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. I

12- The Daily Sentir_tel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Apri17, 1972

Morris.

Many More Will Testify
WASHINGTON (UP)) - The vesiigation until April 20 with a
Senate Judiciary Committee decision on whether to
may call as many as 60 more recommPnd the nomination of
witnesses in its investigation of Richar&lt;. G. Kleindienst as
International Telephone &amp; attorney general coming by
Telegraph-an inquiry thrown April 'll .'
- Rep. Bob Wilson, R.oilif.,
into new turmoil by revela lions
in
a month-old interview,
of apparent discrepancies in
published Thursday by the
previous testimony.
In the latest develop- Baltimore Sun, said ITT
President Harold S. Geneen
ments : ·
personally
pledged a $400,0110
.. - The committee called a
closed meeting at 10 a.m. EST 'guarantee to help subsidize this
today to vote on a plan that summer's GOP National Conwould . continue the 'in - vention . Geneen previously
told the com'mittee uder oath
that the .only commitment
made w.., $200,0110 by ITT's
Sheraton Hotels subsidiary.
Document Supports
Tonight &amp; Saturday
April7-8
Document Supports Claims
-Sen. John V. Tunney, DTHE LAST RUN
Catif., turned over to the
ITechnicolor)
committee a sworn statement
George C. Scoll
from an Internal Revenue
Tony Musante
Service investigator . He said
GP
THE LAST REBEL
the document supports claims
ITechnicolort
tl1at 'U.S. Attorney Harry D.
Joe Namath
Steward
of San Diego blocked a
Ty Hardin
federal investigation - while
GP
Kleindienst was an assistant
attorney general-of illegal
Sun .. Mon. &amp; Tues.
contributions for President
Aprii9-IO.ll
Nixon's 1968 electi.on camGONE WITH
paign.
THE WIND
Senate GOP Leader Hugh
"G P"
Scott
said he opposed any move
Clark Gable
Vivien Leigh
to continue the investigation,
Admission :
adding: "I have reason to
II. .so Adults $1.00 Children
believe that some senators
SHOW START57 P.M.
would like to keep going clear

MEIGS lHEATRE ·
.

Tonight-Sat.-Sun.

Aprii7-B-9

up to the Democratic nciminating convention."
But the month~ong probe
was caught in more controversy· after Wilson's comments appeared in !rllt. In the
tape-recorded Interview with
reporter RObert E. Cox of the
San Diego Union . Wil&lt;&lt;m •ni ~

· ~neen: a fishing c~paiuon,
told him "I'll guarantee you·up
' to $400,0110" of the • •0110 San
Diego .needed to beeome hOot .
city lor · the GOP convention
this August.
Wilson and the San Diego
Union denied the,report.

News. • • in Briefs

(Continued from page 1)'
Lyndon B. Johnson suffered chest pains today and was rushed to
University of Virginia Hospital by a mobile coronary c~re unit.
• Dr. Richard S. Crampton said the 63-yearild former·
president "is comfortable now and his condition is stable." He
refused further comment on Johnson's condition. The former
chief executive was visiting his daughter and son-in~aw Marine
Maj.and Mrs. CllarlesRobb, when the pains struck at 4a'.m.
COLUMBUS -'THE OHIO General Assembly has adjourned
for a month of primary election campaigning after sending to
Gov . John J . Gilligan what is believ,ed to he one of the strongest
strip mine conlr,!&gt;ls in the nation. The House Thursday agreed, 870, to the Senate version of the bill, ending a IS-month debate
punctuated by StawhoiiSI! demonstrations 1111d verbal blasting by
the governor at the president of the largest coal company in Ohio.
G~lllgan Is expected to sign the bill next Monday, making It
effecllve inunediateiy. However . the Natural Reousrces.
Department, which regulates strip mining, will need three
months to hire new Inspectors and otherwise gear up for implementing the law. See Page 4for the bill "spelled out."
l: gb~n :.:U}d.~.~~.me'fmr·m::».=.;:?

League Tourney
Date Settled

HSUS TO MEET
Members of the Meigs
County chapter of the
Humane Society of the
Uillled Slates - which has
Its application for In·
corporallon as a non-profll
organization ready for ffilng
with the Ohio Secretary of
Slate - wiD examtae the
prnspecis of spo118oring •
neutering clinic in Meigs
County nell Thursday.
Dorthea Fisher, president,
said the meeting Is open to
the public. especially to
everyone interested in
joining in the chapter's
work. The meeting wUI begin
al7:30 P.P.'· at the Meigs Inn.

Date and site for the 1972
Southeastern Ohio League golf
tournament was dewrmined
Thursday night by _the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League representatives at
Lake White near Waverly.
The tournament will be
conducted on Friday, April 28,
at Gallipolis.
League officials aiso approved a motion to cooduct all
future league golf tournaments
the last Friday in April .
Championship trophies for
Waverly's varsity and Ironton's reserve basketball teams _m'f§~i@!(.xx.w·:=;t:mw.
were approved by the officials.
The next SEOAL meeting
will be held June f4, at
Wellston High School, beginMr. and Mrs . Max Brown,
ning at 10 a.m.
both students at Ohio
University, have been named
AUTO WRECKED
A car driven by Albert Fife, to the· dean 's list for the past
63, Cheshire, had medium quarter.
Mr. Brown , the son of Mrs.
damage after it struck five
fence posts and went over an Frances Brown of New Haven,
embankment on Mulberry W. Va., is a 1966 graduate of
Heights Hill at 4:39, 'P·'Il· Wahama High School and will
Thursday. Pomeroy police said receive his ma.s~r's degree. in
Fife , leaving Veterans Radio and Television in June.
Memorial Hospital', apparently His avsrage the last quarter
fainted. He was nollnjured. No was 4.0.
Mrs . Brown, the former
charge was filed.
Dorlha Wilcoxen, daughter of
Mr . and Mrs. Martin Wilcoxen,
Racine, and a 1970 graduate of
Southern ·High School, will
receive an Assoc. Degree in
elementary education in June.
Her average for the quarter
was 3.923.

Smart Couple

P'LU,I

_.........
I

We'd like to help
ou remember how
ong we've been
nd

Awar.
ded
•.
P).itque
'

STEAK
HOUSE

.•• three times a day

•

How? Well , we've ordered some plocemots.
They're tough, long lasting, vinyl , and feature lovely scenes
from around the time PNB got it all started.
Once they're on your table, you 'll wont to leave them there.
And 11 they occasionally moke you think of the bank
·
that's been serving Meigs County for a hundred yeors, fine .
A set of six is ~ailing for you . It's yours free.
when you depos1t $100 or 1110re in a passbook savings account
'
ot either our moin office or Rutland bronc h.
If yo~ don't hove o Po~eroy National Bank savings account,
here s the excuse you ve been waiting for! •
Member FDIC
A Full Service Bank

Home of

the i=abulou~

fit, ,

po""""'pome::y
&lt;Ulland

c:~~na

SANDWICH
'I

Order By Phone
And Take Em Homo

the bank ol
the century
Mt. l812

...

992.5432

_

)

"

Next Egg Hunt
Ellster of '73

' . .

.

MIDDLEPORT - An Easter egg hunt,
if not on .Easter, is not worth having.
.That was how the Middleport :
Pomeroy Rotary Club membership voted
here Friday evening·on whether or not to
!)old Its hunt postponed from last Sunday
today, or even later .if bad weather came
again.
. Municipal Park, where the hunt for BOO
(plastic) eggs with prizes in each was to
have been· conducted Easter Sunday, on
that day was sioshy and heavy with patches of standing water. And the sky
threatened more of the same at I p.m.
wlien a final decision to postpone was
made by Dennis Keney, chairman, his
Rotary committee and officers.
"The eggs will keep," Keney observed
sly iy, before the vote.
Several members reported public
reaction - by mothers of young .children
- to the postponement Easl£r Sunday was .
mainly satisfaction beca use of the
unhealthy conditions at the park.
The "open meeting" at Heath United
Methodist Church, was presided over by
· Presipent C. E. Blakeslee followin g dinner

Teachers' Pay Up

Died Thursday

Mrs. ' Erma Daugherty, 77,
Middleport, died Thursday
evening at v~terans Memorial
Hospital. She was born Feb. 19,
1895 at West Columbia, W. Va .,
the daughter of the late
Thurman and Flora Roseberry
Saxton. Besides her parents,
she was preceded in death by'
her first husband, George Van
Meter; her .second husband,
Henry Daugherty , and three
sisters and two brothers.
Surviving is a son, Hubert
Van Meter , Middleport.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m . Saturday at the
Middleport Church of the
Nazarene with the Rev. Audry
Miller officiating. Burial will
.be in Riverview Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
any time.

DAV TO MEET
Initiation will be held when
:Meigs Chapter 53, DAV , meets
·at 7:30 p.m. Monday at the
chapter home on Butternut
·Ave., Pomeroy. Members and
·wives are invited. Refresh·
' men Is will be served.
DRAMA SCHEDULED
The Ohio University Players
' will present a play, "There
Was a Little Boy" when the
, Riverview PTA meets at 7:30
p.m. Monday. Pupils of grades
one and two will present
musical numbers.
SALE IN PROGRESS
A rwrunage sale is being
. held tod8y and SaturdaY, in the
basement of the Trinity Church
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The sale
is being · sponsored by Xi
Gamma Mu Sorority.
. MARRIAGE LICENSE
Foster ...jones Rood, 35,
Reedsville, and Tracy Irene
Mays, 26, Reedsville ; Ricky
' Lee Blake, 18, Reedsville, and
Jeanne Dale Bahr, 16, Long
Bottom.

Flowers, Trees Feature
Bank's Special Project
Thirteen of Meigs County's
14 garden clubs are preparing
floral displays and 1,000 spruce
transplants will be given to the
public as part of a special
projec t planned by the
Pomeroy National Bank .
The bank - which is observing its tOOth anniversary is carrying out the special
Arbor Day theme observance
in recognition of the tOOth
anniversary of Arbor Day
established April 10, 1872.
Each of the garden clubs
taking part in the program will
prepare floral arrangements
carrying out the Arbor Day

theme. These will he on display
at the bank the next 10 days.
Garden clubs participating are
the Pomeroy Garden Club, the
Riverview Garden Club,
Reedsville, Rutland Garden
Club, Wjpding Trail, Rutland
Friendry Gardeners, Rose,
Star, Bend 0 ' the River, WalkIn , Wildwood, Homestead,
Chester, and the Middleport
Garden Club.
'
The bank has ordered 1,0110
six to 12-inch spruce transplants, which are expected to
arrive in time for distribution
one per patron beginning
Monday.

taken to Holzer Medical
Center. Middleport firemen
were called to the Middleport .
Hill Cemetery at 4:01 p.m.
'Fbursday to extinguish a brush
fire .

Deed
i

Elberfelds Storewide ·Sale
Shop Tonight Until 9 p.m.
Open Saturday 9:30 to 9 p.m.·
• Womens Dress Sale

Pleasant, Melgs-Gallla-Mason District
Chairman, Boy · Scouts of America,
thecks activities at GaUls County
Junior Fairground&amp; where the 1972
MGM Scout-0-Rama, Is being condueled this weekend. Scouts, their
advisors and unit representatives
erected display booths Friday night.
Saturday, visitors viewed shows and
dlopla)'ll between 7:30 and 9:30 p.m.
The three-day event wiU wind up with a
show between 2:30 and 4:30p.m., today
In the 4-H Activities Building. Carl
Murray, Jr., Is District Aclivitteo
chairman for the event.

Going, Gone
l ..
i
Fo:r P_epny
Galiia County

l'l'osectiiO. Hamt{p c. ·~ng and Auiuior

Morton P!c~ey have Blllloonced a tu ·
forfeiture sale from June 5 through June t ·
when 49 parcel! of real estate will be sold
at the Courthouse.
This sale, however, is different from the
ordinary tax foreclosure sale. King explained that at foreclosures lhe propertlet
must produce the taxes and court costs. At
a forfeiture sale, it is only necessary to ask
first for a bid in the amount of the putstanding taxes. If such a bid ts not
received, the property may be sold for' any
price to the highest bidder. It is possible to
sell land for a penny, if that is the higheat
bid.
King said that persons desiring to bid on
property should first make sure where the
property is located, because all property is
sold "as is" and for cash at the time of
sale.
He emphasized that there will be "trash
and treasure, bargains, and dogs" sold. It
is up to the buyer to find out which is
which.
County Recorder Evaiee Myers will
show people the lOcation of any parcel on
the tax mapa they might be inl£rested in.
It is believed thl~ will be the first forflliture sale In Galila county since the late
!lOs, although there have been many
foreclosures In the last four years. King
said it is hoped it will net the county a
"considerable .amount of money," but,
more Importantly , it will put the property
in the hands of persons who will pay their
taxes .

Plan Announced

• Mens Work Uniform Sale
• Bedroom Furniture Sale
• Home Sewing Fabric Sale
• Costume Jewelry Sale·
• Bra· and Girdle Sale
.• Mens Sport Shirt. Sale

POMEROY - Dr. Selim Btazewicz;
Meigs County Health Commissioner, said
Saturday the Meigs County Health
Departnlel)t will sponsor an inununizaUon
- program providing the new m8Jlllles-'
rubella yacdne for ali Meigs County ·
childr~n, ages one through ten in every
elementary school in Meigs ~Y dlll'ln8
tbe week ill May I. Preschool-age children
may receive the vaccine at . tile school
nearest them at a time 16 be announced. ·
Since there will be.no charge for thla
llei'Vice, parenla·are atrongly urged to take
advantage ofthla opportunity to have their
chllchn inununized. Stile inununlzation
law requires that children be inunlDiizad ·
aglinsl h9lh types ill measles before enl«ing dlol.
' '
'lbe
combined measleiH'IIbella
vacCine protecta children against both
rubeola ( old-fl!lhloned measles) and
rubella 13-day measles), Therefore,
d!Udren iecetvinll Ibis vaccine fulfill the
acbool en~ance requirement wltll only one
lhot. ~ ~VI!r . 10 ye,ars of age,
howmr, iihoulchot receive the measl•
vaccine vaccine due to medical conlralndicltiolll.
A further aplanltlon of both klndl of
meul• 8114 their dan&amp;en will be
puNIJJbed 1lllr. Esact clinic achedul•
lllo will he - - ' ·

new

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
,.

I

.

Tentative plans for a public auction
were outlined by Gene Riggs, chairman.
Scheduled late this spring, Riggs'
committee will invite the public to make
available from spring cleaning useable
articles of any nature no longer needed. On
call, the articles will be picked up and
stored pending an auction date, he said.
Proceeds from the auction will be
divided between benefitting Project
Hope's missions lr unde rdeveloped
nations and for ·a local humanitarian
project to be announced.
Three guests were introduced, Dr.
Harry King of Gallipolis; Marlin Davis,
(Continued on page 2)

•

IF YOU'RE PLANNING ON WAITING for the Robert E.
Lee, don't do it at the Middleport levee. The levee is in a

dangerous condition. Above Is a section ~l ong the river which
hils caved in .

+

tmts
Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

THREE SECTIONS

38 PAGES
VOL VI NO. 10

Pomeroy-Middleport

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

SUNDAY, APRIL 9, 1972

Nixon Vows to
Stop Invaders

(See Page 7 for Troop
Pictures. l

..

• Ch~ldrens Coat and Dress Sale

chairman.

CHIEF HONCHO - BID Knight, Pt.

Immunization

• Womens Coat Sale

'

served by ladies of the church. Early in the
session Blakeslee presented vice-pr~s ident
-and program chairman · John Will a
framed certificate in recog nition of his
"being the best program chairman the
club hils ever hl!d. " Blakeslee singled out
the appearance at the club a week earlier
of Stale Superintendent of Public Instruction Martin Essex as a highlight of
Will's year - or of any year- as program

••

GALLIPOLIS -

Conlinued (rom page 1)
the deeds," said Tenenbaum.
"It could all be done in the deed
and It would be legal.
·
"But we have no reason to
think any illegal acUon was
taken," 1111id Tenenbaum. "We
are looking to aee if there Is a
legal way to stop lt." A Ralph
Nader a!liltaled Ohio group
said Thursday the proposed
movement of the 14-million
pound shovel acroM an Interstate highway would
"clearly degrade and adversely affect the human environment."

.

~

*

•

••
'

.

Walter Morris of Chester;
• Meigs Qnmty, w~ honored
Thursday night by members of
the Gallia-Meigs Fraternal
Order of Pollee Lodge 115.
Morris was presented the
outstanding service ' award for
his heroic e!fortA In sa'!ing the
.Ufe of three-year old Ellza¥11
Ann WoHe on.Jan.14, 1971. The
award ·read 11 Walter Morris
who upon observiilg a submerging vehicle In the rising
water of Thomas Fork Creek
Rd. and upon hearing that
Elizabeth Ann WoHe was still
inside the car, bravely and
without regard for his life
entered the ruahlng waters,
, removed the child and brought
her to the shore.
Other highlights were the
awarding of a 12 foot john boat
to Mrs. Goldie Hutchln90n of
Gallipolis and a rod, reel and
tackle hox to M. R. 'Cottrell,
also of Gallipolis. ·
Approximately • 80 persoll8
WAHAMA ffiGH SCHOOL SENIOR creative writing class students of Rkhard Nease
attended the steak dinner beld
visited the. P0111etOY offices of The Daily Sentinel :rhursday. Work by the various departments
at the VFW Hall on Third Ave.
was explamed by Mrs. ~thryn Crow of the editorial staff and Mrs . Beatrice Lisle of the advertising department. Mrs. Crow, center, above, assists students who tried their ha.nd at
ACCIDENT MINOR
operating a teletype sender-receiver. Students visiting were David Morgan, Beverly Bates,
A
minor accident was
Davod Smith, Rox Anne Walters, Randy Clark, Jane Haymaker, Anitra Wriston, Joyce
reported by Stale Patrolman
Goodmte, Bruce Adams, Cher Howard , Maria Mitchell.
Jim Sheets today at 8:10 a.m.
at the lntersecUon of Forest
Run Road and SR 7, Edward
Arthur Lawson, 18, Racine, Rt.
2, was stopped on For011t Run
Road at the intersection of SR 7
when his car was struck in the
rear by a car cfl:lven by Charles
will get a 20 cents per hour Michael McLain, 17, Racine,
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - The scales.
Pay Boarq Thursday approved
The unanimous decision by boost . This wage increase Rt. 2. McLain was cited to
higher salaries lor Ohio 's the board clears the way for affects maintenance, ad- juvenile court on charges of
public school teachers and non- beginning teachers with a ministrative and other school following too clooe. There were
teaching school employes, an bachelor's degree to get an district employes not holding no Injuries.
action that is expected to set a immediate salary jump from teacher credentials.
Stale Superintendent of
precedant for the 26 other $5,200 to $5,800, retroactive to
AIDMEN CAUED
states where legislatures have Jan . I. The minimum wage will Schools Martin Essex said the
The Middleport E-R squad
enacted new I!linimwn salary jump another $600 to $6,400 on ruling must await a 14-day reanswered
a call to help
view period, but "I do not exJuly I.
Charlene
Spaulding,
Route 564
pect a reversal or modification
The
state's
43,000
"non.
Erma Daugherty
near Cheshire at 7:48 p.m.
certificated" school employes as the review period is part of Thursday who was luiving
making less than $4.50 per hour their standard policy."
difficulty breathing. She was

"""'

tROW's

.

.

T~TS OFFERED
RACINE - Free skin tests
will be given at the Southern ·
DIED THURSDAY
High School at 1:30 Monday for Miss Leian Sidenstricker,
all junior classmen and their Lake Worth, Fla. , died early
mothers who will be serving Thursday mornin g. Miss
the annual Racine ' Alumni Sidenstricker was a former
banquet. Ali thooe serving will resident of Middleport and
be required to show proof of Rutland. She was the daughter
skin !£sting. Also on Tuesday of the late Alice Murray
evening at 7:30 p.m. all Sidenstricker Rawlings. She is
mothers of juniors who will be survived by one sister, Lady
working with the banquet are Canaday , of Columbus.
asked to meet at the high Funeral services will be anschool.
nounced by Rawiings·Coats
Funeral Home.
PRACTICE CAU..ED
BOYS NOT HOME
Mary Shrine, While Shrine qf
The
Meigs County Sheriff's
Jersualem will hold a practice
Dept.
said
today three teenage
for installation Sunday at 2:20
p.m. at the I.O.O.F. Hall in boys have been missing from
Pomeroy.
The
public their ho!hes since apceremony will be held Friday, proximately 6 p.m . Thursday.
The boys are Jeff Davis,
April 14, at 8 p.m.
·
Minersville, and Bryan Ritch·
hart and Bobby Patwrson of
Syracuse. They were believed
to have been seen early today
near Kerrs·Run .

I

•

'

KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (UP!) - The
White House indicated Saturday that the
United States might escalate its current
level of military support ln the e!lort lo
-. thward the Communist offe nsive in
South Vietnam.
"\Ve will do whatever is necessary,"
declared President Nixon's press
secretary, Ronald Ziegler.
But Ziegler ruled out the use of nuclear
weapons and said there were no plans to
reintroduce American ground troops in
South Vietnam.
Rather, he said, there could be a
widening of air targets available in the
North , such as Haiphong Harbor,
deployment of rear line U.S. troops now in
South Vietnam to replace South Vietnamese support troopa and thus free them
for combat duty and a sizable step-up in
the intensity of the current U.S. air and
naval bombardment in the North and
South.
' URGE SUPPORT OF .2 MIU.. LEVY - John M. (Jake)
corrections, Columbus, Malcolm Orebaugh anq Rev . Glen
The final White House position was
Koebel,left, citizens committee chairman for Gailia's .2 mill
Hueholt, Gallia County committeemen, are pictu?ild here at
elicited after some confusion over
mental health levy, along with Dr. Gordon F. Ogram,
the speaker's table during Thursday night's special Mental
Ziegler's initial remarks at the regularly
assistant corrunissioner and chief of the bureau of comHealth dinner meeting at Oscar's in which 72 persons atscheduled briefing for newsmen acmunity services, department of mental hygiene and
companying Nixon to his Florida retreat.
tended.
Ziegler told reporters that American
ID&gt;:«««&lt;.WM:=•
~.w,w.w,•,•OWo'o'o"''=
forces would continue to furnish the air
,T,.F"-.-w-o-.-o'O-rl.Vo'Yo'• o
.-.Y..'o'.O:•
..
and naval firepower support they have
~
provided since North Vietnamese and Viet
Cong troops began their offensive eight
~
.
::::
days ago. He also ·quickly dismissed a
:::.
'X
report by columnist Jack Anderson that
the United States had prepared conGALLIPOLIS - Charles Bostic, tingency plans for the possible use of
president of .the Gallipolis Merchants
GALIJPOUS - Seventy-two Gallia must be taken to either Portsmouth or Association, on behaH of the organization
County citizens interested In supporting Athens.
Saturday praised the Gallipolis Police
the .2 mill mental health levy wl!ich will
He added that Gallia County has top Department and assisting lawmen for
appear on the May 2 primary ballot were priority to receive state and federal funds their quick action in apprehending three
urged to ''pass the word" to their friends "because of the lack of mental health suspects during the recent Welfare
aqd neighbors to support the importsnt facilities. "
Department burglary.
measure at a special dinner meeting at
Myers said that the progress for
In a statement to the Times-Sentinel,
Oscar's Thursdl!y night.
developing and planning for mental health Bostic said :
Speakers included Dr. Gordon F . services in Galiia, Jackson and Meigs
"Special recognition should go to the
PT. PLEASANT - Vaught (Doc)
O@r•m, asststant commissioner and chief " Counties had moved very rapidly since the police deparlment and other lawmen for
Smith,
well-known Gallipolis businessman
of. the Bureau of Co!R'"unlty Services, f9rmat1on of mental health and retar· their quick action and capture of three
and civic leader, was named to the Board
Department of Mental Hygiene, Colum- dation boards.
suspects In the recent Weliare Department of Directors of the Peoples Bank of Point
001, and James Myers, coordinator,
'
burglary.
·
Pleasant Saturday according to Pre.•ident
Prevention and Educational Services of
Uterature concerning the .2 mill levy is
"The crime" rate being as it is, the Vitus Hartley, Jr.
'
'
the State Depai1ment of Mental Hygiene. BV11ilable at the citizens committee
merchants feel Gallipolis' lawmen are now
Mr.
Smith,
who
is
president
of
Smith
Dr. Ogram reviewed the h~ of the headquarters, located upatairs in the
ready for any emergency. '
Buick,' Inc., of Gallipolis, was elected lo
Mental Healtli and Mental Retardation 648 chamber of conunerce office, 16 Sl;lte St.
" Than~\ you, gentlemen, for a job well the post du_ring a meeting of the bank
Law which created local conununlty Too, the citizens committee has speakers
mental health progranis with the state available for area clubs or organizations done!"
providing 75 pet. of the funds and local seeking additional Information on the
IN HOSPITAL
communities the remaining 25.
proposed levy.
·
•
MINERSVILLE - Albert R. (Red)
Dr. Ogram said that at present Galiia,
Program chairmen of ate.a clubs should Keeton, Minersville, is a patient at the
Jackson and Meigs Counties have no call , 446-4950 to make reservations · for Holzer Medical Center after · suffering a
mental health facilities and that patients speakers prior to the May 2 election.
severe hCl)rt attack·.

.

.-.~•.&lt;;o;o,o,o.ox_Q,o-'\'";'

Mental Health Levy
Cainpaign Launched

I

~\ Praise Given i~
~ City's Police· ~

tactical nuclear weaponlo in Vietnam~ the
situation grew critlcal.l
·
But he ended the briefing by ltaiing :
"We wUl continue ·to 11fOYide .teVei' ·Ill
neceSsary ... We will continue Ill asseiatile
situatio~ and I am lJ!Il ~ :tile
assistance ~e·· ..ru ptOvldt · to 1!10118 two
areas of air and firepower support."
Several minutes after the briefing end· .
ed, Ziegler summoned rel?l'l'!ers to hll
office and said ,he was c:oncernecl tbat they
might have Inferred from hb comments
that the administration was considering
recommitting American ground troopa to
South VIetnam.
' 'Our policy has not changed in Ierma of
use of U.S. ground forces In South Vietnam," Ziegler said by way bf clarification.

Schools in
Fine Shape
MIDDLEPORT - The levy and the
levee were on the agenda Friday night
when the Middleport Chamber of Commerce met at the social rooms of ,the
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Present to ·speak in support of the new
five mill school tax levy wbe voted ,upon at
the May 2 primary in the Meigs Local
School District was George Hargraves,
Meigs Local District superintendent. The
levy is required to be passed for the
(Continued on page 2)

..

Smith Appointed to
P_eoples Hank Board

Jury Lists Drawn._i,.n .Gallia ~ounty
GALIJPOLIS- Names for 'the May Cllarles J. Henderson, 34, Gallipolis,

term of the Gailta County grand and petit arrested In connection with an attempted
jllrleaweredrawnSalurday in the office of
Cerk of Courtl Marjorie Rinehart. The
d jury will
gran
convene on Thursday,
April 20, according to an entry fUed by
Common Pleaa Court Judge-Ronald' R.
Calhoun.
.
.
Three~arei!Cheduledto be heard. '
They are Jlllll! HaU, 29, IU. 1, Patriot,
charged with flrat degree murder 1n the
ahootlng death of J,pltn Burton, 48, Rt. 1, ,
Patriot; Gene Ferrell, 22, Rt. 2, Galllpolls,
chJ!'ged witb crfmlnal agauiUra"') and

ll'eaktngandenterlngat theGallia County
WeHare Department.
l'resent for the drawilijf Saturday
wet:e jUry CGIIlllli8aloners; Dan Notter and
HobartDIUon, MrS. Louise Burger, deputy
clerk, ..
'··~hart, DeputyJamesCrace
.......,
and Judge Ca oun.
Following are the prospective grand
j · .
.
.
ur~:ihur N. ~xwell, 'sr., Rt. I,
Galllpol!s.: Hobarl T, Niday , Jr., ESR ,
Galllpolos: Buddv J.:owlar, Crown Cilv ;

Luther A. Shel lon, Rt. 2, Patriot; Gal lias
G, Fisher, Rt. 1, Gallipolis ; Charles E.
Oiler, Rt. I, Vinton ; David G. Bryan,
'Patriot Star Rt.; Harlan C. Athey, Rt. 2,
· Cheshire; Lowell L. Glassburn, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis; Oscar A. Cordell, Ctty ; Mary
Blanche Miller, Rodney; Leonard Baker,
. Rt. 2, Vinton: VIrginia H. Hood, Clly;
Ethel ,Y. City;
Pyles, Curtis
Rt. 2, Patrlol
: EdllhPSR,
w.
Tarry
Coleman.
Gallipolis: Evel yn G. Evan•, Rt: 2.
Gall ipol is ; Irma I. Wallace, LRR.
Gallipolis: Arthur R. Mounls, City,
I ~~~~~~np~;io~lll er, . Bidwell ; Tommy
(Continued on page 32) · ,

VAUGHT(DOC) SMrrn

Board of Directors last week.
. Born in Huntlngton, the son of the late
Dr. and Mrs. Vaught Smith, the new board
member attended Huntington schools and
also Marshall University and the
University of Kentucky.
Mr, Smith is a trustee of the Ohio
Automobile Dealers Association and
member and past president of the Ohio
Valley Automobile Dealers Association.
He also serves as Deputy Registrar of
Motor Vehicles In Gallia County.
He is a ve\eran of World War n in
which he earned~ Bro~~~:e Star medal, b -a
member of the Grace United Methodist
Church, the Elks ' Club, Gallipolis Gun
Club, Gallipolis GoH Club and the Aladdin
Temple Shrine of Columbll§.
·
Mr . Smith and his wft'e, the former
Wylodine (Deanie) Kemper, are the
parents of three children, a daughter,
Cindy, who attends Gallta Academy High;
Gary, who atwnds Ohio Medical Colleae at
Toledo and Greg, who atlepds Ohio Stile
Universi ty of Columbus.
The Smiths" who reside at Garfield
Heights In GaUipoUs, also have a granddaughter, Heather Smith of Toledo.
.
Otller members of the Pe&lt;opleil Bank
Board of Directors are Mr. Hartley,
pret~ident; R. B. Rothgeb, chairman of the
board; Jack Fruth, Dale Nibert, Fornal ·
Clark, Cecil WiiUams, Cecil Dean, Plu!
Crabtree and RuueU Bibbee•

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2-· Tilt' Sund11y Times· S..nlilll'l, Sunday, April9, 1972

..,

.

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.• !l bqJ!J!b dbb.bi CULL

·School
Levy Supported
by · C of C
.
.
standardS in establishing !Qe
pre-condllions lor quality ·
education. Your c0mtnilment
to NCA during lhe past year is
appreciated by the Ohio North ·

Central Committee. We i.pvite excellence into superior
your continued support · and educalion." ,
.
assistance as our . member · It was signed by Stanley L.
·schools accelerate efforts to Fox, ·chairman, Ohio North
convert their potentiality for Central Committee.

224,806 Boats are Tagged
.

COLUMBUS - The Ohio
division Q! watercraft licensed
224,800 boats and 174,049 outboard inotors in )971, Natural
Resources Director William B.
Nye said today.

The figures show an increase
of 12,401 boats and 5,554 motors
since 1970.
Nye said the licenses
represent ~,595 collected in
boat license fees and $530,288

.,

· Boys Still Gone

.

CllESHIRE ..., John c.
.Wickline, principal at Kyger
Creek High School, has
' notice
.
receiVed
from the Norlh
Central Association of Cplleges
and Secondary Schools and
Colleges that no violations
were found against the school
district. ·
The letter staled, "The
school administrators, staff,
Board of Education, and
community are commended
for carefill attention to ob·
servance of the policies and

.

in Ohio
'.

POMEROY - Three
tee01ge boys who lefltbejr
homes approltmately ap.m.
Thursday sliD lulve aot been
lotated, tile Meigs Couaty
Sheriff's Dept. • reported
Saturday. They are Jeff
Davis, Minersville, and
Bryan Rltcbhart
Bobby
Patten10n of Syracuse.
~~-o:·u·a · ··· ·n; _
cat~:;tO;;

••d

collected for motors.
The lees go into the
marine patrols and for boater
Waterways Safety Fund, which· safety education.
is used lor financing of ·cor\.
Ga)lia County had 469 boats
struction of marinas and Slllall registered along with .26f
boat harbors, for support of
outdo9r motorboats. There
were 445 boats registered In
Meigs County. Outdoor
motorboats totaled 3M.

Six Contempt Cases ~ are Dismissed
PT. PLEASANT - Judgment was
awaraed, a divorce was granted, a
petition for a temporary Injunction and
sl1 coniA!mpt of court cases were
dlamissed In Friday's Circuit Court
actions.
Judge James Lee Thompson on a
court order granted judgment In the
amount f38'7.13 plus costs and statutory
fees and Interest In an action llled by
lhe State of West Virginia e~ rei
Charles H. Haden II, · State Tax
Commissioner against Violet Orvietta
Lee doing business as the Knotty Pine.
Attorney Michael Sldtw represented the •
state's case.
A divorce was granted In a suit by
Opal McKirgan vs. James Glenn
McKlrgan and the plalntlfl was
awarded custody of an infant child,

Next Egg Hunt
(Continued from page I)
nepht'w, and Harold Hendrixson, a friend ,
Q! Rotarian John Werner, both of
Elmhurst, Ill.
A lively 31knlnute discussion followed
President Blakeslee's disclosing that a
young woman, called on him conducting a
survey for the American Electric Power
· Company of the communities to be af.
fected by lhe new Gavin Power Plant and
Meigs Mine. She commented to Blakeslee
in essence, "Meigs County seems to be
behind the others of the area in showing an
iniA!rest In preparing lor the growth and
changes to come."
A swnmary Q! poln Is scored by the
defense to this charge:
-Vernon Weber: An outside firm is
ready to put up a 50-unit mobile home park
near Rutland but has to wait until the
Department of Highways decides where, If
at all, Route 124 will be relocated.
-Bernard Fultz: Meigs County has a
better school plan~than any ol.its neighbors ~ II hao lhe only village (Middleport)
with a modern &lt;oning ordinance; It has a
newTadfity w re, for the first time In at
least 15 years, lhe public can meet and
dine (Meigs Inn) In modern surroundings,
Ill
-I

Contempt of Court actions dismissed
included: Janet Ann Vaughan vs.
George Allen Vaughan ; Juanita Jean
Lieving vs. Larry Jjeving; B~rbara J.
Bonecutter vs. Bruce L. Bonecutter ;
Martha Frances Smith vs. James M.
and stay overnight too; the county has a
new $2 million rural waiA!r system;
American Electric Power Co. and the Ohio
Power Co., have been asked to "Show us
what we shoilld do," and they can't teD us
yet; surveys now in progress by the utility
firms hopefillly will provide a guide;
business men with money to invest cannot
act blindly In putting up new housing.
Filltz added, "First Impressions count
heavily, and the first Impression one gets
of Pomeroy and Middleport leaves
something to be desired. We greatly need
an all out clean-up, paint-up program."
And he added, "Our attitude must be
more positive, less negative, about our
communities."
•
Ed Baker: The best project we coilld
get on woilld be to push for the early
modernizing of Rout.! 124. The new mine is
not far from the Appalachian Highway
leading directly to Jackson; it is close to
Wellston . That's where the people will go
to live unless Route 124 is worked on at
once.
President Blakeslee, somewhat
speechless upon the reaction to his
casually dropped remark about the young
woman reporting her impression of the
CPII1J ty. happily suggested the membership devote its most serious study to the
suggestions made and return to the next
open meeting with an acti9n program.

Dl

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PUBLIC WHOLESALE-- PIJ

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Sell

;:)
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50
each

Save '40 On

These laautlei

On~

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_,_

AIRPORT

TONIGHT- MONDAYTUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY

.....

oftheye•r

- NEWSwtf.K MACW'INf.

ATHENS - The first of a
· group
of
campaign
headquarters in the lOth
Congressional District for
Dew,oc~,atic , Presidential
candidate Senator George
McGovern officially opened In
Athens Friday .
According to McGovern
district coordinator, Dave
Horn
of
Athens, · the
headquarters will serve an
essential function in the
organization of the grass roots
campaign planned in the
district.
The campaign will Include
door-to-door and te lephone
canvassing and direct mailings
to district Democrats.
Due to laok of contributions
from large money interests,
personal canvassing will be
favored over a large scale
advertising campaign, Horn
noted. He added lhat McGove~n
may personally
campaign in . the lOth
District before the May
2 primary. The address of
lhe headqUarters is II E::
Washington St.

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SUNDAY

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·Let's unlock ttlat door to a 'New Mobi.le
Home ... -They are easier to get now.
Come in and let's discuss your Mobile
Home financing,.

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PUBLIC WHOLESALE - PUBLIC WHOLESALE -

..

PUBLIC WHOLESALE - PUBLIC

PUBLIC W

I.ESALE - PUBLIC WHOLESALE

'

~

·...

63-IIICH
LENGTH ~
84" LENGTH

S317 ,,

REG. $3.77

in •

~:\

richly textured blend of 59% r•y·
on end 41 e;o Ctltnese &lt;~~ •cttate.
4" /inch pl.. ts , W~ite, entique
90/ , •voc(tdo, red. Single win.

+-&lt;

lovefy

wo~sh1blt ~r•pe.ri"
11

.'

dow lite .

POL VESTER FILLED FLORALS AND SOLIDS

QUILlED BEDSPREADS*
A fobulous selection of lovely
bedspreads that wil make your
bedrooms bloom wit\, spring col·
or. Fully quilted to tho floor.
Lu.trous ocolole top fabric. Big
selection of colors. Twin or full.

....

SOLID COLOR OR BRIGHT PRINT

44
REGULAR

-

saaa

TIER/VALANCE SETS
REG.

~~74

S199 ~

SET

Drip dry Cape Cad ruffled broadcloth tier or
permanent pren Osntburg tier . J6" length .

BIG 24" r 46" SIZE

"CHALLINGIR" . i
BATH TOWEL

LIMIT I

Meet Candidates

Ill

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1Buy Now. Take ~dvantage of our Low.
Mobile Home ,financing.

"'I

:1:

~-

SUPER SPRING

GOP Ladies to

n

Twin Size

THRU SAT., APRIL 15

Get Tickets

r

.95

SHOP EARLY WIIILE
QUANTITIES LAST

EFFECTIVE

Two Drivers

Ill
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·$

PRICE

Deadline Monday

s

Mattress ~r B,o x. Springs
Full or

LAY-AWAY
p.m. He will be speaking at
7:30p.m. Aprill7 through 21 on
the subject of "The Holy
Spirit."
The public is invited lo attend all services.

~

"Save Many Dollars"

"Studies have shown that we knowledge and experience they
are the losers when we do not have acquired over the years."
Some 500 'families will be
utilize the resources of our
senior citizens . This program contacted by Mrs. Thomas and
is not only to help with the her two·aides - to he employed
problems which our older this week - in the next few
citizens encounter but is months in order to collect in·
designed also to encourage formation which might be
them to contribute the helpful in future programs.

EMPIRE
FURNITURE 00.

,c:

ARM 252 OOIL

what we are doing now for the
aging.
"There are more than 2,700
people in Meigs County who
are now 6!i or over. Within lhe
next 10 years there will be
another 1,000 more who will be
6!i. Seventy-two percent of
these ~re rural residents.

LINOLEUM

Ill

MAITRESS or
BOX SP.RIN·GS

Save '3000

0

,c;:

PUBLIC WHOLESALE - PUBLIC WHOLESALE -

DUTIES REVIEWED - Mrs . James (Eleanor) Thomas, Pomeroy, and c. J. Struble,
president of the Meigs County Council on Aging, discuss her duties as director ollhe council's ·
county information, research and planning Jiroject lor the aging which gets underway Monday
when Mrs. Tbomas begins as director. A survey wiD be made during the project to help
determine future programs to benefit the aging of Meigs County.

CASH, CHARGE,

POMEROY - Monday is the directness, sincJrity, endeadline for entering the thusiasm, and general · ef·
~~~h an~ wrjl\ns- ,~nlefts lectiv,ness. ~ _ .
~
being sponsored ·by llie .Mefgs
Compll&lt;litiona wiU .be jUdl¥
County Pioneer and lll.storjcql on orlginal~t.J of .~e)ectipJl,
Society.
validity of contests, general
The contest is open to effectiveness, and grammar.
students in grades nine through
twelve in aU three Meigs
County schools.
Prizes in each category to be
awarded are $i5, · first, $12
second ; $10 third, fourth, $5;
and the next 10 $1 each.
Speakers wishing to compete
GALUFOUS- Two driven
are to notify the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society, were cited following traffic
Box 32, Pomeroy. The contest accidents Friday in downtown
·
will be held on April 20"at the Gallipolis.
144
Butternut
Ave.
They were Carol " · MiUer,
26, Patriot Star Rt., lor failure
headquar~rs ol the Society
with each coniA!stsnt to be to yield right of way following a
mishap on VIne St. and Fourth
notHied of the .. act lime.
Contestants will, be. scored Ave. Officers said the Miller
car pulled Into the path of an
~uperi&lt;¥", exceDent, good, fair
auto operated by Gregory A.
and poor. ·
Orations are to be of not less Gooderham, 19, Rt. I, Crown
lhan three or more than five City. There was moderate
minutes and must be original damage to both cars.
Similar charges were filed
In composition and deal with a
against
Diana Jane Hershman,
person, family, place, in·
dustry, or event Important in 25, Rt. I, BidweD, foUowing an
accident on First Ave. and
Meigs County history.
ARMSTRONG,
Compositions are to be of not Locust St. Officers said she
QUAKERTONE a11d
less
than 500 words nor more pulled into the path of a car
CUSHION FLOOR
than
1,500 words.
A driven by Edwin J. Prence, 25,
blbUography is to he Included. Rl. I, Gallipolis. Again,
Speeclles will be evaluated moderate damage resillted.
Both 9x12 fl. Widths
A backing accident occurred
on the basis of originality of
selection, expression of on Second Ave., In front of the
thoughts, voice Including Ioree, post office where an auto
Inflection, pauses, ratA!, breath drivim by Jerrls McCaUister,
·-- . - control, bodily expression, 17, Rt. 2, Vinton, backed into a
142 Second Ave.
posture, appropriate gestures, parked car owned ·by Mary H.
1405
1
. ._P•h•.4.".·• • ••11
G•..,;tlpo-li•s_. personality of speaker, Bryan, 32, Patriot Star Rt.
There was minor damage to
both cars.

CARTOON

.

The daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. F. C. Taylor, Rulland ,
Mrs. Thomas is a member of
Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority. Before
moving to Meigs County a little'
over a year ago, Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas were re sidents of
Columbus where Mrs. Thomas
was employed in real estate.
Mr . and Mrs. Thomas purchased the George McQuigg
·property on Lincoln Hill and
have completely remodeled the
attractive home. Mrs. Thomas ,
has been employed with The
Farmers Bank and Slivings Co.
several months.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas have
overload; Michael VanReese, three children, a daughter,
Karen
Munyon,
Cheshire, Rl. I, $5 and costs, ~rs.
insecure load; Wilma F. Columbus; James, Jr., a fresh·
Siders, Racine ; RD, costs only, man at Ohio University, and
six months probation, assault John, a freshman at Meigs
and battery·, $15 and costs, High School. They have a
granddaughter.
disturbing the peace.
Forfeiting bonds were
Offices lor the project will be
William C. Piggott, Parkers- shared with the Meigs Coun ty
burg, Rt. 3, $257.70, overload; Cluster of United Methodist
Fred L. Davis, Jr., Parkers- Churches located on the second
burg, R. L.Stover, Huntington, floor of the building occupied
and Robert F . Priddy, by the Quality Print Shop on
Morgantown, W. Va ., $27.50 Middleport's Mill St.
each, speeding; Roger Keith
Commenting on the project,
Morgan, Columbus, $27 .50, Mrs. Thomas said :
"This is a project not only for
passing at intersection;
George W. Troy, Athens, the people in Meigs County who
$37.50, speeding; Oscar A. are of retirement age, or
Cordell, Gallipolis, $42.50, nearing it, but important to
speeding; Thomas G. Wright, everyone who lives here
Cincinnati, $25(), · trespassing because some day in the luture
and possession of drugs.
each of us will be affected by
problems and opportunities of
lhe aging, to determine some of
lhe needs and inte,rests ollhe
aging, to · determine an
organizatiooal pattern which
will secure widespread· ·participation and reflect needs of
the aging in an attempt to
determine desirable future
projects for the a~ing.

Open in Athens

bHt love story!'

.'

l'()MEROY - Thirteen
defendants were lined and
eight others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Frank
W. Porter were Kenneth Romine,
Rutland,
Rt. I, $5 and costs, no brakes;
Thomas J. Kibble, Reedsville, ·
Rt. I, and Isaac D. Jackson,
Tuppers Plains, $10 and cosIs
each, speeding; . James A.
Dunn, Lynhursl, 0., $5 and
costs, unsafe vehicle; Mike I.
Hardway, Gallipolis, $10 and
costs, stop sign vio lation;
Phillip H. Weatherholt, Bid·
well, Rt. 2, $5 and costs, unsafe
vehicle, $60 and costs, $30
suspended, overload; Robert
S. Wilbur, Hamden, $54
and
costs,
$24
suspended, overload ; Judith E.
King, Bourbonnais, Ill., $10 and
costs, passing at intersection;
Mark A. Haley, Pomeroy, $5
and costs, no muffler; Carl E.
Stewart, Patriot, Rt. I, $5 and
costs, over-length load; Ed·
ward C. Long, Wellston, $25
and costs, $15 suspended,

McGovern HQ

''The bHt comedy

•

13 Fined, 8 Give
Up Court Bonds

Alabaman Will
Be Speaking
At Dedication ,.,

QUILT GUA.RD

Table • 4 Chairs

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SEALY'S

5 Piece Sets

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. GALUPOUS -Icy patches
and speed were blamed for
three minor traffic accidenll
lnvesllgated Friday and
Saturday by the Gallia-Meigs
Post Stale Highway Patrol.
The first occurred at 11:55
p.m. Friday on Rt. 35, nine tenths of a mite· east of Rio
Grande where Robert E.
Miller, Jr., 20, Oak Hill, lost
FRANKLIN CAMP
control of his car on the icy
Raccoon Bridge. The auto ran
off the road and over im embankment.
There
was
· moderate damage. No one was
injured.
The first of two accidents on
the Gallipolis by-pass occurred
at 11:30 p.m. on Rt. 35, one and
one tenth miles west of Rt. 7.
GALLIPOLIS - Dedication
Officers said PeiA!r Reis 25
.
' ' services lor lhe new building of
H1gh Point, N. C., lost control
of his vehicle after striking a the Chapel Hill Church of
sheet of ice. His car went out of Christ located off Route 160 on
control, sliding into the Bulaville Road will be held
guardrail. There was moderate Sunday, April16, at 2:30p.m.
The first services were held
damage .
in
the building last Oct. 31.
Sharon L. See, 23, Pt.
Pleasant, was involved in a Since that lime work has been
similar mishap at 12:10 a.m. done by the members ol the
Saturday on Rt. 35, eight tenths congregation to compleiA! the
of a mile west of the Silver classrooms. The building will
Memorial Bridge. There was be open for the public to tour
after the close of the dedication
minor damage to -her car.
service.
Ronale E. Trimble, 31, Rl. 2,
The speaker wiD be Franklin
Bidwell, was cited to Municipal
Camp
of Birmingham, Ala.,
Court lor speed lor conditions
following an accident at 3:05 who has been preaching the
p.m. on the Kerr-Harrisburg gospel 36 years. He is well
Rd., five tenths of a mile west kn.Wn throughout the Churof Rt. 160. Officers said ches of Christ · for the
Trimble's car struck a parked knowledge he has of the Bible.
auto owned by Eugene L. Mr . Camp has spent an
Plants, Rt. 2, Bidwell . There average of six hours per day
was moderate damage to both studying the word of God for
the past 32 years.
cars.
Mr. Camp will speak at the
three services of the church,
April 16, Bible study at 9:45
a.m.; morning worship at 10:3C
a.m., and•evening worship at 6

TONIGHT ONLY

Gallipolis, Ohio

25 Sets
'Sets
Only

u

~

POMEROY - Mrs. James
·(Eleanor) Thomas," Lincoln
Hili,Pomeroy ,hasbeennamed
director of the Meigs County
Council on Aging inlormation,
research and planning project.
Purpose of the project for
which the local · council has
received lunding in excess of
$Jf,OOO is to arouse Interest in

A~cidents

.PLUI

--.•._-...

Project' Director Named

Blamed for

a

C WHOLESAL -

I

Table • 6 Chairs
Heavy Duty

scene until dawn. Six men,
'three trucks and i big crane
sent here from Pomeroy spent
nearly five hours cleaning up
. the debris Saturday.
Sheets said the three. trucks
carried 20 l~ds of the faD en
rock away. \
.
Work was performed I~ subfreezing temperature most of
the night and day ..

·

Corner of Second &amp; Sycamore

ONLY!

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. Night lamps-were left at the

Friday is holy day among
Moslems, who always cele·
brate the creatl~ of Adam
on that day.

FURNITURE

MONDAY

7 Piece Sets

am

- The Sunday Times ·llenllnel, ~~~~:,;

Ice; Speed ··

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came down on lhe right side of
the highway lacmg north.
A state highway patrolman
arrived minutes later; and
flares were put up
traffic
routed around lhe debris until
workers could clear that
section of the highway.
"Had lhe rock hit a passing
vehicle, il would have caused 8
terrible tragedy.'' Sheets
concluded.

REESE OUTLET

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GALLIPOLIS - Quick ac·
tion by state highway depar.tment officials · prevenled a
possible tragedy on old Rt. 35
at the city corporation limits
about 7 p.m.; Friday.
Brady Sheets·, superin·
IA!nderit of lhe state highway
department in Gallia County,
had jus~ returned home after
helping put up high waiA!r sig118
'on Rt. 218 foUowlng Friday
afternoon's ra!D·and hail storm
which totaled 1.18inches.ln less
than one hour when he received
a caD that a smaD b&lt;iillder had
brok&lt;l!l loose from lhe hill
overlooking Rt. 160 (old Rt. 35)
·at the city c..,loriUon line •.
Sheets had no sooner arrived
on lhe scene when tons of rock

· SAYRE. TO $P~K ,
•
"GP"
SYRACUSE - District .~u,pt. of I' ' ' Ctark 'G~ble
Vivien Leigh •
Schools Ralph Sayre wiD ap,eak, with the
Admission
:
-·~..._ ...
•boara ··or eii'Dl!atiiiil Jl'f~~ wfiet.-·the~
SUO AduHs
Sl.DO Cllildrtn
Syracuse PTA meets at 7:30p.m. 1'1!esdaY
SHOW STARTS7 "P.M.
al the scbool.
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THE WINO

ETTE

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MEIGS THEATRE

SUNDAY

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··Highway ··Tragedy thwarted

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Vandalism
Is Probed

GALWPOLIS - An act of
vandalism was investigated
Friday night by Gallla County
sheriff's deputies. Officers
were called by George Carter
who reported someone placed
gravel In a large air compressor at the Robbins and
Myers Plant. The compressor
was OWned by Carter and
Evans, Inc.
The state highway patrol and
sheriff's deparlment recorded
the following arrests:
Ronnie G. Smith, 33, Eureka
Star Rt., booked lor Intoxication; Thomas H. Dickel,
25, Mineral Wells, Ohio, in(Continued !rom page I)
toxication; Robert Harold
Massie, 53, Rt. I, Patriot, John
district to continue receiving slate foun- Edward Dickel, 28, Parkers·
dation funds, it is reported. The chamber burg, Kelly M. McKenzie, 20,
went on record as endorsmg the levy.
Pomeroy, and Glennard Davis,
.The second levee proble~ was not as 18, Rt.l, Gallipolis, all charged
easily solved. The chamber diScussed the .with DWI: Billy H. Roush, 61,
condition of \lie Middleport levee which Kanauga,
and
Warren
cannot be used as a boat launch this Robinson, 56, cabin Creek, w.
summer. Alarge section has caved in and Va., both for Intoxication and .
lhe levee is In generally bad condition. Randall E. Harrison, 31, for
Repairs woilld run into th011sands · of.., contempt of court.
dollars, it has been reported. No solution
was reached.
However, the chamber voted to pay
$300 towards the maintenance of · the
marina located off Railroad St. This is also
Tonight, Mon. &amp; Tues.
a boating facility.
,,
Manning Kloes, president, presided.
April '·10-11

PUBLIC WHOLESALE- PUBLIC WHOLESALE

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Smith; Linda Clark vs. Dorwln Clark;
Judith A, Murphy vs: BiUy Charles
Murphy. Also an action, Wanda Noe vs.
Harry Noe was dismissed from the
court docket.
Damages were eslimaled at $250,
there were no lnjuries ·and no citations
as lhe result of an accident involving
two cars at 8:45 a.m. today at the
intersection of Burdette Addition, Rt.
62, Point Pleasant.
According to Investigating officer,
Chief Deputy Sheriff Millard Halstead,
acardrivenbyWilliamSilver,l6,Polnt
Pleasant, pillled out from Burdette
Addition, turned·left and attempted to
enter Lewis Street, when a car dr(ven
by Elvin (Pete) Wedge, 44, allegedly
pulled along side the Sliver car and the
Silver car struck the Wedge vehicle.
Damages were estimated for one car at
$tOO and the second car, $!50.

A petition lor a tempor&amp;ry injunction
was dismissed w!)en the plaintiffs
asked.for this through a motion in the
action styled Benjamin IV, Carter L.
Franklin and Ruth S. Franklin vs. City
of Point Pleasant, a Municipal Corp.
and Peoples Bank of Point Pleasant a
West Virginia Banking Corp.
Attorney Raymond G. Musgrave
entered the motion for the plaintiffs
since a subsequent civil action has been
filed regarding the opening of an •
alleyway off Twenty Second Street.

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GALLIPOLIS· SAVINGS
PANY .
AND LOAN
COM
,
.
Opposite Pvst Olflct: Phline 446-3832 Gallipolis

_I._;;;;__IIII!P~-~---~-....

PT. PLEASANT - Muon
County WilDen's RepubllCIIII
Oub wiD hold their "Meet '!be
Clndldalea" potluck dlmer,
April 22, at the Moose HaD 011
Second Street · In Point
Pleasant.
The dinner will be served at
6:30 p.m. and the public II
welcome. Tickets may be
bOught · by contacting Ciani
May HaD, 8'15-1593 ·or Janie
Byus, 875-2823 or the M.HaU the evening of the dlmer.
T!cketll will be BOld at $2.
A feature of the evenlng'l
entertainment will be the
Stevena Brothers who have
auditioned with JohnnY Caab.

CALL ANSWERED
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
emergency squad answered a
can to the Keith Sutherland
n!lldence, Pomeroy Route I, al
9:16 •.m. Saturday for~.
Sutherland, who was iU. She
wu taken to Veteran•
Memorial Hospital.

II.EGULAII. $11.99 SONOREST

REGULAR 88c YARD

•OLD A BED*

SPORTSWEAR PRINTS

.

• CoHon and
polyester no
iron blends.
• 45" widths.

• 2" MA+tr-tSI
• Alu,.,lnum

., ..,.
• Fvl

24•72"
• Slripo ticlincJ.

Stoc.~ up now on tlwe~t b..uti.£ ( CJ•"·
erous 1i1e towels. lteuti-Ruff liniN\
for scft, lu•wic:n,ll terfure. High feJhion
lolids. Pucker rr.. dobby bord.,,,

64~.

IlL IJ..I

I(GULAI $2.,1 ALUMINUM

TWETTLE or FRYPAN

.

ri1i\ .J99
~

EACH

FIREKING®BAKEWARE ·
• S.ke, store
he1t, Mrvt.
• E•sy--clun.
• Meny lias.

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WASH CLOTH .. . . 14t

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II.EGULAit $1.29 to $1.59

54C

IlL

FACE TOWEL . . . . . . 141

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60"

.I
II
I]

II.EGULAII. $10,99

4 Seals l 4 Backs
: •n~;~·~.:··~~:&gt;4\
999
lilt~\
whih .

A•O&lt;odo It
Lar1er StOfll

J.S7

I Hat, I ~~~·

iUUIK$6.97

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STEEL SHELVING*

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2-· Tilt' Sund11y Times· S..nlilll'l, Sunday, April9, 1972

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.• !l bqJ!J!b dbb.bi CULL

·School
Levy Supported
by · C of C
.
.
standardS in establishing !Qe
pre-condllions lor quality ·
education. Your c0mtnilment
to NCA during lhe past year is
appreciated by the Ohio North ·

Central Committee. We i.pvite excellence into superior
your continued support · and educalion." ,
.
assistance as our . member · It was signed by Stanley L.
·schools accelerate efforts to Fox, ·chairman, Ohio North
convert their potentiality for Central Committee.

224,806 Boats are Tagged
.

COLUMBUS - The Ohio
division Q! watercraft licensed
224,800 boats and 174,049 outboard inotors in )971, Natural
Resources Director William B.
Nye said today.

The figures show an increase
of 12,401 boats and 5,554 motors
since 1970.
Nye said the licenses
represent ~,595 collected in
boat license fees and $530,288

.,

· Boys Still Gone

.

CllESHIRE ..., John c.
.Wickline, principal at Kyger
Creek High School, has
' notice
.
receiVed
from the Norlh
Central Association of Cplleges
and Secondary Schools and
Colleges that no violations
were found against the school
district. ·
The letter staled, "The
school administrators, staff,
Board of Education, and
community are commended
for carefill attention to ob·
servance of the policies and

.

in Ohio
'.

POMEROY - Three
tee01ge boys who lefltbejr
homes approltmately ap.m.
Thursday sliD lulve aot been
lotated, tile Meigs Couaty
Sheriff's Dept. • reported
Saturday. They are Jeff
Davis, Minersville, and
Bryan Rltcbhart
Bobby
Patten10n of Syracuse.
~~-o:·u·a · ··· ·n; _
cat~:;tO;;

••d

collected for motors.
The lees go into the
marine patrols and for boater
Waterways Safety Fund, which· safety education.
is used lor financing of ·cor\.
Ga)lia County had 469 boats
struction of marinas and Slllall registered along with .26f
boat harbors, for support of
outdo9r motorboats. There
were 445 boats registered In
Meigs County. Outdoor
motorboats totaled 3M.

Six Contempt Cases ~ are Dismissed
PT. PLEASANT - Judgment was
awaraed, a divorce was granted, a
petition for a temporary Injunction and
sl1 coniA!mpt of court cases were
dlamissed In Friday's Circuit Court
actions.
Judge James Lee Thompson on a
court order granted judgment In the
amount f38'7.13 plus costs and statutory
fees and Interest In an action llled by
lhe State of West Virginia e~ rei
Charles H. Haden II, · State Tax
Commissioner against Violet Orvietta
Lee doing business as the Knotty Pine.
Attorney Michael Sldtw represented the •
state's case.
A divorce was granted In a suit by
Opal McKirgan vs. James Glenn
McKlrgan and the plalntlfl was
awarded custody of an infant child,

Next Egg Hunt
(Continued from page I)
nepht'w, and Harold Hendrixson, a friend ,
Q! Rotarian John Werner, both of
Elmhurst, Ill.
A lively 31knlnute discussion followed
President Blakeslee's disclosing that a
young woman, called on him conducting a
survey for the American Electric Power
· Company of the communities to be af.
fected by lhe new Gavin Power Plant and
Meigs Mine. She commented to Blakeslee
in essence, "Meigs County seems to be
behind the others of the area in showing an
iniA!rest In preparing lor the growth and
changes to come."
A swnmary Q! poln Is scored by the
defense to this charge:
-Vernon Weber: An outside firm is
ready to put up a 50-unit mobile home park
near Rutland but has to wait until the
Department of Highways decides where, If
at all, Route 124 will be relocated.
-Bernard Fultz: Meigs County has a
better school plan~than any ol.its neighbors ~ II hao lhe only village (Middleport)
with a modern &lt;oning ordinance; It has a
newTadfity w re, for the first time In at
least 15 years, lhe public can meet and
dine (Meigs Inn) In modern surroundings,
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Contempt of Court actions dismissed
included: Janet Ann Vaughan vs.
George Allen Vaughan ; Juanita Jean
Lieving vs. Larry Jjeving; B~rbara J.
Bonecutter vs. Bruce L. Bonecutter ;
Martha Frances Smith vs. James M.
and stay overnight too; the county has a
new $2 million rural waiA!r system;
American Electric Power Co. and the Ohio
Power Co., have been asked to "Show us
what we shoilld do," and they can't teD us
yet; surveys now in progress by the utility
firms hopefillly will provide a guide;
business men with money to invest cannot
act blindly In putting up new housing.
Filltz added, "First Impressions count
heavily, and the first Impression one gets
of Pomeroy and Middleport leaves
something to be desired. We greatly need
an all out clean-up, paint-up program."
And he added, "Our attitude must be
more positive, less negative, about our
communities."
•
Ed Baker: The best project we coilld
get on woilld be to push for the early
modernizing of Rout.! 124. The new mine is
not far from the Appalachian Highway
leading directly to Jackson; it is close to
Wellston . That's where the people will go
to live unless Route 124 is worked on at
once.
President Blakeslee, somewhat
speechless upon the reaction to his
casually dropped remark about the young
woman reporting her impression of the
CPII1J ty. happily suggested the membership devote its most serious study to the
suggestions made and return to the next
open meeting with an acti9n program.

Dl

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PUBLIC WHOLESALE-- PIJ

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Sell

;:)
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50
each

Save '40 On

These laautlei

On~

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_,_

AIRPORT

TONIGHT- MONDAYTUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY

.....

oftheye•r

- NEWSwtf.K MACW'INf.

ATHENS - The first of a
· group
of
campaign
headquarters in the lOth
Congressional District for
Dew,oc~,atic , Presidential
candidate Senator George
McGovern officially opened In
Athens Friday .
According to McGovern
district coordinator, Dave
Horn
of
Athens, · the
headquarters will serve an
essential function in the
organization of the grass roots
campaign planned in the
district.
The campaign will Include
door-to-door and te lephone
canvassing and direct mailings
to district Democrats.
Due to laok of contributions
from large money interests,
personal canvassing will be
favored over a large scale
advertising campaign, Horn
noted. He added lhat McGove~n
may personally
campaign in . the lOth
District before the May
2 primary. The address of
lhe headqUarters is II E::
Washington St.

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OPEN
SUNDAY

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50 Piects At This Price

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·Let's unlock ttlat door to a 'New Mobi.le
Home ... -They are easier to get now.
Come in and let's discuss your Mobile
Home financing,.

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PUBLIC WHOLESALE - PUBLIC WHOLESALE -

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PUBLIC WHOLESALE - PUBLIC

PUBLIC W

I.ESALE - PUBLIC WHOLESALE

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63-IIICH
LENGTH ~
84" LENGTH

S317 ,,

REG. $3.77

in •

~:\

richly textured blend of 59% r•y·
on end 41 e;o Ctltnese &lt;~~ •cttate.
4" /inch pl.. ts , W~ite, entique
90/ , •voc(tdo, red. Single win.

+-&lt;

lovefy

wo~sh1blt ~r•pe.ri"
11

.'

dow lite .

POL VESTER FILLED FLORALS AND SOLIDS

QUILlED BEDSPREADS*
A fobulous selection of lovely
bedspreads that wil make your
bedrooms bloom wit\, spring col·
or. Fully quilted to tho floor.
Lu.trous ocolole top fabric. Big
selection of colors. Twin or full.

....

SOLID COLOR OR BRIGHT PRINT

44
REGULAR

-

saaa

TIER/VALANCE SETS
REG.

~~74

S199 ~

SET

Drip dry Cape Cad ruffled broadcloth tier or
permanent pren Osntburg tier . J6" length .

BIG 24" r 46" SIZE

"CHALLINGIR" . i
BATH TOWEL

LIMIT I

Meet Candidates

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1Buy Now. Take ~dvantage of our Low.
Mobile Home ,financing.

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SUPER SPRING

GOP Ladies to

n

Twin Size

THRU SAT., APRIL 15

Get Tickets

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.95

SHOP EARLY WIIILE
QUANTITIES LAST

EFFECTIVE

Two Drivers

Ill
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·$

PRICE

Deadline Monday

s

Mattress ~r B,o x. Springs
Full or

LAY-AWAY
p.m. He will be speaking at
7:30p.m. Aprill7 through 21 on
the subject of "The Holy
Spirit."
The public is invited lo attend all services.

~

"Save Many Dollars"

"Studies have shown that we knowledge and experience they
are the losers when we do not have acquired over the years."
Some 500 'families will be
utilize the resources of our
senior citizens . This program contacted by Mrs. Thomas and
is not only to help with the her two·aides - to he employed
problems which our older this week - in the next few
citizens encounter but is months in order to collect in·
designed also to encourage formation which might be
them to contribute the helpful in future programs.

EMPIRE
FURNITURE 00.

,c:

ARM 252 OOIL

what we are doing now for the
aging.
"There are more than 2,700
people in Meigs County who
are now 6!i or over. Within lhe
next 10 years there will be
another 1,000 more who will be
6!i. Seventy-two percent of
these ~re rural residents.

LINOLEUM

Ill

MAITRESS or
BOX SP.RIN·GS

Save '3000

0

,c;:

PUBLIC WHOLESALE - PUBLIC WHOLESALE -

DUTIES REVIEWED - Mrs . James (Eleanor) Thomas, Pomeroy, and c. J. Struble,
president of the Meigs County Council on Aging, discuss her duties as director ollhe council's ·
county information, research and planning Jiroject lor the aging which gets underway Monday
when Mrs. Tbomas begins as director. A survey wiD be made during the project to help
determine future programs to benefit the aging of Meigs County.

CASH, CHARGE,

POMEROY - Monday is the directness, sincJrity, endeadline for entering the thusiasm, and general · ef·
~~~h an~ wrjl\ns- ,~nlefts lectiv,ness. ~ _ .
~
being sponsored ·by llie .Mefgs
Compll&lt;litiona wiU .be jUdl¥
County Pioneer and lll.storjcql on orlginal~t.J of .~e)ectipJl,
Society.
validity of contests, general
The contest is open to effectiveness, and grammar.
students in grades nine through
twelve in aU three Meigs
County schools.
Prizes in each category to be
awarded are $i5, · first, $12
second ; $10 third, fourth, $5;
and the next 10 $1 each.
Speakers wishing to compete
GALUFOUS- Two driven
are to notify the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society, were cited following traffic
Box 32, Pomeroy. The contest accidents Friday in downtown
·
will be held on April 20"at the Gallipolis.
144
Butternut
Ave.
They were Carol " · MiUer,
26, Patriot Star Rt., lor failure
headquar~rs ol the Society
with each coniA!stsnt to be to yield right of way following a
mishap on VIne St. and Fourth
notHied of the .. act lime.
Contestants will, be. scored Ave. Officers said the Miller
car pulled Into the path of an
~uperi&lt;¥", exceDent, good, fair
auto operated by Gregory A.
and poor. ·
Orations are to be of not less Gooderham, 19, Rt. I, Crown
lhan three or more than five City. There was moderate
minutes and must be original damage to both cars.
Similar charges were filed
In composition and deal with a
against
Diana Jane Hershman,
person, family, place, in·
dustry, or event Important in 25, Rt. I, BidweD, foUowing an
accident on First Ave. and
Meigs County history.
ARMSTRONG,
Compositions are to be of not Locust St. Officers said she
QUAKERTONE a11d
less
than 500 words nor more pulled into the path of a car
CUSHION FLOOR
than
1,500 words.
A driven by Edwin J. Prence, 25,
blbUography is to he Included. Rl. I, Gallipolis. Again,
Speeclles will be evaluated moderate damage resillted.
Both 9x12 fl. Widths
A backing accident occurred
on the basis of originality of
selection, expression of on Second Ave., In front of the
thoughts, voice Including Ioree, post office where an auto
Inflection, pauses, ratA!, breath drivim by Jerrls McCaUister,
·-- . - control, bodily expression, 17, Rt. 2, Vinton, backed into a
142 Second Ave.
posture, appropriate gestures, parked car owned ·by Mary H.
1405
1
. ._P•h•.4.".·• • ••11
G•..,;tlpo-li•s_. personality of speaker, Bryan, 32, Patriot Star Rt.
There was minor damage to
both cars.

CARTOON

.

The daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. F. C. Taylor, Rulland ,
Mrs. Thomas is a member of
Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority. Before
moving to Meigs County a little'
over a year ago, Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas were re sidents of
Columbus where Mrs. Thomas
was employed in real estate.
Mr . and Mrs. Thomas purchased the George McQuigg
·property on Lincoln Hill and
have completely remodeled the
attractive home. Mrs. Thomas ,
has been employed with The
Farmers Bank and Slivings Co.
several months.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas have
overload; Michael VanReese, three children, a daughter,
Karen
Munyon,
Cheshire, Rl. I, $5 and costs, ~rs.
insecure load; Wilma F. Columbus; James, Jr., a fresh·
Siders, Racine ; RD, costs only, man at Ohio University, and
six months probation, assault John, a freshman at Meigs
and battery·, $15 and costs, High School. They have a
granddaughter.
disturbing the peace.
Forfeiting bonds were
Offices lor the project will be
William C. Piggott, Parkers- shared with the Meigs Coun ty
burg, Rt. 3, $257.70, overload; Cluster of United Methodist
Fred L. Davis, Jr., Parkers- Churches located on the second
burg, R. L.Stover, Huntington, floor of the building occupied
and Robert F . Priddy, by the Quality Print Shop on
Morgantown, W. Va ., $27.50 Middleport's Mill St.
each, speeding; Roger Keith
Commenting on the project,
Morgan, Columbus, $27 .50, Mrs. Thomas said :
"This is a project not only for
passing at intersection;
George W. Troy, Athens, the people in Meigs County who
$37.50, speeding; Oscar A. are of retirement age, or
Cordell, Gallipolis, $42.50, nearing it, but important to
speeding; Thomas G. Wright, everyone who lives here
Cincinnati, $25(), · trespassing because some day in the luture
and possession of drugs.
each of us will be affected by
problems and opportunities of
lhe aging, to determine some of
lhe needs and inte,rests ollhe
aging, to · determine an
organizatiooal pattern which
will secure widespread· ·participation and reflect needs of
the aging in an attempt to
determine desirable future
projects for the a~ing.

Open in Athens

bHt love story!'

.'

l'()MEROY - Thirteen
defendants were lined and
eight others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Frank
W. Porter were Kenneth Romine,
Rutland,
Rt. I, $5 and costs, no brakes;
Thomas J. Kibble, Reedsville, ·
Rt. I, and Isaac D. Jackson,
Tuppers Plains, $10 and cosIs
each, speeding; . James A.
Dunn, Lynhursl, 0., $5 and
costs, unsafe vehicle; Mike I.
Hardway, Gallipolis, $10 and
costs, stop sign vio lation;
Phillip H. Weatherholt, Bid·
well, Rt. 2, $5 and costs, unsafe
vehicle, $60 and costs, $30
suspended, overload; Robert
S. Wilbur, Hamden, $54
and
costs,
$24
suspended, overload ; Judith E.
King, Bourbonnais, Ill., $10 and
costs, passing at intersection;
Mark A. Haley, Pomeroy, $5
and costs, no muffler; Carl E.
Stewart, Patriot, Rt. I, $5 and
costs, over-length load; Ed·
ward C. Long, Wellston, $25
and costs, $15 suspended,

McGovern HQ

''The bHt comedy

•

13 Fined, 8 Give
Up Court Bonds

Alabaman Will
Be Speaking
At Dedication ,.,

QUILT GUA.RD

Table • 4 Chairs

Ill
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5 Piece Sets

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. GALUPOUS -Icy patches
and speed were blamed for
three minor traffic accidenll
lnvesllgated Friday and
Saturday by the Gallia-Meigs
Post Stale Highway Patrol.
The first occurred at 11:55
p.m. Friday on Rt. 35, nine tenths of a mite· east of Rio
Grande where Robert E.
Miller, Jr., 20, Oak Hill, lost
FRANKLIN CAMP
control of his car on the icy
Raccoon Bridge. The auto ran
off the road and over im embankment.
There
was
· moderate damage. No one was
injured.
The first of two accidents on
the Gallipolis by-pass occurred
at 11:30 p.m. on Rt. 35, one and
one tenth miles west of Rt. 7.
GALLIPOLIS - Dedication
Officers said PeiA!r Reis 25
.
' ' services lor lhe new building of
H1gh Point, N. C., lost control
of his vehicle after striking a the Chapel Hill Church of
sheet of ice. His car went out of Christ located off Route 160 on
control, sliding into the Bulaville Road will be held
guardrail. There was moderate Sunday, April16, at 2:30p.m.
The first services were held
damage .
in
the building last Oct. 31.
Sharon L. See, 23, Pt.
Pleasant, was involved in a Since that lime work has been
similar mishap at 12:10 a.m. done by the members ol the
Saturday on Rt. 35, eight tenths congregation to compleiA! the
of a mile west of the Silver classrooms. The building will
Memorial Bridge. There was be open for the public to tour
after the close of the dedication
minor damage to -her car.
service.
Ronale E. Trimble, 31, Rl. 2,
The speaker wiD be Franklin
Bidwell, was cited to Municipal
Camp
of Birmingham, Ala.,
Court lor speed lor conditions
following an accident at 3:05 who has been preaching the
p.m. on the Kerr-Harrisburg gospel 36 years. He is well
Rd., five tenths of a mile west kn.Wn throughout the Churof Rt. 160. Officers said ches of Christ · for the
Trimble's car struck a parked knowledge he has of the Bible.
auto owned by Eugene L. Mr . Camp has spent an
Plants, Rt. 2, Bidwell . There average of six hours per day
was moderate damage to both studying the word of God for
the past 32 years.
cars.
Mr. Camp will speak at the
three services of the church,
April 16, Bible study at 9:45
a.m.; morning worship at 10:3C
a.m., and•evening worship at 6

TONIGHT ONLY

Gallipolis, Ohio

25 Sets
'Sets
Only

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POMEROY - Mrs. James
·(Eleanor) Thomas," Lincoln
Hili,Pomeroy ,hasbeennamed
director of the Meigs County
Council on Aging inlormation,
research and planning project.
Purpose of the project for
which the local · council has
received lunding in excess of
$Jf,OOO is to arouse Interest in

A~cidents

.PLUI

--.•._-...

Project' Director Named

Blamed for

a

C WHOLESAL -

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Table • 6 Chairs
Heavy Duty

scene until dawn. Six men,
'three trucks and i big crane
sent here from Pomeroy spent
nearly five hours cleaning up
. the debris Saturday.
Sheets said the three. trucks
carried 20 l~ds of the faD en
rock away. \
.
Work was performed I~ subfreezing temperature most of
the night and day ..

·

Corner of Second &amp; Sycamore

ONLY!

3:

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. Night lamps-were left at the

Friday is holy day among
Moslems, who always cele·
brate the creatl~ of Adam
on that day.

FURNITURE

MONDAY

7 Piece Sets

am

- The Sunday Times ·llenllnel, ~~~~:,;

Ice; Speed ··

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DO,U I II PI AT

w·HO~~SALE

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came down on lhe right side of
the highway lacmg north.
A state highway patrolman
arrived minutes later; and
flares were put up
traffic
routed around lhe debris until
workers could clear that
section of the highway.
"Had lhe rock hit a passing
vehicle, il would have caused 8
terrible tragedy.'' Sheets
concluded.

REESE OUTLET

c
ell

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D BEDDI

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GALLIPOLIS - Quick ac·
tion by state highway depar.tment officials · prevenled a
possible tragedy on old Rt. 35
at the city corporation limits
about 7 p.m.; Friday.
Brady Sheets·, superin·
IA!nderit of lhe state highway
department in Gallia County,
had jus~ returned home after
helping put up high waiA!r sig118
'on Rt. 218 foUowlng Friday
afternoon's ra!D·and hail storm
which totaled 1.18inches.ln less
than one hour when he received
a caD that a smaD b&lt;iillder had
brok&lt;l!l loose from lhe hill
overlooking Rt. 160 (old Rt. 35)
·at the city c..,loriUon line •.
Sheets had no sooner arrived
on lhe scene when tons of rock

· SAYRE. TO $P~K ,
•
"GP"
SYRACUSE - District .~u,pt. of I' ' ' Ctark 'G~ble
Vivien Leigh •
Schools Ralph Sayre wiD ap,eak, with the
Admission
:
-·~..._ ...
•boara ··or eii'Dl!atiiiil Jl'f~~ wfiet.-·the~
SUO AduHs
Sl.DO Cllildrtn
Syracuse PTA meets at 7:30p.m. 1'1!esdaY
SHOW STARTS7 "P.M.
al the scbool.
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GONE WITH
THE WINO

ETTE

and

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MEIGS THEATRE

SUNDAY

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··Highway ··Tragedy thwarted

sCh00I

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Vandalism
Is Probed

GALWPOLIS - An act of
vandalism was investigated
Friday night by Gallla County
sheriff's deputies. Officers
were called by George Carter
who reported someone placed
gravel In a large air compressor at the Robbins and
Myers Plant. The compressor
was OWned by Carter and
Evans, Inc.
The state highway patrol and
sheriff's deparlment recorded
the following arrests:
Ronnie G. Smith, 33, Eureka
Star Rt., booked lor Intoxication; Thomas H. Dickel,
25, Mineral Wells, Ohio, in(Continued !rom page I)
toxication; Robert Harold
Massie, 53, Rt. I, Patriot, John
district to continue receiving slate foun- Edward Dickel, 28, Parkers·
dation funds, it is reported. The chamber burg, Kelly M. McKenzie, 20,
went on record as endorsmg the levy.
Pomeroy, and Glennard Davis,
.The second levee proble~ was not as 18, Rt.l, Gallipolis, all charged
easily solved. The chamber diScussed the .with DWI: Billy H. Roush, 61,
condition of \lie Middleport levee which Kanauga,
and
Warren
cannot be used as a boat launch this Robinson, 56, cabin Creek, w.
summer. Alarge section has caved in and Va., both for Intoxication and .
lhe levee is In generally bad condition. Randall E. Harrison, 31, for
Repairs woilld run into th011sands · of.., contempt of court.
dollars, it has been reported. No solution
was reached.
However, the chamber voted to pay
$300 towards the maintenance of · the
marina located off Railroad St. This is also
Tonight, Mon. &amp; Tues.
a boating facility.
,,
Manning Kloes, president, presided.
April '·10-11

PUBLIC WHOLESALE- PUBLIC WHOLESALE

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Smith; Linda Clark vs. Dorwln Clark;
Judith A, Murphy vs: BiUy Charles
Murphy. Also an action, Wanda Noe vs.
Harry Noe was dismissed from the
court docket.
Damages were eslimaled at $250,
there were no lnjuries ·and no citations
as lhe result of an accident involving
two cars at 8:45 a.m. today at the
intersection of Burdette Addition, Rt.
62, Point Pleasant.
According to Investigating officer,
Chief Deputy Sheriff Millard Halstead,
acardrivenbyWilliamSilver,l6,Polnt
Pleasant, pillled out from Burdette
Addition, turned·left and attempted to
enter Lewis Street, when a car dr(ven
by Elvin (Pete) Wedge, 44, allegedly
pulled along side the Sliver car and the
Silver car struck the Wedge vehicle.
Damages were estimated for one car at
$tOO and the second car, $!50.

A petition lor a tempor&amp;ry injunction
was dismissed w!)en the plaintiffs
asked.for this through a motion in the
action styled Benjamin IV, Carter L.
Franklin and Ruth S. Franklin vs. City
of Point Pleasant, a Municipal Corp.
and Peoples Bank of Point Pleasant a
West Virginia Banking Corp.
Attorney Raymond G. Musgrave
entered the motion for the plaintiffs
since a subsequent civil action has been
filed regarding the opening of an •
alleyway off Twenty Second Street.

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GALLIPOLIS· SAVINGS
PANY .
AND LOAN
COM
,
.
Opposite Pvst Olflct: Phline 446-3832 Gallipolis

_I._;;;;__IIII!P~-~---~-....

PT. PLEASANT - Muon
County WilDen's RepubllCIIII
Oub wiD hold their "Meet '!be
Clndldalea" potluck dlmer,
April 22, at the Moose HaD 011
Second Street · In Point
Pleasant.
The dinner will be served at
6:30 p.m. and the public II
welcome. Tickets may be
bOught · by contacting Ciani
May HaD, 8'15-1593 ·or Janie
Byus, 875-2823 or the M.HaU the evening of the dlmer.
T!cketll will be BOld at $2.
A feature of the evenlng'l
entertainment will be the
Stevena Brothers who have
auditioned with JohnnY Caab.

CALL ANSWERED
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
emergency squad answered a
can to the Keith Sutherland
n!lldence, Pomeroy Route I, al
9:16 •.m. Saturday for~.
Sutherland, who was iU. She
wu taken to Veteran•
Memorial Hospital.

II.EGULAII. $11.99 SONOREST

REGULAR 88c YARD

•OLD A BED*

SPORTSWEAR PRINTS

.

• CoHon and
polyester no
iron blends.
• 45" widths.

• 2" MA+tr-tSI
• Alu,.,lnum

., ..,.
• Fvl

24•72"
• Slripo ticlincJ.

Stoc.~ up now on tlwe~t b..uti.£ ( CJ•"·
erous 1i1e towels. lteuti-Ruff liniN\
for scft, lu•wic:n,ll terfure. High feJhion
lolids. Pucker rr.. dobby bord.,,,

64~.

IlL IJ..I

I(GULAI $2.,1 ALUMINUM

TWETTLE or FRYPAN

.

ri1i\ .J99
~

EACH

FIREKING®BAKEWARE ·
• S.ke, store
he1t, Mrvt.
• E•sy--clun.
• Meny lias.

I·
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ggc:

I

'I'H.

li,C

WASH CLOTH .. . . 14t

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II.EGULAit $1.29 to $1.59

54C

IlL

FACE TOWEL . . . . . . 141

T

I
I
!
I
I

60"

.I
II
I]

II.EGULAII. $10,99

4 Seals l 4 Backs
: •n~;~·~.:··~~:&gt;4\
999
lilt~\
whih .

A•O&lt;odo It
Lar1er StOfll

J.S7

I Hat, I ~~~·

iUUIK$6.97

I
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STEEL SHELVING*

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577

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5- The Sundav Tinies -Senhnel. Sunday, April9, 1972

~ -- The Sunda)-Timet · SI&gt;nlinei,Sunday, April9. 1972

'

EDITORIALS
'

£riends of the Earth Charge Administration

Generation Rap

Letten of opinion are welcomed. They should be less
tbu 100 words long tor be subject to reduction by Ihe editor)
llldmutbesignedwlt~ the signee's address. Names may be
withheld upon publication, however, on request. Letters
m.,l!ld be ill good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

SHE'S HAPPY - OR IS SHE?
Dear Rap :
· •
Listening to people say how much freedom kids have today
makes me sick. I'm almost 16 and I really dig my mother. This
therefore, it came as no surprise that the EPA overlooked nits !lin'! a complamt . I just want everyone to koow not all teens are ·
treferable alternative treatment strategy in derivmg its out uon the loose."
Here are some of the things I can' do:
December estimates. On face, then, the Administration's actions
l. Go out with my girl friends.
were not at all misleading!
Go out with boys.
2.
However, when It ~arne widely known that a much more
3. Go to dances, parties, etc.
cost-effeclive treatment strategy was available for immediate
4.
Talk on the telephone, \lllless my mother answers, then
employment, the Adfulnilltration chose not to publicize, or even
acknowledge, this fact. The Administration left its December asks the gu-1 her name, where she lives and what she wants.
testimony uncorrected, in effect allowing an ignorant Congress (Absolu!ely no boy calls.)
5. Bring kids to the boose.
anH public to regard the correct cost estimates as lies per6. Go shopping, Wiless accompanied by my mother, sister or
petrated by over-zealous environmentalists.
'
brother. (I like all of them lots, so that's no problem.)
Similarly, one particular happening of the past week perSome of the things I AM allowed to do:
fectly highlighted the White House's duplicity -in dealing with
l. Go to work.
water pollution. As reported by Stuart Udall and Jeff stansbury
2. Go to school.
'
on Wednesday,
March 29, 1972, in their syndicated column, Our
3. Got to church every Sunday, mornmg and evening.
Environment, the Administration "embargoed" a report by the
4. Baby-6il for my married s1ster. (! have to, but I don't
U. S. Anny Corps of Engineers that analyzed the land-disposal mmd.)
waste treatment system employed by Chicago. This system iS in
My mother Ill from the old country and worries a lot about
trinciple similar to, although considerably more costly than that what people will say, and temptations and things like that. !love
planned for Muskegon.
her.- JOANNE
Significantly, however, the Corps of Engineers' analysis Dear Joanne:
showed that this system was far more cosl-&lt;!ffective than the
Evidently you're happy, so I'll keep my big typewriter shut,
conventiOnal systems employed presently. Thus, the effect of though it's a terrible effort! - SUE
this study was not only to question the efficacy of the Nation's Dear Joanne :
,
general aptroach to combating water pollution but also to
My big typewriter has to say: "Dear Mother of Joanne definitely prove that "Zero Discharge" was attainable at a cost Please read between her lines and let your daugbter become a
comparable to that developed in the FOE and Faucett Associates normal American teenager! She won't disappoint you. study.
HELEN
One can only conclude from these recent actions that the
+++
Nixon Administration strongly desired that a weak water Dear Rap'
pollution bill be passed in the Houae.
"Liar" asked how to cure himself of lying and exaggerating.
Now that FOE-Faucett cost projeclions for attaining "Zero
I had this habit of making a big deal out of everything, and It
Discharge" are vindicated forever, one can only hope that the was losing me friends . _
members of the House-Senate Conference Committee conSo every time I started to exaggerate, I'd write my version
sidering th,e two Clean Water bills can act sensibly and ex- into a story, afterwards. Then I'd tell my friends and fanuly the
peditiously to report a bill that recognizes the true cost of clean reallruth, and let them read the '1abrication." Pretty soon I was
water.
JUst writing those imagined things and not saying them. It got
The time for duplicity has ended; the Congress, the People, me some good grades in English. - DAN THE LIAR-LOCKER
and the While House must come to the realization that a lltrong Dear Rap:
clean water bill paased today will save the country countless
You probably won't print this, but I have to say it.
billions of dollars in damage tomorrow.
I'm getting tired of hearing over and over about the terrible
things that only the Caucasian race is supposed to have done.
Whites are becoming so weighed down with guilty consciences
that It's hard to function normally; thus we can 1 really "rap"
with people of other races: we're either apologetic and silly or
belligerent and on the offensive.
Really, we aren't the only ones guilty of, cruel and mhuman
treatment. For example, practically all slaves were furmshed
the slave traders by stronger black tribes who captured members of weaker tnbes and sold their "brothers" into bondage.
Very few white traders went inland and captured 'their own
how to be saved now. No, we get that out of the New Testament. blacks. This IS historical fact.
Then why go there to get a system of worship ?
Which doesn't make whites any less at fault- but II IXJES
WhatJolu! saw in Rev. 4: 2,3 was only a visiOn.
spread the cruelty to blacks also
This will be the last letter that I will wnte, as there is no '
Whites are blamed for decimating the Indians, but they
more to write on this subject.
fought each other, too. Japanese concentration camps were
E.R.J.

AprilS, 1972
Dear Sir:
Mr. Clifford Smith, of the Bradford Cburch of Christ,
authored a letter which appeared in the Sunday iss11e of your
paper, April2, with which I have some disagreement. I base my
&lt;~~agreement In the lack of scriptural authority for the doctrine
he haa preaented, as I shall proceed to demonstrate .
In the fourth paragraph,]le states, " ... there Is no prohibition
of inllrumental music in the scripture ." I must assume this
mean~ in the worship of God, and in so far as a '"lbou shalt not,"
Mr. &amp;nilh Is correct. There is no such command. The statement
then continues: "As a matter of fact, It is quite the contrary."
Here Mr. Smill!leaves the premise he sets forth concerning the
New Testament and the governing of the church in the first three
paragraphs and turns to the Old Testament, which contains not a
lingle verse of authority as regards the functions of the church or
worahlp to God today. The entire book of Hebrews is devoted to
~oving that very point. More to these points later.
In the fifth paragraph, the statement Is made, " ... we find
nowhere that the Apostles ever rebuked anyone because of
muaical instruments." They did not, and there is good reason
why, butherels Mr. Smith's statement, "Now either the apostles
were ignorant of this supposed doctrine, or they did not see any
wrong In musical instn:ments." He suggests the latter is most
reaaonable.
•
I disagree. There Is another alternative which is equally as
well proven. They did not practice the use of musical instruf1!ents
in the early church, therefore the apostles had no need to present
direct instructions in the matter. That is just as well founded as
the other premises But let's look seriously at the doctrine Mr.
Smith teaches.
In using the silence of God to justify the use of the musical
instrument in the worship, Mr. Smith "leaves the bam door
open," so to Bjleak. Let's look at some examples from the
IICI'ipture. God did not tell Cain, do not offer vegetables in
aacrlflce! God did not tell Moses, do not strike the rock ! God or
Chrilt did not tell us, do not use pinto beans and corn bread on the
Ulrd's table! Christ did not, nor the Apolltles, tell us, do not use a
mualcal instrument in worship! The scriptures do show that Cain
llld Abel were to offer meat S!l~ifices, Moses .was told to speak
to the rock, Christ left the unleavened bread and fruit of the vine
• his memorial, and we are instructed to sing In Eph. 5:19 and
Col. 3:18. The very fact that a thing Is specified excludes all other
things ill the same category. God told No&amp;h to use gopher wood!
That acluded pine and oak! We are told to sing, that excludes
lilY other ldnd of music !
. As to the instruments in Heaven and at the second coming,
thoeeln no wise are related to the worship of God, in or out of the
ch\&amp;'Ch bere on earth!
I &amp;PP'eciate the abilities and steadfastness of Mr. &amp;!lith in
treaentlng and defending what he believes to be the truth. I am
doing the same thing and sincerely hope that he will study the
thoughts I've presented and reply forthrightly to them. I
welcome any comments which he might direct my way.
Loren T. Stejlhens, Pastor, Olurch of Christ, Mason, W.Va.

Scriptur.al doctrine, second way
Dear Sir :

Mmical lnstrwnent Debate

Continued; One Vows -to Stop

horrible "' so is war!

scriptural doctrine, one way

Columbus, Ohio
April4, 1972

. lin~ It funny how some of us jump from the New Testament
to the old to 11atlafy ouraelves.
1be Old Testament was law and the people could not keep it,
beca111e it na almost Impossible.
So the old law was fl:"lled to the croilS and Clwist gave us a
new Jaw called Grace. This we can partly keep, as Otrist is a
II'O~Iallon lor our sins, and Is willlng to forgive us our sins.
Then why llbould we go back to the Old Testament ,to get a
1)'111111 of IIWilblp ?
•'
Jf we do we might just as well offer animal sacrifices for our
lllna.
I
I Do we want to do that? Or do we just take the part t~t
Atllllellll?
You cu~ find one place in the Old Testament that tells us

on

Dialogue '72
WOUB Tuesdays
~·

By Helen and Sue Hottel

Duplicity in Wate~ Pollution Cost Estimates
Last December in hearings before the House Public Works
Colllllllttee three high Nixon Administration offlcl,als, RUBSell
Train, Chairman of the C'roncil of Environmental Quality,
William RuckelsiJaus, Administrator of the Environmental
Protection Agency, and Paul McCracken, then Otalnnan of the
Council of Economic Adviaors, testHied that the costs related to
achieving _"Zero Dlacharge" of all pollutants into our Nation's
waterways were so great as to make Ibis goal ecooomically
disastrous and socially undesirable.
These charges, which remained unanswered 1111til this
March, in sheer repetition gained mcreasing credibility with·
both the people and, especially, the Congress.
-- -·
However, a study conducted by Friends of the Earth and
Jack Faucet! Associates; an economic research form, located m
Chevy Chase, Md., conclusively proved that using the land
disposal method of waste water treatment being employed in
Muskegon County, Mich, could achieve "Zero Discharge" at
onHixth the cost so widely and misleadingly publicized by the
Administration.
Unfortunately, this realistic cross-projection was received
with great skepticism by most members of the Congress, labor
lead!!rs, and manufacturers, who had been conditioned by the
false Administration figures to believe that "Zero Discharge"
would close industrial plants, lay off workers, and precipitate
massive government expenditures.
ll came as no surprise that the Hous~f Representatives
voted recently to substantially dilute in the Ho'bse bill the strong,
but economically sound, "Zero Discharge" goals of the Senate
Clean Water Bill.
ll was, of course, difficult to charge that the Admmistral!on,
through its release and publication of misleading, mcorrect, and
inflated costs estimates, deliberately planned to mislead the
llouae Into paaaing a "watere&lt;klown" Clean Water Bill. The staff
Ill EPA developed the December cost figures by applying 1990
waste-water load estimates to conventional treatment
lllrategies; secondary, tertiary, advanced tertiary, and
distillation systems.
While the syatems are the ones most commonly used today,
they provide by far the most expensive means of removmg efOumt from waste water. Unfortunately, the most cost-&lt;lffective
system, the land-disposal method previously described, Ill
relatively unknown in the sanitary engineering profession, and

.

As Ohio's May Primary Robert H. Whealey, an
grows nearer, the campaigns associate professor of history
shift into high gear. Helping at Ohio University, and Jack
"turn the candidates on" to the Crisp, head of the Leading
people of Southeastern Ohio Creek Watershed Aasociation,
will be Dialogue '72, he~rd the Leadins Creek ConTuesdays from 10 p.m. to servancy District, and a
licensed minister of the Cburch
midnight on WOUB Radio.
The.Aprilll and 18 dialogues of Christ. Crisp is from Langswill feature the candidates for ville m Meigs County.
Equal time is given to the
the U.S. Congressional seat in
the tenth Ohio district. On the Republican candidates the ,
first show, the Democratic following week. Paul M.
candidates will each spend an Brown, an Jndustrial and
hour with host Bob Pondillo, commercial real estate condiSCussmg their platforms and sultant from Chesapeake Is the
answering questions phoned in challenger and the Honorable
from the listening audience. Clarence E. Miller, of Lan·
Running on the Democratic caster, is the incumbent.
ballot will be, from Athens, Dr. Representative Miller may not
be on the program in person,
but be present via the WATS
line at least.
To mcrease the opportunity
to hear the candidates,
D1alogus '72, on April II and 18
will be broadcast on WOUB FM
(91.3) as well as AM (1340)
Stanley Trussell
has from 10 p.m. to rmdnight.
returned home after spending Athens area listeners can
almost five weeks at Veterans question the candidates by
Memorial Hospital where he calling 594-5544. Out of tOwn
underwent surgery.
listeners should call 614-594Mr. and Mrs. John Ours of 2345, collect.
Belpre spent Sunday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Warden
Ours.
TWINBILL POSTPONED
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Trussell
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) and Dawn of MI. Verno11. spent The San Francisco Giants
Saturday night and Sunday announced Saturday their
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. scheduled doubleheader today
Stanley Trussell . Also spending with the San Diego Padres has
Sunday with them were Bob been postponed.
and Sandra Trussell and Mr.
No new dates were set for the
and Mrs. John Ridneour of games. That makes a total of
Cbester and Richard Kerns of four hQilie games for the
Belpre and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Giants wiped out by the
Trussell and children, local. baseball strike. The team ·was
Visiting them the past week scheduled to begin a roacl trip
were his sisters, Mrs. Murl in Cincinnati Tuesday night
Ours and Mrs. Mildred Frank
and Mr. and Mrs. Herman
PLANS TRADE
Carson, Mr. and Mrs. Albert
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Hill, Racine and Clint McCleveland
Cavaliers Coach Bill
Namee of Carmel.
Fitch
said
Saturday he
Miss Tammy Pitzer fell at
her home and broke a bone in probably would trade his first
her foot. She was taken to the round pick in Monday 's
National Basketball
office of Dr. Davis for x-rays.
Mrs. Wilma Anderson was Association draft to the Los
returned home from Veterans Angeles Lakers as part of the
Memorial Hospital where she deal which brought Rick
spent several weeks due to a Roberson here.
The move meant 'Cleveland
heart ailment
would
aelect 13th m the opening
Mr and Mrs. Ralph Trussell
and children spent Sunday round.
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
---·
SUNDA\'
J
Roger Kirkhart and family of I
Chester.
l TIMt:S-SEi'ITINEL l

Bashan
News

Isn't it time we stopped beating ourselves over past iliistakes
that
we can never change? I'm tired of being made to feel
Scriptural doctrine, a third way
responsible for what my ancestors did.
This is an open letter to those of minority races : please help
Rio Grande, Ohio
Apr. 3, 1972 me feel at ease with you. I can't, so long as I'm - BLAMED
Dear Sir:
UNFAIRLY
:
Pu• lo lhM htr, ~~nat, b l '"' 0" •0 I
I llave just returned from a trip U! Walt Disney World and
1 v·n~... r~~~~~~~~ ~~.~,. . . Hi l BUN(
r
found in March 26th paper an answer to my letter so I must anJ
I ll T~ rG Ayf GIIII&gt;Oitt Oh io I W.ll f
I PI/DI l!lld
U . Uv '-f'llont tHtpl
S.1UHIIV
(l UI Pa11191 P'l ld at
swer :
I C.•I"POI&lt;' Otuo .SUI
1
Tt&lt;E OIILY U ... T("EL
How can we cast off the Old Testament? Jesus quoted from it
Ill (&lt;&gt;v"
Po••'I•OI 0
aJI..
I P&lt;ib l \1\td hlry •••• d 11 ••tn ng nt " l
many times, Matt. 4:4-7. Apostle Paul believed in all the Bible
I l .ot ~• a• v £Mt reG u " '0~ 11
mt,lon t
1 "'"'" I! Pam•ro~ Ch •o ~"••• C !loc t
when he said all scriptures are inspired of God and profitable (II
I h c1tEr~.':,~ a~.;~ ~.un~ 5 ~~~:,1v10 ~ p 1 r
'I1 I~~" ,\IJ.,IG ttLlopgl 1 Tr o""' on Ot"l&gt;II ATES
Timothy 3:16).
ttiCI Wn l
1/ otf oho l on• v• t• tiJ 1)0 ' "
51
I accept hoth Jesus and his father God.
I t~r • e m~ntM to SG tlltllr~lrt ont l"'
1 I ll 111 moniM \1 thru monlhi 1 DO
People in general today do not show love for one another
I
l ~f Dt l y Stnl nfl on• 1ur 111 Gt ''"
II "
IMtf mtMh\ u '10
GALLIPOLIS - Twelve coaches John Milhoan (golf, members of their respective I montnl
Tnt un ••a Prtu •Mtrnttlon t l 11 • •
becauseGodisdeadoroutdated (l Jobn 4:8).
1
""'litO I\&gt;'"' U\ 1 lor PUII" r atton
1 11 "'"'' II•HII ' l~n c•Hr! U to '~ ' '
The Ten Commandments are important to me and should be juniOrs were inducted into the Jim Osborne (baseball) and teams, and gave brief talks on I1 "otl•iPI
Pr• onQ lllo tnt lOX I I llt.,l
pubhlhto " " ' ''"
Ron
Logan
(
lrack)
introduced
the
1972
spring
sports
program.
Nahonal
Honor
Society
during
a mirror to all of us. They are in the Old Testament.
~------------------J
It speaks in Isiah 2:4: no wars, or war implements will be Friday morning's joint
::r:w;;· ::
b Jbbbblbb 2L db bJb
I I t!
made; that prophecy has never been fulfilled . Isiah in 25:8 tells Nahonal Honor Society and
Awards
Assembly
at
Gallia
of a time when death will be oo more. Another prophecy not
Academy High School.
fulfilled
Tapped for National Honor
I personally feel God gave us hands a n d talents to
Society were :
be used on mechanical instrwnents and placed them m our
Brant Adams, Elizabeth
bach's spiffy copies ... A couple of other wellBY JACK O'BRIAN
church to be used for the glory of the Lord.
Boster, Kathy Davies, Mark
heeled
gals, Eunice Kennedy Shriver and Diana
Jesus is our means of salvation bul'God is the Almighty and Kiesling, Alan Kemp, Becky
SU.VERS
ZEROS
IN
Sands, aiso thriftied with other cost4ess 0.
the Creator and is listening every Sabbath morning at the Naskey, Debbie Northup ,
ON
'FORUM'
copies.
beautiful tones from the organ and piano prelude.
Brent Sanders, David Thomas,
NEW
YORK
(KFS)
Phil
Silvers
is
pure
Multi-millionaire music publisherI want to deeply apologize for any statements contrary to Rita Valentine, Karla Sue
brassy gold in the "Funny Thing Happened on songwriter Chester Conn went to Hawaii for a
your belief or feelings on this subject.
Waugh and Jan Wiseman.
the Way to the Forum" revival. Far better in long winter . vacation, was hauled off to the
N.E.W.
The 6ond Citizenship Award
sponsored by the Daughters of the role originated years ago by Zero Mastel. hospital with N. Y. caught pneumonia the day
the American Revolution was Unless of course you like sweaty comedians ... he arrived, suffered a heart attack while there,
last embarrassment, he hopes
presented to Kathy Fischer. Took two yoWig ladies, 13 and 14, to see "Two recovered weeks later and w~nt back to the
Basketball Coach Jim Gentlemen of Verona," and if anything it's even Royal Hawaiian Hotel to rest, tripped and hit his
To Whom It May Concern:
Osborne presented the more wildly delightful than opening night. The head when he fell against a metal somesuch and
My name is Alvis Moore and I am i student at Rio Grande
lollowing individuals varsity kids on stage plainly enjoy the delicious fun ... was sped back to the hospital -concussion .
College.
•
awards for the 1971-72 cam- Big yellow Olecker cab packed with half a Called it a vacation finally and flew back to N.
Last Thursday the Rio Grande College &lt;llorus, the Rio paign :
dozen revelers pulled up in front of El Morocco Y., where he immediately wus bedded with
Grande College Cborale, and the Rio Grande College Wind
Larry Snowden and Rnd in the early Sunday a.m. and the chauffeur was exhaustion. Some rest. Okay now.
Symphony gave a concert at Gallla Academy High School. Much Ferguson, third year; Gil Price Gianm Uzielli, Henry Ford's son-in·lalf, who , .
Perry Como was completely mobile despite
to our chagrin, there were only 30 or 40 people in attendance.
and Rick Boone, second year; then turned it hack to the passenger • riding his busted leg as he sang to the Nat'l Record
I am not ashamed to say that we all were truly embarraSsed Jim Noe, Topper Orr, Mark cabbie ... Sports Illustrated star Dan Jenkms' Manufacturers convention in Florida - from a
and burt because we really thought we were doing this for a Kiesling and Kev Sheets, first novel "&amp;emi-Tpugh" was grabbed by Playboy golf cart ... And from a "confidential report for
worthy orgamzation, the members ol the Cancer Crusade. We year. Manager Roger Harbour, for pre-publication excerpts. It's touted as one the music and radio industries" comes this
worked hard at putting the play together; our director, Mr. Ross, manager, received a first year of the fmest of the decade.
·
heartening excerpt: "The real sentiments of the
sacrificed great amounts of his time to prepare us, and we were award.
GoreVidaljoinedthelate~ateP . J . Clarke 's
NARM members came out when Perry Como
really looking forward to performing it. In the cast were many
FOllowing the awards crowd after slaving over his imminent Bdwy . , appeared. Perry softly crooned three or four
alumni from Gallla Academy.
Ceremonies, spring sports play which knocks Nixon, Kennedy, Johnson - • ballads and at the finish there was absolute
My personal feelings are that if we performed at the
and even George Washington ! ... Teddie pandemonium - cheers and whistles with the
graveyard we would have gotten a much more receptive
O'Sullivan, an owner of Dublin's justiy famed
entire audience, longhaired and shorthaired,
response. "Ballad For Americans" has a deep lnfonnatlve
Gresham
Hotel,
also
joined
our
late~ate
P.J.'s
leaping to their feet in a standing ovatlon. This
hiS grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
message that would ha ve.really been an experience for the whole Norman Schaefer.
fun ... In "21," Baseball Hall of Farner Hank
tribute to top M.O.R. artist, cqming from the
community of Gallipolls.
.
people wtio sell most of the records in this Mrs. Maggie Bayles, Mr. and Greenberg with toycoon Dave Marx bemoaned
In conclusion, I'm deeply sorry if we the students of Rio Mrs. William Perry of Athens the diamond strike. Han!( looks in good enough
country, makes you stop and wonder - about
Grande College are not worthy of your favor. And personally were Easter dinner guests of shape IQ make another Serieil.
whether the Who's Who of record label
speaking, I hope that we won't have to embarrass ourselves for Mr. and Mrs. N. E. Schaefer.
executives (most of them attended) graaped the
' Burgess Meredith joined us in "21" and t9ld
you again.
Mrs . Edna Faulk spent us about Franchot Tone's lad Pat, who llterally
full significance of what they saw ... and just
Thank 'you, Sincerely yours, Mr. Alvis Moore, Michael Sunday with the Clifford Klem last time we saw him was being carried by
how the stOry of what really happened will be
Ohver,'Lewis Hendrickson, Miss Sandy Hunter, and Miss Liss family.
Franchot in a blue blanket on Lower 5th Ave.
reported by the papers. It was an amazing
Wagner .
Mark Stahl of Stockdale Easter ,Sunday 1944 at age 6 weeks. Buzz M.
revelation and hard to believe - just uk the
formerly of this place, rema~ says the lad, who safely grew up nobly despite
leading record merchant in your city wbo wu
in serious condition in a the small wars of his colorful parents (mom is
glut
ji'O bably there." ... Indeed : and the "'··est
"'611
Chillicothe hospital from in- Jean Wallace), has progressed from leaching at
on the music market now are rock groupo;
juries suffered in a wreck.
Collegiate School (where John-John Kennedy
literally hundreds are jobless.
Mr. and Mrs. Hannon Fox studies) to owning his own college (Franklin)..
British vocalist Nell Reid's album, "Mother
· have returned home after
of Mlne,"hltNo.11nBritainand lshotcaldng up
By Mrs. Bertha Parker
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bauer of spending- three months in It's the whole truth, Meredith swears ... David
Merrick a""
wife
didn't
look
worried
about
his
the charta here. Nell' s 12 .....
..__
• -•.
Sabbath School attendance Manon spent a weekend with Florida.
..,.
., record ,...,.,
on Easter at the Free Mrs. Bauer's father, Mr.
up~ming "Sugar" musical's chances on Bdwy.
who went wild when Como sang ''kept walking'
Methodist Church was 154. A Charles Karr Sr. and visited
over their "21" supper ... Where former MGM
out in drove. tmoug~t the rock act" ... Singer
Wuther
large number attended Sunrise Mrs. Karr who is a patient in
veep Charlie Beagle said N. Y. Is a nice place to
Karen Morrow w• starred in !all week'• quietservice Easter morning. Of· Veterans Memorial Hospital.
visit
but
he
prefers
his
retirement
home
in
fold
musical, "Selling of the President" _ her
Sunny and not so coot Sunfering for the day was $220.15. Mr. and Mrs. Bauer attenlled day. High in upper : . and 40s. Monte Carlo.
fifth nop In a row ....
I
Sinatraa
• ·-·-··-'
,........,. his
Mrs . Pearl Jacobs fell worship service at the local Fair Sunday night, low in the
GreatadforOhrbach'sstore: Doris Duke of
London llat and Is aald to be p4Jddling his
sometime ago injurying her church.
upper 20a and 30s. Monday the heiresstocracy, who could buy not only
Manhattan and Acapulc:u pad&amp; ••• June AIIYIOII
arm. She was taken to Holzer
John Story of Columbus lll08tly cloudy and warmer custom-needled origillals but all the ~n
of the tourlni "No, No, Nanette" Is y.-ytling
Hosp1~l for lreatmenl.
• fashion houses themselves, took lis of Ohr· Telan Olp'k Richardl.
spent his Easter vacation with high In the 5tls."
·

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

12 Juniors Become Members
Of GAHS Honors Society

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Laurel Cliff News Notes-

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.I

Gallia 4-H Quh News
Cherokee 4-H Club
The Cherokee Valley Saddle 4-H Club met on March 20 at the
home of Carl Steel with Barbara Barcus presiding. The group
decided to sell pot holders ~sa money making project. Attending
were Bob Mead and Charles Barcus, advisors; member.s, Kenny
Barcus, Barbara Barcus, !i!Irley Barcus, Virginia Porter, Bob
Walters, Teresa Halley, Becky Halley, Patty Porter, Pam Mead,
Kathy Decker, Matt Sanders, John Taylor, Gary Taylor, Mark
Hoffelt and Jeff Steele.
.
, Parents and guests attending were Mrs. Sharon Halley, Mr.
anH Mrs. Carl steele, Paula Butler apd Marta steele.
Cadmus Redsklns
The Cadmus Redskins met on March 20 at the Cadmus
School with Don Cox presiding and devotions by Debby Baker.
The trogram was given by Mrs. Miller followed with a grollp
discussion on club dues. The next meeting will be held on Apri124
at 7 p.m. at the scbool.
Attending were Doug Miller, Pam Miller, Lisa Wells, Cindy
Cox, Carolyn Baker, Di31\8 and Gregory Sands
Parents attending were Mrs. Massie and MISS v Burnette, a
guest. AdVIsors are Mrs Miller and Mrs. Gregory.
Eno Sail On
The EnO Sail On 4-IJ Club met at the Eno Grange Hall on
March 17 wtth Donna Shupe presidmg. Mike Gee gave devotions
and the program was tresented by Knstal Hash. The 4-H pledge
was led by Jennie Elkins, and the pledge to the flag was given by
Kim Reynolds.
Readings were given by Donna Shupe, Robm Herman, R1ck
Eggleton, and Doug Sisson. Songs were sung and games were
played with refreshments of ice cream, cake, and Kool·Aid
served in honor of Mike Gee's birthday. ,
Members discuased projects and dues were set at 15 cents
and roll call was answered by members statmg their favo rite
colors. The projecl books were given out at the meetmg and new
!I'D jects were also discussed.
The next meeting will be held with the date to be announced
later at the Eno Grange Hall. Club adv isors are Mrs. Dorothy
Toler and Mrs. Janet Brownmg. Mrs. LDren Glassburn was the
VIsiting parent.
Georgia Girls
The Georgia Girls 4-H Club met on March 20 at the Georges
Creek Orange Hall with Jo Ann Brown and Shirley Martin
tresiding. The pledges were led by Debbie Graham.
A demonstration was given by Kandy Gindlesberger on
"How to Cover a Button With Material ." Jan Stidham demon·
strated how to make a "Catch Stitch Hem."
The club discussed • clean up project for Georges Creek '
Road. Refreshments were served by Kandy and Jeanme Gindlesberger and Barb Hughes.
A new club member Tina Snyder was welcomed mto the
club. Advisors are Shirley Martin and Jo Aim Brown.
Hannan Trace Pioneers
The Hannan Trace Pioneers met on March 20 at the Mercerville Grange Hall with Joe Slone presiding and giving the
JI'Ogram .
Election of officers was held with president, Joe Slone; vice
Jl'esident, Gene Myers; secretary, Connie Saunders ; treasurer,

English Club Reviews
Book On Woman Doctor

SEVERAL 4-HMEMBERS ARE shown here taking part
m rec1·eational activities during the annual 4-H officers a nd
advisors lrammg conference held at Galha Academy High
School on Apnl 5.

110 Attend Spe~ial
Training Convention
GALLIPOLIS - One hundred ten 4-H advisors and
members attended the annual
4-H Offi'Cers and AdviS ors
Training Conference held at
Gallia Academy on April 5.
All officers and advisors of 4H cl ubs throughout U1e county
were invited to attend the two
hour ~vent to r{ceive speciaJ
tra mwg for their specific offlee. Each session last 30
mmutes.
There were ten sesswns The
presidents and vice presidents
were tau ght by Larry Marr;
secretan es

\\'CI

Mary Margaret W1ll1s;
lleasureis by Roma Smith ,
news 1eporte rs by Dale
Rothgeb; 1ecreahon leader by
Kathy Payne; health and
safely by Heda Fowler ; ad·
v1sors and parents by Duane
Plymale ; 4-H Carn pmg at
Caslters Cave was taught by
Kathy
Payne,
Jumor
Leadership wa s taught by
Cmdy Boggs, Libby Willis and
Kala Sue Waugh; and "What
Makes A Good Club Meeting"
was taught by Jackie Graham
and Jean Niday

e taught by

n'la u
d 0 n Btrt
. hdary
.r, nts llOnore
GA LLIPOLIS - Gilbert L.
Plants, Route I, Galhpohs, was
h o n o~e d on h1s birthday,
Easter Sunday, with a dinner
given by 30 members of his
family. He was p1esented With
a large birthday cake wh ich
everyune enjoyed.

Dorothy, Rebecca and Apnl;
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Loy well.
Donna, Debbie and Vivian;
Vella Bruney and Chns; Mr.
and Mrs. Roney Lemley, Knsh
and Cindy ; Mrs. George S
Hndge rs and Paul; Donald
Plants, Joann Plants, Lmda
Plants and M1s Gilbert L
Plants
Other guests were David
Krone n and Lee Ann Hampton.

GALLIPOLIS - The English
Club met at the horne of Mrs
Clarence Waugh on Tuesaay,
·April 4. The president, Mrs.
Hob8rt Wtckhne, opened the
mee bn!l-wlth a poem "Beauty
Around Us " The followmg
officers
were
elected·
president, Mrs. Douglas
Mulhneaux; vice pr es1de nt ,
Mrs
Ga rland
Ca ud ill ;
secre tary , Mrs. Homer
Brannon , and treasurer, Mrs
Owen Can trell
Mrs. Homer Brannon
reviewed th e book, "Lone
Woman - Story oJ Eliza beth

wanted to become doc tors,

mdudmg her sister, Emily.
Nevertheless, It was more than
one hundred years before all
medical schools would admit
women.
Followmg the program, Mrs.
Waugh aud her co-hostess,
Mrs. Max Tawney served
delicious refreshments and a
sociallwur followed.
The next meetmg will be the
annual dmner on May 2 at RIO
Grande eollege where new
members will be welcomed
an d the officers will be mstalled

GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Richard
On Apni 12 there Will be a
Simpson, pediatrician from the group partlc1patwn session
Holzer Medical Center, was the \\Ith th e girls practicing
guest speaker on Apnl &gt;fo.r the method s or dt apenng un d
Junwr

Women 's

Clu b

Babysittmg Clune.. Dr. Simpson spoke to the group about
the care of infants an d youn g
children.
Am ong the subjects covered
were reedin g and 'burpmg
mfanls, tes tmg fo r and
bnnging down a rever , and
emergency measures to take tn
~.:ases

of vomitmg , conv ulsmg,

chokmg, etc
Bla ckw ell, Ftrst Woman
This sessiOn was the four th in
Doct01 ," by Dorothy Clarke
a series of six; pr ev ious
Wilson Elizabeth Blackwe ll
ALUMNI
TO
DINE
speakers
have been Mrs
was bom m 1821 , Lhe d:.lughter
HUN
TINGTON
The
George
Tabit,
Gallipolis Poltce
of Samuel Blackwell, an
Marshall
University
Alumni
Cb1ef, John Taylor, and Fire
Englishman in the sugar
Association
will
hold
Its
35th
Clue!,
James Northup .
buSiness She g1·ew up with he1·
annual
alumm
banquet
· parents, two ststcrs, a brothel ,
and four maid en aunts. SatUiday, April22, at 6 p.m. m MORE REGISTRATIONS
COLUMBUS (UI;'I) - The
Elizabe th was determined to th e Marshall University
Stud
ent
Center
Guest
speaker
OhiO
DiVISIOn or ..atercraft
du somethmg mure lfllp OI ta nt
will
be
Dr.
Prince
B.
W
oodard,
announced
today 11 licensed
than hve with 1elat1vcs If she
Chancellor, West V1rgm1a 224,806 boats and 174,049 out.
should never marry
The Blackwells mo ved to Board of Regen Is. Toastmaster board motors during 1971, an
Ameuca whete he r father will be Cabell County Sheriff mcrease of 12,401 boats and
5,5S4 motors ove r those
became a fnend or Wil lwm Joe Neal.
licensed m 1970 Cuyahoga
Lloyd Gamson, editor or "The
county
led Ohio's 88 counties in
The aver age dan y cow
Liberator" and organiZer of
two anti-s lav ery soc tcttcs. ea ts about II pounds of hay licenses With 22,977 boats and
16,211 motors
Samuel opened ins home to per day
many people "'ho were
cnh cized for th eu· sta nd
lkJ 4c_,l.J ..-~ , _
against slave1 y H1s sugar
busmess burned in 1836 and he Unscramble these four Jumbles,
suffe1·ed further losses In t11e one letter to each square, to
Pamc of 1837, yet th eir home form four ordinary word s.
was always a pl ace of
Gl
..,,..
(;OIWI-'
...... ...,.,.
hospitality .
Sal]luel moved his family to
Cmcmhali, where he diCd. The
v.omen m the family organiZed
a school, but Ehzabetl1 did not ANCKKparhcularly like teaching and
wanted to do sometlnng more
challenging. When a friend
expressed a Wish that there
fXNOS'I'
were
women
do ctoi'S,
PULLE!i' MCK 10
Ehzabetl1 decided t11at she
MAKE F'~RES5
would be a doctor.
After being tm ned do11n by
seve ral med1 ca l schools,
Elizabeth stud ied med1cme m
the offi ce of Dr. Joseph
Warrmgton or Philadelphia It
was he wh o wro te to the dean of
Geneva MediCal School in
(Antwtr,t Munduy)
Geneva , New York, 1equcslmg
Jumbt •., RAJAH LAPEL SADIST EULOGY
that Elizabeth be admttted Ytt1~r d ay'11
\ An•wer : Went dte tum~ way without
,~
\~
The dean read the letter to the
meeting- PARALLELS
150 students, and they met the
Situahon with 1\histling, catcalls, stampm g of fee t,
pounding of fists and hoots of
dension. !Jut m the end they
accepted her and she did
become a doc tor. Elizabeth
Blackwell was respected and
honored both m tins co untry
and abroad When the Civil
War broke out she orgamzed a
lrammg school for nurses.
Elizabeth was a fnend of
many famous people, including
Horace Greeley, Har ne!
Beecher Stowe, and Lucy Stone

feeau1g A fin :~l wntten
exanunlt twn Y.tll be gtven i\pn l

19.
The Babys1tilllg Cltmc has
been a ...:omnuttce proJeCt
ot gantzl• d by four new llli,:.{Hbers or the Junwr Wonn~n's
Club, Mrs. Stun Evans, Mrs
James Morll so n II. M1s

James Hockwell ond Mrs Don
Wru elume Tr

~Carved
IS NO.I IN

WEDDING

r»WJMIDJ1rn®

I

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I

I

I I

Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
VIrginia Saunders ; news reporter, Denise Shockley; safety
committee, Jeff Halley, Terri Belville; recreatiOn committee, George Plantz, Karla, G1cg,
and Kathy; Mrs Hazel Jones,
Marsha Montgomery, Debbie Murphy and Ike Hively.
Dues were set at $2. Club advisors are Mr. and Mrs Jim Stan ley, J1 , Eli za beth ,
Slone. The meeting was attended by 44 members, 16 of whom
were new members.
health leader ;·Carol Sue Wilcoxen, safety leader, and Teri Kubn,
Guests attending were Paul Burgess, Donna Clark, Cathy
Pam Slayton, Robin Moore, Julia Henderson, Kim and Susan
Slone, Randy Halley, Terry Halley, and Mrs. Paul Martm.
tlemphill,
recreatiOn leaders.
Kuntri·Kids
'lbe next meetmg will be Ajii:i~ 28 at the home of Mrs.
The Kuniri-Kids met on March 2lat the home of Sally Holley,
VIrginia
Cremeens. Advisors and other members attending were
Mallonee Robinson presided with devotiOns given by Rhonda
Mrs. F . C. Pettus, Mrs. Virgm1a Cremeens, and Cathy Boggs.
Mllier and Mallonee Robinson in charge of the program.
Guests
were Mrs. Jolu! Henderson and Mrs. Ma_dge E. Boggs.
The group discussed parliamentary procedure. The group
Gollla County Ridillg
planned to hsve a swimmmg party on April 8.
1he
Gallia
County
Riding 4-H Club had ils second regular
Attending were Mrs. Marlm Kerns and Mrs. Bobby Jones,
advisors, club members, Mallonee Robmson, Rhonda Miller, meetmg on March 29 at 7:30p.m. at the home of Larry Priest on
Bulaville lload, with the president, Jerry Rhodes; calling the
Jane Steele, Elaine Sims, Sally and Diane Holley, June and
meeting to order. Marlyn Lane gave a talk on "Safety witb
Tanya Jones and Jennifer Kerns.
Horses" followed with questions and discussion.
Parents and guests visiting were Mrs Alfred Holley, Mark
Ways of raismg money for the club were discussed with
Holley and Marta !i!eets.
suggestions
for the raffle of a quarter horse colt and a car wash
4-H K·N CorPII
Marsha Dingus hosted the March 21 meeting of the 4-H K-N being considered.
Mr. Wells reminded members of the National Youth
Corps with Susan Gloss presiding and devotions by Ward Hall .
Congress at Columbus on May 4, 5and 6.
The trogram was given by Kim Saunders, who demonstrated
TI1e Area Jaycees are trying to get the community interested
"Correcting Bad Dog Habits."
·
in building a community center for the youth. Devotions were led who 01 gamzed the Wom en's
Mrs. Mary Frances de Lamerens is the club advisor. The
by Jobnn a Rhodes.
.
meeting was attended by 24 members and parent, Mrs. Dingus
Rights Convention and was the
Members
attending
were
Marlyn
Layne,
ViiJI&lt;ki
Baxter,
Rick
prime promoter of the World 's
and guest, Susan Dingus.
Jolu!son, Bruce Scarberry, Joey Slone, Sarah Abels, Barbara Temperance Convention. Lucy
Monsters
Abels, Kim Hawks, Mark Harrison, Cindy Corliss, Christia Stnut, Stone later became Elizabeth's
The Munsters 4-H Club met at the Springfield Grange Hall
and Paul Saucier. The next meeting will be with Vickki Baxter, sister-In-law.
recently with stephanie Crossen presiding . The program comJackson Pike, Atril 12, at 7:30 p.m.
Because of Elizabeth Blackmittee was appointed consisting of Stephanie Crossen, Bobbie
were
served
by
the
hostess,
Mrs.
Larry
Refreshments
well,
the door was gradually
Greene, Nils Campbell and Rita George.
Priest.
Attending were stephanie Crossen, Bobbie Greene, Kay
Duncan, Nikki George, VIcki Burleson, Nita Campbell, Connie
Burleson, ROOnda Greene, Donna DeWitt, Rhonda Duncan, Vicki
George, Rita George, Donna Lively, Darlene Lively, Usa Fuller,
and Kim Saunders.
·
Wide-Awake '
The Wide-Awake 4-H Club met on March 14 at the &lt;llrist
United Methodist Church with Linda Jeffers presiding. Linda
Craft gave devotions and the group then talked about community
troject and individual projects for the 1972 Junior Fair.
The members received bumper stickers which read "4-H
GALLIPOLIS - Today is the
Cares About Youth."
closing
day of the Joe Talley
Members also discussed the Junior Leadenl!ip roundup
Musical Messengers at the
which wus held in South Point the 24th and 25th of March.
Faith Baptist Church of
The next meeting will be held on April II at the Christ Unite&amp; Gallipolis, located Six miles
fllethodlst Qurch. Club advisors are Mrs. Frank McCalla and west of Gallipolis on U.S. Rt.
'lhs. Raymond Wells. Members attending were Carla Willis, 35, just at the Rodney line.
Marcy Plymale, Linda James, Lisa James, Ubby Willis, Linda
The day's activities begin
Craft, Debbie Riser, Jeanie Newman, Cheryl Swain, Joan with the Sunday School how at
Haskins, Betty Henry, Susan Glenn, and Linda Jeffers.
9 30 a.m., at which time the
Mrs. Don James, Mrs. Clifford Newman, and Ann Rieser Talleys will be singing arid
were guests of the club.
playing. Mr . Talley will be
Roadrunners
speaking to th~ Junior High
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Pope hosted the March 29 meeting of through Adul\ Departments in
the Roadrumers 4-H Club with Janet Stewart presiding. Robin the mam auditorium . The
Wllliams gave devotions and the program was presented by the nursery through Junior
Dewtments will have their
advisOr, Carolyn Jeffers.
A demonstration on first aid was given by Beth Jeffers and regular classes.
Win 2 weeks FREE at your .
During the 10:30 morning
Kim Pope. The group decided to clean an old ~aveyard as part
favorite sports campi
of their community troject. They.asked a hairdresser to speak at worship service the Talleys
How would you like to spend two thrilling weeks at a sports
their next meeting which will be on April 28 at the home of Mr. will again be using their incamp of your choice-all expenses pa1d? Abasketball
struments
as
well
as
,vocal
and Mrs. J.eon Jeffers.
camp .. or baseba ll , hockey, tenms, etc.. orw1 n lessons
1be clu~ will accept three new members, Rose Williams, soloist Carolyn.
from a local pro
The evening service at 7:30
Crlsty Cook, Denl.se Stout at the next meeting date.
That's JUS! what you can do when you enter the exciting
will
be comprised of another
Attending were Carolyn Jeffers, Janet Stewart, Beth Jeffers,
Converse Sportstakes.
musical program along with a
Robin Willlams, Kim Denise Pope, Debbie Stout and Diana
To enter, Simply come '" llild fi ll out an entry bla nk Noth1ng
personal testimony and the
t~ buy. And while you're here, look over ou r complete Ime of
Bailey.
unusual conversion story of
Converse athletiC and casual footwear. Enter as often as
Parents visiting were Mr. and Mrs. Walter Pope, Chris
Mrs. Talley. Rev. Talley will
you like And Dads can enter, too- theywtn free lessons
Je!fera, Mrs. Ethel Pope and Taml Pope.
speak on the subject, "A
from a local pro In their
Northup Laules
Journey Into The Unknown."
faVOrite sport. Hundreds of
1be first meeting of the Northup Lassies 4-H Club was held
other valuable pnzes fJ
The instrwnents the Talleys
jamous Converse footwear
Selecf!ld by fh!l
fec:edly 11 the home of Cindy and Cathy Bo~ with Cindy have been using all week are
U.S. Olympic Committ!le
prtlldlng.1bepledj!es were led by VIcki McGhee. The purpose of
trombone, ukelele, electric
for 20 U.S. teams at
the meeting waa lor reorganizati"!l,lnd the selection of proJeC\9·
steel guitar, banjo, flute, plano
'72
Olympics
In Munjch.
8e¥erll new members w..e taken Into the club. They are Patty and organ.
'
laytGn, Robin Moore, Julia Henderson, Sherry Neal, Susan
A nursery is provided at each
Gray, Jelllllle, Barbara and Carol SUe Wilcoxen, and Kathy
service and there is plenty of
parking on church property.
Strait.
•
.
The
general public is cordially
Officers elected were Vicki McGhee, preeldent; Barbara
\
"Serving.You Since 1936"
invited to attend·any or all of
W~Jc~Jsen, vtee pnlldenl; Jeanie WllCOJ:en, secretary; Kathy
324'5econd
Strait, trelllll'll'; Cindy Bon•. newa reporter; Sherry Neal, these services.

j

opened to other women wh o

Babysitting Clinic
Nearing Final Exam

You 'll know why when you
co me in and see the

Imagi nat ion, qua lity and
craftsmanship that go mlo
every stvle

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
"'
' I'

421 Second Ave.

, Gall,i!"'! \• •,&lt;/1~~

iTw.

" The Store with More"

Ga llipolis

Last Day of joe

Talley Campaign

·P ro·m
prcllic~

\

From dotted swiss to
sheer chiffon, lovely
lOng gowns In exq u1 S1 te

sty I lng and many one of
a kind

Enter the great ...
Converse.Sportstakes!

,·... .
''·~

'.

I* converse I

DAN ·THOMAS &amp;SON

I

\

\

.

' •

\

.-

\

~-----

USE OUR OON~NIENT
)

·~

•

�'

-

'

..

\
5- The Sundav Tinies -Senhnel. Sunday, April9, 1972

~ -- The Sunda)-Timet · SI&gt;nlinei,Sunday, April9. 1972

'

EDITORIALS
'

£riends of the Earth Charge Administration

Generation Rap

Letten of opinion are welcomed. They should be less
tbu 100 words long tor be subject to reduction by Ihe editor)
llldmutbesignedwlt~ the signee's address. Names may be
withheld upon publication, however, on request. Letters
m.,l!ld be ill good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

SHE'S HAPPY - OR IS SHE?
Dear Rap :
· •
Listening to people say how much freedom kids have today
makes me sick. I'm almost 16 and I really dig my mother. This
therefore, it came as no surprise that the EPA overlooked nits !lin'! a complamt . I just want everyone to koow not all teens are ·
treferable alternative treatment strategy in derivmg its out uon the loose."
Here are some of the things I can' do:
December estimates. On face, then, the Administration's actions
l. Go out with my girl friends.
were not at all misleading!
Go out with boys.
2.
However, when It ~arne widely known that a much more
3. Go to dances, parties, etc.
cost-effeclive treatment strategy was available for immediate
4.
Talk on the telephone, \lllless my mother answers, then
employment, the Adfulnilltration chose not to publicize, or even
acknowledge, this fact. The Administration left its December asks the gu-1 her name, where she lives and what she wants.
testimony uncorrected, in effect allowing an ignorant Congress (Absolu!ely no boy calls.)
5. Bring kids to the boose.
anH public to regard the correct cost estimates as lies per6. Go shopping, Wiless accompanied by my mother, sister or
petrated by over-zealous environmentalists.
'
brother. (I like all of them lots, so that's no problem.)
Similarly, one particular happening of the past week perSome of the things I AM allowed to do:
fectly highlighted the White House's duplicity -in dealing with
l. Go to work.
water pollution. As reported by Stuart Udall and Jeff stansbury
2. Go to school.
'
on Wednesday,
March 29, 1972, in their syndicated column, Our
3. Got to church every Sunday, mornmg and evening.
Environment, the Administration "embargoed" a report by the
4. Baby-6il for my married s1ster. (! have to, but I don't
U. S. Anny Corps of Engineers that analyzed the land-disposal mmd.)
waste treatment system employed by Chicago. This system iS in
My mother Ill from the old country and worries a lot about
trinciple similar to, although considerably more costly than that what people will say, and temptations and things like that. !love
planned for Muskegon.
her.- JOANNE
Significantly, however, the Corps of Engineers' analysis Dear Joanne:
showed that this system was far more cosl-&lt;!ffective than the
Evidently you're happy, so I'll keep my big typewriter shut,
conventiOnal systems employed presently. Thus, the effect of though it's a terrible effort! - SUE
this study was not only to question the efficacy of the Nation's Dear Joanne :
,
general aptroach to combating water pollution but also to
My big typewriter has to say: "Dear Mother of Joanne definitely prove that "Zero Discharge" was attainable at a cost Please read between her lines and let your daugbter become a
comparable to that developed in the FOE and Faucett Associates normal American teenager! She won't disappoint you. study.
HELEN
One can only conclude from these recent actions that the
+++
Nixon Administration strongly desired that a weak water Dear Rap'
pollution bill be passed in the Houae.
"Liar" asked how to cure himself of lying and exaggerating.
Now that FOE-Faucett cost projeclions for attaining "Zero
I had this habit of making a big deal out of everything, and It
Discharge" are vindicated forever, one can only hope that the was losing me friends . _
members of the House-Senate Conference Committee conSo every time I started to exaggerate, I'd write my version
sidering th,e two Clean Water bills can act sensibly and ex- into a story, afterwards. Then I'd tell my friends and fanuly the
peditiously to report a bill that recognizes the true cost of clean reallruth, and let them read the '1abrication." Pretty soon I was
water.
JUst writing those imagined things and not saying them. It got
The time for duplicity has ended; the Congress, the People, me some good grades in English. - DAN THE LIAR-LOCKER
and the While House must come to the realization that a lltrong Dear Rap:
clean water bill paased today will save the country countless
You probably won't print this, but I have to say it.
billions of dollars in damage tomorrow.
I'm getting tired of hearing over and over about the terrible
things that only the Caucasian race is supposed to have done.
Whites are becoming so weighed down with guilty consciences
that It's hard to function normally; thus we can 1 really "rap"
with people of other races: we're either apologetic and silly or
belligerent and on the offensive.
Really, we aren't the only ones guilty of, cruel and mhuman
treatment. For example, practically all slaves were furmshed
the slave traders by stronger black tribes who captured members of weaker tnbes and sold their "brothers" into bondage.
Very few white traders went inland and captured 'their own
how to be saved now. No, we get that out of the New Testament. blacks. This IS historical fact.
Then why go there to get a system of worship ?
Which doesn't make whites any less at fault- but II IXJES
WhatJolu! saw in Rev. 4: 2,3 was only a visiOn.
spread the cruelty to blacks also
This will be the last letter that I will wnte, as there is no '
Whites are blamed for decimating the Indians, but they
more to write on this subject.
fought each other, too. Japanese concentration camps were
E.R.J.

AprilS, 1972
Dear Sir:
Mr. Clifford Smith, of the Bradford Cburch of Christ,
authored a letter which appeared in the Sunday iss11e of your
paper, April2, with which I have some disagreement. I base my
&lt;~~agreement In the lack of scriptural authority for the doctrine
he haa preaented, as I shall proceed to demonstrate .
In the fourth paragraph,]le states, " ... there Is no prohibition
of inllrumental music in the scripture ." I must assume this
mean~ in the worship of God, and in so far as a '"lbou shalt not,"
Mr. &amp;nilh Is correct. There is no such command. The statement
then continues: "As a matter of fact, It is quite the contrary."
Here Mr. Smill!leaves the premise he sets forth concerning the
New Testament and the governing of the church in the first three
paragraphs and turns to the Old Testament, which contains not a
lingle verse of authority as regards the functions of the church or
worahlp to God today. The entire book of Hebrews is devoted to
~oving that very point. More to these points later.
In the fifth paragraph, the statement Is made, " ... we find
nowhere that the Apostles ever rebuked anyone because of
muaical instruments." They did not, and there is good reason
why, butherels Mr. Smith's statement, "Now either the apostles
were ignorant of this supposed doctrine, or they did not see any
wrong In musical instn:ments." He suggests the latter is most
reaaonable.
•
I disagree. There Is another alternative which is equally as
well proven. They did not practice the use of musical instruf1!ents
in the early church, therefore the apostles had no need to present
direct instructions in the matter. That is just as well founded as
the other premises But let's look seriously at the doctrine Mr.
Smith teaches.
In using the silence of God to justify the use of the musical
instrument in the worship, Mr. Smith "leaves the bam door
open," so to Bjleak. Let's look at some examples from the
IICI'ipture. God did not tell Cain, do not offer vegetables in
aacrlflce! God did not tell Moses, do not strike the rock ! God or
Chrilt did not tell us, do not use pinto beans and corn bread on the
Ulrd's table! Christ did not, nor the Apolltles, tell us, do not use a
mualcal instrument in worship! The scriptures do show that Cain
llld Abel were to offer meat S!l~ifices, Moses .was told to speak
to the rock, Christ left the unleavened bread and fruit of the vine
• his memorial, and we are instructed to sing In Eph. 5:19 and
Col. 3:18. The very fact that a thing Is specified excludes all other
things ill the same category. God told No&amp;h to use gopher wood!
That acluded pine and oak! We are told to sing, that excludes
lilY other ldnd of music !
. As to the instruments in Heaven and at the second coming,
thoeeln no wise are related to the worship of God, in or out of the
ch\&amp;'Ch bere on earth!
I &amp;PP'eciate the abilities and steadfastness of Mr. &amp;!lith in
treaentlng and defending what he believes to be the truth. I am
doing the same thing and sincerely hope that he will study the
thoughts I've presented and reply forthrightly to them. I
welcome any comments which he might direct my way.
Loren T. Stejlhens, Pastor, Olurch of Christ, Mason, W.Va.

Scriptur.al doctrine, second way
Dear Sir :

Mmical lnstrwnent Debate

Continued; One Vows -to Stop

horrible "' so is war!

scriptural doctrine, one way

Columbus, Ohio
April4, 1972

. lin~ It funny how some of us jump from the New Testament
to the old to 11atlafy ouraelves.
1be Old Testament was law and the people could not keep it,
beca111e it na almost Impossible.
So the old law was fl:"lled to the croilS and Clwist gave us a
new Jaw called Grace. This we can partly keep, as Otrist is a
II'O~Iallon lor our sins, and Is willlng to forgive us our sins.
Then why llbould we go back to the Old Testament ,to get a
1)'111111 of IIWilblp ?
•'
Jf we do we might just as well offer animal sacrifices for our
lllna.
I
I Do we want to do that? Or do we just take the part t~t
Atllllellll?
You cu~ find one place in the Old Testament that tells us

on

Dialogue '72
WOUB Tuesdays
~·

By Helen and Sue Hottel

Duplicity in Wate~ Pollution Cost Estimates
Last December in hearings before the House Public Works
Colllllllttee three high Nixon Administration offlcl,als, RUBSell
Train, Chairman of the C'roncil of Environmental Quality,
William RuckelsiJaus, Administrator of the Environmental
Protection Agency, and Paul McCracken, then Otalnnan of the
Council of Economic Adviaors, testHied that the costs related to
achieving _"Zero Dlacharge" of all pollutants into our Nation's
waterways were so great as to make Ibis goal ecooomically
disastrous and socially undesirable.
These charges, which remained unanswered 1111til this
March, in sheer repetition gained mcreasing credibility with·
both the people and, especially, the Congress.
-- -·
However, a study conducted by Friends of the Earth and
Jack Faucet! Associates; an economic research form, located m
Chevy Chase, Md., conclusively proved that using the land
disposal method of waste water treatment being employed in
Muskegon County, Mich, could achieve "Zero Discharge" at
onHixth the cost so widely and misleadingly publicized by the
Administration.
Unfortunately, this realistic cross-projection was received
with great skepticism by most members of the Congress, labor
lead!!rs, and manufacturers, who had been conditioned by the
false Administration figures to believe that "Zero Discharge"
would close industrial plants, lay off workers, and precipitate
massive government expenditures.
ll came as no surprise that the Hous~f Representatives
voted recently to substantially dilute in the Ho'bse bill the strong,
but economically sound, "Zero Discharge" goals of the Senate
Clean Water Bill.
ll was, of course, difficult to charge that the Admmistral!on,
through its release and publication of misleading, mcorrect, and
inflated costs estimates, deliberately planned to mislead the
llouae Into paaaing a "watere&lt;klown" Clean Water Bill. The staff
Ill EPA developed the December cost figures by applying 1990
waste-water load estimates to conventional treatment
lllrategies; secondary, tertiary, advanced tertiary, and
distillation systems.
While the syatems are the ones most commonly used today,
they provide by far the most expensive means of removmg efOumt from waste water. Unfortunately, the most cost-&lt;lffective
system, the land-disposal method previously described, Ill
relatively unknown in the sanitary engineering profession, and

.

As Ohio's May Primary Robert H. Whealey, an
grows nearer, the campaigns associate professor of history
shift into high gear. Helping at Ohio University, and Jack
"turn the candidates on" to the Crisp, head of the Leading
people of Southeastern Ohio Creek Watershed Aasociation,
will be Dialogue '72, he~rd the Leadins Creek ConTuesdays from 10 p.m. to servancy District, and a
licensed minister of the Cburch
midnight on WOUB Radio.
The.Aprilll and 18 dialogues of Christ. Crisp is from Langswill feature the candidates for ville m Meigs County.
Equal time is given to the
the U.S. Congressional seat in
the tenth Ohio district. On the Republican candidates the ,
first show, the Democratic following week. Paul M.
candidates will each spend an Brown, an Jndustrial and
hour with host Bob Pondillo, commercial real estate condiSCussmg their platforms and sultant from Chesapeake Is the
answering questions phoned in challenger and the Honorable
from the listening audience. Clarence E. Miller, of Lan·
Running on the Democratic caster, is the incumbent.
ballot will be, from Athens, Dr. Representative Miller may not
be on the program in person,
but be present via the WATS
line at least.
To mcrease the opportunity
to hear the candidates,
D1alogus '72, on April II and 18
will be broadcast on WOUB FM
(91.3) as well as AM (1340)
Stanley Trussell
has from 10 p.m. to rmdnight.
returned home after spending Athens area listeners can
almost five weeks at Veterans question the candidates by
Memorial Hospital where he calling 594-5544. Out of tOwn
underwent surgery.
listeners should call 614-594Mr. and Mrs. John Ours of 2345, collect.
Belpre spent Sunday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Warden
Ours.
TWINBILL POSTPONED
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Trussell
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) and Dawn of MI. Verno11. spent The San Francisco Giants
Saturday night and Sunday announced Saturday their
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. scheduled doubleheader today
Stanley Trussell . Also spending with the San Diego Padres has
Sunday with them were Bob been postponed.
and Sandra Trussell and Mr.
No new dates were set for the
and Mrs. John Ridneour of games. That makes a total of
Cbester and Richard Kerns of four hQilie games for the
Belpre and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Giants wiped out by the
Trussell and children, local. baseball strike. The team ·was
Visiting them the past week scheduled to begin a roacl trip
were his sisters, Mrs. Murl in Cincinnati Tuesday night
Ours and Mrs. Mildred Frank
and Mr. and Mrs. Herman
PLANS TRADE
Carson, Mr. and Mrs. Albert
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Hill, Racine and Clint McCleveland
Cavaliers Coach Bill
Namee of Carmel.
Fitch
said
Saturday he
Miss Tammy Pitzer fell at
her home and broke a bone in probably would trade his first
her foot. She was taken to the round pick in Monday 's
National Basketball
office of Dr. Davis for x-rays.
Mrs. Wilma Anderson was Association draft to the Los
returned home from Veterans Angeles Lakers as part of the
Memorial Hospital where she deal which brought Rick
spent several weeks due to a Roberson here.
The move meant 'Cleveland
heart ailment
would
aelect 13th m the opening
Mr and Mrs. Ralph Trussell
and children spent Sunday round.
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
---·
SUNDA\'
J
Roger Kirkhart and family of I
Chester.
l TIMt:S-SEi'ITINEL l

Bashan
News

Isn't it time we stopped beating ourselves over past iliistakes
that
we can never change? I'm tired of being made to feel
Scriptural doctrine, a third way
responsible for what my ancestors did.
This is an open letter to those of minority races : please help
Rio Grande, Ohio
Apr. 3, 1972 me feel at ease with you. I can't, so long as I'm - BLAMED
Dear Sir:
UNFAIRLY
:
Pu• lo lhM htr, ~~nat, b l '"' 0" •0 I
I llave just returned from a trip U! Walt Disney World and
1 v·n~... r~~~~~~~~ ~~.~,. . . Hi l BUN(
r
found in March 26th paper an answer to my letter so I must anJ
I ll T~ rG Ayf GIIII&gt;Oitt Oh io I W.ll f
I PI/DI l!lld
U . Uv '-f'llont tHtpl
S.1UHIIV
(l UI Pa11191 P'l ld at
swer :
I C.•I"POI&lt;' Otuo .SUI
1
Tt&lt;E OIILY U ... T("EL
How can we cast off the Old Testament? Jesus quoted from it
Ill (&lt;&gt;v"
Po••'I•OI 0
aJI..
I P&lt;ib l \1\td hlry •••• d 11 ••tn ng nt " l
many times, Matt. 4:4-7. Apostle Paul believed in all the Bible
I l .ot ~• a• v £Mt reG u " '0~ 11
mt,lon t
1 "'"'" I! Pam•ro~ Ch •o ~"••• C !loc t
when he said all scriptures are inspired of God and profitable (II
I h c1tEr~.':,~ a~.;~ ~.un~ 5 ~~~:,1v10 ~ p 1 r
'I1 I~~" ,\IJ.,IG ttLlopgl 1 Tr o""' on Ot"l&gt;II ATES
Timothy 3:16).
ttiCI Wn l
1/ otf oho l on• v• t• tiJ 1)0 ' "
51
I accept hoth Jesus and his father God.
I t~r • e m~ntM to SG tlltllr~lrt ont l"'
1 I ll 111 moniM \1 thru monlhi 1 DO
People in general today do not show love for one another
I
l ~f Dt l y Stnl nfl on• 1ur 111 Gt ''"
II "
IMtf mtMh\ u '10
GALLIPOLIS - Twelve coaches John Milhoan (golf, members of their respective I montnl
Tnt un ••a Prtu •Mtrnttlon t l 11 • •
becauseGodisdeadoroutdated (l Jobn 4:8).
1
""'litO I\&gt;'"' U\ 1 lor PUII" r atton
1 11 "'"'' II•HII ' l~n c•Hr! U to '~ ' '
The Ten Commandments are important to me and should be juniOrs were inducted into the Jim Osborne (baseball) and teams, and gave brief talks on I1 "otl•iPI
Pr• onQ lllo tnt lOX I I llt.,l
pubhlhto " " ' ''"
Ron
Logan
(
lrack)
introduced
the
1972
spring
sports
program.
Nahonal
Honor
Society
during
a mirror to all of us. They are in the Old Testament.
~------------------J
It speaks in Isiah 2:4: no wars, or war implements will be Friday morning's joint
::r:w;;· ::
b Jbbbblbb 2L db bJb
I I t!
made; that prophecy has never been fulfilled . Isiah in 25:8 tells Nahonal Honor Society and
Awards
Assembly
at
Gallia
of a time when death will be oo more. Another prophecy not
Academy High School.
fulfilled
Tapped for National Honor
I personally feel God gave us hands a n d talents to
Society were :
be used on mechanical instrwnents and placed them m our
Brant Adams, Elizabeth
bach's spiffy copies ... A couple of other wellBY JACK O'BRIAN
church to be used for the glory of the Lord.
Boster, Kathy Davies, Mark
heeled
gals, Eunice Kennedy Shriver and Diana
Jesus is our means of salvation bul'God is the Almighty and Kiesling, Alan Kemp, Becky
SU.VERS
ZEROS
IN
Sands, aiso thriftied with other cost4ess 0.
the Creator and is listening every Sabbath morning at the Naskey, Debbie Northup ,
ON
'FORUM'
copies.
beautiful tones from the organ and piano prelude.
Brent Sanders, David Thomas,
NEW
YORK
(KFS)
Phil
Silvers
is
pure
Multi-millionaire music publisherI want to deeply apologize for any statements contrary to Rita Valentine, Karla Sue
brassy gold in the "Funny Thing Happened on songwriter Chester Conn went to Hawaii for a
your belief or feelings on this subject.
Waugh and Jan Wiseman.
the Way to the Forum" revival. Far better in long winter . vacation, was hauled off to the
N.E.W.
The 6ond Citizenship Award
sponsored by the Daughters of the role originated years ago by Zero Mastel. hospital with N. Y. caught pneumonia the day
the American Revolution was Unless of course you like sweaty comedians ... he arrived, suffered a heart attack while there,
last embarrassment, he hopes
presented to Kathy Fischer. Took two yoWig ladies, 13 and 14, to see "Two recovered weeks later and w~nt back to the
Basketball Coach Jim Gentlemen of Verona," and if anything it's even Royal Hawaiian Hotel to rest, tripped and hit his
To Whom It May Concern:
Osborne presented the more wildly delightful than opening night. The head when he fell against a metal somesuch and
My name is Alvis Moore and I am i student at Rio Grande
lollowing individuals varsity kids on stage plainly enjoy the delicious fun ... was sped back to the hospital -concussion .
College.
•
awards for the 1971-72 cam- Big yellow Olecker cab packed with half a Called it a vacation finally and flew back to N.
Last Thursday the Rio Grande College &lt;llorus, the Rio paign :
dozen revelers pulled up in front of El Morocco Y., where he immediately wus bedded with
Grande College Cborale, and the Rio Grande College Wind
Larry Snowden and Rnd in the early Sunday a.m. and the chauffeur was exhaustion. Some rest. Okay now.
Symphony gave a concert at Gallla Academy High School. Much Ferguson, third year; Gil Price Gianm Uzielli, Henry Ford's son-in·lalf, who , .
Perry Como was completely mobile despite
to our chagrin, there were only 30 or 40 people in attendance.
and Rick Boone, second year; then turned it hack to the passenger • riding his busted leg as he sang to the Nat'l Record
I am not ashamed to say that we all were truly embarraSsed Jim Noe, Topper Orr, Mark cabbie ... Sports Illustrated star Dan Jenkms' Manufacturers convention in Florida - from a
and burt because we really thought we were doing this for a Kiesling and Kev Sheets, first novel "&amp;emi-Tpugh" was grabbed by Playboy golf cart ... And from a "confidential report for
worthy orgamzation, the members ol the Cancer Crusade. We year. Manager Roger Harbour, for pre-publication excerpts. It's touted as one the music and radio industries" comes this
worked hard at putting the play together; our director, Mr. Ross, manager, received a first year of the fmest of the decade.
·
heartening excerpt: "The real sentiments of the
sacrificed great amounts of his time to prepare us, and we were award.
GoreVidaljoinedthelate~ateP . J . Clarke 's
NARM members came out when Perry Como
really looking forward to performing it. In the cast were many
FOllowing the awards crowd after slaving over his imminent Bdwy . , appeared. Perry softly crooned three or four
alumni from Gallla Academy.
Ceremonies, spring sports play which knocks Nixon, Kennedy, Johnson - • ballads and at the finish there was absolute
My personal feelings are that if we performed at the
and even George Washington ! ... Teddie pandemonium - cheers and whistles with the
graveyard we would have gotten a much more receptive
O'Sullivan, an owner of Dublin's justiy famed
entire audience, longhaired and shorthaired,
response. "Ballad For Americans" has a deep lnfonnatlve
Gresham
Hotel,
also
joined
our
late~ate
P.J.'s
leaping to their feet in a standing ovatlon. This
hiS grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
message that would ha ve.really been an experience for the whole Norman Schaefer.
fun ... In "21," Baseball Hall of Farner Hank
tribute to top M.O.R. artist, cqming from the
community of Gallipolls.
.
people wtio sell most of the records in this Mrs. Maggie Bayles, Mr. and Greenberg with toycoon Dave Marx bemoaned
In conclusion, I'm deeply sorry if we the students of Rio Mrs. William Perry of Athens the diamond strike. Han!( looks in good enough
country, makes you stop and wonder - about
Grande College are not worthy of your favor. And personally were Easter dinner guests of shape IQ make another Serieil.
whether the Who's Who of record label
speaking, I hope that we won't have to embarrass ourselves for Mr. and Mrs. N. E. Schaefer.
executives (most of them attended) graaped the
' Burgess Meredith joined us in "21" and t9ld
you again.
Mrs . Edna Faulk spent us about Franchot Tone's lad Pat, who llterally
full significance of what they saw ... and just
Thank 'you, Sincerely yours, Mr. Alvis Moore, Michael Sunday with the Clifford Klem last time we saw him was being carried by
how the stOry of what really happened will be
Ohver,'Lewis Hendrickson, Miss Sandy Hunter, and Miss Liss family.
Franchot in a blue blanket on Lower 5th Ave.
reported by the papers. It was an amazing
Wagner .
Mark Stahl of Stockdale Easter ,Sunday 1944 at age 6 weeks. Buzz M.
revelation and hard to believe - just uk the
formerly of this place, rema~ says the lad, who safely grew up nobly despite
leading record merchant in your city wbo wu
in serious condition in a the small wars of his colorful parents (mom is
glut
ji'O bably there." ... Indeed : and the "'··est
"'611
Chillicothe hospital from in- Jean Wallace), has progressed from leaching at
on the music market now are rock groupo;
juries suffered in a wreck.
Collegiate School (where John-John Kennedy
literally hundreds are jobless.
Mr. and Mrs. Hannon Fox studies) to owning his own college (Franklin)..
British vocalist Nell Reid's album, "Mother
· have returned home after
of Mlne,"hltNo.11nBritainand lshotcaldng up
By Mrs. Bertha Parker
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bauer of spending- three months in It's the whole truth, Meredith swears ... David
Merrick a""
wife
didn't
look
worried
about
his
the charta here. Nell' s 12 .....
..__
• -•.
Sabbath School attendance Manon spent a weekend with Florida.
..,.
., record ,...,.,
on Easter at the Free Mrs. Bauer's father, Mr.
up~ming "Sugar" musical's chances on Bdwy.
who went wild when Como sang ''kept walking'
Methodist Church was 154. A Charles Karr Sr. and visited
over their "21" supper ... Where former MGM
out in drove. tmoug~t the rock act" ... Singer
Wuther
large number attended Sunrise Mrs. Karr who is a patient in
veep Charlie Beagle said N. Y. Is a nice place to
Karen Morrow w• starred in !all week'• quietservice Easter morning. Of· Veterans Memorial Hospital.
visit
but
he
prefers
his
retirement
home
in
fold
musical, "Selling of the President" _ her
Sunny and not so coot Sunfering for the day was $220.15. Mr. and Mrs. Bauer attenlled day. High in upper : . and 40s. Monte Carlo.
fifth nop In a row ....
I
Sinatraa
• ·-·-··-'
,........,. his
Mrs . Pearl Jacobs fell worship service at the local Fair Sunday night, low in the
GreatadforOhrbach'sstore: Doris Duke of
London llat and Is aald to be p4Jddling his
sometime ago injurying her church.
upper 20a and 30s. Monday the heiresstocracy, who could buy not only
Manhattan and Acapulc:u pad&amp; ••• June AIIYIOII
arm. She was taken to Holzer
John Story of Columbus lll08tly cloudy and warmer custom-needled origillals but all the ~n
of the tourlni "No, No, Nanette" Is y.-ytling
Hosp1~l for lreatmenl.
• fashion houses themselves, took lis of Ohr· Telan Olp'k Richardl.
spent his Easter vacation with high In the 5tls."
·

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

12 Juniors Become Members
Of GAHS Honors Society

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Voice along Br'Way

Laurel Cliff News Notes-

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.I

Gallia 4-H Quh News
Cherokee 4-H Club
The Cherokee Valley Saddle 4-H Club met on March 20 at the
home of Carl Steel with Barbara Barcus presiding. The group
decided to sell pot holders ~sa money making project. Attending
were Bob Mead and Charles Barcus, advisors; member.s, Kenny
Barcus, Barbara Barcus, !i!Irley Barcus, Virginia Porter, Bob
Walters, Teresa Halley, Becky Halley, Patty Porter, Pam Mead,
Kathy Decker, Matt Sanders, John Taylor, Gary Taylor, Mark
Hoffelt and Jeff Steele.
.
, Parents and guests attending were Mrs. Sharon Halley, Mr.
anH Mrs. Carl steele, Paula Butler apd Marta steele.
Cadmus Redsklns
The Cadmus Redskins met on March 20 at the Cadmus
School with Don Cox presiding and devotions by Debby Baker.
The trogram was given by Mrs. Miller followed with a grollp
discussion on club dues. The next meeting will be held on Apri124
at 7 p.m. at the scbool.
Attending were Doug Miller, Pam Miller, Lisa Wells, Cindy
Cox, Carolyn Baker, Di31\8 and Gregory Sands
Parents attending were Mrs. Massie and MISS v Burnette, a
guest. AdVIsors are Mrs Miller and Mrs. Gregory.
Eno Sail On
The EnO Sail On 4-IJ Club met at the Eno Grange Hall on
March 17 wtth Donna Shupe presidmg. Mike Gee gave devotions
and the program was tresented by Knstal Hash. The 4-H pledge
was led by Jennie Elkins, and the pledge to the flag was given by
Kim Reynolds.
Readings were given by Donna Shupe, Robm Herman, R1ck
Eggleton, and Doug Sisson. Songs were sung and games were
played with refreshments of ice cream, cake, and Kool·Aid
served in honor of Mike Gee's birthday. ,
Members discuased projects and dues were set at 15 cents
and roll call was answered by members statmg their favo rite
colors. The projecl books were given out at the meetmg and new
!I'D jects were also discussed.
The next meeting will be held with the date to be announced
later at the Eno Grange Hall. Club adv isors are Mrs. Dorothy
Toler and Mrs. Janet Brownmg. Mrs. LDren Glassburn was the
VIsiting parent.
Georgia Girls
The Georgia Girls 4-H Club met on March 20 at the Georges
Creek Orange Hall with Jo Ann Brown and Shirley Martin
tresiding. The pledges were led by Debbie Graham.
A demonstration was given by Kandy Gindlesberger on
"How to Cover a Button With Material ." Jan Stidham demon·
strated how to make a "Catch Stitch Hem."
The club discussed • clean up project for Georges Creek '
Road. Refreshments were served by Kandy and Jeanme Gindlesberger and Barb Hughes.
A new club member Tina Snyder was welcomed mto the
club. Advisors are Shirley Martin and Jo Aim Brown.
Hannan Trace Pioneers
The Hannan Trace Pioneers met on March 20 at the Mercerville Grange Hall with Joe Slone presiding and giving the
JI'Ogram .
Election of officers was held with president, Joe Slone; vice
Jl'esident, Gene Myers; secretary, Connie Saunders ; treasurer,

English Club Reviews
Book On Woman Doctor

SEVERAL 4-HMEMBERS ARE shown here taking part
m rec1·eational activities during the annual 4-H officers a nd
advisors lrammg conference held at Galha Academy High
School on Apnl 5.

110 Attend Spe~ial
Training Convention
GALLIPOLIS - One hundred ten 4-H advisors and
members attended the annual
4-H Offi'Cers and AdviS ors
Training Conference held at
Gallia Academy on April 5.
All officers and advisors of 4H cl ubs throughout U1e county
were invited to attend the two
hour ~vent to r{ceive speciaJ
tra mwg for their specific offlee. Each session last 30
mmutes.
There were ten sesswns The
presidents and vice presidents
were tau ght by Larry Marr;
secretan es

\\'CI

Mary Margaret W1ll1s;
lleasureis by Roma Smith ,
news 1eporte rs by Dale
Rothgeb; 1ecreahon leader by
Kathy Payne; health and
safely by Heda Fowler ; ad·
v1sors and parents by Duane
Plymale ; 4-H Carn pmg at
Caslters Cave was taught by
Kathy
Payne,
Jumor
Leadership wa s taught by
Cmdy Boggs, Libby Willis and
Kala Sue Waugh; and "What
Makes A Good Club Meeting"
was taught by Jackie Graham
and Jean Niday

e taught by

n'la u
d 0 n Btrt
. hdary
.r, nts llOnore
GA LLIPOLIS - Gilbert L.
Plants, Route I, Galhpohs, was
h o n o~e d on h1s birthday,
Easter Sunday, with a dinner
given by 30 members of his
family. He was p1esented With
a large birthday cake wh ich
everyune enjoyed.

Dorothy, Rebecca and Apnl;
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Loy well.
Donna, Debbie and Vivian;
Vella Bruney and Chns; Mr.
and Mrs. Roney Lemley, Knsh
and Cindy ; Mrs. George S
Hndge rs and Paul; Donald
Plants, Joann Plants, Lmda
Plants and M1s Gilbert L
Plants
Other guests were David
Krone n and Lee Ann Hampton.

GALLIPOLIS - The English
Club met at the horne of Mrs
Clarence Waugh on Tuesaay,
·April 4. The president, Mrs.
Hob8rt Wtckhne, opened the
mee bn!l-wlth a poem "Beauty
Around Us " The followmg
officers
were
elected·
president, Mrs. Douglas
Mulhneaux; vice pr es1de nt ,
Mrs
Ga rland
Ca ud ill ;
secre tary , Mrs. Homer
Brannon , and treasurer, Mrs
Owen Can trell
Mrs. Homer Brannon
reviewed th e book, "Lone
Woman - Story oJ Eliza beth

wanted to become doc tors,

mdudmg her sister, Emily.
Nevertheless, It was more than
one hundred years before all
medical schools would admit
women.
Followmg the program, Mrs.
Waugh aud her co-hostess,
Mrs. Max Tawney served
delicious refreshments and a
sociallwur followed.
The next meetmg will be the
annual dmner on May 2 at RIO
Grande eollege where new
members will be welcomed
an d the officers will be mstalled

GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Richard
On Apni 12 there Will be a
Simpson, pediatrician from the group partlc1patwn session
Holzer Medical Center, was the \\Ith th e girls practicing
guest speaker on Apnl &gt;fo.r the method s or dt apenng un d
Junwr

Women 's

Clu b

Babysittmg Clune.. Dr. Simpson spoke to the group about
the care of infants an d youn g
children.
Am ong the subjects covered
were reedin g and 'burpmg
mfanls, tes tmg fo r and
bnnging down a rever , and
emergency measures to take tn
~.:ases

of vomitmg , conv ulsmg,

chokmg, etc
Bla ckw ell, Ftrst Woman
This sessiOn was the four th in
Doct01 ," by Dorothy Clarke
a series of six; pr ev ious
Wilson Elizabeth Blackwe ll
ALUMNI
TO
DINE
speakers
have been Mrs
was bom m 1821 , Lhe d:.lughter
HUN
TINGTON
The
George
Tabit,
Gallipolis Poltce
of Samuel Blackwell, an
Marshall
University
Alumni
Cb1ef, John Taylor, and Fire
Englishman in the sugar
Association
will
hold
Its
35th
Clue!,
James Northup .
buSiness She g1·ew up with he1·
annual
alumm
banquet
· parents, two ststcrs, a brothel ,
and four maid en aunts. SatUiday, April22, at 6 p.m. m MORE REGISTRATIONS
COLUMBUS (UI;'I) - The
Elizabe th was determined to th e Marshall University
Stud
ent
Center
Guest
speaker
OhiO
DiVISIOn or ..atercraft
du somethmg mure lfllp OI ta nt
will
be
Dr.
Prince
B.
W
oodard,
announced
today 11 licensed
than hve with 1elat1vcs If she
Chancellor, West V1rgm1a 224,806 boats and 174,049 out.
should never marry
The Blackwells mo ved to Board of Regen Is. Toastmaster board motors during 1971, an
Ameuca whete he r father will be Cabell County Sheriff mcrease of 12,401 boats and
5,5S4 motors ove r those
became a fnend or Wil lwm Joe Neal.
licensed m 1970 Cuyahoga
Lloyd Gamson, editor or "The
county
led Ohio's 88 counties in
The aver age dan y cow
Liberator" and organiZer of
two anti-s lav ery soc tcttcs. ea ts about II pounds of hay licenses With 22,977 boats and
16,211 motors
Samuel opened ins home to per day
many people "'ho were
cnh cized for th eu· sta nd
lkJ 4c_,l.J ..-~ , _
against slave1 y H1s sugar
busmess burned in 1836 and he Unscramble these four Jumbles,
suffe1·ed further losses In t11e one letter to each square, to
Pamc of 1837, yet th eir home form four ordinary word s.
was always a pl ace of
Gl
..,,..
(;OIWI-'
...... ...,.,.
hospitality .
Sal]luel moved his family to
Cmcmhali, where he diCd. The
v.omen m the family organiZed
a school, but Ehzabetl1 did not ANCKKparhcularly like teaching and
wanted to do sometlnng more
challenging. When a friend
expressed a Wish that there
fXNOS'I'
were
women
do ctoi'S,
PULLE!i' MCK 10
Ehzabetl1 decided t11at she
MAKE F'~RES5
would be a doctor.
After being tm ned do11n by
seve ral med1 ca l schools,
Elizabeth stud ied med1cme m
the offi ce of Dr. Joseph
Warrmgton or Philadelphia It
was he wh o wro te to the dean of
Geneva MediCal School in
(Antwtr,t Munduy)
Geneva , New York, 1equcslmg
Jumbt •., RAJAH LAPEL SADIST EULOGY
that Elizabeth be admttted Ytt1~r d ay'11
\ An•wer : Went dte tum~ way without
,~
\~
The dean read the letter to the
meeting- PARALLELS
150 students, and they met the
Situahon with 1\histling, catcalls, stampm g of fee t,
pounding of fists and hoots of
dension. !Jut m the end they
accepted her and she did
become a doc tor. Elizabeth
Blackwell was respected and
honored both m tins co untry
and abroad When the Civil
War broke out she orgamzed a
lrammg school for nurses.
Elizabeth was a fnend of
many famous people, including
Horace Greeley, Har ne!
Beecher Stowe, and Lucy Stone

feeau1g A fin :~l wntten
exanunlt twn Y.tll be gtven i\pn l

19.
The Babys1tilllg Cltmc has
been a ...:omnuttce proJeCt
ot gantzl• d by four new llli,:.{Hbers or the Junwr Wonn~n's
Club, Mrs. Stun Evans, Mrs
James Morll so n II. M1s

James Hockwell ond Mrs Don
Wru elume Tr

~Carved
IS NO.I IN

WEDDING

r»WJMIDJ1rn®

I

"llh"•r' &lt;t~•'

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I I

Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
VIrginia Saunders ; news reporter, Denise Shockley; safety
committee, Jeff Halley, Terri Belville; recreatiOn committee, George Plantz, Karla, G1cg,
and Kathy; Mrs Hazel Jones,
Marsha Montgomery, Debbie Murphy and Ike Hively.
Dues were set at $2. Club advisors are Mr. and Mrs Jim Stan ley, J1 , Eli za beth ,
Slone. The meeting was attended by 44 members, 16 of whom
were new members.
health leader ;·Carol Sue Wilcoxen, safety leader, and Teri Kubn,
Guests attending were Paul Burgess, Donna Clark, Cathy
Pam Slayton, Robin Moore, Julia Henderson, Kim and Susan
Slone, Randy Halley, Terry Halley, and Mrs. Paul Martm.
tlemphill,
recreatiOn leaders.
Kuntri·Kids
'lbe next meetmg will be Ajii:i~ 28 at the home of Mrs.
The Kuniri-Kids met on March 2lat the home of Sally Holley,
VIrginia
Cremeens. Advisors and other members attending were
Mallonee Robinson presided with devotiOns given by Rhonda
Mrs. F . C. Pettus, Mrs. Virgm1a Cremeens, and Cathy Boggs.
Mllier and Mallonee Robinson in charge of the program.
Guests
were Mrs. Jolu! Henderson and Mrs. Ma_dge E. Boggs.
The group discussed parliamentary procedure. The group
Gollla County Ridillg
planned to hsve a swimmmg party on April 8.
1he
Gallia
County
Riding 4-H Club had ils second regular
Attending were Mrs. Marlm Kerns and Mrs. Bobby Jones,
advisors, club members, Mallonee Robmson, Rhonda Miller, meetmg on March 29 at 7:30p.m. at the home of Larry Priest on
Bulaville lload, with the president, Jerry Rhodes; calling the
Jane Steele, Elaine Sims, Sally and Diane Holley, June and
meeting to order. Marlyn Lane gave a talk on "Safety witb
Tanya Jones and Jennifer Kerns.
Horses" followed with questions and discussion.
Parents and guests visiting were Mrs Alfred Holley, Mark
Ways of raismg money for the club were discussed with
Holley and Marta !i!eets.
suggestions
for the raffle of a quarter horse colt and a car wash
4-H K·N CorPII
Marsha Dingus hosted the March 21 meeting of the 4-H K-N being considered.
Mr. Wells reminded members of the National Youth
Corps with Susan Gloss presiding and devotions by Ward Hall .
Congress at Columbus on May 4, 5and 6.
The trogram was given by Kim Saunders, who demonstrated
TI1e Area Jaycees are trying to get the community interested
"Correcting Bad Dog Habits."
·
in building a community center for the youth. Devotions were led who 01 gamzed the Wom en's
Mrs. Mary Frances de Lamerens is the club advisor. The
by Jobnn a Rhodes.
.
meeting was attended by 24 members and parent, Mrs. Dingus
Rights Convention and was the
Members
attending
were
Marlyn
Layne,
ViiJI&lt;ki
Baxter,
Rick
prime promoter of the World 's
and guest, Susan Dingus.
Jolu!son, Bruce Scarberry, Joey Slone, Sarah Abels, Barbara Temperance Convention. Lucy
Monsters
Abels, Kim Hawks, Mark Harrison, Cindy Corliss, Christia Stnut, Stone later became Elizabeth's
The Munsters 4-H Club met at the Springfield Grange Hall
and Paul Saucier. The next meeting will be with Vickki Baxter, sister-In-law.
recently with stephanie Crossen presiding . The program comJackson Pike, Atril 12, at 7:30 p.m.
Because of Elizabeth Blackmittee was appointed consisting of Stephanie Crossen, Bobbie
were
served
by
the
hostess,
Mrs.
Larry
Refreshments
well,
the door was gradually
Greene, Nils Campbell and Rita George.
Priest.
Attending were stephanie Crossen, Bobbie Greene, Kay
Duncan, Nikki George, VIcki Burleson, Nita Campbell, Connie
Burleson, ROOnda Greene, Donna DeWitt, Rhonda Duncan, Vicki
George, Rita George, Donna Lively, Darlene Lively, Usa Fuller,
and Kim Saunders.
·
Wide-Awake '
The Wide-Awake 4-H Club met on March 14 at the &lt;llrist
United Methodist Church with Linda Jeffers presiding. Linda
Craft gave devotions and the group then talked about community
troject and individual projects for the 1972 Junior Fair.
The members received bumper stickers which read "4-H
GALLIPOLIS - Today is the
Cares About Youth."
closing
day of the Joe Talley
Members also discussed the Junior Leadenl!ip roundup
Musical Messengers at the
which wus held in South Point the 24th and 25th of March.
Faith Baptist Church of
The next meeting will be held on April II at the Christ Unite&amp; Gallipolis, located Six miles
fllethodlst Qurch. Club advisors are Mrs. Frank McCalla and west of Gallipolis on U.S. Rt.
'lhs. Raymond Wells. Members attending were Carla Willis, 35, just at the Rodney line.
Marcy Plymale, Linda James, Lisa James, Ubby Willis, Linda
The day's activities begin
Craft, Debbie Riser, Jeanie Newman, Cheryl Swain, Joan with the Sunday School how at
Haskins, Betty Henry, Susan Glenn, and Linda Jeffers.
9 30 a.m., at which time the
Mrs. Don James, Mrs. Clifford Newman, and Ann Rieser Talleys will be singing arid
were guests of the club.
playing. Mr . Talley will be
Roadrunners
speaking to th~ Junior High
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Pope hosted the March 29 meeting of through Adul\ Departments in
the Roadrumers 4-H Club with Janet Stewart presiding. Robin the mam auditorium . The
Wllliams gave devotions and the program was presented by the nursery through Junior
Dewtments will have their
advisOr, Carolyn Jeffers.
A demonstration on first aid was given by Beth Jeffers and regular classes.
Win 2 weeks FREE at your .
During the 10:30 morning
Kim Pope. The group decided to clean an old ~aveyard as part
favorite sports campi
of their community troject. They.asked a hairdresser to speak at worship service the Talleys
How would you like to spend two thrilling weeks at a sports
their next meeting which will be on April 28 at the home of Mr. will again be using their incamp of your choice-all expenses pa1d? Abasketball
struments
as
well
as
,vocal
and Mrs. J.eon Jeffers.
camp .. or baseba ll , hockey, tenms, etc.. orw1 n lessons
1be clu~ will accept three new members, Rose Williams, soloist Carolyn.
from a local pro
The evening service at 7:30
Crlsty Cook, Denl.se Stout at the next meeting date.
That's JUS! what you can do when you enter the exciting
will
be comprised of another
Attending were Carolyn Jeffers, Janet Stewart, Beth Jeffers,
Converse Sportstakes.
musical program along with a
Robin Willlams, Kim Denise Pope, Debbie Stout and Diana
To enter, Simply come '" llild fi ll out an entry bla nk Noth1ng
personal testimony and the
t~ buy. And while you're here, look over ou r complete Ime of
Bailey.
unusual conversion story of
Converse athletiC and casual footwear. Enter as often as
Parents visiting were Mr. and Mrs. Walter Pope, Chris
Mrs. Talley. Rev. Talley will
you like And Dads can enter, too- theywtn free lessons
Je!fera, Mrs. Ethel Pope and Taml Pope.
speak on the subject, "A
from a local pro In their
Northup Laules
Journey Into The Unknown."
faVOrite sport. Hundreds of
1be first meeting of the Northup Lassies 4-H Club was held
other valuable pnzes fJ
The instrwnents the Talleys
jamous Converse footwear
Selecf!ld by fh!l
fec:edly 11 the home of Cindy and Cathy Bo~ with Cindy have been using all week are
U.S. Olympic Committ!le
prtlldlng.1bepledj!es were led by VIcki McGhee. The purpose of
trombone, ukelele, electric
for 20 U.S. teams at
the meeting waa lor reorganizati"!l,lnd the selection of proJeC\9·
steel guitar, banjo, flute, plano
'72
Olympics
In Munjch.
8e¥erll new members w..e taken Into the club. They are Patty and organ.
'
laytGn, Robin Moore, Julia Henderson, Sherry Neal, Susan
A nursery is provided at each
Gray, Jelllllle, Barbara and Carol SUe Wilcoxen, and Kathy
service and there is plenty of
parking on church property.
Strait.
•
.
The
general public is cordially
Officers elected were Vicki McGhee, preeldent; Barbara
\
"Serving.You Since 1936"
invited to attend·any or all of
W~Jc~Jsen, vtee pnlldenl; Jeanie WllCOJ:en, secretary; Kathy
324'5econd
Strait, trelllll'll'; Cindy Bon•. newa reporter; Sherry Neal, these services.

j

opened to other women wh o

Babysitting Clinic
Nearing Final Exam

You 'll know why when you
co me in and see the

Imagi nat ion, qua lity and
craftsmanship that go mlo
every stvle

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
"'
' I'

421 Second Ave.

, Gall,i!"'! \• •,&lt;/1~~

iTw.

" The Store with More"

Ga llipolis

Last Day of joe

Talley Campaign

·P ro·m
prcllic~

\

From dotted swiss to
sheer chiffon, lovely
lOng gowns In exq u1 S1 te

sty I lng and many one of
a kind

Enter the great ...
Converse.Sportstakes!

,·... .
''·~

'.

I* converse I

DAN ·THOMAS &amp;SON

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USE OUR OON~NIENT
)

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....

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6- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, SundaY, April9, 1972

Stanleys
A nnounce

Couple ·To .Observe
Golden Anniversary ~ntertainmentDinner

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Elsie
Neal entertained 13 members
of the French Art Colony
&lt;I' Chapter DAR on Monday afternoon lor the regular
monthly meeting . Refreshments were served by Mary
Virginia O'Brien during the
social hour.
i GALLIPOLIS - Bob and
The regent . Catherine
Avai ce . Stanley of 338 Le Hayward presided and con- ·
Grande Ave .. are announcing dueled ritualistic work as well
ihe birth of a daughter on
March 10 at Holzer Hospital. asall business. The pre•ident's
; The baby, Carey JoLea, message was· given by
Margaret Ecker. The group
]"'eighed 7lb. 6'1.! ounces. She is decided that all girls who had
welcomed home by a brother, won the Good Citizenship
aron Joseph, four years old. contests in the various schools
. Maternal grandparents are h ld b
. r. and Mrs. Charles Johnson s ou e invited as guests of
the chapter to the picnic-to-be
Chicago: Paternal grand- held in June.
Mrs. Maude Nelson, who had
other is Mrs . Richard
f purlock of Point Pleasant.
p h~rge of the program
~
prepared an informative paper
·1
.
on Early American and Indian

Birth

allia Notes

r•

~

Alumni Has Party

By

~~~~~~~ich w~s read by Miss

I RIO GRANDE _

The
bouthern Ohio Alumni Chapter

Mrs. . Erma
Hagan,
southeastern region director of
j'
DAR, gave a detailed report on
f Rio Grande College, Chi the State Convention held in
mega Alpha, Chapter of Toledo in March.
thena had 8 party Wednesday
A luncheon at the Riverboat
vening, April5, at the hom.e of room will open the main
1ss . Susan
Burnside, meeting next month when Mrs.
a 111P01IS,
N 'I Sh
The them of th
rt
el
aw, a mem ber of the
e
e pa Y was chapter, w1ll have an art
A . R~membrance "of exhibit. Miss Mary Virginia
ledgmg. The guests of honor ; O'Brien will be the chairman of
}\'ere the Active Chapter's the lunche
M
All
ring ld
Ia · ld'
onon ay 1·
.
P e ge c ss me u mg, reservations should be made
~ss Ltnda Noel, Wave~ly;
with her.
·
ISS Jan Brown, Grove C1ty;
iss Sharon Vanney, Belpre;
iss Pam Dauthitt, Marietta;
iss Jane Gaul, Cleveland;
iss Marsha Shields, Jackson;
iss Berta Barry, Columbus;
iss Marlene Cusick, LanE_BSier, and Miss Debbie Carr,
preenfield.
1 The
Alumni members atfending were, Mrs. Kaye
P'.JINT PLEASANT
j'Aackin Spillman, Mrs. Carol
Harold E. Musgrave, chicago,
l'anders NaEora, and Mrs. lllinois,
is announcing his
f&lt;:athie Oder Foul, all of Rio graduation' from De Vry Inprande; Miss Bette Jones, Oak stitute
of
Technology,
f!ill; Mrs. Paula Thomerson receiving ~is Associate Degree
~nd
Mrs . Deljbie
Le in Electronic Engineering. He
Compte Miller, both of was a member of the Student
Beverly; Miss Grace Mastic Senate and graduated in the
and Miss Mary Metcalf. top quarter of his class ,
both of Pt. Pleasant, and Miss receiving an Achievement
Cindy Howard and Miss citation for good Engineering
Terresa Dearth, both of Practices for the design and
Gallipolis.
construction of his own stereo
Refreshments, including system.
coffee:chock fondue were
While attending school he
served by hostesses, Bette worked for Macan Engineering
Jones and Susie Burnside. as Chief Technician . He is
Remembrances of pledging married to the former Eva Ann
were shared and enjoyed by Gill, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
all .
JohnS. Gill, Gallipolis Ferry,
There will be a short W. Va.
business meeting in the near
Mr. Musgrave spent Easler
future to complete plans for the vacation with his parents, Mr.
up-coming May Day weekend and, Mrs. Frank Ury,
at Rio Grande .College. Any Meadowbrook Drive, Pt.
Athena alumni interested in Pleasant. Upon returning to his
becoming active in the Alumni newly accepted job with Bell
Association please contact the Laboratories, Napperville, Iii.,
active chapter at the college he will be a design and
for further information.
· engineering technician.
Prior to Easter Mrs. John
Gill spent two weeks with the
'~m~..::: .. :.n,
Musgraves attending
graduation exercises. While
there she also visited with a
· nephew and family, Mr. and
Mrs . Bernard Windon and
daughter, Jennett Margret, of
Northbrook, Ill.
·
Also visiting the Gills over
Easter were Mr. and Mrs.
William Hopkins and son,
MONDAY
AMERICAN Red Cross (Gray Skipper, of Winston Salem, N.
Ladies) luncheon meeting, c.
Holzer Hospital Medical
Center C•feteria. 12:30.
DR. WILSON Bowers guest WEDNESDAY
speaker for Clay PTA 7:30p.m. FAITHFUL WORKERS
. at the school. Program, Mental Society of Poplar Ridge Church
will meet with Mrs. Clinton
heallh and retardation .
Jones.
7:30 o.m.
GALLIPOLIS Chapter Order
Eastern Star regular meeting GALLIA County Extension
7:30 p.m. ·at the Masonic Homemaker's meeting, Grace
United Methodist Church, 10
Temple .
a.m. Morning program, inCATHOLIC Women's Club at stallation of officers. Program
St. Louis Catholic Church 7:30 "History of Home Demonp.m. Program sound film stration Council." Bring
strips on the Old Testament. covered dish and table service.
MERCERVILLE Grange
GRACE UNITED Methodist
regular meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Church Circles, No. 1 with Mrs.
TUESDAY
William F . Smith, 27 PortsFRENCH CITY Garden Club
mouth Road 7:30 p.m.; No. 2
with Mrs. Jewell Moore, 7:30 with Mrs. Charles Lanier, 12
p.m. Mrs. Earl Tope, guest EdgemontDr., 7:30p.m. ; No.3
speaker.
with 'Mrs. W. J. Brown, 451
PEMBROKE meeting with Hedgewood Dr., 7:30p .m. and
Mrs. Gene Gloss, 8 p.m.
No. 4 with Mrs. Perry Bailes,
AAUW 7 p.m. dinner meeting, 443 Hedgewood Dr., 7:30p.m.
Rio Grande College with
Martha Roundtree guest
speaker.
GRACE UNITED Methodist
Church Circles No. 5 and No.'&amp;
SCHOLARS LISTED
at Grace Church I p.m. NurMORGANTOWN 557
sery wiil )&gt;e available.
students have been named
RIO GRANDE Calvary Baptist "President's Scholars" at West
Auxiliary at the church 7:30 Virginia University for the first
p.m.
semester because they
WEDNESDAY
received straight A averages.
FIRST Presbyterian Church From Point Pleasant were
circle meetings. Morning Gary Lee Clarke, sophomore,
circle, 9 a.m. at the church. son of Charles E. Clarke; Jr., of
Evening circle with Mrs . 1914 Maxwell Ave.; Marjorie
frances Wetl\erholt 8 p.m. Jean Head, graduate, daughter
Mternoon circle poslporied to of Clarence L. Head of 146 Park
Drive; William E·. Park,
April 19.
graduate;
son of Nelson A.
SAD!)LE and Sirloin Riding
€lub 6:30 p.m. lor a wiener Park of 2024 Masoo Blvd.: and
r.oast at the home of Mr. and Marlyn Sue Smith, graduate,
Mrs. Frank Petrie. Members, daughter of Uonel L. Smith of .
905 Mossman Circle.
bring dessert ..

~

Harold Musgrave
GradU4te of
De Vry Institute

ROBIN LYNN NIDAY, Gallipolis, Ohio, freshman at
Morehead University, has been selected as a member of CWens,
an honorary for sophomore women. Members of Cwens are
chosen on the basis of high scholarship, leadership potential,
extracurricular activities and willingness to serve the university. Miss Niday is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne L. Niday
of 12 Vinton St., Gallipoli"'
MRS. BEULAH WATIS of Huntington, W. Va., Alma Fowler
and Mrs. Betty Ray, son Ronnie and daughter Connie of Flint,
Mich., spent Friday with their aunt, Mrs. Jesse Johnson, Lower
River Road.
MR. VERNA.RD FALLON, Gage, was visited over Easter
vacation by his daughter, Jane Ann, and a friend, Leal Fpaugh,
both studenl.s at Lear Sigler College in Maryland where Jane Ann
is majoring to be a veterinarian.

De~ a~Yoe
6

At

Coming
I Events

446-2342

It..'

]J·qW&lt;J1J D·;scussed
"

Pomona Grange Meet

RODNEY - Gallia County
Pomona Grange met Monday
evening at the Rodney Grange
hall where the meeting opened
in regular. form with Worthy
Master Kenneth Ward in the
chair.
There were seven Granges
represented at this meeting to
discuss degree day, and
making a booth al the Junior
fair.
Several of the Granges
brought the money they had
collected for Red Cross.
Le tters from Senator Oakley
Collins, and Representative
Ralph Welker concerning the
re solution (that unli censed
vehicles be removed from ail
county and' township roads)
were read.
It was decided to confer the
degree of Pomona May I at
Springfield Grange hall.
Practice for this will be held
April 24 at 8 p.m.
The literary program was
presented with the theme of

"Long Ago."
A poem, "Go Back To The
Long Ago," was read by the
lecturer, Mary Walker. The
song, "The Quilting Party"
was given by the audience. A
poem "Skating on the Pond"
was read by John Bostic and a
reading "The Covered 'Bridge"
by Bonnie Parkins. Poems
given were, "The Old Swimming Hole, " "The Village
Blacksmith," "The New Model
T,'' ~'The Old Spinning Wheel,"
accompanied by recorded
sounds of the past.
The next regular meeting
will be July 3and will be held at
Mercerville Grange for
election of officers.
Grange closed in regular
form, followed by a potluck
lunch.

Demoskey, Mrs. Betty Denney,
Mrs. Carolyn Demoskey, Mrs.
Faye Ball, Mrs. CaUly Cooper
and Mrs. Doris Bailey.
Sending gifts were Mrs.
Margarite Robie, Mrs. Thena
Glassburn, Mrs. Macy Carter
and Mrs. Oma Melton, Mrs.
Mary sieinbeck 1 Miss Rosalie .
Davis, Mrs. Thelma Daniels
and , Mrs. 'Hazel Skidmore.

ning a member of the Committee. Also Arree Marshall, of
Lancaster, Ethel Van Fossen
of Jackson and Berneice
Christenson of Nevada ·au
Chapeaux Passe Departemental. Partners attending
were from Meigs County Salon
No . 710, Fairfield, Scioto,
• Richland and Jackson Coun-

GALLIPOLIS - A baby
shower was given ·recently at
the home of JoAnn Russell lor
Mr. James Glassburn. Games
were played ,and prizes were
won by Mrs, Velma Smith,
Mrs. Clara Haskins, Mrs.
Cathy Cooper, and Mrs. Doris
Bailey.
Mrs. Mary Moore, Mrs.
'ties.
Glassburn's aunt, made the
Guests spoke briefly on in- cake for the occasion. It was
troduction; .and Le Chapeau decorated with' tiny rosebuds
Departmental Mary Martin and a baby cradle.
talked on the various programs
Attending were Mrs.
of the Eight and Forty, Margaret While, Mrs. Sylvia
especially ;~bout the work at Brown, Mrs. Velma Smitjl,_
National Jewish Hospital in Mrs . clara Haskins, Mrk.
Denver. She complimented the Lmda Kemper, Mrs. Mary
Salon
on
their
ac- Sheets, Mrs. Rose Coder, Mrs.
complishments during the year. Joan Pitchford, Mrs. Lillian
and thanked them for their
support.
Faye Wiklermuth returned
SPENCER AT BRAGG
thanks. Dorothy Hecker and
PT. PLEASANT - Army
Emma . Waylend distributed Staff Sgt. Carl E. Spencer, Jr.,
door prizes, and Le Petit whose parenl.s live on Route 1,
Chapeau of Gallia County Point Pleasant, recently was
Salon Joan Wood was master of assigned to the 82nd Airborne
ceremonies. Gifts were Division at Ft. Bragg, N. C.
presented to the guests by Sgt. Spencer, an instructor in
Mildred Hamilton. Parodies the school detachment of HQ
written by Ca~ Neutzling In company of the division, e_nhonor of the guests were sung. lered the army in 1964 and was
Regrets were read from Irene last stationed in Vietnam. He is
Meir, Doris Standriff and Bess a 1959 graduate of Point
Titlow who were unable to Pleasant High School. His wife,
KANAUGA - The Kanauga attend.
Unda, is with him at the fort.
WSCS met at the home of Mrs.
Barron Ward Thursday
evening where the opening
song "The Old Rugged Cross"
.
was sung followed with prayer
by Mrs. Shamblin:
Roll call was answered with
members quoting scripture
verses and Mrs. John Raike
read Luke 24:36-53. A reading,
"The Cross And The Crown"
was given by Mrs. Shamblin. A
reading "The Beatitudes of the
Risen Life" was given by
Evelyn Rothgeb.
Bible
questions were given by
Florence
Allen.
Firsi
Thessalonians, chapter 2, was
used for Bible study. The
benediction was given by Mrs.
Carl Roush. The group
reported having made 53 sick
calls during the month.
Refreshmenl.s were served by
the hostess.

GALLIPOLIS
Mary
GAL\.IPOLIS - Mr. and Columbus and Mr&amp;. Carrol Martin of Pomeroy, Chapeau
Mrs. Ernest (Gusta )·Holbein of (Wilma) Tope of Tampa, Fla. Departemental D'Ohio and her
285 South Burgess Ave ., Mrs. Holbein is the daughter of Secretaire-Caissiere Myrtle
Columbus, wi)l celebrate their the late Mr. and Mrs. Shannon Walker of Racine were honored
golden wedding anniversary on Hl!rrison of Thivener, Ohio and guests when Gallta &lt;;ounty
April II. A surprise party will has many rellitives in this Salon No. ,6t2, Eight and Forty
be given in their honor at tlieir area. Those wishing to send entertained at a dinner
home by their two daughters, cards may send them to the meeting in the Legion Hall
Mrs. Charles_(Cora) Gilkey of above address.
Thursday evening. Ot~er
guests were Violet Aicholz, of
·New Washington, a Dept.
Chapeau Passe and now
member of the National
Finance Committee, Hazel
Elliott of Portsmouth, also· a
Cllapeau Passe and • now
National Pouvoir member,
Becky Vanco Phone
Evalina Berkley of Nevada
Ohio, Le Demi Chapeau
HAROLD SMITH, MANAGER OF MEIGS Equipment Premier Departemental,
Company who suffered a coronary Tuesday, is now out of in- Audrey Glaub of Columbus La
tensive care . He as yet can not receive visitors but would like to Concierge
Departementale,
hear from his many friends in Gallia and Meigs counties. Those Edna Smeltz of Attica,
wishing to send cards may send them to Holzer Hospital, First Departemental Partnership
Ave., Gallipolis.
Chairman, Pearl Knapp of
.
.
.
Gallipolis Chairman of
MRS. GRACE ROACH, Vmton County, 1s a paltent at Departmental Resolutions
Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy room 130. She is • Committee and Golda Mourrecovering from surgery on a knee following a fall.

Athens Will Host
Diocese Leaders

.Baby Sho1:1Jer ·Given
For Mrs. Glassburn

.Eight and Forty Has

Mrs. Elise Neal
Hqsts DAR Meet

M rs.· S:Utwr
'I,.
·

..

·

,

GALLIPOLIS - Emanon
Club mel on Thursday with
Mrs. Kimball Suiter. Following
a short business meeting Mrs.
Oscar Clarke gave a program
showing slides of four trips
which she had taken. Two were
raft trips on wild rivers, Ule
Salmon river and one on a river
~ough the Grand Canyon.
'rhe two following trips were
taken on horseback in the
Marshall wilderness area of
Montana and one to the top of
Mount Whitney, the highest
mountain in California. Mrs.
Suiter served refreshments at
the close of. the meeting.

WSCS Meeting

PT. PLEASANT BOY Scout Troop 'JIJ7 booth workers Friday night at the Gallia County
Junior Fairgrounds included, left to right, Denny Bellamy, Jim Fisher, John Knight, Dave
Scholz, and Joe Harbrecht. The unit is sponsored by the St. Peter's Lutheran Church. Bill
Knight is in charge of this troop.
·
. DEN MOTHERS BUSY - Mrs. Doris Nolan, left, assistant den mother, and Mrs. Julia
Kir~y, ~enter, den mother for Cub Scout Pack 203, Den 2, Grace United Methodist Church,
Gallipolis, helped prepare that unit's booth for this weekend's annual Meigs-Gatlia-Mason
Scout.O:Rama. at the Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds. Looking on at right is George Hout,
Gallipolis, ch&amp;rman of the arrangements conunittee for the booths.

'

\

.,

i

POMEROY BOY SCOUT TROOP 249 booth advisors Friday night included Tom Cassell,
' left, and Patil Warner, right. Scouts working are Danny Will (hidden from view) Ralph Arnold
&lt;· and Kenny Byer . Tbe Meigs booth was one of 17 erected for the annual Meigs-Gallia-Mason
Scout.o-Rama at the Gallia County Junior Fairgro)lnds.
(,&gt;

•

Group Bids to Reopen

••

.

. . '..' . ' ..

Jackson Iron &amp; Steel
JACKSON - A group of local
industrialists is planning a bid
to reopen The Jackson Iron and
Steel Company through aid
from
the
'Economic
Development Administration.
Harold Schott, James Vi .
Jenkins and Earnest Harwell
lead the group. · Schott was
formerly chairman of the
board of the Jackson Iron and
Steel Company and principal
shareholder . Jenkins and
Harwell were directors and

Managers•
Cleara~e Days

also members of the operating
committee.
Associated in the group are
M.
Williinson,
Dwight
professional engineer of
Cleveland, and Fred- Neuenswander, executive vice
president of James A. Rhodes
and Associates, ColumbiiS.
The new facllity initially
would be engaged in the
production of steel wire rods. It
is hoped eventually to be able
also to resume blast furn~ce

Singer products. Many one-of-a-kind.
Limited quantities.
S~list* zig-z~;~g machine with ·$ S}Qg95 Reg.
drop-in bobbin, blindstitch! ·

$149.95

Save $40.00 on the machine that lets you
sew straight and fancy stitches.
It mends, darns, sews buttons
and buttonholes. Even inserts
zippers and puts up hems.

POLYESTER""'
DOUBLE KNIT
$2.79 to $179
COITON ·KNIT
*1.00 lb.

A little flirtatious, very
lightheared and lovely . ..
lorzg gowns just ,right

Adjustable width

Make buttonholes,

zlg·zeg stitches

sew on buttons

for dancing.

Large

PERMANENT PRESS PRINTS
45" Reg. to 2.98 yd:

Yt PRICE

Choose from the greatest an_d largest selecoon in the area. Remember, ·

(,7a.liipolis,

*1.691b.
SPRING FASHIONS

we register your gow~ ~,that -there \Viii not be another one like tt

..

I

from our store at your prom.

326 SEOOND AVL

operations. Beca use this
facility could attract other
industry into the Jackson Iron
property complex, it has been
conservatively estimated that
new jobs would be made
possible for as many as 400
area residents, providing an
annual payroll in excess of
$2,500,000.
Government assistance is
essential to this project in the
form of a loan. The group said
it has had splendid cooperation
lmd assistance. from both
Congressmen Clarence, E.
Miller and William H. Harsha.
While the facility would
· require approximately 18
months to get into full
operation, a great many jobs
would become immediately
available during .the construction and installation
phases.
Schott and Mayor J enklM,
froliflheir former experience,
feel that there is a more than
ample supply of skilled ·and
unskllled labor to operate both
of these types of plants. If
present pl11110 are realized,
Schott anticipates building new
housing facilities in the
Jackson vicinity.
ASSIGNED TO DACHAU
POMEROY - Army Private
First Class David H. Diener,
18, son of Mrs. !'atricia A.
Dunfee, 4263 Janesville·,
· WIchita, Kan., and of Donald
Diener, Pomeroy, recently was
assigned to the 37th Artillery
near Dachau, Germany. Pvt.
Diener is a surveyor with
. Headquarters Battery of the
artillery's 3rd battalion. He is a
1971 graduate of Wichita
Heights High School.
.

,

VtNYL UPHOLSTERY

Simplicity, McCalls, Bullerick, Vogue i&gt;atterns
We Do Custom Dress Making-Singer Sales &amp; Service

446-92Ss

SHEETS
'1.25 lb.

look your loveliest at the prom in a beautiful formal from Bernadine's .·

FRENCH :CITY FABRIC SHOPPE'
$8 Court Street.

*1.50 lb.

el.a,away

Spring prom time is coming and we have many lovely
fabrics and trims to help you create the dress of your
dreams.
·
,

Open 'Til&amp; p.m. Mon . &amp; Fri. Nights:H:Omplete. Floors of Fa~r'ics &amp; Not~ns

DOUBLE KNIT

• BankAmericard

WITH CARRYING CASE

MGM Scouts Prepare for Weekend
Scout-0-Rama in Gallia County

Continues to Improve

1ROM HEADQUARTERS

...

It's easy
to look rich.

THE COTTON GIN

.'

RT. 7

GM "POLIS. 0.
·~

•No

Gardner to be

Addison.,

O~io

BEWARE TURTLES
WASHINGTON (UP!)-~
Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) Friday proposed a ban'
on the importation and interstate shipment of pet turtles, claiming they have ~
linked with 300,000 cases a year
of salmonella sickness, mostly
among children.

NEW YORK, N. Y. - A
co ntinuin g improvement in
operations which accelerated
in the second quarter was
announced last week by Chri sCraft lndustnes, lnc. in
reporting the results of its sixmonth fiscal period ending
February 29. The company
announced sales of $29,920,000
and a loss before taxes and
extraordinary
items of
$1,618,000 compared to
$26,889,000 and $3,717,000 for
the sa me period last year .
Chris-Craft operates a plant in
Gallipolis, Ohio.
For the second quarter, sales
of $15,278,000 were about 27 pet.
above last year's $11,990,000
and the loi;s before taxes and
ex traordinary items was cut
from $2,8t6,000 . in 1971 to
$999,000 this year.
"
However , for the six-month
period because of lower tax
credil.s, $107,000 vs. $1,800,000
last year, and · the heavy extraordinary cost of a proxy
contest, net loss applicable to
common shares was almost
equal to the 197t fiscal year,
$2,495,000
compared
to
$2,445,000.
Loss per common share for
six months was 50 cenl.s with
the extraordinary item, proxy
fight costs, adding 13 cenl.s for
a net loss of 63 cents per
common share compared to 64
cenl.s for the pre~ious year.
The lower loss per share was
the result of an increased
number of common shares
outstanding, 3,987,670 · vs.
3,848,631.
Loss per common share for
the second quarter was :U cents
prior to extraordinary proxy

costs of 10 cenl.s, a net .of 41
ce nts, compared to a 45 cent
loss for the 1971 second
quarter.
The Boat Division bad a
subslan tial improvement, with
sales up sharply and was able
to cut il.s loss by more than
half. The introduction of new
cruiser models and the expansion of the Sport Boat line
contributed sig nifican tly, in
addition to the continuing effect or cost cutting programs.
The Television DiviG
·.on had
an improvement du ing the
second quarter with l~.s up
and income off only a few
percentage poinl.s. For the sixmonth period, however,
Division income was below last
year.
The Industrial Division made
a turnaround and opecated
profitably, compared to a loss
lor the six month period last
year.
The resull.s of operations do
not include Chris-Craft's equity
in earnings or losses of Piper
Aircraft Corporation, in which
the company · owns approximately 42 . pet. of the
outstanding common stock .
Piper reported a loss of
$45i,ooo in its first quarter
ended December 31, 1971
compared to a loss of $95 t ,000
in il.s correspondinl quarter
last year. Piper's report staled
that, in the opinion of il.s
management, the first quar!Alr
of 1972 "would have shown a
favorable profit position" but
for a strike at its Lock Haven
plant, which started November
I, 1971 and ended February 5,
1972.
Chris-Craft intends to in·

COLUMBUS - John W.
Gardner, Chairman of Common Cause, will address the
Ohio Citizens' Committee on
the State Legislature, a
citizens group working to
improve the structure and
operations of the Ohio General
Assembly, at the SheratonColumbus on April 19 and 20.
The purpose of the meeting is
to hear reports by four study
subcommittees and hammer
out final recommendations lor
improving the Ohio General
Asse mbly.

S~lJ3 M·1 7J ,

~w ll W 1n d. lnsiJnt Day- Date,
1\ illlli;I• JI Cn~l 1s h - Sra ni;h C~ l e ndM ,
9112
\\'Jitr l r•tcd , StJ rn l cs~ Steel ,

rr .

In Columbus

'·
'
e(n.narn.er

DAUGHTER BORN
SYRACUSE -Mr. and Mrs.
Austin Wolle are announcing
the birth of a seven pound 12
ounce daughter, Aimee Denise,
at Holzer Medical Center on
April 5. Paternal grandmother
is Mrs. Eulah Wolle, Letart
Falls, and maternal grand•
parents areMr. and Mrs. Jerry
Powell of Racine. Greatgrandparentsare Mr. and Mrs.
Oval Diddle, Antiquity, and
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Custer,
Syracuse. Great - great ,
. Only two I i z a r d s are~randmoth~r is . Mrs . Etta
known to be poisonous-the Custer of Mmersvllle. Mr. and
Gila monster and the beaded Mrs. Wolfe also have a son, ·
lizard of Mexico.
· Jerry, age 6.

Above, and Left:

Chris-Craft Operation

~*J-'··~

Cincinflati.

a

HostsEmanon

Mrs. Ward Hosts

vcntiorl.
The 1972 Diocesan Convention' of tb~ denomination
will be held May 12 and 13 at
the Netherland-l!ilton Hotel in

ATHENS - Delegates to the
1972 Dioc-esan Convention of
the Episcopal Church in ·the
Diocese of Southern Ohio from
t6 churcbes in Southeastern
Ohio will meet at 6:30 p.m.,
April II, at Good Shepherd
Church here for a preConvention meeting .
Clergy and lay delegates will
focus their attention on a
review of annual report s, the
Dio cesa n budget, proposed
re solutions and th e Institutional Racism report,
study submitted by a task force
authorized by the 1970
Diocesan Convention.
In addition to the meeting in
Athens, other pre-Convention
sessions are planned for
delegates from the Columbus,
Dayton and Cincinnati areas of
the Diocese.
Delegates · will be urged ..tQ
return to their parishes from
the pre-Convention meetings
and dis cuss the proposed
resolutions and other agenda
items with members of their
local parish prior to the Con-

1\lue Di.1 l. tumin ou5,
flrMelcl. S75.00

lld r u ~t .ll)le M~· ; h

ju1t give une o f o ur fashion,dJie Se1ko wat ches. They
look ami ac l expenSive.
Sto p by Ia day and see au
collcclio n of Sciko watche
fo r men. Yo u'll be surprise
at how lillie it cos ts to loo
like a mill ion. ·

elude its equity in Piper earningS or losses in its reports as
soon as it has adequate information to do so.
Chris-Craft stated that it has
filed a brief in il.s appeal to the
Federal Court of Appeals for
the Second Circuit in il.s suit
Only European territory
against Bangor Punta Cor- in Cent ral America is British
poration, Piper Aircraft Honduras.
Corporation, The First Boston
Cor poration et al. seeking
substantial damages for
violations of law by the
defendants in opposing ChrisCraft's attempt to acquire
control of Piper .
·

SEIKO
PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS
404 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

Sgt. Beck in
Giant Exercise
POMEROY
Master ·
Sergeant Bobby L. Beck,
brother of Mrs. Garland Lear
of.· Rodney, recently participated in a giant joint services !raining exercise at Ft.
Hood, 'Tex. He is a U. S. Air
Force aircraft support
equipment superintendent with
the 49th Tactical Fighter Wing
at Holloman AFB, N. M. ·
Sergeant Beck served with
the U.S. Army from 1948-1954
and transferred to the Air
Force in 1956. He has completed a year of duty in Vietnam.
He attended Gallia Academy
High School, Gallipolis, and
completed requiremenl.s for
his diploma after entering the
Air Force. His wife is the
former Hermine Big! ·of
Austria .

RICH in
STITCHES
A bou n~y ~P&lt;lfl wedliJI ~ml In contrnt•,..
5l ikhlnliJ. with shiny eyttle ts f)l'l!kln;thr!ltlgh tl'lfl
l&lt;lCCi. Add brew1y sldl cu i ~~~JII lod I c&lt;~ •tdiJP
r.ol• to top It df! A tun shoe, to IIIYt tun 1!'1' M
~

lour brlqlll 'olor1 Chill , Pvmplo In, 1-!uneybun or
k.tro llll.lf sued~ u ppe&lt;"l il} 9~

Top in washable 100 percent coHen knit.
S-M· L. Bright orange-while, deep violetwhile.
·
Fit and flare pant's In washable coHon
and polyester knit. 8-16. While.
·
Top
Pants

412·414 Second .A ve.

$10.00
$11.00

Gallipolis, 0.

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6- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, SundaY, April9, 1972

Stanleys
A nnounce

Couple ·To .Observe
Golden Anniversary ~ntertainmentDinner

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Elsie
Neal entertained 13 members
of the French Art Colony
&lt;I' Chapter DAR on Monday afternoon lor the regular
monthly meeting . Refreshments were served by Mary
Virginia O'Brien during the
social hour.
i GALLIPOLIS - Bob and
The regent . Catherine
Avai ce . Stanley of 338 Le Hayward presided and con- ·
Grande Ave .. are announcing dueled ritualistic work as well
ihe birth of a daughter on
March 10 at Holzer Hospital. asall business. The pre•ident's
; The baby, Carey JoLea, message was· given by
Margaret Ecker. The group
]"'eighed 7lb. 6'1.! ounces. She is decided that all girls who had
welcomed home by a brother, won the Good Citizenship
aron Joseph, four years old. contests in the various schools
. Maternal grandparents are h ld b
. r. and Mrs. Charles Johnson s ou e invited as guests of
the chapter to the picnic-to-be
Chicago: Paternal grand- held in June.
Mrs. Maude Nelson, who had
other is Mrs . Richard
f purlock of Point Pleasant.
p h~rge of the program
~
prepared an informative paper
·1
.
on Early American and Indian

Birth

allia Notes

r•

~

Alumni Has Party

By

~~~~~~~ich w~s read by Miss

I RIO GRANDE _

The
bouthern Ohio Alumni Chapter

Mrs. . Erma
Hagan,
southeastern region director of
j'
DAR, gave a detailed report on
f Rio Grande College, Chi the State Convention held in
mega Alpha, Chapter of Toledo in March.
thena had 8 party Wednesday
A luncheon at the Riverboat
vening, April5, at the hom.e of room will open the main
1ss . Susan
Burnside, meeting next month when Mrs.
a 111P01IS,
N 'I Sh
The them of th
rt
el
aw, a mem ber of the
e
e pa Y was chapter, w1ll have an art
A . R~membrance "of exhibit. Miss Mary Virginia
ledgmg. The guests of honor ; O'Brien will be the chairman of
}\'ere the Active Chapter's the lunche
M
All
ring ld
Ia · ld'
onon ay 1·
.
P e ge c ss me u mg, reservations should be made
~ss Ltnda Noel, Wave~ly;
with her.
·
ISS Jan Brown, Grove C1ty;
iss Sharon Vanney, Belpre;
iss Pam Dauthitt, Marietta;
iss Jane Gaul, Cleveland;
iss Marsha Shields, Jackson;
iss Berta Barry, Columbus;
iss Marlene Cusick, LanE_BSier, and Miss Debbie Carr,
preenfield.
1 The
Alumni members atfending were, Mrs. Kaye
P'.JINT PLEASANT
j'Aackin Spillman, Mrs. Carol
Harold E. Musgrave, chicago,
l'anders NaEora, and Mrs. lllinois,
is announcing his
f&lt;:athie Oder Foul, all of Rio graduation' from De Vry Inprande; Miss Bette Jones, Oak stitute
of
Technology,
f!ill; Mrs. Paula Thomerson receiving ~is Associate Degree
~nd
Mrs . Deljbie
Le in Electronic Engineering. He
Compte Miller, both of was a member of the Student
Beverly; Miss Grace Mastic Senate and graduated in the
and Miss Mary Metcalf. top quarter of his class ,
both of Pt. Pleasant, and Miss receiving an Achievement
Cindy Howard and Miss citation for good Engineering
Terresa Dearth, both of Practices for the design and
Gallipolis.
construction of his own stereo
Refreshments, including system.
coffee:chock fondue were
While attending school he
served by hostesses, Bette worked for Macan Engineering
Jones and Susie Burnside. as Chief Technician . He is
Remembrances of pledging married to the former Eva Ann
were shared and enjoyed by Gill, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
all .
JohnS. Gill, Gallipolis Ferry,
There will be a short W. Va.
business meeting in the near
Mr. Musgrave spent Easler
future to complete plans for the vacation with his parents, Mr.
up-coming May Day weekend and, Mrs. Frank Ury,
at Rio Grande .College. Any Meadowbrook Drive, Pt.
Athena alumni interested in Pleasant. Upon returning to his
becoming active in the Alumni newly accepted job with Bell
Association please contact the Laboratories, Napperville, Iii.,
active chapter at the college he will be a design and
for further information.
· engineering technician.
Prior to Easter Mrs. John
Gill spent two weeks with the
'~m~..::: .. :.n,
Musgraves attending
graduation exercises. While
there she also visited with a
· nephew and family, Mr. and
Mrs . Bernard Windon and
daughter, Jennett Margret, of
Northbrook, Ill.
·
Also visiting the Gills over
Easter were Mr. and Mrs.
William Hopkins and son,
MONDAY
AMERICAN Red Cross (Gray Skipper, of Winston Salem, N.
Ladies) luncheon meeting, c.
Holzer Hospital Medical
Center C•feteria. 12:30.
DR. WILSON Bowers guest WEDNESDAY
speaker for Clay PTA 7:30p.m. FAITHFUL WORKERS
. at the school. Program, Mental Society of Poplar Ridge Church
will meet with Mrs. Clinton
heallh and retardation .
Jones.
7:30 o.m.
GALLIPOLIS Chapter Order
Eastern Star regular meeting GALLIA County Extension
7:30 p.m. ·at the Masonic Homemaker's meeting, Grace
United Methodist Church, 10
Temple .
a.m. Morning program, inCATHOLIC Women's Club at stallation of officers. Program
St. Louis Catholic Church 7:30 "History of Home Demonp.m. Program sound film stration Council." Bring
strips on the Old Testament. covered dish and table service.
MERCERVILLE Grange
GRACE UNITED Methodist
regular meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Church Circles, No. 1 with Mrs.
TUESDAY
William F . Smith, 27 PortsFRENCH CITY Garden Club
mouth Road 7:30 p.m.; No. 2
with Mrs. Jewell Moore, 7:30 with Mrs. Charles Lanier, 12
p.m. Mrs. Earl Tope, guest EdgemontDr., 7:30p.m. ; No.3
speaker.
with 'Mrs. W. J. Brown, 451
PEMBROKE meeting with Hedgewood Dr., 7:30p .m. and
Mrs. Gene Gloss, 8 p.m.
No. 4 with Mrs. Perry Bailes,
AAUW 7 p.m. dinner meeting, 443 Hedgewood Dr., 7:30p.m.
Rio Grande College with
Martha Roundtree guest
speaker.
GRACE UNITED Methodist
Church Circles No. 5 and No.'&amp;
SCHOLARS LISTED
at Grace Church I p.m. NurMORGANTOWN 557
sery wiil )&gt;e available.
students have been named
RIO GRANDE Calvary Baptist "President's Scholars" at West
Auxiliary at the church 7:30 Virginia University for the first
p.m.
semester because they
WEDNESDAY
received straight A averages.
FIRST Presbyterian Church From Point Pleasant were
circle meetings. Morning Gary Lee Clarke, sophomore,
circle, 9 a.m. at the church. son of Charles E. Clarke; Jr., of
Evening circle with Mrs . 1914 Maxwell Ave.; Marjorie
frances Wetl\erholt 8 p.m. Jean Head, graduate, daughter
Mternoon circle poslporied to of Clarence L. Head of 146 Park
Drive; William E·. Park,
April 19.
graduate;
son of Nelson A.
SAD!)LE and Sirloin Riding
€lub 6:30 p.m. lor a wiener Park of 2024 Masoo Blvd.: and
r.oast at the home of Mr. and Marlyn Sue Smith, graduate,
Mrs. Frank Petrie. Members, daughter of Uonel L. Smith of .
905 Mossman Circle.
bring dessert ..

~

Harold Musgrave
GradU4te of
De Vry Institute

ROBIN LYNN NIDAY, Gallipolis, Ohio, freshman at
Morehead University, has been selected as a member of CWens,
an honorary for sophomore women. Members of Cwens are
chosen on the basis of high scholarship, leadership potential,
extracurricular activities and willingness to serve the university. Miss Niday is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne L. Niday
of 12 Vinton St., Gallipoli"'
MRS. BEULAH WATIS of Huntington, W. Va., Alma Fowler
and Mrs. Betty Ray, son Ronnie and daughter Connie of Flint,
Mich., spent Friday with their aunt, Mrs. Jesse Johnson, Lower
River Road.
MR. VERNA.RD FALLON, Gage, was visited over Easter
vacation by his daughter, Jane Ann, and a friend, Leal Fpaugh,
both studenl.s at Lear Sigler College in Maryland where Jane Ann
is majoring to be a veterinarian.

De~ a~Yoe
6

At

Coming
I Events

446-2342

It..'

]J·qW&lt;J1J D·;scussed
"

Pomona Grange Meet

RODNEY - Gallia County
Pomona Grange met Monday
evening at the Rodney Grange
hall where the meeting opened
in regular. form with Worthy
Master Kenneth Ward in the
chair.
There were seven Granges
represented at this meeting to
discuss degree day, and
making a booth al the Junior
fair.
Several of the Granges
brought the money they had
collected for Red Cross.
Le tters from Senator Oakley
Collins, and Representative
Ralph Welker concerning the
re solution (that unli censed
vehicles be removed from ail
county and' township roads)
were read.
It was decided to confer the
degree of Pomona May I at
Springfield Grange hall.
Practice for this will be held
April 24 at 8 p.m.
The literary program was
presented with the theme of

"Long Ago."
A poem, "Go Back To The
Long Ago," was read by the
lecturer, Mary Walker. The
song, "The Quilting Party"
was given by the audience. A
poem "Skating on the Pond"
was read by John Bostic and a
reading "The Covered 'Bridge"
by Bonnie Parkins. Poems
given were, "The Old Swimming Hole, " "The Village
Blacksmith," "The New Model
T,'' ~'The Old Spinning Wheel,"
accompanied by recorded
sounds of the past.
The next regular meeting
will be July 3and will be held at
Mercerville Grange for
election of officers.
Grange closed in regular
form, followed by a potluck
lunch.

Demoskey, Mrs. Betty Denney,
Mrs. Carolyn Demoskey, Mrs.
Faye Ball, Mrs. CaUly Cooper
and Mrs. Doris Bailey.
Sending gifts were Mrs.
Margarite Robie, Mrs. Thena
Glassburn, Mrs. Macy Carter
and Mrs. Oma Melton, Mrs.
Mary sieinbeck 1 Miss Rosalie .
Davis, Mrs. Thelma Daniels
and , Mrs. 'Hazel Skidmore.

ning a member of the Committee. Also Arree Marshall, of
Lancaster, Ethel Van Fossen
of Jackson and Berneice
Christenson of Nevada ·au
Chapeaux Passe Departemental. Partners attending
were from Meigs County Salon
No . 710, Fairfield, Scioto,
• Richland and Jackson Coun-

GALLIPOLIS - A baby
shower was given ·recently at
the home of JoAnn Russell lor
Mr. James Glassburn. Games
were played ,and prizes were
won by Mrs, Velma Smith,
Mrs. Clara Haskins, Mrs.
Cathy Cooper, and Mrs. Doris
Bailey.
Mrs. Mary Moore, Mrs.
'ties.
Glassburn's aunt, made the
Guests spoke briefly on in- cake for the occasion. It was
troduction; .and Le Chapeau decorated with' tiny rosebuds
Departmental Mary Martin and a baby cradle.
talked on the various programs
Attending were Mrs.
of the Eight and Forty, Margaret While, Mrs. Sylvia
especially ;~bout the work at Brown, Mrs. Velma Smitjl,_
National Jewish Hospital in Mrs . clara Haskins, Mrk.
Denver. She complimented the Lmda Kemper, Mrs. Mary
Salon
on
their
ac- Sheets, Mrs. Rose Coder, Mrs.
complishments during the year. Joan Pitchford, Mrs. Lillian
and thanked them for their
support.
Faye Wiklermuth returned
SPENCER AT BRAGG
thanks. Dorothy Hecker and
PT. PLEASANT - Army
Emma . Waylend distributed Staff Sgt. Carl E. Spencer, Jr.,
door prizes, and Le Petit whose parenl.s live on Route 1,
Chapeau of Gallia County Point Pleasant, recently was
Salon Joan Wood was master of assigned to the 82nd Airborne
ceremonies. Gifts were Division at Ft. Bragg, N. C.
presented to the guests by Sgt. Spencer, an instructor in
Mildred Hamilton. Parodies the school detachment of HQ
written by Ca~ Neutzling In company of the division, e_nhonor of the guests were sung. lered the army in 1964 and was
Regrets were read from Irene last stationed in Vietnam. He is
Meir, Doris Standriff and Bess a 1959 graduate of Point
Titlow who were unable to Pleasant High School. His wife,
KANAUGA - The Kanauga attend.
Unda, is with him at the fort.
WSCS met at the home of Mrs.
Barron Ward Thursday
evening where the opening
song "The Old Rugged Cross"
.
was sung followed with prayer
by Mrs. Shamblin:
Roll call was answered with
members quoting scripture
verses and Mrs. John Raike
read Luke 24:36-53. A reading,
"The Cross And The Crown"
was given by Mrs. Shamblin. A
reading "The Beatitudes of the
Risen Life" was given by
Evelyn Rothgeb.
Bible
questions were given by
Florence
Allen.
Firsi
Thessalonians, chapter 2, was
used for Bible study. The
benediction was given by Mrs.
Carl Roush. The group
reported having made 53 sick
calls during the month.
Refreshmenl.s were served by
the hostess.

GALLIPOLIS
Mary
GAL\.IPOLIS - Mr. and Columbus and Mr&amp;. Carrol Martin of Pomeroy, Chapeau
Mrs. Ernest (Gusta )·Holbein of (Wilma) Tope of Tampa, Fla. Departemental D'Ohio and her
285 South Burgess Ave ., Mrs. Holbein is the daughter of Secretaire-Caissiere Myrtle
Columbus, wi)l celebrate their the late Mr. and Mrs. Shannon Walker of Racine were honored
golden wedding anniversary on Hl!rrison of Thivener, Ohio and guests when Gallta &lt;;ounty
April II. A surprise party will has many rellitives in this Salon No. ,6t2, Eight and Forty
be given in their honor at tlieir area. Those wishing to send entertained at a dinner
home by their two daughters, cards may send them to the meeting in the Legion Hall
Mrs. Charles_(Cora) Gilkey of above address.
Thursday evening. Ot~er
guests were Violet Aicholz, of
·New Washington, a Dept.
Chapeau Passe and now
member of the National
Finance Committee, Hazel
Elliott of Portsmouth, also· a
Cllapeau Passe and • now
National Pouvoir member,
Becky Vanco Phone
Evalina Berkley of Nevada
Ohio, Le Demi Chapeau
HAROLD SMITH, MANAGER OF MEIGS Equipment Premier Departemental,
Company who suffered a coronary Tuesday, is now out of in- Audrey Glaub of Columbus La
tensive care . He as yet can not receive visitors but would like to Concierge
Departementale,
hear from his many friends in Gallia and Meigs counties. Those Edna Smeltz of Attica,
wishing to send cards may send them to Holzer Hospital, First Departemental Partnership
Ave., Gallipolis.
Chairman, Pearl Knapp of
.
.
.
Gallipolis Chairman of
MRS. GRACE ROACH, Vmton County, 1s a paltent at Departmental Resolutions
Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy room 130. She is • Committee and Golda Mourrecovering from surgery on a knee following a fall.

Athens Will Host
Diocese Leaders

.Baby Sho1:1Jer ·Given
For Mrs. Glassburn

.Eight and Forty Has

Mrs. Elise Neal
Hqsts DAR Meet

M rs.· S:Utwr
'I,.
·

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,

GALLIPOLIS - Emanon
Club mel on Thursday with
Mrs. Kimball Suiter. Following
a short business meeting Mrs.
Oscar Clarke gave a program
showing slides of four trips
which she had taken. Two were
raft trips on wild rivers, Ule
Salmon river and one on a river
~ough the Grand Canyon.
'rhe two following trips were
taken on horseback in the
Marshall wilderness area of
Montana and one to the top of
Mount Whitney, the highest
mountain in California. Mrs.
Suiter served refreshments at
the close of. the meeting.

WSCS Meeting

PT. PLEASANT BOY Scout Troop 'JIJ7 booth workers Friday night at the Gallia County
Junior Fairgrounds included, left to right, Denny Bellamy, Jim Fisher, John Knight, Dave
Scholz, and Joe Harbrecht. The unit is sponsored by the St. Peter's Lutheran Church. Bill
Knight is in charge of this troop.
·
. DEN MOTHERS BUSY - Mrs. Doris Nolan, left, assistant den mother, and Mrs. Julia
Kir~y, ~enter, den mother for Cub Scout Pack 203, Den 2, Grace United Methodist Church,
Gallipolis, helped prepare that unit's booth for this weekend's annual Meigs-Gatlia-Mason
Scout.O:Rama. at the Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds. Looking on at right is George Hout,
Gallipolis, ch&amp;rman of the arrangements conunittee for the booths.

'

\

.,

i

POMEROY BOY SCOUT TROOP 249 booth advisors Friday night included Tom Cassell,
' left, and Patil Warner, right. Scouts working are Danny Will (hidden from view) Ralph Arnold
&lt;· and Kenny Byer . Tbe Meigs booth was one of 17 erected for the annual Meigs-Gallia-Mason
Scout.o-Rama at the Gallia County Junior Fairgro)lnds.
(,&gt;

•

Group Bids to Reopen

••

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. . '..' . ' ..

Jackson Iron &amp; Steel
JACKSON - A group of local
industrialists is planning a bid
to reopen The Jackson Iron and
Steel Company through aid
from
the
'Economic
Development Administration.
Harold Schott, James Vi .
Jenkins and Earnest Harwell
lead the group. · Schott was
formerly chairman of the
board of the Jackson Iron and
Steel Company and principal
shareholder . Jenkins and
Harwell were directors and

Managers•
Cleara~e Days

also members of the operating
committee.
Associated in the group are
M.
Williinson,
Dwight
professional engineer of
Cleveland, and Fred- Neuenswander, executive vice
president of James A. Rhodes
and Associates, ColumbiiS.
The new facllity initially
would be engaged in the
production of steel wire rods. It
is hoped eventually to be able
also to resume blast furn~ce

Singer products. Many one-of-a-kind.
Limited quantities.
S~list* zig-z~;~g machine with ·$ S}Qg95 Reg.
drop-in bobbin, blindstitch! ·

$149.95

Save $40.00 on the machine that lets you
sew straight and fancy stitches.
It mends, darns, sews buttons
and buttonholes. Even inserts
zippers and puts up hems.

POLYESTER""'
DOUBLE KNIT
$2.79 to $179
COITON ·KNIT
*1.00 lb.

A little flirtatious, very
lightheared and lovely . ..
lorzg gowns just ,right

Adjustable width

Make buttonholes,

zlg·zeg stitches

sew on buttons

for dancing.

Large

PERMANENT PRESS PRINTS
45" Reg. to 2.98 yd:

Yt PRICE

Choose from the greatest an_d largest selecoon in the area. Remember, ·

(,7a.liipolis,

*1.691b.
SPRING FASHIONS

we register your gow~ ~,that -there \Viii not be another one like tt

..

I

from our store at your prom.

326 SEOOND AVL

operations. Beca use this
facility could attract other
industry into the Jackson Iron
property complex, it has been
conservatively estimated that
new jobs would be made
possible for as many as 400
area residents, providing an
annual payroll in excess of
$2,500,000.
Government assistance is
essential to this project in the
form of a loan. The group said
it has had splendid cooperation
lmd assistance. from both
Congressmen Clarence, E.
Miller and William H. Harsha.
While the facility would
· require approximately 18
months to get into full
operation, a great many jobs
would become immediately
available during .the construction and installation
phases.
Schott and Mayor J enklM,
froliflheir former experience,
feel that there is a more than
ample supply of skilled ·and
unskllled labor to operate both
of these types of plants. If
present pl11110 are realized,
Schott anticipates building new
housing facilities in the
Jackson vicinity.
ASSIGNED TO DACHAU
POMEROY - Army Private
First Class David H. Diener,
18, son of Mrs. !'atricia A.
Dunfee, 4263 Janesville·,
· WIchita, Kan., and of Donald
Diener, Pomeroy, recently was
assigned to the 37th Artillery
near Dachau, Germany. Pvt.
Diener is a surveyor with
. Headquarters Battery of the
artillery's 3rd battalion. He is a
1971 graduate of Wichita
Heights High School.
.

,

VtNYL UPHOLSTERY

Simplicity, McCalls, Bullerick, Vogue i&gt;atterns
We Do Custom Dress Making-Singer Sales &amp; Service

446-92Ss

SHEETS
'1.25 lb.

look your loveliest at the prom in a beautiful formal from Bernadine's .·

FRENCH :CITY FABRIC SHOPPE'
$8 Court Street.

*1.50 lb.

el.a,away

Spring prom time is coming and we have many lovely
fabrics and trims to help you create the dress of your
dreams.
·
,

Open 'Til&amp; p.m. Mon . &amp; Fri. Nights:H:Omplete. Floors of Fa~r'ics &amp; Not~ns

DOUBLE KNIT

• BankAmericard

WITH CARRYING CASE

MGM Scouts Prepare for Weekend
Scout-0-Rama in Gallia County

Continues to Improve

1ROM HEADQUARTERS

...

It's easy
to look rich.

THE COTTON GIN

.'

RT. 7

GM "POLIS. 0.
·~

•No

Gardner to be

Addison.,

O~io

BEWARE TURTLES
WASHINGTON (UP!)-~
Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) Friday proposed a ban'
on the importation and interstate shipment of pet turtles, claiming they have ~
linked with 300,000 cases a year
of salmonella sickness, mostly
among children.

NEW YORK, N. Y. - A
co ntinuin g improvement in
operations which accelerated
in the second quarter was
announced last week by Chri sCraft lndustnes, lnc. in
reporting the results of its sixmonth fiscal period ending
February 29. The company
announced sales of $29,920,000
and a loss before taxes and
extraordinary
items of
$1,618,000 compared to
$26,889,000 and $3,717,000 for
the sa me period last year .
Chris-Craft operates a plant in
Gallipolis, Ohio.
For the second quarter, sales
of $15,278,000 were about 27 pet.
above last year's $11,990,000
and the loi;s before taxes and
ex traordinary items was cut
from $2,8t6,000 . in 1971 to
$999,000 this year.
"
However , for the six-month
period because of lower tax
credil.s, $107,000 vs. $1,800,000
last year, and · the heavy extraordinary cost of a proxy
contest, net loss applicable to
common shares was almost
equal to the 197t fiscal year,
$2,495,000
compared
to
$2,445,000.
Loss per common share for
six months was 50 cenl.s with
the extraordinary item, proxy
fight costs, adding 13 cenl.s for
a net loss of 63 cents per
common share compared to 64
cenl.s for the pre~ious year.
The lower loss per share was
the result of an increased
number of common shares
outstanding, 3,987,670 · vs.
3,848,631.
Loss per common share for
the second quarter was :U cents
prior to extraordinary proxy

costs of 10 cenl.s, a net .of 41
ce nts, compared to a 45 cent
loss for the 1971 second
quarter.
The Boat Division bad a
subslan tial improvement, with
sales up sharply and was able
to cut il.s loss by more than
half. The introduction of new
cruiser models and the expansion of the Sport Boat line
contributed sig nifican tly, in
addition to the continuing effect or cost cutting programs.
The Television DiviG
·.on had
an improvement du ing the
second quarter with l~.s up
and income off only a few
percentage poinl.s. For the sixmonth period, however,
Division income was below last
year.
The Industrial Division made
a turnaround and opecated
profitably, compared to a loss
lor the six month period last
year.
The resull.s of operations do
not include Chris-Craft's equity
in earnings or losses of Piper
Aircraft Corporation, in which
the company · owns approximately 42 . pet. of the
outstanding common stock .
Piper reported a loss of
$45i,ooo in its first quarter
ended December 31, 1971
compared to a loss of $95 t ,000
in il.s correspondinl quarter
last year. Piper's report staled
that, in the opinion of il.s
management, the first quar!Alr
of 1972 "would have shown a
favorable profit position" but
for a strike at its Lock Haven
plant, which started November
I, 1971 and ended February 5,
1972.
Chris-Craft intends to in·

COLUMBUS - John W.
Gardner, Chairman of Common Cause, will address the
Ohio Citizens' Committee on
the State Legislature, a
citizens group working to
improve the structure and
operations of the Ohio General
Assembly, at the SheratonColumbus on April 19 and 20.
The purpose of the meeting is
to hear reports by four study
subcommittees and hammer
out final recommendations lor
improving the Ohio General
Asse mbly.

S~lJ3 M·1 7J ,

~w ll W 1n d. lnsiJnt Day- Date,
1\ illlli;I• JI Cn~l 1s h - Sra ni;h C~ l e ndM ,
9112
\\'Jitr l r•tcd , StJ rn l cs~ Steel ,

rr .

In Columbus

'·
'
e(n.narn.er

DAUGHTER BORN
SYRACUSE -Mr. and Mrs.
Austin Wolle are announcing
the birth of a seven pound 12
ounce daughter, Aimee Denise,
at Holzer Medical Center on
April 5. Paternal grandmother
is Mrs. Eulah Wolle, Letart
Falls, and maternal grand•
parents areMr. and Mrs. Jerry
Powell of Racine. Greatgrandparentsare Mr. and Mrs.
Oval Diddle, Antiquity, and
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Custer,
Syracuse. Great - great ,
. Only two I i z a r d s are~randmoth~r is . Mrs . Etta
known to be poisonous-the Custer of Mmersvllle. Mr. and
Gila monster and the beaded Mrs. Wolfe also have a son, ·
lizard of Mexico.
· Jerry, age 6.

Above, and Left:

Chris-Craft Operation

~*J-'··~

Cincinflati.

a

HostsEmanon

Mrs. Ward Hosts

vcntiorl.
The 1972 Diocesan Convention' of tb~ denomination
will be held May 12 and 13 at
the Netherland-l!ilton Hotel in

ATHENS - Delegates to the
1972 Dioc-esan Convention of
the Episcopal Church in ·the
Diocese of Southern Ohio from
t6 churcbes in Southeastern
Ohio will meet at 6:30 p.m.,
April II, at Good Shepherd
Church here for a preConvention meeting .
Clergy and lay delegates will
focus their attention on a
review of annual report s, the
Dio cesa n budget, proposed
re solutions and th e Institutional Racism report,
study submitted by a task force
authorized by the 1970
Diocesan Convention.
In addition to the meeting in
Athens, other pre-Convention
sessions are planned for
delegates from the Columbus,
Dayton and Cincinnati areas of
the Diocese.
Delegates · will be urged ..tQ
return to their parishes from
the pre-Convention meetings
and dis cuss the proposed
resolutions and other agenda
items with members of their
local parish prior to the Con-

1\lue Di.1 l. tumin ou5,
flrMelcl. S75.00

lld r u ~t .ll)le M~· ; h

ju1t give une o f o ur fashion,dJie Se1ko wat ches. They
look ami ac l expenSive.
Sto p by Ia day and see au
collcclio n of Sciko watche
fo r men. Yo u'll be surprise
at how lillie it cos ts to loo
like a mill ion. ·

elude its equity in Piper earningS or losses in its reports as
soon as it has adequate information to do so.
Chris-Craft stated that it has
filed a brief in il.s appeal to the
Federal Court of Appeals for
the Second Circuit in il.s suit
Only European territory
against Bangor Punta Cor- in Cent ral America is British
poration, Piper Aircraft Honduras.
Corporation, The First Boston
Cor poration et al. seeking
substantial damages for
violations of law by the
defendants in opposing ChrisCraft's attempt to acquire
control of Piper .
·

SEIKO
PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS
404 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

Sgt. Beck in
Giant Exercise
POMEROY
Master ·
Sergeant Bobby L. Beck,
brother of Mrs. Garland Lear
of.· Rodney, recently participated in a giant joint services !raining exercise at Ft.
Hood, 'Tex. He is a U. S. Air
Force aircraft support
equipment superintendent with
the 49th Tactical Fighter Wing
at Holloman AFB, N. M. ·
Sergeant Beck served with
the U.S. Army from 1948-1954
and transferred to the Air
Force in 1956. He has completed a year of duty in Vietnam.
He attended Gallia Academy
High School, Gallipolis, and
completed requiremenl.s for
his diploma after entering the
Air Force. His wife is the
former Hermine Big! ·of
Austria .

RICH in
STITCHES
A bou n~y ~P&lt;lfl wedliJI ~ml In contrnt•,..
5l ikhlnliJ. with shiny eyttle ts f)l'l!kln;thr!ltlgh tl'lfl
l&lt;lCCi. Add brew1y sldl cu i ~~~JII lod I c&lt;~ •tdiJP
r.ol• to top It df! A tun shoe, to IIIYt tun 1!'1' M
~

lour brlqlll 'olor1 Chill , Pvmplo In, 1-!uneybun or
k.tro llll.lf sued~ u ppe&lt;"l il} 9~

Top in washable 100 percent coHen knit.
S-M· L. Bright orange-while, deep violetwhile.
·
Fit and flare pant's In washable coHon
and polyester knit. 8-16. While.
·
Top
Pants

412·414 Second .A ve.

$10.00
$11.00

Gallipolis, 0.

�•
The Sunday Times · Sfotlnel, Sunday, April9, I!Y/2

•

8- The Sunday Tionl'S. Sentinel. Sunday. April9, 1972

'·

Mrs. , Houck in Arts Festival·

~M

G.

MIDDLEPORT,
· OHIO

'

GALUPOUS - Mrs. Pal
Houck, former Times.Sentinel
staffer, will participate in the
third 81Ulual Appalachian Arts
Festival April 13 and 14 at
MorriS Harvey COllege.
The conference this year is
called the Appalachian "Arts
Festival" - rather than the
Writers Conference - because
it will cover all aspects of
, mountain culture. New to the
,' IJ'Ogram will be · mountain
'•• music and arts and the ap.
• pearance of the Easter n
'' Educational Network (EEN)
~ which will film the conference
'' for national television. The
1• event Is sponsored jointly by
~
MHC Publications and the
- • .~ West Virginia Department of
l - Education.
Mrs. HoljCk, along with other
1
authors whose work will be
' appearing in From the· Hills
1972, Is • scheduled to par' tlcipateThursday at 9 a.m. and
several times Friday.
Set for definite appearant-es
are Kentucky author, Jesse
• Stuart; Clyde Ware, the movie

i

l
'i
:i.,
•I

~

':.

~
~

t
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~

i

~

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'
}
I
~

~

•
~

~

:
•'

fiX
UP
your
home
ROW...

•
maker who produced "No
Drums, No Bugles" ; William
E. Chilton, Charleston Gazette.
publisher, and two , writers
from North C.arolina, Guy
Owen and John Foster West.
West Virginia University and .
Marshall University will be
represented by faculty
members of their English and
Speech departments. Mrs.
Houck is a commimications
major at Rio Grande College.
"From tbe Hills 1972" will
fea ture Ware's shooting script

;

'

DAYTIME
PAMPERS

Line Goes Through ." Mrs.
Houck's story is "Lean Candles
Hunger," or two elderly men
who live in primitive conditions
in a town called Mountain
Home. It deals with what
happens to the relationship Qe-

30's
PAT HOUCK

RIO GRANDE - The Teqth
District Democratic Action
Club wilt meet Wednesday,
Apri l 12, at the Rio Grande
College cafeteria m Rio
Grande. President Hanl ey
Hackett. Marietta. announced
that dinner
will
be
oerved at 6:30 p.m. wi th a
business mee ting to follow at 8.
Donnld J . Kindt. Personnel

'

'

Supervisor lor the Ohio
Department of Highways, will
be the featured speaker. Kindt
is a former Chairman of the
Richland County Democratic
party and was honored in 1961
as the Outs tanding Young
Democrat in Ohio.
All Tenth District Democrats
are welcome to attend the

ANN HOLTER
POMEROY ~ Miss Ann
Holler, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Holler, Pomeroy
Route 3, graduated Marth 17
from Ohio Stale Unlverslly's
School of Nursing with a
ba ~helor's degree of science
in nursing. Widely known in
Meigs County, Miss Holler Is
a member of Alpha Tau
Deila Nursing Sorority. Sbe
Is a 19ti9 graduate of Eastern
High School. Miss Holter will
begin work at University
Hospital in Columbus on
April 24.

dinner meeting.

Trade Days April 15-16
BAINBRIDGE - The next
Scuthern Ohio Tra(le Days will
be held April 15 and 16 by Bill
Boatman and Co. off Tong

Pauling Speaking
1 'wice in Marietta
MARIETTA, Ohio (UP! ) Two time Nobel Peace Prize
winner Linus Pauling will be at
Marietta College April 13·15, it
was an nounced Saturday .
Pauli ng will present two j\llblic
lectures on April 13 and Apri l

~v---;:it:1ng Is
Guaranteed
lo. SatisfyOr Money Back

SHANK
HALF

Hollow Road ncar Deer Acres,
one mile north of here. As
always, a flea market will be
held in conjunction with Tr&lt;~de
Days.
Trading begins at 8 a.m. on
both days and runs all day.
There's plenty of parking and
food is available on the
grounds. Admission is free but
UICre's a nominal charge lor
table space to display items or
for space to tie a string of dogs.
Grounds will be lighted all
night.
PLANT STRUCK
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
United Auto Workers Union, in
a dispute with General Motors
over working conditions and
standards struck the plant in
suburban Norwood at I :30 a.m .
Saturday, although the second
shift was sent ·home early
because of absenteeism . UAW
Local 674 President Richard
Minton said 3,960 production
line employes and skilled
tradesmen were affected by
the walkout.
NO PROFIT THERE
BALTIMORE (UP!)
Samuel N. Askin, 27, opened a
men's clothin g store .in
suburban Towson Friday. He
made a $20 sale by midmorning. By mid-afternoon he
lost the money in a burglary.
Police said two youn g men
rifled the cash register while
he was waiting on another
customer.

HAMS

lb.49~

·---------WHOLE OR BUTT
HALF

59~b.

'

HELP I
Mak• tho11 Spring im prov
menll with the holp of an ec

Three Students

Of OU .Kille d
ATHENS, Ohio ( UP!) - Three Ohio University students
were killed Friday w hen the
small foreign car they were
riding in crashed broadside
into another car on rain-slick
U.S. 50, southeast of here near
Coolville.
The victims were identified
by the Ohio _Highway Patrol as
Ann Gibson, 18; Ronald Smith,
20, both of Pittsburgh,, and
Leigh A. Guthrie,l9, Wheeling,
W.Va.
Injured were Robert Wich·
mann, 20, Pittsburgh, and
Charles Mantel, 36, Athens:
Investigators said the
students' auto, driven by Wich·
mann, was eastbound when it
went left of center and crashed
into Mantel's auto. Wicbmann
was admi tte_d to a local
hospit.al in critical condillon.

•

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Hospital Chaplaincy Day,
Sunday, April 23, is being
sponsored by the hospital's
Chaplaincy Committee. The
purpose of the day is that in the
churches of the seven county
area, Jackson, Vinton, Meigs,
Gallia, and Lawrence, in Ohio,

-CARPETING
CHECK WITH THE
EMPIRE

reasonable rates and we' l
work out o monthly poymen
plan to suit your budget.
Come in and discuss you

monoy neods NOWI

WE HAVE EVERYTHING TO

appreciare~ ·your buaina~.,
Mlrriler: Fcdefll Dfpollit

l,..raner V::wporlitlon

OFF~R

~xperl In stallation
•Large Selection· of Sa mples
•Over 40 Rolls in Stock for Immediate In stallation
•Experienced Salespeople to Ai d You in Your
Selection

FRE F

"rhe now bank that

-.. MEDAl /
'•

..-·
""""'

ENRICHED flDUR

•'

..'""""

ENRICHED
.., ... ,RDUR
~

37

FLOUR

Wise Wins
Scholarship

1-lB. PKG.

MERCERVILLE - Michael
Wise, son of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Wise, Route 1, Crown City, has
been awarded a four-year
scholarship by the Army ROTC
to attend any college of his
choice provided it offers a
ROTC program.
The Army ROTC scholarship
program provides financial
assistance to highly qualified;
highly motivated young men
who are seriously considering
At the present time, Mike is
considering attendi ng Ohio
State University, However, he
has been recognized by
U.C.L.A. (University of
California ), Virginia Milit.ary
Institute, Pennsylvania
Military College, and others .
Mike is a senior at Hannan
Trace High SchooL During his
four years of school he has
been outstanding in many
activities.
Mike is presently employed'
Saturdays at the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company . He
works in the Editorial and
Photography Departments.

POMEROY - Refusing to
accept the "do nothing attitude" which often comes with
retirement - and sometimes
deservedly so - is lllf-year-&lt;&gt;ld
Morgan C. French, of Nye 'Ave.
Fr.ench, whose grandmother
was a full-blooded Indian,
continues an WlUSual hobby
which is fadin g from the
American scene - the art of
making quilt tops.
His colorful tops are not of a
traditional nature. No sir!
They . are original patterns,
one of which requires about
4,500 small blocks pieced
together - and that's 'a lot of
stitching! Another design he
calls his "puzzle" pattern .
Quilting ts nothing new lor
French, who was born in the
Harrisonville area, the son of
the late John and Rebecca
French. As a child he watched
his mother create quilt tops lor
others. About 50 years ago, he
took up the hobby and has been
at it strong ever since.
How many of quilt tops
French has made is unknown.
He estimates that he has given
about 65 to children, grand-

where he spent some 40 years
before earning hack to the
county to stay in 1945. He was il
jack-of-aU trades during his
employment years. He was one
of six children. All are dead
cttange.''
except
a sister, Alpha, who
M'any of the materia Is used
in tl)e tops are gifts from a resides in Missouri.
Since his wile died last Feb.
neighbor and others who drop
4,
the quilting has taken a back
by his home to lend a helping
hand in the endeavor. Others, seat, so to speak, In French's
French purchases if he needs a life. However, he has some 10
tops on hand lor sale and will
special color blend.
French left Meigs County in "get with it" more as time
1905 and spent five years in helps erase the loss of his wife .
North pakot.a. Alter returning Meantime, his needle, thread
here for a short time, he went and material are close at hand
to · Arkansas and Missouri just in case he "gels the urge."
children, other relatives and
friends. Each top requires his
spare time in about 20 days. He
has sold many, still makes
them to sell lor a little "extra

F'ST

TES

GOING TO GBC
PATRIOT - Miss Linda
Rutt, daugl!terof Mr. and Mrs.
Jam,es D. Rutt, Route 1,
Patrwt, has been accepted at
Gallipolis Business College for
the Fall Quarter beginning In
September. Miss · Rutt, a
member of the 1972 senior class
at Southwestern High School, Is
enrolled in the Secrelarial
Course.

BOUNTY
JUMBO

TOWELS
3.ROLLS

MRS. TUCKER'S
CHARMIN

160 ct.

SHORTENING

NAPKINS

97~
CHARM IN
TOILET
TISSUE

HEAD &amp;
SHOULDERS
SUPER SIZE 11 OZ.
LIST $2.19

$12'
SHOP ntE NEW JONES BOYS'
Best Values on
Foods - Clothing - Hardware

SUIT FILED
POMEROY - A suit for · Hartford Mayor
divorce has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
·by Jan ice Louise Smith, Asks Cooperation
Middleport, Rt. 1, against
Lewis W. Smith, Middleport,
HARTFORD, W. Va . Rt. I, charging gross neglect of Hartfo~d Mayor Thomas
duty and extreme cruelty. The Anderson is asking residents to
plaintiff also seeks the custody comply with a toW!\ ordinance
of two minor children.
that requires the confmement
of dogs. Mayor Anderson said
dogs must be tied during the
garden season and has set the
date to be observed from April
15until fall. He said th is will ,be
strictly enforced during the
emergency or immediate forthcoming season.
request.
The
Holzer
Hospital
Chaplaincy service represents
a commitment by religious
leaders of this area and by the
staff of Holzer Medical Center
to. offer all persons th e
resources of a religious faith in
times of illness. "This commiiment runs deep, the interest is personal, and the
willingness to serve is
genuine," said the Rev. Robert
Davis and the Rev. Clarence
Flath of the Chaplaincy
Committee .

and Ja ckson and Mason in
West Virginia, there is an
.opportunity fo r persons to
become informed as to the
wor k and purpose of the
Chaplaincy Program at Holzer
Medical Center.
Bulletin inserts are being
made
available
to
congregations. The committee
hopes that local churches will
remember the program with
either a special offering on
that date or to include the
financial support of the
program as a regular item In
their annual budget.
At present many ministers
from a wide variety of
denominations a nd
4ll COMMIITED
geographical locations have
POMEROY - There were 46
made commitments to serve as com m i t men t s
and
chaplains at Holzer Medical rededications to Christ during
Center one day a month. This the showing of the Billy
makes it possible that a Graham films at the New
chaplain is available Monday Haven Thea[(:r recently by the
through Friday, and for United Meth!Mlst Churches of
weekend emergencies.
Meigs and Mason Counties. A
The goals of the chaplaincy . meeting of the Evangelism
services are threefold, to · chairmen and pastors of each
contact all in-coming patients, of the churches Involved will be
and if possible, notify the held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
patient's pastor, priest, or the Heath United Methodist
rabbi; to minister to all Church in Middlepor'l to furpatients without church a!- ther discuss results of the film
filiation , and to render crusad~ .
spiritual assistance in time of

OLEO

Quilt Tops Made
BY BOB HOEFLICH

25 lB. BAG

PARKAY

C9lorful, Rare

- in Gallia County
'

Parliing For Over 100 Clrs.

,

DISOOUNTSA

Apiil 23 IS Chaplaincy Day

onomical loan! You borrow a

Ohio,.
Valley
Bank

MIKE WISE

careers as Army offi cers .

r-------------------it
BEFORE YOU BUY
.,

'Gol~ .

POMEROY'S 88-YEAR.QLD MORGAN C. FRENCH tends to his quilting at .hfs home on
Nye Ave. The aged resident has created quilt tops for the past SO years.

Action Club Will Meet

Since \8Sq ·

with our

GOLD· MEDAL

f'·.'f'... · ..

~

Pauling, who helped develop
the fi rst atomic bomb, won the
Nobel Prize fo r chemistry in
1954 and the Nobel Peace Prize
in 1962.

'•

few weeks. The writers will be
at the Anderson-Newcomb
Company in Huntington for an .
autograph session between
l :IS p.m. and 3:15 p.m. on
Friday, April 14.

of a new movie, "When the

15.

''

tween the men when the
daughter of one of .them appears on the scene.
"From the Hills" will be
available locally in the nest

131 Plne··Stret•
.GIIII~

$COPE

SECRET

MOUTHWASH

ROLL-ON

24 OZ. LIST 1.99

10 oz.

ONlY

U. S. NO. 1 KENNEBEC ,

-SEED .POTATOES

50 LB.
BAG

4'x8'

Sunday -'Monday - Tuesday - Wednesday
12"xl2"

and .Thursday Only!

BROA~TED

~uf}ft('~'·

2'x4'

CH_ICIEN AND 1/2

$

·12 PIECES
FEED AFAIIL Y OF 5

PINT OF COLE SLAW
PINT O.F BAKED BEANS
6 ROLLS, NO .SUBSTITUTES

$3.99
FOR EASY PICI,(UP

No Coupons - No Limit

.CALL 446-2682
YOUR ORDER WILL BE WAITING

·t~akt t4nppt
"THAT OLD FASttle*ID GOODIIIQu

2nd &amp;OLIVE ST.

GMuPOUS, CHO
..
.

FOIL COVERED BAG OF 4
INSUL:A TION 50' ROLLS
BLACK PLASTIC

DRAIN .PIPE
4" TEES 99c

4"xl0 FT.

4" ELL .99C

4" ntiCK
.200 SQ. FT.

$

�•
The Sunday Times · Sfotlnel, Sunday, April9, I!Y/2

•

8- The Sunday Tionl'S. Sentinel. Sunday. April9, 1972

'·

Mrs. , Houck in Arts Festival·

~M

G.

MIDDLEPORT,
· OHIO

'

GALUPOUS - Mrs. Pal
Houck, former Times.Sentinel
staffer, will participate in the
third 81Ulual Appalachian Arts
Festival April 13 and 14 at
MorriS Harvey COllege.
The conference this year is
called the Appalachian "Arts
Festival" - rather than the
Writers Conference - because
it will cover all aspects of
, mountain culture. New to the
,' IJ'Ogram will be · mountain
'•• music and arts and the ap.
• pearance of the Easter n
'' Educational Network (EEN)
~ which will film the conference
'' for national television. The
1• event Is sponsored jointly by
~
MHC Publications and the
- • .~ West Virginia Department of
l - Education.
Mrs. HoljCk, along with other
1
authors whose work will be
' appearing in From the· Hills
1972, Is • scheduled to par' tlcipateThursday at 9 a.m. and
several times Friday.
Set for definite appearant-es
are Kentucky author, Jesse
• Stuart; Clyde Ware, the movie

i

l
'i
:i.,
•I

~

':.

~
~

t
g
~

i

~

l
'
}
I
~

~

•
~

~

:
•'

fiX
UP
your
home
ROW...

•
maker who produced "No
Drums, No Bugles" ; William
E. Chilton, Charleston Gazette.
publisher, and two , writers
from North C.arolina, Guy
Owen and John Foster West.
West Virginia University and .
Marshall University will be
represented by faculty
members of their English and
Speech departments. Mrs.
Houck is a commimications
major at Rio Grande College.
"From tbe Hills 1972" will
fea ture Ware's shooting script

;

'

DAYTIME
PAMPERS

Line Goes Through ." Mrs.
Houck's story is "Lean Candles
Hunger," or two elderly men
who live in primitive conditions
in a town called Mountain
Home. It deals with what
happens to the relationship Qe-

30's
PAT HOUCK

RIO GRANDE - The Teqth
District Democratic Action
Club wilt meet Wednesday,
Apri l 12, at the Rio Grande
College cafeteria m Rio
Grande. President Hanl ey
Hackett. Marietta. announced
that dinner
will
be
oerved at 6:30 p.m. wi th a
business mee ting to follow at 8.
Donnld J . Kindt. Personnel

'

'

Supervisor lor the Ohio
Department of Highways, will
be the featured speaker. Kindt
is a former Chairman of the
Richland County Democratic
party and was honored in 1961
as the Outs tanding Young
Democrat in Ohio.
All Tenth District Democrats
are welcome to attend the

ANN HOLTER
POMEROY ~ Miss Ann
Holler, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Holler, Pomeroy
Route 3, graduated Marth 17
from Ohio Stale Unlverslly's
School of Nursing with a
ba ~helor's degree of science
in nursing. Widely known in
Meigs County, Miss Holler Is
a member of Alpha Tau
Deila Nursing Sorority. Sbe
Is a 19ti9 graduate of Eastern
High School. Miss Holter will
begin work at University
Hospital in Columbus on
April 24.

dinner meeting.

Trade Days April 15-16
BAINBRIDGE - The next
Scuthern Ohio Tra(le Days will
be held April 15 and 16 by Bill
Boatman and Co. off Tong

Pauling Speaking
1 'wice in Marietta
MARIETTA, Ohio (UP! ) Two time Nobel Peace Prize
winner Linus Pauling will be at
Marietta College April 13·15, it
was an nounced Saturday .
Pauli ng will present two j\llblic
lectures on April 13 and Apri l

~v---;:it:1ng Is
Guaranteed
lo. SatisfyOr Money Back

SHANK
HALF

Hollow Road ncar Deer Acres,
one mile north of here. As
always, a flea market will be
held in conjunction with Tr&lt;~de
Days.
Trading begins at 8 a.m. on
both days and runs all day.
There's plenty of parking and
food is available on the
grounds. Admission is free but
UICre's a nominal charge lor
table space to display items or
for space to tie a string of dogs.
Grounds will be lighted all
night.
PLANT STRUCK
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
United Auto Workers Union, in
a dispute with General Motors
over working conditions and
standards struck the plant in
suburban Norwood at I :30 a.m .
Saturday, although the second
shift was sent ·home early
because of absenteeism . UAW
Local 674 President Richard
Minton said 3,960 production
line employes and skilled
tradesmen were affected by
the walkout.
NO PROFIT THERE
BALTIMORE (UP!)
Samuel N. Askin, 27, opened a
men's clothin g store .in
suburban Towson Friday. He
made a $20 sale by midmorning. By mid-afternoon he
lost the money in a burglary.
Police said two youn g men
rifled the cash register while
he was waiting on another
customer.

HAMS

lb.49~

·---------WHOLE OR BUTT
HALF

59~b.

'

HELP I
Mak• tho11 Spring im prov
menll with the holp of an ec

Three Students

Of OU .Kille d
ATHENS, Ohio ( UP!) - Three Ohio University students
were killed Friday w hen the
small foreign car they were
riding in crashed broadside
into another car on rain-slick
U.S. 50, southeast of here near
Coolville.
The victims were identified
by the Ohio _Highway Patrol as
Ann Gibson, 18; Ronald Smith,
20, both of Pittsburgh,, and
Leigh A. Guthrie,l9, Wheeling,
W.Va.
Injured were Robert Wich·
mann, 20, Pittsburgh, and
Charles Mantel, 36, Athens:
Investigators said the
students' auto, driven by Wich·
mann, was eastbound when it
went left of center and crashed
into Mantel's auto. Wicbmann
was admi tte_d to a local
hospit.al in critical condillon.

•

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Hospital Chaplaincy Day,
Sunday, April 23, is being
sponsored by the hospital's
Chaplaincy Committee. The
purpose of the day is that in the
churches of the seven county
area, Jackson, Vinton, Meigs,
Gallia, and Lawrence, in Ohio,

-CARPETING
CHECK WITH THE
EMPIRE

reasonable rates and we' l
work out o monthly poymen
plan to suit your budget.
Come in and discuss you

monoy neods NOWI

WE HAVE EVERYTHING TO

appreciare~ ·your buaina~.,
Mlrriler: Fcdefll Dfpollit

l,..raner V::wporlitlon

OFF~R

~xperl In stallation
•Large Selection· of Sa mples
•Over 40 Rolls in Stock for Immediate In stallation
•Experienced Salespeople to Ai d You in Your
Selection

FRE F

"rhe now bank that

-.. MEDAl /
'•

..-·
""""'

ENRICHED flDUR

•'

..'""""

ENRICHED
.., ... ,RDUR
~

37

FLOUR

Wise Wins
Scholarship

1-lB. PKG.

MERCERVILLE - Michael
Wise, son of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Wise, Route 1, Crown City, has
been awarded a four-year
scholarship by the Army ROTC
to attend any college of his
choice provided it offers a
ROTC program.
The Army ROTC scholarship
program provides financial
assistance to highly qualified;
highly motivated young men
who are seriously considering
At the present time, Mike is
considering attendi ng Ohio
State University, However, he
has been recognized by
U.C.L.A. (University of
California ), Virginia Milit.ary
Institute, Pennsylvania
Military College, and others .
Mike is a senior at Hannan
Trace High SchooL During his
four years of school he has
been outstanding in many
activities.
Mike is presently employed'
Saturdays at the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company . He
works in the Editorial and
Photography Departments.

POMEROY - Refusing to
accept the "do nothing attitude" which often comes with
retirement - and sometimes
deservedly so - is lllf-year-&lt;&gt;ld
Morgan C. French, of Nye 'Ave.
Fr.ench, whose grandmother
was a full-blooded Indian,
continues an WlUSual hobby
which is fadin g from the
American scene - the art of
making quilt tops.
His colorful tops are not of a
traditional nature. No sir!
They . are original patterns,
one of which requires about
4,500 small blocks pieced
together - and that's 'a lot of
stitching! Another design he
calls his "puzzle" pattern .
Quilting ts nothing new lor
French, who was born in the
Harrisonville area, the son of
the late John and Rebecca
French. As a child he watched
his mother create quilt tops lor
others. About 50 years ago, he
took up the hobby and has been
at it strong ever since.
How many of quilt tops
French has made is unknown.
He estimates that he has given
about 65 to children, grand-

where he spent some 40 years
before earning hack to the
county to stay in 1945. He was il
jack-of-aU trades during his
employment years. He was one
of six children. All are dead
cttange.''
except
a sister, Alpha, who
M'any of the materia Is used
in tl)e tops are gifts from a resides in Missouri.
Since his wile died last Feb.
neighbor and others who drop
4,
the quilting has taken a back
by his home to lend a helping
hand in the endeavor. Others, seat, so to speak, In French's
French purchases if he needs a life. However, he has some 10
tops on hand lor sale and will
special color blend.
French left Meigs County in "get with it" more as time
1905 and spent five years in helps erase the loss of his wife .
North pakot.a. Alter returning Meantime, his needle, thread
here for a short time, he went and material are close at hand
to · Arkansas and Missouri just in case he "gels the urge."
children, other relatives and
friends. Each top requires his
spare time in about 20 days. He
has sold many, still makes
them to sell lor a little "extra

F'ST

TES

GOING TO GBC
PATRIOT - Miss Linda
Rutt, daugl!terof Mr. and Mrs.
Jam,es D. Rutt, Route 1,
Patrwt, has been accepted at
Gallipolis Business College for
the Fall Quarter beginning In
September. Miss · Rutt, a
member of the 1972 senior class
at Southwestern High School, Is
enrolled in the Secrelarial
Course.

BOUNTY
JUMBO

TOWELS
3.ROLLS

MRS. TUCKER'S
CHARMIN

160 ct.

SHORTENING

NAPKINS

97~
CHARM IN
TOILET
TISSUE

HEAD &amp;
SHOULDERS
SUPER SIZE 11 OZ.
LIST $2.19

$12'
SHOP ntE NEW JONES BOYS'
Best Values on
Foods - Clothing - Hardware

SUIT FILED
POMEROY - A suit for · Hartford Mayor
divorce has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
·by Jan ice Louise Smith, Asks Cooperation
Middleport, Rt. 1, against
Lewis W. Smith, Middleport,
HARTFORD, W. Va . Rt. I, charging gross neglect of Hartfo~d Mayor Thomas
duty and extreme cruelty. The Anderson is asking residents to
plaintiff also seeks the custody comply with a toW!\ ordinance
of two minor children.
that requires the confmement
of dogs. Mayor Anderson said
dogs must be tied during the
garden season and has set the
date to be observed from April
15until fall. He said th is will ,be
strictly enforced during the
emergency or immediate forthcoming season.
request.
The
Holzer
Hospital
Chaplaincy service represents
a commitment by religious
leaders of this area and by the
staff of Holzer Medical Center
to. offer all persons th e
resources of a religious faith in
times of illness. "This commiiment runs deep, the interest is personal, and the
willingness to serve is
genuine," said the Rev. Robert
Davis and the Rev. Clarence
Flath of the Chaplaincy
Committee .

and Ja ckson and Mason in
West Virginia, there is an
.opportunity fo r persons to
become informed as to the
wor k and purpose of the
Chaplaincy Program at Holzer
Medical Center.
Bulletin inserts are being
made
available
to
congregations. The committee
hopes that local churches will
remember the program with
either a special offering on
that date or to include the
financial support of the
program as a regular item In
their annual budget.
At present many ministers
from a wide variety of
denominations a nd
4ll COMMIITED
geographical locations have
POMEROY - There were 46
made commitments to serve as com m i t men t s
and
chaplains at Holzer Medical rededications to Christ during
Center one day a month. This the showing of the Billy
makes it possible that a Graham films at the New
chaplain is available Monday Haven Thea[(:r recently by the
through Friday, and for United Meth!Mlst Churches of
weekend emergencies.
Meigs and Mason Counties. A
The goals of the chaplaincy . meeting of the Evangelism
services are threefold, to · chairmen and pastors of each
contact all in-coming patients, of the churches Involved will be
and if possible, notify the held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
patient's pastor, priest, or the Heath United Methodist
rabbi; to minister to all Church in Middlepor'l to furpatients without church a!- ther discuss results of the film
filiation , and to render crusad~ .
spiritual assistance in time of

OLEO

Quilt Tops Made
BY BOB HOEFLICH

25 lB. BAG

PARKAY

C9lorful, Rare

- in Gallia County
'

Parliing For Over 100 Clrs.

,

DISOOUNTSA

Apiil 23 IS Chaplaincy Day

onomical loan! You borrow a

Ohio,.
Valley
Bank

MIKE WISE

careers as Army offi cers .

r-------------------it
BEFORE YOU BUY
.,

'Gol~ .

POMEROY'S 88-YEAR.QLD MORGAN C. FRENCH tends to his quilting at .hfs home on
Nye Ave. The aged resident has created quilt tops for the past SO years.

Action Club Will Meet

Since \8Sq ·

with our

GOLD· MEDAL

f'·.'f'... · ..

~

Pauling, who helped develop
the fi rst atomic bomb, won the
Nobel Prize fo r chemistry in
1954 and the Nobel Peace Prize
in 1962.

'•

few weeks. The writers will be
at the Anderson-Newcomb
Company in Huntington for an .
autograph session between
l :IS p.m. and 3:15 p.m. on
Friday, April 14.

of a new movie, "When the

15.

''

tween the men when the
daughter of one of .them appears on the scene.
"From the Hills" will be
available locally in the nest

131 Plne··Stret•
.GIIII~

$COPE

SECRET

MOUTHWASH

ROLL-ON

24 OZ. LIST 1.99

10 oz.

ONlY

U. S. NO. 1 KENNEBEC ,

-SEED .POTATOES

50 LB.
BAG

4'x8'

Sunday -'Monday - Tuesday - Wednesday
12"xl2"

and .Thursday Only!

BROA~TED

~uf}ft('~'·

2'x4'

CH_ICIEN AND 1/2

$

·12 PIECES
FEED AFAIIL Y OF 5

PINT OF COLE SLAW
PINT O.F BAKED BEANS
6 ROLLS, NO .SUBSTITUTES

$3.99
FOR EASY PICI,(UP

No Coupons - No Limit

.CALL 446-2682
YOUR ORDER WILL BE WAITING

·t~akt t4nppt
"THAT OLD FASttle*ID GOODIIIQu

2nd &amp;OLIVE ST.

GMuPOUS, CHO
..
.

FOIL COVERED BAG OF 4
INSUL:A TION 50' ROLLS
BLACK PLASTIC

DRAIN .PIPE
4" TEES 99c

4"xl0 FT.

4" ELL .99C

4" ntiCK
.200 SQ. FT.

$

�'
IO-TiwSihlaJ Ttmea-kntlnel,&amp;may. ApriiB,Im

·,Elks Set ·May 1-7
Ohio Youth Week
COLUMBUS - The Ohio of the Elks National ServiL-e
Elks
Association ·has Commission. The Commission
designated the week of May 1~7 provides. recreation and enas .Elks Youth Week In Ohio. tertainment throughout the
rll!onsored by the fraternal ·year for the nation's
order for 23 .years, this week is hospitalized veterans.
celebrated throUJhout the state
to highlight youth decency and ··
to recognize its achievements.
'.} •
Awards valued at ap·
proximately H1,000 will be Social Noles
presented to Ohio's top
stu~ and youth leaders at a
Sunday School attendance on
luncheon Saturday, April 29, in April 2 was 82 and the offering
the Nell House Motor Hotel.
$32.21 . An Easter egg hunt for
Ten
"Most
Valuable the children wa's held at 10:45;
Student" scholarships of S'IOO Worship services were held at
each and 10 secondary II with 43 In attendance. Rev.
scholarships of $600 ea~h are to Lehman spoke from Mark 15
be announced by Donald W. "Who Will Remove the Stone?"
· Peters of Dover who conducted
Good Friday services were
a statewide contest sponsored held here with an attendance of
by the Order.
27. Rev. Lehman 'spoke from
Approximately $8,000 in John 19, "Behold the Man."
youth leadership awards are to Communion services foUowed
be madt by M. A. Mihallck of the sermon.
Mansfield. Young people from
Easter Sunrise services were
11early every part of the state held at 6:30a. m. Sunday. The
have been Invited to attend the program was under the
luncheon as guests of the Elks. direction of Linda Wllllams.
Featured speaker will be . Breakfastwasservedat7:30in
Wlillam J. Jernick of Nutley, J. the church basement with an
J. Apast grand exalted ruler of attendance of 45.
the Elks, Jernlck is Chairman
Friday guests of Mr. and

Al' r.,·ed

..

en i : e e mnmuuuc

OPEN HOUSE
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Osborne, Lin.coln .
Terrace, Pomeroy, will have
open house today from 2-4 p.m.
at the Pomeroy Church o(
Christ in honor of their 50th
anniversary. The family Invites all relatives and friends.
Mrs. Vere S,wartz were Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Swartz and
family of Ravenna , Sarah
Woode of Coolville , Mrs.
Vernon Swartz and children of
Hockingport and Millard
Swartz, local. Mr. Swartz
remains quite ill at his horne
here.
Last Wednesday evening
supper guests of the Clarence
Henderson family were Rev.
and Mrs. Randy Lavender and
Shayn of Athens. They attendP.d prayer meeting at the
church at 7:45 that evening and
furnish special music. Nina
Robinson was le~der.
Friday evening guests of the
Honacher..Cappell family were
Mrs. Anna Thompson and
Harley Sidwell of near
Coolville . The occasion was
Mr. Honacher's birthday.
Easter guests of Clara
Follrod and Nina Robinson
were Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Swartz and family of Marietla,
who attended church here
Sunday morning, Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Follrod and Sue Ann of
Athens and Mr. and Mrs.
Carleton Follrod and Charles
of Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost
and famill' were Easter guests
· of Genevieve Guthrie and
atteQded all the. Easter services at the church.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Wirl·
land and family of Columbus
spent Easter weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Wilbur Wlndland and
family and attended church
here Sunday mornfng.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Swartz
and family of Marietta visited
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Hobart Swartz Easter Sunday
afternoon. ·
Mrs. Emma ·Findling is
visiting her granddaughter,
Mrs. Janice Ritchie and son,
Charles, at Pine Grove.
Mrs. Mary Carr returned to
her home here this past week
after spending some time with
Mr. and Mrs. Seldon O'Brien In
Columbus.

11 -:- The Sw1day Times · §&lt;'ntincl, s uiutay . AprilS, l!l'i~

Beat...

.·

I

~·

a

'

R~frigerator-Freezer
• 14.2 cu. ft . capacity • Only 30" wide
• B/8 102·/b. capacity freezer • Adjustable cold control
• Deep-shelf storese door • Enclosed butter keeper
• Twin parcelaln·enamel vesetable crispers
• Convertible doo11·reverse easily with ordinary tools

• White, Avocado, Gold or Shaded Copper cabinets

'29·9 95
FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
MIDDL£PORT, OHIO

I

.
.
FURNITURE IN RUTLAND, OHIO

· .AT MASON FURNITURE IN MASON, W. VA. cmd

Of the Bend~
By llob Hoeflich

:~-

POMEROY - Election day, May 2, is roUing around and due·
to the wave of publicity given on registration, the Impression is .
that Meigs County voters must register. In Meigs, however,
there is Jl(V.reglstratlon required.
If you won't be able to get to the polla on May 2 due to illness
or the · fact that you will be away you can vote absentee or
disabled baUots any day from I to 4 p.m. at the Meigs County
Board of Elections office !Ocat.ed in the Masonic Temple building,
Pomeroy. The deadline for this voting is 4 p.m., April 'll. The
bOard office is open dui'lng the ·aftemoon hours Monday through
Saturday.
•
Incidentally, the presidential baUots for Democrats in the
May primaries are almost a nightmare - so many names and
only so many to be voted for. One slip of the pencil by the voter
and the entire baUot on the various party delegates of the
p-esidential candidates is thrown out.
CHARLES GIBBS, SUPERINTENDENT of Pomeroy
Schools a number of years, will be the guest speaker for the
Racine High ~ool Alumni reunion on May 'll.
Mr. Gibbs is, of course, a graduate of Racine High and this is
the anniversary of his 50th year ~ince completing his schooling
there.
Mrs. Barbara McNickel Pierce, secretary-treasurer of the
Racine Alumni Association, reports that the association is badly
in need of some 20 volunteers to work on the doors and as
hostesses on reunion night. Anyone wishing to help out is asked to
contact Barbara at 94~2374.
SPEAKING OF OO.YEAR ANNIVERSARIES for graduates,
there should be quite a tutn out by the class of 1922 at Pomeroy
High School.
Many of the class settled In the Big Bend area, so there'll be
little Involved in the way of traveling to the reunion. Not listed on
a published photograph of the class, in their caps and gowns 50
years ago last week, was one of the most prominent members of
the class of '22, Dr. Raymond E. Boice. Actually, he's changed
very little through the years -except a pound here and there, of
course.
Earl Clark, noted for his historical coUections and a member
of the class, !l"Ovide&lt;,l,us the exceUent picture. And most unfortunately, a couple~of-daya.afler Mr. and Mrs. Clark brought
the picture in, Mrs. Clark suffered a coronary and is now a
patient at Veterans Memorial Hospital. ·

I

.

SAT~RI)A~

U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED-WHOLE FRYING CHICKENS

or FAMILY PAK

CHICKEN
P IS

It has been estimated
. Ihere are · about 4.7 million

States,
with theIn average
·COl·
bee colonies
the United
ony yielding 41.9 pounds of
honey a year. ·
·

Free
Delivery
For All

Purchases!

FOR

I ncltides: 3 Bnllfst Quartan -

Buy A

3 Leg Quartan - 3 Wings 2 Pkgs. Giblets &amp; 2 Necks

Living Room Suite
NOTICE .. . Sofa sed Suites and Maple
Frame Suites are EXCLUDED from this

_offer.

AND FOR ONLY'

lb.

we rnerve the riQht tell mit ouentltlts on 111 Items In thll eel.
Prlui •ll•dlvtthru Sat., April IS, 1912. None Mid lode•l•n.

•1.00

TERRY E. WHALEY, BORN IN POMEROY, son of Mr. and
Mrs. F. 0. Whaley, has been named vice president in charge of
business development In the New England sub-region of U. S.
Financial-Northeast, Inc.
The sub-region Includes New York, Massachusetts, Con·
necticut, Rhode Island, Verm0nt, New Hampshire and Maine but
Whaley will be based in Colwnbus. He was formerly regional
finance mansger and assistant vice president of Ryan Homes,
Inc., and previously was branCh manager for Galbreath Mort·
gage Co. He Is the grandsontJf Mrs. Edith Whaley of Albany and
Mrs. Ava Gilkey of Harrisonville.

UNDOUBTEDLY, MANY HERE REMEMBER the Rev.
Father John Turel who was pastor of Sacred Heart ChurCh a ..
number of years. His Ghristmas holiday decorations at the
church each year were really outstanding; the chur¢\en·
tertalning many visltors 'who came to see just what Father Turel
would come up with eaCh year to make the holiday setting new
BY ADA KEELS
Mrs . Silva
Coleman , and different.
At any rate, the Rev. Father Turel is now totally In·
Morgantown, W. Va., visited
her mother, Mrs. Daisy Ross, capacitated at the Ohio VaUey ·Hospital in Wheeling, W. Va.,
where she met her daughters, after suffering a stroke. He's feelin' a little low and probably
Betty Jean Parron and Jo Ann would be quite pleased to hear fr.om his Meigs County friends.
Carter over Easter.
LYSTON PULLEN, FORMERLY of Middleport, is Africa
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Brislin,
bound.
Lyston who resides at Cocoa BeaCh, Fla., Is a civilian
daughters, from Akron, 0.,
visited her parents, Mr. and employe of the Chemical Department of the Air Force Eastern
Mrs. John Gamble from Thurs- Test Rallge at Cape Kennedy. This month he will be going on
day W!til Sunday and enjoyed a temporary assignment to the Ascension Wands off the coast of
wonderful Easter.
Africa.
Mrs. Murl Howard received
word Wednesday m'ornlng that
MRS. WALTER (JUNE) ROUSH IS in critical condition at
her aunt, Mrs. John Reider at University Hospital In Colwnbus where she has been confined
Berlin, Ohio, died suddenly several months. Glenn Roush of Philadelphia, Pa., has beert In
that morning of a heart attack. Columbus recently with his brother, Walter, due to June 's illness.
Mrs. Marvella Smith and Glenn spent Friday evening In Middleport with his mother, Mrs:
'daughter, Brenda Kay, were Earl Roush.
shopping in Huntington, W. Va.
Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. James Parran,
children, from St. Louis, Mo., Friday.
sister, Nora McDaniel from
visited her grandmother, Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Ross McDaniel Berlin, Ohio, visited Mrs.
Daisy Ross Thursday and from near Columbus and Daisy Ross Satl"'day.
Mr. and Mrs; Mikie Carter
and children from Wilberforce,
0 ., visited their grandmother,
Mrs. Daisy Ross Saturday.·::
,.,,,,, Mrs. Mary Howard, Mr. and·
\ Mrs . Frank Young and
children from Dayton, 0.,
··,at~~ th~ wake of Mrs. John
Reider at WeUston Thursday
evening.
Mr. Dewy Keels is reported
on the sick list with laryngitis.
Mr. and Mrs : Raymond
Jackson and family, Dayton,
0., visited Mrs. Mary Howard
and family Saturday evening.
Mrs . Silva . Coleman,
daughter, Mrs. JoAnn Parron,
and mother, Mrs. Oalsy Ross,
visited Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Diggs at Coalton Friday.
Mrs. Mary Howard, local,
daughter Mrs. Dorothy Gorden
and Mrs. Laura Scuggs from
Gallipolis attended the funeral
of Deacon Larry Robison at
Union Church at Blackfork, 0.,
Monday at two o'clock.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Howard
and brother. John, attended the
funeral of Mn. John Reider at
Wellston Friday.
Early American Uving Room Furniture ·
· Bobbie Deen Gorden,
GeUipolis, visited his cousins,
·• Singer • Clayton-Marcus • Bassett
Sherr! Howard and brother,
Christopher Monday afAll In stock for immediate delivery·. Also :
ternoon.
Many other styles.
Sherr! Howard was home
from school Thursday afternoon until Tuesday morning
on her Easter vacation, which
she enjoyed very II\IICh. ·

Sale Starts Tomorrow
AT BOTH STORES•

New Shipments Have
•
DONrT
Arr1ved THIS
Miss
BUY!

2521HIRD
AVENUE,
:GAWPOLIS,
.
.
.
.OHIO- ..
OPEN 9 AM TO 9 PM MONDAlTHRU

••

I

(ALL ITEMS ON $ALE AT BOTH STORES)

.

MORE

GET THIS

BEDROOM

I.

SUITE

You Get This Beautiful 3-Piece
FLORIDA SEEDLESS

FULL ·SIZE

•t·
a
·
FOR
.
~u".l·' .. ~
'ONlY:''·'

F

NewHope

PHILCOIP 2-Door

/

Llbbtu;LY

MATTRESS.

.u.

BOTH PIECES .

GRAPEFRUIT

FOR THE SET

LIMITED

40 Size

each

Quilled Mattress

•

-312 Olils -

I
STATE FARE
SLICED

BREAD
1-lb. 4-oz. Loaves 1
NIBLETS
WHOLE KERNEL

CORN
12·oz. Vac Pak Can

Grate Special! 2 : Piece

VINYL SOFA BED

THOROFARE
.,

TEA BAGS

REGULAR 159~95 ' .,
,•
GRATE SALE AT

BROWN . BlACK • GREEN

I

Speci~l

100-Ct. Pkg.

SMUCKER'S FEATURES
GRAPE JAM ........... ~ ..it!'"· 45c
SEEDLESS BLACKBERRY JAM ·~...·59c
SEEDLESS ..:.,·pl'tEsERVES ·~'"· 75c
GRAPE JELLY • : • • • . . • . . . • 2! ·69c

CLOROX
BLEA(H
l ·Gal.
Jug

53e

I

.

$

.139.95

FRESH PACK
POLISH DILL
PICKLES

1

!· 59~

"

Imagine, outfit your kit·
chen or dining area as you
wish with beautiful maple
in
authentic , Early
American design . All
pieces are crafted with
old -fashioned concern for
quality .. And now you can
buy It on sale during our
Sale of Sales.

COFFEE
l

IARIIRI.

..43tl&gt;

_Off Labll

Pk ·

by day, ben by night.

Maple Hutch

wusaw FALco•

BLUE BONNET
SOFT

lib

· Sofa

for Everyone! Big New Shipment.·

I I '

.

CRISCO

SIORTEIIII.

9 95

•

Furniture·On Sale Now!

Display of
.

II 'Size SOFA BEDS

"'

10-oz.
Jar

'112
. ·

L=========~==g:.====~· =·~!==~=====~
.

'

••

'$99:S ............~
r

'

0

~~~

charm of Early American
aood 1oo111 that malce Early American the raforlte
8illn. JOillliltable c:hanpt to 48 in. l~nath, !tith leaf&lt;
dlllll dh tiUIIIII tqa. and back poets.
.

_~­

........

......

•

urniture,-·
.742-4211'

ARNOLD GRATE .
.

.

Mason Furniture
•

'

773-5592

RUTLAND, 0.
r

•

HERMAN GRATE

MASON, W. VA.

�'
IO-TiwSihlaJ Ttmea-kntlnel,&amp;may. ApriiB,Im

·,Elks Set ·May 1-7
Ohio Youth Week
COLUMBUS - The Ohio of the Elks National ServiL-e
Elks
Association ·has Commission. The Commission
designated the week of May 1~7 provides. recreation and enas .Elks Youth Week In Ohio. tertainment throughout the
rll!onsored by the fraternal ·year for the nation's
order for 23 .years, this week is hospitalized veterans.
celebrated throUJhout the state
to highlight youth decency and ··
to recognize its achievements.
'.} •
Awards valued at ap·
proximately H1,000 will be Social Noles
presented to Ohio's top
stu~ and youth leaders at a
Sunday School attendance on
luncheon Saturday, April 29, in April 2 was 82 and the offering
the Nell House Motor Hotel.
$32.21 . An Easter egg hunt for
Ten
"Most
Valuable the children wa's held at 10:45;
Student" scholarships of S'IOO Worship services were held at
each and 10 secondary II with 43 In attendance. Rev.
scholarships of $600 ea~h are to Lehman spoke from Mark 15
be announced by Donald W. "Who Will Remove the Stone?"
· Peters of Dover who conducted
Good Friday services were
a statewide contest sponsored held here with an attendance of
by the Order.
27. Rev. Lehman 'spoke from
Approximately $8,000 in John 19, "Behold the Man."
youth leadership awards are to Communion services foUowed
be madt by M. A. Mihallck of the sermon.
Mansfield. Young people from
Easter Sunrise services were
11early every part of the state held at 6:30a. m. Sunday. The
have been Invited to attend the program was under the
luncheon as guests of the Elks. direction of Linda Wllllams.
Featured speaker will be . Breakfastwasservedat7:30in
Wlillam J. Jernick of Nutley, J. the church basement with an
J. Apast grand exalted ruler of attendance of 45.
the Elks, Jernlck is Chairman
Friday guests of Mr. and

Al' r.,·ed

..

en i : e e mnmuuuc

OPEN HOUSE
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Osborne, Lin.coln .
Terrace, Pomeroy, will have
open house today from 2-4 p.m.
at the Pomeroy Church o(
Christ in honor of their 50th
anniversary. The family Invites all relatives and friends.
Mrs. Vere S,wartz were Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Swartz and
family of Ravenna , Sarah
Woode of Coolville , Mrs.
Vernon Swartz and children of
Hockingport and Millard
Swartz, local. Mr. Swartz
remains quite ill at his horne
here.
Last Wednesday evening
supper guests of the Clarence
Henderson family were Rev.
and Mrs. Randy Lavender and
Shayn of Athens. They attendP.d prayer meeting at the
church at 7:45 that evening and
furnish special music. Nina
Robinson was le~der.
Friday evening guests of the
Honacher..Cappell family were
Mrs. Anna Thompson and
Harley Sidwell of near
Coolville . The occasion was
Mr. Honacher's birthday.
Easter guests of Clara
Follrod and Nina Robinson
were Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Swartz and family of Marietla,
who attended church here
Sunday morning, Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Follrod and Sue Ann of
Athens and Mr. and Mrs.
Carleton Follrod and Charles
of Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost
and famill' were Easter guests
· of Genevieve Guthrie and
atteQded all the. Easter services at the church.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Wirl·
land and family of Columbus
spent Easter weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Wilbur Wlndland and
family and attended church
here Sunday mornfng.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Swartz
and family of Marietta visited
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Hobart Swartz Easter Sunday
afternoon. ·
Mrs. Emma ·Findling is
visiting her granddaughter,
Mrs. Janice Ritchie and son,
Charles, at Pine Grove.
Mrs. Mary Carr returned to
her home here this past week
after spending some time with
Mr. and Mrs. Seldon O'Brien In
Columbus.

11 -:- The Sw1day Times · §&lt;'ntincl, s uiutay . AprilS, l!l'i~

Beat...

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R~frigerator-Freezer
• 14.2 cu. ft . capacity • Only 30" wide
• B/8 102·/b. capacity freezer • Adjustable cold control
• Deep-shelf storese door • Enclosed butter keeper
• Twin parcelaln·enamel vesetable crispers
• Convertible doo11·reverse easily with ordinary tools

• White, Avocado, Gold or Shaded Copper cabinets

'29·9 95
FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
MIDDL£PORT, OHIO

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FURNITURE IN RUTLAND, OHIO

· .AT MASON FURNITURE IN MASON, W. VA. cmd

Of the Bend~
By llob Hoeflich

:~-

POMEROY - Election day, May 2, is roUing around and due·
to the wave of publicity given on registration, the Impression is .
that Meigs County voters must register. In Meigs, however,
there is Jl(V.reglstratlon required.
If you won't be able to get to the polla on May 2 due to illness
or the · fact that you will be away you can vote absentee or
disabled baUots any day from I to 4 p.m. at the Meigs County
Board of Elections office !Ocat.ed in the Masonic Temple building,
Pomeroy. The deadline for this voting is 4 p.m., April 'll. The
bOard office is open dui'lng the ·aftemoon hours Monday through
Saturday.
•
Incidentally, the presidential baUots for Democrats in the
May primaries are almost a nightmare - so many names and
only so many to be voted for. One slip of the pencil by the voter
and the entire baUot on the various party delegates of the
p-esidential candidates is thrown out.
CHARLES GIBBS, SUPERINTENDENT of Pomeroy
Schools a number of years, will be the guest speaker for the
Racine High ~ool Alumni reunion on May 'll.
Mr. Gibbs is, of course, a graduate of Racine High and this is
the anniversary of his 50th year ~ince completing his schooling
there.
Mrs. Barbara McNickel Pierce, secretary-treasurer of the
Racine Alumni Association, reports that the association is badly
in need of some 20 volunteers to work on the doors and as
hostesses on reunion night. Anyone wishing to help out is asked to
contact Barbara at 94~2374.
SPEAKING OF OO.YEAR ANNIVERSARIES for graduates,
there should be quite a tutn out by the class of 1922 at Pomeroy
High School.
Many of the class settled In the Big Bend area, so there'll be
little Involved in the way of traveling to the reunion. Not listed on
a published photograph of the class, in their caps and gowns 50
years ago last week, was one of the most prominent members of
the class of '22, Dr. Raymond E. Boice. Actually, he's changed
very little through the years -except a pound here and there, of
course.
Earl Clark, noted for his historical coUections and a member
of the class, !l"Ovide&lt;,l,us the exceUent picture. And most unfortunately, a couple~of-daya.afler Mr. and Mrs. Clark brought
the picture in, Mrs. Clark suffered a coronary and is now a
patient at Veterans Memorial Hospital. ·

I

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SAT~RI)A~

U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED-WHOLE FRYING CHICKENS

or FAMILY PAK

CHICKEN
P IS

It has been estimated
. Ihere are · about 4.7 million

States,
with theIn average
·COl·
bee colonies
the United
ony yielding 41.9 pounds of
honey a year. ·
·

Free
Delivery
For All

Purchases!

FOR

I ncltides: 3 Bnllfst Quartan -

Buy A

3 Leg Quartan - 3 Wings 2 Pkgs. Giblets &amp; 2 Necks

Living Room Suite
NOTICE .. . Sofa sed Suites and Maple
Frame Suites are EXCLUDED from this

_offer.

AND FOR ONLY'

lb.

we rnerve the riQht tell mit ouentltlts on 111 Items In thll eel.
Prlui •ll•dlvtthru Sat., April IS, 1912. None Mid lode•l•n.

•1.00

TERRY E. WHALEY, BORN IN POMEROY, son of Mr. and
Mrs. F. 0. Whaley, has been named vice president in charge of
business development In the New England sub-region of U. S.
Financial-Northeast, Inc.
The sub-region Includes New York, Massachusetts, Con·
necticut, Rhode Island, Verm0nt, New Hampshire and Maine but
Whaley will be based in Colwnbus. He was formerly regional
finance mansger and assistant vice president of Ryan Homes,
Inc., and previously was branCh manager for Galbreath Mort·
gage Co. He Is the grandsontJf Mrs. Edith Whaley of Albany and
Mrs. Ava Gilkey of Harrisonville.

UNDOUBTEDLY, MANY HERE REMEMBER the Rev.
Father John Turel who was pastor of Sacred Heart ChurCh a ..
number of years. His Ghristmas holiday decorations at the
church each year were really outstanding; the chur¢\en·
tertalning many visltors 'who came to see just what Father Turel
would come up with eaCh year to make the holiday setting new
BY ADA KEELS
Mrs . Silva
Coleman , and different.
At any rate, the Rev. Father Turel is now totally In·
Morgantown, W. Va., visited
her mother, Mrs. Daisy Ross, capacitated at the Ohio VaUey ·Hospital in Wheeling, W. Va.,
where she met her daughters, after suffering a stroke. He's feelin' a little low and probably
Betty Jean Parron and Jo Ann would be quite pleased to hear fr.om his Meigs County friends.
Carter over Easter.
LYSTON PULLEN, FORMERLY of Middleport, is Africa
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Brislin,
bound.
Lyston who resides at Cocoa BeaCh, Fla., Is a civilian
daughters, from Akron, 0.,
visited her parents, Mr. and employe of the Chemical Department of the Air Force Eastern
Mrs. John Gamble from Thurs- Test Rallge at Cape Kennedy. This month he will be going on
day W!til Sunday and enjoyed a temporary assignment to the Ascension Wands off the coast of
wonderful Easter.
Africa.
Mrs. Murl Howard received
word Wednesday m'ornlng that
MRS. WALTER (JUNE) ROUSH IS in critical condition at
her aunt, Mrs. John Reider at University Hospital In Colwnbus where she has been confined
Berlin, Ohio, died suddenly several months. Glenn Roush of Philadelphia, Pa., has beert In
that morning of a heart attack. Columbus recently with his brother, Walter, due to June 's illness.
Mrs. Marvella Smith and Glenn spent Friday evening In Middleport with his mother, Mrs:
'daughter, Brenda Kay, were Earl Roush.
shopping in Huntington, W. Va.
Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. James Parran,
children, from St. Louis, Mo., Friday.
sister, Nora McDaniel from
visited her grandmother, Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Ross McDaniel Berlin, Ohio, visited Mrs.
Daisy Ross Thursday and from near Columbus and Daisy Ross Satl"'day.
Mr. and Mrs; Mikie Carter
and children from Wilberforce,
0 ., visited their grandmother,
Mrs. Daisy Ross Saturday.·::
,.,,,,, Mrs. Mary Howard, Mr. and·
\ Mrs . Frank Young and
children from Dayton, 0.,
··,at~~ th~ wake of Mrs. John
Reider at WeUston Thursday
evening.
Mr. Dewy Keels is reported
on the sick list with laryngitis.
Mr. and Mrs : Raymond
Jackson and family, Dayton,
0., visited Mrs. Mary Howard
and family Saturday evening.
Mrs . Silva . Coleman,
daughter, Mrs. JoAnn Parron,
and mother, Mrs. Oalsy Ross,
visited Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Diggs at Coalton Friday.
Mrs. Mary Howard, local,
daughter Mrs. Dorothy Gorden
and Mrs. Laura Scuggs from
Gallipolis attended the funeral
of Deacon Larry Robison at
Union Church at Blackfork, 0.,
Monday at two o'clock.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Howard
and brother. John, attended the
funeral of Mn. John Reider at
Wellston Friday.
Early American Uving Room Furniture ·
· Bobbie Deen Gorden,
GeUipolis, visited his cousins,
·• Singer • Clayton-Marcus • Bassett
Sherr! Howard and brother,
Christopher Monday afAll In stock for immediate delivery·. Also :
ternoon.
Many other styles.
Sherr! Howard was home
from school Thursday afternoon until Tuesday morning
on her Easter vacation, which
she enjoyed very II\IICh. ·

Sale Starts Tomorrow
AT BOTH STORES•

New Shipments Have
•
DONrT
Arr1ved THIS
Miss
BUY!

2521HIRD
AVENUE,
:GAWPOLIS,
.
.
.
.OHIO- ..
OPEN 9 AM TO 9 PM MONDAlTHRU

••

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(ALL ITEMS ON $ALE AT BOTH STORES)

.

MORE

GET THIS

BEDROOM

I.

SUITE

You Get This Beautiful 3-Piece
FLORIDA SEEDLESS

FULL ·SIZE

•t·
a
·
FOR
.
~u".l·' .. ~
'ONlY:''·'

F

NewHope

PHILCOIP 2-Door

/

Llbbtu;LY

MATTRESS.

.u.

BOTH PIECES .

GRAPEFRUIT

FOR THE SET

LIMITED

40 Size

each

Quilled Mattress

•

-312 Olils -

I
STATE FARE
SLICED

BREAD
1-lb. 4-oz. Loaves 1
NIBLETS
WHOLE KERNEL

CORN
12·oz. Vac Pak Can

Grate Special! 2 : Piece

VINYL SOFA BED

THOROFARE
.,

TEA BAGS

REGULAR 159~95 ' .,
,•
GRATE SALE AT

BROWN . BlACK • GREEN

I

Speci~l

100-Ct. Pkg.

SMUCKER'S FEATURES
GRAPE JAM ........... ~ ..it!'"· 45c
SEEDLESS BLACKBERRY JAM ·~...·59c
SEEDLESS ..:.,·pl'tEsERVES ·~'"· 75c
GRAPE JELLY • : • • • . . • . . . • 2! ·69c

CLOROX
BLEA(H
l ·Gal.
Jug

53e

I

.

$

.139.95

FRESH PACK
POLISH DILL
PICKLES

1

!· 59~

"

Imagine, outfit your kit·
chen or dining area as you
wish with beautiful maple
in
authentic , Early
American design . All
pieces are crafted with
old -fashioned concern for
quality .. And now you can
buy It on sale during our
Sale of Sales.

COFFEE
l

IARIIRI.

..43tl&gt;

_Off Labll

Pk ·

by day, ben by night.

Maple Hutch

wusaw FALco•

BLUE BONNET
SOFT

lib

· Sofa

for Everyone! Big New Shipment.·

I I '

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CRISCO

SIORTEIIII.

9 95

•

Furniture·On Sale Now!

Display of
.

II 'Size SOFA BEDS

"'

10-oz.
Jar

'112
. ·

L=========~==g:.====~· =·~!==~=====~
.

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'$99:S ............~
r

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0

~~~

charm of Early American
aood 1oo111 that malce Early American the raforlte
8illn. JOillliltable c:hanpt to 48 in. l~nath, !tith leaf&lt;
dlllll dh tiUIIIII tqa. and back poets.
.

_~­

........

......

•

urniture,-·
.742-4211'

ARNOLD GRATE .
.

.

Mason Furniture
•

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773-5592

RUTLAND, 0.
r

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HERMAN GRATE

MASON, W. VA.

�..

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12 - · Tilt' Stonday Timi'S ;St•nlint•l, SIJil~ay , Apri19, 1972 •

I

VA, and RUTLAND FURNITURE. IN . RUTLAND~ OHIO

AT MASON FURNITURE IN MASON,

.

I

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u_,-Tilt SUnday Tmtei. Sentinel;&amp;mday, Aprilt,tm

.

.

(ALL ITEMS ON SALE /tT apTH

Bedding
Bonanza!

Mattress·

AT ;

and,

BOTH STO'RES

_Box Spring

•

BOTH PIECES

ON AU STEEL ···

CABI.NETS .

•

'68

DELUXE
24" UTILITY

For The Set
QuiHed Mattress
312 Coils

SAVE on this DELUXE
UTILITY. Lood1 of ltoroge
room for poh &amp; pans. Door1
haYe lifetime magnetic
cotche1, Fini1hd in white
with aqua interior.

Special
Purchase!

inoleum·
RUGS

95

42" PLASTIC TOP CHINA

24" WX 15"
Dx 66" H
'

88

THIS SALE

Sliding glass doon, outlet, extended
plastic work area. Utility drawer, magnetic catches, Choice of colon.

88

SLIDING DOOR WARDROBE
$

ggs.

49

4.

1•l it:~:li:t•XIII
: ~ ~ .• :; ~ ~

'

30" CHINA UTILITY
Sliding glass doors. Open
work area, drawer, Magnetic
catches, White finish .

36" BIG VALUE
WARDROBE

Special Factory Shipment
by Keller

SAVE· 5 ~0.95
~eluxe f-PIEtE Dinette Set

.•

... Big Enough 'for Banquet Meals

s, ,

LOW, LOW

SAlE PRIC E

9

' No ,Mo"'y Dowo fo •

Pr eferred Cuslomen

Regular $129.95. I f you have a large' family or it you lik! a little more elbow room at
table, then t his is the se t for you! Spacious 36x60~ 72" u 1ensio n table with se lf·edvet:l

min atcd plastic top . . . resists heat1 stains, scratches and wip'es clean with a damp
8 !&lt;til-back t:hai n upholstered in l'leaw , two-tone vinyl. Handsome bronzetone
frames. Co nvenient se lf levelers.
'

ALL
AT
SALE
OF
SALE

LOW
PRICES!

'

il·,~~'

(~\_I

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7-Piece Set

•••

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$'VI~··."' !

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Set

Katie's Korner
By Katie Crow
~ ·i ,;;..

~ ··

TilE RUMOR THAT the Meigs County Commissioners are

Special Selection t I

5-Piece

MIDDLEPORT - Mrs. Kathryn Dent.on of Middleport
and Edward G. Moore, Sr. of Gallipolis, announce the
engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter;
Kathy Jeanette Moore, to Mr. Rex Fletcher Cumings, son of
Mr. and Mrs. David Cumings, Pomeroy. Miss Moore is a1971
graduate Qf Meigs High School and attended the Mount
.Vernon Nazarene College..
Mr. Cwningsis a 1966 graduate of Pomeroy High School
and served fa~~r years in the United States Air Force. He is
presently employed by the Ohio Power Co. The wedding will
be an event of June 10 at 3:30p.m. at the Pomeroy Church of
the Nazarene~ The gracious custom of open church will b,e
observed.

Hop~e.' 1

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We
Deliver!
I

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs. Harry M. Slaven, 883
Maple St., Middleport, are announcing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their daughter, Frances Dee, to
Mr. Douglas Gene Reineke, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Reineke, 122 Sheffield St., Bellevue.
Miss Slaven is a 1966 graduate of Middleport High School,
attended Ohio University, and is presently a senior majoring
in special education at Ohio State University.
Mr. Reineke is a 1966 graduate of Bellevue High Scbool
and a 1970 graduate of Ohio State, where he received a
!lachelor of science degree in accounting . He is presently
employed at Lybrand, Ross Bros. and Montgomery, a public
accounting firm in Columbus.
The wedding will be an event of June 3 at 6 p.m. at the
Glenwood United Methodist Church in Columbus.

Kathy Moore Plans June Wedding

• POMEROY - The following was handed to me recently.
Perhaps everyone may get a kick out of it.
"Sing While You Drive : At 45 miles per hour, sing - "High1\aysAreHappy Ways." At 55 miles, sing - "I'm But AStranger
Here, Heaven is My Home." At 65 miles, sing - "Nearer, My
God To Thee." At 75 miles, sing - "When the Roll is Called Up
Yonder, 11l,be There." At 85 miles, sing - "Lord I'm Coming

95

Sheryl Ann johnson to Wed

Frances Slaven to Wed in june .

•

42"W X 22\"z"D X 66"H
Full-width hat shelf, silent sliding nylon
glides. Extra room below.
Sandalwood lin'ish.

EVERY CABINET
SALE PRICED!

"

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r

Miss joy Ann Comer

Wedding Date Announced
HURRICANE, W. Va. -Mr. and Mrs. Holt Comer of 220
Pinewood Drive, are announcing the engagement of their
da~ghter, Joy Ann to Mr. James Alan Hart, son of Mr. and
Mrs. James L. Hart of New Haven, W. Va. The wedding will
be an event of August 26, 197% at The First Baptist Church in
Hurricane.
Miss Comer is a 1968 'graduate of Hurricane High School .
and attended Marsball University. 9\e is a member of The
Pearls Women's affiliate to Zeta Beta Tau Fraternity,
member of the Delta Pi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi, and is
JresenUy employed by tlie C &amp; P Telephone Company in
Charleston.
Mr. Hart, a 1968 graduate of Wahama High School, is a
senior at Marshall University to graduate next month. He is a
member of the Z'!l:a Beta Tau Social Fraternity.

County Council
Elects Officers
At Reedsville.

lntereated In purchasing property in the Flatwoods· area
belonging to Richard dlambers for a sanitary landfill is untrue . .
The commissioners have a federal grant to establish a sanitary
landfull but just can't seem to iind a site that meets state apREEDSVILLE
Mrs.
Jroval.
Richard Vaughan of Mid·
dleport was
re-elected
WILI.DUGHBY HILL, MEIGS County Juvenile Probation
president of the Meigs County
Officer, was honored on his birthday Friday with a cake and all Council of Parents and
the trlmmlngs by employes of the court house. Happy Bitthday, Teachers at a meeting here
Mr. Hill.
Thursday night at the River·
view School.
SINCE APRIL IS designated by the American Cancer
Other officers elected for a
Society as the 8IU1ual fund drive month for the Cancer Society, two year term were Mrs.
the American Cancer Society has issued some basic data.
Charles Goeglein of the
Cancer ill a disease that is characterized by abnormal Chester unit, vice president;
growth and apread of cells. If this malignant process is not Mrs. Howard Ervin of the
controlled or checked, the patient will die. However, many Racine unit, secretary; and
cancers cari'be cured If detected early in their development and Mrs. William Willford, Salem
treated by ugery or radiation. Certain tested and approved Center, treasurer. Mrs.
ClarenceNorton was chairman
chemlcail are effective In treating cancer.
Cancer can be treated by surgery, X-rays, radioactive of the nominating committee.
Announced at the meeting
substances, and various drugs, chemicals and hormones.
The Cancer Society advises that everyone should have a was the spring district con·
check-11p ante a year. Early detection of cancer is an important ference to be held on April 29 at
Jackson. John Underwood is
factor.
general chairman for the
· The glamorous star, Joan Crawford is the American Cancer .
conference.
Society's National Crusade Chairman for 1972, heading a
Communications from the
dedicated anny of two million volunteers.
Ohio PTA· regarding venereal
Help the Cancer Society with a check-up and a check.

· POMEROY - A 'rwrunage
sale was planned when the
Sew-Rite.Sewlng Club met
recenUy at the home Qf Mrs.'
Wlllard Boyer with Mrs.
Charles Hoffman as co-h011tess.
The shower of gifta were
received by Mrs. James
Neutzllng -who conducted a
game won by Mrs. Ronald
Browning. Mrs. Don Mullen
distributed the mother's
calendars as a fund-raising
project. The treasurer's report
was given by Mrs. Robert
Potter during the meeting
conducted by Mrs. . George
Hoffman. Mrs. Flo Strickland

•

disease were read. A letter was
also read acknowledging
receipt of the schOlarship
money. Arrangements were
made to have the books audited
before the next meeting.
Mrs . Harlis Frank gave
devotions. Reports were given
by Mrs. Ervin , acting
secretary, and Mrs. Norton,
treasurer. Thanks were extended to Mrs . Goeglein,
hospitality chairman.
Blue ribbon winners In the
cultural arts program from
local units were judged with
county winners being selected .
All of the materials 'were on
display for viewing by the
members.
.
Represented at the meeting
were Bradbury, Chester,
Middleport, Pomeroy, Racine,
Riverview, ·Salem Center,
Syracuse. Refreshments were
served by the host unit.

and Mrs. Don Collins will be
hostesses for the next meeting.
A dessert course was served
by the hostesses to those
named and Mrs. Bill McDaniel,
Mrs. Ray Batey, Mrs. Don
McKnight, Mrs . Larry
Wehrung, Mrs. Elmef White,
Mrs. Edward Wells, and Mrs.
Elza Gllniore.

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the shoe with a heart
by .,}1\;,,n."'-.c.An..

Mrs. ·Walker is
Club President
CHESTER - Mrs. I. B.
Walker was elected president
of the Chester Garden Club at a
meeting held Wednesday night
at the home of Mrs. Clarence
Neutzling. ·
Other officers elected were
Mrs . Reid Young , vice
president; Mrs. Dale Kautz,
second vice president; Mrs.
Richard Barton, secretary ;
Mrs. Rose Ginther, assistant
secretary; Mrs. Roy Miller,
treasurer; and Mrs. J. ·M.
Gaul, assistant treasurer.
A report was given by Mrs.
Robert Wo.od, co-hostess, on
the Tuesday tour of Fenton
Glass at Williamstown, W. Va.
Mrs. Homer Holter reported on
a planter flower arrangement
taken to Mrs. Barbara Baer
and it was noted that a flower
was sent to Mrs. Morris after
being used on the altar at the
Chester Methodist Church.
Mrs. Purley Karr will make
the arrangement from the Club
for the Pomeroy National Bank
marking the 100th anniversary
observance of both the bank
and Arbor Day.
A demonstration on spring
flowers was given by Mrs.
Donald Mora. She used a
brown vase, pear branches and
old fashioned daffodils for one
arrangement ; w~athered
wood, pear branches and King
Alfred daffodils for another ;
and flowering airnond, pussy
willow, daffodils a~d leather
leaf fern for a third piece.
"Spring Flight" was another
arra~~gement made by Mrs.
Mora . It featured maple
branches, and daffodils in an
antique
container .
A
traditi'Jial arrangement was In
a wht!M:ontainer using maple
branches , daffodlls and
hyacinths.
Mrs ..Rose Ginther conducted
the .contest with Mrs. Mora

winning first, and Mrs. Karr,
second. Flower arrangements
exhibited at the meeting were
judged by Mrs. Wyatt Chad·
well and )11rs. Horace Karr.
Mrs. Ada Holter won a blue
;·ibbon
for
her
lily
arrangement, Mrs. Young won
a blue for her amarylis
arrangement , and Mrs .
Clarence Neutzling a blue for a
da ffodil specimen.
The spring motif was carried
out in the refreshments served
by Mrs. Neutzling and Mrs.
Wood . Mrs. Roger Gaul won
the door prize.

"'}

ALUMNI TO MEET
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
High School Alumni Assn. wlll
meetWednesday at 7:30p.m.
at the Pomeroy Trinity
Church. Alwnni are asked to
contact Mrs. Don Mayer,
president, 25 Cave St.,
Pomeroy, if they know of any
clailsmate or relative who
passed away since, June 1971. ,

.

7

"''fu •,).

It ..

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WIDTH: B·C.O.f.EEE

.

I

ONLY $14.99

heritage house
Formerly Kips Shoe Store
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

•

SPRING '72
· · · AND AFTER

WOOL BLENDS AND
POLYESTER
KNIT
SUITS

s50oo to $11500
SIZE 35 TO SO

Handsome fanc y fron t
and ba ck suits. Wr in·
kl'~·free ease of move·

ment.

EXC£11 EfU SELECflON

SPORT COATS
Wools and P_., Knits
Sjze 35
:to
50

$3500 $7500
to

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BY

DRESS
SHIRTS

'VISIT WHITES
I.DNG BOTI'OM - Easter
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
.Robert White, RD, were Mr.
imd Mrs. Bill Carr, Vicki and
Penni, from Alfred ; Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Ohlinger and family,
Pomeroy, and Thomas, •
Richard, Tony, Rodney and
Kenneth White.

MOTHER VISITED
MIDDLEPORT - Dr. and
Mrs. Jolm lial'ley, Springfield,
'
spent the weekend here vial ling
' MONEY
TO ELYRIA
his mother, Mrs. J. E. Harley.
COi.UMBUS (UPI)- Lorain
ACCOOlplllled by Mlas Harrle County has been awarded a
Marl' Smlth, they went to . ~.ooo grant under the Om· .
Athens for a dinner with Mrs. nibwt Crime Control Act for the
Margaret Davia. Dr. and Mrs. renovation of the county jaU at
Harley returned to Springfield Elyria, ofllcials announced
and ·Mrs. Davis,· wlll ac· Friday. The grant was to be
compeity Mrs. Harley and Mi8ll matched by $16,1187 in local
funds . .
smtth to Middle~!.

.

SALEM CENTER - Mr. and Mrs. Chester Johnson of
Salem Center are announcing the engagement of their
daughter, Sheryl Ann, to Airman Harold Daniel Lambert,
son of Robert Ivan Lambert, Sr., and Mrs. Anna Melinda
. Lambert of Wilkesville. Miss Johnson Is a senior at Meigs
JHigh School. Mr. Lambert is stationed at the Grissom Air
Force Base in Indiana . AMay wedding is being planned.

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12 - · Tilt' Stonday Timi'S ;St•nlint•l, SIJil~ay , Apri19, 1972 •

I

VA, and RUTLAND FURNITURE. IN . RUTLAND~ OHIO

AT MASON FURNITURE IN MASON,

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(ALL ITEMS ON SALE /tT apTH

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Mattress·

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_Box Spring

•

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ON AU STEEL ···

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•

'68

DELUXE
24" UTILITY

For The Set
QuiHed Mattress
312 Coils

SAVE on this DELUXE
UTILITY. Lood1 of ltoroge
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Special
Purchase!

inoleum·
RUGS

95

42" PLASTIC TOP CHINA

24" WX 15"
Dx 66" H
'

88

THIS SALE

Sliding glass doon, outlet, extended
plastic work area. Utility drawer, magnetic catches, Choice of colon.

88

SLIDING DOOR WARDROBE
$

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49

4.

1•l it:~:li:t•XIII
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work area, drawer, Magnetic
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36" BIG VALUE
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by Keller

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~eluxe f-PIEtE Dinette Set

.•

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Pr eferred Cuslomen

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8 !&lt;til-back t:hai n upholstered in l'leaw , two-tone vinyl. Handsome bronzetone
frames. Co nvenient se lf levelers.
'

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OF
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7-Piece Set

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Katie's Korner
By Katie Crow
~ ·i ,;;..

~ ··

TilE RUMOR THAT the Meigs County Commissioners are

Special Selection t I

5-Piece

MIDDLEPORT - Mrs. Kathryn Dent.on of Middleport
and Edward G. Moore, Sr. of Gallipolis, announce the
engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter;
Kathy Jeanette Moore, to Mr. Rex Fletcher Cumings, son of
Mr. and Mrs. David Cumings, Pomeroy. Miss Moore is a1971
graduate Qf Meigs High School and attended the Mount
.Vernon Nazarene College..
Mr. Cwningsis a 1966 graduate of Pomeroy High School
and served fa~~r years in the United States Air Force. He is
presently employed by the Ohio Power Co. The wedding will
be an event of June 10 at 3:30p.m. at the Pomeroy Church of
the Nazarene~ The gracious custom of open church will b,e
observed.

Hop~e.' 1

\.,

•

I ~}:,
.J-

,,

r

1

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lo

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•

We
Deliver!
I

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs. Harry M. Slaven, 883
Maple St., Middleport, are announcing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their daughter, Frances Dee, to
Mr. Douglas Gene Reineke, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Reineke, 122 Sheffield St., Bellevue.
Miss Slaven is a 1966 graduate of Middleport High School,
attended Ohio University, and is presently a senior majoring
in special education at Ohio State University.
Mr. Reineke is a 1966 graduate of Bellevue High Scbool
and a 1970 graduate of Ohio State, where he received a
!lachelor of science degree in accounting . He is presently
employed at Lybrand, Ross Bros. and Montgomery, a public
accounting firm in Columbus.
The wedding will be an event of June 3 at 6 p.m. at the
Glenwood United Methodist Church in Columbus.

Kathy Moore Plans June Wedding

• POMEROY - The following was handed to me recently.
Perhaps everyone may get a kick out of it.
"Sing While You Drive : At 45 miles per hour, sing - "High1\aysAreHappy Ways." At 55 miles, sing - "I'm But AStranger
Here, Heaven is My Home." At 65 miles, sing - "Nearer, My
God To Thee." At 75 miles, sing - "When the Roll is Called Up
Yonder, 11l,be There." At 85 miles, sing - "Lord I'm Coming

95

Sheryl Ann johnson to Wed

Frances Slaven to Wed in june .

•

42"W X 22\"z"D X 66"H
Full-width hat shelf, silent sliding nylon
glides. Extra room below.
Sandalwood lin'ish.

EVERY CABINET
SALE PRICED!

"

.

r

Miss joy Ann Comer

Wedding Date Announced
HURRICANE, W. Va. -Mr. and Mrs. Holt Comer of 220
Pinewood Drive, are announcing the engagement of their
da~ghter, Joy Ann to Mr. James Alan Hart, son of Mr. and
Mrs. James L. Hart of New Haven, W. Va. The wedding will
be an event of August 26, 197% at The First Baptist Church in
Hurricane.
Miss Comer is a 1968 'graduate of Hurricane High School .
and attended Marsball University. 9\e is a member of The
Pearls Women's affiliate to Zeta Beta Tau Fraternity,
member of the Delta Pi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi, and is
JresenUy employed by tlie C &amp; P Telephone Company in
Charleston.
Mr. Hart, a 1968 graduate of Wahama High School, is a
senior at Marshall University to graduate next month. He is a
member of the Z'!l:a Beta Tau Social Fraternity.

County Council
Elects Officers
At Reedsville.

lntereated In purchasing property in the Flatwoods· area
belonging to Richard dlambers for a sanitary landfill is untrue . .
The commissioners have a federal grant to establish a sanitary
landfull but just can't seem to iind a site that meets state apREEDSVILLE
Mrs.
Jroval.
Richard Vaughan of Mid·
dleport was
re-elected
WILI.DUGHBY HILL, MEIGS County Juvenile Probation
president of the Meigs County
Officer, was honored on his birthday Friday with a cake and all Council of Parents and
the trlmmlngs by employes of the court house. Happy Bitthday, Teachers at a meeting here
Mr. Hill.
Thursday night at the River·
view School.
SINCE APRIL IS designated by the American Cancer
Other officers elected for a
Society as the 8IU1ual fund drive month for the Cancer Society, two year term were Mrs.
the American Cancer Society has issued some basic data.
Charles Goeglein of the
Cancer ill a disease that is characterized by abnormal Chester unit, vice president;
growth and apread of cells. If this malignant process is not Mrs. Howard Ervin of the
controlled or checked, the patient will die. However, many Racine unit, secretary; and
cancers cari'be cured If detected early in their development and Mrs. William Willford, Salem
treated by ugery or radiation. Certain tested and approved Center, treasurer. Mrs.
ClarenceNorton was chairman
chemlcail are effective In treating cancer.
Cancer can be treated by surgery, X-rays, radioactive of the nominating committee.
Announced at the meeting
substances, and various drugs, chemicals and hormones.
The Cancer Society advises that everyone should have a was the spring district con·
check-11p ante a year. Early detection of cancer is an important ference to be held on April 29 at
Jackson. John Underwood is
factor.
general chairman for the
· The glamorous star, Joan Crawford is the American Cancer .
conference.
Society's National Crusade Chairman for 1972, heading a
Communications from the
dedicated anny of two million volunteers.
Ohio PTA· regarding venereal
Help the Cancer Society with a check-up and a check.

· POMEROY - A 'rwrunage
sale was planned when the
Sew-Rite.Sewlng Club met
recenUy at the home Qf Mrs.'
Wlllard Boyer with Mrs.
Charles Hoffman as co-h011tess.
The shower of gifta were
received by Mrs. James
Neutzllng -who conducted a
game won by Mrs. Ronald
Browning. Mrs. Don Mullen
distributed the mother's
calendars as a fund-raising
project. The treasurer's report
was given by Mrs. Robert
Potter during the meeting
conducted by Mrs. . George
Hoffman. Mrs. Flo Strickland

•

disease were read. A letter was
also read acknowledging
receipt of the schOlarship
money. Arrangements were
made to have the books audited
before the next meeting.
Mrs . Harlis Frank gave
devotions. Reports were given
by Mrs. Ervin , acting
secretary, and Mrs. Norton,
treasurer. Thanks were extended to Mrs . Goeglein,
hospitality chairman.
Blue ribbon winners In the
cultural arts program from
local units were judged with
county winners being selected .
All of the materials 'were on
display for viewing by the
members.
.
Represented at the meeting
were Bradbury, Chester,
Middleport, Pomeroy, Racine,
Riverview, ·Salem Center,
Syracuse. Refreshments were
served by the host unit.

and Mrs. Don Collins will be
hostesses for the next meeting.
A dessert course was served
by the hostesses to those
named and Mrs. Bill McDaniel,
Mrs. Ray Batey, Mrs. Don
McKnight, Mrs . Larry
Wehrung, Mrs. Elmef White,
Mrs. Edward Wells, and Mrs.
Elza Gllniore.

-·

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the shoe with a heart
by .,}1\;,,n."'-.c.An..

Mrs. ·Walker is
Club President
CHESTER - Mrs. I. B.
Walker was elected president
of the Chester Garden Club at a
meeting held Wednesday night
at the home of Mrs. Clarence
Neutzling. ·
Other officers elected were
Mrs . Reid Young , vice
president; Mrs. Dale Kautz,
second vice president; Mrs.
Richard Barton, secretary ;
Mrs. Rose Ginther, assistant
secretary; Mrs. Roy Miller,
treasurer; and Mrs. J. ·M.
Gaul, assistant treasurer.
A report was given by Mrs.
Robert Wo.od, co-hostess, on
the Tuesday tour of Fenton
Glass at Williamstown, W. Va.
Mrs. Homer Holter reported on
a planter flower arrangement
taken to Mrs. Barbara Baer
and it was noted that a flower
was sent to Mrs. Morris after
being used on the altar at the
Chester Methodist Church.
Mrs. Purley Karr will make
the arrangement from the Club
for the Pomeroy National Bank
marking the 100th anniversary
observance of both the bank
and Arbor Day.
A demonstration on spring
flowers was given by Mrs.
Donald Mora. She used a
brown vase, pear branches and
old fashioned daffodils for one
arrangement ; w~athered
wood, pear branches and King
Alfred daffodils for another ;
and flowering airnond, pussy
willow, daffodils a~d leather
leaf fern for a third piece.
"Spring Flight" was another
arra~~gement made by Mrs.
Mora . It featured maple
branches, and daffodils in an
antique
container .
A
traditi'Jial arrangement was In
a wht!M:ontainer using maple
branches , daffodlls and
hyacinths.
Mrs ..Rose Ginther conducted
the .contest with Mrs. Mora

winning first, and Mrs. Karr,
second. Flower arrangements
exhibited at the meeting were
judged by Mrs. Wyatt Chad·
well and )11rs. Horace Karr.
Mrs. Ada Holter won a blue
;·ibbon
for
her
lily
arrangement, Mrs. Young won
a blue for her amarylis
arrangement , and Mrs .
Clarence Neutzling a blue for a
da ffodil specimen.
The spring motif was carried
out in the refreshments served
by Mrs. Neutzling and Mrs.
Wood . Mrs. Roger Gaul won
the door prize.

"'}

ALUMNI TO MEET
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
High School Alumni Assn. wlll
meetWednesday at 7:30p.m.
at the Pomeroy Trinity
Church. Alwnni are asked to
contact Mrs. Don Mayer,
president, 25 Cave St.,
Pomeroy, if they know of any
clailsmate or relative who
passed away since, June 1971. ,

.

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MIDDLEPORT, 0.

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BY

DRESS
SHIRTS

'VISIT WHITES
I.DNG BOTI'OM - Easter
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
.Robert White, RD, were Mr.
imd Mrs. Bill Carr, Vicki and
Penni, from Alfred ; Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Ohlinger and family,
Pomeroy, and Thomas, •
Richard, Tony, Rodney and
Kenneth White.

MOTHER VISITED
MIDDLEPORT - Dr. and
Mrs. Jolm lial'ley, Springfield,
'
spent the weekend here vial ling
' MONEY
TO ELYRIA
his mother, Mrs. J. E. Harley.
COi.UMBUS (UPI)- Lorain
ACCOOlplllled by Mlas Harrle County has been awarded a
Marl' Smlth, they went to . ~.ooo grant under the Om· .
Athens for a dinner with Mrs. nibwt Crime Control Act for the
Margaret Davia. Dr. and Mrs. renovation of the county jaU at
Harley returned to Springfield Elyria, ofllcials announced
and ·Mrs. Davis,· wlll ac· Friday. The grant was to be
compeity Mrs. Harley and Mi8ll matched by $16,1187 in local
funds . .
smtth to Middle~!.

.

SALEM CENTER - Mr. and Mrs. Chester Johnson of
Salem Center are announcing the engagement of their
daughter, Sheryl Ann, to Airman Harold Daniel Lambert,
son of Robert Ivan Lambert, Sr., and Mrs. Anna Melinda
. Lambert of Wilkesville. Miss Johnson Is a senior at Meigs
JHigh School. Mr. Lambert is stationed at the Grissom Air
Force Base in Indiana . AMay wedding is being planned.

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to complete
your ensem·

ARROW
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15 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, April 9, ,;,72

14 - The Sunday 1'tJra -SrM!nel, Sunday, Aprile, 11'/2

Sandra Kay Bing
fs
March
Bride
.
.

'

. POMEROY - MISs Sandra pictures painted by the of Pomeroy High School and
worked in Fri~hes at Spring· Kay Bing, daughter of Mr. and bridegroom's·f«ther .
Given in marriage by her field and Bob Evans in
Mrs. Vernon Bing, Route 4,
groom
Pomeroy, became the bride of father, the bride , wore a p(nk Gallipolis . The
graduated
from
Pomeroy
. in
two-piece
street
length
dress
Mr. Paul (Bill) McElroy, son of
carrying
a
white
Bible
with
a
1968.
He
served
with
the
U.
s.
Mr. and Mrs .. Paul McElroy,
Harrisonville Rd., on March 18, bouquet of pink and white Army in Vietnam and is now
working at Plaskolite Plant in
·6:30p.m. ai the Zion Church of carnations.
Columbus.
The couple reside at
Miss
Sharon
Bjng,
sister
of
Christ.
The Rev. Eugene Underwood the bride, was the . maid of 318 Cyprus St., Columbus.
Guests at the wedding were
petformed 'the double ring honor. She was in a street
Mr.
and Mrs. Max Whi~. Mr.
length
lilac
dress
and
carried
a
ceremony. Music.was provided
by Mrs. Ann Lambert. The bouquet of lilac and white
church was decorated with carnations.
Mr. Carl McElroy, ColumEASTER VISITORS
vases of pink and white car~
bus,
was
best
man
for
his
LONG
BOTIOM - Easter
nations with a background of
brother, and ushers were Mr. weekend guests of Mr. and
Gene Arms and Mr. John Mrs. Lewis Johnston, RD, were
family, Logan W. Va.; Mrs .. Murphy. Mrs. McElroy ~ Mr. and Mrs. Bert Scrimsher,
Louisville, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs.
Sylvia George, Holden, W. Va.; registered guests.
.
'Presiding
at
the
reception
Tracy
Scrimsher, and Miss
Mrs . Don Maynard and
table
at
the
church
were
Mrs.
Alta
Scrimsher,
all from
daughter, Chapmanville, W.
Va.; Mrs. Paul ·Hersey and Maldne Jordan, Mrs. Pauline ·Columbus, J!!!l"Randy Friend,
daughter, Nelsonville; Mrs. Hoffman and barleen Bing. Bashan. I
Charles Werry, grandmother The table was decorated with a
of the groom, Mrs. John Bryant three tiered wedding cake with
SING SCHEDULED
pink
rose
trim
and
was
topped
and family, Vinton; Mr. and
LETART FALLS- A hymn
Mrs. Harold Werry, Gallipolis; with the traditional miniature sing. will be held at 1:30 p.m.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Werry bride and groom. Pink candles Sunday at the Letart Falls
and family, Mason; Mr. and were ·featured at either end of United Brethren Church. The
Mrs.
William Swatzel, the table which was covered Rev. Robert Shook, pastor,
'Gallipolis, and Mrs. Debbie with white lace.
extends an invitation to the
The
bride
is
a
1969
graduate
Murray, Columbus.
public.

-

•nd Mrs. Nola Felix, Mrs.
Amber Warner, Mark Warner,
Mrs. John Murphy and Elaine,
Carmel, Peggy, Bar)lara
Donna Hall, Debbie Bailey,
Patricia Thoma, Mrs. Charles ·
King, Chester King, Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Underwood, Mrs.
Charles Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
"Charles Taylor, Stacy Taylor,
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Davidson,
Donna, Adell, Willna, Phyllis, ·
and Anna, .Jim Reed, Mr. and
Mrs. Doyle Knapp and sons,
Rober! Shaffer, Mrs. Mabel
Wood, Mr. and Mrs. John Wood
and son, John .
Heidi, Peggy and Elaine
·'
Milhoan, Guy Bing, Mrs.
.'
'
Albert Baer, Mrs. Alice Davis,
Mrs. Clarence Jordan, Cindy
·:•
Jordan, Mrs. Shirley Gibbs,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Grover,
Jennifer and Joy, Mr. and Mrs.
Vernon Bing, Jr., Tony, Mr.
'
and Mrs. Fred Hoffman, Mrs.
1;;&amp;.
tiu' ·'
Pearl Hoffman, )\Irs. Mary
Arms, Mrs. J. C. Wyatt, Mrs.
Larry Pickens and Terry, Greg
Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy
Grover, Ronnie Arms, Mrs.
Maryln Wilcox, Beverly and
Bryan, Mrs. Clair Giles, Mrs. Lindley, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Bing, and
Thomas Evans, Mrs. Margaret Guilda, Mrs. Helen ·Johns.on, ' Jeffrey .Bing.

Adntlral

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Mr. and Mrs. ]e./Jrey S Werry
ije.turu A.utomatlc FntQUIHIC~ Contmt and ColOr
Mon itor (AFC/CMi, 80IId atftle Su per Scope tun er• and tnst•nt.Pi ty,

Wed in February
MIDDLEPORT - In a
candlelight ceremony at the
Middleport Church of Christ,
Miss Ruby Jean Nicinsky,
daughter of Mr. ,.and Mrs.
George Nicinsky, M1~Ieport,
and Mr. Jeffrey Stephen
Werry, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Werry, Hemlock Grove,
exchanged wedding vows.
The wedding was an event of
Feb. 18 at 7 p.m. with Mr. John
Bryant anq Mr. Raullin Moyer
officiating. Mrs. Chester Erwin
presented a program of nuptial
music including "A Time for
Us," "Summer or '42,"
"Hawaiian Wedding Song, "

of the groom, Mr. Bob Werry,
Pomeroy, a cousin, and Mr.
Stuckey Brooks, Nelsonville.
Ringbearer
was
Gene
Harrison, a cousin of the bride.
He carried the rings on a white
satin pillow accented with
white streamers tied in lovers
knots and decorated with white
and purple flowers. Men of the
wedding party were in Prince
Charles tuxedos.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Nicinsky was in a cream
colored dress fashioned in Aline styling with which she
wore a full length navy blue
vest, blue shoes and ac" Love Is Blue, 11 and the cessories. Her flowers were
"Lord's Prayer."
blue carnations with navy tint.
Two large candelabra and a
Mrs. Werry was in a beige
vase of purple mums were three piece knit ensemble . She
f.eatured in l'ie ~hurch wore br~~n ·~aCcessories and "
lecorations, alon~ ~ith 1~Yt'hite flowers ot wHite,. carnations
l'apers surrounded by green tinted· orange. Grandmothers
fern and purple bows.
of the couple wore corsages of
Given in marriage by her white carnations.
father, the bride was attired in
A reception honoring the
a floor length satin gown couple was held in the church
featuring an empire waist, an parlor immediately following
A-line skirt, a high standup the ceremony. A four tiered
neckline, and Bishop sleeves cake decorated with lavender
adorned with bands of Venice flowers and topped with a
lace. The chapel length veil of silver cross bearing wedding
illusion was edged with mat- ring replicas were flanked by
Illusion was edged with candelabra. Miss Pam Burson
matching lace and fell registered the guests and Miss
from a lace camelot Brenda Staats distributed the
headpiece . The bride 's wedding programs. Serving at
bouquet featured a purple the reception were Miss Jill
cattleya surrounded . by Harris, Mason, W. Va., Miss
numerous pompons and green DeLene DeLegal, Middleport,
leaves. Her jewelry consisted and Rosemary Rice, Rutland.
of a diamond ring of her
For a wedding trip to Hun- ..
mother worn on the right hand, tington and Charleston, the
and white pearl earrings, a gift bride changed into a blue knit
of the groom.
dress with which she wore a
Miss Glenna Luellen of white gold chain belt and
Nelsonville served as the maid matching shoes.
,
of honor. She wore a floor
The couple resides at
length dress of A-line styling in Hemlock Grove. The new Mrs.
sculptured floral nylon in Werry finished high school in
purple, lavender and green January and is currently
with a green ribbon accent at employed at Nelson's Drug
the empire waist. She wore a Store. Mr. Werry is attending
green satin pillbox hat and Ohio University. He is afmatching shoes. Her bouquet filiated with Tau Kappa Epwas of green cymbidium and silon Fraternity at Marietta
pompons
with
green College where he attended a
streamers.
year and a half.
Mrs. Teresa Davis, sister of
Out of town guests at the
·the bride, Middleport, and Miss wedding were .,.l'tlrs. Ben
Marla Neutzling and Miss Harrison, Lo8j11( w·. Va., and
Darla Neutzling, Pomeroy, Mrs. John ~insky, grandwere the other attendants . mothers of the bride, Mrs.
They wore dresses of identical Wanda Canterberry, Dayton;
styling with purple ribbon Mrs. Elizabeth Harrison and
accent and purple satin hats
and shoes. They carried purple
cymbidiwns and white pompons.
Flower girl was Miss Till!!
•BASKETS
Lafferty, cousin of the bride,
eSPRAYS
who was dressed identical to
the maid of honor. She carried
•VASES
a small white basket of purple
•BlANKETS
flower petals. All of the attendants wore a cross entwined
with a wedding ring set, gifts of
Serving: Middleport,
the bride .
Pomeroy,
Gallipolis, 0.
· James Swatzel of Colwribus
&amp; Mason Co., W. Va .
was best man and the ushers
were Mr. Mark Werry, brother

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15 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, April 9, ,;,72

14 - The Sunday 1'tJra -SrM!nel, Sunday, Aprile, 11'/2

Sandra Kay Bing
fs
March
Bride
.
.

'

. POMEROY - MISs Sandra pictures painted by the of Pomeroy High School and
worked in Fri~hes at Spring· Kay Bing, daughter of Mr. and bridegroom's·f«ther .
Given in marriage by her field and Bob Evans in
Mrs. Vernon Bing, Route 4,
groom
Pomeroy, became the bride of father, the bride , wore a p(nk Gallipolis . The
graduated
from
Pomeroy
. in
two-piece
street
length
dress
Mr. Paul (Bill) McElroy, son of
carrying
a
white
Bible
with
a
1968.
He
served
with
the
U.
s.
Mr. and Mrs .. Paul McElroy,
Harrisonville Rd., on March 18, bouquet of pink and white Army in Vietnam and is now
working at Plaskolite Plant in
·6:30p.m. ai the Zion Church of carnations.
Columbus.
The couple reside at
Miss
Sharon
Bjng,
sister
of
Christ.
The Rev. Eugene Underwood the bride, was the . maid of 318 Cyprus St., Columbus.
Guests at the wedding were
petformed 'the double ring honor. She was in a street
Mr.
and Mrs. Max Whi~. Mr.
length
lilac
dress
and
carried
a
ceremony. Music.was provided
by Mrs. Ann Lambert. The bouquet of lilac and white
church was decorated with carnations.
Mr. Carl McElroy, ColumEASTER VISITORS
vases of pink and white car~
bus,
was
best
man
for
his
LONG
BOTIOM - Easter
nations with a background of
brother, and ushers were Mr. weekend guests of Mr. and
Gene Arms and Mr. John Mrs. Lewis Johnston, RD, were
family, Logan W. Va.; Mrs .. Murphy. Mrs. McElroy ~ Mr. and Mrs. Bert Scrimsher,
Louisville, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs.
Sylvia George, Holden, W. Va.; registered guests.
.
'Presiding
at
the
reception
Tracy
Scrimsher, and Miss
Mrs . Don Maynard and
table
at
the
church
were
Mrs.
Alta
Scrimsher,
all from
daughter, Chapmanville, W.
Va.; Mrs. Paul ·Hersey and Maldne Jordan, Mrs. Pauline ·Columbus, J!!!l"Randy Friend,
daughter, Nelsonville; Mrs. Hoffman and barleen Bing. Bashan. I
Charles Werry, grandmother The table was decorated with a
of the groom, Mrs. John Bryant three tiered wedding cake with
SING SCHEDULED
pink
rose
trim
and
was
topped
and family, Vinton; Mr. and
LETART FALLS- A hymn
Mrs. Harold Werry, Gallipolis; with the traditional miniature sing. will be held at 1:30 p.m.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Werry bride and groom. Pink candles Sunday at the Letart Falls
and family, Mason; Mr. and were ·featured at either end of United Brethren Church. The
Mrs.
William Swatzel, the table which was covered Rev. Robert Shook, pastor,
'Gallipolis, and Mrs. Debbie with white lace.
extends an invitation to the
The
bride
is
a
1969
graduate
Murray, Columbus.
public.

-

•nd Mrs. Nola Felix, Mrs.
Amber Warner, Mark Warner,
Mrs. John Murphy and Elaine,
Carmel, Peggy, Bar)lara
Donna Hall, Debbie Bailey,
Patricia Thoma, Mrs. Charles ·
King, Chester King, Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Underwood, Mrs.
Charles Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
"Charles Taylor, Stacy Taylor,
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Davidson,
Donna, Adell, Willna, Phyllis, ·
and Anna, .Jim Reed, Mr. and
Mrs. Doyle Knapp and sons,
Rober! Shaffer, Mrs. Mabel
Wood, Mr. and Mrs. John Wood
and son, John .
Heidi, Peggy and Elaine
·'
Milhoan, Guy Bing, Mrs.
.'
'
Albert Baer, Mrs. Alice Davis,
Mrs. Clarence Jordan, Cindy
·:•
Jordan, Mrs. Shirley Gibbs,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Grover,
Jennifer and Joy, Mr. and Mrs.
Vernon Bing, Jr., Tony, Mr.
'
and Mrs. Fred Hoffman, Mrs.
1;;&amp;.
tiu' ·'
Pearl Hoffman, )\Irs. Mary
Arms, Mrs. J. C. Wyatt, Mrs.
Larry Pickens and Terry, Greg
Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy
Grover, Ronnie Arms, Mrs.
Maryln Wilcox, Beverly and
Bryan, Mrs. Clair Giles, Mrs. Lindley, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Bing, and
Thomas Evans, Mrs. Margaret Guilda, Mrs. Helen ·Johns.on, ' Jeffrey .Bing.

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Mr. and Mrs. ]e./Jrey S Werry
ije.turu A.utomatlc FntQUIHIC~ Contmt and ColOr
Mon itor (AFC/CMi, 80IId atftle Su per Scope tun er• and tnst•nt.Pi ty,

Wed in February
MIDDLEPORT - In a
candlelight ceremony at the
Middleport Church of Christ,
Miss Ruby Jean Nicinsky,
daughter of Mr. ,.and Mrs.
George Nicinsky, M1~Ieport,
and Mr. Jeffrey Stephen
Werry, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Werry, Hemlock Grove,
exchanged wedding vows.
The wedding was an event of
Feb. 18 at 7 p.m. with Mr. John
Bryant anq Mr. Raullin Moyer
officiating. Mrs. Chester Erwin
presented a program of nuptial
music including "A Time for
Us," "Summer or '42,"
"Hawaiian Wedding Song, "

of the groom, Mr. Bob Werry,
Pomeroy, a cousin, and Mr.
Stuckey Brooks, Nelsonville.
Ringbearer
was
Gene
Harrison, a cousin of the bride.
He carried the rings on a white
satin pillow accented with
white streamers tied in lovers
knots and decorated with white
and purple flowers. Men of the
wedding party were in Prince
Charles tuxedos.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Nicinsky was in a cream
colored dress fashioned in Aline styling with which she
wore a full length navy blue
vest, blue shoes and ac" Love Is Blue, 11 and the cessories. Her flowers were
"Lord's Prayer."
blue carnations with navy tint.
Two large candelabra and a
Mrs. Werry was in a beige
vase of purple mums were three piece knit ensemble . She
f.eatured in l'ie ~hurch wore br~~n ·~aCcessories and "
lecorations, alon~ ~ith 1~Yt'hite flowers ot wHite,. carnations
l'apers surrounded by green tinted· orange. Grandmothers
fern and purple bows.
of the couple wore corsages of
Given in marriage by her white carnations.
father, the bride was attired in
A reception honoring the
a floor length satin gown couple was held in the church
featuring an empire waist, an parlor immediately following
A-line skirt, a high standup the ceremony. A four tiered
neckline, and Bishop sleeves cake decorated with lavender
adorned with bands of Venice flowers and topped with a
lace. The chapel length veil of silver cross bearing wedding
illusion was edged with mat- ring replicas were flanked by
Illusion was edged with candelabra. Miss Pam Burson
matching lace and fell registered the guests and Miss
from a lace camelot Brenda Staats distributed the
headpiece . The bride 's wedding programs. Serving at
bouquet featured a purple the reception were Miss Jill
cattleya surrounded . by Harris, Mason, W. Va., Miss
numerous pompons and green DeLene DeLegal, Middleport,
leaves. Her jewelry consisted and Rosemary Rice, Rutland.
of a diamond ring of her
For a wedding trip to Hun- ..
mother worn on the right hand, tington and Charleston, the
and white pearl earrings, a gift bride changed into a blue knit
of the groom.
dress with which she wore a
Miss Glenna Luellen of white gold chain belt and
Nelsonville served as the maid matching shoes.
,
of honor. She wore a floor
The couple resides at
length dress of A-line styling in Hemlock Grove. The new Mrs.
sculptured floral nylon in Werry finished high school in
purple, lavender and green January and is currently
with a green ribbon accent at employed at Nelson's Drug
the empire waist. She wore a Store. Mr. Werry is attending
green satin pillbox hat and Ohio University. He is afmatching shoes. Her bouquet filiated with Tau Kappa Epwas of green cymbidium and silon Fraternity at Marietta
pompons
with
green College where he attended a
streamers.
year and a half.
Mrs. Teresa Davis, sister of
Out of town guests at the
·the bride, Middleport, and Miss wedding were .,.l'tlrs. Ben
Marla Neutzling and Miss Harrison, Lo8j11( w·. Va., and
Darla Neutzling, Pomeroy, Mrs. John ~insky, grandwere the other attendants . mothers of the bride, Mrs.
They wore dresses of identical Wanda Canterberry, Dayton;
styling with purple ribbon Mrs. Elizabeth Harrison and
accent and purple satin hats
and shoes. They carried purple
cymbidiwns and white pompons.
Flower girl was Miss Till!!
•BASKETS
Lafferty, cousin of the bride,
eSPRAYS
who was dressed identical to
the maid of honor. She carried
•VASES
a small white basket of purple
•BlANKETS
flower petals. All of the attendants wore a cross entwined
with a wedding ring set, gifts of
Serving: Middleport,
the bride .
Pomeroy,
Gallipolis, 0.
· James Swatzel of Colwribus
&amp; Mason Co., W. Va .
was best man and the ushers
were Mr. Mark Werry, brother

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.-

•

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Social Calendar ·

Personality ·
Profile , , •

Mrs. A. R. Hecox
and that one who have made their mark
in music.
"Music has been my life," said
Mrs. Hecox.
Norma Lewis Hecox was just 16
when· she began teaching piano. She
was a graduate of Middleport High
School and had attended the Cincinnati
Conservatory of Music. Part of her
early musical training was under the
late Miss Callie Grant who hod taught
at the Conservatory before returning to
Middleport to give private lessons. .
The Steinway was a surprise gift
from her parents when she returned
from the Conservatory. Ills this plano
on which Mrs. Hecox has done all her

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MIDDLEPORT - ·The Steinway
grand piano which occupies a
prominent place in the living room of
the Hecox home is quiet now.
Mrs. A. R Hecox no longer teaches
little fingers to play across its keys.
"I just decided that teaching piano
70 years was long enough," said Mrs.
Hecox; who advised her 20 pupils last
week of her retirement. ·
For Mrs. Hecox, highly r~garded lij
... the community for her musical ability,
·. retirement brings milled emotions. She
: reflects' on the hundreds and hundredl!
· of students on her music roll over the
past seven decades, recalling
· ;·;··· .

teaching. Tl!rougH the years she moved
· it from her home to churches aild
schools for recitals. Her opinion alt~ays
was, "piano students can't play well on
a poor piano."
The recitals were always a high
point for Mi-s. Hecor who recallll a
finale where she and her daughter,
Janet H~rris, were joined by two·other
pianists for an eight-band number at
grand pianos.
For 20 years Mrs. Hecox was active
In the Middleport Music Club which
p-omoted music appreciation among
young people. The long-time plano
teacher was always among those who
arranged special holiday events. In
those days a class of 30 to 35 pupils was
average for Mrs. Hecox.
Bringing particular pleasure to her
was the opportunity to teach piano to
her grandchildren, the children of
Janet and Gene Harris. :Cbere was a
tin\e when Mrs. Hecox was.organist lor
the Episcopal Church.
Not many months ago she
"resurrected a couple of pieces"
learned during her days at the Con·
servatory, rememorized · 11\etn, and
played at a woman's club meeting.
Widowed about 10 years ago, Mrs.
Hecox has a son, Joseph, and two
grandchildren who reside at Perrysburg.
AB lor her plans now lhst she hss
retired fr~tling piano, Mrs.
Hecox says she is considering an invitation from her :son-in-law and
daughter to move into the big house on
South Third. The house Is really home
for Mrs. Hecox, who sold itto the Harris
family a number of years ago. It was
bull! by b.er father, Dan Lewis, who
operated ~clothing store in Middleport.
For Mrs. Hecox, a routine of 70
years comes to an end and the relaxed
days of retirement begin.

70 Attend Services
'

Linda and Eula, a duet; Herb,
a solo; a trio by ihe men, one
by the women, and then all
sang together .
Two of the hymns used were,
"The Old Rugged Cross,'' and
"In lhe Garden," with Merp!des and Nancy Adams at the
Pijlr9· ·1
, ·
!!if\ Roush was speaker for
the' communion service all0:30
a.m.
Alter worship an egg hunt
was held for the children with
Easter baskets for all,
delivered by Herb and Pal
White.
•
It was a blessed, joyous,
happy time for all.
This reporter had dinner
REVIVAL ANNOUNCED
with
the Hayward Bissells o~
GREAT BEND - Revival
services will be held at the Bashan-Keno Rd., and is very
Great Bend Bethlehem Baptist grateful for kind neighbors and
Church, at the junction of SR friends like them.
124 and 338, beginning Aprill9
through the 23rd. The Rev.
Charles Norris will be the
111inister. Services will be held
By Mrs. w. H. Thomas
nightly at 7:30 p.m. Dwayne
Mrs.
Bessie Jones returned
Wolfe will be the ' ong leader.
The public is cordially invited. home after several days in Oak
Hill Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Par~
and f!lmily spent Saturday
ON TEXAS DUTY
here with Mrs. Cena Parsons.
CROWN CITY- Navy Petty
Joe Lundy of Cincinnati
Officer Third Class Donald E.
Clark, son of Mrs. Betty Clark spenl Sunday with his mother,
Mrs. Callie Lundy.
of Crown City, has reported for
Mrs. Faye Vance and
duty at the Naval Air Station,
daughters spent Saturday with
Chase Field, Beeville, Tex.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Vance.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph A.
Couden, Columbus, were
I.OIJGF. TO MEET
Saturday and Sunday guests of
RACINE - The regular
Mrs. William Thomas.
meeting of Hacine J,odge 461 F
Mrs. Lawrence Shong and
&amp; AM will be held Tuesday,
Mrs
. . Gertrude
Clark ,
with work in the Master Mason
Gallipolis, were Easter guests
Degree. Ail Master Masons are
of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Shon_8 .
invited.
Mrs . Alvin Barnell was in

Deer Creek

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I

•Homemaker Club
Meets Recently
Ni':W HAVEN - The April
meeting of the Haven
Homemakers was at the home
of Mrs. Roberta Maynard
Tuesday evening with Mrs . .
Gladys Hart co-hostess. It
opened with the flag salute, led
by the president, Mrs. Jim
Wise. Mrs. Iva Capehart was
devotional leader. A white
elephant sale was held. The
May meeting will be at the
home of Mrs. David Zirkle.
Present were Doris Vickers,
Sadie Warth, Gladys Hart,
Edna Wise, Pearl Briles, Betty
Newell, Iva Capehart, Ann
Zirkle, Anne Johnson and
Rob~ttl! Maynard.

-I ·'. .........., .

·-

Wy 's Schedule
POMEROY - Mr. Eddy
Educator's schedule for week
of April10-14 in Meigs County :
MONDAY - Pagetown, 3:30
• 4:15; Harrisonville, 4:45 •
5:30; Wolf Pen, 6:30 • 7;
Rutland Main, 7:30. 8:30. ·
TUESDAY - School Lot,
9:30-9 :45; Carpenter, 2:30-3;
Srowville, 3: 30 . 3:45; Darwin
.
'
4-4:30; Arnold's, 6:15 · 7:30;
Brown-Town, 8-8 :15.
WEDNESDAY - Rutland
Park, 8-8:30.
THURSDAY - Ca tholic
Church, 9-9: 15; Riverview,
9:45 • 11:30; Tuppers Plains,
12:30 • 3; Ebnwood, 3:30 • 4;
Alfred,
4:15
4:45;
Burlinghsm,5:15'5:30; Forest
Run, 7-7:30; Five Points, 7:45.
8; State Garage, 8:15. 8:30.
FRIDAY - Pomeroy Ele., 92:30; Pomeroy Library, 3-3 :30;
Laurel Cliff, 4-5; Minersville, 6~ ~nterprise, 7:15 • 7:45;
ob s Gull, 3-11 :15.

Anniversary Celebrated
POMEROY - Mr. aod Mrs. Clyde Scott observed their
65th wedding anniversary''on Thursday. Mr. and Mrll. Scott,
the former Mary Hall, were married on April 6, 1907. They
have two living children, Cecil of Albilny, and Wayne at
home, five grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. Mr.
and Mrs. Scott also have three deceased children.
Gallipolis Monday for medical
treatment. Mrs. Barnett had
the misfortune to break her
arm several weeks ago. .
Mrs. Gypay Ratliff returned
home after severals days' stay
in Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. James Thomas
and son, Gallipolis, Mr. and
Mrs. Kerr McClaskey, Bidwell,
were Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Haldon Thomas.
Robert Barnett, Columbus ;
Mr. and Mrs. Clester Tackett
and Mr. and Mrs . Mark Gay
and families of Gallipolis, were
Easter guests of their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Barnett.
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony
Childers called on their son,
Howard, and family Monday.
Bill Cole, Col.umbus, visited
his grandmother, Mrs .
Florence Halley, Kanauga, and
spent a day with his aunt and
husband, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Reynolds.
Mr. and Mrs. Doc White,
Vinton, spent Sunday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Chester
. Jones.
Mr. ·and Mrs. Haldon
Thomas spent a recent day
with their daughter and family ,
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Irwin,
Chillicothe.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Mead,
Wellston, were recent callers
of Mrs. William Thomas. They
were former residents of this
community. Their son, Bobby,
supervisor of·Western Electric
Co. of Columbus, has been
transferred to California, and
the family bought property
there. They left April! for their
new location.
Mr. 'tlrid Mrs. Kerr McClaskey spent Monday with
their daughter, Mr. and Mrs.

. POMEROY .. _ A cake Foll~wlng the potluck luP··
decoratln~. demonstration and cheon, the . woJ'!Isbop will· be :
worlfshop wl~ be staged Thurs- held with the .women altellding
day '•$..st. ~ul's Lutheran being invited to Join,?. the
Church' 'pf Pomt~roy under decorating.
. -'
.
sponsorsfilp of tbe Meigs
~os~ attending will ~e
Co u n t y ' !!: :;c 1 ens i 0 n dlvted mto nine groups w_tth
Homemakers «i:ouncil The , each group to be p:ovided lc!Jlg
public is invfted to atte.d.
and equ~p:nent · to work with.
Mrs. Vernal Wells will There will be a small charge
demonstrllte cake decorating for the workshop a~lvlty .
at the morning session Decorating tips will he_for sale.
following the business meeting
OAUGHTEit BORN
·of the sponsoring group at 10
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mr.
a.m. She has' had (lve years of and Mrs. Wesley Arbaugh,
professloruil experience having Tupp~rs Plains, are andecorated cakes for the Ohio nouncing the birth of a
University College birthday daughter, Bethany Suzanne,
service. .
born on March 4 at the Holzer
In addition to decorating a Medical Center, Grandparents
cake, Mrs. Wells will present are Mr. and Mrs. John Ar·
"quickie demOnstrations" on
baugh, Tuppers Plains, and
candy eggs, and garnishes. Mrs. Mary Jamison, Re$ville. Great-grandparents are
PLANS STYMIED
Mr: and Mrs . A. N. McGregor,
LYNWOOD, Wash. ( UPI') Vincent.
Officers of the South
VISITS RECENTLY
Snohomish County Planning
MIDDLEPORT ...:_ Mr. and
Council called a special session
lor th·e sole . purpose of Mrs. Glen Alllmus and
disbanding the organization children, Lois and Randy, of
but the meeting had to be Erie, Pa., visited Mr. and Mrs.
adjourned without action for Lee Baughman and son, Jef·
frey, Middleport, recenUy.
lack of quorum.

MEIGS BRANCH -

.~

,

By Goldie Clendenin
PORTLAND - There were
70 at the Easter services
Sunday at the Reorganized
Church of . Jesus _Christ of
Latter Day-Saints here.
Mercedes Condon put together
lhe program or song and
I• w ,!IMH!~ti 1 w\th'"ttWeho!r loll
filled once •again.
· • Partlcipa ling were Eula
Proffit!, Freda Ferguson, Jane
Johnson and Linda Evans, Bill
Housh , Denny Evans and
Herbert White. Freda gave the
readings and Eula a solo;

•

'
meeting to be held at 7:30p.m.
SUNDAY
HYMN SING, Sunday; 1:30 Tuesday at the tet'ople. All
p.m. at MI. Mori3h 'Cifurch of Master Ma~ons are invited.
OHIO ETA PID Chapter,
God .
·
Bela
Sigma Phi.Sororily, 8: 15
CANCER CRUSADE dinner
Tuesday
-at the home of Mrs.
at Meigs High 12:30 • 3 p. m.,
Iris
Payne.
Program on
$1.50 plate. Live entertainment
12:31).5 p. m. Bring family out modeling by Carolyn Satterfield and Sarah Bechtle,
after church.
Debbie
Gerlach, co-hostess.
MONDAY"- •
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Elementary
MEIGS
SALON 710, Eiglit
School PTA, 7:60Monday night
and
Forty,
Wednesday, 7:30
at the school. Supt. George
Hargraves to speak on the five· home of Mrs. Eileen Searles.
mill levy to be voted on in the Take bottle caps and pecans.
WEDNESDAY
May Primary, Science fair
POMEROY-Middleport
exhibit:
Club, Wednesday, noon,
omo University players will Lions
United Methodist Church .
present "There was a Little Lions urged to attend.
Boy" when Riverview PTA
POMEROY Chapter BO,
meels, 7:30 p.m. Monday at Royal Arch Masons, 7:30p.m.
school: Students of first and Wednesday, staled meeting.
second grades will present
Pome~oy Masonic Temple .
musical nwnbers.
Most excellent masters degree
MEIGS Chspler 53, DAV, to be conferred on a number of
will initiate new members, 7:30 candidates. Refreshments will
p.m. Monday at chapter home,
be served.
Butternut •Ave., Pomeroy. All
THURSDAY
..
members a~d wives invited;
PIDLATHEA Society, 6 p.m.
refreshments.
Thursday, covered dish dinner.
RUTLAND PTA, 7:30 p.m.
New officers to he installed.
program by John Reece, public
relations, Ohio Power Company. Job opportunities at the.
Gavin plant and the Meigs
Mine to be discussed, it Is
reported.
TUESIMY
MIDDLEPORT Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, will confer the EA
Degre~ on one candidate at a

1i

•'•'
'•'•

Art with Cake to be ·Sho~

Haldon Thomas.
Mr. and Mrs. Vinson Mounts
and two children, Dayton; were
· Monday callers of Mr. and
Mrs. John Vance and family .
They were enroute home after
visiting his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Holly Mounts, Freeburn,
Ky.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernal Vance
and children, Cherry Ridge,
were also callers of the John
Vance family .

THE ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
296 W. Second Sl

Earl F. Ingels, Jr., Manager

Ptxneroy, Ohio

Phone 992-3863

- ..

New Higher ...
.,

PASSBOOK SAVINGS
5 per cent per year paid on Regular

Pa ss book Savings . No Minimum .
(nterest from date of deposit to dale of
withdrawal. int erest compounded
quarterly . Interest paid as long as an
open account is maintained.

5'12 per cent per year paid on
90 day Certifica tes of
Deposit. $1,000.00 Minimum .
interest Payable Quarterly.

'

year Certificates of Deposit.

Breath of Sprin9

55.000.00 Minimum . interest

Bouquet

Payable Quarterly . 90 day
Interest penalty If cashed
before maturity .

a touch of Spring In

your Jife ."

SALE PLANNED
POMEROY - The ladies of
the Forest Run Methodist
Church will sponsor a rummage sale at the church Thursday and Friday from 9a.m. to 3
p.m.

ONLY

$5,95 Delivered

Dudley's Florist
Serving: Middloporl,
Pomeroy, Gallipolis, o.
&amp; Mason Co., W. Ya.

DISTR;;~TO~ N~EDED w

0

IMMEDIATEL Y

6 per cen l per year on 2 year

c,

TO UCOME A PMH OF THE

Certifica tes of Deposit.
In ·
. terest payable Quarterly. 90
day interest penalty 11
cashed bef,ore maturity .
$1D,DDO.DD MJnimum.

T.of..

7JOA

MUL Tt-HILLlON
DOLLAR

v ....

~(,

CISP(NSING IUSINESS
URIJIC ING

(

NATIONALLY ADVERTISED
HOT FOODS .

"'

AS A OltTfiiiiUTO~ 1'0'1
INTlJII - tol.t.AIC SYSTEM$ IHC.

NO SELLING/ WE ESTABLISH ACCOUNTS
II' YOU QUAL.IFY YOU WILL SERVICE
ACCCIUN TS n :T UP IIY THE CONPAHY .

PART TIME ' FULL TIME

All Deposits Insured To $20.0Q0,()() By

C o\N 8!. OPliV•TI!C ON A PAin OR r\JLL
TIME BASI S

The Federsl Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation

UIO.OO IIIONTHLV PROFIT'

LOW OVEMHEAO/ NQ LAYOFFS
MI NIMUM CAS!oi

IH\IUTIIIl"''T U.4tt.OO

LIMITED AVAILABILilY

"II Makes Sense To Save

WIUTE OR C_.,l.L
INTI!" NA"ic: t'I'ITI!IIIS INC .

1110C~AYTON

~
~

"C . ,SUITE. 2ot

ST.l.OUI5,M0 , ll11 7

1

~,
A/C ' " "1•!100
~
....
~• •.t.Sf.D O N THI! !ALl: Of" U CA-"1 Pl£1'1 LOC AtiON !"tl'l OA., 0§

""'

.~~-~-~-~-~-~-~~~-~-~-~-·~-~-~~- . ~

£lue Claimed to
Gunman

Wilh The People Who Care''

•

Combined Assets' of Over $11,000'000.00
.

~l

.~..

.

SERVICE RECOGNIZED- Earle T. Snodgrass, right, resident engineer lor the construction of Southern Ohio Coal Company's Meigs Mine No. 1 and No. 2, is congratulated in
recognition of completing 35 years service in the American Electric Power System. Presenting
Snodgra8s with a lapel pin containing 7 diamonds is Carl P. Zimmerman,"Vice PresidentConstruction of the American Electric Power Service Corjloration in New York. The presentation was held recently at Oscar's Restaurant in Gallipolis.

~· Marine

Airmen in
South Viet Again

SAIGON (UPI)-U.S.
Marine air combat units
returned to South Vietnam
alter an llknonth absence
'Saturday' to holster American
sky power being used agnlnst
the nine-day-&lt;Jid North Vietnamese offensive.
.,
The offensive slackened Sa·
turdoy, but U.S. planes continued bombing raids in both
North and South Vietnam. An
aircraft carrier also moved
into combat position off South
Vietnam's central l'Oastline,
the first lime a naval force has
been based there in slx years.
The arrival at Da Nang
airbase of the two Marine
squadrons, consisting of 36 late
model F4J Phantom jets and
700 Marines to fly and service
them, coincided with the addillon of another squadron of
Air Force FIOS Thunderchlefs
whose operating base in South
Vietnam was not disclosed.
The arrival of the combo!
squadrons put off the
scheduled withdrawal of a
~ squadron of observation lanes
~ from the wa~
' ..
Make Practice Flights
Military sources said the Air
Force squadron arrived from
the United Stales. The two
Marine squadrons, the lirst
Marine air units to be based in
South Vietnam since late 1970,
were thought to have come
from Okinawa.
UP! correspondent Kim Willenson at Da Nang reported
thai the Marine planes made
practice flights shortly after

arriving Saturdoy and were
expected .to enter combat
operations within a few days.
Military spokesmen said the
intensity of the North Vietnamese offensive appeared to
have
eased . somewhat
Ssturday on each of the four
major fighting areas-the
northern front in Quang Tri
Province
below ' the
Demilitarized Zone (DMZ), the
Centra 1 Highlands front, the
Highway 13 front nortl\ of
Saigon and· the .Mekong Delta
front ·south of the capital.
New Offensive Awaited
The North Vietnamese,
however, launched their first
direct attack against an
American outpost since the
offensive began March 30.
Spokesmen said 150 mortar
rounds hit an Army outpost
Ssturday atop Black Virgin
Mountain 55 miles northwest of
Ssigon, wounding four American soldiers,
Sporadic fighting was
reported on the other three
fronts, bul few details were
avl!llable;Milllilry 'lnte!Ugf!iice
officers on the northern lroot
said, however, that North
Vietnamese prisoners and
documents token from them
had indicated a "second
phase" of the offensive would
begin Sunday or Monday.
U.S . planes flying from
airbases in South Vietnam,
Thailand and Guam and from
four aircraft carriers off the
coast bombed North Vietnam
for the third consecutive day

PROVO, Utah (UPI)- Police
picked up a clue to a suspect
.Saturday in their hunt for the
cool, calculating gunman who
parachuted from a United Air
Lines plane with half a million
dollars, the largest ransom
ever paid in a U.S. aircraft
hijacking.
·
Police Chief Jess Evans said
"we have a suspect." He
declined to elaborate, but the
FBI said no suspect was in
custody.
Announcement that authorities had a clue to the wanted
man, who used the name "T.
Johnson," was disclosed
shortly after Evans temporarily called off the ground
search in this flat, marshy area
40 miles southeast of Salt Lake

Saturday and also attacked in
three of the four fronts. There
were np U.S. aeriai attacks in
the Mekong Delta, military
sources said.
Details of the raids over
North Vietnam were not
disclosed, but sources said they
had ranged no deeper than 70
miles north of the DMZ between the two Vietnams .
"Sixle Statton" Reopened
Naval sources said the
Constellation and several support ships steamed south of the
main contingent of the warships and re~stablished "Dixie
Station" off South Vietnam's
central coast. It marked the
first lime that station has been
operative since 19£6.
To the north, three carriers
and at least five destrl!yers are
on "Yankee Station" from
which aerial attacks and artillery barrages are launched
against North Vietnam. The
sOurces said two cruisers, the
USS Oklahoma City and the
USS Chicago, have been ordered on the firing line at
"Yilllkee"$l"atlon" to incrt,ase
its firepower.

Farmers
Defended

WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen·
ate Democratic Leader Mike
Mansfield Saturday accused
the Nixon administration of
trying to l~rn housewives
.
agamsl fanners and ranchers
in the hassle over food prices,
He said the administration
was trying to moke "patsies"
of primary p:oducers when the
real villsins behind soaring
grocery bills were the middle
that hurt the public, cripple the men in the food industry.
economy and cause massive
Mansfield's home state of
human adversity," he said.
Montana is a major producer
The administration bill, of wheat and beet.
w)llch is two years old but still
"What th~ administration is
in committee, would give the trying to do is turn the
White House several options housewife, the consumer,
for dealing with transportation ogalnst the producer,'' he told
strikes, including a bind reporters. "Well, they are
selection between the final picking the wrong pigeons
offers
of
labor and when they pick on farmers and
management.
ranchers. All they're doing Is
Turning to the unem- trying to make a living and it's
ployment p:oblem, Hodgson getting tougher for them all the
p:edlcted the unemployment time."
rate will "bounce around the
Mansfield was indignant at
next few months," head the "unfair" blame being cast
downward and be at the 5 per on farmers and ranchers for
cent level by the end of the _ soaring food prices. He said it
year. It Is currently close to 6 was those who process, pack,
per cent.
distribute and sell' food proWhile
Hodgson
was ducts who are making money,
speaking, United Farm not the growers.
Workers Union pickets passed
· ~ese supermarkets are
out leaflets in front of the hall putting on a great campaign
p:otestlng a Nati\)Dal Labor (to buy lower priced food) but
Relations Boord action aimed they don't seem to be losing
at forcing United Farm any money," he said . "Some of
Workers to halt a consumer them are even raising their
boycott.
own beef. too."

Unions Needing

531• per cent per year on one

.. Put

!f''''''''~~=&gt;:=&gt;:~::::::::::m::::::::::~::::::::::~:;::::::::&gt;:::::::::::;:::::::&lt;=:=&gt;:=:;:=:?&amp;&gt;:~;:;:;&gt;.W"&amp;:::-m

City without finding so much as
a footprint. He said the sear'
chers would regrqup and work
more closely with the 3ir
parties also seeking the
hijacker.
The bizarre hijackihg began
Friday afternoon shortly after
the United flight left ·Denver,
headed lor Los Angeles. A
swarthy man anned with two
guns, a grenade and plastic
explosives began passing notes
to stewardesses dir&lt;laing thsl
the plane be taken to San
Francisco .
Piracy Carefully Planned
For more than 31&gt; hours
while darkness closed in, the
plane satalthe end of a remote
runway at the San Francisco
airport with the 95 passengers

us

,,.

and crew aboard while airline
officials complied with the
hijacker's demands. He asked
for six hours of 'fuel, four
parachutes and $500,000. · All
the hijacker's operations were
carried out with precision that
indicated careful planning. The
passengers were not aware of
what was going on until after
the plane had landed.
When all the demands had
been met, the hijacker allowed
everyone to leave the plane
except for five crewmen who
took off into the night for a
flight over Nevada and a
circuitous route over Utah. At
one point the pilot reported the
hijacker had jumped over
Nevada, but it proved to be a
·false alarm. It was discovered ·

•:W:

· No TV for LBJ
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (UP!) - Former
President Lyndon B. Johnson, resting comfortably after
his secoild major heart attack In 11 ytars, •as deprived ol
his favorite entertnlnment Ssturday night: television.
University of VIrginia Hospital Dlreclor Jofi Harlu
said· althnugb there- Is a televiSion set In tbe former
Presldent'sfourtb Door room In tbe coronary care ...uon,
It is not connected. But he can listen lo a bedside radio.

1
::l

Johnson's "cheSt pains" were diagnosed OHictally

Ssturday as a lull fledged heart attack, but doctors gave
him an 80 pet. chance of recovery.

·.,t

-~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::::;:::i:;:;:;:;~,;.:;:~::::~:s:::::::::::--::::::::!-::::w.(tt~·

the gunman was still aboard
although the light in the pilot's
cabin indicated the back stairs
had been lowered.
Finally, a!lout 11:30 p.m.
MST, the hijacker bailed out
w1th one of the parachutes
supplied by the airline, and the
plane then landed safely at Sail
Lake City.
Parachute Was Bugged
Authorities feared the
hijacker may have been picked
up by a helicopter which had
been reported hovering over

up hope , winning the Indiana

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his home state of South Dakota
before launching a drive to
heat Humphrey and Mualde
again in Massachusetts. That
race also is on Aprll 25.
As the cindlda.tes pressed
on, the National Observer, a
weekly newspaper, saj,d Its
second ,nationwide couhY of
prospective delegate support
at the Democratic convention
indicated "a deep and
dramatic collapse" by Mualde
and lhat moatpollllclllli·AW 1\
as "lrreve'tWibl~." '" """"
The paper said Its first COWll,
taken just before and after the
March 14 Florida primary In
which Muskie finished a poor
fourth, put him just 228~ votes
short of the 1,509 needed to win
the nomln'!tion. In cootrast,
the second tabulation g&amp;ve him
a 773~ total or a drop of
slightly more tMn 500 votes.
McGovern made the biggest
advance, moving up fro!J1287'&gt;il
to 490~ and Humphrey gained
66 for a 448 total, It said.
Bayh Keeps the Faith
The speculation about Mus·
Ide's plans for Indiana, where
he is opposed by Hwnphrey
and Alabamo Gov. George C.
Wallace, was based on statements by state Democratic
officials.
But Sen. Birch Bayh, 0-Ind.,
and four of the state's ·
Democratic coogreasmen have
· endorsed Muskle and a spokesman for Muskle said they were
sticking by him. Sen. Harold E.
Hughes, D-Iowa, once a candidate for the White House, said
he also was not backing away
from his endorsement of
Muskie.

Moscow Summit Still Go·
WASHJloiGTON (UP!&gt; -So·
viet ambassador Analoly F.
Dobrynin plans to return to
Moscow in aboul a wee(&lt;. to help
prepare for President Nixon's
May visit, which 1\as been
cloud~ •but
evidently · 1 not
disrupted by Hanoi's invasion of
South Vietnam .
Soviet embassy sources could
not confirm word of Dobrynin's
departure, which was reported
by other knowledgeable informants, but said "of cow·se his
return to Moscow at this time
is not excluded."
By returning well in advance
of the usual time for the
ambassador of a country to be
visited by a U.S. President, it
appeared lh'!t Dobrynin was
making himself available for
extended consultations with
Communist Party chairman
Leonid Brezhnev and. other
Soviet leaders with whom Nixon

will confer after he arrives in
Moscow May 22.
Administration officials acknowledged the trip still might
be jeopardized if Communist
forces seize substantial South
Vietname!jf. terrllory._tq .J)]e!r
current offensive, and if U.S.
retaliation escalates.
Culture Pact Renewed
But for the present, both
countries are preparing for the
Nixon trip without apparent
regard for developments in
Vietnam or the administration's
harsh remarks about Soviet
logistical support for the North
Vietnamese .
Defense Secretary Melvin R.
Laird charged r'riday that the
Russians, as Hanoi's major
arms supplier, were "a major
contributor to the continuing
conflicfthat exists in Southeast
Asia." In Key Biscayne, Fla. ,

Saturday, a White House Although it fails short of
spOkesman said the United Soviet Cultural Minister YekStates "will do what is aterina Furtseva 's support in
necessary to assist the South Washin gton earlier this year for
Vietnamese forces in stopping a greatly expanded cultural
the invasion through providing exchange, officials noted it
air __, powe r and fire pow&lt;;r , fpllpw~d the smopll)e~\ 1 begotia­
supporl of the ARVN (South lions in the 12-year history of
Vietnamese army.)"
the exchange agreements. ·
Officials here also observed
All this notwithstanding, Stale they expect a Soviet reply
Department officials reported shortly on the proposed reSaturday that a two-year sumption of talks to settle the
extension of the Soviet-Ameri- Soviet Lend Lease debl from
ca n cultural exchange agree- World War ll, which Washingment had been negotiated in ton last estimated at $800
Moscow and would be an· million.
In addition, they point to
nounced early next week. ·
Agriculture Secretary Earl L.
The agreement calls for Butz's negotiations in .,Moscow
modest increases in the ex· next week on possible longchange · o( performing artists, range wheat 'Bnd feed grain
scientists, sc holars and sales to the Russians as
students, and another U.S. evidence of the basic ,good
cultural exhibit to appear in a healtl1 of Soviet-American relahall-dozen Soviet cities.
tions.

By United Press International hallie, which may be long.

••

SWlny and warm.

to need a strong showing in the to hall water pollution and several days this week and was
race a we, later and had lost a April 25 Pennsylvania contest, appearing later in the coal- said to ha,ve widespread back·
ing from the slate's powerful
big bloc 01 potential delegate ~riss-crossed the state for the mining center of Scranton.
organizt&gt;d labor groups.
strength at the Democralic second consecutive day On Saturday, Humphrey apbeginning in the capital of
National Convention.
Muskie's ·chief opponent in
peared
across the border in
Harrisburg, Dying west to Erie Pennsylvania, Sen. Hubert H.
Charleston,
W.Va., to tell a
speculation that hP h:.rt ~ i \"'n
The Maine senator. believed to remind voters of his efforts Humphrey, stumped there for
meeting of trial lawyers that be
soon would propose creation of
an independent "Institute of
Justice" to protect civil liberties, improve the courts and
reform prisons.
Muskle L&lt;&gt;aing Streqtb?
Sen. George S. McGovern,
By United Press In·
teroatlooal
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie
campaigned again Saturday in
Pennsylvania, his next presidential primary large~. amid

CLEVELAND {UP!) - U.S.
Secretary of Labor James D.
Hodgson said Friday labor
unions must get used to the
idea of having limits of their
right to strike and on collective
borgnlning if the .public .interests are to be served.
Hodgson also told the Cleveland aty Club that President
Nixon is "a genuine friend of
the American working man."
The labor secretary added
that he believes the adminis·
!ration's bill to allow the White
House to impose labor settlements in transportation would
strengthen rather thsn weaken
colleCtive bargaining. He said
labor and management have
learned how tii insulate themsel\lea from strikes and the
poblic ends up bearing the
!runt of large labor walkouts.
"Congress J4.slarling to realize the mood of the public, and
that mood can best be described as fed up-led up with
strlkes .ln transportation that
now occur like clockwork and

I, this year, to have this pleled and returned early. The
exemption in January of 1973. county auditor takes it from
The blank lornui are at the · there.
·
treasurer's office In ~omeroy
If he certifies your form you
for Meigs Countians. Forms
wlll receive ~ copy of the
will not be malled out.
.,
certificate with your tax bill
This is for homes only - due on the homestead for Jan.
where perl!ons are living -not 1973. It Ia hoped this in·
- formation
reaches all . who
for acreage.
,
One may pick the forms up ·qualify for it. Talk about it with
any time during working hours your neighbors who may not
11 tile office, Gel them cOm· have heard.

the jump site. Highway
Patrolman Ron Law said- the
helicopter flew away as soon as
police approached.
More than 150 law enforcement officers converged on
Provo, site ol Brigham Young
University, in the man hunt.
Radio signals from a "bugged"
parachute were picked up,
indicating that the wanted man
had landed somewhere in the
mud flats. The weather in the
search area Saturday was

ea en1ng

e

Meir Repeats Israel Hard Line

ByGoldleCleadenlq
POMEROY - All Senior
atize1111 of Ohio having an
income of not more than $2,000
a year are eligible for 70 pet. .
reduction on ~ropertyl.x, due
to the 1972 · Ho ellead
Exemption Act, according to
Meigs County Treasurer
Howard .Frank.
However, cUIJelll must be 65
yelll'l old or oldlr llld fill out
an "Application" fw1t- J•·

;,.· ~

•

Curbs-Hodgson

Some T~payers.
over,'65
to
.
.
-Get 70% Reduction in '72

'.

Prime Minister Golda Meir
said Saturday that even if Arab
leaders agree to sign
full
peace accord with Israel, her
government will not give back
all the territory captured \11 the
1967 Middle East War.
Mrs. Meir spoke in a
televised interview released
alter Israeli military spokesmen reported clashes between
Israeli soldiers and Arab
guerrilla~ along the borders
with Lebanon and Syria:
The spokesman said- an
Israeli anny patrol killed an
Arab guerrilla Friday night in
· a skirrilish just south of tlte
Jsraeli,Lebanese cease-liTe
line. Around midnight, he said,
an Israeli outpost came under
fire from Syrian territory,
touching off an exchange of fire
with Syrian-based guerrillas.
In Egypt, Premier Aziz
Sidky told a public rally the
day when Egypt resomes the
war against Israel "will not be
far off." He said the armed
forces have enough weapons to
emerge 'victorious from the

a

No Israeli Decision
Speaking in the town of
Zagazig, 40 miles northeast of
Cairo, Sidky also denounced
King Hussein's plan for a
federal Jordan as aimed at
isolating Egypt from other
Arab countries.
V
Mrs. Meir, speaking ln an
interview with Britain's lndependent Television news, ruled
out an Israeli withdrawal from
the Golan Heights of Syria, the
Gaza strip, East Jerusalem, or
~arm ei.Sheikh, the outpost

on the. southern tip of the occupied Sinai peninsula of
Egypt.
"There is no decision of the
Israeli government ," Mrs.
Meir said, "but if you ask me, I
think there is no doubt that
Egypt would gel a great part of
the Sinai back."
~e said, however, there Is
no point to the A}"abs (iersisting
in demands for a total Israeli
withdrawal."
·
Pollee Arrest Marxists
Mrs. Melr, in the taped interviewtohebroadcastSunday

=,,,,,,~,,,,,,,,~,,,,:::::=~= =&gt;.;=&gt;.=~- ~:;:=: -~=:;: : : · ~!t~o:urp~~~r~:.?:
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio extended outlook
Tuesday through Thursday.
Chance of showers
Tuesday and Thursday. Fair
Wednesday. Cool early
Tuesday, then mild througl! the period. Highs tn the 60s
and 1•s. Overnight tows
Tuesday In the lower 30s to
'lower 4•s, becoming upper
30s to near 50 Tuesday and
Wednesday.

·=Scioto
May
f} d d
·

neighbors in a position that
would not encourage them tp
try to attack Israeli again,
In Beirut Saturday, a ,
.B

KILLED BY CAR
ZANESVILLE, Ohio (UP! )
- Mrs.. Hazel Pearl Shroyer,
24, Dresden, w.as killed
Saturday when struck by a car
~ere.

Jac~son Likes it In,.M iddle
CLEVELAND (UPI) !._ Sen.
Henry Jackson of Washington,
a candidate lor the Democratic
presidential nomination, said
Fri!lay "all of tliose people who
are advocating either right or
left wing plaiforms" will' be out
of the race by election day.
Jackson, at a news on·
ference here, criticized Sen..
George McGovern of Soutti
Dakota for being too far to the
left and Alabilma Gov. George
Wallace too far to the right

Marxist Palestinian guerrilla
group said two of its leaders
who arrived in Cairo to attend
meetings of the Palestinian
national 'council, were
arrested by Egyptian poUce.
ill~reated and later deported.
The front is a splinter group
which broke away last month
from the Popular Front for the
Liberation of Palestine, which
Is led by George Habash, and is
known for its hijacking of
western airliners.

while Sen. Edmund Muskie of from people who are angry,"
Maine was too "IndeCisive." said Jackson. "The party must
"Anyone who talks of culling learn to reckon with this ."
the defense budget $31 blllion in
He dismissed Muskle as
these perilous times is way out being too indeciaive. "I don't
in left field," Jackson said of know where he stands and
McGovern. ·"tf he isn't out in that's probably the·reason he's
left lield I don't know who is." going downhill so fast,"
Jackson said Wallace is Jackson said. Jackson said he
threatening to "decimate" the was the only announced canDemocratic party from the dldate who represents a
right. "Wallace. constitutes a "progressive centet 1'
real threat because it Is ob· philosophy and could win in
vious he is, receiving support November.

1.

.

e

00

e

COLUMBUS {UP!) - The
National Weather Service office
here warned residents along
the Scioto River, running southward through here to the Ohio
River at Portsmouth, that they
should be alert for weekend
flooding resulting from heavy
rainfall earlier in the week.
While the heavy precipitation
ended late Friday night, run·
olf continued from smaller
Streams into the Scioto,:
keeping It rising from Marlon•
County to the Ohio River.
The Scioto crested at LaRue
Saturday morning at 10.115 feet
and then started receding. The
river at !'inspect in Marion
County was expected to cr~t
just above the 10-foot Hood
stage Sunday morning.
South of here, the Scioto was
expected to crest at Circleville
at 16.3 feet by noon Sunday,
and cresl at Piketon Monday
afternoon at 18.5 feet, both
more than two feet over Hood
stage.

Enarson to

L d OSU
ea

COLUMBUS ( UP!)
Harold Enarson, 52, the man
who helped mould Cleveland
State University over the past
six years, will become the new
leader of Ohio State University
Sept. 1.
· Enarson was named OSU
president-elect Friday by the
board of trustees who cast a.
unanimous vote. He succeeds
Novice Fawcett who retires at
the eild of the academic year
after 16 years as president of
the state's largest university.
Ensrson, who did not apply
for the position, was approached by the search
committee. Both he and hil
wife Audrey were In~
by the bollrd. ·He will receive
$50,000 per year, the same
salary which Fawcett bad been
getting. He too will have an on- campus .resid~.
He said be was caught "oft
balance" bY the ~!!lei:Uon. ·"l
never ir\ my wildest ·
Imagination tboutltt of tbe
(ll'l!lidencyofObloStaleor1117
other university," he aald. "i
simply was trying to do the
beat job I knew how to do
here."

�'

Social Calendar ·

Personality ·
Profile , , •

Mrs. A. R. Hecox
and that one who have made their mark
in music.
"Music has been my life," said
Mrs. Hecox.
Norma Lewis Hecox was just 16
when· she began teaching piano. She
was a graduate of Middleport High
School and had attended the Cincinnati
Conservatory of Music. Part of her
early musical training was under the
late Miss Callie Grant who hod taught
at the Conservatory before returning to
Middleport to give private lessons. .
The Steinway was a surprise gift
from her parents when she returned
from the Conservatory. Ills this plano
on which Mrs. Hecox has done all her

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MIDDLEPORT - ·The Steinway
grand piano which occupies a
prominent place in the living room of
the Hecox home is quiet now.
Mrs. A. R Hecox no longer teaches
little fingers to play across its keys.
"I just decided that teaching piano
70 years was long enough," said Mrs.
Hecox; who advised her 20 pupils last
week of her retirement. ·
For Mrs. Hecox, highly r~garded lij
... the community for her musical ability,
·. retirement brings milled emotions. She
: reflects' on the hundreds and hundredl!
· of students on her music roll over the
past seven decades, recalling
· ;·;··· .

teaching. Tl!rougH the years she moved
· it from her home to churches aild
schools for recitals. Her opinion alt~ays
was, "piano students can't play well on
a poor piano."
The recitals were always a high
point for Mi-s. Hecor who recallll a
finale where she and her daughter,
Janet H~rris, were joined by two·other
pianists for an eight-band number at
grand pianos.
For 20 years Mrs. Hecox was active
In the Middleport Music Club which
p-omoted music appreciation among
young people. The long-time plano
teacher was always among those who
arranged special holiday events. In
those days a class of 30 to 35 pupils was
average for Mrs. Hecox.
Bringing particular pleasure to her
was the opportunity to teach piano to
her grandchildren, the children of
Janet and Gene Harris. :Cbere was a
tin\e when Mrs. Hecox was.organist lor
the Episcopal Church.
Not many months ago she
"resurrected a couple of pieces"
learned during her days at the Con·
servatory, rememorized · 11\etn, and
played at a woman's club meeting.
Widowed about 10 years ago, Mrs.
Hecox has a son, Joseph, and two
grandchildren who reside at Perrysburg.
AB lor her plans now lhst she hss
retired fr~tling piano, Mrs.
Hecox says she is considering an invitation from her :son-in-law and
daughter to move into the big house on
South Third. The house Is really home
for Mrs. Hecox, who sold itto the Harris
family a number of years ago. It was
bull! by b.er father, Dan Lewis, who
operated ~clothing store in Middleport.
For Mrs. Hecox, a routine of 70
years comes to an end and the relaxed
days of retirement begin.

70 Attend Services
'

Linda and Eula, a duet; Herb,
a solo; a trio by ihe men, one
by the women, and then all
sang together .
Two of the hymns used were,
"The Old Rugged Cross,'' and
"In lhe Garden," with Merp!des and Nancy Adams at the
Pijlr9· ·1
, ·
!!if\ Roush was speaker for
the' communion service all0:30
a.m.
Alter worship an egg hunt
was held for the children with
Easter baskets for all,
delivered by Herb and Pal
White.
•
It was a blessed, joyous,
happy time for all.
This reporter had dinner
REVIVAL ANNOUNCED
with
the Hayward Bissells o~
GREAT BEND - Revival
services will be held at the Bashan-Keno Rd., and is very
Great Bend Bethlehem Baptist grateful for kind neighbors and
Church, at the junction of SR friends like them.
124 and 338, beginning Aprill9
through the 23rd. The Rev.
Charles Norris will be the
111inister. Services will be held
By Mrs. w. H. Thomas
nightly at 7:30 p.m. Dwayne
Mrs.
Bessie Jones returned
Wolfe will be the ' ong leader.
The public is cordially invited. home after several days in Oak
Hill Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Par~
and f!lmily spent Saturday
ON TEXAS DUTY
here with Mrs. Cena Parsons.
CROWN CITY- Navy Petty
Joe Lundy of Cincinnati
Officer Third Class Donald E.
Clark, son of Mrs. Betty Clark spenl Sunday with his mother,
Mrs. Callie Lundy.
of Crown City, has reported for
Mrs. Faye Vance and
duty at the Naval Air Station,
daughters spent Saturday with
Chase Field, Beeville, Tex.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Vance.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph A.
Couden, Columbus, were
I.OIJGF. TO MEET
Saturday and Sunday guests of
RACINE - The regular
Mrs. William Thomas.
meeting of Hacine J,odge 461 F
Mrs. Lawrence Shong and
&amp; AM will be held Tuesday,
Mrs
. . Gertrude
Clark ,
with work in the Master Mason
Gallipolis, were Easter guests
Degree. Ail Master Masons are
of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Shon_8 .
invited.
Mrs . Alvin Barnell was in

Deer Creek

NOW ON DISPLAY

The Superior Motor Home
'·

20 fl., 22fT., 25·FT. MODELS

EDWIN H. DAVIS &amp;SON
lANGSVILLE, OHIO STATE RT. 325
•

Telephone 614-742-4471

aDSED ON SUNDAY

I

•Homemaker Club
Meets Recently
Ni':W HAVEN - The April
meeting of the Haven
Homemakers was at the home
of Mrs. Roberta Maynard
Tuesday evening with Mrs . .
Gladys Hart co-hostess. It
opened with the flag salute, led
by the president, Mrs. Jim
Wise. Mrs. Iva Capehart was
devotional leader. A white
elephant sale was held. The
May meeting will be at the
home of Mrs. David Zirkle.
Present were Doris Vickers,
Sadie Warth, Gladys Hart,
Edna Wise, Pearl Briles, Betty
Newell, Iva Capehart, Ann
Zirkle, Anne Johnson and
Rob~ttl! Maynard.

-I ·'. .........., .

·-

Wy 's Schedule
POMEROY - Mr. Eddy
Educator's schedule for week
of April10-14 in Meigs County :
MONDAY - Pagetown, 3:30
• 4:15; Harrisonville, 4:45 •
5:30; Wolf Pen, 6:30 • 7;
Rutland Main, 7:30. 8:30. ·
TUESDAY - School Lot,
9:30-9 :45; Carpenter, 2:30-3;
Srowville, 3: 30 . 3:45; Darwin
.
'
4-4:30; Arnold's, 6:15 · 7:30;
Brown-Town, 8-8 :15.
WEDNESDAY - Rutland
Park, 8-8:30.
THURSDAY - Ca tholic
Church, 9-9: 15; Riverview,
9:45 • 11:30; Tuppers Plains,
12:30 • 3; Ebnwood, 3:30 • 4;
Alfred,
4:15
4:45;
Burlinghsm,5:15'5:30; Forest
Run, 7-7:30; Five Points, 7:45.
8; State Garage, 8:15. 8:30.
FRIDAY - Pomeroy Ele., 92:30; Pomeroy Library, 3-3 :30;
Laurel Cliff, 4-5; Minersville, 6~ ~nterprise, 7:15 • 7:45;
ob s Gull, 3-11 :15.

Anniversary Celebrated
POMEROY - Mr. aod Mrs. Clyde Scott observed their
65th wedding anniversary''on Thursday. Mr. and Mrll. Scott,
the former Mary Hall, were married on April 6, 1907. They
have two living children, Cecil of Albilny, and Wayne at
home, five grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. Mr.
and Mrs. Scott also have three deceased children.
Gallipolis Monday for medical
treatment. Mrs. Barnett had
the misfortune to break her
arm several weeks ago. .
Mrs. Gypay Ratliff returned
home after severals days' stay
in Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. James Thomas
and son, Gallipolis, Mr. and
Mrs. Kerr McClaskey, Bidwell,
were Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Haldon Thomas.
Robert Barnett, Columbus ;
Mr. and Mrs. Clester Tackett
and Mr. and Mrs . Mark Gay
and families of Gallipolis, were
Easter guests of their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Barnett.
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony
Childers called on their son,
Howard, and family Monday.
Bill Cole, Col.umbus, visited
his grandmother, Mrs .
Florence Halley, Kanauga, and
spent a day with his aunt and
husband, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Reynolds.
Mr. and Mrs. Doc White,
Vinton, spent Sunday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Chester
. Jones.
Mr. ·and Mrs. Haldon
Thomas spent a recent day
with their daughter and family ,
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Irwin,
Chillicothe.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Mead,
Wellston, were recent callers
of Mrs. William Thomas. They
were former residents of this
community. Their son, Bobby,
supervisor of·Western Electric
Co. of Columbus, has been
transferred to California, and
the family bought property
there. They left April! for their
new location.
Mr. 'tlrid Mrs. Kerr McClaskey spent Monday with
their daughter, Mr. and Mrs.

. POMEROY .. _ A cake Foll~wlng the potluck luP··
decoratln~. demonstration and cheon, the . woJ'!Isbop will· be :
worlfshop wl~ be staged Thurs- held with the .women altellding
day '•$..st. ~ul's Lutheran being invited to Join,?. the
Church' 'pf Pomt~roy under decorating.
. -'
.
sponsorsfilp of tbe Meigs
~os~ attending will ~e
Co u n t y ' !!: :;c 1 ens i 0 n dlvted mto nine groups w_tth
Homemakers «i:ouncil The , each group to be p:ovided lc!Jlg
public is invfted to atte.d.
and equ~p:nent · to work with.
Mrs. Vernal Wells will There will be a small charge
demonstrllte cake decorating for the workshop a~lvlty .
at the morning session Decorating tips will he_for sale.
following the business meeting
OAUGHTEit BORN
·of the sponsoring group at 10
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mr.
a.m. She has' had (lve years of and Mrs. Wesley Arbaugh,
professloruil experience having Tupp~rs Plains, are andecorated cakes for the Ohio nouncing the birth of a
University College birthday daughter, Bethany Suzanne,
service. .
born on March 4 at the Holzer
In addition to decorating a Medical Center, Grandparents
cake, Mrs. Wells will present are Mr. and Mrs. John Ar·
"quickie demOnstrations" on
baugh, Tuppers Plains, and
candy eggs, and garnishes. Mrs. Mary Jamison, Re$ville. Great-grandparents are
PLANS STYMIED
Mr: and Mrs . A. N. McGregor,
LYNWOOD, Wash. ( UPI') Vincent.
Officers of the South
VISITS RECENTLY
Snohomish County Planning
MIDDLEPORT ...:_ Mr. and
Council called a special session
lor th·e sole . purpose of Mrs. Glen Alllmus and
disbanding the organization children, Lois and Randy, of
but the meeting had to be Erie, Pa., visited Mr. and Mrs.
adjourned without action for Lee Baughman and son, Jef·
frey, Middleport, recenUy.
lack of quorum.

MEIGS BRANCH -

.~

,

By Goldie Clendenin
PORTLAND - There were
70 at the Easter services
Sunday at the Reorganized
Church of . Jesus _Christ of
Latter Day-Saints here.
Mercedes Condon put together
lhe program or song and
I• w ,!IMH!~ti 1 w\th'"ttWeho!r loll
filled once •again.
· • Partlcipa ling were Eula
Proffit!, Freda Ferguson, Jane
Johnson and Linda Evans, Bill
Housh , Denny Evans and
Herbert White. Freda gave the
readings and Eula a solo;

•

'
meeting to be held at 7:30p.m.
SUNDAY
HYMN SING, Sunday; 1:30 Tuesday at the tet'ople. All
p.m. at MI. Mori3h 'Cifurch of Master Ma~ons are invited.
OHIO ETA PID Chapter,
God .
·
Bela
Sigma Phi.Sororily, 8: 15
CANCER CRUSADE dinner
Tuesday
-at the home of Mrs.
at Meigs High 12:30 • 3 p. m.,
Iris
Payne.
Program on
$1.50 plate. Live entertainment
12:31).5 p. m. Bring family out modeling by Carolyn Satterfield and Sarah Bechtle,
after church.
Debbie
Gerlach, co-hostess.
MONDAY"- •
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Elementary
MEIGS
SALON 710, Eiglit
School PTA, 7:60Monday night
and
Forty,
Wednesday, 7:30
at the school. Supt. George
Hargraves to speak on the five· home of Mrs. Eileen Searles.
mill levy to be voted on in the Take bottle caps and pecans.
WEDNESDAY
May Primary, Science fair
POMEROY-Middleport
exhibit:
Club, Wednesday, noon,
omo University players will Lions
United Methodist Church .
present "There was a Little Lions urged to attend.
Boy" when Riverview PTA
POMEROY Chapter BO,
meels, 7:30 p.m. Monday at Royal Arch Masons, 7:30p.m.
school: Students of first and Wednesday, staled meeting.
second grades will present
Pome~oy Masonic Temple .
musical nwnbers.
Most excellent masters degree
MEIGS Chspler 53, DAV, to be conferred on a number of
will initiate new members, 7:30 candidates. Refreshments will
p.m. Monday at chapter home,
be served.
Butternut •Ave., Pomeroy. All
THURSDAY
..
members a~d wives invited;
PIDLATHEA Society, 6 p.m.
refreshments.
Thursday, covered dish dinner.
RUTLAND PTA, 7:30 p.m.
New officers to he installed.
program by John Reece, public
relations, Ohio Power Company. Job opportunities at the.
Gavin plant and the Meigs
Mine to be discussed, it Is
reported.
TUESIMY
MIDDLEPORT Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, will confer the EA
Degre~ on one candidate at a

1i

•'•'
'•'•

Art with Cake to be ·Sho~

Haldon Thomas.
Mr. and Mrs. Vinson Mounts
and two children, Dayton; were
· Monday callers of Mr. and
Mrs. John Vance and family .
They were enroute home after
visiting his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Holly Mounts, Freeburn,
Ky.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernal Vance
and children, Cherry Ridge,
were also callers of the John
Vance family .

THE ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
296 W. Second Sl

Earl F. Ingels, Jr., Manager

Ptxneroy, Ohio

Phone 992-3863

- ..

New Higher ...
.,

PASSBOOK SAVINGS
5 per cent per year paid on Regular

Pa ss book Savings . No Minimum .
(nterest from date of deposit to dale of
withdrawal. int erest compounded
quarterly . Interest paid as long as an
open account is maintained.

5'12 per cent per year paid on
90 day Certifica tes of
Deposit. $1,000.00 Minimum .
interest Payable Quarterly.

'

year Certificates of Deposit.

Breath of Sprin9

55.000.00 Minimum . interest

Bouquet

Payable Quarterly . 90 day
Interest penalty If cashed
before maturity .

a touch of Spring In

your Jife ."

SALE PLANNED
POMEROY - The ladies of
the Forest Run Methodist
Church will sponsor a rummage sale at the church Thursday and Friday from 9a.m. to 3
p.m.

ONLY

$5,95 Delivered

Dudley's Florist
Serving: Middloporl,
Pomeroy, Gallipolis, o.
&amp; Mason Co., W. Ya.

DISTR;;~TO~ N~EDED w

0

IMMEDIATEL Y

6 per cen l per year on 2 year

c,

TO UCOME A PMH OF THE

Certifica tes of Deposit.
In ·
. terest payable Quarterly. 90
day interest penalty 11
cashed bef,ore maturity .
$1D,DDO.DD MJnimum.

T.of..

7JOA

MUL Tt-HILLlON
DOLLAR

v ....

~(,

CISP(NSING IUSINESS
URIJIC ING

(

NATIONALLY ADVERTISED
HOT FOODS .

"'

AS A OltTfiiiiUTO~ 1'0'1
INTlJII - tol.t.AIC SYSTEM$ IHC.

NO SELLING/ WE ESTABLISH ACCOUNTS
II' YOU QUAL.IFY YOU WILL SERVICE
ACCCIUN TS n :T UP IIY THE CONPAHY .

PART TIME ' FULL TIME

All Deposits Insured To $20.0Q0,()() By

C o\N 8!. OPliV•TI!C ON A PAin OR r\JLL
TIME BASI S

The Federsl Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation

UIO.OO IIIONTHLV PROFIT'

LOW OVEMHEAO/ NQ LAYOFFS
MI NIMUM CAS!oi

IH\IUTIIIl"''T U.4tt.OO

LIMITED AVAILABILilY

"II Makes Sense To Save

WIUTE OR C_.,l.L
INTI!" NA"ic: t'I'ITI!IIIS INC .

1110C~AYTON

~
~

"C . ,SUITE. 2ot

ST.l.OUI5,M0 , ll11 7

1

~,
A/C ' " "1•!100
~
....
~• •.t.Sf.D O N THI! !ALl: Of" U CA-"1 Pl£1'1 LOC AtiON !"tl'l OA., 0§

""'

.~~-~-~-~-~-~-~~~-~-~-~-·~-~-~~- . ~

£lue Claimed to
Gunman

Wilh The People Who Care''

•

Combined Assets' of Over $11,000'000.00
.

~l

.~..

.

SERVICE RECOGNIZED- Earle T. Snodgrass, right, resident engineer lor the construction of Southern Ohio Coal Company's Meigs Mine No. 1 and No. 2, is congratulated in
recognition of completing 35 years service in the American Electric Power System. Presenting
Snodgra8s with a lapel pin containing 7 diamonds is Carl P. Zimmerman,"Vice PresidentConstruction of the American Electric Power Service Corjloration in New York. The presentation was held recently at Oscar's Restaurant in Gallipolis.

~· Marine

Airmen in
South Viet Again

SAIGON (UPI)-U.S.
Marine air combat units
returned to South Vietnam
alter an llknonth absence
'Saturday' to holster American
sky power being used agnlnst
the nine-day-&lt;Jid North Vietnamese offensive.
.,
The offensive slackened Sa·
turdoy, but U.S. planes continued bombing raids in both
North and South Vietnam. An
aircraft carrier also moved
into combat position off South
Vietnam's central l'Oastline,
the first lime a naval force has
been based there in slx years.
The arrival at Da Nang
airbase of the two Marine
squadrons, consisting of 36 late
model F4J Phantom jets and
700 Marines to fly and service
them, coincided with the addillon of another squadron of
Air Force FIOS Thunderchlefs
whose operating base in South
Vietnam was not disclosed.
The arrival of the combo!
squadrons put off the
scheduled withdrawal of a
~ squadron of observation lanes
~ from the wa~
' ..
Make Practice Flights
Military sources said the Air
Force squadron arrived from
the United Stales. The two
Marine squadrons, the lirst
Marine air units to be based in
South Vietnam since late 1970,
were thought to have come
from Okinawa.
UP! correspondent Kim Willenson at Da Nang reported
thai the Marine planes made
practice flights shortly after

arriving Saturdoy and were
expected .to enter combat
operations within a few days.
Military spokesmen said the
intensity of the North Vietnamese offensive appeared to
have
eased . somewhat
Ssturday on each of the four
major fighting areas-the
northern front in Quang Tri
Province
below ' the
Demilitarized Zone (DMZ), the
Centra 1 Highlands front, the
Highway 13 front nortl\ of
Saigon and· the .Mekong Delta
front ·south of the capital.
New Offensive Awaited
The North Vietnamese,
however, launched their first
direct attack against an
American outpost since the
offensive began March 30.
Spokesmen said 150 mortar
rounds hit an Army outpost
Ssturday atop Black Virgin
Mountain 55 miles northwest of
Ssigon, wounding four American soldiers,
Sporadic fighting was
reported on the other three
fronts, bul few details were
avl!llable;Milllilry 'lnte!Ugf!iice
officers on the northern lroot
said, however, that North
Vietnamese prisoners and
documents token from them
had indicated a "second
phase" of the offensive would
begin Sunday or Monday.
U.S . planes flying from
airbases in South Vietnam,
Thailand and Guam and from
four aircraft carriers off the
coast bombed North Vietnam
for the third consecutive day

PROVO, Utah (UPI)- Police
picked up a clue to a suspect
.Saturday in their hunt for the
cool, calculating gunman who
parachuted from a United Air
Lines plane with half a million
dollars, the largest ransom
ever paid in a U.S. aircraft
hijacking.
·
Police Chief Jess Evans said
"we have a suspect." He
declined to elaborate, but the
FBI said no suspect was in
custody.
Announcement that authorities had a clue to the wanted
man, who used the name "T.
Johnson," was disclosed
shortly after Evans temporarily called off the ground
search in this flat, marshy area
40 miles southeast of Salt Lake

Saturday and also attacked in
three of the four fronts. There
were np U.S. aeriai attacks in
the Mekong Delta, military
sources said.
Details of the raids over
North Vietnam were not
disclosed, but sources said they
had ranged no deeper than 70
miles north of the DMZ between the two Vietnams .
"Sixle Statton" Reopened
Naval sources said the
Constellation and several support ships steamed south of the
main contingent of the warships and re~stablished "Dixie
Station" off South Vietnam's
central coast. It marked the
first lime that station has been
operative since 19£6.
To the north, three carriers
and at least five destrl!yers are
on "Yankee Station" from
which aerial attacks and artillery barrages are launched
against North Vietnam. The
sOurces said two cruisers, the
USS Oklahoma City and the
USS Chicago, have been ordered on the firing line at
"Yilllkee"$l"atlon" to incrt,ase
its firepower.

Farmers
Defended

WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen·
ate Democratic Leader Mike
Mansfield Saturday accused
the Nixon administration of
trying to l~rn housewives
.
agamsl fanners and ranchers
in the hassle over food prices,
He said the administration
was trying to moke "patsies"
of primary p:oducers when the
real villsins behind soaring
grocery bills were the middle
that hurt the public, cripple the men in the food industry.
economy and cause massive
Mansfield's home state of
human adversity," he said.
Montana is a major producer
The administration bill, of wheat and beet.
w)llch is two years old but still
"What th~ administration is
in committee, would give the trying to do is turn the
White House several options housewife, the consumer,
for dealing with transportation ogalnst the producer,'' he told
strikes, including a bind reporters. "Well, they are
selection between the final picking the wrong pigeons
offers
of
labor and when they pick on farmers and
management.
ranchers. All they're doing Is
Turning to the unem- trying to make a living and it's
ployment p:oblem, Hodgson getting tougher for them all the
p:edlcted the unemployment time."
rate will "bounce around the
Mansfield was indignant at
next few months," head the "unfair" blame being cast
downward and be at the 5 per on farmers and ranchers for
cent level by the end of the _ soaring food prices. He said it
year. It Is currently close to 6 was those who process, pack,
per cent.
distribute and sell' food proWhile
Hodgson
was ducts who are making money,
speaking, United Farm not the growers.
Workers Union pickets passed
· ~ese supermarkets are
out leaflets in front of the hall putting on a great campaign
p:otestlng a Nati\)Dal Labor (to buy lower priced food) but
Relations Boord action aimed they don't seem to be losing
at forcing United Farm any money," he said . "Some of
Workers to halt a consumer them are even raising their
boycott.
own beef. too."

Unions Needing

531• per cent per year on one

.. Put

!f''''''''~~=&gt;:=&gt;:~::::::::::m::::::::::~::::::::::~:;::::::::&gt;:::::::::::;:::::::&lt;=:=&gt;:=:;:=:?&amp;&gt;:~;:;:;&gt;.W"&amp;:::-m

City without finding so much as
a footprint. He said the sear'
chers would regrqup and work
more closely with the 3ir
parties also seeking the
hijacker.
The bizarre hijackihg began
Friday afternoon shortly after
the United flight left ·Denver,
headed lor Los Angeles. A
swarthy man anned with two
guns, a grenade and plastic
explosives began passing notes
to stewardesses dir&lt;laing thsl
the plane be taken to San
Francisco .
Piracy Carefully Planned
For more than 31&gt; hours
while darkness closed in, the
plane satalthe end of a remote
runway at the San Francisco
airport with the 95 passengers

us

,,.

and crew aboard while airline
officials complied with the
hijacker's demands. He asked
for six hours of 'fuel, four
parachutes and $500,000. · All
the hijacker's operations were
carried out with precision that
indicated careful planning. The
passengers were not aware of
what was going on until after
the plane had landed.
When all the demands had
been met, the hijacker allowed
everyone to leave the plane
except for five crewmen who
took off into the night for a
flight over Nevada and a
circuitous route over Utah. At
one point the pilot reported the
hijacker had jumped over
Nevada, but it proved to be a
·false alarm. It was discovered ·

•:W:

· No TV for LBJ
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (UP!) - Former
President Lyndon B. Johnson, resting comfortably after
his secoild major heart attack In 11 ytars, •as deprived ol
his favorite entertnlnment Ssturday night: television.
University of VIrginia Hospital Dlreclor Jofi Harlu
said· althnugb there- Is a televiSion set In tbe former
Presldent'sfourtb Door room In tbe coronary care ...uon,
It is not connected. But he can listen lo a bedside radio.

1
::l

Johnson's "cheSt pains" were diagnosed OHictally

Ssturday as a lull fledged heart attack, but doctors gave
him an 80 pet. chance of recovery.

·.,t

-~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::::;:::i:;:;:;:;~,;.:;:~::::~:s:::::::::::--::::::::!-::::w.(tt~·

the gunman was still aboard
although the light in the pilot's
cabin indicated the back stairs
had been lowered.
Finally, a!lout 11:30 p.m.
MST, the hijacker bailed out
w1th one of the parachutes
supplied by the airline, and the
plane then landed safely at Sail
Lake City.
Parachute Was Bugged
Authorities feared the
hijacker may have been picked
up by a helicopter which had
been reported hovering over

up hope , winning the Indiana

.:.VO:.:L:.:._..:..
V1.:..1.:..N
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:..:.N
:. : D:. :.AY:·.:_:..:.A:..:.
PR:. :.l:::..l.: .:9'...:1:.:.9:..:
7 2=----------~P-"A~G': . E::.:_17 . ~i':~~~s~~:r~~r~

his home state of South Dakota
before launching a drive to
heat Humphrey and Mualde
again in Massachusetts. That
race also is on Aprll 25.
As the cindlda.tes pressed
on, the National Observer, a
weekly newspaper, saj,d Its
second ,nationwide couhY of
prospective delegate support
at the Democratic convention
indicated "a deep and
dramatic collapse" by Mualde
and lhat moatpollllclllli·AW 1\
as "lrreve'tWibl~." '" """"
The paper said Its first COWll,
taken just before and after the
March 14 Florida primary In
which Muskie finished a poor
fourth, put him just 228~ votes
short of the 1,509 needed to win
the nomln'!tion. In cootrast,
the second tabulation g&amp;ve him
a 773~ total or a drop of
slightly more tMn 500 votes.
McGovern made the biggest
advance, moving up fro!J1287'&gt;il
to 490~ and Humphrey gained
66 for a 448 total, It said.
Bayh Keeps the Faith
The speculation about Mus·
Ide's plans for Indiana, where
he is opposed by Hwnphrey
and Alabamo Gov. George C.
Wallace, was based on statements by state Democratic
officials.
But Sen. Birch Bayh, 0-Ind.,
and four of the state's ·
Democratic coogreasmen have
· endorsed Muskle and a spokesman for Muskle said they were
sticking by him. Sen. Harold E.
Hughes, D-Iowa, once a candidate for the White House, said
he also was not backing away
from his endorsement of
Muskie.

Moscow Summit Still Go·
WASHJloiGTON (UP!&gt; -So·
viet ambassador Analoly F.
Dobrynin plans to return to
Moscow in aboul a wee(&lt;. to help
prepare for President Nixon's
May visit, which 1\as been
cloud~ •but
evidently · 1 not
disrupted by Hanoi's invasion of
South Vietnam .
Soviet embassy sources could
not confirm word of Dobrynin's
departure, which was reported
by other knowledgeable informants, but said "of cow·se his
return to Moscow at this time
is not excluded."
By returning well in advance
of the usual time for the
ambassador of a country to be
visited by a U.S. President, it
appeared lh'!t Dobrynin was
making himself available for
extended consultations with
Communist Party chairman
Leonid Brezhnev and. other
Soviet leaders with whom Nixon

will confer after he arrives in
Moscow May 22.
Administration officials acknowledged the trip still might
be jeopardized if Communist
forces seize substantial South
Vietname!jf. terrllory._tq .J)]e!r
current offensive, and if U.S.
retaliation escalates.
Culture Pact Renewed
But for the present, both
countries are preparing for the
Nixon trip without apparent
regard for developments in
Vietnam or the administration's
harsh remarks about Soviet
logistical support for the North
Vietnamese .
Defense Secretary Melvin R.
Laird charged r'riday that the
Russians, as Hanoi's major
arms supplier, were "a major
contributor to the continuing
conflicfthat exists in Southeast
Asia." In Key Biscayne, Fla. ,

Saturday, a White House Although it fails short of
spOkesman said the United Soviet Cultural Minister YekStates "will do what is aterina Furtseva 's support in
necessary to assist the South Washin gton earlier this year for
Vietnamese forces in stopping a greatly expanded cultural
the invasion through providing exchange, officials noted it
air __, powe r and fire pow&lt;;r , fpllpw~d the smopll)e~\ 1 begotia­
supporl of the ARVN (South lions in the 12-year history of
Vietnamese army.)"
the exchange agreements. ·
Officials here also observed
All this notwithstanding, Stale they expect a Soviet reply
Department officials reported shortly on the proposed reSaturday that a two-year sumption of talks to settle the
extension of the Soviet-Ameri- Soviet Lend Lease debl from
ca n cultural exchange agree- World War ll, which Washingment had been negotiated in ton last estimated at $800
Moscow and would be an· million.
In addition, they point to
nounced early next week. ·
Agriculture Secretary Earl L.
The agreement calls for Butz's negotiations in .,Moscow
modest increases in the ex· next week on possible longchange · o( performing artists, range wheat 'Bnd feed grain
scientists, sc holars and sales to the Russians as
students, and another U.S. evidence of the basic ,good
cultural exhibit to appear in a healtl1 of Soviet-American relahall-dozen Soviet cities.
tions.

By United Press International hallie, which may be long.

••

SWlny and warm.

to need a strong showing in the to hall water pollution and several days this week and was
race a we, later and had lost a April 25 Pennsylvania contest, appearing later in the coal- said to ha,ve widespread back·
ing from the slate's powerful
big bloc 01 potential delegate ~riss-crossed the state for the mining center of Scranton.
organizt&gt;d labor groups.
strength at the Democralic second consecutive day On Saturday, Humphrey apbeginning in the capital of
National Convention.
Muskie's ·chief opponent in
peared
across the border in
Harrisburg, Dying west to Erie Pennsylvania, Sen. Hubert H.
Charleston,
W.Va., to tell a
speculation that hP h:.rt ~ i \"'n
The Maine senator. believed to remind voters of his efforts Humphrey, stumped there for
meeting of trial lawyers that be
soon would propose creation of
an independent "Institute of
Justice" to protect civil liberties, improve the courts and
reform prisons.
Muskle L&lt;&gt;aing Streqtb?
Sen. George S. McGovern,
By United Press In·
teroatlooal
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie
campaigned again Saturday in
Pennsylvania, his next presidential primary large~. amid

CLEVELAND {UP!) - U.S.
Secretary of Labor James D.
Hodgson said Friday labor
unions must get used to the
idea of having limits of their
right to strike and on collective
borgnlning if the .public .interests are to be served.
Hodgson also told the Cleveland aty Club that President
Nixon is "a genuine friend of
the American working man."
The labor secretary added
that he believes the adminis·
!ration's bill to allow the White
House to impose labor settlements in transportation would
strengthen rather thsn weaken
colleCtive bargaining. He said
labor and management have
learned how tii insulate themsel\lea from strikes and the
poblic ends up bearing the
!runt of large labor walkouts.
"Congress J4.slarling to realize the mood of the public, and
that mood can best be described as fed up-led up with
strlkes .ln transportation that
now occur like clockwork and

I, this year, to have this pleled and returned early. The
exemption in January of 1973. county auditor takes it from
The blank lornui are at the · there.
·
treasurer's office In ~omeroy
If he certifies your form you
for Meigs Countians. Forms
wlll receive ~ copy of the
will not be malled out.
.,
certificate with your tax bill
This is for homes only - due on the homestead for Jan.
where perl!ons are living -not 1973. It Ia hoped this in·
- formation
reaches all . who
for acreage.
,
One may pick the forms up ·qualify for it. Talk about it with
any time during working hours your neighbors who may not
11 tile office, Gel them cOm· have heard.

the jump site. Highway
Patrolman Ron Law said- the
helicopter flew away as soon as
police approached.
More than 150 law enforcement officers converged on
Provo, site ol Brigham Young
University, in the man hunt.
Radio signals from a "bugged"
parachute were picked up,
indicating that the wanted man
had landed somewhere in the
mud flats. The weather in the
search area Saturday was

ea en1ng

e

Meir Repeats Israel Hard Line

ByGoldleCleadenlq
POMEROY - All Senior
atize1111 of Ohio having an
income of not more than $2,000
a year are eligible for 70 pet. .
reduction on ~ropertyl.x, due
to the 1972 · Ho ellead
Exemption Act, according to
Meigs County Treasurer
Howard .Frank.
However, cUIJelll must be 65
yelll'l old or oldlr llld fill out
an "Application" fw1t- J•·

;,.· ~

•

Curbs-Hodgson

Some T~payers.
over,'65
to
.
.
-Get 70% Reduction in '72

'.

Prime Minister Golda Meir
said Saturday that even if Arab
leaders agree to sign
full
peace accord with Israel, her
government will not give back
all the territory captured \11 the
1967 Middle East War.
Mrs. Meir spoke in a
televised interview released
alter Israeli military spokesmen reported clashes between
Israeli soldiers and Arab
guerrilla~ along the borders
with Lebanon and Syria:
The spokesman said- an
Israeli anny patrol killed an
Arab guerrilla Friday night in
· a skirrilish just south of tlte
Jsraeli,Lebanese cease-liTe
line. Around midnight, he said,
an Israeli outpost came under
fire from Syrian territory,
touching off an exchange of fire
with Syrian-based guerrillas.
In Egypt, Premier Aziz
Sidky told a public rally the
day when Egypt resomes the
war against Israel "will not be
far off." He said the armed
forces have enough weapons to
emerge 'victorious from the

a

No Israeli Decision
Speaking in the town of
Zagazig, 40 miles northeast of
Cairo, Sidky also denounced
King Hussein's plan for a
federal Jordan as aimed at
isolating Egypt from other
Arab countries.
V
Mrs. Meir, speaking ln an
interview with Britain's lndependent Television news, ruled
out an Israeli withdrawal from
the Golan Heights of Syria, the
Gaza strip, East Jerusalem, or
~arm ei.Sheikh, the outpost

on the. southern tip of the occupied Sinai peninsula of
Egypt.
"There is no decision of the
Israeli government ," Mrs.
Meir said, "but if you ask me, I
think there is no doubt that
Egypt would gel a great part of
the Sinai back."
~e said, however, there Is
no point to the A}"abs (iersisting
in demands for a total Israeli
withdrawal."
·
Pollee Arrest Marxists
Mrs. Melr, in the taped interviewtohebroadcastSunday

=,,,,,,~,,,,,,,,~,,,,:::::=~= =&gt;.;=&gt;.=~- ~:;:=: -~=:;: : : · ~!t~o:urp~~~r~:.?:
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio extended outlook
Tuesday through Thursday.
Chance of showers
Tuesday and Thursday. Fair
Wednesday. Cool early
Tuesday, then mild througl! the period. Highs tn the 60s
and 1•s. Overnight tows
Tuesday In the lower 30s to
'lower 4•s, becoming upper
30s to near 50 Tuesday and
Wednesday.

·=Scioto
May
f} d d
·

neighbors in a position that
would not encourage them tp
try to attack Israeli again,
In Beirut Saturday, a ,
.B

KILLED BY CAR
ZANESVILLE, Ohio (UP! )
- Mrs.. Hazel Pearl Shroyer,
24, Dresden, w.as killed
Saturday when struck by a car
~ere.

Jac~son Likes it In,.M iddle
CLEVELAND (UPI) !._ Sen.
Henry Jackson of Washington,
a candidate lor the Democratic
presidential nomination, said
Fri!lay "all of tliose people who
are advocating either right or
left wing plaiforms" will' be out
of the race by election day.
Jackson, at a news on·
ference here, criticized Sen..
George McGovern of Soutti
Dakota for being too far to the
left and Alabilma Gov. George
Wallace too far to the right

Marxist Palestinian guerrilla
group said two of its leaders
who arrived in Cairo to attend
meetings of the Palestinian
national 'council, were
arrested by Egyptian poUce.
ill~reated and later deported.
The front is a splinter group
which broke away last month
from the Popular Front for the
Liberation of Palestine, which
Is led by George Habash, and is
known for its hijacking of
western airliners.

while Sen. Edmund Muskie of from people who are angry,"
Maine was too "IndeCisive." said Jackson. "The party must
"Anyone who talks of culling learn to reckon with this ."
the defense budget $31 blllion in
He dismissed Muskle as
these perilous times is way out being too indeciaive. "I don't
in left field," Jackson said of know where he stands and
McGovern. ·"tf he isn't out in that's probably the·reason he's
left lield I don't know who is." going downhill so fast,"
Jackson said Wallace is Jackson said. Jackson said he
threatening to "decimate" the was the only announced canDemocratic party from the dldate who represents a
right. "Wallace. constitutes a "progressive centet 1'
real threat because it Is ob· philosophy and could win in
vious he is, receiving support November.

1.

.

e

00

e

COLUMBUS {UP!) - The
National Weather Service office
here warned residents along
the Scioto River, running southward through here to the Ohio
River at Portsmouth, that they
should be alert for weekend
flooding resulting from heavy
rainfall earlier in the week.
While the heavy precipitation
ended late Friday night, run·
olf continued from smaller
Streams into the Scioto,:
keeping It rising from Marlon•
County to the Ohio River.
The Scioto crested at LaRue
Saturday morning at 10.115 feet
and then started receding. The
river at !'inspect in Marion
County was expected to cr~t
just above the 10-foot Hood
stage Sunday morning.
South of here, the Scioto was
expected to crest at Circleville
at 16.3 feet by noon Sunday,
and cresl at Piketon Monday
afternoon at 18.5 feet, both
more than two feet over Hood
stage.

Enarson to

L d OSU
ea

COLUMBUS ( UP!)
Harold Enarson, 52, the man
who helped mould Cleveland
State University over the past
six years, will become the new
leader of Ohio State University
Sept. 1.
· Enarson was named OSU
president-elect Friday by the
board of trustees who cast a.
unanimous vote. He succeeds
Novice Fawcett who retires at
the eild of the academic year
after 16 years as president of
the state's largest university.
Ensrson, who did not apply
for the position, was approached by the search
committee. Both he and hil
wife Audrey were In~
by the bollrd. ·He will receive
$50,000 per year, the same
salary which Fawcett bad been
getting. He too will have an on- campus .resid~.
He said be was caught "oft
balance" bY the ~!!lei:Uon. ·"l
never ir\ my wildest ·
Imagination tboutltt of tbe
(ll'l!lidencyofObloStaleor1117
other university," he aald. "i
simply was trying to do the
beat job I knew how to do
here."

�(Gallipolis
SpeciiJlty Store)
.
.
When.you. t~i~k of .car~et ~ think of th~

Dateline
Gallia

.

Land of Carpet .- Carp.et ·Land ·:..; ·Where·
~

you'lkget
experts.

more for lesS 'from the carpet
"

Carpet Is O·u r .Only Business!
If it's carpet you wish, your' wish can come true :at
161 3rd Avenue•.

THE SALT LAKE MORMON TABERNAClli Choir,
seen in Us home setting, the Tabernacle on Temple Square,
will perform as part of the World Conference of The Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, October I, 2and 3in Salt
Lake City, Utah.

•

HERE ARE JUSllO BIG REASONS ·WHY ·

CARPET-LAND CAN GUARANTEE COMPLETE

Mornton Tabernacle is

SATISFACTION.

Among World's Greatest

1.

Temples of Musical Art
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah _ sandstone piers, three feet
The Salt Lake Mormon wide, nine feet long and 20 feet
Tabernacle, site of the 142nd high. The seating capacity Is
Annual world Conference of approximately 7,000 although
The Church of Jesus Christ of many more persons have been
Latter-&lt;lioy Saints on April 6, 8 crowded into the building.
and 9, has earned tbe · The world's greatest atreputation of being one of the tractions have been brought to
world's greatest temples of this building, among them
....
being Gilmore's, Sousa's and
m....c.
L
From the days of Joseph
eoncarallo ' s bands,
Smith, the founding prophet, to Paderewskl, Adellna Patti,
and Including those of John McCormick, Galli-Curci,
President Joseph Fielding Lillian Nordica,' Schuman-.
Smith, who Is presiding at Helnck, Damrosch's orchestra,
the conference, Church John Charles Thomas, Fritz
leaders have given to music an Kreisler, Mischa Ehn~, Nellie
active encouragement. In · Melva, Jascha Heilltz,
Kirtland, Ohio, ~~!Choir sang at Philadelphia Symphony,
. a temple dedication in 1831i, Richard Crooks, Helen Jepson,
and later 1n Nauvoo, Ill., there Nmo Martini, ~r~ce Moore,
were two choirs for reUgious Benjammo Gigh, Joseph
gatherings
Hoffman, Tito Schipa, RachThese agencies of culture manin~ff anH · other great inwere transplanted to the ternahonal artuts and orvalleysofthemountainsbythe chestras, to ~arne a few. .
areal Mormon pioneer
Th~e special attr~ctions m
Brigham Young. In addition, addition to hw\are&amp; of local
hll mlBslonary forces brougbt musical leshvals, regular
into the territory from England appear.ances of the Utah
and other countries many men Symphony and the weekly
and women of unusual talent rehearsals and broadcasts of
who gave Mormon com- the Tabernacle Choir have
muniUes their early musical establisbed the reputation of
stature
·
the Salt Lake Tabernacle as
The f~sl meeting place of the one of the w~rld's greatest
Latter-day Saints In the Salt temples of mUSic.
·Lake Valley was a bowery only
The 142nd Annual World
28 by 40 feet built on July 31 , Conference featured mustc
1147, just one week after the hy the Tabernacle ChoU' and
arrival of the first pioneers. messages of tbe top Church
This bowery was replaced soon leaders. The audiences are
after by a more pretentious one
named the "Old Bowery," a
building pf posts, slabs and
areen bougbs.
Then came the "Old
Tabernacle" in 1852. It was 62
by 128 feet in size and made
chiefly of adbbes. Wor;, pn the
new and present Tabernacle
began In September of 1865 and
the domed structure was first
used October 6, 1867, at the 37tb
semi-annual conference of the
Church. Incidentally, the
singing was by the Tabernacle
Choir, lfhich first sang In the
temporary bowery in 1847.
Eiiptlcal In shape, the
Tabernacle is 250 feet long and
15Gfeet wide. The great arched
roof Is made of wooden trusses
held together by wooden pegs
and rawhide.
. "i
Thare Is a 10-foot space be·
tween ceiling and the roof. The
turtie-ehVed roof rests on 44

·2.
3.

numbered in the millions
because of widespread
coverage by radio and
television. More than 350
stations will carry the

AU'niOR DIES
CINCINNATI (UPI)
Robert F. Schulkers, who
created "Seckatary Hawkins "
and his riverbank adventures,
died at the age of 81 alter
·SUffering a hear! attack at his
h001e here Thursday.' A mass
of U.'l'eiUI'I'OCtion will be held
Monday morning.' Schulkers
drew the lat litUe boy and his
ldmlluroua rlvetbank gang
and introduced him lo the
Oncinnati Enquirer readers in

broadcasts from coast to coast
and in many lanaguages to
Mexico, South and Central
America ; the Caribbean,
Africa and Europe.

Senior Citizens Plan Yard Sale
Mason's Senior Citizens, at
• covered dish luncheon
meeting Thursday, made
plans lor a Yard Sale to bi!
held from I p.m. until 4 p.m.
April13 at the Senior Citizens
Center.

Mary Lynch, a Mason
eounty Health Nurse, was
present to talk to -tbe group
concerning diets. Aslo two
visitors
presented
a
demonstration on How to
Make Neck Tjes.

5.

6.
7.

ALL CARPET 'FIRST QUALITY'. ABSQLUTELY NO.
SECONDS
'

I•

WE HAVE SIX INSTALLATION CREWS - SO IF YOU
WANT IT Now·WE CAN DO IT NOW. •

3 LOCATIONS FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE
TRI STATES' LARGEST CARPET STORE
2626 5th. AVE.
HUNTINGTON, W.VA. 523-9402
161 3rd AVE.
GALLIPOLIS,·OHIO
446-1641

WHY WAIT!" BUY AWHIRLPOOL
WASHER &amp; DRYER .NOW!

8.

this special
&lt;IE&gt;

Whirlpool

9.

WASHER VALUE
.
WON'T LAST
FOREVER
'

\

$

OPENING SOON- 116 W. MAIN, POMEROY, OHIO

SHOP OUR QUALITY &amp; PRICES BEFORE YOU BUY.
(You'll be glad you did.)
THROW RUGS LEFT OVER FROM YOUR WALL TO ·WAlL
INSTALLATION, _SERGEQ ·AT NO EXTRA QiARGE.
(Because we try harder.)

10. WE APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS BECAUSE

"'"'*'

'· COME INNOW'S A
SPECIAL TIME
TO BUY!

COURTEOUS - NO HIGH PRESSURE SALESMEN FREE ESTIMATES
DOZENS OF SHORT ROLLS AVAILABLE AT REMNANT
PRICES FOR THAT EXTRA ROOM.

•

It's a speci•fly featured model. And
it's bound to go fast at this low price. 2
speeds, 3 CJCIIS- NORMAL, GENTLE lind
PERMANENT PRESS. Speclel permenent preu
coal-dawn fights wrinkles blfare clothes 110 into
the dryer. Su.per SURGILATOR• aaitator scru"
clothes clean. MIJic-Mix* filter traps lint. T. .
posidon water level control and five water temperature selections for washing flexibility, So•'·
settina for those extra-dirty washables. A sreat
buy - especially now!

washer

OVER 400 FULL ROLLS IN STOCK - AVAILABLE 'NOW'
FOR THAT .'HURRY UP' JOB. (No weeks of waiting for
that special order carpel)

'

MAKE WASH DAYS EASIER WITH . • .

.

MORE TROUBLE
OXFORD, Ohio (UP!) John D. Millett, retiring
chancellor of the Ohio Board of
Regents, says he sees "nothing
ahead but trouble for colleges
and universities ... because of
the financial crush of more
students and less money .
"There Is going to be
tremendous expansion of
enrollment of low income
students In public colleges and
that expansion Is going to force
state government to provide
more support for thos e
students," said Millett.

4.

JOSEPH FIELDING SMITH, 9:&gt;-year-old presldeni of
The OlUrch of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, surrounded
by happy youth of the church , embraces a young admirer.
President Smith is presiding at the upcoming 142nd Annual
Conference of the church April&amp;, 8 and 9 on Temple Square in
Salt Lake City, Utah.
·····

EXPERT INSTALLATION·- FREE REPAIRS FOR 5 YEARS.
".
(We want your job to_look "Nice" for years to come.)

.

~~v·~ ~

{
\
\

·

Your Interest
Is The
Heart
\
OfOur

'

95

ONLY
WITH MATCHING
WHIRlPOOL DRYEII

$38995

,

CALLCARPET-LAND- 446·1641
For a flee ••tlmata .;,_ we will bring
samples
to your
.
'
home where you may ~lect the carpet you want In
the comfort of your own living room.

Ill
Phone
Colli,..lio

TRY US -' . YOU'LL .LIKE US

ttl~.

'

•
.I

·'-

BY HOBART WILSON, JR.
ONE WEEK from tomorrow, Monday, Aprill7, 1972, is tbe
day everybQdy has been waiting lor the past six years.

++++
DEDICATION of the new $21 million Holzer Medical Center
is scheduled for 2 p.m.; ori that date. Congratulatory messages
are pouring in from all parts of tbe midwest. It should be a day
southeastern Ohioans will never forget.
·

++++
WE'RE too young to remember dedication ceremonies of the
Gallipolis Roller Dam back in .the late 19318. We weren't even
around when the first Silver Bridge was dedicated In 1928. AC:
cording to tbe Daily Tribune lUes, those two historic events attracted thousands of visitors to this area .

.

SUNDAY ONlY

++++
DON"f know at this time how many people will be on hand
for the April17 dedication ceremonies, bUt when the Public Open.
House is conducted by hospital officials on April18 and 19, the
turnout should SW'pass anything ever attempted In the Gallia
County area.

i PM TO 1 PM

4 POUND BAG

-GRASS SEED

++++
IN case you failed to see the story in the March 30 edition of
the Tribune, the Public Open House Is scheduled between 2-4 and
7-9 p.m., on April IS and 19. Hospital officials will have special

LADIES

guides stationed throughout the modern structure lor visitors.

++++
NUMEROUS dignitaries, including President Nixon, have
been invited to the dedication ceremonies. As of this date, the
White House has made no commitment as to whether or not the
nation's chief executive will be here for the event. Anyway, it's
something everybody in this area is looking forward to, and from
John W. Rafferty, executive yice president of the Holzer Medical
Center on down, we know that everybody associated with tbe
medical center must feel a great sense of pride of an accomplishment that was just a dream six short years ago.

++++
RECEIVED a letter and clipping recently from Mrs.
Clarence (Glorianna Foster) Dougherty, Carbondale, Ill. Her
son, Bret, was a member of the Carbondale Biddy Basketball
League Ali.Stars which participated in the national tournament
finals at San Juan, Puerto Rico recently.

++++

HOSE
2 30

REG. 77' PAIR
PAIR
~
PKG.

GYM

BAG

PERFECTLY MATCHED

16" gym bag wilh lull top zipper
and vinyl grain pattern.

BOB WOOD, big six.foot plus GAHS freshman who tips the
"scales at 235 pounds, suffered a broken bone in his left foot while
playing basketball in his backyard recently. Wood, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Harland Woo~, Gallipolis, Is a prime football and
basketball prospect at Gallia Academy next year. He hopes to be
hack in action in a month or two.

HARDWARE DEPT.

CLOTHING DEPT.

ClOTIIIIf ""'·

----- -~-

~

.

SPALDING

. I
. .- - '

ZEBCO 1545 ROD &amp; REEL COMBO

++++

++++

$1.24

SEAMLESS MESH

Heck's Reg. $2.66

CARBONDALE finished third in the national event by
defeating_Lakewood, N.J., 71-3.'1. Brei, a 5-5'h "Ali-America"
seventh grader, tallied 'J:I points against the New Jersey team.
He scored a tournament-high 67 points in three championship
games, including 16 in a 49-42 win over Wichita, and 22 in-a ~2
last..second loss to Chicago.
~
BRET'S team gained the finals by winning the Mid-West
Regional in Gary, Ind., late in February. Nine teams participated in the national finals March 23, 24 and 25 at San Juan.
Brei is the grandson of the late Col. and Mrs . Fred Foster,
Gallipolis, and the nephew of John Foster, Kanauga . His
paternal grandparents are Mr. and' Mrs. William J. Brown,
Gallipolis. Several years ago, Mrs. Dougherty was employed as a
member of the Tribune's advertising staff.

Heck's Reg.

15.45- For heavy fishing when extra
power is a must, thi s is a perfect
match . Zebco A04 spin · cost reel.
5 ' 6", medium -action Zebco 4040

$799

rod .

HECK'SREG. $9.99

SPOITS DEPT.

TENNIS
RACKET

5477

TElliS BALLS

Ideal f9r overage playen .

HECK'S.JtEG.

3 Ill BAG

REG.

$5.99

$1
· ~oo ··

3 roR -11.39

,,_

$HITS

SHITS

DE,.

++++

GAHS Principal James N. M. Davis and members of the
Blue Devil coaching stall received a letter recently from G. H.
Stempal, Jfl, director of College Communications, Ohio
University, Athens. It no doubt made local school officials feel
mighty proud. Stempal wrote : "Dear Mr. Davis. As the lather of
a ninth grade football and basketball player lor Athens, I want to
conunend your ninth grade players , their coaches and your fans
for their lair play and good sportsmanship they exhibited this
year. Your school set an lxample that the rest of the
Southeastern Ohio Conference schools might well follow. It also
seems to me that your school's level or' sportsmanship is particularly significant in view of the fact that the football game and
two basketball games between the freshmen were all close."

30COUNT

SOAP PADS

SOUTH BEll) FLY RER
HICK'S
RIG •

++++
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from tbe files of the Daily Tribune
and weekly Gallia Times .. : Second Lieutenant Bob Dayton, 24,
llnisMs training as pilot on B-29 Superior! at Randolph AFB, '
Texas ... Mrs. 0. 0. Mcintyre aMounces plans to visit Spain,
Wales and Scotland this summel' ... Naomi Phillips, 51, killed In
automobile accident in Savannah, Ga ... Ray Irwin, 13, Centenary captures top honors in annual Gallia County Spelling Bee
... ~g Wetherholt joins Tribune editorial staff ... Pomeroy
comes from behind In last inning to nip GAHS 8-71n Southeastern
Ohio League baseball opener.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center, Ftrst
Oak Hill
Ave. and Cedar St. General
Present Patients
Mrs.
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 ~ · Florence Grooms, Jackson;
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to Dudley Green, Wellston;
4:30 pm. Parents only on- William Brown, Jackson;
Pediatrics Ward.
Charles .Wyant, Jackson;
Births
James Bailey, Beaver;
Mr. and Mrs. Richard K. Katherine Burns, Jackson;
Douglas, Middleport, a Dorothy, Slavens, Jackson;
daughter.
Beulah Chaney, SOuth WebDischarges
ster; Je,sse Vlttltoe, Jackson;
Brenda Hartley, Elwin George Hall, Jackson;
Taylor, Sheila Thevenln, Theodore Renshaw, Wellston;
Woodrow Jones, Donna Webb, Harold Dailey, Coalton;
John Brown, Sr., Brian J. William Tomblin, Jackson;
Leach, Okie Camp, Joyce Mary Harrison, Oak Hill;
Bishop, Ethel Burdette, Vicki KatherineCox,~kHill; Helen
Burnette, Willard H. Cumbo, Fultz, Scioto F"'iffrtace;. Homer
Sr., Archie D. Dolin, Sharon B. Johnson, Jackson; Charles
Michael, Burnace Stout, E. Jenkins, Jackson; Floyd ·
Parmer Taylor, Winston Moore, Oak Hill; Mildred
Varney, Nancy Walker, Mrs: Ponn, Wellston; Willard McChrlatopher W. Biars and Coy,OakHW;VIoiiHutchlson,
daughter, Sha11!B C._ Fetty, Jackson; Elizabeth Rldgeiray, .
Ryan L. Hayman, Mary Oak 'Hill,
Frances Martin, Michelle
Palleoll Releoaed: Pete
Prater, Mn. Donald l'erklns Hoffman, Michael Queen,
.and son, !Wph Johnston and Grace , Evans; WiiUam Rlly
Jerry L. McP~rson.
' 'nliKIIIIB, UWe BlaJllpn, Jamei
. .
Sturgill, Melvin Prater,' Etbel
,. Vele~Memoria!Hupllll Silvey, Gladys McDaniel,
. ADMITTED - Clarence · Vadis Wrigh~ Gladys Hinkle,
.T
, N Ha
Pea I LeGnard Long, Sandra Fannin,
eiUllln, ew
v~;
r Mary $pohn, Charles Welch,
. Dillon, Reedsville, Wilbur Martin Sorrell, Carrie' Tate,
~lnson, . CooivWe; Sandra Nadine Cook.
Lowman, New Haven.
,• DISCHARGED -' Sandra
Jonea, Trudy Jonea, John
Seven· ounces is the maxi- '
L1rkin1, Wuley Glllilail,
·
muin
'weight for a u.s. air·
Qllllna, CleO Labonte;
mall Jetter.
Jr., Richard llelrbl.

wuu.m

.\~

•.;-::... $111

460L

FUTURE
FLOOR FINISH

SPORTS DEPT.

$159

66 1

WOISIWAII

"''·

•

HICK'S IIG. $1.99'

IIIHISEWAIE IJI1T.

Rally
Baseball Shoes

·-·

,~ETAL FUNNEL
WITH FLEXIBLE HOSE

Sizes 2 to 7
Heck's Reg. 13.88

HICK'S REG.

$1.99

'STANLEY
HAND PRUNER

'2''

Pl Pleasant Store On~

AIIFOMIITiriiJE!F.

OIL CHANGE KIT
11 quarl durable polyethylene pan, oil filler
wrench and heavy duly pouring spout with
sharp culler. Allows for draining .crankcase
otl for lhe home mechanic.

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

$ 77

. BUCKET OF
·sPONGES
Heck's 72~

Reg. sl.08
· Heck's

Reg. $2.77

A dr.aw·cut action pruning shear with
blade of. natural cutting angle. High
carbon steel blade ,i s fully hardened
and tempered, has thin .cutting edge for
quick clean cutting . Replaceable anvil .
Handles a·re covered for comfortable
grip.

.

Heclc's Reg.,lar $3.77

HOUSEWARES DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

..

�(Gallipolis
SpeciiJlty Store)
.
.
When.you. t~i~k of .car~et ~ think of th~

Dateline
Gallia

.

Land of Carpet .- Carp.et ·Land ·:..; ·Where·
~

you'lkget
experts.

more for lesS 'from the carpet
"

Carpet Is O·u r .Only Business!
If it's carpet you wish, your' wish can come true :at
161 3rd Avenue•.

THE SALT LAKE MORMON TABERNAClli Choir,
seen in Us home setting, the Tabernacle on Temple Square,
will perform as part of the World Conference of The Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, October I, 2and 3in Salt
Lake City, Utah.

•

HERE ARE JUSllO BIG REASONS ·WHY ·

CARPET-LAND CAN GUARANTEE COMPLETE

Mornton Tabernacle is

SATISFACTION.

Among World's Greatest

1.

Temples of Musical Art
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah _ sandstone piers, three feet
The Salt Lake Mormon wide, nine feet long and 20 feet
Tabernacle, site of the 142nd high. The seating capacity Is
Annual world Conference of approximately 7,000 although
The Church of Jesus Christ of many more persons have been
Latter-&lt;lioy Saints on April 6, 8 crowded into the building.
and 9, has earned tbe · The world's greatest atreputation of being one of the tractions have been brought to
world's greatest temples of this building, among them
....
being Gilmore's, Sousa's and
m....c.
L
From the days of Joseph
eoncarallo ' s bands,
Smith, the founding prophet, to Paderewskl, Adellna Patti,
and Including those of John McCormick, Galli-Curci,
President Joseph Fielding Lillian Nordica,' Schuman-.
Smith, who Is presiding at Helnck, Damrosch's orchestra,
the conference, Church John Charles Thomas, Fritz
leaders have given to music an Kreisler, Mischa Ehn~, Nellie
active encouragement. In · Melva, Jascha Heilltz,
Kirtland, Ohio, ~~!Choir sang at Philadelphia Symphony,
. a temple dedication in 1831i, Richard Crooks, Helen Jepson,
and later 1n Nauvoo, Ill., there Nmo Martini, ~r~ce Moore,
were two choirs for reUgious Benjammo Gigh, Joseph
gatherings
Hoffman, Tito Schipa, RachThese agencies of culture manin~ff anH · other great inwere transplanted to the ternahonal artuts and orvalleysofthemountainsbythe chestras, to ~arne a few. .
areal Mormon pioneer
Th~e special attr~ctions m
Brigham Young. In addition, addition to hw\are&amp; of local
hll mlBslonary forces brougbt musical leshvals, regular
into the territory from England appear.ances of the Utah
and other countries many men Symphony and the weekly
and women of unusual talent rehearsals and broadcasts of
who gave Mormon com- the Tabernacle Choir have
muniUes their early musical establisbed the reputation of
stature
·
the Salt Lake Tabernacle as
The f~sl meeting place of the one of the w~rld's greatest
Latter-day Saints In the Salt temples of mUSic.
·Lake Valley was a bowery only
The 142nd Annual World
28 by 40 feet built on July 31 , Conference featured mustc
1147, just one week after the hy the Tabernacle ChoU' and
arrival of the first pioneers. messages of tbe top Church
This bowery was replaced soon leaders. The audiences are
after by a more pretentious one
named the "Old Bowery," a
building pf posts, slabs and
areen bougbs.
Then came the "Old
Tabernacle" in 1852. It was 62
by 128 feet in size and made
chiefly of adbbes. Wor;, pn the
new and present Tabernacle
began In September of 1865 and
the domed structure was first
used October 6, 1867, at the 37tb
semi-annual conference of the
Church. Incidentally, the
singing was by the Tabernacle
Choir, lfhich first sang In the
temporary bowery in 1847.
Eiiptlcal In shape, the
Tabernacle is 250 feet long and
15Gfeet wide. The great arched
roof Is made of wooden trusses
held together by wooden pegs
and rawhide.
. "i
Thare Is a 10-foot space be·
tween ceiling and the roof. The
turtie-ehVed roof rests on 44

·2.
3.

numbered in the millions
because of widespread
coverage by radio and
television. More than 350
stations will carry the

AU'niOR DIES
CINCINNATI (UPI)
Robert F. Schulkers, who
created "Seckatary Hawkins "
and his riverbank adventures,
died at the age of 81 alter
·SUffering a hear! attack at his
h001e here Thursday.' A mass
of U.'l'eiUI'I'OCtion will be held
Monday morning.' Schulkers
drew the lat litUe boy and his
ldmlluroua rlvetbank gang
and introduced him lo the
Oncinnati Enquirer readers in

broadcasts from coast to coast
and in many lanaguages to
Mexico, South and Central
America ; the Caribbean,
Africa and Europe.

Senior Citizens Plan Yard Sale
Mason's Senior Citizens, at
• covered dish luncheon
meeting Thursday, made
plans lor a Yard Sale to bi!
held from I p.m. until 4 p.m.
April13 at the Senior Citizens
Center.

Mary Lynch, a Mason
eounty Health Nurse, was
present to talk to -tbe group
concerning diets. Aslo two
visitors
presented
a
demonstration on How to
Make Neck Tjes.

5.

6.
7.

ALL CARPET 'FIRST QUALITY'. ABSQLUTELY NO.
SECONDS
'

I•

WE HAVE SIX INSTALLATION CREWS - SO IF YOU
WANT IT Now·WE CAN DO IT NOW. •

3 LOCATIONS FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE
TRI STATES' LARGEST CARPET STORE
2626 5th. AVE.
HUNTINGTON, W.VA. 523-9402
161 3rd AVE.
GALLIPOLIS,·OHIO
446-1641

WHY WAIT!" BUY AWHIRLPOOL
WASHER &amp; DRYER .NOW!

8.

this special
&lt;IE&gt;

Whirlpool

9.

WASHER VALUE
.
WON'T LAST
FOREVER
'

\

$

OPENING SOON- 116 W. MAIN, POMEROY, OHIO

SHOP OUR QUALITY &amp; PRICES BEFORE YOU BUY.
(You'll be glad you did.)
THROW RUGS LEFT OVER FROM YOUR WALL TO ·WAlL
INSTALLATION, _SERGEQ ·AT NO EXTRA QiARGE.
(Because we try harder.)

10. WE APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS BECAUSE

"'"'*'

'· COME INNOW'S A
SPECIAL TIME
TO BUY!

COURTEOUS - NO HIGH PRESSURE SALESMEN FREE ESTIMATES
DOZENS OF SHORT ROLLS AVAILABLE AT REMNANT
PRICES FOR THAT EXTRA ROOM.

•

It's a speci•fly featured model. And
it's bound to go fast at this low price. 2
speeds, 3 CJCIIS- NORMAL, GENTLE lind
PERMANENT PRESS. Speclel permenent preu
coal-dawn fights wrinkles blfare clothes 110 into
the dryer. Su.per SURGILATOR• aaitator scru"
clothes clean. MIJic-Mix* filter traps lint. T. .
posidon water level control and five water temperature selections for washing flexibility, So•'·
settina for those extra-dirty washables. A sreat
buy - especially now!

washer

OVER 400 FULL ROLLS IN STOCK - AVAILABLE 'NOW'
FOR THAT .'HURRY UP' JOB. (No weeks of waiting for
that special order carpel)

'

MAKE WASH DAYS EASIER WITH . • .

.

MORE TROUBLE
OXFORD, Ohio (UP!) John D. Millett, retiring
chancellor of the Ohio Board of
Regents, says he sees "nothing
ahead but trouble for colleges
and universities ... because of
the financial crush of more
students and less money .
"There Is going to be
tremendous expansion of
enrollment of low income
students In public colleges and
that expansion Is going to force
state government to provide
more support for thos e
students," said Millett.

4.

JOSEPH FIELDING SMITH, 9:&gt;-year-old presldeni of
The OlUrch of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, surrounded
by happy youth of the church , embraces a young admirer.
President Smith is presiding at the upcoming 142nd Annual
Conference of the church April&amp;, 8 and 9 on Temple Square in
Salt Lake City, Utah.
·····

EXPERT INSTALLATION·- FREE REPAIRS FOR 5 YEARS.
".
(We want your job to_look "Nice" for years to come.)

.

~~v·~ ~

{
\
\

·

Your Interest
Is The
Heart
\
OfOur

'

95

ONLY
WITH MATCHING
WHIRlPOOL DRYEII

$38995

,

CALLCARPET-LAND- 446·1641
For a flee ••tlmata .;,_ we will bring
samples
to your
.
'
home where you may ~lect the carpet you want In
the comfort of your own living room.

Ill
Phone
Colli,..lio

TRY US -' . YOU'LL .LIKE US

ttl~.

'

•
.I

·'-

BY HOBART WILSON, JR.
ONE WEEK from tomorrow, Monday, Aprill7, 1972, is tbe
day everybQdy has been waiting lor the past six years.

++++
DEDICATION of the new $21 million Holzer Medical Center
is scheduled for 2 p.m.; ori that date. Congratulatory messages
are pouring in from all parts of tbe midwest. It should be a day
southeastern Ohioans will never forget.
·

++++
WE'RE too young to remember dedication ceremonies of the
Gallipolis Roller Dam back in .the late 19318. We weren't even
around when the first Silver Bridge was dedicated In 1928. AC:
cording to tbe Daily Tribune lUes, those two historic events attracted thousands of visitors to this area .

.

SUNDAY ONlY

++++
DON"f know at this time how many people will be on hand
for the April17 dedication ceremonies, bUt when the Public Open.
House is conducted by hospital officials on April18 and 19, the
turnout should SW'pass anything ever attempted In the Gallia
County area.

i PM TO 1 PM

4 POUND BAG

-GRASS SEED

++++
IN case you failed to see the story in the March 30 edition of
the Tribune, the Public Open House Is scheduled between 2-4 and
7-9 p.m., on April IS and 19. Hospital officials will have special

LADIES

guides stationed throughout the modern structure lor visitors.

++++
NUMEROUS dignitaries, including President Nixon, have
been invited to the dedication ceremonies. As of this date, the
White House has made no commitment as to whether or not the
nation's chief executive will be here for the event. Anyway, it's
something everybody in this area is looking forward to, and from
John W. Rafferty, executive yice president of the Holzer Medical
Center on down, we know that everybody associated with tbe
medical center must feel a great sense of pride of an accomplishment that was just a dream six short years ago.

++++
RECEIVED a letter and clipping recently from Mrs.
Clarence (Glorianna Foster) Dougherty, Carbondale, Ill. Her
son, Bret, was a member of the Carbondale Biddy Basketball
League Ali.Stars which participated in the national tournament
finals at San Juan, Puerto Rico recently.

++++

HOSE
2 30

REG. 77' PAIR
PAIR
~
PKG.

GYM

BAG

PERFECTLY MATCHED

16" gym bag wilh lull top zipper
and vinyl grain pattern.

BOB WOOD, big six.foot plus GAHS freshman who tips the
"scales at 235 pounds, suffered a broken bone in his left foot while
playing basketball in his backyard recently. Wood, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Harland Woo~, Gallipolis, Is a prime football and
basketball prospect at Gallia Academy next year. He hopes to be
hack in action in a month or two.

HARDWARE DEPT.

CLOTHING DEPT.

ClOTIIIIf ""'·

----- -~-

~

.

SPALDING

. I
. .- - '

ZEBCO 1545 ROD &amp; REEL COMBO

++++

++++

$1.24

SEAMLESS MESH

Heck's Reg. $2.66

CARBONDALE finished third in the national event by
defeating_Lakewood, N.J., 71-3.'1. Brei, a 5-5'h "Ali-America"
seventh grader, tallied 'J:I points against the New Jersey team.
He scored a tournament-high 67 points in three championship
games, including 16 in a 49-42 win over Wichita, and 22 in-a ~2
last..second loss to Chicago.
~
BRET'S team gained the finals by winning the Mid-West
Regional in Gary, Ind., late in February. Nine teams participated in the national finals March 23, 24 and 25 at San Juan.
Brei is the grandson of the late Col. and Mrs . Fred Foster,
Gallipolis, and the nephew of John Foster, Kanauga . His
paternal grandparents are Mr. and' Mrs. William J. Brown,
Gallipolis. Several years ago, Mrs. Dougherty was employed as a
member of the Tribune's advertising staff.

Heck's Reg.

15.45- For heavy fishing when extra
power is a must, thi s is a perfect
match . Zebco A04 spin · cost reel.
5 ' 6", medium -action Zebco 4040

$799

rod .

HECK'SREG. $9.99

SPOITS DEPT.

TENNIS
RACKET

5477

TElliS BALLS

Ideal f9r overage playen .

HECK'S.JtEG.

3 Ill BAG

REG.

$5.99

$1
· ~oo ··

3 roR -11.39

,,_

$HITS

SHITS

DE,.

++++

GAHS Principal James N. M. Davis and members of the
Blue Devil coaching stall received a letter recently from G. H.
Stempal, Jfl, director of College Communications, Ohio
University, Athens. It no doubt made local school officials feel
mighty proud. Stempal wrote : "Dear Mr. Davis. As the lather of
a ninth grade football and basketball player lor Athens, I want to
conunend your ninth grade players , their coaches and your fans
for their lair play and good sportsmanship they exhibited this
year. Your school set an lxample that the rest of the
Southeastern Ohio Conference schools might well follow. It also
seems to me that your school's level or' sportsmanship is particularly significant in view of the fact that the football game and
two basketball games between the freshmen were all close."

30COUNT

SOAP PADS

SOUTH BEll) FLY RER
HICK'S
RIG •

++++
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from tbe files of the Daily Tribune
and weekly Gallia Times .. : Second Lieutenant Bob Dayton, 24,
llnisMs training as pilot on B-29 Superior! at Randolph AFB, '
Texas ... Mrs. 0. 0. Mcintyre aMounces plans to visit Spain,
Wales and Scotland this summel' ... Naomi Phillips, 51, killed In
automobile accident in Savannah, Ga ... Ray Irwin, 13, Centenary captures top honors in annual Gallia County Spelling Bee
... ~g Wetherholt joins Tribune editorial staff ... Pomeroy
comes from behind In last inning to nip GAHS 8-71n Southeastern
Ohio League baseball opener.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center, Ftrst
Oak Hill
Ave. and Cedar St. General
Present Patients
Mrs.
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 ~ · Florence Grooms, Jackson;
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to Dudley Green, Wellston;
4:30 pm. Parents only on- William Brown, Jackson;
Pediatrics Ward.
Charles .Wyant, Jackson;
Births
James Bailey, Beaver;
Mr. and Mrs. Richard K. Katherine Burns, Jackson;
Douglas, Middleport, a Dorothy, Slavens, Jackson;
daughter.
Beulah Chaney, SOuth WebDischarges
ster; Je,sse Vlttltoe, Jackson;
Brenda Hartley, Elwin George Hall, Jackson;
Taylor, Sheila Thevenln, Theodore Renshaw, Wellston;
Woodrow Jones, Donna Webb, Harold Dailey, Coalton;
John Brown, Sr., Brian J. William Tomblin, Jackson;
Leach, Okie Camp, Joyce Mary Harrison, Oak Hill;
Bishop, Ethel Burdette, Vicki KatherineCox,~kHill; Helen
Burnette, Willard H. Cumbo, Fultz, Scioto F"'iffrtace;. Homer
Sr., Archie D. Dolin, Sharon B. Johnson, Jackson; Charles
Michael, Burnace Stout, E. Jenkins, Jackson; Floyd ·
Parmer Taylor, Winston Moore, Oak Hill; Mildred
Varney, Nancy Walker, Mrs: Ponn, Wellston; Willard McChrlatopher W. Biars and Coy,OakHW;VIoiiHutchlson,
daughter, Sha11!B C._ Fetty, Jackson; Elizabeth Rldgeiray, .
Ryan L. Hayman, Mary Oak 'Hill,
Frances Martin, Michelle
Palleoll Releoaed: Pete
Prater, Mn. Donald l'erklns Hoffman, Michael Queen,
.and son, !Wph Johnston and Grace , Evans; WiiUam Rlly
Jerry L. McP~rson.
' 'nliKIIIIB, UWe BlaJllpn, Jamei
. .
Sturgill, Melvin Prater,' Etbel
,. Vele~Memoria!Hupllll Silvey, Gladys McDaniel,
. ADMITTED - Clarence · Vadis Wrigh~ Gladys Hinkle,
.T
, N Ha
Pea I LeGnard Long, Sandra Fannin,
eiUllln, ew
v~;
r Mary $pohn, Charles Welch,
. Dillon, Reedsville, Wilbur Martin Sorrell, Carrie' Tate,
~lnson, . CooivWe; Sandra Nadine Cook.
Lowman, New Haven.
,• DISCHARGED -' Sandra
Jonea, Trudy Jonea, John
Seven· ounces is the maxi- '
L1rkin1, Wuley Glllilail,
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11 quarl durable polyethylene pan, oil filler
wrench and heavy duly pouring spout with
sharp culler. Allows for draining .crankcase
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AUTOMOTIVE
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A dr.aw·cut action pruning shear with
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HOUSEWARES DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

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....2l- The Sunday Times-Seniilll'I,Sunday, April9, 1972
• - ThP &amp;!ndly Tinlei,Srntlnt'l, Sunda)•. April9. 19'12 .

Art Clark Receives :Five Awards At North Gallia-Cage Banquet

Nicklaus Retains Lead.In Masters
'

AUGUSTA, Ga. (UPI) &amp;lperstar Jack Nicklaus bad a
chance to deliver a knockout
punch in the third roWld of the
Masters Golf Championship
Saturday but streak player Jim
J~mieson refused to throw In
the towel and moved ·within
one strike when Nicklaus
bogeyed the last two holes.
Nicklaus, who already has
three Masters Titles to · his
credit, had a ,.four-under-par
212 after a thlrd..-ound 73.

Jamieson, making only his
fll'st Masters appearance, shot
a one-underilllr 71 for his 213
and .was three strokes closer
thap the next nearest con.. tender.
Jamieson, a 211-year.old pro'
from Moline, m:, who hu yet
to win Jri three years on the
tour, was five strolles off
Nicklaus' pace with five holes
to play iii Satur'day's round but
plclled up three birdies in a
four-hole span late in the round

.

'

-

..

to fnlnish at 71-213.
·money winner and the only with a humbling .77-228, said , ·bogeyed the !mal bole w oo•u·
Tom Weiskopf, the long-billl man to win at least twice each "He's gone. Nobody'll beat that margin fOr the' start' of
hitter who first crossed paths the four major tournaments him."
today's final roilnd. ',
·
with Nicklaus in their school tha_t make up the profeSsional
When Jamieson, wno snot a
Only four of the 47 golfers
days at Ohio State, had a 71).215 "grand slam," held a com- COiirse-record 63 last month in who stirvived Friday's as:boie
and Paul Harney of Holden, manding, four-slrok~ lead over the C\rtrus Open, bogeyed the cut. were still under par after
Mass., had a 75-215.
the field at the midway point of . par five 13th hole, Nidtlaus, three rounds. Only four· others
The gray-haired Harney was the thlrd .round and appeared who ·Parred lhe··hole; iooved wereatevenpar .~6,including
only a stroke back at the start to be turning· the touJ'!IIIment five strokes ahead of the field . Homero' Blancas and Bruce
of SatUrday's play but skied to into a runaway rout.
'•·
. But Jamieson blrdled·ljoles . · Crampton whO, with their 698,
a :klver-par 75 and needed late,
It was at that poiht thai U. S. a, 16 and 17 and whj!n Nicklaus were the only men to break 70
back-to-back birdies to even do Open and British Open champ putted too strong lit 17 and qver the long:Play!ng Augusta
that well.
Lee Trevino, who straggled in suffered a bogey, Jamieson National in a gusty wind.
Nicklaus, golf's leading
was only a stroke behind. Both
Also at 216 were Bobby

Mitchen lvith a 71 and Jei-ry
Heard with a 72.
Defending champion Charles
Coody was alone at 74-~17 and
another stroke back at 218
stOod Jerry McGee (74) and
Steve Melnyk (71), newlywed
former Amateur Champ who
just turned pro lasr Oc~ber.
Four.,tiine Masters champion Arnold Pahner continued
to have his troubles Satw'day
and his 74 had him at 219 along

with Bruce Devlin who shot a
70 -one of only seven Sub-par
rounds achieved during the
heavily overcast day.
Gary Player of South Africa,
only foreigner to ever win the
Masters, was eight strokes off
. the pace at 72-220. Also at 220
were Sam Snead (76) .1'/bb will
j)e 60 years old nezt month;
1970 'champ Billy Kasper (74)
and 1969 champ George Archer
(72).

,

Baseball Owners, Players Continue Dis
NEW YORK ( UPI) - There
was no change in the
stalemated baseball strike
Saturday as the first weekend
of the 1972 season- including a
nationally televised game
worth f200,000 - became a
casualty of the dispute.
Twelve games slated for
Saturday and 13 games for
today were called off because
of the dispute and no new
meetings were scheduled as
the chief negotiators, Marvin
Miller•and John Gaherin, spent
the day at their respective
· homes.
Anticipating no early end to
the strike, the Detroit Tigers
announced' their bOf!le opener
against the New York Yankees
ne:rl' Tuesday has been called
off.
Miller, the executive director
of the Major League Players'
Auoctation, aald Saturday, "I
last spoke-wilh' John Gaherin
Friday night at 6 p.m. and he
advised me for about ihe 59th
· time the owners were making
no new proposals."

Miller said no new meetings
had been scheduled but added,
"We would be · glad to meet
with them but every reaction
from them hu been negative."
Gaherin, the counsel for the
Major League owners, said,
"Nothing's new, I'm just
spending a quiet Saturday at
home. No new meetings nave
been scheduled." He alao said
he has no plans to contact
Miller. "Mr. Miller knows how
to reach me and he knows I'm
available by phone or in person
any time he wishes to."
Gaherin said the owners had
no thoughts of lrying to punish
the players or teach them a
lesson for their strike.
''I've tried my .best to refute
all thinking that we're attempting to be punitive or to
PUJ)ish .IIJ)Y9ne;" Gaherin said.
"We're just lrying to make a
sensible business arrangement
which is critical to our costs.
I'm confident solutions can be
reached. and the problem
solved while the players are
playing but we don't want to

submit this to a third party Angeles Dodgers had voted the able to do it."
who 'll have no responsibility same thing on Friday. But the
He added, "Initially, I think
for living with the results."
owners are turning down any the players were at fault
The players seemed to ,request for arbitration.
because nobody thought there
remain adamant that they
Jim Palmer, a 21).game .would be a strike. Now I think
would return to play only if the winner for the Baltimore the owners have as much
owners would agree to binding Orioles last year, aald, "It responsibility to the fans as the
arbitration if a settlement isn't would be nice if we could go ball players for prolonging the
reached after a specified back and settle it later but I slrike. The owners are being
period of time.
know it's a matter of principle stubborn and are trying to
The Atlanta Braves an- and I· don't know if it's going to bring the downfall of the
nounced Saturday that 16 of end quickly. The owners want players association."
their players voted to play if to break the Players
In San Francisco, Horace
the owners agreed to the ar· Association but they won't be Stoneham, the owner of the San
bitration proposal. The Los

Sub· Paces 109-93 Colonel Win'
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UP!) Mike Pratt, a seldom-used
substitute of the Kentucky
Colonels, paced the Eastern
.Division season champions to a

Suns Trade
Moore For

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PHOENIX iU PI) · - The
Phoenix Suns traded center
Otto Moore to the Houston
Rockets Saturday for a firstround choice in Monday's
N a tiona I 'B a s k e t b a 11
.Association college draft.
Moore, S-foot-11 former Pan
American star, was acquired
by Phoenix from Detroit a year
ago. He appeared in 81 games .
. for the Suns the past season,
averaging 7.6 J¥&gt;iltts and 6.7
rebounds. Moore:was Delroit's
number one draft pick in 1968.
Phoenix had traded its firstround choice to Delroit for
Moore and was without a pick
in the first round until Saturday's trade. The Suns will have
the fourth pick, actually according to Delroit's finish in
the league, because Houston
' ea rlier had obtained the choice
from Detroit.
Suns general manager Jerry
Colangelo said Phoenix would
go for a forward in the draft,
but he declined to mention any
names.
The Rockets repor~dly want
to make Moore their center and
move their top scorer, Elvin
Hayes, to forward.

109-93 victory over the New
York ·Mets and reduced the
losers' lead to 3-2 in the
Ameri c an Basketball
Association Playoff series.
Pratt scored seven of the
Colonels' last 11 points to turn
back a Nets' rally in the final
two minutes after the New
Yorkers had moved to within
seven points at 97-90. Kentucky
coach Joe Mullaney, in search
of a guard who would put
movement in the Colonels'
attack, called Pratt off the
bench. in the first quarter and
the former University of
Kentucky starresponded with
22 points for the game.
The Nets, d!!Spite the return
of ailing Rick Barry to the
lineup, trailed throughout the
game except for one point in

AUSTIN, Tex . (UPI) - Kjell
Isaksson of Sweden, who
already held the World Indoor
record, broke the World
Outdoor Pole Vault record
Saturday by vaulting 18-1, to
become only the second man in
h~tory to go over 18 feet.
Isaksson, competing ,in the
45th Texas Relays, cleared the
height on his second jump to
break the record of 18-0¥, set in
1970 by Shris Papanicolaou of
Greece. He bad gotten over the
17~ mark on his third and final
lry.
The bar was officially
measured at 18-1 before

in this area.
ning entry in the contes t to nome ou r new computer

plug

Garmany . Belgium . Austria l uKemb ourg . And France.
We'll give you twen ty-two days, wi th deluxe and

Tha t' s th e plug that :-viii connect eve ry new VolKs wagen to our VW Compu ter Self -Analysis System

fi rst class accommodations, and breakfas ts and dinners on us.

It 's th e service sys tem o f the future .
Eve ry '72 Volkswagen is already equipped for
it, and t.he first computers will begin ·operation soon ..
Com~ in, and let us tell ybu about if And about
the con test.
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you r souvenir.

We'll give you olltnis, lree. il
you do two things,

After all, it's probably the first .
lime you've been able
to ente r a con tes t with

One, come in and test drive

o•new '72 Volkswagen. You'll dis.

a bug in it. . ·
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longer.

cover i~s a~ead of its time.

And two, come up with the win ·

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SERVICE &amp; PARTS
Mon. -12 P.M. Until t :OO P.M.
Tues., ll(ed. &amp; Frl.-8:00 A.M. Untill :OO P.M.
Thun~day-8:00 A.M. UntiU:OO P.M.
Slturday-1•00 A.M. Until Noon

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Gallipolis, Ohio

l\

FORT WORTH, Tex. ( UPI)
- Horned Frog hurler Johnny
Grace pitched the first ·perfect
no-hit, no-error shutout in
Texas Christian baseball
history Saturday against Pan
American, winning 2-(),
After losing the first game to
the Broncos, 1~. Grace (3-1)
handed Pan American Its first
perfect loss in Bronco history,
Grace faced 21 batters In seven
innings walking none and
slriking out four.
James Newman (6-1) was
lOSing pitcher for Pan Am in
the second game.
Right-hBnder Frank J ohn•
stone, who drew tile first game
loss while giving up only two
hila to Pan American, also had ·
a perfect game going until' the
fifth inning when shortstop
Jamye Pepper hit a double to
right center. He was batted in
. by right ' fielder Royce
Maynard. ·
The split left TCU with a 25-8
_ season record. The Horned
Frogs currently lead the Southwest Conference race with ari
8-1 recor,d.
Pan Am, which had not been
shutout for 31 consecutive
games, has a 28-10 season
mark. Pan Am placed fourth in
the Colleglaii!'World Serle!! last
season .

'·

GALLIPOLIS
Four
baseball games, three goli
matches and two !rack meet:;
will keep Ga ll ia Academy High
School's three spring sports
teams busy this week .
Three of the four baseball
games {weather permitting )
will be played on the road.
Coach
Jim
Tue•day,
· Osborne's diamond crew will
hosl Jackson ori Memorial
Field . It will be the Blue
Devils' home opener.
Wednesday, GAHS will play
a makeup game at Pt.
' Pleasant, and on Thursday , the
Devils will play a makeup
game at Meigs.
The base bailers will play at
Ironton in a regular-scheduled

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North Gall Ia
0 I I 6
Southwestern
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Totals ~, .
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This Week's Games:
Tuesday ..,. ··soythw.e~tern at
North Gallia: Symmes Valley
at Hannan Trace; Eastern at
Isakasson began to jump.
lsakasson struck the bar Southern.
Thursday - Southwestern at
going up on his first attempt, Symmes Valley ; Southern at
and then stopped on the run- North Galt Ia and Hannan
Trace at Kyger Creek.
way of his next try.
Finally, after a lull in the
other activities during the
RAMS SECOND
relays, Isakasson backed up to
CLEVELAND (UP! )- Mike
the extreme edge of the run- · Perrotta rode winners in the
way to make his run at the first, eighth and ninth races
record.
Friday at Thistledowns
He cleared the bar by the Raceway , putting him the
barest fraction, but did not second leading jockey at the
seem to brush it. He leaped ' track.
from the pit with his arms held
Perrotta guided Signal
high and ran back up to the Alarm to victory in the
tartan surface to the cheers of featured ninth for a payoff of
the more than 16,000persons in $17.20, $5 and $3.60.
Memorial Stadium.

VINTON - Arthur Clark,
North Gallia 's 6-5 senior
center, was the center of attraction here once again
Friday night as he walked off
the floor with five troph ies
during th~ school 's annual
basketball banquet . .
Clark, the Southern VaHey
Aihleti c Co nference's Must
Valuable
Player,
wa s
presented that trophy by Bill
Gray, Sports Director of WJEH
Radio and Da le Rothgeb, Jr.,
of the Sunday-Times Sentinel.
He also was honored as the
Pirales' Most Valuable Player ,
Top Reboimder, Best Offensive
Player and was given a special
trophy by the Athletic Boosters
Club in recognition fur his feat
in making the Class A Ali
Southeastern Oh io First
District Team.
Harvey Brown, 5·8 speedy
guard, was named the team's
~ Best Defensive Ptaver and was

SIZE 60X12

SVAC BASEBALL
STANDINGS

Team
Eas'ern
Southern
Symmes Valley

PIRATE TROPHY WINNERS - Four members of the 1971-72 champion North Gallia
. Pirate team received trophies Friday night during the school's ann~al basketball banquet.
li'Players and their awards are, left to right, Gary Crosswhite, Most bnproved Player; Pat
Stout, Best Foul Shooter; Harvey Brown, Best Defensiye Player and Arthur Clark, Most
Valuable Player ; Best Offensive Player; Best Rebounder and the league's Most Valuable
Player.
also presented a special
Coaches Award for his
leaders hip ability.
Pat Stout, 5-10 senior guard,
was the club 's Best Foul
Shooter with a 7·3.5 pet.
Gary Crosswhite, 6-'1 junior
forward, was the team's Most
Improved Player.
Trophtes were sponsored by
Hoiiey's Market, Dan Evans,
Dave 's Barber Shop, Dick's
Sports Shop, (.)·emeens' Super
Mkt. llnd Bob Saunders'
Quaker State Service Center.
Ivan Mayo, president of the
Athletic Boosters Club ,
presen ted tw o special trophies
to Cliff Wrtsun, Norih Gallia
principal. The trophies con·
tained the names of ali boys
who participated in football
and basketball du~ing the 1971·
72 school year.
Stout and Clark presented
Head Coach Jim Foster with a
special trophy on behalf of the

team.
Coach Foster thanked
everyone for their assistance
during the Pirates' outstanding
year. North Galiia captured
the SVAC championship,
Gailia County Tournament and
finished ranked sixth in the
Class A standings.
Guest speaker was Richard
{Dick) Shrider, former head

1

l

,

Gene Payne.
CHEERLEADERS
Melodie Hash - Co-caotain.
Patricia Burger : co-captain ,
Alma Bartley, Rhonda Borden,
Rose Holcomb, Marsha McClelland and Lyn Tipton
alternate.

1

d I

Hl!ltl\1.

Award sponsored by the SWlday Tlmes.Sentinel and Radio
&amp;ation WJEH. He was also tne team's MVP, Best
Rebounder, Best Offensive Player and received another
trophy for his selection on the Class A Southeastern Ohio .
District Team. Coach Jim Foster, left, and Richard (Dick)
Shrider ·'Ill'• banquet's guest speaker, are sliown with Clark.

APRIL10-11-12-13-14-15-17-18-19-20-21 and 22nd

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Hawks Scare Celtics
. BOSTON~i UPI) - Coaches
Tom Heinsoh n and Rich ie
Guerin agree on one thin g: The
Atlanta Hawks in ihe National
Basketball Asso ciation
playoffs aren't the same
Atlanta Hawks that stumbled
, through the regular season.
'
Heinsohn's Boston Ceitics
pulled out a 124-114. win over
Guerin's Hawks Fr1day mght
to take a 3-2lead in the best-ofseven series that now returns
to Atlanta for a · sixth game
today,

But before it was over the
Hawks. trailing by as many as
17 points in the first quarter,
guvc Boston a good scare.
111ere was no other action in
the NBA Friday. Los Angeles
and Milwaukee already have
clinched their qu arter-final
series in the Western Conference. Ba ltimore and New
York, tied 2-2 in the other
Eastern series, resume play
Sunday on the Bullets' home
court.

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Gilllpatls,

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game Friday. Ali games will
begin around 4 p.m.
The track team of Coach Ron
Logan will be on the road twice
this week . Tuesday , the
Galtians are at Warren Local.
Thursday, theillue Devils take
on Chillicothe and Jackson in a
triangular meet at Chillicothe.
These two meets replace
Wahama and Meigs on the
local's original schedule.
Coach John Milhoan's golf
team. rained out in their
season opener against
Wellston-Fairland Friday, will
journey to Athens Monday for
their 1972 opener. Tuesday, the
GAHS golfers will play at
Meigs, and Wednesday, the
Blue Devils are at Wahama.

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Petrie and Roger Chapman.
FRESHMAN TEAM - Mike
George, David Newell, Herman Mayo, Mike Camden,
Larry Winston, Rick Daft,
Jerry Rhodes, David Stollings,
James Norman, Charles
Riedel; Charles Nance and

GHS Spring Activities
: To Pick Up This ·Week

Game, 2-0

*

We'll give you a Volkswagen Super ,Bee tl e lor
sightSeeing. And afterward we'l l bring it home os

cancel the telecast and it
deducted $20o,o·oo from its
payment to baseball for the TV
rights. The network turned the
. ·time back to local stations and
many ran old movies.
· Mike Burke, the president of
the New York Yankees, said
the cancellation of this
weekend's series with the
Baltimore Orioles had cost the
club a quarter of a mllllon
dollars.
But the dollar impact was
different in various cities. In
San Francisco, Giant ticket
manager Pete Hoffmann said
45,000 tickets bad been sold for
the opener. But he aald 85 per
cent of the fans were exchanging the lifkets for dlfferent dates ani! only 15 per
cent of the fans were asking for
refunds.
·,

TCU Ace
·Has Perfect

a
You could be the.

the opening period when Barry
hit a layup to put them ahead
13·12.
Pratt and another former
reserve, Les Hunter, gave the
Colonels ' an outside shooting
threat tbat helped ease the
pressure on 7-2 Artis Gilmore
at his low post. Gilmore
collected 20 points and 19
reboWlds, giving the Colonels
domination of the backboards.
The game was televised
nationally .
Kentucky's leading scorer,
Dan Issei, had 24 points
although he sat out nine
minutes iq the last half after
drawing his fifth foul . .
Rookie John Roche topped
the Nets attacks with 26 points
and Barry, who missed Friday
night's game because of a 1()1).

lsaksson Sets New
Pole Vault Record

•

We 're having a contes t.
If you win we'll give you Holla,ld. Switze rland .

Franclsro Giants, said, "I'm
Fosse added, "20 of the 25
not as optimistic as l was a men on our roster don 't even
eouple of days ago."
qualify for the pension. It's all
Iq Cleveland, Ray Fosse, the right for veteran players to
pl~yer representative for the
take a ~ong stand but we're
Cleveland Indians s~ed to just beginning the game and
take somewhat of a softer have our careers in front of us.
stand. "I want to get back to It's a different kind of strike for
playing ball and the guys I a young team.
talked to feel the same way,"
Asked to comment· on
he said, "we'd like to play and Fosse's statement, ·Miller said,
negotiate. Then, if nothing "Sure the players would like to
developed, we could always set play bu! we proposed resuming
a deadline for another strike." play,
providing
the
negotiations be continued and
if they produce no results they
be submitted to binding arbitration . But thee owners
refused."
The );lational Broadcasting
Company had originally been
degree fever, left his sick bed scheduled to televise nationally
to score 23 points. _
Saturday's Detroit at Boston
Hunter, one-time Net , game. But the network had to
opened at forward in place of
regular Cincy Powell and
\allied 20 points.
The series returns to Nassau
Coliseum in New York Monday
ni~:ht. A seventh game, if
necessary, will be played here
next Wednesday nignt.
Barry said he fell fatigued
and said "We made too many
mistakes."
New York Coach Lou ·Garnesecca blamed sloppy ballhandling for the Nets' defeat.
"We were averaging 13 errors
a game and made 16 in the first
half," he said.

Geurge Garnes, Don Justus,
coach at Gailia Academy Hig h persQns.
Tim Stout, T. J . Robinson,
lfonored
were
:
School and now Athletic
.
VARSITY
Arthur
Clark,
Dave Robinette, Keith WedDirector at Miami University
Larry
Justus,
Gary
dington,
Anthony Mulhoiand,
at
Oxford.
Shrider
congratulated both the varsity Crosswhite, Pat Stout, Harvey Ralph Smith, Sterline Logan
and reserve teams for their Brown, John Egglelon, Tony and Danny Miller.
MANAGERS
Dave
fine seasons and "commended Glassburn and Jack Smith .
Coach Jim Foster '!or his - RESERVE - Chuck Berry, Wickline, Dan Morris, Keith·
leadership.
Foster, in his first year at the
helm of the Pirates, was a
form er junior hi gh player
.under Shrider. "Coach ~·oster
has com&amp;a long way," Shrider
said. His dedication shows in
his coaching. Foster, two years
ago, recorded an 18-3 record at
East Knox High School.
Shrider urged the players to
evaluate the past year to see if
they have been dedicated. He
asked them to be humble, keep
a good attitude, and most of all
be thankful and appreciative.
Coach Shrider asked Pirates
who wilt be returning to continue their training, develop a
g•·eat relationship between
them and their coaches, have
self-re•pcct and respect otl1ers
and be a "coachable boy". He
also emp hasized the importance of having di!!eipline.
Marshall Boggs, former GAHS
Superintendent was also introduced.
Rev. John Bryant gave the
invocation, Bill Gray served as
MVP PLAYER - Arthur Clark, Most Valuable Player of
master of ceremonies and Mrs.
the Southern · Valley Athletic Confer ence, Friday night
Mary Walker prese nted
received five trophies for his outstanding play this past
cheerleading awards.
season in· leading the North Gallia Pirates to the SVAC
The cafeteria style banquet
championship and a sixth place ranking in the Class A Ohio
was prepared by booster club
Basketball Ratings. Clark is holding the league's MVP
members and other interested

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
: · PHONE 44&amp;-4905

STORE HOURS ·
DURING SALE ONLY

Monday Thr~ Thursday 7 a.m. to 5 p.m.
·
Friday 7 a.m. to a p.m.
Saturday 7 a.m. to 4 p.m.

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....2l- The Sunday Times-Seniilll'I,Sunday, April9, 1972
• - ThP &amp;!ndly Tinlei,Srntlnt'l, Sunda)•. April9. 19'12 .

Art Clark Receives :Five Awards At North Gallia-Cage Banquet

Nicklaus Retains Lead.In Masters
'

AUGUSTA, Ga. (UPI) &amp;lperstar Jack Nicklaus bad a
chance to deliver a knockout
punch in the third roWld of the
Masters Golf Championship
Saturday but streak player Jim
J~mieson refused to throw In
the towel and moved ·within
one strike when Nicklaus
bogeyed the last two holes.
Nicklaus, who already has
three Masters Titles to · his
credit, had a ,.four-under-par
212 after a thlrd..-ound 73.

Jamieson, making only his
fll'st Masters appearance, shot
a one-underilllr 71 for his 213
and .was three strokes closer
thap the next nearest con.. tender.
Jamieson, a 211-year.old pro'
from Moline, m:, who hu yet
to win Jri three years on the
tour, was five strolles off
Nicklaus' pace with five holes
to play iii Satur'day's round but
plclled up three birdies in a
four-hole span late in the round

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to fnlnish at 71-213.
·money winner and the only with a humbling .77-228, said , ·bogeyed the !mal bole w oo•u·
Tom Weiskopf, the long-billl man to win at least twice each "He's gone. Nobody'll beat that margin fOr the' start' of
hitter who first crossed paths the four major tournaments him."
today's final roilnd. ',
·
with Nicklaus in their school tha_t make up the profeSsional
When Jamieson, wno snot a
Only four of the 47 golfers
days at Ohio State, had a 71).215 "grand slam," held a com- COiirse-record 63 last month in who stirvived Friday's as:boie
and Paul Harney of Holden, manding, four-slrok~ lead over the C\rtrus Open, bogeyed the cut. were still under par after
Mass., had a 75-215.
the field at the midway point of . par five 13th hole, Nidtlaus, three rounds. Only four· others
The gray-haired Harney was the thlrd .round and appeared who ·Parred lhe··hole; iooved wereatevenpar .~6,including
only a stroke back at the start to be turning· the touJ'!IIIment five strokes ahead of the field . Homero' Blancas and Bruce
of SatUrday's play but skied to into a runaway rout.
'•·
. But Jamieson blrdled·ljoles . · Crampton whO, with their 698,
a :klver-par 75 and needed late,
It was at that poiht thai U. S. a, 16 and 17 and whj!n Nicklaus were the only men to break 70
back-to-back birdies to even do Open and British Open champ putted too strong lit 17 and qver the long:Play!ng Augusta
that well.
Lee Trevino, who straggled in suffered a bogey, Jamieson National in a gusty wind.
Nicklaus, golf's leading
was only a stroke behind. Both
Also at 216 were Bobby

Mitchen lvith a 71 and Jei-ry
Heard with a 72.
Defending champion Charles
Coody was alone at 74-~17 and
another stroke back at 218
stOod Jerry McGee (74) and
Steve Melnyk (71), newlywed
former Amateur Champ who
just turned pro lasr Oc~ber.
Four.,tiine Masters champion Arnold Pahner continued
to have his troubles Satw'day
and his 74 had him at 219 along

with Bruce Devlin who shot a
70 -one of only seven Sub-par
rounds achieved during the
heavily overcast day.
Gary Player of South Africa,
only foreigner to ever win the
Masters, was eight strokes off
. the pace at 72-220. Also at 220
were Sam Snead (76) .1'/bb will
j)e 60 years old nezt month;
1970 'champ Billy Kasper (74)
and 1969 champ George Archer
(72).

,

Baseball Owners, Players Continue Dis
NEW YORK ( UPI) - There
was no change in the
stalemated baseball strike
Saturday as the first weekend
of the 1972 season- including a
nationally televised game
worth f200,000 - became a
casualty of the dispute.
Twelve games slated for
Saturday and 13 games for
today were called off because
of the dispute and no new
meetings were scheduled as
the chief negotiators, Marvin
Miller•and John Gaherin, spent
the day at their respective
· homes.
Anticipating no early end to
the strike, the Detroit Tigers
announced' their bOf!le opener
against the New York Yankees
ne:rl' Tuesday has been called
off.
Miller, the executive director
of the Major League Players'
Auoctation, aald Saturday, "I
last spoke-wilh' John Gaherin
Friday night at 6 p.m. and he
advised me for about ihe 59th
· time the owners were making
no new proposals."

Miller said no new meetings
had been scheduled but added,
"We would be · glad to meet
with them but every reaction
from them hu been negative."
Gaherin, the counsel for the
Major League owners, said,
"Nothing's new, I'm just
spending a quiet Saturday at
home. No new meetings nave
been scheduled." He alao said
he has no plans to contact
Miller. "Mr. Miller knows how
to reach me and he knows I'm
available by phone or in person
any time he wishes to."
Gaherin said the owners had
no thoughts of lrying to punish
the players or teach them a
lesson for their strike.
''I've tried my .best to refute
all thinking that we're attempting to be punitive or to
PUJ)ish .IIJ)Y9ne;" Gaherin said.
"We're just lrying to make a
sensible business arrangement
which is critical to our costs.
I'm confident solutions can be
reached. and the problem
solved while the players are
playing but we don't want to

submit this to a third party Angeles Dodgers had voted the able to do it."
who 'll have no responsibility same thing on Friday. But the
He added, "Initially, I think
for living with the results."
owners are turning down any the players were at fault
The players seemed to ,request for arbitration.
because nobody thought there
remain adamant that they
Jim Palmer, a 21).game .would be a strike. Now I think
would return to play only if the winner for the Baltimore the owners have as much
owners would agree to binding Orioles last year, aald, "It responsibility to the fans as the
arbitration if a settlement isn't would be nice if we could go ball players for prolonging the
reached after a specified back and settle it later but I slrike. The owners are being
period of time.
know it's a matter of principle stubborn and are trying to
The Atlanta Braves an- and I· don't know if it's going to bring the downfall of the
nounced Saturday that 16 of end quickly. The owners want players association."
their players voted to play if to break the Players
In San Francisco, Horace
the owners agreed to the ar· Association but they won't be Stoneham, the owner of the San
bitration proposal. The Los

Sub· Paces 109-93 Colonel Win'
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UP!) Mike Pratt, a seldom-used
substitute of the Kentucky
Colonels, paced the Eastern
.Division season champions to a

Suns Trade
Moore For

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Pl. Pleasant

PHOENIX iU PI) · - The
Phoenix Suns traded center
Otto Moore to the Houston
Rockets Saturday for a firstround choice in Monday's
N a tiona I 'B a s k e t b a 11
.Association college draft.
Moore, S-foot-11 former Pan
American star, was acquired
by Phoenix from Detroit a year
ago. He appeared in 81 games .
. for the Suns the past season,
averaging 7.6 J¥&gt;iltts and 6.7
rebounds. Moore:was Delroit's
number one draft pick in 1968.
Phoenix had traded its firstround choice to Delroit for
Moore and was without a pick
in the first round until Saturday's trade. The Suns will have
the fourth pick, actually according to Delroit's finish in
the league, because Houston
' ea rlier had obtained the choice
from Detroit.
Suns general manager Jerry
Colangelo said Phoenix would
go for a forward in the draft,
but he declined to mention any
names.
The Rockets repor~dly want
to make Moore their center and
move their top scorer, Elvin
Hayes, to forward.

109-93 victory over the New
York ·Mets and reduced the
losers' lead to 3-2 in the
Ameri c an Basketball
Association Playoff series.
Pratt scored seven of the
Colonels' last 11 points to turn
back a Nets' rally in the final
two minutes after the New
Yorkers had moved to within
seven points at 97-90. Kentucky
coach Joe Mullaney, in search
of a guard who would put
movement in the Colonels'
attack, called Pratt off the
bench. in the first quarter and
the former University of
Kentucky starresponded with
22 points for the game.
The Nets, d!!Spite the return
of ailing Rick Barry to the
lineup, trailed throughout the
game except for one point in

AUSTIN, Tex . (UPI) - Kjell
Isaksson of Sweden, who
already held the World Indoor
record, broke the World
Outdoor Pole Vault record
Saturday by vaulting 18-1, to
become only the second man in
h~tory to go over 18 feet.
Isaksson, competing ,in the
45th Texas Relays, cleared the
height on his second jump to
break the record of 18-0¥, set in
1970 by Shris Papanicolaou of
Greece. He bad gotten over the
17~ mark on his third and final
lry.
The bar was officially
measured at 18-1 before

in this area.
ning entry in the contes t to nome ou r new computer

plug

Garmany . Belgium . Austria l uKemb ourg . And France.
We'll give you twen ty-two days, wi th deluxe and

Tha t' s th e plug that :-viii connect eve ry new VolKs wagen to our VW Compu ter Self -Analysis System

fi rst class accommodations, and breakfas ts and dinners on us.

It 's th e service sys tem o f the future .
Eve ry '72 Volkswagen is already equipped for
it, and t.he first computers will begin ·operation soon ..
Com~ in, and let us tell ybu about if And about
the con test.
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We'll give you olltnis, lree. il
you do two things,

After all, it's probably the first .
lime you've been able
to ente r a con tes t with

One, come in and test drive

o•new '72 Volkswagen. You'll dis.

a bug in it. . ·
Don't wa it any
longer.

cover i~s a~ead of its time.

And two, come up with the win ·

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SERVICE &amp; PARTS
Mon. -12 P.M. Until t :OO P.M.
Tues., ll(ed. &amp; Frl.-8:00 A.M. Untill :OO P.M.
Thun~day-8:00 A.M. UntiU:OO P.M.
Slturday-1•00 A.M. Until Noon

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Gallipolis, Ohio

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FORT WORTH, Tex. ( UPI)
- Horned Frog hurler Johnny
Grace pitched the first ·perfect
no-hit, no-error shutout in
Texas Christian baseball
history Saturday against Pan
American, winning 2-(),
After losing the first game to
the Broncos, 1~. Grace (3-1)
handed Pan American Its first
perfect loss in Bronco history,
Grace faced 21 batters In seven
innings walking none and
slriking out four.
James Newman (6-1) was
lOSing pitcher for Pan Am in
the second game.
Right-hBnder Frank J ohn•
stone, who drew tile first game
loss while giving up only two
hila to Pan American, also had ·
a perfect game going until' the
fifth inning when shortstop
Jamye Pepper hit a double to
right center. He was batted in
. by right ' fielder Royce
Maynard. ·
The split left TCU with a 25-8
_ season record. The Horned
Frogs currently lead the Southwest Conference race with ari
8-1 recor,d.
Pan Am, which had not been
shutout for 31 consecutive
games, has a 28-10 season
mark. Pan Am placed fourth in
the Colleglaii!'World Serle!! last
season .

'·

GALLIPOLIS
Four
baseball games, three goli
matches and two !rack meet:;
will keep Ga ll ia Academy High
School's three spring sports
teams busy this week .
Three of the four baseball
games {weather permitting )
will be played on the road.
Coach
Jim
Tue•day,
· Osborne's diamond crew will
hosl Jackson ori Memorial
Field . It will be the Blue
Devils' home opener.
Wednesday, GAHS will play
a makeup game at Pt.
' Pleasant, and on Thursday , the
Devils will play a makeup
game at Meigs.
The base bailers will play at
Ironton in a regular-scheduled

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Kyger Creek
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North Gall Ia
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Southwestern
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This Week's Games:
Tuesday ..,. ··soythw.e~tern at
North Gallia: Symmes Valley
at Hannan Trace; Eastern at
Isakasson began to jump.
lsakasson struck the bar Southern.
Thursday - Southwestern at
going up on his first attempt, Symmes Valley ; Southern at
and then stopped on the run- North Galt Ia and Hannan
Trace at Kyger Creek.
way of his next try.
Finally, after a lull in the
other activities during the
RAMS SECOND
relays, Isakasson backed up to
CLEVELAND (UP! )- Mike
the extreme edge of the run- · Perrotta rode winners in the
way to make his run at the first, eighth and ninth races
record.
Friday at Thistledowns
He cleared the bar by the Raceway , putting him the
barest fraction, but did not second leading jockey at the
seem to brush it. He leaped ' track.
from the pit with his arms held
Perrotta guided Signal
high and ran back up to the Alarm to victory in the
tartan surface to the cheers of featured ninth for a payoff of
the more than 16,000persons in $17.20, $5 and $3.60.
Memorial Stadium.

VINTON - Arthur Clark,
North Gallia 's 6-5 senior
center, was the center of attraction here once again
Friday night as he walked off
the floor with five troph ies
during th~ school 's annual
basketball banquet . .
Clark, the Southern VaHey
Aihleti c Co nference's Must
Valuable
Player,
wa s
presented that trophy by Bill
Gray, Sports Director of WJEH
Radio and Da le Rothgeb, Jr.,
of the Sunday-Times Sentinel.
He also was honored as the
Pirales' Most Valuable Player ,
Top Reboimder, Best Offensive
Player and was given a special
trophy by the Athletic Boosters
Club in recognition fur his feat
in making the Class A Ali
Southeastern Oh io First
District Team.
Harvey Brown, 5·8 speedy
guard, was named the team's
~ Best Defensive Ptaver and was

SIZE 60X12

SVAC BASEBALL
STANDINGS

Team
Eas'ern
Southern
Symmes Valley

PIRATE TROPHY WINNERS - Four members of the 1971-72 champion North Gallia
. Pirate team received trophies Friday night during the school's ann~al basketball banquet.
li'Players and their awards are, left to right, Gary Crosswhite, Most bnproved Player; Pat
Stout, Best Foul Shooter; Harvey Brown, Best Defensiye Player and Arthur Clark, Most
Valuable Player ; Best Offensive Player; Best Rebounder and the league's Most Valuable
Player.
also presented a special
Coaches Award for his
leaders hip ability.
Pat Stout, 5-10 senior guard,
was the club 's Best Foul
Shooter with a 7·3.5 pet.
Gary Crosswhite, 6-'1 junior
forward, was the team's Most
Improved Player.
Trophtes were sponsored by
Hoiiey's Market, Dan Evans,
Dave 's Barber Shop, Dick's
Sports Shop, (.)·emeens' Super
Mkt. llnd Bob Saunders'
Quaker State Service Center.
Ivan Mayo, president of the
Athletic Boosters Club ,
presen ted tw o special trophies
to Cliff Wrtsun, Norih Gallia
principal. The trophies con·
tained the names of ali boys
who participated in football
and basketball du~ing the 1971·
72 school year.
Stout and Clark presented
Head Coach Jim Foster with a
special trophy on behalf of the

team.
Coach Foster thanked
everyone for their assistance
during the Pirates' outstanding
year. North Galiia captured
the SVAC championship,
Gailia County Tournament and
finished ranked sixth in the
Class A standings.
Guest speaker was Richard
{Dick) Shrider, former head

1

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Gene Payne.
CHEERLEADERS
Melodie Hash - Co-caotain.
Patricia Burger : co-captain ,
Alma Bartley, Rhonda Borden,
Rose Holcomb, Marsha McClelland and Lyn Tipton
alternate.

1

d I

Hl!ltl\1.

Award sponsored by the SWlday Tlmes.Sentinel and Radio
&amp;ation WJEH. He was also tne team's MVP, Best
Rebounder, Best Offensive Player and received another
trophy for his selection on the Class A Southeastern Ohio .
District Team. Coach Jim Foster, left, and Richard (Dick)
Shrider ·'Ill'• banquet's guest speaker, are sliown with Clark.

APRIL10-11-12-13-14-15-17-18-19-20-21 and 22nd

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5.79

Hawks Scare Celtics
. BOSTON~i UPI) - Coaches
Tom Heinsoh n and Rich ie
Guerin agree on one thin g: The
Atlanta Hawks in ihe National
Basketball Asso ciation
playoffs aren't the same
Atlanta Hawks that stumbled
, through the regular season.
'
Heinsohn's Boston Ceitics
pulled out a 124-114. win over
Guerin's Hawks Fr1day mght
to take a 3-2lead in the best-ofseven series that now returns
to Atlanta for a · sixth game
today,

But before it was over the
Hawks. trailing by as many as
17 points in the first quarter,
guvc Boston a good scare.
111ere was no other action in
the NBA Friday. Los Angeles
and Milwaukee already have
clinched their qu arter-final
series in the Western Conference. Ba ltimore and New
York, tied 2-2 in the other
Eastern series, resume play
Sunday on the Bullets' home
court.

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4.49

PANEL
MAGIC

•

Gilllpatls,

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1\1.. •

game Friday. Ali games will
begin around 4 p.m.
The track team of Coach Ron
Logan will be on the road twice
this week . Tuesday , the
Galtians are at Warren Local.
Thursday, theillue Devils take
on Chillicothe and Jackson in a
triangular meet at Chillicothe.
These two meets replace
Wahama and Meigs on the
local's original schedule.
Coach John Milhoan's golf
team. rained out in their
season opener against
Wellston-Fairland Friday, will
journey to Athens Monday for
their 1972 opener. Tuesday, the
GAHS golfers will play at
Meigs, and Wednesday, the
Blue Devils are at Wahama.

'.

.

Petrie and Roger Chapman.
FRESHMAN TEAM - Mike
George, David Newell, Herman Mayo, Mike Camden,
Larry Winston, Rick Daft,
Jerry Rhodes, David Stollings,
James Norman, Charles
Riedel; Charles Nance and

GHS Spring Activities
: To Pick Up This ·Week

Game, 2-0

*

We'll give you a Volkswagen Super ,Bee tl e lor
sightSeeing. And afterward we'l l bring it home os

cancel the telecast and it
deducted $20o,o·oo from its
payment to baseball for the TV
rights. The network turned the
. ·time back to local stations and
many ran old movies.
· Mike Burke, the president of
the New York Yankees, said
the cancellation of this
weekend's series with the
Baltimore Orioles had cost the
club a quarter of a mllllon
dollars.
But the dollar impact was
different in various cities. In
San Francisco, Giant ticket
manager Pete Hoffmann said
45,000 tickets bad been sold for
the opener. But he aald 85 per
cent of the fans were exchanging the lifkets for dlfferent dates ani! only 15 per
cent of the fans were asking for
refunds.
·,

TCU Ace
·Has Perfect

a
You could be the.

the opening period when Barry
hit a layup to put them ahead
13·12.
Pratt and another former
reserve, Les Hunter, gave the
Colonels ' an outside shooting
threat tbat helped ease the
pressure on 7-2 Artis Gilmore
at his low post. Gilmore
collected 20 points and 19
reboWlds, giving the Colonels
domination of the backboards.
The game was televised
nationally .
Kentucky's leading scorer,
Dan Issei, had 24 points
although he sat out nine
minutes iq the last half after
drawing his fifth foul . .
Rookie John Roche topped
the Nets attacks with 26 points
and Barry, who missed Friday
night's game because of a 1()1).

lsaksson Sets New
Pole Vault Record

•

We 're having a contes t.
If you win we'll give you Holla,ld. Switze rland .

Franclsro Giants, said, "I'm
Fosse added, "20 of the 25
not as optimistic as l was a men on our roster don 't even
eouple of days ago."
qualify for the pension. It's all
Iq Cleveland, Ray Fosse, the right for veteran players to
pl~yer representative for the
take a ~ong stand but we're
Cleveland Indians s~ed to just beginning the game and
take somewhat of a softer have our careers in front of us.
stand. "I want to get back to It's a different kind of strike for
playing ball and the guys I a young team.
talked to feel the same way,"
Asked to comment· on
he said, "we'd like to play and Fosse's statement, ·Miller said,
negotiate. Then, if nothing "Sure the players would like to
developed, we could always set play bu! we proposed resuming
a deadline for another strike." play,
providing
the
negotiations be continued and
if they produce no results they
be submitted to binding arbitration . But thee owners
refused."
The );lational Broadcasting
Company had originally been
degree fever, left his sick bed scheduled to televise nationally
to score 23 points. _
Saturday's Detroit at Boston
Hunter, one-time Net , game. But the network had to
opened at forward in place of
regular Cincy Powell and
\allied 20 points.
The series returns to Nassau
Coliseum in New York Monday
ni~:ht. A seventh game, if
necessary, will be played here
next Wednesday nignt.
Barry said he fell fatigued
and said "We made too many
mistakes."
New York Coach Lou ·Garnesecca blamed sloppy ballhandling for the Nets' defeat.
"We were averaging 13 errors
a game and made 16 in the first
half," he said.

Geurge Garnes, Don Justus,
coach at Gailia Academy Hig h persQns.
Tim Stout, T. J . Robinson,
lfonored
were
:
School and now Athletic
.
VARSITY
Arthur
Clark,
Dave Robinette, Keith WedDirector at Miami University
Larry
Justus,
Gary
dington,
Anthony Mulhoiand,
at
Oxford.
Shrider
congratulated both the varsity Crosswhite, Pat Stout, Harvey Ralph Smith, Sterline Logan
and reserve teams for their Brown, John Egglelon, Tony and Danny Miller.
MANAGERS
Dave
fine seasons and "commended Glassburn and Jack Smith .
Coach Jim Foster '!or his - RESERVE - Chuck Berry, Wickline, Dan Morris, Keith·
leadership.
Foster, in his first year at the
helm of the Pirates, was a
form er junior hi gh player
.under Shrider. "Coach ~·oster
has com&amp;a long way," Shrider
said. His dedication shows in
his coaching. Foster, two years
ago, recorded an 18-3 record at
East Knox High School.
Shrider urged the players to
evaluate the past year to see if
they have been dedicated. He
asked them to be humble, keep
a good attitude, and most of all
be thankful and appreciative.
Coach Shrider asked Pirates
who wilt be returning to continue their training, develop a
g•·eat relationship between
them and their coaches, have
self-re•pcct and respect otl1ers
and be a "coachable boy". He
also emp hasized the importance of having di!!eipline.
Marshall Boggs, former GAHS
Superintendent was also introduced.
Rev. John Bryant gave the
invocation, Bill Gray served as
MVP PLAYER - Arthur Clark, Most Valuable Player of
master of ceremonies and Mrs.
the Southern · Valley Athletic Confer ence, Friday night
Mary Walker prese nted
received five trophies for his outstanding play this past
cheerleading awards.
season in· leading the North Gallia Pirates to the SVAC
The cafeteria style banquet
championship and a sixth place ranking in the Class A Ohio
was prepared by booster club
Basketball Ratings. Clark is holding the league's MVP
members and other interested

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
: · PHONE 44&amp;-4905

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DURING SALE ONLY

Monday Thr~ Thursday 7 a.m. to 5 p.m.
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Friday 7 a.m. to a p.m.
Saturday 7 a.m. to 4 p.m.

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23- The Stuulay Tlmeo -stntilll'l, Swlday, Aprilg, 1972

,I

Streak ·Doesn't Mean A

Nicklaus Has
Title
Wrapped
.

Thing To Me-Shue

.

Up
") .

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FIRST TEAM ALL-SOUTHEASTERN LEAGUE cagers
honored at Waverly Thursday night in.tfuded (left to right)

Danny Settles, Wellston; Mike Oyer; Waverly ; BUJ Markin,
Ironton; Larry Snowden, Gallipolis and Dave Smith, Athens.

(left to right) Butch Workman, Waverly; Tony Vaughan,
Meigs; Gil Price, Gallipolis; Rod Ferguson, Gallipolis and
Mike Green, Athens.

SECOND.. TEAM ALL..SO,UTHEASTERN LEAGUE
cagers receiving awards at Waverly Thursday night were

Meigs To Play Five
Games In Five Days
ROCK. SPRINGS - Meigs
High School baseball teams
have not been able to play any
games due to inclement
weather. As a result, five
games - one of which was a
reserve contest, are scheduled
this week.
The revised schedule in·
' eludes:
Monday - Point Pleasant at
Middleport.
Tuesday - Meigs at Athens.
Weduesday - Southwestern
Varsity at Middleport with
Meigs Reserves.
Thursday - Gallipolis at
Middleport .
Friday ~ Meigs at Athens.

i

CARROLL Hawhee, now in his 31th year as head
basketball coach ~t Waverly High School, receives the 1972
Co-Coach of the Year award during Thursday night's annual
All-Southeastern League cage banquet held at Lake White in
Waverly . Making the presentation Is veteran Athens .COach
Olarles McAfee. Hawhee • coabbed teams have now won 401
games and lost only 168. His Tigers have won seven consecutive league crowns, five in the Southern Ohio Con·
ference, ·and two sttalght in the SEOAL.

EASTERN
Tuesday ,
Eastern
Southern.
Thursday, ·Glouster
THIRD TEAM ALL-SOUTHEASTERN LEAGUE cagers
honored during th~ 1972 All..SEOAL basketball banquet at
Lake White in Waverly Thursday were (left to right) Bill
Maloy, Waverly; Jim Pierce, Logan; Steve Keller, Jackson ;
Mark Ferguson, Ironton and Jeff Hannon, Ironton.

and 25.8 scoring averages as
their club piled up a record 69
triumphs but they were even
more · effective against the
Bulls, a club that had the third

Emotional Series~:\:::~~r
Lakers' Sharman Expects Hiuhly
'"'e'
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UPI)
- The Los Angeles Qakers,
who won foW' of five regular
season games from the
Milwaukee Bucks, try to
maintain their mastery over
the defending National
Basketball Association
champions when the clubs
launch their playoff series
today.
"I expect a highly emotional
series," Coach Bill Sharman of

the Lakers said. "They're still
the world champs but we beat
them in the regular season. so·
both teams have something to
talk about."
Today's national television
game at the Forum will start at
1:30 p.m. PST. The best-of.
Seven Western Conference
final series continues here
Wednesday night.
The teams are in Milwaukee
next Friday night and Sunday,

April16. If necessary, the fifth
The Lakers won the last
game will be at Los Angeles three times - 118-105, 109-108,
Tuesday night, April 18; game and 123-107.
Los Angeles earned the right
No. 6 at Milwaukee Sat\lf"day,
April 22, and game No. 7 at Los to play Milwaukee by taklng
Angeles Wednesday. night, four straight from the Chicago
April 26.
Bulls, only the sixth playoff
The Lakers heat the Bucks sweep in the 26-year history of
112-105 at Los Angeles in the the NBA. The Bucks took five
clubs' first regular season contests to dispose of the
meeting but had their 33-game Golden State Warriors.
NBA win record streak stopped
Gail Goodrich and Jerry
120-104 at Milwaukee Jan. 9. West led the Lakers with 25.9

season record in
In the Chicago senes,
Goodrich and West each rolled
up 1H points - for 28.5
averages.

Wilt Chamberlain, the senior
member of the Laker starting
five at 35, averaged H.5 points
and 20.7 rebounds against the
Bulls.
A key to the Los AngelesMilwaukee series could be the
health of Oscar Robertson . A
healthy Robertson can hold
West in check but the veteran
backcourt superstar is ailing.

at
at

He suffered a strained abdomen Feb. 4 and aggravated
his stomach injury against
Golden Slate Tuesday night.
With West missing with a
knee injury a year ago,
Milwaukee needed only live
games to beat the Lakers and
reach the NBA Finals.

Eastern .
·Friday, Eastern at Fort
Frye.
SOUTHERN
Monday, Wahama
at
Southern.
Tuesday,
Eastern
at
Southern.
Thursday, Southern at North
Gallia.

Settle Baseball Strike

vs. Athens

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and Benny Parsons of Ellerbe,
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qualified at 105.884 m.p.h. and
Parso ns at 105.316.
Lee roy Yarborough of
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in this event late Friday,
qualified for the number five
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Clark is the top scorer fur the
series with 115 points, three
points better than Frazier.

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drivers guilty or encroachment
will be penalized.

Hiurdan in the same way/' h(!

said .
Riordan , former Knick
super-sub who wound up with

•••

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BEDROOMS o I'A BATHS o WASHER-DRYER
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-p ropose· d ~or 1n d y 500
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BALTIMORE (U P!) - Baltimore in a tradc'fur Earl
"We're two and two, with three ' Monroe last October, scored 21
to go. Tha t's alii know," said points in a 104·98 Bullet loss
Ballimbre Bullets coach Gene Thursday in New York .
Shue. " The s treak doesn't
"01 course this doesn't mean
me"n a thing to me." •
I won 't change things," Shoe
The streak is the Bullets' said .
seven-game string of home
The Knicks have nul been
. playoff victories over the New able to beat the Bullel' at the
York Knicks.
··Civic Center here in playoff
With this year's Eastern action si nce 1970.
Division . NBA
Playoff
Riordan was the sparkplus
deadlock ed at two games for the Bullets in Thursday's
apiece, the Knicks return to . defeat, moving them from 16
Baltimore this afternoon with poin ts back to a 90-89 lead
the hope there really is nothing midway in the fourth qum·ter.
to that " Home court ad"New York was ge tting good
vantage ."
shots and getting the ones it
Both teams have maintamed needed," Riordan lamen ted.
the home court advantage but "Our trouble wa s that we
have been unable to break the didn't get a brea k."
service of the other club.
Ri01·doh and Archie Clark
Shue saicl he did not expect to split the defensive assignment
change his game plan for the on Wall Frazier, the Knicks'
fifth game.
leading scorer of the series,
· " I pian to keep usin g Mike who had 24 points in Uie Thurs·

Braves Vote
To Play Ball

GALLIA ACADEMY
HIGHSCHOOL
GYM

o FRONT DINING ROOM o CENTRAL KITCHEN
o FAMILY ROOM o SIDE LIVING ROOM a 3

weight classes which enabled Ohio University's strong wrestling team to annex its third
straight Mid-American C~nference wrestling championship, Coach Harry Houska's malmen
dominated by scoring a record 104 points. Ohio went on to lie lor eighth place (with Nav)") also
a school record finest in the National Collegiate Wrestling championships at the University of
Maryland. Pictured above are the ten MAC winners, of which two Bobcats, Barry Reighard
(Norton, 0., Jr .) and Joe Zychowicz, (Toledo St. francis, Sr.) won AU-American honors.
Reighard finished third in the nation in the 190 pound division , while Zychowicz, fourth at 126
poWlds. Front row , (L toR), Greg Wojciechowski (Toledo, HWT); Bai-ry Reighard (Ohio, 190);
Russ Johnson (Bridgeton, N. J., Jr., Ohio, 177) ; Doug Wyn· (WMU, 167); Bruce Hosta
(Cleveland John Marshall, Sr., Ohio,158). Back Row, (L toR), Greg Morgan (Independence,
Sr ., Ohio, 142); Bob Mason (Parma, Sr., Ohio, 134); Bill Morgan (Kent Slate, 118); Dave
Embers (Toledo, 126) and Bob Tscholl (Toledo St. Francis, Jr., Ohio, 150).

Brazil Takes
Lead In Series

SEO BASEBAlL
TEAM
W L R OR
Gallipolis
1 0 13 ll
Waverly
1 0 8 7
Wellston
1 0 3 2
Ironton
ooo 0
Meigs
0 o o 0
Logan
0123
Jackson
0 1 7 8
Athens
0 1 11 13
TOTALS
3 3 44 44
Last WHk's Results:
Gall ipolis 13 Athens 11
Waverly 8 Jackson 7
Wellston 3 Logon 2 l8l
lrontan-Melgs, ppnd. rain
Tuesday's Games:
Jackson at Gallipolis
Ironton at · Wolloton .. , ·
Meigs at Athens
·
Waverly vs . Logan
Friday's Games:
Gallipolis at Ironton
Meigs at Lcigan
Jackson at Wellston

APRIL lOth AT

BY CHAMPION

BOBCAT GRAPPLERS "
SET NEW MAC MARKS- With six individual champions in 10

super fan Melvin Belli of San .
SAN FRANCISCO IUPf 1 INDIANAPOLIS, Ind . (UPf) advanlage of cars running in
Some of the nation's bes~ Francisco, have offered their
known l~wyers, headed by services in an effort to help - A signal light system will be the segment ahead of him and
sc tUe the baseball strike.
tried at the Indianapolis Motor
Belli, a San Fra ncisco Giants Speedway to help drivers
fun ever since the club moved maintain their re la tive
west, sent a telegram to Giants pos itions when track conditions
uwne1· Hqrace Stoneham make it necessary lor them to
Saturday offering his services run at red uced speed during
as welt as those of Lee Bailey, this year's 500-mile roce.
BRISTOL, Tenn. ( UPli RIO DE JA NE IRO I UP! )- Perc Foreman, Ed Williams
Speedway offic ials anThomas Koch defeoled and Lou Nizer free of charge. I:.JUnced Saturday night the Bobby Allison "Of Hueytown,
Guillermo Vilas, 4-0, 6-3, 10-ll. 6·
" ff you really want your plm1 was an cxperimen t to Ala., turned a record lap of
106.874 miles per hour Satur3; Saturday to give Brazil a 1.1J strike se ttled, " wired Belli, make the race sufcr.
lead over Argentina in their "Why don' t all you owners and
It includes eight electrkally day to win the pule pos ition lor
second round South America n pi&lt;~ycrs hire me, Lee Bailey, con trolled yellow light panel Sunday's Southea stern 500
Zone Davis Cup series.
Perc Foreman, Ed Williams boards dividing the 3'•z mile stock car race.
Allison, dr iving a 1972
' The second singles match and Lou Nizer. We'll settle oval into eight seg ments of
Chevrolet,
broke David
was halted by darkness after yuur strike forthwith and you' ll 1,650 feet each.
Pearson's
track
record for cars
Edson Mandarino of Brazil and gel more ta lent with us than
By using a control board at
Julian Gonzabal split the fir st you've got in the whole the sw rt-fi nish line, it will be with restricler devices on the
two sets and were lied 3·3 in the Nationa l Leag ue. I haven't possible to se t th e lights for any carburetor . Allison's speed,
third .
wlked with the other lawyers desired speed whenever however, was shy or the overall
Gonzabal won the op ening but we all lov e baseball and hazardous conditi ons develops. track record of 107.375 m.p.h.
set, 64, but Mandarino came we'd give our ~.:ombined serAt the start of a yellow-tight set in 1970 by Calc Yarborough,
back to lie the score with a G-3 vices freely therefore . Even if period, each driver will see a whose car was runnin g without
second set trium ph .
Candlestick Park is cold, I'd specific number, ranging from the restricler plate.
Richard Petty of RanArgentine team cap tain like lube out there again."
one to eight, on the panel he is
dleman
, N.C., whipped his 1972
Oscar Furlong said Gonzabal
There was no immediate approaching .
injured his kn ee during the reply from Stoneham or the
As he reaches the same Plymouth around the half-mile
. third set andthalifhc is unable Giants.
relative position in the next oval al106.246 mph to grab the
to continue nction today ,
.segment of th e track, if he has outside front row slot
Today's 500 lap grind, which
Ricardo Cano will take his
adju sted his speed properly,
will
cover 267 miles is
place.
the number on the panel will
scheduled
to sta rt at 1:30 p.m .
Koch and Mandarino will be
change to the sa me number as
Brazil's doubles team today .
the previous one. If he sees a EST.
different number ahead of him,
Five differe nt makes of
Vilas will undoubtedly be one
ATLANTA (UP!) - The it will be necessary for him to automobiles copped the. first
member of the Argentine
tandem. His doubles partner Atlanta Braves said Saturday adjust his pa ce to conform with live posihons f~r the 37,875
their players have voted to the adjusted speed control. '"'Wmslon Cup Senes race.
1 will be ann ounced prior to the
open the season provided that
Track officials say the pian
Starling m the second row
match.
negotiations continue on their
will give no excuse lor any
dispute with the owners over
driver to encroach on the Sweden Trounces
the pension plan.
Tigers Postpone
A club spokesman said they
Switzerland 12-l
Or~oles Opener
had been informed by Cecil
'72 Home Opener
PRAGUE (UPI) - Sweden
Upshaw, player representative
To
Delayed
trounced Swi tzerland 12·1,
lor
the
team,
that
1
6
players
DETROIT I UPII - The
Saturday in a one-sided game
Detroit Tigers' home opener mel and voted to start ·the
BALTIMORE
(UP!)
The
that hardly revealed Sweden's
, against the New York Yankees season under cer tain con- baseball players strike has
chances
in the World Hockey
' Tuesday ha s been postponed ditions .
necessitated
a
change
in
the
.Tournament.
Upshaw snid "The Braves
because of the players' strike .
Baltimore Orioles' scheduled
The game never reached any
Jim Campbell, the club's have voted to play ball and Monday night opener against
high
standard of play. The
executive vice-president and start the 1972 championship the Milwaukee Brewers.
Swiss
were too inferior and the
general manager, said season at the earliest possible
J
.
Frank
Cashen,
club
Swedes apparently saved their
Saturday every effort would be time, providing negotiations executive vice president, said strength for the crucial game
made to reschedule the game continue for some specified if the strike Is 'settled during against Czeehoslovakia oday.
as early as possible . He said period and if at the expiration the weekend " The Orioles will
Switzerland, beaten 19-1
settlement of the strike would of that period, no agreement is make every effort to play the Friday by Czechoslovakia,
reached, the dispute is to be
determine the dale.
Brewers Tuesday night."
again . showed poor defense.
Fans with tickets for the settled by arbitration."
If an agreement is not The Swede&amp; did hardly
The owners of the Major reached by today, Cashen said,
home opener were advised to
~nything more than making
hold them until the game was League clubs have already another opening date will he 1Ise of their opponents'
voted to turn down such terms. announced.
rescheduled.
defensive mistakes.

COMING TO GALLIPOLIS

·SECTIONAL HOME

money. He's . going to set
records that nobody will beat."
As lor his own play here,
Trevino noted that he's gone
fmm 75 to 76 to 77 in three
success ive days, and added,
"I'm going for 80 tomorrow."
Trevino returned to the
Masters this year after two
years ab se nce, which he
claimed was due to the fact
that his game wasn't "sUited"
to the· Augusta National
9ourse. He says now that he's
adjusted his game for this
co w·se, but the course itself has
got him "psyched out."
"!think my game is adjusted
now to this golf course," inSisted Trevino. "I'm hilling it
high now. But I have an in·
secure feeling that I can't gel
close to the pin. This week I've
hit a lot of fat shuts trying to
ge l the ball up.
"I don'liiketo play that way.
I like to beat the ball."
Trevino was involved in a
minor dispute here earlie r this
week uvei' tickets for friends.

Lawyers Offer To Help

SEO Siandings

Wa~Jerly

Trevino

AUGUSTA, Ga . I UP)) - Lee
Trevino sadly but still with a
touch of humor regard'd the
··wreckage of his return ao the
Mastets Tournament Saturday
and sa id he thinks Jack
Nicklaus has got .. tlie championship wrapped up for a
record fourth lime.
"He's gone," · quipped
Trevino after a third-round 77
that gave him a three-round
total of 228 and left him, at U1e
moment he walked off the
course, a whopping 18 strokes
behind Nicklaus, the man he
defeated in a playoff in the u.
S. Open Championship last
year.
•iJ said two years ago he's the
best the game has ever seen,"
said Trevino. "He 's a freak.
He's so strong he mig ht even
beat two people.
" Any tournam ent he gets
ready for, he'll fini sh no worse
than third - I guarantee it,"
said golf's sell-styled super
Mex. "He's got my vole. Just
so he doesn't take all the

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23- The Stuulay Tlmeo -stntilll'l, Swlday, Aprilg, 1972

,I

Streak ·Doesn't Mean A

Nicklaus Has
Title
Wrapped
.

Thing To Me-Shue

.

Up
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FIRST TEAM ALL-SOUTHEASTERN LEAGUE cagers
honored at Waverly Thursday night in.tfuded (left to right)

Danny Settles, Wellston; Mike Oyer; Waverly ; BUJ Markin,
Ironton; Larry Snowden, Gallipolis and Dave Smith, Athens.

(left to right) Butch Workman, Waverly; Tony Vaughan,
Meigs; Gil Price, Gallipolis; Rod Ferguson, Gallipolis and
Mike Green, Athens.

SECOND.. TEAM ALL..SO,UTHEASTERN LEAGUE
cagers receiving awards at Waverly Thursday night were

Meigs To Play Five
Games In Five Days
ROCK. SPRINGS - Meigs
High School baseball teams
have not been able to play any
games due to inclement
weather. As a result, five
games - one of which was a
reserve contest, are scheduled
this week.
The revised schedule in·
' eludes:
Monday - Point Pleasant at
Middleport.
Tuesday - Meigs at Athens.
Weduesday - Southwestern
Varsity at Middleport with
Meigs Reserves.
Thursday - Gallipolis at
Middleport .
Friday ~ Meigs at Athens.

i

CARROLL Hawhee, now in his 31th year as head
basketball coach ~t Waverly High School, receives the 1972
Co-Coach of the Year award during Thursday night's annual
All-Southeastern League cage banquet held at Lake White in
Waverly . Making the presentation Is veteran Athens .COach
Olarles McAfee. Hawhee • coabbed teams have now won 401
games and lost only 168. His Tigers have won seven consecutive league crowns, five in the Southern Ohio Con·
ference, ·and two sttalght in the SEOAL.

EASTERN
Tuesday ,
Eastern
Southern.
Thursday, ·Glouster
THIRD TEAM ALL-SOUTHEASTERN LEAGUE cagers
honored during th~ 1972 All..SEOAL basketball banquet at
Lake White in Waverly Thursday were (left to right) Bill
Maloy, Waverly; Jim Pierce, Logan; Steve Keller, Jackson ;
Mark Ferguson, Ironton and Jeff Hannon, Ironton.

and 25.8 scoring averages as
their club piled up a record 69
triumphs but they were even
more · effective against the
Bulls, a club that had the third

Emotional Series~:\:::~~r
Lakers' Sharman Expects Hiuhly
'"'e'
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UPI)
- The Los Angeles Qakers,
who won foW' of five regular
season games from the
Milwaukee Bucks, try to
maintain their mastery over
the defending National
Basketball Association
champions when the clubs
launch their playoff series
today.
"I expect a highly emotional
series," Coach Bill Sharman of

the Lakers said. "They're still
the world champs but we beat
them in the regular season. so·
both teams have something to
talk about."
Today's national television
game at the Forum will start at
1:30 p.m. PST. The best-of.
Seven Western Conference
final series continues here
Wednesday night.
The teams are in Milwaukee
next Friday night and Sunday,

April16. If necessary, the fifth
The Lakers won the last
game will be at Los Angeles three times - 118-105, 109-108,
Tuesday night, April 18; game and 123-107.
Los Angeles earned the right
No. 6 at Milwaukee Sat\lf"day,
April 22, and game No. 7 at Los to play Milwaukee by taklng
Angeles Wednesday. night, four straight from the Chicago
April 26.
Bulls, only the sixth playoff
The Lakers heat the Bucks sweep in the 26-year history of
112-105 at Los Angeles in the the NBA. The Bucks took five
clubs' first regular season contests to dispose of the
meeting but had their 33-game Golden State Warriors.
NBA win record streak stopped
Gail Goodrich and Jerry
120-104 at Milwaukee Jan. 9. West led the Lakers with 25.9

season record in
In the Chicago senes,
Goodrich and West each rolled
up 1H points - for 28.5
averages.

Wilt Chamberlain, the senior
member of the Laker starting
five at 35, averaged H.5 points
and 20.7 rebounds against the
Bulls.
A key to the Los AngelesMilwaukee series could be the
health of Oscar Robertson . A
healthy Robertson can hold
West in check but the veteran
backcourt superstar is ailing.

at
at

He suffered a strained abdomen Feb. 4 and aggravated
his stomach injury against
Golden Slate Tuesday night.
With West missing with a
knee injury a year ago,
Milwaukee needed only live
games to beat the Lakers and
reach the NBA Finals.

Eastern .
·Friday, Eastern at Fort
Frye.
SOUTHERN
Monday, Wahama
at
Southern.
Tuesday,
Eastern
at
Southern.
Thursday, Southern at North
Gallia.

Settle Baseball Strike

vs. Athens

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qualified at 105.884 m.p.h. and
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Lee roy Yarborough of
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Clark is the top scorer fur the
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drivers guilty or encroachment
will be penalized.

Hiurdan in the same way/' h(!

said .
Riordan , former Knick
super-sub who wound up with

•••

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BEDROOMS o I'A BATHS o WASHER-DRYER
OR STORAGE CLOSET o FRONT &amp; REAR DOORS

Signal Light System
-p ropose· d ~or 1n d y 500
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BALTIMORE (U P!) - Baltimore in a tradc'fur Earl
"We're two and two, with three ' Monroe last October, scored 21
to go. Tha t's alii know," said points in a 104·98 Bullet loss
Ballimbre Bullets coach Gene Thursday in New York .
Shue. " The s treak doesn't
"01 course this doesn't mean
me"n a thing to me." •
I won 't change things," Shoe
The streak is the Bullets' said .
seven-game string of home
The Knicks have nul been
. playoff victories over the New able to beat the Bullel' at the
York Knicks.
··Civic Center here in playoff
With this year's Eastern action si nce 1970.
Division . NBA
Playoff
Riordan was the sparkplus
deadlock ed at two games for the Bullets in Thursday's
apiece, the Knicks return to . defeat, moving them from 16
Baltimore this afternoon with poin ts back to a 90-89 lead
the hope there really is nothing midway in the fourth qum·ter.
to that " Home court ad"New York was ge tting good
vantage ."
shots and getting the ones it
Both teams have maintamed needed," Riordan lamen ted.
the home court advantage but "Our trouble wa s that we
have been unable to break the didn't get a brea k."
service of the other club.
Ri01·doh and Archie Clark
Shue saicl he did not expect to split the defensive assignment
change his game plan for the on Wall Frazier, the Knicks'
fifth game.
leading scorer of the series,
· " I pian to keep usin g Mike who had 24 points in Uie Thurs·

Braves Vote
To Play Ball

GALLIA ACADEMY
HIGHSCHOOL
GYM

o FRONT DINING ROOM o CENTRAL KITCHEN
o FAMILY ROOM o SIDE LIVING ROOM a 3

weight classes which enabled Ohio University's strong wrestling team to annex its third
straight Mid-American C~nference wrestling championship, Coach Harry Houska's malmen
dominated by scoring a record 104 points. Ohio went on to lie lor eighth place (with Nav)") also
a school record finest in the National Collegiate Wrestling championships at the University of
Maryland. Pictured above are the ten MAC winners, of which two Bobcats, Barry Reighard
(Norton, 0., Jr .) and Joe Zychowicz, (Toledo St. francis, Sr.) won AU-American honors.
Reighard finished third in the nation in the 190 pound division , while Zychowicz, fourth at 126
poWlds. Front row , (L toR), Greg Wojciechowski (Toledo, HWT); Bai-ry Reighard (Ohio, 190);
Russ Johnson (Bridgeton, N. J., Jr., Ohio, 177) ; Doug Wyn· (WMU, 167); Bruce Hosta
(Cleveland John Marshall, Sr., Ohio,158). Back Row, (L toR), Greg Morgan (Independence,
Sr ., Ohio, 142); Bob Mason (Parma, Sr., Ohio, 134); Bill Morgan (Kent Slate, 118); Dave
Embers (Toledo, 126) and Bob Tscholl (Toledo St. Francis, Jr., Ohio, 150).

Brazil Takes
Lead In Series

SEO BASEBAlL
TEAM
W L R OR
Gallipolis
1 0 13 ll
Waverly
1 0 8 7
Wellston
1 0 3 2
Ironton
ooo 0
Meigs
0 o o 0
Logan
0123
Jackson
0 1 7 8
Athens
0 1 11 13
TOTALS
3 3 44 44
Last WHk's Results:
Gall ipolis 13 Athens 11
Waverly 8 Jackson 7
Wellston 3 Logon 2 l8l
lrontan-Melgs, ppnd. rain
Tuesday's Games:
Jackson at Gallipolis
Ironton at · Wolloton .. , ·
Meigs at Athens
·
Waverly vs . Logan
Friday's Games:
Gallipolis at Ironton
Meigs at Lcigan
Jackson at Wellston

APRIL lOth AT

BY CHAMPION

BOBCAT GRAPPLERS "
SET NEW MAC MARKS- With six individual champions in 10

super fan Melvin Belli of San .
SAN FRANCISCO IUPf 1 INDIANAPOLIS, Ind . (UPf) advanlage of cars running in
Some of the nation's bes~ Francisco, have offered their
known l~wyers, headed by services in an effort to help - A signal light system will be the segment ahead of him and
sc tUe the baseball strike.
tried at the Indianapolis Motor
Belli, a San Fra ncisco Giants Speedway to help drivers
fun ever since the club moved maintain their re la tive
west, sent a telegram to Giants pos itions when track conditions
uwne1· Hqrace Stoneham make it necessary lor them to
Saturday offering his services run at red uced speed during
as welt as those of Lee Bailey, this year's 500-mile roce.
BRISTOL, Tenn. ( UPli RIO DE JA NE IRO I UP! )- Perc Foreman, Ed Williams
Speedway offic ials anThomas Koch defeoled and Lou Nizer free of charge. I:.JUnced Saturday night the Bobby Allison "Of Hueytown,
Guillermo Vilas, 4-0, 6-3, 10-ll. 6·
" ff you really want your plm1 was an cxperimen t to Ala., turned a record lap of
106.874 miles per hour Satur3; Saturday to give Brazil a 1.1J strike se ttled, " wired Belli, make the race sufcr.
lead over Argentina in their "Why don' t all you owners and
It includes eight electrkally day to win the pule pos ition lor
second round South America n pi&lt;~ycrs hire me, Lee Bailey, con trolled yellow light panel Sunday's Southea stern 500
Zone Davis Cup series.
Perc Foreman, Ed Williams boards dividing the 3'•z mile stock car race.
Allison, dr iving a 1972
' The second singles match and Lou Nizer. We'll settle oval into eight seg ments of
Chevrolet,
broke David
was halted by darkness after yuur strike forthwith and you' ll 1,650 feet each.
Pearson's
track
record for cars
Edson Mandarino of Brazil and gel more ta lent with us than
By using a control board at
Julian Gonzabal split the fir st you've got in the whole the sw rt-fi nish line, it will be with restricler devices on the
two sets and were lied 3·3 in the Nationa l Leag ue. I haven't possible to se t th e lights for any carburetor . Allison's speed,
third .
wlked with the other lawyers desired speed whenever however, was shy or the overall
Gonzabal won the op ening but we all lov e baseball and hazardous conditi ons develops. track record of 107.375 m.p.h.
set, 64, but Mandarino came we'd give our ~.:ombined serAt the start of a yellow-tight set in 1970 by Calc Yarborough,
back to lie the score with a G-3 vices freely therefore . Even if period, each driver will see a whose car was runnin g without
second set trium ph .
Candlestick Park is cold, I'd specific number, ranging from the restricler plate.
Richard Petty of RanArgentine team cap tain like lube out there again."
one to eight, on the panel he is
dleman
, N.C., whipped his 1972
Oscar Furlong said Gonzabal
There was no immediate approaching .
injured his kn ee during the reply from Stoneham or the
As he reaches the same Plymouth around the half-mile
. third set andthalifhc is unable Giants.
relative position in the next oval al106.246 mph to grab the
to continue nction today ,
.segment of th e track, if he has outside front row slot
Today's 500 lap grind, which
Ricardo Cano will take his
adju sted his speed properly,
will
cover 267 miles is
place.
the number on the panel will
scheduled
to sta rt at 1:30 p.m .
Koch and Mandarino will be
change to the sa me number as
Brazil's doubles team today .
the previous one. If he sees a EST.
different number ahead of him,
Five differe nt makes of
Vilas will undoubtedly be one
ATLANTA (UP!) - The it will be necessary for him to automobiles copped the. first
member of the Argentine
tandem. His doubles partner Atlanta Braves said Saturday adjust his pa ce to conform with live posihons f~r the 37,875
their players have voted to the adjusted speed control. '"'Wmslon Cup Senes race.
1 will be ann ounced prior to the
open the season provided that
Track officials say the pian
Starling m the second row
match.
negotiations continue on their
will give no excuse lor any
dispute with the owners over
driver to encroach on the Sweden Trounces
the pension plan.
Tigers Postpone
A club spokesman said they
Switzerland 12-l
Or~oles Opener
had been informed by Cecil
'72 Home Opener
PRAGUE (UPI) - Sweden
Upshaw, player representative
To
Delayed
trounced Swi tzerland 12·1,
lor
the
team,
that
1
6
players
DETROIT I UPII - The
Saturday in a one-sided game
Detroit Tigers' home opener mel and voted to start ·the
BALTIMORE
(UP!)
The
that hardly revealed Sweden's
, against the New York Yankees season under cer tain con- baseball players strike has
chances
in the World Hockey
' Tuesday ha s been postponed ditions .
necessitated
a
change
in
the
.Tournament.
Upshaw snid "The Braves
because of the players' strike .
Baltimore Orioles' scheduled
The game never reached any
Jim Campbell, the club's have voted to play ball and Monday night opener against
high
standard of play. The
executive vice-president and start the 1972 championship the Milwaukee Brewers.
Swiss
were too inferior and the
general manager, said season at the earliest possible
J
.
Frank
Cashen,
club
Swedes apparently saved their
Saturday every effort would be time, providing negotiations executive vice president, said strength for the crucial game
made to reschedule the game continue for some specified if the strike Is 'settled during against Czeehoslovakia oday.
as early as possible . He said period and if at the expiration the weekend " The Orioles will
Switzerland, beaten 19-1
settlement of the strike would of that period, no agreement is make every effort to play the Friday by Czechoslovakia,
reached, the dispute is to be
determine the dale.
Brewers Tuesday night."
again . showed poor defense.
Fans with tickets for the settled by arbitration."
If an agreement is not The Swede&amp; did hardly
The owners of the Major reached by today, Cashen said,
home opener were advised to
~nything more than making
hold them until the game was League clubs have already another opening date will he 1Ise of their opponents'
voted to turn down such terms. announced.
rescheduled.
defensive mistakes.

COMING TO GALLIPOLIS

·SECTIONAL HOME

money. He's . going to set
records that nobody will beat."
As lor his own play here,
Trevino noted that he's gone
fmm 75 to 76 to 77 in three
success ive days, and added,
"I'm going for 80 tomorrow."
Trevino returned to the
Masters this year after two
years ab se nce, which he
claimed was due to the fact
that his game wasn't "sUited"
to the· Augusta National
9ourse. He says now that he's
adjusted his game for this
co w·se, but the course itself has
got him "psyched out."
"!think my game is adjusted
now to this golf course," inSisted Trevino. "I'm hilling it
high now. But I have an in·
secure feeling that I can't gel
close to the pin. This week I've
hit a lot of fat shuts trying to
ge l the ball up.
"I don'liiketo play that way.
I like to beat the ball."
Trevino was involved in a
minor dispute here earlie r this
week uvei' tickets for friends.

Lawyers Offer To Help

SEO Siandings

Wa~Jerly

Trevino

AUGUSTA, Ga . I UP)) - Lee
Trevino sadly but still with a
touch of humor regard'd the
··wreckage of his return ao the
Mastets Tournament Saturday
and sa id he thinks Jack
Nicklaus has got .. tlie championship wrapped up for a
record fourth lime.
"He's gone," · quipped
Trevino after a third-round 77
that gave him a three-round
total of 228 and left him, at U1e
moment he walked off the
course, a whopping 18 strokes
behind Nicklaus, the man he
defeated in a playoff in the u.
S. Open Championship last
year.
•iJ said two years ago he's the
best the game has ever seen,"
said Trevino. "He 's a freak.
He's so strong he mig ht even
beat two people.
" Any tournam ent he gets
ready for, he'll fini sh no worse
than third - I guarantee it,"
said golf's sell-styled super
Mex. "He's got my vole. Just
so he doesn't take all the

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·Local Bowling
MORNING GLORIES
March 28, 1972
St.1ndings:
Team

' Points

Newell Sunoco

1J2

Oomigan Sohio

100

Excelsior Oil Co.
G. &amp;J.AutoParts
GibbsGrocery

131
122
105

Spencer' s Market

82

High Team 13 Games) Excelsior Oil Co. 2194, Gibbs
Grocery 2192, G. &amp; J. Auto
Paris 2150.
High Team Game - Ex·
celsior Oil Co. 799, Domigan

Sohio 764, Newell Sunoco 755.
Hig~
Ind . 3-Games Thelm a - Osborne

428,

.

'

Waldheim to help Sj!ttle the
D•
OFFERIGNORED
LINDSAY DEA •
PARIS (UP!) .c. The four ' Vieklam · War. · Each side
ALBANY, N. Y. (UPl)
ed suggested instead thai·
Mayor John v. Lindsay's also- . delegations , to the suspend
Waldheim or the United
.ran finish In the early Paris peace tal~s Saturday Nations condemn the other for
Detn ocra tic ·pr.e sidenlial
offer by U. N. escalating the fighting.
primaries 'seriously .hurt any
General Kurt
plan he may hive had of
becoming governor of New
York. This is the vl,!lW of some
of his close poliUcal friends.
Many of ·them had warned the
New York City mayor about
running too fast after switching
to the Democratic party. They
· suggested he bide his time.

M ary

FORD FOR BELTS
DETROIJ (UP!) - T~
Ford Motor Co. will support
legislation !llaking the use of
safety belts compulsory, Ford
Earfy Bird League
President Lee A. Jacocca said
March 29, 1972 .
92 Saturday. "The lime has come
D . G. PinneHes
·
to exert every effort to get
64
Evelyn's Grotery
62 drivc,rs and passengers to use
King Builders
52 their safety bells, and
Larry',s Ashland
38
Rawlings Dodge
28 legislation appears to be the
Meigs Mobile Hol"fles
Team
High Game
only realistic means of
Rawlings Dodge 845, larry' s achieving this," Iacocca said.
A shland 807, Meigs M ob ile
Gil lii'V' 426, Frankie Hunnel
425.
High Ind. &lt;;arne - Thelma
Osborne 170, C. Teaford &amp; D.
Koehler 166, Ann Radford 157.

REBUILDING - Construction is underway to rebuild
the New Haven .Porcelain Company Plant on First Street.
Reopening of the plant Is expected this summer. Robert L.
Staats, president, said Upton Constructi on Company has the
contract. Completion is expected in May. The facility was
destroyed by fire in December of 1970 with an estimated loss

of between $80,000 and $90,000. Insulators for electrical lines
were produced then but a new line of tower packing for
clicmical plant use will be added when it Is reopened . The
structure is being rebuilt·on the same foundation and will be
120 x 160 feet. The former office building did not burn and is
under repair.

Homes 805.
Team High Series - M eigs
Mobile Homes 2260 , l arry' s

Ashland 1211-, Rawl in gs Dodge

2'198 .
Ind. High Game -

.,

Donna

Sporty new engine
runs cooler, lasts
longer, packs more
power!
Model 1556 15 hp

Grate 201, Ma xine Dugan 179,
Maxin e Dugan 177.
Ind . High Series .:_ Ma xine
Dugan 502, Donna Grate 484,
Flossie MaxS&lt;ln 461.

1 SUPER SHEF.,.

Ice Blamed in Ft&gt;ur Accidents
PT. PLEASANT - Ice was blamed
for a rash ·of four mishaps late Friday
night on the Silver Memorial Bridge.
State Police Trooper A. 'E.
Baumgardner investigated the series of
accidents,
Two mishaps occurred also in the
New Haven area, resulting in one injury,
.
At 10:45 p.m. a car driven by Albert
Gilley of Point Pleasant wrecked.
Shortly afterwards another, at 11 p.m.
driven by Edward Jones of Bidwell,
Ohio also wrecked. •
Two car's were involved in another
mishap at 11 :15 a.m. and drivers were
Identified as Barbara Lewis of Point
Pleasant and Cora Cooley of Circleville,
0.

NEW HAVEN WRECK
A hi.! and skip mishap in New Haven
Friday involving one injury is under
investigation ·by New Haven Police
Chief Tom Parsons and another mishap
iw the same community early today
re sulted in considerable property
damages.
Chief Parsons said Frank
Hendrickson complained of a neck
injury when the car he was driving was
struck by a hit and run driver at 11 :45
u.m. Friday.
Police also said Glen Ray Boggs, 22,
Hillsboro, W. Va. was driving a car at 2
a.m. today when it struck a parked car
owned by the West Virginia Sausage
Company. The officer did not give a
property estimate but said damages
were ·•considerable"

Brenda Adkins apparently struck a
vehicle driven by Russell Bibbee of
Point Pleasant in a mishap in the same
area at 11 :30 p.m.

MASON AUTO MISHAP
No injuries were sustained in an
accident reportedly to have occurred

"due to ice" on the Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge at 12:15 a.m. today. There were
no citations.
The accident was investigated by
Mason Chief of Police Jo)ln Harrah and
according to the report, a car driven by
Marjorie Grogran, 25, Middleport, lost
control of her vehicle on the bridge and
slid into a car driven by Delbert
Russell, 40, of Mason. Damages were
estimated at $700.
An icy roadway was blamed for a
headon collision Friday night on the
Shadle Bridge which resulted- in $2200
property damages, but apparently no
injuries, or citations.
Point Pleasant city police said .Gary
Wayne Myers, 20, Gallipolis Ferry told
them he was ~oing south when his car, a
late model Volkswagen started sliding
on the ice. The vehicle slid across the
roadway into the path of another car
which was headed north and driven by
Josephine M. Russell, 44. Mason police
said and they collided on the left fronts.

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(ALL DAY)

UP! Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) -Ohio's
shiny new strip mine law will
stand as a monument to the
109th General Assemblytaller, perhaps, than the state

Income llix.
True, strip mine reform was
forced on the lawmakers, as

Ohio Politics
most legislation ls, by public
outcries that became so loud
they could no longer be ignored
by those who make tbe wheels
turn in tbe legislature,
But just as the conservationists and ecologists got the
ball ro!Ung and clung lena·
cl0118ly to an iron.fisted bill
which cleared tbe Ho :&gt;SO last
October , the coal Industry
P'Jshec) hack with some practical amendments to allow them
to comply with the new reclamati.on requirements, stay in

·r-------------------- ----- ~

!

A~ea Deaths l

Edward King, Pomeroy; a
sister, Karlena Costen, Akron,
Sidenstricker
six grandchildren, 19 greatMIDDLEPORT - Funeral g,randchildrcli , and seve ral
services for Miss Lelah nieces and nephews.
Sldenstrlcker, 68, who died
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at Lake Worth, Monday at I p.m. at Ewing
Fla., wUI be held Monday at 2 Funeral Home with the Rev.
p.m. at Rawlings Coats Cecil Fox officiating . Burial
·Funeral Home . with the Rev , will be in Wells Cemetery.
Raullin Moyer officiating. Friends may call at the funeral
Burial will be in Miles home any· time.
Cemetery at Rutland. Friends
may call at the funeral home
Todd Grueser
after noon today.
Miss Sldenstricker, a former
POMEROY - Graveside
resident of Middleport and
services
for the infant son of
Rutland was born Oct. 16, 1903
James
R.
and Donna Jean
in Middreport, the daughter of
the late Floyd and Alice Wiiliams Grueser, Pomeroy,
Rt. 3, Todd Anthony Grueser,
Murray Sidenstricker .
She ls survived by a sister, who was born March 24, were
Mrs . Lady Canaday of held Saturday at 1 p.m. at
Columbus, and several nieces Kirkland Memorial Gardens,
Pt. Pleasant, with the Rev.
and nepbews.
George Hosc har officiating.
In addition to the parents, the.
infant
is survived by one
Charlie W. King
brother, Jimmy , at home ;
ma ternal .grandparents, Mr.
HARRIS ONVIL LE
Charlie W. King, 68, and Mrs. Wendell Williams,
Harrisonville, died Saturday Pomeroy , Rt . 4; pate rn al
morning O'Bleness Hospil&lt;ll, grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Grueser, Pomeroy, Rt.
Athens.
Mr .. King was preceded in 3; maternal great-granddeath by his parents, Frank parents, · Hr . and Mrs , '
and Lena Grinstead 'King and Virgil Williams, Robertsburg ,
two brothers, .Clark and Bill. W. Va., and Mrs. Lena Layton,
, Mr. King was a member of Piqua, Ohio ; paternal greatgrandparents, Mr. and Mrs,
the carleton Church.
He is survived by 'his wife, George Grueser.' Syracuse, and
Ida Murray King ; one Mrs. Elva Davis, MaS()n.
Ewing Funeral Home was
daughter, Myrtl~ Roblnsorr,
Pomeroy, Rt. •; a brother, .in charge of arrangements.

at

GALLIPOLJS,

eliminated and replaced with third offense, the miner's lithe word "shall." The chief )s cense is revoked for five years.
required to see that mine
operators return stripped land
promptly to a use at least as
valuable as its original use,
and without erosion, acid water
or cllffs steeper than 35
degrees.·
Accommodations were made
so mining companies would not
be straitjacketed with regulations impossible to comply
with. But anylllle who believes
conservationists were sold out
with a watered-down bill
should consider these features:
The chief can veto strip mining ·in .. any area to preserve
natural beauty. He also will be
empowered to send inspectors
onto private land to enforce the
law.
Opportunities for mine
operators to appeal an order of
the chief are restricted, while
any ordinary citizen will be
able for the first time Ill"protest
a lack of enforcement or ap.
peal the release of bond to an
operator for an unsatisfactory
reclamation job.
Before receiving a license to
mine, an operator will have to
show his mining wtd reclamation will not result in pollution,
sedimentation, erosion or other
lwtd deterioration, all more
tightly defeined than under the
old law.

BUY ANEW HOLLAND
GARDEN TRACTOR

HAY. ·FEVER]
A::. --

meth od of payment is designed
to encourage growers Jo im·
pr ove the quality and
marketing of their wool.
Jn any marketi ng year the
hi gher the price a grower gets
for his wool the larger the
incentive payment. For
example, if a·producer got a 15cent average return, his
paymen t will be 2.711 times 15
ce nts or 40.7 cents per pound .
On the other hand , a grower
who produced better quali ty
wool and rcl•eived an overa~e
ITI&lt;lrkel price of 25 cents a
pound would get 2.711 times
mor:e, or an im:eotive ~)ayment
of 67 .8 cents a pound .
II payment t'ale of $2.10 a
hundr cdwe i~ht on un shor n
lambs sold or slauglrtercd in
1971 also was announced by
USDA . The 1970 rate was $1.46.
This payment is designated to
compensate growers for the
wuul they market on live lambs
I'Hj_her tha n as shorn wooL The

pa yment is based on the shorn
wou l p &lt;:~)·me nt ra te , Gvcr age

weight of wool per hun dredweig ht uf b1mbs, and value
uf lamb's wool relative to the
rwt ional average val ue of
shorn wool.
The 1971 payment rate on
mohair will be 166.4 pet. of
sales return s received b)• a
grower· The rate is based on
the difference between the
suppor t level of 80 .2 cents and
the ave1·age price of 30.1 cents
a pound received by all
prndu cc rs
of
mohair .
Pay men ts on the 1970
marketings were al the rate of
105 .1 pet. of dollar returns
wlwn growers received an
averu ge ur39.1ce nts a pound in
the marketplace ,
Pay m en t s

to wool

moha ir growe rs

on

Get in on the Early Bi rd
Special! Buy a New Holland
lawn and ga rd en t ract or be ·
tween Marc h 1 and Apn l
301 1972. and choose:
ftr"'8ftner-e GE 12r black and
wh it e, J)Or ta ble TV or any

Ph . 992-7161

I

·

. -

material used, or profess to guarantee is not evidence that
have a secret formula or a lirm is reliable . . A showy
.ingredient for termite control. contract and g u~rantee could
Beware of firm s that have, no be part of the sales promotion .
For the niost .part, pest
listed telephone number : show
up unexpectedly (kn ockmg on control firms in Ohio are
doors) wanting to inspect your re liable and legitimate
house for term1tes, cater to business organizations, highly
elderly persons or those living respected in their comalone, try to ·: panic" or munities. It is the fraudulent
frig hten homeowners into a operator or "confidence man "
contract and claim to be hig hly whose purpose is to swindle
endorsed by The Ohio State peophi out of 1poney that one
should ava id.
'University .
In connection with the grass
Second, take your lime.
New in Farming There
is always tim e to pur- mowing practices, Extension
operators from outside the chase service wisely and at. speciali sts at Ohio State
area have victi mized un-_ your convenience . Termites University indicate mowing
suspecting homeowners.
work Slowly and your home practices make a difference.
The approach !)lay be that will not be ruined overnight. Mow ing probably require s
the h om~ has termites and Get more than one com petitive more time tl1an all other
must have work done at an cost estimate before buying operations necessa ry to grow
outrageously high price.
service. I! in doubt, check quality turfgrass. Much too
Few homeowners have · the references where the firm has often mowing is don e in a
training, time, or equipmen t to performed service . Find ou t if haphazard fashion and as a
perform . a proper termite the custom ers were satisfied. ne cessary dru,dge ry rather
control job. In most cases,
Third, know the terms of the than one of the most important
termite control is a job for the con tra ct. Get a written ste ps in maintain in g a
professional pest control statement of the termite work desirable turf.
operator, says William F. proposed to be done and a cost
Most of us have Kentucky
Lyon, Extension entomologist, estimate . If th ere is a bluegrass lawns and should cut
The Ohio Stale University . . guarantee, remember that it is the grass at a height of two
There are three steps to take no better than the person or inches. There is a direc t
in "buying" the service of a firm who gives it to you. A relati onship between the height
pest control operator.
First, purchase your service
from a reliable firm . Be sure
the firm has an established
place of business and a good
~GRAVELY
professional reputation. Most
reputable firms belong to the
Ohio Pest Control Association
and-&lt;Jr Na tional Pest Control
ALL-GEAR-DRIVE INSTANT
Assoc iation . They are inFORWARD, NEUTRAL, REVERSE
terested in "professio nal
improvement "
by
par ticipating in short courses and16.5, 14
or workshops sponsored by the
12 or 10
Department of Entomology at
Horsepower
The Ohio State Universi ty andor neighboring states.
This county agent has a
roster of those firms belonging
to Pest Control " Associations
and you r Better Bu si ness
Bureau can give you in ~
formation regal'ding ~a given
local firm .
Beware of firms that quote a
price based on the ga llonage of
By C. E. Blakc,lce
Ext. Agent, Agriculture
POMEROY - With spri ng
just around th e co rner,
homeowners have decisions to
make. A liig one is in connection with grass mowing
practices. The other is in case
you have swarming of ·termits
on warm days, what do you do ?
The termite problem has
been with us for years. In the
past a few uu scrupuious

I5
· 5UDDE·N· ·
: SN EZURE
.
·

and
1971

To4ur·, FUNNY 'Will po~ $1. 00 for

~ ach ongino l " funny " ut ed . Send gags
to: Todoy's FUNNY, 1200 w~, ,· Third

St , Cle•e lond , Ohio 44 11l.

ma1·ketings will be about $1W
million, up $38 million over
1970 . Wool payments are
estimated at about $lOll mil lion
for 1971 compared with $64
mi ll ion for 1970. Moahir
payme nts will be about $10
mi llion, compa red with $8
million for 1970.
Deductions in 1971 of p,,
ce nts a pound from shorn wool
and mohair pa)'menls and 7%
ce nts a hundred pounds of live
weight from lamb payments
will be made lo fimince adverti sing, sales promotion, and
rela ted market development
activities. ·These deductions,
prov ided for in the national
Wool Act, are at the same rates
as fo r the five preceding
marketin g years.
The
deductions were approv ~d by
an 87 pel. favorable vote by
sheepmen voting in a June 1911
referendum and by an 80 pet.
favorable vote by mohair
pr odu cers votin g in a
referendum in April1971.
Agricul ture Stabilization and
Conse rvati on Service County
Offices will begin making the
pay ments early in April.
The 1972 incentive price for
wool announced Nov. 10, 1971 is
72 cenls a pound, the same as
for 1 971~ The 1971 support level
of 80.2 cents a pound for mohair
is also the sa me as the support
level for 1971.

Gallipolis, Ohio

Let's keep it quiet around here!

Grains Bearish

,.-

RIDING TRACTORS

Estimated
Declaration
Is Due Soon

COLUMBUS .- Tax ComWIISHINGTON iUPI)"Feed situa'tion" summary, missioner Robert J. Kosydar
Feed grain prices at harvest sai d th at if wea th er issued a reminder today lhat
tim e this fall will be above last is normal, 1972 feed the initial Ohio eslimated intwo of the followin g:
year's depressed levels, Agri- crops could total about 190 come tax declaration and first
• Bli! ck &amp; Dec ker elec t ric
lawn edger-trimmer
c u t t u r e De p a r I m e n t ' million tons on the hasis of quarterly payment for &lt;l972 is
• Black &amp; Dec ker elect riC
economists predict.
March. planting estimates, 15 due April 15.
shrub and ~ed ge clipper
Kosydar said any individual
The forecast was based on million tons below last year,
• Bla ck &amp; Decker l 8 " van
who
receives income in Ohio,
the assumption that plantings The potential production may
ab le spee·d reve rstng dri ll
thi s year will not top the levels "about equal" prospective do- whether a residen t or non• Melnor 'automat ic t rav ·
predicted after a ·March I sur- mestic and export demands resident, is subject to the
eling lawn sprinkler
vey of farm ers' intentions. But during the 1972-73 marketing persona l income tax and may
Stop in tod ay for complete
detail s.
experts said in a report that season which begins at harvest be required to file a declaration
actual plantings could be below time this fail, the report said. of estimated tax (Form ITthe indicated March level beOne specialist said the esti- 1040ES ).
The filin g of the dec laration
cause some acreage then listed mates were prepared befor e
as intended for feed crops later news that Agriculture Secre- of estimated l&lt;lx is required if
wound up enrolled in the gov- tary Earl L. Butz will open lhe taxpayer reasonably
Upper River Rd .
ernment land-idling program. talks in Moscow next week on estimates th~ tax liabili ty
Gallipolis. Ohio
Economists, writing in a possible additional feed grain for 1972 will exceed $50 and no
sales to Russia . If other tax was withheld. If the tax is
production and use forecasts estimated to be less than $50
hold up and sizeable additional for the year, only an annual
shipments to the Soviet Union re turn, between January 1 and
materialize for next fa ll, total April15, 1973,.will be required ,
1971-73 demand could conceiv- the commissioner said.
Kosydar noted, h ow~ver ,
ably exceed this yea r's production . That would pull back into those individuals who are
use some of th e surplus re sidents of the stales of
generated by record 1971 . Kentucky , Wes t Virginia,
I
Indiana and Michigan and
crops.
The report noted corn prices whose Ohio income consists ·
have been fairly stable at a solely of compensation are not
weekly range of $1.2\41.23 re quired to file es timated
bushel at Chicago since rising returns as Ohio has reciprocal
from $1.05 in mid-November to agreements with these sUi tes
$1.26 in mid-December. Ex- and the wage earner is taxed
perts added that if a report due only in his state of residence.
later this month shows
January-March consumption rises, however, will be limited
levels holding at previous high by the existence of heavy
Just right for a big share of your acres. On
rates, some price strength stocks in the government
heavy soils or light soils. XL-66 comes through
could develop this spring. Any support program.
with yield performance you can depe nd on .

Ew
• 52 hp gas or diesel.
• Lightning fla sh sh ift (8F-4R speeds) syn chromes.h transmission.
• Planetary f inal drive.
• 20 gal lon rear fuel l ank.

e Big capaci ty, live independent hydrau li cs.
• Precision dra fl control 3-po int hitc h with in-

finit e rat e respo nse.
• Hydrostati c power steering, ad justable seat,
Dyna -Li fe"' clutch, hydraulic we t disc brakes.
• Options include twin shaft 540/ 1000 RPM PTO
and differential lock.

NEW

PU.OVED pcr f.,r tu nncn, d u ru i Jilit y - : t ~k n ny Grnvely owner, 11r n11k 11!1
aUuul h&lt;&gt;W " (; m ~' elY I t id ;n1: T r:u·Lnr ~lcKKi up t o the ~ruelin11 W m;hiiiiiL On,
n . c:. L(J New Y ork. lc~t. , , :l[)(j mile11 , ,f tra~· cling. wit h :1 lot uf mow iutt
:•h1ng- tl1c w"y!
l n,·c~t in t h e I ra d,.,r Lluo t .:ivt.'!&lt; you in ~t: mt cunl w l, al! - ~::ea r - t lr ivu;

INTERNATIONAl: 574

a rcput;l t iun, h:m i-··:Hncd llVCf the YI.\'U~ . or bcil111 H rug!(cd, ..,u ulity hu\l t
machin u. A t wd &lt;•r tlwl h : 1~ the righ t dmicc uf u U : uJmu:u l ~, 40 or
i1H'il t'r rmt-muun t "r C'tJIIi l• r-tnvuul mow er~ . atltl tn :tny othcr;J, l'ur yeurruund vers.:•t. i\it.y.
Am i (;r~ t&gt;"t!ly tlc, •lcr~ :1ro 80 rviciniC rlefllt: ~. l .ct U..'l sh uw YfJU why
Y"" ge t lll &lt;lrl) vnl uo f ur your nw uuy with Grnvci,'Y .

au

powerful • productive • easy driving

Meigs Equipment Co.

Open Monday Thru Saturday 8 Til 5
Evenings By Appointment

Tractor Sales &amp;Service

POMEROY, OHIO

992-2975

PHONE 992-2176

Pomeroy . Ohio

512 E. Main

Shop Landmark First!
LANDMARK has EVERYTHING

BIG ON
YOUR
FARM

XL-66

-PRICES GOOD ALL THIS WEEK-

SPECIALS TO MAKE YOU SMILE!

--

TURF-TRIM MOWERS

ECONOMY TILLERS

Briggs &amp; Stratt on 3V' hp engines.
Hand push 122-30111, in carton
$70 .25, se t up $75 .25. Sel f·

Has 3V, hp B &amp; S engine, 93%
of we igh t concentra ted over ·
tines for better tilling. Hahn hoe

propel led (22 -3012), in carton

t ines, 12'' diamete r, 20'r wide .

$82.75, set up $87.7 5

122· 12161

Reg. $159.9 5

2 GALLON GAS CAN $2.45

Big, Big Yielder

•

of cut and the amounf of roots bluegrass is cutto two inches in
present. Research with Ken- height, no more than one inch
lucky bluegrass shows that should be removed at one time.
rootgrowth.is more than twice
All . mowing equipme nt"
as grea t when the grass is cut should be kept in good working
at two inches high than when condition. Kee p mowers sharp
cut at three.quarlers of an and adjusted to assure a good,
inch. In general, the closer a. clean cut. A dull rotary mower
given grass is mowed, the frays the ends of leaves and
1
fewer roots it will produce.
results in browned ends and
Grass should not be allowed damages the grass.
to grow untilcuttingremovesa
Mow when grass is dry, if
majority of the leaf surface. No possible. Do not delay long
more than one-fourth to one- periods of time if rains contjlird of the leaf area should be tinu e to keep the gra ss wet. It 1s
removed at one mowing. This better to mow it wet than to
means that if Kentucky allow it to become too rank.

DURABILITY- PERFORMANCE- PROVED

Cotton
Equipment Co.

New GE Elec-TraR
Tractor
•••.
no
noisy
•
eng1ne, runs on
batteries!

Fees Doubled
Licensing and acreage fees
are doubled . Licenses are
granted for each pit instead of
a large tract of land, making
for stricter control. Bonding
will be flexible and meet the
estimated cost of 'reclamation.
Minimum bond Is more than
doubled. For the first time,
liability insurance will be required.
The miner will have to reclaim 89 he mines, with no
more thari a three-month lag.
He may not substitute . reclamatloninanotherarea. Two
years plus one growing season
is tbe' maximum for complete
reclamation, which has taken .
three ~ five years or longer
through ldopboles in tbe o\d
law.
The chief wUI have strict
control
over
amended
reclamation plants, extensions
of deadlines and mining
beyond the licensed area. He
will control mining near roads,
homes, schools and public
buildings.
,
'J'here will be no blasting between sunset an&lt;;l sunrise, and
rione near homes.
Fines for violating the law
are .sharply upgr,aded. On ihe

()

AND GET AGIFT (OR TWO)!

----GENERAL TIRE SALES

1503 EASTERN AVENUE

Mine Bill.Monument
business wtd preserve jobs.
The result, after the catfightin g and emotionalism
died away, was a wellreasoned, workable law which
wlli require strip miners to
return the land to a stable,
unpolluted wtd useable state.
The new law will probably be
refined in the years ahead to
give Ohio a sound set of reclamation requirements to hold up
to strip miners far into the
future.
Depend on Eoforeemcot
Success of the law wlli depend on its enforcement by the
chief of forestry wtd reclamation in the Department of Natural Resources,
But the language of the law,
labored over lor so many
months, will belp. It sets down
the chief's powers and duties in
black and white, clear for the
first time to any court.
·
. The "mays" .and !'where
possibles"
are largely

GALLIPOLIS - Quality
production incentive ·payment
rate on 1971 marketings of
shorn wool was announced last
week by the U. S. Dcpartinent
of Agriculture.
The rate, based on the In- cenlive price of 72 cents a
pound, is 271.1 pet. of the
national avera ge price of 19.4
cents a pound received ·by
producers. Payments to wool
growers are required by the
Na tional Wool Act of 1954, as
amended.
The higher 1971 payment
rate compared with the 1970
ra te of 102.8 pet. and reflects a
drop in market prices for shor n
wool in 1971, USDA officials
said. Wool prices were
gene rally lower last yea r
throughout the world and the
U. S. average wool price to
producers was the lowest since
1938.
A grower's wool payment is
determined by mult iplying i1is
net dollar return from the sa le
of wool by the payment ra te of
271.1 pet. The perce ntage

the hood, the 1556 is a ll business.

EverY SundaY·

Ll. '

.

Teams up with over 30 job-mind eC auachments . Don 'I

.

U.p. loday'sFUNNY
B
.
.
C
· "'"•""'~ eware - on Games with Your Termites!

.
·
.
.
·
·
00
0 n '71 W I

Introducing the 1556, newest member of the Husky
team. Powered by revolutlaMiy 15 hp overhead va lve
engine . Run s c ooler, lonp •• • more effi cient
pertormance. H~dr os ta tlc tlanltl"'lss lon lets you keep .
your hand s on the wheel, change s~eed ~nd dilect lon ·
with your fool. B ack~sav l ng hydrau lic lilt ts standard .
Solid state ignition for dependab le year ·round startl ng.

Third &amp; Court

By LEE LEONARD

·
S
.
R
. at e et

25 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, StUiday , Apnl9, 1972 '

On e-piece sea ml ess drawn dome top, double ~;ri:';
sea med to bott om . Wide m outh, fa s t -pour ~

spout. 122·07881

Reg. $2.79 .

INTRODUCTORY OFFER

Turns on like a light, runs on silent
electric current, sale as technology can
make it. No gas, no smell, no greasy
maintenance. Mow lawns, plqw groun d,
throw snow, trim hedges, even cut
firewood with portable plug -i n power
tools.
Mow up to three acres without
re-charging ; batteries warranted five

years on models E20, E15, El2, ~••&lt;"' ·
ElOM; three years on model EBM.
" Refu el" by plugging into a·ny standa rd
outl et. Come and see the complete line,
get a free demonstrat ion today!

Maturily-About 5-7 days later than XL·45a
Plant Height- Mediu m
Ear Height- Medium
Ear Type- Long , good girth . Lustrous , heavy
grain.
Standabi lity- Ex ee llen t
Combining Ability- Excellent
.
Adaptation- Perform s we ll on near ly all so tl
types ; comes throug h in fine sha pe in dri 7r
seasons. and makes th e bumper crops m
years with favorabl e moi stur e.
Populations- Up to 23.000 at ha rvest

ALSO AVAILABLE
XL-74
XL44
XL-374

Manufacturer's sugges ted retail price
for -~ SM plus taxes, set-up, freight
charges if any.

Free mower at participating dea lers with
any GE Elec-Trak Tractor during ou r
special Spring Introductory Sale.

GENERAL

ELECTRIC

Consult deoler(s) listed below for their actual prices and terms in effect.

OPEN MONDAY
, JHRU SATURDAY 8 TILL 5
EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT
.

Available Now At

.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
-SALES &amp;SERVICE
.
.

512 E. MAIN

.

992-2975

POMEROY, OHIO
II

NEW

KASOO DOG FOOD
PROFESSIONAL FORMULA

Buy Your Fertilizer Now Get Early Discount!

(27% PROTEINS)
CHUNKS - MEALElTES

;

Bag. ~ulk and Liquid Fertilizer. all
available now. Take delivery now from our
area warehouse at Pomeroy. Ask about
Complete Custom Spray Serv.ice . (We Do
All the Workl.

'II

CLIP THIS
AD AND SAVE

Automat ic drive 5 HP Riding Mower Model 3255. Fea ·

. ture s rear-en~ i n e man~ uve rability ahd automatic dri'Ye.
5 HP. t!Mgine 1n rea r means, less fume s, noise and easier

steeMg. (22-59131

.

Good April 10 to ' 15

Central Soya

OFF
25' OFF

FARM SUPPLY SUPERMARKET
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

J. D. ·NORTH PRODUCE. CO.

50~

' Vine Street

ON 50 LB. BAG

•

POMEROY LANDMARK

ON 25 LB. BAG
Gallipolis, o.

GARDEN SEEDS
ONION sns

JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.
Serving. Meigs, Gallia &amp; Mason Counties

.

STORE OPEN a:oo TO 6:00

'1

Phone 992-2181
STATION OPEN 24 HOURS

�.

·Local Bowling
MORNING GLORIES
March 28, 1972
St.1ndings:
Team

' Points

Newell Sunoco

1J2

Oomigan Sohio

100

Excelsior Oil Co.
G. &amp;J.AutoParts
GibbsGrocery

131
122
105

Spencer' s Market

82

High Team 13 Games) Excelsior Oil Co. 2194, Gibbs
Grocery 2192, G. &amp; J. Auto
Paris 2150.
High Team Game - Ex·
celsior Oil Co. 799, Domigan

Sohio 764, Newell Sunoco 755.
Hig~
Ind . 3-Games Thelm a - Osborne

428,

.

'

Waldheim to help Sj!ttle the
D•
OFFERIGNORED
LINDSAY DEA •
PARIS (UP!) .c. The four ' Vieklam · War. · Each side
ALBANY, N. Y. (UPl)
ed suggested instead thai·
Mayor John v. Lindsay's also- . delegations , to the suspend
Waldheim or the United
.ran finish In the early Paris peace tal~s Saturday Nations condemn the other for
Detn ocra tic ·pr.e sidenlial
offer by U. N. escalating the fighting.
primaries 'seriously .hurt any
General Kurt
plan he may hive had of
becoming governor of New
York. This is the vl,!lW of some
of his close poliUcal friends.
Many of ·them had warned the
New York City mayor about
running too fast after switching
to the Democratic party. They
· suggested he bide his time.

M ary

FORD FOR BELTS
DETROIJ (UP!) - T~
Ford Motor Co. will support
legislation !llaking the use of
safety belts compulsory, Ford
Earfy Bird League
President Lee A. Jacocca said
March 29, 1972 .
92 Saturday. "The lime has come
D . G. PinneHes
·
to exert every effort to get
64
Evelyn's Grotery
62 drivc,rs and passengers to use
King Builders
52 their safety bells, and
Larry',s Ashland
38
Rawlings Dodge
28 legislation appears to be the
Meigs Mobile Hol"fles
Team
High Game
only realistic means of
Rawlings Dodge 845, larry' s achieving this," Iacocca said.
A shland 807, Meigs M ob ile
Gil lii'V' 426, Frankie Hunnel
425.
High Ind. &lt;;arne - Thelma
Osborne 170, C. Teaford &amp; D.
Koehler 166, Ann Radford 157.

REBUILDING - Construction is underway to rebuild
the New Haven .Porcelain Company Plant on First Street.
Reopening of the plant Is expected this summer. Robert L.
Staats, president, said Upton Constructi on Company has the
contract. Completion is expected in May. The facility was
destroyed by fire in December of 1970 with an estimated loss

of between $80,000 and $90,000. Insulators for electrical lines
were produced then but a new line of tower packing for
clicmical plant use will be added when it Is reopened . The
structure is being rebuilt·on the same foundation and will be
120 x 160 feet. The former office building did not burn and is
under repair.

Homes 805.
Team High Series - M eigs
Mobile Homes 2260 , l arry' s

Ashland 1211-, Rawl in gs Dodge

2'198 .
Ind. High Game -

.,

Donna

Sporty new engine
runs cooler, lasts
longer, packs more
power!
Model 1556 15 hp

Grate 201, Ma xine Dugan 179,
Maxin e Dugan 177.
Ind . High Series .:_ Ma xine
Dugan 502, Donna Grate 484,
Flossie MaxS&lt;ln 461.

1 SUPER SHEF.,.

Ice Blamed in Ft&gt;ur Accidents
PT. PLEASANT - Ice was blamed
for a rash ·of four mishaps late Friday
night on the Silver Memorial Bridge.
State Police Trooper A. 'E.
Baumgardner investigated the series of
accidents,
Two mishaps occurred also in the
New Haven area, resulting in one injury,
.
At 10:45 p.m. a car driven by Albert
Gilley of Point Pleasant wrecked.
Shortly afterwards another, at 11 p.m.
driven by Edward Jones of Bidwell,
Ohio also wrecked. •
Two car's were involved in another
mishap at 11 :15 a.m. and drivers were
Identified as Barbara Lewis of Point
Pleasant and Cora Cooley of Circleville,
0.

NEW HAVEN WRECK
A hi.! and skip mishap in New Haven
Friday involving one injury is under
investigation ·by New Haven Police
Chief Tom Parsons and another mishap
iw the same community early today
re sulted in considerable property
damages.
Chief Parsons said Frank
Hendrickson complained of a neck
injury when the car he was driving was
struck by a hit and run driver at 11 :45
u.m. Friday.
Police also said Glen Ray Boggs, 22,
Hillsboro, W. Va. was driving a car at 2
a.m. today when it struck a parked car
owned by the West Virginia Sausage
Company. The officer did not give a
property estimate but said damages
were ·•considerable"

Brenda Adkins apparently struck a
vehicle driven by Russell Bibbee of
Point Pleasant in a mishap in the same
area at 11 :30 p.m.

MASON AUTO MISHAP
No injuries were sustained in an
accident reportedly to have occurred

"due to ice" on the Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge at 12:15 a.m. today. There were
no citations.
The accident was investigated by
Mason Chief of Police Jo)ln Harrah and
according to the report, a car driven by
Marjorie Grogran, 25, Middleport, lost
control of her vehicle on the bridge and
slid into a car driven by Delbert
Russell, 40, of Mason. Damages were
estimated at $700.
An icy roadway was blamed for a
headon collision Friday night on the
Shadle Bridge which resulted- in $2200
property damages, but apparently no
injuries, or citations.
Point Pleasant city police said .Gary
Wayne Myers, 20, Gallipolis Ferry told
them he was ~oing south when his car, a
late model Volkswagen started sliding
on the ice. The vehicle slid across the
roadway into the path of another car
which was headed north and driven by
Josephine M. Russell, 44. Mason police
said and they collided on the left fronts.

Family Pack
includes these
4 sandwiches
and 4 orders
of french fries.

$

onlY

let the sport y look foo l you .. . under

,.

CHUCK· COLLIER
--SERVICE STORE

(ALL DAY)

UP! Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) -Ohio's
shiny new strip mine law will
stand as a monument to the
109th General Assemblytaller, perhaps, than the state

Income llix.
True, strip mine reform was
forced on the lawmakers, as

Ohio Politics
most legislation ls, by public
outcries that became so loud
they could no longer be ignored
by those who make tbe wheels
turn in tbe legislature,
But just as the conservationists and ecologists got the
ball ro!Ung and clung lena·
cl0118ly to an iron.fisted bill
which cleared tbe Ho :&gt;SO last
October , the coal Industry
P'Jshec) hack with some practical amendments to allow them
to comply with the new reclamati.on requirements, stay in

·r-------------------- ----- ~

!

A~ea Deaths l

Edward King, Pomeroy; a
sister, Karlena Costen, Akron,
Sidenstricker
six grandchildren, 19 greatMIDDLEPORT - Funeral g,randchildrcli , and seve ral
services for Miss Lelah nieces and nephews.
Sldenstrlcker, 68, who died
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at Lake Worth, Monday at I p.m. at Ewing
Fla., wUI be held Monday at 2 Funeral Home with the Rev.
p.m. at Rawlings Coats Cecil Fox officiating . Burial
·Funeral Home . with the Rev , will be in Wells Cemetery.
Raullin Moyer officiating. Friends may call at the funeral
Burial will be in Miles home any· time.
Cemetery at Rutland. Friends
may call at the funeral home
Todd Grueser
after noon today.
Miss Sldenstricker, a former
POMEROY - Graveside
resident of Middleport and
services
for the infant son of
Rutland was born Oct. 16, 1903
James
R.
and Donna Jean
in Middreport, the daughter of
the late Floyd and Alice Wiiliams Grueser, Pomeroy,
Rt. 3, Todd Anthony Grueser,
Murray Sidenstricker .
She ls survived by a sister, who was born March 24, were
Mrs . Lady Canaday of held Saturday at 1 p.m. at
Columbus, and several nieces Kirkland Memorial Gardens,
Pt. Pleasant, with the Rev.
and nepbews.
George Hosc har officiating.
In addition to the parents, the.
infant
is survived by one
Charlie W. King
brother, Jimmy , at home ;
ma ternal .grandparents, Mr.
HARRIS ONVIL LE
Charlie W. King, 68, and Mrs. Wendell Williams,
Harrisonville, died Saturday Pomeroy , Rt . 4; pate rn al
morning O'Bleness Hospil&lt;ll, grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Grueser, Pomeroy, Rt.
Athens.
Mr .. King was preceded in 3; maternal great-granddeath by his parents, Frank parents, · Hr . and Mrs , '
and Lena Grinstead 'King and Virgil Williams, Robertsburg ,
two brothers, .Clark and Bill. W. Va., and Mrs. Lena Layton,
, Mr. King was a member of Piqua, Ohio ; paternal greatgrandparents, Mr. and Mrs,
the carleton Church.
He is survived by 'his wife, George Grueser.' Syracuse, and
Ida Murray King ; one Mrs. Elva Davis, MaS()n.
Ewing Funeral Home was
daughter, Myrtl~ Roblnsorr,
Pomeroy, Rt. •; a brother, .in charge of arrangements.

at

GALLIPOLJS,

eliminated and replaced with third offense, the miner's lithe word "shall." The chief )s cense is revoked for five years.
required to see that mine
operators return stripped land
promptly to a use at least as
valuable as its original use,
and without erosion, acid water
or cllffs steeper than 35
degrees.·
Accommodations were made
so mining companies would not
be straitjacketed with regulations impossible to comply
with. But anylllle who believes
conservationists were sold out
with a watered-down bill
should consider these features:
The chief can veto strip mining ·in .. any area to preserve
natural beauty. He also will be
empowered to send inspectors
onto private land to enforce the
law.
Opportunities for mine
operators to appeal an order of
the chief are restricted, while
any ordinary citizen will be
able for the first time Ill"protest
a lack of enforcement or ap.
peal the release of bond to an
operator for an unsatisfactory
reclamation job.
Before receiving a license to
mine, an operator will have to
show his mining wtd reclamation will not result in pollution,
sedimentation, erosion or other
lwtd deterioration, all more
tightly defeined than under the
old law.

BUY ANEW HOLLAND
GARDEN TRACTOR

HAY. ·FEVER]
A::. --

meth od of payment is designed
to encourage growers Jo im·
pr ove the quality and
marketing of their wool.
Jn any marketi ng year the
hi gher the price a grower gets
for his wool the larger the
incentive payment. For
example, if a·producer got a 15cent average return, his
paymen t will be 2.711 times 15
ce nts or 40.7 cents per pound .
On the other hand , a grower
who produced better quali ty
wool and rcl•eived an overa~e
ITI&lt;lrkel price of 25 cents a
pound would get 2.711 times
mor:e, or an im:eotive ~)ayment
of 67 .8 cents a pound .
II payment t'ale of $2.10 a
hundr cdwe i~ht on un shor n
lambs sold or slauglrtercd in
1971 also was announced by
USDA . The 1970 rate was $1.46.
This payment is designated to
compensate growers for the
wuul they market on live lambs
I'Hj_her tha n as shorn wooL The

pa yment is based on the shorn
wou l p &lt;:~)·me nt ra te , Gvcr age

weight of wool per hun dredweig ht uf b1mbs, and value
uf lamb's wool relative to the
rwt ional average val ue of
shorn wool.
The 1971 payment rate on
mohair will be 166.4 pet. of
sales return s received b)• a
grower· The rate is based on
the difference between the
suppor t level of 80 .2 cents and
the ave1·age price of 30.1 cents
a pound received by all
prndu cc rs
of
mohair .
Pay men ts on the 1970
marketings were al the rate of
105 .1 pet. of dollar returns
wlwn growers received an
averu ge ur39.1ce nts a pound in
the marketplace ,
Pay m en t s

to wool

moha ir growe rs

on

Get in on the Early Bi rd
Special! Buy a New Holland
lawn and ga rd en t ract or be ·
tween Marc h 1 and Apn l
301 1972. and choose:
ftr"'8ftner-e GE 12r black and
wh it e, J)Or ta ble TV or any

Ph . 992-7161

I

·

. -

material used, or profess to guarantee is not evidence that
have a secret formula or a lirm is reliable . . A showy
.ingredient for termite control. contract and g u~rantee could
Beware of firm s that have, no be part of the sales promotion .
For the niost .part, pest
listed telephone number : show
up unexpectedly (kn ockmg on control firms in Ohio are
doors) wanting to inspect your re liable and legitimate
house for term1tes, cater to business organizations, highly
elderly persons or those living respected in their comalone, try to ·: panic" or munities. It is the fraudulent
frig hten homeowners into a operator or "confidence man "
contract and claim to be hig hly whose purpose is to swindle
endorsed by The Ohio State peophi out of 1poney that one
should ava id.
'University .
In connection with the grass
Second, take your lime.
New in Farming There
is always tim e to pur- mowing practices, Extension
operators from outside the chase service wisely and at. speciali sts at Ohio State
area have victi mized un-_ your convenience . Termites University indicate mowing
suspecting homeowners.
work Slowly and your home practices make a difference.
The approach !)lay be that will not be ruined overnight. Mow ing probably require s
the h om~ has termites and Get more than one com petitive more time tl1an all other
must have work done at an cost estimate before buying operations necessa ry to grow
outrageously high price.
service. I! in doubt, check quality turfgrass. Much too
Few homeowners have · the references where the firm has often mowing is don e in a
training, time, or equipmen t to performed service . Find ou t if haphazard fashion and as a
perform . a proper termite the custom ers were satisfied. ne cessary dru,dge ry rather
control job. In most cases,
Third, know the terms of the than one of the most important
termite control is a job for the con tra ct. Get a written ste ps in maintain in g a
professional pest control statement of the termite work desirable turf.
operator, says William F. proposed to be done and a cost
Most of us have Kentucky
Lyon, Extension entomologist, estimate . If th ere is a bluegrass lawns and should cut
The Ohio Stale University . . guarantee, remember that it is the grass at a height of two
There are three steps to take no better than the person or inches. There is a direc t
in "buying" the service of a firm who gives it to you. A relati onship between the height
pest control operator.
First, purchase your service
from a reliable firm . Be sure
the firm has an established
place of business and a good
~GRAVELY
professional reputation. Most
reputable firms belong to the
Ohio Pest Control Association
and-&lt;Jr Na tional Pest Control
ALL-GEAR-DRIVE INSTANT
Assoc iation . They are inFORWARD, NEUTRAL, REVERSE
terested in "professio nal
improvement "
by
par ticipating in short courses and16.5, 14
or workshops sponsored by the
12 or 10
Department of Entomology at
Horsepower
The Ohio State Universi ty andor neighboring states.
This county agent has a
roster of those firms belonging
to Pest Control " Associations
and you r Better Bu si ness
Bureau can give you in ~
formation regal'ding ~a given
local firm .
Beware of firms that quote a
price based on the ga llonage of
By C. E. Blakc,lce
Ext. Agent, Agriculture
POMEROY - With spri ng
just around th e co rner,
homeowners have decisions to
make. A liig one is in connection with grass mowing
practices. The other is in case
you have swarming of ·termits
on warm days, what do you do ?
The termite problem has
been with us for years. In the
past a few uu scrupuious

I5
· 5UDDE·N· ·
: SN EZURE
.
·

and
1971

To4ur·, FUNNY 'Will po~ $1. 00 for

~ ach ongino l " funny " ut ed . Send gags
to: Todoy's FUNNY, 1200 w~, ,· Third

St , Cle•e lond , Ohio 44 11l.

ma1·ketings will be about $1W
million, up $38 million over
1970 . Wool payments are
estimated at about $lOll mil lion
for 1971 compared with $64
mi ll ion for 1970. Moahir
payme nts will be about $10
mi llion, compa red with $8
million for 1970.
Deductions in 1971 of p,,
ce nts a pound from shorn wool
and mohair pa)'menls and 7%
ce nts a hundred pounds of live
weight from lamb payments
will be made lo fimince adverti sing, sales promotion, and
rela ted market development
activities. ·These deductions,
prov ided for in the national
Wool Act, are at the same rates
as fo r the five preceding
marketin g years.
The
deductions were approv ~d by
an 87 pel. favorable vote by
sheepmen voting in a June 1911
referendum and by an 80 pet.
favorable vote by mohair
pr odu cers votin g in a
referendum in April1971.
Agricul ture Stabilization and
Conse rvati on Service County
Offices will begin making the
pay ments early in April.
The 1972 incentive price for
wool announced Nov. 10, 1971 is
72 cenls a pound, the same as
for 1 971~ The 1971 support level
of 80.2 cents a pound for mohair
is also the sa me as the support
level for 1971.

Gallipolis, Ohio

Let's keep it quiet around here!

Grains Bearish

,.-

RIDING TRACTORS

Estimated
Declaration
Is Due Soon

COLUMBUS .- Tax ComWIISHINGTON iUPI)"Feed situa'tion" summary, missioner Robert J. Kosydar
Feed grain prices at harvest sai d th at if wea th er issued a reminder today lhat
tim e this fall will be above last is normal, 1972 feed the initial Ohio eslimated intwo of the followin g:
year's depressed levels, Agri- crops could total about 190 come tax declaration and first
• Bli! ck &amp; Dec ker elec t ric
lawn edger-trimmer
c u t t u r e De p a r I m e n t ' million tons on the hasis of quarterly payment for &lt;l972 is
• Black &amp; Dec ker elect riC
economists predict.
March. planting estimates, 15 due April 15.
shrub and ~ed ge clipper
Kosydar said any individual
The forecast was based on million tons below last year,
• Bla ck &amp; Decker l 8 " van
who
receives income in Ohio,
the assumption that plantings The potential production may
ab le spee·d reve rstng dri ll
thi s year will not top the levels "about equal" prospective do- whether a residen t or non• Melnor 'automat ic t rav ·
predicted after a ·March I sur- mestic and export demands resident, is subject to the
eling lawn sprinkler
vey of farm ers' intentions. But during the 1972-73 marketing persona l income tax and may
Stop in tod ay for complete
detail s.
experts said in a report that season which begins at harvest be required to file a declaration
actual plantings could be below time this fail, the report said. of estimated tax (Form ITthe indicated March level beOne specialist said the esti- 1040ES ).
The filin g of the dec laration
cause some acreage then listed mates were prepared befor e
as intended for feed crops later news that Agriculture Secre- of estimated l&lt;lx is required if
wound up enrolled in the gov- tary Earl L. Butz will open lhe taxpayer reasonably
Upper River Rd .
ernment land-idling program. talks in Moscow next week on estimates th~ tax liabili ty
Gallipolis. Ohio
Economists, writing in a possible additional feed grain for 1972 will exceed $50 and no
sales to Russia . If other tax was withheld. If the tax is
production and use forecasts estimated to be less than $50
hold up and sizeable additional for the year, only an annual
shipments to the Soviet Union re turn, between January 1 and
materialize for next fa ll, total April15, 1973,.will be required ,
1971-73 demand could conceiv- the commissioner said.
Kosydar noted, h ow~ver ,
ably exceed this yea r's production . That would pull back into those individuals who are
use some of th e surplus re sidents of the stales of
generated by record 1971 . Kentucky , Wes t Virginia,
I
Indiana and Michigan and
crops.
The report noted corn prices whose Ohio income consists ·
have been fairly stable at a solely of compensation are not
weekly range of $1.2\41.23 re quired to file es timated
bushel at Chicago since rising returns as Ohio has reciprocal
from $1.05 in mid-November to agreements with these sUi tes
$1.26 in mid-December. Ex- and the wage earner is taxed
perts added that if a report due only in his state of residence.
later this month shows
January-March consumption rises, however, will be limited
levels holding at previous high by the existence of heavy
Just right for a big share of your acres. On
rates, some price strength stocks in the government
heavy soils or light soils. XL-66 comes through
could develop this spring. Any support program.
with yield performance you can depe nd on .

Ew
• 52 hp gas or diesel.
• Lightning fla sh sh ift (8F-4R speeds) syn chromes.h transmission.
• Planetary f inal drive.
• 20 gal lon rear fuel l ank.

e Big capaci ty, live independent hydrau li cs.
• Precision dra fl control 3-po int hitc h with in-

finit e rat e respo nse.
• Hydrostati c power steering, ad justable seat,
Dyna -Li fe"' clutch, hydraulic we t disc brakes.
• Options include twin shaft 540/ 1000 RPM PTO
and differential lock.

NEW

PU.OVED pcr f.,r tu nncn, d u ru i Jilit y - : t ~k n ny Grnvely owner, 11r n11k 11!1
aUuul h&lt;&gt;W " (; m ~' elY I t id ;n1: T r:u·Lnr ~lcKKi up t o the ~ruelin11 W m;hiiiiiL On,
n . c:. L(J New Y ork. lc~t. , , :l[)(j mile11 , ,f tra~· cling. wit h :1 lot uf mow iutt
:•h1ng- tl1c w"y!
l n,·c~t in t h e I ra d,.,r Lluo t .:ivt.'!&lt; you in ~t: mt cunl w l, al! - ~::ea r - t lr ivu;

INTERNATIONAl: 574

a rcput;l t iun, h:m i-··:Hncd llVCf the YI.\'U~ . or bcil111 H rug!(cd, ..,u ulity hu\l t
machin u. A t wd &lt;•r tlwl h : 1~ the righ t dmicc uf u U : uJmu:u l ~, 40 or
i1H'il t'r rmt-muun t "r C'tJIIi l• r-tnvuul mow er~ . atltl tn :tny othcr;J, l'ur yeurruund vers.:•t. i\it.y.
Am i (;r~ t&gt;"t!ly tlc, •lcr~ :1ro 80 rviciniC rlefllt: ~. l .ct U..'l sh uw YfJU why
Y"" ge t lll &lt;lrl) vnl uo f ur your nw uuy with Grnvci,'Y .

au

powerful • productive • easy driving

Meigs Equipment Co.

Open Monday Thru Saturday 8 Til 5
Evenings By Appointment

Tractor Sales &amp;Service

POMEROY, OHIO

992-2975

PHONE 992-2176

Pomeroy . Ohio

512 E. Main

Shop Landmark First!
LANDMARK has EVERYTHING

BIG ON
YOUR
FARM

XL-66

-PRICES GOOD ALL THIS WEEK-

SPECIALS TO MAKE YOU SMILE!

--

TURF-TRIM MOWERS

ECONOMY TILLERS

Briggs &amp; Stratt on 3V' hp engines.
Hand push 122-30111, in carton
$70 .25, se t up $75 .25. Sel f·

Has 3V, hp B &amp; S engine, 93%
of we igh t concentra ted over ·
tines for better tilling. Hahn hoe

propel led (22 -3012), in carton

t ines, 12'' diamete r, 20'r wide .

$82.75, set up $87.7 5

122· 12161

Reg. $159.9 5

2 GALLON GAS CAN $2.45

Big, Big Yielder

•

of cut and the amounf of roots bluegrass is cutto two inches in
present. Research with Ken- height, no more than one inch
lucky bluegrass shows that should be removed at one time.
rootgrowth.is more than twice
All . mowing equipme nt"
as grea t when the grass is cut should be kept in good working
at two inches high than when condition. Kee p mowers sharp
cut at three.quarlers of an and adjusted to assure a good,
inch. In general, the closer a. clean cut. A dull rotary mower
given grass is mowed, the frays the ends of leaves and
1
fewer roots it will produce.
results in browned ends and
Grass should not be allowed damages the grass.
to grow untilcuttingremovesa
Mow when grass is dry, if
majority of the leaf surface. No possible. Do not delay long
more than one-fourth to one- periods of time if rains contjlird of the leaf area should be tinu e to keep the gra ss wet. It 1s
removed at one mowing. This better to mow it wet than to
means that if Kentucky allow it to become too rank.

DURABILITY- PERFORMANCE- PROVED

Cotton
Equipment Co.

New GE Elec-TraR
Tractor
•••.
no
noisy
•
eng1ne, runs on
batteries!

Fees Doubled
Licensing and acreage fees
are doubled . Licenses are
granted for each pit instead of
a large tract of land, making
for stricter control. Bonding
will be flexible and meet the
estimated cost of 'reclamation.
Minimum bond Is more than
doubled. For the first time,
liability insurance will be required.
The miner will have to reclaim 89 he mines, with no
more thari a three-month lag.
He may not substitute . reclamatloninanotherarea. Two
years plus one growing season
is tbe' maximum for complete
reclamation, which has taken .
three ~ five years or longer
through ldopboles in tbe o\d
law.
The chief wUI have strict
control
over
amended
reclamation plants, extensions
of deadlines and mining
beyond the licensed area. He
will control mining near roads,
homes, schools and public
buildings.
,
'J'here will be no blasting between sunset an&lt;;l sunrise, and
rione near homes.
Fines for violating the law
are .sharply upgr,aded. On ihe

()

AND GET AGIFT (OR TWO)!

----GENERAL TIRE SALES

1503 EASTERN AVENUE

Mine Bill.Monument
business wtd preserve jobs.
The result, after the catfightin g and emotionalism
died away, was a wellreasoned, workable law which
wlli require strip miners to
return the land to a stable,
unpolluted wtd useable state.
The new law will probably be
refined in the years ahead to
give Ohio a sound set of reclamation requirements to hold up
to strip miners far into the
future.
Depend on Eoforeemcot
Success of the law wlli depend on its enforcement by the
chief of forestry wtd reclamation in the Department of Natural Resources,
But the language of the law,
labored over lor so many
months, will belp. It sets down
the chief's powers and duties in
black and white, clear for the
first time to any court.
·
. The "mays" .and !'where
possibles"
are largely

GALLIPOLIS - Quality
production incentive ·payment
rate on 1971 marketings of
shorn wool was announced last
week by the U. S. Dcpartinent
of Agriculture.
The rate, based on the In- cenlive price of 72 cents a
pound, is 271.1 pet. of the
national avera ge price of 19.4
cents a pound received ·by
producers. Payments to wool
growers are required by the
Na tional Wool Act of 1954, as
amended.
The higher 1971 payment
rate compared with the 1970
ra te of 102.8 pet. and reflects a
drop in market prices for shor n
wool in 1971, USDA officials
said. Wool prices were
gene rally lower last yea r
throughout the world and the
U. S. average wool price to
producers was the lowest since
1938.
A grower's wool payment is
determined by mult iplying i1is
net dollar return from the sa le
of wool by the payment ra te of
271.1 pet. The perce ntage

the hood, the 1556 is a ll business.

EverY SundaY·

Ll. '

.

Teams up with over 30 job-mind eC auachments . Don 'I

.

U.p. loday'sFUNNY
B
.
.
C
· "'"•""'~ eware - on Games with Your Termites!

.
·
.
.
·
·
00
0 n '71 W I

Introducing the 1556, newest member of the Husky
team. Powered by revolutlaMiy 15 hp overhead va lve
engine . Run s c ooler, lonp •• • more effi cient
pertormance. H~dr os ta tlc tlanltl"'lss lon lets you keep .
your hand s on the wheel, change s~eed ~nd dilect lon ·
with your fool. B ack~sav l ng hydrau lic lilt ts standard .
Solid state ignition for dependab le year ·round startl ng.

Third &amp; Court

By LEE LEONARD

·
S
.
R
. at e et

25 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, StUiday , Apnl9, 1972 '

On e-piece sea ml ess drawn dome top, double ~;ri:';
sea med to bott om . Wide m outh, fa s t -pour ~

spout. 122·07881

Reg. $2.79 .

INTRODUCTORY OFFER

Turns on like a light, runs on silent
electric current, sale as technology can
make it. No gas, no smell, no greasy
maintenance. Mow lawns, plqw groun d,
throw snow, trim hedges, even cut
firewood with portable plug -i n power
tools.
Mow up to three acres without
re-charging ; batteries warranted five

years on models E20, E15, El2, ~••&lt;"' ·
ElOM; three years on model EBM.
" Refu el" by plugging into a·ny standa rd
outl et. Come and see the complete line,
get a free demonstrat ion today!

Maturily-About 5-7 days later than XL·45a
Plant Height- Mediu m
Ear Height- Medium
Ear Type- Long , good girth . Lustrous , heavy
grain.
Standabi lity- Ex ee llen t
Combining Ability- Excellent
.
Adaptation- Perform s we ll on near ly all so tl
types ; comes throug h in fine sha pe in dri 7r
seasons. and makes th e bumper crops m
years with favorabl e moi stur e.
Populations- Up to 23.000 at ha rvest

ALSO AVAILABLE
XL-74
XL44
XL-374

Manufacturer's sugges ted retail price
for -~ SM plus taxes, set-up, freight
charges if any.

Free mower at participating dea lers with
any GE Elec-Trak Tractor during ou r
special Spring Introductory Sale.

GENERAL

ELECTRIC

Consult deoler(s) listed below for their actual prices and terms in effect.

OPEN MONDAY
, JHRU SATURDAY 8 TILL 5
EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT
.

Available Now At

.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
-SALES &amp;SERVICE
.
.

512 E. MAIN

.

992-2975

POMEROY, OHIO
II

NEW

KASOO DOG FOOD
PROFESSIONAL FORMULA

Buy Your Fertilizer Now Get Early Discount!

(27% PROTEINS)
CHUNKS - MEALElTES

;

Bag. ~ulk and Liquid Fertilizer. all
available now. Take delivery now from our
area warehouse at Pomeroy. Ask about
Complete Custom Spray Serv.ice . (We Do
All the Workl.

'II

CLIP THIS
AD AND SAVE

Automat ic drive 5 HP Riding Mower Model 3255. Fea ·

. ture s rear-en~ i n e man~ uve rability ahd automatic dri'Ye.
5 HP. t!Mgine 1n rea r means, less fume s, noise and easier

steeMg. (22-59131

.

Good April 10 to ' 15

Central Soya

OFF
25' OFF

FARM SUPPLY SUPERMARKET
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

J. D. ·NORTH PRODUCE. CO.

50~

' Vine Street

ON 50 LB. BAG

•

POMEROY LANDMARK

ON 25 LB. BAG
Gallipolis, o.

GARDEN SEEDS
ONION sns

JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.
Serving. Meigs, Gallia &amp; Mason Counties

.

STORE OPEN a:oo TO 6:00

'1

Phone 992-2181
STATION OPEN 24 HOURS

�39' page
Pag

ASS

a Co
N

PLEAS

OH 0

even ng vas tors of
CarmeI NeWS, Saturday
Mr and M s Home C le
Verna and aVJe
W

By the Day
No s oso

Mr and M s Harold C c e
andfam yofRacneR D Mr
and Mrs Ca l C rcle and
daughter Oak Grove Mr and
M s Doyle Mu ti and fam y of
New Phi!adelph a Oh o were

M and M s Ca C role and
daughle and Mrs Home
C cle spen a ecen weekend
n Columbus guests of Mr and
Mrs Raymond Sn de
Guests of Mrs Ma y C rc e
Easle Sunday we e M and
M s George c!i'c e and fam ly
M and M s James C c e of
Haven Mr and Mrs
~~~n~ ~~ P e ce of Athens and
andM s Melv nC c eand
1an111y of Co umbus
Mrs Mary C rc e was gues
of Mr and M s James C le

,rl I

of New Ha en Mo day n gh
M and M s F ank Hudson
and daughte Ton of Rae ne
M and Mrs She by P ckens
and an ly o S acuse M
and M s Wa ren Rose M
and M s Benne Bcke s J
and lam y of Ra ne R D
were guests of M ~nd M s
A an Taylo on Ea te Sun
day
Guests f M and M s
Robe Lee Bob B Be ky
and Ra ph Lee on Eas e
Sunday we e M s Fe n
Stansbu y and John Fe y o
A hens Mr and M s A hu
0 of Chesler M and M s

Ed Newman and am y of
Ga on and Mr and M s
Rnge G uese and fam y o
Logan

We talk to you
ltke a. person.

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

Campmg Equipment

Wanted To

n~

)B
ane s
aookkeep ng and

e

omp e\f

ax Se
Fo u h A e

42

Kanauga
Ph
41Y' 049
iu nes hous9 a m
pm
Monday h u Sa day Le
Bob ake
a e a
yo.v
boo~keep

ng and ax needs

B appo n men

tl

he me o sp ng
9 Wa s &amp; Com sh

ne o and exero
Wo k
gua a eed Ph 01 463
6

9

9

6

A o

0

---------------96
&amp;
PLANTZ

NOIJ.iriOS

SM TH

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

Remade ng, oo ng 5 d ng
pa n ng Ph 44&lt;1
8 or 256-

69 5

SUNDAY APR L 9 1972

ROOF NG a d gu e
am M

W

he

wo k
88 8.1()
6

0

9 2
d

68

- - - -- Plumb ng &amp; Heatmg
S ANDARD
P mbng&amp; Hea ng

Th dA e

463782

8

RUSSELLS
PLUMB NG &amp; HEATING

l Ga a Ave

8

a
5 page
Ga

444 4711
29

-------CAR TER S PLUMBING

a

AND HEAT NG
Co Fou h&amp;P ne
Phone 446 3888 o 44&lt;1 44 7

55

------

GENE PLANTS &amp; SONS
PLUMB NG
Hea ng &amp; ~
Cond I on ng 300 Fou th A
Ph
446 63
Forme
B am me &gt; P umb ng

e
y

a.

Hea ng

.,a

WE DO ca pen e
n ng
nsu a ng and ement wo k
Ph 446 3954
8 6

- - -- - -·

SEPT C TANKS
C ea ed and ns a led
Russe I s P umb ng 446 4 82
29

D P MART N &amp; Son wa e
De e y Se ce
You
pat ona ge w
be
p e a ed Ph 460A63

WIN AT BRIDGE

Sctenttlic, This Game Bid
.K4
YJ8
. KJ853
. A 09 3

The North South b dding.
was very sc entif c They
certa nly found out that not ump wasn a sound con
WEST
EAST
tract
and that the hearts for
. J l098
.7 6532
s
am
purposes were w de
Y K9432
YA~ 0
opep
t 2
•
They also told West what
•Q s4
•s 2
to
lead but Wests spade
SOUTH (D
ho
dmg
looked so good to
.AQ
h
m
he
opened
that suit
¥6 5
Th
s
lead
gave
South an
tAQ 0964
excellent chance to make a
.KJ6
slam AI\ he had to do was
Both vulne ab
f nesse the right way for the
Wes No th East Sou h
queen of clubs d scard a
1+
heart on dummy s fourth
Pass 2t
Pass
and cia m the overtr ck
club
Pass
Pass 3 t
South
had no mleresl n
Pass
Pas
St
Pass
this
He
was
a strictly prac
Pass
I
cal
br
dge
player
and wh le
Operung lead • J
a sure 20 points was not to
be des11 sed I seemed silly
ndeed to risk game and rub
ber n an effort to collect that
little extra nubbin
South s mply drew trumps
cashed the last top spade
Jed a heart and sat back
It dldn I matter to h m
what the opponents d d They
Mo on D ckey
Ga a Cou:-. V Aud or could take two heart 1r cks
After that the man on lead

2.

3.

Ham n C

o sa e
9 2 •

P

I(

ng

Ga a Coun y
ng A o nev

osecu

Ap

I

972

Apr

9

6 13 30 MIY 1

ALBERT EHMAN
Wa

Pa

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

8

NORTH

4

ap

wou d have to solve South s
problems for h m A club
ead would ocal~ the queen
A heart or spade lead would
allow a ruff and d scard
Inc dentally wh Je th s one
1 me the sc ent f c b ddmg
m ght have proved expen
s ve we approve hea tly ol
Souths three spade b d Give
North the king of hearts
mstead of the k ng of spade&amp;
and he would bave been able
to b d three no trump a con
ract wh ch would have beer.
unbeatable aga nst any hand
HEWSrAPEit EM U: R E AUN

e

De ve ySe vice

o Sta R Go lpo s
Ph 379 2 )3
2.3 H

- - -- - - -

liEW WAY C. pet Cleane s
Ca pe eaned n your home
Von Sch ade Me hod used
exc us vely Re e ences Ph
379 2659
846

DEAD SlOCK
W-oo Svv ce Charge

w I remove your eked
horse ond cows

C. I Jackson 216-.&amp;53
VESTA S TV

Ser c:e ove

20

y s expe ence Reasonable

p ce Pp 367 m1 Cllesh re

___...__ _ _ _n H
The biddmg hall- been
&lt;North
Eost
South

~tst

1¥

z•

Pas

.J

You South ho d

.AK654 YA2

•

.AKU4
What do ybu do now7

A-If you are sltre you pert
ne wont pou bid two spodeo,_
Otherwise jump to thret

spades
TODAY'S QUESTIOli
Send $ fol JACOBY MODERN boot
You do b d v;o opodes and
you partne b da th ee clubo.
to 'W " G ltJdtt c o II news
popo
P 0 lo 419 Radio City Wha do you do now?

TERMITE PEST CONTROL
FREE nspedlon Call 416-3245
Mrtr I 0' Del Operator fo

Exterm na Te mite .Serv ce
19 Be mont D
Wtf
-------:-""'--:.. Ctnfrll Air CQMiitt.lllnt
&amp; IMifllll
FrH Esflmotea

Sltwtrt's Herdwart
VInton Ollio

44-H

- --

rH~S ,AIN

EllTERMI"ATJNG C:O.
Te m to&amp; Ptsl Control
•Whee e sbu g (lh o

10-t

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

�39' page
Pag

ASS

a Co
N

PLEAS

OH 0

even ng vas tors of
CarmeI NeWS, Saturday
Mr and M s Home C le
Verna and aVJe
W

By the Day
No s oso

Mr and M s Harold C c e
andfam yofRacneR D Mr
and Mrs Ca l C rcle and
daughter Oak Grove Mr and
M s Doyle Mu ti and fam y of
New Phi!adelph a Oh o were

M and M s Ca C role and
daughle and Mrs Home
C cle spen a ecen weekend
n Columbus guests of Mr and
Mrs Raymond Sn de
Guests of Mrs Ma y C rc e
Easle Sunday we e M and
M s George c!i'c e and fam ly
M and M s James C c e of
Haven Mr and Mrs
~~~n~ ~~ P e ce of Athens and
andM s Melv nC c eand
1an111y of Co umbus
Mrs Mary C rc e was gues
of Mr and M s James C le

,rl I

of New Ha en Mo day n gh
M and M s F ank Hudson
and daughte Ton of Rae ne
M and Mrs She by P ckens
and an ly o S acuse M
and M s Wa ren Rose M
and M s Benne Bcke s J
and lam y of Ra ne R D
were guests of M ~nd M s
A an Taylo on Ea te Sun
day
Guests f M and M s
Robe Lee Bob B Be ky
and Ra ph Lee on Eas e
Sunday we e M s Fe n
Stansbu y and John Fe y o
A hens Mr and M s A hu
0 of Chesler M and M s

Ed Newman and am y of
Ga on and Mr and M s
Rnge G uese and fam y o
Logan

We talk to you
ltke a. person.

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

Campmg Equipment

Wanted To

n~

)B
ane s
aookkeep ng and

e

omp e\f

ax Se
Fo u h A e

42

Kanauga
Ph
41Y' 049
iu nes hous9 a m
pm
Monday h u Sa day Le
Bob ake
a e a
yo.v
boo~keep

ng and ax needs

B appo n men

tl

he me o sp ng
9 Wa s &amp; Com sh

ne o and exero
Wo k
gua a eed Ph 01 463
6

9

9

6

A o

0

---------------96
&amp;
PLANTZ

NOIJ.iriOS

SM TH

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

Remade ng, oo ng 5 d ng
pa n ng Ph 44&lt;1
8 or 256-

69 5

SUNDAY APR L 9 1972

ROOF NG a d gu e
am M

W

he

wo k
88 8.1()
6

0

9 2
d

68

- - - -- Plumb ng &amp; Heatmg
S ANDARD
P mbng&amp; Hea ng

Th dA e

463782

8

RUSSELLS
PLUMB NG &amp; HEATING

l Ga a Ave

8

a
5 page
Ga

444 4711
29

-------CAR TER S PLUMBING

a

AND HEAT NG
Co Fou h&amp;P ne
Phone 446 3888 o 44&lt;1 44 7

55

------

GENE PLANTS &amp; SONS
PLUMB NG
Hea ng &amp; ~
Cond I on ng 300 Fou th A
Ph
446 63
Forme
B am me &gt; P umb ng

e
y

a.

Hea ng

.,a

WE DO ca pen e
n ng
nsu a ng and ement wo k
Ph 446 3954
8 6

- - -- - -·

SEPT C TANKS
C ea ed and ns a led
Russe I s P umb ng 446 4 82
29

D P MART N &amp; Son wa e
De e y Se ce
You
pat ona ge w
be
p e a ed Ph 460A63

WIN AT BRIDGE

Sctenttlic, This Game Bid
.K4
YJ8
. KJ853
. A 09 3

The North South b dding.
was very sc entif c They
certa nly found out that not ump wasn a sound con
WEST
EAST
tract
and that the hearts for
. J l098
.7 6532
s
am
purposes were w de
Y K9432
YA~ 0
opep
t 2
•
They also told West what
•Q s4
•s 2
to
lead but Wests spade
SOUTH (D
ho
dmg
looked so good to
.AQ
h
m
he
opened
that suit
¥6 5
Th
s
lead
gave
South an
tAQ 0964
excellent chance to make a
.KJ6
slam AI\ he had to do was
Both vulne ab
f nesse the right way for the
Wes No th East Sou h
queen of clubs d scard a
1+
heart on dummy s fourth
Pass 2t
Pass
and cia m the overtr ck
club
Pass
Pass 3 t
South
had no mleresl n
Pass
Pas
St
Pass
this
He
was
a strictly prac
Pass
I
cal
br
dge
player
and wh le
Operung lead • J
a sure 20 points was not to
be des11 sed I seemed silly
ndeed to risk game and rub
ber n an effort to collect that
little extra nubbin
South s mply drew trumps
cashed the last top spade
Jed a heart and sat back
It dldn I matter to h m
what the opponents d d They
Mo on D ckey
Ga a Cou:-. V Aud or could take two heart 1r cks
After that the man on lead

2.

3.

Ham n C

o sa e
9 2 •

P

I(

ng

Ga a Coun y
ng A o nev

osecu

Ap

I

972

Apr

9

6 13 30 MIY 1

ALBERT EHMAN
Wa

Pa

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

8

NORTH

4

ap

wou d have to solve South s
problems for h m A club
ead would ocal~ the queen
A heart or spade lead would
allow a ruff and d scard
Inc dentally wh Je th s one
1 me the sc ent f c b ddmg
m ght have proved expen
s ve we approve hea tly ol
Souths three spade b d Give
North the king of hearts
mstead of the k ng of spade&amp;
and he would bave been able
to b d three no trump a con
ract wh ch would have beer.
unbeatable aga nst any hand
HEWSrAPEit EM U: R E AUN

e

De ve ySe vice

o Sta R Go lpo s
Ph 379 2 )3
2.3 H

- - -- - - -

liEW WAY C. pet Cleane s
Ca pe eaned n your home
Von Sch ade Me hod used
exc us vely Re e ences Ph
379 2659
846

DEAD SlOCK
W-oo Svv ce Charge

w I remove your eked
horse ond cows

C. I Jackson 216-.&amp;53
VESTA S TV

Ser c:e ove

20

y s expe ence Reasonable

p ce Pp 367 m1 Cllesh re

___...__ _ _ _n H
The biddmg hall- been
&lt;North
Eost
South

~tst

1¥

z•

Pas

.J

You South ho d

.AK654 YA2

•

.AKU4
What do ybu do now7

A-If you are sltre you pert
ne wont pou bid two spodeo,_
Otherwise jump to thret

spades
TODAY'S QUESTIOli
Send $ fol JACOBY MODERN boot
You do b d v;o opodes and
you partne b da th ee clubo.
to 'W " G ltJdtt c o II news
popo
P 0 lo 419 Radio City Wha do you do now?

TERMITE PEST CONTROL
FREE nspedlon Call 416-3245
Mrtr I 0' Del Operator fo

Exterm na Te mite .Serv ce
19 Be mont D
Wtf
-------:-""'--:.. Ctnfrll Air CQMiitt.lllnt
&amp; IMifllll
FrH Esflmotea

Sltwtrt's Herdwart
VInton Ollio

44-H

- --

rH~S ,AIN

EllTERMI"ATJNG C:O.
Te m to&amp; Ptsl Control
•Whee e sbu g (lh o

10-t

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

�:'~-

•....

''·"~'

... '

l

•' •·''

..

.

".

...

.•..
.'

:!B - TIK' Sundl1y Tin""'· St&gt;nliiM•I, Swulay, April9,'1972

·For Fast Re~ults .Use The Sundar ~ Times;.Sentinel Classifieds
•

Help Wanted

Memory

. In

•

•

SPRING has sprung! The
weather's areat - so aet out
of the house , start earning
money
as
an
Avon
Representative . Oisco\ler
how easy it is to sell AIJon
products to friendlY. people .
Write or ca ll Mrs. Helen

Yeager , Box 172. Jackson .
Ohio. Ph. 2116-4028.
79-6
SMALL Motor repairman .clerk from 8 to...S p.m . Wnte
Box 216 care of The Tribune.
.
80-tl

HAWK Insurance Agency , 541
Fourth Avenue, Phone 4146·' ,.
2300.
F ir e- l if ~- a uto-c hurch .
. B ~ tf

Real Estate For Sale

THE WISEMAN
AGENCY

MASSIE

Office 446-3643
Evenings Ca!l
.E--M." Ike" Wi$emalr 446-9796

Realty, 32 State Sl

E~'N. Wise!JU!n 446-45NI

•

i

Tel. 446- ~ 998

MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIST
KERR - Near new, all brick, 4
OPENIN G soon for a CLA for 3 bdrms ., large liv . r m., din.
to 11 shift , Monday thru
rm .• and Mrs . approved
Friday , no weekend duty.
kitchen . II has H.W. fl oors,
Regis ter ed
or
r egistry
and carpet. Full fin ished
eligible . Good start ing rat_e
base .. with a 2 car gar. Thiswith

liberal

fringe

benef1l

'

\

pray

If only I cou ld have gone and

rooms, 2 ba ths, gas hot air
fur na ce .
P resent
arra ngement 2 apartments.
Easily converted to one
fami l y dwelling . Asking

$35,000. Shown by a ppt. Ph.
84 -1

buy thi s one and ano ther 6 rm .
(2 apartments) in good

446-0208 .

Daughter Juan ita - - -- - - - - -

Notice

fr uit trees and rm . for a

garden . Price $16,000. If you
want an investment you can

you could have sta yed .
84-1

large garage. Large lol , 9

repair, bes ide iL both for

$26,5CJO.

For Rent

TRAILER space located 1'12 RI O -

REVIVAL services 7: 30 p.m.
nightly beginning April 9th at
the Mt. Zion Bapt ist Church.

miles on state route from
Gallipolis . Real nice, ex tra

large lot. Ph. 446-4053.
84·3

Evangelist is .· Rev. Chester

Lemley. Pastor Mar ion T. 3 BEDROOM house. Call after
Williams.
83-7 5, 446-0196.
84-3
YARD sa!e Thursday, Aprll 13, 5 ROOM apartment, fu rnished,

at 125 Garfield Ave.

84-3

DAY CAifE
Sun Valley Nur sery School,
li censed by State o Ohio, 1'12
· mi les west of new hospita l.

577 Sun Valley Dr . Ph. 4463657. Day ca re thai says "we
care."
28-if

adults only . Ph. 446~ 3781.

All br ick, Oi l electric,

vacant land or vacation spots.

Help Wanted
'

Waitress Wanted
Apply in person.

- - - -- - -

references required. Inquire
at 631 Fourth Ave .

71-lf

NEW
2 BEDRM.
TOWNHOUSE APTS.
BE WITH ihe firs! lo choose

ap ·
laking
Now
gri
II
plications for
cooks. waitresses and
kitchen helpers. Good
pay, pleasant working
condition,
patd
vacation. Apply in
person at Bob Evans
Steak House .

' I

I
I

17 ACRES', truck farm , very
Bargain In Vinton
,
Large corner lot. 107x165, with extra ~epllc· ' ·
ta nk to r mobil e home space. Two story home.
full basement. new fu e l oi·l furnace. 1112 baths. ·
lot s o f paneling. carpeted throughout. bu.ill· in
hood. range and oven. storm windows and
doors. four bedrooms. Oily $U,SOO.

•
ELECTRICITY:.,
We furnish Water -liewage · liarbage CoDeellon • Am_ple .
Parking • TV AQtenna • Wall-IQ·WaU Carpeting •
Draperies • Ranges • Refrlgeraloril • Air Conditioning •
Garbage Disposals · Dishwashers · Heal Lamps · Private
·
Pool • Clhbhouse.

•

TARA

TOWNHOUSf
APARTMENtS

Barga in $19,500.
firePlace. Attractive price
'
Includes HW floors, 1'12 baths, 30 ACRES, Custom built brick
built-in kitchen with dish- ranc h, two inco m e uni ts,
washer. attached garage and Sta te Rl. 160.
35 ACRES, sma ll house, fru it
large fenced in lawn.
and llfl'ber. Clay Twp. $6,750.

-

-«! ACRES, Cozy two bedroom
home, barns near Vinton.

Both sides road. 115,500.

-D '·

stat ions, reception desk, 2
First Lady drying stations
and cha irs . Al l for $24,000.

11

Hou se $21 ,000.

200 ACRE S, Approx. 7,000' plus

(on rural water line) piped to
all bldgs . and irr ig a tion
sys tem . 5 barns, larges t

2B ' xl00' , sma lles i 20'xAO' , al l
in good repair, all have metal
roots. and all having lightning
rods, and well constructed. 75
A., high -pr odu ci ng tr act or

land, 1,300 lb. lob. base, good
woven wire fences. This 'farm
has been opera ted for a
gene r a ti on with sc ientific
farm ing practices . If you are
looking for a farm to start
making money wi thout any
unproductive labor and e~ ­
pense , this is one of Gall1a

PAY" ONI:Y "ONE UTILITY

1\J BA"l'H.S

BE COZy for the
lucky owner of this modern 3
BR home with a larg e stone

50 ACR£ Snl""'land, drilled
$8,500.
well, ko- ~V·

~ Neal

Realty

.·Realty

Excellent Inv estment

Excellent Business
Opportunity

JAPARTMENTSLOCA TED
ON 2ND AVE . IN 600
BLOCK . OWNER MU S T
SELL -

MA K E OF F ER .

MODER N C;RQCERY . DID
11 80.000 .00
IN
1911. ·
GROWING F AST ( TO O
$11.200.00 Buys Bargain FAST FOR PRESENT
OWNER ). ALL MODERN
3
BEDRO OM S.
NI C E EQ UI PMENT ,
l.ARGE
K I TCHEN . RE TAIL ROOM . lARGE
M O DERN
STORM WIND OWS.
STO CK
ROOM .
3
BEDROOM RE S IDENCE ,
STORE
COMPLETELY
Price Reduced
STOCKED - NO CRE~ I T.
PERFE CT FOR MAN ~ ND
OWNER SAYS "S ELL AS
WI F E. WILL PAY FOR
QUICK AS YOU CA N." 3
I TSELF IN 3 YR S.
BE DRO OM S, NICE KIT C HE N ,
SMAL L
LOT.
MODERN
AND
AT T RACT IV E .

...

Excellent Business
Opportunity

3 Bedroom $14,500
Owner Will Finance
N E AT 3 BEDROOM HO ME ,
FU LL BAS EMENT . IN
TO WN , EVA NS HG TS .

Another Bargain For
Sharp Buyer
8 YR . OLD MODERN 3
BEDROOM ON 2 A. LANO .
GARAGE , FENCED Y ARD
· EDGE OF TOWN .

HOTEL . •o ROOMS
80
PERCENT OCCUP I E O
GREYHO UND TERMINAL
I PAYS
GOOD
COM M ISSIONt . BEAUTY SHOP
ROOM

RENTED

-

HUGE

GARAGE FOR G UE ST AND
MONTHLY PARKING F ULL
C ITY
LOT .
2
APARTMENTS .
EX PA NSION OF BUSINE SS
ROOM S PO SSIB L E .

paid, $11.9tJO.
CHECK
THE
EARLY
AMERICAN PRICE on th is
beautifu l remodeled 2 story
home in Pom eroy . Tf1e wife
will love this new built-In

kitchen with 20 ft. cabinets,
gar . disposal, dishwa sher ,

school. Kyger Creek District, .
completely fu rn is hed , also·
adjoin ing 20 x 28 building. fuel

REALTY

REALTOR
446-1066
TROUBLE with bu cket seats is
that not' everyone has the
' same size bucket .
'

GLAMOUR girl to male fe llow
worker : "Yes, I can tel l how I
got my ra ise, but I don't th ink
it will help you much."

WE HAVE trailer lot for sale 80'
x 150' for $1,800 each. Can be
financed for S200 down
paYment. Rural wa t er on lots,

on the Kemper · Bethel Road.
Al so some 60 acr es of wooded
land on same road .

IN GREEN Township an d
Gallipol is Schoo l Di strict, 104
acres, 1f2 acre tobacco base,
25 acres pasture , 60 acre~ In

••o

tltl6·0001
Denver K. Higley 446-0002_
Wancsa·s. Eshenaur 446-0003

Gooc

upstairs now being rented .
are priced at $13,900 each and
offer J BR , bath, nice sized
LR, modern kitchen, HW
floors, air cond., and located
on a quiet St .

&gt;

I

1:

t.

~

;,
'(

t

Jr garage,

10 PCT. DOWN - Modern 3 BR
home, w1· cllrpet, attached
room, Kitchen
garage,
includes a"(:C/J
amount of
cabinets , buh ~'u en, range,
and refrig . Tolat trice $15,900.

.r - ·

..;."J

CITY FARMER'S DREAM 41f2 A . on a state rd. close to
new hospital, pond, 3 car
garage, and a modern 6 room "
home .

ATTENTION
DU E to the ~resent construction
in Gal lia Co. , we have several
out of town buyers in need of,

'
I;

339 FOURTH AVE., GAlliPOLIS

STARTING AT 1 P.M.

fam i ly room .
city schools.

i

l.

2 pc. living room suit e, arm chair , 2 floor lam ps, 18)(9 wool
rug, 12x9 wool rug , 14x9 wool rug, many throw rug s,
electric fan , writing desk and chalr ~ , buffet, exce llent
dining tab le &amp; 6 chairs, 3 double beds, complete ; I twin
bed, comp lete ; telephone stand and seat, vanit y dresser,

t'·
'

I·'

'·

t

:

cabin~ts~

kitchen cabinet, Tappan gas stove, Hotpoint
r efr igerator , many r ockers &amp; st rai ght chairs, 5 ft.

stepladder, Kirby elec. sweeper, set 12 china, plates, cups
&amp; sa ucers; 2 electri c clocks, 6 electri c lamps, electric
toaster, 14 leathe r pillows &amp; cushions, bedd ing, table
linens, needle work,. 1 oak wardrobe, G. E; . radio, wire
screens. dining table &amp; 6 chairs, Kenmore dishwasher,

dow~ .

WOODS Mill Rd. - 100 ft .
fr ontage, $1,000.\
.
LISTINGS NE.EDED
Ranny Blackbum
Branch Manager

B&amp;S Mobile Hom es
Second &amp; VIand St.
Pf. Plea san I! Nextto Heck 's: I
52-If

PUBLIC SALE
TIME: 10:30.
A. M.
.
SAT., APRI~ 22, 1972
Reason for selling: have sold my filrm.

Location: From Gallipolis loke Route 7 to Cheshire~ turn
left on Route 554, go through Kyger, and watch for sale
sign, lurn leU.

'

sound sys tem , 4 speed
automatic changer . Balan ce

$83.17. Use our
· Call 446-102{

budget~,term s .

''

BEAUTIFUL Early Amer ican
s tyl e stereo-radio .com.
bination, four speaker sound
system , 4 speed llutomatic
changer , separate controls .

If part of your business is moving thing s, ·
we offer a .great little he lper. The Datsun
Picku p, America's number one selling
import truck. At up to 25 miles per gallon,
it doesn 'l cost a lot to run. With ils
overhead cam engine il perlorms like any
other self-respecting
iiickup. Nice going!

Balance $79.56. Use our
budget terms. Call 446-1028.
64-3

-PROFESSIONAL
- - --Gibson

electric gu itar and Fender
amplifier wit h all' ac cessories. Ph . 446-3918.
84-3

84-tf

- - -- - -

.

•

AlifTJQIJ,(S"

cracker, wood box, coal picks, 15 gallon brass kettle al\d
stand, oil lamp, llrtle round table. Aladdin lamp, record
player. round table , 6 chairs and buffet, lots of what-nots, .
old ~lc1ure frames, trunk, Iron pot, set of lief Irons, 4
. · straight chairs, grindstOne. set bf molds. lots of other .
Items too numerous to mention.
.
OWNER: MRS, HAZEL RHODES ·,
·
J. A. FRENCH, AUCTIONEER
l'
Auctioneer's note: Como eerty lllld stpy late, I think \·ov
can lind anylllilll you ,.ant, ~undlltrved 111 lnMIIIIIs.

70 Ford Gal. 500, 4 dr, H.T.. auto .• P. S., P.B., air
$2295
69 Toriri02 dr. H.T., 4Sp., VB, radio. Sha,rpcar.
$1611
69 Chevrolet C-10 Pickup, V-8, 3 sp., rad10 &amp; topper. . $1"5
69 Ford Country Sed. Sta. Wgn .• V8, auto., P.S., rad., W·
tires.
·
$17..
69 Ply Satellite 4 dr .• V-8, auto ., P.S. , w-tlres. Sharp. $1611
69 RenaultR -10, 4dr., ladies' trad .. in,low mi.
$1195
67 Ply Barracuda 2 dr. H. T., V-8, auto., P. S., radio, W·
tires.
· .·
•
.
$1011
66 Pontiac Sta . Wgn .,a uto., P.S., P. B., air, rad1o&amp;

rack.

IF YOU'Re NOT PRIVING
A BRAND N_
EW 1972 .CAR

••

DRIVE THE HOTTEST
BRAND IN TOWN
.

84-6
-CLEAN expenslwe carpets with

'

DODGE

the best. Blue ~uslre Is
America's favo ri te . Rent
shamtiooer Sl. Lower G. C.
Murphy Store.

84-6

- -- --:--

2 Door COupe. V-8 Engine. Po~e

V-8 Engine, Auto. Trans.,

Steering, Auto. Trans.,
Radio, Wheel Covers,
Vinyl Canopy Top. C44

Fectory Air Cond., RediD
Tires &amp; Wheel Covers.

Power Steering &amp; Brakes.

$2997

W.w.

.

•

...

~

Ml2

$]997

aJri' ~'rof~Acr •nd Our Price• Do Ow T•W111 ~ lhHIIfl Oit 1~.

83-l

14FT. ALUMINUM boat, 35 HP
motor and trailer . Ph . 446·
1108.
83-3

SET OF 14" Ferguson plows. ·
Ph. 446·1420.
lrt stock over
of the finest'
82-3
lo · choose from , GriD.
Charatan, Savlnelll. Tawney BOAT, 26 ft . Chris Craft cruiser
Jewelers.
inboard, sleeps 4, fully
44-lf
equipped
with trailer . Ph. 446·
•.
3434 or 446-4244.
WHITE cement, all sizes tile In
82-6
•· stock. 12" and 15" field tile
suitable for highway dlfchln~ . '71 RENAULT 10, 4 dr . sedan,
concrete
blocks.
sage ·gray , 9,000 original
GAL~IPOLIS BLOCK CO.•
miles
1 owner. Call · Greg
1231!2 Pfne St., Ph . 446·2783.
Carter, 379-2184.
·
16-tt
82-3
--------CORBIN &amp; SNYQE-R, HOTPOINT•Iove, bed over 100
'SERTA &amp; Bemco Mattresses &amp;
yrs . old, nice kitchen table,
bo
. x springs $29 up . 955 Second
school master's desk. Ph. 446·
1111
4631.
Ave. 4of6.
•·
10.11
79-6
WE HAVE a complete line·of all
new Timex Walches.14.95 to
$25. Tawney Jewelers.

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE
•

Ph. 446-0842

44-lt

or

446-0605 '

,·

.Tf\e 'macadamia nut, a
haro-shelled nut resem~ling
i'"Eiii''tLIZER
a filbert , is Hawaii's third
R EASONABLEJ.rlces . Carl largest crop, ranking behind
Winters. Ph. 2 ·5H5.
69-tf sugar and pineapple.
.j

1o,w·
UM

S695

· OUR USED ECONOMY· CARS

m

·MONACO 4 DOOR" SEQAN '

$"5

d..

65 Muslang2 dr. H.T., V-8, aulo .• P.S., radio,
Plus 64 Comet-s m . 62 F•irlane-$175

- -TF YOU de.slre a pipe. we nave

QIARGER lOPJER

pS

radio.

66 Ford Gal. soo, 2 dr . H .T., v .a, auto., .., ra
h~

mobi le
home, 10x50, extra .nice . Ph .
367-7784.
83·6

7607.

$1295

66 Pontiac Gran Prix 2 dr. H. T., auto ., P.S.f P. B.,

1956 CHEVROLET 283, Hu rst,
new paint. Ph . 446-9297 or 446- '62 CH EV . Super Sport. auto.,
1391.
good ·cond . Carroll Burnette,
84·3
Jr. 446-2415.
-:--- - : - - - -83-3
FOR SALE by owner. 1968
Chev . Impala custom coupe, 1967 PLY. SPT. Fury, 8 cyl ., AT,
PS, vinyl lop. new tires, excel.
PS. PB, AC, blk. with red Int.
.cond. 446-241 2.
Low mil. , very good cond.
84-3
Sl. 100. 256·6405.
83·3
"57 PONTIAC convertible, 8x45
Commodore mobile home . · SYCAMORE and black oak
Ph. 367·7178.
timber, se ll on stump. Ph. 367-

air compressor, 160 lb. gas tllnk , ladders, tobacco setter,

Dinner bell, wood stove, feed bo)( , 1corn sheller, corn ,

USED CARS - GIANT SIZE

SMITH AUTO SALES

Th is sa le consists of: Bedroom sulle, 2 end tables. coffee
table . front locker, dresser, oak breakfast set and cabinet,
wool rug and pad, 2 utility cabinets, Norge r~frlgeralor,
breakfast s~t. G. E. dryer, mangle, card table , metal
wardrobe, 3 wood doors, storm door, meat block. trult
Iars, day bed, Kenmore sewing ma ~hlne, rugoand quilts,
baby bed and springs, high chair, play pen, picnic table,
Iron pipes, iron welding, table, lbg chains, benders, good
lots of hand tools, railroad lack. 9horse power cut-off saw,
plastic pipe, steel traps, 4 wheel drive Jeep, 2 pressure
cookers, boat trailer, good fan travel pull trailer, concrete
blocks, International bull dozer, pull-type brU1h hOif,
horse·drawn mowing mathlne, 2 wheel trailer. air tree
trimmer. 18 month-old collie dog.
\

For Sale

'IJrive a Datsun ...
then decide.

DOUBLE uni t mobile home . Ph .
446-1212.
mileage. Ph . 446-1145 after 6 1971 ZIG-ZAG Sewi ng Machine
JOINTER
planer
and
mini
bike.
lett
In
layaway
.
Beautiful
p.m.
Ph. 256-6569 .
pa stel color , ful l size model.
81·6
1971 DODGE Swinger, 14,000
84-3
All bu ill-in to buttonhole, do
miles. one owner $2,450. Ph .
stretch
sewi
ng
and
fan
cy
60 INCH bay riding horse , very
446-4675.
'67
FORD
Fairlane
GT
2
dr
.
slit ching . Pay just 548.75 cash
gentle, $15Cl. Ph. 256 -6594.
82·3
sedan
,
4
spd
.,
under
or
terms
available.
Tradl!
-ins
81-6
wholesale. Ph. 446-4113 .
accepted . Phone 388-8673.
SPINET-CONSOLE
84-3
80-6
WE H:I\VE in stock a fine
PIANO
-----selection of diamonds and
WANTED
responsible
party to
196615
FT.
STARCRAFT
travel
VACUUM
Cleaner
new
1971
wedding band s. Co l umbia ,
take over spinet piano. Easy
tra
iler,
sleeps
6.
See
at
105
model.
Complete
with
all
Keepsake, and Artcarved .
terms . Can be seen locally .
Liberty St., Pt . Pleasant or
cleaning tools. Small pa int
· Tawney Jewelers.
Wr ite Credit Manager , P. 0 .
Ph
.
675-1429.
damage
in
•hipping.
Will
take
44-lf
Bo• 276, Shelbyv ille , Indiana
84-3
S27 cash or budget plan
46176.
Phone
388-11673.
available.
--~-:--:-:­
J P' S ·Trop ica l Wonderland,
83-2
80-6 FOUR 700Xl~ a pl y tires,
415'12 Main St.. Pt . Plea sant .
moun
ted;
2
pc
.
brown
living
Fish and Suppl ies. Open 11
For Sale
For Sale
room suite, baby car seat ,
3 GOOD used NCR cas h
a.m. till 6 p.m.
SPECIAL SALE
~1 NGER Sewlng.Ma chlne Sales: 1972 BTRACK stereo console in
stroller . Ph. 256-6635.
17-tf
regi ster s, 1electric . Simmons
NEW
36" gas range was $149.95
~
Service
.
All
models
In
lovely
hand
rubbed
walnut
84-3
Pig. &amp; Offi ce Equip. Ph . 446now
$129.95. 25 pet. off all new
stock
.
Free
delivery
.
Ser~lce
finish.
Pay
bal.
of
$96.41
or
-=----:-:-:---::-::-:
1F · YOU- are ·ouilding a ~ mf~,i · 1397.
mattresses and boxspr lngs In
guaranteed. Models pnced
pay $8.21 mo. Ph . 446-0921.
BRACE yourself for a thrill the
54-If
home or re'modeling , see us.
stock . Save up to 550 a set.
from $69.95. Fren ch City . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ 84-lf
first time you use Blue Lustre
.- - - - - We are builders . Di stributor GOOD
Rice's New &amp; Used Furn., 854
to clean rugs. Rent electric
Fatlri c Shoppe. S,inger ap·
CLEAN
LU
MP
and•
for Hotpo int Appliances, · stoker co•I.. C«rl Winters; Rio
Second
(across Jrom Texaco
rovod
dealer.
58
Court
St.
,
1972
DELU
XE
z19
zag
sew
ing
shampooer Sl . Central Supply
P
mach i ne. Thts machine
Allison Electric.
·
Stat ion.) 446-9523.
Co.
9255
446
Grande.
·Phone
245·5115
.
.
154-tf
·
makes buttonholes, darns and
83·11
3oa.tf
84-6 Ph. ,. ·
8-tl

cHARGER

•

84-3

(IT ISN'T CARROL.L'S FAULT)

c!,.

'1495

- - -- - -

•

•

4 dr . hdlp .. gold , black vinyl lop,
cusf. vinyl interior. Sharp.

40 MORE TO CHOOSE FROM
GMAC ... BANK FINANCING .
OPEN TILL 7:00 P.M~

WALNUT Modern style with
AM · FM rad io, 4 speaker

.

•

'1795

'49 Columbia 27x8

mo. Ph. 446-0921.

'

90 H. P .• 11,000 miles, extra nice.

•1795

WAS 11995

Elcona 60xl0
Detroiter 54xl0
Sta r 55x10
Liberty 50x10

emb., makes fancy st itches .
Pay bal. of S48 .50 or pay $6 1959· KENTUCKIAN

Come early for bargains.
.
House to be sold in 2 or 3 weeks at public aution.
D. Hollis Wood, E•ec. of Estate of Jane Davis.
AUCTIONEER: R. E. KNOTTS

pond , fenced in and relldy for

0 . J . WHITE Rd. 1 lOll x 200,
restrl cted building lots. $.500

'

'64
'64
'64
'62

sils, pi ctu r es, towels, gr ips, Ironing board. si lverware, tea.
service.

•

ADDISON - 6 A. next to Tara
deve lopment, 5 rms. and
bath,large melal commercial
size garage, $13,700.
LOTS
·
GEORGES Creek - mobile
· home lots. $300 down, SSO per
month.

1969 1!2 T. Chev. PU
1968 •12 T. Chev . PU
1967 '114 T. Chev . PU
1969 112 T. Chev . PU
1963 '12 T. Chev. PU
1963 SUPER Sport Chevrolet 2
1968 •;, T. GMC P U
dr. hdtp., extra good con 1967 Chev. trl-axle dump trucK
dition , extra clean, auto . with
1968 '12 T. GMC PU
con sole, 327 eng ine, air cond.,
1969'12 T. Chev. PU , auto . .tran s.
ti lt steering wheel , PB, PS.
1966 3 T. GMC
Ph . ~ -9331.
81-3
New II ft . camper
1966 '~'• T. GMC
1967 J EEPSTER 4 Wheel Drive
1966 '12 T. GM~ PU
- Warn Hubs. ver y clea n,
1966' I?&gt; T. GNiC PU
good mechan ical ly , good
1967 •;, T. GMC PU
tires . S1.200. 245-5453.
1966 Chev . Suburban
80-5
1967 •;, T. Chev. PU
- - - c - - - -1963 F600 Ford Truck
1965 CUTLASS 2 door Hardtop
1961 ~ T. GMC
.
P.S. Very clean and depen 1964 3 T. GMC
dable $500. 245-5453.
SOMMER'S G.M.C.
805
TRUCKS, INC.
-----tl3 Pine 51.
1966 CHRYSLER S. W. P.S.
446-2532
P.B. Auto Lights, Excellent
Condition
, 1 owner, $1,695.
1961 CHRYSLER in good
Phone 446-1293 Evenings 446condition. Ph. 446-0212.
0776.
81 -5
80-6

'67 PMC 52x12
'67 Elcona 50x12
'66 New Moon 50xl0

G. E. color cabinet TV, curtain stretchers. kl1chen uten.

have property for sale, don 't

BARGAIN - SO A., 30 A. gooc
farm ground, 20 A. woods, 2
barns, log cabin, VInton. area,
$8.800.

car-

Cust ., 2 dr . hdtp .• air cond ., yellow
with black vinyl lop . Was $1995.

KANAUGA, OHIO

settle for less than nationwide
advertising. CALL STROUT.

l

cond .,

'71 VW bus, ai r cond it ioned, low

large dresser , library table, stand table, oak storage
chest metal breakfast table &amp; 4 chairs, 2 wooden

homes in this area. If you

IN THE 400 Bl ock a 12 room
cattle.
Bri ck house, 2 fami ly , on
large lot . New roof , needs 76 A. - Vacant, 10 mi. out on a
some i nter ior decoration s.
blacktop rd., pond, creek, co.
Price $22,500.
water, some· bottom land,
Office 446·1066
mostly rolling pasture Evenings Call:
$11.900.
Ron Canaday 446-3636
Runell D. Wood 446-4618
163 A.- MONEY MAKER, 56 A..
bottom. 100 A. pasture. 2 large
r oom , deep lot.
barns, extra good set of
buildings, nice farm home
6 ROOMS and bath, large
with 7 rooms and bath, large
reception hall . formal DR. NEW 3 bedroom modular home
shady lawn. Ideal beef, hog
banquet size klkhen, storage
ust completed . 1,368 sq. ft.
and grain setup.
lving area, nat . gas, forced
building and garage.

air

pe led , TV ·antenna, un derpinnlng. metal bldg. Ph .
446-0968 after 4:30p.m.
·'
81 -12 \
_ _ _ __ _ _...:._
1968 KIR KWOOD housefra iler.
Ph . 446-2460 after 5 p.m.
81-6

Truck HeadquarteiS

PUBLIC
NOTICE

carpet, 1'12 baths, cent. air, 2
ca r garage , kitchen wilh 9ar.
disp .. range , hood, diSh ·
washer and lots .of cabinets .

furn ished,

'1995

1968 BUICK ·LeSABRE

1968 BUICK SKYLARK

RECONDITIONED
MOBILE HOMES

50x12,

Factory air cond., gas heater,

40,000 miles. like new cond .

WAS 11995

'1895

Gallipolis

'2295

1971 OPEL ST. WAGON

4 dr .. air cond . • Marlin blu e. local
exec utiv e ' s trade -in .

For Sale .

1970 MOBILE home,

New GMC

PH. 446-3444

Uooer RL 7

extra s harp .

NOW ONLY

1968 BUICK ELECTRA

Smith Buick, Inc.

For Sale

For Sale

AUCTIONEER

OPPOSITE HIGH SCHOOL

"We Beat All Big City Dealer Prices"

2 dr . l:ldlp .• air cond .• vinyl lop.

1968 VOLKS ST. WAGON

4 dr . hdtp .• Fury Ill , 29 ,000 miles.

Gallipolis, 0 .

. Eastern Ave .

)IMME SAYRE

We sell anythin~ for
anybody . Bring your
Items· lo Knotts Communi!Y. flyc1io~ . Ba,r,.~ ,
Corner fhird &amp; Olive. ,
For ·appointment 4£111
446 ·2917. Sale every
Saturday · Evening al
70'Ciock.

1969 PLYMOUTH

•1895

WOOD MOTOR SALES

"SELL THE AUCTION
WAY"

THURSDAY, APRIL 13th

'2795

WAS 12495

ni ce family car.

'995

AUCTION
5ERVICE

walking d istance of new hosp .
Fea ture s· are 3 BR. ww

OVER 1.800 sq . fl . of carpeted
liv ing s· ' · 3 BR, 2 baths,
built-In ~{.'· large living
and dlnir, , • {) ' . pane led

00

112 Ton, standard transm ission , 6 cyl. engine.
Extra Clean.

bedrooms, priced for quic k,
sale . Don 't pass up th is deal. •
Evenings
Oscar C. Baird, 446-4632
D. J. Welherholl, 446-4244
Steven R. Blitz. 446-9583

PUBLIC SALE

CITY - We have 2 homes which

vinyl lop . Sharp.

1969 PONTIAC BONNE

'2495

WAS 12695

1

locc!itian, heart of town, three ·

pete d LR , formal dining
r oom , 2 full bath s, full
basement , and 2 BR apt .

timber with lots of road
frontage. No building .' Price 30A.-2ml.off 160,nlce5 room
$12.500.
home with bath. gooc barn,

84 GARFIELD AVENUE
air furnace. county water, all
WANT a gooc home at a low 7 ROOMS and bath, storage
utilities undergr_q,ynd,
price. Has 2bedrooms, wall to
room and enclosed porch,
washer,
dryer ,
refrig wall carpet In li ving room and
large level lot. Priced for a erator, range, ca rpeted,
both bedrooms. Also one car
quick sale.
L.J&gt;. &amp; D.R., 8.R., lar~e lot,
garage. Sell ing pr ice $10,700.
good location, 4 miles up Rl. 7
FOR SA.LE or long lime leas e', 3 in P,Vn try Air Estate•. Low
WANT to bu~ a lot for your
bedroom new brick home, full
fa• distric t, good school .
mobile home. We have 3 lots
Pr i ce~ right to sell . Inquire at
basement, 2 automatic car
In Rio Grande with city water,
doors. large lot. 2 baths. wall
Corbin &amp; Snyd~r Furn. Co.,
gas and sewer available. Can
to wall carpet, an electric. 4~· 1171, after s, 446-2573.
be bought for $2,500. Small
Located near new hospital ,In
81 -tf
down payment and balance
Hanersvl lle: See 0 . D. Par- - - -- - - - -, like rent. Will sell all 31ots for
sons or Jay Sheppard.
NEW 3 bedroom home with
$7,000.
l
--'
_
_
82·3
attached garage, combined ·
2 ACRE LOT
frame and ..brick e•lerlor,
3 BR HOME In excellent conbuilt-In kitchen with electric
dillon . Va cant and ready to
range and -hood , dishwasher,
move ln. Would constder 2 BEDROOM' trailer with por ch
garbage disposal . gas fur mobile home In trade. Full Bx1 2, on lot 100x l50, has
nace/ completely carpeted /
price. $15.000.
·
natur ai ' gas l ine and well
located Sanders Dr. ·Finan.
Office Phone 44~· 1694
house, Gallipolis Ferry . cing available. Call or see
Evenings
Pri ced $9,500. Ph. 675-2263 or
Nel l Sanders 446-0254 or G. P.
Charles M. Neal 446-1546
675-2561.
Burnette 379·2409.
J. Michael 'N~al 446·1503
76-12
81 -6
- ----'- - ' - - -

ttDuT•

2 Dr. hdtp .• air cond .• red , black

WAS 12995

Conv., air cond . • bucket sea ls ,
mag wheels. extra sharp.
' .

Air conditioner. radio . rear speaker. while-walllir.es. tinted windshi e ld,
bumper protective strips. door guards. carpet savers, power sea l · 6 way.
protective body side moldings. custom vinyl root covenng.

66 CHEVROLET PICKUP

oi l heat. Pri ced under Sl5,000. 1

double oven, bar, and relrig .
with ice maker . Large car -

NEW LI STIN G - Lovely Brick ·
1-- - - - - - - - - -- - -- - - -- - - i less than I yr. old within

RUSSEU.
WOOD

•~•~•

'3950

SPECIAL PRICE

1

home in coun tr y. 7 rm s. &amp;
bath , new furnace, water tap

•2695

1969 OLDS CUTLASS

Electra 225 4-dr. Hardtop

water line / septi c system,
across from elementary.:..

NICELY remodeled 2 story

Custom 2 dr . hdlp .• Marlin blue.
black ·vi nyl top. new E lectra
trade .
......___

WAS 12895

MOBILE HOME , 1'12 ACRES Good drill ed well, county

Erro

ba ths, c"' t.{) e kitchen ,
pa tio, garage, .JO x 200 l ol.
· Out of Town
3 BR- BRICK FRONT
Buyers
NEW home close to new
hospi tal, 3 BR &amp; bath, ca rpel OUR offices on State Route 160
throughout, all eleclric , 120ft .
are now open 7 days a week
fr on tage . Under $20,000.
for your convenience.

--·~

•

~,d~;.~ ~-S-D·L-D ~~;;'.~ T':.:'~ :

SEEING IS BELIEVING
NJC E 3 bedroom home on 1'12
IF YOU like the picture; you'll 'acres. Bi rch paneling. bar In
love th e (. -;,'T'Ie. Moderat e
kilchen $18.500.
price inc "11~' CI;R, utility
rm .• large 11 • .-..-/) ling area,
In Town
love ly built-in 1&lt;1 •..:hen , w-w WE HAVE lwo well -kepi homes
ca r pe t, 2112 ba t hs , 2 ca r
in town. One a three bedroom
garage &amp; sun deck".
home with ai r conditi oning
ALMOST COMPLETED
and a large 14 room hOmeNOW ur _('A construction, fu ll with 3 baths and lots of carpel
brick. ""UJ ·tri c 3 BR, 2 on Second Avenue .

~---1970 OLDS CUTlASS

covers. tinted glass .

452 ·second Ave .
446-3434
446-4775
' .
.

IN-TOWN BARGAIN -

Themselves.

1969 BUICK ELECTRA

2 Dr . Hardtop. 400 2V-V8 engi ne. med. bronze
metallic paint, bro wn vinyl roof. G-78. w-s-w
!Ires, radio. bumper guards . fqc . air, wheel

:l1HIO RIVER

new Medical Cen ter .
Need'S Bedrooms With River View &amp; .Frontege
For less than you would guess. here's a
bea ut if ul 5 bedroom split-level with family
room. ( fir ep lace). basement, 2 car gara'g e,
su n deck. o n the river with boat dock. This is
an unu s ual hom e worthy of your c on s ide ration
in the Ches hire area.

.'

The Mental Cases Most Difficult
to Cure are People Crazy About

SMITH
SAYS'

'72 FORD LTD

2 fireplaces. Price mid 30s.
Ca ll 446-0485.
78,13

road frontage on 4 roads near

loafing shed 4Q:1&lt;60', iool shed
unit. 526 Jackson Pike, Near
16'x30', milk\ house 16'x16'
Holzer Med. Center.
25 Locust St.
with
210 gal. bulk lank , alum .
THIRTY-FIVE WEST
"oward Brannon, Broker
crib. silo, grain cr ib 20'xJO',
APARTMENTS
Off. 446-2674
51 -If an d oth er bldgs . 70 A.
Lucille Brannon
productive tillable l and, 10 A.
4 ROOM house, 816 First Ave .
Eve. 446·1226
limber , bal. in pa sture . Good
rear, $75 mo . rPh . 446-9779 or
fences , 1,303 lb. lob. base. 1/ z
446-9052.
Farms
A. pond . Can be bought with
83-3 or wi thout chattels.
2;4 ACRE S- Tobacco ba se, 80
acr es t i llable , new barn ,
-=:-S-:-L::
E::E"'
P'"'I~;:-G"'"".::R::0::0-M.,-S,- w-eek.Iy
62 A. - 2 mi l south of Mer outstanding farm home with
rates . Park Central Hotel.
cerv ill e on 218. Good barn, 7
DELIVERY
an all bu ll)-in kitchen in color .
.
308 -tt, A. bottom , 25 A. tractor land,
DRIVER SALES
grow 1,850 lb. lob. th is yr . 54 ACRES - 40 acres t lll abl~ .
Older hom e made modern . 4
_,.. WE NEED young men for APARTM ENT for construction
good outbuild ings , good 7
men. Ph . 446-0756.
bdrm . and I balh. Plenty
immediate wo r k . No ex room home , new furnace .
267-11
water. $13,000.
·
perience necessa ry.
6 ACRES - Good ou lbuildings,
·BRADBURY efficiency apt .. 20 4 A. - near Lecta, 20 A.
$3:57 AN HOUR
4 BR home on Slate Rt .
adults onl y. no pels. 729
bollom , 35 A. rol ling, grow
NOT too much for delivery and
Second Ave.
_f
2, 500 lb. lob. this year. 2 50 ACRE S - Loca ted on
sales of sma ll applian ce.
59 1
barns , es tima te d timber
bla cktop roa d. Ideal fo r
450 ,000 bd . fl .. 7 rm . good
FUi.L OR ~
housing or mobile homes.
FUR N. sma l l etf iciencv apt.,
far m home . Plen ty water .
centra l air &amp; Ileal, for I
PART TIME
Price $25.000.
Ho111es
professional ty pe person on ly .
MR . ROW, 446-0677. Monday
5 ROOMS and bath, carpet
Also 3 r oom furn . apt.,
and Tuesday only 9 to 5.
throughout, luxury kitchen,
parking , 'h bl ock from Holzer 72 A. - locarled at J unc tion,
. 84-2 Hospilal , adu lls on ly. Ph . 446Li I tie Bull Skin and Carter
laundry r oom , double ca r Rds. 10 A. tractor land , JJ row
--~-port, storage building, large
0338.
1.700 lb. lob. ihls yr . Some
lot nea r town .
6611
For Rent
coa l, good barn, good 3 bdrm .
house and other out-bldgs. 11 ROOMS , 2'12 baths, fami ly
12 X 60 MOBILE Home locat ed 3 ROOM turn . apl .. all ut ilili es
Pr ice $10,500.
r oom , new kitchen , one floor
paid, adu l ls on ly, free garag e
in Rio Grande 245·5267.
co mplefe"ly ca rpeted , lul l
parking al Libby Hotel.
BO-lt
Anyhr.- 446-1998
basement, new furnace and
74-tJ
E. Winters - 446·3828
central ai r.
AI Arnold - 446-0756
Eve .• J . Fuller - 446-3246
7 ROOMS and bath, fine kif ·
"Eve., J . Berry - 446-3466
chen , LR carpeted, laundry

%BEDROOM TOWNHOUSF.'l

good 4 BR home, basement,
11h mil es f r om Vinton .

WINTE~ CAN

3 First Lady beau ty salon

Co.' s best. Can be bought with
Contemporary in sty le,
luxurious carpeting , in - or w i thout the chattels.
dividually controll ed heat in.Q ,
color
coordi nated
ap - DA IR Y FARM - Th is 162 A.
farm, located on St. Rl . 325
pliances , pr iva te p·a lios,
many other features . Lease and Roush Rd ., has an 8 rm .
modern home , dairy ... barn
$135 mo . Call 446-3772 for
appointment · to see model· 40'x60' with 20 stanch ions,

0

I~

t hese
ap ts.

sectional .

DOC

'7.2 BUICK ELECTRA
4 DOOR.HARDTOP

·THIS IS A NEW CARl

•
today .
ONE ACRE WITH TRAILER :Eight miles from town on 1
10ACRES. Rt . 141, Rural waler.
good county road . Low t~x
distr ict. close to new Gavtn
14ACRES, eight room home, lot
.Plant , 10 x 50 with lwo
of road frontage, Rt. 554 near
bedroom .
Cheshire. $16,000.

liv. rm . for beauty Sa lon. This

Addison. Ph . 446-0294.

Circle's Cafeteria
&amp; Restaurant

three bedroom

property m ay be bought with

CITY - Located at 127 Kineoo,
hou se in good repa ir, some
new copper plumbing and
3 BEDROOM house in
wiring, 5 nice rm . and bath,
Ga llipolis. Shown by appt. Ph.
ful l base .. H.W. fl oor s with
446-2751.
82-3 new carpet and paneling in
liv. r m . Don't walt to see this
one. Pr ice $17,500.
12xSO 2 bedroom mobile home in

your r esidence in
beaUtiful su burb an

World's Largest

84 ~ 4

Write to Harriet Kirkpatrick, NOW leasing new 1 bedroom
1560
Duff ie ld . Drive ,
apartments, adults on ly. Ph.
Columbus, Ohio 43227 or call
675·3450 Pt. PIE03Sant.
collect evenings 861 -8356 .
296-lf
Klelmeyer Rea lt y Co.
·
84-1 FURNISHED apartment.

-

'

INVESTMENT. SR 160 Haners·
ville. Front house Is Spanish
style, three roams and bath .
Por ch and red tile roof. Ideal
for office. Second house is

.

.

basement. near neW hospital.

$51000

buyers for fa rm s, vacant land
and urban property . Call us

beautiful 5 rm . hom e , loca ted
in exce ll ent res idential
section. One owner uses huge

82-tf ADDISON - Modern home,
-.:-- '·
H.W. floors, fully ca]pe led .
SORRY - ·we servi ce only what
Liv . rm. 14'xl 8' . Kitc hen
NICE
CLEAN
2
bedroom
we sell or · under service
mobile home, adults. Ph. 256- 12'x l6', plenly ca bine ts. Fu ll
conlracl. Simmons Ptg. &amp;
" base. Low taxes, gooc schools
1291.
Offi ce Equip: Ph. 446-1397.
82-3 and located where the action
51 -If
is taking place. Price $16,000.
UNFURNI
SHED
4
room
and
RALPH'S Ca rpet &amp; Upn oi sl~y
CITY - Largi!'- 2 slory , 7 rm .
Cleaning Service. Free . bath apartment. Ph . 446-9024.
82-3 older br ick home, full base. ,
estimates. Ph. 446·0294. Ralph
for mal din . rm ., l ~rge kitchen
A. t;&gt;avis, owner .
with plenty cab., huge liv .
COTTAGE,
2
rooms
and
bath
.
9-tt · adults only, $50 mo. P1us rm ., 4 bdrms . with plenty
c:losets. Located on a large lot
- - - - -- -:--,,.,utilities . Ph . 256-6233.
TWU-WAY Radios Sa les a.·
82-3 in the center of town. On ly
Service. New and used CB's,
$27,000.
poll ee .m onito rs , antennas,
SLE
ER
ING
ROOMS
wee_kly
etc .• Bob' s Citizens Band
3 ni ce lots and
rates, f r ee garage parkmg, VIN TON Ra~i o Equip., Georges Creek
storage
bldg
. Priced for a
Libby Hotel.
Rd ., Gallipolis, Ohio. 446-4517..
289-lf quick sale at $4,500.
tom
16-11
FARMS
2 UNF . APARTMENTS. 5 WADDELL FARM - Located 9
mi . oul on Sl. Ri. 775, 5 rm.
rooms and bath, adults on ly :
Wanted
ultra -modern home pl us
Ca ll 446 -1479.
Wanled Farms
finished attic. Plenty water
HAVE cash buyers for farms ,
6~- t f

-

.STROUT
REALTY

THE LEADER SINCE 1900 IN
Ideal rental unit .
SERVING THE NATION'S '
Farm &amp; Ur~an
BUYERS I SELLERS.
I'll. 44UIII
LISTINGS needed . We have

house has 1,888 sq. ft. liv. area

water tank, new plumbing
and new shing le roof. Has

. Rancho Company
Rea 1Estate For Sale ,
Real Estate For S.ale
REAL
TORS, H'eadquarters for
.
County Real Eslate . 91(2 ACRES land 'iol nln~
HOBART, DILLON Gallia
SyCamore Lake . R ~ra wate
For real 'esta le you want ... or
available 8 m)les fro
Real Estate Broker'
don't want .
Gal lipolis, less than $.500 a
P. 0 . Bo• 516
acre. 446-1293 or 446-0776 afte•
First Time
EXCLUSIVE agent for Ra ccoon
Valley Campsites . Ph. 446·
5 p.m. .
80·6
Offered
,2710.
47· If FOUR bedroom 'ranch home.
Country size kitchen, lar ge
House For ·sate ·
ll v irJg . room, . den with BY OWNER . Large lof, brick.
fireplace, utll ity room , 1112
central air, F.A. heal. garage
baths and air conditioning .
and
carport.
finished
Addison Twp. . ·
basement. 7 rooms and bath
Price
Reduced
first floor. 4 rooms and bath

\

prog ram . Call, write or apon each floor . Located on near
ply :
Personnel
Dept ..
2 A. level land . Bought for
Pl easant Valley Hospital. Pt.
replacement cos l.
Rev. Jennings Cremeans
Pl easan t, W. Va . 25550. · Ph .
675-4340.
CITY - Locaied ai 88 Pine St .. 6
IN LOVIN G memory of Rev .
81 -6 rm s. , bath &amp; ut ility rm . This
J enn ing s Cr em ea n s who
house is in good repa ir:. with
passed away 19 years ago.
FOR SALE by owner. 2 story
mos t of in ter ior new. New
brick at 452 First Ave . 7
kitchen. new balh. new hoi

In front of my eyes you faded
away.
.
Deep in my heart are memon es
to stay
Often I visit your grave and

.For Fast Results Use .· The ·Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

I

J

Real Estate For Sal.e ·

Insurance

29 - The Sunday Times · &amp;:nlinel, ~day, April9, 1972

$1911
11 VW Bug , green, 4 sp.,lealherette. radio.
69 VW Bug, dark blue, 4 sp., lealherette, radio, low
S1S9S
m1· .
69 VW Bug, II. blue, auto .. radio, W·lires. Sh1r~ .
SIS9S
69 VW Fast Back, beige, auto., radlo, 1S,OOO m1 . on
eng.
I
$17..
69 Ca mpmoblle, pop-up-top, radio, gas heater, n. co
unit.
·
$2,..
2_.7 Bugs, 4 sp., radio, new paint (sharp cors). II· Sll.. ·
68 Sq. Back, 4 sp .• light blue (runs good) .
S13..
65 Ghia Coupe, 4 sp .. radio, reat•harp car.
$1095
. 65 VW Bug . 64 VW Bug · l-'3 Bugs

Thank you Tri-Countians for
our best start everi

N WAnS V.W

•

195 Upper River Rd .
Gallipolis. Ohio
Ph. 446-9800

AUTHORIZED
DEALER

SERVICE &amp; PARTS
Mon. -12 P.M. Until9:00 P.M.
Tues .• Wed. &amp;· Fri. - 8:00 A.M. Unti15:00 P.M.
Thursday-8:00A.M. Untii9:00·P. M.
Saturday- 1 : 00 A.M. Until Noon

NEW c,.•JRMAN
nn

OPENS ""...,AIGN
~-

CoLUMBUS (UPI)- Frank
B. Sollars, Washlnglon Court
House, has been name4 to
H Dun1a 88
succeed (]eorg~ .
P
chairman of the board of
Nationwide Mulual Insurance
Co., the parent firm of aH
Nationwide
companies.
Dunlap ; who was · board
chairman for 31 years, was
reelected to a new three-year
term as direct« of the Insuran&lt;:e companies.

DAYTON, Ohio . (UPI)
Democratic Prealdentlal
· hopefuiSen. HuberiHwnpbrey

to

.._.ft

.

· ten~~v~

was
_... ID . u
campaign In Oblo SaturdiJ.
1be Mbmesola Slnlllil' wa lo .
fiy Into O.yloo toalcbl f« a
rally wllh bill IUJIIICll'la'l. He
wu to partk:iplte In ~ YOIIIh
Forum ben 8aDda1 blfln
fiyin8 to Columbus f« a a~ before 1be Oblo ·
State Council Ill IIN+Ini+ .

.

~

'i

�:'~-

•....

''·"~'

... '

l

•' •·''

..

.

".

...

.•..
.'

:!B - TIK' Sundl1y Tin""'· St&gt;nliiM•I, Swulay, April9,'1972

·For Fast Re~ults .Use The Sundar ~ Times;.Sentinel Classifieds
•

Help Wanted

Memory

. In

•

•

SPRING has sprung! The
weather's areat - so aet out
of the house , start earning
money
as
an
Avon
Representative . Oisco\ler
how easy it is to sell AIJon
products to friendlY. people .
Write or ca ll Mrs. Helen

Yeager , Box 172. Jackson .
Ohio. Ph. 2116-4028.
79-6
SMALL Motor repairman .clerk from 8 to...S p.m . Wnte
Box 216 care of The Tribune.
.
80-tl

HAWK Insurance Agency , 541
Fourth Avenue, Phone 4146·' ,.
2300.
F ir e- l if ~- a uto-c hurch .
. B ~ tf

Real Estate For Sale

THE WISEMAN
AGENCY

MASSIE

Office 446-3643
Evenings Ca!l
.E--M." Ike" Wi$emalr 446-9796

Realty, 32 State Sl

E~'N. Wise!JU!n 446-45NI

•

i

Tel. 446- ~ 998

MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIST
KERR - Near new, all brick, 4
OPENIN G soon for a CLA for 3 bdrms ., large liv . r m., din.
to 11 shift , Monday thru
rm .• and Mrs . approved
Friday , no weekend duty.
kitchen . II has H.W. fl oors,
Regis ter ed
or
r egistry
and carpet. Full fin ished
eligible . Good start ing rat_e
base .. with a 2 car gar. Thiswith

liberal

fringe

benef1l

'

\

pray

If only I cou ld have gone and

rooms, 2 ba ths, gas hot air
fur na ce .
P resent
arra ngement 2 apartments.
Easily converted to one
fami l y dwelling . Asking

$35,000. Shown by a ppt. Ph.
84 -1

buy thi s one and ano ther 6 rm .
(2 apartments) in good

446-0208 .

Daughter Juan ita - - -- - - - - -

Notice

fr uit trees and rm . for a

garden . Price $16,000. If you
want an investment you can

you could have sta yed .
84-1

large garage. Large lol , 9

repair, bes ide iL both for

$26,5CJO.

For Rent

TRAILER space located 1'12 RI O -

REVIVAL services 7: 30 p.m.
nightly beginning April 9th at
the Mt. Zion Bapt ist Church.

miles on state route from
Gallipolis . Real nice, ex tra

large lot. Ph. 446-4053.
84·3

Evangelist is .· Rev. Chester

Lemley. Pastor Mar ion T. 3 BEDROOM house. Call after
Williams.
83-7 5, 446-0196.
84-3
YARD sa!e Thursday, Aprll 13, 5 ROOM apartment, fu rnished,

at 125 Garfield Ave.

84-3

DAY CAifE
Sun Valley Nur sery School,
li censed by State o Ohio, 1'12
· mi les west of new hospita l.

577 Sun Valley Dr . Ph. 4463657. Day ca re thai says "we
care."
28-if

adults only . Ph. 446~ 3781.

All br ick, Oi l electric,

vacant land or vacation spots.

Help Wanted
'

Waitress Wanted
Apply in person.

- - - -- - -

references required. Inquire
at 631 Fourth Ave .

71-lf

NEW
2 BEDRM.
TOWNHOUSE APTS.
BE WITH ihe firs! lo choose

ap ·
laking
Now
gri
II
plications for
cooks. waitresses and
kitchen helpers. Good
pay, pleasant working
condition,
patd
vacation. Apply in
person at Bob Evans
Steak House .

' I

I
I

17 ACRES', truck farm , very
Bargain In Vinton
,
Large corner lot. 107x165, with extra ~epllc· ' ·
ta nk to r mobil e home space. Two story home.
full basement. new fu e l oi·l furnace. 1112 baths. ·
lot s o f paneling. carpeted throughout. bu.ill· in
hood. range and oven. storm windows and
doors. four bedrooms. Oily $U,SOO.

•
ELECTRICITY:.,
We furnish Water -liewage · liarbage CoDeellon • Am_ple .
Parking • TV AQtenna • Wall-IQ·WaU Carpeting •
Draperies • Ranges • Refrlgeraloril • Air Conditioning •
Garbage Disposals · Dishwashers · Heal Lamps · Private
·
Pool • Clhbhouse.

•

TARA

TOWNHOUSf
APARTMENtS

Barga in $19,500.
firePlace. Attractive price
'
Includes HW floors, 1'12 baths, 30 ACRES, Custom built brick
built-in kitchen with dish- ranc h, two inco m e uni ts,
washer. attached garage and Sta te Rl. 160.
35 ACRES, sma ll house, fru it
large fenced in lawn.
and llfl'ber. Clay Twp. $6,750.

-

-«! ACRES, Cozy two bedroom
home, barns near Vinton.

Both sides road. 115,500.

-D '·

stat ions, reception desk, 2
First Lady drying stations
and cha irs . Al l for $24,000.

11

Hou se $21 ,000.

200 ACRE S, Approx. 7,000' plus

(on rural water line) piped to
all bldgs . and irr ig a tion
sys tem . 5 barns, larges t

2B ' xl00' , sma lles i 20'xAO' , al l
in good repair, all have metal
roots. and all having lightning
rods, and well constructed. 75
A., high -pr odu ci ng tr act or

land, 1,300 lb. lob. base, good
woven wire fences. This 'farm
has been opera ted for a
gene r a ti on with sc ientific
farm ing practices . If you are
looking for a farm to start
making money wi thout any
unproductive labor and e~ ­
pense , this is one of Gall1a

PAY" ONI:Y "ONE UTILITY

1\J BA"l'H.S

BE COZy for the
lucky owner of this modern 3
BR home with a larg e stone

50 ACR£ Snl""'land, drilled
$8,500.
well, ko- ~V·

~ Neal

Realty

.·Realty

Excellent Inv estment

Excellent Business
Opportunity

JAPARTMENTSLOCA TED
ON 2ND AVE . IN 600
BLOCK . OWNER MU S T
SELL -

MA K E OF F ER .

MODER N C;RQCERY . DID
11 80.000 .00
IN
1911. ·
GROWING F AST ( TO O
$11.200.00 Buys Bargain FAST FOR PRESENT
OWNER ). ALL MODERN
3
BEDRO OM S.
NI C E EQ UI PMENT ,
l.ARGE
K I TCHEN . RE TAIL ROOM . lARGE
M O DERN
STORM WIND OWS.
STO CK
ROOM .
3
BEDROOM RE S IDENCE ,
STORE
COMPLETELY
Price Reduced
STOCKED - NO CRE~ I T.
PERFE CT FOR MAN ~ ND
OWNER SAYS "S ELL AS
WI F E. WILL PAY FOR
QUICK AS YOU CA N." 3
I TSELF IN 3 YR S.
BE DRO OM S, NICE KIT C HE N ,
SMAL L
LOT.
MODERN
AND
AT T RACT IV E .

...

Excellent Business
Opportunity

3 Bedroom $14,500
Owner Will Finance
N E AT 3 BEDROOM HO ME ,
FU LL BAS EMENT . IN
TO WN , EVA NS HG TS .

Another Bargain For
Sharp Buyer
8 YR . OLD MODERN 3
BEDROOM ON 2 A. LANO .
GARAGE , FENCED Y ARD
· EDGE OF TOWN .

HOTEL . •o ROOMS
80
PERCENT OCCUP I E O
GREYHO UND TERMINAL
I PAYS
GOOD
COM M ISSIONt . BEAUTY SHOP
ROOM

RENTED

-

HUGE

GARAGE FOR G UE ST AND
MONTHLY PARKING F ULL
C ITY
LOT .
2
APARTMENTS .
EX PA NSION OF BUSINE SS
ROOM S PO SSIB L E .

paid, $11.9tJO.
CHECK
THE
EARLY
AMERICAN PRICE on th is
beautifu l remodeled 2 story
home in Pom eroy . Tf1e wife
will love this new built-In

kitchen with 20 ft. cabinets,
gar . disposal, dishwa sher ,

school. Kyger Creek District, .
completely fu rn is hed , also·
adjoin ing 20 x 28 building. fuel

REALTY

REALTOR
446-1066
TROUBLE with bu cket seats is
that not' everyone has the
' same size bucket .
'

GLAMOUR girl to male fe llow
worker : "Yes, I can tel l how I
got my ra ise, but I don't th ink
it will help you much."

WE HAVE trailer lot for sale 80'
x 150' for $1,800 each. Can be
financed for S200 down
paYment. Rural wa t er on lots,

on the Kemper · Bethel Road.
Al so some 60 acr es of wooded
land on same road .

IN GREEN Township an d
Gallipol is Schoo l Di strict, 104
acres, 1f2 acre tobacco base,
25 acres pasture , 60 acre~ In

••o

tltl6·0001
Denver K. Higley 446-0002_
Wancsa·s. Eshenaur 446-0003

Gooc

upstairs now being rented .
are priced at $13,900 each and
offer J BR , bath, nice sized
LR, modern kitchen, HW
floors, air cond., and located
on a quiet St .

&gt;

I

1:

t.

~

;,
'(

t

Jr garage,

10 PCT. DOWN - Modern 3 BR
home, w1· cllrpet, attached
room, Kitchen
garage,
includes a"(:C/J
amount of
cabinets , buh ~'u en, range,
and refrig . Tolat trice $15,900.

.r - ·

..;."J

CITY FARMER'S DREAM 41f2 A . on a state rd. close to
new hospital, pond, 3 car
garage, and a modern 6 room "
home .

ATTENTION
DU E to the ~resent construction
in Gal lia Co. , we have several
out of town buyers in need of,

'
I;

339 FOURTH AVE., GAlliPOLIS

STARTING AT 1 P.M.

fam i ly room .
city schools.

i

l.

2 pc. living room suit e, arm chair , 2 floor lam ps, 18)(9 wool
rug, 12x9 wool rug , 14x9 wool rug, many throw rug s,
electric fan , writing desk and chalr ~ , buffet, exce llent
dining tab le &amp; 6 chairs, 3 double beds, complete ; I twin
bed, comp lete ; telephone stand and seat, vanit y dresser,

t'·
'

I·'

'·

t

:

cabin~ts~

kitchen cabinet, Tappan gas stove, Hotpoint
r efr igerator , many r ockers &amp; st rai ght chairs, 5 ft.

stepladder, Kirby elec. sweeper, set 12 china, plates, cups
&amp; sa ucers; 2 electri c clocks, 6 electri c lamps, electric
toaster, 14 leathe r pillows &amp; cushions, bedd ing, table
linens, needle work,. 1 oak wardrobe, G. E; . radio, wire
screens. dining table &amp; 6 chairs, Kenmore dishwasher,

dow~ .

WOODS Mill Rd. - 100 ft .
fr ontage, $1,000.\
.
LISTINGS NE.EDED
Ranny Blackbum
Branch Manager

B&amp;S Mobile Hom es
Second &amp; VIand St.
Pf. Plea san I! Nextto Heck 's: I
52-If

PUBLIC SALE
TIME: 10:30.
A. M.
.
SAT., APRI~ 22, 1972
Reason for selling: have sold my filrm.

Location: From Gallipolis loke Route 7 to Cheshire~ turn
left on Route 554, go through Kyger, and watch for sale
sign, lurn leU.

'

sound sys tem , 4 speed
automatic changer . Balan ce

$83.17. Use our
· Call 446-102{

budget~,term s .

''

BEAUTIFUL Early Amer ican
s tyl e stereo-radio .com.
bination, four speaker sound
system , 4 speed llutomatic
changer , separate controls .

If part of your business is moving thing s, ·
we offer a .great little he lper. The Datsun
Picku p, America's number one selling
import truck. At up to 25 miles per gallon,
it doesn 'l cost a lot to run. With ils
overhead cam engine il perlorms like any
other self-respecting
iiickup. Nice going!

Balance $79.56. Use our
budget terms. Call 446-1028.
64-3

-PROFESSIONAL
- - --Gibson

electric gu itar and Fender
amplifier wit h all' ac cessories. Ph . 446-3918.
84-3

84-tf

- - -- - -

.

•

AlifTJQIJ,(S"

cracker, wood box, coal picks, 15 gallon brass kettle al\d
stand, oil lamp, llrtle round table. Aladdin lamp, record
player. round table , 6 chairs and buffet, lots of what-nots, .
old ~lc1ure frames, trunk, Iron pot, set of lief Irons, 4
. · straight chairs, grindstOne. set bf molds. lots of other .
Items too numerous to mention.
.
OWNER: MRS, HAZEL RHODES ·,
·
J. A. FRENCH, AUCTIONEER
l'
Auctioneer's note: Como eerty lllld stpy late, I think \·ov
can lind anylllilll you ,.ant, ~undlltrved 111 lnMIIIIIs.

70 Ford Gal. 500, 4 dr, H.T.. auto .• P. S., P.B., air
$2295
69 Toriri02 dr. H.T., 4Sp., VB, radio. Sha,rpcar.
$1611
69 Chevrolet C-10 Pickup, V-8, 3 sp., rad10 &amp; topper. . $1"5
69 Ford Country Sed. Sta. Wgn .• V8, auto., P.S., rad., W·
tires.
·
$17..
69 Ply Satellite 4 dr .• V-8, auto ., P.S. , w-tlres. Sharp. $1611
69 RenaultR -10, 4dr., ladies' trad .. in,low mi.
$1195
67 Ply Barracuda 2 dr. H. T., V-8, auto., P. S., radio, W·
tires.
· .·
•
.
$1011
66 Pontiac Sta . Wgn .,a uto., P.S., P. B., air, rad1o&amp;

rack.

IF YOU'Re NOT PRIVING
A BRAND N_
EW 1972 .CAR

••

DRIVE THE HOTTEST
BRAND IN TOWN
.

84-6
-CLEAN expenslwe carpets with

'

DODGE

the best. Blue ~uslre Is
America's favo ri te . Rent
shamtiooer Sl. Lower G. C.
Murphy Store.

84-6

- -- --:--

2 Door COupe. V-8 Engine. Po~e

V-8 Engine, Auto. Trans.,

Steering, Auto. Trans.,
Radio, Wheel Covers,
Vinyl Canopy Top. C44

Fectory Air Cond., RediD
Tires &amp; Wheel Covers.

Power Steering &amp; Brakes.

$2997

W.w.

.

•

...

~

Ml2

$]997

aJri' ~'rof~Acr •nd Our Price• Do Ow T•W111 ~ lhHIIfl Oit 1~.

83-l

14FT. ALUMINUM boat, 35 HP
motor and trailer . Ph . 446·
1108.
83-3

SET OF 14" Ferguson plows. ·
Ph. 446·1420.
lrt stock over
of the finest'
82-3
lo · choose from , GriD.
Charatan, Savlnelll. Tawney BOAT, 26 ft . Chris Craft cruiser
Jewelers.
inboard, sleeps 4, fully
44-lf
equipped
with trailer . Ph. 446·
•.
3434 or 446-4244.
WHITE cement, all sizes tile In
82-6
•· stock. 12" and 15" field tile
suitable for highway dlfchln~ . '71 RENAULT 10, 4 dr . sedan,
concrete
blocks.
sage ·gray , 9,000 original
GAL~IPOLIS BLOCK CO.•
miles
1 owner. Call · Greg
1231!2 Pfne St., Ph . 446·2783.
Carter, 379-2184.
·
16-tt
82-3
--------CORBIN &amp; SNYQE-R, HOTPOINT•Iove, bed over 100
'SERTA &amp; Bemco Mattresses &amp;
yrs . old, nice kitchen table,
bo
. x springs $29 up . 955 Second
school master's desk. Ph. 446·
1111
4631.
Ave. 4of6.
•·
10.11
79-6
WE HAVE a complete line·of all
new Timex Walches.14.95 to
$25. Tawney Jewelers.

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE
•

Ph. 446-0842

44-lt

or

446-0605 '

,·

.Tf\e 'macadamia nut, a
haro-shelled nut resem~ling
i'"Eiii''tLIZER
a filbert , is Hawaii's third
R EASONABLEJ.rlces . Carl largest crop, ranking behind
Winters. Ph. 2 ·5H5.
69-tf sugar and pineapple.
.j

1o,w·
UM

S695

· OUR USED ECONOMY· CARS

m

·MONACO 4 DOOR" SEQAN '

$"5

d..

65 Muslang2 dr. H.T., V-8, aulo .• P.S., radio,
Plus 64 Comet-s m . 62 F•irlane-$175

- -TF YOU de.slre a pipe. we nave

QIARGER lOPJER

pS

radio.

66 Ford Gal. soo, 2 dr . H .T., v .a, auto., .., ra
h~

mobi le
home, 10x50, extra .nice . Ph .
367-7784.
83·6

7607.

$1295

66 Pontiac Gran Prix 2 dr. H. T., auto ., P.S.f P. B.,

1956 CHEVROLET 283, Hu rst,
new paint. Ph . 446-9297 or 446- '62 CH EV . Super Sport. auto.,
1391.
good ·cond . Carroll Burnette,
84·3
Jr. 446-2415.
-:--- - : - - - -83-3
FOR SALE by owner. 1968
Chev . Impala custom coupe, 1967 PLY. SPT. Fury, 8 cyl ., AT,
PS, vinyl lop. new tires, excel.
PS. PB, AC, blk. with red Int.
.cond. 446-241 2.
Low mil. , very good cond.
84-3
Sl. 100. 256·6405.
83·3
"57 PONTIAC convertible, 8x45
Commodore mobile home . · SYCAMORE and black oak
Ph. 367·7178.
timber, se ll on stump. Ph. 367-

air compressor, 160 lb. gas tllnk , ladders, tobacco setter,

Dinner bell, wood stove, feed bo)( , 1corn sheller, corn ,

USED CARS - GIANT SIZE

SMITH AUTO SALES

Th is sa le consists of: Bedroom sulle, 2 end tables. coffee
table . front locker, dresser, oak breakfast set and cabinet,
wool rug and pad, 2 utility cabinets, Norge r~frlgeralor,
breakfast s~t. G. E. dryer, mangle, card table , metal
wardrobe, 3 wood doors, storm door, meat block. trult
Iars, day bed, Kenmore sewing ma ~hlne, rugoand quilts,
baby bed and springs, high chair, play pen, picnic table,
Iron pipes, iron welding, table, lbg chains, benders, good
lots of hand tools, railroad lack. 9horse power cut-off saw,
plastic pipe, steel traps, 4 wheel drive Jeep, 2 pressure
cookers, boat trailer, good fan travel pull trailer, concrete
blocks, International bull dozer, pull-type brU1h hOif,
horse·drawn mowing mathlne, 2 wheel trailer. air tree
trimmer. 18 month-old collie dog.
\

For Sale

'IJrive a Datsun ...
then decide.

DOUBLE uni t mobile home . Ph .
446-1212.
mileage. Ph . 446-1145 after 6 1971 ZIG-ZAG Sewi ng Machine
JOINTER
planer
and
mini
bike.
lett
In
layaway
.
Beautiful
p.m.
Ph. 256-6569 .
pa stel color , ful l size model.
81·6
1971 DODGE Swinger, 14,000
84-3
All bu ill-in to buttonhole, do
miles. one owner $2,450. Ph .
stretch
sewi
ng
and
fan
cy
60 INCH bay riding horse , very
446-4675.
'67
FORD
Fairlane
GT
2
dr
.
slit ching . Pay just 548.75 cash
gentle, $15Cl. Ph. 256 -6594.
82·3
sedan
,
4
spd
.,
under
or
terms
available.
Tradl!
-ins
81-6
wholesale. Ph. 446-4113 .
accepted . Phone 388-8673.
SPINET-CONSOLE
84-3
80-6
WE H:I\VE in stock a fine
PIANO
-----selection of diamonds and
WANTED
responsible
party to
196615
FT.
STARCRAFT
travel
VACUUM
Cleaner
new
1971
wedding band s. Co l umbia ,
take over spinet piano. Easy
tra
iler,
sleeps
6.
See
at
105
model.
Complete
with
all
Keepsake, and Artcarved .
terms . Can be seen locally .
Liberty St., Pt . Pleasant or
cleaning tools. Small pa int
· Tawney Jewelers.
Wr ite Credit Manager , P. 0 .
Ph
.
675-1429.
damage
in
•hipping.
Will
take
44-lf
Bo• 276, Shelbyv ille , Indiana
84-3
S27 cash or budget plan
46176.
Phone
388-11673.
available.
--~-:--:-:­
J P' S ·Trop ica l Wonderland,
83-2
80-6 FOUR 700Xl~ a pl y tires,
415'12 Main St.. Pt . Plea sant .
moun
ted;
2
pc
.
brown
living
Fish and Suppl ies. Open 11
For Sale
For Sale
room suite, baby car seat ,
3 GOOD used NCR cas h
a.m. till 6 p.m.
SPECIAL SALE
~1 NGER Sewlng.Ma chlne Sales: 1972 BTRACK stereo console in
stroller . Ph. 256-6635.
17-tf
regi ster s, 1electric . Simmons
NEW
36" gas range was $149.95
~
Service
.
All
models
In
lovely
hand
rubbed
walnut
84-3
Pig. &amp; Offi ce Equip. Ph . 446now
$129.95. 25 pet. off all new
stock
.
Free
delivery
.
Ser~lce
finish.
Pay
bal.
of
$96.41
or
-=----:-:-:---::-::-:
1F · YOU- are ·ouilding a ~ mf~,i · 1397.
mattresses and boxspr lngs In
guaranteed. Models pnced
pay $8.21 mo. Ph . 446-0921.
BRACE yourself for a thrill the
54-If
home or re'modeling , see us.
stock . Save up to 550 a set.
from $69.95. Fren ch City . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ 84-lf
first time you use Blue Lustre
.- - - - - We are builders . Di stributor GOOD
Rice's New &amp; Used Furn., 854
to clean rugs. Rent electric
Fatlri c Shoppe. S,inger ap·
CLEAN
LU
MP
and•
for Hotpo int Appliances, · stoker co•I.. C«rl Winters; Rio
Second
(across Jrom Texaco
rovod
dealer.
58
Court
St.
,
1972
DELU
XE
z19
zag
sew
ing
shampooer Sl . Central Supply
P
mach i ne. Thts machine
Allison Electric.
·
Stat ion.) 446-9523.
Co.
9255
446
Grande.
·Phone
245·5115
.
.
154-tf
·
makes buttonholes, darns and
83·11
3oa.tf
84-6 Ph. ,. ·
8-tl

cHARGER

•

84-3

(IT ISN'T CARROL.L'S FAULT)

c!,.

'1495

- - -- - -

•

•

4 dr . hdlp .. gold , black vinyl lop,
cusf. vinyl interior. Sharp.

40 MORE TO CHOOSE FROM
GMAC ... BANK FINANCING .
OPEN TILL 7:00 P.M~

WALNUT Modern style with
AM · FM rad io, 4 speaker

.

•

'1795

'49 Columbia 27x8

mo. Ph. 446-0921.

'

90 H. P .• 11,000 miles, extra nice.

•1795

WAS 11995

Elcona 60xl0
Detroiter 54xl0
Sta r 55x10
Liberty 50x10

emb., makes fancy st itches .
Pay bal. of S48 .50 or pay $6 1959· KENTUCKIAN

Come early for bargains.
.
House to be sold in 2 or 3 weeks at public aution.
D. Hollis Wood, E•ec. of Estate of Jane Davis.
AUCTIONEER: R. E. KNOTTS

pond , fenced in and relldy for

0 . J . WHITE Rd. 1 lOll x 200,
restrl cted building lots. $.500

'

'64
'64
'64
'62

sils, pi ctu r es, towels, gr ips, Ironing board. si lverware, tea.
service.

•

ADDISON - 6 A. next to Tara
deve lopment, 5 rms. and
bath,large melal commercial
size garage, $13,700.
LOTS
·
GEORGES Creek - mobile
· home lots. $300 down, SSO per
month.

1969 1!2 T. Chev. PU
1968 •12 T. Chev . PU
1967 '114 T. Chev . PU
1969 112 T. Chev . PU
1963 '12 T. Chev. PU
1963 SUPER Sport Chevrolet 2
1968 •;, T. GMC P U
dr. hdtp., extra good con 1967 Chev. trl-axle dump trucK
dition , extra clean, auto . with
1968 '12 T. GMC PU
con sole, 327 eng ine, air cond.,
1969'12 T. Chev. PU , auto . .tran s.
ti lt steering wheel , PB, PS.
1966 3 T. GMC
Ph . ~ -9331.
81-3
New II ft . camper
1966 '~'• T. GMC
1967 J EEPSTER 4 Wheel Drive
1966 '12 T. GM~ PU
- Warn Hubs. ver y clea n,
1966' I?&gt; T. GNiC PU
good mechan ical ly , good
1967 •;, T. GMC PU
tires . S1.200. 245-5453.
1966 Chev . Suburban
80-5
1967 •;, T. Chev. PU
- - - c - - - -1963 F600 Ford Truck
1965 CUTLASS 2 door Hardtop
1961 ~ T. GMC
.
P.S. Very clean and depen 1964 3 T. GMC
dable $500. 245-5453.
SOMMER'S G.M.C.
805
TRUCKS, INC.
-----tl3 Pine 51.
1966 CHRYSLER S. W. P.S.
446-2532
P.B. Auto Lights, Excellent
Condition
, 1 owner, $1,695.
1961 CHRYSLER in good
Phone 446-1293 Evenings 446condition. Ph. 446-0212.
0776.
81 -5
80-6

'67 PMC 52x12
'67 Elcona 50x12
'66 New Moon 50xl0

G. E. color cabinet TV, curtain stretchers. kl1chen uten.

have property for sale, don 't

BARGAIN - SO A., 30 A. gooc
farm ground, 20 A. woods, 2
barns, log cabin, VInton. area,
$8.800.

car-

Cust ., 2 dr . hdtp .• air cond ., yellow
with black vinyl lop . Was $1995.

KANAUGA, OHIO

settle for less than nationwide
advertising. CALL STROUT.

l

cond .,

'71 VW bus, ai r cond it ioned, low

large dresser , library table, stand table, oak storage
chest metal breakfast table &amp; 4 chairs, 2 wooden

homes in this area. If you

IN THE 400 Bl ock a 12 room
cattle.
Bri ck house, 2 fami ly , on
large lot . New roof , needs 76 A. - Vacant, 10 mi. out on a
some i nter ior decoration s.
blacktop rd., pond, creek, co.
Price $22,500.
water, some· bottom land,
Office 446·1066
mostly rolling pasture Evenings Call:
$11.900.
Ron Canaday 446-3636
Runell D. Wood 446-4618
163 A.- MONEY MAKER, 56 A..
bottom. 100 A. pasture. 2 large
r oom , deep lot.
barns, extra good set of
buildings, nice farm home
6 ROOMS and bath, large
with 7 rooms and bath, large
reception hall . formal DR. NEW 3 bedroom modular home
shady lawn. Ideal beef, hog
banquet size klkhen, storage
ust completed . 1,368 sq. ft.
and grain setup.
lving area, nat . gas, forced
building and garage.

air

pe led , TV ·antenna, un derpinnlng. metal bldg. Ph .
446-0968 after 4:30p.m.
·'
81 -12 \
_ _ _ __ _ _...:._
1968 KIR KWOOD housefra iler.
Ph . 446-2460 after 5 p.m.
81-6

Truck HeadquarteiS

PUBLIC
NOTICE

carpet, 1'12 baths, cent. air, 2
ca r garage , kitchen wilh 9ar.
disp .. range , hood, diSh ·
washer and lots .of cabinets .

furn ished,

'1995

1968 BUICK ·LeSABRE

1968 BUICK SKYLARK

RECONDITIONED
MOBILE HOMES

50x12,

Factory air cond., gas heater,

40,000 miles. like new cond .

WAS 11995

'1895

Gallipolis

'2295

1971 OPEL ST. WAGON

4 dr .. air cond . • Marlin blu e. local
exec utiv e ' s trade -in .

For Sale .

1970 MOBILE home,

New GMC

PH. 446-3444

Uooer RL 7

extra s harp .

NOW ONLY

1968 BUICK ELECTRA

Smith Buick, Inc.

For Sale

For Sale

AUCTIONEER

OPPOSITE HIGH SCHOOL

"We Beat All Big City Dealer Prices"

2 dr . l:ldlp .• air cond .• vinyl lop.

1968 VOLKS ST. WAGON

4 dr . hdtp .• Fury Ill , 29 ,000 miles.

Gallipolis, 0 .

. Eastern Ave .

)IMME SAYRE

We sell anythin~ for
anybody . Bring your
Items· lo Knotts Communi!Y. flyc1io~ . Ba,r,.~ ,
Corner fhird &amp; Olive. ,
For ·appointment 4£111
446 ·2917. Sale every
Saturday · Evening al
70'Ciock.

1969 PLYMOUTH

•1895

WOOD MOTOR SALES

"SELL THE AUCTION
WAY"

THURSDAY, APRIL 13th

'2795

WAS 12495

ni ce family car.

'995

AUCTION
5ERVICE

walking d istance of new hosp .
Fea ture s· are 3 BR. ww

OVER 1.800 sq . fl . of carpeted
liv ing s· ' · 3 BR, 2 baths,
built-In ~{.'· large living
and dlnir, , • {) ' . pane led

00

112 Ton, standard transm ission , 6 cyl. engine.
Extra Clean.

bedrooms, priced for quic k,
sale . Don 't pass up th is deal. •
Evenings
Oscar C. Baird, 446-4632
D. J. Welherholl, 446-4244
Steven R. Blitz. 446-9583

PUBLIC SALE

CITY - We have 2 homes which

vinyl lop . Sharp.

1969 PONTIAC BONNE

'2495

WAS 12695

1

locc!itian, heart of town, three ·

pete d LR , formal dining
r oom , 2 full bath s, full
basement , and 2 BR apt .

timber with lots of road
frontage. No building .' Price 30A.-2ml.off 160,nlce5 room
$12.500.
home with bath. gooc barn,

84 GARFIELD AVENUE
air furnace. county water, all
WANT a gooc home at a low 7 ROOMS and bath, storage
utilities undergr_q,ynd,
price. Has 2bedrooms, wall to
room and enclosed porch,
washer,
dryer ,
refrig wall carpet In li ving room and
large level lot. Priced for a erator, range, ca rpeted,
both bedrooms. Also one car
quick sale.
L.J&gt;. &amp; D.R., 8.R., lar~e lot,
garage. Sell ing pr ice $10,700.
good location, 4 miles up Rl. 7
FOR SA.LE or long lime leas e', 3 in P,Vn try Air Estate•. Low
WANT to bu~ a lot for your
bedroom new brick home, full
fa• distric t, good school .
mobile home. We have 3 lots
Pr i ce~ right to sell . Inquire at
basement, 2 automatic car
In Rio Grande with city water,
doors. large lot. 2 baths. wall
Corbin &amp; Snyd~r Furn. Co.,
gas and sewer available. Can
to wall carpet, an electric. 4~· 1171, after s, 446-2573.
be bought for $2,500. Small
Located near new hospital ,In
81 -tf
down payment and balance
Hanersvl lle: See 0 . D. Par- - - -- - - - -, like rent. Will sell all 31ots for
sons or Jay Sheppard.
NEW 3 bedroom home with
$7,000.
l
--'
_
_
82·3
attached garage, combined ·
2 ACRE LOT
frame and ..brick e•lerlor,
3 BR HOME In excellent conbuilt-In kitchen with electric
dillon . Va cant and ready to
range and -hood , dishwasher,
move ln. Would constder 2 BEDROOM' trailer with por ch
garbage disposal . gas fur mobile home In trade. Full Bx1 2, on lot 100x l50, has
nace/ completely carpeted /
price. $15.000.
·
natur ai ' gas l ine and well
located Sanders Dr. ·Finan.
Office Phone 44~· 1694
house, Gallipolis Ferry . cing available. Call or see
Evenings
Pri ced $9,500. Ph. 675-2263 or
Nel l Sanders 446-0254 or G. P.
Charles M. Neal 446-1546
675-2561.
Burnette 379·2409.
J. Michael 'N~al 446·1503
76-12
81 -6
- ----'- - ' - - -

ttDuT•

2 Dr. hdtp .• air cond .• red , black

WAS 12995

Conv., air cond . • bucket sea ls ,
mag wheels. extra sharp.
' .

Air conditioner. radio . rear speaker. while-walllir.es. tinted windshi e ld,
bumper protective strips. door guards. carpet savers, power sea l · 6 way.
protective body side moldings. custom vinyl root covenng.

66 CHEVROLET PICKUP

oi l heat. Pri ced under Sl5,000. 1

double oven, bar, and relrig .
with ice maker . Large car -

NEW LI STIN G - Lovely Brick ·
1-- - - - - - - - - -- - -- - - -- - - i less than I yr. old within

RUSSEU.
WOOD

•~•~•

'3950

SPECIAL PRICE

1

home in coun tr y. 7 rm s. &amp;
bath , new furnace, water tap

•2695

1969 OLDS CUTLASS

Electra 225 4-dr. Hardtop

water line / septi c system,
across from elementary.:..

NICELY remodeled 2 story

Custom 2 dr . hdlp .• Marlin blue.
black ·vi nyl top. new E lectra
trade .
......___

WAS 12895

MOBILE HOME , 1'12 ACRES Good drill ed well, county

Erro

ba ths, c"' t.{) e kitchen ,
pa tio, garage, .JO x 200 l ol.
· Out of Town
3 BR- BRICK FRONT
Buyers
NEW home close to new
hospi tal, 3 BR &amp; bath, ca rpel OUR offices on State Route 160
throughout, all eleclric , 120ft .
are now open 7 days a week
fr on tage . Under $20,000.
for your convenience.

--·~

•

~,d~;.~ ~-S-D·L-D ~~;;'.~ T':.:'~ :

SEEING IS BELIEVING
NJC E 3 bedroom home on 1'12
IF YOU like the picture; you'll 'acres. Bi rch paneling. bar In
love th e (. -;,'T'Ie. Moderat e
kilchen $18.500.
price inc "11~' CI;R, utility
rm .• large 11 • .-..-/) ling area,
In Town
love ly built-in 1&lt;1 •..:hen , w-w WE HAVE lwo well -kepi homes
ca r pe t, 2112 ba t hs , 2 ca r
in town. One a three bedroom
garage &amp; sun deck".
home with ai r conditi oning
ALMOST COMPLETED
and a large 14 room hOmeNOW ur _('A construction, fu ll with 3 baths and lots of carpel
brick. ""UJ ·tri c 3 BR, 2 on Second Avenue .

~---1970 OLDS CUTlASS

covers. tinted glass .

452 ·second Ave .
446-3434
446-4775
' .
.

IN-TOWN BARGAIN -

Themselves.

1969 BUICK ELECTRA

2 Dr . Hardtop. 400 2V-V8 engi ne. med. bronze
metallic paint, bro wn vinyl roof. G-78. w-s-w
!Ires, radio. bumper guards . fqc . air, wheel

:l1HIO RIVER

new Medical Cen ter .
Need'S Bedrooms With River View &amp; .Frontege
For less than you would guess. here's a
bea ut if ul 5 bedroom split-level with family
room. ( fir ep lace). basement, 2 car gara'g e,
su n deck. o n the river with boat dock. This is
an unu s ual hom e worthy of your c on s ide ration
in the Ches hire area.

.'

The Mental Cases Most Difficult
to Cure are People Crazy About

SMITH
SAYS'

'72 FORD LTD

2 fireplaces. Price mid 30s.
Ca ll 446-0485.
78,13

road frontage on 4 roads near

loafing shed 4Q:1&lt;60', iool shed
unit. 526 Jackson Pike, Near
16'x30', milk\ house 16'x16'
Holzer Med. Center.
25 Locust St.
with
210 gal. bulk lank , alum .
THIRTY-FIVE WEST
"oward Brannon, Broker
crib. silo, grain cr ib 20'xJO',
APARTMENTS
Off. 446-2674
51 -If an d oth er bldgs . 70 A.
Lucille Brannon
productive tillable l and, 10 A.
4 ROOM house, 816 First Ave .
Eve. 446·1226
limber , bal. in pa sture . Good
rear, $75 mo . rPh . 446-9779 or
fences , 1,303 lb. lob. base. 1/ z
446-9052.
Farms
A. pond . Can be bought with
83-3 or wi thout chattels.
2;4 ACRE S- Tobacco ba se, 80
acr es t i llable , new barn ,
-=:-S-:-L::
E::E"'
P'"'I~;:-G"'"".::R::0::0-M.,-S,- w-eek.Iy
62 A. - 2 mi l south of Mer outstanding farm home with
rates . Park Central Hotel.
cerv ill e on 218. Good barn, 7
DELIVERY
an all bu ll)-in kitchen in color .
.
308 -tt, A. bottom , 25 A. tractor land,
DRIVER SALES
grow 1,850 lb. lob. th is yr . 54 ACRES - 40 acres t lll abl~ .
Older hom e made modern . 4
_,.. WE NEED young men for APARTM ENT for construction
good outbuild ings , good 7
men. Ph . 446-0756.
bdrm . and I balh. Plenty
immediate wo r k . No ex room home , new furnace .
267-11
water. $13,000.
·
perience necessa ry.
6 ACRES - Good ou lbuildings,
·BRADBURY efficiency apt .. 20 4 A. - near Lecta, 20 A.
$3:57 AN HOUR
4 BR home on Slate Rt .
adults onl y. no pels. 729
bollom , 35 A. rol ling, grow
NOT too much for delivery and
Second Ave.
_f
2, 500 lb. lob. this year. 2 50 ACRE S - Loca ted on
sales of sma ll applian ce.
59 1
barns , es tima te d timber
bla cktop roa d. Ideal fo r
450 ,000 bd . fl .. 7 rm . good
FUi.L OR ~
housing or mobile homes.
FUR N. sma l l etf iciencv apt.,
far m home . Plen ty water .
centra l air &amp; Ileal, for I
PART TIME
Price $25.000.
Ho111es
professional ty pe person on ly .
MR . ROW, 446-0677. Monday
5 ROOMS and bath, carpet
Also 3 r oom furn . apt.,
and Tuesday only 9 to 5.
throughout, luxury kitchen,
parking , 'h bl ock from Holzer 72 A. - locarled at J unc tion,
. 84-2 Hospilal , adu lls on ly. Ph . 446Li I tie Bull Skin and Carter
laundry r oom , double ca r Rds. 10 A. tractor land , JJ row
--~-port, storage building, large
0338.
1.700 lb. lob. ihls yr . Some
lot nea r town .
6611
For Rent
coa l, good barn, good 3 bdrm .
house and other out-bldgs. 11 ROOMS , 2'12 baths, fami ly
12 X 60 MOBILE Home locat ed 3 ROOM turn . apl .. all ut ilili es
Pr ice $10,500.
r oom , new kitchen , one floor
paid, adu l ls on ly, free garag e
in Rio Grande 245·5267.
co mplefe"ly ca rpeted , lul l
parking al Libby Hotel.
BO-lt
Anyhr.- 446-1998
basement, new furnace and
74-tJ
E. Winters - 446·3828
central ai r.
AI Arnold - 446-0756
Eve .• J . Fuller - 446-3246
7 ROOMS and bath, fine kif ·
"Eve., J . Berry - 446-3466
chen , LR carpeted, laundry

%BEDROOM TOWNHOUSF.'l

good 4 BR home, basement,
11h mil es f r om Vinton .

WINTE~ CAN

3 First Lady beau ty salon

Co.' s best. Can be bought with
Contemporary in sty le,
luxurious carpeting , in - or w i thout the chattels.
dividually controll ed heat in.Q ,
color
coordi nated
ap - DA IR Y FARM - Th is 162 A.
farm, located on St. Rl . 325
pliances , pr iva te p·a lios,
many other features . Lease and Roush Rd ., has an 8 rm .
modern home , dairy ... barn
$135 mo . Call 446-3772 for
appointment · to see model· 40'x60' with 20 stanch ions,

0

I~

t hese
ap ts.

sectional .

DOC

'7.2 BUICK ELECTRA
4 DOOR.HARDTOP

·THIS IS A NEW CARl

•
today .
ONE ACRE WITH TRAILER :Eight miles from town on 1
10ACRES. Rt . 141, Rural waler.
good county road . Low t~x
distr ict. close to new Gavtn
14ACRES, eight room home, lot
.Plant , 10 x 50 with lwo
of road frontage, Rt. 554 near
bedroom .
Cheshire. $16,000.

liv. rm . for beauty Sa lon. This

Addison. Ph . 446-0294.

Circle's Cafeteria
&amp; Restaurant

three bedroom

property m ay be bought with

CITY - Located at 127 Kineoo,
hou se in good repa ir, some
new copper plumbing and
3 BEDROOM house in
wiring, 5 nice rm . and bath,
Ga llipolis. Shown by appt. Ph.
ful l base .. H.W. fl oor s with
446-2751.
82-3 new carpet and paneling in
liv. r m . Don't walt to see this
one. Pr ice $17,500.
12xSO 2 bedroom mobile home in

your r esidence in
beaUtiful su burb an

World's Largest

84 ~ 4

Write to Harriet Kirkpatrick, NOW leasing new 1 bedroom
1560
Duff ie ld . Drive ,
apartments, adults on ly. Ph.
Columbus, Ohio 43227 or call
675·3450 Pt. PIE03Sant.
collect evenings 861 -8356 .
296-lf
Klelmeyer Rea lt y Co.
·
84-1 FURNISHED apartment.

-

'

INVESTMENT. SR 160 Haners·
ville. Front house Is Spanish
style, three roams and bath .
Por ch and red tile roof. Ideal
for office. Second house is

.

.

basement. near neW hospital.

$51000

buyers for fa rm s, vacant land
and urban property . Call us

beautiful 5 rm . hom e , loca ted
in exce ll ent res idential
section. One owner uses huge

82-tf ADDISON - Modern home,
-.:-- '·
H.W. floors, fully ca]pe led .
SORRY - ·we servi ce only what
Liv . rm. 14'xl 8' . Kitc hen
NICE
CLEAN
2
bedroom
we sell or · under service
mobile home, adults. Ph. 256- 12'x l6', plenly ca bine ts. Fu ll
conlracl. Simmons Ptg. &amp;
" base. Low taxes, gooc schools
1291.
Offi ce Equip: Ph. 446-1397.
82-3 and located where the action
51 -If
is taking place. Price $16,000.
UNFURNI
SHED
4
room
and
RALPH'S Ca rpet &amp; Upn oi sl~y
CITY - Largi!'- 2 slory , 7 rm .
Cleaning Service. Free . bath apartment. Ph . 446-9024.
82-3 older br ick home, full base. ,
estimates. Ph. 446·0294. Ralph
for mal din . rm ., l ~rge kitchen
A. t;&gt;avis, owner .
with plenty cab., huge liv .
COTTAGE,
2
rooms
and
bath
.
9-tt · adults only, $50 mo. P1us rm ., 4 bdrms . with plenty
c:losets. Located on a large lot
- - - - -- -:--,,.,utilities . Ph . 256-6233.
TWU-WAY Radios Sa les a.·
82-3 in the center of town. On ly
Service. New and used CB's,
$27,000.
poll ee .m onito rs , antennas,
SLE
ER
ING
ROOMS
wee_kly
etc .• Bob' s Citizens Band
3 ni ce lots and
rates, f r ee garage parkmg, VIN TON Ra~i o Equip., Georges Creek
storage
bldg
. Priced for a
Libby Hotel.
Rd ., Gallipolis, Ohio. 446-4517..
289-lf quick sale at $4,500.
tom
16-11
FARMS
2 UNF . APARTMENTS. 5 WADDELL FARM - Located 9
mi . oul on Sl. Ri. 775, 5 rm.
rooms and bath, adults on ly :
Wanted
ultra -modern home pl us
Ca ll 446 -1479.
Wanled Farms
finished attic. Plenty water
HAVE cash buyers for farms ,
6~- t f

-

.STROUT
REALTY

THE LEADER SINCE 1900 IN
Ideal rental unit .
SERVING THE NATION'S '
Farm &amp; Ur~an
BUYERS I SELLERS.
I'll. 44UIII
LISTINGS needed . We have

house has 1,888 sq. ft. liv. area

water tank, new plumbing
and new shing le roof. Has

. Rancho Company
Rea 1Estate For Sale ,
Real Estate For S.ale
REAL
TORS, H'eadquarters for
.
County Real Eslate . 91(2 ACRES land 'iol nln~
HOBART, DILLON Gallia
SyCamore Lake . R ~ra wate
For real 'esta le you want ... or
available 8 m)les fro
Real Estate Broker'
don't want .
Gal lipolis, less than $.500 a
P. 0 . Bo• 516
acre. 446-1293 or 446-0776 afte•
First Time
EXCLUSIVE agent for Ra ccoon
Valley Campsites . Ph. 446·
5 p.m. .
80·6
Offered
,2710.
47· If FOUR bedroom 'ranch home.
Country size kitchen, lar ge
House For ·sate ·
ll v irJg . room, . den with BY OWNER . Large lof, brick.
fireplace, utll ity room , 1112
central air, F.A. heal. garage
baths and air conditioning .
and
carport.
finished
Addison Twp. . ·
basement. 7 rooms and bath
Price
Reduced
first floor. 4 rooms and bath

\

prog ram . Call, write or apon each floor . Located on near
ply :
Personnel
Dept ..
2 A. level land . Bought for
Pl easant Valley Hospital. Pt.
replacement cos l.
Rev. Jennings Cremeans
Pl easan t, W. Va . 25550. · Ph .
675-4340.
CITY - Locaied ai 88 Pine St .. 6
IN LOVIN G memory of Rev .
81 -6 rm s. , bath &amp; ut ility rm . This
J enn ing s Cr em ea n s who
house is in good repa ir:. with
passed away 19 years ago.
FOR SALE by owner. 2 story
mos t of in ter ior new. New
brick at 452 First Ave . 7
kitchen. new balh. new hoi

In front of my eyes you faded
away.
.
Deep in my heart are memon es
to stay
Often I visit your grave and

.For Fast Results Use .· The ·Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

I

J

Real Estate For Sal.e ·

Insurance

29 - The Sunday Times · &amp;:nlinel, ~day, April9, 1972

$1911
11 VW Bug , green, 4 sp.,lealherette. radio.
69 VW Bug, dark blue, 4 sp., lealherette, radio, low
S1S9S
m1· .
69 VW Bug, II. blue, auto .. radio, W·lires. Sh1r~ .
SIS9S
69 VW Fast Back, beige, auto., radlo, 1S,OOO m1 . on
eng.
I
$17..
69 Ca mpmoblle, pop-up-top, radio, gas heater, n. co
unit.
·
$2,..
2_.7 Bugs, 4 sp., radio, new paint (sharp cors). II· Sll.. ·
68 Sq. Back, 4 sp .• light blue (runs good) .
S13..
65 Ghia Coupe, 4 sp .. radio, reat•harp car.
$1095
. 65 VW Bug . 64 VW Bug · l-'3 Bugs

Thank you Tri-Countians for
our best start everi

N WAnS V.W

•

195 Upper River Rd .
Gallipolis. Ohio
Ph. 446-9800

AUTHORIZED
DEALER

SERVICE &amp; PARTS
Mon. -12 P.M. Until9:00 P.M.
Tues .• Wed. &amp;· Fri. - 8:00 A.M. Unti15:00 P.M.
Thursday-8:00A.M. Untii9:00·P. M.
Saturday- 1 : 00 A.M. Until Noon

NEW c,.•JRMAN
nn

OPENS ""...,AIGN
~-

CoLUMBUS (UPI)- Frank
B. Sollars, Washlnglon Court
House, has been name4 to
H Dun1a 88
succeed (]eorg~ .
P
chairman of the board of
Nationwide Mulual Insurance
Co., the parent firm of aH
Nationwide
companies.
Dunlap ; who was · board
chairman for 31 years, was
reelected to a new three-year
term as direct« of the Insuran&lt;:e companies.

DAYTON, Ohio . (UPI)
Democratic Prealdentlal
· hopefuiSen. HuberiHwnpbrey

to

.._.ft

.

· ten~~v~

was
_... ID . u
campaign In Oblo SaturdiJ.
1be Mbmesola Slnlllil' wa lo .
fiy Into O.yloo toalcbl f« a
rally wllh bill IUJIIICll'la'l. He
wu to partk:iplte In ~ YOIIIh
Forum ben 8aDda1 blfln
fiyin8 to Columbus f« a a~ before 1be Oblo ·
State Council Ill IIN+Ini+ .

.

~

'i

�..

.. j

.

:

•

..

:10 - ThrSundayTimes-Seniinei,SIIIday, April9,1972 ·

·For Fast Results Us~ '(~e . Sun~y Times-Sentinel Classifieds

. for Fasi Results Use The 'Sruiday Times-Sentinel
Cl~ssifieth
.
SE·E
Business ,Services

.

.

.

'

"l

- ·-- ~--

~i
.•

WANT ADS
Real Estate For Sale
For Sale
lfelp Wanted
INFORMATION
RACINE
- 6 room house, bath,
DELIVERY Driver Sales. We 40.000 TOMATO Stakes, 3c each
DEADLINES
utility roorn , garage, $10,000 ;
need
young
men
for
Imin
lots
of
10,000
or
more
.
Ray
5 · P. M.
Da y
Before
phone 949·4195.
mediate work , no experience
Adam s,
1-304-453 ·3422.
Publication .
necessary
.
$3.51
an
hour.
Not
Huntington.
Monda y Deadlln~ 9 a.m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections

Will be aceepted.u nlil9 a.m. fo1 ,
Day ot Publication
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the

right to edft or reject any ads ·

too much for delivery and
sales of small appliances .
Ful l or par i time. Mr . RoW,

cage

p.m .

Poultry

4-9-2tc
deemed oblectlonal. The
publisher will not be -::--=:;:::=====~
responsible for more than one r-lncorrect. -~~T~~n .

.

For Want Ad Service

5 cents per Word one lnsel'tlon

,Minimum Charge 75c

·and

The Dal'Iy Sent'lneI.

SPINET-CONSOLE PIANO.
Wanted responsi ble party to
take over spinet piano. Easy
term s. Can be seen locally.

- - - - - - - ' --

2 HEREFORD Bulls, Charles
.R. Harris, Portland , phone

843-2693.

4·9-6tc

Hudson

ONE TRAIN case. lr . pullman,

who passed

THE

away three year s ago, Apri 17.

$15
one wardrobe
case,
$5;
24"; Electric
rang e $10;
phone

Sadly missed by husband,
Walte r ,

son,

Larr y

and

992-3818.

MEIGS INN
ROOMS

famil y.

4-9-1fc
:-:c-:-=-:-,..,...,---IN MEMORY of Mrs. Faye
Logan , who passed away 2

years ago, April 8, 1970.

dear Mom , To cher ish our
whole life through ,

dition , phone 667-3364 or M7·
3958.
4-7·31c

- -- -- -

Phon e 985-3371.

and brother , Dick Genheimer

who died April 8, 1968 o~
Okinawa .
'Mr s.
Dian
Genhelmer and fami ly.

'I

16 FT. TRAVEL trailer, self·
contained. ready to go, hitch
inc luded . Phone 773 -5651,
Mason, W. Va .
\
4-5-tfc

4-6·12tp

2 BEDROOM trailer. with air
conditioning, washer, dryer

---------------1971 ZIG-ZAG sewing machine

and carpeting . Phone 773·

4-9-ltc

:----- -- -

left in layaway. Beautiful
pastel color. full size model.
All built-in to buttonhol~. do
stretc h sewing and fancy

5751 .

Card cf Thank's

4·6-5tc

IWOULDi iketo than keachand · 3 BEDROOM apartment, $75
everyone for thei r prayers.
gifts, ca rds , flowers and visits

per mon th , 3621!2 E. Main St.,
see Theodore Reed, Jr .

to me while I was a patient In
the hospital. Aspecial thank s
to the Pleasant Valley
Hospita l, staff, doctors and

4·1·3fc

nurses.
Brace .

Sincerely,

stitching . Pay just $48.75 cash
or terms available. Trade-ins

accepted. Phone

992- 56~1.

4·5·6fc

FURNISHED apartment. 5 ~-=-:=-:-::-------rooms and bath. no pets, 1 VACUUM Cleaner new 1971

Mabel

child accepted. Pick your
camp site, 1,000 ft. river

model. Complete with all
cleaning tools. Small paint

---------

our budget terms Ca ll 992
space at ~ lea Market.
GUN SHOOT. also rifle matches RENT
7085.
Sa
lurday
,
Ma
y
6th
Inside
Bird
- open sites only, Forked
4·5·6fc
Ar
ena
,
Athens,
to
sell
___::
Run Sportsman Club, Sunday, anything. 10' x 10' for $5; 10' x
April 9, 12 noon.
20' for $10 ; Call Lynne Dudek, 1962 RAMBLER Ambassador
4-5-31c
__:
wagon. sell for parts; new
sn9928 .
1ocque conver ter $50. Ca ll9924·4·61c
YARD Sale. Fr iday, Saturday

____

_____

and Sunday, some antiques on

Ljlrkin Street, Rutland.

4-5-Jtc

- - - - --

27 18 af ter 6 p. m . ·

3-30-10tp

For Sale

AMERICAN Stereo19M BLACK Comet Cyclone, 4 EARLY
radio combinat ion , 4 spe'aker
REG ISTERE D Appaloosa Slud on floor. Excellent Cond. $895
so und system , 4 speed
Service, S50 Reg. Mares, $40
Phone 895-3368.
changer. separate controls.
Grade ; Francis Benedum,
4-7·31 Balan ce $71.59 . Use our
Phone 667-3856.
budget term s. Call 992-7005.
3-30-30tc - - - -- TWO 20 lb. bottle gas tank s with ~~------------4_::
· S-6fc
table , S20. Phone 992-39 14
WILL do sewing of all kinds in
--~----

0

after 6 p.m.

my home . Phone 992-6879 .

3-26-JOip

Real Estate For Sale

4·9·31p

-------

SAVE up to one halt. tjnng your MOBILE HOME. porch 16' x
Slh'; wood floor, f iberg lass
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
roof bolted together; easily
151 Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy.
moved ; phone 304-882·2736
4-4-tfc
4-9-3tp

~
,I
.

I

I

Mums, Geraniums, Pans ies,
and• Petunias . Geraldine

Get Rid ofThem
We will protect any single

WHITE

JIEALTY ~

Contact Associate
VERA EBLEN
192

N· 2nd

Cleland, E. Main St. , Racine.
4-2-tfc

-------

992-3020
Middleport

garage &amp; garden , drapes &amp;
carpe tin g
throughout.
Eli mi na te your
Spr ing!
Clea ning , move into this
" Clean As A Pin '' home .
Immediate ac cupan cy
$ 18 ,000
MIDDLEPORT

Large 5 b.r ., 2 bath home in
downtown
Middl eport.
Owner will help fina nc e.
Home , setup as duplex plu s
extra lots across from A&amp;P
2 Beautiful homes on
Broad wa y in Middleport,
both are Ranch Type.

KOSCOT KOSMET ICS an d
wigs . Need e)( tra money? Just
se l l these products . No
restricted territories. Phone
992-5113 .

:----------------4~-2-lfc
.REOUCE sate &amp; las I wTffi
Go Bese Tablet s &amp; E -Vap
" water pil ls' at Nelson Drug s.

3-11-20tp

low-priced, guaranteed ap
pliances and used fur niture

Chest-type freezer Sll5 ; Kuhl's
Bargain Center , Rt . 7, " at the
caution I ight, "
Tupp ers

Pla ins, Ohio. Open to 6 p.m ..
closed Mondays. phone M7
3858.
4-9-6fc

-------

Help Wanted
WAN TED hand y man

for

r oofi ng, shingles, du ct work,

1966' 352 FORD motor , Howard
Birchfield , Rutland. phone
742-4494 .

4-9-3tc
elc. Phone 675-1270 ; after 6
p.m. call 615-4582.
6FT. SI NGLE disc ; one
4+6tp ONE
John
Deere hay fl utter ; one 8
------ft . culfipacker. Phone 992
7058.
.
R~S PON S IBLE person tor
4-9-lfp
established dry clean ing - - - - - -- route . A.e .c . Cleane rs , MEIGS Boat Shop, Pearl Street,
Mason, W. Va.
Middleport ; pontoon boats,
0 -ffc
pickup covers; one used 19ft
-----10.
H -3tc
-K-N-IT_ A
_N
_D
_ St_it_ch-e-s.-·c- oo
- lville,
. Ohio; fabr ics, notions, yarn,
"NOTICE"
ar.pllques; sewing, mending,
e c.
4-9-Hc

CARRIER

WANTED IN
POMEROY

niE DAILY
SENTINEL
992-2156
Court St.

I

Pomeroy

--------

REAL ESTATE
GeorgeS. HobsteUer Jr.,
Broker
Phone 985-41 &amp;.\

Hilton Wolfe Sr .• Salesman
Phone 949-3211
For all your Real
Estate needs see or
call us .

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

EXTERMJNATIO.N
633 Main St.
Zanesville, Ohio

Free Estimate

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITIONING

Dozer &amp; End toadei- work,
ponds , basem ent, land sca pi ng. We have 2 sin
dozers, 2 size , loaders. Work
done bY. hour or contract.
Free Estimates. We also

haul fill dirt, top soil. Dump
trucks and low-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525

'

4 BEDROOMS
10 ACRES - Ranch style home, 1'12 baths, hot
water heat. 2 drilled wells, and foundation for
another home. Salem Township on 124. Olly
$20,000 .00.
OOUBLE APARTMENT
11 ROOMS - 5 with bath, up, 6 with bath
down. Large living-dining . Ideal for a rooming
house . Uptow n location, on 2 lots with larg e
porch and room for several cars to park .
$23.500.00.
NEW LISTING
POMEROY - 3 bedrooms, living paneled,
carpel in 2 rooms, bath, new gas furnace .
Storm doors and windows . Side porch, full
basement . $10,000.00.
ACREAGE
7 ACRES - 01 Route 7 cleared, ready for
housing . Water tap. Olly $10,000.00.
YOU HAVE THE PROPERTY, THE BANK
HAS THE
MONEY, AND WE HAVE THE
IDEAS. PROPERTY IS GETTING BETTER
AND HIGHER, THINK OF IT, THEN USE
. YOUR RENT MONEY TO BUY. SEE US FOR
DETA.ILS.
.
HELEN .L~ TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE .
992-3325
·
·
992-2378

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

Radia~or

.;

Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOlORS. INC.
Ph. 992-2114 ,

OFFICE
MACHINE
REPAIR

Septic tanks installed. George

. TYPEWRITER
616 Main St.
. 423-6551

- GUARANTEEDPhooe 992-2094

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION
&amp;PLUMBING CO.

(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
4.25-t(c
HOUSE BUILDE RS , CAL L.
GUY NEIGLER, RACINE,
OHIO.
.
3·5-30tc

Day Number 992 ·2150

HARRI SON 'S TV and Antenna
Service. Phone 992-2522.
.
6- 11). tfc
c.____ __ __:_

Real

Plumbin-g

O' DE LL WHEEL allghm

70 Gal. 500

w:s-w t ires, wheel covers.

.

.GOBl£ MOBILE

66 CHEV. NOVA

HOMES, INC.

-i Or . station wagon , 6 cy!. engine, automat ic trans .. w-s-w

tires.

Lot Phone 992-7004
If no answer, Ph. "2·2196

LISTINGS

Middleport. Ohio.

Just sold 10 properties
in 7 days - one of these
m1ght
have
been
yours:

6-30-tfc

6 Cyt ., 4 new tires, 38,000 act . miles, one owner.

'1495

60. 3 BEDROOM :
mobile home, $4,000; or Sl!OO .'

67 Ford LTD
• Dr. hardtop, V-6 auto. trans., steering, fac. air, radio,
w-s·w tires, wheel covers, very nice one owner.

"'

- ·"""- =

11!' - 14' ~ 24'.- WIDE

Racine, Ohio

Cr itt Bradford

5-t-lfc ·

3 Bedroom Homes
All
Prices. Hom es with Some

'Acreage. Far ms· (all types)
- l ots .

These properties are
needed by prospects
who are waiting to buy.

. 3-2-tfc:-.---------'~SEWING MACHIN ES. Repair'
service. all makes . 992 ·228 4
T~ e Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sa les and

MILLER

HENRY E. CLELAND,
REALTOR

call collect 446·3608, Byerly

Cons tr uction Ca ., Gall ipolis.

3-24·30tp
SEPTIC TAN!&lt;&gt; •LeANED
REASONABLE rate1!"Ph. 4~
4782, Ga ll ipolis. John Russell'
ONner &amp; Operator.

5·12-tfc

PUBLIC AUCTION
:
Satvrday, April15, 1972 - 11 :00 A.M.
Havtng sold our farm, we will sell the following at the
farm located on SR 325. From Langsville, Oltio go west on
SR 121approx. 1112 miles, !torn south on SR 325. Firstfarm
on right. Walch for sale signs.
MACHI.NERY : Allis Chalmers B with S' belly mount, 2·
way l,-4" plow on original tires. Brillion hay conditioner, 3

pt. Ford cuitlyator. 3 pt. corn sprayer, 3 pt. Int. corn
planter. 3 pt. field eultlvator, 3 pt. somethi'ngi, J. 0. grain
drill, Rubber tired lime spreader, 2-man Mall power saw,
I lot tile block, 8x8x16 ; 2 rolls No. 9 woven wire, grinder, 2
hay feed racks, 180 'gal. stock tank, approx. 125 locust ,
posts, platform scales, 7 stanchions, complete with •

dividers; Meyers jet water pump, 2 hole hog feeder, 50
gal. hog water, tra ctor chains, ladder. &amp; etc.

' HOUSEHOLD: Dinette set &amp; 8 chairs, refrigerator, gas
range. apt. size waSher &amp; dryer, 4 pc. bedroom· sufte. day

bed, dresser, ·chest of drawers, wardrobe, 6 chairs,
rocking chair, 2trunks, end tables, sm. round table, stand,
bookcase, cupboard, hall tree, 2 beds, side board, dish-

. washer, sewing machine, vacuum cl~ner, fuel oil heater,
lamps, radio, high chair, lawn mower, Clinton gasoline
motor, other numerous ,Items.

Mr. &amp;Mrs. Carl Gorby
·Lunch Available
TERMS : . CASH
CARNAHAN AUCTION SERVICE
949-2708-J. Carnahan
.
D. s·milh-949-2033
·
Ractne, O.

.

1969. .LE SABRE 4 DR. H.T.

Transporter De luxe. fou r cyl ., 4 speed , 3 seat model.

, ,WAS

1

Custom St . Wagon, 351 V-8 eng ., automat ic
trans ., power brakes, good tires. clean in·
terlor, beige finish, radio.

1969 atRYSLER NEWPORT

'1999

Custom 4' dr. sed. Real sharp ear. This Is one of the
cleanest used cars In town .

PRICED TO SELL ONLY '1995

"OWN A

CADILLAC,
Of Course You Can"
1970 CADILLAC ELDORADO COUPE
Sliver fin ish, black vinyl lop, black Interior, full power,
Climate Control air, I owner new Cadillac trade.

HORSE &amp;PONY AUCTION

1971 Matador 6 Pass. Wagon

6 cyl. , auto .. real clean 68 model. oYerhead cam.

'1395

PRICED TO SELL

price.

1972 Gold Duster 2 Dr. Coupe
V-8. au tomatic trans., p .-steering , rad io, w-s-wall s, on ly
2,1)00 miles, ful l warranty , new truck tr ade-in .

RAWLINGS
DEPENDABLE CITY

1967 atEV. IMPAlA
6 cyl. , sta ndard trans. A real crea m puff.

ONLY '1095

1966 BUICK LE SABRE

GTO HT Cpe., ~ speed trans ., black vinyl in·
terior with bucket seats &amp; console. Power
steering &amp; brakes. radio, good w·w fires , red
· finish . See this one.

'1795

4 Or. sed. Local owner, real good 66 model.

ONLY '795

1966 PONTIAC CATAI.INA

1969 CHEVROLU
•

4 Dr. Sed. Sold &amp; served by this garage.

'

Biscayne 4 dr . V-8, automatic trans., p.
steering &amp; brakes, white fintsh, blk. vinyl

ONLY '695

OPEN UNTIL 8 : 00 P. M. each evening
except Saturday &amp; Sunday.

69 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE

7:00 P.M.

·Silver metallic finish with black vinyl top, matching
Interior. tull power equlgment. Climate Control air
conditioning.
,
WAS smo

Consignment hone &amp; po y sole at the Gallipolis Livestock
barn . Bring your consignments early . Will start selling
tack at 7:00p. m. Something for everyo11111 See you at the

3900

sa le.

Over 40 New Cadillacs &amp; Oldsmobiles
Now In Stock!

OHIO VALLEY LIVESTOCK CO.
52 Vinton·Ave., Gallipolis

TIME TO TRADEI
I

PUBLIC -HOUSE AUCTION

KARR &amp;VAN ZANDT
Cadillac . Oldsmobile

APRIL 15, .1972. - ll:OO~A.M~

992-534_2
GMAC Finan~lnq Available
Pomeroy
Open Eves . Til 6-Til 5 P. M. Sat.
"You'll Like OurQUall~ Woy of DOing Business"

Location : Rutland, Ohio · Across from Rutland High
School.

·Wanted To Rent

Maytag Wringer Washer, Phllco Deep-Freeze (upright),
Gibson Refrigerator w-lceiT)aker (like newt , Dirietle Set,
Elec. Range , Automatl~ Dry0r, Zenith Color TV, (3)
Platform Rockers, (2) Llv jng roo!" Suites. (2) B&amp;W TV's,
Player plano. piano rolls, Librar,y table, Singer ••wing ·
Machine, Bedroom Suite, Violin, Typewriter (2) Porch
Gliders; Lawn Choirs, Metal Storage Cablnat, Floor
Lamp, (2) Wool Rugs, Artlflelal Flowers, Mirror, Dishes,
Bed Linens, Church Pldure, Dayton Counter Scales,
Cross·cut Saw, 35,000 BT_U Gas Healer, Power Lawn

Employment Wanted ·

HOUSE on small f~rm, phone WILL PAINT roofs or houses.
985-3805.
trim trees. clean out allies.
~-7-61c
basements, etc. 949·3221.
·
i-2-61c

For Rent or Sale

ROOMS, &amp; bath, 80 ft . road L~AL welder. has portabie 1
frontage. M 11o G FoocfMarket, welder wants welding lobs,
· l miles soul~. MlddlePQrt, St. any time, 7 days a week.
Rl. 7.
.
Phone 992·5271.
U-6tp
H ·Jtc

~

Mower, Dresser w-Rnd. Mirror, Dresser w-~ . mirror,

•

------;-Wanted To Buy

$899

Interior.

We Service What We Sell
Open Evenings Till 7 p .m. &amp; Sat. Till 5 p .m .
Service Till 12 Noon on Sat.

.Don't Pop
• •

TRUCK SPECIAL!
1968 Chevrolet

0
0
Smith Nelsan Motors, Inc..
500 E. Main St.

:v. Ton, v.a engine, 3 speed column shift, good

IS" Com·
mercia I tires, loci I 1ownar lrf&lt;. WaSS1695.00. Special .

'

'1549

Fomef'Oy, Ohio

Ph. 992-2174

·Pomeroy ·M. otor Co.,
Your Chevy Dealer
992-2126
Open Ewes 9

r•

Fully Self-contained, Dodge engi ne, 22 tt.,
14,000 actual miles . Come look it over .

For Sale .
'71 CHEV . CHEYENNE Pickup Truck, V·8,
P.S., with ca mper top, orange &amp; white . Extra
nice.

'68 FORD '12 TON PICKUP, V-8, auto . trans. , .
P.S., 2-tone red and white . Extra nice.

70 FORD.~ ...................... ..'1995.
4 Or., auto., P.S.

'69 FORD 'f• TON PICKUP, 6 cyl. , stand.
trans., red &amp; ready .
'56 FORD '12 TON PICKUP, V-8, 3 sp .
' 63 FORD
drive .

'I• TON PICKUP, 4 s p.. with 4 wtu~el

'49 FORD 'h TON PICKUP, V-B, stand. t rans . .

'

USED CARS

'71 CHEVROLET, V-B, auto . trans ., 4 door
H.T .. with double power, factory air .
'69 CHRYSLER NEWPORT, 2 door H. T., V-8,
auto. trans., facto r y air, light brown with vinyl
top.
·
·
I

v.w.

'62
1964 CAMPING TRAILER, fully self contained.
1972 NEW XTZ F iberglass horse tra iler .

"GOOD STOCK OF MINI BIKES"

Pomero,

For Sale

FORMAL, size 10, lace over 10 1,.. ui TEMPO Mobile Horne.
lavender satin, see at Fabric
Piierle 247-2161.
Shop or call 985-.U7. $15.
4-2-61c
3-31 -lotp

--,.-----

69 MERCURY. .................~1995
Marque, 4 dr. H.'T., air condition .

'5500

FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1972

I·

1970 Ford

1970 AVALON MOTOR HOME

ol

I

vacation In this

NOW '2595

~695

'

pletely setup. Beautlfur1
lxallon. owner leaving state.
Phone 949-1892 or 992-5272."
o:t~f]
4'----------~~1-~1~

'

your

1968 PONTIAC LE MANS

.SEE US FOR ADEAL
ON USED TRUCKS1 CAMPERS AND CARS.

and
aluminum
awning ,
alttminum skirting, com -

Coal Heater, Fruit Jars, Reclining Chair, Gas Range,
Baby Bed, Carnival Glass, John Boat, Numerous mise 1
Items. .
.
·
.
·
.
ANTIQUES
· .
f• t Old Trunks, Uphol!litr,cl Pietur• Al~um, Brass Double
Bed .(very pood condition), . o~,s.,r. Pldure .. Framn,
Wash ,Stand w-mlrror, Stone Jars, Lard Press, 20-gel.
Stone Ja_r, Coffee Grinder, (2) 5-Gal. Milk Ca~s. Otd Sola,
Drop-~eaf Table, 8'day Cloc:k . (works ~rfectly) Cedar
Chest. Flat Irons. .
· ·, . '
Not rosponslbt. lor ocd-..11 or tost''prG,.rty.
Lunch servM by RutiMCI Flrem..,•s Auxlllory
Property of Elizabeth Hysell (ct.cnlld)
· TERMS: CASH
OWNER: CARL$. HYSELL
AudlotiHrl: Earl Wltllw ·Max Taylor

1970 Ford -

While with black vinyl top. factory air, low mileage, new

t ires . Thi s is a r eal clean ca r . Take
air cond. beauty .

1967 Volkswagen ...................... '1495

Your·Cork. •

- ---

VINYL ind alummum s1amg
free esfi mates i references:'

-1967 Mercury ..........................'1495

'2495

ONLY '1495
.
.

Our Word Is Our Bond

·~

'

3·29-tfc

4

.

-·'1"195

invite you to compare the quality &amp;
pr1ce of all these used cars. Each one
carJ~~ t~e Ford A-I Warranty!
' ,

. ~rv i ce. We Sharpen Scissors.

CALL US AT ONCE.

6 ~ass .. wagon , V-8, automatic trans., light

w~

Phone 949·3!2 1

door s and windows, carports,
marquees, aluminum siding
and rai ling. A. Jacob. sales
r epresentative . For f ree
esi i mates. phone Char les
Li sl e, Syra cuse, V . V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.

Office "2-2259 Res. 992·2168

shop

Ameri can 6 pass. wagon, six cyl inder , au tomati c t r ans.,
economy is her e

992·2151 OR 992·2152 MIDDLEPORT

'

in, 13,000 miles, automatic trans .• luggage
rack, radio, chrome wheel covers. blue color,
blk. vinyl interior .

6 cyl ., standa rd t rarls. , one owner car. Real nice economy
car.

1968' Rambler ........................ ·$1395

'695

.·
4-9-6tp .:

742-3947

and

Polara 9 pass. wagon , V-8, p.-steering , automatic, air
cond., r eady, wil ling and able

w tires, wheel cover!. . In excellent cond.

and take over payments of :

Sq. Back sedan. local 1 owner, new car trade-

1970 FORD MAVERICK

1965 Dodge " " " """""" " " " " $795

4 Dr., 6 cyl .. auto. trans., p. steer ing , p. brakes, rad io, w-s·

• 1970 1 ~ X

Complete Ser vice

SE~E~U~S~F~O~R~:~
~
Aw
--,
n i-ng-s-.~stdtm ·

REALTY

sure

Coronet'9 pass·. wagon, V-8, p.·sl eering ,
automatic trans ., good rubber, hard to
find one

65 Gal. 500

- - -..,.--- -

1971 Volkswagen

,; ,; USED CARS

See Emerson Jones. Pearl Ash , Hilton
Wolfe , Wallace Amberger,
Dick
Rawling s .

P.

Berry -Mi ller Mobile Home
Sales, 105 Farson Street .
Belpre, Oh io - You will be
glad you did.
4-6-Jtc

~ - BRA DFORD. Auctioneer

TOOAY WE NEED

- CLELAND
·

stock . Be

1966 Dodge:..............~795

B, p.-steering. p.- brakes. automatic trans., ai r con-

69 Dodge Pickup

VEMCO ADD-A-ROOMS. SAVE
MONEY ! 16 FLOOR PLANS .
OR CUSTOMIZE. ADD 3RD :
BEDROOM, DEN, BATH OR •
OFFICE . YOUNG'S MOBILE :
HOME SALES, STATE RT . 7 •
&amp; 35 (BELOW SILVER :
MEMORIAL
BRIDGE) ·
GALLIPOLIS.
'
4-9-lfc :

,.,OBILE ttlMES

livered right to your proleC::t .
Fast
and
easy .
Free
estima tes. Phone 992 -3284.
Goeglein Reatl y-Mi x Co .,

Spring Clean Up Sale On

ditioning , pr ic ed a t $1 ,000 off original factory st icker

&amp;

located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
We are fully i nsured
Complete front end M r vlce,
-.~~~~----=_J
tune up and brake - servlc.e.. SE PT I-C ta-nks cleanea . /;u 11e:r
Wheels
ba lanced
elecSan ita tion, Stewart, Ohlo. -Ph .

You can't · beat these bargains
. anywhere; check and compare prices;
then come &amp; see us .
'

BRAND NE W-NEVER TI TLED-FULL WARRANTY , V-

'595

584 Locust St.
Mjddleporl
Open Dally 10 to 6
Sundo 1:001o5:00

$10.11 . Phone 992-2292.

-

Colony park 10 pass. wagon , V-8. automatic tran s., p.steering , p.- br ... lots of comfort here.

'2395

DEALS

POMEROY
PH. 992-2174

Spring Cleaning Days At
DeJH(ndable City

B i scayn~

2 Dr. hardtop, V-8, auto. tra ns .• p. steer ing , fac. air cond.,

E. MAIN '

MOTO·R S FREE

green, vtnyl tn l enor, new tires.

70x14- 3 Bdr.

SOO

1968 Chevrolet ..................... ,.. '1495

'8.9 5

troQically .
All
,v.:prk
M2·3035.
·
~state For ~ale
guaran teed.
Reasona~le .,
,
2-12-tfc
2 LARGE lois, o rooms, bath ,
rates . Phon e 992-32 13.
11220 Woihington aivd.
garage, cellar $li,500; Maggie
7. 27 -ttc Mobile Homes For Sale
Belpre, Ohio
Whitt ington . Dep ot St. .
7U"'P"'
Rutland. Ohio.
H-:
O-L"'
ST::-:E:-::R-1N
- .G
- -S-E_R_VICE,
1970 MONTE REY, 12 x 60, fully $$$ SAVE $$$. 7 new display
4-7-301p
comple te selec t ion of fabrics
carpeted. 2 bedroom, full size
model mobile homes will be
and vinyl to choose from
utility room , underpinning
HOUSE in Long Bottom , pHoi1e
sold
AS IS . All new - all must
Pi ck -up and delivery. Slater
included. Phone 992-M02.
98'-3529.
be
sold
before Sunday, April
Uphol stering , Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
4·5-6tc
1·28-ffc
phone 992-3611.
9th at 5 p. m. Free delivery to .
your lot . Factory warranties
-;:R"A"C"'I"'
N"'
E----:1-:-0-ro_o_m--:h-ouse ,
3-28-301 p
apply.
Financing available.
bath , basement , ga rage, lwo
.
.
SAVE SAVE SAVE. Before you
$100
deposit
required with
lots. Phone 949-4313.
AUTOMOBILE insurance been buy any mobile home be sure
order
.
All
sales
final. Miller
4-5-JOtp , can c elled?
l ost . your ! and consider t he .huge savings
Homes.
1220
Washington
-----------------opera lor 's license? Call.992you can have on a late model
Blvd .. Belpre, Ohio.
29M.
6· 15tk
~~~.or ,;~~s~~s:~y-~~~~
H -Jtc
--------....,,-----.,.Mobile Home Sales. We have
a huge selection of 8, 10 and 12 · 60X12, 2·60ilroom, ·all-electric,
READY-MIX CUN~t&lt;t I t ae· wide Mobile Homes now In
air conditioned, 8x20 ft . Porch i

WE NEED

Ford Falcon

4 Dr . station wagon, 6 cy l. engine, standard sh ift. fa c. ·
e~tra clean.
a1r,

SPECIAL SHOWING
The G~ay}o/oQd
Premier
By Redman

We have 24 hr. emergency
Serv ice.•·.,

992-1803
992 · 3898 742-4761

6~

•FLAMINGO

Belpre, 0 .

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment'
'5.55
On Most American C. .

'1095

•LIBERTY
•BELMONT
eVAN DYKE

MARl rnA

Comptele
Heali ng.

67 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE
Station wagon, V-8, a_uto. trans .. p. steering, 10 passenger ·
model. dark green wtth sadd le vi nyl inter ior, radio, w-s-w
tires. wheel covers .

MOBILE HOMES

tile and Paneling and Siding .

---c=-c-~--....:....:..

'1595

;.For Best Buys
/ In Top .Quality

.

We have a complete Home
Maintenance- Service lhe
rear around. No matter what
your need . Complete roof or
spouling repair . Interior or
elCterior carpentry . Ceiling

BACKHOE ANO DOZER work.

68 FORD COUNTRY SOUIRE

Dan Thompson
The Pea lin ' Man

Middleport. Ohio
Dba Anthony Plumbing

after 1 p.m.

· ~~----------

6 Passenger station wagon , red with red v inyl upholstery,
390 V-8, p.. steering , p . brakes, automati c transmission. wS·W tires, wheel covers, luggage rack.

i

240 Lincoln St.

ONLY $13,750

'.

•'
·'

For Appointment
. Phone 949-2803

1 car garage, brick front,
wall to wall carpe t.

'

•'
,•

Smallest Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs·

Opens Til5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pom.roy,O.

ON YOUR LOT

.•
•''

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator tc the

Pomeroy Ho.me &amp; Auto

3 BR
HOME

SPECIALS!

.&lt;

B&amp;W HEATING CO.

EARTH ,MOVING

-··

---~----

GOOD refrigerator, S50; go 4
miles east Tuppers Plains,
Rt . 681. turn right, 3rd house.
4-9-lotp
-C-HE_ R
_R
_Y
_ bed
-an_d_n-lg_h_t s- tand;
cherry gun cabinet. All Early
Ameri ~an style ; 'one good
~~~~~~. l awn mower. Pho~e
4-9-3tc

w·RITTEN WARRANTY
Call Colleci614-452-J 158

" WE ' RE HONEST
Ph. 992-i608 Pomeroy, Ohio .

P.O. Box 101 , Pomeroy

NEW LISTING
POMEROY - 8 rooms carpeted, ~ be droom s,
modern kitchen, bath, gas forced air furnace .
Froni and back porc hes . Lots of shrubbery.
Full basement. 2 car garage. A r ea l nice piece
of proper ly. $21 ,000.00.

4-9-6tp
-----CHE CK wi th Kuhl's first for

•149.50

Y.CITY

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

3031. Tuppers Plains.

dwelling .residence for

POMEROY
J BR , Ph bath , basement.

110 Mechanic Street

1970 12 x 60 mobile home ; take
over rema inder of payments ,
1961 Comet, $100. Call M1·

MEIGS, W.VA. 25260
MEIGS992-1151
MASON 773-5634

TER"l.JTES•• TERMITES,

JOHN

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker

-=--- - - - ------CLE LAND'S GREENHOUSE : MUST sacrifice due to divorce

Let us show our Silmp les .
Let-Us-Do -Over-Your
Bathroom or Kitchen
In sured-Bu t best of all

-==========~
t
1L=========~

con trols. Balance $63 .56 . Use

..

.

CERAMIC TILE

" Everything In Home
Maintenance"

Elementary School. Phone
99U384 to sr;e.
,
1!-7.lfc,,

•

I I

FOR THE BEST IN

CONST.

air fumace. Near Pomeroy .~

frontage . Trailer space. M S.
damage in ~hipping . Will take
G Food Market, 3 miles,
$27 cash or budget plan Several ni ce building lots in
south, Middl eport, St. Rt. 1.
available. Phone 992-5641.
Pom eroy, Middleport and
Notice
_____________4_
·7-3tc ::-::-:-:........-:---------·•_:·H ie Minersville . Ranging fr om
shoo . SJ6oo.
A SHOTGUN and rifle match
SLE.EPI
NG
rooms
in
mobiie
2
RIDIN
G
horses,
phone
949.
will be hel~ Sunday, Apr il 9,
home for men only, 818 E.
3196.
30 Acres , modern 3 b.r . home
at 12 o'clo'tk, Rutland Gun
just off Rt . 7.
Main St ., Pomeroy, next to
4-5-llp
J;lu.J1...N.!W1..1Jma .(lpad, Hand
Tom's
Carry
Out.
phone
992choked shotguns will be 3254.
:':;9j6t9 -;-;
v-:. w::-.--c~
a-m_p_m_o"'bi,le__:
.. with 10-4 Acres, modern 3 b.r
handleapped. Rifles will be In
home close to Eastern
top and tent, mileage
two classes. Open sig hts and _________________•_·Hie raised
21,000 - $2,495 ; phone 992· School.
scope, bench rest and off
hand . Rifle shooters will 6-ROOM brick house, wall to 3076.
of land on St . Rt. 143,
furnish own shells . Any
wall carpeting , paneled walls, ________________4_:·Hic 8 ACRES
approximately 1 mile SE of
calibre rifle, muzzle loaders
dishwasher and disposal . will
Harrisonv ill e, water tap paid ;
Included.
renlfurnlshed or unfurnished. ALLI S CHALMERS we tractor
'Phone
742 -4095.
If interested write Box 7?&lt;).R and equipment, $550. Allis
• 4·6-Jtc
4-6·12tp
In c-o The Da lly Sentinel,
Chalmers Combine, $350.
Phone 742-3656.
GU N SHOOT Sunday, Apr il 9, 1 Pomeroy.
4·_9-10tp WANTED - Homes $10,000 and
4-H ic _____ _ _ _ _
p. m. Factory choked guns
un der ; any condition; buyer s
only. Second place shooters ---,--- -wi ll repair ; White Real ty
get free shot In next match. FURIQISHED and unntnlshed WH.ITE electric range in elC ·
Offi ce 992-3020.
ce llen t conditi on, $50; Forest
apartments. Close trl !.Choo(
Assorted meats. Racine Gun
4-6-61c
M. Guth rie. Alhens , Ohio,
Phone 992·5434.
,
C.lub.
phone 592-2158.
10-IB·Ifc
4-~·3fc
3-31 -1otp SIX ROOM house, 133 Bunernut '
'
2
HED
ROOM
mobile
home
w1th
Ave. Contact Ed Hedr ick, 2137
FI GHT fatig ue wiTn L!ppies, the
condi tioning In Racine WALNUT 'stereo, 4 speaker . Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
great Iron pi ll. Only $1.98 at . air
area ; phone 992-6329.
sound system , 4 speed dual
Ohio, phone 237·4334.
Nelson Drugs.
3-23-tfc
volume control , se parate
11 -21 -.lf,c .
3· 17-30tp

4-9-llc
----------------

&amp; Remodeling

SON

NICE 2-story home with full
ba sement, 2 lots. new forced

1969
BSA 250 cc, just
overhauled, excellent con-

----------~-----4~-9-ltc ROOM &amp; BOARD. Chester,
IN LOVING memory of our son

- - ----

22-250 with scope, cos t over

PH. 992-3629

Sadly missed by the family.

.
4·7-1.0fp

Johnson Masonry

and

4-4-6tp

$200, special new, $125; phone
742·3656. .
_;__ __ _ __ _4·_7-1otp

Day , Week, Month
Libera I Rates

But swee tn ess will l inger
forever, As we cher ish the
memor y of you .

&amp;

KITCHEN

basement ; Tuppers Plains,
Ohio . Laurence
Balser.
$9,000; phone M7-J693.

-------REMINGTON Model 700 AOL,

by

We have ~n ly your memory.

\.

4·1·2fc

:::-:=-::-:---------- - -

IN LOVING memory of Mrs.
Irene

Typewriter

Adding Machine Repair ..

Write Credit Manager, P. 0 . HOUSE and lots on Wright
Street, Pomeroy. phone 142·
Box 276, Shelbyville, Indiana
5937.
46176.
4-4-6tc
4·1·2fp

apartments ideat for couple s.
Contact McClu r e's Dairy Isle.
992·5248 or 992-3436.

In Memory

supplies.

Make reservations for you r '
private parties, banqUets, 1
special occasions .
Idea I for meeting place wi th or without kit chen 1
privileges.
Individual Cater ing

';::========::=;

HARTFORD

••
·'.•

ESFOR

.

GALLI POLIS, OHIO

-,·'.•.·

clover, timothy , alfalfa, hay, 3 lltDROOM hom e on two·
Pick-up &amp; Delivery
thirds acre lot ; all con 65c per bale. phone 985-3809.
veniences
;
at
Gallipolis
Will seat up to 150 people.
'!:,-IOle
Ferry, W. Va. only $10,000;
PHONE
67~3628
16 FT. BOAT and trailer, 4 come see ; Call615-3666or 675·
Phone
cylinder Inboard motor. M &amp;
3886 PI, Pl easant, W. Va.
424 Main St.
Pt. Pleasant
,992-3975
992-57&amp;
G Food Market, 3 mll essouth,
4·4·18tp l::=========~
Middleport, St. Rt. 7..
r
.
4-7-Jfc , 7 ROOMS and bath. new carpet,

25 Per Cent Discount on paid .
ads and ads paid within 10
days .
Not A Motor Route .
CA~D OF THANKS
. &amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for so word minimum. .
Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Ph. 614-992-2156
Additional 25c . Charge per . L.....:..:::~:...:..:::.:::..:~!:..._..J
Advertisement. ,
FOr RenI
OFFIC'E HOURS
8:30a .m . to 5:00 p.m. Dally, ONE
BEDROOM trailer
8: 30 a. m. to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday .

Complete line of office
equipment, furniture &amp;

-----GOOD MIXED second cutting

MA$0N

12 ce'nts per word three ·
consecutive insertions.
18 cents per word, six cOn~ecutive insertions.

.•

Otthid Room.

· &amp;

399 W. Main, Pomeroy, 992·
2164.
4-9-ltc

Carriers For

.

housing

automation . Modern Poultry ,

WANTED!

.,

av~ilable. ·

grown

.

For Best

SMilH NELSON MOTORS. INC.

MA.RTIN FORD

.,·l

The

H&amp;N DAY OLD or started
Leghorn pullets. Both floor or

446 -0617,
Monday
an d
Tuesday on ly, 10 a.m . to 5

).

.l

4-9-ltc

~-----

•

. 31 - The Sunday Times - Sentinei. SIIIda• A .19. .
"
" prt • 1972

69 FORD ............. ~ ........... ~1795
Torino, 2 dr . H. T .

68 REBEL .......................
sags
P.S.
2 dr . H. T., auto.,

63 VOLKSWAGEN.,............S295
63 BUICK'...........~............:.s295
·4 dr. sedan . Runs good .

·

POODLE puppies. Sliver Toy,
DROP leaf table - $15 ; baby
Park view K.,nels, Phon•992
bed - $10; high- dialr - SJi . S«J,
Columbia Grofonola - $15;
gultor·amp. outfit - $50; old
oil lamps - SIO; phone 94'1· ALUMINUM car -top ·bOats,
319~.

3·29·10tp

won' ! rust at rot, sate and

ligh tweight. 10, 1213 and 14 fl .
in stock now. Phone 992·6256
alter 5 p. m ~

TROPICAL - . FISH, taney
J.JII.~tc
guppies, angels and breeden;
Bellas apd supplies. Phone •
.
992·SU3.
,,•
SHOWALTER'S Wet Pet Snap,
12-JO.Hc · Chester, Ohio, Phone '115-3356,
~~--~------Tropical llsh and supplies.
l-28-301p
FARMALL H Tractor, New
ldN No. 18 manure spreader, "STAR" kitts rats quickly .
Georg• M. Collins, Rt . 1,
Sure. 2'12 lbs. $1.69; EbersReedsville, Ohio. Pltone 614·
bach Hdwe .• Sugar Run Mills,
667·341. '
Plekens Hdwe., Malon.
3-19-3011

16'12 ft. Red Fish

BOAT &amp; TRAILER.......... }500
40 horse motor, auto. starter, windshield,
lights .

••••••••••••••••••••
:
NEW-NEW'-NEW
:

•
BOAT &amp; .TRAILER.............ssoo •

••

15 If, Shell· Lake

Mark 78 Mercury
windshield.

~otor,

auto.• starter, lights,'

RIGGS BROS•• INC.
USED CARS

=:-- - - - -

' o.

Ph. 915-4100

:

1972 CHEVROLn.P.CKUP

Wlllt I fl. wide body, front dlse brakes, ~uble walt c~ ·•
and body construdlon, 307·V-1 engl1111, TurJoo.Hy~ramalte •
, tro111., Posltredloo rear axle, heovy duty springs, duot •
. • mirrors, 5 heavy duty H-71 ttr111, mud &amp; snow rear, rear
· • l1wp bumper. foam 10111, lnstrum.,t gaugos, bHutlfut •
• willie &amp; medium gnen.
. .
· ,
•

•

UstS3530

'

· SPECIAL

-E~PJ~t~ent

~~-----

I

$2898 ••.

:

POMEROY MOTOR CO. :

a

I

:.

Sales

:

•
•

AVAILABLE
for
house·
Located on S. Rt. 7
- · Olesttr,
cleaning, baby slttlng. lkltch.,
•• Prices
or• Lower
At P-roy
Motor
·ot:O I FURNi'tURE, dls~es, help for one week. Send card
eloc:ks, brass bedt, sliver c-o Mrs. J. Grueser1 Rt. 1,
\
Auto Sal&amp;$
~o
Auto Sales· ·
donors
or
comple'- Minersville. Ohio.
'65
MUSTA)IjG,
219,
llandard,
1966
, •ALCOtt : f-uturo ~PQI'I 1967 VOlKSWAGEN good
households. Write M. 0,
3·30-101p
I1IIW motQr, gOQd condition
1'MO DODGE for peril -.......
Coupe, 2 door, automatic, 6
Miller, At. ~; Pomeroy, Oltlo.
condition, phone ac-2762.
992·2307,
' r ·-~
phone 742-.Wt. .
'
cylinder,
$600;
phone
9.W-2951
.
\ Call 992-6271 .
.
'
...,.lip
,
4-9·3tC
H ·5tc
3-16-Hc ·Auto
=::-::=::-----4:..:
·7-Jtp
Your Chet7Y Dealer
'
.
1960 ~-500 ~A RM truck, green 1937 FORD COUPE, new 12 ge.
:-----,-,---1970 W- ~ OLDSMOBILE · 442. 1961 FORD truck tractor, 220
bed-~atfle rac~s. good t.lres,
automatic, factory ~tereo
c.vmmlns diesel, sleeper cab, 196SINTERNATIONALScout, 4
870 Wlngmasttrahotgun ; 4.10
wheel drive ; 35,000 mll!s, 1
*anted
good condition, Harold
tope
;
lots
of
extras;
realty
atr
tag_
axle.
Will
trade,
goers for Dona reerend ; Sun
992-2126
Open Eves. TII8
Fomeroy
CA
ER work Iff - any
Brewer, Long Bottom, phone
Harold Brewer. Long Bottom, owner, good eondlllon ; many
Tach wltlt llllldlng. unit, Hudt
kind . Pt,.,n, o..ter, Ottlo 742· nice; pri&lt;W,right; phone 992·
extras;
phone
992-7271.
985-3554.
phone 985-3554.
lUI after 5 p.m.
W1111ner: !&gt;'- 94J-3465.
f/79.
~·6·61c
3·2$-301P
3·31·11&lt; ---------~::..:~9-tfc
oU-llp
--~-----..:..:..:"-9-Hc

ales

•

••.

,

••••••••••••••••••••
'

-----~~--

'·

'

�..

.. j

.

:

•

..

:10 - ThrSundayTimes-Seniinei,SIIIday, April9,1972 ·

·For Fast Results Us~ '(~e . Sun~y Times-Sentinel Classifieds

. for Fasi Results Use The 'Sruiday Times-Sentinel
Cl~ssifieth
.
SE·E
Business ,Services

.

.

.

'

"l

- ·-- ~--

~i
.•

WANT ADS
Real Estate For Sale
For Sale
lfelp Wanted
INFORMATION
RACINE
- 6 room house, bath,
DELIVERY Driver Sales. We 40.000 TOMATO Stakes, 3c each
DEADLINES
utility roorn , garage, $10,000 ;
need
young
men
for
Imin
lots
of
10,000
or
more
.
Ray
5 · P. M.
Da y
Before
phone 949·4195.
mediate work , no experience
Adam s,
1-304-453 ·3422.
Publication .
necessary
.
$3.51
an
hour.
Not
Huntington.
Monda y Deadlln~ 9 a.m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections

Will be aceepted.u nlil9 a.m. fo1 ,
Day ot Publication
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the

right to edft or reject any ads ·

too much for delivery and
sales of small appliances .
Ful l or par i time. Mr . RoW,

cage

p.m .

Poultry

4-9-2tc
deemed oblectlonal. The
publisher will not be -::--=:;:::=====~
responsible for more than one r-lncorrect. -~~T~~n .

.

For Want Ad Service

5 cents per Word one lnsel'tlon

,Minimum Charge 75c

·and

The Dal'Iy Sent'lneI.

SPINET-CONSOLE PIANO.
Wanted responsi ble party to
take over spinet piano. Easy
term s. Can be seen locally.

- - - - - - - ' --

2 HEREFORD Bulls, Charles
.R. Harris, Portland , phone

843-2693.

4·9-6tc

Hudson

ONE TRAIN case. lr . pullman,

who passed

THE

away three year s ago, Apri 17.

$15
one wardrobe
case,
$5;
24"; Electric
rang e $10;
phone

Sadly missed by husband,
Walte r ,

son,

Larr y

and

992-3818.

MEIGS INN
ROOMS

famil y.

4-9-1fc
:-:c-:-=-:-,..,...,---IN MEMORY of Mrs. Faye
Logan , who passed away 2

years ago, April 8, 1970.

dear Mom , To cher ish our
whole life through ,

dition , phone 667-3364 or M7·
3958.
4-7·31c

- -- -- -

Phon e 985-3371.

and brother , Dick Genheimer

who died April 8, 1968 o~
Okinawa .
'Mr s.
Dian
Genhelmer and fami ly.

'I

16 FT. TRAVEL trailer, self·
contained. ready to go, hitch
inc luded . Phone 773 -5651,
Mason, W. Va .
\
4-5-tfc

4-6·12tp

2 BEDROOM trailer. with air
conditioning, washer, dryer

---------------1971 ZIG-ZAG sewing machine

and carpeting . Phone 773·

4-9-ltc

:----- -- -

left in layaway. Beautiful
pastel color. full size model.
All built-in to buttonhol~. do
stretc h sewing and fancy

5751 .

Card cf Thank's

4·6-5tc

IWOULDi iketo than keachand · 3 BEDROOM apartment, $75
everyone for thei r prayers.
gifts, ca rds , flowers and visits

per mon th , 3621!2 E. Main St.,
see Theodore Reed, Jr .

to me while I was a patient In
the hospital. Aspecial thank s
to the Pleasant Valley
Hospita l, staff, doctors and

4·1·3fc

nurses.
Brace .

Sincerely,

stitching . Pay just $48.75 cash
or terms available. Trade-ins

accepted. Phone

992- 56~1.

4·5·6fc

FURNISHED apartment. 5 ~-=-:=-:-::-------rooms and bath. no pets, 1 VACUUM Cleaner new 1971

Mabel

child accepted. Pick your
camp site, 1,000 ft. river

model. Complete with all
cleaning tools. Small paint

---------

our budget terms Ca ll 992
space at ~ lea Market.
GUN SHOOT. also rifle matches RENT
7085.
Sa
lurday
,
Ma
y
6th
Inside
Bird
- open sites only, Forked
4·5·6fc
Ar
ena
,
Athens,
to
sell
___::
Run Sportsman Club, Sunday, anything. 10' x 10' for $5; 10' x
April 9, 12 noon.
20' for $10 ; Call Lynne Dudek, 1962 RAMBLER Ambassador
4-5-31c
__:
wagon. sell for parts; new
sn9928 .
1ocque conver ter $50. Ca ll9924·4·61c
YARD Sale. Fr iday, Saturday

____

_____

and Sunday, some antiques on

Ljlrkin Street, Rutland.

4-5-Jtc

- - - - --

27 18 af ter 6 p. m . ·

3-30-10tp

For Sale

AMERICAN Stereo19M BLACK Comet Cyclone, 4 EARLY
radio combinat ion , 4 spe'aker
REG ISTERE D Appaloosa Slud on floor. Excellent Cond. $895
so und system , 4 speed
Service, S50 Reg. Mares, $40
Phone 895-3368.
changer. separate controls.
Grade ; Francis Benedum,
4-7·31 Balan ce $71.59 . Use our
Phone 667-3856.
budget term s. Call 992-7005.
3-30-30tc - - - -- TWO 20 lb. bottle gas tank s with ~~------------4_::
· S-6fc
table , S20. Phone 992-39 14
WILL do sewing of all kinds in
--~----

0

after 6 p.m.

my home . Phone 992-6879 .

3-26-JOip

Real Estate For Sale

4·9·31p

-------

SAVE up to one halt. tjnng your MOBILE HOME. porch 16' x
Slh'; wood floor, f iberg lass
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
roof bolted together; easily
151 Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy.
moved ; phone 304-882·2736
4-4-tfc
4-9-3tp

~
,I
.

I

I

Mums, Geraniums, Pans ies,
and• Petunias . Geraldine

Get Rid ofThem
We will protect any single

WHITE

JIEALTY ~

Contact Associate
VERA EBLEN
192

N· 2nd

Cleland, E. Main St. , Racine.
4-2-tfc

-------

992-3020
Middleport

garage &amp; garden , drapes &amp;
carpe tin g
throughout.
Eli mi na te your
Spr ing!
Clea ning , move into this
" Clean As A Pin '' home .
Immediate ac cupan cy
$ 18 ,000
MIDDLEPORT

Large 5 b.r ., 2 bath home in
downtown
Middl eport.
Owner will help fina nc e.
Home , setup as duplex plu s
extra lots across from A&amp;P
2 Beautiful homes on
Broad wa y in Middleport,
both are Ranch Type.

KOSCOT KOSMET ICS an d
wigs . Need e)( tra money? Just
se l l these products . No
restricted territories. Phone
992-5113 .

:----------------4~-2-lfc
.REOUCE sate &amp; las I wTffi
Go Bese Tablet s &amp; E -Vap
" water pil ls' at Nelson Drug s.

3-11-20tp

low-priced, guaranteed ap
pliances and used fur niture

Chest-type freezer Sll5 ; Kuhl's
Bargain Center , Rt . 7, " at the
caution I ight, "
Tupp ers

Pla ins, Ohio. Open to 6 p.m ..
closed Mondays. phone M7
3858.
4-9-6fc

-------

Help Wanted
WAN TED hand y man

for

r oofi ng, shingles, du ct work,

1966' 352 FORD motor , Howard
Birchfield , Rutland. phone
742-4494 .

4-9-3tc
elc. Phone 675-1270 ; after 6
p.m. call 615-4582.
6FT. SI NGLE disc ; one
4+6tp ONE
John
Deere hay fl utter ; one 8
------ft . culfipacker. Phone 992
7058.
.
R~S PON S IBLE person tor
4-9-lfp
established dry clean ing - - - - - -- route . A.e .c . Cleane rs , MEIGS Boat Shop, Pearl Street,
Mason, W. Va.
Middleport ; pontoon boats,
0 -ffc
pickup covers; one used 19ft
-----10.
H -3tc
-K-N-IT_ A
_N
_D
_ St_it_ch-e-s.-·c- oo
- lville,
. Ohio; fabr ics, notions, yarn,
"NOTICE"
ar.pllques; sewing, mending,
e c.
4-9-Hc

CARRIER

WANTED IN
POMEROY

niE DAILY
SENTINEL
992-2156
Court St.

I

Pomeroy

--------

REAL ESTATE
GeorgeS. HobsteUer Jr.,
Broker
Phone 985-41 &amp;.\

Hilton Wolfe Sr .• Salesman
Phone 949-3211
For all your Real
Estate needs see or
call us .

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

EXTERMJNATIO.N
633 Main St.
Zanesville, Ohio

Free Estimate

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITIONING

Dozer &amp; End toadei- work,
ponds , basem ent, land sca pi ng. We have 2 sin
dozers, 2 size , loaders. Work
done bY. hour or contract.
Free Estimates. We also

haul fill dirt, top soil. Dump
trucks and low-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525

'

4 BEDROOMS
10 ACRES - Ranch style home, 1'12 baths, hot
water heat. 2 drilled wells, and foundation for
another home. Salem Township on 124. Olly
$20,000 .00.
OOUBLE APARTMENT
11 ROOMS - 5 with bath, up, 6 with bath
down. Large living-dining . Ideal for a rooming
house . Uptow n location, on 2 lots with larg e
porch and room for several cars to park .
$23.500.00.
NEW LISTING
POMEROY - 3 bedrooms, living paneled,
carpel in 2 rooms, bath, new gas furnace .
Storm doors and windows . Side porch, full
basement . $10,000.00.
ACREAGE
7 ACRES - 01 Route 7 cleared, ready for
housing . Water tap. Olly $10,000.00.
YOU HAVE THE PROPERTY, THE BANK
HAS THE
MONEY, AND WE HAVE THE
IDEAS. PROPERTY IS GETTING BETTER
AND HIGHER, THINK OF IT, THEN USE
. YOUR RENT MONEY TO BUY. SEE US FOR
DETA.ILS.
.
HELEN .L~ TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE .
992-3325
·
·
992-2378

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

Radia~or

.;

Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOlORS. INC.
Ph. 992-2114 ,

OFFICE
MACHINE
REPAIR

Septic tanks installed. George

. TYPEWRITER
616 Main St.
. 423-6551

- GUARANTEEDPhooe 992-2094

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION
&amp;PLUMBING CO.

(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
4.25-t(c
HOUSE BUILDE RS , CAL L.
GUY NEIGLER, RACINE,
OHIO.
.
3·5-30tc

Day Number 992 ·2150

HARRI SON 'S TV and Antenna
Service. Phone 992-2522.
.
6- 11). tfc
c.____ __ __:_

Real

Plumbin-g

O' DE LL WHEEL allghm

70 Gal. 500

w:s-w t ires, wheel covers.

.

.GOBl£ MOBILE

66 CHEV. NOVA

HOMES, INC.

-i Or . station wagon , 6 cy!. engine, automat ic trans .. w-s-w

tires.

Lot Phone 992-7004
If no answer, Ph. "2·2196

LISTINGS

Middleport. Ohio.

Just sold 10 properties
in 7 days - one of these
m1ght
have
been
yours:

6-30-tfc

6 Cyt ., 4 new tires, 38,000 act . miles, one owner.

'1495

60. 3 BEDROOM :
mobile home, $4,000; or Sl!OO .'

67 Ford LTD
• Dr. hardtop, V-6 auto. trans., steering, fac. air, radio,
w-s·w tires, wheel covers, very nice one owner.

"'

- ·"""- =

11!' - 14' ~ 24'.- WIDE

Racine, Ohio

Cr itt Bradford

5-t-lfc ·

3 Bedroom Homes
All
Prices. Hom es with Some

'Acreage. Far ms· (all types)
- l ots .

These properties are
needed by prospects
who are waiting to buy.

. 3-2-tfc:-.---------'~SEWING MACHIN ES. Repair'
service. all makes . 992 ·228 4
T~ e Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sa les and

MILLER

HENRY E. CLELAND,
REALTOR

call collect 446·3608, Byerly

Cons tr uction Ca ., Gall ipolis.

3-24·30tp
SEPTIC TAN!&lt;&gt; •LeANED
REASONABLE rate1!"Ph. 4~
4782, Ga ll ipolis. John Russell'
ONner &amp; Operator.

5·12-tfc

PUBLIC AUCTION
:
Satvrday, April15, 1972 - 11 :00 A.M.
Havtng sold our farm, we will sell the following at the
farm located on SR 325. From Langsville, Oltio go west on
SR 121approx. 1112 miles, !torn south on SR 325. Firstfarm
on right. Walch for sale signs.
MACHI.NERY : Allis Chalmers B with S' belly mount, 2·
way l,-4" plow on original tires. Brillion hay conditioner, 3

pt. Ford cuitlyator. 3 pt. corn sprayer, 3 pt. Int. corn
planter. 3 pt. field eultlvator, 3 pt. somethi'ngi, J. 0. grain
drill, Rubber tired lime spreader, 2-man Mall power saw,
I lot tile block, 8x8x16 ; 2 rolls No. 9 woven wire, grinder, 2
hay feed racks, 180 'gal. stock tank, approx. 125 locust ,
posts, platform scales, 7 stanchions, complete with •

dividers; Meyers jet water pump, 2 hole hog feeder, 50
gal. hog water, tra ctor chains, ladder. &amp; etc.

' HOUSEHOLD: Dinette set &amp; 8 chairs, refrigerator, gas
range. apt. size waSher &amp; dryer, 4 pc. bedroom· sufte. day

bed, dresser, ·chest of drawers, wardrobe, 6 chairs,
rocking chair, 2trunks, end tables, sm. round table, stand,
bookcase, cupboard, hall tree, 2 beds, side board, dish-

. washer, sewing machine, vacuum cl~ner, fuel oil heater,
lamps, radio, high chair, lawn mower, Clinton gasoline
motor, other numerous ,Items.

Mr. &amp;Mrs. Carl Gorby
·Lunch Available
TERMS : . CASH
CARNAHAN AUCTION SERVICE
949-2708-J. Carnahan
.
D. s·milh-949-2033
·
Ractne, O.

.

1969. .LE SABRE 4 DR. H.T.

Transporter De luxe. fou r cyl ., 4 speed , 3 seat model.

, ,WAS

1

Custom St . Wagon, 351 V-8 eng ., automat ic
trans ., power brakes, good tires. clean in·
terlor, beige finish, radio.

1969 atRYSLER NEWPORT

'1999

Custom 4' dr. sed. Real sharp ear. This Is one of the
cleanest used cars In town .

PRICED TO SELL ONLY '1995

"OWN A

CADILLAC,
Of Course You Can"
1970 CADILLAC ELDORADO COUPE
Sliver fin ish, black vinyl lop, black Interior, full power,
Climate Control air, I owner new Cadillac trade.

HORSE &amp;PONY AUCTION

1971 Matador 6 Pass. Wagon

6 cyl. , auto .. real clean 68 model. oYerhead cam.

'1395

PRICED TO SELL

price.

1972 Gold Duster 2 Dr. Coupe
V-8. au tomatic trans., p .-steering , rad io, w-s-wall s, on ly
2,1)00 miles, ful l warranty , new truck tr ade-in .

RAWLINGS
DEPENDABLE CITY

1967 atEV. IMPAlA
6 cyl. , sta ndard trans. A real crea m puff.

ONLY '1095

1966 BUICK LE SABRE

GTO HT Cpe., ~ speed trans ., black vinyl in·
terior with bucket seats &amp; console. Power
steering &amp; brakes. radio, good w·w fires , red
· finish . See this one.

'1795

4 Or. sed. Local owner, real good 66 model.

ONLY '795

1966 PONTIAC CATAI.INA

1969 CHEVROLU
•

4 Dr. Sed. Sold &amp; served by this garage.

'

Biscayne 4 dr . V-8, automatic trans., p.
steering &amp; brakes, white fintsh, blk. vinyl

ONLY '695

OPEN UNTIL 8 : 00 P. M. each evening
except Saturday &amp; Sunday.

69 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE

7:00 P.M.

·Silver metallic finish with black vinyl top, matching
Interior. tull power equlgment. Climate Control air
conditioning.
,
WAS smo

Consignment hone &amp; po y sole at the Gallipolis Livestock
barn . Bring your consignments early . Will start selling
tack at 7:00p. m. Something for everyo11111 See you at the

3900

sa le.

Over 40 New Cadillacs &amp; Oldsmobiles
Now In Stock!

OHIO VALLEY LIVESTOCK CO.
52 Vinton·Ave., Gallipolis

TIME TO TRADEI
I

PUBLIC -HOUSE AUCTION

KARR &amp;VAN ZANDT
Cadillac . Oldsmobile

APRIL 15, .1972. - ll:OO~A.M~

992-534_2
GMAC Finan~lnq Available
Pomeroy
Open Eves . Til 6-Til 5 P. M. Sat.
"You'll Like OurQUall~ Woy of DOing Business"

Location : Rutland, Ohio · Across from Rutland High
School.

·Wanted To Rent

Maytag Wringer Washer, Phllco Deep-Freeze (upright),
Gibson Refrigerator w-lceiT)aker (like newt , Dirietle Set,
Elec. Range , Automatl~ Dry0r, Zenith Color TV, (3)
Platform Rockers, (2) Llv jng roo!" Suites. (2) B&amp;W TV's,
Player plano. piano rolls, Librar,y table, Singer ••wing ·
Machine, Bedroom Suite, Violin, Typewriter (2) Porch
Gliders; Lawn Choirs, Metal Storage Cablnat, Floor
Lamp, (2) Wool Rugs, Artlflelal Flowers, Mirror, Dishes,
Bed Linens, Church Pldure, Dayton Counter Scales,
Cross·cut Saw, 35,000 BT_U Gas Healer, Power Lawn

Employment Wanted ·

HOUSE on small f~rm, phone WILL PAINT roofs or houses.
985-3805.
trim trees. clean out allies.
~-7-61c
basements, etc. 949·3221.
·
i-2-61c

For Rent or Sale

ROOMS, &amp; bath, 80 ft . road L~AL welder. has portabie 1
frontage. M 11o G FoocfMarket, welder wants welding lobs,
· l miles soul~. MlddlePQrt, St. any time, 7 days a week.
Rl. 7.
.
Phone 992·5271.
U-6tp
H ·Jtc

~

Mower, Dresser w-Rnd. Mirror, Dresser w-~ . mirror,

•

------;-Wanted To Buy

$899

Interior.

We Service What We Sell
Open Evenings Till 7 p .m. &amp; Sat. Till 5 p .m .
Service Till 12 Noon on Sat.

.Don't Pop
• •

TRUCK SPECIAL!
1968 Chevrolet

0
0
Smith Nelsan Motors, Inc..
500 E. Main St.

:v. Ton, v.a engine, 3 speed column shift, good

IS" Com·
mercia I tires, loci I 1ownar lrf&lt;. WaSS1695.00. Special .

'

'1549

Fomef'Oy, Ohio

Ph. 992-2174

·Pomeroy ·M. otor Co.,
Your Chevy Dealer
992-2126
Open Ewes 9

r•

Fully Self-contained, Dodge engi ne, 22 tt.,
14,000 actual miles . Come look it over .

For Sale .
'71 CHEV . CHEYENNE Pickup Truck, V·8,
P.S., with ca mper top, orange &amp; white . Extra
nice.

'68 FORD '12 TON PICKUP, V-8, auto . trans. , .
P.S., 2-tone red and white . Extra nice.

70 FORD.~ ...................... ..'1995.
4 Or., auto., P.S.

'69 FORD 'f• TON PICKUP, 6 cyl. , stand.
trans., red &amp; ready .
'56 FORD '12 TON PICKUP, V-8, 3 sp .
' 63 FORD
drive .

'I• TON PICKUP, 4 s p.. with 4 wtu~el

'49 FORD 'h TON PICKUP, V-B, stand. t rans . .

'

USED CARS

'71 CHEVROLET, V-B, auto . trans ., 4 door
H.T .. with double power, factory air .
'69 CHRYSLER NEWPORT, 2 door H. T., V-8,
auto. trans., facto r y air, light brown with vinyl
top.
·
·
I

v.w.

'62
1964 CAMPING TRAILER, fully self contained.
1972 NEW XTZ F iberglass horse tra iler .

"GOOD STOCK OF MINI BIKES"

Pomero,

For Sale

FORMAL, size 10, lace over 10 1,.. ui TEMPO Mobile Horne.
lavender satin, see at Fabric
Piierle 247-2161.
Shop or call 985-.U7. $15.
4-2-61c
3-31 -lotp

--,.-----

69 MERCURY. .................~1995
Marque, 4 dr. H.'T., air condition .

'5500

FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1972

I·

1970 Ford

1970 AVALON MOTOR HOME

ol

I

vacation In this

NOW '2595

~695

'

pletely setup. Beautlfur1
lxallon. owner leaving state.
Phone 949-1892 or 992-5272."
o:t~f]
4'----------~~1-~1~

'

your

1968 PONTIAC LE MANS

.SEE US FOR ADEAL
ON USED TRUCKS1 CAMPERS AND CARS.

and
aluminum
awning ,
alttminum skirting, com -

Coal Heater, Fruit Jars, Reclining Chair, Gas Range,
Baby Bed, Carnival Glass, John Boat, Numerous mise 1
Items. .
.
·
.
·
.
ANTIQUES
· .
f• t Old Trunks, Uphol!litr,cl Pietur• Al~um, Brass Double
Bed .(very pood condition), . o~,s.,r. Pldure .. Framn,
Wash ,Stand w-mlrror, Stone Jars, Lard Press, 20-gel.
Stone Ja_r, Coffee Grinder, (2) 5-Gal. Milk Ca~s. Otd Sola,
Drop-~eaf Table, 8'day Cloc:k . (works ~rfectly) Cedar
Chest. Flat Irons. .
· ·, . '
Not rosponslbt. lor ocd-..11 or tost''prG,.rty.
Lunch servM by RutiMCI Flrem..,•s Auxlllory
Property of Elizabeth Hysell (ct.cnlld)
· TERMS: CASH
OWNER: CARL$. HYSELL
AudlotiHrl: Earl Wltllw ·Max Taylor

1970 Ford -

While with black vinyl top. factory air, low mileage, new

t ires . Thi s is a r eal clean ca r . Take
air cond. beauty .

1967 Volkswagen ...................... '1495

Your·Cork. •

- ---

VINYL ind alummum s1amg
free esfi mates i references:'

-1967 Mercury ..........................'1495

'2495

ONLY '1495
.
.

Our Word Is Our Bond

·~

'

3·29-tfc

4

.

-·'1"195

invite you to compare the quality &amp;
pr1ce of all these used cars. Each one
carJ~~ t~e Ford A-I Warranty!
' ,

. ~rv i ce. We Sharpen Scissors.

CALL US AT ONCE.

6 ~ass .. wagon , V-8, automatic trans., light

w~

Phone 949·3!2 1

door s and windows, carports,
marquees, aluminum siding
and rai ling. A. Jacob. sales
r epresentative . For f ree
esi i mates. phone Char les
Li sl e, Syra cuse, V . V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.

Office "2-2259 Res. 992·2168

shop

Ameri can 6 pass. wagon, six cyl inder , au tomati c t r ans.,
economy is her e

992·2151 OR 992·2152 MIDDLEPORT

'

in, 13,000 miles, automatic trans .• luggage
rack, radio, chrome wheel covers. blue color,
blk. vinyl interior .

6 cyl ., standa rd t rarls. , one owner car. Real nice economy
car.

1968' Rambler ........................ ·$1395

'695

.·
4-9-6tp .:

742-3947

and

Polara 9 pass. wagon , V-8, p.-steering , automatic, air
cond., r eady, wil ling and able

w tires, wheel cover!. . In excellent cond.

and take over payments of :

Sq. Back sedan. local 1 owner, new car trade-

1970 FORD MAVERICK

1965 Dodge " " " """""" " " " " $795

4 Dr., 6 cyl .. auto. trans., p. steer ing , p. brakes, rad io, w-s·

• 1970 1 ~ X

Complete Ser vice

SE~E~U~S~F~O~R~:~
~
Aw
--,
n i-ng-s-.~stdtm ·

REALTY

sure

Coronet'9 pass·. wagon, V-8, p.·sl eering ,
automatic trans ., good rubber, hard to
find one

65 Gal. 500

- - -..,.--- -

1971 Volkswagen

,; ,; USED CARS

See Emerson Jones. Pearl Ash , Hilton
Wolfe , Wallace Amberger,
Dick
Rawling s .

P.

Berry -Mi ller Mobile Home
Sales, 105 Farson Street .
Belpre, Oh io - You will be
glad you did.
4-6-Jtc

~ - BRA DFORD. Auctioneer

TOOAY WE NEED

- CLELAND
·

stock . Be

1966 Dodge:..............~795

B, p.-steering. p.- brakes. automatic trans., ai r con-

69 Dodge Pickup

VEMCO ADD-A-ROOMS. SAVE
MONEY ! 16 FLOOR PLANS .
OR CUSTOMIZE. ADD 3RD :
BEDROOM, DEN, BATH OR •
OFFICE . YOUNG'S MOBILE :
HOME SALES, STATE RT . 7 •
&amp; 35 (BELOW SILVER :
MEMORIAL
BRIDGE) ·
GALLIPOLIS.
'
4-9-lfc :

,.,OBILE ttlMES

livered right to your proleC::t .
Fast
and
easy .
Free
estima tes. Phone 992 -3284.
Goeglein Reatl y-Mi x Co .,

Spring Clean Up Sale On

ditioning , pr ic ed a t $1 ,000 off original factory st icker

&amp;

located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
We are fully i nsured
Complete front end M r vlce,
-.~~~~----=_J
tune up and brake - servlc.e.. SE PT I-C ta-nks cleanea . /;u 11e:r
Wheels
ba lanced
elecSan ita tion, Stewart, Ohlo. -Ph .

You can't · beat these bargains
. anywhere; check and compare prices;
then come &amp; see us .
'

BRAND NE W-NEVER TI TLED-FULL WARRANTY , V-

'595

584 Locust St.
Mjddleporl
Open Dally 10 to 6
Sundo 1:001o5:00

$10.11 . Phone 992-2292.

-

Colony park 10 pass. wagon , V-8. automatic tran s., p.steering , p.- br ... lots of comfort here.

'2395

DEALS

POMEROY
PH. 992-2174

Spring Cleaning Days At
DeJH(ndable City

B i scayn~

2 Dr. hardtop, V-8, auto. tra ns .• p. steer ing , fac. air cond.,

E. MAIN '

MOTO·R S FREE

green, vtnyl tn l enor, new tires.

70x14- 3 Bdr.

SOO

1968 Chevrolet ..................... ,.. '1495

'8.9 5

troQically .
All
,v.:prk
M2·3035.
·
~state For ~ale
guaran teed.
Reasona~le .,
,
2-12-tfc
2 LARGE lois, o rooms, bath ,
rates . Phon e 992-32 13.
11220 Woihington aivd.
garage, cellar $li,500; Maggie
7. 27 -ttc Mobile Homes For Sale
Belpre, Ohio
Whitt ington . Dep ot St. .
7U"'P"'
Rutland. Ohio.
H-:
O-L"'
ST::-:E:-::R-1N
- .G
- -S-E_R_VICE,
1970 MONTE REY, 12 x 60, fully $$$ SAVE $$$. 7 new display
4-7-301p
comple te selec t ion of fabrics
carpeted. 2 bedroom, full size
model mobile homes will be
and vinyl to choose from
utility room , underpinning
HOUSE in Long Bottom , pHoi1e
sold
AS IS . All new - all must
Pi ck -up and delivery. Slater
included. Phone 992-M02.
98'-3529.
be
sold
before Sunday, April
Uphol stering , Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
4·5-6tc
1·28-ffc
phone 992-3611.
9th at 5 p. m. Free delivery to .
your lot . Factory warranties
-;:R"A"C"'I"'
N"'
E----:1-:-0-ro_o_m--:h-ouse ,
3-28-301 p
apply.
Financing available.
bath , basement , ga rage, lwo
.
.
SAVE SAVE SAVE. Before you
$100
deposit
required with
lots. Phone 949-4313.
AUTOMOBILE insurance been buy any mobile home be sure
order
.
All
sales
final. Miller
4-5-JOtp , can c elled?
l ost . your ! and consider t he .huge savings
Homes.
1220
Washington
-----------------opera lor 's license? Call.992you can have on a late model
Blvd .. Belpre, Ohio.
29M.
6· 15tk
~~~.or ,;~~s~~s:~y-~~~~
H -Jtc
--------....,,-----.,.Mobile Home Sales. We have
a huge selection of 8, 10 and 12 · 60X12, 2·60ilroom, ·all-electric,
READY-MIX CUN~t&lt;t I t ae· wide Mobile Homes now In
air conditioned, 8x20 ft . Porch i

WE NEED

Ford Falcon

4 Dr . station wagon, 6 cy l. engine, standard sh ift. fa c. ·
e~tra clean.
a1r,

SPECIAL SHOWING
The G~ay}o/oQd
Premier
By Redman

We have 24 hr. emergency
Serv ice.•·.,

992-1803
992 · 3898 742-4761

6~

•FLAMINGO

Belpre, 0 .

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment'
'5.55
On Most American C. .

'1095

•LIBERTY
•BELMONT
eVAN DYKE

MARl rnA

Comptele
Heali ng.

67 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE
Station wagon, V-8, a_uto. trans .. p. steering, 10 passenger ·
model. dark green wtth sadd le vi nyl inter ior, radio, w-s-w
tires. wheel covers .

MOBILE HOMES

tile and Paneling and Siding .

---c=-c-~--....:....:..

'1595

;.For Best Buys
/ In Top .Quality

.

We have a complete Home
Maintenance- Service lhe
rear around. No matter what
your need . Complete roof or
spouling repair . Interior or
elCterior carpentry . Ceiling

BACKHOE ANO DOZER work.

68 FORD COUNTRY SOUIRE

Dan Thompson
The Pea lin ' Man

Middleport. Ohio
Dba Anthony Plumbing

after 1 p.m.

· ~~----------

6 Passenger station wagon , red with red v inyl upholstery,
390 V-8, p.. steering , p . brakes, automati c transmission. wS·W tires, wheel covers, luggage rack.

i

240 Lincoln St.

ONLY $13,750

'.

•'
·'

For Appointment
. Phone 949-2803

1 car garage, brick front,
wall to wall carpe t.

'

•'
,•

Smallest Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs·

Opens Til5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pom.roy,O.

ON YOUR LOT

.•
•''

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator tc the

Pomeroy Ho.me &amp; Auto

3 BR
HOME

SPECIALS!

.&lt;

B&amp;W HEATING CO.

EARTH ,MOVING

-··

---~----

GOOD refrigerator, S50; go 4
miles east Tuppers Plains,
Rt . 681. turn right, 3rd house.
4-9-lotp
-C-HE_ R
_R
_Y
_ bed
-an_d_n-lg_h_t s- tand;
cherry gun cabinet. All Early
Ameri ~an style ; 'one good
~~~~~~. l awn mower. Pho~e
4-9-3tc

w·RITTEN WARRANTY
Call Colleci614-452-J 158

" WE ' RE HONEST
Ph. 992-i608 Pomeroy, Ohio .

P.O. Box 101 , Pomeroy

NEW LISTING
POMEROY - 8 rooms carpeted, ~ be droom s,
modern kitchen, bath, gas forced air furnace .
Froni and back porc hes . Lots of shrubbery.
Full basement. 2 car garage. A r ea l nice piece
of proper ly. $21 ,000.00.

4-9-6tp
-----CHE CK wi th Kuhl's first for

•149.50

Y.CITY

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

3031. Tuppers Plains.

dwelling .residence for

POMEROY
J BR , Ph bath , basement.

110 Mechanic Street

1970 12 x 60 mobile home ; take
over rema inder of payments ,
1961 Comet, $100. Call M1·

MEIGS, W.VA. 25260
MEIGS992-1151
MASON 773-5634

TER"l.JTES•• TERMITES,

JOHN

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker

-=--- - - - ------CLE LAND'S GREENHOUSE : MUST sacrifice due to divorce

Let us show our Silmp les .
Let-Us-Do -Over-Your
Bathroom or Kitchen
In sured-Bu t best of all

-==========~
t
1L=========~

con trols. Balance $63 .56 . Use

..

.

CERAMIC TILE

" Everything In Home
Maintenance"

Elementary School. Phone
99U384 to sr;e.
,
1!-7.lfc,,

•

I I

FOR THE BEST IN

CONST.

air fumace. Near Pomeroy .~

frontage . Trailer space. M S.
damage in ~hipping . Will take
G Food Market, 3 miles,
$27 cash or budget plan Several ni ce building lots in
south, Middl eport, St. Rt. 1.
available. Phone 992-5641.
Pom eroy, Middleport and
Notice
_____________4_
·7-3tc ::-::-:-:........-:---------·•_:·H ie Minersville . Ranging fr om
shoo . SJ6oo.
A SHOTGUN and rifle match
SLE.EPI
NG
rooms
in
mobiie
2
RIDIN
G
horses,
phone
949.
will be hel~ Sunday, Apr il 9,
home for men only, 818 E.
3196.
30 Acres , modern 3 b.r . home
at 12 o'clo'tk, Rutland Gun
just off Rt . 7.
Main St ., Pomeroy, next to
4-5-llp
J;lu.J1...N.!W1..1Jma .(lpad, Hand
Tom's
Carry
Out.
phone
992choked shotguns will be 3254.
:':;9j6t9 -;-;
v-:. w::-.--c~
a-m_p_m_o"'bi,le__:
.. with 10-4 Acres, modern 3 b.r
handleapped. Rifles will be In
home close to Eastern
top and tent, mileage
two classes. Open sig hts and _________________•_·Hie raised
21,000 - $2,495 ; phone 992· School.
scope, bench rest and off
hand . Rifle shooters will 6-ROOM brick house, wall to 3076.
of land on St . Rt. 143,
furnish own shells . Any
wall carpeting , paneled walls, ________________4_:·Hic 8 ACRES
approximately 1 mile SE of
calibre rifle, muzzle loaders
dishwasher and disposal . will
Harrisonv ill e, water tap paid ;
Included.
renlfurnlshed or unfurnished. ALLI S CHALMERS we tractor
'Phone
742 -4095.
If interested write Box 7?&lt;).R and equipment, $550. Allis
• 4·6-Jtc
4-6·12tp
In c-o The Da lly Sentinel,
Chalmers Combine, $350.
Phone 742-3656.
GU N SHOOT Sunday, Apr il 9, 1 Pomeroy.
4·_9-10tp WANTED - Homes $10,000 and
4-H ic _____ _ _ _ _
p. m. Factory choked guns
un der ; any condition; buyer s
only. Second place shooters ---,--- -wi ll repair ; White Real ty
get free shot In next match. FURIQISHED and unntnlshed WH.ITE electric range in elC ·
Offi ce 992-3020.
ce llen t conditi on, $50; Forest
apartments. Close trl !.Choo(
Assorted meats. Racine Gun
4-6-61c
M. Guth rie. Alhens , Ohio,
Phone 992·5434.
,
C.lub.
phone 592-2158.
10-IB·Ifc
4-~·3fc
3-31 -1otp SIX ROOM house, 133 Bunernut '
'
2
HED
ROOM
mobile
home
w1th
Ave. Contact Ed Hedr ick, 2137
FI GHT fatig ue wiTn L!ppies, the
condi tioning In Racine WALNUT 'stereo, 4 speaker . Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
great Iron pi ll. Only $1.98 at . air
area ; phone 992-6329.
sound system , 4 speed dual
Ohio, phone 237·4334.
Nelson Drugs.
3-23-tfc
volume control , se parate
11 -21 -.lf,c .
3· 17-30tp

4-9-llc
----------------

&amp; Remodeling

SON

NICE 2-story home with full
ba sement, 2 lots. new forced

1969
BSA 250 cc, just
overhauled, excellent con-

----------~-----4~-9-ltc ROOM &amp; BOARD. Chester,
IN LOVING memory of our son

- - ----

22-250 with scope, cos t over

PH. 992-3629

Sadly missed by the family.

.
4·7-1.0fp

Johnson Masonry

and

4-4-6tp

$200, special new, $125; phone
742·3656. .
_;__ __ _ __ _4·_7-1otp

Day , Week, Month
Libera I Rates

But swee tn ess will l inger
forever, As we cher ish the
memor y of you .

&amp;

KITCHEN

basement ; Tuppers Plains,
Ohio . Laurence
Balser.
$9,000; phone M7-J693.

-------REMINGTON Model 700 AOL,

by

We have ~n ly your memory.

\.

4·1·2fc

:::-:=-::-:---------- - -

IN LOVING memory of Mrs.
Irene

Typewriter

Adding Machine Repair ..

Write Credit Manager, P. 0 . HOUSE and lots on Wright
Street, Pomeroy. phone 142·
Box 276, Shelbyville, Indiana
5937.
46176.
4-4-6tc
4·1·2fp

apartments ideat for couple s.
Contact McClu r e's Dairy Isle.
992·5248 or 992-3436.

In Memory

supplies.

Make reservations for you r '
private parties, banqUets, 1
special occasions .
Idea I for meeting place wi th or without kit chen 1
privileges.
Individual Cater ing

';::========::=;

HARTFORD

••
·'.•

ESFOR

.

GALLI POLIS, OHIO

-,·'.•.·

clover, timothy , alfalfa, hay, 3 lltDROOM hom e on two·
Pick-up &amp; Delivery
thirds acre lot ; all con 65c per bale. phone 985-3809.
veniences
;
at
Gallipolis
Will seat up to 150 people.
'!:,-IOle
Ferry, W. Va. only $10,000;
PHONE
67~3628
16 FT. BOAT and trailer, 4 come see ; Call615-3666or 675·
Phone
cylinder Inboard motor. M &amp;
3886 PI, Pl easant, W. Va.
424 Main St.
Pt. Pleasant
,992-3975
992-57&amp;
G Food Market, 3 mll essouth,
4·4·18tp l::=========~
Middleport, St. Rt. 7..
r
.
4-7-Jfc , 7 ROOMS and bath. new carpet,

25 Per Cent Discount on paid .
ads and ads paid within 10
days .
Not A Motor Route .
CA~D OF THANKS
. &amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for so word minimum. .
Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Ph. 614-992-2156
Additional 25c . Charge per . L.....:..:::~:...:..:::.:::..:~!:..._..J
Advertisement. ,
FOr RenI
OFFIC'E HOURS
8:30a .m . to 5:00 p.m. Dally, ONE
BEDROOM trailer
8: 30 a. m. to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday .

Complete line of office
equipment, furniture &amp;

-----GOOD MIXED second cutting

MA$0N

12 ce'nts per word three ·
consecutive insertions.
18 cents per word, six cOn~ecutive insertions.

.•

Otthid Room.

· &amp;

399 W. Main, Pomeroy, 992·
2164.
4-9-ltc

Carriers For

.

housing

automation . Modern Poultry ,

WANTED!

.,

av~ilable. ·

grown

.

For Best

SMilH NELSON MOTORS. INC.

MA.RTIN FORD

.,·l

The

H&amp;N DAY OLD or started
Leghorn pullets. Both floor or

446 -0617,
Monday
an d
Tuesday on ly, 10 a.m . to 5

).

.l

4-9-ltc

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•

. 31 - The Sunday Times - Sentinei. SIIIda• A .19. .
"
" prt • 1972

69 FORD ............. ~ ........... ~1795
Torino, 2 dr . H. T .

68 REBEL .......................
sags
P.S.
2 dr . H. T., auto.,

63 VOLKSWAGEN.,............S295
63 BUICK'...........~............:.s295
·4 dr. sedan . Runs good .

·

POODLE puppies. Sliver Toy,
DROP leaf table - $15 ; baby
Park view K.,nels, Phon•992
bed - $10; high- dialr - SJi . S«J,
Columbia Grofonola - $15;
gultor·amp. outfit - $50; old
oil lamps - SIO; phone 94'1· ALUMINUM car -top ·bOats,
319~.

3·29·10tp

won' ! rust at rot, sate and

ligh tweight. 10, 1213 and 14 fl .
in stock now. Phone 992·6256
alter 5 p. m ~

TROPICAL - . FISH, taney
J.JII.~tc
guppies, angels and breeden;
Bellas apd supplies. Phone •
.
992·SU3.
,,•
SHOWALTER'S Wet Pet Snap,
12-JO.Hc · Chester, Ohio, Phone '115-3356,
~~--~------Tropical llsh and supplies.
l-28-301p
FARMALL H Tractor, New
ldN No. 18 manure spreader, "STAR" kitts rats quickly .
Georg• M. Collins, Rt . 1,
Sure. 2'12 lbs. $1.69; EbersReedsville, Ohio. Pltone 614·
bach Hdwe .• Sugar Run Mills,
667·341. '
Plekens Hdwe., Malon.
3-19-3011

16'12 ft. Red Fish

BOAT &amp; TRAILER.......... }500
40 horse motor, auto. starter, windshield,
lights .

••••••••••••••••••••
:
NEW-NEW'-NEW
:

•
BOAT &amp; .TRAILER.............ssoo •

••

15 If, Shell· Lake

Mark 78 Mercury
windshield.

~otor,

auto.• starter, lights,'

RIGGS BROS•• INC.
USED CARS

=:-- - - - -

' o.

Ph. 915-4100

:

1972 CHEVROLn.P.CKUP

Wlllt I fl. wide body, front dlse brakes, ~uble walt c~ ·•
and body construdlon, 307·V-1 engl1111, TurJoo.Hy~ramalte •
, tro111., Posltredloo rear axle, heovy duty springs, duot •
. • mirrors, 5 heavy duty H-71 ttr111, mud &amp; snow rear, rear
· • l1wp bumper. foam 10111, lnstrum.,t gaugos, bHutlfut •
• willie &amp; medium gnen.
. .
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UstS3530

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· SPECIAL

-E~PJ~t~ent

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I

$2898 ••.

:

POMEROY MOTOR CO. :

a

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Sales

:

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•

AVAILABLE
for
house·
Located on S. Rt. 7
- · Olesttr,
cleaning, baby slttlng. lkltch.,
•• Prices
or• Lower
At P-roy
Motor
·ot:O I FURNi'tURE, dls~es, help for one week. Send card
eloc:ks, brass bedt, sliver c-o Mrs. J. Grueser1 Rt. 1,
\
Auto Sal&amp;$
~o
Auto Sales· ·
donors
or
comple'- Minersville. Ohio.
'65
MUSTA)IjG,
219,
llandard,
1966
, •ALCOtt : f-uturo ~PQI'I 1967 VOlKSWAGEN good
households. Write M. 0,
3·30-101p
I1IIW motQr, gOQd condition
1'MO DODGE for peril -.......
Coupe, 2 door, automatic, 6
Miller, At. ~; Pomeroy, Oltlo.
condition, phone ac-2762.
992·2307,
' r ·-~
phone 742-.Wt. .
'
cylinder,
$600;
phone
9.W-2951
.
\ Call 992-6271 .
.
'
...,.lip
,
4-9·3tC
H ·5tc
3-16-Hc ·Auto
=::-::=::-----4:..:
·7-Jtp
Your Chet7Y Dealer
'
.
1960 ~-500 ~A RM truck, green 1937 FORD COUPE, new 12 ge.
:-----,-,---1970 W- ~ OLDSMOBILE · 442. 1961 FORD truck tractor, 220
bed-~atfle rac~s. good t.lres,
automatic, factory ~tereo
c.vmmlns diesel, sleeper cab, 196SINTERNATIONALScout, 4
870 Wlngmasttrahotgun ; 4.10
wheel drive ; 35,000 mll!s, 1
*anted
good condition, Harold
tope
;
lots
of
extras;
realty
atr
tag_
axle.
Will
trade,
goers for Dona reerend ; Sun
992-2126
Open Eves. TII8
Fomeroy
CA
ER work Iff - any
Brewer, Long Bottom, phone
Harold Brewer. Long Bottom, owner, good eondlllon ; many
Tach wltlt llllldlng. unit, Hudt
kind . Pt,.,n, o..ter, Ottlo 742· nice; pri&lt;W,right; phone 992·
extras;
phone
992-7271.
985-3554.
phone 985-3554.
lUI after 5 p.m.
W1111ner: !&gt;'- 94J-3465.
f/79.
~·6·61c
3·2$-301P
3·31·11&lt; ---------~::..:~9-tfc
oU-llp
--~-----..:..:..:"-9-Hc

ales

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Tl•· Sumt;ir Tinll'S -&amp;•nt in•• I, Swldily , April !1, lfl72

..

4-CountY Tree Planting
Underway
•

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I

'

'

CANTON ·- Ohio ' Power
Co.'s annual tree·planling
prog ram
in
Morgan,
Muskingum, Noble and
li uerry sey, c~unlies is well
underway. ··

'

I

When this year's planting of
seedlings is com·
plcWd, the company will have
planWd more than 32-millioo
seedlings in the reclamation'
program.

z,o:;o,ooo

•

LOW COST

FAS
SERVICE

AND-A
WAGONFULL
OF OTHER
BENEFITS
..

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BANK
AUTO

.

LOANS
See Harold Thompson or Lou Lutton

"THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

The company's reclamation
program has been in existence
lor the past 28 years, beginning
shortly after It began its surfaee minin, in the four-c.ounty
. area .
.
Walter D. Smith, teelamation supervisor lor the
company, said that varying
February and March weather
helped dictate a nwnber o!
projects this spring.
Tree planting was performed
every suitable day, and will
continue for the next few
weeks. On other days, when'
weather prevented the planting, crews were put to work
pruning trees in areas planted
12 lo Ia years ago, spreading

109 YEARS OF SERVICE"

FLAG .PRESENTED - Members of Eric Chamber;' ·

lifth grade class, Washington Elementary Sehool, Gallipolis,
was presented a new United States Flag Friday afternoon by
loth District Congressman Clarence Miller. Cong. Miller
spoke to the students briefly on American government activities prior to presenting _them the flag which has flown
over the nation's capitol buDding. Studentsof5-309 are (not in
.

Jurors Drawn
(Continued from page 1)

Niday, Ci ty ; Kenneth H.

Ernest Lee Grymes, City ;
Dennis Oxyer, Rt. 1, Cheshire ;

Robert K. Theiss, Rt.

I,

Adams, Rt . 2, Bidwell; Freda
M . Waugh, Crown City ;

Kanauga; Mar jorie L. Trout,
Kanauga; Wa yne F. Sisson, Rt.
2, Cheshire ; Basil Crews,
Patriot, and Gladys Rite,
Cheshire.
PatsyS. Sto llar, Rio Grande ;

Onida M. Johnson. PSR,
Gallipol is; Nancy L. Clarkson.
Rl. 4, Oak Hill ; Patricia H.
Davis, City; Jack Dewayne
Stuller , ESR, Gallipolis;
Russell L Slayton. Rt. 1.
Vinton ; Mary A. Spriegel ,
PSR , Gallipolis; Sybil R.
McKean, Ci ty, and .Lilliar M.
Garnes. City.

1. Bidwell ; Lillian E. Moore,
Rt. 1, VInton; Mac: il D. Raines,

Scottown ; Esther R. Luman,
Rt. 1, Patriot ; Lewis
Crawford ~ City ; Reba

V.

J.

Wedemeyer , Rt . L Thurman ;
Beulah Haskins, Rt . 2,
Gallipolis; Edmond L. Wright,

Rt. 2. Crown City ; Bobby G.
Watson, Scottown; Frances M.
Mundell, Bidwell ; Mary V.
Phi llips, City; Robert A.
Moore, City ; Alvin 0 . Walfon.

Rt. 2, Bidwell; Delores Jeane
Fisher, Rt . 2, Gallipolis ; Mary
E. Lewis, Rt. 2, Gallipolis ; 1
_James H. Crace, Vinton ; John
J. Churchi l l, ESR , Gall ipolis.
Charlene Slone, Kanauga;

Cheshire .

Jessie E . Kerns , City ;
. Richard C. J. Roderick, City ;

Ga llipolis; Sandra H. Nea l,
Addison ; Mary G. Stormont,
City ; William H. · Menshouse,
City ;· Ferd ie G. Jones, Rt. I.

Bidwell ; Reva I. Nibert. Rt. 2.
Gallipolis; Arthur E. Casey,
City; Clay M. Baker, Patriot ;

Vinton; MaryS. McGinnis, Rt.

2. Patriot; Gary E. Walker,

City ; Mary B. Williams. City ;
Stewart C. Holmes, Rt . 2,
Patriot: Ernest L. Unroe,

Crown· ·City; · · Etrm1r M.
Gothard, Rt. 1, · Gallipolis;
William H. Thomas, Rt. 2,
Bidwell ; Nettie C. Jeffers, Rl.
2. Crown City : Shirley Ann
Miller . Patriot : Hattie E.
Miller, Rt. I. Patriot ; Charles
Lee Silvers, Patriot ; Lex ie D.
Shelton, City, and Leslie L.
Nida y. City.

Petit Jurors are William
Mary L. Waugh, Crown City ;
Skidmore, Rt. 2, Bi dwe.ll ; ·Eima A. Rose, Patriot ; Robert
Cornell W. Vance , Jr., Rt 2, L. Green, City ; Donald E.
Cheshire ; Garnet H. McKean, O' Rourke, City ;
Stanley

City ; Gladys G. Glassbur n·, Rt.

Gallipolis ; Ernestine Paisley.
Ewlngton ; Alice V. El li s,

2,

Bid- Charlotte Wedemeyer, Rl.

well ; William M. Marks, Rt.1,
Thurman ; Donald . E. Little,
Cheshire ; Mabel F Reynolds,

Ernest M. Denney, Rt . •1,

John W. Swisher 1 Rl . 2, Vinton ;

Dow I M. Daniels, City ; Nola F.
Spurlock, Crown City ; Mildred
L Brown, City ; Nancy J.
Lemley , Il-l. 1, Gallipolis;

-Emmett R•IAHr -Rt. 2, Crown

City; Ethelyn E. Coughenour,

ChesHire : 'Irma Mae Gabrielli,

City ; Leslie E. McMahon. Rt.

2. Gallipolis; Anna M. Burke.

City.• Wanda T. Theiss. City;
Ray Fisher, Rt. 2. ' Northup.
and Violet B. Lloyd, City.
Oscar J. Garland. Rt. I.
Crown City ; Constance Ann
Wise, Cheshire ; Paul W.
Carman , Rt. 1, Gal lipoli s:
James R. Sarrett, City ; Bessie

M. Sheets, ESR, Gallipolis;
Grace
I.
Wood, PSR,
Massie, Patriot ; Everett G. Gallipolis ; Christopher Biars.
Rl. 2. Gallipolis; Bonnie D.
George, Vinton ; Patricia L.
Roush, Rt. I , Gallipolis; ' Cottee. Rt. 2, Vinton; Ward
Herma n H. Wood , Rt. 2, Bloomfield, Rt. 4, Oak Hill ;
Scott.
ESR.
Patriot ; Nancy M. Sheets, R'l. Imogene
L Ga llipolis ; Bessie M. Gallipolis; Denver E. Call.
Crown City ; Lena M. ThompJohnson, Crown City ; Lowell
E. Jeffers, Patriot ; Constance son, Rt. 2, Vinton ; Joann Y.
S. Cross. City ; William F. Schmidt, City. and William H.
Nance, Northup; Clifford F. Swanson, Rt. 2, Gallipolis.
Newman , LRR , Gallipolis ;
Kathleen Thompson, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis; Ella P. Shaver, Rt.
Belville, Crown City ; Edgar

I.

Gladys 'M. Hutchinson,
Northup; John E. LafT!bert,
City ; John S. Smith, WSR,
Gallipol is; Frank H. Mozena,
City ; James R. Collison, Rt . 2,
Northup;

John

W.

if the so-called experts really

RIL

·· ·

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bears.

New York. And that is the rub.
Locked ID Vault
The Met has told the Andersons
" We also own a Rem· their Titus has to be a copy.
"No one wants to a.dmit his
brandt," ' says Anderson,
unequivocally but not without a painting is not the original,"
said Anderson during an intrace of defiance in his voice.
This work, a 12 x 19-inch terview in his living room
drawing, does not hang in the where, for the occasion, he had
Anderson home; it is kept in a displayed his treaure propped
bank vault in downtown up on well-worn sofa.
"'But ours is. an original
Seattle.
drawing
and the MetThe Andersons are convinced their colored chalk ropolitan's is a painting,
drawing of the famous Dutch perhaps a painting copied from
..
master's son Titus as a young ours.
"Our task-and it's proving
prince is a Rembrandt
to be a monumental one- is
original. ,
Awork similar to that owned• proving what I say is true ..The
experts don 't seem to be in~y the Andersons hangs in the
Metropolitan Musewn of Art in terested. Sometimes I wonder

exist .''
Anderson, 43, and his wile
have read just about every ·
book, pamphjet or reference
work that ex1sts about Remlrandt .
They have had the paper on ·
which the picture is drawn •
investigated by an expert and :
the materials used In the
picture analysed by a scientist.
They have had X-ray and ·
spectrograph tests of the
drawingand,asfarastheyare ,
concerned, the resUlts have .
erased any doubts that their •
Titus is an original work done ·
by Rembrandt Harmensmon .
van Rijn in 16:i5 ..

GALLIPOLIS - Mike Null,
son of Louis Lambert,
Waterloo, a student at Symmes
Valley High School and Barbara Lynne Hixon, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. John Hixon, Rt. 2,
Jackson, a Ja ckson fllgh
School student, were named
winners of the !972 Buckeye
Rural Electric Cooperative
Scholarship Contest Saturday.

Second place went to John
Cur tis, son of Clifford and
Betty Curtis, Oak Hill, a
stud ent at Oak Hill High
School, and Debra Lynn
Dearth, daughter of Lincoln
and Mary L. Dearth, McArthur , a student of Vinton
County High SchooL
Second place winners are

City ; Charlotte M. Green.
Cro.wn Ci ty ; Record lull.
Crown City ; Carol Ann Foster.
Rt. 2. Gallipolis; Ralph
Johnston. Jr .. City ; Anna D.
Harrison. Rt . 2. Gallipolis ;
Keith P. Bradbury. Rt. 2.
Cheshire; Ph illip M. Garlic,
ESR. Gallipol iS; Leona P.
Sp ires. City; Alice I. Beard,
City ; Emma C. Lawless,
Bidwell ; David W. Harper, Rt.

. 0 . Heister, Kerr ; Oscar L.

2, Gallipolis; Eli C. Lambert,

Rt . 1, Thurman, and Joe A.
Luikart, City.
Robert F. Bostwick, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis ; Lawrence R. Hall,
City ; Carl L. Cameron, City;
Mary U. Lewis, Rio Grande;
Ross C. Northup, City ; Frank
W. Clendenin, Kanauga; Leo
Ell is

Swisher,

· Each winner will receive
$200 cash and will be eligible to
enter • the state contest in
Colwnbus at Scots Inn May 8.
The slate winners, one bOy and
one girl will receive $1,000 cash
and at the end of the second
year of college work , if the
winner is interested in a career
in rural electrification, he or
she may receive on-the-job
summer employment at one of
tlle Ohio Rural Electric Co-ops
- 13 weeks per summer for
two vacation periods.
Minimum
tota l
remuneration is $1,300. Total
value of the first award is
$2,300, if work plan option is
used.

Mr . and Mrs. David Carr and
son from Virginio Beach
visiWd his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. E. R. Carr over the
weekend.
Mr. and Mrs . Doyle l;ludson
and Judy were dinner guests of
the Joe Sayres Sunday.
Rev. and Mrs. David
Wi se man and children of
Cambridge were overnight
guests of their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Wiseman.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Hudson
are enjoying a couple ol.weeks
with his sister in Louisiana.
Robert R. Gibson of
Columbus visiied till! Robert
Atkires and Ray Sunday .

"

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E. Wiseman, City ; Betty Lou Thelma S. Taylor. Rt . 1,
Marchi,

City ; Margaret C.

'

Soc.iety News

making her home wl th Freda
Carsey .
'
Guests Easter of the Junior
Paynes were Mr. and Mrs.
James Cheadle and children of
Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Barret and family of
Rutland and Kathryn Weaver.
Recent guests of Ava ClUkey
were Mr. and Mrs. C)inton
Gilkey and Karen of Albany,
Mr . and Mrs. F. 0. Whaley and
Mr . and Mrs. Terry Whaley
and daughter and Bobby
Gibson of Columbus and Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Jordan of
Cincinnati.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Bishop
visiWd her mother in Hamden
Mrs. Mannie Newlun is now Easter.

• Modem - Early American • Med~erranean - 5. 6. 7 and 9 Piece Sets
•High Pressure Plastic Tops in fAIIor and Wood Grain
•Metal O!airs in Chrome, Bronze, Black and Avocado with Large Selection of
Vin~ Covers
·
·

Cheshire ;

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eligible to lake over awards ·
should first place winner .·
become ineligible or in any ,
way be unable to participate In ·
program.
Judging the contest were E. ,
E. Davis of Davis Fire Brick :
Co., Oak Hill ; J. Shennan :
Porter, Rio Grande College :
and Gary Short of Gallipolis. :

Harrisonville

Northup; Jimm ie R. Hale, Rt.

Myers, Kanauga ; Hobart T. 4. Oak Hill ; Elsie Lak in. Rt. 2.

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Shop Elberfeld&amp; 3rd Floor Furniture Dept. and save during our Spriltg

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Furniture Sale of Living Room and Bedroom Furniture.
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PRICES IN· EFFECT THROUGH
.
SUNDAY APRIL 16. WHILE
QUANTITIES LA.ST .

Miss Hixon, Mike Null Win $250

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
SPRI-NG SALE DINETTE SETS

Russell,

Patriot ; Raymond E. Barr, Rt.
L Gall ipolis; Mary L. James,
Rt. 2. Gallipolis; Paul D.
Brookins. Rt. 1. Gallipolis;
Mabel M. Stevens. Rt. 2.
Patriot ; Dayton L. Briggs. Rt.
1, Gallipolis; Ma xi ne H.
Smithkey, Rt. 1, Northup, and
Joe N. Lawson . Rl. 1,
Ga ll ipolis.
Verdon H. O' Dell , City ;
Walter B. Mosley, City; Noel

Bonnie Stewart. City; Harold

·,

STAR1lNG
10 A.M. MONDAY
•

1, Gallipolis.

Opal P. Nibert. Rt . 1, Cheshire; Naida France Frye,
Gallipolis; Robert R. Gooch, City ; Harry E. McE II)aney,

Beck, WSR, Gallipolis; Barbar a F. Epling, City ; Edison(;,
Guinther; City ; Buren L. Bush
Ci ty ; Kenneth N. Romlta, City;
Bobby C. Roble, Rt. 1, Bidwell;
Pearl W. Donna'lly; Rt. 2,
Patriot ; Michael J. Pickens.
Rt. 2. Crown City.

order) Peter Buis, Mike Coonen, Mark Cornell, Bobby
Kiesling, Terry Lewis, Charles Masters, Scott ~ice, Danny
Sickles, Nate Thomas, Keven Woodall, Terry Bramard, _Terri
Adkins, Sara Abels, Shari Bennett, Brenda Ferguson, Gwen .
Gilliam, Lori Kelton, Cheryl Malcolm, Patty Phillips, Renee
Saucier, Elizabeth Simms, Cindy Stalnaker, Meg Thomas
and Diane Ward.

Experts Shush.·Amateur's Claim·

~;::: ~~~~i~g~n~o:r;,~~~in~~ ~:s;~oc::tri~~~

were from ·
Mr . Smith said.
Hundreds of deer hunters
Pruning of the trees will aid were in the reclaimed area last
in their growth and help to fall, and considerable success
SEATILE, Wash. (UPI)improve the trees themselves, was reported. Earlier this Ed Anderson is a good-natured
he said. ·
year, the company opened Its man who is an electrician by
Of the total number of land to beaver trapping, and trade and happens to like
seedlings being planted this 103 beaver ranging in size from paintings, including an oil of a
year, 1,600,000 will be planWd 12 pounds to 61 pounds were bunch of bears which he did ·
on previously mined banks, taken. .
himself.
while the remaining 400,000 are
While the lakes were stocked
He also is a man who claims
to be planted on unmined with many kinds of fish, in- he owns an original Rembrandt
banks.
eluding muskellunge, the first but can't seem to get anyone to
The tree and seed planting "muskie" ca tch was recorded take him seriously.
and the pruning of growing in 1971.
Anderson and his wife, Pat,
trees all are part of Ohio
While the public is w~lcomed have several paintings hanging
Power's philosophy of return- to the recreation area, people. In their modest, lemon-yellow
In~
mined
lands
to are advised that a permanent . house stuck away among tall,
usefulness.," Mr. Smith said. permit is available at any Ohio greeri firs within sound of the
Over the years, the company ·--·Power office or through the freeway south of SeatUe.
has planWd hardwoods, such Ohio- Department of Natural
The art on display includes a
as yellow poplar, red oak, Resources. Stale licenses also handsome little original by
white oak, white ash, silver are required for fishing, Ludwig . Knaus, the German
maple, cottonwood , basswood, h'unting and trapping.
genre artist; an unsigned
buckeye, black walnut. bl,ck
masterwork of a Capuchin
monk; a John Clymer landscape, five or six other works
and, of course, the Anderson

City ; Biddie Alma Provens,

n

alder, black ., locust and
sycamore, and · softwood
varieties such as larch and
white, red ani!- Vi{glnia 'pine. ·
Seedl,ings have ·grown · to
matUrity .in many areas of the ..
ffkmer sur!ace mine lahd, and
the company .,Ims se! aside
large and sinalfparksites, has
aided in the stocking with fish
of more than 300 lakes, and has
opened its land to public
camping, fishing and hunting.
More than 800 camping units
wete counWd in the parksites
last •Memorial Day alone, and
61,000
people
signed
registration she~ts at the
parksites in 1971. Of those,
8,293 were !rom states outside

WITH STORIS
LOCATED•IN

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Tl•· Sumt;ir Tinll'S -&amp;•nt in•• I, Swldily , April !1, lfl72

..

4-CountY Tree Planting
Underway
•

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I

'

'

CANTON ·- Ohio ' Power
Co.'s annual tree·planling
prog ram
in
Morgan,
Muskingum, Noble and
li uerry sey, c~unlies is well
underway. ··

'

I

When this year's planting of
seedlings is com·
plcWd, the company will have
planWd more than 32-millioo
seedlings in the reclamation'
program.

z,o:;o,ooo

•

LOW COST

FAS
SERVICE

AND-A
WAGONFULL
OF OTHER
BENEFITS
..

~

.. .

BANK
AUTO

.

LOANS
See Harold Thompson or Lou Lutton

"THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

The company's reclamation
program has been in existence
lor the past 28 years, beginning
shortly after It began its surfaee minin, in the four-c.ounty
. area .
.
Walter D. Smith, teelamation supervisor lor the
company, said that varying
February and March weather
helped dictate a nwnber o!
projects this spring.
Tree planting was performed
every suitable day, and will
continue for the next few
weeks. On other days, when'
weather prevented the planting, crews were put to work
pruning trees in areas planted
12 lo Ia years ago, spreading

109 YEARS OF SERVICE"

FLAG .PRESENTED - Members of Eric Chamber;' ·

lifth grade class, Washington Elementary Sehool, Gallipolis,
was presented a new United States Flag Friday afternoon by
loth District Congressman Clarence Miller. Cong. Miller
spoke to the students briefly on American government activities prior to presenting _them the flag which has flown
over the nation's capitol buDding. Studentsof5-309 are (not in
.

Jurors Drawn
(Continued from page 1)

Niday, Ci ty ; Kenneth H.

Ernest Lee Grymes, City ;
Dennis Oxyer, Rt. 1, Cheshire ;

Robert K. Theiss, Rt.

I,

Adams, Rt . 2, Bidwell; Freda
M . Waugh, Crown City ;

Kanauga; Mar jorie L. Trout,
Kanauga; Wa yne F. Sisson, Rt.
2, Cheshire ; Basil Crews,
Patriot, and Gladys Rite,
Cheshire.
PatsyS. Sto llar, Rio Grande ;

Onida M. Johnson. PSR,
Gallipol is; Nancy L. Clarkson.
Rl. 4, Oak Hill ; Patricia H.
Davis, City; Jack Dewayne
Stuller , ESR, Gallipolis;
Russell L Slayton. Rt. 1.
Vinton ; Mary A. Spriegel ,
PSR , Gallipolis; Sybil R.
McKean, Ci ty, and .Lilliar M.
Garnes. City.

1. Bidwell ; Lillian E. Moore,
Rt. 1, VInton; Mac: il D. Raines,

Scottown ; Esther R. Luman,
Rt. 1, Patriot ; Lewis
Crawford ~ City ; Reba

V.

J.

Wedemeyer , Rt . L Thurman ;
Beulah Haskins, Rt . 2,
Gallipolis; Edmond L. Wright,

Rt. 2. Crown City ; Bobby G.
Watson, Scottown; Frances M.
Mundell, Bidwell ; Mary V.
Phi llips, City; Robert A.
Moore, City ; Alvin 0 . Walfon.

Rt. 2, Bidwell; Delores Jeane
Fisher, Rt . 2, Gallipolis ; Mary
E. Lewis, Rt. 2, Gallipolis ; 1
_James H. Crace, Vinton ; John
J. Churchi l l, ESR , Gall ipolis.
Charlene Slone, Kanauga;

Cheshire .

Jessie E . Kerns , City ;
. Richard C. J. Roderick, City ;

Ga llipolis; Sandra H. Nea l,
Addison ; Mary G. Stormont,
City ; William H. · Menshouse,
City ;· Ferd ie G. Jones, Rt. I.

Bidwell ; Reva I. Nibert. Rt. 2.
Gallipolis; Arthur E. Casey,
City; Clay M. Baker, Patriot ;

Vinton; MaryS. McGinnis, Rt.

2. Patriot; Gary E. Walker,

City ; Mary B. Williams. City ;
Stewart C. Holmes, Rt . 2,
Patriot: Ernest L. Unroe,

Crown· ·City; · · Etrm1r M.
Gothard, Rt. 1, · Gallipolis;
William H. Thomas, Rt. 2,
Bidwell ; Nettie C. Jeffers, Rl.
2. Crown City : Shirley Ann
Miller . Patriot : Hattie E.
Miller, Rt. I. Patriot ; Charles
Lee Silvers, Patriot ; Lex ie D.
Shelton, City, and Leslie L.
Nida y. City.

Petit Jurors are William
Mary L. Waugh, Crown City ;
Skidmore, Rt. 2, Bi dwe.ll ; ·Eima A. Rose, Patriot ; Robert
Cornell W. Vance , Jr., Rt 2, L. Green, City ; Donald E.
Cheshire ; Garnet H. McKean, O' Rourke, City ;
Stanley

City ; Gladys G. Glassbur n·, Rt.

Gallipolis ; Ernestine Paisley.
Ewlngton ; Alice V. El li s,

2,

Bid- Charlotte Wedemeyer, Rl.

well ; William M. Marks, Rt.1,
Thurman ; Donald . E. Little,
Cheshire ; Mabel F Reynolds,

Ernest M. Denney, Rt . •1,

John W. Swisher 1 Rl . 2, Vinton ;

Dow I M. Daniels, City ; Nola F.
Spurlock, Crown City ; Mildred
L Brown, City ; Nancy J.
Lemley , Il-l. 1, Gallipolis;

-Emmett R•IAHr -Rt. 2, Crown

City; Ethelyn E. Coughenour,

ChesHire : 'Irma Mae Gabrielli,

City ; Leslie E. McMahon. Rt.

2. Gallipolis; Anna M. Burke.

City.• Wanda T. Theiss. City;
Ray Fisher, Rt. 2. ' Northup.
and Violet B. Lloyd, City.
Oscar J. Garland. Rt. I.
Crown City ; Constance Ann
Wise, Cheshire ; Paul W.
Carman , Rt. 1, Gal lipoli s:
James R. Sarrett, City ; Bessie

M. Sheets, ESR, Gallipolis;
Grace
I.
Wood, PSR,
Massie, Patriot ; Everett G. Gallipolis ; Christopher Biars.
Rl. 2. Gallipolis; Bonnie D.
George, Vinton ; Patricia L.
Roush, Rt. I , Gallipolis; ' Cottee. Rt. 2, Vinton; Ward
Herma n H. Wood , Rt. 2, Bloomfield, Rt. 4, Oak Hill ;
Scott.
ESR.
Patriot ; Nancy M. Sheets, R'l. Imogene
L Ga llipolis ; Bessie M. Gallipolis; Denver E. Call.
Crown City ; Lena M. ThompJohnson, Crown City ; Lowell
E. Jeffers, Patriot ; Constance son, Rt. 2, Vinton ; Joann Y.
S. Cross. City ; William F. Schmidt, City. and William H.
Nance, Northup; Clifford F. Swanson, Rt. 2, Gallipolis.
Newman , LRR , Gallipolis ;
Kathleen Thompson, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis; Ella P. Shaver, Rt.
Belville, Crown City ; Edgar

I.

Gladys 'M. Hutchinson,
Northup; John E. LafT!bert,
City ; John S. Smith, WSR,
Gallipol is; Frank H. Mozena,
City ; James R. Collison, Rt . 2,
Northup;

John

W.

if the so-called experts really

RIL

·· ·

·

bears.

New York. And that is the rub.
Locked ID Vault
The Met has told the Andersons
" We also own a Rem· their Titus has to be a copy.
"No one wants to a.dmit his
brandt," ' says Anderson,
unequivocally but not without a painting is not the original,"
said Anderson during an intrace of defiance in his voice.
This work, a 12 x 19-inch terview in his living room
drawing, does not hang in the where, for the occasion, he had
Anderson home; it is kept in a displayed his treaure propped
bank vault in downtown up on well-worn sofa.
"'But ours is. an original
Seattle.
drawing
and the MetThe Andersons are convinced their colored chalk ropolitan's is a painting,
drawing of the famous Dutch perhaps a painting copied from
..
master's son Titus as a young ours.
"Our task-and it's proving
prince is a Rembrandt
to be a monumental one- is
original. ,
Awork similar to that owned• proving what I say is true ..The
experts don 't seem to be in~y the Andersons hangs in the
Metropolitan Musewn of Art in terested. Sometimes I wonder

exist .''
Anderson, 43, and his wile
have read just about every ·
book, pamphjet or reference
work that ex1sts about Remlrandt .
They have had the paper on ·
which the picture is drawn •
investigated by an expert and :
the materials used In the
picture analysed by a scientist.
They have had X-ray and ·
spectrograph tests of the
drawingand,asfarastheyare ,
concerned, the resUlts have .
erased any doubts that their •
Titus is an original work done ·
by Rembrandt Harmensmon .
van Rijn in 16:i5 ..

GALLIPOLIS - Mike Null,
son of Louis Lambert,
Waterloo, a student at Symmes
Valley High School and Barbara Lynne Hixon, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. John Hixon, Rt. 2,
Jackson, a Ja ckson fllgh
School student, were named
winners of the !972 Buckeye
Rural Electric Cooperative
Scholarship Contest Saturday.

Second place went to John
Cur tis, son of Clifford and
Betty Curtis, Oak Hill, a
stud ent at Oak Hill High
School, and Debra Lynn
Dearth, daughter of Lincoln
and Mary L. Dearth, McArthur , a student of Vinton
County High SchooL
Second place winners are

City ; Charlotte M. Green.
Cro.wn Ci ty ; Record lull.
Crown City ; Carol Ann Foster.
Rt. 2. Gallipolis; Ralph
Johnston. Jr .. City ; Anna D.
Harrison. Rt . 2. Gallipolis ;
Keith P. Bradbury. Rt. 2.
Cheshire; Ph illip M. Garlic,
ESR. Gallipol iS; Leona P.
Sp ires. City; Alice I. Beard,
City ; Emma C. Lawless,
Bidwell ; David W. Harper, Rt.

. 0 . Heister, Kerr ; Oscar L.

2, Gallipolis; Eli C. Lambert,

Rt . 1, Thurman, and Joe A.
Luikart, City.
Robert F. Bostwick, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis ; Lawrence R. Hall,
City ; Carl L. Cameron, City;
Mary U. Lewis, Rio Grande;
Ross C. Northup, City ; Frank
W. Clendenin, Kanauga; Leo
Ell is

Swisher,

· Each winner will receive
$200 cash and will be eligible to
enter • the state contest in
Colwnbus at Scots Inn May 8.
The slate winners, one bOy and
one girl will receive $1,000 cash
and at the end of the second
year of college work , if the
winner is interested in a career
in rural electrification, he or
she may receive on-the-job
summer employment at one of
tlle Ohio Rural Electric Co-ops
- 13 weeks per summer for
two vacation periods.
Minimum
tota l
remuneration is $1,300. Total
value of the first award is
$2,300, if work plan option is
used.

Mr . and Mrs. David Carr and
son from Virginio Beach
visiWd his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. E. R. Carr over the
weekend.
Mr. and Mrs . Doyle l;ludson
and Judy were dinner guests of
the Joe Sayres Sunday.
Rev. and Mrs. David
Wi se man and children of
Cambridge were overnight
guests of their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Wiseman.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Hudson
are enjoying a couple ol.weeks
with his sister in Louisiana.
Robert R. Gibson of
Columbus visiied till! Robert
Atkires and Ray Sunday .

"

' .

E. Wiseman, City ; Betty Lou Thelma S. Taylor. Rt . 1,
Marchi,

City ; Margaret C.

'

Soc.iety News

making her home wl th Freda
Carsey .
'
Guests Easter of the Junior
Paynes were Mr. and Mrs.
James Cheadle and children of
Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Barret and family of
Rutland and Kathryn Weaver.
Recent guests of Ava ClUkey
were Mr. and Mrs. C)inton
Gilkey and Karen of Albany,
Mr . and Mrs. F. 0. Whaley and
Mr . and Mrs. Terry Whaley
and daughter and Bobby
Gibson of Columbus and Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Jordan of
Cincinnati.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Bishop
visiWd her mother in Hamden
Mrs. Mannie Newlun is now Easter.

• Modem - Early American • Med~erranean - 5. 6. 7 and 9 Piece Sets
•High Pressure Plastic Tops in fAIIor and Wood Grain
•Metal O!airs in Chrome, Bronze, Black and Avocado with Large Selection of
Vin~ Covers
·
·

Cheshire ;

'

eligible to lake over awards ·
should first place winner .·
become ineligible or in any ,
way be unable to participate In ·
program.
Judging the contest were E. ,
E. Davis of Davis Fire Brick :
Co., Oak Hill ; J. Shennan :
Porter, Rio Grande College :
and Gary Short of Gallipolis. :

Harrisonville

Northup; Jimm ie R. Hale, Rt.

Myers, Kanauga ; Hobart T. 4. Oak Hill ; Elsie Lak in. Rt. 2.

'

.

Shop Elberfeld&amp; 3rd Floor Furniture Dept. and save during our Spriltg

. I

Furniture Sale of Living Room and Bedroom Furniture.
,.

'

0

PRICES IN· EFFECT THROUGH
.
SUNDAY APRIL 16. WHILE
QUANTITIES LA.ST .

Miss Hixon, Mike Null Win $250

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
SPRI-NG SALE DINETTE SETS

Russell,

Patriot ; Raymond E. Barr, Rt.
L Gall ipolis; Mary L. James,
Rt. 2. Gallipolis; Paul D.
Brookins. Rt. 1. Gallipolis;
Mabel M. Stevens. Rt. 2.
Patriot ; Dayton L. Briggs. Rt.
1, Gallipolis; Ma xi ne H.
Smithkey, Rt. 1, Northup, and
Joe N. Lawson . Rl. 1,
Ga ll ipolis.
Verdon H. O' Dell , City ;
Walter B. Mosley, City; Noel

Bonnie Stewart. City; Harold

·,

STAR1lNG
10 A.M. MONDAY
•

1, Gallipolis.

Opal P. Nibert. Rt . 1, Cheshire; Naida France Frye,
Gallipolis; Robert R. Gooch, City ; Harry E. McE II)aney,

Beck, WSR, Gallipolis; Barbar a F. Epling, City ; Edison(;,
Guinther; City ; Buren L. Bush
Ci ty ; Kenneth N. Romlta, City;
Bobby C. Roble, Rt. 1, Bidwell;
Pearl W. Donna'lly; Rt. 2,
Patriot ; Michael J. Pickens.
Rt. 2. Crown City.

order) Peter Buis, Mike Coonen, Mark Cornell, Bobby
Kiesling, Terry Lewis, Charles Masters, Scott ~ice, Danny
Sickles, Nate Thomas, Keven Woodall, Terry Bramard, _Terri
Adkins, Sara Abels, Shari Bennett, Brenda Ferguson, Gwen .
Gilliam, Lori Kelton, Cheryl Malcolm, Patty Phillips, Renee
Saucier, Elizabeth Simms, Cindy Stalnaker, Meg Thomas
and Diane Ward.

Experts Shush.·Amateur's Claim·

~;::: ~~~~i~g~n~o:r;,~~~in~~ ~:s;~oc::tri~~~

were from ·
Mr . Smith said.
Hundreds of deer hunters
Pruning of the trees will aid were in the reclaimed area last
in their growth and help to fall, and considerable success
SEATILE, Wash. (UPI)improve the trees themselves, was reported. Earlier this Ed Anderson is a good-natured
he said. ·
year, the company opened Its man who is an electrician by
Of the total number of land to beaver trapping, and trade and happens to like
seedlings being planted this 103 beaver ranging in size from paintings, including an oil of a
year, 1,600,000 will be planWd 12 pounds to 61 pounds were bunch of bears which he did ·
on previously mined banks, taken. .
himself.
while the remaining 400,000 are
While the lakes were stocked
He also is a man who claims
to be planted on unmined with many kinds of fish, in- he owns an original Rembrandt
banks.
eluding muskellunge, the first but can't seem to get anyone to
The tree and seed planting "muskie" ca tch was recorded take him seriously.
and the pruning of growing in 1971.
Anderson and his wife, Pat,
trees all are part of Ohio
While the public is w~lcomed have several paintings hanging
Power's philosophy of return- to the recreation area, people. In their modest, lemon-yellow
In~
mined
lands
to are advised that a permanent . house stuck away among tall,
usefulness.," Mr. Smith said. permit is available at any Ohio greeri firs within sound of the
Over the years, the company ·--·Power office or through the freeway south of SeatUe.
has planWd hardwoods, such Ohio- Department of Natural
The art on display includes a
as yellow poplar, red oak, Resources. Stale licenses also handsome little original by
white oak, white ash, silver are required for fishing, Ludwig . Knaus, the German
maple, cottonwood , basswood, h'unting and trapping.
genre artist; an unsigned
buckeye, black walnut. bl,ck
masterwork of a Capuchin
monk; a John Clymer landscape, five or six other works
and, of course, the Anderson

City ; Biddie Alma Provens,

n

alder, black ., locust and
sycamore, and · softwood
varieties such as larch and
white, red ani!- Vi{glnia 'pine. ·
Seedl,ings have ·grown · to
matUrity .in many areas of the ..
ffkmer sur!ace mine lahd, and
the company .,Ims se! aside
large and sinalfparksites, has
aided in the stocking with fish
of more than 300 lakes, and has
opened its land to public
camping, fishing and hunting.
More than 800 camping units
wete counWd in the parksites
last •Memorial Day alone, and
61,000
people
signed
registration she~ts at the
parksites in 1971. Of those,
8,293 were !rom states outside

WITH STORIS
LOCATED•IN

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·WED.,
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•
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tftipt ttyl.. 1'1'10.11
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DRESS PANTS

Reg.
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from
.
r.egular models, popular frayed It ~s

or demm prints. Sizes: 29 to 42.

$500

y

'

MEN'S

DRESS SOCKS .
Better quality nylon bo 1
12 auorted colors
n_on, or orion crew styles.
13.
• ne Slllt stretch fits si•s 10 to

0

Heck's

Heck's
Reg.
To $2.99

7:::;.;,

Each

CLOTHING
DEPT.

.BOYS'

PERMANENT PRESS

WALK ·SHORTS
~~le

24"x36''

OVAL RUG

' Durable shorts that will lost the
son long ·. Never nee d ."o.ning . Frayed seoI
mo del•. S1ut• 6 tc 16.
·
eg

3 PAIR
$1 0 0

CLOTHING DEPT.

·Heck's Reg.
$3.44 each ·

USE YOUR
HECK'S
CHARGE-A-CARD

'

CLOTHING .
DEPT.

BOYS'

POLO ·sHIRTS .
with comlortab'-'" crew neck a d
.Available
tr'
In ' 1pe• or solids. Siuts: 4 to 8 and 6 to I~-

. _
JR. BOYS'

. PANTS
&amp; ~HORTS
~::9 wear ond easy ·care Permo-

hoi: :ress pa.nts and shorts with
.oxer wollt. A wide selection
o! sohds or fancies to choose fr
S11es: 4 to 7.
om.

$100

Practical car et .
.
·
shape with f .P p~eces In an oval
Jute ba k' r!~ged borders. Double
c mg. nosorted colors.

Heck's

Heck's Reg.
$J.99 Each

. Heclc's Reg.
$2.44 Each
CLOTHING DEP:r. ·

Reg.
To $J.88

Heelc' s leg. to $ J.66
Q.OTH!NG DEPT.
PAGI5

�GIRLS'

POLO

GOLF BALLS

BASKETBALL

~ SHIRTS

.....-.......
Wc.. sidw ' er

3 ·FOR

'. .
. Rugged. responsive ·cover olwoys ready for ony
court, ony weather. Conforms rigidly to offi.
ciol silO and weight standards. .\7yrowo~nd with
nylon filament for e1act roundness and shape
retention. Fully molded butyl rubber bladder.
Pebble-&lt;jroin finish.

Hurry to mah
your selection of
solids or prints.
Si~es: 71o 14.

CIRLS'
SHIFT &amp;

X-OUT

WILSON

ggc

-

~'i_cor'CI .pOUcts.

liJct.d

bottom•.

Clilforund trhft•.

· ··PANTY SETS
The ,;;tier look in girls' shift
ond panty sets. Mode of smooth
ond' comfortable acetate. Woshoble. Available in assorted styles.
s;.., 7to 14.
.

Heck's
Reg.
CLOTHING DEPT.

$7.99

Heclc'a

SPORTS

$11.99

•••

DEPT.

INFANTS

JUMP SUIT

CLOTHING
DEPT.

lnfo11h OM pieu jump

'"it with

button thouldtn ond 1nop crotch .
All permanent prtn in
01\0rtH dripet. Siat:

USE YOUR

110 LB. BARBELL COMBINATION

CHlRIE~l-ClRD

One 5 ~- foot bor and ont dttp·•nvrltd chrome plot.d ,...,oJvift9 ......... Two iMide collars 111ith Mt
Krtw. Two lariJII ouhlde collon witt! horwj~ bolt
wrench. Four 10-pound in..rlodiNJ gold-finid.d
vinyl pl9tt1. Two 14" dumbbell bon with two
dwome-ploted re.olvin&lt;j .l..'t'et. Four dumbbell col.
lors. lillord BortMII Troinir19 Chort.

S·

M-l-XL

CHARGE IT

$158 ·

$

99

Heclc's Reg.
$21.97
'

TODDLER
BOYS'
SUIT LEI

PAJAMAS
• Ad;.toWe '-• ........

All permanent pr.ss mot.riol
with comfortable elastic
woist line. Size 2 to 4.

..,..... .......

• .!loll ..... If' whe1ll ·
Htd'aleg.
. $11.99 .

CLOTHING DEPT.

....

H~s

$f.21
SPORTS

DEPT•

. GIRLS'

SHORT SETS

Ideal for tho spring an~ summor
,
s~oaan. Availoblo in one or twO' · 1 . 1
pooc• stylos. Porman•nt Pross.
Sias: 3 to 6X ond 7to 14.

$148

C

AIID

·

WILSONK-28
GOLF BALLS
Porfectly lowni!J , thin wolle .. liqwicl ctntor,
Yorcls of r.otwrol rul.~r thrucl wit~dlnt••

m.lchod .... ~-

w•....., """" ''""""

the''"'''· Coclwelll.oloto cover. Polyurott.n. finish th.t • • chipt;

or yellows • stop

3 FOR

$271

.

.
Cowllfch fHther with
dwdy lfltclllllf for -..

....

w!Otof.. ~fo .

·-

PAGE 7

�415

COLEMAN

5254

COLEMAN

STOVE

COOLER
0

•

A eortvenient Ctftl.., to the 9f"t number of
tow ptofilt 1torop lpOCfiS found in MOd.rn
con, boof\, troi&amp;tn arwt cobiM. MointoiM
lor,. food storop capacity, inc:orporoft1

NATIONAL

delute feoturft of ednllarg. coot.r.

99

$

•

•

Hero's o 2-burnor stove that's
economical and its easy portability roproso nh o solid oppoolfor
budget-minded comport who li••
to travel. 2~ pint fuel capacity.
Folds to IB"a ll ~ "•4-71",

ZEBCO 202

SPINCAST REEL
St.ainless steel spinnerhead, nitrate
hardened for resistance to line wear.
Thumb control button.

12'x12' ·DINI.NG CANOPY
Modo of tent twill . f" . Guy
ropes with rope guides . . . adjustable spring button aluminum
center pole ... complete with
ropes, sto.es, i nd alum inum
poles.

Heck's Reg.$ 20.9.9

$

Ree l fe oturt1 fiber-fill ed l e•o n bo dy for
total corrosion ,.lisiOIK:t, contow-ed thumb
control, 111per-smooth drag o~ Hlective onoff o nti~evene . Medium.oction two-pitu

fiber glou rod hot ofhet handle with ta pered ~elect specie cOf~ grip and foregrip .

$ 88

Complete witn Zebco monofilom.nt line.

Heck's Reg.
$3.88

SPORTS
DEPT.

Heclc's Reg. $l6.97

SPORTS
DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.'

6

$

Sr.!INCAST ROD &amp;. REEL
COMBINATION
SPORTS

DEPT.,:

Heclc's
Reg.

SPORTS DEPT.

$ll.97

. KELLER

ONE -GALLON

FOAM JUG

,COLE,M AN

SLEEPING BAG

SPORTS
DEPT.

Filled with ocryfil insulation. Outer cover is
hoo vy-duty shooting ond tho lining is Kosho.
Quilt through design.
· ·

$
Heclc's Reg.
$J .38

.

'

8'x10' WALL TENT
M~d. of "Colorfast" +-ttt twill, compltf~y
odfustoblt o~ld. oluminvm frame. S.wn-ln

Ooot •• . 61"1.22" KtHftld pictvre window in
each lidt of tent with 1tot"m flo ps. 10" "'""
door .. . ••"pOYt fiOOf . , , complete with

9

$

Heclc's Reg. $l0.99

Say
"Charge

SPORTS DEPT.

HECK'S 6 VOLT

Heclc's Reg.

30 QT. FOAM COOLER

SPORTS DEPT .

$64.88

LANTERN BATTERY

.

BIKE
HELMET

It"

-~A"'II'i&gt;:
,,,
' ­

,,

'

Heclc's

~pring picnic seo~n is just ohood and this ice chest is ideal for ...; ong oil your rolroshmonts cold; Complete with aluminum handle.

Reg.

99c

•

DIAMOND

'
SPORTS
DEPT;

PITCHING

•

HIPWELL 6-VOLT_

LANTERN ·
Heck's Reg. $1.88
"'

Just

'

fro f'lle and detl1 fo~es.

KE;LLER .

$

88

SPORTS
DEPT.
'
'

SPORTS$
DEPT.

27

Sntll owov.d. bueds tftt ~ormonce dondord• of the .
USAS I Z90.1. Fa,ertlou fwll coverage 1hell, rubb"
trimmed edcjt, 1tyro-foom and foam no~bb.r iM~.~klted, with
vrnyl ttothtr
and nyloft chfn •trap. RuggH •no!M
!Krou front to mount'vitot 0t foce shi.ld ol'ld 9099!. 1trap.

'*'*'

- . . I colon.

$

9

HORSE SHOES
Official size and weight. Made of
strong steel. Four to a .set. Horse
shoes only.

$599

Heclc's Reg.
$l.99

Heclc's .a.,. $J7.99
s,otfSQlPT.

Heclc's leg. $7.77
SPOtTS OEPT.

Hura

.:J; '
•

�ROTARY
.

ASSORTED
!\:1\ ......:r.'

-

• 13 Inch Wheel
• Orange in Color
• Convertible Style

99

$

RIDEM SCOOTER :

TOY

~eg.

I

I

I

$299

$366

Heck's Reg. $3.99

~lrlliln

Heck's Reg. $ J. J 9

BY HUFFY

Hec/c's Reg. $4 .88

RADIO PAL

\

STEEL WAGOI
Salt plastic grip on brightly plated handle. All
stool construction. Body • 24 Jlu 12al in. Wheels
• 6al4 in. ~ubber lites. A child's favorite toy!

'

Heck's Reg.
$3.48

RIDING LAWNMOWER

HARDWARE DEPT.

TOY DEPT.

$19.88

Sillilar
to

.

•

CHOICE

·DEPT.
'

I

. HORSE
POWER

32

CHOICE

The leader of the poet The BOLD EAGLE
lriko flys down hill, wings through the loop
and soan through space! A super custo,;
trike on a dore devil, lightning coune.

01

8

Roses of the finest
quality.

BOLD· EAGLE
-SET

A. T.V. SCRAMBLER
RID.EM VEHICLE .

Heck's

·~-

Heck's
Reg.

6-PIECE

HARDWARE DEPT.

Heclc's
Reg.
$399.88

Heck's Reg.
$2.48
HARDWARE DEPT.

WEED-GRASS WHIP

IY TOOTSIE TOY

$

$377

.

$2.66
HARDWARE DEPT.

I.

SUPER SLICK
SET

• 8 H.P. Brigg1 &amp; Stratton, -4 cycle
eng ina
• Qn dcnh ore lever control, lor cho.e,
speed ond llop
• -4 forword ipeed\ plu1 N1utral and
R1.,.1n1, P1dol clutch, OiH1rential on
r1ar o•le
• Bla~e~ c:on be di"ngoged while
enqlne i1 running
• Foot pedal controhld brolie
• SIMI, full pneumatic Terra. Tir11,
R1or . IS.6.00, Front . 11•&lt;4.00
• Geared 1f'11ri"9
• Budet 110t with bot~ red
• CuHinq heighh: IV. " to 4", Tate
bo• under 11ot

Heck's Reg.

$5.78

99

CLOTHES.LINE ''T'' POST
Mo,de of rugged galvanized steel.
Cames·in a set of two.

· · HARDWARE
DEPT.

HARDWARE
DEPT.

41

Hec/c's Reg.
$4 .99

.GLOBE

-,
•

Fits aU ~ypes of .~oolwoar. No. clamps to adjust. Adjustable

length 7 to 9l'l . 8 ball boa.,ng wheels..' Leather hool strap.
Foam rubber instep pods. Bright plated finish.

TOY
DEPT

$33~
Ull

. Y2"

FOLDING FENCE

MATTEL

$4.33

' " " $2.77

Heck's Reg. $4.44

36"x39"

. TOY · ·
DEPT.

GARDEN .HOS.E

Heck's Reg.

WHITE

WITH CANOPY

,Hec/c:s
' lteg.

~..

$333
SANDB9X -

BABY BEAN DOLLS

. . PLASTIC

~:

· ROLLER SKATES

"

LAWN SHEAR

ROSE
BUSHES

·.~" "'- .• .:-e:

'

'·

Heck's
Reg .
$1.48
HARDWARE DEPT.

»

HARDWARE DEPT.

50 FT.

$
. ,·..

IS" high, 10 ft. long. Protects shrubs,
lawns, flowers and trees. Baked-on
DuPont finish.

$ 00·

X

Heck's Reg. $4.48

Heclc's
HARDWARE
DEPT.

- Reg.
$2.77
•

r

Heclc's Reg.
. ' $2.77·.
HARDWARE DEPT.

�.

.

GILSON
S H.P.

GARDEN
TILLER

HECK'S
VINYL

Hard worling, big power tiller.
Eooy handling, too • with for .
word, neutral, reverse. Deluxe
· tine ohield . 5 hp., 4·cycle
Briggs &amp; Stratton engine, over·
center clutch control. All Gil.
oon quality leatureo.

WALL PAINT
A "better buy" ot Hod'o ... . choooe
from ton modern colon pluo two whiteo
in thio to oily applied Iotti wall point
... durable, attractive ... your ootio·

HARDWARE. $
DEPT.

faction is guaranteed.

PREMIUM

HOUSE
PAINT

WALL
PAINT

WHITE ONLY

Th. "Best of the Bell " from H.d '1. Ouolity
fate• wall point a vailable in o wide lelecfoon
of detOfolor 1hode1 ... plu1 whilt l, to \uol
anyone 's to1h . Thi1 wall coofinq coven
most colon with ivll one coot .... point in
the morning, party in the evening . Compare

/

LITE
CHARCOAL
STARTER

GuN

Lite

charcoar
starter

QT

3-PC. REDWOOD PICNIC
SET
poti~

Ideal lor
or picnic
area. Table and 2 bencheo.
Edgeo ore eooed to prevent
splinter damage and oharp·

'HECK 'S PREMIUM ' wi t h any other wall

$

HARDWARE
DEPT.

00

GULF

... ¥· -··....... ...._,

FAMILY SIZE ·

point at any priu. YOU will bl pleo~ntl y
Mltpri.. d.

GALLONS

Heck's Reg.
$188.88

HECK'S

HECK'S
ACRYLIC

$29.88

GALLON_
Heclc's Reg.
$2.99 Gallon

1

HARDWARE
DEPT.

Heck's Reg.
$6.99 ·

HARDWARE
· DEPT.

GALLO I
· H 1c

WIPER

R

BLADE

ec 's eg .
$4 .99

39c~.....;._.....J~-..ii..~

REFILLS

HARDWARE DEPT.

Si~~to

for moot cars.

....... Heck's
· Reg.
to' $2.99

HARDWARE
DEPT.

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.
l'e*le.

24"x60"

RALLY

FOLDING TABLE

• 10 OZ. UEAM WAI
t:::~ • 16 OZ. VIIYL TOP .
WAI .
9 OZ. VIIYL TOP
"''" • '1AID
UPHOLSTERY
CLEAIEI

24"x60". A oilver topped table that serve• o multi.
tude, of purpooes. Non.oinl U·lego. Table loldo eo oily ·
ond compoctlf.
.
HARDWARE

Ha/11

.___ .DEPT.

CIIOICE
Heck's Reg.
~10.66

'

30''' BOW SAW'
HARDWARE
DEPT.

ci3

$'

99

I

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

SUPERIOR

SPORT GRIP
STEERING WHEEL COVlR
Mofes any ordi!'Ory ste..ring wheel o btoltftful custom spOI'b

whMII Amo1ing ntw Porotherm looh b.tter titan leather, t.. h
li•• o m·· ~rforat.d , lace-on, cu1hioned!

Heclc's
Heck's Reg.
$4.48

Heck's Reg.

.Reg.
\ $3.66

-

�STP

.

.

Enter the
SWABBIT CONTEST

OIL TREATMENT
SEAT
COVERS
.
.

$

CARTRIDGE TYPE

$100_

-

Heck's Reg.
$4.99

HEAD I SHOULDERS

SPIN-ON TYPE

Heclc's

.$166

Reg .

99c

COSMETIC
DET.

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

.· j · · . .

)

I!!

,

AUTOMOnVE

DEPT.

-2-pioce rubber front mat
set . •. . choose from as1
sorted colors. -

Heclc's

$3.99

3-SECTIOI CAR

Lorge load capacity . . • rigid one piece construction. Attractive baked-on enamel finish. Completely
assembled ready for -easy installation. Suction cups
assure solid position grip.

A·

Easy to install. Ideal for better reception. Includes 54" lead cable.

Heclc's
Reg.
$2;97

&lt;AR .... HOME

SPRAY $
GUN

Attaches to any gordon hate.
. This spray gun ii tho perfect
answer for: auto washing, win·
dows, siding, cleaning potiot,
opplyin9 fertilizer, wHd liller,
and insect spraying. Comes
with waa ond detergent pollen
. . . other pollen ovoilable • .

AUTOMOtiVE
DEPT. .

Iii' Sport . .. made lor'the hard to lit American and Imported compact, sub-compact, ond sporll cars. Ri9ht style .. .
ideal size .. . one model fin perfectly on righi ond Wit side.

~299 .

BAYER ASPIRIN
50'i

39c

'

Heck's Reg. 58c

COSMETIC DEPT.

,

PRO
.
.
TOOTHBRUSH

...........

• Medium
• Hard

Heclc's
Reg.
$4.99

Skin Bracer
I

[) [) [) 0 0
ooot)

STATION WAGON
.· V.ENTILA TED '
WIRE CU$MION

6

PAD
• Assorted colors
• Foam podded
• 42"172"

Covered with Black ond White Chemtu
treated fibre with wire coil insort and bound
in black vinyl. 16"132".

AUTOMOnVE DEPT.

oz.

.MENNEN .
~eclr's

. SKIN :

Reg.
54c

IOSMETIC
DEPT.

Heclc's Reg. $4.99

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

coiM£t:IC DEPT.
.
.

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

lir SPORT
CAR MIRROR

89c

Heclc' s Reg.
$4.99 .

~UTOMOTIVE DE~T.

MAS~ER

Mfg. list

-$ 66

$ 77

Heck's Reg. $5.99
~UTOMOnVE

DEPT.

ggc
•

48c

TOP CARRIER

CHOICE

To $J.44

S's

FOXCRAFT

• 4.3 OZ. TUIE

Reg.

SUPER STAINLESS

2

COSMETIC
. DEPT. .

.Heck's

GILLETTE
BLADES

$ 9m9 Automotlw.
Dept.

•5
• 1.5 IZ. LITIOI.

75c

Heck's Reg.

RUBBER TWIN FRONT
CAR MATS

SHAMPOO
oz. .Ill

Mfg. list

to $2.27

•

COSMETIC •
. DEPT. .

ALKA-SELIZER 25's

• Silft to fit motif c:on.

The finest nvlon and foam constru~tion . makes
these the 4 best seat coven you can buy. These '
covers fot as if they Wlti'O built right into the car. ,
The beautiful styling and protection of these '
popular seat covers offer years of comfort and
elegance. For split or solid bact

Heck's Reg. $ J.J 6

IOOONLY
PaSTOIE

OIL FILTERS

NYLON-N-F.OAM

~ -.-;:~--

Twin Tray 400's

LIMIT 2

LEE

.C

SWABS
'

68

Heclr's Reg.
. 99c -

COSMEnC DEPT.

.J&amp;.J
FIRST Ill

KIT

.«....~
. $J.I9 '

COSMETIC

�'

S~On

LADY

· ·.

FACIAL .TISSUE
175 CO.UNT

3-PIECE
CAST IRON .

·3-PIECE GOURMET

COOKWARE SET .

SKILLET SET

•

LIMIT 4

Rogol -l piece gourmet pan s•t with Super·
Hard Tollon II the tough ~rotch ro~slonl fin·
ish. No sticking! No scouring! No spociol tools
needed. Set co~sts of: 10 in. gourmet pon, I~
in. gourmet pon, Sturdy siHispotulo.

The answer to oil frying nee.ds from
lumberjack brooklosn to polite sorv·
ings. Contains: I 0" skillet, 8" skillet,
6~" .. illet.

$

$

FOR
Heclc's Reg. HOUSEWARE
33c Each
DEPT.

oz~

QUART

FOAM CUPS

THERMOS
..' BOTTLE

SO COUNT

.CHARMIN NAPKINS
I

J

-

1,60 COUNT

LIMIT 4

-'

'

•

4

PIGS.
FOR ,

WITH HANDLE .

·•

'$ 55'

•

Heclc' s ~eg.
49c
HOUSEWARE DEPT. ·

Heclc' s Reg.

.27 OZ.'- -

$· 00

FUTURE

,

.

Heck's Reg .
$4.99

·3-P

'

• Heck's Reg.
$1.29

. HOUSEWARE DEPT:

7

oz.

45 PC. MELAMINE
DINNERWARE SET
Set o lull table with this complete dinner·
wore sol (service/or eight! . Available in
lour different patterns.

. $4.66

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

$15.88

19c
Heclc's Reg .
. 29c
HOUSEWARE DEPT.

BATH SCALES

,I ...

Heclc' s Reg.

..

--- -·~~-~
- · ·~ ._ _ -~~

.. ..

•

HASSOCKS
Cho- from o wide, wond.rful soloc·
tion of loom-lop~ hassocks in colors
that add now beauty to your homo. All
. covered in wipe-clean vinyl ,with tho
look and fool olloother. Available in
ouorted decorator styles.

$3.77
HOUSEWARE DEPT.

Hecf(.s .
. Reg . .

$1.09

·. HOUSEWARE DEPT.
, .

TABLE
LIMP SHADE.
ASSORTIEIIT
Auortod Iabrie lompshades. Available in
ouortod .;...

SEWII&amp; CHEST
\

· Sturdy design in this, plastic
sowi"9 chest. Complete with
lnoy i~de.

ggc
Heck's lteg.
49c Each

LAMP SHADES.·

Heclc's Reg.

Booutilulstyling occonh this 12-inch
bollerino lamp shade.

Heck's Reg.
79c

3 ~OR

Heck's
Reg.

BALLERINA

·r

IEL IIPU,
. .TBIE

2 ond 3 qt. .;...

$344

PLASTIC
2,.-QUART

•

MODESS 12's

·'

~I i~cludes I,

HOUSEWARE DEPT. ·

A precise solf-levoling movement that weighs
accurately on any floor surface . .. with a
260-lb. weight capocity.

&amp;&amp;c

MIXING BOWL SET

$2.88

PLEDGE .
REI. OR LEIIOII

E

STAINLESS STEEL

DECiliTER

Heclc' s Reg.
39c Plcg.

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.
"

.. 1

9

'

Heck's Reg. To $7.88

HOUSEWAIE -

DEPT.
Heclc' s Reg.
$1.88 .

Heclr's let. to
$2.55

HOUSEWAII

, DIPT.

�~

.r

•

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

FESCO

SCOOP

25''x87''

PLASTIC

FRAMm PICTURES

CHAIRS.

- A tompltte .n.. of populor rept'oduttiOM of fir~~ oil poilrl.
if19&amp;. eoch rend.ftd witft highly •omotit ond tMiiatic br1llh
lfro•n Included in thlt fobulo111 ouortrMt'lt ore MGKOPft,
londscopu, mocMn11 ond ltillliffl.

Su!*bly comfortoblt, ligh+w•ight ond duro·
ble molded of tough poiYpropPnt plastic
• • • 10 n•• ible it .hopu ihelf to fit tt. .Jt.
t.r, yet it's 1fron91r thon rnetol. R.Usts oCkk. olkoli, ond llou..hcx.ld chemicoh. Assort.

tdco~.

Heclc's Reg. $8.50

HOUSEW ARE DEPT.

99

Heck's
lleg.
$3.99

S"x7"
Heck's
~8fl·
$4.44

PHOTO
FRAMES .

...

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

44c

Each

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

8110......41'
HOUSEWARE DEPT. ·

SNYDER

BAR·.STOOLS

. MARSHALLAN

19" PATIO' TABLE
$11 2

Quality and sturdy design
makes this attractive, streamlined stool ideal for use in
kitchen, den· or bar. 'W~od
slat seat and bad. Choice of
24" or 30" sizes.

• Latge enough to hold a full meal
• 19" Round 19" high
• Design is Stain &amp; Mar Resistant

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

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

--$

$

Heclc's Reg.
$1.88 .

TV TRAY
TABLE

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Heclc's Reg .
$9.44

• 15"121" site
• Hardwood tops: s~in, alcohol, mar mistant
• Folds campoctly..,..ortfy edged
with olovatod brass trim
• • lustre braa W' logo

\

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

PLASTIC
GRECIAN

BIRD BATH

Heclc's
Reg.

Classic design. Sturdy two-piece
construction. Self-locking injectionmolded tip. Rigid plastic base.

$1.99

HOUSEWARE DEPT.
Hect'e ....

$1M

SN

D.R

CEILING LIGHT
• What .,,.._ '"'" wittl cP'*kel dfffwtr in co*• Screw Into CNIY 1ocile" ~ •lith' ~It

77c

Heclc' s Reg. $ J .09

HOUSEWARE DEPT•.

5-.. ··~·­
KITCHEN SINK

SET
IIILIIIII Oiah [)rain or, Silv;rwaro
Cup, Ordin Tray, Saop Oiah and Oiah
Map.

~-=~· $1_'6·6·.
$2.88

Heclc' s Reg.

$2.88
HOUSIWARE
DEPT.
PAGI19

�WALTHAM 17 .J

SCHICK

LADIES' .&amp; ·MENS' -· WRIS·
T
.

MIST -HAIR.SETTER

.

.

WATCHES

.

No d.y hoot to tole tho ~fo ond .W., ""'of yow hoo. C..h -yow how wall
bea...tifyi!WJ mirl.lnck.dts ottrocti~ "toa....,. .. to..," tot. Mt. ld.ol for h'o..l
and sfor04J'. A morvelcM way to. Mep YG4II heir IMovttfvt Oftd KOMmicalty.

Reliable performen . • • each watch is
shock resistant and has an unbreakable

S-100

8
C-1400

G. E.-AM

Heclc's Reg: $21.96

C.LOCK .RADIO

JEWELRY
DEPT.

Heclc's Reg.· $24.88
JEWELRY DEPT.

Compoct dyltftt oltd low price. Sitet to fit eon11oniently on niqht lo b'- or thtlf, it lwt o lor~Jt, eoty -to.....a~ clod foco fOf thott dupy, O'fild MOrniNJ-. SoJid•tott dttitn. Wo•o-to-Midic Control, and Auio-

INLAID 8-TRACK .STEREO

motic Volvrnt Control Ort yows, all at, o pww p'-o1inq low priu.

PENDANT WATCHES
A beautiful assortment of styles to choose from.
Complete with long necklace like chain.

$

CLAIROL

HAIR STYLING DR_YER
rjjiitJe·.::;r·i~~
;~a
\, .

Heclc's Reg.
$8.88

I

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3

.

I

·······

JEWELRY
DEPT.

PRO STYLE

NECKLACES; PINS,
EARRINGS

.....
2
--

HAIR DRYER

FH ·

JEWUY DEPT.

·Heclc's

Reg.
$23.88

$

Hlp vein VHF tuittr. Solid stClte
UHF ..... Front ilunll. Front""'
.,. Wit-in molcW ..............

WAHL

PET CLIPPERS

Heclc' s Reg.
$1 r .96

JEWUY DEPT.

WAHL
HOME BARBER SET

SPMTIS

ROOSTER CLOCK

JEWUY DEPT.

77

88

Th. old-tlmo "r.. cfl.oord loa•• groat
......ifwJ on the weN with iti tvltic ho"9·
iftg tho"t · /111 groat ontiqwo fil'lidtes:
.--.. wiMtwoM.Ct~
4;01.

.it

All equipment i1 firmly held in th own comportment. Tht
includos tho powtrfulsingle-cut oloctrlc hair clipper, the quitl,
&amp;moot~int clipptt 'f*iolly de&amp;tfnt~ fOf horne v.e. Aho in-

clo.lod ... -..,. ti• .-.oil, oool ho0cuffi"9 ; -

'

$499

$·5 99 .

Hec•'• •-..
$1.39

Heck's Reg. $8.96

JIWILIY DIPT.

JEWUY DEPT.

·

·.

$49.96

Mtr totley. Th. •peciel ~ltlh ottochfMilf
01'14 worfl'll oW flaw c:oMW.. to--~ heir
looiNot fuloool fwll of ~-

Fast
comfortable
drying at home or
away. Nothing touches
your hair but warm air.
No hot hoses or bonnets. Four temperatures, from Hot· to
Cool. , Portable and
compact for easy storage.

' $1 21 UCI

Heclc's Ret~• $6.39

illl ..,.,....

JEWELRY
DEPT.

$

Heclc' s Reg.

..... omnna. 74 tq. ln. 'Yiewlftt

f

$144 ..

JEWELRY ,
DEPT.

Heclc's Reg.
$ J8.96

SCHICK

Eight track auto lope player complete
with two 'wedge speoken. Channel indicolor and front mounted tone tuning
control. Slide controls, channel light
and fine luning with built-in head clean-

Heclc's Reg. $13 .88

of tofty'• .._ . . .......flowi"t MW4M.

.$.

JEWELRY
DEPT.

loa• of black wrought iron and b touch
that makes a' sprightly loo•ing rooster,
And, ideal lor any ~cor. Easy to
1
crysl•ol-co••orod dial.

...

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a~ty

9

AUTO TAPE
PLAYER
'

JUST
SAY

CAlliSTER
VACUUM
CLEIIIER

CHIRIE.
IT!

Swivel top turns a full circle ta help you
clean. Easy lac•·in attaehmenh include
floating action rug and floor tool, crevice
tool, dusHng brush, upholstery and Iabrie
noule, twa chrome Plotecl steel wands and
a wovon ho..

$
Heclc's Reg. $32,96
JEWELRY PEPT.

�.

.

KODAK .CX-.126-12 ,.

KODAK INSTAMATIC

COLOR PRill FI~M

ggc

JEWaRY
DEPT. -

•

··CAMERA KI-m

r

The AX-15, smart, light, compact, easy to
carry. Ta~es beautiful color snapshots, color
slides, and black and w~ite snapshots. No
setting- drop in film, aim ancJshoot. Gets
sh~rp clear pictures from four feet on.

'

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..

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SUPER 8

~.· Mo·. VIE

JEW.E~Y

DEPT.

&lt;

PRESSURE PAN

CHROME
MIXER
.·$ 77

$ 99

'

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$8.88

M-~

MOVIE FILM

JEWELRY

~·t.
'

:$

' $19:88

$151 $zoo .
..,""'

.

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JEWELRY
DEPT.

JEWELRY

.. DEPT. ·

AX1SR

..

· SUNBEAM

TEFLO FRY .PAN
MUL n-COOKER FRY PAN, CERTIFIED TEFLON II
Use metal spotulo, DuPont's Tello~ iur·
face is scratch-resistant! High dome
vented cover. Removable hoot ~ontre&gt;l
lor immenible cl&lt;ioning. Pedestal legs
protect table. Double hondle.

9

'

$

..
· JEWB.RY DEPT.
Heclts Reg .
$12.96

Heclts Reg.
$18.Jr

•

J-RY
DEPT.

•

Heclts Reg . .
. $9.96
JEWB.RY DEPT.

BLEN.DER

1• tpetd Duttom, off buttoM. .~I d dot., 950 wott motor! low
bow in l decorator colon, eleqont chrotnt trim,
conwenitnt cord .torag. , k up heat....tittont do.,.rltof glou
jar with hondle, 2-piece fle •i.qrip lid with 2-oL meoturing cup,

$ilhouett.

Now lightweight dosign, 6 position
·switch . Whips, crooms, folds, mires,
blonds. Stores on wall or in a drawer.
Ootochoble cord.

rtcipt boo•. full year warTanty .

VANWYCK

..

ICE CR.U SHER

1032

' .

All tho ice you nood\ at tho flip of a switchl
Soporot~ ice container !or o~sy s.orving . lco
level windo,.. tolls when conlotnor 11 lull. ·lclool
lor mi11d drinks and salads. One year roplocomont ~uorantoo.

JUST
SlY

Heclts Reg. $21.96

CHARGE

JEWELRY
DEPT.

IT!
VA.NWYCK

$

EMPIRE .
· · ,: 32 CUP

7

Heclts Reg. $9.96 .
JEWPY DEPT.

•

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POLY.
·. P .E RC
Moclo of duroble polypropylene !tougher than
molal), resists scrotchos, ,will not doni or brook
• . • completely CHior-INo to protoct clolicato
'cofloo taste and orQmo , Now decorator approved colors oro pormano"nt and will not facio
or discolor. So pretty, 'lo oosy to ""· Automat.
· ic operation.

COFFEE·
MAIER
.
~

SLICING ·K NIFE

YW-44

Heclc' s Reg.

Handsome styling on this toaster will complement any ~itchen decor. Temperature
diaJ allows yo!l to select the dar~ness of your

WARIIIG 14 SPE

Now! Open hondle for 0010 of operation. lclool for
right or left hand slicing. Pushbutton bloclo ejection, Stoinleu steel blades lock solely in ploce.
Finger-tip 6.~-off control button. Heavy-duty motor
lor ollro power. Beautifully balanced.

'W

'

KODAK
REGULAR 8

G.E. 2-SLICE TOASTER'

VIII WYCK
5-SPEED

I~STAMATIC

FILM. SLIDE FILM

.$222

4-QUART

KODAK

9

.

MnH IO,to l2 cups of full bodied coll.o. No boiling
wotor to carry . , ..no timor , , • no switches • •• no
,gues$&gt;¥Ork ... oosy to soo 9raduqtia" marks show
fiOCt JI"'Ount of water to uso. Moclo ollioost polnhod
aluniinum will! ,turdy bakolito-c:ovor knob, hondlet and
,legs.
'

$Jll
•

Heclc'a,,!leg. $10.88

Heclts Reg. .
. $9.96

.·
•.

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Reg.

$8.99

·.

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SEE PAGE 2 FOR.. WEDNESDAY COI)PONS

COUPONS .

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DRESS SHIRTS
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Colgate

Thtt feshionobl. ~ tiHvt tricot
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MFP •

5-01.

COLUTE·. JOOTHPISTE

LIMIT 4
WITH Cou_p()N ,

400 ·ONLY PEl STOll

4Foa$5°0

LIMIT l

WITH

39:0.

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CLOTHING DEPT.

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couPoN

COSMETIC DIPT.

---ONE
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ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER

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EDISON

~

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RAININ6! I'M.. THE GAME ? MINVTE NOW ...
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.55c ...

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PLA'(!

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$24.99
HAIDWAIE DEPT.

------------... ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER

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CAN I 00 FOR '{OU ?.
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qt. Co'1"d Sil.vc• Po11, 5 qt. Outcll o~u. 10 ~ I nc:~ Open Fry
Pc;~n (Cottr of
o...,. fltl ffy Par~~

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GOING? DON'T GO!

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BROWN! ANI.{ONE Wl-10 WOU L.D
~TAND OUT IN THI~ RAIN ~HOULP
5EE A P:5'c'CI-I'IATI&lt;I~T !

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1200 ONLY PER STOlE

WI-IERE'5 EVER~ON~ ·

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114 H.P. motor i• do.igMd IO&lt; Iough colli"9. Zipo
lhrough 2x4'• oven ol45' o.,lo. Rotrocioblo blddo
guord:
110 ONLY I'll STOll

7-PC. CAST ALUMINUM
bha tt.ir.i: Cod Alull'l~l'l\ eool:wort hi•M

'· • &amp;8 ONLY PER STORE

LIMIT Will . . .
ONE

WITHOUT COUPON
; 99c
HARDWARE DEPT.

$499

$744

WITHOUT COUPON

. WITHOUT COUPON

.

$14.19

---. ·- --- PIICI&amp;T0¥8

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

ONE COUPON PER CUST.GMER

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.LANCELOT

LADIES'
SHAVER
i.,

Micto-twin ~ ... htod , . , one sld. for
for ltifl. Fod, aoft o;md 1moolh

41 ONLY PER 5TORE

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WITH COUPON

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$8.99
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! COULD U~e ·

$1999

THESE COOKING .
·. TOOL$1 Too.

wmt COUPc:iN

$200
WITHOUT COWON
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JIWEI,ItY DIPT.

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RIDICULOV~

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PIR STOll • LIMIT

25 ONLY PER STOlE '

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couPON

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COUPONS .

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EDISON

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qt. Co'1"d Sil.vc• Po11, 5 qt. Outcll o~u. 10 ~ I nc:~ Open Fry
Pc;~n (Cottr of
o...,. fltl ffy Par~~

LIMIT TWO

GOING? DON'T GO!

'1'0U'RE OUT OF 'fOVR MIN~, CHARt:'I E
BROWN! ANI.{ONE Wl-10 WOU L.D
~TAND OUT IN THI~ RAIN ~HOULP
5EE A P:5'c'CI-I'IATI&lt;I~T !

'

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1200 ONLY PER STOlE

WI-IERE'5 EVER~ON~ ·

. .. I . • '.

114 H.P. motor i• do.igMd IO&lt; Iough colli"9. Zipo
lhrough 2x4'• oven ol45' o.,lo. Rotrocioblo blddo
guord:
110 ONLY I'll STOll

7-PC. CAST ALUMINUM
bha tt.ir.i: Cod Alull'l~l'l\ eool:wort hi•M

'· • &amp;8 ONLY PER STORE

LIMIT Will . . .
ONE

WITHOUT COUPON
; 99c
HARDWARE DEPT.

$499

$744

WITHOUT COUPON

. WITHOUT COUPON

.

$14.19

---. ·- --- PIICI&amp;T0¥8

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ONE COUPON PER CUST.GMER

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LADIES'
SHAVER
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Micto-twin ~ ... htod , . , one sld. for
for ltifl. Fod, aoft o;md 1moolh

41 ONLY PER 5TORE

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WITH COUPON

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WINTHROP
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SO I ' WANT .WU 10
CJ.IECK 'IM OUT FOR 1
ME... ~UST IN CASE,

YEH ••• IT15 ABOUT
A NEW CITIZEN
WE JUST SOT...

$1·..---------------~JM GOING 10 5T"AND
RIGHT HERE UNTIL
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"MY I.OADt· I'M HAU_LING,

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hiR. SH-4RI&lt;EY.
nus Tl-lEME IS
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L.IF,E&amp;oAT! A ~TY

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I ~ESENi 'I'OUR ATTACKS 0~ MY

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A 5L.ING6HOT, MAJOR~

I AM ABOLlT TO Pi?AC'riCE
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WATE~·WITCHINc,

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IGNORANCE

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AMANDA PANDA

JACK CRISP of western
M'elgs County and a
Ooemocrat candidate for
Co•ngress was one of lbe
01sny visitors who viewed
the attractive ceramic
dtsplays during Crusade
Sunday. The displays were
b)' Kee and Dee' Evans and
Mrs. Frances Hewetsoo and
d.,ughter, Mrs. Marvin
SJ11encer.

TilE OUTSTANDING STAMP collection of Mrs. Norman Wayland, Middleport, right, was
a display at Cancer SuiJday. With Mrs. Wailand is Miss Hazel Van Cooney, long-time Middleport postal employe before her retirement, who helped ~xplain to the public various aspects
pertaining to the cpllection.

SANDY CURTIS, left, and Cindy Schneider were
among the many volunteers working at Meigs Cancer Sunday. They were collecting for a buck board from residents

who gave in appreciation for th~ir live entertainment
presented during the afternoon hours.

Crusatk Sunl/ay Proves Thumping Success
I

innovation in fund raising
activities of the Meigs County
Chapter of the American
Cancer Society happened
Sunday afternoon when hundreds of folks tllronged to the

•

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Meigs High School to par- including live entertainment,
ticipate in "Crusade Sunday. " ' art and ceramic displdfS,
The afternoon's activity refreshments and dinner for
headed by Paul Casci and John ' over 700,persons. · .
Reece, co-chairmen, offered
Throughout tlle afternoon
"something for everybody " live entertainment was

An

presented in the school
auditorium ranging from baton
twirlers , gospel singing
through hard rock music.
Taking part in the program
were Armand Turley and

•

Now You Know,

at y

AI. his death in 1877, Monnan
. leader Brigham Young was
survived by 17 widows and 47
chlldlren .

George Hall, organists; Gloria
Buck Walla~e 's baton corps;
the Bissell Brotllers, ·gospel
singers; tile Meigs High School
orchestra and the vocal ·
chorale of the school; "Willie,"

a rock group, Jhe Ambassadors, the Eartllquakes,
lbe Notations and the Cogwells,
all presenting varieties of mod
music.
Volun leers were everywhere

Weather

en tine

Partly cloudy today. High in
tile mid 50s to mid 001. Partly
cloudy with a chance of
, showers or thundershowers
· tonight. Lows in tile upper 30!
and 4lls. Tuesday partly cloudy
and · a Iitie warmer. Highs
mostly in tile 001 north and 708

Devoled To The lnlerestl OJ The Meig1-Ma10n Area

VOL. XXIV NO. 254

All Thin~s
·
CometoHim
Wha··wakes
K -,o; PANTL ESS

iF WE.. STICKS
~CiltTHP.­

WLOUTWE:IGrlS
HIM ~'I HUNDE.P.DS

O'POUNDS!!

IN UNION
THAR IS

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

to,

1972

PHONE 992·2156

ThousaDds Die in Quake
TEHRAN (UP,J·)-A
catacly§IIIIc earthquake struck
110uthern Iran today, leveling
the crude adobe fanning. huts
In dozens of . villages a!ld
burying thousands of people in
the rubble. Awitness said it hit
''like. the end of the world on
Judgment Day."
Manouchet Pirouz, Governor
General of Fars Province
where the earthquake struck
along a 250-mlle long area, said
between 2,000 and 4,000 persons

RA'-PHI£!!

National Earthquake Information Center sai.i! .the quake
reglsterea 7.0 on the openended Richter Scale but witnesses from the area said the
quake had an intensity
measure of 9.5, which would be
one of the heaVieSt on record.)

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Rescue Helicopters SeDI
Helicopter rescue teams flew
to lhe area and began ·pulling
bodies from beneath the
debris. The Shah of Iran ordered six army planes to the
area and sent his brother,
Prince Mahmoud Reza, to the

province to asaist in relief
operations.
"This was a disaster no one
could ever imagine," one
wibie8s who returned from tile
scene said. "It was just like the
end of the world on Judgment
Day.

B52s Inside Screen of·
N
h
·
v
M
il
6
~:tha:;;e~~~;~ ~~:~: ort ·. ietnam
iss· es
were killed and perhaps more.

AH DON'T LI KE TH'SHAPE.
0' 'lOP. E. NOSE., 'IOKUM-

.

PUT 'EM BACK
ON PDTJE&gt;.l
AALPH IE .ON E
O'TrlE5E.
HE'S ·S"'

TOO ROU"'D !! AI·I'L.L
FL.ATTE.N IT!! r--::i

&amp;oUNDTO

WAKEUP!!

THIS R•OCK ENTERTAINER, one of the group known as
"WUlie", was one of a number of entertainers who donated
their talenl .$1&gt;nday when Crusade Sunday was held in Meigs
County.

By United Press Iliterutlonal

by Crooks &amp;

CAPTAIN EASY

5TI:ADY ON, ?UH .. , l ?U?PEC.T!:P
THAT FE:MAL.e- MI&lt;:;HT L.&amp;AI'
'
STRQNaFpOT A~TRAY...
ISO :r·HAI&gt;
THE TWO

Lawrenc~
.JU?T nu: MOCK· UP MO
,;,.;,;,,.\ REAl. ONE:.'~ .5AFC: 1'-1 1iE1~ef

MODEL.?
~WITCH!"
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CAPE KENNEDY - THE COl]NTOOWN started today for
the launch of Apollo 16 Sunday on a keystone mission to land in
the unexplored lunar highlands and search crater rims and
mountain slopes lor clues to the moon's early hlsl!n'y.
The long aerie11 of lliunch preparations began on schedule at
8:30a.m. EST.lt Is aiming toward a 12:54 p.m. blastoff Sunday
for veteran astronaut John W. Young, 41, and space newcomers
Thomas K. Mattingly and Charles M. Duke, both~BELFAST, NORtm;RN IRELAND - · THE ROI!fAN
Catholic Civil Right's ABIJoclallon said today direct British rule
over Northern Ireland has failed to bring real progress toward
jleace and justice, It said &amp;itain must move faster If 'It wants to
stop the violence.
In one violent i&lt;ncident Sunday; slx;·:Y!fuths 'and two young
women dragged a fi~'l!-montha Prt8DIIII c!ltbollc houaeW!fe from
her Belfast home, heat her witll stii:ka, coated her with red paint
and feathers and slritwed her to a lamppost, Police said. Nei8hbors said theauacket·swere members of themllitant Provilional
wing of tile Irish Re)~ublic111 Army (IRA), meting out jlunish·
ment for some infrac~lon of IRA rules.
·

COMPUTE~

set off several landslides,
adding to tile general destruction. ,
In Tehran, government ofti·
ciahi said perhaps as many as
20 to 30 villages with a total
population of 40,000 were
destroyed ,
(In Rockville , Md ., the

COLUMBUS (UPI) ~ The
state ·Board of EciuC~~tioQ.'l)las
presented today ..Wth contract
requests which, if approved,
would nearly round out
structional te~h5ion coverage
for Ohio's i!lementary and
secondary students'. The
contracts total .more than $1
million in state assistance.
The·board was asked to pay
$6,025 to the Southwestern Ohio
Instruc'tional Television
Association ·, Miami
University' sia'tion WMUB-TV
- for aev,en weeks of .~road­
·castlng IIi the 1971~72 school
year. . , .
The board was asked to
. approve contr~cts with the

m-

The ~ander for South
Vietnam's northern war zdne,
Lt. Gen. Hoang Xuan Lam,
said in Da Narig thai ''we have
stopped tile invaSion" by
Communists ·across the
Demilitarized Zone (DMZ)
separating the two Vietnams.

SAIGON (UP!) - American
852 heavy bombers braved
high.flying missiles and raided
North Vietnam today for tile
first time in five years. U.S.
warships dueled with Communist ahore batteries and tw.o
destroyers were hit.

sljlte's newest educational TV
station, WOET-TV at Dayton,
which
be able 'to begiri
broadcasting instructional
lessons on April 24.

Lima-Bowling :Green, Portsmouth and Salem.
'
' When!!llare.in_operation, the
number' of elementary and
secondary studenta iri their
viewing audiences should
The Dayton stati6n was nearly double ·next year from
acquired ·by the ' Ohio the 921,057 of 1971-72. •
I
Educational Television Net"Educational television ,
work Commission from the
Kilty Hawk Broadcasting f.once a novelty, has become
Corp., which operated it as truly a workhorse in the
EKTR-TV.
schools," state ~uJ~~ertntel\(ient
Four more educational of Public lnsiruction Martin W.
"Through
stations, thrqugh funding by Essex s~id.
tile Ohio General Assembly, television students may see
are currently. under con- lessons or' expeliments which
struction and are ~eduled to would be impossible to
begin ope~ation thlS·fall. ,'rtley duplicate becau~e of, cost,
. are located at Camhrlil&amp;e, comp~ty or danger."

will

j

DON'T SE A~URD! IT'? THEMO?T AO,VAN~ED EL5C;TRONIC
&amp;RAIN &amp;VE!t DE'\/I~ISD~ WHAT'

'

COULD POS~I&amp;l.V GO WRON6?

.

However, in Saigon the South
Vietnamese headquBrfers appeared less optimistic. Aaked If
the northern offensive had
ended, a spokesman said ''we
are not qualified to characterize the situation In Quang Tri
province" -the province bordering on 'tile DMZ which bore
the brunt of the original
Communist attack April!.
Fighting continued in Quang
Tri and. other battle areas to
th~ south, including tile vicinity
of Saigon.
~D Ordered Air Sirlkes
It was the first time the
eigbt-engined B5?B based in
Guam and Thailand have
bombed in North Vietnam
since Nov. 'l1, 1967, although
tlley ha~ carried out regular
raids against Communist
positions in South Vietnam,
Laos and Cambodia. A,
spokesman said President
Nixon personally approved the

strikes.
The 85?11, each worth $8
million, fly at a relatively slow
860 MPH and have an altitude
ollO''miles, which make them
vulnerable to 'lhe Soviet-bill!
(cOOiliiued ·on Page 8)

't •

COLUMBUS, S. C .~AGS ·new at half staff at the White
House and slate. bulld\mga IQday in memory of James Francia
Byrnes, one of the "¥lion's most veraaltile and honored statesmao. He died at hia hOul.e S111day at 92.
.
·
· The body of the foi:mi!r Supreme Court Justice, !'aaslstant .
president," secretarY of state aodgqvernor "'If to lie In state at
the rotunda -of the staifouse for :U ooun pn!cedtng noon services Wadnesday.
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Middleport E-R Unit in Tw Runs

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The Middleport E·R'
answered two calls ~(Jay
afternoon. At 12:01 p.m. to
home of Harry Brinkllr,
Middleport mn, who was )11,
. and was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospill\ where .he
wu admltied, and at 3:1/ p.m.
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to help lwei-year-old Robbie 1
Clonch, 11!1" of 111r. anjl Mrs..
~ Clonch, who suffared a
head laceration In falling from
.a swing. He waa taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospiiat
treated and released.
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·

SPRING, .1972
By Goldie Clendenin
PORTLAND-Faye Chilcote Walker
says:
New grass shields the face of the sorrowing
ridge,
And the tears of the winter flow under the
bridge.
Co!I)eli spring wind,.comes rain, and suddenly

arch,

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. CHILLY NIGHT - Hunchda of Meip.Gallla-Muon
district scouts found S(llurday n!Pt more like l'lllnt Barrow,
AlaaU, thallaoutbem (Jllo but ha!l tents like the'11 for partial
protection In the weekend Scou~ at the Gallia Junior

'

Fairgrounds. ~ ranged,ln the iDa. Undaunted,
the uperlence tnproved the scouting Image of being. capable
ofrouchlngit,nomatter what.. Inset: Troop a,.Pt. PIUYnt
who lllept in ~ tenta. 1
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The.stream drinks a toast to the passing of
March.
"Times Change! " cry the cautious; "Be
prudent! we -say!"
But March has her fling in the usual way.
Spring stays the charmer she always has
been;
How Nature must question the wisdom of
men!
Yes, spring's done sprung: with its
promises of a new lease, or renewal· of life,'
someone has said, "She's fickle and unpredictable, but worth the wait.
And we should greet her with a topcoat,
rain coat~ umbrella, galoshes and a smile.
And maybe a pot o' sassafras tea.
Reminds us ole hillbillies of clearing ground in
winter for crops when summer comes - And
saving the roots for tea!
Besides tasting good, it was supposed to
clear one's complexion, thin her blood, etc. All
a spring tonic is supposed to. do.
Fifty years ago in East Liverpool a little
man on the streets used to sell bunches oC ihe
bark for a nickel. Yes, times have chlll)ged!
L8J BETI'ER

CHARLOTI'ESVILLE,
Va. (UPI) - Dr. J. Wlllls
Hurst said Sunday tbat
Lyndoa B. Jobnsoa Is
sbowlag "aome al&amp;ai of
Improvement" bui added
lhat the former president's
heart . hu suffered "permanent damage."
The heart apeclalist,
however, aald thai II was
safe for him to leave
Johnaoa'• bedalde aad
retom to bla dutlea at Emory
Uohenlty In Atlanta.

4 Helped
.

By Aidmen

Pomeroy E·R squadmen
were busy Saturday evening
and SIDlday responding to four
calls for help. These were :
At 4:20 p. m. Satw-dlly to the'
Kleirl residence on Spine Ave.
for Mrs. Nell Klein; Proc· .
torville, who had becllmt Wat
. ·.•.•,•,•,•,•.•,•.•, ,•,•,•,•,•,• .. ·.···:·:·:·:·:···.·:···:·:·:·:·: her son's home. She wu lalren
to Veterans Memorial Hospital'
Divorce Actions
where she was admitted.

Filed in Court

, COLUMBUS - Dwi!GHJ' W• .QSEPH, to.:mer Columbua
chief of police, today ~J appointed head ol the Ohio Bureau ol
~ Identification ~ Inveat~catlon .
··
State Attorney Gen"i'alW11Uam J. Brown said Joseph, 53,
woUld aiSIIIlle hia !IIW'1fr~ imJnediately.
1
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TEN CENTS

SOU\h.

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HERE COME
ROTTEN

STRENGTI-l!.'

MONDAY, APRIL

giving a helping hand to. the
ambitious project which got
the official stamp, "a success," by Casci and Reece. All
refreshmenls, food and en1Continued on page 8)

Two suits for divo~ filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court are by SheUa M. Floro,
Racine, Rt. 2, vs Donald L.
Floro, Racine, and Dapiel
Jeffers, Pomeroy, va Marjorie
·Jeffers, each cllarglnl groas
J1t8loct of duty and extreme
cruelty, , ·
C. W. B~ight, · Worley
Frances and Harley Grate,
Salem township trustees,
Llnsav!lle, and David Campbell, lo!lrir Carlille, Ohio, ftled
lUll to fix the location of a line
fe~ce against Leo Lent1,
Dexter. Also, the Eastern
Finance Corp., Cheupeake,
Va., filed suit for '?42.14
against J1111e1 D. Meadows
and Martha Mudowl, Loag
Botton\.

At 11:58 p: m. to lbe
Theodore Croy home near
Chester for Mr. Croy who was
ill. He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
·was admitted.
'

At 12:50 p.m. Sunday, to the
Laurel Cliff CGIIIIIIunlty fw
Mrs. Gerald Pulllna who had
injured her back In,a fall. She
was taken to the Holzer
Medical Center by a RawU.
Coats ambulance.
· At 7:1H p. m. SundaJ to the.
Alfred canunltJ tor Mn.
Wanda Flndlln1 ' ·~ ' Wll
suffering from a bMd ·
laceration . upo11 bela&amp; ill uck
by a pte wblcb 1114 bee ,
llruck by I bull• • fta 111-

mitted to ve-.. ~

"
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        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52882">
              <text>April 9, 1972</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
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      <name>grueser</name>
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      <name>king</name>
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    <tag tagId="1664">
      <name>sidenstricker</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
