 ; Leroy
Jenk ins 6; Christian Cen'ter 8; Movi e " Green

I~

1
j

I

I

13; Soundstage 20: KUf'' Show 33.
12:()()--A BC News 6.
12 :3()-Bonanza 4; ABC News 13; News 20; Ja nak! 33.

/la r. e t. Wish 6; Focus on
Columbus 4, Re • Ca l n r1 E ~~rr~ 13.

11 :3cr-TV Chapel 1

(JY, 'er~nce A J , l!tsue'i and
k~· on ~ Lo•.o~t er Li ghthouse

1: J()-Peyton Place 4.

13; Happy Plat&lt; 1S

Garner

T~d

Pre:-!; ~

·: .J. ' 5 -,.
Ar ms.t r CA,'J ::

n ~ 1 fl q

· MONDAY, JUNE 7,1976

1n Blac k 8:

6:0()-Sum mer Semoster 10.
6: 1;-Farm Report 13..
6 23()-Good News 13.
6:3()-Colum bus Today 4; News 6; Summer Semester
e; Farmtlme 10.
6.4;-Morning Report 3.
6.50--Good Morning, West Virg inia 13.
6' s;.....C huck Whi te Reports 10;· Good Morning, Trl
Sta te 13.
7:()()--Today 3,4, 15; Good Morn ing, America 6, 13; CBS
News B; Bug s Bunny &amp; Fr le ndss 10.
7. 3()-Schoolles I0.
7:4;-Sesame St. 33.
a·oo--Lassie 6: Capt. Ka ngaroo B. tO.
8' 3()-B ig Valley 6.
9:()()--A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4; Lucy Show B; Mike
Douglas 10: Morn ing with D.J . 13; Phil Donahue 15;
.
.
Mister Rogers 33.
9 J()-Cros.-'1/its 3; One Life to Live 6: Tattleta les B;
Mike Douglas 13;' Vi lla Alegre 33.
to 1)()-o-(elebrity Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Edge of Night 6;
Pr ice is Right B, 10; Bit wi th Knit 25.
10 ·3()- High Roller&gt; 3,4, 15; Dinah 6; Lilias Yoga &amp; You
33.
1t ·()()--Wheel ol Fortune 3, 15; Wee kday 4; Gambit
e, 10; Farmer's Daughte r . 13; Lowell Thomas

1 :OQ-Amer ica I s J ·f:;. ';r~· U! .t V~mrr JfiiQIJe 6;
Christian Broadc.3~ T '"1? ~ - - ~ ~ '. '.l ."f: r:. NF L Ac
tl on ' 76 lJ , Wre st h rt9 ~ b
'I ~Jf!"' i. J~".l ; r n a l 1J
1:30-GreenAcre s J, t-n r;r r: ~ "· ·. ·//. 'l: ~ ~ -=,-,.-;,~ he
Nation 10; Spor't ;man ";. ;- r ~· ~~ ·:
2:0Q-Baseball War m to 1 ' -: Of: 1-·· o ."'"-LrJ. ~ ­

Point of View 6. W!lo l, ,t r '.: • ~ ·•

'·'~

·..

f

·; .

Onedin Line 33

2: 1()-Baseball 3,4
2:30-Amer ican Ang ler 6

Gdto• r. ~1; ')~",.:;

';.

r,. - ..; ,or

Topi cs 13..
t rrpo~~ ~ !J t t: 6.
To Be Announced 15. Riva ls o f Sher lod.. Holme!. ;3

3:00-lssues and Answer s- l l M i'.:rs.•on

3:3()-C hampionshlp Fishing 8; Mo'te 100 ·
4:oo--NFL Championsh ip Games i . NF L Cham
plonships B. Llckety Split·l3: World Charnpoon,h lp
of Mag ic 15; Le t' s Graw A Garden 33 .
4 :30-T enni s 6, 13; Broad cast Forum s 8; French Che f \

33.
4:4;-Green Acres 3; Scoreboard 4.
S : ~Movie " Rascals " 3; Window o f the World 4;

College for Ca nines 33.
5:3()-To Be Announced B; Guppies to Gropers 33.
6:0()-News 4; David Niven 's World 6; Sports
Challenge B; Burt Bac harach : Close To You 10:
Jacques Cousteau 13; Wally's Workshop 15; Walt
Street Week' 33.
6:3()-NBC News 3,4,15; News 6; WCH S.TV Repor t B;
World Press 33.
7:()()--World of Dis ney 3,4, 15; Jacques Cousteau 6; 60
Minutes 8, 10; America 13; Crockett 's Vic tory
Garden 20; Onedi n Li ne 33.
7:3()--Ant lques 20.
e:O()-E II eryQueen 3,4, 15; Six Million Dollar Man 6, 13;
Sonny &amp; Cher 8, 10; Nova 20,33.
9:0()-McCioud 3.4.15; Movie " XY B. Zee" 6,13 ; Koiak
B,10; Master piece Theatre 20.33 .
10:oo--B ronk 8,10; White House Transcripts 20 ;

Open Eves . Til6- Til5 p .m . Sat.
See one of these courteous salesmen :
Pete Burris
Lloyd, Mclaughlin
Marvin Keeba ugh

11 :3D-Star Trek 3; Bonanza 4;
Mov ie " Rose of
Washington Squar e" 8; Ha wa ii Five'O 10; Ironside

Is The Life 15.

6; Re)( Humbard a ,l 5 Re1 ~enry Mahan 13.

12:30-Meet The

" You ' ll Lik e OUr Qua l ity Way of Doing Business"

~ve n ing at Symphony 33.
11 :Oo-News 3,4,B, 10, 13, 15; FBI 6.
11:1;-C BS News 8,10; Don Kirs hner's Rock Concert
15.

11 :0()-Vegetable ~oup 3. Doctors on Cal l 4: Hot Fudge

12:00--At Iss ue l, N':Ht..
Answer s 6; Fac e T h~:

Pomeroy

1
1I

I

··- ·- · -·-·-·-·--··--·--·-·-·-·-·-·--··

Dolphin Street" 10; J immy Swaggart 13 ; Faith For
Today 15.
10 :3()-Big Blue Marb le 3. Garner Ted Armstrong 4 ;
Jimmy Swaggart 6, Rev Robert Schule r e;
T ni ~

Fi';.d~~::~ 0:vsa~t::\~

\

Remembers JJ .

11 3()-Hol lywood Squares 3,4,15 : Hoppy Days 13 ; Love
ot Lite e. 10; Biography 33.
11 :s;..... Take Kerr 8; Dan Imel's World 10.
12:0()-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3, 15: Let 's Make a
Deal 13; Bob Braun 4; News 6,e,10; Sesa me St. 33.
12 ·3()-Take My Advice 3,15 ; All My Children 6,13;
Search for to m orrow 8, 10.
12 · 55- NBC News 3, 15.
I 0()-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donahue B;
Young B. Ihe Restless 10; Not For Women On iy 15;
Elee. Co . 33.
1:3()-Days ot Our Lives 3,4, 15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6, 13;
As Tl1e World Turns B, lo1; Earthkeeplng 33.
2:0()-$20,000 Pyramid 6.13: It's About Time 33 .

Don 't ask for cr iticism today
from a friend who always tells It
l ike it is. un less you're
prepared to face the truth.

.4 wh . drive , l ike new interior, less t han 12,000 miles,

soo thing effect on others.

TAURUS (Aprtt 20-May 20)
Yo u may find someone willing

to help you wrap up an old tas,k

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22)
You function bes t as the power
behind the throne today - and
you enjoy it! EKposure will
le ssen yo u r c hances o f
success.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23· Dtc.
21) A group you' re affili ated
with may ask you to take on
added responsibilities today.
Don't shirk. Th ey really need

your help.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jin.
19) Chal lenge stimulate s you
today to the poin t where . you

HONDA

BILL

:• Hf.lJ!!!A

JOHNSON:

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO'S LARGEST QIRYSI.IR.PLYMOUTH DEALIR

~

ALL 1975
MODELS ON
SALE

350 v.a, automatic, P. steering &amp; brakes.

W· W t ires, wh .
cover s, step bumper, ch rome mirrors, m ldgs., AM
radio , clean sha.rp truck .

1974 FORD Fl00 ..................... ~~-~5
B' Styleslde, green iinish, good tir es, R. bumper ,
chrome gri lls &amp; fils bumper, 6 cyl. &amp; std. trans.

Smith Honda Sales

1973 CHEVROLET C10 ........... .. $2895

KANAGA, OHIO

v.a,

1975 MONTE CARLD .
A ir , landau top. skyroof. P . w !n&lt;1ows.

1975
PACER X
Air, 6900 miles, loaded.
1975 PONTIAC LeMANNS

3 pt . Cpe., air, vinyl top.

1974
OODGE DART C~E.
22.000 mites, vinyl top, p, steenng.
1974 HORNET 2 DR.

Hatchbilck, auto,. P. steering , 19,000 miles.

1974 MAVERICK 4 DR.

Auto ., P. stee ri ng, 25,000 m iles .

·~-------------------..*

automatic, power st eering &amp; brakes, good t ires , step
bumper, radio , c ustom trim &amp; mirrors.

1974 BUICK
CENTURY 4 DR.
P.
Ai r, aut o.,

102" C. A.. V-B, 5 speed, te,soo 2 speed. R. a Kie, 900 tires,
solid ca b, color w h i~.

'75 CHEV. NOVA

YOUR INVITATION TO ADVENTURE

1973
OLDS TORONAOO
Air , power .wi ndows, sea ts. vinyl top.

2 dr . Coupe, red fin ish with black Interior.
economical 6 cycle engine, auto. trans .•. P.

'Touring AM ER ICA is a call to adventure
few can resist . When you set out to explore
. . . to get away from it all take along
TRAVEL EQUIPMENT CORPORATION's
travel companion that has an eye for space.
a feel for family budge ts and a talen t for
depe ndable pe rformance - the TEC MINI ·
motorhome !

steering. w-s·w tires. Only 5,000 act. miles.
Extra new cond .

'3395

:;

72 CHRYSLER 4 DR. SEDAN

il

Air, P.S .. P.B.

•

•~

'1595

OVER 50 LATE CLEAN CUT MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM

~

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

t

1639 EASTERN AVENUE

1973 BUICK REGAL 2 DR HT
1972
CADIUAC DeVILlE
Dr . Hdtp., air, whi le, bla ck vi nyl top .
1971
VOLKS 411 ST. WAG.
Auto ., radio, blue.
'Air ~ tape. chrome wheels.

Eastern Ave. ·

Gallipolis,

GALLIPOLIS 446-3273 •

c!'::~: !::p:::::·~::::~.

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

&amp; BANK FINANCING

or\
In 1933,
this day
a motion
in history
picture
:
drive-in theater opened in
Camden, N.J .. the first of its
kind .
In 1944, hundreds of thousands of Allied lroops started
crossing the English Channel
in the " D-Day" invasion of
Na~i-occupied Europe. The
greatest invasion in history
was supported by thousands
of planes and ships.
In 1972, a coal mine
explosion in
Rhodesia
trapped
464
miners
underground and more than
425 of them died .

2: 3()-Doctors 3,4, 15; Break the Bank 6,13; Guiding
Light e, 10; Firing Line 33.
3:()()--Another World 3,4,15; General Hospltal6 ,13; All
tn The Fami ly e,10; Woman 20.
3:30-Cne Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Match
Game e, 10; Consumer Survival Kit 20 ; World Press
33.
.
4:QO-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
MaK B. Nimble 6; Mickey Mouse Club e; Mister
Roge&lt;S 20,33; Movie " The Gir l Can 't Help It " 10;
Dinah 13 .
4:3()-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Andy Griffith e;
Sesa me St. 20,33; Flintstones 15.
5:Q0-6onanza 3; Partridge Family e; Missi on : lm .
possible 15.
5:30-Adam-12 4; News 6; Family Affair e; Elec Co .
20,33; Ada m-12 13.
6:()()--News 3,4,B, 10, 13, 15 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
. 6:3o-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News e. 10 ; Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
Carrascolendas 33.
7:QO-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Buck Owens e; News 10; Candid Camera
13; Family Affair 15; Teaching Children to Read
20; Resou rceful West Virgin ia 33.
7:3()--That Good Ole Nashville Musi c 3; Bobby Vlntoo
. 4; Space: 19996; Price is R!ght e; Evening Edition
with Martin Agronsky 20; High Road to Adventure
10; To Tell the Truth 13; Friends of Man 15 ; Tennl~
for Everyone 33.
B:oo--Bobby Vinton 3; Viva Valdez 13 ; John Davidson
4,15; Gunsmoke B; U.S.A.: Peop le &amp; Pol itics 20.33;
Rhoda 10.'
e :J()-We Think You Should Know 3; Baseball 6;
Phyllis 10; Movie "Cool Hand Luke" 13 .
9:QO-Joe Forrester 3,4,15; !Ill. In The Fa mily e,10;
Wellsprings 33 ; Man Who Played Sprock 20
9:3()-Ma ude e, 10.
··
10 :0()-Jigsaw John 3,4, 15; Medical Center 8; Herb
Alpert &amp; the Tiiuana Brass 10; News 20: Bt-Ways
33.
10:3()-Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20; Catch·33 33.
10:4;-Testlmony Ti me Today 9.
11:0()-News 3,4.6,e,t10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :3()-Johnny Cfrson 3,4, 15; World Championship of
Tr ivia 6, 13; Movie " Mayert lng" B; Movie "The
Gatling Gun" 10; Janak l 33 .
1:QO-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
Channel Five
9 a.m. 700 Club lei
' 7 p.m. High and Wild (c)
7:30 - Musi c Connect lion (c)
B:O()-Cable Journa l (c)
9:0()-Washington Debates (c)
10 :0()-700.Ciub lei

Other TEC Chevrolet Conversion Vans and
' ' The Swing Turtle" by Turtle Top in stock
now.

*
*

Close-out on our 3 remaining NEW
1975 Rabbits and 1 '7S' Rabbit
demonstrator. We will show you our
actua I cost on these cars and will
accept trade-ins. ·

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
/'&gt;'\
l.v-'

0

USED CAR SPECIALS
C~~m ?u~~~agon.
G~~Co~~~~?.~~~. S ,air

These cars are tremendous
bargains. We are not only selling
these cars near cost, but the 76's had
a substantial price increase c&gt;Ver
these cars as well.

Pomeroy

·=;;;v.~;~~~~;~~~;;;~~
~OMOTE

0

WILL CONTNLJE-,!

ACIUAL .
COST

NEW - 4-Wbeel Drive and Luv Trucks In Stock
We have the right deal for you
Reliable Service after the deal

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. Til8

l APIE5 ANO G&amp; N TLEM6~ OF TH~
f'!lES5 •. OUR TV OE-MON5Tfo::Art0N

VOLI&lt;SWAGEN

$895

70 lATE MODEL CARS

June 6. 1976

SEE THIS ON OUR LOT

$1395
'995 $695

$1895

1970
PONTIAC 4 DR.
Catalina, auto ., P. sleerlno .
1970 CHEVEu.E
2 Dr . Hdtp ., 4 speed, black .

o.

'*********•*****~*****~•*********************~

$3
$2495
$2495
$2495
$2995
$36951$3195
$3495 $2995
$3395

4

WOOD MOTOR SALES

£GALLIPOLIS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH i .._______......

Your
\l}'Birthday
Important co n tac t s wil l be
developed this coming year
th ro u g h yo ur socia l tn volvements. You'll dO par·
ticular ly well with th ose older
than your self .
, I N~W S PAPt: R ENTERPRI SE ASSN . I

steerin g, briikes.

1974
BUICK .CENTURY 2 DR. HT
Air, vinyl lop, sport wheels.

1973 INTERNATIONAL 1600 .... $3895

A

The Almanac
United Press lnternallunal
Today is Sunda y, June 6,
the !58th day of 1976 with 208
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) They' ll to follow .
take notice today H you voice
The moon· is between its
an opin~on during a d iscussion.
first
quarter and full pha!!e.
Others se n se you 're no t given
The
morning stars are
to making id le remar ks .
Mercury,
Venus
and
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Stpl. 22) It
Jupiter.
you expect an old debt to be
The evening stars are Mars
repaid , call the person aside
today and give him a gentle and Sa turn.
reminder . O th erw ise, it just
Those born on this date are
won't happen .
under llle sign of Gemini.
Ainerican patriot Nathan
LIBRA (Sopt. 23 ,0cl . 23)
Stand up and be counted it Hale was born June 6, 1755.

any thing th rea te ns an o ld
fri'e nd
to d ay.
Your
realati onship has been a good
o.ne·. Your lo ya lt y wi l l
stren gthen it.

,..--~~-----.,

SPECIALI

1974 CHEV. C10 CHEYENNE ..... s3495

8' F leet si de, ,wh. over red , clea n inter ior, 350

•.

SPRING CLEARANCE

wh . over si lver. 250 v.e, automatic, power steering 8.
brakes , chrome mldgs ., bumper, e)Ct erior mirrors,
radio. See it now.

You are especia lly determined
tpday and wil l accomplish what
yoU set out to do. Surpri singly,
your best e ffOrts wi ll go to help'
Someone else.

Yo u k n ow how to get rea l
mileage out of a dollar today
-~n d co uld piCk up so me good
bargain s. This Is parlic-ularly
true of household Items.

(1) Coupe DeVille
(1) Eldorado (1) Sedan DeVille

m 5342 • GMC

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Fob. 19)

CANCER (Juno 21 -July 22)

I
1
I
I
I KARR &amp;VAN ZANDl I
I
I

presence will hav e a ve ry

Although you'll be in a
gregari ous mood today, you 'll
also want to be around serious
thi·nke rs
to exc hange
worthwh ile ideas.

Television Log
SUNDAY , JUNE 6, 1976
6:0()-This Is The Ute 10.
.
6:3()-Jerry Falwel l 4; Viewpoint 8; Public Policy

Normally . wherever you go yo u
generate action. Today your

GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20)

NOW

lac lory air and T&amp; T whee l.

For Sunday, Juno 6, 1178
ARIES (March 21·Aprt1 11)

you·ve been putting off . It will
be a welcom e r9l ief.

Whi.te , bl_ue viny l t op, blue cloth inter ior: fu ll Power
equ •p., a•r , T&amp; T wheel, fu l l ster eo, rad ia l ti res, .one
owner

I
I

Phone
992-2196

'7600
73 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

might volunteer to take on
things others run away from .
What's more, you'll do it!

1975 CHEV. BLAZER K-5 ....... }5295

PISCES (Ftb. 20-March 20)

1

Newsmaker '76 l3 ;

Sea led proposals will be
received ar the off ice of the
Dir ector of the OhiO Depart
ment o t Transporta t ion,
Co lumbus, Ohio , until 10 : 00.
AM . , Ohio Standard Time,
Tuesday , June IS, 1976, for
im pro vemen ts in :
Gallia County, on various
sec tions
GAL State Route
553 , in the Village of Crown
Citv . by resurfacing with
asphalt concrete .
Pavemen t Width - Varies .
Proiect and Work L ength 12 ,303 feet or 2.33 mites .
" The dale set f or compte lion
ot this work shall be as set
forth in the bidding proposal."
· Ea c h bi~der
Sha ll be
requi red to file '&gt;Vilh his bid a
ce r ti fi ed ct"leck or cashie r 's
check tor an amount e t~u" l to
fiv e per cen t of hi s bid; bu t In
no event more than f ifty
tt'lousand do II a rs , or a bond tor
ten p ercen t of his bid, payable
to the D irec tor .
Bidd er s must apply , an tht;&gt;
proper forms , for quali fi catlon
at l east te n days prior to the
date set for opening bids in
accordance wit h Chap t er 5525
Ohio Revised Code,
Plans and speci f ic ations are
on l ite in the Department of
Tr ansportation and the off ice
of
the
D i strict
D epu ty
D irector .
Th e Director reserves the
r ig ht to · reject any and a iL
bids .
RICHARD D. JACKSO N
. D IRECTOR
Rev . 8 17 73

'N{l.y .

Station Wa gon , auto . trans , show s good cMe.

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLER·
PLYMOUTH

No . 76 · 4l8
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

May 30 . June 6

1972 FORD LTD 4 DR. HT.. ................... 11995
Brougham , e&gt;:ceptiOr'lal

....-****************************************~

Confr,acl Sales Legal Copy

1974
Ford
Maverick
Grabber auto .. real good
little ca r . Priced rig ht

owner

29- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sundav. June 6, 1976

$2650
$2795

P. B.. P.S.. air .........................

ME TO

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

P~~IDENf!

''Jro·F~ioreC
_,

?.~po~~~!r~a~~~cyl.,

P.S .. P.B. .................... . ...

~2495 .

~.~a~t~~. ~P.~~~! ....... ................$2895

HAHAHAHAHA!~

I WONDER IF I
Tf\'ADE HER
TO CHARLIE FINlE'(...

?o~. v~~P~~~~r~~Y

COULD

.
1. New '75' Rabbit 2 dr ., blue, radio,
leatherette int., r . defogger, radial tires, vc. frt. disc .brakes - $150 over cost.

0
D

$AVING$

2. New '75' Rabbit 2 dr ., yellow, a-c, tinted
glass, leatherette int., r. defogger, radial·
tires, v -c, frl. disc brakes. $150 over cost.
3. New '75' Rabbit 4 dr., yellow, v-c,
leatherette int., r . defogger , radio, radial
tires, frt. disc brakes. $150 over cost .

''

CJ-5s

1974 Red, black top , 6 cyl., 1 BBL., tach, roll
bar , draw bar , loc·outs, new tires, radio,
rear seat. wheel lip ext.
1973 Green. black top . 6 cyl., 1 BBL. draw
bar , rear seat.

MINT (OND.
1971 Island Blue, New black top, V-6, roll
bar. draw bar , radio, loc·o· matics.

:
'
l
I

•

4. Demo '75' Ra.b bit 2 dr., green, r . defogger,
v-c. radial tires, front disc brakes. Actual
cost. ·
·

~

•;
tt

TO GIVE AWAY- Melg•' County

-~=-~~~~!.'_6-'.~.!'~m~---- ·--

CARROLL NORRIS
DODGE

A.K.C. Doberman Pinscher puppies, 6 w"ks old. Shots and

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Humane Society has one male
dog , medium sl:~e, about 10
months old, 2 kittens about 8
months old , on' black , one
black and white. Just shots and
worming will be furn ished . Call

1973 Commando, butterscotch gold &amp; white,
auto. , P.S., P . B., Lock-outs , 6 cyl., radio .

4 WD

Family Yard Sole, June 7

and 8 at Dennie Hill retideni::e,
Racine, Ohio. pass Sou thern
High School on Rout e 124.
1
Children's clothes. of all sizes.
~ a.dspreods, curtains, distle~
C and several other items . 9:00

JEEP DEALERSHIP
842Washlngton Awe.

Chillicothe, Ohio CM411

774-1111

·-----------------·
- -·
2 Black Poodle puppies, male,
$40. One Slberiq n Husky, male.

tll14100.
~v'A'Ros~;; ~?F'a~iivv~.:d-s~;;;,,

r
"'

Phone992·7185 .

3 locations. June 5th and 6th .
Oliver Bailey, Paul Life and
B'Jan Harris ,· Success Rd. 1 Co,

'
0 R . 46.
··--------··.
,.. Family Yard Sole,
:

CHILLICOTHE JEEP, INC.

wormed. Call (614) 533-0761 .

j

:
;
:

• . ... .. .. . ....... .....

Upper Rt, 7, Gallipolis, Ph. 446-9800

WAGONS

1974 Cherokee "S", metal I ic green , auto .,
P.S., P. B.• 360 V-8, carpeting , bucket seats,
cast " mag" whee ls , 18.000 actual miles.

$2250
?rc~up~~~~ 8~ .!~.~ ............................. $2295

~

1970 Island Blue, metal cab, V-6, roll bar,
.draw bar, loc-outs .

1974 Wagoneer Custom. yellow, Loaded,
power tailgate, new tires, carpet, A-C. P. S.,
P. B., auto ., 360 V-8 , roof rack.

~~up~~~~~~. :~}~~"'''

...........................
'' Don Watts Volkswagen
I

•

~1995

USED TRUtK SPECIALS

..

:•

sta nd shift, 4cyl. ............... . ........ .

~!. ~~~.~~~~~~~... . . . ........... . . ..:......$895

I

.,
•

•

1974 Green -black top, V-8, 304, 4 BBL.
headers, roll bar. draw bar, A-T, tires.

~~Co~~o~~~a~.

$3250

tow mlteage, one owner. ..............

Olds Cutla ss Svpreme,
31 .000 miles , $3300. ex cellent
co ndition . Phone (6lol } 8.43·

..

Tuppers
Plains in the Arbaugh AdditiOn,
June 7, 8ond91rom9a.m. ti11 4
p.m. For information phone

: (614) 667·3933.
:FIVE· F-;,;iiy ·y~;d S~1~.

1973

June 1 to
• II , clot"lng, dishes, furniture ,
I' crafts . 11 mile southeast of Hor·
:.. rison~ille , Ohio · on Stale Rt .
143, 8to6p .m.

350 engine with
"~~""' · wHI sacrifice at $1200.

..

Phone 843·2624.
·~ · ·· - .

·--· . •···

·-

-· ..

196.4 Catalina 4 dr., floor , 3
speed , $95 or best offer. Call
anyllme' Sunday and after 6
p .m. on weekdays . Phone
2958 .

m.

1956 Chev y Belair , 53,00 actual
miiA s. Phone ~·6092 .

2621.
1969 VW bug, $550. Phone 992.
1797 .
1970 Dodge Poloro , 4 dr ., a.c.,
p.1., p.b., a .f . Phonf!992·~413 .

2 power ta ke-off units .for Dodge
truck , $250. Right and left.
Phone 992-51 11 .
1969 Roadrunner, very good con di t ion . Ph01lC (6t 4) 367 7153 .

I

-~~~~m~~~~:

1~68

1975 Musta ng II , 2 dr . H.T.. 14 ,500
miles. exc. cond., $3350,
negotiable, good financing

Skyline trailer , 12Jt:60, ond
land. 3 bedrm . very good condi ·
lion, $8,000. Phone 992-5-491
ar 992·5972.

1972 Ford one-hall ton pi ckup ,

1969 Schultz mobile homes, 12k·
60, good cpndllion. Phone

V·8, automatic , radio, $500.
May be seen after 5 p.m . of

mobile home with 8)(pando.
Por tly furnished, Phone 992·

1973 Mon te Carlo, silver. low
mileage, e.cce llent co ndition .

1970 Commun ity Caravan, 12x52,
2 bedrm ., good condition,

available. Ph. 992-7101.

------

$1350 . Call (~14) 37e-.6349.
742-3018.
•
J ·-~--·----- ...... - ..... -.-------~
1968 Chevello Motlbu, 2 dr . h.l ., 1966 12x65 Vindale. 3 bodrm.
Che.,er. Catl(614) 985-3596.
Phone 992-2035 or 992-2971.

2821 or 992·2437.

- - - ....

Phone (6 14) 9B5-4294.

-

�Ill

Jl e S u

In MernOJY

Notices

Pets for Sale

IN lov ng n emo y of my Mo he

Lll o
Sooley who pa s~ed
owoy May 3 976
I won edso u I okeepyou

I wa I cd you doy by day
Un o los w hbook ng heo
I saw ou s l p away ho mo n ng

God wod c lyou wh eyou s t

le ed
And k aw you I ad you s ho e
Uu o du y osed you weo y

TheSundayTunF~~sunF;;~976R esults Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

For Rent

AKC Ooba man s ud •• ce Red SLEEPING Rooms weekly ote s
Po k Can oiHo el
and us 2 Oobe man pupp ••

Co ••6 •65&lt;
BOARDING &amp; AKC ~UPPIES

Brea tcer Breaker

How bout It Voter?
Elect A Cand dale
Who l stens

K &amp; p Kanne s 388 817•
55.4
m east of Po e

LLOYD E DANNER
Republ can For
County Comm sstoner
Jan 2 Term
THAT SA BIG 10 4
Pd Pol Adv.

Card of Thanks

PASOUAE

Ee

0

•

Se

.u 6 27 6 doyo ngh

LOW weekly and month y a as a

L GH housekHp ng oom Po k
Can ol Hoe

BOARDING AKC pupp es C ~ e 2 lRAILU spaces oco ed n
L Kennels 2 m as f om own
Chesh • ovdy lo hook up
•s2•
Phonel67 0505

••6

AKC R~&amp;g

Be no d Pupp es

S

Col 1 :tO&lt; •58 1069
• s pup

AKC Reg Boson Te

p 05
sho s and wo med
Roventwood 342 273 3722 o

273'1998
BRII\RPATCH KENNELS
Boo d ng lo ge ndoo ou doo
uns Eng I sh Cock11 Span efs
and Go don Sa • s Ph ••6
.191
JUliN TA 1\ 1\l B eed Dog G oom
ng G oom ng bo h ng flea
d pp ng "6 7878
ONE Eng! sh set e one German
Sho tho Po n e also Ge man
Shephe d

1

ud

•• v ce

Ph

2•5 5095 0 2•5 5592

en

MOllE home space to
..6 0008

SlEEPING ooms fo ent Goll a
Hoe
FURN op
odul s only o I
u tospd ••69S23
ON F s Avenue 5 oom un
fu n shed opa men w th
ga ago $150 monthly Ph ••6
os•7
ONE bed oom furn apa t off
st •• po k ng o cond ton 1
o 2 odul s only 4146 0338
FOUR mobl a home 1pace1
eve y h ng eody to hook up
Ph 379 1•69
FURN ap adults only ut es
pd no pels 258SaeS "6

2 Reg b ood rna •• 1 quo te
0085
ho sa one Appaloosa one
yea 1ng Appaloosa t I y col FURN apt 3 d f oo men p ate
coll256 t915ale • 30p m
od $70 uf los pd See M
Shawupstll s 9 92ndAve 10
AKC Reg fema e
sh se er and
am .Cp m
dognouse Hb 7723 o 99'2

rtottces

3835

.t oom furn op ups a s 1068
2nd !\va aduls only no pets
RABB TS peocan able and ha
.. 6 9•s
v ng oom su te pho o copyh
mach ne 245 94112
FURN 3 oom house and bath no
poh o ch ld 175 dep bolO 5 h
H MALAY AN k t ens and Chow
Ave Ph 446 74•9
Chow pupp as
0 agonwynd
Col e y "6 38&lt;•
AKC coli es qual ty pur.p as 2
b ue Me le one r co o

s ud

se v ce P octo v lie 886 8506
SEW NG Mo

A

S

FREE mole lab ado puppy 4
mos o d w th 1ho s lama e
k t en 3 mas col 446 108 o
..6 •569

nokco
opp

0

0

NOW OPEN
Centenary Woods Kennel
New
Pel
Groommg

lost and Foimd
LOS WA EP

zepo

you ve los

he

a o you ov

ed on e ho e a new one made

o G ave s S ud o 4t46 7494
LOS dog and a a vy Dole
Ap 5
S orne e and Ge man
S hnou e 50 and pepe
a
goes by he name of of
p n es and he dog 1 nome
Mandy dog ha ough cl pp ng
Ph 446 4 34 offe ng ewa d
Ch dspe ms eymu h

A Rut
Stucki
Sl d g Along
Elect
LLOYD E DANNER
For Belter Roads
Cou ty Corn mrssroner

LOST b own and wn e mae
Beag e w h flea o Ia nome
of 8o ney n Ro G ande Co

Rt! publ can Jan 2 Term

Pd Po Adv

245 5662
OST I
Oobe
n
boy s
ewo

Auct10ns
AUCTION

e b a k and b own m n
man P he man
n
yo Cene
e 5y old
dog onswe s o Joav
do e ed Dave Banks

facll

your pet
under
santtary

t es Have

groom~d

comfortable
condtftons
all

bnteds

occepted 446 023 I

NEWGMC
T uck Heodqua e s
1970 Fo d P ckup

197'
197'
1'17•

T GMC Pickup
T GMC P ckup
T Chov PU •WD

1973

TERMS
c n be a ran&lt;Jed a
w lh owne

~U

Wagon

969 mpo o PS PB 2 d

w
sell eosonob e Ph 446 20 8

1975 Move ck powa s ee ng 6
cyl 4 doo
ad ol t es om
od o 0 000 m les exc ond
p ed osel Ph 4&lt;16 4191
970 Cheve e SS 1915 Como o
L bo h good cond
a I 245

92S2
$250 o bes
0
67S 1773

1975 Chevy luv
uck w h
delu)(e oppe
$3475 t oval
a Ia w h many ext as $675

cal •46 9'1 0

Hoy Bo e 5 Reg $3 750 now
$J 50 Rakes &amp; mowe s Reg
$1 200 now $1 000 Taylo &amp;
Taylo W lowwood Oh o 20
mile 5 N of ton on 61• 643

Me gs Local

10 mon hs

op qual ty

5 23 JO 6 6

J 20 5 c

RABBIT dog mus buy on
ol
Jock Ho bou R 2Bx56Po
co
e Oh o

WIN AT BRIDGE
Good play gives way to luck
NOll Til
•

~

5

86 4

v IQ976
+ I H4
"' I

II I Sl

fAST

.r. QJ
.,, J

4K3

+

a

vJ

2

2

tAKJ5

•K 2

.,9876&gt;4
SIUi ll ll
' " " 052

VI

·~ 7

J

"' I J iO

Sou I vulne abe
~

l

South

p s

East cashed his kms of
d amonds and continued wtth
the mne of clubs South s jack
forced Wests kmg and dum
my ruffed but now South was
one tr ck short of hts contract
He couldn t get to hts hand to
take a heart fmesse wtthout
usrng up dummy s last trump
and cou d not avotd the loss of
two more d amond lrtcks
South could have made the
contract after takmg h s ace
of trumps f he had led a
heart to dummy s queen
He would have been mtghty
lucky but good play would
have gtven luck that chance
to take over

24
a s I ass

lly Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
We s t opened one of those
weak two btds that are fatrly
co mo today A double
would have been for takeout
o Norll passed South really
I ould have le t the two hearts
alone bu t he haled to be shut
out and trted two spades
whtch North ratsed to four
A d amund lead would have
cooked h s goose but West
perwd the deuce of clubs and
&amp; uth was rn bus ness for a
.,.) lc He led a trump to h s
w d a second trump to

kn g

good

BAIRD S
BODY SHOP
Fore gn car &amp; fiberglass
Spec a sis
FREE EST MATES
All Makes
Rl 7 next to old Sl ver
Bridge
r IRD BROS AUTO PARTS

MOBILE HOME PARK
He e s one of the be e
nvestment j;lropert es n
Ga a Co 4 en ted pads an
extra 0 xSO mob e home
2 storage bu ld ngs good
we I A h s plus a 24 x60
v ng Qua ers w n w w
carpe
3 BR
bah
c: ov e ed pal o well and
seeped Pr ced for a qu ck
sale Th s prop~rty has
many ext as fo
con
ven ence

body wok Ph •&lt;6-3710
l973 VW axe concf p ce $1895
3118 90&lt;9

a

1

o ma

qutet netghhorhaod

CLOSE TO TOWN

Good

tJiock
homl!
w th
4
bedrooms
some ca pet
fu
basement for ced a
furnace
batns nas an
extra lot tha goes wl h

h s 93 A Raccoon Creek
fa m at a ow nterest 11 e
Land s a f 11 w th about
wooded and
I liable
Good home w th 6 rms and
ba h barn and outbu ld
nos Located near V nton
IDEAL R"ETREAT - 26
acres w h a arge pond and
ave ed w h o s of p ne
ees s a pe fee h de s
wav o
vou weekend s
Loca ed abou 20 m f om
Ga po s S8 900
Pas u e

a ge pond sp ngs o d
housew h ~ ms and bah
ce a house

PR CEO REDUCED

DANVILLE

OWNER WILL FINANCE

MORGAN TWP -

Th s lovelv frame home
nas J bedrooms n ce ba n
w h shower
fu y car
pe ed
w ndow un
ar
cond one
c11r garage
Loca ed
on
a
aroe
beaut ful lot Owner nas
been transfe ed and wants
o se I th s week
No
reasonab e offer refused

Bargam Hunter and Handy Man

Spr ng
ey sf nest Tn s
a
ac ve b ck ranch
of ers 2 500 sq
f
of
modern com for ab e v ng
0 her spec .!II ea ures are
a comple e k chen aroe
LR w th f rep ace 3 or 4
SRs tam lv m 2 ba hs
garage and a
cen
a
a ge corn e
o Mus be
seen o apprec ate Shown
by appo n men

fa m 41 ac esc ean o ng
g ass and good fences

proper y $24 000

NEAR

DANVILLE -

66

mas y a and ro no
g ass and
n e scenery
p en y wa e
o s of
p
va c y
nan
ng
ava ab e o he gh pa y

A

s 7900

BEEF CATTLE COUN
PR CE R~CED on th s

Need a

we
ke
Add son
ba h w h 5

pace close o the m nes?
Take a ook at
hs 3
bedroom home w h fa m y
room
den
ba h
some
ca pet has a arge barn
oca ed on a n ce ac e of
g ound

home n
&gt;oms and
s I 6 500

NEAR C TY SCHOOLS

Dup ex each s de has f ve
ooms
ba hs p va e
d vcway

NEW HOME- Th s ovely

SEEIN S BEL EV N

b ck frame home s very
nee
Has
J
lage
bedrooms
ba hs n ce
area
k chen d n ng
cent a a r cond on 1 car
garage Located c ose o

S23 500 buys

n s near y
new f ame anch on v 5
m es om c y Ga po s
School D s

TRY- App ox. ma ey 300
acres ro ng and mas v
c ean pas u e good woven
w e
fenc:es
seve a
sp ngs J barns a ge ob
base o d house pr ced a
S250 pe ac e

C TY- VACANT LAND app OK 5
ac es runn ng
f om Fou h
Ave
o
Ch ckamauga
C eek
S6 500 Don
wa
o buy
Buy and wa

RARE COUNTRY
J BR
fea ures

own

OLD lumbe
1550

227 3 d Avo "6

g ve t the but of our
abl ty to promote a sa e
save you t me
We w
werk and money Ca I
today

Th ee lou fh T 1'170 Chevy Ph
379 2 72

7f pcnctobes.oebengsold
by Wh te Ook. Bap 1 Youth
Co 1367 033'1olte 5 p m
73 Ho ley Oov dson Spo s a
p ced o •• I 446 2079

1975 Bultoco Alp no

350 CC

.. 6 •160
NEW wool o ental des gn u; by
Cour stan g Hn &amp; gold colors
¥1 h pod Co "'6 3227

oc .,, of land nnds some
fence tpoi make good hun
t ng lodge
See Wayne

EUREKA

Call us nght now

For Sale

we need L s ng' ca the
Agency 446 l64l
Ga a co s Largest Rea
Estate Sales Agency
Off ce 446 364l
lkeW seman446 3796
E N W seman 446 4500

w seman

21r
Gallipolis
11S Th rdAve
Galltpolts 0

Botills Hay ool1 of o
Uaadl octors
JmsFa mEqup

EXTRI\

~

ve y

1973 200 Super
cond

new po nt

$1•00 388 9019

QUI\RTER horse and tllo ob ed
ma •
3 y s p eosu e and
compe ton b g ho n saddle

S-450 Ph "6 058&lt;

ESTATE SALE

12 gauge W ncheo e Modo 1400
OHrsloyer Ph 3677306
FARMAll M 7 It mowo Ph

2&lt;5 ~.
,_.._. ,,·- ~ 1'165 700 ford 16 It flo boq
ttoket' stover prked for quick

solo Ph •&lt;6-•39•
HAY to solo 388 1763

SWAIN
AUcnON BARN
'""~'" nt ter
If our A wet on
B1rn or in your home For
inform1tion 1nd p ckup

we

uti

Anftques Secretary n perfect cond ton 2 wooden ice

boKes (I large 1 small I VIctrola records trunks (flat
top &amp; came) rock ng chairs oak dressers &amp; bureaus

( 2+ 5th edition McGuffee reader n good cond lion I
ch na doll~ carnaval dol s Atwater Kent rad o Ph leo
rad o
m n alu e locomoflve m nlature kerosene
m ners lamp clocks lanterns 45 star flag complele
World War 1 un form meda s 2 ra lroad watches
several other watcnes slra ght razors brass locker
silver th mb e 3 sew ng mach nes

SaiD Enry S1t• day

N vhtal7p m

SWAIN
AUCJION SERVICE
K•nntth Sw1 n Auct
Corner Third &amp; Oflvt

S nger crank type

m ners lamps lunch bucket breast augers many
other miners tools wood cook stove oak library table
brass beds several oak beds and bureaus picture
frames hall trees shoe last wash stand vaces
ca nlval g ass dep ess on glass vln09ar Wh te House
bdllles stonerars 110 20 ga lru I )ars m rrors love
seal old co ns 1914 S2 00 Blanket b II 00 s of other
co lectors Items oo numerous to mention
Hand tools new 1 gsaw 2 elect lc hand saws e ect c

gr nder 2 oels o e&gt;lens on ladders 2 wooden wheel
barrows other tems too numerous to menton

IAW'bCIIIY

ten u cat 2H 1967

POLY FOAM fo
sons
dea fo compe s
s zes D e Fob c
So es Mo n St Pt
F dov

J BR
SUPER VALUE
nome n c y a a p ce you
c an affo d s 0 00

80 ACRES -

Good Ia m
h a n ce house
3
bedrooms
bath
n ce
k tchen fo ced a turn ace
large
barn
ando her
bu ld ngs Also has a 10K51..
mob le home that goes w t h
property Owne w II ne P
f nance or I ade

LAND LOVERS 50 acres
on y B m es rom c y 300
b obacco base S 0 500

WE BUY SELL TRADE

GREEN ACRESJ BR
a
e ec: r c
arn e ranch
Move n Cond on
m
med a e occupancy

$28 500

THE ESTATE OF ARTHUR LENCH
James S mpson Admmlslralor
Terms Cash or Check w1th post! ve I D Lunch Served
Tom JOY Joe Stewart Auct oneer
Galllpolts Ohto
Note Be here on I me thiS s a very large sole w lh
hundreds of tems

( ~:.::.:::.:_:;:::.:.:::...:.::~....J

cna
us
padd ng
Vo e y of
and Foam
Pleasant

I 8

CHIMNEY Bocks W Va &amp; On o
lump Cool Goll pol s Block
Co "6 2783
FOR SALE
LIMESTONE FOR DRIVEWAYS
CARL WINTERS PH 2•5 5115

APPROVED

A mos new anc:h
o of er for on y
To a
e ec
c
tea u es 3 BRs
m n ce k chen w
n
ange
WW
cen a wa e and
and oca ed n
v age

has o s
S21 400
home
laundry
h bu 11
carpe
sewage
Rodnev

LOW DOWN PAYMENT

New doub e w de mob le
home offers 3 BRs a ge
LR DR k chen w th s ove
and ef and n ce cab ne s
shag carpe sa nd a f a o
w rad e fo a m

ROUTE 3S WEST
Amos new 3 BR brck
ranch s very appea ng
and can be vour dream
home
Large equ pped
k chen 1 ba hs qual 1y
ca pe througnou cen ra
a r arge L R d n ng area
garage fu I basemen

3 B BRICK HOME (LIKE NEW)
eve! o
all stee
nsu ated doors
Thermopane w ndows n ce modern kIt chen al bu It n
e ect r c sto ve w h wa I oven d shwashe garbage
d sposa l 7 car garage w th eledr c eye door opener
and cent a a r
'-'

C TY -

OU ET STREET

- Comfo ab e 6 ms and
ba h w h a a ge back
po ch and ga age oca ed
onFfhAve ~
ed ose
qu cka Sl8 000

LARGE

NEW LIST NG MERCIAL S TE -

COM
5 os

and ode home on S a e
Roue n Kanauga Los o f
po en a fo S34 000

NEAR VINTON

8 ace s

mos y
abe g ound
bu d ngs $22 000

No

HARRISON TOWNSH P WILL TRADE- ii6 ac es
of woods and g ass and
F on s on 2 Rds

ONE

ACRE

LOTS -

Located near Rodney
coun v water a'Va !abl e
restr cted o homes on 'I
and pr ced a $3 500

NEAR MEIGS MINES -

f oars gas hea a r cond
and garage The k chen s
compte e w h ga bage
d sp d shwas~er eye eve
oven range hOOd and ref
P ced to se a S23 000

Real Eslale 446 1066
Evenings Russell Wood

AUCTION SALE
CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT
JUNE 101h-11 AM HUNTINGTON W VA
Take Barboursvtlle Ext! No 6olf 164
SALE EQUIPMENT
1974 Cat Dozer D40 1965 Cal Dozer D40 John Deere
Dozer 450 1966 AC Dozer HDn E 1965 John Deere
Dozer 1010 Series 196B Cat Dozer 02 Cat Dozer D6
1975 AC 940 Wheel Loader 1976 AC 540 Wheel Loader
Hougl Pay Loader 1976 AC 715 loader 1973 lnll
Loader Backhoe 1969 JOhn Deere 400B loader
Backhoe 1975 AC 700 Fork LIt 1965 Adams 440
Grader Osgood 50 Crane Yeager A r Cornp 3 GMC
Turnapool Dumps 1970 GMC Tractor Aslro 1962
Brockway Tractor 1970 Ford Tractor 9000 Series 1966
MAC Tractor U600 1972 GMC 7500 Dump Truck 1968
Dodge Dump Truck I ton 1966 Ford Cab &amp; Chassis
1961 Chevy 60 Cab &amp; Chassl~ White Water Truck 1964
tnt 1600 l ne Truck 1974 Chevy Pickup 1970 tnt I 18
It Van 1970 Ford 20 It Van 1959 tnt I Slep \/an 19.16
tnt 1 Step Van 1974 Fruehauf •o It Flat Trailer 1965
Fruehauf 40 II Flat Trller 24 Ton low Boy
Tra !mob te 35 ton Low Boy 2 1972 Fruehauf 40 II
Vans 1971 Fruehauf 40 II Vans 3 G!nd a &lt;O It Van
1964 Fruehauf 40 It Van 1975 Hallie lie Tag a long 1947
tnt I Farm Traclo Cars 1975 Motorhome 21 1975 23
Champ on II'\Otorhome 1974 450 John Deere Dozer 974
850 Case loader approx 25 olher cars and trucks Th s
s a partial list ng
lons gnments Welcome Terms Cosh Cortlltod Chock
(personal or company checks occepted only with letter
of credit from bank) Auct on Heodquorten will be
located at Stone Lodge Motel Rt 60 Borboursvtllt W
a During the week ph 304 7il6-l4S 1 for further
n(ormatlon In Huntington arN Ru Do.. h.. 304 736
7179 or Btll Sheets Auclton Co
P 0 Box 33
Buchannan W Va 26201 Ph 304 472 4475

TRA LER

o o ed 641 3d live

adu s on y Ph 446 3870

eq Ph 446 4292

v

B&amp;SMOB LE
HOME SA ES

no

have

cho ce o s a
severa oca ons
Ad
d son Twp
Georges
Creek Road C ouSe Beck

USED MOB LE HOMES
CALL576 27

Rd 12 250 and up

RON CANADAY
REALIDR
61\CKHOE DOZER TRENCHER
WORK DONE 1\T REI\SONABLE
Ex

RATE
Con oct Sm h
cava ng Ph U6 3981

1\ll TYPES of doze wo k Ph
379 2621 Alen Ru he o d

CHECK ou p ces on used Mob e
o e s 1
Homes and ave
Sto e Mob e Homes Sale s
220 Eos e n Ave Go I pol s
Oh a Bonk F none ng
970 &amp;Ox. 2 mob e home fu n

ph 367 7306
964 Ma le MH 2 b
a pe
h ougnou
fu n o unfu n
See a o 42 K&amp;K Mob le Home
Po k Eos e n A e o 4.46 0056

V111Cramblelhele four Jumblto,
one lflter lo tach oquart to
torm four ordinary !Word•

3 6R
No

wo k also op

c
•
•

II

[JJ
tj I

[]

f~'~~~~

T~OU8LED THE

al s zes

nng

Monday

Good

TEACHER w h BS dog ee w I u
o
Ma h
eod ng
language 4.46 4422
~OOF NG ond ax.ta o

po n ng
Fee est m es 379 2617

PAINTING ns de &amp; ou s de &amp; yo d
o le s see the No 1
wo k $3 00 h Cook o boke

Now ornnre tho circled leiters

(AM•en Monchly

Juoobl" EIGHT FEWER AROUND FETISH

,.,

HerflftfcnNihNCGtle
inot,.roll•t- REFRESHING

T oval
o e 1 fo d down1
m n mo o homes Camp Con
ey Stare af Sales Rt 62 N
of P Pleasant

9TH ANNIVERSARY SALE
On Stacot
mn
moos
ovel t a le 5 compB new &amp;
used Bes p ces n T Soe
o ea S op and co npo e Camp
Con ev ~ o c f Soles R 62 N
of Po n P eoson

BEAUTIFULl
BEDROOM
Fu basem en n ce a ge
tam y rOOt'tl
mode n
k c:tien 2 ba h s IIJar!loe
cen ra a r u Y ca peted
ocated on a arge ot
ApproK 2 years o d L ke
new
ust see
o ap
Af!dUCP.rl

7 oom house s tern doors
and w ndow s beau lu
and sca ped va d 2 ba ns
ch cken hou se hog ce ll or
sn oke hou se n d oo house
ana co rn cr bs l ) llc es
bo om end fru
ees
BOO b
obac c o bue
L oc a cd on H ghwey 218

TR LEVEL LIKE NEW

Over 3 000 sq t
v ng
space 4 bed ooms 3 ba hs
Thermopane ooors end
w ndows E ec t c hea ana
ce n a a r Rura we ur
svs em 2 car ga age .4
acres o end Lo s of ot er
tea u es
s
s ed

BEAUT FUL HOME SITE
Jus off 60 Ev ero un 36
acres fl mo s a I I liable
N ce hunk of t&amp;nd

loco! o

ve Ph 4•6 0679

GENERAL house epa
n and ou
oaf ng

po o ng
Ph 446

4509o &lt;462 14

For Sale or Trade
HORSES Ponys sodd es b dies
ha ness guns dogs and ol
k nds of m sc
ems B ng
any h ng you wan o sel o
ode e e y Sunday a Mel n
ou s es den e Fo mo e n
o me on ol 742 3 76

c

11 a c res vacan
and
plenly o wa er
0 m ••
t om own sa 500

BOB LANE
BRANCH MANAGER
4Jl SECOND AVE
GALL POL S OHIO

446 7900

L STINGS NEEDED NOW
TO F T OUR BUYERS
NE E DS

on

Ca l

co lee 1 682 6249 R 3 Ook
H II Oho
FOR THE BEST n o h ec u a
des gn of new homes smo
comm c a bu ld nga apt o
emodel ng w h sto e opp ova
o p ons B I Wolke
682

doze

bockhoo

Rut ond Oh o 742 2008 o
446 7687
ME TO CHECK A R COND
TONERS RESIDENTIAL AND
COMMERCII\l Cl\ll D DI\Y
REFR GERAT ON 8 YRS EX
PERIENCE liND SCHOOL
TRA NED PHONE 388 8274
TV REPA RS RENll\ S

L_.::..:.:::._::_::::.:..~~::.:._--1

3 BR hou se o d ba h lo o ed n
c ty
h ee fou 'h ac e lot

P co S 0 500 col 446 HBS
3 BR home I ke n&amp;w w hop
P onces n luded
Ph 4&lt;6

6643c ,-, ·--·,c·

Se ceCa Is
Pc u elubeSpeca 5 s

HARTWEll ELECTRONICS
145 5365 ·- --G l ARBAUGH TreeSe "ce and
l andscape Inc Ooze wo k S

2 b Ph 361

Albans Ph 304 722 3•98
De e y
doy o n gh 245 93 5 o 388
8262
BORDER S GI\RI\GE DOOR So

HOWARD Peck wo e

PI\SQUALE nsulot ng 103 Cedo
S

Go po s Ph 44627 6o

AIJO ser'4' ng area between
Crown
c tv
and
Chesapeake

446 0'12

CUSTOM REMODEL NC 20 yeo s

Bop st Youth Col 367 0339

do Soles S Rt 7 Gal pol s
Oh o "611•0
STI\RCRAFT

v

on v sis ooo
92ACREFARM

ce Comma c o and Res den
of Spe alz ng n ope a o s
Loco 256 b-472

and

PROWLER

TRAVEL
sella n the USA Sm h s Han

.. - ...... 1CCtJ (lliiJ

I
:t........,.

clo

96

NOT 50 YOUNG
Acn&lt;:E55

1

~

Eu eka

Wed

o o lobo 379

W ndow clean ng and odd fObs
eve and Sa by he Wh te Oak

t
I I J t J ~~:::.:.h::~~:.:::::..~

~ RULBET

So e

N GALLI POL S
5 oom house on a peacelu
street
Po ch na
ga s
fu na ce bu t n cab ne s
of
fenced n yard p en
ga den space A rea buy
Redu ced Now on y Sl3 soo

and dJ cne Cho les R Ho
eld
Ba ck Hoe Se v ce

TO ECONOM ZE on fuel unde p n
you mob le home and oncho
fa so e y Fos e Mob le Home
Sa v ce 4-46 2783 o Elme Sk d
mo e446 3H9

Tuoo

LARGE
COUNTRY HOME
PLUS 9 ACRE
7 ooms 11m a 4 bed ooms

n
w h be h o s o bu
cab nets goo sma ba n
b ac k op ro&amp;rt P ced on v
$ 6 000
J BEDROOM
Ac e p us
ev e ap
p ox
1'
m es I om
Hosp a on b ll k op Rd
Pt en V of ga !)en spoce
ru a wa er coun v v ng
c ose o Ga po s P ced

AR. EA ON HWY 35
55 f fron age by 60 deep
eve o w th a beau u
home Shor d s ance o
c ose o spr ng
hosp a
va ey Shopp ng P aza

SANDY and Bee e nsu once Co
ha s otfe ed 'e v celi o F e n
suone oeage n Gala
Coun y fo olmo5 a cen u y
Fa m' home s and pe sono
p ope v
ave oge5
a a abe o mee nd
needs
Con oc
Wedemeye
you ne ghbo and agen

7•98
EXCAVAT NG

P P eoson W Vo

YARD

gas
and
d en

SPt!ICe

FAST DEVELD.ING

Room
Co ag e
su ounded by a 73 acre
tarn
ree t om b ush
b ars and rocks 25 acres
of farm ng and w h 025
bs
obacco base Some

VA and FHA mpe

965 May a Ox40 BR
1955 M ch gon A ow 8J~C.45 2 BR

lues Wed
on let on
Geo ges C eek Bedsp eods
d opes ope p aye opes

S ROOM HOUS E

n Gll po s
bu
n csb e s
po c es
ea

Boggs Ex. e m no ng Co

BR

flt!JJMIDlh)];::t.:~::!c

ac es bo om
lind
a cross Rd f om 80 liC es
37 ac es i 2 000

TERMITES liNTS WA TERBUGS

972 Royo Embossv 4x.70 3 B
1968Na ono 2&gt;~6028R
1972 F eedom 14 xb4 Cen o o 3

Any Hour

gINNEL

dep

MOBILE HOME FOR SALE
B&amp;S MOB LE HOMES

446 3636

NEW f]ou se unde c ons r
pu s ~ oom te~rm house
barn &amp; o he au bu d ngs
App ox
40 acres o f
pa s tu e lind
mber 8.
app ox 28 acres of
8ble
and A
m nera
gh s
goes some good f en ces A
and &amp; hous es fo
on y
sss 000 Now

20

Neal Realty

2 BR mob e homes $ 00 3 b
mob le homes $ 25 44b 0 75

446 4618

ken Morgan 446 Ot71

161 ACRES
N-E R PORTER

MObUe Homes mRent

L ST NGS NEEDED
WE
ADVERT SE
NATIONALLY
WE BUY
- SELL
TRADE

PLANN NG TO BUILD?
Ca 1 Wood Insurance &amp;

37 ACRES VACANT

85 ACRES
3 Be d oom
om e fo ccd
a h ea s ern doo s and
w ndow s 38 1(42
cc a
house u
v bv d ng a
n ne a ooes ove 200 b
oba cco base N c e h om e
and
fa m
AI
a m
equ pm en
goes
P cc
educed o QU c k sa e

CLOSE TO TOWN
Love y 3 BR. anch has HW

ba hs c a r
e ec r c fu y
a
c:a peed comb k chen
am y room now under
cons uc on n
Green
Actes
SH COO
We

10 ACRES PLUS

Va ca n
a
wood ll d
wond er and son e P8!. ure
and
ab e and Less tan
s 60 00 pe a e

RIO GRANDE - One Of
he n ces homes on he
market oday A mas new
br ck ranch mus be seen a
apprec ate Pr ced n he
SOs Ca
or appo n men

THE BEST 3

Foste Coo "6 27::.83:.: __ _

r epl aces L il gc ot P ccd l o

good
n be
p en '( of
wa er good ba n pou v
and smoke hou !le and
u
y bu d ng Mu s see o
bf! ev e P cod o se

COTTAGE PLUS
7JACRES

3 Bedroom mode n hom e
n cab ne s
w h bu
um num s d ng To a
ec c
a d en space
w hn
d s ance of

8 acres on Morgan Lane
tea ures a new unf n shed 4
rm
and
ba h home
c s ern pond and o s ot
pr vacv Pr ced a s 2 ooo

s a ooo

W VA Chunks- The p ce s not
too h gh the qua ty 5 f st
ate
Pe fee
coat
fo
f eplaces Med urn s ze 6 x8

floors 2 wood bu n ng

se ll

BEAUTIFUL HOME

s•RUCE STR~El
N GALLIPOLIS

ESTATES

n ce
modern kit chen (d shwasher lab e lop a gc bu II n
wa ll ov en) Nat ural gas forced a furna ce a dwood

3 bedrooms
o s
Corner o n Po erbrook of bu t n storage spaces 2
Sub D v s ze BO fron age ba hs modern k chen w th
on Fa rf e d Ce n
Rd by bu
n cab ne s hb e op
155 deep a
eve
On y range
wal
oven
d sh
S610Q 00
washer
ru !!I
wa e
LEVEL2 ACRES
ce n ra a r arge Ia on R
3 OR 4 BEDROOMS
60 w h a beau fu v ew
6 rooms f a me house bath
barn storage and ch cken Red uced o qu ck sa e
house A f enced n R@a
1 A &amp; HOMF.
n ee pace
Jus outofc y m sonR
80 ACRES2 FARMS
4
N ce comfo ab e 5
2 houses - One 7 ooms 4 room home w th wood
bedroom s
w h
ba h burn ng
f rep ac e
comp e e k tchen abe op basemen modern k chen
range
ef ge a or d sh na
gas fu na ce
c v
washer washe and C!rye
wa er arge ca por n ce
Th s house can be bough
6 x. lB b ock s 0 age b dg
by
se f and appro x 2 ga age space Ca now
ac es o
and The o her
BUSINESS NCOME
house has 6
ooms
3
PROPERTY
bed ooms
bu
n
cab ne s Sa n
300 b Up o S660 00 per man h
oba cco base Th s hou se Rena s pus a beau fu 7
can be bough
w h 78 room J bedrooms Hom e
o ve n yourse f a um
BC P.S
s d ng good grade n ce
ICE CREAM &amp;
fran porch o1s of bu
n
SANDW CH SHOPPE
cab ne s abe top range
A good go ng bus ness wa oven aundry ub s
ocat ed on Sta e H ghwav na gas fo ceo a r fu nace
160 n a n ce commu n y
Wood burn ng
cen ra a
Land
b ck
bu d ng
f ep ace Lo ts of sh ub
equ pmen
and a
sock berv
eve grassy o A
goes P ced gh
beau fu pace pu s a n ce
MODERN RET REMENT
ncome P ced
gh
HOME
47 ~CRES IN VI!ITON
Beau tu
em ode ed nne C y wate
7 room t e
room hom a w h base n en
bock n ce home fo ced a r
Large a bu
n k hen
so m
u nace basemen
w h enc osed po h Two doo s s orm w ndows
ga age Ci y wa er
ca
wood burn ng
f rep a ce
we
n su a ed w h o ed so e bu d ng
milk ng
a gas u nace Me a barn hpuse aod parlor
corn
on 46
acres o t and w h c b 35 ac es bottom and
new f en ces w h n 3 m es Rea n ce fa m
of Ga PO S

TWP 9 ac es
pas u e
and
g:ood fenc~s o d
sp nos S1 500

VA~LEY

7 Room s plus 2 baths Basement tam ly oo Yl

6 ooms

VACANT LOT

WALNUT
rorTTng
wood and
bu d ngs

SPRING

La ge n ce

RANNY BLACKBURN,
BRANCH MANAGER

o E hey beco me homes n
grea demand and h s one
comes w h 25 acres c tv
wa e
n v age of V n on

,\newer

I

FHA

OLDER HOMES NEVER

INDUSTRIAL Sow M I
•733

Locoted 1 mile lbove the Metgs Gall a County I neon
State Rt 7 Watch for stgns
Househo d !ems 2 gas stoves relrlgeralor table &amp;
cho rs Maylag wrlnge washer beds couch II. cha rs
d sh cab nel
(New bed I nen tab e cloths
bedspreads) pi) low cases Zen th T V many other
Items too numerous to menton

HoNDA 750 lf'T.C Ike new lots
of occasor •• 41416 7494 10 5
o1k fo Dole

3

bedroom w h n ce bath
arge garage n ce eve lo

THURSDAY, JUNE 10,
STARTING AT 10:00 A.M.

Phone446WI7

VACANT LOTS
Loca ed
onL nco n P keand Negh
bo hood Rd
dea
or
mob e hom es Ca
oday

2x.60 mob e home 2 b

Ph 6753&lt;69 9S daly

k nd1

WHY NOT s ep up o an
aeaoman fee vng
3 BR b ck e ec r c hea
near Holze Hosp a
a
modern conven ences a a
ow $3d 000

Even ngs Call
John Fuller 446 4327
Lee Johnson 2511 6740
Doug Wetherholt 444 4244
Earl T W nters 4463821

61or$1 00

Gallpo 1 Oho
Ph "610&lt;4
FUZZ BUSTER (Po leo Rado
Do ector) $50 1lO Ph 379 2•69
NEW hoy okor $575 50 2 Used
MF 12 bole s I MF 9 Bale NH

Good

Twp I 8 000

w

Aluminum
Sheets

Tribune

NEAR RIO GRANDE

Over 4 acres
eve
o
ro ng g ound w h an
amos new modu ar hom e
fea ures
3114 sq f
of
modern
v ng
A so n
c ud ed s a new 2 ca
ga age ap

ACRES-S27 900
- N ce comfor abe 3 BR
ranch s perfec for your
grow ng am y En oy he
qu et res den a ne gh
borhood
f a
andscaped
o a cond gas hea WW
ca pe
garage and a ge
back porch

ooo LB Toba cco Base w
hetp pay o
h s 5 ooms
and ba h w h 4 ac es C ay

Good buy tor S14 500

36 x21 X OOf

Dai~

Gall~a County s Fastest Growmll Real Estate Agency

GREEN

bah

J yea
o d anch has 3
bedrooms O\le y ba h w h
shower n ce carpe
one
car garage Owner has
moved out o sta e and
wants o sel now P ce
$22 soo

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES
$215
635
850
2'150
2850

Good home

3 bedrooms
garage
coun v
Ia ge lot room to

PRICE REDUCED

co f 245 9369

JOHN Dee a 60 d ng mower
with snow blode Ph ·4416 1146

BAIRD S
Automat c T ans Shop
AI Makes
Free Est males
Rt 7 next to o d S lver
Br dge
Ba rd Bro~ Auto Ports

BIDWELL

w h

den S14 900

10 day old

Ph Home 379 2184

yesterdays price
lwo
s ory home oca ed
n
Thurman s p ced o se
Ca
Oday

WE SELL BETTER
LIV NG

MILK cow Hols en

MernH Carter
Associate

SEVEN
THOUSAND
DOLLARS- Buy oday a

1976 Sta c oft fold down compar
sleeps 6 I ka new 2~ 6626

and

1'171 Fo d P ckup can be s.en a
6205th Ave

I

and corner lot 1n

$75 22 automo c tie w scope
new $.40 Ph 367 OS.f

Cui &gt;JO o I ke new 69 Dodge
Co net Sedcm good unn ng
cond on Phone •.t6 0559

Con ol Supply Co

11 s true lhtS ts the one you have wa ted tor Large
hv ng room formal entrance &amp; dmmg w b fireplace en
the famtly room 3 large bedrooms 2 a baths garage

DIAL YOUR
OWN WEI\THER

Rt 35 W Gollpolls 0
71 G ami n X runs ge.xf needs

!For a copy ol JACOBY
MODERN send $1 lo W n Amsboly "6 0239
alB dga
CIO ths SOUPS on the rug tho s so
dean the spot w h Blue Lust •
newspaper P 0 Box 489
AIIJflf a ect &lt; .hampooe Sl
!lad o C ty Slat on New York
N Y 10019)

Now vacant

Oooo

A Georgta reader wanlll to
know what he should do With
.r.J KX &lt; ¥ AQu +Qxx4xx
Hts partner opened one
spade He raiSed to two and
hts partner nvtted game by a
b d of three
All the books say he should
bon with plonh roody
go on to game because he TOBACCO
set Orner P ose Ph •416 1171
holds maxtmum stngle ratse
and we go along wtth all the 5 oom old to m house with 100

books

w th gas fu n 3 porches
extra a ge o for ga
den ng Loca ed n own

4 BR

d n ng m us of R 35 on
Sun Va e y D ve
Lg
beau tu y land scaped o
Gas hea
dea tam v
hon e S34 000

Charmmg Br1ck Ranch
Prrced Under $40 ooo

bsm

&amp; t es

con

d t on $725 Ph 367 05&lt;

INTERN!\ liON Cub T octo

JUST LISTED

s o y s u co w h

JO.&lt; 773 s•o5
~ M ckey Thompson mags

"6 7322 ole 5
" ' Pan ac Cotal no

SCENICALLY SITUATED

Ph

1973 Pon oc e•c cond
od al
t 85 AC ext a c eon o g nol
owne $2550 Ph 446 10441 or

388 8776

:JUST liSTED A Cond 2
B R F ee wood
a e on
ac e o
Kempe
Ho ow
Rd 2 ou bu d ng s and o s
of o he ex as S 0 000

mos

Lerge wo s o y
J 5R
home coun rv k chen
formal DR ptas ~r wa s

arge s orage room

446 3636

va

221&lt; 0 6&lt;3 2285
2 eg polled He elo d bull col es

9322

S haoDs c
Boa do Educa on

adm

Galltpolts Ohro

THE ONE YOU VE BEEN
WAIT NG FOR - One of

LIST NOW

NEW Holland Hoy Spec ols Hay
Bnes Rog $3'150now$3200

1966 Fo d Econo ne Supe Von
good unn ng cond $700 4416

JUNK au o and s

home toea ed be wten he
two c y schoo ls on a
beau fu tv andscaped o
The home s cove ed w fh
a um num s d ng J PO
ches oas heat 2 oom d Y
bsm
Ia ge count v k
chen DR clen aundrv &amp;

Do you want to sel your
pace" Buy a new one w th
more s-pace? Call the

Ph "6 7&lt;69

pe

Conven en to eve vth no
A large two story 4 BR

Th s s a
able loc al on

2S12

~ 4461066

Sem bunga o home 4 BR
ve yn ce k chen w hoven
&amp; range DR f rep ace n
LR fu ~sm garage jus
rom own
7 m

969 Plymou h Belv&amp;de • 41 d
seen 0 1902 Eastern Ava o

cek

REALTOR

BRANNON REALTY We
wI
st your property &amp;

$6&lt;50 Ph "64 4
67 Cho
o cond on Ph .446
37 1

ohn

WOOD

NO BUSSING

s or age

CANADAY
REALTY
Locust St

RUSSELL

(H 446-3434

190 ACRES

1971 Chev lmpo o
1970 Mon e Co lo

1965 Chevy &amp;e o
offe
co
m
befo a5pm

H Locust St
Howard Brannon Broker
on ce 446 2614
L.ucil t Brannon
~ve 446 '216 or U6 2674

70 A pasture 60 A t abe
30 A
mber 2 ponds &amp;
sp ng
obacco base 3
ba ns grana v &amp; shop

367-7250

972 Po s he 911 T 5 spd toe
a
ond Sn
VG cond

omo
352

TOWNHOUSE
APARlMENTS
2 Bedroom
Townhouses '
112 Baths
Pay Only One Uttltty
Addrson Ohto
For Information
Call Sh1rley Adkrns

T GMC PU

1971 lon GMC P U
1971 h •• lou h GMC P U
2968
Fo d

REALTY

In th s beaut ful ramb ng
ranch home 3 BR 2 ba hs
a bu
n k en en fo m a
DR f replace n LR w w
carpet central a r 2 ca
garage outbu d ngs a
th s &amp; 30 acres of good and
nea own
7 ACRES
Near eve and oca cd n
Eve green
Large two
story 3 BR nome
a ge
kitchen DR
par bsm
furnace alum num s d ng
s orm w ndows &amp; doors
porch
ga age
Qu ck
possess on

TARA

1975 T Chev PU
973 h ee fou h T Chev PU

97
0 ds
S o
SOMMERS GMC
Tucks Inc
33 P ne S
H6 2$32

CLOSE IN
e ou R
s t om
oc o v 1 e ( s gn on e 1

Spnng Valley
Green Apartments
446-1599

OHIO RIVER
REALTY INC.

THE WISEMAN AGENCY
GAlliA COUNTY'S lARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

l bby Hole "6 17&lt;3
Rt

Real Estate fot Slit__

0 TCH NG Wo e l nes Gos
E ec and Te epnone bu o
Ru fon9 0 7 42 2008

REG QUI\RTER Ho se S ud •e
v ce

Leo &amp; K ng b ed

Co

446 4654
THOMAS Fl\ N
EXIERM NAT NG

ex.pe ence 388 8308 New d y
wo I ce ng w h sw o ex
u e des gns 0 he d y wall
epa
nyl wollpape ng new
bo hs new k chens Any h ng
n emode ng o epa

THE TOP SHOP
Cus om 8u It Roof T uues Fa
m co Coun e ops &amp; Cob ne s

Coo e on o 667 3 86
COUGHE NOUR Wo e Del ve y

e m e Pes Con o
Whee e sbu g Oh o

446 3962 446 4262 ony; me
HAMS Rado &amp; TV Co yn se
ce 2 m les otf R 7 Gr:to ges CARPENTER wo k
hou se
C eek Rd 4&lt;6 9304
e nodelng . w ng punbng
po n ng Pn 4416 29 0
CONCR~TE
wo k
pa os
s dewo k
basemen
l ou s Cnx 446 3398

•

DOZER wo k

leo

e~Ccavo

g Ph 446 0051
i

ng

and

Joe Crans256 i4SI
NAT ONAL
AD
CARTERS PLUMB NG
AND HEATING

VERTIS NG
w lh
Ga le v of Homes

he

Co Fou h&amp;Pne
Phone Ub 3888 o 446 .4477

STI\NDARD
P umb ng Heo ng

215 h dA e "63782
GENE Pli\N1S &amp; SON
PLUMB NG - Heo ng - A
Cond on ng 300 Fou h Avo

Ph "6 i637
DEWI11 S P UMB NG
AND HEAl NG
Roue 60o E egeen

Pho e •46 2735

FOR SALE by Owne But nan
bu d ng g show oom off ce
pen y po k ng space neo Jc1
R 35 and 60 6 oom mode n
v ng qua to s abo e

bo hs Ph 446 0762
REAL ESTATELOI\NS

VA FHA 30 v oons Po k Mor
gage Se v ces 77 E State

A hens Ph 592 3051

�Ill

Jl e S u

In MernOJY

Notices

Pets for Sale

IN lov ng n emo y of my Mo he

Lll o
Sooley who pa s~ed
owoy May 3 976
I won edso u I okeepyou

I wa I cd you doy by day
Un o los w hbook ng heo
I saw ou s l p away ho mo n ng

God wod c lyou wh eyou s t

le ed
And k aw you I ad you s ho e
Uu o du y osed you weo y

TheSundayTunF~~sunF;;~976R esults Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

For Rent

AKC Ooba man s ud •• ce Red SLEEPING Rooms weekly ote s
Po k Can oiHo el
and us 2 Oobe man pupp ••

Co ••6 •65&lt;
BOARDING &amp; AKC ~UPPIES

Brea tcer Breaker

How bout It Voter?
Elect A Cand dale
Who l stens

K &amp; p Kanne s 388 817•
55.4
m east of Po e

LLOYD E DANNER
Republ can For
County Comm sstoner
Jan 2 Term
THAT SA BIG 10 4
Pd Pol Adv.

Card of Thanks

PASOUAE

Ee

0

•

Se

.u 6 27 6 doyo ngh

LOW weekly and month y a as a

L GH housekHp ng oom Po k
Can ol Hoe

BOARDING AKC pupp es C ~ e 2 lRAILU spaces oco ed n
L Kennels 2 m as f om own
Chesh • ovdy lo hook up
•s2•
Phonel67 0505

••6

AKC R~&amp;g

Be no d Pupp es

S

Col 1 :tO&lt; •58 1069
• s pup

AKC Reg Boson Te

p 05
sho s and wo med
Roventwood 342 273 3722 o

273'1998
BRII\RPATCH KENNELS
Boo d ng lo ge ndoo ou doo
uns Eng I sh Cock11 Span efs
and Go don Sa • s Ph ••6
.191
JUliN TA 1\ 1\l B eed Dog G oom
ng G oom ng bo h ng flea
d pp ng "6 7878
ONE Eng! sh set e one German
Sho tho Po n e also Ge man
Shephe d

1

ud

•• v ce

Ph

2•5 5095 0 2•5 5592

en

MOllE home space to
..6 0008

SlEEPING ooms fo ent Goll a
Hoe
FURN op
odul s only o I
u tospd ••69S23
ON F s Avenue 5 oom un
fu n shed opa men w th
ga ago $150 monthly Ph ••6
os•7
ONE bed oom furn apa t off
st •• po k ng o cond ton 1
o 2 odul s only 4146 0338
FOUR mobl a home 1pace1
eve y h ng eody to hook up
Ph 379 1•69
FURN ap adults only ut es
pd no pels 258SaeS "6

2 Reg b ood rna •• 1 quo te
0085
ho sa one Appaloosa one
yea 1ng Appaloosa t I y col FURN apt 3 d f oo men p ate
coll256 t915ale • 30p m
od $70 uf los pd See M
Shawupstll s 9 92ndAve 10
AKC Reg fema e
sh se er and
am .Cp m
dognouse Hb 7723 o 99'2

rtottces

3835

.t oom furn op ups a s 1068
2nd !\va aduls only no pets
RABB TS peocan able and ha
.. 6 9•s
v ng oom su te pho o copyh
mach ne 245 94112
FURN 3 oom house and bath no
poh o ch ld 175 dep bolO 5 h
H MALAY AN k t ens and Chow
Ave Ph 446 74•9
Chow pupp as
0 agonwynd
Col e y "6 38&lt;•
AKC coli es qual ty pur.p as 2
b ue Me le one r co o

s ud

se v ce P octo v lie 886 8506
SEW NG Mo

A

S

FREE mole lab ado puppy 4
mos o d w th 1ho s lama e
k t en 3 mas col 446 108 o
..6 •569

nokco
opp

0

0

NOW OPEN
Centenary Woods Kennel
New
Pel
Groommg

lost and Foimd
LOS WA EP

zepo

you ve los

he

a o you ov

ed on e ho e a new one made

o G ave s S ud o 4t46 7494
LOS dog and a a vy Dole
Ap 5
S orne e and Ge man
S hnou e 50 and pepe
a
goes by he name of of
p n es and he dog 1 nome
Mandy dog ha ough cl pp ng
Ph 446 4 34 offe ng ewa d
Ch dspe ms eymu h

A Rut
Stucki
Sl d g Along
Elect
LLOYD E DANNER
For Belter Roads
Cou ty Corn mrssroner

LOST b own and wn e mae
Beag e w h flea o Ia nome
of 8o ney n Ro G ande Co

Rt! publ can Jan 2 Term

Pd Po Adv

245 5662
OST I
Oobe
n
boy s
ewo

Auct10ns
AUCTION

e b a k and b own m n
man P he man
n
yo Cene
e 5y old
dog onswe s o Joav
do e ed Dave Banks

facll

your pet
under
santtary

t es Have

groom~d

comfortable
condtftons
all

bnteds

occepted 446 023 I

NEWGMC
T uck Heodqua e s
1970 Fo d P ckup

197'
197'
1'17•

T GMC Pickup
T GMC P ckup
T Chov PU •WD

1973

TERMS
c n be a ran&lt;Jed a
w lh owne

~U

Wagon

969 mpo o PS PB 2 d

w
sell eosonob e Ph 446 20 8

1975 Move ck powa s ee ng 6
cyl 4 doo
ad ol t es om
od o 0 000 m les exc ond
p ed osel Ph 4&lt;16 4191
970 Cheve e SS 1915 Como o
L bo h good cond
a I 245

92S2
$250 o bes
0
67S 1773

1975 Chevy luv
uck w h
delu)(e oppe
$3475 t oval
a Ia w h many ext as $675

cal •46 9'1 0

Hoy Bo e 5 Reg $3 750 now
$J 50 Rakes &amp; mowe s Reg
$1 200 now $1 000 Taylo &amp;
Taylo W lowwood Oh o 20
mile 5 N of ton on 61• 643

Me gs Local

10 mon hs

op qual ty

5 23 JO 6 6

J 20 5 c

RABBIT dog mus buy on
ol
Jock Ho bou R 2Bx56Po
co
e Oh o

WIN AT BRIDGE
Good play gives way to luck
NOll Til
•

~

5

86 4

v IQ976
+ I H4
"' I

II I Sl

fAST

.r. QJ
.,, J

4K3

+

a

vJ

2

2

tAKJ5

•K 2

.,9876&gt;4
SIUi ll ll
' " " 052

VI

·~ 7

J

"' I J iO

Sou I vulne abe
~

l

South

p s

East cashed his kms of
d amonds and continued wtth
the mne of clubs South s jack
forced Wests kmg and dum
my ruffed but now South was
one tr ck short of hts contract
He couldn t get to hts hand to
take a heart fmesse wtthout
usrng up dummy s last trump
and cou d not avotd the loss of
two more d amond lrtcks
South could have made the
contract after takmg h s ace
of trumps f he had led a
heart to dummy s queen
He would have been mtghty
lucky but good play would
have gtven luck that chance
to take over

24
a s I ass

lly Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
We s t opened one of those
weak two btds that are fatrly
co mo today A double
would have been for takeout
o Norll passed South really
I ould have le t the two hearts
alone bu t he haled to be shut
out and trted two spades
whtch North ratsed to four
A d amund lead would have
cooked h s goose but West
perwd the deuce of clubs and
&amp; uth was rn bus ness for a
.,.) lc He led a trump to h s
w d a second trump to

kn g

good

BAIRD S
BODY SHOP
Fore gn car &amp; fiberglass
Spec a sis
FREE EST MATES
All Makes
Rl 7 next to old Sl ver
Bridge
r IRD BROS AUTO PARTS

MOBILE HOME PARK
He e s one of the be e
nvestment j;lropert es n
Ga a Co 4 en ted pads an
extra 0 xSO mob e home
2 storage bu ld ngs good
we I A h s plus a 24 x60
v ng Qua ers w n w w
carpe
3 BR
bah
c: ov e ed pal o well and
seeped Pr ced for a qu ck
sale Th s prop~rty has
many ext as fo
con
ven ence

body wok Ph •&lt;6-3710
l973 VW axe concf p ce $1895
3118 90&lt;9

a

1

o ma

qutet netghhorhaod

CLOSE TO TOWN

Good

tJiock
homl!
w th
4
bedrooms
some ca pet
fu
basement for ced a
furnace
batns nas an
extra lot tha goes wl h

h s 93 A Raccoon Creek
fa m at a ow nterest 11 e
Land s a f 11 w th about
wooded and
I liable
Good home w th 6 rms and
ba h barn and outbu ld
nos Located near V nton
IDEAL R"ETREAT - 26
acres w h a arge pond and
ave ed w h o s of p ne
ees s a pe fee h de s
wav o
vou weekend s
Loca ed abou 20 m f om
Ga po s S8 900
Pas u e

a ge pond sp ngs o d
housew h ~ ms and bah
ce a house

PR CEO REDUCED

DANVILLE

OWNER WILL FINANCE

MORGAN TWP -

Th s lovelv frame home
nas J bedrooms n ce ba n
w h shower
fu y car
pe ed
w ndow un
ar
cond one
c11r garage
Loca ed
on
a
aroe
beaut ful lot Owner nas
been transfe ed and wants
o se I th s week
No
reasonab e offer refused

Bargam Hunter and Handy Man

Spr ng
ey sf nest Tn s
a
ac ve b ck ranch
of ers 2 500 sq
f
of
modern com for ab e v ng
0 her spec .!II ea ures are
a comple e k chen aroe
LR w th f rep ace 3 or 4
SRs tam lv m 2 ba hs
garage and a
cen
a
a ge corn e
o Mus be
seen o apprec ate Shown
by appo n men

fa m 41 ac esc ean o ng
g ass and good fences

proper y $24 000

NEAR

DANVILLE -

66

mas y a and ro no
g ass and
n e scenery
p en y wa e
o s of
p
va c y
nan
ng
ava ab e o he gh pa y

A

s 7900

BEEF CATTLE COUN
PR CE R~CED on th s

Need a

we
ke
Add son
ba h w h 5

pace close o the m nes?
Take a ook at
hs 3
bedroom home w h fa m y
room
den
ba h
some
ca pet has a arge barn
oca ed on a n ce ac e of
g ound

home n
&gt;oms and
s I 6 500

NEAR C TY SCHOOLS

Dup ex each s de has f ve
ooms
ba hs p va e
d vcway

NEW HOME- Th s ovely

SEEIN S BEL EV N

b ck frame home s very
nee
Has
J
lage
bedrooms
ba hs n ce
area
k chen d n ng
cent a a r cond on 1 car
garage Located c ose o

S23 500 buys

n s near y
new f ame anch on v 5
m es om c y Ga po s
School D s

TRY- App ox. ma ey 300
acres ro ng and mas v
c ean pas u e good woven
w e
fenc:es
seve a
sp ngs J barns a ge ob
base o d house pr ced a
S250 pe ac e

C TY- VACANT LAND app OK 5
ac es runn ng
f om Fou h
Ave
o
Ch ckamauga
C eek
S6 500 Don
wa
o buy
Buy and wa

RARE COUNTRY
J BR
fea ures

own

OLD lumbe
1550

227 3 d Avo "6

g ve t the but of our
abl ty to promote a sa e
save you t me
We w
werk and money Ca I
today

Th ee lou fh T 1'170 Chevy Ph
379 2 72

7f pcnctobes.oebengsold
by Wh te Ook. Bap 1 Youth
Co 1367 033'1olte 5 p m
73 Ho ley Oov dson Spo s a
p ced o •• I 446 2079

1975 Bultoco Alp no

350 CC

.. 6 •160
NEW wool o ental des gn u; by
Cour stan g Hn &amp; gold colors
¥1 h pod Co "'6 3227

oc .,, of land nnds some
fence tpoi make good hun
t ng lodge
See Wayne

EUREKA

Call us nght now

For Sale

we need L s ng' ca the
Agency 446 l64l
Ga a co s Largest Rea
Estate Sales Agency
Off ce 446 364l
lkeW seman446 3796
E N W seman 446 4500

w seman

21r
Gallipolis
11S Th rdAve
Galltpolts 0

Botills Hay ool1 of o
Uaadl octors
JmsFa mEqup

EXTRI\

~

ve y

1973 200 Super
cond

new po nt

$1•00 388 9019

QUI\RTER horse and tllo ob ed
ma •
3 y s p eosu e and
compe ton b g ho n saddle

S-450 Ph "6 058&lt;

ESTATE SALE

12 gauge W ncheo e Modo 1400
OHrsloyer Ph 3677306
FARMAll M 7 It mowo Ph

2&lt;5 ~.
,_.._. ,,·- ~ 1'165 700 ford 16 It flo boq
ttoket' stover prked for quick

solo Ph •&lt;6-•39•
HAY to solo 388 1763

SWAIN
AUcnON BARN
'""~'" nt ter
If our A wet on
B1rn or in your home For
inform1tion 1nd p ckup

we

uti

Anftques Secretary n perfect cond ton 2 wooden ice

boKes (I large 1 small I VIctrola records trunks (flat
top &amp; came) rock ng chairs oak dressers &amp; bureaus

( 2+ 5th edition McGuffee reader n good cond lion I
ch na doll~ carnaval dol s Atwater Kent rad o Ph leo
rad o
m n alu e locomoflve m nlature kerosene
m ners lamp clocks lanterns 45 star flag complele
World War 1 un form meda s 2 ra lroad watches
several other watcnes slra ght razors brass locker
silver th mb e 3 sew ng mach nes

SaiD Enry S1t• day

N vhtal7p m

SWAIN
AUCJION SERVICE
K•nntth Sw1 n Auct
Corner Third &amp; Oflvt

S nger crank type

m ners lamps lunch bucket breast augers many
other miners tools wood cook stove oak library table
brass beds several oak beds and bureaus picture
frames hall trees shoe last wash stand vaces
ca nlval g ass dep ess on glass vln09ar Wh te House
bdllles stonerars 110 20 ga lru I )ars m rrors love
seal old co ns 1914 S2 00 Blanket b II 00 s of other
co lectors Items oo numerous to mention
Hand tools new 1 gsaw 2 elect lc hand saws e ect c

gr nder 2 oels o e&gt;lens on ladders 2 wooden wheel
barrows other tems too numerous to menton

IAW'bCIIIY

ten u cat 2H 1967

POLY FOAM fo
sons
dea fo compe s
s zes D e Fob c
So es Mo n St Pt
F dov

J BR
SUPER VALUE
nome n c y a a p ce you
c an affo d s 0 00

80 ACRES -

Good Ia m
h a n ce house
3
bedrooms
bath
n ce
k tchen fo ced a turn ace
large
barn
ando her
bu ld ngs Also has a 10K51..
mob le home that goes w t h
property Owne w II ne P
f nance or I ade

LAND LOVERS 50 acres
on y B m es rom c y 300
b obacco base S 0 500

WE BUY SELL TRADE

GREEN ACRESJ BR
a
e ec: r c
arn e ranch
Move n Cond on
m
med a e occupancy

$28 500

THE ESTATE OF ARTHUR LENCH
James S mpson Admmlslralor
Terms Cash or Check w1th post! ve I D Lunch Served
Tom JOY Joe Stewart Auct oneer
Galllpolts Ohto
Note Be here on I me thiS s a very large sole w lh
hundreds of tems

( ~:.::.:::.:_:;:::.:.:::...:.::~....J

cna
us
padd ng
Vo e y of
and Foam
Pleasant

I 8

CHIMNEY Bocks W Va &amp; On o
lump Cool Goll pol s Block
Co "6 2783
FOR SALE
LIMESTONE FOR DRIVEWAYS
CARL WINTERS PH 2•5 5115

APPROVED

A mos new anc:h
o of er for on y
To a
e ec
c
tea u es 3 BRs
m n ce k chen w
n
ange
WW
cen a wa e and
and oca ed n
v age

has o s
S21 400
home
laundry
h bu 11
carpe
sewage
Rodnev

LOW DOWN PAYMENT

New doub e w de mob le
home offers 3 BRs a ge
LR DR k chen w th s ove
and ef and n ce cab ne s
shag carpe sa nd a f a o
w rad e fo a m

ROUTE 3S WEST
Amos new 3 BR brck
ranch s very appea ng
and can be vour dream
home
Large equ pped
k chen 1 ba hs qual 1y
ca pe througnou cen ra
a r arge L R d n ng area
garage fu I basemen

3 B BRICK HOME (LIKE NEW)
eve! o
all stee
nsu ated doors
Thermopane w ndows n ce modern kIt chen al bu It n
e ect r c sto ve w h wa I oven d shwashe garbage
d sposa l 7 car garage w th eledr c eye door opener
and cent a a r
'-'

C TY -

OU ET STREET

- Comfo ab e 6 ms and
ba h w h a a ge back
po ch and ga age oca ed
onFfhAve ~
ed ose
qu cka Sl8 000

LARGE

NEW LIST NG MERCIAL S TE -

COM
5 os

and ode home on S a e
Roue n Kanauga Los o f
po en a fo S34 000

NEAR VINTON

8 ace s

mos y
abe g ound
bu d ngs $22 000

No

HARRISON TOWNSH P WILL TRADE- ii6 ac es
of woods and g ass and
F on s on 2 Rds

ONE

ACRE

LOTS -

Located near Rodney
coun v water a'Va !abl e
restr cted o homes on 'I
and pr ced a $3 500

NEAR MEIGS MINES -

f oars gas hea a r cond
and garage The k chen s
compte e w h ga bage
d sp d shwas~er eye eve
oven range hOOd and ref
P ced to se a S23 000

Real Eslale 446 1066
Evenings Russell Wood

AUCTION SALE
CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT
JUNE 101h-11 AM HUNTINGTON W VA
Take Barboursvtlle Ext! No 6olf 164
SALE EQUIPMENT
1974 Cat Dozer D40 1965 Cal Dozer D40 John Deere
Dozer 450 1966 AC Dozer HDn E 1965 John Deere
Dozer 1010 Series 196B Cat Dozer 02 Cat Dozer D6
1975 AC 940 Wheel Loader 1976 AC 540 Wheel Loader
Hougl Pay Loader 1976 AC 715 loader 1973 lnll
Loader Backhoe 1969 JOhn Deere 400B loader
Backhoe 1975 AC 700 Fork LIt 1965 Adams 440
Grader Osgood 50 Crane Yeager A r Cornp 3 GMC
Turnapool Dumps 1970 GMC Tractor Aslro 1962
Brockway Tractor 1970 Ford Tractor 9000 Series 1966
MAC Tractor U600 1972 GMC 7500 Dump Truck 1968
Dodge Dump Truck I ton 1966 Ford Cab &amp; Chassis
1961 Chevy 60 Cab &amp; Chassl~ White Water Truck 1964
tnt 1600 l ne Truck 1974 Chevy Pickup 1970 tnt I 18
It Van 1970 Ford 20 It Van 1959 tnt I Slep \/an 19.16
tnt 1 Step Van 1974 Fruehauf •o It Flat Trailer 1965
Fruehauf 40 II Flat Trller 24 Ton low Boy
Tra !mob te 35 ton Low Boy 2 1972 Fruehauf 40 II
Vans 1971 Fruehauf 40 II Vans 3 G!nd a &lt;O It Van
1964 Fruehauf 40 It Van 1975 Hallie lie Tag a long 1947
tnt I Farm Traclo Cars 1975 Motorhome 21 1975 23
Champ on II'\Otorhome 1974 450 John Deere Dozer 974
850 Case loader approx 25 olher cars and trucks Th s
s a partial list ng
lons gnments Welcome Terms Cosh Cortlltod Chock
(personal or company checks occepted only with letter
of credit from bank) Auct on Heodquorten will be
located at Stone Lodge Motel Rt 60 Borboursvtllt W
a During the week ph 304 7il6-l4S 1 for further
n(ormatlon In Huntington arN Ru Do.. h.. 304 736
7179 or Btll Sheets Auclton Co
P 0 Box 33
Buchannan W Va 26201 Ph 304 472 4475

TRA LER

o o ed 641 3d live

adu s on y Ph 446 3870

eq Ph 446 4292

v

B&amp;SMOB LE
HOME SA ES

no

have

cho ce o s a
severa oca ons
Ad
d son Twp
Georges
Creek Road C ouSe Beck

USED MOB LE HOMES
CALL576 27

Rd 12 250 and up

RON CANADAY
REALIDR
61\CKHOE DOZER TRENCHER
WORK DONE 1\T REI\SONABLE
Ex

RATE
Con oct Sm h
cava ng Ph U6 3981

1\ll TYPES of doze wo k Ph
379 2621 Alen Ru he o d

CHECK ou p ces on used Mob e
o e s 1
Homes and ave
Sto e Mob e Homes Sale s
220 Eos e n Ave Go I pol s
Oh a Bonk F none ng
970 &amp;Ox. 2 mob e home fu n

ph 367 7306
964 Ma le MH 2 b
a pe
h ougnou
fu n o unfu n
See a o 42 K&amp;K Mob le Home
Po k Eos e n A e o 4.46 0056

V111Cramblelhele four Jumblto,
one lflter lo tach oquart to
torm four ordinary !Word•

3 6R
No

wo k also op

c
•
•

II

[JJ
tj I

[]

f~'~~~~

T~OU8LED THE

al s zes

nng

Monday

Good

TEACHER w h BS dog ee w I u
o
Ma h
eod ng
language 4.46 4422
~OOF NG ond ax.ta o

po n ng
Fee est m es 379 2617

PAINTING ns de &amp; ou s de &amp; yo d
o le s see the No 1
wo k $3 00 h Cook o boke

Now ornnre tho circled leiters

(AM•en Monchly

Juoobl" EIGHT FEWER AROUND FETISH

,.,

HerflftfcnNihNCGtle
inot,.roll•t- REFRESHING

T oval
o e 1 fo d down1
m n mo o homes Camp Con
ey Stare af Sales Rt 62 N
of P Pleasant

9TH ANNIVERSARY SALE
On Stacot
mn
moos
ovel t a le 5 compB new &amp;
used Bes p ces n T Soe
o ea S op and co npo e Camp
Con ev ~ o c f Soles R 62 N
of Po n P eoson

BEAUTIFULl
BEDROOM
Fu basem en n ce a ge
tam y rOOt'tl
mode n
k c:tien 2 ba h s IIJar!loe
cen ra a r u Y ca peted
ocated on a arge ot
ApproK 2 years o d L ke
new
ust see
o ap
Af!dUCP.rl

7 oom house s tern doors
and w ndow s beau lu
and sca ped va d 2 ba ns
ch cken hou se hog ce ll or
sn oke hou se n d oo house
ana co rn cr bs l ) llc es
bo om end fru
ees
BOO b
obac c o bue
L oc a cd on H ghwey 218

TR LEVEL LIKE NEW

Over 3 000 sq t
v ng
space 4 bed ooms 3 ba hs
Thermopane ooors end
w ndows E ec t c hea ana
ce n a a r Rura we ur
svs em 2 car ga age .4
acres o end Lo s of ot er
tea u es
s
s ed

BEAUT FUL HOME SITE
Jus off 60 Ev ero un 36
acres fl mo s a I I liable
N ce hunk of t&amp;nd

loco! o

ve Ph 4•6 0679

GENERAL house epa
n and ou
oaf ng

po o ng
Ph 446

4509o &lt;462 14

For Sale or Trade
HORSES Ponys sodd es b dies
ha ness guns dogs and ol
k nds of m sc
ems B ng
any h ng you wan o sel o
ode e e y Sunday a Mel n
ou s es den e Fo mo e n
o me on ol 742 3 76

c

11 a c res vacan
and
plenly o wa er
0 m ••
t om own sa 500

BOB LANE
BRANCH MANAGER
4Jl SECOND AVE
GALL POL S OHIO

446 7900

L STINGS NEEDED NOW
TO F T OUR BUYERS
NE E DS

on

Ca l

co lee 1 682 6249 R 3 Ook
H II Oho
FOR THE BEST n o h ec u a
des gn of new homes smo
comm c a bu ld nga apt o
emodel ng w h sto e opp ova
o p ons B I Wolke
682

doze

bockhoo

Rut ond Oh o 742 2008 o
446 7687
ME TO CHECK A R COND
TONERS RESIDENTIAL AND
COMMERCII\l Cl\ll D DI\Y
REFR GERAT ON 8 YRS EX
PERIENCE liND SCHOOL
TRA NED PHONE 388 8274
TV REPA RS RENll\ S

L_.::..:.:::._::_::::.:..~~::.:._--1

3 BR hou se o d ba h lo o ed n
c ty
h ee fou 'h ac e lot

P co S 0 500 col 446 HBS
3 BR home I ke n&amp;w w hop
P onces n luded
Ph 4&lt;6

6643c ,-, ·--·,c·

Se ceCa Is
Pc u elubeSpeca 5 s

HARTWEll ELECTRONICS
145 5365 ·- --G l ARBAUGH TreeSe "ce and
l andscape Inc Ooze wo k S

2 b Ph 361

Albans Ph 304 722 3•98
De e y
doy o n gh 245 93 5 o 388
8262
BORDER S GI\RI\GE DOOR So

HOWARD Peck wo e

PI\SQUALE nsulot ng 103 Cedo
S

Go po s Ph 44627 6o

AIJO ser'4' ng area between
Crown
c tv
and
Chesapeake

446 0'12

CUSTOM REMODEL NC 20 yeo s

Bop st Youth Col 367 0339

do Soles S Rt 7 Gal pol s
Oh o "611•0
STI\RCRAFT

v

on v sis ooo
92ACREFARM

ce Comma c o and Res den
of Spe alz ng n ope a o s
Loco 256 b-472

and

PROWLER

TRAVEL
sella n the USA Sm h s Han

.. - ...... 1CCtJ (lliiJ

I
:t........,.

clo

96

NOT 50 YOUNG
Acn&lt;:E55

1

~

Eu eka

Wed

o o lobo 379

W ndow clean ng and odd fObs
eve and Sa by he Wh te Oak

t
I I J t J ~~:::.:.h::~~:.:::::..~

~ RULBET

So e

N GALLI POL S
5 oom house on a peacelu
street
Po ch na
ga s
fu na ce bu t n cab ne s
of
fenced n yard p en
ga den space A rea buy
Redu ced Now on y Sl3 soo

and dJ cne Cho les R Ho
eld
Ba ck Hoe Se v ce

TO ECONOM ZE on fuel unde p n
you mob le home and oncho
fa so e y Fos e Mob le Home
Sa v ce 4-46 2783 o Elme Sk d
mo e446 3H9

Tuoo

LARGE
COUNTRY HOME
PLUS 9 ACRE
7 ooms 11m a 4 bed ooms

n
w h be h o s o bu
cab nets goo sma ba n
b ac k op ro&amp;rt P ced on v
$ 6 000
J BEDROOM
Ac e p us
ev e ap
p ox
1'
m es I om
Hosp a on b ll k op Rd
Pt en V of ga !)en spoce
ru a wa er coun v v ng
c ose o Ga po s P ced

AR. EA ON HWY 35
55 f fron age by 60 deep
eve o w th a beau u
home Shor d s ance o
c ose o spr ng
hosp a
va ey Shopp ng P aza

SANDY and Bee e nsu once Co
ha s otfe ed 'e v celi o F e n
suone oeage n Gala
Coun y fo olmo5 a cen u y
Fa m' home s and pe sono
p ope v
ave oge5
a a abe o mee nd
needs
Con oc
Wedemeye
you ne ghbo and agen

7•98
EXCAVAT NG

P P eoson W Vo

YARD

gas
and
d en

SPt!ICe

FAST DEVELD.ING

Room
Co ag e
su ounded by a 73 acre
tarn
ree t om b ush
b ars and rocks 25 acres
of farm ng and w h 025
bs
obacco base Some

VA and FHA mpe

965 May a Ox40 BR
1955 M ch gon A ow 8J~C.45 2 BR

lues Wed
on let on
Geo ges C eek Bedsp eods
d opes ope p aye opes

S ROOM HOUS E

n Gll po s
bu
n csb e s
po c es
ea

Boggs Ex. e m no ng Co

BR

flt!JJMIDlh)];::t.:~::!c

ac es bo om
lind
a cross Rd f om 80 liC es
37 ac es i 2 000

TERMITES liNTS WA TERBUGS

972 Royo Embossv 4x.70 3 B
1968Na ono 2&gt;~6028R
1972 F eedom 14 xb4 Cen o o 3

Any Hour

gINNEL

dep

MOBILE HOME FOR SALE
B&amp;S MOB LE HOMES

446 3636

NEW f]ou se unde c ons r
pu s ~ oom te~rm house
barn &amp; o he au bu d ngs
App ox
40 acres o f
pa s tu e lind
mber 8.
app ox 28 acres of
8ble
and A
m nera
gh s
goes some good f en ces A
and &amp; hous es fo
on y
sss 000 Now

20

Neal Realty

2 BR mob e homes $ 00 3 b
mob le homes $ 25 44b 0 75

446 4618

ken Morgan 446 Ot71

161 ACRES
N-E R PORTER

MObUe Homes mRent

L ST NGS NEEDED
WE
ADVERT SE
NATIONALLY
WE BUY
- SELL
TRADE

PLANN NG TO BUILD?
Ca 1 Wood Insurance &amp;

37 ACRES VACANT

85 ACRES
3 Be d oom
om e fo ccd
a h ea s ern doo s and
w ndow s 38 1(42
cc a
house u
v bv d ng a
n ne a ooes ove 200 b
oba cco base N c e h om e
and
fa m
AI
a m
equ pm en
goes
P cc
educed o QU c k sa e

CLOSE TO TOWN
Love y 3 BR. anch has HW

ba hs c a r
e ec r c fu y
a
c:a peed comb k chen
am y room now under
cons uc on n
Green
Actes
SH COO
We

10 ACRES PLUS

Va ca n
a
wood ll d
wond er and son e P8!. ure
and
ab e and Less tan
s 60 00 pe a e

RIO GRANDE - One Of
he n ces homes on he
market oday A mas new
br ck ranch mus be seen a
apprec ate Pr ced n he
SOs Ca
or appo n men

THE BEST 3

Foste Coo "6 27::.83:.: __ _

r epl aces L il gc ot P ccd l o

good
n be
p en '( of
wa er good ba n pou v
and smoke hou !le and
u
y bu d ng Mu s see o
bf! ev e P cod o se

COTTAGE PLUS
7JACRES

3 Bedroom mode n hom e
n cab ne s
w h bu
um num s d ng To a
ec c
a d en space
w hn
d s ance of

8 acres on Morgan Lane
tea ures a new unf n shed 4
rm
and
ba h home
c s ern pond and o s ot
pr vacv Pr ced a s 2 ooo

s a ooo

W VA Chunks- The p ce s not
too h gh the qua ty 5 f st
ate
Pe fee
coat
fo
f eplaces Med urn s ze 6 x8

floors 2 wood bu n ng

se ll

BEAUTIFUL HOME

s•RUCE STR~El
N GALLIPOLIS

ESTATES

n ce
modern kit chen (d shwasher lab e lop a gc bu II n
wa ll ov en) Nat ural gas forced a furna ce a dwood

3 bedrooms
o s
Corner o n Po erbrook of bu t n storage spaces 2
Sub D v s ze BO fron age ba hs modern k chen w th
on Fa rf e d Ce n
Rd by bu
n cab ne s hb e op
155 deep a
eve
On y range
wal
oven
d sh
S610Q 00
washer
ru !!I
wa e
LEVEL2 ACRES
ce n ra a r arge Ia on R
3 OR 4 BEDROOMS
60 w h a beau fu v ew
6 rooms f a me house bath
barn storage and ch cken Red uced o qu ck sa e
house A f enced n R@a
1 A &amp; HOMF.
n ee pace
Jus outofc y m sonR
80 ACRES2 FARMS
4
N ce comfo ab e 5
2 houses - One 7 ooms 4 room home w th wood
bedroom s
w h
ba h burn ng
f rep ac e
comp e e k tchen abe op basemen modern k chen
range
ef ge a or d sh na
gas fu na ce
c v
washer washe and C!rye
wa er arge ca por n ce
Th s house can be bough
6 x. lB b ock s 0 age b dg
by
se f and appro x 2 ga age space Ca now
ac es o
and The o her
BUSINESS NCOME
house has 6
ooms
3
PROPERTY
bed ooms
bu
n
cab ne s Sa n
300 b Up o S660 00 per man h
oba cco base Th s hou se Rena s pus a beau fu 7
can be bough
w h 78 room J bedrooms Hom e
o ve n yourse f a um
BC P.S
s d ng good grade n ce
ICE CREAM &amp;
fran porch o1s of bu
n
SANDW CH SHOPPE
cab ne s abe top range
A good go ng bus ness wa oven aundry ub s
ocat ed on Sta e H ghwav na gas fo ceo a r fu nace
160 n a n ce commu n y
Wood burn ng
cen ra a
Land
b ck
bu d ng
f ep ace Lo ts of sh ub
equ pmen
and a
sock berv
eve grassy o A
goes P ced gh
beau fu pace pu s a n ce
MODERN RET REMENT
ncome P ced
gh
HOME
47 ~CRES IN VI!ITON
Beau tu
em ode ed nne C y wate
7 room t e
room hom a w h base n en
bock n ce home fo ced a r
Large a bu
n k hen
so m
u nace basemen
w h enc osed po h Two doo s s orm w ndows
ga age Ci y wa er
ca
wood burn ng
f rep a ce
we
n su a ed w h o ed so e bu d ng
milk ng
a gas u nace Me a barn hpuse aod parlor
corn
on 46
acres o t and w h c b 35 ac es bottom and
new f en ces w h n 3 m es Rea n ce fa m
of Ga PO S

TWP 9 ac es
pas u e
and
g:ood fenc~s o d
sp nos S1 500

VA~LEY

7 Room s plus 2 baths Basement tam ly oo Yl

6 ooms

VACANT LOT

WALNUT
rorTTng
wood and
bu d ngs

SPRING

La ge n ce

RANNY BLACKBURN,
BRANCH MANAGER

o E hey beco me homes n
grea demand and h s one
comes w h 25 acres c tv
wa e
n v age of V n on

,\newer

I

FHA

OLDER HOMES NEVER

INDUSTRIAL Sow M I
•733

Locoted 1 mile lbove the Metgs Gall a County I neon
State Rt 7 Watch for stgns
Househo d !ems 2 gas stoves relrlgeralor table &amp;
cho rs Maylag wrlnge washer beds couch II. cha rs
d sh cab nel
(New bed I nen tab e cloths
bedspreads) pi) low cases Zen th T V many other
Items too numerous to menton

HoNDA 750 lf'T.C Ike new lots
of occasor •• 41416 7494 10 5
o1k fo Dole

3

bedroom w h n ce bath
arge garage n ce eve lo

THURSDAY, JUNE 10,
STARTING AT 10:00 A.M.

Phone446WI7

VACANT LOTS
Loca ed
onL nco n P keand Negh
bo hood Rd
dea
or
mob e hom es Ca
oday

2x.60 mob e home 2 b

Ph 6753&lt;69 9S daly

k nd1

WHY NOT s ep up o an
aeaoman fee vng
3 BR b ck e ec r c hea
near Holze Hosp a
a
modern conven ences a a
ow $3d 000

Even ngs Call
John Fuller 446 4327
Lee Johnson 2511 6740
Doug Wetherholt 444 4244
Earl T W nters 4463821

61or$1 00

Gallpo 1 Oho
Ph "610&lt;4
FUZZ BUSTER (Po leo Rado
Do ector) $50 1lO Ph 379 2•69
NEW hoy okor $575 50 2 Used
MF 12 bole s I MF 9 Bale NH

Good

Twp I 8 000

w

Aluminum
Sheets

Tribune

NEAR RIO GRANDE

Over 4 acres
eve
o
ro ng g ound w h an
amos new modu ar hom e
fea ures
3114 sq f
of
modern
v ng
A so n
c ud ed s a new 2 ca
ga age ap

ACRES-S27 900
- N ce comfor abe 3 BR
ranch s perfec for your
grow ng am y En oy he
qu et res den a ne gh
borhood
f a
andscaped
o a cond gas hea WW
ca pe
garage and a ge
back porch

ooo LB Toba cco Base w
hetp pay o
h s 5 ooms
and ba h w h 4 ac es C ay

Good buy tor S14 500

36 x21 X OOf

Dai~

Gall~a County s Fastest Growmll Real Estate Agency

GREEN

bah

J yea
o d anch has 3
bedrooms O\le y ba h w h
shower n ce carpe
one
car garage Owner has
moved out o sta e and
wants o sel now P ce
$22 soo

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES
$215
635
850
2'150
2850

Good home

3 bedrooms
garage
coun v
Ia ge lot room to

PRICE REDUCED

co f 245 9369

JOHN Dee a 60 d ng mower
with snow blode Ph ·4416 1146

BAIRD S
Automat c T ans Shop
AI Makes
Free Est males
Rt 7 next to o d S lver
Br dge
Ba rd Bro~ Auto Ports

BIDWELL

w h

den S14 900

10 day old

Ph Home 379 2184

yesterdays price
lwo
s ory home oca ed
n
Thurman s p ced o se
Ca
Oday

WE SELL BETTER
LIV NG

MILK cow Hols en

MernH Carter
Associate

SEVEN
THOUSAND
DOLLARS- Buy oday a

1976 Sta c oft fold down compar
sleeps 6 I ka new 2~ 6626

and

1'171 Fo d P ckup can be s.en a
6205th Ave

I

and corner lot 1n

$75 22 automo c tie w scope
new $.40 Ph 367 OS.f

Cui &gt;JO o I ke new 69 Dodge
Co net Sedcm good unn ng
cond on Phone •.t6 0559

Con ol Supply Co

11 s true lhtS ts the one you have wa ted tor Large
hv ng room formal entrance &amp; dmmg w b fireplace en
the famtly room 3 large bedrooms 2 a baths garage

DIAL YOUR
OWN WEI\THER

Rt 35 W Gollpolls 0
71 G ami n X runs ge.xf needs

!For a copy ol JACOBY
MODERN send $1 lo W n Amsboly "6 0239
alB dga
CIO ths SOUPS on the rug tho s so
dean the spot w h Blue Lust •
newspaper P 0 Box 489
AIIJflf a ect &lt; .hampooe Sl
!lad o C ty Slat on New York
N Y 10019)

Now vacant

Oooo

A Georgta reader wanlll to
know what he should do With
.r.J KX &lt; ¥ AQu +Qxx4xx
Hts partner opened one
spade He raiSed to two and
hts partner nvtted game by a
b d of three
All the books say he should
bon with plonh roody
go on to game because he TOBACCO
set Orner P ose Ph •416 1171
holds maxtmum stngle ratse
and we go along wtth all the 5 oom old to m house with 100

books

w th gas fu n 3 porches
extra a ge o for ga
den ng Loca ed n own

4 BR

d n ng m us of R 35 on
Sun Va e y D ve
Lg
beau tu y land scaped o
Gas hea
dea tam v
hon e S34 000

Charmmg Br1ck Ranch
Prrced Under $40 ooo

bsm

&amp; t es

con

d t on $725 Ph 367 05&lt;

INTERN!\ liON Cub T octo

JUST LISTED

s o y s u co w h

JO.&lt; 773 s•o5
~ M ckey Thompson mags

"6 7322 ole 5
" ' Pan ac Cotal no

SCENICALLY SITUATED

Ph

1973 Pon oc e•c cond
od al
t 85 AC ext a c eon o g nol
owne $2550 Ph 446 10441 or

388 8776

:JUST liSTED A Cond 2
B R F ee wood
a e on
ac e o
Kempe
Ho ow
Rd 2 ou bu d ng s and o s
of o he ex as S 0 000

mos

Lerge wo s o y
J 5R
home coun rv k chen
formal DR ptas ~r wa s

arge s orage room

446 3636

va

221&lt; 0 6&lt;3 2285
2 eg polled He elo d bull col es

9322

S haoDs c
Boa do Educa on

adm

Galltpolts Ohro

THE ONE YOU VE BEEN
WAIT NG FOR - One of

LIST NOW

NEW Holland Hoy Spec ols Hay
Bnes Rog $3'150now$3200

1966 Fo d Econo ne Supe Von
good unn ng cond $700 4416

JUNK au o and s

home toea ed be wten he
two c y schoo ls on a
beau fu tv andscaped o
The home s cove ed w fh
a um num s d ng J PO
ches oas heat 2 oom d Y
bsm
Ia ge count v k
chen DR clen aundrv &amp;

Do you want to sel your
pace" Buy a new one w th
more s-pace? Call the

Ph "6 7&lt;69

pe

Conven en to eve vth no
A large two story 4 BR

Th s s a
able loc al on

2S12

~ 4461066

Sem bunga o home 4 BR
ve yn ce k chen w hoven
&amp; range DR f rep ace n
LR fu ~sm garage jus
rom own
7 m

969 Plymou h Belv&amp;de • 41 d
seen 0 1902 Eastern Ava o

cek

REALTOR

BRANNON REALTY We
wI
st your property &amp;

$6&lt;50 Ph "64 4
67 Cho
o cond on Ph .446
37 1

ohn

WOOD

NO BUSSING

s or age

CANADAY
REALTY
Locust St

RUSSELL

(H 446-3434

190 ACRES

1971 Chev lmpo o
1970 Mon e Co lo

1965 Chevy &amp;e o
offe
co
m
befo a5pm

H Locust St
Howard Brannon Broker
on ce 446 2614
L.ucil t Brannon
~ve 446 '216 or U6 2674

70 A pasture 60 A t abe
30 A
mber 2 ponds &amp;
sp ng
obacco base 3
ba ns grana v &amp; shop

367-7250

972 Po s he 911 T 5 spd toe
a
ond Sn
VG cond

omo
352

TOWNHOUSE
APARlMENTS
2 Bedroom
Townhouses '
112 Baths
Pay Only One Uttltty
Addrson Ohto
For Information
Call Sh1rley Adkrns

T GMC PU

1971 lon GMC P U
1971 h •• lou h GMC P U
2968
Fo d

REALTY

In th s beaut ful ramb ng
ranch home 3 BR 2 ba hs
a bu
n k en en fo m a
DR f replace n LR w w
carpet central a r 2 ca
garage outbu d ngs a
th s &amp; 30 acres of good and
nea own
7 ACRES
Near eve and oca cd n
Eve green
Large two
story 3 BR nome
a ge
kitchen DR
par bsm
furnace alum num s d ng
s orm w ndows &amp; doors
porch
ga age
Qu ck
possess on

TARA

1975 T Chev PU
973 h ee fou h T Chev PU

97
0 ds
S o
SOMMERS GMC
Tucks Inc
33 P ne S
H6 2$32

CLOSE IN
e ou R
s t om
oc o v 1 e ( s gn on e 1

Spnng Valley
Green Apartments
446-1599

OHIO RIVER
REALTY INC.

THE WISEMAN AGENCY
GAlliA COUNTY'S lARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

l bby Hole "6 17&lt;3
Rt

Real Estate fot Slit__

0 TCH NG Wo e l nes Gos
E ec and Te epnone bu o
Ru fon9 0 7 42 2008

REG QUI\RTER Ho se S ud •e
v ce

Leo &amp; K ng b ed

Co

446 4654
THOMAS Fl\ N
EXIERM NAT NG

ex.pe ence 388 8308 New d y
wo I ce ng w h sw o ex
u e des gns 0 he d y wall
epa
nyl wollpape ng new
bo hs new k chens Any h ng
n emode ng o epa

THE TOP SHOP
Cus om 8u It Roof T uues Fa
m co Coun e ops &amp; Cob ne s

Coo e on o 667 3 86
COUGHE NOUR Wo e Del ve y

e m e Pes Con o
Whee e sbu g Oh o

446 3962 446 4262 ony; me
HAMS Rado &amp; TV Co yn se
ce 2 m les otf R 7 Gr:to ges CARPENTER wo k
hou se
C eek Rd 4&lt;6 9304
e nodelng . w ng punbng
po n ng Pn 4416 29 0
CONCR~TE
wo k
pa os
s dewo k
basemen
l ou s Cnx 446 3398

•

DOZER wo k

leo

e~Ccavo

g Ph 446 0051
i

ng

and

Joe Crans256 i4SI
NAT ONAL
AD
CARTERS PLUMB NG
AND HEATING

VERTIS NG
w lh
Ga le v of Homes

he

Co Fou h&amp;Pne
Phone Ub 3888 o 446 .4477

STI\NDARD
P umb ng Heo ng

215 h dA e "63782
GENE Pli\N1S &amp; SON
PLUMB NG - Heo ng - A
Cond on ng 300 Fou h Avo

Ph "6 i637
DEWI11 S P UMB NG
AND HEAl NG
Roue 60o E egeen

Pho e •46 2735

FOR SALE by Owne But nan
bu d ng g show oom off ce
pen y po k ng space neo Jc1
R 35 and 60 6 oom mode n
v ng qua to s abo e

bo hs Ph 446 0762
REAL ESTATELOI\NS

VA FHA 30 v oons Po k Mor
gage Se v ces 77 E State

A hens Ph 592 3051

�32- The Sunday Times. Sentinel. Sunday. June 6, 1976

AUTO SMOKED
GALLIPOLIS
No
damage resulted from a
smoke scare at 12:02 p.m.
Friday in an auto owned by
Be lly aoone, Gallipolis.
Accordi ng to Fire Chief
James A. .Northup,. smoke
was coming from Mrs
Boone's 1975 Ford Thunder:
bird due to oil on the hot
manifold. Seven men
responded to the 98th alarm
of the year.

AFTER more than five months of campaigning by local ,
district and state ROlilicians, round one of the atcentennial
Year elections will be climaxed following Tuesday's prirru~ ry
in the Buckeye State .
·
~ ~

BAD AIR ALERT
CLEVELAND · fUPI I
Clevelanders remained under
an air pollution alert
Saturday because of hi gh
readings for sulfw dioxides
and particulates from power
' plants. The aled was
dechired at noon Fnday by
Gov. James A. Rhodes when
the city 's air pollution index
tose to 213. The index had
dropped only seven poin ts by
4 p.m.

-1

BY early Wednesday (probably around 6 a.m .) individual
party contests and local issues will ha ve been settled.
Republicans, Democrats and Independents will then start the
long grind on round two - the November (presidential)
election.

1'ou r 'Vole and l nflu~ nce Apprerlat ed

Rlehard II!'. 11llloh15

+H

ON U1e surface, it appea rs action in local contests is quiet,
but undernea th It ail, you can bet candidates of both major
political parties have been burning the midnight oil with
various factions in an ali-&lt;Jut effort to earn fail nominations.
+ +~

IT is a policy of both parties not to endorse toea l

ca ndidates befor. a pri1nar)' election. GOP and Democrat
Centra l Committeemen, however, go all out to support
primary nominees in general elections.

++ +

ALTHO UGH incwnbenl officials usually have a n
· advantage in a primary, history has proven that not all
incumbents are renominated by GalJia voters. With such a
large number of sheriff 112) and county commission 111 )
candidates seekin g nomination in both parties, you can expect
some surprises Tuesday. Upsets, if you may, beca use it
appea rs neit her party has no clear cul favorites in those
contests.

COMMANDER RAY ROBEH'l'S demonstrates proper

JOIIIS

use of the handgun to Leon Stollings, Ernest Thompson,
Gil Plants, Tom Werry and Larry Hudson,
-

Law enforcement class finishing training on firiitg range ·

Republican candidate F or -

student will receive a cer- Education and will be certificate from the State of tified by the Slate of Ohio,
Ohio, Trade and Industrial Peace Office r Trai ning
Division of Voca tional Council.

Full Term

B ~gtnnl ng

January a,

Primary Election - June I, 1178
Pd . Po l. Ad v , b y th e Candid at e

custom
draperies

BESIDES local contests and issues, Gallia Countians will
also be called upon to select presidential delegates and
alternates for both parties. Democrats will have a contested U.
S. Senate primary and both parties will have contests for each
of the Ohio Supreme Court seats that will be up for election In
November.

+++
GAI.LI A vote rs will be fa ced with eight constitutional
amendment questions. Too, voters will nominate senate,
congressional, representative, supreme court and court of
appeals candidates.

Save 30%
On ·Custom Draperies
For Your Home or
Office.

+~-+

SE:CRETARY of State Ted W. Brown said earlier this
year, " If Ohio's eligible voters do not vote in the primary, and
unfortunate ly man y will not, they have no right to complain
because they do not like the selection of candidates at general
election time."

+++

CLEVELAND (UP! ) High · level Ohio Belle
Telephone Co. offi cials met
Friday with striking Com. muni ca ti ons Workers of
America, but the meeting
wa s recesse d without
resolution of their conflict
star ling in Cleveland last
Friday when members of
CWA Local 4309 protested a
.decision by the company to
allow service representatives
to assemble and se ll

telephones in new Ohiu Bell
retail stores.
A Local 4309 spokesman
said telephone assembly "is a
primary job responsibility of
a telephone installer or
repairman." There are 7,000
CWAmembers on strike. The
company maintained that the
issue was not covered by Ohio
Bell's contract with the CWA
because the retail stores are
a new venture.

Choose From Over 700 Fabrics
and Cokrs in Our Collection.

PAUL KIESLING

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Kiesling will
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of Optometry
GA LLIPOLIS · Paul
Daniel t Dan 1 Kiesling, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kiesling,
1066 First Ave ., Gallipolis,
has been accepted to the 197677 class of the Ohio State
University College of Optometry . A 1973 graduate of
Gallia Academy high school,
he attended Ri o Grande
College for two years, where
he was a member of Chi Beta
Phi Science fraternity . He
transferred to Ohio State
University last fall .
Recently , he was amnng a
~ roup
of s tu~ent s receiving
the
Summa
Award Cer tifi cate for
high academic scholarship
while in University College at
Ohio State.
He will complete his junior
year in Art.; and Sciences in
June and begin claS!oes in the
College of Optometry in
September .

Please bring window sizes with ,ou.

MAIN STORE, ANNEX AND
WAREHOUSE OPEN
FRIDAY, 9:30 to 8, and
SATURDAY 9:30 to 5 PM.

••
~

Canol K. Snowden
24 Slate St., Gallipolis
Phone 446-4290
Home 446-4518

"See me for Homeowners Insurance
from State FarnHhe.world's largest~'
Uke agood neighbor,
Slate Farm is there.
P7172

tlATI 'AIM

A

Slttt Ftrm ' ~•
llldC....Itr ~

Mom.~

II'UUIAHCI

omc.: ~- llinoll

OVRDC TO MEET
PORTSMOUTH - Th e
quar terly meelin_g of the full
co mmiss ion of the Ohi o
Valley Reg ional Development Commission will be
held Tuesday, June 15 at the
Elks Country Club, Portsmouth, beginning at 7 p.m.
The dinner meeting will be
preceded by a social hour ,
with a business meeting to
folluw lhe dinner.

MANAGEMENT
t would like to lake this opportunily lo
ask you for
your support .
I feel my candidacy is worth your sincere
consideration as I have no axes to grind, owe no
favors to anyone or any special interest group. It
was I alone, who made the decision to enter -into
politics; now t find I must obtain your support.
My candidacy rests in the beha If of these issues
- Drug Traffic and Drug Abuse, Rural
Protection , Upgrading th• Sh"iff's Department,
~ Kpose you to some of my view.s and

Community Co~peration , as elaborated in my

PAUL PLYMALE
t

platform ; THE FIRST CANDIDATE FOR
SHERIFF TO PLATFORM HIS CANDIDACY.

·(

"

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

"THE PERFECT MATCH"

l.

LAW ENFORCEMENT

On e candidate would ha\le yolJ and I beli eve

hi s term of office was without fault. You be th e
jud,, ,~ ! Some c~ndidates boa st their many years

of law enforcement background, but fail to state
their opinion of the proble ms or intended
programs. I remind vou, this ele ttion is not a
quiz on hi story but a test for the future of Gallia
County .
We need not expound on problems and
po ssibl.e cures but tO unite tl'le people, organize
the Sher iff' s office in such a manner as to have
unit y and co .operation between the
Commi ssioners, the judicial oHices and other
law enforc ement agencies . I fe el my past

e

tm

ELBERFELD;$ IN POMEROY

.

No progress in strike talks

2,550,000 voters will visit the
state's 13,000 polling places,
compared will! 2,228,555 in
1972.
One reason may be the
intense interest in the Ohio
presidential balloting where .
each party has a "pure"
primary contest for the first
time his history.
Prior to 1972, Ohio usually.
went the ~~ favorite " son
ro~te .
Voting was for
delegates
instead
of
presidential candidates.
This time, however, there
will be a six-way statewide
contest for Democratic
presidential popularity and a

two-way Republican race.
President Ford will be
tryifl! to ice his nomination at
the Republican National
Convention by soundly
defeating former California
Gov . Ronald Reagan In the
Republican primary, which
will produce 28 at-large
delegates and another 69
congre.ssional
district
delegates .
Former Gov . Jimmy
Carter of Georgia is hopilig
Ohio, joining .California and
New Jersey · as the final
primary states of 1976, will
put a cap on his marathon
campaign for the Democratic

ba ckground , best qualifies me for this difficult
ta sk. It government is to operate in a business
fa shion , then busines smen and business
t echnique s must be employed . Management and
CJdmlnistration is the key to any succ~ssful
business . I not only have youth nd management
qualiti es to be a fu II time Sheriff - but I will be a
full term Sheriff.
.
My sincere thanks for allowing me to give
vvu my support if elected to the office SHERIFF OF GALLI A COUNTY .

PAUL ·J.
PLYMALE
REPUBLICAN ~OR SHERIFF
Pd . Pol. Ad v.

VOL XXVIII

NO. 35

presidential nomination by Tall Jr .. . HUhiu. Taft Is
awarding him a major share unopposed for the ltcpublican
of the 152 delegates at stake. nomination.
His major challengers in
- Nine cootesb in volving
Ohio are Rep . Morris K. incumbent L'O ngrcssmen,
UdaU of Arizona and Sen. including Wayne 1.. Hays , ().
Frank Church of Idaho .
Flushing, who is e•pecteu to
" As Ohio goes, so probably win renomination despite a
goes the convention," said scandal which already has
Church in underscoring the cost him a commi ttee
importance placed on the chairmanship.
state's primary .
- Contests for nomination
: The primary ballot will also in all 99 Ohio House districts
include :.
and 16 state Senate districts.
- A contest between four
- Races !Or pllrty norrilnaCleve landers
for
the tions for two Ohio Supreme
Democratic nomina lion to Court seats being vacated by
run for the U.S. Senate seat the retiring Justices J.J.P.
now occupied by Sen. Robert Corrigan and Leonard J .

•

"EIGB COUNTY

RIO GRAN DE - Students exam will be given on J une
of the Adult Education Basic 14.
Law Enforcement class at
Upon sa tisfac torily com Buckeye Hllls Career Center ple tin g the c o urs~ each
tell the classroom last week

SALE I

PRE-ELECI'ION BRIEFS - More than 2,500,000 Ohioans,
an all4ime primary turnout, are expected to go to the polls
Tuesday ... Galila County now ha s 11,887 registered voters. If
more than.8,000 Gallians cast ballots Tuesday, it will be a new
primary turnout for this county . Gallia's record primary ·vote
was establish ed in 1972 when 7,920 persons went to the polls ...
Gallia has 36 of Ohio's 13,000 polling places, thus it's going to be
another lorig hard day and night for local precinct workers and
election board officials. In 1972, the first precinct to report in
during that record primary turnout four years ago was 2-A, at
10:20 p.m. Final results trickled 'in from Addison Pet. at 5:10
a.m. the next da y .. . Polls will be open from 6:30a .m. until 7:30
p.m. Tuesday, giving everybody enough time to go to the polls
... Both GOP and Democrat leaders encourage all registered
voters to cast ballots Tuesday. It 's a simple acl which requires
little time. Your vole, however, is very important for the
future of Ga llia County. See you at the polls Tuesday '

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Staltltouae Repurler
OOLUMBUS (UPI ) - Ohio
voters will cast their ballots
Tuesday for ooe of the most
Impressive
lists
of
presidential candidates ever
to appear on a Buckeye St;l te
primary election ballot.
Voters will also be able to
cast ballots on a variety of
issues and one of the most
heated
U.S.
Senate
campaigns in recent years in
the race between James
Stanton
and
Howard
Metzenbawn.
Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown has foreca st that

COMMI$$/fJNEI

for firearms
class,
consistingtraining.
of loca l The
law , . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . ,
en force ment offi cers will
complete 24 hours of handgun
and riotgun training at the
local firing range.
The course sl&lt;lrted last
+++
5 and will be comJanuary
MOST candida!es have slated their position on various
pleted
June
14 . Classes are
issues. B ac k~ round information of each candidate appeared in
being
held
each Monday,
the Tribune and Sunday Times.Sentinel during the filing
Tuesday,
and
Thursday
period earlier this year . Now, it's up to Gallia 's 11,887
evenings
from
6
p.m.
lo 10
registered voters to decide who will advance to the ~ ene ral
subjects
being
p.m.
Basic
election this all. 1See general wrapup of Tuesday's election
taught in the class include
elsewhere in today's paper. )
law and procedures,
criminal
H~
rules
of
evidence,
search and
TWENTY -TWO Republicans are seeking Gallia positions.
se
izure,
cour
t
structures
in
There are 10 Democrats and two Independents for a total of 34
Ohio, federal civil · rights,
hopefu ls.
prowler calls, mob and riot
++ ~
THERE are three contests for GOP Central control, and traffic accident
Committeemen seats and one contest on the Democrat ticket. investigation .
Commander of Basic La w
Residents in the city school district will vote on a 4 mill
Ray Robert•
Enforcement
operating levy. We support the city school levy wholean
nounced
that
th e fi nal
heartedly.
H -J

Over 2¥2 million Ohio votes expected Tuesday

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Stern , a pair of Republicans
originally appointed by G&lt;&gt;v .
James A. Rhodes.
- Eight statewide issues Incl uding a controversial
proposa l to require the
governor and lleuten11nt
Kovernor candidates to run
for election in teams starting_
in 1978.
- A variety of local
con tests, bond issues and
operating levies.
Many of the presidential
candidates with a chance at
winning were expected to
saturate the state with radio
and television adverli!ing ap-

proaching $1 million.
Reagan, Carter and Udall
were etpected to use.particularl y
heavy
media
coverage.
Reagan fielded a full slate
of at-la rge delegates but
conceded Ford 24 districts
delegates by competing for
only ~ In 15 congressional
districts.
Carter, Udall and Church
will be joined on the
statewide Democratic ballot
by Sen. Henry M·. Jackson of
Washington and Alabama
Gov. George Wallace, neither
of wh001 has campaigned

acUvely for a month.
Also competing for the 38
allarge De moc rati c
de legates is state Treasurer
Gertrude W. Donahey, who
heads_an uncommitted slate.
Any candida te fa ili ng to
achieve IG per cent of the
statewide vote wiU be shut
out of at-large delegates.
Mrs. Donahey has no delegates II] any of the 2.1 the
co ngress ional dis tric t s.
Carter has a full complement
of IH In all the dlsirlcts,
Udall has filed In 22 and
Wallace a nd J ackson are on
the ballot In 21.

en tine
PRICE FifTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, JUNE 7, 1976
::::::::::::::::::;:::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::;:::::::;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;::

Extended service
ordered July 16
Extended ·area service be·
tween the General Telephone
Co. customers of Pomeroy,
. Middleport, ·Racine and
Rutland and the 965 nwnbers
of the Chester exchange of
the
Western
Reserve
Telephone Co., headquartered at Quaker City, Ohio,
will go into effect on July 1$.
Learning of the extended
service from the Western
ll.eserve Co. was Mrs. Sandra
Sheets Griffith who headed
the, move three years ago to
receive extended service be·
tween the eastern part and
the balance of Meigs County.
The service will involve .
for
additional
costs
customers of the Western
Reserve Co. including :
Business, one party, $1.60

increase
per
month;
business, two party, $1.35;
pay station , $2';" private
residential phone, 8ti cents;
two party line, 65 cents a
month and four party
residential, 60 cents.
·
The new directory to be
issued on July 26 wiD include ·
the new .nwnbers which 9115
customers can call without
paying toll into the General
Telephone Co. area . Kenneth
Krinn of the Athens office of
The General Telephone Co.
said this morning there apparently will be no additional
costs for subscribers of the
company in Pomeroy,
Middleport, !lacine and
Rutland- 992, 949 and 742
nwnbers - who will now be
able to phone 985 numbers of

the .Western Reserve Co. In
the Chester area without a
.toll.
Mrs, Griffith instigated the
extended area service three
years ago and filed a nwnber
of petitions from residents
asking for the service. A
public hearing resulted at the
coUrthouse in Pomeroy and it
was ruled that the extended
area service would be Instigated.
Mrs. Griffith said this
morning she is "delighted"
with the word that the extended area serVice wlll be
effective on July 16. She
extended thanks to her
committee and to all
residents who ·helped on the
project.

p 0lice
ffNews • • •zn Brzef~
.

w~*w,:~,~~~:::::m~:::~:$;::::::~::::~~:::::::~:::::::::~~~:::::::~~:,~:~~·:::::::&gt;.&gt;.&lt;

·

ByunltedPresslnterilatlonat
BEIRUT, LEBANON - TWO COLUMNS OF Syrian army
tanks and troops advanced Into Lebanon's central mountains
todaY, clash!Jig for the first time with Moslem militiamen and
threatening a major confrontation with leftist and Palestinian
forces .
Moslem gunmen fought Syrian-backed Saiqa guerrillas in
the streets of Beirut, prompting authrrities to close Beirut
International airport "until further notice." It was one of the
bloodiest battles of the 14-month-&lt;Jid civil war. A Syrian strike
force ol several hundred troops moved west from positions
near Dahr .el Baider, on the Beirut-Damascus highway 30
miles east of the capital toward leftist strongholds in the
mountains.

WASHINGTON
CITING " INEFFECTIVE"
management, Air Force auditors say officials who are
responsible for financing varsity sports at the Air Force
Academy lost '$549,803 in the stock market over a four ·year
period. "The securities speculation was a terrible disservice to
cadets who pay fees and servicemen wbo pay dues into the
athletic asaociation," said Rep. Les Aspin, 0-Wis., wbo
released the audit Sunday.
Aspln also said tile Air Force Academy Athletic
Association might have lost. an additional ~.000 on its
purchase of speculative seciD'itles of the Government National
Mortgage Association. That transaction, according to the
audit, resulted In a "bilge dispute" with Merrill Lynch, Pierce,
Fenner &amp; Srrilth, Inc., the nation's largest stock brokerage
firm . In a settlement with Merrill Lynch, the association ended
up losing $113,000 rather than $463,000.
LONDON - BILUONAIRE J. PAUL GETI'Y, who died
Sunday at &amp;'1, always disliked being called one of the world's
richest men -: not out of sensitivity, but because he felt it
classified him as "some sort of freak."
The Minnesapolls-born attorney's son, who made his flrt
mililon by the age of 24, died one minute after midnight,
succumbing to a heart attack a this !J!Bnsion, Sutton Place. He
had been in falling health for some time.
Trans World Airlines was flying today as negotiators
discussed details of an unsigned tentative contract averting a
strike by 5,500fllghtattendants. But a bevy of disputes plagued
other American industries. A strike was planned against a
railroad and contract disputes tied up shipping in northern
California and the San Francisco Bay area, and threatened
medical services in New York and Connecticut.
A tentative agreement was reached Saturday between
TWA and Local 551 of the Air Transport Division-Transport
Workers Union. Althou~h the agreement was not sil!ned and
negotiators were still going over the language, a union
spokesman said the chances of a strike appeared "very slim."
Union secretary · treasurer Jim Tuller said picketers were
sent home late Saturday. TWA carries SOI)Ie 43,000passengers
a day.

log .tour
ll
.

mishaps
Four auto accidents were
investigated by Pomeroy
Police over the weekend.
At 4:13 p.m. Sunday on
Route 7 near the Beacon
Service Station, a car driven
by Paul Clark, 47, Middleport, struck and broke up
a utility pole. Damages to the
vehicle were medium; Clark
was cl ted for leaving the
scene of an accident.
At 6:28p.m. Saturday, cars
driven by Mildred Riley,
Mason, and Kenneth Klein ,
Pomeroy, collided on West
Main St. near the parking lot.
Damages were minor. There
were no arrests and no injuries.
There were only minor
damages to two vehicles
SatiD'day on CoUrt St., when a
car driven by Arnold
Snowden, Pomeroy, backed ·
from a parking space into a
car driven by George Korn,
Jr . There were no arrests and
no injuries.
At 5:17 a.m. Sunday on
Union Ave., a car driven by
Robert L. Dugan, Rutland,
traveling west, went out of
control and struck a steel
guard
railing
fence,
sideswiped a tree, and then
struck the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Phil Globokar , incurring damages to its porch
and basement.
Dugan is charged with
driving while intoxicated and
driving · while
under
suspension. There were no
. injuries. Damages were
heavy to the car.

This baby wouldn't wait
;;Heave"n Can Walt" as the saying gqes,
However, new bablea can't, and don't, memben of the
Pomeroy Emergency Squad _foqod out early one morning
last week.
Enroute to Pleasant VaHey H111pltal witb Mrs. Monad
(Jean) Goode, a matemlty patient, aquadmen Cbarlea
Bartels, Howard Mullen and George Kom, Jr., found ·
themaelves with a baby who wouldn't walt and so
deUvered the child In front of the Captain's Louage In
Gallfa County. Mra.Goode and her baby were taken on to
Pleasant Valley and both ~ doing fine, squadmen
repurt.
'

B&amp;E PROBED
Pomeroy police are In·
vesligatlng a breaking and
entering at the offices of
Midwest Steel Co., E. Main
St., Pomeroy, Police said the
offices were ransacked and
between $300 and $400 stolen.
li was believed that entrance
was gained through a rear
window. The incident was
discovered at 6:58 a.m.
Monday morning.-

Dateline 1776
PHILADELPIJIA, June 7
- Rlchard Henry Lee of
Virginia lutroduced In
Congress three resolulloos.
One called for total Independence· from Britain;
the others for preparations
for a plan of colonial
confederation and the
entering Into · of foreign
alliances. Delegates were
"enjoined to attend punetually at 10 o'clock" the
next day to begin debate on
them.
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Property
APRIL AND AU.EN KING DEMONSTRATE judo
technique .

damages
heavy
Three accidents were investigated by- the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department
over lh~ weekend ,. none
causing personal Injuries.
Saturday at 6: IS p.m. in
Sutton Township on Snowball
Hill-, Lorraine Patro Aeiker,
26, Pomeroy, was traveling
east when her car's right
front lire blew out, causing
her to lose control in loose
gravel, go off the road to the
right, and hit a parked car
owned by Ronnie Hubbard.
There was severe damage
to the Aeiker car. Hubbard's
vehicle was demolished. No
citation was iSsued.
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. In
Lebanon Twp . on CR 31
Gregory K. Circle, 17, Rt. I,
Racine, traveling east
collided with li car backed
Into his path by Michael A.
Fleming, 19, Rt. I, Portland.
There was slight to moderate
damage.
Sunday at 5 p.m. In Rutland
Twp., Pansy G. Ohlinger, 17,
Middleport, traveling west
and Donald L. Hysell, 24,
Rutland, _ traveling east,
collided. Ohlinger was cited
to court for left of center.
There
was
moderate
property damage.

APRIL AND AlLEN KING •re junior Judo
champions of West Virginia having won gold medals in a
tournament at Charleaton this sp,rlng. The two .won
trophies at .earlier meets held at Parkersburg, a.~W MrU..
age 12, went on to win the regional gold medal at
Rochester, Mich. Her age prohibits her from entering the
national competition.

April King is
gold winner
Middleport's April King was a gold medal winner in the
Junior Olympics regional competition of the United States
Judo Assn. held recently at Oakland University In Rochester,
.

M~ .

Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Allen Lee King, April qualified
to compete by taking the gold medal first place award for the

Weather
Clear and mild tonight.
Lows around 60. Sunny and
hot Tuesday. Highs in mid
and upper 80s. Chance of rain
near zero through Tuesday.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday through
Friday, fair and warm
through period. Highs In
80s and lows In tiOs.

Entries invited for
battle of hands
RUTLAND
Registrations are being
accepted for the " Battle of
the Bands" to be staged at
6:30p.m. on Monday, July 5,
at the Rutland Community
Park in conjunction with the
expanded July 4th weekend
activities planned for the
holiday in Rutland .
· The Rutland Fire Department and the Rutland
Bicentennial Committee are
working together on the
several day celebration of
which the "Battle of the
Bands" is a part.
Each band taking part will
make · a 15 minute presen-

tation and the band selected
as first place winner will
receive $100. Second place Is
$5() and third place $25.
Registration is $10 and must
be sent In with the
registration form . The fee
will be forfeited if the band
does not compete. Deadline
for registering is July I.
Registration forms are to
be sent at once to Mrs. Joan
Stewart, Bicentennial
Chairman, P. 0 . Box ltl,
Rutland, Ohio 45775. Bands
are to send their fee along
with the completed form
below .

NAME OF BAND
PERSON IN CHARGE
·ADDRESS OF, PERSON IN CHARGE
PHONE OF PERSON IN CHARGE
TYP~:

.

OF MUSIC BY BAND
.~

''

state of West Virginia In a conies! staged In Charleston.
At the regional competition, April competed agalnat
contestants from Ohio, West Virginia, Kentucky, Illinois,
. Indiana and Michigan, a total of 186, all first , second and third
place state winners In the several age, weight, and sex
categories.
Although she Is the regional judo champion In her
category, she canitot compete in the national contest due to her
.age, .Ryles specify that she.must be 13 to enter. In addition to
her gold medals, April has al8i&gt; won two trophies, both last fall
in Parkersbur~. W. Va. meets.
Her 10-yearo(l]d brother, Allen, also won three trophies, both
at the Parkersburg tournaments, and also received a medal at
the Charleston, W. Va , state competition.
April and Allen, who belong to the Tan! Judo Club at Point
Pleasant, for the past 2 years have been takh1g Instruction
there. Their practice sessions are on each Wednesday from
September to April.
While they are both currently "white belt," this fall April
will try for lhe blue bell which Is the eighth degree In junior
judo, and Allen wjll try for the "orange ~ell, " or the sixth
degree. These are the maxlmwn degrees they can lake at their
ages. The promollona In junior ranka L'Ome on the basis of judo
ability, contest wins and close attendance. The highest belt
. which can be achieved In junior judo Is the purple belt.
Emphasis of .the program on the junior level Is physical
conditioning, recreation, fellowship and enjoyment. April and
Allen belong to the United States Judo Assn. and the Amateur
Athletic Union of the West Virginia Assn .

.::·.

Upper Snake Valley
made disaster.area
iDAHO FALLS, Idaho
About 7,000 homes were exact death count may never
(UPI) - No one paid much ruined in the rush of water, be known . "We're not going
attention when water began mud and debris, some 30,000 to get all the bodies," he said
seeping through the 3lt)..foot persons were evacuated, ·and In Rexburg, the town hardest
Teton Dam. [!ut then a thousands of head of cattle hlfby the flood.
whirlpool appeared were drowned .
''They're gone. They are
. ominously near one corner '!'hose who could returned burled under the mud."
. and the earth-fill dam burst, to mud-filled homes and
Officials said most of the
sending millions of gallons of farms today to find other missing probably had taken
water racing through the danges awaiting them - refugee at other homes and
Uwer Snake River Valley. pes tlcldepoisoned water, locationa.
Daryl Grleg was fishing rattlesnakes and diseases
Two federal officials said
Saturday wben he looked up caused by the decaying Sunday night a preliminary
to see a "giant wave that cattle.
Investigation disclosed a
looked like It was 30 feet
President Ford declared · corner of the dam began
high" rushing at him. Grieg, the valley a disaster area, crumbling because water
22, rode a logjam In the making federal recovery seeped through three grout
flooded Teton· River until he funds available.
curtains between the fill and
climbed to !;Bfety in a tree.
Officials said two of the the rock bottom of the Teton
By the time the water level dead were fishermen who had River, bot that Initially the
over 300 flooded square miles been below the dam when It seepage had attracted little
dropped Sunday, at least six ruptured Saturday. Another attention.
persons were reported dead was a 62-year~ld woman wbo
Then a whldpooi appeared
because of the disaster and suffered a fatal heart attack. near the corner just before
.numerous others were listed
Civil Defense operations the break, Commissioner
as missing.
officer Kent Marlor said the Gilbert Stamm of the Bureau
'1.1.!~~~.
. .. ····· .,. . . -~:::::::::::·:::::~·::::::::~:::::.:-:.~:-:::~~~~::::·:;::::::::~:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· of Reclamation and assistant
...........::!··~·-0:·.·······
. . •.0:•:0'~·:·.···········».•.•.•.•.•
·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: Interior Secretary Jack
•••••. •~-•• • ... '· .. .:!... .•.i!. •...........
.•. ·······················0:
0:•,•,•,•,•...•.•,•,•,•,•,·,•.0:•.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.
Horton told an Idaho Falls
Airport news conference.
But, they said, valley residents had been given a
Middleport Village oHlclala urge all resldenll to vote warning In ample time .
Tuesday for the 3-a!IU levy for current e~pe~~ses.
Stamin and Horton denied
This levy will provide $h,DOO per year over a 5-yetr a report a "ground shift "
period for contlltned use of village street Ughta and for street caused the break.
malnteaance and lmprovemellls. They said this levy Is
The dam had been built for
dellpfrately needed by the village.
the Bureau of Reci81118tlon as .
Resldenll are reminded that Middleport has no an Irrigation and flood
operatlooallevy of any kind and has one of ·the lowest tax control project: Ecology
. rates Ia tile coWJty,
groups fought unsuccessfully
"Y011r vote and aupport wUI be greatly appreciated by in the couris to ,block Its
your village uHiclala," the mayor (Fred HoHman) and
construction on grourds it
council said.
was ecooomically pnfeasible
and ·, dangerous . to the ·
~l~~~;~l~l~lli;~~~~~~ml;~lll~l~llil~l~l~l~l~l;l:~:~@~t~~~~~~l~ll;l~~l;m~~~l~!~i~i~l~~~l~l~lf:~~l;l~~~~~~~~l~l;~~§t: environment .

Vote for

,1 ,

levy urged

~

~''

,,i

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