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                  <text>12

Speech

Speaking of Schools
responsibility to redefine the total goal
picture Jor Ohio schools for the decade or
the 1970s. When these goats have been
agreed.to by oW. citizens, we can then get
on with the job of accounting just how well
we are doing the total job and each of its
parts.
We'll be involving many people in this
in the future. We'll try to keep you posted.
WE AHE HAPIDI.Y approaching the
starting time for our first evening adult
mining class . If you want to apply for
admission, call us at 991-2153 and we'll
send you an application form. The course
will last 80 hours and the tuition will be $20
this first lime around .
We plan to have a smaller version of
the summer remedial program this ye~r .
It wi ll involve studen ts in grades 1.0 and be
li111ited to 90 students. Emphasis will be on .
rea ding and math . About 6ll of the students
will come fr om grades 1·3 and the other 30
from grades 4.0. Many children have found
real help in this type of program in past

0

,

yea rs. It is, of course, finan ced with

federal dollars.
.•:
SKIPS MEETING
SAN ANTONIO, Tex . (UP!)
- Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson
skipped a meeti nR of the
University of Texas Board of
- He~enL' Tlmrsday to be. by the

SUITS FILED
A suit fo r partition or real
cstH tc ha s been filed in Meigs
County Court by F:red W. Crow,
Jr ., aga inst Charles Richard
Crow eta l. The property is
~i r.lc of her husba11d , who is located in Salisbury Township.
re cover in g fr om bi s hca rl James Hake, Middleport. filed
suit for divorce ag ainst Eileen
mtack.
Hoss Hake, Burmingham ,
Eng ., charging ex treme
cr·uel ty. The Tri-County Bank
ha s fil ed suit against James
F'u(tz etal for $6,463.16.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Saturday
April21 ·22

RED SKY

AT

MORNING

( Tec hn icolor )
Rit::hard Thomas

Cat heri ne Bu rns

GP
Fea lurette ;
Three Stooges
Crime on Their •Hands

Colorcartoons:
Deep End .
The Hun t

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M .

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Elsie Epple, Pomeroy; Kent Kirkham,
Middleport ; Connie Warner,
Albany; Michael Wolfe, New
Haven; Donald Dye, Long
Bottom; Agnes Oldaker.
Letar t, W. Va.; Georgia
Jolm so n, Rutland; Judi th
Jeffers, Southside, W. Va .
DISCHARGES - Frederick
Ney, TameIa Bowers, Lolita
Casto, Kay King, Victor Diehl.

ARE YOU DOLLAR
CONSCIOUS?

William

THRIFT CENTER
Seasonal Shoes • Broken Sizes
All The Family AI Amazing Low Prices!

.

Pomeroy National Bank.
·It's been a hundred years.
So far.

June 17 1872 to June 17. 1972 One
t.::Pntury t\ &lt;.:ent ury lhi1 1::; seen war and
D{'c!Ct frc~~t and f t~mr n€' The century
man tca1 necl to tty dnd l lt-"w to the moon .
ScvPrl!y two to seventy-t wo The first
t ,JO yNH~ IJI Por11eroy Natrona! Bank
Wed lrke to tr~ ke the credtl for getting
thP town st;~rli'd. but the fact rs the area
held been sdtlecl l ur nearly 70 yea rs before we lrrst opPnC'd our doors Po meroy
hart br'f'n :tw ~en t ot Mergs County since
\841 anct the tow n was well on its way
to a solrd comnH&gt;rtr&lt;l l foo ttlo lct rn coal
and salt
01 courso ttl (' doors ti1.1yP.d open No
sma ll fea1rn the early days of Amencan
bankrng And t hfougtl those doors ever
~mco have co1;11 e busrnossme n and pn vrt 1f' ci11Zf'ns wh o'd mM tA the dectsion
th at he11? wns wt1ere !11e busrness of
bankmg wa s bost conduct~Jd
• DlJrtr1g 1972, we d ltKe to cornbme ou r
little oat-on-tt1e-b41ck lor ourselves with

a big "thank you very kind ly" for yoU .
You and the peo ple in your past are re~
soonsible l or our pa st and necessary
for our future

The big ce lebration will be the week
of June 17. Please plan to drop in . Meanwh ite. drop m any tune Particularly o n

Sa turday mornings for a piece of our
brr\hd ay cake . or arw time. to pi ck up
your copy of a brochure com memorating
your city's latest hund red years. We'd
just like to say hello. Even if you don 't
bank here. we all live here.
AI bot h lhe rna1n off1ce and Ru tland
branch. we 've been sh owing a modern

PLEASANT VALLEY
Names of persons admitted
have been discontinued by
hospital aulhorities.
DISCHARGES :
Mrs.
William Morrison, Mrs. Basil
Crews, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Joseph Hoscher, Bidwell; Mrs.
Charles Stearns, Point
Pleasant; Inez Burdette,
Oakley Willet, Mrs. Homer
Bickleheimer, Fraziers Bottom; Mrs. Dewitt .Browning,
Rosetta Edwards, David
Durst, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Jerry Johnson, daughter, Mrs.
John Carpenter, New Haven;
Mrs. William Underwood ,
Point Pleasant; Lacy Barton ,
Pomeroy ; Mrs . James
Oldaker, Gallipolis ~'erry, and
Patricia Craig, .Middleport.

ne w too k and referring to ourselves as

'Tile Bank of the Century" Great. But
we're really talkmg aboUt two centu riesone of fond memory , one of firm com-

mitment. ·

MASON DRIVE-IN

Were thmktng abo ut one. And work-

ing

on the oth er.

Tonight,
Saturday$ Sunday

APR. 11·12-2l
Double Feoturo
DOCTORS' WIVE'S
Dyan Cannon
pon•e,oy
ru i iUIItl

Richard Crenna

pomero~

national
barik
IM~ Oon ~

r

.

(Color)

ALSO

(ll

1111" t cnl ur y
C$ln1JIIslu!U usn

R

A MAN
CALLED SLEDGE
James Garner·

(Color)

R

the convention are the Rev .
Henry Schadeberg, Greenville,
Mich., and the Rev. W. Me·
Douglas of Siedman, N. C.
The Congregational
Christian Church, of which
Trinity Church of Pomeroy is a
member ,.traces its heritage to
the Pilgrim Founding Fathers
of America, who leavi ng
England in search of religious
freedom, brought
Congregationalism to the
western hemisphere.
At a banquet following the
address by Rev. Perrin on June
29, Ray Nitschke, famous
linebacker for lhe Green Bay
Packers
and
devout
Congregationalist, will tell of
his pro football experiences as
related to his Christian life .

Police Taking

• Sale Chenille Bedspreads . Polyester Double Knit Yard Goods On Sale

• lrd Floor Furniture Department- Sale of Easy Chairs • Sale of Sofas

Other changes planned in conjunction
with the new operation include installation
of a liquid petroleUilJ gas plant needed to
supplement the natural gas supply . Increased useage and the shortage of natural
gas necessitated the L.P.G. plant addition.
Federal-Mogul is performing
development work in an effort to bring
additional ma~ufacturing operations to

Paints including Spred Satin · Playtex Sale of Bras and Girdles
'

VOL. VII

• Take Advaniage of the Special Sale Prices in Every Department

34 PAGES .

NO. ,12

PERKIN~

Two year field grown superrooted roses. The most popular
and best growing varieties.
Chrysler Imperial - Red
Condessa De Sastago- Pink ·goid
bicolor
Crimson Glory- Deep Crimson
Eclips~Golden yellow
Helen Traubei- Apricot-pink
K.T. Marshall- Glowing pink
Mirandy- Dark red
Peac~Yellow - pink blend
Rex Anderson- White
Blaze Climber- Brilliant red

JACKSON AND PERKINS REDI-PLANTED

PATENTED ROSES
APOUO. YELLOW

4.95
4~75

mlsllonera:

GOLDEN GATE - YELLOW

Mile! cOrporations prepare planti of
their projected ~ and plans for lbe
ned period of yean. Tile comprehensive
plan of Meigs County, with proper Input by
the clllzens and government offlclala, will
provide· plana and guidance for the
deve~ment of Meigs County during lbe
nett Period of yean.
·
Ail cllizelll Interested In the future of
Melaa County are Invited to attend the
Moilday evenlni meeting.

4.95
4.95
JOHN F. KENNlDY - WHITE

4A5
. MISTER LINCOLN - RED

GALLIPOLIS - Four indictments,
including one for first degree murder,
were returned late Friday by the January
term of the Gallia County Grand Jury .
During the two day session, the jury
considered four transcripts in examining
12 witnesses.
. Indicted were Jane Hall, 29, Rt. 1,
Patciot., cha rged With first degree murder;
Gene Ferrell, 22, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, charged
with criminal assault (rape); Charles J.
Henderson, 34, Gallipolis, charged with
breaking and entering, and Iknver W.
Ash, Jr., 26, Buffalo, W. Va. , for removal
of mortgaged property from the state.
· Gallia County Prosecutor Hamlin .c.
King presen"'d the state's evidence . Judge
Rona,ld R. Calhoun presided and John R.
Morgan was jury foreman .
. Other jurors were Mary I. Casto,
JewelS. Parker, Wal"'r W. Rife, Larry L.
Shong, Nelson P. Gardner, James T.
Boster, Helen H. Jamison, Wilnell
Rodgers, George R. Barnette, Betty L.
Rumley, Macyle J. Searls, Nina E.
Wickline, Woodrow Glassburn and Eva M.
Carruthers.

WATERUNE BRF'AK - Workers of the Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
District were busy Satnrday afternoon repairing lines broken In a hillside slip.
'

~Rain

Makes · Trouble

CHESTER - Approximately 30 sul&gt;scribers of the Tuppers Plains-Chester
Water Dlslrlct were wllhout service
Saturday due to two breaks which occurred on Route 7 near the Allen Ball and
Philip Smith residences.
Albert Martin, district maintenance
supervisor, said the first break occurred at
5:30 Saturday morning but was repaired
by 10 a.m. The second break In the fourinch line came about 10:30 a.m., approximately 1500 feet from the first.

PORTRAIT - DEEP PINK

4.95

GALUPOI..iS - Frank Pelrie, Jr.,
Sanitarian, Saturday asked Gallia
Countlans to help stop the mosquito
problem before It begins.
The way to do this is by destroying
their breeding places, which are many.
Anything that will hold a few drops .of
water can ~orne a hatchery for
m011qut toes.
He suggested . to clean up old cans,
tires, bottles .or anything that will llold
water (there Ia abllolutely no way you can
lay a tin! without it holding water).
Uonehasdllches or small pools, try to
ilraln
these so tllal they will noIhold water. ·
GAWPOIJS - PhYJiclana are
fleeing petlenta at their pment locallolll Lacking thla, apply used motor oll ·to the
·:·:·:·.·: .. ::·:.:·.·:·.. :·· -: ...
oo Flrlt Avllllle and . Cedar Street and .·.·· ·.······.·.·· ·.·.
Fourth Avenue and S)'CIIIl(ft Street In
River Sianding at
Galllpolll. .
In liiUlng tbe 111110UI1cement Roberl
Racine
on Saturday
·
Danltl, ldminlllrltor of Holler Medical
.
J
C.OIIr Clinic, llld that foUowlng the
RACINE - Radae Loeb and Dam
dlcucatitll Of lbe 11111 $31 miWIII Holler reported Salartlaf moralng that the
· Medkial Center Monday, 111111Y people Oblo River wu• i 11ud at Racine and
'tbqbt niiiiUinJy doelln bad miv1ld falling above, 111111 Ucbt rala above.
lbelr aflloll to the- faellll)". HI laid tbe
The ....U., at P-l'f!Y all a.m. was
~ wiD not to tbe 11111 M feel APPI d••tlely 4U feel would
bulldl'll 011 Roate • ,111111 lbe entire pel Wilier aa Ia
at tile ctl'ller of
medbl c;enllr ecmpla II nlld1 fw oc- Eut MDI aad Syeamare IlL
,CUPIIIoa, irhlch could be late nat mt1111l.
·....·. ··.·:· .·.:.. ·..-...·.·,

suu·

TROPICANA - ORANGE-RED

•

· 4A5
WHITE MASTERPIECE - WH'TE

4.95

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

line'

~

'

...

•.
f

.

..

~-. ~~~

'

f

Employes of the district were busy
Saturday afternoon repairing the second
break which affected residents of the
Forest RWl ·Will Hill area.
Martin reported that the breaks were
caused by hillside slips. He said other
breaks In the system are expected to the
rain.
So far this month Meigs GolUlly has had
5\!r inches of rainfall compared to the onehalf inch In April of 1971, Martin commented.
·

Mosquito Can

Ph)'8icians at Same
Old Stands ·in City

3.95

~

Families
15 CENTS

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Grand Jury
Indicted 4

a

FIRST PRIZE - PINK BLEND

.

SUNDAY, APRIL 23, 1972

-

STURDY! HARDY! EVER BLOOMING!

'

Than 11,000
3 SECTIONS

Pomeroy-Middleport

POMEROY -Meigs County citizens.
Monday have the opportunity to participate in the development of a plan for
the future of Meigs County.
E. F. Robinson of Pomeroy and
Thereon Johnson of Letart Falls, chair·
men of the Meigs County Regional
Plannlnjj Co111111i41ioo and the Melp
County Regional Planning Commission
Executive Olmmittee, urge every Interested citizen to attend a meeting In the
Orchid Room, 234\!r East Main St.,
Pomeroy at 8 p.m.
At this session Pat Meeker of Surveya
Unlimited, the ·c~Multant for the Com·
mission, will present a proposed comprehensive plan as far as It Is developed on
the base mapping, socif&gt;.economlc study,
land use and housing, land use and plan
elements, and the participation and im·
plementalion program.
When completed, this plan will
illustrate the thoroughfare, land use,
commlUlity facilities and utlllties, housing,
and Industrial plans. The meeting Monday
evening will give citizens of the colUlty the
opportunity to see the work that has been
completed to date, to ask questions, and to
malle suggestions for additions, lm- .
provements, or corrections of the plan u
proposed.
Comprebeulve county-wide plalllllng
Ia today almoal a mpst 10 tlull goveromealal ualls 11 weD as private ID·
dlvlduall and corporallou will have
some Idea aslo the developmealal needs
of the Cllunly. ComprebeDBivo plallllln&amp;
Is one of the requtremeall of getting
apeclflc goveramenlal asolltaace for
many programs such as water supply
and sewage dllpoul.
The Meigs County Regional Planning
Commission is made up of the planning
cmnmlsslons ' of the five incorporated
villages of Middleport, P~oy, Racine,
Rutland and Syracuse; the chairman of
each of the 12 boards of IOIVI18hlpa
trustees; the three county commissioners;
representative of the township lruslees
and clerks assoclallon, and 10 members
appoln!A!d by the Meigs County Com-

ROSE BUSHES

.

Reaching More

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

On Stage

ELBERFELD$

i
'

tmts

The Plan

Open Until 9-Friday and Saturday

.

Your Invited Guest

--------------------------------------------------~----~--~----~----------------------------------··----

ELBERFELDS IN -POMEROY

SALE! JACKSON AND

the Gallipolis plant in the near future . · plant was designed to increase the
These operations are currently being production capacity of the corporation's
performed by outside shops in northern Haller Division, which has pioneered in the
Ohio aod Michigan . The goal is to bring in- fabrication of parts from powered metal.
house as many. of .the outside manufacThe primary slructure of 62,000 square
turing . operations as economically feet was designed to allow for expansion to _.
possible, Lutton said. Federal-Mogul has approximately three times its original
already added the required employees to size . Work on the slructure began on Nov.
man the new operation. They are presently 11, 1968 with plant operation beginning in
being !rained.
the SUilJmer of 1969.
Parking facilities also are being ex·
The plant has since operated under
panded to accommodate 75 more cars to normal conditions except for a five-month
provide ample parking for the growth strike from June through October, 1970.
which is occurring .
Approximately 70 persons were employed at the plant a year ago. According
In June, the board of directors of to Bill Parsons, personnel manager, 250
Federal-Mogul Corp. will visit the persons .are employed there today. ParGallipolis facilities to see the operations, sons says he has another 700 applications
the expansion, and to consider the future on file .
growth of the Gallipolis plant.
Federai-Mogu!e chose the Gallipolis
When the new building is completed, area for several reasons. These included
an open house will be announced so that the availability of manpower, a favorable
employee families and friends may tour economic climate, the attractiveness of
the plant and its new facilities.
the area as a place to live and · the
Federal-Mogul first announced plans proximity of Rio Grande College and Ohio
to construct a plant here Oct. '19, 1968. The University .

+

Partly cloudy and cool
Sunday. Highs Sunday in lhe
lower 50s and the lower 60s.
Considerable cloudiness with a
chance of showers Sunday
night and Monday . Lows
Sunday night In the mid 30s to
the mid 40s. Highs Monday in
the 50s and lower 60s.

• 1st Floor-Big_Sale of Mens and Boys Aare Leg Slacks · Glidden

.

Eastern Ave. Plans call for a structure of 10,000 square feel
and additional parking space. Federal-Mogul which begao
operations bere in 1969, .employs 250 persons.

Weather

and Living Room Suites

'

•I '

Fed-Mogul Expansion
In Gallipolis Underway

•
DISCUSS EXPANSION PLANS - Bill Parspns, left,
personnel manager, and Plant Manager Ted Lutton discuss
expansion plans at Federal-Mogul's Haller Division plant on

HEIRLOOM - LILAC

'EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook Sunday through Tuesday:
Cloudy and mild with
chance of sbowen Sunday or ·
Monday, becoming pardy
cloudy and cooler Tuesday.
Hlgb Sunday und Monday
mostly In the 60s aortb to the
low 70s south. Lows 1D the
early mol'lling In lbe 40s and
low 58s, dropping by
Tuesday 10 the 30s north and
low 40s' south,

'·

Dresses • Girls Coats

Job in Town

FACES SURGERY
John Blake, a first grader at
Middleport Elementary
School, is a patient in
Children's Hospital, Cincinnati. Members of his class
\"Ould appreciate it if he were
remembered with cards. He
will undergo surgery this
coming week. The address is
Children's Hospital , 240
Bethesda, Room 318 South,
Cincinnati.

.

• On the 2nd floor-Sale of Summer Tops • Sale Womens Coats • Girls

Dog Warden's
Sirice
Meigs
County
presently has no dog warden,
Middleport Police Chief f J .
Cremeans· and his department
will undertake to control dogs
running loose in that town.
Cremeans asks property
ow ners to tie up dogs found on
their property and notify the
police depariment. The dogs
will be picked up and disposed
of. Cremeans said he appreciates the efforts of
residents who are taking care
of their pels. The department
will cooperate aod do the best it
can in regard to dogs running
loose, Cremeans promised.

,

GALUI'oiJS - Federal-Mogul here
Saturday announeed a significant expansion of its plant and production .
capaCity calling for a new building of
10,000 square feet of floor space.
Ted Lutton; manager of the plant·on
Eastern Av~ .• said the new building - now
under construction - will house an annealing furnace, a lubricant coating
machine, and provide · additional
warehousing space.
The addition will bring the plant to
approximately 75,000 square feet of
manufacturing area . Carter and Evans is
the ·general contractor on the project and
has scheduled completion for June I.

.

Pair Taken

Where Shoes Are Sensibly Priced
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

''

A good time for family shqpplng all over the store

Perrin Invited to
.
Address National
Meeting in June

RUTLANP - William J . 29.
Also invited to make talks at
Hobstetler, vice president and
branch manager of the Rutland
Br•nch of the Romeroy
National Bank, announced
today that the bank will be
(Continued from page I)
moving over the weekend into in Meigs County jail at 1:30
its new fa cilities on Seventh St.
Doors will be open at the new p.m.
At 2 p.m. the Pomeroy E·R
quarters Monday at 9 a.m.
squad was summoned to the
jar! by Deputy David Sheets for
Taylor who had slit his throat
with a razor blade that he had
concealed in a shoe.
Taylor was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and later
transferred to Jackson County
by ambulance where he was
serving time for conviction of
contributing to the delinquency
of a minor .

BOX

.

Providence ~chool of ,
Rellgioo held over the past •
several weeks at the , Naomi :
Baptist Chljl'Ch will C(lnclude
· with 30 8 p.m. serv1ce on .
Sunday. Everyone .enrolled Is
urged to be present.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy Are Opeo
Friday Night and Saturday .Night Until 9

News . .. in Briefs

County" ;

~ SEilVICE Sf:'~'

The "nogra:ting" perjod for
during five principal
set-aside acreage on farms months of the growing season.
SPACE CEJNTER, Houston (UPJ)-Charles M. Duke's first participating in the 1972 feed Nor may set-aside acre!·age
or
gral·n and wheat . programs harvested
words on the moon •Thursday were pllre emotion.
ed lteexcep
t . 01'lseed
1
· ''Ooooohh!' he exclaimed 'Oh man, 1
't's ·in. 01e 0 r1on
· Ill
· · • •·gan
Apr1'IJ and wt'll contt'nue. designat
a rna e h
""
·
·
·
·
f'
ve
months,
end'1ng
August
31.
crops
and
emergency_
ay . .
1
finally here. Fantastic!"
Veteran John W. Young was more subdued .. ''It's not flatOrion Robsh, cnairman of
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
the Meigs County Agricultural
lands'" he said.
Th
Stabilization and ·Conse·rvation
e p omeroy E•R squad was
(ASC) Committee, explained called Thursday at 10:52 a.m.
. LOCAL TEMPS
SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)-Johil W. l/oung, who after that a condition for par- to Harrisonville for Elsie Epple
10 years as an astronaut had to spend 3.,. hours in moon orbit to ticipating in lhe voluntary who was taken to Veterans· Temperature in downtown
get permission to land, still wasn't sure he could stay on the moon . farm programs is tha~ set- Memorial Hospital and ad· Pomeroy Friday at 11 a.m. was
58 degrees lUfder cloudy skies.
after landing Thursday night. '
aside acreage may not be · milled.
As Charles J'v\. Duke Jr. raved about the sights, Y&lt;f!l~g interrupted him : "Wait a minute, Charlie. We get to stay, Houston?"
Mission Control said Young Clluld stay.

Wheeler, "Entertainment Now
and Then"; Becky Will, "The
Hose Hill Schoolhouse" .
The essay contest was
judged on the basis of
originality of selection, validity
of co nten ts, general effcctiven·ess, and grammar.
The National Association of
Mrs. Jennifer Sheets presided Congregational Christian
at the speech contest and Churches, iw planning its anpresented the awards.
nual national gathering this
year in Green Bay, Wise., has
invited Rev. Bill Perrin of the·
Trinity Church of Pomeroy, to
address the conv.ention on June
BANK MOVING

.

. tI

·
Ch
·
No Grazin,g Rule In Five Months
gra~
S. Pace . atter

-· SPACE CENTER; Houston (UPI)-Televisioo for tbe first
moonwalk I!Jday was unce.rtain and, even if it is available, it will
be below par.
Every first step on tbe moon has been shown oo television but
Young's first step might not be televised because an antenna on
the lunar module is not operating properly. Another antenna
•
be placed in the musewn for might be used, but it will not be as strong.
Once
the
camera
is
mounted
on
Rover
II,
the
eat's
powerful
reference purposes.
Other entries submitted in antema will be used and the pictures should be at full strength.
the essay contest' were Reba
SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)-On tbeir way down to
Bachus, "The Old Letart Falls
Cayley
Plains, astronauts C)larles Duke and John YoWlg swept
Community Hall"; Tom Ball,
"The Flood of 1937"; Irene across Kant Plateau, the highest spot on the face of the moon.
The plateau .towers 16,733 feet above the Sea of Tranquillity,
Barnes, "The Langsville
where
Apollo lllanded, and is 9,843 miles higher than the place
Tunrkl "; Chris Beegle, "The
Future of Meigs County " ; where Young and Duke landed .
Lorna Bell, "The Hills Come
to Letart Falls;" Tim Hill,
SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)- Tl!e lunar module, Orion,
''Sutton Township "; Bob landed on the moon 656 feel west and 459 feet north of the planned
Hysell , "Chester Golf Cour· target, conlrollers said early today.
se"; Tim !hie, "Hunting in
Meigs County "; Debbie
LaValley, "My Beer-Drinking
Pig"; Pam Manley, "The
Silver Run School"; Sherry
(Con tinued from page 11
McCain, "Howell's Historical
Collections of Ohio Pioneer quite ready to assure YOI1 that in any statement on cessation of
History of Meigs County"; the bombing the U. S. governmenl will not refer to the word
Loretta Middleswart, "Why "cooditlonal.' " Former President Lyndon B. Johnson stopped
Destroy What We Have all bombing of the north on Nov. I, 1968. However, since then the
Had ?"; Nancy Ours, "Meigs Nixon administration has said the bombing half was conditional.
County ' s Recrea tiona!
THURMONT, MO. -PRESIDENT NIXON SETTLED in at
Facilities" : Karen Price, "The
his
Camp David retreat today for a long weekend that will see
Titus Homestead" ; Melissa
Proffitt, "Historical Great him work on foreign policy and domestic legislation.
White House spokesmen declined to say whelher Nixon
Bend"; Rosemary Rice. "The
Necessity of Communication"; would draft his statement on Vietnam lroop withdrawals, which
Leanne Sebo, "The Middleport he is expected tu deliver some time next week . But with him at
War Memorial"; David Camp David was Dr. Henry A. Kissinger, his adviser for national
Stewart, "Letart Falls"; Beth security affairs.
Theiss, "Meigs County on
Saturday Nights"; Debra
West, " The Need for
Recreational Facilities in
Meigs

Come and Visit Our

THE SHOE

(Continued from page I )·
:·:rhe Syracuse Stink Tree' ':
Rebecca Scaggs; "Major John
1!. Downing" , and Robert
Titus, " The History and
Jkvelopmen of the Sa1t Industry in Meigs Olunty.
Judging the 36 entries in the
essay contest were Miss Ann
Bradbury, Ga lli a County
retired English teacher, and
Mrs.· Don May, speech and
English teacher at the Wellston
High School.
In both· the speaking and
writing contests prizes of $15
were awarded to the first place
winners, $12 to second place
winners, $i0 to third place, $5
to fourth place winners, and $1
eac h to t~ose receiving
honorable mention . Copies of
all entries in both contests will

-.

2.14 In. Rain Fell
GALLIPOLIS - Jim Hood, official
weather observer, East Ga!Upolls
Station, reported 2.14 inches of rain fell
In the Gallla County area between I
p.m., Friday unlll 9 a.m., Saturday.
Hood recorded a high of &amp;:1 Friday,
a low of48and it was 54 at9:30 a.m.
With lhe exception of the fifth
annual Rotary Relays, all area
weekend athletic events were washed
out.
-:·:·:·.· ·.·.·.·.·.·.-.·. ·..·.. ·:·. . . ''

•\ . .. ·
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MRS. MilDRED SAlLEY, and Anthonia (Toni) Ibana, ci Nigeria, Africa :
Toni, from a shy, hesitant person to becoming outward going, entl11slastlc; a
transformation at Meigs High School.

Impossible? No
BY CHARLENE HOiiFLICH ·
what has happened lo "Toni" the past
POMEROY -Almost the impossible month.
seems to have happened at Meigs High
The credit for this lremendous change
School for Anthonia Ibana, an Ohio belongs to Mrs. Mildred Bailey and her
University foreign student.
students in the home economics , job
From a shy, retiring African girl !raining program at Meigs High. Personal
hesitant to speak out because of a slut- . interest of lbe teacher, the lnfonnal altering problem lo ~oming an outward, mosphere of the classroom situation, and
personable young woman Is the story of ""
(Continued on page 2)

Be.~ · Had

surface. This will not harm wild life built
will keep mOsquitoes from hatchin~ and
breeding.
Persons who live in rural areas can
put up Martin boxes. Martins are . very·
effective ln conlrolling mosqui,toes.
If everyone would cooperate, thla can
do a great deal to eliminate the mosquito
problem in Gallia County.

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
POMEROY
The i&gt;omeroy
Emergency Squad was ealled Frictay at
11:53'p.m. lo the'IIJrold Will realdence on
HID St. for Lawrence Klein. Mr. Klein wu
taken to VeterBIUI Memorial Hospital
where he was admitted. At 2:56 a.m.
Saturday tbe Pomeroy Fire Dept, wu
·called to the L. R. Gerlach residence off
Rt. 681 where a bam W811 burning. The call
was cancelled before the firemen arrived.
BORING GUILTY
POMEROY - Floyd Boring: 35,
Pomeroy, pleaded guilty to a bill of In·
formation in Meigs C01111ty Common Pleas
Court Saturday to ollarges of forgery and
nOI'klllpport. Borlnjj was lOdged In Meigs
County Jail pending sentencing.

KC FRESHMAN WINS GIL DODD MILE - Mlke Rife
captured Saturday's :&amp;5th running of the (lll Dodd Mile,
.ponsored by lbe Gllllpolla RDtary (lob. The event W811
conducted during the Fifth Armual Rotary Relays on

Memorial FleldatGIIUpolla. Rift fllilhed wllha 4:111 mark, ·
best among all Gallla CCIIIJiy'Mlle N111411'1. ~with
Rift are KC Traclt Coach Jbn Arledle, left, Dlllble C411dee,
GAHS cbeerleadtr, and RUry Plwldent·IAu Foret Meet
detapa and other plctwea are on Jlllelll and lt.

�•

r

~:-_The SUnday Ttmes · Sentinel~ Sunday, April 23, 1m ·

a- '1'111..,....,-Ttmea· Sel!llnel, SUnday. April23,lt'12·

Court Business ·Heavy

Impossible

(Oinllnued from page I)
the friendllness of the students have aU
POMEROY - Thirty-two :
c:onlributed to Toni's prlll!ress.
defendants
were fined and 26
When Mlas lbana was assigned to
others
forfeited
bonds in Meigs
Meigs fllgb School, her Ohio University
County Court Friday.
counaelor advised Mrs. Bailey that she
Fined by Judge Frank W.
would be only aQ observer because Toni
Porter
were, George D.
''could not talk in public."
Walkup, Jr., Vienna, W. Va.,
l:ncouragement was the key,
Dana H. Bailey, Jr., Albany,
however. Mrs. Bailey reflects tluit it
Rt. 3, Charles E. Saltz,
wasn't but a few days until the girl "who
. Pomeroy, RD, Larry H.
~er wanted to tslk, just couldn't keep
farley , Long Bottom, Rt. I,
quiet." It turned out that llle stuttering
Eldon C. Blake, Reedsville, Rl.
was habit and not a true speech im·
1', and Jack R. Walker,
pediment, perhaps a symptom of her
Hemlock 'Grove, $10 and costs
eztreme shyness. .
each,
speeding; Charles F.
And she is doing student teacliing,
Martin,
·Columbus, and Anne
much to the amazement of her OU counG. Gilbert, Pomeroy, Rt. 3, $5
aelor.
and
•costs each, parking on
Toni is Meigs High Schogl's first
roadway;
.· Albert J. Faust,
foreign student teacher. She will graduate
Akron, 110 and costs, expired
from Ohio University in June and hopes to
operators licenSe; Lowell s·.
continue tOwards a masters deg~ either
Davis, Gallipolis, Rt. 1, $50 and
there or at another school in Ohio. Her plan
costs, speeding; Richard J.
is to get her education here and then return
Poulin, Middleport, Rt. I, $10
to Nigeria to work as a supervisor in her
and
costs, ·stop sign violation;
country's Deparlment.of Education.
Woodrow Hendrix, Jr., Mid•
Graduate of a convent high school In
dleport, Rt. 1, $5 and costs, no
Nigeria, Toni took a job In a passport office
LOOKING
AT
GIFTThere
were
many
baskets
of
flowers
and
other
gifts
horn; Roger Shultz, Pomeroy,
and worked there long enough to get
presented to the Peoples Bank for their Open House on Friday and today. But none Rt. 3, $5 and costs, no brakes;
together money to make the trip to
were as unusuaras the one sent by Sherwood Costen ot Point Pleasant. Costen sent Herman Sowards, Albany, Rt.
America. It was on March 10, 1968 tluit she
a basket covered with candy coins and a dish in the center. The dish contained 1, $5 and costs, .no muffler ;
arrived in New York. From there she went
water, more candy eoins and several small fish . Looking at the uniqlll! gift is Board Maurice G. Gagnon, Miners·
to Portsmouth to b6gin secretarial
of Directors member Jack Fruth and his daughters Lynne and Carole.
ville, Rt. I, $13 and costs,
training at the lnterstste Business College.
speeding;
James R. Betz, Jr.,
Her hCJBt family was Dr . and Mrs. Jim
Langsville, $20 and costs,
Scott. She took whatever jobs were
speeding; Elmer L. Pickens;
available to pay her tuition and room and
board. LltUe financial help came from No aides, grants, or scholarships have marriage.''
This summer. Miss !hana. who speaks
home where Toni has five younger sisters. ever come her Way.
WOMEN TO MEET
However, she is hopeful of obtaining four languages, will be joined here by a PT. PLEASAN:r _ St. Peter
After completing her secretarial
training at the Portsmouth college, she some financial assistance when she hegins sister equally detennined to acquire a Lutheran Church Women will
enrolled at Ohio Unlverslty. Each summer her masters work and says she will attend good education in an American college. meet 7:30p.m. Tuesday at the
l!he worked to accumulate enough money whatever school offers lt.
Toni will continue her student teaching home of Mrs. Walden F. Roush,
Last summer she became engaged to
to get her through a year at school. Most of
2003 Mt. Vernon Avenue for the ·
the time she held down two jobs. Last an African student studying to become a at Meigs High for another month - a April meeting. A tour of their
8Willllfr she worked as a stenlll!rapher for petroleum engineer at a university in month vital toward building the confidence rock shop on Jefferson Ave.,
the Board of Education in Chicago by day , Chicago. She Is emphatic in her ststement she needs to overcome whatever shyness will be prog;·am for the evening
and as a waitress at a restaurant by night. that for them it is "education first and then remains.
and then return to her home for
meeting. Mrs. Frank Scholz,
LCW president, will preside.
All ladies of the church are
invited.

a

Racine, Rt. 2, $25 and costs, $15
suspended, overloa4;
Katherine L. Pauley, Albany,
Rt. 2, Gerald Sellers, Racine,
R( 1, and Roger : Westfall,
Reedsville, RD, $5 and costs,
each, unsafe vehicle; JW!'y L.
Johnson, RuUand, $25 and
costs, speeding; Paul W.
Baird, Pomeroy, $16 and costs,
speeding; Lewis G. Taylor,
Pomeroy, $340 and .cill!lts, $140
suspended, overload; Floyd J.
Boring, Pomeroy, $150 and
cosls, three days confinement,
license suspended for six
months, .driving while in·
toxicatedi Doli . C. Hooper,
Shade, Rt.. I, $10 and costs,
failure to yield; Charles
Aelker, Racine, $150 and costs,
three days confinement,
license suspended for six
months, driving while In·
toxlcated; Kenneth E. Norris,
Albany, Rt. 2,115 and costs, no
valid operators license; Homer
A. Powell,. Pomeroy, Rt. 1, $10
and costs, left of center; Roger
E. Searles, Rulland, Rt. I, $5
and costs, no brakes ; Claude
Colley, Gallipolis, $12 and
costs, speeding; Roger A.
Hooker, Pomeroy, Rt. 4, $5 and
costs, no safety equipment;
Ray A. Watson , Tuppers
Plains, $15 and costs, fishing
without a license.
Forfeiting bonds were
Eleanor Boyles, Tuppers
Plains, $25 posted, failure to
yi~ld right of way; Charles
Lambert, Belpre, Gregory·
Reck, Versailles, 0., Millard
M. Phillips, Wendell, N. C.,
James C. Wills, Ironton, Kurt
K. Klein, Madison, Frances S.
Hill, Syracuse, James C. Cobb,

SiX Cited Following Auto Accidents

·l~Rftafta~~\~K~~-,~-~
-m~~-~·~
o _,:..: ;;;:;,:

COMING THURSDAY
GALLIPOLIS _ Volun·
teen of llle Gallla ·County
chopler, American Red
&lt;:.-ore IMlay preparing lor
tile villi of the Huntington
Relloul Bloodmobile In

GALLIPOLIS - Six persons
were cited to Municipal 'court
Friday following traffic ac·
cidents.
Rober t Campbell, 76,
Chillicothe Rd., was charged
with DWI following a mishap at

5:18 p.m. on Chillicothe Rd.
Oflicers said Campbell lost
Gllllm ~-!:_om tnthoonGto 1 control of his truck and struck
p. . ,....._y a e race
d't h d
te
db
Ualled Melhodlal Church. a I c an gas me r. owne y
Mn. Thelma Shaver bl®!l. Columbia Gas of Oh1o.
cbllf man, said saiurday ·-·· Larry-B7·Halley, 30 • Rt. 12•
0 ,_0 from 18 to 16 yean of Crown C1ty, wa ~ also charged
lie jJ eligible to donate w1th OWl followmg a three-car
·•blotd. Ml
Ji
11 pile-up on Second 'Ave. ·
~.......~Y treptll ceHmela
Officers reported Halley's
are ~ a
e oze~
·
Medical Ceater, abe 118ld.
:tLJA PPJ b

»!

'"1!H

Accidents
·Hurt ·None

car struck an auto driven by
Harry L. Smith, 58, Gallipolis.
The impact knocked the Smith
auto into a parked car owned
by Victor E. Halley, 62,
Gallipolis.
There
was
moderate damage to all three
cars.

•

Lowell L. Neimeyer, 26,
Gallipolis, was cited for failure
to yield following an accident
on Court St. and Third Ave.
According to th e report,
Neimeyer opened his car door
into the path of a car operated
by Linda Lou Jones. Rt. 2,

$1,200 in Fines Levied
COLUMBUS (SPECIAL)
A.ssistan t U. S. Attorney W.
Robinson Watters Saturday
announced tluit Judge Joseph
P. Kinneary Friday fined Billy
Joe Marcum, Patriot Star Rt. ,
Gallipolis, $300 for each count
of a four-count indictment, or
$1,200, for failure to file

Federal tax returns for a three
year period from 1965-1968.
During those years, Marcum, 36, was self-employed as
im owner and operator of a
movin g van business which
grossed $113,468.36 during
those three years. In addition
to .the fine, Marcwn !a,ces civil
action by the IRS for taxes,
penalties and Interest due on
his lncol)le.
The investigation leading to
Marcutn 's indictment was
conducted by the intelligence
division of the Internal
Revenue Service in Columbus.

Gallipolis.
Juanits Grace Lodwick, 46,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, was charged
with failure to yield the right of
way following an ·accident on
Third Ave. near the Ohio Bell
Telephone building. The police
said Mrs. Lodwick pulled into
the path of a ca r driven by John
Lynn Damewood, 22, Rt. 2,
Reedsville. There was minor
damage to both cars.
Motte
Ray
Graves,
Galllpolls, was charged with
failure to yield the right of way
following a mishap on Eastern
Ave. and Sycamore St. Grijves
pulled his car into the path of·a
truck operated by James P.
Fraley, 16, Gallipolis. There
was minor damage.
Larry Lee Taylor, 33, Rt. I,
Gallipolis, was cited for im·
proper backing following an
accident on Vine St. at Barr's
Supermarket parking lot.
Officers said Taylor backed
into an auto owned by Robert J.
Rocchi, 49, Gallipolis.

GAU.IPOLIS - No one was
Injured In four traffic accidents
invesUgated Friday by the
Gallia-Melgs Post State High.
way Patrol.
The first occurred at 2:50
p.m. on Rt. 7 at the entrance to
theJamesM. Gavin plant. The
patrol said a car driven by
Danny L. Green, 20, Gallipolis,
attempted to turn Into the plant
entrance and was struck in the
POMEROY - Mrs. Pearl
.ear by an auto operated by
Williams,
-a- roemlier of the will tr iple what the tax
Ronald Sargent, 24, Cheshire.
Sargent was charged with Meigs County Board of Menl&lt;\1 duplicate produces in money
faUure to stop within the Retardation Saturd~y asked divided equally between the
assured clear distance. There the voting public to weigh the three counties, Mrs. Williams
was moderate damage to benefits in passing the up- said.
Services included under the
coming levy to be voted on May
Sargent's car.
Douglas Johnson, 19, Rl. I, 2 to support the Meigs, Gallia three county project are:
Cheshire, was involved in a and ·Jackson Community diagnostic, outpatient, in·
single car mishap at 6 p.m. on Mental. Health and Mental patient, day or night care,
rehabilitation, consultation
Rt. 7 In )'Meigs County. The Retardation Board .
services,
information and
The three-county prlll!ram is
patrol reported Johnson lost
control of his car which ran off known as the "648 Board" and educa tion, emergency serthe left side of the highway. is not connected in any way vices, and research and
There was slight damage to his with the local Mental Retar· training.
In the November election
car,
dation Board.
voters
will vote on a renewal
The three-county board, If
Asimilar mishap occurred at
levy
for
the local Mental
6:40 p.m. an Rl. 7, two and the levy passes, will aid the
three tenths miles south of Rt. local board in tluit it will hear Retardation Board.
Mrs. Williams urges voters
218 where James E. Shafter, the expenSe of special trained
to
support the levy on May. 2 as
. 20, Eureka Stir Rt., Gallipolis, people tluit the local board bas
well as the renewal in
laet control of his car which ran been paying.
If the levy pssses, the state November.
off the highway and struck a
fence causing moderate
damale.
A final accident occurred on
••
'nck Ridge Rd., one tenth of a
•
mile IIOllth of Rt. 35, where cars
SENSIBLE
- driven by Heasle Walaon, 50,
RATES
Warren, Ind., and Margaret
Tbomaa, 67', Thurman,
•
collided. The Watson l'OIIUin ·
••
••
wu cbarged with OWl and hitskip.
LOW
CLOSING
. TENDER, LOVING CARE
COSTS

Support for

648 Board
Recommended

ENTERED AT GBC

••

VINTON '- . Miss Alma
Bartley, daughter of Mrs.
lewis Bartley, bas been accepted at Galllpolis Bnslness
College for the Summer
Qulrler beginning June 13.
Milllllrlley, a member rl ~
lt'12 llelllor class at North
GaJJJa High School, 1s tiU'Olled
In the ~eeretarial course.

!

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••
•
PROMPT
SERVICE

••
•••

'

.. .,,

~~~•••

br

.

DOCTOR 5' WIVE 5

Dyan Cannon
I Color I

•1 10

lftl

A MAN .

PANAVISION" • TECHNICOLOR"
Warner Bros. , A Kinney Company

CALLED SLEDGE
James Garner

C.ARTOON

..
R

1Dt11 """'

.'-------...... --::=-- --:---~

TATURE
ACQUIRED RIGHT FROM HIS START IN

OHIO'S LEGISLATURE·

RALPH WELKER

Guaranteed
To SatisfyOr Money Back

GALLIA, MEIGS, LAWRENCE AND
PART OF ATHENS OOUNTY

12 QZ. 59~
PKG.

~

Ralph takes time to talk to you!
His Industry is a matter of Record!
Served as Chairman of State
Government, Agric:ulture anq
.Conservation
Committees.
'
Now serving as Chairman of Agrl·
Business Committee.
Chairman of SOb-Committee on
Public Retirement.

----------A&amp;P
·SAUERKRAUT

.

2 B~· 39~
••

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FRIENDLY
PEOPLE

•
REASONABLE
DOWN
PAYMENT

••

.••

.••
FLEXIBLE
TERMS

.••

Keep Seniority and Leadership in
Ohio Legislature 1 Only Ra'lph
Welker can do this!

FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE

(92nd ti)USE.DISTRICT)
. Vote For ' Not More Than Orie

X RALPH WEllER

GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
Gallipolis

-ODS MACK RUS

Scheduled May 1, 2, 3
POMEROY - The Meigs County Health Department is
reminding parents of pre.echool-age children, ages one (1) year
and older, of the special evening preschool measles...uhella
lnnnunization clinics to he held at three county locations on May ·
I, 2, aod 3.
At these clinics, pre.echoolers may receive the combined
measles.rnbella vaccine free of charge. This vaccine protects
children against both old-fashioned measles (rnboola) and J.day
measles (rubella ) aod thus saUsfies the state law which requires
· lmm.nnlzation against both diseases before entering school.
· Parents of pre-schoolers are urged to complete and sign the
following fonn and bring It with them to one of the pre-&lt;~chool
clinics.

.

This meeting of Meigs
County Council on Aging will
be held Sunday, April 30, at
2:30 p.m. at the St. Paul
Lutheran Church, Pomeroy,

This meeti ng is to get
aquainted with other senior
Meigs Countians, and the of·
fleers of the Aging Unit here,
who are Clarence Struble,
President; Mrs. Geneva Yates,
acting secretary ; Mrs. Eleanor
Thomas, director ; two aides,

TOTAL EDUCATION
·· For Our Youth I
WE NOW HAVE~

i

·/

Chester, and Henry D. Watson,
Middleport;
There will be a speaker, Mrs.
Bjorn from Columbus ; a film
shown , and a question and
answer period . .
Everyone is invited. Persons

friend, or neighbor.
Remember the date, Sunday,
April 30, at 2 o'clock at St.
Paul 's Lu thera n Church,
Pomeroy .

Pre-Signing in

In radiotelephony, the expression "Mayday" is used
as a distress signal for air.
craft in the same manner
.that SOS is used at sea .

FOR [!]

VOTE

GALLIA·JACKSON JOINT VOCATIONAL SCHOOL COMMITTEE
CO ·CHAIItMAH

BARRON

CLAUDI E. 8WICK

GALLJf'OLI8 , OHIO

WD.LIITON, OHIO

ROG~R

C.

PARTICIPATING DISTRICTS

District Set
Wellston
•

ci I y
Jackson

I
N or I h '

c i I Y

The Store With the Lorge
Selection"
Bulova and
Seiko Watches

J A C K S~ N

Dlillftls
Of fine Oulily
S,.lfll Wllrh Bln•s
Walth and Jewelry Repalrl•g
Cltcb
Ch1rms Cusltlll JewelrY .

Galli a

KyQer
'

-~

.,
Cr • • k

Hi II

Oak
U n i on

In•One of

The LarQest . Selections in

S. E.O.

ci t 'f

l ~4f1615 · 1
TAWNEY
JEWELERS

Hannan

Tr a c •

422 Second Ave .
Gallipolis, Ohio

lice~.

•. '

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t •
I

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AI 5:10 p.m. on SR 7, two
tenths of a mile north of county
road 36, Carl R. Thomas, 18,
Long Bottom, was traveling
n~th when he lost cdntrol on
wet .pavement. Tbe car spun
al'OWid in the road and struck a
gnaidrlU. There was medium
damage but no injuries or
arrests.
Al 5:40 p.m. on county road
28 (Basban-Keno road) n~
tenths of amUeliOllth of SR MS, ·
Carole Slllan Bush, 34, Racine,
'!II traveling south when a
deer wu killed as It ran Into
the path or her car. 'lblre wu
1fp dllllage to the car and no
~es.,

,i.

TOGETHER
0

0

•

We Can Do MORE for OUR YOUTH

By forming a jointure, local school districts can provide a much broader
program more economically than any one district could .p rovide on its
own .

A Joint Vocational School Is a specialized high school serving an area
larger than any existing school district In our area and providing a
program of specific job training . Students learn the job skills, technical
knowledge, safety judgements, work habits and attitudes necessary for
occupations requiring no formal training beyond high school.

PROGRAM:
The proposed school would offer 20 different courses in 5 broad vocational
areas :

,._

.------lilt
--·
-~-

l'llor'N -

; NOW'AVAILABLE
· IN DD CUPS

lloun;
wftii.ANII1'TP, tlio

.
...
...
-CIOIIIIIhdon
" ' " " olebliitth
" " - -8lld
wftlllllo
wnu
DMifDrllble eupport

"'trutr

c '

.

1. AGRICULTURE

(Ag. Business, Horticulture-Forestry, Ag . Equip·

ment and Mechanics)

2. BUSINESS&amp; OFFICE EDUCATION (Entry Bus. Data Processing and
Computer, Accounting -Computing Clerk. Cooperative Office Practice,
I
Office Duplicator Operator, Oerlcal Services)
3. DISTRIBUTIVE EDUCATION (Work-Study program in sales, mer chand!iing and distribution)

I'

LOftl Llne-Atg, lt.oO Now t7.H
Strlel220

1~8. 34-oMC, 34-440'.

NEW! tw-460.0')

('D . 'DD suo mort)

'

DEPARTMENT STORE
. 302 Second. Gallipolis, Ohio

•

I
I

VOCATIONAL EDUCATION

sign in giving name, address yourself, perhaps parents , or

Southern Loval

COLLEGE EDUCATION

Complete t:he Program
on May 2nd, 1972

Mrs . Margaret Amberger,

and phone number.
All churches and other
organizations are invited to
donate cookies and coffee for
refreshments.

ELEMENTARY &amp; SECONDARY
EDUCATION

_ _ VOCATIONAL EDUCATION

Instead of the Trinity Church having transportation are
as was previously an- · asked to tell their neighbors,
and bring someone.
nounced.
Most folks should be in·
terested in this, if not for

RACINE - Pre-registration
for all first grade and kin1.- - , . - - - - - - - - - - AGE-- dergarten students of Southern
Local School District will he
held Friday at Syracuse ,
2 . - - - - - - - -- -AGE - Ra cine Elementary and
3. - - - - - - - - - - - - - AGE- - - Kindergarten Room and Letart
. • :Falls from 9to 12 and I to 3.
All parents registering
FAMILY PHYSICIAN- - - - - - - students for the first time are
asked to bring the child's birth
TELEPHONE- - - - - - - -- - - - - - certificate and record of all
immunizations.
There will be no regular
I request and authorize \he administration of live
classes
for ·first .grade or
virus Measles-Rubella vaccines to my children,
kindergarten students of the
named above .
district on pre-registration
day.
(Parent or Guardian)
HOUCKS TO TRAVEL
GALLIPOLIS - Billy Houck,
local representative of the
&lt;Addfess)
National Life and Accident
Insu ra nce Company's HunTELEPHONE ---~-------------tington district and his wife ,
Pat, will attend a Leaders'
Clinic Sites: Monday, May l, Chester Fire Business Conference next
Department; Tuesday, May 2, Racine Fire month ·at the Diplomat Hotel in
Qepartment ; Wednesday, May 3, Pomeroy Fire Hollywood Beach, Florida ,
May 24·27, as a member of the
Department.
Jirm's
1971 Career club.
All Times: 6·7:30 p.m.

••
'

By GOLDIE CLENDENIN
POMEROY - There will be
a Senior Citizens fellowshi p
meeting at the St. Paul's
- Lutheran Church in Pomeroy
:onSunday, April30 at 2:30p.m.
Eve ryone is
welcome ,
especially we who are over 55.
You are asked to come at 2 to

PRESCHOOLERS ONLY BRING TO CLINIC
PARENT Aun!ORIZATION FoR
MEASLES- RUBELLA COMBINED
'
IMMUNIZATION
All children ages of I through 10 who were vaccinated with
measles vaccine before January 1, 1970, or who have received ·
only one of the two measles vaccines (measles or rubella) should
he vaccinated AGAIN with the Measles-Rubella (Comb.) vaccine.
·
Children should NOT be vaccinated if they have a fever, or
are being treated for cancer or leukemia, CHIWREN
ALLERGIC TO CHICKEN OR DUCK, CHICKEN OR DUCK
EGGS OR FEATHERS, OR NEOMYCIN SHOULD NOT BE
VACCINATED. Children who have received oral polio, measles,
rubella or smallpox vaccine within the last 30 days should not be
vaccinated at this time.

POMEROY - Two persons
were treated and released at ·
·veterans Memorial Hospital
following a two car accident
Friday at&amp;p.m. on county road
35, the Meigs County SheriH's
.DePt. reported.
" Injured were Robert Louis
,McGrail, 30, Zanesville, and
·Robert Thorla, a passenger in
the McGrail vehicle. They
'ivere taken to the hospital by
'Deputy James Soulsby.
.: McGrail was traveling east
tlhen he met two oncoming
cars. The second vehicle,
W'lven by Jo~n Bennett Cobb,
48, Racine, struck McGrail
almost headon.
Both cars were demolished,
Cobb was cited to court on
charges of driving while In·
toxlcated and without an
operator's license. McGrail
was cited to court on charges of
!Javil.g an expired operator's

(92nd HOUSE DISTRICT)

WIENERS

Immunization ·CJinics

Senior Citizens To
-·
Meet April 30

'I njury

STATE
·REPRESENTATIVE .

MON. &amp; TUES.
ONLY
SUPER RIGHT
SKINLESS

completing his first year · as John Blake, Mrs. Martha . Gabriel will remain in the
principal. ·
Brown, Miss Linda Roilsh and district as a teacher and
Five-year contracts were Larry Shong.
substitute bus driver .
awarded to Jimmy Steele and
Jim Foster was designated
Ivan Mayo was awarded a
James Burleson. James Oiler head basketball and baseball
received a three year pact.
coach and assistant irf football. continuing contract as a bus
Employed on two-year !ilake was name&lt;;! head football driver.
Two other drive,rs employed
contracts were . Thomas . and track coach and assistant
on one-year contracts were
Campbell, Roy Mullins, K~ren in basketball.
,Allen, Martha Meek, Cheryl
The board accepted . the Ernestine Polsley and Jeanie
Brophy, James Foster, and resignation of Bruce Gabriel as Hampton. Harold Russell, Jr.,
Miss Betty Jones. Title One junior high coach at Bidwell- reCeived a one-year.contract as
and ADC instructors employed Porter and regula.r bus driver. bus mechanic.
on a one-year basis were Mrs.
'
Ruth George, Mrs. Jean
Cassidy, and Mrs . Shirley
Smith. Hired for one-year
pending certificat ion were

.Suffer

FOR

•

446-3832

-oo

OUR CHOICE

No m~trer whot your needs in a hom e may be, talk to
us about the f;nonc;ng . You'll be gla d thai you d;d.

Opposite Tile Post Office

R

ALSO
ICol~rl

Let's...F,trovide ..

NAME OF CHILD

Richard Crenna

M ... IL $U8ii011Pl10111 !lATE$
t~t Gtllipotil t .. ounr In 0 ~1" 111~ Wnt
Vit'J II'Iol , O&lt;lt ynr SIJ.OO, l la m1111t~1 171
ltlrl'r monttot U !4, r luwt.•••· onr ' ' ' '
lll ; 11• mon t~ l " ' tilt H rnon lt.t » .00.
lt.l' Pl•ly ~rntlnll , Onr YN r IU.OO ; I I•
"'~' "' I Ul . thru rno nlhl U .SO
l fle Unllrll f'rtn lnlrrr'lltiGn-' 11 ra
ck,. lvtl~ tn tillra 1a tfll uu tor • uollullon
..... nUll c:t i ~DI!ChU C'lc:t l!lc:t !0 IIIII
tnc:t

'

Double Footure

•~• O~io

fAII!IUNE

-··

ht'l in

and

APR.23 .

GI I'IHi i, , O~lo , tUI I
THE OAILY SI!N TIN EL
11 1 Covr1 ~ ~ . Porr&gt;troy. O, , fSI ...
Pu1tllllltO '" ' ' ' wui&lt;CIIy t•tnlnf t•t~l
~t urllh EnttrHI u M c..,d cln• mtl! in t
"'llllt 1 1 POmHoy , Ohillo, POl! Ollict
TEIIMS OF SUISCIIIPTIO N
a y urrier a11tv 1111 Sun...,, , !ik 1&gt;tr

Ml~fl"

'

VINTON - North Gallla
Local Schobl District, pending
certification of four ' in·
structors, Friday night com.
pleted its teaching an&lt;;! administrative staffs for the 197273 school year.
•Meeting in special session
the board employed a~
elementary principal, 17
· teachers and four han-teaching
employees .
Charles Dowler of Gallipolis
was rehired as principal at
Bidwell-Porter Elementary on
a one-year contract. Dowler,
former social studies instructor in the high school, is

.

TONIGHT

US Tll lr" Awt .. G lll i~l l l , 011 10 . •SUI
PU,Ot fli'IICI e~f'V WlfUIY tUII on , . . CIII1
hUirCif~ !econcr CIIU PMIItf P.tiCI II

-MII Dif

Tonight thru
--~!(lnes!la.l'

MAKES

Since 1859 ·

Over the years we hove furnished the money thQt has
enabled many fc"}ilies to own o home of the ir own. As
time rolls by on d o hovse becom es too small or too lo.rg e,
we have helped wi tt-~ th e cllangeover .

•

Publil~fll

MEiGS THEATRE

MASON DRIVE IN

SUNDAY
TIMES.SENTINEL
V·ll~y... rt?~::~~~ ~o_.,llY

Clendenin, W.. Va., .Norman Intoxication; Stanley Watson,.
Schoonover, Pomeroy; Rt. 3, Middleport, RD, $25, distur·
~arc W. Pieltaar, Northridge, bing the peace.
Calif., Jesse T. Alexander,
Akron, G. R. Wol!ingbarger,
Pt. Pleasant, and Billy Joe
Poff, Chesapeake, $27.50 ·each,
Tonight, MOfl. 1o Tues.
speeding ; Robert .!-.: Rich·
April23·24·25
mond, Middleport, Rt. 1, and
Walt Disney's
THE LIVING DESERT
Eddie 'Schartiger, Middleport,
!technlcolorl
Rt. I, $159.55 each, possession
Acaderi'1y Award . Win~rs.
oi iUegal deer; .Jaines M. The greatest wlldllle
Pierce, Middleport Rt. I, speclacle ol this alii
$1W.55, taking deer out of
"G"
season ; Sherwood Coe,
Walt Dls~ey's
VANISHING PRAIRIE
·Parkersburg, $257.50, driving
!Technlcolor)
while intoxicated; Kenneth 0.
Peoples, Wellston;Rt. 3, $37.50,
overload; Rodney o_. Roberts,,
Gallipolis, $32.50, excessive
speed; Kenny Johnson,
Pomeroy, Rt. 4, $25, disturbing
the peace; Robert L. R,ay,
Barboursville, W. Va., $27.50,
passing on yellow line; Leon C.
Steadman, Akron, ·$27.50,
expired operators license;
Sunday
Marion H. Graham, Parkers·
burg, . $257.50, driving while
intoxicated,
$57.50,
no
operators license; James C.
Watson, Tuppers Plains,
$32.50, speeding ; Richard
McBride, Parkersburg, $25,

.School Staffs Employed

4. ,HOME ECONOMICS &amp; HEALTH (Commercial Food Services, Home
and Community Service Aides)

.s. TRADE

&amp; INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION (Automotive Body Repair ,
Auto Mechanics, Cosmetology, Drafting , Electricity, Machine ·Shop,
Sheet · Metal. · Welding, Occupational Work Experience, Mining Oc·
cupatlons and Mechanics, Industrial Maintenance}

REMEMBER:
Only 2 mills for construction and operation will provide a comprehensive
job training program for our YOUTH.
_
.
Not Paid For With Public Funds'

�•

r

~:-_The SUnday Ttmes · Sentinel~ Sunday, April 23, 1m ·

a- '1'111..,....,-Ttmea· Sel!llnel, SUnday. April23,lt'12·

Court Business ·Heavy

Impossible

(Oinllnued from page I)
the friendllness of the students have aU
POMEROY - Thirty-two :
c:onlributed to Toni's prlll!ress.
defendants
were fined and 26
When Mlas lbana was assigned to
others
forfeited
bonds in Meigs
Meigs fllgb School, her Ohio University
County Court Friday.
counaelor advised Mrs. Bailey that she
Fined by Judge Frank W.
would be only aQ observer because Toni
Porter
were, George D.
''could not talk in public."
Walkup, Jr., Vienna, W. Va.,
l:ncouragement was the key,
Dana H. Bailey, Jr., Albany,
however. Mrs. Bailey reflects tluit it
Rt. 3, Charles E. Saltz,
wasn't but a few days until the girl "who
. Pomeroy, RD, Larry H.
~er wanted to tslk, just couldn't keep
farley , Long Bottom, Rt. I,
quiet." It turned out that llle stuttering
Eldon C. Blake, Reedsville, Rl.
was habit and not a true speech im·
1', and Jack R. Walker,
pediment, perhaps a symptom of her
Hemlock 'Grove, $10 and costs
eztreme shyness. .
each,
speeding; Charles F.
And she is doing student teacliing,
Martin,
·Columbus, and Anne
much to the amazement of her OU counG. Gilbert, Pomeroy, Rt. 3, $5
aelor.
and
•costs each, parking on
Toni is Meigs High Schogl's first
roadway;
.· Albert J. Faust,
foreign student teacher. She will graduate
Akron, 110 and costs, expired
from Ohio University in June and hopes to
operators licenSe; Lowell s·.
continue tOwards a masters deg~ either
Davis, Gallipolis, Rt. 1, $50 and
there or at another school in Ohio. Her plan
costs, speeding; Richard J.
is to get her education here and then return
Poulin, Middleport, Rt. I, $10
to Nigeria to work as a supervisor in her
and
costs, ·stop sign violation;
country's Deparlment.of Education.
Woodrow Hendrix, Jr., Mid•
Graduate of a convent high school In
dleport, Rt. 1, $5 and costs, no
Nigeria, Toni took a job In a passport office
LOOKING
AT
GIFTThere
were
many
baskets
of
flowers
and
other
gifts
horn; Roger Shultz, Pomeroy,
and worked there long enough to get
presented to the Peoples Bank for their Open House on Friday and today. But none Rt. 3, $5 and costs, no brakes;
together money to make the trip to
were as unusuaras the one sent by Sherwood Costen ot Point Pleasant. Costen sent Herman Sowards, Albany, Rt.
America. It was on March 10, 1968 tluit she
a basket covered with candy coins and a dish in the center. The dish contained 1, $5 and costs, .no muffler ;
arrived in New York. From there she went
water, more candy eoins and several small fish . Looking at the uniqlll! gift is Board Maurice G. Gagnon, Miners·
to Portsmouth to b6gin secretarial
of Directors member Jack Fruth and his daughters Lynne and Carole.
ville, Rt. I, $13 and costs,
training at the lnterstste Business College.
speeding;
James R. Betz, Jr.,
Her hCJBt family was Dr . and Mrs. Jim
Langsville, $20 and costs,
Scott. She took whatever jobs were
speeding; Elmer L. Pickens;
available to pay her tuition and room and
board. LltUe financial help came from No aides, grants, or scholarships have marriage.''
This summer. Miss !hana. who speaks
home where Toni has five younger sisters. ever come her Way.
WOMEN TO MEET
However, she is hopeful of obtaining four languages, will be joined here by a PT. PLEASAN:r _ St. Peter
After completing her secretarial
training at the Portsmouth college, she some financial assistance when she hegins sister equally detennined to acquire a Lutheran Church Women will
enrolled at Ohio Unlverslty. Each summer her masters work and says she will attend good education in an American college. meet 7:30p.m. Tuesday at the
l!he worked to accumulate enough money whatever school offers lt.
Toni will continue her student teaching home of Mrs. Walden F. Roush,
Last summer she became engaged to
to get her through a year at school. Most of
2003 Mt. Vernon Avenue for the ·
the time she held down two jobs. Last an African student studying to become a at Meigs High for another month - a April meeting. A tour of their
8Willllfr she worked as a stenlll!rapher for petroleum engineer at a university in month vital toward building the confidence rock shop on Jefferson Ave.,
the Board of Education in Chicago by day , Chicago. She Is emphatic in her ststement she needs to overcome whatever shyness will be prog;·am for the evening
and as a waitress at a restaurant by night. that for them it is "education first and then remains.
and then return to her home for
meeting. Mrs. Frank Scholz,
LCW president, will preside.
All ladies of the church are
invited.

a

Racine, Rt. 2, $25 and costs, $15
suspended, overloa4;
Katherine L. Pauley, Albany,
Rt. 2, Gerald Sellers, Racine,
R( 1, and Roger : Westfall,
Reedsville, RD, $5 and costs,
each, unsafe vehicle; JW!'y L.
Johnson, RuUand, $25 and
costs, speeding; Paul W.
Baird, Pomeroy, $16 and costs,
speeding; Lewis G. Taylor,
Pomeroy, $340 and .cill!lts, $140
suspended, overload; Floyd J.
Boring, Pomeroy, $150 and
cosls, three days confinement,
license suspended for six
months, .driving while in·
toxicatedi Doli . C. Hooper,
Shade, Rt.. I, $10 and costs,
failure to yield; Charles
Aelker, Racine, $150 and costs,
three days confinement,
license suspended for six
months, driving while In·
toxlcated; Kenneth E. Norris,
Albany, Rt. 2,115 and costs, no
valid operators license; Homer
A. Powell,. Pomeroy, Rt. 1, $10
and costs, left of center; Roger
E. Searles, Rulland, Rt. I, $5
and costs, no brakes ; Claude
Colley, Gallipolis, $12 and
costs, speeding; Roger A.
Hooker, Pomeroy, Rt. 4, $5 and
costs, no safety equipment;
Ray A. Watson , Tuppers
Plains, $15 and costs, fishing
without a license.
Forfeiting bonds were
Eleanor Boyles, Tuppers
Plains, $25 posted, failure to
yi~ld right of way; Charles
Lambert, Belpre, Gregory·
Reck, Versailles, 0., Millard
M. Phillips, Wendell, N. C.,
James C. Wills, Ironton, Kurt
K. Klein, Madison, Frances S.
Hill, Syracuse, James C. Cobb,

SiX Cited Following Auto Accidents

·l~Rftafta~~\~K~~-,~-~
-m~~-~·~
o _,:..: ;;;:;,:

COMING THURSDAY
GALLIPOLIS _ Volun·
teen of llle Gallla ·County
chopler, American Red
&lt;:.-ore IMlay preparing lor
tile villi of the Huntington
Relloul Bloodmobile In

GALLIPOLIS - Six persons
were cited to Municipal 'court
Friday following traffic ac·
cidents.
Rober t Campbell, 76,
Chillicothe Rd., was charged
with DWI following a mishap at

5:18 p.m. on Chillicothe Rd.
Oflicers said Campbell lost
Gllllm ~-!:_om tnthoonGto 1 control of his truck and struck
p. . ,....._y a e race
d't h d
te
db
Ualled Melhodlal Church. a I c an gas me r. owne y
Mn. Thelma Shaver bl®!l. Columbia Gas of Oh1o.
cbllf man, said saiurday ·-·· Larry-B7·Halley, 30 • Rt. 12•
0 ,_0 from 18 to 16 yean of Crown C1ty, wa ~ also charged
lie jJ eligible to donate w1th OWl followmg a three-car
·•blotd. Ml
Ji
11 pile-up on Second 'Ave. ·
~.......~Y treptll ceHmela
Officers reported Halley's
are ~ a
e oze~
·
Medical Ceater, abe 118ld.
:tLJA PPJ b

»!

'"1!H

Accidents
·Hurt ·None

car struck an auto driven by
Harry L. Smith, 58, Gallipolis.
The impact knocked the Smith
auto into a parked car owned
by Victor E. Halley, 62,
Gallipolis.
There
was
moderate damage to all three
cars.

•

Lowell L. Neimeyer, 26,
Gallipolis, was cited for failure
to yield following an accident
on Court St. and Third Ave.
According to th e report,
Neimeyer opened his car door
into the path of a car operated
by Linda Lou Jones. Rt. 2,

$1,200 in Fines Levied
COLUMBUS (SPECIAL)
A.ssistan t U. S. Attorney W.
Robinson Watters Saturday
announced tluit Judge Joseph
P. Kinneary Friday fined Billy
Joe Marcum, Patriot Star Rt. ,
Gallipolis, $300 for each count
of a four-count indictment, or
$1,200, for failure to file

Federal tax returns for a three
year period from 1965-1968.
During those years, Marcum, 36, was self-employed as
im owner and operator of a
movin g van business which
grossed $113,468.36 during
those three years. In addition
to .the fine, Marcwn !a,ces civil
action by the IRS for taxes,
penalties and Interest due on
his lncol)le.
The investigation leading to
Marcutn 's indictment was
conducted by the intelligence
division of the Internal
Revenue Service in Columbus.

Gallipolis.
Juanits Grace Lodwick, 46,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, was charged
with failure to yield the right of
way following an ·accident on
Third Ave. near the Ohio Bell
Telephone building. The police
said Mrs. Lodwick pulled into
the path of a ca r driven by John
Lynn Damewood, 22, Rt. 2,
Reedsville. There was minor
damage to both cars.
Motte
Ray
Graves,
Galllpolls, was charged with
failure to yield the right of way
following a mishap on Eastern
Ave. and Sycamore St. Grijves
pulled his car into the path of·a
truck operated by James P.
Fraley, 16, Gallipolis. There
was minor damage.
Larry Lee Taylor, 33, Rt. I,
Gallipolis, was cited for im·
proper backing following an
accident on Vine St. at Barr's
Supermarket parking lot.
Officers said Taylor backed
into an auto owned by Robert J.
Rocchi, 49, Gallipolis.

GAU.IPOLIS - No one was
Injured In four traffic accidents
invesUgated Friday by the
Gallia-Melgs Post State High.
way Patrol.
The first occurred at 2:50
p.m. on Rt. 7 at the entrance to
theJamesM. Gavin plant. The
patrol said a car driven by
Danny L. Green, 20, Gallipolis,
attempted to turn Into the plant
entrance and was struck in the
POMEROY - Mrs. Pearl
.ear by an auto operated by
Williams,
-a- roemlier of the will tr iple what the tax
Ronald Sargent, 24, Cheshire.
Sargent was charged with Meigs County Board of Menl&lt;\1 duplicate produces in money
faUure to stop within the Retardation Saturd~y asked divided equally between the
assured clear distance. There the voting public to weigh the three counties, Mrs. Williams
was moderate damage to benefits in passing the up- said.
Services included under the
coming levy to be voted on May
Sargent's car.
Douglas Johnson, 19, Rl. I, 2 to support the Meigs, Gallia three county project are:
Cheshire, was involved in a and ·Jackson Community diagnostic, outpatient, in·
single car mishap at 6 p.m. on Mental. Health and Mental patient, day or night care,
rehabilitation, consultation
Rt. 7 In )'Meigs County. The Retardation Board .
services,
information and
The three-county prlll!ram is
patrol reported Johnson lost
control of his car which ran off known as the "648 Board" and educa tion, emergency serthe left side of the highway. is not connected in any way vices, and research and
There was slight damage to his with the local Mental Retar· training.
In the November election
car,
dation Board.
voters
will vote on a renewal
The three-county board, If
Asimilar mishap occurred at
levy
for
the local Mental
6:40 p.m. an Rl. 7, two and the levy passes, will aid the
three tenths miles south of Rt. local board in tluit it will hear Retardation Board.
Mrs. Williams urges voters
218 where James E. Shafter, the expenSe of special trained
to
support the levy on May. 2 as
. 20, Eureka Stir Rt., Gallipolis, people tluit the local board bas
well as the renewal in
laet control of his car which ran been paying.
If the levy pssses, the state November.
off the highway and struck a
fence causing moderate
damale.
A final accident occurred on
••
'nck Ridge Rd., one tenth of a
•
mile IIOllth of Rt. 35, where cars
SENSIBLE
- driven by Heasle Walaon, 50,
RATES
Warren, Ind., and Margaret
Tbomaa, 67', Thurman,
•
collided. The Watson l'OIIUin ·
••
••
wu cbarged with OWl and hitskip.
LOW
CLOSING
. TENDER, LOVING CARE
COSTS

Support for

648 Board
Recommended

ENTERED AT GBC

••

VINTON '- . Miss Alma
Bartley, daughter of Mrs.
lewis Bartley, bas been accepted at Galllpolis Bnslness
College for the Summer
Qulrler beginning June 13.
Milllllrlley, a member rl ~
lt'12 llelllor class at North
GaJJJa High School, 1s tiU'Olled
In the ~eeretarial course.

!

••
••
•
PROMPT
SERVICE

••
•••

'

.. .,,

~~~•••

br

.

DOCTOR 5' WIVE 5

Dyan Cannon
I Color I

•1 10

lftl

A MAN .

PANAVISION" • TECHNICOLOR"
Warner Bros. , A Kinney Company

CALLED SLEDGE
James Garner

C.ARTOON

..
R

1Dt11 """'

.'-------...... --::=-- --:---~

TATURE
ACQUIRED RIGHT FROM HIS START IN

OHIO'S LEGISLATURE·

RALPH WELKER

Guaranteed
To SatisfyOr Money Back

GALLIA, MEIGS, LAWRENCE AND
PART OF ATHENS OOUNTY

12 QZ. 59~
PKG.

~

Ralph takes time to talk to you!
His Industry is a matter of Record!
Served as Chairman of State
Government, Agric:ulture anq
.Conservation
Committees.
'
Now serving as Chairman of Agrl·
Business Committee.
Chairman of SOb-Committee on
Public Retirement.

----------A&amp;P
·SAUERKRAUT

.

2 B~· 39~
••

'

••

FRIENDLY
PEOPLE

•
REASONABLE
DOWN
PAYMENT

••

.••

.••
FLEXIBLE
TERMS

.••

Keep Seniority and Leadership in
Ohio Legislature 1 Only Ra'lph
Welker can do this!

FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE

(92nd ti)USE.DISTRICT)
. Vote For ' Not More Than Orie

X RALPH WEllER

GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
Gallipolis

-ODS MACK RUS

Scheduled May 1, 2, 3
POMEROY - The Meigs County Health Department is
reminding parents of pre.echool-age children, ages one (1) year
and older, of the special evening preschool measles...uhella
lnnnunization clinics to he held at three county locations on May ·
I, 2, aod 3.
At these clinics, pre.echoolers may receive the combined
measles.rnbella vaccine free of charge. This vaccine protects
children against both old-fashioned measles (rnboola) and J.day
measles (rubella ) aod thus saUsfies the state law which requires
· lmm.nnlzation against both diseases before entering school.
· Parents of pre-schoolers are urged to complete and sign the
following fonn and bring It with them to one of the pre-&lt;~chool
clinics.

.

This meeting of Meigs
County Council on Aging will
be held Sunday, April 30, at
2:30 p.m. at the St. Paul
Lutheran Church, Pomeroy,

This meeti ng is to get
aquainted with other senior
Meigs Countians, and the of·
fleers of the Aging Unit here,
who are Clarence Struble,
President; Mrs. Geneva Yates,
acting secretary ; Mrs. Eleanor
Thomas, director ; two aides,

TOTAL EDUCATION
·· For Our Youth I
WE NOW HAVE~

i

·/

Chester, and Henry D. Watson,
Middleport;
There will be a speaker, Mrs.
Bjorn from Columbus ; a film
shown , and a question and
answer period . .
Everyone is invited. Persons

friend, or neighbor.
Remember the date, Sunday,
April 30, at 2 o'clock at St.
Paul 's Lu thera n Church,
Pomeroy .

Pre-Signing in

In radiotelephony, the expression "Mayday" is used
as a distress signal for air.
craft in the same manner
.that SOS is used at sea .

FOR [!]

VOTE

GALLIA·JACKSON JOINT VOCATIONAL SCHOOL COMMITTEE
CO ·CHAIItMAH

BARRON

CLAUDI E. 8WICK

GALLJf'OLI8 , OHIO

WD.LIITON, OHIO

ROG~R

C.

PARTICIPATING DISTRICTS

District Set
Wellston
•

ci I y
Jackson

I
N or I h '

c i I Y

The Store With the Lorge
Selection"
Bulova and
Seiko Watches

J A C K S~ N

Dlillftls
Of fine Oulily
S,.lfll Wllrh Bln•s
Walth and Jewelry Repalrl•g
Cltcb
Ch1rms Cusltlll JewelrY .

Galli a

KyQer
'

-~

.,
Cr • • k

Hi II

Oak
U n i on

In•One of

The LarQest . Selections in

S. E.O.

ci t 'f

l ~4f1615 · 1
TAWNEY
JEWELERS

Hannan

Tr a c •

422 Second Ave .
Gallipolis, Ohio

lice~.

•. '

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I

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i

AI 5:10 p.m. on SR 7, two
tenths of a mile north of county
road 36, Carl R. Thomas, 18,
Long Bottom, was traveling
n~th when he lost cdntrol on
wet .pavement. Tbe car spun
al'OWid in the road and struck a
gnaidrlU. There was medium
damage but no injuries or
arrests.
Al 5:40 p.m. on county road
28 (Basban-Keno road) n~
tenths of amUeliOllth of SR MS, ·
Carole Slllan Bush, 34, Racine,
'!II traveling south when a
deer wu killed as It ran Into
the path or her car. 'lblre wu
1fp dllllage to the car and no
~es.,

,i.

TOGETHER
0

0

•

We Can Do MORE for OUR YOUTH

By forming a jointure, local school districts can provide a much broader
program more economically than any one district could .p rovide on its
own .

A Joint Vocational School Is a specialized high school serving an area
larger than any existing school district In our area and providing a
program of specific job training . Students learn the job skills, technical
knowledge, safety judgements, work habits and attitudes necessary for
occupations requiring no formal training beyond high school.

PROGRAM:
The proposed school would offer 20 different courses in 5 broad vocational
areas :

,._

.------lilt
--·
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l'llor'N -

; NOW'AVAILABLE
· IN DD CUPS

lloun;
wftii.ANII1'TP, tlio

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-CIOIIIIIhdon
" ' " " olebliitth
" " - -8lld
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1. AGRICULTURE

(Ag. Business, Horticulture-Forestry, Ag . Equip·

ment and Mechanics)

2. BUSINESS&amp; OFFICE EDUCATION (Entry Bus. Data Processing and
Computer, Accounting -Computing Clerk. Cooperative Office Practice,
I
Office Duplicator Operator, Oerlcal Services)
3. DISTRIBUTIVE EDUCATION (Work-Study program in sales, mer chand!iing and distribution)

I'

LOftl Llne-Atg, lt.oO Now t7.H
Strlel220

1~8. 34-oMC, 34-440'.

NEW! tw-460.0')

('D . 'DD suo mort)

'

DEPARTMENT STORE
. 302 Second. Gallipolis, Ohio

•

I
I

VOCATIONAL EDUCATION

sign in giving name, address yourself, perhaps parents , or

Southern Loval

COLLEGE EDUCATION

Complete t:he Program
on May 2nd, 1972

Mrs . Margaret Amberger,

and phone number.
All churches and other
organizations are invited to
donate cookies and coffee for
refreshments.

ELEMENTARY &amp; SECONDARY
EDUCATION

_ _ VOCATIONAL EDUCATION

Instead of the Trinity Church having transportation are
as was previously an- · asked to tell their neighbors,
and bring someone.
nounced.
Most folks should be in·
terested in this, if not for

RACINE - Pre-registration
for all first grade and kin1.- - , . - - - - - - - - - - AGE-- dergarten students of Southern
Local School District will he
held Friday at Syracuse ,
2 . - - - - - - - -- -AGE - Ra cine Elementary and
3. - - - - - - - - - - - - - AGE- - - Kindergarten Room and Letart
. • :Falls from 9to 12 and I to 3.
All parents registering
FAMILY PHYSICIAN- - - - - - - students for the first time are
asked to bring the child's birth
TELEPHONE- - - - - - - -- - - - - - certificate and record of all
immunizations.
There will be no regular
I request and authorize \he administration of live
classes
for ·first .grade or
virus Measles-Rubella vaccines to my children,
kindergarten students of the
named above .
district on pre-registration
day.
(Parent or Guardian)
HOUCKS TO TRAVEL
GALLIPOLIS - Billy Houck,
local representative of the
&lt;Addfess)
National Life and Accident
Insu ra nce Company's HunTELEPHONE ---~-------------tington district and his wife ,
Pat, will attend a Leaders'
Clinic Sites: Monday, May l, Chester Fire Business Conference next
Department; Tuesday, May 2, Racine Fire month ·at the Diplomat Hotel in
Qepartment ; Wednesday, May 3, Pomeroy Fire Hollywood Beach, Florida ,
May 24·27, as a member of the
Department.
Jirm's
1971 Career club.
All Times: 6·7:30 p.m.

••
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By GOLDIE CLENDENIN
POMEROY - There will be
a Senior Citizens fellowshi p
meeting at the St. Paul's
- Lutheran Church in Pomeroy
:onSunday, April30 at 2:30p.m.
Eve ryone is
welcome ,
especially we who are over 55.
You are asked to come at 2 to

PRESCHOOLERS ONLY BRING TO CLINIC
PARENT Aun!ORIZATION FoR
MEASLES- RUBELLA COMBINED
'
IMMUNIZATION
All children ages of I through 10 who were vaccinated with
measles vaccine before January 1, 1970, or who have received ·
only one of the two measles vaccines (measles or rubella) should
he vaccinated AGAIN with the Measles-Rubella (Comb.) vaccine.
·
Children should NOT be vaccinated if they have a fever, or
are being treated for cancer or leukemia, CHIWREN
ALLERGIC TO CHICKEN OR DUCK, CHICKEN OR DUCK
EGGS OR FEATHERS, OR NEOMYCIN SHOULD NOT BE
VACCINATED. Children who have received oral polio, measles,
rubella or smallpox vaccine within the last 30 days should not be
vaccinated at this time.

POMEROY - Two persons
were treated and released at ·
·veterans Memorial Hospital
following a two car accident
Friday at&amp;p.m. on county road
35, the Meigs County SheriH's
.DePt. reported.
" Injured were Robert Louis
,McGrail, 30, Zanesville, and
·Robert Thorla, a passenger in
the McGrail vehicle. They
'ivere taken to the hospital by
'Deputy James Soulsby.
.: McGrail was traveling east
tlhen he met two oncoming
cars. The second vehicle,
W'lven by Jo~n Bennett Cobb,
48, Racine, struck McGrail
almost headon.
Both cars were demolished,
Cobb was cited to court on
charges of driving while In·
toxlcated and without an
operator's license. McGrail
was cited to court on charges of
!Javil.g an expired operator's

(92nd HOUSE DISTRICT)

WIENERS

Immunization ·CJinics

Senior Citizens To
-·
Meet April 30

'I njury

STATE
·REPRESENTATIVE .

MON. &amp; TUES.
ONLY
SUPER RIGHT
SKINLESS

completing his first year · as John Blake, Mrs. Martha . Gabriel will remain in the
principal. ·
Brown, Miss Linda Roilsh and district as a teacher and
Five-year contracts were Larry Shong.
substitute bus driver .
awarded to Jimmy Steele and
Jim Foster was designated
Ivan Mayo was awarded a
James Burleson. James Oiler head basketball and baseball
received a three year pact.
coach and assistant irf football. continuing contract as a bus
Employed on two-year !ilake was name&lt;;! head football driver.
Two other drive,rs employed
contracts were . Thomas . and track coach and assistant
on one-year contracts were
Campbell, Roy Mullins, K~ren in basketball.
,Allen, Martha Meek, Cheryl
The board accepted . the Ernestine Polsley and Jeanie
Brophy, James Foster, and resignation of Bruce Gabriel as Hampton. Harold Russell, Jr.,
Miss Betty Jones. Title One junior high coach at Bidwell- reCeived a one-year.contract as
and ADC instructors employed Porter and regula.r bus driver. bus mechanic.
on a one-year basis were Mrs.
'
Ruth George, Mrs. Jean
Cassidy, and Mrs . Shirley
Smith. Hired for one-year
pending certificat ion were

.Suffer

FOR

•

446-3832

-oo

OUR CHOICE

No m~trer whot your needs in a hom e may be, talk to
us about the f;nonc;ng . You'll be gla d thai you d;d.

Opposite Tile Post Office

R

ALSO
ICol~rl

Let's...F,trovide ..

NAME OF CHILD

Richard Crenna

M ... IL $U8ii011Pl10111 !lATE$
t~t Gtllipotil t .. ounr In 0 ~1" 111~ Wnt
Vit'J II'Iol , O&lt;lt ynr SIJ.OO, l la m1111t~1 171
ltlrl'r monttot U !4, r luwt.•••· onr ' ' ' '
lll ; 11• mon t~ l " ' tilt H rnon lt.t » .00.
lt.l' Pl•ly ~rntlnll , Onr YN r IU.OO ; I I•
"'~' "' I Ul . thru rno nlhl U .SO
l fle Unllrll f'rtn lnlrrr'lltiGn-' 11 ra
ck,. lvtl~ tn tillra 1a tfll uu tor • uollullon
..... nUll c:t i ~DI!ChU C'lc:t l!lc:t !0 IIIII
tnc:t

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Double Footure

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fAII!IUNE

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and

APR.23 .

GI I'IHi i, , O~lo , tUI I
THE OAILY SI!N TIN EL
11 1 Covr1 ~ ~ . Porr&gt;troy. O, , fSI ...
Pu1tllllltO '" ' ' ' wui&lt;CIIy t•tnlnf t•t~l
~t urllh EnttrHI u M c..,d cln• mtl! in t
"'llllt 1 1 POmHoy , Ohillo, POl! Ollict
TEIIMS OF SUISCIIIPTIO N
a y urrier a11tv 1111 Sun...,, , !ik 1&gt;tr

Ml~fl"

'

VINTON - North Gallla
Local Schobl District, pending
certification of four ' in·
structors, Friday night com.
pleted its teaching an&lt;;! administrative staffs for the 197273 school year.
•Meeting in special session
the board employed a~
elementary principal, 17
· teachers and four han-teaching
employees .
Charles Dowler of Gallipolis
was rehired as principal at
Bidwell-Porter Elementary on
a one-year contract. Dowler,
former social studies instructor in the high school, is

.

TONIGHT

US Tll lr" Awt .. G lll i~l l l , 011 10 . •SUI
PU,Ot fli'IICI e~f'V WlfUIY tUII on , . . CIII1
hUirCif~ !econcr CIIU PMIItf P.tiCI II

-MII Dif

Tonight thru
--~!(lnes!la.l'

MAKES

Since 1859 ·

Over the years we hove furnished the money thQt has
enabled many fc"}ilies to own o home of the ir own. As
time rolls by on d o hovse becom es too small or too lo.rg e,
we have helped wi tt-~ th e cllangeover .

•

Publil~fll

MEiGS THEATRE

MASON DRIVE IN

SUNDAY
TIMES.SENTINEL
V·ll~y... rt?~::~~~ ~o_.,llY

Clendenin, W.. Va., .Norman Intoxication; Stanley Watson,.
Schoonover, Pomeroy; Rt. 3, Middleport, RD, $25, distur·
~arc W. Pieltaar, Northridge, bing the peace.
Calif., Jesse T. Alexander,
Akron, G. R. Wol!ingbarger,
Pt. Pleasant, and Billy Joe
Poff, Chesapeake, $27.50 ·each,
Tonight, MOfl. 1o Tues.
speeding ; Robert .!-.: Rich·
April23·24·25
mond, Middleport, Rt. 1, and
Walt Disney's
THE LIVING DESERT
Eddie 'Schartiger, Middleport,
!technlcolorl
Rt. I, $159.55 each, possession
Acaderi'1y Award . Win~rs.
oi iUegal deer; .Jaines M. The greatest wlldllle
Pierce, Middleport Rt. I, speclacle ol this alii
$1W.55, taking deer out of
"G"
season ; Sherwood Coe,
Walt Dls~ey's
VANISHING PRAIRIE
·Parkersburg, $257.50, driving
!Technlcolor)
while intoxicated; Kenneth 0.
Peoples, Wellston;Rt. 3, $37.50,
overload; Rodney o_. Roberts,,
Gallipolis, $32.50, excessive
speed; Kenny Johnson,
Pomeroy, Rt. 4, $25, disturbing
the peace; Robert L. R,ay,
Barboursville, W. Va., $27.50,
passing on yellow line; Leon C.
Steadman, Akron, ·$27.50,
expired operators license;
Sunday
Marion H. Graham, Parkers·
burg, . $257.50, driving while
intoxicated,
$57.50,
no
operators license; James C.
Watson, Tuppers Plains,
$32.50, speeding ; Richard
McBride, Parkersburg, $25,

.School Staffs Employed

4. ,HOME ECONOMICS &amp; HEALTH (Commercial Food Services, Home
and Community Service Aides)

.s. TRADE

&amp; INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION (Automotive Body Repair ,
Auto Mechanics, Cosmetology, Drafting , Electricity, Machine ·Shop,
Sheet · Metal. · Welding, Occupational Work Experience, Mining Oc·
cupatlons and Mechanics, Industrial Maintenance}

REMEMBER:
Only 2 mills for construction and operation will provide a comprehensive
job training program for our YOUTH.
_
.
Not Paid For With Public Funds'

�\

•
5- Tbe S"\'day Times. Sent~ I, Sunday, Aprll23, 1972

Bridal Shower Honors
Miss jeanne Geremes; ·
GALLIPOLIS · _ A bridal
shower was held Wednesday
evening in honor of Miss
Jeanne Geremesz bride~lect
of ·Mr. Marvin 'Ours. The
shower was held at the home or
Mrs. Charles Bell, Peb~y Dr.,
with Mrs. Richard Roy as co• hostess.
Assisting the hostesses wer~
Misses Karen and Charlene
Roy. Games were played with
prizes being won by Mrs. Bud
McGee, Mrs. Leonard Blland
and Miss Jeanne Geremesz.
Mrs. Walter Allie won the door
prize.
The honoree opened and
acknowledged her many lovely
gifts . Refreshments were

Gen~ration
-R ap
.
TONI

'

TODD

served from a table centered
with an "orchid and pink floral
arrangement ~1th orchid
candles on either s1de,
carrying out an orchid and pink
color theme.
Guests present were Mrs.
Erhardt Tews, Mrs. Steven
Geremesz, . Mrs . Leonard
Biland, Mra. Walter Allie, Mrs. '
Bud McGee, Mrs. Paul Fuller,
Mrs. Ronald Calhoon, Miss
Jennifer Ours, Mrs. ; C. E.
Lingo, Mrs. Juanita Workman,
and Mrs. Robert Adams and
Nancy.
Sending gifts were Mrs.
John Cleary, Mrs. Herbert
Smith, Mrs. Dean Mason and
Mrs. Marvin Ours.

So m"ch
going for it

Mr. and Mrs.
Miss Brigitte Nease

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Gerald D. Nease are announcing
"' the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter,
Brigitte, to Mr. Glen K. Soles, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn K.
Soles, Sr., of Gallipolis.
· Miss Nease, a 1969 graduate· of Southern Local High School,
is a senior ~t Holzer Medical Center School of Nursing and will
graduate In June.
Mr. Soles, a 1967 graduate of Gallia Academy High School, is
employf! at Holzer Medical Center as a printer.
The open church wedding will be an event of July 29 at 2:30
p.m. at the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Pomeroy.

Grace United Methodist
WSCS Discusses. "'K.:enya ·

The April meeting of the
Grace United Methodist
W.S.C.S. was held in the chapel
of the church with the newly
elected president, Mrs. Howell
Edwards, presiding. She
opened the meeting with a brief
word about the country Kenn,
focal point lor the month. It
was noted that there are no
United Methodist Churches in
Kenya, but that nine
missionaries are now present
to help the people . The
secretary and treasur.er
reports were read and reports
given from chairmen of
committees. Mrs . W. J. Brown,
representative of Church
W&lt;JJen United, announced the
~.meeting would be Friday
evening, May 5th, at6:30.·Thls
meeting, which is to be a
potluck supper, will be held at
the Presbyterian Church .
Program for the evening will
be "Behold the Woman."
The main thrust WSCS
District meeting wiD be held at
Nelsonville on April 26. The
satellite meeting will be held
oo April 27 at Heath United
Methodist Church in Mid·
dleport. Time lor both nights is
7:30 to 9:30. All officers and
members are invited to attend
these meetings.
The Golden Circle will meet
at the church next Tuesday,
Aprll25, atl2 noon. The dinner

is potluck and all attending are
to bring fiible service. Gen.
George Bush retired, will be in
charge of the program. It was
also announced that May 19
will be the Senior breakfast
which be held in the church
dinin g room, Bible School
.dates for Grace· Church are
June 5 thru June 9 from 9:30 till
2.

Mrs . Edwards urged all
members to vote for the Mental
Health Levy on the May 2
ballot. Passage of this levy will
benefit people in need of help
with problems in ordinary
living. It was also announced
that · the United Methodist
Church would not endorse the
lottery law which is also on the
May 2 ballot.
The next General Meeting
wilt be the Mother-Daughter
Banquet on May 17 at 6:30 (l&lt;m.
This will be a potluck dinner
and members, please bring
table service.
There were 29 members
present for Wednesday night's
meeting. Circle members
present for the month of April
were 77 and a total of 176 sick
calls made by the combined
circles.
The program for the evening
was given by Circle No. 4 with
Mrs . Stanley Folden as
chairman . Topic was HPower
in the Christian's Experience''

HUNTSVILLE Miss
. Theresa Schell and J . Stephen
Wagoner were united in
marriage March 4, 1972 at 2
p.m. in Our Lady, Queen of the
Universe Church with 'Father Paul ·Donnelly performing the · double ring
ceremony.
Nuptial music was presented
by Micbeal O'Shea, organist.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and .. Mrs. F. · n . Schell,
Huntsville, Ala., and the g'room
is the son of •Mrs. Juanita J.
Wagoner, Gallipolis.
The wedding took place in
Alabama. Given in marriage
by her father , the bride wore a
full-length gown of Chantilly
lace with long pointed sleeves.
by Theressa Hoover and is an
attempt to define and understand power and the use of
it for social change. Mrs.
Folden listed several symbols
of power, and at the center, and
source of all power - God. She
added that all lives are affected by the power of individuals or groups. Each
person lives . in power
relationships to others.
Examples of the different
powers affecting lives were
given, showing how each is
affected by power exerted by
others. Members taking part in
the program were Mrs. Buell
Clark,- who spoke on "Power
and Decision Making" ; Mrs.
Beulah Ward , "Power and
Patriotism"; Mrs . Hiram
Stutes, 11 P.ower of Love"; and
"The Power of Prayer" by
Mrs. Viola Car~r.
Music for the evening was
the hymn "Come, Thou
Almighty King." Devotions
and scripture reading were by
Mrs. Hoke Robinson, who also
closed th e meeting with
prayer.
Adessert course was served
by Circle 2.

vestigate the possibility of
beginning a Cadette program
for Junior High age girls.
Leaders of the exisUng Rio
Grande troops are Mrs. Sue
Brandeberry and Mrs. Rachel
Sheridan of Brownie troop No.
li56, and Mrs. Sarah Blazer,
Debbie Hyrne and Mrs. Shirley
Smith of Junior troop No. 513.

Her Mantilla of silk illusion
was encircled with matching
Chantilly lace and was attached to a lace crown. She
carried a bouquet of white
sweetheart roses and baby's
breath.
Miss Kathy Tourville of
Puducah, Ky., was maid of
honor and Micheal Schell,
brother of the bride, was best

man.
The bride is a graduate of S.
R. Butler High School in Huntsville, Ala. L·Cpl. Wagoner
attended Gailia Academy High
School and is presently
stationed at Marine Corps Air
Base in Santa Ana, California. '
Mr. and Mrs. Wagoner will live
in Santa Ana, Calif.
A reception at the church
followed the i:eremony.

SCOUTING CAN GROW
Girls in any community or
rural section of Gallia County
can enjoy scouting. The key is
leadership. The strength of girl
scouting is its volun teer adults.
Wherever there are women
who honestly like to work and
have fun with girls and will
give the necessary time to
train themselves, girls can
have scouting . Generation
. Gap? Not in girl scouting 1

$7 5. OFF REG. PACE
on the Golden 'buch&amp;Sew' sewing machine
in the Bakersfield desk!

It's the Golden Touch &amp;Sew • sewing machine,
our very best, in the Bakersfield
cabinet ; gjve5 you Singer slretch ·
stitches for knits. Touch the dial
to switch stitches .. And
touch the exclusive
Siriger' Push-Button
Bobbin- it winds itself .

permanent accordion pleats. In wOnderful machine&amp;

+++++

washable/ dryable polyester do•bteknit. White or black.
8-18.

Pear Rap :
"Lisa" wanted to know how she could break her knucklecracking habit. My father made me sit and puli my fingers for
one solid hour! I never had the urge again. Try it, Lisa! BRENDA
Dear Rap :
I'd like to ask•these Women's Liberationists something : Why
do you Insist on making a big deal out of being liberated, when
you could join a "help the handicapped" campaign, or work to
get POWs out of North Vietnam, or help in tbe fight against
pollution, do something about cancer research - or get involved
In many of the other problems that are much more desperate lor
solutions?
What good is equality with men when neither men nor
women can breathe our poisonous air? Why add another hassle to
a nation that has so many unsolved problems already'
ANGRY AT SELFISH WOMEN'S LIBBERS
Dear Angry :
Good question. We're sure there will be many answers.
Have at it, Libera.tionists ! - RAP

28.00

TONI

TODD
Color bands
set It off

VOTE FOR AMENDMENT
WASHING,TON (UP!) Ohio's two Republican
senators, Reller! Tall Jr. and
William SaJbe both voted for

FABRIC SPECIALS!
l~

1 GROUP

2 PDRIIr..r:

PERM PRESS

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PLAIDS

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Tri -color bands stitched together wilh fagot ing locus

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yellow / brown / orange or white with pin ks/purple. 10-20.

We Do Custom Dress Making
Singer Soles &amp; Service

58 Court St.

APP~OVED SI_Nc; E R DEALER·

446-9255

LUNCH 1 TO 2

attention on Toni Todd's easy-does-it shapeling. A joy

Notions

, • A T1-o-.rt ol THE IIHilEfl (OMIIAHY

MONDAY, TUESDAY &amp; WEDNESDAY
APRIL 24-25-26
MONDAY 11 A.M. TO 7 P.M.
TUES. &amp; WED. 9:30 TO 4 P.M.

PRICE

.
..
Open 'Till p.m. Man. &amp; Fri. Nights
Simplicity, McCatls, Butlerlck,
Vogue Patterns
~~~~~
2 Complete FlOors of Fabrics &amp;
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an amendment Thursday
which killed a proposed rural
development bank.
The amendment passed the
Senate by a 44-42 vote.

3 BIG, DAYS

FRENCH_C_ITY
FA.BRIC
- SHOPPE
.

LUNCHEON MEETING
The DAR will have a luncheon meeting in the Riverboat
Room on Monday, May 1.
Reservations must be made
with Mary Virginia O'Brien on
or before Thursday, April 27.

+++++

You'll love it wherever you roam. This Cool Collectable
by Toni Todd plots pure figure flattery- the uncluttered
bodice, the big beautiful golden buckle, the fling of

sa'le'•

WHEN FRIENDSHIP SHOULD END
Dear Sue and Helen:
·
I was sorry for this girl because she didn't know how to mix
or attract boys, so I made her my special project. I showed her
how to dress, act, talk - in fact, 1 created a different person out
of her.
And I've created a monster! Well anyway, a rival - who
does her darndest to take away every boy I Uke. Trouble is, she
usually succeeds.
·
See, she's perfected MY personallty, so !hat she is a better
"me." Boys who are attracted to me, are silting ducks for her
because she can ouklo me. And to think: I taught her! I valued
her friendship but I'm beginning to hate ber, too.
She is still best.friends with me, and I can't ahow my
jealousy because she's only doing what I said. But does s~e have
to brag every time a boy turns to ber - away from me? SUCCEEOED TOO WELL
Dear S'IW:
.
You valued this girl's friendship once but, as we aU know, the
closer you get to someone, the better you can see her defects, if
they're there.
I think she may have used you as a stepping stone. She
learned all your tricks, and now she's "practicing" on the closest
targets : your boy friends. Maybe you didn't "create a monster"
- you just uncovered one under that layer of-insecurity. So drop
her: she doesn't need you any more - and you, for sure, don 't
need HER! - SUE
Dear S'IW:
Inasmuch as you were a successful teacher once, why not try
your luck one more time before you drop this girl?
Give it to her straight about "territorial rights" and the
hazards of sharpening your ego on other girls' boy friends. In
some strange way, she may feel you expect her to "bird-dog" that is, "shoot these guys down" so that she can go after them.
You've never mentioned your jealousy to her, you know -so
perhaps she doesn't realize you've stopped being a teacher. This
way, you may eliminate a rival and keep a friend . -HELEN
LAST WORD FROM SUE : But don't count on it! - S.

I

OPEN 'TIL 8 P.M. MONDAY

·Schell-Wagoner
Solemnize Vows

Nease-Soles Plan
july 29th Wedding

1

J Stephen Wagoner

By Helen and Sue HOttel

24.00

TODD
On-the-town
knlttery

Mon., Tues., Wed.
Sat.-9-5
Thur.-9-12

•

Wht11 thtlamlll shops lol328 Sotond ~...
Gallipolis, 0.

Fri.-U p.m.

GOSPEL MEEtiNG
1

CHURCH OF CHRIST
APRIL 24th thru· 30th
7 P.M.

Color
Portrait

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Accutron•
by Bulova

Everyone Welcome

SPEAKER: C; EU-GENE.:ZOPP

lleautiful

x10"

for
Graduation
.

Bidwell, Ohio

chai" rm en

of

mt ss wnary

education, christian social

relati ons, Wesleyan service
guild and other in terested
persons should attend to be

J •

GALLIPOLIS- The'French
City Garden Club held its
monthly mee ting w\th Mrs.
Jewell
Moore Tuesday
evening, with Miss Marie Meal
co-hostess. Mrs. Lucas was a
guest.

onlv88C

welt decorated room gives
emotional experience, it makes
a place to enjoy.
New carpel and new furniture do not ma ke a room but
it is important to include the
correct accessories . If colors

Mrs . Harley George, are mixed in a room let one
president, presided and Miss color dominate, or one thing.
Meal prese nted devotions by Hall and half is not interesting,
reading Romans 12:9-21 with a room needs a focal point just
reference to "Brotherly Love," as a floral arrangement needs
a prayer and a reading "What a focal point. Ac cessories
Have.You given Away."
should not compete with the
Roll call was by naming a focal point but should accent it.
favorite flower color. The They should be stepping stones
secretary's report was read by from the focal point around the
Mrs. Melvin Smeltzer and was room.
approved .
A room should have evidence
Announcement was made of of people being there. An open
the Spring Regional Meeting to magazine, a pipe in an asy
be held at Logan, Ohio. Other tray, lreshflowers . Aroom ca n
communications consisted of a be given life by planl.'l, live
letter from the commit~• for plants. Don't ove rcr owd a
Galli a-Jackson . Joint roo m with too many acVocationai School District with cessori es but enough and of
reference to the levy to provide colors as to bring the room
therefor.
together.
Corsages for the Ladies
Mrs. 1\loore di:;,1iayed inHome Council Installation of teresting arrangements on the
officers were made by Mrs. pia no and corner ta ble.
Florence Trainer . Mrs. Refreshmenl.&gt;; were se rved by
Smeltzer reported she and her the hostesses and the meeting
husband had talked to the adjourned.
Wayside Garden Club of
The next meeting will be an
Cheshire.
open meeting on May 9 at 7:30
Mr. Earl Tope of _Tope . p.m. at Grace United
Furniture Co ., was guest Methodist Church.
speaker for the mee ting,
Mrs. Homer Holter of
talking on "Design in Floral Wildwood and Chester Garden
Art Correlated with Interior Club~ of Pomeroy will show
Decor a tin g." Final touches slides and narrate "Gardens of
and accessories are very other countries." Other clubs
important in a room, he said, are invited.
and floral arrangements are
part of these accessories .
Floral arrangements in a room HOSPITAL NEWS
must correlate to the furniture
Holzer Medical Center, First
and other accessories.
Ave. and Cedar St. General
Take out the fl oral . visiting hours 2-4 and 7-jj p.m.
arrangement and 1t will change Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
the whole room. Accessories 4:30 p.m. Parents only on
should speak, have something Pediatrics Ward.
to say, "Trines make perBirths
fection," Michelangelo once
Mr . and Mrs. Eric William
said.
Steckel, Gallipolis Ferry, W.
The accessories or a floral va ., a daughter and Mr . and
arrangement can perfect a Mrs. Wayne Cleland, Langsroom and should carry out ville, a daughter.
favorite colors and shapes. A
Discharges
Valerie Henry, Kelly Dale
Roush, Robert Staats, Hazel
Dugan, John Manering, Fannie
Staley, Wylodine Riggle, Linda
Grimm, Judy Whetsel, Clifford
·/i. Welch, Lawrence Sutton,
Mrs. David Coffey and son,
Audra Nickels, John Baker,

Coming
Events

Gallipolis.

TONI

.r l'

NE!.SONVILL~ Athens
District Women's Society of
Christian Service will hold a
Celebrati on of Giving and
Sharing on Wednesday, April
26, al the Nelsonville United
Methudist Church, 20o West
Columbus St., Nelsonville, at
7:30 p.m.
Society presidents, vicepre sid e nts, treasurers,

Faculty Club
To Attend Play

Greenlee Presides
At Grf!:nge Mee-ting

. GALLIPOLIS - The Faithful Wurkers Society of Poplar
Ridge Church met un Aprjlll
ENO- The Eno Grange No.
bette•· · informed of their at the home of Mrs. Rosetta
pl'ivilcgcs and responsibilities J unes with Mrs. Jones 2080 rriet recently with Worthy
of the finan9iai program and to presiding.
Master Ernest Greenlee in the
kn ow lbe areas supported by The meeting opened with the . chair. The secretary, Ralph
giving.
group singing, "He Arose" Leesburg, gave the records of
Thre e confe rence offi cers followed with the Lord's the last meeting.
will be in attendance to answer Prayer in unison . The hostess · A get well card was signed to
questions and supply general read "First Psalms" for the be sent to Mrs·. Cora Rupe who
· information.
devotional and the secretary1 is a patient in a hospital in
Three foll ow-up satelli te Mrs. Grace Lemley, gave the Daytona Beach, Fla .
meetings wilt follow on April 27 minutes of the last meeting.
Following a brief business
at 7:30 at First Uni ted · Dues and the Sunshine Fund meeting the literary program
Method ist Chur ch, Crooks· were collected and bills were was given by the lecturer, Mrs.
ville; Heath United Methodist paid. The club reported having Marie Thomas, who used the
Ch ur ch, Middleport, and made $31 from the sale of rugs. theme "The Grange Farmer."
Trinity Chape l, Third and The members signed get well
The program was concluded
·wooster SL&gt;; ., Marietta.
ca rds to be se nt to Mrs. Bessie with readings given by several
Viars, Mrs. Elizabeth Welch, members. They are Mrs.
and Forest McNeal.
.1
Mrs . Nancy Lemley, Mrs.
'

Mr.•c- Tope Speaks 'T"0
French City Garden

Girl ~outing In Rio Grande
RIO GRANDE - An im·
portant part of girl scouting in
Gallia County are the li'oops in
Rio Grande. The first troop
was established there in 1968
by two Rio Grande College
studj!nls who had grown up in
the scouting program.
The next year a Junior troop
was organized. Plans are
underway at present to in-

.

Giving and Sharing
Celebration Planned

Mrs. Jones Hosts
Faithful Workers

RIO GRANDE - The Ri o
College Faculty
Women's Club, instead of their
regular April meeting, will
Bea tri ce Stamper, " April attend the faculty-s tudent play
·Showers" ; Ralph Leesburg, "The Odd Couple" on Wed: .
"Tips on Tractor Safety"; Mrs. nesday, April 26. Cu rtain time
Anise Greenlee "Trees of the is 8:30 p.tn.
Bible"; Mrs. Alma Hix, "The
Following the play the
Use of Bees," and Maurice Faculty Women are sponsorin g
Thomas with "Four Country an open-house at the Rio
Neighbors ." Mrs. Marilyn Grande College dining hall fm·
Halfhill read "Keep Your Eyes all patrons attending WedOpen," Mrs. Marie Thomas nesday night's showing, as well
asked riddles and Mrs. Rosetta as participati ng cast, backJones read "A Prayer In A s
personnel an d other
Forest." The program was
closed with the group singing
"The Dear Old Farm" and the
meeting closed in reg ular
.form .
Grand~

Emblem C'lub Donates $25

Pearl_ welch, Mrs . Karen
Lemley, Mrs. Pea rl Lemley,
~:
Mrs . Theresa ~P r i ce, Mrs.
Rose tta Jones and Susan
GALLIPOLIS - The Em·
McCoy received birthday gifts blem Club met on April 11 to
fr'om their secret sis ters. .elect new officers for 1972-73.
Readings were given by Mrs. They are, president, Bette
Ola Mae Arrowood , Mrs. Grace Null ; junior past president,
Lemley, Mrs. Dottie McCoy, Evalee S. Myers; first viceMrs. Alma Hix and Mrs. Pearl president, Pete Shelton;
Lemley .
second vice-president, Hope
Songs and recitals were

given by children, Lori McCoy,
Susan McCoy, Christi Lemley,
Cindy Lemley, and Wendy
Lemley followed wi th Bible
questions by Mrs. Ola Mae ,
Arrowood . ·
The May meeting will be at
the home of Mrs. Pearl Lemley
where a silent auction will be
held . Refreshments were
served to 27 members and
guests.

Eno Ladies Aid
Has 11 Guests
GALLIPOLIS - The April
meeting of the Eno Ladies Aid
was held at the home of Mrs.
Vera Miles at Centenary.
There were six members and
eleven. guests present. Guests
were Mr. and Mrs. Merrill
Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Worthy
Eva,!'S, Mr. and Mrs. Nick
Johnson and son , Stoney, Ruth
Spires, Mrs. Tressa Cremeans,
Homer Kemper and Earl
George.
A potluck lunch was served
at noon.
The business meeting opened
with the song "Sunshine in My
Soul" and a scripture reading
by Mrs . Worthy Evans.
Readings given were
"Tithing" by Mrs. Worthy
Evans ; "Nobody But Nobody,"
by Mrs . Earl George, and
"How Much," by Jane Ann

Johnson . The closing song
"Beautiful Garden of Prayer"
was sung and the closing
prayer was given by Mrs.
Kenneth Swisher. The May
meeting will be at the home of
Reva Reynolds of Gallipolis.

MEETING PLANNED
The regular meeting of the
Gallia County Association for
Retarded Children will be held
Monday, April 24, at 7 p.m. in
the Medical-Surgical Building
at the Gallipolis State Institute.
The nominating committee
will present their report with a
program and social hour to
follow the meeting .

Stevers ; secretary,

Joan

Allen; treasurer, Liz Mills ;
chaplain, Leota Guinther; first
trustee, Edna Vanco; sec~nd
trustee, Fern G~rd?er; th1rd
trustee, . Ann Wlcklme; marshall, W1lma Brown ; first ass't
marshall, Carol Nibert ; second

ass't. marshall, Janet Reese ;
recordin g secre tary , Edna
Tawney; organist, Cheryl
Bush ; press correspondent,
Lanna Waugh; historian ,
Bonnie Bawney; first guard,
Claudetta McCreedy ; second
guard , Jean Hankin s, and
corresponding
secretary ,
Marianne Dille.
Following the election of
officers plans were made for
installation on May 9. Members and officers voted to give
a $2o donation for GSI patients
to a Billy Graham movie.

Riverside Study Club
Announces New Officers
GALLIPOLIS
The
Riverside Study Club met oo
Tuesday, Aprill8, at the home
of Mrs. Arthur Espenscheid in
Rio Grande where refreshments were served and a social
hour .enjoyed prior to the
meeting.
Nine members answered roll
call with each naming an Indian tribe.
The slate of officers for 197273 was announced. They are
Mrs. Arthur Espenscheid~
president; Mrs. L. H. Wickline,
vice-president; Mrs. M. T.
Epling, secretary, and Mrs .
Howard Leimann, treasurer.
The program was the
presentation of res'o!utions to
be voted on at the Federation
Convention in Denver on June
5. The discussion which

followed the motions was lively
and interesting.
The meeting adjourned to
meet on April 25 with Mrs.
Allen.
·

\

$4l.omwNE

AITENDS SEMINAR
GALL IPOLIS .
Dr.
Gordon K. Amsbary has gone
to a five day dental seminar in ·
Carolir
Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. While
t~ere Dr. Amsbary will attend
Catch • 1perlrle
Phase II of a Preventive
from the "JOmlngautJ.
Dentistry Seminar, which ·he
H,old the magic
ol a Iudden breeze.
feels that this is a virtually
KHp thoae momenlla//ve,
relevan t seminar on the most
They're youn lor a lifetime.
topical and provocative subject
With a dlamonrl
in dentistry today, "Preven- .
engagamantrlngl~
tative Dentistry."
Orange 8/o-.om.

LONG PmiCOAT
The cling -free, anti -static

properties of Antron-Nylon
lrl cot provide the idea 1.
under cover- for today 's

new es t ankle -le ngth
fa shion. Cocktail slit design
and hem trimm ed
alencon lace.

in

Color: Wh ite
Slzeo: xs.s-M-L.

PAUL DAVIES

RUMMAGE SALE
A rumma ge sale will be held
on April27, 28 and 29 at the Old
Cedar St. Market on the corner
404 Second Ave.
of Third Ave. and Cedar St. The
!ieJiiiiOli&amp;. Ohio
sale is sponsored by the Cen- ·""--"'"'_ _ _ _ _..
terpoinl Freewill Baptist.

JEWELERS

"The Store with Mort"

Galtiootis

L:....--------.. . J

SUNDAY
GALLIPOLIS Chapter Order
Eastern Star Practice 3:30
p.m.
REV!V AL Bt:GIN~ a! Walnut
Ridge Church, 7:30p.m. Rev.
Orville Carrico, evangelist.
MONDA'\
POMONA Grange fifth degree
rehearsal, Springfield Grange
Hail, 8 p.m.
.
OCSEA regular chapter·
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Ail 'dinner
committees please report.
GALLIPOLIS Chapter Oraer
Eastern Star Annual In·
specUon 7:30 p.m. Ofilcers,
bring salad.
CREATIVE
WRITERS
Workshop 7:30p.m. in Library.

The heart of an Accutron
watch i5. tiny, tuning fork

~Native of Charleston, W. Va.
- Married &amp; has 2 children.
- Attended Morris Harvey College, W. Va. State Collfl!le.
- Has been located Full-l'lme Minister at Henderson, W.
Va. for past 61/l . year,.
- Directed Summer Youth Camp for past 6 years.
- Frequent· Youth Group Speaker
'- Conducted Gospel Meetings In Ohio, W. Va., Virginia.

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J_EWELfRS

"CHOICE OF YOUTH- REMEMBER OR REGRET''
"FORGIVENESS OF SI.NS IS NO JOKE!!"
"GODS' KINO OF HOME "
" LIFE'S OTHER SIDE"
"SPECIAL TEENAGE MESSAGE"

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•
5- Tbe S"\'day Times. Sent~ I, Sunday, Aprll23, 1972

Bridal Shower Honors
Miss jeanne Geremes; ·
GALLIPOLIS · _ A bridal
shower was held Wednesday
evening in honor of Miss
Jeanne Geremesz bride~lect
of ·Mr. Marvin 'Ours. The
shower was held at the home or
Mrs. Charles Bell, Peb~y Dr.,
with Mrs. Richard Roy as co• hostess.
Assisting the hostesses wer~
Misses Karen and Charlene
Roy. Games were played with
prizes being won by Mrs. Bud
McGee, Mrs. Leonard Blland
and Miss Jeanne Geremesz.
Mrs. Walter Allie won the door
prize.
The honoree opened and
acknowledged her many lovely
gifts . Refreshments were

Gen~ration
-R ap
.
TONI

'

TODD

served from a table centered
with an "orchid and pink floral
arrangement ~1th orchid
candles on either s1de,
carrying out an orchid and pink
color theme.
Guests present were Mrs.
Erhardt Tews, Mrs. Steven
Geremesz, . Mrs . Leonard
Biland, Mra. Walter Allie, Mrs. '
Bud McGee, Mrs. Paul Fuller,
Mrs. Ronald Calhoon, Miss
Jennifer Ours, Mrs. ; C. E.
Lingo, Mrs. Juanita Workman,
and Mrs. Robert Adams and
Nancy.
Sending gifts were Mrs.
John Cleary, Mrs. Herbert
Smith, Mrs. Dean Mason and
Mrs. Marvin Ours.

So m"ch
going for it

Mr. and Mrs.
Miss Brigitte Nease

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Gerald D. Nease are announcing
"' the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter,
Brigitte, to Mr. Glen K. Soles, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn K.
Soles, Sr., of Gallipolis.
· Miss Nease, a 1969 graduate· of Southern Local High School,
is a senior ~t Holzer Medical Center School of Nursing and will
graduate In June.
Mr. Soles, a 1967 graduate of Gallia Academy High School, is
employf! at Holzer Medical Center as a printer.
The open church wedding will be an event of July 29 at 2:30
p.m. at the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Pomeroy.

Grace United Methodist
WSCS Discusses. "'K.:enya ·

The April meeting of the
Grace United Methodist
W.S.C.S. was held in the chapel
of the church with the newly
elected president, Mrs. Howell
Edwards, presiding. She
opened the meeting with a brief
word about the country Kenn,
focal point lor the month. It
was noted that there are no
United Methodist Churches in
Kenya, but that nine
missionaries are now present
to help the people . The
secretary and treasur.er
reports were read and reports
given from chairmen of
committees. Mrs . W. J. Brown,
representative of Church
W&lt;JJen United, announced the
~.meeting would be Friday
evening, May 5th, at6:30.·Thls
meeting, which is to be a
potluck supper, will be held at
the Presbyterian Church .
Program for the evening will
be "Behold the Woman."
The main thrust WSCS
District meeting wiD be held at
Nelsonville on April 26. The
satellite meeting will be held
oo April 27 at Heath United
Methodist Church in Mid·
dleport. Time lor both nights is
7:30 to 9:30. All officers and
members are invited to attend
these meetings.
The Golden Circle will meet
at the church next Tuesday,
Aprll25, atl2 noon. The dinner

is potluck and all attending are
to bring fiible service. Gen.
George Bush retired, will be in
charge of the program. It was
also announced that May 19
will be the Senior breakfast
which be held in the church
dinin g room, Bible School
.dates for Grace· Church are
June 5 thru June 9 from 9:30 till
2.

Mrs . Edwards urged all
members to vote for the Mental
Health Levy on the May 2
ballot. Passage of this levy will
benefit people in need of help
with problems in ordinary
living. It was also announced
that · the United Methodist
Church would not endorse the
lottery law which is also on the
May 2 ballot.
The next General Meeting
wilt be the Mother-Daughter
Banquet on May 17 at 6:30 (l&lt;m.
This will be a potluck dinner
and members, please bring
table service.
There were 29 members
present for Wednesday night's
meeting. Circle members
present for the month of April
were 77 and a total of 176 sick
calls made by the combined
circles.
The program for the evening
was given by Circle No. 4 with
Mrs . Stanley Folden as
chairman . Topic was HPower
in the Christian's Experience''

HUNTSVILLE Miss
. Theresa Schell and J . Stephen
Wagoner were united in
marriage March 4, 1972 at 2
p.m. in Our Lady, Queen of the
Universe Church with 'Father Paul ·Donnelly performing the · double ring
ceremony.
Nuptial music was presented
by Micbeal O'Shea, organist.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and .. Mrs. F. · n . Schell,
Huntsville, Ala., and the g'room
is the son of •Mrs. Juanita J.
Wagoner, Gallipolis.
The wedding took place in
Alabama. Given in marriage
by her father , the bride wore a
full-length gown of Chantilly
lace with long pointed sleeves.
by Theressa Hoover and is an
attempt to define and understand power and the use of
it for social change. Mrs.
Folden listed several symbols
of power, and at the center, and
source of all power - God. She
added that all lives are affected by the power of individuals or groups. Each
person lives . in power
relationships to others.
Examples of the different
powers affecting lives were
given, showing how each is
affected by power exerted by
others. Members taking part in
the program were Mrs. Buell
Clark,- who spoke on "Power
and Decision Making" ; Mrs.
Beulah Ward , "Power and
Patriotism"; Mrs . Hiram
Stutes, 11 P.ower of Love"; and
"The Power of Prayer" by
Mrs. Viola Car~r.
Music for the evening was
the hymn "Come, Thou
Almighty King." Devotions
and scripture reading were by
Mrs. Hoke Robinson, who also
closed th e meeting with
prayer.
Adessert course was served
by Circle 2.

vestigate the possibility of
beginning a Cadette program
for Junior High age girls.
Leaders of the exisUng Rio
Grande troops are Mrs. Sue
Brandeberry and Mrs. Rachel
Sheridan of Brownie troop No.
li56, and Mrs. Sarah Blazer,
Debbie Hyrne and Mrs. Shirley
Smith of Junior troop No. 513.

Her Mantilla of silk illusion
was encircled with matching
Chantilly lace and was attached to a lace crown. She
carried a bouquet of white
sweetheart roses and baby's
breath.
Miss Kathy Tourville of
Puducah, Ky., was maid of
honor and Micheal Schell,
brother of the bride, was best

man.
The bride is a graduate of S.
R. Butler High School in Huntsville, Ala. L·Cpl. Wagoner
attended Gailia Academy High
School and is presently
stationed at Marine Corps Air
Base in Santa Ana, California. '
Mr. and Mrs. Wagoner will live
in Santa Ana, Calif.
A reception at the church
followed the i:eremony.

SCOUTING CAN GROW
Girls in any community or
rural section of Gallia County
can enjoy scouting. The key is
leadership. The strength of girl
scouting is its volun teer adults.
Wherever there are women
who honestly like to work and
have fun with girls and will
give the necessary time to
train themselves, girls can
have scouting . Generation
. Gap? Not in girl scouting 1

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Pear Rap :
"Lisa" wanted to know how she could break her knucklecracking habit. My father made me sit and puli my fingers for
one solid hour! I never had the urge again. Try it, Lisa! BRENDA
Dear Rap :
I'd like to ask•these Women's Liberationists something : Why
do you Insist on making a big deal out of being liberated, when
you could join a "help the handicapped" campaign, or work to
get POWs out of North Vietnam, or help in tbe fight against
pollution, do something about cancer research - or get involved
In many of the other problems that are much more desperate lor
solutions?
What good is equality with men when neither men nor
women can breathe our poisonous air? Why add another hassle to
a nation that has so many unsolved problems already'
ANGRY AT SELFISH WOMEN'S LIBBERS
Dear Angry :
Good question. We're sure there will be many answers.
Have at it, Libera.tionists ! - RAP

28.00

TONI

TODD
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set It off

VOTE FOR AMENDMENT
WASHING,TON (UP!) Ohio's two Republican
senators, Reller! Tall Jr. and
William SaJbe both voted for

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Open 'Till p.m. Man. &amp; Fri. Nights
Simplicity, McCatls, Butlerlck,
Vogue Patterns
~~~~~
2 Complete FlOors of Fabrics &amp;
~

an amendment Thursday
which killed a proposed rural
development bank.
The amendment passed the
Senate by a 44-42 vote.

3 BIG, DAYS

FRENCH_C_ITY
FA.BRIC
- SHOPPE
.

LUNCHEON MEETING
The DAR will have a luncheon meeting in the Riverboat
Room on Monday, May 1.
Reservations must be made
with Mary Virginia O'Brien on
or before Thursday, April 27.

+++++

You'll love it wherever you roam. This Cool Collectable
by Toni Todd plots pure figure flattery- the uncluttered
bodice, the big beautiful golden buckle, the fling of

sa'le'•

WHEN FRIENDSHIP SHOULD END
Dear Sue and Helen:
·
I was sorry for this girl because she didn't know how to mix
or attract boys, so I made her my special project. I showed her
how to dress, act, talk - in fact, 1 created a different person out
of her.
And I've created a monster! Well anyway, a rival - who
does her darndest to take away every boy I Uke. Trouble is, she
usually succeeds.
·
See, she's perfected MY personallty, so !hat she is a better
"me." Boys who are attracted to me, are silting ducks for her
because she can ouklo me. And to think: I taught her! I valued
her friendship but I'm beginning to hate ber, too.
She is still best.friends with me, and I can't ahow my
jealousy because she's only doing what I said. But does s~e have
to brag every time a boy turns to ber - away from me? SUCCEEOED TOO WELL
Dear S'IW:
.
You valued this girl's friendship once but, as we aU know, the
closer you get to someone, the better you can see her defects, if
they're there.
I think she may have used you as a stepping stone. She
learned all your tricks, and now she's "practicing" on the closest
targets : your boy friends. Maybe you didn't "create a monster"
- you just uncovered one under that layer of-insecurity. So drop
her: she doesn't need you any more - and you, for sure, don 't
need HER! - SUE
Dear S'IW:
Inasmuch as you were a successful teacher once, why not try
your luck one more time before you drop this girl?
Give it to her straight about "territorial rights" and the
hazards of sharpening your ego on other girls' boy friends. In
some strange way, she may feel you expect her to "bird-dog" that is, "shoot these guys down" so that she can go after them.
You've never mentioned your jealousy to her, you know -so
perhaps she doesn't realize you've stopped being a teacher. This
way, you may eliminate a rival and keep a friend . -HELEN
LAST WORD FROM SUE : But don't count on it! - S.

I

OPEN 'TIL 8 P.M. MONDAY

·Schell-Wagoner
Solemnize Vows

Nease-Soles Plan
july 29th Wedding

1

J Stephen Wagoner

By Helen and Sue HOttel

24.00

TODD
On-the-town
knlttery

Mon., Tues., Wed.
Sat.-9-5
Thur.-9-12

•

Wht11 thtlamlll shops lol328 Sotond ~...
Gallipolis, 0.

Fri.-U p.m.

GOSPEL MEEtiNG
1

CHURCH OF CHRIST
APRIL 24th thru· 30th
7 P.M.

Color
Portrait

QIV8

Accutron•
by Bulova

Everyone Welcome

SPEAKER: C; EU-GENE.:ZOPP

lleautiful

x10"

for
Graduation
.

Bidwell, Ohio

chai" rm en

of

mt ss wnary

education, christian social

relati ons, Wesleyan service
guild and other in terested
persons should attend to be

J •

GALLIPOLIS- The'French
City Garden Club held its
monthly mee ting w\th Mrs.
Jewell
Moore Tuesday
evening, with Miss Marie Meal
co-hostess. Mrs. Lucas was a
guest.

onlv88C

welt decorated room gives
emotional experience, it makes
a place to enjoy.
New carpel and new furniture do not ma ke a room but
it is important to include the
correct accessories . If colors

Mrs . Harley George, are mixed in a room let one
president, presided and Miss color dominate, or one thing.
Meal prese nted devotions by Hall and half is not interesting,
reading Romans 12:9-21 with a room needs a focal point just
reference to "Brotherly Love," as a floral arrangement needs
a prayer and a reading "What a focal point. Ac cessories
Have.You given Away."
should not compete with the
Roll call was by naming a focal point but should accent it.
favorite flower color. The They should be stepping stones
secretary's report was read by from the focal point around the
Mrs. Melvin Smeltzer and was room.
approved .
A room should have evidence
Announcement was made of of people being there. An open
the Spring Regional Meeting to magazine, a pipe in an asy
be held at Logan, Ohio. Other tray, lreshflowers . Aroom ca n
communications consisted of a be given life by planl.'l, live
letter from the commit~• for plants. Don't ove rcr owd a
Galli a-Jackson . Joint roo m with too many acVocationai School District with cessori es but enough and of
reference to the levy to provide colors as to bring the room
therefor.
together.
Corsages for the Ladies
Mrs. 1\loore di:;,1iayed inHome Council Installation of teresting arrangements on the
officers were made by Mrs. pia no and corner ta ble.
Florence Trainer . Mrs. Refreshmenl.&gt;; were se rved by
Smeltzer reported she and her the hostesses and the meeting
husband had talked to the adjourned.
Wayside Garden Club of
The next meeting will be an
Cheshire.
open meeting on May 9 at 7:30
Mr. Earl Tope of _Tope . p.m. at Grace United
Furniture Co ., was guest Methodist Church.
speaker for the mee ting,
Mrs. Homer Holter of
talking on "Design in Floral Wildwood and Chester Garden
Art Correlated with Interior Club~ of Pomeroy will show
Decor a tin g." Final touches slides and narrate "Gardens of
and accessories are very other countries." Other clubs
important in a room, he said, are invited.
and floral arrangements are
part of these accessories .
Floral arrangements in a room HOSPITAL NEWS
must correlate to the furniture
Holzer Medical Center, First
and other accessories.
Ave. and Cedar St. General
Take out the fl oral . visiting hours 2-4 and 7-jj p.m.
arrangement and 1t will change Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
the whole room. Accessories 4:30 p.m. Parents only on
should speak, have something Pediatrics Ward.
to say, "Trines make perBirths
fection," Michelangelo once
Mr . and Mrs. Eric William
said.
Steckel, Gallipolis Ferry, W.
The accessories or a floral va ., a daughter and Mr . and
arrangement can perfect a Mrs. Wayne Cleland, Langsroom and should carry out ville, a daughter.
favorite colors and shapes. A
Discharges
Valerie Henry, Kelly Dale
Roush, Robert Staats, Hazel
Dugan, John Manering, Fannie
Staley, Wylodine Riggle, Linda
Grimm, Judy Whetsel, Clifford
·/i. Welch, Lawrence Sutton,
Mrs. David Coffey and son,
Audra Nickels, John Baker,

Coming
Events

Gallipolis.

TONI

.r l'

NE!.SONVILL~ Athens
District Women's Society of
Christian Service will hold a
Celebrati on of Giving and
Sharing on Wednesday, April
26, al the Nelsonville United
Methudist Church, 20o West
Columbus St., Nelsonville, at
7:30 p.m.
Society presidents, vicepre sid e nts, treasurers,

Faculty Club
To Attend Play

Greenlee Presides
At Grf!:nge Mee-ting

. GALLIPOLIS - The Faithful Wurkers Society of Poplar
Ridge Church met un Aprjlll
ENO- The Eno Grange No.
bette•· · informed of their at the home of Mrs. Rosetta
pl'ivilcgcs and responsibilities J unes with Mrs. Jones 2080 rriet recently with Worthy
of the finan9iai program and to presiding.
Master Ernest Greenlee in the
kn ow lbe areas supported by The meeting opened with the . chair. The secretary, Ralph
giving.
group singing, "He Arose" Leesburg, gave the records of
Thre e confe rence offi cers followed with the Lord's the last meeting.
will be in attendance to answer Prayer in unison . The hostess · A get well card was signed to
questions and supply general read "First Psalms" for the be sent to Mrs·. Cora Rupe who
· information.
devotional and the secretary1 is a patient in a hospital in
Three foll ow-up satelli te Mrs. Grace Lemley, gave the Daytona Beach, Fla .
meetings wilt follow on April 27 minutes of the last meeting.
Following a brief business
at 7:30 at First Uni ted · Dues and the Sunshine Fund meeting the literary program
Method ist Chur ch, Crooks· were collected and bills were was given by the lecturer, Mrs.
ville; Heath United Methodist paid. The club reported having Marie Thomas, who used the
Ch ur ch, Middleport, and made $31 from the sale of rugs. theme "The Grange Farmer."
Trinity Chape l, Third and The members signed get well
The program was concluded
·wooster SL&gt;; ., Marietta.
ca rds to be se nt to Mrs. Bessie with readings given by several
Viars, Mrs. Elizabeth Welch, members. They are Mrs.
and Forest McNeal.
.1
Mrs . Nancy Lemley, Mrs.
'

Mr.•c- Tope Speaks 'T"0
French City Garden

Girl ~outing In Rio Grande
RIO GRANDE - An im·
portant part of girl scouting in
Gallia County are the li'oops in
Rio Grande. The first troop
was established there in 1968
by two Rio Grande College
studj!nls who had grown up in
the scouting program.
The next year a Junior troop
was organized. Plans are
underway at present to in-

.

Giving and Sharing
Celebration Planned

Mrs. Jones Hosts
Faithful Workers

RIO GRANDE - The Ri o
College Faculty
Women's Club, instead of their
regular April meeting, will
Bea tri ce Stamper, " April attend the faculty-s tudent play
·Showers" ; Ralph Leesburg, "The Odd Couple" on Wed: .
"Tips on Tractor Safety"; Mrs. nesday, April 26. Cu rtain time
Anise Greenlee "Trees of the is 8:30 p.tn.
Bible"; Mrs. Alma Hix, "The
Following the play the
Use of Bees," and Maurice Faculty Women are sponsorin g
Thomas with "Four Country an open-house at the Rio
Neighbors ." Mrs. Marilyn Grande College dining hall fm·
Halfhill read "Keep Your Eyes all patrons attending WedOpen," Mrs. Marie Thomas nesday night's showing, as well
asked riddles and Mrs. Rosetta as participati ng cast, backJones read "A Prayer In A s
personnel an d other
Forest." The program was
closed with the group singing
"The Dear Old Farm" and the
meeting closed in reg ular
.form .
Grand~

Emblem C'lub Donates $25

Pearl_ welch, Mrs . Karen
Lemley, Mrs. Pea rl Lemley,
~:
Mrs . Theresa ~P r i ce, Mrs.
Rose tta Jones and Susan
GALLIPOLIS - The Em·
McCoy received birthday gifts blem Club met on April 11 to
fr'om their secret sis ters. .elect new officers for 1972-73.
Readings were given by Mrs. They are, president, Bette
Ola Mae Arrowood , Mrs. Grace Null ; junior past president,
Lemley, Mrs. Dottie McCoy, Evalee S. Myers; first viceMrs. Alma Hix and Mrs. Pearl president, Pete Shelton;
Lemley .
second vice-president, Hope
Songs and recitals were

given by children, Lori McCoy,
Susan McCoy, Christi Lemley,
Cindy Lemley, and Wendy
Lemley followed wi th Bible
questions by Mrs. Ola Mae ,
Arrowood . ·
The May meeting will be at
the home of Mrs. Pearl Lemley
where a silent auction will be
held . Refreshments were
served to 27 members and
guests.

Eno Ladies Aid
Has 11 Guests
GALLIPOLIS - The April
meeting of the Eno Ladies Aid
was held at the home of Mrs.
Vera Miles at Centenary.
There were six members and
eleven. guests present. Guests
were Mr. and Mrs. Merrill
Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Worthy
Eva,!'S, Mr. and Mrs. Nick
Johnson and son , Stoney, Ruth
Spires, Mrs. Tressa Cremeans,
Homer Kemper and Earl
George.
A potluck lunch was served
at noon.
The business meeting opened
with the song "Sunshine in My
Soul" and a scripture reading
by Mrs . Worthy Evans.
Readings given were
"Tithing" by Mrs. Worthy
Evans ; "Nobody But Nobody,"
by Mrs . Earl George, and
"How Much," by Jane Ann

Johnson . The closing song
"Beautiful Garden of Prayer"
was sung and the closing
prayer was given by Mrs.
Kenneth Swisher. The May
meeting will be at the home of
Reva Reynolds of Gallipolis.

MEETING PLANNED
The regular meeting of the
Gallia County Association for
Retarded Children will be held
Monday, April 24, at 7 p.m. in
the Medical-Surgical Building
at the Gallipolis State Institute.
The nominating committee
will present their report with a
program and social hour to
follow the meeting .

Stevers ; secretary,

Joan

Allen; treasurer, Liz Mills ;
chaplain, Leota Guinther; first
trustee, Edna Vanco; sec~nd
trustee, Fern G~rd?er; th1rd
trustee, . Ann Wlcklme; marshall, W1lma Brown ; first ass't
marshall, Carol Nibert ; second

ass't. marshall, Janet Reese ;
recordin g secre tary , Edna
Tawney; organist, Cheryl
Bush ; press correspondent,
Lanna Waugh; historian ,
Bonnie Bawney; first guard,
Claudetta McCreedy ; second
guard , Jean Hankin s, and
corresponding
secretary ,
Marianne Dille.
Following the election of
officers plans were made for
installation on May 9. Members and officers voted to give
a $2o donation for GSI patients
to a Billy Graham movie.

Riverside Study Club
Announces New Officers
GALLIPOLIS
The
Riverside Study Club met oo
Tuesday, Aprill8, at the home
of Mrs. Arthur Espenscheid in
Rio Grande where refreshments were served and a social
hour .enjoyed prior to the
meeting.
Nine members answered roll
call with each naming an Indian tribe.
The slate of officers for 197273 was announced. They are
Mrs. Arthur Espenscheid~
president; Mrs. L. H. Wickline,
vice-president; Mrs. M. T.
Epling, secretary, and Mrs .
Howard Leimann, treasurer.
The program was the
presentation of res'o!utions to
be voted on at the Federation
Convention in Denver on June
5. The discussion which

followed the motions was lively
and interesting.
The meeting adjourned to
meet on April 25 with Mrs.
Allen.
·

\

$4l.omwNE

AITENDS SEMINAR
GALL IPOLIS .
Dr.
Gordon K. Amsbary has gone
to a five day dental seminar in ·
Carolir
Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. While
t~ere Dr. Amsbary will attend
Catch • 1perlrle
Phase II of a Preventive
from the "JOmlngautJ.
Dentistry Seminar, which ·he
H,old the magic
ol a Iudden breeze.
feels that this is a virtually
KHp thoae momenlla//ve,
relevan t seminar on the most
They're youn lor a lifetime.
topical and provocative subject
With a dlamonrl
in dentistry today, "Preven- .
engagamantrlngl~
tative Dentistry."
Orange 8/o-.om.

LONG PmiCOAT
The cling -free, anti -static

properties of Antron-Nylon
lrl cot provide the idea 1.
under cover- for today 's

new es t ankle -le ngth
fa shion. Cocktail slit design
and hem trimm ed
alencon lace.

in

Color: Wh ite
Slzeo: xs.s-M-L.

PAUL DAVIES

RUMMAGE SALE
A rumma ge sale will be held
on April27, 28 and 29 at the Old
Cedar St. Market on the corner
404 Second Ave.
of Third Ave. and Cedar St. The
!ieJiiiiOli&amp;. Ohio
sale is sponsored by the Cen- ·""--"'"'_ _ _ _ _..
terpoinl Freewill Baptist.

JEWELERS

"The Store with Mort"

Galtiootis

L:....--------.. . J

SUNDAY
GALLIPOLIS Chapter Order
Eastern Star Practice 3:30
p.m.
REV!V AL Bt:GIN~ a! Walnut
Ridge Church, 7:30p.m. Rev.
Orville Carrico, evangelist.
MONDA'\
POMONA Grange fifth degree
rehearsal, Springfield Grange
Hail, 8 p.m.
.
OCSEA regular chapter·
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Ail 'dinner
committees please report.
GALLIPOLIS Chapter Oraer
Eastern Star Annual In·
specUon 7:30 p.m. Ofilcers,
bring salad.
CREATIVE
WRITERS
Workshop 7:30p.m. in Library.

The heart of an Accutron
watch i5. tiny, tuning fork

~Native of Charleston, W. Va.
- Married &amp; has 2 children.
- Attended Morris Harvey College, W. Va. State Collfl!le.
- Has been located Full-l'lme Minister at Henderson, W.
Va. for past 61/l . year,.
- Directed Summer Youth Camp for past 6 years.
- Frequent· Youth Group Speaker
'- Conducted Gospel Meetings In Ohio, W. Va., Virginia.

that Splits a second into
360 equal intervals.
Accutron time is so nearly

\
'

perfect that Bulova suar·
aatees monthly accuracy to

within 60 seconds. •
•ctUTION "2.." C:llt Jnd

bile~

11r11t dltl, Gut tdpfl •tn1p, $1U,

SOME OF

· TAWNEY

LESSON TITLES

J_EWELfRS

"CHOICE OF YOUTH- REMEMBER OR REGRET''
"FORGIVENESS OF SI.NS IS NO JOKE!!"
"GODS' KINO OF HOME "
" LIFE'S OTHER SIDE"
"SPECIAL TEENAGE MESSAGE"

WALK A PRETTY MILE ... Here's a shoe thatlets a lady go comfortably
01\ her way ... and so fashionably tool With its sensible heel and pretty trim,
you ' re sure to wear this style often. Ask for "Loafing"

16.95

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aud1t1ons
MADe IN U. t .A.

422 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

•

Soh new · individualism-Toni Todd's Cool Collectable
sp1&gt;lls it out. Here, the dirndl okirt to catch a brMzo
the embroidered waislbond to catch a glance. Bli11fully'
carefree polyester daubleknit machine waohu and dries.
Red or navy with white. 8· 18.

24.00 · ·

l

'LOWER STORE ONLY

Open Friday

REVOLVING CHARGE

Nights

30 DAY QiARGE PINt
·...·••.·. . .·......·.·.· ·.·.·.. ·.·:·.·:·.·.·.·.. ·:·:·..·:··.-.. .·. ·.·.··:·: :- .·.·.·.·. .. .
)

.

'

·..·. . ·.· .. .

.

.. ·.·.·

'

.;.· :·:·:···.

.·.·..· . . ·. .

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·.· ··:-.·. '·.··.·.·.·.·. ·.· ·•·

�f

6- Tt-, ~day Tim~. Sentinel; Sunday' April 23, 1972

7 _ The Sunday Times· ~ntinl11, .$unday, April 23,

I

TRUE VALUE

IE

ER

: · AT I.G.A.

CANTALOUPES

WE CARRY OUT
YOUR GROCERIES

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TASTER'S CHOIC
COFFEE 8 Ol JAR

CENTER CUT

GRAPE
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JE-LLY ·

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REG. $2.19 JAR
ONE PER COUPON

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M&amp;R IGA FOODLINER
EXPIRES APRIL 30th ·

WITH

32 Ol JAR

COUPON

CABBAGE

.NIAGARA
MACARONI•
&amp; DiEESE

(DOUBLE)

29 oz.

()

DINNER

ONLY

7'14

SPRAY
·STARCH

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oz.

22 OZ. CAN

KELLOGGS

CRISCO·
3LB.
CAN

18 OZ. BOX

BUCKET 0' CHICKEN
16 BEST PIECES
4 THIGHS 4 .REASTS
4 WINGS 4 LEGS

HUNT'S

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JUST ARRIVED TRUCKLOAD OF NEW
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LAKEWOOD

4'X8' SHEETS

PANEliNG
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REG. PRICE $6!19

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CARNATION PINK
HORIZON BLUE
VALLEY GOLD

THE SERVICE TEAM reiiPOnalble for )X'Ovidlng girl scouting In GaWa County receives
direct aaslabince from a Professional Field Director. They ate front row, I to r, Adeline
Wuerch, Cadette Coll8Uitant; Shirley Leach, Field Director; Lydia Groth, Service Unit
~; back, I tor, Phyllis Tbomas, Brownie Consultant; Deanna Morgan, and Eleanor
Thomaa,iroop organizers;.not pictured, Nancy Smith, Junior Consultant; Sue Beverly, troop
organizer; Ellen Schopla, librarian.

Girl Scout Volunteers·Honored
GALLIPOLIS ·- Seventy-six
women of Gallia County are
Involved with 325 gids of aU
ages In · the Gir.l Seoul
movement. Special appreciation was expressed for
their faithful leadership at the
.April meeting of the l}allia
County Service Unit by their
director, Mrs. John Groth.
The involvement of volunteer
· adul Is incl~4es all manner of
jobs, such as membership on
•

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W'X 100FT.

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We Have Bath Tubs, Sinks,
Toilet Outfits, Vanities,
Cabinets, Etc.

NO

COUPONS

. . BOX

TO CLIP!

WHY COOK! PICK .UP A SNA~ BOX
· FOR DINNER OR SUPPER!

"

'To Comfort the Uving"
,.

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.IAKIR..__.

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DudleJ.'s Florist
Strvlllf: MltMisport, ·
l'otlltiTf,O.IIItoHs,'O.,
I Mt- C.., W; VI.

lllakf ·_ l~oppe
. '"TMAT .._D FAII.Diill' IOCIDN'

2nd ·&amp;.OUVE sr.

BROWNIE LEADERS !&gt;"!'ART GIIU.S OFF
Although a girl can become a girl ocout at any age,
most girls begin In Brownies wblle In the oecond and
third grade. This year 120 girlR belong to six t.........
Their leaders are Sue Brandeberry, Marta Dean, Anne
Bowers, Gall Smith, Betoy Simpson, Maxine Shilllug,
Barbara Epling, Aggie Boord, Anne Je\)klus, Calhy
Bostic, Shirleen Wiseman, Rachel Sheridan and Lois

---.-

...

- Wedne«lay

.

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:;:;

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--

(

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1:

and Thlll'8d8y Only!

co.

·=-·
:~:

1

PAUL
JEWELERS.

Sunday - Monday -

::::=:;:;:~:::::::?.:::2:~;:::::~::::::::::::::::;:;::~:::::::;:;:;:;::::'-::::::::::::::::~::::::!:?.::=::::::;,.:..W.:~I:I8illl!llSi

;:;:

their effor ts are appreciated.
Troop parents are being ~
contacted by the following girl
scout parents: Roger Hines,
Harold
Wiseman,
Pete ~
Alderigi, Dean Circle, Louis
Ford, John Mills, Gene Gloss,
Simms.
•
Mrs. Anton Buis, Mrs. Gene ~~
~.~
Wetherholt, Mrs. John Brown, :..&lt;.
Mrs. Bodo Boers!, Mrs. Arthur ~l:~~:::=:::=!!!!!.~:=%:!!~::::::::~~-;s;:;:;:;~~;g,_~ma
Lanham, Mrs. Otho Burdette
Jr., Dr. and Mrs. Niehm, Mr.
and Mrs. James Roush, M~.
and Mrs. Ed. Stewart, Mrs.
William Tate, Mrs. Richard
Campbell and Mrs. Ali Golji.
Businesses and friends of
scouting have received their
looking his
appeal in the mail. If missed,
check can be made out to the
swashbuckling best In
Seal of Ohio Girl Scout Council
his double-knit sport coat
and mailed to Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Reimund, 21 Oakwood
of Celaneses Fortreft
Dr., Gallipolis.

P1VE OFFICERS FROM GAWPOLJS SERVE Area IO·
Mrs. Gilbert Johnson .
4t~ll,..u...,l,.
with olhen In GaWa, Jacbon and Vinton counties. They are
Mr. and Mrs. Buddy Queen
fnlnt,ltor ' RulbAnnMc.......
'"·'-Co
.
,, uncUde Iega te ; Ba r bara
an d sons, Gr~g. andBnan,
of
MOTHER'S DAY
Epling, Counclldelegate and Area 10Secretary; back, I tor,
Columbus vlSlted a recent
CARDS ANO GIFTS
MeiiDe '!fUercll, Area 10 DlairmM; Lydia Groth, Council
~~0~ oi'Pi-~:Vme. ~icha:; weekend with her parents, Mr.
delepl!ll, IIIII Joan Sclunldt, Area NominaUng Committee.
..
In in the U 'ted Slate. and Mrs. Raymond Carter.
SUNDAY MAY 14
·
"' ,.• 'lfll'
· I I! II! ·
'• ~: :-&gt;~;· •J':rhi~
s~tioo\!ll ~In t Wedding bells will be ringing
'
·
' ;
'
" C t~ d".
' •
soon for Lester Lee Wells of
·c
~ 1_
~
•
- ~.. a od~M wm· · Queen Crown City and Brenda Sue
1
c~~dren ~~~ Canal Cremeans of Gallipolis.
•
l
'J 0 '
Winchester' spent a Sunday
Fay . Bundy of Columbus
DRIVE BEGINS
- 'thhl
ts M dMrs spentarecentSundaywtthMr.
Mr
.
Mrs. Charles
~~rry ~~~n a~d :o~~ Basil: and _Mrs. Russell Wolford and Reimund,andcO&lt;hairmen
for the
'
0 '
Mrs . Mary Wolford of family.
Hannan Trace Road, spent 8
Mr. and Mr~. Eugene Cooper 1972 Girl Scout fund drive, as[\
CHESHIRE - Plans have will provide entertainment recent Sunday w·ith her sister, and three children of. Dayton everyone to support Gallia 's
been completed for the annual following
the
banquet Mrs. Bertha Craig, at the home spent a wee_kend. wtth i)er 325 girl scouts and their leaders
Cheohlre C'heshlre·Kyger program.
of her son-ln·law and daughter, brother and SlSler-m-law, lll:r. by contributing to the 1972 fund
All those tender, personal
Creek Alumni Asooclatlon
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Mooney. and Mrs. Charles Lambert and drive during the two week
period
from
April
24
to
May
6.
banquet and program. The
Mr. and Mrs. Dick · Wills chtldre.n.
little sentiments ca n be
One
can
be
a
Booster
with
a
gift
event wUI be held at 7 p.m. on
Oak Hill Hoopltal Newo
spent a few days with relatives
Jenmfer Ott has been on the
found right here ... for Mom,
Friday, May 26 at the high
Present Patlento _ Mrs. in Georgia.
•
sick list several days and is up to $10 or a Sustaining
for Grand mom . Come i~ and
school cafeteria.
Fl
G
J kso
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Halley being treated at Warehime Member with a gift of $10 or
browse around. You'll find
more.
Tickets are~ each and may SteoUarences l rootmFs, Nac Inn; and children, Iris, Ike and Clinic in Gallipolis.
00
be obtained' from Scott's
wger '
urs g
Mr .. and Mrs. Sollie Miller
All gifts are needed to keep
just th e perfect c~ rd to tell
"""'·~ir
Hill'
Home,
Jackson;
Helen
Jerry,
of
Columbus
spent
a
and
son,
Sollt
'
e,
of
Columbus
camps at minimum health and
Grocery In ,,....,., e,
8 w lb
her how much you care.
J k
B tt
week at their farm home In this
Market In Addison or from any
a urn' ac son;
e Y
spent a Sunday with her safety standards and large
alumni officer.
R«'gland, Rt. I, Beaver ; Golda area.
mother, Mrs. Lillie Sibley and gifts are needed to improve
'-•·- Robe t
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Blake
Lerner
Rl
I
Jac
camping fac ilities. It also pays
D~VIES
Officers
are
Frank
' · • """'';
r
family.
Cremeans, Gallipolis, Scarrett, Rl. I Wellston; of Colorado, and Mra. Leo
Mrs. Gerald Smeltzer of lor the professional help that
Dewey Dameron, Jesse Blake of Proctorville, spent a
president, phone 446·4298; Vittltoe, George Hall and r~cent Saturday evening with Crown City was a patient in the leaders must have to do a good
Contributions
tell
Katie Shoemaker, Rt. I,
,
ndf the G ed Pleasant Valley Hospital in job.
404 Second Ave.
Cheshire, vice-president, Loretta Har~ett, Jackson; Mlchae1's gra a r, arr
Point Pleasant, W.Va. a few everyone who works with
Gallipolis, Ohio
phone 367_7178 or 367_7500 . , Clarence Aldridge, Rt 3, Oak Blake, an!l diiughter, Lulu days recently.
Gallia County girl scouts tha ~
Christine Napier, Rt. 1', Hill; Emeroon Hughes, Oak M::~. and Mrs. Paul Notter of
Cheshire, eecretary, phone 367• Hill; Gladys Fair, Jackson;
7661 or 387•7139 and Sharon ~atherlne CoxL_Oak H1ll; Columbus spent a Saturday
Cooper, Rt. I, Cheshire, Roberta Evans, Jackson; with her mother, Mrs. Orpha
lreaourer, phone 367_7206. Tex Frank Stiffler, Rt. 2 Wellston ; Lemon who Is being cared for
Harrison and hiR Valley Boys Darlene Clagg, Rt. 3, Oak Hill; In lhe home of Mr. and Mrs ..
Louella Maslen, South Max Pickett and f8JI!lly .
.---,;__ _ _ ____, Webster; Clyde McCleese
Mr. Md lllrs. George Ward
Wheelersburg ; Della Coyle, celebrated their eighth wed·
Rt. 1 Ray; Wanda Caldwell, , ding anniversary AprU4. Their
'Jackson; Unda Arrowood, Rl. children, Barbara Md. Brian;
1, Oak Hill; Carol Swaney, helped them celebrate the
Jackson ; John Norris, occasion.
Wellston; Archer Graham,
Mrs. Naqcy Unroe and
Jackson; Hazel Criner, Rt. 4, children, Carol and Michael, of ·
T~U?Sday
Oak Hill· Beryl McNerlln and Columbus, spent a week with
'
Debnar 'Chrfsuan, Oak HIU, her parents, Mr. anll Mrs. ,
IMPIRE
and Hallie Abernathy, Jenkins
Memorial, WellSton.
PUINITUIE
&amp;ec 11uve.
· Patleata Released - Eddie Slavens, Mark and Aubrey
. Pllole._.lfiS
Canter, George E. Crabtree, Hill, Dorothy Slsvens, Feila
.1..,.---'-~-----' Laura
Marlin, Doroth~ Crider, l\largaret Downey,
Mayme Thomas, Mabel Hale,
Mary Harrlaon, Judith Hale, ·
Ellzabeth MWer, Nola Leming,
Virgil W. Jenkins, Albert
Smith, Henry Click, . Carloo
2 PIICES CHI:KIN
Hobo, Minnie Belle DeHart,
RooeUa Vanee, Connie Me·
ROLL &amp; POTATOD
Neely, Brend• Cruse, Iva
Sharp, S. E. Dem):.. Waller
"IT'S
Paulina, Mildred Kozma, Jolm
Kight, Richard Yerian, Dudley
INCOMPARABLE"
Greene, Clarence Adkins, and
Margaret Crabtree.

· DRAPES~

·TILE
PLASTIC
.

Perry Queen and son, Basil.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Queen have
been on the sick list some lime.
Mr . and Mrs . Aaron
Reynolds and son, Terry Joe,
spent a. weekend with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Wolford and family.
Mrs. Edward Johnson spent
a recent Sunday with her son
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and

girls.
Leaders and their assistants
meet weekly with their troops,
in addition to the many hours of
planning, training, meetings
and extra troop activities.
These are also the women who
provide leadership in our
Gallia County Day Camp each
summer. The Service Unit
Director is responsible for
dire cting the entire girl
scouting program in the
county. She r]!ceives direct
ass is lance from the Council
through a Professional Field
Director.
In addition to all of these
volunteers are the other
mothers and fathers who drive
girls to ca mp and help out in
various ways. In a broader and
very real sense, it is the whole
co mmunity who makes
scouting possible, for without
the financial contributions
from businesses, scout parents
and interested citizens, it
wouldn't be possible to operate
a council and provide camps
for the girls. All Gallia
Coun tians can be proud of ,!he
boost for youth 'tbey are giving
through girl scouting.

CUSTOM
MADE

CEILING

4"

troop committees. Some former leaders serve as consultants and are able to give
practical help· to leaders .
Others fill needs such as
libra'rian, uniform swap shop,
publicity , product sales,
council
delegates
and
nominating committee. Three
troop organizers spend a great
deal of time trying to find the
best possible leadership for

Plans Banquet Prouram

NO. 1
4x8 SHEETS

ELLS

and Mrs. Perry Queen and son,
Basil.
-'Mr
·' · M4 Mrs. Michael Blake
of Coillrado have been spending a three weeks furlough
'th h'
Is Mr
d Mrs
Wt
lSparen
'
.
an
'-el!'!lllilte'and family and her'
rit.s M; d Mr De

h
K.,
.
A
r.JeS tre- 1/uer . r-umnt

·EVERYTHING YOU NEED FOR A 9'Xl2' ROOM

ENCO WHITE

Mr . and Mrs .. Emerson
Unroe and children, Carol and
Michael, of Columbus spent 8
weekend with her parents, Mr.

·,

LESSTHAN

ROLL
65 LB.
ROOFING
PARTICLE
BOARD

Hannan ·T race

94

$

4'X8'

'

GUTTER
BLA

'2''

4'X8'

There are 125 fourth, fifth and sixth grade girls who
belong to five troops led by these Junior leaders : front, Ito r,
Nora Price and Carol Giese; back, I tor, Sara Blazer, Joan
Schmidt and Shirley Smith; not pictured, Debbie Hyrne,
Maria Moore, Ellen Schopis, Alice Pasquale, MarybeU
Pasquale and Hank Orr.

FIVE CADE'ITE LEAPERS AND one Senior Advisor serve 80 girls from grades 7 through
12 in three troops. Front, I 10 r, Norma Dellinger, Publicity ; Ruth Ann McMahon and Cookie
Jolmson, Product Sales co-chairmen; Fern Mills, swap shop for uniforms; back, I tor, Mary
Ellen Lingo, Emogene Borden, Billie Shaffer and Cathy Anderson. Not pictured - Barbara
Morgan and Marilyn Barron.

CliO

Knits are news and Johnny has the
most newsworthy knits of all. For
instance, this "Hiutley" Sport Coat
has the good looks of the ''Hartley"
suit, translated Into a smart' sport

P.Oat. Do ble-knjJ o"1~ Celar,t!lll~ ,.

.

ry

I I

Fortrel' polyesterjn,a unique giant
'
chevron pattern to pair Perfectly
•
with co-ordinated striped double·
knit slacks, wardrobe shirt and tie.
Sport Coat sao.oo ·

I
'f01trella a

~ademarl&lt;

of Flbor lnrlutlrlll, Inc.

�11

u

'lie_. . . . . .

JUST ARRIVED TRUCKLOAD OF NEW
.

.

.

EVAN ·PLY·WOOD
LAKEWOOD

4'X8' SHEETS

PANEliNG
MEADOW GREEN

REG. PRICE $6!19

'

-,

'

CARNATION PINK
HORIZON BLUE
VALLEY GOLD

THE SERVICE TEAM reiiPOnalble for )X'Ovidlng girl scouting In GaWa County receives
direct aaslabince from a Professional Field Director. They ate front row, I to r, Adeline
Wuerch, Cadette Coll8Uitant; Shirley Leach, Field Director; Lydia Groth, Service Unit
~; back, I tor, Phyllis Tbomas, Brownie Consultant; Deanna Morgan, and Eleanor
Thomaa,iroop organizers;.not pictured, Nancy Smith, Junior Consultant; Sue Beverly, troop
organizer; Ellen Schopla, librarian.

Girl Scout Volunteers·Honored
GALLIPOLIS ·- Seventy-six
women of Gallia County are
Involved with 325 gids of aU
ages In · the Gir.l Seoul
movement. Special appreciation was expressed for
their faithful leadership at the
.April meeting of the l}allia
County Service Unit by their
director, Mrs. John Groth.
The involvement of volunteer
· adul Is incl~4es all manner of
jobs, such as membership on
•

. 4 BEAUTIFUL NEW COLORS

PLYWOOD PANELS
OUR BEST SELLING PANELS

CALIFORNIA ·WALNUT
WHITE ENAMEL

PLASTIC
PIPE
4"X10'

TEES
4"

'2''
EACH

5"Xl0"

SUSPENDED
_CEILING

$

ROLL

12"X12"

BLACK .

PLASTIC PIPE
W'X 100FT.

•4••

ROLL

COATED

for&amp;t

an/·.:

....

EA.

RUGS
9'Xl2'

••

'5'5

We Have Bath Tubs, Sinks,
Toilet Outfits, Vanities,
Cabinets, Etc.

NO

COUPONS

. . BOX

TO CLIP!

WHY COOK! PICK .UP A SNA~ BOX
· FOR DINNER OR SUPPER!

"

'To Comfort the Uving"
,.

..........

.IAKIR..__.

.

'

~n,

DudleJ.'s Florist
Strvlllf: MltMisport, ·
l'otlltiTf,O.IIItoHs,'O.,
I Mt- C.., W; VI.

lllakf ·_ l~oppe
. '"TMAT .._D FAII.Diill' IOCIDN'

2nd ·&amp;.OUVE sr.

BROWNIE LEADERS !&gt;"!'ART GIIU.S OFF
Although a girl can become a girl ocout at any age,
most girls begin In Brownies wblle In the oecond and
third grade. This year 120 girlR belong to six t.........
Their leaders are Sue Brandeberry, Marta Dean, Anne
Bowers, Gall Smith, Betoy Simpson, Maxine Shilllug,
Barbara Epling, Aggie Boord, Anne Je\)klus, Calhy
Bostic, Shirleen Wiseman, Rachel Sheridan and Lois

---.-

...

- Wedne«lay

.

··~
:;:;

i

--

(

s:,•,•

·.
1:

and Thlll'8d8y Only!

co.

·=-·
:~:

1

PAUL
JEWELERS.

Sunday - Monday -

::::=:;:;:~:::::::?.:::2:~;:::::~::::::::::::::::;:;::~:::::::;:;:;:;::::'-::::::::::::::::~::::::!:?.::=::::::;,.:..W.:~I:I8illl!llSi

;:;:

their effor ts are appreciated.
Troop parents are being ~
contacted by the following girl
scout parents: Roger Hines,
Harold
Wiseman,
Pete ~
Alderigi, Dean Circle, Louis
Ford, John Mills, Gene Gloss,
Simms.
•
Mrs. Anton Buis, Mrs. Gene ~~
~.~
Wetherholt, Mrs. John Brown, :..&lt;.
Mrs. Bodo Boers!, Mrs. Arthur ~l:~~:::=:::=!!!!!.~:=%:!!~::::::::~~-;s;:;:;:;~~;g,_~ma
Lanham, Mrs. Otho Burdette
Jr., Dr. and Mrs. Niehm, Mr.
and Mrs. James Roush, M~.
and Mrs. Ed. Stewart, Mrs.
William Tate, Mrs. Richard
Campbell and Mrs. Ali Golji.
Businesses and friends of
scouting have received their
looking his
appeal in the mail. If missed,
check can be made out to the
swashbuckling best In
Seal of Ohio Girl Scout Council
his double-knit sport coat
and mailed to Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Reimund, 21 Oakwood
of Celaneses Fortreft
Dr., Gallipolis.

P1VE OFFICERS FROM GAWPOLJS SERVE Area IO·
Mrs. Gilbert Johnson .
4t~ll,..u...,l,.
with olhen In GaWa, Jacbon and Vinton counties. They are
Mr. and Mrs. Buddy Queen
fnlnt,ltor ' RulbAnnMc.......
'"·'-Co
.
,, uncUde Iega te ; Ba r bara
an d sons, Gr~g. andBnan,
of
MOTHER'S DAY
Epling, Counclldelegate and Area 10Secretary; back, I tor,
Columbus vlSlted a recent
CARDS ANO GIFTS
MeiiDe '!fUercll, Area 10 DlairmM; Lydia Groth, Council
~~0~ oi'Pi-~:Vme. ~icha:; weekend with her parents, Mr.
delepl!ll, IIIII Joan Sclunldt, Area NominaUng Committee.
..
In in the U 'ted Slate. and Mrs. Raymond Carter.
SUNDAY MAY 14
·
"' ,.• 'lfll'
· I I! II! ·
'• ~: :-&gt;~;· •J':rhi~
s~tioo\!ll ~In t Wedding bells will be ringing
'
·
' ;
'
" C t~ d".
' •
soon for Lester Lee Wells of
·c
~ 1_
~
•
- ~.. a od~M wm· · Queen Crown City and Brenda Sue
1
c~~dren ~~~ Canal Cremeans of Gallipolis.
•
l
'J 0 '
Winchester' spent a Sunday
Fay . Bundy of Columbus
DRIVE BEGINS
- 'thhl
ts M dMrs spentarecentSundaywtthMr.
Mr
.
Mrs. Charles
~~rry ~~~n a~d :o~~ Basil: and _Mrs. Russell Wolford and Reimund,andcO&lt;hairmen
for the
'
0 '
Mrs . Mary Wolford of family.
Hannan Trace Road, spent 8
Mr. and Mr~. Eugene Cooper 1972 Girl Scout fund drive, as[\
CHESHIRE - Plans have will provide entertainment recent Sunday w·ith her sister, and three children of. Dayton everyone to support Gallia 's
been completed for the annual following
the
banquet Mrs. Bertha Craig, at the home spent a wee_kend. wtth i)er 325 girl scouts and their leaders
Cheohlre C'heshlre·Kyger program.
of her son-ln·law and daughter, brother and SlSler-m-law, lll:r. by contributing to the 1972 fund
All those tender, personal
Creek Alumni Asooclatlon
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Mooney. and Mrs. Charles Lambert and drive during the two week
period
from
April
24
to
May
6.
banquet and program. The
Mr. and Mrs. Dick · Wills chtldre.n.
little sentiments ca n be
One
can
be
a
Booster
with
a
gift
event wUI be held at 7 p.m. on
Oak Hill Hoopltal Newo
spent a few days with relatives
Jenmfer Ott has been on the
found right here ... for Mom,
Friday, May 26 at the high
Present Patlento _ Mrs. in Georgia.
•
sick list several days and is up to $10 or a Sustaining
for Grand mom . Come i~ and
school cafeteria.
Fl
G
J kso
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Halley being treated at Warehime Member with a gift of $10 or
browse around. You'll find
more.
Tickets are~ each and may SteoUarences l rootmFs, Nac Inn; and children, Iris, Ike and Clinic in Gallipolis.
00
be obtained' from Scott's
wger '
urs g
Mr .. and Mrs. Sollie Miller
All gifts are needed to keep
just th e perfect c~ rd to tell
"""'·~ir
Hill'
Home,
Jackson;
Helen
Jerry,
of
Columbus
spent
a
and
son,
Sollt
'
e,
of
Columbus
camps at minimum health and
Grocery In ,,....,., e,
8 w lb
her how much you care.
J k
B tt
week at their farm home In this
Market In Addison or from any
a urn' ac son;
e Y
spent a Sunday with her safety standards and large
alumni officer.
R«'gland, Rt. I, Beaver ; Golda area.
mother, Mrs. Lillie Sibley and gifts are needed to improve
'-•·- Robe t
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Blake
Lerner
Rl
I
Jac
camping fac ilities. It also pays
D~VIES
Officers
are
Frank
' · • """'';
r
family.
Cremeans, Gallipolis, Scarrett, Rl. I Wellston; of Colorado, and Mra. Leo
Mrs. Gerald Smeltzer of lor the professional help that
Dewey Dameron, Jesse Blake of Proctorville, spent a
president, phone 446·4298; Vittltoe, George Hall and r~cent Saturday evening with Crown City was a patient in the leaders must have to do a good
Contributions
tell
Katie Shoemaker, Rt. I,
,
ndf the G ed Pleasant Valley Hospital in job.
404 Second Ave.
Cheshire, vice-president, Loretta Har~ett, Jackson; Mlchae1's gra a r, arr
Point Pleasant, W.Va. a few everyone who works with
Gallipolis, Ohio
phone 367_7178 or 367_7500 . , Clarence Aldridge, Rt 3, Oak Blake, an!l diiughter, Lulu days recently.
Gallia County girl scouts tha ~
Christine Napier, Rt. 1', Hill; Emeroon Hughes, Oak M::~. and Mrs. Paul Notter of
Cheshire, eecretary, phone 367• Hill; Gladys Fair, Jackson;
7661 or 387•7139 and Sharon ~atherlne CoxL_Oak H1ll; Columbus spent a Saturday
Cooper, Rt. I, Cheshire, Roberta Evans, Jackson; with her mother, Mrs. Orpha
lreaourer, phone 367_7206. Tex Frank Stiffler, Rt. 2 Wellston ; Lemon who Is being cared for
Harrison and hiR Valley Boys Darlene Clagg, Rt. 3, Oak Hill; In lhe home of Mr. and Mrs ..
Louella Maslen, South Max Pickett and f8JI!lly .
.---,;__ _ _ ____, Webster; Clyde McCleese
Mr. Md lllrs. George Ward
Wheelersburg ; Della Coyle, celebrated their eighth wed·
Rt. 1 Ray; Wanda Caldwell, , ding anniversary AprU4. Their
'Jackson; Unda Arrowood, Rl. children, Barbara Md. Brian;
1, Oak Hill; Carol Swaney, helped them celebrate the
Jackson ; John Norris, occasion.
Wellston; Archer Graham,
Mrs. Naqcy Unroe and
Jackson; Hazel Criner, Rt. 4, children, Carol and Michael, of ·
T~U?Sday
Oak Hill· Beryl McNerlln and Columbus, spent a week with
'
Debnar 'Chrfsuan, Oak HIU, her parents, Mr. anll Mrs. ,
IMPIRE
and Hallie Abernathy, Jenkins
Memorial, WellSton.
PUINITUIE
&amp;ec 11uve.
· Patleata Released - Eddie Slavens, Mark and Aubrey
. Pllole._.lfiS
Canter, George E. Crabtree, Hill, Dorothy Slsvens, Feila
.1..,.---'-~-----' Laura
Marlin, Doroth~ Crider, l\largaret Downey,
Mayme Thomas, Mabel Hale,
Mary Harrlaon, Judith Hale, ·
Ellzabeth MWer, Nola Leming,
Virgil W. Jenkins, Albert
Smith, Henry Click, . Carloo
2 PIICES CHI:KIN
Hobo, Minnie Belle DeHart,
RooeUa Vanee, Connie Me·
ROLL &amp; POTATOD
Neely, Brend• Cruse, Iva
Sharp, S. E. Dem):.. Waller
"IT'S
Paulina, Mildred Kozma, Jolm
Kight, Richard Yerian, Dudley
INCOMPARABLE"
Greene, Clarence Adkins, and
Margaret Crabtree.

· DRAPES~

·TILE
PLASTIC
.

Perry Queen and son, Basil.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Queen have
been on the sick list some lime.
Mr . and Mrs . Aaron
Reynolds and son, Terry Joe,
spent a. weekend with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Wolford and family.
Mrs. Edward Johnson spent
a recent Sunday with her son
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and

girls.
Leaders and their assistants
meet weekly with their troops,
in addition to the many hours of
planning, training, meetings
and extra troop activities.
These are also the women who
provide leadership in our
Gallia County Day Camp each
summer. The Service Unit
Director is responsible for
dire cting the entire girl
scouting program in the
county. She r]!ceives direct
ass is lance from the Council
through a Professional Field
Director.
In addition to all of these
volunteers are the other
mothers and fathers who drive
girls to ca mp and help out in
various ways. In a broader and
very real sense, it is the whole
co mmunity who makes
scouting possible, for without
the financial contributions
from businesses, scout parents
and interested citizens, it
wouldn't be possible to operate
a council and provide camps
for the girls. All Gallia
Coun tians can be proud of ,!he
boost for youth 'tbey are giving
through girl scouting.

CUSTOM
MADE

CEILING

4"

troop committees. Some former leaders serve as consultants and are able to give
practical help· to leaders .
Others fill needs such as
libra'rian, uniform swap shop,
publicity , product sales,
council
delegates
and
nominating committee. Three
troop organizers spend a great
deal of time trying to find the
best possible leadership for

Plans Banquet Prouram

NO. 1
4x8 SHEETS

ELLS

and Mrs. Perry Queen and son,
Basil.
-'Mr
·' · M4 Mrs. Michael Blake
of Coillrado have been spending a three weeks furlough
'th h'
Is Mr
d Mrs
Wt
lSparen
'
.
an
'-el!'!lllilte'and family and her'
rit.s M; d Mr De

h
K.,
.
A
r.JeS tre- 1/uer . r-umnt

·EVERYTHING YOU NEED FOR A 9'Xl2' ROOM

ENCO WHITE

Mr . and Mrs .. Emerson
Unroe and children, Carol and
Michael, of Columbus spent 8
weekend with her parents, Mr.

·,

LESSTHAN

ROLL
65 LB.
ROOFING
PARTICLE
BOARD

Hannan ·T race

94

$

4'X8'

'

GUTTER
BLA

'2''

4'X8'

There are 125 fourth, fifth and sixth grade girls who
belong to five troops led by these Junior leaders : front, Ito r,
Nora Price and Carol Giese; back, I tor, Sara Blazer, Joan
Schmidt and Shirley Smith; not pictured, Debbie Hyrne,
Maria Moore, Ellen Schopis, Alice Pasquale, MarybeU
Pasquale and Hank Orr.

FIVE CADE'ITE LEAPERS AND one Senior Advisor serve 80 girls from grades 7 through
12 in three troops. Front, I 10 r, Norma Dellinger, Publicity ; Ruth Ann McMahon and Cookie
Jolmson, Product Sales co-chairmen; Fern Mills, swap shop for uniforms; back, I tor, Mary
Ellen Lingo, Emogene Borden, Billie Shaffer and Cathy Anderson. Not pictured - Barbara
Morgan and Marilyn Barron.

CliO

Knits are news and Johnny has the
most newsworthy knits of all. For
instance, this "Hiutley" Sport Coat
has the good looks of the ''Hartley"
suit, translated Into a smart' sport

P.Oat. Do ble-knjJ o"1~ Celar,t!lll~ ,.

.

ry

I I

Fortrel' polyesterjn,a unique giant
'
chevron pattern to pair Perfectly
•
with co-ordinated striped double·
knit slacks, wardrobe shirt and tie.
Sport Coat sao.oo ·

I
'f01trella a

~ademarl&lt;

of Flbor lnrlutlrlll, Inc.

�10- Tile S!lldaf Tlmell-8eGinel, &amp;mday' April23, lt'/2

Judge Rules
For ·officers
.
'

''The defendants were acting not only
within the law, but were also
performing the duties imposed upon
them by law" Judge Jilmes Lee
Thompson said in part in an opinion he
releaSed Friday In Mason County
Circuit Court involving three state
police officers stationed at the local
detachment.
·
Tbis action stems from a ci v.U suil
entered in Mason County Circuit Court .
laat September by Uoyd Ward and
Katherine Ward, doing · business ~s
Orchid lon no. 2 against State Police
Troopers A.E. Baumgardner, J.R.
Smith arid Sgt. Jack Parsons. The
plaintiff's in theil' complaint, which was
filed through attorney Harvey M.
Cohen of HuntinR~on , contended state
police harrassed and intimidated their
cuStomers and as a result they lost an
innumberable amount of bl,lSiness and
suffered both financial and economic
damage.
In this suit they asked for judgmenl
against the police in the amount
of$200,000 and punitive damage in the
amount of $200,000 and a trial by jury.
Judge Thompson in the court order

Friday 5aid on motion for summary
judgment by attorney ·Samuel D.
· Uttlepage for the defendanls, that it is .
his opinion the' Jll?lion should be
granted. '
.
The opinion said: "Specifically of lhe
ieight persons named In paragraph 4 of
the complaint one (Jeflers) forleited
bond, two (Craig and Spencer ) were
found guilty and one (Holley) had three
trials resulting in hung jury on each.
Ari officer. is nqt required to have a
warrant to effect the arrest or a person
committing a misdemeanor in his ·
presence and the result in each case
clearly supports the !act the arresting
officer had valid reason to believe a
crime was being committed at th~ time
of the arrest. The plaintiffs allege that
the acts complained of were done by the
troopers while.on duty and while sworn
to uphold the laws of the S!Jlt. of West
Virginia and all the llllltter.s before the
Court · support this allegation. The
defendants were acting not only within
the law but were also performing the
d~ties imposed upon them by law. The
record does not support the allegation
of a conspiracy. There being no
genuine iisue as to any material lact
upon which reasonable men would
differ the defendants should prevail."
The men referred to.by last names in
the above were Joe Jeffer, Wendell
. Craig, Ollie Spencer, Tom Holley.

In Oc:tober last year police, named as
defendants, asked that the plaintiff's '
complaint
action is be
the dismissed.
aftermath Yesterday's
of several
proceedin&amp;S fUed in .tlie sui\ since Its
origin in liepternber. ,

The
Association
of president, was presented .a
Mr. and Mrs. Julius A.
Classroom Teachers met at flower arrangement from
Matheny are announcing the
the Point Pleasant Junior Buffington Greenhouse.
engagement and approaching
High
for its April meet for the Refreshment were then
marriage of their youngest
in stallation of the 1972-73 served.
daughter, Julia Ami, to Rick
Hostess · for the evening
officers.• Mrs. Clara Belle
Hlggins, son of Mrs. Virginia
Dunn was in charge of the were Judy William, Sara
Wallis, of South Side, and Mr.
ceremony.
The new officers Buffington, Suzanne Piercy
Joseph Higgins of Rt. 2, Point
Elaine Rouse , president; and Carol Miller.
Pleasant.
PROBE THEFT
The next meeting will be
Gerald Simmons, Vice
Julia Is a 1971 graduate of
Wednesday
April 26 at 4:125
President
;
Judy
William
,
Point Pleasant High School
Point
Pleasant
City
police
p.m.
at
the
Point Pleasant
Secretary ; Suzanne Piercy;
annd is pre,sently employed
with
Gallipolis
Parts have been asked to investigate Treasurer .were Installed in Junior High. Reportez&lt;l' by
a theft at the Kroger Store on the traditional candle-light Carol Miller, ACT Secretary.
Company,
Mrs. Dunn
Rick is a 1970 graduate of Viand Street. Pollee said $94 ceremony .
Poirlt Pleasant High School worth of shrubbery had been concluded the installation. by
and is presently employed . taken from the outside on the reading the ACT Constitution
and re-installing all the
with Kroger Company of Point . fron,t premises.
memberi present as member
: of ACT. She also presented
,. : each new officer with a flower.
:;: The guest speaker for the
.: .: evening was Velma Allen
\' state ACT president. Mrs. . COLUMBUS (UPI)- Rep.
:y.Allen spoke to the group about John Aahbrook, R.()hio, waved
'.',:.:legislative issues concerning a copy of the 1988 Republican
IS NOT
OUR PR.OPERTY ALONE!
.
:? ' classroom teachers. A few of party platform in the air Fri· '· the issues discussed were day and said "this, along with
: organizations, paid insurance the Pentagon papers, is one of
': and negotations. Mrs, Allen a the major suppresSed publica. resident of Philippi is on leave tions in our nation today."
YOUilt ".fEVER BUY Ql,IALITY
'· · of absence in Barbour County
Aahbrook, opposing Nixon
'\ : to perform her duties as State . for ' the GOP presidential
: "; president. Her term of nomination, said Nixon had
C president will expire in •June. created an international lack of
·
A brief business meeting confidence in the dollar, which
'
THAN :YOU DO AT
followed' the program. The
contributed to the balance of
group voted to pay all bills
trade deficit, Inflation and
owed.
deficit spending- all counter
Also discussed was sending to the Republican platform.
: a delegate to Atlantic City in
Aahbrook said Nixon has fos: June to the NEA convention.
Fine Furni,ure
tered a " spirit of ap; Jerry Romine was presented a peasement"
that
unt.11DDLEPO.~T
gift by the teachers in of the
derestimates the capacity and
':: two year te~ms as ACT intentions · of the nation's
\ '' president.
· · · Mrs. Elaine Rouse, new enemies.
Speaking at a seminar at the
Ohio State University College
of Law, Ashbl'fiOk again was
critical of the ITT affair.
"I think they (Senate Judiciary Committee hearings)
have raised enough doubt that
there should be an Investigation," Ashbrook said.

Ashbrook Says

Party Platfonn
Being Ignored

QUALITY • • •
.

'

IUT •••

FOR ·LESS ·

BAKER•s

Keds Flying SaucerFREE

with

every
pair
of
kids'

FOUR INDICTED
CLEVELAND (UPI )- Four
area ~have been indicted
by a ed al grand jury for
allege ly printing
and
distributing more than $200,000
in counterfeit money. Charged
were Wallace Clayton, Jr., 2!i,
of suburban Warrensville
Heights, and Ronnie Adkins,
28, Rudy Montgomery, 26, and
Ernest Robinson, 35, all ·of
.Cleveland.

The Tigerettes softball team
opened their 1912 sea.son 'on
Tuesday evening April 18, by
beating Milwer's Insur8ljc~ of
New Haven in a double·h1111der
by a score of 19-2 and 111-5.
Norma Wright led the
Tigerettes
with
three
homeru'ns
and
Opal
Bonecutter followed up with
two homers and a three base
hit. This energetic women's
team is off to a very good start
enjoymentandentertainment.
I'; ee p
up
the
good
sportmanshipWalter.

252 THIRD AVENUE, GAWPOLIS, .OHIO
OPEN 9 AM .yo 9 PM. MONDAY
. THRU SATURDAY
. PESCHKE's.-_.;u.s. Govt. Inspected

FULLY COOKED
·,BON-LESS

Miss Diana Roush will
celebrate her 17th birthday on
the 2Jrd or April and Johnny
Johnson will be 20 years old on
the 24th.
Mrs. Allie Hamman
Wheeler wife of the late Sheri
Wheeler was buried Saturday
in Belair, Ohio. Attending
their aunt's funeral from here
was Mrs. Charles Wheeler,
Mike, Kay and Brad and Lula
Wh'eeler .
Rebecca Sue Bland seven
month old daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Marshall Bland was
christened at the West
Columbia, U'nited Methodist
Church on Aprill6 by the Rev.
Mrs . Bernice Winkler .
Members of the family
attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Marshall Bland, Mrs. Gene '
Bland, Mr. Ralph Miler Sr.,
Mrs. David Hall and Stacie,
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Zurcher
and Mrs. James Young· and
Tammy.
Mr. and Mrs . G. R. Kapp Sr.
visited Sunday with their
daughters and families which
is Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Waugh
of Crown City, Ohio and Mr.
and Mrs. John Greenlee of
Point Pleasant, W. Va.

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lARGE 27 SIZE

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(DANNY)

'

BISCUITS .

THOMPSON

·48-oz. 41 C

Republican Candidate

SUNSHINE FEATURES

JAN. 2 TERM

· NEW AT PENNYIARi
IN CANS
SPECIAL RATION • •• ; . • •.•...• •• ._•• ."~:::·· 17c
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LIVER CHUNKS .. ... .............. ~ ·~· · 30c
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PISWUNTSA

.

POMEROY - An an. Mts. Don McKnight. Reports
f
niversary card and gift was were given by Mrs. Don
presented to Mrs. Edward Collins, co-hostess, clu
¥{#1111 ![!liiiW·¥'1 slstef at treasurer ; and Mrs. Elza
w~ ·mt meeting Gilmore, Jr., secretary.
at the Sew-Rite Sewing Club Mrs. Don Mullen will host the
held at the home of Mrs. Flo next meeting to be held May 2.
Strickland. ·
The hostesses served a salad
Mrs. Wells reported on a gifl course to Mrs. George Hoff.
sent to Julie Baity who haa man, president; Mrs. Larry
been
hospitalized
and Wehrung, Mrs. Charles Hoff.
discussed was a location for a man, Mrs. Willard Boyer, Mrs.
June rummage sale. A shower Robert Potter, Mrs. Elmer
of gifts presented to Qne White, Mrs. Ray Baity, and
member each month went to Mrs. Ronald Browning.

Wr r•~•rv• tlte ri~ht to limit qu1n11tln on •tl ntm s ln lhll 1d. Prien 1HHfln lhru S.t.,

FOLGER'S
COFFEE

Best .Va(~~&amp; on
Foods - Clothing • Hardware
~ in Gallia County .

'

FLORIDA SEEDLESS

Two dismissals were issued
among Mason County Circuit
Court actions here Friday,
orders signed by Judge James
Lee Thompson disclosed.
An
action,
Marshall
Maintenance vs. Owen Burll8
et al, was dismissed after the
plaintiffs said the defendants 1
had agreed to cease all
picketing at the West Virginia
Malleable Iron Company in ·
Point Pleasant.
Hershel R. Howard and
Odessa F. Howard vs. O.K.
Construction Company was
dismissed when the matter was
settled.

SHOP ntE NtW.JONES·I)Y$'

'

POMEROY - Mrs. Don
Grueser was elected ·president
of the Middleport Child Con·
servalion League at a business
meeting which followed the
annual dinner party at the
' Meigs Inn .
,,
' Other officers named for the
1972-73 year were Mrs. Arthur
Arnold, vice president; Mrs.
John Blaker, secretary; Mrs.
Louis Osborne, treasurer; and
Mrs . Clifford Kennedy,
reporter.
.AMay picnic for the children
of the .Meigs Community Class
was discussed and Mrs. Arnold
will complete arrangements
with the school. The May
meeting of the CCL will be at
the ceramic ~hop of Mrs. Alice

Tubes

I

lllquetW. .

~~~·45°
g.
.
I
.Ito ..._

Meigs County Commissioner

1

""'

Ruth Ellen Winebrenner

Mrs. Mayer wore a deep pink
dress with matching hat and
black accessories, and a
corsage of red and pink
sweetheart roses.
Mrs. Clatworthy was in a
blue coat and dress ensemble
with matching hat and black
accessories, and wore a corsage of pink sweetheart roses.
Guests were registered by
Miss Connie Lanning and Miss
Joy
Kautz . A ' cupid
arrangement with pink, white,
lavender mwns was used nn
the table.
A reception honoring the
couple was held in the church
social room. Miss Mercedes
Condon played a medley of
selections at the plano. A cupid
arrangement of pink and
lavender mums was on the
piano.
The bride's table was
covered with white imported
lace over a pink linen cloth and
' was centered with a six tiered
wedding cake decorated in the
pink ·and lavender color
scheme of the wedding. The
traditional miniature bride and
groom topped the cake, which
was encircled at the base with
huckleberry. Silver candelabra
were used on either side. The
cake was served with green
punch, coffee, and pink and
lavender mints.
Presiding at the table were
Mrs. J. J. Davis of Middleport
who served the cake, Mrs. Sam
Clatworthy, Sissonsvllle, W.
Va., the coffee, and Mrs.
Ronald Carr, Pomeroy, the
punch.
•
Others assisting at the
reception were Mrs. William
Mayer, Mrs. Kermit Walton,
Miss Marcy Owens, Mrs. C. J.
Strauss, Mrs. W. H. Perrin,
and members of the Happy
Harvester Class.
For a wedding trip through
West Virginia, the bride
changed into a lavender, blue
and pink cape and pantsuit
ensemble with which she wore
brown accessories and the
white orchid from her bridal
bouquet.
•
• The couple resides at 131
Ebenezer St., Pomeroy.
The new Mrs. Clatworthy is a
1971 graduate of Meigs High
School and is employed as
secretary ·lor the Middleport
Elementary School. She also
does secretarial work for the
Saturday', Speech and Hearing
Clinic.

,

· Mr. Clatworthy graduated
from Meigs Hlgh School in 1969
and Is a junior at Ohio
University where he is

DAUGHTER BORN
POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Triplett of Marietta
are announcing the birth of
their first child, a daughter,
Michelle ReQee. The nine
pound,' nine ounce girl was
born on April17 at the Marietta
Memorial Hospital. Grand·
parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Leslie Hawley, Middleport,
and Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Triplett, Pomeroy. Mrs.
Phyllis Hawley of Cheshire,
and Mrs. Willa Kitts, Ironton,
are the great-trandparents.

maj orin g in busi ness

I

SYRACUSE -Mr. and Mrs. Dana B. Winebrenner of
Syracuse are announcing the eugagement of their daughter,
Ruth Ellen, to Mr. Roher! Sammy Shain, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Shain, Letart. The bride-elect is a 1971 graduate of
Southern High School and attended Bliss College, Columbus.
Her fiance, also a 1971 graduate of Southern High School, is
employed by Jim Carnahan, Racine. Wedding plans are
incomplete.

a d~

ministration. He is em ployed
at the Kroger Store in
Pomeroy.
Out-of-town guests at the
wedding were Mr . and Mrs.
Phil Fox, Huntington; Mr. Ray.
Redman, Mr. and Mrs. Randall
Fisher, and Miss Mary Sue
Hayes, Gallipolis; Miss Twila
Clatwor thy, Rio Grande; Miss
Vone tt Pearce, Park ersburg;
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Schilling
and Jane, Lancaster ; Mrs.
Shirley Spires, Wilkes ville ;
Mrs. Don ::&gt;wisher, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Lillian Henderson, Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
James Aldridge, Mr. and Mrs.
C. J. Strauss, Miss Becky
Houdashelt, Miss Debbie
Harbrecht, Steve Schilling, and
Miss Anita Fultz, Columbus.

AND UP

I

1H£ SHOE BOX

A 1967 graduate of Middleport
High School, he received an
associate degree in 1970 from
Mountain State Business
College, Parkersburg. His
wife, Nancy, is with him in
Hawaii.

COMPLETES COURSE
MIDDLEPORT - Specialist
Five Ra ymond E. Hindy, 21,
sun uf Mrs, Mary B. Hindy, 97
Mill St., recently completed the
basic Leadership Course at the
U. S. Army, Hawaii Noncommi s sioned Officer
Academy · at
Schofield
Barracks, Hawaii. Hindy is
regularl y assigned as a squad
leader in Headquarters
Company, U.S. Army-Pacific.

'i#

Where Shoes Are S'enslbly Priced

MIDDLEPORT, 0. ·

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

, ~ommunity \
·Icorner By Charlene Hoeflich II\
«
~

'

•

'

POMEROY - Fifty years ago Thursday night Harry S.
Moore traveled from Ashland, Ky. t~ Pikeville, Ky. by chartered
bus to assist in the organization of a Rotary Club.
Thursday night he made a return trip - thjs time to join in
the golden anniversary celebration of the Club.
Harry and his wife, Jean, drove to Ashland Thursday so that
they could make the trip on the chartered bus with the Ashland
Club members. Just as Harry did 50 years ago when the PikeviUe
club was organized, he led in the singing at the celebration. He is
the only living member of the 22 Rotarians who made that trip to
Pikeville, and there remains only one living charter member of
the celebrating club.
HERMAN BAILEY of Middleport had surgery. a few weeks

ago, when many,pints of blood were required. His friends at the
Middleport Fire Department have replaced much of this, but
seven replacement pints still are needed. Perhaps you would like
to give in Mr. Bailey's name when you visit the ~loodmoblle
tomorrow afternoon at the Pomeroy Elementary School.

THE BIG MOVE WAS ·MADE yesterday by the Rutland
Branch of the Pomeroy National !lank into their beautiful new
structure on Salem St. in Rutland. They'll be open for business
there on Monday. Open house will be held Saturday and next
week we'll teiJ you about the open bouse hours and other plans.
ENTERING THE VETERANS Hospital at Huntington
Friday was FrankS . Fischer, Racine, Route 1. He will be undergoing observation and treatment and expects to be confined
there for some time. Perhaps you 'd like to send a card. His address is Ward 2 A, Room 212.
SOME PEOPLE HAVE all the fun - they go on V!'cations !
Just back from Denver, Colo., are Jean and Lloyd Wright.
They were joined for the trip by Jean's step-father and mother,
Mr: and Mrs. William Oehler of Columbus, and lhe trip, of
course, was primarily to visit with tbe Wrights' son, Benny,
stationed there with the U. S. Air Force. They took in Colorado
Springs, the Garden of tlie Gods, and toured the U.S. Mint.
• Spending a 11Klay vacation In Lakeworth, Fla. with their
daughter, Mrs. Nancy Yoong, who works there with the C. and P.
Teletmone Co. were Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Yomg of Rutland.
Mrs. Dorothy Ree~es Salbaney, Gail and Joan, returned to
lhelr home In Massachusetts yesterday after visiting here with
her mother, Mrs. Jessie Reeves, a brother, Arthur, and a sister,
Mrs. Merle Johnson. Mrs. Salhaney and chlldren were joined
bere by a son, Richard; who lives in Gainesville, Fla. for a real
fam-ily reunion. ·
lncldentaiJy,.Mrs. Johnson (Jonnle's Beauty Sbop) attended
the School of Beauty Knowledge held in Columbus last weekend.
Her name was unintentionaUy omitted from an earlier listing of
beauticians there.

The Shop
Pteawnt Ridge Road
POMEROY, OHIO

,,--.
----""\
I
Dick &amp; Dale

'

*-&lt;· really · . know ·!
,_ · I how to cut up.

.
-·-QUICK SERVICE
1

'

YOU INSTALL
AND \SAVEI

Amana
Whole House Air Condi.tioning
QJols

Many 5 to 6 Room Houses

ONLY

Includes CR 2 Condenser, 20' A-Coil,
Tubing and Thermostat.

Gas Furnace
105,000 BTU

Similar Saving On
.Other Models

"-::ustom meat,cutting"

'

~~~-49°

Engagement Announced·

Mr. and Mrs. James W. C!atworthy

IN COLUMBUS
POMEROY -Mrs. .Maxine
Griffith, cashier of the
nn Thompson Ia for 1 More Pr~easlve Meigs '
Pomeroy National Bank,. ls in
g:.n~. He hat had elCpll'ltJICI In Coun Government.
Columbus this weekend atFor aggrtlllve leMienhlp· Vote for and Jec1 lending the spring meeting of
the Olllo Group of the National
Association of Bank Women,
,Inc. at the Imperial House
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.North .

,

MillS on South Second St. in
Middleport.
The pledge and mother ~s
prayer opened the meeting
with Mrs. Dan White giving a
poem " If You Make it So." ~
name of Mrs. Charles Conner
was submitted for mem·
hership. Plans were made for a
socia I hour following tfie ..
ceramic de,~~~ons!l'ation next
month at the home of Mrs.
Grueser. Awhi.te elephant sale
will also be held at that time.
Honorary m~mbers attending the dinner were Mrs.
Richard Chambers and .Mrs.
Joseph Davis. Other guests
were Mrs. Harold Blackston,
Mrs. Dale Colburn, and Mrs.
Conner.

WOMEN'S SANDALS
THE RAGE FOR
SUMMER---

\

lJ t · C'l b
Mrs. VI('tnc• k/and 1105
s IU

Dismissals
Are Issued

P~rklnt Far aver· 100 ca..,

DAN THOMAS &amp;SON

,.

PERSONALS
Mrs. Julia Van Maire is a
patient at the Hoi2er Medical
Center. Her condition is
improving and she is
expecting to be discharged on
Friday. She will be staying '
with her daughter, Mrs. Esker
Johnson of Mason.

Qt. Bottles
Here's fu~ galore for kids."Be ready to
toss, curve, spin, catch- jump and ....,- ·..;:
run -stop and start - in a
pair of Keds action shoes.
Hurry in for your free
Flying Saucer - while
they last- where you
buy, your Keds.

POMEROY - Miss Nancy pompons centered with a
Jo Mayer and Mr. James purple throated white orchid.
William ct8tworthy exchanged The blue garter worn by the
wedding vows on March 19 at bride was made by her sisterthe Trinity Church in Pomeroy in-law, Mrs . Don Mayer, ·
before an altar decorated with Pomeroy.
vases of white, ·pink and . Attending the bride were
lavender pompons fianke(j by Miss
Susan
Andrews,
two nine-branche candelabra. · Pomeroy, maid of honor; Mrs.
.Single candies with which Mayer, matro~ of honor; Mrs.
s8 tin . bows, mums ·and Dennis Schilling of Pomeroy
greenery were used on each and Miss Judy McKnight of
side of the chancel and in Pomeroy, bridesmaids. They·
several windows. White satin wore floor length gowns peau
bo~s marked the pews arid a de sole · with matching bow
'kneeling bench was used .in headpieces and carried
front of the altar.
colonial bouquets of carThe bftde Is the daughter of nations.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy .Mayer,
Miss Andrews and Mr~.
Pomeroy, and-the bridegroom Schilling were In pink, and
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Mayer and Miss
William Henry Clatworthy, McKnight were in lavender.
Middleport.
The bridesmaids' bouquets
A half-hour of nuptial music were carnations tinted in a
preceding the 2:30 p.m. color to match their gowiiB, ·
ceremony was presented by Miss Andrews carried pink
Mrs. Dean
Appleman, carnations and Mrs. Mayer
Columbus, organist, and Mrs. had' lavender-carnations.
Marvin Burt, soloist. SelecMiss Bethany Jo Mayer,
lions included "Ava Marlll", Pomeroy, nl~ce of the bride,
"Because" , "The Wedding, and MiSs Michele Clatworthy,
Prayer" and "The ·Lord's Sissonsville, W. Va., niece of
Prayer" as, the couple knelt at the groom, were the flower
the altar.
girls, Bethany wore a floor
The Rev. W. H. Perrin of. length pink peau de soie gown
ficiated' at the double ring .with an empire Bethany
ceremony.
- waisUine and matching belt,
Given in marriage by ber · and puffed sleeves. Her bow
father, the bride wore a floor headpiece matched her gown.
lenglh gown of Angelakln peau Michele was in lavender, and
de .aoie and rMmbroldered both carried white baskets of
lace with a detachable chapel pink and lavender pompons
train edged In rt!-&lt;!mbroidered with greenery .
lace . The gown was faahloned
Mr . Sam Clatworthy or
with an empire waistline, high Sissonsville, W. Va . served as
neckline and camelot sleeves. best man for his brother.
coming to points over the Ushers were Mr. Don Mayer,
hands. Her veil of imported brother of the bride, Pomeroy ;
French silk illusion was beld in Mr. Dennis Schilling, Lan.place by a headpiece of white caster, brother-in-law of the
flowers, lace and seed pea~la . groom; Mr. Robert Shuck and
The bride's only jewelry was Mr. Jan Long, cousin of the
a diamond lavaliere which had groom, both of Middleport.
belonged to her paternal
Acolytes were Miss Maria
grandmother. She carried a Legar and Miss Beth Perrin.
cascade bouquet of white
For her daughter's wedding,
'

TIGERETTES TEAM

Pleasant.
The wedding is to be an
event of April 29th, at 7:30
p.m. and is to be solemnized
by the bride-grooms Uncle at
Leon Baptist Church.

I

Colu· m'bt'a·.

a

r I
Teac hers E1ec t
Julia Matheny-Joseph '·
assroom
\.Higgins Are Betrothed Officers, Hear Speaker

CCL Officers Named&gt;
.

Wedding. Vows
Taken March 19

'

Mr . H.. C. Waugh, a
nurseryman from Kanauga,
Ohio recently purchased the
land surrounding West
Columbia HIU Cemetery . Don
WaugtJ and his men worked
digginfo · Myrtle, leTha · and
dahlias !rom these hills, which
is used for landscaping· jobs.
Tne myrtle is
creeping
evergreen plant wiih blue
flowers, used especially al.on~:
new highways.

.

'

'

BUYS CEMETERY

Lakin State Hospital will observe
Mental Health Month by holding Open
House, Hospital Day, Sunday May 7,
from I to 4 p.m.
Mr. Ted Johnson, Exeoutive
· Secretary of the Mental Health
Association, will be the ·guest speaker.
Acordial welcome has been extended to
friends and the public to visit the
hospital on that day.
·
The ,. National Theme of the
1972 is "Open Your .Mind, Your Heart
your hands to the mental! iU." Each
yeqr brings encouraging enlightenment
in the method adopted to assist in the
recovery of the mentaiJy ill. Mental
illness may strike a Jllember of a family
unexpectedly at any time, and if
appropriate measures are !aken, such
sickenss is often found to he curable.
An afternoon program will be
presented starti~g at 1:00 p.m. and
followed by guided tours of the hospital
and concluded with refreshments .
.

11-The lltii&amp;Q 1'111111·' II I, att~, .r\ilrll ~~

BYJ. G; KAPP

Open House
'
Is Planned

,

we s f

Open All Year

,. To Serve You.

Dlle Uttle
992-6346

SEE US TODAY

FOREMAN &amp;-ABBOIT
W"W·2n~d~AV~E....;....._..!!£-~
· M~IDDlEPORT, 0.

.'

•

I

.t'

L

t

�10- Tile S!lldaf Tlmell-8eGinel, &amp;mday' April23, lt'/2

Judge Rules
For ·officers
.
'

''The defendants were acting not only
within the law, but were also
performing the duties imposed upon
them by law" Judge Jilmes Lee
Thompson said in part in an opinion he
releaSed Friday In Mason County
Circuit Court involving three state
police officers stationed at the local
detachment.
·
Tbis action stems from a ci v.U suil
entered in Mason County Circuit Court .
laat September by Uoyd Ward and
Katherine Ward, doing · business ~s
Orchid lon no. 2 against State Police
Troopers A.E. Baumgardner, J.R.
Smith arid Sgt. Jack Parsons. The
plaintiff's in theil' complaint, which was
filed through attorney Harvey M.
Cohen of HuntinR~on , contended state
police harrassed and intimidated their
cuStomers and as a result they lost an
innumberable amount of bl,lSiness and
suffered both financial and economic
damage.
In this suit they asked for judgmenl
against the police in the amount
of$200,000 and punitive damage in the
amount of $200,000 and a trial by jury.
Judge Thompson in the court order

Friday 5aid on motion for summary
judgment by attorney ·Samuel D.
· Uttlepage for the defendanls, that it is .
his opinion the' Jll?lion should be
granted. '
.
The opinion said: "Specifically of lhe
ieight persons named In paragraph 4 of
the complaint one (Jeflers) forleited
bond, two (Craig and Spencer ) were
found guilty and one (Holley) had three
trials resulting in hung jury on each.
Ari officer. is nqt required to have a
warrant to effect the arrest or a person
committing a misdemeanor in his ·
presence and the result in each case
clearly supports the !act the arresting
officer had valid reason to believe a
crime was being committed at th~ time
of the arrest. The plaintiffs allege that
the acts complained of were done by the
troopers while.on duty and while sworn
to uphold the laws of the S!Jlt. of West
Virginia and all the llllltter.s before the
Court · support this allegation. The
defendants were acting not only within
the law but were also performing the
d~ties imposed upon them by law. The
record does not support the allegation
of a conspiracy. There being no
genuine iisue as to any material lact
upon which reasonable men would
differ the defendants should prevail."
The men referred to.by last names in
the above were Joe Jeffer, Wendell
. Craig, Ollie Spencer, Tom Holley.

In Oc:tober last year police, named as
defendants, asked that the plaintiff's '
complaint
action is be
the dismissed.
aftermath Yesterday's
of several
proceedin&amp;S fUed in .tlie sui\ since Its
origin in liepternber. ,

The
Association
of president, was presented .a
Mr. and Mrs. Julius A.
Classroom Teachers met at flower arrangement from
Matheny are announcing the
the Point Pleasant Junior Buffington Greenhouse.
engagement and approaching
High
for its April meet for the Refreshment were then
marriage of their youngest
in stallation of the 1972-73 served.
daughter, Julia Ami, to Rick
Hostess · for the evening
officers.• Mrs. Clara Belle
Hlggins, son of Mrs. Virginia
Dunn was in charge of the were Judy William, Sara
Wallis, of South Side, and Mr.
ceremony.
The new officers Buffington, Suzanne Piercy
Joseph Higgins of Rt. 2, Point
Elaine Rouse , president; and Carol Miller.
Pleasant.
PROBE THEFT
The next meeting will be
Gerald Simmons, Vice
Julia Is a 1971 graduate of
Wednesday
April 26 at 4:125
President
;
Judy
William
,
Point Pleasant High School
Point
Pleasant
City
police
p.m.
at
the
Point Pleasant
Secretary ; Suzanne Piercy;
annd is pre,sently employed
with
Gallipolis
Parts have been asked to investigate Treasurer .were Installed in Junior High. Reportez&lt;l' by
a theft at the Kroger Store on the traditional candle-light Carol Miller, ACT Secretary.
Company,
Mrs. Dunn
Rick is a 1970 graduate of Viand Street. Pollee said $94 ceremony .
Poirlt Pleasant High School worth of shrubbery had been concluded the installation. by
and is presently employed . taken from the outside on the reading the ACT Constitution
and re-installing all the
with Kroger Company of Point . fron,t premises.
memberi present as member
: of ACT. She also presented
,. : each new officer with a flower.
:;: The guest speaker for the
.: .: evening was Velma Allen
\' state ACT president. Mrs. . COLUMBUS (UPI)- Rep.
:y.Allen spoke to the group about John Aahbrook, R.()hio, waved
'.',:.:legislative issues concerning a copy of the 1988 Republican
IS NOT
OUR PR.OPERTY ALONE!
.
:? ' classroom teachers. A few of party platform in the air Fri· '· the issues discussed were day and said "this, along with
: organizations, paid insurance the Pentagon papers, is one of
': and negotations. Mrs, Allen a the major suppresSed publica. resident of Philippi is on leave tions in our nation today."
YOUilt ".fEVER BUY Ql,IALITY
'· · of absence in Barbour County
Aahbrook, opposing Nixon
'\ : to perform her duties as State . for ' the GOP presidential
: "; president. Her term of nomination, said Nixon had
C president will expire in •June. created an international lack of
·
A brief business meeting confidence in the dollar, which
'
THAN :YOU DO AT
followed' the program. The
contributed to the balance of
group voted to pay all bills
trade deficit, Inflation and
owed.
deficit spending- all counter
Also discussed was sending to the Republican platform.
: a delegate to Atlantic City in
Aahbrook said Nixon has fos: June to the NEA convention.
Fine Furni,ure
tered a " spirit of ap; Jerry Romine was presented a peasement"
that
unt.11DDLEPO.~T
gift by the teachers in of the
derestimates the capacity and
':: two year te~ms as ACT intentions · of the nation's
\ '' president.
· · · Mrs. Elaine Rouse, new enemies.
Speaking at a seminar at the
Ohio State University College
of Law, Ashbl'fiOk again was
critical of the ITT affair.
"I think they (Senate Judiciary Committee hearings)
have raised enough doubt that
there should be an Investigation," Ashbrook said.

Ashbrook Says

Party Platfonn
Being Ignored

QUALITY • • •
.

'

IUT •••

FOR ·LESS ·

BAKER•s

Keds Flying SaucerFREE

with

every
pair
of
kids'

FOUR INDICTED
CLEVELAND (UPI )- Four
area ~have been indicted
by a ed al grand jury for
allege ly printing
and
distributing more than $200,000
in counterfeit money. Charged
were Wallace Clayton, Jr., 2!i,
of suburban Warrensville
Heights, and Ronnie Adkins,
28, Rudy Montgomery, 26, and
Ernest Robinson, 35, all ·of
.Cleveland.

The Tigerettes softball team
opened their 1912 sea.son 'on
Tuesday evening April 18, by
beating Milwer's Insur8ljc~ of
New Haven in a double·h1111der
by a score of 19-2 and 111-5.
Norma Wright led the
Tigerettes
with
three
homeru'ns
and
Opal
Bonecutter followed up with
two homers and a three base
hit. This energetic women's
team is off to a very good start
enjoymentandentertainment.
I'; ee p
up
the
good
sportmanshipWalter.

252 THIRD AVENUE, GAWPOLIS, .OHIO
OPEN 9 AM .yo 9 PM. MONDAY
. THRU SATURDAY
. PESCHKE's.-_.;u.s. Govt. Inspected

FULLY COOKED
·,BON-LESS

Miss Diana Roush will
celebrate her 17th birthday on
the 2Jrd or April and Johnny
Johnson will be 20 years old on
the 24th.
Mrs. Allie Hamman
Wheeler wife of the late Sheri
Wheeler was buried Saturday
in Belair, Ohio. Attending
their aunt's funeral from here
was Mrs. Charles Wheeler,
Mike, Kay and Brad and Lula
Wh'eeler .
Rebecca Sue Bland seven
month old daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Marshall Bland was
christened at the West
Columbia, U'nited Methodist
Church on Aprill6 by the Rev.
Mrs . Bernice Winkler .
Members of the family
attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Marshall Bland, Mrs. Gene '
Bland, Mr. Ralph Miler Sr.,
Mrs. David Hall and Stacie,
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Zurcher
and Mrs. James Young· and
Tammy.
Mr. and Mrs . G. R. Kapp Sr.
visited Sunday with their
daughters and families which
is Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Waugh
of Crown City, Ohio and Mr.
and Mrs. John Greenlee of
Point Pleasant, W. Va.

GRAPEFRUI
lARGE 27 SIZE

c

each .l

"SERVING YOU SINCE 1936"

324 Second Avenue

PRICES ARE RIGHT!

_,CE CREAM

... ll'it6 .

Gallon Pkg.

from our

BUDGET

KELLOGG'S

SHOP I

POP TARTS
All VARIETIES

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BAKER

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M\IDliPOIT, 0.

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LIMIT
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(DANNY)

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BISCUITS .

THOMPSON

·48-oz. 41 C

Republican Candidate

SUNSHINE FEATURES

JAN. 2 TERM

· NEW AT PENNYIARi
IN CANS
SPECIAL RATION • •• ; . • •.•...• •• ._•• ."~:::·· 17c
IEEF CHUIIIS ' ................. : ... ·~:~· 301
~ORSIMEAT CHUNKS .. .. .. .... ..... '~:,:· iOc
LIVER CHUNKS .. ... .............. ~ ·~· · 30c
CHICIEII ................ .. ....... '~:,:· %7c

DANIR E.

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THOMPSON

for

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VANILLA

2·;b,

PISWUNTSA

.

POMEROY - An an. Mts. Don McKnight. Reports
f
niversary card and gift was were given by Mrs. Don
presented to Mrs. Edward Collins, co-hostess, clu
¥{#1111 ![!liiiW·¥'1 slstef at treasurer ; and Mrs. Elza
w~ ·mt meeting Gilmore, Jr., secretary.
at the Sew-Rite Sewing Club Mrs. Don Mullen will host the
held at the home of Mrs. Flo next meeting to be held May 2.
Strickland. ·
The hostesses served a salad
Mrs. Wells reported on a gifl course to Mrs. George Hoff.
sent to Julie Baity who haa man, president; Mrs. Larry
been
hospitalized
and Wehrung, Mrs. Charles Hoff.
discussed was a location for a man, Mrs. Willard Boyer, Mrs.
June rummage sale. A shower Robert Potter, Mrs. Elmer
of gifts presented to Qne White, Mrs. Ray Baity, and
member each month went to Mrs. Ronald Browning.

Wr r•~•rv• tlte ri~ht to limit qu1n11tln on •tl ntm s ln lhll 1d. Prien 1HHfln lhru S.t.,

FOLGER'S
COFFEE

Best .Va(~~&amp; on
Foods - Clothing • Hardware
~ in Gallia County .

'

FLORIDA SEEDLESS

Two dismissals were issued
among Mason County Circuit
Court actions here Friday,
orders signed by Judge James
Lee Thompson disclosed.
An
action,
Marshall
Maintenance vs. Owen Burll8
et al, was dismissed after the
plaintiffs said the defendants 1
had agreed to cease all
picketing at the West Virginia
Malleable Iron Company in ·
Point Pleasant.
Hershel R. Howard and
Odessa F. Howard vs. O.K.
Construction Company was
dismissed when the matter was
settled.

SHOP ntE NtW.JONES·I)Y$'

'

POMEROY - Mrs. Don
Grueser was elected ·president
of the Middleport Child Con·
servalion League at a business
meeting which followed the
annual dinner party at the
' Meigs Inn .
,,
' Other officers named for the
1972-73 year were Mrs. Arthur
Arnold, vice president; Mrs.
John Blaker, secretary; Mrs.
Louis Osborne, treasurer; and
Mrs . Clifford Kennedy,
reporter.
.AMay picnic for the children
of the .Meigs Community Class
was discussed and Mrs. Arnold
will complete arrangements
with the school. The May
meeting of the CCL will be at
the ceramic ~hop of Mrs. Alice

Tubes

I

lllquetW. .

~~~·45°
g.
.
I
.Ito ..._

Meigs County Commissioner

1

""'

Ruth Ellen Winebrenner

Mrs. Mayer wore a deep pink
dress with matching hat and
black accessories, and a
corsage of red and pink
sweetheart roses.
Mrs. Clatworthy was in a
blue coat and dress ensemble
with matching hat and black
accessories, and wore a corsage of pink sweetheart roses.
Guests were registered by
Miss Connie Lanning and Miss
Joy
Kautz . A ' cupid
arrangement with pink, white,
lavender mwns was used nn
the table.
A reception honoring the
couple was held in the church
social room. Miss Mercedes
Condon played a medley of
selections at the plano. A cupid
arrangement of pink and
lavender mums was on the
piano.
The bride's table was
covered with white imported
lace over a pink linen cloth and
' was centered with a six tiered
wedding cake decorated in the
pink ·and lavender color
scheme of the wedding. The
traditional miniature bride and
groom topped the cake, which
was encircled at the base with
huckleberry. Silver candelabra
were used on either side. The
cake was served with green
punch, coffee, and pink and
lavender mints.
Presiding at the table were
Mrs. J. J. Davis of Middleport
who served the cake, Mrs. Sam
Clatworthy, Sissonsvllle, W.
Va., the coffee, and Mrs.
Ronald Carr, Pomeroy, the
punch.
•
Others assisting at the
reception were Mrs. William
Mayer, Mrs. Kermit Walton,
Miss Marcy Owens, Mrs. C. J.
Strauss, Mrs. W. H. Perrin,
and members of the Happy
Harvester Class.
For a wedding trip through
West Virginia, the bride
changed into a lavender, blue
and pink cape and pantsuit
ensemble with which she wore
brown accessories and the
white orchid from her bridal
bouquet.
•
• The couple resides at 131
Ebenezer St., Pomeroy.
The new Mrs. Clatworthy is a
1971 graduate of Meigs High
School and is employed as
secretary ·lor the Middleport
Elementary School. She also
does secretarial work for the
Saturday', Speech and Hearing
Clinic.

,

· Mr. Clatworthy graduated
from Meigs Hlgh School in 1969
and Is a junior at Ohio
University where he is

DAUGHTER BORN
POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Triplett of Marietta
are announcing the birth of
their first child, a daughter,
Michelle ReQee. The nine
pound,' nine ounce girl was
born on April17 at the Marietta
Memorial Hospital. Grand·
parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Leslie Hawley, Middleport,
and Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Triplett, Pomeroy. Mrs.
Phyllis Hawley of Cheshire,
and Mrs. Willa Kitts, Ironton,
are the great-trandparents.

maj orin g in busi ness

I

SYRACUSE -Mr. and Mrs. Dana B. Winebrenner of
Syracuse are announcing the eugagement of their daughter,
Ruth Ellen, to Mr. Roher! Sammy Shain, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Shain, Letart. The bride-elect is a 1971 graduate of
Southern High School and attended Bliss College, Columbus.
Her fiance, also a 1971 graduate of Southern High School, is
employed by Jim Carnahan, Racine. Wedding plans are
incomplete.

a d~

ministration. He is em ployed
at the Kroger Store in
Pomeroy.
Out-of-town guests at the
wedding were Mr . and Mrs.
Phil Fox, Huntington; Mr. Ray.
Redman, Mr. and Mrs. Randall
Fisher, and Miss Mary Sue
Hayes, Gallipolis; Miss Twila
Clatwor thy, Rio Grande; Miss
Vone tt Pearce, Park ersburg;
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Schilling
and Jane, Lancaster ; Mrs.
Shirley Spires, Wilkes ville ;
Mrs. Don ::&gt;wisher, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Lillian Henderson, Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
James Aldridge, Mr. and Mrs.
C. J. Strauss, Miss Becky
Houdashelt, Miss Debbie
Harbrecht, Steve Schilling, and
Miss Anita Fultz, Columbus.

AND UP

I

1H£ SHOE BOX

A 1967 graduate of Middleport
High School, he received an
associate degree in 1970 from
Mountain State Business
College, Parkersburg. His
wife, Nancy, is with him in
Hawaii.

COMPLETES COURSE
MIDDLEPORT - Specialist
Five Ra ymond E. Hindy, 21,
sun uf Mrs, Mary B. Hindy, 97
Mill St., recently completed the
basic Leadership Course at the
U. S. Army, Hawaii Noncommi s sioned Officer
Academy · at
Schofield
Barracks, Hawaii. Hindy is
regularl y assigned as a squad
leader in Headquarters
Company, U.S. Army-Pacific.

'i#

Where Shoes Are S'enslbly Priced

MIDDLEPORT, 0. ·

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

, ~ommunity \
·Icorner By Charlene Hoeflich II\
«
~

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POMEROY - Fifty years ago Thursday night Harry S.
Moore traveled from Ashland, Ky. t~ Pikeville, Ky. by chartered
bus to assist in the organization of a Rotary Club.
Thursday night he made a return trip - thjs time to join in
the golden anniversary celebration of the Club.
Harry and his wife, Jean, drove to Ashland Thursday so that
they could make the trip on the chartered bus with the Ashland
Club members. Just as Harry did 50 years ago when the PikeviUe
club was organized, he led in the singing at the celebration. He is
the only living member of the 22 Rotarians who made that trip to
Pikeville, and there remains only one living charter member of
the celebrating club.
HERMAN BAILEY of Middleport had surgery. a few weeks

ago, when many,pints of blood were required. His friends at the
Middleport Fire Department have replaced much of this, but
seven replacement pints still are needed. Perhaps you would like
to give in Mr. Bailey's name when you visit the ~loodmoblle
tomorrow afternoon at the Pomeroy Elementary School.

THE BIG MOVE WAS ·MADE yesterday by the Rutland
Branch of the Pomeroy National !lank into their beautiful new
structure on Salem St. in Rutland. They'll be open for business
there on Monday. Open house will be held Saturday and next
week we'll teiJ you about the open bouse hours and other plans.
ENTERING THE VETERANS Hospital at Huntington
Friday was FrankS . Fischer, Racine, Route 1. He will be undergoing observation and treatment and expects to be confined
there for some time. Perhaps you 'd like to send a card. His address is Ward 2 A, Room 212.
SOME PEOPLE HAVE all the fun - they go on V!'cations !
Just back from Denver, Colo., are Jean and Lloyd Wright.
They were joined for the trip by Jean's step-father and mother,
Mr: and Mrs. William Oehler of Columbus, and lhe trip, of
course, was primarily to visit with tbe Wrights' son, Benny,
stationed there with the U. S. Air Force. They took in Colorado
Springs, the Garden of tlie Gods, and toured the U.S. Mint.
• Spending a 11Klay vacation In Lakeworth, Fla. with their
daughter, Mrs. Nancy Yoong, who works there with the C. and P.
Teletmone Co. were Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Yomg of Rutland.
Mrs. Dorothy Ree~es Salbaney, Gail and Joan, returned to
lhelr home In Massachusetts yesterday after visiting here with
her mother, Mrs. Jessie Reeves, a brother, Arthur, and a sister,
Mrs. Merle Johnson. Mrs. Salhaney and chlldren were joined
bere by a son, Richard; who lives in Gainesville, Fla. for a real
fam-ily reunion. ·
lncldentaiJy,.Mrs. Johnson (Jonnle's Beauty Sbop) attended
the School of Beauty Knowledge held in Columbus last weekend.
Her name was unintentionaUy omitted from an earlier listing of
beauticians there.

The Shop
Pteawnt Ridge Road
POMEROY, OHIO

,,--.
----""\
I
Dick &amp; Dale

'

*-&lt;· really · . know ·!
,_ · I how to cut up.

.
-·-QUICK SERVICE
1

'

YOU INSTALL
AND \SAVEI

Amana
Whole House Air Condi.tioning
QJols

Many 5 to 6 Room Houses

ONLY

Includes CR 2 Condenser, 20' A-Coil,
Tubing and Thermostat.

Gas Furnace
105,000 BTU

Similar Saving On
.Other Models

"-::ustom meat,cutting"

'

~~~-49°

Engagement Announced·

Mr. and Mrs. James W. C!atworthy

IN COLUMBUS
POMEROY -Mrs. .Maxine
Griffith, cashier of the
nn Thompson Ia for 1 More Pr~easlve Meigs '
Pomeroy National Bank,. ls in
g:.n~. He hat had elCpll'ltJICI In Coun Government.
Columbus this weekend atFor aggrtlllve leMienhlp· Vote for and Jec1 lending the spring meeting of
the Olllo Group of the National
Association of Bank Women,
,Inc. at the Imperial House
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.North .

,

MillS on South Second St. in
Middleport.
The pledge and mother ~s
prayer opened the meeting
with Mrs. Dan White giving a
poem " If You Make it So." ~
name of Mrs. Charles Conner
was submitted for mem·
hership. Plans were made for a
socia I hour following tfie ..
ceramic de,~~~ons!l'ation next
month at the home of Mrs.
Grueser. Awhi.te elephant sale
will also be held at that time.
Honorary m~mbers attending the dinner were Mrs.
Richard Chambers and .Mrs.
Joseph Davis. Other guests
were Mrs. Harold Blackston,
Mrs. Dale Colburn, and Mrs.
Conner.

WOMEN'S SANDALS
THE RAGE FOR
SUMMER---

\

lJ t · C'l b
Mrs. VI('tnc• k/and 1105
s IU

Dismissals
Are Issued

P~rklnt Far aver· 100 ca..,

DAN THOMAS &amp;SON

,.

PERSONALS
Mrs. Julia Van Maire is a
patient at the Hoi2er Medical
Center. Her condition is
improving and she is
expecting to be discharged on
Friday. She will be staying '
with her daughter, Mrs. Esker
Johnson of Mason.

Qt. Bottles
Here's fu~ galore for kids."Be ready to
toss, curve, spin, catch- jump and ....,- ·..;:
run -stop and start - in a
pair of Keds action shoes.
Hurry in for your free
Flying Saucer - while
they last- where you
buy, your Keds.

POMEROY - Miss Nancy pompons centered with a
Jo Mayer and Mr. James purple throated white orchid.
William ct8tworthy exchanged The blue garter worn by the
wedding vows on March 19 at bride was made by her sisterthe Trinity Church in Pomeroy in-law, Mrs . Don Mayer, ·
before an altar decorated with Pomeroy.
vases of white, ·pink and . Attending the bride were
lavender pompons fianke(j by Miss
Susan
Andrews,
two nine-branche candelabra. · Pomeroy, maid of honor; Mrs.
.Single candies with which Mayer, matro~ of honor; Mrs.
s8 tin . bows, mums ·and Dennis Schilling of Pomeroy
greenery were used on each and Miss Judy McKnight of
side of the chancel and in Pomeroy, bridesmaids. They·
several windows. White satin wore floor length gowns peau
bo~s marked the pews arid a de sole · with matching bow
'kneeling bench was used .in headpieces and carried
front of the altar.
colonial bouquets of carThe bftde Is the daughter of nations.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy .Mayer,
Miss Andrews and Mr~.
Pomeroy, and-the bridegroom Schilling were In pink, and
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Mayer and Miss
William Henry Clatworthy, McKnight were in lavender.
Middleport.
The bridesmaids' bouquets
A half-hour of nuptial music were carnations tinted in a
preceding the 2:30 p.m. color to match their gowiiB, ·
ceremony was presented by Miss Andrews carried pink
Mrs. Dean
Appleman, carnations and Mrs. Mayer
Columbus, organist, and Mrs. had' lavender-carnations.
Marvin Burt, soloist. SelecMiss Bethany Jo Mayer,
lions included "Ava Marlll", Pomeroy, nl~ce of the bride,
"Because" , "The Wedding, and MiSs Michele Clatworthy,
Prayer" and "The ·Lord's Sissonsville, W. Va., niece of
Prayer" as, the couple knelt at the groom, were the flower
the altar.
girls, Bethany wore a floor
The Rev. W. H. Perrin of. length pink peau de soie gown
ficiated' at the double ring .with an empire Bethany
ceremony.
- waisUine and matching belt,
Given in marriage by ber · and puffed sleeves. Her bow
father, the bride wore a floor headpiece matched her gown.
lenglh gown of Angelakln peau Michele was in lavender, and
de .aoie and rMmbroldered both carried white baskets of
lace with a detachable chapel pink and lavender pompons
train edged In rt!-&lt;!mbroidered with greenery .
lace . The gown was faahloned
Mr . Sam Clatworthy or
with an empire waistline, high Sissonsville, W. Va . served as
neckline and camelot sleeves. best man for his brother.
coming to points over the Ushers were Mr. Don Mayer,
hands. Her veil of imported brother of the bride, Pomeroy ;
French silk illusion was beld in Mr. Dennis Schilling, Lan.place by a headpiece of white caster, brother-in-law of the
flowers, lace and seed pea~la . groom; Mr. Robert Shuck and
The bride's only jewelry was Mr. Jan Long, cousin of the
a diamond lavaliere which had groom, both of Middleport.
belonged to her paternal
Acolytes were Miss Maria
grandmother. She carried a Legar and Miss Beth Perrin.
cascade bouquet of white
For her daughter's wedding,
'

TIGERETTES TEAM

Pleasant.
The wedding is to be an
event of April 29th, at 7:30
p.m. and is to be solemnized
by the bride-grooms Uncle at
Leon Baptist Church.

I

Colu· m'bt'a·.

a

r I
Teac hers E1ec t
Julia Matheny-Joseph '·
assroom
\.Higgins Are Betrothed Officers, Hear Speaker

CCL Officers Named&gt;
.

Wedding. Vows
Taken March 19

'

Mr . H.. C. Waugh, a
nurseryman from Kanauga,
Ohio recently purchased the
land surrounding West
Columbia HIU Cemetery . Don
WaugtJ and his men worked
digginfo · Myrtle, leTha · and
dahlias !rom these hills, which
is used for landscaping· jobs.
Tne myrtle is
creeping
evergreen plant wiih blue
flowers, used especially al.on~:
new highways.

.

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BUYS CEMETERY

Lakin State Hospital will observe
Mental Health Month by holding Open
House, Hospital Day, Sunday May 7,
from I to 4 p.m.
Mr. Ted Johnson, Exeoutive
· Secretary of the Mental Health
Association, will be the ·guest speaker.
Acordial welcome has been extended to
friends and the public to visit the
hospital on that day.
·
The ,. National Theme of the
1972 is "Open Your .Mind, Your Heart
your hands to the mental! iU." Each
yeqr brings encouraging enlightenment
in the method adopted to assist in the
recovery of the mentaiJy ill. Mental
illness may strike a Jllember of a family
unexpectedly at any time, and if
appropriate measures are !aken, such
sickenss is often found to he curable.
An afternoon program will be
presented starti~g at 1:00 p.m. and
followed by guided tours of the hospital
and concluded with refreshments .
.

11-The lltii&amp;Q 1'111111·' II I, att~, .r\ilrll ~~

BYJ. G; KAPP

Open House
'
Is Planned

,

we s f

Open All Year

,. To Serve You.

Dlle Uttle
992-6346

SEE US TODAY

FOREMAN &amp;-ABBOIT
W"W·2n~d~AV~E....;....._..!!£-~
· M~IDDlEPORT, 0.

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L

t

�'·

·Better Health Club
Helps
Cancer
Crusade
·
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POMEROY- Acontribution
was made to the Cancer ·
Crusade when the Rock
Springs Better Health Club met
."fhursday afternoo,n at the
home or l\1rs. Arlee Abbott.
Mrs. Fred Goeglein con·
dueled the meeting whic~
opened with devotions by the

~hapl!lin,

Mrs, Abbott. Slie
read uc;tean
Our Lives,"
and the 51st Psalm. A com- ·
mittee reported on · illnesses
during the past three months .'
Named to a new health committee were Mrs. William
Grueser and Mrs. Scott
Folmer. Money making

uP

.

'

It was noted that next month

officers will be elected. Mrs.
George Skinner, Mrs. Mark
Grueser, and Mrs. William
Witte will take a treat to the
infirmary in May.
Mrs. Witte prepared the

.

Mrs. Houdasbelt Hosts A uxiliilry
'
MIDDLEPORT .
Remembrances for a veteran
at the Chillicothe Veterans
Hospital were arranged during

liiiiiii...._

.

a meeting of ·th e Past
Presidents Club of the
American Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39,

Pomeroy, Wednesday night at
the home of Mrs .· Harry
Houdashelt.
Devo lions to open the
meeting conducted by Mrs.
Ray Fox were given by Mrs.
Ellen Couch. She used scriptures from Luke and Jeremiah,
along with a meditation and a
POMEROY - Mrs. Paul Eichinger.
poem entitled "My Time Is In
Eiching&amp;, Mrs. Don Grueser, Otbe~s presenting gifls to Your Hands." The pledge to
and Mrs. Max Eichinger en· Mrs. Wallace were Miss Sonja the flag was included in the
tertained recently with a bridal Ohlinger, Mrs. Annie Chapman opening ritual.
.
shower honoring Mrs. Bruce and daughter, Jennifer, Mrs.
Plans were made for an
Wallace; nee Gloria Buck, at Ada Nease, Mrs. Becky An· auction to be held at the May
the Pomeroy United Methodist derson,
Mrs .
Frances meeting with Mrs. Harry ·
Church.
Goeglein, Miss Jennifer Goble, Davis, Pomeroy, to be hostess.
A color sclieme of yellow, Mrs. Nancy Grueser, Mrs. Mrs. Ernest Powell will be in
green, pink and white was used Sally Walters, Mrs. Charlotte charge of recreation. A quiz
on cakes de corated with Dillard, Mrs. Helen Blackston, was conducted with prizes
miniature umbrellas and Mrs. Betty Hutchinson, Julia going to the winners.
wedding bells. Mints made by and Joyce, Mr. and Mrs .
Mrs. Houdashelt and Mrs.
Mrs. Paul Eichinger and Mrs. Robert Buck, Miss Barbara George Bearhs served a salad
Grueser carried out the color Smith, Mrs. Jo Stalnaker, Mrs. course. Attending besides
scheme. The nut cups were Mary Gibbs, Mrs. Nancy those named were Mrs. George
small wedding bell replicas. Hubbard. Mrs. Linda Boyd, Hackett, Sr., Mrs. J. M.
Punch and coffee were served. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Hood, Mr. Thornton , Mrs.
Gerald .
An umbrella centerpiece and Mrs. Paul Haptonsljill, Wildermuth , Mrs. Frank
completed the setting of the Mrs . Marjorie Walburn, M~s. Cheesebrew, Mrs. Ben
lace covered table .
Darrell Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs. Neutziing, Mrs. Harry Davis,
Games were played with Karl Owen, Mrs. J. J. Davis, Mrs. Oian Knapp, and Mrs. Jed
prizes going to Mrs. Dwight Mrs. Bob Hoeflich, Mrs. Nora · Webster, Sr.
Wallace, Mrs. Jim Adams, and Eason and daughter, Linda,
It was reported that Mr. and
Mrs. Kathy Wallace. Other Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Smith, Mrs. Charles Sauer are in
guests at the shower were Mrs. Miss Linda Sauvage, Miss Hawaii with their daughter,
Dottie Musser, Mrs . Dorothy Kathy Werry, Mr. and Mrs. Sally, and her husband who
Sheets, Mrs. Pat White, Mrs. Myron Miller, Debbie Taylor, recently suffered a heart al·
.Ernestine Werry, Mrs. Linda Mrs. Mary Lou Hood and tack.
Boyles, Mrs. Nola Swisher, daughter, Vicki , Peggy
Mrs . Peggy Taylor and Neigler, Lisa Warner,
daughter, Brenda, Mrs. Carol
Send A
Mr. and Mrs. John Blake,
Koker, Miss Peggy O'Brien, Miss Maxine Matson, Jack
Valerie Koker, Mrs. Phyllis Matson, Mrs. William Malson ,
FloWeri~g
Skinner, Mrs. Beatrice Buck, Ridgeway Thomas, Mrs. A. R.
Mrs. Golda Roush, Mrs. Lois Pullins and daughter, Jerry,
To A Friend
Hawley, Mrs. Helen Sauer, Mr. and Mrs. Asa Bradbury,
They Help lo Heal &amp;
Mrs .. Maxine Griffith and Mary Agnes and Mickey Roy,
Mend .
daughter, Karen, Miss Becky Mr. and Mrs. Lionel Boggs,
Radford, Mrs. Martha An· Mr. and Mrs. Norman Hysell,
derson, Mrs. Margaret Mr. and Mrs. Ed Ihle, the Rev.
Eichinger, Mrs. Don Lowery, and Mrs. Dwight Zavitz. Also
Serving: Middleport
Pomeroy,
Gallipolis, 0.
Mrs. Addie Buck, Becky presenting a gift to the couple
&amp; Mason Co., W. Va.
Eichinger and Tammy were the Gallipolis GliH!ttes.

VA\()()E VUA\~S
ties to the .past

Wed in December
MIDDLEPORT - Inl! 2p.m.
candlelight service on Dec. 31,
1971, Miss Teresa Nlcinsky,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
George Niclll8ky, Middleport,
aoo Mr. Mark Davis, son of Mr.
and Mrs. W,Ulie Davis, Mid·
·dleport, exchanged wedding
vows. '
The Rev. RauiUn Moyer
officiated at the ceremony
conducted at the Middleport
Church of Christ. Nuptial
music wa~ presented by Mrs.
Chester Erwin, Middleport,
with selections including
"Exoc;tus," 11 Love Is Blue,"
aoo "Romeo and Juliet."
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride was attired In
a white vel•et goivn fashioned
with long full sleeves and an
empire waist. Her chapel
length veil of illusion edged In
lace and a blusher feU from a
velvet pillbox hat. The bride
carried a bouquet of muma and
roees tipped In' blue.
Mrs. Debbie Murray of
Columbus served as maid of
hon&lt;r for the bride. She wore a
fioor length blue velvet gown in'
identical style to the one worn
by the bride. Her headpiece
was a matching velvet bow
with netting, and she carried a
single white mum tied with
blue and white streamers.
Best man for the brlde~room

was Mr. Gary Walker of
Racine. Ushers were Mr. Chris
McDade, Columbus, and' Mr.
Kevin Wolfe, Racine, nephews
of t~e groom. All male
members of the wedding party
wore dark suli8 with blue shiris
and ties.
For her daughter's wedding,
, Mrs. Nlclnslcy was in a blue
ensemble and wore a mum
corsage. Mrs. Davis was attired In a brown dress and also
had a mum corsage.
A re~eptlon honoring the
couple was held Immediately
following the ceremony with
women of the Middleport
Church serving as hostesses.
l'&gt;!r. Davili Is employed at the
Stauffer Chemical Co. in Point
Pleasant, and hls wife
manages a tape exchange in
Middleport owned by Dave
Salbbury. The couple reside on
SecOnd Ave. In Middleport.

"'

Out·of·town guests attending
the wedding and reception
were Mr . and Mrs. Ben
Harrison , Logan, W. Va. ,
grandparents of the bride; Mr.
and Mrs . John Nicinsky,
Chapmanville, W. Va., also
grandparents of the bride;
Mrs. Jack George and sons,
Tracy and T. J., Logan, W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. non
Maynard and daughter,
Tammy, Chapmanville, W.
Va. : Mr. ·and Mrs. .Ben Can·
tebury, Richard, Tina and
Rena of Dayton ; Mr. and Mrs.
Ron McDade, Chris and
Mandy, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Victor Wolfe and
children, Kevin and Vicki,
Racine ; Mr. 8)ld Mrs. Gary
Dill, Steve, Tim, Kathy and
Clody, Eagle Ridge; Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Dill, Morning Star;
and Mr. and Mrs. Ben Petrel
and Mrs. Addie Petrel, Racine.

Plant

Dudley's Florist

CiritiNA.··.·' ·sPRiNG

POMEROY - Donations
lrom several families for the
use of hotipltal equipment were
acknowledged during Thursday night's meeting of the
Laurel Cliff Better Health Club
at the home of Mrs, Bertha
Parker.
The donations were received
from the Edwards and the
PlckeM famlllea. A note was
read from Charles Diehl for a
remembrance. Mrs. Parker
reported on hospital supplies
available.
· Mrs. Ernest Powell con· •
dueled the meeting with Mn.
Uoyd Wright giving devotions
from Luke .11. The Lord's
Prayer and the pledge to the
flag were given.
Readings Included "Would
You Cheat Your Child?" by
Mrs. Parker, and the Indian
version of the 23rd Psalm by
Mn. Powell. Mrs. Clarence
Curtis and Mrs. Lou Diehl led ,
in an Informal songfest:
Contests were conducted by
Mrs. Parker with Mrs. James
Gllmore and Mrs. Wright
winning prius.
Mn. Wright will host the
May 11 meeting with Mrs.
Merlin 'I'I'acy as the co-hostess.
Attending besides those named
were Mn..Robert Bowen, Mn.
Allen Eichinger, Mrs. Carman
Evana; Mn. Paul Frick, and a
guest, 'Mrs. Thomas Parker.

SIZE

6~·12

By Katie Crow
POMEROY -Mr. and Mn. Claude Roy, Racine, had a
narrow escape recenUy when a valve on an oxygen tank he was
using .broke, letting oxygen escape throughout their home.
Coming to the couple's rescue WIIS their son, Bob and
Richard Dugan of Letart Falls. A tiny spark would have caused a
tragic explosion. .
Mr. Roy, who lllffers from black lung, haB to have oxygen
around the clock. Rest aliSUred that a new part has been otdered
for the tank.

BERNICE MAY, MIDDLEPORT, has four SOI!ll. Now this is
wonderful, but can you Imagine what a job It Is for a mother to
keep track of four boys who are playing lltUe league, and pony
league and all on different teams! She won't know which game to
attend, or when.

an

Don'tlook
back, but yesteryear's
fashions are gaining on
you. It's a time for fashion nostalgia

from head to toe. Take Thorn MoAn's

TilE SYRACUSE PI' Ais sponsoring a much needed project,
a teachen' lounge. A former· office room at the Syracuse
Elementary hu been converted with palnling and furnishing
being done by Shirley lleeflle and Etta May Norton .

new Dapper Dans, for instance. These new
two·tone lace·ups feature old·timt pattern favorites
in the latest color and material combinations. And they're
design~d to complement todoy's opdoltd classics such

as pin stripe suits With wide lapels, bell,bottom pants. and
even wide brimmed hats. So. , . ro·llve a tittle ...
with Dapper Dans by Thorn MeAn. Available In a
variety of boot and oxford styles. And, with Dapper Dens,
you don 't have to be the last of the great spenders.
Only
1

FOR THE FISHERMEN who are . interested, the Ohio
DepariJ_nellt ri Natural Relources report that Forked Run Lake
ianormal,lfflllcbllymuddy. Trolitare beq taken on cheese and
llllall splm.-. in the dam area during the mlll'lling and evening
bolll'l. Crapplea are hitting on IIDBD spinners below the spillway.
Bank filbennen have been liiOBt succes$1.

15.99

EVELYN WEU.IS VERY DISTURBED over the rouditlon
ri tbe Saulb Bethel U!llted Methodiat Cemetery located on Silver
Ridge in ~· Tll1mlhlp.
AcCG'din&amp; to Mn. Well, people viliting the cemetery throw
dilcarded llmren owr the fence in full view of the cemetery,
rather than lbrowing lbem in containen. A aad situation .

heritage house
Formerly Kips Shoe Store

OHIO

AND YOU GO TOGETHER · ~· - 1

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IN THE AOCOUNT OF THE Rutland Branch of the Pomeroy
Nailmal Bank niovtng to Ita facilities over the weekend it
alated that the new buDding waa located on Seventh Street. We
ltand to be correCted, It Ia lcicated oo Salem Street.

new

.'l,.,!l&lt;it.

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TilE APPLE GROVE ME'IHODIST CHURCH will sponsor a
nmunage ale Tbureday, Friday and Saturday in the newly
deanted Community Hall at Letart Fa114. The sale will give
u.- atlaldlng a chance to see the work that has been dooe on
lbeoldstructure. TbeAlewUI beheld from 9a.m. to 4p.m. daily.

Cotalma·
COTTON SEPARATES
... really fit into your
life. Bright, exuberant
styles. Catalina's
famous comfortable
fit. All in cool, cor·efr&lt;to
Cotton thot looks great
and launders with ease.
Cotolina Separates is
what your life is all
obout, St. Tropez
Shirt: 9.00. Clossic
Ottoman Pont: 12.00

Hosts Club

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:

MONDAY
BASEBALL meeting
Monday at Club Restaurant,
Racine, 7:30 p.m. Collches
needed for sWllliler progam.
All Interested persoM urg~ to
attend.
RACINE LODGE 481 F&amp;AM
. apeclal meeting Monday to
confer the Master Masori
degree. All Master Maso111
invited.
TUESDAY '
AMERICAN LEGION
Auxiliary Drew Webster Post
39 Tuesday 7:3tl p.m. at post
home. Program, Foreign

BIRTII ANNOUNCED
WEST COLUMBIA - Mr.
and Mrs. Ben 0 . Roush
received w&lt;rd from Rockford,
Ill., from their son and
daughter-in·law, Mr. and Mn . .
David E. Roush, of the birth of
a granddaughter Tuesday,
March 14. The Infant has been
named Martella Colleen,
weighed I lbs. and 9 ozs. The
Roushes have two other
children, Lucinda Dawn, 7'&gt;!1
and Do9na Gall, 9. Maternal

grandparents are Rev . and
Mrs. Hubert Forrester, Rockford, Ill. and a greatgrandmother is Luvena
Rainey, Letart, W. Va.

VISITS BROTHER
POMEROY - Harold E.
Davis, Columbus, security
officer at the Neil House, spent
the weekend with his brotber,
Richard Davis, Pomeroy.

Mrs. Walhce is in Spain

Study, Sightseeing
Trip Taken in Spain
POMEROY - Gloria Buck
Wallace is in Torremolinos,
Spain attending classes. in
dance and baton offered by the
International Twirling
Teachers Institute.
Mrs. Wallace left Columbus
Saturday by jet for New York
City where she joined the ITII
chartered flight for Spain via
PortugaL She will be there for
eight days studying under well:,
known registered teachers
including Alan Kramer of
Pennsylvania.
The relaxed teaching
schedule of the lifl allows
ample time lor optional side
trips to Granada, Seville,
Malaya, and historica l points.
An excursion -ro- Tangier in
Morocco, North Africa with a
visit to a Casbah and market
place, a bull fight and a
banquet are included on the
Thursday agenda.
Headquarters for the
Teachers Institute is the
Playamor, considered one of
Europe's largest and finest
hotel
resorts on
the
Mediterranean Sea . It contains
lour swimming pools, one of
which is the largest on the
Costa del SoL
Mrs. Wallace is a charter
member of the ITII and this is
the third international institute
she has attended. The first two
were held in the Bahamas in

CoMma·
COTTON SEPARATES
... really lit into your
life. Bright, exuberant
,s tyles. Catalina's
famous comfortoble
fit. All in cbol
care free Cotton' thot
looks great and
launders with ease,
Carolina Separates is
what your life is all
obout. Cone Print Tonk
T_op: 8.00. Ottoman
Scooter: 11 .00,

Separo1es Ioyer on the fashion

in stri~ing colors and textures,

to ploy one against another for
exciting new effects. The
loo~s are contemporary and

full of life, Catalina makes
I ife more wearable, because
these Carolina Separates
ore Fortrel" polyester.
Spring Tweed Sport Vest:
36,00. Boucle Lang Sleeve
Turtle Neck: 16.00. Spring
Tweed Slant Flote Slocks:

24.00.

I

1o u1n~ers

with

ease. Cotol ina
Separates is

what your
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life is oil

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named to tile honor roll for the
POLLY'S POINTERS fifth six weeks grading period.
To be named to the roll
students must maintain a
grade average of "B" or
better. Named to the roll were:
With Fabric Softener
SEVENTH - Penny Adams,
Teresa Brown, Dale Browning,
By POLLY CRAMER
Kellee Burdette, Marilee
Cassell, Cathy Coleman, Mark
DEAR POU.Y-I know many of the girls are Uke I Davis, Robin Dewhurst, Mary
am in that they cannot stand dingy windows. I have used
Durst, Paula Eichinger,
window cleansers, ammonia and detergents and finally
Teresa Ellis, Trina Faulk,
beard of adding a bit.of cornstarch to the water and that
·
if a bll help. However, I accidentally stumbled into some· Vanessa Folmer, Becky Fultz,
thing which really makes the windows shine without any Sandy Garnes, Jennifer Grate,
stre8klng. Add a tablespoon or two of fabric softener to Crystal Hall, Mary Ann Hoff.
the water when washlne windows and you cannot help but · man, Jayne Jlutchison, Karen
be pleased with the shine. Paper towels are fine for the' Hysell, Vicki Johnston, Cheryl
pollablng, I tblnk.-MitS. K. W.
Kennedy, Jackie King, Paul
Polly's Problem ••IIIIi!liltlllliRI--~ Klein, Siindra Little, Laraine
DEAR POU.Y-I cannot wear elastic-topped 88•
M c E I haneY. Duane
klell because of circulatory trouble so have a terMcLaughlin, Denise Marshall,
rlble Ume buying appropriate socks. I can get a
Cathy Meadows, Vickie Might,
good grade in stretcb nylon but' !hey work down my
Scott Napper, Debbie Osborne,
heel futo ' my shoe 10 are worse than nothing. Has
John Partlow, Faith Perrin,
anyone a remedy for this? I buy the largest size so
Bobby Powers, Trudy Roach,
It Is not that they are too short In the foot. The
Suzy Samuels, Timothy Scites,
nonstretch kind are l!lways a 'heavier weight and
these light onea .are fine until I walk. Hoping for a
Kimberly Sebo, Debbi.Shelton,
.iiiOtililuiiiiitloiiln._MRS_.
.
L•.H
ititttt'M.
ltil_ _ _ _ __ . . '

SETTY CANARY

abou t.

Sca ll op
Trim
Aspirin

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lCIW'"'l

1970 and 1971. Teachers from
all over the world attend . She is
also a charter member of the
National Baton Clinics having
attended the first national in
Miami, Fla. in 1965, and the
fourth national in Milwaukee,
Wise.
Recently married to Bruce
Wallace, South Local School
District school teacher, Gloria
has taught at numerous clinics.
She began dancing and twirling
at the age of seven and has
been a teacher since she was
sixteen. Mrs. Wallace has
studios in both Meigs and
Gallia Counties and has
students from a five county
area.
The Meigs GIIH!ttes, first
twirling corps of the five·
county ·area , was organized by
Mr~. Wallace over seven years
ago. She organized the Gallia
County Glo.ettes about five
years ago. In addition to
pcivate student work, Mrs.
Wallace
has
also
choreographed dances and
twirling routines for the Meigs
High School majorettes for the
past two years, and this. past
year taught baton to the North
Gallia High School majorettes.
She has studios 'in Pomeroy
and Gallipolis. Classes both
places have been suspended
until May 3.

relations with Dr. and Mn. R.
R. Pickens showing slides of
Africa and program on
children and youth. Hostesses
are Mrs. Olan Knapp and Mrs.
Uoyd Wright.
.
RAClNE ' American Legion
Auxiliary 'fllesday, 7:31) p.m.
:at post boo)e.
EASTERN Athletic Boosten
Tuesday 8 p.m. at high I!Cbool.
Plana for basketball~~:;:: ­
on April 28 will be cc
Tickets to basketball dliuler
may be purChased at Nelson's
Drug Store.
CIIURCll WOMEN United of
Meigs County, planniilg session
for May Fellowship Day, 1:30
Tuesday, at the Enterpriae
United Methodist Church. Kay
Women to atteoo.

rQIIy
, there should be no sales tax since I pay for ·
them th 1tampa that are a rebate for payinJI cash at the
atcn 111!1 I flel the aales_ tax has already 1ieen paid. I
paid tax on the full amount at the store where_ I got the
1tampt 8lld I get no rebate on that tax.-DOROTHY W.

Dot
Scoop:

9.00.

7.50.

Weber, Beverly Wilcox,
Beverly Will, Robert Will.
EIGHTH - Kathy Baker,
Katrina Baley, Tom Batey,
Bruce Blackston, Bren6a
Bolin, Sandra Carleton, George
Carper, Debra Caruthers, Ida
Casci, Pam Clonch, David
Cole, Karen Coleman, Ginger
Cullums, Patty Eblln, Cherie
Fry, John Fultz, Crystal Glaze,
Margaret Griffith, Darla
Harper, James Hawley, Andrew Hoover, Debbie Janey,
James Kennedy, Mona King,
Keith Kline, Max Laudermill,
Tami Lee, Mike Magnotta,
Charles Marshall, Tammy
Mowery, Kimberly Ohlinger,
Judy Radford; Bruce Reed,
Rebecca Roush, Kathy Rupe,
Mary Ruschell,
Bobby
Schneider, Edward Sisson,
Judy Smith, Tammy Snider,
Tamra Stanley, George
stewart, Michael Swick, Liaa
Thomas, Donna Thornton,
Gregory VanMeter, Jack Well,
Terry Wahley.

By BETI'Y CANARY
A young friend, a prospective June bridegroom, came
DEAR POLLl[-Tura should srray her carpet bag
to
me for advice. "Could you give me some rules," he
purse with hair spray so it wU not r~b off on her
ask~.
"on how to get along with my prospective mother·
clothes. Flrlt teat bottom of bag.-WIWE
in-law?"
DEAR GIIUB-My llrtwa
nk off oallcldI am not a mother·in·law but I hope some day to be one. .
. celan• elllla1 ud wllea I eom
te lbe lhGD wllere
Therefore I was more than happy to draw up a starter
. . K ... Pili!
u wHII t\nell- list for him. Perhaps some day my own sons-ln·law will
~~~
· apny IIIII&amp; II aa lie marbt IDd · want a copy. .,
.
· avdaMI 18 YlrletJ, depiarlmlll&amp; IIIII llll'tlware ltorn.
1. Approach a mother·ili:law's dining table with en·
De Nlll tile iillreedl11 lief- li111q ·a etll 10 II tl be thuslasm.
Always say, "This is tJ!e best tuna caaaerole
liN JM _.., !lie eeneet IIPI'IY for tile material
I
ever
ate!"
(:Be sure'that it is a tuna caAerole.)
_ . fW ...... fllr ltq.-POIJ;Y
.
2. Never snore while listening to her family dlscuu
~APIIIImDIIM AUH.)
her old boyfriends. Look Interested and alert but not
jealous. Don't make remarks such as, "Sure I know him!
YM will rml•• i tllllar If Polly..un yov fanrlte
Isn't he the guy picked up for drunken drlvlll&amp;last week?"
Pet Peeve, PtiiJ'a Probleta II' lOla·.·
3. If asked about your political jeanlngs, It might be
1111 tl 1 JftMes. Write Ptlly Ia an el WI Dewl. . per. best to simply smile ~nd say, "Give me the middle of the

'sr.="

MIDDLEPORT, 0.
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Circle Meets
In Home at
Stiversville ·

:~~-::~;dies

Planting Project
"T"
.1.

Mom-in-Law R~les for the Groom

:;r.r:

MEETING TODAY
POMEROY
The
Providence School of Religion,
Rocking sub:dlstrict, will
conclu~ wlth a meeting at 3 ·
p.m. this afternoon at the
Naomi Baptist Church. All
th011e enrolled for the several
weeks course are asked to be
present. .

I

CHESTER Grange 2609
Tuesday, 8 p.m. All members
urged to attend.
PAST .MATRONS
of
Pomeroy · Eastern Stars
Tuesday at the home of Mrs.
Alonzo Custer at 7;30 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
WIWWOOD Garden Club
Wednesday, I0:30a.m. home of
Hilda Yeauger. Cook-out and
na lure tour.
WOMEN'S
Christian
.Temperance
Union
of
, BY GOWIE CLENDENIN
SOMETimiGOW-Nonew chrlstenlnggownforMary
PORTLAND - Dah Roush Pomeroy, 2p.m. Wednesday at
lhli
United
Methodist
Church.
Teresa
Byer! The dark haired daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
and Goldie Clendenin co-hosted
POMEROY • Middleport
Byer of Mlddlemrt wore a gown well over a century old for
the Emma Smith Circle of the
Lions
Club,
Wednesday
noon,
her christening Swtday at the Heath United Methodisi
R.L.D.S. Church 'l'hursday
Church in Middleport. The handmade embroidered gown was
evening in this reporter's home Pomeroy United Methodist
Church; Election of officers. ·
on Stiversville hill.
OHIO VALLEY Commandry
a gift to Mrs. T. G. Hllldore, Mary Teresa's grandmother,
In charge were Eula Proffitt, 24, Knight Templars, stated
from the late Miss Sally Weaver of the Racine-Letart area
leader, and Lucy Taylor, conclave, · 7:30 p.m. Wed·
many years ago and carefully packed away until it was first
program chairman. The lesson nesday, Pomeroy Masonic
used tO years ago for the cbrlstening of Julie Byer.
was "The Power of Christ"
Temple. Potluck dinner at 6:30
.
from Helen B. Lancaster's
"Someone .Touched Me,"
and
dealing with the woman in the
crowd who was Instantly
TWIN.CITY Shrlnettes, 7:30
.
'
healed by touching the edge of
Thursday,
Col.
and
Southern
His garment, and how the
crowd marveled at this man's Ohio Electric Co. Plans will be
made for attending spring
~0
limitless power.
ceremonial in Columbus May
Men and women may only
measure the degree of this 6.
POMEROY - The planting held at Logan yesterday.
•
power we receive by: What we
Becky
Windon.
The
advisors,
at
the
Letart
Falls
Cemeterv
Mrs
.
Wilson
Carpenter
·
are, what we give to others,
what we say, and what we do. Leota Young and Lucille being carried out by the_jjend presided at the meeting which.
While Ilah and Eula were Ridenour talked about the 0' the River Garden Club will carried out the theme "April
Love." Members responded to
preparing to serve refresh· varioWJ projects available and be completed this spring.
Meeting Tuesday night at the roll call with a remark on signs ·
ments a business meeting and project selections were made.
Nola
Young
served
refresh·
home
· of Mrs. Ben Philson, ol spring.
_
silent auction were held, and
ments
and
Becky
Windon
was
Racine,
members
arranged
to
Mrs.
Clifford
Morris
talked ·
donations made to the pledge
in charge of recreation. _ have two dogwood trees on wild fiowers in the area
fund .
planted and discussed what describing them as. those
New rugs were shown and Nancy Ridenour.
The TNT club dls.cussed other shrubs would . com· flowers which · are native .. to .
women divided them to sen for
flower
bulb sales and .~very plUnent the plantings. &amp;iveral ',certain areas and gOO\VJW\Iho,\lli!oJ
the church. They were made by
member
Insurance at their members' of the club attended '· cultivation, She mentioned th~r
Betty Johnston of Morning
April
.12th
meeting. Foui ad· the open meeting Of the Wind· · bluets, violets, r.ose·, dandelion, ··.
Star.
Pearl Proffitt asked ihe visors~llended. Outside games lng 'I'I'ull Garden Club beld sweet williams, anem9ne; red.
blessing on the ·refreshments. were enjoyed by the 14 Wednesday night at the Ohio " stars, dogwood and redbud, ,
She won the door prize. Others members after the business Po\Yer'Co., and several we.nt to and suggest an afternoon stroll .
attending were Tricia Roush, meeting._ Sandra van Meter. the Region 11 spring meeting through a wooded area to view
The Meigs CoWity Better
the many colorful flowers.
Beulah Roush, Golda Gillilan
Livestock 4-H Dairy Club held · were served by Mrs. Coffey
Mrs . Morris · listed danand Anna Foreman .
its
&lt;rganizational
meeting
at
and
Randy
Johnson.
The
next
delions
.and dock as b\!ing good ·
Several allsent because of
illness were Clarence Proffitt's the home of the advisor, Roy meeting will be Monday, May to eat as well as nutritious. She
wife, Myrtle, and daughter, Holter with IS members 8th, at the County Extension concluded her program by··
Earlene Stobart, may have present. Officers elected were Office .' - Grant Johnson, suggesting that we look at wild
flowers, love them, · but put
been visiting him at Holzer's Jan Holter, president; Melanie reporter.
Dean,
vice
president;
Mark
A
demonstration
by
Byron
them in their native habitat.
where he had surgery.
Mora,
secretarY;
Ed
Parker,
Miller,
manager
of
Royal
Oak
Mrs . Robert · Kuhn gave
Patty (Mrs. Danny) Robah Ia
there also'with a new daughter newsreporter; Janis Carnahan Farm highlighted the April devotions reading two poems,
·
mee ting of the Me1gs County "In My Back Yard,·"·and "Stop
(Sherri-Lynne). We look for- and Mary Mora, recreation
leaders;
treasurer
is
Tony
Better
Livestock Beef 4-H . Me, It's Spring," with a prayer
ward to having them back at .
Carnahan. Co-t!hairmen of Club. Tbeclubmetatthe Royal !rpm · a collection called
church soon.
.
Health are Stephanie Radford 0 a k · Farm. Twenty-!h· ree "Sidewalk. Prayers."
and Alan Holter. Co-t!halrmen members watched Mr. Miller
The door prize was won by
of aafety are Eddie Holter and trim catUe's feet and give lips Mrs. Kuhn. Mrs. Ernest
Lester Parker. Club dues were on finer points of trinuning I!R~ Wingett will host the May IS
set at $1 and an educational grooming. Changes of various- meeting of the club. Some
e
~MIG
tour was planned. Dairy rules In the ·Junior Fair discussion was held on
The Bashan Bunch 4-H club projecta were diacasaed by schedule were reviewed. Mrs. changing the meeting night.
met April lith, at advisor Mary members and parents as there Miller served refreshments The hostess assisted by her
Rose's home. There were 11 are new pilot projecls . after the meeting. Plans were mother, Mrs. Mina Lewis,
members and '2 advisors avallsble this year. The next made for a · tour of the served refreshments. A bowl of
present with each member meeting will be at Tony and Southeast Research Center .at yellow and white narcissus
showing an item they bad Janb Carnahan's on May 2nd. Carpenter on May 11 at 6 p.m. centered the table.
made since the last meeting. - Ed Parker, reporter.
- Randy Jc.hnson, reporter.
Tips on accessories for dlf.
The 4-H Pleaaure Riders met Funfashlons and Clothing
ferent styles were given. Final April 10, at the fairgrounds. Construction fihn strips and
SON BORN
sewing ideas are to be given at The sixteen members and slides were viewed when the
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
the next meeting on April24. - three advisors made final Star Stitcher J: L.'s met Thurs- Mrs. Gary S~ope of 811 High
Man~e Rose.
plans for the club's attending. day evening at Jan Holter's St. , Middleport, are ·an·
The second year of OUtdoor the Meredith Manor's riding home. T. B. skin !eats and food nouncing the birth of a son,
Cookery was selected aa a club cline on April 30th. David handler's examinations will be Aaron Matthew,. April! at the
project when the Pine Grove Neue gave a demonstration taken ilao. Advisor, Mrs. Roy Holzer Medical center. 1ite .
Pals met at the Scout Hall In abQut lYinll !mota. A text was Holter, showed different seama Infant weighed six pounds, 14'
Chester. The 15 members glvenonthelillltomyandsome and gave instructions about ounces. Grandparents are Mr.
elected new officers, voted on common faulta of horse.i. - pre-washing materlai8 after and Mrs. Perl Watts, Duncan
the club name, and decided the Marcia IJIIlani, reporter.
getting the lnformaUon from Falls, and Mr. and Mrs. Carlos
arnolD\! of dues for the year. · The Melp County Shepherds the bolt enda when purchaSe ill ·Swope, ZaneavWe. Mn. Jessie
Officers · elected were: held their April meeting at the made. Lola Walker served Simms, IDoomfield, Mrs. lcle
president, Pam Kautz; vice Extension Office with 10 refreshments to the eight Swope, and Mrs. Frieda 'wayte
president, Nola Young; rnemben •!lending and their members and one advisor both of Zaneavilie, afe great~
secretary, Barbara Douglas; advisor, Mn. Coffey. The club attending .
grandmothers.
treasurer, Nancy Ridenour; Is plarlrq to attend the LAmb
Health chairman, Tammy Show at the Athens' Junior
Filch; safety chairman, Kathy Fair building on April Mth, and
Newell; riews reporter, Jayne a Lamb Sale Aprillltb at the
Smith; recreation leader, aame place • .Refreahmenla

DEAR POU.Y-My Pet Peeve Is having to pay a &amp;!lies

t¥ on~" " obtain~ with trading stamps. If they were

\

be Completed .···

96 Make Honor Listings Me· 8 4-H
MIDDLEPORT- Ninety-six Melanie Simmons, Rebecca
'IJ.
students of Meigs Junior High Thomas, June Wamsley, Club Np--..
School, Middleport, have been Raymond Waugh, Duane

Get Cleaner Windows

Ottoman
Witch ..,.;;~;::;rl
Britch :

l

SUNDAY
RACINE CHAPTER 134 1
OES, observing Go to Church
Sunday, 10:45 a.m. Sunday at
Ra cine First Baptiat Church
for all officers and members.
Rev: Charles Norris will
deliver serinon.

MEIGS COUNTY RECORDER ELEANOR ROBSON, ''Miss
Republican," these days Ia wearing an attractive red, white and
blue scarf with the word "Vote" }rinted on the front and back.
The scarf was a gift from Mr. &amp;lid Mrs. Don Spires.

'

Mrs. Parker

Katie's Korner

MARIE HAWK REPORTS that for the first time in the 31
years sbe has Uved on Osborne..$.-, Pomeroy, the street has been
swept and cleaned by v!llage employes. The ~~ sweeper was
used, and according to Marie, the street needs sweeping again . .

.o,.._.. •
,
jjq({(W

· Social .Calendar ·.

JAMES YOUNG OF REEDS'liLLE has been plagued with
bad luck recenUy. A week ago Sunday he suffered minor injuries
when a \Ire exploded at his employment at LaOOmark Service
Station.
On Monday the Chester Fire Department was called to West .
Shade Road where a car was on fire. When the firemen, Ross
Cleland, Harold Newell and Don Ridenour arrived, they found
that the car belonged to Jamea Young.
Mter the fire was exUnguiahed Young, with the aid of his
father, went to move the car off the highway but In the moving,
the car went off the hl&amp;hway, over an embankment, and into a
creek where it sulmerged!

by~~~

Bride Showered

Mr. and Mrs. Mark Davis

'

'

program whlch·was. conducted The contest conducted by Mn.
by Mrs. Louis Grueser.. It In· Welby Whaley .was won · by
eluded "Sickle ~11 Anemia . Mrs. Louis Grueser and Mrs. ·
Treatment". by Mrs. William Goeglein. .
--:
·
Folmer; "liard Water, a Heart
Mrs. Harold Blackston will
Saver" by Mrs: Amos host the May meeting with
Leonard; "Pap Smear . for Mrs . Abbott to have the
Breast Cancer" by Mrs. program and Mrs. Witte the
William Grueser; "Bleeding" contest. A clessert course was
by Mrs . James Conkle; served to those named and
"Burns" by Mrs. Grueser; Mrs. W. A. Morgan and Mrs.
·"Falls" by Mr&gt;J. Scott' Folmer. OUver ·Clark.

projects were discussed.

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r····:W.w!XX
·HW;~""'"'"'j

••ylq

•••=--

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•

road every time." (Now, 1001e molhera-ln-law are golnc
to sniff and aay, "That'• the trouble wltb youn1 peop~
today-all soclallatt-an wantinc us to etve them IOIIIethlng!")
4. When in the home of parenta-ln-law, watcb the!r
c~olce of TV progr111111. Tbey'U pre up a diugbter easily. •
Carol BurneU Is another lbin.l entirely.
5. Never sit down tao ban[ Almoat every ·mother-in·
law has an antique chair ot two. (',olllllfl'nl without look·
lng strains botb old flll'l!ltun 8lld lrleriil17 ielaticiJII.
8. Offer to eut IJ'IU or lbovtl .eeordiDJ to the
seuoni. It'• Ill rllbt te walt until ~ an c1o11t before
making the after. lltltuNS can J[III1J u much u deedL
7. Never IICI'atcb an Itcb. A mothlr-I!Haw loatbel a
scratcher.
8. Foreet the ftnt lleYeo rulu · aDd j01t be yourself.
Chances are the belt· they'll ever bave to uy about you
is, "Well, he's no Hank Sallderaon but Ellie love• him."

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·Better Health Club
Helps
Cancer
Crusade
·
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POMEROY- Acontribution
was made to the Cancer ·
Crusade when the Rock
Springs Better Health Club met
."fhursday afternoo,n at the
home or l\1rs. Arlee Abbott.
Mrs. Fred Goeglein con·
dueled the meeting whic~
opened with devotions by the

~hapl!lin,

Mrs, Abbott. Slie
read uc;tean
Our Lives,"
and the 51st Psalm. A com- ·
mittee reported on · illnesses
during the past three months .'
Named to a new health committee were Mrs. William
Grueser and Mrs. Scott
Folmer. Money making

uP

.

'

It was noted that next month

officers will be elected. Mrs.
George Skinner, Mrs. Mark
Grueser, and Mrs. William
Witte will take a treat to the
infirmary in May.
Mrs. Witte prepared the

.

Mrs. Houdasbelt Hosts A uxiliilry
'
MIDDLEPORT .
Remembrances for a veteran
at the Chillicothe Veterans
Hospital were arranged during

liiiiiii...._

.

a meeting of ·th e Past
Presidents Club of the
American Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39,

Pomeroy, Wednesday night at
the home of Mrs .· Harry
Houdashelt.
Devo lions to open the
meeting conducted by Mrs.
Ray Fox were given by Mrs.
Ellen Couch. She used scriptures from Luke and Jeremiah,
along with a meditation and a
POMEROY - Mrs. Paul Eichinger.
poem entitled "My Time Is In
Eiching&amp;, Mrs. Don Grueser, Otbe~s presenting gifls to Your Hands." The pledge to
and Mrs. Max Eichinger en· Mrs. Wallace were Miss Sonja the flag was included in the
tertained recently with a bridal Ohlinger, Mrs. Annie Chapman opening ritual.
.
shower honoring Mrs. Bruce and daughter, Jennifer, Mrs.
Plans were made for an
Wallace; nee Gloria Buck, at Ada Nease, Mrs. Becky An· auction to be held at the May
the Pomeroy United Methodist derson,
Mrs .
Frances meeting with Mrs. Harry ·
Church.
Goeglein, Miss Jennifer Goble, Davis, Pomeroy, to be hostess.
A color sclieme of yellow, Mrs. Nancy Grueser, Mrs. Mrs. Ernest Powell will be in
green, pink and white was used Sally Walters, Mrs. Charlotte charge of recreation. A quiz
on cakes de corated with Dillard, Mrs. Helen Blackston, was conducted with prizes
miniature umbrellas and Mrs. Betty Hutchinson, Julia going to the winners.
wedding bells. Mints made by and Joyce, Mr. and Mrs .
Mrs. Houdashelt and Mrs.
Mrs. Paul Eichinger and Mrs. Robert Buck, Miss Barbara George Bearhs served a salad
Grueser carried out the color Smith, Mrs. Jo Stalnaker, Mrs. course. Attending besides
scheme. The nut cups were Mary Gibbs, Mrs. Nancy those named were Mrs. George
small wedding bell replicas. Hubbard. Mrs. Linda Boyd, Hackett, Sr., Mrs. J. M.
Punch and coffee were served. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Hood, Mr. Thornton , Mrs.
Gerald .
An umbrella centerpiece and Mrs. Paul Haptonsljill, Wildermuth , Mrs. Frank
completed the setting of the Mrs . Marjorie Walburn, M~s. Cheesebrew, Mrs. Ben
lace covered table .
Darrell Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs. Neutziing, Mrs. Harry Davis,
Games were played with Karl Owen, Mrs. J. J. Davis, Mrs. Oian Knapp, and Mrs. Jed
prizes going to Mrs. Dwight Mrs. Bob Hoeflich, Mrs. Nora · Webster, Sr.
Wallace, Mrs. Jim Adams, and Eason and daughter, Linda,
It was reported that Mr. and
Mrs. Kathy Wallace. Other Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Smith, Mrs. Charles Sauer are in
guests at the shower were Mrs. Miss Linda Sauvage, Miss Hawaii with their daughter,
Dottie Musser, Mrs . Dorothy Kathy Werry, Mr. and Mrs. Sally, and her husband who
Sheets, Mrs. Pat White, Mrs. Myron Miller, Debbie Taylor, recently suffered a heart al·
.Ernestine Werry, Mrs. Linda Mrs. Mary Lou Hood and tack.
Boyles, Mrs. Nola Swisher, daughter, Vicki , Peggy
Mrs . Peggy Taylor and Neigler, Lisa Warner,
daughter, Brenda, Mrs. Carol
Send A
Mr. and Mrs. John Blake,
Koker, Miss Peggy O'Brien, Miss Maxine Matson, Jack
Valerie Koker, Mrs. Phyllis Matson, Mrs. William Malson ,
FloWeri~g
Skinner, Mrs. Beatrice Buck, Ridgeway Thomas, Mrs. A. R.
Mrs. Golda Roush, Mrs. Lois Pullins and daughter, Jerry,
To A Friend
Hawley, Mrs. Helen Sauer, Mr. and Mrs. Asa Bradbury,
They Help lo Heal &amp;
Mrs .. Maxine Griffith and Mary Agnes and Mickey Roy,
Mend .
daughter, Karen, Miss Becky Mr. and Mrs. Lionel Boggs,
Radford, Mrs. Martha An· Mr. and Mrs. Norman Hysell,
derson, Mrs. Margaret Mr. and Mrs. Ed Ihle, the Rev.
Eichinger, Mrs. Don Lowery, and Mrs. Dwight Zavitz. Also
Serving: Middleport
Pomeroy,
Gallipolis, 0.
Mrs. Addie Buck, Becky presenting a gift to the couple
&amp; Mason Co., W. Va.
Eichinger and Tammy were the Gallipolis GliH!ttes.

VA\()()E VUA\~S
ties to the .past

Wed in December
MIDDLEPORT - Inl! 2p.m.
candlelight service on Dec. 31,
1971, Miss Teresa Nlcinsky,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
George Niclll8ky, Middleport,
aoo Mr. Mark Davis, son of Mr.
and Mrs. W,Ulie Davis, Mid·
·dleport, exchanged wedding
vows. '
The Rev. RauiUn Moyer
officiated at the ceremony
conducted at the Middleport
Church of Christ. Nuptial
music wa~ presented by Mrs.
Chester Erwin, Middleport,
with selections including
"Exoc;tus," 11 Love Is Blue,"
aoo "Romeo and Juliet."
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride was attired In
a white vel•et goivn fashioned
with long full sleeves and an
empire waist. Her chapel
length veil of illusion edged In
lace and a blusher feU from a
velvet pillbox hat. The bride
carried a bouquet of muma and
roees tipped In' blue.
Mrs. Debbie Murray of
Columbus served as maid of
hon&lt;r for the bride. She wore a
fioor length blue velvet gown in'
identical style to the one worn
by the bride. Her headpiece
was a matching velvet bow
with netting, and she carried a
single white mum tied with
blue and white streamers.
Best man for the brlde~room

was Mr. Gary Walker of
Racine. Ushers were Mr. Chris
McDade, Columbus, and' Mr.
Kevin Wolfe, Racine, nephews
of t~e groom. All male
members of the wedding party
wore dark suli8 with blue shiris
and ties.
For her daughter's wedding,
, Mrs. Nlclnslcy was in a blue
ensemble and wore a mum
corsage. Mrs. Davis was attired In a brown dress and also
had a mum corsage.
A re~eptlon honoring the
couple was held Immediately
following the ceremony with
women of the Middleport
Church serving as hostesses.
l'&gt;!r. Davili Is employed at the
Stauffer Chemical Co. in Point
Pleasant, and hls wife
manages a tape exchange in
Middleport owned by Dave
Salbbury. The couple reside on
SecOnd Ave. In Middleport.

"'

Out·of·town guests attending
the wedding and reception
were Mr . and Mrs. Ben
Harrison , Logan, W. Va. ,
grandparents of the bride; Mr.
and Mrs . John Nicinsky,
Chapmanville, W. Va., also
grandparents of the bride;
Mrs. Jack George and sons,
Tracy and T. J., Logan, W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. non
Maynard and daughter,
Tammy, Chapmanville, W.
Va. : Mr. ·and Mrs. .Ben Can·
tebury, Richard, Tina and
Rena of Dayton ; Mr. and Mrs.
Ron McDade, Chris and
Mandy, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Victor Wolfe and
children, Kevin and Vicki,
Racine ; Mr. 8)ld Mrs. Gary
Dill, Steve, Tim, Kathy and
Clody, Eagle Ridge; Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Dill, Morning Star;
and Mr. and Mrs. Ben Petrel
and Mrs. Addie Petrel, Racine.

Plant

Dudley's Florist

CiritiNA.··.·' ·sPRiNG

POMEROY - Donations
lrom several families for the
use of hotipltal equipment were
acknowledged during Thursday night's meeting of the
Laurel Cliff Better Health Club
at the home of Mrs, Bertha
Parker.
The donations were received
from the Edwards and the
PlckeM famlllea. A note was
read from Charles Diehl for a
remembrance. Mrs. Parker
reported on hospital supplies
available.
· Mrs. Ernest Powell con· •
dueled the meeting with Mn.
Uoyd Wright giving devotions
from Luke .11. The Lord's
Prayer and the pledge to the
flag were given.
Readings Included "Would
You Cheat Your Child?" by
Mrs. Parker, and the Indian
version of the 23rd Psalm by
Mn. Powell. Mrs. Clarence
Curtis and Mrs. Lou Diehl led ,
in an Informal songfest:
Contests were conducted by
Mrs. Parker with Mrs. James
Gllmore and Mrs. Wright
winning prius.
Mn. Wright will host the
May 11 meeting with Mrs.
Merlin 'I'I'acy as the co-hostess.
Attending besides those named
were Mn..Robert Bowen, Mn.
Allen Eichinger, Mrs. Carman
Evana; Mn. Paul Frick, and a
guest, 'Mrs. Thomas Parker.

SIZE

6~·12

By Katie Crow
POMEROY -Mr. and Mn. Claude Roy, Racine, had a
narrow escape recenUy when a valve on an oxygen tank he was
using .broke, letting oxygen escape throughout their home.
Coming to the couple's rescue WIIS their son, Bob and
Richard Dugan of Letart Falls. A tiny spark would have caused a
tragic explosion. .
Mr. Roy, who lllffers from black lung, haB to have oxygen
around the clock. Rest aliSUred that a new part has been otdered
for the tank.

BERNICE MAY, MIDDLEPORT, has four SOI!ll. Now this is
wonderful, but can you Imagine what a job It Is for a mother to
keep track of four boys who are playing lltUe league, and pony
league and all on different teams! She won't know which game to
attend, or when.

an

Don'tlook
back, but yesteryear's
fashions are gaining on
you. It's a time for fashion nostalgia

from head to toe. Take Thorn MoAn's

TilE SYRACUSE PI' Ais sponsoring a much needed project,
a teachen' lounge. A former· office room at the Syracuse
Elementary hu been converted with palnling and furnishing
being done by Shirley lleeflle and Etta May Norton .

new Dapper Dans, for instance. These new
two·tone lace·ups feature old·timt pattern favorites
in the latest color and material combinations. And they're
design~d to complement todoy's opdoltd classics such

as pin stripe suits With wide lapels, bell,bottom pants. and
even wide brimmed hats. So. , . ro·llve a tittle ...
with Dapper Dans by Thorn MeAn. Available In a
variety of boot and oxford styles. And, with Dapper Dens,
you don 't have to be the last of the great spenders.
Only
1

FOR THE FISHERMEN who are . interested, the Ohio
DepariJ_nellt ri Natural Relources report that Forked Run Lake
ianormal,lfflllcbllymuddy. Trolitare beq taken on cheese and
llllall splm.-. in the dam area during the mlll'lling and evening
bolll'l. Crapplea are hitting on IIDBD spinners below the spillway.
Bank filbennen have been liiOBt succes$1.

15.99

EVELYN WEU.IS VERY DISTURBED over the rouditlon
ri tbe Saulb Bethel U!llted Methodiat Cemetery located on Silver
Ridge in ~· Tll1mlhlp.
AcCG'din&amp; to Mn. Well, people viliting the cemetery throw
dilcarded llmren owr the fence in full view of the cemetery,
rather than lbrowing lbem in containen. A aad situation .

heritage house
Formerly Kips Shoe Store

OHIO

AND YOU GO TOGETHER · ~· - 1

' •. J-'

IN THE AOCOUNT OF THE Rutland Branch of the Pomeroy
Nailmal Bank niovtng to Ita facilities over the weekend it
alated that the new buDding waa located on Seventh Street. We
ltand to be correCted, It Ia lcicated oo Salem Street.

new

.'l,.,!l&lt;it.

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TilE APPLE GROVE ME'IHODIST CHURCH will sponsor a
nmunage ale Tbureday, Friday and Saturday in the newly
deanted Community Hall at Letart Fa114. The sale will give
u.- atlaldlng a chance to see the work that has been dooe on
lbeoldstructure. TbeAlewUI beheld from 9a.m. to 4p.m. daily.

Cotalma·
COTTON SEPARATES
... really fit into your
life. Bright, exuberant
styles. Catalina's
famous comfortable
fit. All in cool, cor·efr&lt;to
Cotton thot looks great
and launders with ease.
Cotolina Separates is
what your life is all
obout, St. Tropez
Shirt: 9.00. Clossic
Ottoman Pont: 12.00

Hosts Club

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·'.,·
:

MONDAY
BASEBALL meeting
Monday at Club Restaurant,
Racine, 7:30 p.m. Collches
needed for sWllliler progam.
All Interested persoM urg~ to
attend.
RACINE LODGE 481 F&amp;AM
. apeclal meeting Monday to
confer the Master Masori
degree. All Master Maso111
invited.
TUESDAY '
AMERICAN LEGION
Auxiliary Drew Webster Post
39 Tuesday 7:3tl p.m. at post
home. Program, Foreign

BIRTII ANNOUNCED
WEST COLUMBIA - Mr.
and Mrs. Ben 0 . Roush
received w&lt;rd from Rockford,
Ill., from their son and
daughter-in·law, Mr. and Mn . .
David E. Roush, of the birth of
a granddaughter Tuesday,
March 14. The Infant has been
named Martella Colleen,
weighed I lbs. and 9 ozs. The
Roushes have two other
children, Lucinda Dawn, 7'&gt;!1
and Do9na Gall, 9. Maternal

grandparents are Rev . and
Mrs. Hubert Forrester, Rockford, Ill. and a greatgrandmother is Luvena
Rainey, Letart, W. Va.

VISITS BROTHER
POMEROY - Harold E.
Davis, Columbus, security
officer at the Neil House, spent
the weekend with his brotber,
Richard Davis, Pomeroy.

Mrs. Walhce is in Spain

Study, Sightseeing
Trip Taken in Spain
POMEROY - Gloria Buck
Wallace is in Torremolinos,
Spain attending classes. in
dance and baton offered by the
International Twirling
Teachers Institute.
Mrs. Wallace left Columbus
Saturday by jet for New York
City where she joined the ITII
chartered flight for Spain via
PortugaL She will be there for
eight days studying under well:,
known registered teachers
including Alan Kramer of
Pennsylvania.
The relaxed teaching
schedule of the lifl allows
ample time lor optional side
trips to Granada, Seville,
Malaya, and historica l points.
An excursion -ro- Tangier in
Morocco, North Africa with a
visit to a Casbah and market
place, a bull fight and a
banquet are included on the
Thursday agenda.
Headquarters for the
Teachers Institute is the
Playamor, considered one of
Europe's largest and finest
hotel
resorts on
the
Mediterranean Sea . It contains
lour swimming pools, one of
which is the largest on the
Costa del SoL
Mrs. Wallace is a charter
member of the ITII and this is
the third international institute
she has attended. The first two
were held in the Bahamas in

CoMma·
COTTON SEPARATES
... really lit into your
life. Bright, exuberant
,s tyles. Catalina's
famous comfortoble
fit. All in cbol
care free Cotton' thot
looks great and
launders with ease,
Carolina Separates is
what your life is all
obout. Cone Print Tonk
T_op: 8.00. Ottoman
Scooter: 11 .00,

Separo1es Ioyer on the fashion

in stri~ing colors and textures,

to ploy one against another for
exciting new effects. The
loo~s are contemporary and

full of life, Catalina makes
I ife more wearable, because
these Carolina Separates
ore Fortrel" polyester.
Spring Tweed Sport Vest:
36,00. Boucle Lang Sleeve
Turtle Neck: 16.00. Spring
Tweed Slant Flote Slocks:

24.00.

I

1o u1n~ers

with

ease. Cotol ina
Separates is

what your
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life is oil

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named to tile honor roll for the
POLLY'S POINTERS fifth six weeks grading period.
To be named to the roll
students must maintain a
grade average of "B" or
better. Named to the roll were:
With Fabric Softener
SEVENTH - Penny Adams,
Teresa Brown, Dale Browning,
By POLLY CRAMER
Kellee Burdette, Marilee
Cassell, Cathy Coleman, Mark
DEAR POU.Y-I know many of the girls are Uke I Davis, Robin Dewhurst, Mary
am in that they cannot stand dingy windows. I have used
Durst, Paula Eichinger,
window cleansers, ammonia and detergents and finally
Teresa Ellis, Trina Faulk,
beard of adding a bit.of cornstarch to the water and that
·
if a bll help. However, I accidentally stumbled into some· Vanessa Folmer, Becky Fultz,
thing which really makes the windows shine without any Sandy Garnes, Jennifer Grate,
stre8klng. Add a tablespoon or two of fabric softener to Crystal Hall, Mary Ann Hoff.
the water when washlne windows and you cannot help but · man, Jayne Jlutchison, Karen
be pleased with the shine. Paper towels are fine for the' Hysell, Vicki Johnston, Cheryl
pollablng, I tblnk.-MitS. K. W.
Kennedy, Jackie King, Paul
Polly's Problem ••IIIIi!liltlllliRI--~ Klein, Siindra Little, Laraine
DEAR POU.Y-I cannot wear elastic-topped 88•
M c E I haneY. Duane
klell because of circulatory trouble so have a terMcLaughlin, Denise Marshall,
rlble Ume buying appropriate socks. I can get a
Cathy Meadows, Vickie Might,
good grade in stretcb nylon but' !hey work down my
Scott Napper, Debbie Osborne,
heel futo ' my shoe 10 are worse than nothing. Has
John Partlow, Faith Perrin,
anyone a remedy for this? I buy the largest size so
Bobby Powers, Trudy Roach,
It Is not that they are too short In the foot. The
Suzy Samuels, Timothy Scites,
nonstretch kind are l!lways a 'heavier weight and
these light onea .are fine until I walk. Hoping for a
Kimberly Sebo, Debbi.Shelton,
.iiiOtililuiiiiitloiiln._MRS_.
.
L•.H
ititttt'M.
ltil_ _ _ _ __ . . '

SETTY CANARY

abou t.

Sca ll op
Trim
Aspirin

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lCIW'"'l

1970 and 1971. Teachers from
all over the world attend . She is
also a charter member of the
National Baton Clinics having
attended the first national in
Miami, Fla. in 1965, and the
fourth national in Milwaukee,
Wise.
Recently married to Bruce
Wallace, South Local School
District school teacher, Gloria
has taught at numerous clinics.
She began dancing and twirling
at the age of seven and has
been a teacher since she was
sixteen. Mrs. Wallace has
studios in both Meigs and
Gallia Counties and has
students from a five county
area.
The Meigs GIIH!ttes, first
twirling corps of the five·
county ·area , was organized by
Mr~. Wallace over seven years
ago. She organized the Gallia
County Glo.ettes about five
years ago. In addition to
pcivate student work, Mrs.
Wallace
has
also
choreographed dances and
twirling routines for the Meigs
High School majorettes for the
past two years, and this. past
year taught baton to the North
Gallia High School majorettes.
She has studios 'in Pomeroy
and Gallipolis. Classes both
places have been suspended
until May 3.

relations with Dr. and Mn. R.
R. Pickens showing slides of
Africa and program on
children and youth. Hostesses
are Mrs. Olan Knapp and Mrs.
Uoyd Wright.
.
RAClNE ' American Legion
Auxiliary 'fllesday, 7:31) p.m.
:at post boo)e.
EASTERN Athletic Boosten
Tuesday 8 p.m. at high I!Cbool.
Plana for basketball~~:;:: ­
on April 28 will be cc
Tickets to basketball dliuler
may be purChased at Nelson's
Drug Store.
CIIURCll WOMEN United of
Meigs County, planniilg session
for May Fellowship Day, 1:30
Tuesday, at the Enterpriae
United Methodist Church. Kay
Women to atteoo.

rQIIy
, there should be no sales tax since I pay for ·
them th 1tampa that are a rebate for payinJI cash at the
atcn 111!1 I flel the aales_ tax has already 1ieen paid. I
paid tax on the full amount at the store where_ I got the
1tampt 8lld I get no rebate on that tax.-DOROTHY W.

Dot
Scoop:

9.00.

7.50.

Weber, Beverly Wilcox,
Beverly Will, Robert Will.
EIGHTH - Kathy Baker,
Katrina Baley, Tom Batey,
Bruce Blackston, Bren6a
Bolin, Sandra Carleton, George
Carper, Debra Caruthers, Ida
Casci, Pam Clonch, David
Cole, Karen Coleman, Ginger
Cullums, Patty Eblln, Cherie
Fry, John Fultz, Crystal Glaze,
Margaret Griffith, Darla
Harper, James Hawley, Andrew Hoover, Debbie Janey,
James Kennedy, Mona King,
Keith Kline, Max Laudermill,
Tami Lee, Mike Magnotta,
Charles Marshall, Tammy
Mowery, Kimberly Ohlinger,
Judy Radford; Bruce Reed,
Rebecca Roush, Kathy Rupe,
Mary Ruschell,
Bobby
Schneider, Edward Sisson,
Judy Smith, Tammy Snider,
Tamra Stanley, George
stewart, Michael Swick, Liaa
Thomas, Donna Thornton,
Gregory VanMeter, Jack Well,
Terry Wahley.

By BETI'Y CANARY
A young friend, a prospective June bridegroom, came
DEAR POLLl[-Tura should srray her carpet bag
to
me for advice. "Could you give me some rules," he
purse with hair spray so it wU not r~b off on her
ask~.
"on how to get along with my prospective mother·
clothes. Flrlt teat bottom of bag.-WIWE
in-law?"
DEAR GIIUB-My llrtwa
nk off oallcldI am not a mother·in·law but I hope some day to be one. .
. celan• elllla1 ud wllea I eom
te lbe lhGD wllere
Therefore I was more than happy to draw up a starter
. . K ... Pili!
u wHII t\nell- list for him. Perhaps some day my own sons-ln·law will
~~~
· apny IIIII&amp; II aa lie marbt IDd · want a copy. .,
.
· avdaMI 18 YlrletJ, depiarlmlll&amp; IIIII llll'tlware ltorn.
1. Approach a mother·ili:law's dining table with en·
De Nlll tile iillreedl11 lief- li111q ·a etll 10 II tl be thuslasm.
Always say, "This is tJ!e best tuna caaaerole
liN JM _.., !lie eeneet IIPI'IY for tile material
I
ever
ate!"
(:Be sure'that it is a tuna caAerole.)
_ . fW ...... fllr ltq.-POIJ;Y
.
2. Never snore while listening to her family dlscuu
~APIIIImDIIM AUH.)
her old boyfriends. Look Interested and alert but not
jealous. Don't make remarks such as, "Sure I know him!
YM will rml•• i tllllar If Polly..un yov fanrlte
Isn't he the guy picked up for drunken drlvlll&amp;last week?"
Pet Peeve, PtiiJ'a Probleta II' lOla·.·
3. If asked about your political jeanlngs, It might be
1111 tl 1 JftMes. Write Ptlly Ia an el WI Dewl. . per. best to simply smile ~nd say, "Give me the middle of the

'sr.="

MIDDLEPORT, 0.
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Circle Meets
In Home at
Stiversville ·

:~~-::~;dies

Planting Project
"T"
.1.

Mom-in-Law R~les for the Groom

:;r.r:

MEETING TODAY
POMEROY
The
Providence School of Religion,
Rocking sub:dlstrict, will
conclu~ wlth a meeting at 3 ·
p.m. this afternoon at the
Naomi Baptist Church. All
th011e enrolled for the several
weeks course are asked to be
present. .

I

CHESTER Grange 2609
Tuesday, 8 p.m. All members
urged to attend.
PAST .MATRONS
of
Pomeroy · Eastern Stars
Tuesday at the home of Mrs.
Alonzo Custer at 7;30 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
WIWWOOD Garden Club
Wednesday, I0:30a.m. home of
Hilda Yeauger. Cook-out and
na lure tour.
WOMEN'S
Christian
.Temperance
Union
of
, BY GOWIE CLENDENIN
SOMETimiGOW-Nonew chrlstenlnggownforMary
PORTLAND - Dah Roush Pomeroy, 2p.m. Wednesday at
lhli
United
Methodist
Church.
Teresa
Byer! The dark haired daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
and Goldie Clendenin co-hosted
POMEROY • Middleport
Byer of Mlddlemrt wore a gown well over a century old for
the Emma Smith Circle of the
Lions
Club,
Wednesday
noon,
her christening Swtday at the Heath United Methodisi
R.L.D.S. Church 'l'hursday
Church in Middleport. The handmade embroidered gown was
evening in this reporter's home Pomeroy United Methodist
Church; Election of officers. ·
on Stiversville hill.
OHIO VALLEY Commandry
a gift to Mrs. T. G. Hllldore, Mary Teresa's grandmother,
In charge were Eula Proffitt, 24, Knight Templars, stated
from the late Miss Sally Weaver of the Racine-Letart area
leader, and Lucy Taylor, conclave, · 7:30 p.m. Wed·
many years ago and carefully packed away until it was first
program chairman. The lesson nesday, Pomeroy Masonic
used tO years ago for the cbrlstening of Julie Byer.
was "The Power of Christ"
Temple. Potluck dinner at 6:30
.
from Helen B. Lancaster's
"Someone .Touched Me,"
and
dealing with the woman in the
crowd who was Instantly
TWIN.CITY Shrlnettes, 7:30
.
'
healed by touching the edge of
Thursday,
Col.
and
Southern
His garment, and how the
crowd marveled at this man's Ohio Electric Co. Plans will be
made for attending spring
~0
limitless power.
ceremonial in Columbus May
Men and women may only
measure the degree of this 6.
POMEROY - The planting held at Logan yesterday.
•
power we receive by: What we
Becky
Windon.
The
advisors,
at
the
Letart
Falls
Cemeterv
Mrs
.
Wilson
Carpenter
·
are, what we give to others,
what we say, and what we do. Leota Young and Lucille being carried out by the_jjend presided at the meeting which.
While Ilah and Eula were Ridenour talked about the 0' the River Garden Club will carried out the theme "April
Love." Members responded to
preparing to serve refresh· varioWJ projects available and be completed this spring.
Meeting Tuesday night at the roll call with a remark on signs ·
ments a business meeting and project selections were made.
Nola
Young
served
refresh·
home
· of Mrs. Ben Philson, ol spring.
_
silent auction were held, and
ments
and
Becky
Windon
was
Racine,
members
arranged
to
Mrs.
Clifford
Morris
talked ·
donations made to the pledge
in charge of recreation. _ have two dogwood trees on wild fiowers in the area
fund .
planted and discussed what describing them as. those
New rugs were shown and Nancy Ridenour.
The TNT club dls.cussed other shrubs would . com· flowers which · are native .. to .
women divided them to sen for
flower
bulb sales and .~very plUnent the plantings. &amp;iveral ',certain areas and gOO\VJW\Iho,\lli!oJ
the church. They were made by
member
Insurance at their members' of the club attended '· cultivation, She mentioned th~r
Betty Johnston of Morning
April
.12th
meeting. Foui ad· the open meeting Of the Wind· · bluets, violets, r.ose·, dandelion, ··.
Star.
Pearl Proffitt asked ihe visors~llended. Outside games lng 'I'I'ull Garden Club beld sweet williams, anem9ne; red.
blessing on the ·refreshments. were enjoyed by the 14 Wednesday night at the Ohio " stars, dogwood and redbud, ,
She won the door prize. Others members after the business Po\Yer'Co., and several we.nt to and suggest an afternoon stroll .
attending were Tricia Roush, meeting._ Sandra van Meter. the Region 11 spring meeting through a wooded area to view
The Meigs CoWity Better
the many colorful flowers.
Beulah Roush, Golda Gillilan
Livestock 4-H Dairy Club held · were served by Mrs. Coffey
Mrs . Morris · listed danand Anna Foreman .
its
&lt;rganizational
meeting
at
and
Randy
Johnson.
The
next
delions
.and dock as b\!ing good ·
Several allsent because of
illness were Clarence Proffitt's the home of the advisor, Roy meeting will be Monday, May to eat as well as nutritious. She
wife, Myrtle, and daughter, Holter with IS members 8th, at the County Extension concluded her program by··
Earlene Stobart, may have present. Officers elected were Office .' - Grant Johnson, suggesting that we look at wild
flowers, love them, · but put
been visiting him at Holzer's Jan Holter, president; Melanie reporter.
Dean,
vice
president;
Mark
A
demonstration
by
Byron
them in their native habitat.
where he had surgery.
Mora,
secretarY;
Ed
Parker,
Miller,
manager
of
Royal
Oak
Mrs . Robert · Kuhn gave
Patty (Mrs. Danny) Robah Ia
there also'with a new daughter newsreporter; Janis Carnahan Farm highlighted the April devotions reading two poems,
·
mee ting of the Me1gs County "In My Back Yard,·"·and "Stop
(Sherri-Lynne). We look for- and Mary Mora, recreation
leaders;
treasurer
is
Tony
Better
Livestock Beef 4-H . Me, It's Spring," with a prayer
ward to having them back at .
Carnahan. Co-t!hairmen of Club. Tbeclubmetatthe Royal !rpm · a collection called
church soon.
.
Health are Stephanie Radford 0 a k · Farm. Twenty-!h· ree "Sidewalk. Prayers."
and Alan Holter. Co-t!halrmen members watched Mr. Miller
The door prize was won by
of aafety are Eddie Holter and trim catUe's feet and give lips Mrs. Kuhn. Mrs. Ernest
Lester Parker. Club dues were on finer points of trinuning I!R~ Wingett will host the May IS
set at $1 and an educational grooming. Changes of various- meeting of the club. Some
e
~MIG
tour was planned. Dairy rules In the ·Junior Fair discussion was held on
The Bashan Bunch 4-H club projecta were diacasaed by schedule were reviewed. Mrs. changing the meeting night.
met April lith, at advisor Mary members and parents as there Miller served refreshments The hostess assisted by her
Rose's home. There were 11 are new pilot projecls . after the meeting. Plans were mother, Mrs. Mina Lewis,
members and '2 advisors avallsble this year. The next made for a · tour of the served refreshments. A bowl of
present with each member meeting will be at Tony and Southeast Research Center .at yellow and white narcissus
showing an item they bad Janb Carnahan's on May 2nd. Carpenter on May 11 at 6 p.m. centered the table.
made since the last meeting. - Ed Parker, reporter.
- Randy Jc.hnson, reporter.
Tips on accessories for dlf.
The 4-H Pleaaure Riders met Funfashlons and Clothing
ferent styles were given. Final April 10, at the fairgrounds. Construction fihn strips and
SON BORN
sewing ideas are to be given at The sixteen members and slides were viewed when the
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
the next meeting on April24. - three advisors made final Star Stitcher J: L.'s met Thurs- Mrs. Gary S~ope of 811 High
Man~e Rose.
plans for the club's attending. day evening at Jan Holter's St. , Middleport, are ·an·
The second year of OUtdoor the Meredith Manor's riding home. T. B. skin !eats and food nouncing the birth of a son,
Cookery was selected aa a club cline on April 30th. David handler's examinations will be Aaron Matthew,. April! at the
project when the Pine Grove Neue gave a demonstration taken ilao. Advisor, Mrs. Roy Holzer Medical center. 1ite .
Pals met at the Scout Hall In abQut lYinll !mota. A text was Holter, showed different seama Infant weighed six pounds, 14'
Chester. The 15 members glvenonthelillltomyandsome and gave instructions about ounces. Grandparents are Mr.
elected new officers, voted on common faulta of horse.i. - pre-washing materlai8 after and Mrs. Perl Watts, Duncan
the club name, and decided the Marcia IJIIlani, reporter.
getting the lnformaUon from Falls, and Mr. and Mrs. Carlos
arnolD\! of dues for the year. · The Melp County Shepherds the bolt enda when purchaSe ill ·Swope, ZaneavWe. Mn. Jessie
Officers · elected were: held their April meeting at the made. Lola Walker served Simms, IDoomfield, Mrs. lcle
president, Pam Kautz; vice Extension Office with 10 refreshments to the eight Swope, and Mrs. Frieda 'wayte
president, Nola Young; rnemben •!lending and their members and one advisor both of Zaneavilie, afe great~
secretary, Barbara Douglas; advisor, Mn. Coffey. The club attending .
grandmothers.
treasurer, Nancy Ridenour; Is plarlrq to attend the LAmb
Health chairman, Tammy Show at the Athens' Junior
Filch; safety chairman, Kathy Fair building on April Mth, and
Newell; riews reporter, Jayne a Lamb Sale Aprillltb at the
Smith; recreation leader, aame place • .Refreahmenla

DEAR POU.Y-My Pet Peeve Is having to pay a &amp;!lies

t¥ on~" " obtain~ with trading stamps. If they were

\

be Completed .···

96 Make Honor Listings Me· 8 4-H
MIDDLEPORT- Ninety-six Melanie Simmons, Rebecca
'IJ.
students of Meigs Junior High Thomas, June Wamsley, Club Np--..
School, Middleport, have been Raymond Waugh, Duane

Get Cleaner Windows

Ottoman
Witch ..,.;;~;::;rl
Britch :

l

SUNDAY
RACINE CHAPTER 134 1
OES, observing Go to Church
Sunday, 10:45 a.m. Sunday at
Ra cine First Baptiat Church
for all officers and members.
Rev: Charles Norris will
deliver serinon.

MEIGS COUNTY RECORDER ELEANOR ROBSON, ''Miss
Republican," these days Ia wearing an attractive red, white and
blue scarf with the word "Vote" }rinted on the front and back.
The scarf was a gift from Mr. &amp;lid Mrs. Don Spires.

'

Mrs. Parker

Katie's Korner

MARIE HAWK REPORTS that for the first time in the 31
years sbe has Uved on Osborne..$.-, Pomeroy, the street has been
swept and cleaned by v!llage employes. The ~~ sweeper was
used, and according to Marie, the street needs sweeping again . .

.o,.._.. •
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jjq({(W

· Social .Calendar ·.

JAMES YOUNG OF REEDS'liLLE has been plagued with
bad luck recenUy. A week ago Sunday he suffered minor injuries
when a \Ire exploded at his employment at LaOOmark Service
Station.
On Monday the Chester Fire Department was called to West .
Shade Road where a car was on fire. When the firemen, Ross
Cleland, Harold Newell and Don Ridenour arrived, they found
that the car belonged to Jamea Young.
Mter the fire was exUnguiahed Young, with the aid of his
father, went to move the car off the highway but In the moving,
the car went off the hl&amp;hway, over an embankment, and into a
creek where it sulmerged!

by~~~

Bride Showered

Mr. and Mrs. Mark Davis

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program whlch·was. conducted The contest conducted by Mn.
by Mrs. Louis Grueser.. It In· Welby Whaley .was won · by
eluded "Sickle ~11 Anemia . Mrs. Louis Grueser and Mrs. ·
Treatment". by Mrs. William Goeglein. .
--:
·
Folmer; "liard Water, a Heart
Mrs. Harold Blackston will
Saver" by Mrs: Amos host the May meeting with
Leonard; "Pap Smear . for Mrs . Abbott to have the
Breast Cancer" by Mrs. program and Mrs. Witte the
William Grueser; "Bleeding" contest. A clessert course was
by Mrs . James Conkle; served to those named and
"Burns" by Mrs. Grueser; Mrs. W. A. Morgan and Mrs.
·"Falls" by Mr&gt;J. Scott' Folmer. OUver ·Clark.

projects were discussed.

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·HW;~""'"'"'j

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road every time." (Now, 1001e molhera-ln-law are golnc
to sniff and aay, "That'• the trouble wltb youn1 peop~
today-all soclallatt-an wantinc us to etve them IOIIIethlng!")
4. When in the home of parenta-ln-law, watcb the!r
c~olce of TV progr111111. Tbey'U pre up a diugbter easily. •
Carol BurneU Is another lbin.l entirely.
5. Never sit down tao ban[ Almoat every ·mother-in·
law has an antique chair ot two. (',olllllfl'nl without look·
lng strains botb old flll'l!ltun 8lld lrleriil17 ielaticiJII.
8. Offer to eut IJ'IU or lbovtl .eeordiDJ to the
seuoni. It'• Ill rllbt te walt until ~ an c1o11t before
making the after. lltltuNS can J[III1J u much u deedL
7. Never IICI'atcb an Itcb. A mothlr-I!Haw loatbel a
scratcher.
8. Foreet the ftnt lleYeo rulu · aDd j01t be yourself.
Chances are the belt· they'll ever bave to uy about you
is, "Well, he's no Hank Sallderaon but Ellie love• him."

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14 - The SUnday TIIDII· lleiKIDII, IIi*•, April

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-.am

d
·
6'
4
8
L
E
·
d
.
.
·
·
. ropo·se
'. . ev_y ' n orse, '
P
·

Scholarship

d'

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·
The Gallia-Meigs C.A.P. order to raise local lunda to in the May Primary.
A year ago Gallia.JacksonExecutive Council met m qualify for State matching
fundsonathree
toone
raliofor
Meigs
Counties (because the
apecial session April 18 and
'red ,POpulati'on of
requl
State
1
officially endorsed the Mental operali&lt;HI of the mental hea th
POMEROY - Miss Rebecca
50,000
or
more) started to
H~alth Levy for Gallia,
Will, daughter of Mr. ~~d MrS.
Jackson, and Meigs Counties. pr~r:rjuly I, 1969, state law develop its Community Me~tal
James F. Will, Route 3,
Richard Sayre, executive required that counties of.50,000 Health and Mental Retardation
Pomeroy. has been awarded
director, said the purpose of or more population establish a services. and on July I, 1970
the Eleanor Gifford SchoJar·
the levy was explained along Board of Mental Health and submitted its Community Plan
ship. Miss Will plans to attend
to the· State Department of
with the &lt;;ost to the taxpayer. Mental Retardation.
Ohio University this fall.
The
act
(H.
B.
648)
which
Mental
Hygiene for funding .
The council conlldered it a
She Is a member of 1be
"very worthwhile project". established the Board of .The Commu.ni·ty . Mental
EnterPrise United Methodlat
They consider the 848 Board a Mental Health and Retardation Health and Mental Retardation
.ng in
Church, its youth fellowship,
nooessity and wish it success in (often referred to as the "848" Board has been operatl
choir, and Is the &amp;mday school
1
Board) empowered
the County the three Counties Wl'th con·
the future , Sayre said.
pianist. She is president of the
Meanwhile, the Community Commissioners to furnish the tracted Psychiatrist and
United Methodist County
and Mental Health Board local share of the cost of Psychologist one-day-a-week.
REBECCA WIU
Youth Rally, president of the
released
the following mental health programs either In lhe past patients would have
National Honor · Society at
from the General Fund or by to leave their community to
The bumblebee is the only
Meigs High · School, and a insect capable of pollinating statement in support of the means of a levy. General Fund . receive treatment. Seventyproposed levy:
member of the student council. red clover.
The Community Mental money' not being available five ( 7~ pet.) of the patients
Health and Mental Retardation after June 30 1972 at the have been scheol age children.
Board of Gallia , Jackson, request of the "M8" Board, tile Referrals have been made by
llleig&amp; Counties is asking Commissioners have approved local doctors, courts, schools,
support for a two-tenth (.2) a levy to be placed on the ballot an d many ot her agencies.
mill levy on the May ballot in

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The County Genetal Fund
cannot continue its financial
supportafterJuneofthisyear,
therefore , each County _i11s
proposingatwo-lenth (.2)mi
levy to finan ce its share of the
program.
• Pa~ge tot-. thes_e le~ies is
. essential to continuahon of
service provided by the Gallia ,
Jackson, Meigs, CommWlily
Mental Health and Mental
Retardation Board.
.
The "648" Board needs
In·
ff
creased professional sta to:
of
Work with a variety
community resources ineluding public sch[Klls, Board~
of Mental Retardation, Menta
Health Center, the Courts and
others to develop additional
services which are needed to
help people' deal more effectively with problems such
as mental retardation,

GALUPOIJS - The Rev.
Joseph C. Chapman, pastor of
the Faith Baptist Church of
Gallipolis, has accepted a_call
to pastor the Blessed Hope
Baptist Church In Springfield,
Ohio. His responsibilities here
will end Sunday, May 28. He
wiU begin his ministry in
Springfield Sunday, June 4.
Twenty-two years ago Rev.
Chapman began his ministry of
the Bible Protestant Church of
Bridgeton, N. J . Accepting the
call with eight people in a
medium size church building,
the work grew so that in four
years this became a full-time
pastoral ministry. From
Br.idgeton Rev. Chapman
pastored the Bible Baptist
Church of Cortland, N. -Y.
where the congregation built a
new church auditorium seating
about 200 people. Presently this
church has increased in
membership as well as additional buildings for its
Sunday School facilities.
From Cortland Mr. Chapman pastored the Dan bury
Baptist Church , Danbury,
Conn.; where he led the
congregation into the construction of a Sunday School
building which accommodated

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During the ministry and
an additional 300 people.
From Danbury Pastor leadership of Pastor ChapmaM
Chapman wa~ called to the the attendance of Faith Baptist
First Baptist Church here has more than tripled in both
where he has served over six the Sunday School and worship
and one half years. During his services. Beginning with a
leadership here plans were in charter membership of 53, the
preliminary stages for an church has a total membership
additional buildfng to ac· of 131. The highest Sunday
commodate the growing School attendance was 198 last
SWlday School and church. Not Easter Sunda~ .
tieing able to get Wlderway Faith Baptist Church parsupports
two
with actual construction of a tially
building, the crowded con- missionaries, one in Australia
ditions prevailed in both the and one soon to leave for
SWlday School and worship Bangladesh. This church has a
service. It became apparent daily radio broadcast, "Faith
that a branch church was the For Today," heard each day at
answer. Upon endorsement of 2 p.m. over WJEH. It also has
the congregation, and under organized youth ministries,
the leadership, and as social gatherings, · recreatlon
moderator, M!'. Charles programs throughout the year,
Scouten led the 53 charter and, most of all the spiritual
members in Its organizational ministries based upon the
Word of God as a Fundamental
plans.
The congregation of First New Testament Church.
It has been incorporated
Baptist voted to have Rev.
Chapman teach the weekly under the chartered laws of
Bible Study class and to act in Ohio . Faith Baptist is in
an advisory capacity . Having fellowship with the Ohio
had experience in starting Association of Regular Baptist
three branch churches .while m Churches and the General
Danbury, it was decided that Association of Regular Baptist
Mr. Chapman would be of Churches.
The congregation started
value to the group. Those of
First Baptist who had the this new work entirely on faith .
vision and burden to begin this Much hard work and sacrifice
new church continued to has. been put into it. Their
perform their responsibilities vision and burden has become
within the church Wltil the new a reality ·and has been mightily
group became an organized blessed. It is with all conand Scripturai New Testament fidence that this church will
continue -to grow ~der the
Church.
In the process of organizing,
witH the advice and · help of
Rev. Earl Umbaugh, state
missionary for the Ohio Assn.
of Regular Baptist Churches,
the group was in a position to
call a pastor who proved to be
Rev. Chapman. Weeks after
this meeting and call, Pastor
Chapman accepted.
On Sunday, Sept. 6, 1970,
Pastor Chapman terminated
his ministry at First Baptist to
become the pastor of the newly
organized Faith Baptist
Church.
Sun~ay afternoon, September 6, 1970, groundbreaking
ceremohies were held on the
new property purchased by the
congregation · of Faith Baptist .
and the following day construction began for the new 40'
by 80' church edifice. In
exactly three months the
building was ready. During
this time worship services
were held in the Masonic
Building which· began on
Sunday, Sept. 13.
After a year of growth in
crowded conditions, the
congregation of Faith Baptist
took another step of "faith."
Construction began on a new
50' by 100' Sunday School addition which has been completed.- Plans are in the
pretiminary stages to construct a large church sanctuary which is expected to be
completed soon.

rn-

urol.ogical. handicap, lea

~~~nci~!io~ri!! ~=~!~t~~

Base Captured 40

particular attention . to
prevention and treatment. of

Irm~g~d~I!sa~b~Il~It~y~
, ,!!d;el~ln~q~u:,en~c;,;:Y,;,
• 7-a::lc;o:::ho:,:;lls~m~a~n;,d.;d;;,;ru;;::g~a~b~use-..,
t'
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e

M•Jf'
I ord L. Hysell
'
d
th'
has Improve f I"&amp;e
qu'a Ity 0 II e

Mlles from .Saigon

•

}"

SAIGON (UPI) - North
Vietnamese troops captured
three more military bases
Saturday, one 40 miles from
Sai~on and the other two in the
Central Highlands. Thousands
of South Vietnamese soldiers
were shifted into the capital
area to shore up government
defenses against possible
Communist attack.
As the Saigon troops were
pulled out of the centr~l and
northern regions of the
country, North Vietnamese
gunners launched heavy
shelling attacks on government
positions in other areas.
Guerrillas attacked two convoys on a vital supply road in
the Central Highlanda.
U.S. B52s continued to pound
the area around embattled An
Loc, 60 miles north of Saigon.
Troops of both sides fought in
the streets of the devastated
provincial capital, "hurling
themselves at each other, each
refusmg to quit," according to
one officer.
The three lost bases included
Dau Tieng, 40 miles northwest
of Saigon, and Delta and
Yankee artillery bases on
" Rocket Ridge, " a· long
raz orback in the Central
Highlands overlooking a valley
in which forward positions

. .

&amp;or hundreCis
0 f peop·•·e

li

Superior dedication to his profession'
and a genuine concern for his customers
can m.1ke 'this man a benefit to you.
By insuring. your family's income,
education, health and home,, he can
improve the quality of your life
and help guarantee all the things that
enrich the life of your family.
Contact him. Let his experience and

Rev. Chapman Ends Ministry Here

CHECK WITH THE
EMPIRE

. IOCIII ldjUIImenll, etc.
continue and further expend
work In mental ·health ,

leadership of its new pastor.
Pastor and Mrs. Chapman
and family wish to express
their deep and sincere thanks
to all who have prayed for the
new church and to those who
have supported it in various
ways. We all at Faith Baptist
can only say, "Great things He
hath done for us, whereof we
are glad." Psalm 126:3.
In addition to his duties as a
pastor, Mr. Chapman has
served on the administrative
committee of the Scioto Hills
BaptiSt youth camp six years.
Four of these have been as
chairman. He also is chairman
of the Southern Ohio Pastor's
Fellowship .
Pastor Chaprrt1n has been
engaged in revivals at various
churches, Bible teacher at
youth camps, and, with his
family, has assisted at special
services in the ministry of
music.
The deacons of Faith Baptist
are currently working With
Pastor Chapman toward the
call of a new pastor.
Faith Baptist Church IS
located on Rt. 35, SIX miles
west of Gallipolis, at the
Rodney line.

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3 per cent are 2() per cent
overweight , according to Encyclopaedia Britann ica

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His company and business
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concern for those he serves
earned him
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defending Dak To, Tan canh
and Ben Het are located.
Mllitiamen guarding Dau
Tieng, once the headquarters
pf a regular South Vietnames~
regiment, fled to near~y Tr1
Tam when they were attacked
by a much stronger Communist force, field reports
said.
Delta was overwhebned by a
tank-led North Vietnamese
assault Friday night. About a
battalion of South Vietnamese
paratroopers and Rangers
scrambled two miles to the
safety of Fire Bsse Hotel at the
south end of Rocket Ridge .
Yankee was abandoned
Saturday morning after a
heavy Communist artillery
barrage. The battalion of
paratroopers there fled two
miles north to Fire Base Five.
The withdrawals left about
seven miles of the ri9ge in
Communist hands. 'dnty five of
eight bases set up a month ago
to guard agamst Communist
attacks in the srea were still
held by the government.
Convoy Anobusbed
Military men at Highlands
headquarters in Pleiku feared
the North Vietnamese would
haul artillery onto the ridgeline
to bombard the valley bases
and Highway 14 over which

Advice
Defied
WASHINGTON (UPI ) Most of President Nixon's close
advisers counseled him against
bombing Hanoi and Haiphong
because they feared it could
cost him the November election, a high administration
official says.
The official said Nixon
decided to escalate the U. S.
response to North Vietnam's
Easter wee~ offellBive because
the President was convinced he
would not have a "viable
foreign policy" unless he did.
"If I don't do what I shobld
do to protect the future of this
coon try then it is questionable
whether I could have a viable
foreign policy even if I were reelected," the official quoted
Nixon.
"If by doing what I think I
must do, it meallB the election
of someone else, then at least it
will give him a chance to have
a viable, credible foreign
policy in his administrati~,' '
Nixon was quoted as saying.
The official, who often Is
consulted by Nixon on major
the
policy,
discussed
President's decision-making
process with a small group of
newsmen. He spoke with the
Wlderstaqding he would not be
named and his worda would not
he quoted directly although
there could be direct quotation
of remarks he attributed to

Milford L Hyuf!, Agttll
·
222 N. Third Ave., Middleport, 0.
Ph. 992-7177
.

PEOPLES LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY,
WASHINGTON, D. C.

Finance In
Advance
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they are being supplied, UP!
reporter Matt Franjola said.
Allied commanda appeared
to be redeploying troops to
reinforce the Saigon a·rea.
Heavy Communist pressure
applied along Highway 13
linking Saigon with besieged
An Loc and the loss of 50 miles
of vital Highway I in Cambodia , between Phnom Penh
and Saigon, has dented the
capital's defense hnes in the
past two weeks.
Among the reinforcements
sent to Saigon was a 2,000-man
Ranger group pulled out of
outposts near the old imperial
·capital of Hue.
However , nearly 100 armored personnel carriers and
tanks were sent to the Tan My
navy base, five miles east of
Hue, to shore up forces there.
In addition, allied officers said
hseveral" U. S. destroyers are
en route to the coast off Hue to
provide artillery support for
the city's defenders.
UPI correspondent Kate
Weill&gt; in Phnom Penh said
Communists along Highway I
are applying heavy pressure to
the besieged provincial capital
of Svay Rieng, 78 miles
southeast of the capital, where
ISolated government tr oops
were encircled.

'
THE TRUMPET SECTION of the Meigs High School Symphonic Band
who will take part in a concert to be presented April 28 at 8 p.m. at the high

What a
Place!

SPACE CENTER, Houston
(UP! ) - Apollo 16's lunar
explorers gunned their buggy
across washboard debris and
up the steep slopes of Stone
Mountain Saturday, looking for
the secrets of the moon's ancient, violent past .
"Wow, what a place! What a
view!" said astronaut Clu!rles
M. Duke Jr., standing on the
rocky flank iJ) the uncharted
Descartes highlands 2 'fz miles
from the landing craft Orion.
"
''It's absolutely unreal,'' said
mission commander John W.
Young , as they scooped, raked
and photographed volcanic
chunks and battered crater
debris for scientists who
watched eagPr!y on television.
POMEROY - Tonoorrow, AprH 24, 1972, is
The 35-minute drive south
BloodmobUe Day In Meigs County, 1 to 6 p.in. at the
from the cayley Plains landing
Pomeroy Elenoentary School.
site
was less treacherous
A new test, three Umes as effective as the present
because
of relatively fewer
test now being performed, with an expe&lt;tatloo of
craters along the route, but
ptcldDg ap over 91 pet. of tbe heJK1tltis suspect bloods,
Young complained of a "terri•" is to go Into effect July L The cost of administering
ble" bumpy ride when the
blood will be Increased $1.50 per unit, as this Is the
rover crcssed Surrey Ridge, a
Increase In lbe cod of lbe new test, and is being imray of debris apparently
posed by the Federal Goverrunenl. Tbe test bas to be
spewed out of South Crater
performed on all ABC blood drawn.
during a meteorite impact.
Using only volunteer dooors for blood distribution
See Lava Flow
similar to that of Great Britain and Canada bas proved
Young told Mission Control
a reduction of post transfusion of bepatllll by 90 pel.
the moonscape reminded him
ARC Is Interested In seeing a Ioiii! volunteer program.
} of the Nevada atomic test site
We In the Blood procram lD Melp COIIIII7 are hoping
north of Las Vegas which he
enougb volunteen will lake pari lD the program ao we
had visited during a geological
ean cover every need of every one In Ibe county.
~ . field trip on earth .
Mlulchnsetts and Teus have oullawed other
::::
While they sampled the
than volunteer blood. Coogre11noan Veuley In· :.§ original lunar crust from the
troduced 1 bill to outlaw coDIIDereilll blood. U eom- ~:l Descartes formation, fellow
~~ astronaut Thomas K. "Ken"
merclal blood IJ not ouilawed lbe blood mWII be labeled
r:a Mattingly II was making
''Higb Risk Blood" ud coosent of the famlly noust be
history in the orbiting comreceived before II can be lralllfUied.
mand
ship. Mattingly had
So come lD to the Bloodmobile tomorrw, AprH 24,
observed the first primordial
ud belp build up a 1afe supply of disease free blood In
lava flow, now frozen into a
Meigs County.
waterless sea, that had ever
·~~:~~~~~~W0ii!CirnWrn8''&amp;·w·w&amp;.l':'liM@:~::~· .. been viewed closeup on the
"
darkened back side of the
since the North Vietnamese moon.
Nixon.
After Nixon decided to do offensive began three weeks · A little more than an hour
whatever is necessary to repel ago. His silence contrasts with after they left Orion for their
the North Vietnamese of- his nationally televised an- second day's lWlar expedition,
fensive, he se~ few limits on noW! cement of the Cambodia Young and Duke had reached a
terrace on the lower slope of
possible action. The official incursion last year.
The official said Nixon Stone Mountain that was
said the response could go
beyond bombing Hanoi and considers the 'current situation believed formed by' one of a
Haiphong although he declined to be more serious than the series of lava flows as long as 4
Cambodian operation and billion years ago.
to spell out details.
when the President is fa ced
Young Rabbit Hops
Nixon has made only passing with a major crisis, he seeks to
But the explorers seemed
public references to the war curb his emotions.
puzzled by the rocks and debris
beneath them. "! wish I could
say these rocks looked different, Houston, but they don't,"
said YoiUlg. "I'm not sure
we're gelling Descartes
miles northeast of Brisbane, circular route the weather material," agreed Duke.
after rowing their 35-foot made us take instead of what Although they were looking
fiberglass boat Britannia II would have been 6,500 miles for ancient bedrock from Stone
across the Pacific.
from San Francisco to Sydney,' ' Mountain, they seemed to be
getting mostly debris from
The couple left San Francisco Fairfax said.
South
Ray Crater insteild.
on April 25, 1971, and were An experienced rower, Fairbelieved lost in a devastating fax, 33, successfully made a Geologists in Houston symcyclone which lashed the similar solo trip across the pathized with their confusion.
Pacific and the Queensland Atlantic in 10 months in 1969. At one point, the slope was so
coast last February.
But this time an encounter with steep Young rabbit-hopped
"I estimate we traveled about a shark on March 21left a six- down, feet together and spraying up thick gray dust.
8,000 miles · because of the - (Continued on Page 16).

BRISBANE, Australia (UPI)
- Adventurer John Fairfax and
his girl friend Sylvia Cook,
rowing 8,000 miles against
fantastic odds, weathered two
deadly cyclonic storms, a
shortage of food, a sHark bite
and boredom, but they won .
Fairfax and the shapely Miss
Cook, 31, came ashore Saturday
at the Great Barrier Reef
resort of Hayman Island, 580

~

VOL. VII NO. 12

'THfOLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

'

MIDDLEPORT- Such a litUe matter
as a slipped disk In his back might slow
down . - or stop - some committee
chairmen.
Not Gene Riggs, chairman of the
· Middleport - Pomeroy Rotary Club Spring
Auction Committee.
·
Confined to the Camden.Clark .
Hospital, Parkersburg, where surgery
·may become necessary, Riggs had
telephoned auction arrangements to Club
President C. E. Blakeslee who relayed
them to members Friday night at Heath
Church' following dinner.

'

.

.

'!btl' aultion, tor which ~ dille will be
set, hopelutii'WIIl produce money for two
PIJI1Kli8S• one, the GOod Ship Hope, a
special humanitarian project of the
1011lhwllem Ohio Dlltrlet ol Rotary In·
ternatlOIIII to)rblch the~ club belonp,
and 1 leal project to be leleeled.
The club lnvllll ... , _ wbo will to
donate appllinl:a, furniture, articles of
uiiiiiJ olany _ldnd tbll ' Jl are

._ble_.

,I

school students of the Tri-State area world '
economics, trade, national defense, urban
problema and ll!;Ology.
' Struble, partlcularl7, was struck by
the speakers. He opened by observing that
too often Mr. Average John Doe cOIIBiders
himself an expert in a variety of complicated areas of human activity, rendering opinions wiUy nllly w1th all the
aplomb of a Socrates.
.
"But I assure you," he said, "after
attending the institute l'm·sure there are
no experts here tonight,"
Wilcoxen and Struble, and Gerlach,
thanked the cluj) for sponaoring their trip
to Clnclnnatl.
.
Preaident Blakeslee urged the club to
consider - t week - when he will bel
abient at a dlalrlct Rotary Conference lendiDa ita IUJIPl"' to the propoeecl 848

1lolrd levy.

Guesta Introduced were Jack ~uxton
cflhe Pt. Pleuan\ Club, and Bill Reed, of

Pomeroy.

·

.

Ladlas of the church served dinner.

.

P..ME 15

SUNDAY, APRIL g}L 1972

Demonstrators
OpposeBomb.·. . . .~
United Press International
Demonstrators by the
thousands gathered for rallies
and marches Saturday to
protest the U. S. bombing of
Nor th VIetnam. Demonstrations were started m New
York, Chicago, Los Angeles,
San Francisco and several
sta te capitals.
Sponsors of the San Francisco rally predicted 50,000
would
attend ;
se veral
thousa nd gathered. Busloads of
demonstrators were bemg
transpo rted fr om Illinois
campuses to the Chicago rally.
Organizers of other rallies
were predicting attendance in
U1e thousands, despi te damp,
chiUy weather in many areas.
Mayor John Lindsay of New
York issued a statement saymg'
"I join all Americans who on
April 22 will speak out for
peace " and M~nhattan
Borough President Percy
Sutton declared Saturday as
"Peace Action Day." He urged
all citizens of Manhattan to join
the protest.
Actress Jane Fonda, poet
Alan Ginsberg and defendants
of the Chicago Seven and
Harrisburg trials were among
those scheduled to appear at
major rallies.
Angela Davis, forbidden by
court order to appear at such
events, sent a tape recorded
message to the San Francisco
rally, which was also
scheduled to hear a transAtlantic telephone con·
versation with Viet Cong and
North VielllaiPese negotiators
to the Paris peace talks.
Vietnam Veterans Against
the War bore a flag-draped
casket, symbolic of all those
who died in Indochina, through
the rain of Washington, D. C.,
to the Tomb of the Unknowns
Saturday. The veterans then
laid a memorial wreath and
carried th e casket to the
Pentagon.

,.
This may be done by calling Danny
Thompson, Vernon Weber, of Sel Smith.
(aU in the phone book) or Dennis Keney
~.Chester Exch., who will arrange
for the articles to be picked up. cash Bahr
and Ed Baker will provide storage space
until the sale.
"We'll accept anything that can be
moved and has usefulness left,'' Riggs
ordered his committee.
ProgriD\ Given
Two Meigs County High School seniors
spok~ informally to the club of their experiences at the Iflstitute of World Affairs
last wee~end In Cincinnati sponsored by
the Cincinnati Rotary Club.
Larry Wilcoxen, Southern High, and
Michael Struble, Meigs Hl8h, were ·in·
traduced by George Meinhart, chairman,
as was Michael Gerlach, Meigs High
teacher who accompanied the young men
to Cincinnati.
•
Both were impl"e88old with the. intemational standings of the. speakel'll at
the institute who dlscuased !or the high

About 200 protesters staged
an all-night sit-in at the
University of Illinois student
union at Urbana before leaving
for Saturday's rally in Chicago.
Students
at
Princeton
University m New J ersey
ended their sit-In at the
Woodrow Wilson School for
Public and International Af.
fairs at 3 a.m. after 12 hours.
Runmng battles between
pohce and demonstrators at
Lhe University of Texas-Austin
campus ended shortly before
dawn with at least 15 arrests.
As many as 2,000 studen ts tried
to occupy the University's
mum building and stoned the
Lyndon B. Johnson Memorial
Library .
In many cities, police fa ced
their sixth straight day of
confrontation with protesters.
Police in Madison, Wis.,
reported that demonstrations
by University of Wisconsin ·students and local residents
since Monday already had cost
$90,243 in police overtime and
property damage. The police
chief in Champaign, Ill., and
two of his men were among the
dozen injured in Friday's
at
the
demonstration
University of Illinois campus.

.

roME TO Me, Bend to Me Ballet IJ performed here by
graceful Pam Romaine, who played Jean MacLaren In the
Broadway musical, Brlgadoon. The show ran three days at
Washington School Auditorium under the direction of Mrs.
Anne Fischer, GAHS vocal music Instructor.

House Going to Doves
DANIEL RAPOPORT
WASH!NGTON (UP!) - The
House Democrats' caucus vote
means that Congress will
probably pass the kind of endthe-war legislation the Nixon
administration until now has
kept from becoming law.
An analysis of Thursday's
votes and checks with key
By

pv~.;;:·:·

sources in the House produced
these conclusions :
- Enough Democrats are on
record in favor of setting a date
for a U.S. military withdrawal
from Vietnam that with
relatively few Republicans
they could swing the House into
the dove bloc.
-Among the Democrats

in ...,.,ri~f~

United Press brteroational
PARIS - SOUI'II KOREN AMBASSADOR Soo Yung Lee
was found slabbed to death at his Paris home Friday, an apparent victim of a hara-kiri suicide, police said Saturday. Police
sources said Lee died from a dagger plunged into his stomach.
His hody was discovered ahout 5 a.m. Friday, lying in a pool of
blood at his Paris residence.
They said they were working on the theory Lee committed
suicide but had not yet come up with a pOssible mptive. Harakiri, or suppuku, is the traditional feudal Japanese manner of
killing oneself with honor and is accomplished by plunging a
knife into the stomach and ripping. Lee was a former student at
the Waseda University in Tokyo.
By

Explorers

Set Record
SPACE CENTER, Houston
(UP!) - Apollo 16's dogged
lunar exploers pushed halfway
up Stone Mountain and nearly
wore out their four-wheeled
·buggy Saturday in a record-

~ ct1'on P'Ian Launched ~€:"::~.:;
Au

See Harold Thorn pson or 'Lou Lutton

school under the direction of David Bowen are, front to back, Sheila
McKnight, Patti Well, Roxie Patterson, Debbie May, Diana Carsey, Cherie
Reuter, Jan Kennedy, Debbie Triplett, Connie Radford, Connie Grueser.

junbatt xrrimts
- itntintl
.

.

End 8,000 Mile Venture

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"109 YEARS OF SERVICE''

..

-.

and Charles M. Duke Jr.
seemed frustrated at times in
their search for volcanic
mountain bedrock that oozed
like hot mo~sses from the
moon's interior as long as 4
billion years ago.
But they requested permission from Mission Control
- and cheered when they got it
~ to stay outside their landing
craft Orion long enough to beat
the Apollo 15 moonwalk record
of 7 hours, 12 minutes and 43
seconds set last . sunimer by
David R. Scott and James B.
Irwin.
YoiUlg and Duke stayed on
the forbidding, cratered surface 7 hours, 23 minutes and 28
second&amp;. In the procet~~~, they
drove their lunor rover "like a
camel" past yawning craters
and treacherous 20-degree
slopes remlnlscent cl Death
Valley in the wastelands of
(Continued on Page 16)

\

COLUMBUS - THE BUREAU OF EMPLOYMENT Ser·
vices reported Saturdsy that the Ohio economy is apparently
rebounding from the 1971 recession and production workers
grossed a record $179 a week in March.
''The average work-week in Ohio factories has been moving
upward In the past two months and seems likely to rise further, "
the bureau said In a statement. "Last month's level- 41.1 hours
-is Indicative of considerable overtlnle."
"
· PARIS- NOR111 VIETNAM SAID It shot down three U.S.
warplanes over Thanh Hao province Saturday, k~ "a certain
number" of pilots. North Vietnam !llllde the claim in-a Foreign
Ministry statement issued in Hanoi Saturday and circulated in
Paris by the North Vietnamese delegation to the suspended
peace talks.
_
The North Vietnamese news agency said Frldlly its troope
bad shot down three U. S. aircraft over the North during the
raids.
BOSTON -SEN. GEORGES. McGOVERN slrollet\ through
buay awds at the city's largest open air market Saturday,
shaking bands and tasting hawkers' wares in aeardl of the
working c1au vote in Tueilday'a )fa~Dchlllella Democratic
primary. The South Dakota Demol!rat, fawred to win the
popular vote and a majority of MullachUMtts' 102 dsletlate wtes
at the national convention, munched on an awle, a piece of
cheddar cheese and a sa~~~~ge sandwich while WOIIdes'IDI
through the maie ofstalla and llooda of Saturday sboppen ill and
(Continued on Page 16)

joining the "date certain" bloc
are such longtime establishment figures as Speaker Carl
Albert, Okla., Majority Leider
Hale Boggs, Ls., Cbalrman
Wilbur D. Mills, Ark:, of lfDu8e
Ways and Means Committee
and Chet Holifield, Callf.,ol the
House Govenunent Operatlonl
Committee. · (Mills did not
attend the caucus but he endorsed the general Idea of the
resolution in a campaign
speech.)
A partisan tine haa been
drawn througb the VIetnam
debate, with Democrats and
Republicans shouting aero• it
at each other and among
themselves.
Wlthdrawlll Dille Waled
By a vote of 135 to 118, the
·Democratic caucus adopted a
resolution offered by Whip
Thomas P. O'Neill, Mall.,
denouncing the U.S. bombing
of North Vietnam 11 a
"dangel'OWI escalation" of the
war, calling for the JII'O!Ill)t
setting of a withdrawal date
and directing ita memben on
the House Foreign Affairs
Committee to eome up with
appropriate withdrawal
legislation within· 30 daya.
A little while later, In an
effort to balance the blne of the
resolution, the caucus condemned the Nortb Vietnamese
''mllltary InvaSion" ol lbe
South. 'l1lat move picked ap a
handful more Including Albert
and BoggB -1nd the lllltllded
O'NeW prOpOia1 passed 144 to

56.
For both Albert ud llaQI,
as well aa such senior
Democrata as Holifield, U
ma"ked the lint time lheJ bid
accepted, even in principle, 11M
setting of a 111:111 wl1bdrawlll
deadline, eontma-Jt llllly upae
the retum of Amerlcu prt.
nera and an acco11111Dc of lilt
milling Ia adlon.
'lbree ilmel In 1r11 lilt
Senile puled an ., " d
by Senate Doili'lCrlltic

I In

Mike Mullleld, Mtllll, . . . .
(Contlllued on Plat 11)

�- ..

' ,' ~

14 - The SUnday TIIDII· lleiKIDII, IIi*•, April

. ..

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4
8
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·
d
.
.
·
·
. ropo·se
'. . ev_y ' n orse, '
P
·

Scholarship

d'

·
·
The Gallia-Meigs C.A.P. order to raise local lunda to in the May Primary.
A year ago Gallia.JacksonExecutive Council met m qualify for State matching
fundsonathree
toone
raliofor
Meigs
Counties (because the
apecial session April 18 and
'red ,POpulati'on of
requl
State
1
officially endorsed the Mental operali&lt;HI of the mental hea th
POMEROY - Miss Rebecca
50,000
or
more) started to
H~alth Levy for Gallia,
Will, daughter of Mr. ~~d MrS.
Jackson, and Meigs Counties. pr~r:rjuly I, 1969, state law develop its Community Me~tal
James F. Will, Route 3,
Richard Sayre, executive required that counties of.50,000 Health and Mental Retardation
Pomeroy. has been awarded
director, said the purpose of or more population establish a services. and on July I, 1970
the Eleanor Gifford SchoJar·
the levy was explained along Board of Mental Health and submitted its Community Plan
ship. Miss Will plans to attend
to the· State Department of
with the &lt;;ost to the taxpayer. Mental Retardation.
Ohio University this fall.
The
act
(H.
B.
648)
which
Mental
Hygiene for funding .
The council conlldered it a
She Is a member of 1be
"very worthwhile project". established the Board of .The Commu.ni·ty . Mental
EnterPrise United Methodlat
They consider the 848 Board a Mental Health and Retardation Health and Mental Retardation
.ng in
Church, its youth fellowship,
nooessity and wish it success in (often referred to as the "848" Board has been operatl
choir, and Is the &amp;mday school
1
Board) empowered
the County the three Counties Wl'th con·
the future , Sayre said.
pianist. She is president of the
Meanwhile, the Community Commissioners to furnish the tracted Psychiatrist and
United Methodist County
and Mental Health Board local share of the cost of Psychologist one-day-a-week.
REBECCA WIU
Youth Rally, president of the
released
the following mental health programs either In lhe past patients would have
National Honor · Society at
from the General Fund or by to leave their community to
The bumblebee is the only
Meigs High · School, and a insect capable of pollinating statement in support of the means of a levy. General Fund . receive treatment. Seventyproposed levy:
member of the student council. red clover.
The Community Mental money' not being available five ( 7~ pet.) of the patients
Health and Mental Retardation after June 30 1972 at the have been scheol age children.
Board of Gallia , Jackson, request of the "M8" Board, tile Referrals have been made by
llleig&amp; Counties is asking Commissioners have approved local doctors, courts, schools,
support for a two-tenth (.2) a levy to be placed on the ballot an d many ot her agencies.
mill levy on the May ballot in

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The County Genetal Fund
cannot continue its financial
supportafterJuneofthisyear,
therefore , each County _i11s
proposingatwo-lenth (.2)mi
levy to finan ce its share of the
program.
• Pa~ge tot-. thes_e le~ies is
. essential to continuahon of
service provided by the Gallia ,
Jackson, Meigs, CommWlily
Mental Health and Mental
Retardation Board.
.
The "648" Board needs
In·
ff
creased professional sta to:
of
Work with a variety
community resources ineluding public sch[Klls, Board~
of Mental Retardation, Menta
Health Center, the Courts and
others to develop additional
services which are needed to
help people' deal more effectively with problems such
as mental retardation,

GALUPOIJS - The Rev.
Joseph C. Chapman, pastor of
the Faith Baptist Church of
Gallipolis, has accepted a_call
to pastor the Blessed Hope
Baptist Church In Springfield,
Ohio. His responsibilities here
will end Sunday, May 28. He
wiU begin his ministry in
Springfield Sunday, June 4.
Twenty-two years ago Rev.
Chapman began his ministry of
the Bible Protestant Church of
Bridgeton, N. J . Accepting the
call with eight people in a
medium size church building,
the work grew so that in four
years this became a full-time
pastoral ministry. From
Br.idgeton Rev. Chapman
pastored the Bible Baptist
Church of Cortland, N. -Y.
where the congregation built a
new church auditorium seating
about 200 people. Presently this
church has increased in
membership as well as additional buildings for its
Sunday School facilities.
From Cortland Mr. Chapman pastored the Dan bury
Baptist Church , Danbury,
Conn.; where he led the
congregation into the construction of a Sunday School
building which accommodated

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During the ministry and
an additional 300 people.
From Danbury Pastor leadership of Pastor ChapmaM
Chapman wa~ called to the the attendance of Faith Baptist
First Baptist Church here has more than tripled in both
where he has served over six the Sunday School and worship
and one half years. During his services. Beginning with a
leadership here plans were in charter membership of 53, the
preliminary stages for an church has a total membership
additional buildfng to ac· of 131. The highest Sunday
commodate the growing School attendance was 198 last
SWlday School and church. Not Easter Sunda~ .
tieing able to get Wlderway Faith Baptist Church parsupports
two
with actual construction of a tially
building, the crowded con- missionaries, one in Australia
ditions prevailed in both the and one soon to leave for
SWlday School and worship Bangladesh. This church has a
service. It became apparent daily radio broadcast, "Faith
that a branch church was the For Today," heard each day at
answer. Upon endorsement of 2 p.m. over WJEH. It also has
the congregation, and under organized youth ministries,
the leadership, and as social gatherings, · recreatlon
moderator, M!'. Charles programs throughout the year,
Scouten led the 53 charter and, most of all the spiritual
members in Its organizational ministries based upon the
Word of God as a Fundamental
plans.
The congregation of First New Testament Church.
It has been incorporated
Baptist voted to have Rev.
Chapman teach the weekly under the chartered laws of
Bible Study class and to act in Ohio . Faith Baptist is in
an advisory capacity . Having fellowship with the Ohio
had experience in starting Association of Regular Baptist
three branch churches .while m Churches and the General
Danbury, it was decided that Association of Regular Baptist
Mr. Chapman would be of Churches.
The congregation started
value to the group. Those of
First Baptist who had the this new work entirely on faith .
vision and burden to begin this Much hard work and sacrifice
new church continued to has. been put into it. Their
perform their responsibilities vision and burden has become
within the church Wltil the new a reality ·and has been mightily
group became an organized blessed. It is with all conand Scripturai New Testament fidence that this church will
continue -to grow ~der the
Church.
In the process of organizing,
witH the advice and · help of
Rev. Earl Umbaugh, state
missionary for the Ohio Assn.
of Regular Baptist Churches,
the group was in a position to
call a pastor who proved to be
Rev. Chapman. Weeks after
this meeting and call, Pastor
Chapman accepted.
On Sunday, Sept. 6, 1970,
Pastor Chapman terminated
his ministry at First Baptist to
become the pastor of the newly
organized Faith Baptist
Church.
Sun~ay afternoon, September 6, 1970, groundbreaking
ceremohies were held on the
new property purchased by the
congregation · of Faith Baptist .
and the following day construction began for the new 40'
by 80' church edifice. In
exactly three months the
building was ready. During
this time worship services
were held in the Masonic
Building which· began on
Sunday, Sept. 13.
After a year of growth in
crowded conditions, the
congregation of Faith Baptist
took another step of "faith."
Construction began on a new
50' by 100' Sunday School addition which has been completed.- Plans are in the
pretiminary stages to construct a large church sanctuary which is expected to be
completed soon.

rn-

urol.ogical. handicap, lea

~~~nci~!io~ri!! ~=~!~t~~

Base Captured 40

particular attention . to
prevention and treatment. of

Irm~g~d~I!sa~b~Il~It~y~
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I ord L. Hysell
'
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th'
has Improve f I"&amp;e
qu'a Ity 0 II e

Mlles from .Saigon

•

}"

SAIGON (UPI) - North
Vietnamese troops captured
three more military bases
Saturday, one 40 miles from
Sai~on and the other two in the
Central Highlands. Thousands
of South Vietnamese soldiers
were shifted into the capital
area to shore up government
defenses against possible
Communist attack.
As the Saigon troops were
pulled out of the centr~l and
northern regions of the
country, North Vietnamese
gunners launched heavy
shelling attacks on government
positions in other areas.
Guerrillas attacked two convoys on a vital supply road in
the Central Highlanda.
U.S. B52s continued to pound
the area around embattled An
Loc, 60 miles north of Saigon.
Troops of both sides fought in
the streets of the devastated
provincial capital, "hurling
themselves at each other, each
refusmg to quit," according to
one officer.
The three lost bases included
Dau Tieng, 40 miles northwest
of Saigon, and Delta and
Yankee artillery bases on
" Rocket Ridge, " a· long
raz orback in the Central
Highlands overlooking a valley
in which forward positions

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Superior dedication to his profession'
and a genuine concern for his customers
can m.1ke 'this man a benefit to you.
By insuring. your family's income,
education, health and home,, he can
improve the quality of your life
and help guarantee all the things that
enrich the life of your family.
Contact him. Let his experience and

Rev. Chapman Ends Ministry Here

CHECK WITH THE
EMPIRE

. IOCIII ldjUIImenll, etc.
continue and further expend
work In mental ·health ,

leadership of its new pastor.
Pastor and Mrs. Chapman
and family wish to express
their deep and sincere thanks
to all who have prayed for the
new church and to those who
have supported it in various
ways. We all at Faith Baptist
can only say, "Great things He
hath done for us, whereof we
are glad." Psalm 126:3.
In addition to his duties as a
pastor, Mr. Chapman has
served on the administrative
committee of the Scioto Hills
BaptiSt youth camp six years.
Four of these have been as
chairman. He also is chairman
of the Southern Ohio Pastor's
Fellowship .
Pastor Chaprrt1n has been
engaged in revivals at various
churches, Bible teacher at
youth camps, and, with his
family, has assisted at special
services in the ministry of
music.
The deacons of Faith Baptist
are currently working With
Pastor Chapman toward the
call of a new pastor.
Faith Baptist Church IS
located on Rt. 35, SIX miles
west of Gallipolis, at the
Rodney line.

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3 per cent are 2() per cent
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His company and business
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defending Dak To, Tan canh
and Ben Het are located.
Mllitiamen guarding Dau
Tieng, once the headquarters
pf a regular South Vietnames~
regiment, fled to near~y Tr1
Tam when they were attacked
by a much stronger Communist force, field reports
said.
Delta was overwhebned by a
tank-led North Vietnamese
assault Friday night. About a
battalion of South Vietnamese
paratroopers and Rangers
scrambled two miles to the
safety of Fire Bsse Hotel at the
south end of Rocket Ridge .
Yankee was abandoned
Saturday morning after a
heavy Communist artillery
barrage. The battalion of
paratroopers there fled two
miles north to Fire Base Five.
The withdrawals left about
seven miles of the ri9ge in
Communist hands. 'dnty five of
eight bases set up a month ago
to guard agamst Communist
attacks in the srea were still
held by the government.
Convoy Anobusbed
Military men at Highlands
headquarters in Pleiku feared
the North Vietnamese would
haul artillery onto the ridgeline
to bombard the valley bases
and Highway 14 over which

Advice
Defied
WASHINGTON (UPI ) Most of President Nixon's close
advisers counseled him against
bombing Hanoi and Haiphong
because they feared it could
cost him the November election, a high administration
official says.
The official said Nixon
decided to escalate the U. S.
response to North Vietnam's
Easter wee~ offellBive because
the President was convinced he
would not have a "viable
foreign policy" unless he did.
"If I don't do what I shobld
do to protect the future of this
coon try then it is questionable
whether I could have a viable
foreign policy even if I were reelected," the official quoted
Nixon.
"If by doing what I think I
must do, it meallB the election
of someone else, then at least it
will give him a chance to have
a viable, credible foreign
policy in his administrati~,' '
Nixon was quoted as saying.
The official, who often Is
consulted by Nixon on major
the
policy,
discussed
President's decision-making
process with a small group of
newsmen. He spoke with the
Wlderstaqding he would not be
named and his worda would not
he quoted directly although
there could be direct quotation
of remarks he attributed to

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they are being supplied, UP!
reporter Matt Franjola said.
Allied commanda appeared
to be redeploying troops to
reinforce the Saigon a·rea.
Heavy Communist pressure
applied along Highway 13
linking Saigon with besieged
An Loc and the loss of 50 miles
of vital Highway I in Cambodia , between Phnom Penh
and Saigon, has dented the
capital's defense hnes in the
past two weeks.
Among the reinforcements
sent to Saigon was a 2,000-man
Ranger group pulled out of
outposts near the old imperial
·capital of Hue.
However , nearly 100 armored personnel carriers and
tanks were sent to the Tan My
navy base, five miles east of
Hue, to shore up forces there.
In addition, allied officers said
hseveral" U. S. destroyers are
en route to the coast off Hue to
provide artillery support for
the city's defenders.
UPI correspondent Kate
Weill&gt; in Phnom Penh said
Communists along Highway I
are applying heavy pressure to
the besieged provincial capital
of Svay Rieng, 78 miles
southeast of the capital, where
ISolated government tr oops
were encircled.

'
THE TRUMPET SECTION of the Meigs High School Symphonic Band
who will take part in a concert to be presented April 28 at 8 p.m. at the high

What a
Place!

SPACE CENTER, Houston
(UP! ) - Apollo 16's lunar
explorers gunned their buggy
across washboard debris and
up the steep slopes of Stone
Mountain Saturday, looking for
the secrets of the moon's ancient, violent past .
"Wow, what a place! What a
view!" said astronaut Clu!rles
M. Duke Jr., standing on the
rocky flank iJ) the uncharted
Descartes highlands 2 'fz miles
from the landing craft Orion.
"
''It's absolutely unreal,'' said
mission commander John W.
Young , as they scooped, raked
and photographed volcanic
chunks and battered crater
debris for scientists who
watched eagPr!y on television.
POMEROY - Tonoorrow, AprH 24, 1972, is
The 35-minute drive south
BloodmobUe Day In Meigs County, 1 to 6 p.in. at the
from the cayley Plains landing
Pomeroy Elenoentary School.
site
was less treacherous
A new test, three Umes as effective as the present
because
of relatively fewer
test now being performed, with an expe&lt;tatloo of
craters along the route, but
ptcldDg ap over 91 pet. of tbe heJK1tltis suspect bloods,
Young complained of a "terri•" is to go Into effect July L The cost of administering
ble" bumpy ride when the
blood will be Increased $1.50 per unit, as this Is the
rover crcssed Surrey Ridge, a
Increase In lbe cod of lbe new test, and is being imray of debris apparently
posed by the Federal Goverrunenl. Tbe test bas to be
spewed out of South Crater
performed on all ABC blood drawn.
during a meteorite impact.
Using only volunteer dooors for blood distribution
See Lava Flow
similar to that of Great Britain and Canada bas proved
Young told Mission Control
a reduction of post transfusion of bepatllll by 90 pel.
the moonscape reminded him
ARC Is Interested In seeing a Ioiii! volunteer program.
} of the Nevada atomic test site
We In the Blood procram lD Melp COIIIII7 are hoping
north of Las Vegas which he
enougb volunteen will lake pari lD the program ao we
had visited during a geological
ean cover every need of every one In Ibe county.
~ . field trip on earth .
Mlulchnsetts and Teus have oullawed other
::::
While they sampled the
than volunteer blood. Coogre11noan Veuley In· :.§ original lunar crust from the
troduced 1 bill to outlaw coDIIDereilll blood. U eom- ~:l Descartes formation, fellow
~~ astronaut Thomas K. "Ken"
merclal blood IJ not ouilawed lbe blood mWII be labeled
r:a Mattingly II was making
''Higb Risk Blood" ud coosent of the famlly noust be
history in the orbiting comreceived before II can be lralllfUied.
mand
ship. Mattingly had
So come lD to the Bloodmobile tomorrw, AprH 24,
observed the first primordial
ud belp build up a 1afe supply of disease free blood In
lava flow, now frozen into a
Meigs County.
waterless sea, that had ever
·~~:~~~~~~W0ii!CirnWrn8''&amp;·w·w&amp;.l':'liM@:~::~· .. been viewed closeup on the
"
darkened back side of the
since the North Vietnamese moon.
Nixon.
After Nixon decided to do offensive began three weeks · A little more than an hour
whatever is necessary to repel ago. His silence contrasts with after they left Orion for their
the North Vietnamese of- his nationally televised an- second day's lWlar expedition,
fensive, he se~ few limits on noW! cement of the Cambodia Young and Duke had reached a
terrace on the lower slope of
possible action. The official incursion last year.
The official said Nixon Stone Mountain that was
said the response could go
beyond bombing Hanoi and considers the 'current situation believed formed by' one of a
Haiphong although he declined to be more serious than the series of lava flows as long as 4
Cambodian operation and billion years ago.
to spell out details.
when the President is fa ced
Young Rabbit Hops
Nixon has made only passing with a major crisis, he seeks to
But the explorers seemed
public references to the war curb his emotions.
puzzled by the rocks and debris
beneath them. "! wish I could
say these rocks looked different, Houston, but they don't,"
said YoiUlg. "I'm not sure
we're gelling Descartes
miles northeast of Brisbane, circular route the weather material," agreed Duke.
after rowing their 35-foot made us take instead of what Although they were looking
fiberglass boat Britannia II would have been 6,500 miles for ancient bedrock from Stone
across the Pacific.
from San Francisco to Sydney,' ' Mountain, they seemed to be
getting mostly debris from
The couple left San Francisco Fairfax said.
South
Ray Crater insteild.
on April 25, 1971, and were An experienced rower, Fairbelieved lost in a devastating fax, 33, successfully made a Geologists in Houston symcyclone which lashed the similar solo trip across the pathized with their confusion.
Pacific and the Queensland Atlantic in 10 months in 1969. At one point, the slope was so
coast last February.
But this time an encounter with steep Young rabbit-hopped
"I estimate we traveled about a shark on March 21left a six- down, feet together and spraying up thick gray dust.
8,000 miles · because of the - (Continued on Page 16).

BRISBANE, Australia (UPI)
- Adventurer John Fairfax and
his girl friend Sylvia Cook,
rowing 8,000 miles against
fantastic odds, weathered two
deadly cyclonic storms, a
shortage of food, a sHark bite
and boredom, but they won .
Fairfax and the shapely Miss
Cook, 31, came ashore Saturday
at the Great Barrier Reef
resort of Hayman Island, 580

~

VOL. VII NO. 12

'THfOLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

'

MIDDLEPORT- Such a litUe matter
as a slipped disk In his back might slow
down . - or stop - some committee
chairmen.
Not Gene Riggs, chairman of the
· Middleport - Pomeroy Rotary Club Spring
Auction Committee.
·
Confined to the Camden.Clark .
Hospital, Parkersburg, where surgery
·may become necessary, Riggs had
telephoned auction arrangements to Club
President C. E. Blakeslee who relayed
them to members Friday night at Heath
Church' following dinner.

'

.

.

'!btl' aultion, tor which ~ dille will be
set, hopelutii'WIIl produce money for two
PIJI1Kli8S• one, the GOod Ship Hope, a
special humanitarian project of the
1011lhwllem Ohio Dlltrlet ol Rotary In·
ternatlOIIII to)rblch the~ club belonp,
and 1 leal project to be leleeled.
The club lnvllll ... , _ wbo will to
donate appllinl:a, furniture, articles of
uiiiiiJ olany _ldnd tbll ' Jl are

._ble_.

,I

school students of the Tri-State area world '
economics, trade, national defense, urban
problema and ll!;Ology.
' Struble, partlcularl7, was struck by
the speakers. He opened by observing that
too often Mr. Average John Doe cOIIBiders
himself an expert in a variety of complicated areas of human activity, rendering opinions wiUy nllly w1th all the
aplomb of a Socrates.
.
"But I assure you," he said, "after
attending the institute l'm·sure there are
no experts here tonight,"
Wilcoxen and Struble, and Gerlach,
thanked the cluj) for sponaoring their trip
to Clnclnnatl.
.
Preaident Blakeslee urged the club to
consider - t week - when he will bel
abient at a dlalrlct Rotary Conference lendiDa ita IUJIPl"' to the propoeecl 848

1lolrd levy.

Guesta Introduced were Jack ~uxton
cflhe Pt. Pleuan\ Club, and Bill Reed, of

Pomeroy.

·

.

Ladlas of the church served dinner.

.

P..ME 15

SUNDAY, APRIL g}L 1972

Demonstrators
OpposeBomb.·. . . .~
United Press International
Demonstrators by the
thousands gathered for rallies
and marches Saturday to
protest the U. S. bombing of
Nor th VIetnam. Demonstrations were started m New
York, Chicago, Los Angeles,
San Francisco and several
sta te capitals.
Sponsors of the San Francisco rally predicted 50,000
would
attend ;
se veral
thousa nd gathered. Busloads of
demonstrators were bemg
transpo rted fr om Illinois
campuses to the Chicago rally.
Organizers of other rallies
were predicting attendance in
U1e thousands, despi te damp,
chiUy weather in many areas.
Mayor John Lindsay of New
York issued a statement saymg'
"I join all Americans who on
April 22 will speak out for
peace " and M~nhattan
Borough President Percy
Sutton declared Saturday as
"Peace Action Day." He urged
all citizens of Manhattan to join
the protest.
Actress Jane Fonda, poet
Alan Ginsberg and defendants
of the Chicago Seven and
Harrisburg trials were among
those scheduled to appear at
major rallies.
Angela Davis, forbidden by
court order to appear at such
events, sent a tape recorded
message to the San Francisco
rally, which was also
scheduled to hear a transAtlantic telephone con·
versation with Viet Cong and
North VielllaiPese negotiators
to the Paris peace talks.
Vietnam Veterans Against
the War bore a flag-draped
casket, symbolic of all those
who died in Indochina, through
the rain of Washington, D. C.,
to the Tomb of the Unknowns
Saturday. The veterans then
laid a memorial wreath and
carried th e casket to the
Pentagon.

,.
This may be done by calling Danny
Thompson, Vernon Weber, of Sel Smith.
(aU in the phone book) or Dennis Keney
~.Chester Exch., who will arrange
for the articles to be picked up. cash Bahr
and Ed Baker will provide storage space
until the sale.
"We'll accept anything that can be
moved and has usefulness left,'' Riggs
ordered his committee.
ProgriD\ Given
Two Meigs County High School seniors
spok~ informally to the club of their experiences at the Iflstitute of World Affairs
last wee~end In Cincinnati sponsored by
the Cincinnati Rotary Club.
Larry Wilcoxen, Southern High, and
Michael Struble, Meigs Hl8h, were ·in·
traduced by George Meinhart, chairman,
as was Michael Gerlach, Meigs High
teacher who accompanied the young men
to Cincinnati.
•
Both were impl"e88old with the. intemational standings of the. speakel'll at
the institute who dlscuased !or the high

About 200 protesters staged
an all-night sit-in at the
University of Illinois student
union at Urbana before leaving
for Saturday's rally in Chicago.
Students
at
Princeton
University m New J ersey
ended their sit-In at the
Woodrow Wilson School for
Public and International Af.
fairs at 3 a.m. after 12 hours.
Runmng battles between
pohce and demonstrators at
Lhe University of Texas-Austin
campus ended shortly before
dawn with at least 15 arrests.
As many as 2,000 studen ts tried
to occupy the University's
mum building and stoned the
Lyndon B. Johnson Memorial
Library .
In many cities, police fa ced
their sixth straight day of
confrontation with protesters.
Police in Madison, Wis.,
reported that demonstrations
by University of Wisconsin ·students and local residents
since Monday already had cost
$90,243 in police overtime and
property damage. The police
chief in Champaign, Ill., and
two of his men were among the
dozen injured in Friday's
at
the
demonstration
University of Illinois campus.

.

roME TO Me, Bend to Me Ballet IJ performed here by
graceful Pam Romaine, who played Jean MacLaren In the
Broadway musical, Brlgadoon. The show ran three days at
Washington School Auditorium under the direction of Mrs.
Anne Fischer, GAHS vocal music Instructor.

House Going to Doves
DANIEL RAPOPORT
WASH!NGTON (UP!) - The
House Democrats' caucus vote
means that Congress will
probably pass the kind of endthe-war legislation the Nixon
administration until now has
kept from becoming law.
An analysis of Thursday's
votes and checks with key
By

pv~.;;:·:·

sources in the House produced
these conclusions :
- Enough Democrats are on
record in favor of setting a date
for a U.S. military withdrawal
from Vietnam that with
relatively few Republicans
they could swing the House into
the dove bloc.
-Among the Democrats

in ...,.,ri~f~

United Press brteroational
PARIS - SOUI'II KOREN AMBASSADOR Soo Yung Lee
was found slabbed to death at his Paris home Friday, an apparent victim of a hara-kiri suicide, police said Saturday. Police
sources said Lee died from a dagger plunged into his stomach.
His hody was discovered ahout 5 a.m. Friday, lying in a pool of
blood at his Paris residence.
They said they were working on the theory Lee committed
suicide but had not yet come up with a pOssible mptive. Harakiri, or suppuku, is the traditional feudal Japanese manner of
killing oneself with honor and is accomplished by plunging a
knife into the stomach and ripping. Lee was a former student at
the Waseda University in Tokyo.
By

Explorers

Set Record
SPACE CENTER, Houston
(UP!) - Apollo 16's dogged
lunar exploers pushed halfway
up Stone Mountain and nearly
wore out their four-wheeled
·buggy Saturday in a record-

~ ct1'on P'Ian Launched ~€:"::~.:;
Au

See Harold Thorn pson or 'Lou Lutton

school under the direction of David Bowen are, front to back, Sheila
McKnight, Patti Well, Roxie Patterson, Debbie May, Diana Carsey, Cherie
Reuter, Jan Kennedy, Debbie Triplett, Connie Radford, Connie Grueser.

junbatt xrrimts
- itntintl
.

.

End 8,000 Mile Venture

Now you can shop for your dream
car with the money to b!Jy it already in
your pocket. We process your auto loan
Arst and let you pick the car later. It puts
you behind the wheel faster, with less
detail and delay. We make it our· business to gel you on the road.

"109 YEARS OF SERVICE''

..

-.

and Charles M. Duke Jr.
seemed frustrated at times in
their search for volcanic
mountain bedrock that oozed
like hot mo~sses from the
moon's interior as long as 4
billion years ago.
But they requested permission from Mission Control
- and cheered when they got it
~ to stay outside their landing
craft Orion long enough to beat
the Apollo 15 moonwalk record
of 7 hours, 12 minutes and 43
seconds set last . sunimer by
David R. Scott and James B.
Irwin.
YoiUlg and Duke stayed on
the forbidding, cratered surface 7 hours, 23 minutes and 28
second&amp;. In the procet~~~, they
drove their lunor rover "like a
camel" past yawning craters
and treacherous 20-degree
slopes remlnlscent cl Death
Valley in the wastelands of
(Continued on Page 16)

\

COLUMBUS - THE BUREAU OF EMPLOYMENT Ser·
vices reported Saturdsy that the Ohio economy is apparently
rebounding from the 1971 recession and production workers
grossed a record $179 a week in March.
''The average work-week in Ohio factories has been moving
upward In the past two months and seems likely to rise further, "
the bureau said In a statement. "Last month's level- 41.1 hours
-is Indicative of considerable overtlnle."
"
· PARIS- NOR111 VIETNAM SAID It shot down three U.S.
warplanes over Thanh Hao province Saturday, k~ "a certain
number" of pilots. North Vietnam !llllde the claim in-a Foreign
Ministry statement issued in Hanoi Saturday and circulated in
Paris by the North Vietnamese delegation to the suspended
peace talks.
_
The North Vietnamese news agency said Frldlly its troope
bad shot down three U. S. aircraft over the North during the
raids.
BOSTON -SEN. GEORGES. McGOVERN slrollet\ through
buay awds at the city's largest open air market Saturday,
shaking bands and tasting hawkers' wares in aeardl of the
working c1au vote in Tueilday'a )fa~Dchlllella Democratic
primary. The South Dakota Demol!rat, fawred to win the
popular vote and a majority of MullachUMtts' 102 dsletlate wtes
at the national convention, munched on an awle, a piece of
cheddar cheese and a sa~~~~ge sandwich while WOIIdes'IDI
through the maie ofstalla and llooda of Saturday sboppen ill and
(Continued on Page 16)

joining the "date certain" bloc
are such longtime establishment figures as Speaker Carl
Albert, Okla., Majority Leider
Hale Boggs, Ls., Cbalrman
Wilbur D. Mills, Ark:, of lfDu8e
Ways and Means Committee
and Chet Holifield, Callf.,ol the
House Govenunent Operatlonl
Committee. · (Mills did not
attend the caucus but he endorsed the general Idea of the
resolution in a campaign
speech.)
A partisan tine haa been
drawn througb the VIetnam
debate, with Democrats and
Republicans shouting aero• it
at each other and among
themselves.
Wlthdrawlll Dille Waled
By a vote of 135 to 118, the
·Democratic caucus adopted a
resolution offered by Whip
Thomas P. O'Neill, Mall.,
denouncing the U.S. bombing
of North Vietnam 11 a
"dangel'OWI escalation" of the
war, calling for the JII'O!Ill)t
setting of a withdrawal date
and directing ita memben on
the House Foreign Affairs
Committee to eome up with
appropriate withdrawal
legislation within· 30 daya.
A little while later, In an
effort to balance the blne of the
resolution, the caucus condemned the Nortb Vietnamese
''mllltary InvaSion" ol lbe
South. 'l1lat move picked ap a
handful more Including Albert
and BoggB -1nd the lllltllded
O'NeW prOpOia1 passed 144 to

56.
For both Albert ud llaQI,
as well aa such senior
Democrata as Holifield, U
ma"ked the lint time lheJ bid
accepted, even in principle, 11M
setting of a 111:111 wl1bdrawlll
deadline, eontma-Jt llllly upae
the retum of Amerlcu prt.
nera and an acco11111Dc of lilt
milling Ia adlon.
'lbree ilmel In 1r11 lilt
Senile puled an ., " d
by Senate Doili'lCrlltic

I In

Mike Mullleld, Mtllll, . . . .
(Contlllued on Plat 11)

�..

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•

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•

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•

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P"

•

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.. ' ..

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..-. 1·.• •

11- Tbe &amp;n~ay Tlmel-

te-Tile 81lldi.Y Tlmel· SeniiDel, Sunday, AprU23, 1m .

Old Running Mates Collide Tuesday
' PHILADELPHIA (uP!) Rwlnlng mates in 19111, Hubert
H. Humplrey and Edmund S.
Muskle collide in the pennayt.
vanla primary Tuesday, trying
to kill each other olf 111 the
treacher0111 trail to the ~ocrallcJ)raldential nomination.
[lUI a late surge by Sen.
a.otge S. M~ '!hreatellll
to make·a three-way race out of
..m.tts erpecte(t ·to be.the first
allowdoW!l betWeen Humphrey
and Mulkie, old friends and
poUIIcal allies only four years
ago.
The'outcome of the primary
In this large and populous
lnduatrialatrongholdiscrilical
to the White HOUle ambitions
of Muakle and Humphrey but
for !lfcGovern, who has concentrated 111 the same day's
Mauachusetts primary,
anything more than a thirdplace.flnlshand more than 10 to
15 delegates would be · a
bonanza.· For Humphrey, who
has never won a presidential
primary In attemP,ts dating
back to 1960, Pennsylvania
provides the chance for him to
prove he Is a wlnnet. He calls It
a "do or die" situation.
Opllmlltlc and enthusiastic
• always, .Jlurnphrey flatly
predicts "we're going to win

thts one."
A more restrained and
subdued Musk!e is looking past
the "besuty contest" prefer·
ence aspect of the primary and
CQuriting on grabbing the
majOI' share of the delegates I&lt;J
be chosen in another phase of
the hellotlng.
It is not Impossible that
,Humphrey will win the preference primary and Muskte the
larger number of delegates
wbich could send them into the
following week's Ohio primary
with both r!ghUy claiming that
they triwnphed in Pennsylvanla .
.
Although billed as a head-tohead clash between the two
leading candidates from the
idealog!cal center of the Democratic Party, the preference
ballot also lists Alabama Gov.
George C. Wallace and Sen.
Henry M. Jackson.
Jackson has compietely tgnored Pennsylvania to concenIrate on Ohio but McGovern.
stepped up his activities in th.e
state in the final week and
Wallace shifted campaign lac·
tics to allow hlm several hit·
and-run missions.
Wallace and McGovern, who
SuCcessfully mined the deep
!Uscontent among voters In

Wisconsin, may show sur- Wallace, 4. There are also 170 s)&gt;lvania, swinging from the
prising percentagea. They will uncommitted delegates.
populous east to the recessionnot, however, ~fit from a · Only President Nixon is ridd!lll west with Shapp almost
Republican cr~ver which is entered in the Republican always at his side.
not allowed as it
in !iimary. Fifty delega,tes to the
With his own political
Wisconsin .
GOP convention in San Diego acumen · (he jumped .on the
Although McGovern per- also will be elected,
· Muskie bandwagon early) on
sonally made no claim post
lAired by the entreatie~~ of theline,Sbapphasputhisstate
"we' ll do better than . we Gov.Mi)tonShappandoffersof organization to work for
thought," his campaign .aides desper~lely-needed cash to fin- Muskle.
predicted that the South ·&amp;nee the campaign, Muskie . This include:~ ·I;'eter J. CaDakota senator · might · edge made the hard decision to miel, the l&gt;hllaclelphla party
Musk!e In the . popularity leave
the
April
25 chairman, who is 'waging an
contest and possibly also finish Massachusetts primary to aggressive campaign for the
second In the number of MfGovern and take on area's 2li delegates although
delegates.
Hwnphrey in Pennsylvania. Humphrey has a strong hold on
Wallace predicted there
Although he made sporadic the city's blacks, an estimated
would be "some surprise•" in forays into Massachusetts and 250,00il of them registered as
the vote on Tuesday but Ohio, Musltie concentrated aJ. Democrats.
refused to make any exact most exclusively on PennTo counter the Shapp organlprediction.
·Separated from the prefer.
ence primary on the intricate
and complicated ballot iB the
selection ·of delegates to the
convention. The voters
Tuesday will choose 137; those,
in turn, will pick 'll more; and
the state committee will ap.
point 18. In all, Penrisylvania
will have 182 delegate votes,
third largest at the convention.

,Yu

Studying Red -Schools

B,OOO .Mile
(Continued from page 15)
inch gash on hls right arm.
Dlda't Blame Sbark
"It was not really the shark's
fault-It was mine," he said. "I
had spear&lt;!d a fish and the
shark took it off my spear so I
speared hlm and he did not like
It, so had a go at me.
"I am going to need some
surgery but the wound is not
aer10111," he said.
· Fairfax said he and Miss
Cook, of Stoneleigh, England,
did not suffer any illnesses on
their journey but were very
bored.
He said the boat; designed
specially for the trip, had
performed wonderfuUy.
"We had about 10 days of
really bid weather ~th 40 knot
wlnda and high waves oil the
fringe of two cyclones but
.never felt we were in ·danger,"
he aald.
"We never looked like running .short &lt;i food but were
&amp;eltin&amp; pretty low by the lime
we arrived here. However we
had alocked up pretty well at
two lalands on the way," he
llld.

organization in visits to various
types of schools, an analysis of
methodology, content and
climate . of instruction, the
extracurricular program, and
professional status.
The
group
became
acquainted with ihe history of
the Soviet Union and with
Marxist-Leninist philosophy.
In addition, t¥ director of the
project, as well as local
specialists, assisted in giving
the participants an un.derstanding of political,
economic and social conditions.
Dr . and Mrs. Rousey and two
daughters, Rhonda and Jenny,
· before returning to Alaska
Saturday morning, visited here
with his moiher and friends
several days.
Dr. Rousey in comparing U.
S. with Russia, observed tliat,
"There is no comparison."

Soviet Russia has progressed,
but comparison to their
progress would be the standard
of education that existed in the
U. S. 50 years ago.
Dr. Rousey said his school
district In Alaska covers 23,000
square miles.

Opinion Group

Gallipolis, Ohio
April21,1972
Dear Sir :
The people of Gallia County and the surrounding area should
be proud of their overwhelming response to the collection of
glass, to "Reglassification, " as a means to help preserve the
environment.Last week, over eighteen large barrels were filled.
Several people have offered to drive their trucks to the Huntington, Owens-Illinois Reclamation Center.
Now, another crucial element became available, that of
continuous manpower, vital to having glass collection on a
permanent basis. Thanks to Dr. Niehm, superintendent of G.S.I.,
who today gave the assurance of the Institute's cooperation and
irupport. Dr. Nlebm will have .several men help each Wednesday
and Saturday with the transfer, sorting and cruahlng of glaas
here in Gallipolis. He further offered to have the resldenla of the
Gallipolis State Institute actively save all of their glaas and assist
THE CHASE - Harry Beaton (Rick Boone) races through the forest in an attempt to
with the rinsing and collection of the glass used by the Institute.
escape Brigadoon after his true love, Jean MacLaren, (Pam Romaine) decides to marry
More small pickup trucks are needed : One each Wednesda,
Charlie Dalrymple (Dave Thomas). Picture was taken by Steve Wilson as Act 2got underway.
for about an hour from 5:30 p.ll) .. and each Sa!urday starting
from 12:30for about an hour and a half. If you can help just once,
do call, for that will be of great ~stance. If anyone has an old
truck that they would like to donate to this very worthy cause it
would be greatly appreciated: The lifting of·herrels will be done
by the M.Y.F. members and by the G.S.I. residents; thus, if you
help with your truck you do oot have to do more than drive
around to .the collection points here in Gallipolis while the other
helpers exchange full barrels for the empties and return the full
ones to Scotten-Dlllon for crushing and storage.., ·
_
Please notethatthereis nodangertoyourlnicks, thegla.SII is
,.....: In neat containers. Those driving to Huntington wW be reimbursed for the gas expenses with the profit from the glass.
Scotten-Dillon for the present has most graciously and
, generously offered the ~se of its eitra space as the main aortlng
and storage place . However, if anyone can offer a more per·
manent space in a partially vacant bullding, for Instance, in
town, please call.
Please keep rinsing and saving your glass, of all aorta and
Iring it to the collection points : A &amp; P, Jones' Boys, Johnson's,
and Penny·Fl!J'O. The glass may be brought at any Urne.
For volunteering services or trucks or furiher Information
please call either 446-9339 or 446-3915.
Mrs. Balzac Selendy

EDA Grant of $4.2,790 Made

Assigned
KATHY FISCHER, who played the leading lady (Fiona MacLaren) in Gallla Academy
High School's presentation of Brigadoon Thursday, Friday and Saturday, ts pictured here In a
first actscene as she sings, "Wallin' for My Dearie.

_Area News • • • i~ Briefs
Death

around Haymarket -Square.
"Hey, we got 'lm, wegol'lm, we got 'lm rigllthere. Hey we got
Senator McGovern right here," one stallkeeper droned above the
ooise of the crowd as McGovern inched his way around the
market. Farther along a hawker held up a flab as McGovern
walked by. "How 'bout a fresh mackerel. Hey ... stop fishing
around for votes." But he added, "Let's get Nixon outta there."

I

WASHINGTON - lOth
District Representative
Clarence E. Miller was today
advised by the Economic
Development Administration
of the approval of a $42,790
grant to the Buckeye Hills
Hocking Valley Economic
Development District, based in
Marietta.
Local source.s· will provide
$H,405 to complete the total
$57,195 cost of operating the
program for one year. The
funds are to help pay ad-

Eddy's Schzdule

POMEROY - Mr. Eddy
Educator's schedule in Meigs
County for the week of April 2428:
Monday, Salisbury, 9-10 :30;
VIENTIANE - THE PATHET LAO Communist
Salem
Center, 11:15-1:30.
representative here said Saturday discussions on the release' of
Tuesday, Syracuse, 9-11 :15;
American prisoners of war held in Gaos could begin a• soon as
Racine,
12-2:30; Wagner's, 2:45
the U!lited State• ordered a ''total" bomb. . hall in the land3
15
• ' ; East Letart, 3' 45 • 5;
locked kingdom.
Col. Soth Phetrasy, the Laotian Communlals' permanent WhisUe Stop, 5 • 5:30;. Apple
8
spokesman in Vientiane, said ''there were many" U.s. POWs ~r~e, : 6;30; Antlqwty, 7 •
7·30 • Racme Bank, 7:45 • 8:30.
being held by the Patbet Lao but would not dlscme·the met
~ednesday, Langsville, 7:45 ·
number or their wherabollll. ''We are ~ to discuss the '
question of U.S. POW rei- if the American lmperiallsts would • 8.15.
Thunday' Southern Sr. High,
order a total bombing halt and let alorie the laotians to solve
9-11 :30; Dorcas, 12!15. 12:45;
their own .internal prolllems," he said.
Long Bottom, I: 45 • 3; ReedsvWe, 3' 30 • 4:30; Whistle S,top,
4:35 • 4:50; . Keno, 8 • 6(30j
~shan, 7 • 7:30; Harden's 8.
8 30
· ·
'

.Chicken Barbecue is.First

MIDDLEPORT - ne llrR e1 aevent fad nliJic
prvJeell......-bylllellldtltpertFhDeptwlllbe
beld S.lllrday, Aprll!llll at IH Lap. l'lrt 1lebJid IH
poll ollke.
A'cbldea balileeaelllarllqatU~.m.lllll'llllllll
81 lq 81 tile IIPlll1 lull wOl be lleld, RAIN OR

Explorers

.··

SHINE. ·
'lbeme•wiD be'~ellle~ lllked beau, lin ud
niDI, Ill for tiM.
. Melley w01 billed lor ep)J
1111 .w fire
atallaalllllqlidwOlbellllltW....,..,
.·... . ::-:-. .. :. .
.
l arr: ..,
!!iil

CHARGE, FILED
GALUPOUS - Charging
gross neglect of duty and eatreme cruelty, Lucille Swain,
Rt. 2, filed a petition ·here

Gallia

BY HOBART WWlON, JR.
·
A leading Gallipolis merchant, whlle discussing the downtown parking situation recenUy in the Old Freneh City, came up
with two or three suggestions.

++++
THE Individual thought it might be wise to conduct a survey
bef&lt;ire the Holzer.Medlcal Center moves Into its new quarters on
Ria. 35-160, then follow'up with another stUdy after the hospital's
move Iosee just how much shoul4 be done to better the situation.

++++

SHOULD the second survey

r~eal

something he done
to Improve the parking situation, the merchant suggested local
wslnessmen get together and plan a downtown parking garage,
similar to the one buill recenUy In Athens. It was suggested too,
the association could ask their employees to park along the
Upstream PUblic Use Area below the Public Square in order to
make additional room for area shoppers. "The association could
sponsor some kind of a contest in order to promote off-etreet
parking," continued the merchant.

++++

Glass Reclamation Now Reality

' GALLIPOUS - Dr. A. R.
Christensen, president of the
Gallipolis Chamber of ComMRS. GEORGE
merce, Saturday announced
committee chairmen and
assignments for the 1972·73
liscal year.
They are:
Downtown Improvement Ermice Brooks
Hoyt Mullens and Paul Davies,
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. James
McARTHUR- Mrs. Ruth T. co-chairmen ; John Mills, (Eunice M.) Brooks, 63, a
George, 201 W. N. St., has been Wayne Niday, Mac McGinness, native of Gallia County, died at
selected to serve on the Dr. C. R. qprnett, Jack Hud- her home in Delaware, Ohio
National Voter Advisory Board son, and Earl Durham.
Thursday.
.
of the American Security
Education - Mrs. Jean
Mrs . Brooks was the
Council and to participate in Moore, Richard Mackenzie, daughter. of Mr. and Mrs. Ira
the election year National · Ray Blowers, Hugh Graham, Shaio.
Security Issues Poll.
Dr. C. E. Holzer, and Ally,
She is survived by her
John M. Fisher, president of Hamlin C. King.
husband, Jim · E. £rooks ;
ihe American Security Council
Executive - Dr: A. R. daughters, Mrs . Barbara
in Washington, D. C., stated Christensen , Hoyt Mullins, Tisdale, Richmond, Va., Mrs.
that this selection had been Roger Barron and Wendell Janet Davidson, Westerville ;
made on the basts of Mrs. Thomas.
son, Kenneih J.' Reed, VerGeorge's national recognition
Highway &amp; Transportation - milion, Ohio; sisters, Ethel
as an opinion leader in Richard Carter, Joe D. Miller, Roush,
Faye
Wr.ight,
McArthur.
Atty. Bill Jenkins, Dr. K. R. Galiipolis ; Maxine Boggs,
The American Security Brandeberry, Bob Evans, and Columbus; brothers, Jim,
Council
works
with Ray Ellis.
Raymond and Paul Shato,
Republicans and Democrats,
Indistrial - Clyde Ramsay, Gallipolis, Fred Shato,
liberals and conservatives, Ted Lutton, Richard Roy and Colwnbus: 13 Rrandchildren; I
labor and business, competing L. R. Ford.
great-grandchild. Member of
forms of mass media, different
Membership - Wendell Beechwold Church of Christ.
religious groups, different Thomas, !farold Wiseman,
Friends may call at Shawlevels of education, and Alva G. Shoemaker, Richard Davis North Chapel, 4341 N.
Federal and local government. Roderick, Charles Bostic, Bob High st. toda y.
The resulta of the poll made . ruchards, and Marianne B.
Funeral service is. 11 , a.m.
by this Advisory Board will be Campbell.
Monday . Drury Benton,
(CGntbsued from ~e 16)
sent to President Nixon,
Publicity
Paul
Wagner
·
Minister
officiating. Intel'ment
Callfomil.
members of the Congress, and and Hobart Wilson, co- will he in Kingswood Mem'orial
The Rover lost Its tilt· the national press. Members of
Gardens.
l'eldlnl device, a rear fender, the Board will receive solid chairmen.
Special Events - John
part oll~ rear wheel drive and sterling silver American Koebel, Sam Neal, Manning
filially almost ill entire Security Insignia. Mrs. George Wetherholt, Gilbert Bush,
MorfciiUCIIII system, forcing is .the Coordin8tor of the Title I Morris E. Haskins, Bob Barron and Dr. Thomas
Y011111 to foll111r his own tracks and ADC Federal Programs of Marchi, Mrs. Charlene Batey, Morgan, co-chairmen; Kenblet to !be lllttering Orion 011 ihe North Galli a Local School and Mrs. Lola M. Suiter.
neth Morgan, Neal Sanders,
Clyley Plalm. : .
District and Art Instructor.
Traflic &amp; Safety - Roger and Clarence Waugh.

Mrs. George on

Massachusetts, his supporters 1-2, with Wallace at . 711 and
sensed a late surge in the blue Humphrey atl9.
collar districts, similar to the
All the candidates have
ones that occurred in sharply criticised Nb:on•a
Wiscoosln and New Hamp. . economic policiea In deference
shire. .
·
to the state 5.8 per cent
· To take . advantage of the ·unemployment; promlaed to
upswing, McGovern added two cut· loopholes as 'meant ol
days of campaignll!g in Penn- reducing property ~es, an&lt;!
sylvania.
attacked the l!S!1allition.of !he
He predicted that he would, VIetnam bombing.
get a majority of the . 239
Although the Democratic
delegates · (137 Pennsylvania, candidates went aIIIIIch. other
102 Massach~~&amp;etts) at stake in Wisconsin, they have muted
Tuesday which would put him that ·part of the CN11P"i811 to
ahead In the delegate race. He attack Nixon. Musli:!e called
now trails ~yskie 93 1-2 to IlK hlin.''the main target."

·Dateline

SUNDAY, APRIL 23
7 oz.
SUN IN

++++

Committees

By C of C

Highest Office Could. Go to tlae ·.
Winner of this Contest Between
Old. Democrat Political Budtlies

.,.hwl, 8aDdly, April u, 1m

MUCH is being done by community leaders in preparing the
·Old French City for the especled Influx of new residents during
the next few months. Many feel, however, that downtown
·parking should receive more attention than It's getting at the .
present lime. If you've got any Ideas on the subject, why ·not
:attend the nest merchant meeting on Tuesday, May 2, and voice
. your opinions?

Muskie has 138 delegates
running; McGovern, 137;
Humphrey, 130; Jackson, 28;
Rep. Shirley Chisholm, 19; and

·nr. Rousey with Group
POMEROY - Dr. Norman
Ro~~~ey, son of Mrs. Katerine
Millikan, Pomeroy, was one of
15 educaton in the United
States chosen to represent the
U. S. educational cormilunlty
as a participant In the
American Association of
School Admlnlstra tors
(AASA's) International field
·atudy mission to USSR, from
March 28 to April 17.
Dr. Rouaey Is superintendent
• of schools at Palmer, Alaska,
Matanuaka&amp;.sitna Borough
School District.
Dr. Rouaey was born In
Puneroy In the home In which
hll mother now resldlii·; 1ll
Butternut Ave. He .attended
achool at Sugar Run ·
Elementary, then bter moved
to Athens where he graduated
DR. ROUSEY
from Athens High School. .
Dr. Rouaey, while living In patterns and administrative
Pomeroy, resided with his techniques.
grandparenbi, the' late Judge
Special attention was given
and Mrs. C. E: Popl~s.
to
Soviet
educational
He received his BS degree In
education from Bowling Green
University, has master degree
from the University of
Southern California, and hls
doctorate from Ohio University.
Accompanying him to Russia
. was his wile, Katie. The pur·
pose of the mission lo Russia
was to study the schools of the
Soviet Union which included an .
examination of their curricula,
standards of achievement,
methods, or~anizational

zatlm, Humphrey has picked
backing of organized
labor which boasts 1.5 million·
members. The endonements
include I. W. ,Abel, president of
the United Steelworkers.
In a!ldltion.to Ills own ability
tocampaignalmostaroundthe
clock wi!h no vlslble signs of
weariness, }fumphrey hopes to
pu\ together a coalition of
· unionists, . blacks, Jews; and
the elderly. This combination,
long the backbone of Humphrey support, helped him heal
Nixon in PeMaylvania four
years ago by 11111,000 votes.
Although McGovern has
spentmlllltofthetlmesincethe
AprU 4 WiBcanain primary in
up the

Party's No'mination fo~ NatU&gt;n 's

.,

t tilltl!!!.l!!:!!l!

Friday aeeklng a divorce from
Bobby Joe Swain, aame ad-

· dreaa. They were married June

17, t9t7 and haVe 8lx chlldnn.

AHS

G

Election

Set 10r
I
Tuesday
GALUPOUS - ElecUon. of

ministrative expenses connected with the planning of
economic growth In the nine- ·
county area served by the
Distriet. The nine counties are:
Washington, Perry, Athens,
Meigs, Hocking, [lelinonl,
Noble, Morgan and Monroe.

Doves
(Continued from page 15)
lng it to be ''the pollcy of ttie
United States" that the United
State• militarily dlsenaage
from Indochina within 8lx or
nine munths. The HOUle never
accepted It but under a
parliamentary situatiCII that
favored the administration,
doves lost only 215 to 193,in an
effort to adopt the measure.
AmeadmentFavtred
Acheckoftheunoffocialroll
call taken at the cloaed CIUCUI'
reveals that for the moll part
the Democral.l maintained
their two-toH~ne stand in fmr
of a Mansfield type ~
menl. Adding Albert and
Boggs, and lboee who would
follow their lead, would
provide the extra nlDllbera llllt
psychological )llllh to carry the
day for the doves.
·
One While HoUle. aide ack·
nowledged that wbat worried
him most was whetber tbl:
Democratic vote signaled a
t!I'Uclal break in the blput[san
working relaUOillbp be~
the adminlatra~ and the'
H0111e leaderlhlp over tbt
Issue.
•
The conversion of Albert and
Boggs Is neither total nor'

a

==·

1972-73 Gallla Academy High
~~~;"'~
Schooi•tudent body off!cera 1s lndl ted
,._ in !bee. . .
scheduled Tuesday April 25 ·
ca ear....
nit
according to Jam~ N. M: tllat he -dered wbetbtr the
Davis, principal.
ID8IIIveU.S.bomblniofHIIICII ·
Vice presidential candidates ~nd
IJai~ll
wu
are Brant Adams Mark ~.. Pr · ,. ·
IOeallng, Topper ~. Arlen from~=-4DC!-llle Dlmocnll
Owens and Kala Sue Waugh. wu
to llavi ~ a
PrelldenUal candidates are part. 'lben WllltJIIIIfth ..
Alan !temp SteveLae Howard Bo&amp;&amp;s felt be bad beta "
Mcllanlal ~ David 'Thamas. ~Into vatilll wllb the .·
'

EDWIN (Pete) McCirmlck, veteran Boy Scout official, has
'performed many chores for area youngsters down through the
years. last Tuesday, the tables were reversed. Members of Jack
'Sinuns' Troop 200 journeyed out to Pete's Fairfield Farm where
they cleaned up the winter litter and mowed the grass for
Gallia 's Grand Ole' Scouter. How 'bout that for a good deed for
\he day?
YEAR after year students of Mrs, Anne Fischer, GAHS vocal
music instructor, come up with top.notch Broadway musical
performances. This year's Brigadoon, presented at Washington
auditorium Thursday, Friday and Saturday, drew much praise
from community residents as did Music Man, South Pacific and
others presented by the young musicians down through the
years. If you've never been in one, you can't Imagine the work
that is required by all to make such o production a success. It's
something worthwhUe, In more ways than one, and something
participants will never forget, even long after the final curtain is
down.

1 PM TO 7 PM ONLY
•

SUNTAN
SPRAY

66e

00

SPINCAST ROD &amp;·REEL
COMBINATION

SUNTAN
SPRAY ·

Rotllootvru fib., .!Ulod lt•on ~y f.,
rwtilfooiiCI, cO!Itolnd thumll
eon+rol, 1up.r-smooth drtt ond MIKti"'~fvl ~•iltr!

-

oft

....

COSMETICS DEPT.

SPORTS
DEPT.

NYLON 8"/z'xllW
. ROOM SIZE

+++++

TWENTY YEARS AGO, ·from the files of the Daily Tribune

and weekly Gallia Times ... Ohio Colleges Association approves
Rio Grande College for assoclate'memhershlp, synonymous with
accreditation ... Mrs. Carrie Dele to head teachers organization
... City approves plans for new $950,000 sewage disposal plant ...
Terry Johnson selected ROtary Boy of the Week ... Lois Ann
Gooch and Eleanor K. Richards named Girls of the Month by
B&amp;PW Club ... SWimming pool Improvements ordered by city ,
commlsa!on ... GAHS upsets unbeaten Jackson 5-4 for first
baseball victory of year.

22 LONG RIFLE

SHELLS
Heck's Reg.

8.80

1

•s•!"

10 BOXES, 500• ROUNDS PER CARTON
SPORTS DEPT.

Heck's· Reg. 134.88

SCHULT

MOBILE HOMES
•HOMESTEAD .
•CHATEAU
•Cl:[STOM

EAQt WitH AN ASsoRTMENT

·OF FLOOR PLANS .
3 - .USED UNITS

8'x30'.
~II ~II '995.00
10'150'••••~ •••••••••••••• ·····:~ •••• ~2995.00
I I I I I If Ill I f'lll I l l I I lilt

Heck's Rei!. 111.97 1

TV TRAY
TABLE

A large selection of better
quality room size rugs . Choo se
from Capri or Apache styl es .
Colors : Blue Green, Green,
Avocado . Gold. Red and Blue.

$}22
CLOTHING DEPARTMENT
• 15"x21" li•

• Honlwood topa: otoin, olcoMI, mor '"""""'
• Fokh oompactly-'ly edpd
wijh eitvolod limo 'li"'

FOLDING BED

' t.um. ...... ~ .. ""'

HOUSEWARES DEPT.

Single leg. balled tub ing, 1"
thick virgin polyfoam
mattress has striped cotton
ticking ononeslde, vinyl on
the reverse. ,

·· · ·KENTr . .

LIFE VEST
Kapok filled, electronically
sea ted In air· light heavy duty
vinyl lnser ls . Approved yoke
design always float s wearer
lace up. Rugged jeans cloth

cover, strong cotton snap on
and tie tape straps. Approved
stainless steel hardware.
Mildew proof thread. U.S.C.G.

;~k~; Reg.
OP TO

SJ.88 .

$

Heck's
Reg.

244

33'

LADY

S.M·l

FACIAL TISSUE

.
Heck's Reg. 113.99

DEPT.

BATHROOM
ORGANIZER

175 COUNT

HARDWARE DEPARTMENT

LIMIT 4
HOUSEWARE~

$

DEPT.

A real space maker

FIR

Spring adjustable

Three shelves

20 GAL Mgll .

GILSON

S H.P.

Democrats Will Meet at Addison
ADDISON - A Democrai Democratic primary on May 2,
Neighborhood meeting will be and to furnish Information
held Monday, April 24 at 7:30 about one of ihe Democratic
p.m. here at the home of Mrs. candidates for President, '
Dougla• Rouse, Old ·Route 7. Senator George McGovern,
The meeting will have two Democrat of South Dakota.
purposes, · to acquaint voters Interested democrats are
with the new type of blllot tha.t . invited.
will be used in this year's

$888

ontl...,-. MHi•"'•divn ....,-.

libtr tlon rod ho1 olllot kondlo with 1111.
,.,,d MIKI lf!Kie ceri grip "lll'ld IOJe9ri p.
Co"'plftt wi;l. Z,fc. monofiiCINftt liM, .

++++

DEDICATION and open house activities of the new Holzer
Medical Center iB now history. Thousands came from near and
afar to view the $21 mllllon medical facility last week. Many are
sllll talking about the events which took place Monday, Tuesday,
and Wednesday. It's almost Impossible for us to describe how
Individuals reacted as they loured the new structure. An editorial
which appeared In Wednesday morning's Huntington HeraldDispatch read :
"A $21 mllllbn medical comp!es, in Gallla County, Ohio,
received the accolades reserved for such an accomplishment
Tuesday .
"It was the official dedication of Holzer Medical Complex .
"And, the worda of John Rafferty, its administrator, sum·
med up what many were thinking:
" 'It ia not just a building. It Is an idea, a concept that
represents the best posaible medical care we can offer. If Holzer
can instill confidence and pride In those it serves, then we have
acbleved what we set out to do.' "
"Of course, Holzer is In the Umelight at present, But, this is
not to disdain efforts of other communities to upgrade medical
facilities and services.
"Ironton and Lawrence County are currenUy in the midst of
a transformation of Lawrence County General Hospital. Other
cities - Huntington, Ashland and throughout Eastern Kentucky
- have embarked on similar esponsfons and Improvements of
hospital and anclllary services.
"Quality health care is a national goal. It must be made
accessible to all people, as Dr. John W. Cashmand, Sr., directordesignate of the Ohio Deparbnent of Health, put it.
"Holzer and the many fine hospitals now a-building are
· added incentive for this · valley's continued growth. The
availabWty of quality medical service is high on the list of
priorities for any viable and growing area. We have it to offer
here in the Tri.States.''

2.490

each

Heck's Reg. •s1.33
...

ZEiCO

FRONT ONLY
Rei!. '3.99

12 ONLYTO SELL
DISCONTINUED STYLE

GARDEN
TILLER
Heck's Reg. 17.99

word,

ntufn,l, ntYMf,

'"" """ta1

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FOLDING FENCE
HARDWARE
DEPT.

$r.48
HAIDWAH DEPT

$1~6

COM PAC

.REEL
$}22

Heck's Reg.
$ J88.88

Heck's Ret. $1.99 .
DEPT.

PLASTIC

Heclr's
lteg.

2.66

1

Delu• ·

tine shi•ld. 5 hp., 4-cyctit

WHITE

oo·

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Easy hondlinq, ~oo ·with forBrigi.P &amp;: Strotton •n9IM, ower.
ctnt.r clutch control. Aft &amp;il.

1$

..

Honl worll"'', bMj po- filler.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

18;, high, 10 ft. long. Protects shrubs,
lawns, flowers ond trees.· Bcihd -on "
DuPont finish .

GARBAGE
CANS

RALLY CREAM

WAX
Heck's Rq. '1.48· ~~~

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te-Tile 81lldi.Y Tlmel· SeniiDel, Sunday, AprU23, 1m .

Old Running Mates Collide Tuesday
' PHILADELPHIA (uP!) Rwlnlng mates in 19111, Hubert
H. Humplrey and Edmund S.
Muskle collide in the pennayt.
vanla primary Tuesday, trying
to kill each other olf 111 the
treacher0111 trail to the ~ocrallcJ)raldential nomination.
[lUI a late surge by Sen.
a.otge S. M~ '!hreatellll
to make·a three-way race out of
..m.tts erpecte(t ·to be.the first
allowdoW!l betWeen Humphrey
and Mulkie, old friends and
poUIIcal allies only four years
ago.
The'outcome of the primary
In this large and populous
lnduatrialatrongholdiscrilical
to the White HOUle ambitions
of Muakle and Humphrey but
for !lfcGovern, who has concentrated 111 the same day's
Mauachusetts primary,
anything more than a thirdplace.flnlshand more than 10 to
15 delegates would be · a
bonanza.· For Humphrey, who
has never won a presidential
primary In attemP,ts dating
back to 1960, Pennsylvania
provides the chance for him to
prove he Is a wlnnet. He calls It
a "do or die" situation.
Opllmlltlc and enthusiastic
• always, .Jlurnphrey flatly
predicts "we're going to win

thts one."
A more restrained and
subdued Musk!e is looking past
the "besuty contest" prefer·
ence aspect of the primary and
CQuriting on grabbing the
majOI' share of the delegates I&lt;J
be chosen in another phase of
the hellotlng.
It is not Impossible that
,Humphrey will win the preference primary and Muskte the
larger number of delegates
wbich could send them into the
following week's Ohio primary
with both r!ghUy claiming that
they triwnphed in Pennsylvanla .
.
Although billed as a head-tohead clash between the two
leading candidates from the
idealog!cal center of the Democratic Party, the preference
ballot also lists Alabama Gov.
George C. Wallace and Sen.
Henry M. Jackson.
Jackson has compietely tgnored Pennsylvania to concenIrate on Ohio but McGovern.
stepped up his activities in th.e
state in the final week and
Wallace shifted campaign lac·
tics to allow hlm several hit·
and-run missions.
Wallace and McGovern, who
SuCcessfully mined the deep
!Uscontent among voters In

Wisconsin, may show sur- Wallace, 4. There are also 170 s)&gt;lvania, swinging from the
prising percentagea. They will uncommitted delegates.
populous east to the recessionnot, however, ~fit from a · Only President Nixon is ridd!lll west with Shapp almost
Republican cr~ver which is entered in the Republican always at his side.
not allowed as it
in !iimary. Fifty delega,tes to the
With his own political
Wisconsin .
GOP convention in San Diego acumen · (he jumped .on the
Although McGovern per- also will be elected,
· Muskie bandwagon early) on
sonally made no claim post
lAired by the entreatie~~ of theline,Sbapphasputhisstate
"we' ll do better than . we Gov.Mi)tonShappandoffersof organization to work for
thought," his campaign .aides desper~lely-needed cash to fin- Muskle.
predicted that the South ·&amp;nee the campaign, Muskie . This include:~ ·I;'eter J. CaDakota senator · might · edge made the hard decision to miel, the l&gt;hllaclelphla party
Musk!e In the . popularity leave
the
April
25 chairman, who is 'waging an
contest and possibly also finish Massachusetts primary to aggressive campaign for the
second In the number of MfGovern and take on area's 2li delegates although
delegates.
Hwnphrey in Pennsylvania. Humphrey has a strong hold on
Wallace predicted there
Although he made sporadic the city's blacks, an estimated
would be "some surprise•" in forays into Massachusetts and 250,00il of them registered as
the vote on Tuesday but Ohio, Musltie concentrated aJ. Democrats.
refused to make any exact most exclusively on PennTo counter the Shapp organlprediction.
·Separated from the prefer.
ence primary on the intricate
and complicated ballot iB the
selection ·of delegates to the
convention. The voters
Tuesday will choose 137; those,
in turn, will pick 'll more; and
the state committee will ap.
point 18. In all, Penrisylvania
will have 182 delegate votes,
third largest at the convention.

,Yu

Studying Red -Schools

B,OOO .Mile
(Continued from page 15)
inch gash on hls right arm.
Dlda't Blame Sbark
"It was not really the shark's
fault-It was mine," he said. "I
had spear&lt;!d a fish and the
shark took it off my spear so I
speared hlm and he did not like
It, so had a go at me.
"I am going to need some
surgery but the wound is not
aer10111," he said.
· Fairfax said he and Miss
Cook, of Stoneleigh, England,
did not suffer any illnesses on
their journey but were very
bored.
He said the boat; designed
specially for the trip, had
performed wonderfuUy.
"We had about 10 days of
really bid weather ~th 40 knot
wlnda and high waves oil the
fringe of two cyclones but
.never felt we were in ·danger,"
he aald.
"We never looked like running .short &lt;i food but were
&amp;eltin&amp; pretty low by the lime
we arrived here. However we
had alocked up pretty well at
two lalands on the way," he
llld.

organization in visits to various
types of schools, an analysis of
methodology, content and
climate . of instruction, the
extracurricular program, and
professional status.
The
group
became
acquainted with ihe history of
the Soviet Union and with
Marxist-Leninist philosophy.
In addition, t¥ director of the
project, as well as local
specialists, assisted in giving
the participants an un.derstanding of political,
economic and social conditions.
Dr . and Mrs. Rousey and two
daughters, Rhonda and Jenny,
· before returning to Alaska
Saturday morning, visited here
with his moiher and friends
several days.
Dr. Rousey in comparing U.
S. with Russia, observed tliat,
"There is no comparison."

Soviet Russia has progressed,
but comparison to their
progress would be the standard
of education that existed in the
U. S. 50 years ago.
Dr. Rousey said his school
district In Alaska covers 23,000
square miles.

Opinion Group

Gallipolis, Ohio
April21,1972
Dear Sir :
The people of Gallia County and the surrounding area should
be proud of their overwhelming response to the collection of
glass, to "Reglassification, " as a means to help preserve the
environment.Last week, over eighteen large barrels were filled.
Several people have offered to drive their trucks to the Huntington, Owens-Illinois Reclamation Center.
Now, another crucial element became available, that of
continuous manpower, vital to having glass collection on a
permanent basis. Thanks to Dr. Niehm, superintendent of G.S.I.,
who today gave the assurance of the Institute's cooperation and
irupport. Dr. Nlebm will have .several men help each Wednesday
and Saturday with the transfer, sorting and cruahlng of glaas
here in Gallipolis. He further offered to have the resldenla of the
Gallipolis State Institute actively save all of their glaas and assist
THE CHASE - Harry Beaton (Rick Boone) races through the forest in an attempt to
with the rinsing and collection of the glass used by the Institute.
escape Brigadoon after his true love, Jean MacLaren, (Pam Romaine) decides to marry
More small pickup trucks are needed : One each Wednesda,
Charlie Dalrymple (Dave Thomas). Picture was taken by Steve Wilson as Act 2got underway.
for about an hour from 5:30 p.ll) .. and each Sa!urday starting
from 12:30for about an hour and a half. If you can help just once,
do call, for that will be of great ~stance. If anyone has an old
truck that they would like to donate to this very worthy cause it
would be greatly appreciated: The lifting of·herrels will be done
by the M.Y.F. members and by the G.S.I. residents; thus, if you
help with your truck you do oot have to do more than drive
around to .the collection points here in Gallipolis while the other
helpers exchange full barrels for the empties and return the full
ones to Scotten-Dlllon for crushing and storage.., ·
_
Please notethatthereis nodangertoyourlnicks, thegla.SII is
,.....: In neat containers. Those driving to Huntington wW be reimbursed for the gas expenses with the profit from the glass.
Scotten-Dillon for the present has most graciously and
, generously offered the ~se of its eitra space as the main aortlng
and storage place . However, if anyone can offer a more per·
manent space in a partially vacant bullding, for Instance, in
town, please call.
Please keep rinsing and saving your glass, of all aorta and
Iring it to the collection points : A &amp; P, Jones' Boys, Johnson's,
and Penny·Fl!J'O. The glass may be brought at any Urne.
For volunteering services or trucks or furiher Information
please call either 446-9339 or 446-3915.
Mrs. Balzac Selendy

EDA Grant of $4.2,790 Made

Assigned
KATHY FISCHER, who played the leading lady (Fiona MacLaren) in Gallla Academy
High School's presentation of Brigadoon Thursday, Friday and Saturday, ts pictured here In a
first actscene as she sings, "Wallin' for My Dearie.

_Area News • • • i~ Briefs
Death

around Haymarket -Square.
"Hey, we got 'lm, wegol'lm, we got 'lm rigllthere. Hey we got
Senator McGovern right here," one stallkeeper droned above the
ooise of the crowd as McGovern inched his way around the
market. Farther along a hawker held up a flab as McGovern
walked by. "How 'bout a fresh mackerel. Hey ... stop fishing
around for votes." But he added, "Let's get Nixon outta there."

I

WASHINGTON - lOth
District Representative
Clarence E. Miller was today
advised by the Economic
Development Administration
of the approval of a $42,790
grant to the Buckeye Hills
Hocking Valley Economic
Development District, based in
Marietta.
Local source.s· will provide
$H,405 to complete the total
$57,195 cost of operating the
program for one year. The
funds are to help pay ad-

Eddy's Schzdule

POMEROY - Mr. Eddy
Educator's schedule in Meigs
County for the week of April 2428:
Monday, Salisbury, 9-10 :30;
VIENTIANE - THE PATHET LAO Communist
Salem
Center, 11:15-1:30.
representative here said Saturday discussions on the release' of
Tuesday, Syracuse, 9-11 :15;
American prisoners of war held in Gaos could begin a• soon as
Racine,
12-2:30; Wagner's, 2:45
the U!lited State• ordered a ''total" bomb. . hall in the land3
15
• ' ; East Letart, 3' 45 • 5;
locked kingdom.
Col. Soth Phetrasy, the Laotian Communlals' permanent WhisUe Stop, 5 • 5:30;. Apple
8
spokesman in Vientiane, said ''there were many" U.s. POWs ~r~e, : 6;30; Antlqwty, 7 •
7·30 • Racme Bank, 7:45 • 8:30.
being held by the Patbet Lao but would not dlscme·the met
~ednesday, Langsville, 7:45 ·
number or their wherabollll. ''We are ~ to discuss the '
question of U.S. POW rei- if the American lmperiallsts would • 8.15.
Thunday' Southern Sr. High,
order a total bombing halt and let alorie the laotians to solve
9-11 :30; Dorcas, 12!15. 12:45;
their own .internal prolllems," he said.
Long Bottom, I: 45 • 3; ReedsvWe, 3' 30 • 4:30; Whistle S,top,
4:35 • 4:50; . Keno, 8 • 6(30j
~shan, 7 • 7:30; Harden's 8.
8 30
· ·
'

.Chicken Barbecue is.First

MIDDLEPORT - ne llrR e1 aevent fad nliJic
prvJeell......-bylllellldtltpertFhDeptwlllbe
beld S.lllrday, Aprll!llll at IH Lap. l'lrt 1lebJid IH
poll ollke.
A'cbldea balileeaelllarllqatU~.m.lllll'llllllll
81 lq 81 tile IIPlll1 lull wOl be lleld, RAIN OR

Explorers

.··

SHINE. ·
'lbeme•wiD be'~ellle~ lllked beau, lin ud
niDI, Ill for tiM.
. Melley w01 billed lor ep)J
1111 .w fire
atallaalllllqlidwOlbellllltW....,..,
.·... . ::-:-. .. :. .
.
l arr: ..,
!!iil

CHARGE, FILED
GALUPOUS - Charging
gross neglect of duty and eatreme cruelty, Lucille Swain,
Rt. 2, filed a petition ·here

Gallia

BY HOBART WWlON, JR.
·
A leading Gallipolis merchant, whlle discussing the downtown parking situation recenUy in the Old Freneh City, came up
with two or three suggestions.

++++
THE Individual thought it might be wise to conduct a survey
bef&lt;ire the Holzer.Medlcal Center moves Into its new quarters on
Ria. 35-160, then follow'up with another stUdy after the hospital's
move Iosee just how much shoul4 be done to better the situation.

++++

SHOULD the second survey

r~eal

something he done
to Improve the parking situation, the merchant suggested local
wslnessmen get together and plan a downtown parking garage,
similar to the one buill recenUy In Athens. It was suggested too,
the association could ask their employees to park along the
Upstream PUblic Use Area below the Public Square in order to
make additional room for area shoppers. "The association could
sponsor some kind of a contest in order to promote off-etreet
parking," continued the merchant.

++++

Glass Reclamation Now Reality

' GALLIPOUS - Dr. A. R.
Christensen, president of the
Gallipolis Chamber of ComMRS. GEORGE
merce, Saturday announced
committee chairmen and
assignments for the 1972·73
liscal year.
They are:
Downtown Improvement Ermice Brooks
Hoyt Mullens and Paul Davies,
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. James
McARTHUR- Mrs. Ruth T. co-chairmen ; John Mills, (Eunice M.) Brooks, 63, a
George, 201 W. N. St., has been Wayne Niday, Mac McGinness, native of Gallia County, died at
selected to serve on the Dr. C. R. qprnett, Jack Hud- her home in Delaware, Ohio
National Voter Advisory Board son, and Earl Durham.
Thursday.
.
of the American Security
Education - Mrs. Jean
Mrs . Brooks was the
Council and to participate in Moore, Richard Mackenzie, daughter. of Mr. and Mrs. Ira
the election year National · Ray Blowers, Hugh Graham, Shaio.
Security Issues Poll.
Dr. C. E. Holzer, and Ally,
She is survived by her
John M. Fisher, president of Hamlin C. King.
husband, Jim · E. £rooks ;
ihe American Security Council
Executive - Dr: A. R. daughters, Mrs . Barbara
in Washington, D. C., stated Christensen , Hoyt Mullins, Tisdale, Richmond, Va., Mrs.
that this selection had been Roger Barron and Wendell Janet Davidson, Westerville ;
made on the basts of Mrs. Thomas.
son, Kenneih J.' Reed, VerGeorge's national recognition
Highway &amp; Transportation - milion, Ohio; sisters, Ethel
as an opinion leader in Richard Carter, Joe D. Miller, Roush,
Faye
Wr.ight,
McArthur.
Atty. Bill Jenkins, Dr. K. R. Galiipolis ; Maxine Boggs,
The American Security Brandeberry, Bob Evans, and Columbus; brothers, Jim,
Council
works
with Ray Ellis.
Raymond and Paul Shato,
Republicans and Democrats,
Indistrial - Clyde Ramsay, Gallipolis, Fred Shato,
liberals and conservatives, Ted Lutton, Richard Roy and Colwnbus: 13 Rrandchildren; I
labor and business, competing L. R. Ford.
great-grandchild. Member of
forms of mass media, different
Membership - Wendell Beechwold Church of Christ.
religious groups, different Thomas, !farold Wiseman,
Friends may call at Shawlevels of education, and Alva G. Shoemaker, Richard Davis North Chapel, 4341 N.
Federal and local government. Roderick, Charles Bostic, Bob High st. toda y.
The resulta of the poll made . ruchards, and Marianne B.
Funeral service is. 11 , a.m.
by this Advisory Board will be Campbell.
Monday . Drury Benton,
(CGntbsued from ~e 16)
sent to President Nixon,
Publicity
Paul
Wagner
·
Minister
officiating. Intel'ment
Callfomil.
members of the Congress, and and Hobart Wilson, co- will he in Kingswood Mem'orial
The Rover lost Its tilt· the national press. Members of
Gardens.
l'eldlnl device, a rear fender, the Board will receive solid chairmen.
Special Events - John
part oll~ rear wheel drive and sterling silver American Koebel, Sam Neal, Manning
filially almost ill entire Security Insignia. Mrs. George Wetherholt, Gilbert Bush,
MorfciiUCIIII system, forcing is .the Coordin8tor of the Title I Morris E. Haskins, Bob Barron and Dr. Thomas
Y011111 to foll111r his own tracks and ADC Federal Programs of Marchi, Mrs. Charlene Batey, Morgan, co-chairmen; Kenblet to !be lllttering Orion 011 ihe North Galli a Local School and Mrs. Lola M. Suiter.
neth Morgan, Neal Sanders,
Clyley Plalm. : .
District and Art Instructor.
Traflic &amp; Safety - Roger and Clarence Waugh.

Mrs. George on

Massachusetts, his supporters 1-2, with Wallace at . 711 and
sensed a late surge in the blue Humphrey atl9.
collar districts, similar to the
All the candidates have
ones that occurred in sharply criticised Nb:on•a
Wiscoosln and New Hamp. . economic policiea In deference
shire. .
·
to the state 5.8 per cent
· To take . advantage of the ·unemployment; promlaed to
upswing, McGovern added two cut· loopholes as 'meant ol
days of campaignll!g in Penn- reducing property ~es, an&lt;!
sylvania.
attacked the l!S!1allition.of !he
He predicted that he would, VIetnam bombing.
get a majority of the . 239
Although the Democratic
delegates · (137 Pennsylvania, candidates went aIIIIIch. other
102 Massach~~&amp;etts) at stake in Wisconsin, they have muted
Tuesday which would put him that ·part of the CN11P"i811 to
ahead In the delegate race. He attack Nixon. Musli:!e called
now trails ~yskie 93 1-2 to IlK hlin.''the main target."

·Dateline

SUNDAY, APRIL 23
7 oz.
SUN IN

++++

Committees

By C of C

Highest Office Could. Go to tlae ·.
Winner of this Contest Between
Old. Democrat Political Budtlies

.,.hwl, 8aDdly, April u, 1m

MUCH is being done by community leaders in preparing the
·Old French City for the especled Influx of new residents during
the next few months. Many feel, however, that downtown
·parking should receive more attention than It's getting at the .
present lime. If you've got any Ideas on the subject, why ·not
:attend the nest merchant meeting on Tuesday, May 2, and voice
. your opinions?

Muskie has 138 delegates
running; McGovern, 137;
Humphrey, 130; Jackson, 28;
Rep. Shirley Chisholm, 19; and

·nr. Rousey with Group
POMEROY - Dr. Norman
Ro~~~ey, son of Mrs. Katerine
Millikan, Pomeroy, was one of
15 educaton in the United
States chosen to represent the
U. S. educational cormilunlty
as a participant In the
American Association of
School Admlnlstra tors
(AASA's) International field
·atudy mission to USSR, from
March 28 to April 17.
Dr. Rouaey Is superintendent
• of schools at Palmer, Alaska,
Matanuaka&amp;.sitna Borough
School District.
Dr. Rouaey was born In
Puneroy In the home In which
hll mother now resldlii·; 1ll
Butternut Ave. He .attended
achool at Sugar Run ·
Elementary, then bter moved
to Athens where he graduated
DR. ROUSEY
from Athens High School. .
Dr. Rouaey, while living In patterns and administrative
Pomeroy, resided with his techniques.
grandparenbi, the' late Judge
Special attention was given
and Mrs. C. E: Popl~s.
to
Soviet
educational
He received his BS degree In
education from Bowling Green
University, has master degree
from the University of
Southern California, and hls
doctorate from Ohio University.
Accompanying him to Russia
. was his wile, Katie. The pur·
pose of the mission lo Russia
was to study the schools of the
Soviet Union which included an .
examination of their curricula,
standards of achievement,
methods, or~anizational

zatlm, Humphrey has picked
backing of organized
labor which boasts 1.5 million·
members. The endonements
include I. W. ,Abel, president of
the United Steelworkers.
In a!ldltion.to Ills own ability
tocampaignalmostaroundthe
clock wi!h no vlslble signs of
weariness, }fumphrey hopes to
pu\ together a coalition of
· unionists, . blacks, Jews; and
the elderly. This combination,
long the backbone of Humphrey support, helped him heal
Nixon in PeMaylvania four
years ago by 11111,000 votes.
Although McGovern has
spentmlllltofthetlmesincethe
AprU 4 WiBcanain primary in
up the

Party's No'mination fo~ NatU&gt;n 's

.,

t tilltl!!!.l!!:!!l!

Friday aeeklng a divorce from
Bobby Joe Swain, aame ad-

· dreaa. They were married June

17, t9t7 and haVe 8lx chlldnn.

AHS

G

Election

Set 10r
I
Tuesday
GALUPOUS - ElecUon. of

ministrative expenses connected with the planning of
economic growth In the nine- ·
county area served by the
Distriet. The nine counties are:
Washington, Perry, Athens,
Meigs, Hocking, [lelinonl,
Noble, Morgan and Monroe.

Doves
(Continued from page 15)
lng it to be ''the pollcy of ttie
United States" that the United
State• militarily dlsenaage
from Indochina within 8lx or
nine munths. The HOUle never
accepted It but under a
parliamentary situatiCII that
favored the administration,
doves lost only 215 to 193,in an
effort to adopt the measure.
AmeadmentFavtred
Acheckoftheunoffocialroll
call taken at the cloaed CIUCUI'
reveals that for the moll part
the Democral.l maintained
their two-toH~ne stand in fmr
of a Mansfield type ~
menl. Adding Albert and
Boggs, and lboee who would
follow their lead, would
provide the extra nlDllbera llllt
psychological )llllh to carry the
day for the doves.
·
One While HoUle. aide ack·
nowledged that wbat worried
him most was whetber tbl:
Democratic vote signaled a
t!I'Uclal break in the blput[san
working relaUOillbp be~
the adminlatra~ and the'
H0111e leaderlhlp over tbt
Issue.
•
The conversion of Albert and
Boggs Is neither total nor'

a

==·

1972-73 Gallla Academy High
~~~;"'~
Schooi•tudent body off!cera 1s lndl ted
,._ in !bee. . .
scheduled Tuesday April 25 ·
ca ear....
nit
according to Jam~ N. M: tllat he -dered wbetbtr the
Davis, principal.
ID8IIIveU.S.bomblniofHIIICII ·
Vice presidential candidates ~nd
IJai~ll
wu
are Brant Adams Mark ~.. Pr · ,. ·
IOeallng, Topper ~. Arlen from~=-4DC!-llle Dlmocnll
Owens and Kala Sue Waugh. wu
to llavi ~ a
PrelldenUal candidates are part. 'lben WllltJIIIIfth ..
Alan !temp SteveLae Howard Bo&amp;&amp;s felt be bad beta "
Mcllanlal ~ David 'Thamas. ~Into vatilll wllb the .·
'

EDWIN (Pete) McCirmlck, veteran Boy Scout official, has
'performed many chores for area youngsters down through the
years. last Tuesday, the tables were reversed. Members of Jack
'Sinuns' Troop 200 journeyed out to Pete's Fairfield Farm where
they cleaned up the winter litter and mowed the grass for
Gallia 's Grand Ole' Scouter. How 'bout that for a good deed for
\he day?
YEAR after year students of Mrs, Anne Fischer, GAHS vocal
music instructor, come up with top.notch Broadway musical
performances. This year's Brigadoon, presented at Washington
auditorium Thursday, Friday and Saturday, drew much praise
from community residents as did Music Man, South Pacific and
others presented by the young musicians down through the
years. If you've never been in one, you can't Imagine the work
that is required by all to make such o production a success. It's
something worthwhUe, In more ways than one, and something
participants will never forget, even long after the final curtain is
down.

1 PM TO 7 PM ONLY
•

SUNTAN
SPRAY

66e

00

SPINCAST ROD &amp;·REEL
COMBINATION

SUNTAN
SPRAY ·

Rotllootvru fib., .!Ulod lt•on ~y f.,
rwtilfooiiCI, cO!Itolnd thumll
eon+rol, 1up.r-smooth drtt ond MIKti"'~fvl ~•iltr!

-

oft

....

COSMETICS DEPT.

SPORTS
DEPT.

NYLON 8"/z'xllW
. ROOM SIZE

+++++

TWENTY YEARS AGO, ·from the files of the Daily Tribune

and weekly Gallia Times ... Ohio Colleges Association approves
Rio Grande College for assoclate'memhershlp, synonymous with
accreditation ... Mrs. Carrie Dele to head teachers organization
... City approves plans for new $950,000 sewage disposal plant ...
Terry Johnson selected ROtary Boy of the Week ... Lois Ann
Gooch and Eleanor K. Richards named Girls of the Month by
B&amp;PW Club ... SWimming pool Improvements ordered by city ,
commlsa!on ... GAHS upsets unbeaten Jackson 5-4 for first
baseball victory of year.

22 LONG RIFLE

SHELLS
Heck's Reg.

8.80

1

•s•!"

10 BOXES, 500• ROUNDS PER CARTON
SPORTS DEPT.

Heck's· Reg. 134.88

SCHULT

MOBILE HOMES
•HOMESTEAD .
•CHATEAU
•Cl:[STOM

EAQt WitH AN ASsoRTMENT

·OF FLOOR PLANS .
3 - .USED UNITS

8'x30'.
~II ~II '995.00
10'150'••••~ •••••••••••••• ·····:~ •••• ~2995.00
I I I I I If Ill I f'lll I l l I I lilt

Heck's Rei!. 111.97 1

TV TRAY
TABLE

A large selection of better
quality room size rugs . Choo se
from Capri or Apache styl es .
Colors : Blue Green, Green,
Avocado . Gold. Red and Blue.

$}22
CLOTHING DEPARTMENT
• 15"x21" li•

• Honlwood topa: otoin, olcoMI, mor '"""""'
• Fokh oompactly-'ly edpd
wijh eitvolod limo 'li"'

FOLDING BED

' t.um. ...... ~ .. ""'

HOUSEWARES DEPT.

Single leg. balled tub ing, 1"
thick virgin polyfoam
mattress has striped cotton
ticking ononeslde, vinyl on
the reverse. ,

·· · ·KENTr . .

LIFE VEST
Kapok filled, electronically
sea ted In air· light heavy duty
vinyl lnser ls . Approved yoke
design always float s wearer
lace up. Rugged jeans cloth

cover, strong cotton snap on
and tie tape straps. Approved
stainless steel hardware.
Mildew proof thread. U.S.C.G.

;~k~; Reg.
OP TO

SJ.88 .

$

Heck's
Reg.

244

33'

LADY

S.M·l

FACIAL TISSUE

.
Heck's Reg. 113.99

DEPT.

BATHROOM
ORGANIZER

175 COUNT

HARDWARE DEPARTMENT

LIMIT 4
HOUSEWARE~

$

DEPT.

A real space maker

FIR

Spring adjustable

Three shelves

20 GAL Mgll .

GILSON

S H.P.

Democrats Will Meet at Addison
ADDISON - A Democrai Democratic primary on May 2,
Neighborhood meeting will be and to furnish Information
held Monday, April 24 at 7:30 about one of ihe Democratic
p.m. here at the home of Mrs. candidates for President, '
Dougla• Rouse, Old ·Route 7. Senator George McGovern,
The meeting will have two Democrat of South Dakota.
purposes, · to acquaint voters Interested democrats are
with the new type of blllot tha.t . invited.
will be used in this year's

$888

ontl...,-. MHi•"'•divn ....,-.

libtr tlon rod ho1 olllot kondlo with 1111.
,.,,d MIKI lf!Kie ceri grip "lll'ld IOJe9ri p.
Co"'plftt wi;l. Z,fc. monofiiCINftt liM, .

++++

DEDICATION and open house activities of the new Holzer
Medical Center iB now history. Thousands came from near and
afar to view the $21 mllllon medical facility last week. Many are
sllll talking about the events which took place Monday, Tuesday,
and Wednesday. It's almost Impossible for us to describe how
Individuals reacted as they loured the new structure. An editorial
which appeared In Wednesday morning's Huntington HeraldDispatch read :
"A $21 mllllbn medical comp!es, in Gallla County, Ohio,
received the accolades reserved for such an accomplishment
Tuesday .
"It was the official dedication of Holzer Medical Complex .
"And, the worda of John Rafferty, its administrator, sum·
med up what many were thinking:
" 'It ia not just a building. It Is an idea, a concept that
represents the best posaible medical care we can offer. If Holzer
can instill confidence and pride In those it serves, then we have
acbleved what we set out to do.' "
"Of course, Holzer is In the Umelight at present, But, this is
not to disdain efforts of other communities to upgrade medical
facilities and services.
"Ironton and Lawrence County are currenUy in the midst of
a transformation of Lawrence County General Hospital. Other
cities - Huntington, Ashland and throughout Eastern Kentucky
- have embarked on similar esponsfons and Improvements of
hospital and anclllary services.
"Quality health care is a national goal. It must be made
accessible to all people, as Dr. John W. Cashmand, Sr., directordesignate of the Ohio Deparbnent of Health, put it.
"Holzer and the many fine hospitals now a-building are
· added incentive for this · valley's continued growth. The
availabWty of quality medical service is high on the list of
priorities for any viable and growing area. We have it to offer
here in the Tri.States.''

2.490

each

Heck's Reg. •s1.33
...

ZEiCO

FRONT ONLY
Rei!. '3.99

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DISCONTINUED STYLE

GARDEN
TILLER
Heck's Reg. 17.99

word,

ntufn,l, ntYMf,

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FOLDING FENCE
HARDWARE
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$r.48
HAIDWAH DEPT

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$}22

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$ J88.88

Heck's Ret. $1.99 .
DEPT.

PLASTIC

Heclr's
lteg.

2.66

1

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tine shi•ld. 5 hp., 4-cyctit

WHITE

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Easy hondlinq, ~oo ·with forBrigi.P &amp;: Strotton •n9IM, ower.
ctnt.r clutch control. Aft &amp;il.

1$

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Honl worll"'', bMj po- filler.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

18;, high, 10 ft. long. Protects shrubs,
lawns, flowers ond trees.· Bcihd -on "
DuPont finish .

GARBAGE
CANS

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2~QUART

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19c

�\

..

.. ,

.

.. ,

.. 1

......

·• - me Sunday Times· Sentinel ~~........ .

. . ..

. . ... . . .
~

.,.

~.

- ---·

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..

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.

.. .

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....

..

.

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·--··U~

Ch,esapea.ke Wins Fifth Annual R~tary Relays;
Five Records Set In Meet; Wilson Top Scorer
~

•

' :: d ...-.

-~

,

I

GALUPOUS - Coach Bob finished ahead oi 14 other area behind Chesapeake :with 35 ~
Harris' Chesapeake Panthen, high school squads. with 50 J-3 points. Wheelersburg wu.lltlrd
paced by lanky Steve Wilson's points:
'!'ilh 25, Rock Hill IOllflh wjlh
,
·
13\'t points, captured the Fifth
' Five · meet rec~ were 22 Bnd Jackson fifth with 21 and
Annual Gallipolis Rotary ' broken
wbile · Gallla one-third. ·
Relays Championship on Academy thiaclads
· The meet was conducted on a
Memcrlal Field here Satllfday. established lwo oel!&gt; school ' soggy track as a result of.
The Panthers captured six marks.
friday's. heavy · rain. Telil·
first in the 15-(!vent meet, and
Gallipolis finished .second . peratllfes ranged in Ute mid·

60$, under partly cloudy skies. Gallia Academy's ·mile relay

New relay ·marks were
establi!heil in the 'shot put by
Ceredo-Kenova's Jerry
NesU!r; lillie run by .Bernard
Tilly, Wheelersbllfg; 880-yard
run, by Bernard Tilly,
Wheelersburg ; 220-dash, by
Sieve Wilson, Chesapeake and

learn.
. The GAHS relay team
sluitlered the school's .!954
mark . with a 3:35.7 ,!fort.
Runners were Leon Smith,
Chris Fisher,"Rod Ferguson
and Ken Wamsley;
Eric Saunders, wbo

•
'

'

•

'

finished seeoud In the pole
vault, set a aew GAHS school
mark by going 11-4 before
losiDg out .Jo Chesapeake's
Roo Eslep, whO finished wilb
a 11-8 effort,
It was Chesapeake's second
team victory in the five-year·
old meet. GAHS won it in ·l968,
1970 and 1971.
Here's the results of
Salllfday's meet:
- BOYS FIELD EVENTS
DISCUS - Kouns, SP ;
Nesler, C-K; Wood, G; Hall, C;
Ma s, C-K- 135'-J".
S~OT PUT- Nester, C-K;
Mays, C-K: Wood, G: Kouns,
RH; Mullins, PE - 50'-10v.''.
(New meet record, old 47-11 by
Ironton's Syar In 1970) .
HIGH JUMP - Ondera, J;
Stewart, RH ; Edwards, C:
Thomas, I; Sparks, WB - 6' D" .
LONG JUMP- Meek, WB;
Snowden, G; White, G;
Seagraves, R; Evans - SP-

Wah; Roush, Wah; Dean, C-K
- : 21.5. 1New meet record, old
:22 by North Gallio's Hat"tey
Brown In 19711.
· .
TWO MILE 'RUN - Sheets,
C· Curry, SP; Woodrum, WB;
R:. Tilly, W'B; Chalfin, C-K ·10: 08.
MILE RELAY - . Won by
GAHS. Runners were Chris
Fisher, Leon Smith, Rod
Ferguson and Ken Wamsley.
Tlme-3:35.7. !New meet 8lld.
school record. Old meet" mark

J: 39.5 In 1970' by ~ronton . Old
school record 3:36.6 in 1954) .
PE second, Wahama third ;
Ravenswood fourth. Rock HIJI
fifth .
.880-YARD RELAY -Won by
Chesapeake. Runners were

Hartman, Hawthorne. · Wilson

. ·-

.

.

......... .

•

I

'

l•
'

1

1 1

1 1

1

1

'

"•

'"-.. •

"'!,r

•

-1

and Edwards. Time ~ 1:37.9.
Jack.sort second; Wahoma
third; North Galli• fourth _and
Ravenswood fifth.
Filial ·Results:
TE"M
POINTS
Chesapeake ·
5I) 1-J
Gallipolis
J5V'
Wheelersburg
25
Rock Hill
22
Jackson
2i 1-3
Ceredo-Kenova
18
Wahama
17
Rave~swood
14'fl .
Ports. E..t
m'.l
SOuth Point
11 1·3
.Ironton Reserves
7
North Galli a
4
Meigs
2lfl
Kyger Creek
0
Southwestern
.
o
Top Scorer - Steve Wilson,
Chesapeake, 13'11 points.

NOW ON DISPLAY

BOYS CHAMPION$HIP TEAM ..,. '11\e. Chellpeake
Panthers with fifty· and one-third polota ca~llfed the bof• ·
division of the flftl) &amp;MUll GalliP,OIIa Rotary Relays Sntut.
day. PraentiDg Coadl Bob HlrriJI the 1972. learn cham.

The Superior Motor Home

.ptOn.hiptrophy.iiGAH3c~eader Debbie Condee. On left 11;
Ia Lou Forcl,llotaty prestdenl. On right is Vance Johnson,
ooe of the Rotlrlans who belped condUct Saturday's meet.

GiltLS ~IONSHIP T!.ut

-

1bf ·Wbiellraburt

girls Ira~ INm ca)ltllred the 1972 Rotary Relay's learn

champ!onshlp Qll Memorial Field at Gallipolis Snturqay. The
gal Pirates ha.!I2S~ points for the day. l'ictured above are

I

'

. Rita Boll, Cheryl F1Mey, Nancy Conant, Florine Payton,
. Terri Lute, Debbie Bailey, Becky Ishmael. Rear - Hershel
Burke, coach ; Pam Manyard, Susan Hill, Teresa Jennlns,
Beth Sparks, Patti Freeman, Kathy Webb, Reyma
Strickland and Sandy Ricks.

0 'j

·· . Indians Belt Orioles, .9-2
. Amerlc1111 League Rol!DIIap Milwaukee's only runs.
Ualteil Prern Imenatloaal . The twice-delayed
· , · . RoOltle BUddY Bell !l!jilecl Jill ' (l(Uwaukee opener attracted
• ftrlt major lelgue horlie run AI '·ooiY 8,9118 fans•. Every other
*"and . alam ,In the 110~ • Milwaukee opener dating back
.lli!in'g, apd,. ~Y Fo!188 and 1o 1953 drew 20,000 or more.
Aiel Johlllon added · hoiners '·Len Randle doubled twice,
•llirday to ~d the Gleveland·· IICOI'ed twice, drove In a run
fiDOIIIlll to aM victory over Ute: and 1!13de Ute defensive play of
Slltimore liip)es,
ume to save Pete
Bell, the son of former ,.
National League star .Gus Bel),

.

20 FT., 22FT., 25 FT. MODELS

EDWIN H. DAVIS &amp; SON

Broberg's follf-hit · shuloul In

sending the Texas 'Rangers to a
seCond straight Win
over
the
.
'
. . .:..;, "

t-"ephone 614-742-4471

'•

'

·Eddie Wilt.'

Rook~ Dldt: n&lt;~row

went six'
innings In piCking up his fits!
major league victory. The :Ityear .old pitcher held the
~oles to four hits and struck
, eiDt four ~ being lifted for
' piDchhl1141: In lbe IIlith.
.

ClDSED ON SUNDAY

Standings

Norm!:anllhvebom~tbrel., '

and Galli Brown two •
Delroit IIUpi Cor ..,
· ,... ,.,.....~.
II )lie ftnt tiro lnniDgs to ·rout
tie ·Bnwera;: 1-2, before the
rmalleat opening day crowd ln.
MI1Waukee1s blatory.
· ·
Joe ·Coleman, a 2llilame ·
winner a year ago, held the
l!rewers hilless until the
-entb inniac. wb101 a single
br J~ Briggs · and Joe
~ud'sllnt borne run of tile
year
accounted
for
1'1111

'TEAM
W L R OR
logan
4 1 27 15
Ironton
3 1 17 8
Melgl
2 1 17 13
Athens
3 2 53 35
Gallipolis
2 2 79 22
Wellston
1 J 5 26
Waverly
1 3 15 32
Jackson
1 4 19 31
TOTALS
17 17 182 182
LAST WEEK'S RESULTS:
Logan 6 Ironton 2
Logan 7 Gall ipolis 6 ( 101
Athens 17 Wellston 2

RON Ellep, Ch'fnpeake, CIJ)tured pole vault honors In
Satunlny's Rotary nelaya on MemorlarField with a, 11'-11"
performance.

Athens 9 Jackson 6
TUESDAY'S GAMES :

Wheelersburg Is
Girls Team Champ
es,tablilhed:
The Pirate gals finished
ahead ol runnerup Jackson
with 23~ points. Tbe Ironmen
gats had 161&gt; markers.
champion
Defend'Ing
Gallipolis was third with 15.
Soubi Point was next with 12
)Vhlle North Gallla had seven,
Cheaapeake 51&gt; and Kyger
Creek~ .

Jackson's Patty Exline was
second in individual scoring
with BY•.
Gallipolis' Christy King set a
new mark in the 100-yard dash,
breaking her 1971 mark with a
:12 effort. .
,
Hixon of Jackson won the
· high jump with a 4'-5" effort.
Exline of ,Jackson set a new
relay mark with a 1:&gt;-2 effort in
the long jump,
•
Ricks of Wheelersburg won
the shot put with a 30' effort,
and Wheelersburg set a new
~yard relay mark by win·
nlng In 56.8.
'
Here's the girls results :
GIRLS. EVENTS
100-YARD DASH - Klnq, G;
Payton. WB: Miller, C; Exline,
J: Lute, WB- :12.0. (New meet
recqrd, old : 17.35 by King In
1P71).
HIGH JUMP - Hixon, J;
Ferguson, SP; BurneH, G:
Conaut, WB; Hugh.., KC and
JeMinas, WB, tied for fourth:
-

4'·5'1.

LONG

-

Exline, J ;
G: G.

Meigs at Wellston

Jackson at Logan
Athens at Ironton
Gallipolis at Waverly
SVAC BASEBALL
,; STANDINGS
TEAM
W L R OR
Southern
J 0 28 11
Eastern
J 1 57 12
Kyger Creek
2 1 18 15
Symmes Valley 1 1 11 5

Milks, SP-: 15.2. (New meet
record. Old mark 14·11 '12 by
Exline In 19701.
SHOT PUT- Ricks. WB;
Howell , NG; Folden, G; Jones,
NG; Alii , SP - 30' .
440-YARD RELAY - Won by
Wheelersburg 1n :56.8. New
meet mark, old mark : 59.5, by
Parkersburg South In· 1970.
South
Point
second,
Chesapeake end Jackson lied
for third, North Galllo was
fifth.
Flnol Standings:
Team

Wheelersburg
Jackson
Gallipolis
South Point
North Go lila
Chesapeake
Kyger Creek

Paints
231/'.il
161f.~

15
12
7
5V'

Hannan Trace

l

~ R YIUl
-'

.

'

. SAUNDERS SETS NEW~ MAU- Erie Sllllldera i1 picturad here 111 he
l!llablllbed a new GARB pole Yld lllllt ol1l feet, fOur lndlll, cbil!l S.urday'n Rotary
Rela71 bald on Meinorlll Field. Old llchoolllllll'k wu 11-2, set by Jim GllmGre In 1811. Saun·

"THE CONCORD"

ders, however, finished necond ln,Saturday's meet.

18 FT. ROUND POOL

2 10 30

North Galllo
0 2 2 18
Southwestern
0 J 6 41
Totals
10 10 132 132
Last week's results : Southern 4 Symmes Valley 2; Kyger

INCLUDES
t PILU..IADDIII

Creek 7 Southwestern 3 and
Eastern 12 North Gallia 1. All
other games were rained out.

• nmNtm
t 111111-WALL

This weik's Gamn:

1111-

Tuesday ~ Eastern at Kyger
Creek ; Hannan Trace at South' ern and Symmes Valley at
North Gallla.
Thursday - Eastern at

112

rrEVE WII.WN, Cb peake's.fine alblllle, captured
indlvldul ICIII'iq honorJ IU* pollia) '!bill the Fifth
Anlllllt QeDipQJie I!Gia!Y ...,_ 011 M • ill ~ Saturday, Bell na,Jed by La1wcl, lit!, RaWt P:l!llzlonl, aJ¥1
Debblt c.dee, GAitS c~ II II II del' wllo Pi
l h-.rds to
lealil llld IDdiWiull .....~~.

·wE HAVE ON DISPLAY ONE OF THE LARGEST
SELECTI()NS OF IN GROUND &amp; ABOVE G_ROUND POOLS
IN THE OHIO VALLEY . . • . All Specially ~riced For You.

Meigs 6 Jackson 5
Ironton 5 Waverly 0

I

GALLIPOLIS - Led by Flo
Payton's 91&gt; points, Wheelers. bllfg's girls captured the 1972
GaiUpolls Rotary Relays for
Girls on Memorial Field
Saturday. Three marks were

.'

NOW
ONLY

DeliMfats Bet:Ofd
Crot«&lt;.
..

..
~
LAWJI!tNCE, Kan. (UP!)..,. milesince-\'on RJden tromped
Jim R)'WI ·sur~ed away fr~ him at loll Angeles last month
Tom Von Ruden in the strelch . in 3:58.8, bat ll1arit in the
of the Open Mile Saturday a,t world thia year. Ryun ran 4:19
the Kansas Relays, 'lrinntnclll that day and bad difficulty
3:57.1 before a delighted~ finishing.
crowd of 32,000.
Ryun look the early lead
Ryun had not run the ouldoar before ·~rd Hllkln raced
· ahead at4he ~y mark. AI
Walket of Wichita State
•
boomed~ dUring the third
lap befwe R:t.l and Voh
Ruden raced aW.y on Ute flpal
•
lap. · .

~:~.6.

,Ryun's qqarter-inile splits
were 59.5, 1:1.9, 61.9 and 53.8
Jeconds.
Herb
Washington
of
Michigan State set a meet
record In the Open 100-Yard
lluh, ~ng Ivory crockett of
Soutbalu lllirwia at Ute tape.
BOth were tlnied in 9,2 seconds
and ran into a two-mile-anhour wind.

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Kyger Creek and Southern at

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a.vailabfe.

Ask For FREE Patio Planning Kit

Hannan Trace; North Gall ia at

f

'.}-

yon RudeMinished in 3:57,9
'and Larry ~ose was third in

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Southwestern.

withFILON·STRIPES®

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Snowdlll

LONG JUMP - Galllpolll'
placed .-1 In
lone Jtnp 'clvlng

a,e

ace

Satunlay'a Rotary JIUyl CIIMemorfal Field. 'l1le OARS
leaped 18'~\1•" wtiUe WhHIInburg's Meek kllped lt'-4" for
top llollora.

.

Roberts Blanks·Giants On Seven Hits
Gllnfl, walked l1rO al1l alrack

IIIIth

Ill •It ••1111 1172

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I

California Angels, S-0. . . • ' .
Randle, who drove. In fl!ut ·'·•.,
l')lll8 In the Rangers' 7~ vicioey
·
Friday night, drove In Toby
Harrah with Texas' ftrst run iD
Ute third and seor~d oo an
error by pitcher Rick Clark.

61\tbled hcmt bls' first .
· leagpe run:bl t1i8
C,.i!f!ed a l,lve-run · ~ ~81~'1\
'IIMIDg wit!~ a drive '
... Jeft field '-'~ off ~:;~./~:

.'

!'

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'.

.

POLE VAULT - Estep, C;

'

••

ualG ·,polis Rotary Relays

Saunders, G; Vanlnwagen, M;

~··-·

'

·;

- 19'·4" .

fuller, R; White, G. - 11 '-8".
(Saunders at 11'-4", set new
GAHS record, breaking Jim
Gllmor~'s 1968 mark of 11'21 .
BOYS RUNNING EVENTS
120-HURDLES - Stewart,
RH ; Ondera, J; Samsel, Wah;
Dotson, NG; While, G - : 15 .6.
100-YARD DASH - Hartman, C; Rymer, R; Jenkins,
RH ; Hall, PE; Meeks, WB : 10.5.
.
MILE RUN - Tilley, WB;
Hull, C; Waddell. I; Holderby,
I; Dean, C-K - 4:29.3. (New
meet record, old 4:30.5 by Rick
Hueholl ln ·1970) .
440-YARD DASH. - Wilson,
C; Johnson, SP; Roush, Wah;
Hall, PE - Wamsley, G. tied
for fourth. - :52.8.
110-YARD LOW HURDLES
•
OeSiephen, · J ; While, G;
ROCK Hll..L'S giant 6-7 Jim Stewart (front) won Ute second heat of the lSI-yard low hurMaltlcs, R; Rite, G; three-way
dles in Saturday's Rotary Relays, but failed Ill qualify for Ute finals. The event was won by
lit for fourth - Ridge,' J ;
Evans, SP and Edwa.rds, CJackoon's Artie DeSiepben.
:21.7.
YARD RUN - Tilly,
' ~&lt;::::!&amp;! i i l; , ; : ; :i :®&amp;~'».-&lt;;~:;g;~~~~· 'i,l.:~-~&lt;,:;:;:'tl:~:om::::::~:~::::::::::::~::·.n '
71PI11' n WB880·
; Ferguson, G; Davis, PE ;
Slmza, SP; Morgan, Wah. 2:00.2. (New meet record, old
' Photos by Bret Harrison
2:00.3 by Gallla's Rod
t&lt;'lr' .., .•., ''Nil..,.
"':::l::::i:fi@l:lW~@Simm'&lt;l\'lS!~
in 19701.
S::J''e"'LT'··:·:::;=~.W:""''::::::.QWJJ":::»~~:;~~;;;mm:::
JHm ..: Ferguson
220-YARD
DASH- Wilson,

'

,,

L

C; Hortman, C: Gillespie,

ii

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·10:.and 12' avail~ble

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BUILDERS

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..

.. ,

.

.. ,

.. 1

......

·• - me Sunday Times· Sentinel ~~........ .

. . ..

. . ... . . .
~

.,.

~.

- ---·

·~

..

~.

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"'

....

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':

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:

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·--··U~

Ch,esapea.ke Wins Fifth Annual R~tary Relays;
Five Records Set In Meet; Wilson Top Scorer
~

•

' :: d ...-.

-~

,

I

GALUPOUS - Coach Bob finished ahead oi 14 other area behind Chesapeake :with 35 ~
Harris' Chesapeake Panthen, high school squads. with 50 J-3 points. Wheelersburg wu.lltlrd
paced by lanky Steve Wilson's points:
'!'ilh 25, Rock Hill IOllflh wjlh
,
·
13\'t points, captured the Fifth
' Five · meet rec~ were 22 Bnd Jackson fifth with 21 and
Annual Gallipolis Rotary ' broken
wbile · Gallla one-third. ·
Relays Championship on Academy thiaclads
· The meet was conducted on a
Memcrlal Field here Satllfday. established lwo oel!&gt; school ' soggy track as a result of.
The Panthers captured six marks.
friday's. heavy · rain. Telil·
first in the 15-(!vent meet, and
Gallipolis finished .second . peratllfes ranged in Ute mid·

60$, under partly cloudy skies. Gallia Academy's ·mile relay

New relay ·marks were
establi!heil in the 'shot put by
Ceredo-Kenova's Jerry
NesU!r; lillie run by .Bernard
Tilly, Wheelersbllfg; 880-yard
run, by Bernard Tilly,
Wheelersburg ; 220-dash, by
Sieve Wilson, Chesapeake and

learn.
. The GAHS relay team
sluitlered the school's .!954
mark . with a 3:35.7 ,!fort.
Runners were Leon Smith,
Chris Fisher,"Rod Ferguson
and Ken Wamsley;
Eric Saunders, wbo

•
'

'

•

'

finished seeoud In the pole
vault, set a aew GAHS school
mark by going 11-4 before
losiDg out .Jo Chesapeake's
Roo Eslep, whO finished wilb
a 11-8 effort,
It was Chesapeake's second
team victory in the five-year·
old meet. GAHS won it in ·l968,
1970 and 1971.
Here's the results of
Salllfday's meet:
- BOYS FIELD EVENTS
DISCUS - Kouns, SP ;
Nesler, C-K; Wood, G; Hall, C;
Ma s, C-K- 135'-J".
S~OT PUT- Nester, C-K;
Mays, C-K: Wood, G: Kouns,
RH; Mullins, PE - 50'-10v.''.
(New meet record, old 47-11 by
Ironton's Syar In 1970) .
HIGH JUMP - Ondera, J;
Stewart, RH ; Edwards, C:
Thomas, I; Sparks, WB - 6' D" .
LONG JUMP- Meek, WB;
Snowden, G; White, G;
Seagraves, R; Evans - SP-

Wah; Roush, Wah; Dean, C-K
- : 21.5. 1New meet record, old
:22 by North Gallio's Hat"tey
Brown In 19711.
· .
TWO MILE 'RUN - Sheets,
C· Curry, SP; Woodrum, WB;
R:. Tilly, W'B; Chalfin, C-K ·10: 08.
MILE RELAY - . Won by
GAHS. Runners were Chris
Fisher, Leon Smith, Rod
Ferguson and Ken Wamsley.
Tlme-3:35.7. !New meet 8lld.
school record. Old meet" mark

J: 39.5 In 1970' by ~ronton . Old
school record 3:36.6 in 1954) .
PE second, Wahama third ;
Ravenswood fourth. Rock HIJI
fifth .
.880-YARD RELAY -Won by
Chesapeake. Runners were

Hartman, Hawthorne. · Wilson

. ·-

.

.

......... .

•

I

'

l•
'

1

1 1

1 1

1

1

'

"•

'"-.. •

"'!,r

•

-1

and Edwards. Time ~ 1:37.9.
Jack.sort second; Wahoma
third; North Galli• fourth _and
Ravenswood fifth.
Filial ·Results:
TE"M
POINTS
Chesapeake ·
5I) 1-J
Gallipolis
J5V'
Wheelersburg
25
Rock Hill
22
Jackson
2i 1-3
Ceredo-Kenova
18
Wahama
17
Rave~swood
14'fl .
Ports. E..t
m'.l
SOuth Point
11 1·3
.Ironton Reserves
7
North Galli a
4
Meigs
2lfl
Kyger Creek
0
Southwestern
.
o
Top Scorer - Steve Wilson,
Chesapeake, 13'11 points.

NOW ON DISPLAY

BOYS CHAMPION$HIP TEAM ..,. '11\e. Chellpeake
Panthers with fifty· and one-third polota ca~llfed the bof• ·
division of the flftl) &amp;MUll GalliP,OIIa Rotary Relays Sntut.
day. PraentiDg Coadl Bob HlrriJI the 1972. learn cham.

The Superior Motor Home

.ptOn.hiptrophy.iiGAH3c~eader Debbie Condee. On left 11;
Ia Lou Forcl,llotaty prestdenl. On right is Vance Johnson,
ooe of the Rotlrlans who belped condUct Saturday's meet.

GiltLS ~IONSHIP T!.ut

-

1bf ·Wbiellraburt

girls Ira~ INm ca)ltllred the 1972 Rotary Relay's learn

champ!onshlp Qll Memorial Field at Gallipolis Snturqay. The
gal Pirates ha.!I2S~ points for the day. l'ictured above are

I

'

. Rita Boll, Cheryl F1Mey, Nancy Conant, Florine Payton,
. Terri Lute, Debbie Bailey, Becky Ishmael. Rear - Hershel
Burke, coach ; Pam Manyard, Susan Hill, Teresa Jennlns,
Beth Sparks, Patti Freeman, Kathy Webb, Reyma
Strickland and Sandy Ricks.

0 'j

·· . Indians Belt Orioles, .9-2
. Amerlc1111 League Rol!DIIap Milwaukee's only runs.
Ualteil Prern Imenatloaal . The twice-delayed
· , · . RoOltle BUddY Bell !l!jilecl Jill ' (l(Uwaukee opener attracted
• ftrlt major lelgue horlie run AI '·ooiY 8,9118 fans•. Every other
*"and . alam ,In the 110~ • Milwaukee opener dating back
.lli!in'g, apd,. ~Y Fo!188 and 1o 1953 drew 20,000 or more.
Aiel Johlllon added · hoiners '·Len Randle doubled twice,
•llirday to ~d the Gleveland·· IICOI'ed twice, drove In a run
fiDOIIIlll to aM victory over Ute: and 1!13de Ute defensive play of
Slltimore liip)es,
ume to save Pete
Bell, the son of former ,.
National League star .Gus Bel),

.

20 FT., 22FT., 25 FT. MODELS

EDWIN H. DAVIS &amp; SON

Broberg's follf-hit · shuloul In

sending the Texas 'Rangers to a
seCond straight Win
over
the
.
'
. . .:..;, "

t-"ephone 614-742-4471

'•

'

·Eddie Wilt.'

Rook~ Dldt: n&lt;~row

went six'
innings In piCking up his fits!
major league victory. The :Ityear .old pitcher held the
~oles to four hits and struck
, eiDt four ~ being lifted for
' piDchhl1141: In lbe IIlith.
.

ClDSED ON SUNDAY

Standings

Norm!:anllhvebom~tbrel., '

and Galli Brown two •
Delroit IIUpi Cor ..,
· ,... ,.,.....~.
II )lie ftnt tiro lnniDgs to ·rout
tie ·Bnwera;: 1-2, before the
rmalleat opening day crowd ln.
MI1Waukee1s blatory.
· ·
Joe ·Coleman, a 2llilame ·
winner a year ago, held the
l!rewers hilless until the
-entb inniac. wb101 a single
br J~ Briggs · and Joe
~ud'sllnt borne run of tile
year
accounted
for
1'1111

'TEAM
W L R OR
logan
4 1 27 15
Ironton
3 1 17 8
Melgl
2 1 17 13
Athens
3 2 53 35
Gallipolis
2 2 79 22
Wellston
1 J 5 26
Waverly
1 3 15 32
Jackson
1 4 19 31
TOTALS
17 17 182 182
LAST WEEK'S RESULTS:
Logan 6 Ironton 2
Logan 7 Gall ipolis 6 ( 101
Athens 17 Wellston 2

RON Ellep, Ch'fnpeake, CIJ)tured pole vault honors In
Satunlny's Rotary nelaya on MemorlarField with a, 11'-11"
performance.

Athens 9 Jackson 6
TUESDAY'S GAMES :

Wheelersburg Is
Girls Team Champ
es,tablilhed:
The Pirate gals finished
ahead ol runnerup Jackson
with 23~ points. Tbe Ironmen
gats had 161&gt; markers.
champion
Defend'Ing
Gallipolis was third with 15.
Soubi Point was next with 12
)Vhlle North Gallla had seven,
Cheaapeake 51&gt; and Kyger
Creek~ .

Jackson's Patty Exline was
second in individual scoring
with BY•.
Gallipolis' Christy King set a
new mark in the 100-yard dash,
breaking her 1971 mark with a
:12 effort. .
,
Hixon of Jackson won the
· high jump with a 4'-5" effort.
Exline of ,Jackson set a new
relay mark with a 1:&gt;-2 effort in
the long jump,
•
Ricks of Wheelersburg won
the shot put with a 30' effort,
and Wheelersburg set a new
~yard relay mark by win·
nlng In 56.8.
'
Here's the girls results :
GIRLS. EVENTS
100-YARD DASH - Klnq, G;
Payton. WB: Miller, C; Exline,
J: Lute, WB- :12.0. (New meet
recqrd, old : 17.35 by King In
1P71).
HIGH JUMP - Hixon, J;
Ferguson, SP; BurneH, G:
Conaut, WB; Hugh.., KC and
JeMinas, WB, tied for fourth:
-

4'·5'1.

LONG

-

Exline, J ;
G: G.

Meigs at Wellston

Jackson at Logan
Athens at Ironton
Gallipolis at Waverly
SVAC BASEBALL
,; STANDINGS
TEAM
W L R OR
Southern
J 0 28 11
Eastern
J 1 57 12
Kyger Creek
2 1 18 15
Symmes Valley 1 1 11 5

Milks, SP-: 15.2. (New meet
record. Old mark 14·11 '12 by
Exline In 19701.
SHOT PUT- Ricks. WB;
Howell , NG; Folden, G; Jones,
NG; Alii , SP - 30' .
440-YARD RELAY - Won by
Wheelersburg 1n :56.8. New
meet mark, old mark : 59.5, by
Parkersburg South In· 1970.
South
Point
second,
Chesapeake end Jackson lied
for third, North Galllo was
fifth.
Flnol Standings:
Team

Wheelersburg
Jackson
Gallipolis
South Point
North Go lila
Chesapeake
Kyger Creek

Paints
231/'.il
161f.~

15
12
7
5V'

Hannan Trace

l

~ R YIUl
-'

.

'

. SAUNDERS SETS NEW~ MAU- Erie Sllllldera i1 picturad here 111 he
l!llablllbed a new GARB pole Yld lllllt ol1l feet, fOur lndlll, cbil!l S.urday'n Rotary
Rela71 bald on Meinorlll Field. Old llchoolllllll'k wu 11-2, set by Jim GllmGre In 1811. Saun·

"THE CONCORD"

ders, however, finished necond ln,Saturday's meet.

18 FT. ROUND POOL

2 10 30

North Galllo
0 2 2 18
Southwestern
0 J 6 41
Totals
10 10 132 132
Last week's results : Southern 4 Symmes Valley 2; Kyger

INCLUDES
t PILU..IADDIII

Creek 7 Southwestern 3 and
Eastern 12 North Gallia 1. All
other games were rained out.

• nmNtm
t 111111-WALL

This weik's Gamn:

1111-

Tuesday ~ Eastern at Kyger
Creek ; Hannan Trace at South' ern and Symmes Valley at
North Gallla.
Thursday - Eastern at

112

rrEVE WII.WN, Cb peake's.fine alblllle, captured
indlvldul ICIII'iq honorJ IU* pollia) '!bill the Fifth
Anlllllt QeDipQJie I!Gia!Y ...,_ 011 M • ill ~ Saturday, Bell na,Jed by La1wcl, lit!, RaWt P:l!llzlonl, aJ¥1
Debblt c.dee, GAitS c~ II II II del' wllo Pi
l h-.rds to
lealil llld IDdiWiull .....~~.

·wE HAVE ON DISPLAY ONE OF THE LARGEST
SELECTI()NS OF IN GROUND &amp; ABOVE G_ROUND POOLS
IN THE OHIO VALLEY . . • . All Specially ~riced For You.

Meigs 6 Jackson 5
Ironton 5 Waverly 0

I

GALLIPOLIS - Led by Flo
Payton's 91&gt; points, Wheelers. bllfg's girls captured the 1972
GaiUpolls Rotary Relays for
Girls on Memorial Field
Saturday. Three marks were

.'

NOW
ONLY

DeliMfats Bet:Ofd
Crot«&lt;.
..

..
~
LAWJI!tNCE, Kan. (UP!)..,. milesince-\'on RJden tromped
Jim R)'WI ·sur~ed away fr~ him at loll Angeles last month
Tom Von Ruden in the strelch . in 3:58.8, bat ll1arit in the
of the Open Mile Saturday a,t world thia year. Ryun ran 4:19
the Kansas Relays, 'lrinntnclll that day and bad difficulty
3:57.1 before a delighted~ finishing.
crowd of 32,000.
Ryun look the early lead
Ryun had not run the ouldoar before ·~rd Hllkln raced
· ahead at4he ~y mark. AI
Walket of Wichita State
•
boomed~ dUring the third
lap befwe R:t.l and Voh
Ruden raced aW.y on Ute flpal
•
lap. · .

~:~.6.

,Ryun's qqarter-inile splits
were 59.5, 1:1.9, 61.9 and 53.8
Jeconds.
Herb
Washington
of
Michigan State set a meet
record In the Open 100-Yard
lluh, ~ng Ivory crockett of
Soutbalu lllirwia at Ute tape.
BOth were tlnied in 9,2 seconds
and ran into a two-mile-anhour wind.

NEWLYWEDS ••• RETIREES ••.
APARTMENT DWELI.ERS ...
enjoy carefree living &amp; privacy in a

Kyger Creek and Southern at

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Hannan Trace; North Gall ia at

f

'.}-

yon RudeMinished in 3:57,9
'and Larry ~ose was third in

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placed .-1 In
lone Jtnp 'clvlng

a,e

ace

Satunlay'a Rotary JIUyl CIIMemorfal Field. 'l1le OARS
leaped 18'~\1•" wtiUe WhHIInburg's Meek kllped lt'-4" for
top llollora.

.

Roberts Blanks·Giants On Seven Hits
Gllnfl, walked l1rO al1l alrack

IIIIth

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$434

I

California Angels, S-0. . . • ' .
Randle, who drove. In fl!ut ·'·•.,
l')lll8 In the Rangers' 7~ vicioey
·
Friday night, drove In Toby
Harrah with Texas' ftrst run iD
Ute third and seor~d oo an
error by pitcher Rick Clark.

61\tbled hcmt bls' first .
· leagpe run:bl t1i8
C,.i!f!ed a l,lve-run · ~ ~81~'1\
'IIMIDg wit!~ a drive '
... Jeft field '-'~ off ~:;~./~:

.'

!'

'

'.

.

POLE VAULT - Estep, C;

'

••

ualG ·,polis Rotary Relays

Saunders, G; Vanlnwagen, M;

~··-·

'

·;

- 19'·4" .

fuller, R; White, G. - 11 '-8".
(Saunders at 11'-4", set new
GAHS record, breaking Jim
Gllmor~'s 1968 mark of 11'21 .
BOYS RUNNING EVENTS
120-HURDLES - Stewart,
RH ; Ondera, J; Samsel, Wah;
Dotson, NG; While, G - : 15 .6.
100-YARD DASH - Hartman, C; Rymer, R; Jenkins,
RH ; Hall, PE; Meeks, WB : 10.5.
.
MILE RUN - Tilley, WB;
Hull, C; Waddell. I; Holderby,
I; Dean, C-K - 4:29.3. (New
meet record, old 4:30.5 by Rick
Hueholl ln ·1970) .
440-YARD DASH. - Wilson,
C; Johnson, SP; Roush, Wah;
Hall, PE - Wamsley, G. tied
for fourth. - :52.8.
110-YARD LOW HURDLES
•
OeSiephen, · J ; While, G;
ROCK Hll..L'S giant 6-7 Jim Stewart (front) won Ute second heat of the lSI-yard low hurMaltlcs, R; Rite, G; three-way
dles in Saturday's Rotary Relays, but failed Ill qualify for Ute finals. The event was won by
lit for fourth - Ridge,' J ;
Evans, SP and Edwa.rds, CJackoon's Artie DeSiepben.
:21.7.
YARD RUN - Tilly,
' ~&lt;::::!&amp;! i i l; , ; : ; :i :®&amp;~'».-&lt;;~:;g;~~~~· 'i,l.:~-~&lt;,:;:;:'tl:~:om::::::~:~::::::::::::~::·.n '
71PI11' n WB880·
; Ferguson, G; Davis, PE ;
Slmza, SP; Morgan, Wah. 2:00.2. (New meet record, old
' Photos by Bret Harrison
2:00.3 by Gallla's Rod
t&lt;'lr' .., .•., ''Nil..,.
"':::l::::i:fi@l:lW~@Simm'&lt;l\'lS!~
in 19701.
S::J''e"'LT'··:·:::;=~.W:""''::::::.QWJJ":::»~~:;~~;;;mm:::
JHm ..: Ferguson
220-YARD
DASH- Wilson,

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•

Lakers

B111ttp

Out the Bucks

Va., who had a tw&lt;Hlver-par 14.
Par for La Costa · Country
Club's 7,114-yard tighllayout Is
36-36 - 72.
Mitchell led by four strokes
at the haliway mark with
rounds of 71~ - 136. Nicklaus
had a 70.71 for 141 after 36
holes. Trevino's earlier rounds

were 7~.
. ~ 'I'm satisfied with the way
I'm playing," said Nicklaus
calmly after his third round 3532- 67, a card on which he had
six birdies and one boyey. "I
had the ball close to the hole
most ofthe day except on the
back nine."
Nicklaus' longest birdie putt
wasa35-footer on the lOth hole.

Mitchell, who complained
that lie thought he ' deserved
more publicity, ,. had to
scramble for his third round 74.
"I'm still in there," he said
with a smile. He was a bit wild
from the tee and went out In 38.
On the back nine he slipped to
five under par for the tournament but Pill together bir.dies at the 14th and l~th hole to
go sevt!n under. He took a
fourth bogey on No. 13.
Mitchell's birdie putt on the
14th was a net 40-footer. The
one on 15 was only a twe-footer.
"I'm not in bad shape," ·he
ssid.. ''l missed some short
putts for bogeys. The one I

u~The SUnday Times- Senlillel, Sunday' April :13, 19'12

'

ml.ssed on the lith was four Jerry Heard with a third round shooting a 65 the second day'l
slipped to a 77, five over
feet but
n0t.dlscouraged.'; , 72 and Dave HiU with a 70.
Trevino had five btrdieil and
Bruce Crampton, who has and was at 217 with ve.teran :
one bogey on hil third round seven under on the back nine, Bob ROiburg who had a 61. •

card. lie was hiit.lng"his iron
shots well and his longest
birdie·putt was an IS-looter on
the lith hole.
·~·m going" out and hit a few
balls," he '"!id after the,round .
"I may have to shoot a 66
tomorrow 'if I w•nt to beat
Nicklaus.''..
' Trevino spent three h4urs on
the practice tee after his first
round 75, concentrating on iron
shots.
Tied for fourth . behind
Trevino and Mitchell and !QUI'
back of Nicklaus at 21Z were

lost four shots to par when· he
_took a double bogey and two
single bogeys on the last three
holes for a 71 and 213.
Tom Weiskopf shot 71 for 215
and Bob Goalby had 71 for 216.
Homero lllancaa after,

•

BY C. E. BLAKESLEE
E:l:t. Agent, Agrlcilllure
PO/&gt;lEROY ~ The terms '.'Rural Development," "Rural

par, \

I'm

Areas Development,': "~urce .Development," and ueom.

Arnold Palmer had a 70 for
218 along with Hubert Green,
the first round c«Header, who
had a 74. Gardner Dickinson
who shared the first round lead
(66) ahofa.bciTendous 80 and
wu at 220, four over,

•

munl.ty Development" are popular these days in many circles
and, m general: are·used inter-changeably. Dr. Riley s. Dougan,
Ohio State UmverSlty AsSistant Director of the Cooperative
Extens1on Service, says in a new publication thatif you have
used one of these, no .d~bt it had Its own special meaning;
however, no matter which 1s used, usually the focus in on action
to bnprove one's community .
.
Dr. Dougan, in a recent Issue of Economic JnformatioQ for

the l,VEW in FARMING
Ohio Agricultur~. points out that Coinmunity Resource
· Development involves gr911pa of citizens making community
decisions and carrying out plans to bnprove the commllnity.
Decisions that vitally affect your community are being made
almost daily, with varying amounts of background information
on w~lch to base the decision .
Changes in land-use, technology, Income levels and patterns
of living have caused significant adjustment problems for most
communities. Population and Industrial aevelopment
possibilities change constantly. Citizens need to give attention to
these changes to bring about the most good for the most people.
"Rural Community Development" Is of especiaUy great
bnportance in those communities with populations of 50,000 or
less where the farm, rural non.farm and urban interests are so
highly interrelated. A 'tax Issue, for instance, is often as bnportant to the farmer one-llaU mile outside the corporation as to
the banker one-half mile inside the corporation.
If we are to successfully reverse the trend of having even
larger metropoUtan areas that already are much overc,rowded,
a dynamic effort must he made th revitalize our nonmetropoUtan communities.
THE BALANCE BETWEEN urban and rural interests in

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

S.EED POTATOES
A GOOD crowd wu m hand at Memorial Field In
GaUipolis Saturday lor the Fifth Annual .Rotary Relllys

despite Friday's heavy rain wlllch left llle track and lleld Ia
soggy conditions.

CERTIFIED MINNESOTA

•

KENNEBEC

BASEBALL·
STANDINGS

KING SEts MARK ...cGa~risty Klng, front, sets a

new 100-yard dash mark in the girls' Rotary Relay meet
Saturday with a :12 effort.
....

Sun Colony Has
Length In Stretch
BALTIMORE, MD. (UP!)Sun Colony, a 4-year-old
daughter of Sunrise FUgllt,
took command at the head of
the stretch and went on to post
a one-length victory ln the
$33,800 GaUorette Handicap for
fillies and mares at Pimlico
Saturday:
The 21st running of the
Gallorette originally was
scheduled for the grass course,
ootlt was shifted to the main
dirt track after an aU-day rain
had soaked the turf. Sun Colony
chalked up her first stakes
triumph and was timed ill 1:45
lor the I and on~nth
miles.
.
rn picking up $21,970 for her
aecond triumph In 10 starts this
year, Sun Colony paid $13.60,
t5.60 and $3.60. Frank
Stronach's T!co's Donna, an
outsider in the field of nine,
closed fast for secona money

and returned $12.60 and t5.40.
It was another length back to
Alma North, the favorite from
Gene Marl's East Acres. Alma
North paid $3 to show.
Alms North, winner of the
mack Helen Handicap last
month at Hialeah, went to the
front at the start and held
command until Carlos Jimenez
moved Sun Colony up fast from
SOC?nd place on the final curve.
The Juan Arias-trained
Triple C~own nominees,
Hassi's Image and Lester's
Jester, dlssppointed In their
final trial before departing
Monday for the Kentucky
Derby. They met five older
horses In the 1 and onesixteenth miles of the Axalea
Handicap and wound up far
back as Lelington Park won at
$10.20 Hassi's Image was sixth
and Lester's Jester seventh.

. ' ~tar Le.uoio siindinus
By Unoted p,.sotntornotlanol
I Eostl
W. L. Pet. GB
Montreal
5 0 1.000
Pittsburgh
4 2 .647 l'f2
Philadelphia
3 3 .500 2'12
New York
2 2 .500 2'12
Chicago
2 4 .333 3112
St. Louis
1 6 .142 5
IWesll
W. L. Pel. GB
Los Angeles
6 1 .857
Houslon
5 2 .714 1
S...n Francisco 4 4 .500 2112
S...n Diego
3 4 .429 3
Cincinnati
2 3 .&lt;100 3
Atlanta
1 7 .125 5'12
Saturdoy's Results
Montreal 6 St. Louis S
Houston 6 S...n Francisco 0
Sunday's Games
National League
St. Louis at Montreal 12:15
p.m.)
.
Chicago at New York 2 (1 p.m.)
Pillsburgh at Philadelphia
11 :30 p.m.)
Cincinnati al Atlanta 12:15
p.m . )
S...n Diego at Los Angeles (5
p.m.)
Houston at San Francisco
Monday's Games
Chicago at Houston (night)
I Only game• scheduled)
Amorlcon Luguo Standings
By United Press lntorna11onal
I Eastern Division)
W. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
5 2 .714
Detroit
3 2 .600 1
. Cleveland
3 3 .500 1'12
Boston
3 3 .500 1'12
New York
2 4 .333 2'12
Mil waukee
1 3 .250 2'12
(Western Dlvslonl
W. L. Pel. GB
Oakland
4 I .800
Chicago
4 3 .571 1
Texas
3 3 .500 1'12
Minnesota
2 2 ,500 1'12
Kansas City
3 5 .375 2'12
California
2 4 .333 2112
Saturday' s Results
Oakland al Minnesota, ppd.,
rain
Texas 5 Calltornla 0
Chicago 1 Kansas Clly 0 (1st)
Chicago 3 Kansas City 2 (2nd )
Cleveland 7 Baltimore 2
Detroit 8 Milwaukee 2
Boston 11 New York 7
Sundoy's Gomes
American League
Oakland at Minnesota
California at Texas
Kansas City at Chicago
Baltimore at Cleveland
Detroit al Milwaukee
New 'York at 'Boston

•

Thanks To Everyone For
Sale A Tremendous Success.

·-----....---•
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Solid state lgnlllon tordopendablo year 'round starting.
Teams up with over30job-mlnded attachmonts. Don't
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------

WHlTE THIRD - Ga!UpoUs' Dave White placed third in the long Jump during Saturday's
Rotary Relays on Memorial Fi~ld.
NBA Playoff Standings
By United Press International
I All Series Best.of.Sovonl
Eastern Division Finals
W L Pet.
New York
3 1 .750
Boston
1 3 .250
Western Division Finals
W L Pet.
x-Los Angeles
4 2 .647
Milwaukee
2 4 .333
• ·Clinched Series
.
Solurdoy's Results
Los Angeles 104 Milwaukee 100
{All.)
.
.
(Only game scheduled)
Sunday's Games
Ne"' Yqr_k ~t ~oston (_Alt.)

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook
Tuesday tbrougb Thursday.
Cloudy and cool wllb
chauce of showers Tuesday
and Wednesday, becoimlag
parlly cloudy Thursday.
Highs Tuesday and
Wednesday in the 50s In the
north and 55 to 60 lo tbe
south, rising on Thursday to
near 60 In the norlb and mid
60s in the south.
Lows in tbe 30s and low
40..

. __Gallipolis, Ohio

KENNEBEC

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Now At

•

Central Soya
FARM SUPPLY SUPERMARKET
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

"BI then, lar)J Bird saYers!
low's the time to get a real good deal

Get Answered
By BERNARD BRENNER
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UPI) Administration farm officials
are mobilizing their nationwide
network of state and county
farm program offices to help
counter complaints about high
food prlees.
The move came this week
with distribution by the Agriculture Department's
Stabilization and Conservation
Service (ASCS) of an "info
memo" titled: "Background
Information ... Food Prices
and the Farmer."
The memo was sent to state
ASCS offices which were expected to redistribute it to 2,920
county offices. A covering note·
informed officials that "any
part of this material may he
used by state and eolinty offices in speeches, interviews,
broadcasts, newsletters, news
releases, correspondence and
conunent."
The memo was compiled primarily from material used
earlier by Agriculture
Secretary Earl . L. Butz and
other administration officials

on ......, tractor!"
International Lawn Party.
Buy a mower ancl plclr a present.
You can easily dream up 10 good
excuses.notto cutlhe graM. We've
gotiO good reasons why you should.
All. tree.
Just buy any lntematlanal•
rotary power mower, and we'll give

you ana of these gllll tree.
.
Somettolng special Ia get you out on
lhe lawn. like the Ames garden
shears and pruning sel.
The lnlemaHonal Lawn Parjy
ends June 30, Sa come on over,

And get cutting.
The new InternatiOnal• rotary power
mower, Mit-propelled with '*'trle stall.

You said It,
;en1rer 1~ow that MF
IEsrrlv rB/rd is bacl&lt;, you csn savo big on tho world:a btltl~~~~:.~,:t~ra'.~".~to;~rs!-Massoy-Ferguson. From small ones to mighty

the tractors you'" haVe to beat.lt's a deal you can't

SALitSALE! -SALETiALE! SALE!

. New Mas_sey,Ferguson Tractor Sale! One week only! Sale ·
ends Aprtl 28th. We are offering any new M.F. Tractor in
stock this week for $100 or less over our cost! We will also ·
trade! SAVE BIG MONEY today at your authorized M F .
• ,
DEALER.
ALSO, we just received our shipment of new tobacco setters
or transplanters; CASH PRICE ON THESE $285.00.

w-··" a

.,~~ ·

Your Mauey-Ferguson Dealer

~

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CHECK US FIRST•••••
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Complaints to
PER HUNDRED

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Making Our Spring Paneling

•

Ohio is well-lmown. Such balance is ·conducive to improving
community development opportunities.. · · ·
Helping citizens make better commllnity decisions is indeed
a challenge. Sound group decisions are harder to come by than
individual decisions, p8rtiy because people within a group vary
s:o much in their present knowledge about a particula! problem
and, of course, individuals have dllfering goals.
When two people apply their value systems to the same set of
information they may well come to different conclusions about
what should he done about a particular problem. This fact should
be viewed as a challenge in bringing about desirable commllnity
changes, rather than as an insurmountable obstacle.
THERE ARE "HANDLES" which Extension and other
groups, such as USbA committees, can use to help local citizens
solve comm!Ulity problems. Every citizen has a stake in the
outcome of a Community issue, but it is irnporlant to find those
who will be willing and able to give concentrated attention to the
problem.
After identifying this group of people, special attention needs
to he given to providing them with factual, objective information
which relates directly to whatever problem is under consideration. We need to "rifle" our shots. The basic need for objectivity can't be emphasized too strongly.
It Is not the role of Extension. to promote a particular selfinte~esl. There Is a critical need for providing unbiased information aboui the imjllication ·of various alternatives for
solving given community Issues.
The major community development opportunities identified
by community leaders throughout Ohio are many and varied. A
local citizens' group in one county spelled out the following
priority concerns:
(I) Providing more job opportunities through industrial
development.
(2) Improving housing conditions.
(3) Improving medical facilities and services.
( 4) EstabllshJng an bnproved re~enue source to pay lor local
services .
(5) Improving water and sewage systems.
(6) Improving educational opporlunitiea.
Another community group identified the following:
(I) Improving transportation facilities.
(2) Improving the utility system and services.
(3) Improving the school dlstricting situation.
( 4) Improving environment, including an analysis of benefits
and llabilitles from rural plarming and zoning.
( 5) Improving housing conditions.
NONE OF THESE may be a pressing problem in our community. A totally different set of decisions may he most irn-

$

Third &amp; Court

UPPER ' ROUTE 7-KANAUGA
'
.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Phone: 446-1044

I

I DevelopinentMeans Improvement of Community

',fraiHng Nicklaus Now Out front .

RANCHO LA COSTA, Calif.
(UPI) - Jack Nicklaus, .
trailing by five strokes at the
halfway mark, shot a flvelo!ll.WAUKEE, Wis. (UPI).
The ,win for the Lakers, under-pljr67 Saturday to take a
- The Los Angeles Lakers which ended 1\'lllwaukee's D!le- ·two-shot lead alter ·three.
came back from a lfl.point year reign as NBA cham(JB, rounds ol the •166,000 Money ,
deficit in the fourth quarter was aided by the alr!ence of Tournament of Champions, ·
Saturday to beat the . Oscar Robertson from the
Witil one round to go 'Sunday
Milwaukee Bucks 10..100 and Bucks lineup during most of. far the $33,000 first prize,
win· the National Basketball the game.
·•
Nicklaus was eight \lnder par. .
'Assoclptlon Western ConRobertson, suffer!ti(!rom an, His 54-hole total of 206 gave
terence title.
~bdomlnal muscle strain, . him a likely springboard for hia
'The Latera, with veterana Started the game rot soon gave fourth tournament of ChamJerry West and Wlit Cham· way to WaUy Jones,, .who' pions tiUe . .
beriain leading the way in the almost led .the Bucks to vic- Two strol!es back at 210 was
final period, wOii the right to tory·
Lee Trevino who had a third
meet·the winner of the Eastern
The Lakers started the game round 113 and wu tied with
'Cooference leries in the NBA by opening up a 10.2 lead afier Bobby Mitchell, ·the litUe
championships series. Los . Robertson missed three shots, bcnrn pro tram Dlnviile.
Angeles beat MUwaukee lour Including a layup. With 8:41
~ iiirt of six.
left .In the first period, Jonea
Chambe~laln with nine came In for Robartson and
points and Welt with 121ed the gave the Bucks. the mobility
l.akers final ~rter surge to they needed. Milwaukee tied
the Western Title. MUwaukee the score at 25-25 at the end of ·
led 85-75 with just 10:21left In tile quarter.
the game.
In the second period, it was
But then Chamberlain, who up and down tlle court with the
finished with 20 points and 24 Buc~s and Lakers trading
rebound&amp;, and West, who went .. baskets. Milwaukee led 52-51 at
scoreless in the third quarter, the half.
took over.
Los Angeles shot « per cent
f. Ajump shot by West tied the and the Bucka 40 per cent from
score at 97 with 2:25 left. AGaU the field in the first half.
.Goodrich basket and a free
West finished with 25 poirils
tllrow by Hap Hairston shoved while Kareem Abdul.Jabbar
the Lakers ahead lfl0.97 with led MUwaukee .with 37 points.
1:33 remaining and the Bucka and 25 rebounds, both marks
could not come back.
high for the game.

I~

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MEIGS EQUIPMENT ~CO.
( PHONE 992·2176

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portant to our community's growth. Whatever tile community
Issue, though, it's likely there is information available to help
resolve it.
·
·
Our challenge in community development is to locate objective information and to present it to a,wropriate groups in
such a·manner that citizens can make informed decisions that
will result in better communities in which to live an{l to eam a
living. It will take a great deal oftime and effort to he effective in
this area of d'i.Cision making: The Cooperative Extension Service
is committed to provide 3uch assistance to the lbnits of the
resources available to do quality work .
The U. S. Department of Agritulture is looking for ways to
combine. resources of several department agencies with the

talents of many other state, federal, and local groups to Sid In
community development.
Th'e Extension community resource development program
in each county is directed by the county Extension agents in
cooperation with area and state specialists. Any person or group
with a community problem can secure advice and assistance
from the Cooperative Extension faculty. When our speciaUsts or
agents do not have the Information needed, they will help get it
from outside resources.
We believe then an active, representative citzens' committee is necessary in each county to identify major community
problems and Issues and to determine appropriate courses of
action for moving forward on community bnprovemeni projects.

Shop Landmark Brst!

Court Says
Contracts

LANDMARK has EVERYTHING
.

Repeated

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-PRICES GOOD ALL WEEK-

TOLEDO, Ohio {UP! ) Hunt-Wesson Foods, Inc., here
Friday was ordered by a
Toledo U.S. District Court to
offer members of the Ohio
Agricultural Marketing
Association the same tomato
production contra~ts they had
last year.
Judge Donald Young said the
firm discriminated against 14
Ohio and Michigan growers
because they became members ol the association. Young
said evidence indicated HuntWesson excluded menbers
from contracts for the purpose
of desiroying the association.
The court said the action by
the firm was in violation of the
federal Agricultural Fair
Practice's Act of 1967.

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''

SPECIALS TO MAKE YOU SMILE!
ECONOMY TILLERS

••

Has 3V&lt;? tlp B &amp; S engi ne, 93%

of weigh t c onc e ntrated over
ti nes for better til ling. Hah n hoe

'-./

tines, 12" diameter, 20" wide .
(22·12 16)
Reg. $159.95

&amp; St ra lton 3V' hp eng rnes.
{22·301 1), in carton
se t up $75 .25. Se ll ·
I
{22-30 12), in carton
5, set up $87.75

:"'''" _ec··· ..

2 GALLON GAS CAN $2.45

SylvaniJJ Pays
For Muskrats

One-piece seamless drawn
dome top, double se amed

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Sylvania Commercial Electronics Corp., has paid $859.44
to the division of wildlife of the
Ohio Deparirnent of Natural
Resources for muskrats killed
by an oil spill in Putnam
County, officials announced
today.
Wildlife spokesmen saiil fuel
oil leaked from the firm's
picture tube plant in Ottawa
into Tawa Creek last
December .

In speeches and statements
designed to counter demands
for ceilings on food and farm
prices.
Starting with the theme that
"farm prices for food are not
high," the memo goes on to
,,
assert that "food Is one of the
most reasonable buys available" and points out that retail
food prices historically have
A thought for today : Roman
not risen as fast as other poet Horace said, "The brief
Pfices.
span of life forbids us to
"Production of farm food Is a cherish a long hope."
very compet(tive business, and
this keeps margins low," the
memo claims. It adds that
farm meat prices fluctuate
with supply and demand
conditions, and "if you deflate
present beef prices in line with
today's cheaper dollars,
today's beef prices are far
below the level of 20 years

to boltom. Wi d e mouth,
fast ·pou r spout.l22·0788)
Reg. $2.79.

WHY WAIT BUY YOUR

FERTILIZER
Now and Get the Early Discount
Bag, Bulk and Liquid Fertilizer, all available now. Take delivery
now from our area warehouse .at Pomeroy.

POMEROY LANDMARK
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
Phone992-2l81
Serving Meigs, Galli a &amp; Mason Counties ·
Station Open 24 Hours ··
Store Open 8:00 To 6:00

. New GE Elec-TraRTractor mows lawns,

thr~ snow, plows fields, trims hedges,.

ago."
Also, the memo points out

that while farm costs have
risen sharply, farm prices lor
foods have risen only 6 per cent
in 20 years while the investment needed In farming
has doubled and retail food
prices have risen 43 per cent.
William Cummings, director
of information for the ASCS,
said the price "background"
was sent to the agency's network of offices to answer "repeated requests from farmers
and our own people."
''This is simply factual information which has not been
available In some plllces,"
Cummings said .

The Abnanac
By United Press International
Today is Sunday, April23, the
114th day of 1972.
. The moon is between its first
quarter and full phase.
The morning stars are
Mercury and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this day are ·
under· the sign of Taurus.
British' poet William Shakespeare was born April 23, 15&amp;4.
On this day in history:
In 1898 the U.S. government
asked for 125,000 volunteers to
fight against Spain in Cuba.
In 1917 abnost every performer stepped forward at a mass
rally in New York City when
asked to volunteer to entertain
the troops overseas in World
War I.
·
In 1941 thousands attending
an "America First" rally in
New York City heard ·Charles
Llridbergh say ... "It Ia obvious
that England Ia lOlling the
war." The noted aviator
oppciee&lt;l American entry into
conflict.
In 1911$ more than 200 u.s.
planelstruck Nortli VIetnam In
one of the blggeat ralda of the
war to that time.

cuts firewood,
• even
g1vesyou
a shave: ••

I

li

,.

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It's a complete outdoor power center,
without the' noisy engine, smelly fumes,
greasy maintenance.
· Mow up to three acres without
re·charging; batteries warranted five years
- on models E20, El5, El2, El2M, EIOM;
three years on modei.ESM ." Refuel" by
plugging into any standard outlet. Come and
' see the complete line, get a free
·
demonstration today!
·· · .. .*(with, of course, optional inverter
far liO·volt operation.) ·
·

Free mower at participating dealers with
any GE Elec·Tra k Tractor during our special
Spring Introductory Sale.

Manufacturer's suggested retail price for E SM

plus taxes, set·up, freight charges it any.

GENERAL

ELEC.TR IC

ConouH dealer listed below lor their actual prices and terms In ofleet.

OPEN MONDAY THRU

SAT~RDAY

B.TIU 5

EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT

GRAVELY.TRACTOR SALES &amp;SERVICE
512 E. MAIN

H2·2975

POMIIOY, OHIO

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Lakers

B111ttp

Out the Bucks

Va., who had a tw&lt;Hlver-par 14.
Par for La Costa · Country
Club's 7,114-yard tighllayout Is
36-36 - 72.
Mitchell led by four strokes
at the haliway mark with
rounds of 71~ - 136. Nicklaus
had a 70.71 for 141 after 36
holes. Trevino's earlier rounds

were 7~.
. ~ 'I'm satisfied with the way
I'm playing," said Nicklaus
calmly after his third round 3532- 67, a card on which he had
six birdies and one boyey. "I
had the ball close to the hole
most ofthe day except on the
back nine."
Nicklaus' longest birdie putt
wasa35-footer on the lOth hole.

Mitchell, who complained
that lie thought he ' deserved
more publicity, ,. had to
scramble for his third round 74.
"I'm still in there," he said
with a smile. He was a bit wild
from the tee and went out In 38.
On the back nine he slipped to
five under par for the tournament but Pill together bir.dies at the 14th and l~th hole to
go sevt!n under. He took a
fourth bogey on No. 13.
Mitchell's birdie putt on the
14th was a net 40-footer. The
one on 15 was only a twe-footer.
"I'm not in bad shape," ·he
ssid.. ''l missed some short
putts for bogeys. The one I

u~The SUnday Times- Senlillel, Sunday' April :13, 19'12

'

ml.ssed on the lith was four Jerry Heard with a third round shooting a 65 the second day'l
slipped to a 77, five over
feet but
n0t.dlscouraged.'; , 72 and Dave HiU with a 70.
Trevino had five btrdieil and
Bruce Crampton, who has and was at 217 with ve.teran :
one bogey on hil third round seven under on the back nine, Bob ROiburg who had a 61. •

card. lie was hiit.lng"his iron
shots well and his longest
birdie·putt was an IS-looter on
the lith hole.
·~·m going" out and hit a few
balls," he '"!id after the,round .
"I may have to shoot a 66
tomorrow 'if I w•nt to beat
Nicklaus.''..
' Trevino spent three h4urs on
the practice tee after his first
round 75, concentrating on iron
shots.
Tied for fourth . behind
Trevino and Mitchell and !QUI'
back of Nicklaus at 21Z were

lost four shots to par when· he
_took a double bogey and two
single bogeys on the last three
holes for a 71 and 213.
Tom Weiskopf shot 71 for 215
and Bob Goalby had 71 for 216.
Homero lllancaa after,

•

BY C. E. BLAKESLEE
E:l:t. Agent, Agrlcilllure
PO/&gt;lEROY ~ The terms '.'Rural Development," "Rural

par, \

I'm

Areas Development,': "~urce .Development," and ueom.

Arnold Palmer had a 70 for
218 along with Hubert Green,
the first round c«Header, who
had a 74. Gardner Dickinson
who shared the first round lead
(66) ahofa.bciTendous 80 and
wu at 220, four over,

•

munl.ty Development" are popular these days in many circles
and, m general: are·used inter-changeably. Dr. Riley s. Dougan,
Ohio State UmverSlty AsSistant Director of the Cooperative
Extens1on Service, says in a new publication thatif you have
used one of these, no .d~bt it had Its own special meaning;
however, no matter which 1s used, usually the focus in on action
to bnprove one's community .
.
Dr. Dougan, in a recent Issue of Economic JnformatioQ for

the l,VEW in FARMING
Ohio Agricultur~. points out that Coinmunity Resource
· Development involves gr911pa of citizens making community
decisions and carrying out plans to bnprove the commllnity.
Decisions that vitally affect your community are being made
almost daily, with varying amounts of background information
on w~lch to base the decision .
Changes in land-use, technology, Income levels and patterns
of living have caused significant adjustment problems for most
communities. Population and Industrial aevelopment
possibilities change constantly. Citizens need to give attention to
these changes to bring about the most good for the most people.
"Rural Community Development" Is of especiaUy great
bnportance in those communities with populations of 50,000 or
less where the farm, rural non.farm and urban interests are so
highly interrelated. A 'tax Issue, for instance, is often as bnportant to the farmer one-llaU mile outside the corporation as to
the banker one-half mile inside the corporation.
If we are to successfully reverse the trend of having even
larger metropoUtan areas that already are much overc,rowded,
a dynamic effort must he made th revitalize our nonmetropoUtan communities.
THE BALANCE BETWEEN urban and rural interests in

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

S.EED POTATOES
A GOOD crowd wu m hand at Memorial Field In
GaUipolis Saturday lor the Fifth Annual .Rotary Relllys

despite Friday's heavy rain wlllch left llle track and lleld Ia
soggy conditions.

CERTIFIED MINNESOTA

•

KENNEBEC

BASEBALL·
STANDINGS

KING SEts MARK ...cGa~risty Klng, front, sets a

new 100-yard dash mark in the girls' Rotary Relay meet
Saturday with a :12 effort.
....

Sun Colony Has
Length In Stretch
BALTIMORE, MD. (UP!)Sun Colony, a 4-year-old
daughter of Sunrise FUgllt,
took command at the head of
the stretch and went on to post
a one-length victory ln the
$33,800 GaUorette Handicap for
fillies and mares at Pimlico
Saturday:
The 21st running of the
Gallorette originally was
scheduled for the grass course,
ootlt was shifted to the main
dirt track after an aU-day rain
had soaked the turf. Sun Colony
chalked up her first stakes
triumph and was timed ill 1:45
lor the I and on~nth
miles.
.
rn picking up $21,970 for her
aecond triumph In 10 starts this
year, Sun Colony paid $13.60,
t5.60 and $3.60. Frank
Stronach's T!co's Donna, an
outsider in the field of nine,
closed fast for secona money

and returned $12.60 and t5.40.
It was another length back to
Alma North, the favorite from
Gene Marl's East Acres. Alma
North paid $3 to show.
Alms North, winner of the
mack Helen Handicap last
month at Hialeah, went to the
front at the start and held
command until Carlos Jimenez
moved Sun Colony up fast from
SOC?nd place on the final curve.
The Juan Arias-trained
Triple C~own nominees,
Hassi's Image and Lester's
Jester, dlssppointed In their
final trial before departing
Monday for the Kentucky
Derby. They met five older
horses In the 1 and onesixteenth miles of the Axalea
Handicap and wound up far
back as Lelington Park won at
$10.20 Hassi's Image was sixth
and Lester's Jester seventh.

. ' ~tar Le.uoio siindinus
By Unoted p,.sotntornotlanol
I Eostl
W. L. Pet. GB
Montreal
5 0 1.000
Pittsburgh
4 2 .647 l'f2
Philadelphia
3 3 .500 2'12
New York
2 2 .500 2'12
Chicago
2 4 .333 3112
St. Louis
1 6 .142 5
IWesll
W. L. Pel. GB
Los Angeles
6 1 .857
Houslon
5 2 .714 1
S...n Francisco 4 4 .500 2112
S...n Diego
3 4 .429 3
Cincinnati
2 3 .&lt;100 3
Atlanta
1 7 .125 5'12
Saturdoy's Results
Montreal 6 St. Louis S
Houston 6 S...n Francisco 0
Sunday's Games
National League
St. Louis at Montreal 12:15
p.m.)
.
Chicago at New York 2 (1 p.m.)
Pillsburgh at Philadelphia
11 :30 p.m.)
Cincinnati al Atlanta 12:15
p.m . )
S...n Diego at Los Angeles (5
p.m.)
Houston at San Francisco
Monday's Games
Chicago at Houston (night)
I Only game• scheduled)
Amorlcon Luguo Standings
By United Press lntorna11onal
I Eastern Division)
W. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
5 2 .714
Detroit
3 2 .600 1
. Cleveland
3 3 .500 1'12
Boston
3 3 .500 1'12
New York
2 4 .333 2'12
Mil waukee
1 3 .250 2'12
(Western Dlvslonl
W. L. Pel. GB
Oakland
4 I .800
Chicago
4 3 .571 1
Texas
3 3 .500 1'12
Minnesota
2 2 ,500 1'12
Kansas City
3 5 .375 2'12
California
2 4 .333 2112
Saturday' s Results
Oakland al Minnesota, ppd.,
rain
Texas 5 Calltornla 0
Chicago 1 Kansas Clly 0 (1st)
Chicago 3 Kansas City 2 (2nd )
Cleveland 7 Baltimore 2
Detroit 8 Milwaukee 2
Boston 11 New York 7
Sundoy's Gomes
American League
Oakland at Minnesota
California at Texas
Kansas City at Chicago
Baltimore at Cleveland
Detroit al Milwaukee
New 'York at 'Boston

•

Thanks To Everyone For
Sale A Tremendous Success.

·-----....---•
ALSO AVAILABLE NOW

Introducing the 1556, nawosl member of lha Husky
leam. Powered by revolutionary 15 hp overhead valve
engine. Runs cooler, longer .. . more attlc lant
perlormance. Hydrostatic transmission lots you keep
your hands on the wheal, change speed and direction
with your toot. Back-saving hydraulic lilt. is standard .
Solid state lgnlllon tordopendablo year 'round starting.
Teams up with over30job-mlnded attachmonts. Don't
let lhe sporty look too you .• : under
the hood. the 155619 all bu~lnass.

CERTIFIED RED

PONTIAC$

'4'5

.

CHUCK COLLIER
SERVICE STORE

·---------·
'245 . .•
'5.90
PER HUNDRED

CERTIFIED MAINE

------

WHlTE THIRD - Ga!UpoUs' Dave White placed third in the long Jump during Saturday's
Rotary Relays on Memorial Fi~ld.
NBA Playoff Standings
By United Press International
I All Series Best.of.Sovonl
Eastern Division Finals
W L Pet.
New York
3 1 .750
Boston
1 3 .250
Western Division Finals
W L Pet.
x-Los Angeles
4 2 .647
Milwaukee
2 4 .333
• ·Clinched Series
.
Solurdoy's Results
Los Angeles 104 Milwaukee 100
{All.)
.
.
(Only game scheduled)
Sunday's Games
Ne"' Yqr_k ~t ~oston (_Alt.)

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook
Tuesday tbrougb Thursday.
Cloudy and cool wllb
chauce of showers Tuesday
and Wednesday, becoimlag
parlly cloudy Thursday.
Highs Tuesday and
Wednesday in the 50s In the
north and 55 to 60 lo tbe
south, rising on Thursday to
near 60 In the norlb and mid
60s in the south.
Lows in tbe 30s and low
40..

. __Gallipolis, Ohio

KENNEBEC

GENERAL TIRE SALES
.

.
Ph. 992-7161

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mower you'll find.
Tough, rugged and
powerful enough
to sweep, doze,
haul, fertilize or
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• Comfortable; safe maneuverability.
• Fully enclosed transmission.+ Five forward.
speeds plus reverse. • Powetful5 and 8 HP
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LISTEN TO ·TENNESSEE ERNIE FORD:

Now At

•

Central Soya
FARM SUPPLY SUPERMARKET
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

"BI then, lar)J Bird saYers!
low's the time to get a real good deal

Get Answered
By BERNARD BRENNER
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UPI) Administration farm officials
are mobilizing their nationwide
network of state and county
farm program offices to help
counter complaints about high
food prlees.
The move came this week
with distribution by the Agriculture Department's
Stabilization and Conservation
Service (ASCS) of an "info
memo" titled: "Background
Information ... Food Prices
and the Farmer."
The memo was sent to state
ASCS offices which were expected to redistribute it to 2,920
county offices. A covering note·
informed officials that "any
part of this material may he
used by state and eolinty offices in speeches, interviews,
broadcasts, newsletters, news
releases, correspondence and
conunent."
The memo was compiled primarily from material used
earlier by Agriculture
Secretary Earl . L. Butz and
other administration officials

on ......, tractor!"
International Lawn Party.
Buy a mower ancl plclr a present.
You can easily dream up 10 good
excuses.notto cutlhe graM. We've
gotiO good reasons why you should.
All. tree.
Just buy any lntematlanal•
rotary power mower, and we'll give

you ana of these gllll tree.
.
Somettolng special Ia get you out on
lhe lawn. like the Ames garden
shears and pruning sel.
The lnlemaHonal Lawn Parjy
ends June 30, Sa come on over,

And get cutting.
The new InternatiOnal• rotary power
mower, Mit-propelled with '*'trle stall.

You said It,
;en1rer 1~ow that MF
IEsrrlv rB/rd is bacl&lt;, you csn savo big on tho world:a btltl~~~~:.~,:t~ra'.~".~to;~rs!-Massoy-Ferguson. From small ones to mighty

the tractors you'" haVe to beat.lt's a deal you can't

SALitSALE! -SALETiALE! SALE!

. New Mas_sey,Ferguson Tractor Sale! One week only! Sale ·
ends Aprtl 28th. We are offering any new M.F. Tractor in
stock this week for $100 or less over our cost! We will also ·
trade! SAVE BIG MONEY today at your authorized M F .
• ,
DEALER.
ALSO, we just received our shipment of new tobacco setters
or transplanters; CASH PRICE ON THESE $285.00.

w-··" a

.,~~ ·

Your Mauey-Ferguson Dealer

~

,..,

. GALLIPOLIS TRACTOR

CHECK US FIRST•••••
CARTER AND EVANS .INC. .

PER 50

e CERTIFIED MINNESOTA

. Snarner.
The lll(Ml!r that \\Ol"ks
like a beaver.

FOR ALL YOUR BUILDING SUPPLIES

I~

Complaints to
PER HUNDRED

'

Making Our Spring Paneling

•

Ohio is well-lmown. Such balance is ·conducive to improving
community development opportunities.. · · ·
Helping citizens make better commllnity decisions is indeed
a challenge. Sound group decisions are harder to come by than
individual decisions, p8rtiy because people within a group vary
s:o much in their present knowledge about a particula! problem
and, of course, individuals have dllfering goals.
When two people apply their value systems to the same set of
information they may well come to different conclusions about
what should he done about a particular problem. This fact should
be viewed as a challenge in bringing about desirable commllnity
changes, rather than as an insurmountable obstacle.
THERE ARE "HANDLES" which Extension and other
groups, such as USbA committees, can use to help local citizens
solve comm!Ulity problems. Every citizen has a stake in the
outcome of a Community issue, but it is irnporlant to find those
who will be willing and able to give concentrated attention to the
problem.
After identifying this group of people, special attention needs
to he given to providing them with factual, objective information
which relates directly to whatever problem is under consideration. We need to "rifle" our shots. The basic need for objectivity can't be emphasized too strongly.
It Is not the role of Extension. to promote a particular selfinte~esl. There Is a critical need for providing unbiased information aboui the imjllication ·of various alternatives for
solving given community Issues.
The major community development opportunities identified
by community leaders throughout Ohio are many and varied. A
local citizens' group in one county spelled out the following
priority concerns:
(I) Providing more job opportunities through industrial
development.
(2) Improving housing conditions.
(3) Improving medical facilities and services.
( 4) EstabllshJng an bnproved re~enue source to pay lor local
services .
(5) Improving water and sewage systems.
(6) Improving educational opporlunitiea.
Another community group identified the following:
(I) Improving transportation facilities.
(2) Improving the utility system and services.
(3) Improving the school dlstricting situation.
( 4) Improving environment, including an analysis of benefits
and llabilitles from rural plarming and zoning.
( 5) Improving housing conditions.
NONE OF THESE may be a pressing problem in our community. A totally different set of decisions may he most irn-

$

Third &amp; Court

UPPER ' ROUTE 7-KANAUGA
'
.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Phone: 446-1044

I

I DevelopinentMeans Improvement of Community

',fraiHng Nicklaus Now Out front .

RANCHO LA COSTA, Calif.
(UPI) - Jack Nicklaus, .
trailing by five strokes at the
halfway mark, shot a flvelo!ll.WAUKEE, Wis. (UPI).
The ,win for the Lakers, under-pljr67 Saturday to take a
- The Los Angeles Lakers which ended 1\'lllwaukee's D!le- ·two-shot lead alter ·three.
came back from a lfl.point year reign as NBA cham(JB, rounds ol the •166,000 Money ,
deficit in the fourth quarter was aided by the alr!ence of Tournament of Champions, ·
Saturday to beat the . Oscar Robertson from the
Witil one round to go 'Sunday
Milwaukee Bucks 10..100 and Bucks lineup during most of. far the $33,000 first prize,
win· the National Basketball the game.
·•
Nicklaus was eight \lnder par. .
'Assoclptlon Western ConRobertson, suffer!ti(!rom an, His 54-hole total of 206 gave
terence title.
~bdomlnal muscle strain, . him a likely springboard for hia
'The Latera, with veterana Started the game rot soon gave fourth tournament of ChamJerry West and Wlit Cham· way to WaUy Jones,, .who' pions tiUe . .
beriain leading the way in the almost led .the Bucks to vic- Two strol!es back at 210 was
final period, wOii the right to tory·
Lee Trevino who had a third
meet·the winner of the Eastern
The Lakers started the game round 113 and wu tied with
'Cooference leries in the NBA by opening up a 10.2 lead afier Bobby Mitchell, ·the litUe
championships series. Los . Robertson missed three shots, bcnrn pro tram Dlnviile.
Angeles beat MUwaukee lour Including a layup. With 8:41
~ iiirt of six.
left .In the first period, Jonea
Chambe~laln with nine came In for Robartson and
points and Welt with 121ed the gave the Bucks. the mobility
l.akers final ~rter surge to they needed. Milwaukee tied
the Western Title. MUwaukee the score at 25-25 at the end of ·
led 85-75 with just 10:21left In tile quarter.
the game.
In the second period, it was
But then Chamberlain, who up and down tlle court with the
finished with 20 points and 24 Buc~s and Lakers trading
rebound&amp;, and West, who went .. baskets. Milwaukee led 52-51 at
scoreless in the third quarter, the half.
took over.
Los Angeles shot « per cent
f. Ajump shot by West tied the and the Bucka 40 per cent from
score at 97 with 2:25 left. AGaU the field in the first half.
.Goodrich basket and a free
West finished with 25 poirils
tllrow by Hap Hairston shoved while Kareem Abdul.Jabbar
the Lakers ahead lfl0.97 with led MUwaukee .with 37 points.
1:33 remaining and the Bucka and 25 rebounds, both marks
could not come back.
high for the game.

I~

'

I

MEIGS EQUIPMENT ~CO.
( PHONE 992·2176

..

I

Q

portant to our community's growth. Whatever tile community
Issue, though, it's likely there is information available to help
resolve it.
·
·
Our challenge in community development is to locate objective information and to present it to a,wropriate groups in
such a·manner that citizens can make informed decisions that
will result in better communities in which to live an{l to eam a
living. It will take a great deal oftime and effort to he effective in
this area of d'i.Cision making: The Cooperative Extension Service
is committed to provide 3uch assistance to the lbnits of the
resources available to do quality work .
The U. S. Department of Agritulture is looking for ways to
combine. resources of several department agencies with the

talents of many other state, federal, and local groups to Sid In
community development.
Th'e Extension community resource development program
in each county is directed by the county Extension agents in
cooperation with area and state specialists. Any person or group
with a community problem can secure advice and assistance
from the Cooperative Extension faculty. When our speciaUsts or
agents do not have the Information needed, they will help get it
from outside resources.
We believe then an active, representative citzens' committee is necessary in each county to identify major community
problems and Issues and to determine appropriate courses of
action for moving forward on community bnprovemeni projects.

Shop Landmark Brst!

Court Says
Contracts

LANDMARK has EVERYTHING
.

Repeated

I

..

I'

-PRICES GOOD ALL WEEK-

TOLEDO, Ohio {UP! ) Hunt-Wesson Foods, Inc., here
Friday was ordered by a
Toledo U.S. District Court to
offer members of the Ohio
Agricultural Marketing
Association the same tomato
production contra~ts they had
last year.
Judge Donald Young said the
firm discriminated against 14
Ohio and Michigan growers
because they became members ol the association. Young
said evidence indicated HuntWesson excluded menbers
from contracts for the purpose
of desiroying the association.
The court said the action by
the firm was in violation of the
federal Agricultural Fair
Practice's Act of 1967.

'
''

SPECIALS TO MAKE YOU SMILE!
ECONOMY TILLERS

••

Has 3V&lt;? tlp B &amp; S engi ne, 93%

of weigh t c onc e ntrated over
ti nes for better til ling. Hah n hoe

'-./

tines, 12" diameter, 20" wide .
(22·12 16)
Reg. $159.95

&amp; St ra lton 3V' hp eng rnes.
{22·301 1), in carton
se t up $75 .25. Se ll ·
I
{22-30 12), in carton
5, set up $87.75

:"'''" _ec··· ..

2 GALLON GAS CAN $2.45

SylvaniJJ Pays
For Muskrats

One-piece seamless drawn
dome top, double se amed

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Sylvania Commercial Electronics Corp., has paid $859.44
to the division of wildlife of the
Ohio Deparirnent of Natural
Resources for muskrats killed
by an oil spill in Putnam
County, officials announced
today.
Wildlife spokesmen saiil fuel
oil leaked from the firm's
picture tube plant in Ottawa
into Tawa Creek last
December .

In speeches and statements
designed to counter demands
for ceilings on food and farm
prices.
Starting with the theme that
"farm prices for food are not
high," the memo goes on to
,,
assert that "food Is one of the
most reasonable buys available" and points out that retail
food prices historically have
A thought for today : Roman
not risen as fast as other poet Horace said, "The brief
Pfices.
span of life forbids us to
"Production of farm food Is a cherish a long hope."
very compet(tive business, and
this keeps margins low," the
memo claims. It adds that
farm meat prices fluctuate
with supply and demand
conditions, and "if you deflate
present beef prices in line with
today's cheaper dollars,
today's beef prices are far
below the level of 20 years

to boltom. Wi d e mouth,
fast ·pou r spout.l22·0788)
Reg. $2.79.

WHY WAIT BUY YOUR

FERTILIZER
Now and Get the Early Discount
Bag, Bulk and Liquid Fertilizer, all available now. Take delivery
now from our area warehouse .at Pomeroy.

POMEROY LANDMARK
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
Phone992-2l81
Serving Meigs, Galli a &amp; Mason Counties ·
Station Open 24 Hours ··
Store Open 8:00 To 6:00

. New GE Elec-TraRTractor mows lawns,

thr~ snow, plows fields, trims hedges,.

ago."
Also, the memo points out

that while farm costs have
risen sharply, farm prices lor
foods have risen only 6 per cent
in 20 years while the investment needed In farming
has doubled and retail food
prices have risen 43 per cent.
William Cummings, director
of information for the ASCS,
said the price "background"
was sent to the agency's network of offices to answer "repeated requests from farmers
and our own people."
''This is simply factual information which has not been
available In some plllces,"
Cummings said .

The Abnanac
By United Press International
Today is Sunday, April23, the
114th day of 1972.
. The moon is between its first
quarter and full phase.
The morning stars are
Mercury and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this day are ·
under· the sign of Taurus.
British' poet William Shakespeare was born April 23, 15&amp;4.
On this day in history:
In 1898 the U.S. government
asked for 125,000 volunteers to
fight against Spain in Cuba.
In 1917 abnost every performer stepped forward at a mass
rally in New York City when
asked to volunteer to entertain
the troops overseas in World
War I.
·
In 1941 thousands attending
an "America First" rally in
New York City heard ·Charles
Llridbergh say ... "It Ia obvious
that England Ia lOlling the
war." The noted aviator
oppciee&lt;l American entry into
conflict.
In 1911$ more than 200 u.s.
planelstruck Nortli VIetnam In
one of the blggeat ralda of the
war to that time.

cuts firewood,
• even
g1vesyou
a shave: ••

I

li

,.

..

It's a complete outdoor power center,
without the' noisy engine, smelly fumes,
greasy maintenance.
· Mow up to three acres without
re·charging; batteries warranted five years
- on models E20, El5, El2, El2M, EIOM;
three years on modei.ESM ." Refuel" by
plugging into any standard outlet. Come and
' see the complete line, get a free
·
demonstration today!
·· · .. .*(with, of course, optional inverter
far liO·volt operation.) ·
·

Free mower at participating dealers with
any GE Elec·Tra k Tractor during our special
Spring Introductory Sale.

Manufacturer's suggested retail price for E SM

plus taxes, set·up, freight charges it any.

GENERAL

ELEC.TR IC

ConouH dealer listed below lor their actual prices and terms In ofleet.

OPEN MONDAY THRU

SAT~RDAY

B.TIU 5

EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT

GRAVELY.TRACTOR SALES &amp;SERVICE
512 E. MAIN

H2·2975

POMIIOY, OHIO

I
I

I•

�-

...

-

39 page

Pogo SS
a Cou

BY ADA KEEJ..Il
Mrs Do othy Go den and
son Bobb e Deen of Ga I po s
VLS ted he mo her M s Ma y
Howard and lam y a ecen
Sunday even ng
M s Josephille Hu en
te Ia ned M s Jack e How a d
Mrs Mu Howa d M s
Lu le Hur and M s Cha es
Howa d \YhO s tea h ng hem
to kn tlifleren h ngs on
Wednesday e en ngs

Mrs Ma y Lew sol M Hope
and children came to see he
mo he Mrs Uoyd Hu ch son
who s se ous y a Ho e
Med ca Cente n Ga I po s
M s T~elma Ca
and
h d en of Pennsy van a
l!lted M s Mary Howard and
lam y a e en Sunday
even ng
Cha es Howa d and ch d en
f Ja kson VIS ted h s mothe
M s Ma y Howa d and family
M s Co nel a Hu cheson s
se ously ll n he Med al
Cente a 4 hand Sy arno e S

n Ga po IS Anyo e w sh ng
to send a ge well ard w be
mu h apprec a ed
M s Mu Howa d and M s
Ja k H wa d a ended he
Re gous Edu a on a Pan
C eek Chu h
Bob Saunde s of Ak on
vsted hs sste M s A e
Gamb e and husband Jo n a
few days
News arne o th
om
mun y tha Leno d Howe
d e&lt;1 n Co umbus of an e o
e He forme y ed and
wo ked a B a kfo k

LEGAL NOTICE
N

For Rent

Lost

S EEP NG

PAR

Se o d A e

P EAS
OH 0

Card of Thanks

Help Wanted

w

N

0

Cook 11 a m
7 30
p m Apply n person
_

TRA

CIRCLES

_ _ _ _ _ _9

Not ce

8

9 6

s

APARTME N

d ba h ad
9

5

0

63
ROOMS week
ga age pa k ng

289
90 8
9

home
93 6

I

9

IQI
Ca

a

A

Ew1ngton
By M s M
Adn wagenaeen
Sund ya he h me M and
M
Cha es
Roa h
Ga p
n h no of M s
R a h husband and h
m he sb hd y Two o e y
akes we e baked by M s
Roa h s sse M Sh ey
Rob e Those en y ng he
oc as n we e M Roa h
pa en Is and fam y and h
g andm he M 0 a Webb
Vn n
M
and M
Raymond Robe B dw e M
Roa h pa enls M and M
A f ed Arno d F edd e Bu
ne Ga pos
M andM s Ke thTy e and
daugh and am y M and
M s Basel Ha s of S
A bans W Va v s ed the son
and lam y M and M s Lee
Tyle
Gas on a N C o e
Ea te
M a nd M s Wyman
Denney a ed on he un e
andaun M and M s Ha ey
G een a ecen Sunday They
spen Easte w h M Den
ney bohe andw eM and
M Don Denney o B dwe
Sam Ma s ece ed wo d o
he deah of h s b o he a
B ue e d W Va
T mm e Ty e who spen a
we k w h h s ath F an lS
Ty e h s g andparents and
ohe ea es reurned ohs
home a Delawa e Oh o
M s B an h S ow be
fo me y
Ms
B anch
Rob nson o S A bans W Va
w.a be e o a end he fune a
of he s n Law en eRob n on
who was bu ed a Blackfo k
He s ste M s Ada Payne
a mpan ed he
he h me
a S A bans W Va

96

5

12 MEN NEEDED
6 0

Wanted To Do

96

OCARE

m

66

m

a

9

week
Hoe
308 t1

296

For Sale

•

96

------

8
RUSSELLS
PLUMB NG&amp; HEAT NG
lGaaAe
46482
9
OEW T S PLU M B NG
AND HEA NG
R e 60a E e g e
Ph
46
8

FOR SALE
Entre flock of Reg.
Suffolk ewes and
lambs 1 Reg Suffolk

ARMY
JOBS
FOR ARMY
VETERANS.
If you were n grades
E 4 through E 6 WJth
less than s x years
serv ce for pay
purposes and have
been out less than
three months you can
come back to the
Army w th no ass n
rank or pay Prov ded
a vacancy er. sts n
your MOS and grade
If you have be•m
separated more t han
three months you may
return at a grade
detenn ned by the
Army Today s Army
wants to JO n you

ram Ph 446 2947

For Sale009

6 X 23

X

Alum mum
Sheets
USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

20~
8 for $1 00

Galhpohs
Dally Tnbun"
825 Th rd Ave

L;__G
: _.a lhpohs.

o.

614 446 3343

For Rent
wo

Jlt1JJWID~® lkJ ~-~IJ woJ , _
Uno amb ethese lou Jumb eo,
one e te to each aqua e o
fo m four o d na y wo do

Go

a Cou

yA d o

Ap

I

Ham n c K ng
Ga 1 Coun v
p 011 u ng A o ne
f 2

Ap

9

6 23 30 MIY'

A g 25 Ph

C a e Ph 388 8695

ltQill (llll S 4th

• ) lnltloll

m

ALL STOCK AKC REG

e

so

\WITERj

W.ASHINGTON (UPI) '!be
[)efeDM Department has
ldlllliftld Pfc Charlea D
IADdll lnltton. Ohio •• one Ill
lbtte m111 recenUy tUied
IU'inl bo1111e actlan In Viet-

lbrM G

NEED A PUPPY'

96 6

-2 000- ----:LB TOBACCO ba e

end

II
r)
I

Ph

95 3

Now IIIT1Illlt the

1

lombl

ml

\ Ano

es w e
e

e

es
&amp;

Can

smooth lox

We!. es mnaue
Co~ke s
Basse s
Baages
Da hshunds Pome an ans
and She and sheep dogs
5

Sc hnaute s

K&amp;P KENNELS

~:=~~,

(I l I ] ON THE [I X )'

Bidwell Ohio
PH JttU74

AM• n Mond )
'I'

95 2

_..___.,;,__

Eugene

mBN"a'D'iU vroTIM

aLandll . . 111111111 of Mn

__

96

- - -- - Adu

I (

11\o on 0 kty

se

BEOROOM

R o G a de

DOiliT niNT CAIINA POnte
Thll Mi,(lo op p op • nadi.K a ood /o
lite - • A PIRIOD

95 3

We • so ha 1 boa d ng
a
es g oom ng and sllld
ser co

�-

...

-

39 page

Pogo SS
a Cou

BY ADA KEEJ..Il
Mrs Do othy Go den and
son Bobb e Deen of Ga I po s
VLS ted he mo her M s Ma y
Howard and lam y a ecen
Sunday even ng
M s Josephille Hu en
te Ia ned M s Jack e How a d
Mrs Mu Howa d M s
Lu le Hur and M s Cha es
Howa d \YhO s tea h ng hem
to kn tlifleren h ngs on
Wednesday e en ngs

Mrs Ma y Lew sol M Hope
and children came to see he
mo he Mrs Uoyd Hu ch son
who s se ous y a Ho e
Med ca Cente n Ga I po s
M s T~elma Ca
and
h d en of Pennsy van a
l!lted M s Mary Howard and
lam y a e en Sunday
even ng
Cha es Howa d and ch d en
f Ja kson VIS ted h s mothe
M s Ma y Howa d and family
M s Co nel a Hu cheson s
se ously ll n he Med al
Cente a 4 hand Sy arno e S

n Ga po IS Anyo e w sh ng
to send a ge well ard w be
mu h apprec a ed
M s Mu Howa d and M s
Ja k H wa d a ended he
Re gous Edu a on a Pan
C eek Chu h
Bob Saunde s of Ak on
vsted hs sste M s A e
Gamb e and husband Jo n a
few days
News arne o th
om
mun y tha Leno d Howe
d e&lt;1 n Co umbus of an e o
e He forme y ed and
wo ked a B a kfo k

LEGAL NOTICE
N

For Rent

Lost

S EEP NG

PAR

Se o d A e

P EAS
OH 0

Card of Thanks

Help Wanted

w

N

0

Cook 11 a m
7 30
p m Apply n person
_

TRA

CIRCLES

_ _ _ _ _ _9

Not ce

8

9 6

s

APARTME N

d ba h ad
9

5

0

63
ROOMS week
ga age pa k ng

289
90 8
9

home
93 6

I

9

IQI
Ca

a

A

Ew1ngton
By M s M
Adn wagenaeen
Sund ya he h me M and
M
Cha es
Roa h
Ga p
n h no of M s
R a h husband and h
m he sb hd y Two o e y
akes we e baked by M s
Roa h s sse M Sh ey
Rob e Those en y ng he
oc as n we e M Roa h
pa en Is and fam y and h
g andm he M 0 a Webb
Vn n
M
and M
Raymond Robe B dw e M
Roa h pa enls M and M
A f ed Arno d F edd e Bu
ne Ga pos
M andM s Ke thTy e and
daugh and am y M and
M s Basel Ha s of S
A bans W Va v s ed the son
and lam y M and M s Lee
Tyle
Gas on a N C o e
Ea te
M a nd M s Wyman
Denney a ed on he un e
andaun M and M s Ha ey
G een a ecen Sunday They
spen Easte w h M Den
ney bohe andw eM and
M Don Denney o B dwe
Sam Ma s ece ed wo d o
he deah of h s b o he a
B ue e d W Va
T mm e Ty e who spen a
we k w h h s ath F an lS
Ty e h s g andparents and
ohe ea es reurned ohs
home a Delawa e Oh o
M s B an h S ow be
fo me y
Ms
B anch
Rob nson o S A bans W Va
w.a be e o a end he fune a
of he s n Law en eRob n on
who was bu ed a Blackfo k
He s ste M s Ada Payne
a mpan ed he
he h me
a S A bans W Va

96

5

12 MEN NEEDED
6 0

Wanted To Do

96

OCARE

m

66

m

a

9

week
Hoe
308 t1

296

For Sale

•

96

------

8
RUSSELLS
PLUMB NG&amp; HEAT NG
lGaaAe
46482
9
OEW T S PLU M B NG
AND HEA NG
R e 60a E e g e
Ph
46
8

FOR SALE
Entre flock of Reg.
Suffolk ewes and
lambs 1 Reg Suffolk

ARMY
JOBS
FOR ARMY
VETERANS.
If you were n grades
E 4 through E 6 WJth
less than s x years
serv ce for pay
purposes and have
been out less than
three months you can
come back to the
Army w th no ass n
rank or pay Prov ded
a vacancy er. sts n
your MOS and grade
If you have be•m
separated more t han
three months you may
return at a grade
detenn ned by the
Army Today s Army
wants to JO n you

ram Ph 446 2947

For Sale009

6 X 23

X

Alum mum
Sheets
USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

20~
8 for $1 00

Galhpohs
Dally Tnbun"
825 Th rd Ave

L;__G
: _.a lhpohs.

o.

614 446 3343

For Rent
wo

Jlt1JJWID~® lkJ ~-~IJ woJ , _
Uno amb ethese lou Jumb eo,
one e te to each aqua e o
fo m four o d na y wo do

Go

a Cou

yA d o

Ap

I

Ham n c K ng
Ga 1 Coun v
p 011 u ng A o ne
f 2

Ap

9

6 23 30 MIY'

A g 25 Ph

C a e Ph 388 8695

ltQill (llll S 4th

• ) lnltloll

m

ALL STOCK AKC REG

e

so

\WITERj

W.ASHINGTON (UPI) '!be
[)efeDM Department has
ldlllliftld Pfc Charlea D
IADdll lnltton. Ohio •• one Ill
lbtte m111 recenUy tUied
IU'inl bo1111e actlan In Viet-

lbrM G

NEED A PUPPY'

96 6

-2 000- ----:LB TOBACCO ba e

end

II
r)
I

Ph

95 3

Now IIIT1Illlt the

1

lombl

ml

\ Ano

es w e
e

e

es
&amp;

Can

smooth lox

We!. es mnaue
Co~ke s
Basse s
Baages
Da hshunds Pome an ans
and She and sheep dogs
5

Sc hnaute s

K&amp;P KENNELS

~:=~~,

(I l I ] ON THE [I X )'

Bidwell Ohio
PH JttU74

AM• n Mond )
'I'

95 2

_..___.,;,__

Eugene

mBN"a'D'iU vroTIM

aLandll . . 111111111 of Mn

__

96

- - -- - Adu

I (

11\o on 0 kty

se

BEOROOM

R o G a de

DOiliT niNT CAIINA POnte
Thll Mi,(lo op p op • nadi.K a ood /o
lite - • A PIRIOD

95 3

We • so ha 1 boa d ng
a
es g oom ng and sllld
ser co

�I

'

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... ... ,

.,. ....
, ·'·,.,

.. .':"''

... ·''

~··li

'

•.

..... . ...

..

'

·-Tile

24 - The SundayTimes - Sentinel,Sunday, April23, i972

For Fast Results Use The SundAy Time~-Sentinel Cl~Jssifieds

·l

Real Estate For Sale

·aI Estate For Sale

iI

Realty, 32 State SL
Tel. 446-1998

'

Real Estate For.Sale

STROUT THE WISEMAN
REALTY·
AGENCY

MASSIE

l

World's Largest

KERR - ~ear new, all bricK , 4 oarm ., larQe liv. rm ., din .
r m ., and Mrs. approved kitchen and 3 baths. I! has H.W.
floors, and car1)et . Full finished ba~ement . , w1th a 2 car
oar . This house has 1,888 sQ. ft . llv . area on each floor .

Located on near 2 A. level land. Bought for replacement
cost'.

CITY - Located at 88 Pine PORTER - 4 bdrm . home
St., 6 rms., both and utility with large liv. r m. 12'x28' ,
·rm . This house is In good lll1 baths. carpet' over H. W.,

lots of panel ing , new vinyl
new. New kitchen, new biilh. siding , storm doors and
new hot water tank , new Windows, en c losed back
plumbing and new sh ingle' p:.rch, water tap paid ; ha s
root. Has large garllge . barn and 2 car gar . 51 7,500
Large lot, 9 fruit trees and buys th is nice home with 4 A.
rm . for a garden. Price of land .
Sl6,000 . If you want an in.
Real nice,
Jestmerit you can buy this EUREKA remodeled
older
hom e
one and another 6 rm . (2
apartments) in good repair, located on 21ots, overlooking
beside It; both for $26.500. the Ohio River . It has 6 rm s.
repair, with most of Interior

on first floor and 2 on the

CITY - Located at 127
Klneon. house In good repair,
$0me ne'v\ copper plumbing
and wiring, 5 nice rms. and

bath, full base .. H.W. floors
with new carpet and
paneling in llv. rm . Don't
walt to see this one . Price
$17,500.

I'I

I

ADDISON - Modern home.
H.W. floors, fully carpeted.
Llv. rm. 14'x18'. Kitchen
12'x16', plenty cabinets. Full
base. Low taxes. good

;I

schools and located where

the action Is taking place.
Price $16,000.

'I

iI
I
I'

I

knotty ·plne cabinets . Alum .
siding. Priced for a quick

sale. $16.900.
R10 - All bri ck, all electri c,
beautiful 5 rm . home,
In
ex cell ent
lo cated
re sidential section . On e
QWner uses huge llv. rm . for

beauty salon. This property
may be bought with 3 First
Lady beauty salon stations,
reception desk, 2 Flrst Lady
drrlng stations and chair s.

AI for $24.000. House $21, 000.

FARMS
WADDELL
FARM
DAIRY FARM - This 162 A.
Located· 9 mi. from city on farm , located on St. Rt . 325
St. Rt. 775. It has a modern 5 and Roush Rd ., has an 8 rm .
rm . home with finished attic . modern home, dairy barn
Plenty of water (rural water 40' K60' with 20 stanchions,
line) piped to all bldg•. and loafing shed 40' 1&lt;60', tool
Irrigation system . 5 big shed 10'x30' , m ilk house
.. barns
In good repair, all 16'&lt;16' with 210 ~al. bulk
have metal roofs. and all tank , alum . crib, s1lo, gra in

all

I
,I

proteCted from lightning.

crib 20' x30', and other bldg s.

This farm has 75 A. high·
produ&lt;ing tractor land, l.lOO
lb. lob . base, and good

70 A. product ive tillable

fences . You can't lose If you

I

buy this one because it has 10
A. of ideal development land.

'

I

i:

second . It has a large ltv. rm .
with F. P. All rms. on first
floor ar e carpeted and kitchen has pfenty of real nice

•·

land, 10 A. limber, bal. in

pasture. Good fences. 1.303
lb. fob . base, 112 A. pond. Can
be bought with or without

chattels.

ANY HOUR : 446-1998
E. Wint.,r,lr-446·3121!,
,
~v ~,J· Bl rry- !46·3466
AtArnolif-:.446·0756
Eve., J. F~ller-245· 9311

NEW LISTING - lovely Brick
less than 1 yr . old within
walk ing distance of new hosp.
Features are 3 BR, ww
carpet , 1~1:1 baths; cent . air, ~
car _garage, kitchen with 9ar .
disp ., range , hood ; dishwasher and lots of cabinets .

•

WINTER CAN BE COZY for the
lucky ow ~~r of this modern 3
BR horr
a large stone
flreplact. .
"'ctive price
includes Hilt . {) 1112 baths;

fPt·+t,

built-in kltchel•

. Real Estate for Sale · ·Real Estate For Sale
-~ -r

fhe ·W!S~MAN

Very Attractive-In Town-Large Lot
Don't miss seeing this lovely Colonial. 3
bedrooms. large living room (fireplac'eJ.
dining room , entrance hall , all fully carpeted.
1112 baths, very nice kitchen, full basement.and
garage - See it anytime. just call us for an
appointment.

Off. ~3643
G~llia

Co.'&lt; Lar.aest
Evenina :
Ike Wiseman
446-3796
E. N. Wiseman
446,4500

BE ~ UTIFUL WELL -BU ILT
BRI C K 3 BEDROOM HOME

WITH

BASEMENT

ATTENTION

advertising . CALL STROUT.
lOA .- 2 mi. off 160. nice 5 rocm
home with bath. good barn.
pond, fenced in and ready for

cattle .

Nnw

KITCHEN ,

SPRING VALLEY .

SP LI T-LEVEL
DREAM
HOME WIT H 3 OR 4
BEnR O OM S,

ROOM . ALL CARPETED .

1'i O O ER N

CE LLENT

M E DIATELY . WILL S ELL

RE SI DENC E

AND

BLDG .

SEPARATE . YOU MAY
HAVE HEARD WRONG ON

MEIG S

COUN TY .

96 1h

ACRES ,
20
BOTTOM
CROPLAND , 76 PASTURE ,
GOOD FEN CI:o, . LARGE
BARN 8lx4 2. GOOD 2
STORY MODERN HOME
WITH NICE KITCHEN ,
BAT H,

LITTLE ODD JOBS , BUT IS

A

Cheshire on 5S4. Ph. 367-7516.
93·6

FURNACE HEAT ,

716
~V~,~
A'C~R'E-f~a-=rm
=-.~2~bed
~room

SO CHECK

house, buildi _
ng lots, 8 miles
from Ga ~lipolis on Bulaville·
Porter Rd . Rural water

church, school and stor es.

LOTS
GEORGES Creek - mobile
home lots , IJOO.down , $50 per
month.
0 . J. WHITE Rd .. 100 x 200,
res tr icted building lots. SSOO
down .

WOODS Mi ll Rd . - 100 fl .
frontage, $1,000.
·
LISTINGS NEEDED
Ranny Blackburn
Branch Manager

possess ion .

,

outstanding farm home with
an all bullf·ln kitchen In color.
54 ACRES - 40 acres tillabl e.
good outbuildings, good 7
JO ACRES, Custom buill brick
r oom home, new furnace.

6 ACRES - Good outbuild ing s,
State Rt . 160.
4 B R home on State Rt .
l5 ACRES. small house, fru it
and nmber . Clay Twp. 16,750. so ACRES - Located on
bla c ktop road . Ideal for
housing or mobile h.omes.
40 ACRES. Cozy two bedroom
Vinton .

land near new Holzer Medical
Center. 1000" frontage US l5.
2200' frontage on county
road.

Homes
8 ROOMS 1'12 balh, al l built -in
kitchen with snack bar and
stools.
formal
din ing ,
fireplace In LR , family room .
laundry and carport plus a
very large workshop, fenced
lawn and outside gril l. Must
be seen to appreciate.

1!2 /lcre Lot

IDEALto• .1Ji . · or home . On e 6 ROOMS and bath. larg e kit·
mile from""l,1J on Addison
Township. With .1ater tap.

Owner
Leaving State

chen, two

porch e s ~

deep lot.
11 ROOMS, 2'1'

basement,

baths. new

k l t c hen 1 central ai r , ca r ·
pet lng , full basement, Ideal
location .

YOUR chance to buy a well kept
3 BR house on Chestnut Sf.
Paneled and carpeted living
room. Bullt ·ln cabinets.
Lorge gdrage for the man
who needs his own work shop.
Call tor personal showing.

In Town
WE HAVE two well -kept homes
In town . One a three bedroom
home with air conditioning
and a larde 14 room home
wi th l baths and lots of carpal
on Second Avenue .

basem ent on .9 acre, ha s 3
be dr oorps, 2 baths , large
l ivi ng r oom 1Sx20 ft ., has
mod ern kitch en, wi thin
wal king di stan ce ol new

ft .. kitchen 12x17 fl..

FOR SALE
BY OWNERS
LOCATED AT KANAUGA
5 room house and bath with
natura I ViS. forced air
furnace ,
rP.cently
remodeled. 24xl2 concrete

block building, lormerly
Stewart's Garage . 12x60
Richardson mobile home
furnished . Plenty of room for

a garden
124,000.00.

plot.

Only

, Can be seen at 644 Fifth Ave .,
Kanauga .

For more in-

S ROOM house in Bidwel l. Lot

3 BEDROOM house on Cedar
Street with ba sement and
garage . Pr i ce reduced to

$8,000.

'
Office 446' 1066
Evenings Call '
Ron C1naday 446·l6l6
Russell D. Woo~ 446,4618

Camping Equipment -

COMPARE our q~a l lty and
pri ces. ' Highest di scount In
Tri .State on trailers and
campers. Accept trade.Jns.
Sto ck
all
accessori es,
Amer ica's No. 1 camper .

Camp Con ley_Slarcraft Sales.
ROOMS &amp; bath - LR car· formation phone: 446·0165.
Rl . 62 N. of Pt. Pleasant.
peted. bullt.tn .kitchen, ful l
82·tf
· basement, deep lot.
2BR home located In Rio , ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii. .
Grande ,
completely
remodeled, new bath, kitchen
BUSINE SS BUILDING!
Neeas some

repa1r.

~rice

$2,700.
7 ROOMS &amp; bath, al l carpeted,
new

garage ~

alum inum

siding . larg e rolling well

PUBLIC SALE
10:00 A.M.

Since we have sold our farm we will sell at
public auction our livestock, machinery, feed,
supplies and household furnishings which
incl!Jde many antiques.

PAY ONLY ONE UTILITY
ELECTRICITY

We furnish Water - sewage· Garbage' Collection. Ample
Parking • TV Antenna . Watl.to-Wall Carpeting .
. Draperies · Ranges · _Refrigerators . Air Conditioning •
Garbage Disposals· Drshwashers . Heat Lamps . Private
Patios - Swimming Pool . Clubhouse.

shaded lawn . l lf• acr es in the

LIVESTOCK : l good stock cows, bred to a Charolais bull,
one has calf, others are close.up. 5 yearling Hereford
heifers, yr. Hereford steer, 2 yr. Holstein steers. 1 yr.
Holstein heifer, yr . Charolais steer, yr . Charolai~ heifer,

:1

We sell anything for
anybody . Bring your
lt•ms· to Knotts Com. munlty Auction Barn.
Cornor Third &amp; Olive. ,
·For apPOintment ~all
446 -2917. Sale every
Saturday · Evening at
70'Ciock.
'

""6·000)
• O.nv•r K. Higley 44..0002'
wan• s. E•htllaur 444-0!103

·2.BEDROOM TOWNHOUSES

TARA

TOWNOOUSE ·
APARTMENTS

For Information Call Shirley Adkins-367-7250

7J.ff

1972 Dodge Monaco Station Wagon
4 Door 6 Passenger, 50-50 split back vinyl seats with center arm rest . .air
conditioning, automatic transmission. power steering. power brakes.
tinted glass. 400 cu. in . 2 Bbl. V·8 engine. AM· FM radio wilh rear speak er,
white-side-wall tires, wheel covers, undercoating.

.·.
.
OUR PRICE-~--------- 4 1 297
STICKER PRICE '$,616.30

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE, INC.

Located: 754 4th Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio.

'"'-'~

1 ~

·f

I ...

Gallipolis, Ohio

Av~.

IIIII•••••••••••••••••••..

•..., electric starter, excel. cond .,

96·3

SINGER sewing machine
reclalme&lt;l, bill . 137.40, sews
like new. Will mono., darn.
etc. Cash or terms available.
Ph. «1&gt;25.:1.
RECONDITIONED
MOilLE HOMES
1970 Statesman 60x12
196S Van Dyke 55x12
1965 Elcona 60x10
1N2 GJbraltarS5x10
19.S.. CrestJina J5x8
1952 Alml J5x8
B&amp;S Mobile Homes
Second &amp; VIand St.
· Pt. PlellantiNoxtto Htck'l.)
96-tf
-::B__
E_ArU::T1:-:F::-U::-L-:Co-:J-on7ta7t--;:-Earty
· Amerltan St•reo . radio
combination, AM· FM radio, •
speaker sound system. •
speed automatic changer .
Balance $79.12. Use ·our
budget terms. Call ~- 1:

3

WALNUT Storeo Console, •
speaker sound syaltm, •
speed changer, separate
controls. Balance $65.19. UN
oui time payment plan. Call
~-1028 . .

.

FURNITURE and ANTIQUES : Oak desk, old secretary, 2'
wardrobes, picture frllmes, old sewing ma Chine, 4-plece

love seat set, good condition ; 3 Iron kettles, 2 copper
kettles, 2,pie safes, porch furniture. 2 quilt chests. 3 flour

I

f

This nice two story three bedroom brick
dwelling. Extni" well buill out of the best of
material. Full basement. Hot water heat. Ph
l)aths. Driveway In common. · ·
Located at 339 4th Ave. opposite the high ·
school. Lot 173ft. 10 lnclles by 43 ft. 9 Inches.
Open house , Sundays 2 to 4. Other times by
appointment. .,
.,
·

To be sold at public auction ahhe
house, 339 - 4th, May 6th,· at 10
o'clock. ·
D. Hollis Wood, bee. of
~-

Estate of. Jane DiYis
'

~

t
'

PASO Fino honn. Ph. 256-6553.
M-1

You don't chalk up a victory
record like Datsun without some
pretty advanced engineering.
Datsun 510 4-Door Sedan has an
overhead cam engine, saf"-ty front
dilc braltea, and independent rear
1111pension. Plus nylon carpeting.
Full-vinyl interior with reclining
buckets. Tinted ql111. Whitewalls.

. Dataun 510. It lUre beatl
whatiVu'l 1eccm,d.

SMITH AUTO SALES
Kanauga, Oflio

....

f ----.:::-::::-:-:--.-:::-:
F!lf' Sale
BLUE CT Hondo 70, good '
r' 1970
condition. Ph . .j44-.S11.
.M-l HONDA Dr•m model 1965,
_....._~-:--:-.:

FOR "a loti well done '"""~~"
clean car~ell ,with Blut
Luafrt.
Rent
ltltctrlc
lhamf'OO!I" $1. Lower G. C.
IW/rpftY S~t.
tw

300CC, extel. cond. Ph.
ol973 aft..- 5 p.m.

o~..s.

95-3
S CHARQLAIS holftrs brod fo

Hertford bull, aome to
lrnMII - · Lee Slmm$, 2566.591 .

'6.5 ~ORO, PS, 1uto. trens,;
good condtftan. Ph. 367-n50.

fU, REG. Quarter horse mare, 7

-1,-7-0_H_O~N~O~A~7=o~.-,-.~ct~ll~t
condlfton. Ph....

*'·

'

.f'

WAS 12495

D. P. MARTIN &amp; Son Water

....

Nice .

'2595 ·

'2295

prec iated . Ph . 446-0463.

).fl

4dr . hdtp .• Fury Ill, 29,000 miles,
nice family car .

TERMITE PE ST CONTROL
FREE inspection. Call446-3245.

V.I. P. Sport Coupe, vinyl top, air
condition, one owner, 27,000 miles,
extra nice.

'1795

M err ill O'Dell, Operator for
Ex.term inal Termite Service,
19 Be lmont Dr .

- - - - --

1969 PLYMOliTH FURY

1969 PLYMOUTH

Delivery Servi ce.
Your.
be ap:
patronag e will

'2095 '

267-lf

Central Air Conditioning
&amp; Heating
Free Estimates
Stewart's Hardware
Vinton, Ohio

144-tt'

1968 BUICK SKYLARK

1968 VOLKS ST. V4AGON

·cust .• 2 dr. hdtp .• air cond ., yellow
with black vinyl top. Was $1995.

Factory air cond., gas heater,
40,000 miles. like new cond.

WAS '1995

Termi! e &amp; Pest Con l rol
'Wheel er sburg , Oh io

'1795

'1995-.

NOW ONLY

60·11

ALBERT EHMAN
Water De livery Serv ice
Patr iot Star Rt ., Gall ipolis

Ph. 379·21l3
24l·tf

18 FT. FIBERGLAS BOAT

1968 BUICK LeSABRE

75 HP Eng., trailer. cover. Check

this .

4 dr. hdtp., gold, black vinyl top,
cust. vinyl interior. Sharp.

GMAC :... ~ BANK FINANCING
OPEN TILL 7:00 P.M.
a little bit at a time.
First say to yourself. " I 'd like to
bu y a bug a litt le bit at a t ime."
And if you've got $197. 00 for a cash
down payment, you can have the whole
mont h for 36 months.
( If you don' t have an adding ma chine
ha ndy, that works out to a deferred
pay ment pr ice of $2372.40 which in·
et udes a finan ce charge of an ANNUAL

SERVICE &amp; PARTS
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Mon.-12 p.m. Untili:OO p.m.
Tues .. loVed. &amp; Fri.-8 a.m. Until s p.m.
Thursday-8 :00a .m. until9:00 p.m.
Saturday-8:00a.m. until Noon

'U GTO, good condition, tx·
celltfll r101nlng . Ph. 367-7701.

I_

4 Dr. Air Cortd., vinyl top. Blue.

169·11

DON WATTS V.W.

9~·1

FEED: 100 bu. corn, 60 bu. oats, "30 bu. barley. 125.bales
straw, small lot baled hay.

2 dr. hdtp .• air cond ., vinyl top.
extra shar p.

- -----

For Sale

years old, gentle, well
trained, Suaar Bar brooding.
Ph. 379·261f.
95-3

For Sale

RICE'S

For Sale

.New GMC

Truck Headquarters

' IF YOU are ·building a · new
We are builders. Distributor
for Hotpoint Appl iances ,
Allison Electric.

'

154·ff
WE HAVE a complete line of all
new Time&lt; Watches. 16 .95 to
125. Tawney Jewelers .
u .tf ·

FOR SALE

SS:oo Service.Charge
Will remove your dNdi
horse and ·cows
Co II Je~son m:4531

,t UT HORilUl
OU l tR

· ·

44·11

---~-

WHITE cement; all sizes file m

m

-----~92- 6 '
NEW 1971 Zlg .Zag Sewing
Machine in ' original factory
carton. Zig-Zag to make
buttonholes; sew on buttons,
monograms, and make fancy
designs with justthe twist of 1

slngle·dial . Left In lay.away
and never been used . Wilt 1111
for only S.7 casll. or credit
terms available. Phone 381·
867l.
92·6

ELECTRDLUX • Vacuum
Cleaner complete with af.
tachments, cordwlnder and

SGI-t

NORTH (D)
.AJ1065

Tawney Jewelers.

in stock over
of the finest'
lo · ch oose ·rrom , GBD,
Charatan. Savlnelll. Tawney

•

WE FiAVE in stock a fine
wedding bonds. Columbia .
Keepsake, and Artcarved.

IF YOU desir e a pipe , we have

'The Full .Treatment' Here
.KIOH

selection of diamonds and

For Sale

WIN AT BRIDGE

---------,

stock. 12" and 15" field tile.
suitable lbr highway ditching ,
concrete
blocks.
GALpPOLIS BLOCK CO.,
12l 1h Pfrie St., Ph. ~-2783 .
II&gt; If

zz

• 10

.107 5
WEST
EAST
• 65 3
.2
¥74
'K82
tAQ8742
t KJ63
r
.J9832
"'KQ
SOUTH
.AQJ98
.Q93

and underled his ace of dla
monds. Willard won with th&lt;
king and cashed the Jack o:
clubs to complete the fur
Sims·Karn treatment.
South wanted to kno'O
why Willard had the nerv•
to try to cash a club. "Sup

Seod $1 lot J.4COIV 1/oODI/IH liiiA

to : "Win crt Jtidft," (c/o t~is _..
poporl, P.O. lox ·olf9, «lfl;. City
S!olion, Now York,' N.Y. 100,,

• 95

,.
,.
••

"'A64

pose I had started with ju1t
one club?" questioned South.
"In that case, we were
p..,
Pa:ss
not going to beat five
2+
Pass
spades," replied Willard.
Pass 5.
Pass Pus
" Furthermore, "If you held
Dble Pass
P... Pass
lust one club, you would"
Opening lead- .r. K
have so many red ·cards that
Hal's diamond trick wo'iii.d
keep ."
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
The real big. play was
CORBIN &amp; S.NYDER
when
Hal underled the dla· ·
Philip Hal Sims may well
FURNITURE .
mond
ace . 'Anyone else
have been the most colorful
would
have
been happy with
USED 36'' gas range COfl· bridge player of all time 1
pi
us-200:
•
·
.
",
pertone ; boxsprlngs, fu\1 size; well as one of the best. One•
2 pc. sectional couch, 2 table of his favorite expressions
(HIWSPAPil IHlllPIIII ASSII .l'
lamps, rod utltl~rt . Plenty was, "We ftave them the full
of frtt perking.
Fr[dayl treatment.
till I, 955 Second VI. Ph. .ofol6.
In today's hand, he and his ,.
1171 .
The biddiq hu been:
90-11 favorite partner, the late'
-~-----Willard S. Karn, really gave W01t North
Jut 1972 8TRACll. stereo""""'" '" ' South the full treatment.
1"'
Puo I t
·tovely hand rubbed welnut
M t S th
t t
1
P...
1¥
Pua 2¥
finish . Pay bal . of $9M1 or
os
ou s go o Pay P... 3N.T. Pus
7
pay 11.21 mo. Pf&gt;. ~-0921.
and make four spades. A
You, South, hold:
a...tf couple were set one trick at
five. Hal not only doubled
•.uu ¥Knz +Qln •u
1972 DE LUXE zig zag sewing five Spades, but be and WU·
What do you do ZUJW! .
machine. This mochlnt lard found the defense to
A-hu or . bW • - llooda,
mlkfl butlonholn, dorn11nd beat the conttact two trick&amp;
111Pd7. Y•
emb. mekn fancy stitches. '
· Wo favor tbt ' IIIII.
Pay ~1. of 1450 or pey S6
It actually wasn't too dlf. bi4 a lhrM-~ •t
mo. Ph. 416'Dn1.
flcult. Hal's king of clubs Ml)obt your parhor bW a
· 84-tf lead was normal enoueh. three· ..rd heart IIIIL
.
South won the trick, drew
TODAY'll QUISTION
CORBih &amp; SNYI)e-R :rumps with three leads, led In 1 to a d of rtblddlnc one
'SERTA &amp; Bemco Maltrlllll &amp; ·the nine of hearts and let h..rt, your porlntr wont Ill 1wo
box •prlngs S29 up. 955 Second it ride to Kam's king.
clubs alter your dlomond nAve . 446-1171 . '
IO.tf
Karn led batk the deuce ' sponM. What do yeu do r-t
. Jf Clubs. Hal won the trick

Jewelers .
1969 '!, T: Chev. PU
44·11 · REBUILT Electrolux cleaners.
1968 v, T, Chev. PU
- ----....,-- .
Ph. 446·945l.
1967 .'I• T. Chev. PU
SCHULT
f
railer,
i2
x
65,
87·12
1
970
!969 '12 T. Chev. PU
air
.
4
mi.
from
Gavin
-:-:-::---=--Central
1963 1;, T. Chev. PU
Plant. Ph . 367-75l0.
GOOD CLEAN LUMP and"
1968 'h T. GMC PU
stoker coal. Carl Winters, Rio·
92-6
1967 Chev. tr l-axle dump tru ck
Grande. Phone ·u5-51.15.
1968 o;, T. GMC PU
6·11
one
1966
FAIRLANE,
4
dr.
1969 '12 T. Chev . PU , auto. trans.
owner. Ph. 446·1670.
1968 3 T. GMC

New 11 ft . camper
1966 'I• T. GMC
1968 v, T. GMC PU
. 1966 o;, T, GMC PU
1967 '12 T. GMC PU
1968 Chev. Suburban
1967 'h T. Chev . PU
1Ml F600 Ford 'Truck
1961 2 T. GMC
1964 3 T. GMC
SOMMER'S G.M.C.
TRUCKS, INC.
Ill Pine St.
446·25l2

DEAD STOCK

CAMPER, full focll ltles; also
camper on pickup truck . Call .
before noon ~ -0168 or, 1026
. Second Ave.
87·ff

home or remodel ing, see us.

paint spray. Used but In like
NEW &amp; USE'D FUAN.
•
new condition. Pay SJ.U5
NEW
Early
American 1972 Pontlet Grandvlll• 4 dr . I ' cash or b&lt;Jdget plan avalla~le .
Ph011e l8a.&amp;67l.
hldNway bed complete with hdtp. Brasill gold wlih
. 92·6
mattress was S229.95 now . cordova top, Pontltc's flnnt
$199.95, new 5 pc. all wood 1· •
E 1 ...., Jth
dinette sets 1119.95. 85• · uxury cu. qu p,.... w
Second (across from Texaco all power, usl•t• Including '51 NG E R Sewlng.~ch tn• satn
Station.) ..._9523. ·
factory AM &amp; . FM stereo,
&amp; Service. All
modeif In
95-tf .•, _ 111M player and air,
stock. Free delivery. Service
custom dulgn•cl lnt.. ior
guaranteed. Models prlcod
1963 FORO, $200, good ~on· wltll 60-40 pow•r ISSill sttl,
from $69.95. French City
dillon . Ph . ~·3149 or see privately ownod, ltss !Mn
Fabric Shoppe, ~nger apo
l500 local milts. Ph. 444-1446.
John Lane.
proved dealer, 58 Court St.,
Ph. ·~ ·9255.

I\

For Sale or Trade

FERTILIZER
REASONABLE prlces ... Cer l
Winters, Ph . 245-5115.
69·1f

Along the way , you ge t a l ittl e
fi nan cial hel p fro m t he ca r .
Such as an aver age 25 m il es to t he
ga llon .
Pints of oi l to fill it up instead of
quarts of oi l.
And no outlays for antifreeze at ali.
Of t ourse. you might be the kind that
says to hi msel f, " I don 't l ike borrowing
money ."
In that case the cash pr ice i s $21 83.05.

-19-69-cY
-cA
:-cM
-cA
:-cH
-cA:-:1-cOO:-:C::C:-:t-r a-cl!:7~lM 1

FOR SALE

Estab lished in 1940.

PERCENTAGE RATE of 11 .95 pet,)

N -l

'

1970 OLDS CUTlASS

ca r a nd pay for it little by little $65.90 a

~· OIU.

SlOO. Ph . 446·1909.

'2695

How to buy a bug

WOOD MOTOR SALES
Eastern

'2395

'995
'1495
37 MORE ·TO . CftOOSE FROM··. ~ ·-.

'2195

~·

Conv ., P. wind ., air cond., beige,
new prem tires .

1969 PONTIAC BONNE

.

·GRAVELY tractor with now
mower, good condition. Ph.

Reed Garnes, Administrator
Terms: Cash
TOMMY JOE STEWART, Auctioneer
Not Responsible for Accidents.

WAS '2695

6 cyl., standard trans., 8' bed. green metallic

96-6

MiNI
bike; electric
with
amplifier;
2 oldguitar
antiquo
trunks. Ph. 256-6569.

_,

'2795

1969 BUICK ELECTRA

Conv .• air con d., bucket seats,
mag wheels. extra sharp.

•

0.29.

Westinghouse refrigerator, R.C.A. gas range.
kitchen table &amp; chairs. dish cabinet; marble.
top dresser, oak library table. 2 oak dressers,
oak stand table, oak chest of drawers,
numerous chairs, dishes, other furniture &amp;
other items too numerous to mention.

WAS 12995

1969 OLDS CUTLASS

finish with vinyl interior, 27,000 act. miles.
Excellent cond.

THE AMAZING Blue Lustre
will leave your upholstery
beautifully soft and clean.
Rent electric shampooer Sl.
Central Supply Co.

steel. JPH 8' rotary hoe, platfo r- m scales, 2 ga r den roto- tillers , Dearborn cut·off saw. vise. anvil, lot new lumber , .
corn shel ler. steel and locust posts.

Farm located on Ohio River .road midway be·
tween Philip Sporn Plant and Ra.cine Locks.
· John McNeill, Harold Flax- Aucts. '
Shell, Rose, Hart- Clerks ·
Lunch will be. served. ' .

.,..

91&gt;l

------=ALL metal lawn swing. Ph.

2 Dr. hdtp., air cond., red, black
vinyl top. Sharp.

'3295

'70 CHEV. 1h TON PICKUP

-:-:--::-:-:-:-:-::--:::---8Xl5 TRAILER . Ph . 367-7329.
.

ciE!aning and repair, also.
house wreck ing . Ph . 446 ·9499.

- - - - --

1970 HONDA 70 mini trail , $185.
Ph. 36).)658.
96-3

THURS•. APRil 27
THURS.
12:30 P.M.

1970 OLDS cunASS

'

GILLENWA TER 'S septic tank

ThOMAS FAIN
EXTERMINATING CO.

NOBODY WALKS AWAY FROM

- -..,.-----

ladder. 3PH cultivator. 3PH 2·14 plow, Int. 2·16 plows on

MR. &amp; ~RS. CHARLES MAaiiR
Letart: w:va., Rt. 1

,

•30 NEW CARS IN STOCK
e10 NEW TRUCKS IN STOCK
•40 SHARPEST USED CARS &amp; TRUCKS IN THE AREA

1967 FORD Ftlrlane V-8 std .•
good condition. Ph. 4..S·1062.
96·6

lime spreader , new 24' bale el evator with electric motor , 3
good wagons with 16' flats, 2·wheel tra iler with BxlO flat,
gravity grain bed, 8' double cultipacker, 2 steel harrows, 2
- 8' pull-type dis cs. cattle oiler, 28' alum. extension

dresser, 2. safes~ 2 round· fop trunks , 2 cupboards, cow
bells, drawer knives, milk cans, butter mold. Many other
~ items.
'

PUBLIC
NOTICE

surance. Prun ing, trimm ing
and cavity work , tree. and
stump remova l. Ph . 446·4953.

.

ES.TATE ·sALE

Custom. 4 Dr . hdtp ., air cond .•
power windows. seat, 18,000 ac·
tual miles, local own.er . Like new.

49-51

BANKS TREE SERVICE
FRE E estimates. liability in·

AK-C white poodles. Ph . ~·
3870.
illl:Tij
,... ~~. M·3,.
,. . ., ...

~~-----------------­

. '72 BUICK OR OPEL BEST SEL£CTION EVER.

, 1969 BUICK ELECTRA ..

Free

Plumbing, 446 -4782 Gallipoli s,

Ohio.

Olivetti portable lyj)f!wrlterl
$89.50 now $74.50. Simmon•
Pig. &amp; Office Equip.
9.&amp;.H

MACHINERY : '52 Alll s· Chalmers tractor model W.O., '54
Ford tractor, NH7' mower , like new ; 1971 MF baler No. 9,
has baled only 161l0 bales. Int. hay condit ioner, new Idea
rake, new idea spreader, JQ 13-sisc grain drill. E·Z flow

lugs, lard press. chairs, rockers, •lands, jars, vanity

for your convenience:

MR. HAROLD' MALONE. OWNER ·
Daryl Albans- AUCTIONEERS- Kttulttll Swoln
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS

and are In good condition .

chests , """'3 ~ chest of drawers, quilting frames, 2 Warm
·Morning heaters, watr-ut clothes press, wooden bowls,

B11yers
OUR bfflces on State Route 160
are now open 7 days a week

tobacco setter, stone jar ( large), 2 burner laundry stove,
· 12·12-12 fertili zer, other miscellaneous Items.

Control

inspect ion . Call Rus sell's

TRI -AXLE
dump truck,
reasonable. Ph. ~-..S76.
Phone 446·0842 or·446-0605
.
9··l
dHI04S631
SPECIAL for graduation - . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _GALLIPOLIS,
______
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,

waters. coal furnace. Sun Rey kitchen range (new), 85,000
B.T.U. gas heater, 1eiectr lt hot water tank, chains,

NOW IS THE TIME TO GET THAT NEW

Arab EXterminating Co.

T E RMITE ~ P est

18 FT. Starcraft boat, 110 HP
Inboard -outboard, excel.
tond.. completely equipped
with troller. Ph . •••·•119
days, after 5 ~· 109• .
94·10

rubber.fired farm wagons 12}, lime spreader, corn

HOLLEY'S DITCHING
COMPLETE wa ter line in·

22·tf

FORMICA counter top with
double sink Installed, first
&lt;lass condition. See at 9 Olive
St .
u .3

sprayer, fenc'l!' charger (new ). llh H.P. ellll!ctric motor,
corn conveyors, Duplex water pump/ hog feeders &amp;

297 -tl

Se r vic e &amp;
Re p a ir s.
Hou se wi ring ,
· electric heat. motor controls.
Free est imates. Ph . 446·456 1
or 675, 3361.

,..,

overhauled), Ferguson 12" turn plows, Fergus.on disc,
corn Ricker, brush·hog mower, corn planter, cultivators,

SMITH
SAYS'

C&amp;S El ectr iCa l

1972 25 FT. travel trailer, air
cond ., fully setf.contalned.
many e.tras. Must sell. See ot
Henderson. W. Va. Trailer
Court.

STARTING AT 10:30 A.M.

rrs VACATION TIME!

IXJC

J. P. Holley, Ph. 245·5018 or
446·4344.
1· If

1968 BUIC~ LeSabre custom •
dr. hdtp ., elr, PS, PB, good
rubber , motor, 17,000 miles.
See at French City Mobile
Home Center.
9H

SATURDAY, APRIL 29, 1972

Cleaned and installed
Russell'S Plumbing, 446·4782

stal latiOn , ba·ckhoe . bulldoz~r
and boring ma chine servic es,

For ~le

'

Co mplete

SEPTIC TANKS

'

I

pair Holstein twin calves. These cattle are of good quality

'

..COV'ER IT WITH DODGES"

RT. 7 NEXT TO
OLD SILVER BRIDGE
KANAtlGA. OHIO

Conlacl: Director of Nursing, Gl!llfpolfs S~le hJ.
stltule.

LANE 'S

Bookkeeping and Tax Ser·
vice. 42·-1117 Fo urt h Ave. ,
K,anauga. Off ice hrs. 9 a.m .-1

85-tf

Q.OSED AU. DAY
THURS. &amp; SUN.

40 Hours per week.

BOB

p.m. Ph. 446-1049.

PH.._

Behavior Modifiation
~nter. Ho~rs • 1:55 P.M
to 10:15 P.M.

THE ESTATE OF MRS. ELVA STEWART

;__

USED &amp;
REBUILT

Located on Colem~n Road. 2 miles nortll of O.k Hill, Ohio.
Off State Route 93. Wafch for Auction Signs.

'

SAT., APR. 29

•.;..-

GUARANTEED

SOx200 fl . Pr ice $3.300.

village of Vinton. Call today
- It will pay.

Out of Town

ha~

closed-In back porch and side
porch , ~ bath and small·
basem ent, gas and sewer and
city wat er .

5

and
furnace ,
attached
garaQe, l arae lot.

PH. 446-3444

NEW LISTINGS
1 ROOM brick home with full

bedroom s, living room 12x17

Vinton .

ran ch, two Incom e unit s,

AUCTIONEER

.
IN CITY
OLD house on small lot. 2

acres tillable , new barn,

" &gt;asement.

JIMME SAYRE

Hoi ze r Medica l Center .
Shown by appointment.

Low price of $11 ,500. Quick

farm , very 254 ACRES - Tobacco base, 80

90 ACRES prime development

"SELL THE AUCTION
WAY"

Farm Special

of road frontage, Rt . 554 near
Cheshire, $16,000.

• I

AUCTION
SERVICE

Off. 446·2674
~Lucille Brannon
Eve. 446·1226

WITHOUT a doubt this is one of
and urbah property. Call us
the best •mall farms for the
today.
·
money , 40 acres, 20 acres in
Jlh ACRES. Nice ~ BR home at
grass, fa i r ft•nce. some
Eno. Birch paneling, bar In
timber. 6 room one story
_ kitchen , part basement .
home, l BR and ni ce bath,
dining
room , aluminum
10 ACRES, Rt . 141 , Rural wa ter .
siding, storm windows and
12 ACRES prime development doors, spacious lenced lawn
land near new Holze• Medical with shrubs and large shade
Center. 800' frontage US 35. trees, garage and out ·
900' frontage county road .
bu ildings , toba cco base.
Located two mi. from bank,
14 ACRES. eight room home, lot

barns near

AT

build
. qood
3 miles
from
with ings
bath.
barn . other

Ploward Brannon, Broker

buyers for farms, vacant land

Both sides road . St5,500.

BAR G AIN

Let's. Continue. To Keep The

PARTS
'

52 ACRE farm , 8 room house·

BEDROOMS·,

-4

REAL

$21.000.

25 Locust St.

; Farm &amp; Urban

home,

LOCATION o

THI S HOME· NEEDS A FEW

RETA IL

STORE , RE STAURANT ,
DAIRY
QUEEN ,
GROCERY , ETC. FOR
CHURCH PURPOSE. CAN
BE
IN
USE
IM ·

DI SH·

W AS HER , ETC . 11h BATH S.
F ULL
B A S E M E N T. ,
G ARA G E , IN AN
EX ·

Farm

FOR SERVICE STATION .
WA S H,

K I TCHEN .

RA NGE. OVEN ,

Business Opportunity
Excellent Location
CAR

D INING

.

AUTO
- ~ -

Cons isting of a 1952 Ferguson Tractor !completely

Y' Price Reduced

~

Services Offered

·'

PUBLIC AUCTION

LARGE

-.

.

Ohio Valley Beautiful

$7,000.

elementary

family dwelling . Asking
$35,000 . Shown by appt . Ph .
446-0208.
96·1

NEW LY CARPETED
LIVING ROOM - 2 EXTRA
LOTS .
LOCATED •IN

REALTY

LISTINGS needed . We have

from

rooms, 2 baths, Qas hot air
furnace .
Present
arrang ement 2 apar.tments.
Easily converted to one

&amp;

95·3

Lincoln Hill. Contact Jay
Sheppard.

across

~nn

system. Ph . 446·0822.

with river view located on

.. :U
Bargain $19,500.

t.?7

(RANGE

DISHWA SHER),

-Owner Movmg Out Of SlateAnd sht: hates to leave this new 3 bedroom
home. It has a very pretty kitchen (range,
oven. etc.) large carpeted living room. 2
baths, garage and flat lot 4 blocks from new
hospital. Take your time, but hurry. It won't
be on the market long at this price.

PR ICE
WI TH US .

16 BUILDING lots plus acreage

ONE ACRE WITH TRAIL~R :Eight miles ltom town Qn
goo&lt;;f,j:ounty road. Low I~&lt;
district, dose to new Gavm WANT to buy a fol tor your
Plan.f, 10 x so· with two. · mobile home. We hav~ 3 lots
bedro~m .
~RIGrande with city water,
d sewer avilla"''' Can
MOBILE HOME , 11'2 ACR~S ugh! tor $2;500. $mall
Good drilled well, county · down payment end bilanco·
woter ·line, seplic • system,
like rent. Wlll' sellall31ots,for

WI S EMAN

BATH S, LARGE FAMIL Y
ROOM , 2 CAR GARAGE,
FORMAL D INING , NICE

For real estate you want ... or
don't want .

good -4 B
l'h mlfes

AT

VERY ATTR ACTIVE 3
BEDROOM HOME WITH 2

TH ~

Pomeroy Acreage

446·34l4 446-4775

84 GARFIELD AVENUE'
WANT a good home at a low
price. Has 2 bedrooms. wall to
wall carpel In living room and
both 'bedrooms. Also one car
garage. iielllng price $10,700.

.

.

,BAIRD
BROS.

Neal ·RealtY·

,_; ·New Listing

REALTORS. Headquarters for
G11111 County Real Estate.

;7 ACRES. $-0.1.'
" ""

PJl l rFn

CALL
IK -E
RIGH T NOW .

CHUR C H

Rancno company

AND

GARAGE, LARGE ' FLAT
LOT . KITCHEN INC~ UDES
RANGE
AND · DI SH·
MILE OUT . WAS $29 ,900

paid, 511 .900.

DUE to the present construction
.in Gallia Co. , we have s~veral
out of town buyers in need of
homes in this area . If you
have property for sal~, don't
settle for less than nationwide

BATHS,

Jl/1

WA SHER . 4 YRS . OLD , S

home in country . 7 rms. &amp;
bath, new furnace, water tap

4112 A. on a state rd . close to
new hospitaL pond, 3 car
gar age, and a modern 6 room
home.

412 Second Ave.

FOR SALE by owner. 2 story
bri ck at 452 First Ave. 7

yt Price Reduced

NICELY rem odeled 2 story

CITY FARMER'S DREAM -

• Realty

524.000.

wa sher , attached garage and
larg e fenced in lawn .

floors, air cond ., and located
on a quiet Sf .

'

'

.·

•

8ulltlly TID8-h•t•l,lllmdly, April 23, 1872

.

school, Kyger Cr~k·District,
.
2 ACRE LOT
completel.y furnished , alsb l BR HOME In excellent con·
These ·
adjoining 20 x 28 building, fuel
dillon . Vacant and readY. to
4 Great Home ·
oil heat. Priced under $15,000.
move ln . ,Would cons d"
mobile home In trade. Full
Buys
IN -TOWN BARGAIN - Good
price. $15,000.
.location. heart of town , three
Office Phone 446·1694
ONE OF THESE HOME S
bedrooms , pr iced for quick
Evening•
SHOU LD BE EXACTLY
sale . Don't pa ~s up this deal.
Charles M. NNI 446·1546
WHAT YOU'RE LOOK ING
FOR . CHECK AND SEE .
J . Michael Neal 446·1503
Evenings
Dsur C. Baird, 446-4632
D. J. Wetherholt, 446·4244
HOUSE for sale by owner In
, ; Price Reduced
Steven R. Betz, 446-9583
city, l bedroom tirlck', lorg•
DON 'T MISS SEEING THIS
family room. central olr. See
1FANTASTIC BARGAIN. 3
or phone Ed Stewart, 446·3827.
BEDROOMS ,
FUL.L.
H·6
H6BART
DILLON
BAS,EMENT , FIREPLACE ,
LARGE LIVIN G ROOM,
Real Estate Qroker
FAMILY ·
ROOM .
P. 0. Boxl16
BREEZEWAY , GARAGE . ~-'C LUSfVE
agent for Raccoon
IN
EX ( ELLENT ;::.:;(-. .
WANTED
Valley Campsites . Ph. 446OITION . YOU J UST WO N' T
FIND A BETTER BUY 2730 .
I
f
LPN, FOR
J7-t
WA S $26,000 REDU CED TO

ofh dish-

CITY - We have 2 homes which
are priced at $13,900 each and
offer 3 BR, bath , nice sized
LR , modern kitchen , · HW

·

REALTOR

'

..-

For Fast Results Use . The s ·u nday Times-Sentinel' Classifieds

Real Estate For Sale .

OHIO ltiVER .

J

Agericy

. Galli a Cq.'s Largest
Real Estate Sales. Agency
Office 446-3643
• E\venings .Call
.
·e. M. "Ike" Wiseman 446-3796
F . N, Wiseman 446-4500

THE LEADER SINCE 1900 IN
SERVING THE NATION'S
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS.
Ph. 446-0001

.

'

. -'

..

., J.

I

North-Soulh vulnerable
w..t North East South

as

...

\

\

�I

'

•

r

"'

:-.

... ... ,

.,. ....
, ·'·,.,

.. .':"''

... ·''

~··li

'

•.

..... . ...

..

'

·-Tile

24 - The SundayTimes - Sentinel,Sunday, April23, i972

For Fast Results Use The SundAy Time~-Sentinel Cl~Jssifieds

·l

Real Estate For Sale

·aI Estate For Sale

iI

Realty, 32 State SL
Tel. 446-1998

'

Real Estate For.Sale

STROUT THE WISEMAN
REALTY·
AGENCY

MASSIE

l

World's Largest

KERR - ~ear new, all bricK , 4 oarm ., larQe liv. rm ., din .
r m ., and Mrs. approved kitchen and 3 baths. I! has H.W.
floors, and car1)et . Full finished ba~ement . , w1th a 2 car
oar . This house has 1,888 sQ. ft . llv . area on each floor .

Located on near 2 A. level land. Bought for replacement
cost'.

CITY - Located at 88 Pine PORTER - 4 bdrm . home
St., 6 rms., both and utility with large liv. r m. 12'x28' ,
·rm . This house is In good lll1 baths. carpet' over H. W.,

lots of panel ing , new vinyl
new. New kitchen, new biilh. siding , storm doors and
new hot water tank , new Windows, en c losed back
plumbing and new sh ingle' p:.rch, water tap paid ; ha s
root. Has large garllge . barn and 2 car gar . 51 7,500
Large lot, 9 fruit trees and buys th is nice home with 4 A.
rm . for a garden. Price of land .
Sl6,000 . If you want an in.
Real nice,
Jestmerit you can buy this EUREKA remodeled
older
hom e
one and another 6 rm . (2
apartments) in good repair, located on 21ots, overlooking
beside It; both for $26.500. the Ohio River . It has 6 rm s.
repair, with most of Interior

on first floor and 2 on the

CITY - Located at 127
Klneon. house In good repair,
$0me ne'v\ copper plumbing
and wiring, 5 nice rms. and

bath, full base .. H.W. floors
with new carpet and
paneling in llv. rm . Don't
walt to see this one . Price
$17,500.

I'I

I

ADDISON - Modern home.
H.W. floors, fully carpeted.
Llv. rm. 14'x18'. Kitchen
12'x16', plenty cabinets. Full
base. Low taxes. good

;I

schools and located where

the action Is taking place.
Price $16,000.

'I

iI
I
I'

I

knotty ·plne cabinets . Alum .
siding. Priced for a quick

sale. $16.900.
R10 - All bri ck, all electri c,
beautiful 5 rm . home,
In
ex cell ent
lo cated
re sidential section . On e
QWner uses huge llv. rm . for

beauty salon. This property
may be bought with 3 First
Lady beauty salon stations,
reception desk, 2 Flrst Lady
drrlng stations and chair s.

AI for $24.000. House $21, 000.

FARMS
WADDELL
FARM
DAIRY FARM - This 162 A.
Located· 9 mi. from city on farm , located on St. Rt . 325
St. Rt. 775. It has a modern 5 and Roush Rd ., has an 8 rm .
rm . home with finished attic . modern home, dairy barn
Plenty of water (rural water 40' K60' with 20 stanchions,
line) piped to all bldg•. and loafing shed 40' 1&lt;60', tool
Irrigation system . 5 big shed 10'x30' , m ilk house
.. barns
In good repair, all 16'&lt;16' with 210 ~al. bulk
have metal roofs. and all tank , alum . crib, s1lo, gra in

all

I
,I

proteCted from lightning.

crib 20' x30', and other bldg s.

This farm has 75 A. high·
produ&lt;ing tractor land, l.lOO
lb. lob . base, and good

70 A. product ive tillable

fences . You can't lose If you

I

buy this one because it has 10
A. of ideal development land.

'

I

i:

second . It has a large ltv. rm .
with F. P. All rms. on first
floor ar e carpeted and kitchen has pfenty of real nice

•·

land, 10 A. limber, bal. in

pasture. Good fences. 1.303
lb. fob . base, 112 A. pond. Can
be bought with or without

chattels.

ANY HOUR : 446-1998
E. Wint.,r,lr-446·3121!,
,
~v ~,J· Bl rry- !46·3466
AtArnolif-:.446·0756
Eve., J. F~ller-245· 9311

NEW LISTING - lovely Brick
less than 1 yr . old within
walk ing distance of new hosp.
Features are 3 BR, ww
carpet , 1~1:1 baths; cent . air, ~
car _garage, kitchen with 9ar .
disp ., range , hood ; dishwasher and lots of cabinets .

•

WINTER CAN BE COZY for the
lucky ow ~~r of this modern 3
BR horr
a large stone
flreplact. .
"'ctive price
includes Hilt . {) 1112 baths;

fPt·+t,

built-in kltchel•

. Real Estate for Sale · ·Real Estate For Sale
-~ -r

fhe ·W!S~MAN

Very Attractive-In Town-Large Lot
Don't miss seeing this lovely Colonial. 3
bedrooms. large living room (fireplac'eJ.
dining room , entrance hall , all fully carpeted.
1112 baths, very nice kitchen, full basement.and
garage - See it anytime. just call us for an
appointment.

Off. ~3643
G~llia

Co.'&lt; Lar.aest
Evenina :
Ike Wiseman
446-3796
E. N. Wiseman
446,4500

BE ~ UTIFUL WELL -BU ILT
BRI C K 3 BEDROOM HOME

WITH

BASEMENT

ATTENTION

advertising . CALL STROUT.
lOA .- 2 mi. off 160. nice 5 rocm
home with bath. good barn.
pond, fenced in and ready for

cattle .

Nnw

KITCHEN ,

SPRING VALLEY .

SP LI T-LEVEL
DREAM
HOME WIT H 3 OR 4
BEnR O OM S,

ROOM . ALL CARPETED .

1'i O O ER N

CE LLENT

M E DIATELY . WILL S ELL

RE SI DENC E

AND

BLDG .

SEPARATE . YOU MAY
HAVE HEARD WRONG ON

MEIG S

COUN TY .

96 1h

ACRES ,
20
BOTTOM
CROPLAND , 76 PASTURE ,
GOOD FEN CI:o, . LARGE
BARN 8lx4 2. GOOD 2
STORY MODERN HOME
WITH NICE KITCHEN ,
BAT H,

LITTLE ODD JOBS , BUT IS

A

Cheshire on 5S4. Ph. 367-7516.
93·6

FURNACE HEAT ,

716
~V~,~
A'C~R'E-f~a-=rm
=-.~2~bed
~room

SO CHECK

house, buildi _
ng lots, 8 miles
from Ga ~lipolis on Bulaville·
Porter Rd . Rural water

church, school and stor es.

LOTS
GEORGES Creek - mobile
home lots , IJOO.down , $50 per
month.
0 . J. WHITE Rd .. 100 x 200,
res tr icted building lots. SSOO
down .

WOODS Mi ll Rd . - 100 fl .
frontage, $1,000.
·
LISTINGS NEEDED
Ranny Blackburn
Branch Manager

possess ion .

,

outstanding farm home with
an all bullf·ln kitchen In color.
54 ACRES - 40 acres tillabl e.
good outbuildings, good 7
JO ACRES, Custom buill brick
r oom home, new furnace.

6 ACRES - Good outbuild ing s,
State Rt . 160.
4 B R home on State Rt .
l5 ACRES. small house, fru it
and nmber . Clay Twp. 16,750. so ACRES - Located on
bla c ktop road . Ideal for
housing or mobile h.omes.
40 ACRES. Cozy two bedroom
Vinton .

land near new Holzer Medical
Center. 1000" frontage US l5.
2200' frontage on county
road.

Homes
8 ROOMS 1'12 balh, al l built -in
kitchen with snack bar and
stools.
formal
din ing ,
fireplace In LR , family room .
laundry and carport plus a
very large workshop, fenced
lawn and outside gril l. Must
be seen to appreciate.

1!2 /lcre Lot

IDEALto• .1Ji . · or home . On e 6 ROOMS and bath. larg e kit·
mile from""l,1J on Addison
Township. With .1ater tap.

Owner
Leaving State

chen, two

porch e s ~

deep lot.
11 ROOMS, 2'1'

basement,

baths. new

k l t c hen 1 central ai r , ca r ·
pet lng , full basement, Ideal
location .

YOUR chance to buy a well kept
3 BR house on Chestnut Sf.
Paneled and carpeted living
room. Bullt ·ln cabinets.
Lorge gdrage for the man
who needs his own work shop.
Call tor personal showing.

In Town
WE HAVE two well -kept homes
In town . One a three bedroom
home with air conditioning
and a larde 14 room home
wi th l baths and lots of carpal
on Second Avenue .

basem ent on .9 acre, ha s 3
be dr oorps, 2 baths , large
l ivi ng r oom 1Sx20 ft ., has
mod ern kitch en, wi thin
wal king di stan ce ol new

ft .. kitchen 12x17 fl..

FOR SALE
BY OWNERS
LOCATED AT KANAUGA
5 room house and bath with
natura I ViS. forced air
furnace ,
rP.cently
remodeled. 24xl2 concrete

block building, lormerly
Stewart's Garage . 12x60
Richardson mobile home
furnished . Plenty of room for

a garden
124,000.00.

plot.

Only

, Can be seen at 644 Fifth Ave .,
Kanauga .

For more in-

S ROOM house in Bidwel l. Lot

3 BEDROOM house on Cedar
Street with ba sement and
garage . Pr i ce reduced to

$8,000.

'
Office 446' 1066
Evenings Call '
Ron C1naday 446·l6l6
Russell D. Woo~ 446,4618

Camping Equipment -

COMPARE our q~a l lty and
pri ces. ' Highest di scount In
Tri .State on trailers and
campers. Accept trade.Jns.
Sto ck
all
accessori es,
Amer ica's No. 1 camper .

Camp Con ley_Slarcraft Sales.
ROOMS &amp; bath - LR car· formation phone: 446·0165.
Rl . 62 N. of Pt. Pleasant.
peted. bullt.tn .kitchen, ful l
82·tf
· basement, deep lot.
2BR home located In Rio , ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii. .
Grande ,
completely
remodeled, new bath, kitchen
BUSINE SS BUILDING!
Neeas some

repa1r.

~rice

$2,700.
7 ROOMS &amp; bath, al l carpeted,
new

garage ~

alum inum

siding . larg e rolling well

PUBLIC SALE
10:00 A.M.

Since we have sold our farm we will sell at
public auction our livestock, machinery, feed,
supplies and household furnishings which
incl!Jde many antiques.

PAY ONLY ONE UTILITY
ELECTRICITY

We furnish Water - sewage· Garbage' Collection. Ample
Parking • TV Antenna . Watl.to-Wall Carpeting .
. Draperies · Ranges · _Refrigerators . Air Conditioning •
Garbage Disposals· Drshwashers . Heat Lamps . Private
Patios - Swimming Pool . Clubhouse.

shaded lawn . l lf• acr es in the

LIVESTOCK : l good stock cows, bred to a Charolais bull,
one has calf, others are close.up. 5 yearling Hereford
heifers, yr. Hereford steer, 2 yr. Holstein steers. 1 yr.
Holstein heifer, yr . Charolais steer, yr . Charolai~ heifer,

:1

We sell anything for
anybody . Bring your
lt•ms· to Knotts Com. munlty Auction Barn.
Cornor Third &amp; Olive. ,
·For apPOintment ~all
446 -2917. Sale every
Saturday · Evening at
70'Ciock.
'

""6·000)
• O.nv•r K. Higley 44..0002'
wan• s. E•htllaur 444-0!103

·2.BEDROOM TOWNHOUSES

TARA

TOWNOOUSE ·
APARTMENTS

For Information Call Shirley Adkins-367-7250

7J.ff

1972 Dodge Monaco Station Wagon
4 Door 6 Passenger, 50-50 split back vinyl seats with center arm rest . .air
conditioning, automatic transmission. power steering. power brakes.
tinted glass. 400 cu. in . 2 Bbl. V·8 engine. AM· FM radio wilh rear speak er,
white-side-wall tires, wheel covers, undercoating.

.·.
.
OUR PRICE-~--------- 4 1 297
STICKER PRICE '$,616.30

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE, INC.

Located: 754 4th Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio.

'"'-'~

1 ~

·f

I ...

Gallipolis, Ohio

Av~.

IIIII•••••••••••••••••••..

•..., electric starter, excel. cond .,

96·3

SINGER sewing machine
reclalme&lt;l, bill . 137.40, sews
like new. Will mono., darn.
etc. Cash or terms available.
Ph. «1&gt;25.:1.
RECONDITIONED
MOilLE HOMES
1970 Statesman 60x12
196S Van Dyke 55x12
1965 Elcona 60x10
1N2 GJbraltarS5x10
19.S.. CrestJina J5x8
1952 Alml J5x8
B&amp;S Mobile Homes
Second &amp; VIand St.
· Pt. PlellantiNoxtto Htck'l.)
96-tf
-::B__
E_ArU::T1:-:F::-U::-L-:Co-:J-on7ta7t--;:-Earty
· Amerltan St•reo . radio
combination, AM· FM radio, •
speaker sound system. •
speed automatic changer .
Balance $79.12. Use ·our
budget terms. Call ~- 1:

3

WALNUT Storeo Console, •
speaker sound syaltm, •
speed changer, separate
controls. Balance $65.19. UN
oui time payment plan. Call
~-1028 . .

.

FURNITURE and ANTIQUES : Oak desk, old secretary, 2'
wardrobes, picture frllmes, old sewing ma Chine, 4-plece

love seat set, good condition ; 3 Iron kettles, 2 copper
kettles, 2,pie safes, porch furniture. 2 quilt chests. 3 flour

I

f

This nice two story three bedroom brick
dwelling. Extni" well buill out of the best of
material. Full basement. Hot water heat. Ph
l)aths. Driveway In common. · ·
Located at 339 4th Ave. opposite the high ·
school. Lot 173ft. 10 lnclles by 43 ft. 9 Inches.
Open house , Sundays 2 to 4. Other times by
appointment. .,
.,
·

To be sold at public auction ahhe
house, 339 - 4th, May 6th,· at 10
o'clock. ·
D. Hollis Wood, bee. of
~-

Estate of. Jane DiYis
'

~

t
'

PASO Fino honn. Ph. 256-6553.
M-1

You don't chalk up a victory
record like Datsun without some
pretty advanced engineering.
Datsun 510 4-Door Sedan has an
overhead cam engine, saf"-ty front
dilc braltea, and independent rear
1111pension. Plus nylon carpeting.
Full-vinyl interior with reclining
buckets. Tinted ql111. Whitewalls.

. Dataun 510. It lUre beatl
whatiVu'l 1eccm,d.

SMITH AUTO SALES
Kanauga, Oflio

....

f ----.:::-::::-:-:--.-:::-:
F!lf' Sale
BLUE CT Hondo 70, good '
r' 1970
condition. Ph . .j44-.S11.
.M-l HONDA Dr•m model 1965,
_....._~-:--:-.:

FOR "a loti well done '"""~~"
clean car~ell ,with Blut
Luafrt.
Rent
ltltctrlc
lhamf'OO!I" $1. Lower G. C.
IW/rpftY S~t.
tw

300CC, extel. cond. Ph.
ol973 aft..- 5 p.m.

o~..s.

95-3
S CHARQLAIS holftrs brod fo

Hertford bull, aome to
lrnMII - · Lee Slmm$, 2566.591 .

'6.5 ~ORO, PS, 1uto. trens,;
good condtftan. Ph. 367-n50.

fU, REG. Quarter horse mare, 7

-1,-7-0_H_O~N~O~A~7=o~.-,-.~ct~ll~t
condlfton. Ph....

*'·

'

.f'

WAS 12495

D. P. MARTIN &amp; Son Water

....

Nice .

'2595 ·

'2295

prec iated . Ph . 446-0463.

).fl

4dr . hdtp .• Fury Ill, 29,000 miles,
nice family car .

TERMITE PE ST CONTROL
FREE inspection. Call446-3245.

V.I. P. Sport Coupe, vinyl top, air
condition, one owner, 27,000 miles,
extra nice.

'1795

M err ill O'Dell, Operator for
Ex.term inal Termite Service,
19 Be lmont Dr .

- - - - --

1969 PLYMOliTH FURY

1969 PLYMOUTH

Delivery Servi ce.
Your.
be ap:
patronag e will

'2095 '

267-lf

Central Air Conditioning
&amp; Heating
Free Estimates
Stewart's Hardware
Vinton, Ohio

144-tt'

1968 BUICK SKYLARK

1968 VOLKS ST. V4AGON

·cust .• 2 dr. hdtp .• air cond ., yellow
with black vinyl top. Was $1995.

Factory air cond., gas heater,
40,000 miles. like new cond.

WAS '1995

Termi! e &amp; Pest Con l rol
'Wheel er sburg , Oh io

'1795

'1995-.

NOW ONLY

60·11

ALBERT EHMAN
Water De livery Serv ice
Patr iot Star Rt ., Gall ipolis

Ph. 379·21l3
24l·tf

18 FT. FIBERGLAS BOAT

1968 BUICK LeSABRE

75 HP Eng., trailer. cover. Check

this .

4 dr. hdtp., gold, black vinyl top,
cust. vinyl interior. Sharp.

GMAC :... ~ BANK FINANCING
OPEN TILL 7:00 P.M.
a little bit at a time.
First say to yourself. " I 'd like to
bu y a bug a litt le bit at a t ime."
And if you've got $197. 00 for a cash
down payment, you can have the whole
mont h for 36 months.
( If you don' t have an adding ma chine
ha ndy, that works out to a deferred
pay ment pr ice of $2372.40 which in·
et udes a finan ce charge of an ANNUAL

SERVICE &amp; PARTS
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Mon.-12 p.m. Untili:OO p.m.
Tues .. loVed. &amp; Fri.-8 a.m. Until s p.m.
Thursday-8 :00a .m. until9:00 p.m.
Saturday-8:00a.m. until Noon

'U GTO, good condition, tx·
celltfll r101nlng . Ph. 367-7701.

I_

4 Dr. Air Cortd., vinyl top. Blue.

169·11

DON WATTS V.W.

9~·1

FEED: 100 bu. corn, 60 bu. oats, "30 bu. barley. 125.bales
straw, small lot baled hay.

2 dr. hdtp .• air cond ., vinyl top.
extra shar p.

- -----

For Sale

years old, gentle, well
trained, Suaar Bar brooding.
Ph. 379·261f.
95-3

For Sale

RICE'S

For Sale

.New GMC

Truck Headquarters

' IF YOU are ·building a · new
We are builders. Distributor
for Hotpoint Appl iances ,
Allison Electric.

'

154·ff
WE HAVE a complete line of all
new Time&lt; Watches. 16 .95 to
125. Tawney Jewelers .
u .tf ·

FOR SALE

SS:oo Service.Charge
Will remove your dNdi
horse and ·cows
Co II Je~son m:4531

,t UT HORilUl
OU l tR

· ·

44·11

---~-

WHITE cement; all sizes file m

m

-----~92- 6 '
NEW 1971 Zlg .Zag Sewing
Machine in ' original factory
carton. Zig-Zag to make
buttonholes; sew on buttons,
monograms, and make fancy
designs with justthe twist of 1

slngle·dial . Left In lay.away
and never been used . Wilt 1111
for only S.7 casll. or credit
terms available. Phone 381·
867l.
92·6

ELECTRDLUX • Vacuum
Cleaner complete with af.
tachments, cordwlnder and

SGI-t

NORTH (D)
.AJ1065

Tawney Jewelers.

in stock over
of the finest'
lo · ch oose ·rrom , GBD,
Charatan. Savlnelll. Tawney

•

WE FiAVE in stock a fine
wedding bonds. Columbia .
Keepsake, and Artcarved.

IF YOU desir e a pipe , we have

'The Full .Treatment' Here
.KIOH

selection of diamonds and

For Sale

WIN AT BRIDGE

---------,

stock. 12" and 15" field tile.
suitable lbr highway ditching ,
concrete
blocks.
GALpPOLIS BLOCK CO.,
12l 1h Pfrie St., Ph. ~-2783 .
II&gt; If

zz

• 10

.107 5
WEST
EAST
• 65 3
.2
¥74
'K82
tAQ8742
t KJ63
r
.J9832
"'KQ
SOUTH
.AQJ98
.Q93

and underled his ace of dla
monds. Willard won with th&lt;
king and cashed the Jack o:
clubs to complete the fur
Sims·Karn treatment.
South wanted to kno'O
why Willard had the nerv•
to try to cash a club. "Sup

Seod $1 lot J.4COIV 1/oODI/IH liiiA

to : "Win crt Jtidft," (c/o t~is _..
poporl, P.O. lox ·olf9, «lfl;. City
S!olion, Now York,' N.Y. 100,,

• 95

,.
,.
••

"'A64

pose I had started with ju1t
one club?" questioned South.
"In that case, we were
p..,
Pa:ss
not going to beat five
2+
Pass
spades," replied Willard.
Pass 5.
Pass Pus
" Furthermore, "If you held
Dble Pass
P... Pass
lust one club, you would"
Opening lead- .r. K
have so many red ·cards that
Hal's diamond trick wo'iii.d
keep ."
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
The real big. play was
CORBIN &amp; S.NYDER
when
Hal underled the dla· ·
Philip Hal Sims may well
FURNITURE .
mond
ace . 'Anyone else
have been the most colorful
would
have
been happy with
USED 36'' gas range COfl· bridge player of all time 1
pi
us-200:
•
·
.
",
pertone ; boxsprlngs, fu\1 size; well as one of the best. One•
2 pc. sectional couch, 2 table of his favorite expressions
(HIWSPAPil IHlllPIIII ASSII .l'
lamps, rod utltl~rt . Plenty was, "We ftave them the full
of frtt perking.
Fr[dayl treatment.
till I, 955 Second VI. Ph. .ofol6.
In today's hand, he and his ,.
1171 .
The biddiq hu been:
90-11 favorite partner, the late'
-~-----Willard S. Karn, really gave W01t North
Jut 1972 8TRACll. stereo""""'" '" ' South the full treatment.
1"'
Puo I t
·tovely hand rubbed welnut
M t S th
t t
1
P...
1¥
Pua 2¥
finish . Pay bal . of $9M1 or
os
ou s go o Pay P... 3N.T. Pus
7
pay 11.21 mo. Pf&gt;. ~-0921.
and make four spades. A
You, South, hold:
a...tf couple were set one trick at
five. Hal not only doubled
•.uu ¥Knz +Qln •u
1972 DE LUXE zig zag sewing five Spades, but be and WU·
What do you do ZUJW! .
machine. This mochlnt lard found the defense to
A-hu or . bW • - llooda,
mlkfl butlonholn, dorn11nd beat the conttact two trick&amp;
111Pd7. Y•
emb. mekn fancy stitches. '
· Wo favor tbt ' IIIII.
Pay ~1. of 1450 or pey S6
It actually wasn't too dlf. bi4 a lhrM-~ •t
mo. Ph. 416'Dn1.
flcult. Hal's king of clubs Ml)obt your parhor bW a
· 84-tf lead was normal enoueh. three· ..rd heart IIIIL
.
South won the trick, drew
TODAY'll QUISTION
CORBih &amp; SNYI)e-R :rumps with three leads, led In 1 to a d of rtblddlnc one
'SERTA &amp; Bemco Maltrlllll &amp; ·the nine of hearts and let h..rt, your porlntr wont Ill 1wo
box •prlngs S29 up. 955 Second it ride to Kam's king.
clubs alter your dlomond nAve . 446-1171 . '
IO.tf
Karn led batk the deuce ' sponM. What do yeu do r-t
. Jf Clubs. Hal won the trick

Jewelers .
1969 '!, T: Chev. PU
44·11 · REBUILT Electrolux cleaners.
1968 v, T, Chev. PU
- ----....,-- .
Ph. 446·945l.
1967 .'I• T. Chev. PU
SCHULT
f
railer,
i2
x
65,
87·12
1
970
!969 '12 T. Chev. PU
air
.
4
mi.
from
Gavin
-:-:-::---=--Central
1963 1;, T. Chev. PU
Plant. Ph . 367-75l0.
GOOD CLEAN LUMP and"
1968 'h T. GMC PU
stoker coal. Carl Winters, Rio·
92-6
1967 Chev. tr l-axle dump tru ck
Grande. Phone ·u5-51.15.
1968 o;, T. GMC PU
6·11
one
1966
FAIRLANE,
4
dr.
1969 '12 T. Chev . PU , auto. trans.
owner. Ph. 446·1670.
1968 3 T. GMC

New 11 ft . camper
1966 'I• T. GMC
1968 v, T. GMC PU
. 1966 o;, T, GMC PU
1967 '12 T. GMC PU
1968 Chev. Suburban
1967 'h T. Chev . PU
1Ml F600 Ford 'Truck
1961 2 T. GMC
1964 3 T. GMC
SOMMER'S G.M.C.
TRUCKS, INC.
Ill Pine St.
446·25l2

DEAD STOCK

CAMPER, full focll ltles; also
camper on pickup truck . Call .
before noon ~ -0168 or, 1026
. Second Ave.
87·ff

home or remodel ing, see us.

paint spray. Used but In like
NEW &amp; USE'D FUAN.
•
new condition. Pay SJ.U5
NEW
Early
American 1972 Pontlet Grandvlll• 4 dr . I ' cash or b&lt;Jdget plan avalla~le .
Ph011e l8a.&amp;67l.
hldNway bed complete with hdtp. Brasill gold wlih
. 92·6
mattress was S229.95 now . cordova top, Pontltc's flnnt
$199.95, new 5 pc. all wood 1· •
E 1 ...., Jth
dinette sets 1119.95. 85• · uxury cu. qu p,.... w
Second (across from Texaco all power, usl•t• Including '51 NG E R Sewlng.~ch tn• satn
Station.) ..._9523. ·
factory AM &amp; . FM stereo,
&amp; Service. All
modeif In
95-tf .•, _ 111M player and air,
stock. Free delivery. Service
custom dulgn•cl lnt.. ior
guaranteed. Models prlcod
1963 FORO, $200, good ~on· wltll 60-40 pow•r ISSill sttl,
from $69.95. French City
dillon . Ph . ~·3149 or see privately ownod, ltss !Mn
Fabric Shoppe, ~nger apo
l500 local milts. Ph. 444-1446.
John Lane.
proved dealer, 58 Court St.,
Ph. ·~ ·9255.

I\

For Sale or Trade

FERTILIZER
REASONABLE prlces ... Cer l
Winters, Ph . 245-5115.
69·1f

Along the way , you ge t a l ittl e
fi nan cial hel p fro m t he ca r .
Such as an aver age 25 m il es to t he
ga llon .
Pints of oi l to fill it up instead of
quarts of oi l.
And no outlays for antifreeze at ali.
Of t ourse. you might be the kind that
says to hi msel f, " I don 't l ike borrowing
money ."
In that case the cash pr ice i s $21 83.05.

-19-69-cY
-cA
:-cM
-cA
:-cH
-cA:-:1-cOO:-:C::C:-:t-r a-cl!:7~lM 1

FOR SALE

Estab lished in 1940.

PERCENTAGE RATE of 11 .95 pet,)

N -l

'

1970 OLDS CUTlASS

ca r a nd pay for it little by little $65.90 a

~· OIU.

SlOO. Ph . 446·1909.

'2695

How to buy a bug

WOOD MOTOR SALES
Eastern

'2395

'995
'1495
37 MORE ·TO . CftOOSE FROM··. ~ ·-.

'2195

~·

Conv ., P. wind ., air cond., beige,
new prem tires .

1969 PONTIAC BONNE

.

·GRAVELY tractor with now
mower, good condition. Ph.

Reed Garnes, Administrator
Terms: Cash
TOMMY JOE STEWART, Auctioneer
Not Responsible for Accidents.

WAS '2695

6 cyl., standard trans., 8' bed. green metallic

96-6

MiNI
bike; electric
with
amplifier;
2 oldguitar
antiquo
trunks. Ph. 256-6569.

_,

'2795

1969 BUICK ELECTRA

Conv .• air con d., bucket seats,
mag wheels. extra sharp.

•

0.29.

Westinghouse refrigerator, R.C.A. gas range.
kitchen table &amp; chairs. dish cabinet; marble.
top dresser, oak library table. 2 oak dressers,
oak stand table, oak chest of drawers,
numerous chairs, dishes, other furniture &amp;
other items too numerous to mention.

WAS 12995

1969 OLDS CUTLASS

finish with vinyl interior, 27,000 act. miles.
Excellent cond.

THE AMAZING Blue Lustre
will leave your upholstery
beautifully soft and clean.
Rent electric shampooer Sl.
Central Supply Co.

steel. JPH 8' rotary hoe, platfo r- m scales, 2 ga r den roto- tillers , Dearborn cut·off saw. vise. anvil, lot new lumber , .
corn shel ler. steel and locust posts.

Farm located on Ohio River .road midway be·
tween Philip Sporn Plant and Ra.cine Locks.
· John McNeill, Harold Flax- Aucts. '
Shell, Rose, Hart- Clerks ·
Lunch will be. served. ' .

.,..

91&gt;l

------=ALL metal lawn swing. Ph.

2 Dr. hdtp., air cond., red, black
vinyl top. Sharp.

'3295

'70 CHEV. 1h TON PICKUP

-:-:--::-:-:-:-:-::--:::---8Xl5 TRAILER . Ph . 367-7329.
.

ciE!aning and repair, also.
house wreck ing . Ph . 446 ·9499.

- - - - --

1970 HONDA 70 mini trail , $185.
Ph. 36).)658.
96-3

THURS•. APRil 27
THURS.
12:30 P.M.

1970 OLDS cunASS

'

GILLENWA TER 'S septic tank

ThOMAS FAIN
EXTERMINATING CO.

NOBODY WALKS AWAY FROM

- -..,.-----

ladder. 3PH cultivator. 3PH 2·14 plow, Int. 2·16 plows on

MR. &amp; ~RS. CHARLES MAaiiR
Letart: w:va., Rt. 1

,

•30 NEW CARS IN STOCK
e10 NEW TRUCKS IN STOCK
•40 SHARPEST USED CARS &amp; TRUCKS IN THE AREA

1967 FORD Ftlrlane V-8 std .•
good condition. Ph. 4..S·1062.
96·6

lime spreader , new 24' bale el evator with electric motor , 3
good wagons with 16' flats, 2·wheel tra iler with BxlO flat,
gravity grain bed, 8' double cultipacker, 2 steel harrows, 2
- 8' pull-type dis cs. cattle oiler, 28' alum. extension

dresser, 2. safes~ 2 round· fop trunks , 2 cupboards, cow
bells, drawer knives, milk cans, butter mold. Many other
~ items.
'

PUBLIC
NOTICE

surance. Prun ing, trimm ing
and cavity work , tree. and
stump remova l. Ph . 446·4953.

.

ES.TATE ·sALE

Custom. 4 Dr . hdtp ., air cond .•
power windows. seat, 18,000 ac·
tual miles, local own.er . Like new.

49-51

BANKS TREE SERVICE
FRE E estimates. liability in·

AK-C white poodles. Ph . ~·
3870.
illl:Tij
,... ~~. M·3,.
,. . ., ...

~~-----------------­

. '72 BUICK OR OPEL BEST SEL£CTION EVER.

, 1969 BUICK ELECTRA ..

Free

Plumbing, 446 -4782 Gallipoli s,

Ohio.

Olivetti portable lyj)f!wrlterl
$89.50 now $74.50. Simmon•
Pig. &amp; Office Equip.
9.&amp;.H

MACHINERY : '52 Alll s· Chalmers tractor model W.O., '54
Ford tractor, NH7' mower , like new ; 1971 MF baler No. 9,
has baled only 161l0 bales. Int. hay condit ioner, new Idea
rake, new idea spreader, JQ 13-sisc grain drill. E·Z flow

lugs, lard press. chairs, rockers, •lands, jars, vanity

for your convenience:

MR. HAROLD' MALONE. OWNER ·
Daryl Albans- AUCTIONEERS- Kttulttll Swoln
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS

and are In good condition .

chests , """'3 ~ chest of drawers, quilting frames, 2 Warm
·Morning heaters, watr-ut clothes press, wooden bowls,

B11yers
OUR bfflces on State Route 160
are now open 7 days a week

tobacco setter, stone jar ( large), 2 burner laundry stove,
· 12·12-12 fertili zer, other miscellaneous Items.

Control

inspect ion . Call Rus sell's

TRI -AXLE
dump truck,
reasonable. Ph. ~-..S76.
Phone 446·0842 or·446-0605
.
9··l
dHI04S631
SPECIAL for graduation - . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _GALLIPOLIS,
______
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,

waters. coal furnace. Sun Rey kitchen range (new), 85,000
B.T.U. gas heater, 1eiectr lt hot water tank, chains,

NOW IS THE TIME TO GET THAT NEW

Arab EXterminating Co.

T E RMITE ~ P est

18 FT. Starcraft boat, 110 HP
Inboard -outboard, excel.
tond.. completely equipped
with troller. Ph . •••·•119
days, after 5 ~· 109• .
94·10

rubber.fired farm wagons 12}, lime spreader, corn

HOLLEY'S DITCHING
COMPLETE wa ter line in·

22·tf

FORMICA counter top with
double sink Installed, first
&lt;lass condition. See at 9 Olive
St .
u .3

sprayer, fenc'l!' charger (new ). llh H.P. ellll!ctric motor,
corn conveyors, Duplex water pump/ hog feeders &amp;

297 -tl

Se r vic e &amp;
Re p a ir s.
Hou se wi ring ,
· electric heat. motor controls.
Free est imates. Ph . 446·456 1
or 675, 3361.

,..,

overhauled), Ferguson 12" turn plows, Fergus.on disc,
corn Ricker, brush·hog mower, corn planter, cultivators,

SMITH
SAYS'

C&amp;S El ectr iCa l

1972 25 FT. travel trailer, air
cond ., fully setf.contalned.
many e.tras. Must sell. See ot
Henderson. W. Va. Trailer
Court.

STARTING AT 10:30 A.M.

rrs VACATION TIME!

IXJC

J. P. Holley, Ph. 245·5018 or
446·4344.
1· If

1968 BUIC~ LeSabre custom •
dr. hdtp ., elr, PS, PB, good
rubber , motor, 17,000 miles.
See at French City Mobile
Home Center.
9H

SATURDAY, APRIL 29, 1972

Cleaned and installed
Russell'S Plumbing, 446·4782

stal latiOn , ba·ckhoe . bulldoz~r
and boring ma chine servic es,

For ~le

'

Co mplete

SEPTIC TANKS

'

I

pair Holstein twin calves. These cattle are of good quality

'

..COV'ER IT WITH DODGES"

RT. 7 NEXT TO
OLD SILVER BRIDGE
KANAtlGA. OHIO

Conlacl: Director of Nursing, Gl!llfpolfs S~le hJ.
stltule.

LANE 'S

Bookkeeping and Tax Ser·
vice. 42·-1117 Fo urt h Ave. ,
K,anauga. Off ice hrs. 9 a.m .-1

85-tf

Q.OSED AU. DAY
THURS. &amp; SUN.

40 Hours per week.

BOB

p.m. Ph. 446-1049.

PH.._

Behavior Modifiation
~nter. Ho~rs • 1:55 P.M
to 10:15 P.M.

THE ESTATE OF MRS. ELVA STEWART

;__

USED &amp;
REBUILT

Located on Colem~n Road. 2 miles nortll of O.k Hill, Ohio.
Off State Route 93. Wafch for Auction Signs.

'

SAT., APR. 29

•.;..-

GUARANTEED

SOx200 fl . Pr ice $3.300.

village of Vinton. Call today
- It will pay.

Out of Town

ha~

closed-In back porch and side
porch , ~ bath and small·
basem ent, gas and sewer and
city wat er .

5

and
furnace ,
attached
garaQe, l arae lot.

PH. 446-3444

NEW LISTINGS
1 ROOM brick home with full

bedroom s, living room 12x17

Vinton .

ran ch, two Incom e unit s,

AUCTIONEER

.
IN CITY
OLD house on small lot. 2

acres tillable , new barn,

" &gt;asement.

JIMME SAYRE

Hoi ze r Medica l Center .
Shown by appointment.

Low price of $11 ,500. Quick

farm , very 254 ACRES - Tobacco base, 80

90 ACRES prime development

"SELL THE AUCTION
WAY"

Farm Special

of road frontage, Rt . 554 near
Cheshire, $16,000.

• I

AUCTION
SERVICE

Off. 446·2674
~Lucille Brannon
Eve. 446·1226

WITHOUT a doubt this is one of
and urbah property. Call us
the best •mall farms for the
today.
·
money , 40 acres, 20 acres in
Jlh ACRES. Nice ~ BR home at
grass, fa i r ft•nce. some
Eno. Birch paneling, bar In
timber. 6 room one story
_ kitchen , part basement .
home, l BR and ni ce bath,
dining
room , aluminum
10 ACRES, Rt . 141 , Rural wa ter .
siding, storm windows and
12 ACRES prime development doors, spacious lenced lawn
land near new Holze• Medical with shrubs and large shade
Center. 800' frontage US 35. trees, garage and out ·
900' frontage county road .
bu ildings , toba cco base.
Located two mi. from bank,
14 ACRES. eight room home, lot

barns near

AT

build
. qood
3 miles
from
with ings
bath.
barn . other

Ploward Brannon, Broker

buyers for farms, vacant land

Both sides road . St5,500.

BAR G AIN

Let's. Continue. To Keep The

PARTS
'

52 ACRE farm , 8 room house·

BEDROOMS·,

-4

REAL

$21.000.

25 Locust St.

; Farm &amp; Urban

home,

LOCATION o

THI S HOME· NEEDS A FEW

RETA IL

STORE , RE STAURANT ,
DAIRY
QUEEN ,
GROCERY , ETC. FOR
CHURCH PURPOSE. CAN
BE
IN
USE
IM ·

DI SH·

W AS HER , ETC . 11h BATH S.
F ULL
B A S E M E N T. ,
G ARA G E , IN AN
EX ·

Farm

FOR SERVICE STATION .
WA S H,

K I TCHEN .

RA NGE. OVEN ,

Business Opportunity
Excellent Location
CAR

D INING

.

AUTO
- ~ -

Cons isting of a 1952 Ferguson Tractor !completely

Y' Price Reduced

~

Services Offered

·'

PUBLIC AUCTION

LARGE

-.

.

Ohio Valley Beautiful

$7,000.

elementary

family dwelling . Asking
$35,000 . Shown by appt . Ph .
446-0208.
96·1

NEW LY CARPETED
LIVING ROOM - 2 EXTRA
LOTS .
LOCATED •IN

REALTY

LISTINGS needed . We have

from

rooms, 2 baths, Qas hot air
furnace .
Present
arrang ement 2 apar.tments.
Easily converted to one

&amp;

95·3

Lincoln Hill. Contact Jay
Sheppard.

across

~nn

system. Ph . 446·0822.

with river view located on

.. :U
Bargain $19,500.

t.?7

(RANGE

DISHWA SHER),

-Owner Movmg Out Of SlateAnd sht: hates to leave this new 3 bedroom
home. It has a very pretty kitchen (range,
oven. etc.) large carpeted living room. 2
baths, garage and flat lot 4 blocks from new
hospital. Take your time, but hurry. It won't
be on the market long at this price.

PR ICE
WI TH US .

16 BUILDING lots plus acreage

ONE ACRE WITH TRAIL~R :Eight miles ltom town Qn
goo&lt;;f,j:ounty road. Low I~&lt;
district, dose to new Gavm WANT to buy a fol tor your
Plan.f, 10 x so· with two. · mobile home. We hav~ 3 lots
bedro~m .
~RIGrande with city water,
d sewer avilla"''' Can
MOBILE HOME , 11'2 ACR~S ugh! tor $2;500. $mall
Good drilled well, county · down payment end bilanco·
woter ·line, seplic • system,
like rent. Wlll' sellall31ots,for

WI S EMAN

BATH S, LARGE FAMIL Y
ROOM , 2 CAR GARAGE,
FORMAL D INING , NICE

For real estate you want ... or
don't want .

good -4 B
l'h mlfes

AT

VERY ATTR ACTIVE 3
BEDROOM HOME WITH 2

TH ~

Pomeroy Acreage

446·34l4 446-4775

84 GARFIELD AVENUE'
WANT a good home at a low
price. Has 2 bedrooms. wall to
wall carpel In living room and
both 'bedrooms. Also one car
garage. iielllng price $10,700.

.

.

,BAIRD
BROS.

Neal ·RealtY·

,_; ·New Listing

REALTORS. Headquarters for
G11111 County Real Estate.

;7 ACRES. $-0.1.'
" ""

PJl l rFn

CALL
IK -E
RIGH T NOW .

CHUR C H

Rancno company

AND

GARAGE, LARGE ' FLAT
LOT . KITCHEN INC~ UDES
RANGE
AND · DI SH·
MILE OUT . WAS $29 ,900

paid, 511 .900.

DUE to the present construction
.in Gallia Co. , we have s~veral
out of town buyers in need of
homes in this area . If you
have property for sal~, don't
settle for less than nationwide

BATHS,

Jl/1

WA SHER . 4 YRS . OLD , S

home in country . 7 rms. &amp;
bath, new furnace, water tap

4112 A. on a state rd . close to
new hospitaL pond, 3 car
gar age, and a modern 6 room
home.

412 Second Ave.

FOR SALE by owner. 2 story
bri ck at 452 First Ave. 7

yt Price Reduced

NICELY rem odeled 2 story

CITY FARMER'S DREAM -

• Realty

524.000.

wa sher , attached garage and
larg e fenced in lawn .

floors, air cond ., and located
on a quiet Sf .

'

'

.·

•

8ulltlly TID8-h•t•l,lllmdly, April 23, 1872

.

school, Kyger Cr~k·District,
.
2 ACRE LOT
completel.y furnished , alsb l BR HOME In excellent con·
These ·
adjoining 20 x 28 building, fuel
dillon . Vacant and readY. to
4 Great Home ·
oil heat. Priced under $15,000.
move ln . ,Would cons d"
mobile home In trade. Full
Buys
IN -TOWN BARGAIN - Good
price. $15,000.
.location. heart of town , three
Office Phone 446·1694
ONE OF THESE HOME S
bedrooms , pr iced for quick
Evening•
SHOU LD BE EXACTLY
sale . Don't pa ~s up this deal.
Charles M. NNI 446·1546
WHAT YOU'RE LOOK ING
FOR . CHECK AND SEE .
J . Michael Neal 446·1503
Evenings
Dsur C. Baird, 446-4632
D. J. Wetherholt, 446·4244
HOUSE for sale by owner In
, ; Price Reduced
Steven R. Betz, 446-9583
city, l bedroom tirlck', lorg•
DON 'T MISS SEEING THIS
family room. central olr. See
1FANTASTIC BARGAIN. 3
or phone Ed Stewart, 446·3827.
BEDROOMS ,
FUL.L.
H·6
H6BART
DILLON
BAS,EMENT , FIREPLACE ,
LARGE LIVIN G ROOM,
Real Estate Qroker
FAMILY ·
ROOM .
P. 0. Boxl16
BREEZEWAY , GARAGE . ~-'C LUSfVE
agent for Raccoon
IN
EX ( ELLENT ;::.:;(-. .
WANTED
Valley Campsites . Ph. 446OITION . YOU J UST WO N' T
FIND A BETTER BUY 2730 .
I
f
LPN, FOR
J7-t
WA S $26,000 REDU CED TO

ofh dish-

CITY - We have 2 homes which
are priced at $13,900 each and
offer 3 BR, bath , nice sized
LR , modern kitchen , · HW

·

REALTOR

'

..-

For Fast Results Use . The s ·u nday Times-Sentinel' Classifieds

Real Estate For Sale .

OHIO ltiVER .

J

Agericy

. Galli a Cq.'s Largest
Real Estate Sales. Agency
Office 446-3643
• E\venings .Call
.
·e. M. "Ike" Wiseman 446-3796
F . N, Wiseman 446-4500

THE LEADER SINCE 1900 IN
SERVING THE NATION'S
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS.
Ph. 446-0001

.

'

. -'

..

., J.

I

North-Soulh vulnerable
w..t North East South

as

...

\

\

�.......

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

...

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

·"- -···

~

S-Tbe8ulldiJTimll·9blllloel,SUIIdiJ,ApriUI,Im

.

.

.

· .fi

.

ds
~

27 -Tbe Sunday Tlmea.~J, SUnday, April 23, 1972

For Fast Results Use. The Sunday Times-Sentinel ~lfJs~z e .. ·_
LongBottom
Business Services

Social Notes

POINT OFFICE
·SUPPLY

CARRIER
WANTED IN
POMEROY
THE.DAILY
SENTINEL

&amp;75·3628

'

DANCE

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

KEBLER'S
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

t.

·. WANTED!

By Ml'l. Evelyn Brlcklea
Sunday School attendance at
the United Methodist Church
was 47. Offering was $13.40.
Worship attendance was 36 and
offering $36.
,
Mrs. Doris Koenig and son,
Rickie, were Sunday evening
guests of Mrs . Dorothy
Smalley of near Keno.
Gerald Violet, Dorset Miller,
Floyd Spence and Jewell Story
all attended the annual
banquet of the Quarter Century
Club of the Columbia Gas
System at Lancaster Wed·
nesday . .
Mrs. Maxine Marcinko
called on Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Brlckles Monday.
Mr . and Mrs . Thomas
Barthelemy of Dayton spent
the weekend here with her
mother, Mrs. Effie Watson.
Mrs, Leone Babcock is ill
with ear Infection.
Mr. and Mrs. Dinsmore
Boyles returned horne from
Camden Clark Hospital in
Parkersburg where they had
been confined after an auto
accident. Mr. Boyles remains
quite poorly.
Mrs. Mirna Walker called on
Miss Dora Mae . Calaway
Sunday afternoon. Miss
Calaway has been Ill but Is
somewhat improved.
Mrs. Phillip Boyles returned
home from the hospital after
undergoing surgery and is
recovering nicely.

TRYING to lqcate the family of
· Amanda Lalla Wakely ; she Is
very lll i her father was John
Wakely and her mother was
E. M. Carr ; she Is 76 years
old ; II anyone has any Information concerning the

whereabouts of her family,
please contact her daughter,
Mr s.

James Goswick,

Sentinel

RACINE -

10 room houso,
two
lots. Phone 949-4313.
4-S-30lp

THE

bath, basement, garage,

Phone 667-3856.

3·30-JOic

Cleland
Realty

MEIGS INN - - - - ROOMS ·
by
Day, Week, Month
Liberal Rates
PH.

992-3629

------

-------

apartments. Ideal for couples.

Conlact McClure's Dairy Isle,
992-5248 or 992-3436.
. ' 4·20·121C

PIANO and organ fes-sons,
Gerald Hotlner; phone 992·
COMMERCIAL Building , 32 x
3825.
75 and -or lots ; 100 x 80 and 33
4·11 -121c
• 90; at 610 E. Main St., Phone
\192-7178.
ABOUT YOUR WEI GHT ... The
4-l9-6tc
e"'tllng New Weight Wat·
chers fRl Program can help
you. For local class In - NEW 2 bedroom mobile home in
Syracuse, will be ready by
formation call TOLL-FREE
May 5th , call 992·2441 after
800-582-7026.
5:30p.m.
4·17-Utc
4-19-31
KOSCO T KOSMETICS and
wigs . Need extra money? Just 3 ROOM furnished apartment,
pri vate entrance, bath. No
s.ell these products . No
pets. One child accepted. 356
restricted territories. Phone
North Fourth St., Middleport,
992·Sll3.
William Smith .
4-2-tlc
4-23-6tp

New Haven.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
visited Mr . and Mrs. Ray
affiC
CWS, Byers of Tanners Run a recent
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Johnson
of Belpre were recent visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Circle.
Dixie Circle of Cleveland
Paula and Jill Springer of
visited her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Homer Circle and Mr. and Vinton, Va ., visited at the
Mrs. il!!r.!lld Circle and family, Douglas Circle home on
Mr. adlfMrs. Carl Circle and saturday.
Florence Circle called on Mr.
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
and
Mrs. Garrett Circle of
Harden and family from
Racine
on Friday ,
Tuesday until Saturday'.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
VIsiting Paul Moore on
Chester
called at the home of
Saturday were Aldon Springer
Mr.
and
Mrs. Robert Lee and
and daughters of Vinton, Va.,
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Rose family and Ralph Lee on
of Reedsville, Florence Circle Monday evening.
Mrs . Hattie Powell -and
and Kim Follrod, local. '
daughter,
Addle, of Racine R.
cauJng at the home of Mary
D.,
spent
Tuesday
evening with
Circle on Sunday were Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Pierce of Athens, Mary Circle.
Mr. and Mrs.. George Circle Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hudso.n of
and ctauchter, Cheryl and Mr. Racine visited with Mr. and
and Mrs. James Circle. all of ·Mrs. Allan Taylor on Saturday.

C

-----

Box:

Grade ; Francis Ben edum,

spec ial ize· in aluminum,
viny l and steel slcllng
fiberglas , br ick and stone;
comple te line of residential
and commerc ial roofing ';"
remodelin
bull'dlng ,
suspended
. Interior
and ex ter i
· com .
l ine
All
custom er
are fully
in sured
protec t ion . 32

N. 2n~ .

-------

' NILE 2-s1ory
basem ent, 2
air · furnace.
Elementary

992-7384 to

nome with full
lots, new forced
Near Pomeroy .·
School. Phone

s~e .

Oil ice 992-2259 Till

lP-tlc

appointmenl ca ll 742·5045.
4·23·31c

WE WOUL D LIKE TO SE LL
YOUR PROPE RTY FOR
YOU.
RENOVATED BRICK
MIDDL EPOR T- S rooms, 2
bedrooms , bath, paneled.
til ed, ca rpeted , storage
building,
level
lot .

JOHN

6.9~.00 .

WHITE -

MAKE US AN OFFER
POMEROY - 2 stor y lrame,
3 bedrooms. kitchen , living

Contact Associate

condition. WOULD MAKE A
NICE HOME.
WASHINGTON COUNTY
VINCENT - large 2 story

REALTY~

VERA EBLEN
992-3020
160 Coal St.
Middleport
COUNTRY LIVING
30 Acres, modern 3 b.r. home

just off Rt . 7.

104 Acres, modern 3 b.r.
home close to Eastern

School.
MIDDLEPORT
3 b.r ., 1'12 baths , carpet, one
closet is cedar lined , marble

window sills. beauti fu l builtto pool and
park in Middleport. $25,000.

in kitchen, close

room, cellar. In fairly good

frame, ,. enovated inside,
bath ,
basement,
some
carpeting, 1 acre ground, .
large barn , 2 chicken houses.

PONY GOES WITH HOM E.
$15,900.00.
to SELL LIST
WITH CLELAND'S
POMEROY - In good

condition, 2 bedrooms, bath,
baseme nt, ki tchen has nice

cabi nets, A GOOD PLACE
TO LIVE S7.000.o6.
A REALTOR IS IN·
TERESTEO In serving you ,
his client, to the best possible
ends and abides by such a
commitment.

Henry E. Cleland Sr.

Good financing on th is one.

Realtor

POMEROY
home,

912-5103
992-3898

$5.55

For Best Buys
In Top Quality '

MOBILE HOMES
•LII.RTY
•IELMO,NT
•VAN DYKE
eFLAMit.!GO
•NORRIS GOLD
SEAL HOMES
eHILLCiEST BY
SKYLINE

On ~st Am_eri~_a]l_ Cilllll

CERAMIC TILE

-GUARANTEE[)-:
Phone 992-2094

Let us show our samples.

Let-Us-Do-Over· Your
Bathroom or Kitchen

Insured--But best of all
"WE'RE HONEST
Ph. 9g2-7~08 Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomeroy Ho.me

&amp; Auto

SPECIAL SHOWING
The Graywood
Premier
By Redman'

.

Open 8TI15
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

· 70x14- 3 Bdr.

KITCHEN
15
1000 SQ. FT. OF
THRU MAY

"Everything In Home
Malnten1nc:e"

MEIGS, W.VA. 2!260
MEIGS 992-71Sl
MASON 77J-!634

On Your Home
Only

Service,

tr imming and removal Richard· Hayman, phone 667-

3041.

VEMCOADD·A·ROOMS. SAVE
MONEYI 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
BRIDGEt .
GALLIPOLIS.
4-23-ltc

Free Estimate

For Appointment
Fully insured for your
protection .

Tree

Lot Phoneffl-7004
11 no answer, Ph. 992-2196
516 Locust St.
Middlepor1 .
Open Dolly·JO Ia 6
Sundar l:OOtoS :OO

CONST.

/1/UII/11//Irl S//l/1/G

EXPERT

GOBLE MOBILE
HOMES, INC.

and
SON

4-23-3otp

O'DELL WHEEL allgnm•~•
loca ted at Crossroads, Rt. 124.

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITIONING

B&amp;W HEAnNG CO.
' For Appointment
"'one 949-2803

t

lf • 14' ~ . ~~· .•cWIM,,;

Complete front en~.. service, ..
L :;:
.. ::;:=::::;::=~===~
tune up and brake .,er.vice. · i-=

whe~ l s ba la nced electrODICally .
All
,w_ork
guaranteed .
Reasonatle
ra tes. Phone 992-3213,
'
7-27-llc
-:A:-:
U T-:cO::-M~O::B:-:
1 L-:E:-i:-n-su-r-an_c_e'7~-en

TERM
' ITES. TERMITES
__
•
_1
Get Rid ol Them
We will protect any single
dwelling rosldenct for
1

WRITTEN WARRANTY
Call Collect614-4ll-3158

6·15-tlc

. Y.CITY
EXTERMINATtON
6iiM.atn St.

2966.

Stt-'IIL ranKS Cleaned. Mlllttr

Sa nitat ion, Stewart, Ohio. Ph ..
662-3035.
· I
2-12-tlc

-~~~-

UI'HULHE:~I Nu

.MtLLER
'lll0 Woshlngton Blvd.

htpro, Ohio

1970 SCHULT, 12 x 65 with
Central Air, 4 miles lrom
Gavin Plant. phone 367-7530.
4-18-6tc
CASH paid lor all makes and
models of mobile home• .
Phone area code 614·423-9531.
4-13-tlc

Zanesville, Ohio

SERVI CE, ·:==========:

comp lete selection of fabr ics
and vinyl to choose from .
Pi ck-up and delivery. Slater

Upholstering , Rl . 3, Pomeroy ,
phone 992-3617.
3-28-JOtp

--"-~-HOUSE ~U ILOE RS,

CALL
GUY NEI GLER, RACINE ,
OHIO.
·'
3·5·301&lt;

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell ,
Owner &amp; Operator .

. EARTH MOVING
Do&gt;er &amp; End looder work,
ponds , basement, landscaping ." We have 2 size
doters, 2 site loaders. Work

done by hour or contract.
Free Estimates. We also
haul fill dir1 , top soil. Dump
trucks and low-bor for hire .
See Bob or ROller Jolfers.
Pomeroy , Phone 992·3525
after 7 p.m.

· S-12-tfe
'SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
doors and windows, carports,
marquees, aluminum siding

HARrliSON'S TV ana ""'"'''"
Servlc~. Phone 992-2St\JMt;

• Prolaoelonally onglnHrod
IIIUCiut'H, wldt dur tpane.
• Rust.frH lhtmlnum or
oorrolion-nlisllniiiHI
lldl,. led rooftng.
BMUUhtt colon.
•Froo ptannlf111HrVIet.

and railing. A. Jacob. sa les

~~rr~ ~~~!~ti;i~nt 0~ha~;;

Lis le , Sy ra cuse, V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
3·2-tlc

Real Estate For Sale

Mobile Hom.es For Sale
V.' BERRY -M-IL LEt&lt; MOBILE
HOMES, 705 Farson Street,
Belpre, Ohio. Before you buy
any Mobile Home be sure to
see us first . We have a huge
seletllon of 8, 10 and 12 wide
used and repossessed Mobile

-

DeVILLE
· Sllvfl" metallic llnlsh with black vinyl top, matching ·
Interior, lull power equipment, Climate Control air .
condition ing .
.
WAS 14100

&amp; Oldsmobiles ·

Now In Stock!

1972 Pontiac

TIME TO TRADEI

only s10528 per mo.

Ca talina two door HT, vinyl roof, ·air . cond., P.S., P.B.,
ra dio, r ear speaker , white wa l l tires .

KARR &amp; VAN _ZANDT

only sg!JM per mo.

1972 Pontiac

C..dilllc. Oldsmobile

LeMans A door Sed., 350 engine, auto .. P.S .. P. B. , air
cond., w hite ti res, radio. Two-tone green &amp; white.

992-5342
GMAC Financing Avo liable
Pomeroy .
Open Eves. Til 6-Til 5 P.M. Sat.
" You'll Ll~e l'" Qua lily Way ot Doing Business"

on~

1972 Pontiac

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. · Broker ·
110 Mechanic Street

Several Farms and Building

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Lots.

RUTLAND
3 BEDROOMS - bath, gas heat. city water. Front porch.
so me paneling . Large tot near school and stores. Only

$6,000.00.

HARRISONVILLE
7 ROOMS - Carpeted . 3 bedrooms. 1'/2 baths. Modern
kitchen , ni ce tront porch. I'!~ acres. Utility building 40x70
with additional room .
CHESHIRE
COMMER CIAL LOT - Has old block building, suitable

By the Day

1or ser vice station , garage, antique shop, etc.

SYRACUSE
4rooms - Full basement, ni ce kitchen . All utilities. Level
lot. Asking onl y S2SOO.OO.
NEAR RACINE
2 AC RES PLUS - Level lot on Rl. 124. Nice for new home
or mobile home. All utilities ava ilable. ssoo.oo down 131.18
a month.
NEW LISTING
NEW - 3 bedrooms with large closets. Bath, with ohower.
Ki tchen has stove and refrigerator. Living and dining
carpeted. Utility room . Sidewalks, storm_ doors and
windows. NIce level lot with metal utlll~y building.

Dedicated to provide homes for the bet·
ferment of Meigs C.o.
You too can own a home 'l ike this or choose your own

design . Three bedroom home fini shed and ready to move
Into. Prices rarige lrom S13,75() and up. Watch lor Open
House announcement showing one of these homes al a

later date.
0)

WE ~AVE MANY NEW HOMES, SOME LIKE NEW,
AND SOME OLDER ONES IN GOOD CONDITION.
PICT URES OF THE ABOVE ARE !IT THE OFFICE.
DROP I NAND SEE WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER..
HELEN L, TEAFORD. ASSOCIATE
992-3325
992-2371

lots of s s s on many of these
homes
used
and
repO!sessed Mobile Home•
are our specialty. So see us
first - you will be glad you
did .
4-2r-21c

COM,Afll. OUR QUALITV,

OHIOK OUPI LOW PIIICl.

Ventura 307 eng.ine , auto., P.S. , radio, air cond.·, :'fJh.ite
tires, two to choose from 2dr. &amp; 4 dr .

For Sale

For Sale

ANTIQUE AUCTION : A large
collection of parts of three
estates ·from the mountains
will be sold at my property at
Hartford, W. Va., {On State
Rt. J3, 3.5 miles above
Pomeroy -Moson Bridge.!
Aprl129, 1972, 10 a.m. Roll top
desk, wash stand with pitcher
and bowl ; COINS: Indian
Cents, Booker T. Washington
Half Dollar; several oval top
trunks, oak hall 1ree, organ,
rockers , small Burnolde
!lave, Iron tea kettle , kraut
cutter, wood baby cradle, old
mustache cup. wagon wheels,
roto1d table lllger claw tegsl
with 4Chalrs; hundreds of old
bottles and dated tars, aold
railroad Elgin watch, sad
Irons, old swing, china cup·
board. brass bed, wicker
settee, hall mirror with seat,
organ ~tool. old wall
teleohone. three brassllettles,
Ice box. wood barrel, picture

TAKE SOIL away the Blue
Lustre way from carpets and
upholstery. Rent electric
shampooer Sl. Ben Franklin
Store, 200 Main St., Pomeroy,
Ohio.
·
4·2J.6tc
- - - - -- - - '66 FORD truck wllh camper ;

frames , medicine ·cabinet

Metro Van camper; price not

COLONIAL Maple Stereo-radio
combination, AM-FM radio,
lour speakers, 4 speed Intermixed ~hanger, separate
controls. Balance S77.79. Use _
our budget terms . Call 992,
7085.
4-19-6tc

LeSabre 4 dr. sed., two-tone blue V-8, au to., P.S., P.e .•

1972 Buick
LeSabre 2 dr . H.T., red &amp; white. This car Is loaded. has
mag wheels, P.S. , P. B., radio, rear spea ker, till wheel air
cOnd . You can buy thi s beauty and be ready for vacation .

1972

cml•MGU•

v.a, autom ., p.-st .

Sk~alil

~8!il)

per mo.

2 Door H. T., yellow with white top mag wheels, 350 eng.,
P.S ., P. B., air cond., radio . Thi s Is one of the sharpest new
ca r s on the lot . You can buy this beauty .

1972 Pontiac

s104 per mo.
12

Ca talina 2 door H.T., green with
radio, white tires. air cond.

w hit~

top. has P.S., P.B ..

..

WE S.ERVICE WHAT WE SE.Ll
OUR WORD IS OUR BOND

$1895

SJ895

St795

·Smith Nelson Motors, Inc.

H. T.- . coupe. loca.l owned. beautiful whi·t e. ·
finish; with black vinyl top, V-8 engine, P . S., &amp;
P. B., radio . New w-w tires. ·

$1595
$1595

68BISCAYNE WAGON

$1595

68 COR ON ET4 DR. S.E D.
51•. 3 speed .
68 AMERICAN WAGON
Six, automatic.
67 COUNT~Y SQUIRE
·

Sl49S

67 IMPALA l DR. H. TOP .

Sl395

67 COLONY PARK WAGON
V-8. autom .. p. -st.
67 MONTEREY 4 DR. SED.
.V-8, autom .. p.. st.
67 CHARGER! DR.·H. TOP.
v.a, T-FII., p.. st.
66 POLARA CONY.
V-8, T-FII., p.-st.
66 CHE\i. II WAGON
Sl•. 3 speed.
66 CORONET WAGON.
V-8, T-FII. p.st.
64CORONET4 DR. SED.
V-8, T-FII., p.-sf.
64GALAXIE!OOlDR. HT.
V-8, autom ., p.-st.
63 SPECIAL4 DR. SED.
V-6, 3 speed.
63 CLASSIC 4 DR. SED.
51•, automat ic.
62 DART2 OR. SED.
Six, 3 speed.
62 POLAR Asoo 4 DR.
V-8, T-Fii., p. -st.
63 CLASSIC4 DR. SED.
51•. automatic
~4 CLASSIC WAGON
Sl•, automatic.
60 ELECTRA4 OR.
.
V-8, autom ., p.-st. ·
59 CHRYSLER l DR. HT.
59 CHRYSLER 2 DR. HT.
v.a, T-FI., p.-st.
58 BISCAYNE 4 DR.
Six, 3 speed.
51 CHEV. BELAIR 2 DR. HT.
51~, P·GIIde.

$139S

V-8, autom ., air.

'2495
1970 Ford Galaxie 500 ·

$1695

68 AMBASSADOR SST 4 DR .
V-8. autom . p. st.
68 REBEL SST2 DR. H. TOP
· V-8, autam. p.-st.
68 MUSTANG CONY.
V-8, automati c.

Sport coupe. local owned , black fin ish, red ·
vinyl interior. like new w· w tir es, Turqo ·
Hydramatic, power steering, radio &amp; -a ll the
~xtras . A beauty to see. .
.

$1995

$1795

V-8, autom . p ..st.

I

$1895

•s POLAR A 4 DR. H. TOP.

V-8, T-FI. , air .

I

1970 Chevrolet Impala

S1495
$149S

'2095
·1969 ·Chevrolet Kingwood·_
Estate Station . Wagon, tra~e- in. by one of qur. ·
most careful owne·rs. green finish. green .vinyl
interior, luggage ri'Jck &amp; air deflector. fatlory
air rond., V-Bengine. P .S., &amp; P. B.• radio •.good
w·w tires . Looking for something nice for a
family .
·
·
·

$1395

'2495
1970 Ford .·

$1295
$1195
$1095
$795

sm

Cu.s tom St. Wagon, 351 eng., automati c trans.,
power brakes. good tires,' clean interior, beige
finish, radio.
·

$595

'1999
1969 Chevrolet

$295
$295

$245
$195
$75

..,

.

Biscayne 4 dr . V-8, automatic trims .• p.
·steering &amp; brakes, white finish . blk. · vinyl
interior .

'899

$35

'

TRUCK SPECIAL!
·• , . . . ..,_.. ,.:;.

, ,_, .,...,~,_._.,

...

\ttrrq ..· r•&gt; i !\r\1:.....

1969 ·Ford %Ton
Pick-up. 8' wide body, . heavy duty springs, 4
speed trans .. 360 V-8 engine. Deluxe cab with
body mldg. 750x16 heavy duty t ires , step
bumpers. maroon finish . .~xtra cl ea n _&amp; nice .

'2149
1968 Chevrolet ·

RAWLINGS

3/4 Ton, V-8 engh1e, 3 speed. column shift, good
15" Commercial tires , local 1 owner Irk. Was
$1695.00. Special.

'1549
1967 Chev. El Camino
V-8 engine , auto. trans .• P : steering , radia• .
good w-w tires, red finish . A nice one. Cover .
for body.
'

'1649
1965 Dodge· Pickup
1/2 Ton, 8ft. narrow body, good tires. so lid cab.
Wholesale to you .

·

·

· · '

·.

SUNDAY, APRIL 23 , 1972

(114) 474-1732
ACROSS

for

llfYICII, Clll ·

Or wrlto: Box 523, Circleville,

0. 43113.

'

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

We put up SO pet. of tile Concord EnterpriHI Co., Inc.
'r&lt;iqulred capital you put up 50 11311 North Central Ex'
j)I'Uiwey
pet secured by qualttyl Dall11s Texas 7.1231
··
I' Can Invest S12000__;s2
ma chines
and
quality! NAME _

you~~R-~R~ES~S~=====

profits II! We can prove 1111 STATE_~§};;;:==
PHONE !req.)
.
o.pt. 423151

· contrtct
&amp;-The onn here
ll- Taak
16-Tolly
21--Alludo Ia
22-Rtnts
2s-soro1llo
24-Nun't outfit

211-Dint

71-Mualc: ••

written

33-Mifl'l
nlekntmt

14 Scold

Ss-Doctrlnt
16--HII_,td

37 SCM thwutern
Indian

110-lnune

77-Uprlltht timber
78-Sotar disk

141-Dittant

79--HIMPI,..d
82--5ettled In

84 '

~ks

M-Spteltl

154-0id-womanlsh

tt-Frllld
tt-Part of church

156-Girl't name

IOQ--Corded cloth

159-Europuns
160-SMtpfolds

hammer

161-Speckl

DOWN
fruit

44-Matt
45-lnCtochlnnt

l~r'Mtt"'
11G-Nott OIICitf

101-Undtrwortd 10d

111-Eneounter ~ ·
112-Th,...pt'Onpd

trtbtlmtn

weepon

"rtvtr''

'

S!I-Btood
16-WION
,.._..ffla:

__ .....
hullIll

62-Wift...

lmpllmlntl

II Ntlr
17-0olf ........

----rd

114-F'rench plurel
trtklt

50-Sptnhh ·for

158-Chalrt

102-lloints of

a~umtlke

47-Htndlet
49-Simplt

nickel

143-Pronoun
1•4--ltnded

tnlmal
I !i2- Avold '

103-R-•

..,...

142-symbol for

92-S~wed malic.

106--Sitnsn

toQ~JIIIof

44-Watbl• ·' , ~
46-Cooltd liYa

139--Encouraae .

76-Conettltd

·2-8tlhoprlc:
43-Coura,.Ous

tubiKI Ia

145-Tranuctlons

147-Ltttr
149-Ptl•
15()-.South Amtrlctn

138--lnquhe

7'--'l.. ile rock

......Chtnp 1:0lor of
104--Devourtd
40-Renovatt

11 "rlllwrtd ,

device
91 - Tiny amounts

135-Cover

$5--AntltNd animal
25-Vollthful
86-Mttei
21-Rettll
11-Challenae
Httbllthment
30-Rt•l ttlttl mtP 19--Ganua of hop
90-MOYt tldtwlll
32:-bctamltlon

11-RJIUfld

90- Welghlng

compound
27-Num ber
29-Cravats
31-S!Rn of zodiac
36-AI this pl ace
37-Preposlt lon
39-.River In
Germany
40-Ceremony
41-Cry
42--.Foul odor
43,....Pdntlsslve

133-Binds

72-A.etnt

ll~frcohollc

117:-Hokl In

u9-Jumbled type
120--Vtntllatn.

122--Dinner DOUrM
(pl.l
' 12~1-

12!1-0.,121 lp ' I Df
)IOIIItr (pl.)

121 ,,.......
lzt U:ISR

n

Your Chevy Dealer

20--chemical

69--Frllhttn
. 131- Lubrlcates
7o-Pulvtril:td rock 132-Ex plrt

1-confiM and

~

I

V-8, autom ., p.-st .

Sll95

Open Evening~ Till7 p.m. and Sat. Till 5 p.m.
lglaSil . old clocks, old qUoted until seen; may be
S75
spooner, live good oil lamps, seen alter S p.m.. J . E.
Service Ti II 12 Noon on $at,
two anvils, carnival glass; Thoren, Jr., phone 949-21 82.
S7S
4-23-6tp
several boxes ol mls$75
~-.twms , .. Bnd· .
,
1!oril ' AuctiOn
' Company,' ELEC'Ill'O CUX Viic uum
S75
C. C. Bradford, Auct., phone Cleaner. ·like new, new hose
9-19·3821 or 9-19-3161, Racine , and all attachments, $36.50.
$150
Ohio. Signed : Jaml'! Fields. Cash or terms available .
Lto1ch Served. Not Respon · Phone 992·2289.
slble for accldenls.
4·23-2tc
We also hlvelO used trucks ot speclatr,rlces ..• 1957 thru
4-23-llc ---~----1969 models . , . 'h tllrv '4 ton mode s.
WILSON-Sam Snead Golf
15 FT. BOAT, fiberglas com·
See Emerson Jones, PHrl A!h, Hilton Wolfe, Wallace
Clubs ~ A Iron s~ putter, 2
500 E. Main St.
Amberger,
Dick Rawlings.
plete with 45 h.p. Mercury
woods, covers, bag, balls. S65;
Pomeroy, Ohio
motor and trailer. A-1 conphone 992·5468.
Ph. 992-2174
dillon, phooe 992 -3457.
4-23 -lotp
·
I ·
4-21 ·31c
DEPENDABLE CITY
KNITS and Stitches. Coolville.
i7'h' CONTINENTAL trailer Ohio, Fabrics, Notions. Yarn,
For
Sale
912-2151
OR 991-2152 MIDDLEPORT
For Sale
with hitch, mlrron and
Appliques, Sewing, Mending ,
OPEN UNTIL 1:00 P.M. eich avenlng except Saturday &amp;
awanlng; phone 992-5982 .
fs HEAD Pol led Hereford ST RAWBERRY plants, Charles ( __s_u_ndl...;y_._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _._ _ _ _.._.J
4·21 -3tc etc.
4-23-ltc ca ttl e, p)lone 742-3985.
Fos ler, Rl. 338, near Racine · ··
4-19-6tc
Lo~ks, phone 247 -23Q9.
FRESH eggs, 2Sc a dozen . Bring H&amp;N DAY ·OLD or started
Wanted To Buy
4-12-12tc For Sale
containers. Phone 992-7•78. Leghorn pullets. Both floor or 3 PC. BEDROOM suite, $45 ;
4-23·3tC cage grown available. wringer washer, S20; Electric
2 STEREO car tape players OLD FURNITURE ,' dl!hes,
ALUM
INUM
car ~ 1o p boats ,
with speakers and wiring. clocks, brass beds, silver
Poultry
housing
&amp; , dryer , S15, needs some
dollars
or
c 1mplete
ANTIQUE organ with stool, automation . Modern Poultr;-y, · repalr i Misses shoe skates, won'r rust or rot, sa fe and
Phone 992-3'192.
lighlweig ht. 10, 12 13 and 1411.
•·23-3tc
households.
Write
M. D,
antique square grand plano,
399 W. Main , Pomeroy , 992- size 7, $8. Phone 742-3164.
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohld.
in srock now. Phone 992-6256
phone 9..,·2253.
. .
.
211&gt;4.
4-23-3tc after
5 p. m.
Call 992-6271.
•-18-6tc
4·23-ltc
3 YR . OLD American saddle
3-16-tfc
3 30
NEW 1971 Zig -Zag sewi ng -----~--_·_·_
3Ctc bred stud, sorrel ; phone 992- _.,--~-----HAS ITI Low-priced,
1966 HONDA 150, very good KUHL'S
machine In or igi nal lactory 16 FT . TRAV-EL trailer. self· 3016 ·
o4- 21 •3tc Employment Wanted
guaranteed
appliances,
used
condition. Just overhauled.
ca
rton
.
Zig
-Zag
to
make
contai
ned,
ready
to
go,
hitch
-furniture. Special on electric
buttonholes , sew on buttons,
inc luded . Phone 773-5651,
Phone 985·3'126.
WILL)iatnt hou..s, roofs, barns
dryers, $30 ; · Kuhl's Bargain
4-20-6tc
and repel r work, etc. Ph line
monogram
s
and
make
fancy
Mason , W. Va .
TROPICAL FISH , fancy
Center, Rt . 7, Tuppers Plains,
with
just
the
lwisl
of
a
4-5-tfc
1
db
de
designs
992-71lf15.
Ohio. Phone 667-3858 ; closed
sln~le dial. Left In ~~-away
guppies, ange san ree rs,
4-21·6tc
Bellas
and
supplies.
Phont
Monday.
GOOD POWER IMwer, SIS.
an never been used. Ill sell TOOL BOX for pickup with 99 2-5 443 .
·
~----4-23-6tc
Zenith U&gt;nsole TV, $30; Gas
lor only $-17 cash or credit
bu ilt -in gas tank and
12-:JO.tfc' CARPENTER work of any'
healer, SIO; 1 electric motor, WHIRL POOL
terms
avai
labl
e.
Phone
992everyt
hi
ng
for
com
plete
hook--------~
kind. Phone Dexter, Ohlo7ol2·
automatic
$5; 1 small electric window
.t/7'/.
waoher; G. E. Automatic
5641.
4-19-6tc
~·io
Gary
Smith
,
Chester,
POODLE
puppleo.
Sliver
Toy,
fan , $5. Call992-5083 alter • p. washer and dryer cQmbfned.
3-28-Jotp
·
4·23-3tp Park view Kennels, Phon~992m.
Call
992-2885
alter
5
p·
.
m.
ELECTR·OLUX Vacuum
5443.
4-:ZO.Jip
NtLL DO part time work on
4·23-Jtp
"
. 8-15-ff&lt;
Cleaner complete with at.
Monday and Thursday af.
POWER SAW. 61h" Porta
tachments, cordwintfer· and AKC puppies - Schnauzers, ··-----.---:::.:;::::;~
ternoons or any evening In
Cable, Mlllerfalls Mlder Bo•, 1970 MUSTANG, · take over
Poodles, Ca irn Terriers ,
paint spray. Used but In like
SHOWALTER'S
Wei
Pet
Snop,
Middleport area. Clean yards,
10 000 BTU air condltlooer;
hea lthy home raised, per.
payments; one Homellte
new condit ion . Pay $34.45
Chester,
Ohio,
Phone
985-3356.
pelnt, etc. Write c-oP. 0 . Box
a:n be seen at 101 Park Sl .,
manent
injections,
wormed
Super XL Chain Saw. Phone cash or budget plan available ..
Tropical
fish
and
supplies
.
·
57,
Middleport, Ohio.
Middleport.
$75-$85; Coolville 667·6214.
· Phone 992-5641.
•.2Q.Jtp · 992·3703 evenings.
.
3-28-30tp,
•·:ZO.lotc
4·12-12tp
.
+23-6tc
4-19-6tc

CIRCLEVILLE, OHIO

Concord, a National firm expanding Into this area. Olfe~s
an opportunity In tho highest profit-making field In ven·
ding today . We n&amp;ed a limited number of operators to
service our Concord 100 Hot Drink Vending Mlichlnu. We
furnish all location• and training.

Double ·

·

52995

.I

Pomeroy ot.or. Co. -

LET US
.PROVE ITII

products .

,

70 DUSTER 2 DR. CPE.
·
Six, 3 speed.
70 DART 4 DR. SED.
51•. T-Filte.
~9 POLAR A4 DR. SED.
.
V-8, T·FI .. air.
. 69 AMER'ICAN l DR. SED;
·
Sl•, 3 speed.
68 CAMAR02 DR. SPT. CP.

V-8, autom ., air.

redio,·fa ctory air, white f ires.

MODERN Walnut stereo-radio
combination, dual volume
cootrol, 4 speaker. 4 speed
changer, se parate controls.
Balance $63 .59. Use our
bud et terms . Call \192-7085.
g
4•19 _6tc

72 DUSTER l DR. CPE.
V-8, T-FI., p.-st.
70 HORNET SSTl OR.

"

1972 Buick '

'

------

SMALL INVESTMENTLARGE INCOME!

~

$7gn per mo.

I

AMONEY~VING
USED CAR DEAL ·
AT DEPENDABLE CITY

.

If your present car i~ worth $10.00~00 &amp; paid for
or yQu have $1000 .00 equity in your present car.
.you can purchase a new Buick or Pontiac for a
few dollars . a month. fhis payment .includes
life. ins. , carrying , chariJeS, tax &amp;· title. With
apt]roved credit . Following is a few of the ·
great buys we have .
·

•a900

Cadilacs

ON

NEW PONTIACS &amp; BUICKS .

69 CADIUAC SEDAN

Over 40 New

.

l

•

..

Homes In stock .. You c:an save

garage, extra lot l or g·ard en .
SIB,OOO or owner wi ll lis ten to
offer .

I'

TRICKS

MOBIL£ IIJMES

149.50

ca nce ll ed?
Lost
your
opera tor's license? can.1192-

basement.

Call or see GeorgeS. Habstetter Day or Night
for more information.
985-41&amp;
Box 101
Pomeroy, Ohio

·

EXPERT.

FOR THE BEST IN

I

PH. 992-2 174 .

'5500

· Dan Thompson
The Oealln' Man

742-3947

Whpel _Aligllment

POMEROY

ELDORADO COUPE ·
Silver finish, black vtnyl top, black interior, full power,
Climate U&gt;ntrol air. 1 owner new Cadillac trade.

742-4761

&amp;Remodeling

E. MAIN

;•

We haVe 24 hr. emergency

Johnson MasoniY

Very nice - very modern very r easonable, 3 B.R ., 1112

bath

yetr 1round. No m1tter what
your nttd. Cumplete rool or
spouting .epolr. Interior or
oxwrlor corpontty. Calling
tile oncl Ponollng ond Siding.
Complete Plum~ing
&amp;
,,
Heating.
Dlr Number 992-2550

500

USEO CAliS

1970 CADILLAC,_

We are fully in"iured

Sundays &amp; Evenings. 992-2568

RUTLAND - Six rooms an-~
bath. ci ty water and gas,
excellen t cond ition . F or

REAL ESTATE FOR SMf

lN

4: oo

• •i

We have 1 comPlete Horrte i
M1in1en1nc:e ·Serv'ice the

service.

ALLSIOE BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR. CO.

Call992-3523

223, Hlllsoro, N. C. 27278 or FURNISHED 2 -bedroom
phone 919-732-2681.
apartment , ground lloor ,
4·18·61c
close to schools. Robert Hi ll,
Racine, 949·3811 ,
"'
t -LE
:. -L-A,-N.,.
_D-' S_ G_R_E_E_N_H_O-US E:
4-2J.6tp
Mums, Gerl!nlums, Pansies,
and Petunias. Geraldine
Cleland, E. Main St .. Racine. 2 BEDROOM mobile home
located In Salem Center,
4-2-tlc
phone 742-3722:
4-21·61p
SAVE up to one hall . Bring your
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop, 3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
151 Butlernut Ave .. Pomeroy.
unfurnished
apartments .
4-4-tl c
Phone 992-5434.
4·12-tfc
REGISTE-RED Appal oosa Stud
Service, S50 Reg . Mares, $40 ONE
BEDROOM trailer

---===----

we·

-w

.last Wlaat ·the Doctor

Of Course r ou Can"

CO. ·

.240.Lincoln St.
Micld llflort, Ohio
Obi Anthony Plumbing

ONLY $13,750

MASON

614-992-2156

SHOOTING MATCH, Sunday,
April 23. noon, Rutland Gun .
Club, New Lima Road. All .
calibre, scope, sights and
open lorm,lrom SO yds. to 200
yds. Bench rest.
4·19·4tc

&amp;·· PWMBING
car garage, brick front ,
wall t~ w~ll carpet.

.

Smith ·Nelson· Motors Inc.

~

"OWN A
·CADILLAC,

ROOFING

&amp; CONSTRUCTION

HOME

Free Estimate

The

Tuppers Plains
Society News

3 BR

Carrlen For
· and
HARTFORD

ALL WEATHER

,

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds)

'

For Sale
WANt AbS
Notice
INFORMATION
ORDER
you r
Southern
WILL do sew ing ot all kinds In
DEADLINES
Vegetable 'Plants: deli very
my
home.
Phone
992-6879.
s
P.M.
Day
Befort
date May 8th ; Charles R.
3-26-301p
P\Jbllcatlon
.
Harris. phone 843-2693.
Monday Deadlln' 9 a .m. ·
4-19-6tc
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Nil I be accepted until 9 a .m. for
"NOTICE"
Real Estate For Sale ·
Revival services are being '
Day of Publication
COME and see us . Two
held nightly at the Methodist The ~~~~~~T~~:~ves the
beautilvl new homes, 1/ 2 mile
Omrch with the Rev.. Bud right to edit or reject any ads
North ol Eastern High School
on St. Rt. 7. Both homes have
Hatfield doing the preaching. • deemed oblectlonal. The
4 bedrooms, bath and a half ,
Complete line of office
Everyone Is welcome.
, publisher wJII not be
'
responsible for more than one
built in kit~hens an'd utility · equipm(!nt, furnitu·re &amp;
Mr. and Mrs. Cl1ester Wells lncorretl Insertion. .
room s; wall to wall carpet su pplies. TypeJriter &amp;
will be install ed soon . One
.
RATES '•
celebrated their silver wedding
Adding Machine. Repair .
houSe has a large family room
anniversary recently. A social
For Wanl Ad Service
·
. s cents per Word one lnsertloo
and a den . Both have a ·
Pick-up &amp; Delivery
hour was planned by thell'
Minimum Charge 7Sc
garage. Ge t um , while they
children.
·
12 cents per word three
last . Call Sherman'· Sum ·
melf
ield 985-3598.
'
Pat Smith spent the weekend consecutive Insertions.
PHONE
992-2156
·
18 cents per word· six con4·14-ttc
Court
,St.
Pomeroy
In Colwnbus with friends. Pat secutlve Insertions.
--~-424 Main St.
pt, Pleasant
is employed at St. Joseph 25 Per Cent Discount on paid , HYMN SING &amp; Revival, TWO lots on Osborne SL,
Hospital in Parkersburg and is ads and ads paid within 10
Freedom Go5pel Mission ,
Pomeroy, phone 3222 after 5
Bald Knobs , Rev . L. R. p.m .
an RN!n the Intensive care unit day~ATID OF THANKS
Gluesencamp, Pastor. Hymn
4-21 -3tp
there.
&amp; OBITUARY
Sing Is Saturday, April 22, ~---~Visiting Ernestine Hayman SUO lor SO word minimum.'.
7:30 p.m. with The .Bissell GEORGE Hobstetter , Real
word k
Brothers and others ; Revival
Were Kathy and Linda F'itz• Each addltlonol
Estate Broker. Hilton Wolle.
BLIND ADS
starts
Sunday,
April
23,
7:30
Salesman.
Rac ine - Larg e
patJ:ick, Mrs. Sharon Fitz· Additional 2Sc. Charge per
From the largest
p.m. with Rev . 0. H. Cart,
lot, good trailer location
patrick and daughters and Mr. · Advertisement. ·
Evangelist. Public Is Invited. $1, 100; Harri sonville-Grocery Bulldozer Radiator to the
·
Us
OFFICE HOURS
.
4·19-6tc store, stock and equipment, a Smallest Heater Core.
and Mrs. Jim Wa and son, 8, 30 a.m. to s:oo p.m. Daily, •
going
bus iness,
living
Nathan Biggs
Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Keith 8:30 a.m . to 12: 00 Noon
quarter s, very good location.
Radiator
Specialist
Ridenour and son, Chester, Mr. Saturday.
only $18,000; Salem Center and Mrs. Dick Hayman and ·
·
6 acres land, 112 mile from
Parker Run, 112 mite from
sons , Mr. and Mrs. Tom Card of Thanks
Salem
Center Grade School,
WHISPERING PINES
Hayman and daughters and I WOULD like to thank Or.
located
on Stale ·Rt . 124, very Ph . 99'2-2174
Pomerov
Mary Pierce.
T~lle, Dr. Pickens, and Or.
good
building
site. Call g.w
R1dgway , all nurses and
NITE CWB
321 1.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Van
entire staff at Veterans
4-21-3lc
Metero!Portlandwerevislting
Memorial HosPital; the
10 P.M. Til2 A.M.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Curtis.
LPNs, Mrs. Roush and Mrs.
Friday &amp;
·SIX ROOMhouse,l33 Butlernut'
.
·
Stalnaker for the wonderful
Saturday Nights
EnunettStethemls a patient
care 1 received while twas a
Ave. Contact Ed Hedr ick, 2137 '
at
Veteran's
Memorial
patient there for almosl five
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
Bunner &amp; the Rhyth·
Ohio, phone 237-4334.
Hospital in Pomeroy .
weeks . Thanks also to the Bill
ll -21 -lfc
Kaiser Aluminum Blood Bank metres S pc. Bond &amp; Female
Nancy Kay Baum of Chester
of Ravenswood, W. Va. for
Vo~alist from Parkersburg,
Specializing In
HOUSE. Phone 992·6103.
was visiting the David Smith
blood ; our minister, Rev . W. Va .
4·19-12tc
Small
Businesses
Cheesbrew lor his visits and
family.
.M ' d M
H
d
prayers ; to all who sent me
'I• ACRE, level, corner lot. with .
r . an
rs.
owar
cards flowers and visited me Help Wanted
304 E. Main St.
some shade trees, located on
Larkins and fiJillilY of Portland
and all that helped In any
Rt
.
7
$1,000;
Wh
ite
Realty
Pomeroy, Ohio
Visited Mr. and Mrs. Fred
way . May . God Bless WAITRESS, Apply in person.
Co .. phone 992-3020.
Craw's Steak House .
. Larkins.
everyone .
Stanley
E.
Phone 992-3795
4- 19-6tc
4-18-6tc
d
Trussell
.
'
or MJson 773-5535
Mr . and Mrs. Don Swon an
4-23-ltc
family of Vienna, W.Va., were
TWELVE MEN NEEDED : No 3 BEDROOM ranch .type home.
experience necessary, must
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers SE WING MACHINES. Repair
visiting Serena Sisson.
be neat and have dependable
Plains. All new with tot~tl
Lost
service,Gall makes. 992 -2284.
Mrs. Curt C8wthorne and KEY RING with keys ;
car , call Mr. Rip, 9 a.m. to S electric and ce ntra~ air
T~e Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .'
daughters of New York spent
p.m., Monday and Tuesday,
conditioning, bath and 3;.4 fu ttv
sometime Friday. II found
Authorized Singer Sales and ,
carpeted , ful l basement ; . Service. We Sharpen Sci ssors.
446·0677.
several weeks with Mr. and call 992-5919.
4-23-2tc
garage in ba,.ement. See by
4-23
-3tc
3·29-tlc
Mrs. Martin Nesselroad.
appointment. ph_one 992-2196 .
Mr. and Mrs. E;lsworth Dill
N
,or 992-3_585. Danny Thompson. -READY-MIX CONCRETE de
of Pomeroy and Roberta · 0 ICe
F1nancmg available.
. livered r ig ht to your project .
1
1
Larkins were visiting Mr. and GUN SHOOT Sunday, Apri123, I
--'==~~-;:-::=:--;:
2;:
·
30"'£:
·
t::2c Fa 5 t and easy . Free
p.m. Factory choked gun s
3 dEDROOM home on two- estimates. Phone 992-3284 .
Mrs. Warren Connolly.
only. Second place shooters
third s acre lot,· a ll con · · Goegleln Really -M ix Co . •
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
get free shot In ne•t match.
ven iences; at Ga ll ipolis
M lddlep·ort , Ohio.
Hensley were visiting Mr. and
Assorted meats. Racine Gun
Ferry, W. Va. only 110,000:
6-JO-tlc
come see ; Caii67S-3666 or 67.5- ...,.------~:-:--::
Mrs. Lloyd McPeek of
Club.
4-21 -2tc
3886 Pt . Plea sa nt, W. Va.
BA-CKHOE AND DOZER work .
4·4-IBtp
Belleville, W. Va.
===:-:::-:-:::-:-::-:
Septic tanks installed. George
Joe Bissell and Tim of CARPORT SALE. Apri l 27, 9
{Billl Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
a.m. to 5 p.m . Cha in saw,
RACIN E - 6 room house, bath.
Mason, W. Va., visited Mr. and·
Avons and misc. Items. 918 S.
"-25-tfc
uti lily room. garage, 110,000 :
Nat A Motor Route .
Mrs. Joe Bissell.
Third Ave., Middleport.
phone 949-4195.
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Young
4-23-ltp
).)J .tf c
Complete Service
Dai~
----of Paden ·ctty, W. Va., spent NEW shlpmenl of Yarn &amp;
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
2
lll!veral days with Mr. and Mrs.
LARGE
lots,
6
rooms.
bath,
Crewel Embroidery arriving
Ph.
Critt
Bredtord
garage,
cellar
S8.500
;
Magg
ie
and all needlework supplies;
Garth Smith.
'
5-1-tfc
Whittington
,
Depot
St..
-~
Needletralt Shop, Syracuse. 'F R !
1
-VIolet Smith
;.,
RUtland,
Ohio.
l
Ohio.
.
or en
4-7-30lp Real Estate For Sale
4-21 -Jic

""·· ·~···· --. ·

48--W•r god

, 49- Durrowlna
animal
50-Teilr
51-liUihln&amp;
52-Chemictll
compound
. 53-Conjuncti on

55-Encircled
56-Body or water
57-Go In
58-Collt&amp;e

2-Prepan~d

til - Actu al
63-Son of Adam

l)lrt of

officials

ship
64-Pralse
4-Pronoun
68-Cioud oval
5-Lift Whtl ltYer
6-0nt who s~irks 70-Gulded
Olt &lt;koly
• 71 - Ttklt
7-Ciothn holdll'l
·, unlawfully \
73-Walk, clumsily
a-urae on
1)..-ComPIII point
7~P,nt•ll duck

'"""'

10-Worm

11-hlecttd
' 12-Dtmtlt
11-Nitlve metal
14--Hott of tetl•
15-Rttlm
. 11--FDOd fith

17-HauM"okl pt1
l.......,.lvtr In ~btrla

11-Lnso

Open Eves Til 9

97-Sho wers
99-Turkish (lag
101 - Gratlly

105-Sow .

,.,
waste
115-DtCillriS
116-Anclent cou r,try
of Europe
118-Lara:e cistern

119-Anlmaf's cOat

121-Bridlt bit
123- Beholdl

125-Ate to eet thin
126-Asslst•nt

127-Fruhets
129-Postt
130-Fibtr plant
131-Japaneu ush

Auto Sales
Employment Wanted
WILL do daytime babysitting In 1966 PLYMOUTH Barracuda,
Racine area, call 9-19·4422.
V-8, 4 sr,eed. Phone 742-4851 it
4-19-JOtp lnteres ed .
'
4·2Htp
Auto Sales

1961 FORO truck traclor, 220
196i" HlRD 700, 195" wheel
Cummins diesel, sleeper cab,
base, used on paved highway,
air lag axle. Will trade,
exceptionally good, 5 speed
Harold Brewer, Long Bottom ,
lronsmlsslon, 2 speed axle,
phone 985-3554.
good tires. Phone 985·3554,
Harold Brewer, Long Bottom.
4-23-tlc ·1960 F:soo FARM truck, Jlraln
bed-cattle racks, good.l lires ."
19li9YW. squareback, good
good condition, Harold
tires, runs good. New paint
Brewer, Long Bottom, phone
job. Phone 7•2-5815.
985-3554.
·
H3-3tc
. 4-9-tf c•

..,.u&lt;: .

1972 FORO PINTO. less than
2,000 · miles. Ca ll Hershel
McClure at 992-3436 or 992·
5248.

132-Small valley•

13•-Before
136-Polntltu

137- Et tl
139-Word of sor,row
14Q-M•nuflcturtd
a•-4 - 0tnlth. land
dlvlllon

ol-20-6tc

1947 · CADILLAC 'Pickup, 1'165 .
Mustang . Phone 992-6'113.

145-Drl&amp;hl tt., •
75-Wtlr!(
146-41tonqulan
77-Strlp of leather
lndl•n •
147- River li'!i'nd
78--Jai)IMIII
aborlllfle
148-Edae

80--Pinoc;hlt term
81- Spec;k

ol-20-3to

'7 1 Volkswagen , 18 month
war'ranty left . Excellent
condition. Phone 992 -S.tll .
4-:Z0.6tp

149-Damp

151-Cooltd IIVI
83-W.,Ittl'l
1!3-Note of scale
84-Mocc:IIIM
155-NIIItlvt
1!11-Stt nymph
157-Art lflclal
89-W~thtS li&amp;htly
lai'IIU l'lt

\I

Pomeroy

'

95-Tht linden
96--Smtlll ·insl!ct ,

pronoun

1-&lt;:onfttllon of
ftlth

3-Rttr

92-BieJTIISM .
93-Acl . ,

992-2126

NOI.J.fl"IOS

-

'

•

1965 IMPALA. Phone 992-5551:
'oi-:Z0.31c
I

'

�.......

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

...

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

·"- -···

~

S-Tbe8ulldiJTimll·9blllloel,SUIIdiJ,ApriUI,Im

.

.

.

· .fi

.

ds
~

27 -Tbe Sunday Tlmea.~J, SUnday, April 23, 1972

For Fast Results Use. The Sunday Times-Sentinel ~lfJs~z e .. ·_
LongBottom
Business Services

Social Notes

POINT OFFICE
·SUPPLY

CARRIER
WANTED IN
POMEROY
THE.DAILY
SENTINEL

&amp;75·3628

'

DANCE

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

KEBLER'S
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

t.

·. WANTED!

By Ml'l. Evelyn Brlcklea
Sunday School attendance at
the United Methodist Church
was 47. Offering was $13.40.
Worship attendance was 36 and
offering $36.
,
Mrs. Doris Koenig and son,
Rickie, were Sunday evening
guests of Mrs . Dorothy
Smalley of near Keno.
Gerald Violet, Dorset Miller,
Floyd Spence and Jewell Story
all attended the annual
banquet of the Quarter Century
Club of the Columbia Gas
System at Lancaster Wed·
nesday . .
Mrs. Maxine Marcinko
called on Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Brlckles Monday.
Mr . and Mrs . Thomas
Barthelemy of Dayton spent
the weekend here with her
mother, Mrs. Effie Watson.
Mrs, Leone Babcock is ill
with ear Infection.
Mr. and Mrs. Dinsmore
Boyles returned horne from
Camden Clark Hospital in
Parkersburg where they had
been confined after an auto
accident. Mr. Boyles remains
quite poorly.
Mrs. Mirna Walker called on
Miss Dora Mae . Calaway
Sunday afternoon. Miss
Calaway has been Ill but Is
somewhat improved.
Mrs. Phillip Boyles returned
home from the hospital after
undergoing surgery and is
recovering nicely.

TRYING to lqcate the family of
· Amanda Lalla Wakely ; she Is
very lll i her father was John
Wakely and her mother was
E. M. Carr ; she Is 76 years
old ; II anyone has any Information concerning the

whereabouts of her family,
please contact her daughter,
Mr s.

James Goswick,

Sentinel

RACINE -

10 room houso,
two
lots. Phone 949-4313.
4-S-30lp

THE

bath, basement, garage,

Phone 667-3856.

3·30-JOic

Cleland
Realty

MEIGS INN - - - - ROOMS ·
by
Day, Week, Month
Liberal Rates
PH.

992-3629

------

-------

apartments. Ideal for couples.

Conlact McClure's Dairy Isle,
992-5248 or 992-3436.
. ' 4·20·121C

PIANO and organ fes-sons,
Gerald Hotlner; phone 992·
COMMERCIAL Building , 32 x
3825.
75 and -or lots ; 100 x 80 and 33
4·11 -121c
• 90; at 610 E. Main St., Phone
\192-7178.
ABOUT YOUR WEI GHT ... The
4-l9-6tc
e"'tllng New Weight Wat·
chers fRl Program can help
you. For local class In - NEW 2 bedroom mobile home in
Syracuse, will be ready by
formation call TOLL-FREE
May 5th , call 992·2441 after
800-582-7026.
5:30p.m.
4·17-Utc
4-19-31
KOSCO T KOSMETICS and
wigs . Need extra money? Just 3 ROOM furnished apartment,
pri vate entrance, bath. No
s.ell these products . No
pets. One child accepted. 356
restricted territories. Phone
North Fourth St., Middleport,
992·Sll3.
William Smith .
4-2-tlc
4-23-6tp

New Haven.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
visited Mr . and Mrs. Ray
affiC
CWS, Byers of Tanners Run a recent
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Johnson
of Belpre were recent visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Circle.
Dixie Circle of Cleveland
Paula and Jill Springer of
visited her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Homer Circle and Mr. and Vinton, Va ., visited at the
Mrs. il!!r.!lld Circle and family, Douglas Circle home on
Mr. adlfMrs. Carl Circle and saturday.
Florence Circle called on Mr.
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
and
Mrs. Garrett Circle of
Harden and family from
Racine
on Friday ,
Tuesday until Saturday'.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
VIsiting Paul Moore on
Chester
called at the home of
Saturday were Aldon Springer
Mr.
and
Mrs. Robert Lee and
and daughters of Vinton, Va.,
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Rose family and Ralph Lee on
of Reedsville, Florence Circle Monday evening.
Mrs . Hattie Powell -and
and Kim Follrod, local. '
daughter,
Addle, of Racine R.
cauJng at the home of Mary
D.,
spent
Tuesday
evening with
Circle on Sunday were Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Pierce of Athens, Mary Circle.
Mr. and Mrs.. George Circle Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hudso.n of
and ctauchter, Cheryl and Mr. Racine visited with Mr. and
and Mrs. James Circle. all of ·Mrs. Allan Taylor on Saturday.

C

-----

Box:

Grade ; Francis Ben edum,

spec ial ize· in aluminum,
viny l and steel slcllng
fiberglas , br ick and stone;
comple te line of residential
and commerc ial roofing ';"
remodelin
bull'dlng ,
suspended
. Interior
and ex ter i
· com .
l ine
All
custom er
are fully
in sured
protec t ion . 32

N. 2n~ .

-------

' NILE 2-s1ory
basem ent, 2
air · furnace.
Elementary

992-7384 to

nome with full
lots, new forced
Near Pomeroy .·
School. Phone

s~e .

Oil ice 992-2259 Till

lP-tlc

appointmenl ca ll 742·5045.
4·23·31c

WE WOUL D LIKE TO SE LL
YOUR PROPE RTY FOR
YOU.
RENOVATED BRICK
MIDDL EPOR T- S rooms, 2
bedrooms , bath, paneled.
til ed, ca rpeted , storage
building,
level
lot .

JOHN

6.9~.00 .

WHITE -

MAKE US AN OFFER
POMEROY - 2 stor y lrame,
3 bedrooms. kitchen , living

Contact Associate

condition. WOULD MAKE A
NICE HOME.
WASHINGTON COUNTY
VINCENT - large 2 story

REALTY~

VERA EBLEN
992-3020
160 Coal St.
Middleport
COUNTRY LIVING
30 Acres, modern 3 b.r. home

just off Rt . 7.

104 Acres, modern 3 b.r.
home close to Eastern

School.
MIDDLEPORT
3 b.r ., 1'12 baths , carpet, one
closet is cedar lined , marble

window sills. beauti fu l builtto pool and
park in Middleport. $25,000.

in kitchen, close

room, cellar. In fairly good

frame, ,. enovated inside,
bath ,
basement,
some
carpeting, 1 acre ground, .
large barn , 2 chicken houses.

PONY GOES WITH HOM E.
$15,900.00.
to SELL LIST
WITH CLELAND'S
POMEROY - In good

condition, 2 bedrooms, bath,
baseme nt, ki tchen has nice

cabi nets, A GOOD PLACE
TO LIVE S7.000.o6.
A REALTOR IS IN·
TERESTEO In serving you ,
his client, to the best possible
ends and abides by such a
commitment.

Henry E. Cleland Sr.

Good financing on th is one.

Realtor

POMEROY
home,

912-5103
992-3898

$5.55

For Best Buys
In Top Quality '

MOBILE HOMES
•LII.RTY
•IELMO,NT
•VAN DYKE
eFLAMit.!GO
•NORRIS GOLD
SEAL HOMES
eHILLCiEST BY
SKYLINE

On ~st Am_eri~_a]l_ Cilllll

CERAMIC TILE

-GUARANTEE[)-:
Phone 992-2094

Let us show our samples.

Let-Us-Do-Over· Your
Bathroom or Kitchen

Insured--But best of all
"WE'RE HONEST
Ph. 9g2-7~08 Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomeroy Ho.me

&amp; Auto

SPECIAL SHOWING
The Graywood
Premier
By Redman'

.

Open 8TI15
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

· 70x14- 3 Bdr.

KITCHEN
15
1000 SQ. FT. OF
THRU MAY

"Everything In Home
Malnten1nc:e"

MEIGS, W.VA. 2!260
MEIGS 992-71Sl
MASON 77J-!634

On Your Home
Only

Service,

tr imming and removal Richard· Hayman, phone 667-

3041.

VEMCOADD·A·ROOMS. SAVE
MONEYI 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
BRIDGEt .
GALLIPOLIS.
4-23-ltc

Free Estimate

For Appointment
Fully insured for your
protection .

Tree

Lot Phoneffl-7004
11 no answer, Ph. 992-2196
516 Locust St.
Middlepor1 .
Open Dolly·JO Ia 6
Sundar l:OOtoS :OO

CONST.

/1/UII/11//Irl S//l/1/G

EXPERT

GOBLE MOBILE
HOMES, INC.

and
SON

4-23-3otp

O'DELL WHEEL allgnm•~•
loca ted at Crossroads, Rt. 124.

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITIONING

B&amp;W HEAnNG CO.
' For Appointment
"'one 949-2803

t

lf • 14' ~ . ~~· .•cWIM,,;

Complete front en~.. service, ..
L :;:
.. ::;:=::::;::=~===~
tune up and brake .,er.vice. · i-=

whe~ l s ba la nced electrODICally .
All
,w_ork
guaranteed .
Reasonatle
ra tes. Phone 992-3213,
'
7-27-llc
-:A:-:
U T-:cO::-M~O::B:-:
1 L-:E:-i:-n-su-r-an_c_e'7~-en

TERM
' ITES. TERMITES
__
•
_1
Get Rid ol Them
We will protect any single
dwelling rosldenct for
1

WRITTEN WARRANTY
Call Collect614-4ll-3158

6·15-tlc

. Y.CITY
EXTERMINATtON
6iiM.atn St.

2966.

Stt-'IIL ranKS Cleaned. Mlllttr

Sa nitat ion, Stewart, Ohio. Ph ..
662-3035.
· I
2-12-tlc

-~~~-

UI'HULHE:~I Nu

.MtLLER
'lll0 Woshlngton Blvd.

htpro, Ohio

1970 SCHULT, 12 x 65 with
Central Air, 4 miles lrom
Gavin Plant. phone 367-7530.
4-18-6tc
CASH paid lor all makes and
models of mobile home• .
Phone area code 614·423-9531.
4-13-tlc

Zanesville, Ohio

SERVI CE, ·:==========:

comp lete selection of fabr ics
and vinyl to choose from .
Pi ck-up and delivery. Slater

Upholstering , Rl . 3, Pomeroy ,
phone 992-3617.
3-28-JOtp

--"-~-HOUSE ~U ILOE RS,

CALL
GUY NEI GLER, RACINE ,
OHIO.
·'
3·5·301&lt;

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell ,
Owner &amp; Operator .

. EARTH MOVING
Do&gt;er &amp; End looder work,
ponds , basement, landscaping ." We have 2 size
doters, 2 site loaders. Work

done by hour or contract.
Free Estimates. We also
haul fill dir1 , top soil. Dump
trucks and low-bor for hire .
See Bob or ROller Jolfers.
Pomeroy , Phone 992·3525
after 7 p.m.

· S-12-tfe
'SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
doors and windows, carports,
marquees, aluminum siding

HARrliSON'S TV ana ""'"'''"
Servlc~. Phone 992-2St\JMt;

• Prolaoelonally onglnHrod
IIIUCiut'H, wldt dur tpane.
• Rust.frH lhtmlnum or
oorrolion-nlisllniiiHI
lldl,. led rooftng.
BMUUhtt colon.
•Froo ptannlf111HrVIet.

and railing. A. Jacob. sa les

~~rr~ ~~~!~ti;i~nt 0~ha~;;

Lis le , Sy ra cuse, V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
3·2-tlc

Real Estate For Sale

Mobile Hom.es For Sale
V.' BERRY -M-IL LEt&lt; MOBILE
HOMES, 705 Farson Street,
Belpre, Ohio. Before you buy
any Mobile Home be sure to
see us first . We have a huge
seletllon of 8, 10 and 12 wide
used and repossessed Mobile

-

DeVILLE
· Sllvfl" metallic llnlsh with black vinyl top, matching ·
Interior, lull power equipment, Climate Control air .
condition ing .
.
WAS 14100

&amp; Oldsmobiles ·

Now In Stock!

1972 Pontiac

TIME TO TRADEI

only s10528 per mo.

Ca talina two door HT, vinyl roof, ·air . cond., P.S., P.B.,
ra dio, r ear speaker , white wa l l tires .

KARR &amp; VAN _ZANDT

only sg!JM per mo.

1972 Pontiac

C..dilllc. Oldsmobile

LeMans A door Sed., 350 engine, auto .. P.S .. P. B. , air
cond., w hite ti res, radio. Two-tone green &amp; white.

992-5342
GMAC Financing Avo liable
Pomeroy .
Open Eves. Til 6-Til 5 P.M. Sat.
" You'll Ll~e l'" Qua lily Way ot Doing Business"

on~

1972 Pontiac

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. · Broker ·
110 Mechanic Street

Several Farms and Building

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Lots.

RUTLAND
3 BEDROOMS - bath, gas heat. city water. Front porch.
so me paneling . Large tot near school and stores. Only

$6,000.00.

HARRISONVILLE
7 ROOMS - Carpeted . 3 bedrooms. 1'/2 baths. Modern
kitchen , ni ce tront porch. I'!~ acres. Utility building 40x70
with additional room .
CHESHIRE
COMMER CIAL LOT - Has old block building, suitable

By the Day

1or ser vice station , garage, antique shop, etc.

SYRACUSE
4rooms - Full basement, ni ce kitchen . All utilities. Level
lot. Asking onl y S2SOO.OO.
NEAR RACINE
2 AC RES PLUS - Level lot on Rl. 124. Nice for new home
or mobile home. All utilities ava ilable. ssoo.oo down 131.18
a month.
NEW LISTING
NEW - 3 bedrooms with large closets. Bath, with ohower.
Ki tchen has stove and refrigerator. Living and dining
carpeted. Utility room . Sidewalks, storm_ doors and
windows. NIce level lot with metal utlll~y building.

Dedicated to provide homes for the bet·
ferment of Meigs C.o.
You too can own a home 'l ike this or choose your own

design . Three bedroom home fini shed and ready to move
Into. Prices rarige lrom S13,75() and up. Watch lor Open
House announcement showing one of these homes al a

later date.
0)

WE ~AVE MANY NEW HOMES, SOME LIKE NEW,
AND SOME OLDER ONES IN GOOD CONDITION.
PICT URES OF THE ABOVE ARE !IT THE OFFICE.
DROP I NAND SEE WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER..
HELEN L, TEAFORD. ASSOCIATE
992-3325
992-2371

lots of s s s on many of these
homes
used
and
repO!sessed Mobile Home•
are our specialty. So see us
first - you will be glad you
did .
4-2r-21c

COM,Afll. OUR QUALITV,

OHIOK OUPI LOW PIIICl.

Ventura 307 eng.ine , auto., P.S. , radio, air cond.·, :'fJh.ite
tires, two to choose from 2dr. &amp; 4 dr .

For Sale

For Sale

ANTIQUE AUCTION : A large
collection of parts of three
estates ·from the mountains
will be sold at my property at
Hartford, W. Va., {On State
Rt. J3, 3.5 miles above
Pomeroy -Moson Bridge.!
Aprl129, 1972, 10 a.m. Roll top
desk, wash stand with pitcher
and bowl ; COINS: Indian
Cents, Booker T. Washington
Half Dollar; several oval top
trunks, oak hall 1ree, organ,
rockers , small Burnolde
!lave, Iron tea kettle , kraut
cutter, wood baby cradle, old
mustache cup. wagon wheels,
roto1d table lllger claw tegsl
with 4Chalrs; hundreds of old
bottles and dated tars, aold
railroad Elgin watch, sad
Irons, old swing, china cup·
board. brass bed, wicker
settee, hall mirror with seat,
organ ~tool. old wall
teleohone. three brassllettles,
Ice box. wood barrel, picture

TAKE SOIL away the Blue
Lustre way from carpets and
upholstery. Rent electric
shampooer Sl. Ben Franklin
Store, 200 Main St., Pomeroy,
Ohio.
·
4·2J.6tc
- - - - -- - - '66 FORD truck wllh camper ;

frames , medicine ·cabinet

Metro Van camper; price not

COLONIAL Maple Stereo-radio
combination, AM-FM radio,
lour speakers, 4 speed Intermixed ~hanger, separate
controls. Balance S77.79. Use _
our budget terms . Call 992,
7085.
4-19-6tc

LeSabre 4 dr. sed., two-tone blue V-8, au to., P.S., P.e .•

1972 Buick
LeSabre 2 dr . H.T., red &amp; white. This car Is loaded. has
mag wheels, P.S. , P. B., radio, rear spea ker, till wheel air
cOnd . You can buy thi s beauty and be ready for vacation .

1972

cml•MGU•

v.a, autom ., p.-st .

Sk~alil

~8!il)

per mo.

2 Door H. T., yellow with white top mag wheels, 350 eng.,
P.S ., P. B., air cond., radio . Thi s Is one of the sharpest new
ca r s on the lot . You can buy this beauty .

1972 Pontiac

s104 per mo.
12

Ca talina 2 door H.T., green with
radio, white tires. air cond.

w hit~

top. has P.S., P.B ..

..

WE S.ERVICE WHAT WE SE.Ll
OUR WORD IS OUR BOND

$1895

SJ895

St795

·Smith Nelson Motors, Inc.

H. T.- . coupe. loca.l owned. beautiful whi·t e. ·
finish; with black vinyl top, V-8 engine, P . S., &amp;
P. B., radio . New w-w tires. ·

$1595
$1595

68BISCAYNE WAGON

$1595

68 COR ON ET4 DR. S.E D.
51•. 3 speed .
68 AMERICAN WAGON
Six, automatic.
67 COUNT~Y SQUIRE
·

Sl49S

67 IMPALA l DR. H. TOP .

Sl395

67 COLONY PARK WAGON
V-8. autom .. p. -st.
67 MONTEREY 4 DR. SED.
.V-8, autom .. p.. st.
67 CHARGER! DR.·H. TOP.
v.a, T-FII., p.. st.
66 POLARA CONY.
V-8, T-FII., p.-st.
66 CHE\i. II WAGON
Sl•. 3 speed.
66 CORONET WAGON.
V-8, T-FII. p.st.
64CORONET4 DR. SED.
V-8, T-FII., p.-sf.
64GALAXIE!OOlDR. HT.
V-8, autom ., p.-st.
63 SPECIAL4 DR. SED.
V-6, 3 speed.
63 CLASSIC 4 DR. SED.
51•, automat ic.
62 DART2 OR. SED.
Six, 3 speed.
62 POLAR Asoo 4 DR.
V-8, T-Fii., p. -st.
63 CLASSIC4 DR. SED.
51•. automatic
~4 CLASSIC WAGON
Sl•, automatic.
60 ELECTRA4 OR.
.
V-8, autom ., p.-st. ·
59 CHRYSLER l DR. HT.
59 CHRYSLER 2 DR. HT.
v.a, T-FI., p.-st.
58 BISCAYNE 4 DR.
Six, 3 speed.
51 CHEV. BELAIR 2 DR. HT.
51~, P·GIIde.

$139S

V-8, autom ., air.

'2495
1970 Ford Galaxie 500 ·

$1695

68 AMBASSADOR SST 4 DR .
V-8. autom . p. st.
68 REBEL SST2 DR. H. TOP
· V-8, autam. p.-st.
68 MUSTANG CONY.
V-8, automati c.

Sport coupe. local owned , black fin ish, red ·
vinyl interior. like new w· w tir es, Turqo ·
Hydramatic, power steering, radio &amp; -a ll the
~xtras . A beauty to see. .
.

$1995

$1795

V-8, autom . p ..st.

I

$1895

•s POLAR A 4 DR. H. TOP.

V-8, T-FI. , air .

I

1970 Chevrolet Impala

S1495
$149S

'2095
·1969 ·Chevrolet Kingwood·_
Estate Station . Wagon, tra~e- in. by one of qur. ·
most careful owne·rs. green finish. green .vinyl
interior, luggage ri'Jck &amp; air deflector. fatlory
air rond., V-Bengine. P .S., &amp; P. B.• radio •.good
w·w tires . Looking for something nice for a
family .
·
·
·

$1395

'2495
1970 Ford .·

$1295
$1195
$1095
$795

sm

Cu.s tom St. Wagon, 351 eng., automati c trans.,
power brakes. good tires,' clean interior, beige
finish, radio.
·

$595

'1999
1969 Chevrolet

$295
$295

$245
$195
$75

..,

.

Biscayne 4 dr . V-8, automatic trims .• p.
·steering &amp; brakes, white finish . blk. · vinyl
interior .

'899

$35

'

TRUCK SPECIAL!
·• , . . . ..,_.. ,.:;.

, ,_, .,...,~,_._.,

...

\ttrrq ..· r•&gt; i !\r\1:.....

1969 ·Ford %Ton
Pick-up. 8' wide body, . heavy duty springs, 4
speed trans .. 360 V-8 engine. Deluxe cab with
body mldg. 750x16 heavy duty t ires , step
bumpers. maroon finish . .~xtra cl ea n _&amp; nice .

'2149
1968 Chevrolet ·

RAWLINGS

3/4 Ton, V-8 engh1e, 3 speed. column shift, good
15" Commercial tires , local 1 owner Irk. Was
$1695.00. Special.

'1549
1967 Chev. El Camino
V-8 engine , auto. trans .• P : steering , radia• .
good w-w tires, red finish . A nice one. Cover .
for body.
'

'1649
1965 Dodge· Pickup
1/2 Ton, 8ft. narrow body, good tires. so lid cab.
Wholesale to you .

·

·

· · '

·.

SUNDAY, APRIL 23 , 1972

(114) 474-1732
ACROSS

for

llfYICII, Clll ·

Or wrlto: Box 523, Circleville,

0. 43113.

'

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

We put up SO pet. of tile Concord EnterpriHI Co., Inc.
'r&lt;iqulred capital you put up 50 11311 North Central Ex'
j)I'Uiwey
pet secured by qualttyl Dall11s Texas 7.1231
··
I' Can Invest S12000__;s2
ma chines
and
quality! NAME _

you~~R-~R~ES~S~=====

profits II! We can prove 1111 STATE_~§};;;:==
PHONE !req.)
.
o.pt. 423151

· contrtct
&amp;-The onn here
ll- Taak
16-Tolly
21--Alludo Ia
22-Rtnts
2s-soro1llo
24-Nun't outfit

211-Dint

71-Mualc: ••

written

33-Mifl'l
nlekntmt

14 Scold

Ss-Doctrlnt
16--HII_,td

37 SCM thwutern
Indian

110-lnune

77-Uprlltht timber
78-Sotar disk

141-Dittant

79--HIMPI,..d
82--5ettled In

84 '

~ks

M-Spteltl

154-0id-womanlsh

tt-Frllld
tt-Part of church

156-Girl't name

IOQ--Corded cloth

159-Europuns
160-SMtpfolds

hammer

161-Speckl

DOWN
fruit

44-Matt
45-lnCtochlnnt

l~r'Mtt"'
11G-Nott OIICitf

101-Undtrwortd 10d

111-Eneounter ~ ·
112-Th,...pt'Onpd

trtbtlmtn

weepon

"rtvtr''

'

S!I-Btood
16-WION
,.._..ffla:

__ .....
hullIll

62-Wift...

lmpllmlntl

II Ntlr
17-0olf ........

----rd

114-F'rench plurel
trtklt

50-Sptnhh ·for

158-Chalrt

102-lloints of

a~umtlke

47-Htndlet
49-Simplt

nickel

143-Pronoun
1•4--ltnded

tnlmal
I !i2- Avold '

103-R-•

..,...

142-symbol for

92-S~wed malic.

106--Sitnsn

toQ~JIIIof

44-Watbl• ·' , ~
46-Cooltd liYa

139--Encouraae .

76-Conettltd

·2-8tlhoprlc:
43-Coura,.Ous

tubiKI Ia

145-Tranuctlons

147-Ltttr
149-Ptl•
15()-.South Amtrlctn

138--lnquhe

7'--'l.. ile rock

......Chtnp 1:0lor of
104--Devourtd
40-Renovatt

11 "rlllwrtd ,

device
91 - Tiny amounts

135-Cover

$5--AntltNd animal
25-Vollthful
86-Mttei
21-Rettll
11-Challenae
Httbllthment
30-Rt•l ttlttl mtP 19--Ganua of hop
90-MOYt tldtwlll
32:-bctamltlon

11-RJIUfld

90- Welghlng

compound
27-Num ber
29-Cravats
31-S!Rn of zodiac
36-AI this pl ace
37-Preposlt lon
39-.River In
Germany
40-Ceremony
41-Cry
42--.Foul odor
43,....Pdntlsslve

133-Binds

72-A.etnt

ll~frcohollc

117:-Hokl In

u9-Jumbled type
120--Vtntllatn.

122--Dinner DOUrM
(pl.l
' 12~1-

12!1-0.,121 lp ' I Df
)IOIIItr (pl.)

121 ,,.......
lzt U:ISR

n

Your Chevy Dealer

20--chemical

69--Frllhttn
. 131- Lubrlcates
7o-Pulvtril:td rock 132-Ex plrt

1-confiM and

~

I

V-8, autom ., p.-st .

Sll95

Open Evening~ Till7 p.m. and Sat. Till 5 p.m.
lglaSil . old clocks, old qUoted until seen; may be
S75
spooner, live good oil lamps, seen alter S p.m.. J . E.
Service Ti II 12 Noon on $at,
two anvils, carnival glass; Thoren, Jr., phone 949-21 82.
S7S
4-23-6tp
several boxes ol mls$75
~-.twms , .. Bnd· .
,
1!oril ' AuctiOn
' Company,' ELEC'Ill'O CUX Viic uum
S75
C. C. Bradford, Auct., phone Cleaner. ·like new, new hose
9-19·3821 or 9-19-3161, Racine , and all attachments, $36.50.
$150
Ohio. Signed : Jaml'! Fields. Cash or terms available .
Lto1ch Served. Not Respon · Phone 992·2289.
slble for accldenls.
4·23-2tc
We also hlvelO used trucks ot speclatr,rlces ..• 1957 thru
4-23-llc ---~----1969 models . , . 'h tllrv '4 ton mode s.
WILSON-Sam Snead Golf
15 FT. BOAT, fiberglas com·
See Emerson Jones, PHrl A!h, Hilton Wolfe, Wallace
Clubs ~ A Iron s~ putter, 2
500 E. Main St.
Amberger,
Dick Rawlings.
plete with 45 h.p. Mercury
woods, covers, bag, balls. S65;
Pomeroy, Ohio
motor and trailer. A-1 conphone 992·5468.
Ph. 992-2174
dillon, phooe 992 -3457.
4-23 -lotp
·
I ·
4-21 ·31c
DEPENDABLE CITY
KNITS and Stitches. Coolville.
i7'h' CONTINENTAL trailer Ohio, Fabrics, Notions. Yarn,
For
Sale
912-2151
OR 991-2152 MIDDLEPORT
For Sale
with hitch, mlrron and
Appliques, Sewing, Mending ,
OPEN UNTIL 1:00 P.M. eich avenlng except Saturday &amp;
awanlng; phone 992-5982 .
fs HEAD Pol led Hereford ST RAWBERRY plants, Charles ( __s_u_ndl...;y_._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _._ _ _ _.._.J
4·21 -3tc etc.
4-23-ltc ca ttl e, p)lone 742-3985.
Fos ler, Rl. 338, near Racine · ··
4-19-6tc
Lo~ks, phone 247 -23Q9.
FRESH eggs, 2Sc a dozen . Bring H&amp;N DAY ·OLD or started
Wanted To Buy
4-12-12tc For Sale
containers. Phone 992-7•78. Leghorn pullets. Both floor or 3 PC. BEDROOM suite, $45 ;
4-23·3tC cage grown available. wringer washer, S20; Electric
2 STEREO car tape players OLD FURNITURE ,' dl!hes,
ALUM
INUM
car ~ 1o p boats ,
with speakers and wiring. clocks, brass beds, silver
Poultry
housing
&amp; , dryer , S15, needs some
dollars
or
c 1mplete
ANTIQUE organ with stool, automation . Modern Poultr;-y, · repalr i Misses shoe skates, won'r rust or rot, sa fe and
Phone 992-3'192.
lighlweig ht. 10, 12 13 and 1411.
•·23-3tc
households.
Write
M. D,
antique square grand plano,
399 W. Main , Pomeroy , 992- size 7, $8. Phone 742-3164.
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohld.
in srock now. Phone 992-6256
phone 9..,·2253.
. .
.
211&gt;4.
4-23-3tc after
5 p. m.
Call 992-6271.
•-18-6tc
4·23-ltc
3 YR . OLD American saddle
3-16-tfc
3 30
NEW 1971 Zig -Zag sewi ng -----~--_·_·_
3Ctc bred stud, sorrel ; phone 992- _.,--~-----HAS ITI Low-priced,
1966 HONDA 150, very good KUHL'S
machine In or igi nal lactory 16 FT . TRAV-EL trailer. self· 3016 ·
o4- 21 •3tc Employment Wanted
guaranteed
appliances,
used
condition. Just overhauled.
ca
rton
.
Zig
-Zag
to
make
contai
ned,
ready
to
go,
hitch
-furniture. Special on electric
buttonholes , sew on buttons,
inc luded . Phone 773-5651,
Phone 985·3'126.
WILL)iatnt hou..s, roofs, barns
dryers, $30 ; · Kuhl's Bargain
4-20-6tc
and repel r work, etc. Ph line
monogram
s
and
make
fancy
Mason , W. Va .
TROPICAL FISH , fancy
Center, Rt . 7, Tuppers Plains,
with
just
the
lwisl
of
a
4-5-tfc
1
db
de
designs
992-71lf15.
Ohio. Phone 667-3858 ; closed
sln~le dial. Left In ~~-away
guppies, ange san ree rs,
4-21·6tc
Bellas
and
supplies.
Phont
Monday.
GOOD POWER IMwer, SIS.
an never been used. Ill sell TOOL BOX for pickup with 99 2-5 443 .
·
~----4-23-6tc
Zenith U&gt;nsole TV, $30; Gas
lor only $-17 cash or credit
bu ilt -in gas tank and
12-:JO.tfc' CARPENTER work of any'
healer, SIO; 1 electric motor, WHIRL POOL
terms
avai
labl
e.
Phone
992everyt
hi
ng
for
com
plete
hook--------~
kind. Phone Dexter, Ohlo7ol2·
automatic
$5; 1 small electric window
.t/7'/.
waoher; G. E. Automatic
5641.
4-19-6tc
~·io
Gary
Smith
,
Chester,
POODLE
puppleo.
Sliver
Toy,
fan , $5. Call992-5083 alter • p. washer and dryer cQmbfned.
3-28-Jotp
·
4·23-3tp Park view Kennels, Phon~992m.
Call
992-2885
alter
5
p·
.
m.
ELECTR·OLUX Vacuum
5443.
4-:ZO.Jip
NtLL DO part time work on
4·23-Jtp
"
. 8-15-ff&lt;
Cleaner complete with at.
Monday and Thursday af.
POWER SAW. 61h" Porta
tachments, cordwintfer· and AKC puppies - Schnauzers, ··-----.---:::.:;::::;~
ternoons or any evening In
Cable, Mlllerfalls Mlder Bo•, 1970 MUSTANG, · take over
Poodles, Ca irn Terriers ,
paint spray. Used but In like
SHOWALTER'S
Wei
Pet
Snop,
Middleport area. Clean yards,
10 000 BTU air condltlooer;
hea lthy home raised, per.
payments; one Homellte
new condit ion . Pay $34.45
Chester,
Ohio,
Phone
985-3356.
pelnt, etc. Write c-oP. 0 . Box
a:n be seen at 101 Park Sl .,
manent
injections,
wormed
Super XL Chain Saw. Phone cash or budget plan available ..
Tropical
fish
and
supplies
.
·
57,
Middleport, Ohio.
Middleport.
$75-$85; Coolville 667·6214.
· Phone 992-5641.
•.2Q.Jtp · 992·3703 evenings.
.
3-28-30tp,
•·:ZO.lotc
4·12-12tp
.
+23-6tc
4-19-6tc

CIRCLEVILLE, OHIO

Concord, a National firm expanding Into this area. Olfe~s
an opportunity In tho highest profit-making field In ven·
ding today . We n&amp;ed a limited number of operators to
service our Concord 100 Hot Drink Vending Mlichlnu. We
furnish all location• and training.

Double ·

·

52995

.I

Pomeroy ot.or. Co. -

LET US
.PROVE ITII

products .

,

70 DUSTER 2 DR. CPE.
·
Six, 3 speed.
70 DART 4 DR. SED.
51•. T-Filte.
~9 POLAR A4 DR. SED.
.
V-8, T·FI .. air.
. 69 AMER'ICAN l DR. SED;
·
Sl•, 3 speed.
68 CAMAR02 DR. SPT. CP.

V-8, autom ., air.

redio,·fa ctory air, white f ires.

MODERN Walnut stereo-radio
combination, dual volume
cootrol, 4 speaker. 4 speed
changer, se parate controls.
Balance $63 .59. Use our
bud et terms . Call \192-7085.
g
4•19 _6tc

72 DUSTER l DR. CPE.
V-8, T-FI., p.-st.
70 HORNET SSTl OR.

"

1972 Buick '

'

------

SMALL INVESTMENTLARGE INCOME!

~

$7gn per mo.

I

AMONEY~VING
USED CAR DEAL ·
AT DEPENDABLE CITY

.

If your present car i~ worth $10.00~00 &amp; paid for
or yQu have $1000 .00 equity in your present car.
.you can purchase a new Buick or Pontiac for a
few dollars . a month. fhis payment .includes
life. ins. , carrying , chariJeS, tax &amp;· title. With
apt]roved credit . Following is a few of the ·
great buys we have .
·

•a900

Cadilacs

ON

NEW PONTIACS &amp; BUICKS .

69 CADIUAC SEDAN

Over 40 New

.

l

•

..

Homes In stock .. You c:an save

garage, extra lot l or g·ard en .
SIB,OOO or owner wi ll lis ten to
offer .

I'

TRICKS

MOBIL£ IIJMES

149.50

ca nce ll ed?
Lost
your
opera tor's license? can.1192-

basement.

Call or see GeorgeS. Habstetter Day or Night
for more information.
985-41&amp;
Box 101
Pomeroy, Ohio

·

EXPERT.

FOR THE BEST IN

I

PH. 992-2 174 .

'5500

· Dan Thompson
The Oealln' Man

742-3947

Whpel _Aligllment

POMEROY

ELDORADO COUPE ·
Silver finish, black vtnyl top, black interior, full power,
Climate U&gt;ntrol air. 1 owner new Cadillac trade.

742-4761

&amp;Remodeling

E. MAIN

;•

We haVe 24 hr. emergency

Johnson MasoniY

Very nice - very modern very r easonable, 3 B.R ., 1112

bath

yetr 1round. No m1tter what
your nttd. Cumplete rool or
spouting .epolr. Interior or
oxwrlor corpontty. Calling
tile oncl Ponollng ond Siding.
Complete Plum~ing
&amp;
,,
Heating.
Dlr Number 992-2550

500

USEO CAliS

1970 CADILLAC,_

We are fully in"iured

Sundays &amp; Evenings. 992-2568

RUTLAND - Six rooms an-~
bath. ci ty water and gas,
excellen t cond ition . F or

REAL ESTATE FOR SMf

lN

4: oo

• •i

We have 1 comPlete Horrte i
M1in1en1nc:e ·Serv'ice the

service.

ALLSIOE BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR. CO.

Call992-3523

223, Hlllsoro, N. C. 27278 or FURNISHED 2 -bedroom
phone 919-732-2681.
apartment , ground lloor ,
4·18·61c
close to schools. Robert Hi ll,
Racine, 949·3811 ,
"'
t -LE
:. -L-A,-N.,.
_D-' S_ G_R_E_E_N_H_O-US E:
4-2J.6tp
Mums, Gerl!nlums, Pansies,
and Petunias. Geraldine
Cleland, E. Main St .. Racine. 2 BEDROOM mobile home
located In Salem Center,
4-2-tlc
phone 742-3722:
4-21·61p
SAVE up to one hall . Bring your
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop, 3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
151 Butlernut Ave .. Pomeroy.
unfurnished
apartments .
4-4-tl c
Phone 992-5434.
4·12-tfc
REGISTE-RED Appal oosa Stud
Service, S50 Reg . Mares, $40 ONE
BEDROOM trailer

---===----

we·

-w

.last Wlaat ·the Doctor

Of Course r ou Can"

CO. ·

.240.Lincoln St.
Micld llflort, Ohio
Obi Anthony Plumbing

ONLY $13,750

MASON

614-992-2156

SHOOTING MATCH, Sunday,
April 23. noon, Rutland Gun .
Club, New Lima Road. All .
calibre, scope, sights and
open lorm,lrom SO yds. to 200
yds. Bench rest.
4·19·4tc

&amp;·· PWMBING
car garage, brick front ,
wall t~ w~ll carpet.

.

Smith ·Nelson· Motors Inc.

~

"OWN A
·CADILLAC,

ROOFING

&amp; CONSTRUCTION

HOME

Free Estimate

The

Tuppers Plains
Society News

3 BR

Carrlen For
· and
HARTFORD

ALL WEATHER

,

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds)

'

For Sale
WANt AbS
Notice
INFORMATION
ORDER
you r
Southern
WILL do sew ing ot all kinds In
DEADLINES
Vegetable 'Plants: deli very
my
home.
Phone
992-6879.
s
P.M.
Day
Befort
date May 8th ; Charles R.
3-26-301p
P\Jbllcatlon
.
Harris. phone 843-2693.
Monday Deadlln' 9 a .m. ·
4-19-6tc
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Nil I be accepted until 9 a .m. for
"NOTICE"
Real Estate For Sale ·
Revival services are being '
Day of Publication
COME and see us . Two
held nightly at the Methodist The ~~~~~~T~~:~ves the
beautilvl new homes, 1/ 2 mile
Omrch with the Rev.. Bud right to edit or reject any ads
North ol Eastern High School
on St. Rt. 7. Both homes have
Hatfield doing the preaching. • deemed oblectlonal. The
4 bedrooms, bath and a half ,
Complete line of office
Everyone Is welcome.
, publisher wJII not be
'
responsible for more than one
built in kit~hens an'd utility · equipm(!nt, furnitu·re &amp;
Mr. and Mrs. Cl1ester Wells lncorretl Insertion. .
room s; wall to wall carpet su pplies. TypeJriter &amp;
will be install ed soon . One
.
RATES '•
celebrated their silver wedding
Adding Machine. Repair .
houSe has a large family room
anniversary recently. A social
For Wanl Ad Service
·
. s cents per Word one lnsertloo
and a den . Both have a ·
Pick-up &amp; Delivery
hour was planned by thell'
Minimum Charge 7Sc
garage. Ge t um , while they
children.
·
12 cents per word three
last . Call Sherman'· Sum ·
melf
ield 985-3598.
'
Pat Smith spent the weekend consecutive Insertions.
PHONE
992-2156
·
18 cents per word· six con4·14-ttc
Court
,St.
Pomeroy
In Colwnbus with friends. Pat secutlve Insertions.
--~-424 Main St.
pt, Pleasant
is employed at St. Joseph 25 Per Cent Discount on paid , HYMN SING &amp; Revival, TWO lots on Osborne SL,
Hospital in Parkersburg and is ads and ads paid within 10
Freedom Go5pel Mission ,
Pomeroy, phone 3222 after 5
Bald Knobs , Rev . L. R. p.m .
an RN!n the Intensive care unit day~ATID OF THANKS
Gluesencamp, Pastor. Hymn
4-21 -3tp
there.
&amp; OBITUARY
Sing Is Saturday, April 22, ~---~Visiting Ernestine Hayman SUO lor SO word minimum.'.
7:30 p.m. with The .Bissell GEORGE Hobstetter , Real
word k
Brothers and others ; Revival
Were Kathy and Linda F'itz• Each addltlonol
Estate Broker. Hilton Wolle.
BLIND ADS
starts
Sunday,
April
23,
7:30
Salesman.
Rac ine - Larg e
patJ:ick, Mrs. Sharon Fitz· Additional 2Sc. Charge per
From the largest
p.m. with Rev . 0. H. Cart,
lot, good trailer location
patrick and daughters and Mr. · Advertisement. ·
Evangelist. Public Is Invited. $1, 100; Harri sonville-Grocery Bulldozer Radiator to the
·
Us
OFFICE HOURS
.
4·19-6tc store, stock and equipment, a Smallest Heater Core.
and Mrs. Jim Wa and son, 8, 30 a.m. to s:oo p.m. Daily, •
going
bus iness,
living
Nathan Biggs
Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Keith 8:30 a.m . to 12: 00 Noon
quarter s, very good location.
Radiator
Specialist
Ridenour and son, Chester, Mr. Saturday.
only $18,000; Salem Center and Mrs. Dick Hayman and ·
·
6 acres land, 112 mile from
Parker Run, 112 mite from
sons , Mr. and Mrs. Tom Card of Thanks
Salem
Center Grade School,
WHISPERING PINES
Hayman and daughters and I WOULD like to thank Or.
located
on Stale ·Rt . 124, very Ph . 99'2-2174
Pomerov
Mary Pierce.
T~lle, Dr. Pickens, and Or.
good
building
site. Call g.w
R1dgway , all nurses and
NITE CWB
321 1.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Van
entire staff at Veterans
4-21-3lc
Metero!Portlandwerevislting
Memorial HosPital; the
10 P.M. Til2 A.M.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Curtis.
LPNs, Mrs. Roush and Mrs.
Friday &amp;
·SIX ROOMhouse,l33 Butlernut'
.
·
Stalnaker for the wonderful
Saturday Nights
EnunettStethemls a patient
care 1 received while twas a
Ave. Contact Ed Hedr ick, 2137 '
at
Veteran's
Memorial
patient there for almosl five
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
Bunner &amp; the Rhyth·
Ohio, phone 237-4334.
Hospital in Pomeroy .
weeks . Thanks also to the Bill
ll -21 -lfc
Kaiser Aluminum Blood Bank metres S pc. Bond &amp; Female
Nancy Kay Baum of Chester
of Ravenswood, W. Va. for
Vo~alist from Parkersburg,
Specializing In
HOUSE. Phone 992·6103.
was visiting the David Smith
blood ; our minister, Rev . W. Va .
4·19-12tc
Small
Businesses
Cheesbrew lor his visits and
family.
.M ' d M
H
d
prayers ; to all who sent me
'I• ACRE, level, corner lot. with .
r . an
rs.
owar
cards flowers and visited me Help Wanted
304 E. Main St.
some shade trees, located on
Larkins and fiJillilY of Portland
and all that helped In any
Rt
.
7
$1,000;
Wh
ite
Realty
Pomeroy, Ohio
Visited Mr. and Mrs. Fred
way . May . God Bless WAITRESS, Apply in person.
Co .. phone 992-3020.
Craw's Steak House .
. Larkins.
everyone .
Stanley
E.
Phone 992-3795
4- 19-6tc
4-18-6tc
d
Trussell
.
'
or MJson 773-5535
Mr . and Mrs. Don Swon an
4-23-ltc
family of Vienna, W.Va., were
TWELVE MEN NEEDED : No 3 BEDROOM ranch .type home.
experience necessary, must
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers SE WING MACHINES. Repair
visiting Serena Sisson.
be neat and have dependable
Plains. All new with tot~tl
Lost
service,Gall makes. 992 -2284.
Mrs. Curt C8wthorne and KEY RING with keys ;
car , call Mr. Rip, 9 a.m. to S electric and ce ntra~ air
T~e Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .'
daughters of New York spent
p.m., Monday and Tuesday,
conditioning, bath and 3;.4 fu ttv
sometime Friday. II found
Authorized Singer Sales and ,
carpeted , ful l basement ; . Service. We Sharpen Sci ssors.
446·0677.
several weeks with Mr. and call 992-5919.
4-23-2tc
garage in ba,.ement. See by
4-23
-3tc
3·29-tlc
Mrs. Martin Nesselroad.
appointment. ph_one 992-2196 .
Mr. and Mrs. E;lsworth Dill
N
,or 992-3_585. Danny Thompson. -READY-MIX CONCRETE de
of Pomeroy and Roberta · 0 ICe
F1nancmg available.
. livered r ig ht to your project .
1
1
Larkins were visiting Mr. and GUN SHOOT Sunday, Apri123, I
--'==~~-;:-::=:--;:
2;:
·
30"'£:
·
t::2c Fa 5 t and easy . Free
p.m. Factory choked gun s
3 dEDROOM home on two- estimates. Phone 992-3284 .
Mrs. Warren Connolly.
only. Second place shooters
third s acre lot,· a ll con · · Goegleln Really -M ix Co . •
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
get free shot In ne•t match.
ven iences; at Ga ll ipolis
M lddlep·ort , Ohio.
Hensley were visiting Mr. and
Assorted meats. Racine Gun
Ferry, W. Va. only 110,000:
6-JO-tlc
come see ; Caii67S-3666 or 67.5- ...,.------~:-:--::
Mrs. Lloyd McPeek of
Club.
4-21 -2tc
3886 Pt . Plea sa nt, W. Va.
BA-CKHOE AND DOZER work .
4·4-IBtp
Belleville, W. Va.
===:-:::-:-:::-:-::-:
Septic tanks installed. George
Joe Bissell and Tim of CARPORT SALE. Apri l 27, 9
{Billl Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
a.m. to 5 p.m . Cha in saw,
RACIN E - 6 room house, bath.
Mason, W. Va., visited Mr. and·
Avons and misc. Items. 918 S.
"-25-tfc
uti lily room. garage, 110,000 :
Nat A Motor Route .
Mrs. Joe Bissell.
Third Ave., Middleport.
phone 949-4195.
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Young
4-23-ltp
).)J .tf c
Complete Service
Dai~
----of Paden ·ctty, W. Va., spent NEW shlpmenl of Yarn &amp;
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
2
lll!veral days with Mr. and Mrs.
LARGE
lots,
6
rooms.
bath,
Crewel Embroidery arriving
Ph.
Critt
Bredtord
garage,
cellar
S8.500
;
Magg
ie
and all needlework supplies;
Garth Smith.
'
5-1-tfc
Whittington
,
Depot
St..
-~
Needletralt Shop, Syracuse. 'F R !
1
-VIolet Smith
;.,
RUtland,
Ohio.
l
Ohio.
.
or en
4-7-30lp Real Estate For Sale
4-21 -Jic

""·· ·~···· --. ·

48--W•r god

, 49- Durrowlna
animal
50-Teilr
51-liUihln&amp;
52-Chemictll
compound
. 53-Conjuncti on

55-Encircled
56-Body or water
57-Go In
58-Collt&amp;e

2-Prepan~d

til - Actu al
63-Son of Adam

l)lrt of

officials

ship
64-Pralse
4-Pronoun
68-Cioud oval
5-Lift Whtl ltYer
6-0nt who s~irks 70-Gulded
Olt &lt;koly
• 71 - Ttklt
7-Ciothn holdll'l
·, unlawfully \
73-Walk, clumsily
a-urae on
1)..-ComPIII point
7~P,nt•ll duck

'"""'

10-Worm

11-hlecttd
' 12-Dtmtlt
11-Nitlve metal
14--Hott of tetl•
15-Rttlm
. 11--FDOd fith

17-HauM"okl pt1
l.......,.lvtr In ~btrla

11-Lnso

Open Eves Til 9

97-Sho wers
99-Turkish (lag
101 - Gratlly

105-Sow .

,.,
waste
115-DtCillriS
116-Anclent cou r,try
of Europe
118-Lara:e cistern

119-Anlmaf's cOat

121-Bridlt bit
123- Beholdl

125-Ate to eet thin
126-Asslst•nt

127-Fruhets
129-Postt
130-Fibtr plant
131-Japaneu ush

Auto Sales
Employment Wanted
WILL do daytime babysitting In 1966 PLYMOUTH Barracuda,
Racine area, call 9-19·4422.
V-8, 4 sr,eed. Phone 742-4851 it
4-19-JOtp lnteres ed .
'
4·2Htp
Auto Sales

1961 FORO truck traclor, 220
196i" HlRD 700, 195" wheel
Cummins diesel, sleeper cab,
base, used on paved highway,
air lag axle. Will trade,
exceptionally good, 5 speed
Harold Brewer, Long Bottom ,
lronsmlsslon, 2 speed axle,
phone 985-3554.
good tires. Phone 985·3554,
Harold Brewer, Long Bottom.
4-23-tlc ·1960 F:soo FARM truck, Jlraln
bed-cattle racks, good.l lires ."
19li9YW. squareback, good
good condition, Harold
tires, runs good. New paint
Brewer, Long Bottom, phone
job. Phone 7•2-5815.
985-3554.
·
H3-3tc
. 4-9-tf c•

..,.u&lt;: .

1972 FORO PINTO. less than
2,000 · miles. Ca ll Hershel
McClure at 992-3436 or 992·
5248.

132-Small valley•

13•-Before
136-Polntltu

137- Et tl
139-Word of sor,row
14Q-M•nuflcturtd
a•-4 - 0tnlth. land
dlvlllon

ol-20-6tc

1947 · CADILLAC 'Pickup, 1'165 .
Mustang . Phone 992-6'113.

145-Drl&amp;hl tt., •
75-Wtlr!(
146-41tonqulan
77-Strlp of leather
lndl•n •
147- River li'!i'nd
78--Jai)IMIII
aborlllfle
148-Edae

80--Pinoc;hlt term
81- Spec;k

ol-20-3to

'7 1 Volkswagen , 18 month
war'ranty left . Excellent
condition. Phone 992 -S.tll .
4-:Z0.6tp

149-Damp

151-Cooltd IIVI
83-W.,Ittl'l
1!3-Note of scale
84-Mocc:IIIM
155-NIIItlvt
1!11-Stt nymph
157-Art lflclal
89-W~thtS li&amp;htly
lai'IIU l'lt

\I

Pomeroy

'

95-Tht linden
96--Smtlll ·insl!ct ,

pronoun

1-&lt;:onfttllon of
ftlth

3-Rttr

92-BieJTIISM .
93-Acl . ,

992-2126

NOI.J.fl"IOS

-

'

•

1965 IMPALA. Phone 992-5551:
'oi-:Z0.31c
I

'

�•
•
28 - Tbe Sunday Times -Se.U.I, Sllldl1, April 23, 1fiZ

.

Defeat ofAmendtne~t Package Feared .

.
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Slatehoule Rtporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) -Proponenll of a If.point
package of constitutional amendrnenta on tho May 2
ba Dot are biting their nalla over lta prospeeta for
adoption.
·
A number of Statehouse observers belleve tbe ·
package, whieb hl!f~ly got on tbe May ballot In tho
1u·st place, doeSn 't have a cha~ 'because of two
.·ontroverslal proposals - expe111e allowances for
legislators and tandem elecllon of the .governor and
lie utenant governor.
Among the skeptics is Lt .Gov. John W. Brown, who
.

•,

Ohio Politics

,.
just happens to be opposed to teaming the governor
and lieutenant governor In the general election unless
they also are PB.lred in party prlm8cy voting.
As proposed, candidates for governor and
lieutenant governor would be teamed in the general
election, but Ute General Assembly w011ld set up procedures for the primary .
This provision was inserted as a last-minute compromise to gel the constitutional package through tbe
legislature and onto the May ballot.
Views Approval Vital
The Cons.titutional Revision Commlsslon, which
drafled Ute original package, views approval by the
voters in May as vital. Defeat would set reform of the
Ohio constitution_back considerably.
It not only would repudiate Ute work of the special
commission, but it would leave Ute question of a

.,

'

, conatilullonal convention on the November ballot as ·
•
· the chief Instrument of reform.
And constitutional cmvenlloiul in other states
recently have been "oot greslly encouraging" In the .
words of Richard H. Carter, president of the Cpnstitutlonal Revision Commissloo.
"Furthernnore,"observedCarter, ''Ohio voters are
not Ukely to authorize a convention in 1972."
'111ere are lean that the ~n prQP0811ls . for
11111oothing out legislative operations may be spoiled
because the controvei'!laJ governor-lieutenant
governor and eXDenae acCount Issues are biding
among them.
Even given one amendment at a time, voters are
often susplcloos about cha!Wlng the Constitution.
''The average citizen either doetn'l know, doesn't
care Or, even worse, has a gut feeling that changing
the Constitution II akin to being against motherhood," Carter said.
In defense of the package, It must be noted that
expenses are authorized for most other businessmen.
Why oot reuonable and necessary llving expenses
for leglalalors? Almost three.fourtha of the slates
allow them.
And If the goVernor and lieutenant governor were
automaticallY of the same party, lbere would be no
worries abool succe8111on, and the gov~rnor could
give his lieutenant some constructive things to do, as
prescribed in another one of the amendments on the
ballot.
The constitutional package also authorizes the
legislature to prescribe powers lor the lieutenant
governor. II removes him as presiding officer of the
Senate and requires that a senator serve in that

.

capacity. .
Allows Speelll Sesalou
The package also allows !louse and Senate leaden
to call special se8111ons of the legislature, a power oow .
llmlted to the governor. And If forbids a member of .
the legialature to bold any other public office escept
notary public, or in a poUtical party or the Armed
Forces.
•
The other eight amendmenta, whi&lt;;h John A.
SklptQn, ·a member of the Constitutional Revisioo
Commission, desCribes as a "good house-cleBrlins
job,". can be put.In three categories :
1. Proceduralamendmtipts 'which will facilltate the
opera lion of the legislature. ·One charige would
eliminate Ute calling of special "skeleton" sessions
just so legislative officers can slljn tiiiis'in public. The
other would allow ·one chamber to adj011rn for five
days, Instead of only two, without the consent of the
other.
2. Changes wbich already are being practiced
although not In the Constitution. One amendment
eliminates the requirement that all bills be rell!l at
length for three days before passage. Another
requires copies of the bli) and amendments 10 be in
the hands of legialators prior to a V9le. The thiril
requires the legialature to meet annually, which it
does in practice.
3. Technical amendments. One repeals a redundant
section of the Constitution on public office holding and
membership in the legislature. Another makes cor- 1
rective changes in filling vacancies and organizing
each chamber. The third repe~ a section on a
special commission to dispose of the Supreme Courll
business - a commission last used 89 years ago.

YoungMan Killed

7 Sai/Qrs Jump ·
Ship ·Going to
Vietnam War

Robert J. · Relhage, 22, of· struck two sign posts, and
Pittsburgh, Pa., was fatally turned over twice. Rethage and
injured in a single car accident a passenger, Kevin Kelley, 24,
at 3:05p.m. Sunday on Rt. 33, Pittsburgh, were thrown from
five-tenths of a mile north of the car. Kelley was admitted to
Veteran!i Memorial Hospital
Rt. ,7 in Meigs County.
According to the. Gallia· where he is listed in fair con·
Meigs Post Stale Highway 1dillon with multiple injuries.
LEONARDO, N. J . (UPI) - Seven sallorsleaped overboard. Pa trol, Rethage, traveling
The accident occurred at the
from a Navy anununition ship that has been the target of antiwar south, lost control of hi.s car construction site of the Rl. 33'7·
OO.monstrations this nlorning and attempted to swim·. to a which ran off the highway, 124 interchan~e at Rock
protesters' flotilla of 16 canoes as the Navy ship left a pier here,
reportedly for Vietnam.
The Coast G~~j~rd said all seven sailors who leaped from the
U.S.S.Nitro were picked up by two Coast Guard cutters in Sandy
Hook Bay and would be returned to the Nitro.
·
JACK MATI'HEWS

MIKE NOE

BRUCE WILSON

COMPLETE COURSE - Three of Gallia County's young men have received ·certificates
upon completion of Morehead State University's Personal Development Institute, a five-week,
non~redit courSe designed to sharpen social skills and improve other personal quaUties.
II has received national attention for its innovative approaeb to personal deVIllopmenl. The
men are Jack Matthews, sophomore, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Matthews of 13 Garfield.Ave.;
Bruce Wllaon, sophomore, Ute son of Mr. and Mrs .. Harry C. Wilson of 27 Chillicot!le Rd.; a,nd
Miebael D. Noe, freshman, son of Mr. and Mrs: Roland Edward Noe of 32 Henkle Ave.
Presenting Ute certifices was Mrs. Mignon Doran, the institute's founder.

The ca noe rtotilla was
launch(\&lt;! earlier this morning
by members of an antiwar
group that saw 19 of its
members arrested Sunday for
entering the Earle anununilion
depot to protest loading of the
Nitro, Middletown Township
police said.
The protesters were arrested
after crossing a depot fence
and trying to throw themselves
on to railroad tracks to block
trains carrflng ammunition to
the ship, authorities said. The
protest began last Wednesday
when the activists said they

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
state Forestry and Reclamation Division won't be content
with observing Arbor Day by
planting the usual one tree Friday. It plans to put out some
10,000 at Deer Creek Slate Park
that day.

Apollo Trouble Made
Moon Mission Doubtful

Week in

R~view

were in the lunar lander some
~stance away.
Mattingly had started going
through his ebeckUst as be got
ready to fire his main rocket. II
would boost him into a higher
orbit before the lander started
ita descent to the moon.
The primary guidance system, whieb controls the direction of the rocket firing,
checked out. The backup
system didn't . Mattingly
decided against firing the
rocket . It looked as though the
moon landing would have to be
aborted.
'

tWIIWI JOUr moDIJ •••• men lntaest!
•MlM JOU 11M thiiiiCII Security - Blnk Saity! .
tWIM JOUr Mttutl is Plid Ew.y 90 Oils!
•WI*' they flllly Appt1ciate JOUr Businis!
'

(Compounded Qu•rterly) - - •

·

Salinas•

!Compounded Qu.,.terly)

DISTINGUISHED SERVICE- The Board of Trustees of the non.partissn Americans for
Constitutional Action (ACA ) has honored loth District Representative Clarence E. Miller with
ACA's Distinguished Service Award. The award is presented every two years to legislators
whose voting records serve "to strengthen and defend the spirit and principles of the Constitution." ACA President Charles McManus (left ) presented the award to Miller in
Washington.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

learned the Nitro was being
loaded with ammunition for
Vietnam.
The Navy declined to reveal
the ship's destination because
such information is classified.
The Movement for a New
Society of Philadelphia,
however, said sailors told them
the ship was to sail today at 6
a.m. EST.
Those arrested were charged
with trespassing on federal
property and
unlawful
assembly. They were held in
jail overnight in lieu of bond
and will be arraigned today.

. WASHINGTON (UP!)- The
Supreme Court reversed itseU
today and decided against
reexamining iIs controversial
1966 Miranda ruling that
barred use of confessions
against a suspect who was not
advised of his right to keep
silent
In a brief order without

and Republicans grew heated
at times.
sen. Barry Goldwater, RArlz., introduced a resolution
CC)_ndemnlng the North Vietnamese as aggressors. In an
angry speeeb, he called the
Russians the main culprits for

. "-

and 90 Day Cet tificatls
of Deposit* Eam----

10,000 Put In Darkness
affected by the 6:20 p.m.
Friday loss of power, along \
with small portions of Adams
and Ross counties.
The Pike County Sheriff's
Department here said it was
operating by candlelight and
battery power.
Electric company officials
said power was restored by
mid-morning Saturday .

Ideal for
Mother's

Twnor Fight Is ,. ,. ..

12 MONlHS
CERTIFICATES OF
DEPOSITit£ARN - -

keening
on top

24 MONntS
.

The report was made by Dr.
Matthew C. bodd, professor of
microbiology at OS\) and was
co-authored by Maurice
Schee~ II and Jefirey L.
Rossio, both doctorial candidates in microbiology.

lnrlalion coverage In a Slate rarm ·
~ omtowne:rs Pclicy helps you slay
The three scientists, who
on tO!) of rising replacement tosts. warned that the possibility of
Slate Farm Is all you f1Nd to know producing cancer vaccines is
about insur~n c:e:. Cal! me IOOay,

CEmFICATES OF
DEPOSIT

Carrol K.

Snowden
· ParkCentrol
Hotel llclg.
.Second Ave.
Ph. 444·4290
Homo 446·4SII

• Minimum lnit.ial DeposlfSl,OOO.IIOor More

OhioValJ.ey Bank
"duo """'looalt lbiC 4PI cloteo

still a long way off, said the
acid known as RNA can be
taken from animal cells and
used to direct human white
blood ceUs to attack tumor
cells under test lube con·
dilions . .

STATE FARM
State Fall'l'l Flrt and

Casualty Company,
Home Ofliee:

"*" hul-"

Mori&gt;or•F - ' - 1.....,. Coopohoc;,

,

the invasion.
House Democrats, at a party
caucus, deoounced both the
North Vietnamese Invasion
and the U.S. escalation of the
war. They called for setting of
a dste to end U.S. military
action in Indochina.

COLUMBUS (UP!) . - A in blood cells was presented
method to immunize against Friday in a paper by three Ohio
tumors by using an acid found State University
microbiologists to the New
York Academy of Sciences.

Weather
Low tonight in the 30s. Cool
Tuesday with variable
cloudiness north and par tly ·
cloudy south. Chance of
showers northeast. High
Tuesday upper .;10s to lower 40s
north and 45 to 50 south.

Blcomlr. Qton, Ulinol1

•

P-7012

•
•

Harding Cabin at Ute 9,307-acre
park in Fayette and Pickaway
counties Friday morning.
After lunch, more than 100
Boy Scouts, 4-H Club
members and vocational agri cul ture students
will spread out on about
. 12 acres of the park and put in
10,000 seedlings. They will
plant a fulur.e forest on land
cleared in the 1800s for farm·
ing.

TWO KILLED
CLEVE LAND (UP!)
James E. Sheppard, 23, and
John Wright, 22, were shot to
death Sunday following a birthday party for a neighbor
woma n, police said.

VOL. XXIV NO. 264

just push a button
and turn a dial for lhe cycle you need.
· • RINSE-HOLD cyclo quick-rinses dishes.
lhen holds for washing· laJer with ~ full
load.
• NORMAL cyclt washes dishes lwlce and
• Ccllllpletely outomotle,

port of Thanh Hoa, 82 miles
soulb .of Hapoi. One B52 was
riddled by fragments of a
surface-to-air (SAM) missile
but landed safely at Da Nang,
A Navy F4 Phantom was shot
down Sunday but its two
crewmen were rescued from
the Tonkin Gulf.
The American planes were
assisted by ships of Ute U.S. 7th
Fleet bombarding coastal lar·
(
geta in North Vietnam. The
BI United Preaa loternallonal
guided missile destroyer USS
CINCINNAT(- SEN. HENRY JACKSON, D·WASH., said Parsons was slightly damaged
Sunday night the use of atomic power does not mean death to the by shore batteries Sunday and
coal Industry. "We will have to be strict on maintaining stan- Ute guided missile destroyer
dards to prevenllhennal pollution and radiation hazard, but the . USS Benjamin Sloddert was
real problem is that the demand for power ill so enormous," sllghlly damaged Saturday.
New Front Seen
Jackson said in an interview here.
MiUiary sources said the
The Democratic presidential candidate earlier spoke at a
Communist
attacks in the
rally in Columrus and then came bere Sunday. He was scheduled
to slarl off a full day of campaigning in Ohio today with a news Central Hlghlanda 280 miles
conference here and then. proceed to ChUlicothe, Athens, Zanes- north of Saigon appeared to be
Ute long-expected opening of a
ville and Woodsfield.
·
North VIetnamese front there.
COLUMBUS - FORMER PRESIDENTIAL NEWS Four Americans were killed
secretary Pierre Salinger said Sen. Henry M. Jackson, cam- today in the region when their
paigning in Ohio for the May 2 Democratic presidential primary, helicopter was shot down.
Of more Immediate concern
has not reveal~d his campaign contributors beca~se they would in Saigon was the battle along
show his candidacy was backed· by the nation s military In- Highway 13 leadlrlg from the
duslrlal complex. Satlnger, now national polltlcal coordinator ror capital to An Loc 60 miles to
Sen. Ge~ge McGovern's' bid for tbe Democratic presidential · the north. Fier'ce fighting
oominalion, made the remark during the weekend in response to continued in An Loc and
an allegation by Jackson that McGovern had not flied his cam- military spokesmen said the
paign slatemenla ss required by law.
North Vietnamese hit the
Salinger said McGovern flied the reports in lime and added it · rubbled city with iiOO more
was in "ill grace" for Jackson 10 make such a statement, rounda of moriar and rocket
''particularly in view of the fact that Sen. Jackson is the only fire during the night.
Democratic i!andldale who has falled to file any reporll Ustlng
UP! Correspondent Leon Dahls campaign contributors prior to the new federal law going into niel reported from Highway 13
operation."
that Communist troop8 apparently in strength pinned
down
two government battaIA)S ANGELES - REP. JOHN ASHBROOK OF oHJO, the
lions
totalling
about 1,500 men
only RepubUcan actively __opposing President Nixon for the
(Continued on Page 4)
(Continued on Page 8)

SAIGON (UPI)-Communlst
forces atlacking at close range
pinned down two South Vietnamese batlallons only 38 miles
oorth of Saigon today. Tank-led
North Vietnamese overran
three firebases in the Central

POM EROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

enttne

MONDAY, APRIL 24. 1972

lEN CENTS

PHONE 992-'2156

•

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I

.-11

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!

MEIGS ATHLETES, Bit and wall to be eerved at tbe annual AD Sports Banquet Saturday
night sponsored by the Pomeroy Firemen. See Page .t

\ ___________________________

Rock Take Great

Charles Hensley
Dies on Saturday

G-T to Extepd
Cable tO Shade

samples and ·1,745 frames of
film from Orion to Casper's
storage lockers. The samples
were coated with dust and at
one point, Duke said :
"Looks Uke a dust .storm in
this cockpit."
Tile two astronauts finally
glided through the manhole;.
sized tunnel linking the two
docked craft about 2a ,m. today
and retired . for most of the
m~.

"As the sun sinks slowly In
the west, we bid a fond farewell
to old MCC (Mission Control
Center)," Young said Brier
controllers bade them- good
night.
In roaming the heavily
cratered, boulder.JIItered surface, Young and Duke
produced fOur moon exploration records.
1beRecordl
Their 71oltour, 2-rnlnute stay
on the surface was four hours
longer than the mark 11111 by
Apollo 15 last swruner, and
they also spent more time out
o{ their spacecraft-20 ~lours
and 15 minutes-than' did their
predecessors . They drove
farther than Apollo 15, and
Apollo 18's haul of lunar
(Continued on-Page 8)

Club· Sets Deadline
!

o

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•

SPACE CENTER, HOIISton scientific harvest, and tbey
(~I )-Apollo 16's lunar ex- were to deploy a small satellite
plorers returned to their or- before blasting out of lunar
•bitingmothershiptodaywitha . orbit at 9:16 p.m. EST and
JACK FOILROD AND GEORGE NESSEIJIOAD, 1-r,
record 24S-pound surprise heading back home.
had their hands full Saturday night dishing oot slaw at the
package of rocks. A leading
They are due to splash down
annual Pomeroy Firemen's Sports Banquet at the Second
scientist predicted It wUl be the in the Pacific Ocean Thursday,
Ward Fire Station. Meigs High Sebool athletes are honored
most Important cache yet a day early and 50 pounds
annually by the firemen with a chicken dinner and all the
brought back from tbe moon. overweight. Their heavy load
trimmings. See more pictures on page 4.
John W. Young and Charles ofmoonsampleswillberushed
M. Duke lefl on the moon a 18.4 10 the Lunar Receiving
mile web of car tracks and Laboratory at the Space Center
footprints as testimony to Saturday for preliminary
man's only plamed ezpedltion analysis by Impatient sciento the rocky central highlands. lists.
The two moonwalkers and
Of the five-hour moon excommand m.odule pilot ploratlon Sunday, flight
Thomas K. Mattingly were director M. Pete Frank said:
adding
more
moon "II was reaDy the crowning
LONG BOJ'TOM - Charles an infant son.
photography
today
to
their achievement for the Apollo 16
Mr. Hensley was employed
H. Hensley, 56, Long Bottom,
crew. I just don 't know what
widely known store operator, by the Meigs County Highway
could have been done better, or
died unexpectedly ,Saturday Department, a member of the
done more."
.
evening at his residence. The Long Bottom United Methodist
Launch Still ~tiD&amp;
son of the late H. A. (Otto) and ChUfCh and of Its Golden Rule
Young and Duke rocketed off
Wilhelmenia Defenbaugh Class in which he held a perfect
Descartes Base in full view of a
Hensley, he was also preceded attendance for 14 years;
television camera and rejoined
In death by a brother, Dan, and present trustee of the church,
A project to expand cable Mattingly In the command ship
he held most of 118 lay ofl1ces, facilities in the southern Casper at 10:35 p.m. Sunday.
including Sunday School Supt.; portion of the Athens exchange The camera that showed the
he was a trustee of Sand Hill and south to Ute Village of launch still is operating and
Cemetery 19 years, member of ·Shade is under way, 'General engineers hope it will last unW
the Shade River Lodge F&amp;AM Telephone Co. of Ohio an- Ute sun sets over Descartes.
No. 453, Past P.atron of Racine nounced today.
Once docked to Casper,
Chapter 134 O.E.S., . charter
Kenley Krinn, Athens . Young and Duke transferred
member of Mary Shrine 37 of district commercial manager, Ill moon rocks and soli
the White Shrine of Jerusalem said the $50,400 job will allow ..
of Pomeroy, and a member of filling existing orders for
Chester Council D of A 323.
private lines and provide for
He is survived by his wife, future wide-scale party-line
Leona Swan Hensley ; two reduclion .
brothers, George and John,
"This job is the first phaee of
Decoration Day has been eet
both of Long Bottom; three . an over-all progrl!l'D to upgrade
as the deadline for completing
listers, Mrs. Antone (Anna) facilities in the exchanges. It the plan Ung ·at Middleport
Liter; Mr~. · Perry (Iva) will serve aa a combination
Vlllase Hall by the Middleport
Carpenter, both of Long Bot- feeder and distribution cable," Amateui' Gardeners.
tom, and Mrs. Charles Krlnn noted.
Mra. Ferman Moore Is
(J4argaret) !4urray, Ironton,
"The . ~ompar.y
Is chairman of the project with
and several nieces and engineering Ita cable projects
Mrs. Edward Burkett, Mrs.
nephews.
to enable offering customers Belly Cline, Miss Bernice Ann
Funeral services will be held. whate~er grade of service they
Durst, and Mrs. Roger Morson
TUesday at I p. m, at the Long want," Krinn explained. :rhe
on the comrnjllee. The project
Bottom United Methodist Athens exchange serves 12,439
was reviewed at a business
Church with the Rev. Freeland telephones in a 106.2 square- session of the club held Wed·
' .
Norris and the Rev. Jacob Leh- mile area of Athens County. nesday night following the open
Saturday In JIIOVing lnm the old quarten into their at- . man officiating. Burial will be
Shade has 2216 phones in a »- meeting of the Winding Trail
trictlve new ltnleture located on Salem St. in RuUand, Open
in Sand Hill Cemetery. White square-mile area of Athens and
Garden Club at 11M! Ohio Power
bo-at the new bam wW be oblerved Saturday.
(Continued on,Page 8)
Meigs counties.
. Co.

See the large selection of
whirlpool Appllanr:u on
lhe Jrd floor'.
Freturo, Rilrlgerotors,
Washers, Dryers; Ranges,
Truh 'Mashers . and
Dehumidilien.

Model SXF'-325

·Eiberfelds In Pom

INSPECT AUTO - State Highway Patrolmen James Sheela, left, and Roger Gillespie, two
of the three patrolmen stationed ill Meigs County, inspect the small foreign made sports car in
which Robert Rethage, 22, of Pittsburgh was killed Sunday at Rock Springs.

\ ).1

Highlands and another force
seized 10 more miles of Highway 1 in Cambodia .
The air war over North
VIetnam heated up and '852s
again joined fighter-liOmbers
in strikes today against the

rinses lour limes 10 remove stubborn soils.

W- ftOW ftiiUrt lets YOU use faucet
tor other purposes while dishwasher is
, operating. . · .
'
·
• hplralt · tloctrlc cord and ·drain hose
'
'
· 11orage.
· .
·
• 01111 dllptnttr adds detergent automati'
caliY at the alart of each wash.

It had been widely believed
that when the Court ··decided
last month to hear the Ware
case, it meant that four
justices
appointed
by
President Nixon could join with
opponenets of the original 5-4
Miranda ruling and perhaps
overturn it. ,
The Miranda ruling was one
of the most controversial of the
Court under former Chief
Justice Earl Warren. It was
blamed by "law and order"
advocates for handcuffing the
police and allowing criminals
to go free.

Invaders Push
Nearer Saigon

dishwasher
afler e~ery wash and rinse.

ground."

Devoted To 'l'he lnh!rl?$t. Of The Meigs·Ma&amp;On Area

Front-load portable
Sett·cfunlng lllt.r means no pre-rinsing.
Filter flushes food parlicles down dra in

\

confessions in his c·ase "rests
upon an adequate state

at y

Whirlpool

~

~

•

&lt;IE&gt;

• 11'1 convertible; Qan be built·in later.

World's longest continuous
railway is the one line, 5.600.
m 11 e Trans-Siberian Rail' road. · It connects Moscow
' with Vladivostok on the Pa•Cific coast.

explanation, the Court vacated
its March 20 order gra nting
review of the Philadelphia
request that Paul D. Ware be
tried for four robbery-murders
in Philadelphia .
Instead, the Court denied the
request for a hearing and said
th e slate supreme cou rt
decision·ruling out the use of

fNe~s.Jn "B;i~/~

THE MYSTERY OF lbe large egg found in Ute yard of
Mrs. Elizabeth Roush of Letart Falls has been solved. Scott
and Wendy Ransom and Billy Milliron being held by his
mother, Mrs. Gloria Milliron, 1-r, proved beyond a doubt that
they are the owners of geese, one of which laid the egg found
in Mrs. Roush's yard. Scott and Wendy bold two of the large
eggs while Scott has a basketful, just to prove his point.

. -WAVERLY, Ohio (UPI ) _::
An estimated 10,000 persons in
a three-county area were
without electric service late
Friday and early Saturday
after a bushing in a power
transformer blew out in a
Colwnbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Co. station here.
Power company spokesmen
said most of Pike County was

REGULAR PASS 11001
SAVINGS EARN '
Golden

Natural Resources Director
William B. Nye wiU speak and
plant a ceremonlallree near a
parking area opposlle the

Mattingly relayed the bad the stepup In U.S. action
news to the Space Center at against North Vietnam's invaHouston after he sWUrlg arfllllld slon of South Vietnamthe eastern rim of tbe moon. particularly the bombing of
Apollo engineers across the Hanoi and Haiphong.
nation went to work-l!lmulatIn VIetnam, American waring the problem, f1lliking tests planes concentrated mainly on
and checking and re- Conunu$1 targeta in South
checking.
Vietnam and the southern part
Several hours later they of NorUt Vietnam after the
reaebed their decision. The weekend raid's on Hano'i and
.problem was minor. The moon Haiphong. U.S. Navy action
landing got a g~ead.
picked up. And four sailors
Young and Duke landed on aboard Ute destroyer Higbee
the moon six hours behind were wounded from missiles
schedule, and set up their fired eiUter by North Vietnacamp in a crater on a boulder- , mese M!Gs or torpedo boata.
strewn plateau.
The U.S. command's weekly
...,-casualty count showed 12
The college campuses had Americans killed and 63
been qulellor months. But that wounded. Tbe report said a
ebanged th1s week. National record 1,002 South VIetnamese
guardsmen · and policemen were killed. The Communist
were back. Tel!!' gas was being death toll was put at 7,117.
lobbed Into crowda of demonIn Washington, President
strators. Arrests mounted.
Nixon remained . silentThe nationwide upsurge of publicly at least-but the
antiwar feeling stemmed from debate between Democrats ·

The Pomeroy E-R unit
removed Kelley to the hospital.
The body of Mr. Retha ge was
removed to Ewing's Funeral
Home, and tater to the John H.
Slater Funeral Home In
Pittsburgh.

Miranda Ruling Stands

Not One but Many

By ALBERT FAUSTINO .
The Apollo 16 command ship
was on a pass behind the moon
·when the trouble started.
Astronaut Thomas K. Maltingly n was alone and out of
contact with the Earth. The
other astronauts, John W.
Young and Chl!l'les M. Duke,

Springs. ·
The patrol said Rethage
suffered a skull fracture .

.KlAN MAY, KAREN GRATE and · Mrl. Edltll
-. WlllllltiiOn. I.e, b*Jnc! 1111 c:aunter ill the IIIW RutlaDI
Iinneii Ill IIIII Plca u; Nlllanll Bant. Employees 111'1...;,

•

,.

Named to the nominating
committee were Mn. Walter
Crooks, Mn. Arthur Strauss
and Mrs. Betty Cline. The
committee will report at the
May meeting. Flower ,umbrellas were distrulbuted to.the
members by Mrs. Pearl
Reynolds, ways and means
chairman. A program on
flowering annuals were given
by Mrs. Harry Moore and Mrs.
Edward llurkell. Mn. Selwyn
Smith will prepare the Green
11lumb Notes for The Deily
Sentinel in May.

'

.

•'

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