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                  <text>12 - the Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. o., JUM Z3, 1m

R. H~ Eynon,
.· 83, Succi,mbs

San Antoni.o's -J.a med
Alamo gets its name !rom
tile Spanish word for .a cot,
tonwood tree that once grew
there.
·

• Tonight lh~u Tuesday
June 2J-2?
THE FRENCH
CONNECTION

ITechnicolor)

Gene Hci(;kman
Fernan·do Rey

"R"

ALSO CARTOONS
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

MASON DRIVE IN
•

'

,,

t'

· TONIGHT

June 2J

DQuble Feature Program

"E VEL KNIEVEL"
f MetrOcolorl
George Hamilton
Sue Lyon ·

IGPI

- PLUSWEREWOLVES ON
WHEELS

IColor)
Stephen Oliver

IR I
SATURDAY
June 24

Double Feature
FRAGMENT OF FEAR
Davi d Hemmings

&lt;Gayle Hunnicutt
iGPI

PLUS
.:Jupport Your
Loca I Gunfighter
Jam es Garner

(Color)
...._ _ _ _IG I
SUN.-MON.-TUES.

June lS-26-27
Double Feature

LOVE MACHINE

Robert Ryan

Cyan Cannon

PLUS
B. S. I LOVE YOU

IRI

Peter Kastner
Joanna Cameron

· IRI

•

CONDUCTS REVIVAL ' The Rev. John L. Lauter of
. Junction City wlll conduct
revival services from
Sunday through Juiy 4 at 8
each evenlag at the Carleton
Church on the Kingsbury
Road. The Rev. Mr. Lanier Is
an ordalne_d elder and
evangelist In the Church of
the Nazarene. He sup·
plements his evangellstlo
preaching with playing
various
sjrlnged
Ia·
strumenls. He and Mrs.
Lanier have conducted
nearly 600 revivals and have
traveled 900,000 miles. The
public Is invited.

Wreck.

I

I

(Continued .from Page I )
a.m. on U.S. 33. Deputy Sheriff
Bob Huffman identified the
driver as Hickel and said after
the car left the blacktop it went
165 feet before hitting an
(Continued from Page I ) embankment. He explained
further that alter It hit the
Public Welfare department.s embankment, the car traveled
showed:
through the air78 fee l, slruck a
telephone pole which it broke
- In many counties the in· into, went 69 more feel where it
crease in state support for hit a corner of the Marian
educa tion is ~realer than the Reynolds house. On impact
toU!I personal tncome tax thetr with the house the motor was
residenis paid. · .
thrown out and landed 132 fer.t
- In most counhes the total , away across the roadway on
state increase for . education, prope'rty .owned by Homer
homestead exemphon and 10 . Smith. All three of the young
pet. property tax reduction men were also thrown out of
relw'ns more dollars to them the vehicle.
than they pay in personal in·
Mr. Reynolds sail he was
come taxes.
asleep but' awakened when the
- In all but three counties house shook adding "I thouuht
the increase of state support a truck had hit the
for educa tion is greater than house." When he came
th~ increase in sUite, federal outside he said he found
arid county welfare support. all three of the boys lying
close together in his front yard
near four gas meters. Checking
them first but hearing the
escaping gas because some of
the meters had been damaged,
he noted his first impulse was
to get this shut off .before a fire
erupted since it was evident
that gasoline had been slrewn
about.
Immediately then he sum·
moned Mason's Emergency
Squad and fire department as
well as the Pomeroy

'Tax.

ews•• zn -·

••

WASHINGTON (UPI )--Sen.
William Proxmire, D-Wis.,
said today he will fight the
confirmation of Gen. Creighton
W. Abrams as Army chief of
staff unless Abrams gives a
"thoroughly satisfactory explanation" of unauthorized air
raids in ·North Vietnam.
President Nixon
has
oominated Abrams, the U.S.
corrunander in Vietnam the
past loW' yea rs, to succeed
Glm. William C. Westmoreland, who will retire at
the end of this month .
Proxmire~ referred to the
case of Gen. John D. Lavelle,
the 7th Air Force commander
in Southeast Asia, who was
fired , brought home and
retired for ordering bombing
strikes in North Vietnam
between last Novemeber and
March that were outside
guidelines laid down by
President Nixon.
Lavelle conceded he issued
the orders and then falsified
report.&lt;; that the raids were
made as "protective reaction"
in defense of American forces.
He said Abram~ "knew what I
was doing.'·'

over an area of several feet.
Mrs. Bernard (Lynn) Connolly,
who lives nearby notified the
sheriff's department. She
stated "I was in my living
room when I heard a crash. I
looked out the door and saw
parl.s flying through the air and
heard screaming."

ISNT
EVERYTHING
·Sometimes you need more than money for a car,
or your house. or your family.
Sometimes you need ·good, s.pund financial advice,

Reclrunalion. • •

We have that. And il's yours lrbe tor the asking.
And we'd like to give It to you.

(Continued from Page I)

Vehicles."
Ohio will pay $29,900 for the
additional 167 acres for the
Perry Area, now Including
more than 4,000 acres of
· reclaimed slrlp mine land,
The 460 acres to be added to
KIUdeer, which then will total
nearly 9,000 acres, will cost
$273,500. The extra land will be
used for upland game and
waterfowl management activities. Ohio will pay $3,515 for
I l!z acres to be added to
Killbuck, now having 1,300
acres used for game and
waterfowl management.
Nye said long-range P.lans
called for buying 6,000 more
acres In the Killbuck area.

pomeroy

national
bank
the bank of
the century
851.1872

Dick Cumberland

Trio

•

You'll Love It
At The New

Miss White
Selected For

OSU Program
Barbara White, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Dan White of
Pomeroy, has been selected
one of 20 students to participate
in th e National Science
Foundation undergradua~e
research program this summer at the Ohio State
University College of Pharmacy.
The program beg'll' June 12
lll!d will continue through the
swnmer to Sept. I. She has
been assigned to the Leukemia
Research Project in the
Department of Medicinal
Chemistry.
Barbara recently completed
her Jwlior year at capital
University in Columbus where
she is enrolled in the pre-med
program and plans a career in
medical . research. She has
been selected to receive a
science department award for
the 1972-1973 academic year .
Miss White is a 1969 graduate
of Meigs High School and was
valedictorian of her class.

New Store Hours
Mon., Tues.

Saturday Ni~ht
10:00 TIL 2:00

MEIGS
INN
992·3629

POMEROY

9- 5

Thurs. 9-ll
Sat. 9-8

Middleport
Book Store
'99 Mill Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760

HOSPITAL
NEWS

will

Elberfelds In .Pomeroy

STORE·WIDE
A E

It takes more than a mil·
lion begonia seeds to make
an ounce.

Than 11,000

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

30

PAGES

THREE SECTIONS

Families

.VO_L_._V_II~·~N0~.~2~1._~~----~-----P-om_e~ro~y-~~id-dt~ep_or_t____~----------~S~U~N~DA~Y~,. ~JU~N~E~2~5~,~19~7~2----~------------~G~all~ip~oh~s-~Po=in~tP~le=a=~~nt____________________ 15CENTS

Trans erO Stock
Completes Venture
GALLIPOLIS - 'Transfer of. stock
Friday finalized the sale of the Evans
Packing Company located on Chillicothe
Rd., to Landmark, Inc., of Columbus.
Kennelh N. Probasco, executive vice
president of Landmark, Inc., and J . Tim
Evans, president of the Evans Packing
Company, jointly announced the purchase
agreement on June 1.
Friday, Landmark officials announced
the sale had been fmalized with the trans·
fer of all stock owned by the privately .
owned operation to the new company.
The annowtcement came at a lun·

OLD AND NEW OWNERS - The sale of the Evans
Packlr)g Company, Chlllicothe Rd., Gallipolis, was com·
pleted Friday with the transfer of final stock to Landmark,
Inc., Columbus, Ohio. Completing the transaction were, first
row, I. to r ., Kenneth N. Probasco, executive vice-

o/

,

Your Invited Guest
Reaching More

tmts

High temperatures today
mainly in .the upper 50s and ·
, lower &amp;Os: Lows tonight in the
, 50s and Monday highs will be in
the 60s to lolljer 70s southwest
portion.

y-\
.

Budget Policies

Wed., Fri.

•

"The entire issue of civilian
control over the · military in
forming American policy is at
SACRAMENTO, CALIF. -:DECLARING that losers cannot
stake," Proxmlre said in a
change the rules after they've played the game, a federal judge
statement. ''I do not intend to
ruled Thursday that Sen. George McGovern .can keep all 271
see this -important constitutiondelegate votes he won in Cillfomla 's primary. ·
al question swept under the
An attorney for four defeated presldenUal candidates, in·
rug, downgraded, ignored or
eluding Sen. · Hubert H. Humphrey, said he will appeal the
whitewashed."
decision on growtds the winner-take..aJI syi!lem.!l violates the
Sen. Charles McC. Mathias,
"equal protection" clause of the 14th Amendment to the U. S.
R-Md., also said that Abrams,
~
~ Constitution.'
as Lavelle's superior in Viet·
/, I \,
· "The plaintiffs appear to have gone along with the present
nam , ought to be closely
qu estioned about the raids.
system until they lost," said U.S. District Court Judge Philip C.
Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr., IJ.
TAKING BASIC - Pvt. Wilkins.
N.C., saw.the Lavelle incident
John W. Anderson, son of
differently, however. Ervin is a
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas An· .
ISRAELI GUNNERS fired into southern Lebanon early
member of the Armed Services
derson, Larkin St., Rutland, today in retaliation for severallong-cange rockets fired at Israeli
Committee, but said he would
is undergoing basic training villages.
,
....
not participa te in any in·
at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo.
The rocket.&lt;;, pr~umabiy fired by Arab commandos, hit the
tcrrogation of Abrams about
He is a graduate of Meigs northern Israeli villages of Klriat Shmona and Kfar Giladi, but
Lavelle.
High School, Class of 1972. there were no reports of casualties or damage.
'
"Do you think it raises an
His address is Pvt. John W.
"Fire was returned," an Israeli military spokesman In Tel
issue or civilian control over
Anderson, 287-54-4 766, Co. B, Aviv said today,
the military'? " Ervin was
5th Bat!., 3rd B.T.B., Fort
A second Incident was reported Thursday night, with Arabs
asked.
Leonard Wood, Mo., 65473.
"No/' Ervin rep lied. " It
He Is expected to com plete firing a nwnber of shells from Syria that hit the area of Ramal
Magshimin and the Israelio()ccupied Golan Heights. No
seems to me it's a question of
basic training Aug. 3
casualties nor damage were reported and,lvaeli forces dld not
military control over the
return the fire .
military."
•
Secretary of Defense Melvin
ACCIDENT PROBED
-BELFAST -BRITISH troops exchanged gunfire with lhe
R. Laird has said that Abrams
A minor two-car accide nt
"was not involved in any way was investiga ted by the Meigs · Irish Republican Army (IRA) Thursday night and today despite
in the abuse of authority."
Coun ty Sheriff's Department an agreement by both sides.on a cease.fire starting Monday to
Thursday at 5·p. m. at Letart end three years of iectati!!n vio!!!ru'!! Ml N!!!'llll!nlll'eland. . .
The latest shooting occurred first In Andlnonltown a stong.
Falls on Red Hill Road.
Debra L. Nelson, Racine, Rt. bold of the more militant element.s of the IRA which ha; opposed
2, was traveling south on Red an end to the campaign of shooting and bombing which has ldlled
Hill Road when.a car driven by nearly 400 persons and injured 3,000.
Max Junior Manuel, Racine,
An army spokesman said lhe British lroopa !bought they had
Rt. 2, pulled off of Manuel Road hit three of the snipers although no bodies were recovered. Most
and struck the Nelson vehicle. of the IRA gunfire was against a sandbagged army observation
There were no injuries or post.
"The Federal Government
arrests,
and on ly minor
Miller stated, "is running a
~
$246 billion business - a damage to both vehicles.
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON believes chances
business the size of the nation's
lor a permanent nuclear arms limitation agreement with !he
fifty largest Col'p&lt;lrations Soviet Union will be "totally destroyed" unless Congress apAWARDS PRESENTED
with general store'bookkel!ping
proves a new offensive weapons program.
1
Trophies and cash awards
and accounting methods."
Nixon lnslllted at 1\JlCWS conference Thunday that the arms
''Congressional budgetary were presented to the first agreements he made at the Moocow summit In May should be
procedures must be brought place winners in the first an· approved by Congress on their merits.
into the twentielh ce ntury if nual boat parade held during
Plealallt Valley Hoi)Jilal
federal spending is to receive a the eighth annual Big Bend
·
DISCHARGES:
Mrs .
greater degree of scrutiny and Rega tta .
were
funniest,
Categories
O!arles
Stapleton
and
son,
control. For too long, Congress
Crown City; Henry McCoy,
has paid a lot of lip service to most unusual decorated, and
Gallipolis; William Veasey,
fiscal responsibility and has , Big Bend on the Move .
·Rhonda Oliver, Hubert Hendone little about it. The basic
Winners in each category
Jwte 21, 1972
reforms contained in this bill were: funniest, Bruce Gill of
Births - Mrs. Charles Stans- son, Maggie Roush, Michael
help remove the Kentucky- unusual decora.ted, berry , daughter, Wellston; Jones, Ronald Holcomb, all
procedural roadblocks to Xl Gamma Mu Soronty; Mrs.
Charles
Burnett Point PleaW.t; Mrs. Perry
fulfilling that responsibility." Sta_nley Stearn, 2nd piace; '\. daulihter, Gallipolis, and Mrs: Jeffers, Southside; Charles
The legislation contains the "B1g Bend on the Move," Ri ck Swain, daughter
Kuhn, Jackson, 0 .; Mrs. Joe
following provisions:
Carroll Johnson, Middleport. Gallipolis.
' Bray, Henderson; Marsha
Title I - provides that the
Discharges - Gene Sauer, Fetty, O!eshlre; Bertha
fiscal year coincide with lhe
Virgil Davis, Bernice Green, Griffin, Middleport.
ca lendar year . This will Veterans Memorial Hospital Delcey Bailey, Mrs. Mariam
ADMITTED - Charles
fa cilitate long range com·
Carroll,
Long Bottom; Marge Potts and daughter, Anna
prehensive budgeta ry planning
Murphy , Nola Lemlngs,
and allow members more time Reuter , Pomeroy; Eulah Pamela Wtlllams, Marjorie
REFUSES TREATMENT
to consider the 1,1110 page Francis, Middlepor t; Clara Hart, John Porter, James
The
Middleport emergency
Paulsen, Hemlock Grove, and
budget document.
Doyle,
Barbara
Chevalier,
squad answered a call at 6:45
Title II - requires th e Ellen Wilson, Middleport.
Timothy
Glenn,
Barbara
a. m. Friday fQr Wilbur Ellls,
DISCHARGED - Norman
Congress to esta blish an
caruthers,
Mrs.
Robert
Taylor
Rutland, who waa having
overall spending limitation Smith, Claude Roy, Michael and daughter, Erma McNeil,
difficulty breathing. He
forty.five days after receipt of Martin, Olive Lawson and !ne:l Ida HiU and Brian Bailey.
re!UM!d treatment.
the President 's economic Randolph.
message. This would force the
Congress to consider the
budget proposal in a unified
manner ralher than as loW'·
teen separate proposals.
Title 111 - provides that
either House of Congress may
disapprove of an impohndment
of any appropriated monies by
the Executive Branch. This
impoundment procedure
•
reasserl.s Congress' rightful
role to insW'e that lis appropriations act.&lt;; are carried ·
out. Also contains a provision
to expedite the disbursement of
funds b~ federal officials to
state and local government.s
ailb private contractors.
TiUe IV - directs a study of
appropriatiolf procedures of
Congress by a, joint HouseSenate Commission composed
of
the leadership of
Congressional committees
dealln~ with budgetary and
OPEN TO"IGHT UNTIL 9 PM
fiscal policy, and the Comptroller General. This Com·
mission would make specific
recorruncndations to moder·
nize Congressional !Judgetary
procedure.
11

.~

WASHINGTON - MAR111A MITC~ says she is "sick
and tired" of politics and has threatened to leave her husband
wtless he get.&lt;; out of the political arena.
"I gave him an ultimatum," the wife of former Attorney
General John N. Mitchell told a UP! reporter In' a telephone
conversation from Newport Beach, calif. Thursday night.
Mitchell, contacted at ~ Washington apartmen\, took his
wife's latest phone tirade in good stride.

Miller Bill Would
WASHINGTON, D. C. - Ohio
lOth District Congressman
Clarence E:. Miller has cosponsored legislation to reform
the fiscal and budgetary
policies of the Federal
Government.
The pW'pose of the bill, en·
titled the " Fiscal Respon·
sibility Act of 1972", is to
reestablish the Congressional
role in developing budget
priorities and modernizing the
mechanisms of Congress to
deal with fiscal policies in a
more
systematic
and
analytical mannfr.

+

.weather

LOS ANGI):l.ES - THE GOVEIIN&amp;(ENT pointed .to Daniel
Ellsberg and his associates as the Chief SUBpeCts today in an
alleged 8econd Pentagon Papers leak - to colwnniBt Jack AnderSon - even as Ellsberg's espionage lrial for the first leak is
about to begul.
·
·
·
Ellsberg, his co-defendant Anthony J. RUS80, !heir defense
attorneys ahd Anderson all denied the accusation - the lawyers
calling it a "last ditch desperate move" to discredit Ellsberg end
Russo.
The Justice bepartment ThW'sday asked the federal judge
hearing the Pentagon Papers case for a hearing into what federal
officials-said was publication of previoiJB!y undisclosed parts of
,the classified report in seven of Anderson's columns during the
past two weeks.

.Explanatiqn For.
Air Raids Asked

E~~!~:ie·~U:~irewn about Reform

pomeray
rutland

By un:ted ' Preu IJIIet'lllollaul
· .MEDIA, PA. - TIIJo.! Pw:nY, blonde, teenage motller
· cried as .the lhree judg~ found her guilty ol first degree murder
ThW'sday night. Now she m\WI walt several days for a aentence,
which could be death, in the electric chair.
.
Mrs. Marily;n Dobrol~nski, 19, Toledo, Ohio, had admitted
!hooting Delaware state troopers David Yarrington, 24, and
Ronald Carey, .Z!l, last Jan. 5, but ber attorney, David S. J .
Brooks, hoped for a voluntary manslaughter verdict. ·

Reed H. Eynon, 83, Racine,
Rt. 1, died ThiU'sday night 111
Holzer Medical Center.
He was preceded in death by
his parents, Willia!ll and Sarah
Decker Eynon. His wife,
Emma EyiiOH, died in March,
. 1971,
Mr. Eynon is survived by two
sons, Bernard JiJynon, Belfast,
Maine; E;mil Eynon, Ractn~
· RD; three\ daughters, :~.
· Robert (Wilma) Reiber,
Racine RD; Mrs. Carrol ·
(W""da) Neigler ,- Syracuse; ·
Mrs. Ivan Waston, Sterling
Heights, Mich.; one sister,
Gladys Croy, Chester, 11
'1
grandchildren and seven greatTIIISPicrURE of days long, long ago was provided by Mrs. Kenneth Welsh, Po~eroy Rt.
grandchildren.
·4.
The
class is believed to have been one at the Bowers School on Gibson Ridge near
Funeral services will be held
Harrisonville and the teacher In the pictW'e is Mary Welsh. However, no other identities are
Sunday at I p.m. at Ewing
. Anyone having identification may call Mrs. Welsh at 698-3719.
,known
Chapel. Burial will be in Sand
Hill Cemetery, Long Bottom.
Friends may call at the funeral
home any time.

MEIGS TtfEATRE

•

•

·'"·

president, Landmark, Inc.; Harland Martin, Emerson
Evans, and Dwight Oberschlake, president of Landmark.
Other former owners of Evans Packing Co. are left to right,
J. Tim Evans, Morris Haskins, C. H. McKenzie and Merrill
Evans.

New Attractions Feature
1972 Meigs County Fair
ROCK SPRINGS - Big name en·
tertainment, several new attractions,
increased premiums and free grandstand
events are slated for the 1972 edition of the
Meigs Cowtty Fair, to be held Aug. 15-19.
On AWl:. 17, Thursday, the grandstand
lliPIN will inclu4le Kenny ~. CoWltry
and Western recording personality, tne
Flowers Ftunlly, making Its second ap·
pearance at the local fair, and Zeke and
JIUi, a comedy. vocal duo from The Grand
Ole Opry.
The Thursday evening performances
will climax a day of quarter horse racing,
pony races, flower shows, and dairy cattle
judging.
The grandstand event on Saturday will
be the Blue Ridge ~let of the West
Virginia Jamboree. The will be featured
on Gospel, Country an Western numbers

as well as comedy and novelty nwnbers.
An addition to the fair on Wednesday,
Aug . 16, will be an appearance by the All·
Ohio Boys Band. The band will be accompanied by Miss Ohio Slate Fair, Mios
Con nie Lecc. Three hundred boys make up
the !&gt;4nd wh\ch . tolu's throughout ·the
swnmer.
An increased purse is expected to
entice more entries in the Aug . 19 quarterhorse running races and an additional
class has been added to the pony pulling
contest. Kiddies day has been set for
Wednesday, Aug. 16, until 4 p.m. when
rides on the midway will be half price .
The Meigs County Agricultural
Society, which stages the annual fair, also
this year is instituting a program to attract
the elderly to the fair. Senior Citizens Day
will be observed on ThW'sday when all

persons in the county over 6{) will be ad·
milled for half price. A tent is being
provided where these persons may rest or
display their hobby or craft items.
The society's board is expecting a
larger exhibit of livestock resulting from a
decision to increase premiums for the
winners.
,
A chain ~w cutting contest has been
added to the lineup and·will be held on the
final day, Aug. 19, al'll a.m. Three classes
will be included with prizes to be awarded
to the top three winners in each class. The
prizes ar~ being provided by Bill McDaniel
of the Pomeroy Home and Auto Store.
Rules governing the new contest have
been adopted from the National Paul
Bunyan Contest but the local winner has
not been scheduled for any further competition beyond the local fair.

w;:z·ll
Swollen Ohio River JIJ' ~

Crest Below Flood ·Stage
EUREKA - According to the Hwt·
Ungton Weather BW'eau, the Ohio River Is
expected to crest here at the Gallipolis
Lbcks and Dam at 4 p.m. Monday at 40.5
feet.
• It Is expected to crest In Point
Pleasant the 98llle evening at ,36.5 feet.
This is three and one half feet below the 40.
foot flood stage at Point Pleasant.
Pomeroy Is expected to have 43 feet before
Monday's crest.
Chickamauga Creek flooded the
Gallipolis Swimming Pool Saturday,

Four Directors To
Be Named July 10
' GALLIPOLIS - Election of loW'
directors will highlight the annual meeting
ol the Gallla County Rural Water
Alsociation slated Tuesday, July 10, at the
Rodney Conu:nwtily Hall . All r_W'al water
subscribers are eligible to attend.
Directors whose terms expire are
Merrill McCormick, Robert Sprlegei ,
Dave McCoy and Walter Neal.
• A nominating corrunittee composed of
-~ulah Mitchell, Richard Cremeens and
Kenneth Haner has been selected to
provide a list of interested. nominees.
Gueat speaker will .be a representative
from the Farmers' Home Administration.

.

Believe Garage Fire,

Is SEt I&gt;eLUlerately
GAL!;IPOL!S - Damage was
11Umated at $100 in a 'fire which was
llelleved to• have ~ .deliverately set
Friday night near a garage and workshop
at .the rear of the home of Mrs. Holll•
MCCormick , 107 Second Ave.
Fire Chief James A. Noi-thup said the
)llue wu c;onlalned In old lwnber and
4iltrllat the rear of the garqe. It could
hive been a much bigger fire Iince the
..... houled $2,0011 WGrtb of power toola,
llllDMli'OUI ~ !lema and a 111111

l'ontlac.

forcing removal of all pool pumps. The
pool will be closed at least WJtil Tuesday.
All area swimming pools have been closed
since Tuesday as a result of the cold
_weather and rainy conditions.
The river was rising SaiW'day at the
rate of three tenths foot per hoW' as a
result of heavy' rains in the PlllszW'gh,
Pa., area.
.
A spokesman at the Gallipolis Loclts
and Dam ~id the river was at 32.6 feet
early SaiW'day afternoon.
The water is expected to begin falling
after reaching a crest of 43 feet Monday in
Pomeroy. This is 3.5 feet below flood stage.
At the corner of East Main and Sycamore
St., water;_ comes onto the street at 46.5
feet.
There has been some concern in Point
Pleasant about the Ohio River rising over
the floodwall at Sixth Street, due to
demolition of the old Sliver Bridge ramp.
Robert Fowler, floodwall-superintendent,
said Saturday he and U. S. Corps of
Engineers.personnel along with officials of

Dravo Corporation held a conference
Friday to discuss the situation . If the need
arises, sand bags will be placed at the
opening he said.
The National Weather Service Friday
issued the following forecasl.s for river
crest.&lt;; :
Ohio River: Will crest at ;5 feet at
Wheeling at 10 p.m., Saturday, flood stage
36 feet; at 34.5 feet at Parkersburg at 10
p.m. Sunday, flood stage 36 feet; at 34 feet
at Point Pleasant at 10 a.m. Monday, flood
stage 40 feet; at 40 feet at Huntington at 7
p.m. Monday, flood stage 50 feet.
Monongahela River : Was to crest at 13
feet at Morgantown at I a.m. Saturday,
flood stage 22 feet.
Tygart River: Was to crestall6feetat
(Continued on Page 21

•

Man Bound To Jill')
· Under $3,000 Bond
'

POMEROY - Daniel Michael
Salvani, Cleveland, was bowtd to the
grand jW'y under $3,000 bond after en·
tering a plea of innocent in the Melga
County CoW'! Friday on charge~ ol
possession and possetiSion for sale of
cocaine.
. The case of Sandra See, 21, Mid·
dleport, charged with vehicular homicide
in the death .of Shirley Hood, 29, Muon,
dW'ing the Regatta weekend parade
recently, was . continued for one week
pending the appointment of counsel for
· Mr Se
·

s. e.

TO MEI.T nJESDAY
POMEROY ~ The Meigs Cowtty
Alcoholllm and Drug Abule Conunlttee
will meet 81 7:30p.m. Tuesday at the St.
Paul Lutheran Church in Pomeroy. The
publl£ Is invited,

MEIGS
PIONEER
HOUSE

cheon hosted by Landmark.
Landmark, Inc., manufactures and
The Evans Packing Company, con- distribotes a complete line of livestock
structed in 1937 on a 32-4tcre site on feeds, seed, h!rtilizer, petroleum product.&lt;;
O!illicothe Rd. in the Old French City. In and related farm supplies. II also market.&lt;;
1971, the company sales exceeded $7 grain, pork, poultry and eggs. Landmark's
million . Evans Packing has eight ,1971 volume exceeded $156 million .
refrigerated delivery trucks which - Harland Martin, chainnan of the
distribute French City meat products over board, said the Evans group sold its plant
a 90 mile radius in Southeastern Ohio and to Landmark because it believes in SEO
parts of West Virginia.
Ohio and Evans Products. "We will sup·
It was formerly owned and operated port it in any way possible to make the
by J. Tim Evans, Emerson Evans, Morris purchase profitable for them," he said.
Haskins, C. H. McKenzie, Harland Marlin
Kenneth N. Probasco, executive vice
and Merrill Evans.
president of Landmark, said he is hopeful
the new ownership can maintain the
reputation that the Evans family has
enjoyed in the past . Fred McLaughlin, vice
president of feed and food divisions for
Landmark, said there will be no challl(e in
the company. Evans Packing Co. will
be operated as a separate, who!lyo()wned
subsidiary of Landmark. J. Tim Evans
will continue as manager of the Evono
Packing Company and no change is anticipated In personnel, products
manufactured or customers served.
Attending
Friday's luncheon
recognizing the purchase were Dr. Alphus
D. Christensen, president of the Gallipolis
Chamber of Commerce; Joe Stewart,
county commissioner; D. Kenneth
Morgan, Gallipolis City Manager; Bryson
R. Carter. Gallia County Agriculture
(Continued on Page 2)

Scholarship ·
Winners Are
Announced
MRS. ANNA Wheeler, left, president of the Women's Auxiliary of Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Friday afternoon presented Miss Connie Grueser with the
auxiliary's $500 scholarship. With them is Donald Diener, administrator of
Veterans Memorial Hospital .

Miss Grueser Wins
$500 Scholarship
POMEROY - Miss Connie Grueser,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David E.
Grueser, Rock Springs, and a 1972
graduate of Meigs High School, has been
named to receive the a1ual scholarship of
the Women 's Auxiliary of Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Miss Grueser, who will begin her work
at the Holzer Hospital School of Nursing in
the fall ; received a $500 scholarship. This
will include $200 for her first year of
studies and $150 for the second and third

years.

_..

· At Meigs High School, Miss Grueser

was a member of the National Honor
Society and she was a member of the pep,
dance, symphonic and marching bands,
playing a trumpet. She took part in state
music competition . She was a member of
the Meigs Chorale. Miss Grueser has been
a Candystriper at Ve,terans Memorial
Hospital for two years and five months and
is a past vice president of the group. She
attends the Rock Springs Methodist
Church.
Presenting the scholarship to Miss
Grueser Friday was Mrs. Anna Wheeler,
auxiliary president.

Gallia CAP Members
In First Jet Flight
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Squadron 1207 of the Civil Air Patrol,
enjoyed Its first flight in an Air Force Jet
during an all day tour of Lockbourne Air
Force Baae Thursday.
Air Force Reservist , Robert A.
Wilkey, a civilian employee of the base
chauffeured the unit on a personally
guided tour of the base. Lockbourne is a
pert of the Strategic Air Corrunand and is
prepared at all ttmes to serve and protect
lhe citizens of the United States. The base
is a small city within itself, having a 16
lane bowling alley, an 18 hole golf course
with club facilities and a theater with a
seating capacity of 1,000 persons.
MoSgt. Tom Clwn, Tech. Sgt. Ron
Dillon, and Sgt. Richard Sparks were a few
of the guides making the lour a memorable
occasion. The CAP members and guest.s
were guided through the Aircraft Main·

I&gt;r. Holzer I&gt;iscusses
Recent Hospital Move

MUSEUM NAMED. - 'l1le new
Meigs County mllleWII has t.en. pt.
ficlally named "Melga Pioneer HoUle."
Mrs. Annie Chapman, Pomeroy, active
member of the Meiga CoWJty Plonw
and Historical Society, holds the
colonial type sign which will be uaeclln
front of the new mUJeum which Ia the
fonner home of £11:. and Mra. Ra7
Heaton on Pomeroy'1 Butternut Ave.

I'

MIDDLEPORT- Dr. Charles Holzer,
Ga!Upolla, dlscuased the recent move from
the old hoepltalto the new Holzer Medical
Center during Friday night's meeting of
the Middleport • Pomeroy Rotary Club at
Heath Uni~ Methodist Church in Middleport.
•
Dr. Holzer was introduced by JoHn
Wlll, pnlll'llll chairman. Roses for the
tablel were provided by Will. Guests for
the dinner meeting were l.A!O Moasnian,
Galltpolla; Ray Pickens and Fred Alh,
who were aueata of Dr. R. R. Pickens.

tenance Hangar and were shown the
complex! ties of a jet engine and how each
aircraft is designed primarily for the
safety of the pilot. The group viewed the
ammunition dump, the crash station for
aircraft emergencies and the area U8ed for
wtderground !raining where teams of
military personnel spend seven days (24
hoW's daily) in this underground station.
Teams rotate -.very seven days.
After a delicious lunch in the enlisted
• (Continued on Page 2)

Schedule Announced
For Water Inspector
POMEROY - Charles (Chuck)
Bartels, ·Meigs County's water inspector ,
will be working in OUve Township dW'in~ i
lhe remainder of June an~ for about the ~
first half of July.
In April; Bartels made 142 visits
laking 64 water 98lllples. Of the 64, 40
found to be safe and 24, unsafe. In May, he
,made 129 vlsil.s collecting 71 samples with
45 found sal~ and 25 unsafe.
• During the latter half of August,
Bartels will be working In. Lebanon
Township where he expects alS()' fo be
working during August.
Anyone can have the free water check
by calling the Meigs Couaty Health
Department, 1192-3723. Reconimendatlona
will be made on how water 11lPPUea can be
made safe for use If a check dllcl-lhat
lfle usors supply is wtsafe.
·

were

. ..,

•

POMEROY - Deborah LaValley,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard
LaValley, Dorcas, and Andrea M.
DewhW'st, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Dewhurst of Rutland, have been
selected to receive the annual scholarships
of the Meigs County Tuberculosis and
Health Association .
Miss LaValley, a 1972 graduate of
Southern High School at Racine, was a
member of the National Honor Society and
a member of the forming corrunittee for
the stude"t council. She was homecoming
queen, FFA sweetheart, and an attendant
at both the Christmas dance and the Beaux
Arts ball. She was listed in Merit's Who's
Who Among American High School
studenl.s and was an attendant to the
alumni queen. She was a CandystriP,er at
Veterans Memorial Hospital for two years.
Miss· LaValley will enter the Holzer
Hospital School of NW'sing in the fail.
Miss DewhW'st was a member of the
National Honor Society of_Meigs High
School where she graduated this spring.
She was a member of the newspaper staff,
the Future Nurses Club, lhe French and
Latin Clubs, Pep Club, the Meigs High
chorale.
She was a Candystriper at Veterans
Memorial Hospital lor two y,ears. She lias
served as president of the youth group of
the Hysell Run Free Methodist Church of
which she is a member. She will enter
nurse's training at the East Liverpool City
Hospital In the fall.
Both scholarships are $250.

Bloodmobile Visits
GaiHa On Jwte ·29
GALLIPOLIS - Gallla County Blood
Donor Day Is scheduled Thursday, June
29, when lhe Red Cross Bloodmobile will
visit Grace United Methodist O!urch in
Galllpolis from 12 noon wttil 6 p.m.
"Collection of blood Is lruly a community responsibiUty," said Mrs. Thelma
Shaver, blood chairman for the Gallia
County Chapter, American Red cross.
"WIIh medical research wtlts finding new
uses for blood and derivatives and with
accidents continuing to take their toll of
blood reserve, the supply must constantly
be replenished," she added.
"Sporadic individual donations are not ·
sumclent.lt has been found that only when
a commWJity makes an organized and
regular effort are suctessful results
achieved. ·
"Any one in goOd health weighing mor~ ' ·
than 115 powtda, between lhe ages of 18
and 1161sellglble to be a.blood donor.
"Thoee who give this U!e saving fluid
through the Red Cross blood program not
only assure community blood supply, but
will obtain Important blood coverage for
themaelvea and immediate flllllly for one
year lrtJln the time of donation.
"!I II' hoped lltat many Gallla Cowl·
Ilana lliU help In Thurlday'a cCIIIlllllllity
effort," Mrl. Sbavar concluded.

f

I

•

�_ 3 - TheSundayTimesSentinel, June25, 1972

2- Tbe SUnday Times SePUnel, June 25, 1972

·

,.

. Education

-=:r~:a;~~~r:~~~
and llllly eventually be offered

Rio Collene
e . To. Offer Two
·Early· ·Childho_o_d Cours.es
.·
RIOGMNUI!: - Rio Grande
College will offer- two courses
· in early childhood education
· this summer that will enable
elementary school teachers to
receive an additional certilication by the Ohio Departmenl of Education for the
primary grades, kindergarten
_through third grade.
The. two courses, the first
offered in early childhood
education by Rio Grande
College, will be offered during
the second session of Summer
'72, July 16 through August 17.
The twocourses may be taken
at the same time.
- According to Dr. Herman L.
Koby, vice president for

·
f
academic affairs at the
college~ the early childhood
education program will look at
the physical, social and mental
characteristics of 4 to 6 year
olds ,' and will emphasize
working with the 4 to 6 year
olds in an educational setting.
Dr . Koby said there is
currently growing interest in
early childhood education; and
a great deal of work Is now
bein~ done in the area.
. Teachers already certified in
elementary education, Dr.
Koby said, can use the two
courses to receive a primary
grades certification . The
normal elementary certification includes grades 1

Fourth Grant

Is Annollllced
LANDMARK, Inc., assumed full control of the Evans Packing Co., in Gallipolis Friday. Aerial photo shows the
plant, located on Chillicothe Rd.

Transfer•. .

(Continued from Page 1)
Agent; Wayne Neal, Jackson Production
Credit Association; Dale Rothgeb, Jr.,
Gallipolis Daily Tribune ; Robert Wingett,
Pllint Pleasant Register ; Richard Owen,
Pllmeroy Daily Sentinel; Edward Chapman, Jackson Sun.. Journal ; Jo Counts,
.Aibens Messenger, and Dick Thomas,
WJEH. Landmark personnel present were
DwightOberschlake, president; Golden R.
Qlnaday, board member; Kenneth N.
Probasco, executive vice president; Fred
M~Laughlln, vice president, feed and food
divisions; John M. Moore, vice president,
treasurer; Howard Runyeon, ·vice
president, controller; George Morrison,
attorney, Landmark; Jack Carsey,
manager, Meigs Landmark; Kenneth
Brown, Manager, Jackson Landmark ;
Delbert Kasler, manager, Athens Landmark; · William Farley, security
representative; William ~k , security
representative ; Harold .Martin, public
relations; Bob Schmidt, manager, fOOd
distribution and Joe Wollam, area feed
representative.
Also present were the former owners
and their attorney, Warren F. Sheets.

Swollen.

• •
(Continued from Page I)

' Belington at II p.m. Friday, flood stage 14
feet; at 20 feet at Philippi at 10 p.m.
Friday, flood stage 17 feet.
Che,t River : Was to crest at 17.5 at
Parsons at 5 p.m. Friday, flood stage 11
feet.
Kanawha River : Was to crest at 19.5
feet at Charleston at t a.m. Saturday, flood
stage 30 feet.
. Potomac River : Was to crest at 28 feet
at Harpers Ferry at 6 p.m. Friday, flood
stage 18 feet; at 32 feet at Shepherdstown
at3 p.m. Saturday, flood stage 15 feet.
. IN ' SERIOUS CONDITION
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UP!)- David Hanley,
30, who rammed his 1971 Cadillac
Eldorado into the nose gear of an
American Airlines 7'tl jetliner in what may
have been a one-man attempt to stop a
hl.lacklng, was reported in serious con•
dillon Saturday following extensive
surgery.

Pentagon Has New POW List
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The Pentagon
said Saturday it has received a new list of
24 Air Force and Navy airmen captured in
North Vietnam since November of 1970,
raising to 363 the number of U.S. servicemen Hanoi has identified through
unofficial channels as prisoners of war.
A Defense Department spokesman said
nine of the men had previously been listed
on Pentagon rolls as missing in action,
meaning their fate was unknown. The
other 15 already had been identified by
U.S. defense officials as POWs.
The new list was given to the U.S. embassy in Paris late Wednesday by Walter
Sohier, an attorney In Paris who was
ac,ting for Sen. EdWard M. Kennedy, DMass. The Pentagon made the list public in
response to questions from reporters.
Prior to tbe latest list the North Vietnamese had provided the names of J$9
Americans they were ~!ding prisoqer and
of 20 others who died in captivity .
The Pentagon's own latest' figures show
393 Americans captured in North Vietnam
and 431 -including ·the nine on the new
Hanoi list-missing in action. Throughout
Southeast Asia the latest totals, published
Thursday, show 500 captured and 1,109
missing.
As is customary for POWs or missing
servicemen, the Pentagon did not make
public their home towns or dates of capture. It did, however, release the names of
the men and their previous status :
They were :
.
Air Force - 1. Capt. William Raymond
Bean Jr., previously missing in action
(MIA) ; 2. Capt. William Glenn Byrns,
previously MIA ; 3. Cllpt. James Dickinson
Cutter, already known as POW ; 4. Maj.
Gale Albert Despiegler, already known
POW ; 5. Maj. Edward K. Elias, previously
MIA; 6. Capt. Kenneth James Frasier ,
already known POW; 7. 1st Lt. Ralph
William Galati, already known POW;
8. Capt. Lynn Ellis Guenther, already
.known POW; 9. Maj . Leland Louis
Hildebrand already known POW; 10. Capt.
Edward A. Hawley, already known POW;
11. Maj . Kenneth Richard Johnson ,

already known POW; 12. Maj. James
Phillip Padgett, previously MIA ; 13. Capt.
William Ralph Schwertfeger, already
known POW; 14. Maj. William Hanson
Talley Jr., previously MIA ; 15. 1st Lt.
Samuel Richard Vaughan, already known
POW; 16. 1st Lt. Kenneth Roth Wells,
already known POW ;
Navy - 1. Lt. Carol Robert Beeler,
previously MIA; 2. Lt. Jg. Norris Alphonso
Charles, already known POW; 3. Lt.
Cmdr. David W. Hoffman, already known
POW; 4. Lt . Jg. James Eugene Kernan,
already known POW; 5. Lt. Thomas
Bennett Latendresse, already known
POW ; 6. Lt. Albert Rick Molinare,
previously MIA; 7. Lt. Aubrey Allen
Nichols, previously MIA ; 8. Lt. Stephen
Anthony Rudloff, previously 1\IIA.

Gallia CAP...

,-------------------·
~4'''-

Pubt · ~ n .n o

'f

~( &lt; 0&lt; J

~··• ~ "a~ t

P'· 'l ~

"' ~ "~'

Large Banks Raise
In
R
terest' ales

' £', 't &gt;~ F l

P ~nw• o1

~ AIL

(Continued from Page 1)
men 's mess ·hall, the entire group was
escorted to the runway and placed in a C123 turho jet, appropriately nicknamed
"The Provider." Adverse weather conditions limited the time spent in the air
because of a low ceiling with poor
visibility. The aircraft flew at 1,500 feet.
Secon~ Lt. Hamlin C. King and Commander Ray Friend furnished transportation for CAP Cadets David Bush, '
Richard Barsotti , Patty Fife, Randy
Breech, Ray Weiher, Keith Cooper, David
Stollings, Mike Dayton , Mark Sims, and
Randy Friend. W.(J Nadine Friend and W0 Rene Broyles with guests, Jimmy King
and Noah Friend, accompanied the group.
The local unit will meet Monday evening at 7 in the Gallia County
Courthouse. Group 12Commander captain
Burdell Hoffm an and Cadet Major Mary
Smith will be guests and a film showing
several acti vities of the group's summer
encampment at the Scioto Trails Forest
will be viewed. Parents of the Cadets are
invited to attend this meeting so that they
might acquaint themselves of the fun ctions of the Civil Air Patrol.

~·T~::::~=-~~Said,
offer the flexibility to ex-

through B.
Those currently working
toward elementary education
certification, he added, can
also utilize these courses. By
. taking the lwo courses and
doing part onll of the student
teaching experience in one of
lhe primary grades, a person
can receive both the primary
and the regular elementary
certifications.
In announcing the program,
Dr. Koby also announced the
fa culty appoiniment of Shirley
White to teach the early
childh.ood education courses.
Miss White, director of the
Snow White Nursery School,
previously taught in the Erie ;
Pa., School District, and in the
field of kindergarten education
at Clevela-nd State Universlty .
She received her bachelor's
in
elementary
deg ree
education from Villa Maria
College and her Master of
Education from Edinboro State
College. Miss White also
earned a master's degree in
ea~ly childhOOd education from
Boston's Wheelock College.
Dr. Koby said that, depending on th e interest and
delllllnd for the program, the
early childhood courses ,

~U!IM. IIIf'll ll N

m gn ll,. 11 h

I

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''""" "'D" "' • 1• $0

' '""''&lt;! Pr~.- ' " '~"'"' ' ~"• '

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MEIGS THEATRE

MASON
DRIVE-IN
.
.
'

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'•

...~:.

CARTOON

Sunday - Monday
and Tuesday

DUSDN
HOfiM.\N
"LIT{Lf 816 M4N"

PanaYioion•Toct·-·

~-

t'

PLUS

·

TONIGHT
MON . . TUES.

June 25-26-27
Doubl e Feature

LOVE MACHINE

Robert Ryan
Oyan Cannon

l&gt;~ lE ~

I hr G ~ •t· POI • I Tr O\il\t' n 0" '" ~ " " W•l t
V• r a • n ·~ . on• · ~• · IIJ \XI ' " mon tM 11.
I tnrn mon•n, ,.. :11&gt; ~ ,,r .. nrrt ~n1 , ,.,
1 I ll I " man•~• V l ~ f VI' riH)&lt;&gt;II\1 ' I 00
111~ O ~ •'Y ~'"''"~' on• ' -""' 11•110 , ~· •
I

--

bild ~ CllllllliiiiiiSI iua

(R)

PLUS
B. S. I LOVE YOU
Peter Kastner
Joanna
. . Cameron

( R)

~ubt.,n~&lt;l '"'' "'"

~- ------ - ----- - ----~

_
NEW YORK (UP!) - Some
of the nation's largest banks,
led by those that instituted a
"floating " rate adjusted
weekly, Friday raised their
prime interest rates to 5¥• pet.
First National City Bank
raised its rate from 5\1 pet.
while Irving Trust Co. increased its rate from 5 pel.
Recently these banks have
reviewed their rates each week
and adjusted them , if
necessary, depending on the
money market.
The prime rate Is what the
best corporations pay for
loans.
Also raising their rates to 5V..
pet. Friday were the Chemical
Bank, the Bank of New York
and the First Pennsylvania
Banking &amp; Trust Co.

5
BIG DAYS
Tuesday thru Saturday
June 27 thru July 1st

slated for June 23-25 in
Washington Court House, Ohio.
The location in the city will the
Miami Trace High School.
He stated that some 1,000
delegates will be attending to ·
further their development as
ministers, authorized to preach
the good news now in more
than 21M! lands. The three~ay
event will unfold on Friday
evening at 6:45 with a model
school of training, with con:
ISLETON, Calif. (UPI) - structive advisory comments
Conditions were described as by District Director Henry C.
"stable" Saturday in this DoDd- Brewer
from
World
ravaged delta river town as Headquarters, Brooklyn, N.. Y.
officials pondered their next
Sunday will feature the
moves on the long road toward public lecture by District
its restoration.
Supervisor Henry C. Brewer,
"Everything is stable and no speaker on the subject, "Are
new trouble spots have been You Marked For Survival?" to
reported, " the Sacramento which the public is invited
County sheriff's office without cost.
reported .
"This will warm us to our
Only scattered crews next stop this summer," he
remained' on duty in the vast continued, to the many 'Divine
flood area to keep an eye on Rulership' district assemblies
any possible new levee leaks
to be held in the United States
and protect the property of the and Canada beginning July 6 in
town 's 1,300 residents forced to · Pittsburgh, Pa. Further details
evacuate in the face of rising of District Conventions will be
DOOdwaters.
forthcomin g.
A state official estimated it
would be two to six months
before people could return to
their homes.
The town was flooded
Thursday . night when an ~ · , THIEF SOUGHT
emergency levee which had
LORAIN, Ohlo (UP! )
been hastily built, collapsed. Police and FBI agents today
The ctials was touched oft' sought a man in his · ~ who
early Wedneaday when a main escaped with an Wldetennined
levee on the San Joaquin River amount of money Friday from
collapsed, Dooding Andrus and the First Federal Savings and
Brlllllllt J'Jianda.
.Loan office.
·

Conditions

Remain)Stable

•

CHICKEN _
Baked Beans • Cole Slaw • Roll
•

79f;

NO SUBSTITUTES

DRIVE INN

M"lSSlng
• M,an
PT . PLE ASANT - A
miss ing 90-yea r-o ld . man ,
Orville Martin, was fo un d by a
neighbor boy nea r his home
Friday and is reported today to
be in ·•good condition" at
Holzer Medical Center where
he was admi tted.
·Mr. Martin appa rently
wand ered fr om his home
Friday abuut 6 a. m. an d wh en
he fai led to return a report of
missing was sent out an d a
sea rch party was organ ized
ncar the Mason - Putnam
MAMED OU':fSTANDING
Coun ty line in a secti on ar~ und AIRMAN-U .S. Air Force
Pliny .
·
Sergeant Forrest D. Bachtel,
A youn g lad by the name of son of Mrs. Juanita Bachtel,
Frank Wears found Mr . Marli n 315S. Fourth Sl., Middleport,
approxi mately 50. yards fr om has been named Outstanding
his home down1 over an em·
Fi rst Term Airman in his
banknwnl. He was removed to
unit at Luke AFB, Ariz.
Holzer in a Crow-Hussell S.f rgcanl Bac htel, an
ambulance at 3: tOp. m.
aeros pa ce control and
warnin g operator , was
selected lor his exemplary
MAN ARRESTED
conduct and duty perPOMEROV - Robert L. formance. He serves with a
McGra il, 40, Zanesville, has unit of th e Aerospace
been arres ted by the depar t- Defense Command whi ch
ment of Sheriff Robert Har, protects the U. S. against
lenbach on a charge of taking hostile aircraft and missiles.
and using the credit card of Th e se rgeant, a 1963
M~. Pearl Reyn olds, Mid- graduate of Middleport Higll
dleport, without consent. Bond School, received a B.A.
has bee n set at $500.
degree in speech in 1967 from
Mount Union College,
Dwight D. Eisenhower left Alllance. His wife, Carol, is
offi ce at lhe age of 70 , the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
makin g hi m the olde st presi- Paul A. Scolt of 439 Lincoln
dent in U.S. history.
Sl., Middleport.

HUNTINGTON - Vercoe &amp; of American Business Club and
Com pany, Inc. , members of _. the Guyan Golf and Country
the New York Stock Exchange, Club.
Inc., Saturday announced the
He is also a member of tlle
appointment of Samuel M. Blue Lodge of Pennsylvania,
Andrews as manager of the Free and Acce pted Masons,
Huntington Area Branch Office and is a member of the An cient
of lhe company.
I
Order of the Mystic Shrine,
Mr. Andrews and his wife ; Syria Temple, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Jerry, res ide at 1406 Fifth He was a former pilot and
Street Rd., and have been instructor' and is now inresidents of Huntington, W. terested in golf.
Va. , for lhe pa~t 16 years.
Mr. Andrews brings with him
He is a member of the to Vercoe &amp; Company' Inc.,
Down town Kinw anis Club, over 13 years experience in the
Huntington Area Chamber of investment
fi eld,
wi th
Comm er ce , Hu nt i ngton management experience in the
•
Chapter, National Association steel industry In West Virginia
and in p·ttsb gh
Vercoe'&amp; Cur · 1 .
·
ompany nc., rs a
member firm of the New York •
Stock Exchange, Inc., affiliate
member of the American Stock
Exchange,· Inc., with wife
service to other major markets
throughout the United States.
They are celebrating their 50th
anniversary as a lull service
organization in the investment
Babies- childreft -. adults- groups --,. 1 Spo,ctoif.
business.
of each person singly only 88¢, plu s 50¢ film
The home office is located in
Groups $1.00 per person, plus one 50¢ film 1fee.
n
Columbus, Ohio.
Select from finishfd pictures in rad iant block
Satisfy~
DRIVER KILLED
white and living color .
TIFFIN , Ohio ( UPI)
Bonus quality ''Guaranteed Satisfaction ."
William Lonsway, 25, Tiffin,
was killed Saturday when his
• Limit - one Special per child .
Split or Whole
car collided with a train
$ Fut deliY~ry - courteous se rvice .
stopped at a crossing on U. S.
224, two miles south of here.

8"x10"

SAVE

SAVE

·eo ·so

On the K i ~ Sire S3crot:ledic
tmp• rla l (l ·j:icct- N tscm bl ro)

'259.90

Nltlo nally ad ~cr h $cd

o.~ l

SJ 19.90

On l ht- Q ~ec n Size Snc ropcdic
lmpctli'!l {2· plccc cn&amp;t-mbla)

$40
'119.90

Bemco·s once-a-year Sacropedlc Imperial ~attress sale
Is on right now. And that means spec ial savings on the
manress of your dreams.
Bemco makes the Sacrop&amp;diC Imperial With fi rm Umlu scd •
Conslrl.ICtion lor eJCtra support. So you and your back both ·
wake up refreshed.

. . . . . . :. . .! 29~~

~::~~=:Nr:~~~~~

Eve
ng Is
Guaranteed
· To
Or Money Back

HOURS

ol h mco Qvir!orlm.la- m"1~~"

Thto Wo1/d'1 C:~t lell .llftplllf 'iiiJ~

/

Since 1859

*Plus 50.¢
Film Fee

*
*

N~~llnJ IIy Ad~ IU\IUid 011S159.90

.l.ldM

*

only 88c

·

On tho Full etr Twi n Sin S a cr op~ d lc
lmpcr i:ll i 2-pltleo en semble}

'169.90

N,1 11ona1 ir ad .. rlisedat 5219.90

living Color
Portrait

SAVE

.

Tues. • Wed•• Thur. &amp; Sal
9:30 to 1 ~ • lPM to 4:30
Lunch 1 to 2

Friday 9:30 to 7:00 PM

'

FRYERS
. !b. 2· 9~

·---------·
.

Ground Beef
3 lbs. or more

' state
Both were arrested by
police.. Jerry Robert B)-us, 51,
Route I, Point Pleasant, was
taken into custody by ihe
sheriff's department and is to
be held 10 days in jail on orders
of Judge James Lee Thompson .

In your own backyard
· thereare:
57 stale parks ,
'461 sta te owned ca bins
and lodge fac ili ties
with 334 renta l rooms,
7839 state par k c amps ites and
thousa nds of other publ ic and
privately-owned c ampsites .
Pre historic Indian mounds,
143 publ icly-owned lake6,
Swiss cheese-a pple butlerb ratwu rst- melon-pu mp kin
a nd 24 other fe stivals ,
175 museums,
Art shows,
Forests-valleys- rivers-cavescascad es a nd grottoes,
200 cove red bridg es,
Fle a markets,
Bikeways,
County a nd Ohio Sta te fairs ,
Hunting a nd fishing,
Music festivals,
Public gardens,
Am usement parks . . .

being performed on Owl Hollow Road by crews from the
Mason County Division of the West Virginia Department of
Highways.

,13 Fined, Six Forfeit

Found Safe

get a beautiful ·

Stretch out on a Sacropedic Imperial mattress set now.
And enjo~ heallhy savings on a hea lthy night's rest.

~~e,

CLEANING UP -.Wor~en are weed cutting to clea n up
along West Virginia highways. Weed.cutting, a routine job, Is

Of V&amp;C, Inc., Office

SNACK BOXO

.

......... .

..,,.

.,I

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;Thursday

2 PIECES COL SANDERS

..

Andrews Manager

Congregation Is Given Invitation
MIDDLEPORT - Larry D.
Carnahan, presiding minister
of the Middleport congregation
of Jehovah 's Witnesses
Saturday announced that the
local witnesses have been
invited to attend a seminar

PT. PLEASANT - Donald
Bruce Spires, 41, Cheshire, was
arrested by state police on a
DW! charge and was one of
three booked at lhe local jail
since Friday.
Rodger Gail Wamsley, 24,
f irst Street, Poin t Pleasant,
was charged with intoxicati on .

County. She was a member of
Christ United Methodist
Church.
Funeral services will be held ·
I p. m. Tuesday at the WaughHalley-Wood Funeral Home
with Rev . Alfred Holley officiating. Burial will be in
Mow1d Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral horne between 2-4 and
7-9 p. m. on Monday . .

PT. PLEASANT - Funeral
services for Iva Jean "Jeanie"
Bush, d;lughter,of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Bush ~r . oF' Southside
will beheld at 2p. m. Sunday in
the Wyoma Pentecostal
Church at GalHpo[is Ferry with
the Rev. Tommy Kinnaird and
the Rev. O'Dell Bush officiating . Burial will follow in
· the church cemetery .
The 12 year old child died
Thursday evening as the result W. E. Robbins
•of an accidental shooting at her
PT. PLEASANT - Wirt E.
home.
Robbins, 77, 405 First Street,
Friends are being received died Saturday morn ing in
· at lhe Wilcoxen Funeral Home. Pleasan t Valley Hospital after
a lengthy illness.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p. m. Tuesday in Stevens
R. V. Hill
Funeral Home wi th burial in
POMEROY - Raymond V. Henderson Cemetery .
Hill, 60, Fort Myers, Fla .,
He was a retired carpenter
for.merly of Pomeroy, died and was a member of Local
Fnday afternoon ~t the Lee · Carpenters Union No. 1159, Pi.
Memonal Hospitalm Flonda. Pleasant. He was born in
He IS survived by his wife, Henderson November 10 1894
the former Lucille Owens, also a son of the late Earl and' Mar;
a former resident of Pomeroy ; Walker Robbins.
a son, George Raymond of
Survivors include his wife
Jacksonville, Fla .; a sister, Lillian Ord Robbins; a son:
Mrs. Aaron Zahl and a brother, An gus
Robbin s
Poi nt
Allen Hill, both of Pomeroy. Pleasant; a daughter, Mrs.
. Funeral arrangements are Okla Hemp oJ Carleret, N. Y.;
Incomplete.
and a bro ther, Ra ymond
Robbin s of Hende rso n; a
sister,
Mrs. Frances_Clark of
.Bessie Harrison
Henderson; four grandchildren
GALLIPOLIS - Bess ie and five grea t-grandchildren .
The body is at the Stevens
Harrison, 75, of 4 Burkhart
Lane, died at 10:40 p. m. Fw1eral Home.
Friday al her home. She had
been in failing health about one
year and in serious condition John Strong
the past few days.
POM EROY
Mrs.
Mrs. Harrison was born Aug . Lawrence Chapman received
22, 1896, at Millstone, W. Va., word of the sudden death of her
daughter of the late Rea son brother-in-la w, John J. Strong
and Della Force Myers.
of Colwnbus.
She married Alva Harrison
His wife , the former Edith
on March 23, 1917, in Colum- Romine, and their daughter,
bus. He preceded her in death Dorothy and two children were
in 1965.
ill Hawaii on a vacation when
The followin g children he passed away . Mr. and Mrs.
Gordon Laurence Chapman attended
survive :
Mrs.
( Evelyn )Fisher, Mrs. Don the funera l which was held
(Norma
Jean )
Hem - Mon day wit h burial in
sworth and Mrs . Audrey Columbus.
Adkins, all of Gallipolis; one
; son preceded her in death.
f Seven'grandchildren and two
;great-grandchildren survive.
SUFFERS STROKE
i The following brothers and
GALLIPOLIS
- Earl Willis,
:.tsters survive : Vernon Myers,
resident
of this area,
a
former
:Gallipolls; Mrs. Mary Noble,
i£W9n ; Eddie !IIY.~rs, Cocoa, is hospita lized in Bra denton,
ll"'ii-j Ml'a. Myrtle Dildge, Flo., following a stroke. Mr.
Marton . One brother and two Willis resides at 2606 Southern
sisters preceded her in death . Parkway Drive, Bradenton,
She spent all her life in Galli a Fla., 33505.

Tonight thru,Wedne.s day

Three Men Arr-ested

·Area Deaths !

Iva ].Bush

.periment with new ~ourses and
new approaches in a number of '
areas. He added that more
information on early childhood
education and other Sununer
'72 progral)lS, including the
Outdoor Education Workshop
scheduled for Augwst, can be
· obtained by contacting the
college. Tbe college number iS
(614) 245-5353.
'

fund a Staff Development
Program of six carefully
planned workshop experiences
for local stall members . .
Atotal of $8,610 will be spent
in a Public Relations Program
involving materials, consultant
service, and four workshops in
a comprehensive campaign
aimed al the business community.
The remaining $20,285 will
Tonight thru Tuesday
cover costs of administration
June 25-27
and planning for the .group,
THE FRENCH
maintenance of a headquarters
CONNECTION
unit, supplies, and a telephone
ITechnicolarl
~ene Hackman
network between the member
Fer nando Rey
libraries and the State Library .
" R"
•
Pomeroy Public. Library is a
ALSO CARTOONS
member of OVAL. Herbert
Wescoat Memorial Library in 1
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
McArthur is administrative :;;;;;;:;;;;~
agent for the eleven-county
district.

POMEROY - Jerry Grim,
director of Ohio ·Valley Area
Libraries, announced Saturday
the grant of its fourth project
by the State Library Board.
Funds of $84,985 frQJll Library
Services and Construction Act,
together with $93,206 already
being spent by the 12 member
libraries will enable OVAL to
promote
inter-librar y
cooperation and planning for
maximum utilization of
resources to serve the public.
A Collection Development
Program amounting to $145,797
will seek to supply books in
areas where they are most
needed and cataloging and
processing services where
these are most difficult. Each
library will receive a grant of
$1,000for the purchase of books
in the subject areas most often
requested on inter-library loan .
Additional grants will be made I .
Sl ':~IJ ,\ l
.:
in amounts based on local l Tl ~tt:S-SENTl~U .
l
book-buying history " and II l' ue1o111~11 ' '"" ~... ~d ~, ~ . tn• o ~ .o I
(h
1
I
population . Processing ser- I (,/I LLOPO U~ p:ot( III I II U r-l f
I !II (" " " :.., (, ~"·~O'•• '""" •lU I
" ~ b l ,~tO ~• ff, ~- •••- .a~ , ~ -, ,., , ~Q t o f~D I 1
vices will be provided for an I I•'•·•H
•v
.. q1 P. ,, 1 1 I
1
additional 18,000 volumes 1I c.~" D""', ., o~( . a ouJ•
Ill ( auc t ~ ~
ao . "~ "'"
0 . •Sli t I
purchased by the local II lPuat''
''"" ,.,,., , • •· ~ ~·~ " '""' ' "~ o o1opt
l lurd'' En l ~'""•l&gt; • &lt;~n&lt;ll • 4"" "' • '''" 9
I
01
Ql ..o Pa,o 0 11 «0
libraries this year.
I
~ . ,'.~ ~-~: ~"~,;, ~~:,~5~ :~:},'u~ '"'
Only $3,519 will be needed to II '" f"

1

'

'

r-------------------------

f6:l and 473, may

POM EROY - Thir tee n Kenneth D. Thomas, Athens,
defe ndan L• were fined and_)iix $150 and costs, three days 1.1
others forfeited bonds in Meigs c onf in e m e nt , li ce nse
County Court F'riday.
suspended for six months ,
Fined by Judge Frank W. driving while intoxicated; Jack
Porter were William M. D. Thompson, Haberstown ,
Skiver, New Boston; John E. Md ., $125 and costs, five days
McLaughlin , Pomeroy, Rl. 3, co n fin e m e nt , l i c e n se
and Mary Rockwell, Gallipolis, suspended in Ohio for six
$10 and costs each, speeding; mo nth s, driving wh ile inJames Paul Sellers, Syracuse, toxi cated; Wil liam Reeves ,
$5 and costs, no muffler ; Ray J Pomeroy, $10 and tosts, inNewell , Pomeroy·, $10 and toxication; Hal Borden , Bidcosts, left of center ; Paul L. well, $50 and costs, license
Norris, Chesterhille, $11.65 and sus pended fur 30 days,
costs. speeding; Clarence E. restric ted dri ving priv ileges ,
Fife, Pomeroy, and Richard reckless operation. Larry L.
Caruth ers, Mi ddl epor t, $150 Bail , Mason, IO days probation,
and cos ts each. three days speeding; Mark Laudermiit ,
c o nfin e m ent:_, li ce n s e Pomeroy, costs, 10 days
sus pended for six mont hs , confine ment, r eckl es s
res tricted driving privileges, operation and costs, 10 days
driving whil e '· intoxica ted ; co nfin ement , assault and
Patti VanMatre, Syracuse, $15 ba ttery.
~--- - - ----- ------- ------------,
an.d costs , $10 suspe nd ed,
Forfe iting bonds were Floyd I Traverand Tourism Section,P.0 . Box 1001, Columb us, Ohio 43216 I
fis hing without a license : W. Go uld, Shade, Rt. 1, $57.50, • Please send me inform al ion on Ohio's
1
Richard A. Bainey , Athens, $\0 no operat or s license, $27.50,
~-calendar of summer events _ state park camping areas
1
,- fes tivals 1972
_ stale park facilities
1
and c~sts, passin!t_on right; fa ilure to register ; Alfred H.
Pratt, New Milford, William s.
.hunti ng and lishi ng areas
___ stale park lodges and cabins 1
. Frey, Ir onton , and Jackie
· _bikeways
PTS I
French, Holmes Beach, Fla., Name
1
$27. 50 each, speeding; Wilbur Address
J
H. Ellis, Zaleski, $27.50, in1
toxication and $2.77.50, dri ving Cily.
Zip
I
while
intoxicated;
Charles
R.
1
GALLIPOLIS - John R.
Aeiker , Racine, $34.55, fishing
1
McGinness, 22, Pa triot Star without
a 'license .
·
Ano ther se ~v ~c e of vou r Ohio Department of Oe\lelopment,
1
Rt., was charged with DW!
John J . Gil ligan, Governor· Or. David C. Sweet , Director
1
following a traffic accident at
L---------------------------~
2:42 a. m. Saturday on Second
Ave. and Spruce St.
City police said McGinness
lost control of his car striking
an aut o driven by Daniel E.
Kn otts, 27, Gallipolis. Irma
Jean McNeal, 33, a passenger
in the Knotts ca r had minor
injuries. There was moderate
damage to hoth cars.
Donald W. Hp tley, 25,
Gallipolis, was c fi~rged with
failure to stop within the
assure d clea r distan ce
followi ng a mishap at 4:23 p.
m. on Eastern Ave. Holley's
car struck the rear end of an
aut o operated by Earlene
Sprangler, 22, Gallipolis. There
was minor damage to both
real~
cars . Oscar Cordell , 48,
Gallipolis, was cited to
Municipal Court for failing to
.
.
yield the right of way following
a mishap . on Olive St. and
Second Ave. Cordell pulled
(Compounded Quarterly) - - •
his car from a curb striking an
auto driven by Arthur Roush,
37. . of Mason. There was
moderate damage to both cars.
A hit-~;klp accident occurred
on Third Ave. at Kroger's
(Compounded Quarterly)
parking lot where an auto
owned by Thurman Denney of
Rt.l, Gallipolis, was struck by
·,
an kn
h'
. un own ve lC1e.

Don't go awayVacation in Ohio!

Save time, money and mileage.

rn

Charged
Accident

._. your money earns more lnlerlsll
• Where you hM the mmt Security - Bank Securilyf .
• Where your interest is Paid Evely 90 Oats!
•Where t1wt
Appreciate your Business!

REGULAR PASS BOOK
SAVINGS EARN

Golden Paubook Savings•

FOR ABETTER
JOB. SOONER GO TO BUSINESS
COLLEGE
ENROLL NOW FOR NEW
QUARTER BEGINS SEPT. 14
One and Two Year
Courses
Business
Ad ministration
Executive Secretarial
Jr. Accounting
Secretaria 1 •
General Office
All College Level Courses
Approved lor VA Benefits
Job Pllcement . Assistince
Approved by State BNrd of
School
&amp;
College
Registration.
Writa, visit or call 4%-4367
fer lrH c.atalog and ln.
lorm1tlon,

GALUPOUS
BUSIN.ESS OOI.l.EGE
36 Locust street
Gallil!lllll

Slate Reg, No. 71-02-0'·nB

and 90 Day Certificates
of Deposit* Eam---

12 MONTHS
CERTIFICATES OF
DEPOSIT• EARN-~
24 MONTHS
CERTIFICATES OF
DEPOSIT•EAR
• Minimum Initial DeposlfSl,QOO.OO or t/«e
'

'

~OhioValley Bank·
420 Thir~ Ave.
Gallipolis, Ollto
"the now buk thai appncial•.yaar ....._,
._ , f-~'-'*-""'

�_ 3 - TheSundayTimesSentinel, June25, 1972

2- Tbe SUnday Times SePUnel, June 25, 1972

·

,.

. Education

-=:r~:a;~~~r:~~~
and llllly eventually be offered

Rio Collene
e . To. Offer Two
·Early· ·Childho_o_d Cours.es
.·
RIOGMNUI!: - Rio Grande
College will offer- two courses
· in early childhood education
· this summer that will enable
elementary school teachers to
receive an additional certilication by the Ohio Departmenl of Education for the
primary grades, kindergarten
_through third grade.
The. two courses, the first
offered in early childhood
education by Rio Grande
College, will be offered during
the second session of Summer
'72, July 16 through August 17.
The twocourses may be taken
at the same time.
- According to Dr. Herman L.
Koby, vice president for

·
f
academic affairs at the
college~ the early childhood
education program will look at
the physical, social and mental
characteristics of 4 to 6 year
olds ,' and will emphasize
working with the 4 to 6 year
olds in an educational setting.
Dr . Koby said there is
currently growing interest in
early childhood education; and
a great deal of work Is now
bein~ done in the area.
. Teachers already certified in
elementary education, Dr.
Koby said, can use the two
courses to receive a primary
grades certification . The
normal elementary certification includes grades 1

Fourth Grant

Is Annollllced
LANDMARK, Inc., assumed full control of the Evans Packing Co., in Gallipolis Friday. Aerial photo shows the
plant, located on Chillicothe Rd.

Transfer•. .

(Continued from Page 1)
Agent; Wayne Neal, Jackson Production
Credit Association; Dale Rothgeb, Jr.,
Gallipolis Daily Tribune ; Robert Wingett,
Pllint Pleasant Register ; Richard Owen,
Pllmeroy Daily Sentinel; Edward Chapman, Jackson Sun.. Journal ; Jo Counts,
.Aibens Messenger, and Dick Thomas,
WJEH. Landmark personnel present were
DwightOberschlake, president; Golden R.
Qlnaday, board member; Kenneth N.
Probasco, executive vice president; Fred
M~Laughlln, vice president, feed and food
divisions; John M. Moore, vice president,
treasurer; Howard Runyeon, ·vice
president, controller; George Morrison,
attorney, Landmark; Jack Carsey,
manager, Meigs Landmark; Kenneth
Brown, Manager, Jackson Landmark ;
Delbert Kasler, manager, Athens Landmark; · William Farley, security
representative; William ~k , security
representative ; Harold .Martin, public
relations; Bob Schmidt, manager, fOOd
distribution and Joe Wollam, area feed
representative.
Also present were the former owners
and their attorney, Warren F. Sheets.

Swollen.

• •
(Continued from Page I)

' Belington at II p.m. Friday, flood stage 14
feet; at 20 feet at Philippi at 10 p.m.
Friday, flood stage 17 feet.
Che,t River : Was to crest at 17.5 at
Parsons at 5 p.m. Friday, flood stage 11
feet.
Kanawha River : Was to crest at 19.5
feet at Charleston at t a.m. Saturday, flood
stage 30 feet.
. Potomac River : Was to crest at 28 feet
at Harpers Ferry at 6 p.m. Friday, flood
stage 18 feet; at 32 feet at Shepherdstown
at3 p.m. Saturday, flood stage 15 feet.
. IN ' SERIOUS CONDITION
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UP!)- David Hanley,
30, who rammed his 1971 Cadillac
Eldorado into the nose gear of an
American Airlines 7'tl jetliner in what may
have been a one-man attempt to stop a
hl.lacklng, was reported in serious con•
dillon Saturday following extensive
surgery.

Pentagon Has New POW List
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The Pentagon
said Saturday it has received a new list of
24 Air Force and Navy airmen captured in
North Vietnam since November of 1970,
raising to 363 the number of U.S. servicemen Hanoi has identified through
unofficial channels as prisoners of war.
A Defense Department spokesman said
nine of the men had previously been listed
on Pentagon rolls as missing in action,
meaning their fate was unknown. The
other 15 already had been identified by
U.S. defense officials as POWs.
The new list was given to the U.S. embassy in Paris late Wednesday by Walter
Sohier, an attorney In Paris who was
ac,ting for Sen. EdWard M. Kennedy, DMass. The Pentagon made the list public in
response to questions from reporters.
Prior to tbe latest list the North Vietnamese had provided the names of J$9
Americans they were ~!ding prisoqer and
of 20 others who died in captivity .
The Pentagon's own latest' figures show
393 Americans captured in North Vietnam
and 431 -including ·the nine on the new
Hanoi list-missing in action. Throughout
Southeast Asia the latest totals, published
Thursday, show 500 captured and 1,109
missing.
As is customary for POWs or missing
servicemen, the Pentagon did not make
public their home towns or dates of capture. It did, however, release the names of
the men and their previous status :
They were :
.
Air Force - 1. Capt. William Raymond
Bean Jr., previously missing in action
(MIA) ; 2. Capt. William Glenn Byrns,
previously MIA ; 3. Cllpt. James Dickinson
Cutter, already known as POW ; 4. Maj.
Gale Albert Despiegler, already known
POW ; 5. Maj. Edward K. Elias, previously
MIA; 6. Capt. Kenneth James Frasier ,
already known POW; 7. 1st Lt. Ralph
William Galati, already known POW;
8. Capt. Lynn Ellis Guenther, already
.known POW; 9. Maj . Leland Louis
Hildebrand already known POW; 10. Capt.
Edward A. Hawley, already known POW;
11. Maj . Kenneth Richard Johnson ,

already known POW; 12. Maj. James
Phillip Padgett, previously MIA ; 13. Capt.
William Ralph Schwertfeger, already
known POW; 14. Maj. William Hanson
Talley Jr., previously MIA ; 15. 1st Lt.
Samuel Richard Vaughan, already known
POW; 16. 1st Lt. Kenneth Roth Wells,
already known POW ;
Navy - 1. Lt. Carol Robert Beeler,
previously MIA; 2. Lt. Jg. Norris Alphonso
Charles, already known POW; 3. Lt.
Cmdr. David W. Hoffman, already known
POW; 4. Lt . Jg. James Eugene Kernan,
already known POW; 5. Lt. Thomas
Bennett Latendresse, already known
POW ; 6. Lt. Albert Rick Molinare,
previously MIA; 7. Lt. Aubrey Allen
Nichols, previously MIA ; 8. Lt. Stephen
Anthony Rudloff, previously 1\IIA.

Gallia CAP...

,-------------------·
~4'''-

Pubt · ~ n .n o

'f

~( &lt; 0&lt; J

~··• ~ "a~ t

P'· 'l ~

"' ~ "~'

Large Banks Raise
In
R
terest' ales

' £', 't &gt;~ F l

P ~nw• o1

~ AIL

(Continued from Page 1)
men 's mess ·hall, the entire group was
escorted to the runway and placed in a C123 turho jet, appropriately nicknamed
"The Provider." Adverse weather conditions limited the time spent in the air
because of a low ceiling with poor
visibility. The aircraft flew at 1,500 feet.
Secon~ Lt. Hamlin C. King and Commander Ray Friend furnished transportation for CAP Cadets David Bush, '
Richard Barsotti , Patty Fife, Randy
Breech, Ray Weiher, Keith Cooper, David
Stollings, Mike Dayton , Mark Sims, and
Randy Friend. W.(J Nadine Friend and W0 Rene Broyles with guests, Jimmy King
and Noah Friend, accompanied the group.
The local unit will meet Monday evening at 7 in the Gallia County
Courthouse. Group 12Commander captain
Burdell Hoffm an and Cadet Major Mary
Smith will be guests and a film showing
several acti vities of the group's summer
encampment at the Scioto Trails Forest
will be viewed. Parents of the Cadets are
invited to attend this meeting so that they
might acquaint themselves of the fun ctions of the Civil Air Patrol.

~·T~::::~=-~~Said,
offer the flexibility to ex-

through B.
Those currently working
toward elementary education
certification, he added, can
also utilize these courses. By
. taking the lwo courses and
doing part onll of the student
teaching experience in one of
lhe primary grades, a person
can receive both the primary
and the regular elementary
certifications.
In announcing the program,
Dr. Koby also announced the
fa culty appoiniment of Shirley
White to teach the early
childh.ood education courses.
Miss White, director of the
Snow White Nursery School,
previously taught in the Erie ;
Pa., School District, and in the
field of kindergarten education
at Clevela-nd State Universlty .
She received her bachelor's
in
elementary
deg ree
education from Villa Maria
College and her Master of
Education from Edinboro State
College. Miss White also
earned a master's degree in
ea~ly childhOOd education from
Boston's Wheelock College.
Dr. Koby said that, depending on th e interest and
delllllnd for the program, the
early childhood courses ,

~U!IM. IIIf'll ll N

m gn ll,. 11 h

I

Tn r

''""" "'D" "' • 1• $0

' '""''&lt;! Pr~.- ' " '~"'"' ' ~"• '

•1 "

1 1'"'""' ' •• ' · "~d •o fno• ,u • • for p~OioUI • OII
~ ~~ ....,..,, &lt;t • •o • • c ~ ~• &lt; ' ~O·I•·~ tc '"''
I of
"" '" "'~o ··• &amp;
no ~ '"' · • · ~ .,, , ~ , ""'"'
I

MEIGS THEATRE

MASON
DRIVE-IN
.
.
'

t

'•

...~:.

CARTOON

Sunday - Monday
and Tuesday

DUSDN
HOfiM.\N
"LIT{Lf 816 M4N"

PanaYioion•Toct·-·

~-

t'

PLUS

·

TONIGHT
MON . . TUES.

June 25-26-27
Doubl e Feature

LOVE MACHINE

Robert Ryan
Oyan Cannon

l&gt;~ lE ~

I hr G ~ •t· POI • I Tr O\il\t' n 0" '" ~ " " W•l t
V• r a • n ·~ . on• · ~• · IIJ \XI ' " mon tM 11.
I tnrn mon•n, ,.. :11&gt; ~ ,,r .. nrrt ~n1 , ,.,
1 I ll I " man•~• V l ~ f VI' riH)&lt;&gt;II\1 ' I 00
111~ O ~ •'Y ~'"''"~' on• ' -""' 11•110 , ~· •
I

--

bild ~ CllllllliiiiiiSI iua

(R)

PLUS
B. S. I LOVE YOU
Peter Kastner
Joanna
. . Cameron

( R)

~ubt.,n~&lt;l '"'' "'"

~- ------ - ----- - ----~

_
NEW YORK (UP!) - Some
of the nation's largest banks,
led by those that instituted a
"floating " rate adjusted
weekly, Friday raised their
prime interest rates to 5¥• pet.
First National City Bank
raised its rate from 5\1 pet.
while Irving Trust Co. increased its rate from 5 pel.
Recently these banks have
reviewed their rates each week
and adjusted them , if
necessary, depending on the
money market.
The prime rate Is what the
best corporations pay for
loans.
Also raising their rates to 5V..
pet. Friday were the Chemical
Bank, the Bank of New York
and the First Pennsylvania
Banking &amp; Trust Co.

5
BIG DAYS
Tuesday thru Saturday
June 27 thru July 1st

slated for June 23-25 in
Washington Court House, Ohio.
The location in the city will the
Miami Trace High School.
He stated that some 1,000
delegates will be attending to ·
further their development as
ministers, authorized to preach
the good news now in more
than 21M! lands. The three~ay
event will unfold on Friday
evening at 6:45 with a model
school of training, with con:
ISLETON, Calif. (UPI) - structive advisory comments
Conditions were described as by District Director Henry C.
"stable" Saturday in this DoDd- Brewer
from
World
ravaged delta river town as Headquarters, Brooklyn, N.. Y.
officials pondered their next
Sunday will feature the
moves on the long road toward public lecture by District
its restoration.
Supervisor Henry C. Brewer,
"Everything is stable and no speaker on the subject, "Are
new trouble spots have been You Marked For Survival?" to
reported, " the Sacramento which the public is invited
County sheriff's office without cost.
reported .
"This will warm us to our
Only scattered crews next stop this summer," he
remained' on duty in the vast continued, to the many 'Divine
flood area to keep an eye on Rulership' district assemblies
any possible new levee leaks
to be held in the United States
and protect the property of the and Canada beginning July 6 in
town 's 1,300 residents forced to · Pittsburgh, Pa. Further details
evacuate in the face of rising of District Conventions will be
DOOdwaters.
forthcomin g.
A state official estimated it
would be two to six months
before people could return to
their homes.
The town was flooded
Thursday . night when an ~ · , THIEF SOUGHT
emergency levee which had
LORAIN, Ohlo (UP! )
been hastily built, collapsed. Police and FBI agents today
The ctials was touched oft' sought a man in his · ~ who
early Wedneaday when a main escaped with an Wldetennined
levee on the San Joaquin River amount of money Friday from
collapsed, Dooding Andrus and the First Federal Savings and
Brlllllllt J'Jianda.
.Loan office.
·

Conditions

Remain)Stable

•

CHICKEN _
Baked Beans • Cole Slaw • Roll
•

79f;

NO SUBSTITUTES

DRIVE INN

M"lSSlng
• M,an
PT . PLE ASANT - A
miss ing 90-yea r-o ld . man ,
Orville Martin, was fo un d by a
neighbor boy nea r his home
Friday and is reported today to
be in ·•good condition" at
Holzer Medical Center where
he was admi tted.
·Mr. Martin appa rently
wand ered fr om his home
Friday abuut 6 a. m. an d wh en
he fai led to return a report of
missing was sent out an d a
sea rch party was organ ized
ncar the Mason - Putnam
MAMED OU':fSTANDING
Coun ty line in a secti on ar~ und AIRMAN-U .S. Air Force
Pliny .
·
Sergeant Forrest D. Bachtel,
A youn g lad by the name of son of Mrs. Juanita Bachtel,
Frank Wears found Mr . Marli n 315S. Fourth Sl., Middleport,
approxi mately 50. yards fr om has been named Outstanding
his home down1 over an em·
Fi rst Term Airman in his
banknwnl. He was removed to
unit at Luke AFB, Ariz.
Holzer in a Crow-Hussell S.f rgcanl Bac htel, an
ambulance at 3: tOp. m.
aeros pa ce control and
warnin g operator , was
selected lor his exemplary
MAN ARRESTED
conduct and duty perPOMEROV - Robert L. formance. He serves with a
McGra il, 40, Zanesville, has unit of th e Aerospace
been arres ted by the depar t- Defense Command whi ch
ment of Sheriff Robert Har, protects the U. S. against
lenbach on a charge of taking hostile aircraft and missiles.
and using the credit card of Th e se rgeant, a 1963
M~. Pearl Reyn olds, Mid- graduate of Middleport Higll
dleport, without consent. Bond School, received a B.A.
has bee n set at $500.
degree in speech in 1967 from
Mount Union College,
Dwight D. Eisenhower left Alllance. His wife, Carol, is
offi ce at lhe age of 70 , the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
makin g hi m the olde st presi- Paul A. Scolt of 439 Lincoln
dent in U.S. history.
Sl., Middleport.

HUNTINGTON - Vercoe &amp; of American Business Club and
Com pany, Inc. , members of _. the Guyan Golf and Country
the New York Stock Exchange, Club.
Inc., Saturday announced the
He is also a member of tlle
appointment of Samuel M. Blue Lodge of Pennsylvania,
Andrews as manager of the Free and Acce pted Masons,
Huntington Area Branch Office and is a member of the An cient
of lhe company.
I
Order of the Mystic Shrine,
Mr. Andrews and his wife ; Syria Temple, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Jerry, res ide at 1406 Fifth He was a former pilot and
Street Rd., and have been instructor' and is now inresidents of Huntington, W. terested in golf.
Va. , for lhe pa~t 16 years.
Mr. Andrews brings with him
He is a member of the to Vercoe &amp; Company' Inc.,
Down town Kinw anis Club, over 13 years experience in the
Huntington Area Chamber of investment
fi eld,
wi th
Comm er ce , Hu nt i ngton management experience in the
•
Chapter, National Association steel industry In West Virginia
and in p·ttsb gh
Vercoe'&amp; Cur · 1 .
·
ompany nc., rs a
member firm of the New York •
Stock Exchange, Inc., affiliate
member of the American Stock
Exchange,· Inc., with wife
service to other major markets
throughout the United States.
They are celebrating their 50th
anniversary as a lull service
organization in the investment
Babies- childreft -. adults- groups --,. 1 Spo,ctoif.
business.
of each person singly only 88¢, plu s 50¢ film
The home office is located in
Groups $1.00 per person, plus one 50¢ film 1fee.
n
Columbus, Ohio.
Select from finishfd pictures in rad iant block
Satisfy~
DRIVER KILLED
white and living color .
TIFFIN , Ohio ( UPI)
Bonus quality ''Guaranteed Satisfaction ."
William Lonsway, 25, Tiffin,
was killed Saturday when his
• Limit - one Special per child .
Split or Whole
car collided with a train
$ Fut deliY~ry - courteous se rvice .
stopped at a crossing on U. S.
224, two miles south of here.

8"x10"

SAVE

SAVE

·eo ·so

On the K i ~ Sire S3crot:ledic
tmp• rla l (l ·j:icct- N tscm bl ro)

'259.90

Nltlo nally ad ~cr h $cd

o.~ l

SJ 19.90

On l ht- Q ~ec n Size Snc ropcdic
lmpctli'!l {2· plccc cn&amp;t-mbla)

$40
'119.90

Bemco·s once-a-year Sacropedlc Imperial ~attress sale
Is on right now. And that means spec ial savings on the
manress of your dreams.
Bemco makes the Sacrop&amp;diC Imperial With fi rm Umlu scd •
Conslrl.ICtion lor eJCtra support. So you and your back both ·
wake up refreshed.

. . . . . . :. . .! 29~~

~::~~=:Nr:~~~~~

Eve
ng Is
Guaranteed
· To
Or Money Back

HOURS

ol h mco Qvir!orlm.la- m"1~~"

Thto Wo1/d'1 C:~t lell .llftplllf 'iiiJ~

/

Since 1859

*Plus 50.¢
Film Fee

*
*

N~~llnJ IIy Ad~ IU\IUid 011S159.90

.l.ldM

*

only 88c

·

On tho Full etr Twi n Sin S a cr op~ d lc
lmpcr i:ll i 2-pltleo en semble}

'169.90

N,1 11ona1 ir ad .. rlisedat 5219.90

living Color
Portrait

SAVE

.

Tues. • Wed•• Thur. &amp; Sal
9:30 to 1 ~ • lPM to 4:30
Lunch 1 to 2

Friday 9:30 to 7:00 PM

'

FRYERS
. !b. 2· 9~

·---------·
.

Ground Beef
3 lbs. or more

' state
Both were arrested by
police.. Jerry Robert B)-us, 51,
Route I, Point Pleasant, was
taken into custody by ihe
sheriff's department and is to
be held 10 days in jail on orders
of Judge James Lee Thompson .

In your own backyard
· thereare:
57 stale parks ,
'461 sta te owned ca bins
and lodge fac ili ties
with 334 renta l rooms,
7839 state par k c amps ites and
thousa nds of other publ ic and
privately-owned c ampsites .
Pre historic Indian mounds,
143 publ icly-owned lake6,
Swiss cheese-a pple butlerb ratwu rst- melon-pu mp kin
a nd 24 other fe stivals ,
175 museums,
Art shows,
Forests-valleys- rivers-cavescascad es a nd grottoes,
200 cove red bridg es,
Fle a markets,
Bikeways,
County a nd Ohio Sta te fairs ,
Hunting a nd fishing,
Music festivals,
Public gardens,
Am usement parks . . .

being performed on Owl Hollow Road by crews from the
Mason County Division of the West Virginia Department of
Highways.

,13 Fined, Six Forfeit

Found Safe

get a beautiful ·

Stretch out on a Sacropedic Imperial mattress set now.
And enjo~ heallhy savings on a hea lthy night's rest.

~~e,

CLEANING UP -.Wor~en are weed cutting to clea n up
along West Virginia highways. Weed.cutting, a routine job, Is

Of V&amp;C, Inc., Office

SNACK BOXO

.

......... .

..,,.

.,I

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;Thursday

2 PIECES COL SANDERS

..

Andrews Manager

Congregation Is Given Invitation
MIDDLEPORT - Larry D.
Carnahan, presiding minister
of the Middleport congregation
of Jehovah 's Witnesses
Saturday announced that the
local witnesses have been
invited to attend a seminar

PT. PLEASANT - Donald
Bruce Spires, 41, Cheshire, was
arrested by state police on a
DW! charge and was one of
three booked at lhe local jail
since Friday.
Rodger Gail Wamsley, 24,
f irst Street, Poin t Pleasant,
was charged with intoxicati on .

County. She was a member of
Christ United Methodist
Church.
Funeral services will be held ·
I p. m. Tuesday at the WaughHalley-Wood Funeral Home
with Rev . Alfred Holley officiating. Burial will be in
Mow1d Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral horne between 2-4 and
7-9 p. m. on Monday . .

PT. PLEASANT - Funeral
services for Iva Jean "Jeanie"
Bush, d;lughter,of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Bush ~r . oF' Southside
will beheld at 2p. m. Sunday in
the Wyoma Pentecostal
Church at GalHpo[is Ferry with
the Rev. Tommy Kinnaird and
the Rev. O'Dell Bush officiating . Burial will follow in
· the church cemetery .
The 12 year old child died
Thursday evening as the result W. E. Robbins
•of an accidental shooting at her
PT. PLEASANT - Wirt E.
home.
Robbins, 77, 405 First Street,
Friends are being received died Saturday morn ing in
· at lhe Wilcoxen Funeral Home. Pleasan t Valley Hospital after
a lengthy illness.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p. m. Tuesday in Stevens
R. V. Hill
Funeral Home wi th burial in
POMEROY - Raymond V. Henderson Cemetery .
Hill, 60, Fort Myers, Fla .,
He was a retired carpenter
for.merly of Pomeroy, died and was a member of Local
Fnday afternoon ~t the Lee · Carpenters Union No. 1159, Pi.
Memonal Hospitalm Flonda. Pleasant. He was born in
He IS survived by his wife, Henderson November 10 1894
the former Lucille Owens, also a son of the late Earl and' Mar;
a former resident of Pomeroy ; Walker Robbins.
a son, George Raymond of
Survivors include his wife
Jacksonville, Fla .; a sister, Lillian Ord Robbins; a son:
Mrs. Aaron Zahl and a brother, An gus
Robbin s
Poi nt
Allen Hill, both of Pomeroy. Pleasant; a daughter, Mrs.
. Funeral arrangements are Okla Hemp oJ Carleret, N. Y.;
Incomplete.
and a bro ther, Ra ymond
Robbin s of Hende rso n; a
sister,
Mrs. Frances_Clark of
.Bessie Harrison
Henderson; four grandchildren
GALLIPOLIS - Bess ie and five grea t-grandchildren .
The body is at the Stevens
Harrison, 75, of 4 Burkhart
Lane, died at 10:40 p. m. Fw1eral Home.
Friday al her home. She had
been in failing health about one
year and in serious condition John Strong
the past few days.
POM EROY
Mrs.
Mrs. Harrison was born Aug . Lawrence Chapman received
22, 1896, at Millstone, W. Va., word of the sudden death of her
daughter of the late Rea son brother-in-la w, John J. Strong
and Della Force Myers.
of Colwnbus.
She married Alva Harrison
His wife , the former Edith
on March 23, 1917, in Colum- Romine, and their daughter,
bus. He preceded her in death Dorothy and two children were
in 1965.
ill Hawaii on a vacation when
The followin g children he passed away . Mr. and Mrs.
Gordon Laurence Chapman attended
survive :
Mrs.
( Evelyn )Fisher, Mrs. Don the funera l which was held
(Norma
Jean )
Hem - Mon day wit h burial in
sworth and Mrs . Audrey Columbus.
Adkins, all of Gallipolis; one
; son preceded her in death.
f Seven'grandchildren and two
;great-grandchildren survive.
SUFFERS STROKE
i The following brothers and
GALLIPOLIS
- Earl Willis,
:.tsters survive : Vernon Myers,
resident
of this area,
a
former
:Gallipolls; Mrs. Mary Noble,
i£W9n ; Eddie !IIY.~rs, Cocoa, is hospita lized in Bra denton,
ll"'ii-j Ml'a. Myrtle Dildge, Flo., following a stroke. Mr.
Marton . One brother and two Willis resides at 2606 Southern
sisters preceded her in death . Parkway Drive, Bradenton,
She spent all her life in Galli a Fla., 33505.

Tonight thru,Wedne.s day

Three Men Arr-ested

·Area Deaths !

Iva ].Bush

.periment with new ~ourses and
new approaches in a number of '
areas. He added that more
information on early childhood
education and other Sununer
'72 progral)lS, including the
Outdoor Education Workshop
scheduled for Augwst, can be
· obtained by contacting the
college. Tbe college number iS
(614) 245-5353.
'

fund a Staff Development
Program of six carefully
planned workshop experiences
for local stall members . .
Atotal of $8,610 will be spent
in a Public Relations Program
involving materials, consultant
service, and four workshops in
a comprehensive campaign
aimed al the business community.
The remaining $20,285 will
Tonight thru Tuesday
cover costs of administration
June 25-27
and planning for the .group,
THE FRENCH
maintenance of a headquarters
CONNECTION
unit, supplies, and a telephone
ITechnicolarl
~ene Hackman
network between the member
Fer nando Rey
libraries and the State Library .
" R"
•
Pomeroy Public. Library is a
ALSO CARTOONS
member of OVAL. Herbert
Wescoat Memorial Library in 1
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
McArthur is administrative :;;;;;;:;;;;~
agent for the eleven-county
district.

POMEROY - Jerry Grim,
director of Ohio ·Valley Area
Libraries, announced Saturday
the grant of its fourth project
by the State Library Board.
Funds of $84,985 frQJll Library
Services and Construction Act,
together with $93,206 already
being spent by the 12 member
libraries will enable OVAL to
promote
inter-librar y
cooperation and planning for
maximum utilization of
resources to serve the public.
A Collection Development
Program amounting to $145,797
will seek to supply books in
areas where they are most
needed and cataloging and
processing services where
these are most difficult. Each
library will receive a grant of
$1,000for the purchase of books
in the subject areas most often
requested on inter-library loan .
Additional grants will be made I .
Sl ':~IJ ,\ l
.:
in amounts based on local l Tl ~tt:S-SENTl~U .
l
book-buying history " and II l' ue1o111~11 ' '"" ~... ~d ~, ~ . tn• o ~ .o I
(h
1
I
population . Processing ser- I (,/I LLOPO U~ p:ot( III I II U r-l f
I !II (" " " :.., (, ~"·~O'•• '""" •lU I
" ~ b l ,~tO ~• ff, ~- •••- .a~ , ~ -, ,., , ~Q t o f~D I 1
vices will be provided for an I I•'•·•H
•v
.. q1 P. ,, 1 1 I
1
additional 18,000 volumes 1I c.~" D""', ., o~( . a ouJ•
Ill ( auc t ~ ~
ao . "~ "'"
0 . •Sli t I
purchased by the local II lPuat''
''"" ,.,,., , • •· ~ ~·~ " '""' ' "~ o o1opt
l lurd'' En l ~'""•l&gt; • &lt;~n&lt;ll • 4"" "' • '''" 9
I
01
Ql ..o Pa,o 0 11 «0
libraries this year.
I
~ . ,'.~ ~-~: ~"~,;, ~~:,~5~ :~:},'u~ '"'
Only $3,519 will be needed to II '" f"

1

'

'

r-------------------------

f6:l and 473, may

POM EROY - Thir tee n Kenneth D. Thomas, Athens,
defe ndan L• were fined and_)iix $150 and costs, three days 1.1
others forfeited bonds in Meigs c onf in e m e nt , li ce nse
County Court F'riday.
suspended for six months ,
Fined by Judge Frank W. driving while intoxicated; Jack
Porter were William M. D. Thompson, Haberstown ,
Skiver, New Boston; John E. Md ., $125 and costs, five days
McLaughlin , Pomeroy, Rl. 3, co n fin e m e nt , l i c e n se
and Mary Rockwell, Gallipolis, suspended in Ohio for six
$10 and costs each, speeding; mo nth s, driving wh ile inJames Paul Sellers, Syracuse, toxi cated; Wil liam Reeves ,
$5 and costs, no muffler ; Ray J Pomeroy, $10 and tosts, inNewell , Pomeroy·, $10 and toxication; Hal Borden , Bidcosts, left of center ; Paul L. well, $50 and costs, license
Norris, Chesterhille, $11.65 and sus pended fur 30 days,
costs. speeding; Clarence E. restric ted dri ving priv ileges ,
Fife, Pomeroy, and Richard reckless operation. Larry L.
Caruth ers, Mi ddl epor t, $150 Bail , Mason, IO days probation,
and cos ts each. three days speeding; Mark Laudermiit ,
c o nfin e m ent:_, li ce n s e Pomeroy, costs, 10 days
sus pended for six mont hs , confine ment, r eckl es s
res tricted driving privileges, operation and costs, 10 days
driving whil e '· intoxica ted ; co nfin ement , assault and
Patti VanMatre, Syracuse, $15 ba ttery.
~--- - - ----- ------- ------------,
an.d costs , $10 suspe nd ed,
Forfe iting bonds were Floyd I Traverand Tourism Section,P.0 . Box 1001, Columb us, Ohio 43216 I
fis hing without a license : W. Go uld, Shade, Rt. 1, $57.50, • Please send me inform al ion on Ohio's
1
Richard A. Bainey , Athens, $\0 no operat or s license, $27.50,
~-calendar of summer events _ state park camping areas
1
,- fes tivals 1972
_ stale park facilities
1
and c~sts, passin!t_on right; fa ilure to register ; Alfred H.
Pratt, New Milford, William s.
.hunti ng and lishi ng areas
___ stale park lodges and cabins 1
. Frey, Ir onton , and Jackie
· _bikeways
PTS I
French, Holmes Beach, Fla., Name
1
$27. 50 each, speeding; Wilbur Address
J
H. Ellis, Zaleski, $27.50, in1
toxication and $2.77.50, dri ving Cily.
Zip
I
while
intoxicated;
Charles
R.
1
GALLIPOLIS - John R.
Aeiker , Racine, $34.55, fishing
1
McGinness, 22, Pa triot Star without
a 'license .
·
Ano ther se ~v ~c e of vou r Ohio Department of Oe\lelopment,
1
Rt., was charged with DW!
John J . Gil ligan, Governor· Or. David C. Sweet , Director
1
following a traffic accident at
L---------------------------~
2:42 a. m. Saturday on Second
Ave. and Spruce St.
City police said McGinness
lost control of his car striking
an aut o driven by Daniel E.
Kn otts, 27, Gallipolis. Irma
Jean McNeal, 33, a passenger
in the Knotts ca r had minor
injuries. There was moderate
damage to hoth cars.
Donald W. Hp tley, 25,
Gallipolis, was c fi~rged with
failure to stop within the
assure d clea r distan ce
followi ng a mishap at 4:23 p.
m. on Eastern Ave. Holley's
car struck the rear end of an
aut o operated by Earlene
Sprangler, 22, Gallipolis. There
was minor damage to both
real~
cars . Oscar Cordell , 48,
Gallipolis, was cited to
Municipal Court for failing to
.
.
yield the right of way following
a mishap . on Olive St. and
Second Ave. Cordell pulled
(Compounded Quarterly) - - •
his car from a curb striking an
auto driven by Arthur Roush,
37. . of Mason. There was
moderate damage to both cars.
A hit-~;klp accident occurred
on Third Ave. at Kroger's
(Compounded Quarterly)
parking lot where an auto
owned by Thurman Denney of
Rt.l, Gallipolis, was struck by
·,
an kn
h'
. un own ve lC1e.

Don't go awayVacation in Ohio!

Save time, money and mileage.

rn

Charged
Accident

._. your money earns more lnlerlsll
• Where you hM the mmt Security - Bank Securilyf .
• Where your interest is Paid Evely 90 Oats!
•Where t1wt
Appreciate your Business!

REGULAR PASS BOOK
SAVINGS EARN

Golden Paubook Savings•

FOR ABETTER
JOB. SOONER GO TO BUSINESS
COLLEGE
ENROLL NOW FOR NEW
QUARTER BEGINS SEPT. 14
One and Two Year
Courses
Business
Ad ministration
Executive Secretarial
Jr. Accounting
Secretaria 1 •
General Office
All College Level Courses
Approved lor VA Benefits
Job Pllcement . Assistince
Approved by State BNrd of
School
&amp;
College
Registration.
Writa, visit or call 4%-4367
fer lrH c.atalog and ln.
lorm1tlon,

GALUPOUS
BUSIN.ESS OOI.l.EGE
36 Locust street
Gallil!lllll

Slate Reg, No. 71-02-0'·nB

and 90 Day Certificates
of Deposit* Eam---

12 MONTHS
CERTIFICATES OF
DEPOSIT• EARN-~
24 MONTHS
CERTIFICATES OF
DEPOSIT•EAR
• Minimum Initial DeposlfSl,QOO.OO or t/«e
'

'

~OhioValley Bank·
420 Thir~ Ave.
Gallipolis, Ollto
"the now buk thai appncial•.yaar ....._,
._ , f-~'-'*-""'

�.,

,. "'

..

'

5 - The Sunday Times-8entlnel, JWle 25, 1972

Work Conferred Mrs. W.illiams Gives· Shower Held
· · · • · · Discusszon On Roses
''

f.!pon Candzdates - Ye~ldeVUtageGardenCI~b

met at the home of Mrs. Bill
Pleasant,
and
the
Philippines
Davis to enjoy the program
WILKESVILL'E
were
present.
•
given
by Mrs. Marion Williams
Wilkesvllle Chapter No. 207
The initiatory work was on .. ~ 'Rose Culture." · Mrs .
Order 'of the Eastern Star held
its annual inapectiOQ June 17 conferred upon t.hree dan. Williams . explained that
with Mrs. Marie Turner, didates by officers, Worthy anyolfe can gro;w roses a11J1ost
Worthy Matron, and . Ronald Matron Marie Turner, Worthy anywhere. ·There are roses to
· Pool,
Worthy
Patron, Patron Ronald Pool, Assol;iate suit all iastes and climates.
MaltoJI Joyce Tackett,
In selecting the site for roses
presiding.
,
·Deputy · Grand Matron, Associate Patron Randall onemustbeawarethatr~tsof
District 24, Grand Clu;pter of Tackett, Secretary !tilth most trees extend at l~ast as
Ohio, Sister , Betty Cottrill · of Swisher, Treasurer Sella far as the outmost tips of
Hamden was the Inspecting Snavely, Conductress Beulah branches. Roots of hedges
officer . Other distinguished Belle Wright, Associate grow beyond their width. Roses
guests present were Sister Conductress Bonnie Haston, set too Close to any of lhese
Janer Capehart, Grand Chaplain Juanita McNickle, woody plarits cannot get aU lhe
Representative to Alberta in Marshal Everett . Turner, moisture and food they need.
West Virginia of Pt. Pleasant Organist Maxine Wells, Adah, ·Mosttoses need sun.for at leiiSt
Chapter, and Sister Catherine Unda Shenefield; Ruth, Debra half II!• day: ·
Shenefield , Grand Pool; Esther, Kay Cull urns; · One should choose ~e ~t
Representative to Virginia In Martha, Thelma Raines; soil. Good dramage IS lm·
Ohio of Wilkesville Chapter. EJecta, Sherry Turner ; portant . . Nearly all soils,
Worthy Matrons and Patrons Warder Linda Combs and especially sandy or clay soils,
ol the VInton , Oak Hill, Sentinel, Gary Haston.
are improved by addition ~p to
Refreshments were served four inches of compost, peat
O.eshire, Proctorville, South
Point, Wellston, Thurman and by Merium Hoffman, Madeline moss or other form o~ orga~ic
Ironton chapters were present. Wiseman and Anna Elizabeth matter, thoroughly m1xed w1th
Past Matrons and Patrons of Turner.
lhe soil to a depth of twelve
Wilkesville present were Grace
inches.
~:'o\1'!Mo.&lt;~~
Colwell, Shirley Peters,
Little plant food is needed at
Mildred Nelson, Ruth Swisher,
lirst by rosebushes. Prepared
Sella Snavely, Catherine
rose fertilizer mixed com·
Shenefield, Maxine Wells,
pletely into the soil will suffice.
Juanita McNickle, Beulah
When plants are unpacked,
Belle Wright, Maxie Ponn,
pllll]ge their roots in a pail of
Thelma Leitch, Anna Elizabeth
water. Cut off dead and broken
Turner, Zelda Hall, Kenneth
roots and decayed or twiggy
Nelson, Rex Shenefield, Earl
shoots. Make a hole 15-18 in·
•ches wide and make a moWld
Wright, John Colwell and
SUNDAY
of line soil in the middle of the
William NcNickle.
COMBINED CHARGE church
. Soloistfor the evening, Connie service at the Vinton United hole . Hold the bush in the
Sue Wells, sang "Whither Thou
spread
Methodist Church with a center of the hole
'th and
t bend.
Goest I Wlll Go." One hWldred
the roots out WI ou
. mg
potluck lunch following, 10:30
· tin the w k 1 1
and twenty-one guests from the
or lwls g m. or Pen Y
· · t'mg c hap ters from MONDAY
a. m.
of fine soil with the fingers and
v1s1
t
McArth ur, Zal esk.'· we11 son,
OCSEA Gallia Chapter shake the bush so that the soil
Thurman, Ironton, Cheshire, . meetl'ng, 7·.30 p.m. Guest falls between the roolll and no
v·10 t H d o k Hill
air gaps are left. Fill in more
on, am en, a
' speakers, refreshments and soil until the hole if half full ,
1h f
Proc torville, South Point, country store bingo.
Middleport, Harrisonville,
press down firmly w t oot.
Gallipolis, Nelsonville, Pt . TUESDAY
Pour half bucket of water
GOLDEN Circle of Grace aroWld bush, after this settles,
United Methodist Church will fill the hole with dirt.
have a noon potluck dinner.
At least 25 insects attack
11
Everyone is invited. Bring roses and do serious damage if
._,
table service.
left Wlchecked. One should
GALIJPOIJS - Mr. and AMERICAN
LEG 10 N examine plants daily for signs
Mrs. Dea~CRoger Evims, Route Auxiliary will meet at 7:30 of possible trouble . Chewing
2, Gallipolis, are announcing p.m. in the Legion Hall.
insects (Including Japanese
the birth of a son, Dean Roger
bettles) which eat leaves,
flower buds and blooms are
Evans, Jr., born on May 29 at
Pleasant Valley Hospital. The
I
controlled by keeping all parts
baby weighed eight pounds,
GALIJPOLIS - Mr. and of the flower covered with
one-half ounce. Maternal Mrs . Rick Swain are an - insecticide. All-purpose dusts
grandp~ren!s are Mr. and Mrs'. . nouncing the birth of a seven and sprays applied at 7-10 day
Thomas Shamblin, Route I, poWld, two OUJ1Ce daughter, intervals throughout the
Gallipolis·. Pafernal 'granij. Heather Dawn , on ·JWle 21. She growing season will eliminate
parents are Mr. and Mrs. E. L. is welcomed home by a brother practi cally all of insect
Evans, Route 2, Gallipolis.
Ricky. Maternal grandparents problems.
~
are Mr . and Mrs. Earl Waugh,
Mrs. John H. Reese,
Scottown . Paternal grand· president, called the meeting
HOSPITAL NEWS parents are Mr . and Mrs. to order by all giving the Lord's
Verlin Swain, Crown City. Prayer in 1111ison. Mrs. Bill
Holzer Medical Center, Rt. Great-grandparents are Mr. Davis read the secretary's
160 and Rt. 35. Generjl) visiting and Mrs. B. G. Rucker, report and the announcement
hours 2'4 and 7-8 p.m. Scottown. Mr. and Mrs.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to Glenville Halley and Mr . and
4:30 p.m. Parents only on Mrs . Stanley Swain, Cro!Yn
Pediatric's Ward.
City.
Jwte 22, 19'12
.
Birth-Mrs. RobertLovette, :;~
son, Oak Hill.
:~
Discharges - Mrs . Roy ::~
Yauger and daughter, James ·~
Roush, Carl Allensworth, Mrs. ;~
Eddie VanMeter and son, Lisa ~j
Norton, Bryan Sherward, ~
~
Elizabeth Bell, Jill Martin,
MONDAY
Kenneth Robinette, Fred
.
POMEROY
Chamber of
Shepherd; Mrs. Daniel Griffith .
and son, Ellen Ebersbach, Commerce Monday at Meigs
Leslie Evans, Geraldine Inn at noon.
YoWlg, Paul Wallace, Elsie
1 RUTLAND G.arden Club, 8
Thaxton, Aaron Swope, · p.m. Monday at the horne of
Genevieve Starcher, Brenda Mrs. Robert Canaday with
Jones, Bonnie Hamilton, Mrs . Roy Snowden, co-hostess.
STAFF and Officers, Meigs
Rhonda Edmonds, Edson
Temple,
home of Mrs. Betty
Edgington and Margaret
Spencer,
Monday
at 7:30 p.m.
Bickle.
.•
Tuesday
Pleasant Valley Hospital
AMERICAN
Legion
DISCHARGES Mrs . Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
Marlon Kirk, Point Pleasant; 39, 7:30Tuesday, installation of
Edward Willet, New Haven ; officers.
Mrs. Ernest Frazier, Frazier's
Bottom; Mrs. David Marston,
Wyoming, Mich.; Mrs. Emma
"Smith, Henderson; Mrs. J. A.
Utile, Point Plessant; Mrs.
Lena Crookham, Leon .
·

1.~
· .

J ....

;/·

'

Mrs. jerry Davis

r;::'.'!'l&gt;';';. . . ).

Morris-Davis Vows
Solemnized june 3 ·
MIDDLEPORT - Miss sang "My Cup RWlneth Over"
Lennie Morris, daughter of Mr. and "For All We Know."
and Mrs. Charles W. Morris,
For her daughter's wedding,
Huntington , W. Va ., and Je rrY Mrs. Morris wore a yellow
David Davis, son of Mr. and long • sleeves dress with
Mrs. Max 0 . Davis1 Mid· b!ack patent accessories.
dleport, were wtiled in double Mrs . Davis wore a beige
ring marriage Saturday, J1111e short • sleeved dress and
3, at 2:30p.m. In a candlelight white accessories. Both were
service at GOod .Samaritan presented with yellow rose
United Methodist Church with corsages.
Rev. Ralph G. Sager, Jr. and
A reception for the couple
Rev. Wilflam Carter of· h~ld at the Duck's Inn im·
Hclatlng.
mediately followed the
Given In marriage by her ceremony with Janice Rose,
father,thebrideworea bishop· Northup,, Shelly Ferrell, Mt.
sleeved gown with a tucked Gilead, and Mrs . Michael
sheer yoke and accents of Porter, Grove City, presiding
Venise lace. Her chapel train at the table. Guests were
· was of silk organza and her registered by Joyce Davis,
Uered bouffant vell cascaded sister of the groom.
from a Juliet cap of Veni:ie lace
For their wedding trip
and satin. She carried a navy through northern Ohio, the new
blue basket of red, while and Mrs. Davis changed into a
blue pomP.Ons ~lxie car- navy and white sailor dress
naUons,. .'wt;.IBmthi,rith -:wl!h w)litd ·)i&amp;\tssorleli.\!IN
red andj~~s anCI.J'Ihlt~ . worb d w~~ rosebud C?fsa~e.
satin sireamers.
Mrs . Diivls Is a 1966 graduate
'Judy Blevins, HWltlngton, of Huntington High .School,
was maid of honor and Mrs. attended Marshall Umvers1ty
Craig Troxel, Athens, and Mrs. and . grBduated from . Holzer
Arnold Miller sister of the Med1cal Center School '" 1971.
bride, were brldesmaida. They A member of Good Samaritan
wore ldeniical long-sleeved United Methodist Church, she
gowns of white organdy is an R.N. in the emergency
bodices with checked navy and deparlment of Holzer Medical
white skirts with accents of red Center.
ribbons. They carried red
Mr. Davis is a 1965 graduate
baskets of red white and blue of Middleport High School and
pompons, pixi~ carn'ations, and Is a 1969 cum laude graduate of
baby's breath with red, white Rio Grande College. He 1s a
and blue streamers.
member of the Bradbury
John W. Johnson, Pomeroy, Church of Christ and is
served as best man· and Jerry presently employed as a
Van lnwagen, Middleport, and teacher in the Gallipolis City
Arnold Miller , Huntington, School system.
were ushers .
The new couple is residing at
Mrs. John McCornas, Jr., the 35 West Apartments,
was pianist and Jane Crouch Apartment 15 in Gallipolis.

.
: Events 1.

Son Born Jn Ma

School Honors Fathers
GAUJPOIJS - Paint Creek
Baptist Sunday School ob·
aerved Father's bay last
Sw!day during the S1111day
School hour. "Seek The Lord
While He May be Fo1111d, Call
Upon Him While He Is Near"
was the call to worship by
superintendent Mrs. Leslie
Howard.
The school sang "In The
Garden" followed by scripture
reacllns •. Matthew 6 : ~15. by
Olarles Jamison . The Lord's
Prayer In 1111ison was led by
Wanda Jamison .
A poem "When I Pray" was
read by Wanda Jamison after
which the school sang "I Am
Thind 0 Lord." In observance

of Father's Day, Rev. and Mrs.
Grover G. Turner sang "How
Great Thou Arl." A poem
"What Is A F11ther" was read
by Mrs. Etta Jamison .
Each father present was
recognized with a love token,
given to each one by Mrs. Etta
Jamison .

Plymale Family
I

·
1aVe ReUntDn

'T' u
.L 0 1

GALLIPOLIS
The
Plymale Re1111ion will be held
Sunday, July 16, from 10 a.m....
p.m. at the Buffalo High School
on Buffalo Creek Road, Wayne
Co1111ty, W. Va. Morning services In the gymnasium will
begin at 10:30 with a picnic
IWlch following at 12:30 in the
cafeteria. During the afternoon
program, prizes will be
awarded to the largest family
present, the oldest and the
youngest persons attending
and the one who traveled the
farthest. Bring a picnic basket.

1be AlmiiiiiiC
By UDIIttl Preu latenuotl-1
Today II Sunday, June 25, the
1771h day of 1972 with 189 to
follow.
The moon is approaching illl
full phase.
The morning stars are Venus
and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiler.
Thole born Oli this date are
under llle sign d Cancer.
French composer Gustave
ChllrpenUer was born June 25, under the cornmand of Maj.
Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower.
18811.
In 1960 the North Koreans
On lhll date In his lory :
Invaded
South Korea.
In 11'11, General • Gecrge.
QIJ._. and hill force ol 2011 men In 1962 the U.S. Supreme
were -creel by Sioux Court handed down a decision
llldlenl in the battlt: ol Utile interpreied as barring prayer In
public IChooll,
1111 Horn in Montana.
A thought for ~hi! day: British
• In 1M2 the U.S. War
DeiW ILAal IZIIIOUIICed the writer JOhn Galsworthy sald:
forme! •llbllllunent o1 a "If you do not lhlnk about the
Ell'opiM ..... rl Gplnltionll future, you cannot have one."

~·

B'rth A nnoUnCred

from Mabel Reed, stale
president, for the 4:/nd con·
vention of the Ohio Association
of Garden Clubs, to be held ar
Denison University, August IJ..
10.
Thank-you notes were read
from Mrs. Berc Tap, Gretchen
Carty and Phylis Brown for,tile
flower arrangements made by
Ye Olde Vill!lge Garden Club
for the AAUW Tour of Homes .
June 11. Mrs. Marion Williams
gave the treasurir's· report.
Each member answered lhe
roll call by naming . their
favorite rose.
Mrs. John Byers, giving the
July tips, reminded everyone
to sow perennial flower seeds
now. A coldframe is an ideal
place. Check all plants for
spider mites, apnids and other
insects. Malathion Is a good
insecticide for these. A fine
spray on the plant· gives the
best spread and control. After
delphinium blooms are past cut
off the flowers and let new
shoots come from below for a
. second blooming.

~

~

GALLIPOLIS ·"- · A bridal gifts from Mrs. Ellae Kimball,
shower was given recenUyby ·Mrs. John Paul Kerns, Mn.
Meda Edelblute and Debbie Marion Caldwell, Mrs. Jack
North in honor of Janice Rose, Carter, Mrs. Richard Sanders,
Richard Mrs . ,James Houck, Mrs.
bride-elect of
Bowersox . Mrs. Edwin Melvin Sheets, Mrs. Everett
Edelblute and Mrs. John North McMahon, Mni. Leon Saun·
assisted with the shower which ders, Mrs. Ronnie Saunden,
was held at the North home. Mrs. Torn San~, Mrs; Carl
Gifts were placed .on a Atkins, , ~on Atkins, Mn.
decorated table. Green and Hsrland'Sanders, Mn: Worthy
yellow streamers descending Evans, Mrs. Leslie BreWer,
from white wedding bells . Mrs. Marland Ctemeeps, .Mn.
above the inanUe to the table Claude Evans, Mrs. Morris
were caught together \Vith Haskins, Mrs. Oeari Davis,
clusters of white daisies. A · Mrs. Mike Davis, Becky Laldn,
dessert course of cake and Hazel Halley, . Anna Mae
punch in keeping with the Halley, Mrs. George Adams,
gre~n and yellow color scheme Mrs. Bill Matthews, Mrs. Jeff
was served to the guests.
Smith, Mrs. Cliff Wilson, Mrs.
Mrs. Ronnie Keenan wlls the Roger Hood, Mrs. · Russell
winner of the -game of the Sarrett, Mrs. Elmer CaldWt!ll,
evening and Mrs. Jack Carter Mrs. Ronnie Keenan, Mri.
won the door prize .
Smeltzer · Rose, Mrs. Mike
Miss Rose opened and Williams and the hostesses.
graciously acknowledged her

••

~

ENO - Eno . Grange met
recently at the grange hall with
Master Ernest· Greenlee
presiding. After a brief
buainess session, members of
the Sprjngfield Grange were
introdu.ced and an informative
program on the theme "Faith
Of Our Fathers" was given by
Mrs. Mil.dred George. For ·
dev.otions, Rev. Jeff Butcher
read from II Kings, gave a talk

GALLIPOLIS - The Faith·
lui Workers Society of ihe
Poplar Ridge Free-Will Bap.tist
Church met at the home of
Mrs. Nettie Swisher for the
June meeting. The meeting

1

Order fall-blooming bulbs
such as fall
crocus,
colchicums, sternbergias plus.
blooming Madonna lilies for
planting in August. Keep roses
going with a handful of rose
fond about once a month in
summer. Glads and other
flowers which bloom In 90 days
can still be planted early this
month . Remove old flowers
from both annuals and
perennials and water and feed
moderately for continued
blooming.
•

GALIJPOIJS - The Sew
·and So Club met Thursday
evening at the horne of Mrs.
Lewis Sheets with 13 members
and six guests present. The
meeting was called to order .by
the president; Mrs. Gerald
Dennison.
~votions were led by Mrs.
Lewis Sheets and she resd the
secretary's report. Mrs .
Monvil Swain read the
treasW'er's report.
Mrs. Lawrence Marti con·
ducied the games and Mrs.
Wymond Sheets won the prize.
A stork shower was given for
Mrs. Jimmie Sheets.
A family picnic dinner was
planned for the next meeting to
be held July 12 at 6 p.m. at the
Ga!lia County Fairgrounds.
Refreshpienta. were lletVfC[ .....,,
by the hostess. ·
.•,,,
...

Head For Mexico
SYRACUSE- Mr. an~ Mrs.
Willis Leadmgham, Gallipolis,
former Syracuse residents,
will leave Saturday for Mexico
City to attend the Uons Club
Convention. The Leadlnghams
will , celebr~te their . 2~~h
wedding anmversary while 10
Mexico City.

...,

.,
RECEIVES DEGREE
,,
Ruth Card, daughter of Rev.
and Mrs . Robert Card, .,
graduated from the Baldwin· ...'•
Wallace College, Berea, on ·
June 9. She received her
Bachelor of Arts degree.

.,

.,

DAN THOMAS
&amp; SON

"

SUMMER
New Fall
Merchandise
Arriving

GROUP OF
WOMENS

SHOES

Dai~

,,

'7~Mll~ f J
TO '21.00

'""-..,_....\.... .,__....,......

LOVE'S

TWOSOME

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - William
Fry, Mason ; Blaine Hajok,
Melrose, Ill.; Clarence
Hayman , Ra cine ; Pauline
Jones, Cheshire.
DISCHARGES - Joann
Co nkle, Iva ' Howe!~, Eric
Robinson, John Blosser, Blaine
Hajok.

and We
Need
The Room

TENNIS
SHOES

'3~~

7.99 .

1

"

SUMMER SHOES

'311 OFF

CLARK'S .
JEWELRY
STORE

J

1

FINAL

'

,.

ii '

MENS

SHOES

•••••••
NO atARGES
NO lAY-AWAY

'q
1
~

li

'

t

.I

REG.

•1

12,99

r

•

1

,a
,1

.WID , IUNQ 1!1 MAN ' . 100

fflKeepea.ke•
Pl'ATOMEET
IIICliiTIIU:D DIAW O NO IIIHOt
RACINE - Members of the
Racine PTA are aalted to meet
with Mr1. . Sue Follrod,
preaident, It 7:30p.m. Monday
on the school grounds to
diacuss the possibllity of
Second Ave.
342
preparing an entry for the July L-....!~~~~~-.J
4th p.nde to be held In Racine. .

••
"

J

All SALES

)J

DAN THOMAS &amp; SON
"SERVING YOU SINCE 1936"
324 Second Alellue

Regts· tratt'on
D DACQlllen

's

J
I
O
cIa
·J
I
caIen dar.

If

'

!
i
I

•

welcOme.

•
' , ON DEAN'S LIST
GUy A. Dey, 1011 of Mr. and
Mn. James C. Day, GaiUpoUa
Rou&amp;t 2, hu been named to tbil

lfeldtlbera

Collqe'a Dean's

,

u.t.:He 111 srldulte o1 Glllla
..

~,..

TAWNEY '·
JEWELERS
422 Second Ave..
Gllllpolls, Olilo

Students Hold

Recte//1~-al £Dor Ra~~~'nnts

'eek

Diamond
Bridal Sets

'ALL

.•a••

. MENS WHITE

..

'

*1

HOT PANT
BOOTS

~:~9

PICNIC MONDAY
POMEROY - The Bend 0 '
The River Garden Club will
hold its annual picnic. at the
horne of Mrs. Chlorus Grimm
at 6:30 p.m. Monday. Mrs.
Charles Lewis will speak Oil the
annual Meigs Co1111ty ·Fair
flo""r show.
·

INFANTS

TENNIS
SHOES

[J;zan 0

blessing.
and an sang "The Sohd Rock"
followed by the Lord's Prayer.
Jeff Nye read the scripture
..
lesson from Psalm 23. Minutes
of the last meeting were read
l\ Text TI
by Mrs. Grace Lemley and roll
1 Vi
VV I
call was given. Get-well cards
were signed to be sent to Don
The .Centenary United
Price and Felton Castle.
Methodist Church, located at
' Debbie Nibert received a Centenary on Route 141, is
birthday card from her conducting 'a Vacation Church
mystery sister. Nine dollars School for children and adults .
was received from the rug sale. June 26 · J1111e 30 at 6:30.8:30
The program consisted of a each evening .
song by Krist! and Cindy
'l'he adult class will be taught
Lemley and Becky Price. by Rev . Edward G. Wallen
Susan McCoy recited a verse using the study book , "The Ufe
from the Bible and Lori McCoy and Teaching of Jesus ."
The children's classes and
sang "Down On My Knees."
teachers
are, kindergarte n,
Kristi Lemley gave a
recitation. Readings give n Margaret Fadeley and Debbie
were "The Boy On The Farm," Northup : elementary I·III,
by Mrs. Alma Hilt ; "Con· Janet Yoho and Pat Wallen ;
solation Takes Away Fear" by elementary IV-VI , Mrs. Betty
Mrs. Ola Mae Arrowood; "A Harbour, and junior high, Mrs.
Little Gypsy Hobo" by Mrs. Maxine Northup:
Pearl Lemley; " Just A Tran ~ po rtali on will be
Housewife" by Mrs. Grace arran ged for those who need it .
l.A!mley j ''Grandma's Apron,'' Call 446-3895.
by Mrs. Rosetta Jones and "In
My other Purse" by Mrs
Nancy Lemley . Mrs. OJ~
Arrowood lllld Mrs. Dottie
,
McCoy led 1n Bible quizzes.
The meetln was dismissed !'Or 1'.1'1
J:'
with ra er gb Mrs. Pearl
Lemle~. YRefre~ents were G A L L I P 0 LIS served to 26 members.
Registration for the second
summer sessions of classes
... .:ru ~&gt;n 1 u_lfl 1 r 01 • l l'·offered by the French Art
:···:·····:· .._-·.::·:· ·.. ·-·---·.·...·.-.·· --·. ~ · Colony at Rlverby is now open .
~
1
ClatrSes to be of~ered during
~
the second sessiOn Include
children's art for students IJ..9
~1,
years old, taught by Jody
~
Riggan on Monday and
~
Wednesday from 9:30·11 :30
lS
· a.m.; relief printing, taught by
Jennie Holzer and beginning
SUNDAY
oil, taught by Mrs . Joy
HYMN SING, Stiversvllle l)rendergast, both on Monday
Church, 1:30 p.m. Sunday b:v -1\nd Wednesday from 7-9 p.m.
youth fellowship. Singers in·
The dance classes will be
vited.
taught by Mrs. Gillian Moore
EAGLE RIDGE CommWlity and wlll be Tuesday and ThursChurch Bible School closing day. Ballet wlll be offered 9:31).
program, SWlday, 8 p. m.
10:30, tap from 10:31J.ll :30 and
CAPT. CHARLES Cochran, modern dance from 11 :30·
Athens Police Department, 12:30. Jennie Holzer will teach .
will be at Middleport Pen- acrylic and water color
tecostal Church, S. Third Ave., painting from 1-3 p.m.
S1111day, 10 a.m. He wlll show
A special seminar on anmovies and have displays on tiques will be offered August
drugs . Public interesied in 10·11 by Orva Walker
youth drug problem, please HieS..onbuttel, widely known
attend.
authority on antiques.
GROUP
I,
Women's
Registration forms for the
Association, Middleport First classes are available at
Uniied Presbyterian Church, Riverby, the Gallia County
family picnic, 3 p.m . at Royal District Ubrary and Carl's
Oak Park. Family affair. Shoe Store. All persons in·
terested in enrolling for classes
· PqUuck.
A PRACI'ICE for Installation are ·urged to complete the
of Aulillary officers will be
held at the Pomeroy American
Legion hail at 7 p.m. Sunday,
MONDAY ,
MEIGS lzaak Walton League
Chapter, regular meeting, 7 p.
m. Monday.
JUNIOR GARDEN Club of
Winding Trail Garden Club will
meet Monday at home of Marilt ·
Legar:
. TUESDAY
P~T MATRONS, Pomeroy
Cliapter 172, OES, 7:30 p.m.
Tu!llilay, home of Mrs. Norma
Parker.
RACINE American Legion
Auxiliary Tuesday 8 p:m. at
post .home. Installation of of.
fleers. 1
'
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
Uona Club, Wednesday noon,
Meigs l!'n. Officers will be
Installed by Uon Joe Hallnlng,
junior district deputy a! pons
J3.K .District.
. "'
·
OHIO VALLEY Com·
maqdery :H, Knights Templar,
&lt;
$150
,regUlar ·conclave, Masonic
Avail~ble in 14KT
Temple . .Election and in·
and lBKTwhite
·stallftion ollofllcers. Plana will
be .liade !of ·the annual picnic
ar yellow ,gal d. .
in ~uly. All Sir Knights

Be

GtV' en

GALLIPOIJS - Word was
received from Detroit recenUy
Mrs. Bill Davis's home was a th at Carroll Norris has
fl ower garden with the returned from a two-week tour
beautiful arrangements made of Europe. He was one of 80
by the members. Mrs. Davis Dodge deslers in the United
made a colorful centerpiece of States to win the trip, based on
fi eld flowers with green sales and accomplishments.
foliage. Mr~. John B~ers u~d
While in Europe Mr. Norris
red and wh1te carnahons With took a cruise on the Rhine
green fohadgfe.. Mrs. Elbert · River touring Holland, Ger·
Turner use 1eld flowers and many, France and Swit·
green foliage. Mrs. James zerland. By boa!, he traveled
Cochra~ used honeysuckle for from Switzerland to MWlich,
hne.s With roses 10 a Hogarth Germany, seeing th! Black
design. Mrs. Joh? Reese m~de Forest the Danube River and
a Crescent design by usmg the AI' s MoWltains.
holly and Roses.
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Church School To

S.'fjT~OWer

Visits Europe

Following the meeting, a
plant exchange was conducted
by Mrs. John Byers and all
enjoyed refreshments and a
social hour .
·
The July meeting will be held
at the home of Mrs. Albert
Haycraft where each member
is to bring a flower
arrangement. ·

;r~i~:~\~~~. ~!~ttab~o~~:

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Wood, David and Mark Smith,
Minda Lakin, Cheryl Green,
Carolyn Baker and Debbie
Grate. ·
Adults attending were Rev.
Ronald Nicholas, Mrs. Gladys
Flowers and Mrs. Martha
Smith.

Carno/.1 Noms"

and led the Lord's Prayer.
Mrs. Alice. Sprague read
"Bill's In Trouble," Mrs. Alice
Sprague, Mrs. Nettie Carter,
Mrs . Kate Dauber, Mrs .
Virginia KemP.., Mrs. Mason
and Mrs. Myrtle Kemper
presented a song, " Home
Sweet Home" accompanied by
Mrs. Ora Kemper.
Herman Sprague reap
"HWlting Season" and Mrs.
Virginia Kemper read "Royal ·
Bumper Degree." Stephanie
'
Sprague gave a recitation and
STUDENTS OF Mrs. Kathleen Greene participated in the fourth annual piano recital held
Mrs. Nettie Carter read·"When
June 17 at 8 p.m. In Vinton.
Father Asks The Blessing." A
game led by Mrs. George was
.
won by Mrs. Nettie Carter.
e
.
The program closed by
singing "Come Home, It's
Supper Time ." A potluck
supper was served in the dining
· room to the 28 persons present
.and Rev, Butcher asked the

Workers Society ·
Uses Father Theme

J
B
YF
Member otns
·
GALLIPOLIS - The Salem
Senior BY.F opened its meeting
Sunday, JWle 18, with Carolyn
Baker presiding. The opening
song, "They Will Know We Are
Christians By Our Love," was
followed with prayer by Rev.
Ronald Nicholps.
The bake sale held Saturday,
JWle 17, was discussed. The
BYF would like to thank all
those who helped with the sale.
Terry Lakin, a new member,
was J'oined by Ruth and Uoyd

McDaniel-Lear
Complete Plans

Springfield Grange
Gf!~St Of Eno Grange .

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Miss.........Haskins Holds Office
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GALLJPOLIS
Joan
Haskins,
daughter
of
Mr.
and
HENDERSON, W. Va.- Mr.
and Mrs. Edward il. Me· Mrs. Frank Haskins, lll3 Ohio
Caniel,
135
Shadle Avenue, Gallipolis, has been
Road ,
are
announcing appointed as the secretary to
final plans for the mar· the Ueutenant Governor at
riage of thei r daughter , . Buckeye'Girls' State this week.
Della Lue to Mr. Marlin Lear , She resides in iJl the city of
son of Mr . and Mrs. Garland Schille in Palmer COWl ty and
belongs to the Federalist party
Lear of Rodney.
The gracious custom of open
church will be observed Friday
evening, June 30, at 7:30 in the
O.urch of Christ at Henderson,
with Mr. Eugene Zopp of·
ficiating. Teresa Heib will be
maid of honor and bridesmilids
will be Patty Frye, cousin of
the bride. Letha Long and
Valerie Rayburn.
Laura Brunicardi, cousin or
the bride, will be flower girl
and Scott Sloan will be
ringbearer . Ca ndle bearers
will be Keith Doss and Pat
Legg.
Guests will be registered by
Carolyn Sayre and Dale Lear,
brother of the ·groom, will be
best man . Ushers will be
:t
Chester Calloway, James
Tarbell and Mike Myers.
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....· ;x;~·:·:·:·:..:..:·:·=::::::..:•m
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enrollment as qui ckly as
possible in order that suitable
class fa cili ties can be
arranged.
In addition to the regular
summer classes, three special
programs will be offered by
Nancy Howell Koehler of En on.
Mrs. Koehler is the daughter of
Mrs. Geneva Howell, 842\i
First Avenue, Gallipolis.
Mrs. Koehler's programs
·will be children 's weaving on
July 17, 21 and 24 with a $1.50
fee for materials; macrame
workshop on July 19 with a $1
registration fee and additional
costs for materials available at
the session, and textiles
workshop on July 26 with a $1
fee . Pre-registration is
required for these special
workshops by Mrs. Koehler.

,.v.·~·

Jesus;" Vicky Price, "Love The students sang "Happy
Story ," and a duel by the Zeoli Father's Day" . to all the
•~·:
•·..::
sisters.
fathers present. The program
Third graders were Lu Ann was closed with eve rying :~
Whitley, " Spinning Song :" singing "Good Night, Ladies "
Nan Harder, "Somewhere My with Penny Muiholand at the .•••
·:·:
Love;" Letha Stollings, piano.
Mrs. Daniel Struble and
" Ballade, " and Tammi
Refr eshments of nuts, children, Daneen and Steven,
Stewart, "Cherish. 11
cookies and punch were served Ci ncinnati, have spent the past
Playing for the fourth by Jane Ann Denney and Mrs. week here visiting her mother,
were
Trhonda Helen Tyler. Mrs. Ludena Mrs. Ann Webster, Rutland,
graders
Gallihan, "The Last Waltz:" Stollings registered the guests and other relatives . Mr .
Penny Muiholand, "Black and Mrs. James Mulholand Struble came today to return
Hawk Waltz ;" Cathy Twyman , presented Mrs . Greene with a his family to Cincinnati.
" Loves Dreamland ," and corsage .
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert D.
Anthony Mulholand, "Calm As Mrs. Greene extends thanks Reed of Bridgeport, W. Va. and
the Night. "
to all who helped with the daughter, Diane of Boston,
recital.
Mass ., have been the guests of
Mr. and Mrs. James Souders.
Mrs. Eulah Francis is
confined to Veterans Memorial
HO's pital, Room 132, for
medical treatment.
Mr . and Mrs . Douglas
Friends and other relatives Jackson of Rendville observed
Buchanan of Coolville; Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Buchanan and at tending were Mr . and Mrs. their 52nd wedding an·
Buchanan,
New · niversary with Mrs . Con
Sheila of Reedsville ; Mrs . Clyde
Ia d, W. Va.; Mr. an d Mrs. Young, Middleport, and David
Ovaline Royce and Sharon of Eng·n
Greenfield; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Dexter Dotson and Yvonne, Jackson, Pomeroy. The group
Davis and Denise of Parkers· Mrs. Mae Holand, Mr. and dined at Crow's Steak House .
burg , W. Va, and Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Robert O'Hara, Marlene Mrs. Douglas Ja ckson will
Grant
Hospital ,
Neil Niggemeyer , Na ncy, Miller, Terry s. Hall, Mr. and enter
Mike, and Angela of Guysville. Mrs. Floyd Owens and Cindy, Columbus, on July 3 for ob·
all from Elyria; Mr. and Mrs. servation and treatment.
Carl Owens of Logan; Mr. and
Mrs. Gdneva Yates,and Mr.
Mrs. Orval ' BlaKe 01 ,Green· and Mrs. Edgar Arnott, Allen
field ; Mrs. Jan Schurman and and Cathy ,.altended the Arnott
AWARD GIVEN '
son, of Atfiens'; Mt. and' Mrs : • ·reWlion held at Allensville. last
James R. Magnussen, son of Franklin Morris and Paul of Sunday·
Mr . and Mrs. Marcus J. Athens ; Mrs. Virginia Deeter,
Magnussen, 619 Fourth Ave., Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Barnhart
was · one of 34 students of Coolville; Mrs. Robert
MEET WEDNESDAY ,
recog nized by the Ohio State Randolph of Hockingport; Mrs.
POMEROYThe Wildwood
University College of Medicine Agnes Hill of Tuppers Plains ;
Garden
Club
will
meet at 8 p.
for excellence in their fields . Mr . and Mrs. Clarence
He was given the otolar- Buchanan , Little Hocking ; m. Wednesday at the home of
nygology department award . Mrs. Pam Hoffman and Christi Mrs . Vernon Nease with Mrs.
Dwight Milhoan as co-hostess.
Lynn of Chester; Mrs. George
Buckley, Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Kerwin, Miss Lucy Rood ,
Duane Barber, Wilbert Barber,
COUNTY RECORDER
Mr . and Mrs. Alvin Reed, Rev.
Jan
Alice
Wiseman, Elden Blake, Mrs. Gladys
daughter of Ml-.and Mrs. E. M. Williams, Mrs. Ruth Anne
Ike Wiseman, was elected to Balderson, H. E. Kibble, Mr.
the office of COWl ty recorder and Mrs. Ivan Chevalier and
for Ailstock County at Buckeye grandson, and Mr . .and Mrs.
Girls' State last week. Jan John Henderson, all from
resides In the city of Cary and Reedsville. Cake, ice cream
belongs to the Federalist party. and coffee were served to the
guests.
~.

Middleport 1
!~ Personal Notes ~

Buchanans Observe 60th
REEDSVILLE - Mr. and
Mrs. John Bushanan of Reeds·
ville telebrated their 60th
wedding anniversary Sunday.
They were married JWle 15,
1912 at Canal Wmchester, by
Rev. George Longacre.
Children and grandchildren
who at~nded were Earl

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POWER RIB GRANDPA ••• McGregor adds
a new dlmenalan ta the ribbed knit. Coal
comfortable cotton Ia atyled In a twa-wciy
rib crew neck shirt with deep four button
placket. 57.50
·

Swulay - Monday - Tlrosday - Wednesday ·
and 'Thursday Only!
BROA~TED

~"f &gt;'H'"'-«'

CHICKEN ANol/2
12 PIECES
FEED A FAMILY OF 5

$

PINT OF COLE SLAW
PI~T 0~ BAKED BEANS
6 ROLLS. NO SUBSTITUTES

No Coupons ·No Limit

-

3 99

Head far the far-out HEELS!
The fashion view shoWs lots of you, with
plenty of wide-open sp~Cet. An eyeful
of fun •.• snappy sandolsand the newest
heel hoppeningsl
A. The g01)ettin' ghillit cuts out
with a sensationolsled hMI. Whi~.

· Brown LM·Iher.

•
For Easy Pickup Call 446-2682
Your Order Will Be Waiting.

- · .....•

Mon••TMt.·Wtcl.

Sat.,.,

Tllun. 9-12

Fri.'"'

"THAT OLD..PAIHIONED COOD"III"

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CARD SHOWER
BIQWELL - A card shower
will be -lleld July 2 for Mrs.
Ernest Carpenter who will be
celebrating her 82nd birthday
that day. Her address is P. 0 .
Box 14, .Bidwell. Her maiden
name is Margaret Houck.

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VINTON - Piano stud~nts of
Mrs . Kathleen
Greene
presented a recital June 17 at 8
p.m. in the Vinton Elorpentary
Grade School Auditorium. The
program was opened with the
students singing a greeti ng
song accompanied by Cathy
Twyman .
Second graders participating
were Yvonne Zeoli, "Starlight
Waltz';; Detlbie Holley, " Deep
River; Jene Wilfong, "The
Lily of The Valley;" David
Stollings, "On Yonder Rock
Reelin g;" Ruby Preston ,
"What A Friend We Have In

of Girls' State.

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5 - The Sunday Times-8entlnel, JWle 25, 1972

Work Conferred Mrs. W.illiams Gives· Shower Held
· · · • · · Discusszon On Roses
''

f.!pon Candzdates - Ye~ldeVUtageGardenCI~b

met at the home of Mrs. Bill
Pleasant,
and
the
Philippines
Davis to enjoy the program
WILKESVILL'E
were
present.
•
given
by Mrs. Marion Williams
Wilkesvllle Chapter No. 207
The initiatory work was on .. ~ 'Rose Culture." · Mrs .
Order 'of the Eastern Star held
its annual inapectiOQ June 17 conferred upon t.hree dan. Williams . explained that
with Mrs. Marie Turner, didates by officers, Worthy anyolfe can gro;w roses a11J1ost
Worthy Matron, and . Ronald Matron Marie Turner, Worthy anywhere. ·There are roses to
· Pool,
Worthy
Patron, Patron Ronald Pool, Assol;iate suit all iastes and climates.
MaltoJI Joyce Tackett,
In selecting the site for roses
presiding.
,
·Deputy · Grand Matron, Associate Patron Randall onemustbeawarethatr~tsof
District 24, Grand Clu;pter of Tackett, Secretary !tilth most trees extend at l~ast as
Ohio, Sister , Betty Cottrill · of Swisher, Treasurer Sella far as the outmost tips of
Hamden was the Inspecting Snavely, Conductress Beulah branches. Roots of hedges
officer . Other distinguished Belle Wright, Associate grow beyond their width. Roses
guests present were Sister Conductress Bonnie Haston, set too Close to any of lhese
Janer Capehart, Grand Chaplain Juanita McNickle, woody plarits cannot get aU lhe
Representative to Alberta in Marshal Everett . Turner, moisture and food they need.
West Virginia of Pt. Pleasant Organist Maxine Wells, Adah, ·Mosttoses need sun.for at leiiSt
Chapter, and Sister Catherine Unda Shenefield; Ruth, Debra half II!• day: ·
Shenefield , Grand Pool; Esther, Kay Cull urns; · One should choose ~e ~t
Representative to Virginia In Martha, Thelma Raines; soil. Good dramage IS lm·
Ohio of Wilkesville Chapter. EJecta, Sherry Turner ; portant . . Nearly all soils,
Worthy Matrons and Patrons Warder Linda Combs and especially sandy or clay soils,
ol the VInton , Oak Hill, Sentinel, Gary Haston.
are improved by addition ~p to
Refreshments were served four inches of compost, peat
O.eshire, Proctorville, South
Point, Wellston, Thurman and by Merium Hoffman, Madeline moss or other form o~ orga~ic
Ironton chapters were present. Wiseman and Anna Elizabeth matter, thoroughly m1xed w1th
Past Matrons and Patrons of Turner.
lhe soil to a depth of twelve
Wilkesville present were Grace
inches.
~:'o\1'!Mo.&lt;~~
Colwell, Shirley Peters,
Little plant food is needed at
Mildred Nelson, Ruth Swisher,
lirst by rosebushes. Prepared
Sella Snavely, Catherine
rose fertilizer mixed com·
Shenefield, Maxine Wells,
pletely into the soil will suffice.
Juanita McNickle, Beulah
When plants are unpacked,
Belle Wright, Maxie Ponn,
pllll]ge their roots in a pail of
Thelma Leitch, Anna Elizabeth
water. Cut off dead and broken
Turner, Zelda Hall, Kenneth
roots and decayed or twiggy
Nelson, Rex Shenefield, Earl
shoots. Make a hole 15-18 in·
•ches wide and make a moWld
Wright, John Colwell and
SUNDAY
of line soil in the middle of the
William NcNickle.
COMBINED CHARGE church
. Soloistfor the evening, Connie service at the Vinton United hole . Hold the bush in the
Sue Wells, sang "Whither Thou
spread
Methodist Church with a center of the hole
'th and
t bend.
Goest I Wlll Go." One hWldred
the roots out WI ou
. mg
potluck lunch following, 10:30
· tin the w k 1 1
and twenty-one guests from the
or lwls g m. or Pen Y
· · t'mg c hap ters from MONDAY
a. m.
of fine soil with the fingers and
v1s1
t
McArth ur, Zal esk.'· we11 son,
OCSEA Gallia Chapter shake the bush so that the soil
Thurman, Ironton, Cheshire, . meetl'ng, 7·.30 p.m. Guest falls between the roolll and no
v·10 t H d o k Hill
air gaps are left. Fill in more
on, am en, a
' speakers, refreshments and soil until the hole if half full ,
1h f
Proc torville, South Point, country store bingo.
Middleport, Harrisonville,
press down firmly w t oot.
Gallipolis, Nelsonville, Pt . TUESDAY
Pour half bucket of water
GOLDEN Circle of Grace aroWld bush, after this settles,
United Methodist Church will fill the hole with dirt.
have a noon potluck dinner.
At least 25 insects attack
11
Everyone is invited. Bring roses and do serious damage if
._,
table service.
left Wlchecked. One should
GALIJPOIJS - Mr. and AMERICAN
LEG 10 N examine plants daily for signs
Mrs. Dea~CRoger Evims, Route Auxiliary will meet at 7:30 of possible trouble . Chewing
2, Gallipolis, are announcing p.m. in the Legion Hall.
insects (Including Japanese
the birth of a son, Dean Roger
bettles) which eat leaves,
flower buds and blooms are
Evans, Jr., born on May 29 at
Pleasant Valley Hospital. The
I
controlled by keeping all parts
baby weighed eight pounds,
GALIJPOLIS - Mr. and of the flower covered with
one-half ounce. Maternal Mrs . Rick Swain are an - insecticide. All-purpose dusts
grandp~ren!s are Mr. and Mrs'. . nouncing the birth of a seven and sprays applied at 7-10 day
Thomas Shamblin, Route I, poWld, two OUJ1Ce daughter, intervals throughout the
Gallipolis·. Pafernal 'granij. Heather Dawn , on ·JWle 21. She growing season will eliminate
parents are Mr. and Mrs. E. L. is welcomed home by a brother practi cally all of insect
Evans, Route 2, Gallipolis.
Ricky. Maternal grandparents problems.
~
are Mr . and Mrs. Earl Waugh,
Mrs. John H. Reese,
Scottown . Paternal grand· president, called the meeting
HOSPITAL NEWS parents are Mr . and Mrs. to order by all giving the Lord's
Verlin Swain, Crown City. Prayer in 1111ison. Mrs. Bill
Holzer Medical Center, Rt. Great-grandparents are Mr. Davis read the secretary's
160 and Rt. 35. Generjl) visiting and Mrs. B. G. Rucker, report and the announcement
hours 2'4 and 7-8 p.m. Scottown. Mr. and Mrs.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to Glenville Halley and Mr . and
4:30 p.m. Parents only on Mrs . Stanley Swain, Cro!Yn
Pediatric's Ward.
City.
Jwte 22, 19'12
.
Birth-Mrs. RobertLovette, :;~
son, Oak Hill.
:~
Discharges - Mrs . Roy ::~
Yauger and daughter, James ·~
Roush, Carl Allensworth, Mrs. ;~
Eddie VanMeter and son, Lisa ~j
Norton, Bryan Sherward, ~
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Elizabeth Bell, Jill Martin,
MONDAY
Kenneth Robinette, Fred
.
POMEROY
Chamber of
Shepherd; Mrs. Daniel Griffith .
and son, Ellen Ebersbach, Commerce Monday at Meigs
Leslie Evans, Geraldine Inn at noon.
YoWlg, Paul Wallace, Elsie
1 RUTLAND G.arden Club, 8
Thaxton, Aaron Swope, · p.m. Monday at the horne of
Genevieve Starcher, Brenda Mrs. Robert Canaday with
Jones, Bonnie Hamilton, Mrs . Roy Snowden, co-hostess.
STAFF and Officers, Meigs
Rhonda Edmonds, Edson
Temple,
home of Mrs. Betty
Edgington and Margaret
Spencer,
Monday
at 7:30 p.m.
Bickle.
.•
Tuesday
Pleasant Valley Hospital
AMERICAN
Legion
DISCHARGES Mrs . Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
Marlon Kirk, Point Pleasant; 39, 7:30Tuesday, installation of
Edward Willet, New Haven ; officers.
Mrs. Ernest Frazier, Frazier's
Bottom; Mrs. David Marston,
Wyoming, Mich.; Mrs. Emma
"Smith, Henderson; Mrs. J. A.
Utile, Point Plessant; Mrs.
Lena Crookham, Leon .
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Mrs. jerry Davis

r;::'.'!'l&gt;';';. . . ).

Morris-Davis Vows
Solemnized june 3 ·
MIDDLEPORT - Miss sang "My Cup RWlneth Over"
Lennie Morris, daughter of Mr. and "For All We Know."
and Mrs. Charles W. Morris,
For her daughter's wedding,
Huntington , W. Va ., and Je rrY Mrs. Morris wore a yellow
David Davis, son of Mr. and long • sleeves dress with
Mrs. Max 0 . Davis1 Mid· b!ack patent accessories.
dleport, were wtiled in double Mrs . Davis wore a beige
ring marriage Saturday, J1111e short • sleeved dress and
3, at 2:30p.m. In a candlelight white accessories. Both were
service at GOod .Samaritan presented with yellow rose
United Methodist Church with corsages.
Rev. Ralph G. Sager, Jr. and
A reception for the couple
Rev. Wilflam Carter of· h~ld at the Duck's Inn im·
Hclatlng.
mediately followed the
Given In marriage by her ceremony with Janice Rose,
father,thebrideworea bishop· Northup,, Shelly Ferrell, Mt.
sleeved gown with a tucked Gilead, and Mrs . Michael
sheer yoke and accents of Porter, Grove City, presiding
Venise lace. Her chapel train at the table. Guests were
· was of silk organza and her registered by Joyce Davis,
Uered bouffant vell cascaded sister of the groom.
from a Juliet cap of Veni:ie lace
For their wedding trip
and satin. She carried a navy through northern Ohio, the new
blue basket of red, while and Mrs. Davis changed into a
blue pomP.Ons ~lxie car- navy and white sailor dress
naUons,. .'wt;.IBmthi,rith -:wl!h w)litd ·)i&amp;\tssorleli.\!IN
red andj~~s anCI.J'Ihlt~ . worb d w~~ rosebud C?fsa~e.
satin sireamers.
Mrs . Diivls Is a 1966 graduate
'Judy Blevins, HWltlngton, of Huntington High .School,
was maid of honor and Mrs. attended Marshall Umvers1ty
Craig Troxel, Athens, and Mrs. and . grBduated from . Holzer
Arnold Miller sister of the Med1cal Center School '" 1971.
bride, were brldesmaida. They A member of Good Samaritan
wore ldeniical long-sleeved United Methodist Church, she
gowns of white organdy is an R.N. in the emergency
bodices with checked navy and deparlment of Holzer Medical
white skirts with accents of red Center.
ribbons. They carried red
Mr. Davis is a 1965 graduate
baskets of red white and blue of Middleport High School and
pompons, pixi~ carn'ations, and Is a 1969 cum laude graduate of
baby's breath with red, white Rio Grande College. He 1s a
and blue streamers.
member of the Bradbury
John W. Johnson, Pomeroy, Church of Christ and is
served as best man· and Jerry presently employed as a
Van lnwagen, Middleport, and teacher in the Gallipolis City
Arnold Miller , Huntington, School system.
were ushers .
The new couple is residing at
Mrs. John McCornas, Jr., the 35 West Apartments,
was pianist and Jane Crouch Apartment 15 in Gallipolis.

.
: Events 1.

Son Born Jn Ma

School Honors Fathers
GAUJPOIJS - Paint Creek
Baptist Sunday School ob·
aerved Father's bay last
Sw!day during the S1111day
School hour. "Seek The Lord
While He May be Fo1111d, Call
Upon Him While He Is Near"
was the call to worship by
superintendent Mrs. Leslie
Howard.
The school sang "In The
Garden" followed by scripture
reacllns •. Matthew 6 : ~15. by
Olarles Jamison . The Lord's
Prayer In 1111ison was led by
Wanda Jamison .
A poem "When I Pray" was
read by Wanda Jamison after
which the school sang "I Am
Thind 0 Lord." In observance

of Father's Day, Rev. and Mrs.
Grover G. Turner sang "How
Great Thou Arl." A poem
"What Is A F11ther" was read
by Mrs. Etta Jamison .
Each father present was
recognized with a love token,
given to each one by Mrs. Etta
Jamison .

Plymale Family
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1aVe ReUntDn

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GALLIPOLIS
The
Plymale Re1111ion will be held
Sunday, July 16, from 10 a.m....
p.m. at the Buffalo High School
on Buffalo Creek Road, Wayne
Co1111ty, W. Va. Morning services In the gymnasium will
begin at 10:30 with a picnic
IWlch following at 12:30 in the
cafeteria. During the afternoon
program, prizes will be
awarded to the largest family
present, the oldest and the
youngest persons attending
and the one who traveled the
farthest. Bring a picnic basket.

1be AlmiiiiiiC
By UDIIttl Preu latenuotl-1
Today II Sunday, June 25, the
1771h day of 1972 with 189 to
follow.
The moon is approaching illl
full phase.
The morning stars are Venus
and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiler.
Thole born Oli this date are
under llle sign d Cancer.
French composer Gustave
ChllrpenUer was born June 25, under the cornmand of Maj.
Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower.
18811.
In 1960 the North Koreans
On lhll date In his lory :
Invaded
South Korea.
In 11'11, General • Gecrge.
QIJ._. and hill force ol 2011 men In 1962 the U.S. Supreme
were -creel by Sioux Court handed down a decision
llldlenl in the battlt: ol Utile interpreied as barring prayer In
public IChooll,
1111 Horn in Montana.
A thought for ~hi! day: British
• In 1M2 the U.S. War
DeiW ILAal IZIIIOUIICed the writer JOhn Galsworthy sald:
forme! •llbllllunent o1 a "If you do not lhlnk about the
Ell'opiM ..... rl Gplnltionll future, you cannot have one."

~·

B'rth A nnoUnCred

from Mabel Reed, stale
president, for the 4:/nd con·
vention of the Ohio Association
of Garden Clubs, to be held ar
Denison University, August IJ..
10.
Thank-you notes were read
from Mrs. Berc Tap, Gretchen
Carty and Phylis Brown for,tile
flower arrangements made by
Ye Olde Vill!lge Garden Club
for the AAUW Tour of Homes .
June 11. Mrs. Marion Williams
gave the treasurir's· report.
Each member answered lhe
roll call by naming . their
favorite rose.
Mrs. John Byers, giving the
July tips, reminded everyone
to sow perennial flower seeds
now. A coldframe is an ideal
place. Check all plants for
spider mites, apnids and other
insects. Malathion Is a good
insecticide for these. A fine
spray on the plant· gives the
best spread and control. After
delphinium blooms are past cut
off the flowers and let new
shoots come from below for a
. second blooming.

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GALLIPOLIS ·"- · A bridal gifts from Mrs. Ellae Kimball,
shower was given recenUyby ·Mrs. John Paul Kerns, Mn.
Meda Edelblute and Debbie Marion Caldwell, Mrs. Jack
North in honor of Janice Rose, Carter, Mrs. Richard Sanders,
Richard Mrs . ,James Houck, Mrs.
bride-elect of
Bowersox . Mrs. Edwin Melvin Sheets, Mrs. Everett
Edelblute and Mrs. John North McMahon, Mni. Leon Saun·
assisted with the shower which ders, Mrs. Ronnie Saunden,
was held at the North home. Mrs. Torn San~, Mrs; Carl
Gifts were placed .on a Atkins, , ~on Atkins, Mn.
decorated table. Green and Hsrland'Sanders, Mn: Worthy
yellow streamers descending Evans, Mrs. Leslie BreWer,
from white wedding bells . Mrs. Marland Ctemeeps, .Mn.
above the inanUe to the table Claude Evans, Mrs. Morris
were caught together \Vith Haskins, Mrs. Oeari Davis,
clusters of white daisies. A · Mrs. Mike Davis, Becky Laldn,
dessert course of cake and Hazel Halley, . Anna Mae
punch in keeping with the Halley, Mrs. George Adams,
gre~n and yellow color scheme Mrs. Bill Matthews, Mrs. Jeff
was served to the guests.
Smith, Mrs. Cliff Wilson, Mrs.
Mrs. Ronnie Keenan wlls the Roger Hood, Mrs. · Russell
winner of the -game of the Sarrett, Mrs. Elmer CaldWt!ll,
evening and Mrs. Jack Carter Mrs. Ronnie Keenan, Mri.
won the door prize .
Smeltzer · Rose, Mrs. Mike
Miss Rose opened and Williams and the hostesses.
graciously acknowledged her

••

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ENO - Eno . Grange met
recently at the grange hall with
Master Ernest· Greenlee
presiding. After a brief
buainess session, members of
the Sprjngfield Grange were
introdu.ced and an informative
program on the theme "Faith
Of Our Fathers" was given by
Mrs. Mil.dred George. For ·
dev.otions, Rev. Jeff Butcher
read from II Kings, gave a talk

GALLIPOLIS - The Faith·
lui Workers Society of ihe
Poplar Ridge Free-Will Bap.tist
Church met at the home of
Mrs. Nettie Swisher for the
June meeting. The meeting

1

Order fall-blooming bulbs
such as fall
crocus,
colchicums, sternbergias plus.
blooming Madonna lilies for
planting in August. Keep roses
going with a handful of rose
fond about once a month in
summer. Glads and other
flowers which bloom In 90 days
can still be planted early this
month . Remove old flowers
from both annuals and
perennials and water and feed
moderately for continued
blooming.
•

GALIJPOIJS - The Sew
·and So Club met Thursday
evening at the horne of Mrs.
Lewis Sheets with 13 members
and six guests present. The
meeting was called to order .by
the president; Mrs. Gerald
Dennison.
~votions were led by Mrs.
Lewis Sheets and she resd the
secretary's report. Mrs .
Monvil Swain read the
treasW'er's report.
Mrs. Lawrence Marti con·
ducied the games and Mrs.
Wymond Sheets won the prize.
A stork shower was given for
Mrs. Jimmie Sheets.
A family picnic dinner was
planned for the next meeting to
be held July 12 at 6 p.m. at the
Ga!lia County Fairgrounds.
Refreshpienta. were lletVfC[ .....,,
by the hostess. ·
.•,,,
...

Head For Mexico
SYRACUSE- Mr. an~ Mrs.
Willis Leadmgham, Gallipolis,
former Syracuse residents,
will leave Saturday for Mexico
City to attend the Uons Club
Convention. The Leadlnghams
will , celebr~te their . 2~~h
wedding anmversary while 10
Mexico City.

...,

.,
RECEIVES DEGREE
,,
Ruth Card, daughter of Rev.
and Mrs . Robert Card, .,
graduated from the Baldwin· ...'•
Wallace College, Berea, on ·
June 9. She received her
Bachelor of Arts degree.

.,

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DAN THOMAS
&amp; SON

"

SUMMER
New Fall
Merchandise
Arriving

GROUP OF
WOMENS

SHOES

Dai~

,,

'7~Mll~ f J
TO '21.00

'""-..,_....\.... .,__....,......

LOVE'S

TWOSOME

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - William
Fry, Mason ; Blaine Hajok,
Melrose, Ill.; Clarence
Hayman , Ra cine ; Pauline
Jones, Cheshire.
DISCHARGES - Joann
Co nkle, Iva ' Howe!~, Eric
Robinson, John Blosser, Blaine
Hajok.

and We
Need
The Room

TENNIS
SHOES

'3~~

7.99 .

1

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SUMMER SHOES

'311 OFF

CLARK'S .
JEWELRY
STORE

J

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FINAL

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MENS

SHOES

•••••••
NO atARGES
NO lAY-AWAY

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12,99

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.WID , IUNQ 1!1 MAN ' . 100

fflKeepea.ke•
Pl'ATOMEET
IIICliiTIIU:D DIAW O NO IIIHOt
RACINE - Members of the
Racine PTA are aalted to meet
with Mr1. . Sue Follrod,
preaident, It 7:30p.m. Monday
on the school grounds to
diacuss the possibllity of
Second Ave.
342
preparing an entry for the July L-....!~~~~~-.J
4th p.nde to be held In Racine. .

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All SALES

)J

DAN THOMAS &amp; SON
"SERVING YOU SINCE 1936"
324 Second Alellue

Regts· tratt'on
D DACQlllen

's

J
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I
caIen dar.

If

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' , ON DEAN'S LIST
GUy A. Dey, 1011 of Mr. and
Mn. James C. Day, GaiUpoUa
Rou&amp;t 2, hu been named to tbil

lfeldtlbera

Collqe'a Dean's

,

u.t.:He 111 srldulte o1 Glllla
..

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TAWNEY '·
JEWELERS
422 Second Ave..
Gllllpolls, Olilo

Students Hold

Recte//1~-al £Dor Ra~~~'nnts

'eek

Diamond
Bridal Sets

'ALL

.•a••

. MENS WHITE

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HOT PANT
BOOTS

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PICNIC MONDAY
POMEROY - The Bend 0 '
The River Garden Club will
hold its annual picnic. at the
horne of Mrs. Chlorus Grimm
at 6:30 p.m. Monday. Mrs.
Charles Lewis will speak Oil the
annual Meigs Co1111ty ·Fair
flo""r show.
·

INFANTS

TENNIS
SHOES

[J;zan 0

blessing.
and an sang "The Sohd Rock"
followed by the Lord's Prayer.
Jeff Nye read the scripture
..
lesson from Psalm 23. Minutes
of the last meeting were read
l\ Text TI
by Mrs. Grace Lemley and roll
1 Vi
VV I
call was given. Get-well cards
were signed to be sent to Don
The .Centenary United
Price and Felton Castle.
Methodist Church, located at
' Debbie Nibert received a Centenary on Route 141, is
birthday card from her conducting 'a Vacation Church
mystery sister. Nine dollars School for children and adults .
was received from the rug sale. June 26 · J1111e 30 at 6:30.8:30
The program consisted of a each evening .
song by Krist! and Cindy
'l'he adult class will be taught
Lemley and Becky Price. by Rev . Edward G. Wallen
Susan McCoy recited a verse using the study book , "The Ufe
from the Bible and Lori McCoy and Teaching of Jesus ."
The children's classes and
sang "Down On My Knees."
teachers
are, kindergarte n,
Kristi Lemley gave a
recitation. Readings give n Margaret Fadeley and Debbie
were "The Boy On The Farm," Northup : elementary I·III,
by Mrs. Alma Hilt ; "Con· Janet Yoho and Pat Wallen ;
solation Takes Away Fear" by elementary IV-VI , Mrs. Betty
Mrs. Ola Mae Arrowood; "A Harbour, and junior high, Mrs.
Little Gypsy Hobo" by Mrs. Maxine Northup:
Pearl Lemley; " Just A Tran ~ po rtali on will be
Housewife" by Mrs. Grace arran ged for those who need it .
l.A!mley j ''Grandma's Apron,'' Call 446-3895.
by Mrs. Rosetta Jones and "In
My other Purse" by Mrs
Nancy Lemley . Mrs. OJ~
Arrowood lllld Mrs. Dottie
,
McCoy led 1n Bible quizzes.
The meetln was dismissed !'Or 1'.1'1
J:'
with ra er gb Mrs. Pearl
Lemle~. YRefre~ents were G A L L I P 0 LIS served to 26 members.
Registration for the second
summer sessions of classes
... .:ru ~&gt;n 1 u_lfl 1 r 01 • l l'·offered by the French Art
:···:·····:· .._-·.::·:· ·.. ·-·---·.·...·.-.·· --·. ~ · Colony at Rlverby is now open .
~
1
ClatrSes to be of~ered during
~
the second sessiOn Include
children's art for students IJ..9
~1,
years old, taught by Jody
~
Riggan on Monday and
~
Wednesday from 9:30·11 :30
lS
· a.m.; relief printing, taught by
Jennie Holzer and beginning
SUNDAY
oil, taught by Mrs . Joy
HYMN SING, Stiversvllle l)rendergast, both on Monday
Church, 1:30 p.m. Sunday b:v -1\nd Wednesday from 7-9 p.m.
youth fellowship. Singers in·
The dance classes will be
vited.
taught by Mrs. Gillian Moore
EAGLE RIDGE CommWlity and wlll be Tuesday and ThursChurch Bible School closing day. Ballet wlll be offered 9:31).
program, SWlday, 8 p. m.
10:30, tap from 10:31J.ll :30 and
CAPT. CHARLES Cochran, modern dance from 11 :30·
Athens Police Department, 12:30. Jennie Holzer will teach .
will be at Middleport Pen- acrylic and water color
tecostal Church, S. Third Ave., painting from 1-3 p.m.
S1111day, 10 a.m. He wlll show
A special seminar on anmovies and have displays on tiques will be offered August
drugs . Public interesied in 10·11 by Orva Walker
youth drug problem, please HieS..onbuttel, widely known
attend.
authority on antiques.
GROUP
I,
Women's
Registration forms for the
Association, Middleport First classes are available at
Uniied Presbyterian Church, Riverby, the Gallia County
family picnic, 3 p.m . at Royal District Ubrary and Carl's
Oak Park. Family affair. Shoe Store. All persons in·
terested in enrolling for classes
· PqUuck.
A PRACI'ICE for Installation are ·urged to complete the
of Aulillary officers will be
held at the Pomeroy American
Legion hail at 7 p.m. Sunday,
MONDAY ,
MEIGS lzaak Walton League
Chapter, regular meeting, 7 p.
m. Monday.
JUNIOR GARDEN Club of
Winding Trail Garden Club will
meet Monday at home of Marilt ·
Legar:
. TUESDAY
P~T MATRONS, Pomeroy
Cliapter 172, OES, 7:30 p.m.
Tu!llilay, home of Mrs. Norma
Parker.
RACINE American Legion
Auxiliary Tuesday 8 p:m. at
post .home. Installation of of.
fleers. 1
'
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
Uona Club, Wednesday noon,
Meigs l!'n. Officers will be
Installed by Uon Joe Hallnlng,
junior district deputy a! pons
J3.K .District.
. "'
·
OHIO VALLEY Com·
maqdery :H, Knights Templar,
&lt;
$150
,regUlar ·conclave, Masonic
Avail~ble in 14KT
Temple . .Election and in·
and lBKTwhite
·stallftion ollofllcers. Plana will
be .liade !of ·the annual picnic
ar yellow ,gal d. .
in ~uly. All Sir Knights

Be

GtV' en

GALLIPOIJS - Word was
received from Detroit recenUy
Mrs. Bill Davis's home was a th at Carroll Norris has
fl ower garden with the returned from a two-week tour
beautiful arrangements made of Europe. He was one of 80
by the members. Mrs. Davis Dodge deslers in the United
made a colorful centerpiece of States to win the trip, based on
fi eld flowers with green sales and accomplishments.
foliage. Mr~. John B~ers u~d
While in Europe Mr. Norris
red and wh1te carnahons With took a cruise on the Rhine
green fohadgfe.. Mrs. Elbert · River touring Holland, Ger·
Turner use 1eld flowers and many, France and Swit·
green foliage. Mrs. James zerland. By boa!, he traveled
Cochra~ used honeysuckle for from Switzerland to MWlich,
hne.s With roses 10 a Hogarth Germany, seeing th! Black
design. Mrs. Joh? Reese m~de Forest the Danube River and
a Crescent design by usmg the AI' s MoWltains.
holly and Roses.
P

.

Church School To

S.'fjT~OWer

Visits Europe

Following the meeting, a
plant exchange was conducted
by Mrs. John Byers and all
enjoyed refreshments and a
social hour .
·
The July meeting will be held
at the home of Mrs. Albert
Haycraft where each member
is to bring a flower
arrangement. ·

;r~i~:~\~~~. ~!~ttab~o~~:

.
Wood, David and Mark Smith,
Minda Lakin, Cheryl Green,
Carolyn Baker and Debbie
Grate. ·
Adults attending were Rev.
Ronald Nicholas, Mrs. Gladys
Flowers and Mrs. Martha
Smith.

Carno/.1 Noms"

and led the Lord's Prayer.
Mrs. Alice. Sprague read
"Bill's In Trouble," Mrs. Alice
Sprague, Mrs. Nettie Carter,
Mrs . Kate Dauber, Mrs .
Virginia KemP.., Mrs. Mason
and Mrs. Myrtle Kemper
presented a song, " Home
Sweet Home" accompanied by
Mrs. Ora Kemper.
Herman Sprague reap
"HWlting Season" and Mrs.
Virginia Kemper read "Royal ·
Bumper Degree." Stephanie
'
Sprague gave a recitation and
STUDENTS OF Mrs. Kathleen Greene participated in the fourth annual piano recital held
Mrs. Nettie Carter read·"When
June 17 at 8 p.m. In Vinton.
Father Asks The Blessing." A
game led by Mrs. George was
.
won by Mrs. Nettie Carter.
e
.
The program closed by
singing "Come Home, It's
Supper Time ." A potluck
supper was served in the dining
· room to the 28 persons present
.and Rev, Butcher asked the

Workers Society ·
Uses Father Theme

J
B
YF
Member otns
·
GALLIPOLIS - The Salem
Senior BY.F opened its meeting
Sunday, JWle 18, with Carolyn
Baker presiding. The opening
song, "They Will Know We Are
Christians By Our Love," was
followed with prayer by Rev.
Ronald Nicholps.
The bake sale held Saturday,
JWle 17, was discussed. The
BYF would like to thank all
those who helped with the sale.
Terry Lakin, a new member,
was J'oined by Ruth and Uoyd

McDaniel-Lear
Complete Plans

Springfield Grange
Gf!~St Of Eno Grange .

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Miss.........Haskins Holds Office
.

GALLJPOLIS
Joan
Haskins,
daughter
of
Mr.
and
HENDERSON, W. Va.- Mr.
and Mrs. Edward il. Me· Mrs. Frank Haskins, lll3 Ohio
Caniel,
135
Shadle Avenue, Gallipolis, has been
Road ,
are
announcing appointed as the secretary to
final plans for the mar· the Ueutenant Governor at
riage of thei r daughter , . Buckeye'Girls' State this week.
Della Lue to Mr. Marlin Lear , She resides in iJl the city of
son of Mr . and Mrs. Garland Schille in Palmer COWl ty and
belongs to the Federalist party
Lear of Rodney.
The gracious custom of open
church will be observed Friday
evening, June 30, at 7:30 in the
O.urch of Christ at Henderson,
with Mr. Eugene Zopp of·
ficiating. Teresa Heib will be
maid of honor and bridesmilids
will be Patty Frye, cousin of
the bride. Letha Long and
Valerie Rayburn.
Laura Brunicardi, cousin or
the bride, will be flower girl
and Scott Sloan will be
ringbearer . Ca ndle bearers
will be Keith Doss and Pat
Legg.
Guests will be registered by
Carolyn Sayre and Dale Lear,
brother of the ·groom, will be
best man . Ushers will be
:t
Chester Calloway, James
Tarbell and Mike Myers.
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....· ;x;~·:·:·:·:..:..:·:·=::::::..:•m
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enrollment as qui ckly as
possible in order that suitable
class fa cili ties can be
arranged.
In addition to the regular
summer classes, three special
programs will be offered by
Nancy Howell Koehler of En on.
Mrs. Koehler is the daughter of
Mrs. Geneva Howell, 842\i
First Avenue, Gallipolis.
Mrs. Koehler's programs
·will be children 's weaving on
July 17, 21 and 24 with a $1.50
fee for materials; macrame
workshop on July 19 with a $1
registration fee and additional
costs for materials available at
the session, and textiles
workshop on July 26 with a $1
fee . Pre-registration is
required for these special
workshops by Mrs. Koehler.

,.v.·~·

Jesus;" Vicky Price, "Love The students sang "Happy
Story ," and a duel by the Zeoli Father's Day" . to all the
•~·:
•·..::
sisters.
fathers present. The program
Third graders were Lu Ann was closed with eve rying :~
Whitley, " Spinning Song :" singing "Good Night, Ladies "
Nan Harder, "Somewhere My with Penny Muiholand at the .•••
·:·:
Love;" Letha Stollings, piano.
Mrs. Daniel Struble and
" Ballade, " and Tammi
Refr eshments of nuts, children, Daneen and Steven,
Stewart, "Cherish. 11
cookies and punch were served Ci ncinnati, have spent the past
Playing for the fourth by Jane Ann Denney and Mrs. week here visiting her mother,
were
Trhonda Helen Tyler. Mrs. Ludena Mrs. Ann Webster, Rutland,
graders
Gallihan, "The Last Waltz:" Stollings registered the guests and other relatives . Mr .
Penny Muiholand, "Black and Mrs. James Mulholand Struble came today to return
Hawk Waltz ;" Cathy Twyman , presented Mrs . Greene with a his family to Cincinnati.
" Loves Dreamland ," and corsage .
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert D.
Anthony Mulholand, "Calm As Mrs. Greene extends thanks Reed of Bridgeport, W. Va. and
the Night. "
to all who helped with the daughter, Diane of Boston,
recital.
Mass ., have been the guests of
Mr. and Mrs. James Souders.
Mrs. Eulah Francis is
confined to Veterans Memorial
HO's pital, Room 132, for
medical treatment.
Mr . and Mrs . Douglas
Friends and other relatives Jackson of Rendville observed
Buchanan of Coolville; Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Buchanan and at tending were Mr . and Mrs. their 52nd wedding an·
Buchanan,
New · niversary with Mrs . Con
Sheila of Reedsville ; Mrs . Clyde
Ia d, W. Va.; Mr. an d Mrs. Young, Middleport, and David
Ovaline Royce and Sharon of Eng·n
Greenfield; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Dexter Dotson and Yvonne, Jackson, Pomeroy. The group
Davis and Denise of Parkers· Mrs. Mae Holand, Mr. and dined at Crow's Steak House .
burg , W. Va, and Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Robert O'Hara, Marlene Mrs. Douglas Ja ckson will
Grant
Hospital ,
Neil Niggemeyer , Na ncy, Miller, Terry s. Hall, Mr. and enter
Mike, and Angela of Guysville. Mrs. Floyd Owens and Cindy, Columbus, on July 3 for ob·
all from Elyria; Mr. and Mrs. servation and treatment.
Carl Owens of Logan; Mr. and
Mrs. Gdneva Yates,and Mr.
Mrs. Orval ' BlaKe 01 ,Green· and Mrs. Edgar Arnott, Allen
field ; Mrs. Jan Schurman and and Cathy ,.altended the Arnott
AWARD GIVEN '
son, of Atfiens'; Mt. and' Mrs : • ·reWlion held at Allensville. last
James R. Magnussen, son of Franklin Morris and Paul of Sunday·
Mr . and Mrs. Marcus J. Athens ; Mrs. Virginia Deeter,
Magnussen, 619 Fourth Ave., Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Barnhart
was · one of 34 students of Coolville; Mrs. Robert
MEET WEDNESDAY ,
recog nized by the Ohio State Randolph of Hockingport; Mrs.
POMEROYThe Wildwood
University College of Medicine Agnes Hill of Tuppers Plains ;
Garden
Club
will
meet at 8 p.
for excellence in their fields . Mr . and Mrs. Clarence
He was given the otolar- Buchanan , Little Hocking ; m. Wednesday at the home of
nygology department award . Mrs. Pam Hoffman and Christi Mrs . Vernon Nease with Mrs.
Dwight Milhoan as co-hostess.
Lynn of Chester; Mrs. George
Buckley, Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Kerwin, Miss Lucy Rood ,
Duane Barber, Wilbert Barber,
COUNTY RECORDER
Mr . and Mrs. Alvin Reed, Rev.
Jan
Alice
Wiseman, Elden Blake, Mrs. Gladys
daughter of Ml-.and Mrs. E. M. Williams, Mrs. Ruth Anne
Ike Wiseman, was elected to Balderson, H. E. Kibble, Mr.
the office of COWl ty recorder and Mrs. Ivan Chevalier and
for Ailstock County at Buckeye grandson, and Mr . .and Mrs.
Girls' State last week. Jan John Henderson, all from
resides In the city of Cary and Reedsville. Cake, ice cream
belongs to the Federalist party. and coffee were served to the
guests.
~.

Middleport 1
!~ Personal Notes ~

Buchanans Observe 60th
REEDSVILLE - Mr. and
Mrs. John Bushanan of Reeds·
ville telebrated their 60th
wedding anniversary Sunday.
They were married JWle 15,
1912 at Canal Wmchester, by
Rev. George Longacre.
Children and grandchildren
who at~nded were Earl

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POWER RIB GRANDPA ••• McGregor adds
a new dlmenalan ta the ribbed knit. Coal
comfortable cotton Ia atyled In a twa-wciy
rib crew neck shirt with deep four button
placket. 57.50
·

Swulay - Monday - Tlrosday - Wednesday ·
and 'Thursday Only!
BROA~TED

~"f &gt;'H'"'-«'

CHICKEN ANol/2
12 PIECES
FEED A FAMILY OF 5

$

PINT OF COLE SLAW
PI~T 0~ BAKED BEANS
6 ROLLS. NO SUBSTITUTES

No Coupons ·No Limit

-

3 99

Head far the far-out HEELS!
The fashion view shoWs lots of you, with
plenty of wide-open sp~Cet. An eyeful
of fun •.• snappy sandolsand the newest
heel hoppeningsl
A. The g01)ettin' ghillit cuts out
with a sensationolsled hMI. Whi~.

· Brown LM·Iher.

•
For Easy Pickup Call 446-2682
Your Order Will Be Waiting.

- · .....•

Mon••TMt.·Wtcl.

Sat.,.,

Tllun. 9-12

Fri.'"'

"THAT OLD..PAIHIONED COOD"III"

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CARD SHOWER
BIQWELL - A card shower
will be -lleld July 2 for Mrs.
Ernest Carpenter who will be
celebrating her 82nd birthday
that day. Her address is P. 0 .
Box 14, .Bidwell. Her maiden
name is Margaret Houck.

1l

T .

VINTON - Piano stud~nts of
Mrs . Kathleen
Greene
presented a recital June 17 at 8
p.m. in the Vinton Elorpentary
Grade School Auditorium. The
program was opened with the
students singing a greeti ng
song accompanied by Cathy
Twyman .
Second graders participating
were Yvonne Zeoli, "Starlight
Waltz';; Detlbie Holley, " Deep
River; Jene Wilfong, "The
Lily of The Valley;" David
Stollings, "On Yonder Rock
Reelin g;" Ruby Preston ,
"What A Friend We Have In

of Girls' State.

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8 - The &amp;lnclay ~line!, June 25, 11172

vie•~ from

The Redwoods
'

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h'
Forestry or· Liquidation, Wh IC
· .

By MURRAY OLDERMAN

'

ayne
Nation·
a
l
.Forest
.

all American women sew.

U you want to make the
clothes for Dick and Jane, loc
an opener there was a red and
green tartan boy's outfit with
knickers and westkit plua 4
solid green shirt. For the girls, .
there · were tweedy-patterned
pants with a multi-colored
smock lop. ·
A black and white .pleated,
checked skirt topped out with a
pin:"lripe blazer ~ navy and
· wh1te. Toddlers coveralls
were in red_ a~ navy plaid.
Anothe~ grrl s outfit. featured
a red plaid poncho With tassel
trtm worn with flannel pants in
solid red.
Toggle Coats Sbowu
A group or toggle coats for
boys were in blanket plaids in
orange or blue tones, worn with
solid shade slacks.
And for the girl of six, seven
or eight "dressing up", the
show included an ankle-long
skirt with its blue-green tartan
cut on the diagonal, the topping
a weskit in solid yellow, a shirt
in white.
Patterns will offer some
things other than· plaids,
however. One 'boy's outfit
paired an. off-white cable kt)il
sweater w1th brown trousers. A
girl's outfit paired the same

cable knit, with matching cap
and ml!tens, topping solid red
pants.
.
For small cowboys, there
was the "Easy Rider" blue
jeans jacket and trousers (with
elasticized waist), complete
with tbe cowboy hankie tie and
rplni.Stetson ;
The cliiBS!cs conllnue&lt;! in a
boys's bankers gray cardigan
coat over matching aborts and
a blazer-ehorts outfit in navy.

·Taylor-Salisbury Attend Meeting
Plans Completed GALLIPOLIS - Denise L.
GALLIPOLIS- Miss Gloria
Taylor, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Tommy Taylor, Route 2,
Cheshire, has completed plans
for her marriage to Daryl W.
Salisbury, son of Mr. Warren
Salisbury, Lower River Road,
and Mrs. Evelyn Salisbury,
Mabelene Drive, Gallipolis.
The open church wedding will
take place July 2 at 2 p.m. in
the Poplar Ridge Church with
Rev . John Jeffrey officiating.
A reception will follow.

· Ameel, a senior. in Gallia
Academy lilgh School, will be'
among the 1,500 delegates
attending the 1972 National
Meeting
of
Future
Homemakers of America July
1().13 in Los Angels, Calif.
Denise will be participating as
a voting delegate for Ohio.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
i.eo Ameel, 617 Jackson Pike,
Uenise is president of the local
·chapter of FHA for this coming
year and has been vice·
president for 2 years
previously.

TAWNEY
STUDIO

;;:;::;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:w;;;;;;;;;;;;®;!i;;;;;;;;;:;,;;:;,;;:;,;;;.

cool coordinates with Kodel®
are Sheer Heaven®and ... Permanent Press

0

Art'fic' I
Arrangement

Dudley's

.

GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
Office

./

.
•

Escapes

•
CAR DEMOLISHED - This 1964 model automobile was demolished and three youths
injured foUowing an accident on Rt. 7, near the Kyger Creek Plant stop light around 7:30p.m.
Thursday. According to the patrol, Marvin J. Wickline,16, driver of the autO,Iost control of the
vehicle when his brakes failed. The auto skidded sideways on the wet highway, off the highway
and into a tree. Wickline suffered a concussion. He was treated and released at the Holzer
M~lcal Center. Two pa~ngers who suffered bruises in the mishap, but did not require
·
treatment, were Aiuly Wickline,l4, and Greg Shelton, 16.

BfR~Y'S W~~LD

a

year millions of
Americans visit the National
Forests, or make use of their
resources, not only for camping and picnicking, but also
for the timber, wildlife,
grazing,
and
water.
Management and protection of
these resour.ces is an important
function of the Forest Service.
It means jobs and homes for
people ; a haven for fish and
·game, cattle and sheep for the
market place; clean, clear
water for the community ; and
an attractive place to visit with
your family.
In order to protect these

GAHS Student To

logging, and the bare
patches run right up to the
ORICK, Calif. - ' tNEA) - edge of the nat ional park.
It's easy to see why people
One hundred years ago,
are disturbed by the threat- claims Gordon Robinson, the
ened decimation of the red- forestry expert of the Sierra
wood, a species of tree Cl
unique to this rain-and-fog
ub, there were 1.5 million
acres of old growth redbelt of the Pacific Coast, woods and now only 15P,OOO
where the Sequoia sempet·
·
·
h
virens (their s c i en t if i c acres remam, pnvately eld,
name ) rise to majestic and they're being reduced at
heights o{ 350 feet and are the rate or 10,000 acres ,a
20 feet in diameter.
· year.
"The redwood industry as
The open bed trucks roll we know it," he says, "will
heavily north and south on disappear in 10 yea rs. The
U.S. 101, , three huge logs 1 · · th
d t
oggmg IS e most es rucPiled in a triangle nakedly tlve
the brush. That rattling,
conducted anywhere in
exposed , to the horror of con- the ·world. Eighty per cent
rumbling and sawd ust flying
servationists.
of the surface is destroyed.
in the mills. that's not. for
Lucille and Bill Vineyard and the productive capacity
me .
can see them from their of the land is heavil y dam"It's more dangerous for
home in Trinidad, ori the aged. This isn't forestry but
us to go down to the city
highway a few miles south liquidation "
and walk across the street
of the Redwood National
An evironmentalist will be
than be here where the timForest, which was conse- almost as sensitive about .
ber's falling ."
crated I? the preservation of ' living in a redwood house as
Luton is conscious of the
the anginal· growth red- he is about wearing alligato1·
struggle between environwoods.
shoes.
·
mentalists and the lumber
Lucllle , .an outdoorsy, mid·
However, stimulated by
industry over the resources
die-aged woman in b 1u e the cries of conservation
of the redwood region. He
jeans who spryly walks groups, 75,000 acres of virgin
feel s the schism is due to
miles along the ocean every redwood have already been
lack of communication and
lucille
.
day, has taken me to the set aside in national , state
lAck of com promi se. "Lum"the ruining of a land· that people
Ladybird Grove in the park, and county parks , protected
bering." he concedes, "has
hare lost resJ!ect for . . ."
dedicated a few years ago from the chain saws and
to be more fl exible. And
ll your greatest moments
by Mrs. Johnson. In a serene tractot·s which level the for·
there's a younger generation
Bruce Luton
come when you least exstand of huge, pristine trees, ests .
coming in that's aware of
pect them, carry one of
"we
tear
the
hell
out
of
things.
At
the
The lumber intet·ests. a
sunlight filtering through the
lhese .. . lhe now KODAK
same - ~ime we try to restore it." the ecology.' '
forest, she points to the west. little gun shy fl·om th e atLuton works in a part of
Pocket INSTAMATIC• 40
where the ridge drops off, tack of the conservationists
the redwood region where,
Camera Outl~. It goes
and says, "They wouldn't in the last decade, now
because of the steep terrain
where you go •.• for the
let the reporters over there. proudly boast of their formoments when you wiM
and soil conditions, "clear
It was cordoned off."
estry practices and claim
., you ~ had W'Cameral'' 11\I,J'n
cut'' logging is practiced. A
, ' So we walk 'over and look they have fiqally reached a
' I :1.,
parcel of forest is stripped
"'across the valley to Skunk state . of sustained yield.
clear of all trees las OP·
.'
! Cabbage Ridge, which has meanmg the growth rate on .
posed ' to "selective cutting"
been denuded of trees, a thetr 900,000 acres of pnvatein which the old trees are
mS.condAve.
"I'm led up with talking about crob grass. let's talk
,debris·strewn scar on the ly forested. land equals the
marked for logging). The reGatlipotls, Ohio
hillside.
cu tting rate. Conservationabout
something
RELEVANT,
Iike
MULCH!"
sult- a naked, scraggly hill·
"lt's heartbreaking in the ISIS like Rob mson counter
side- is particularly offen20 years I've been ln Hum- that second-growlh redwoods
sive to nature lovers .
bolt County" she says "to are only -a paltry imitation
" I'm going to be honest, .\::.
:;,;;;;,,,,,,~:=:~=:;;,:;.::::,~:::::&lt;~;K:&gt;::~,~~~~
see the red~oods go o~t to' of the real thing, and that
regardless of where the chips
sea, literally. It's the ruin· the "shoddy resulls are only
fall," says Luton. ''We tear
ing of a land that people fit for pulp and crude tumthe hell out of thin gs. At the
have lost respect for ill the her."
.
same time we try to restore
u~V\.IW~t-'1But the felhng of the redlast money. grubbing cenit. It's only a matter of a
tory."
woods lor ,commercial purvear or two or three between
Lucille Is officially con- poses contmues Inexorably.
bad· and a good- looking
cerned because she's chair· The huge trucks contmue to
place.' '
Thank Schrank for these new and delightful sleep
man of the northern group roll along the highways from
W.hen not in the woods
of the local chapter ·or the the forests to the mills,
and lounge fashion s. Prettied with cascades
fellin g timber, he works the
Sierra Club. She has been where the te pee burners
winter in the forestry deof white la ce centered with floral chain in
involved since 1964, when the belch the smo ke of refuse
partment planting trees, so
matching pastel colors .
public was alerted by seeing whtle mstde the large plants
he see both ends of the busi... all are Sheer Heaven, blend of Kodel polyester
for the first time the laying !he ':lost sophtsttcated saws
ness.
and
combed ~ouon. In blue, yellow, pink.
open of hlllside timber from 1magmable dtssect the raw
"In the old days," he adthe famed Redwood High· logs and produce smooth
mits, "it was nothing but a
way.
planks. .
.
rape of the forest. It's not
This is lumber country , . It all starts w1th someone
like that any more. The
among the finest in the li ke Walt Lara .
lumber people, if they run
world .. The ·economy of the
"I'm ,just a dirty old black
out of timber, they 're out of
area IS largely based on it. lnd1a~. he says when I as.k
business."
The redwood is a remark- how I ll reco~ntze.. h'~ . He s dangerous work to us. Cou· Bruce Luton, "and spend the
able lumbering product, fire· a· Yurok , nattve to thts north pie of years ago I got hit in rest of the year working on
' resistant and termite-re- coastal regmn, He's a chop- ihe back of the head by a forestry and c o m p a n y
Seal Kill
slstant In his million-dollar per, who sp_ec1ahzes m saw- limb and still got the bump. roads." The Simpson !urnBut the people that get hurt ber company, for whom Lu. .
showcase in Los Angeles ing down old redwoods.
the
people
that
don
't
are
ton
works
,
has
more
than
The
greatest
sea,
l
k11l
m
It's a delicate job. The redbasketball player Wilt 'cham:
listen.''
800
miles
of
private
roads
the
n~rthern
Atlantic
occurberlain used enough red- wood Is a fragile tree. A
red m 1831, when 687,000
Walt is not very sympathet- on its forest lands.
wood ·lumber for 17 normal "lay"-the place where the
seals. .were taken by about
homes.
tree will fall-must be pre- · ic to the conservationists . Luton has spent 30 year s 300
sh1ps and 10,000 men, acThree big lumber com- pared or the timber will who bemoan the ruining of m the woods. He ls a hook cording
to Encyclopaedia
the forests. "What the hell
panies - Georgia-Pacific, splinter.
1
" ! hate to see people go business is it of theirs? We ;~~~\os~o~~a~:~ : itotha~ Britannica.
Pacific Lumber, and Simpson~omi~ate the logging ~f out and butcher 'em," says don 't bug people who take the logs are gathered up." , . - - - - - - -. .,
redwoods m the coastal strtp Walt. He is 37 and has some coal out of the ground and
Luton, who is 50, has been Decorate Your Home
extending from above San gray in. his temples. " I leave holes down there."
in the redwood country since With An
But he has a word of criti- 1950, migrating fro m the
Francisco north to the Ore- earned every damn one of
cism for the lumber .people: lumber camps or his native
gon . border. Simpson alo~e. these," he says.
I Ia
for mstance, cuts 110-mllhon
He started out in the brush "They're not replanting with state of Washington. He was
board feet of redwood . an· peeling bark off trees, and th e species of redwood they a sergeant in the lOth Mounnually. (A board foot 1s a now ·he has his own house take out. "
tain Division in· Italy during Beautiful Styles &amp;
theoretical board one mch trailer and five kids and his
Loggers will also criticize World War II. His face is Colors
thiCk and 12 inches square.) own car . It's an. Eldorado theil' bosses for lack of ero· seamed. He wears a knit
But the redwood, desptte Cadillac. "I worked damn sion control. Most of &lt;the cap and the draggy clottres
the alarm raised by ev1ron- hard for it," he says. " It's damage is done in winter of the woodsman. He likes
mentahsts, Is not disappear· something you get once in a logging. when the ground is what he does.
Serving : Mlddiop.ort.
ing like the Am~rican buf· lifetime.''
wet.
"I'm a logger," he says, Pomeroy, Gollipolls 1nd
falo did. Ge?logically, It has
He also has his own pick·
"They can log all they "not like tho se sliver pickers Mlson t;o .. W. Va.
been !n C_a11forma 40-mtlhon up truck to take him into the. need in the sum mer," says who ~ork in the mill. l like
years. It !S perhal's the fast- woods for Georgia· Pacific .
est jii'Owmg .comfer (core- It's all incentive work. He
bearmg) spec1es in the world gets paid $3.55 per thousand
and reproduces Itself by board reel (a six·foot red·
MORTGAGE
IF 4816 - BABY DOLL
sprouting from the stumps wood which might contain
WlTH BIKINI PANTS
of cut or fallen trees.
9,000 board feet and tak e .an
MONEY IS AVAILABLE
Sizes S-M-L. 17.00
The schism between the hour to fall).
lumber Interests and those
" I only went to the eighth
Ill h~ lp you buy or build a home right
concerned with the ecology grade," says Walt. "Logging
now . An experienced planner c·an help
of the area rs,pearheaded by is the only thing I can do to
You 'II Always Find An
yo u r hnu'-l' the . tvpe of loan ·that is
the famed S1erra Club) IS make a halfway decent livover the fate of the virginal, ing. 1 can make $2,000 in a
tJe,t for you arid all transactions are
Outstanding Selection of
untouched redwood forests, good month. " ·
,.,.,tfiden tial .
with some. trees as much as
Last year .'he Worked 10- ·
Schrank's Apparel In
2,000 years old.
and-a-half months and made
· "They can't stand ~? see a $20,000. The equipment costs
Our Store.
tree die naturally, says him three to lour thousand
Lucille Vineyard. "TheY a year.
·
'
can't manage a dead tree." . He Is tough. A gang pulled
Her husband, Bill, is a pro- a gun on him lrr a Eureka
fesaor of botany at Hum- bar. "I went in with my
boldt· State College and used chain saw " he says "and
to have class nature trips smoked •ein out. "
'
on Bald. Hill Road along
He won't wear goggles or
Holter R1dge, past the Lady· ear plugs. "One time I had a
blrd trove of redwoods. No fight and got a black eye,"
,; 68!6 · SHIFT GOWN
Gallipolis·
more. On ~th sides of the . he says, "and couldn't see
·412·414 Second Ave,
Si.., S·M·L. 17.00
roa~, the r1d«~ has been out of my 'eft eye, so I tried
Opposite Post
446-3832
atripped of the· b1g redwoods, to wear goggles and couldn't
leaving only the rubble of see anything. It's not that
&gt;

~

.

By GAY PAULEY
UP! Women's Editor
NEW YORK (UPI)Mother's little Jinnb will tum
out in wool for fall, but unlike
. Mary's pet, tbe fleece it wears
will be patterned.
New fashions for the nursery
. and ~indergarten setl(l!low the
overwhebning trend in a!lull
clothes--a ·mind boggling assortment of plaids some o1
them the tradition.d tartans,
others done in a free.for-all
play of color including pastels.
Plaids showed in everything
from brief smock dresses to
bedtime jumpsuit;s tyle
(lljamas for little girls to
toggle coat outerwear and
bathrobes just like Dad's for
little boys in a Wool. Bureau,
Inc. fashion show in New York
• this week, The show was one of
a series showing the new
ready-to-wear · for visiting
fashion reporters. The series
ended Friday.
One Reason
One of tbe reasons the wool
industry staged the show was
to brag about its machinewashable fabrics; tb be sold as
yard goods in major retail
stores this fall. Simplicity
Pattern Co. joined ln to offer
patterns lor the clotbes, and to
cite statistics that about haU of

Ladybird Grove .. . an economy vs: the ecology.

7 - The &amp;~ 'J'Imes.&amp;sltinel, June 25, 111'/2

•

Grownup. Fashions Are
The Style For Youngsters
'

The

I
~

---·...
......

Israeli Gunboats Sink

Serious

Injury
GALLIPOLIS - David W.
Saunders , 17 , Gallipolis,
. escaped serious injury in a one-

Arab Vessel Saturday

car accident on Route 160, west
of Gallipolis at 2:55 a. m.
Saturday morning.
According to the GalliaMeigs State Highway Patrol
Post, Saunders was eastbound
when he lost control, went off
the left side of the road,
traveled over an embankment,
and rolled onto its top in a
ditch.
Saunders suffered only a
laceration of his ·arm. The car
was . demolished and no·
CitatiOnS were ISSUed .
'A second accident occurred
at almost the identical spot
Friday at 3:20p.m. on Route
160, near the Medical Plaza.
Morris E. Young, 72,
Gallipolis, pulled from the
Plaza's parking lot into the
path of northbound Judy c.
Young , 17, Route 2 Bidwell .
There was minor damage to
the first car and moderate
damage to the second. No
injuries were reported and the
older Young was cited for
failure to yield the right of way.

By Uolted Presa llltemallonal machine gun and mortar fire .
The latest violence on the
Israel said its gunboats sank Witnesses in southern Lebanon frontier between Israel and
an Arab guerrilla vessel off the said Israeli planes continued to Lebanon followed four months
Lebanese coast Saturday and fly over the area.
of relative peace in the area.
i\8 artillery shelled guerriUa
bases in southern Lebanon . But
,, Lebanese Premier Saeb Salam
U
U
.
said Israeli raids would not
OtD'Pr~
force his government to crack
~~ ~
down on guerrillas operating
on Its territory.
'v
An Israeli mWtary commu.l
nique said Its forces struck
.
anew in retaliation for a rocket
By NICHOLAS DAN!LOFF of U. S. prisoners to a fourattack on the frontier settleWASHINGTON (UP~) -Se- month withdrawal of all U. S.
ment of Gesber Hazlv. The cretary of state W1ll1am P. combat troops was "most
Iaraell chief of staff warned hix Rogers left ~n a 17.-&lt;lay world generous in its terms. We
a&gt;Ulltry would take "all the :~tour Saturday, saymg he ~ad would hope that they would
necessary means" to end .cause for hope the Co~unlsts realize that there is a good
guerrilla auacks from may be ready to negoliate In opportunity to use President
Lebanon.
earnest at the PariS peace Nixon's proposal."
In New Yprk the United talks.
SEATO Meeting .
Nations Securlty,Councll sehe- . Rogers was en route to Pago . Rogers ' official duties begin
duledmore debate' on a request Pago by w~y of San Francisco on Monday at the Ministerial
, by Lebanon to condemn the and Hawau on the rrrst leg of Council meeting of the South·
Iaraell ralda and or11er the hlsjourneywhlchwillta~ehim east Asia Treaty Organization
turn 011Lebll
nd O.~••n to Canberra, Austral~ for an1L!~'t - fo r.ei.jln 111inisters
re
~;a
ol the meetln ·of ttie ·ANZUS which .
army officen captured "''~""
by the Monday's meet\ng
.
Iaraells last Wednesday.
So~theast AslB Treaty Organi· links the United States, Austra- ·
In council debate Friday zatlon miniSters.
'
lia and New Zealand in a
night, !lrael claimed more
He told a planestde· news defense jJact. The meetings are
·
than 5,000 guerrillas were conference before leavmg An· regarded by· administration
~ based in Lebanon and that lis drews ~ Fo~ce Base that officials as primarily routine
aid agalnat them were in North Vteinam s offensiVe mto gatherings.
the South has been unAfte1 Australia, Rogers will
r U~ef
se Both~~ claimed victory in successful ":"d "it is qui~~ clear make a visit to Indonesia June
MOSCOW (UPI)- The Soviet
th 1 llh between a guer.rllla they are disappointed. And, 30 through July 2. The United Communist
party
said
ve~tand !lraell patrol boa\8 he said, the U. S. blockade of States holds the Djakarta Saturday that heads
may roll
off the ancient Lebanese the North, has been "quite government in high regard lor when it trims its ranks next
coastal town of Tyre.
successful.
its steady economic achieve- year, but not literally, as in
On Beirut radio, Premier
Diplomats Hopeful . .
ments following the sup- Josef Stalin's purges.
Salam said continued Iaraeli
"These and other lmllcallons pression of the attempted
Pravda ,
the
party
raids on guerrilla en· ~ the diplomatic commun_Ity Communist takeover in 1965. newspaper, said unworthy
campments in !be soutbern g~v.e us hope that the o~&lt;7 s1d~
Rogers will then arrive in comrades would be expelled in
part of his country would not IS mterested m negotiations,
Eastern Europe via the Per· 1973 and 1974 when the Soviet
force his government to take Rogers S8ld..
. .
sian Gulf area where he makes party collects old membership
acUon agalnat the guerriUas.
Rogers S8ld the indications stops at Bahrain and Kuwa1t.
cards and issues new ones.
"Some people want a claah be referred to were s1gns that
Rogers described his visits to
It will be the first such
between Lebanon and the other world governments ~ere Yugoslavia, Hungary and Ru- renewal of party cards in 18
Palestlnlans," Salam said. trying to pressure Hanoi to mania as a mission of "con· years. The Soviet party as
"But thill will never be. I take a new ap.proach m the siderable Importance:" He will roughly doubled its memdeclare It to the world that thix Paris discussiOns. He ad- be briefing leaders in those bership to about 14.5 million in
will never be and let Israel milled, however, there has countries on the Moscow that ttme.
been "no clear signal"
of a summit meetings -tbe first
hear."
·
"Naturally, in the proce!is of
In other action in the Middle Communist willingness · to time the United States has holding the exchanges, the
East, Beirut radio said Iaraeli resume the talks.
, , included reports on such a party organizations will get rid
gunners peppered the area of
He S8ld, Presid~nt NIXon s major interniltlonal conference of those who do not comply
Alma AI Shaad near the , M~y 8 proposallinkmg a return to countries associated with the with the requirements of the
viet bloc.
Iaraell-Lebanese border with
Communist party program and
rules," Pravda said in a frontpage editorial.
" ...At the same time, one
Moon&amp;
should bear in mind this is not a
The harvest moon is the purge.
e o p e,full moon that occurs near- "Purges that were carried
est the time of the autumnal out in the past were aimed at
equinox, Sept. 23; the hunt· resolutely ridding the party of
er's moon is the October full alien class elements.
moon.

R

ow 0 n

nas nones
r
'

orld .,.,0 ur

W7
Jf'

valuable resources, it is
necessary to have common
sense rules for their use and
enjoyment, as well as to
sa fe guafd the llea tth and
welfare of the public.
Due to the introduction of the
Cooperative Law Enforcement
Agreement with the Lawrence
County Sheri£!, you should be
aware of some of the rules and
regulations governing the use
of National Forest recreation
areas. We are attempting to
provide a safe, serene, quiet,
leave your cares behind quality
type of recreation experience
for everyone using a National
Forest:
I
Theremus(bea place where
people can go and relax and
forget about noise, crime,
pollution, thk hustle and bustle
of everyda¥ life. With your help
we plan tp make the Wayne
National Forest just such a
place. ;
Nothing would spoil a
camping trip more than to
unknowingly run afoul of a
campg~ound rule. To prevent
this, I fiave prepared a partial
lisling:of the more important
rules gover ning our campgrounds. A complete listing
may be found on all National
Forest Campgrounds. They are
usually posted on a bulletin
board located in a ce ntral area
of t)le campground, If you have
doubts about our rules, contact
the forest officer on the area or
call the District Ranger's oflice.
The following acts are not
permitted on National Forest
land:
- Failing to dispose of all
gar bage and rubbish by
removal from the site or area,
or disposal at places provided
for such disposition.
- Draining ClJ dumping
refuse or waste from any

trailer ·except in places
provided for such uses.
- Cleaning fish or food, or
washing clothing or articles of
household use at hydrants or at
water faucets located in
restrooms.
Polluting or conf&lt;iminating wale&lt; supplies or
water used for human consumption.
-Using refuse containers Qr
other refuse faciilties for
dumping household or commercia! garbage or trash
brought as such from private
properly.
~ Inciting or participating in
rio ts, or indulging in
boisterous,
abusive,
threatening or indecent conduct.
- Destroying, defacing, or
· removing any natural feature
or plant.
- Destroying, injuring ,
defacing, .removin g,
or
disturbing in any manner any
public building, sign, equipment, marker, or other
structure or property.
-Selling or offering for sale
any merchandise without
written consent of. the Forest
Service.
- Distributing any handbills
or circ ulars, oc · posting,
placing, or erecting any bills,
noticest papers, or advertising
devices or matter of any kind
without the written consent of
the Forest Supervisor.
- Discharging firecrackers,
rockets, or any other
fireworks.
- · Operating or using any
audio devices, including radio,
television, and musical instruments, and other noise
producing devices, such as
elec trical generator plants and
equipment driven by motors or
engines, in such a manner and
at such times to disturb other

HY T. ALLAN WOLTER
District Ranger

persons.
- Operating or using public
address systems, whether
fixed , portable , or vehicle
mounted.
The .'following is not permitted in developed recreation
site"'
- Occupying a site for other
than primarilx recreation
purposes.
- Entering or using a site
clo.sed to public use.
- Building a fir.e outside of
stoves, grills, fireplaces or
outside of fire rings provided
for such a purpose .
- Camping overnight in
places restricted to day use
on ly.
- Before departure, failin g
to clean their rubbish from
places occupied by the person
or persons.
- Pitching tents or parking
trailers or , other campin g
equipment except on places
provided for such purposes.
- Camping within a campground for a longer per.iod of
lime than that established by
the Forest Supervisor. (14 days
at Lake Vesuvius) .
- Leaving a ca mp unit
unoccupied during the first
night after camping equipment
has been set up, or leaving
unattended camping equipment for more than 24 hours
th erea fter . Unattended
camping equipmen t which is
not removed within the
prescribed time limit is subject
to impoundment.
- Failing to maintain quiet
in campgrounds between the
hours of 10 p.m. and 6 a.m.
- Bringing a dog, cat or
other animal into the site
unless it is crated, caged, or
upon a leash not longer than six
feet.
- Bringing animals other
than seeing-eye dogs to a

developed swimming beach.
- Bringing saddle, pack, or
draft animal into the site
unless it has been deve!Op.p to
accommodate them and is
posted accordingly .
- Driving motor vehi¢les in
excess of posted speeds.
- Priving or parking any
vehicle or _trailer except in
places developed for this
purpose.
- ·Driving any vehicle
.carelessly and heedlessly
tlisregarding the rights or
. safety of others, or without
caution and at a speed, or in a
manner, so as to endanger any
person or property .
Driving
bicycles,
motorbikes, and motorcycles
on trails within developed
recreation sites.
- ·Driving motorbikes,
motorcycles, or other motor
vehicles on roads in developed
recreation sites for any purpose other than access into, or
egress out of the site .
- Operating a motor vehicle
at any lime without a muffler
in good working order, or
operating a motor vehicle in
such as manner as to ~reate
excessive or unusual noise or
annoying smoke, or using a
muffler cutoff, bypass or

•

similar device.

- Excessively accelerating
the engine of a motor vehicle or
motorcycle when such vehicle
is not moving or is approaching
or leaving a stopping place.
These rules are authorized
by Regulations of • the
Secretary of Agriculture 36
CFR 251.91)..96. Violators are
subject to a fine of not more
than $500 or imprisonment for
not more than 6 months, or
both.
Violators may be prosecuted
under Federal regulation• or
State law.
,
'
My intent is not tO frighten
anyone but only to make
everyone aware of some
common sense rules. First and ·
foremost we want you to enjoy
National Forests,
·

C_ommunrs·t

I'

Heads May
Roll in '73

Political

Crisis In
Italy Over

ROME (UP!)-Tbe leader of
the dominant Christian Democrat Party said ·Saturday he
believes acting Premier Glullo
AndreotU has succeeded in
. endln1 Itily's four-month
po!IUcal crilla.
"I think he can now tell the
!l"elide!ll lie has formed a
governnlent," said party
Secretary Arnaldo Forlani
after a four-how meeting with
pollUcaris pledged to join or
support all 'Andreotti coalition.
Andreotti has led a minority
Christian
Democratic
caretak• government Iince
late February, when the It).
year-old center-left coalition

· oollapeed.

The new governmentDaly's 34th since 1M3-would
allandon the center-left
poaltloD ud shift slightly
rightward to include three

center Jlll1lal, lbe CuiJtlan
·Democ;rall, Liberals and

8ocll1 Dei1wera11.

The plldpl fve Anchottl a
majwll)' fi 11 Ill the 830 n·t
Owmbw fi DllpuU. .llld •
majarlty li rwr In the 321aeat

Senate.

Not Enough

Rich P I
Scott Says

BOSTON (UPI)-Sen.
GeorgeS . McGovern wants to
"play Robin Hood on a gigantic
scale" but there are not enough
rich people in the country to
make his pljms work, Senate
ReP.Ublican leader Hugh Scott
said Saturday .
The
Pennsylvania
Republican criticized his
Democratic colleague from
South Pakota in a keynote
address to the Republican
state Convention.
He said tbe tax proposals
offered by McGovern, the
leading Democratc
Presidential candidate, con·
lilted of "demagoguery and
deception."
"He would U!le tbe taxing
power-au he said-to rediatri·
bute the national wealth-to
even thqs out. Not jull to
base taxes on ability to pay-a
the progrellllve income tal
already does-but to . play
Robin Flood ·on a gigantic
scale," Scott said.
'"!be baalc trouble with hla
lcheme Ia thlt there are not
mOUjjh rich people in the
United statal to finance hla .
ICheme even if he takes
everythq they have."

LIVING ROOM GROUPING

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$1

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NOW•••••••• ,..

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Dinette Tables
112 PRICE
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LIVING ROOM GROUPING ·

~~g~/~~~::~...~300

TOP TABLES

$149.95

NOW•••••• I

$7 5

••••••••

EARLY AMERICAN

ROCKER REWNER

SHOP THE Ntw. JOIES·IJYS'

S219.95 $180

Reg.
NOW••••••••••••

Belt .Vlllua on
Food. - Clothing • Hardwre
- in GaUl. County

4 PC. TEEN GROUP

BEDROOM .

Plrklng For Ov• 100 C:.rs,

'
FOIUIIG DJSWlJNT SAVINf'w&amp;

$449.95. $225'
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Wmt 4 CHAIRS

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•

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1 2 PRICE

CHAIR
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Modern and
Mediterranean

Green &amp; 1 Orang~ V•lual

ROCKER·RED.INER

STRATOLOUNGE_
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RECLINER

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1 Traditional

oo

COUCH
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lAM~S, PICTURES, r
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REWNERS

saoro
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•

�. .,
'

•
''

8 - The &amp;lnclay ~line!, June 25, 11172

vie•~ from

The Redwoods
'

.

•
h'
Forestry or· Liquidation, Wh IC
· .

By MURRAY OLDERMAN

'

ayne
Nation·
a
l
.Forest
.

all American women sew.

U you want to make the
clothes for Dick and Jane, loc
an opener there was a red and
green tartan boy's outfit with
knickers and westkit plua 4
solid green shirt. For the girls, .
there · were tweedy-patterned
pants with a multi-colored
smock lop. ·
A black and white .pleated,
checked skirt topped out with a
pin:"lripe blazer ~ navy and
· wh1te. Toddlers coveralls
were in red_ a~ navy plaid.
Anothe~ grrl s outfit. featured
a red plaid poncho With tassel
trtm worn with flannel pants in
solid red.
Toggle Coats Sbowu
A group or toggle coats for
boys were in blanket plaids in
orange or blue tones, worn with
solid shade slacks.
And for the girl of six, seven
or eight "dressing up", the
show included an ankle-long
skirt with its blue-green tartan
cut on the diagonal, the topping
a weskit in solid yellow, a shirt
in white.
Patterns will offer some
things other than· plaids,
however. One 'boy's outfit
paired an. off-white cable kt)il
sweater w1th brown trousers. A
girl's outfit paired the same

cable knit, with matching cap
and ml!tens, topping solid red
pants.
.
For small cowboys, there
was the "Easy Rider" blue
jeans jacket and trousers (with
elasticized waist), complete
with tbe cowboy hankie tie and
rplni.Stetson ;
The cliiBS!cs conllnue&lt;! in a
boys's bankers gray cardigan
coat over matching aborts and
a blazer-ehorts outfit in navy.

·Taylor-Salisbury Attend Meeting
Plans Completed GALLIPOLIS - Denise L.
GALLIPOLIS- Miss Gloria
Taylor, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Tommy Taylor, Route 2,
Cheshire, has completed plans
for her marriage to Daryl W.
Salisbury, son of Mr. Warren
Salisbury, Lower River Road,
and Mrs. Evelyn Salisbury,
Mabelene Drive, Gallipolis.
The open church wedding will
take place July 2 at 2 p.m. in
the Poplar Ridge Church with
Rev . John Jeffrey officiating.
A reception will follow.

· Ameel, a senior. in Gallia
Academy lilgh School, will be'
among the 1,500 delegates
attending the 1972 National
Meeting
of
Future
Homemakers of America July
1().13 in Los Angels, Calif.
Denise will be participating as
a voting delegate for Ohio.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
i.eo Ameel, 617 Jackson Pike,
Uenise is president of the local
·chapter of FHA for this coming
year and has been vice·
president for 2 years
previously.

TAWNEY
STUDIO

;;:;::;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:w;;;;;;;;;;;;®;!i;;;;;;;;;:;,;;:;,;;:;,;;;.

cool coordinates with Kodel®
are Sheer Heaven®and ... Permanent Press

0

Art'fic' I
Arrangement

Dudley's

.

GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
Office

./

.
•

Escapes

•
CAR DEMOLISHED - This 1964 model automobile was demolished and three youths
injured foUowing an accident on Rt. 7, near the Kyger Creek Plant stop light around 7:30p.m.
Thursday. According to the patrol, Marvin J. Wickline,16, driver of the autO,Iost control of the
vehicle when his brakes failed. The auto skidded sideways on the wet highway, off the highway
and into a tree. Wickline suffered a concussion. He was treated and released at the Holzer
M~lcal Center. Two pa~ngers who suffered bruises in the mishap, but did not require
·
treatment, were Aiuly Wickline,l4, and Greg Shelton, 16.

BfR~Y'S W~~LD

a

year millions of
Americans visit the National
Forests, or make use of their
resources, not only for camping and picnicking, but also
for the timber, wildlife,
grazing,
and
water.
Management and protection of
these resour.ces is an important
function of the Forest Service.
It means jobs and homes for
people ; a haven for fish and
·game, cattle and sheep for the
market place; clean, clear
water for the community ; and
an attractive place to visit with
your family.
In order to protect these

GAHS Student To

logging, and the bare
patches run right up to the
ORICK, Calif. - ' tNEA) - edge of the nat ional park.
It's easy to see why people
One hundred years ago,
are disturbed by the threat- claims Gordon Robinson, the
ened decimation of the red- forestry expert of the Sierra
wood, a species of tree Cl
unique to this rain-and-fog
ub, there were 1.5 million
acres of old growth redbelt of the Pacific Coast, woods and now only 15P,OOO
where the Sequoia sempet·
·
·
h
virens (their s c i en t if i c acres remam, pnvately eld,
name ) rise to majestic and they're being reduced at
heights o{ 350 feet and are the rate or 10,000 acres ,a
20 feet in diameter.
· year.
"The redwood industry as
The open bed trucks roll we know it," he says, "will
heavily north and south on disappear in 10 yea rs. The
U.S. 101, , three huge logs 1 · · th
d t
oggmg IS e most es rucPiled in a triangle nakedly tlve
the brush. That rattling,
conducted anywhere in
exposed , to the horror of con- the ·world. Eighty per cent
rumbling and sawd ust flying
servationists.
of the surface is destroyed.
in the mills. that's not. for
Lucille and Bill Vineyard and the productive capacity
me .
can see them from their of the land is heavil y dam"It's more dangerous for
home in Trinidad, ori the aged. This isn't forestry but
us to go down to the city
highway a few miles south liquidation "
and walk across the street
of the Redwood National
An evironmentalist will be
than be here where the timForest, which was conse- almost as sensitive about .
ber's falling ."
crated I? the preservation of ' living in a redwood house as
Luton is conscious of the
the anginal· growth red- he is about wearing alligato1·
struggle between environwoods.
shoes.
·
mentalists and the lumber
Lucllle , .an outdoorsy, mid·
However, stimulated by
industry over the resources
die-aged woman in b 1u e the cries of conservation
of the redwood region. He
jeans who spryly walks groups, 75,000 acres of virgin
feel s the schism is due to
miles along the ocean every redwood have already been
lack of communication and
lucille
.
day, has taken me to the set aside in national , state
lAck of com promi se. "Lum"the ruining of a land· that people
Ladybird Grove in the park, and county parks , protected
bering." he concedes, "has
hare lost resJ!ect for . . ."
dedicated a few years ago from the chain saws and
to be more fl exible. And
ll your greatest moments
by Mrs. Johnson. In a serene tractot·s which level the for·
there's a younger generation
Bruce Luton
come when you least exstand of huge, pristine trees, ests .
coming in that's aware of
pect them, carry one of
"we
tear
the
hell
out
of
things.
At
the
The lumber intet·ests. a
sunlight filtering through the
lhese .. . lhe now KODAK
same - ~ime we try to restore it." the ecology.' '
forest, she points to the west. little gun shy fl·om th e atLuton works in a part of
Pocket INSTAMATIC• 40
where the ridge drops off, tack of the conservationists
the redwood region where,
Camera Outl~. It goes
and says, "They wouldn't in the last decade, now
because of the steep terrain
where you go •.• for the
let the reporters over there. proudly boast of their formoments when you wiM
and soil conditions, "clear
It was cordoned off."
estry practices and claim
., you ~ had W'Cameral'' 11\I,J'n
cut'' logging is practiced. A
, ' So we walk 'over and look they have fiqally reached a
' I :1.,
parcel of forest is stripped
"'across the valley to Skunk state . of sustained yield.
clear of all trees las OP·
.'
! Cabbage Ridge, which has meanmg the growth rate on .
posed ' to "selective cutting"
been denuded of trees, a thetr 900,000 acres of pnvatein which the old trees are
mS.condAve.
"I'm led up with talking about crob grass. let's talk
,debris·strewn scar on the ly forested. land equals the
marked for logging). The reGatlipotls, Ohio
hillside.
cu tting rate. Conservationabout
something
RELEVANT,
Iike
MULCH!"
sult- a naked, scraggly hill·
"lt's heartbreaking in the ISIS like Rob mson counter
side- is particularly offen20 years I've been ln Hum- that second-growlh redwoods
sive to nature lovers .
bolt County" she says "to are only -a paltry imitation
" I'm going to be honest, .\::.
:;,;;;;,,,,,,~:=:~=:;;,:;.::::,~:::::&lt;~;K:&gt;::~,~~~~
see the red~oods go o~t to' of the real thing, and that
regardless of where the chips
sea, literally. It's the ruin· the "shoddy resulls are only
fall," says Luton. ''We tear
ing of a land that people fit for pulp and crude tumthe hell out of thin gs. At the
have lost respect for ill the her."
.
same time we try to restore
u~V\.IW~t-'1But the felhng of the redlast money. grubbing cenit. It's only a matter of a
tory."
woods lor ,commercial purvear or two or three between
Lucille Is officially con- poses contmues Inexorably.
bad· and a good- looking
cerned because she's chair· The huge trucks contmue to
place.' '
Thank Schrank for these new and delightful sleep
man of the northern group roll along the highways from
W.hen not in the woods
of the local chapter ·or the the forests to the mills,
and lounge fashion s. Prettied with cascades
fellin g timber, he works the
Sierra Club. She has been where the te pee burners
winter in the forestry deof white la ce centered with floral chain in
involved since 1964, when the belch the smo ke of refuse
partment planting trees, so
matching pastel colors .
public was alerted by seeing whtle mstde the large plants
he see both ends of the busi... all are Sheer Heaven, blend of Kodel polyester
for the first time the laying !he ':lost sophtsttcated saws
ness.
and
combed ~ouon. In blue, yellow, pink.
open of hlllside timber from 1magmable dtssect the raw
"In the old days," he adthe famed Redwood High· logs and produce smooth
mits, "it was nothing but a
way.
planks. .
.
rape of the forest. It's not
This is lumber country , . It all starts w1th someone
like that any more. The
among the finest in the li ke Walt Lara .
lumber people, if they run
world .. The ·economy of the
"I'm ,just a dirty old black
out of timber, they 're out of
area IS largely based on it. lnd1a~. he says when I as.k
business."
The redwood is a remark- how I ll reco~ntze.. h'~ . He s dangerous work to us. Cou· Bruce Luton, "and spend the
able lumbering product, fire· a· Yurok , nattve to thts north pie of years ago I got hit in rest of the year working on
' resistant and termite-re- coastal regmn, He's a chop- ihe back of the head by a forestry and c o m p a n y
Seal Kill
slstant In his million-dollar per, who sp_ec1ahzes m saw- limb and still got the bump. roads." The Simpson !urnBut the people that get hurt ber company, for whom Lu. .
showcase in Los Angeles ing down old redwoods.
the
people
that
don
't
are
ton
works
,
has
more
than
The
greatest
sea,
l
k11l
m
It's a delicate job. The redbasketball player Wilt 'cham:
listen.''
800
miles
of
private
roads
the
n~rthern
Atlantic
occurberlain used enough red- wood Is a fragile tree. A
red m 1831, when 687,000
Walt is not very sympathet- on its forest lands.
wood ·lumber for 17 normal "lay"-the place where the
seals. .were taken by about
homes.
tree will fall-must be pre- · ic to the conservationists . Luton has spent 30 year s 300
sh1ps and 10,000 men, acThree big lumber com- pared or the timber will who bemoan the ruining of m the woods. He ls a hook cording
to Encyclopaedia
the forests. "What the hell
panies - Georgia-Pacific, splinter.
1
" ! hate to see people go business is it of theirs? We ;~~~\os~o~~a~:~ : itotha~ Britannica.
Pacific Lumber, and Simpson~omi~ate the logging ~f out and butcher 'em," says don 't bug people who take the logs are gathered up." , . - - - - - - -. .,
redwoods m the coastal strtp Walt. He is 37 and has some coal out of the ground and
Luton, who is 50, has been Decorate Your Home
extending from above San gray in. his temples. " I leave holes down there."
in the redwood country since With An
But he has a word of criti- 1950, migrating fro m the
Francisco north to the Ore- earned every damn one of
cism for the lumber .people: lumber camps or his native
gon . border. Simpson alo~e. these," he says.
I Ia
for mstance, cuts 110-mllhon
He started out in the brush "They're not replanting with state of Washington. He was
board feet of redwood . an· peeling bark off trees, and th e species of redwood they a sergeant in the lOth Mounnually. (A board foot 1s a now ·he has his own house take out. "
tain Division in· Italy during Beautiful Styles &amp;
theoretical board one mch trailer and five kids and his
Loggers will also criticize World War II. His face is Colors
thiCk and 12 inches square.) own car . It's an. Eldorado theil' bosses for lack of ero· seamed. He wears a knit
But the redwood, desptte Cadillac. "I worked damn sion control. Most of &lt;the cap and the draggy clottres
the alarm raised by ev1ron- hard for it," he says. " It's damage is done in winter of the woodsman. He likes
mentahsts, Is not disappear· something you get once in a logging. when the ground is what he does.
Serving : Mlddiop.ort.
ing like the Am~rican buf· lifetime.''
wet.
"I'm a logger," he says, Pomeroy, Gollipolls 1nd
falo did. Ge?logically, It has
He also has his own pick·
"They can log all they "not like tho se sliver pickers Mlson t;o .. W. Va.
been !n C_a11forma 40-mtlhon up truck to take him into the. need in the sum mer," says who ~ork in the mill. l like
years. It !S perhal's the fast- woods for Georgia· Pacific .
est jii'Owmg .comfer (core- It's all incentive work. He
bearmg) spec1es in the world gets paid $3.55 per thousand
and reproduces Itself by board reel (a six·foot red·
MORTGAGE
IF 4816 - BABY DOLL
sprouting from the stumps wood which might contain
WlTH BIKINI PANTS
of cut or fallen trees.
9,000 board feet and tak e .an
MONEY IS AVAILABLE
Sizes S-M-L. 17.00
The schism between the hour to fall).
lumber Interests and those
" I only went to the eighth
Ill h~ lp you buy or build a home right
concerned with the ecology grade," says Walt. "Logging
now . An experienced planner c·an help
of the area rs,pearheaded by is the only thing I can do to
You 'II Always Find An
yo u r hnu'-l' the . tvpe of loan ·that is
the famed S1erra Club) IS make a halfway decent livover the fate of the virginal, ing. 1 can make $2,000 in a
tJe,t for you arid all transactions are
Outstanding Selection of
untouched redwood forests, good month. " ·
,.,.,tfiden tial .
with some. trees as much as
Last year .'he Worked 10- ·
Schrank's Apparel In
2,000 years old.
and-a-half months and made
· "They can't stand ~? see a $20,000. The equipment costs
Our Store.
tree die naturally, says him three to lour thousand
Lucille Vineyard. "TheY a year.
·
'
can't manage a dead tree." . He Is tough. A gang pulled
Her husband, Bill, is a pro- a gun on him lrr a Eureka
fesaor of botany at Hum- bar. "I went in with my
boldt· State College and used chain saw " he says "and
to have class nature trips smoked •ein out. "
'
on Bald. Hill Road along
He won't wear goggles or
Holter R1dge, past the Lady· ear plugs. "One time I had a
blrd trove of redwoods. No fight and got a black eye,"
,; 68!6 · SHIFT GOWN
Gallipolis·
more. On ~th sides of the . he says, "and couldn't see
·412·414 Second Ave,
Si.., S·M·L. 17.00
roa~, the r1d«~ has been out of my 'eft eye, so I tried
Opposite Post
446-3832
atripped of the· b1g redwoods, to wear goggles and couldn't
leaving only the rubble of see anything. It's not that
&gt;

~

.

By GAY PAULEY
UP! Women's Editor
NEW YORK (UPI)Mother's little Jinnb will tum
out in wool for fall, but unlike
. Mary's pet, tbe fleece it wears
will be patterned.
New fashions for the nursery
. and ~indergarten setl(l!low the
overwhebning trend in a!lull
clothes--a ·mind boggling assortment of plaids some o1
them the tradition.d tartans,
others done in a free.for-all
play of color including pastels.
Plaids showed in everything
from brief smock dresses to
bedtime jumpsuit;s tyle
(lljamas for little girls to
toggle coat outerwear and
bathrobes just like Dad's for
little boys in a Wool. Bureau,
Inc. fashion show in New York
• this week, The show was one of
a series showing the new
ready-to-wear · for visiting
fashion reporters. The series
ended Friday.
One Reason
One of tbe reasons the wool
industry staged the show was
to brag about its machinewashable fabrics; tb be sold as
yard goods in major retail
stores this fall. Simplicity
Pattern Co. joined ln to offer
patterns lor the clotbes, and to
cite statistics that about haU of

Ladybird Grove .. . an economy vs: the ecology.

7 - The &amp;~ 'J'Imes.&amp;sltinel, June 25, 111'/2

•

Grownup. Fashions Are
The Style For Youngsters
'

The

I
~

---·...
......

Israeli Gunboats Sink

Serious

Injury
GALLIPOLIS - David W.
Saunders , 17 , Gallipolis,
. escaped serious injury in a one-

Arab Vessel Saturday

car accident on Route 160, west
of Gallipolis at 2:55 a. m.
Saturday morning.
According to the GalliaMeigs State Highway Patrol
Post, Saunders was eastbound
when he lost control, went off
the left side of the road,
traveled over an embankment,
and rolled onto its top in a
ditch.
Saunders suffered only a
laceration of his ·arm. The car
was . demolished and no·
CitatiOnS were ISSUed .
'A second accident occurred
at almost the identical spot
Friday at 3:20p.m. on Route
160, near the Medical Plaza.
Morris E. Young, 72,
Gallipolis, pulled from the
Plaza's parking lot into the
path of northbound Judy c.
Young , 17, Route 2 Bidwell .
There was minor damage to
the first car and moderate
damage to the second. No
injuries were reported and the
older Young was cited for
failure to yield the right of way.

By Uolted Presa llltemallonal machine gun and mortar fire .
The latest violence on the
Israel said its gunboats sank Witnesses in southern Lebanon frontier between Israel and
an Arab guerrilla vessel off the said Israeli planes continued to Lebanon followed four months
Lebanese coast Saturday and fly over the area.
of relative peace in the area.
i\8 artillery shelled guerriUa
bases in southern Lebanon . But
,, Lebanese Premier Saeb Salam
U
U
.
said Israeli raids would not
OtD'Pr~
force his government to crack
~~ ~
down on guerrillas operating
on Its territory.
'v
An Israeli mWtary commu.l
nique said Its forces struck
.
anew in retaliation for a rocket
By NICHOLAS DAN!LOFF of U. S. prisoners to a fourattack on the frontier settleWASHINGTON (UP~) -Se- month withdrawal of all U. S.
ment of Gesber Hazlv. The cretary of state W1ll1am P. combat troops was "most
Iaraell chief of staff warned hix Rogers left ~n a 17.-&lt;lay world generous in its terms. We
a&gt;Ulltry would take "all the :~tour Saturday, saymg he ~ad would hope that they would
necessary means" to end .cause for hope the Co~unlsts realize that there is a good
guerrilla auacks from may be ready to negoliate In opportunity to use President
Lebanon.
earnest at the PariS peace Nixon's proposal."
In New Yprk the United talks.
SEATO Meeting .
Nations Securlty,Councll sehe- . Rogers was en route to Pago . Rogers ' official duties begin
duledmore debate' on a request Pago by w~y of San Francisco on Monday at the Ministerial
, by Lebanon to condemn the and Hawau on the rrrst leg of Council meeting of the South·
Iaraell ralda and or11er the hlsjourneywhlchwillta~ehim east Asia Treaty Organization
turn 011Lebll
nd O.~••n to Canberra, Austral~ for an1L!~'t - fo r.ei.jln 111inisters
re
~;a
ol the meetln ·of ttie ·ANZUS which .
army officen captured "''~""
by the Monday's meet\ng
.
Iaraells last Wednesday.
So~theast AslB Treaty Organi· links the United States, Austra- ·
In council debate Friday zatlon miniSters.
'
lia and New Zealand in a
night, !lrael claimed more
He told a planestde· news defense jJact. The meetings are
·
than 5,000 guerrillas were conference before leavmg An· regarded by· administration
~ based in Lebanon and that lis drews ~ Fo~ce Base that officials as primarily routine
aid agalnat them were in North Vteinam s offensiVe mto gatherings.
the South has been unAfte1 Australia, Rogers will
r U~ef
se Both~~ claimed victory in successful ":"d "it is qui~~ clear make a visit to Indonesia June
MOSCOW (UPI)- The Soviet
th 1 llh between a guer.rllla they are disappointed. And, 30 through July 2. The United Communist
party
said
ve~tand !lraell patrol boa\8 he said, the U. S. blockade of States holds the Djakarta Saturday that heads
may roll
off the ancient Lebanese the North, has been "quite government in high regard lor when it trims its ranks next
coastal town of Tyre.
successful.
its steady economic achieve- year, but not literally, as in
On Beirut radio, Premier
Diplomats Hopeful . .
ments following the sup- Josef Stalin's purges.
Salam said continued Iaraeli
"These and other lmllcallons pression of the attempted
Pravda ,
the
party
raids on guerrilla en· ~ the diplomatic commun_Ity Communist takeover in 1965. newspaper, said unworthy
campments in !be soutbern g~v.e us hope that the o~&lt;7 s1d~
Rogers will then arrive in comrades would be expelled in
part of his country would not IS mterested m negotiations,
Eastern Europe via the Per· 1973 and 1974 when the Soviet
force his government to take Rogers S8ld..
. .
sian Gulf area where he makes party collects old membership
acUon agalnat the guerriUas.
Rogers S8ld the indications stops at Bahrain and Kuwa1t.
cards and issues new ones.
"Some people want a claah be referred to were s1gns that
Rogers described his visits to
It will be the first such
between Lebanon and the other world governments ~ere Yugoslavia, Hungary and Ru- renewal of party cards in 18
Palestlnlans," Salam said. trying to pressure Hanoi to mania as a mission of "con· years. The Soviet party as
"But thill will never be. I take a new ap.proach m the siderable Importance:" He will roughly doubled its memdeclare It to the world that thix Paris discussiOns. He ad- be briefing leaders in those bership to about 14.5 million in
will never be and let Israel milled, however, there has countries on the Moscow that ttme.
been "no clear signal"
of a summit meetings -tbe first
hear."
·
"Naturally, in the proce!is of
In other action in the Middle Communist willingness · to time the United States has holding the exchanges, the
East, Beirut radio said Iaraeli resume the talks.
, , included reports on such a party organizations will get rid
gunners peppered the area of
He S8ld, Presid~nt NIXon s major interniltlonal conference of those who do not comply
Alma AI Shaad near the , M~y 8 proposallinkmg a return to countries associated with the with the requirements of the
viet bloc.
Iaraell-Lebanese border with
Communist party program and
rules," Pravda said in a frontpage editorial.
" ...At the same time, one
Moon&amp;
should bear in mind this is not a
The harvest moon is the purge.
e o p e,full moon that occurs near- "Purges that were carried
est the time of the autumnal out in the past were aimed at
equinox, Sept. 23; the hunt· resolutely ridding the party of
er's moon is the October full alien class elements.
moon.

R

ow 0 n

nas nones
r
'

orld .,.,0 ur

W7
Jf'

valuable resources, it is
necessary to have common
sense rules for their use and
enjoyment, as well as to
sa fe guafd the llea tth and
welfare of the public.
Due to the introduction of the
Cooperative Law Enforcement
Agreement with the Lawrence
County Sheri£!, you should be
aware of some of the rules and
regulations governing the use
of National Forest recreation
areas. We are attempting to
provide a safe, serene, quiet,
leave your cares behind quality
type of recreation experience
for everyone using a National
Forest:
I
Theremus(bea place where
people can go and relax and
forget about noise, crime,
pollution, thk hustle and bustle
of everyda¥ life. With your help
we plan tp make the Wayne
National Forest just such a
place. ;
Nothing would spoil a
camping trip more than to
unknowingly run afoul of a
campg~ound rule. To prevent
this, I fiave prepared a partial
lisling:of the more important
rules gover ning our campgrounds. A complete listing
may be found on all National
Forest Campgrounds. They are
usually posted on a bulletin
board located in a ce ntral area
of t)le campground, If you have
doubts about our rules, contact
the forest officer on the area or
call the District Ranger's oflice.
The following acts are not
permitted on National Forest
land:
- Failing to dispose of all
gar bage and rubbish by
removal from the site or area,
or disposal at places provided
for such disposition.
- Draining ClJ dumping
refuse or waste from any

trailer ·except in places
provided for such uses.
- Cleaning fish or food, or
washing clothing or articles of
household use at hydrants or at
water faucets located in
restrooms.
Polluting or conf&lt;iminating wale&lt; supplies or
water used for human consumption.
-Using refuse containers Qr
other refuse faciilties for
dumping household or commercia! garbage or trash
brought as such from private
properly.
~ Inciting or participating in
rio ts, or indulging in
boisterous,
abusive,
threatening or indecent conduct.
- Destroying, defacing, or
· removing any natural feature
or plant.
- Destroying, injuring ,
defacing, .removin g,
or
disturbing in any manner any
public building, sign, equipment, marker, or other
structure or property.
-Selling or offering for sale
any merchandise without
written consent of. the Forest
Service.
- Distributing any handbills
or circ ulars, oc · posting,
placing, or erecting any bills,
noticest papers, or advertising
devices or matter of any kind
without the written consent of
the Forest Supervisor.
- Discharging firecrackers,
rockets, or any other
fireworks.
- · Operating or using any
audio devices, including radio,
television, and musical instruments, and other noise
producing devices, such as
elec trical generator plants and
equipment driven by motors or
engines, in such a manner and
at such times to disturb other

HY T. ALLAN WOLTER
District Ranger

persons.
- Operating or using public
address systems, whether
fixed , portable , or vehicle
mounted.
The .'following is not permitted in developed recreation
site"'
- Occupying a site for other
than primarilx recreation
purposes.
- Entering or using a site
clo.sed to public use.
- Building a fir.e outside of
stoves, grills, fireplaces or
outside of fire rings provided
for such a purpose .
- Camping overnight in
places restricted to day use
on ly.
- Before departure, failin g
to clean their rubbish from
places occupied by the person
or persons.
- Pitching tents or parking
trailers or , other campin g
equipment except on places
provided for such purposes.
- Camping within a campground for a longer per.iod of
lime than that established by
the Forest Supervisor. (14 days
at Lake Vesuvius) .
- Leaving a ca mp unit
unoccupied during the first
night after camping equipment
has been set up, or leaving
unattended camping equipment for more than 24 hours
th erea fter . Unattended
camping equipmen t which is
not removed within the
prescribed time limit is subject
to impoundment.
- Failing to maintain quiet
in campgrounds between the
hours of 10 p.m. and 6 a.m.
- Bringing a dog, cat or
other animal into the site
unless it is crated, caged, or
upon a leash not longer than six
feet.
- Bringing animals other
than seeing-eye dogs to a

developed swimming beach.
- Bringing saddle, pack, or
draft animal into the site
unless it has been deve!Op.p to
accommodate them and is
posted accordingly .
- Driving motor vehi¢les in
excess of posted speeds.
- Priving or parking any
vehicle or _trailer except in
places developed for this
purpose.
- ·Driving any vehicle
.carelessly and heedlessly
tlisregarding the rights or
. safety of others, or without
caution and at a speed, or in a
manner, so as to endanger any
person or property .
Driving
bicycles,
motorbikes, and motorcycles
on trails within developed
recreation sites.
- ·Driving motorbikes,
motorcycles, or other motor
vehicles on roads in developed
recreation sites for any purpose other than access into, or
egress out of the site .
- Operating a motor vehicle
at any lime without a muffler
in good working order, or
operating a motor vehicle in
such as manner as to ~reate
excessive or unusual noise or
annoying smoke, or using a
muffler cutoff, bypass or

•

similar device.

- Excessively accelerating
the engine of a motor vehicle or
motorcycle when such vehicle
is not moving or is approaching
or leaving a stopping place.
These rules are authorized
by Regulations of • the
Secretary of Agriculture 36
CFR 251.91)..96. Violators are
subject to a fine of not more
than $500 or imprisonment for
not more than 6 months, or
both.
Violators may be prosecuted
under Federal regulation• or
State law.
,
'
My intent is not tO frighten
anyone but only to make
everyone aware of some
common sense rules. First and ·
foremost we want you to enjoy
National Forests,
·

C_ommunrs·t

I'

Heads May
Roll in '73

Political

Crisis In
Italy Over

ROME (UP!)-Tbe leader of
the dominant Christian Democrat Party said ·Saturday he
believes acting Premier Glullo
AndreotU has succeeded in
. endln1 Itily's four-month
po!IUcal crilla.
"I think he can now tell the
!l"elide!ll lie has formed a
governnlent," said party
Secretary Arnaldo Forlani
after a four-how meeting with
pollUcaris pledged to join or
support all 'Andreotti coalition.
Andreotti has led a minority
Christian
Democratic
caretak• government Iince
late February, when the It).
year-old center-left coalition

· oollapeed.

The new governmentDaly's 34th since 1M3-would
allandon the center-left
poaltloD ud shift slightly
rightward to include three

center Jlll1lal, lbe CuiJtlan
·Democ;rall, Liberals and

8ocll1 Dei1wera11.

The plldpl fve Anchottl a
majwll)' fi 11 Ill the 830 n·t
Owmbw fi DllpuU. .llld •
majarlty li rwr In the 321aeat

Senate.

Not Enough

Rich P I
Scott Says

BOSTON (UPI)-Sen.
GeorgeS . McGovern wants to
"play Robin Hood on a gigantic
scale" but there are not enough
rich people in the country to
make his pljms work, Senate
ReP.Ublican leader Hugh Scott
said Saturday .
The
Pennsylvania
Republican criticized his
Democratic colleague from
South Pakota in a keynote
address to the Republican
state Convention.
He said tbe tax proposals
offered by McGovern, the
leading Democratc
Presidential candidate, con·
lilted of "demagoguery and
deception."
"He would U!le tbe taxing
power-au he said-to rediatri·
bute the national wealth-to
even thqs out. Not jull to
base taxes on ability to pay-a
the progrellllve income tal
already does-but to . play
Robin Flood ·on a gigantic
scale," Scott said.
'"!be baalc trouble with hla
lcheme Ia thlt there are not
mOUjjh rich people in the
United statal to finance hla .
ICheme even if he takes
everythq they have."

LIVING ROOM GROUPING

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LIVING ROOM GROUPING ·

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TOP TABLES

$149.95

NOW•••••• I

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ROCKER REWNER

SHOP THE Ntw. JOIES·IJYS'

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NOW••••••••••••

Belt .Vlllua on
Food. - Clothing • Hardwre
- in GaUl. County

4 PC. TEEN GROUP

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Plrklng For Ov• 100 C:.rs,

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t - 'ftle 8IDiay Th r SealiMI, June Zi,

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Death
Toll
.
ReachesllO

Wedding Plans Compkted

.•
&gt;I

By United Press lnternall01al sandbagged the Susquehanna

The mighty Susquehanna in an attempt io litem the
· River burst through sandbag flooding water. A family lowdikes into WUkes-Barre Satw-- was swept to death when the
day and ihe Ohio River swept river carried away their car.
Into Pittsbutgh's Golden Residents of towns along the
Triangle business district · as Ohio River in the northeslern
· Pennsylvania suffered the part of the Buckeye"state and
brunt of the nation's most the northwelltern panhandle of
exie(lsjve floods in history.
West Virginia were evacuated
The Ohio River, surging to 42 from their homes and rescue
feet, alSo forced mass evacua- officials said the waters posed
lions of towns in West Virginia a ''major" threat to Wheeling.
and Ohio and po$00 a major Some 7,000 residents of Wheelthreat to Wheeling, W. Va.
ing Island, located in the
The weeklong death toll in middle of the the Ohio, were
floods
unleashed ·hy tropical evacuated. The island was
CAROL ,\DAMS, PomerQy, left, treasurer of the Ohio Eta Phi Olapter of the Beta Sigma
storm
Agnes
climbed to 110 and expected to he submerged by .,..
Phi Sorority, on hehaU of Ute soro"ily presents a check to he used in helping with the program
damage
soared
past the billion Sunday morning.
at the Oanter's.Cave Camp in Jackson County. The camp with a varied program gets underway
dollar mark. More than 350,000 Wheeling · Downs racetrack
today and coocludes Thw-sday with young people of nine counties taking part. Receiving the
persOns were left homeless and was covered with siX feet of
check are llori8 BaMJhari,Middleport ROute I, and Susan Teaford, Minersville Route I, hoth of
uncounted scores were water and flooding also was
whom will ~rve as camp coun~lors .
missing.
reported across the river In
President Nixon, who Martins Ferry, East liverpool
alr~ady had· declared Florida, and Bellaire, Ohio.
Mar¢~land, Pennsylvania, New
Nixon at Harrisburg
York and Virginia major flood
President Nixon stopped in
disaster areas, toured inundat- Harrisburg during his helicop·ed'areas of Maryland Pennsyl- ter tour and said,"l'm parlicuvania by helicopter Saturday larly concerned about the
morning.
houses. We need to find places
"We saw devastation every- for these people to live.
where," tne President said.
"I'm also concerned about
Civil Defense workers, Na- the steel plants because that
tiona! Guardsmen and tern- means jobs. We've got to get
Raybw-n farm was caused by Wallow Ridge off Route 2 with porarily released prisoners that steel plant (Bethlehem
By John Cooper •
mostly water seeps coming out some decision making con- aided in evacuating entire Steel Corp.'s steel plant in
Soil Conservation Service
of
the hill. In order to crrect cerning his land. Mr · WoOd is cities in the Northeast. Hun-.. Harrisburg) operating again or
PT. PLEASANT - Olief
activities that we have recently this situation an interceptor an engineer at the Kaiser plant dreds of thousands of persons "find another industry. If they
been associated with are tile system was planned. This at Ravenswood and is planning near the Susquehanna, can't open again, this would
teaching a conservation class soil is Monongahela Silt Loam. to build a house on some Allegheny, Chemung, destroyHarrisbirrg,"thePresIn order for an interceptor recentiy purchased land near Monongahela, Ohio and James ident said.
. at 4-H Camp and assisting with
tile drainage pn several farms . tile system to work properly, the old Bear Wallow School. He Rivers-all fed by five days of Nixon also talked to some of
The dltcher moved into care is taken to install the tile asked us for soils information relentless rains from tropical the 700 refugees at William
Mason County the first of last in dry ground at a higher at sites they were considering storm Agnes-left their homes Penn High School.
week and since that time elevation than where the tile for their house. The main to the mercy of the spreading "We lost everything. The
despite losing some time seep appears on the surface. purpose of this was that he was water and fled to higher furniture, everything we own,"
because of rains, about 16,000 By digging the ditch some 21,; concerned that the land might ground.
Olarles Crewsaw, who lives
• feet of tile have been put into to 3 feet deep usually it is slip at the site which he and his
Pennsylvania was the near the inundated governor's
possible to Intercept the water wife had made as their first hardest hit with 47 known dead mansion in Harrisbw-g, told
the ground.
T. A. Williamson of Southside before it appears on the sur- choice.
and more than a quarler Nixon.
·
installed 4,660 feet, Forrest face.
Upon exa111inalion we found million residents homeless . "Can you go back?" Nixon
that this wa.s true . ln fact, their The capital of Harrisburg was asked.
Nibert of Ashton installed 8,785
THE KIDS at the 4-H Camp chosen site was in the middle of inundated and statewide "We'll try," crewsaw
feet, Richard Kinnaird of
Gallipolis Ferry, 1,960 feet and have been a lively group · an old slip. We could see that it damage was estimated at more replied.
Floyd Rayburn, off Sandhill despite cold, wet and muddy was an old slip because of the · than ·$1 billion .
ROad, 650 feet. All of the ltle conditions. It was necessary uneven terrain and a recession
State's Worst Disaster
A force of 17,000 volunteers
jobs completed, except the that we alter our teaching o(the soil up above the uneven
"Without any doubt, it is the lost a desperate battle to to
Rayburn job, were what is plans somewhat because of the land .
worst disaster in the history of save the downtown section of
While there, we looked at a Pennsylvania," said Gov. Mil- Wilkes-Barre when the
known as a pattern system. By weather. These plans consisted
this system we mean that tile mostly of showing them pic- spring that the Woods are ton J. Shapp. "I think J?enn- floodwaters smashed through a
Unes were laid parallel to one tw-es ·of conservation work, considering to develop as.their sylvania will have every sandbag barrier sending the
anotHer over the entire wet various maps and explaining source of water for their new reason to rename Hurricane workers running for high
Soil Conservation Service to home . Morgan O'Nelll, a Agnes, Hw-ricane Agony."
ground. Nearby Kingston also
area.
them.
neighbor
of
Wood's
and
a
longThe
National
Weather
was
flooded. The nearly 100,000
The 5oll on •the Williamson
The following 4-H'ers were in time resident of Bear Wallow Service said dimlnishihg rain residents of both cities had
farm and Kinnaird farm was
Melvin Sill Loam . This is a the class : Petie SoliiJiler, Billy Ridge, said that he had at- and subsiding winds had been evacuated earlier.
tight soli and it is necessary to Lewis, Keven J. Scott, Cecil tended school at this old one- · reduced the fury of Agnes, but Gov. Shapp $aid damage
lay parallel lines about 50 feet Duncan Jr., Jeffrey Clendenen, room school house and that at warned ftooding would con- "will be well over Sl billion.
wi 1k e s- Barre,
apart and backfill over top the Zack Harris, Harold Russell, that time they had carried tinue. In Pennsylvania, Lt. Just
Scott
Worster,
Marty
Diehl,
water
from
this
spring
for
use
Gov.
Ernest
P.
!Qine
said,
"I
Harrisburg,
Bloomsbw-g and
tile with porous material in
Greg
Forbes,
Shawna
Martin
,
order to bring about the proper
at the school.
feel reasonably sw-e that the Sunbury alone would he worth
Laura Armstrong, Ike Mcdrainage.
worst is yet to come .' 1 ·
that, and there has been
Conihay
and
Becky
WilliamThe soli on the Nibert farm
The skyscraper Golden considerable damage in
. was mostlY. Sehecaville Silt son.
Triangle in downtown Pills· western Pennsylvania."
Loam and it is posalble to space
burgh, where the Allegheny Half of the historic city of
WE
HELPED
David
N.
tlle a little farther apart on that
and Monogahela Rivers meet Richmond, Va. was without tap
Wood whpse place is on Bear
soil and still do a good job.
to form the Ohio, was swamped water after the worst flooding
The wet ground on the
and water spread to the Hilton in the history of the James
Hotel. The city, however, was River. Nearby residents of
spared as the floodcrest swept Hopewell and Petersburg
braced for expected flooding
TEL AVIV ( UPI )-Kozo on downstream.
Th~~ were 17 known dead in Saturday night from the rainOkamoto, the surviving
Vtrgmla,
15 In Maryland, 11 swollen Appomattox River .
Japanese who attacked Tel
in
Ne'
York,
two in North
In· western New York where
Aviv's Lod airport with a
Carolina
and
one
each
in
New
75,000
persOIIYIIlrd to be
machinegun assault that killed
/
25, cannot offer a reasonable Jersey and Delaware. Sixteen evacuated from their low lying
explanation for his deed, persons died earlier in the homes, most rescue operations
Japanese embassy officla1s week when Agnes raged could he carried out only by
through Cuba and Florida.
hoat and helicopter because of
said Saturday.
. . .
Martial
Law
Declared
flooded
roads. The towns of
Okamoto is to stand .trial for
The search for the hijackerPERU, Ind. (UPI)-Ayoung
In SUnbury, Pa., down river Corning and Coopers Plain
f!!tyjacker balled out of a described as a man about 30 his life before an Israeli
'from
Wilkes-Barre, was placed were under up to five feet of
jetliner In predawn darkness with long; dark hair, a pock- military tribunal for his part in
under
martial law. More than water and tons of food and
over wooded farmland Satur- marked face and wearing the massacre that left 25 dead
. day, presumably carrying green trousers with · a light and 80 wounded, mostly Puerto 400Natio!UII guardsmen, Army other supplies were being
Rican Pilgrims. Two other reservists, police, firemen and flown in to homeless peroons.
more than $500,000 in ransom, brown or gold sport jacketJapanese attackers also died In civliian volunteers feverishly
lfter a flight to Texas and centered southeast of Peru.
A state police spokesman the attack.
back,.
Military and legal sources
The hijacker jumped from said, "We have instructions
the rear mps of a American that he (the hijacker) is said the trial~or which no
Airlines 727 jet he had con- dangerous," adding that it was date has yet been set- was
trolled since be took over believed the man had taken his likely to eclipse the 1961 trial
anotber ntght Friday just after gun with him when he jUII)ped. for war crimes of Adolf EichThe airliner landed at mann. Eichmann was conIt left St. Louis by lrandtahing
what the FBI said may have O'Hare International Airport victed for the mass murder of
in Olicago early Saturday Jews it\ World War n and was
been a machine gun.
after
the hijacker jumped. FBI banged in early 1962.
The first plane, after landing
Police sources said Okamoto
at St. Louis and releasing some agents searched it but would
of the passengers, took off not comment on what they is hebJg kept in tbe same
again Frlday afternoon. It found. Observers said they saw maximwn secw-ity cell Eichcircled Sl . Louis for two hours agents remove an Army jacket mann occupied prior to his
before the \lljacker ordered It from the plane and ~ piece of hanging .
Yugi Morita, first secretary
to Fort · Worth. But before clothing from the plane's tail,
at
the .Japanese Embassy' in
' landing In Texas he ordered it but officials would not confirm
their report.
Rome, met Oksmoto in his
back to St. Louis.
prison
cell for two hour~
Peru
Is
about
70
miles
north
Then It was disabled on 'the
ground when a suburban St. of Indianapolis and abo.ut 110 Friday, Japanese embassy
officials said. Morita left for .
Louis man broke through an miles southeast of Ollcago.
Rome earlier in the day.
airport fence early Saturday,
Asked by Morita why he
raced his 1971 Cadlllac Eldora·
do past the plane several times
tilled innocent Puerto Ricans
n
lkamoto reportedly hesitated
and then crashed It into the
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The Defore replying : "Since I'm a
nosegear after the ransom was
Natural Resources Depart- human being too, there are
paid.
•
WE HAVE EVERYTHING TO OFFER
ment awarded _contracts .some things I cannot quiet
Helped Into Parachale
eExped Installation
The hijacker or!lered a Friday totaling $4.9 million to explain reasonably."
•Large
Selection of Samples
build a vacation lodge at
The officials said Okamoto
~MGnd 727, a three-engine Jet
•Over 40 Roils In Stock for Immediate In·
with rear loading steps. He Mohican State Park in Ashland told Morita he had been trained.
stallation
in .an Arab guerrilla camp in
walked to It, wearing a County.
•Experienced Salespeople to Aid You In · Your
parachute which he had to be
Construction of a lwo-f!tory Lebanon because "I wanted to
Selection
belped into. He carried the limber and stone lodge will become a revolutionary solFREE ESTIMATES
-.100 r11110m money in II begin early next month, and dier."
canvu 111111 bag and keeping was expected to he completed H said the other two
Japanese who took part
two atewardeasea and one early.in 1974.
The lodge will have 96 guest in the attack
"died
~ger llolage so close to
111m thllt FBI sharpshooters rooms, a 220-seat main dining a beautiful r~volullonary
.Utlolled at the airport held room, a 250-eeat meeting room, death," adding; "I want to die
t11e1r fire. The aecond plate coffee shop and snack bar, a death which will he as
llld a frelh tine-man flight game room and indoor beautiful as the deaths of my
awlmmlng pool.
friends."
Cl'ft',

';

'"'

SOUTHERN STAR- U.S. Govt.lnspected

FULLY COOKED HA .S

Conservation Oass Is Chief

Shank

Mrs. Jeffrey Gibbs

Half

dealers.

Mr. and Mrs. Bums ;

Mrs. Jerry Huky .

Joyce Alexander Kramer-Hurley Nancy St. Clair
Is
April
Bride
Weds Jeff Gibbs Repeat Vows

4-H Camp Activity In Mason

POMEROY - On April28, at
7:30 p.m., Miss Nancy St.
!·POMEROY - In a formal Heights. Floral centerpieces POMEROY - Miss Sarah servers. Eric Kramer, the Clair, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
fedding ceremony at the Little were used on each table and an
Avery St. - Clair, Pomeroy,
Beth Cramer and Mr. Jerry bride's brother, Milwaukee,
t;Iower Olw-ch at Berkeley, N. orchestra provided music.
became the bride of Mr. Mike
Huley repeated wedding Wis., was leclor .
J. on June 17, Miss Joyce Mary Following their honeymoon Don
Burns.
son of Mrs. Violet
Alexander and Mr. Jeffrey at St. Thomas, Virgin Islands, vows iii a 2 p.m. ceremony on · Tammy Ballard of Houston, Bw-ns, Clifton, W. Va., and Mr.
¥an Gibbs exchanged wedding San Juan, they will reside at Sunday, June 4, in St. Alice niece of the bridegroom, was Jake Burns of Hilliard.
Catholic Church in Plainview, flower girl. She carrieed a
l(ows.
6148 l'olo Drive, Apt. J?.
The vows of the double ring
~ The bride is the daughter of
The new Mrs. Gibbs is a Texas. The Rev. Edward white basket of rose petals ceremony were read by the
1\jr. and Mrs. Arthur graduate of Plainfield High Chrisman, minister of the featuring satin streamers. Rev . Chester Tennant in the
Emil Kramer, a brother of the
.\lezander of Berkeley Heights School and Ohio Stale church, officiated.
Mason Assembly of God .
The parents or the bride are bride, was ringbearer .
ljnd the bridegroom i.s the son University where she was
Donna Weber of Rutland
·d! Mr. and Mrs. Wllltam · A. affiliated with Pi Beta Phi Dr. and Mrs. N. W. Kramer of Tommy Huley was his presented piano se lections,
Route 2, Lockney, Texas. Mrs. brother's best man, and the
Gtllbl, Pomeroy. A program of Sorority.
"Summer of '42," "Love
crgan music preceded the ~
Mr. Gibbs graduattd from Kramer is the former Thane! groomsmen were Ronnie Marr Story," " More ," and "Oh
Barnitz of Pomeroy. Grand· of Lubbock, Kenneth Jackson
pro. double ring ceremony Pomeroy High School and Ohio parents
Promise Me" preceding the
or the bride are Mr. of canyon, and H. G. Graham ceremony.
performed by the Rev. Fr. Slate University . He was a
Kevin Ashe. All white flowers member of Phi Delta Theta and Mrs. W. 0. Barnitz, of Plainview . Eric Kramer and
Given in marriage by her
were used in the church Fraternity . CurrenUy he is Pomeroy . Parents of the Larry Beedy, Floydada , seated father, the bride was attired in
employed as a consultant for groom are Mr. and Mrs. T. L. the guests.
decorations.
A reception was held at the ·
Given in marriage by her the Richard D. Irwin Ruley Lockney .
Two' candle trees flanked by Holiday Inn in Plainview
father, the bride was attired in Publishing .Co. of Chicago, m.
Out-of-toWn guests for the baskets of white assorted ·following the ceremony. The
an off-white gown of satin
featuring inlerts of alencon wedding besides the parents of summer flowers provided the bride's table was graced with a
for the vows. Bill white ~et cloth over white
the bridetll"OOIII were Mr. and setting
Deardorf
of ' Plainview, satin . II was highlighted by a
"Mrs. Rober't Elberfeld and
organist,
and
Karen Gilbert, tiered wedding cake featuring " MqndMrs. Mi~~ael W. Lee
J{er full length mantilla edged daughter, Julie, Stan Coates,
Amarillo, soloist, presented the pastel colors and topped of Caldwell and nussell and
~ lace and a blusher were Pqmeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Phil
nuptial selections.
with two white feathered Kenneth Lee of Dexter City,
litt&amp;ched to a 1ace headpiece. Cook, New Haven and Mr. and
The bride wore a formal doves. The attendants spent the weekend with their
· The bride's attendants were Mr~. William Gibbs, Kent.
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
The bridegroom 's parents length gown of sil~ organza bouquets formed the cen- Ted Riley, Sr. at Clifton. While
J111et .\lexander, siSter of the
bride, Berkeley Heights, N.~.; entertained with a rehearsal over peau de soie. · It was terpiece and a silver punch here they attended the
fashioned with a high natural bowl and appointments
Vikld Fahey, Olicago, Dl.; dinner at Pete and Olarlie's
Regatta .
waistl!ne with sheer bodice and completed the table decor.
Suzy Rice ,'Kent, and Mary Ann Party House at Stauffer's Inn
Other guests of Rileys were
was sleeveless. hnported tiny
The groom's table was
Mlllenkamp, Toledo, brides- in North Plainfield, N. J.
Mrs.
Ted Riley, Jr. and son,
teardrop Venise lace outlined covered with a gold linen cloth
maids. They wore Identical
the transparent yoke and and held a wrought iron cen- John Pat and Mrs. Joyce
rose colored gowns fashioned
extended down the bodice and terpiece decorated with orange Douglas and daughter, Kelly
with empire waists, poufed
Louann of Middleport.
ue~tec across the waist. Thesametiny flowers.
sleeves and bateau necklines
Visitors on Sunday at the
lace formed the high wedding
For a honeymoon trip to the
with white picture hats achome
of Mr. and Mrs. Byron
7\. T
. ring collar and Ute cuff on the mountains of New Mexico, the VanMeter
cented with pink ribbOn trim. 7\.
at Clifton, were their
sleeves. The skirt was softly bride traveled in blue figured
William Gibbs of Kent served 1 V j
gathered at the high waist and knit hotpants with a solid blue daughter and son-in·l~w, Mr.
as best man for hill brother,
fell into _a flowing hell shape . overskirt. She wore a blue and Mrs . Adrain Mullins,
and the ushers were Carson
MIDDLEPORT - The newly
Her veil, completely edged in straw picture hat and carried a Cabin Creek, Mrs. Miller, Mr.
Crow and William Francis, organized Men's Fellowship of
and Mrs. Enoch Lemon of
the imported tiny teardrop matching straw bag .
Pomeroy and Duane Mld- the First Baptist Olw-ch of Venise lace, with a short
The couple will reside at 2604 Clearwater' Florida . ·
dleworth, Toledo.
Middleporl has selected the blusher veil, fell from a lace Apt. 2 in canyon where hoth
For her daughter's wedding, name of "The Hucksters."
edged Juliet cap to a chapel will be attending summer
Lovely
Mrs. Aleunder wore a pale
At the organizational length train . She carried a school at West Texas
Long Lasting
yellow chiffon floor length meeting, officers elected in- white prayer book with University.
gown with a headed bodice and cluded
John
Werner, mother-&lt;&gt;f-pearl cover given to
f!, 1970 graduate of Plainview
a yellow rosebud wri,lt .cor- president; Asa Jordan, vice her by her parents. The bride's High School and a sophomore
sage. Mrs. Glbbl wllre an aqua president; Greg Hayes, bouquet was centered with ~ business major at West Texas,
polyesler crepe gown with full secretary - greasurer; Robert· white orchid and featured the bride is a member of Delta
chiffon sleeves and also had ·a Parker, program ~hairman; cascade of pastel colored Zeta Social Sorority. The
Kenneth Imboden, refresh- sweetheart, roses entwined bridegroom is a 1967 graduate
yellow rosebud corasge.
A dinner recepUon for 200 ment chairman; Danny wil/1 lily of the valley and of Lockney High School and a
guests was held immediately Thompson, devotional leader ; stephanotis.
junior physical education Serving: Middleport ,
following the ceremony at Clifford Hayes, membership
For something new the bride major at West Texas. He was Pomeroy, Gallipolis &amp;
Sulphyr Springs, Berkeley chairman and Kenneth hn- wore pearl earrings, a gUt of formerly employed by Gifford ~;;M;;•;;50;;;";,;ciioii.'.iwlo.• viiaii._ __ .
,--------------~------, . the bridegroom. For something Hill Western.
old and borrowed, she carried ·rlll!llll!llll!llll!llll!l.- 11• 11110 • • • • • • • •
.a rosary of her mother's.
1

!

IRISH BRAND OR SWIFT'S PREMIUM- U.S. Govt.lnspectad

5·1b.

Size

$429

Qifton
Personals

Kathryn Ann
Dressmaking

.,

'

Vine-Ripened

TOMATOES
For Slicing or Saiaos At a Special Low Price

*
LOW

lb.

M en

STATE FARE

PRICE Wiener or
Sandwich
SPECIAL

Recent Attack

*

Skyjacker
Successful

*
LOW
PRICE
SPECIAL

~

*

*

LOW
PRICE
SPECIAL

BEFORE YOIJ HUY

CARPETING

Te W

Pkg. of 8

THOROFARE

BEVERAGES
12 oz. Cans
limit 12

State Fare

POTATO

•

FUTURES
Extra Light

I
BUIIERMlK BISCIITS I
_4 ~~~~.....,..,
45c
I
OVEN
Btllltd

I ,

iI

READY

. 6 J~~~ 59C"'*
~ .•

Btllord

~ ·

.

: ~
·.

~~

¥

SUNDAY, JUNE 25
COME AND SEE .

the new community of all brick homes just off

Rt. 33 South at the new by-pass near Meigs
: High School. Prices start at $21,000 for a~, 3 or
-4 bedroom home. Let us show you the many
quality features. Conie to our Open House this
Sunday from 11 to 5.
~

atARLES OORNELL; DEVElDPER
KEY REAL ESTATE, AGENT
Alba, Ohio

I

.-

..

{

Feed th'e Whole
Fam.lly ••·~ r only

II
I
1·

.• 2 5

1

·

-1
J
I
1
1·

$

I
I

.

1
I
I

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday

I
THRIFT BOlf.I
g pieces
ribbonsandflowerslnher~. 1·
regularly '2.65
Evan Kramer, brother of the
bride, and Billy Hoelscher, I
Amarillo, a cousin, were 1
Offer good thru June 29, 1972
_;bo-de-n,-vic-e-m-e-mb~er--:-sh-ip ·II Why cook? Visit the Col~l
~halrman.
1
COLONFL SANDERS' R~CIPE

Theand
group
composed
of
men
hi&amp;h isIChool
boys and
will meet at 7 pm. on the
••
Ray DDuglas, Rtaltar
HCQJtd TbQrsday of each
1-592-3414
month. The neat meellng wu
81 II Keelon, Associate
sat for I pm. oo July at the
. 1-592-1349
~---------------~ ch..-ch for a pizza pa

..

II
II

I

I

~

frW eLfIIICI.J....

C.ow'l Steak HOUII

---

POMIIOY1 OHIO .

111!1111!1111!1111!1_____

I
I
I
I

Featuring All of the
.
Latest Shoe Fashions
WOMEN'S

I1

STARTS MONDAY, JUNE 26

r'~
,_

'0

~

b"'

NATURALIZERS
Regular

18.99

1

MISS .AMERICA SHOES

\

Miss America white and beige summer dress shoes.
Also Party Shoes In sliver and gold. Party group
Includes values to '15.00
Regular
Regular
Regular

14.99
and 15.99 .

11.99
to 13.99

864

9.99
to 10.99

SIZE 4-8
-Women's Dress and Sandals
Y2 PRICE

I

I
1

" ,

=·

. ~lJJJJLJ&gt;Y

I
I
I
·I
I
I

I

At Forked Run Lake Entrance
Long Bottom. 0.

·CHAPMAN'S

t

Something blue was a garter
personally made for her by
Mrs. Victor Ebeling 111d for
good luck, the bride WO':f a sixpence in her shoe wh1ch her
father broughl to her from ,
England.
Alexa Kramer, sister of the
bride, was maid of honor. Mrs.
Paul Griego of Longmont,
Colo. wa~ her sister's matron
of honor. Brideamalds wen!
Connie Kemp and Ronnie Beth
Ebeling, both of Plainview.
The bride's attendants wore
floor length floral print dreuea.
of !lheer oganza flocked with
. pastel colored flowers. Each
featured a transparent yoke
. and sleeves and was lined in·a
different pastel color of satin,
yellow, orchid, pink, blue and
green. Each carried a boaegay
of white dailies and won! satin

Relax .. , Drive in for a Delicious
Moo Burger. Best yet for the united
tastes of America. Or a refreshing
malt, shake, cone or sundae.

..

"ame

-

1-lb. Pkg.

- BISCUITS-

Awarded F 'day

1

OPEN FOR BUSINESS

..

Dudley's Florist

• Bars . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ; .lH•·39
F19
..... c
Chocolate Chip Cookies . . ... ~~~~· 39c

Contracts Are

(' T

MOO MOO DAIRY BARN

MOO MOO DAIRY BARN
•.
in~d~P~e~g;gy~S~to~~Y~·-----·~t::·-~·=···:·"~'C·~·•:":':; ~'ot~. :·::::::::;:;::::~··~·~r,

Foliage
Gardens

* Keebler Features

CHECK WITH THE
EMPIRE

a floor length gown with an
empire waist outlined by
yellow trim. She carried a
bouquet of white daisies.
Mrs. Janet Pickens, sister of
the bride, was matron of honor .
She wore a mint green gown ·
acce nted with a dark green
velvet bow. Her headpiece was
a rose with green veiling and
she carried a bouquet of green
tinted carnations.
Stanford Burns of Columbus
served as best man for his
brother.
A reception honoring the
couple was held at the home of
the bride's parents following
the ceremony. The three tiered
wedding cake was decorated
with. daisies and topped with
wedding hell replicas. Serving
the cake, punch and nuts were
Mrs. Alpha Bailey, Mrs. Janet
Pickens, Mrs. Yvonne Young

:f:ttednch':T~rfm~

f

The

&lt;9

Lone Suroivor
Can't Explain

I

--.·"&gt;?'· · 'I&lt;

252 THIRD AVENUE, GALLIPOU~ OHIO
OPEN 9 AM TO 9 PM MONDAY TlfRU SATURDAY

We reserve thll! right to
limit quantit ies oo illl
items in th h o~d . Prius
effecfi¥e
~"~--'~~~~~..'!:
July J , 1911.

I

Pomeroy . . .
.. Personal Notes

~..;!;}'

••

Lay Of the Land

•

.

POMEROY - Plans have son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
been completed for the in- Crow, Syracuse.
The open church wedding
fOrma l wedding of Miss
Pamela Lynn Neutzling , will be held at 2:30 p.m. on
daughter of Mr. an·d Mrs. Saturda~. July I, at the MidRichard Neutzling, Pomeroy, dleport First Baptist Olurch. A
and Mr . James Hyson Crow, half-how- of music preceding
the ceremony will he presented
by
Mrs . Robert Kuhh,
f""m~'%&lt;'1'~·~~&lt;:::
Pomeroy, organist, and Danley
Thompson, Pomeroy, soloist.
Marla Neutzling and Darla
Neutzling, twin sisters of the
bride-&lt;)lect, will be her only
Among the recent visitors of· attendants.
Mrs. Sallie Byers,. Route . 2,
Bob Crow
of
New
Pomeroy, were her nieces, Mr. Philadelphia will serve as best
and Mrs. Arvin J. Whitt, man for his brother, and the
Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. usher will he Steve Sewell of
Gaines Strouse and daughter, . Marietta .
West Jefferson , and Paul
Areception will he held in the
Toops of Columbus. Mrs. Byers church social room following
visited her cousins, Mr. and the ceremony .
Mrs. W. W. Byers and family
for two days recently in
Parkersburg .
Mr. and Mrs. Lou Bracksieck
CLUB TO MEET
of Washington, D. C. .have been
RIO GRANDE ~ The Open
the guests of her grandmother,
Gate Garden Club of Rio
Mrs. Fred Rosenbawn.
Grande will meet Tuesday,
Mr . and Mrs. Dale Richards,
Jw1e 27, at 6 p.m. at the home
the former Joyce Williamson,
of Mrs. Vicky Powell for a
of 1411 George Rd., Route 1, N.
E. Lancaster, are annoWJcing terrene dinner. This replaces
last week's meeting which was
the birth of a son, Wednesday
postponed.
at Mount Carmel Hospital in
Columbus. The infant weighed
eight pounds and is Mr. and
Mrs. Richards' first child.
David Hundley of Gahanna,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred W.
Hundley, underwent sw-gery
last week at University
Hospital, Columbus, for a hip
injury suffered while playing
Corner of Third &amp; Main
football two years ago. He
Sts
.
expects to be con.fined to his
home most of the summer.
Middleport. 0.
Mrs . Hundley is the former
Jeanne
Williamson
of ~ 10 a.m . to 4 p.m.
Pomeroy .

.
1

/ / . ~:·:~~

....

'

\

~ Straw

and Summer Bags Reduced!

I MainCHAPMAN'S
St
Pomeroy
SHOES
I'

.1 ..--------------,_...,;;..._______...

1

�••

"'

t - 'ftle 8IDiay Th r SealiMI, June Zi,

tm

T~

Death
Toll
.
ReachesllO

Wedding Plans Compkted

.•
&gt;I

By United Press lnternall01al sandbagged the Susquehanna

The mighty Susquehanna in an attempt io litem the
· River burst through sandbag flooding water. A family lowdikes into WUkes-Barre Satw-- was swept to death when the
day and ihe Ohio River swept river carried away their car.
Into Pittsbutgh's Golden Residents of towns along the
Triangle business district · as Ohio River in the northeslern
· Pennsylvania suffered the part of the Buckeye"state and
brunt of the nation's most the northwelltern panhandle of
exie(lsjve floods in history.
West Virginia were evacuated
The Ohio River, surging to 42 from their homes and rescue
feet, alSo forced mass evacua- officials said the waters posed
lions of towns in West Virginia a ''major" threat to Wheeling.
and Ohio and po$00 a major Some 7,000 residents of Wheelthreat to Wheeling, W. Va.
ing Island, located in the
The weeklong death toll in middle of the the Ohio, were
floods
unleashed ·hy tropical evacuated. The island was
CAROL ,\DAMS, PomerQy, left, treasurer of the Ohio Eta Phi Olapter of the Beta Sigma
storm
Agnes
climbed to 110 and expected to he submerged by .,..
Phi Sorority, on hehaU of Ute soro"ily presents a check to he used in helping with the program
damage
soared
past the billion Sunday morning.
at the Oanter's.Cave Camp in Jackson County. The camp with a varied program gets underway
dollar mark. More than 350,000 Wheeling · Downs racetrack
today and coocludes Thw-sday with young people of nine counties taking part. Receiving the
persOns were left homeless and was covered with siX feet of
check are llori8 BaMJhari,Middleport ROute I, and Susan Teaford, Minersville Route I, hoth of
uncounted scores were water and flooding also was
whom will ~rve as camp coun~lors .
missing.
reported across the river In
President Nixon, who Martins Ferry, East liverpool
alr~ady had· declared Florida, and Bellaire, Ohio.
Mar¢~land, Pennsylvania, New
Nixon at Harrisburg
York and Virginia major flood
President Nixon stopped in
disaster areas, toured inundat- Harrisburg during his helicop·ed'areas of Maryland Pennsyl- ter tour and said,"l'm parlicuvania by helicopter Saturday larly concerned about the
morning.
houses. We need to find places
"We saw devastation every- for these people to live.
where," tne President said.
"I'm also concerned about
Civil Defense workers, Na- the steel plants because that
tiona! Guardsmen and tern- means jobs. We've got to get
Raybw-n farm was caused by Wallow Ridge off Route 2 with porarily released prisoners that steel plant (Bethlehem
By John Cooper •
mostly water seeps coming out some decision making con- aided in evacuating entire Steel Corp.'s steel plant in
Soil Conservation Service
of
the hill. In order to crrect cerning his land. Mr · WoOd is cities in the Northeast. Hun-.. Harrisburg) operating again or
PT. PLEASANT - Olief
activities that we have recently this situation an interceptor an engineer at the Kaiser plant dreds of thousands of persons "find another industry. If they
been associated with are tile system was planned. This at Ravenswood and is planning near the Susquehanna, can't open again, this would
teaching a conservation class soil is Monongahela Silt Loam. to build a house on some Allegheny, Chemung, destroyHarrisbirrg,"thePresIn order for an interceptor recentiy purchased land near Monongahela, Ohio and James ident said.
. at 4-H Camp and assisting with
tile drainage pn several farms . tile system to work properly, the old Bear Wallow School. He Rivers-all fed by five days of Nixon also talked to some of
The dltcher moved into care is taken to install the tile asked us for soils information relentless rains from tropical the 700 refugees at William
Mason County the first of last in dry ground at a higher at sites they were considering storm Agnes-left their homes Penn High School.
week and since that time elevation than where the tile for their house. The main to the mercy of the spreading "We lost everything. The
despite losing some time seep appears on the surface. purpose of this was that he was water and fled to higher furniture, everything we own,"
because of rains, about 16,000 By digging the ditch some 21,; concerned that the land might ground.
Olarles Crewsaw, who lives
• feet of tile have been put into to 3 feet deep usually it is slip at the site which he and his
Pennsylvania was the near the inundated governor's
possible to Intercept the water wife had made as their first hardest hit with 47 known dead mansion in Harrisbw-g, told
the ground.
T. A. Williamson of Southside before it appears on the sur- choice.
and more than a quarler Nixon.
·
installed 4,660 feet, Forrest face.
Upon exa111inalion we found million residents homeless . "Can you go back?" Nixon
that this wa.s true . ln fact, their The capital of Harrisburg was asked.
Nibert of Ashton installed 8,785
THE KIDS at the 4-H Camp chosen site was in the middle of inundated and statewide "We'll try," crewsaw
feet, Richard Kinnaird of
Gallipolis Ferry, 1,960 feet and have been a lively group · an old slip. We could see that it damage was estimated at more replied.
Floyd Rayburn, off Sandhill despite cold, wet and muddy was an old slip because of the · than ·$1 billion .
ROad, 650 feet. All of the ltle conditions. It was necessary uneven terrain and a recession
State's Worst Disaster
A force of 17,000 volunteers
jobs completed, except the that we alter our teaching o(the soil up above the uneven
"Without any doubt, it is the lost a desperate battle to to
Rayburn job, were what is plans somewhat because of the land .
worst disaster in the history of save the downtown section of
While there, we looked at a Pennsylvania," said Gov. Mil- Wilkes-Barre when the
known as a pattern system. By weather. These plans consisted
this system we mean that tile mostly of showing them pic- spring that the Woods are ton J. Shapp. "I think J?enn- floodwaters smashed through a
Unes were laid parallel to one tw-es ·of conservation work, considering to develop as.their sylvania will have every sandbag barrier sending the
anotHer over the entire wet various maps and explaining source of water for their new reason to rename Hurricane workers running for high
Soil Conservation Service to home . Morgan O'Nelll, a Agnes, Hw-ricane Agony."
ground. Nearby Kingston also
area.
them.
neighbor
of
Wood's
and
a
longThe
National
Weather
was
flooded. The nearly 100,000
The 5oll on •the Williamson
The following 4-H'ers were in time resident of Bear Wallow Service said dimlnishihg rain residents of both cities had
farm and Kinnaird farm was
Melvin Sill Loam . This is a the class : Petie SoliiJiler, Billy Ridge, said that he had at- and subsiding winds had been evacuated earlier.
tight soli and it is necessary to Lewis, Keven J. Scott, Cecil tended school at this old one- · reduced the fury of Agnes, but Gov. Shapp $aid damage
lay parallel lines about 50 feet Duncan Jr., Jeffrey Clendenen, room school house and that at warned ftooding would con- "will be well over Sl billion.
wi 1k e s- Barre,
apart and backfill over top the Zack Harris, Harold Russell, that time they had carried tinue. In Pennsylvania, Lt. Just
Scott
Worster,
Marty
Diehl,
water
from
this
spring
for
use
Gov.
Ernest
P.
!Qine
said,
"I
Harrisburg,
Bloomsbw-g and
tile with porous material in
Greg
Forbes,
Shawna
Martin
,
order to bring about the proper
at the school.
feel reasonably sw-e that the Sunbury alone would he worth
Laura Armstrong, Ike Mcdrainage.
worst is yet to come .' 1 ·
that, and there has been
Conihay
and
Becky
WilliamThe soli on the Nibert farm
The skyscraper Golden considerable damage in
. was mostlY. Sehecaville Silt son.
Triangle in downtown Pills· western Pennsylvania."
Loam and it is posalble to space
burgh, where the Allegheny Half of the historic city of
WE
HELPED
David
N.
tlle a little farther apart on that
and Monogahela Rivers meet Richmond, Va. was without tap
Wood whpse place is on Bear
soil and still do a good job.
to form the Ohio, was swamped water after the worst flooding
The wet ground on the
and water spread to the Hilton in the history of the James
Hotel. The city, however, was River. Nearby residents of
spared as the floodcrest swept Hopewell and Petersburg
braced for expected flooding
TEL AVIV ( UPI )-Kozo on downstream.
Th~~ were 17 known dead in Saturday night from the rainOkamoto, the surviving
Vtrgmla,
15 In Maryland, 11 swollen Appomattox River .
Japanese who attacked Tel
in
Ne'
York,
two in North
In· western New York where
Aviv's Lod airport with a
Carolina
and
one
each
in
New
75,000
persOIIYIIlrd to be
machinegun assault that killed
/
25, cannot offer a reasonable Jersey and Delaware. Sixteen evacuated from their low lying
explanation for his deed, persons died earlier in the homes, most rescue operations
Japanese embassy officla1s week when Agnes raged could he carried out only by
through Cuba and Florida.
hoat and helicopter because of
said Saturday.
. . .
Martial
Law
Declared
flooded
roads. The towns of
Okamoto is to stand .trial for
The search for the hijackerPERU, Ind. (UPI)-Ayoung
In SUnbury, Pa., down river Corning and Coopers Plain
f!!tyjacker balled out of a described as a man about 30 his life before an Israeli
'from
Wilkes-Barre, was placed were under up to five feet of
jetliner In predawn darkness with long; dark hair, a pock- military tribunal for his part in
under
martial law. More than water and tons of food and
over wooded farmland Satur- marked face and wearing the massacre that left 25 dead
. day, presumably carrying green trousers with · a light and 80 wounded, mostly Puerto 400Natio!UII guardsmen, Army other supplies were being
Rican Pilgrims. Two other reservists, police, firemen and flown in to homeless peroons.
more than $500,000 in ransom, brown or gold sport jacketJapanese attackers also died In civliian volunteers feverishly
lfter a flight to Texas and centered southeast of Peru.
A state police spokesman the attack.
back,.
Military and legal sources
The hijacker jumped from said, "We have instructions
the rear mps of a American that he (the hijacker) is said the trial~or which no
Airlines 727 jet he had con- dangerous," adding that it was date has yet been set- was
trolled since be took over believed the man had taken his likely to eclipse the 1961 trial
anotber ntght Friday just after gun with him when he jUII)ped. for war crimes of Adolf EichThe airliner landed at mann. Eichmann was conIt left St. Louis by lrandtahing
what the FBI said may have O'Hare International Airport victed for the mass murder of
in Olicago early Saturday Jews it\ World War n and was
been a machine gun.
after
the hijacker jumped. FBI banged in early 1962.
The first plane, after landing
Police sources said Okamoto
at St. Louis and releasing some agents searched it but would
of the passengers, took off not comment on what they is hebJg kept in tbe same
again Frlday afternoon. It found. Observers said they saw maximwn secw-ity cell Eichcircled Sl . Louis for two hours agents remove an Army jacket mann occupied prior to his
before the \lljacker ordered It from the plane and ~ piece of hanging .
Yugi Morita, first secretary
to Fort · Worth. But before clothing from the plane's tail,
at
the .Japanese Embassy' in
' landing In Texas he ordered it but officials would not confirm
their report.
Rome, met Oksmoto in his
back to St. Louis.
prison
cell for two hour~
Peru
Is
about
70
miles
north
Then It was disabled on 'the
ground when a suburban St. of Indianapolis and abo.ut 110 Friday, Japanese embassy
officials said. Morita left for .
Louis man broke through an miles southeast of Ollcago.
Rome earlier in the day.
airport fence early Saturday,
Asked by Morita why he
raced his 1971 Cadlllac Eldora·
do past the plane several times
tilled innocent Puerto Ricans
n
lkamoto reportedly hesitated
and then crashed It into the
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The Defore replying : "Since I'm a
nosegear after the ransom was
Natural Resources Depart- human being too, there are
paid.
•
WE HAVE EVERYTHING TO OFFER
ment awarded _contracts .some things I cannot quiet
Helped Into Parachale
eExped Installation
The hijacker or!lered a Friday totaling $4.9 million to explain reasonably."
•Large
Selection of Samples
build a vacation lodge at
The officials said Okamoto
~MGnd 727, a three-engine Jet
•Over 40 Roils In Stock for Immediate In·
with rear loading steps. He Mohican State Park in Ashland told Morita he had been trained.
stallation
in .an Arab guerrilla camp in
walked to It, wearing a County.
•Experienced Salespeople to Aid You In · Your
parachute which he had to be
Construction of a lwo-f!tory Lebanon because "I wanted to
Selection
belped into. He carried the limber and stone lodge will become a revolutionary solFREE ESTIMATES
-.100 r11110m money in II begin early next month, and dier."
canvu 111111 bag and keeping was expected to he completed H said the other two
Japanese who took part
two atewardeasea and one early.in 1974.
The lodge will have 96 guest in the attack
"died
~ger llolage so close to
111m thllt FBI sharpshooters rooms, a 220-seat main dining a beautiful r~volullonary
.Utlolled at the airport held room, a 250-eeat meeting room, death," adding; "I want to die
t11e1r fire. The aecond plate coffee shop and snack bar, a death which will he as
llld a frelh tine-man flight game room and indoor beautiful as the deaths of my
awlmmlng pool.
friends."
Cl'ft',

';

'"'

SOUTHERN STAR- U.S. Govt.lnspected

FULLY COOKED HA .S

Conservation Oass Is Chief

Shank

Mrs. Jeffrey Gibbs

Half

dealers.

Mr. and Mrs. Bums ;

Mrs. Jerry Huky .

Joyce Alexander Kramer-Hurley Nancy St. Clair
Is
April
Bride
Weds Jeff Gibbs Repeat Vows

4-H Camp Activity In Mason

POMEROY - On April28, at
7:30 p.m., Miss Nancy St.
!·POMEROY - In a formal Heights. Floral centerpieces POMEROY - Miss Sarah servers. Eric Kramer, the Clair, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
fedding ceremony at the Little were used on each table and an
Avery St. - Clair, Pomeroy,
Beth Cramer and Mr. Jerry bride's brother, Milwaukee,
t;Iower Olw-ch at Berkeley, N. orchestra provided music.
became the bride of Mr. Mike
Huley repeated wedding Wis., was leclor .
J. on June 17, Miss Joyce Mary Following their honeymoon Don
Burns.
son of Mrs. Violet
Alexander and Mr. Jeffrey at St. Thomas, Virgin Islands, vows iii a 2 p.m. ceremony on · Tammy Ballard of Houston, Bw-ns, Clifton, W. Va., and Mr.
¥an Gibbs exchanged wedding San Juan, they will reside at Sunday, June 4, in St. Alice niece of the bridegroom, was Jake Burns of Hilliard.
Catholic Church in Plainview, flower girl. She carrieed a
l(ows.
6148 l'olo Drive, Apt. J?.
The vows of the double ring
~ The bride is the daughter of
The new Mrs. Gibbs is a Texas. The Rev. Edward white basket of rose petals ceremony were read by the
1\jr. and Mrs. Arthur graduate of Plainfield High Chrisman, minister of the featuring satin streamers. Rev . Chester Tennant in the
Emil Kramer, a brother of the
.\lezander of Berkeley Heights School and Ohio Stale church, officiated.
Mason Assembly of God .
The parents or the bride are bride, was ringbearer .
ljnd the bridegroom i.s the son University where she was
Donna Weber of Rutland
·d! Mr. and Mrs. Wllltam · A. affiliated with Pi Beta Phi Dr. and Mrs. N. W. Kramer of Tommy Huley was his presented piano se lections,
Route 2, Lockney, Texas. Mrs. brother's best man, and the
Gtllbl, Pomeroy. A program of Sorority.
"Summer of '42," "Love
crgan music preceded the ~
Mr. Gibbs graduattd from Kramer is the former Thane! groomsmen were Ronnie Marr Story," " More ," and "Oh
Barnitz of Pomeroy. Grand· of Lubbock, Kenneth Jackson
pro. double ring ceremony Pomeroy High School and Ohio parents
Promise Me" preceding the
or the bride are Mr. of canyon, and H. G. Graham ceremony.
performed by the Rev. Fr. Slate University . He was a
Kevin Ashe. All white flowers member of Phi Delta Theta and Mrs. W. 0. Barnitz, of Plainview . Eric Kramer and
Given in marriage by her
were used in the church Fraternity . CurrenUy he is Pomeroy . Parents of the Larry Beedy, Floydada , seated father, the bride was attired in
employed as a consultant for groom are Mr. and Mrs. T. L. the guests.
decorations.
A reception was held at the ·
Given in marriage by her the Richard D. Irwin Ruley Lockney .
Two' candle trees flanked by Holiday Inn in Plainview
father, the bride was attired in Publishing .Co. of Chicago, m.
Out-of-toWn guests for the baskets of white assorted ·following the ceremony. The
an off-white gown of satin
featuring inlerts of alencon wedding besides the parents of summer flowers provided the bride's table was graced with a
for the vows. Bill white ~et cloth over white
the bridetll"OOIII were Mr. and setting
Deardorf
of ' Plainview, satin . II was highlighted by a
"Mrs. Rober't Elberfeld and
organist,
and
Karen Gilbert, tiered wedding cake featuring " MqndMrs. Mi~~ael W. Lee
J{er full length mantilla edged daughter, Julie, Stan Coates,
Amarillo, soloist, presented the pastel colors and topped of Caldwell and nussell and
~ lace and a blusher were Pqmeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Phil
nuptial selections.
with two white feathered Kenneth Lee of Dexter City,
litt&amp;ched to a 1ace headpiece. Cook, New Haven and Mr. and
The bride wore a formal doves. The attendants spent the weekend with their
· The bride's attendants were Mr~. William Gibbs, Kent.
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
The bridegroom 's parents length gown of sil~ organza bouquets formed the cen- Ted Riley, Sr. at Clifton. While
J111et .\lexander, siSter of the
bride, Berkeley Heights, N.~.; entertained with a rehearsal over peau de soie. · It was terpiece and a silver punch here they attended the
fashioned with a high natural bowl and appointments
Vikld Fahey, Olicago, Dl.; dinner at Pete and Olarlie's
Regatta .
waistl!ne with sheer bodice and completed the table decor.
Suzy Rice ,'Kent, and Mary Ann Party House at Stauffer's Inn
Other guests of Rileys were
was sleeveless. hnported tiny
The groom's table was
Mlllenkamp, Toledo, brides- in North Plainfield, N. J.
Mrs.
Ted Riley, Jr. and son,
teardrop Venise lace outlined covered with a gold linen cloth
maids. They wore Identical
the transparent yoke and and held a wrought iron cen- John Pat and Mrs. Joyce
rose colored gowns fashioned
extended down the bodice and terpiece decorated with orange Douglas and daughter, Kelly
with empire waists, poufed
Louann of Middleport.
ue~tec across the waist. Thesametiny flowers.
sleeves and bateau necklines
Visitors on Sunday at the
lace formed the high wedding
For a honeymoon trip to the
with white picture hats achome
of Mr. and Mrs. Byron
7\. T
. ring collar and Ute cuff on the mountains of New Mexico, the VanMeter
cented with pink ribbOn trim. 7\.
at Clifton, were their
sleeves. The skirt was softly bride traveled in blue figured
William Gibbs of Kent served 1 V j
gathered at the high waist and knit hotpants with a solid blue daughter and son-in·l~w, Mr.
as best man for hill brother,
fell into _a flowing hell shape . overskirt. She wore a blue and Mrs . Adrain Mullins,
and the ushers were Carson
MIDDLEPORT - The newly
Her veil, completely edged in straw picture hat and carried a Cabin Creek, Mrs. Miller, Mr.
Crow and William Francis, organized Men's Fellowship of
and Mrs. Enoch Lemon of
the imported tiny teardrop matching straw bag .
Pomeroy and Duane Mld- the First Baptist Olw-ch of Venise lace, with a short
The couple will reside at 2604 Clearwater' Florida . ·
dleworth, Toledo.
Middleporl has selected the blusher veil, fell from a lace Apt. 2 in canyon where hoth
For her daughter's wedding, name of "The Hucksters."
edged Juliet cap to a chapel will be attending summer
Lovely
Mrs. Aleunder wore a pale
At the organizational length train . She carried a school at West Texas
Long Lasting
yellow chiffon floor length meeting, officers elected in- white prayer book with University.
gown with a headed bodice and cluded
John
Werner, mother-&lt;&gt;f-pearl cover given to
f!, 1970 graduate of Plainview
a yellow rosebud wri,lt .cor- president; Asa Jordan, vice her by her parents. The bride's High School and a sophomore
sage. Mrs. Glbbl wllre an aqua president; Greg Hayes, bouquet was centered with ~ business major at West Texas,
polyesler crepe gown with full secretary - greasurer; Robert· white orchid and featured the bride is a member of Delta
chiffon sleeves and also had ·a Parker, program ~hairman; cascade of pastel colored Zeta Social Sorority. The
Kenneth Imboden, refresh- sweetheart, roses entwined bridegroom is a 1967 graduate
yellow rosebud corasge.
A dinner recepUon for 200 ment chairman; Danny wil/1 lily of the valley and of Lockney High School and a
guests was held immediately Thompson, devotional leader ; stephanotis.
junior physical education Serving: Middleport ,
following the ceremony at Clifford Hayes, membership
For something new the bride major at West Texas. He was Pomeroy, Gallipolis &amp;
Sulphyr Springs, Berkeley chairman and Kenneth hn- wore pearl earrings, a gUt of formerly employed by Gifford ~;;M;;•;;50;;;";,;ciioii.'.iwlo.• viiaii._ __ .
,--------------~------, . the bridegroom. For something Hill Western.
old and borrowed, she carried ·rlll!llll!llll!llll!llll!l.- 11• 11110 • • • • • • • •
.a rosary of her mother's.
1

!

IRISH BRAND OR SWIFT'S PREMIUM- U.S. Govt.lnspectad

5·1b.

Size

$429

Qifton
Personals

Kathryn Ann
Dressmaking

.,

'

Vine-Ripened

TOMATOES
For Slicing or Saiaos At a Special Low Price

*
LOW

lb.

M en

STATE FARE

PRICE Wiener or
Sandwich
SPECIAL

Recent Attack

*

Skyjacker
Successful

*
LOW
PRICE
SPECIAL

~

*

*

LOW
PRICE
SPECIAL

BEFORE YOIJ HUY

CARPETING

Te W

Pkg. of 8

THOROFARE

BEVERAGES
12 oz. Cans
limit 12

State Fare

POTATO

•

FUTURES
Extra Light

I
BUIIERMlK BISCIITS I
_4 ~~~~.....,..,
45c
I
OVEN
Btllltd

I ,

iI

READY

. 6 J~~~ 59C"'*
~ .•

Btllord

~ ·

.

: ~
·.

~~

¥

SUNDAY, JUNE 25
COME AND SEE .

the new community of all brick homes just off

Rt. 33 South at the new by-pass near Meigs
: High School. Prices start at $21,000 for a~, 3 or
-4 bedroom home. Let us show you the many
quality features. Conie to our Open House this
Sunday from 11 to 5.
~

atARLES OORNELL; DEVElDPER
KEY REAL ESTATE, AGENT
Alba, Ohio

I

.-

..

{

Feed th'e Whole
Fam.lly ••·~ r only

II
I
1·

.• 2 5

1

·

-1
J
I
1
1·

$

I
I

.

1
I
I

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday

I
THRIFT BOlf.I
g pieces
ribbonsandflowerslnher~. 1·
regularly '2.65
Evan Kramer, brother of the
bride, and Billy Hoelscher, I
Amarillo, a cousin, were 1
Offer good thru June 29, 1972
_;bo-de-n,-vic-e-m-e-mb~er--:-sh-ip ·II Why cook? Visit the Col~l
~halrman.
1
COLONFL SANDERS' R~CIPE

Theand
group
composed
of
men
hi&amp;h isIChool
boys and
will meet at 7 pm. on the
••
Ray DDuglas, Rtaltar
HCQJtd TbQrsday of each
1-592-3414
month. The neat meellng wu
81 II Keelon, Associate
sat for I pm. oo July at the
. 1-592-1349
~---------------~ ch..-ch for a pizza pa

..

II
II

I

I

~

frW eLfIIICI.J....

C.ow'l Steak HOUII

---

POMIIOY1 OHIO .

111!1111!1111!1111!1_____

I
I
I
I

Featuring All of the
.
Latest Shoe Fashions
WOMEN'S

I1

STARTS MONDAY, JUNE 26

r'~
,_

'0

~

b"'

NATURALIZERS
Regular

18.99

1

MISS .AMERICA SHOES

\

Miss America white and beige summer dress shoes.
Also Party Shoes In sliver and gold. Party group
Includes values to '15.00
Regular
Regular
Regular

14.99
and 15.99 .

11.99
to 13.99

864

9.99
to 10.99

SIZE 4-8
-Women's Dress and Sandals
Y2 PRICE

I

I
1

" ,

=·

. ~lJJJJLJ&gt;Y

I
I
I
·I
I
I

I

At Forked Run Lake Entrance
Long Bottom. 0.

·CHAPMAN'S

t

Something blue was a garter
personally made for her by
Mrs. Victor Ebeling 111d for
good luck, the bride WO':f a sixpence in her shoe wh1ch her
father broughl to her from ,
England.
Alexa Kramer, sister of the
bride, was maid of honor. Mrs.
Paul Griego of Longmont,
Colo. wa~ her sister's matron
of honor. Brideamalds wen!
Connie Kemp and Ronnie Beth
Ebeling, both of Plainview.
The bride's attendants wore
floor length floral print dreuea.
of !lheer oganza flocked with
. pastel colored flowers. Each
featured a transparent yoke
. and sleeves and was lined in·a
different pastel color of satin,
yellow, orchid, pink, blue and
green. Each carried a boaegay
of white dailies and won! satin

Relax .. , Drive in for a Delicious
Moo Burger. Best yet for the united
tastes of America. Or a refreshing
malt, shake, cone or sundae.

..

"ame

-

1-lb. Pkg.

- BISCUITS-

Awarded F 'day

1

OPEN FOR BUSINESS

..

Dudley's Florist

• Bars . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ; .lH•·39
F19
..... c
Chocolate Chip Cookies . . ... ~~~~· 39c

Contracts Are

(' T

MOO MOO DAIRY BARN

MOO MOO DAIRY BARN
•.
in~d~P~e~g;gy~S~to~~Y~·-----·~t::·-~·=···:·"~'C·~·•:":':; ~'ot~. :·::::::::;:;::::~··~·~r,

Foliage
Gardens

* Keebler Features

CHECK WITH THE
EMPIRE

a floor length gown with an
empire waist outlined by
yellow trim. She carried a
bouquet of white daisies.
Mrs. Janet Pickens, sister of
the bride, was matron of honor .
She wore a mint green gown ·
acce nted with a dark green
velvet bow. Her headpiece was
a rose with green veiling and
she carried a bouquet of green
tinted carnations.
Stanford Burns of Columbus
served as best man for his
brother.
A reception honoring the
couple was held at the home of
the bride's parents following
the ceremony. The three tiered
wedding cake was decorated
with. daisies and topped with
wedding hell replicas. Serving
the cake, punch and nuts were
Mrs. Alpha Bailey, Mrs. Janet
Pickens, Mrs. Yvonne Young

:f:ttednch':T~rfm~

f

The

&lt;9

Lone Suroivor
Can't Explain

I

--.·"&gt;?'· · 'I&lt;

252 THIRD AVENUE, GALLIPOU~ OHIO
OPEN 9 AM TO 9 PM MONDAY TlfRU SATURDAY

We reserve thll! right to
limit quantit ies oo illl
items in th h o~d . Prius
effecfi¥e
~"~--'~~~~~..'!:
July J , 1911.

I

Pomeroy . . .
.. Personal Notes

~..;!;}'

••

Lay Of the Land

•

.

POMEROY - Plans have son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
been completed for the in- Crow, Syracuse.
The open church wedding
fOrma l wedding of Miss
Pamela Lynn Neutzling , will be held at 2:30 p.m. on
daughter of Mr. an·d Mrs. Saturda~. July I, at the MidRichard Neutzling, Pomeroy, dleport First Baptist Olurch. A
and Mr . James Hyson Crow, half-how- of music preceding
the ceremony will he presented
by
Mrs . Robert Kuhh,
f""m~'%&lt;'1'~·~~&lt;:::
Pomeroy, organist, and Danley
Thompson, Pomeroy, soloist.
Marla Neutzling and Darla
Neutzling, twin sisters of the
bride-&lt;)lect, will be her only
Among the recent visitors of· attendants.
Mrs. Sallie Byers,. Route . 2,
Bob Crow
of
New
Pomeroy, were her nieces, Mr. Philadelphia will serve as best
and Mrs. Arvin J. Whitt, man for his brother, and the
Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. usher will he Steve Sewell of
Gaines Strouse and daughter, . Marietta .
West Jefferson , and Paul
Areception will he held in the
Toops of Columbus. Mrs. Byers church social room following
visited her cousins, Mr. and the ceremony .
Mrs. W. W. Byers and family
for two days recently in
Parkersburg .
Mr. and Mrs. Lou Bracksieck
CLUB TO MEET
of Washington, D. C. .have been
RIO GRANDE ~ The Open
the guests of her grandmother,
Gate Garden Club of Rio
Mrs. Fred Rosenbawn.
Grande will meet Tuesday,
Mr . and Mrs. Dale Richards,
Jw1e 27, at 6 p.m. at the home
the former Joyce Williamson,
of Mrs. Vicky Powell for a
of 1411 George Rd., Route 1, N.
E. Lancaster, are annoWJcing terrene dinner. This replaces
last week's meeting which was
the birth of a son, Wednesday
postponed.
at Mount Carmel Hospital in
Columbus. The infant weighed
eight pounds and is Mr. and
Mrs. Richards' first child.
David Hundley of Gahanna,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred W.
Hundley, underwent sw-gery
last week at University
Hospital, Columbus, for a hip
injury suffered while playing
Corner of Third &amp; Main
football two years ago. He
Sts
.
expects to be con.fined to his
home most of the summer.
Middleport. 0.
Mrs . Hundley is the former
Jeanne
Williamson
of ~ 10 a.m . to 4 p.m.
Pomeroy .

.
1

/ / . ~:·:~~

....

'

\

~ Straw

and Summer Bags Reduced!

I MainCHAPMAN'S
St
Pomeroy
SHOES
I'

.1 ..--------------,_...,;;..._______...

1

�•

'

•

.

Garden Club Will
Host Open Meetin

.•

W
, ed june 17
•

REGULAR TO 'I5.99

WOMEN'S
SHOES
'

FOR DRESS AND CASUAL WEAR

'38

8

linda Grindstaff

Couple Repeats Linda Grindstaff
Marriage Vows To .Wed In July
POMEROY - Miss Vickie
Lee Sulton, Pomeroy, and Mr.
James M. Fink, Rutland,
exchanged wedding vows on
May 24, at 11:30 a.m. at the
Trinity Methodist Church hi
Point Pleasant, w. Va.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Wallace
of Pomeroy, and the
bridegroom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Fink,
. Rutland. Officiating the double
ring ceremony performed
before an altar decorated with
baskets of white gladioli and
mums was the Rev. Charles
Thompson. Nuptial music was
presented by Jane E. Wise.
Given In marriage by Mr.
Wallace, her step-lather, the
bride was attired In a floor
length gown of Imported
chantilly lace over bridal satin.
The long full sleeves were
scalloped· at the wrist and the
chapel train was attached at
the waist. The bride's veil of
Ulusion fell from a plateau of
!ll!lln roses with seed pearl
trim. Her only jewelry were
teardrop earrings, a keepsake
of the groom's mother, and a
gold cross necklace, a gift from
the groom. The bride carried a
white Bible belonging to the
groom topped with an orchid.
Karen Baity, Pomeroy, was
maid of honor for the bride. She
wore a yellow floor length
gown trimmed in green wllh
matching headdress and accessories. She han a white
carnation corsage.
John Wise of Rutland was the
best man .
The bride's mother wore a
blue knit .dress with accessories and had a white
carnation corsage. The
groom's mother wore a mint
green dress with matching
accessories and had a white
carnation corsage.
A reception honoring the
couple was held at the home of
the bride's parents. The three
tiered cake topped with the
traditional miniature bride and
groom was featured on Uie

Roush Hosts
Meeting
PORTLAND - The Emma
Smith
Circle
of
the
Reorganize~ Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day Saints on
Racine - Portland Road met
with Beulah Roush Thursday
evening. Eula Proffitt was In
charge and devotions on the
theme "One In The Spirit"
were read by Lucy Taylor.
Hymns were sung for Fred
Roush who has recently
returned from the hospital. A
silent auction was held and the
minutes read. Goldie Clendenin received the door prize .
Refreshments were served
by the hostess and Golda
Gillilan, co-hostess, to those
named and Ruth Bradford,
Pearl Pro(filt, Linda and
Becky Evans.
Absent were Jane Johnson,
Myrtle Proffilt, Earlene
Stobart and llah Roush who .
bas been visiting her daughter
and san-in-law, Diane and Mike
Duhl, in Tacoma, Wash.
The Dulhs recently announced the June 12 birth of a
son,
Michael
William,
weighing siJ: pounda and 12
ouzes. The BW Roushes are
grandparent8.

I

bride's table. The cloth used on
the table was identical in
styling to those used in the
White House. Mrs . Larry
Bailey and Mrs. Jack Handley
presided at the table.
For a wedding trip through
parts of Kentucky and West
Virginia, the bride changes
into a two-tone orchid knit
ensemble with which she wore
matching accessories . She
wore the corsage from her
bridal bouquet.
The couple resides at Union
St. In Rutland.
The bride is a 1972 graduate
of Meigs High School where she
majored in cosmetology. She
was a member of the Vica
Club. She is now employed
parttime a.t the Pomeroy
Pastry Shop, Pomeroy. ·
Mr. Fink graduated from
Rutland High School in 1968
and served two years in the
Marines. He also graduated
from the Hocking Technical
College with an associate
degree on June 11 and will
continue his education at
Youngstown State University
in the fall. Currently he is
employed at Forked Run Lake.
The bride is the daughwr of
the late Eugene Sutton of Oak
Hill. Sewed in the hem of her
wedding gown was a gold
wedding band which her late
father had presented to her
mother on their lOth wedding
anniversary. The ring has been
in the 1 family for five
generations and it was her
father's wish that it be passed
along to his daughter.

Relatives Vis-it
MASON - Mr. and Mrs.
John Roach and family of
Mason visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Forshee at Cin- .
cinnati recently. While there
they visited many interesting
places and the Cincinnati Zoo.
They also visited recently
with Mrs. Roach's sister and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Burton
Webb, and with Mr. and Mrs.
Bernard Webb and family at
Mansfield.

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
David D. Grindstaff of Racine
are
announcing
the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter,
Linda Marie, lo Jerry Richard
Van lnwagen of Bradbury.
Miss Grindstaff is a 1969
graduate of Southern Local
School and a 1972 graduate of
the Holzer Medical ·Center
School of Nursing. She is

prese ntly employed in the
pediatrics department of the
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Van Inwagen is a 1965
graduate of Middleport High
School and is employed at the
Imperial Electric Co., Middleport.
The wedding will be an event
of July 16 with the custom of
open church lo be observed .

150 Attend Program
RUTLAND - The closing
program of the Daily Vacation
Bible School of the Rutland
Church of Christ was held
recently with an attendance of
150. The students marched in
the church by the theme song
"We Worship God ," accompanied by Br.enda Bolin at
the piano. Greg and Teresa
VanMeter
carried
the
American and Christian Flags
and Kelly Brown carried the
Holy Bible. The. congregation
stood and sang "My Country
'Tis Of Thee" followed by lhe
pledges of the flags and Bible.
The program opened with a
prayer song "Keep on
Praying" and prayer was
,offered by Victor Braley. Keith
Wise was the song leader for
the school and led the students
in songs which they learned
during the Bible school.
Following the songs service,
certificate of appreciation
were presented by the director,
Mrs. Thelma Hysell , to the
teachers and staff for their
works.
Seventy dollars of the Bible
School collection is being sent
to Peggy Russell of Mexico for
ATTENDS WORKSHOP
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Janet
Wetherholt, teacher at Gallia
Academy High School, was
among 45 teachers participating from throughout the
state in Columbus at the Health
Occupations Workshop on June
20-22. The theme of the
workshop was "Knowledge of
Student, Subject and Self," the
purpose to become more effective teachers.

missionary work she is doing
there. Mrs . Merle Johnson was
the missionary leader of the
Bible school.
Special recog nition was
given to those who had perfect
attendance during the school.
Cards of appreciation were
presented to Victor Braley for
molding all· the plaques and
Blanche Braley for helping
with the Kraft-Paks for the
Beginners Class. Also thankyous were extended to Purl and
Barbara VanMeter, William
Brown and Tom Martin for
helping with the picnic on
Friday, June 9, and to those
who donated ~up cakes, or
helped in any way to the Bible
School.
'
The classes were all
presented certificates by thei~
teachers. Teacher for . the
classes were : nursery, Joan
May, teacher, and helpers
Debbie ~ay, Flo and Tammy
Martin; beginners class, J•ne
Wise, teacher, and helpers
Teresa Brown·, Brenda Bolin
and Karen Sutherland;
primary class, Mona Johnson ,
teacher, and helpers Eileen
and Merle Johnson and Jodi .
Fergason; junior class and the
youth class, Keith Wise,
~~~~~~~nd helper, Rose~ary
Brenda Bolin served as
pianist and Myrville Brown as
secretary and treasurer. An
average of 65 attended daily.
Devotionals and prayer were
held by the minister, Keith
Wise.
After the program, the
students' work was displayed
in the church basement for
viewing.

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Officers of the Cradle To College Mothers: Club are (left
to right) Mrs. Tom Pitchford, secretary; Mrs . Doyle
Saunders, vice president; Mrs. Steve Fuller, news reporter,
"and Mrs. James Skidmore, treasurer.

. REGULAR '3.50 to '8.99

MEN'S
SHOES
Thom· MeAn, Rand and others

' SYRACUSE - A potluck!
lunch ,was held at noon for the
Star Class and Emily
Missionary Society Tuesday in
the annex of the Presbyterian
Church.
. Following the lunch, bandages were made to be sent to
'Miraj Medical Center, Wanless
'Hospital in Maraj , Maharashtra State, India.
A short Star Class meeting
was held, conducted by
president, Frankie Mumaw,
who read Psalm 93 and gave
prayer. Roll call was answered
with a scripture verse.
Sec re tary and treasurer 's
report was given by Rachel
McBride. Miss Mumaw gave a
question and answer session
for the short program.
Attending were Mrs. Laura
Pickens, Mrs. Agnes White,
Mrs. Rachel McBride, Frankie
Mumaw, Mrs. Florence Potts
and Mrs. Ada Slack.

'11 88 '1'' ro -'6aa

REGULAR 13.50 TO 17.99

WOMEN'S

BOYS' AND GIRLS'
SHOES .

GALLIPOUS - The Cradle
To
College
Mothers'
Club held its installslion dinner June I at the
Meigs Inn. Before the dinner ,_
the club's prayer was aiven bv
Mrs . Paul Hollingshead ,
president. Attending the dinner
were nine club members .
Alter the dinner the group
had their meeting and drew
names for secret sisters. The
club then elected officers and
pictures were taken .
The officers elected were

FASHION HANDBAGS.

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POM~ROY -

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SAVINGS
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ALL SALES -

MEN'S

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POLYESTER KNITS

I

9:I5 Iii 5:oo ·
Monday lhru Friday
9:15 to 8:00

NO LAY-AWAYS - NO APPROVALS
CASH

REDUCED

30%
t!~,~~ITS 30%
SLACKS
30%

OF MEN

LADIES'

SUITS &amp;
SPORT COATS
Sport Coats ·
REDUCED

REDUCED

BLOUSES &amp;
KNIT TOPS

30%

MEN'S

Saturday

LADIES'

2O07/0

REDUCED

LADIES'

REDUCED

(''{[lenim, Stretch Denim
Dacron, Polyester etc.

REDUCED

LADIES'

JACKETS

REDUCED

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

REDUCED

DRESS SHIRTS
SPORT SHIRTS

20
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MEN'S

KNIT SPORT

30

LADIES'

DRESSES
Miss, Junior
· Half Sizes

LADIES'
SHORTS
1 GROUP OF

SWIM· WEAR
DRESS
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20%

1 RACK OF MEN'S
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PANTS

20
0%

Randy Williams of Pomeroy
was best man for the
bridegroom and the ushers
were Mike Nicholson and Jerry
Jacka, Rutland .
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs . Maples wore a light pink
dress . Mrs . Nicholson wore a
mint green ensemble. B,oth had
an orchid corsage.
Immediately following the
wedding a reception was held
in the church social room.
Lavender rosebuds decorated
the tiered cake.
Guests were registered by
Mrs. Cheryl Lemley, and Mrs.
Ernest Maples Jr. and Mary
O'Neil served at the reception.
For her traveling costume,
the bride changed into· a red
and white dress with a white
wide-brinuned hat. The couple
took a wedding trip to Gettysburg, Pa. They now reside at 21
North State Street in Dover,
Del., where the bridegroom is
stationed with the
S. Air
Force.
A graduate of Meigs High
School, the bride attended two
years atOhio University. She is
a meinber of Evangeline
Chapter ·172, Order of the
Eastern
Star .
Airman
Nicholson is also a graduate of
Meigs High School.
Out-{)f-town guests at the
wedding were Mr. and Mrs.
Everett Hatfield, and Mrs.
Ernest Maples, Livonia ,
Mich.; Mrs. Betty Heitman
and sons •. Garden City, Mtc)l_.;
Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence
Wolford and daughters,
Ypsilanti,
Mich.;
Mr .
and Mrs. Ernest Maples,
Mr. and Mrs. E~est Maples,
Jr. and son, Lexmgton, Ky .;
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Reynolds and
son, and Mr. and M~s. Bennett
Hunt, Kimper, Ky.; Mr. and
Mrs. B.J. Reynolds, Pikeville,
Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. William

It Takes THREE to
GET MARRIED
••
'
the BRIDE ... the GROOM
and the
PHOTOGRAPHER

u:

..

coffee.
For a wedding trip to
Florida, the bride changed into
a navy dress trimmed in white
with a striped three-quarter
length coat. Following their
honeymoon, the couple will
reside at Mt. Hope, 214 Main
St.,'Apt. 2.
The new Mrs. Dorado attended Marshall University,
completed an IBM course; and
spent a year at a Foreign
Language School in Europe.
Mr . Dorado attended Marshall University and graduated
from the Huntington College of
Business . He is associated with
his father in the American
Hardware and Lumber Co . at
Mt. Hope.
Among the out-of-town
gues.ts here for the
were Mr. and Mrs. Sam
Dorado, Sr., Bobby Dorado,
Mount Hope ; Mr . and Mrs .
Robert Yost and Katherine
Anne and Amy Beth, Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Yost, Sr., Hun tington; Mrs. Dimi Wederman,
Kenova; Dr. and Mrs . Roy
Weber and daughter, Shiela,
Attorney and Mrs . Mark
Klosterman, Kara, Kevin and
Kip, Celina; Mrs. J. Bachtel,
Middleport, and Dr. and Mrs.
E. R. Keig, St. Petersburg,
Fla.

POMEROY - Acontribution
to the nurses' scholarship fund
was made when the Past
Presidents Club of the
American Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39, met_
Wednesday night at the home
· oi Mrs. Ernest Powell with
Mrs. Jed Webster,
Sr.'!" as co.
. •
hostess .
Plans were made during the
meeting for the annual picnic
which was set for the Laura
Watson home at Racine on.July
12. Mrs. Powell extended an
invitation to the members to
attend an open house on July 9
to be held in observance of the
25th wedding anniversary
which she and her husband will
celebrate. Members signed a
card for Mrs. Watson who was

wedding25th

Anniversary
Will Be Observed
MASON - Mr. and Mrs.
George B. Hudson of Mason
will celebrate their 25th
wedding anniversary with an
open house Sunday, July 2,
from 1 to 5 p.m. Mrs. Hudsortl~

Homemaker
Shares Recipes

MASON - Mrs : George
Carson, Mason, presented the
lesson on "Foods With a Flair"
w~ Mason Homemakers
met on Tuesday at the home of
Mrs. Landon Smith in Mason .
POMEROY - The Auxiliary In keeping with the interesting
prayer was read by Mrs. Sibley lesson, she submitted a leaflet
Slack when the June meeting of of recipes and sample of her
the Veterans Memorial sour cream prune bread which
Hospital Women's Auxiliary was among the recipes.
met with president, Mrs. Alex
Mrs. John Roach gave the
Wheeler ,' presiding . Mrs . devotionals from Matthew
Wheeler gave the secretary'_s 9:37-38 and the thought for the
report and Mrs. Slack gave the day. The group prayed the
treasurer's report. Both Lord's Prayer.
reports were approved.
The nurse 's scholarship was
·won this year by Connie
Grueser.
Mrs. Hugh Bearhs, Mrs. Ada for Mrs. Dana Nelson to Mrs .
Slack, Mrs. George White, James Daniels , Mrs. Alex
Mrs. James Daniels and Mrs. Wheeler, Mrs. Sibley Slack,
Lewis Grueser were named to Mrs. Robert McElhinney, Mrs .
a nominating committee and Myla Hudson, Mrs. Ada Slack,
the auditing committee named Mrs. Hugh Bearhs, Mrs. Nettie
was Erma J. Smith, Don Hayes, Mrs . Corienne Combs,
Reuter and Mrs. Sibley Slack. Erma J. Smith, Mrs. George
Mrs. Corienne Combs gave a White, Mrs. Ernest Molden,
report on the District Hospital Mrs. Bertha Parker , Mrs.
Meeting that she, Mrs. Nattie Charles Karr , Mrs . Harold
Hayes and Mrs . Eslie . Sauer and Mrs. Lucille
Mossman attended In St. Leifheit.
Clairsville recently.
mack irnd white brochures of
the hospital are to be printed. It
was announced that the annual
hospita1 picnic will be held on
July 23.
,.
The annual Auxiliary picnic
will be held August 15 at the
home of Mrs. Charles ·Karr
with a potluck dinner at 6 p.m.
Mrs. White and Mrs. Jestie
Molden served refreshments

Hospital Meeting

O'Neil and daughters, Whitmore Lake, Mich.; Mr. aJid ,
Mrs. Frank Havelka and
children, South Lyon, Mich.;
Mrs. James Sayre and
daughters, and Mrs. Alfred
Ashworth, Point Pleasant, W.
Va. , and Waid Nicholson ,
Dexter.
""

YALUES
TO $12.00

Our skill and experience assurn you
a profnslonol photographic record '
that will capture lor your memory,
the splendor ol your wedding.

· I TABLE OF

BLOUSES, SHORTS .
PEDAL. PUSHERS • .SlACKS
TO

1 RACK OF•

.DRESSES • SKIRTS ,·
SUITS • BLOUSES ~ SLACKS

For the photogrophlc rec:ord of your
wedding, the services ol • quollt•ed
profeaslonal phQtographer ·are
nstnllal.

l l.PRICE

Stop In tor your Free Copy of
the Bride's Booklet·
·

72 .

Grove(s Studio
~n

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• Amana electro-&lt;:oating linish lor rust protection.
• Amana engineered for quiet
operation.

Mrs. l..a,.Tence Roush gave a
check for $18.92 from R. C.
Bottling Co. to the club.
Mrs. Landon Smith presided
during the brief business
meeting during which an in-

the daughter of Mrs. Ola
McDaniel, Hartford, and the
late Leonard McDaniel. Mr.
Hudson is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Dewey Hudson of Minersville .
The couple was married
June 28, 1941 by L. B. Higgins
at Pomeroy.
Mr. Hudson is employed at
the Amos Plant with Sollitt
Construction Co. and Mrs.
Hudson is . employed at
Veterans Memorial Hospital at
Pomeroy.
They are the parents of one
son, R. Bryant of Akron and
one daughter, Cheryl, a junior
at Meigs High School.

NOW IN
PROGRESS

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here's good news! Now you can perk up those fashions
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while the choice is the best .

VALUES
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$695 TO'1495

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102 E. Main

Bet1y Ohlinger

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FOR A FIR DTIMATI

MIIJI)ijPORT, OHIO

' .

,l,

Pomeroy

vitation was read ' rroQl Mrs.

George Hudson, a club
member, in regards to their
25th wedding anniversary on
Hudson's home in Mason.
The group discussed the~
The ·grvup discussed the
co unty educational tour
scheduled for Morgantown, W.
Va. Mrs. Ray Fox reported
briefly on Tanzania , its
climate, foods etc. and foreign
student from that country,
Hidaya Mlege, a student at
West Virginia University.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs . Smith to Mrs .
Lawrence Roush, Mrs. George
Carson, Mrs. John Roach, Mrs.
Uoyd Williams, Mrs. Laurene
Lewis, Mrs. Matilda Noble,
Mrs. Cecil Smith, Mrs . Evelyn
Stewart, Mrs . Alburtice
Young, Mrs. Elmer VanMeter,
Mrs. J. Marshall, Mrs. Ray
Fox and Mrs. Alice Faye
Gardner.

Foreman .&amp; .Aitbott

OHIO

unable to attend.
, Mrs. Ray Fox presided at the
meeting which opened with the
pledge to the flag and the
Lord's Prayer. Mrs. Gerald
Wildermuth gave devotion s
using "Smiles are Contagious"
and "True Greatness." She
also read a note from Constance Thorn of Miller Cottage,
Dayton . Mrs. Charles Sauer
also shared a note she had
received from Miss Thorn in
response to a card · fr om
Hawaii.
Refreshments were served to
those named and Mrs. Pearl
Knapp, Mrs. George Hackett,
Sr ., Mrs. Frank Cheese brew,
Mrs. Harry Davis, Mrs. Harry
Houdashelt and Mrs. J. · M. .
Thornton .

SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE

Mr. and Mrs. Hudson ·

new automatic thermostat

REDUCED

MEN'S

· REDUCED

PANTY HOSE

REDUCED

The Rutland
Church of Christ was the
setting for the wedding of Miss
Carolyn Maples, daughter of
Mr. ani! Mrs. Joseph D.
Maples, Route 1, Gallipolis,
and William R. Nicholson, son
d M
11'
t
~ · lson,
r ·UPRuuanO.
;u1 lf~ ,,., rn
lie
1-:Tlle wedding was imevent of
June 10 at 1 p.m. with the Rev.
Gene Musser officiating . The
double ring ceremony was
preceded with 8 program of
nuptial music by •Julie Hut·
chison, pianist.
Basket,oflavenderand pink
daisies were used to mark the
pews. The altar decorations
were arrangements of white
gladioli with lavender, white
and pink daisies, with candelabra.
Given in marriage by her
father. the bride chose for her
wedding day a formal length
gown of white organza. The
bodice featured a sheer yoke,
wedding band collar, full
dresden sleeves all trimmed
with lace. The empire waist
held a so!Uy gathered A-line
skirt and the detachable chapel
length train also trimmed in
lace. The ·bride carried a
colonial bouquet of daisies and
yellow rosebuds.
Unda Cardillo, LangsviUe,
was the maid of honor and the
bridesmaids were Kathy
O'Neil Whitmore Lake, Mich.,
and ~bbie Maples, Gallipolis.
Miss Cardillo wore a pink satin
floor length skirt fashioned
with 8 ruffle at the bottom and ·
a sash at the waist and wore a
white blouse in old fashioned
styling and lavender widebrimmed hat. The attire of the
bridesmaids was the same
except their skirts were
lavender .. They all carried
colonial bouquets of lavender,
pink and white daisies.

~

STORE HOURS

SALE STARTS
MONDAY, JUNE 26

20% TO

Mrs. Bill McCreedy, president;
Mrs. Doyle . Saunders; vice'president; Mrs. Tom Pitchford, secretary; Mrs. James
Skidmore, treasurer; Mrs.
Steve Fuller, news reporter;
Mrs. James Skidmore and
Mrs. Tim Bickers, ways and
means and telephone committee and Mrs. Harold Von
Lookado, special activities.
The club is to have a hoi dog
sale July 1'lat the Porter
Texaco Station.

POMEROY - The Sacred
Heart Catholic Church at
Pomeroy was the scene of the
wedding of Miss Harriet
Walsh, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Harry A. Walsh of Mason,
W.Va., to Mr. Sam D. Dorado,
son of Mi'. and Mrs. Sam
Dorado of Mt. Hope, W. Va.
The Rev. Fr. Bernard
Krojcovic performed the
double ring ceremony at 11
a.m. on June 17 following a
program of nuptial music by
Mrs. Ben Neutzling, organist.
Vases of gladioli and mums
decorated the church. ·
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a white
polyester satin monk's robe
with a pearl rope belt and
·carried a single white rose. Her
only attendant, Kay McGowan
of Mason, wore a purple
p,olyester satin monk's robe
with a pearl rope belt and
carried a single lavender
rosebud .
Robert E. Dorado of Mt.
Hope was best man and the
usher was Mark V. Klosterman
of Celina.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Walsh was attired in a
light pink dress with rose
accessories and wore a pink
rosebud corsage. Mrs. Dorado
wore an aqua lace ensemble
and had a white rose corsage.
Mrs. Thomas Hennesy of
Pomeroy and Mrs. Don Mullins
of Middleport were hostesses
for a reception in the church
social room. An orchid and
white color scheme was
carried out. Guests were
registered by Deline McGowan

June Wedding Oif
Maples-Ni~holson. :~~~~~~~;s~~~:~~!'ctun~~

Middleport

SEMI•ANN

MEN'S
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Take advantage of the
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'11

To

REGULAR TO 1I8.99

Star Class Meets
Mr. and. Mrs. Fink

-Contribution Made
Nurses' Scholarship

alsh~Dorado

POMEROY - an open
meeting of the Rutland
Friendly · Gardeners will be
held Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at
the Rutland (,'burch of Christ.
Mrs. G. R. Thompson of the
Pomeroy Winding Trail
Garden Club will be guest
speaker and demonstrator.
Mrs . Thompson, an outstanding gardener of Region II,
Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs, will present plant
propagation using rose cuttings, perennials and house ·
plants.
Also speaking will be Mrs.
Joe Bolin, director of Region
II, and Mrs. James Carpenter,
chairman of the meeting,
giving gardening tips for July.
Mrs. Bruce Davis and Mrs.
William Brown will serve as
hostesses. All Meigs County
Garden Clubs are invited. Door
prizes will be awarded and
refreshments served.

.

THArS WHAT YOU RECEIVE WHEN YOU OPEN A PASSBOOK SAVINGS
ACCOUNT AT ACS&amp;l. IT DOES MAKE A DIFFERENCE WHERE YOU
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MEIGS BRANCH
lHE ATHENS OOUNlY .SAVINGS &amp; LOAN 00.
296 W. Second St.

Phane 992-3863

Earl F. Ingels, Jr .• Manager Pvmeroy, Ohio

I

I

�•

'

•

.

Garden Club Will
Host Open Meetin

.•

W
, ed june 17
•

REGULAR TO 'I5.99

WOMEN'S
SHOES
'

FOR DRESS AND CASUAL WEAR

'38

8

linda Grindstaff

Couple Repeats Linda Grindstaff
Marriage Vows To .Wed In July
POMEROY - Miss Vickie
Lee Sulton, Pomeroy, and Mr.
James M. Fink, Rutland,
exchanged wedding vows on
May 24, at 11:30 a.m. at the
Trinity Methodist Church hi
Point Pleasant, w. Va.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Wallace
of Pomeroy, and the
bridegroom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Fink,
. Rutland. Officiating the double
ring ceremony performed
before an altar decorated with
baskets of white gladioli and
mums was the Rev. Charles
Thompson. Nuptial music was
presented by Jane E. Wise.
Given In marriage by Mr.
Wallace, her step-lather, the
bride was attired In a floor
length gown of Imported
chantilly lace over bridal satin.
The long full sleeves were
scalloped· at the wrist and the
chapel train was attached at
the waist. The bride's veil of
Ulusion fell from a plateau of
!ll!lln roses with seed pearl
trim. Her only jewelry were
teardrop earrings, a keepsake
of the groom's mother, and a
gold cross necklace, a gift from
the groom. The bride carried a
white Bible belonging to the
groom topped with an orchid.
Karen Baity, Pomeroy, was
maid of honor for the bride. She
wore a yellow floor length
gown trimmed in green wllh
matching headdress and accessories. She han a white
carnation corsage.
John Wise of Rutland was the
best man .
The bride's mother wore a
blue knit .dress with accessories and had a white
carnation corsage. The
groom's mother wore a mint
green dress with matching
accessories and had a white
carnation corsage.
A reception honoring the
couple was held at the home of
the bride's parents. The three
tiered cake topped with the
traditional miniature bride and
groom was featured on Uie

Roush Hosts
Meeting
PORTLAND - The Emma
Smith
Circle
of
the
Reorganize~ Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day Saints on
Racine - Portland Road met
with Beulah Roush Thursday
evening. Eula Proffitt was In
charge and devotions on the
theme "One In The Spirit"
were read by Lucy Taylor.
Hymns were sung for Fred
Roush who has recently
returned from the hospital. A
silent auction was held and the
minutes read. Goldie Clendenin received the door prize .
Refreshments were served
by the hostess and Golda
Gillilan, co-hostess, to those
named and Ruth Bradford,
Pearl Pro(filt, Linda and
Becky Evans.
Absent were Jane Johnson,
Myrtle Proffilt, Earlene
Stobart and llah Roush who .
bas been visiting her daughter
and san-in-law, Diane and Mike
Duhl, in Tacoma, Wash.
The Dulhs recently announced the June 12 birth of a
son,
Michael
William,
weighing siJ: pounda and 12
ouzes. The BW Roushes are
grandparent8.

I

bride's table. The cloth used on
the table was identical in
styling to those used in the
White House. Mrs . Larry
Bailey and Mrs. Jack Handley
presided at the table.
For a wedding trip through
parts of Kentucky and West
Virginia, the bride changes
into a two-tone orchid knit
ensemble with which she wore
matching accessories . She
wore the corsage from her
bridal bouquet.
The couple resides at Union
St. In Rutland.
The bride is a 1972 graduate
of Meigs High School where she
majored in cosmetology. She
was a member of the Vica
Club. She is now employed
parttime a.t the Pomeroy
Pastry Shop, Pomeroy. ·
Mr. Fink graduated from
Rutland High School in 1968
and served two years in the
Marines. He also graduated
from the Hocking Technical
College with an associate
degree on June 11 and will
continue his education at
Youngstown State University
in the fall. Currently he is
employed at Forked Run Lake.
The bride is the daughwr of
the late Eugene Sutton of Oak
Hill. Sewed in the hem of her
wedding gown was a gold
wedding band which her late
father had presented to her
mother on their lOth wedding
anniversary. The ring has been
in the 1 family for five
generations and it was her
father's wish that it be passed
along to his daughter.

Relatives Vis-it
MASON - Mr. and Mrs.
John Roach and family of
Mason visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Forshee at Cin- .
cinnati recently. While there
they visited many interesting
places and the Cincinnati Zoo.
They also visited recently
with Mrs. Roach's sister and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Burton
Webb, and with Mr. and Mrs.
Bernard Webb and family at
Mansfield.

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
David D. Grindstaff of Racine
are
announcing
the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter,
Linda Marie, lo Jerry Richard
Van lnwagen of Bradbury.
Miss Grindstaff is a 1969
graduate of Southern Local
School and a 1972 graduate of
the Holzer Medical ·Center
School of Nursing. She is

prese ntly employed in the
pediatrics department of the
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Van Inwagen is a 1965
graduate of Middleport High
School and is employed at the
Imperial Electric Co., Middleport.
The wedding will be an event
of July 16 with the custom of
open church lo be observed .

150 Attend Program
RUTLAND - The closing
program of the Daily Vacation
Bible School of the Rutland
Church of Christ was held
recently with an attendance of
150. The students marched in
the church by the theme song
"We Worship God ," accompanied by Br.enda Bolin at
the piano. Greg and Teresa
VanMeter
carried
the
American and Christian Flags
and Kelly Brown carried the
Holy Bible. The. congregation
stood and sang "My Country
'Tis Of Thee" followed by lhe
pledges of the flags and Bible.
The program opened with a
prayer song "Keep on
Praying" and prayer was
,offered by Victor Braley. Keith
Wise was the song leader for
the school and led the students
in songs which they learned
during the Bible school.
Following the songs service,
certificate of appreciation
were presented by the director,
Mrs. Thelma Hysell , to the
teachers and staff for their
works.
Seventy dollars of the Bible
School collection is being sent
to Peggy Russell of Mexico for
ATTENDS WORKSHOP
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Janet
Wetherholt, teacher at Gallia
Academy High School, was
among 45 teachers participating from throughout the
state in Columbus at the Health
Occupations Workshop on June
20-22. The theme of the
workshop was "Knowledge of
Student, Subject and Self," the
purpose to become more effective teachers.

missionary work she is doing
there. Mrs . Merle Johnson was
the missionary leader of the
Bible school.
Special recog nition was
given to those who had perfect
attendance during the school.
Cards of appreciation were
presented to Victor Braley for
molding all· the plaques and
Blanche Braley for helping
with the Kraft-Paks for the
Beginners Class. Also thankyous were extended to Purl and
Barbara VanMeter, William
Brown and Tom Martin for
helping with the picnic on
Friday, June 9, and to those
who donated ~up cakes, or
helped in any way to the Bible
School.
'
The classes were all
presented certificates by thei~
teachers. Teacher for . the
classes were : nursery, Joan
May, teacher, and helpers
Debbie ~ay, Flo and Tammy
Martin; beginners class, J•ne
Wise, teacher, and helpers
Teresa Brown·, Brenda Bolin
and Karen Sutherland;
primary class, Mona Johnson ,
teacher, and helpers Eileen
and Merle Johnson and Jodi .
Fergason; junior class and the
youth class, Keith Wise,
~~~~~~~nd helper, Rose~ary
Brenda Bolin served as
pianist and Myrville Brown as
secretary and treasurer. An
average of 65 attended daily.
Devotionals and prayer were
held by the minister, Keith
Wise.
After the program, the
students' work was displayed
in the church basement for
viewing.

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SUMMER SANDALS
Men's . Women's . Children's

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$7ll

Officers of the Cradle To College Mothers: Club are (left
to right) Mrs. Tom Pitchford, secretary; Mrs . Doyle
Saunders, vice president; Mrs. Steve Fuller, news reporter,
"and Mrs. James Skidmore, treasurer.

. REGULAR '3.50 to '8.99

MEN'S
SHOES
Thom· MeAn, Rand and others

' SYRACUSE - A potluck!
lunch ,was held at noon for the
Star Class and Emily
Missionary Society Tuesday in
the annex of the Presbyterian
Church.
. Following the lunch, bandages were made to be sent to
'Miraj Medical Center, Wanless
'Hospital in Maraj , Maharashtra State, India.
A short Star Class meeting
was held, conducted by
president, Frankie Mumaw,
who read Psalm 93 and gave
prayer. Roll call was answered
with a scripture verse.
Sec re tary and treasurer 's
report was given by Rachel
McBride. Miss Mumaw gave a
question and answer session
for the short program.
Attending were Mrs. Laura
Pickens, Mrs. Agnes White,
Mrs. Rachel McBride, Frankie
Mumaw, Mrs. Florence Potts
and Mrs. Ada Slack.

'11 88 '1'' ro -'6aa

REGULAR 13.50 TO 17.99

WOMEN'S

BOYS' AND GIRLS'
SHOES .

GALLIPOUS - The Cradle
To
College
Mothers'
Club held its installslion dinner June I at the
Meigs Inn. Before the dinner ,_
the club's prayer was aiven bv
Mrs . Paul Hollingshead ,
president. Attending the dinner
were nine club members .
Alter the dinner the group
had their meeting and drew
names for secret sisters. The
club then elected officers and
pictures were taken .
The officers elected were

FASHION HANDBAGS.

For Dress, School or Play

.

•1•• •s••

A Beautiful S~lection
All Styles

2o% oFF

TO

heritage house
225 N. Second ·

Your Thorn MeAn Shoe Store

POM~ROY -

•
SAVINGS
OF

50~

ALL SALES -

MEN'S

Size 36 to SO

SUITS
WOOL DACRON
&amp;

BLENDS
POLYESTER KNITS

I

9:I5 Iii 5:oo ·
Monday lhru Friday
9:15 to 8:00

NO LAY-AWAYS - NO APPROVALS
CASH

REDUCED

30%
t!~,~~ITS 30%
SLACKS
30%

OF MEN

LADIES'

SUITS &amp;
SPORT COATS
Sport Coats ·
REDUCED

REDUCED

BLOUSES &amp;
KNIT TOPS

30%

MEN'S

Saturday

LADIES'

2O07/0

REDUCED

LADIES'

REDUCED

(''{[lenim, Stretch Denim
Dacron, Polyester etc.

REDUCED

LADIES'

JACKETS

REDUCED

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

REDUCED

DRESS SHIRTS
SPORT SHIRTS

20
REDUCED

MEN'S

KNIT SPORT

30

LADIES'

DRESSES
Miss, Junior
· Half Sizes

LADIES'
SHORTS
1 GROUP OF

SWIM· WEAR
DRESS
PANTS

20%

1 RACK OF MEN'S
PERMA-PRESS

PANTS

20
0%

Randy Williams of Pomeroy
was best man for the
bridegroom and the ushers
were Mike Nicholson and Jerry
Jacka, Rutland .
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs . Maples wore a light pink
dress . Mrs . Nicholson wore a
mint green ensemble. B,oth had
an orchid corsage.
Immediately following the
wedding a reception was held
in the church social room.
Lavender rosebuds decorated
the tiered cake.
Guests were registered by
Mrs. Cheryl Lemley, and Mrs.
Ernest Maples Jr. and Mary
O'Neil served at the reception.
For her traveling costume,
the bride changed into· a red
and white dress with a white
wide-brinuned hat. The couple
took a wedding trip to Gettysburg, Pa. They now reside at 21
North State Street in Dover,
Del., where the bridegroom is
stationed with the
S. Air
Force.
A graduate of Meigs High
School, the bride attended two
years atOhio University. She is
a meinber of Evangeline
Chapter ·172, Order of the
Eastern
Star .
Airman
Nicholson is also a graduate of
Meigs High School.
Out-{)f-town guests at the
wedding were Mr. and Mrs.
Everett Hatfield, and Mrs.
Ernest Maples, Livonia ,
Mich.; Mrs. Betty Heitman
and sons •. Garden City, Mtc)l_.;
Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence
Wolford and daughters,
Ypsilanti,
Mich.;
Mr .
and Mrs. Ernest Maples,
Mr. and Mrs. E~est Maples,
Jr. and son, Lexmgton, Ky .;
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Reynolds and
son, and Mr. and M~s. Bennett
Hunt, Kimper, Ky.; Mr. and
Mrs. B.J. Reynolds, Pikeville,
Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. William

It Takes THREE to
GET MARRIED
••
'
the BRIDE ... the GROOM
and the
PHOTOGRAPHER

u:

..

coffee.
For a wedding trip to
Florida, the bride changed into
a navy dress trimmed in white
with a striped three-quarter
length coat. Following their
honeymoon, the couple will
reside at Mt. Hope, 214 Main
St.,'Apt. 2.
The new Mrs. Dorado attended Marshall University,
completed an IBM course; and
spent a year at a Foreign
Language School in Europe.
Mr . Dorado attended Marshall University and graduated
from the Huntington College of
Business . He is associated with
his father in the American
Hardware and Lumber Co . at
Mt. Hope.
Among the out-of-town
gues.ts here for the
were Mr. and Mrs. Sam
Dorado, Sr., Bobby Dorado,
Mount Hope ; Mr . and Mrs .
Robert Yost and Katherine
Anne and Amy Beth, Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Yost, Sr., Hun tington; Mrs. Dimi Wederman,
Kenova; Dr. and Mrs . Roy
Weber and daughter, Shiela,
Attorney and Mrs . Mark
Klosterman, Kara, Kevin and
Kip, Celina; Mrs. J. Bachtel,
Middleport, and Dr. and Mrs.
E. R. Keig, St. Petersburg,
Fla.

POMEROY - Acontribution
to the nurses' scholarship fund
was made when the Past
Presidents Club of the
American Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39, met_
Wednesday night at the home
· oi Mrs. Ernest Powell with
Mrs. Jed Webster,
Sr.'!" as co.
. •
hostess .
Plans were made during the
meeting for the annual picnic
which was set for the Laura
Watson home at Racine on.July
12. Mrs. Powell extended an
invitation to the members to
attend an open house on July 9
to be held in observance of the
25th wedding anniversary
which she and her husband will
celebrate. Members signed a
card for Mrs. Watson who was

wedding25th

Anniversary
Will Be Observed
MASON - Mr. and Mrs.
George B. Hudson of Mason
will celebrate their 25th
wedding anniversary with an
open house Sunday, July 2,
from 1 to 5 p.m. Mrs. Hudsortl~

Homemaker
Shares Recipes

MASON - Mrs : George
Carson, Mason, presented the
lesson on "Foods With a Flair"
w~ Mason Homemakers
met on Tuesday at the home of
Mrs. Landon Smith in Mason .
POMEROY - The Auxiliary In keeping with the interesting
prayer was read by Mrs. Sibley lesson, she submitted a leaflet
Slack when the June meeting of of recipes and sample of her
the Veterans Memorial sour cream prune bread which
Hospital Women's Auxiliary was among the recipes.
met with president, Mrs. Alex
Mrs. John Roach gave the
Wheeler ,' presiding . Mrs . devotionals from Matthew
Wheeler gave the secretary'_s 9:37-38 and the thought for the
report and Mrs. Slack gave the day. The group prayed the
treasurer's report. Both Lord's Prayer.
reports were approved.
The nurse 's scholarship was
·won this year by Connie
Grueser.
Mrs. Hugh Bearhs, Mrs. Ada for Mrs. Dana Nelson to Mrs .
Slack, Mrs. George White, James Daniels , Mrs. Alex
Mrs. James Daniels and Mrs. Wheeler, Mrs. Sibley Slack,
Lewis Grueser were named to Mrs. Robert McElhinney, Mrs .
a nominating committee and Myla Hudson, Mrs. Ada Slack,
the auditing committee named Mrs. Hugh Bearhs, Mrs. Nettie
was Erma J. Smith, Don Hayes, Mrs . Corienne Combs,
Reuter and Mrs. Sibley Slack. Erma J. Smith, Mrs. George
Mrs. Corienne Combs gave a White, Mrs. Ernest Molden,
report on the District Hospital Mrs. Bertha Parker , Mrs.
Meeting that she, Mrs. Nattie Charles Karr , Mrs . Harold
Hayes and Mrs . Eslie . Sauer and Mrs. Lucille
Mossman attended In St. Leifheit.
Clairsville recently.
mack irnd white brochures of
the hospital are to be printed. It
was announced that the annual
hospita1 picnic will be held on
July 23.
,.
The annual Auxiliary picnic
will be held August 15 at the
home of Mrs. Charles ·Karr
with a potluck dinner at 6 p.m.
Mrs. White and Mrs. Jestie
Molden served refreshments

Hospital Meeting

O'Neil and daughters, Whitmore Lake, Mich.; Mr. aJid ,
Mrs. Frank Havelka and
children, South Lyon, Mich.;
Mrs. James Sayre and
daughters, and Mrs. Alfred
Ashworth, Point Pleasant, W.
Va. , and Waid Nicholson ,
Dexter.
""

YALUES
TO $12.00

Our skill and experience assurn you
a profnslonol photographic record '
that will capture lor your memory,
the splendor ol your wedding.

· I TABLE OF

BLOUSES, SHORTS .
PEDAL. PUSHERS • .SlACKS
TO

1 RACK OF•

.DRESSES • SKIRTS ,·
SUITS • BLOUSES ~ SLACKS

For the photogrophlc rec:ord of your
wedding, the services ol • quollt•ed
profeaslonal phQtographer ·are
nstnllal.

l l.PRICE

Stop In tor your Free Copy of
the Bride's Booklet·
·

72 .

Grove(s Studio
~n

Profeulonalilm Count.

• Installs fast and easy, complately outside.
• Amana electro-&lt;:oating linish lor rust protection.
• Amana engineered for quiet
operation.

Mrs. l..a,.Tence Roush gave a
check for $18.92 from R. C.
Bottling Co. to the club.
Mrs. Landon Smith presided
during the brief business
meeting during which an in-

the daughter of Mrs. Ola
McDaniel, Hartford, and the
late Leonard McDaniel. Mr.
Hudson is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Dewey Hudson of Minersville .
The couple was married
June 28, 1941 by L. B. Higgins
at Pomeroy.
Mr. Hudson is employed at
the Amos Plant with Sollitt
Construction Co. and Mrs.
Hudson is . employed at
Veterans Memorial Hospital at
Pomeroy.
They are the parents of one
son, R. Bryant of Akron and
one daughter, Cheryl, a junior
at Meigs High School.

NOW IN
PROGRESS

Big Name Brands At Big Savings
If your shoe wardrobe is beginning fa look a bit wilted
here's good news! Now you can perk up those fashions
with several smart new pairs of shoes at clearance sale
prices. You' ll find a wide range of styles . So shop now
while the choice is the best .

VALUES
TO I8.00

$695 TO'1495

Marguerite's Shoe Shop
102 E. Main

Bet1y Ohlinger

We're Cutting,. the Melo~,._,.

All

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.Receive

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flexible duct kit
return air grill

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CALL 992-5321

FOR A FIR DTIMATI

MIIJI)ijPORT, OHIO

' .

,l,

Pomeroy

vitation was read ' rroQl Mrs.

George Hudson, a club
member, in regards to their
25th wedding anniversary on
Hudson's home in Mason.
The group discussed the~
The ·grvup discussed the
co unty educational tour
scheduled for Morgantown, W.
Va. Mrs. Ray Fox reported
briefly on Tanzania , its
climate, foods etc. and foreign
student from that country,
Hidaya Mlege, a student at
West Virginia University.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs . Smith to Mrs .
Lawrence Roush, Mrs. George
Carson, Mrs. John Roach, Mrs.
Uoyd Williams, Mrs. Laurene
Lewis, Mrs. Matilda Noble,
Mrs. Cecil Smith, Mrs . Evelyn
Stewart, Mrs . Alburtice
Young, Mrs. Elmer VanMeter,
Mrs. J. Marshall, Mrs. Ray
Fox and Mrs. Alice Faye
Gardner.

Foreman .&amp; .Aitbott

OHIO

unable to attend.
, Mrs. Ray Fox presided at the
meeting which opened with the
pledge to the flag and the
Lord's Prayer. Mrs. Gerald
Wildermuth gave devotion s
using "Smiles are Contagious"
and "True Greatness." She
also read a note from Constance Thorn of Miller Cottage,
Dayton . Mrs. Charles Sauer
also shared a note she had
received from Miss Thorn in
response to a card · fr om
Hawaii.
Refreshments were served to
those named and Mrs. Pearl
Knapp, Mrs. George Hackett,
Sr ., Mrs. Frank Cheese brew,
Mrs. Harry Davis, Mrs. Harry
Houdashelt and Mrs. J. · M. .
Thornton .

SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE

Mr. and Mrs. Hudson ·

new automatic thermostat

REDUCED

MEN'S

· REDUCED

PANTY HOSE

REDUCED

The Rutland
Church of Christ was the
setting for the wedding of Miss
Carolyn Maples, daughter of
Mr. ani! Mrs. Joseph D.
Maples, Route 1, Gallipolis,
and William R. Nicholson, son
d M
11'
t
~ · lson,
r ·UPRuuanO.
;u1 lf~ ,,., rn
lie
1-:Tlle wedding was imevent of
June 10 at 1 p.m. with the Rev.
Gene Musser officiating . The
double ring ceremony was
preceded with 8 program of
nuptial music by •Julie Hut·
chison, pianist.
Basket,oflavenderand pink
daisies were used to mark the
pews. The altar decorations
were arrangements of white
gladioli with lavender, white
and pink daisies, with candelabra.
Given in marriage by her
father. the bride chose for her
wedding day a formal length
gown of white organza. The
bodice featured a sheer yoke,
wedding band collar, full
dresden sleeves all trimmed
with lace. The empire waist
held a so!Uy gathered A-line
skirt and the detachable chapel
length train also trimmed in
lace. The ·bride carried a
colonial bouquet of daisies and
yellow rosebuds.
Unda Cardillo, LangsviUe,
was the maid of honor and the
bridesmaids were Kathy
O'Neil Whitmore Lake, Mich.,
and ~bbie Maples, Gallipolis.
Miss Cardillo wore a pink satin
floor length skirt fashioned
with 8 ruffle at the bottom and ·
a sash at the waist and wore a
white blouse in old fashioned
styling and lavender widebrimmed hat. The attire of the
bridesmaids was the same
except their skirts were
lavender .. They all carried
colonial bouquets of lavender,
pink and white daisies.

~

STORE HOURS

SALE STARTS
MONDAY, JUNE 26

20% TO

Mrs. Bill McCreedy, president;
Mrs. Doyle . Saunders; vice'president; Mrs. Tom Pitchford, secretary; Mrs. James
Skidmore, treasurer; Mrs.
Steve Fuller, news reporter;
Mrs. James Skidmore and
Mrs. Tim Bickers, ways and
means and telephone committee and Mrs. Harold Von
Lookado, special activities.
The club is to have a hoi dog
sale July 1'lat the Porter
Texaco Station.

POMEROY - The Sacred
Heart Catholic Church at
Pomeroy was the scene of the
wedding of Miss Harriet
Walsh, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Harry A. Walsh of Mason,
W.Va., to Mr. Sam D. Dorado,
son of Mi'. and Mrs. Sam
Dorado of Mt. Hope, W. Va.
The Rev. Fr. Bernard
Krojcovic performed the
double ring ceremony at 11
a.m. on June 17 following a
program of nuptial music by
Mrs. Ben Neutzling, organist.
Vases of gladioli and mums
decorated the church. ·
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a white
polyester satin monk's robe
with a pearl rope belt and
·carried a single white rose. Her
only attendant, Kay McGowan
of Mason, wore a purple
p,olyester satin monk's robe
with a pearl rope belt and
carried a single lavender
rosebud .
Robert E. Dorado of Mt.
Hope was best man and the
usher was Mark V. Klosterman
of Celina.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Walsh was attired in a
light pink dress with rose
accessories and wore a pink
rosebud corsage. Mrs. Dorado
wore an aqua lace ensemble
and had a white rose corsage.
Mrs. Thomas Hennesy of
Pomeroy and Mrs. Don Mullins
of Middleport were hostesses
for a reception in the church
social room. An orchid and
white color scheme was
carried out. Guests were
registered by Deline McGowan

June Wedding Oif
Maples-Ni~holson. :~~~~~~~;s~~~:~~!'ctun~~

Middleport

SEMI•ANN

MEN'S
See our vast display of
merchandise ... newest
shipments from all over the
nation grouped together at
one location for your
shopping
convenience!
Take advantage of the
many speGial values Bakers
offer.

'11

To

REGULAR TO 1I8.99

Star Class Meets
Mr. and. Mrs. Fink

-Contribution Made
Nurses' Scholarship

alsh~Dorado

POMEROY - an open
meeting of the Rutland
Friendly · Gardeners will be
held Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at
the Rutland (,'burch of Christ.
Mrs. G. R. Thompson of the
Pomeroy Winding Trail
Garden Club will be guest
speaker and demonstrator.
Mrs . Thompson, an outstanding gardener of Region II,
Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs, will present plant
propagation using rose cuttings, perennials and house ·
plants.
Also speaking will be Mrs.
Joe Bolin, director of Region
II, and Mrs. James Carpenter,
chairman of the meeting,
giving gardening tips for July.
Mrs. Bruce Davis and Mrs.
William Brown will serve as
hostesses. All Meigs County
Garden Clubs are invited. Door
prizes will be awarded and
refreshments served.

.

THArS WHAT YOU RECEIVE WHEN YOU OPEN A PASSBOOK SAVINGS
ACCOUNT AT ACS&amp;l. IT DOES MAKE A DIFFERENCE WHERE YOU
SAVt OPEN OR ADD TO YOUR ACtOUNT NOW!

MEIGS BRANCH
lHE ATHENS OOUNlY .SAVINGS &amp; LOAN 00.
296 W. Second St.

Phane 992-3863

Earl F. Ingels, Jr .• Manager Pvmeroy, Ohio

I

I

�.•

'

1~

-

The Sunday

Tim~ntinel,

..

June 25, 1972

'

~mW~ X!!imts- i'ttitittt!
YOUR CHOICE SALE

ENTERPRISE
7 CUP RANGE . TOP
COFFEE MAKER
.
.
10'; TEFLON .II SKILLET ·
2~

$

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QT. WHISTLING TEAKffiLE

•
•

•••
••••

•••

•

APPLIANCE ROLLERS
HIGH IMPACT STYRENE
HOLDS UP TO 2000 LB.

PUFFS.FACIAL TISSUES

.PRELL
LIQUID
7 Ol

BOITLE

Scramble Hits
T'Pj"e1 Offices

scon

LILT
SPECIAL PERMANENT

BIG
ROLL

M~\:a~h~~~v:i~~nNews

Friday

ONLY
(.

SHORT OR LONG SLEEVE

CORITY
COrrON BALLS

BLENDER

BLACK &amp; DECKER

714'' Cl RCULAR
SAW
1

2 SPEED

44)

OPEN SU'N DA Y 12 T() 6

Increase Urged

Seized

•

MANNING $
BOWMAN

Attacks Continue

Convention

I

BOYS'
SHIRTS

.

department in this community "getting up there pretty high"
MARTINS FERRY, Ohio where they can sleep."
Aspokesman for the Martins of 22,500. "We've evacuated 40 but added he had "no idea"
(UP!) - Hundreds of families
in Eastern Ohio were Ferry Fire Department said or more families so far and how many families had been
evacuated.
evacuated Saturday as rains machinery was moved in the there will be more.;,
Trailers Moved ·
He said the water was "six to
from tropical storm Agnes sent Wheeling Steel plant in that
community
of
12,000
and
the
eight
to
10
feet
deep"
in
the
In
Powahatan
Point, a comthe Ohio river surging out of its
plant
was
closed.
some areas where the evacua- munity of 2,200, Mrs. Carl Begbanks. The river was 22 feet
There were only scattered tions were made and these had ley, wife of the police chief,
over flood stage at nearby East
said there had been "lots o(
Liverpool closing several evacuations in Martins Ferry to be done by boat.
which
is
north
of
Bellaire,
al"We
don't
have
any
industry
evacuations" especially in
businesses.
The river is expected to be 12 most directly across the river shut down but all the docks · trailer parks.
She said the water was rising
to 15 feet above flood level at from Wheeling and not as close along the river have been
to
the
river.
washed
out,"
said
the
disrapidly and Ohio 7 in that area
other communities bordering
Ohio 7 between Martins patcher.
was also blocked.
the river in both Ohio and the
!NVl11:D GUESTS attending Friday's limcheon of,
R. Carter, Joe Stewart, D. Kenneth Morgan, Dr. Alphus R.
James Holdaway, dispatcher
The sewage plant at SteubenNorthern Panhandle of West Ferry and East Liverpool,
f!clally signaling the purchase of the Evans Packing ComChristensen and Golden R. Canaday. They are shown with J.
further
north,
was
shut
by
the
for
the
police
department
in
ville had to be closed because
Virginia.
Tim Evans, plant manager, and Kenneth Probasco,
pany by Landmark, Inc., were standing left to right, Bryson
Shadyside, a community of of high waters but there were
Damages from the storm in high waters.
executive vice president of Landmark.
"It's rising pretty quick," 5,000 in southern Belmont no evacuations in the city of
eastern and northern Ohio are
said
a dispatcher for the police county, said the water was 34,000 as yet.
expected to run into millions of
dollars.
Eastern Obio communities
hit by the flooding included
Martins Ferry, Bellaire,
Bridgeport, Shadyside, East
Liverpool, Powahatan Point
and Hannibal pius other
Attackers Use Tear-Gas
the paratrooper lines.
SAIGON (UPI)-A Ndtth
smaller communities.
Huntley said these attackers
The crest in this area is ex: Vietnamese infantry regiment,
Allied officers at the scene
used
tear
!Ills,
machine
guns,
peeled to reach 47-48 feet at 8 backed by two tank companies,
described it as a "suicide
SILVER SPRING, Md.
a.m. Sunday, well over the stormed across the My Chanh mortars, rocket grenades and mission," but said the North
(UP!) -Gov. George C.
flood stage which is 36 feet. River through thundering U.S. rifles in human wave assaults, Vietnamese kept charging ond
Wallace of Alabama is greatly
Dozens of roads were closed by air and naval bombardment and the defenders fought back that heavy fighting continued
improved and still intends to go
, high water.
.
Saturday in the third straight with wire-guided '1ow" mis- at nightfall. South Vietnamese
to the Democra!ic National
· The river was at 42 feet in day of suicide attacks against siles. Dozens of U.S. warplanes colilmanders told Huntley that
.Convention next month despite
this area by midmorning Sa- the northern defense . line of dove down to bombard· the 75 Communists were dead in
his son's statement that his
Communists crossing open this fight by midalternoon, and
turday and rising at·about half South Vietnam .
condition has weakened, an
· a foot an hour.
Government defenders beat plains in the charges on the government losses were one
aide said Saturday.
Mimbrano Castricone, back most of the attacks, hilltop paratroop camp.
killed 'and 14 wounded.
"! saw him this morning,"
During the peak of the
mayor of Bellaire, a com- battlefield reports said, but the
The commanders said the air
said Elvin Staunton, ~ress
munity of 11,500 which · is biggest fight of the day was fighting, three B52s dropped strikes ani! paratrooper misspokesman for the candidate
about 75 tons of bombs within siles knocked out nine of the 10
loc~ted just south or Wheeling, sti\1 going on at nightfall.
for
the
Democratic
W.Va. said he had asked Ohio
Field commanders told UP! an ear..shattering 500 yards of tanks.
presidential nomination.
Gov. John J. Gilligan lor help. ·Correspondent Chad Huntley
"His complexion and color
"I talked to his administr;- that 20 Communist tanks were
are good. He say's he feels '·
tive assistant and he said he knocked out and 116 Red
good. His pain has diminished.
would put us in contact with soldiers kilied in the Saturday
His physical therapy has inCivil defense and the Highway strikes against a hall dozen
creased."
de~rtment," he said. "We're out~osts below a 12-mile ·
George Wallace Jr., the
getting along pretty good now stretch of the river. Five
go~rnor's son, said at a
though and we may not n~d govern111ent . solqiers were
Walla:iii'-Pr~~ally ill
the help.
.,r · killed)and 33~/oun.tili~"'-,
.f!i;J · ' ' ·
Grac
'ii'la., r rJUIIY night
"From what I can gather we J,;,; Mas~jVe iJiomb~enf··' • --~.,.~ · ~ '· •· · .. '
that his ather's condition "is
havetakenoutbetween50ori!O " Huntley sald ~erlcan air'LONDON (U~l)-Brltons currency to find Its own natural
oot as good as it has been the
families," said' Castricone. craft and warships inflicted the beSieged the 12 offJceS of travel level created anxiety and
last few days." ·
"But they're really g0ing now biggest part of the Communist agent Thomas Cook-famous confusion for vacationers.
MANAGERS ON HAND- J. Tim Evans, plant manager of Evans Packing Company a lid
"Sert of Stupid"
The Treasury advised travebecause we're going to get a lot losseS. Hundreds of u .S. planes for "Co~k's tours" Saturday,
Kenneth N. Probasco, executive vice president of Landmark Inc., (seated ), new owners of
• "He is very alert mentally,
lers
to take foreign currency
more water."
battered the region, accompa- scrambling to 0ange their
but hlp physical condition has
Evans Packing, were introduced to several area Landmark store managers during Friday's
"We set up the high school so nied by a massive bombard- pounds for_ foretgn curre~cy with them where possible
weakened," the son said.
luncheon at Oscar's Restaurant. Others, left to right, Kenneth Brown, manager, Jackson
we can feed them," he said. ment of 7th F1eet ships.
before takmg off on foretgn because the best rates were
It was the first time anyone
available in London.
Landmark; Delbert Kasley, manager, Athens Landmark, and Jack Carsey, Meigs Landmark
"And we put cots in the gym
852 siratofortresses flew 21 vacations.
close to the governor had in,
Waiting customers formed
manager.
strikes .Saturday in Com- · The government's decision
dlcated Wallace might be
long
lines waiting for Cook's
munistheld Quang Tri province Friday to break the pound
unable to attend the July 10
above the My Otanh and away from its $2.6057-dollar offices to open. The counters
government:controlled Thua exchange rate and "float" the were staying open late Saturday night. Commercial banks
Thien province below the river.
· reported that Dr. Joseph
and most other moneySmaller tactical fighters flew
changing operations were
Schanno , the neurosurgeon
.
. "
·
149 strikes. At least four planes
closed,
as they normally are
who performed the first
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A hne .
significant problem" racing
usually take part in each
Saturdays.
·surgery on Wallace after he re.P?rt compiled for the_ Obio
- Medicare coverage should the elderly in both Ohio and the
strike, although the figure can
Bank of England and
was shot May 15, said the son's DiVIsion on Admmistration of be increased to ~ver 1tems nation is the lack of long raoge
run much higher.
officials worked on
Treasury
statement was "sort of Aging has r.ecomme~ded t~t such as longterm care, eye- pianniog.
·
The North Vietnamese reexchange control regulations
stupid."
soctal secur1ty benefits be m- glasses, dental care , out"Non~ocal funds are seldom
giment and tank units split up
to back up restrictions on
The News reported that creased "substantially" and patient services, podiatry and available to subsidize continualter the river crossing and hit
money movements inside the
Schanno said convention reser- more earnings be allowed prescription drugs.
ing eflorts," the report said,
five government paratroop
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
sterling area bloc and to
vations have been made for without penalty because many - More housmg for the eider- "instead they are almost aipositions and a marine position
govern stock market dealing in
Wallace and himself at Miami Ohio senior citizens are living ly should be built for ail income ways channeled into short term Members of the police below the western half of the
department's
narcotics
sterling
area securities like
Beach, and that the governor near or below the poverty levels.
demonstration projects which
My Olanh, Huntley said.
division
Friday
night
arrested
South Africa and Australian
spent most of Friday working level.
- Programs offering meals if successful must then be
In the biggest attack, two
mine's.
with his staff on who would
The complex, 277 page report to older people should be ex- funded entirely from local two men at Port Columbus and battalions plus 10 tanks storconfiscated six and one half
To underline the governaccompany him to the conven- was prepared under contract panded.
.
sources.
med a paratroop regimental
HARRISBURG, Pa. (UPI)- ment's "no panic" attitude in
ounces
of
almost
pure
cocaine
lion.
lor the Division of Admini!tra-Older people should be en"The problem with this apcamp two miles southwest of President Nixon toured floodface of the new sterling
Wallace had surgery last lion on Aging by the Scripps couraged to use the food stamp proachis that state and federal with a street value of $300,000, the town of My Chanh.
ravaged Maryland and Penn- upheaval, Prime Minister Edpolice
said
Saturday.
weekend to remove a bullet Foundation lor Research in. program if they are eligible for taxes.are high yet outside the
sylvania today, expressing ward Heath Saturday planned
Police said Thomas B.
that was lodged near his spine. Population Problems.
participation.
direct control of the average
concern for the "devastation to be at the heim of his yacht
He has been paralyzed from
The report sought to find the
-Development of mass citizen," the report said. "The Eisaman, 18, Fort Lauderdale,
everywhere."
Morning Cloud racing in the
.the hipa down since he was major unmet needs of Obio's transit systems and other only direct control he exercises Fla., and Barry D. Kaye, 23,
Nixon flew in Army-1, the
Gainesville,
Fla.,
were
Solent near Southampton .
wounded and doctors have older people and they are in- public carriers for older over his tax burden is at the
presidential hellcopter, from Heath was scheduled to spend
Indicated chances are not good come, health, housing, people.
localievel, and it is precisely at charged on federal counts . of
the Camp David, Md., &amp;mday at his official country
-Special services should be this level that the tax revolt is possession for sale.
that he will be· able to walk nutrition and transportation.
mountain
retreat to a football residence, Olequers, political
Police said the men apagain unaided.
The recommendation for an developed to help keep older raging."
field
at
William
Penn High sources said.
Has Good Night
increase in social security ben- people out of institutions.
"Given this state of affairs it parently flew into Columbus
Scbool in Harrisburg.
In Paris Saturday top Eu"His ·physical condition has efits, the report said, would en- Local government should is not surprising that many of and were waiting to pick up
U . Gov. Ernest Kline escort- ropean bankers and officials
their
luggage
when
they
were
greatly Improved," Staunton able Oblo's old ~ulation, accept responsibility lor the local services to Obio's
ed Nilton through the school, were arguing the merits of
said. "The governor had which now numbe(s about 1 coordinating delivery of social elderly must come from non- arrested.
where about 700 flood refugees
The narcotic, police said, had
Olancellor of the Exchequer
probably the best day since his million, to better meet these services at the local level by government sources such as
were being fed and housed by Anthony Barber's action.
wholesale
value
of
about
a
operation yesterday (Friday) . problems.
both private and public United Appeal or various philthe Red Cross.
Political sources said the ·
He had a good night last night
"Income for older Ohioans agencies.
anthropie agencies," said the $18,000.
"We saw devastation every- government was convinced its
and Is feeling very well . this comes mainly from earnings, · The report said the "most report.
where," Nilton told Kline as speedy action, taken boldly,
morning. He ate a big break- assets and Social Security,"
they walked along shaking was the right course to avert
last and read the newspapers. the report said. "Yet only one
hands. "I'm particularly conthe threat to the national gold
"He had two sessions of in six older people has earnings
cerned about the houses. We
and hard currency reserves
physical theraliY yesterday. and assets provide significant
need to find places for these which back the currency. It
The second lasted over an . income to only about five per
people to live . .
was also determined to awid
llour," Staunton said.
, cent of the older population.
"I'm also ·concerned about ano : her
International
He described the therapy as
"This means that Social SeTOKYO (UP!)- Okinawana
the steel plants because that
borrowing saga like that which
exerclses to strengthen the curity is by far the inost Pfevmeans jobs. We've got tO get preceded the 1967 devaluation
BELFAST (UPl)- Four per- number killed since British vote Sunday In the first · IN KOREA - .S·S1t.
arms and Chest, ptishiog and alent and important income
that. siee~lant (there are two to defend the pOund ag8inst
troops
moved
Into
Northern
governor's
election
since
their
Michael C. Nicholson, soa of
sons, three of them British
p~lllng against preuure, and llOurce for older Ohioans and as
steel
plants in the Harrisburg international speculators.
Ireland in August, 1969, in an island was returned to Japan Mr. and Mrs. Erneal C.
maneuvers with a !lit table. · a result most retired Ohioans soldiers, were kilied in Northarea) back into operation or
effort to bring peace between after 27 years of U. S. oc- Nicholson of Rutland, left
Acting Alabama Gov. Jere encounter economic dif- ern Ireland violence Sat11rday,
find another industry. If they
protestant
and
minority
•
cupation.
less than 72 hours ·before
June 17 for a 13-month tour of
Beasley, who has ,diaagreed ficulties" the repclrt said.
can't open again, this would Portsmouth Gets
The outcome of the election duly In Korea. lie. bas been
militants of the Irish Republi- Roman Catholic communities.
.\lith Wallace in the past, Jilso
destroy Harrisburg."
can Army (IRA) were sche- This year so far 176 persons will have no direct bearing on asslgued to the 51st Air Baie
·warned at the rally "the news
Olarles Crewsaw, who llves 852,500 Grant
have
been
killed-three
more
the
existing
friendly
relations
"At best, the retired Individ- duled to begin a cease-lire.
Willg in OlaJi aad wiU be
lmedla hil put too much emthe total for all of 1971. between Japan and the United affiliated with helicopter on Green street near the
fbaala on the fact that the ual faces an adjustment to an Another British llOidler waa than
COLUMBUA (UP!) - The
Security SOIII'ttll said the States.
inundated governor's mansion
Income
substantially
lower
rescue ha villg attended a 3&amp;-'governor will PhYsl.caRy be at
No tn*tter who wins, the day rescue training course lo
in Harrisburg, told Nixon: "We Portsmouth Police Depart'the convention ... It ~ ·than hilJ previous eamingl-a wounded by sniper shots . in · three Army vlctlml were in a
lost everything. The furniture, ment will get a grant of $52,000
'upon .U. physical condition." painful ad)llstment, perhaps, Belfa'st, and a 9.i'ear-old girl ~ vehicle trapped between two United States will continue to Ogden, Utah. He and his
to purchase communications
everylhq we own."
bat a possible one," the report was wounded by a bullet fired mines, of about 1!0 pounds each, • maintain more than . 40,000 wife,
Bonte,
were
equi~ment.
"Can
you
go
back?"
Nixon
•.
continued. "At worst he must at an army post in the ,Planted in a culvert 011 either l)lilitary perllQnnel on ·okinawa previously· stationed at
The"grant will be matched by
asked.
make do ivlth an income below Ballymurphy area of the city. side of a :,country road near under the U. S. . - Japan . Lockbourne Air Force Base
'
11
11
We'11 try ,
Crewaaw · $17,ii00 in local hinds to pur.
NAMED PRESIDENT
what lite Federal Government A1 Middletown on the Irish Dunglven, aouth of Lmldonder- Security treaty .
Ia ColiUIIbus for 18 monlhs
chase a CO!IIIlle, base statiO!\,
replied.
. : COLUMBUS(UPI)- Walter has determined to be Republlc border, sil armed ry, The mines were detonated
Both nationa can scrap the and w:ere residents of
A. Olurchlll Sr., president of 'minimal'."
An 8-year-old black mild who 15 mobile radioa, a command
men blew 1!J1 a.customa post. by remOte amtrol, poalbly by treat}' on one year's advance England for 3G months prior
OlurchiU SUpennarketa, Inc.,
Other key recommendationa
told Nixon - hla name was control center, eight portable
'n1ree British 80ldlers were men who lay In walt, security notice but Preaidential Adviaer to their reluraillg to lbe
·Toledo, 1111 elected president of the 47 SIJilmitted in lbe re- Iillled In what security forces sources said.
"Jeff," bwled his bead in the radios, a muiti:channel
Henry Kissinger iaid during states. Mrs. Nlcbolaoa wiU
al lbe Ohio State Automobile port include:
,
President '1 coat •d lbe two of recordlpg machine and acsaid wu a deliberate attack. A
Slota were fired at the his villi to Tokyo this month be resldlq lo BattaDd witll
them walked band-In-band ~es.
-Allowable Aid For the 17.,ea-~d youth was shot end vehicle and another army that lbe Nixon administration her pareola, Mr, aad Mrs.
, ;AIIoclaUon,
He IUCCeeda Brooks P· Aged lhGuld be increased in killed from a passing car.
through the erbool 011 the ~ · Gov. Jol!n J. GIUlgan aptruck inunedlately after the lntandl!d to keep the security GeoJ1e Grate, clurtDI her
minute tour.
provecl the grant Sa1111'day.
Jaltan, ~ Co;Jwnbul. banker. · Cllio, at ltut to the poverty
The deathl brought to 387 the blasts.
.w.nce with ·Japen.
bUIItud'l Korean tour,

Attend

EACH

TOWELS

.

Wallace To

47

200 CT.

PAGE 13 .

EvaCuate HUttdreds
In Eastern Ohio

ONLY
••

'SUNDAY, JUNE 25, 1972

VOL VII NO. 21

Right Reserved To Umit Quantities

MIDDLEPORT
·OHIO

Four Killed In

Ireland

'

Violenc~

Okinawans Go

To Polls Today

Nixon
·-T ours
Areas

·;

�.•

'

1~

-

The Sunday

Tim~ntinel,

..

June 25, 1972

'

~mW~ X!!imts- i'ttitittt!
YOUR CHOICE SALE

ENTERPRISE
7 CUP RANGE . TOP
COFFEE MAKER
.
.
10'; TEFLON .II SKILLET ·
2~

$

.

QT. WHISTLING TEAKffiLE

•
•

•••
••••

•••

•

APPLIANCE ROLLERS
HIGH IMPACT STYRENE
HOLDS UP TO 2000 LB.

PUFFS.FACIAL TISSUES

.PRELL
LIQUID
7 Ol

BOITLE

Scramble Hits
T'Pj"e1 Offices

scon

LILT
SPECIAL PERMANENT

BIG
ROLL

M~\:a~h~~~v:i~~nNews

Friday

ONLY
(.

SHORT OR LONG SLEEVE

CORITY
COrrON BALLS

BLENDER

BLACK &amp; DECKER

714'' Cl RCULAR
SAW
1

2 SPEED

44)

OPEN SU'N DA Y 12 T() 6

Increase Urged

Seized

•

MANNING $
BOWMAN

Attacks Continue

Convention

I

BOYS'
SHIRTS

.

department in this community "getting up there pretty high"
MARTINS FERRY, Ohio where they can sleep."
Aspokesman for the Martins of 22,500. "We've evacuated 40 but added he had "no idea"
(UP!) - Hundreds of families
in Eastern Ohio were Ferry Fire Department said or more families so far and how many families had been
evacuated.
evacuated Saturday as rains machinery was moved in the there will be more.;,
Trailers Moved ·
He said the water was "six to
from tropical storm Agnes sent Wheeling Steel plant in that
community
of
12,000
and
the
eight
to
10
feet
deep"
in
the
In
Powahatan
Point, a comthe Ohio river surging out of its
plant
was
closed.
some areas where the evacua- munity of 2,200, Mrs. Carl Begbanks. The river was 22 feet
There were only scattered tions were made and these had ley, wife of the police chief,
over flood stage at nearby East
said there had been "lots o(
Liverpool closing several evacuations in Martins Ferry to be done by boat.
which
is
north
of
Bellaire,
al"We
don't
have
any
industry
evacuations" especially in
businesses.
The river is expected to be 12 most directly across the river shut down but all the docks · trailer parks.
She said the water was rising
to 15 feet above flood level at from Wheeling and not as close along the river have been
to
the
river.
washed
out,"
said
the
disrapidly and Ohio 7 in that area
other communities bordering
Ohio 7 between Martins patcher.
was also blocked.
the river in both Ohio and the
!NVl11:D GUESTS attending Friday's limcheon of,
R. Carter, Joe Stewart, D. Kenneth Morgan, Dr. Alphus R.
James Holdaway, dispatcher
The sewage plant at SteubenNorthern Panhandle of West Ferry and East Liverpool,
f!clally signaling the purchase of the Evans Packing ComChristensen and Golden R. Canaday. They are shown with J.
further
north,
was
shut
by
the
for
the
police
department
in
ville had to be closed because
Virginia.
Tim Evans, plant manager, and Kenneth Probasco,
pany by Landmark, Inc., were standing left to right, Bryson
Shadyside, a community of of high waters but there were
Damages from the storm in high waters.
executive vice president of Landmark.
"It's rising pretty quick," 5,000 in southern Belmont no evacuations in the city of
eastern and northern Ohio are
said
a dispatcher for the police county, said the water was 34,000 as yet.
expected to run into millions of
dollars.
Eastern Obio communities
hit by the flooding included
Martins Ferry, Bellaire,
Bridgeport, Shadyside, East
Liverpool, Powahatan Point
and Hannibal pius other
Attackers Use Tear-Gas
the paratrooper lines.
SAIGON (UPI)-A Ndtth
smaller communities.
Huntley said these attackers
The crest in this area is ex: Vietnamese infantry regiment,
Allied officers at the scene
used
tear
!Ills,
machine
guns,
peeled to reach 47-48 feet at 8 backed by two tank companies,
described it as a "suicide
SILVER SPRING, Md.
a.m. Sunday, well over the stormed across the My Chanh mortars, rocket grenades and mission," but said the North
(UP!) -Gov. George C.
flood stage which is 36 feet. River through thundering U.S. rifles in human wave assaults, Vietnamese kept charging ond
Wallace of Alabama is greatly
Dozens of roads were closed by air and naval bombardment and the defenders fought back that heavy fighting continued
improved and still intends to go
, high water.
.
Saturday in the third straight with wire-guided '1ow" mis- at nightfall. South Vietnamese
to the Democra!ic National
· The river was at 42 feet in day of suicide attacks against siles. Dozens of U.S. warplanes colilmanders told Huntley that
.Convention next month despite
this area by midmorning Sa- the northern defense . line of dove down to bombard· the 75 Communists were dead in
his son's statement that his
Communists crossing open this fight by midalternoon, and
turday and rising at·about half South Vietnam .
condition has weakened, an
· a foot an hour.
Government defenders beat plains in the charges on the government losses were one
aide said Saturday.
Mimbrano Castricone, back most of the attacks, hilltop paratroop camp.
killed 'and 14 wounded.
"! saw him this morning,"
During the peak of the
mayor of Bellaire, a com- battlefield reports said, but the
The commanders said the air
said Elvin Staunton, ~ress
munity of 11,500 which · is biggest fight of the day was fighting, three B52s dropped strikes ani! paratrooper misspokesman for the candidate
about 75 tons of bombs within siles knocked out nine of the 10
loc~ted just south or Wheeling, sti\1 going on at nightfall.
for
the
Democratic
W.Va. said he had asked Ohio
Field commanders told UP! an ear..shattering 500 yards of tanks.
presidential nomination.
Gov. John J. Gilligan lor help. ·Correspondent Chad Huntley
"His complexion and color
"I talked to his administr;- that 20 Communist tanks were
are good. He say's he feels '·
tive assistant and he said he knocked out and 116 Red
good. His pain has diminished.
would put us in contact with soldiers kilied in the Saturday
His physical therapy has inCivil defense and the Highway strikes against a hall dozen
creased."
de~rtment," he said. "We're out~osts below a 12-mile ·
George Wallace Jr., the
getting along pretty good now stretch of the river. Five
go~rnor's son, said at a
though and we may not n~d govern111ent . solqiers were
Walla:iii'-Pr~~ally ill
the help.
.,r · killed)and 33~/oun.tili~"'-,
.f!i;J · ' ' ·
Grac
'ii'la., r rJUIIY night
"From what I can gather we J,;,; Mas~jVe iJiomb~enf··' • --~.,.~ · ~ '· •· · .. '
that his ather's condition "is
havetakenoutbetween50ori!O " Huntley sald ~erlcan air'LONDON (U~l)-Brltons currency to find Its own natural
oot as good as it has been the
families," said' Castricone. craft and warships inflicted the beSieged the 12 offJceS of travel level created anxiety and
last few days." ·
"But they're really g0ing now biggest part of the Communist agent Thomas Cook-famous confusion for vacationers.
MANAGERS ON HAND- J. Tim Evans, plant manager of Evans Packing Company a lid
"Sert of Stupid"
The Treasury advised travebecause we're going to get a lot losseS. Hundreds of u .S. planes for "Co~k's tours" Saturday,
Kenneth N. Probasco, executive vice president of Landmark Inc., (seated ), new owners of
• "He is very alert mentally,
lers
to take foreign currency
more water."
battered the region, accompa- scrambling to 0ange their
but hlp physical condition has
Evans Packing, were introduced to several area Landmark store managers during Friday's
"We set up the high school so nied by a massive bombard- pounds for_ foretgn curre~cy with them where possible
weakened," the son said.
luncheon at Oscar's Restaurant. Others, left to right, Kenneth Brown, manager, Jackson
we can feed them," he said. ment of 7th F1eet ships.
before takmg off on foretgn because the best rates were
It was the first time anyone
available in London.
Landmark; Delbert Kasley, manager, Athens Landmark, and Jack Carsey, Meigs Landmark
"And we put cots in the gym
852 siratofortresses flew 21 vacations.
close to the governor had in,
Waiting customers formed
manager.
strikes .Saturday in Com- · The government's decision
dlcated Wallace might be
long
lines waiting for Cook's
munistheld Quang Tri province Friday to break the pound
unable to attend the July 10
above the My Otanh and away from its $2.6057-dollar offices to open. The counters
government:controlled Thua exchange rate and "float" the were staying open late Saturday night. Commercial banks
Thien province below the river.
· reported that Dr. Joseph
and most other moneySmaller tactical fighters flew
changing operations were
Schanno , the neurosurgeon
.
. "
·
149 strikes. At least four planes
closed,
as they normally are
who performed the first
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A hne .
significant problem" racing
usually take part in each
Saturdays.
·surgery on Wallace after he re.P?rt compiled for the_ Obio
- Medicare coverage should the elderly in both Ohio and the
strike, although the figure can
Bank of England and
was shot May 15, said the son's DiVIsion on Admmistration of be increased to ~ver 1tems nation is the lack of long raoge
run much higher.
officials worked on
Treasury
statement was "sort of Aging has r.ecomme~ded t~t such as longterm care, eye- pianniog.
·
The North Vietnamese reexchange control regulations
stupid."
soctal secur1ty benefits be m- glasses, dental care , out"Non~ocal funds are seldom
giment and tank units split up
to back up restrictions on
The News reported that creased "substantially" and patient services, podiatry and available to subsidize continualter the river crossing and hit
money movements inside the
Schanno said convention reser- more earnings be allowed prescription drugs.
ing eflorts," the report said,
five government paratroop
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
sterling area bloc and to
vations have been made for without penalty because many - More housmg for the eider- "instead they are almost aipositions and a marine position
govern stock market dealing in
Wallace and himself at Miami Ohio senior citizens are living ly should be built for ail income ways channeled into short term Members of the police below the western half of the
department's
narcotics
sterling
area securities like
Beach, and that the governor near or below the poverty levels.
demonstration projects which
My Olanh, Huntley said.
division
Friday
night
arrested
South Africa and Australian
spent most of Friday working level.
- Programs offering meals if successful must then be
In the biggest attack, two
mine's.
with his staff on who would
The complex, 277 page report to older people should be ex- funded entirely from local two men at Port Columbus and battalions plus 10 tanks storconfiscated six and one half
To underline the governaccompany him to the conven- was prepared under contract panded.
.
sources.
med a paratroop regimental
HARRISBURG, Pa. (UPI)- ment's "no panic" attitude in
ounces
of
almost
pure
cocaine
lion.
lor the Division of Admini!tra-Older people should be en"The problem with this apcamp two miles southwest of President Nixon toured floodface of the new sterling
Wallace had surgery last lion on Aging by the Scripps couraged to use the food stamp proachis that state and federal with a street value of $300,000, the town of My Chanh.
ravaged Maryland and Penn- upheaval, Prime Minister Edpolice
said
Saturday.
weekend to remove a bullet Foundation lor Research in. program if they are eligible for taxes.are high yet outside the
sylvania today, expressing ward Heath Saturday planned
Police said Thomas B.
that was lodged near his spine. Population Problems.
participation.
direct control of the average
concern for the "devastation to be at the heim of his yacht
He has been paralyzed from
The report sought to find the
-Development of mass citizen," the report said. "The Eisaman, 18, Fort Lauderdale,
everywhere."
Morning Cloud racing in the
.the hipa down since he was major unmet needs of Obio's transit systems and other only direct control he exercises Fla., and Barry D. Kaye, 23,
Nixon flew in Army-1, the
Gainesville,
Fla.,
were
Solent near Southampton .
wounded and doctors have older people and they are in- public carriers for older over his tax burden is at the
presidential hellcopter, from Heath was scheduled to spend
Indicated chances are not good come, health, housing, people.
localievel, and it is precisely at charged on federal counts . of
the Camp David, Md., &amp;mday at his official country
-Special services should be this level that the tax revolt is possession for sale.
that he will be· able to walk nutrition and transportation.
mountain
retreat to a football residence, Olequers, political
Police said the men apagain unaided.
The recommendation for an developed to help keep older raging."
field
at
William
Penn High sources said.
Has Good Night
increase in social security ben- people out of institutions.
"Given this state of affairs it parently flew into Columbus
Scbool in Harrisburg.
In Paris Saturday top Eu"His ·physical condition has efits, the report said, would en- Local government should is not surprising that many of and were waiting to pick up
U . Gov. Ernest Kline escort- ropean bankers and officials
their
luggage
when
they
were
greatly Improved," Staunton able Oblo's old ~ulation, accept responsibility lor the local services to Obio's
ed Nilton through the school, were arguing the merits of
said. "The governor had which now numbe(s about 1 coordinating delivery of social elderly must come from non- arrested.
where about 700 flood refugees
The narcotic, police said, had
Olancellor of the Exchequer
probably the best day since his million, to better meet these services at the local level by government sources such as
were being fed and housed by Anthony Barber's action.
wholesale
value
of
about
a
operation yesterday (Friday) . problems.
both private and public United Appeal or various philthe Red Cross.
Political sources said the ·
He had a good night last night
"Income for older Ohioans agencies.
anthropie agencies," said the $18,000.
"We saw devastation every- government was convinced its
and Is feeling very well . this comes mainly from earnings, · The report said the "most report.
where," Nilton told Kline as speedy action, taken boldly,
morning. He ate a big break- assets and Social Security,"
they walked along shaking was the right course to avert
last and read the newspapers. the report said. "Yet only one
hands. "I'm particularly conthe threat to the national gold
"He had two sessions of in six older people has earnings
cerned about the houses. We
and hard currency reserves
physical theraliY yesterday. and assets provide significant
need to find places for these which back the currency. It
The second lasted over an . income to only about five per
people to live . .
was also determined to awid
llour," Staunton said.
, cent of the older population.
"I'm also ·concerned about ano : her
International
He described the therapy as
"This means that Social SeTOKYO (UP!)- Okinawana
the steel plants because that
borrowing saga like that which
exerclses to strengthen the curity is by far the inost Pfevmeans jobs. We've got tO get preceded the 1967 devaluation
BELFAST (UPl)- Four per- number killed since British vote Sunday In the first · IN KOREA - .S·S1t.
arms and Chest, ptishiog and alent and important income
that. siee~lant (there are two to defend the pOund ag8inst
troops
moved
Into
Northern
governor's
election
since
their
Michael C. Nicholson, soa of
sons, three of them British
p~lllng against preuure, and llOurce for older Ohioans and as
steel
plants in the Harrisburg international speculators.
Ireland in August, 1969, in an island was returned to Japan Mr. and Mrs. Erneal C.
maneuvers with a !lit table. · a result most retired Ohioans soldiers, were kilied in Northarea) back into operation or
effort to bring peace between after 27 years of U. S. oc- Nicholson of Rutland, left
Acting Alabama Gov. Jere encounter economic dif- ern Ireland violence Sat11rday,
find another industry. If they
protestant
and
minority
•
cupation.
less than 72 hours ·before
June 17 for a 13-month tour of
Beasley, who has ,diaagreed ficulties" the repclrt said.
can't open again, this would Portsmouth Gets
The outcome of the election duly In Korea. lie. bas been
militants of the Irish Republi- Roman Catholic communities.
.\lith Wallace in the past, Jilso
destroy Harrisburg."
can Army (IRA) were sche- This year so far 176 persons will have no direct bearing on asslgued to the 51st Air Baie
·warned at the rally "the news
Olarles Crewsaw, who llves 852,500 Grant
have
been
killed-three
more
the
existing
friendly
relations
"At best, the retired Individ- duled to begin a cease-lire.
Willg in OlaJi aad wiU be
lmedla hil put too much emthe total for all of 1971. between Japan and the United affiliated with helicopter on Green street near the
fbaala on the fact that the ual faces an adjustment to an Another British llOidler waa than
COLUMBUA (UP!) - The
Security SOIII'ttll said the States.
inundated governor's mansion
Income
substantially
lower
rescue ha villg attended a 3&amp;-'governor will PhYsl.caRy be at
No tn*tter who wins, the day rescue training course lo
in Harrisburg, told Nixon: "We Portsmouth Police Depart'the convention ... It ~ ·than hilJ previous eamingl-a wounded by sniper shots . in · three Army vlctlml were in a
lost everything. The furniture, ment will get a grant of $52,000
'upon .U. physical condition." painful ad)llstment, perhaps, Belfa'st, and a 9.i'ear-old girl ~ vehicle trapped between two United States will continue to Ogden, Utah. He and his
to purchase communications
everylhq we own."
bat a possible one," the report was wounded by a bullet fired mines, of about 1!0 pounds each, • maintain more than . 40,000 wife,
Bonte,
were
equi~ment.
"Can
you
go
back?"
Nixon
•.
continued. "At worst he must at an army post in the ,Planted in a culvert 011 either l)lilitary perllQnnel on ·okinawa previously· stationed at
The"grant will be matched by
asked.
make do ivlth an income below Ballymurphy area of the city. side of a :,country road near under the U. S. . - Japan . Lockbourne Air Force Base
'
11
11
We'11 try ,
Crewaaw · $17,ii00 in local hinds to pur.
NAMED PRESIDENT
what lite Federal Government A1 Middletown on the Irish Dunglven, aouth of Lmldonder- Security treaty .
Ia ColiUIIbus for 18 monlhs
chase a CO!IIIlle, base statiO!\,
replied.
. : COLUMBUS(UPI)- Walter has determined to be Republlc border, sil armed ry, The mines were detonated
Both nationa can scrap the and w:ere residents of
A. Olurchlll Sr., president of 'minimal'."
An 8-year-old black mild who 15 mobile radioa, a command
men blew 1!J1 a.customa post. by remOte amtrol, poalbly by treat}' on one year's advance England for 3G months prior
OlurchiU SUpennarketa, Inc.,
Other key recommendationa
told Nixon - hla name was control center, eight portable
'n1ree British 80ldlers were men who lay In walt, security notice but Preaidential Adviaer to their reluraillg to lbe
·Toledo, 1111 elected president of the 47 SIJilmitted in lbe re- Iillled In what security forces sources said.
"Jeff," bwled his bead in the radios, a muiti:channel
Henry Kissinger iaid during states. Mrs. Nlcbolaoa wiU
al lbe Ohio State Automobile port include:
,
President '1 coat •d lbe two of recordlpg machine and acsaid wu a deliberate attack. A
Slota were fired at the his villi to Tokyo this month be resldlq lo BattaDd witll
them walked band-In-band ~es.
-Allowable Aid For the 17.,ea-~d youth was shot end vehicle and another army that lbe Nixon administration her pareola, Mr, aad Mrs.
, ;AIIoclaUon,
He IUCCeeda Brooks P· Aged lhGuld be increased in killed from a passing car.
through the erbool 011 the ~ · Gov. Jol!n J. GIUlgan aptruck inunedlately after the lntandl!d to keep the security GeoJ1e Grate, clurtDI her
minute tour.
provecl the grant Sa1111'day.
Jaltan, ~ Co;Jwnbul. banker. · Cllio, at ltut to the poverty
The deathl brought to 387 the blasts.
.w.nce with ·Japen.
bUIItud'l Korean tour,

Attend

EACH

TOWELS

.

Wallace To

47

200 CT.

PAGE 13 .

EvaCuate HUttdreds
In Eastern Ohio

ONLY
••

'SUNDAY, JUNE 25, 1972

VOL VII NO. 21

Right Reserved To Umit Quantities

MIDDLEPORT
·OHIO

Four Killed In

Ireland

'

Violenc~

Okinawans Go

To Polls Today

Nixon
·-T ours
Areas

·;

�., ..

'

14 - The Sunday 'l'lrne&amp;Senlinei, June 25, 1m

., _e.J $

.

CQW ' ')P"'WP ?UC:

·m

g~;;uJu

m

Voice along Br'Way

Generation Rap
By Helen and'Sue Bottel

Berra also is an owner and TV conunerclsl
BY JACK O'BRIAN
spieler
for the soft drink called Yoo-Hoo. Now
AH, FOR A NIGHT
the biggest conunercial beer: manag..- ·Berta
WITH GROUCliO
: NEW YORK (KF~) - Quality always Is in merger has been . effectuated with nary an
.style : The Marx Bros. otdle, "A Night in antitrust burp from the Justice Dep't Casablanca," gets a glitter-revival June 23 at Rheingold has bought the Puerto Rico and
the Little Carnegie for what's hoped will be a big Caribbean franchise for Yoo-Hoo as Yogi's soda
run ... Groucho's been Taken Up this year in all glass runneth over ... Now if Willie Mays keeps
his quirks and romps, a veritable dirty.old Elvis homering, Seaver keeps winning and Agee'quits
... The amazing. true marginal graffiti : young aging, it's subtropical home.free for Yog.
+++
Everything was done on a grand ,scale at
gals really dig him, with propositions and all 1
Artist:
Lee Wiley, a gentle giant of vocal jazz, will · Bob Hope's "Evening" .at the neighboring
This navel battle can be settled with an olive branch be starred at the Newport Festival-New York Garden State Arts Center In New Jersey
palrited over the point in question. (Or whatever kind of foliage bash July 4 at Carnegie Hall ... Accompanied by (inaybe the loveliest concert hall along the
they had back then.) - SUE
the completely right group: briUiant Bobby entire Atlantic seaboard; all the way to Punta
+++
Hackett on cornet, Teddy Wils&lt;m at the piano, del Fuego): tickets went for a nifty $100 and a'
Rap: •
guitarist Bucky Pizzarelli, George Duvivier and sybaritic gourmet buffet for the thousands who
We were talking abaut pollution the other day and we,got to Don Lamond ... Eddie Condon, who plays' the attended was catered all the way from Radio
thinking: What would happen if every kind of motor or machine- world's most famoils siHtring ukulele, has City's fabulous (am! fabulous'Priced) Forum Of
run vehicle (cars, trains, buses, planes, trurks, etc.) were . enlisted sax fiend Barney Bigard (ri!lht name, the XII Caesars.
banned for a year? Or somebody said "Zap!" and they stopped Albany Bigard), tile explosively melodious Wild
Insurance underwriters have gone to the
running'
feds
with suspicions about a possible Invasion of
BiU Davison, the merry Max Kaminsky, WOlle
Would we all die or would we somehow · make it• the Lion Sll)ith, Joe Thomas, Benny Morton, a big private security firm by organized crime.
WHATIFFER
Dick Hayman, J. C. Higginbotham and similar Scary if true ... Ex-Queen Sotaya's back In .
Whatlffer :
long-bung stars ... The C;irnegie Hall bash will Rome after her ill-starred romance with Franco
That's a great Idea for a science fiction novel. If I had the close with "The World's Greatest Jazz Band";. Indovina, lli!fedin'a Palermo plane disaster.
answer I might try writing it. - HELEN
Billy Butterfield, Bud Freeman, ·Bobby She can't w'aut past a newsstand or magazine
+++
Haggart, Vic Dickenson, Yank Lawson, Ralph rack without seeing her sad photos and
Note From Sue:
tratunatic details of the whole thing.
Sutton etc. Great night for aural nostalgia.
My mother never told me advice columning would be like
Israel's.mail to relatives in Rtunania bears
United Artists, which once flung anything
this! Next question please?:.... SUE
potentially profitable onto a screen despite the legend, "Let My People Go," so Rumania
. +++
ratings, has seen the light, marched up the without explanation just returns all the mall ...
Sue and Helen:
sawdust trail reading the Gospel According to Rich Las Vegas entrepreneur Dell Coleman's
I have a hard time fmding a guy because I'm not very Walt Disney and will produce "major motion summering in "21" Club partner Sheldon
popular. Tony, who Is 2l,askedme out,and I guess I was grateful pictures designed to appeal to family audien- Tannen's mansion in . the Hampton's after
or something. I'd never been a pushover before but we ended up ces." Its partner-in-mime explains it : Reader's making an offer Sheldon couldn't refuse ... The
In his apartment. Now that I realize how wrong I was, I want to Digest, which has offered G-rated writings lo, Duke of Kent's country estate, Coppins, may
break up, but he says "No!"
these many family decades ... RD Pres. Hobart go to Lcndon showman Vic Lcwnes, at a
He says if I don't keep on with him he'll spread the word Lewis with UA Pres. David Picker noted reported $250,000 or more ... Just a few wuxtrys
around town that I am an easy make, so I'm going with him to millions of Americans currently skip the flicks ago there were eight all-night Bdwy. newstands.
save my reputation ... while losing it!
and agreed "the majority of these people will Now there is one. At 50th. It's \he muggy nights.
If my parents find out they'll never trust me again. (They attend intelligent and entertaining motion
Parents are righting to get talented sprigs
think Tony's a great guy now.) Since he's threatened me, I pictures designed to appeal to the entire Into Julliard School of Music. The brilliant inalmost hate him, and l can't go on being used, but I'm scared of family." Egad, Mary Popplns and Rodgers &amp; structors aren't the whole story: Julliard has
what wlll happen when he spreads the "news" allover town. - 16 Hammerstein and Chitly-Chitty Bang Bang the best security system of any Milnhatlan
AND ·SCARED
tried to tell that to all those cynical fellas years school. No one gets in unless he proves he has ·
"16" And Scared:
business there ... All Miss Americas of the ~
ago. Better late than broke, to coin a cliche.
. well: the ' Nevele resort offered
Tell him two can play h1~ little game: If Tony spreads the
must
be domg
Rheingold Breweries has sponsored the N.
"news," then YOU wiU spread the truth- and what girl would Y. Mets telecasts for hi, these many years. Yogi $500 for any ..one of then'! just to show up. No
chance dating a blackmailer? And mention casually that the first Berra has been coach and now manager of the takers ... Or is that just a tip in the rich sour
person you'll tell will be your father. - SUE
Magnificent Mets for a nice long run. Yogi cream Alps 7
TilE QUESTIONS THEY ASK! .
Helen and Sue:
,
·
We're doing a mural as a sununer art project. lt"s "The
History of Man.'' I'm assigned Adam and Eve. Could you tell me
please: did they have navels? Somebody said tlley weren't born
of women, so they wouldn;t need them. -ARtiST
Dear Artist:
Michel_angelo thought "Yes," oth~r artists thought ''No."
God 11lone knows! - HELEN

j.,_

o•r

""

•

""'"

QUICK QUIZ

.

.

--

_,.

~·

....

~, '

-

... .
'

l-

+++
Dear Rap:
With all this talk of women's liberation, it appears we're
progressing backwards. There were 19 women in Congress ten
years ago, two of them senators, the rest representatives. Today
we have just one woman senator, and only II women in the House
... And there's not one woman governor!
Meanwhile, (mostly male) state legislatures refuse to ratify
• the Equal Rights Amendment, and keep rigid anti-abortlon laws
'tl\e books.
The lew women in Congress have'done outstanding jobs. Why
don't we at home ~rsuade more.qualified women to run for
office -andvoteforlhem? - COLLEGE GIRL
Dear College :
We should; and we could put our candidates in office - for
women hold 53 pet. of the vote.
Here's another of my "out-on-a-limb" pradictions: by 1980 I
believe we 'II have at least 100 women in Congress.- HELEN

African Bird
The secretary bird of Afri·
• ca was named by early naturalists who observed that
an erectile tuft of long black
feathers on the back of the
head looked like a secretary
with· quill pens in his hair,
according to Encyclopaedia
Britannica.

++++

..
ACCORDING tO Manchester Principal Jere~. Edwards, the
: Class AA Red and Black Panthers were 7-3 in 1971, same as
.. Coach C. L. (Johnny) Ecker'sBiue Devils. Edwards said Akron
' Manchester High School is located approximately 10 miles south
of Akron. Most of the residents in that area work either in Akron
or Barberton.

NOIJ.!l'IOS

++++
MANCHES1'ER has 930 pupils in the upper four grades GAHS has 951 in g~ades nine through 12. Mr. Edwards said the
Panthers hav~ several lettermen back from last year, and that
they are looking forward to the long trip "down on the river."
Earher, Dateline "measured" the map distance between
GaiU_poiis and Akron (by rule of thumb) and said it was approXllllately 160 miles. Principal Edwards said hehad checked
with the Akron Triple A, and it is 205 miles. Edwards also said
plans are being made to bring the Manchester band to the Old
French City for the 1972 ~eason opener.

ee&gt;s-54 11.+\A,T
5t)S IN!?Ss IS

THAT W Y' 1N P'

++++

1-Gro~

6-Suppart

11-lm porhnce
16-Sedate

WIN AT BRIDGE

'Reading' Defense Is Key
24

.J94
• Q85
• Q954
.K7 5

WEST

EAST

.K63
• AKJ974
t73
... Q9

. 72
.6 2
tJJ08 6
.10864 $

SOUTII

(D)

.AQIO BS
• 103

tAK 2
.AJ 2

Both vulnerable

West

z•

North
2•
Pass

I.4.

East South ·
Pass

Pass
Pass
Opening lead- • K

By Oswald &amp; ,James· Jacoby
A scientist endeavors toreplace appearance by facts·. A
bridge player should try to
replace a probability by a
sure thing any time he has
that opportunity.
You can see that West
holds exactly two clubs including the queen. After all,
the four hands are right in
front of you.
Declarer can't get this
look, but this time he doesn't
need it. Good play can show
him the club situation just as
surely as if he were looking
at all four hands.
West cashes two heart
tricks and leads a third one
to kill dummy's queen. East
ruffs and South overruffs.
South leads a club to dum my's king and tries the
trump finesse. West gets his
third trick and leads a trump
back. South draws the last
trump.
At this point South knows

that West started with six
hearts and three spades and
therefore holds a total of four
cards in the minor suits. He
plays out his last trump and
discards one of dummy's
clubs.
Now he plays three rounds
of diamonds leaving everyone with two cards. One of
East's cards is the jack of
diamonds . His other card is
a club. One of West's cards
is a heart so he also has one ·
club . The queen or clubs is
sure to fail .
What would Scuth have
done if West had started with
three clubs to the queen'
Gone down one trick. You
can't win against some card
combinations .
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

of 1rees

1

21-Unloeks
22-Part of
fortification
23-Seml·precious
alone
24-Balance
25-Cry of cat
26-Vapld
28-Stories
3D-Precipitation
32-Compus po int
33- Teutonic: deity'
34-Ea&amp;s
35-Man's nickname

written

74-Wildernets
76-Aigonquian
Indian

131--Game at cards
132-Maln

1...
3'

Pass
Pass

LOOSE NOTES - Jim Sigler told Vernon Deweese recently
that he picked his first ripe tomalll on Sunday, June II. Deweese,
the Tribune's advertising manager, put a note on our desk, but
somehow it became "lost" In the shuffle ... Mrs. Ruth Masters,
retired GAHS teacher, received a newspaper clipping recently
from her daughter and son4n~aw, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Nelson. It
appeared in the June 8 edition of the Van Nuys, Calif., News, in
Bernie MiUigan's sports coltunn. Said Milligan: "Shame on
Scully. Referring to a new ball player, he lllld all the athlete is
from Gai-JP-o~is, Ohio. The late 0 . 0. Mcintyre, also from there,
would spin In his sepulchre if he had heard that . Oscar Odd,
which was his name, put down with firm charm all who called it
anything but Galla-poi·EECE. Back along the Ohio River we said
it Mcintyre's way. Of course, out here in California, they may
call in San Juan Capistrano." Apparently Milligan wane!erring
to Gallla'sDaveRoberts, now a major ,league pitcher for the redhot Houston Astros. Vin Scully is the LA Dodgers' popular radio
annoWlCer. Apparently that guy Milligan is from around this
area. Not too many people know how to pronouce Gallipolis.

133-Eiiclt
135-Deflte
138-Fondle

139- Fiy ing mammals
14D-Footlike part
141 - Period ol time
142-Proc:eed

39-Snatch
40-Son of

97-Sword
99-Leafy veaetable

~dam

FACTS

48~
HECK'S REG.

41 - MIId expleti'ie

101-Brash

77-Repair
143-Kin&amp;: of Bashan
44-Call
78-RiYer In Arl zoM 144-Two at onca
46-Above
79- State of being
145-Adheslve
48- Wciraod
thoroughly
substance
soaked
147-Figure of speech 49-Cover surface of
50-Go by water
82- Harblnger
149-Solt food
51- Frock
84-Anon
150-Chellenged
52-Lano
85-Seed eoalina:
152-Pitttlers
53- Spreadlni out
86-Journey
154-Preclp!tous
from a cente r
BB-Transaction
!56-Courageous
55-Fragments.
89- lncarnation of
158-Funeral*ong
56-Highway
3r-Soft down from
Vittlnu
159- Procrastinalion
5i -Rom11n offitl111
90-Clerical collar 160-Barter
linen
58-Pertainlns to
37-Total
92- Ate to get thin 161-f'ouncled
the sun
38-label
94-Deelerations
COWN
61-Aneient
4~RUiitd
98-Sea in Asl11
Irishman
mountain
99-Cries like dove
1- HuYtnly body
63- Green la nd
crest
lOD-Teke un lawfully
2- Muslcal drama
ttttlement
42-Negatlve
102-Stage whisper
,(J- Church bench
t:i4- Twlst
43-Muelcal
103-Tke urlal
4-Symbol for tin
68-Verslon
Instrument
104- Yallow c cher
5---Worm
70- let eo
44- Hutane
105-DIYina: bird
6-More courageoua 71 - Powerful
4!5--Hindranet
106-Docks
47- Reeoytr
'' 108- l arge bird .
7-Tolcl
persons
8--Frull drink
13- kettledrum
109-River In Siberia
49.- Frult
9- Symbol for
74-Court order
110--Hebrew letter
ulclum
75-Palnful spots
50-Wnken
HI - Tropical tree
tl
77- l•lond In
51-Ctaltr In cloth 11 2-PIIp!tate
fl . d
10- Suuenong
the doer
Mediterranean
54- Cha ll enge
114- Fa ir Deal
It- Manservant
78-Contest
55- l•ne
ag:enc'r' (ln lt.)
12-Matu red
SO- Mountalnt of
56-Lifts
11 6-Beverage
13-Spanlsh plu ral
Europe
59- Bone of body
117- Pert of jacket
artic le
81 - lnsect egg
fiO-IOO ,OOO n.~pees 1!9-Mounta ln
14- Gu ido 's low note 83-Ethloplan tllle
pa551!5
6 2-Dtlu d•
120-Cipher .
IS-Weirder
8-4-Crippled
64- Cook In hot
122-Con]unction
Hi- Part of fireplace 87- 0an&amp;:el'li
wtttr
124-Devourtd
17-Menure of
89.:....Dim lnish
weight
65-Nott of acate
125-Spheroid
18-Thrte·lotd
sloth
90-Gretea
66-B•bylonien
126-Retreat
19- Send for1h
91~Fairy In
dtity
12B-Fem11le deer
20-LThinks
" Ttle Tempest"
67-Rivt~r ln Scolland 129-Gatlic

107-Let It sllnd
111-Man's nlcknem•
112-Game pl'ayedon
tlortabaek

,liMO, PRO;ESSOR
~lj} ~AS 8fEN .~~~.MID
4CT ING PllES ietENT
CIF TJ.!E COLLEGE.

lltUSTI£1

fj.ji NI(

$277

20 GALLON PLASTIC

G~ARBAGE

FOLDING BED

$2''

20224

HECK'S REG. s3.99

IN~l.U ENC E

ON

BADMINTON
SET
• Two,.., '".._ with "'""""'-fh. wlhl
n.,.... tlrlllfl. l'inyl 9'ipl
• ll11bbtf.ti~ plllrtic lho,M~M;od

HOSE HANGERS
.

118-Directlon
119-Vehlcles

KENNY WIGGINS Is to be commended for his fine efforts in
establishing a ball field for youngsters taking pert in the summer
baseball programs.
Kenny donated hts·time and money in establishing a field in
upper Mookey, near Minersville.
Understand that if It hadn't been for Kenny the children of
Pomeroy would have been denied the baseball program as they
did not have a ball field .
The field Is in excellent condition and we certainly
congratulate KeMy for his fine effort. In addition to making the
baU field a reality KeMy coaches a girls' softball team.
This county can stand to have more people like Kenny ·
Wiggins.

121-Cc:lmmanded
123-Prtpotltlon
125-Waahed
12r-Rem11lnder
127-A continent
129-L)'rlc: poem
13~Royel

131-0bHe
132-Untldy
13'-Heacil:"r
13r-Century plent
137-Leuoed
139-Tor~o

l4D- Bre:r:lllen
tiiUir)'

144 -Suppllcete
1'5-Swordsm•n'e
dummyateke
146-Supertatrve

'

153-Pronoun

155---lnltlals of 26th
Prteldtnt
157-Sun 10d

no w ?

Send $1 '"JACOBY MODERN book
to: "Win at Bridgt," (c/o tltis 11ew1·
pcper), P.O. Box .olf9, Rodio Cilf
Slotion, H... York, H.Y. 10019.

TilE 32chlldren In the Head Start program at Salisbury and
their teachers, Mrs. Vinas Lee and John Arnott extend their
sincere thanks to the Pomeroy National Bank and the R. C.
Bottling Co. for the fine to.ur of the business establishments offered them Friday.
QUITE AN attractive addition to Crow's Steak House is a
colored portrait of Col. Sanders of Kentucky Fried Chicken fame.

•

h111d on this bidding.
TODAY'S QUESTION

You respond one heart and he
bids two dubs. What do you do

HECK'S
REG.

$1889

To the many friends of Harold Smith the news of his sudden
death Friday night was sad to hear.
We extend our deepest sympathy to his wife, Evelyn, and
sons, Bryce and Mark.
Meigs County has lost a fine .citizen.

TI-lE. STUDEt.!Ti

you don't have • slam-type

Again your partner opens one

$1''
1-PLAYER.

• Cotto~~ ..,

witt\"'" top

• Go~,..,., .,iny\ "OIT.,m, "'"'

·~.

1

HAIR SETTER

1..-+-b+-l~~

'

Sixth Ax Murder_ In
Three Days Unsolved
have been arrested .
The latest victim was Keith
-The apparent ax murder of a
Bolla,
20, Downey, whose body
20-year-old Downey, Calif.,
man brought to llix the number was found in a vacant house in
of persons hacked, stabbed or Compton Friday. Police said
beaten Ill death in the Lcng he apparenUy had been killed
Beach • Compton area since with an &amp;l 12 to 18 hours
earlier. There was evidence of
Thursday.
a struggle, but Qfficers said he
Five of the murders were In had not been robbed.
lhll belch city; which baa only
Two 18-year-old youths were
an elght.nlan homicide detail . . being questioned by Long
The lliJth occurred in adjacent Beach police for the slaying of
Compton.
·
security guard Michael Paul
Lonl Beach pollee said there Kach, 61, on Thursday. He was
wu no cpnnection between the stabbed and beaten while
ldlllnp, which lnchllled one trying to capture two burglary
double mlll'der. Throe suspects susuects. •
WNG BEACll, Calif. (UP!)

'I
;

I .

0

No dry heot to toke,.., ~f. ond ,h;.,. ollf ol )'0111' t!Gif , Clll'k fN' h.ir wit!l
btoutif, i ~911'1i tt . l~dY dti atb'acti,.. .. ._~ • •.,...,lo~&gt;J " tpt. bag . ld.ollor lro.. l
ood •loro qe. "ww•olou• way lo

•"P your hair btaulif11l olld OCO ftom itall~.

.ITALIAN
BOTTLES

144

88

HECK'S REG.
12.18

Heck's Reg. $21.96

2 CU. FT.

SHAG RUG
•
VACUUM
ATTACHMENT

PEAT MOSS

EI CHAIR PADS.

77 HECK'S REG.

77t;
HECK'S REG. 11.29

$5.96
NORELCO HOME
BEAUTY SALON

MRS. 0 . B. S1'0uT of Middleport Is seeking a Middleport
mother who has a daughter living in Lakeland, Fla.
Mrl. Stout received a long distance call Wednesday Alf·
teft\oon from a girl at Lakeland who slated .that her molher,
whom abe called Mary ,lived next door to Mrs. Stout and a£ked if
Mrs. Stout would please have the mother call her .
Mn. Stool went next door to the Mrs. Kay CecU apartments
but found no one livlnB there except one married couple.
U there Is a lady living In Middleport with the ftrst name of
Mary who has a daughter in Lakeland, Fla., please get in touch.

NEXT WEEK I will be on vacation, getting ready for son
Jim's wedding on July I til PamelaNeutzllng.

HECK'S REG. $1.38

SCHICK

lo!AVE A •cALMING•

You, South, hold:

club. This time you hold:
.AJH .K8763 tS ... Q107

CANS

HECK'S REG. s399

~E'I. L.

"'KJH ¥K8763 t5 ... QIO!
Whut do you do now?

A-Just bid lour Mearts. This
contract should be Ironclad, but t;;;T-

!'Katie's Korner
By Katie Crow

~i

113--Great Lake
115-Aulslant
116-lnter[ectlon

endlnl
1,.7-Afternooon
1)111)'
1&lt;48-Recede
149-Dance step
151-nO
• tI a 1 ICI It

2.77

1

HECK'S REG. 69*

?

The Declaration oflndependence, the Constitution
and the Bill of Rights are
enshrined In the National
Archives Exhlblllon Hall in
Washington, D.C. The
World Almanlfe notes that
these documents-are sealed
in glass-and-bronze cases
filled with Inert helium gas,
and can be lowered at a
moment's notice into a
large shockproof and fire·
proof safe.

HECK'S REG.

TWENTY YEARS AGO, ftom the files of the Daily Tribune and
weekly Gallia Times ... John Morgan named to fill vacancy on
city commission ... U.S. Cornett to head Knights of Columbus ...
Ron Canaday, 19, completes basic training at Lack\and AFB in
Texas ... Lancaster wins annual SOGA tournament. Gallipolis
finishes third. Howard B. Saunders second in medalist play .

93-Perlorms
95---Measure
duration ot
96-Wooden pin

42-Female relatives 105-Wath
43-Nerve. network 106-Haul

PLASTIC

++++

•
92-Fate

HOT .POTS

LAUNDRY
BASKETS

++ + +

.

WORLD ALMANAC

FISHING VEST

IT will be the first time in history GAHS has played an Akron
team in any sport. Years ago, the Blue Devil squads played
Columbus teams in both football and basketball. To our
kno":ledge, GAHS has never played any Ohio team farther north
than Coltunbus.

The biddfng has been:
West North East
Pass

ELECTRIC

++ ++

Joined Cburcb
First U.S. president to join
a church subsequent to his
inauguration was Qwight D.
Eisenhower. He took the full
communicant rites from baptism through confirmation
at the National Presbyterian
Church of Washington, D.C.

27- Rocky till!
29-Solar disk
31 - Conjuncti on
36--Girl's name
37-brinks slowly

- 1 P.M. TO 7 P.M. ONLY

SUNDAY, JUNE 25th

GAHS Athletic Direetor Ed Stewart said that in 1973, when
GAHS pays Akron a visit, Blue Devillans can get there by going
to Mari~tl/l on Rt. 7then hit I-n which takes you right into the big
ctty. It ts a four hour drive;

SUNDAY, JUNE 25, 1972
59-Mediterranean
yessel
7D-Ac:tual
71 - S!!same
72-Muslc; as

...

.

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS

~

AKRON Manchester High School, Gallia Academy's new
openmg game~oothallfoe on Memorial Field on Saturday, Sept. !f·'
(2p. m.) 1s a member of a seven-team Akron Suburban League.

'

on

NORTH

First Female lo Space
First woman io travel in
space was Valentina Vladimirova Tereshkova of Russia. She orbited the earth 48
times in a 70-hour and 50·
minute space flight that
las.!fd from June 16 to June
19. 1963 .

./ll.l .. ....

Q-Why is the common

frog valuable !o scientist!?
A-rts organs are .similar
Q~ WI•ere is the world's. captured iQ th~ Crimean War
to
those of larger animals.
nntu .~talact ite aryan?
of 1854:1856.
A- In Luray Caverns, Va . ·
Q- Do ' trees drink
fi'rom the organ, the music
of the g r e a t composers water that falls on
eehoes among the rock for- leaves?
mations.
A-No. Lea'OOS are waterproof ; trees get their water
Q-'fhe inauguration uf f1·om the ground.
wl~at U.S. president was the
first to be televised?
Q-How many members
A - T h a I of President of President franklin Roose·
Harry S. Truman in Janu- v e 1t's cabin e t served
ary, 1949.
throughout his entire 12·
year term?
Q-Jo'ram what materia! is
A- Two- Harold lck~s.
the Victoria Cl:oss, most
secretary
of . the Interior,
highly prized British mili·
and
Frances
Perkins, secretary decoration, made?
·
A-MPt~l t~kPT1 from gun.;; tary of Labor.

+++

Dear 16:
Two Utile words will stop this louse : statutory rape! He's 21
-an adult; you're a minor. If he doesn't want to be a noni'aying
guest of the State, he'd better beg YOU to keep quiet! -HELEN

,.... ............. -

,.. '

CHAIR

CHAISE

$122

$1'' HECK'2.88S REG.

HECK'S REG. 11.66

1

30LS .

.

FOLDING BOAT
SEAT

$377
HECK'S REG.

14.99

HECK'S REG. 88' .

9 oz. J&amp;J

BABY LOTION

66e

6''

DAISY AIR RIFLE
America 's best B-B Gun value and a long-time $
favorite. "Big gun" features include lever-

cocking, fravity-feed, 350-shot repeating action,
·
controlled velocity and realistic styling. Sturdy
steel construction.
HECK'S II,, $&amp;.99

SPORTS DEPT.

MODEL 102

.

1

•HECK'S REG. 1.08

·~
lotion

12 oz
LUSTRE CREME

HAIR SPRAY

39t;

HECK'S REG. 69'

�., ..

'

14 - The Sunday 'l'lrne&amp;Senlinei, June 25, 1m

., _e.J $

.

CQW ' ')P"'WP ?UC:

·m

g~;;uJu

m

Voice along Br'Way

Generation Rap
By Helen and'Sue Bottel

Berra also is an owner and TV conunerclsl
BY JACK O'BRIAN
spieler
for the soft drink called Yoo-Hoo. Now
AH, FOR A NIGHT
the biggest conunercial beer: manag..- ·Berta
WITH GROUCliO
: NEW YORK (KF~) - Quality always Is in merger has been . effectuated with nary an
.style : The Marx Bros. otdle, "A Night in antitrust burp from the Justice Dep't Casablanca," gets a glitter-revival June 23 at Rheingold has bought the Puerto Rico and
the Little Carnegie for what's hoped will be a big Caribbean franchise for Yoo-Hoo as Yogi's soda
run ... Groucho's been Taken Up this year in all glass runneth over ... Now if Willie Mays keeps
his quirks and romps, a veritable dirty.old Elvis homering, Seaver keeps winning and Agee'quits
... The amazing. true marginal graffiti : young aging, it's subtropical home.free for Yog.
+++
Everything was done on a grand ,scale at
gals really dig him, with propositions and all 1
Artist:
Lee Wiley, a gentle giant of vocal jazz, will · Bob Hope's "Evening" .at the neighboring
This navel battle can be settled with an olive branch be starred at the Newport Festival-New York Garden State Arts Center In New Jersey
palrited over the point in question. (Or whatever kind of foliage bash July 4 at Carnegie Hall ... Accompanied by (inaybe the loveliest concert hall along the
they had back then.) - SUE
the completely right group: briUiant Bobby entire Atlantic seaboard; all the way to Punta
+++
Hackett on cornet, Teddy Wils&lt;m at the piano, del Fuego): tickets went for a nifty $100 and a'
Rap: •
guitarist Bucky Pizzarelli, George Duvivier and sybaritic gourmet buffet for the thousands who
We were talking abaut pollution the other day and we,got to Don Lamond ... Eddie Condon, who plays' the attended was catered all the way from Radio
thinking: What would happen if every kind of motor or machine- world's most famoils siHtring ukulele, has City's fabulous (am! fabulous'Priced) Forum Of
run vehicle (cars, trains, buses, planes, trurks, etc.) were . enlisted sax fiend Barney Bigard (ri!lht name, the XII Caesars.
banned for a year? Or somebody said "Zap!" and they stopped Albany Bigard), tile explosively melodious Wild
Insurance underwriters have gone to the
running'
feds
with suspicions about a possible Invasion of
BiU Davison, the merry Max Kaminsky, WOlle
Would we all die or would we somehow · make it• the Lion Sll)ith, Joe Thomas, Benny Morton, a big private security firm by organized crime.
WHATIFFER
Dick Hayman, J. C. Higginbotham and similar Scary if true ... Ex-Queen Sotaya's back In .
Whatlffer :
long-bung stars ... The C;irnegie Hall bash will Rome after her ill-starred romance with Franco
That's a great Idea for a science fiction novel. If I had the close with "The World's Greatest Jazz Band";. Indovina, lli!fedin'a Palermo plane disaster.
answer I might try writing it. - HELEN
Billy Butterfield, Bud Freeman, ·Bobby She can't w'aut past a newsstand or magazine
+++
Haggart, Vic Dickenson, Yank Lawson, Ralph rack without seeing her sad photos and
Note From Sue:
tratunatic details of the whole thing.
Sutton etc. Great night for aural nostalgia.
My mother never told me advice columning would be like
Israel's.mail to relatives in Rtunania bears
United Artists, which once flung anything
this! Next question please?:.... SUE
potentially profitable onto a screen despite the legend, "Let My People Go," so Rumania
. +++
ratings, has seen the light, marched up the without explanation just returns all the mall ...
Sue and Helen:
sawdust trail reading the Gospel According to Rich Las Vegas entrepreneur Dell Coleman's
I have a hard time fmding a guy because I'm not very Walt Disney and will produce "major motion summering in "21" Club partner Sheldon
popular. Tony, who Is 2l,askedme out,and I guess I was grateful pictures designed to appeal to family audien- Tannen's mansion in . the Hampton's after
or something. I'd never been a pushover before but we ended up ces." Its partner-in-mime explains it : Reader's making an offer Sheldon couldn't refuse ... The
In his apartment. Now that I realize how wrong I was, I want to Digest, which has offered G-rated writings lo, Duke of Kent's country estate, Coppins, may
break up, but he says "No!"
these many family decades ... RD Pres. Hobart go to Lcndon showman Vic Lcwnes, at a
He says if I don't keep on with him he'll spread the word Lewis with UA Pres. David Picker noted reported $250,000 or more ... Just a few wuxtrys
around town that I am an easy make, so I'm going with him to millions of Americans currently skip the flicks ago there were eight all-night Bdwy. newstands.
save my reputation ... while losing it!
and agreed "the majority of these people will Now there is one. At 50th. It's \he muggy nights.
If my parents find out they'll never trust me again. (They attend intelligent and entertaining motion
Parents are righting to get talented sprigs
think Tony's a great guy now.) Since he's threatened me, I pictures designed to appeal to the entire Into Julliard School of Music. The brilliant inalmost hate him, and l can't go on being used, but I'm scared of family." Egad, Mary Popplns and Rodgers &amp; structors aren't the whole story: Julliard has
what wlll happen when he spreads the "news" allover town. - 16 Hammerstein and Chitly-Chitty Bang Bang the best security system of any Milnhatlan
AND ·SCARED
tried to tell that to all those cynical fellas years school. No one gets in unless he proves he has ·
"16" And Scared:
business there ... All Miss Americas of the ~
ago. Better late than broke, to coin a cliche.
. well: the ' Nevele resort offered
Tell him two can play h1~ little game: If Tony spreads the
must
be domg
Rheingold Breweries has sponsored the N.
"news," then YOU wiU spread the truth- and what girl would Y. Mets telecasts for hi, these many years. Yogi $500 for any ..one of then'! just to show up. No
chance dating a blackmailer? And mention casually that the first Berra has been coach and now manager of the takers ... Or is that just a tip in the rich sour
person you'll tell will be your father. - SUE
Magnificent Mets for a nice long run. Yogi cream Alps 7
TilE QUESTIONS THEY ASK! .
Helen and Sue:
,
·
We're doing a mural as a sununer art project. lt"s "The
History of Man.'' I'm assigned Adam and Eve. Could you tell me
please: did they have navels? Somebody said tlley weren't born
of women, so they wouldn;t need them. -ARtiST
Dear Artist:
Michel_angelo thought "Yes," oth~r artists thought ''No."
God 11lone knows! - HELEN

j.,_

o•r

""

•

""'"

QUICK QUIZ

.

.

--

_,.

~·

....

~, '

-

... .
'

l-

+++
Dear Rap:
With all this talk of women's liberation, it appears we're
progressing backwards. There were 19 women in Congress ten
years ago, two of them senators, the rest representatives. Today
we have just one woman senator, and only II women in the House
... And there's not one woman governor!
Meanwhile, (mostly male) state legislatures refuse to ratify
• the Equal Rights Amendment, and keep rigid anti-abortlon laws
'tl\e books.
The lew women in Congress have'done outstanding jobs. Why
don't we at home ~rsuade more.qualified women to run for
office -andvoteforlhem? - COLLEGE GIRL
Dear College :
We should; and we could put our candidates in office - for
women hold 53 pet. of the vote.
Here's another of my "out-on-a-limb" pradictions: by 1980 I
believe we 'II have at least 100 women in Congress.- HELEN

African Bird
The secretary bird of Afri·
• ca was named by early naturalists who observed that
an erectile tuft of long black
feathers on the back of the
head looked like a secretary
with· quill pens in his hair,
according to Encyclopaedia
Britannica.

++++

..
ACCORDING tO Manchester Principal Jere~. Edwards, the
: Class AA Red and Black Panthers were 7-3 in 1971, same as
.. Coach C. L. (Johnny) Ecker'sBiue Devils. Edwards said Akron
' Manchester High School is located approximately 10 miles south
of Akron. Most of the residents in that area work either in Akron
or Barberton.

NOIJ.!l'IOS

++++
MANCHES1'ER has 930 pupils in the upper four grades GAHS has 951 in g~ades nine through 12. Mr. Edwards said the
Panthers hav~ several lettermen back from last year, and that
they are looking forward to the long trip "down on the river."
Earher, Dateline "measured" the map distance between
GaiU_poiis and Akron (by rule of thumb) and said it was approXllllately 160 miles. Principal Edwards said hehad checked
with the Akron Triple A, and it is 205 miles. Edwards also said
plans are being made to bring the Manchester band to the Old
French City for the 1972 ~eason opener.

ee&gt;s-54 11.+\A,T
5t)S IN!?Ss IS

THAT W Y' 1N P'

++++

1-Gro~

6-Suppart

11-lm porhnce
16-Sedate

WIN AT BRIDGE

'Reading' Defense Is Key
24

.J94
• Q85
• Q954
.K7 5

WEST

EAST

.K63
• AKJ974
t73
... Q9

. 72
.6 2
tJJ08 6
.10864 $

SOUTII

(D)

.AQIO BS
• 103

tAK 2
.AJ 2

Both vulnerable

West

z•

North
2•
Pass

I.4.

East South ·
Pass

Pass
Pass
Opening lead- • K

By Oswald &amp; ,James· Jacoby
A scientist endeavors toreplace appearance by facts·. A
bridge player should try to
replace a probability by a
sure thing any time he has
that opportunity.
You can see that West
holds exactly two clubs including the queen. After all,
the four hands are right in
front of you.
Declarer can't get this
look, but this time he doesn't
need it. Good play can show
him the club situation just as
surely as if he were looking
at all four hands.
West cashes two heart
tricks and leads a third one
to kill dummy's queen. East
ruffs and South overruffs.
South leads a club to dum my's king and tries the
trump finesse. West gets his
third trick and leads a trump
back. South draws the last
trump.
At this point South knows

that West started with six
hearts and three spades and
therefore holds a total of four
cards in the minor suits. He
plays out his last trump and
discards one of dummy's
clubs.
Now he plays three rounds
of diamonds leaving everyone with two cards. One of
East's cards is the jack of
diamonds . His other card is
a club. One of West's cards
is a heart so he also has one ·
club . The queen or clubs is
sure to fail .
What would Scuth have
done if West had started with
three clubs to the queen'
Gone down one trick. You
can't win against some card
combinations .
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

of 1rees

1

21-Unloeks
22-Part of
fortification
23-Seml·precious
alone
24-Balance
25-Cry of cat
26-Vapld
28-Stories
3D-Precipitation
32-Compus po int
33- Teutonic: deity'
34-Ea&amp;s
35-Man's nickname

written

74-Wildernets
76-Aigonquian
Indian

131--Game at cards
132-Maln

1...
3'

Pass
Pass

LOOSE NOTES - Jim Sigler told Vernon Deweese recently
that he picked his first ripe tomalll on Sunday, June II. Deweese,
the Tribune's advertising manager, put a note on our desk, but
somehow it became "lost" In the shuffle ... Mrs. Ruth Masters,
retired GAHS teacher, received a newspaper clipping recently
from her daughter and son4n~aw, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Nelson. It
appeared in the June 8 edition of the Van Nuys, Calif., News, in
Bernie MiUigan's sports coltunn. Said Milligan: "Shame on
Scully. Referring to a new ball player, he lllld all the athlete is
from Gai-JP-o~is, Ohio. The late 0 . 0. Mcintyre, also from there,
would spin In his sepulchre if he had heard that . Oscar Odd,
which was his name, put down with firm charm all who called it
anything but Galla-poi·EECE. Back along the Ohio River we said
it Mcintyre's way. Of course, out here in California, they may
call in San Juan Capistrano." Apparently Milligan wane!erring
to Gallla'sDaveRoberts, now a major ,league pitcher for the redhot Houston Astros. Vin Scully is the LA Dodgers' popular radio
annoWlCer. Apparently that guy Milligan is from around this
area. Not too many people know how to pronouce Gallipolis.

133-Eiiclt
135-Deflte
138-Fondle

139- Fiy ing mammals
14D-Footlike part
141 - Period ol time
142-Proc:eed

39-Snatch
40-Son of

97-Sword
99-Leafy veaetable

~dam

FACTS

48~
HECK'S REG.

41 - MIId expleti'ie

101-Brash

77-Repair
143-Kin&amp;: of Bashan
44-Call
78-RiYer In Arl zoM 144-Two at onca
46-Above
79- State of being
145-Adheslve
48- Wciraod
thoroughly
substance
soaked
147-Figure of speech 49-Cover surface of
50-Go by water
82- Harblnger
149-Solt food
51- Frock
84-Anon
150-Chellenged
52-Lano
85-Seed eoalina:
152-Pitttlers
53- Spreadlni out
86-Journey
154-Preclp!tous
from a cente r
BB-Transaction
!56-Courageous
55-Fragments.
89- lncarnation of
158-Funeral*ong
56-Highway
3r-Soft down from
Vittlnu
159- Procrastinalion
5i -Rom11n offitl111
90-Clerical collar 160-Barter
linen
58-Pertainlns to
37-Total
92- Ate to get thin 161-f'ouncled
the sun
38-label
94-Deelerations
COWN
61-Aneient
4~RUiitd
98-Sea in Asl11
Irishman
mountain
99-Cries like dove
1- HuYtnly body
63- Green la nd
crest
lOD-Teke un lawfully
2- Muslcal drama
ttttlement
42-Negatlve
102-Stage whisper
,(J- Church bench
t:i4- Twlst
43-Muelcal
103-Tke urlal
4-Symbol for tin
68-Verslon
Instrument
104- Yallow c cher
5---Worm
70- let eo
44- Hutane
105-DIYina: bird
6-More courageoua 71 - Powerful
4!5--Hindranet
106-Docks
47- Reeoytr
'' 108- l arge bird .
7-Tolcl
persons
8--Frull drink
13- kettledrum
109-River In Siberia
49.- Frult
9- Symbol for
74-Court order
110--Hebrew letter
ulclum
75-Palnful spots
50-Wnken
HI - Tropical tree
tl
77- l•lond In
51-Ctaltr In cloth 11 2-PIIp!tate
fl . d
10- Suuenong
the doer
Mediterranean
54- Cha ll enge
114- Fa ir Deal
It- Manservant
78-Contest
55- l•ne
ag:enc'r' (ln lt.)
12-Matu red
SO- Mountalnt of
56-Lifts
11 6-Beverage
13-Spanlsh plu ral
Europe
59- Bone of body
117- Pert of jacket
artic le
81 - lnsect egg
fiO-IOO ,OOO n.~pees 1!9-Mounta ln
14- Gu ido 's low note 83-Ethloplan tllle
pa551!5
6 2-Dtlu d•
120-Cipher .
IS-Weirder
8-4-Crippled
64- Cook In hot
122-Con]unction
Hi- Part of fireplace 87- 0an&amp;:el'li
wtttr
124-Devourtd
17-Menure of
89.:....Dim lnish
weight
65-Nott of acate
125-Spheroid
18-Thrte·lotd
sloth
90-Gretea
66-B•bylonien
126-Retreat
19- Send for1h
91~Fairy In
dtity
12B-Fem11le deer
20-LThinks
" Ttle Tempest"
67-Rivt~r ln Scolland 129-Gatlic

107-Let It sllnd
111-Man's nlcknem•
112-Game pl'ayedon
tlortabaek

,liMO, PRO;ESSOR
~lj} ~AS 8fEN .~~~.MID
4CT ING PllES ietENT
CIF TJ.!E COLLEGE.

lltUSTI£1

fj.ji NI(

$277

20 GALLON PLASTIC

G~ARBAGE

FOLDING BED

$2''

20224

HECK'S REG. s3.99

IN~l.U ENC E

ON

BADMINTON
SET
• Two,.., '".._ with "'""""'-fh. wlhl
n.,.... tlrlllfl. l'inyl 9'ipl
• ll11bbtf.ti~ plllrtic lho,M~M;od

HOSE HANGERS
.

118-Directlon
119-Vehlcles

KENNY WIGGINS Is to be commended for his fine efforts in
establishing a ball field for youngsters taking pert in the summer
baseball programs.
Kenny donated hts·time and money in establishing a field in
upper Mookey, near Minersville.
Understand that if It hadn't been for Kenny the children of
Pomeroy would have been denied the baseball program as they
did not have a ball field .
The field Is in excellent condition and we certainly
congratulate KeMy for his fine effort. In addition to making the
baU field a reality KeMy coaches a girls' softball team.
This county can stand to have more people like Kenny ·
Wiggins.

121-Cc:lmmanded
123-Prtpotltlon
125-Waahed
12r-Rem11lnder
127-A continent
129-L)'rlc: poem
13~Royel

131-0bHe
132-Untldy
13'-Heacil:"r
13r-Century plent
137-Leuoed
139-Tor~o

l4D- Bre:r:lllen
tiiUir)'

144 -Suppllcete
1'5-Swordsm•n'e
dummyateke
146-Supertatrve

'

153-Pronoun

155---lnltlals of 26th
Prteldtnt
157-Sun 10d

no w ?

Send $1 '"JACOBY MODERN book
to: "Win at Bridgt," (c/o tltis 11ew1·
pcper), P.O. Box .olf9, Rodio Cilf
Slotion, H... York, H.Y. 10019.

TilE 32chlldren In the Head Start program at Salisbury and
their teachers, Mrs. Vinas Lee and John Arnott extend their
sincere thanks to the Pomeroy National Bank and the R. C.
Bottling Co. for the fine to.ur of the business establishments offered them Friday.
QUITE AN attractive addition to Crow's Steak House is a
colored portrait of Col. Sanders of Kentucky Fried Chicken fame.

•

h111d on this bidding.
TODAY'S QUESTION

You respond one heart and he
bids two dubs. What do you do

HECK'S
REG.

$1889

To the many friends of Harold Smith the news of his sudden
death Friday night was sad to hear.
We extend our deepest sympathy to his wife, Evelyn, and
sons, Bryce and Mark.
Meigs County has lost a fine .citizen.

TI-lE. STUDEt.!Ti

you don't have • slam-type

Again your partner opens one

$1''
1-PLAYER.

• Cotto~~ ..,

witt\"'" top

• Go~,..,., .,iny\ "OIT.,m, "'"'

·~.

1

HAIR SETTER

1..-+-b+-l~~

'

Sixth Ax Murder_ In
Three Days Unsolved
have been arrested .
The latest victim was Keith
-The apparent ax murder of a
Bolla,
20, Downey, whose body
20-year-old Downey, Calif.,
man brought to llix the number was found in a vacant house in
of persons hacked, stabbed or Compton Friday. Police said
beaten Ill death in the Lcng he apparenUy had been killed
Beach • Compton area since with an &amp;l 12 to 18 hours
earlier. There was evidence of
Thursday.
a struggle, but Qfficers said he
Five of the murders were In had not been robbed.
lhll belch city; which baa only
Two 18-year-old youths were
an elght.nlan homicide detail . . being questioned by Long
The lliJth occurred in adjacent Beach police for the slaying of
Compton.
·
security guard Michael Paul
Lonl Beach pollee said there Kach, 61, on Thursday. He was
wu no cpnnection between the stabbed and beaten while
ldlllnp, which lnchllled one trying to capture two burglary
double mlll'der. Throe suspects susuects. •
WNG BEACll, Calif. (UP!)

'I
;

I .

0

No dry heot to toke,.., ~f. ond ,h;.,. ollf ol )'0111' t!Gif , Clll'k fN' h.ir wit!l
btoutif, i ~911'1i tt . l~dY dti atb'acti,.. .. ._~ • •.,...,lo~&gt;J " tpt. bag . ld.ollor lro.. l
ood •loro qe. "ww•olou• way lo

•"P your hair btaulif11l olld OCO ftom itall~.

.ITALIAN
BOTTLES

144

88

HECK'S REG.
12.18

Heck's Reg. $21.96

2 CU. FT.

SHAG RUG
•
VACUUM
ATTACHMENT

PEAT MOSS

EI CHAIR PADS.

77 HECK'S REG.

77t;
HECK'S REG. 11.29

$5.96
NORELCO HOME
BEAUTY SALON

MRS. 0 . B. S1'0uT of Middleport Is seeking a Middleport
mother who has a daughter living in Lakeland, Fla.
Mrl. Stout received a long distance call Wednesday Alf·
teft\oon from a girl at Lakeland who slated .that her molher,
whom abe called Mary ,lived next door to Mrs. Stout and a£ked if
Mrs. Stout would please have the mother call her .
Mn. Stool went next door to the Mrs. Kay CecU apartments
but found no one livlnB there except one married couple.
U there Is a lady living In Middleport with the ftrst name of
Mary who has a daughter in Lakeland, Fla., please get in touch.

NEXT WEEK I will be on vacation, getting ready for son
Jim's wedding on July I til PamelaNeutzllng.

HECK'S REG. $1.38

SCHICK

lo!AVE A •cALMING•

You, South, hold:

club. This time you hold:
.AJH .K8763 tS ... Q107

CANS

HECK'S REG. s399

~E'I. L.

"'KJH ¥K8763 t5 ... QIO!
Whut do you do now?

A-Just bid lour Mearts. This
contract should be Ironclad, but t;;;T-

!'Katie's Korner
By Katie Crow

~i

113--Great Lake
115-Aulslant
116-lnter[ectlon

endlnl
1,.7-Afternooon
1)111)'
1&lt;48-Recede
149-Dance step
151-nO
• tI a 1 ICI It

2.77

1

HECK'S REG. 69*

?

The Declaration oflndependence, the Constitution
and the Bill of Rights are
enshrined In the National
Archives Exhlblllon Hall in
Washington, D.C. The
World Almanlfe notes that
these documents-are sealed
in glass-and-bronze cases
filled with Inert helium gas,
and can be lowered at a
moment's notice into a
large shockproof and fire·
proof safe.

HECK'S REG.

TWENTY YEARS AGO, ftom the files of the Daily Tribune and
weekly Gallia Times ... John Morgan named to fill vacancy on
city commission ... U.S. Cornett to head Knights of Columbus ...
Ron Canaday, 19, completes basic training at Lack\and AFB in
Texas ... Lancaster wins annual SOGA tournament. Gallipolis
finishes third. Howard B. Saunders second in medalist play .

93-Perlorms
95---Measure
duration ot
96-Wooden pin

42-Female relatives 105-Wath
43-Nerve. network 106-Haul

PLASTIC

++++

•
92-Fate

HOT .POTS

LAUNDRY
BASKETS

++ + +

.

WORLD ALMANAC

FISHING VEST

IT will be the first time in history GAHS has played an Akron
team in any sport. Years ago, the Blue Devil squads played
Columbus teams in both football and basketball. To our
kno":ledge, GAHS has never played any Ohio team farther north
than Coltunbus.

The biddfng has been:
West North East
Pass

ELECTRIC

++ ++

Joined Cburcb
First U.S. president to join
a church subsequent to his
inauguration was Qwight D.
Eisenhower. He took the full
communicant rites from baptism through confirmation
at the National Presbyterian
Church of Washington, D.C.

27- Rocky till!
29-Solar disk
31 - Conjuncti on
36--Girl's name
37-brinks slowly

- 1 P.M. TO 7 P.M. ONLY

SUNDAY, JUNE 25th

GAHS Athletic Direetor Ed Stewart said that in 1973, when
GAHS pays Akron a visit, Blue Devillans can get there by going
to Mari~tl/l on Rt. 7then hit I-n which takes you right into the big
ctty. It ts a four hour drive;

SUNDAY, JUNE 25, 1972
59-Mediterranean
yessel
7D-Ac:tual
71 - S!!same
72-Muslc; as

...

.

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS

~

AKRON Manchester High School, Gallia Academy's new
openmg game~oothallfoe on Memorial Field on Saturday, Sept. !f·'
(2p. m.) 1s a member of a seven-team Akron Suburban League.

'

on

NORTH

First Female lo Space
First woman io travel in
space was Valentina Vladimirova Tereshkova of Russia. She orbited the earth 48
times in a 70-hour and 50·
minute space flight that
las.!fd from June 16 to June
19. 1963 .

./ll.l .. ....

Q-Why is the common

frog valuable !o scientist!?
A-rts organs are .similar
Q~ WI•ere is the world's. captured iQ th~ Crimean War
to
those of larger animals.
nntu .~talact ite aryan?
of 1854:1856.
A- In Luray Caverns, Va . ·
Q- Do ' trees drink
fi'rom the organ, the music
of the g r e a t composers water that falls on
eehoes among the rock for- leaves?
mations.
A-No. Lea'OOS are waterproof ; trees get their water
Q-'fhe inauguration uf f1·om the ground.
wl~at U.S. president was the
first to be televised?
Q-How many members
A - T h a I of President of President franklin Roose·
Harry S. Truman in Janu- v e 1t's cabin e t served
ary, 1949.
throughout his entire 12·
year term?
Q-Jo'ram what materia! is
A- Two- Harold lck~s.
the Victoria Cl:oss, most
secretary
of . the Interior,
highly prized British mili·
and
Frances
Perkins, secretary decoration, made?
·
A-MPt~l t~kPT1 from gun.;; tary of Labor.

+++

Dear 16:
Two Utile words will stop this louse : statutory rape! He's 21
-an adult; you're a minor. If he doesn't want to be a noni'aying
guest of the State, he'd better beg YOU to keep quiet! -HELEN

,.... ............. -

,.. '

CHAIR

CHAISE

$122

$1'' HECK'2.88S REG.

HECK'S REG. 11.66

1

30LS .

.

FOLDING BOAT
SEAT

$377
HECK'S REG.

14.99

HECK'S REG. 88' .

9 oz. J&amp;J

BABY LOTION

66e

6''

DAISY AIR RIFLE
America 's best B-B Gun value and a long-time $
favorite. "Big gun" features include lever-

cocking, fravity-feed, 350-shot repeating action,
·
controlled velocity and realistic styling. Sturdy
steel construction.
HECK'S II,, $&amp;.99

SPORTS DEPT.

MODEL 102

.

1

•HECK'S REG. 1.08

·~
lotion

12 oz
LUSTRE CREME

HAIR SPRAY

39t;

HECK'S REG. 69'

�. . ..

•

•

•

~

~

. . . .. ,

.. -

If

.......

•

'

e •

,,..

,.

-~

...........

'"·-

~

..

. .....,..

·- .

~

••

___
-

•

.. ·'

'

•
•
11 -:- The ~ T1Jne1.8enllnel, June z ; 1m

' ~

Mud, Rain Pirates,
Curtail G0 l'f
·

LOGAN -

Mud and rain
Saturday slowed activities in
the 47th aMual Southeastern
Ohio Golf Association Tournament at the Hocking Hills
Country Club near bere.
M of .5:tli p.m., Saturday;
ooly 15 golfers had completed
lhe lint round (18 holes) in
team play.
The tournament will be
concluded today.
,No team scores were
available at press time
Saturday night.
The first 15 SOGA golfers to

200 Attend Stag
Fish Fry Event
POMEROY
Appromnateiy 200 attended the
annuli stag . fish fry of the
MeliiJ County Fish and Game
Assodation held Thursday
night at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.
Proceeds, .. Roy Armes,
president 0! the association
said, will be used to stock the
COWity with 500 quail. In the
past three years the
asaoclatlon has stocked the
county will 700 ring-neck
pheasants and has asilisted
with the annual trout derby
held
In the Forked RWl Lake
•
area. ·

17 - The Sunday

. :'

' ·
report in were:
Carmon Lorubblo, Athens,
37-35.::..72;
Fred
Rake,
Marietta, 33.J4-~2; Bob Hill.
. Marietta, 36-36-72; George
Pope, Gallipolis, 36·37- 73;
Lowell LeClair, Lancaster, 3&amp;37-73; Wilbur Gerles,' Camtridge, N--74; Joe Allen,
Olilllcothe, 38-36-74; Bruce
Hillwagen, Circleville, 36-38-74; Herb McConnick, Jackson,
37-37-74; G. N. Reynolds,
Lancaster, 35-39- 74; To be
Offen berger, Marietta, 34-4074 ; Kermit Blosser, Athens, 3837--75;
Dave
Evans,
Chillicothe, 38-37- 75; Don
Lambright, Lancaster, 37-3871i and .Tun Blanton, Logan, 3738-75.

CHICAGO (UP!) - Manny
Sangulllen ripped a basesl~aded single up tlje middle,
.sending In two runs to break a
1-1 tie in the top of the eighth
mmng Saturday to help the
PittSburgh Pirates defeat the
Chicago Cubs, 3-1.
· Sangulllen's hit, off loser Bill
.Hands, &amp;;!, scored Roberto
Clemente and Willie St:argeU as
Nelson Briles with relief help
from Dave Giusti picked up his
fifth win of the season.
Dave Cash led·pff the Pirates

Cards Post Wins

eighth with a single but Hands
settled down getting the next
two men to bounce out on force
plays. Clemente raced to thlfd
when Stafgell singled to left
center and, when the throw
from center field was slow in
getting back to lite iniield
StsrgeU, continued to secllnd.
AI Oliver was purposely pa,g.'!ed
to fill the bases and Sangulllen
then ,singled sharply through
the box to send home the tiebreaking run.
Briles retired the first 14 men

.

.

he faced finally gave up a twoout single to Rick Monday in
the fifth. Giusti ~rded his
ninth save when he came on in
the ·ninth to retire Ron Santo
for the final out.
Chicago took the lead in the
sixth after leadoff batter
Randy Hundley beat out a
perfect bUnt down the third
base line. H~Uldley took second
on an infeld out and_ seored
when Glenn Beckert to leftcenter field.
With one out in the seventh,

Oliver,lined his sixth homer of
the year clear out of Wrigley
Field to tie the score and give
the Pirate center fielder 45 RBI
for the season:
NEWYORK(UPI)-TheSt.
Louis Cardinals converted
"Old Timers Day" at Shea
Stadium into a personal field
d8y for themselves Saturday
. when Luis Melendez pinch-hit a
grand slam home run and
Reggie Cleveland shut out the
New York Mets, IH, on six
hits before 45,334.
-·
.
'

Twins Top
Royals, 4-1
' .

STANDINGS

- FOr
Con Cent
·
Yacht sma.n.
Expressed

Snead

Senior Golf

O.ampion

if:

ANNOUNCING!

Retains Tide

Beginning Sunday, June 18th
The Following Mobile Home Dealers
Will Be CLOSED ALL DAY
Every Sunday!
TRI COUNTY MOBILE HOMES
JOHNSON'S MOBILE HOMES
FRENCH CITY MOBILE HOMES
CARROLL'S MOBILE HOMES
YOUNG'S MOBILE HOMES
REG -GEM MOBILE HOMES
7-35 MOBILE HOMES

~

.

pionsh1p, Emerson Fittipaldl of
Brazil, driving a Lotus, clocked
the fastest qualifying time
Frida/, but Formula Two
Argentine driver Carlos Reutemann in a Brabham was only
two tenths of a second behind.
Other Formula Two drivers
looking for an upset were
Frenchman Jean-Pierre Jaussaud in a Brabham , Niki
Lauda of Austria AI the wheel
of a March and Briton Mike
Hailwood in a Surtees.
The drivers they were out to
beat included Le Mans winners
Graham Hill of Britain and
Frenclunail Henri Pescarolo,
as well as Briton John SIU'tees;
and Frenchmen Franco is
Cevert and Jean-Pierre bel·
Ioise.

.,

Includes these •
4 sandwiches •
111d 4 orders
of fnnch. fries.

Friday's qualifications saw a
strong field cut from 40 racing
machines to 32. Twelve more
cars were due to be eliminated
in two heats Sunday morning,
before the remaining 20 cars
compete in the 30-lap final
around the 3.437 mile coiU'se in
the afternoon.
'Going into Sunday's event,
Jaussaud led the competition
with 21 points, followed by
Lauda 's 15 points and South
African Jody Scheckter with
12. ReutOIJ!ann had II points.
They will all he shooting for
the nine points a win here
would bring. Since such drivers
as Fittlpaldi are excluded from
the European championship a
victory by the Brazilian would
still give the full nine points to

.

the top finishing regular
Formula Two driver.
FltUpaldi docked the faateat
la.P Fri~y in one minute 411.1
secllnds for an average !IPOed
oi lf4,500 mph In his black
Lotus 69.
Reutemann and FIWpaldl
were set to compete in the flrst
heat along with Beltolse.
Leaders In the second heat
were Pescarolo, Hallwood,
Cevert,and Jaussaud. All were
within one second of Fittipaldi's fastest ,lap time. ·
Officials said that 10 of the 18
drivers in each heat would
advance to the 290 103.o\o mile
final. Those qualifying would
~ the top six flnlsh~ra and the
four drivers docking the best
lap time.

"

Cardenas has been a pro at
Lancaster for three years and
was a pro at Cincinnati four
years previous to that. He has The complete results were as
tow:ed the pro circuit before. follows :
Joe Cardenas . Dr . Lowel l
The Lancaster due shot an
LeCtear,
33-3&lt;-67. Lancaster;
18-hole best-ball round of 33-34- Tex Lakford
. Greg Poston, 34·
67 to edge horne-town favorites 34-68, Logan ; Bill Whetsel l
Tex Lakford and Greg Poston Dou~ Robinso n, 34·34-68,
; Bru ce Helwagen .
of Logan and Marietta's Bill Mar1eftll
Steve Helwagen. 33-36-69 ,
·Whetsell and Doug Robinson Cir cleville ; !;)irk Jackson- Vic
Hage r. 34,_.15-69, Gallipolis:
who both shot 34-34-68.
John
. George Pope, 35Fiilishing third was the Dirk 3&lt;-69, Shinn
Gallipolis; Wilbur Jerles
Ja ckson and Vic Hager team, - John Abbot. 37-33-70, Camthe John Shinn and George bridge; Bob Cooley . Fred
her, 34-36-70, Athens:
Pope team·, both from Schleic
Dick Holzer - Richard Spires,
Gallipolis, and Bruce and Steve 37-33-70, Lancaster : Cliff Rhein
Helwagen of Circleville. All · Dan Lambr lnght 36·51 -71,
Lancaster : Dick Roderick .
three teams shot 69's.
Chip
James,
37·34-72.
The Cardenas- LeCiear team Gallipoli s; Gene Charney .
won $160 each for their first John McAfle. 34-37-71, Logan;
place honors while the Lakford Andy Sirois · Jack Wilkens, 3635·71, Logan ; Ch~rles Stamm · Poston and Whetsell • Ed Alexander, 34-37·71.
Robinson teams received $80 Cambridge; Charles Moore each for second ,place. The Jesse Perry . 35·36·71 , Athens ;
Dave Evans · AI Blankensh ip,
three third place teams, B. 37
·35 -72. Chillicothe ; Dick
Helwagen - S. Helwagen, McGoon-John Derrow. 37·35-72,
Jackson • Hager, and Shil)n - Jackson ; Steve Gardner - M ike
Noe, 35·38·73, Gallipolis; Jan
Pope, pocketed $26 each.
Reynolds . Dave Van ce, 37-36·
The other Gallipolis scores 73 , Lanca ster; George Qf .
were Dick Roderick and Chip fenberger . Ted Baurr, 36·37·73,
Marletla ; H. Olfenbarger . Don
Janes with a 37-34-71; Steve Cox,
37·36·73, Mar ie tta; Rob
Gardner and Mike Noe, 35-38- Johnston - Peak John ston, 3873; Bill Conley and. Howard 35·73, Logan ; Bill Conley .
Howar d Saunders. 38 -35-73,
Saunders, 38-35-73, and Sonny Gallipolis;
Jack Oakley . Don
Ellls and Clark Hager 38-38- Shafer. 38·36·74, Logan ; Nick
Ba instlne - Ed Balnstine, J8.J6.
76.
74,
Chillicothe ; Randy Adams The scores of the pro-am
Dr . William RiRgs, 38·36-74,
were surprisingly low because Athens ; Bob Loftier . Jack
of the severe rainy and cold Algeo. 36·38-14, Athens; Bill
Semple . Charles Alod, 37-38-75,
weather.
.
.
Cambridge ; Chuck Kelly. Jim
In a meeting held Fnday Blanton, -7·37·75, Logan : Sonny
night, the Southeastern Ohio Ellis . Clark Hager. 38-3a-76,
Golf Association recognized Galllr.olls ; Dave Derr - Frank
"
Dow our, 36·40·76, Logan ;
the ~c~,el)pmce of Ironto~ as a C~er es Scott . Pat ,Tittle, 38·38·
memtler' lltar\11\'g" nexP' yeif.' 16. CambrldQe ; Jerrv Feme! The' 1972 ' SOGA tournament Mike Kukllca. 38·38-76, Cam.
•
brldQe : Bob Amod . O..en
Will be held at Lancaster June Wilkenson, 39-38·77, Athens ;
22-23-24.
Dave Frame . Nell Hawk. 39ThejllniorSOGA tournament 38-77, Jackson: Bill Taylor .
Herb McCormi ck, 38·39-77.
will be held at Hocking Hills in Jackson, and Marion Riggs . A.
Logan some Ume in August. C. Bowman, 40-39.19. Logan .

one boat and driver collect
The drivers don 'I like the
some money.
. course they consider the •'moat
Muncey, 44, qualified one of
dangerous" on ,the circuit.
the two boats AUans Van Lines
One of the reasons they
has in the rae~ at 120.948 miles
dislike the often choppy river is
per hoW" earlier during the
because of what happened to
week - a speed thought to be a
Charles Dunn, who will be
record until it was disclosed
safely watching the race inthe three-mile course the race
stead of participating In it In
is to be run on Isn't certified.
the cockpit of his boat, The
He is In a five-boat heat, the
Madison.
first of three to be run. The top
Dunn was thrown out and
five hydroplanes after the
escaped without serious injury
heats run off in the finals .
Friday when the Madison
"porpoised" three times, one
Ume too many, and broke up.
Most drivers fell It was
~8\lf.\! ,h~ .1!1.\ ~. P.i Ilia qlllll-•lll
swells, caused .. during a
practice run, while attempting
to qualify his boat at a higher
speed.
Nicklaus by only one stroke
Toughest competition for
going into the final' round
Muncey, who leads the point
before shooting a 77. .
The best scorf'S among the standings after two wins, wlis
early finishers were four- expected to come from the
Bllly
under-par 87s by Rod Funseth runnerup driver,
or
from
Dean
Schumacher,
and Julius Boros.
Funseth was deadlocked Chenoweth In Notre Dame.
Pride of Pay 'n Pak,
with DickRhyan, who had a 68,
at even-par 213 after 54 holes Schwnacher's powerboat, wu
while Homero Blancas, 011 Chi drawn in the same first heat as
Rodriguez and Kemiit Zarley Muncey's. Schumacher hit
110.647 m.p.h. to quallfy.
all were at 215.
Boros, Butch Baird, Bob Chenoweth hit 113.745 aJl(lllso
Smith, Bob Ilarbaroasa and ls.in the same heat as the other
amateur Joel Hirsch were at two .
217.
Pizza Pete, qualified by Bob
Defending llhampion Bruce Gilliam in 105.575, and Timex, ·
Crampton shot his third which was placed In by Jim
straight 73 and was far down McCormick at 102.718, comthe list at 219.
plete the ilve-boat first heat.

•

.

Bench
CINCINNATI (UP!) -Carl
Buck and Johnny Bench have
at least one thing in chmmon each gets the job done.
Bench is the Cincinnati Reds
All-Star catcher. Buck is the
top maintenance man at River·
front Stadium, home of the Cincinnati Reds.
Bench had complained to
Buck that the lights to the left
of the scoreboard bothered his
hitting, so Buck adjusted the
lights so they beamed down upon second base instead of home
plate,
The adjustment helped
Bench because he belted his
19th home run of the seaso n

See the •••

.......... -·.

.

.

.

SYRACUSE - Rain tast
week made it grea t ,for ducks,
but ducks don't play baseball .
The Meigs League baseball
team, weather permitting , hits
the road again today, this time
to New Haven to battle the
charges of Mel Clark for
another doubleheader. Action
starts at I. The two teams split
in an earlier twin;bill.
The entire Meigs team went

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bllths ·
Bay windows, attractive fireplace. option,' kltchen-dlnlnu·
area. embossed aluminum exterior, recesSed porch, fully
furnished, etc. The clean neat exterior gives the first cluit to
whafs In store for you Inside ELCDNA's now double Wide
GLEN ARVIN., Every feature, from the emboslld alum lnum
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practicality for your personal comfort end convenience.
Drapery, carpet and furniture options will 1dd even more·
livability to this home.

\

manded their wish with a new
supply of good, fresh timber.
Result: Instant Slump!
The Meigs pitching staff ,
however, has been nothing less
than sensational. Stan Perry
and Rick Van Maire have nine
inning ERA's of less than one
and the other members of the
six-man staff, Skip Johnson,
Rick Ash, Steve Lee, and
Johnny Baird, have all turned
in good performances.

into a horrible slump last
weekend. After scoring the
most runs this year against Pt.
Pleasant ten days ago, ten runs
on ten hits, Meigs plated but
four runs in four games las t
Saturday and Sunday,
Before the slump, some of
the players had heen kidding
around about the minimum
supply of good bats. Business
manager Don Hunncl com-

Physical Fitness Testing.
Program Draws Forty Boys
GALLIPOLIS
Aplflroxima tely 40 boys parlicipated in last week's initial
physica l fitness testi ng
program on Memorial Field
according to C. L. 1Johnny )
Ecker.
The turnout was somewhat
disappointing, Ecker said, in
that earlier this year, some 75
boys indicated they would take
part in the weekly program.
Tests will be continued on

This Week's
Local Games

29 J. Hawks vs. Larks
30 IOrioles
N11tonal)vs . Wrens
June 26 Eagles vs. Hawks
27 Cardinals vs.
Falcons 28 Robl ns vs. Eag 1es
29 Hawks vs. Cards
30 Falcons vs. Robins
LITTLE LEAGUE
June 26. Athletics . Cubs:
June 21, Red Sox - Yanks ; June
28, Indians · Padres; June 29,
Orioles - Senators; June 30,
Wh ite. Sox . Tigers. . _
June 26. Indians - White So.;
June 27, Tigers - Padres ; June
28, Athletics - Senators ; Juno
29, Cubs -Yanks;; June 30, Red
Sox . Orioles.
PONY LEAGUE

June 27, Reds v.: Giants; June
28, Braves vs . Phlls; June 29,
Reds vs. Dodgers ; June 30,
Giants vs. Phils.
•

l

Bench on a hitting streak at
home.
Statistics show Bench ha•
done his best hitting on the
road this season .
/
For instance, that home run
- his 19th of the season - was
his sixth at Riverfront
Stadiwn. "The other 13 have
been on the road.
Thats a little better than a 2-1
ratio. The ratio of games
played at home and on the road
i~ much slimmer. Friday
night 's game was the 32nd at
home. The Reds have played 29
on the road.
Bench's homer came off
Houston lefty Jerry Reuss, who

New Haven Nine
Today
.

June 26, Braves vs. Dodgers;

Glen Arvin

Friday night as the Reds
moved back into first place,
stopping Houston 7-1.
"I noticed there· wasn't any
glare when I was batting," said
Bench. " I even noticed a difference when I was catching."
Ross Grimsley tossed a fivehitter at the Astros as the Reds
knocked them out of first place
in the \lild National League
West.
Lights Changed
Bench had told the maintenance man the row of lights to
the left of the scoreboard had
bothered him. The change was
made Friday.
The alterations may start

19th, Reds Win, 7-1

....

.

..

Sl~ms

Memorial Field between 7 and ran the mile in 5:38. Niday was
9 p.m. , daily while the gate to also tops in the 100-yard dash
the track is open, Ecker said, with a :12.7 effort. Tony Reese
and will be conducted·through was best in the 40-yard dash
the first of August.'
with a :5.4 mark.
Too, boys are invited to Mike McCarty posted a 6:15
workout on the school 's time in the mile, and Reese
Universal Gym, locateq In the was 6:18. Scott E~ling finished
basement of the old high school the mile ' 6:23', and ·Mike
building. The Universal GyD) is Evans in 7:07.
available for use between 9 and
In the juniors and seniors
!'I a.m., and 5-8 p.m., daily. ca tego ry , Mark Kiesling ,
Results of last week 's mile, senior, finished the mile in
100-yard dash and 40-yard dash 5:25. Leon Smith, also a- senior,
events revealed local athletes did it in 5:28 while another
need lots of work for the senior, John Walter, posted a
coming school year.
5:30 mark in the mile. Chuck
For example, Ecker said a Perrouddidlikewise,and Dave
boy wishing to play a back on Brown, a junior, finished the
the football team should be mile in 5:40.
able to run the mile in 5:30 or
Junior Tim Weaver posted a
less . Linemen , candidates 5:55 in the mile while senior
should be able J:o do it in six Mike Wolfe finished in six
minutes or less.
minutes flat.
Some of the better times
In the 100-yard dash, Junior
•recorded last wee k were. an- Ken Collier had the best mark
nounced by Ecker. In eighth . with a :11.6 finish . Pat Boster,
grade competition, Brent also a junior, posted a :11.8
Johnson
ran the mile
th
. in 5: 45, figure and senior Leon Smith
e 100-yard dash m :12.9, and was :11.9.
the 4(1-yard dash in :5.9. Tim
Several finished the 100-yard
Carman ran the mile in 8:40. dash in 12 flat - good backfield
On the freshmen level, Gary candidates should run the 100
Snowden ran the mile in 5:59. in 10.5 or under. Dave Brown,
Others included: Chris Randy Rice , junior, Tim
Fischer, 6:09; Steve Wallis, Weaver, John Null, senior, all
6:15; RobbieGreen,6 :15; John fipished the 100 in 12 flat~
Bastiani, 6:18; Tony Folden, Finishing at :12.1 were Mark
6:22; Dave Wiseman , 6:29 and Kiesling and J ohn Walter.
Bob Walter, 6:35.
In the 4(1-yard dash, Ken
Top frosh in the 100-yard Collier's :5.0 was tops while
dash was Mike Valley, with a Leon Smith and Pat Boster
:12.2 effort. Bob Walter had a posted :5.1 marks . Mark
:5.2 effort in the 40-yard' dash. Kiesling was :5.2, and John
Pacing boys of sophomore Walter, Dean Epling and Mike
age was Jimmy Niday, who Wolfe were all :5.4.

had twirled a one-hitter his last
time out. This time he gave up
three hits in five innings.
Reuss walked Pete Rose and
Morgan before Bench came up
with his homer.
Sets Walk Mark
That walk to Morgan extended his walks to 12 consecutive
games, a new National League
record, and seven shy of the
major league record held by
Ted Williams.
The Reds added a fourth run
in the fifth inning and then
ganged upon Joe Gibbon and
Fred Gladding for their final
three in the eighth.

I

Introducing the 1558, newest member of the Husky
team. Powered by revolutionary 15 hp overhead valve
engine. Runa cooler ..longer .. , more atllcle_nt
performance. Hyd1oslallc lransrnlsslon lets you keep
your hands on tho wheol, change spead and direction
with 'your foot. Back-saving hydraulic lilt Is standard .
Solid alate ignition for dependable year •round stalling.
Teams up with over 30job-mlnded attachmonls.Don't
111 the a!)Prty look roo you .. . under
tilt ho&lt;&gt;d. thet5581a all buelneas.

•

CHUCK COLLIER
'SERVICE STOiE:

'

We Appreciate Yo.Lir Patronage and Extend An Invitation To
Visit Our Lots Monday Thru Saturday.
'

Gallipolis, Ohio

--~-~

GENERAL TIRE

e OPEN EVENINGS

Middleport, Ollio

Thank You!
(

f

,,

SALES~
Pfl, 992·7161

VANDAUA, Ohio (UP!) Charles Forlthofer of Avon, a
14-year-old shooter, fired the
best score Friday at the Ohio
State Trapshoot and won the
Jl'eliminary handicap.
The y~ broke 97 clay tar·
gets from the 19-yard line lor
the highest score in the preliminary handicap and the preliminary wubles events shot In
windy weather with gusts of up
to 30 mph ..
Second in the preliminary
handicap race was Mark Snowden of Dayton, who troke 96
targets from the 20\i yard line.
More than 1,000 shooters
braved the wind and cool
weather for the third day. The
handicap event saw 610
shootera whUe ~ e~ered in
wubles race.
Winning the wubles event
Will J\!fi'Y Hutchinson of Logan
whO broke 94 targets. Second
wu Robert Horne of Xenia
with 93.
.
Cla!f winners In the handicap were Jeff Webb of Sabina
with a 93 from the 21 yard line
u the resident trophy; P. 0.
lllrbage of West Jefferson, a
10 from the 21-yard line for
A, Jo Hatbage of Grove
a IH from the 20\i in the

Louisv ille

Toledo

Tidewater

an shooter, while David
Fletcher of Dayton and Robert
Mieczkowski of Wintersville
tied for the top junior shooters.'
Delbert L. Pare! of Bucyrus
was named the top veteran.

JS 29 .547

the National League West will
be a tight one right down to the
wire." ·
A single game Sunday with .
Houston pits Jim McGlothlin
against Ken Forsch. The Reds
will leave immediately following the game for the WeSt
Coast to open a two-game
series Monday night against .
Los Angeles.

12'X60' DARIAN
MOBILE HOME
Two bedroom, Colonial styJe, fully
carpeted, plumbed for washer,
house type door, storm windows,
outside light, shutters, tub en,
clos,ure, ' gas furnace and range.
Delivered and leveled.

31 32 .492 4112

Roc hester
Penins ula

29 36 .446
26 37 .413

7'h
9112

Friday's Results
Toledo 4 Louisville 3
Ric hmond at Rochester.
ppd ., ra in
.
Peninsula at Syracuse, ppd.,

.

Charleston 2 Tidewater o

KANAUGA
MOBILE HOME
SALES

TOURNEYS ANNOUNCED
PORT ANTONIO, Jamaica
(UPl )-The ninth annual Ja.
maica International Blue Marlin Team Tournament and 14th ·
annual Jamaica International
Fishing Tournament will be
run concurrently this fall from
Oct. 16-20 by the Eastern
Jamaica Anglers Association.

Something

New
Has Been
Added

To Ow-Store
Ready Pasted

)

ECON
-O-

Plumbing
Supplies

WALL

f

Ready pasted, ••

PAINT

dip in water and apply.
Fade proof, plasticized,
precision trimmed, soap
raised prints and

Colors To
Select From

American tradition.

NO CHARGE TO MIX PAINT .

and water washable.ln

-

*Nominal charge aner
· 4 oz. of mixed paint

FRENCH CITY BUILDERS
SUPPLY

750 1st Ava.

\

•

,. 1800 Different

Plenty of Free Parking

j

:

'l

l
:'

Gallipolis, Ohio

f-~~~~=====::::::::--------:--"':'--:-~--~~~:-----,

Usbon aColegrove,
92for Class
B honorsa; '
Robert
Columbos,
92 for Class A: David Wolk of
Cincinnati, an 87 for Class D'
and Webb, an 89 for .Class E.
The Ohio State Trapshooting
Association·also named Emory
Moyer, a 47-year-old polio victim from Dayton, to be captain
of the All-State Trapshooting
team.
MoY,er Is supported by a
crutcli'. He was unable to compete in this state shoot becailse
of illness In his family.
Others on the team were
Tom Jones of Canton; Eugene
uiurlsky of Murray City,
Robert Heckman of Celina,
Robert Colegrove of Columbus,
Larry Treni of Franklin,
atarlea Pidcock of Mlllfield,
Garth Henley of Columbus,
David Berlet of Wapskoneta,
Ramo Lupl of Mayfield
Heights, Edwin Smith of
Westlake.
Laura Christopher of Bnutswlck was n11111ed the top WOrn·

We are pleased to announce that

Samuel M. Andrews
has joined our firm as
Manager Huntington Area Branch Office

VERCOE &amp;·
COMPANY INC. .
Member New York Stock Exchange, Inc.
Assodate Member American Stock Exchange, Inc .

Samuel M, Andrews ·

9314th Ave., Huntington, W.Va. (304) 519·33'1

· Ashland 325.1331

.,

'(

"

V1

30 32 .484 5

rai n

••

1972

32 30 .516 3

Syracuse

in

ladies race and Jeff Goodrich
of Northville, Mich., a 92 from
the 22 yard line among the .
pros. .
•
In the doubles, Gene McMabon of Marysville broke a 90 lot
_win Class A; Terry Zepeta of

Grimsley's victory was his
fourth against two defeats. The
complete game was his first.
He ~tr u c k out seven and
walked. only one.
The Reds lead the Astros 5-3
this year.
"It 's too early to call this
series crucial," said Reds
Mana ger Sparky Anderson.
"Actually I think the race in

INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
United Press International
W. L. Pet. GB
Charleston
35 27 .557
Richmond
34 28 .548

14-Year·Old Has Best ·Score Friday

1

.

.:

Meigs Legion To Play

28 Wrens vs. Angels'

Sporty new engine
runs cooler, lasts
longer, packs more
power!
Model1556 15 hp

I

'

GALLIPOLIS - Here's th is
week's baseball schedule for
the Gallipolis Pee Wee, Little
League and Pony League:
.
PEE WEE
!American)
June 26
Angels
vs .OrJ.ioles
Hawks
27 Larks vs.

QUAIL CREEK MOBiLE HOMES
. KEITH GOBLE MOBILE HOMES
-

'

'

Lancaster pro Joe Cardenas and his amateur
partner Dr. Lowell LeCiear won the pro·am
segment of the 47th annual Scmtheastern Ohio Golf
Associ~tion Tournament at the Logan links Friday.
Thts marks the second straight year that
Cardenas has walked away with first place honors
m the p:o-am. Last year he fired a sizzling 61 at
Galhpohs along with his partner Cliff Rhein.

Jamieson Tak·es
Lead In ·western ····
NORTHBROOK, Ill. (UP!)
- Jim Jamieson, continuing to
play brillianUy while niost of
his challengers ·faded, pulled
away to a six-stroke lead
Saturday midway through the
third round of the $150,000
Western Open.
Jamieson, the leader after 36
boles with a seven-under-par
135, picked up successive
birdies on the third and fourth
holes, added another on the
ninth, parred the rest of the
front nine, an(j.was at Hl·underpar 167.after 45 holes.
Doug Sanders, in second
place two strokes behind at the
start of the day , lost a stroke to
par on the front nine but
remained alone in second place
at four-under-par 173.
Four players - R. H. Sikes,
Tommy Aaron, Tom Weidkopf
and Bobby Nichols - were at
three-under-par at varying
stages of their rounds on the
back nine, and J. C. Sne, 1,
Hale Irwin and Dale Douglass
were at lw!HIIIder.par.
AI the Masters in April,
Jamieson
trailed
Jack

~

By KEITH WISECUP

Vet Muncey Favored
DETROIT (UP!) - Veteran
Bill Muncey, the sizzling driver
with the hottest hydroplane,
was favored Sunday to win the
$44,000 Gold CUp Race for the
unlimit.ed powerboats on the
treacherous Detroit River.
Muncey heads a field of nine,
with a lOth starter hoping to
qualify early on the day of the
race, which will match
roostertails for the first prize of
$14,750. Second place is worth
$8,7.00, third $5,200, and all but

,

Carderias•LeClear
Fire 67; Gallia
·Duo Takes Third

~

1 SUPER SHE~,.

Family Pack

,.)

Lancaster Retains· Pro-Am Golf Title

Ray Sadecki relieved Mets'
In the first Lou Brock and Ed
starter· Tom Seaver with the. Crosby each singled and Brock
bases full in the fifth and scored when Matty Alou gol a
Melendez, batting for Bernie gift double as riglj_t fieldfr
Carbo, drove a :Hmd-2 pitch Dave Marshall slipped on the
over the left field wall for his wet grass going after his
third homer of the year.
blooper. Joe Torte's sacrilll;e
ThelCards clipped Seaver for fly andTed Simm01l8' single Up
three runs In the first; added . the middle accouitteil for two
another off him in the fourth, more runs.
and four more In the fifth when
The seven·. earned runs
they finally chased him with charged against Seaver were
his fourlll defeat against nine the most he has O¥er given up
victQries. All iolled, St. Louis in any one game in th~ major
pounded out 17 hits.
leagues.

.

ARTHUR HERMAN
~
ROUEN, France (UPI)Top Formula Two drivers
today awaited the chance to
challenge some of auto
racing's biggest names Sunday
in the ~d Rouen Formula
double with Renick stopping at Two Grand Prix.
third.
Current leader in the FormuSoderholm then delivered his la One world driver's chamtwo-run single and scored on
~
Kaat's two-out double.
The Twins added a run in the
seventh when Steve Braun
drew a bases-loaded watk, but
· the ,Royals escaped further
damage when Jim Nettles .__ _ _ _,..____
lined into an inning • ending
National League
double play to second baseman
St1ndings
Cookie Rojas.
United Press International
(Twilight and Night Games
Kaat recorded his ninth
Not Included)
victory against two losses and
I East)
was backed by four Minnesota Team
W. L. Pet. G.B.
Pittsburgh 38 21 .644
double plays.
37 23 .617 1'12
The Royals scored in the New York
Chicago
34 25 .576 4
eighth when Rojas and John St. Louis
27 32 .458 11
' Mayberry opened with singles, Mootreal
26 33 .441 12
Rojas going to third. Rojas was Philadelphia 21 37 .362 16'12
(West)
trapped in a rundown when Team
W. L. Pel. G.B.
Jerry May bounced to Cincinnati
37 24 .607
37 25 .597 •;,
Soderholm but catcher Phil Houston
Los
Angeles
34 26 .567 2'12
Roof threw .the ball away Atlanta
27 31 .466 8'12
allowing Rojas to score.
San Diego
21 39 .350 15'12
San Fran.
22 45 .328 18
Saturdav's Resu Its
Pittsburgh 3 Chicago 1
St. Louis 11 New York o
Philadelphia at Montreal
(night)
Houston at Cincinnati tnl9hl)

BASEBALL

Is Imposed

'

Top Drivers Await Challenge

KANSAS CITY (UP!) 7 Eric
Soderholm cracked a two-run
single to highlight a three-run
fourth inning Saturday and Jim
•
Kaat pitched an eight-hitter to
lead the Minnesota Twins to a
4-1 victory over the Kansas
City Royals.
Rick Renick started the
fourth inning surge by drawing
a walk off loser Jim Rooker.
DENVER (UP! ) - The Bobby Darwin followed with a
Western Athletic Conference
announced Saturday that the
conference presidents have
decided to Impose a limitation
on football scholarships within
the next academic year.
At its annual meeting in
Denver,
the
league's
Presidents' Council .also appointed a committee to study
RECALLED
the future ·of intercollegiate
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Ron athletics for women in the
LONDON (UP!) - Concern
Lolleh, 2:i, was recalled Friday WAC.
was expressed Saturday for
by the Cleveland Indians to
"The presidents were yachtsman Sir Francis
replace Chris Chambliss, who adamant in their view that the Chichester, 71, currently
Is on IIII-day 'leave for active· time has come for the con- sailing the Atlantic singlemllltary reserve duty In ference to take positive action handed.
Wichita. Lolich, an outfielder on the financial pinch felt in all
"Obviously one is to some
with Portland, batted .349 as or major
college
athletic extent concerned," said Ron
June II and had 12 homers and programs today," said Hall, an official of the
San Francisco at San D1ego
49 rbl's. Lolich Is the cousin of Commissioner Stan Bates, newspaper (The - Sunday
Inight)
Atlanta
at Los Angeles 2 (twlMickey Lolich, a pitcher with regarding
the
football Times) for which Chichester is
night)
·
the Detroit Tiger organization. scholarships.
writing about the Observer
Today's Games
(All Times EDT)
"II is hoped that the WAC 's Singlehanded
Transatlantic
Ph
iladelphia
at Montreal &lt;2: 15
action may serve as a catalyst Race.
for others in the , area of
Hall said the veteran
LONGNIDDRY,
Scotland P·~\ouis at New York 2 (t
·
POSTPONED
financlll aid. While this action yachtsman, first man .to sail (UP!) - Sam Snead won seven p.m,)
IJUI ""' All iliiilner •ls pre~n~ limited td football, solo around the world, had straight holes today to wipe out Pittsburgh at Chicago (2: 15
lea
seball action was the presidents also requested failed to keep three scheduled a four-hole deficit to win the ~·,!;,~ta at Los Angeles (5 p.m.)
postponed here again Friday the conferenc~ council to study radio contacts.
World Senior Golf Cham· Houston at Cincinnat i (2 : 15
p.m.)
.
due to rain and wet grounds. the possibility of limiting
"The most likely explanation pionship'
The GO-yea r-old Virginian San Francisco at San Diego (4
scholarships in other sports," is there is something wrong
p.m.)
Bates said.
Monday's Games
with his radio," Hall said. beat 52-year-old British Pro
BOOSTERS TO MEET
About women athletes, who "There is also the probability Ken Bousfield by 3 and 2 in Cincinnati at Los Angeles
MASON - Wblte Falcon do not presently compete In the he is .not very well, and ob· their 36 hole final after trailing ~i~~~~urgh at New York
Athletic Boosters have called a WAC, Bates said the presidents viously one is to some extent by two holes at the halfway (night)
regular meeting for Monday recognize their desire to concerned."
stage.
• Philadelphia at Chicago
Snead, who won won $2080 . Montreal at St. Louis (night)
evening at 7:30p.m. in the high participate in intercollegiate
Contestants in the race are
Houston at San Diego (night)
school gymnasium. All sports and a committee Is to sprea&lt;j all over the Northern was four-down after 16 despite Atlanta
at San Fran .
members are urged to study all aspects of the Atlantic. Sponsoring officials out-driving the Briton by as
American League
"·( attend.
situation.
said they had no idea who was much as 100 yards at times.
( Easll
The presidents, in their wide- in the lead or even where many Then he won the last two holes Team
W. L.
of
the
morning
round
with
par
ranging
session,
also
apDetroit
of
the
boats
were.
Coadaue brvesU.aUon
~; ~~
proved :
Some were last sighted on figures and had a hat-trick of Baltimore
MIDDLEPORT - Police
26 29
New
York
Wednesday. Four were back in · birdies among five straight Boston
-Guidelines for ireshman
continued investigation here
24 31
victories in the opening holes Citveland
and
junior
varsity
competition.
Plymouth,
where
the
·race
Saturday Into a hit-skip ac~~ ~
Milwaukee
...,
after lunch .
- A procedure for waiting began.
cident Involving former
(West)
The American reached the Team
Of these, Oscar Debra of
W. L.
Glllipolls City, Mana~er Gary eligibility rules fur persons
turn
for
the
last
Ume
with
a
with
extraordinary
hardships.
Belgium,
officially
retired
Oakland
J8 19
R. Short. Short was ap·
Chicago
35 27
three-under
par
32
against
a
37
A
revised
expense
formula
from
the.race,
and
Briton
Max
prehended Friday night on Rt.
Minnesota
31 25
160 by Galli&amp; County sheriff's for the WAC champion in the Barton was towed into harbor for Bousfield. They exchanged California
28 32
Fiesta Bowl.
a victory apiece on the back Kansas City
with
a
missing
mast
and
26
31
deputies. He was returned to
nine
before
Snead
secured
the
•
A
raise
in
the
guarantee
for
probably
would
not
restart.
Texas
25
34
Meigs County to face charges
Saturday's Results
conference football games The other two back in title, finished with a one-over
there.
Milwaukee
Boston 2
from · $20,000 to $25,000, · ef- Plymouth hoped to set out par score for the 34 holes Minnesota 45 Kansas
City I
fective with the 1973 season. again late Saturday.
played .
Chicago at Texas, night
In the morning round Boston at Milwaukee, night
at Baltimore, fwl ·night
Bousfield returned a two over Detroit
New York at Cleveland, ppnd .
71 and Snead a 73.
Today's Games
Detroit at Baltimore
Chi at Texas, twilight
C.tifornla at Oakland, 2
Minnesota at Kan City, 2
New York at Cleveland, 2
Boston at Milwaukee. 2

Scholarship
Limitation

.

~line!, June 25, 1972

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•
•
11 -:- The ~ T1Jne1.8enllnel, June z ; 1m

' ~

Mud, Rain Pirates,
Curtail G0 l'f
·

LOGAN -

Mud and rain
Saturday slowed activities in
the 47th aMual Southeastern
Ohio Golf Association Tournament at the Hocking Hills
Country Club near bere.
M of .5:tli p.m., Saturday;
ooly 15 golfers had completed
lhe lint round (18 holes) in
team play.
The tournament will be
concluded today.
,No team scores were
available at press time
Saturday night.
The first 15 SOGA golfers to

200 Attend Stag
Fish Fry Event
POMEROY
Appromnateiy 200 attended the
annuli stag . fish fry of the
MeliiJ County Fish and Game
Assodation held Thursday
night at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.
Proceeds, .. Roy Armes,
president 0! the association
said, will be used to stock the
COWity with 500 quail. In the
past three years the
asaoclatlon has stocked the
county will 700 ring-neck
pheasants and has asilisted
with the annual trout derby
held
In the Forked RWl Lake
•
area. ·

17 - The Sunday

. :'

' ·
report in were:
Carmon Lorubblo, Athens,
37-35.::..72;
Fred
Rake,
Marietta, 33.J4-~2; Bob Hill.
. Marietta, 36-36-72; George
Pope, Gallipolis, 36·37- 73;
Lowell LeClair, Lancaster, 3&amp;37-73; Wilbur Gerles,' Camtridge, N--74; Joe Allen,
Olilllcothe, 38-36-74; Bruce
Hillwagen, Circleville, 36-38-74; Herb McConnick, Jackson,
37-37-74; G. N. Reynolds,
Lancaster, 35-39- 74; To be
Offen berger, Marietta, 34-4074 ; Kermit Blosser, Athens, 3837--75;
Dave
Evans,
Chillicothe, 38-37- 75; Don
Lambright, Lancaster, 37-3871i and .Tun Blanton, Logan, 3738-75.

CHICAGO (UP!) - Manny
Sangulllen ripped a basesl~aded single up tlje middle,
.sending In two runs to break a
1-1 tie in the top of the eighth
mmng Saturday to help the
PittSburgh Pirates defeat the
Chicago Cubs, 3-1.
· Sangulllen's hit, off loser Bill
.Hands, &amp;;!, scored Roberto
Clemente and Willie St:argeU as
Nelson Briles with relief help
from Dave Giusti picked up his
fifth win of the season.
Dave Cash led·pff the Pirates

Cards Post Wins

eighth with a single but Hands
settled down getting the next
two men to bounce out on force
plays. Clemente raced to thlfd
when Stafgell singled to left
center and, when the throw
from center field was slow in
getting back to lite iniield
StsrgeU, continued to secllnd.
AI Oliver was purposely pa,g.'!ed
to fill the bases and Sangulllen
then ,singled sharply through
the box to send home the tiebreaking run.
Briles retired the first 14 men

.

.

he faced finally gave up a twoout single to Rick Monday in
the fifth. Giusti ~rded his
ninth save when he came on in
the ·ninth to retire Ron Santo
for the final out.
Chicago took the lead in the
sixth after leadoff batter
Randy Hundley beat out a
perfect bUnt down the third
base line. H~Uldley took second
on an infeld out and_ seored
when Glenn Beckert to leftcenter field.
With one out in the seventh,

Oliver,lined his sixth homer of
the year clear out of Wrigley
Field to tie the score and give
the Pirate center fielder 45 RBI
for the season:
NEWYORK(UPI)-TheSt.
Louis Cardinals converted
"Old Timers Day" at Shea
Stadium into a personal field
d8y for themselves Saturday
. when Luis Melendez pinch-hit a
grand slam home run and
Reggie Cleveland shut out the
New York Mets, IH, on six
hits before 45,334.
-·
.
'

Twins Top
Royals, 4-1
' .

STANDINGS

- FOr
Con Cent
·
Yacht sma.n.
Expressed

Snead

Senior Golf

O.ampion

if:

ANNOUNCING!

Retains Tide

Beginning Sunday, June 18th
The Following Mobile Home Dealers
Will Be CLOSED ALL DAY
Every Sunday!
TRI COUNTY MOBILE HOMES
JOHNSON'S MOBILE HOMES
FRENCH CITY MOBILE HOMES
CARROLL'S MOBILE HOMES
YOUNG'S MOBILE HOMES
REG -GEM MOBILE HOMES
7-35 MOBILE HOMES

~

.

pionsh1p, Emerson Fittipaldl of
Brazil, driving a Lotus, clocked
the fastest qualifying time
Frida/, but Formula Two
Argentine driver Carlos Reutemann in a Brabham was only
two tenths of a second behind.
Other Formula Two drivers
looking for an upset were
Frenchman Jean-Pierre Jaussaud in a Brabham , Niki
Lauda of Austria AI the wheel
of a March and Briton Mike
Hailwood in a Surtees.
The drivers they were out to
beat included Le Mans winners
Graham Hill of Britain and
Frenclunail Henri Pescarolo,
as well as Briton John SIU'tees;
and Frenchmen Franco is
Cevert and Jean-Pierre bel·
Ioise.

.,

Includes these •
4 sandwiches •
111d 4 orders
of fnnch. fries.

Friday's qualifications saw a
strong field cut from 40 racing
machines to 32. Twelve more
cars were due to be eliminated
in two heats Sunday morning,
before the remaining 20 cars
compete in the 30-lap final
around the 3.437 mile coiU'se in
the afternoon.
'Going into Sunday's event,
Jaussaud led the competition
with 21 points, followed by
Lauda 's 15 points and South
African Jody Scheckter with
12. ReutOIJ!ann had II points.
They will all he shooting for
the nine points a win here
would bring. Since such drivers
as Fittlpaldi are excluded from
the European championship a
victory by the Brazilian would
still give the full nine points to

.

the top finishing regular
Formula Two driver.
FltUpaldi docked the faateat
la.P Fri~y in one minute 411.1
secllnds for an average !IPOed
oi lf4,500 mph In his black
Lotus 69.
Reutemann and FIWpaldl
were set to compete in the flrst
heat along with Beltolse.
Leaders In the second heat
were Pescarolo, Hallwood,
Cevert,and Jaussaud. All were
within one second of Fittipaldi's fastest ,lap time. ·
Officials said that 10 of the 18
drivers in each heat would
advance to the 290 103.o\o mile
final. Those qualifying would
~ the top six flnlsh~ra and the
four drivers docking the best
lap time.

"

Cardenas has been a pro at
Lancaster for three years and
was a pro at Cincinnati four
years previous to that. He has The complete results were as
tow:ed the pro circuit before. follows :
Joe Cardenas . Dr . Lowel l
The Lancaster due shot an
LeCtear,
33-3&lt;-67. Lancaster;
18-hole best-ball round of 33-34- Tex Lakford
. Greg Poston, 34·
67 to edge horne-town favorites 34-68, Logan ; Bill Whetsel l
Tex Lakford and Greg Poston Dou~ Robinso n, 34·34-68,
; Bru ce Helwagen .
of Logan and Marietta's Bill Mar1eftll
Steve Helwagen. 33-36-69 ,
·Whetsell and Doug Robinson Cir cleville ; !;)irk Jackson- Vic
Hage r. 34,_.15-69, Gallipolis:
who both shot 34-34-68.
John
. George Pope, 35Fiilishing third was the Dirk 3&lt;-69, Shinn
Gallipolis; Wilbur Jerles
Ja ckson and Vic Hager team, - John Abbot. 37-33-70, Camthe John Shinn and George bridge; Bob Cooley . Fred
her, 34-36-70, Athens:
Pope team·, both from Schleic
Dick Holzer - Richard Spires,
Gallipolis, and Bruce and Steve 37-33-70, Lancaster : Cliff Rhein
Helwagen of Circleville. All · Dan Lambr lnght 36·51 -71,
Lancaster : Dick Roderick .
three teams shot 69's.
Chip
James,
37·34-72.
The Cardenas- LeCiear team Gallipoli s; Gene Charney .
won $160 each for their first John McAfle. 34-37-71, Logan;
place honors while the Lakford Andy Sirois · Jack Wilkens, 3635·71, Logan ; Ch~rles Stamm · Poston and Whetsell • Ed Alexander, 34-37·71.
Robinson teams received $80 Cambridge; Charles Moore each for second ,place. The Jesse Perry . 35·36·71 , Athens ;
Dave Evans · AI Blankensh ip,
three third place teams, B. 37
·35 -72. Chillicothe ; Dick
Helwagen - S. Helwagen, McGoon-John Derrow. 37·35-72,
Jackson • Hager, and Shil)n - Jackson ; Steve Gardner - M ike
Noe, 35·38·73, Gallipolis; Jan
Pope, pocketed $26 each.
Reynolds . Dave Van ce, 37-36·
The other Gallipolis scores 73 , Lanca ster; George Qf .
were Dick Roderick and Chip fenberger . Ted Baurr, 36·37·73,
Marletla ; H. Olfenbarger . Don
Janes with a 37-34-71; Steve Cox,
37·36·73, Mar ie tta; Rob
Gardner and Mike Noe, 35-38- Johnston - Peak John ston, 3873; Bill Conley and. Howard 35·73, Logan ; Bill Conley .
Howar d Saunders. 38 -35-73,
Saunders, 38-35-73, and Sonny Gallipolis;
Jack Oakley . Don
Ellls and Clark Hager 38-38- Shafer. 38·36·74, Logan ; Nick
Ba instlne - Ed Balnstine, J8.J6.
76.
74,
Chillicothe ; Randy Adams The scores of the pro-am
Dr . William RiRgs, 38·36-74,
were surprisingly low because Athens ; Bob Loftier . Jack
of the severe rainy and cold Algeo. 36·38-14, Athens; Bill
Semple . Charles Alod, 37-38-75,
weather.
.
.
Cambridge ; Chuck Kelly. Jim
In a meeting held Fnday Blanton, -7·37·75, Logan : Sonny
night, the Southeastern Ohio Ellis . Clark Hager. 38-3a-76,
Golf Association recognized Galllr.olls ; Dave Derr - Frank
"
Dow our, 36·40·76, Logan ;
the ~c~,el)pmce of Ironto~ as a C~er es Scott . Pat ,Tittle, 38·38·
memtler' lltar\11\'g" nexP' yeif.' 16. CambrldQe ; Jerrv Feme! The' 1972 ' SOGA tournament Mike Kukllca. 38·38-76, Cam.
•
brldQe : Bob Amod . O..en
Will be held at Lancaster June Wilkenson, 39-38·77, Athens ;
22-23-24.
Dave Frame . Nell Hawk. 39ThejllniorSOGA tournament 38-77, Jackson: Bill Taylor .
Herb McCormi ck, 38·39-77.
will be held at Hocking Hills in Jackson, and Marion Riggs . A.
Logan some Ume in August. C. Bowman, 40-39.19. Logan .

one boat and driver collect
The drivers don 'I like the
some money.
. course they consider the •'moat
Muncey, 44, qualified one of
dangerous" on ,the circuit.
the two boats AUans Van Lines
One of the reasons they
has in the rae~ at 120.948 miles
dislike the often choppy river is
per hoW" earlier during the
because of what happened to
week - a speed thought to be a
Charles Dunn, who will be
record until it was disclosed
safely watching the race inthe three-mile course the race
stead of participating In it In
is to be run on Isn't certified.
the cockpit of his boat, The
He is In a five-boat heat, the
Madison.
first of three to be run. The top
Dunn was thrown out and
five hydroplanes after the
escaped without serious injury
heats run off in the finals .
Friday when the Madison
"porpoised" three times, one
Ume too many, and broke up.
Most drivers fell It was
~8\lf.\! ,h~ .1!1.\ ~. P.i Ilia qlllll-•lll
swells, caused .. during a
practice run, while attempting
to qualify his boat at a higher
speed.
Nicklaus by only one stroke
Toughest competition for
going into the final' round
Muncey, who leads the point
before shooting a 77. .
The best scorf'S among the standings after two wins, wlis
early finishers were four- expected to come from the
Bllly
under-par 87s by Rod Funseth runnerup driver,
or
from
Dean
Schumacher,
and Julius Boros.
Funseth was deadlocked Chenoweth In Notre Dame.
Pride of Pay 'n Pak,
with DickRhyan, who had a 68,
at even-par 213 after 54 holes Schwnacher's powerboat, wu
while Homero Blancas, 011 Chi drawn in the same first heat as
Rodriguez and Kemiit Zarley Muncey's. Schumacher hit
110.647 m.p.h. to quallfy.
all were at 215.
Boros, Butch Baird, Bob Chenoweth hit 113.745 aJl(lllso
Smith, Bob Ilarbaroasa and ls.in the same heat as the other
amateur Joel Hirsch were at two .
217.
Pizza Pete, qualified by Bob
Defending llhampion Bruce Gilliam in 105.575, and Timex, ·
Crampton shot his third which was placed In by Jim
straight 73 and was far down McCormick at 102.718, comthe list at 219.
plete the ilve-boat first heat.

•

.

Bench
CINCINNATI (UP!) -Carl
Buck and Johnny Bench have
at least one thing in chmmon each gets the job done.
Bench is the Cincinnati Reds
All-Star catcher. Buck is the
top maintenance man at River·
front Stadium, home of the Cincinnati Reds.
Bench had complained to
Buck that the lights to the left
of the scoreboard bothered his
hitting, so Buck adjusted the
lights so they beamed down upon second base instead of home
plate,
The adjustment helped
Bench because he belted his
19th home run of the seaso n

See the •••

.......... -·.

.

.

.

SYRACUSE - Rain tast
week made it grea t ,for ducks,
but ducks don't play baseball .
The Meigs League baseball
team, weather permitting , hits
the road again today, this time
to New Haven to battle the
charges of Mel Clark for
another doubleheader. Action
starts at I. The two teams split
in an earlier twin;bill.
The entire Meigs team went

NOW ON DISPLAY

"GLEN ARVIN", our Newest Doubll-lldt. 3 btdrms. 2
bllths ·
Bay windows, attractive fireplace. option,' kltchen-dlnlnu·
area. embossed aluminum exterior, recesSed porch, fully
furnished, etc. The clean neat exterior gives the first cluit to
whafs In store for you Inside ELCDNA's now double Wide
GLEN ARVIN., Every feature, from the emboslld alum lnum
exterior to the finished closets, contributes elev-noe· end
practicality for your personal comfort end convenience.
Drapery, carpet and furniture options will 1dd even more·
livability to this home.

\

manded their wish with a new
supply of good, fresh timber.
Result: Instant Slump!
The Meigs pitching staff ,
however, has been nothing less
than sensational. Stan Perry
and Rick Van Maire have nine
inning ERA's of less than one
and the other members of the
six-man staff, Skip Johnson,
Rick Ash, Steve Lee, and
Johnny Baird, have all turned
in good performances.

into a horrible slump last
weekend. After scoring the
most runs this year against Pt.
Pleasant ten days ago, ten runs
on ten hits, Meigs plated but
four runs in four games las t
Saturday and Sunday,
Before the slump, some of
the players had heen kidding
around about the minimum
supply of good bats. Business
manager Don Hunncl com-

Physical Fitness Testing.
Program Draws Forty Boys
GALLIPOLIS
Aplflroxima tely 40 boys parlicipated in last week's initial
physica l fitness testi ng
program on Memorial Field
according to C. L. 1Johnny )
Ecker.
The turnout was somewhat
disappointing, Ecker said, in
that earlier this year, some 75
boys indicated they would take
part in the weekly program.
Tests will be continued on

This Week's
Local Games

29 J. Hawks vs. Larks
30 IOrioles
N11tonal)vs . Wrens
June 26 Eagles vs. Hawks
27 Cardinals vs.
Falcons 28 Robl ns vs. Eag 1es
29 Hawks vs. Cards
30 Falcons vs. Robins
LITTLE LEAGUE
June 26. Athletics . Cubs:
June 21, Red Sox - Yanks ; June
28, Indians · Padres; June 29,
Orioles - Senators; June 30,
Wh ite. Sox . Tigers. . _
June 26. Indians - White So.;
June 27, Tigers - Padres ; June
28, Athletics - Senators ; Juno
29, Cubs -Yanks;; June 30, Red
Sox . Orioles.
PONY LEAGUE

June 27, Reds v.: Giants; June
28, Braves vs . Phlls; June 29,
Reds vs. Dodgers ; June 30,
Giants vs. Phils.
•

l

Bench on a hitting streak at
home.
Statistics show Bench ha•
done his best hitting on the
road this season .
/
For instance, that home run
- his 19th of the season - was
his sixth at Riverfront
Stadiwn. "The other 13 have
been on the road.
Thats a little better than a 2-1
ratio. The ratio of games
played at home and on the road
i~ much slimmer. Friday
night 's game was the 32nd at
home. The Reds have played 29
on the road.
Bench's homer came off
Houston lefty Jerry Reuss, who

New Haven Nine
Today
.

June 26, Braves vs. Dodgers;

Glen Arvin

Friday night as the Reds
moved back into first place,
stopping Houston 7-1.
"I noticed there· wasn't any
glare when I was batting," said
Bench. " I even noticed a difference when I was catching."
Ross Grimsley tossed a fivehitter at the Astros as the Reds
knocked them out of first place
in the \lild National League
West.
Lights Changed
Bench had told the maintenance man the row of lights to
the left of the scoreboard had
bothered him. The change was
made Friday.
The alterations may start

19th, Reds Win, 7-1

....

.

..

Sl~ms

Memorial Field between 7 and ran the mile in 5:38. Niday was
9 p.m. , daily while the gate to also tops in the 100-yard dash
the track is open, Ecker said, with a :12.7 effort. Tony Reese
and will be conducted·through was best in the 40-yard dash
the first of August.'
with a :5.4 mark.
Too, boys are invited to Mike McCarty posted a 6:15
workout on the school 's time in the mile, and Reese
Universal Gym, locateq In the was 6:18. Scott E~ling finished
basement of the old high school the mile ' 6:23', and ·Mike
building. The Universal GyD) is Evans in 7:07.
available for use between 9 and
In the juniors and seniors
!'I a.m., and 5-8 p.m., daily. ca tego ry , Mark Kiesling ,
Results of last week 's mile, senior, finished the mile in
100-yard dash and 40-yard dash 5:25. Leon Smith, also a- senior,
events revealed local athletes did it in 5:28 while another
need lots of work for the senior, John Walter, posted a
coming school year.
5:30 mark in the mile. Chuck
For example, Ecker said a Perrouddidlikewise,and Dave
boy wishing to play a back on Brown, a junior, finished the
the football team should be mile in 5:40.
able to run the mile in 5:30 or
Junior Tim Weaver posted a
less . Linemen , candidates 5:55 in the mile while senior
should be able J:o do it in six Mike Wolfe finished in six
minutes or less.
minutes flat.
Some of the better times
In the 100-yard dash, Junior
•recorded last wee k were. an- Ken Collier had the best mark
nounced by Ecker. In eighth . with a :11.6 finish . Pat Boster,
grade competition, Brent also a junior, posted a :11.8
Johnson
ran the mile
th
. in 5: 45, figure and senior Leon Smith
e 100-yard dash m :12.9, and was :11.9.
the 4(1-yard dash in :5.9. Tim
Several finished the 100-yard
Carman ran the mile in 8:40. dash in 12 flat - good backfield
On the freshmen level, Gary candidates should run the 100
Snowden ran the mile in 5:59. in 10.5 or under. Dave Brown,
Others included: Chris Randy Rice , junior, Tim
Fischer, 6:09; Steve Wallis, Weaver, John Null, senior, all
6:15; RobbieGreen,6 :15; John fipished the 100 in 12 flat~
Bastiani, 6:18; Tony Folden, Finishing at :12.1 were Mark
6:22; Dave Wiseman , 6:29 and Kiesling and J ohn Walter.
Bob Walter, 6:35.
In the 4(1-yard dash, Ken
Top frosh in the 100-yard Collier's :5.0 was tops while
dash was Mike Valley, with a Leon Smith and Pat Boster
:12.2 effort. Bob Walter had a posted :5.1 marks . Mark
:5.2 effort in the 40-yard' dash. Kiesling was :5.2, and John
Pacing boys of sophomore Walter, Dean Epling and Mike
age was Jimmy Niday, who Wolfe were all :5.4.

had twirled a one-hitter his last
time out. This time he gave up
three hits in five innings.
Reuss walked Pete Rose and
Morgan before Bench came up
with his homer.
Sets Walk Mark
That walk to Morgan extended his walks to 12 consecutive
games, a new National League
record, and seven shy of the
major league record held by
Ted Williams.
The Reds added a fourth run
in the fifth inning and then
ganged upon Joe Gibbon and
Fred Gladding for their final
three in the eighth.

I

Introducing the 1558, newest member of the Husky
team. Powered by revolutionary 15 hp overhead valve
engine. Runa cooler ..longer .. , more atllcle_nt
performance. Hyd1oslallc lransrnlsslon lets you keep
your hands on tho wheol, change spead and direction
with 'your foot. Back-saving hydraulic lilt Is standard .
Solid alate ignition for dependable year •round stalling.
Teams up with over 30job-mlnded attachmonls.Don't
111 the a!)Prty look roo you .. . under
tilt ho&lt;&gt;d. thet5581a all buelneas.

•

CHUCK COLLIER
'SERVICE STOiE:

'

We Appreciate Yo.Lir Patronage and Extend An Invitation To
Visit Our Lots Monday Thru Saturday.
'

Gallipolis, Ohio

--~-~

GENERAL TIRE

e OPEN EVENINGS

Middleport, Ollio

Thank You!
(

f

,,

SALES~
Pfl, 992·7161

VANDAUA, Ohio (UP!) Charles Forlthofer of Avon, a
14-year-old shooter, fired the
best score Friday at the Ohio
State Trapshoot and won the
Jl'eliminary handicap.
The y~ broke 97 clay tar·
gets from the 19-yard line lor
the highest score in the preliminary handicap and the preliminary wubles events shot In
windy weather with gusts of up
to 30 mph ..
Second in the preliminary
handicap race was Mark Snowden of Dayton, who troke 96
targets from the 20\i yard line.
More than 1,000 shooters
braved the wind and cool
weather for the third day. The
handicap event saw 610
shootera whUe ~ e~ered in
wubles race.
Winning the wubles event
Will J\!fi'Y Hutchinson of Logan
whO broke 94 targets. Second
wu Robert Horne of Xenia
with 93.
.
Cla!f winners In the handicap were Jeff Webb of Sabina
with a 93 from the 21 yard line
u the resident trophy; P. 0.
lllrbage of West Jefferson, a
10 from the 21-yard line for
A, Jo Hatbage of Grove
a IH from the 20\i in the

Louisv ille

Toledo

Tidewater

an shooter, while David
Fletcher of Dayton and Robert
Mieczkowski of Wintersville
tied for the top junior shooters.'
Delbert L. Pare! of Bucyrus
was named the top veteran.

JS 29 .547

the National League West will
be a tight one right down to the
wire." ·
A single game Sunday with .
Houston pits Jim McGlothlin
against Ken Forsch. The Reds
will leave immediately following the game for the WeSt
Coast to open a two-game
series Monday night against .
Los Angeles.

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MOBILE HOME
Two bedroom, Colonial styJe, fully
carpeted, plumbed for washer,
house type door, storm windows,
outside light, shutters, tub en,
clos,ure, ' gas furnace and range.
Delivered and leveled.

31 32 .492 4112

Roc hester
Penins ula

29 36 .446
26 37 .413

7'h
9112

Friday's Results
Toledo 4 Louisville 3
Ric hmond at Rochester.
ppd ., ra in
.
Peninsula at Syracuse, ppd.,

.

Charleston 2 Tidewater o

KANAUGA
MOBILE HOME
SALES

TOURNEYS ANNOUNCED
PORT ANTONIO, Jamaica
(UPl )-The ninth annual Ja.
maica International Blue Marlin Team Tournament and 14th ·
annual Jamaica International
Fishing Tournament will be
run concurrently this fall from
Oct. 16-20 by the Eastern
Jamaica Anglers Association.

Something

New
Has Been
Added

To Ow-Store
Ready Pasted

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ECON
-O-

Plumbing
Supplies

WALL

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Ready pasted, ••

PAINT

dip in water and apply.
Fade proof, plasticized,
precision trimmed, soap
raised prints and

Colors To
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American tradition.

NO CHARGE TO MIX PAINT .

and water washable.ln

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· 4 oz. of mixed paint

FRENCH CITY BUILDERS
SUPPLY

750 1st Ava.

\

•

,. 1800 Different

Plenty of Free Parking

j

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'l

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:'

Gallipolis, Ohio

f-~~~~=====::::::::--------:--"':'--:-~--~~~:-----,

Usbon aColegrove,
92for Class
B honorsa; '
Robert
Columbos,
92 for Class A: David Wolk of
Cincinnati, an 87 for Class D'
and Webb, an 89 for .Class E.
The Ohio State Trapshooting
Association·also named Emory
Moyer, a 47-year-old polio victim from Dayton, to be captain
of the All-State Trapshooting
team.
MoY,er Is supported by a
crutcli'. He was unable to compete in this state shoot becailse
of illness In his family.
Others on the team were
Tom Jones of Canton; Eugene
uiurlsky of Murray City,
Robert Heckman of Celina,
Robert Colegrove of Columbus,
Larry Treni of Franklin,
atarlea Pidcock of Mlllfield,
Garth Henley of Columbus,
David Berlet of Wapskoneta,
Ramo Lupl of Mayfield
Heights, Edwin Smith of
Westlake.
Laura Christopher of Bnutswlck was n11111ed the top WOrn·

We are pleased to announce that

Samuel M. Andrews
has joined our firm as
Manager Huntington Area Branch Office

VERCOE &amp;·
COMPANY INC. .
Member New York Stock Exchange, Inc.
Assodate Member American Stock Exchange, Inc .

Samuel M, Andrews ·

9314th Ave., Huntington, W.Va. (304) 519·33'1

· Ashland 325.1331

.,

'(

"

V1

30 32 .484 5

rai n

••

1972

32 30 .516 3

Syracuse

in

ladies race and Jeff Goodrich
of Northville, Mich., a 92 from
the 22 yard line among the .
pros. .
•
In the doubles, Gene McMabon of Marysville broke a 90 lot
_win Class A; Terry Zepeta of

Grimsley's victory was his
fourth against two defeats. The
complete game was his first.
He ~tr u c k out seven and
walked. only one.
The Reds lead the Astros 5-3
this year.
"It 's too early to call this
series crucial," said Reds
Mana ger Sparky Anderson.
"Actually I think the race in

INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
United Press International
W. L. Pet. GB
Charleston
35 27 .557
Richmond
34 28 .548

14-Year·Old Has Best ·Score Friday

1

.

.:

Meigs Legion To Play

28 Wrens vs. Angels'

Sporty new engine
runs cooler, lasts
longer, packs more
power!
Model1556 15 hp

I

'

GALLIPOLIS - Here's th is
week's baseball schedule for
the Gallipolis Pee Wee, Little
League and Pony League:
.
PEE WEE
!American)
June 26
Angels
vs .OrJ.ioles
Hawks
27 Larks vs.

QUAIL CREEK MOBiLE HOMES
. KEITH GOBLE MOBILE HOMES
-

'

'

Lancaster pro Joe Cardenas and his amateur
partner Dr. Lowell LeCiear won the pro·am
segment of the 47th annual Scmtheastern Ohio Golf
Associ~tion Tournament at the Logan links Friday.
Thts marks the second straight year that
Cardenas has walked away with first place honors
m the p:o-am. Last year he fired a sizzling 61 at
Galhpohs along with his partner Cliff Rhein.

Jamieson Tak·es
Lead In ·western ····
NORTHBROOK, Ill. (UP!)
- Jim Jamieson, continuing to
play brillianUy while niost of
his challengers ·faded, pulled
away to a six-stroke lead
Saturday midway through the
third round of the $150,000
Western Open.
Jamieson, the leader after 36
boles with a seven-under-par
135, picked up successive
birdies on the third and fourth
holes, added another on the
ninth, parred the rest of the
front nine, an(j.was at Hl·underpar 167.after 45 holes.
Doug Sanders, in second
place two strokes behind at the
start of the day , lost a stroke to
par on the front nine but
remained alone in second place
at four-under-par 173.
Four players - R. H. Sikes,
Tommy Aaron, Tom Weidkopf
and Bobby Nichols - were at
three-under-par at varying
stages of their rounds on the
back nine, and J. C. Sne, 1,
Hale Irwin and Dale Douglass
were at lw!HIIIder.par.
AI the Masters in April,
Jamieson
trailed
Jack

~

By KEITH WISECUP

Vet Muncey Favored
DETROIT (UP!) - Veteran
Bill Muncey, the sizzling driver
with the hottest hydroplane,
was favored Sunday to win the
$44,000 Gold CUp Race for the
unlimit.ed powerboats on the
treacherous Detroit River.
Muncey heads a field of nine,
with a lOth starter hoping to
qualify early on the day of the
race, which will match
roostertails for the first prize of
$14,750. Second place is worth
$8,7.00, third $5,200, and all but

,

Carderias•LeClear
Fire 67; Gallia
·Duo Takes Third

~

1 SUPER SHE~,.

Family Pack

,.)

Lancaster Retains· Pro-Am Golf Title

Ray Sadecki relieved Mets'
In the first Lou Brock and Ed
starter· Tom Seaver with the. Crosby each singled and Brock
bases full in the fifth and scored when Matty Alou gol a
Melendez, batting for Bernie gift double as riglj_t fieldfr
Carbo, drove a :Hmd-2 pitch Dave Marshall slipped on the
over the left field wall for his wet grass going after his
third homer of the year.
blooper. Joe Torte's sacrilll;e
ThelCards clipped Seaver for fly andTed Simm01l8' single Up
three runs In the first; added . the middle accouitteil for two
another off him in the fourth, more runs.
and four more In the fifth when
The seven·. earned runs
they finally chased him with charged against Seaver were
his fourlll defeat against nine the most he has O¥er given up
victQries. All iolled, St. Louis in any one game in th~ major
pounded out 17 hits.
leagues.

.

ARTHUR HERMAN
~
ROUEN, France (UPI)Top Formula Two drivers
today awaited the chance to
challenge some of auto
racing's biggest names Sunday
in the ~d Rouen Formula
double with Renick stopping at Two Grand Prix.
third.
Current leader in the FormuSoderholm then delivered his la One world driver's chamtwo-run single and scored on
~
Kaat's two-out double.
The Twins added a run in the
seventh when Steve Braun
drew a bases-loaded watk, but
· the ,Royals escaped further
damage when Jim Nettles .__ _ _ _,..____
lined into an inning • ending
National League
double play to second baseman
St1ndings
Cookie Rojas.
United Press International
(Twilight and Night Games
Kaat recorded his ninth
Not Included)
victory against two losses and
I East)
was backed by four Minnesota Team
W. L. Pet. G.B.
Pittsburgh 38 21 .644
double plays.
37 23 .617 1'12
The Royals scored in the New York
Chicago
34 25 .576 4
eighth when Rojas and John St. Louis
27 32 .458 11
' Mayberry opened with singles, Mootreal
26 33 .441 12
Rojas going to third. Rojas was Philadelphia 21 37 .362 16'12
(West)
trapped in a rundown when Team
W. L. Pel. G.B.
Jerry May bounced to Cincinnati
37 24 .607
37 25 .597 •;,
Soderholm but catcher Phil Houston
Los
Angeles
34 26 .567 2'12
Roof threw .the ball away Atlanta
27 31 .466 8'12
allowing Rojas to score.
San Diego
21 39 .350 15'12
San Fran.
22 45 .328 18
Saturdav's Resu Its
Pittsburgh 3 Chicago 1
St. Louis 11 New York o
Philadelphia at Montreal
(night)
Houston at Cincinnati tnl9hl)

BASEBALL

Is Imposed

'

Top Drivers Await Challenge

KANSAS CITY (UP!) 7 Eric
Soderholm cracked a two-run
single to highlight a three-run
fourth inning Saturday and Jim
•
Kaat pitched an eight-hitter to
lead the Minnesota Twins to a
4-1 victory over the Kansas
City Royals.
Rick Renick started the
fourth inning surge by drawing
a walk off loser Jim Rooker.
DENVER (UP! ) - The Bobby Darwin followed with a
Western Athletic Conference
announced Saturday that the
conference presidents have
decided to Impose a limitation
on football scholarships within
the next academic year.
At its annual meeting in
Denver,
the
league's
Presidents' Council .also appointed a committee to study
RECALLED
the future ·of intercollegiate
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Ron athletics for women in the
LONDON (UP!) - Concern
Lolleh, 2:i, was recalled Friday WAC.
was expressed Saturday for
by the Cleveland Indians to
"The presidents were yachtsman Sir Francis
replace Chris Chambliss, who adamant in their view that the Chichester, 71, currently
Is on IIII-day 'leave for active· time has come for the con- sailing the Atlantic singlemllltary reserve duty In ference to take positive action handed.
Wichita. Lolich, an outfielder on the financial pinch felt in all
"Obviously one is to some
with Portland, batted .349 as or major
college
athletic extent concerned," said Ron
June II and had 12 homers and programs today," said Hall, an official of the
San Francisco at San D1ego
49 rbl's. Lolich Is the cousin of Commissioner Stan Bates, newspaper (The - Sunday
Inight)
Atlanta
at Los Angeles 2 (twlMickey Lolich, a pitcher with regarding
the
football Times) for which Chichester is
night)
·
the Detroit Tiger organization. scholarships.
writing about the Observer
Today's Games
(All Times EDT)
"II is hoped that the WAC 's Singlehanded
Transatlantic
Ph
iladelphia
at Montreal &lt;2: 15
action may serve as a catalyst Race.
for others in the , area of
Hall said the veteran
LONGNIDDRY,
Scotland P·~\ouis at New York 2 (t
·
POSTPONED
financlll aid. While this action yachtsman, first man .to sail (UP!) - Sam Snead won seven p.m,)
IJUI ""' All iliiilner •ls pre~n~ limited td football, solo around the world, had straight holes today to wipe out Pittsburgh at Chicago (2: 15
lea
seball action was the presidents also requested failed to keep three scheduled a four-hole deficit to win the ~·,!;,~ta at Los Angeles (5 p.m.)
postponed here again Friday the conferenc~ council to study radio contacts.
World Senior Golf Cham· Houston at Cincinnat i (2 : 15
p.m.)
.
due to rain and wet grounds. the possibility of limiting
"The most likely explanation pionship'
The GO-yea r-old Virginian San Francisco at San Diego (4
scholarships in other sports," is there is something wrong
p.m.)
Bates said.
Monday's Games
with his radio," Hall said. beat 52-year-old British Pro
BOOSTERS TO MEET
About women athletes, who "There is also the probability Ken Bousfield by 3 and 2 in Cincinnati at Los Angeles
MASON - Wblte Falcon do not presently compete In the he is .not very well, and ob· their 36 hole final after trailing ~i~~~~urgh at New York
Athletic Boosters have called a WAC, Bates said the presidents viously one is to some extent by two holes at the halfway (night)
regular meeting for Monday recognize their desire to concerned."
stage.
• Philadelphia at Chicago
Snead, who won won $2080 . Montreal at St. Louis (night)
evening at 7:30p.m. in the high participate in intercollegiate
Contestants in the race are
Houston at San Diego (night)
school gymnasium. All sports and a committee Is to sprea&lt;j all over the Northern was four-down after 16 despite Atlanta
at San Fran .
members are urged to study all aspects of the Atlantic. Sponsoring officials out-driving the Briton by as
American League
"·( attend.
situation.
said they had no idea who was much as 100 yards at times.
( Easll
The presidents, in their wide- in the lead or even where many Then he won the last two holes Team
W. L.
of
the
morning
round
with
par
ranging
session,
also
apDetroit
of
the
boats
were.
Coadaue brvesU.aUon
~; ~~
proved :
Some were last sighted on figures and had a hat-trick of Baltimore
MIDDLEPORT - Police
26 29
New
York
Wednesday. Four were back in · birdies among five straight Boston
-Guidelines for ireshman
continued investigation here
24 31
victories in the opening holes Citveland
and
junior
varsity
competition.
Plymouth,
where
the
·race
Saturday Into a hit-skip ac~~ ~
Milwaukee
...,
after lunch .
- A procedure for waiting began.
cident Involving former
(West)
The American reached the Team
Of these, Oscar Debra of
W. L.
Glllipolls City, Mana~er Gary eligibility rules fur persons
turn
for
the
last
Ume
with
a
with
extraordinary
hardships.
Belgium,
officially
retired
Oakland
J8 19
R. Short. Short was ap·
Chicago
35 27
three-under
par
32
against
a
37
A
revised
expense
formula
from
the.race,
and
Briton
Max
prehended Friday night on Rt.
Minnesota
31 25
160 by Galli&amp; County sheriff's for the WAC champion in the Barton was towed into harbor for Bousfield. They exchanged California
28 32
Fiesta Bowl.
a victory apiece on the back Kansas City
with
a
missing
mast
and
26
31
deputies. He was returned to
nine
before
Snead
secured
the
•
A
raise
in
the
guarantee
for
probably
would
not
restart.
Texas
25
34
Meigs County to face charges
Saturday's Results
conference football games The other two back in title, finished with a one-over
there.
Milwaukee
Boston 2
from · $20,000 to $25,000, · ef- Plymouth hoped to set out par score for the 34 holes Minnesota 45 Kansas
City I
fective with the 1973 season. again late Saturday.
played .
Chicago at Texas, night
In the morning round Boston at Milwaukee, night
at Baltimore, fwl ·night
Bousfield returned a two over Detroit
New York at Cleveland, ppnd .
71 and Snead a 73.
Today's Games
Detroit at Baltimore
Chi at Texas, twilight
C.tifornla at Oakland, 2
Minnesota at Kan City, 2
New York at Cleveland, 2
Boston at Milwaukee. 2

Scholarship
Limitation

.

~line!, June 25, 1972

•

�.

'

' '

~

.

.

.

' .

,,_... ,,..-;-.....

•

nant races.

over."

II al!oo illustrates why many
For his part, Walker doesn't
clubs are hesitant to swing big conceal the fact that he feels
deals with teams in their own getting rid of Morgan was a
1 divlllons. You usually hate to
plus. "The whole attitude on
tradeaguywhocancome back this club is better," Walker
and haunt you. But that's .Just savs. "There's no squabbling
what Cincinnati and Houston every day. That's one of the big
'did last winter when the Reds reasons we're in til ere."
traded Lee . May, Tommy
Walker also feels May is a
Helms and Jack stewart to good influence on Wynn, who's
HoUBton for Joe Morgan, Denis had quite a comeback. "Joe
Menke, Jack Billingham, would sympathize with Wynn
Cesar Geronimo and a minor and maybe even lead him on
leaguer.
but the other guy (May) pals
The lll!y figures were May with him and threats hjm like a
atdMorgan .TheRedsgaveup buddy . Of course, ir'may be
a guy (May) who hit 39 homers that Wynn just came back on
last year to obtain a speedy his own this year but I'm sure
second baseman in Morgan, it's helped to give him a new
The consensus among most lease on llfe."
' baieball observers was thlit The manager also feels that
' Houston got the edge in the batting in ftont of May means
• deal because power hitters are Wynn gets better pitches to hit
a acarce commodity.
and helps the entire attack.
Anderson, who led the Reds "Our hitting has given everyto the pennant in 1970 when the body more confidence,"
club was labeled the Big Red Walker says. "Our pitchers as
Machine, has spent much of the well as our hitters."
Ieason claiming the trade
One thing that both sides
helped his club.
agree on is that Morgan has
"I couldn't understand aU of done a splendid job for the
the commotion because I was Reds. Even Walker says, "Of
ao llckled to get Morgan," course, Joe's helped them .
Anderson said, "He's so lmpor- He's gone to a new place and
tant to us. The long ball is wants to impress people: He's
wonderful but how much got a lot of pride and he's done
thunder do you need1"
a good ljob. I'm all for him as
The fact that Cincinnati and
Houston, are battling for the
National League lead has
helped to keep the trade in the
IPOtllght as a major topic of
conservation.
CLUB DISBANDED
Walker, MorBID Disagree
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)Another added feature to the
The
St. Louis Blues of the
~amatic situation is the fact
National
Hockey League
that Morgan and Walker dldn 'I
get along in Houston. Morgan Friday announced that their
made It clear he dl~l't agree Central Hockey League farm
with some of Walker's man- club, the Kansas City Blues is
' ll(lll:lal tactics and Walker being disbanded. The mov~ is
ob\'lofildY ·felt · Morgan was expected to help clear the way
cauaing trouble on the club and for the NHL's proposed move
was a bad Influence on Jimmy into nearby Kansas City, Kan.
in 1974.
•
)\'yon, Astro outfielder.

lorig as we can beat them in the
race."
Morgan Replace May?
But the question for Cincinnati remains whether the
addition of Morgpn is enough to
offset the loss of May -{II US \he
fact th~l the Reds may have
helped the club they Mve to
beat out.
Anderson says, "There are a
lot of little things that count in
basebalL Morgan doesn't hit
into double plays, You need to
ggt 'l:l outs in this game, not
just 24 becauSe you hit into
three double plays. And a guy
like Morgan can score even
without a hit in an inning
because. of his speed and thai
means you pick up extra runs.'
However, Cincinnati doesn 'I
have the kind of pitching staff
that makes one or .two runs
stand up for victory. It needs
runs in clusters --and it gets
them when Johnny Bench and
Tony Perez are hitting. Neith,er
was hitting at the start of the
year and the Reds weren 'I
winning even though Morgan
was playing well. Once they
started to hit, the club took off.
Also : the surprising return of
Bobby Tolan to his old form has
lessened the need for another
speedster in the lineup.
What it boils down to is the
Reds first five now reads Rose,
Morgan, Tolan, Bench, Perez
instead of the quintet two years

~~c~fa.'::~/olan,

Perez,
. Which hneup would you
rather have• Anderson ,
natural)y, says he likes the one
he has now. It's obvious the
question won't be settled until
the pennant race is over.
"! felt bad at the start of the
year when we weren 't going
well ," Morgan admits, "I
wanted to show the people the
Reds had made a good trade.
But the guys were all great and
kept telling me I was doing my
job."
But if the Reds don't win it
and the Astros do, the trade
won't be remembered as a
Cincinnati coup.
Of course, there's one other
club still alive in the race, too
- the Los Angeles Dodgers.
And they made a key trade in
the off-season. For a guy
named Frank Robinson .
· That's why the NL West race
is being called the one to watch
this year.

I

'

•

.

11 - The Sonlay 'J'Imes.,SenUnei, June 25, 1972

'

~.

•

PT .. PLEASANT - Several
entries have already been
at:t:epfed for the Second Alinual
-,
1·~
~ Hi~den Valley Country Glub
' : '1i11!
July Open Golf Tournament, it
--~- -, was announced . Saturday by
·
Chairman Bill Capehari.
., "
·
Capehart, who issued a

;.U

'

V
£

'

The New In Fanning

n .· y S, ·
•

•

Houston
000 000 001 - 1 5 1
Clncl
000 310 o3x"- 7 6 1
Reuss, York (6), Gibbon ·lSI,
Gladding lSI and Howard ·
Grimsley (4-2) and Bench. LP_:
Reuss 15-6). HR-Bench (19th).

(~&gt;.-

.

I

three other nights. All players ·
must play In the Sunday, July 2
qualifying rouhd, for · night
placement.
Trophies and 'prlzes valued in
excess of t600 wiU be awarded.
All play will be on gross score,
Capehart also revealed.
Entry fee ts $7 plus green
fees. Entry forms can be gotten
at the Hiddeli. Valley Country
Club and can be mailed toP. 0.
Box 396. in Point Pleasant or
left at the Hidden Valley
Country Clijb clubhouse. Entry
fees must be paid In fuU with
entry forms.

American Lea_
gue

SanFh.n "'iiOOo~ 1 1 o
San Diego 000 010 o3x- 4 7 o
Mc Dowell. Moffitt lSI and
Rader; Arlin (7-61 and Corrales. LP- McDowell IS-S). HR
- Colbert (14th) .
Atlanta
Los Ang
Nlekro
Down•ng
Robinson

Boston
000 000 01o- 1 3 2
Mllw
010 160 OOx- 8 13 0
Curtis, Krausse (S), Tiant
IS), Newhauser (8) and Fisk; NO.2 SIGNS
Brett, Sanders 191 and RodriBUFFALO (UP!) - Reggie
guez. WP-Brett 13-81. LP- McKenzie, the Buffalo Bills'
Curtls (3-3).
No. 2 draft pick out of the
ooO 000 lOD- 1 5o California 001 000 001- 2 7 1 University of Michigan, Friday
000 002 OOx- 2 50 Oakland
100 000 ooo.- 1 2 1
17-6) and Williams;
Ryan ,._S) and Kusnyer; signed a multi-year contract
(4-3) and Sims. HR- Hamilton (4·1) and Dun.can . HR with the National Fllotball
llOih) .
- Jackson l141h), Oliver 19th). League club.

SAN FRANCISCO ( UPI)- A
federal judge Friday ordered
Hick Barry to honor a five-year
$1 million contract signed with
the Golden State Warriors of
the National Basketball
Association in October 1969.
,District Judge Alfonso
Zirpoli granted an injunction
barring the scoring ace of the
New York Nets of' the
American Basketball
Association from playing for
any other club until the con-

Summer'72
Sale
s ,iiiO=iii

State Warriors.
Barry signed the contract
when he was playing with the
. Oakland Oaks. He previously
played with the Warriors. He
took the action when the
franchise was sold to a
Washington, D.C. combine.
Barry later jumped to the
v·1rgm1a
' ' Sq wres
.
of the ABA
and then signed with the Nets.
FranklinMieuli, ownerofthe
Warriors, sought the injunc-

MANY OU1S,'AND•Tl\T.'G:
.l.
'.l1 ll

from playing for the New York
Nets or any other professional
team. &gt;,S
an Francisco
suffer
irreparable
and will
per-

Barry himself said he did not
wish to return to San Francisco.
RECORD SET

manent injuries," the judge
ruled.
NEW YORK (UPI)- The
When the contract was
National
Hockey League set an
signed on Oct . 2, 1969, the team
all-time attendance record
was known as the San Fran- during
the 1971-72 season, it
cisco Warriors . It later was announced Friday by the
changed its name to the Golden league offices.

visitors to the Ohio Stale
University campus they should
try to reason things out for
themselves. She asked the

the easy '!,BY with

1

•l•------:-:.;:,;;.;:;::;:,..:~:;::;..0:.:!";!:
:'~'~--------1
1
.~
_ J _.·
('L_ _
T!J-~f4!'• tln6 (DNA~, cJif!l.

('_//

PURINA CHECK-FLY
CATTLE BLOC~ .

f

"BUILDING SUPPLIES"

Mondoi- Thru Frldoy-7 A.M. to s P.M.
saturuoy-7
•AM
. . 1a 4 P•M.
PHONE446-4905
GALLIPOLIS,

ATTENDS
CONFERENCE - Dean Bush of
Gallipolis, direclor-at-la~ge
for the American - fnlernalional Junior Charolais
Foundation during · 1972,
attended the third annual
junior
C harolais
.,...l~i.r\~,U. association's leadership
j
•, conference, June
18-21, at ~
Texas A&amp;M University in
College Station, Tex. The
third
annual
AICJF
Leadership Conference
included such topics as
presentations on animal
genetics~ reproduction, a live
catlle evaluation and
leadership workshop. The
conference was sponsored by
the American - International
Charolais Assn., of Houston
Tex., in cooperation with th~
animal science depariment
of Texas A&amp;M Uni versily.
Besides serving as director
for
the AICJF during 1972,
Gallipolis, 0.
Bush has been president of
the Ohio Valley Junior
Charolais Association and is
a member of the Future
Farmers of America.

FLY CONTROL

~

Cattle eat Cattle Blocks
with t.he buillain maggot

OHIO

killer. Fewer maggots mean
fewer fa~e an~ horn flies.

The easiest wn~ to control

flies . Cattle Blocks also aid
in conlroll i ng worms and
provide all the· mirlerals
and salt cattle need.

a·n

Purina Check-Fly Cattle
Blocks. Gel. some aoon.

J. D. North Produce Co.
Vine Street

. I

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,,

Anniversary

th

0

Special
50 Qilf Size

maintenance We'll
the shutters

~nd two

• ·

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We'll bui~~ this home lor you ... on your property. You'll
l1nd that 11 swell eng!neered • .. built to really last •• : built
ou~ of ruge;ed matertals that go on and on with little or no

·-

q~~~~t~ ~a~:t~~~ct; ~et~~~~:~ ~! ~~i=~dz~~gJy~: ~!i~'i;.~e'U !nclude

,

~!~~ l~~u:t!:~ ~j ~~!id: :~~~fe~:~e. ¢~a matte~~ fact, alte~ finishing the outside we:n :~~~ ~t~r.

finishing. Just~ little or a lot. it doe~n't ~~~~~~uhoa e over an do som~ o~ all.o~ th.e costly inside
for yourself the LOWER YOUR COSTS
w much but the more tnslde ftniShtng you can do
'
and the more money you'll save.
/

~VER 20 MODELS • · HIGH QUALITY
~~i~ma~d:~r;,~~~~~~mw~~J!!s~~:ui~a~u~~~~:~~l u~ heavy d~ly r?Ofing , hardboa~d "won~er" ..
.

on looking good year after year

·

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. . . •. .. .
~ MQ'/l'r~

mmtmum up eep '"a home that Will keep rtght

A

WI

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I
.......... ..,.a........

a Lumber &amp; Supply
PHONE 675-11:60

6th !STREJ..:'I'

Old Hwy. 52
P.O. Box 248
Phone: 867-3153

POINT PLEASANT

P.O. Box 8367
608 1st. Ave. So.
U. 5. Hwy. 25 (Nitro, W. Va.)
PH:· 727 ·2296

•
,I

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what ~ 'WOUld cost ond wllot YoUr monthly
;!~dtobo to build ony of our homes on your~
r our frn cotolor Df homes ond COII!piele
"'1110n or stop ~Y parr. locatioll:

~---1
~~~
WALTER HOMES
(Moil to neorest office)
• '

So. OfARLESTON, W. VA. .

-;
or:

I

-

-

I would like to have more

1

I NAMI,~------------------------- I
I
I.rol.,h_
CITY

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lor ..lthllon)

ru,.l reute ....... tivt tlirtctlon• _

-- .:

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:

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l.!.::· "'"' "' ·-----::~----- _..,.,

FREEl

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IrATI

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When You Purchase A Creep Feeder During The Month of June-Size
CC200
We Wil Give You )'
.

"'

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ADDIISS '

WEIGH MORE·I

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~

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understond there would be

~
&lt;),

--:"'1
"l I

information and the cost of
building on my property . I

no obli~;~ation 'to buy and
that 'I'OI.i would give me the"
facts free of charge.

CREEP FED
CALVES •••

P.

G
ET COST AND COMPLETE INFORMATION.
Wo wont you to how oil tho 1tct1 Wo wont ,ou to 1m1w

· d .
even me 1u e 10 your mortgage the cost of the materials that

CHESAPEAKE, OHIO 4561$

l

.

.

-~l:JtiUiii4/J{l
. .
·
to que/ifted propeny owners

·u

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geeowJ ~ ~
/)_ ~ ~ l .

AG'E rllfll'l
It!'IAI ANC
I"'"'
lNG

We lmance the homes we bu'ld d
you'll use to finish your hom~. an

~
·

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1,000 lbs. of CREEP FEED
OF OHIO

I

"Your Form SUfllllv

SuDtmtorlitl"
Gallipolis, Ohio

t1.......
'I

Ph. 446-2463

......................~...,.......-................

~

delegates lo ask themselves
three basic questions - Who
3111 p Where am 1 uoing' How .
·
o
·
will I gel there? Miss Schaefer'
of course got her sta'fl on the
'
road to Miss America in
connection with the Big Bend
Regatta several years ago
when she was selected as the
area's Miss America ca ndidate.
Scholarships for the six Club
Congress delegates wer~~o
provided by the Meigs County
Agricultural Society and the
Citizen's National Bank at
Middleport. The club members
themselves paid $10 so they
couldhelpdtherclubmembers
par ticipate in other ou lstanding activities.
The 4-H club camping season
will be. completed for Meigs
County club ~embers this
conung week with the ninecounty Teen Camp to be held at
Canters Cave on June 25 to
June . 29. Bud Carter,, Gallia
County Extension .. Agent,
Agriculture, and Mrs: Jennifer
Sheets, Meigs County Extension
Agent,
Home
Economics, are the directors
for the camp. They will be
assisted by Brenda . Donohue,
counselor from Meigs County
and other counselors and staff
members who are in the WorkStudy Program including Dean
Weber from Ohio Stale
University and Margie Jeffers,
Doris Barnhart, and Susie
Teaford from Ohio University.
COLUMBUS ( UPI)
The first 4-H camp of the Columbia Gas of Ohio and the
year was Junior Camp which Ohio Valley Gas Companies
was held June II to 15 with C. were granted permission
E. Blakeslee, Meigs County Friday to restrict residential
Extension Agent, Agriculture, gas service to new customers
and Mrs . Char lotte Buchy, 4-H 1 after Oct. I, 1972.
Agent from Callia County, as
The Public Utilities Comdirectors.
mission of Ohio order permits
Meigs Coun ly counselors for the two firms to refuse service
the Junior Camp were Edwin lo new residential premises
Cross, Jan Hoi ter, Mandie after Oct. I, but specifies those
Rose, Virginia Jordan , Bar- applicants for service who
bara Jordan, Mary Ruth have commenced construction
Sauer, and Randy Johnson . of residential units would be
Campers included Marcia and given gas service if the home
Pam Holcomb, Lester and was under construction prior to
Marco Jeffers, Rilla Rhods, the effective date.
Lola Walker, Jeffrey Thaddox,
Also prohibited in the
Julia Johnson, Cathy Blaetl- commission order was all
nar , Faith Perrin, Nicky se rvi ce for existing orJoseph, Ricky Jordan, Noah namental flare fixtures and
Hysell, Paula Hysell, Teresa service for any new outside gas
Ritne, Beth McKnight, Carl lights.
Gheen, Kim Scbo, Mary Mora, The two firms had asked the
kim AUman, ,&amp;beryl Lawson, restrictions be imposed efWayne Reed and David Reed. fective July 1, 1972.
The 9 and 10 Year Old Camp
was held June 18 to 20th with
Mrs. Charlotte Buchy, Gallia
County Extension Agent, 4-H,
as Director. Counselors from
Meigs County included Lester
Jeffers and Jane Jordan. Also
assisting were Dean Weber and
Susie Teaford. Campers al·
lending were JoAnn and Paula
McWhorter , Alicia Evans,
Kathy Po oler, Chr istina
Adkins, Melinda Dailey, Diann
and Kimberly Ward, Mark and
David Riggs, Unda Donohue,
Belinda Whittington, Patricia
Weyersmiller, Tammi Starcher, Rebecca Edwards, Patty
Cremeans, Joy Edwards,
Janet and Sheila Horky, Julie
Biron, Nancy Wallace, Denise
White, and Jerrie Sue Jordan .

meal price freeze ... The
Co mmi ss ion 's recom 1i1endalion for a freeze was by·
passed by the Cost of Living
CoWJcil Thursday.
The prospects for a freeze,
however, were seeri by 59me
sources as slight in the wake of
President Nixo)l 's disc!Dsure
Thursday thai he was considering hiking meat import
quotas to increase supply and .
bring down prices.
Nixon also said he would not

rule out elimination of the price
control exempbon that raw
ag~•cullu.re products have
enjoyed smce the start of the
wage-price freeze last August.
William
J.
Kuhfess,
president of the American
Farm Bureau. Federation,
announced Fnday he had
telephoned Nixon warning that .
a "Freeze on food prices would
redijce production and do
nothing to curb demand ... we
urge you lo avoid this road to

food shortag~~· black markets,
consumer dis~llus,t,onment and
voter. frustrabon.
White House Press Secretary
Ronald L. Ziegler said Nixon
mel with Treasury Secretary
George P. Shu!lz and members
of the Counc•l of Econom1c
Advisers Friday and food
prices were discussed. Nixon
asked his advisers for addiltonal facts on the meat pr1ce
situation but had made no
decision, Ziegler said.

Now·handle extreme variations ·
in twine without missing atie

•

HI.

,

•
•
•
•
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Handle heavy crops, heaviest bales without knotter adjustment.
Handle llghl, fluffy, and slick dry crops without knotter adjuslment.
Make only three Infrequent adjustmenls to compensate for wear.
Tie exclusive double-diameter knols that tests up to 17% stronger.

Meigs Equipment Co.
PH. 992-2176

POMEROY, 0.

New..lok-Twi.$\ .B~Iers, .too~

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BIG 23 CU. FT. UN ICO

CHEST FREEZER

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Regu~r

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Telegram
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
president of the ;Oiilllt Farm
Bureau Federa·lion sent ·a
telegram to 1'-sident Nixon
Friday urgln~ the chief
executive prevent proposed
raw agricultural products
price controls from being
placed into effect.
Leonard Schnell, Apple
Creek president of the 55,500member state organization,
. said such price controls would
not· be workable, would not
increase the supply of farm
products and would be
'resented by farmers. .
"Applying price controls on
farm goods would lead to
rationing, black markets and
unacceptable public reaction,"
he said. ','The problem of
higher costs is caused by increased demand lor red meat.
"Affluent housewifes have
bid up the price on a limited
supply of red meal," Schnell
added. "Controlled prices will
certainly not li\duce farmers
and ranchers to produce more
meal.

MOTIVE SOUGHT
AKRON ( UPI) - The
Sunmlt County Coroner today
sought to establish why Eugene
WeDs Sr., 57, and hla wife,
Hattie, 52, argued Friday
before Wells killed his wife and
thentookhlsown~e .

.

NEW ALL·TWINE BALERS:

Farm Bureau
Sends Nuon

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'CENTRAL SOYA
4

WASHINGTON (UPI ) _ The
Agriculture Departm ent
reports that food prices in
supermarkets in creased in
May following two months of
decline.
·
The government food price
report was issued Friday as the'
Price Commission scheduled
an WJusual meeting at noon
Sunday to consider clamping a
30-{)ay freeze on retail meat
prices.
The Agri~ulture Department's "market basket" index
of .food prices rose 0.4 per cent
in May following declines of 0.7
per ce nt in April and 0.4 P,er
cent in March. Government
officials. say the increase in
May would have been higher
except for price cutbacks by
middlemen.
The increase was attributed
mainly to higher retail prices
for pork, fresh vegetables and
frui t.
Beef prices fell during May
but started lo increase sharply
;as the month ended, the
department said.
Price Commission Chairman
C. Jackson Grayson called the
Sunday meeting after polling
the six other members-of his
panel by telephone Friday to
sound out their reaction to a

Restrict Service

y /t.L

Decker • Yale
our S&amp; T S*o•e

F9od Prices Up In May

Gas Firms To

T/ -4

e B.lack &amp;

87 OLIVE ST.

"':;f::

JULY 4th

I

tr~.~~~: ~!r~~ ~~!\njoined i~;;~~t~~~s ~;r;rig~~;

°

AND

TUES
Qtl\T P-411&gt;~:0' 7T~ B'RAlVIJS
~ t .L' /flU U&gt;J
YOU KNOW

I'

,
exerctse, the 4-H ers debated
and voted on "The Ohio Plan,"
a proposa l to extend,financial
· ...
, t d ts . h'
asslswonce .o s u en m lgher
edu,calton
through
an
arrang
t 1 h
th
em en
ave
e
students repay the state later.
The 4-H delegates defeated the
proposal by a tntal vote of 593
a~~mst. to 159 for.
1ghhghls of the sessions
were the appea;an~e of
Governor J?hn J. Gllbgan and
Speaker of the House Charles
F. Kurfess. Both were tntr.oduced and ·mad~ bnef
statements comm~ndmg - the
youths for their mteresl tn
government.
The featured speaker of the
Ohio Club Congress was 11\iss
Laurie Lea Schaefer, Miss
America 1972, who told the
delegates attending the June
14-17 4-H Congress that young
people must become involved if
they expect to lind a place in
1
s':ci~~·fer told the

PRODUCTION
CREDIT OFFICE
IN POMEROY
WILL BE CLOSED
JUNE 27th

DON'T MISS T-HE

.•

•

NOTICE

·,

Barry Must Honor '69
Contract With Warriors

r

BY C. E. BLAKESLEE
F
E 1A
or the rest of the summer
x ~ gent, Agriculture
tlle club membe
k'
POMEROY - The Meigs ' with their advisor~"· ·~or mg
County 4-H club program has · out one or
' WI. :~r~y
more proJec.., m
moved InIo hi gh gear during each of the 48
local clubs
the month .of June. The most
The mal'o . ti 't
f.
interesting tat' ti r
r ac VI y, as ar as
s .ts, c rom . the stale 4-H events already
Extension Services standpoint completed
. dI l
is that total enrollment George . ~~~~~ e e~a est
reported is 643 club members Johnson Marcia C 'r Shran
as compared to508in 19.71. This Wilson, 'Jane Whi~;~ad a~~~
represents. ail increase of Sheri Young, who att~nded
approximately 15 pet., thanks Ohio 4-H Club Congress, June
to the excellent work of 4·H 14-17. Before allending .the
A&amp;slstants Mrs. Pal Holler and event they were briefed on
Mrs . Leota. Young, in legislative procedure b
c?"perallon With 1.05 4-H ad- Representative Ralph Welke~
vtsors and 58 JUnt9r leaders in preparation for their inock
who serve without pay.
legislative session. Nearly 800
The 4-H recruitment 4-H youth from all over Ohio
.. P~ogram, was carried out last participated in three mock
wmter when l'llrs. Holter a.nd legislative sessions in the
Mrs. Young Vtslled the third assembly chamber of the Ohio
and fourth gra41lJ! of ev.ery, House of Representatives on
school In the county telllng June 16 . It w,s the final day of
them about the 4-H club activity for the young men and
program. The •.chools were women attending the 55th
yery cooperative m.permllting annual Ohio 4-H Congress. In a
this program to be presented. regular house parliamentary

znescore~ w~~~~ J:!~~~pth:~

New Yor~ 002 020 ooo.-'4 7 1
Cleveland · 001 000 ooo.- 1 6 0
Peterson (6-S) and· MUn.on ;
Wilcox, Rlddleberger 151, Hennlgan 181 and Fosse. LPWilcox 16·71. HR-AIIen (lsi).
·
-Minnesota 000 000 ~ 0 7 1
KanCity
000 001 04x- 5 10 o
Perry . (6-6) and Mltterwald;
mllttorft (6.4) and Kirkpatrick.
R- Mayberry 16th).
Chicago . 000 100 2oo- 3 12 0
Texas
000 102 Olx- 4 B 2
Wood, Forster lSI and
Herrmann, Brinkman 17); Bos·
man, Cox · (7 I, Paul (8),
Lindblad (8) and Billings, WPLindblad IJ.2) . LP- Wood Ill ·
61. HRs-Howard 15th), Ford
16th).

~.'

,.

Meigs 4-H Program Rolling

•.,......

after June :zs.
. ,...
Players wiD be paired into ,...
foursomes on Sunday, July 2, ...,
when they '11'111 play the inlllal
18-hole qualifying round~.
Teeoff times and pairings wiD
be announced .tn the newspaper
on Friday, June 30.
The final 18-boles of the
tourney pairings wW be an•
nounced o~ Monday, July~. .

•da ' L • ' · .

By Unoted Press lnle•natlonal
National League
St. Louis at N.Y., ppd, rain
.
·· - PoUsbrgh 000 300 o1o- 4 9 0
Chtcago . 000 001100 -2 8 0
Blass, Gluslt 191 and Sangull len; Jenkins, McGinn 181 and
Hundley. WP-.,. Biass 19·11. LP· Jenktns 1.8-61.
Phlla
000 OOO Olo- 1 9 2
Montreal 000 000 o2x- 2 7 0
· Nash, ~hort ISJ and Baleman ; Torrez 18·3 and Humphrey. LP-Nash 11-2) .

NEW JACKSON COACH- Ronald J. Fenik, 36, former
head football coach at Barberton, OhiQ, has accepted the
head coaching position at Jackson High School. Fenik an
Ohio ·university graduate, was former head coach' at
McArthur where he won three championships. He has five ,
Yfars experience as an assistant coa·ch at Xavier University
ahd Muskingum College.llis 1971 squad finished with an 8-1-1
record with its only loss to the tough Massillon Tigers. He will
inherit a veteran ball club at Jackson .
.

'

reminder that entries Will be
closed after 100 Ilnksters have
signed to partiCipate, said this
year's tourney !rill be a twoday event with 18 holes to be
played on July 2 and the other .
18 holes on July 4.
No entries will be accepted

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•

.Golf Entries ·Accepted Now· . ;

Reds-Astro·s Swap.
Last Fall Still Debated
When Cincinnati made its
first trip to Houstnn this year,
Morgan was asked if he said
hello to Walker. "Why should I
say anything to him now,"
Morgan said, "I haven't
spoken to him for two years."
Morgan also refused to take,
a rest and come out of one
game even though Cincinnati
had a big lead because, · "I
wanted to see the expression' on
Harry's face when it was

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I&amp; .::.. 'lbe Sunday 'l'ime&amp;&amp;ntineJ, June 25 1912'
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NEW YORK (UPI)-'.'How ·
much thunder do you really
need?" asks Cincimati Reds'
manager Sparky Anderson.
"The trade looks as good to
ua as it did last November, "
Jays Houston Astro manager
Harry Walker.
The de!Nite started last Nov.
29th and it seems destined to
continue all summer, fueled by
the emotions of what mighl be
one of baseball's hottest pen-

.....

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WE SERVICE!
.WE FiNANCE!

Limited Supply! On Sale While They La1 t!

•

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See Our

:~[0

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Selection

$
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Cool Low !;!rices On All Sizes
Now In Stock! A size for
ever)6. purpose 5,000, 7,000,
10,200, 12,000, 15,000, 18,000,
24,000 and 29,000 BTU. We
insta II!

Speciali.s ts in Whole House Air Conditioning . Phone 992-2181 for
free esltmate.
- ·

POMEROY. LANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.

Serving Meigs, O.m11nc1 Mason Counties
Phpnt 992·2111
Open Mon.-sat. Until6 P.M.

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nant races.

over."

II al!oo illustrates why many
For his part, Walker doesn't
clubs are hesitant to swing big conceal the fact that he feels
deals with teams in their own getting rid of Morgan was a
1 divlllons. You usually hate to
plus. "The whole attitude on
tradeaguywhocancome back this club is better," Walker
and haunt you. But that's .Just savs. "There's no squabbling
what Cincinnati and Houston every day. That's one of the big
'did last winter when the Reds reasons we're in til ere."
traded Lee . May, Tommy
Walker also feels May is a
Helms and Jack stewart to good influence on Wynn, who's
HoUBton for Joe Morgan, Denis had quite a comeback. "Joe
Menke, Jack Billingham, would sympathize with Wynn
Cesar Geronimo and a minor and maybe even lead him on
leaguer.
but the other guy (May) pals
The lll!y figures were May with him and threats hjm like a
atdMorgan .TheRedsgaveup buddy . Of course, ir'may be
a guy (May) who hit 39 homers that Wynn just came back on
last year to obtain a speedy his own this year but I'm sure
second baseman in Morgan, it's helped to give him a new
The consensus among most lease on llfe."
' baieball observers was thlit The manager also feels that
' Houston got the edge in the batting in ftont of May means
• deal because power hitters are Wynn gets better pitches to hit
a acarce commodity.
and helps the entire attack.
Anderson, who led the Reds "Our hitting has given everyto the pennant in 1970 when the body more confidence,"
club was labeled the Big Red Walker says. "Our pitchers as
Machine, has spent much of the well as our hitters."
Ieason claiming the trade
One thing that both sides
helped his club.
agree on is that Morgan has
"I couldn't understand aU of done a splendid job for the
the commotion because I was Reds. Even Walker says, "Of
ao llckled to get Morgan," course, Joe's helped them .
Anderson said, "He's so lmpor- He's gone to a new place and
tant to us. The long ball is wants to impress people: He's
wonderful but how much got a lot of pride and he's done
thunder do you need1"
a good ljob. I'm all for him as
The fact that Cincinnati and
Houston, are battling for the
National League lead has
helped to keep the trade in the
IPOtllght as a major topic of
conservation.
CLUB DISBANDED
Walker, MorBID Disagree
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)Another added feature to the
The
St. Louis Blues of the
~amatic situation is the fact
National
Hockey League
that Morgan and Walker dldn 'I
get along in Houston. Morgan Friday announced that their
made It clear he dl~l't agree Central Hockey League farm
with some of Walker's man- club, the Kansas City Blues is
' ll(lll:lal tactics and Walker being disbanded. The mov~ is
ob\'lofildY ·felt · Morgan was expected to help clear the way
cauaing trouble on the club and for the NHL's proposed move
was a bad Influence on Jimmy into nearby Kansas City, Kan.
in 1974.
•
)\'yon, Astro outfielder.

lorig as we can beat them in the
race."
Morgan Replace May?
But the question for Cincinnati remains whether the
addition of Morgpn is enough to
offset the loss of May -{II US \he
fact th~l the Reds may have
helped the club they Mve to
beat out.
Anderson says, "There are a
lot of little things that count in
basebalL Morgan doesn't hit
into double plays, You need to
ggt 'l:l outs in this game, not
just 24 becauSe you hit into
three double plays. And a guy
like Morgan can score even
without a hit in an inning
because. of his speed and thai
means you pick up extra runs.'
However, Cincinnati doesn 'I
have the kind of pitching staff
that makes one or .two runs
stand up for victory. It needs
runs in clusters --and it gets
them when Johnny Bench and
Tony Perez are hitting. Neith,er
was hitting at the start of the
year and the Reds weren 'I
winning even though Morgan
was playing well. Once they
started to hit, the club took off.
Also : the surprising return of
Bobby Tolan to his old form has
lessened the need for another
speedster in the lineup.
What it boils down to is the
Reds first five now reads Rose,
Morgan, Tolan, Bench, Perez
instead of the quintet two years

~~c~fa.'::~/olan,

Perez,
. Which hneup would you
rather have• Anderson ,
natural)y, says he likes the one
he has now. It's obvious the
question won't be settled until
the pennant race is over.
"! felt bad at the start of the
year when we weren 't going
well ," Morgan admits, "I
wanted to show the people the
Reds had made a good trade.
But the guys were all great and
kept telling me I was doing my
job."
But if the Reds don't win it
and the Astros do, the trade
won't be remembered as a
Cincinnati coup.
Of course, there's one other
club still alive in the race, too
- the Los Angeles Dodgers.
And they made a key trade in
the off-season. For a guy
named Frank Robinson .
· That's why the NL West race
is being called the one to watch
this year.

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11 - The Sonlay 'J'Imes.,SenUnei, June 25, 1972

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PT .. PLEASANT - Several
entries have already been
at:t:epfed for the Second Alinual
-,
1·~
~ Hi~den Valley Country Glub
' : '1i11!
July Open Golf Tournament, it
--~- -, was announced . Saturday by
·
Chairman Bill Capehari.
., "
·
Capehart, who issued a

;.U

'

V
£

'

The New In Fanning

n .· y S, ·
•

•

Houston
000 000 001 - 1 5 1
Clncl
000 310 o3x"- 7 6 1
Reuss, York (6), Gibbon ·lSI,
Gladding lSI and Howard ·
Grimsley (4-2) and Bench. LP_:
Reuss 15-6). HR-Bench (19th).

(~&gt;.-

.

I

three other nights. All players ·
must play In the Sunday, July 2
qualifying rouhd, for · night
placement.
Trophies and 'prlzes valued in
excess of t600 wiU be awarded.
All play will be on gross score,
Capehart also revealed.
Entry fee ts $7 plus green
fees. Entry forms can be gotten
at the Hiddeli. Valley Country
Club and can be mailed toP. 0.
Box 396. in Point Pleasant or
left at the Hidden Valley
Country Clijb clubhouse. Entry
fees must be paid In fuU with
entry forms.

American Lea_
gue

SanFh.n "'iiOOo~ 1 1 o
San Diego 000 010 o3x- 4 7 o
Mc Dowell. Moffitt lSI and
Rader; Arlin (7-61 and Corrales. LP- McDowell IS-S). HR
- Colbert (14th) .
Atlanta
Los Ang
Nlekro
Down•ng
Robinson

Boston
000 000 01o- 1 3 2
Mllw
010 160 OOx- 8 13 0
Curtis, Krausse (S), Tiant
IS), Newhauser (8) and Fisk; NO.2 SIGNS
Brett, Sanders 191 and RodriBUFFALO (UP!) - Reggie
guez. WP-Brett 13-81. LP- McKenzie, the Buffalo Bills'
Curtls (3-3).
No. 2 draft pick out of the
ooO 000 lOD- 1 5o California 001 000 001- 2 7 1 University of Michigan, Friday
000 002 OOx- 2 50 Oakland
100 000 ooo.- 1 2 1
17-6) and Williams;
Ryan ,._S) and Kusnyer; signed a multi-year contract
(4-3) and Sims. HR- Hamilton (4·1) and Dun.can . HR with the National Fllotball
llOih) .
- Jackson l141h), Oliver 19th). League club.

SAN FRANCISCO ( UPI)- A
federal judge Friday ordered
Hick Barry to honor a five-year
$1 million contract signed with
the Golden State Warriors of
the National Basketball
Association in October 1969.
,District Judge Alfonso
Zirpoli granted an injunction
barring the scoring ace of the
New York Nets of' the
American Basketball
Association from playing for
any other club until the con-

Summer'72
Sale
s ,iiiO=iii

State Warriors.
Barry signed the contract
when he was playing with the
. Oakland Oaks. He previously
played with the Warriors. He
took the action when the
franchise was sold to a
Washington, D.C. combine.
Barry later jumped to the
v·1rgm1a
' ' Sq wres
.
of the ABA
and then signed with the Nets.
FranklinMieuli, ownerofthe
Warriors, sought the injunc-

MANY OU1S,'AND•Tl\T.'G:
.l.
'.l1 ll

from playing for the New York
Nets or any other professional
team. &gt;,S
an Francisco
suffer
irreparable
and will
per-

Barry himself said he did not
wish to return to San Francisco.
RECORD SET

manent injuries," the judge
ruled.
NEW YORK (UPI)- The
When the contract was
National
Hockey League set an
signed on Oct . 2, 1969, the team
all-time attendance record
was known as the San Fran- during
the 1971-72 season, it
cisco Warriors . It later was announced Friday by the
changed its name to the Golden league offices.

visitors to the Ohio Stale
University campus they should
try to reason things out for
themselves. She asked the

the easy '!,BY with

1

•l•------:-:.;:,;;.;:;::;:,..:~:;::;..0:.:!";!:
:'~'~--------1
1
.~
_ J _.·
('L_ _
T!J-~f4!'• tln6 (DNA~, cJif!l.

('_//

PURINA CHECK-FLY
CATTLE BLOC~ .

f

"BUILDING SUPPLIES"

Mondoi- Thru Frldoy-7 A.M. to s P.M.
saturuoy-7
•AM
. . 1a 4 P•M.
PHONE446-4905
GALLIPOLIS,

ATTENDS
CONFERENCE - Dean Bush of
Gallipolis, direclor-at-la~ge
for the American - fnlernalional Junior Charolais
Foundation during · 1972,
attended the third annual
junior
C harolais
.,...l~i.r\~,U. association's leadership
j
•, conference, June
18-21, at ~
Texas A&amp;M University in
College Station, Tex. The
third
annual
AICJF
Leadership Conference
included such topics as
presentations on animal
genetics~ reproduction, a live
catlle evaluation and
leadership workshop. The
conference was sponsored by
the American - International
Charolais Assn., of Houston
Tex., in cooperation with th~
animal science depariment
of Texas A&amp;M Uni versily.
Besides serving as director
for
the AICJF during 1972,
Gallipolis, 0.
Bush has been president of
the Ohio Valley Junior
Charolais Association and is
a member of the Future
Farmers of America.

FLY CONTROL

~

Cattle eat Cattle Blocks
with t.he buillain maggot

OHIO

killer. Fewer maggots mean
fewer fa~e an~ horn flies.

The easiest wn~ to control

flies . Cattle Blocks also aid
in conlroll i ng worms and
provide all the· mirlerals
and salt cattle need.

a·n

Purina Check-Fly Cattle
Blocks. Gel. some aoon.

J. D. North Produce Co.
Vine Street

. I

'.

,,

Anniversary

th

0

Special
50 Qilf Size

maintenance We'll
the shutters

~nd two

• ·

· .

-

We'll bui~~ this home lor you ... on your property. You'll
l1nd that 11 swell eng!neered • .. built to really last •• : built
ou~ of ruge;ed matertals that go on and on with little or no

·-

q~~~~t~ ~a~:t~~~ct; ~et~~~~:~ ~! ~~i=~dz~~gJy~: ~!i~'i;.~e'U !nclude

,

~!~~ l~~u:t!:~ ~j ~~!id: :~~~fe~:~e. ¢~a matte~~ fact, alte~ finishing the outside we:n :~~~ ~t~r.

finishing. Just~ little or a lot. it doe~n't ~~~~~~uhoa e over an do som~ o~ all.o~ th.e costly inside
for yourself the LOWER YOUR COSTS
w much but the more tnslde ftniShtng you can do
'
and the more money you'll save.
/

~VER 20 MODELS • · HIGH QUALITY
~~i~ma~d:~r;,~~~~~~mw~~J!!s~~:ui~a~u~~~~:~~l u~ heavy d~ly r?Ofing , hardboa~d "won~er" ..
.

on looking good year after year

·

..

. . . •. .. .
~ MQ'/l'r~

mmtmum up eep '"a home that Will keep rtght

A

WI

I

I
.......... ..,.a........

a Lumber &amp; Supply
PHONE 675-11:60

6th !STREJ..:'I'

Old Hwy. 52
P.O. Box 248
Phone: 867-3153

POINT PLEASANT

P.O. Box 8367
608 1st. Ave. So.
U. 5. Hwy. 25 (Nitro, W. Va.)
PH:· 727 ·2296

•
,I

~

what ~ 'WOUld cost ond wllot YoUr monthly
;!~dtobo to build ony of our homes on your~
r our frn cotolor Df homes ond COII!piele
"'1110n or stop ~Y parr. locatioll:

~---1
~~~
WALTER HOMES
(Moil to neorest office)
• '

So. OfARLESTON, W. VA. .

-;
or:

I

-

-

I would like to have more

1

I NAMI,~------------------------- I
I
I.rol.,h_
CITY

I"

lor ..lthllon)

ru,.l reute ....... tivt tlirtctlon• _

-- .:

I

------

:

I

l.!.::· "'"' "' ·-----::~----- _..,.,

FREEl

I
I
I
I

IrATI

.

r

'

•

When You Purchase A Creep Feeder During The Month of June-Size
CC200
We Wil Give You )'
.

"'

·

ADDIISS '

WEIGH MORE·I

"
~

I
~

•

·'

·~

1

understond there would be

~
&lt;),

--:"'1
"l I

information and the cost of
building on my property . I

no obli~;~ation 'to buy and
that 'I'OI.i would give me the"
facts free of charge.

CREEP FED
CALVES •••

P.

G
ET COST AND COMPLETE INFORMATION.
Wo wont you to how oil tho 1tct1 Wo wont ,ou to 1m1w

· d .
even me 1u e 10 your mortgage the cost of the materials that

CHESAPEAKE, OHIO 4561$

l

.

.

-~l:JtiUiii4/J{l
. .
·
to que/ifted propeny owners

·u

.

geeowJ ~ ~
/)_ ~ ~ l .

AG'E rllfll'l
It!'IAI ANC
I"'"'
lNG

We lmance the homes we bu'ld d
you'll use to finish your hom~. an

~
·

;

,,

1,000 lbs. of CREEP FEED
OF OHIO

I

"Your Form SUfllllv

SuDtmtorlitl"
Gallipolis, Ohio

t1.......
'I

Ph. 446-2463

......................~...,.......-................

~

delegates lo ask themselves
three basic questions - Who
3111 p Where am 1 uoing' How .
·
o
·
will I gel there? Miss Schaefer'
of course got her sta'fl on the
'
road to Miss America in
connection with the Big Bend
Regatta several years ago
when she was selected as the
area's Miss America ca ndidate.
Scholarships for the six Club
Congress delegates wer~~o
provided by the Meigs County
Agricultural Society and the
Citizen's National Bank at
Middleport. The club members
themselves paid $10 so they
couldhelpdtherclubmembers
par ticipate in other ou lstanding activities.
The 4-H club camping season
will be. completed for Meigs
County club ~embers this
conung week with the ninecounty Teen Camp to be held at
Canters Cave on June 25 to
June . 29. Bud Carter,, Gallia
County Extension .. Agent,
Agriculture, and Mrs: Jennifer
Sheets, Meigs County Extension
Agent,
Home
Economics, are the directors
for the camp. They will be
assisted by Brenda . Donohue,
counselor from Meigs County
and other counselors and staff
members who are in the WorkStudy Program including Dean
Weber from Ohio Stale
University and Margie Jeffers,
Doris Barnhart, and Susie
Teaford from Ohio University.
COLUMBUS ( UPI)
The first 4-H camp of the Columbia Gas of Ohio and the
year was Junior Camp which Ohio Valley Gas Companies
was held June II to 15 with C. were granted permission
E. Blakeslee, Meigs County Friday to restrict residential
Extension Agent, Agriculture, gas service to new customers
and Mrs . Char lotte Buchy, 4-H 1 after Oct. I, 1972.
Agent from Callia County, as
The Public Utilities Comdirectors.
mission of Ohio order permits
Meigs Coun ly counselors for the two firms to refuse service
the Junior Camp were Edwin lo new residential premises
Cross, Jan Hoi ter, Mandie after Oct. I, but specifies those
Rose, Virginia Jordan , Bar- applicants for service who
bara Jordan, Mary Ruth have commenced construction
Sauer, and Randy Johnson . of residential units would be
Campers included Marcia and given gas service if the home
Pam Holcomb, Lester and was under construction prior to
Marco Jeffers, Rilla Rhods, the effective date.
Lola Walker, Jeffrey Thaddox,
Also prohibited in the
Julia Johnson, Cathy Blaetl- commission order was all
nar , Faith Perrin, Nicky se rvi ce for existing orJoseph, Ricky Jordan, Noah namental flare fixtures and
Hysell, Paula Hysell, Teresa service for any new outside gas
Ritne, Beth McKnight, Carl lights.
Gheen, Kim Scbo, Mary Mora, The two firms had asked the
kim AUman, ,&amp;beryl Lawson, restrictions be imposed efWayne Reed and David Reed. fective July 1, 1972.
The 9 and 10 Year Old Camp
was held June 18 to 20th with
Mrs. Charlotte Buchy, Gallia
County Extension Agent, 4-H,
as Director. Counselors from
Meigs County included Lester
Jeffers and Jane Jordan. Also
assisting were Dean Weber and
Susie Teaford. Campers al·
lending were JoAnn and Paula
McWhorter , Alicia Evans,
Kathy Po oler, Chr istina
Adkins, Melinda Dailey, Diann
and Kimberly Ward, Mark and
David Riggs, Unda Donohue,
Belinda Whittington, Patricia
Weyersmiller, Tammi Starcher, Rebecca Edwards, Patty
Cremeans, Joy Edwards,
Janet and Sheila Horky, Julie
Biron, Nancy Wallace, Denise
White, and Jerrie Sue Jordan .

meal price freeze ... The
Co mmi ss ion 's recom 1i1endalion for a freeze was by·
passed by the Cost of Living
CoWJcil Thursday.
The prospects for a freeze,
however, were seeri by 59me
sources as slight in the wake of
President Nixo)l 's disc!Dsure
Thursday thai he was considering hiking meat import
quotas to increase supply and .
bring down prices.
Nixon also said he would not

rule out elimination of the price
control exempbon that raw
ag~•cullu.re products have
enjoyed smce the start of the
wage-price freeze last August.
William
J.
Kuhfess,
president of the American
Farm Bureau. Federation,
announced Fnday he had
telephoned Nixon warning that .
a "Freeze on food prices would
redijce production and do
nothing to curb demand ... we
urge you lo avoid this road to

food shortag~~· black markets,
consumer dis~llus,t,onment and
voter. frustrabon.
White House Press Secretary
Ronald L. Ziegler said Nixon
mel with Treasury Secretary
George P. Shu!lz and members
of the Counc•l of Econom1c
Advisers Friday and food
prices were discussed. Nixon
asked his advisers for addiltonal facts on the meat pr1ce
situation but had made no
decision, Ziegler said.

Now·handle extreme variations ·
in twine without missing atie

•

HI.

,

•
•
•
•
•

Handle different sizes and types of twine without knotter adjustment. .
Handle heavy crops, heaviest bales without knotter adjustment.
Handle llghl, fluffy, and slick dry crops without knotter adjuslment.
Make only three Infrequent adjustmenls to compensate for wear.
Tie exclusive double-diameter knols that tests up to 17% stronger.

Meigs Equipment Co.
PH. 992-2176

POMEROY, 0.

New..lok-Twi.$\ .B~Iers, .too~

* FREEZERS
BIG 23 CU. FT. UN ICO

CHEST FREEZER

.95
Regu~r

'309_00

Telegram
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
president of the ;Oiilllt Farm
Bureau Federa·lion sent ·a
telegram to 1'-sident Nixon
Friday urgln~ the chief
executive prevent proposed
raw agricultural products
price controls from being
placed into effect.
Leonard Schnell, Apple
Creek president of the 55,500member state organization,
. said such price controls would
not· be workable, would not
increase the supply of farm
products and would be
'resented by farmers. .
"Applying price controls on
farm goods would lead to
rationing, black markets and
unacceptable public reaction,"
he said. ','The problem of
higher costs is caused by increased demand lor red meat.
"Affluent housewifes have
bid up the price on a limited
supply of red meal," Schnell
added. "Controlled prices will
certainly not li\duce farmers
and ranchers to produce more
meal.

MOTIVE SOUGHT
AKRON ( UPI) - The
Sunmlt County Coroner today
sought to establish why Eugene
WeDs Sr., 57, and hla wife,
Hattie, 52, argued Friday
before Wells killed his wife and
thentookhlsown~e .

.

NEW ALL·TWINE BALERS:

Farm Bureau
Sends Nuon

' -

'CENTRAL SOYA
4

WASHINGTON (UPI ) _ The
Agriculture Departm ent
reports that food prices in
supermarkets in creased in
May following two months of
decline.
·
The government food price
report was issued Friday as the'
Price Commission scheduled
an WJusual meeting at noon
Sunday to consider clamping a
30-{)ay freeze on retail meat
prices.
The Agri~ulture Department's "market basket" index
of .food prices rose 0.4 per cent
in May following declines of 0.7
per ce nt in April and 0.4 P,er
cent in March. Government
officials. say the increase in
May would have been higher
except for price cutbacks by
middlemen.
The increase was attributed
mainly to higher retail prices
for pork, fresh vegetables and
frui t.
Beef prices fell during May
but started lo increase sharply
;as the month ended, the
department said.
Price Commission Chairman
C. Jackson Grayson called the
Sunday meeting after polling
the six other members-of his
panel by telephone Friday to
sound out their reaction to a

Restrict Service

y /t.L

Decker • Yale
our S&amp; T S*o•e

F9od Prices Up In May

Gas Firms To

T/ -4

e B.lack &amp;

87 OLIVE ST.

"':;f::

JULY 4th

I

tr~.~~~: ~!r~~ ~~!\njoined i~;;~~t~~~s ~;r;rig~~;

°

AND

TUES
Qtl\T P-411&gt;~:0' 7T~ B'RAlVIJS
~ t .L' /flU U&gt;J
YOU KNOW

I'

,
exerctse, the 4-H ers debated
and voted on "The Ohio Plan,"
a proposa l to extend,financial
· ...
, t d ts . h'
asslswonce .o s u en m lgher
edu,calton
through
an
arrang
t 1 h
th
em en
ave
e
students repay the state later.
The 4-H delegates defeated the
proposal by a tntal vote of 593
a~~mst. to 159 for.
1ghhghls of the sessions
were the appea;an~e of
Governor J?hn J. Gllbgan and
Speaker of the House Charles
F. Kurfess. Both were tntr.oduced and ·mad~ bnef
statements comm~ndmg - the
youths for their mteresl tn
government.
The featured speaker of the
Ohio Club Congress was 11\iss
Laurie Lea Schaefer, Miss
America 1972, who told the
delegates attending the June
14-17 4-H Congress that young
people must become involved if
they expect to lind a place in
1
s':ci~~·fer told the

PRODUCTION
CREDIT OFFICE
IN POMEROY
WILL BE CLOSED
JUNE 27th

DON'T MISS T-HE

.•

•

NOTICE

·,

Barry Must Honor '69
Contract With Warriors

r

BY C. E. BLAKESLEE
F
E 1A
or the rest of the summer
x ~ gent, Agriculture
tlle club membe
k'
POMEROY - The Meigs ' with their advisor~"· ·~or mg
County 4-H club program has · out one or
' WI. :~r~y
more proJec.., m
moved InIo hi gh gear during each of the 48
local clubs
the month .of June. The most
The mal'o . ti 't
f.
interesting tat' ti r
r ac VI y, as ar as
s .ts, c rom . the stale 4-H events already
Extension Services standpoint completed
. dI l
is that total enrollment George . ~~~~~ e e~a est
reported is 643 club members Johnson Marcia C 'r Shran
as compared to508in 19.71. This Wilson, 'Jane Whi~;~ad a~~~
represents. ail increase of Sheri Young, who att~nded
approximately 15 pet., thanks Ohio 4-H Club Congress, June
to the excellent work of 4·H 14-17. Before allending .the
A&amp;slstants Mrs. Pal Holler and event they were briefed on
Mrs . Leota. Young, in legislative procedure b
c?"perallon With 1.05 4-H ad- Representative Ralph Welke~
vtsors and 58 JUnt9r leaders in preparation for their inock
who serve without pay.
legislative session. Nearly 800
The 4-H recruitment 4-H youth from all over Ohio
.. P~ogram, was carried out last participated in three mock
wmter when l'llrs. Holter a.nd legislative sessions in the
Mrs. Young Vtslled the third assembly chamber of the Ohio
and fourth gra41lJ! of ev.ery, House of Representatives on
school In the county telllng June 16 . It w,s the final day of
them about the 4-H club activity for the young men and
program. The •.chools were women attending the 55th
yery cooperative m.permllting annual Ohio 4-H Congress. In a
this program to be presented. regular house parliamentary

znescore~ w~~~~ J:!~~~pth:~

New Yor~ 002 020 ooo.-'4 7 1
Cleveland · 001 000 ooo.- 1 6 0
Peterson (6-S) and· MUn.on ;
Wilcox, Rlddleberger 151, Hennlgan 181 and Fosse. LPWilcox 16·71. HR-AIIen (lsi).
·
-Minnesota 000 000 ~ 0 7 1
KanCity
000 001 04x- 5 10 o
Perry . (6-6) and Mltterwald;
mllttorft (6.4) and Kirkpatrick.
R- Mayberry 16th).
Chicago . 000 100 2oo- 3 12 0
Texas
000 102 Olx- 4 B 2
Wood, Forster lSI and
Herrmann, Brinkman 17); Bos·
man, Cox · (7 I, Paul (8),
Lindblad (8) and Billings, WPLindblad IJ.2) . LP- Wood Ill ·
61. HRs-Howard 15th), Ford
16th).

~.'

,.

Meigs 4-H Program Rolling

•.,......

after June :zs.
. ,...
Players wiD be paired into ,...
foursomes on Sunday, July 2, ...,
when they '11'111 play the inlllal
18-hole qualifying round~.
Teeoff times and pairings wiD
be announced .tn the newspaper
on Friday, June 30.
The final 18-boles of the
tourney pairings wW be an•
nounced o~ Monday, July~. .

•da ' L • ' · .

By Unoted Press lnle•natlonal
National League
St. Louis at N.Y., ppd, rain
.
·· - PoUsbrgh 000 300 o1o- 4 9 0
Chtcago . 000 001100 -2 8 0
Blass, Gluslt 191 and Sangull len; Jenkins, McGinn 181 and
Hundley. WP-.,. Biass 19·11. LP· Jenktns 1.8-61.
Phlla
000 OOO Olo- 1 9 2
Montreal 000 000 o2x- 2 7 0
· Nash, ~hort ISJ and Baleman ; Torrez 18·3 and Humphrey. LP-Nash 11-2) .

NEW JACKSON COACH- Ronald J. Fenik, 36, former
head football coach at Barberton, OhiQ, has accepted the
head coaching position at Jackson High School. Fenik an
Ohio ·university graduate, was former head coach' at
McArthur where he won three championships. He has five ,
Yfars experience as an assistant coa·ch at Xavier University
ahd Muskingum College.llis 1971 squad finished with an 8-1-1
record with its only loss to the tough Massillon Tigers. He will
inherit a veteran ball club at Jackson .
.

'

reminder that entries Will be
closed after 100 Ilnksters have
signed to partiCipate, said this
year's tourney !rill be a twoday event with 18 holes to be
played on July 2 and the other .
18 holes on July 4.
No entries will be accepted

-

•

.Golf Entries ·Accepted Now· . ;

Reds-Astro·s Swap.
Last Fall Still Debated
When Cincinnati made its
first trip to Houstnn this year,
Morgan was asked if he said
hello to Walker. "Why should I
say anything to him now,"
Morgan said, "I haven't
spoken to him for two years."
Morgan also refused to take,
a rest and come out of one
game even though Cincinnati
had a big lead because, · "I
wanted to see the expression' on
Harry's face when it was

-

.

I&amp; .::.. 'lbe Sunday 'l'ime&amp;&amp;ntineJ, June 25 1912'
'
.
'

NEW YORK (UPI)-'.'How ·
much thunder do you really
need?" asks Cincimati Reds'
manager Sparky Anderson.
"The trade looks as good to
ua as it did last November, "
Jays Houston Astro manager
Harry Walker.
The de!Nite started last Nov.
29th and it seems destined to
continue all summer, fueled by
the emotions of what mighl be
one of baseball's hottest pen-

.....

WE DELIVER!
WE SERVICE!
.WE FiNANCE!

Limited Supply! On Sale While They La1 t!

•

*AIR CONDITIONERS
See Our

:~[0

Big
Selection

$
•
.
·'

Ml up

Cool Low !;!rices On All Sizes
Now In Stock! A size for
ever)6. purpose 5,000, 7,000,
10,200, 12,000, 15,000, 18,000,
24,000 and 29,000 BTU. We
insta II!

Speciali.s ts in Whole House Air Conditioning . Phone 992-2181 for
free esltmate.
- ·

POMEROY. LANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.

Serving Meigs, O.m11nc1 Mason Counties
Phpnt 992·2111
Open Mon.-sat. Until6 P.M.

.

-

�_..... __ .....

..
· ~ - The Sun&lt;lay TIJnell.8enllnel, Jilne 25, 1m

.

~

'

'sALE OF US ED
SCHOOL BUSES
Gallipolis City Board of
Education will accept .sealad
bids on two used sc~ool buses
up until 12:00 noon, July 11 ,
1972.
Description of Buses:
66 Passenger GMC chassis
will&gt; Superior body 1962 Model
60 Passenger GMC cilassis
will&gt; Superior body 1963 Model
Bids will be acceml!d on
each bus individually or a ·
total bid lor both buses. Buses
may be inspected and bid
forms obtained at tile bus

..'

Re ~ Estale For Sale

Real Estate For Sale
'

STROUT THE WISEMAN
AGENCY
REALTY

PAY ONLY ONE UTILITY
ELECTRICITY
We furnish Woltr • Sewqe · Gorbage Collection . Ample
1'-•rtdng · TV Antenno . Wol~to- Wali ·corpeting .
Oroptrie• • Rongn . llefrlttrolors . Air Conditioning .
G1rb1ge Dispouls · Dishwoshers . Heal L•mps . Private
Ptfios • Swi"'"'inq· Pool • Clubhouso. ·
.
·- ··· ..;.

-- .

THE LEADER SINCE 1900 IN
. SI;RVING THE NATION'S
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS.
Ph.~-- .

A_ farge rustle log constructed home nes11ed on

Drntlcolly Raduced
Sele
STOVES, refrigerators.

living room and enjoy the huge tlreplace and wood
panelad wails. Kitchen is complete with new built-In cab .,
range, dishwasher. etcc1_padrooms (could bed 4 or S) with
mor.-tllan ample room . 2 baths, hili basemen! will&gt;

11/z BATHS

TOWNHOUSE
'APARTMENTS

TARA

fireplace and2 car garage-7 acres for the kids' horses or

pontes. 5 miles out In city school district. Pricad In the
forties. (Qoll Ike Wiseman for an appointment)

•ll l·i't·---------..

For Information Call-Shirley Adkins.,.-367~7250

clothing,
[ewetry,
showcases,
typewriter
, shoes,
and

·· - - · - - - - ·
counters, other Items too 6 RM. HOUSE and bath. 104 SLEEPING ROOMS weekly
Third Ave. Kanauga 446'4322. rates , free garage parkinQ, ·
numerous to mention .
Saunders Economy Store, 1..0
M9-3 Libby Hotel.
Third Ave .. Gallipolis.
289-tf,
VINTON ...:. 2 story home
149-3 FURNISHED apartmenl , - ------------,.completely remodeled . 3 BR.
"""'--,----,-,utilities pd. PI&gt; . 245-5535 Rio FuR N1sHE 0 apartm\nt.
LR with WB fireplace. formal
~ iXliJBLE wide 'mobile · ~ome,
Grande Barber Shop. .
adults preferred . Reference,
dining rm ., new modern
city water and gas, $175 mo:
149·3 631 Fourth Ave.
kitcilen, full basement,
Ph. (46.1066 or 446-4618. . - - - - - 141 -tf
several shade trees, will sell
102-tf ' HOUSETRAILER IQts, near
or trade.
llospltai . Call 992-3589 or 992==-----=-c
FURNISHED two -bedroom
TWO-WAY R'adjos Sale~ · -~
2720.
Service. New and used CB~s~
149-6 trailer near Gavin Plant. NOW under construct)oof. } BR,
Phone 367-7167.
bath, nice kitchen, paneled
po11ce tr~onltors, antenn,a~, ·
SE::-T::-R::-A=IL-:E:::R:--:172x-67D~two
-o= u::LR. garage. w-w carpel. all
145-tf
etc. Bob's 'Citizens Band H
electric, brick front, large
Radio Equip., Georges Creek
bedroom. total electric, air
corner lot. $16,500.
Rd ., Gallipolis, Oillo. 446·4517., condlllonad, nice lot, 1 mile
16-tf. from city limits, city water,
r.n-..• .
BARGAINS in Bidwell : No. t adults only, utilities paid. Ca.ll Real Estate For Sal :
RALPH:5 Carpe1 &amp; Upholsl~ 446-2543.
7 rms ., bath,
garage,
workshop, large lot, $5,500.
Cleaning Service . Free
147-3
No. 2 - S rooms, 2 porches.
tollmates. Ph. 446·0294. Ralph ----------------A. Davis, ownw.
cellar house, corner lot.
TWO badroom mobile home.
$4,200.
9-1
PI&gt; . 367-7322.
139-lf
------~--~~--~
DAY CARE
NEW LISTING - 10 mi. out , 330
SUN VALLEY Nursery School, 112 OF 'double house, grounO
ft. frontage on state rd ., 31/.,.
licensed by State of Ohio, I V~ floor, 2 bedrooms . Very nice .
acres, 3 BR, lovely buill ·in
miles wut of new hospllol.
kitchen. large LR &amp; family
Ace~! one child.
577 Sun Valley Or. PI&gt;. 446- Ph. 446-4806.
rm .. garage, basement and
3657. Day care that says "we
large maple shaded lawn .
1·8-tf
care. 11 MadM Hauldren ,
519,000.
Owner ; Loreijilh &amp; Joiln NEARLY new four room SMALL ~oy on telephone as
teenage sister rushes to grab WE HAVE several homes under
Hauldren, Operators.
apartment, unfurnished, near
it : "You must have the wrong
114-tf
construction between $20,000
center of town. Garage ln.
. I don't have a
--:--o-=---,----,=.,..and $35,000. If interested, call
eluded. Adults only. PI&gt;. 446- number
beautiful sister."
HOLY.. LANO and· Rome tour,
for appointment .
2691. After 5 call 446-2561.
special discount to those who
148-5 FOUR bedroom double wide
pay $100 down before the end
RIPE FOR DEVELOPMENT
trailer, nice living room and
ollhis month. Departure date UNFURNISHED two badroom
-38 acres in city school dist.
kitchen with a lot of cabinets
October 17. Pilone 446-.(113.
Beautiful rolling woodland
spartment on Eastern Ave .
1
and bath and half. Lot 97 12
147-3 446-9583.
overlooking Ohfo River ,
frontage and 175 feet deep,
:-::-:--::---county water available .
148-7 with
city water and gas and
GARAGE SAL E. Friday and
sepllc lank. Price $14,500.
Saturday,lOa.m . loS p.m. 5..0
ATTENTION! We ilave 2 ideal
Th ird
Avenue ,
books ,
renlal property investments:
THREE bedroom llouse, all NO. 1 - 4 houses and 5 mobile
clothing, odds and ends, and Real Estate For Sal'
carpeted with ni ce kitchen
toys.
homes on upper route 7.
and with lots of cabinets,
147-3
Owner will finance for 5 pet .
electric stove , dis hwasher
·-----and garbage disposal. Frame NO. 2 - 15 rental units in city,
HelD Wanted
ilouse with brick front. New.
plenty of road frontage and

-----

----,.....~- , .,

a ·tree

~.

RUSSEU

WOOD

~==,--:-,.----

occupancy. Cali 446-0003.

DRIVER SALES
12 · young men and
women needed immediately lor salary
position.

$3.50 per hour

7 rms., ball&gt;, river
view, 2 car carport, 2 lots,
new alum . siding . $16,000.

PATRIOT No experience nee·
essaryl
~ust
be
neat and dependable.
Ca II 446-0677 from 9
a.m. to 5:30p.m. ~on .
Tues. and Wed.
REMOOELIN'G. 'li·uil•lng ' new
rooms.

cement,

tooting,

siding. furnace Ins. J. H.
Queen &amp; !llln, 446-9271.
68-lf.
'
l
·oNii r,hone call can gel you
star ad toward a profitable
spere-tlme
money-making
opportunlly as an Avon
Representative. You can
meet new people, make

friends, win prizes! Call or
.write Mrs. Helen Yeager. Box
172, Jackson, Oillo. Ph. 286·
@8.

2 story, older

home , sound, water line, 2 A.

flat lot: price $13,000.

shubbery .

dining and· full basement, garage and not much grass to

mow. This Is an exceptionally clean horne close to both
schools, and block from park.

Jay ·sheppard 446-0001
Denver K. Higley 444-0002
Wanda S. Eshenaur4441-0DOJ

GREEN ACRES - 4 yrs. old, 5
rm . frame, H.W. firs., at tached gar. Price $23,000.
KANAUGA - 5 rm . fr~me.
H.W. firs ., fur . heat. qu iet st.
$11,000.
ADDISON -

Eastern

Avenue,

Gallipolis.
149·3
--~c~.-s~hi~
er -~R~e-c•-r7.
ti~
on~i~
,,,_

SHARP tndividua with high
school diploma who enjoys
meeting and serving the
public. Must be able to type
and work with figures .

25 Locust St.

Nice frame, 4

rms, bath, base., edra lot

and only 12 yrs. old. $16,000.

CHATHAM AVE. -

Howard Brannan, Broker
Off. 44 .. 2674
Lucille Brannon

Eve. 446-1226

Counby Living

S rm.

AT ITS best. 2 story frame
fur . heat. cheap housing. home. 3 BR. formal dining
room, w-w carpet on all
$12.000.
frame, storm drs. and 1 win.

KERR - All brick, HW and
carpel firs . 7 rms. pius full
base., 1 A. lot. It has 3 baths
and 2 car garage. Price
reducad $35,000.
rms ., 2 car gar ., vinyl sid . on
.7 A. tot. 518,000.

CITY - Real nice, 6 big rms.,
bath, part carpel, fur . heat,
cheap at $15,800.

CITY - 5 rms., bath and base ..
H.W. firs .. flat lot, $17.000.
FARMS
BusineSs experience 75 A. modern 5 rm . ilome, s
desirable but not necessary ..
barns, 15 A. development
Reply Box 227 c-o Tribune.
land, one of Gallia Co.'s best.
148-4 160 A. on St. Rt. 325, 100 A.
-.,----,---tractor land. good bldgs. and
LADY to stay part t1me wun
plenty water.
semi -Invalid lady . References
required . Call 446-1364, after 5 204 A. near Lecta , lots of tim ber, 7 rm. house, 2 barns and
p.m.
only $25,000.
147·6
163 A. 5 mi. from Cheshire, on
Ward Rd . no bidgs .. underlaid
wllh coal . $20,000.
GRILL COOK for 2 p. m. to
23 A. Lincoln Pike. 7 rm. house,
10 p. m. shift. Also
barn and tob. base .
woltrenes for 2 p. m. to 10 p.
· ANY HR. 446-1998
m. Apply Bob Evons st.. k
E. Winters- ~- 3878
House. No phone coils.
/II Arnold- 446-0756
147·3
.
eve., J. Berry-446-3466
. Eve .. J. Fuller-245·9311

downstairs, paneled walls,
nice large kitchen,
'h
basement, near new gas
·for ced air furnace , 2 car

garage, outbuildings, 3 acres

of clean land with 600' fron -

tage on BT road. well fenced,
about 12 mi. from Gallipolis .

Don 't delay . See today.

BUSINESS building at 48 Pine
Slreel. Full pr ice, $5,500.

Move In Tomorrow· Excellent Location
Near new hospital - The owner has n)oved out of area and
wants an immediate sale. Very very nice 3 bedroom home.

THIS is a buy you can't alford to
miss. 2 BR home with wall to

with beamad ceilings In living and kllchen area. Air
conditioning, large lot on U.S. 35 - Equipped kilchen

Wall carpet in living room and
both bedrooms . Can now be

(range, dishw.asher, etc.)

bought for 510,000. Call today
l or your appointment .

WE ALSO llave some lots on
Raccoon
,. Creek .

WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTOR WAN-TED
Simply service companyestabll'shed all cash accounts in this
area. This is not a coin operatad vending route. Fine famous
brand products you've seen on TV sold In locations such as
offices. employee lounges in retail stores, financial fn.
$tltutlons. small manufacturing plants, warehouses and

small lnslltuttonai accounts. The distributor we select will be
responsible for maintaining these locations and restocking
Inventory. All locations are establlshad by our company. We
nead a dependable distributor, male or female, In this area
. with 1900.00 minimum to Invest in equipment and Inventory
which can turn over up to two limn monthly. Earnings can
grow to S25,000 annually and up. We will consider pert-time
llcatlons. Write for complete information, including
one: number and Area Code. All inquires strictly conldtnllel.
·
CONSOLIDATED C.HE~ICAL CORPORATION
F...,o Driod Products Division
:1115 MolttroM ltvd., SuU. 120·
Houston, TtXII 77006

NEW 3 bed room home with

Want Lot of Room with River Frontage
Five badroom split level wilh family room (fireplace). 2
baths. 2 car garage, locatad on I A. lot overlooking and
running to the Ohio River. Very pleasant home and
surroundings. Owner moving out of state.

I

mo.

brick front, 1 car garage , 120
ft . frontage 1112 mi le from new

hosp ita l on Rt. 160. Call 367 7846.
145-lf

dows and alum lnum siding,
formal dining room, 2 baths.
kitchen Includes refrlg. with
Ice maker. double oyen,

cook top and llood. dish - ··

Brand spanking new 3 bedroom home with beaut ifu l built.

new hospTlY:(1J 1d, 3 car
garage, and a mv...ern 4S room
home.
•

In kitchen , carpet throughout. ceramic bath, garage and
wonderful view. It' s attractive, convenient a'n d very well

New Frame

·. Brick.

w.z.y

'

IS Ihe word for this cornforteble
2 BR home, fully carpelad,
stone fireplace in large LR.
laundry room -by kitchen,
deep lot on concrete street.
When you see this one you'll
· want to move today. 112,500.

LOTS OF LOTS
WE HAVE lots in all directions.
Some can be bought with a
very small down payment.
Whether building or buying a
mobile home, call today.
LISTIN"S WANTED
Ranny Blackburn
Branch Mgr.

· Mobile tbnes For Sale ·

"SELL THE AUCTION
'WAY"· '

JIMME SAYRE

•

PH. 446-3444 ·

·~:··:1

I.

NOTICE

.,

We sell anyihint lor
anvbody. Bri1141 your
Items- to Knotts Communi.J;Y Auction Bern . .
Corner Third &amp; Olive. ,
Far appointment
446-2917 . .. Sale ,f'terySiturday Evening 11
;70'Ciock.

..

IF YOU LIKE COUNTRY
LIVING WITH THE CO N.
VENIENCE OF BEING
CLOSE TO TOWN , LOOK
AT THIS NEW CARPETED
3 BEDROOM HOME WITH
BEAUTIFUL KITCHEN,
GARAGE AND LARGE LOT
( G A R D·E N
SP0 T)
LOCATED 5 MILES OUT IN
CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT,
521,000 BUYS IT .

:·.

;:

COMPLETE WITH STOVE, OVEN, FAN,

·:••

••.,
=t
••

...•!,

ANDLOOKATTHE PRICE ,
$2 0 , 5 0 D. 0 D. F 0 U R
BEDROOMS . LARGE
LIVING ROOM , W TO W
CARPETING
THROUGHOUT HOUSE,
VERY NICE BUILT -IN
KITCHEN ,
UTILITY
ROOM, CARPORT AND
LARGE LOT . OWNER
MOVING TO CLEVELAND .
We Need
Listings Now
HAVE BUYERS WE CAN ' T
sA T I S F y . W E • R E

.-••::
•'

SLEEPS 6. LIKE NEW.

FOR SALE by owner - ' HOBART DILLPN
badrooms, 2 ballls. Home 1
Real·Estate Broker
block from city park. Call 446P. 0. Box516
3521 .
·
· EXCLUSIVE
agentfor Raccoon,
149-3 Valley campsites, wls,hes to
- - -- - - - - his office In the
f--------------1 t!nnounce
Valley area will be open dally
Seven room house, Mills
from 12 noon 'til 8 p. m. Ph
Village. next to oew hospital,
446-2730:
47-1 .
3 bedrooms, carpet In LR,
lormol dining rm., ond hill
and bath. Full basement
with large family room, l
IDEAL 5ACRE RANCHO. Lake
Conchas, New Mexico. $2,975.
fireplaces, all curtains and
No Down. No Interest. $25-mo.
dropery stay in house. Extra
Vacation
Paradise. Money
large screened porch, stqrm

:~

t . '

8 hole ilog feeder, BOO bales mixed hay !last years), 75
bushel corn, McCiaugh No. IS chain saw (like new), 8ft.

,.:.

PRICED FOR

ll

QUICK SALE

I•

CARROLL NORRIS
DODGE INC.

s·~

~
~

~

~

pump wltil tank. hand tools of all ki nds. chains and' other
Items too numerous to mention .

. VERN AND VERGIE BROWN, OWNERS

.Hi

'I

'

......______..........,
TERMS : CASH
LUNCH SERVED
Tommy Joe Stewart, Auctioneer
•ee there on time'

_

Maker .

Free

Brochure.

doors and windows, nice
RECONDfi'tOtijtl) ' .
Ranchos : Box 2001 BT,
large lot. Pricad In upper
MOBILE HOMES
Alameda , California 9•5()1.
136-14
1966 Conestoga 55x12. 2 bdrm. 20's. Quick occuponcy. Ph.
446-4895.
1965 _
,Frontier 60x12, 2 bdrm .
1965 Frontier 60x12, 3 bdrm.
L-----------l FOR SALE by owner. 2 story
brick at 452 First Ave. 7
WE NEED LISTINGS NOW- 1964 Baron S6x12, 2 bdrm .
rooms, 2 baths. gas hot air
We havean active demand for 1962 Gibraltar 55xto, 2 bdrm . For Sale or Trade
f~r. nace .
Present
homes and acreage. Recenl
sales have helped us. Now let 1968 Apollo Travel Trailer. CAMPE.R,' full facilities: also arrangement 2 _apartments.
17'12', self-contalnad.
us help you, too. Cali
camper on ·pickup truck. Call Easily converted to one
B&amp; S Mobile Hom~•
BRANNON REALTY today.
before noon 4&lt;6-0168 or 1~6 family dwelling. Asking
Secon &amp; Vian~ St.
$35,000. Shown by appt. Ph.
IT WILL PAY.
Second Ave.
446-0208.
Pt. Pleosant I Next to Heck's)
•
87 ,~
149-tf
149-1

Attention

HomeownefS!

------ ------ ------

PUBLIC SALE

Wanteti To Buy

HAVE cash buyers for farms
NEEDWRM.
and vacant land, · any size.
2B
Wrlle to Harriet Klrkpalrlck,
TOWNH9USE APTS.
1560
Duffield
Drive,
BE WITH the first to choose Columbus. Ohio 43227 or call
your residence In lhese' collect evenings. 861-8356.
btau'llful ·suburban apls. Klelmeyer Realty Co.
Contemporary In slyle,
149-1
luxurious conlrofled
car~etlng,
In· .NOlAN relic's, arrow heads,
dlvldually
heall!lll,
$:plgr
•oordln•l4d
ap - axes, spears. etc. by piece or
plfan·c:.,·. ., prtvatt · patioS: collection. Top prices paid .
many other features. Lease Phone 446-9442.
S135 mo. C.ll (46.3712 for
141-30
appointment
. to ...
- so
-- -I:~- 'With
=-unit. 526Jackson
Pike,model
Near 10 -TO
ALl(
2 or
more
Holler /Md. Center.
bedroom house. Phone 367·
' THIRTY-FIVE
WEST
7~76.
1'"·5
APARTMENTS
51-tt

------

'·, ·

STARTING AT. 12 NOON
Location f_rom Gallipolis,tako Route 7 to Chflhlre. w1 tch
lor sale Stgn above Roush's Doiryland
.,

11

. :. .. • ·

clolhing in my home . CaU

••
~w

.,12

USED &amp;
REBUILT

BACKHOE work in Rio Grande
area. Ph . 2~5 -5535 Rio Grande
Barber Shop .
149-3

SHI.PMENTI .

PH. 446 4060
CLOSED ALL DAY
THURS. &amp;SUN•

DOC SMITH SAYS:

I·----------~--------------,
.
.
I
UVE MODERN...
.
1
INA
I

I

ACT N0 W

II
I

s· AVE

1
1

'

I
I

I1
I
Wanted
I
ROOM and board, evening meal I
h
~~~~a·~~~-esNotF~ cdl:~ I
Halderman. c;ontacl Bill Joe I
Johnson. 446-3273, or 446-1154.
149·6" I

'1 oooo

10'-i2' AND14'WIDE UP' T070' LONG
Spanish, Old English, Early American and Nodern Decors
DOUBLE WI DES AS LARGE AS24x60
TOTAL ELECTRIC AVAILABLE
·

we are going out for big business. 78
sold within next 60 days.

tb
mobile homes m~s e
.

BIG SELECTION
CLEAN USE DB' AND10'WIOES READYTO~OVE
.

I

BANK

INTO.

UP JO 12 YEARS ON TERMS

DATr~

Ml~

TO SUIT ~OUR
INMuE
I'
wm
CO

FREE DELIVERY . ·
OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. T09

flwe~or~.~~~r'J::1~
PIIY

1.,_3

Sh , alley rear "' Sacond
Av':.
139_11

U.S. 23

·

·
ME IN TODAY

P.~. · INCL~DINGSUNDAY

·

------------

WAVERLY, OHIO

--

For Sale
CORBIN &amp; SNYD~R
FLIRNITURE

USED: 2 piece 11vong room
su tle, 3 piece end table set,
full size coil springs and
mattress, twin size bed,
complete, recliner. Full size
bed and coli springs, two of()"
••
gas stoves, good shape,
Tappan .
•
NEW: Father's ·oay gift

II
I
I

II
1
11
I

I

suggestions:

rockers,

recliners, portable TV. Lawn

furniture, loves.eat . Open

Friday 1111 8. Pienly of
parking. Free delivery. 95S
Second Ave. 446-1171. ·
142-lf
regfstered Hereford
yearlings. Hereford Butler
Farm, 256-6518 or 256-1113.
144'-tf

FIVE rooms and bath, 3
bedrooms, attachad garage,
storm windows and doors,

forced air furnace . Lol 7Sx100.
Locatad on St. Rt. 7 at
Chesillre, Ohio. Price raducad
tor quick sale. Owner lea.vlng
state. Call 367-7428 after ~
p.m.
146·4

---.1 1970 DODGE Coronet Aof() 2 door

.:~:·::~:t,Wi~. T~t5~¥f.~~~·.i~ L. WAVERLY
MOBILE
HOME
SALES
I
.
. ·
·
SIX room houM lor ·family ol

UPPER RT. 7

1 FIVE

NEW 12' WIDE 2 BEDROOM
· ONLY •369500

Lost

SMITH BUICK, INC.

I
I

.

1972 BUICK SKYLARK
TUDOR SALE

I

1

MOBILE HOMES

CITY DEALER PRICES!

I

1

ON BEAUTIFUL

WE BEAT ALL BIG

With air condition • power steering, automatic trans. , V-8 eng., white
walls, tinted windshield. dlx. steering wheel, carpet frt. &amp; rear, dlx. wheel
covers. protective bump~r strl_pes~ radio. Plus many more extras .

II
I
1
1

ro· '15 oooo

1

·8

'I
·v'

ANOTHER~ NEW~~n

Mrs . Ross Norihup, 446-2543 .
21 ·11
.
PAINT job on houses. barns.
outbuildings and roofs. Ph. PIANO luning and repair by
379-2205.
local man with 10 years ex149-12
perience. Call Elmer D.
RT. 7 NEXT TO
-::-:--::-:-----.,--,-,
Geiser 388-8666.
DOES your home nead painting;
siding. roofing. remodeling, - - -- - - -147 -3
OLD SILVER BRIDGE
paneling , cement work , NEED More Room? Let Byerly
barbecue, patios, or garage,
Conslruction Co . remodel or
KANAUGA, OHIO
carport, etc .? You name it,
add a hew room or garage to .__..;,;...;.,...;,_.;__..,_•
we'll do II . Reasonable rates .
vour home. Reasonable rates. For Sale
Call 446-0126 or 446-1753.
Free estimates . Call Denver
119-tf
Higley Sales Manager 446- THREE bedroom trailer, space
- : - - - - - -0002.
available. 367-7329.
BABYSITTING in my hom e. S2
147-6
136-tf
per day. Ph. 379-2660.
. 148-3
• .
.
~· . GOOD CLEAN LUMP and
TUTORING lor tile summer. ROOFING and guller work. stoker co~l. Carl Winters. Rio
Call 446-4933.
Will iam Mitchell. 388·8507. ·
Grande. Phone 245·5115.
148-3
67-lf
.
6-tf

I

'I

-·

GUARANTEED

Wanted To Do

ALTERATIONS.ON all types of

ADULT basic education ciosse&amp; ·HOLSTEIN bull calf lost near..
art In progress at North
no.
Iff d II 2"
Gellia HI h School on
Porter, vulo. oun ca -·
Tuescleyan:J'Thursday during 5663 ·
149·31
lilt summer. Call Howara
Neelcamp 318-872A.
143. 10 LOST_ Men's eyeglesies ln
bleck pouch-like case around 1
•t·
...
Fermer's Bank parking lot
BusiiiiSS Opportum 1es
Friday evening. If found 1
TtRI!5- 0i baing retired or
conlact Ctareoce Lawrenceat
&amp;tlhdl.ng In unemployment
Ul-2815.
..
llntl. You can &amp;tart working
6- 18-soc- ~
for u. end yourMif today
IOIIcttlno past dut accounts.
T 0
WrlteorcallllltcrodltburNu Wanted 0. 0
.
o1 Point Ptee11nt, 312 Main
~-

IIi

PARTS

Gallipolis, Ohio

Wanted To Do

lnstfilclloh

J
~

WAVALENE STAGE, OWNER

· .•;ttl
_. . _ ~ark Central Ho~:0.

Eastern Ave.

;j i'

lA

'

FURNITURE
Refrigerator, 16Ft. Gibson .New; 2 ~droom Suites · 100
Kenmore Automatic Washer, Breakfast Set. 23 'tnch
Television, Platform rOCker, Coffee fable, End table, 3
stands, 3 Electric tans, 2 toble lamps. Hoover swHper, 2
radios, occasional cllair, Record plover, metal wardrobe
Pictures. Pots and Pans, Rugs.
'
ANTIQUES
.
Sewing machine, trunk, dishes, chairs, picture
frames, Secretary desk, Bottles. Shoe Loth, Pie Cup.
board, other Items too numerous to mention. .
•

11Lf;ol:l'l~ll:; ROOMS, weekly
.
..,... ,
(.APARTMENT for constructlal!
• m-. Ph. 446 _0756 _
-'
...
.
26,;,.

SATURDAY; JULY 1st

J. A. FRENCH, AUCTIONEER

GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

4460842
For Rent

extension ladders, grease guns. hose, Shovels, 1 water

.

ONLY 7,000 ACTUAL MILES.

'.

~~~~1 't.?e TtA~MR~~tl~~
THEM .

·---------------------------------_.J

I

'•

antique dlsil cabinet, other household Items too

1/2~ile0ut

COMMODE, SHOWER, AIR CONDITIONING .

•'

1 dinette sef, Unlco regrig~rator (like new I. 3 beds, 3 chest
of drawers, I dresser, numerous chairs, stand to~~bles, new
couch , wringer type washer, portable mixer, mixed lots of
dishes, two vacuum sweepers, antique cherry wardrobe,

Four Bedroom

.•••'
)l

AUTO

*2295
'.
WOOD MOTOR SALES

1970 FORD
MOTOR HOME

••'•

._.u

numerous to mention.

Price Reduced
VERY NICE FOR THE
PRICE. NEARLY NEW ' 3
BEDROOM HOME WITH
BUILT -IN KITCHEN IN
TOWN ,$ 14,90D. WASSI6,000.
FINANCING AVAILABLE .
Brand Spanking
New

' f

'

r.l

•' •
·••'

BROS.

2 dr . hardtop. auto . trans' , p . steering, p.
brakes. radio, w-s-w tires, fac . air cond.,
midnight green metallic finish with nat . vinyl
interior . One owner car in like new condition .

.

AUCTIONEER

Located from Gallipolis--Take route 141 to Rt.
775, go approximately 4 miles, turn right on
Patriot, Cadmus Rd. Watch lor Signs.

built.

40 MORE TO CHOOSE FROM
P TO 36 MON

BAIRD

69· Pontiac Catalina

New Listing at Edge ofTown

4 1f~ A. or ..t'Ji". ·.. rd . close to

. 2 Dr., 26,000 miles. One owner.

KANAUGA, OHIO

'SERVIa

12:00 P.M.

out, city water and sewer. ~

washer , gar. dlsp. and bar .

DREAM -

~UCTiqN •

THURSDAY - JUNE 29 - THURSDAY

basement, new storm win·

1970 Ford Maverick

Pickup, ~ cyL engine, Custom cab.
Standard shift.

PUBLIC SALE
Owner L,_eaving Area-Fabulous Buy
For the money you can't beat fhls , 3 !large) bedrooms
br ick home Including family room will&gt; fireplace, 1 full .
2-1h batils, completely carpeted throughout, 2 car
garage, large fencad lot in city school district, 11 miles

2 Hdtp.; Auto .• P.S .• 24,000 Miles. School
Teacher Trade

67 FORD LONG WHEEL BASE

:-.;••

available , $5,000.

'~ R'S

beauty .

1968 Ford Fairlane

SMITH AUTO• SALES

$1595

• cyl . engine, p, steering , A real

Ot.O

THREE room home on State Rt.
160, flat lot, county water

39 Acres

Creek Scilool distri ct.

NO SELLING ... KEEP YOUR PRESENT JOB I

Charles
446-1546
J. Michael Neal, 446- 1503

6 A. - Development land, Clay
Twp.

CITY FAR

61 GMC % TON PICKUP

ES with well and seplic

Vinton and Rio Grande.

ATTENTION
DUE to the present construction
In Gallla Co .• we ha ve several
out of town buyers in need of
homes in thi s area . If you
LOCATED on State highway,
have property for sale, don'l
large barn 1 tobacco base,
setlleforlesslhannationwlde
garage and plenty oul advertising. CALL STROUT.
b~lldings , 2 BR home in good
condition, nice kitchen with 3oA. - 2 m; ''160.nlceSroom
_(lA
plenty cabinets. Ideal for
home w;, -:::cJ,i good barn,
horses or cattle. deep well.
pond. lencec - ~{) ready lor
cattle.
163 A. - MONEY MAKER, 56
ONE of our better buys, 3 large
A. bottom, 100 A. pasture, 2
BR, 2 lull baths, spacious
Iarge barns, ex t ra goo d se I 0 f
buill-In kitchen. large LR,
buildings,
nice farm horne
fully carpeted. carport,
with
7
rooms
and bath, large
storage . room , basement,
shadY
lawn,
ideal beef, hog
patiO, concrete drive, Jarge
and grain setup.
lot 89' x 222' ready lo go at a
price you can afford ;
ADDISON - 6 A. next to Tara
development, 4 rm s. and
, )&gt;ath,large metal commercial
size g~rage.
ATTRACTIVE Brick ranch
featuring 6 rooms, llh bath, 25 ACRES. 1 mi. from Tycoon
Lake. 4 rms. &amp; bath, cellar
coppertone kitchen , carpeted
house. Ideal lor retirement, or
LR and family room. all.
vacation, 56,300.
garage,
covered
patio ,
laundry room , natural gas
heat, concrete street, Kyger

new hospital on Rt. 160. Call
367-7846 or 367-7481 .

room and a full basement.

$1295

6 crl. Standord lhlfl.

Ft. Frontage 1'12 mile from

Air Cond .• Low Miles, Local Owner , Like
New.

maintenance. If you're expanding, may we offer this small
suggestion: ihe Dalsun Pickup. It de livers up to 25 miles
per ga llon.'It requires, less maintenance simply because
there's less to maihtain . Yet it hauls the goods JUSt ltke
other self-respecting half -ton in town. The Datsun Pickup
is America's number one selling import !ruck. Pure and
simple. Drive a Datsun ... then decide.

69 CHEV!IOLET VAN

or 2.8 acres for
Raccoon

POMEROY - Completely
remodel ad. 2 stories, plus full

1970 Int. Scout

It's basic math. More business, more trucks, more fuel and

135-tf

NEW 3 bedroom Home with
br ick front, t car garage 120

1052 Second Ave. This is a 3
BR. large living room. din ing

5() A. - Vacant, Morgan .

REALTY

· . Air cond .• 2 to choose from . Both sharp.

Travel lop. 4 wheel Drive. VB Auto .• Was
$2495.
•

69 DODGE PICKUP
.6 crl., new tires, locally owned , tow
$
milage .

looking for . A solid brick
home located on a large lot at

nice kitchen, carport, alr
cond., will sell or trade .

10 A. CA1
5200 dov-. .~-IJ

$795

1970 Olds 4 Dr.

1968 Ford LT.D.

25ACRES on Brick Road $3,000.
Will trade for good mobile
ilomes.
Call collect 987-4561.
NEW LISTING
146-26
JUST what you have been

CITY- 3 BR. bath, utility rm .,

2 A . - Nice buildirlg or mob ile
home lot. 200 ft . frontage on
state route 325 between

$1395

2 dr. hordtop, 6 cyl., out. Irons.,
believe itl

Neal Realty

3

'

busiDtlSS
As
be
grows,

67 MERCURY COUGAR

147-tf

&lt;
.tn:• -lots ol pines,

RIO - Ali brick, ali elec ., 5
rms ., bath, and ut ility rm.
$21,000. (Ideal Retirement).

Genorol M&lt;olntenonul
A
STRONG
electrical
background requlrad. Applr.
In person at Faderai Mogu • ST. RT. 218 - New, all elec., 5
2160

Office 446·1066
Evening Call:
Ron Canaday 446-3636
Russell D. Wood 446-4618
John I. Richards 446 -0280

2 Dr . Hdlp . Maroon. black vinyl top. Was
$2995.

$995

2 dr. Sedan , li cyl engine , standard
shift, radio, white witt! oold trim.
w•v •bove 1verage automoblle .

radio . See this to

garage, w to w carpet, on h
acre lot. Paved driveway plus

In Town· Great Location· Beauty Inside
This home Is like new inside Ivery well kept), brand new
kilchen, new wall-to-wall carpet, large bedrooms, formal

NEAR CLAY SCHOOL - Ail WE HAVE some lots and land
with no building, 2 acres up lo BAR&lt;&gt;AIN - 50 A., 30 A. good
Elec., ali brick, 6 rms. base.
104 acres. Call for In ·
on 1 A. tot. Price $28,500.
farm ground, 20 A. woods, 2
NEAR K. C. H. SC. - Colonial, 2 formation , If interested.
barns, log cabin, VInton area.
slory. 8 big rms. , base., 3
$8.800.
WE HAVE other houses$3,300,
baths. 3 A. $50,000.
EUREKA -

1970 Olds Delta

61 FALCON

65 CHEV. CHEVELLE MALIBU

Barr
Construction .
3
bedrooms, living room. kit·
chen. utility room , bath, wl!h

water frontage . Priced to sell.

some double and single up to SO A. - Harrison twp. , lob.
$50,000. Call for information.
base , mostly woods. $4,900 .

trade.

HOUSE~ ' for sale by contractor

MASSIE

Tel 446·1998

2 Dr. Hdtp . All Buick extras, new limited

radio, priced to sell .

rrons .. p, lt.. rlng, a very very sharp

.

---

1970 Buick lim

2 dr . hordtop, 6 cyt., slick shift,

dr. hardtop, bucket seats, va, aut .

Ev,nlngs .
Oscar D. Ba lrd, 446-4632
D. J. Wetherholt, 446-4244
Steven R. Betz, 4%-95~ ··~

12x60 furnished mobile home
on J pieces property. lmmed.

REALTOR

ready to move ln . Lot size, 85
x 150. Utility room in garage.
Will be ready to move into
soon . Pnce 521,000. , , ....

return .

Kanauga. Garage 2hc22. Also

------

Realty, 32 State Sl

:1.

$2095 ·

69· CHEVROLET CAMARO
..

:\
'I

today!
VINTON, nice 2 bedroom llome HOME PLUS INCOME - Nice
on Jackson St. Garden. Call
three bedroom ho'I'O with lull •
446-•127.
.bath, city water, city JChools,
Income of over $200 per month
RENT ONE, Rent Two. Get a
from two mobile homes on lot.
good return on your in A good investment. with good

446-1066

·DELIVERY

$25,000.

30 NEW BUICKS &amp; OPELS IN STOCK!
HUGE DISCOUNTS &amp;
LIBERAL TRADES.

70 FORD TORINO
2 dr. hardtop, 351 va aut. treni .. p,
steering, fac. air cond ., tinted glass,
W·l-wtlres,radlo, med. blue metallc
finish, blUe rtlnyl Interior ..:.. Sh&amp;rpl

f~

water. Priced in teens. See . town.

vestment and a home. to live
In, too. s rm . house in

J'

,,

•4 ACRE FARM, HOME - ·~
Near Meigs min'e ho~se has ~
200 ACRES, over 7,000' road
full bath, plenl' ~~ room. • ,;:
frontage on .4 roads near
large barn, pond. good stock ,1
Medical Center.
farm .
·
~
MOBILE HOME and half acre OVERLOOK GAL~IPOLIS I~
191 on Georges Creek Road.
LOCKS t&lt;llce three I
bedroom home with full bath
NEAR flOSPITAL, 25 acre
on large lot with · three car
farm , remodeled 3 bdrm.
metal garage. Good location
home , forced air heat, rural
on S. R. 7, easy access to

large stream just below. Enter the spacious fully carpeted

2 BEDROO~ TOWNHOUSES

.,

buy~ for. · u,~er

Morgan Township.

•

{ ~J

lealtJ '

'

r"",....-,. .. ...... ,. -e•

'

OHIO. RIVfR.

·exCellent

" .. :;. .... .;. ~ -- -- ~-.-. ~~o...,. .... ...
I

Classifieds
For Fast Results Use ·The Sunday :Times-Sentinel
.

Real Estate For' Sa!r.

100 ACRES, vacant land In

. shadad hillside overlooking a beautiful water falls in a

attend . Rev . Elmer Jones.

149·6

basement .

,.._- ......

.

Headquarters tor Galli a County
. . . .... ,
Real Estate. Listings neede~ ,
;f;
452 Second Au.
,. '
35 ACRE . -~·; ~ room home
444·3434 ~-4775
::
with b" ~-11 ~imber. A
steal at S6,,,.,.v
TWO MILES FROM PARK - :,
•
Brand new thr~ bedroom, all. ' j
45 ACRES farm . Good fences
electric with c~ntrdal air, 1
t!.
Md pond. Remodeled two
ilome on gQOd roa . City ii&lt;
story farm h()me . . Spanish
schools, county water, 501 i•
decor . Shag carpel. 4 Nylon carpet througilout, 1 ,~ ·
bedrooms. bath and ·'pari
Tappan equip~ 'k!lchen.- ~n · 1••

Gallia Co.'s Largest
Real Estate Sales Agency
Office 446-3643
Evenings.Call
E . ~ . "Ike" Wiseman 446-3796
E. N. Wiseman 446-4500
•
Picture This In Your ~ind

World's. Largest

garage /ocat,d at Green ·

Elementary Schpol on Route
141.
149-1
~--:--:-:-::::-:-­
OLD-FASHIONED hymn sing
at Fairview Church, Fairview
Rd . Singers are invilad to

Real Estate For S~le
Rancho Co!YipanY)

......

ll - The Sllltlay 'l'lmee.&amp;nllnel, JW~e. 25, 1972

For ·Fast Results Use The Sunday .Times'-Sentinel ·Classifieds
Notice

-

I

_ _ _ _. .

hard lop./ow mileage. Call
367-7428 af er A p.m.
146-4
:SPECIAL for gradualion · Olivetti portable typewriters
' S89.SO now snso. Sinomon(
Pig.• .&amp; Ottice Equip.
fA.tf

GAlliPOliS

~or

Sale

New GMC
Truck 'Headquarters

For Sale
-51 NG.E~ !lwt,ng MatniM haiti.
&amp; Service .. All models in
stock. Free delivery. Service

guaranteed. Models · prlcad
from $69.95. French City.
Fabric Shoppe. ~Inger approved dealer. 58 Court St.,
Ph. 446·'1255.

1969 2 1. GMC
1963 v, T. GMC PU
J08.tf
1964 1/, T. GMC PU
1967 .Jeepster
1968 V2 T. Chev. PU
GOOD USED MO~'LE HOMES
1967. 1~ T. Chev. PU
1970 ~kyline 12x5'· 1 Br.
1963 12 T. Chev. PU
1967 Horizon 12x5() 2 Br.
1968 'h T. GM PU
1970 RichardSOn 12x65 3 llr.
1968 112 T. GMC PU
.1965 Vlndale 10x5() 2 Br.
New 11 fl . campior
1960 Van Dyke 10xof() 2 Br
1966 'I&lt;
T.
GMC
1960 Van Dyke 10x5() 2 Br .
1968 11&gt; T. GMC PU
Tri-County Mobile Homes
1966 ·v, T. GMC PU
2013 Eastern Ave.
1967 v, T. GMC PU
!&lt;allipolis, Ohio
1963 F401) ford Truck
446-0175
1.966 ociDGE Sportsman Wagon - - - - - - - - 196-1 '12 T. Ford PU
1966 '4 T. GMC PU
"Teddy Be1ra"
1967 If&gt; T. Ford PU
While
on a hunting trip,
atrver 66 Tractor wllh
Theodore
Roosevelt refused
cultivators.
to
shoot a small bear. C. K
SOMMER'S G.M.C.
Berryman, famed cartoonist,
TRUCKS, INC.
immortalized
the incident
m Pine St.
and loy bears, then new to
446-2532
the market, 'soon · became
mz
known as "Teddy bears."
·EIGHT track tape stereo In
, lovely hand rubbed walnut
·
Time Zone
console. Pay bal. of $101.21 or . Atlantic Standard Time a
$5.55 mon. Ph. •"-0921 · 105_11 • tEime zone an hour ahead ' of
astern Standa~d Time, has
been established to cove!'
.. FEATILlZi!R.
Puerto Rico and the VIrgin
REASONABLE prices. Carl Islands. No other U.S. terri·
Winters. Ph. 2-15-5115.
: tory Ia included In the At·
----=--·---..,.~.....;_69 11 !antic zone.

il.

�_..... __ .....

..
· ~ - The Sun&lt;lay TIJnell.8enllnel, Jilne 25, 1m

.

~

'

'sALE OF US ED
SCHOOL BUSES
Gallipolis City Board of
Education will accept .sealad
bids on two used sc~ool buses
up until 12:00 noon, July 11 ,
1972.
Description of Buses:
66 Passenger GMC chassis
will&gt; Superior body 1962 Model
60 Passenger GMC cilassis
will&gt; Superior body 1963 Model
Bids will be acceml!d on
each bus individually or a ·
total bid lor both buses. Buses
may be inspected and bid
forms obtained at tile bus

..'

Re ~ Estale For Sale

Real Estate For Sale
'

STROUT THE WISEMAN
AGENCY
REALTY

PAY ONLY ONE UTILITY
ELECTRICITY
We furnish Woltr • Sewqe · Gorbage Collection . Ample
1'-•rtdng · TV Antenno . Wol~to- Wali ·corpeting .
Oroptrie• • Rongn . llefrlttrolors . Air Conditioning .
G1rb1ge Dispouls · Dishwoshers . Heal L•mps . Private
Ptfios • Swi"'"'inq· Pool • Clubhouso. ·
.
·- ··· ..;.

-- .

THE LEADER SINCE 1900 IN
. SI;RVING THE NATION'S
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS.
Ph.~-- .

A_ farge rustle log constructed home nes11ed on

Drntlcolly Raduced
Sele
STOVES, refrigerators.

living room and enjoy the huge tlreplace and wood
panelad wails. Kitchen is complete with new built-In cab .,
range, dishwasher. etcc1_padrooms (could bed 4 or S) with
mor.-tllan ample room . 2 baths, hili basemen! will&gt;

11/z BATHS

TOWNHOUSE
'APARTMENTS

TARA

fireplace and2 car garage-7 acres for the kids' horses or

pontes. 5 miles out In city school district. Pricad In the
forties. (Qoll Ike Wiseman for an appointment)

•ll l·i't·---------..

For Information Call-Shirley Adkins.,.-367~7250

clothing,
[ewetry,
showcases,
typewriter
, shoes,
and

·· - - · - - - - ·
counters, other Items too 6 RM. HOUSE and bath. 104 SLEEPING ROOMS weekly
Third Ave. Kanauga 446'4322. rates , free garage parkinQ, ·
numerous to mention .
Saunders Economy Store, 1..0
M9-3 Libby Hotel.
Third Ave .. Gallipolis.
289-tf,
VINTON ...:. 2 story home
149-3 FURNISHED apartmenl , - ------------,.completely remodeled . 3 BR.
"""'--,----,-,utilities pd. PI&gt; . 245-5535 Rio FuR N1sHE 0 apartm\nt.
LR with WB fireplace. formal
~ iXliJBLE wide 'mobile · ~ome,
Grande Barber Shop. .
adults preferred . Reference,
dining rm ., new modern
city water and gas, $175 mo:
149·3 631 Fourth Ave.
kitcilen, full basement,
Ph. (46.1066 or 446-4618. . - - - - - 141 -tf
several shade trees, will sell
102-tf ' HOUSETRAILER IQts, near
or trade.
llospltai . Call 992-3589 or 992==-----=-c
FURNISHED two -bedroom
TWO-WAY R'adjos Sale~ · -~
2720.
Service. New and used CB~s~
149-6 trailer near Gavin Plant. NOW under construct)oof. } BR,
Phone 367-7167.
bath, nice kitchen, paneled
po11ce tr~onltors, antenn,a~, ·
SE::-T::-R::-A=IL-:E:::R:--:172x-67D~two
-o= u::LR. garage. w-w carpel. all
145-tf
etc. Bob's 'Citizens Band H
electric, brick front, large
Radio Equip., Georges Creek
bedroom. total electric, air
corner lot. $16,500.
Rd ., Gallipolis, Oillo. 446·4517., condlllonad, nice lot, 1 mile
16-tf. from city limits, city water,
r.n-..• .
BARGAINS in Bidwell : No. t adults only, utilities paid. Ca.ll Real Estate For Sal :
RALPH:5 Carpe1 &amp; Upholsl~ 446-2543.
7 rms ., bath,
garage,
workshop, large lot, $5,500.
Cleaning Service . Free
147-3
No. 2 - S rooms, 2 porches.
tollmates. Ph. 446·0294. Ralph ----------------A. Davis, ownw.
cellar house, corner lot.
TWO badroom mobile home.
$4,200.
9-1
PI&gt; . 367-7322.
139-lf
------~--~~--~
DAY CARE
NEW LISTING - 10 mi. out , 330
SUN VALLEY Nursery School, 112 OF 'double house, grounO
ft. frontage on state rd ., 31/.,.
licensed by State of Ohio, I V~ floor, 2 bedrooms . Very nice .
acres, 3 BR, lovely buill ·in
miles wut of new hospllol.
kitchen. large LR &amp; family
Ace~! one child.
577 Sun Valley Or. PI&gt;. 446- Ph. 446-4806.
rm .. garage, basement and
3657. Day care that says "we
large maple shaded lawn .
1·8-tf
care. 11 MadM Hauldren ,
519,000.
Owner ; Loreijilh &amp; Joiln NEARLY new four room SMALL ~oy on telephone as
teenage sister rushes to grab WE HAVE several homes under
Hauldren, Operators.
apartment, unfurnished, near
it : "You must have the wrong
114-tf
construction between $20,000
center of town. Garage ln.
. I don't have a
--:--o-=---,----,=.,..and $35,000. If interested, call
eluded. Adults only. PI&gt;. 446- number
beautiful sister."
HOLY.. LANO and· Rome tour,
for appointment .
2691. After 5 call 446-2561.
special discount to those who
148-5 FOUR bedroom double wide
pay $100 down before the end
RIPE FOR DEVELOPMENT
trailer, nice living room and
ollhis month. Departure date UNFURNISHED two badroom
-38 acres in city school dist.
kitchen with a lot of cabinets
October 17. Pilone 446-.(113.
Beautiful rolling woodland
spartment on Eastern Ave .
1
and bath and half. Lot 97 12
147-3 446-9583.
overlooking Ohfo River ,
frontage and 175 feet deep,
:-::-:--::---county water available .
148-7 with
city water and gas and
GARAGE SAL E. Friday and
sepllc lank. Price $14,500.
Saturday,lOa.m . loS p.m. 5..0
ATTENTION! We ilave 2 ideal
Th ird
Avenue ,
books ,
renlal property investments:
THREE bedroom llouse, all NO. 1 - 4 houses and 5 mobile
clothing, odds and ends, and Real Estate For Sal'
carpeted with ni ce kitchen
toys.
homes on upper route 7.
and with lots of cabinets,
147-3
Owner will finance for 5 pet .
electric stove , dis hwasher
·-----and garbage disposal. Frame NO. 2 - 15 rental units in city,
HelD Wanted
ilouse with brick front. New.
plenty of road frontage and

-----

----,.....~- , .,

a ·tree

~.

RUSSEU

WOOD

~==,--:-,.----

occupancy. Cali 446-0003.

DRIVER SALES
12 · young men and
women needed immediately lor salary
position.

$3.50 per hour

7 rms., ball&gt;, river
view, 2 car carport, 2 lots,
new alum . siding . $16,000.

PATRIOT No experience nee·
essaryl
~ust
be
neat and dependable.
Ca II 446-0677 from 9
a.m. to 5:30p.m. ~on .
Tues. and Wed.
REMOOELIN'G. 'li·uil•lng ' new
rooms.

cement,

tooting,

siding. furnace Ins. J. H.
Queen &amp; !llln, 446-9271.
68-lf.
'
l
·oNii r,hone call can gel you
star ad toward a profitable
spere-tlme
money-making
opportunlly as an Avon
Representative. You can
meet new people, make

friends, win prizes! Call or
.write Mrs. Helen Yeager. Box
172, Jackson, Oillo. Ph. 286·
@8.

2 story, older

home , sound, water line, 2 A.

flat lot: price $13,000.

shubbery .

dining and· full basement, garage and not much grass to

mow. This Is an exceptionally clean horne close to both
schools, and block from park.

Jay ·sheppard 446-0001
Denver K. Higley 444-0002
Wanda S. Eshenaur4441-0DOJ

GREEN ACRES - 4 yrs. old, 5
rm . frame, H.W. firs., at tached gar. Price $23,000.
KANAUGA - 5 rm . fr~me.
H.W. firs ., fur . heat. qu iet st.
$11,000.
ADDISON -

Eastern

Avenue,

Gallipolis.
149·3
--~c~.-s~hi~
er -~R~e-c•-r7.
ti~
on~i~
,,,_

SHARP tndividua with high
school diploma who enjoys
meeting and serving the
public. Must be able to type
and work with figures .

25 Locust St.

Nice frame, 4

rms, bath, base., edra lot

and only 12 yrs. old. $16,000.

CHATHAM AVE. -

Howard Brannan, Broker
Off. 44 .. 2674
Lucille Brannon

Eve. 446-1226

Counby Living

S rm.

AT ITS best. 2 story frame
fur . heat. cheap housing. home. 3 BR. formal dining
room, w-w carpet on all
$12.000.
frame, storm drs. and 1 win.

KERR - All brick, HW and
carpel firs . 7 rms. pius full
base., 1 A. lot. It has 3 baths
and 2 car garage. Price
reducad $35,000.
rms ., 2 car gar ., vinyl sid . on
.7 A. tot. 518,000.

CITY - Real nice, 6 big rms.,
bath, part carpel, fur . heat,
cheap at $15,800.

CITY - 5 rms., bath and base ..
H.W. firs .. flat lot, $17.000.
FARMS
BusineSs experience 75 A. modern 5 rm . ilome, s
desirable but not necessary ..
barns, 15 A. development
Reply Box 227 c-o Tribune.
land, one of Gallia Co.'s best.
148-4 160 A. on St. Rt. 325, 100 A.
-.,----,---tractor land. good bldgs. and
LADY to stay part t1me wun
plenty water.
semi -Invalid lady . References
required . Call 446-1364, after 5 204 A. near Lecta , lots of tim ber, 7 rm. house, 2 barns and
p.m.
only $25,000.
147·6
163 A. 5 mi. from Cheshire, on
Ward Rd . no bidgs .. underlaid
wllh coal . $20,000.
GRILL COOK for 2 p. m. to
23 A. Lincoln Pike. 7 rm. house,
10 p. m. shift. Also
barn and tob. base .
woltrenes for 2 p. m. to 10 p.
· ANY HR. 446-1998
m. Apply Bob Evons st.. k
E. Winters- ~- 3878
House. No phone coils.
/II Arnold- 446-0756
147·3
.
eve., J. Berry-446-3466
. Eve .. J. Fuller-245·9311

downstairs, paneled walls,
nice large kitchen,
'h
basement, near new gas
·for ced air furnace , 2 car

garage, outbuildings, 3 acres

of clean land with 600' fron -

tage on BT road. well fenced,
about 12 mi. from Gallipolis .

Don 't delay . See today.

BUSINESS building at 48 Pine
Slreel. Full pr ice, $5,500.

Move In Tomorrow· Excellent Location
Near new hospital - The owner has n)oved out of area and
wants an immediate sale. Very very nice 3 bedroom home.

THIS is a buy you can't alford to
miss. 2 BR home with wall to

with beamad ceilings In living and kllchen area. Air
conditioning, large lot on U.S. 35 - Equipped kilchen

Wall carpet in living room and
both bedrooms . Can now be

(range, dishw.asher, etc.)

bought for 510,000. Call today
l or your appointment .

WE ALSO llave some lots on
Raccoon
,. Creek .

WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTOR WAN-TED
Simply service companyestabll'shed all cash accounts in this
area. This is not a coin operatad vending route. Fine famous
brand products you've seen on TV sold In locations such as
offices. employee lounges in retail stores, financial fn.
$tltutlons. small manufacturing plants, warehouses and

small lnslltuttonai accounts. The distributor we select will be
responsible for maintaining these locations and restocking
Inventory. All locations are establlshad by our company. We
nead a dependable distributor, male or female, In this area
. with 1900.00 minimum to Invest in equipment and Inventory
which can turn over up to two limn monthly. Earnings can
grow to S25,000 annually and up. We will consider pert-time
llcatlons. Write for complete information, including
one: number and Area Code. All inquires strictly conldtnllel.
·
CONSOLIDATED C.HE~ICAL CORPORATION
F...,o Driod Products Division
:1115 MolttroM ltvd., SuU. 120·
Houston, TtXII 77006

NEW 3 bed room home with

Want Lot of Room with River Frontage
Five badroom split level wilh family room (fireplace). 2
baths. 2 car garage, locatad on I A. lot overlooking and
running to the Ohio River. Very pleasant home and
surroundings. Owner moving out of state.

I

mo.

brick front, 1 car garage , 120
ft . frontage 1112 mi le from new

hosp ita l on Rt. 160. Call 367 7846.
145-lf

dows and alum lnum siding,
formal dining room, 2 baths.
kitchen Includes refrlg. with
Ice maker. double oyen,

cook top and llood. dish - ··

Brand spanking new 3 bedroom home with beaut ifu l built.

new hospTlY:(1J 1d, 3 car
garage, and a mv...ern 4S room
home.
•

In kitchen , carpet throughout. ceramic bath, garage and
wonderful view. It' s attractive, convenient a'n d very well

New Frame

·. Brick.

w.z.y

'

IS Ihe word for this cornforteble
2 BR home, fully carpelad,
stone fireplace in large LR.
laundry room -by kitchen,
deep lot on concrete street.
When you see this one you'll
· want to move today. 112,500.

LOTS OF LOTS
WE HAVE lots in all directions.
Some can be bought with a
very small down payment.
Whether building or buying a
mobile home, call today.
LISTIN"S WANTED
Ranny Blackburn
Branch Mgr.

· Mobile tbnes For Sale ·

"SELL THE AUCTION
'WAY"· '

JIMME SAYRE

•

PH. 446-3444 ·

·~:··:1

I.

NOTICE

.,

We sell anyihint lor
anvbody. Bri1141 your
Items- to Knotts Communi.J;Y Auction Bern . .
Corner Third &amp; Olive. ,
Far appointment
446-2917 . .. Sale ,f'terySiturday Evening 11
;70'Ciock.

..

IF YOU LIKE COUNTRY
LIVING WITH THE CO N.
VENIENCE OF BEING
CLOSE TO TOWN , LOOK
AT THIS NEW CARPETED
3 BEDROOM HOME WITH
BEAUTIFUL KITCHEN,
GARAGE AND LARGE LOT
( G A R D·E N
SP0 T)
LOCATED 5 MILES OUT IN
CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT,
521,000 BUYS IT .

:·.

;:

COMPLETE WITH STOVE, OVEN, FAN,

·:••

••.,
=t
••

...•!,

ANDLOOKATTHE PRICE ,
$2 0 , 5 0 D. 0 D. F 0 U R
BEDROOMS . LARGE
LIVING ROOM , W TO W
CARPETING
THROUGHOUT HOUSE,
VERY NICE BUILT -IN
KITCHEN ,
UTILITY
ROOM, CARPORT AND
LARGE LOT . OWNER
MOVING TO CLEVELAND .
We Need
Listings Now
HAVE BUYERS WE CAN ' T
sA T I S F y . W E • R E

.-••::
•'

SLEEPS 6. LIKE NEW.

FOR SALE by owner - ' HOBART DILLPN
badrooms, 2 ballls. Home 1
Real·Estate Broker
block from city park. Call 446P. 0. Box516
3521 .
·
· EXCLUSIVE
agentfor Raccoon,
149-3 Valley campsites, wls,hes to
- - -- - - - - his office In the
f--------------1 t!nnounce
Valley area will be open dally
Seven room house, Mills
from 12 noon 'til 8 p. m. Ph
Village. next to oew hospital,
446-2730:
47-1 .
3 bedrooms, carpet In LR,
lormol dining rm., ond hill
and bath. Full basement
with large family room, l
IDEAL 5ACRE RANCHO. Lake
Conchas, New Mexico. $2,975.
fireplaces, all curtains and
No Down. No Interest. $25-mo.
dropery stay in house. Extra
Vacation
Paradise. Money
large screened porch, stqrm

:~

t . '

8 hole ilog feeder, BOO bales mixed hay !last years), 75
bushel corn, McCiaugh No. IS chain saw (like new), 8ft.

,.:.

PRICED FOR

ll

QUICK SALE

I•

CARROLL NORRIS
DODGE INC.

s·~

~
~

~

~

pump wltil tank. hand tools of all ki nds. chains and' other
Items too numerous to mention .

. VERN AND VERGIE BROWN, OWNERS

.Hi

'I

'

......______..........,
TERMS : CASH
LUNCH SERVED
Tommy Joe Stewart, Auctioneer
•ee there on time'

_

Maker .

Free

Brochure.

doors and windows, nice
RECONDfi'tOtijtl) ' .
Ranchos : Box 2001 BT,
large lot. Pricad In upper
MOBILE HOMES
Alameda , California 9•5()1.
136-14
1966 Conestoga 55x12. 2 bdrm. 20's. Quick occuponcy. Ph.
446-4895.
1965 _
,Frontier 60x12, 2 bdrm .
1965 Frontier 60x12, 3 bdrm.
L-----------l FOR SALE by owner. 2 story
brick at 452 First Ave. 7
WE NEED LISTINGS NOW- 1964 Baron S6x12, 2 bdrm .
rooms, 2 baths. gas hot air
We havean active demand for 1962 Gibraltar 55xto, 2 bdrm . For Sale or Trade
f~r. nace .
Present
homes and acreage. Recenl
sales have helped us. Now let 1968 Apollo Travel Trailer. CAMPE.R,' full facilities: also arrangement 2 _apartments.
17'12', self-contalnad.
us help you, too. Cali
camper on ·pickup truck. Call Easily converted to one
B&amp; S Mobile Hom~•
BRANNON REALTY today.
before noon 4&lt;6-0168 or 1~6 family dwelling. Asking
Secon &amp; Vian~ St.
$35,000. Shown by appt. Ph.
IT WILL PAY.
Second Ave.
446-0208.
Pt. Pleosant I Next to Heck's)
•
87 ,~
149-tf
149-1

Attention

HomeownefS!

------ ------ ------

PUBLIC SALE

Wanteti To Buy

HAVE cash buyers for farms
NEEDWRM.
and vacant land, · any size.
2B
Wrlle to Harriet Klrkpalrlck,
TOWNH9USE APTS.
1560
Duffield
Drive,
BE WITH the first to choose Columbus. Ohio 43227 or call
your residence In lhese' collect evenings. 861-8356.
btau'llful ·suburban apls. Klelmeyer Realty Co.
Contemporary In slyle,
149-1
luxurious conlrofled
car~etlng,
In· .NOlAN relic's, arrow heads,
dlvldually
heall!lll,
$:plgr
•oordln•l4d
ap - axes, spears. etc. by piece or
plfan·c:.,·. ., prtvatt · patioS: collection. Top prices paid .
many other features. Lease Phone 446-9442.
S135 mo. C.ll (46.3712 for
141-30
appointment
. to ...
- so
-- -I:~- 'With
=-unit. 526Jackson
Pike,model
Near 10 -TO
ALl(
2 or
more
Holler /Md. Center.
bedroom house. Phone 367·
' THIRTY-FIVE
WEST
7~76.
1'"·5
APARTMENTS
51-tt

------

'·, ·

STARTING AT. 12 NOON
Location f_rom Gallipolis,tako Route 7 to Chflhlre. w1 tch
lor sale Stgn above Roush's Doiryland
.,

11

. :. .. • ·

clolhing in my home . CaU

••
~w

.,12

USED &amp;
REBUILT

BACKHOE work in Rio Grande
area. Ph . 2~5 -5535 Rio Grande
Barber Shop .
149-3

SHI.PMENTI .

PH. 446 4060
CLOSED ALL DAY
THURS. &amp;SUN•

DOC SMITH SAYS:

I·----------~--------------,
.
.
I
UVE MODERN...
.
1
INA
I

I

ACT N0 W

II
I

s· AVE

1
1

'

I
I

I1
I
Wanted
I
ROOM and board, evening meal I
h
~~~~a·~~~-esNotF~ cdl:~ I
Halderman. c;ontacl Bill Joe I
Johnson. 446-3273, or 446-1154.
149·6" I

'1 oooo

10'-i2' AND14'WIDE UP' T070' LONG
Spanish, Old English, Early American and Nodern Decors
DOUBLE WI DES AS LARGE AS24x60
TOTAL ELECTRIC AVAILABLE
·

we are going out for big business. 78
sold within next 60 days.

tb
mobile homes m~s e
.

BIG SELECTION
CLEAN USE DB' AND10'WIOES READYTO~OVE
.

I

BANK

INTO.

UP JO 12 YEARS ON TERMS

DATr~

Ml~

TO SUIT ~OUR
INMuE
I'
wm
CO

FREE DELIVERY . ·
OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. T09

flwe~or~.~~~r'J::1~
PIIY

1.,_3

Sh , alley rear "' Sacond
Av':.
139_11

U.S. 23

·

·
ME IN TODAY

P.~. · INCL~DINGSUNDAY

·

------------

WAVERLY, OHIO

--

For Sale
CORBIN &amp; SNYD~R
FLIRNITURE

USED: 2 piece 11vong room
su tle, 3 piece end table set,
full size coil springs and
mattress, twin size bed,
complete, recliner. Full size
bed and coli springs, two of()"
••
gas stoves, good shape,
Tappan .
•
NEW: Father's ·oay gift

II
I
I

II
1
11
I

I

suggestions:

rockers,

recliners, portable TV. Lawn

furniture, loves.eat . Open

Friday 1111 8. Pienly of
parking. Free delivery. 95S
Second Ave. 446-1171. ·
142-lf
regfstered Hereford
yearlings. Hereford Butler
Farm, 256-6518 or 256-1113.
144'-tf

FIVE rooms and bath, 3
bedrooms, attachad garage,
storm windows and doors,

forced air furnace . Lol 7Sx100.
Locatad on St. Rt. 7 at
Chesillre, Ohio. Price raducad
tor quick sale. Owner lea.vlng
state. Call 367-7428 after ~
p.m.
146·4

---.1 1970 DODGE Coronet Aof() 2 door

.:~:·::~:t,Wi~. T~t5~¥f.~~~·.i~ L. WAVERLY
MOBILE
HOME
SALES
I
.
. ·
·
SIX room houM lor ·family ol

UPPER RT. 7

1 FIVE

NEW 12' WIDE 2 BEDROOM
· ONLY •369500

Lost

SMITH BUICK, INC.

I
I

.

1972 BUICK SKYLARK
TUDOR SALE

I

1

MOBILE HOMES

CITY DEALER PRICES!

I

1

ON BEAUTIFUL

WE BEAT ALL BIG

With air condition • power steering, automatic trans. , V-8 eng., white
walls, tinted windshield. dlx. steering wheel, carpet frt. &amp; rear, dlx. wheel
covers. protective bump~r strl_pes~ radio. Plus many more extras .

II
I
1
1

ro· '15 oooo

1

·8

'I
·v'

ANOTHER~ NEW~~n

Mrs . Ross Norihup, 446-2543 .
21 ·11
.
PAINT job on houses. barns.
outbuildings and roofs. Ph. PIANO luning and repair by
379-2205.
local man with 10 years ex149-12
perience. Call Elmer D.
RT. 7 NEXT TO
-::-:--::-:-----.,--,-,
Geiser 388-8666.
DOES your home nead painting;
siding. roofing. remodeling, - - -- - - -147 -3
OLD SILVER BRIDGE
paneling , cement work , NEED More Room? Let Byerly
barbecue, patios, or garage,
Conslruction Co . remodel or
KANAUGA, OHIO
carport, etc .? You name it,
add a hew room or garage to .__..;,;...;.,...;,_.;__..,_•
we'll do II . Reasonable rates .
vour home. Reasonable rates. For Sale
Call 446-0126 or 446-1753.
Free estimates . Call Denver
119-tf
Higley Sales Manager 446- THREE bedroom trailer, space
- : - - - - - -0002.
available. 367-7329.
BABYSITTING in my hom e. S2
147-6
136-tf
per day. Ph. 379-2660.
. 148-3
• .
.
~· . GOOD CLEAN LUMP and
TUTORING lor tile summer. ROOFING and guller work. stoker co~l. Carl Winters. Rio
Call 446-4933.
Will iam Mitchell. 388·8507. ·
Grande. Phone 245·5115.
148-3
67-lf
.
6-tf

I

'I

-·

GUARANTEED

Wanted To Do

ALTERATIONS.ON all types of

ADULT basic education ciosse&amp; ·HOLSTEIN bull calf lost near..
art In progress at North
no.
Iff d II 2"
Gellia HI h School on
Porter, vulo. oun ca -·
Tuescleyan:J'Thursday during 5663 ·
149·31
lilt summer. Call Howara
Neelcamp 318-872A.
143. 10 LOST_ Men's eyeglesies ln
bleck pouch-like case around 1
•t·
...
Fermer's Bank parking lot
BusiiiiSS Opportum 1es
Friday evening. If found 1
TtRI!5- 0i baing retired or
conlact Ctareoce Lawrenceat
&amp;tlhdl.ng In unemployment
Ul-2815.
..
llntl. You can &amp;tart working
6- 18-soc- ~
for u. end yourMif today
IOIIcttlno past dut accounts.
T 0
WrlteorcallllltcrodltburNu Wanted 0. 0
.
o1 Point Ptee11nt, 312 Main
~-

IIi

PARTS

Gallipolis, Ohio

Wanted To Do

lnstfilclloh

J
~

WAVALENE STAGE, OWNER

· .•;ttl
_. . _ ~ark Central Ho~:0.

Eastern Ave.

;j i'

lA

'

FURNITURE
Refrigerator, 16Ft. Gibson .New; 2 ~droom Suites · 100
Kenmore Automatic Washer, Breakfast Set. 23 'tnch
Television, Platform rOCker, Coffee fable, End table, 3
stands, 3 Electric tans, 2 toble lamps. Hoover swHper, 2
radios, occasional cllair, Record plover, metal wardrobe
Pictures. Pots and Pans, Rugs.
'
ANTIQUES
.
Sewing machine, trunk, dishes, chairs, picture
frames, Secretary desk, Bottles. Shoe Loth, Pie Cup.
board, other Items too numerous to mention. .
•

11Lf;ol:l'l~ll:; ROOMS, weekly
.
..,... ,
(.APARTMENT for constructlal!
• m-. Ph. 446 _0756 _
-'
...
.
26,;,.

SATURDAY; JULY 1st

J. A. FRENCH, AUCTIONEER

GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

4460842
For Rent

extension ladders, grease guns. hose, Shovels, 1 water

.

ONLY 7,000 ACTUAL MILES.

'.

~~~~1 't.?e TtA~MR~~tl~~
THEM .

·---------------------------------_.J

I

'•

antique dlsil cabinet, other household Items too

1/2~ile0ut

COMMODE, SHOWER, AIR CONDITIONING .

•'

1 dinette sef, Unlco regrig~rator (like new I. 3 beds, 3 chest
of drawers, I dresser, numerous chairs, stand to~~bles, new
couch , wringer type washer, portable mixer, mixed lots of
dishes, two vacuum sweepers, antique cherry wardrobe,

Four Bedroom

.•••'
)l

AUTO

*2295
'.
WOOD MOTOR SALES

1970 FORD
MOTOR HOME

••'•

._.u

numerous to mention.

Price Reduced
VERY NICE FOR THE
PRICE. NEARLY NEW ' 3
BEDROOM HOME WITH
BUILT -IN KITCHEN IN
TOWN ,$ 14,90D. WASSI6,000.
FINANCING AVAILABLE .
Brand Spanking
New

' f

'

r.l

•' •
·••'

BROS.

2 dr . hardtop. auto . trans' , p . steering, p.
brakes. radio, w-s-w tires, fac . air cond.,
midnight green metallic finish with nat . vinyl
interior . One owner car in like new condition .

.

AUCTIONEER

Located from Gallipolis--Take route 141 to Rt.
775, go approximately 4 miles, turn right on
Patriot, Cadmus Rd. Watch lor Signs.

built.

40 MORE TO CHOOSE FROM
P TO 36 MON

BAIRD

69· Pontiac Catalina

New Listing at Edge ofTown

4 1f~ A. or ..t'Ji". ·.. rd . close to

. 2 Dr., 26,000 miles. One owner.

KANAUGA, OHIO

'SERVIa

12:00 P.M.

out, city water and sewer. ~

washer , gar. dlsp. and bar .

DREAM -

~UCTiqN •

THURSDAY - JUNE 29 - THURSDAY

basement, new storm win·

1970 Ford Maverick

Pickup, ~ cyL engine, Custom cab.
Standard shift.

PUBLIC SALE
Owner L,_eaving Area-Fabulous Buy
For the money you can't beat fhls , 3 !large) bedrooms
br ick home Including family room will&gt; fireplace, 1 full .
2-1h batils, completely carpeted throughout, 2 car
garage, large fencad lot in city school district, 11 miles

2 Hdtp.; Auto .• P.S .• 24,000 Miles. School
Teacher Trade

67 FORD LONG WHEEL BASE

:-.;••

available , $5,000.

'~ R'S

beauty .

1968 Ford Fairlane

SMITH AUTO• SALES

$1595

• cyl . engine, p, steering , A real

Ot.O

THREE room home on State Rt.
160, flat lot, county water

39 Acres

Creek Scilool distri ct.

NO SELLING ... KEEP YOUR PRESENT JOB I

Charles
446-1546
J. Michael Neal, 446- 1503

6 A. - Development land, Clay
Twp.

CITY FAR

61 GMC % TON PICKUP

ES with well and seplic

Vinton and Rio Grande.

ATTENTION
DUE to the present construction
In Gallla Co .• we ha ve several
out of town buyers in need of
homes in thi s area . If you
LOCATED on State highway,
have property for sale, don'l
large barn 1 tobacco base,
setlleforlesslhannationwlde
garage and plenty oul advertising. CALL STROUT.
b~lldings , 2 BR home in good
condition, nice kitchen with 3oA. - 2 m; ''160.nlceSroom
_(lA
plenty cabinets. Ideal for
home w;, -:::cJ,i good barn,
horses or cattle. deep well.
pond. lencec - ~{) ready lor
cattle.
163 A. - MONEY MAKER, 56
ONE of our better buys, 3 large
A. bottom, 100 A. pasture, 2
BR, 2 lull baths, spacious
Iarge barns, ex t ra goo d se I 0 f
buill-In kitchen. large LR,
buildings,
nice farm horne
fully carpeted. carport,
with
7
rooms
and bath, large
storage . room , basement,
shadY
lawn,
ideal beef, hog
patiO, concrete drive, Jarge
and grain setup.
lot 89' x 222' ready lo go at a
price you can afford ;
ADDISON - 6 A. next to Tara
development, 4 rm s. and
, )&gt;ath,large metal commercial
size g~rage.
ATTRACTIVE Brick ranch
featuring 6 rooms, llh bath, 25 ACRES. 1 mi. from Tycoon
Lake. 4 rms. &amp; bath, cellar
coppertone kitchen , carpeted
house. Ideal lor retirement, or
LR and family room. all.
vacation, 56,300.
garage,
covered
patio ,
laundry room , natural gas
heat, concrete street, Kyger

new hospital on Rt. 160. Call
367-7846 or 367-7481 .

room and a full basement.

$1295

6 crl. Standord lhlfl.

Ft. Frontage 1'12 mile from

Air Cond .• Low Miles, Local Owner , Like
New.

maintenance. If you're expanding, may we offer this small
suggestion: ihe Dalsun Pickup. It de livers up to 25 miles
per ga llon.'It requires, less maintenance simply because
there's less to maihtain . Yet it hauls the goods JUSt ltke
other self-respecting half -ton in town. The Datsun Pickup
is America's number one selling import !ruck. Pure and
simple. Drive a Datsun ... then decide.

69 CHEV!IOLET VAN

or 2.8 acres for
Raccoon

POMEROY - Completely
remodel ad. 2 stories, plus full

1970 Int. Scout

It's basic math. More business, more trucks, more fuel and

135-tf

NEW 3 bedroom Home with
br ick front, t car garage 120

1052 Second Ave. This is a 3
BR. large living room. din ing

5() A. - Vacant, Morgan .

REALTY

· . Air cond .• 2 to choose from . Both sharp.

Travel lop. 4 wheel Drive. VB Auto .• Was
$2495.
•

69 DODGE PICKUP
.6 crl., new tires, locally owned , tow
$
milage .

looking for . A solid brick
home located on a large lot at

nice kitchen, carport, alr
cond., will sell or trade .

10 A. CA1
5200 dov-. .~-IJ

$795

1970 Olds 4 Dr.

1968 Ford LT.D.

25ACRES on Brick Road $3,000.
Will trade for good mobile
ilomes.
Call collect 987-4561.
NEW LISTING
146-26
JUST what you have been

CITY- 3 BR. bath, utility rm .,

2 A . - Nice buildirlg or mob ile
home lot. 200 ft . frontage on
state route 325 between

$1395

2 dr. hordtop, 6 cyl., out. Irons.,
believe itl

Neal Realty

3

'

busiDtlSS
As
be
grows,

67 MERCURY COUGAR

147-tf

&lt;
.tn:• -lots ol pines,

RIO - Ali brick, ali elec ., 5
rms ., bath, and ut ility rm.
$21,000. (Ideal Retirement).

Genorol M&lt;olntenonul
A
STRONG
electrical
background requlrad. Applr.
In person at Faderai Mogu • ST. RT. 218 - New, all elec., 5
2160

Office 446·1066
Evening Call:
Ron Canaday 446-3636
Russell D. Wood 446-4618
John I. Richards 446 -0280

2 Dr . Hdlp . Maroon. black vinyl top. Was
$2995.

$995

2 dr. Sedan , li cyl engine , standard
shift, radio, white witt! oold trim.
w•v •bove 1verage automoblle .

radio . See this to

garage, w to w carpet, on h
acre lot. Paved driveway plus

In Town· Great Location· Beauty Inside
This home Is like new inside Ivery well kept), brand new
kilchen, new wall-to-wall carpet, large bedrooms, formal

NEAR CLAY SCHOOL - Ail WE HAVE some lots and land
with no building, 2 acres up lo BAR&lt;&gt;AIN - 50 A., 30 A. good
Elec., ali brick, 6 rms. base.
104 acres. Call for In ·
on 1 A. tot. Price $28,500.
farm ground, 20 A. woods, 2
NEAR K. C. H. SC. - Colonial, 2 formation , If interested.
barns, log cabin, VInton area.
slory. 8 big rms. , base., 3
$8.800.
WE HAVE other houses$3,300,
baths. 3 A. $50,000.
EUREKA -

1970 Olds Delta

61 FALCON

65 CHEV. CHEVELLE MALIBU

Barr
Construction .
3
bedrooms, living room. kit·
chen. utility room , bath, wl!h

water frontage . Priced to sell.

some double and single up to SO A. - Harrison twp. , lob.
$50,000. Call for information.
base , mostly woods. $4,900 .

trade.

HOUSE~ ' for sale by contractor

MASSIE

Tel 446·1998

2 Dr. Hdtp . All Buick extras, new limited

radio, priced to sell .

rrons .. p, lt.. rlng, a very very sharp

.

---

1970 Buick lim

2 dr . hordtop, 6 cyt., slick shift,

dr. hardtop, bucket seats, va, aut .

Ev,nlngs .
Oscar D. Ba lrd, 446-4632
D. J. Wetherholt, 446-4244
Steven R. Betz, 4%-95~ ··~

12x60 furnished mobile home
on J pieces property. lmmed.

REALTOR

ready to move ln . Lot size, 85
x 150. Utility room in garage.
Will be ready to move into
soon . Pnce 521,000. , , ....

return .

Kanauga. Garage 2hc22. Also

------

Realty, 32 State Sl

:1.

$2095 ·

69· CHEVROLET CAMARO
..

:\
'I

today!
VINTON, nice 2 bedroom llome HOME PLUS INCOME - Nice
on Jackson St. Garden. Call
three bedroom ho'I'O with lull •
446-•127.
.bath, city water, city JChools,
Income of over $200 per month
RENT ONE, Rent Two. Get a
from two mobile homes on lot.
good return on your in A good investment. with good

446-1066

·DELIVERY

$25,000.

30 NEW BUICKS &amp; OPELS IN STOCK!
HUGE DISCOUNTS &amp;
LIBERAL TRADES.

70 FORD TORINO
2 dr. hardtop, 351 va aut. treni .. p,
steering, fac. air cond ., tinted glass,
W·l-wtlres,radlo, med. blue metallc
finish, blUe rtlnyl Interior ..:.. Sh&amp;rpl

f~

water. Priced in teens. See . town.

vestment and a home. to live
In, too. s rm . house in

J'

,,

•4 ACRE FARM, HOME - ·~
Near Meigs min'e ho~se has ~
200 ACRES, over 7,000' road
full bath, plenl' ~~ room. • ,;:
frontage on .4 roads near
large barn, pond. good stock ,1
Medical Center.
farm .
·
~
MOBILE HOME and half acre OVERLOOK GAL~IPOLIS I~
191 on Georges Creek Road.
LOCKS t&lt;llce three I
bedroom home with full bath
NEAR flOSPITAL, 25 acre
on large lot with · three car
farm , remodeled 3 bdrm.
metal garage. Good location
home , forced air heat, rural
on S. R. 7, easy access to

large stream just below. Enter the spacious fully carpeted

2 BEDROO~ TOWNHOUSES

.,

buy~ for. · u,~er

Morgan Township.

•

{ ~J

lealtJ '

'

r"",....-,. .. ...... ,. -e•

'

OHIO. RIVfR.

·exCellent

" .. :;. .... .;. ~ -- -- ~-.-. ~~o...,. .... ...
I

Classifieds
For Fast Results Use ·The Sunday :Times-Sentinel
.

Real Estate For' Sa!r.

100 ACRES, vacant land In

. shadad hillside overlooking a beautiful water falls in a

attend . Rev . Elmer Jones.

149·6

basement .

,.._- ......

.

Headquarters tor Galli a County
. . . .... ,
Real Estate. Listings neede~ ,
;f;
452 Second Au.
,. '
35 ACRE . -~·; ~ room home
444·3434 ~-4775
::
with b" ~-11 ~imber. A
steal at S6,,,.,.v
TWO MILES FROM PARK - :,
•
Brand new thr~ bedroom, all. ' j
45 ACRES farm . Good fences
electric with c~ntrdal air, 1
t!.
Md pond. Remodeled two
ilome on gQOd roa . City ii&lt;
story farm h()me . . Spanish
schools, county water, 501 i•
decor . Shag carpel. 4 Nylon carpet througilout, 1 ,~ ·
bedrooms. bath and ·'pari
Tappan equip~ 'k!lchen.- ~n · 1••

Gallia Co.'s Largest
Real Estate Sales Agency
Office 446-3643
Evenings.Call
E . ~ . "Ike" Wiseman 446-3796
E. N. Wiseman 446-4500
•
Picture This In Your ~ind

World's. Largest

garage /ocat,d at Green ·

Elementary Schpol on Route
141.
149-1
~--:--:-:-::::-:-­
OLD-FASHIONED hymn sing
at Fairview Church, Fairview
Rd . Singers are invilad to

Real Estate For S~le
Rancho Co!YipanY)

......

ll - The Sllltlay 'l'lmee.&amp;nllnel, JW~e. 25, 1972

For ·Fast Results Use The Sunday .Times'-Sentinel ·Classifieds
Notice

-

I

_ _ _ _. .

hard lop./ow mileage. Call
367-7428 af er A p.m.
146-4
:SPECIAL for gradualion · Olivetti portable typewriters
' S89.SO now snso. Sinomon(
Pig.• .&amp; Ottice Equip.
fA.tf

GAlliPOliS

~or

Sale

New GMC
Truck 'Headquarters

For Sale
-51 NG.E~ !lwt,ng MatniM haiti.
&amp; Service .. All models in
stock. Free delivery. Service

guaranteed. Models · prlcad
from $69.95. French City.
Fabric Shoppe. ~Inger approved dealer. 58 Court St.,
Ph. 446·'1255.

1969 2 1. GMC
1963 v, T. GMC PU
J08.tf
1964 1/, T. GMC PU
1967 .Jeepster
1968 V2 T. Chev. PU
GOOD USED MO~'LE HOMES
1967. 1~ T. Chev. PU
1970 ~kyline 12x5'· 1 Br.
1963 12 T. Chev. PU
1967 Horizon 12x5() 2 Br.
1968 'h T. GM PU
1970 RichardSOn 12x65 3 llr.
1968 112 T. GMC PU
.1965 Vlndale 10x5() 2 Br.
New 11 fl . campior
1960 Van Dyke 10xof() 2 Br
1966 'I&lt;
T.
GMC
1960 Van Dyke 10x5() 2 Br .
1968 11&gt; T. GMC PU
Tri-County Mobile Homes
1966 ·v, T. GMC PU
2013 Eastern Ave.
1967 v, T. GMC PU
!&lt;allipolis, Ohio
1963 F401) ford Truck
446-0175
1.966 ociDGE Sportsman Wagon - - - - - - - - 196-1 '12 T. Ford PU
1966 '4 T. GMC PU
"Teddy Be1ra"
1967 If&gt; T. Ford PU
While
on a hunting trip,
atrver 66 Tractor wllh
Theodore
Roosevelt refused
cultivators.
to
shoot a small bear. C. K
SOMMER'S G.M.C.
Berryman, famed cartoonist,
TRUCKS, INC.
immortalized
the incident
m Pine St.
and loy bears, then new to
446-2532
the market, 'soon · became
mz
known as "Teddy bears."
·EIGHT track tape stereo In
, lovely hand rubbed walnut
·
Time Zone
console. Pay bal. of $101.21 or . Atlantic Standard Time a
$5.55 mon. Ph. •"-0921 · 105_11 • tEime zone an hour ahead ' of
astern Standa~d Time, has
been established to cove!'
.. FEATILlZi!R.
Puerto Rico and the VIrgin
REASONABLE prices. Carl Islands. No other U.S. terri·
Winters. Ph. 2-15-5115.
: tory Ia included In the At·
----=--·---..,.~.....;_69 11 !antic zone.

il.

�..

..

..

.

'·'

...

....

.

..• •.., ·&lt;' .

....w.

I

Card "'f ·Thanks

For Sale

For Sale

BOXER AKC puppies 10 weeks MAGNETIC car and tru.ck
signs . Available 61J.1 " x 18" to
old'. Phone 446-4471 .
20" x 24" . $12.50 to $30 pair.
149-J
4&lt;16-1397 .
If
1401968 FORO exhale with air and
low mileage. Ph . 369-7268 .
1
149-J ALMOST new 5 foot brush hog,
one number I good famlly
cow, 3 years old. Ph . 388·8631.
HANNAH ' S husband Hector
147-3
hates hard work so he cleans
the rugs with Blue Lustre.
Rent electric shampooer Sl. FIVE regi stered Heref ord
yearling heifers . 256-6518 &lt;&gt;r
!Lower G. C. Murphy's) .
256-111 3.
149-tf

-------------

----,---PLANTS: sweet . potato, cab-

147-lf

DURING the Illness. and
bereavement of my husband,
S,amuel Barnhart, we thank
the
Veterans Memorial
Hospital . Or . Telle. Dr.
Ridgway · nur·ses and staff
'r
k H ·
0 '
cam_den dar
osp1tal, r ·
Mod1e, Dr. Carter, nurses and
staff, Ewing Funeral Home,
Sy ra cuse
Fire
Dept .
Auxiliary, Rev . Char le s
Norris , I sabe ll e Simpson.
friends. relatives and neigh·
bors for kindnesses extended
to us. ·
Mrs. Helen E. Barnhart and
family, brothers and sisters.
6-25· lfc

Services Oflered

- - -- - -

shampooer
Supply Co.)

Rent

electric

$1.

(Central
149-tf

CLOSE out on 19711ull size zigzag sewing machi ne. For
sewi ng stretch
fabri cs .

buttonholes,

f~ ncy

designs,

etc. Paint slightly blemished .
Choice ol carrying case or
sewing stand. $49.80 cash or
terms available. Phone 4464578.
149-6

--------------1963 BUICK Wildcat, white with

black interior, bucket seats,
auta. Ph . 256:6095 .
147·3
- -------AMERICAN saddle gelding, six
years old . S300. 367 -7432.
147-3
--------196 1 CHEVROLET Impala
hardtop . Ph . 256-6074 .
147·3

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
• DEADLINES
, 5 P .M . Day Before Publ ication. WAITRESS , apply in person ,
· Monday ' Deadline 9 a.m . .Craw's Steak Hou se.
Cai'K.e llaliOn - Correct ions
6·20-6tc
Wilt be accepted Ul}til ~ a.m . lor.
Day of Publication
DELIVERY
REGULATIONS
.
DRIVER SALES
T.he Publisher re serves the
. right to edIt or reject any ads . 12 YOUNG men ~ and wOmen
needed immediately fer
· deemed
obje ctional.
The
sa lary position . SJ .50 per
publ isher will not be responsible
house.
No
experience
for more· tflan one in correct
necessary, ml,lst be neat and
Inse rtion .
depgndable. Call 446-0677, 9
For wa~· r1~ 5 Se rvice
a.m . to 5:30 p .m ., Monday,
5 cents per Word one .Insertion
Tuesday and Wednesday.
Min imum Charge: 75c ·
6·25-3fc
12 cents . per word three
consecutive insertioris .
·
18 cents per ·· word six ~on
secutlve insertions .
25 Per Cent Disc oUnt on pi!tdd
" 11
ads and ads paid within 10 days .' WILL paint roofs or houses
CARD OF THANKS
.
'
&amp; OBITUARY
·
In~ , and cut trees; clean
Sl .SO for so word minim um .
att1cs;
basements,
e.tc.
Each additiona l word 2c.
Phone 949 ·322 1.
BLIND ADS
6-14-30ic
Additional 2Sc Charge per
Advertisement .
OFFICE HOURS :,
8: 30 o.m,. to s:oo p.m , Daily,
8 :30 a.m . to 12 : 0() Noon
1966 CHEVROLET. •;, ton
Saturday .
pickup. 6'l2 ft . bed. sta ndard;
1
phone 992 -6547 .
6·_
23 · 31c
I WANT to thank all my friends, _ _ _ _ _ __ __
neighbors and minister s who
came to visit me during my QUARTER horse; phone 742·
stay at Ve teran s Memorial
3.:1 18.
Hospital , also al l the ones who
6-21 -6tc
sent car ds. fl owers . and
prayers for me . May God
bless each and every one of
you.
M rs. Opal Barr LEAO vocalist for roc k group .
6·25-ll c
Col i Gallipol is 446-3829 or
Pomeroy ~92 - 2289 .
WE WOULO like to express our
6-22 ·3tc
most sincer e thanks to our
fr iends,
neighbors
and
relat ives for the flowers,
prayers and ca ll s at the t ime
of the sickness and dea th of
our Dad , Rufus E . Hite ; al so
thanks to the Good Samar itan
Hospital , Zanesvil le ; Martin
Funera l Heme and Rev. Cecil
Wise . . Your thoughtfulness
wi ll al ways be remembered .
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Hite
6-25-ll c

Card c Thanks

-~----~-----

BOB
LAN E'S
Comp lete
Bookkeeping and Tax Se rvice, 424112 Fourth Ave .,
Kanauga. Office hrs. 9 a.m .-1
p.m. Ph. 446-1049.
.
85·11
- - - - - - - -HOLLEY BRO. CONST.
COMPLETE water lin e insfallation , backhoe, bulldozer
and boring machine services.
J. P. Holley 245-5018 or D. R.
Holl ey 245-5006.
111 -lf .
- - - - - : - -- - C&amp;S Electri'd1l Service &amp;
Repairs .
House wi r i ng ,
'"electri c heat, motor controls .
Free estimates . Ph. 446-456 1
or 675-3361.
22-tf

;===========-,

Wanted!

Notice

- ------

--,--- - - -

- - - - --

- -----

- - - -- -

- - -- - -

- -- - - -

- - - - --

a.

a.

-

- -

s

·t=-·=======::..__.,

"HE1L"

Plumbing &amp; Heating

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

- - - -- -

D£AD STOCK

------

- - -- -1962 CHEV. Impala, auto .•

- - -- -- -

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth&amp;Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 446-4477
Ts5-tf

perfect mechanical con d., a
little rust , best offer. Call
Larry Landaker . 245-9335.
148-3

------

USED FURNITURE

GENE PLANTS &amp; SONS
PLU MBING - Heating &amp; A!r
Conditioning. 300 Fourth Ave.
Ph . H6 - 1637 . ( For,erly
Brammer's Plumbing &amp;
Healing.)
48-lf

Ll K E new 4 pc . matching living
room suite, 2 pc. living room
suite In excellent tondilion.
long Early Amerltan coven,
Early American chair, sofa
bed, vinyl couch, 6 pt. dine tte
set, 92'' long flowered couch, 2
tamps, dresser, 854 Second.
446-9523.

Unique Teacher
Maria Montessori first ap·
plied her unique teaching
RICE'S NEW AND methods to defective chit·
USED· FURNITURE dren in !899 and later used
them with average children
KITCHEN table and chairs. to d evelop a worldwide edu·
desk, playpen, baby bed , cational system , according
Inside ~ door, trunk·, electric to Encycl opaedia 8 rita n·
stove, colonial couch and
nica.
chair . Ph . 446·2857.

W -3
-=--~---­

- : - - -- 1965 PONTIAC Catalina, good

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

Insurance

I

cond ition, 389 cu. ln ., radio
healer, Sears air conditioner,
power .. steering,
power
brakes. S350 firm . Ph. 4462476.

CAR INSURANCE
CANCELLED? DECLINED?
Young Drivers
Too Many Accidents
License Suspended
OWl ETC.

SAUNDERS.EVANS
INSURANCE, INC.

a for

\

$1.00

c·W-----~--~--------4~

I

We talk to JOU
like t persoo,

WMP0/1390
.

WAlLOP JllnR

""'"•" nlo • .,,.,.,to '"'"•roiii- PASS

·

ON YOUR DIAL

!

" " " - - - - - --

tm
•

•

Pomeroy HO!lli!' &amp; Auto
OperiS Til 5
. Mondaythru Saturday
• 606 E . Main, Pomeroy, Q. .

Wanted To Buy
USEO subnierslb t'e water
pump, phone 742-3263.
_6·26-3tp

.

--:--:-----

When using a coin-operated car
it's better for your car's finish to
an extra quarter for an extra
than to leave a soapy film .

'

-~::-:----

1962 CHEV .

Contact Asw.ciale
;VERA EBLEH
Yf2·J020
Middl-'

1964 IN TERNATIONAL •;, ton
pickup. 6 cyli nder : call 949·
2184.
6-23-21c

---..,.-=:-:-=

SEPTIC tanKs cleanao. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
662-3035.
2-12-tft •

160 Coal St .

RUTLAND
2 B.R. modern home ,
comp let ely furnished on
large fenced Jot , garaoe ,
$18,000.

:---

1969 . MERCURY 10 passenger
wagon, a.c., p.b., p .s., priced
to sel l ; cal l 949·218.:1 ,
6·23-2tc

3 B. R. home, recently
completed refinished inside
on lfo~ acres, 511,500.

• - - - -- ---- -.--J

4567.

1963 PONTIAC Tempest. 4
cy linder. automati c, good
running condition, good tires,
2'1' MILE S from Rutland , 7
REAOY-MIX
CONCRETE
$150. Phone 99n204.
room, 1 floor plan home,
16 FT. FIBERGLAS boa t with
delivered . right to your
6-23 -6lp
bath, fu rnace on l lf• acre
40 h.p. outboard motor; wi th
pro/ec:t. Fast and easy. Free
ground $10,000.
complete accessor ies ; phone
est mates . Phone 992- 328~.
1971
THUNDERBIRD,
2
door
992·3509 .
"'Goegleln Ready-MI• Co.,
Landau , all power , AM- ~M­
6-2l-3l c
M iddleport, Ohio.
I MILE from Bypass. 3 b.r .
Stereo radio, air·cond it ioned.
6-JO.tfc
all-e
lec
t
ric
home
on
3
acres,
many extra s. 9,000 actual
$18,900 .
32 FT. HOUSEBOAT. 40 h.p .
miles; cal l 773.5323. John
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
outboard motor and tr ai ler;
McMur ray, Mason.
REASONABLE rates. Ph . .446will se ll r easonable . Phone
6 ~ 2 J . 6lp
MIDDLEPORT
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell ,
992-7157 or see at 28A Railroad
S. SEC0NO Avenue, 3 b.r .,
Owner &amp; Operator.
St ., Middleport .
bath. fu ll basement, gas
6·20 ·6fc
5-12-tfc
rurnace, carport. very nlce
--------$21,()()(1,
APPROX IMATELY. 130 · acres
-:
C .~
B~
RA
~
O~FO~R~
O.~
Au-c~ll-oo~Hr
t imber , pasture and hay lahd;
Complete Service
7 ROOMS. bath , garage on
ideal lake site, owner wil t heiR
Phone 949-3821
finan ce t o.righ t party ; phone - ta•.e pr ivate lot , $7,950 .
IS YOUR Mob ile Home hot?
Racine, Ohio
992-2452.
Berry .Mill er Mobi le Home
' Crill , Bradford
6·22
-31c
. 160 Coal Street Also ·
~o,.,.
''"tr'"S-1-Hc1
Sales, 705 Farson Street ,
location
of
the
Middleport
C
Belp re, Ohio can solve your
of C offlte.
,
'ooZER and back hoe work~
problem
with
Coleman
SE in Long Bottom. phone
Central Air Conditioning . HOU
ponds and septic tanks; B &amp; K
'985-3529 .
Don' t delay - call today, area
Extavallng, Phone 992-5367 ,
6-11 -tt c
614-423-9531.
Oick Karr . Jr .
6·22-3tc
5-21 -lft
I OE AL 5·ACRE RANCHO.
La ke Conchas, New Mexi co.'
~s-=
E-=E~t-h_e_"_W
_E_E_K_E_N_O
-ERS
BACKHOE ANO OOZER work.
$2,875.
No Oown . No inter~st .
SPE CI AL" at Ber ry -M il ler
Septic tanks Insta lled . George
$25 mo . Vacation Paradtse.
POMEROY
M obile Home Sales, 705
(Bi ll) Pullins . Ph~ne 991·2478c
Mon ey
Maker.
Fre.e
Farson Stree t in Belpre, Ohio .
.
4-25-tfc
FOR THE FAMILY
Broch ure . Ranchos : Bo x
A SO x 10 Star, completely
Near shopp ing , playground ,
200100
,
Alameda
,
California
furni shed, only $1,995 .00 ,
and swim ming pool , S SEE US' I'OR: Awnl ng t, storm
94501.
d ;·
d
d
t
doors and windows, carports,
e lvere an se -up on your
bedrooms, 1'12 baths, dining
6-7-30tp
marquoes, aluminum siding
lot . We have a huge selection
room , nice kitchen. garage
and
railing . "A. Jacob, sales
of good late model used and 3. BEDROOM
and car port . $12,800.00.
frame •wi lh
representative
. For free
repossessed Mobile Hames on
1
garage and / 2 basement,
A-1 CONDITION
· esti mates. phone Charles
display, Before you buy any
Wea th e rman
Addition , • Immedia t e possession on
Lisle, Syratuse, V. V .
new Mobile Home see us fir st
Tuppers Plains, Oh io; phone
this home, 2 bedrooms, nice
Johnson and Soo, Inc.
- you' ll be glad you did. Open
667-36AJ ;. priced en inspect ion ,
kllchen and dining area ,
M onday thru Sa t urday J.2·tfl
6,23-3lp
fireplace, hardwood floors.
closed Sundays.
~----gas forced air heat, full
6-22-3tc
O'UELL WHEEL allghmenl'
RACINE - 6 room house. bath ,
basement,
2 car garage .
utilrty r oom , garage, S10,000 ;
located at Crossroads, Rf. 124.
$14,900 .00 .
phone 949-4195.
Complete front end service,
50 x 10 MOBILE home ; priced
TAKES HONORS
• 3-31 -lfc
tune up and brake servlte. ··
reasonably ; ca l l Chester 985 ·
FOR SNUGNESS
Wheels
balanced
elet 3379 .
2, bedrooms; bath, din ing
tr onlcally .
All
work
6-21 -61p RAC IN E 10 room hou~e.
room, car peted , paneled.
guaranteed .
Reasonable
bath, basement, garage, twb
tiled. storage building, THIS
rates
.
Phone
992-3213.
CAS~ paid for all ma1&lt;es and
lots. Phone 949 -4313.
HOME IS IN FIRST CLASS
1·21-ltc
models cf mobile homes.
CONDITION.
YOU
MUST
4-5-lfp
Phone area code 614-423-9531. -H-O-US_E_ _
R_ _ _b__
SEE IT.$6,950.00 .
AUTOMOBILE lnsurante ~
4-13-lfc
in ulland y Gr ade ·
1 AIN'T
cancelled?
Lost
your
School ; 4 rooms with balh , .
GOT NOBODY
operator's license? Call 992·
garden , large lot, carpor t ;
Here's a house that's not
2966.
•
phone 742·3154 .
·.Air Conditioners
6· 1S·Itt
new. needs paint Inside. Has
6-21 · 3tC
new siding , new roof, new
• Awnings
HARRISON ' S T V Service, open
carport . In good neigh .
MUST sell at once, 383 N. 3rd
·Underpinning
9 a .m . to 9 p.m. ; free pickup
borhood,
and
a
steal
at
lust
St .. Midd leport ; 2 story
and delivery ; phone 992-2522.
$5 ,500.00.
frame, 3 bedrooms, l lf2 baths.
Complete mobile home
6·13-ttc
new double garage. new
serv i ce -r plus gigantic
storm windows and doors ; 2...- WATCH THIS SPACE FOR
'disp tay of mobile homes
REALTY VALUES.
,
porches, Idea l l ocation;
always available at ...
EYEGLASSES In Middleport,
HENRY E. CLELAND SR .
asking $12,900 - make us an
•
Reward, Ed Ba ker , phone 992·
offer. Cleland Realty, phone
REALTOR
3307 or 992·2642.
992-2259.
PHONE 992-2259

Marine Sales

p~i:k 992-2i'74

MAIN ST. POM

Mobile Homes For Sale

CLELAND
, REALTY

.1970 ·Ford LTD ,.

, ....

Estate For

~ ,, 1.-,

6· 25-61&lt;
2 BEDROOM house at 313
Condor St.. full basement,
forced air furnace ; phone 992·
2792.
6·25-3tc

, I

va.

2 Dr . HT
ps &amp; pb. factory air. vinyl roof,
top of the . line.

J

'

2 Dr . HT V8, ps &amp; pb, factory air. vinyl ,roof,
we sold it new.

1970 DODGE POLARA ...............s2295
Fa ctory ai r co nd itioning, V-8 engine, automatic transm ission . power steering, power brakes, good white side
walls, many mere extras. White f in ish, black vinyl r oof.
Priced to move!

1967 Volkswagen

v.a

Hardt op coupe,
engine. atuomatic transmission,
power steeri ng &amp; brakes, whi te finish, black vinyl top,
vinyl interior , white wall t ires, like new, radio.

1969 GMC ·only $1895

I
I
I
I

1967 International Pickup
'908B' series, VB, 3 speed, new tires all around .

.

I
I
II
I

1966 Chevrolet Impala
4 Dr . v8, p-glide. ps. AM-F M, factory air,
speedometer shows 2B,OOO miles .... who
knows????

LTD Coupe, 399 V·8 engine, 3-speed , automatic, power
steer i ng, power brakes, factory ai r , grey finish . ~d
white
wall
t ires,
radio.
·

only _$695.

1965 atEVROLET..................·••• ..'595

Custom 500 4 dr . Sed . Must see this car to
believe how clean it is.

Impala station wagon. V-8 engine, standard transmission,
good tires, radio, heater .

1965 Ford

1961 atEVROLET ......................5250

only $795

1971 Ford Galaxie 500
VB, auto. trans., PS, Bron ze with vinyl top .

Impa la Coupe, V-8, automatic, power steeri ng , radio.

Gal., 2 dr . HT, factory air . one owner . Real,
sharp·, 65 model.
Open Evenings Till7 p.m. &amp; Sat. Till 5 P.M.
Service Till 12 Noon ·on s·a t. · ·

We Service What We Sell
Our Word Is Our Bond

PLENTY-OF NEW CHEVROLETS
WI1'H
.41H
'
.
.

CONDITIONING IN sroo;

.,:

992 2174
•
Pontiac

MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

1

~~~F:;:~0:;:;:::::·;s:;:a;:::l;:a''''·'·'·'!&gt;1. : ; : :l: :;: ;: : : : : : : : : :~;~.;: &gt;,;:3F:os:'r:;ss'''a'':1~~: : ' ''~·~::::: : : : : :: : : : : : ;:. ;:; : : : ~f

.

'I• ton heavy duty, 360 engine,
auto . trans ., new '72 truck
ca mper. Will sell separate or
together .

1969 FORD ............................ S1995

ton pickup. 6 cyl. local one owner. This is a
real sharp truck. •

TJHICKS

2 Dr. Sedan 4 speed, red finish . ready.

Ford
Pickup

1970 FORD GALAXIE 500 ..........s1995

'h ton pickup V8, local one owner . low
mileage.

Buick

-----

POODLE puppies, Sliver Toy , 1965 CHEVROLET Supers port,
while with black Interior, b.
Park view Kennels , Phone 992·
5443.
'
seats, 283 4 bbl ., aufo., like
8·15 ·1ft
new tires. Ph . 992-5997.
:;
T::W::-IN
: :-:N-:-ee--:d:-le_s_e-w7in"'
g...,..
m-a-:chine _ _ _ _ __ _ _ __
6-21-6
1971 model .Ill walnut stand.
All features"'bullt -in to make BEAUTIFUL Maple Early
filtl cy desig ns and do stretch
American sty le. stereo-radi o
sewing . Also buttonhol es,
combination , AM-FM rad io, 4
bl ind hems etc . $43 .35 cash
speaker sound system, 4
price or Yerms avallabl~ .
speed automati c changer.
Phone 992-5641.
Balance $76.39 . Use our
6·22-6fc
budget terms. Cal l 992-7085.
6-22-6tc
VACUUM CLEANER . Electro
Hygi ene New OemonsJrator
style,
ha s all t leanlng allathments WALNUT , Modern
stereo-rad io, 4 speaker sound
plus the new Eletfro Suds for
system , 4 speed automatlt
shampo,olng carpet . Onl y
S27.50 cash price or term s · changer , separate controls.
Balance $62 . 34. Use our
available . Phone 992-5641.
budget
terms. can 992-7085.
6·22-61c
6-22-6fc

We are here to please you Appraisal &amp; Trading Policy!

you'll like our

AIR CONI)ITION SPEqAL

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
992-2126

For

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. TillS

Sal e

Rawlings Dependable City does it again ... we ha ve
" unfrozen" our prices on air conditioning and w ill install
air condition ing on any car dur ing the months of June and
July fo r the tomplete pri ce of S285 . .. thi s is a $115
discount over the original price ... no gimm icks ; THIS IS
T.HE COMPLETE INSTALLED PRICE: PART S;
LABOR ; TAX ; COMPLETE ... ANY CAR. Beautiful
wood grained cabinet to matth the latest of models .. .
hurry in and see the unit and set up your appointment to
have a " cool" summer.

Pomeroy

For Sale

COAL.

Lim estone, Excelsior
Sa lt Works, E . Main St.,
P.o meroy, Phone 992-3891 .
4-12-llc

---------2 L -60·14 MICKEY Thompson
tires, pr i ced rea sonable ;
phone 949-4989.
6-25-3fp
1963 GMC pickup , 8 fl . bed ; I
Dem eo.Revelle 23 channel CB
radio, 1 Courier Clipper 23
hand se t , so l id state, 23
channels. 5 wa tts. with extra
battery pack ; phone 992-2792 .
6-22-6tc

1952 CHEVY 112 ton pltkup ; all
new tires, S120; good work
horse, weighs about 1,200 lbs.,
$150; phone Chesler 985-4180
alter 5 p.m .
5-25-41p
EVERY da y is Bargain Oay for
clean, used furniture, aP..
pliances
at
KUHL S
BARGAIN CENTER. Rt. 7
" at the caution light. " Tuppers P\a ins, Ohio. Open to 6
p.m . ; closed Mondays. Pnone
667-3858.
6-25·61c

FRONT : Oelu•e automotive styling with sa fely-designed
padded base . Wood grain control and toP. str ip.
AIR OUTLET LOUVERS: Three 4"x1'1&lt;' front louvers .
Adjustable lor all-direction air !low.
EVAPOR'ATOR CASE : Olmenslons- Heighl4'12'', Length
16%", Depth 11 ~".
AIR CONTROL : Varlable3-speed lor ma xi mum personal
comfort.
TEMPERATURE CONTROL ; Adluslab le with off
position . Cooling level Is automatically ma intained by
THERMOTROL.

We have a good selection of

1972 SWINGERS

MARTIN FORD
WEEKEND SPECIAL

in stock; hurry on these.
They won't last long; both six
&amp; VB, with &amp; without air
cond.; good color selection
.... also (2) Demon '340's' in
stock (both automatic!. This
is our last allotment of these
... hurry.

~;;~;;;;;;·~---·····6i·2i5;·3k

I

"OWN A
·CADDJ.AC,

$1795

I MITH NELSON MOTORS, INc.~·
I '?
I
~
I
II

1969 Ambassador

------

Gold with white top .

v.a

1969 Int. only $1795

1965 Ford

2 dr. 350 engine. auto . trans .• PS. 1500 miles.

350 cu. in .
engine, turbohydramat ic. power steering &amp;
brakes, radio. red viny l i nter ior , black fini sh. White wall
tires, I ike new .

1l 2

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
II
I
I

1972 Chevrolet Nova

1970 atEV. IMPALA SPT. CPE. .•. !2395

12 ton pickup, VB . std . tran s., custom cab. A
~l~y
.

· ··

Real sharp.

Gobi beige, black vi nyl roof. black knit upholstery with
bu cket seats, 400cu. in . v .8engine, power steering, power
disc brakes, console, positraction. ral l y wheels, F&amp;R
guards, G-70 x15 whit e wa ll tires, radio &amp; r ea r seat
speaker , A-season ai r conditioner . . THIS IS ONE OF
A KIND - MIGHTY SHARP!

1

·8:

w-s-w tires. blue.

1970 atEVROLET MONTE CARLO 3095'

·Dart. This car is just like new. 6 cyl. and auto.
Ole of _
the cleanest cars in the county .

1969 Dodge

4 speed. radio,

5

1969 Dodge only $1595

------

\

v.a

4 door sedan, factory air ,
engine, power steeri ng &amp;
brak es, Turbohydramat ic, radio, wheel covers, bumper
guards, gold fini sh, with black vinyl roof. covert viny l
interior, used less than 5,000 miles as Driver's Ed car.
SA LE PRICEO - AREALBUY !

Fairlane wag . Small VB &amp; auto. · Local one
owner . Real sharp wagon.

;

OHIO

)Datsun
Pickup

1972 atEVROLET BELAIR ..........53950

1969 Ford only $1795

ITH NELSON MOTORS,:INC.

sEWI NG' MACH::
I N-::1-::
: S-.-=
R-epai r;
service, all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpan Scissors .
3-29-tfc

1969

Wagons. Two to choose from . Come in &amp; dri ve
these o·ne owner cars. Ole with automatic and
one with 4 speed. Real Sharp.
·

Open Evenings Till7 p.m . &amp; Sat. lill 5 p.m.
Service on Sat. Till 12 noon,

6-22-6tt

LOWEST
PRICES!

., 1969 Opel only $1595

Before you start on your vacation,
don't forget a tip -to-toe safety check at
Smith Nelson Motors, Inc.

COMPLETE Mobile Home
Serv ice; also roof seal, underpinning
&amp; awnings ,
Richard A . Shuler, phone 949-

307 engine. V8, auto. rrans .. 2 dr. Real sharp .

Wagon only
miles on this nice little ca r .
Easy on gas and a nice family car .

Dut'tng a long -distance run on a hot
highway, tire temperatures reach as·
high as 250 degrees. ·

6-25-2tp

~

•

USED CARS

NEW LISTING
RUTLAND - 5 rooms, b.i th, gas heat, some panel ing .
Front porch, utility building , garage, and; garden . Near
grade school .
MIDDLEPORT
RENOVATED - 3 bedrooms , bath, charming breakfa st
nook , uti li ty rooin , nice kitchen. Lovely fr ont porch.
-...
Outbuilding for storage.
~ ACRES
.
INOUSTR IAL SITE - Located on two rail l ines. Access to
the Ohio River and •Route 7.
97 ACRES
EASTERN SCHOOL OISTRICT - Hill farm lor beef
cat tle . 8 room modest home. Has modern bath, coal
furnace. and semi -modern kitchen. 40 acres of }lay. All
minerals. $21 ,000.00 .
·
NEW LISTING
.
POMEROY - 3 bedroom stu cco home, bath . large livi ng
with fireplace and book shelves . Nlte front . porcn . Full
· basement . New gas forted air furna ce. Large side yard. 2
car garage and J.car space In basement. Ciose.tn for
$21 ,000.00 .

72 LTO FORD

R. H. RAWUNGS SONS 00.

COUNTRY SQUIRE
STATION WAGON·

• MIDDLEPORT. 0.

For Safe

12 X 60, 2 BEDROOM mobile
nome, loca ted In Rutland.
phone 742-5641.
6-25-6fc

For Rent
~ BEDROOM modular horne on

UPSTAIRS apartment. un furnished, 4 rooms and bath.
751 Brownell Ave., call 1-985·
3974.
6-22 -Jip

UNFURNISHED · 4 rooms &amp;
bath ; 2 bedroom mobile
home; trailer space ; store
room 30 x 60; 3 miles south
CAMPER, 16ft. sloeps 6, good'
Middleport on Rt. 7, M &amp; G ·
tondltlon , Sl .ooo. Phone 992F'oxt Market.
6329. .
.
'
.
6-23-31p
5-12-tfc

1968 CADIUAC SEDAN DeVILll

DEPENDABLE CITY

Gold with matching Interior, lull J&gt;Ower, Climate Cbnlrol
air conditioning .

992·2151 OR 992:2152 MIDOI.EPORT

'2600
Good ielection New Cadilacs &amp; Oldsmoblles
Now In Stock! .
TIME 10 TRADit

KARRC.dlttoc
&amp;.VAN
ZANDT
•
Otclsmotllt.

GMAC Flllilldnt AVIIt.bte
Por1tenty
Open Eves. Til 6-,:-Ttl 5 P.M. S.t.
" You' l l LlklC'ow'QUellty ~Y ol, ~ng luslnts~"

1?2·5342

992-J}l~

'-.,.--------------~-----..J
r

•

t

OPEN UNTIL 8:00 P.M. each evening
Except Saturday &amp; Sunday

1

For Sale

For Sale
REGISTERED Tenneutt
Walklnll Hartt, mores 1~d
lillles; C::horln King, between
Harrison •rt.&lt;~ Dexter 1· phone

742-.5870.

•

6-25-31&lt;

H&amp;N dly old or started Leghorn
pullets. Both floor or cage
grown oveiteble. Poultry
~ouslng
&amp;
eutomotlon.
Modltl' Poultry, ;199 W. Mlln,
Pomeroy, 992·216-1.
6-25;1tc

'2 QUARTER

Squire Luxury
Vin~

•.

.. ,

·-

RAWLINGS

3500

1

BIG THINGS ARE GO ING TO HAPPEN HERE SOO
BUY NOW WHILE THINGS ARE REASONABLE WE
HAVE SOME GOOD PROPERTIES FOR Y~U TO SEE.

HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE

See Emerson Jones. Pearl Ash. Hilton Wolfe,
Walla ce Amberger, Dick Rawlings.
·

Turquoise, bl'ock top, turquoi se Inferior full power

horse tolls, S100

each; phone 992-5039.
6-25-1tc

.
PUREBRED Hereford bull, 3
years old; elsa 1960 Dodge;
phone 992-2l07.
6-23-:Jtp
SMALL mart pony with fitly
oolt ; phone 992-, 0 or 992·
2759.

For Rent

TWO wheel uti lity trailer 5 11.
ratks, $70 ; (#&gt;Ieman three
burner camp stove, like new ,
$15; Coleman llameless camp
heater, 5,000 BTU, new S15 i 1
L.P. gas tank lor travel
trai ler, new$ 10; phone 9854140.
6-25-4tp

Of Course You Can"
.~ulpment. Climate Control air condll l..;lng.

l

'

1970 Chevrolet Nova

18.~90

wash,
spend
rinse
·

device which sets off flashing amber
lights at the rear of the car when it
slows down. Lights go off when car
stops,

Ph. " '·2114

1/• ton pickup, runs
good, $100; 2 1957" Chev. - 2
dr . and 4 dr ., $50 fof bofh ;
Phone 1-304-773 -5365, Mason,
W. Va ., between 6 p.m. and 7
p .m.
6-25-2tp

USED CARS

1971 Opel only $1895

/i. ca·nadian firm · manufactures a

SMITH NELSON
MOlORS. INC.

Real Estate For Sale

lATE

Beautiful
CARS

ON ~ ~ Checked
USED CARS

63,000 U. S. garage mechanics have
enrolled in a federally subsidized auto
emissions control course to help
reduce air pollution .

From the lar~st
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core .
Nathln Biggs
, Radlatqr Specl1llst

..

NO.1 BUYS II
'

The cooling system · of the average
modern auto engine 1must be able to
withstand in excess of 17 pounds of
pressure, combined with underhood
temperatures up to 278 degrees F.

~

ilL' . ..• "'"

:.

EAN UP

o,. BIU NELSON .

tn-"1

: 5232.

::

SUMMER

STEER THIS WAY

Dozer &amp; End loader work, .
ponds; baseMent, landscaping. We hive . 2 size
dozers. 2 olze IDiders. Work
done by . mur or CQnlrlct.,
Free · Esllmates. We 1lso
haul fill dirt, top,soll. Dump
trutks and low-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Joffers•.
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525 ,
"afMr 1 p.m. or phone

1 ~::....
OL'D tobacco Cans and tobacco
tabs; watch fob s; political
I' J
Items (badges, etc.). phone ·
&amp;1'
•. t-.~· --'
367 ·7433 or wr ite John Veith , '
Cheshi re, Ohio.
L-~--------&lt;
6-25 -31p

Auto Sales

:

1969 I;ADIUAC COUPE DeVILll

Pomeroy, Ohio

StiOI

'

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

111 Court St.

J

I

For fast Results ·Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

EARTH MOVING

We specialize in aluminum,
viny l and steel siding ;
fl)ierg las, brltk and " stoiiei
complete tine of residential
and commercial ·roofing ;
re modeling ,
building ,
suspended ceilings, Interior
and exterior painting ;
tomplele line of Masonry
work . All work guaranteed to
customer satlsfadion . We
are fully Insured for your
protection . 32 N. 2nd . 992·
3918.
ALLSIDE . BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR. CD. ,.

- GOARANTEEQ..-;
Pho'ne 992-2094

110 Mechan,ic Street

The
Daly Sentinel

Jurn

I}

-

3 Bedf &lt;M!m home. with
brick f'ront. 1 car
garage,
carpeting .
Pr.iced at ..
ONLY .$13,750

On ~ost American Cat!

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.- Broker

20~

n.;, 11 ""' pan that 0.., ..ound

The Daily Sentinel

Real

US EO OFFSET PLATE S
HAVI;,
-MANY .ltSES

[

IJwnbl.,, IALKY
l'f!llll'rday'•j
•

Ph. 992-2156

1220 Washington Blvd.
423-7521
BELPRE , O.

Aluminum
Sheets

437 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh io 45631
446-0404-446-0425

t4Mwttt Mu.d.,)

EXPERT.
Wheel Alignment'
$5.55

-

,.

.!

Business Services

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES .

36" x 23" x .oo·9

i·

Syracuse

•

Lost

For Sale

·=~~::J·-

I

.

------

992 -2448
Pomeroy, o.

Jlt!liMIDM® u..J :::!!:! ~ c

GIBSON olr condit ioner , 11,000
BTU unit. Healing and Unacramble thuo four Jumbltl,
c6ollng window unii18.SOO btu one letter to each aquare, to ·
cooling, 11,500 BTU healing.
Practica lly new 446-4237 after form four ordinary wordo.
5 on week days.
147-6
JJOVA /l

Sentinel Carrier
In

Wanted To Buy

-------

---,----

.

Wan.ted

SAVE
UP to $400 on Apache Solid State
ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe
Campers or Bolder Ameri can
Travel Trailers. Ideal fer
model. Complete with all
cleani ng attachments and
compact cars. Just in time fer
uses paper bags. Slightl y used
Fourth of July vacation . Sale
but clean and looks like new .
en ds June 26. Amsbary
Will sell for $34.25 cash or
Apache Trailer Sales. 631
terms available. Phone 446Fourth Ave .. Gallipolis.
--::-::~:::-c:::-=::7.==
45711:
145-tf
BANK$ ' fREE SERVICE
149-6 - - - - - - - - FREE estimates, liability in· 'OLD FURNITURE , dishes,
clocks , brass beds, si lver
~LL TYPES of
building
surance. Prun ing , trimming
dollars
or ·
complet e
'70 CHEVELLE. red with blatk
materials , block. brick. sewer ' and cavi ty work , tree and
households . Write M . D.
pipes, windows. lintels. etc.
v inyl top . auto. on floor , good
stump removal. Ph. 446-4953.
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
shape. PI&gt; . 446-0705.
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
73-tf
Coli 992-627 1.
149-3
0. Phone 245-5121 after 5.
3·16-lfc
123-tf , G IL L ENWATER'S septic tank
10 ACRES of standing hay 10c a - - : - - - - -- - clea ning and repair, also
1967 PONTIAC Catalina 400 Two . house wrecking. PI&gt;. 446-9499.
bale. Ph . 388-8738.
.
Ooor Ha rd top P.S.. P.B..
Established In 1949.
149-3
A.T., lj,&amp;H , Ph . 446-2898.
169-lf RIFLE malch - .22 and highBRED Holstein hollers. start
145·6 ~:---:----:-:--power ed
scope
sig hts ,
freshening In August. (614)
D. P. MARTIN &amp; Son Wa ter
Rutland Gun Club, Sunday ,
Delivery
Service .
You r
286·2496 . Also some co~•·
'53 WILL YS Jeep Truck . Ex June 25th, I p .m .
patronage w ilt be ap.'
148-2
ce llenl condition . $700. Phone
6-23-21c
675 -1186 .
preclaled . Ph. 446-0463.
DOUBLE bedJ35, dresser $15,
7-tf ' TWIN CITY CAB CO. - This is
145-5
both In verY"ifood condlfion .
a non .profit organization, we
446-0855 or 446-4257 .
• .
'71 GMC 3(, ton pltk ·UP with 1967
TERMITE PESTCONTRO•
didn 't plan it that way, but II
148-4
Kamp King camper. Phone FREE Inspect ion . Ca ll 446 -3245. ·
is .
245-5804.
Merrill O'Dell , Operator for
6-25 -2tp
BEAUTIFUL t hampagne toy
145-5
Ext.erml nal Termite Service,
pood,les. Phone 286·4844.
19 Belmont Or .
KOSCOT KOSMETICS: Severa l
148-3 MU ST SELL 1972 delux.e zig zag
267-11
new products - specials each
sewing mathlne•. Ph .• 441&gt;·0921.
month ; also sa les personnel
1972 SL 350 K-2 Honda $800.
Central
Air
Conditioning
105-tf
needed
. Phone 992·5113.
Phone 446-3732 after 5: 30.
&amp; Healing
6-6·1fC
1
Free Estimates
_ _ __ _ _ __ _ 48·5 If · you are ·culldlng· a nf'~
Stewart's
Hardware
home or remOEiellng, see us:
GUN SHOOT; Sunday, June 25 ,
Vinton, Ohio
TRUCK tamper. Phone 446·
We are builders . Oisl ribulor
1428
1 p.m . Factory choked guns
·
_
for
Hotpolnt
Appllan
ce,s;
-------..,~144'
·
148 3
only. Second pl ace shooters
All ison E lectr ic .
UNIVERSAL
get free shot in nexl match .
15
11
ONE Allis Chalmers Tractor
'·
Walch Repair. 1818 Eastern
Assor ted meats . Rac ine Gun
$350 ._ One Farmall $1 , 500. 256- .·CO RBI\: &amp; SN. YO."' a
Ave ., Strictly wholesale
Club.
1247
N
C:~
repairing . Ph . 446.9234.
6·22·3tc
148-l SERTA
Bemco Mallresses
103-tf
E
--------box springs S29 up. 955 Second
AV up toone half . Bringyo~r
ALUMINUM buildings, while Ave 446-1171.
TROMASFAIN
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
t ement. all sizes of tile In
·
10·11'
EXTERMINATING CO.
151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy .
Termite &amp; Pest Control
stotk,
to ncrete blocks . · - -4_4,tfc
'Wheeler sburg , Ohio
GALLIPOLIS BLOCK CO., DACHSHUND puppies A.K.C.
60-11
12JV2 Pine Street.
Reg . $50. Phone 446-4999.
148
_ __ _ _ _ _ _ ·"
145-6
1968 FORO Ranger •;, ton .
$1 ,500. Oarvln Bloomer. Ph .
Backhoe and Dozer Service.
245-5147 .
Septic tanks, farm ditching ,
148-tf
STA NDARD
ponds. Free Estimates .
Plumbing &amp; Heating
Phone 361-7579 or 367-7706 .
AKC
reg istered
Br ittany
215 Th l rd Ave .. 446-3782
146-tf
, spaniel bird dogs. 11 weeks
187-tf
old . Call Pomeroy 992 -6556.
148-3
RUSSELL'S
Window
- - - - : - - - -PLUMBING&amp; HEATING·
Air Conditioners
·24 INCH coa t furnace with 21 Gallla Ave .
446·4182
stoker and fan. Ph. 446-1427 .
297-tf .
Hot Water Heaters
148-3
SS:oo Service Charge
Plumbing
-::-0:. -E
:. -W
..,..,.T-T'~
., s"'
· P=L.,..
.U~
M.,.
·B"'
·IN
"·'G
" "·
AKC Registered Bassett pupWill
rernoveJour
dead
Electrical
Work
ANO HEAoTING
pies. 6 weeks old . Phone 446·
hor se an cows
Route 160at Evergreen
9836.
Call Jackson 286-4531
Phone 446-2735 .
148-6
187-tl

- - -- - -

,'

Employment '"•n!•-l
·'i . . .

For Sale or Trade.

-------

c lean er .

~·

Help Wanted

bage, tomato, and pepper . MODERN Walnut Stereo-radio
combination, four -.peed In·
Located In Rodney . Call
~rmlxed
changer, fuur ----~----Floyd Erll, 245-5124.
speaker
sound
s_ystem,
149-6
separate con trol s. Balance
169.40. Use our budget lerm s.
ALBERT EHMAN
2 USEO wood windows with
Call 446· 2728.
Water Oeli very Ser vice
storm windows, 1 single, 1
147-3
Patr iot Star Rt ., Ga ll ipolis
double $30. Ph . 245-5804.
Ph. 379-2133
149-3
COLONIAL Maple stereo-radio,
2~3- H
beau tifu l Early American .
.
ALTO saxophones. E&gt;eellent
style, with AM-FM radio, four • Arib 'hiermlnallng· Co.
condition. Phone 446-1865.
speakers , 4 speed automatic · TERMITE -PEST control. Free
149-3
cnanger . BalanC:e $79.34. Use
Inspec tion . Call Russe ll 's
Plumbing, 446-4782 Gallipo~s.
our budget terms . Call 446·
1962 FORO Van. Needs motor
2728.
Ohio.
repair $125, phone 245-5535,
147-3
107·51
Rio Grande Barber Shop.
149-3
1969 SEABREEZE boat. 80 h.p. '
SEPTIC TANKS
Mercury motor, $1 ,400. Ph .
Cleaned and In sM iled
EXCEL LENT. eff,lclent and
256-6095.
Russell 's Plumbing, 446-4782
economicaL that's Blue
147-3
297 -tf
Lustre carpet and upholstery

- -----

.

...._

23 - The Sunday 'l'lmes..sentlnel, June 25

For Fa~t Results Use Tlie Sunday -Times-Sentinel Cla.ssifieds
.

__

:

22 - The Sunday ~tine!, JIUle 25, 19'12

.

.....

Trini

6 Passenger

Syratuse. nlte location,
furnished, phone 992-2441
after 5 p.m .
6-14-tft

400 engine, H78xl5 w/s/w tires, deluxe .luggage rae~ radio, lockab~ side luggage
department, carpeted. cargo area, front bumper guards, fac. air cond., dual rear seat
.speakers, tinted glass, remote. conbol mirror.
t·
Fac:. Sticker Price
MARTIN
'5,337
FORD PRICI

NEW - Total electrlt apart·
men!, 2 bedroom. walk -in
closets, large living r09m,
kllthen and dining area;
phone 992-738&lt; or 992-7133.
• 6-22-ltc

2, BEDRooM traotft', adults HOUSE, ll'lfurnlshed, 7 rooms
· . only. Bob's Mobile
phDM 992-2951.

wit~ beth and .laundry roo~ ,

Court,

1/ 2

duplex,
all
ne.,.,.ly
r&amp;modeled. walt -to -wall
carpeting, S rooms and bath ;
Furnlshld slotplng room with
beth; pllooe 992-2780 · or 992-

6-13-tfc

.--=:-:=:-:::;::,:---

'

UNPO'iUfiSHHS
apartment,
1:14 Mulberry Ave .• phone 9"2.

3432.

3962.

------

6-2Htc

6-11-tfc

Ptts for Sale

SIAMESE kltltns, 2 months
old ; phane 992-321~.

- - - - - --..:"..::23-ite

~

1

BE QROOM
furnished
apertment bel\o11n Pomeroy
&amp; Alhtns, $80 par month:
~ 675-1614 ; also trailer
~p~Q .

�..

..

..

.

'·'

...

....

.

..• •.., ·&lt;' .

....w.

I

Card "'f ·Thanks

For Sale

For Sale

BOXER AKC puppies 10 weeks MAGNETIC car and tru.ck
signs . Available 61J.1 " x 18" to
old'. Phone 446-4471 .
20" x 24" . $12.50 to $30 pair.
149-J
4&lt;16-1397 .
If
1401968 FORO exhale with air and
low mileage. Ph . 369-7268 .
1
149-J ALMOST new 5 foot brush hog,
one number I good famlly
cow, 3 years old. Ph . 388·8631.
HANNAH ' S husband Hector
147-3
hates hard work so he cleans
the rugs with Blue Lustre.
Rent electric shampooer Sl. FIVE regi stered Heref ord
yearling heifers . 256-6518 &lt;&gt;r
!Lower G. C. Murphy's) .
256-111 3.
149-tf

-------------

----,---PLANTS: sweet . potato, cab-

147-lf

DURING the Illness. and
bereavement of my husband,
S,amuel Barnhart, we thank
the
Veterans Memorial
Hospital . Or . Telle. Dr.
Ridgway · nur·ses and staff
'r
k H ·
0 '
cam_den dar
osp1tal, r ·
Mod1e, Dr. Carter, nurses and
staff, Ewing Funeral Home,
Sy ra cuse
Fire
Dept .
Auxiliary, Rev . Char le s
Norris , I sabe ll e Simpson.
friends. relatives and neigh·
bors for kindnesses extended
to us. ·
Mrs. Helen E. Barnhart and
family, brothers and sisters.
6-25· lfc

Services Oflered

- - -- - -

shampooer
Supply Co.)

Rent

electric

$1.

(Central
149-tf

CLOSE out on 19711ull size zigzag sewing machi ne. For
sewi ng stretch
fabri cs .

buttonholes,

f~ ncy

designs,

etc. Paint slightly blemished .
Choice ol carrying case or
sewing stand. $49.80 cash or
terms available. Phone 4464578.
149-6

--------------1963 BUICK Wildcat, white with

black interior, bucket seats,
auta. Ph . 256:6095 .
147·3
- -------AMERICAN saddle gelding, six
years old . S300. 367 -7432.
147-3
--------196 1 CHEVROLET Impala
hardtop . Ph . 256-6074 .
147·3

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
• DEADLINES
, 5 P .M . Day Before Publ ication. WAITRESS , apply in person ,
· Monday ' Deadline 9 a.m . .Craw's Steak Hou se.
Cai'K.e llaliOn - Correct ions
6·20-6tc
Wilt be accepted Ul}til ~ a.m . lor.
Day of Publication
DELIVERY
REGULATIONS
.
DRIVER SALES
T.he Publisher re serves the
. right to edIt or reject any ads . 12 YOUNG men ~ and wOmen
needed immediately fer
· deemed
obje ctional.
The
sa lary position . SJ .50 per
publ isher will not be responsible
house.
No
experience
for more· tflan one in correct
necessary, ml,lst be neat and
Inse rtion .
depgndable. Call 446-0677, 9
For wa~· r1~ 5 Se rvice
a.m . to 5:30 p .m ., Monday,
5 cents per Word one .Insertion
Tuesday and Wednesday.
Min imum Charge: 75c ·
6·25-3fc
12 cents . per word three
consecutive insertioris .
·
18 cents per ·· word six ~on
secutlve insertions .
25 Per Cent Disc oUnt on pi!tdd
" 11
ads and ads paid within 10 days .' WILL paint roofs or houses
CARD OF THANKS
.
'
&amp; OBITUARY
·
In~ , and cut trees; clean
Sl .SO for so word minim um .
att1cs;
basements,
e.tc.
Each additiona l word 2c.
Phone 949 ·322 1.
BLIND ADS
6-14-30ic
Additional 2Sc Charge per
Advertisement .
OFFICE HOURS :,
8: 30 o.m,. to s:oo p.m , Daily,
8 :30 a.m . to 12 : 0() Noon
1966 CHEVROLET. •;, ton
Saturday .
pickup. 6'l2 ft . bed. sta ndard;
1
phone 992 -6547 .
6·_
23 · 31c
I WANT to thank all my friends, _ _ _ _ _ __ __
neighbors and minister s who
came to visit me during my QUARTER horse; phone 742·
stay at Ve teran s Memorial
3.:1 18.
Hospital , also al l the ones who
6-21 -6tc
sent car ds. fl owers . and
prayers for me . May God
bless each and every one of
you.
M rs. Opal Barr LEAO vocalist for roc k group .
6·25-ll c
Col i Gallipol is 446-3829 or
Pomeroy ~92 - 2289 .
WE WOULO like to express our
6-22 ·3tc
most sincer e thanks to our
fr iends,
neighbors
and
relat ives for the flowers,
prayers and ca ll s at the t ime
of the sickness and dea th of
our Dad , Rufus E . Hite ; al so
thanks to the Good Samar itan
Hospital , Zanesvil le ; Martin
Funera l Heme and Rev. Cecil
Wise . . Your thoughtfulness
wi ll al ways be remembered .
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Hite
6-25-ll c

Card c Thanks

-~----~-----

BOB
LAN E'S
Comp lete
Bookkeeping and Tax Se rvice, 424112 Fourth Ave .,
Kanauga. Office hrs. 9 a.m .-1
p.m. Ph. 446-1049.
.
85·11
- - - - - - - -HOLLEY BRO. CONST.
COMPLETE water lin e insfallation , backhoe, bulldozer
and boring machine services.
J. P. Holley 245-5018 or D. R.
Holl ey 245-5006.
111 -lf .
- - - - - : - -- - C&amp;S Electri'd1l Service &amp;
Repairs .
House wi r i ng ,
'"electri c heat, motor controls .
Free estimates . Ph. 446-456 1
or 675-3361.
22-tf

;===========-,

Wanted!

Notice

- ------

--,--- - - -

- - - - --

- -----

- - - -- -

- - -- - -

- -- - - -

- - - - --

a.

a.

-

- -

s

·t=-·=======::..__.,

"HE1L"

Plumbing &amp; Heating

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

- - - -- -

D£AD STOCK

------

- - -- -1962 CHEV. Impala, auto .•

- - -- -- -

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth&amp;Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 446-4477
Ts5-tf

perfect mechanical con d., a
little rust , best offer. Call
Larry Landaker . 245-9335.
148-3

------

USED FURNITURE

GENE PLANTS &amp; SONS
PLU MBING - Heating &amp; A!r
Conditioning. 300 Fourth Ave.
Ph . H6 - 1637 . ( For,erly
Brammer's Plumbing &amp;
Healing.)
48-lf

Ll K E new 4 pc . matching living
room suite, 2 pc. living room
suite In excellent tondilion.
long Early Amerltan coven,
Early American chair, sofa
bed, vinyl couch, 6 pt. dine tte
set, 92'' long flowered couch, 2
tamps, dresser, 854 Second.
446-9523.

Unique Teacher
Maria Montessori first ap·
plied her unique teaching
RICE'S NEW AND methods to defective chit·
USED· FURNITURE dren in !899 and later used
them with average children
KITCHEN table and chairs. to d evelop a worldwide edu·
desk, playpen, baby bed , cational system , according
Inside ~ door, trunk·, electric to Encycl opaedia 8 rita n·
stove, colonial couch and
nica.
chair . Ph . 446·2857.

W -3
-=--~---­

- : - - -- 1965 PONTIAC Catalina, good

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

Insurance

I

cond ition, 389 cu. ln ., radio
healer, Sears air conditioner,
power .. steering,
power
brakes. S350 firm . Ph. 4462476.

CAR INSURANCE
CANCELLED? DECLINED?
Young Drivers
Too Many Accidents
License Suspended
OWl ETC.

SAUNDERS.EVANS
INSURANCE, INC.

a for

\

$1.00

c·W-----~--~--------4~

I

We talk to JOU
like t persoo,

WMP0/1390
.

WAlLOP JllnR

""'"•" nlo • .,,.,.,to '"'"•roiii- PASS

·

ON YOUR DIAL

!

" " " - - - - - --

tm
•

•

Pomeroy HO!lli!' &amp; Auto
OperiS Til 5
. Mondaythru Saturday
• 606 E . Main, Pomeroy, Q. .

Wanted To Buy
USEO subnierslb t'e water
pump, phone 742-3263.
_6·26-3tp

.

--:--:-----

When using a coin-operated car
it's better for your car's finish to
an extra quarter for an extra
than to leave a soapy film .

'

-~::-:----

1962 CHEV .

Contact Asw.ciale
;VERA EBLEH
Yf2·J020
Middl-'

1964 IN TERNATIONAL •;, ton
pickup. 6 cyli nder : call 949·
2184.
6-23-21c

---..,.-=:-:-=

SEPTIC tanKs cleanao. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
662-3035.
2-12-tft •

160 Coal St .

RUTLAND
2 B.R. modern home ,
comp let ely furnished on
large fenced Jot , garaoe ,
$18,000.

:---

1969 . MERCURY 10 passenger
wagon, a.c., p.b., p .s., priced
to sel l ; cal l 949·218.:1 ,
6·23-2tc

3 B. R. home, recently
completed refinished inside
on lfo~ acres, 511,500.

• - - - -- ---- -.--J

4567.

1963 PONTIAC Tempest. 4
cy linder. automati c, good
running condition, good tires,
2'1' MILE S from Rutland , 7
REAOY-MIX
CONCRETE
$150. Phone 99n204.
room, 1 floor plan home,
16 FT. FIBERGLAS boa t with
delivered . right to your
6-23 -6lp
bath, fu rnace on l lf• acre
40 h.p. outboard motor; wi th
pro/ec:t. Fast and easy. Free
ground $10,000.
complete accessor ies ; phone
est mates . Phone 992- 328~.
1971
THUNDERBIRD,
2
door
992·3509 .
"'Goegleln Ready-MI• Co.,
Landau , all power , AM- ~M­
6-2l-3l c
M iddleport, Ohio.
I MILE from Bypass. 3 b.r .
Stereo radio, air·cond it ioned.
6-JO.tfc
all-e
lec
t
ric
home
on
3
acres,
many extra s. 9,000 actual
$18,900 .
32 FT. HOUSEBOAT. 40 h.p .
miles; cal l 773.5323. John
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
outboard motor and tr ai ler;
McMur ray, Mason.
REASONABLE rates. Ph . .446will se ll r easonable . Phone
6 ~ 2 J . 6lp
MIDDLEPORT
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell ,
992-7157 or see at 28A Railroad
S. SEC0NO Avenue, 3 b.r .,
Owner &amp; Operator.
St ., Middleport .
bath. fu ll basement, gas
6·20 ·6fc
5-12-tfc
rurnace, carport. very nlce
--------$21,()()(1,
APPROX IMATELY. 130 · acres
-:
C .~
B~
RA
~
O~FO~R~
O.~
Au-c~ll-oo~Hr
t imber , pasture and hay lahd;
Complete Service
7 ROOMS. bath , garage on
ideal lake site, owner wil t heiR
Phone 949-3821
finan ce t o.righ t party ; phone - ta•.e pr ivate lot , $7,950 .
IS YOUR Mob ile Home hot?
Racine, Ohio
992-2452.
Berry .Mill er Mobi le Home
' Crill , Bradford
6·22
-31c
. 160 Coal Street Also ·
~o,.,.
''"tr'"S-1-Hc1
Sales, 705 Farson Street ,
location
of
the
Middleport
C
Belp re, Ohio can solve your
of C offlte.
,
'ooZER and back hoe work~
problem
with
Coleman
SE in Long Bottom. phone
Central Air Conditioning . HOU
ponds and septic tanks; B &amp; K
'985-3529 .
Don' t delay - call today, area
Extavallng, Phone 992-5367 ,
6-11 -tt c
614-423-9531.
Oick Karr . Jr .
6·22-3tc
5-21 -lft
I OE AL 5·ACRE RANCHO.
La ke Conchas, New Mexi co.'
~s-=
E-=E~t-h_e_"_W
_E_E_K_E_N_O
-ERS
BACKHOE ANO OOZER work.
$2,875.
No Oown . No inter~st .
SPE CI AL" at Ber ry -M il ler
Septic tanks Insta lled . George
$25 mo . Vacation Paradtse.
POMEROY
M obile Home Sales, 705
(Bi ll) Pullins . Ph~ne 991·2478c
Mon ey
Maker.
Fre.e
Farson Stree t in Belpre, Ohio .
.
4-25-tfc
FOR THE FAMILY
Broch ure . Ranchos : Bo x
A SO x 10 Star, completely
Near shopp ing , playground ,
200100
,
Alameda
,
California
furni shed, only $1,995 .00 ,
and swim ming pool , S SEE US' I'OR: Awnl ng t, storm
94501.
d ;·
d
d
t
doors and windows, carports,
e lvere an se -up on your
bedrooms, 1'12 baths, dining
6-7-30tp
marquoes, aluminum siding
lot . We have a huge selection
room , nice kitchen. garage
and
railing . "A. Jacob, sales
of good late model used and 3. BEDROOM
and car port . $12,800.00.
frame •wi lh
representative
. For free
repossessed Mobile Hames on
1
garage and / 2 basement,
A-1 CONDITION
· esti mates. phone Charles
display, Before you buy any
Wea th e rman
Addition , • Immedia t e possession on
Lisle, Syratuse, V. V .
new Mobile Home see us fir st
Tuppers Plains, Oh io; phone
this home, 2 bedrooms, nice
Johnson and Soo, Inc.
- you' ll be glad you did. Open
667-36AJ ;. priced en inspect ion ,
kllchen and dining area ,
M onday thru Sa t urday J.2·tfl
6,23-3lp
fireplace, hardwood floors.
closed Sundays.
~----gas forced air heat, full
6-22-3tc
O'UELL WHEEL allghmenl'
RACINE - 6 room house. bath ,
basement,
2 car garage .
utilrty r oom , garage, S10,000 ;
located at Crossroads, Rf. 124.
$14,900 .00 .
phone 949-4195.
Complete front end service,
50 x 10 MOBILE home ; priced
TAKES HONORS
• 3-31 -lfc
tune up and brake servlte. ··
reasonably ; ca l l Chester 985 ·
FOR SNUGNESS
Wheels
balanced
elet 3379 .
2, bedrooms; bath, din ing
tr onlcally .
All
work
6-21 -61p RAC IN E 10 room hou~e.
room, car peted , paneled.
guaranteed .
Reasonable
bath, basement, garage, twb
tiled. storage building, THIS
rates
.
Phone
992-3213.
CAS~ paid for all ma1&lt;es and
lots. Phone 949 -4313.
HOME IS IN FIRST CLASS
1·21-ltc
models cf mobile homes.
CONDITION.
YOU
MUST
4-5-lfp
Phone area code 614-423-9531. -H-O-US_E_ _
R_ _ _b__
SEE IT.$6,950.00 .
AUTOMOBILE lnsurante ~
4-13-lfc
in ulland y Gr ade ·
1 AIN'T
cancelled?
Lost
your
School ; 4 rooms with balh , .
GOT NOBODY
operator's license? Call 992·
garden , large lot, carpor t ;
Here's a house that's not
2966.
•
phone 742·3154 .
·.Air Conditioners
6· 1S·Itt
new. needs paint Inside. Has
6-21 · 3tC
new siding , new roof, new
• Awnings
HARRISON ' S T V Service, open
carport . In good neigh .
MUST sell at once, 383 N. 3rd
·Underpinning
9 a .m . to 9 p.m. ; free pickup
borhood,
and
a
steal
at
lust
St .. Midd leport ; 2 story
and delivery ; phone 992-2522.
$5 ,500.00.
frame, 3 bedrooms, l lf2 baths.
Complete mobile home
6·13-ttc
new double garage. new
serv i ce -r plus gigantic
storm windows and doors ; 2...- WATCH THIS SPACE FOR
'disp tay of mobile homes
REALTY VALUES.
,
porches, Idea l l ocation;
always available at ...
EYEGLASSES In Middleport,
HENRY E. CLELAND SR .
asking $12,900 - make us an
•
Reward, Ed Ba ker , phone 992·
offer. Cleland Realty, phone
REALTOR
3307 or 992·2642.
992-2259.
PHONE 992-2259

Marine Sales

p~i:k 992-2i'74

MAIN ST. POM

Mobile Homes For Sale

CLELAND
, REALTY

.1970 ·Ford LTD ,.

, ....

Estate For

~ ,, 1.-,

6· 25-61&lt;
2 BEDROOM house at 313
Condor St.. full basement,
forced air furnace ; phone 992·
2792.
6·25-3tc

, I

va.

2 Dr . HT
ps &amp; pb. factory air. vinyl roof,
top of the . line.

J

'

2 Dr . HT V8, ps &amp; pb, factory air. vinyl ,roof,
we sold it new.

1970 DODGE POLARA ...............s2295
Fa ctory ai r co nd itioning, V-8 engine, automatic transm ission . power steering, power brakes, good white side
walls, many mere extras. White f in ish, black vinyl r oof.
Priced to move!

1967 Volkswagen

v.a

Hardt op coupe,
engine. atuomatic transmission,
power steeri ng &amp; brakes, whi te finish, black vinyl top,
vinyl interior , white wall t ires, like new, radio.

1969 GMC ·only $1895

I
I
I
I

1967 International Pickup
'908B' series, VB, 3 speed, new tires all around .

.

I
I
II
I

1966 Chevrolet Impala
4 Dr . v8, p-glide. ps. AM-F M, factory air,
speedometer shows 2B,OOO miles .... who
knows????

LTD Coupe, 399 V·8 engine, 3-speed , automatic, power
steer i ng, power brakes, factory ai r , grey finish . ~d
white
wall
t ires,
radio.
·

only _$695.

1965 atEVROLET..................·••• ..'595

Custom 500 4 dr . Sed . Must see this car to
believe how clean it is.

Impala station wagon. V-8 engine, standard transmission,
good tires, radio, heater .

1965 Ford

1961 atEVROLET ......................5250

only $795

1971 Ford Galaxie 500
VB, auto. trans., PS, Bron ze with vinyl top .

Impa la Coupe, V-8, automatic, power steeri ng , radio.

Gal., 2 dr . HT, factory air . one owner . Real,
sharp·, 65 model.
Open Evenings Till7 p.m. &amp; Sat. Till 5 P.M.
Service Till 12 Noon ·on s·a t. · ·

We Service What We Sell
Our Word Is Our Bond

PLENTY-OF NEW CHEVROLETS
WI1'H
.41H
'
.
.

CONDITIONING IN sroo;

.,:

992 2174
•
Pontiac

MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

1

~~~F:;:~0:;:;:::::·;s:;:a;:::l;:a''''·'·'·'!&gt;1. : ; : :l: :;: ;: : : : : : : : : :~;~.;: &gt;,;:3F:os:'r:;ss'''a'':1~~: : ' ''~·~::::: : : : : :: : : : : : ;:. ;:; : : : ~f

.

'I• ton heavy duty, 360 engine,
auto . trans ., new '72 truck
ca mper. Will sell separate or
together .

1969 FORD ............................ S1995

ton pickup. 6 cyl. local one owner. This is a
real sharp truck. •

TJHICKS

2 Dr. Sedan 4 speed, red finish . ready.

Ford
Pickup

1970 FORD GALAXIE 500 ..........s1995

'h ton pickup V8, local one owner . low
mileage.

Buick

-----

POODLE puppies, Sliver Toy , 1965 CHEVROLET Supers port,
while with black Interior, b.
Park view Kennels , Phone 992·
5443.
'
seats, 283 4 bbl ., aufo., like
8·15 ·1ft
new tires. Ph . 992-5997.
:;
T::W::-IN
: :-:N-:-ee--:d:-le_s_e-w7in"'
g...,..
m-a-:chine _ _ _ _ __ _ _ __
6-21-6
1971 model .Ill walnut stand.
All features"'bullt -in to make BEAUTIFUL Maple Early
filtl cy desig ns and do stretch
American sty le. stereo-radi o
sewing . Also buttonhol es,
combination , AM-FM rad io, 4
bl ind hems etc . $43 .35 cash
speaker sound system, 4
price or Yerms avallabl~ .
speed automati c changer.
Phone 992-5641.
Balance $76.39 . Use our
6·22-6fc
budget terms. Cal l 992-7085.
6-22-6tc
VACUUM CLEANER . Electro
Hygi ene New OemonsJrator
style,
ha s all t leanlng allathments WALNUT , Modern
stereo-rad io, 4 speaker sound
plus the new Eletfro Suds for
system , 4 speed automatlt
shampo,olng carpet . Onl y
S27.50 cash price or term s · changer , separate controls.
Balance $62 . 34. Use our
available . Phone 992-5641.
budget
terms. can 992-7085.
6·22-61c
6-22-6fc

We are here to please you Appraisal &amp; Trading Policy!

you'll like our

AIR CONI)ITION SPEqAL

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
992-2126

For

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. TillS

Sal e

Rawlings Dependable City does it again ... we ha ve
" unfrozen" our prices on air conditioning and w ill install
air condition ing on any car dur ing the months of June and
July fo r the tomplete pri ce of S285 . .. thi s is a $115
discount over the original price ... no gimm icks ; THIS IS
T.HE COMPLETE INSTALLED PRICE: PART S;
LABOR ; TAX ; COMPLETE ... ANY CAR. Beautiful
wood grained cabinet to matth the latest of models .. .
hurry in and see the unit and set up your appointment to
have a " cool" summer.

Pomeroy

For Sale

COAL.

Lim estone, Excelsior
Sa lt Works, E . Main St.,
P.o meroy, Phone 992-3891 .
4-12-llc

---------2 L -60·14 MICKEY Thompson
tires, pr i ced rea sonable ;
phone 949-4989.
6-25-3fp
1963 GMC pickup , 8 fl . bed ; I
Dem eo.Revelle 23 channel CB
radio, 1 Courier Clipper 23
hand se t , so l id state, 23
channels. 5 wa tts. with extra
battery pack ; phone 992-2792 .
6-22-6tc

1952 CHEVY 112 ton pltkup ; all
new tires, S120; good work
horse, weighs about 1,200 lbs.,
$150; phone Chesler 985-4180
alter 5 p.m .
5-25-41p
EVERY da y is Bargain Oay for
clean, used furniture, aP..
pliances
at
KUHL S
BARGAIN CENTER. Rt. 7
" at the caution light. " Tuppers P\a ins, Ohio. Open to 6
p.m . ; closed Mondays. Pnone
667-3858.
6-25·61c

FRONT : Oelu•e automotive styling with sa fely-designed
padded base . Wood grain control and toP. str ip.
AIR OUTLET LOUVERS: Three 4"x1'1&lt;' front louvers .
Adjustable lor all-direction air !low.
EVAPOR'ATOR CASE : Olmenslons- Heighl4'12'', Length
16%", Depth 11 ~".
AIR CONTROL : Varlable3-speed lor ma xi mum personal
comfort.
TEMPERATURE CONTROL ; Adluslab le with off
position . Cooling level Is automatically ma intained by
THERMOTROL.

We have a good selection of

1972 SWINGERS

MARTIN FORD
WEEKEND SPECIAL

in stock; hurry on these.
They won't last long; both six
&amp; VB, with &amp; without air
cond.; good color selection
.... also (2) Demon '340's' in
stock (both automatic!. This
is our last allotment of these
... hurry.

~;;~;;;;;;·~---·····6i·2i5;·3k

I

"OWN A
·CADDJ.AC,

$1795

I MITH NELSON MOTORS, INc.~·
I '?
I
~
I
II

1969 Ambassador

------

Gold with white top .

v.a

1969 Int. only $1795

1965 Ford

2 dr. 350 engine. auto . trans .• PS. 1500 miles.

350 cu. in .
engine, turbohydramat ic. power steering &amp;
brakes, radio. red viny l i nter ior , black fini sh. White wall
tires, I ike new .

1l 2

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
II
I
I

1972 Chevrolet Nova

1970 atEV. IMPALA SPT. CPE. .•. !2395

12 ton pickup, VB . std . tran s., custom cab. A
~l~y
.

· ··

Real sharp.

Gobi beige, black vi nyl roof. black knit upholstery with
bu cket seats, 400cu. in . v .8engine, power steering, power
disc brakes, console, positraction. ral l y wheels, F&amp;R
guards, G-70 x15 whit e wa ll tires, radio &amp; r ea r seat
speaker , A-season ai r conditioner . . THIS IS ONE OF
A KIND - MIGHTY SHARP!

1

·8:

w-s-w tires. blue.

1970 atEVROLET MONTE CARLO 3095'

·Dart. This car is just like new. 6 cyl. and auto.
Ole of _
the cleanest cars in the county .

1969 Dodge

4 speed. radio,

5

1969 Dodge only $1595

------

\

v.a

4 door sedan, factory air ,
engine, power steeri ng &amp;
brak es, Turbohydramat ic, radio, wheel covers, bumper
guards, gold fini sh, with black vinyl roof. covert viny l
interior, used less than 5,000 miles as Driver's Ed car.
SA LE PRICEO - AREALBUY !

Fairlane wag . Small VB &amp; auto. · Local one
owner . Real sharp wagon.

;

OHIO

)Datsun
Pickup

1972 atEVROLET BELAIR ..........53950

1969 Ford only $1795

ITH NELSON MOTORS,:INC.

sEWI NG' MACH::
I N-::1-::
: S-.-=
R-epai r;
service, all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpan Scissors .
3-29-tfc

1969

Wagons. Two to choose from . Come in &amp; dri ve
these o·ne owner cars. Ole with automatic and
one with 4 speed. Real Sharp.
·

Open Evenings Till7 p.m . &amp; Sat. lill 5 p.m.
Service on Sat. Till 12 noon,

6-22-6tt

LOWEST
PRICES!

., 1969 Opel only $1595

Before you start on your vacation,
don't forget a tip -to-toe safety check at
Smith Nelson Motors, Inc.

COMPLETE Mobile Home
Serv ice; also roof seal, underpinning
&amp; awnings ,
Richard A . Shuler, phone 949-

307 engine. V8, auto. rrans .. 2 dr. Real sharp .

Wagon only
miles on this nice little ca r .
Easy on gas and a nice family car .

Dut'tng a long -distance run on a hot
highway, tire temperatures reach as·
high as 250 degrees. ·

6-25-2tp

~

•

USED CARS

NEW LISTING
RUTLAND - 5 rooms, b.i th, gas heat, some panel ing .
Front porch, utility building , garage, and; garden . Near
grade school .
MIDDLEPORT
RENOVATED - 3 bedrooms , bath, charming breakfa st
nook , uti li ty rooin , nice kitchen. Lovely fr ont porch.
-...
Outbuilding for storage.
~ ACRES
.
INOUSTR IAL SITE - Located on two rail l ines. Access to
the Ohio River and •Route 7.
97 ACRES
EASTERN SCHOOL OISTRICT - Hill farm lor beef
cat tle . 8 room modest home. Has modern bath, coal
furnace. and semi -modern kitchen. 40 acres of }lay. All
minerals. $21 ,000.00 .
·
NEW LISTING
.
POMEROY - 3 bedroom stu cco home, bath . large livi ng
with fireplace and book shelves . Nlte front . porcn . Full
· basement . New gas forted air furna ce. Large side yard. 2
car garage and J.car space In basement. Ciose.tn for
$21 ,000.00 .

72 LTO FORD

R. H. RAWUNGS SONS 00.

COUNTRY SQUIRE
STATION WAGON·

• MIDDLEPORT. 0.

For Safe

12 X 60, 2 BEDROOM mobile
nome, loca ted In Rutland.
phone 742-5641.
6-25-6fc

For Rent
~ BEDROOM modular horne on

UPSTAIRS apartment. un furnished, 4 rooms and bath.
751 Brownell Ave., call 1-985·
3974.
6-22 -Jip

UNFURNISHED · 4 rooms &amp;
bath ; 2 bedroom mobile
home; trailer space ; store
room 30 x 60; 3 miles south
CAMPER, 16ft. sloeps 6, good'
Middleport on Rt. 7, M &amp; G ·
tondltlon , Sl .ooo. Phone 992F'oxt Market.
6329. .
.
'
.
6-23-31p
5-12-tfc

1968 CADIUAC SEDAN DeVILll

DEPENDABLE CITY

Gold with matching Interior, lull J&gt;Ower, Climate Cbnlrol
air conditioning .

992·2151 OR 992:2152 MIDOI.EPORT

'2600
Good ielection New Cadilacs &amp; Oldsmoblles
Now In Stock! .
TIME 10 TRADit

KARRC.dlttoc
&amp;.VAN
ZANDT
•
Otclsmotllt.

GMAC Flllilldnt AVIIt.bte
Por1tenty
Open Eves. Til 6-,:-Ttl 5 P.M. S.t.
" You' l l LlklC'ow'QUellty ~Y ol, ~ng luslnts~"

1?2·5342

992-J}l~

'-.,.--------------~-----..J
r

•

t

OPEN UNTIL 8:00 P.M. each evening
Except Saturday &amp; Sunday

1

For Sale

For Sale
REGISTERED Tenneutt
Walklnll Hartt, mores 1~d
lillles; C::horln King, between
Harrison •rt.&lt;~ Dexter 1· phone

742-.5870.

•

6-25-31&lt;

H&amp;N dly old or started Leghorn
pullets. Both floor or cage
grown oveiteble. Poultry
~ouslng
&amp;
eutomotlon.
Modltl' Poultry, ;199 W. Mlln,
Pomeroy, 992·216-1.
6-25;1tc

'2 QUARTER

Squire Luxury
Vin~

•.

.. ,

·-

RAWLINGS

3500

1

BIG THINGS ARE GO ING TO HAPPEN HERE SOO
BUY NOW WHILE THINGS ARE REASONABLE WE
HAVE SOME GOOD PROPERTIES FOR Y~U TO SEE.

HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE

See Emerson Jones. Pearl Ash. Hilton Wolfe,
Walla ce Amberger, Dick Rawlings.
·

Turquoise, bl'ock top, turquoi se Inferior full power

horse tolls, S100

each; phone 992-5039.
6-25-1tc

.
PUREBRED Hereford bull, 3
years old; elsa 1960 Dodge;
phone 992-2l07.
6-23-:Jtp
SMALL mart pony with fitly
oolt ; phone 992-, 0 or 992·
2759.

For Rent

TWO wheel uti lity trailer 5 11.
ratks, $70 ; (#&gt;Ieman three
burner camp stove, like new ,
$15; Coleman llameless camp
heater, 5,000 BTU, new S15 i 1
L.P. gas tank lor travel
trai ler, new$ 10; phone 9854140.
6-25-4tp

Of Course You Can"
.~ulpment. Climate Control air condll l..;lng.

l

'

1970 Chevrolet Nova

18.~90

wash,
spend
rinse
·

device which sets off flashing amber
lights at the rear of the car when it
slows down. Lights go off when car
stops,

Ph. " '·2114

1/• ton pickup, runs
good, $100; 2 1957" Chev. - 2
dr . and 4 dr ., $50 fof bofh ;
Phone 1-304-773 -5365, Mason,
W. Va ., between 6 p.m. and 7
p .m.
6-25-2tp

USED CARS

1971 Opel only $1895

/i. ca·nadian firm · manufactures a

SMITH NELSON
MOlORS. INC.

Real Estate For Sale

lATE

Beautiful
CARS

ON ~ ~ Checked
USED CARS

63,000 U. S. garage mechanics have
enrolled in a federally subsidized auto
emissions control course to help
reduce air pollution .

From the lar~st
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core .
Nathln Biggs
, Radlatqr Specl1llst

..

NO.1 BUYS II
'

The cooling system · of the average
modern auto engine 1must be able to
withstand in excess of 17 pounds of
pressure, combined with underhood
temperatures up to 278 degrees F.

~

ilL' . ..• "'"

:.

EAN UP

o,. BIU NELSON .

tn-"1

: 5232.

::

SUMMER

STEER THIS WAY

Dozer &amp; End loader work, .
ponds; baseMent, landscaping. We hive . 2 size
dozers. 2 olze IDiders. Work
done by . mur or CQnlrlct.,
Free · Esllmates. We 1lso
haul fill dirt, top,soll. Dump
trutks and low-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Joffers•.
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525 ,
"afMr 1 p.m. or phone

1 ~::....
OL'D tobacco Cans and tobacco
tabs; watch fob s; political
I' J
Items (badges, etc.). phone ·
&amp;1'
•. t-.~· --'
367 ·7433 or wr ite John Veith , '
Cheshi re, Ohio.
L-~--------&lt;
6-25 -31p

Auto Sales

:

1969 I;ADIUAC COUPE DeVILll

Pomeroy, Ohio

StiOI

'

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

111 Court St.

J

I

For fast Results ·Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

EARTH MOVING

We specialize in aluminum,
viny l and steel siding ;
fl)ierg las, brltk and " stoiiei
complete tine of residential
and commercial ·roofing ;
re modeling ,
building ,
suspended ceilings, Interior
and exterior painting ;
tomplele line of Masonry
work . All work guaranteed to
customer satlsfadion . We
are fully Insured for your
protection . 32 N. 2nd . 992·
3918.
ALLSIDE . BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR. CD. ,.

- GOARANTEEQ..-;
Pho'ne 992-2094

110 Mechan,ic Street

The
Daly Sentinel

Jurn

I}

-

3 Bedf &lt;M!m home. with
brick f'ront. 1 car
garage,
carpeting .
Pr.iced at ..
ONLY .$13,750

On ~ost American Cat!

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.- Broker

20~

n.;, 11 ""' pan that 0.., ..ound

The Daily Sentinel

Real

US EO OFFSET PLATE S
HAVI;,
-MANY .ltSES

[

IJwnbl.,, IALKY
l'f!llll'rday'•j
•

Ph. 992-2156

1220 Washington Blvd.
423-7521
BELPRE , O.

Aluminum
Sheets

437 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh io 45631
446-0404-446-0425

t4Mwttt Mu.d.,)

EXPERT.
Wheel Alignment'
$5.55

-

,.

.!

Business Services

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES .

36" x 23" x .oo·9

i·

Syracuse

•

Lost

For Sale

·=~~::J·-

I

.

------

992 -2448
Pomeroy, o.

Jlt!liMIDM® u..J :::!!:! ~ c

GIBSON olr condit ioner , 11,000
BTU unit. Healing and Unacramble thuo four Jumbltl,
c6ollng window unii18.SOO btu one letter to each aquare, to ·
cooling, 11,500 BTU healing.
Practica lly new 446-4237 after form four ordinary wordo.
5 on week days.
147-6
JJOVA /l

Sentinel Carrier
In

Wanted To Buy

-------

---,----

.

Wan.ted

SAVE
UP to $400 on Apache Solid State
ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe
Campers or Bolder Ameri can
Travel Trailers. Ideal fer
model. Complete with all
cleani ng attachments and
compact cars. Just in time fer
uses paper bags. Slightl y used
Fourth of July vacation . Sale
but clean and looks like new .
en ds June 26. Amsbary
Will sell for $34.25 cash or
Apache Trailer Sales. 631
terms available. Phone 446Fourth Ave .. Gallipolis.
--::-::~:::-c:::-=::7.==
45711:
145-tf
BANK$ ' fREE SERVICE
149-6 - - - - - - - - FREE estimates, liability in· 'OLD FURNITURE , dishes,
clocks , brass beds, si lver
~LL TYPES of
building
surance. Prun ing , trimming
dollars
or ·
complet e
'70 CHEVELLE. red with blatk
materials , block. brick. sewer ' and cavi ty work , tree and
households . Write M . D.
pipes, windows. lintels. etc.
v inyl top . auto. on floor , good
stump removal. Ph. 446-4953.
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
shape. PI&gt; . 446-0705.
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
73-tf
Coli 992-627 1.
149-3
0. Phone 245-5121 after 5.
3·16-lfc
123-tf , G IL L ENWATER'S septic tank
10 ACRES of standing hay 10c a - - : - - - - -- - clea ning and repair, also
1967 PONTIAC Catalina 400 Two . house wrecking. PI&gt;. 446-9499.
bale. Ph . 388-8738.
.
Ooor Ha rd top P.S.. P.B..
Established In 1949.
149-3
A.T., lj,&amp;H , Ph . 446-2898.
169-lf RIFLE malch - .22 and highBRED Holstein hollers. start
145·6 ~:---:----:-:--power ed
scope
sig hts ,
freshening In August. (614)
D. P. MARTIN &amp; Son Wa ter
Rutland Gun Club, Sunday ,
Delivery
Service .
You r
286·2496 . Also some co~•·
'53 WILL YS Jeep Truck . Ex June 25th, I p .m .
patronage w ilt be ap.'
148-2
ce llenl condition . $700. Phone
6-23-21c
675 -1186 .
preclaled . Ph. 446-0463.
DOUBLE bedJ35, dresser $15,
7-tf ' TWIN CITY CAB CO. - This is
145-5
both In verY"ifood condlfion .
a non .profit organization, we
446-0855 or 446-4257 .
• .
'71 GMC 3(, ton pltk ·UP with 1967
TERMITE PESTCONTRO•
didn 't plan it that way, but II
148-4
Kamp King camper. Phone FREE Inspect ion . Ca ll 446 -3245. ·
is .
245-5804.
Merrill O'Dell , Operator for
6-25 -2tp
BEAUTIFUL t hampagne toy
145-5
Ext.erml nal Termite Service,
pood,les. Phone 286·4844.
19 Belmont Or .
KOSCOT KOSMETICS: Severa l
148-3 MU ST SELL 1972 delux.e zig zag
267-11
new products - specials each
sewing mathlne•. Ph .• 441&gt;·0921.
month ; also sa les personnel
1972 SL 350 K-2 Honda $800.
Central
Air
Conditioning
105-tf
needed
. Phone 992·5113.
Phone 446-3732 after 5: 30.
&amp; Healing
6-6·1fC
1
Free Estimates
_ _ __ _ _ __ _ 48·5 If · you are ·culldlng· a nf'~
Stewart's
Hardware
home or remOEiellng, see us:
GUN SHOOT; Sunday, June 25 ,
Vinton, Ohio
TRUCK tamper. Phone 446·
We are builders . Oisl ribulor
1428
1 p.m . Factory choked guns
·
_
for
Hotpolnt
Appllan
ce,s;
-------..,~144'
·
148 3
only. Second pl ace shooters
All ison E lectr ic .
UNIVERSAL
get free shot in nexl match .
15
11
ONE Allis Chalmers Tractor
'·
Walch Repair. 1818 Eastern
Assor ted meats . Rac ine Gun
$350 ._ One Farmall $1 , 500. 256- .·CO RBI\: &amp; SN. YO."' a
Ave ., Strictly wholesale
Club.
1247
N
C:~
repairing . Ph . 446.9234.
6·22·3tc
148-l SERTA
Bemco Mallresses
103-tf
E
--------box springs S29 up. 955 Second
AV up toone half . Bringyo~r
ALUMINUM buildings, while Ave 446-1171.
TROMASFAIN
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
t ement. all sizes of tile In
·
10·11'
EXTERMINATING CO.
151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy .
Termite &amp; Pest Control
stotk,
to ncrete blocks . · - -4_4,tfc
'Wheeler sburg , Ohio
GALLIPOLIS BLOCK CO., DACHSHUND puppies A.K.C.
60-11
12JV2 Pine Street.
Reg . $50. Phone 446-4999.
148
_ __ _ _ _ _ _ ·"
145-6
1968 FORO Ranger •;, ton .
$1 ,500. Oarvln Bloomer. Ph .
Backhoe and Dozer Service.
245-5147 .
Septic tanks, farm ditching ,
148-tf
STA NDARD
ponds. Free Estimates .
Plumbing &amp; Heating
Phone 361-7579 or 367-7706 .
AKC
reg istered
Br ittany
215 Th l rd Ave .. 446-3782
146-tf
, spaniel bird dogs. 11 weeks
187-tf
old . Call Pomeroy 992 -6556.
148-3
RUSSELL'S
Window
- - - - : - - - -PLUMBING&amp; HEATING·
Air Conditioners
·24 INCH coa t furnace with 21 Gallla Ave .
446·4182
stoker and fan. Ph. 446-1427 .
297-tf .
Hot Water Heaters
148-3
SS:oo Service Charge
Plumbing
-::-0:. -E
:. -W
..,..,.T-T'~
., s"'
· P=L.,..
.U~
M.,.
·B"'
·IN
"·'G
" "·
AKC Registered Bassett pupWill
rernoveJour
dead
Electrical
Work
ANO HEAoTING
pies. 6 weeks old . Phone 446·
hor se an cows
Route 160at Evergreen
9836.
Call Jackson 286-4531
Phone 446-2735 .
148-6
187-tl

- - -- - -

,'

Employment '"•n!•-l
·'i . . .

For Sale or Trade.

-------

c lean er .

~·

Help Wanted

bage, tomato, and pepper . MODERN Walnut Stereo-radio
combination, four -.peed In·
Located In Rodney . Call
~rmlxed
changer, fuur ----~----Floyd Erll, 245-5124.
speaker
sound
s_ystem,
149-6
separate con trol s. Balance
169.40. Use our budget lerm s.
ALBERT EHMAN
2 USEO wood windows with
Call 446· 2728.
Water Oeli very Ser vice
storm windows, 1 single, 1
147-3
Patr iot Star Rt ., Ga ll ipolis
double $30. Ph . 245-5804.
Ph. 379-2133
149-3
COLONIAL Maple stereo-radio,
2~3- H
beau tifu l Early American .
.
ALTO saxophones. E&gt;eellent
style, with AM-FM radio, four • Arib 'hiermlnallng· Co.
condition. Phone 446-1865.
speakers , 4 speed automatic · TERMITE -PEST control. Free
149-3
cnanger . BalanC:e $79.34. Use
Inspec tion . Call Russe ll 's
Plumbing, 446-4782 Gallipo~s.
our budget terms . Call 446·
1962 FORO Van. Needs motor
2728.
Ohio.
repair $125, phone 245-5535,
147-3
107·51
Rio Grande Barber Shop.
149-3
1969 SEABREEZE boat. 80 h.p. '
SEPTIC TANKS
Mercury motor, $1 ,400. Ph .
Cleaned and In sM iled
EXCEL LENT. eff,lclent and
256-6095.
Russell 's Plumbing, 446-4782
economicaL that's Blue
147-3
297 -tf
Lustre carpet and upholstery

- -----

.

...._

23 - The Sunday 'l'lmes..sentlnel, June 25

For Fa~t Results Use Tlie Sunday -Times-Sentinel Cla.ssifieds
.

__

:

22 - The Sunday ~tine!, JIUle 25, 19'12

.

.....

Trini

6 Passenger

Syratuse. nlte location,
furnished, phone 992-2441
after 5 p.m .
6-14-tft

400 engine, H78xl5 w/s/w tires, deluxe .luggage rae~ radio, lockab~ side luggage
department, carpeted. cargo area, front bumper guards, fac. air cond., dual rear seat
.speakers, tinted glass, remote. conbol mirror.
t·
Fac:. Sticker Price
MARTIN
'5,337
FORD PRICI

NEW - Total electrlt apart·
men!, 2 bedroom. walk -in
closets, large living r09m,
kllthen and dining area;
phone 992-738&lt; or 992-7133.
• 6-22-ltc

2, BEDRooM traotft', adults HOUSE, ll'lfurnlshed, 7 rooms
· . only. Bob's Mobile
phDM 992-2951.

wit~ beth and .laundry roo~ ,

Court,

1/ 2

duplex,
all
ne.,.,.ly
r&amp;modeled. walt -to -wall
carpeting, S rooms and bath ;
Furnlshld slotplng room with
beth; pllooe 992-2780 · or 992-

6-13-tfc

.--=:-:=:-:::;::,:---

'

UNPO'iUfiSHHS
apartment,
1:14 Mulberry Ave .• phone 9"2.

3432.

3962.

------

6-2Htc

6-11-tfc

Ptts for Sale

SIAMESE kltltns, 2 months
old ; phane 992-321~.

- - - - - --..:"..::23-ite

~

1

BE QROOM
furnished
apertment bel\o11n Pomeroy
&amp; Alhtns, $80 par month:
~ 675-1614 ; also trailer
~p~Q .

�..

- . _•• !.

~

..

..

.... .

..

r..

POMEROY - Two Meigs
High School girls attending
Buckeye Girls State have been
named to offices at the 26th
annual session which ends
today.

Ohio Assembly's Cat and · Mo~se Game
.
Most Likely To (A&gt;ntinue All Summer
.

'

enacted during the 1971-72 session as the legislatureadministration - lobbyists
worked the grand process.
Of note were the maoslve·
budget-tax program and ll!e
comprehensive strip mine reform bill, both of which took
months to crystallize.
Slowed By Eleellons
Still other major bills have
fallen by the wayside for this
year, or are waiting for their
only hope of enactment - a
burst of pressure from some
source, whether pubUc outrage
or an unseen nudge froin
another branch of .government
or special Interest groups,
Thus far , pressures on aRepublican -domina ted legislature
in an election year have Induced action on bills granting
tax breaks to nonpublic school
parents, homeowners, the
elderly and retired; boost!iig
local government aid; blunting
t~e effect of impending
property tax increases, and
cracking down · on errant
motorists.
Not enough preSSIU'e has

ON THE
FINANCING

Meigs Average Income
$6;485, Census Shows
WASHINGTON ~ Average
In the !XJpulation age 16 and
family income was ,S,485 in over,67percentofthemenand
'Meigs County in 1969, com- 24 per cent of the women were
pared with $10;313 for the State, in the labor force. Among the
according to a report on the employed, 35 per cent were
1970 census by the Bureau of holding white collar jobs, and
the Census, U. S. 0ePB!'tment 17 percent were government
of Commerce. Per capita in- workers.
c&lt;iine for the county amounted
About 70 per cent of the
to $2,010, the report shows.
marrllld women with husband
The 1870 census counted present were In the labor force,
19,799 residents in the county ; and 15 per cent of these wives
0.3 per cent were foreign born had children under six.
and 1.4 per cent native born
There were 4,805 persons 3 to
With one or both ·parents of 24 years old enrolled In school.
foreign birth.
In the 25-and-older population,
~ Mwn&amp; , thiLl:Ounty:a .1Ui9•..,.3!1..per..cent~lhe.men and 40
iniUlbltailta age 5 and ' over in per cent of the women were
1970, 1,358 were living in a high school graduates.
different c'Oun ty within the
State in 1965, and 992 In a different State.

Applications are now being
accepted and no experience or
=;iiiiriiiiiiii&lt;ii&gt;riv'i-ii
·-~jj·iiiK!training is required in the
•
substitute rural carrier of
irecord posts . Applications
r.o,..,, ro·,, c:.,!c Fnrm got to Imust take a written test . To be
:.~m'~:'~w~g;;·~ ;·l. ~;.7?J~f~,~~~ 1·l eligible musl have
'2 ·, t Ho;r:r.J 1! 10 b~ ~ t C!-::::1 state driver's license and a
a···l:..: ·- ·1 ;;.1 c~ .J~ o r c.!i-: y ::-;•!
'
driving record. Subst1'tute
:f·,c ~ y:u br::::d, u c -1\l ·da:~
t ::..t.:;:;~ at iow cjsl.
mail carriers lnust
I
'
f1~nish
and maintain their own
A5k your SMlo F.urJ1 tl~c~t
Oi OI'l iH e~ SIJ !o 'F.1rm Homevehicles at their own expense
o .vncrs Pol: ~.-, l'll lh aulomJli-::
but will be given an equipment
lll llati.;n Col(cra~o.
I maiqtenance allowance.
Sec or Call:
I Applications must be sub.• Imit ted by July 7. Those iiiteres ted may con ta ct the
CAROI-I'IR!Jtland Postmaster.

one

...

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.

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•

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a valid

Park Central
Haiti Bldg.
S.COIHI Ave.
Phone 446·4290

IN DALLIPDLI.

Homt 446~511

Ollllpolis

.,,!
l

5i&amp;!o

F,~rm

'

.

f11c and Cuua llv COIIIPIIIV

llomo Of! iu : Dioc~l:n~!on, Htinci&amp;

PLANS CHANGED
PT. PLEASANT - Plans for
the 1967 graduating class
reunion of Point Pleasant High
School have been changed
. from an ox roast to a dance to
be held at the.Moose Hall Aug.
• 19. Persons who have not been
notified are being asked to
contact Pam Simpkins at 6753533. Those who have received
!etters are urged to respond
immediately .

·- ...

...

-- --

Pom'"'Y

•
-.

\

'

'·

'

'

;.

.

J ..

,

'

.

.

''

...

..

·~

Devoted To T.he Greater
Mifld, .Ohio
.

~all~IY

'

Headquarte.rs

For.

• • •
•

..

J

..
'

.

.
'
\

..

,•. ~

.

.

"~

Floor-A ·Matic
Rug &amp; Floor
Cond itioner

Cleaner

Convert ible

H1ndivac

Cleaner

Cleaner

'

-l·

'

t

,,

•

....-.1

Power Drive
Diai -A-Mati c

~

'j

.

~

~_... ,

:• .'

·~

1'

: ol(

•

.:

....

• Convertible
•Constellatkln
• Portable Cleaner

•

eSwingette

• Diai-A-Matic

eftiriaivi

I

Swingette
Cleaner

Portable
Cleaner

Department for a complete selection

.·~
:z ·'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

.

'

~..

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. . h.
.;--. ,·
(

'

.

·WA'Y· INTO .
•.

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.

'

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'

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.

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!····················· ·········· ·········································································!·
.

1

A GREAT TEAM!

-7

•

,
1•

Arnold Grate and Frigidaire

1
•

;•

z

t ~~-

ANNIVERSARY SALE!
25 YEARS OF SERVICE

' ' ''

J

.)~if,'!;r
.

.•.

'

"'

'l

.'

t i l l 111111111110 0 o o o 0 o 0 0 0 o o o o o o I I I 0 I 00 I 0 I I I I I I I I I 1 I I 01 • • • • OIOIOoe•ll l l l f f l f t l l l t t • t t t l l t t t l l l l l l t l • t • • • o o :

Big Shipment! Better Discounts!

""'

.--

'

.

.

'·

Proleotloll Plln.
Backed by General Motora.
1-year warranty for rapeir of
any defect In the tnt ire product,
pl41 a 4-year Protection Plan for
repair olanydeteot In the retrfgeraUng eY~tem llld ASS cabinet
liner on modeluo equipped.
.

Only 30" wide
and 60" high
Re~reraa-d&lt;K~n ilupttuny ar·
rangement, now or ln lhtlulu,._

They may be hinged lor a rightor left-hand door opening if you
change your address, your
kitchen or your mind. No need
to calla serviceman. The switch
can easily be made by the man
of the house.

willltwo
egg aerve11, Hperate
compartmenlllor
apreada and snacka,
deep ehell for ~-gal.
carton. .
Juice can holdtr
and doorahelf.
organize the
freezer handily.

I

• •I

,

I' .~

..· •• -~~...'''*'I
V{'I••• ' "
v~

He.- 1:: 'COtiJ=.,s •
•

'

f,

·I

I

.'!HE· ~~'

WITH TRADE

YOUR CHOICE, MANY MODEL$ .NOW AT

Rutland Furniture
742-4211

ARNOLD GRATE

\

RUTlAND, 0.

"''''''''''''''~'"• • ••-.,

'

-.

.'

·..·,b.v:·stll.•o·w rll.l a ··:

Frigidaire! 100% Frost-Proof
Refrigerator. Never Defrost.
Big 15.2 cu. ft.
4. 75 cu. ft. frHzer

.'

•

SNOWDEN

FIRST
NATIONAL
BANK .

YEARS OF SERVICE"

-

I

POMEROY - Two cars
were heavily damaged and a
driver cited to court as the
result of an accident on th e
Flat Ruri Hollow . Road in
Rutland Township at 12:45
p.m. Friday.
The department of Sheriff
Robert Hartenbach said cars
driven by Edna Nance, 28,
Rutland , and Edward Mitchell,
16, Langsville, collided on a
narrow curve on the road.
Mitchell was left of center at
the point of contact, officials
said. He has been cited to
juvenile court on a charge of
driving without a license. A
passenger in the Nance
vehicle, four -year-old Reg ina
Nance received a laceration or
the cheek.

['I~ liQTAlillEI
Arh.
l'i:
, •

~~ 109

.

N

Wreck Late Friday

-~~~~~ti~~~···:~~ st!:~~al s~:k~ni~~
'C~ii"e'it&lt;,.,1i.J ..- om'"""~ ••

"11111/r:!::!:

.

;ki -

Cars Damaged In

1?{~1}Z'?J£r:f2~W~%; Exam July 7

11

.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

been generated on aid for low
Houae Speaker Pro Tern~
Income hou1lng, ·stepped-up Olarles E. Fey, R.Springfield,
boller lriailectlonl, nunlns . obserVed that paasage Without
home fire lately' a code of firm support from the admlnethics1 rectlictlan !)I the age of lstra,tlon would suJ&gt;ject the
adulthood, a women's ' rlghti GOP to "the worst of both
ameridmerit •.,d a cunnmer sides."
..
credit bill. ·
BUt the most interesting
And last 11V,eek, HoUle Repub- lilase of the game Is.the tug-of:
lican leaden llhowed they were war between Kurfess and
willing to etrtng a pair of prior- Senate President Theodore M.
JOINS fiRM -George W.
rity admlnlltratlon reorgani- Gray, R-Piqua, who should be Hackel1, Ill, son of Mr. and
. zatlon bills aloog into tbe 1111111- WO{king together.
Mrs. lieorge w. Hackett Jr.,
mer unW the right combiQatlon
Qray, a _"consent" leader 93 Seventh Ave., Middleport,
is found .
..,.
wboaUows the majOrity of his bas joined The Babcock &amp;
Houae Speaker auittu F. caucus to do what It will, would Wilcox Company and Is in
. Kurfess, R-Bowllng Green, ex- just as soon spend the summer the initial phase of a com·
pressed exuperation that the at home. He figures the less pany-wlde orlentatlon
administration wa1 agreeing to time the Republicans are in program. Hackett, a 1972
an EP..., bill in private and Columbus, the Jess trouble they graduate of · Case Western
. cornplalnting about it in public. will get into.
Reserve University with a
Action waa put off unW the
Kurfess, a leader who tries to · bachelor ofsclence degree in ·
administration can offer make things happen, is anxlous nuid and thermal sciences,
wholehearted sup!)(lrt, and not to leave no loose ends that the Is participating Ill a threebe able to whip the GOP Gilligan administration could week session at Barberton
legislature during the cam- pick up and 'Use as wea!XJns. prior to being assigned to the.
paign for falling to paas a
Consequently the House, at power generation group.
Sl!t.!Bfactory bill.
least, can be expected to bold Babcock &amp; Wilson is a major
Mer1er Postponed
"housekeeping" sessions international manufacturer
The Republicans also during the summer and roll of
power
generatlon
decided • to let the ad- .some bills around in com- equipment for utilltles and
ministration cool ita heels on a mittees so the lawmakers Industry. Its sales during
bill merging the Department of won't get rusty and the pd- 1971 were more than $950
Development
and
the mlntstration can't mount a million and its backlog
Department of Urban Affairs sneak attack before the elec- stands at approximately $2
after Sjllle 1111klnd remarks tion .
billion. were made.

Rural Carrier

"THE bLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

'P.tu ,_,n wen,

Heidi , Denise Milhoan,
Pomeroy Route 3, has been
appointed ·Cbietol Police of the
mythical city of Oakley
Palmer. She is a member of the
Nationalist party: • ·

TWO TRANSPORTED
Shop our Second Floor Home Furnishing
PT . PLEASANT ~ Mason's
Emergency Squad transported
of Hoover Cleaners and Accessories.
two persons to Holzer Medical
Center Friday. Angela Clark
was admitted to Holzer and
Darlene Scarberry was ta~n
there by the emergency
vehicle, but was returned home
M
·~: • 1·, ..\ . \ \:i:.::}~~'~ substitute rural camer of by her father .
"'-1 ;;'-"·:- :} ! ), 'I ~.~"\ ':,..':. record at the Rutland Post f~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~ . ·~r~o...
·'.:t·"'~h.;.. "" :~9 Cf.l
1'1'1 Office .
c:t

See Harold Thompson or Lou Lutton

~

Route 3, has been IP!XJin~
City Fire Ch)ef lor the city of
Bickerdyke Allstock In the all
mylhical setup to give girls
experience in goverpmlmt.
Miss wen is a member of the
Fl!deraU.t party.

Two New Resorts Open July Fourth

Ohio Politics

TO LOWER COSTS

-..

)

\..

24 - The swiday Times-Sentinel. Jqne 25, 19'12

THE KEY

•

,.

I

By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Report!!!"
COLUMBUS (UPI)- The
Ohio General Assembly, which
. was sup!XJSed to have adjourned two weeks ago, is
involved in ·a game of cat-andmouse which seems likely to
continue all sununer.
, One phase of the game is
normal. It features tlie legislature, the office of Gov. John J.
Gilligan and special interest
groups trying to draft major
bills agreeable to all.
The symptoms of this pha~
were evident last week as an
environmental protection
agency (EP A) bill was
deadlocked until next month.
The game has beeen complicated this year, however, by
a difference of opinion between
Republican House and Senate
leaders on how to play.
The result has been a
separate game of tag between
the two chambers, which cannot seem to synchronize with
each other on finishing up the
year's business.
Prime legislation has been

I&lt;' . . . .

Convenient Termsl
Oualified Service :
Free Delivery
·:
•'

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�..

- . _•• !.

~

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.... .

..

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POMEROY - Two Meigs
High School girls attending
Buckeye Girls State have been
named to offices at the 26th
annual session which ends
today.

Ohio Assembly's Cat and · Mo~se Game
.
Most Likely To (A&gt;ntinue All Summer
.

'

enacted during the 1971-72 session as the legislatureadministration - lobbyists
worked the grand process.
Of note were the maoslve·
budget-tax program and ll!e
comprehensive strip mine reform bill, both of which took
months to crystallize.
Slowed By Eleellons
Still other major bills have
fallen by the wayside for this
year, or are waiting for their
only hope of enactment - a
burst of pressure from some
source, whether pubUc outrage
or an unseen nudge froin
another branch of .government
or special Interest groups,
Thus far , pressures on aRepublican -domina ted legislature
in an election year have Induced action on bills granting
tax breaks to nonpublic school
parents, homeowners, the
elderly and retired; boost!iig
local government aid; blunting
t~e effect of impending
property tax increases, and
cracking down · on errant
motorists.
Not enough preSSIU'e has

ON THE
FINANCING

Meigs Average Income
$6;485, Census Shows
WASHINGTON ~ Average
In the !XJpulation age 16 and
family income was ,S,485 in over,67percentofthemenand
'Meigs County in 1969, com- 24 per cent of the women were
pared with $10;313 for the State, in the labor force. Among the
according to a report on the employed, 35 per cent were
1970 census by the Bureau of holding white collar jobs, and
the Census, U. S. 0ePB!'tment 17 percent were government
of Commerce. Per capita in- workers.
c&lt;iine for the county amounted
About 70 per cent of the
to $2,010, the report shows.
marrllld women with husband
The 1870 census counted present were In the labor force,
19,799 residents in the county ; and 15 per cent of these wives
0.3 per cent were foreign born had children under six.
and 1.4 per cent native born
There were 4,805 persons 3 to
With one or both ·parents of 24 years old enrolled In school.
foreign birth.
In the 25-and-older population,
~ Mwn&amp; , thiLl:Ounty:a .1Ui9•..,.3!1..per..cent~lhe.men and 40
iniUlbltailta age 5 and ' over in per cent of the women were
1970, 1,358 were living in a high school graduates.
different c'Oun ty within the
State in 1965, and 992 In a different State.

Applications are now being
accepted and no experience or
=;iiiiriiiiiiii&lt;ii&gt;riv'i-ii
·-~jj·iiiK!training is required in the
•
substitute rural carrier of
irecord posts . Applications
r.o,..,, ro·,, c:.,!c Fnrm got to Imust take a written test . To be
:.~m'~:'~w~g;;·~ ;·l. ~;.7?J~f~,~~~ 1·l eligible musl have
'2 ·, t Ho;r:r.J 1! 10 b~ ~ t C!-::::1 state driver's license and a
a···l:..: ·- ·1 ;;.1 c~ .J~ o r c.!i-: y ::-;•!
'
driving record. Subst1'tute
:f·,c ~ y:u br::::d, u c -1\l ·da:~
t ::..t.:;:;~ at iow cjsl.
mail carriers lnust
I
'
f1~nish
and maintain their own
A5k your SMlo F.urJ1 tl~c~t
Oi OI'l iH e~ SIJ !o 'F.1rm Homevehicles at their own expense
o .vncrs Pol: ~.-, l'll lh aulomJli-::
but will be given an equipment
lll llati.;n Col(cra~o.
I maiqtenance allowance.
Sec or Call:
I Applications must be sub.• Imit ted by July 7. Those iiiteres ted may con ta ct the
CAROI-I'IR!Jtland Postmaster.

one

...

-

·-

.....

-

,_--

---

-~ ~

.

,.0

•

-

_,-

&lt;oo

-""

_..._-

--

-

a valid

Park Central
Haiti Bldg.
S.COIHI Ave.
Phone 446·4290

IN DALLIPDLI.

Homt 446~511

Ollllpolis

.,,!
l

5i&amp;!o

F,~rm

'

.

f11c and Cuua llv COIIIPIIIV

llomo Of! iu : Dioc~l:n~!on, Htinci&amp;

PLANS CHANGED
PT. PLEASANT - Plans for
the 1967 graduating class
reunion of Point Pleasant High
School have been changed
. from an ox roast to a dance to
be held at the.Moose Hall Aug.
• 19. Persons who have not been
notified are being asked to
contact Pam Simpkins at 6753533. Those who have received
!etters are urged to respond
immediately .

·- ...

...

-- --

Pom'"'Y

•
-.

\

'

'·

'

'

;.

.

J ..

,

'

.

.

''

...

..

·~

Devoted To T.he Greater
Mifld, .Ohio
.

~all~IY

'

Headquarte.rs

For.

• • •
•

..

J

..
'

.

.
'
\

..

,•. ~

.

.

"~

Floor-A ·Matic
Rug &amp; Floor
Cond itioner

Cleaner

Convert ible

H1ndivac

Cleaner

Cleaner

'

-l·

'

t

,,

•

....-.1

Power Drive
Diai -A-Mati c

~

'j

.

~

~_... ,

:• .'

·~

1'

: ol(

•

.:

....

• Convertible
•Constellatkln
• Portable Cleaner

•

eSwingette

• Diai-A-Matic

eftiriaivi

I

Swingette
Cleaner

Portable
Cleaner

Department for a complete selection

.·~
:z ·'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

.

'

~..

.l '
. . h.
.;--. ,·
(

'

.

·WA'Y· INTO .
•.

l .·..
··,/·:'&gt;··

'I'

"'t':-o'i
I . .:t

.

'

.

.

'

.

-1.
'

'

''

'

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.

'
-~
•

!····················· ·········· ·········································································!·
.

1

A GREAT TEAM!

-7

•

,
1•

Arnold Grate and Frigidaire

1
•

;•

z

t ~~-

ANNIVERSARY SALE!
25 YEARS OF SERVICE

' ' ''

J

.)~if,'!;r
.

.•.

'

"'

'l

.'

t i l l 111111111110 0 o o o 0 o 0 0 0 o o o o o o I I I 0 I 00 I 0 I I I I I I I I I 1 I I 01 • • • • OIOIOoe•ll l l l f f l f t l l l t t • t t t l l t t t l l l l l l t l • t • • • o o :

Big Shipment! Better Discounts!

""'

.--

'

.

.

'·

Proleotloll Plln.
Backed by General Motora.
1-year warranty for rapeir of
any defect In the tnt ire product,
pl41 a 4-year Protection Plan for
repair olanydeteot In the retrfgeraUng eY~tem llld ASS cabinet
liner on modeluo equipped.
.

Only 30" wide
and 60" high
Re~reraa-d&lt;K~n ilupttuny ar·
rangement, now or ln lhtlulu,._

They may be hinged lor a rightor left-hand door opening if you
change your address, your
kitchen or your mind. No need
to calla serviceman. The switch
can easily be made by the man
of the house.

willltwo
egg aerve11, Hperate
compartmenlllor
apreada and snacka,
deep ehell for ~-gal.
carton. .
Juice can holdtr
and doorahelf.
organize the
freezer handily.

I

• •I

,

I' .~

..· •• -~~...'''*'I
V{'I••• ' "
v~

He.- 1:: 'COtiJ=.,s •
•

'

f,

·I

I

.'!HE· ~~'

WITH TRADE

YOUR CHOICE, MANY MODEL$ .NOW AT

Rutland Furniture
742-4211

ARNOLD GRATE

\

RUTlAND, 0.

"''''''''''''''~'"• • ••-.,

'

-.

.'

·..·,b.v:·stll.•o·w rll.l a ··:

Frigidaire! 100% Frost-Proof
Refrigerator. Never Defrost.
Big 15.2 cu. ft.
4. 75 cu. ft. frHzer

.'

•

SNOWDEN

FIRST
NATIONAL
BANK .

YEARS OF SERVICE"

-

I

POMEROY - Two cars
were heavily damaged and a
driver cited to court as the
result of an accident on th e
Flat Ruri Hollow . Road in
Rutland Township at 12:45
p.m. Friday.
The department of Sheriff
Robert Hartenbach said cars
driven by Edna Nance, 28,
Rutland , and Edward Mitchell,
16, Langsville, collided on a
narrow curve on the road.
Mitchell was left of center at
the point of contact, officials
said. He has been cited to
juvenile court on a charge of
driving without a license. A
passenger in the Nance
vehicle, four -year-old Reg ina
Nance received a laceration or
the cheek.

['I~ liQTAlillEI
Arh.
l'i:
, •

~~ 109

.

N

Wreck Late Friday

-~~~~~ti~~~···:~~ st!:~~al s~:k~ni~~
'C~ii"e'it&lt;,.,1i.J ..- om'"""~ ••

"11111/r:!::!:

.

;ki -

Cars Damaged In

1?{~1}Z'?J£r:f2~W~%; Exam July 7

11

.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

been generated on aid for low
Houae Speaker Pro Tern~
Income hou1lng, ·stepped-up Olarles E. Fey, R.Springfield,
boller lriailectlonl, nunlns . obserVed that paasage Without
home fire lately' a code of firm support from the admlnethics1 rectlictlan !)I the age of lstra,tlon would suJ&gt;ject the
adulthood, a women's ' rlghti GOP to "the worst of both
ameridmerit •.,d a cunnmer sides."
..
credit bill. ·
BUt the most interesting
And last 11V,eek, HoUle Repub- lilase of the game Is.the tug-of:
lican leaden llhowed they were war between Kurfess and
willing to etrtng a pair of prior- Senate President Theodore M.
JOINS fiRM -George W.
rity admlnlltratlon reorgani- Gray, R-Piqua, who should be Hackel1, Ill, son of Mr. and
. zatlon bills aloog into tbe 1111111- WO{king together.
Mrs. lieorge w. Hackett Jr.,
mer unW the right combiQatlon
Qray, a _"consent" leader 93 Seventh Ave., Middleport,
is found .
..,.
wboaUows the majOrity of his bas joined The Babcock &amp;
Houae Speaker auittu F. caucus to do what It will, would Wilcox Company and Is in
. Kurfess, R-Bowllng Green, ex- just as soon spend the summer the initial phase of a com·
pressed exuperation that the at home. He figures the less pany-wlde orlentatlon
administration wa1 agreeing to time the Republicans are in program. Hackett, a 1972
an EP..., bill in private and Columbus, the Jess trouble they graduate of · Case Western
. cornplalnting about it in public. will get into.
Reserve University with a
Action waa put off unW the
Kurfess, a leader who tries to · bachelor ofsclence degree in ·
administration can offer make things happen, is anxlous nuid and thermal sciences,
wholehearted sup!)(lrt, and not to leave no loose ends that the Is participating Ill a threebe able to whip the GOP Gilligan administration could week session at Barberton
legislature during the cam- pick up and 'Use as wea!XJns. prior to being assigned to the.
paign for falling to paas a
Consequently the House, at power generation group.
Sl!t.!Bfactory bill.
least, can be expected to bold Babcock &amp; Wilson is a major
Mer1er Postponed
"housekeeping" sessions international manufacturer
The Republicans also during the summer and roll of
power
generatlon
decided • to let the ad- .some bills around in com- equipment for utilltles and
ministration cool ita heels on a mittees so the lawmakers Industry. Its sales during
bill merging the Department of won't get rusty and the pd- 1971 were more than $950
Development
and
the mlntstration can't mount a million and its backlog
Department of Urban Affairs sneak attack before the elec- stands at approximately $2
after Sjllle 1111klnd remarks tion .
billion. were made.

Rural Carrier

"THE bLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

'P.tu ,_,n wen,

Heidi , Denise Milhoan,
Pomeroy Route 3, has been
appointed ·Cbietol Police of the
mythical city of Oakley
Palmer. She is a member of the
Nationalist party: • ·

TWO TRANSPORTED
Shop our Second Floor Home Furnishing
PT . PLEASANT ~ Mason's
Emergency Squad transported
of Hoover Cleaners and Accessories.
two persons to Holzer Medical
Center Friday. Angela Clark
was admitted to Holzer and
Darlene Scarberry was ta~n
there by the emergency
vehicle, but was returned home
M
·~: • 1·, ..\ . \ \:i:.::}~~'~ substitute rural camer of by her father .
"'-1 ;;'-"·:- :} ! ), 'I ~.~"\ ':,..':. record at the Rutland Post f~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~ . ·~r~o...
·'.:t·"'~h.;.. "" :~9 Cf.l
1'1'1 Office .
c:t

See Harold Thompson or Lou Lutton

~

Route 3, has been IP!XJin~
City Fire Ch)ef lor the city of
Bickerdyke Allstock In the all
mylhical setup to give girls
experience in goverpmlmt.
Miss wen is a member of the
Fl!deraU.t party.

Two New Resorts Open July Fourth

Ohio Politics

TO LOWER COSTS

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24 - The swiday Times-Sentinel. Jqne 25, 19'12

THE KEY

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By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Report!!!"
COLUMBUS (UPI)- The
Ohio General Assembly, which
. was sup!XJSed to have adjourned two weeks ago, is
involved in ·a game of cat-andmouse which seems likely to
continue all sununer.
, One phase of the game is
normal. It features tlie legislature, the office of Gov. John J.
Gilligan and special interest
groups trying to draft major
bills agreeable to all.
The symptoms of this pha~
were evident last week as an
environmental protection
agency (EP A) bill was
deadlocked until next month.
The game has beeen complicated this year, however, by
a difference of opinion between
Republican House and Senate
leaders on how to play.
The result has been a
separate game of tag between
the two chambers, which cannot seem to synchronize with
each other on finishing up the
year's business.
Prime legislation has been

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Convenient Termsl
Oualified Service :
Free Delivery
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HE OOGHTID WA)t:H HIM5ELF••• BEING
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HIMSELF IN10

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"AS A SECRn'ARY SHE'S ,GOT EVERYTHING. FORTUNATELY
.: , FOR HEI, MO$TLY ON THE BOSS!"

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BOARDING 110l1SB '

by Les Carroll
:::~uiV\Irtlt:R

WHEN THE WE~il4ER WAS INSUFFERfo.BLE""

MY

. J'vE BiEN Tj.j1NKING1
· F6R.GY.,. WQL)LDNi' IT BE
GREAT u: ·EV&amp;aVON E. ·
. COULD A.EI.ATE 'i

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FROM DOOLITTLE COLJ..'EG.E

by~JJuM:r ~v SAV •PLACK

IIAUTIFU~~

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OBVIOUS
TO ANVONE,
F.E/l(JY,..

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IUT. BASICALLV

l'M COLOR•Il.IND

ONI LOOI( io.T

'fOUR. ~~EADSJ

I ~eL~Etl IN it\E COOLi~ OF
'THE SUR~E.'Y Will&lt;\ it\E

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S1RONG. ME.N

FRINGE ON i,._P!

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ONe~ A 17Aif. We'RE ORSrf'lfo{&lt;:t
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IS 1'~A~&amp;.I~&lt;!t" 170 ft11~6S A
SECO~D W11HI~ fti~ Cv\11-K'(

·THE BORN LOSER

WAll.,. At-lD - ()()({ M~AXI{ IS
f{IJSHit.JG- 1H~ SPAce,

by Art Sanson1.

Hl~ '1-'{0IYI&lt;E. 1HE
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IN 1'!-IIS MONTI-IS MAlt.,

DOC1"0R

YOU GO'T
SOME" OF 'TI-lE
NE:W Mlk'ACLE'
DRUGS/

BUGS BUNNY

bF Stoffe'l &amp; · Hel~ndahl
IN THAT CASEE. ·
HAVe A SEA1"7

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�Massive Cleanup
Operation
Begun
Along
River
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BELLAIRE, Ohio (UP!) Residents along the Ohio River
nca~ the brunt of flooding
during the weekend but prepared to begin
massive
cleanup operation today.
Hundreds of Ohioans were
forced from their homes as the
river swelled to as much as It).
13 feet above flood stage. Most
of them, however, viewed the

PANDA '··~

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flooding as a. more-or-less think this was pretty bad, but
we don't."
routine occurrance.
"This Oood really doesn't
bother us too much because the ' The river crest~ at 48.7 feet
people in this town ... are aU here Sunday and nooded a city
used to it," seld Jim Degen· water supply pumping station.
hardt, 33, Civil Defense direc- Several pumps were short cirtor in Brilliant, a town of about cuited,leaving the city without
2,174 perlK&gt;nS.
a water supply for several
"Someone who hsd not gone hours.
through a llood hefor~ would
"The situation wasn't really

too serious," said Mayor Castri Brilliant, East Liverpool,
Cone. "We hooked up with the 'Shadyside, Powhatan Point ,
county water supply and unless Martins .Ferry and Hannib;ll.
we have a major fll'e, we Roads and highways near the
should be In good shape until river were closed by the high
we get the pumps all . back water. They were expected to
working sometime today or remain closed to traffic even
after the water recedes, until
Tuesday."
mud and debris is removed.
The river was expected to
Persons were ordered from
crest
at Cincinnati Thursday,
their homes in Clarington,

•

NQw You Know

Devoted To

VOL XXIV

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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Ladc.,; W/th
..a Past

WASHINGTON (UPI)- 1mmediate U.S. withdrawal from
Southeast Asia, postwar
amnesty for draft dodgers and
delerf.ers, and abolition of the
draft were proposed today as
major planks In the 1972 Democratll presidential campaign
plalfonn.
The platform proposed to the
l5CJ.rnember Democratic Platform Committee by a If&gt;.
member
drafting
subcommittee also endorsed
·limited school busing to
achieve quaUty education and
ta11payer financing of most
election campaign costs.
The subeorrunlttee split, 7-to7 - with Chairman Kenneth
GibBon not voting -on the
defense plank.
One version backed by
supporters of Sen. George S.'
McGovern, O.S.D., the frontrunner for the party 's

presaaenllaJ nomanatwn, called
for less military spending.
The other, backed by supporters of Gov. George C. Wallace
of Alabama and Sen. Henry
Jackson, D-Wash., called for
''a program of national defense
·which Is both prudent and
responsible , which will retain
the confidence of our allies,
and which wiUhe a deterrent to
potential aggressors".
Even before the platform
committee began two days of
debate on it, the proposed
platform was under sharp
attack from two sides.
Wallace supporters vowed to
push for an antibusing plank
and for planks to promise tax
relief for middle income
Americans and cuts in foreign
aid.
Some McGovern supporters
said the subcommittee compromised McGovern's liberal

'

By United Pre.a Iniernallonal
nut WORST FLO()D~G In 'U. S. history was receding
·today and the tropical storm that caused It hsd died out. But
hundreds of thouaands of Eastern residents still waited to learn
• when they could return home.
Tropical storm Agnes left at least 122 persons dead, most of
them from flooding in northeastern states, and damage approaching f2 bllllon.
'111e hardest hit state from the flooding was Pennsylvania,
with al.least 47 dead and up to 250,000 persons forced to 'flee their
bomes. In New York 21 persons died, in Virginia, 17, and in
Maryland, 15.
Agne8 left a few squalls Sunday before dying out over
canada where It caused no serious damage.

MAH

F'OL.KS.~~

SU.VERSPRINGS, MD.- FOR 111E f1RST TIME since he
waa llhot In a Laurel, Md., shopping Center May )5, Alabama
Gov. George C. Wallace has some feellng in his thighs.
Aides reported the development Sunday and seid they
It with "cautlolll optimiBm."
PreaaldeElvinStauntonsaid, "Hehassensatlonnowlnthe
thi&amp;ha that wu not present one week ago. This should be
with cautiolll opttmtam for continued neurological
improvement in the month&amp; ahead."
Eight daya ago Wallace underwent surgery for a bullet
lodged near his !!pine.

recll'ded

reclll'ded

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CAPTAIN EASY
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by Crooks ~ Lawrence

WE DUJ\JNO WOf

'·~"·-·

THE: NUT lOOK.? LIKe!
OUI't 01-JL.'i CLUE I~ He·;.
CARJl,YIIIJ~

A CONCEALEP

ORANGE G~ENAPEl

programs too much for the
seke of unity, glossing over
some of the South Dakota
senator's controversial prO)lOsals in favor of what they said
was bland, general language.
An Alabama state Senator,
Ierre Pelham, Wallace 's
nonvoting representative on
the drafting subcommittee,
contended that McGovern 's
supporters ignored Wallace's
constituency of disenchallted
middle income Americans.
"This McGovern crowd ex!'
hlbits no interest whatever In
the problems · and needs of
these people," Pelham told

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"It's still shutdown ," said a
police officer Sunday night. "I
guess the sewage will just have
to back up till they get it going
again.''

Generally clear tonight wiU1
lows mainly in the 50s. Mostly
sunny and warmer Tuesday
highs In the upper 70s to lower
80s.

Of The Meig&amp;· Mason Area

MONDAY JUNE '26, 1972

TEN CENTS .

PHONE 992-2156

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newsmen.
"They're more interested in
the exotic, " Pelham said.
"They're more interested in
deserters than POWs. They
talk about the right of
homosexuals to marry. That's
nonsense."
Pelham's latter reference
was to. a proposed platform
plank seying Americans should
hsv~ the right to conduct their
private Jives as they wish .
Gibson seid it was aimed at
homosexual rights.
.
Ted Van Dyk, McGovern's
representative to the Platform
(Continued on Page 8)

Abortion Issue
Is Reset Again
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Supreme Court today ordered
reargument next term In two
ca•es challenging whethe~
state laws against abortion are
an unconstitutional invasion of
privacy.
In a brief order without
comment, the justices set new
arguments in abortion cases
from Georgia and Texas to be
heard sometime next fall or
winter.
In a separate action, the
Court also called for reargument in three cases where
new obscenity rules and standards were at issue.
In the Texas abortion case,
the state law makes abortion a
crime unless necessary to save
the mother's life. Thirty other
states have slrnifar laws.
Georgia'slaw allowing aborlions for some reasons, such as

Nixon Returns
T Whi H
0 .
te OllSe

pregnancybecauseofrapeand
the possibility of a physical or
mental defect in the child, is
, oimllar to that of , 16 other
states. ·
The general argument
against anti-abortion laws has
been that they are unconstitutional interference
with a woman's right to hear a
child or not as she chooses and
with a doctor 's right to counsel
hlspatients.
In the Texas case started by
an unmarried pregnant woman
and a childless married couple
-all of whose names were
withheld -a special threejudge federal court In Dallas
ruled on June 17, 1970, the state
laws so vague that they
violated the constitutional
guarantee of due process of
law.
In the Georgia case, a threejudge federal panel in Atlanta
on July 31, 1971, found a large
group of persons had the legal
right to bring suit against the
law and that one woman .who
was refused an abortion had
suffered a deprivation .
Abortion bills were Introduced In 36 states in 1971.
Some were aimed at making
abortion easier, others at
making it hsrder. None was
enacted.
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THIS WAS THE way the swollen Ohio River looked in
Pomeroy Sunday evening . There were many sightseers
watching the ris~ river which moved into the diP. between
ti\e lwo'"pa"r'k1ni\otS'atilng' !lie 'river ani! tnen along lhe 'edges
of the lots. By Monday morning both lots were out of use as
the water spread across them . The river stood at 44.8 at 9
a.m. Monday. Flood stage is considered 46.5. According to
.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:::::::::,:,:,:,~:::::;:,:;:;:;:;:;:

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio -Extended OutlookWednesdaythroughFriday:
Fair and warm. Highs In
the 80s and lows In the 60s.

Legion

Players Hurt
In Collisi•OD

17 Dze 0
R • hW8VS

information received at the Pomeroy VWage Hall the river
was to rise six more Inches cresting before noon today.
James Bailey, auperintendent of the highway department,
reported Routes 338, 124, junction of 338 and junction with 881
at Reedsville, 248 between Keno and Long Bottom, Route 7,
Dark Hollow, Forest Run area, and Route 124 Racine to
Pomeroy, at Minersville, closed.

M cGovern R as
.

BallEno

Tom Cooke, the second
baseman and "Mr. Hustle" on
the Meigs Legion baseball
team, suffered mouth Injuries
WASHINGTON(UPI)-Presand
a concussion in the New
CINCINNATI - 11IE CINCINNATI SUMMER opera not
Haven-Meigs game Sunday.
only hu lix new productions for Ita 5:/nd year but also a new ident Nixon was back In the
White
House
today
preparing
Cooke met head-on with New
home.
for
a
busy
week
that
will
see
Haven's
Robbie Lambert in a
During Its first 51 years here, the swmner opera was
spectacular collision near
preaenled at the Cincinnati Zoo with some of lhe slnt!ers at the him annO\Ulce a new troop
withdrawal
from
Vietnam.
'
second base. Cooke was atopen..tr pavWon almost drowned out by the roar of the Ilona and
Nixon spent the weekend at
tempting to steal second with
cries o.f the wandering peacocks.
camp
David,
flying
back
to
the
Lambert
covering the bag. As
The variable weather and the shortage of parklnt! and seats
White
House
by
helicopter
RLambert
caught the ball
finally forced the nation's second oldest opera company to seek
Sunday
evening
with
his
wife,
·
.
around
five
feet on the first
other quarters.
Pet, and their daughter, JuUe,
.
base side of second, the two
and
son-in-law,
David
Elsencrashed.
Both immediately
CLEVELAND- ELEVEN ATI'ORNEYS flled suit today
JU
dropped to the ground and lay
againlt Blue Closs of Northeastern Ohio, claiming the insurance hower.
Some_
t
ime
this
week,
Nixon
.
.l
'
there
for around ten minutes.
company ol(ercharged subacribers.
..
will
annO\Ulce
the
next
U.S.
'
Lambert
suffered a deep cut
'111e suit said Blue Croas falled to pinpoint industrial • relilted
boapltal ca1es and receive reimOO!'sement from the state. The troop wlthdr~wal from Viet- United Prell Intemational under one of his eyes caused by
Seventeen persons, 10 of Cooke's front tooth.
,
attorneys said that by faUing to screen out these lndustrisi ca1es, · nam. The force level will he
them under 30 years of age,
Cooke knocked the ball out of
· Blue Clola ·hu overcharged its subacribers as much as $10 reduced to 49,000 by July I.
Informed
sources
seld
Nixon
were
killed
during
the
first
Lambert's
glove and crawled
mllllon a year.
wa~ expected to malntaln,-a weekend of swnmer in Ohio as to second safely. Cooke was
to
Veterans
WASIIINGTON - IJTI'ON INDUSTRIES, which holda resadual force. in Vietnam until the result of traffic . related admitted
the
C~unl8ta
agree
to
a
accidenta.
Memorial
Hospital.
He was
major lhlp conatructloo contracta with the Navy, Ia on the brink
Twenty-three · persons were transferred there after the
of financial dLiuter, Sen. Wllllam Prollllire, D-Wii., said today. cease.fll'e and the release of
killed In Ohio traffic accldenta accident by Ted Perry, father
He aaid the firm ill pressing the Navy for payment Df f450 U.S: prisoners of war.
-NIXon alllo plans to hold durin.fl the first summer of the Meigs pitcher Stan
mllllon In "an attempt tolhlfttbecostaoflts own Inadequacies to
another news conference-pro- weekend period last year and Perry.
the American taxpayer."
'lbe f460 million demand Is a claim made by UUon on bably Thursday. It Is expected 24 during !he senie period In
)11'01111111 that the NaVY. changed Its contracta after they hsd been • to deal both with,domestic and 1970, the Ohio Highway Patrol
llfaned, Pr011nire said Navy officiata have testified that only a foreign policy. A news confer- said. Thirteen persons lost
LOCAL TEMPS
ence held last week wu ' their lives In traffic mtsliapa
llllall fraction of the clalm could he justified.
The temperature In downrestricted lo , domestic policy. last weekend.
BELFAST- NORTHERN IRELAND was hit today with
The President scheduled a
The cOWlt included three town Pomeroy at 11:30 a.m:
new of violence before a mldnl&amp;ht ceue-tire goes into morn inti meellnt! today with double • death accldenta · two Monday was 70 degrees under
tlfec:t, ~ and lhoolinCs were on a far Jeaser acale than Ambauador Henry Cabot of them occurring Sa~y sunny skies.
the weellencl violence that killed Iii more penona.
Lodge, hia apecial repmenta- and the other Friday nlcht
'111tlnlce •• propoeed by the mWtant Provillonal Wing of live to the VaUcan. Early In the ahortly after the weekend
11M lrllb Republican, Army (IRA) and accepted by Britain. afternoon he planned to p-eet period began ate p.m.
Miiiiii'IIIJ_. ialcl their troopa had arden to kHp a ''low Gen. WUllam C. Westmoreland,
Two petlonl died Friday
WATER OFI' TUESDAY
proftle" with 1t1rt of the -.fire lrougbt largely by Catholic theretirlngArmychiefolslaff, evenlng, ·l2Saturday and three
Water service of the
prollltl illlnlt IRMnlplred violence,
and hll family.
on Suiaday.·
,
Pomeroy village water
•
Friday, Nixon will fly to the · The weekend !raffle Yictiml department wW be turned off
I'BIUJ, ~- - A IIUACUR who balled out of a jeilja:ler _ Callfornli White HOUle at San were all ridlllc 1n velllclea and Tueaday at 12 noon on Route 33
wllb • • r11111t1111 nmalned tbe object ol an lntenllve a-Die. He will ala)' there the toll did not Include any from the Fred Clark residence
~-t todQ&gt;, -lhoulh llltborltl• did not know If he wu for perhapa u 1«*~1 u thne padestrllna. One penon wu to the fairgrounds due to work
11111111 tbe 11111'1117 populated area.
neb while the Democrata are ·ldlled 1n 1 Oile-cJr cruh 011 the being done in the prea. The
8la'dl 1e1m1 on foot, on boneback and In bolla and lloldiDc their national conven- Ohio Turnpike near Younp- amount of time the water will
(Contlnued an Pqe I)
lion in Mt.ml Beach.
town.
be off has not been determined.

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down at the sewage treabnent
plant in Steubenville, a city Df
34,000, and officials were uncertain when the plant could be
re-&lt;&gt;pened .

Weather

enttne

Major Planks for 1972
Dem CampaignApproved

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NO. 51

1'he· lntere~l3

1

Ferry police officer , said about .
200 famllies along the route
were evacuated. "Most of them
were in the bottoms (along the
river bank) but it just seems
like a routine thing to them."
In East Uverpool about 40
families were evacuated, but
most had returned home early
today.
High water forced a shut-

•

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The "Savannah," which left
Savannah, Ga., May 22, 1819,
waa the first steamship to cross
the Atlantic.

about eight feet below Oood
stage . Most larger Ohio cities
suffered little or no flood damage since they are protected by
flood walls and high groll!ld.
Ohio 7, a heavily-traveled
sta te route between Martins
Ferry and East Liverpool was
one of the highways closed by
the high water.
Boyd Carpino, a Martins

h Votes

WASHING.TON (UP!) -Sen. first-ballot nomination for us over on the first ballot In
George S. McGovern claimed President at the Democratic Miami,'' McGovern said.
McGovern said he was
1,510.5 delegate votes today National Convention.
convinced
that within a week
which he said assured him a
McGovern made the claim
after a group" of previously additional names would be
uhcommltted delegates threw added to his delegate total. '111e
him 96% votes. He said that put convention begins July 10.
"What Is most significant is
him over the 1,509 votes
that
this is another major step
necessery to nominate.
.in
uniting
all Americans in the
Congressional delegate
Walter E. Fauntroy of political process," McGovern
the Dlstrtct of Colum- seid.
In response to • question,
bia, who is black, an·
said that he assured
aiiiS nounced at a news conference McGovern
the
blacks
that biB administraattended by McGovern that the
tion
would
Include
blacks on the
By United Presa International delegates were made up of both
As tropical storm Agnes died blacks and whites from 12 Supreme Court, the Cabinet,
to a few drizzles today, scat- states.
.., the regulatory agencies "and at
tered thundershowers fell in
"There is no question that the all levels of government in
the south Atlantic states and 96% delegates who represent reasonable propo!ltion to their
sizzllnt! temperatures hit the new additions are enough to put percentage of the population".
McGovern and the members
southo()Ontral states.
of the congressional black
A · weak and diffused low
caucus held the news cooferpressure area over New York
ence shortly before McGovern
was all that remained of floodembarked
on a pre-convention
producing Agnes and a few
swing
through
the south and
shqwers were associated with
southwest, where his support is
the system from eastern
Michigan and Ohio to New CLEVELAND (UPI) - The considered weak.
England.
rains that sent five-loot waves
Most rivers and streams In from swollen Big Creek through
the flood-ravaged Eastern the main road of the Cleveland
States were slowly receeding, Z9ll Friday did an estimated Tractor Pull
but the disestea: was still $25,000 damage to zoo buUdings
widespresd.
and kil\ed two animals. ·
Slated July 1
Scattered · thundershowers
A rare goat from the . Red
feU from Arkanses and nor- Sea area, a two - month - old t The annual Harrisonville
thern Louisiana to Kansas and nubian Ibex, drowned In the Community Tractor Pull will
flood and a Himalayan tahr, he held at the Harrisonville
the Dakotas.
Hail the size of golfballs feU another type of goat, died of School Saturday at 2:30 p.m.
under the sponsorship of the
at Danbury, Neb., and smaller exp&lt;~~ure .
HarrlsonviUe
PTO.
'hall pelted Hays, Kan., late
Chief Z!lologlst Richard W.
Weigh-in of the garden
Sunday. A funnel cloud was Merrtu, 29, worried that the
tractors
willatart at 1 p.m. and
sighted near McLaughlin, S.D., toll mlflhl mount.
but no damage or Injuries were
"There Ia a chance we wW five classes wlll be Included reported.
lose some from pneumonia," up to 500 poundl, ~1 10 700
Temperatures in west and Merrill said. "We're watchlnt! pounds, 701 to 900 pounds, 901 to
central Texas, eastern l'!ew every 'one carefully. At the first 1100 pounds and free for all.
Afarm tractor pull wlllatart
Mexico and southwest and sign of a cold, we'll bit them
.
at
7:30 p.m. with a' wellb-IA
·south-central Oklahoma were . with antibiotics and try to
bealnntng at 8 p.m. 0... Ill
ezpected til reach the 10(). knock It out of them."
degree mark today.
The zoo, which hu a collec- the farm tractor caleiDI'J
Temperatures early today Uon of 1,200 animall, SUIIalned Include 4,500 pounda, ......
ranged fro~ at Dallas, Tex., a far greater loss In a 1101· . 1,100 and 8,1100. Troplllet 11111 be
to 41 at RiiCk Spring&amp; and Oood when the entire repUie ..-nted In all c~ llld tilt
CGIIIpltiUon Ia Clptll to
EVI!Iston, Wyo.
collection fled. •

Agnes Dies
Following
Heavy R •

Rains Cause
S
$2 ,000 D8Dlage

IIIJ-.

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