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10 - The Daily SP-&gt;tinc:, Middlepott-Pomeroy, 0., prii6,J973
•

Roger Dmgey is. 1\U State
' MASON - Roger Dingey, and Mrs ..Marion Dingey.

Wahama
High
School ' s
Dingey scored 513 points
talented 6-5 senior ; today during the 1972-73 Wahama
became a member of the 1973 basketball season in 20 games
Class AA All-West Virginia ·for an average of 25.65.
basketball team.
Dingey's scoring total was
Coach Grant Barnette, who achieved on 246 field goals and
calls Dingey the best shooter in 50-of-79 free throws. This total
the history of the school, "Said includes the Alwnni gam~. He
he believes the lanky New scored 29 points in that one l but
Haven senior is the first after. subtracting, his official
basketball All-Stater ever at total for 20 games was 513 . .
WHS. Dingey"is the son of Mr .
Roger Jed the- White Falcon~
in nine of 10 categories. He
pulled down 3&gt;&gt; rebounds,
made 40 steals, passed off for
52 assists and committed only
67 turn overs , On seven
Tonight thru Tuesday
separate occasions , he netted
ApriU-10 .
30 or more points· in a single
WHA T"S UP DOC?
game
.
Uechnicolor)
Barbara Streisand
Ryan O' Neal
Frank Ihle dies
lGJ
Co lorca rtoons
dults: S1.50 Children : 75c
Frank Ihle, Middletown,
Show Starts 7 p.m .
formerly of Meigs County, died
Thursday morning at Ft .
Hamilton Hospital, HamiJton,
Ohio. Mr. Ihle Is survived by
his wi£e, Jessie Ihle, who is
·.·'
... v .•
seriously ill in Ft. Hamilton
,\ ( 111'"''' N,qld1,
Hospital.
Funeral services will be held
Ton•ght, Sat., Sun .
Monday al2p .m. at the McCoy
April6 -7-8
and
Leffner Funeral Home,
--Double Feature Program
"CURIOUS FEMALE "
Middletown. Calling hours are
Three nubile pus sycats
from 5 to 9 Sunday evening.
yearn ing far love
- Piu s"SWEDISH
FLY GIRLS"
LOCAL TEMPS
Every man should met a
The
temPerature
in Pomeroy
high fly1ng stewardess.
at II a.m. Friday was 55
Rated {R)
degrees under sunny skies.

MASON DRIVE-IN

•

Two accidents
investigated .
Hartenbach 's Dept. Thursday.
At 1:50 p.m. on County Road 1,
Salem Twp., John E. Schubert.
N
ew J ersey, was traveling
n lh ·
truck when he came
or m a
to~ narro~ place in the high·
way. He p!liled rightto pass an
Oncollli·ng veh'icle and the road
gave way and. the truck slid
over an embankment and
l. ed 0 er
1pp
v .
Schubert had visible inuries
b t was not immediately
u
treated
There wa s heavy
to the tru c k. No
citation w3s iss ued .
At5 : Iop.m .onUSRt.33,j11Sl
north of Reuter 's Service

damag~

ROGER DINGEY

Streets.

Station, Robert W. Qualls,
Pomeroy, was traveling north
when he s topped to make a left
hand turn and his car was

(Continued from page t)
struck in the rear by another
assistance m financing to in.
driven by Robert L. Jones,
stall a waste disposal plant Shade. There were no injuries
which would serve Syracuse
or arre s ts and medium
and Ratihe .
damage to both -vehicles. · The letter stated that all
federal government progr:ams
are being carefully reviewed to
identify any which can be
reduced or eliminated . The
letter further stated that, "The

· Pomeroy Boys League this
w~k wer~ presa~ent , Tom
Grueser ; v1re pres 1dent, J~hn
Manley ;
sec
retary
and
·;; Ohl"
d
treasurer, 81
mger, an
.
·
Cha res
1 ·
direc tor or wnptres,
Marshall..
. A meeting _has been called_
for Monday mght 7 p.m . Apn 1 '
9, at Pomeroy City Hall, First
Aid Room, for parents and all
.
.
o ~her ~nterested persons . . A
diSCUSSIOn of what playmg
·
f"Ie ld s WI·11 be use d an d thear
locat!ons will be held .. Money
makirtg projects wall be
d"•scussed · It tak es a conSlderable sum or money to

The followiRgls the roster of
team managers and players:
J!;{ 'Z.~~~e~ed~'ntTa~~gr~~~
Whitlatch: Roger Gaul. Todd
Grover, Joe Bolt Hemsley,
Brent Houdashelt, Tracy
Hysell , Tony JewelL Kail
Knapp . Rod Manley. Ken
McCullough, John 'McKinney,
Todd
Norton,
James Spencer,
Sheets,
John Sm
ith , Brian
Mat.t VanVranken , Mike
Whitlatch.
Pee Wee, Angels, managers,
Bob Wamsley and Howard
Smith : Chuck Bailey, John
Beaver,
Tom Fields,
Callahan,
Mahlon
Eblin,
Jerry
Todd
Fife,
Mark Friend, Shawn Gilmore,
Scott
Harrison, Richard'
Icenhower,
Nicky
Riggs, Ricky
Smith.
J . R.
Wamsley,
Kyle
Wood, -Brian Zerkle.

.

son· LEAG~E.

Giants, -manager, Tom
Grueser: Raymond Andrews,
Bob
Chappelear,
Doug
Clelland, Steve Diener, Jeff
Grueser, Buddy McAngus.
Chris
McK inney,
Scott
McKinney, Andy Pockllr'!gton,
Todd
Rawlings.
SJeve
Schneider, Shane Smith, Oa.vid
Whitsell , Scott Williams, Chris
Woods.

Pirates, manager, Ke ith
Van lnwagen : Denny Allen ,
James Ash , Rick Blaettnar.
Rod Ca..michael. Troy Grllflth,
John Hoffman. Tim Hysell,
Cliff Kennedy, Greg Lee, Lee
Lewts. Clifford Murray, Lyle
Moon, Todd Smith, Weslie
Smith, Mike Tripplet.
Tigers, managers. Ron
Browning and Herschel /11\c.
(lure : Gary Baham , David
Blake, Billy Browning, Tim
Herdman, Don Icenhower ,
Chas. Kennedy, David Ken nedy, Randy 1\o\arshall, Dan
Morris, Steve Ohlinger, Steve
Pullins, John Russell, Mike
Smith, Brian Teaford, . Kevin
Smith .
Yankees, Woodrow Call, Jr.,
Gary Freeman : Rick Baker,
David Burt. Steve CalL Ken neth Callahan, Tim Faulk,
Tom Hawley , Joe Jeffers ,
I!Je House Finance Committee, Steve little, Mark Norton, Pat
Owens. Tom 'Ovvens, Larry
said Gilligan's ne-w spending Snyder, Chris Taylor, Harvey
plan resulted from "a rnoWJt- Whitlatch.
PONY LEAGUE
ing chorus of protests from all
Pony lea_gue, 13 yr . old,
over the state over the inade- manager, Gene Mitch and
Dale
quacy of the budget in the field Char)es Ham ilton :
of education." ·-·

_

COLUMBUS "(UP! ) - Gov.
John J . Gilligan has proposed

to pump an ex!fa $118 million
into his 1973-75 state budget
proposal, using money anticipated from jacked-up revenue
projections and savings in the
areas of welfare and hig~r edFarmers Home Administration
Harry Ohlinger, 81, formerly ucation .
water and waste disposal gran t of Pomeroy, of 300 E. Rich St.,
The governor told a news
program has been terminated OilumbiiS, died Thursday at
conference Thursday a substias a result of lhi§ -review. We Grant Hospital, Columbus.
tute general appropriations bill
regret that we will not be able
Mr. Ohlinger was a salesman
would be offered in the House
to provide the gra nt assistance rn ready wear at the Red An·
neld week, with additional exyou desired."
chor Departm ent Store in penditures on elementary and
The letter said the teview of , Pomeroy many years. His
secondary education, colleges
fed eral government programs wife, the late Jessie A. Ewing and universities, mental health
is necessary to "control in- O.hlinger, was exec utive and community action proflati onary pressures within the secretary of the Meigs County grams.
economy.".
American Red Cross Chapter
The changes would hike the
. Mayor London and council for a number of years. The governor 's proposed· two-year
members
expressed
ap- family moved to ColumbiiS t7 budget from $9.8 billion to $9.9
preciatwn
to
amdllary years ago. Mrs. Ohlinger died billion.
members for their recent in 1963.
Republican legislative
donation to the new kitchen in
Surviving are a son~ Dr,
leaders immediately said
the new municipal building. Joseph E. Ohlinger ; a
Gilligan "belatedly recognized
The auxiliary purchased a daughter , Mrs. Karl (Harriet) the need for appropriating
sink, stove, refrigerator and Rauch, both of Columbus; two
additional funds to education,"
material for the cabinets.
grandchildren, and a sister,
saying they have been adPickens, who ha s donated a Mrs: ~· reda Ohlinger of
vocating this for weeks.
great deal of time and work on Cleveland;
They also complained the
lhe inside of the new municipal
Mr. Ohlinger was a member
governor offered nothing in the
building, agreed last night to· of the Hope Evangelical
way of
relief, and that it
see that the septic lank iS in- Lutheran Church in ColumbiiS.
was an ''affront to the legislastalled.
Funeral services will be held ture" to come up with a brand
Council
f~viewed ~n a-t 10:30 a.m . Saturday at the new "budget proposal.
agreement sent to Mayor Schoedinger Northwest
Rep. FrederickN. Young, RLondon . from Fred Crow, Chapel, 1740 Zolinger Road, Dayton, ranking Republican on
Pomeroy Village solicitor, in where friends may call from 7
regard to Pomeroy's proposed to 9 tonight. Burial will be in
Holzer Medical Center
water system.
Glen Rest Cemetery. The
(Discharged)
Council di sc ussed
th e family suggests contributions
Gweneth Daughtery. Jeffrey
agreement between . Pomeroy be made to a favorite charity
Swisher,
Vivian Plummer,
and SyracUse at length and in his memory .
sugges ted some changes in the
Geneva
Proffitt,
Lena
proposal .
Laudeuer, Elizabeth Kuhn,
MRS:&gt;fcGJtAW DIES
Council agreed to purchase a
Donald Cline, Reva Colley,
Friends here have received Jaunita Maline, Roy Baurer,
used typewriter and discussed
the selling of the old town hall word of the death of Mrs . Della Edward
Edinger,
Mrs.
and the possibility of erecting a (Rhodes) McGraw, 93, at East Clarence Ewing and daughter,
yo uth center at the new park LiverpooL Mrs . McGraw was Annie Galloway,
Lillian
the daughter of the late Marion Stokes, Daniel Codner, Mrs.
site.
Council voted to accept the and Rachel Rhodes who were Terry Wise and son, Howard
application of David Lipscomb £ormer residents of the Wilson, Harvey Willey, Oral
Fairview Community. Funeral Waugh, Jessie Walker. Anna
as park maintenance manager
Lipscomb in turn will be given services and burial were at Jean Taylor, Frances Tabit,
free living quarters in the town East Liver~ool.
Melinda Strait, Betty Sanders,
owned house located at the
Myrtle Myers, Donna Mcmunicipal park.
Clellan, Elinor Leonard, Hazel
Making donations toward the
Lear, Linda Lam bart, KimSUIT
FILED
new bullding were Archie Lee,
berly Hamm, Reed Haddox
An
action
asking
judgment
of
and Virgie Coffee.
Eber Pickens, Al Lipscomb,
Robert Wmgett, and Mayor $26,468.2&gt; has been filed in
Herman London ,
Meigs County Common ~leas
PLEASANT VALLEY
Attending were Mayor Court by Betty Pooler and
DISCHARGES : Mrs. Lewis
London, Wingett, Lipscomb, Robert Pooler. Middleport, Williamson and daughter,
Ed Neutzling, Art Sylvester, against Eli Ebersbach, Mid~ llenders on ; Mrs. Thurman
and Pickens, councilmen; dleport,. for perspnal and Oiler, Vinton; Mrs. Davey
George Holman, treasurer; property dama.ges as .the result Miller, Syracuse; Arawanna
Milton Varian, police chief, of an automobile accident that Anthony, Point Pleasant ;
and Kathryn Crow, clerk.
occurred Nov . I at the in- Morgan Smith, Point Pleasant;
tersection of Beec~ and Locust Samuel Edens, Vinton; Arnold ,
Blankenship, Letart; Edwin
St , Middleport.
Edwards, New Haven; Mrs.
At The Meigs
LODGE NOTICE
Lowell
Vaughn,
Point
Any membei of Middleport's Pleasant; Mrs. Larry Pettry,
Evangeline Chapte4 OES Southside; Mrs. Merrill Clark,
wishing to make reservations Point Pleasant.

Harry Ohlinger
died Thursday

pomeroy
national
bank
the bank of
the ce ntury
established

IB72

Member

FDIC

"Cioing one step further"

Now Appearing

THEY

PLAY IT ALL!

Jan Haddox

LODGE TO MEET
Harrisonville Lodge 411,
F&amp;AM will meet Saturday at
7:30p.m. Larry Weii, "W. M.,
invites alJ master masons to
attend. Refreshments will be
se rved .

and the
Music Department

THE MEIGS INN
POMEROY

1

'

apparet shop at 326 Second Ave. in
Gallipolis, also preside nt and a major
stockholder of Mullins' Enterprises, owner
of My Sister 's Closet, 2nd and State Sts.,
Gallipolis, plus a second My Sis ter 's Closet
at II Wes t Union Street, Athens, Ohio,
plans to occupy a portion of the Lafaye tte
Building with Bernadine's as soon as
necessary remod~;ling is completed.
Beyond that , he declined to reveal any
additional usage of the building until
present studies by his consultants, ar.
chitects and conh·actors are completed.
TRANSFERRING the deed and a check for the Lafayette Hotel ar.e Hoyt
They will determine the most realistic·
Mullins, •left," and former owner William O'Brien.
uses of the space available.
However, Mullins said, "The building
will be 100 percent uhlized. All remod eling
GALLIPOLIS - Hoyt V. Mullins Wilcoxen 's Barber Shop at the rear· of the will be based on a French motif m keeping
announced Friday that he and his brot11er, ·court St. side. A department s~o.re .was a .. with the background of the Old French
C. R. Mllilins had acquired ownership of former tenant.
City ."
I!Je Lafayette Hotel Building, Second Ave.
Hoyt V. Mullins said the .transfer
Explainlng his motive, Mf. Mullins
and Court St., in downtown Gallipolis.
followed seyeral weeks of negotiations said, " It has lon g been my desire, and Umt
_Built in 1927, the three.. tory fireproof with the previous owner, William O'Brien , of my family , to acquire this property and
building, with a frontage of 86.8 feet on of Columbus, Ohio. Sale price was not we feel this indicates our Complete falth in
Second Ave. and a depth of 134.6·{.eet on disclosed.
the downtown Gallipolis area and the
Court St., currently is occupied bri_wo
·Hoyt Mutlins, president and maj ority entire community. We hop e 0t11 e r
tenants, Credit Thrift on the corner and stockholder of Bernadine 's, lnC.1 a ladies'
(Continued on Page II )

(Continued .from page-!) ·
"The Disabled American
Veterans," Fannin advises,
u 0rganized in 1920, and were
charted by Congress in 1932 to
work for civil rehabilitation of
the more than 3 million .
wounded and disabled veterans
returned ' from the nation's
wars since World War I. Our ·
objectives remain constant, ''
he avers.
" In cooperation with other
nationwide Veterans Groups,
deserving disabl¢ veterans
and their dependents benefit
from legislation obtained on
the national and state levels.
This, we are very proud," he
said, " as well as DAV em ..
ployment
assistance
programs, our partnership
with the Boy Scouts of
America, and our service and
hospital programs.
-Commander Fannin will be
honored at dinner served at
6:30p.m. by Meigs Chapter 53,
DAV and its Ladies Auxiliary,
to which ellglble disabled .
veterans in Meigs are invited,
as well as Chapter member~.
Auxiliary members are to
bring a covered dish.
John C. Bacon is commander
of the local chapter and Martin
Kelly is adjutant.

·N ews • • • in Briefs

(Continued from page I)
Myles J . Ambrose, special assistant attorney gemiral for drug
law enforcement, and District of Columbis Police Chief Jerry V.
Wilson.

a

COLuMBUS - KENT McGOUGH OF LIMA was elected
state Republican cbairma,n Thursday_!llljl immedla_tely went to
work on the 1974 campaign, claiming "any Republican candidate
with the proper planning and fina.n cing" could beat Gov. John J.
Gilligan.
McGough, 55, received 31 votes of the GOP state central
committee to succeed the retiring John Andrews. Robert E.
Hughes, chairman of I!Je Cuyahoga County party, received 14
votes. Hughes had said he entered the race to prevent the
chairmanship from g'l)ng to McGough "by default," but buth
men said after the secret vote was taken that there was no
disunity in the party.

'

•

Weather

VOL. g

J~r

All Occasions

.

NO. 10

BY DALEROTHGEBJR.
GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Martin Essex,
State Superintendent of Public Instruction,
Monday is expected to recommend to the
State Board of Education that charter
revocation procedures be initiated against
the North Gallia, Southwestern and
Hannan Trace School Districts.
J. E . Brown, director, Division of
Elementary iind Secondary Education and
his assistant, Dr. Doyle K. Shumaker,
made that recommendation to Dr. Essex
following school evaluations conducted
Feb. 13, 14, 15, and 16.
Dr. Shumaker, in evaluating the three
districts, concluded that the problems and
shortcomings of all are due largely to
Umited enrollments, lack of resources and
adequate facilities designed to accommodate a comprehensive high school
curriculum. He said, "The Department of
Education, Division of Elementary and
Secondary Education, in its report on April
15, 1971, informed the administration and
board of education lhat immediate steps
should be taken toward becoming a part of
a larger administrative unit.
"The Board of Education and administration were also advised that the
Division would contmue directed attention
to the current problem.
"During the week of Feb. 12, in-

'

ELBERFELDS IN ,POMEROY
Friday and Saturday Sale
Shop Both ftiday and Saturday Til 9
Save during the special" two day sale all over the
store - Body shirts at low prices. . sale of extra size
sportswear. womens polyester shorts - womens pants · ·
Royal portable typewriters . womens umbrellas ·
Bestform bras and girdles . mens Lee Boot Cut Flares ·
mens knit slacks - mens polyester walk shorts · mens
short sleeve sport shirts . Blue Chambray shirts - boys
shirts on sale. Save on Boys and Girls Bicycles· 8 Track
Stereo Tapes.
And be sure to visit the Warehouse on Mechan·ic
Street - ·sale of Summer Furniture - Whirlpool Appliances - linoleum . Lawnboy mowers - carpet by the
yard . and many other items. Warehouse is open both
Friday
and Saturday nights til
.
. 9 P.M.

Stepson has
disappeared
GALLIPOLIS Gallia County
sheriff's deputies Friday received another
missing persons' report, the third in ~
week.
Mrs. Lloyd P. Hayden, Rt. 3, reported
her step-son, Jerry Hayden, age 15, has
been missing since March 24. Hayden was
described as weighing between 13&gt;-140
pounds, light brown hair, blue eyes and
was last seen wearing brown jeans, a
green shirt and white tennis shoes.
a Missing persons re~orts were a~so
filed last week for 17-year old Billie Jo
Hale who was last seen on Sunday, ~nd
Ronalda Cook, 19, daughter of Mrs. Bonnie
Ashworth, Rt. I, Northup, als~. m1ssing
since Sunday.
·
Sheriff's investigator Ken Deckard
Friday investigated a breaking and entering at the Sportsman's Inn on Rt. 233.
Deckard said someone entered the
·establishment by breaking a window. An
undetermined amount of change and
cigarettes wa~ taken.

·-ELBE.RFELDS IN POMEROY

7:30 NIGHTLY

spections were held to ineasure progress
toward becoming part of a larger admi'nistrative Unit in compliance with.
minimum standard s for Ohio Hi gh
Schools.
"On the basis of converences with the
Gallia Co unty Superintendent, lo cal
superintendents, high school principals,
classroom visitations and information
reporled to the State D~artment of
Education, several rniniffium standards
were not me t.
" In view of the Ohio H1gh School
standards cited m the report on 1Pril 5,
1971, the inspeCtion reviews. con ducted the
week of Feb. 12, evidence did not :eve a!
satisfactory progress or potential £or
compliance with adopted sta ndards nor
the development of a comprehensive
secondary education attendance center.
"The limitations 0f the schools, are,
for the most part, unavoidable in operation
and do not reflect on the Board of
Educa tions ,or administration .
" It is not possible, with the present
district administrative organizations, to
utilize starr efficiently and provide a
comprehen s ive program of studies,
'develop essential services, provid~ appropmlte £acUities to implement the
desired and necessa ry instructional
programs.
!'The inadequacies or these schools as
con firm ed by two in s pections by
representatives of t~e State Department of
Education and a ;real concern for the
education and future welfare of the
students indicates that the distriCts should
be discontinued and a plan to provide an
opportunity for an improved and comprehensive high school" education be
developed .
"The con tinuation of North Gallia,

10: 15a. m. ·

992~2039

Thursday, April 5

~omeroy Flower
. Sho,i

(Pack-a-Pew

Butternut Ave., Pomeroy
Mrs. Millard Van Meter

..

~ight)

Saturdaj, April 7
(Fami~ Night)

7:30p .m. - The Agape YOuth
Singers tram Gallipolis will be
In cMrge of entire program.

POMEROY - Absentee voting for the
May 8 primary election will begq. Monday,
the Meigs County Board of Elections
BEAUTY PAGEANT WINNER announces. The board office located in the
Cindy Patterson, daughter of Mr. and
Masonic Temple structure, Pomeroy, will
Mrs. Corbett Patterson, Syracuse, won
be open from Ito 4 p.m ., Monday through
the title of " Little Miss of Meigs
Friday, for the convenience of absentee
County" in a beauty pageant held at the
voters.
.
American Legion Hall in Athens,
There are no local contests in the
recently. The pageant was sponsored
villages of the county. Absentee voter~ will .bY International Pageant System,
be deciding upon seven state issues and a .,Elmira, N. Y. Cindy will compete in
2.7 building bond issue in t~~ Eaf tern
state competition In Jlliy at Wooster
Local School District.
College, Wooster.
Ii

15 CENTS

or school cliarters

Southwestem and Hannan Trace High
Schools ccmnot be recommended: "
The eval uation nlso htt hard at the
ele mentary buildings in oll .Jhrec
dislricls.
Although -13 separate violations
·were cHcd In the evaluation of the Kyger
Creek High School, the State Dep•rtment of Education DID NOT recornmend lakJng up Che Kyger Creek
DJs trict charter.

Jn a letter to Local Supt. Comer
· Bradbury, Brown su1d tliat in light of the
rapadly changing educational structures
and the eventual potential of the toted
program in Galha County, it is strong ly
re commended that immediate an d
aggresstve steps should be tali: en to form a
larger administrati ve unit.
Dr . Shuma ker, in his le!_ter to Bradbury , conclud ed that the evaluatio n
conducted Feb 15, together with previous
evaluations, reflects increasing concerns
aDd problems in proyiding for present and
future educatwnal needs of youth in the
distri ct. He said, "Schools and distr:icts
which are lacking potential in enrollments,
will encounter increasing dl£ficulty in
accommodaling c hanging needs.
" Present enrollments of Kyger Creek
High School does not tnd1 cate an
POMEROY - The Hcv .Hohe1·LWells,
enrollment base which can ef£iciently
ce nter , chaplain of the Ohio State Gran ge,
suppor t· a high level of educational opwa s spctjker ~t the annua l Mcig~; County
portunity .' '
Pomorw Gran ge dtnner Vriday night at the
He recommended tha t the Kyger
&amp;Jlisbury El ementary School with some
Creek Local Board . of Education " take
]50 persons ~tttcndmg . With him are, left,
necessary steps toward becoming a part of
Norman Will, Meigs Pomona maste r, and
a larger adm in istrati ve unit whi ch will
right, Virgil Atkins, deputy master.
(Contin ued on Page 12 )
In his t.alk , the Rev . Ml'. Wells urged
the g range to tt~ke a rol e in gettin g farmers

Chaplain wants everybody to talk things over
and non·farm.ers together to discuss
problems thereby crcaling ~ better un. that they are entitl ed to a fair income on
thei r investment.
_derstandi ng. He cited price mc rca ses in
the Umted States on a rtides other than
The Rev. Mr. Wells was introduced by
farm products and poin ted out thut other
Earl Starkey of Carpen ter , past state
rields of pmduction ha ve not undergone a
grange gatekeeper . Piano selections were
boyc(Jtt as the meat Lndustry and farmer
prese nted by Keith Ashley, and Teresa and
has been ..
Sonio Carr, daughterS of Mr. and Mrs.
He said fw·n1crs are m&lt;.Jking more
Charles Ca rr , Tuppers Plains, eQtertained
profit Lh;:m eyer before, but pointed out
with a ba.lon twirling ac t.

Lafayette was hub of the old French City

BY DOROTHY COUNTRYMAN
was decorated in the French pt:!riod style, dining r oom , ball room and large kitchens.
GALLIPOLIS - The Lafayette Hotel
wJth an iv ory and beige theme The dining room seat~d 100 persons at the in the hotel and the woodwork was done by
opened May 3, 1928 with 58 gues t rooms
predominat ing in th e lobby, gold in the ball tables and featured dinner music on the Athens Lumber Co.
and the hope of becoming the hub of
The Lafayette's first guest was E. R.
room . It fron ts 85 feet on Second Ave., and Sunday, Tuesday a nd Thursday even ings,
Gallipolis . It did .
Jamiso1,1 of Columbus. The hotel was the
1:16 feet on Court St. .
&lt;tnd dancing two nights a week.
The buildmg, owned and operated
scene
of many parties and balls and was
The three-story, structure houses a
The Lofayette's lobby boasts onental involved in the celebration of the
originally by George A. Tabit, also Mused
w1d e lobby, entered fro_m Second Ave.; a chandeliers ·that were the first of the
the Tabit Department Store (later Cox 's,
dedication of the old Silver Bridge. The
pattern ever cas t.
which moved .out in November, 1972) and
openmg day dinner-dance entertained
The hotel wus designed by J ohn Q. more than 200 people with music from Pete
the Comme(cial and Savings Bank. l.t was
Adams
, who als o designed the then new Sullivan and the King Taste Orchestra.
Gill~
cons tructed at a cost of about $185,000,
Columbus City Hall, the Majestic rheater
with building beginning m 1927.
GALLIPOLIS - Gerald Glib, 57, of
The hotel was first leased to Edward
in
Athens
and
several
Ohio
University
Tabit bought the land for the building
100 Second Ave., was found dead at his
Sullivan, who placed John Coe in charge as
huildmgs.
from J. Warren Miller and Mrs . Emily F .
manager.
home around 4 p.m. Saturday.
Charles P . Kircher and sons conVance around 1921 for about $20,000. He
Mr. Gills was an accountant and
In 193&gt;, Earl W. and Mary Smith took
tracted the building. The glass came from the((-... onjhe Lafayette. They, with their
opened his first department store on the
&lt;iirector ofJ)fi "ommercial and Savings
the Ce ntral Glass' Company of Huntington . daug hter , Alice, operated J t 4nlil 19&gt;7.
site, but it burned on Feb. 14, 1923. The
Bank.
OhiO Bell insta lled a private switchboard
, land composed of lotS 100 and 99, origina lly
He is s urvived by his parents,
{Continued on Page }1 )
belonged to Antoine Due and Charles
Everett and Ne ll Carter Gills,
Berthelot. It became a si ngle property
Gallipolis, and .one brother, Jack GHJs,
when the two lots were purchased by
Urbana. Waugh-Halley·Wood Funeral
Cha rles Creuzet. .
Horn e will announce services Monday. _
. The hotel is Georgian arch1tecture and ·=&lt;·: :·:=·:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::·::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;.;:::::::;:;:;:;:;::::•:;::
GALLIPOLIS - A $150,(J(JO damage Rt. I, Northup and 0 . M. Stewart, Gallia
suft was filed in Gallia County Common . County Treasurer
Pleas Court he re Saturda y as a result of a
Cherring ton seeks a JUdgment totaling
traffic acciden t April 8, 1971 qn Rt. 7 nca r $4,677. 24 plus interes t fr om Npv. 4, 1967
Cheshire.
I
plus foreclosure on 0 46 acres in Harrison
Eleanor
J
.
Nea
l,
2&gt;8
State
St
.,
filed
the
COL"UMBlTS - Dr. J ohn W. Cashman ,
Twp. He asked the propei' ty be sold with
for marketing and considers it a actwn agains t Gerald L. Chesser of
· Director of the Department of Health, has
ihe proceeds going to satisfy the judgment
significant hazard in that its desi~n a~d Albany. Plaintiff says the de!end;&gt;~t
alerted "tbca l Hea lth Commissioners that
Stewart as county treasurer has a tax lien
di(ections for use can cause a h1gh In· negligently dr ove his auto into her car. She
on the properly:
Pap-Chek, a do-it-yourself mail order test
cidence of false negative resultc; which seeks the dt1mages for injuries and ~x­
kit designed to detect cervical ca ncer,
could delay an accurat!i dt~gnosis of penses incurred. In a second action,
In. other court action, Jewell E. Roth. ·
distributed by Female LaborHtory Testing
cancer: . lt is es ttmated that over 1.000 tests William P. Cherri ng ton , tru stee of the
ru.
2.
Gallipolis, chafged g ross nej~lec t of
has been requested by the F .D.A. .to
have been sold. Anv wom a n who had used trust fWld crel;lted under· the will of Perduty and extreme cr uelty in a divorce
discontinue marketing and begin a
this product is urg"ed io see her physician melia Wood , de ceased, of Gallipolis, filed a
pe\ition filed against ~llyn C:Roth, North
nationwide recall of its pr0&lt;1;uot. ·
for retes tin g,
·
a
nd
forecl
osure
action
agains
t
judgment
Pori
Charlotte, Fla. They- were married
F .D.A. has never approved Pap Chek'
I
Clarenci , James and Helen R·uth Taylor; July 15, 1971 and have one child.

dies

$150,000 sui~ filed

commence .o n Monday

Rev . Charles SirTion
' ( Regulitr Offering)

.

Gallipolis- Poin t Pleasant

•

Gerald

{

~­
We wire flowers .
Ever')l'where
'

Your Invited Guest
Reaching More
Than 11,500
Families

FIVE SECTIONS

SUNDAY, APRIL 8, 1973

Pomeroy-Middleport

Absentee voting will _

Sunday, April 8
Wednesday, April ~
Friday, April 6
(Sunday School Night) · (Youth Night) (Church Lo,alty Sunday) _
\

__

,

fkt ,oted To Tht&gt; Greater Middle Ohio VaiiPy

Essex will ask

dli(iddle.p.ott, i!Jhio

• • •

tmts

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

SIXTH ond ,PALMER

COME AND

I.AF AVETTE HOTEL, Gallipolis , changed ownership Friday for I!Je fourth time since it was built in 1927. Picture
above was taken at intersection of Second Ave. and Court St.

74 PAGES

Cll'u. ·']iut .!Bap.tt~t t!l'z.u.tah

•

••

.

•
•

+

Cloudy and cooler, chance of
showers or snow flurries
: Sunday. Highs mostly in 40s.
Cloudy and cool Sunday night
and Monday. Lows in 30s south.
Highs Monday 10 mid 40s.

EVANGELIST.IC CRUSADE

FLOWERS

Saturday _Night 10:00 .til 2

Lafayette HOtel 6uildin'g sold
to Mullins brothers ·by O'Brien

Browning , Doug Browning,
Carl Carmichael, Tim ~ts,
Kenr Hawk. Brian Ham•1t011,
Dav1d Hatr is, Tim Hood, Ge-ne
Humphrey, Rick Johnson, Bob
McClure, Mark Mit&lt;:h, Randy
Roach. Ron Snyder, Greg
Smith, Jimmer Soulsby.
Pony Lea9ue Phillies, U -l.S
yr . olds, manager. Woodrow
Call, Jr . and Wry Freem.an :
John Slake, Greg Browning,
David Cole, Gary Fife, Larry
Fridley. Charles Marshall. Jeff •.
Mc-Kinney , Mike" Nesselroad,
John Partlow, Steve Pickens,
Jim
Pocklington,
Tim
Rawl ings, Ed Sisson, Pat
Soulsby. Rick Taylor, K~nny
Joe Mankin, Bob Schnetder.

or pre-reg
is ter tofor
Chapter
is asked
callGrand
Helen ~?G&gt;..::&gt;-c...::&gt;&lt;::&gt;-..::&gt;-..:::&gt;-&lt;C&gt;..::;&gt;..c:&gt;o&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;-o...::&gt;&lt;::&gt;-..::&gt;-c:&gt;oc:&gt;;:::;&gt;..c:&gt;o.ooe&gt;..::;&gt;..o.o-o'&lt;:&gt;-c...::&gt;-..:::&gt;&lt;:&gt;-&lt;:&gt;;:::&gt;-o-o-o-a-c...:;...::..,
Milhoan at 992-5602 or 992-2890
before April 12.
MEETING SET
Bill Hubbard said today a
meetmg for fast-pitch softball
will be held Sunday at the
Syracuse Ball Park for those
who are interested .

Sweet Music of

'

DAV meet

GI•11•Igan wo.uld
£att en' b u d g- e t

-tax

oome.oy
&lt;utlond

·.

Pomerpy Assn. elects _o fficers

Two ac cidents we re inOfficers elected at an 'operate the SWIUI&gt;er baseball
vestigated by Sherirf Robert C. organizational meeting of the . program.

MEIGS THEATRE

Start pract1C1ng now.
Put you r· money 1n a Savin gs Account.
trs a perfect place. It ea rns h1gh Interest
lt s sa le And 11 s ready anyt1me you need 11

\

•

Do-it-yourself test kit banned

�•

'
'

-.

:-:be Sunday TL-nes. Sentinel, Surday, April6,l973 •

..

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

Marshall executive to I Bear···
Of the Bend ·
speak -at alumni dinner By Bob Hoeflich
•

K. Easley, . vice president" for
Academic Affairs at Marshall
University, will be the guest
speaker at the Tri-County
Marshall Alumni Assn . sp,ring
meeting at the Red Carpet Inn,
Friday, April 13.

se niors in the tri-eounty area
wh o have applied lor entrance
to Marshall University.
Dr. Easley, who has been
associated with Marshall U.
since August 1972, was for·
merly a chemist for \he Ten·
nessee Eastman and Chern·

Alwnni will have as their

strand Corporations; a teacher

guests at the 6:30 p. m . buffet
dinner fhe 1973 graduating

in several southern uriver·
sities, and Dean of the

popular brother comedy team
·,:

.

1

" available
TilE POPULAR PRESIDENTIAL books are now
again at \he Sentinel Office, Court St., Pomeroy. The book
carries that complete collection of Presidential stories and
pictures which were printed recently in \he paper. Cost ili $1 plus
tax. To this point, tbe demand has been quite lively.

1

I

Correct- AHest : Ruth Casto
Pearl George
Kelty Huntley -

f

11~

rn ;, , Av~ " "' "~""' o~ .p

Georgia wa s the first
state t o all ow 18-ye&gt;r-olds to
VOt(' in 1943 ..

Dii"ectors

w.. k

MluL SUIHC~IPTiO "' T&lt;-&gt; l E I
HoGoll , poh• T• •t&gt;vnt .n o~,o on&lt;! Wt"

\lorg ift•l . ono yU• I IJ(IIl 1• • mon•111 V .
111. .1 mOI'IIfll • • ~ 9 ,,.,.,.horo . On&lt; . . . ,
Ill. ' " mon t h I I tMn mOn Th\ 1 ~ 110

hi Dlt ly ''"''"'' · oM, .. , 11• 00 sl~

'"'"" ' " ' 111$

'"'ff

monTM '" 10

I

I

.1
I
I
1

I

I

r~. Un'''" P rn• '"'"'"'
'' • • 1
•o•' ' ""''
""~"'" ' '""

ctuli •tl; t nt 111od to'"" uu
Dl

I

o il n l'•l

~'"''-P • Pe•

Cl t tp• tc~PI

o~cl

P;IIDM~•d ~ .... ~

•~&gt;o

' ' '" ''"" IQ

•ne.

o or~ t

on,,

~•w •

I

J

', I

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

TEN WILL ATTEND
. HUNTINGTON - The rop
officer of the Tri-state Area
Council, Boy Scouts of America
will head a group of 10 BSA
leaders who will attend the
National · Council Annual
Mee ting in May in Min -

*

ARMOUR STAR .SELECTED

PORK~U.S.

Govt. Inspected

-Pork Loin Sal

BATON STUDENTS of Mrs. Judy Riggs won honors in
Lancaster last Sunday when Ohio State NBTA baton twirling
championship comeptition was held. They are from the left,
JoAnn Fick, first place in beginning fancy strutting and fifth
place in intermediate solo in the junior division and LouaM
Newell and Diane Guthrie, who won first_place in the. Ohio
state senior duet championships besides other honors.

Whole or
Either Half

OALELENE SCOTT, Becky Windon, Karen Strausbaugh
and Cindy Patterson, left .ro right, took second place state
honors in the juvenile ~all teams competition of NBTA
state twirling championships Sunday at Lancaster. Libby
Ann Watkins is absent.
As few as 4.000 mou ntain
lions remain in the United
Slates, ·

•

..' lb.

Kad-ettes zn limelight
POMEROY - Members of
the Riggs Royal Kad-ettes
fared well in the Ohio State
NBTA
Baton
Twirling
. Ct;lampionships in Lancaster
last Sunday.
The Juvenile Team captured
second place in the Ohio State
Juvenile small teams cham. pions hip for 1973. The Juvenile
team members are Cindy
Patterson
of
Syracuse;
Dalelene Scott, Albany ; Becky
Windon, Ches ter ; Kar en
Strausbaugh , Athens, and
Libby Ann Watkins of Rutland·.
Two of the team members
went on to win first in the Ohio
· SUite Juvenile Duet Cham-

By
The
Pie ce Only

CUT TO ORDER ••••• lb. 95'

FAMILY PAK PORK CHOPS

Center &amp; End Chops - 9 to 11 Chops per Pkg.

We' rtserve 1he rithl to Hmit qu.antities ~:.n all llems·ln '",'!,;~!,
None sold to •

r

neapolis. Richard A. Monk,
Manager of Sears, Roebuck
and Co., who is president of the
Tri-state Area Council, expects
that at least t~ n persons will
attend the national meeting
from here .

..

MEIGS THEATRE

•.
~·

:'

••1

Tonight·, AprilS

WHAT.'S UP DOC?
{technico/or)
Barbara Streisand
Ryan O'Neal ·

IG l

CoiOrcartoons
dults: 51.50 Chi'ldren : He

•

U.S. No. 1 Grade
IDAHO

Sho~

Starts 7 p.ni.

:~

•'·

I ll

•
·.

.•.
.
.·.

MRS. FILBERT'S

'

RGARINE

TOnight, Mon., Tues.
April B-10
Double Feature Program

" CURIOUS FEMALE"
Three

nu b il e pu ssycats
yearning for lo ve.

- Pius" SWEDISH
. FLY GIRLS"
Every· ma'n should met · a
high-fl ying stewa rdess.

Rafed( R)

1-lb. Quarters

5X7

•.

'
'·

CAMPBELL'S .

-.

TRANSFER ASKED
COLUMB US - Applications
. for new. liquor permits and for
tran s fers of owner_ship or
locatioil are b~ing proces·s ed by
the Ohio Department of Liquor
: Control. Among the transfer
applications is that of Keith
Riggs, . dba as the Martin
Res taurant, to Helen Haddox ,
dba as the Martin Restaurant,
Middleport . ·

WARNER AT WORK
POMEROY - Real estate
appr&lt;::~i se r Denver \Vijrn er has
begUn working in Salisbury
Tow'ns hip , Meigs Auditor
Gordon Caldwell said Saturday . The appraiser iS ca rrying
an identifica ti on card signed
by the auditor lind bea ring the
auditor's phone number. He
drive s a tan .. Dodge car.
Anyone having any ques tions
as t o the authenticity of a
person l' laiming to be an ·ap.
praiser should telephone the
county &lt;mditor 's offi ce.

CLASS

NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

of'74

EXPERIENCED PROFESSIONAL PHOTOCRAPHER
ASSURES NATURALlY EXPRESSIVE POSES

THEY TAUGHT MORE;

Naturally there i~ no o bl igation to buy additional photographs ; however ; e~i ro
prin t$ ore aVailable in vorious ·sizes o.nd styles at reo~onoble price ~ .

THI\N rHEY LEARNED!
IRI--'.~ -1
ICOLOR I

•

ALL AGES - LIMIT ONE PER SUBJECT OR TWO PER FAMIL Y

PLU'S ·

J!!I~

I

Groups or. Individuals at $1.00 per Additional Subject.

G. C. Murphy Co.
350 Second Avenue
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
•

Tues., Wed. &amp; Thurs., Apri l 10-11 -12
10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

.J

.

Jack Lemmon in his most
important dramatic

0 I

I

I

12 ·t ///
I

rolesince

'The Days of
Wine and Roses:·

GRATE GAVE SINK
SYRACUSE - In a recent
report of a 3yrac use Council
meeting it was reported that
auxiliar'y members purchased
a stove, refrigerator and sink.
'The s tove and refrigerator
were purchased by the
auxiliary, but the new· double
.bow l stainless steel .sink. was
donated by Arnold Grate of
Rutland.

___,...
PARAMOUNT PIC1\JRE.S CCIRPORATlOt-t
and FlLMINAYS. INC ~)Men~

.ro&lt; LEM.M(t\1
111

A MARTIN fW'ISOHOfF Prodl&gt;C!IOrl

·Say "G ood -bye,''

~-------;

D i·:d }'lllfL :dl din.:d·'·:

kn owing tha i you' ve

tlu: d rcnpl·M \1,1}' lt Jf, Jil ~

"SAVE TI-iE TIGER"

m;~Jcsomc IX!op lcvcry
happy. And rh;~l yuU·\'C
spe nt vcrr l ittle. nc-

long di 51!1 1l&lt;..c. y.,u'll

co·stan1ng JACK GiLFORD

cnj11)' )dll r e,dl r11nn: 1f
. }Otl . f !J

11hml l

nor \\'orr~ " ilig
d11..: ur~ l .

CtltJsc long distance is
cheaper tha n yrju t h. ink,

S:•y .. I k i lo." I If the pccoplc
) 1111 u d I g1.:t ~:xdtcd

Cartoon

h t l 'ilti '&gt;C i 1 ' ~

Ti:ll C\·crywlc how
nna.h you love 1hcm.

lo ll):; d i-, IIITH.t',

Tl 11:m tu

n.: lax

htC;l~r.~c

ot\ ehc,tpt- r than thty

.'

.

lh·mini~cc

.
•

i.·

• • •

"

39C

CHASE I SAIIBORII

·cOFFEE
1-lb.
Can

97e

·•

MARGARINE fEATURES
. Sh•·······"•· c Soft Golden t·.:,~:·· . . . ~: 49 c
PEPPERONI o;:'" .. ~-~·~::•··99c Soft Whipped 1-111. 1 ':.~~·· 45c
BLEACH
1/2-Gal.
Bottle

Pleas~nt

37e

BO PEEP
CLOUDY

FRESH UP

AMMONIA

Deodorant Soap

~~i.

AP~IL 9-10-11-12

•
•
•

•

We- are remodeling so that we can better
serve you ..• our customer•

•

Watch 'ForOilr Ad Thursday!

MRS. FILBERT'S

JENO'S PIZZA MIXES
.
14%·•·· 53
CHEESE Sloolo
MAGIC

Point
...

ll -Or . Pk!l .

•MON.
•TUES.
•WED.
•THURS.

.for .

"'•·

"Hoine Of Good Shoes Since 1903"

.•

• • • • , • • • •

26e

Pkg. of

,u

4
5-oz. Ban ·

sse

.'

..

vm1 :1 rC:: and wh:rt
h nw i nc~pcnsin~
you\•c hccn up 10.
L"trJiing lOll)-: d i)I:Hl(l'
i..'i, pJir·d he h;rnJ.:inA .
II]' fl,t;ht llD\o\1•
nlt t yoll'vc still got
7 min ui6 ldL

.

.

When you examine a.
10-minute long distance
call, you'll see' that it gives
you enough time to say
and hear just about
'everything you want to
say and hear.
·
Without costing very
much. Provided you follow
a few simplnuJes,

Jus,t dial your out-ofstate long distan ce calls
direct, without opera tor
&lt;J.ssistan ce. And make your
calls• between 5 and
11 .P.M., Sunday. through
Friday. (Rates are even
lower after 11 P.M. and

@

on weekends.)
That way you'll
pay a lot less for long
distance calls.
Even 10-minute ones.
Some typi cal costs tor
10-minu te s'ilf-dialed
s tation calls, placed

.ohioBell

between 5. and II P.M.,
Sunday through Friday, arc:
Seattle, $2.60; Los Angeles,
$2.60; Dallas, $2.1 0;
Atlanta, $2.00; Boston,
$2.05; New York, $2.00;
St. Lo uis, $2,00; Las Vegos,
$2.5.0; Miam·i, $2.10 and .
Denver, $2.10.
All .rates plus tax .

UseYour Phone For All It~ Worth.
"'Dial-it-youueif. r~tes _a pply o n· Out~of-state dial~ ca lls ( wit hn.u t 1ope rat~r assiS~a ~ce) fr~~- ~esidencc ·and ~'usincss _rh~nes anywhere.~ in lhc _U.S. 1
(except AWka an'd Hawaii) , and on calls-placed wuhan operamr where d1rect dtal mg factJmes a re not a\·atla,ble. Dtai ·H·yourself r:n e-, du .not ·11•11-)'
to pcr YIR· to~pe rson , coin, h o~el ~ue'tr cn .. ltr ,,,nl
llt t 1ll.s_antl on call! charged tv Mm th,·r .11umher,

•'

•'.

'

·.

Second ·&amp; Olive Sl,
(

•

WILL

•

11:11 C\'. t: ryonc how ·

CLOSED

"

SUGAR RINGS .•... -~ •.. ..- .• , _..,._,.,_•••· 39c
SUGAR CINNAMON RINGS .. ..• .,., :.,,. 39c
BUTTER FLA:VORED RINGS . . . . " ·'·" · •••· 39c
COCONUT BARS .. .. ................. ••• 39c

Find 1m t lww
cvcryunt: is :~ nJ whal
thq··n· bl'cn trp to,

.
H you didn ' t knoll'

a liuh.•.

BE

LUNCHEON AND
SANDWICH LOAF
12-oz. Cans

N.B.C.,COOKIE FEATURES

422 Main St.

WE

'·I

BILTMORE

•

0

:··"

1-lb. 5-oz. Cans

•

SATISFACTION
GUARANTEED
OR
YOUR MONEY
REFUNDED

Tonighttfiril
Wedm!~day

ttl!

PORK I BEANS

-~

PROFESSIONAL
PORTRAIT

TO THEil UFE IS ABAU

tll ink.l

Ben Frankl-in Co.

'liolated their c-on tra ct ·.1:ith li-re
network.

./w 'v '

,-., ( ,1t1Hrll1 Nrql1llr

10-lb. bag

pionship. They were Cindy C.hampionships.
Patterson and Dalelene Scott.
Two other Riggs Royal KadTw o other Kad-ettes who WO!L,...ette members-taking part in
the firs t places in the Ohio the state contest but not
S~a t e Sen ior Juet Cham . pictured, are Teres~ Carr and
p10nship~ are Diana Guthrie Suzy Goebel of Tuppers Plains.
a nd Louann Newell of Chester.
The Riggs . Royal Kad-ette
Diana Guthrie: of Coolville Baton Corps is ins tructed by
also won the first place title in Mrs; Judy Riggs.
th e Ohio State Jr . Hoop
Dalelene Scott also won third
~wirling .C~ampionship , and place in Juv enile hoop in the ·
ftfth place ·in ""2~baton, and state co nte s t and . Diane
fourth place in th e Flag Guthrie, Cindy Patterson and
Twirling Championships for Oaielene Sco tt were recent
the s tate.
winnerS of the . Little Miss
J oAnn Fick of Chester WOn Athens County and Miss Teen
firs t place in Beginning Fancy of Athens and Meigs Counties.
Strutting and ·fifth. place in
In termediate Solo fn the Jr.
Divisions of the Official State

MASON DRIIJE-IN
'.' 1

The slick of patent, and there you are:
the great iook·o f a low -heeled·wear-with•all. You'll
hardly find an o ccasion o r an outfit where you
· couldn't wear_it. (W ho'd not want to , it's so
comfortab le) . Try t his Florsheim shoe for size and style.

,stH.~w

TONIGHT
ONLY

TH E OA i l V SENTI,., El

T EIIM S 0&lt; SUfiSC IItP li!hl
I~ &lt;811'n dooly ~ "" &gt;u~ a• • \C r ""'

State of Ohio. County of Gallia, ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me th·ls Sth day Of April, 1973 .
and I he'r ebY cert ify that I am not an officer or dir ector of thiS:
~nk.
·
Daniei:M. Evans, Notary Public
M y Comm iss ion expires March 12 •. 1974.

CLOSED SUNDAY,· 252 THIRD AVENUE

(i 'I II• POh l , Qh•o , · ~~l l

i

cancellatwn of ltH.:'

9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. MONDAY tHRU SATURDAY

;1n1

hluta • • E'n'-' ' " o'o ''"'''~ c• •,.. "'' '''"g
mott" •• PomeroY O~•o P~•· OU •(t •

Dean H. Davis ,

OPEN DAILY:

PuOhlhfG ••••, •• • "-~• • ~v•~·n~ ., ~ ~~~
Ulu •~ • ~ ~'"" "" C lil~l """"9• P~ ' " • '

I H CourT S t
PomtiOh , 0
o51t9
Pul;&gt;li lhU •« • ; w eHO~ ' t•tn . n ~ "uopt

sUbsequent tapes of the 'ierJf'
Th e Smothers f'Ortt•r.il 1

I

QUITE A UNIQUE SITUATION in the rural community of
Poriland. Porlland has four families in which a son or daughter
· was born on one of their parent's bir\hday anniversary.
of Vinton in the State of Ohio •nd Domestic Subsidiaries at the
They are Mrs. Shirley Johnson, born on her father 's birthday
close of business on March 28, 1973.
(Bill
McKelvey ) January 28; Mrs. Maxine Price, born on her
ASSETS
mother's bir\hday, (Etbel Swan) July 10; Miss Pam Larkins,
DR. WILLIAM K. EASLEY
Cash and due from banks - - - - - ••.
- - 5331 , ~93A6
- U.S. Trea'sury securities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 106.025.00
born on her mother's biriM!IY (Donna Larkins ) Nov, 7, and Miss
Other loans - - - - - - - - - . - ... - - - . - - . 154,901.15
Graduate School of Nor\heast Beverly Price, born on her lather's bir\hday (Hubert Price) on
Bank premisf;'!S, furn iture and fixtures, and
Louisiana Universl ty. He will Sept. 7.
. . . 4.095.00
· other assets representing bank premises
speak on one phase of the
. . 243.75
Other assets - · - - - - - - - - - - - TOTAL ASSETS . . . . . . . . . . -- · . ·
1596.858.36
deve lopment of Ma.shall ~ . CONGRATULATIONS TO BOB EASTMAN, formerly of
LIAB.tLITIES
University .
Pomeroy, who has been named ·manager of the new Kroger Store
Demand depo·sits of ln.d ividuals. partnerships,
Reservations to the dinner at Winfield, W. Va ., which starts Its grand opening observance
and cor poratiOns ; . - - . - . . . - • - . .
$320,916 .02
Deposi ts of Un.ited States Government - - - - - - - · 903.94
may be made by calling Mrs. today.
Deposi ts of States and political subdivi sions .
· · 171.788 .51
Bertha Filson, 675-2163, or Mrs.
The son of Mr. and Mrs . Uland Saxton of Pomeroy, Bob
Certified and offi ce r s' checks, etc.
- · · - · - - · - 2,300 .99
&lt;:arol Miller , 675·1089, by worked at the Kroger Store in Pomeroy~\'eral years before
TOTAL DEPOSITS
. . . · · · · $495 ,909 .46
(a I.-Total demand deposi ts , . . - - - $495,909 .46
Friday, April 6th. The cost of becoming manager at Gallipolis, Ashland, Ky. , and Ironton, \he
TOTAL LIAB ILI TIES .
· · · · · · · $495,909 .46
the dinner will be $4 per per· latter being his assignment before the Winfield job.
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
son. Alumni are encouraged to
Mrs. Eastman is the former Sheila Strauss of Pomeroy. Tbey
Reserve for bi=id debt losses on-loans. .:
bring
their
spouses
to
the
have
two sons, Kevin, 6, and Brent, 10. The Eastmans have been
(set up pursuant to IR S rulings) - . -.. ·
- - - - - · $1 ,000.00
TOTA L RESERVES ON LOANS
dinner. Even though many living at Teas Valley near Ironton . They expect to be loctated
$1.000 ,00
AND SECURITIES · · . · · ·
·
alwnni were contacted in the no'w at Coal Grove. ·
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
past 10 days, unless a definite
Common stock- tota l par va lue · . - · · - · - - - $25, 000.00
No. shares authorized 500
reservation was .made, tQose
UNDER THE DIRECTION oi Mrs. Phyllis Hackett, faculty
No. shares outstanding 500
wishing to attend should call member, who plays a great piano, students of the Bradbury .
. . 45,000 .00
Surplus · · - · · - - · ·· · · --, - school, a fifth and sixth grade education facility now, have
Undivi ded profits . . . - .. . - - . 29,948,90 · one of the above persons.
. . . $99.948 .90
To stay on the active list, started rehearsalS for an operetta to be given this spring. In·
TOTA L c., PITAL ACCOUNTS · · · ·
TOTAL "lAB ILI T IES. RESERVES. AND
alwnni may maintain mem- cidentally, some 13 stodents of the school presented a patriotic
$596,858 .36
CAP ITAL ACCOUNTS · · · · · · · ·
bership in. the association by type program at the Meigs County PTA Council Thursday night. .
MEMORANDA
paying_ $1.00 1972-73 mem- The students really brought forth a great deal of favorable
Average ot total ,deposit s tOr the 15 calendar
days ending with ca ll date . . . - - - . - $424,843.55
bership dues to treasurer Carol comment with their excellent presentation.
Average of tot a I loan s for the 15 calendar
Miller. Any person who has
days ending with ca ll date - · - - - - - · · - - $164,448.40
r eceived credit hours from MU
THE BEND 0' THE RIVER Garden Club is carrying out a
.
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA·
Pledged assets and securities loaned (book value) :_
is considered- an alwnnus .
· program w beautify the Letart Falls Cemewry. Included in the ·
U.S: Government obligations, direct and guaranteed,
plan is the purchase of flowering shrubs which are to be used all
$59 ,000 .00 . --------------~---pledged to secure deposi ts and other liabilities ...
along
the fence. Anyone wishing to help financially with the
TOTAL · ·
· · · · · · · · · · · · . . ' $59,000 .00 . :
SU t\DA l
program is asked to mail a donation to Mrs. Edward Simpson,
i Tll\IES'St;,, TINEL
Racine, club secretary. Dogwood and evergreen trees already
h l ~f&lt;l • •••• ~~ n &lt;JH ~; on~ o~.a
I. Ruth Casto, Cashier, of the above-nam ed bank, do I V oPu~
lin P uD"'"'~9 Co
•
I
C .O. U. IP OLtS 0.\IL' T~IBU '- "
have
been planted as a part of the beautification project.
solem nl y affltm that thi s report of condition is true ·and correct,
to the best of my know ledge and belief.

Canceled in t969 when they ran

afoul of the network , won a
. $776;000 jud8ment against CBS
~--~iday . The entertainers had
sought $to million in the breach
or contract suit arising from
the ··sn{otht'rs Brothers
Comedy Hour. " CBS fi led a
cross complaint demanding $!million.
·
The Smolhers and CBS had

THE VINTON
BANK.ING OOMPANY .
. .

I

comedian David Steinberg
whose " Sermonette'' religious~~­
spoor aired on the show drew
unfavorable letters and caused
CBS to carefully pre--screen

or

whose tele"ision shawl was

POMEROY __: Anyone lor some roses of Sharon?
Roscoe Fowler, who lives on Locust St. In Middleport, is
clearing out roses of Sharon near a fence on hls property. It's an
ideal time for transplanting, Fowler reports, and the plants are
available for free. Anyone interested can contact Roscoe at 9922980 to make arrangements. Incidentally, Roscoe and wife,
Mildred, have just retwned from a three month Florida visit.

0~

!angled often during_ the 2.,_
year run
the show overportions which the network
said 'were in bad taste. One of
the
segments
involved

Tom ·and Dick Smothers, the

I

·

State Rank No. 266

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CO"! DITtON

I.OS ANGELES I UPI I -

1

1
1

PT. PLEA..ANT - William

........~~===~

! -~----

1

·

Smothers brothers win $776,000 from network

'

.

·-

Gallipolis, Ohio
'

•
.,....... _

\

�•

'
'

-.

:-:be Sunday TL-nes. Sentinel, Surday, April6,l973 •

..

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

Marshall executive to I Bear···
Of the Bend ·
speak -at alumni dinner By Bob Hoeflich
•

K. Easley, . vice president" for
Academic Affairs at Marshall
University, will be the guest
speaker at the Tri-County
Marshall Alumni Assn . sp,ring
meeting at the Red Carpet Inn,
Friday, April 13.

se niors in the tri-eounty area
wh o have applied lor entrance
to Marshall University.
Dr. Easley, who has been
associated with Marshall U.
since August 1972, was for·
merly a chemist for \he Ten·
nessee Eastman and Chern·

Alwnni will have as their

strand Corporations; a teacher

guests at the 6:30 p. m . buffet
dinner fhe 1973 graduating

in several southern uriver·
sities, and Dean of the

popular brother comedy team
·,:

.

1

" available
TilE POPULAR PRESIDENTIAL books are now
again at \he Sentinel Office, Court St., Pomeroy. The book
carries that complete collection of Presidential stories and
pictures which were printed recently in \he paper. Cost ili $1 plus
tax. To this point, tbe demand has been quite lively.

1

I

Correct- AHest : Ruth Casto
Pearl George
Kelty Huntley -

f

11~

rn ;, , Av~ " "' "~""' o~ .p

Georgia wa s the first
state t o all ow 18-ye&gt;r-olds to
VOt(' in 1943 ..

Dii"ectors

w.. k

MluL SUIHC~IPTiO "' T&lt;-&gt; l E I
HoGoll , poh• T• •t&gt;vnt .n o~,o on&lt;! Wt"

\lorg ift•l . ono yU• I IJ(IIl 1• • mon•111 V .
111. .1 mOI'IIfll • • ~ 9 ,,.,.,.horo . On&lt; . . . ,
Ill. ' " mon t h I I tMn mOn Th\ 1 ~ 110

hi Dlt ly ''"''"'' · oM, .. , 11• 00 sl~

'"'"" ' " ' 111$

'"'ff

monTM '" 10

I

I

.1
I
I
1

I

I

r~. Un'''" P rn• '"'"'"'
'' • • 1
•o•' ' ""''
""~"'" ' '""

ctuli •tl; t nt 111od to'"" uu
Dl

I

o il n l'•l

~'"''-P • Pe•

Cl t tp• tc~PI

o~cl

P;IIDM~•d ~ .... ~

•~&gt;o

' ' '" ''"" IQ

•ne.

o or~ t

on,,

~•w •

I

J

', I

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

TEN WILL ATTEND
. HUNTINGTON - The rop
officer of the Tri-state Area
Council, Boy Scouts of America
will head a group of 10 BSA
leaders who will attend the
National · Council Annual
Mee ting in May in Min -

*

ARMOUR STAR .SELECTED

PORK~U.S.

Govt. Inspected

-Pork Loin Sal

BATON STUDENTS of Mrs. Judy Riggs won honors in
Lancaster last Sunday when Ohio State NBTA baton twirling
championship comeptition was held. They are from the left,
JoAnn Fick, first place in beginning fancy strutting and fifth
place in intermediate solo in the junior division and LouaM
Newell and Diane Guthrie, who won first_place in the. Ohio
state senior duet championships besides other honors.

Whole or
Either Half

OALELENE SCOTT, Becky Windon, Karen Strausbaugh
and Cindy Patterson, left .ro right, took second place state
honors in the juvenile ~all teams competition of NBTA
state twirling championships Sunday at Lancaster. Libby
Ann Watkins is absent.
As few as 4.000 mou ntain
lions remain in the United
Slates, ·

•

..' lb.

Kad-ettes zn limelight
POMEROY - Members of
the Riggs Royal Kad-ettes
fared well in the Ohio State
NBTA
Baton
Twirling
. Ct;lampionships in Lancaster
last Sunday.
The Juvenile Team captured
second place in the Ohio State
Juvenile small teams cham. pions hip for 1973. The Juvenile
team members are Cindy
Patterson
of
Syracuse;
Dalelene Scott, Albany ; Becky
Windon, Ches ter ; Kar en
Strausbaugh , Athens, and
Libby Ann Watkins of Rutland·.
Two of the team members
went on to win first in the Ohio
· SUite Juvenile Duet Cham-

By
The
Pie ce Only

CUT TO ORDER ••••• lb. 95'

FAMILY PAK PORK CHOPS

Center &amp; End Chops - 9 to 11 Chops per Pkg.

We' rtserve 1he rithl to Hmit qu.antities ~:.n all llems·ln '",'!,;~!,
None sold to •

r

neapolis. Richard A. Monk,
Manager of Sears, Roebuck
and Co., who is president of the
Tri-state Area Council, expects
that at least t~ n persons will
attend the national meeting
from here .

..

MEIGS THEATRE

•.
~·

:'

••1

Tonight·, AprilS

WHAT.'S UP DOC?
{technico/or)
Barbara Streisand
Ryan O'Neal ·

IG l

CoiOrcartoons
dults: 51.50 Chi'ldren : He

•

U.S. No. 1 Grade
IDAHO

Sho~

Starts 7 p.ni.

:~

•'·

I ll

•
·.

.•.
.
.·.

MRS. FILBERT'S

'

RGARINE

TOnight, Mon., Tues.
April B-10
Double Feature Program

" CURIOUS FEMALE"
Three

nu b il e pu ssycats
yearning for lo ve.

- Pius" SWEDISH
. FLY GIRLS"
Every· ma'n should met · a
high-fl ying stewa rdess.

Rafed( R)

1-lb. Quarters

5X7

•.

'
'·

CAMPBELL'S .

-.

TRANSFER ASKED
COLUMB US - Applications
. for new. liquor permits and for
tran s fers of owner_ship or
locatioil are b~ing proces·s ed by
the Ohio Department of Liquor
: Control. Among the transfer
applications is that of Keith
Riggs, . dba as the Martin
Res taurant, to Helen Haddox ,
dba as the Martin Restaurant,
Middleport . ·

WARNER AT WORK
POMEROY - Real estate
appr&lt;::~i se r Denver \Vijrn er has
begUn working in Salisbury
Tow'ns hip , Meigs Auditor
Gordon Caldwell said Saturday . The appraiser iS ca rrying
an identifica ti on card signed
by the auditor lind bea ring the
auditor's phone number. He
drive s a tan .. Dodge car.
Anyone having any ques tions
as t o the authenticity of a
person l' laiming to be an ·ap.
praiser should telephone the
county &lt;mditor 's offi ce.

CLASS

NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

of'74

EXPERIENCED PROFESSIONAL PHOTOCRAPHER
ASSURES NATURALlY EXPRESSIVE POSES

THEY TAUGHT MORE;

Naturally there i~ no o bl igation to buy additional photographs ; however ; e~i ro
prin t$ ore aVailable in vorious ·sizes o.nd styles at reo~onoble price ~ .

THI\N rHEY LEARNED!
IRI--'.~ -1
ICOLOR I

•

ALL AGES - LIMIT ONE PER SUBJECT OR TWO PER FAMIL Y

PLU'S ·

J!!I~

I

Groups or. Individuals at $1.00 per Additional Subject.

G. C. Murphy Co.
350 Second Avenue
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
•

Tues., Wed. &amp; Thurs., Apri l 10-11 -12
10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

.J

.

Jack Lemmon in his most
important dramatic

0 I

I

I

12 ·t ///
I

rolesince

'The Days of
Wine and Roses:·

GRATE GAVE SINK
SYRACUSE - In a recent
report of a 3yrac use Council
meeting it was reported that
auxiliar'y members purchased
a stove, refrigerator and sink.
'The s tove and refrigerator
were purchased by the
auxiliary, but the new· double
.bow l stainless steel .sink. was
donated by Arnold Grate of
Rutland.

___,...
PARAMOUNT PIC1\JRE.S CCIRPORATlOt-t
and FlLMINAYS. INC ~)Men~

.ro&lt; LEM.M(t\1
111

A MARTIN fW'ISOHOfF Prodl&gt;C!IOrl

·Say "G ood -bye,''

~-------;

D i·:d }'lllfL :dl din.:d·'·:

kn owing tha i you' ve

tlu: d rcnpl·M \1,1}' lt Jf, Jil ~

"SAVE TI-iE TIGER"

m;~Jcsomc IX!op lcvcry
happy. And rh;~l yuU·\'C
spe nt vcrr l ittle. nc-

long di 51!1 1l&lt;..c. y.,u'll

co·stan1ng JACK GiLFORD

cnj11)' )dll r e,dl r11nn: 1f
. }Otl . f !J

11hml l

nor \\'orr~ " ilig
d11..: ur~ l .

CtltJsc long distance is
cheaper tha n yrju t h. ink,

S:•y .. I k i lo." I If the pccoplc
) 1111 u d I g1.:t ~:xdtcd

Cartoon

h t l 'ilti '&gt;C i 1 ' ~

Ti:ll C\·crywlc how
nna.h you love 1hcm.

lo ll):; d i-, IIITH.t',

Tl 11:m tu

n.: lax

htC;l~r.~c

ot\ ehc,tpt- r than thty

.'

.

lh·mini~cc

.
•

i.·

• • •

"

39C

CHASE I SAIIBORII

·cOFFEE
1-lb.
Can

97e

·•

MARGARINE fEATURES
. Sh•·······"•· c Soft Golden t·.:,~:·· . . . ~: 49 c
PEPPERONI o;:'" .. ~-~·~::•··99c Soft Whipped 1-111. 1 ':.~~·· 45c
BLEACH
1/2-Gal.
Bottle

Pleas~nt

37e

BO PEEP
CLOUDY

FRESH UP

AMMONIA

Deodorant Soap

~~i.

AP~IL 9-10-11-12

•
•
•

•

We- are remodeling so that we can better
serve you ..• our customer•

•

Watch 'ForOilr Ad Thursday!

MRS. FILBERT'S

JENO'S PIZZA MIXES
.
14%·•·· 53
CHEESE Sloolo
MAGIC

Point
...

ll -Or . Pk!l .

•MON.
•TUES.
•WED.
•THURS.

.for .

"'•·

"Hoine Of Good Shoes Since 1903"

.•

• • • • , • • • •

26e

Pkg. of

,u

4
5-oz. Ban ·

sse

.'

..

vm1 :1 rC:: and wh:rt
h nw i nc~pcnsin~
you\•c hccn up 10.
L"trJiing lOll)-: d i)I:Hl(l'
i..'i, pJir·d he h;rnJ.:inA .
II]' fl,t;ht llD\o\1•
nlt t yoll'vc still got
7 min ui6 ldL

.

.

When you examine a.
10-minute long distance
call, you'll see' that it gives
you enough time to say
and hear just about
'everything you want to
say and hear.
·
Without costing very
much. Provided you follow
a few simplnuJes,

Jus,t dial your out-ofstate long distan ce calls
direct, without opera tor
&lt;J.ssistan ce. And make your
calls• between 5 and
11 .P.M., Sunday. through
Friday. (Rates are even
lower after 11 P.M. and

@

on weekends.)
That way you'll
pay a lot less for long
distance calls.
Even 10-minute ones.
Some typi cal costs tor
10-minu te s'ilf-dialed
s tation calls, placed

.ohioBell

between 5. and II P.M.,
Sunday through Friday, arc:
Seattle, $2.60; Los Angeles,
$2.60; Dallas, $2.1 0;
Atlanta, $2.00; Boston,
$2.05; New York, $2.00;
St. Lo uis, $2,00; Las Vegos,
$2.5.0; Miam·i, $2.10 and .
Denver, $2.10.
All .rates plus tax .

UseYour Phone For All It~ Worth.
"'Dial-it-youueif. r~tes _a pply o n· Out~of-state dial~ ca lls ( wit hn.u t 1ope rat~r assiS~a ~ce) fr~~- ~esidencc ·and ~'usincss _rh~nes anywhere.~ in lhc _U.S. 1
(except AWka an'd Hawaii) , and on calls-placed wuhan operamr where d1rect dtal mg factJmes a re not a\·atla,ble. Dtai ·H·yourself r:n e-, du .not ·11•11-)'
to pcr YIR· to~pe rson , coin, h o~el ~ue'tr cn .. ltr ,,,nl
llt t 1ll.s_antl on call! charged tv Mm th,·r .11umher,

•'

•'.

'

·.

Second ·&amp; Olive Sl,
(

•

WILL

•

11:11 C\'. t: ryonc how ·

CLOSED

"

SUGAR RINGS .•... -~ •.. ..- .• , _..,._,.,_•••· 39c
SUGAR CINNAMON RINGS .. ..• .,., :.,,. 39c
BUTTER FLA:VORED RINGS . . . . " ·'·" · •••· 39c
COCONUT BARS .. .. ................. ••• 39c

Find 1m t lww
cvcryunt: is :~ nJ whal
thq··n· bl'cn trp to,

.
H you didn ' t knoll'

a liuh.•.

BE

LUNCHEON AND
SANDWICH LOAF
12-oz. Cans

N.B.C.,COOKIE FEATURES

422 Main St.

WE

'·I

BILTMORE

•

0

:··"

1-lb. 5-oz. Cans

•

SATISFACTION
GUARANTEED
OR
YOUR MONEY
REFUNDED

Tonighttfiril
Wedm!~day

ttl!

PORK I BEANS

-~

PROFESSIONAL
PORTRAIT

TO THEil UFE IS ABAU

tll ink.l

Ben Frankl-in Co.

'liolated their c-on tra ct ·.1:ith li-re
network.

./w 'v '

,-., ( ,1t1Hrll1 Nrql1llr

10-lb. bag

pionship. They were Cindy C.hampionships.
Patterson and Dalelene Scott.
Two other Riggs Royal KadTw o other Kad-ettes who WO!L,...ette members-taking part in
the firs t places in the Ohio the state contest but not
S~a t e Sen ior Juet Cham . pictured, are Teres~ Carr and
p10nship~ are Diana Guthrie Suzy Goebel of Tuppers Plains.
a nd Louann Newell of Chester.
The Riggs . Royal Kad-ette
Diana Guthrie: of Coolville Baton Corps is ins tructed by
also won the first place title in Mrs; Judy Riggs.
th e Ohio State Jr . Hoop
Dalelene Scott also won third
~wirling .C~ampionship , and place in Juv enile hoop in the ·
ftfth place ·in ""2~baton, and state co nte s t and . Diane
fourth place in th e Flag Guthrie, Cindy Patterson and
Twirling Championships for Oaielene Sco tt were recent
the s tate.
winnerS of the . Little Miss
J oAnn Fick of Chester WOn Athens County and Miss Teen
firs t place in Beginning Fancy of Athens and Meigs Counties.
Strutting and ·fifth. place in
In termediate Solo fn the Jr.
Divisions of the Official State

MASON DRIIJE-IN
'.' 1

The slick of patent, and there you are:
the great iook·o f a low -heeled·wear-with•all. You'll
hardly find an o ccasion o r an outfit where you
· couldn't wear_it. (W ho'd not want to , it's so
comfortab le) . Try t his Florsheim shoe for size and style.

,stH.~w

TONIGHT
ONLY

TH E OA i l V SENTI,., El

T EIIM S 0&lt; SUfiSC IItP li!hl
I~ &lt;811'n dooly ~ "" &gt;u~ a• • \C r ""'

State of Ohio. County of Gallia, ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me th·ls Sth day Of April, 1973 .
and I he'r ebY cert ify that I am not an officer or dir ector of thiS:
~nk.
·
Daniei:M. Evans, Notary Public
M y Comm iss ion expires March 12 •. 1974.

CLOSED SUNDAY,· 252 THIRD AVENUE

(i 'I II• POh l , Qh•o , · ~~l l

i

cancellatwn of ltH.:'

9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. MONDAY tHRU SATURDAY

;1n1

hluta • • E'n'-' ' " o'o ''"'''~ c• •,.. "'' '''"g
mott" •• PomeroY O~•o P~•· OU •(t •

Dean H. Davis ,

OPEN DAILY:

PuOhlhfG ••••, •• • "-~• • ~v•~·n~ ., ~ ~~~
Ulu •~ • ~ ~'"" "" C lil~l """"9• P~ ' " • '

I H CourT S t
PomtiOh , 0
o51t9
Pul;&gt;li lhU •« • ; w eHO~ ' t•tn . n ~ "uopt

sUbsequent tapes of the 'ierJf'
Th e Smothers f'Ortt•r.il 1

I

QUITE A UNIQUE SITUATION in the rural community of
Poriland. Porlland has four families in which a son or daughter
· was born on one of their parent's bir\hday anniversary.
of Vinton in the State of Ohio •nd Domestic Subsidiaries at the
They are Mrs. Shirley Johnson, born on her father 's birthday
close of business on March 28, 1973.
(Bill
McKelvey ) January 28; Mrs. Maxine Price, born on her
ASSETS
mother's bir\hday, (Etbel Swan) July 10; Miss Pam Larkins,
DR. WILLIAM K. EASLEY
Cash and due from banks - - - - - ••.
- - 5331 , ~93A6
- U.S. Trea'sury securities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 106.025.00
born on her mother's biriM!IY (Donna Larkins ) Nov, 7, and Miss
Other loans - - - - - - - - - . - ... - - - . - - . 154,901.15
Graduate School of Nor\heast Beverly Price, born on her lather's bir\hday (Hubert Price) on
Bank premisf;'!S, furn iture and fixtures, and
Louisiana Universl ty. He will Sept. 7.
. . . 4.095.00
· other assets representing bank premises
speak on one phase of the
. . 243.75
Other assets - · - - - - - - - - - - - TOTAL ASSETS . . . . . . . . . . -- · . ·
1596.858.36
deve lopment of Ma.shall ~ . CONGRATULATIONS TO BOB EASTMAN, formerly of
LIAB.tLITIES
University .
Pomeroy, who has been named ·manager of the new Kroger Store
Demand depo·sits of ln.d ividuals. partnerships,
Reservations to the dinner at Winfield, W. Va ., which starts Its grand opening observance
and cor poratiOns ; . - - . - . . . - • - . .
$320,916 .02
Deposi ts of Un.ited States Government - - - - - - - · 903.94
may be made by calling Mrs. today.
Deposi ts of States and political subdivi sions .
· · 171.788 .51
Bertha Filson, 675-2163, or Mrs.
The son of Mr. and Mrs . Uland Saxton of Pomeroy, Bob
Certified and offi ce r s' checks, etc.
- · · - · - - · - 2,300 .99
&lt;:arol Miller , 675·1089, by worked at the Kroger Store in Pomeroy~\'eral years before
TOTAL DEPOSITS
. . . · · · · $495 ,909 .46
(a I.-Total demand deposi ts , . . - - - $495,909 .46
Friday, April 6th. The cost of becoming manager at Gallipolis, Ashland, Ky. , and Ironton, \he
TOTAL LIAB ILI TIES .
· · · · · · · $495,909 .46
the dinner will be $4 per per· latter being his assignment before the Winfield job.
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
son. Alumni are encouraged to
Mrs. Eastman is the former Sheila Strauss of Pomeroy. Tbey
Reserve for bi=id debt losses on-loans. .:
bring
their
spouses
to
the
have
two sons, Kevin, 6, and Brent, 10. The Eastmans have been
(set up pursuant to IR S rulings) - . -.. ·
- - - - - · $1 ,000.00
TOTA L RESERVES ON LOANS
dinner. Even though many living at Teas Valley near Ironton . They expect to be loctated
$1.000 ,00
AND SECURITIES · · . · · ·
·
alwnni were contacted in the no'w at Coal Grove. ·
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
past 10 days, unless a definite
Common stock- tota l par va lue · . - · · - · - - - $25, 000.00
No. shares authorized 500
reservation was .made, tQose
UNDER THE DIRECTION oi Mrs. Phyllis Hackett, faculty
No. shares outstanding 500
wishing to attend should call member, who plays a great piano, students of the Bradbury .
. . 45,000 .00
Surplus · · - · · - - · ·· · · --, - school, a fifth and sixth grade education facility now, have
Undivi ded profits . . . - .. . - - . 29,948,90 · one of the above persons.
. . . $99.948 .90
To stay on the active list, started rehearsalS for an operetta to be given this spring. In·
TOTA L c., PITAL ACCOUNTS · · · ·
TOTAL "lAB ILI T IES. RESERVES. AND
alwnni may maintain mem- cidentally, some 13 stodents of the school presented a patriotic
$596,858 .36
CAP ITAL ACCOUNTS · · · · · · · ·
bership in. the association by type program at the Meigs County PTA Council Thursday night. .
MEMORANDA
paying_ $1.00 1972-73 mem- The students really brought forth a great deal of favorable
Average ot total ,deposit s tOr the 15 calendar
days ending with ca ll date . . . - - - . - $424,843.55
bership dues to treasurer Carol comment with their excellent presentation.
Average of tot a I loan s for the 15 calendar
Miller. Any person who has
days ending with ca ll date - · - - - - - · · - - $164,448.40
r eceived credit hours from MU
THE BEND 0' THE RIVER Garden Club is carrying out a
.
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA·
Pledged assets and securities loaned (book value) :_
is considered- an alwnnus .
· program w beautify the Letart Falls Cemewry. Included in the ·
U.S: Government obligations, direct and guaranteed,
plan is the purchase of flowering shrubs which are to be used all
$59 ,000 .00 . --------------~---pledged to secure deposi ts and other liabilities ...
along
the fence. Anyone wishing to help financially with the
TOTAL · ·
· · · · · · · · · · · · . . ' $59,000 .00 . :
SU t\DA l
program is asked to mail a donation to Mrs. Edward Simpson,
i Tll\IES'St;,, TINEL
Racine, club secretary. Dogwood and evergreen trees already
h l ~f&lt;l • •••• ~~ n &lt;JH ~; on~ o~.a
I. Ruth Casto, Cashier, of the above-nam ed bank, do I V oPu~
lin P uD"'"'~9 Co
•
I
C .O. U. IP OLtS 0.\IL' T~IBU '- "
have
been planted as a part of the beautification project.
solem nl y affltm that thi s report of condition is true ·and correct,
to the best of my know ledge and belief.

Canceled in t969 when they ran

afoul of the network , won a
. $776;000 jud8ment against CBS
~--~iday . The entertainers had
sought $to million in the breach
or contract suit arising from
the ··sn{otht'rs Brothers
Comedy Hour. " CBS fi led a
cross complaint demanding $!million.
·
The Smolhers and CBS had

THE VINTON
BANK.ING OOMPANY .
. .

I

comedian David Steinberg
whose " Sermonette'' religious~~­
spoor aired on the show drew
unfavorable letters and caused
CBS to carefully pre--screen

or

whose tele"ision shawl was

POMEROY __: Anyone lor some roses of Sharon?
Roscoe Fowler, who lives on Locust St. In Middleport, is
clearing out roses of Sharon near a fence on hls property. It's an
ideal time for transplanting, Fowler reports, and the plants are
available for free. Anyone interested can contact Roscoe at 9922980 to make arrangements. Incidentally, Roscoe and wife,
Mildred, have just retwned from a three month Florida visit.

0~

!angled often during_ the 2.,_
year run
the show overportions which the network
said 'were in bad taste. One of
the
segments
involved

Tom ·and Dick Smothers, the

I

·

State Rank No. 266

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CO"! DITtON

I.OS ANGELES I UPI I -

1

1
1

PT. PLEA..ANT - William

........~~===~

! -~----

1

·

Smothers brothers win $776,000 from network

'

.

·-

Gallipolis, Ohio
'

•
.,....... _

\

�'

•
•

4- The Sunday 'T'ime.;- Sentinel, ~unday, April8,1973
SEEN ANOHEA RO

formerly or Racine, is a patient

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Addie
Mae Brown, Mason, IV. Va.,

room nwnber is . 210 *and she
would i:ippreciate cards.

at Holzer Medical Center. Her

Vernon, Pa .; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Kaminski, Virginia
Beach, Va.;·. Mrs. Joanie

·Patty Dailey tp
wed Mr. Snodgrass
GALLIPOLIS -

Mr. and

Mrs. Golder Dailey announce
the engagement ol their second
daughter, Patty Lynn, to
James Thomas Snodgrass, son
of Mrs . Esta Snodgrass,
Gallipolis
and
James

SimmS, Pleasant Hills, Pa.,
'and Mrs. William Sim},
Greenwich, Ohio.

Snodgrass. Patty will bea 1973
graduate of Southwestern High
School. Tom will be a 1973
graduate of Gallia Academy
High School. An August

wedding is being planned.

Forgiveness is topic at
.ladies prayer group
Sunday Only!
ACETATE TRICOT

Sunday Only!
FOLDING

'1.6~

Regular

GALLIPOLIS
"The
Bigger
Some body's • in
Forgiveness" was this week's
discussion for th e Ladi es
Prayer Group of the GalliJ)&lt;llis
Christia n Ch urch, Jed by Mrs.
John Elardo.
The scriplUI'e used for Ibis

GIRLS
PANTIES

CAMP
·STOOL·

Size 4 to 14

lesson was taken from Mat·

¢

thew 6: 12.
Th ~

Mrs. Keith Carpenter was

welcomed as a new member.
A discQssionwas held on the
meaning~of

baptism.
· Sentence prayer was given
. by Mrs. J ohn Ela rdo, Mrs.
Je rr y McMa ni s, Mrs. Bill

Marrah, Mrs. Richard Moyer,
Mrs. Keith Carpenter , Mrs.

Church, F airview Subdivision.

GALLIPOLIS- The French
The public is invited .
City Ca mp e r s ·held thei r
monthly meeting Thursday,
AprilS, at the Buckeye Electric
Building with 19 present.
· :rhe m ee ting was called to
order by ·president, Harland
Sander s, and pra yer was led by
Jim King. A report was glven
. by Art Wroblewski confirming
reservati ons· (or the August
GALLIPOLUS - Miss Carol
camp-&lt;lut at Old Man 's Cave.
Jane Hanson became the bride
Field direc tor, J erry Jordan of
of James B. Blank March 3 at
'the 0-Kan Wanderers, made an
7 :30 '· p .m . in St. Pete r 's

Fin11l Sale Day! ·

WOMENS
PANTS
OFF
REGU

announcement that Harland

Sanders has been appointed

PRICE

field director of this area .
1t was voted upon and passed
to continue the monfhly

AU 3 STORES ARE OPEN

meetings of this club through
. the swnmer, .at a different
place each rnonlh with a
potluck supper.
Visitors were Mr. and Mrs.
Hoke Robinson , Gallipolis, and
Mrs . . Jerry Jordan , Point ·
Pleasant.
Refreshments were served
by Bill and Mildred Seyfried .
The club will give a goingaway dinner party for Dr. ·and

-Sunday Only!

SHOPPING
REMINDER

Episcopal Church , Gallipolis.
Rev. Albert MacKenzie officiated at the double ring

changed to a gold paisley print
dress of treva polyester topped
with a gold polyeste• tunic with

19 Edgemont Dr., Gallipolis
and the groom is.the son of J\Jr.
and Mrs. Sy.lvester Blank , 581
Old Clairton Rd., Pittsburgh,

C1uh

¢

Mothers hostparty
RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Grand e Mothers League hosted

a bowlir.g party for

their

children Sunday, followed by

A DISCO\! NT
O[PA RT M f. NT ~TOitl

PT. PLEAS A NT-MASON.
. SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

~~ews

~·~

was lovely in a gown ~f cotton

yea rs as Second Class Petty
Officer and is now employed as
test engineer at OVEC.

lace and organza . The bodice of
the dress featured a high
collar, a bib of col\on lace,
accented with small covered

Out of town guests were Mr.
and Mrs. Emerson Christofel ,
Mr. and Mrs. Allred Beam,
Helen J . Allen, John R. Stod-

'

::,t:,

.

\...-'

...,._,..,.'

J

Kelly Clark , Cheri · Houck,
Kelly
Pullins,
Annette

* Complete Delivery

* Quality
• Schult

• Holly Park

• Baron

• Buddy

• Eagle

See .

See

Our All
·Electric
Mobile Homes..

Our All
PAUl. &amp; MADGE NORTHUP

"''10N£
ll)f /6&gt; ) 101)0

QJIIIJIIIJP'

Electric
Mobile Homes.

• o&gt;Nl ~~(/I!&gt;A .. f , ,',[~1 Y l i&gt;CI"'&lt; A n~~~~

Schull Mobile Aomes

Appalachian Power Joins In Bringing You- This. Message.

John Reese was appointed
chairman of a committee to
make a rran gements for
planting a tree in April. Mrs,
Lanier moved, and Mrs.

and sortness to an interesting

Wymond Bradbury seconded,
that the club have a rummage

for birds .

view. Trees and other forms of
vegetation have some effect on
the transmission of soWld.
They provide food and shelter
Space is no.t a problem.
Container gardening can be
conducted in a sirigle pot on a
windowsill. Most any ki nd of
container can be used, wood,
concrete, metal, glass, plastic
and ceramic. Light is the rnpst
critical requirement.
Ornamental gardens. haVe
always been"-Bn importa nt par t
of American culture, but urban
living ha s brought a change in

style with a greater emphasis
on intensive use of limited
space. There is now a demand
for dramat.ic visual .appeal.

buttons, and'. lantern sleeves.
The a•line skirt was appliqued
withbandsoflaceandfeatured
a ruffled flounce at the

mine the traffic patterns you
need· to serve them. This will
all r elate to. the planting. Then

Club advisor is Eugene

president, Mark Harrison: vice

Elliott. Club members present

president, Oeoise Shockley;

were John Erwin, L. A.
Guinther, Brian McDade,
David Dailey, David Mink,

news reporter, Michael Fulks;
secretary, Sheryl Fraser:
treasurer, Cindy Corless; song

Brian Mink, Ernie Erwin, Mike
Delille, Eugene Rut~. Alan
Rutz and Gus Rutz .

leader, Becky Pa uly; health
and safety, Lynn 'smith and

U&amp;i Saunders' home on Lower

Bonice led devotions. Mary

River Rd.

Cox

had

charge

of

son, John Hutchison, RiC ky
Seag raves, Dar rell Dotson,
Diana
Ten y,
J effery
Seagraves, Lou Cox, J udy Cox,
Lar ry Bonice, Sharon Bonice,
"Timmy Seagr aves, Tony
Dotson and DaVid Bonice .
Guests present were Miss
Patty Bonice, Eddi e Cox, !\!iss
Sha ron Spencer.. Mrs. Ruth

Dotso n, Mrs. Ann BOn ice,
Ma ry Ellan Dotson and Amy

Jame'S

D. aansOn,

Hen-

length mantilla was edged in

dersonville, Tenn. ; Mrs. John

cottol] lac::~ . . !he bri~e's
colonial bouquet was of white
carnations, red sweetheart
roses·, baby's breath and white

Spahn, Susan, J'ohnny
Stevie, Monongahela,
Mrs. Raymond Beech
Karen, · Finleyville, P8.;

streamers . The bride also

Joel Little .and Joey, Belle.

in lace. Lace triin and red satin

meeting adjourned .

•

GALLIPOLIS
SAVINGS
AND

LOAN

co.

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Cancer Fund Drive
Variety Show had it.s ups and
Liz Rodney presented a jazz
downs Friday evening, but the dance to the tune of Neil
program net~d $29l for the Diam ond 's ''Walk on Wa ter ",
drive which will begin and youn ger s tudents of

residEmtial carivassing April
24.
Performers, introduced by

Dorothy Grirfin presented an
"I Spy" ballet routine to the
"Dance of the Marionettes''.

Bud McGee, included, baton

Older students presented a

· twirlers,.dancers, singers and
musicians .
Ann Rieser's _}atonists
opened the program with four

numbers, each done by a
diiferent ·age group, to the

strains of " Love Potion
NwTiber Nine'\ "Candy Man",
"Popcorn," and a · poompon
routine· to Elton John 's

SAVINGS

"Crocidile Rock".
GAHS · sophomore

• • • •

Lisa

James sang ' ~If, . and "Old
Fashioned Love Song " ,

2 Year, Savings

Serving ae .best man for , the

bridegroom was Joel Little,
Pittsburgh, Pa. Ushers were
Michael Beech, nephew of the

Certificates

5,000

1

minimum
Savings Certificates
$1,000 minimum
1 Year

followed by a ballet by Paula
Covert, 13 year-&lt;lld student of
Jill Moore. Gallia Academy

theatrical touch to the prog ram

members present were Steve, featured a two-tiered wedding
Tommy and Robbie Moses, cake, de-corated with roses,
Larry Cater, Steve Arrowood, heartshaped ring boxes and a

Interest paid quarterly on all certificates
Deposit by the. lOth of the month and earn from the first.
Interest available monthly on accounts of $1,000 or more

" This Nearly Was Mine" and

solo c hampion Ellen Chambers

J erry and J ohna
Hawks and Annette

"Some Enchanted Evening "

perform ed

trom the musical "South

number.

a

solo

CARNIVAL

..

.

by Dick Tumer.

I

··· .

program.

David Bryan and Patty
Graham talked about the J . L. .
Round-up. Mrs . Graham announced camp da~ s. The club
started a pr~ject on ,;Me, You
and Others". The next meeting
will be held at the Junior
Club advisors are Mr. and
. Mrs. Glenn Graham, Miss
Regina Grubb and Mr. and
Mrs. Paul D. Niday . Club

i

.. ~

members present were David,
Mark and Pam Bryan, Carlos,
Cathy, Chip, Chris, Gary and ·
. Randy 'CaldweU, Jerry Eutsler, Bobby and J oey F os ~r ;
David and Patty Graham,

Bonnie, Jessie, Matthew, Paul
and Roseanne Johnson·, Debbie
'and Marc Kinder, Kim and Lyn
Niday, Gary and Robin Nibert,
Cinde aod Tande Pope, Lloyd,
Ruth and Marie Wood, Taode
Woodward, Mike Hemphill and

Paul Duncan·.
Guests were Mr . and Mrs.
Herman Wood, April. Graham
an d Gwin Niday.

GAL,LIPOLIS, OHIO
ltrJ

"For a subatltute driver he looks pretty
. upertenc!ec1 to mer•

Lang; , by Charles Rowe.

J.

· .

·

GALLIPOLIS - ':fr .. and
Mrs. ~ellie George, 417 F irst

Ave., ar e announci ng the
marriage of their daughter,
Marie, to Charl es Conger , Rt.
1, Ewington.
The ceremony was at the
home of the groom 's parents,
Mr . and Mrs. Clinton Conger.
The Reverend fu1 lph Spires
read Lhe vows .at 5:30 p.m . on
Saturday, March 31. Only the

REEDSVILLE -

Hos t.s of

lhc Ri verview-Ga rden Club for

the Mafc h ineeling were Mrs.

Ann Bonice and Annabelle
Seagraves .
Club memflers are Timmy
Seag r a ve.s, Ri c hard
Seagrav es, Rita Seagraves,
Bryan Seag rav es, Jeffr ey
. Seagraves, John Hutchinson,
Darrell Dotson, Tony Dotson,
Larry Bon'ice , Sharon Bonlee,
Diana Terry, Regina Terry,

Officers
elected;.
are
president, .Julie- Hall; viceprcsJdent, Linda Ho1ley ;
secreta ry, Diane Swain; .Judy Cox aod Lori Cox. Guest.s
tr eas urer, Teresa J~m es; .pre sent wer e _ Miss Pa tt y
news reporter , Gaill ytm Bonice and Eddie Cox.
Hedrick ; devotions, Jeff
Sanders and recreation and
SOng, Tammy Swain and Paula _
Butler . ·The neXt m¢eting will --::--:-;;-;;;-o;:-be April 12 at 7:30 p .m . at
A R B
Ter esa Jan)es' house.
By Pl!IL l'ASTORE'f'
Club advisors ar e Reda

a

Fowler and Virginia James.

suit and h~r corsagC was white
carnations. After the cere.mony
the guests we re served wedding ca ke and punch.
The bride is well known in
Gi!llipolis where she has been
emph1yed.as a practica l_ nurse.
The groom is a farmer and for
&amp;e\•cral year,s o p~ra ted a fleet
of trucks. They a'rc at home at
Ht. 1, Ewington.
\

s

Always be t he last one
out of th e shop , and. th ey' ll

Club ·members present were start to check on yo u when
Julie Hall, Linda Holley, Diane t he typew ri ters begi n t.o disSwal n, · Teresa. James, Jeff appea r.
.;&gt;
•:' ' ':0.
Sanders, Tanuny SWain , PauJa

THANK YOU
FOR YOUR
RESPONSE

v
.
OUR

..

Riveroiew. gardeners
meet with Mrs. Myers -

.

Pope, Janet Stewart and Robin
Williams.

Mrs. Ross . . McGinness and
Lester Lambert.
The bride wore a teal blue

Wat·rting.''
Roll call was answered by
members reading a poem of
spring. Plans were made to
make arrangements [or the
spo1·ts banquet at Eastern High
School and an Arbor Daj'
progr·a m which would be at ·
Rive.rv_ie w ' School
was
disc ussed.
(Club members plan to tour
Stahl 's Nursery cmd dine out
fv r the 1\p ril meeting.
For the program, Mrs. Roy
Hannwu presented (l~l ar·ticle
about cacti.
She explain ed the "care,
diseases, and how the cactus
plant stores its water 'a nd
distribut ed color ful J.e afl ets

· about cacti to the ··m ember~.
She
presented
Mrs.
Gt·ossnickle and Mrs. Lyle
Balderson each with a potted
cactus.
M rs. _

F rank .
presented an article, ''·For
Color With a Bang;-· Planl
Dahlias,'' Which described the
kinds of dahlias and flow to
plan t and fertilize the plants.
G am ~s were conducted by
Mrs. Gene Wilson during the
social h,gur with several prizes
awarded. Rcfteshments were
served by Mrs. Brown and
Mrs. Myers to 13 members.
Mrs. Wilson won the door prize.
Ha rli ss

ANNIVERSARY
SALE .
CONTINUES
ALL THIS WEEK

10%
RAIN CHECK

FREE

-- WITH EVERY PURCHASE

•••

SHOP FOR NOW!
SELECT FOR EASTER
USE OUR NQ-COST
LAY-AWAY

The Store with More
Gallipoli s

A nig la Owl. is r1. felLow
. who dpe.'trl, ' l. .(Jive a hbo t

(rbout what time he gets
m.

'

'

Eithe r the p 1at e s are

talkiid about the projects that la rge r or th e p o r t i o n s
are avaiiable to 4-Hers. Of- - small er a t th e local bea ner y.
fioe rs wili be elected at the
' '' '"
next
. m
. eeting, April 3 at Cox's
If you can k~ep yo,ur

tempe r, the rest of u s

residence.

Club advisors are Mary Cox,

would be much·obliged.

Kim

baton

promptu, Opus 92 in Eb'' by music ·including a " Boogie
Shubert and a medley of . the, Woogie".
themes from "Love St0ry".!.800
'

,;

PI:IONE 446-3832

Mark Harrison , Marilu Simon,

Triangle ~H Club met March
31 with Ruth and Lloyd Woods.
Pacific" .
The program ended with. the 1
David Bryan presided. Charles
In his. final performance for . G~rfield Barbecue Gang , a
Caldwell led devotions. David
th~ fund drive, ·GAHS senior : group of amateur musicians
Bryan had char ge of the
Brant Adams, .played " lnt- · presentin g some old time

•

•

and Ma e Kemp . Old m •mbers

dance-twirl routine and state

THE GALLIPOLIS .SAVINGS
and lOAN COMPANY
OPPOSITE POST OFFICE

May i. Anothe r th ing di scussed
was eommunjty projects and it

P.

•

photography.
Dona ld M}'ers and Mrs. Walte r
We are ha vlng a bake sa le
Brown at the new home of Mrs.
April 2LT)le next p1 eeting will
be April 24 at Diane Bailey's Myers. Devotions were Conduc ted by Mrs .. Her man
house at 7:30 p.m. - ·
Club advisor is Carolyn Gross nickl e wh o gave a
·reading, ' 'Bread of Life," and
J effe rs. Club members present
by Mrs. Claremont Harris, who
we r e Debbie Baker, Jud y
read a poe m wl)ich he1·
Baker Ca rolyn Baker , Tami
.
gra ndson, Bob Gros.snickle,
. Pope, Diane . Bailey , Debbie
Stout , Ca r olyn Stout ; Kim had written, " A Sinner's

AnYone jnterested should
contact either Mrs. Jacque
GJa.ss burn or Mi ss Ka th y
Deckard . Dues must be pa id by

se~ior Howard McDaniels sang

·~

\Vheldon. Mrs. Jack McNeal, bride.
Diana Forgey and Mrs .
For her wedding trip to
,Waunita Wood were g uests.
Washing ton , D. C., Mrs. Blank

devotions. caroly n J effers. had
charge of the program. Kim
Pope had a demonstration on

·· Fairgrounds April 2B.

· Save.Any Amount Any Time

Fairchild and Lori and Carolyn Pam Laufer, cousin of the

Baker 's home : Carolyn· Jeffers
presided. Oebbie Baker led

by presenting an excerpt from , present were Brenda Cornwell,
"You're A Good Man, ~ harli e 1 Risa Sexton , Sara Ables ,

'

white roses.
.Hostesses for. the reception
were Mrs. George Hout and
Mrs. Clayton Miller. Mrs.
William Sims, Mrs . Bill
Hanson, Mrs . James D.
Hanson and Miss Marlene
Fraley presided at the table
and guests were registered by

Cadinus Roadrunners 4-H
Club met March 28 a t Carolyn

i 1.

arranged

George,
Charle-s-Eonger wed

-

Twilighters ~H Club met
Ab.l es.
Cynthi a
Corli ss Marc h 29 at Teresa James'
presided, J ohn Rhodes led , house. Julie Hall presided.
devotions and Cynthia Corliss J\Jrs. Reda Fowler had charge
oi the program.
had 'charge of the program.

Mic helle Vallee, Chris tia Stout,
Marilyn Layne , Cindy Corliss,

John Morrissey : Invocation for

Goldsbury, Ta mmi
Anderson, Lee Ann Whitley,
Marilyn Layne , J erry Thacher, · immedi&lt;J tc fami lies were
Treasa Barcus, Usa Saurx:leis, present. The atte ndants were
Ca rl Elliott, Oebbie Barron,
Steve Clary and Tom Beck.

was thought by every member
number done to The Car- that one project should be work
penter•s " Bless The Beasls and on the horse show ring at the Butler and Gaillynri Hedrick.
the Children".
·l fairgrounds. Next meeting will · Dona James was a guest.
In s tr~ ctr ess, D oroth y · be at th e residence of Mr. and
Centerpoint · 4-H Club met
Grif[in, who holds an M.A.: Mrs. Gilbert Corliss AprillB at ,
March 30 with Mary Cox, Rt. 2
degree in dan ce .from Mills 7:30p .m.
·
College, pe rf ormed an inClub a d visoFs-er-e·~ Mrs. Pa triot. Mrs. J ackie Graham
terpr~tive ballet to "Sunrise, Jacque GlasSbUrn and Kathy pre sided. Judy Cox led
Ja cki e
Sunset," fr om "Fiddler on the ) Decka1·d . New members devotions . Mrs.
Graham
had
charge
pf the
Roof' '.
.
1 present . were Linda · McCulty,
GAHS s tud ents add ed a EHen Frazee, Kathy Daniels program. Mrs. Jackie Graham

Passbook -Savings Accounts

LeWis, Sandra and .·Louella adorl1ed with two doves and

Lynn

residence of Mr. an d Mrs. Gene

Brown ".
Gloria Buck Wa lla ce' s
Junior Glo-Ettes performed a

'

Baf~ us ,

Biser Sexton, Tammi Frazer ,

the club, should do so by April

There is no charge for the'
concert. The public is lnvited to
attend . The bands are directed

f 1-

Club ·

Becky Pauly, J ackie Bittner ,
Robert Calhoun , J oyce Casto,

Variety show raises
cancer fund $291

and
Pa .;
and
Mrs.

THE
SIGN
OF
SAFE

featured white voile bodices
with victorian necklines edged

the

Lyrm Smith , Treasa

Caribeguine, Willis Schaffer.

Intermission. ·

to the Z&lt;xJ. Robert Martin and

Citadel

Band, Philip Gordon; Sounds

of the Carpenters, arranged J .
Cacavasi Selections from
Music Man, Meridith Wilson ,

M.tss
• Ma-¥1•e

Sheryl F raser, Cindy Corless,
Vickey Baxter, Craig Fisher ,

The constitution com~i ttee
is s tiU in prOgr'ess, but the
contents so far stimd approved .
During the -. meeting outfits
were discussed and d ub colors,
red and white, were chosen. A
. discussion on 4-H camp and ·
" Bria n 's Song' '· Brant a lso J un ior Lea de r ~ were held .
accorhpanied the soloists .
Anyone wh o would Hke to join

.carried a white lace hand-

twin sister of the groom. They
wore · identical gowns which

before

F.uion .

arrangedJ. D. Ployhar; Patrol
'76, Carrol M. Butt.s.

March, Frank Erickson ; Come

The Cadet Band -

members 'P~esent · were
Michael
Fu1ks,
Denise
Shockley, Mark Harrison,

Mark J ohnson, Wayne .John-

mosphere. Trees provide a
barrier against wind.

at-

Ann

program .
Officers . elected were
president, Ricky Seagraves;
vice-president, Mark Johnson;
treasurer , Wayne J ohnson;
secretary, Diana Terr y; song
leader , Lou Cox i news
re porter,
Judy
Cox ;
recreationa l · leade r , Bryan
Seagravesi health chairman,
John Hutchinson and safety
chairman, Timmy Seagra ves:
The next meeting will be held
May 7 at Mr s. Charles E. Cox:s
home.
-·
Club advisors are Mrs. Mary
E. Cox, Mrs. An nabe lle
Seag raVes and Mr.s. Ann
Bonice. Club members present
were ·Regina Terr y, Rita
Seagraves, Bryan Seagraves,

Emanuelina Pizzoto; Theme
From Gunsmoke, Koury
anangcd J . Kinyon; Aura Lee,

High School Concert Band - ·
The Kadiddlehopper March,
Red Skelton, arranged Ron
Roullier; Main Street U.S.A ..

program follows ;

Cl ub advisor is Miss Jane

the

BolithoandLo&lt;i,Clairlon, Pa.;
Mr. and Mrs. David Gower,
Nashville, Tenn. ; llir. and Mrs.

the

and

Mary Cox presided and Larry

Goldenrods 4-H

dard and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas

to

Barcus

Club metAprll3 at COx's home.

Cen~rpoint

by the hostess

the soil

Treasa

recreationa l leaders, Vicky
Baxter and Craig Fisher. The
next meeting will be held at

from

Chapel

crease the hli1Didity . Trees do a
petter job of reducing the
temperature than would a tent

Academy lnstrwnerital Music
Department will present a
concert at 2:30 this afternoon

Oues

Gollia Co unty 4-H Saddle
·c lub met April 4 at lhe

Gene Layton , Wayne and Lynn bride and groom under an

,.

Plant.s ca n be used for enframement, to provide scale

the surrouridings, they can · your area and IQ1ow the various
modify the climate and in- uses of these pla nts. Pick out a

would mean giving up 4-H, -- white bows.
Wlless there is a good excuse .
Following the ceremony a
· Club advisors are Hank reception was held at the home
Forgey and Janet Beman. Club of the bride. The bride's table

Halle y, Ruthie Arrowood,
Bobby and Larry Ruff, Melody
Tate, Mike Fortner , Steve and
Dwane Forgey, Jack and
Kevin Welker, Mary Ruff, Kim
Ball, Susan Elliott, Robert and
.Mary Wood, Pam Donnell,
· Paul, Lori ·and Rose McNeal,
Kent Walker, Sonny and Cherel

Purchase of a book for the
library was discussed. Mrs.

and national 4-H reports and

GALLIPOLIS - The ·GaUia

roller skating at Jackson. (
Denise Shockley talked about
·at GAHS. The concert wit!
Th~next meeting will be held · his three-year projects.
feature both the Cadet Band
the first Monday of May at will be $1 a year .
Eugene Elliott's house.
Of£icers eJected were 'and ttie High School Band. The

or umbrella covering the same
area . They move moisture

Forgey, advisor, said missing a rriink stole. Her corsage was ·
more than. three meetings white carnations tied with

* Complete Set Up

desira ble views.

theprog.ram. He also discuss~

sprin g arran gement with
rhythmic design.
Refreshmen ts were served

Brenda · William (Bill) Hanson, brother
Hood . Guests present were of the bride, Crown City.
Mrs. Marvin Pullins and Terri " For her daugh~r·s wedding
Mrs. Hanson wore a powder
Jo Steger.
blue -floor length gown of
polyester crepe. A corsage of
Centerville El ~ ctrons 4-H .white carnations ~nd bows .of.
Club met April 3 at Thurman white completed her ensemble.
Methodis t 'Church .. Mike
The groom 's mother, Mrs.
Fortner presided. Hank Blank, wore a fiOIJr length
Forgey and Janet Beman had gown of mint green polyester
charge of the program. Hank crepe , which she accented with

took At The ·Rest Then
Buy The BEST.

gave the treasurer's repor t.

Plants can malte l!fe more familiarize yourself with the
pleasant. Besides beautifying .· . plant material that does well in

Barbara · Hood and

-The More You look The
Better We ·LOOK~

to ease visual po llution by
hiding ugly objects or un-

a

Snowden , 'Charlen'e Bostic , ·groom, Finleyville, Pa.; and

I

Mrs. Melvin Smeltzer read
the minutes. Miss Marie N•.a l

Ann Fallon had charge of the
program. M.rs . Jackie Graham
talked about Ohio ~H report.s

Terry.

AND ·SEE THE SHOW

Club members present were
SharOn Scouten, Teresa Steger,

might otherwise ente r · the
streams. They can also be used

met April 2 with Eugene
Elliott. Gus Rutz presided, led
devotions and had charge of

th eme, a feeling, a m otif.
Mrs. Neff displayed a lovely

Kathy Davis and Tina Adkins.

· April 6th Thru 14th
Peoples Bank Lot

naming a plant with a weapon
for defense.

" One Hand , One

K &amp; K Mobile Home Says:

r ., fSfoW

helping to hold topsoil and
reducing the sediment that

maintain plants in different
envtron
· m en ts . __

buttons accented the bodices.
bara Hood " Putting Elastic The skirts were red and white
Through a Casing," and Kelly ·dotted ·swiss leno weave. Red
lf!ICI•=cx~e~-=-=cx~e~o=-:X:~e~o~x:&gt;O~::H:X:&gt;Oc:&gt;&lt;X)CO~XIC'o;.t:X&gt;O~=-:, Pullins made a, tossed salad. satin sashes highlighted . tho
waistlines
and
The club members comple~d empire
streamers
fell
froln
bows
in
the
plans for a bake sale to be held
· in front of Haskins and Tan- back of the dresses.
Each attendant carried a
ner's April 14 at 9:30 a.m. Next
colonial
bouquet of peppermint '
meeting will be May 7 at Mrs.
R'oger Hood 's home. Club and red carnations surrounded
advisors are Ann Butler, Carol ·by lace and white ribbon
Jean Hood and Alma 'Fowler: streamers.
"-="
•

---iiii-Jiiiltiiiiititiiiiiiiiiiolool.- - - - - - •

Glasses," and offering prayer.
RoU caU was answered by

home will be put , the n deter-

kerchief belonging to her
g
reat-grandmother .. for
Bush Hands 4-H 'Club met
April 3 at the hom e of Mrs. · something old.'
Miss Maria 1Hanson served
Roger Hood . Barbara Hood
presided and led devotions. her sister as maid of honor.
Mrs. Mike Allen , from "Jack Attendants· were Miss Debbie
and Ji!Ps," spoke on the im- North, Gallipolis and Mrs.
.portance of cleanliness and Joanie Simms, Pittsburgh ,

refreshments. Those pnise11t
· wet·e DelOres Shockey and
children, .Craig, Lisa, Marc neat appearan ce, . showed
and Scott, Helen Canaday and · spring and surrinler fashions ·
Mark and Scott, Betty Copley for the younger set and
and Lori e. Peggy call and Jeff; discussed how to coordinate
Jason and Jerry, Shari and style and colors . Demon~
strations were given by Bar-

only help to reduce air
pollution but also reduce
pollutants in water and soil by

scientists must be combined to
create the information to help

herfiline. The bride'S

Gallia 4-H

Mrs.
Charles
Lanier
presented devotions by reading
a
poem,
"Grandma's

Merlyn Rgss, organistaud..Mr ~".- . .Business: Mr . Blank is a
Ross, soloist who sang HMore, " graduate ..of Thomas Jefferson

Pa .
A half hour of pre:.Ouptial
music was presented by Mrs.

United States Navy for three

Mr . and Mrs. James Hanson ,

Plants and techniques
developed to conserve soil and
water on farms and ranches
are fast' finding their way into
cities and suburbs. Plants not

Knowledge about plantS and

250\1 . Second Ave., Gallipolis.
The new Mrs . Blan]&lt;s is a 1970
graduate of Gallia Academy
and the Huntington College of

altar decorated with vases of Lord's Prayer."
white gladioli and red carGiven in marriage by her
nations and lighted candles. ·iather and mother, the bride

foliage and white ribbons.
The bride is the daughter of

GALU POLIS- Mrs. Lucille
Neff recenUy en~rtained the
French City Garden Club at
her home. Mrs. Jewell Moore
presided.
•

Remember tha t good lan ~­
·sca pi_ng is mainly -.applying
good Common sense. Si! down
and determine the uses to
which various ar""as around the

High School in Pittsturgh, Pa.,

The windows were decorated
with a white candle, sprengeri

R!~r~ ~~~~~~.s~e;:~ane 'GAHS bands tQ Present.concert

Lucille Neff hosts
French City club

their functions has become the
concern of many more persons~
than the avid gardener, w~th an
interest in specific group of
plants. Skills of many kin~s of

and the University of Pittsburgh; · He s~rved with the

eveniog at 6:30, at the Gallla

A 11.00 Value
While They last

white orchid with white and

yellow ribbons .
The newlyweds will reside at

Heart,"

Mrs. Joseph Shirmer Monday
County Fairgr ounds. The
shirrners are moving to
Florida later this month .

brown accessories. She wore a

"Sometimes," "One Love,"
"SWlrise, Sunset," and " The

ceremony performed before. an

5~ Te Sui&gt;day Times -Sentinel, S.,unday, AprilS, 1973

sale. The mo.tion carried.
Mrs. Smeltzer presented the
program on "Landscaping .for
Living '' taken from the 1972
Yearbook of Agriculture .
Gardening is a hobby· of over
80 million Americans, she said,
and many of them garden
without a lawn or any natural
soil, miles away from any field
· or woodland . They put their
plants everywhere, on porches,
decks, balconies and window
sills.
. . ,

Mr. and Mrs. james B. Blank

Carol Hanson
weds Mr. Blank

Entire Spring Stockl

Regular '1.271

much to ''Save face '\ as to
"Save soul." The devotional
study centered on forgiveness.

Walter Schoonover and J\Jrs.
Bill Schoonover.
The Ladies Prayer Group
meets ea ch Monday at 10 a. m.
a t th e G allipolis Christia n

Campers
meet

OPEN l 'PM TO 6 PM

NUT
DISPENSER.

Christian prind ple of

forgive ness teaches us not so

pr.

0

I

Temperatures Rising 4-H
Club met March 22 at · Miss
Jane Ann Fallon's home. Mark

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Don't Miss Qur Drawing
I

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54 State St., Gallipolis

OWoll OIIOOJ p,ododlooo

·

Al l White •.
or Bla ck
8 to 12-$10.99
fie' II get 8 gift With every

pair!

. Open Mon . &amp; Fri.9;JO!i1Bp.m . .

Tues. Wed. Sat. 9:301il Sp.m .• Thur.

9 : 301oll~

7

noon

�'

•
•

4- The Sunday 'T'ime.;- Sentinel, ~unday, April8,1973
SEEN ANOHEA RO

formerly or Racine, is a patient

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Addie
Mae Brown, Mason, IV. Va.,

room nwnber is . 210 *and she
would i:ippreciate cards.

at Holzer Medical Center. Her

Vernon, Pa .; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Kaminski, Virginia
Beach, Va.;·. Mrs. Joanie

·Patty Dailey tp
wed Mr. Snodgrass
GALLIPOLIS -

Mr. and

Mrs. Golder Dailey announce
the engagement ol their second
daughter, Patty Lynn, to
James Thomas Snodgrass, son
of Mrs . Esta Snodgrass,
Gallipolis
and
James

SimmS, Pleasant Hills, Pa.,
'and Mrs. William Sim},
Greenwich, Ohio.

Snodgrass. Patty will bea 1973
graduate of Southwestern High
School. Tom will be a 1973
graduate of Gallia Academy
High School. An August

wedding is being planned.

Forgiveness is topic at
.ladies prayer group
Sunday Only!
ACETATE TRICOT

Sunday Only!
FOLDING

'1.6~

Regular

GALLIPOLIS
"The
Bigger
Some body's • in
Forgiveness" was this week's
discussion for th e Ladi es
Prayer Group of the GalliJ)&lt;llis
Christia n Ch urch, Jed by Mrs.
John Elardo.
The scriplUI'e used for Ibis

GIRLS
PANTIES

CAMP
·STOOL·

Size 4 to 14

lesson was taken from Mat·

¢

thew 6: 12.
Th ~

Mrs. Keith Carpenter was

welcomed as a new member.
A discQssionwas held on the
meaning~of

baptism.
· Sentence prayer was given
. by Mrs. J ohn Ela rdo, Mrs.
Je rr y McMa ni s, Mrs. Bill

Marrah, Mrs. Richard Moyer,
Mrs. Keith Carpenter , Mrs.

Church, F airview Subdivision.

GALLIPOLIS- The French
The public is invited .
City Ca mp e r s ·held thei r
monthly meeting Thursday,
AprilS, at the Buckeye Electric
Building with 19 present.
· :rhe m ee ting was called to
order by ·president, Harland
Sander s, and pra yer was led by
Jim King. A report was glven
. by Art Wroblewski confirming
reservati ons· (or the August
GALLIPOLUS - Miss Carol
camp-&lt;lut at Old Man 's Cave.
Jane Hanson became the bride
Field direc tor, J erry Jordan of
of James B. Blank March 3 at
'the 0-Kan Wanderers, made an
7 :30 '· p .m . in St. Pete r 's

Fin11l Sale Day! ·

WOMENS
PANTS
OFF
REGU

announcement that Harland

Sanders has been appointed

PRICE

field director of this area .
1t was voted upon and passed
to continue the monfhly

AU 3 STORES ARE OPEN

meetings of this club through
. the swnmer, .at a different
place each rnonlh with a
potluck supper.
Visitors were Mr. and Mrs.
Hoke Robinson , Gallipolis, and
Mrs . . Jerry Jordan , Point ·
Pleasant.
Refreshments were served
by Bill and Mildred Seyfried .
The club will give a goingaway dinner party for Dr. ·and

-Sunday Only!

SHOPPING
REMINDER

Episcopal Church , Gallipolis.
Rev. Albert MacKenzie officiated at the double ring

changed to a gold paisley print
dress of treva polyester topped
with a gold polyeste• tunic with

19 Edgemont Dr., Gallipolis
and the groom is.the son of J\Jr.
and Mrs. Sy.lvester Blank , 581
Old Clairton Rd., Pittsburgh,

C1uh

¢

Mothers hostparty
RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Grand e Mothers League hosted

a bowlir.g party for

their

children Sunday, followed by

A DISCO\! NT
O[PA RT M f. NT ~TOitl

PT. PLEAS A NT-MASON.
. SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

~~ews

~·~

was lovely in a gown ~f cotton

yea rs as Second Class Petty
Officer and is now employed as
test engineer at OVEC.

lace and organza . The bodice of
the dress featured a high
collar, a bib of col\on lace,
accented with small covered

Out of town guests were Mr.
and Mrs. Emerson Christofel ,
Mr. and Mrs. Allred Beam,
Helen J . Allen, John R. Stod-

'

::,t:,

.

\...-'

...,._,..,.'

J

Kelly Clark , Cheri · Houck,
Kelly
Pullins,
Annette

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Appalachian Power Joins In Bringing You- This. Message.

John Reese was appointed
chairman of a committee to
make a rran gements for
planting a tree in April. Mrs,
Lanier moved, and Mrs.

and sortness to an interesting

Wymond Bradbury seconded,
that the club have a rummage

for birds .

view. Trees and other forms of
vegetation have some effect on
the transmission of soWld.
They provide food and shelter
Space is no.t a problem.
Container gardening can be
conducted in a sirigle pot on a
windowsill. Most any ki nd of
container can be used, wood,
concrete, metal, glass, plastic
and ceramic. Light is the rnpst
critical requirement.
Ornamental gardens. haVe
always been"-Bn importa nt par t
of American culture, but urban
living ha s brought a change in

style with a greater emphasis
on intensive use of limited
space. There is now a demand
for dramat.ic visual .appeal.

buttons, and'. lantern sleeves.
The a•line skirt was appliqued
withbandsoflaceandfeatured
a ruffled flounce at the

mine the traffic patterns you
need· to serve them. This will
all r elate to. the planting. Then

Club advisor is Eugene

president, Mark Harrison: vice

Elliott. Club members present

president, Oeoise Shockley;

were John Erwin, L. A.
Guinther, Brian McDade,
David Dailey, David Mink,

news reporter, Michael Fulks;
secretary, Sheryl Fraser:
treasurer, Cindy Corless; song

Brian Mink, Ernie Erwin, Mike
Delille, Eugene Rut~. Alan
Rutz and Gus Rutz .

leader, Becky Pa uly; health
and safety, Lynn 'smith and

U&amp;i Saunders' home on Lower

Bonice led devotions. Mary

River Rd.

Cox

had

charge

of

son, John Hutchison, RiC ky
Seag raves, Dar rell Dotson,
Diana
Ten y,
J effery
Seagraves, Lou Cox, J udy Cox,
Lar ry Bonice, Sharon Bonice,
"Timmy Seagr aves, Tony
Dotson and DaVid Bonice .
Guests present were Miss
Patty Bonice, Eddi e Cox, !\!iss
Sha ron Spencer.. Mrs. Ruth

Dotso n, Mrs. Ann BOn ice,
Ma ry Ellan Dotson and Amy

Jame'S

D. aansOn,

Hen-

length mantilla was edged in

dersonville, Tenn. ; Mrs. John

cottol] lac::~ . . !he bri~e's
colonial bouquet was of white
carnations, red sweetheart
roses·, baby's breath and white

Spahn, Susan, J'ohnny
Stevie, Monongahela,
Mrs. Raymond Beech
Karen, · Finleyville, P8.;

streamers . The bride also

Joel Little .and Joey, Belle.

in lace. Lace triin and red satin

meeting adjourned .

•

GALLIPOLIS
SAVINGS
AND

LOAN

co.

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Cancer Fund Drive
Variety Show had it.s ups and
Liz Rodney presented a jazz
downs Friday evening, but the dance to the tune of Neil
program net~d $29l for the Diam ond 's ''Walk on Wa ter ",
drive which will begin and youn ger s tudents of

residEmtial carivassing April
24.
Performers, introduced by

Dorothy Grirfin presented an
"I Spy" ballet routine to the
"Dance of the Marionettes''.

Bud McGee, included, baton

Older students presented a

· twirlers,.dancers, singers and
musicians .
Ann Rieser's _}atonists
opened the program with four

numbers, each done by a
diiferent ·age group, to the

strains of " Love Potion
NwTiber Nine'\ "Candy Man",
"Popcorn," and a · poompon
routine· to Elton John 's

SAVINGS

"Crocidile Rock".
GAHS · sophomore

• • • •

Lisa

James sang ' ~If, . and "Old
Fashioned Love Song " ,

2 Year, Savings

Serving ae .best man for , the

bridegroom was Joel Little,
Pittsburgh, Pa. Ushers were
Michael Beech, nephew of the

Certificates

5,000

1

minimum
Savings Certificates
$1,000 minimum
1 Year

followed by a ballet by Paula
Covert, 13 year-&lt;lld student of
Jill Moore. Gallia Academy

theatrical touch to the prog ram

members present were Steve, featured a two-tiered wedding
Tommy and Robbie Moses, cake, de-corated with roses,
Larry Cater, Steve Arrowood, heartshaped ring boxes and a

Interest paid quarterly on all certificates
Deposit by the. lOth of the month and earn from the first.
Interest available monthly on accounts of $1,000 or more

" This Nearly Was Mine" and

solo c hampion Ellen Chambers

J erry and J ohna
Hawks and Annette

"Some Enchanted Evening "

perform ed

trom the musical "South

number.

a

solo

CARNIVAL

..

.

by Dick Tumer.

I

··· .

program.

David Bryan and Patty
Graham talked about the J . L. .
Round-up. Mrs . Graham announced camp da~ s. The club
started a pr~ject on ,;Me, You
and Others". The next meeting
will be held at the Junior
Club advisors are Mr. and
. Mrs. Glenn Graham, Miss
Regina Grubb and Mr. and
Mrs. Paul D. Niday . Club

i

.. ~

members present were David,
Mark and Pam Bryan, Carlos,
Cathy, Chip, Chris, Gary and ·
. Randy 'CaldweU, Jerry Eutsler, Bobby and J oey F os ~r ;
David and Patty Graham,

Bonnie, Jessie, Matthew, Paul
and Roseanne Johnson·, Debbie
'and Marc Kinder, Kim and Lyn
Niday, Gary and Robin Nibert,
Cinde aod Tande Pope, Lloyd,
Ruth and Marie Wood, Taode
Woodward, Mike Hemphill and

Paul Duncan·.
Guests were Mr . and Mrs.
Herman Wood, April. Graham
an d Gwin Niday.

GAL,LIPOLIS, OHIO
ltrJ

"For a subatltute driver he looks pretty
. upertenc!ec1 to mer•

Lang; , by Charles Rowe.

J.

· .

·

GALLIPOLIS - ':fr .. and
Mrs. ~ellie George, 417 F irst

Ave., ar e announci ng the
marriage of their daughter,
Marie, to Charl es Conger , Rt.
1, Ewington.
The ceremony was at the
home of the groom 's parents,
Mr . and Mrs. Clinton Conger.
The Reverend fu1 lph Spires
read Lhe vows .at 5:30 p.m . on
Saturday, March 31. Only the

REEDSVILLE -

Hos t.s of

lhc Ri verview-Ga rden Club for

the Mafc h ineeling were Mrs.

Ann Bonice and Annabelle
Seagraves .
Club memflers are Timmy
Seag r a ve.s, Ri c hard
Seagrav es, Rita Seagraves,
Bryan Seag rav es, Jeffr ey
. Seagraves, John Hutchinson,
Darrell Dotson, Tony Dotson,
Larry Bon'ice , Sharon Bonlee,
Diana Terry, Regina Terry,

Officers
elected;.
are
president, .Julie- Hall; viceprcsJdent, Linda Ho1ley ;
secreta ry, Diane Swain; .Judy Cox aod Lori Cox. Guest.s
tr eas urer, Teresa J~m es; .pre sent wer e _ Miss Pa tt y
news reporter , Gaill ytm Bonice and Eddie Cox.
Hedrick ; devotions, Jeff
Sanders and recreation and
SOng, Tammy Swain and Paula _
Butler . ·The neXt m¢eting will --::--:-;;-;;;-o;:-be April 12 at 7:30 p .m . at
A R B
Ter esa Jan)es' house.
By Pl!IL l'ASTORE'f'
Club advisors ar e Reda

a

Fowler and Virginia James.

suit and h~r corsagC was white
carnations. After the cere.mony
the guests we re served wedding ca ke and punch.
The bride is well known in
Gi!llipolis where she has been
emph1yed.as a practica l_ nurse.
The groom is a farmer and for
&amp;e\•cral year,s o p~ra ted a fleet
of trucks. They a'rc at home at
Ht. 1, Ewington.
\

s

Always be t he last one
out of th e shop , and. th ey' ll

Club ·members present were start to check on yo u when
Julie Hall, Linda Holley, Diane t he typew ri ters begi n t.o disSwal n, · Teresa. James, Jeff appea r.
.;&gt;
•:' ' ':0.
Sanders, Tanuny SWain , PauJa

THANK YOU
FOR YOUR
RESPONSE

v
.
OUR

..

Riveroiew. gardeners
meet with Mrs. Myers -

.

Pope, Janet Stewart and Robin
Williams.

Mrs. Ross . . McGinness and
Lester Lambert.
The bride wore a teal blue

Wat·rting.''
Roll call was answered by
members reading a poem of
spring. Plans were made to
make arrangements [or the
spo1·ts banquet at Eastern High
School and an Arbor Daj'
progr·a m which would be at ·
Rive.rv_ie w ' School
was
disc ussed.
(Club members plan to tour
Stahl 's Nursery cmd dine out
fv r the 1\p ril meeting.
For the program, Mrs. Roy
Hannwu presented (l~l ar·ticle
about cacti.
She explain ed the "care,
diseases, and how the cactus
plant stores its water 'a nd
distribut ed color ful J.e afl ets

· about cacti to the ··m ember~.
She
presented
Mrs.
Gt·ossnickle and Mrs. Lyle
Balderson each with a potted
cactus.
M rs. _

F rank .
presented an article, ''·For
Color With a Bang;-· Planl
Dahlias,'' Which described the
kinds of dahlias and flow to
plan t and fertilize the plants.
G am ~s were conducted by
Mrs. Gene Wilson during the
social h,gur with several prizes
awarded. Rcfteshments were
served by Mrs. Brown and
Mrs. Myers to 13 members.
Mrs. Wilson won the door prize.
Ha rli ss

ANNIVERSARY
SALE .
CONTINUES
ALL THIS WEEK

10%
RAIN CHECK

FREE

-- WITH EVERY PURCHASE

•••

SHOP FOR NOW!
SELECT FOR EASTER
USE OUR NQ-COST
LAY-AWAY

The Store with More
Gallipoli s

A nig la Owl. is r1. felLow
. who dpe.'trl, ' l. .(Jive a hbo t

(rbout what time he gets
m.

'

'

Eithe r the p 1at e s are

talkiid about the projects that la rge r or th e p o r t i o n s
are avaiiable to 4-Hers. Of- - small er a t th e local bea ner y.
fioe rs wili be elected at the
' '' '"
next
. m
. eeting, April 3 at Cox's
If you can k~ep yo,ur

tempe r, the rest of u s

residence.

Club advisors are Mary Cox,

would be much·obliged.

Kim

baton

promptu, Opus 92 in Eb'' by music ·including a " Boogie
Shubert and a medley of . the, Woogie".
themes from "Love St0ry".!.800
'

,;

PI:IONE 446-3832

Mark Harrison , Marilu Simon,

Triangle ~H Club met March
31 with Ruth and Lloyd Woods.
Pacific" .
The program ended with. the 1
David Bryan presided. Charles
In his. final performance for . G~rfield Barbecue Gang , a
Caldwell led devotions. David
th~ fund drive, ·GAHS senior : group of amateur musicians
Bryan had char ge of the
Brant Adams, .played " lnt- · presentin g some old time

•

•

and Ma e Kemp . Old m •mbers

dance-twirl routine and state

THE GALLIPOLIS .SAVINGS
and lOAN COMPANY
OPPOSITE POST OFFICE

May i. Anothe r th ing di scussed
was eommunjty projects and it

P.

•

photography.
Dona ld M}'ers and Mrs. Walte r
We are ha vlng a bake sa le
Brown at the new home of Mrs.
April 2LT)le next p1 eeting will
be April 24 at Diane Bailey's Myers. Devotions were Conduc ted by Mrs .. Her man
house at 7:30 p.m. - ·
Club advisor is Carolyn Gross nickl e wh o gave a
·reading, ' 'Bread of Life," and
J effe rs. Club members present
by Mrs. Claremont Harris, who
we r e Debbie Baker, Jud y
read a poe m wl)ich he1·
Baker Ca rolyn Baker , Tami
.
gra ndson, Bob Gros.snickle,
. Pope, Diane . Bailey , Debbie
Stout , Ca r olyn Stout ; Kim had written, " A Sinner's

AnYone jnterested should
contact either Mrs. Jacque
GJa.ss burn or Mi ss Ka th y
Deckard . Dues must be pa id by

se~ior Howard McDaniels sang

·~

\Vheldon. Mrs. Jack McNeal, bride.
Diana Forgey and Mrs .
For her wedding trip to
,Waunita Wood were g uests.
Washing ton , D. C., Mrs. Blank

devotions. caroly n J effers. had
charge of the program. Kim
Pope had a demonstration on

·· Fairgrounds April 2B.

· Save.Any Amount Any Time

Fairchild and Lori and Carolyn Pam Laufer, cousin of the

Baker 's home : Carolyn· Jeffers
presided. Oebbie Baker led

by presenting an excerpt from , present were Brenda Cornwell,
"You're A Good Man, ~ harli e 1 Risa Sexton , Sara Ables ,

'

white roses.
.Hostesses for. the reception
were Mrs. George Hout and
Mrs. Clayton Miller. Mrs.
William Sims, Mrs . Bill
Hanson, Mrs . James D.
Hanson and Miss Marlene
Fraley presided at the table
and guests were registered by

Cadinus Roadrunners 4-H
Club met March 28 a t Carolyn

i 1.

arranged

George,
Charle-s-Eonger wed

-

Twilighters ~H Club met
Ab.l es.
Cynthi a
Corli ss Marc h 29 at Teresa James'
presided, J ohn Rhodes led , house. Julie Hall presided.
devotions and Cynthia Corliss J\Jrs. Reda Fowler had charge
oi the program.
had 'charge of the program.

Mic helle Vallee, Chris tia Stout,
Marilyn Layne , Cindy Corliss,

John Morrissey : Invocation for

Goldsbury, Ta mmi
Anderson, Lee Ann Whitley,
Marilyn Layne , J erry Thacher, · immedi&lt;J tc fami lies were
Treasa Barcus, Usa Saurx:leis, present. The atte ndants were
Ca rl Elliott, Oebbie Barron,
Steve Clary and Tom Beck.

was thought by every member
number done to The Car- that one project should be work
penter•s " Bless The Beasls and on the horse show ring at the Butler and Gaillynri Hedrick.
the Children".
·l fairgrounds. Next meeting will · Dona James was a guest.
In s tr~ ctr ess, D oroth y · be at th e residence of Mr. and
Centerpoint · 4-H Club met
Grif[in, who holds an M.A.: Mrs. Gilbert Corliss AprillB at ,
March 30 with Mary Cox, Rt. 2
degree in dan ce .from Mills 7:30p .m.
·
College, pe rf ormed an inClub a d visoFs-er-e·~ Mrs. Pa triot. Mrs. J ackie Graham
terpr~tive ballet to "Sunrise, Jacque GlasSbUrn and Kathy pre sided. Judy Cox led
Ja cki e
Sunset," fr om "Fiddler on the ) Decka1·d . New members devotions . Mrs.
Graham
had
charge
pf the
Roof' '.
.
1 present . were Linda · McCulty,
GAHS s tud ents add ed a EHen Frazee, Kathy Daniels program. Mrs. Jackie Graham

Passbook -Savings Accounts

LeWis, Sandra and .·Louella adorl1ed with two doves and

Lynn

residence of Mr. an d Mrs. Gene

Brown ".
Gloria Buck Wa lla ce' s
Junior Glo-Ettes performed a

'

Baf~ us ,

Biser Sexton, Tammi Frazer ,

the club, should do so by April

There is no charge for the'
concert. The public is lnvited to
attend . The bands are directed

f 1-

Club ·

Becky Pauly, J ackie Bittner ,
Robert Calhoun , J oyce Casto,

Variety show raises
cancer fund $291

and
Pa .;
and
Mrs.

THE
SIGN
OF
SAFE

featured white voile bodices
with victorian necklines edged

the

Lyrm Smith , Treasa

Caribeguine, Willis Schaffer.

Intermission. ·

to the Z&lt;xJ. Robert Martin and

Citadel

Band, Philip Gordon; Sounds

of the Carpenters, arranged J .
Cacavasi Selections from
Music Man, Meridith Wilson ,

M.tss
• Ma-¥1•e

Sheryl F raser, Cindy Corless,
Vickey Baxter, Craig Fisher ,

The constitution com~i ttee
is s tiU in prOgr'ess, but the
contents so far stimd approved .
During the -. meeting outfits
were discussed and d ub colors,
red and white, were chosen. A
. discussion on 4-H camp and ·
" Bria n 's Song' '· Brant a lso J un ior Lea de r ~ were held .
accorhpanied the soloists .
Anyone wh o would Hke to join

.carried a white lace hand-

twin sister of the groom. They
wore · identical gowns which

before

F.uion .

arrangedJ. D. Ployhar; Patrol
'76, Carrol M. Butt.s.

March, Frank Erickson ; Come

The Cadet Band -

members 'P~esent · were
Michael
Fu1ks,
Denise
Shockley, Mark Harrison,

Mark J ohnson, Wayne .John-

mosphere. Trees provide a
barrier against wind.

at-

Ann

program .
Officers . elected were
president, Ricky Seagraves;
vice-president, Mark Johnson;
treasurer , Wayne J ohnson;
secretary, Diana Terr y; song
leader , Lou Cox i news
re porter,
Judy
Cox ;
recreationa l · leade r , Bryan
Seagravesi health chairman,
John Hutchinson and safety
chairman, Timmy Seagra ves:
The next meeting will be held
May 7 at Mr s. Charles E. Cox:s
home.
-·
Club advisors are Mrs. Mary
E. Cox, Mrs. An nabe lle
Seag raVes and Mr.s. Ann
Bonice. Club members present
were ·Regina Terr y, Rita
Seagraves, Bryan Seagraves,

Emanuelina Pizzoto; Theme
From Gunsmoke, Koury
anangcd J . Kinyon; Aura Lee,

High School Concert Band - ·
The Kadiddlehopper March,
Red Skelton, arranged Ron
Roullier; Main Street U.S.A ..

program follows ;

Cl ub advisor is Miss Jane

the

BolithoandLo&lt;i,Clairlon, Pa.;
Mr. and Mrs. David Gower,
Nashville, Tenn. ; llir. and Mrs.

the

and

Mary Cox presided and Larry

Goldenrods 4-H

dard and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas

to

Barcus

Club metAprll3 at COx's home.

Cen~rpoint

by the hostess

the soil

Treasa

recreationa l leaders, Vicky
Baxter and Craig Fisher. The
next meeting will be held at

from

Chapel

crease the hli1Didity . Trees do a
petter job of reducing the
temperature than would a tent

Academy lnstrwnerital Music
Department will present a
concert at 2:30 this afternoon

Oues

Gollia Co unty 4-H Saddle
·c lub met April 4 at lhe

Gene Layton , Wayne and Lynn bride and groom under an

,.

Plant.s ca n be used for enframement, to provide scale

the surrouridings, they can · your area and IQ1ow the various
modify the climate and in- uses of these pla nts. Pick out a

would mean giving up 4-H, -- white bows.
Wlless there is a good excuse .
Following the ceremony a
· Club advisors are Hank reception was held at the home
Forgey and Janet Beman. Club of the bride. The bride's table

Halle y, Ruthie Arrowood,
Bobby and Larry Ruff, Melody
Tate, Mike Fortner , Steve and
Dwane Forgey, Jack and
Kevin Welker, Mary Ruff, Kim
Ball, Susan Elliott, Robert and
.Mary Wood, Pam Donnell,
· Paul, Lori ·and Rose McNeal,
Kent Walker, Sonny and Cherel

Purchase of a book for the
library was discussed. Mrs.

and national 4-H reports and

GALLIPOLIS - The ·GaUia

roller skating at Jackson. (
Denise Shockley talked about
·at GAHS. The concert wit!
Th~next meeting will be held · his three-year projects.
feature both the Cadet Band
the first Monday of May at will be $1 a year .
Eugene Elliott's house.
Of£icers eJected were 'and ttie High School Band. The

or umbrella covering the same
area . They move moisture

Forgey, advisor, said missing a rriink stole. Her corsage was ·
more than. three meetings white carnations tied with

* Complete Set Up

desira ble views.

theprog.ram. He also discuss~

sprin g arran gement with
rhythmic design.
Refreshmen ts were served

Brenda · William (Bill) Hanson, brother
Hood . Guests present were of the bride, Crown City.
Mrs. Marvin Pullins and Terri " For her daugh~r·s wedding
Mrs. Hanson wore a powder
Jo Steger.
blue -floor length gown of
polyester crepe. A corsage of
Centerville El ~ ctrons 4-H .white carnations ~nd bows .of.
Club met April 3 at Thurman white completed her ensemble.
Methodis t 'Church .. Mike
The groom 's mother, Mrs.
Fortner presided. Hank Blank, wore a fiOIJr length
Forgey and Janet Beman had gown of mint green polyester
charge of the program. Hank crepe , which she accented with

took At The ·Rest Then
Buy The BEST.

gave the treasurer's repor t.

Plants can malte l!fe more familiarize yourself with the
pleasant. Besides beautifying .· . plant material that does well in

Barbara · Hood and

-The More You look The
Better We ·LOOK~

to ease visual po llution by
hiding ugly objects or un-

a

Snowden , 'Charlen'e Bostic , ·groom, Finleyville, Pa.; and

I

Mrs. Melvin Smeltzer read
the minutes. Miss Marie N•.a l

Ann Fallon had charge of the
program. M.rs . Jackie Graham
talked about Ohio ~H report.s

Terry.

AND ·SEE THE SHOW

Club members present were
SharOn Scouten, Teresa Steger,

might otherwise ente r · the
streams. They can also be used

met April 2 with Eugene
Elliott. Gus Rutz presided, led
devotions and had charge of

th eme, a feeling, a m otif.
Mrs. Neff displayed a lovely

Kathy Davis and Tina Adkins.

· April 6th Thru 14th
Peoples Bank Lot

naming a plant with a weapon
for defense.

" One Hand , One

K &amp; K Mobile Home Says:

r ., fSfoW

helping to hold topsoil and
reducing the sediment that

maintain plants in different
envtron
· m en ts . __

buttons accented the bodices.
bara Hood " Putting Elastic The skirts were red and white
Through a Casing," and Kelly ·dotted ·swiss leno weave. Red
lf!ICI•=cx~e~-=-=cx~e~o=-:X:~e~o~x:&gt;O~::H:X:&gt;Oc:&gt;&lt;X)CO~XIC'o;.t:X&gt;O~=-:, Pullins made a, tossed salad. satin sashes highlighted . tho
waistlines
and
The club members comple~d empire
streamers
fell
froln
bows
in
the
plans for a bake sale to be held
· in front of Haskins and Tan- back of the dresses.
Each attendant carried a
ner's April 14 at 9:30 a.m. Next
colonial
bouquet of peppermint '
meeting will be May 7 at Mrs.
R'oger Hood 's home. Club and red carnations surrounded
advisors are Ann Butler, Carol ·by lace and white ribbon
Jean Hood and Alma 'Fowler: streamers.
"-="
•

---iiii-Jiiiltiiiiititiiiiiiiiiiolool.- - - - - - •

Glasses," and offering prayer.
RoU caU was answered by

home will be put , the n deter-

kerchief belonging to her
g
reat-grandmother .. for
Bush Hands 4-H 'Club met
April 3 at the hom e of Mrs. · something old.'
Miss Maria 1Hanson served
Roger Hood . Barbara Hood
presided and led devotions. her sister as maid of honor.
Mrs. Mike Allen , from "Jack Attendants· were Miss Debbie
and Ji!Ps," spoke on the im- North, Gallipolis and Mrs.
.portance of cleanliness and Joanie Simms, Pittsburgh ,

refreshments. Those pnise11t
· wet·e DelOres Shockey and
children, .Craig, Lisa, Marc neat appearan ce, . showed
and Scott, Helen Canaday and · spring and surrinler fashions ·
Mark and Scott, Betty Copley for the younger set and
and Lori e. Peggy call and Jeff; discussed how to coordinate
Jason and Jerry, Shari and style and colors . Demon~
strations were given by Bar-

only help to reduce air
pollution but also reduce
pollutants in water and soil by

scientists must be combined to
create the information to help

herfiline. The bride'S

Gallia 4-H

Mrs.
Charles
Lanier
presented devotions by reading
a
poem,
"Grandma's

Merlyn Rgss, organistaud..Mr ~".- . .Business: Mr . Blank is a
Ross, soloist who sang HMore, " graduate ..of Thomas Jefferson

Pa .
A half hour of pre:.Ouptial
music was presented by Mrs.

United States Navy for three

Mr . and Mrs. James Hanson ,

Plants and techniques
developed to conserve soil and
water on farms and ranches
are fast' finding their way into
cities and suburbs. Plants not

Knowledge about plantS and

250\1 . Second Ave., Gallipolis.
The new Mrs . Blan]&lt;s is a 1970
graduate of Gallia Academy
and the Huntington College of

altar decorated with vases of Lord's Prayer."
white gladioli and red carGiven in marriage by her
nations and lighted candles. ·iather and mother, the bride

foliage and white ribbons.
The bride is the daughter of

GALU POLIS- Mrs. Lucille
Neff recenUy en~rtained the
French City Garden Club at
her home. Mrs. Jewell Moore
presided.
•

Remember tha t good lan ~­
·sca pi_ng is mainly -.applying
good Common sense. Si! down
and determine the uses to
which various ar""as around the

High School in Pittsturgh, Pa.,

The windows were decorated
with a white candle, sprengeri

R!~r~ ~~~~~~.s~e;:~ane 'GAHS bands tQ Present.concert

Lucille Neff hosts
French City club

their functions has become the
concern of many more persons~
than the avid gardener, w~th an
interest in specific group of
plants. Skills of many kin~s of

and the University of Pittsburgh; · He s~rved with the

eveniog at 6:30, at the Gallla

A 11.00 Value
While They last

white orchid with white and

yellow ribbons .
The newlyweds will reside at

Heart,"

Mrs. Joseph Shirmer Monday
County Fairgr ounds. The
shirrners are moving to
Florida later this month .

brown accessories. She wore a

"Sometimes," "One Love,"
"SWlrise, Sunset," and " The

ceremony performed before. an

5~ Te Sui&gt;day Times -Sentinel, S.,unday, AprilS, 1973

sale. The mo.tion carried.
Mrs. Smeltzer presented the
program on "Landscaping .for
Living '' taken from the 1972
Yearbook of Agriculture .
Gardening is a hobby· of over
80 million Americans, she said,
and many of them garden
without a lawn or any natural
soil, miles away from any field
· or woodland . They put their
plants everywhere, on porches,
decks, balconies and window
sills.
. . ,

Mr. and Mrs. james B. Blank

Carol Hanson
weds Mr. Blank

Entire Spring Stockl

Regular '1.271

much to ''Save face '\ as to
"Save soul." The devotional
study centered on forgiveness.

Walter Schoonover and J\Jrs.
Bill Schoonover.
The Ladies Prayer Group
meets ea ch Monday at 10 a. m.
a t th e G allipolis Christia n

Campers
meet

OPEN l 'PM TO 6 PM

NUT
DISPENSER.

Christian prind ple of

forgive ness teaches us not so

pr.

0

I

Temperatures Rising 4-H
Club met March 22 at · Miss
Jane Ann Fallon's home. Mark

AT BRUNICARDI'S MUSIC

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PIANO
SPECIALS

boys and girls from infants
to ag.e 12. There's .a

A rare opportunity to .own a fine piano
. at TREMENDOUS SAVINGS. FULL
88 note keyboard, three working
·pedals, 13 ply lam.i.nated .pin block, fine
Spruce sound board, full . factory
warranty.

Mickey MQuse emblem on each pair!
Don't Miss Qur Drawing
I

Saturdlav

TERMS TO· SUIT UP TO

5 YEARS TO PAY
see Us For All Your

MUSICAL NEEDS
eBAND INSTRUMENTS
•AcCESSORIES
· • SAlES and RENTAl
• MUSIC REPAIR SERVICE

BRUNIC.ARDI·
HOUSE OF ·MUSIC
54 State St., Gallipolis

OWoll OIIOOJ p,ododlooo

·

Al l White •.
or Bla ck
8 to 12-$10.99
fie' II get 8 gift With every

pair!

. Open Mon . &amp; Fri.9;JO!i1Bp.m . .

Tues. Wed. Sat. 9:301il Sp.m .• Thur.

9 : 301oll~

7

noon

�..
7- TheSundarTinoes - Sentinel, Sunday, April&amp;, 1973

.

·was located in the park, hence
the name Court St.

Program on
town square
. '
.
heard at Riverside Study

SUNDAY
GALI.JA Coonty Riding Club,
trail ride at 11:30 a.m. at the
borne of Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Denney. The meeting will be at
b30 p.m. at the home of Mr .
and Mrs . Eugene Stevens.
Bring sack· lunch. In case of
rain the club will have its'
regular meeting April 14 at
7:30 p.m. with Mr. and Mrs.
Denney.
LAFAYETTE Shrine No. 44,
rehearsal 'for officers at 2:30
p.m.
MONDAY
CHESHIRE- Kyger PTA, open
house at 6:30 p.m. Program
will be a band concert by the
fifth and sixth grades under the
direction of David Phillips. The
third and fourth grades will
present a spelling bee . .
CLAY PTA at 7:30 p. m.
Regular meeting and election
of officers. All members are
urged to attend .
LADIES Prayer Group at the
Gallipolis Christian Church at
·10 a.m. in .the Fairview Sulr

GALLIA County Homemakers
Extension Council meets at 11
GALLIPOLIS
The
a.m. at Grace United
Ri&gt;erside Study Club met
Methodist Church . Installation
Tuesday with Mrs . Albert
of officers. Topic of discussion
Durose. During the social hour,
will-be family planning.
the hostess served a Salad
APRIL meeting of Home cow-se.
Council at 10 a.m. at Grace
The meeting was called to
United Methodist Church. . order by the president, Mrs.
Installations ?f officers.
Arthur Espenschied. Members
Po.Uuck lunch .
responded to roll with the name
MID-WEEK Lenten llervice · of an early settler of Gallia ·
conducted by Pastor Joe D. COlUl ty or someone who has
Will , New Life Lutheran greatly influenced the history
Church, ~t St. Peter's of the area .
Episcopal Church at' 7:30 p.m.
'[he program was presented
The gublic is welcome.
by guest speaker, Mrs . Harold

Wetherholt, who .told of the
early history of Galtipolis with
special emphasis on the park,

The Joseph De Vacht house
on .,.. . irst Ave. is the only one of
the early homes to have been
continuously occupied by a
lineal descendant of . the
builder. Mrs. Howard Lieurnauu, the present owner and

or public square .

occupant is a great • great -

She notOd the early settlers
were buried in the northwest
corner of the public square
across from the former Ohio
Valley Bank buildin~. When
the dead ~lm trees were
removed, some marker~like
slabs of stone were bulldozered
out, but all the inscriptions had
been removed by weather.
. The first of the four courthouses, a 30 by 40 foot building

granddaughter
DeVacht.

of

FINDS MORE MONEY
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov .
John J. Gilligan announCed
Thursday his adminiStration
! was · tacking an ••Ira 1118
' million onto the proposed state
budget for 1973-75. "Yo:e haven't
found' this money in the
basement," Gillig!'n said.
" We're saying it's going to be
there in two years."

STRIPPABLE COAL RESERVES
N THE UNITED STATES

'

Joseph
HELP AT HOME
COLUMBUS (UP!) :.._ Rtp.
Troy L. Jame~ »-Cle'leland,
was one of 20 Democrats who
introduced a bill Thursday to
establish home district offices
lor all 99 representatives and
33 senators. " We have to do so
much running around we _can't
possibly take care of all the
problems of ou:r constituents,""
James said.

Mrs . Wetherholt showed
sevei-al picture$ and . prints
which she and her husband had
colleeted .
.. The next meeting will be a
luncheon at the Holiday Inn
with ·Mrs . Espenscheid ~s
hostess.

.'

King Cool is being talked about more and more as the
fuel of the future, as the notion's gas and oil reserves
dwindle - if environmentql and ecological problems of
mining oand using cool can be solved. Estimates of the
U.S. cool supply range up to 200 years. Mop shows areas
susceptible to controversial strip-mining. Generally, cool
in the west is of low ~s ulphur type now mUch in demon~ .

PARADE OF FASHIONS
.
.

SHOP OUR CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT TO
OUTFIT THE LITTLE ONES ,_..-,

In Tlie

New Silver
Bridge
Shopping
Plaza
Mon .- Fri.10-9p.m.
Sat. l0-6·p .m .

division.
STAMPS

GALLiPOI.JS Chapter nwnber
283 OEA regular meeting at the
Masonic Temple at 7:30 p.m.
TUESDAY
FRENCH City Garden Club
will nneet with Mrs. Florence
Trainer . The program on
Ecology will be given by Mrs.
Elaine George.
RIO GRANDE C;ilVary Baptist
Ladies Auxiliary will hold their
annual love gift box opening at
7:30p.m. at the church.
KYGER Creek Band Boosters
in the band room at 7:30 p.m .
_ 9R ACE . United Methodist
Church Circle nwnber four
meets at the church at 9:30
a.m. Circle nwnber five meets
at I p.m., at the church.
Nursery will be open.
KYGER Creek Band Boosters
meet in the band room at 7:30
p.m.

'
RIVERSIDE
Study Club
luncheon meeting at :the
Holiday Inn at I p.m . Mrs.
Arth.ur Espenscheid is. hostess.
WEDNESDAY
SADDLE anct Sirloin Riding
Club wiii riieet at Bulaville
Townhouse at 7 p.m. Members
are to bring dessert.
REVJVAL at Okey Church
near Lecta at 7:30p.m. for four
nights. Andrew Workman will ·
be
speaking.
Everyone
welcome.
GRACE United Methodist
Church circle number one will
meet at the home of Mrs.
Robert O' Dell, Neighborhood
Rd. Circle number two will
meet at the home of Mrs."
Aldeth Robinson, at 210 First
Ave. Circle number three will
meet at the home of Mrs.
Kenneth Frazer on Portsmouth
Rd. all at 7:30 p.m.
FIRST United Presbyterian
Church morning circle at the
church at 9:30a .m. Afternoon
circle at 1:30 p.m. at the home
of Mrs. Donald Warehime.
Evening circle at 8 p.m. 'It the
home of Mrs. George Houf.
QN EXTENDED CRUISE
Navy Seaman Recruit
Warren E. Dotson, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Junior-A. Dotson of .
Bidwell has left his homeport
at Alameda, Calif., for an
extended Western Pacific
deployment aboard the aircraft carrier USS Coral Sea.
Once in Asian waters,-the Coral
Sea will operate with the U. S.
8th Fleet. Scheduled port visits .
include Hong Kong, Singapore,
Australia and the Philippines.
A· former student of North
Gallia High School, . Bidwell,
Dotson joined the Navy in
September, 1972.
I

,-

by:

HARDWICK
and
LORD HAMPTON

------------I11/YA..--:.

P.O. 274963

·I
I
I
I
I
I

VALUESI~MPS

:
I

I .
I

-~·· ·

'

\

OHIOAN ARRESTED
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (UPI ) FBI agents Thursday arrested
Calire W'tlson, 28, Canton, Ohio,
as he a.ttempted to board an
airplane here and charged him
with the $35,000 robherty last
month of the Harter Bank in
Canton, Ohio.
Wibon was held in lieu . of
1100.000.
. •.

:
I

I

I

Good Thru Sat..April 21, 1973.

I

fro:m 4.99

CCESSORIES

COLORIFIC AND

SMART
SPRING
HANDBAGS

VATIVE
--· TIES

~I~-~-~-~-~-g;-~-~-~-:::-~-~~:;::~_::::_:-_;_=:_=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=--=-=-~-=-=-;-;-;;-;_~-~-=-;-;-;_~-~-~-~-~-¥:_?;!_:

~

~

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

:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~A1:

I
I
I

I

100EXTRA

I
I

TOP VAWE STAMPS

.I
I
I

with any pair of

I
I
I
I
I
I

50
TOP VAWI:: STAMPS

100
TOP VAWE STAMPS

with any

-CHILDRENS
SHOES

AN'S TIE

Good Thr.11 Sat. April 21, 1973

Good Thru ·sat. April 21, 1973

i

COLORFUL
NEW
SPRING
SHOES

FOREVER YOUNG
PRICED AT20.00

21st Century Wemblon and the all new
_
t ies by Wembl ey. They are even beMer than
they took! The f eel of tines! Silk. Come see o.u r
ca ll edion in print's, solid colors and In tere sting woven patterns.

-.

A LARGE BEAUTIFUL
SELECTION OF SCARFS
.

•

.

MEN'S SHIRT-s

with any

.

.. ,

If ' .

GET UP TO 700 EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS

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

Sizes: B to 2.4112
10e pet . polyest ers, several styl es;
beaut-iful co lor s and priced from

FARAH SLACKS

•.•;"'••••••W-

are here. Smar.t new s tyl~ng and
co lor s. Si zes B to- 22 112.
Pi ctured . By Puritan .

SPRING and .
EASTER COATS

SPORT COATS 12.00

1
I
I
I

I

LADY'S PURSE

WHAT A
MATCII UP!

100 percent polyester Double Knit
Spor t Coat s. by two very famou s ·
makers, Hardwick and Lord Hampton.
New spring styling and beautiful new ·
spring color s. 36 Reg. to 46 Long.

Prites Start At

.Jacquard
knit basic

The Right-On Fashion in
-men's . shoes. The Two·. -Jnes. Sizes 7 to 11 , a ll in D

CINDERELLA'S SPRING

Good Thru Sat. April 21, 1973

SPECIAL
MEN'S TWO.
TONE SHOES
0

Widths. A 512 .00 plus valuE: .
Whi le they last Only '

POLYESTERS
.,-,...c==-:;:.. I r;;-~:-..

50
TOP VAWE STAMPS ·
with any palrof

EN'S SOCKS

STOR E ' HOURS:

Monday thru Friday
10 a.m. ti19 :00 p.m.
Saturday 10 a.m. fil6 p.m .

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

·I
I

.I

Good Thru Sat. April 21, 1973
STRIKE AVERTED
COSHOCTON, Ohio (UPI ) A strike by 134 of the city's !55
teachers was averted _Thursday when the school b&lt;iard and
teachers agreed to arbitration
before a three~ember panel.
· The teachers had threatened .
to walk out over stalled contract · talks . More than 3,000
students would have been affected.

CINDERELLA
Poiyester and
polyester blends.
Beautiful new colors and
· from •6.00' ·

I
I

NEW SPRING AND
EASTER DRESSES

Boys' size 3-7, 100 pet.
po lyester double knit Sport
Coats with mi x or match
Litt le Farah Slacks.

for the 3. to 6X
Size Girl by

I

I

1
I
I
I

Smart Looking Dresses

~:

WITH A PURCHASE OF
$5 OR MORE

:

· ,'

I
I
I
II
I
I
I
I
I
I

I
I
I
I
I
I

SIZES 7 to 14

50
TOP VAWE STAMPS
wllh any lady's

50

-

TOP VAWE STAMPS

t:

· wilh any purchase of lady's

HOISERY or
PANTY HOSE

SCAR.F or . .
COSTU JEWELRY

Good Thru Sat. April 21 , 1973

Goo(! Thru Sat. April 21, 1973

by .,

•·

TOP

.

. .

VAN HEUSEN·
, Great looking Srping Patterns and
Styles . All . fashion co ll ars and
colors.

GET
·OF

the Iittle ·go anywhere, do
any thing basic . . . tex tured polyester double kni t
takes on new ease. Figure
flat1 er i ng . Choose pink ,
orang·e , tu rquoise, lil ac,
!
or beige. Sizes : 10-20

OUT
WITH

DEPARTMENT STORE

SIZES I4ih to 17

IN THE SILVER BRIDGE
SHOPPING PLAZA

NEW SHIPMENT OF MEN'S

•'
•

l

'

~TAMPS "

~'

~

:/ J1

· YOUNG MEN'S
POLYESTER
.
.
SPORT COATS
Sizes: 8-18
·Plaid s and Checks in
browns and navy ·.

FARAH
.POLYESTER KNIT

M'ATCH UP WITH
FARAH SLACKS

GET UP TO 700 EXTRA STAMPS WITH COUPONS ON OPPOSI'fE PAGE!
-

..

�..
7- TheSundarTinoes - Sentinel, Sunday, April&amp;, 1973

.

·was located in the park, hence
the name Court St.

Program on
town square
. '
.
heard at Riverside Study

SUNDAY
GALI.JA Coonty Riding Club,
trail ride at 11:30 a.m. at the
borne of Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Denney. The meeting will be at
b30 p.m. at the home of Mr .
and Mrs . Eugene Stevens.
Bring sack· lunch. In case of
rain the club will have its'
regular meeting April 14 at
7:30 p.m. with Mr. and Mrs.
Denney.
LAFAYETTE Shrine No. 44,
rehearsal 'for officers at 2:30
p.m.
MONDAY
CHESHIRE- Kyger PTA, open
house at 6:30 p.m. Program
will be a band concert by the
fifth and sixth grades under the
direction of David Phillips. The
third and fourth grades will
present a spelling bee . .
CLAY PTA at 7:30 p. m.
Regular meeting and election
of officers. All members are
urged to attend .
LADIES Prayer Group at the
Gallipolis Christian Church at
·10 a.m. in .the Fairview Sulr

GALLIA County Homemakers
Extension Council meets at 11
GALLIPOLIS
The
a.m. at Grace United
Ri&gt;erside Study Club met
Methodist Church . Installation
Tuesday with Mrs . Albert
of officers. Topic of discussion
Durose. During the social hour,
will-be family planning.
the hostess served a Salad
APRIL meeting of Home cow-se.
Council at 10 a.m. at Grace
The meeting was called to
United Methodist Church. . order by the president, Mrs.
Installations ?f officers.
Arthur Espenschied. Members
Po.Uuck lunch .
responded to roll with the name
MID-WEEK Lenten llervice · of an early settler of Gallia ·
conducted by Pastor Joe D. COlUl ty or someone who has
Will , New Life Lutheran greatly influenced the history
Church, ~t St. Peter's of the area .
Episcopal Church at' 7:30 p.m.
'[he program was presented
The gublic is welcome.
by guest speaker, Mrs . Harold

Wetherholt, who .told of the
early history of Galtipolis with
special emphasis on the park,

The Joseph De Vacht house
on .,.. . irst Ave. is the only one of
the early homes to have been
continuously occupied by a
lineal descendant of . the
builder. Mrs. Howard Lieurnauu, the present owner and

or public square .

occupant is a great • great -

She notOd the early settlers
were buried in the northwest
corner of the public square
across from the former Ohio
Valley Bank buildin~. When
the dead ~lm trees were
removed, some marker~like
slabs of stone were bulldozered
out, but all the inscriptions had
been removed by weather.
. The first of the four courthouses, a 30 by 40 foot building

granddaughter
DeVacht.

of

FINDS MORE MONEY
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov .
John J. Gilligan announCed
Thursday his adminiStration
! was · tacking an ••Ira 1118
' million onto the proposed state
budget for 1973-75. "Yo:e haven't
found' this money in the
basement," Gillig!'n said.
" We're saying it's going to be
there in two years."

STRIPPABLE COAL RESERVES
N THE UNITED STATES

'

Joseph
HELP AT HOME
COLUMBUS (UP!) :.._ Rtp.
Troy L. Jame~ »-Cle'leland,
was one of 20 Democrats who
introduced a bill Thursday to
establish home district offices
lor all 99 representatives and
33 senators. " We have to do so
much running around we _can't
possibly take care of all the
problems of ou:r constituents,""
James said.

Mrs . Wetherholt showed
sevei-al picture$ and . prints
which she and her husband had
colleeted .
.. The next meeting will be a
luncheon at the Holiday Inn
with ·Mrs . Espenscheid ~s
hostess.

.'

King Cool is being talked about more and more as the
fuel of the future, as the notion's gas and oil reserves
dwindle - if environmentql and ecological problems of
mining oand using cool can be solved. Estimates of the
U.S. cool supply range up to 200 years. Mop shows areas
susceptible to controversial strip-mining. Generally, cool
in the west is of low ~s ulphur type now mUch in demon~ .

PARADE OF FASHIONS
.
.

SHOP OUR CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT TO
OUTFIT THE LITTLE ONES ,_..-,

In Tlie

New Silver
Bridge
Shopping
Plaza
Mon .- Fri.10-9p.m.
Sat. l0-6·p .m .

division.
STAMPS

GALLiPOI.JS Chapter nwnber
283 OEA regular meeting at the
Masonic Temple at 7:30 p.m.
TUESDAY
FRENCH City Garden Club
will nneet with Mrs. Florence
Trainer . The program on
Ecology will be given by Mrs.
Elaine George.
RIO GRANDE C;ilVary Baptist
Ladies Auxiliary will hold their
annual love gift box opening at
7:30p.m. at the church.
KYGER Creek Band Boosters
in the band room at 7:30 p.m .
_ 9R ACE . United Methodist
Church Circle nwnber four
meets at the church at 9:30
a.m. Circle nwnber five meets
at I p.m., at the church.
Nursery will be open.
KYGER Creek Band Boosters
meet in the band room at 7:30
p.m.

'
RIVERSIDE
Study Club
luncheon meeting at :the
Holiday Inn at I p.m . Mrs.
Arth.ur Espenscheid is. hostess.
WEDNESDAY
SADDLE anct Sirloin Riding
Club wiii riieet at Bulaville
Townhouse at 7 p.m. Members
are to bring dessert.
REVJVAL at Okey Church
near Lecta at 7:30p.m. for four
nights. Andrew Workman will ·
be
speaking.
Everyone
welcome.
GRACE United Methodist
Church circle number one will
meet at the home of Mrs.
Robert O' Dell, Neighborhood
Rd. Circle number two will
meet at the home of Mrs."
Aldeth Robinson, at 210 First
Ave. Circle number three will
meet at the home of Mrs.
Kenneth Frazer on Portsmouth
Rd. all at 7:30 p.m.
FIRST United Presbyterian
Church morning circle at the
church at 9:30a .m. Afternoon
circle at 1:30 p.m. at the home
of Mrs. Donald Warehime.
Evening circle at 8 p.m. 'It the
home of Mrs. George Houf.
QN EXTENDED CRUISE
Navy Seaman Recruit
Warren E. Dotson, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Junior-A. Dotson of .
Bidwell has left his homeport
at Alameda, Calif., for an
extended Western Pacific
deployment aboard the aircraft carrier USS Coral Sea.
Once in Asian waters,-the Coral
Sea will operate with the U. S.
8th Fleet. Scheduled port visits .
include Hong Kong, Singapore,
Australia and the Philippines.
A· former student of North
Gallia High School, . Bidwell,
Dotson joined the Navy in
September, 1972.
I

,-

by:

HARDWICK
and
LORD HAMPTON

------------I11/YA..--:.

P.O. 274963

·I
I
I
I
I
I

VALUESI~MPS

:
I

I .
I

-~·· ·

'

\

OHIOAN ARRESTED
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (UPI ) FBI agents Thursday arrested
Calire W'tlson, 28, Canton, Ohio,
as he a.ttempted to board an
airplane here and charged him
with the $35,000 robherty last
month of the Harter Bank in
Canton, Ohio.
Wibon was held in lieu . of
1100.000.
. •.

:
I

I

I

Good Thru Sat..April 21, 1973.

I

fro:m 4.99

CCESSORIES

COLORIFIC AND

SMART
SPRING
HANDBAGS

VATIVE
--· TIES

~I~-~-~-~-~-g;-~-~-~-:::-~-~~:;::~_::::_:-_;_=:_=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=--=-=-~-=-=-;-;-;;-;_~-~-=-;-;-;_~-~-~-~-~-¥:_?;!_:

~

~

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

:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~A1:

I
I
I

I

100EXTRA

I
I

TOP VAWE STAMPS

.I
I
I

with any pair of

I
I
I
I
I
I

50
TOP VAWI:: STAMPS

100
TOP VAWE STAMPS

with any

-CHILDRENS
SHOES

AN'S TIE

Good Thr.11 Sat. April 21, 1973

Good Thru ·sat. April 21, 1973

i

COLORFUL
NEW
SPRING
SHOES

FOREVER YOUNG
PRICED AT20.00

21st Century Wemblon and the all new
_
t ies by Wembl ey. They are even beMer than
they took! The f eel of tines! Silk. Come see o.u r
ca ll edion in print's, solid colors and In tere sting woven patterns.

-.

A LARGE BEAUTIFUL
SELECTION OF SCARFS
.

•

.

MEN'S SHIRT-s

with any

.

.. ,

If ' .

GET UP TO 700 EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS

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

Sizes: B to 2.4112
10e pet . polyest ers, several styl es;
beaut-iful co lor s and priced from

FARAH SLACKS

•.•;"'••••••W-

are here. Smar.t new s tyl~ng and
co lor s. Si zes B to- 22 112.
Pi ctured . By Puritan .

SPRING and .
EASTER COATS

SPORT COATS 12.00

1
I
I
I

I

LADY'S PURSE

WHAT A
MATCII UP!

100 percent polyester Double Knit
Spor t Coat s. by two very famou s ·
makers, Hardwick and Lord Hampton.
New spring styling and beautiful new ·
spring color s. 36 Reg. to 46 Long.

Prites Start At

.Jacquard
knit basic

The Right-On Fashion in
-men's . shoes. The Two·. -Jnes. Sizes 7 to 11 , a ll in D

CINDERELLA'S SPRING

Good Thru Sat. April 21, 1973

SPECIAL
MEN'S TWO.
TONE SHOES
0

Widths. A 512 .00 plus valuE: .
Whi le they last Only '

POLYESTERS
.,-,...c==-:;:.. I r;;-~:-..

50
TOP VAWE STAMPS ·
with any palrof

EN'S SOCKS

STOR E ' HOURS:

Monday thru Friday
10 a.m. ti19 :00 p.m.
Saturday 10 a.m. fil6 p.m .

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

·I
I

.I

Good Thru Sat. April 21, 1973
STRIKE AVERTED
COSHOCTON, Ohio (UPI ) A strike by 134 of the city's !55
teachers was averted _Thursday when the school b&lt;iard and
teachers agreed to arbitration
before a three~ember panel.
· The teachers had threatened .
to walk out over stalled contract · talks . More than 3,000
students would have been affected.

CINDERELLA
Poiyester and
polyester blends.
Beautiful new colors and
· from •6.00' ·

I
I

NEW SPRING AND
EASTER DRESSES

Boys' size 3-7, 100 pet.
po lyester double knit Sport
Coats with mi x or match
Litt le Farah Slacks.

for the 3. to 6X
Size Girl by

I

I

1
I
I
I

Smart Looking Dresses

~:

WITH A PURCHASE OF
$5 OR MORE

:

· ,'

I
I
I
II
I
I
I
I
I
I

I
I
I
I
I
I

SIZES 7 to 14

50
TOP VAWE STAMPS
wllh any lady's

50

-

TOP VAWE STAMPS

t:

· wilh any purchase of lady's

HOISERY or
PANTY HOSE

SCAR.F or . .
COSTU JEWELRY

Good Thru Sat. April 21 , 1973

Goo(! Thru Sat. April 21, 1973

by .,

•·

TOP

.

. .

VAN HEUSEN·
, Great looking Srping Patterns and
Styles . All . fashion co ll ars and
colors.

GET
·OF

the Iittle ·go anywhere, do
any thing basic . . . tex tured polyester double kni t
takes on new ease. Figure
flat1 er i ng . Choose pink ,
orang·e , tu rquoise, lil ac,
!
or beige. Sizes : 10-20

OUT
WITH

DEPARTMENT STORE

SIZES I4ih to 17

IN THE SILVER BRIDGE
SHOPPING PLAZA

NEW SHIPMENT OF MEN'S

•'
•

l

'

~TAMPS "

~'

~

:/ J1

· YOUNG MEN'S
POLYESTER
.
.
SPORT COATS
Sizes: 8-18
·Plaid s and Checks in
browns and navy ·.

FARAH
.POLYESTER KNIT

M'ATCH UP WITH
FARAH SLACKS

GET UP TO 700 EXTRA STAMPS WITH COUPONS ON OPPOSI'fE PAGE!
-

..

�•

..

•

LJorcas

Mfo~en · ~eet

RACINE _ Eleven members
th e Dor oas Women's
Fellowship, meeting recently
in the social room of Bethany
United Methodist Church, were
led in devotions by Bernice·
Theiss.
A poem on Spring was read
of

•
MIDDLE GROUND FOUND
CLEVELA ND (UPI ) Councilman Bas il Russo,
sponsor of " Meatless Month "~
here, found some middleground ' with the. 12 ..South
Dakota cattlemen who came
here to protest the boycott of
meal. They issued a JOIIIt
statement Thursday asking for
a meetin g with Pres ident
Nixon to "attempt to find a
s olution to the economic
problems which confronts us
both ." ,_

Junior Glo-Ettes pictured above are. left to right, first row, Valerie Koker, Cheryl
Robinson, Patty Patrick, Karen Roy and Pam McMahon . Second row, Tanunie.Stewart, Penny
Proffitt ' Arm
McMahony ' Renee Smith and Shella Cassidy. Third row, Kim Waugh, Cindy
.
Hindy,Mar~ia Dillard and Lisa Warner. Fourth row, Jane Sisson, Terry Ralke, Peggy Neigur
and Bonnie Tackett.

juvenile Glo-Ettes
·win awards Sunday

•

GALLIPOLIS _ The GloEttes -are state champions
again .
Last
the junior girls
w·on first place in 1972 National
Baton Twirling Associati on.
Ohio state dance and twirl
competition~
and
team
although they placed second
this year, the juvenile girls now

'yea;

The Gla-Ettes now have the
distinctio,n of being the first
and only baton twirling group
in this. area to have held two
firs t place NBTA s tate
championships. ·
Both the juvenile and junior
girls also placed se~ ond in the
dance and twirl team category
Sunday in ·Lancaster. They

have a first place cham- · were defeated in the com-

pionship in the corps competition. The senior da:nce-twirl
. corps competition was won by
the Link-Ettes from Cincinnati.

petition
by
Micheles
JunioretteS of Canton.
There were 39 corps par-

ticipating in the military,

Lutheran women
meet at church

show, dance-twirl and parade
competition .
·This is what the Glo-Ettes
won the past weekend: first
place, Ohio state juvenile
dance-twirl corps ; second
place, Ohio state junior dance'
twirl team and Ohio s"'te
juvenile dance.twirl teain.
Tammy Eichinger, eight
years old, compe(!!d with girls
seven to 10 years of age. She
won third in Ohio state parade
majorette, fourth in Ohio state
best appearing military and
seventh place in . Ohio state
fancy strutting .
Sherry Belville and Ellen
Chambers participated in the
state . juvenile duet com- ·
petition . They will be awarded
either first or second pending
the decision of the National
-Rules Commissioner.
Ellen Chambers won first
place .in Ohio state novice solo
and Ohio state novice fancy
strut.

~

Methodist women meet
with Evelyn Rothgeb

KANAUGA- The Kanauga
United Methodist Women met
with Evelyn Rothgeb April 5.
. · The meeting opened with the
group singing "He Lives/'
followed by prayer by Mrs.
Berkley Wright.
Mrs. Carl Roush read the
scripture, Luke 24:1-9.
A poein, nThe Stone Was
Rolled Away" was read by
Mrs. R. C. Swisher. Mrs. Piney
Ward read "The ResurrectiQn
Reality." Florence Allen read
a poem, "The . Cross" and tOe
group sang 11 Must Jesus Bear
the Cross Alone?''
The · Bible study was on I
Timothy 2.
, Mrs. John RaiK.e pronounced .
the benediction.

For ABetter Job,Sooner-Go To
Business College
GBC Grads Get
The Beller Jobs!
Write, Visit or Call -946· 4367
for free ·catalog of courses
and next starting date. VA
Approved.

Gallipolis
Business College
36 Locust St.

Gallipolis

·' st. Reg . No . 71 -02-00J2B

•

The group made 54 sick calls
during theo month. Get well'and
birthday cards were signed.
The organiZation voted to
donate $10 to the· emergency
_squad.
Mrs. John Raike will host the
next rpeeting at her home.

Pictured are the juvenile Glo-Ettes. Left to right, first row, Mary Hawley, Tammy
Eichinger and Lena Phalin. Second row, Cathy Truesd~U and Melonie Dillard . .Third row,
Angie Abshire, Ellen Chambers and Cathy Baylor. 'Absert from \he picture were Nancy
Wallace, Sherry Belville, Becky Eichinger, Joy Henderson and Linda Eason.
·

Catholic women
meet at church

it;

GALLIPOLIS - The St. planning to · attend please
Peter Lutheran Church Women contact Mrs. Scholz : There will
mel recently at the fellowship be an LCW retreat May 18-20 at
hall for their regular meeting . · Lutherlyn, Pa .; and reserMrs. Frank Scholz, president, vations should be made in·
presided and presented the advance.
· devotional reading from I
A workshop concluded the
· Timothy 4.
meeting in the new kitchen of
• Plans were made fo'r the the church.
Easter activities assisted by
The Parish Education of St.
th~ LCW members, including
Peter will be attending the
an Easter breakfast, April Z2 at "Magic Show" ai Washington
the church. The confirmation ·School, Gallipolis, April 14.
class will be present£d on Palm :This will be for the first grade
Sunday, April 15, during the through junior high, with
worship service at 9 a.m. · teachers and other church
Pastor John F. Haeberle will ·members furnishin g trans'
conduct this presentation and portation .
liturgy for the youth.
A coffee hour closed the
Mrs , Kathryn M. .Daily, a meetin g with Mrs . Emil
guest and representative , of Roma~s, Mrs. Charles Oliver,
Lutheran Brotherhood of · Mrs. Kenneth Roush, Mrs.
Parker s bur g , announced Frank Scholz, Mrs. Dale Roush
( ' " ~~ ~ ~ ·ig· i d e 1 : 1 ~ .)
.
district activities for the and two guests, Mrs. Kathryn
&gt;:" .. 11' .'-' ]•ar •l:.r l·: ul •· r"J ll' i:&lt;c .\ :- ~· n .
Lutheran Church Women. M. Daily, and Pastor John F.
District Assembly will meet Haeberle, present.
May 5 at the Christ Lutheran
The next meeting will be
Tax Cut
Church in Vienna, W. Va . . April 23, followed by adjournOrnately styled cut glass
beginning at 10 a.m. with ment of the group to meet reputedly · became fashion!uncheon at iloon: Members again. iii September.
a b I e in England after a
heavy tax w a s levied on
. crystal glassware in 1745 according to its weight. Deeply cut, intricate designs re·
duced the glassware's .tax·
able weight.

Honeybees account for
more than 80 per cent of all
pollination by insects. Without honeybees , many hr,portant plants would disarJpear.

Superior

SLICED BOLOGNA1-LB.

·gge

~

Gallipolis, Ohio ...cur-~ ...U!!Io.-• ..r~

In 1794 Christian WaldThere was also 3 sawmill, excitement in the area in 1863
schmidt left his Lancaster blacksmith shop, a distillery when General John Morgan
County, Pa. home and -headed and a paper mill. The paper and his Confederate raiders
for the Ohio Country, - now mill is believed to be the first in crossed the Little Miami River
made safe b~ Mad Anthony Ohio and was located direcUy not far away, overturned an
Wayne 's Legion from Indian across the road fr om the house. approaching engine and train
attacks.
These operations required and burned government
With several companions. he many more people than lived in wagons. . .
. crossed the rugged Alleghenies the viUage . Ads were placed in
In 1941, the Christian Waldand then came by flatboat neighboring newspapers en- schmidt Home became a public
down the Ohio River to Judge couraging families to come to memorial. Through the
John Cleves Symmes vas t New Get:many , with a promise _generosity of ·Mr. and Mrs.
holdings between the tw o of schooling for the childreJJ . A Chester Kroger of Cincinnati,
Miami rivers. In the rich teacher had been hired to leach the house was given to the Ohio
bottom lands ' of the Little English and other .subjects, Soc iety, Daugh.lers of the
Miami. some 12-miles from its , while Christian Waldschmidt , American Revolution. The
GALLIPOLIS - The Cradle
mouth, the group found the site taught German .
soc iety
appointed
Mrs. to College Mothers Club held
for their new home. WaldAs the fortune of the Romona Kaiser Bradley (Mrs. its montllly meeting at the
schmidt purchased 1,140 acres villagers fl ourished , Wald- · Judson ) as chairman of the hqne of Mrs. Tom Pritchford
at tbe price of one Spanish schmidt decided to build a ...restoration committee . Thursday evening .
Following roll call, Mrs.
dollar per acre.
large home i~ t~e style of the Restoring the struc~re, furLeaving several of the men Pennsylvania countryside nishing and operating it have James Skidmore gave the
to clear the land and build from which he had come. Using been accomplished by the treasurer's report. There were
cabin homes, Waldschmidt and native field stone, held OAR.
14 members present.
the others made the long return together with white mortar,
The house is open to the
Mrs . Mike Johnson was
trip to Pennsylvania for their and heavy oak timbers, he public on Sundays from Apr. I welcomed as a new member .
families and belongings. He completed his home in 1804.
to November I and ori SaturNew officers elected were
In 1814, Christian Wald- days and Sundays from 1-5 president,. Mrs. Roger Dee!;
had seven children by his wife ,
Catnerine.
schmidt died, having lived well p.m. from June to Sep- vice president, Mrs. Steve
By 1798 20 families were in Ohio. He lies buried in the tember, at no charge, Fuller; secretary, Mrs. Ron
living in the small village ·, small cemetery near his home. Donations, however, are Twyman ; treasurer, Mrs .
which was ·named New GerDuring the period of the Civil gratefully accepted . Ar- Clyde Smith; reporter many. Two years later, the War, New Germany and · rangements
for
group librarian, Mrs. Terry Johnson
village boasted, in addiliQn to a vicinity became a training and meetings and tours can be and historian, Mrs. Clyde
church, a general store and a induction center for Union made with the trustees. Any Smith.
school, a number of mills and troopS. The center was named individual may donate money
Committees elected were, ·
shops. By damming the nearby Carnp Dennison in honor of the for landscaping and the activities, Mrs . Tom Pitchriver and using "the water governor of Obio . General driveway ·or trees. r::·
.
ford and Mrs . Bill Mepower to turn great wooden· Joshua Bates, commandant of
Two new trustees have been --· creedy; telephone, Mrs .
wheels, the villagers began the the center , u•&lt;d Christian elected . They are Mrs. Arthur James Skidmore and Mrs. Tim
manufacture of linen, wool and Waldschmidt's house for his Faulwetter, Cincinnati and Bickers; ways and means,
flour.
... ....
headquarters. There was much Jean Powell.
Mrs. Doyle Saunders, Mrs.
Harold von Lookado and Mrs.
Paul Hollingshead.
The ladies modeled spring
bonnets made from household
.supplies . The prize for the-most

I

J
'.

'

favorit ~ I a?~·
ZW358M ·17J

Yellow, olive green dial. {Also

available in while with. blue dia l,
· ZW3 57M .) $79.50

Ted Flood. Watchmaker .
"We Servic:e What we Sell" .

PAUL DAVIES
JEWElERS
404 Se'cond Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio

'

there was a discussion concerning Grace Guild sponsoring a project to ~c ure wallto-wall carpeting for the crawl
nursery .
. Mrs. Elsie McCall gave the
nominating committee report,
which was a ccepted. New

origlral hat went to Mrs. Don
Smith.
Rcfreshinenls were served
by hostesses, Mrs . Pritchford
and Mrs. von Lookado .
Mrs. Don Smith won the door
prize .
The next meeting will be a
cookout for the members and
their husbands at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Fuller,
May 12:

AN ELEGANT NEW
DIAMOND BRIDAL
8403 ... lh .Ct .
8404 ... I Ct. .,- ··· B40S ... llll Ct . ·~~

'1

422 Second Ave .

Serving you since 1934"
Gallipolis. Ohio

I

Gallipolis, Ohio

326 Second Ave.

Yes, We Have

-~

REV LON

--en

Easter
eostumemakt~rs

BUY .3 PAIR

AND WE WII,L

ON ALL BRIDAL PARTY FABRICS

GIVE YOU

WE HAVE SOMETHING FOR
EVERY WEDDING
•

CHILDREN'S

THE 4th PAIR.

LARGE OR SMALL

FREEl

;

SIZE 10 TO 3

WE CARRY BRIDAL-I:tEADPIECESI

$}00

FRENCH .CITY F.ABRIC SHOPPE

Open Monday thru Saturday 10 am to 9 pm
Sunday 1 pm to Epm

·

~
~

~

"'L~

O~en 'Til8 Mon·. &amp; Fri.- Open All Day Thursday
2 COMPLETE FLOOR OF
• FABR-ICS &amp; NOTIONS
~

'

SIMPLICITY, McCALLS, BUTT ERICK, VOGOE PATTERNS
WE DO CUSTOM DRESSMAKING-SINGER SAlES&amp; SERVICE

sa Court St.

'Ph. 446-9255

Gallipolis

E.

FINISH TOUCH Is applied'
to a Saturn IB In the . Ken,
nedy Space ·Center assembly building. First and second stages lor the Skylab
orbital w o r k s h o P are
m 0 u n 1 e d on a mobile
launcher. The Skylab mission In May will send astronauts Charles Conrad·, Dr .
Joseph Kerwin and Paul
Weitz Into orbit - to rendezvous and dock with an
0 r b 1t 10 g workshop. They
will remain tn the work·
shop for 28 days.

atl'

CHARGE-'LAYAWAY
OPEN
Mon. &amp; Fri. 9:30 til8 p.m.
Tues. Wed. Thur. Sat.
9:30 til S p.m.

Just Come in and Try 'em
A Coat, Je'rold's cOntrast stif';=h• Sh irt·
w~lst Trench . Textured woven pol y ester .
Color : Banana. Size 8·16. sso.oo,
. . B. Handbag, Lou Tay lor ~ - co mpartment
adjustabt ~ strap flap ctos rng . S22 .00 .
(. Scarves by Vera Paste.ls. So!ids and
Prints . Beaut·i ful colors, rncludrng red ,
white &amp; blue :

D. Gloves by Kays er starting at n.so .In
white, . black, r.ed, navy , pastels wtth
deli cate trim s.
E . Costume · jewelry
Long er ali.

$225

S3Bt
. S.59S

TAWNEY ·
JEWELERS

OAN THOMAS
AND SON

I'

10% DISCOUNT DURING APRIL

GROUP OF

SILVER BRIDGE SHOPPING PLAZA

will

330.Second Avenu~

'

BETTER FOOTWEAR FOR THE FAMILY

off icers are Mrs. Hoke
Robin s on, president, Mrs.
Viola t arter, vi ce-presid en~ .
and Mrs. Helen Smith ,
secre"'ry. They
be installed at the May meeting.
Mrs. James L. Clark, Rio
Grande, was guest speaker.
Her program wa s on
"C hris moms ' " · ChriStian
.
Church Symbols. She displayed
many of the symbols she has
made. She said the Methodist
Church at Jacksm1 used these
symbols as ornaments for the
church Christmas tree during
the last few years.
The meeting closed with a
meditation by Mrs . Max
Tawney.
Preceding the· program, a
ham loaf dinner was served by
the followin g committee,
Thelma Neal, chairwoman,
Bernice Childers, Florence
WicklfnC, Ruth Bailes, Kate
Dobbins and Elsie Neal. The
table WaS decor;.Jted in an
'
Easter motif
..

r

years.
Others were the fig tree in
Genesis; hemlock in Hosea and
in Nwnber and Psalms; apple the Judas tree in Matthew. The .·"
{apricot) in Proverbs; balm, blossoms of mis tree were pink
{Balsam) , Ezekiel; box tree, JUJtil Judas hung himself on the
Isaiah; almug tree, I Kings; tree. The blossoms then supbubrush, Exodus; cassia, posedly turned red with shame .
Some of these plants and .
Exodus; cedar (juniper),
while
Numbe~s; cedar (Lebanon and trees were ·used for wOod,
•
others
served
medicinal
Cypress), Isaiah.
The Ark of the Covenant was pu~oseS or were made into oil.
made of Cypress as were twO · tfie hostesses serv~d a
doors. in St. Peter's Cathedral dessert course . to close t.he
in Rome, which lasted over 600 session.

WE HAVE FABRICS, UNIQUE &amp; UNUSUAL FOR
· EVERY BRIDE'S WEDDING. VISIT US TODAY

$297

fSOr~P/rr :.

residin~ in the area of Rio
Grande, Cora : Rodney, Gage,
etc. is invited to attend and
bring a fr iend.
.
Citizens Club; April 3, for the
A prize will be awarded lor
Rio Grande area . •
the best name submitted for
Elected iJs co.-chairwomen this new club.
were Mrs . Mary Denn y and
Mrs. Beatrice Cla rk . Mrs .
Jessie Richards wa_s chosen
sec ret ar y~t r e a s ur e r .
Mrs .
Roxie Salzman will be the
group's representati ve to the
Ga llia County Council on
Aging.
The next meeting will be held
at the Rodney Grange Hall
May I at 5:30 p:m, Those atte nding are asked to bring a
covered dish and their own
table service . George Northup
will be in charge of entertainrncnt.
Anyone in the age group
d.

FRENCH CITY ~ABRIC SHOPPE ENCOURAGES All BRIDES TO
. VISIT OUR STORE AND SELECT THE GOWN OF HER DREAMS FROM OUR
WIDE SELECTION OF FABRICS, TRIMS AND BRIDAl ACCESSORIES.

NOT All
SIZES BUT .

make it. Come choGse
a Lady Seiko f9r your

Moulton

group of persons 55 and over in
age met to form a Senior

PANTY HOSE FREE

SIZES UP TO 10

the lime it took to

RIO GRANDE

Hall was the scene when a

GET A PAIR OF

GROUP OF ·

Everything's
elegant but the
price. All Seiko
watches are
· aulomation·made ,,
so you pay only for ·
the timepi~ce , not

.

Cradle to College
holds monthly ~~et

GALLIPOLIS- The English Willa Breland and Mrs .
Club met at the home of Mrs . Elizabeth Evans.
Virginia Burner Tuesday with
O(ficers elected were
Mrs .
Ruth
Mrs. Ruth Mullineaux as co- president,
h'ostess.
Mullineaux;
vice-president,
Those answering roll call Mrs. Alma Caudill; secretary,
with the name of their favorite .,-- Mrs. Irene Brannon and
flower were Mrs. Isabelle Bias, treasurer, Mr~. June Cantrell.
Miss Margaret Topping
Mrs. Ruby Bossard, Mrs. Irene
Brannon Mrs. Mary Virginia reviewed the book "All the
Burner, 'Mrs. June Cantrell, Plants of the Bible" by
Mrs. Alma Caudill, Mrs . Winifred Walker. ·There were
Beatrice Clark, Mrs. Jennie 114 Bible plants, including the
Elliott, Mrs. Ruth Mullineaux, algum tree in II Chronicles;
Mrs. Marjorie Plyinale, Mrs. the almond, in Numbers; aloes
Mabel Waugh, Mrs_. Florence
Wickline and · Miss Margaret
ATTENDS SEMINAR
Topping.
GALLIPOLIS
Polly
Cards were. sent to Mrs.
Wetherholt, R. N., Gallipolis
City School nurse, recently
attended a Family Planning
Seminar in Ironton. The
features speaker was Dr .Robert Kaplan, professor of
· Health Education at O~io State
University. His topic for the
day was 11 Hwnan SexuaHty
and Behavior." Those attending were from Athens,
Hocking, Lawrence and Gallia
Counties.

American industry an·
nually throws 30 million•
tons of smoke and other
debris into the sky.

a

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Hoke
Robinson presided at the Grace
Guild April meeting . Her
thought for the month was
William J. Bryant's " ! Shall
Not Doubt lnunor"'lity ."
During the business meeting,

fi

Sentors groull Qrfne

'Bible plants ' topic of
English club book review .

c~ummer

1:00 PM TO 6:00 PM ONLY

. .

Mrs. Clark is
_Guild speaker

DAR sponsors
Waldschmidt home

u.iztch.

£COHOMT ORIG I ~IIES

SLICED
BACON
1-LB. 99e
'2-LB. •1.89

~

We Have

•

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Mrs.
Katie Gilligan, wife of Gov.
John J. Gilligan, was released
from University Hospital Iiere
Thursday afte~ doctors noted
her condition had improved
and tests failed to indicate any
further hospiwl treatment was
needed .
Mrs. GiUigan was admitted
to the hospital Sunday night,
s~ffering from abdominal
pains.

LadySeiko
Desigr}er

WEO

All Good

YeS,

BQID1
of

KATIE RELEASED

WOMEN'S
Everything Is
Guaranteed
To Satisfyo~ Money Back

A golden eagle builds its
nest of boughs ~P to four
feet long and an inch in di·
ameter. A completed nest
may ~ eig h a ton.

'

Rummage Sale on Friday and
Saturday, April 13 and 14. All
members of the church are
asked to gather their discarded
clothing and other items for
this sale. Further details will
be announced later.
The ladies of St. Louis Parish
will be hosts to the Church
Women United at · their
Fellowship Dinner in the
church ·basement at 6:30 p.m.
Friday, May 4.
The next meeting of. the
Catholic Women's Club Will be
Monday night, Aprilj6, at 7:45
p.m. in the church basement.

Since 1859

W~~ RI

~

Second Avenu~

GALLIPOLIS - At the last
meeting of the Catholic
Women's Club of St. Louis
Church, the women ; :were
treated to an excellent
program of poetry re~dings by
Miss Joanne Ford. Many of her
selections were taken !rom the
Psalms in the Bible regarding
Jewish Passover and Christian
traditions, tieing into the
Lenten season as ~e know as
well as poetry_ that she composed herself. Especially
FACTS:
lovely w~re the poems written
on the subject of. the angels:
)'receding the program, tbe
business meeting was opened
and presided over by Mrs .
SaJUJdra Koby, president.
The members voted to
donate $5 to the Heart Fund.
and $10 to the Emergency
Ambulance Service.
Membership dues of $1 are
due and should be gi veil or sent
On ly 5 other presidents to Mrs. (;retch en 'Carty, 22
beside s President Nixon Edgemont Dr., Gallipolis.
have served ~ur in g .a time
The phone conunittee and
when· there were no former other committee chairJiving presidents. The World
Almanac recalls they were manships wil~·be · reorganized
Washington , John Adams, during the next month. Each
Grant , Theodore ~ooseve lt committee will be held
and Hoover: Of these peri- respi'Jrisible for one program
ods Washington 's 8 years
was the longest and Hoov- each year and the refresher's Was the shortest- two ments following the program.
months .
It was decided to have a

WORLD ALMANAC

by each member, and two
guests were intr!lduced, Rev.
Cheesebrew and Rev. Shiveley,
who spoke on Issue No. 1
(Lottery) . coming up in the
1\lay primary election. They
asked each member to vote no
explained the reasons lor such'
a vote and urged each ORe to
tell others. A business session
followed .
•
Prayer by Hazal Calllll!han
closed the meeting. Refresh.me nts of ice cream, cake and
coffee "were served by Edna
Kn opp and Esther West. A.
silent auction netted $15.40 lor
the fellowship treasury,

.

9- The SJUJday Times- Sentinel, 1l,undaY. April8, !973

by

Juno . and

F. Dres s, Bleeker Street in wastia~le
jXllyesl er, permanent press pleats. Wh r.t e
with navy trim . Si1es: 8-18. S38.00.
·

On

,,

�•

..

•

LJorcas

Mfo~en · ~eet

RACINE _ Eleven members
th e Dor oas Women's
Fellowship, meeting recently
in the social room of Bethany
United Methodist Church, were
led in devotions by Bernice·
Theiss.
A poem on Spring was read
of

•
MIDDLE GROUND FOUND
CLEVELA ND (UPI ) Councilman Bas il Russo,
sponsor of " Meatless Month "~
here, found some middleground ' with the. 12 ..South
Dakota cattlemen who came
here to protest the boycott of
meal. They issued a JOIIIt
statement Thursday asking for
a meetin g with Pres ident
Nixon to "attempt to find a
s olution to the economic
problems which confronts us
both ." ,_

Junior Glo-Ettes pictured above are. left to right, first row, Valerie Koker, Cheryl
Robinson, Patty Patrick, Karen Roy and Pam McMahon . Second row, Tanunie.Stewart, Penny
Proffitt ' Arm
McMahony ' Renee Smith and Shella Cassidy. Third row, Kim Waugh, Cindy
.
Hindy,Mar~ia Dillard and Lisa Warner. Fourth row, Jane Sisson, Terry Ralke, Peggy Neigur
and Bonnie Tackett.

juvenile Glo-Ettes
·win awards Sunday

•

GALLIPOLIS _ The GloEttes -are state champions
again .
Last
the junior girls
w·on first place in 1972 National
Baton Twirling Associati on.
Ohio state dance and twirl
competition~
and
team
although they placed second
this year, the juvenile girls now

'yea;

The Gla-Ettes now have the
distinctio,n of being the first
and only baton twirling group
in this. area to have held two
firs t place NBTA s tate
championships. ·
Both the juvenile and junior
girls also placed se~ ond in the
dance and twirl team category
Sunday in ·Lancaster. They

have a first place cham- · were defeated in the com-

pionship in the corps competition. The senior da:nce-twirl
. corps competition was won by
the Link-Ettes from Cincinnati.

petition
by
Micheles
JunioretteS of Canton.
There were 39 corps par-

ticipating in the military,

Lutheran women
meet at church

show, dance-twirl and parade
competition .
·This is what the Glo-Ettes
won the past weekend: first
place, Ohio state juvenile
dance-twirl corps ; second
place, Ohio state junior dance'
twirl team and Ohio s"'te
juvenile dance.twirl teain.
Tammy Eichinger, eight
years old, compe(!!d with girls
seven to 10 years of age. She
won third in Ohio state parade
majorette, fourth in Ohio state
best appearing military and
seventh place in . Ohio state
fancy strutting .
Sherry Belville and Ellen
Chambers participated in the
state . juvenile duet com- ·
petition . They will be awarded
either first or second pending
the decision of the National
-Rules Commissioner.
Ellen Chambers won first
place .in Ohio state novice solo
and Ohio state novice fancy
strut.

~

Methodist women meet
with Evelyn Rothgeb

KANAUGA- The Kanauga
United Methodist Women met
with Evelyn Rothgeb April 5.
. · The meeting opened with the
group singing "He Lives/'
followed by prayer by Mrs.
Berkley Wright.
Mrs. Carl Roush read the
scripture, Luke 24:1-9.
A poein, nThe Stone Was
Rolled Away" was read by
Mrs. R. C. Swisher. Mrs. Piney
Ward read "The ResurrectiQn
Reality." Florence Allen read
a poem, "The . Cross" and tOe
group sang 11 Must Jesus Bear
the Cross Alone?''
The · Bible study was on I
Timothy 2.
, Mrs. John RaiK.e pronounced .
the benediction.

For ABetter Job,Sooner-Go To
Business College
GBC Grads Get
The Beller Jobs!
Write, Visit or Call -946· 4367
for free ·catalog of courses
and next starting date. VA
Approved.

Gallipolis
Business College
36 Locust St.

Gallipolis

·' st. Reg . No . 71 -02-00J2B

•

The group made 54 sick calls
during theo month. Get well'and
birthday cards were signed.
The organiZation voted to
donate $10 to the· emergency
_squad.
Mrs. John Raike will host the
next rpeeting at her home.

Pictured are the juvenile Glo-Ettes. Left to right, first row, Mary Hawley, Tammy
Eichinger and Lena Phalin. Second row, Cathy Truesd~U and Melonie Dillard . .Third row,
Angie Abshire, Ellen Chambers and Cathy Baylor. 'Absert from \he picture were Nancy
Wallace, Sherry Belville, Becky Eichinger, Joy Henderson and Linda Eason.
·

Catholic women
meet at church

it;

GALLIPOLIS - The St. planning to · attend please
Peter Lutheran Church Women contact Mrs. Scholz : There will
mel recently at the fellowship be an LCW retreat May 18-20 at
hall for their regular meeting . · Lutherlyn, Pa .; and reserMrs. Frank Scholz, president, vations should be made in·
presided and presented the advance.
· devotional reading from I
A workshop concluded the
· Timothy 4.
meeting in the new kitchen of
• Plans were made fo'r the the church.
Easter activities assisted by
The Parish Education of St.
th~ LCW members, including
Peter will be attending the
an Easter breakfast, April Z2 at "Magic Show" ai Washington
the church. The confirmation ·School, Gallipolis, April 14.
class will be present£d on Palm :This will be for the first grade
Sunday, April 15, during the through junior high, with
worship service at 9 a.m. · teachers and other church
Pastor John F. Haeberle will ·members furnishin g trans'
conduct this presentation and portation .
liturgy for the youth.
A coffee hour closed the
Mrs , Kathryn M. .Daily, a meetin g with Mrs . Emil
guest and representative , of Roma~s, Mrs. Charles Oliver,
Lutheran Brotherhood of · Mrs. Kenneth Roush, Mrs.
Parker s bur g , announced Frank Scholz, Mrs. Dale Roush
( ' " ~~ ~ ~ ·ig· i d e 1 : 1 ~ .)
.
district activities for the and two guests, Mrs. Kathryn
&gt;:" .. 11' .'-' ]•ar •l:.r l·: ul •· r"J ll' i:&lt;c .\ :- ~· n .
Lutheran Church Women. M. Daily, and Pastor John F.
District Assembly will meet Haeberle, present.
May 5 at the Christ Lutheran
The next meeting will be
Tax Cut
Church in Vienna, W. Va . . April 23, followed by adjournOrnately styled cut glass
beginning at 10 a.m. with ment of the group to meet reputedly · became fashion!uncheon at iloon: Members again. iii September.
a b I e in England after a
heavy tax w a s levied on
. crystal glassware in 1745 according to its weight. Deeply cut, intricate designs re·
duced the glassware's .tax·
able weight.

Honeybees account for
more than 80 per cent of all
pollination by insects. Without honeybees , many hr,portant plants would disarJpear.

Superior

SLICED BOLOGNA1-LB.

·gge

~

Gallipolis, Ohio ...cur-~ ...U!!Io.-• ..r~

In 1794 Christian WaldThere was also 3 sawmill, excitement in the area in 1863
schmidt left his Lancaster blacksmith shop, a distillery when General John Morgan
County, Pa. home and -headed and a paper mill. The paper and his Confederate raiders
for the Ohio Country, - now mill is believed to be the first in crossed the Little Miami River
made safe b~ Mad Anthony Ohio and was located direcUy not far away, overturned an
Wayne 's Legion from Indian across the road fr om the house. approaching engine and train
attacks.
These operations required and burned government
With several companions. he many more people than lived in wagons. . .
. crossed the rugged Alleghenies the viUage . Ads were placed in
In 1941, the Christian Waldand then came by flatboat neighboring newspapers en- schmidt Home became a public
down the Ohio River to Judge couraging families to come to memorial. Through the
John Cleves Symmes vas t New Get:many , with a promise _generosity of ·Mr. and Mrs.
holdings between the tw o of schooling for the childreJJ . A Chester Kroger of Cincinnati,
Miami rivers. In the rich teacher had been hired to leach the house was given to the Ohio
bottom lands ' of the Little English and other .subjects, Soc iety, Daugh.lers of the
Miami. some 12-miles from its , while Christian Waldschmidt , American Revolution. The
GALLIPOLIS - The Cradle
mouth, the group found the site taught German .
soc iety
appointed
Mrs. to College Mothers Club held
for their new home. WaldAs the fortune of the Romona Kaiser Bradley (Mrs. its montllly meeting at the
schmidt purchased 1,140 acres villagers fl ourished , Wald- · Judson ) as chairman of the hqne of Mrs. Tom Pritchford
at tbe price of one Spanish schmidt decided to build a ...restoration committee . Thursday evening .
Following roll call, Mrs.
dollar per acre.
large home i~ t~e style of the Restoring the struc~re, furLeaving several of the men Pennsylvania countryside nishing and operating it have James Skidmore gave the
to clear the land and build from which he had come. Using been accomplished by the treasurer's report. There were
cabin homes, Waldschmidt and native field stone, held OAR.
14 members present.
the others made the long return together with white mortar,
The house is open to the
Mrs . Mike Johnson was
trip to Pennsylvania for their and heavy oak timbers, he public on Sundays from Apr. I welcomed as a new member .
families and belongings. He completed his home in 1804.
to November I and ori SaturNew officers elected were
In 1814, Christian Wald- days and Sundays from 1-5 president,. Mrs. Roger Dee!;
had seven children by his wife ,
Catnerine.
schmidt died, having lived well p.m. from June to Sep- vice president, Mrs. Steve
By 1798 20 families were in Ohio. He lies buried in the tember, at no charge, Fuller; secretary, Mrs. Ron
living in the small village ·, small cemetery near his home. Donations, however, are Twyman ; treasurer, Mrs .
which was ·named New GerDuring the period of the Civil gratefully accepted . Ar- Clyde Smith; reporter many. Two years later, the War, New Germany and · rangements
for
group librarian, Mrs. Terry Johnson
village boasted, in addiliQn to a vicinity became a training and meetings and tours can be and historian, Mrs. Clyde
church, a general store and a induction center for Union made with the trustees. Any Smith.
school, a number of mills and troopS. The center was named individual may donate money
Committees elected were, ·
shops. By damming the nearby Carnp Dennison in honor of the for landscaping and the activities, Mrs . Tom Pitchriver and using "the water governor of Obio . General driveway ·or trees. r::·
.
ford and Mrs . Bill Mepower to turn great wooden· Joshua Bates, commandant of
Two new trustees have been --· creedy; telephone, Mrs .
wheels, the villagers began the the center , u•&lt;d Christian elected . They are Mrs. Arthur James Skidmore and Mrs. Tim
manufacture of linen, wool and Waldschmidt's house for his Faulwetter, Cincinnati and Bickers; ways and means,
flour.
... ....
headquarters. There was much Jean Powell.
Mrs. Doyle Saunders, Mrs.
Harold von Lookado and Mrs.
Paul Hollingshead.
The ladies modeled spring
bonnets made from household
.supplies . The prize for the-most

I

J
'.

'

favorit ~ I a?~·
ZW358M ·17J

Yellow, olive green dial. {Also

available in while with. blue dia l,
· ZW3 57M .) $79.50

Ted Flood. Watchmaker .
"We Servic:e What we Sell" .

PAUL DAVIES
JEWElERS
404 Se'cond Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio

'

there was a discussion concerning Grace Guild sponsoring a project to ~c ure wallto-wall carpeting for the crawl
nursery .
. Mrs. Elsie McCall gave the
nominating committee report,
which was a ccepted. New

origlral hat went to Mrs. Don
Smith.
Rcfreshinenls were served
by hostesses, Mrs . Pritchford
and Mrs. von Lookado .
Mrs. Don Smith won the door
prize .
The next meeting will be a
cookout for the members and
their husbands at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Fuller,
May 12:

AN ELEGANT NEW
DIAMOND BRIDAL
8403 ... lh .Ct .
8404 ... I Ct. .,- ··· B40S ... llll Ct . ·~~

'1

422 Second Ave .

Serving you since 1934"
Gallipolis. Ohio

I

Gallipolis, Ohio

326 Second Ave.

Yes, We Have

-~

REV LON

--en

Easter
eostumemakt~rs

BUY .3 PAIR

AND WE WII,L

ON ALL BRIDAL PARTY FABRICS

GIVE YOU

WE HAVE SOMETHING FOR
EVERY WEDDING
•

CHILDREN'S

THE 4th PAIR.

LARGE OR SMALL

FREEl

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SIZE 10 TO 3

WE CARRY BRIDAL-I:tEADPIECESI

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FRENCH .CITY F.ABRIC SHOPPE

Open Monday thru Saturday 10 am to 9 pm
Sunday 1 pm to Epm

·

~
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O~en 'Til8 Mon·. &amp; Fri.- Open All Day Thursday
2 COMPLETE FLOOR OF
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~

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WE DO CUSTOM DRESSMAKING-SINGER SAlES&amp; SERVICE

sa Court St.

'Ph. 446-9255

Gallipolis

E.

FINISH TOUCH Is applied'
to a Saturn IB In the . Ken,
nedy Space ·Center assembly building. First and second stages lor the Skylab
orbital w o r k s h o P are
m 0 u n 1 e d on a mobile
launcher. The Skylab mission In May will send astronauts Charles Conrad·, Dr .
Joseph Kerwin and Paul
Weitz Into orbit - to rendezvous and dock with an
0 r b 1t 10 g workshop. They
will remain tn the work·
shop for 28 days.

atl'

CHARGE-'LAYAWAY
OPEN
Mon. &amp; Fri. 9:30 til8 p.m.
Tues. Wed. Thur. Sat.
9:30 til S p.m.

Just Come in and Try 'em
A Coat, Je'rold's cOntrast stif';=h• Sh irt·
w~lst Trench . Textured woven pol y ester .
Color : Banana. Size 8·16. sso.oo,
. . B. Handbag, Lou Tay lor ~ - co mpartment
adjustabt ~ strap flap ctos rng . S22 .00 .
(. Scarves by Vera Paste.ls. So!ids and
Prints . Beaut·i ful colors, rncludrng red ,
white &amp; blue :

D. Gloves by Kays er starting at n.so .In
white, . black, r.ed, navy , pastels wtth
deli cate trim s.
E . Costume · jewelry
Long er ali.

$225

S3Bt
. S.59S

TAWNEY ·
JEWELERS

OAN THOMAS
AND SON

I'

10% DISCOUNT DURING APRIL

GROUP OF

SILVER BRIDGE SHOPPING PLAZA

will

330.Second Avenu~

'

BETTER FOOTWEAR FOR THE FAMILY

off icers are Mrs. Hoke
Robin s on, president, Mrs.
Viola t arter, vi ce-presid en~ .
and Mrs. Helen Smith ,
secre"'ry. They
be installed at the May meeting.
Mrs. James L. Clark, Rio
Grande, was guest speaker.
Her program wa s on
"C hris moms ' " · ChriStian
.
Church Symbols. She displayed
many of the symbols she has
made. She said the Methodist
Church at Jacksm1 used these
symbols as ornaments for the
church Christmas tree during
the last few years.
The meeting closed with a
meditation by Mrs . Max
Tawney.
Preceding the· program, a
ham loaf dinner was served by
the followin g committee,
Thelma Neal, chairwoman,
Bernice Childers, Florence
WicklfnC, Ruth Bailes, Kate
Dobbins and Elsie Neal. The
table WaS decor;.Jted in an
'
Easter motif
..

r

years.
Others were the fig tree in
Genesis; hemlock in Hosea and
in Nwnber and Psalms; apple the Judas tree in Matthew. The .·"
{apricot) in Proverbs; balm, blossoms of mis tree were pink
{Balsam) , Ezekiel; box tree, JUJtil Judas hung himself on the
Isaiah; almug tree, I Kings; tree. The blossoms then supbubrush, Exodus; cassia, posedly turned red with shame .
Some of these plants and .
Exodus; cedar (juniper),
while
Numbe~s; cedar (Lebanon and trees were ·used for wOod,
•
others
served
medicinal
Cypress), Isaiah.
The Ark of the Covenant was pu~oseS or were made into oil.
made of Cypress as were twO · tfie hostesses serv~d a
doors. in St. Peter's Cathedral dessert course . to close t.he
in Rome, which lasted over 600 session.

WE HAVE FABRICS, UNIQUE &amp; UNUSUAL FOR
· EVERY BRIDE'S WEDDING. VISIT US TODAY

$297

fSOr~P/rr :.

residin~ in the area of Rio
Grande, Cora : Rodney, Gage,
etc. is invited to attend and
bring a fr iend.
.
Citizens Club; April 3, for the
A prize will be awarded lor
Rio Grande area . •
the best name submitted for
Elected iJs co.-chairwomen this new club.
were Mrs . Mary Denn y and
Mrs. Beatrice Cla rk . Mrs .
Jessie Richards wa_s chosen
sec ret ar y~t r e a s ur e r .
Mrs .
Roxie Salzman will be the
group's representati ve to the
Ga llia County Council on
Aging.
The next meeting will be held
at the Rodney Grange Hall
May I at 5:30 p:m, Those atte nding are asked to bring a
covered dish and their own
table service . George Northup
will be in charge of entertainrncnt.
Anyone in the age group
d.

FRENCH CITY ~ABRIC SHOPPE ENCOURAGES All BRIDES TO
. VISIT OUR STORE AND SELECT THE GOWN OF HER DREAMS FROM OUR
WIDE SELECTION OF FABRICS, TRIMS AND BRIDAl ACCESSORIES.

NOT All
SIZES BUT .

make it. Come choGse
a Lady Seiko f9r your

Moulton

group of persons 55 and over in
age met to form a Senior

PANTY HOSE FREE

SIZES UP TO 10

the lime it took to

RIO GRANDE

Hall was the scene when a

GET A PAIR OF

GROUP OF ·

Everything's
elegant but the
price. All Seiko
watches are
· aulomation·made ,,
so you pay only for ·
the timepi~ce , not

.

Cradle to College
holds monthly ~~et

GALLIPOLIS- The English Willa Breland and Mrs .
Club met at the home of Mrs . Elizabeth Evans.
Virginia Burner Tuesday with
O(ficers elected were
Mrs .
Ruth
Mrs. Ruth Mullineaux as co- president,
h'ostess.
Mullineaux;
vice-president,
Those answering roll call Mrs. Alma Caudill; secretary,
with the name of their favorite .,-- Mrs. Irene Brannon and
flower were Mrs. Isabelle Bias, treasurer, Mr~. June Cantrell.
Miss Margaret Topping
Mrs. Ruby Bossard, Mrs. Irene
Brannon Mrs. Mary Virginia reviewed the book "All the
Burner, 'Mrs. June Cantrell, Plants of the Bible" by
Mrs. Alma Caudill, Mrs . Winifred Walker. ·There were
Beatrice Clark, Mrs. Jennie 114 Bible plants, including the
Elliott, Mrs. Ruth Mullineaux, algum tree in II Chronicles;
Mrs. Marjorie Plyinale, Mrs. the almond, in Numbers; aloes
Mabel Waugh, Mrs_. Florence
Wickline and · Miss Margaret
ATTENDS SEMINAR
Topping.
GALLIPOLIS
Polly
Cards were. sent to Mrs.
Wetherholt, R. N., Gallipolis
City School nurse, recently
attended a Family Planning
Seminar in Ironton. The
features speaker was Dr .Robert Kaplan, professor of
· Health Education at O~io State
University. His topic for the
day was 11 Hwnan SexuaHty
and Behavior." Those attending were from Athens,
Hocking, Lawrence and Gallia
Counties.

American industry an·
nually throws 30 million•
tons of smoke and other
debris into the sky.

a

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Hoke
Robinson presided at the Grace
Guild April meeting . Her
thought for the month was
William J. Bryant's " ! Shall
Not Doubt lnunor"'lity ."
During the business meeting,

fi

Sentors groull Qrfne

'Bible plants ' topic of
English club book review .

c~ummer

1:00 PM TO 6:00 PM ONLY

. .

Mrs. Clark is
_Guild speaker

DAR sponsors
Waldschmidt home

u.iztch.

£COHOMT ORIG I ~IIES

SLICED
BACON
1-LB. 99e
'2-LB. •1.89

~

We Have

•

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Mrs.
Katie Gilligan, wife of Gov.
John J. Gilligan, was released
from University Hospital Iiere
Thursday afte~ doctors noted
her condition had improved
and tests failed to indicate any
further hospiwl treatment was
needed .
Mrs. GiUigan was admitted
to the hospital Sunday night,
s~ffering from abdominal
pains.

LadySeiko
Desigr}er

WEO

All Good

YeS,

BQID1
of

KATIE RELEASED

WOMEN'S
Everything Is
Guaranteed
To Satisfyo~ Money Back

A golden eagle builds its
nest of boughs ~P to four
feet long and an inch in di·
ameter. A completed nest
may ~ eig h a ton.

'

Rummage Sale on Friday and
Saturday, April 13 and 14. All
members of the church are
asked to gather their discarded
clothing and other items for
this sale. Further details will
be announced later.
The ladies of St. Louis Parish
will be hosts to the Church
Women United at · their
Fellowship Dinner in the
church ·basement at 6:30 p.m.
Friday, May 4.
The next meeting of. the
Catholic Women's Club Will be
Monday night, Aprilj6, at 7:45
p.m. in the church basement.

Since 1859

W~~ RI

~

Second Avenu~

GALLIPOLIS - At the last
meeting of the Catholic
Women's Club of St. Louis
Church, the women ; :were
treated to an excellent
program of poetry re~dings by
Miss Joanne Ford. Many of her
selections were taken !rom the
Psalms in the Bible regarding
Jewish Passover and Christian
traditions, tieing into the
Lenten season as ~e know as
well as poetry_ that she composed herself. Especially
FACTS:
lovely w~re the poems written
on the subject of. the angels:
)'receding the program, tbe
business meeting was opened
and presided over by Mrs .
SaJUJdra Koby, president.
The members voted to
donate $5 to the Heart Fund.
and $10 to the Emergency
Ambulance Service.
Membership dues of $1 are
due and should be gi veil or sent
On ly 5 other presidents to Mrs. (;retch en 'Carty, 22
beside s President Nixon Edgemont Dr., Gallipolis.
have served ~ur in g .a time
The phone conunittee and
when· there were no former other committee chairJiving presidents. The World
Almanac recalls they were manships wil~·be · reorganized
Washington , John Adams, during the next month. Each
Grant , Theodore ~ooseve lt committee will be held
and Hoover: Of these peri- respi'Jrisible for one program
ods Washington 's 8 years
was the longest and Hoov- each year and the refresher's Was the shortest- two ments following the program.
months .
It was decided to have a

WORLD ALMANAC

by each member, and two
guests were intr!lduced, Rev.
Cheesebrew and Rev. Shiveley,
who spoke on Issue No. 1
(Lottery) . coming up in the
1\lay primary election. They
asked each member to vote no
explained the reasons lor such'
a vote and urged each ORe to
tell others. A business session
followed .
•
Prayer by Hazal Calllll!han
closed the meeting. Refresh.me nts of ice cream, cake and
coffee "were served by Edna
Kn opp and Esther West. A.
silent auction netted $15.40 lor
the fellowship treasury,

.

9- The SJUJday Times- Sentinel, 1l,undaY. April8, !973

by

Juno . and

F. Dres s, Bleeker Street in wastia~le
jXllyesl er, permanent press pleats. Wh r.t e
with navy trim . Si1es: 8-18. S38.00.
·

On

,,

�·r
'

"\

'

•

•

'

!.

t· ~·~
-~
~s~~;;da;y~T~U3;;~~-~&amp;:n:t:rne::l·:s~::da:y~,~A=p~r·~l8~,;1:3~~. . . . . . . .~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . .________~. .~. . . . . . . . . . . .. . .

AND ON
NEWJ973
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MERCHANDISEI

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PICTURES
AAD WALL
ACCESSORIES

•

MANY BRANDS

OCCASIONAL
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Odd . Tables
Or In Groups

14 TO 12

NOW

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ecHROMCRAFT
eDUCHESS
eSTRATOLOUNGER
eSTRATFORD·
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No injuries in

·CHAIRS
...

'

1
'
TO ' 2·

.

ON HAND Friday'aflen)oon in the law offices of Halliday
and Sheets for one of Galllpolis'larg~t business transactions
in several yea~s were, seated left to right, Hoyt Mullins,

LI-VING ROOM.

~j

Hotel was hUh

UPTO

DINING ROOM
SOLID MAPLE
SUIT
BEDROOM &amp; DINING
'
ROOM SUITES

OFF

Butler CoWlly will get $242,500
in federal funds toward the cost
'of
buying 160 acres of land for a
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
state Natural Resour ces recreational park . The c ity will
Fairfield in match the
GRANT FOR FAIRFIE[.D .

'

e BIG SAVINGS

5 BIG DAYS

\~·ers.

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NOW ONLY

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Save $20 on a rn aUress and anothe r $20 on a box
spring dur1ng Be m co · ~ fabuloUs Roaring Twenties
Sale
The Medi ·Rest 5upreme is des1gned with Bemco's

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JEWELRY
STORE

260 second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

P!{OCI.AMATION MADE
POMEROY
Dona ld
CQllihs, mayor of Pomeroy, in. .
r'ecogniti"on of the public
benefits der[ved from . the
educational and research serv·
ice of libraries and tqe Bookmobile and their staffs, has
proclaimed the week of April 814, as Ohio National Library
Week.

®

ingsridge·
CUSTOM FABRIC

KINGSRIDG~
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the fashion, the fabrics,. the
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• 5 watertemp selections
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Film Fee

Babies· children- adulh- groups- I. ~pecia l
of eoch person singly only 88~ , plus 50¢ f1lm fee .
Groups $1.00 per person, plus one 50¢ fi lm fee .

I&lt;S•ote.et from finished pictures in rad iant block and

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• Cool--down care for Permanent Pres~.
no-iron fabrics
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This is it - the seas on it a ll happe ns . Everything
inan wants and needs neatly packaged in one great
collection of clothing . , . quality•tai,lored .
authorlfative, comp lete. It's the look you'll.find in
KINGSRIDGE fashions .for Spring.

ARMAGEDDON
Capturing in Vivid Color 'Photographs
the Greatest War of the Ages!
Complete·with Music and Narration .

You ~ ll see freedom ... freedom from high heat and

humidity thanks to the world's finest ·lightweight
fabrics . , • freedom to move without binding or
. culling thanks to the action-engineered fabrics._

'

ARMAGEDDON - a strange sounding name~w ill be the
battle ground fo r the greatest blood bath th8t the
. world has ever see 11 (Revelation 16: 16).

•

SEETHE UNUSUAL PHOTOGRAPH OF GETHSEMANE Inc luded In this presentation is the most unusual
pho tograph of Gethsemane. Taken with a spec lal ·camera

You'll see it all because only this famous
maker Puts It All Together for you'-:' see it
aU this Spring.

that photog~aphs a 140° angle, you will be amazed at

what·this color photo reveals!

A Salem Kirban Visual Presentation

TUESDAY,
APRIL 10th
.
I PM AND3PM
.

FOR EASTER '73 &amp; AFTER!

.

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LOCKHART'S BIBLES &amp; BOOKS
700 Second Ave .

•

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,.

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Timeless Twosomes

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THE BEMCO
QUILTORAMA PRESTIGE' .

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ROARING .TWENTIES
SAVINGS ON THE
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144 . 7~

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1ortable ni ght's sleep. And Bemco's Coii-Guardl! suppor1
g1ves extra fi rmness to keep your back in shape tor years

to come.

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SATURDAY....................... 9:30 'til 4 PM
WNCH 1 'til 2

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no-nonsense pump
that speaks volumes
for your good t'aste.
Sleek and simple ...
combin ing rims of
golden trim on
finely textured
Spanish Crush.

In The Silver Bridge

TUES., WED., THUR~ .............. 9:30 'til 5:00
FRIDAY .......................... 9:30 'til 8 PM!

'

-~ -

The

Mon . thru Sat. IO :oo a.m. til9:00 p.m.
POMEROY
Twelve ter were George A. Carso·n, Alba~y. $10 and costs, In·
·Sunday 1: 00 p.m . ti 16 :00 p .m.
defendanis were fined and West Columbia, $15 and cos Is, toxication.
l?orfeiling bonds were
eight others forfeited bonds in . speeding; ' Mary F. Austin,
Meigs County Court Friday. Ga llipolis, $14 and cos ts , Ronald G. Spitz, Pennsboro,Fined by Judge Frank W. Por- spe.eding ; Harry L. Donaghy, Pa., Owe n Oalton, Ashton , W. ·
Fairfax , . Va ., and Mic hael Va ., and John E. McGuire,
Newsome, Akron, $10 and cos ts Gallipolis, $357. 50 CiH.:h , dr:iving
BETTER FOOTWEAR FOR THE FAM ILY
each, speeding : Donald K. while.intoxicalcd ; Fred Cullip,
· Sedgwick, Tuppers Plains .$50 Gallipolis , Ri c hard Rou s h,
· and cos ts, lic~ns~_suspe~dcd _ !~_ tart, W.Va. , and"William G.
for 1 year, reckless operation; · G.oudy , Parke rsb_ur g, $27.50
Jafnes T. Glass, Athens. $10 e ::~ c h , spe ~ din g; Cynthia
and cos t..:;, expired operator's McGraw, Hcn o, Ohio, $27.50,
J icen s~; Bonnie S. Miller, . passing at intcr s e c ti~n , and ·
Racine, Rt. 2, $10 and _coSts, Charles. Mathe~s, Rac 1 ~e RD,
failur e to .register : Dani1y A. $50 · (jnd ·COs ts; assau lt OJnd
Brickles, Pomeroy , Rl..2, $18 battery .
and co.sts, speeding; Peter .1. :l&lt;:&gt;OCI&lt;~-.;,.~OO&lt;::&gt;&lt;:&gt;Ooc:&gt;&lt;::o-::&gt;&lt;:&gt;C&gt;c:&gt;&lt;~&gt;Oc:&gt;&lt;~&gt;c-oc~&gt;c-c::&gt;&lt;XIOO&lt;::X~ci=-c&gt;O-:OCIOC&gt;&lt;x:lec:ocoooc""if
Ferguson, Zanesville , $150 and
costs, three days confinement, ·
li cense s u s pend e ~ for s ix
months, restrict(!d drivi ng
privileges, driving" while intoxicated ; Jo.hn F . Crabtree,
Coal Grove , $9 and cos ts,
'
TH,I,MES
speeding
;
~mie
R.
Estep,
L.ADY " S
MA N ' S 3 11 . ? 5
FAIIU. I TE
Chesapeake , $10 and costs,
L AC Y'S
MAN ' S 5'5
fi ctitious plates ; Paul Reeves,

HC)URS-

~v,

th e
Bur·e au
o'
for
Reha bilitation, will lis t' ser ,
vices the bureau provides.;
Mrs. Bacori will discuss social:
security and welfare.
Babysitting services will be
provided so that parents may
bring their younger children
and' refr es hments will be
served . Parents of students
other than those involved in the
work-study program are alSo
welcome.

18 Cases settled in·court

'

April .l Oth thru 14th

Supreme·
MaHress Set

POMERO Y - A second
mee ting ror parents of Meigs
High School students involved
in the wor k-study program has
beenselfor 7:30p.m. Thursday
at the hi gh school, Ma ry
Bacon, program coordinator,
an noun ced.
Mrs . Erma Finch, Miss
Stephanie Niemiec, and Sam.
Crow will discuss insurance
On Sriturday, April 14, the and wage agree ments, and
annual Lil y Sale will be con· Marshall Kimmel, counselor

'

TUES., WED,, THURS., FRI.; SAT.

I. REST

·Second meeting of parents .set .

'

---- AND

STOCK

GALLIPOLIS - No one was
injured or cited in two minor
traffic accidents inves tigated
her'e Friday. A backing accident occurred on Third Ave.·
at th e Oh·io Valley Bank
pilrking lot where an auto
driven by Eetty Lou Provens,
52, Northup, backed her car
into an auto owned by Mary E.
Waddell, Rt. 2, Crown City .
There w a ~ mi nor damage to
both cars.
•
A. second ac;cidenl occurred
on Cour t St. at 5::17 p.m. where
an a uto dri ven by M o lv e t~1 3.
Northup, 25, Rt. 2, Gallipolis,
pulled f1·om a curb s tri~in g a
car operated by Urban H. ·
Baldwin, 49, Rl. 2, Gallipolis.

dueled by members of the K-9 direction of Mr&gt;' J . A. de
Kor ps 4-H Club, under Ule · Lame rens.

(Continued from page l)
Present plans call for Bernadine 's to representatives or hi ~ consultant, the
occupy hotel space formerly used as a architect arid the contractor will be
businessmen will share tbat faith ."
A native of Virginia, Hoyt Mullin&gt; lobby and main dining room. This will present Uf answer questi ons regard ing
came to this area in 1959 with his wife, provide ~ more than double the space af-. development of the project.
Lureva Sturgill Mullins, and their two forded by the store's current location .
sons, Victor and James. Mrs. Mullins is Having outgrown their present facilities .•
T•·ec hit
car
associated with· her husband in Ber- · Hoyt Mullin.S further stated that the
nadrne's. James is resident"'llanager of acquisition of the L;lfayette.Hotel B~ilding
· . (Continued fr om page 1) .
. that 111 issed dog
My Sister's Closet in Athens, while Victor ;was the culmination of several years'
Durmg thelf years m the hotel, M1ss Smtth
, ·
and his wife, WiUna (the former Wilma search for adequate space in the downtown
reported there were 1rtany nights when . . PQMEROY ~ A sirigle car
Schlup, of Washington, D. C.), operate the area in order to a·ccommodate Bernadine's
there were so manY guests ~hat they had to . acc ident wa s· reported to
general offices of Mullins' Enterprises. fast·growing needs for additional space.
have residents in ·the community to help Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach's
Since its el-ection in 1927, the
Mr _Mullins was associated with the Evans
them accommodate-all the people. .
Dept. that occ urred Saturday
Grocery Gompanyfrom 1959 to 1967, when Lafayette Hotel has been regarded as
In !937, during the big. Ohio River
Ch
.at 2 a.m. at
ester.
one
of
the
best-built,
most
fire-proof
1
1
he purchased Bernadine's from _Mrs. ·
flood, the Lafayette was th e on y pace in
Robert Wood, 2i, Long
buildings in the area . The brainchild of Gallipolis that served food . The Red Cross Bottom, Rl. I, was traveling
Margaret Jarvis.
George
Tobit, lhe building was con- was headquartered in the b~ildi ng. The east on SR 248 when a dog ran
C. R. Mullins, also a native of Virginia, ·
is vice-president of F. N. Thompson, Inc., structed by John Kirchen &amp; Son, con· water came jlist up to th~~door~, and Miss in front of his car. To avoid
general contractors, Charlotte, N.C., with tractors, of Athens, with the use of !- Smith r~r_nembers tha_t she had boarded a hitting it, Wood cui !o tbc t•ight
whom he bas been associated 19 years. He beams ' concrete walls and fire walls, floor
boat outs1dc the door: m ord~~ to go across .going off the roit\J_Jt nd· hitting ~
base and roof base_ In addition to the three the park to the_ s~enff's, of~tce for ne~s .. b·ce. There were n.o injuries or
and his '\'ife, Betty Purcell Mullins; have
two children, Patricia and Cameron, and fl.oors, it houses a full and completely dry
In 1957, . Wilham 0 Bnen and Jake arres ts. There was ha vy
basement, plus loading dock facilities in Moore secured _the opera tang lease of the dama ge to the car.
make their home in Charlotte.
the alley at the rear of the building_
Lafayette for mne years .
· As for future plans regarding the
The Tabil family sold the hotel to
development of the building, Mullins in- Ecford and Margaret Hodgson on Oct. 27,
NOW YOU KNOW
TO MEET TUESDAY
dicated that when planning is completed, 1960 but the deed was not recorded until
The
Amazon river streams
GALLIPOLIS - The April board of
with drawings and perspective, a press_ Nov '.. 7, 1960. On April I, 1966, William . t hrou~h six countries :directors meeting of the Gallipolis Area
luncheon will b~ arranged for all the news O'Brien bought the hotel outright from the V en ezuela ,
Colombi'a,
Chamber of Commerce
will
be
held
12
noon
media within a radius of 100 miles. At that Hodgsons . After a time, he closed the hotel Ecuador , Peru , Bolivia and
•
Tuesday at Oscar's.
time , Mr . Mulllns, his a.s sociates , · and it has stood mostly empty ::;ince.
Brazil.

All Styles

IN OPEN

William O'Brien and Cecil R. Mumns. Standing, Victor
Mullins, Mrs. Hoyt Mullins, Rick O'Brien, Mrs. William
O'Brien, Judge Robert Belz, Mrs. C~cil Mullins and Attorney
Warren F. Sheets.

Lafayette Hotel ·building sold

FURNITURE

•

OF -BARS

two accidents

' 1

- o-N BEDROOM

ONE GROUP

12

.

SAVINGS

''•

,,

'

'

STRATOLOUNGE
RECLINERS
For Father•s Day

GALLIPOLIS - The 1973 Easter . Residents were ma iled
Gall ia County Cr ippled Easter &amp;al letters earlier this
~hil dren ' s Drive is now un- .month accord ing to th e
de rw ay according to Mrs . chairma n.
George Lea r , general chair.
Individuals are urged to
man.
support the Na tional Easter
Goal this yea r is $3.500.
Sea l Socie ty ror Crippled
The Easter Seal campaign Children and Adults.
for fWlds will run through
Coin ca rds a re being placed
in area schools. 1\:ithin tlje next
(ew days, coin boxes will be
Placed in downtown business
establishments by membe rs of
\he GAHS Key Club.

'

50 OR
MORE

•

DON'T .
MISS
THIS
SALE

ON
. .J

'

e TREMENDOUS

TO $AVE
'

Crippled ch.i ldren 's drive underway

GROUP OF

YOU KNOW

•

"

..

Galljpolis, Ohio

OPEN MONDAY NIGHT 'TIL 8 PM
I

�·r
'

"\

'

•

•

'

!.

t· ~·~
-~
~s~~;;da;y~T~U3;;~~-~&amp;:n:t:rne::l·:s~::da:y~,~A=p~r·~l8~,;1:3~~. . . . . . . .~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . .________~. .~. . . . . . . . . . . .. . .

AND ON
NEWJ973
'
MERCHANDISEI

I
\

PICTURES
AAD WALL
ACCESSORIES

•

MANY BRANDS

OCCASIONAL
'

TABLES

Odd . Tables
Or In Groups

14 TO 12

NOW

·Now Is The Time

eBASSET
•SINGER
ecHROMCRAFT
eDUCHESS
eSTRATOLOUNGER
eSTRATFORD·
eLANE
• BEAUTYREST
by Simmons
eBEMCO
•WHIRLPOOL •
•HOOVER
eKINCAID •
•FRANKLIN
. •COLEMAN
and OTHERS

'

....''
'
'
'

No injuries in

·CHAIRS
...

'

1
'
TO ' 2·

.

ON HAND Friday'aflen)oon in the law offices of Halliday
and Sheets for one of Galllpolis'larg~t business transactions
in several yea~s were, seated left to right, Hoyt Mullins,

LI-VING ROOM.

~j

Hotel was hUh

UPTO

DINING ROOM
SOLID MAPLE
SUIT
BEDROOM &amp; DINING
'
ROOM SUITES

OFF

Butler CoWlly will get $242,500
in federal funds toward the cost
'of
buying 160 acres of land for a
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
state Natural Resour ces recreational park . The c ity will
Fairfield in match the
GRANT FOR FAIRFIE[.D .

'

e BIG SAVINGS

5 BIG DAYS

\~·ers.

,.

s

NOW ONLY

•••

•

~

•• J!!I

) .
Celebratin&amp; 2S years of bulldm&amp;

II

·Nationally Advertised at $79.95
Save $20 on a rn aUress and anothe r $20 on a box
spring dur1ng Be m co · ~ fabuloUs Roaring Twenties
Sale
The Medi ·Rest 5upreme is des1gned with Bemco's

Model

Ewt-17s -~

.

REFRIGERATOR·$
FREEZER · · .

K.e..e_pea.ke•

32995
·

TIU,OITIO~AL

WI:DOI,..O

l! l fiOI

®

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE

260 second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

P!{OCI.AMATION MADE
POMEROY
Dona ld
CQllihs, mayor of Pomeroy, in. .
r'ecogniti"on of the public
benefits der[ved from . the
educational and research serv·
ice of libraries and tqe Bookmobile and their staffs, has
proclaimed the week of April 814, as Ohio National Library
Week.

®

ingsridge·
CUSTOM FABRIC

KINGSRIDG~
,

' . I

Puts ·It All Together

the fashion, the fabrics,. the
flair, the- function
.
,·

'

'

all you need to look and feel great!

with

·c·•a'
'· .•'

double deop
quil ting . The World 's
Greatest Sleepi ng Pi ll '.

$39995

8•t .

Avr ,

Phon• ... 6·1405
G•llipoli,

..

• Cool-down care for Permanent Press,
no-i ron fabrics
• 2 speeds, 4 cycles
• 2-position water level control
• 5 watertemp selections
• Built-in lint filter
• Bleach di spenser ·.
•
SURGILATOR' agitator

*

*Plus 50¢ .
Film Fee

Babies· children- adulh- groups- I. ~pecia l
of eoch person singly only 88~ , plus 50¢ f1lm fee .
Groups $1.00 per person, plus one 50¢ fi lm fee .

I&lt;S•ote.et from finished pictures in rad iant block and

LXE 6700 DRYER
• Cool--down care for Permanent Pres~.
no-iron fabrics
.
· • Custom Dry Control ·
· • 3-position temp selector
• TUMBLE PRESS® control
• Extra-large. lint screen
• Fas.t drying system

. .

·

THE PAIR
LXA 6400 WASHER

SEE

.,. . Portrait
! c01Dr only
88c
·.

NOW ONLY

.'

· Only

Nationall y Adver tised
at S89.95 eac h p•ece

, 10"

.

.,••••
••,,

'Now only

get a beautiful

I

I U~ UIIOUS

wh ite and living color.

Mntl~&gt;l

EWT-17SM With lcemaker

17 CU. FT. WHIRLPOOL

7

REFRIGERATOR· ~3 995

)

Bonus quality "Guaranteed Satisfaction.' '
Limit -

one Special per child .

' F.ast deli'•ery ~ Courteous c;ervice.·

LOWER STORE

·

a

.

This is it - the seas on it a ll happe ns . Everything
inan wants and needs neatly packaged in one great
collection of clothing . , . quality•tai,lored .
authorlfative, comp lete. It's the look you'll.find in
KINGSRIDGE fashions .for Spring.

ARMAGEDDON
Capturing in Vivid Color 'Photographs
the Greatest War of the Ages!
Complete·with Music and Narration .

You ~ ll see freedom ... freedom from high heat and

humidity thanks to the world's finest ·lightweight
fabrics . , • freedom to move without binding or
. culling thanks to the action-engineered fabrics._

'

ARMAGEDDON - a strange sounding name~w ill be the
battle ground fo r the greatest blood bath th8t the
. world has ever see 11 (Revelation 16: 16).

•

SEETHE UNUSUAL PHOTOGRAPH OF GETHSEMANE Inc luded In this presentation is the most unusual
pho tograph of Gethsemane. Taken with a spec lal ·camera

You'll see it all because only this famous
maker Puts It All Together for you'-:' see it
aU this Spring.

that photog~aphs a 140° angle, you will be amazed at

what·this color photo reveals!

A Salem Kirban Visual Presentation

TUESDAY,
APRIL 10th
.
I PM AND3PM
.

FOR EASTER '73 &amp; AFTER!

.

'

LOCKHART'S BIBLES &amp; BOOKS
700 Second Ave .

•

I
,.

''

I

Timeless Twosomes

I

THE BEMCO
QUILTORAMA PRESTIGE' .

I

I

'

$~ 5

·

BEMCO GIVES
ROARING .TWENTIES
SAVINGS ON THE
MEDI·REST CLASSIC~'TOO.

I

$1899

144 . 7~

famous Un11used Con struct io n'~~' to give you' a really com ~
1ortable ni ght's sleep. And Bemco's Coii-Guardl! suppor1
g1ves extra fi rmness to keep your back in shape tor years

to come.

'

'

:17 CU. FT. WHIRLPOOL
.

by

Shopping Plaza

SATURDAY....................... 9:30 'til 4 PM
WNCH 1 'til 2

~~\~

'

no-nonsense pump
that speaks volumes
for your good t'aste.
Sleek and simple ...
combin ing rims of
golden trim on
finely textured
Spanish Crush.

In The Silver Bridge

TUES., WED., THUR~ .............. 9:30 'til 5:00
FRIDAY .......................... 9:30 'til 8 PM!

'

-~ -

The

Mon . thru Sat. IO :oo a.m. til9:00 p.m.
POMEROY
Twelve ter were George A. Carso·n, Alba~y. $10 and costs, In·
·Sunday 1: 00 p.m . ti 16 :00 p .m.
defendanis were fined and West Columbia, $15 and cos Is, toxication.
l?orfeiling bonds were
eight others forfeited bonds in . speeding; ' Mary F. Austin,
Meigs County Court Friday. Ga llipolis, $14 and cos ts , Ronald G. Spitz, Pennsboro,Fined by Judge Frank W. Por- spe.eding ; Harry L. Donaghy, Pa., Owe n Oalton, Ashton , W. ·
Fairfax , . Va ., and Mic hael Va ., and John E. McGuire,
Newsome, Akron, $10 and cos ts Gallipolis, $357. 50 CiH.:h , dr:iving
BETTER FOOTWEAR FOR THE FAM ILY
each, speeding : Donald K. while.intoxicalcd ; Fred Cullip,
· Sedgwick, Tuppers Plains .$50 Gallipolis , Ri c hard Rou s h,
· and cos ts, lic~ns~_suspe~dcd _ !~_ tart, W.Va. , and"William G.
for 1 year, reckless operation; · G.oudy , Parke rsb_ur g, $27.50
Jafnes T. Glass, Athens. $10 e ::~ c h , spe ~ din g; Cynthia
and cos t..:;, expired operator's McGraw, Hcn o, Ohio, $27.50,
J icen s~; Bonnie S. Miller, . passing at intcr s e c ti~n , and ·
Racine, Rt. 2, $10 and _coSts, Charles. Mathe~s, Rac 1 ~e RD,
failur e to .register : Dani1y A. $50 · (jnd ·COs ts; assau lt OJnd
Brickles, Pomeroy , Rl..2, $18 battery .
and co.sts, speeding; Peter .1. :l&lt;:&gt;OCI&lt;~-.;,.~OO&lt;::&gt;&lt;:&gt;Ooc:&gt;&lt;::o-::&gt;&lt;:&gt;C&gt;c:&gt;&lt;~&gt;Oc:&gt;&lt;~&gt;c-oc~&gt;c-c::&gt;&lt;XIOO&lt;::X~ci=-c&gt;O-:OCIOC&gt;&lt;x:lec:ocoooc""if
Ferguson, Zanesville , $150 and
costs, three days confinement, ·
li cense s u s pend e ~ for s ix
months, restrict(!d drivi ng
privileges, driving" while intoxicated ; Jo.hn F . Crabtree,
Coal Grove , $9 and cos ts,
'
TH,I,MES
speeding
;
~mie
R.
Estep,
L.ADY " S
MA N ' S 3 11 . ? 5
FAIIU. I TE
Chesapeake , $10 and costs,
L AC Y'S
MAN ' S 5'5
fi ctitious plates ; Paul Reeves,

HC)URS-

~v,

th e
Bur·e au
o'
for
Reha bilitation, will lis t' ser ,
vices the bureau provides.;
Mrs. Bacori will discuss social:
security and welfare.
Babysitting services will be
provided so that parents may
bring their younger children
and' refr es hments will be
served . Parents of students
other than those involved in the
work-study program are alSo
welcome.

18 Cases settled in·court

'

April .l Oth thru 14th

Supreme·
MaHress Set

POMERO Y - A second
mee ting ror parents of Meigs
High School students involved
in the wor k-study program has
beenselfor 7:30p.m. Thursday
at the hi gh school, Ma ry
Bacon, program coordinator,
an noun ced.
Mrs . Erma Finch, Miss
Stephanie Niemiec, and Sam.
Crow will discuss insurance
On Sriturday, April 14, the and wage agree ments, and
annual Lil y Sale will be con· Marshall Kimmel, counselor

'

TUES., WED,, THURS., FRI.; SAT.

I. REST

·Second meeting of parents .set .

'

---- AND

STOCK

GALLIPOLIS - No one was
injured or cited in two minor
traffic accidents inves tigated
her'e Friday. A backing accident occurred on Third Ave.·
at th e Oh·io Valley Bank
pilrking lot where an auto
driven by Eetty Lou Provens,
52, Northup, backed her car
into an auto owned by Mary E.
Waddell, Rt. 2, Crown City .
There w a ~ mi nor damage to
both cars.
•
A. second ac;cidenl occurred
on Cour t St. at 5::17 p.m. where
an a uto dri ven by M o lv e t~1 3.
Northup, 25, Rt. 2, Gallipolis,
pulled f1·om a curb s tri~in g a
car operated by Urban H. ·
Baldwin, 49, Rl. 2, Gallipolis.

dueled by members of the K-9 direction of Mr&gt;' J . A. de
Kor ps 4-H Club, under Ule · Lame rens.

(Continued from page l)
Present plans call for Bernadine 's to representatives or hi ~ consultant, the
occupy hotel space formerly used as a architect arid the contractor will be
businessmen will share tbat faith ."
A native of Virginia, Hoyt Mullin&gt; lobby and main dining room. This will present Uf answer questi ons regard ing
came to this area in 1959 with his wife, provide ~ more than double the space af-. development of the project.
Lureva Sturgill Mullins, and their two forded by the store's current location .
sons, Victor and James. Mrs. Mullins is Having outgrown their present facilities .•
T•·ec hit
car
associated with· her husband in Ber- · Hoyt Mullin.S further stated that the
nadrne's. James is resident"'llanager of acquisition of the L;lfayette.Hotel B~ilding
· . (Continued fr om page 1) .
. that 111 issed dog
My Sister's Closet in Athens, while Victor ;was the culmination of several years'
Durmg thelf years m the hotel, M1ss Smtth
, ·
and his wife, WiUna (the former Wilma search for adequate space in the downtown
reported there were 1rtany nights when . . PQMEROY ~ A sirigle car
Schlup, of Washington, D. C.), operate the area in order to a·ccommodate Bernadine's
there were so manY guests ~hat they had to . acc ident wa s· reported to
general offices of Mullins' Enterprises. fast·growing needs for additional space.
have residents in ·the community to help Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach's
Since its el-ection in 1927, the
Mr _Mullins was associated with the Evans
them accommodate-all the people. .
Dept. that occ urred Saturday
Grocery Gompanyfrom 1959 to 1967, when Lafayette Hotel has been regarded as
In !937, during the big. Ohio River
Ch
.at 2 a.m. at
ester.
one
of
the
best-built,
most
fire-proof
1
1
he purchased Bernadine's from _Mrs. ·
flood, the Lafayette was th e on y pace in
Robert Wood, 2i, Long
buildings in the area . The brainchild of Gallipolis that served food . The Red Cross Bottom, Rl. I, was traveling
Margaret Jarvis.
George
Tobit, lhe building was con- was headquartered in the b~ildi ng. The east on SR 248 when a dog ran
C. R. Mullins, also a native of Virginia, ·
is vice-president of F. N. Thompson, Inc., structed by John Kirchen &amp; Son, con· water came jlist up to th~~door~, and Miss in front of his car. To avoid
general contractors, Charlotte, N.C., with tractors, of Athens, with the use of !- Smith r~r_nembers tha_t she had boarded a hitting it, Wood cui !o tbc t•ight
whom he bas been associated 19 years. He beams ' concrete walls and fire walls, floor
boat outs1dc the door: m ord~~ to go across .going off the roit\J_Jt nd· hitting ~
base and roof base_ In addition to the three the park to the_ s~enff's, of~tce for ne~s .. b·ce. There were n.o injuries or
and his '\'ife, Betty Purcell Mullins; have
two children, Patricia and Cameron, and fl.oors, it houses a full and completely dry
In 1957, . Wilham 0 Bnen and Jake arres ts. There was ha vy
basement, plus loading dock facilities in Moore secured _the opera tang lease of the dama ge to the car.
make their home in Charlotte.
the alley at the rear of the building_
Lafayette for mne years .
· As for future plans regarding the
The Tabil family sold the hotel to
development of the building, Mullins in- Ecford and Margaret Hodgson on Oct. 27,
NOW YOU KNOW
TO MEET TUESDAY
dicated that when planning is completed, 1960 but the deed was not recorded until
The
Amazon river streams
GALLIPOLIS - The April board of
with drawings and perspective, a press_ Nov '.. 7, 1960. On April I, 1966, William . t hrou~h six countries :directors meeting of the Gallipolis Area
luncheon will b~ arranged for all the news O'Brien bought the hotel outright from the V en ezuela ,
Colombi'a,
Chamber of Commerce
will
be
held
12
noon
media within a radius of 100 miles. At that Hodgsons . After a time, he closed the hotel Ecuador , Peru , Bolivia and
•
Tuesday at Oscar's.
time , Mr . Mulllns, his a.s sociates , · and it has stood mostly empty ::;ince.
Brazil.

All Styles

IN OPEN

William O'Brien and Cecil R. Mumns. Standing, Victor
Mullins, Mrs. Hoyt Mullins, Rick O'Brien, Mrs. William
O'Brien, Judge Robert Belz, Mrs. C~cil Mullins and Attorney
Warren F. Sheets.

Lafayette Hotel ·building sold

FURNITURE

•

OF -BARS

two accidents

' 1

- o-N BEDROOM

ONE GROUP

12

.

SAVINGS

''•

,,

'

'

STRATOLOUNGE
RECLINERS
For Father•s Day

GALLIPOLIS - The 1973 Easter . Residents were ma iled
Gall ia County Cr ippled Easter &amp;al letters earlier this
~hil dren ' s Drive is now un- .month accord ing to th e
de rw ay according to Mrs . chairma n.
George Lea r , general chair.
Individuals are urged to
man.
support the Na tional Easter
Goal this yea r is $3.500.
Sea l Socie ty ror Crippled
The Easter Seal campaign Children and Adults.
for fWlds will run through
Coin ca rds a re being placed
in area schools. 1\:ithin tlje next
(ew days, coin boxes will be
Placed in downtown business
establishments by membe rs of
\he GAHS Key Club.

'

50 OR
MORE

•

DON'T .
MISS
THIS
SALE

ON
. .J

'

e TREMENDOUS

TO $AVE
'

Crippled ch.i ldren 's drive underway

GROUP OF

YOU KNOW

•

"

..

Galljpolis, Ohio

OPEN MONDAY NIGHT 'TIL 8 PM
I

�'

~

I

'

'

j

•)
12- 'l1&gt;e Sunday Times - Sentinel, Swulay, April B, 1973

13- '!'he Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Apri18 1973

'

..

~

the school's reported expenditures for .

library books did not meet the prescribed
minimwn , the library does not provide an
enclosed conference area, the overaU
laboratory facHities are not designed to
accommodate a comprehensive progra·m
which encompasses oippropriate breadth
and depth educational experiences,.
adequate provisions are not made for .
meeting indi":'idual differences of students
including special education classes, and

the school's program is not comprehensive
in terms of the education._l and vocational
requirements or students.
Twenty-two deficiencies were cited
against North Gallia, 2.1 against Southwestern and 27 against Hannan Tra ce.
The report at North Gallia said two
laboratory type courses, me c.h~ni ca l
drawing and industrial arts, do not meet
the required .clock ho,urs for credit
assigned, the school's program is not
comprehensive in terms of the educational
and vocational requirements of students,
the art program is not scheduled for the

. l

l

I

ge~eral student body, inadequacies in the
library c~nter including volumes, expenditures, and facilities prevent the
library from serving as the •major instructional resou.rte center, the school has
no psychologist, the school facilities do not
meet the needs of the educational
program, the school does not have
facilities for art or separate facilities for
industrial arts, and four teachers do not
hold validated certificates for each subject
assigned.
Both . Southwestern's elementary
buildings were hit Pl!rticularly hard' as
were North GaUia's.
In the high school report, Dr.
Shwnaker reported the school has no
course offerings in industrial arts and
schedules only .one-half l!llit in art, the
library cannot be considered the major
instructional resource center of the school
based 'llpon inadequate facilities and insufficient volumes, the school has no
psychologist, one teacher does not hold a
certificate of provisional grade or higher
and five teachers do no.t hold vaUdated
certificates for each subject assigned, the
counselor"pupil ratio is 1~12 exceeds the
required 1-400, the library does not have
the required 5,000 volwnes, the facilities
do not meet the needs of the educational
program, the ·school dOes not provide

facHiOes designed for guidance services,
the school does not have lacilities for art
and industrial arts, and the music
. facilities are not adequate to implement
the instructional program.
. Hannan Trace's deficiencies were
similar in that two classes, vocal music
do not meet the
and ensemble groups,
.
required clock hours lor the credit
assigned, the school's program is not
comprehensive in terms or the educational
and vocational requirements of students,
there are no art units and industrial arts
Wlits, adequate provisionS are not made
for meeting iridividual differences of
students, the library cannot be considered
the major instructional resource center of
the school based upon inadequate
facilities, insufficient volume . e-x..
penditures and insufficient volwnes, the
school does not provide a psychologist, the
counselor-p.upil ratio of 1-454 exceeds the
·required 1400, the library center does not
ha ve the required 5,000 volumes, the
school does not have facilities for health
services, and the music facilities are not ..
- adeq~iite to implement the instructional
program.
All boards of education were commended for their efforts to provide an
educational prog ram for the students of
their districts.
'
If the charters are revoked as
recommended , countywide consolidation
excluding Gallipolis, could be forced prior
to the 1973-74 school year, local Qbservers
conclude.

.

~

IRONTON ...: Tewey Lee near ProctorviUe.
Judge Harley Myers of
Wall, 2B, Crown City, was
sentenced to life at hard labor Logan, who presided during
in the Ohio Penitentiary Thurs- la St week 's four-day trial,
day for " the 1970 gunshot v.:hich resulted in a common
slaying of .Frank McCartney pleas court jury finding . Wall
guilty or first degree murder
and guilty of shooting another
times in each dorm for in- with intent to kill, pronounced
formal discussions. They will sentence after hea"ring a
attend
several
classes motion by Defense Counselor
William Curry asking that an
throughout Monday .
Th_ere will also .be an -i nde pendent menta 1
exhibition
of
Indian examination be made of Wall.
Curry asked that sentencing
photographs, crafis, and paintbe
delayed until such an
ings in the college dining hall
during the entire day Monday. examination is made. Wall's
· One or two dishes prepared defense had been based on the
from an Indian reCipe will be · iitsanity plea.
Ir1 opposing Curry's motion,
included in our cafeteria menu
for Jwtch and dinner. Also, an Lawrence County Prosecutor .
evening performance · begin~ Uoyd Moore· argued that the .
· ning at 8 in the dining hall will state facilities at Lima State.
i involve traditional indian song Hospital had ruled Wall sane
on·this matter and that the jury
~~ and , dance with audience
participation and possibly a . had decided that Wall wasn't'
film .
insane at the time of the crime.

RlO GRANDE _ Monday, traditional messages, dances,
April 9, Rio Grande College songs ·and films . They have
will share a cultural ex-' visited over 150 colleges and
· perience with the "White Roots universities; church groups,
of Peace ." .
high schools, prisons and InAn ancient Iroquois tradition dian groups ,
tells of the White Roots of
For Indians, their message is
Peace, a symbol of the first one of ho.pe and enUnited Nations the world ever couragement -··---· for
the
knew. At the base ofthe ·Tree ol tradi1ionalists through the
Great Peace were four white establishment of revitalized
roots gQing out to the four . Indiim strength and Wlity .
winds in order that all peoples
For thousands of noncould find their way to peace in Indians, the White Roots of
the shade of the Great Tree.
Peace have provided an opThe Iroquois people have portunity for all people to hear
always
considered
an the Indians' view of peace and
aggre~ive "pursuit of peace relationships with their enamong men' ' to
their vironment, as well as bringing
mission. In September, 1959, real brotherhood tp all peoples.
following the Traditional In- · The White Roots of Peace
dian Unity ConvetJtiOn, ·a group will arrive on -campus SaWlday
of yoWlg Mohawks set out to afternoon (the 8th) and that
renew their corrunitment to evening will m~et at ,specified.
these traditions. They .adopted
· the name , "White Roots of
.I
Peace."
Call No. 485
Charier No.l36
National Bank Region No.4
The White Roots of Peace, a
REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING
North Amer ~can
Indian
DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES; OF THE
communications group, has
travelled over 200,000 miles In
the United States and Canada
to provide a meaningful exof GallipOlis, Oblo In the State of Ohio, at the clOse of business on March 28, 1973
perience
through
their
published in response lo call made by Comptroller of the currency, under Title
12, United States Code, Section 161.

~

DELBERT HANEY
PATRIOT Delbert
Haney, son of Mr. and Mrs.
William R. Haney, of RD 2,
Patriot, Is one ol 51 .siudents
selected as a 1973 Pace
Setter In the College of
Administrative Science at
Ohio State University. He
· · _will be honored at a banquet
on Aprll12 as an outstanding
scholar and lender in the
College. Delbert, a · 1967
graduate ol Westlall High
, School, Is a junior majoring
in accouotJng.

Cosh and due from banks - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $1,359,591.80
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1,757,012.97
Obligations of States and political subdivisions - - - - - - - - 2,929,851.29
Other securities - • • • • - - - - - - - - - - " - 110,750.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
·
·
Wlder agreements to resell - - - - - • - - 1,200,000.00
Loans - - - - - - - - · -- - -- - - - - - 779707335
·
'
· ··
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
·other assets representing bank premises - - 163,045.75
Real estate owned other than bank premises ·.•
- 7,375.36
Otherassets · - - - - - - • • • - · - - - 6,0!2.00
TOTAL ASSETS - - - • - - • • • - - •
$1~,330,712. 52
LIABILITIES
.
Demand deposits of individu.als; partnerships;
and corporations - .-. - - . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $3,698,570.42
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and COrporationS - • - - - - • • ·.. - - - - 8,402,322.22
Deposits of United Stjtes Govenunant - - - - - - - • • - . 118,541.83
Deposits of States and political supdivisions - - - · - : - - . • . 1169,778.73
Certified and officers' checks, etc. - - - - - - - - - - - - · 135,614.63
TOTAL DEPOSITS • • • - - - - • - $13,224,827.83
(a) Total demand deposits - - - - - - $ 4,B22,505.61
(b). Total time and savings deposits - - $ 8,4()2,322.22 ·
Other liabilities - - - • ' • • - - ·. :
- - • - 572,024.72
:COTAL UABIUTIES - • • • • • • , ·. - . - - - - - . $13,796,852.55
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on ·loans
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) - • - • - - - - - - - - - ·- $126,453.38
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIEi;
- - - - $126,453.38
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital~otaJ· - - - - - • - - $1,407,406.59
Common Stock~otal par value - - -. .
100,000.00
No. shares authorized 1,000 ·
No. shares outstanding 1,000
Surplus .- - - - - ,- - • •
• .- - - - - - - 1,100,000.00
'
Undivided prQfits - - - - · - - - . - . 207,406.59
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS ..
1,407,406,59
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVF;S, AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS - .
•
$15,330,712.52
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar' days ending with call date - - - - - - - - - - - . • - - - $13,456,832.39
Average of total loans for the 15 calendar
· days ending with call date - - - - - · - - - - - - •• · - - 7,712,738.95

r

'

EDUCATION MEETING
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The .
state Board of Education, at its
monthly meeting Monday, will
consider
revislng
four
vocational educatior&amp;al planning districts and granting the
state .Rehabilitation "and
Correction Department a
special charter.

I, Marlin G. Kerns, Executive ViCe President of the above-named bank do
hereby declare that this report otcondition is true and correct to the best o£ my
lmowledge and belief.
·
Marlin G•.Kerns, Executive VJce President

.I

· We, the undersigned directors a.ttest the correctness of ihis report of con'
dition aod declare that it has been exan1ined by us and to the best of our
knowledge and belief is true and correct. ·
E. E. Null . '
Pa.ul Stewart -- Directors . ·
Joho E. Halliday

M

I'OMEROY - Tuesday Robert Ours Qf l&lt;Jng Bottom, Rt. 1,
his 96th birthday anniversary. Our
congratulations ! Ris friends and relatives are anxious that it be
especially nice this year and for that reason a card shower is
being planned. Won't you send one?

will .celebrate

9 to .9 DAILY

12 TO 8 SUNDAY

137 PINE STREET
GAlli POLIS, OHIO .
FABULOUS DISCOUNTERS!

STUDENTS IN OffiO SCHOOI.S are working to raise money
for a wid~ variety of school activities and equipmfnt - and a
unique program sponsored by the Colgate-Palmolive Co. is
helping pay part of the bill. .
.
called the Colg~te School Action Plan, it is a simple program
involving junior and senior high schools. It enable$ any school to
obtain cash_ for· worlhwhile n~f., projects for school improvements m exchange for Colgate boxtops and labels. These
are valued from three cents for a regular size bar ol soap to 30
cents for a family-size box or laWldry detergent.
.
~terested? Contact the Colgate-Palmolive Co. at 300 Park
Ave.' , New York. , N. Y.
·
·

700 WEST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
~--

FRENCH CITY BRAND

ROUND .STEAK

JUMBO SIZE

JONES BOYS

PLASTIC
WASTE .lA
1-LB.

¢

Gold~n

PKG.

EA.

THE RIGHT TO LIMIT
QUANTITIES

6 PIECE
HOMOGENIZED

MILK
PRICES
GOOD. TODAY
THRU SUNDAY,
APRIL-15th·

SCOT FARMS

LONGHORN
CHEESE

e

$ 00

Social Calendar

EACH

TRANSISTOR
POCKET RADIO
•

99.

•

EASTER
CAND.Y
HEADQUARTERS
EASTER BASKETS
79' TO 12.99

- ' CHOCOLATE aUNNIES
ASSORTED SIZES

GENERAL ELECTRIC

.CASSETTE .
TAPE RECORDER

88

• 3 big, powerful machines to choose from (one
tO H.P. and two 16 H.P.'s).
• Anti-scalp mowers that attach to the front axle
so they: follow the contours of your lawn.
• 42" and 48" triple rotary mower decks for smooth,
.
·
·
.
·
fast cutting .
• Hydrostatic, shuttle and·all gear transmisSions .
• Front &amp; Reartractor driven P.T.O.'s.
e Over 30 easy-to'fit attachments to h~~die,.alrnost
every job. Like snow removal , rotp ttlhng , lawn
revitalizing , lawn rol!lnQ ... for year-round
yardsare.
• Safety ignition interlock and mower chute ·
deflector reduce danger of accidental tn)ury
and

dam~ge.

MODEL NO. P2790

(

HOft'ELrt'E']

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
SAL-ES &amp; SERVICE

LARGEST VARIETY OF
EASTER
CANOY .IN TOWN
I
.

Birth defects seminary
planned by Meigs PTA

--MisrKathy Abbott
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. l::dgar
Abbott, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, are anDQuncing the engagement and
approachiog marriage of their daughter, Kathy, to Paul A.
Rice, son or Mr. and M,., Harold Rice, Rt. I, Rutland. Miss
Abbott is a 1970 graduate or Meigs High School and Is at-·
tending Glenvi.Jle State College, Glenville, W. Va. Her fiance
is a 1970 giaduate of..Meigs High also, and is a student at Rio
Grande College. The open church wedding will be held May
J9at6 :30 p.m. at the Rock Springs United Methodist Church.

. 985-3308

John Ridenour
CHESTER, OHIO
/

SUNDAY
REVIVAL at Rutland
Church or God beginning
SWlday at 7:30p.m . The· Rev.
Chelsea Noel will be the
evangelist. The Rev . Bertha
Kingrey is ·the pa·s tor.
Everyone welcome.
YOUTH RALLY, Christian
Brethren Church, Mason , W.
Va., April Bthrough 14, Eugene
Phelps speaking. He is a 16year old evangelist fr om
Louisa, Ky. Service, 7:30p.m.
MEIGS CoWl!}' Youth Rally
sponsoring appearances
' Operation Evangelize Team,
7:30p .m. Friday, Meigs JWlior
High School; saturday, 1 p.m .,.
ugper' Pllrking··lot, P~meroy;
Saturday evening; 7:30, Sunday 2.p.m. and SWlday, 7:30
p.m., all at Meigs JWlior High,
Middleport
MONDAY
HEATH UNITED Methodist
.
Church WSCS, Mondoy, 7:30
p.m. Mrs: Charles Swanson
will show slides or the Holy
Land. Devotions will be given
by Mrs. Wa~ter Hayes and Mrs.
Everett Davis.'

.

Spruce Up
For Spring

. ''

Seniors to organize·

POMEROY - American be
served immediately
Lutheran Church Women, following the suhrise s_ervice.
A rwnmage sale ' Was an~
. meeting Thursday night at St.
· P"aul's Lutheran Church, made nouilced for May 4 and 5 from g
- a contribution to the program a.m. to 1 p.m. A motherof tht Meigs County Council on daughter banquet was set lor
Aging.
May 8 with members to invite
· Speaker for the mee~ng was guest~. Mrs . Mees gave
Mrs. Eleanor Thomas, project devotion.s which included · a
director f.or the council, who rev~ew of the condensed veroutlined progress and prQjects sian of "The True Resurreccurrently in progress, and Lion" by H. A. Williams.
spoke of the prospective plans
Others attending were Mrs.
to provide transportation and Donald Diener, Miss Erna
Unproved health benefits. She Jesse, Mrs. Ferman Moore,
spoke of thePI!rticipation of the Mrs . Arthur Lurid, · Mrs .
aged and of their appreciation· Richard Foltrod, Mr~. George
for the project development. Morris, Mrs. -Fred Blaettnar,
Mrs .
Malcolm
Mees, Mrs . Harry Davis, Mrs .
president, had charge of the William Holt, Mrs. Max
·
·
h'1c h E1·ch 1·nger, Mrs. Herman
busmess
mee ting durmgw
time the traditional Easter Warner and Mrs. Kenneth
breakfast was planned . It will Braun.
,::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:=:•:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::!:;

SET

HARDWOOD
FOLDING STOOL

AN OPEN HOUSE will be held Sunday, Al"il 15, by the
family of Mr. and Mrs. Jewell Story in honor ol their 50th
wedding anniversary at their home on State Route 681 from I
to 4 p.m. All friends and relatives are oordially invited.

Rule class meets

2-lhGAL
·CARTONS

Mr. and Mrs. ]ewell Story

Church -women contribute
to ·aging council fund

FLASHLIGHT·• SET

•

......_..

DR. AND MRS. P. E. STANLEY really get around. They
resignation
as
council . ·
MIDDLEPORT
have justreturned after spending the winter in the Rio Grande - Arrangements fof a District 16 president. Mr s. Charles
Valley. of Texas, and during the winter took an extensive tour of
was
elected
seminar on birth defects to be Goegleio
the Pacific coast of Mexico.
held at the Meigs Junior High president. A vice president will
There were visits to San Luis Potosi, Tacatecas, Durango,
School in Middleport on May 10 be named at the May 3 meeting
the movie capital of Mexico where John Wayne makes all of his . from 7 to 9:30p.m. were an- to be held at Chester. At that
Mex:ican ·movies, the Mazathan, a Pacific coast resort city, and nounced Thursday night at a time linal plans £or the birth
L&lt;Js Mochis, where lots of winter vegetables are grown.
meeting of Ute Meigs County defectS meetlng will be made .
l\tU&gt;sMochis Dr. and Mrs. Stanley boarded a train for a j25
The Teenage ' Institute on
Coun~i]
of Parents and
l)!ile triP. over the Sierra Madre Mountain to, Chihuahua It was
Teachers held at the Bradbury Alcohol and Drugs to be held in
quite a trip! The train passed through 86 tunnels, went over 37
August at Ohio Wesleyan was
SchooL
bridges, crisscrossed the continental divide three times and
announced
and Mrs. Vaughan
The seminar will be co· reached an elevation Qf 8,000 feet to get to an area which is
sponsored by the Council and asked the . units to consider
inhabited by some ol the most primitive Indians Qf the Western
the March of Dimes with sponsoring a junior or senior in
World.
several obstreticians and one of tl' e high schools. The
From Chihuahua they traveled to Torreon , Saltillo and
pediatricians to participate, cost is $35.
Monterey before returning to the States.
Mrs . Richard Vaughan, · A choral readin g " Our
president, announced. Called a Country 'Tis of Thee" was
QUITE THE CURRENT CRAZE with the younger
"Mother-Daugher Be-In" the presented by Mrs . Sabra
generation these days is the yo yo ... not any old yoyo, but a program wiU be open to all Morrison's reading class at the
Duncan. There was a day when you could see a dozen hulahoops
mothers and daughters above Bradbury school. Participating
on any school playground, 1\'s the same now with the yoyo and all the seventh grade.
in this were Janet Horky;
the kids seem to be struggling to learn all the _tricks tha.t look so
Purpose o£ the seminar will Robin Snowden, Tony · Pope,
~sy when the ChampionS do.them on television. Wha~ next, we
be to acquaint--the people of .Vic)ty Pickens, '{er~i. Zirkle,
wonder ·
·
District 16 with the causes of Marianne Welsh, Carin Bailey,
birth delects. Mrs. Vaughan Greg Becker, Ricky Hovatter,
asked that two or three people Danny Smith, Kevin King,
from each unit assist with the Mark Venoy and Todd
MOrrison. The group also led in
conference;
POMEROY - The Easter · · ."The Magic of Easter".
Also announced at the the pledge to open the meeting .
theme was carried out in
Sunshine boxes and round- meeting ·was the .District 16
Mrs.
Phyllis Hackett
the
Couricil
deVotions:and the progiain at robin cards Were prepared for spring conferenCe to be held in Welcomed
the Tuesday night meeting of the shut-i ns. Articles per- Chesapeake on April 28. The delega_tes and PTA members
the Golden Rule Class oi the taining to Easter were brought first place division winners in on behalf of Mrs. June Kloes,
Pomeroy Church ol Christ held by each of the members lor the cultural arl':i competition Bradbury PTA president, who
at tile horne of Mrs, Elwood..,. sale·among ·the members. Mrs. - on display at the meeting will was unable to attend. The
lre1Jsilrer r'eported a balanCe Of
Bow~rs, Chester Rd..
_Ba~ gave a reading '}The· be taken to the conference for
$580.89. Cookies, coffee and
Mrs. Stanley Bass presided Cross As I See It" and exhibit.
at the meeting with Mrs. Louis displayed a c'ross arrangement
Due to Mrs . .Yaugtran 's punch were served by the host
Osborne giving . the prayer. which she had made.
ap'(fointme.nt · as district unit.
There was group singing of
director, she submitted her
Asalad course was served by
"What A Friend We Have in
Jesus". Mrs. Osborne read the hostess.
Attending·, ~esides tho~e
John 15 from the Living Bible
and members responded to roll . named, were Mrs--;- ·-Edward
call' by giving a favorite poem. Venor · and Mrs·. Denver
Mrs. Raymond Baity read. Kapplc.

LB.

-

ACUPUNCTURE CHARGE
MAssiLLON, Ohio (UP!) 'Dr. Raymond Rich, a
chiropractor in nearby Perry
Township, pleaded innocent
Friday
to
practicing
acupuncture without a license.
He was released under $1,000
bond pending trial.
·

.....

TRADITIONALLY THE Middleport Church of Christ has a
"30 pieces of silver" offering at Eastertime.
·
This is an offering of love designed to turn the price of
betrayal into a gift for God. The objective or the church this year
is to make the offering the biggest ever as an indication of
Christian dedication.

sees policy lacking

DAYTON, Ohio (UP! ) - exact opposite the next day .
United Auto Workers &lt;UAW) This adds to the uncertainty.
Union president Leonard The budgetary policies in the
Woodcock
sald
Friday administration don 't make too
President Nixon's ceiling on much sense as far as
meat-prices will not work and strengthening the economy is
• complained that the ad- concerned,'' he said. "We have
ministrati.on's budgetary a continued balance 'of tradwe:·.
.. _
policies 1'don't make too much and continued weakness in the
dollar. In total, I thin~ ·the
sense ."
" They ~ve had
performance of the lideConOmic
ministratiQn leaves a gre~t
deal lo
"

~.

Yo

•

The First National ·Bank
ASSETS

W~k

!Community I
ICorner By Charlene Hoeflich t

Iroquois bringing Crown ·City man
world's first UN
sentenced to life.
.to .Rio Grande

·b·e-

•

"o' • • • •O,','.:}I'o'·"N/.,o!o';,•,vo:_,·,..,.,-.....,.·,· ~--·~"' . .
•
I
:~!%:-:-.-&gt;:·:·:·.···· ··:·"·"' .........,.,.•••·,·.-.o;-~·-·.&lt;·.· :·::.:..:-.v.•:-:·::~:::.:.=::::x::::::;:"~z.o;:=::m::~

·Essex would lift charters
(Continued from Pl!ge 1)
provide the potential for an efficient and
effective operating educational program ."
Deficienci~s cited against the Kyger
Creek District were that it does not
provide a psychologist, the counselor-pupil
ratio of 1-442 exceeds the prescribed 1-400,

I

G}
- - - - !QIIt 11411111----

LENDER

in Racine-:Portland

HOME LOANS

RACINE - A meeting to Welker · and Mrs.' · M3rgaret
·organize a senior citizens· club Amberger of the Meigs co·unty
for the Racine-Portland area ·Council on Aging staff will be
will be held at I p.m. Wed- . present for the organizational
nesday at the Church of Latter session. Cookies clnd coffee will
Day Saints on the Ra cine-Port- be -_served. Anyone wis~ing to
attend but not haVing transLand Road . .
All persons· 55 .or over are portation is asked to call ~2-invited to aitend. Mrs. Pearl 7884 or 992-78116:

1. Home ConstructioJI Loans
2. Home PurchaseJ.oans

Cub pack at Reedsvilk
reorga~ized recently .

3. Home Improvement loans

4. ttome.Consolidation loans

and
Mr.
REEDSVfLLE - Cub scout Cubmaster,
instit
ution
a.)
pack No ..59, :;pons.orcd by the· Kessinger,
Riverview PTA, ReedsvUie, representative:
has recently-been reorganb:ed':·-.. To·oecome a Cub Scout a boy
Den mothers are Wanda·Kimes must be ··bet~een the ages of
and Teresa Collins.
. eight , an~ ten. Den meetings
Committee members are are held each Friday imGene 'Young, chairman; Orva mediately after school. Dues
Joan Holter, Eloise Powell, ·are 15 cents per meeting . Pack
Teresa Collins, \Yanda Kiines, . meetings will- be scheduled
Ruth Dillon, Dohrman Reed , once a month at which time ·
parlcne Reed ; Charles Powell , parents are invl~ to attend
and participate io activities.
Members ·of Pack 59 are
David Young ; Jeff Cowdrey,
NO SMUT WANTED
CLEVELAND (UPI ) - The Tiin Brewer, Mark Holter,
chairman of a commit~e that Bdan Collins, Klare Kimes,
· brou ~ ht · BiJly. Graham 's James Reed, Scott Dillon, Scotf
Crusade here said Saturday Vanmeter, Richard Vanmeter,
she had started a petition drive, · Charles POwell and Jeff
to get "half-clad bosoms, smut Masters.
Cub mascot- is Angela
and bad taste" off nidio and
television. Katie Williams, wife . Collins.
of a prominent Glevela·nd
businessman, said she has
received 20,000 signatures on
petitions she began circulating
last February which she will ·
send to congress.

ARREST!\ UP
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Richard E. Guggenheim,
director of the Ohio Depart.
ment of Liquor Control, said ·
arrests for illegal importation ·
~:: of alcoholic beverages totaled
\[1.~.: 25 last year as compared to
. eight for 1971.

MONDAY
·. RIVERVIEW PTA Monday,
SANCTIONS, MAYBE
April 9 at 7:30 p.m. at the
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) _ The
schOol ; program , a · play, 30 member executive com"Mother Goose Land " by first mittee o£ the Ohio Education
and second graders directed by ASsociation will meet here
the Literature Class; the Sunday and consider imposing
Guida9ce Counselor of Eastern sanctions against the Geneva
School District will attend.
Area School District in
POMEROY PTA, 7:30 p.m. Ashtabula County .
.Monday night, election and ·
installation of officers. Science
fair .
MAJOR NAMED
TUESDAY
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Henry
RACINE LODGE 461 F&amp;AM F. Stehmeyer, a native of
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. All master . Zanesville who recently retired
masonS invited. Refreshments. as a major in the Ohio Hig hway
. THE WSCS of Pomeroy Patrol has been named to head
United Methodist Church up th..investigative division of
Tuesday, 7:3Gp.m. Miss Grace the Ohio Racing Corrunission,
Campbell wiil present a·n it was announced Saturday.
Easter program.
;wEDNES!JAY
MIDDLEPORT
The
Amateur Garden Club of
WEDNESDAY
Middleport will meet at B p.m.
POMEROY Chapter SO,
th h
· [ "rs Eddie
1
·B
a k ett orne o '" ·
Royal Arch - Masons, stated
.
ur e ·
.
· meeting 7:30 p.m. at Pomeroy
POMEROY - Middleport M
. ·H 11 M t Excellent
'I .
Cl b t
M. I n
asomc a . os
.. Ions u 'a noon·, elgs n . master degree to be cOnferred.
All members are asked to R r h
ts
atterld.
· e res men . ,

. '

·5. Mobile Home Loans
I

Meigs Branch

'

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
296

w. 2n"d st..

PomerOy. Ohio ~5769

Earl F. Ingels, Jr., Mgr.

All Deposits Insured to $20,000.00 By The
Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation.

a treasury of .
great .Easter lo~ks
All the looks to watch are here in our new

easte r co lle ctio n . by Aud itions / Natura l
Bridge. Tfendy-yet -tastelul shoes that give
statu s to the simplest ensemble. There's a
. pair that's. "you".'; . co me see!

auditions

Marguerite's
SHOES
Betty Ohlinger
102E. Main, Pomeroy
•

I

'.

I

l
I
I

�'

~

I

'

'

j

•)
12- 'l1&gt;e Sunday Times - Sentinel, Swulay, April B, 1973

13- '!'he Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Apri18 1973

'

..

~

the school's reported expenditures for .

library books did not meet the prescribed
minimwn , the library does not provide an
enclosed conference area, the overaU
laboratory facHities are not designed to
accommodate a comprehensive progra·m
which encompasses oippropriate breadth
and depth educational experiences,.
adequate provisions are not made for .
meeting indi":'idual differences of students
including special education classes, and

the school's program is not comprehensive
in terms of the education._l and vocational
requirements or students.
Twenty-two deficiencies were cited
against North Gallia, 2.1 against Southwestern and 27 against Hannan Tra ce.
The report at North Gallia said two
laboratory type courses, me c.h~ni ca l
drawing and industrial arts, do not meet
the required .clock ho,urs for credit
assigned, the school's program is not
comprehensive in terms of the educational
and vocational requirements of students,
the art program is not scheduled for the

. l

l

I

ge~eral student body, inadequacies in the
library c~nter including volumes, expenditures, and facilities prevent the
library from serving as the •major instructional resou.rte center, the school has
no psychologist, the school facilities do not
meet the needs of the educational
program, the school does not have
facilities for art or separate facilities for
industrial arts, and four teachers do not
hold validated certificates for each subject
assigned.
Both . Southwestern's elementary
buildings were hit Pl!rticularly hard' as
were North GaUia's.
In the high school report, Dr.
Shwnaker reported the school has no
course offerings in industrial arts and
schedules only .one-half l!llit in art, the
library cannot be considered the major
instructional resource center of the school
based 'llpon inadequate facilities and insufficient volumes, the school has no
psychologist, one teacher does not hold a
certificate of provisional grade or higher
and five teachers do no.t hold vaUdated
certificates for each subject assigned, the
counselor"pupil ratio is 1~12 exceeds the
required 1-400, the library does not have
the required 5,000 volwnes, the facilities
do not meet the needs of the educational
program, the ·school dOes not provide

facHiOes designed for guidance services,
the school does not have lacilities for art
and industrial arts, and the music
. facilities are not adequate to implement
the instructional program.
. Hannan Trace's deficiencies were
similar in that two classes, vocal music
do not meet the
and ensemble groups,
.
required clock hours lor the credit
assigned, the school's program is not
comprehensive in terms or the educational
and vocational requirements of students,
there are no art units and industrial arts
Wlits, adequate provisionS are not made
for meeting iridividual differences of
students, the library cannot be considered
the major instructional resource center of
the school based upon inadequate
facilities, insufficient volume . e-x..
penditures and insufficient volwnes, the
school does not provide a psychologist, the
counselor-p.upil ratio of 1-454 exceeds the
·required 1400, the library center does not
ha ve the required 5,000 volumes, the
school does not have facilities for health
services, and the music facilities are not ..
- adeq~iite to implement the instructional
program.
All boards of education were commended for their efforts to provide an
educational prog ram for the students of
their districts.
'
If the charters are revoked as
recommended , countywide consolidation
excluding Gallipolis, could be forced prior
to the 1973-74 school year, local Qbservers
conclude.

.

~

IRONTON ...: Tewey Lee near ProctorviUe.
Judge Harley Myers of
Wall, 2B, Crown City, was
sentenced to life at hard labor Logan, who presided during
in the Ohio Penitentiary Thurs- la St week 's four-day trial,
day for " the 1970 gunshot v.:hich resulted in a common
slaying of .Frank McCartney pleas court jury finding . Wall
guilty or first degree murder
and guilty of shooting another
times in each dorm for in- with intent to kill, pronounced
formal discussions. They will sentence after hea"ring a
attend
several
classes motion by Defense Counselor
William Curry asking that an
throughout Monday .
Th_ere will also .be an -i nde pendent menta 1
exhibition
of
Indian examination be made of Wall.
Curry asked that sentencing
photographs, crafis, and paintbe
delayed until such an
ings in the college dining hall
during the entire day Monday. examination is made. Wall's
· One or two dishes prepared defense had been based on the
from an Indian reCipe will be · iitsanity plea.
Ir1 opposing Curry's motion,
included in our cafeteria menu
for Jwtch and dinner. Also, an Lawrence County Prosecutor .
evening performance · begin~ Uoyd Moore· argued that the .
· ning at 8 in the dining hall will state facilities at Lima State.
i involve traditional indian song Hospital had ruled Wall sane
on·this matter and that the jury
~~ and , dance with audience
participation and possibly a . had decided that Wall wasn't'
film .
insane at the time of the crime.

RlO GRANDE _ Monday, traditional messages, dances,
April 9, Rio Grande College songs ·and films . They have
will share a cultural ex-' visited over 150 colleges and
· perience with the "White Roots universities; church groups,
of Peace ." .
high schools, prisons and InAn ancient Iroquois tradition dian groups ,
tells of the White Roots of
For Indians, their message is
Peace, a symbol of the first one of ho.pe and enUnited Nations the world ever couragement -··---· for
the
knew. At the base ofthe ·Tree ol tradi1ionalists through the
Great Peace were four white establishment of revitalized
roots gQing out to the four . Indiim strength and Wlity .
winds in order that all peoples
For thousands of noncould find their way to peace in Indians, the White Roots of
the shade of the Great Tree.
Peace have provided an opThe Iroquois people have portunity for all people to hear
always
considered
an the Indians' view of peace and
aggre~ive "pursuit of peace relationships with their enamong men' ' to
their vironment, as well as bringing
mission. In September, 1959, real brotherhood tp all peoples.
following the Traditional In- · The White Roots of Peace
dian Unity ConvetJtiOn, ·a group will arrive on -campus SaWlday
of yoWlg Mohawks set out to afternoon (the 8th) and that
renew their corrunitment to evening will m~et at ,specified.
these traditions. They .adopted
· the name , "White Roots of
.I
Peace."
Call No. 485
Charier No.l36
National Bank Region No.4
The White Roots of Peace, a
REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING
North Amer ~can
Indian
DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES; OF THE
communications group, has
travelled over 200,000 miles In
the United States and Canada
to provide a meaningful exof GallipOlis, Oblo In the State of Ohio, at the clOse of business on March 28, 1973
perience
through
their
published in response lo call made by Comptroller of the currency, under Title
12, United States Code, Section 161.

~

DELBERT HANEY
PATRIOT Delbert
Haney, son of Mr. and Mrs.
William R. Haney, of RD 2,
Patriot, Is one ol 51 .siudents
selected as a 1973 Pace
Setter In the College of
Administrative Science at
Ohio State University. He
· · _will be honored at a banquet
on Aprll12 as an outstanding
scholar and lender in the
College. Delbert, a · 1967
graduate ol Westlall High
, School, Is a junior majoring
in accouotJng.

Cosh and due from banks - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $1,359,591.80
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1,757,012.97
Obligations of States and political subdivisions - - - - - - - - 2,929,851.29
Other securities - • • • • - - - - - - - - - - " - 110,750.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
·
·
Wlder agreements to resell - - - - - • - - 1,200,000.00
Loans - - - - - - - - · -- - -- - - - - - 779707335
·
'
· ··
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
·other assets representing bank premises - - 163,045.75
Real estate owned other than bank premises ·.•
- 7,375.36
Otherassets · - - - - - - • • • - · - - - 6,0!2.00
TOTAL ASSETS - - - • - - • • • - - •
$1~,330,712. 52
LIABILITIES
.
Demand deposits of individu.als; partnerships;
and corporations - .-. - - . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $3,698,570.42
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and COrporationS - • - - - - • • ·.. - - - - 8,402,322.22
Deposits of United Stjtes Govenunant - - - - - - - • • - . 118,541.83
Deposits of States and political supdivisions - - - · - : - - . • . 1169,778.73
Certified and officers' checks, etc. - - - - - - - - - - - - · 135,614.63
TOTAL DEPOSITS • • • - - - - • - $13,224,827.83
(a) Total demand deposits - - - - - - $ 4,B22,505.61
(b). Total time and savings deposits - - $ 8,4()2,322.22 ·
Other liabilities - - - • ' • • - - ·. :
- - • - 572,024.72
:COTAL UABIUTIES - • • • • • • , ·. - . - - - - - . $13,796,852.55
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on ·loans
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) - • - • - - - - - - - - - ·- $126,453.38
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIEi;
- - - - $126,453.38
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital~otaJ· - - - - - • - - $1,407,406.59
Common Stock~otal par value - - -. .
100,000.00
No. shares authorized 1,000 ·
No. shares outstanding 1,000
Surplus .- - - - - ,- - • •
• .- - - - - - - 1,100,000.00
'
Undivided prQfits - - - - · - - - . - . 207,406.59
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS ..
1,407,406,59
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVF;S, AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS - .
•
$15,330,712.52
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar' days ending with call date - - - - - - - - - - - . • - - - $13,456,832.39
Average of total loans for the 15 calendar
· days ending with call date - - - - - · - - - - - - •• · - - 7,712,738.95

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EDUCATION MEETING
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The .
state Board of Education, at its
monthly meeting Monday, will
consider
revislng
four
vocational educatior&amp;al planning districts and granting the
state .Rehabilitation "and
Correction Department a
special charter.

I, Marlin G. Kerns, Executive ViCe President of the above-named bank do
hereby declare that this report otcondition is true and correct to the best o£ my
lmowledge and belief.
·
Marlin G•.Kerns, Executive VJce President

.I

· We, the undersigned directors a.ttest the correctness of ihis report of con'
dition aod declare that it has been exan1ined by us and to the best of our
knowledge and belief is true and correct. ·
E. E. Null . '
Pa.ul Stewart -- Directors . ·
Joho E. Halliday

M

I'OMEROY - Tuesday Robert Ours Qf l&lt;Jng Bottom, Rt. 1,
his 96th birthday anniversary. Our
congratulations ! Ris friends and relatives are anxious that it be
especially nice this year and for that reason a card shower is
being planned. Won't you send one?

will .celebrate

9 to .9 DAILY

12 TO 8 SUNDAY

137 PINE STREET
GAlli POLIS, OHIO .
FABULOUS DISCOUNTERS!

STUDENTS IN OffiO SCHOOI.S are working to raise money
for a wid~ variety of school activities and equipmfnt - and a
unique program sponsored by the Colgate-Palmolive Co. is
helping pay part of the bill. .
.
called the Colg~te School Action Plan, it is a simple program
involving junior and senior high schools. It enable$ any school to
obtain cash_ for· worlhwhile n~f., projects for school improvements m exchange for Colgate boxtops and labels. These
are valued from three cents for a regular size bar ol soap to 30
cents for a family-size box or laWldry detergent.
.
~terested? Contact the Colgate-Palmolive Co. at 300 Park
Ave.' , New York. , N. Y.
·
·

700 WEST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
~--

FRENCH CITY BRAND

ROUND .STEAK

JUMBO SIZE

JONES BOYS

PLASTIC
WASTE .lA
1-LB.

¢

Gold~n

PKG.

EA.

THE RIGHT TO LIMIT
QUANTITIES

6 PIECE
HOMOGENIZED

MILK
PRICES
GOOD. TODAY
THRU SUNDAY,
APRIL-15th·

SCOT FARMS

LONGHORN
CHEESE

e

$ 00

Social Calendar

EACH

TRANSISTOR
POCKET RADIO
•

99.

•

EASTER
CAND.Y
HEADQUARTERS
EASTER BASKETS
79' TO 12.99

- ' CHOCOLATE aUNNIES
ASSORTED SIZES

GENERAL ELECTRIC

.CASSETTE .
TAPE RECORDER

88

• 3 big, powerful machines to choose from (one
tO H.P. and two 16 H.P.'s).
• Anti-scalp mowers that attach to the front axle
so they: follow the contours of your lawn.
• 42" and 48" triple rotary mower decks for smooth,
.
·
·
.
·
fast cutting .
• Hydrostatic, shuttle and·all gear transmisSions .
• Front &amp; Reartractor driven P.T.O.'s.
e Over 30 easy-to'fit attachments to h~~die,.alrnost
every job. Like snow removal , rotp ttlhng , lawn
revitalizing , lawn rol!lnQ ... for year-round
yardsare.
• Safety ignition interlock and mower chute ·
deflector reduce danger of accidental tn)ury
and

dam~ge.

MODEL NO. P2790

(

HOft'ELrt'E']

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
SAL-ES &amp; SERVICE

LARGEST VARIETY OF
EASTER
CANOY .IN TOWN
I
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Birth defects seminary
planned by Meigs PTA

--MisrKathy Abbott
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. l::dgar
Abbott, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, are anDQuncing the engagement and
approachiog marriage of their daughter, Kathy, to Paul A.
Rice, son or Mr. and M,., Harold Rice, Rt. I, Rutland. Miss
Abbott is a 1970 graduate or Meigs High School and Is at-·
tending Glenvi.Jle State College, Glenville, W. Va. Her fiance
is a 1970 giaduate of..Meigs High also, and is a student at Rio
Grande College. The open church wedding will be held May
J9at6 :30 p.m. at the Rock Springs United Methodist Church.

. 985-3308

John Ridenour
CHESTER, OHIO
/

SUNDAY
REVIVAL at Rutland
Church or God beginning
SWlday at 7:30p.m . The· Rev.
Chelsea Noel will be the
evangelist. The Rev . Bertha
Kingrey is ·the pa·s tor.
Everyone welcome.
YOUTH RALLY, Christian
Brethren Church, Mason , W.
Va., April Bthrough 14, Eugene
Phelps speaking. He is a 16year old evangelist fr om
Louisa, Ky. Service, 7:30p.m.
MEIGS CoWl!}' Youth Rally
sponsoring appearances
' Operation Evangelize Team,
7:30p .m. Friday, Meigs JWlior
High School; saturday, 1 p.m .,.
ugper' Pllrking··lot, P~meroy;
Saturday evening; 7:30, Sunday 2.p.m. and SWlday, 7:30
p.m., all at Meigs JWlior High,
Middleport
MONDAY
HEATH UNITED Methodist
.
Church WSCS, Mondoy, 7:30
p.m. Mrs: Charles Swanson
will show slides or the Holy
Land. Devotions will be given
by Mrs. Wa~ter Hayes and Mrs.
Everett Davis.'

.

Spruce Up
For Spring

. ''

Seniors to organize·

POMEROY - American be
served immediately
Lutheran Church Women, following the suhrise s_ervice.
A rwnmage sale ' Was an~
. meeting Thursday night at St.
· P"aul's Lutheran Church, made nouilced for May 4 and 5 from g
- a contribution to the program a.m. to 1 p.m. A motherof tht Meigs County Council on daughter banquet was set lor
Aging.
May 8 with members to invite
· Speaker for the mee~ng was guest~. Mrs . Mees gave
Mrs. Eleanor Thomas, project devotion.s which included · a
director f.or the council, who rev~ew of the condensed veroutlined progress and prQjects sian of "The True Resurreccurrently in progress, and Lion" by H. A. Williams.
spoke of the prospective plans
Others attending were Mrs.
to provide transportation and Donald Diener, Miss Erna
Unproved health benefits. She Jesse, Mrs. Ferman Moore,
spoke of thePI!rticipation of the Mrs . Arthur Lurid, · Mrs .
aged and of their appreciation· Richard Foltrod, Mr~. George
for the project development. Morris, Mrs. -Fred Blaettnar,
Mrs .
Malcolm
Mees, Mrs . Harry Davis, Mrs .
president, had charge of the William Holt, Mrs. Max
·
·
h'1c h E1·ch 1·nger, Mrs. Herman
busmess
mee ting durmgw
time the traditional Easter Warner and Mrs. Kenneth
breakfast was planned . It will Braun.
,::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:=:•:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::!:;

SET

HARDWOOD
FOLDING STOOL

AN OPEN HOUSE will be held Sunday, Al"il 15, by the
family of Mr. and Mrs. Jewell Story in honor ol their 50th
wedding anniversary at their home on State Route 681 from I
to 4 p.m. All friends and relatives are oordially invited.

Rule class meets

2-lhGAL
·CARTONS

Mr. and Mrs. ]ewell Story

Church -women contribute
to ·aging council fund

FLASHLIGHT·• SET

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DR. AND MRS. P. E. STANLEY really get around. They
resignation
as
council . ·
MIDDLEPORT
have justreturned after spending the winter in the Rio Grande - Arrangements fof a District 16 president. Mr s. Charles
Valley. of Texas, and during the winter took an extensive tour of
was
elected
seminar on birth defects to be Goegleio
the Pacific coast of Mexico.
held at the Meigs Junior High president. A vice president will
There were visits to San Luis Potosi, Tacatecas, Durango,
School in Middleport on May 10 be named at the May 3 meeting
the movie capital of Mexico where John Wayne makes all of his . from 7 to 9:30p.m. were an- to be held at Chester. At that
Mex:ican ·movies, the Mazathan, a Pacific coast resort city, and nounced Thursday night at a time linal plans £or the birth
L&lt;Js Mochis, where lots of winter vegetables are grown.
meeting of Ute Meigs County defectS meetlng will be made .
l\tU&gt;sMochis Dr. and Mrs. Stanley boarded a train for a j25
The Teenage ' Institute on
Coun~i]
of Parents and
l)!ile triP. over the Sierra Madre Mountain to, Chihuahua It was
Teachers held at the Bradbury Alcohol and Drugs to be held in
quite a trip! The train passed through 86 tunnels, went over 37
August at Ohio Wesleyan was
SchooL
bridges, crisscrossed the continental divide three times and
announced
and Mrs. Vaughan
The seminar will be co· reached an elevation Qf 8,000 feet to get to an area which is
sponsored by the Council and asked the . units to consider
inhabited by some ol the most primitive Indians Qf the Western
the March of Dimes with sponsoring a junior or senior in
World.
several obstreticians and one of tl' e high schools. The
From Chihuahua they traveled to Torreon , Saltillo and
pediatricians to participate, cost is $35.
Monterey before returning to the States.
Mrs . Richard Vaughan, · A choral readin g " Our
president, announced. Called a Country 'Tis of Thee" was
QUITE THE CURRENT CRAZE with the younger
"Mother-Daugher Be-In" the presented by Mrs . Sabra
generation these days is the yo yo ... not any old yoyo, but a program wiU be open to all Morrison's reading class at the
Duncan. There was a day when you could see a dozen hulahoops
mothers and daughters above Bradbury school. Participating
on any school playground, 1\'s the same now with the yoyo and all the seventh grade.
in this were Janet Horky;
the kids seem to be struggling to learn all the _tricks tha.t look so
Purpose o£ the seminar will Robin Snowden, Tony · Pope,
~sy when the ChampionS do.them on television. Wha~ next, we
be to acquaint--the people of .Vic)ty Pickens, '{er~i. Zirkle,
wonder ·
·
District 16 with the causes of Marianne Welsh, Carin Bailey,
birth delects. Mrs. Vaughan Greg Becker, Ricky Hovatter,
asked that two or three people Danny Smith, Kevin King,
from each unit assist with the Mark Venoy and Todd
MOrrison. The group also led in
conference;
POMEROY - The Easter · · ."The Magic of Easter".
Also announced at the the pledge to open the meeting .
theme was carried out in
Sunshine boxes and round- meeting ·was the .District 16
Mrs.
Phyllis Hackett
the
Couricil
deVotions:and the progiain at robin cards Were prepared for spring conferenCe to be held in Welcomed
the Tuesday night meeting of the shut-i ns. Articles per- Chesapeake on April 28. The delega_tes and PTA members
the Golden Rule Class oi the taining to Easter were brought first place division winners in on behalf of Mrs. June Kloes,
Pomeroy Church ol Christ held by each of the members lor the cultural arl':i competition Bradbury PTA president, who
at tile horne of Mrs, Elwood..,. sale·among ·the members. Mrs. - on display at the meeting will was unable to attend. The
lre1Jsilrer r'eported a balanCe Of
Bow~rs, Chester Rd..
_Ba~ gave a reading '}The· be taken to the conference for
$580.89. Cookies, coffee and
Mrs. Stanley Bass presided Cross As I See It" and exhibit.
at the meeting with Mrs. Louis displayed a c'ross arrangement
Due to Mrs . .Yaugtran 's punch were served by the host
Osborne giving . the prayer. which she had made.
ap'(fointme.nt · as district unit.
There was group singing of
director, she submitted her
Asalad course was served by
"What A Friend We Have in
Jesus". Mrs. Osborne read the hostess.
Attending·, ~esides tho~e
John 15 from the Living Bible
and members responded to roll . named, were Mrs--;- ·-Edward
call' by giving a favorite poem. Venor · and Mrs·. Denver
Mrs. Raymond Baity read. Kapplc.

LB.

-

ACUPUNCTURE CHARGE
MAssiLLON, Ohio (UP!) 'Dr. Raymond Rich, a
chiropractor in nearby Perry
Township, pleaded innocent
Friday
to
practicing
acupuncture without a license.
He was released under $1,000
bond pending trial.
·

.....

TRADITIONALLY THE Middleport Church of Christ has a
"30 pieces of silver" offering at Eastertime.
·
This is an offering of love designed to turn the price of
betrayal into a gift for God. The objective or the church this year
is to make the offering the biggest ever as an indication of
Christian dedication.

sees policy lacking

DAYTON, Ohio (UP! ) - exact opposite the next day .
United Auto Workers &lt;UAW) This adds to the uncertainty.
Union president Leonard The budgetary policies in the
Woodcock
sald
Friday administration don 't make too
President Nixon's ceiling on much sense as far as
meat-prices will not work and strengthening the economy is
• complained that the ad- concerned,'' he said. "We have
ministrati.on's budgetary a continued balance 'of tradwe:·.
.. _
policies 1'don't make too much and continued weakness in the
dollar. In total, I thin~ ·the
sense ."
" They ~ve had
performance of the lideConOmic
ministratiQn leaves a gre~t
deal lo
"

~.

Yo

•

The First National ·Bank
ASSETS

W~k

!Community I
ICorner By Charlene Hoeflich t

Iroquois bringing Crown ·City man
world's first UN
sentenced to life.
.to .Rio Grande

·b·e-

•

"o' • • • •O,','.:}I'o'·"N/.,o!o';,•,vo:_,·,..,.,-.....,.·,· ~--·~"' . .
•
I
:~!%:-:-.-&gt;:·:·:·.···· ··:·"·"' .........,.,.•••·,·.-.o;-~·-·.&lt;·.· :·::.:..:-.v.•:-:·::~:::.:.=::::x::::::;:"~z.o;:=::m::~

·Essex would lift charters
(Continued from Pl!ge 1)
provide the potential for an efficient and
effective operating educational program ."
Deficienci~s cited against the Kyger
Creek District were that it does not
provide a psychologist, the counselor-pupil
ratio of 1-442 exceeds the prescribed 1-400,

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LENDER

in Racine-:Portland

HOME LOANS

RACINE - A meeting to Welker · and Mrs.' · M3rgaret
·organize a senior citizens· club Amberger of the Meigs co·unty
for the Racine-Portland area ·Council on Aging staff will be
will be held at I p.m. Wed- . present for the organizational
nesday at the Church of Latter session. Cookies clnd coffee will
Day Saints on the Ra cine-Port- be -_served. Anyone wis~ing to
attend but not haVing transLand Road . .
All persons· 55 .or over are portation is asked to call ~2-invited to aitend. Mrs. Pearl 7884 or 992-78116:

1. Home ConstructioJI Loans
2. Home PurchaseJ.oans

Cub pack at Reedsvilk
reorga~ized recently .

3. Home Improvement loans

4. ttome.Consolidation loans

and
Mr.
REEDSVfLLE - Cub scout Cubmaster,
instit
ution
a.)
pack No ..59, :;pons.orcd by the· Kessinger,
Riverview PTA, ReedsvUie, representative:
has recently-been reorganb:ed':·-.. To·oecome a Cub Scout a boy
Den mothers are Wanda·Kimes must be ··bet~een the ages of
and Teresa Collins.
. eight , an~ ten. Den meetings
Committee members are are held each Friday imGene 'Young, chairman; Orva mediately after school. Dues
Joan Holter, Eloise Powell, ·are 15 cents per meeting . Pack
Teresa Collins, \Yanda Kiines, . meetings will- be scheduled
Ruth Dillon, Dohrman Reed , once a month at which time ·
parlcne Reed ; Charles Powell , parents are invl~ to attend
and participate io activities.
Members ·of Pack 59 are
David Young ; Jeff Cowdrey,
NO SMUT WANTED
CLEVELAND (UPI ) - The Tiin Brewer, Mark Holter,
chairman of a commit~e that Bdan Collins, Klare Kimes,
· brou ~ ht · BiJly. Graham 's James Reed, Scott Dillon, Scotf
Crusade here said Saturday Vanmeter, Richard Vanmeter,
she had started a petition drive, · Charles POwell and Jeff
to get "half-clad bosoms, smut Masters.
Cub mascot- is Angela
and bad taste" off nidio and
television. Katie Williams, wife . Collins.
of a prominent Glevela·nd
businessman, said she has
received 20,000 signatures on
petitions she began circulating
last February which she will ·
send to congress.

ARREST!\ UP
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Richard E. Guggenheim,
director of the Ohio Depart.
ment of Liquor Control, said ·
arrests for illegal importation ·
~:: of alcoholic beverages totaled
\[1.~.: 25 last year as compared to
. eight for 1971.

MONDAY
·. RIVERVIEW PTA Monday,
SANCTIONS, MAYBE
April 9 at 7:30 p.m. at the
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) _ The
schOol ; program , a · play, 30 member executive com"Mother Goose Land " by first mittee o£ the Ohio Education
and second graders directed by ASsociation will meet here
the Literature Class; the Sunday and consider imposing
Guida9ce Counselor of Eastern sanctions against the Geneva
School District will attend.
Area School District in
POMEROY PTA, 7:30 p.m. Ashtabula County .
.Monday night, election and ·
installation of officers. Science
fair .
MAJOR NAMED
TUESDAY
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Henry
RACINE LODGE 461 F&amp;AM F. Stehmeyer, a native of
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. All master . Zanesville who recently retired
masonS invited. Refreshments. as a major in the Ohio Hig hway
. THE WSCS of Pomeroy Patrol has been named to head
United Methodist Church up th..investigative division of
Tuesday, 7:3Gp.m. Miss Grace the Ohio Racing Corrunission,
Campbell wiil present a·n it was announced Saturday.
Easter program.
;wEDNES!JAY
MIDDLEPORT
The
Amateur Garden Club of
WEDNESDAY
Middleport will meet at B p.m.
POMEROY Chapter SO,
th h
· [ "rs Eddie
1
·B
a k ett orne o '" ·
Royal Arch - Masons, stated
.
ur e ·
.
· meeting 7:30 p.m. at Pomeroy
POMEROY - Middleport M
. ·H 11 M t Excellent
'I .
Cl b t
M. I n
asomc a . os
.. Ions u 'a noon·, elgs n . master degree to be cOnferred.
All members are asked to R r h
ts
atterld.
· e res men . ,

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·5. Mobile Home Loans
I

Meigs Branch

'

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
296

w. 2n"d st..

PomerOy. Ohio ~5769

Earl F. Ingels, Jr., Mgr.

All Deposits Insured to $20,000.00 By The
Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation.

a treasury of .
great .Easter lo~ks
All the looks to watch are here in our new

easte r co lle ctio n . by Aud itions / Natura l
Bridge. Tfendy-yet -tastelul shoes that give
statu s to the simplest ensemble. There's a
. pair that's. "you".'; . co me see!

auditions

Marguerite's
SHOES
Betty Ohlinger
102E. Main, Pomeroy
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1--'The SUnday T;meo '1ientinel, Sunday, April 8.1973

IS -The Sunday Times- Sentinel, SIU)day AprilS 1973
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Author at:lc4 3 new titles the past year

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1 Patty Kelly is1 new program

RIO GRANDE - Mrs . nation, enti\]ed " Kim Ann and
CanQida Palmer, wife of Dr. T. Lhe Yellow Machine.'' and
Vail Palmer, pr ofe ssor of ''The Soapsuds Fairy."
religion and philosophy at Ri o
The third book completed
Grande College, has published recently by Mrs. Palmer is a
th ree 'new books the past year. collection of poems entitled,
Two of the books, published " Sidings, " with he r own
by Ginn and Company _of illustrations. This book is also
Boston, Mass., are children's available to the public at the
books for grades one through Rio Grande College Bookstore
three. They are a part of Ginn's and the Log Cabin Books tore in
Magic Circle books sold to Gallipolis.
elementary schools of thP

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r.eceived . numerou s ~ awards, par-

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Gallia Salon 612
dinner in Pomeroy
POMEROY - The annual
dinner of .Gallia County Salon
612, Eight and Forty, attended'
by dignitaries
of the
organization as well as the
,American Legjpn Auxiliary,
was staged Thursday night at
Trinity Church in Pomeroy.
Mrs . Carrie Neutzling,
chap~au,

presented

the

-.

Hecker, District 8, community marched from · the kitchen
serviCe chairman, Auxiliary; ;playing bazookas. In the group
Mrs.
Genev.ieve
Mrs. Jean Carr, Mrs. Louise were

Stewart, and Mrs . Mabel

Meinhart, Mrs. Ella Smith,

Brown, past Auxiliary District
8 presidents.
Table decorations for the
dinner served by Trinity
women featured a red aild

Mrs. Wilma Terrell, Mrs. Neva

white color scheme with tall
tapers
and
floral

distinguished guests including
Mrs. E~alina Berkley, chapeau arrangements. The speaker~s
Departernental of Ohio; Mrs. table had a 10-branch cariBerneice Christensen, Ia .delabra decorated with red
secretaire-cassiere depar- ve)vet grapes and gr~enery.
temental; Mrs. .Rev~ Cihla, Favors were miniature hat

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Seyfried, Mrs. Rose Ginther,
Mrs. Holter,

Mrs . Carrie

Meinhart, Mrs. Edith Lanning,
and- Mrs. Eva Dessauer.

Also included on

the

program were Mrs. Lois Burt,
Mrs. Alice Nease, and Mrs.

Mary Riggs, singing, "Drifting
and Dreaming," a·nct "It's Just

a Little Street." A style revue

Mr. anirMrs. James McKrzight

Mr. and Mrs. McKnight were ·
HARTFORD - Mr. and Mrs .
marri
ed at the Hartford ·
James McKnight, lifelong
re s idents of Har-tford, will Methodist Church on April 5,
observe their golden wedding 1923 by the Rev. 0. E: Elkins .
anniversary on SundaY, April Mrs ..McKnight is the daughter

·22, with an open house at their
home from 2 to 4 p.m.

sent to Mrs. !11yrt!e Walker, a

chai~an of the

HospitaL

resolutions
committee departemerttal;
Mrs. Florence Richards,
national sec11rity chairman,
American Legion Auxiliary;

Hazel

Grant,

district

rehabilitation chairman,
Auxiliary; Mrs. Dorothy

patient at Veterans Memmial

·

The program was humorous
and began with the in·

troduction of the Grande Chef
Wille N. Bug lessen played by
Mrs. Ada Holter. The cooks in
.white a~rons ·and tall hats,
made by·Mrs. Emn:aa Wayland,

Spencers celebrate
25th·anniversary ·

Reaaon 4. H the IRS shoold call you in for
an audit, H &amp; R Block will go with you, al
no additional rost. Not as a leg~~!
reprl,sentative .. ~ but we can answ&amp; all
questions about how your tax return was

Mrs.

their 25th wedding anniversary._
Mr. and Mrs. Spencer were
married' on April -13, J948 at

McKnight, Hartford .
The McKnights have a son,
Charles, Atwater, Ohio, six

then pastor

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
MRS. MILLARD VAN METER
PH. 992-2039
.
PH. 992-5721

cordially invited to attend the
open house.

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selor at a 4-H camp in Calhoun
County.
Patty is a neW comer to Mei{::s
Coilnty having been here only since

Shoes

ldfss

Spencer where a decorated
c.a ke , ice cream and iced tea
'were served.

Kelly who is associated with the Kelly
Manufacturing Co. in Middleport.
After graduating from hi•h
t~ school
in Lewisburg; W. Va., Patty took two

With a bold personality for today' s spirited,
. ' ways.
movm

Chester Methodist Church.
They .have four children,
Mrs. James 1Esther ) Mays,

Donald Combs will serye as
evangelist for a t:eviva] to be

held from April8 through April

establish a day camp where several
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Mt. Moriah Church of God. The

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TO HOLD MEETING .
BURLINGHAM - An open
meeting will he held at the

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McDonald of the Gal!ia County
Red Cross assisted. Others,
helping were:

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TWO EVENINGS
EACH WEEK

b'

Jenkins.

White

Drinks and

Wide M.enu

~ssert

Choice

Extra.

-· Order our regular menu every night 5 to 10.

dntlraL

LETART FALLS - A con- Hill who read Psalm 104. Artribution of $10 to the Bend 0' tides read included "My Name
the River Garden Club for 1·s T'tme.. -by Mrs . E rnest

The MEIGS INN

of Mrs. Ernest Grimm.
·creation" by Mrs. Harold
Mrs. Howard Shiveley spoke Roush; "His ·Footprints" by
to the group on Lottery Bill Mrs. Ernest Grimm. A
Issue 1 to be voted on iil .the
May primary and reported that
she will have additional in~
fonnation for distribution in
the near future.
Mrs. Andrew Cross presided
at the meeting ,which opened
With a program by Mrs. Johii

paraphrase on the 23rd Psalm
was given by Mrs. Erma
Wilson and Mrs : ShivE!ley
concluded with prayer.
·
Mrs. Harold Roush will host
the riext meeting at her home
in Portland. Mrs. Ernest
Grimm served refreshmen~.

NT ! B36A - N o-Froflt Admiral Duai\Vith R e ve n~ ibte Door~ .

T ~ mp'&amp;

Model S61 87P_. 16-in ch' (diag.
m P&lt;I.~u re) Admiral remote-control
eu lor TV. Only $::! 99.9fi ' .
·. 25-inch (diag..measu'rej

_ND1736- No-Frost Admiral

K~~~'(cAdmiral
stereo,

-

2~

TV. - " "

HAPPY BIRTHDAY WISHES to Willoughby Hill , juvenile
officer of the Probate Court, who celebrated his day Saturday.

Wools and Polyester Knits
Size 35

to 50

$4000 to $7 500

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DRESS
SlliRTS
Multi - c ol o red s hirts
to comp lete

BY
ARROW
AND
CAREER
CLUB

your ensem·
ble.

Perm&amp; iron . Cotton dacron,
polyester knit Long &amp; Short Slee\lf!o.

5.00 tO '13.00

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1-RACK MEN'S SUITS &amp; SPORT COATS 1h PRICE
TOP OFF YOUR WARDROBE WITH A TIE $2.50 TO $5.00
DISCOUNT TO ALL GRADSI
· Shop Ottr

Staff members Janet Morris and Ann Wal.&lt;ion, and Judge
Manning Webster honored Hill by pre~enting him _a birthday ·
cake.

flill'{!;;lifl.

R 11chs For Both Men and Women

BAHR CLOTHIERS ·

, Also"cclebrating a birthday this week was Dr . T. H. Crow,
also remembered by many with cake , fl~wers and .cardc;. Bc~t

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

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Wishes to one fine person.

Easton. Carl Huntley, Robert

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Amana ,

Dupl e x~ .

SPORr·COATS

A BARBECUE WILL BE held today on the Pomeroy parking
lot beginning at 11:30 a.m. spOnsored by the Pomeroy Fire Dept.
· emergency squad and Drew Webster Pos t 39 of the Americ.ah
Legion.

Pan s y ·
Boggs, lesa Torn .Osborne: Rita Garland ,
~ - ~;,.~7-e/i; Don Braithwaite, Pam Jenkins, LaVetta Mar 1
liken....J'helley Hook, bury, Tom Mill s, Laurence
Nancy Ell is, Lemley , Allan Morehart, Kim
Kurt Elliott, Jane Stowers, ·Brothers, Sandi Carver, Kathy
Kever , Jane Gu·al , Teres a
Pres ton . Peg!;IY Ca ll. Doris
Ross .
James
Bur l es_on,
Virginia Gail ; Cindy Bradley,
Larry L. Shang. Jacob A.
Shawan . Ri chard Sayre, Dan

RIL SPECI

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" You·r

loaded it.

two Quarters, will continUe his studies for the BS degree . ·
Roger Nease, son of Mr. and Mrs. David 'Nease, Minersville,
has been itamed to the. dean's list _at Ohio State for the winter _
quarter ,
.
It is nice to hear of :such fine acco.mplishmchts from the
yoWlger generation. Congratulations to you both.

Rol'l

planting flowering crab apples · Schuler; 1 'Reviv~l'' ' by Mrs.

Don Bell ; " Disturbed" by Mrs.
Cro~§ ; "Christ Waits Our
Invitation" by Mrs. Gladys
Shields; "Gems of Wisdom" by

EXCEUINT SELECTION .

, Beverly

POMEROY

·PH. 992-3629

· ·· 3nd back s_u its. Wr in k le -tr ee ease o f moveme n.t,

making homemade candy Easter eggs. The eggs, in 12 different

JIM WARNER, SON OF Mr. and Mr.. William Warner,
Middleport, received an associate degr~ in ~ngine~ring from
the Ohio Institute for Technicians, Columbus , at the end of the
winter quarter. Jim, who was named on the dean's list the last

Gallipolis
Emerg·ency .
Squad, Michael Null, William
Gunnell and Jeff Fulkerson .
Prospective donor s were
Merlyn Ross, William F ,
Fadley , Else A. Burns,
Elizabeth LeWis, Paul Dunfee,
Burton Brunner , Erma L.
Hogan, Ellara A. · Leftwich.
Wilma D. Arnold , Dorothy
Higley, Jessie Farney, George
Armbruster, Roger . Hamood,
Sandra Hunter, Harry Harrel.
Sarah Winters, KUrt Smith,
Karen S. William s, JoAnn
Bartley, Linda Hubler, Carolyn
Ickes. Angie Poole, Jttn e Gust,
Phillis Alderdice . . j$: athy
Gledhill , Mikf' Oliver. Vince
Hilt. Mewod ie· Egg le s ton,
Francis
Donald

THE SHOE lOX
Where Shoes Are Still Sensibly Priced
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Handsome. fan cy trorit

Cholrs from Forest Run, Minersville and the SyracuSe
Methodist Churches will take p8rt in ·the presentatiori with Mrs.
·Roy Jenkins, the pianist. The program is open to the pUblic .

Mr s. Sherry
Ramsey, Mrs . Margaret
B.lazer, Mrs . Miles Epling ,
Mrs . Mabel Mohler , Mrs.
Darrell Young, and Miss Ruth

Sheridan ; Student cha irman
was Brenda K. Sm.ith, Rio
Graride College .
Pi
Sigma · Fraternity
(unloading of bloodmobile).
Oean K:ozlo , Toin Simes, and
Alpha Sigma Phi Fraternity

Navy

the Joy.Singers will be present
·and Charles Cochran of Athens
wi ll speak on drugs and ·show
pictures dealin_g with his

By Katie Crow

Canteen Workers - Open flavors. seU for 15 cents each.
Gate Garden Club and Rio ,
those wishing ·to place an order may. do so by calling 992Gra nde Gorden·· ·Club Chairmen :
Mrs. Au.d rey 2801,992-2659 or 992·~181, or contact any of the members.
Wickline and Mrs. Cecelia

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Saturday. Bill Beegle and

·su )ect. Women of the .camp
will serve refreshments. ·

Nibert, Nancy Ell is and Beth
Lloyd.

5 tO 9: JQ---..-,$2.50 all you can eat, (o·r AI a Carte). -

Woodmen
Half
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M ai n at Syc a~~ r e, Pomeroy

KNIT $5Q00 10 $}}500
SUITS
SIZE 35 TO 50

Teresa Gooch , Ctfandra Miller
and Pat O'Hara.
MRS. EUGENE (KAREN) HAWLEY TRIPlETT received a
Zeta Theta Chi Pledges Karen Parrish, Joyce Madry , BS degree in Education at the close of the fall quarter ·at Ohio ·
Barb Rouse. Ellen Leftwich , University. Mrs. Triplett,. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. LesHe
Terri Wagner, Linda Forsha 1 . Hawley, Middleport, graduated summa cum laude. Karen and
Cynltha Poinsett, · Anita Selther husband and daughter, Michelle, reside in Marietta . Her
zer, Debbi Latham, _Cynthia
Wilson, Ton ( Graves, Holly husband is asscicioi'ited with the department of highways as an
Stern, Kathy Gledh i ll and
engineer-in-training.
Elaine Horner ;
·
.• Congrat.ulations!
MLT (Freshman Class ) Betsy
Saunder s,
·b ebbie
Sau11ders, Janet-F-uchs, Debbie
LADIES OF THE Firemen's Auxiliary in Syracuse are busy

and

United Methodist-women
donate to garden club
at the Letart Falls Cemetery
was made by the United
Methodist Women of the Letart
Falls Church at a meeting

Russell, Teresa Casci, and
Brenda Smith.
Lambda
Omicron . Psi
Pledges - Joanne Bartley,

MONDAY EVENING
AND TUESDAY EVENING

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Nurses

Modern

~.rn .

two replacements were made.
Mrs. Charles Shaver, Mrs.

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IKatie's Korner

POMEROY - Under the direction of Mrs. John Sauvage, an
Easter Cantata, "The Seven Last Words", will be presented
Lambda
Om ic r on
Ps-i April15, Palm Sunday, at the Asbury U@ted Methodist Church in
So(Qrity - Pat Cantrell, Jan Syracuse at 7:30 p:rn.
Wilson , Jeri Latham , Kathy

DININ.G

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lOLA'S

WOOL BLENDS AND
POLYESTER

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·Blood given at _R io Grande

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At lola's Now!

- - - AND AFTER

involved with prompting, llghting, sowid effects, promotion
and ticket sales . Charles Corder is the director. The play will
be presented Friday, April13, at Meigs High School. Tickets

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to one degree or another, in the production of the annual class
-play. Some 17 have speaking parts. while man·y nrore are

q

BUFFET

15, 7:30 each evening, at the
public is invited.

out ali-day programs for several days
· She ·ts a1so m
· teres ted m
·
a t a r1me.
seeing a bicycle trail established.
F
·
p tt k
b
or
.
now
a
Y eeps
assisting the 30 or so clubs now in usy
the
·
h
process Of organizing. S e is anxious
to expand 4·H and has been busy
making young people aware ol th~
program~ and getting them enrolled
in a club.
She and her husband reside on the
Rutland Rd.

tension Service.
P~tty's particular interest this
· y~ar J!S a new feature for 4-H is to

REVIVAL PLANNED
POMEi\OY - The Rev.

PROM
DRESS

.SPRING .'73

POMEROY - Rehearsals will be continuing this week on
"R~t Assured", a three-act comedy being presented by the
Meigs High School Senior Class. Many seniors are involved,

c1ubs wou ld come toge ther and ·carry

education. Her hope is to eventually
complete her undergraduate work in
that field but for now she seems
t' f'ed t
k . h
.
sa 1s 1 o wor 1n er part-1une
position with the Meigs County Ex-

of the

lay .Away Your

MRS; PATTY KELLY

years
University,
. . at .Marshall
.
1
rna]o~tng '" ear Y c!lildhood

NOW

"A Ride On High."

Assured'' Monday night at 7 p.tn . on " Take: Five". Pictured ,
left to right, are Jack Kauff as Joe La nconi , Tom. Cassell
(back to camera} as Phillip Morlock arid Tim King as Luigi
'UJ.nconi in the Mei ~s High production Of ''Rest ~ssured".

September w.hen she married Michael

of the 'Huntington Regional
Bloodmobile. In all, 75 persons
attended, 18 were deferred·and

Storm Before Christmas," and

' the door . C~blc TV viewers will get a dose-up IOQk at "Rest

here ·Thufsd3y during the·visit . Wayne Davis and Mrs. Bruce

Sp~

Mrs. Palmer is working now
on a full length novel. She has
been writi ng for the psst 10
years, and in addition w ber
three latest works, has .had two
other books published, "Snow

are $1 for adults and 50 cents for students and may be oba
t.ai~d from any member of the cast or may be purchased at

:~:i:':!n~n.;:::rasl:a~:~~Pco~:

RIO GRANDE - Fifty...,ven
·. pints of blood were collected

Leith . Joe A. Blazer, Audre y
WicklinE;". Betty Peters. Lynne
Harrison ,
Clyde
Evans ,
Cover1.
Wayne
Virg inia
Warrington , Joe Qvatrochir..

heritagQ house
Your Thorn MeAn Store

225 N. 2nd AVE.

MIDDLEPORT; 0.

(![]111JI11J@JJ
'--"'I@)@)J]@[p[J

Vehicles collide

,

Whole House Air ·Conditioning
Cools Many 5 to 6 Room Houses
lnclude!!"CR 2 Condenser, 20'. A-Coil,
TUbing and Thennostat.

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!Itlpared.

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grandchildren and one great.
grandchild, A son, George,
died in 1966.
Friends and relatives are

Chester by the Rev. E. L.
Miller,

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Potted Plants
Cut Flowers
Corsages
Artificial Arrangements

George

POMEROY - Mr . and Mrs. Harry, Thomas and Waid Roy,
Waid Spencer of Long Bottom and one grandchild, Jeff Mays.
were guests of honor at a · Th~ children hosted the dinner.
dinner party held in Parkers- The group then went to the
burg recently in observance of horne of Mr. and Mrs. Thoihas

Wednesday night at the home · Mrs . Bert Grimm;

Henry Block has
17 reasons why you
should come to us
for .income tax help.,

of the late M~ . and Mrs. George
Ginther, Hartford, and Mr.

and

~~ ·
=~:
~•.;

Order Early!

McKnight is the son of the late
Mr .

..
::~

Nationwide delivery.

To celebrate golden anniversary ·Apri/22

of the latest fashions from
departemental
concierge; boxes trimmed with red rib- .. Paris narrated by Mrs. NeutzREPORTER DIES
Mrs. Mary Martin, national .. bons several of Which con· ling . featured Mrs. · Fay
PHILADELPHIA .(UP!)
pouvior member, chairman of tained stunts for .the pariners Wildermuth in an afternoon
Funeral services will be ·held
Area D children and youth, · to perform. Each one attending dress; Mrs. -Emm~. Wayland in
Tuesday for Lee Carson, 51, ·a
chairman of the Passe Club, also received a small vase an evening gown; Mrs. Louise
White House and World War II
and c hapeau passe depar~ containing a red velvet rosebud Stewart, bsthing outfit; Miss
correSpondent
for
Intemental; Violet Aichholz, and an attractive program Erma Smith, lingerie; Mrs.
ternational News Service. Miss
member of the· national finance -book provided by Miss Erma Gladys Cummings, ·a -wedding
C~rson, who died Thursday at
committee, departem·ental · Smith.
dress, and Mrs. Grace Pratt in
Lankenau Hospital here,
chairni8n of finance, and
As a f~3ture of the opening a parits suit.
landed on Omaha Beach on 0·chapeau ·passe departemental;
Mrs. Neutzling, presented . Day and was believed to be the
ceremony, rriembers sang
Edma Smeltz, member of "Here's a Welcome· Hand," gifts to each of the deparfirst allied reporter to enter
constitutiOn and by-laws; shaking hands around tiU. table temental officers and the
Catherine Welsh, member of and put on their white foam American LegiOn Auxiliary Paris when it wa~ liber~ted.
She covered· the Firs t Army
nurses scholar ship and District hats with red net b.ows as they district ·chairmen. Ten door
until after V-E Day.
8 Am,eriCanism chainnan for _sang a parody on Eight and prizes were awarded.
the Auxiliary.
Punch and cOffee were
Forty to the tune of "Easter
Mrs.
Helen · Billings, Parade." The prayer was by served at the conclusiori of the
The four main ocean area·s
departemental color guard, Mrs. Hecker, and members program with Miss Smith
of earth - Atlantic, Pacific,
also representative for the gave the . pledge to the flag. presiding at the punch bowl Indian and Arctic hold
American Legion Auxiliary at Miss Sybil Ebershach was and Mrs. Cwnmings at the 93.9 per cent of the world's
. water supply.
the Southeastern Ohio Mental pianist for the program, a·nd coffee serviCe.
Health Center, Athens; Mrs. several original songs were
Ethel VanFossan, chairman of suilg. An arrangement of
rules and order committee; yellow mums at the dinrier was

departemental chapeau passe;
Mrs. Golda Mourning Roush,

II
..

MRS. EVAUNA BERKLEY, DepartementaJ· Chapeau, Eight and Forty, sealed center,
was a guest at the annual dinner of the Gallia County Salon 612held Thursday night at Trinity
Church, Pomeroy. She is seated between Mrs. Carrie Neut21ing, right, chapeau of the Gallia
County Salon, and Mrs. Berneice Christensen, departemental la secretaire-cassiere. Other
distinguished guests attending were !.eft to right standing, Mrs. Ethel Van Fossan, departemental_..!'~au-man of rules and order, and a chapeau passe; Mrs. Mary Martin, chapeau
passe, national pouvior member; Mrs. Violet Aichholz, member of the national finance
committee; Mrs . Helen Bi!lfugs, a color guard departemental; and Mrs. Reva Cihla departemental la concierge. .
'

assistant
By Cbarlme HoefUcb
Meigs County's new 4-H program
assistant i,s Mrs. Patty Kelly.
4-H is nothing new to Patty who
was a 4-H member ror 10 years. She

;:;:

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I

POMEROY - Sheriff Robert
Hartenbach's Dept. said Its
investigation was continuing of
a collision of two autos on
Qounty Rd. 35 near Racine at

12:45 p.m. Saturday.
.
Vehicles driven by Ronald B.
Hill, Racine Rt. 1, driving on
the gun club road, collided in a
curve with a car driven ·eas t by

-

County Judge Frank w: Poc_ter

Model 515391. 25-inch

(diag, measure) Admiral
. Super &amp;larcolor TV with
Color Master. Only $539.9:) '.

· 2 ~-inr:h ldiag. m ""a~ure) Adffiiral
color T V console with 8-track .~tt· r eo .

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

304 E. Main-992 -379S- Pomeroy
Open 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. Mon. thru Sat.
Phone 992-3795
. Second &amp; Sycamore-Gallipolis .
Open 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. Weekdays, 9-5 Sat.
Phone 446-0303
S7 Court St.
592-2851
Athens. 0.
Only 8 Days Left- No Appointment

Nec~ssary .

SEE US TODAY

POMEROY - David. Eugene
Clem 24 Cincin(lati , and
'. '
Joanne · Elaine Codner, 2J,

I

Look a Iittle closer ...
you get.a lot r]'lore from

BAKrR-FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Long Bottom; Rodney David
Jones, 18, Porrieroy 1 and Linda

Sue

17 Pomeroy.

Everyone
Welcome

YOUTH ·RALLY

. .

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
.N. 2nd AVE. ·

•

Marriage Licenses

'

SAVINGS

1\J odel iiL5663.

LOCM

Jr. Damage was heavy. There
were no ·injuries reported .'

MIDDLEPORT,

Christian
Brethren Church
· · Mason . W. Va.

APRIL 8 lhru 14
'pea1Ker , Eugene -PhelD'
16 yr.' oJd Evang~list

Louisa, Ky .

Stay cool with sandals that keep Yo~
that way! AU-leather uppers on a low heel
make for a sturdy, ruwed sandal that's
super for illl-summer wear. SJed-heeled
version in

Brown .

Plain heel style in

White.
Both in medium widt~s only.

* . .

·.

footnotes·'·'

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/

1--'The SUnday T;meo '1ientinel, Sunday, April 8.1973

IS -The Sunday Times- Sentinel, SIU)day AprilS 1973
~·.v-:vr..:·!".'o'.•.)i.o;.;::;·;•:•:-:···:.:·~·-.;:.·,y"x'· ·•• ...,

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......... . ....•.oc.t,•-. ... • • •• ,•.:...'&gt;~•'• ••••••• ••...&lt;:.-...•.,.....
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•;"'-• ••••••••
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.•,._._._,
•'"'·'"'-'·'•':•,?:•:O:•:•:•:•:•!•._ ,;.;.;:::;&lt;•&lt;;:•)o_;•,
· o;";•;o;-;•;&lt;~:•XO:•;&lt;:V;•-' • ,...._,_.

•

0:~

.
Author at:lc4 3 new titles the past year

·

•'•~··'i':O."Xo:.;.-..,

...• o•..o.o..o .•.;ox&gt;.•.;o.Xo.•.o:V:•.o.-~•'o. •A•. • :•:«o;oo:o

...-

1 Patty Kelly is1 new program

RIO GRANDE - Mrs . nation, enti\]ed " Kim Ann and
CanQida Palmer, wife of Dr. T. Lhe Yellow Machine.'' and
Vail Palmer, pr ofe ssor of ''The Soapsuds Fairy."
religion and philosophy at Ri o
The third book completed
Grande College, has published recently by Mrs. Palmer is a
th ree 'new books the past year. collection of poems entitled,
Two of the books, published " Sidings, " with he r own
by Ginn and Company _of illustrations. This book is also
Boston, Mass., are children's available to the public at the
books for grades one through Rio Grande College Bookstore
three. They are a part of Ginn's and the Log Cabin Books tore in
Magic Circle books sold to Gallipolis.
elementary schools of thP

~~

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::::
....

•j

::::

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,.,
~
~:::

r.eceived . numerou s ~ awards, par-

:~

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_,1_.:.
: _,:,r.

.

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,

:~~

=&gt;·

~l

; i

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-

Gallia Salon 612
dinner in Pomeroy
POMEROY - The annual
dinner of .Gallia County Salon
612, Eight and Forty, attended'
by dignitaries
of the
organization as well as the
,American Legjpn Auxiliary,
was staged Thursday night at
Trinity Church in Pomeroy.
Mrs . Carrie Neutzling,
chap~au,

presented

the

-.

Hecker, District 8, community marched from · the kitchen
serviCe chairman, Auxiliary; ;playing bazookas. In the group
Mrs.
Genev.ieve
Mrs. Jean Carr, Mrs. Louise were

Stewart, and Mrs . Mabel

Meinhart, Mrs. Ella Smith,

Brown, past Auxiliary District
8 presidents.
Table decorations for the
dinner served by Trinity
women featured a red aild

Mrs. Wilma Terrell, Mrs. Neva

white color scheme with tall
tapers
and
floral

distinguished guests including
Mrs. E~alina Berkley, chapeau arrangements. The speaker~s
Departernental of Ohio; Mrs. table had a 10-branch cariBerneice Christensen, Ia .delabra decorated with red
secretaire-cassiere depar- ve)vet grapes and gr~enery.
temental; Mrs. .Rev~ Cihla, Favors were miniature hat

.I
I

I

Seyfried, Mrs. Rose Ginther,
Mrs. Holter,

Mrs . Carrie

Meinhart, Mrs. Edith Lanning,
and- Mrs. Eva Dessauer.

Also included on

the

program were Mrs. Lois Burt,
Mrs. Alice Nease, and Mrs.

Mary Riggs, singing, "Drifting
and Dreaming," a·nct "It's Just

a Little Street." A style revue

Mr. anirMrs. James McKrzight

Mr. and Mrs. McKnight were ·
HARTFORD - Mr. and Mrs .
marri
ed at the Hartford ·
James McKnight, lifelong
re s idents of Har-tford, will Methodist Church on April 5,
observe their golden wedding 1923 by the Rev. 0. E: Elkins .
anniversary on SundaY, April Mrs ..McKnight is the daughter

·22, with an open house at their
home from 2 to 4 p.m.

sent to Mrs. !11yrt!e Walker, a

chai~an of the

HospitaL

resolutions
committee departemerttal;
Mrs. Florence Richards,
national sec11rity chairman,
American Legion Auxiliary;

Hazel

Grant,

district

rehabilitation chairman,
Auxiliary; Mrs. Dorothy

patient at Veterans Memmial

·

The program was humorous
and began with the in·

troduction of the Grande Chef
Wille N. Bug lessen played by
Mrs. Ada Holter. The cooks in
.white a~rons ·and tall hats,
made by·Mrs. Emn:aa Wayland,

Spencers celebrate
25th·anniversary ·

Reaaon 4. H the IRS shoold call you in for
an audit, H &amp; R Block will go with you, al
no additional rost. Not as a leg~~!
reprl,sentative .. ~ but we can answ&amp; all
questions about how your tax return was

Mrs.

their 25th wedding anniversary._
Mr. and Mrs. Spencer were
married' on April -13, J948 at

McKnight, Hartford .
The McKnights have a son,
Charles, Atwater, Ohio, six

then pastor

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
MRS. MILLARD VAN METER
PH. 992-2039
.
PH. 992-5721

cordially invited to attend the
open house.

·:&lt;·

::~::

W
X•

0

selor at a 4-H camp in Calhoun
County.
Patty is a neW comer to Mei{::s
Coilnty having been here only since

Shoes

ldfss

Spencer where a decorated
c.a ke , ice cream and iced tea
'were served.

Kelly who is associated with the Kelly
Manufacturing Co. in Middleport.
After graduating from hi•h
t~ school
in Lewisburg; W. Va., Patty took two

With a bold personality for today' s spirited,
. ' ways.
movm

Chester Methodist Church.
They .have four children,
Mrs. James 1Esther ) Mays,

Donald Combs will serye as
evangelist for a t:eviva] to be

held from April8 through April

establish a day camp where several
.

••

• • • ••

•

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•

Mt. Moriah Church of God. The

.. '.. . . . •. . •
f

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TO HOLD MEETING .
BURLINGHAM - An open
meeting will he held at the

.... .

• • •

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,

McDonald of the Gal!ia County
Red Cross assisted. Others,
helping were:

. .. .. .
•

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• •

TWO EVENINGS
EACH WEEK

b'

Jenkins.

White

Drinks and

Wide M.enu

~ssert

Choice

Extra.

-· Order our regular menu every night 5 to 10.

dntlraL

LETART FALLS - A con- Hill who read Psalm 104. Artribution of $10 to the Bend 0' tides read included "My Name
the River Garden Club for 1·s T'tme.. -by Mrs . E rnest

The MEIGS INN

of Mrs. Ernest Grimm.
·creation" by Mrs. Harold
Mrs. Howard Shiveley spoke Roush; "His ·Footprints" by
to the group on Lottery Bill Mrs. Ernest Grimm. A
Issue 1 to be voted on iil .the
May primary and reported that
she will have additional in~
fonnation for distribution in
the near future.
Mrs. Andrew Cross presided
at the meeting ,which opened
With a program by Mrs. Johii

paraphrase on the 23rd Psalm
was given by Mrs. Erma
Wilson and Mrs : ShivE!ley
concluded with prayer.
·
Mrs. Harold Roush will host
the riext meeting at her home
in Portland. Mrs. Ernest
Grimm served refreshmen~.

NT ! B36A - N o-Froflt Admiral Duai\Vith R e ve n~ ibte Door~ .

T ~ mp'&amp;

Model S61 87P_. 16-in ch' (diag.
m P&lt;I.~u re) Admiral remote-control
eu lor TV. Only $::! 99.9fi ' .
·. 25-inch (diag..measu'rej

_ND1736- No-Frost Admiral

K~~~'(cAdmiral
stereo,

-

2~

TV. - " "

HAPPY BIRTHDAY WISHES to Willoughby Hill , juvenile
officer of the Probate Court, who celebrated his day Saturday.

Wools and Polyester Knits
Size 35

to 50

$4000 to $7 500

•

DRESS
SlliRTS
Multi - c ol o red s hirts
to comp lete

BY
ARROW
AND
CAREER
CLUB

your ensem·
ble.

Perm&amp; iron . Cotton dacron,
polyester knit Long &amp; Short Slee\lf!o.

5.00 tO '13.00

.1

1-RACK MEN'S SUITS &amp; SPORT COATS 1h PRICE
TOP OFF YOUR WARDROBE WITH A TIE $2.50 TO $5.00
DISCOUNT TO ALL GRADSI
· Shop Ottr

Staff members Janet Morris and Ann Wal.&lt;ion, and Judge
Manning Webster honored Hill by pre~enting him _a birthday ·
cake.

flill'{!;;lifl.

R 11chs For Both Men and Women

BAHR CLOTHIERS ·

, Also"cclebrating a birthday this week was Dr . T. H. Crow,
also remembered by many with cake , fl~wers and .cardc;. Bc~t

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

.

-. .,'

Wishes to one fine person.

Easton. Carl Huntley, Robert

•

Amana ,

Dupl e x~ .

SPORr·COATS

A BARBECUE WILL BE held today on the Pomeroy parking
lot beginning at 11:30 a.m. spOnsored by the Pomeroy Fire Dept.
· emergency squad and Drew Webster Pos t 39 of the Americ.ah
Legion.

Pan s y ·
Boggs, lesa Torn .Osborne: Rita Garland ,
~ - ~;,.~7-e/i; Don Braithwaite, Pam Jenkins, LaVetta Mar 1
liken....J'helley Hook, bury, Tom Mill s, Laurence
Nancy Ell is, Lemley , Allan Morehart, Kim
Kurt Elliott, Jane Stowers, ·Brothers, Sandi Carver, Kathy
Kever , Jane Gu·al , Teres a
Pres ton . Peg!;IY Ca ll. Doris
Ross .
James
Bur l es_on,
Virginia Gail ; Cindy Bradley,
Larry L. Shang. Jacob A.
Shawan . Ri chard Sayre, Dan

RIL SPECI

•

" You·r

loaded it.

two Quarters, will continUe his studies for the BS degree . ·
Roger Nease, son of Mr. and Mrs. David 'Nease, Minersville,
has been itamed to the. dean's list _at Ohio State for the winter _
quarter ,
.
It is nice to hear of :such fine acco.mplishmchts from the
yoWlger generation. Congratulations to you both.

Rol'l

planting flowering crab apples · Schuler; 1 'Reviv~l'' ' by Mrs.

Don Bell ; " Disturbed" by Mrs.
Cro~§ ; "Christ Waits Our
Invitation" by Mrs. Gladys
Shields; "Gems of Wisdom" by

EXCEUINT SELECTION .

, Beverly

POMEROY

·PH. 992-3629

· ·· 3nd back s_u its. Wr in k le -tr ee ease o f moveme n.t,

making homemade candy Easter eggs. The eggs, in 12 different

JIM WARNER, SON OF Mr. and Mr.. William Warner,
Middleport, received an associate degr~ in ~ngine~ring from
the Ohio Institute for Technicians, Columbus , at the end of the
winter quarter. Jim, who was named on the dean's list the last

Gallipolis
Emerg·ency .
Squad, Michael Null, William
Gunnell and Jeff Fulkerson .
Prospective donor s were
Merlyn Ross, William F ,
Fadley , Else A. Burns,
Elizabeth LeWis, Paul Dunfee,
Burton Brunner , Erma L.
Hogan, Ellara A. · Leftwich.
Wilma D. Arnold , Dorothy
Higley, Jessie Farney, George
Armbruster, Roger . Hamood,
Sandra Hunter, Harry Harrel.
Sarah Winters, KUrt Smith,
Karen S. William s, JoAnn
Bartley, Linda Hubler, Carolyn
Ickes. Angie Poole, Jttn e Gust,
Phillis Alderdice . . j$: athy
Gledhill , Mikf' Oliver. Vince
Hilt. Mewod ie· Egg le s ton,
Francis
Donald

THE SHOE lOX
Where Shoes Are Still Sensibly Priced
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Handsome. fan cy trorit

Cholrs from Forest Run, Minersville and the SyracuSe
Methodist Churches will take p8rt in ·the presentatiori with Mrs.
·Roy Jenkins, the pianist. The program is open to the pUblic .

Mr s. Sherry
Ramsey, Mrs . Margaret
B.lazer, Mrs . Miles Epling ,
Mrs . Mabel Mohler , Mrs.
Darrell Young, and Miss Ruth

Sheridan ; Student cha irman
was Brenda K. Sm.ith, Rio
Graride College .
Pi
Sigma · Fraternity
(unloading of bloodmobile).
Oean K:ozlo , Toin Simes, and
Alpha Sigma Phi Fraternity

Navy

the Joy.Singers will be present
·and Charles Cochran of Athens
wi ll speak on drugs and ·show
pictures dealin_g with his

By Katie Crow

Canteen Workers - Open flavors. seU for 15 cents each.
Gate Garden Club and Rio ,
those wishing ·to place an order may. do so by calling 992Gra nde Gorden·· ·Club Chairmen :
Mrs. Au.d rey 2801,992-2659 or 992·~181, or contact any of the members.
Wickline and Mrs. Cecelia

•

Saturday. Bill Beegle and

·su )ect. Women of the .camp
will serve refreshments. ·

Nibert, Nancy Ell is and Beth
Lloyd.

5 tO 9: JQ---..-,$2.50 all you can eat, (o·r AI a Carte). -

Woodmen
Half
•
Burlingham Camp 7230, at 7:30

M ai n at Syc a~~ r e, Pomeroy

KNIT $5Q00 10 $}}500
SUITS
SIZE 35 TO 50

Teresa Gooch , Ctfandra Miller
and Pat O'Hara.
MRS. EUGENE (KAREN) HAWLEY TRIPlETT received a
Zeta Theta Chi Pledges Karen Parrish, Joyce Madry , BS degree in Education at the close of the fall quarter ·at Ohio ·
Barb Rouse. Ellen Leftwich , University. Mrs. Triplett,. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. LesHe
Terri Wagner, Linda Forsha 1 . Hawley, Middleport, graduated summa cum laude. Karen and
Cynltha Poinsett, · Anita Selther husband and daughter, Michelle, reside in Marietta . Her
zer, Debbi Latham, _Cynthia
Wilson, Ton ( Graves, Holly husband is asscicioi'ited with the department of highways as an
Stern, Kathy Gledh i ll and
engineer-in-training.
Elaine Horner ;
·
.• Congrat.ulations!
MLT (Freshman Class ) Betsy
Saunder s,
·b ebbie
Sau11ders, Janet-F-uchs, Debbie
LADIES OF THE Firemen's Auxiliary in Syracuse are busy

and

United Methodist-women
donate to garden club
at the Letart Falls Cemetery
was made by the United
Methodist Women of the Letart
Falls Church at a meeting

Russell, Teresa Casci, and
Brenda Smith.
Lambda
Omicron . Psi
Pledges - Joanne Bartley,

MONDAY EVENING
AND TUESDAY EVENING

• • • •

~·

t·:·!

Nurses

Modern

~.rn .

two replacements were made.
Mrs. Charles Shaver, Mrs.

• '

• •

IKatie's Korner

POMEROY - Under the direction of Mrs. John Sauvage, an
Easter Cantata, "The Seven Last Words", will be presented
Lambda
Om ic r on
Ps-i April15, Palm Sunday, at the Asbury U@ted Methodist Church in
So(Qrity - Pat Cantrell, Jan Syracuse at 7:30 p:rn.
Wilson , Jeri Latham , Kathy

DININ.G

.
.
..... . .

lOLA'S

WOOL BLENDS AND
POLYESTER

:fs~::.::::8~:-:;:~~=~=*::::.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=x:::::-":*:;;-;:::::w.~

·Blood given at _R io Grande

• • •

At lola's Now!

- - - AND AFTER

involved with prompting, llghting, sowid effects, promotion
and ticket sales . Charles Corder is the director. The play will
be presented Friday, April13, at Meigs High School. Tickets

~::;:;-;:;::::::::::::;::~:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::;::::;:::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;;:~:=:~;;:;:;:;~:::;::::::::!:!:::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:{

• •

.

.•

to one degree or another, in the production of the annual class
-play. Some 17 have speaking parts. while man·y nrore are

q

BUFFET

15, 7:30 each evening, at the
public is invited.

out ali-day programs for several days
· She ·ts a1so m
· teres ted m
·
a t a r1me.
seeing a bicycle trail established.
F
·
p tt k
b
or
.
now
a
Y eeps
assisting the 30 or so clubs now in usy
the
·
h
process Of organizing. S e is anxious
to expand 4·H and has been busy
making young people aware ol th~
program~ and getting them enrolled
in a club.
She and her husband reside on the
Rutland Rd.

tension Service.
P~tty's particular interest this
· y~ar J!S a new feature for 4-H is to

REVIVAL PLANNED
POMEi\OY - The Rev.

PROM
DRESS

.SPRING .'73

POMEROY - Rehearsals will be continuing this week on
"R~t Assured", a three-act comedy being presented by the
Meigs High School Senior Class. Many seniors are involved,

c1ubs wou ld come toge ther and ·carry

education. Her hope is to eventually
complete her undergraduate work in
that field but for now she seems
t' f'ed t
k . h
.
sa 1s 1 o wor 1n er part-1une
position with the Meigs County Ex-

of the

lay .Away Your

MRS; PATTY KELLY

years
University,
. . at .Marshall
.
1
rna]o~tng '" ear Y c!lildhood

NOW

"A Ride On High."

Assured'' Monday night at 7 p.tn . on " Take: Five". Pictured ,
left to right, are Jack Kauff as Joe La nconi , Tom. Cassell
(back to camera} as Phillip Morlock arid Tim King as Luigi
'UJ.nconi in the Mei ~s High production Of ''Rest ~ssured".

September w.hen she married Michael

of the 'Huntington Regional
Bloodmobile. In all, 75 persons
attended, 18 were deferred·and

Storm Before Christmas," and

' the door . C~blc TV viewers will get a dose-up IOQk at "Rest

here ·Thufsd3y during the·visit . Wayne Davis and Mrs. Bruce

Sp~

Mrs. Palmer is working now
on a full length novel. She has
been writi ng for the psst 10
years, and in addition w ber
three latest works, has .had two
other books published, "Snow

are $1 for adults and 50 cents for students and may be oba
t.ai~d from any member of the cast or may be purchased at

:~:i:':!n~n.;:::rasl:a~:~~Pco~:

RIO GRANDE - Fifty...,ven
·. pints of blood were collected

Leith . Joe A. Blazer, Audre y
WicklinE;". Betty Peters. Lynne
Harrison ,
Clyde
Evans ,
Cover1.
Wayne
Virg inia
Warrington , Joe Qvatrochir..

heritagQ house
Your Thorn MeAn Store

225 N. 2nd AVE.

MIDDLEPORT; 0.

(![]111JI11J@JJ
'--"'I@)@)J]@[p[J

Vehicles collide

,

Whole House Air ·Conditioning
Cools Many 5 to 6 Room Houses
lnclude!!"CR 2 Condenser, 20'. A-Coil,
TUbing and Thennostat.

•

!Itlpared.

.:~:

~.!_:.:_;

~:

grandchildren and one great.
grandchild, A son, George,
died in 1966.
Friends and relatives are

Chester by the Rev. E. L.
Miller,

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Potted Plants
Cut Flowers
Corsages
Artificial Arrangements

George

POMEROY - Mr . and Mrs. Harry, Thomas and Waid Roy,
Waid Spencer of Long Bottom and one grandchild, Jeff Mays.
were guests of honor at a · Th~ children hosted the dinner.
dinner party held in Parkers- The group then went to the
burg recently in observance of horne of Mr. and Mrs. Thoihas

Wednesday night at the home · Mrs . Bert Grimm;

Henry Block has
17 reasons why you
should come to us
for .income tax help.,

of the late M~ . and Mrs. George
Ginther, Hartford, and Mr.

and

~~ ·
=~:
~•.;

Order Early!

McKnight is the son of the late
Mr .

..
::~

Nationwide delivery.

To celebrate golden anniversary ·Apri/22

of the latest fashions from
departemental
concierge; boxes trimmed with red rib- .. Paris narrated by Mrs. NeutzREPORTER DIES
Mrs. Mary Martin, national .. bons several of Which con· ling . featured Mrs. · Fay
PHILADELPHIA .(UP!)
pouvior member, chairman of tained stunts for .the pariners Wildermuth in an afternoon
Funeral services will be ·held
Area D children and youth, · to perform. Each one attending dress; Mrs. -Emm~. Wayland in
Tuesday for Lee Carson, 51, ·a
chairman of the Passe Club, also received a small vase an evening gown; Mrs. Louise
White House and World War II
and c hapeau passe depar~ containing a red velvet rosebud Stewart, bsthing outfit; Miss
correSpondent
for
Intemental; Violet Aichholz, and an attractive program Erma Smith, lingerie; Mrs.
ternational News Service. Miss
member of the· national finance -book provided by Miss Erma Gladys Cummings, ·a -wedding
C~rson, who died Thursday at
committee, departem·ental · Smith.
dress, and Mrs. Grace Pratt in
Lankenau Hospital here,
chairni8n of finance, and
As a f~3ture of the opening a parits suit.
landed on Omaha Beach on 0·chapeau ·passe departemental;
Mrs. Neutzling, presented . Day and was believed to be the
ceremony, rriembers sang
Edma Smeltz, member of "Here's a Welcome· Hand," gifts to each of the deparfirst allied reporter to enter
constitutiOn and by-laws; shaking hands around tiU. table temental officers and the
Catherine Welsh, member of and put on their white foam American LegiOn Auxiliary Paris when it wa~ liber~ted.
She covered· the Firs t Army
nurses scholar ship and District hats with red net b.ows as they district ·chairmen. Ten door
until after V-E Day.
8 Am,eriCanism chainnan for _sang a parody on Eight and prizes were awarded.
the Auxiliary.
Punch and cOffee were
Forty to the tune of "Easter
Mrs.
Helen · Billings, Parade." The prayer was by served at the conclusiori of the
The four main ocean area·s
departemental color guard, Mrs. Hecker, and members program with Miss Smith
of earth - Atlantic, Pacific,
also representative for the gave the . pledge to the flag. presiding at the punch bowl Indian and Arctic hold
American Legion Auxiliary at Miss Sybil Ebershach was and Mrs. Cwnmings at the 93.9 per cent of the world's
. water supply.
the Southeastern Ohio Mental pianist for the program, a·nd coffee serviCe.
Health Center, Athens; Mrs. several original songs were
Ethel VanFossan, chairman of suilg. An arrangement of
rules and order committee; yellow mums at the dinrier was

departemental chapeau passe;
Mrs. Golda Mourning Roush,

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MRS. EVAUNA BERKLEY, DepartementaJ· Chapeau, Eight and Forty, sealed center,
was a guest at the annual dinner of the Gallia County Salon 612held Thursday night at Trinity
Church, Pomeroy. She is seated between Mrs. Carrie Neut21ing, right, chapeau of the Gallia
County Salon, and Mrs. Berneice Christensen, departemental la secretaire-cassiere. Other
distinguished guests attending were !.eft to right standing, Mrs. Ethel Van Fossan, departemental_..!'~au-man of rules and order, and a chapeau passe; Mrs. Mary Martin, chapeau
passe, national pouvior member; Mrs. Violet Aichholz, member of the national finance
committee; Mrs . Helen Bi!lfugs, a color guard departemental; and Mrs. Reva Cihla departemental la concierge. .
'

assistant
By Cbarlme HoefUcb
Meigs County's new 4-H program
assistant i,s Mrs. Patty Kelly.
4-H is nothing new to Patty who
was a 4-H member ror 10 years. She

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POMEROY - Sheriff Robert
Hartenbach's Dept. said Its
investigation was continuing of
a collision of two autos on
Qounty Rd. 35 near Racine at

12:45 p.m. Saturday.
.
Vehicles driven by Ronald B.
Hill, Racine Rt. 1, driving on
the gun club road, collided in a
curve with a car driven ·eas t by

-

County Judge Frank w: Poc_ter

Model 515391. 25-inch

(diag, measure) Admiral
. Super &amp;larcolor TV with
Color Master. Only $539.9:) '.

· 2 ~-inr:h ldiag. m ""a~ure) Adffiiral
color T V console with 8-track .~tt· r eo .

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

304 E. Main-992 -379S- Pomeroy
Open 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. Mon. thru Sat.
Phone 992-3795
. Second &amp; Sycamore-Gallipolis .
Open 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. Weekdays, 9-5 Sat.
Phone 446-0303
S7 Court St.
592-2851
Athens. 0.
Only 8 Days Left- No Appointment

Nec~ssary .

SEE US TODAY

POMEROY - David. Eugene
Clem 24 Cincin(lati , and
'. '
Joanne · Elaine Codner, 2J,

I

Look a Iittle closer ...
you get.a lot r]'lore from

BAKrR-FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Long Bottom; Rodney David
Jones, 18, Porrieroy 1 and Linda

Sue

17 Pomeroy.

Everyone
Welcome

YOUTH ·RALLY

. .

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
.N. 2nd AVE. ·

•

Marriage Licenses

'

SAVINGS

1\J odel iiL5663.

LOCM

Jr. Damage was heavy. There
were no ·injuries reported .'

MIDDLEPORT,

Christian
Brethren Church
· · Mason . W. Va.

APRIL 8 lhru 14
'pea1Ker , Eugene -PhelD'
16 yr.' oJd Evang~list

Louisa, Ky .

Stay cool with sandals that keep Yo~
that way! AU-leather uppers on a low heel
make for a sturdy, ruwed sandal that's
super for illl-summer wear. SJed-heeled
version in

Brown .

Plain heel style in

White.
Both in medium widt~s only.

* . .

·.

footnotes·'·'

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IS- The Sunday Titnes- Sentinel. Sunday. Annl8, 1973

STRIKE IT RICH WITH THESE
'

Middleport Foodliner .
is moving next door

f

•

. MIDDLEPORT - The IGA
Foodliner, part of the M. and
R. operation in Middleport, is ·
being moved from its present
location at Locust and Pearl
Sts., into enlarged quarters in
the adjoining structure, Jim
Rickman,
president
of
McGinnis and Rickman, an~

location will feature wider
customer' aisles, large meat
and produce departments and
rnore check-out stations.
Rickman has announced that
Philip Mowery will be
manager and Ron Toler
assistant manager of the food~
liner. Hours will be from 9 a.m .
nounces.
to 9 p.m., Monday through
The grocery is operating on a Saturday, and from 12 noon to 6
full scale b'Bsis in its present p:m. on Sunday. The present
location but Will be closed April building used for the fnndliner
16-18 so tha t the move can be after it is vacated will be used
made. In its new location, the for a period of time as 3
foodliner wi ll have 12,000 preparation area for the n.ew
square feet of floor' space. grocery. However, in the near
compared to the 5,000 square future, the building will be
feet now provided for the converted into a complete

/ STARTS SUNDAY

AT M&amp;R BA-RGA INLAND
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

produce market and variety
store.
Rickman also announced
that the hardware and building
supp)ies operation of the M.
and R. Shopping Center is
being changed to prov_ide more
of a variety of merchandise.
Wilbur Young is the manager
and effective Monday, hours of
' the building supplies and
hardwa re section will be from 9
a.m. to6p .in., Monday through
Saturday, with the section to he
closed on Sundays.

. TilE M. AND R. IGA FOODLINER in Middleport will be moyed from
thas lo~a tion m to larger Quarters jn the adjoining structure on Pearl St.
Operahng full scale now, the foOd liner will be closed April16-18 for the move.

..

junbau

btl$iness. The new foodJiner 1

~

VOL. 8

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PRICE HONORED - Hubert Price w,;_. honored Friday
night when tbe residents of Portland presented hlm with a
plaque for dedication and serlilte"to ~he Portland School,
which opened for the 1951-52 school year. Price was -principal
at Portland Elementary from 1952 until1968 when the school
was closed. The school was teopened last fall . Price
developed a widely recognized baskelblll) program in the
school and wa ~ instrumental In landscaping of the site. The

I

.

~News .. in

LADIES'

~

PANTY HOSE

.PR.

-·~

NEW SPRING

-~

.-.::_~~:; 7 .

SAVE NOW!

SHIPMENT ..

OFF

t

E-PSOM SALTS 16 OZ.
8 oz. PEROXIDE

RUBBER
BOOTS

t

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SYLVANIA

•

HIGH

:

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"

.'.... ---BOBBIE BROOKS

.i

SUNDAY. APR IL 8, 1973

PAGE 17.

WASHINGTON (UP! ) break-in and bugg(ng at Demo- secret from convicted WaterMore members "of Congress craUc·national headquarters in ga t~ _conspirato r Ja mes W.
from OOth parties urged White - the Wate rgate bui lding or other McCord Jr., ·rormcr security
House aides Saturday to testify aUeged political espionage.
chief fo r the ComlniU.ee to Rein the Watergate b.ugging case,
ije has based his position on elect. the President.
claiming executive privilege th e doc brine of executive
The federal grand jury which
ought not be invoked to cover privilege which holds that indict ed McCord and six oUJca·s
any knowledge ·· of alleged some' dealings between a in the case, including two
criminal activity.
·~ --·PreSident and his staff are former White House aides, has
The ·latest caUs came from confidential, or not su,bject tO · been called back into session to
Sen. Charles H; Percy _of Congressiona l· scrutiny.
'i"" ' hea~ further _te$timohy .
lllinois, a moderate Repu_hThe senate's Select Comnlft:;
N1xon has mst ructed all past
lican ; Sens. Thomas F. Eagle- tee on Pr.e sidcntilll C&lt;l~pilig n and present White House aides
ton of Mi'ssouri and Adlai E. Activities, created to investi- to cooperate fully with the
Steven sO n of Illinois, both ga te the Wate rgate affair and panel if suniinoned before it.
liberal Democrats ; and Rep. a ny other r elated poli ti&lt;.:al
In his stHtement .Saturday,
William J . Scherle of Iowa, a espionage', plans to open public &amp; hel'ie said " the doak of
conservative Republic2:!n .
hearin gs ::;oon, .probably after exec utive pr ivi lege should
President 'Nixon has refused Cong_ress ends an Eastcr~evcr . be used to -shelter
to let any of his current or -recess April 25.
wrongdoers, no malter how
former aides testify before
The senate c.ommittee al- highly plat-ed. And dearly
9mgre~s ab~ut the June 17 ready· )las heard testimOny in someo~e very highly placed is

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itntintl

ressure a
e
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IXOD ·a t

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NO. 10

~imts

This present buildi ng will serve at the present as a preparation area for the
new foodliner but will be soon converted into a complete procluce and va r iety
store .
·
·

LIGHT
BULBS
25, 40, 60, 100
WATI BUlBS

~

YOUR

REG. $398 ONLY

CHOICE

'·.

ONLY
WATCH FOR THE
EA.
~·-

LARGER IGA FOODLINER .

--

..... .....

HARDWARE·&amp;
BUILDING SUPPLIES

FOODLI~ER, ~ARGAINLAND
OPEN SUNDAY 12-6
.
~

.0':1 -

CLOSED SUNDAY

·'

Brie+s:
!i
J

If 1
j :;:
8 U 1 dPr lnt
, Y nhtel' etess erna .ona
b · f th
SAIGON - TWO e 1cop rs carrying mem ers o
e
v·
k · f
d -10ted b Am ·
d'
Ietnam peace- eepmg orce an ~~
Y.
ert~ans asarr
peared Saturday over _a Commurust occupled area of South
VIetnam. At least orte of tllern apparently W~.$ shot down. A total

16personswasre~rt~tobeaboar_dthe atrcraft.
The ~opters carried representatives fr?m each of the four
ICCS natLons - Canada , H~ngary, Indonesia and Pola~d -:- as

of

wellasVietCongandAmencancrewmembers. Thehehcopters
are clearly marked with green stnpes and a large whtte block
around the letters ." ICCS. •r
JOHNSON CITY , TEX. -SOIJI'H VIETNAMESE President
Nguyen Van Thieu bowed Saturday before the wreath-decorated
grave of former President Lyndon B. JohnSon who began th e
massive flow of U. S. troops and supplies to the beleaguered
Asian nation in~the .1960s.
Ei~teen persons, including.Lady Bird Johnson, widow of the
former president, walked in double file from the LBJ ranchhouse
. to the cemetery. As they reached the cemetery.and stopped, Mrs .
Johnson sai.d to Thieu's i2-year old son, Nguyen Quang Loc
Th_ieu, who was at the back,_''You're tOO little. Come over hfre
and st8nd in front."

PINE RIDGE,S.D.( UPI ) The federal government and
the · Indians
occupyin g
Wounded Knee charged each
other Saturday with violating
their "treaty" to end the occupatioi1 of the village. The
chief governm ent negotiator·
said he.. ,. . will "stand by the
agreement un'til hell .freezes
over."
-The India ns who have occupied the historic villagesite of the " Ma ssacre of
Wounded Knee" - for 39 days
had been expected to lay dow~
their arms Saturday morning
when . talks
began
in
Washington between their
leader and a presidential aide.
But Russell Means, the
militant Ame ri can Indian
Movement (AIM ) leader who

' travelled to Washingto n, sa id
his meetin g with Leonard
Carmenthadbeenput off for at
·
least 24 hours because th e
JUstice Depart ment ~~~ 011 ~ ·
tinues to run amok at Wounded
Knee."
He said the ,governmcnt is
violating .the treaty by closing
in on th e village and threate ning "to swoosh do wn on the
occupants."
A.ssistapt Attorney GcnerCtl
Kent Frizzell, who signed th e.
Thursday . "treaty" for the
gove rnm ent, met AIM leaders
in Wounded Knee Saturday and
then denied Means' charges
angrily and categoricall y.·
" We s ta nd
by
our
ag reement ." Fr'izzell said .
"We call on AIM leaders and
Rnc;sell Means to stand by their

n.·x.·e hiet h·a rd

ag reement. I for one stand
•·eady to stand by the agre€ment untilhellfreezcsover."
d
d f
" We st an rea y or a
meeting in Washington with
Means within 24 hours after he
ag rees to do what the a~rccment says,' I Frizze ll· sa id .
'"l'hc ag reement is yc ry clear
to the lndi uns, to the gov·er.nmcnt, and to the public."
The long.&lt;J istance exchange
of angry words....-Means rai led
Frizzell ''a man gone mad with
power " - made it appear that
the stalemate between the
gove rnment and the dwi ndling
ba nd of lndian·s in Wounded
Knee 111ay continue.! Or days or
week :;.
Means charged that the U.S.
marshals surro unding theVillage ''have violuted Pul' justsigned tfea ty by esta bl ishing a

CHICAGO-AGR!CULTUREDffiEcTORSfrom ~~--iitaoos,
'voice . per imeter' aro un d
including Ohio, are expected to be present Monday as an
Wounded Knee."
"emergency conference"· on the rail shipment of gr3in gets
By this, Means said he meant
~ay
at
the
'
BlS
'
marck
Hotel.
the
marshals had closed in to
unde
, ..
By United Press International level in :10 years.
h
· t th t th
·
DlinolS' Gov. Daniel Walker called the conference last week
t e pom
a
ey we re tn
New rains, fla sh flonds and
The worst flooding around
'h t'· di t
f -h th
because "the current rail transportation crisis is threatening the
s ou mg s ancc o cac o er
tornadoes descended on the Vi cksb urg ca me fr om the
d"
·
d' ·
t 1
an are Jeopar azmg no on y
finan "'•1 stability of nati'on31 grain production. "
. storm-beleaguered Southeast backwaters of the Yazoo and · th
t' lions b t ·0 0 di
Walker and Illinois Agriculture Director Robert " Pud"
C nego 1a
, u J par zsaturday , pushing the swollen Su nflower
Hivers
and · 1 d. r . lives"
mg n w •:;
·· ·
Wl·mams said millions of bushels of grain are backed up at
All tl11·s Fnzze
· 1.1 dem'ed .
· midwestern elevators because r3ilrOad cars· are not aVllilable to 'MiSsissippi Ri ver arid its numerous cr:eks and bayous
tributaries still higher and which run through the. flat
haul the product to markets or ports. As a result, elevator
dri ving thousands of residents Delt3 fa r m region. The
BAR.H ECUE TODAY .
operators are facing heavy storage costs an_d are paying from homes in the storied cities Natio na l Weathe r Se r vice
POMEHOY - The Pomeroy
thoUsands of dollars a mopth in interest on bank loa~s .
of Dixie.
predicted a crest of,_oo.:I feet
.
HELPER, UTAH-8HlRLEY HAYCOCK thinks people whO
A steady · s tream , of Mond·ay at Vicksburg, site of a Fire Dept. and ...Drew Webste r
Post 39, American Leg ion, w~ l l
want to keep her frop1 crossing th~ Atlantic in a 17-foot can~ a~e · refugees, ca rrying their most major Civil War battle.
taking all the excitement out of_life. Mrs. Haycock, 40, sald precious po~sessi ons, left the
Author ities said the hold a chicken barbecue
Fridiy that they are ohly increasmg her detemu~atton -~lea ve area north of historic Vicks- riverfront city itself was not Sunday beginning at 1l : 30 a.m.
this coal mining town in eastern Utah next week (or Washmgton, burg, MiSs :, where the· threa tened:· but wat'er was up on Lhc upper parking lot.
D. c., where she 'plans to launch _her canoe April 16 for Lisbon , Mississippi reached its highest to the rooftops of homes .in the . Serving will contlnue until the
supply is exhausted,
,
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Portugal. .
. Mrs. Haycock said she has decided not to in~ ke the voyage
I\IANAGER WANTED
alone . Bob Geedy, 311, an auto mechanic from Manti, Utah, will
'
MIDDLEPORT - The
accompany her aboard the "Senior Citizens Ark," a 17-foot
recreation commission is
fiberglass canoe now , being built by a Salt Lake City firm. A
accepting applications until
sw-vival training teacher who likes to run the raptds of the
May 1 for the position of park
Colorado River, she hopes to raise ftmds for senior citizens
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - A nitrite question under review
director which Includes
centers in rural Utah with her stunt.
managing the swimming privately finan ced report on a - for sofnetime. Thei r poSition is
ST. CLAIRSVILLE, OHIO - OfFICIALS of the Central
pool for the summer season wi_de_ly used food· additive th-at .evidence aga inst the
Dililsion of Consolidation Coal Co, where 110 miners were·laidbeginning on Memorial Day cla imed Saturday that bacon · chemical ~o far does not out.
.
off Friday, say more lay-&lt;J(fs are a "distinct possibility." A
and ending Labor Day. Tile, . rna ~ be " the most dangerous weigh thc .gnod that it &lt;loes· in
spokesman for the division, for111er1y known as Hanna Coal Co.,
job pay• $367.50 per rnorith. food in the supermarket" in preventi ng growth of bacteria
said the·no were let go to offset large loi!ses resulting from exApplications may he mailed · terms of cancer--causing poten- in meat. ·
cessive absenteeism, unauthorized work stoppages and reduced
· The Center is a non-profit
to the Mayor's office, tial.
. productivity;
The allegation was made by organ ization staf!ed--P:rimarily
Middleport staling age and
the
Center for . Science in the by·. scientists who are paid
qualiflrallons,
or
by
WASHINGTON- THE TYPICAL AMERICAN farm worker
telephoning same to the Public Interest in a $-page through foundation money and
is; 23 white, male and not very highly paid , an Agriculture
study of sodium nitrite, a income fr om sales of vario_us
mayor's secretary.
Depa'rtmentreport indicated Saturday. The study made in 1972,
·Applications also are being preservative used for hot dogs, re ports published by the
showed he did 88 days of far111work during the year and earned
accepted at the same place hams, f{s), and a Jnng li ~t 0( .center.
$1,160 in cash wages, an average wage of $13.20 per day.
The study on $Odium nitrite ,
for lifeguard positions. other products in addi tion to
The study said 2.8 million persons did some far111 work last
wri tten by Michael F'. JacobLifeguards must possess .a bacon.
year, up 7 pet. from 1971 for ll&gt;e second COI)SOCUtive yearly in. The Agriculture Department •on, who has a PhD in biology,
Red Cross senior_life saving
crease. But ooly 24 pet. lisled agricultural work as ~eir '!lain
arid
the Food and Drug Ad- urged the government to ban
certificate .
:::::;:::::::::::::::::::.:-:.-:·:·:·!·!·!·!·!:!·!::::::::::_
:
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mini s t rat io n ~ ha,ve- had t he use or the additive in food .
occupation .

War situation
in~ Cambodia
at critical stage

SAN CLEMENTE, Ca lif. &lt;U P l) - President
Nixon Saturday ordered one of his top militar ypolitica l trouble-shooters, Gen. Al exander M. Haig
.J r ., to visit Southeast Asia for a first-ha nd
assessmen t of the deteriorating situation in Cambodia .
l·laig 's trip was announced less tha n a week
after Nixon. a nd South Vietna mese P resident
hiding behin d . the skirts of ·
Nguyen Va n Thieu had wa rned of "a ppropria tely
immunity , an m'l'a nt egotist,
drunk with power, but lacking vigorious reactions" if the Co mmuni sts cont inued to
in the most. eleme nta ry violate the J an. 28 cease-fi re agreement in Vietnam ,
C;1mbodia a nd Laos. The White House press
!Xlliti cal judgment.''
"If the President dO.s not s~cretary, Ronald L. Zi egler , sa id Haig would leave ·
wish hi mself and his enti re later Sa turday after a meeting with Nixon a nd hi s
gov~nmle nt to be tarred with
national securitl' advisor, Henry A. Kissinger , at
the sHmC brush, he must iin- the Wester n White House in San Clemente.

mediately direct his entire
ln the Cambodian capit.81 of
staff to cooperate fu lly with the
Phnom Penh, miliiaa·y sources
congressional committee as
Pl1111e .~ hot down
said that U.S. Air Force cafgo
well as- the gra nd jU rY. in;
A· U. S. Air force obplanes had bcb'Un airlifting .
vc~tigating t~ e case."
sc rvatiun plane has been
ammun ition and other war
Pe rcy sa id h~ saw ''no materials into Cambodia. A· shot down and lt'l pil ot killed_
possibility of stretching thc - Communist bloc kade has
in Cambodia, it was anconc.e.pl.of execut ive privi1ege closed off all normal ~ upp l y
nounced Saturda y.
to include a~yon e that h«s any routes.
The loss ol the OV 10 _ob- .
know ledge of all eged Criminal
servation plane was reported
Haig, now Army vice chief of
activi ty''and that Nixon should staff, wa~ Kissinger's deputy
by the U. S. Pacific Co m"make it perfectly clear tlult . dur ing the fl rsr fo ur years of
mand tn Honolulu. It was the
these men are going to uppcnr, the Nixon administration. ']'his
fir st American Jli:HH'and wi JJ .appear.' before B duly lr ip Will be his 12th to tile war
r-cpo1·tcd . shot duw11 over
constituted, bipartisa n com- zone. He last visited the area
Ctl nlbodia s.ince the (). ·S;o-........;..·
milteC of tl1e U.S. &amp;)nate to Ja n, 14-2t, ju st before t!Ie
iutcllslficd the air war there
. give tes timony.''
cease-fire ag reement was si_g~
a rt e·r
the
Jan .
28
Stevenson, appearing with ned.
cea se-fir e
in
South
Pcn;y on a televised report to
Ziegler st~ id Haig's purpose
Vietnam .
their Ill inoisconstitucnts , said : ·was to aSsess the military and
" [ agr ee.''
political situulion throughout "should ·not suggest that the
F.uglelon, speaking at a La w So utheast Asia. But it apUnited States is ~ nticipating
DHy di nner at St. Loui s peared that his meeting in··
the
reintroduction of forces"
Univer sity, ·said . ;,lt ta kes &lt;;1 -P.llnom Penh with Cambodianinto Southeast Asia,
cc~-t ain flight of fa ntasy . to President Lon No! wou ld be the
Asked if h~ could rule out any
in..c:ist t ha t 'executive privilege• ltlost impurt.ant stop.
possible. return of i'\merican
.,-lr it exists- extends to shieldZiCglCr said- Haig will first troops to Indochina, Ziegler
ing wrongdoers f ro~ testifying visit Bungkok, Thai1and, then
ahou t thei r part in u·ncthica l or· Victi ene, Phnom P"inh and res ponded that the United
·States has " no intention, no
illegal
ac ti vil ie!) si m ply Saigon. ·He ;will r eturn to·
plans and no desires to rCinbecattc;e · th~y arc, or were, Washington ilext Thursday.
trnduce ground forces into
White House employes."
Zieg ler said Haig's trip Southeast Asia ."

B~ycoUs

may continue

Hy United Press -lntcrnational

Women United for Action and
Women Str ike for Peace. They
demanded not me rely a freeZe,
hut a price ro!Jba ck.
A sma ll number-some ob- .
servers C..'O untfd only •30 perso ns marched north through
Chicago's l.JJop area to a rally
. aga inst high prices at Civic
Center Plaza.
From the way th'at pric-es
In Washington, Rep. William
held at most stores across the R. Cotler (D-Conn.), a sponsor
country during the week, there of price · .rollback legislatiori,
we re indications thci t t hey · announced formation of what
wou ld hav@l to con tinue their he Called a "CoalitiOn fOr the
effurt7- Some orga nizations Rollback," a lobbyin g effort .to .
said ttiey wou ld do so, despite support a measure to roll b&lt;Jck
the ,warnings of economists prices to Jan. 10, 1973 levels.
Ulal they v/ere hat ti ing &lt;1 long- Such a measure has passed the
House Banking and Currency
range problem. .
About 500 pe rSons, ·· mostly Coffimlttee in its versiOn of the
women H;nd including some Economic Stabilizati on AQt.
chHdren , marched fr om
Meat markete r s in New
Herald Squ::ire in New York York , Pittsburgh, Chicago,
City to the wholesale meat Houston, San Fra nci~co and
,packing district f.!:round .14th Los Angeles reported sales off
Street under the leader~hip of during the wee k, a lthough
Housewives .de dicated to
boycott ing meat un til pr ices
come down naraded in · New
York and C hicago st reets
sarurcray'at ~1e end of the first
marke ti ng week since t he
pfcsidenti~l price cei ling' on
heef, pork and lamb.

there was some impr ovem~nt
on Friday, a major shopping
da y.
Robert oristead, President of
a food market group in
Houston, Tex., said "one or two
weeks (o f boycott) really
aren't going to do anything,"
and the only action to cu.t beef
prices would be a '·long haul"
cutback on buying .
Willard F. Wi'lliams, an
agricultural- economist at
Texa s Tech, for esaw tha t
pri~es either would go 11Still
higher or there will have to be
rationing like that of World
War II." . .
"Either way , it will wre~k
the cattle industry ," he said.
A former agriculture depart"
ment economist in Washigton
told United Press International · •
that a short-range approach to
bririging meat prices doWn
would have little success .

Fo~d additive suspect in cancer search

.

"Eating a hot.ctog or strip of . Nitrites are used.to preserVe
bacon now and then wiU not color in meat, Th e sodium part
guarantee cancer/' Jacobson of the formula is salt, a
said. "However, food made tra ditional prese rvative. Amiwithout nitrite is certa inly nes, an ammoflia de rivative 1
safer than that made with occur natura ll y in foods,
-· nitrite . I recommend that beverages and drugs.
people sto p eati ng cufed
The chemical reaCtion of
meats , pa r ticul a rly bacon, nit r ite and a-n am ine, to
until the threat of nitrosamin es produ ce a nit rosamine, could
is eliminated."
occur eiVter in a food containJ a e o b s o n'
s a -i d . ing both or in the stomach if
nitrosamim!s...:. a ~:;ombination both nHritcs and amines are
of nitrites a nd amines formed ea ten af.ttle same time .
·
sometimes after mea t is cured
Jacobson said one FDAstudY
pr when it .is cooked-are found ttaH t in four differe nt
"a mong the most potent · brands of bacon "up to :100
canee r.eaus(n g agen ts y et parts per billion of another
discovered. "·

cancet&lt; ausing nittoEamin~
was discovered. Twice that
amowtt was f'JUnd In the bacon
drippings. The toxic chemical
mu.$t have 'formed when .the
bacon was fried, because
uncooked bacon was free of it. " ·
Con~ntrations......., nitrosamines were not nearly so high
in other foods as in bacon, he ·
said.
" Fifty-two samples of
canned ham and weitters also
did not contain nitr osamines,"
he said .. ''Thus the wors t ..of- fender. and pFobably the most
dangerous (ood in the supert}'la~ke t is bacon."

�•

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IS- The Sunday Titnes- Sentinel. Sunday. Annl8, 1973

STRIKE IT RICH WITH THESE
'

Middleport Foodliner .
is moving next door

f

•

. MIDDLEPORT - The IGA
Foodliner, part of the M. and
R. operation in Middleport, is ·
being moved from its present
location at Locust and Pearl
Sts., into enlarged quarters in
the adjoining structure, Jim
Rickman,
president
of
McGinnis and Rickman, an~

location will feature wider
customer' aisles, large meat
and produce departments and
rnore check-out stations.
Rickman has announced that
Philip Mowery will be
manager and Ron Toler
assistant manager of the food~
liner. Hours will be from 9 a.m .
nounces.
to 9 p.m., Monday through
The grocery is operating on a Saturday, and from 12 noon to 6
full scale b'Bsis in its present p:m. on Sunday. The present
location but Will be closed April building used for the fnndliner
16-18 so tha t the move can be after it is vacated will be used
made. In its new location, the for a period of time as 3
foodliner wi ll have 12,000 preparation area for the n.ew
square feet of floor' space. grocery. However, in the near
compared to the 5,000 square future, the building will be
feet now provided for the converted into a complete

/ STARTS SUNDAY

AT M&amp;R BA-RGA INLAND
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

produce market and variety
store.
Rickman also announced
that the hardware and building
supp)ies operation of the M.
and R. Shopping Center is
being changed to prov_ide more
of a variety of merchandise.
Wilbur Young is the manager
and effective Monday, hours of
' the building supplies and
hardwa re section will be from 9
a.m. to6p .in., Monday through
Saturday, with the section to he
closed on Sundays.

. TilE M. AND R. IGA FOODLINER in Middleport will be moyed from
thas lo~a tion m to larger Quarters jn the adjoining structure on Pearl St.
Operahng full scale now, the foOd liner will be closed April16-18 for the move.

..

junbau

btl$iness. The new foodJiner 1

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VOL. 8

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PRICE HONORED - Hubert Price w,;_. honored Friday
night when tbe residents of Portland presented hlm with a
plaque for dedication and serlilte"to ~he Portland School,
which opened for the 1951-52 school year. Price was -principal
at Portland Elementary from 1952 until1968 when the school
was closed. The school was teopened last fall . Price
developed a widely recognized baskelblll) program in the
school and wa ~ instrumental In landscaping of the site. The

I

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~News .. in

LADIES'

~

PANTY HOSE

.PR.

-·~

NEW SPRING

-~

.-.::_~~:; 7 .

SAVE NOW!

SHIPMENT ..

OFF

t

E-PSOM SALTS 16 OZ.
8 oz. PEROXIDE

RUBBER
BOOTS

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SYLVANIA

•

HIGH

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.'.... ---BOBBIE BROOKS

.i

SUNDAY. APR IL 8, 1973

PAGE 17.

WASHINGTON (UP! ) break-in and bugg(ng at Demo- secret from convicted WaterMore members "of Congress craUc·national headquarters in ga t~ _conspirato r Ja mes W.
from OOth parties urged White - the Wate rgate bui lding or other McCord Jr., ·rormcr security
House aides Saturday to testify aUeged political espionage.
chief fo r the ComlniU.ee to Rein the Watergate b.ugging case,
ije has based his position on elect. the President.
claiming executive privilege th e doc brine of executive
The federal grand jury which
ought not be invoked to cover privilege which holds that indict ed McCord and six oUJca·s
any knowledge ·· of alleged some' dealings between a in the case, including two
criminal activity.
·~ --·PreSident and his staff are former White House aides, has
The ·latest caUs came from confidential, or not su,bject tO · been called back into session to
Sen. Charles H; Percy _of Congressiona l· scrutiny.
'i"" ' hea~ further _te$timohy .
lllinois, a moderate Repu_hThe senate's Select Comnlft:;
N1xon has mst ructed all past
lican ; Sens. Thomas F. Eagle- tee on Pr.e sidcntilll C&lt;l~pilig n and present White House aides
ton of Mi'ssouri and Adlai E. Activities, created to investi- to cooperate fully with the
Steven sO n of Illinois, both ga te the Wate rgate affair and panel if suniinoned before it.
liberal Democrats ; and Rep. a ny other r elated poli ti&lt;.:al
In his stHtement .Saturday,
William J . Scherle of Iowa, a espionage', plans to open public &amp; hel'ie said " the doak of
conservative Republic2:!n .
hearin gs ::;oon, .probably after exec utive pr ivi lege should
President 'Nixon has refused Cong_ress ends an Eastcr~evcr . be used to -shelter
to let any of his current or -recess April 25.
wrongdoers, no malter how
former aides testify before
The senate c.ommittee al- highly plat-ed. And dearly
9mgre~s ab~ut the June 17 ready· )las heard testimOny in someo~e very highly placed is

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itntintl

ressure a
e
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IXOD ·a t

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NO. 10

~imts

This present buildi ng will serve at the present as a preparation area for the
new foodliner but will be soon converted into a complete procluce and va r iety
store .
·
·

LIGHT
BULBS
25, 40, 60, 100
WATI BUlBS

~

YOUR

REG. $398 ONLY

CHOICE

'·.

ONLY
WATCH FOR THE
EA.
~·-

LARGER IGA FOODLINER .

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..... .....

HARDWARE·&amp;
BUILDING SUPPLIES

FOODLI~ER, ~ARGAINLAND
OPEN SUNDAY 12-6
.
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CLOSED SUNDAY

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Brie+s:
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If 1
j :;:
8 U 1 dPr lnt
, Y nhtel' etess erna .ona
b · f th
SAIGON - TWO e 1cop rs carrying mem ers o
e
v·
k · f
d -10ted b Am ·
d'
Ietnam peace- eepmg orce an ~~
Y.
ert~ans asarr
peared Saturday over _a Commurust occupled area of South
VIetnam. At least orte of tllern apparently W~.$ shot down. A total

16personswasre~rt~tobeaboar_dthe atrcraft.
The ~opters carried representatives fr?m each of the four
ICCS natLons - Canada , H~ngary, Indonesia and Pola~d -:- as

of

wellasVietCongandAmencancrewmembers. Thehehcopters
are clearly marked with green stnpes and a large whtte block
around the letters ." ICCS. •r
JOHNSON CITY , TEX. -SOIJI'H VIETNAMESE President
Nguyen Van Thieu bowed Saturday before the wreath-decorated
grave of former President Lyndon B. JohnSon who began th e
massive flow of U. S. troops and supplies to the beleaguered
Asian nation in~the .1960s.
Ei~teen persons, including.Lady Bird Johnson, widow of the
former president, walked in double file from the LBJ ranchhouse
. to the cemetery. As they reached the cemetery.and stopped, Mrs .
Johnson sai.d to Thieu's i2-year old son, Nguyen Quang Loc
Th_ieu, who was at the back,_''You're tOO little. Come over hfre
and st8nd in front."

PINE RIDGE,S.D.( UPI ) The federal government and
the · Indians
occupyin g
Wounded Knee charged each
other Saturday with violating
their "treaty" to end the occupatioi1 of the village. The
chief governm ent negotiator·
said he.. ,. . will "stand by the
agreement un'til hell .freezes
over."
-The India ns who have occupied the historic villagesite of the " Ma ssacre of
Wounded Knee" - for 39 days
had been expected to lay dow~
their arms Saturday morning
when . talks
began
in
Washington between their
leader and a presidential aide.
But Russell Means, the
militant Ame ri can Indian
Movement (AIM ) leader who

' travelled to Washingto n, sa id
his meetin g with Leonard
Carmenthadbeenput off for at
·
least 24 hours because th e
JUstice Depart ment ~~~ 011 ~ ·
tinues to run amok at Wounded
Knee."
He said the ,governmcnt is
violating .the treaty by closing
in on th e village and threate ning "to swoosh do wn on the
occupants."
A.ssistapt Attorney GcnerCtl
Kent Frizzell, who signed th e.
Thursday . "treaty" for the
gove rnm ent, met AIM leaders
in Wounded Knee Saturday and
then denied Means' charges
angrily and categoricall y.·
" We s ta nd
by
our
ag reement ." Fr'izzell said .
"We call on AIM leaders and
Rnc;sell Means to stand by their

n.·x.·e hiet h·a rd

ag reement. I for one stand
•·eady to stand by the agre€ment untilhellfreezcsover."
d
d f
" We st an rea y or a
meeting in Washington with
Means within 24 hours after he
ag rees to do what the a~rccment says,' I Frizze ll· sa id .
'"l'hc ag reement is yc ry clear
to the lndi uns, to the gov·er.nmcnt, and to the public."
The long.&lt;J istance exchange
of angry words....-Means rai led
Frizzell ''a man gone mad with
power " - made it appear that
the stalemate between the
gove rnment and the dwi ndling
ba nd of lndian·s in Wounded
Knee 111ay continue.! Or days or
week :;.
Means charged that the U.S.
marshals surro unding theVillage ''have violuted Pul' justsigned tfea ty by esta bl ishing a

CHICAGO-AGR!CULTUREDffiEcTORSfrom ~~--iitaoos,
'voice . per imeter' aro un d
including Ohio, are expected to be present Monday as an
Wounded Knee."
"emergency conference"· on the rail shipment of gr3in gets
By this, Means said he meant
~ay
at
the
'
BlS
'
marck
Hotel.
the
marshals had closed in to
unde
, ..
By United Press International level in :10 years.
h
· t th t th
·
DlinolS' Gov. Daniel Walker called the conference last week
t e pom
a
ey we re tn
New rains, fla sh flonds and
The worst flooding around
'h t'· di t
f -h th
because "the current rail transportation crisis is threatening the
s ou mg s ancc o cac o er
tornadoes descended on the Vi cksb urg ca me fr om the
d"
·
d' ·
t 1
an are Jeopar azmg no on y
finan "'•1 stability of nati'on31 grain production. "
. storm-beleaguered Southeast backwaters of the Yazoo and · th
t' lions b t ·0 0 di
Walker and Illinois Agriculture Director Robert " Pud"
C nego 1a
, u J par zsaturday , pushing the swollen Su nflower
Hivers
and · 1 d. r . lives"
mg n w •:;
·· ·
Wl·mams said millions of bushels of grain are backed up at
All tl11·s Fnzze
· 1.1 dem'ed .
· midwestern elevators because r3ilrOad cars· are not aVllilable to 'MiSsissippi Ri ver arid its numerous cr:eks and bayous
tributaries still higher and which run through the. flat
haul the product to markets or ports. As a result, elevator
dri ving thousands of residents Delt3 fa r m region. The
BAR.H ECUE TODAY .
operators are facing heavy storage costs an_d are paying from homes in the storied cities Natio na l Weathe r Se r vice
POMEHOY - The Pomeroy
thoUsands of dollars a mopth in interest on bank loa~s .
of Dixie.
predicted a crest of,_oo.:I feet
.
HELPER, UTAH-8HlRLEY HAYCOCK thinks people whO
A steady · s tream , of Mond·ay at Vicksburg, site of a Fire Dept. and ...Drew Webste r
Post 39, American Leg ion, w~ l l
want to keep her frop1 crossing th~ Atlantic in a 17-foot can~ a~e · refugees, ca rrying their most major Civil War battle.
taking all the excitement out of_life. Mrs. Haycock, 40, sald precious po~sessi ons, left the
Author ities said the hold a chicken barbecue
Fridiy that they are ohly increasmg her detemu~atton -~lea ve area north of historic Vicks- riverfront city itself was not Sunday beginning at 1l : 30 a.m.
this coal mining town in eastern Utah next week (or Washmgton, burg, MiSs :, where the· threa tened:· but wat'er was up on Lhc upper parking lot.
D. c., where she 'plans to launch _her canoe April 16 for Lisbon , Mississippi reached its highest to the rooftops of homes .in the . Serving will contlnue until the
supply is exhausted,
,
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Portugal. .
. Mrs. Haycock said she has decided not to in~ ke the voyage
I\IANAGER WANTED
alone . Bob Geedy, 311, an auto mechanic from Manti, Utah, will
'
MIDDLEPORT - The
accompany her aboard the "Senior Citizens Ark," a 17-foot
recreation commission is
fiberglass canoe now , being built by a Salt Lake City firm. A
accepting applications until
sw-vival training teacher who likes to run the raptds of the
May 1 for the position of park
Colorado River, she hopes to raise ftmds for senior citizens
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - A nitrite question under review
director which Includes
centers in rural Utah with her stunt.
managing the swimming privately finan ced report on a - for sofnetime. Thei r poSition is
ST. CLAIRSVILLE, OHIO - OfFICIALS of the Central
pool for the summer season wi_de_ly used food· additive th-at .evidence aga inst the
Dililsion of Consolidation Coal Co, where 110 miners were·laidbeginning on Memorial Day cla imed Saturday that bacon · chemical ~o far does not out.
.
off Friday, say more lay-&lt;J(fs are a "distinct possibility." A
and ending Labor Day. Tile, . rna ~ be " the most dangerous weigh thc .gnod that it &lt;loes· in
spokesman for the division, for111er1y known as Hanna Coal Co.,
job pay• $367.50 per rnorith. food in the supermarket" in preventi ng growth of bacteria
said the·no were let go to offset large loi!ses resulting from exApplications may he mailed · terms of cancer--causing poten- in meat. ·
cessive absenteeism, unauthorized work stoppages and reduced
· The Center is a non-profit
to the Mayor's office, tial.
. productivity;
The allegation was made by organ ization staf!ed--P:rimarily
Middleport staling age and
the
Center for . Science in the by·. scientists who are paid
qualiflrallons,
or
by
WASHINGTON- THE TYPICAL AMERICAN farm worker
telephoning same to the Public Interest in a $-page through foundation money and
is; 23 white, male and not very highly paid , an Agriculture
study of sodium nitrite, a income fr om sales of vario_us
mayor's secretary.
Depa'rtmentreport indicated Saturday. The study made in 1972,
·Applications also are being preservative used for hot dogs, re ports published by the
showed he did 88 days of far111work during the year and earned
accepted at the same place hams, f{s), and a Jnng li ~t 0( .center.
$1,160 in cash wages, an average wage of $13.20 per day.
The study on $Odium nitrite ,
for lifeguard positions. other products in addi tion to
The study said 2.8 million persons did some far111 work last
wri tten by Michael F'. JacobLifeguards must possess .a bacon.
year, up 7 pet. from 1971 for ll&gt;e second COI)SOCUtive yearly in. The Agriculture Department •on, who has a PhD in biology,
Red Cross senior_life saving
crease. But ooly 24 pet. lisled agricultural work as ~eir '!lain
arid
the Food and Drug Ad- urged the government to ban
certificate .
:::::;:::::::::::::::::::.:-:.-:·:·:·!·!·!·!·!:!·!::::::::::_
:
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mini s t rat io n ~ ha,ve- had t he use or the additive in food .
occupation .

War situation
in~ Cambodia
at critical stage

SAN CLEMENTE, Ca lif. &lt;U P l) - President
Nixon Saturday ordered one of his top militar ypolitica l trouble-shooters, Gen. Al exander M. Haig
.J r ., to visit Southeast Asia for a first-ha nd
assessmen t of the deteriorating situation in Cambodia .
l·laig 's trip was announced less tha n a week
after Nixon. a nd South Vietna mese P resident
hiding behin d . the skirts of ·
Nguyen Va n Thieu had wa rned of "a ppropria tely
immunity , an m'l'a nt egotist,
drunk with power, but lacking vigorious reactions" if the Co mmuni sts cont inued to
in the most. eleme nta ry violate the J an. 28 cease-fi re agreement in Vietnam ,
C;1mbodia a nd Laos. The White House press
!Xlliti cal judgment.''
"If the President dO.s not s~cretary, Ronald L. Zi egler , sa id Haig would leave ·
wish hi mself and his enti re later Sa turday after a meeting with Nixon a nd hi s
gov~nmle nt to be tarred with
national securitl' advisor, Henry A. Kissinger , at
the sHmC brush, he must iin- the Wester n White House in San Clemente.

mediately direct his entire
ln the Cambodian capit.81 of
staff to cooperate fu lly with the
Phnom Penh, miliiaa·y sources
congressional committee as
Pl1111e .~ hot down
said that U.S. Air Force cafgo
well as- the gra nd jU rY. in;
A· U. S. Air force obplanes had bcb'Un airlifting .
vc~tigating t~ e case."
sc rvatiun plane has been
ammun ition and other war
Pe rcy sa id h~ saw ''no materials into Cambodia. A· shot down and lt'l pil ot killed_
possibility of stretching thc - Communist bloc kade has
in Cambodia, it was anconc.e.pl.of execut ive privi1ege closed off all normal ~ upp l y
nounced Saturda y.
to include a~yon e that h«s any routes.
The loss ol the OV 10 _ob- .
know ledge of all eged Criminal
servation plane was reported
Haig, now Army vice chief of
activi ty''and that Nixon should staff, wa~ Kissinger's deputy
by the U. S. Pacific Co m"make it perfectly clear tlult . dur ing the fl rsr fo ur years of
mand tn Honolulu. It was the
these men are going to uppcnr, the Nixon administration. ']'his
fir st American Jli:HH'and wi JJ .appear.' before B duly lr ip Will be his 12th to tile war
r-cpo1·tcd . shot duw11 over
constituted, bipartisa n com- zone. He last visited the area
Ctl nlbodia s.ince the (). ·S;o-........;..·
milteC of tl1e U.S. &amp;)nate to Ja n, 14-2t, ju st before t!Ie
iutcllslficd the air war there
. give tes timony.''
cease-fire ag reement was si_g~
a rt e·r
the
Jan .
28
Stevenson, appearing with ned.
cea se-fir e
in
South
Pcn;y on a televised report to
Ziegler st~ id Haig's purpose
Vietnam .
their Ill inoisconstitucnts , said : ·was to aSsess the military and
" [ agr ee.''
political situulion throughout "should ·not suggest that the
F.uglelon, speaking at a La w So utheast Asia. But it apUnited States is ~ nticipating
DHy di nner at St. Loui s peared that his meeting in··
the
reintroduction of forces"
Univer sity, ·said . ;,lt ta kes &lt;;1 -P.llnom Penh with Cambodianinto Southeast Asia,
cc~-t ain flight of fa ntasy . to President Lon No! wou ld be the
Asked if h~ could rule out any
in..c:ist t ha t 'executive privilege• ltlost impurt.ant stop.
possible. return of i'\merican
.,-lr it exists- extends to shieldZiCglCr said- Haig will first troops to Indochina, Ziegler
ing wrongdoers f ro~ testifying visit Bungkok, Thai1and, then
ahou t thei r part in u·ncthica l or· Victi ene, Phnom P"inh and res ponded that the United
·States has " no intention, no
illegal
ac ti vil ie!) si m ply Saigon. ·He ;will r eturn to·
plans and no desires to rCinbecattc;e · th~y arc, or were, Washington ilext Thursday.
trnduce ground forces into
White House employes."
Zieg ler said Haig's trip Southeast Asia ."

B~ycoUs

may continue

Hy United Press -lntcrnational

Women United for Action and
Women Str ike for Peace. They
demanded not me rely a freeZe,
hut a price ro!Jba ck.
A sma ll number-some ob- .
servers C..'O untfd only •30 perso ns marched north through
Chicago's l.JJop area to a rally
. aga inst high prices at Civic
Center Plaza.
From the way th'at pric-es
In Washington, Rep. William
held at most stores across the R. Cotler (D-Conn.), a sponsor
country during the week, there of price · .rollback legislatiori,
we re indications thci t t hey · announced formation of what
wou ld hav@l to con tinue their he Called a "CoalitiOn fOr the
effurt7- Some orga nizations Rollback," a lobbyin g effort .to .
said ttiey wou ld do so, despite support a measure to roll b&lt;Jck
the ,warnings of economists prices to Jan. 10, 1973 levels.
Ulal they v/ere hat ti ing &lt;1 long- Such a measure has passed the
House Banking and Currency
range problem. .
About 500 pe rSons, ·· mostly Coffimlttee in its versiOn of the
women H;nd including some Economic Stabilizati on AQt.
chHdren , marched fr om
Meat markete r s in New
Herald Squ::ire in New York York , Pittsburgh, Chicago,
City to the wholesale meat Houston, San Fra nci~co and
,packing district f.!:round .14th Los Angeles reported sales off
Street under the leader~hip of during the wee k, a lthough
Housewives .de dicated to
boycott ing meat un til pr ices
come down naraded in · New
York and C hicago st reets
sarurcray'at ~1e end of the first
marke ti ng week since t he
pfcsidenti~l price cei ling' on
heef, pork and lamb.

there was some impr ovem~nt
on Friday, a major shopping
da y.
Robert oristead, President of
a food market group in
Houston, Tex., said "one or two
weeks (o f boycott) really
aren't going to do anything,"
and the only action to cu.t beef
prices would be a '·long haul"
cutback on buying .
Willard F. Wi'lliams, an
agricultural- economist at
Texa s Tech, for esaw tha t
pri~es either would go 11Still
higher or there will have to be
rationing like that of World
War II." . .
"Either way , it will wre~k
the cattle industry ," he said.
A former agriculture depart"
ment economist in Washigton
told United Press International · •
that a short-range approach to
bririging meat prices doWn
would have little success .

Fo~d additive suspect in cancer search

.

"Eating a hot.ctog or strip of . Nitrites are used.to preserVe
bacon now and then wiU not color in meat, Th e sodium part
guarantee cancer/' Jacobson of the formula is salt, a
said. "However, food made tra ditional prese rvative. Amiwithout nitrite is certa inly nes, an ammoflia de rivative 1
safer than that made with occur natura ll y in foods,
-· nitrite . I recommend that beverages and drugs.
people sto p eati ng cufed
The chemical reaCtion of
meats , pa r ticul a rly bacon, nit r ite and a-n am ine, to
until the threat of nitrosamin es produ ce a nit rosamine, could
is eliminated."
occur eiVter in a food containJ a e o b s o n'
s a -i d . ing both or in the stomach if
nitrosamim!s...:. a ~:;ombination both nHritcs and amines are
of nitrites a nd amines formed ea ten af.ttle same time .
·
sometimes after mea t is cured
Jacobson said one FDAstudY
pr when it .is cooked-are found ttaH t in four differe nt
"a mong the most potent · brands of bacon "up to :100
canee r.eaus(n g agen ts y et parts per billion of another
discovered. "·

cancet&lt; ausing nittoEamin~
was discovered. Twice that
amowtt was f'JUnd In the bacon
drippings. The toxic chemical
mu.$t have 'formed when .the
bacon was fried, because
uncooked bacon was free of it. " ·
Con~ntrations......., nitrosamines were not nearly so high
in other foods as in bacon, he ·
said.
" Fifty-two samples of
canned ham and weitters also
did not contain nitr osamines,"
he said .. ''Thus the wors t ..of- fender. and pFobably the most
dangerous (ood in the supert}'la~ke t is bacon."

�•
18 -

Tile Sunday fir&gt;-&gt;es· Sentinel, Sunday , AprilS, 1973

,.

I--------------------------~
Letters o1 opllliou are wel&lt;ea~ed. They siiOillcl be leu
I
I, lhu
- aud
words
....be
, tor
be subje&lt;IIO
roduclloa..wr-.
by lho
eel!lor)
mnst
•IPeel
wllli lhe •ic-'1

I Nameo may be wltbhekl UJIOD pabllcau... . However, oa
-'" .....
d ~.e.~
u•• __ ., ..., .... ,_
~
1 request,nam.......
.., d~I....
...........
L . ,_

I

I

taste , address In&amp; i10u.. , Dol persoiUlUtlos.

£}.~~~ · •

1

~lilitDt&amp;.&lt;:

I

I
I

·• • •

l)f,L

''l/l•

•

Not all meat's fault

u~

1

I

1

Area. De_ath s·

1I Mrs. E the I B urns
I _ GALUPOLJS _ Mrs. E••·l

I
I

•

.
.
II
r1 -------------------------1l r1 -------------------------y
·

•,1 II

f
1

19 - The Suprlov Times. Sentinel. Sunn•v AnrilR 19

I.

Burns, 77, of 1969 Dunbar Dr.,
Colwnbus. died at her home
Thursday. She was the
daughter of the late William
and Prudence Crouse Criner of
Gallia County.
She ' was marria! to Frank

Burns, who preceded her. in
death,
AprilS, 1973
She is survived by four
Dear Sir:
daughters
, all of Colwnbus,
At different times , I have been tempted to write a letter to
Mrs. Norma Belbrey, Mrs.
the editor; however, only after reading the letter encouraging all
Imogene Henson, Mrs. Juanita
of us to boycott meat did !_actually decide to take pen in hand ,
Wells and Mrs . Frances
I must admit that my grocery bill has skyrocketed to an all·
Freeman; several grand and
time high , but I don't place all tile blame on meat prices. We ~ve
' g r eat-grandchildre n ;
one
our own beef in the freezer . It is my opinion th;it there a.re other
brother,
Rudy
Criner,
items whic)) have increased in cost at the same rate 'or higher
pereentage than meat. For instance, potatoes, some dairy Gallipolis. Three children, one
siste r and three br oth e r s
prodilcis;-aiiifjlractic ally every other item in the food line.
preceded her in death ,
Now let us venture outside the market and see bow many
Funeral services wiU be held
people are not batting an eye while purchasing cigarettes,
Monday at the Schoedinger
alcohol. And, yes, even " dope, " which I don' t doobt have also
Funeral Home, Columbus .
in&lt;!reas"!! considerably in price.
.

Long Bottom, Oltio

'·rl ' Jl'

Powers. Burial will be in Miller
C.:metery. ·
She was born July 21, 1895 at
Crown City, a daughter of tile
late Slaan and Mary Spurlock
Brurnlield . She was a member
of tile Crown City Methodist
Church. She was preceded in
death by her husband, C. C.
Henderson in 1960.
Survivors in~;lude live
daughters, Mr s . Gertrude
Hamlin , Chesapea ke ( with
whom she made her home ),
Miss Ernestine Henderson of
Wa shington, d}. C.; Mrs.
Wreathe! Wagner of 'Cleveland,
Ohio ; Mrs. Avenell Hagar of
So . .Wales, United Kingdom,
and Mrs. Ruth Ann Lockl:!&lt;lrt of
Chesa peake; : four
so ns ,
Charles Henderson of Ashland;
Ky .; Everette Henderson of
Procto r ville; Ronald Hen- .
derson of Nashville, Tenn., and
Willard Dean Henderson of
Belpre, Ohi9; one sister , MrS.
Hazel Woodyard of Columbus;
two brothers, John Brwnlield ·
of A thalia , , and Sanford
Brumfield of Tampa, Fla.; 12
grandchildren and five greatgrandchildren .
Friends may call at Hall
1
t Pr
·ll
Funera Home a.
octorvt e
after 6 p.m . today.

..

I
I1

Dateline
G8 ll"fa

1t
.•

By .Hobart Wilson Jr.

II

"J

I

....

···········.-.·.-.·.-... ......

~ .._.;,:,. • ••o'•:O"&lt;'•"•' •'"'•"•'••,•,•r.t;•:•:•:•:•:•:~•:•:•:•:•:•:•,•:•:•:
' ················~
...
;.., .o;00:
__
'Hf'U
.r.J&lt;.!:o'..Y;,,.•••••••• ,•.,, ••,....... .. .... • ' ••• ' •~• • •.••:•:•
• •::.:•'•"•"•!•
• :..,•,•,•,•,•r,•,•,•&lt;'•'•"•"•"•'•'•'•.&lt;-VF
:)$

Th e Poes
t'

~~ -

I
p

Corner

~~

. 1 WAS A STRANGER

ACCORDING to information received from the Gallipolis
Area Welcome Wagon 's sponsor record last week, 16 new
families (totaling
than 50 persons) located in the city or
county during the month of March.

9.:
[:~

HERE 'S a list of till! newcomers, their place of employment,
present address, number of children, and where they came from :
listed in. that order :

:?:

mor~

+++

+++
KESSLEY Carnes, retired, Q-own Oty, Portsmouth; Mrs.
Linda Skinner, 2216 Eastern Ave., three children, Parkersburg ;
John llill, 31 Portsmouth Rd., two children, Columbus ; Mr. and
Mrs. J . N. Alcorn III , Gavin Plant , 83 Cedar ·St., two children,
Fallsburg, Pa.; Unda and Clyde Davis, 46 O!illicotbe Rd.,
Columbus.

+++

By fair weather friends I had long·been fsak
or en;
I couldn't remember how long since I'd prayed.
Even my faith in the Saviour· was shaken,

;~:~

Then I heard His voice saying, "Be not afraid ,"

1[1f

;&lt;!

WithonethooghtinmindLgazedattheriver, , ,
Then silently prayed, ''lord above, be my ~w.de.
The cold,'icy wind from the north made me_shiver
And there in the dsrkness He stood by my stde.

:f:f

1 was a stranger till I heard him say,

:::

~m
:·:·

l:i.
;.;.

~

·t

~~~;

B. and Stepbenie Hallstead, Davis Rd. , Crown City; Mr. and
Mrs . Reed Monroe, Robbins &amp; Myers, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, Pennsylvania; David and Evelyn Camp, plumber, Raccoon Creek Rd .,
one son, Ariwna ; Mr. and Mrs. C. Davis, (retired ) lincoln Pike,
Louisiana · Mr. and Mrs. Thacker, Gavin Plant, Rt. 1, Northup,
. '
three children, Clarksburg, W. Va ,

I
~~j

11

He who gave life can still free you from sin."

My life has cha nged and I'm happy today ; '
I was a stranger and He took me in.

.

'

A faith that is past understanding is mine
For deep.in my heart I found peace when-He came;
Sorrow has changed to a love that's divine;
I WAS A STRANGER"'Tn. HE CALLED MY NAME.
- Forest Kyle, Box 16, Little Hocking, Ohio.

OPEII DAILY

r~
~~

~
~

•

~

f.

~
!:!

i

·~
?i

APRIL
8 &amp;9

SUNDAY
AND

MONDAY

~l

-f
~J

~

MHER AND CAUGE CENTER .
'

tachometers· gauges •lesl equipment

.

,iii;\ '"'· .

:..'"'

\\W
'

ALL
AMERICAN ·TACH
RAC .

SHEAFFER

99

$

HECK'S REG. 85'

NO. 600

RAC
TIMING LIGHT
NO. 523

'12aa

SOUNDESIGN AM/FM

RADIO 8 TRACK
STEREO CHANGER
WITH HEADPHONE AND STAND

·2
'

I

I

'

I

HECK'S REG. '159.96

$100

PKS.

$

.

35-YJ
2 ONLY

· HECK'S
REG. 11.18

66¢

PEARL DROPS

AJAX HEAVY DUTY

UTILITY DRAWER

TOOTH POLISH
IE,ULAI-SPEAIMIIT

4 ONLY!

$244

HECK'S

73.96

1

REG.'

c

MULTI-PURPOSE

LIMIT
OlE

SAW HORSE .BRACKETS
HECK'S
REG. '1.66
C

9·
9

'

HECK'S REG. 54'
WILKINSON
STAINLESS STEEL

PATHFINDER ClEARANCE
OR MARKER LIGHT --

POLAROID
TYPE 108

$144

HECK'S
REG. 12.48

FILM

HARD-MEDIUM
LIMITTWO

'

·3··

GATE

2.7S OZ.

HECK'S
REG.

BLADES 5PK.

BAYER tOO'S
ASPIRIN
LIMIT TWO ·.

LIMIT TWO

.

MEN'S
,

HECK S
REG. 14.29
1

· HECK'S

JEWELRY CHEST

·~
:;:::::.

R~~~~;~88

$499

REG. 79'

70Z.

ULTRA-BRITE
TOOTHPASTE
IEC 01 MIIIT

HECK'S REG. 73' ·

PRIMUS

PROPANE
STOVE'

•14

77

HECK'S
REG. ,$3.67

FUNNELS

I .

CAMERA

'

LIGHTERS

HECK'S REG. 1 PACK 11.00

YASHICA
135MM

'

VU-TANE REFilLABlE

4PACK

HECK'S REG. '17.99

··n. s'nv:,. "k ·\

HECK'S REG. 99'

AA EVEREADY
tRANSISTER
BATTERY

speOO;ng

•

e

HECK'S REG. '13.99

+++

. D?n

PELLETS

00

FOR$

6

Wise

NATIONAL
177 CAL

CARTRIDGE PEN

FOR ALL Y-8 CARS

°

to

9

'

Television Log

LaW

T~

10

,,

These same people boycotting the markets are probably
Mr. Clay
driving up to the picket line in brand new cars, and wouldn 't
+++
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
M.
Freeman,
trucker , 641 Second Ave., five
think of parading with their signs dressed in anything less than
Clay
Gee,
71,
a
VINTON
the. latest fashions .
·
children, Zanesville; Mr .. and Mrs. William Tndd, Robbins &amp;
former resident of Gallia
Myers, 550 Jay Drive, .three girls, ~ringfield; Mr. and Mrs.
Construction of new bomes seems to be progressing right
County,
of
8217
South·Oid
State
along even though tlie cost of one 2x4 is outrageous.
Robert Nelson, Ohio Bell, 52ti Hilda Drive, three boys, ZanesSundar, April a, 1973
Rd ., Westerville, died Frid~y
· So, what point am I trying to make? Only that it seems these
ville· Mr. and Mrs. Harry Chapman, Raven Coal Co.; Rodney,
6:00 - Film 4.
.
at
Doctors
Hospital
In ·
'
·
·
6:30
_
Th
is
week
4;
Newsmaker
'
73
13;
Bob Harrington 6;
people are fooling themselves. Are they planning to boycott
one son, Sardis, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Curry, Rodney, one son,
Lamp Unto My Feet 10.
. ·
. .
Columbus.
every necessity of life ? Why not be a litUe more conservative in
:
two daughters, and Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hardman, Ohio Power,
_
Commun
ique
6;
Old
T1me
Gospel
Hour.
13
,
T rme for
He was a retired Franklin
7 00
all aspects of living and use our brain for what God intended?
Add
'
Wh
ling
Timothy
4
;
Look
Up
&amp;
Live
.
1
0.
.
.
County public school teacher
ll;On,
ee
·
+++
_
Fai
th
For
Today
B;
Rev
1val
F!res
6;
Herald
of
Truth
3,
o
,
7
3
-~Let's don 't punish our family by "skimping" on food and, at the
and administrator. .
M h M
Camera Th ree 10; Cha ng e by Desrg n 4.
.
same time, avoiding to cut down on some items which are
1.L(){)SE NOTES- Those of you who have ·not filed your ins :oo _ Leona rd Repass B; Gospel Caravan 6_; Ch urch Serv1~e
Surviving are his wife, Helen
art a- cE/roy
come tax returns, or purchased new·license plates are reminded
13; Mormon ·Choir. 3; Dax of Discovery 4; B1fly James Harg1 s
actually harmless.
May; a daughter, Mrs. Robert
MINERSVILLE
Martha
and
his AII -Amen can Kids 10. .
.
A concerned housewife and mother.
B: 30 _ Oral Robert s 3; Your Health 4 ; Day. of Drscovery 8; Rex ·
Ball, Columbus; twb grand- Mc Elroy, 9{) years old, of that the deadline for these chores is only a week away ... Paul A.
.
(Name withheld on request) .
Hum bart "13 ; Rev i va l Fires 15 ; Kathryn. Kuhlan 6; Don Young
c hildren ; a bro~her , Robert , of Minersville, Ohio Rou te I Schuster, District ·Director of Internal Revenue for so~hem 1
.
Ohio,
reminds
landlords
that
renegitoation
provisions
pertaining
R
Jackson ; a sister, Mrs. C1oe passed away at The Angel of
8 5 ~·- 8 lack Cameo 4.
Wants reform in probate larDs
9 : 00 _ Singing J ubilee :l ; Cad_te &lt;;ha~et 4; Oral Roberts 10; ex
Lidamood, Jackson , and a half- Mercy Rest Home at Albany , to rental agreements prior to Jan. 11, 1973, which provide for
renegotiation
of
ahigherrent
when
controls
e~d
o
_
r
which
specify
· H.umbard 6; Old-Fashioned Meeting 8·
Hamil ion, Ohio
brother, Ray McCo mber, Ohio Saturday morning at
1
9:
JO
- Church
at th e· Road 4 ; Globetrotters 8 ; Re v.
Charles
Norrby
is .Side
April2, 1973
Ilremen, Ohio, He wa s 12 :05 following an ioxtended the higher rent to be charged when controls end, are ii ega!. In
13 .
Dear Sir:
the Executive Order establishing Phase Ill, President Nixon
10:00 _ Chu rch Service 4 ; Cur iosi ty Shop 6, 13; World Conpreceded in death by a brother. illness.
declared
such
renegotiation
provisions
·
inoper~tive
a
s
terence 3, 10 ; Garden Club 8; Fa ith for Today 15.
I am wondering if any of my fellow-graduates of '32 o( GAllS,
He wa·s a member of the
She was · born ·in Bedford
10 :15- Facing Life 8.
and other friends of Gallipolis and Gallia County have heard of
lO : 3o- lnsight 4 ; Viewpoi nts ; Th is--ls The Li fe 15..
.
Linworth United Methodist Twp. , Meigs County Feb. 25, tmreasonably inconsistent witb the goals of the Economic
Stabilization Program. Landlords who attempt to enforce
11 :00 - TV Chapel 3; Focus On Columbus 4; Pornt of Vrews 6;
the fight in Butler County and other areas for probate reform in . Church, Worthington ; of the
1883, a daughter of the late
··
b'eclto ct.
b th Costof
Joyinlivin g 13 ; Camera -38;ConsumerReport15.
·
Ohio.
a ton Y e
New England Lodge F&amp;AM, Charles and Amanda Pullins, renegotiations provtslons are su J
11 : 3()--- Mak e A·Wi sh 6 , l3 ; Doctors on Ca ll 4; Insi ght 15 ; Face t~e
Nation 8.
·
·p.
.
M
I alone have bad over 600 sign a petition with the following
Worthington, and the Wor- having 'spent her life in Meigs Living Council and the Justice Department to prevent operation
1
of such provisiorts. In addition, tenants may ~nforce the.Lf own
12: 0()---Cal v i n Eva ns 13 ; Rex Humba rd 8; CB A Bow rng 6; eet
heading : "We believe lawyers',· ·appraisors' and court fees
thington Order of Eastern Star, County . She attended 'the
the Press3. 4, 15 ; Urban League Presents 10.
should be unnecessary in transferring property of the deceased
behall in Court.
12 : 30 - Rev i.val Fires 13; Columbus Town Meeti ng 10. ·
·
Chapter No. 287.
Me thodist Church.
io survivors when there is a will and-or no dispute. Property
+++
.
1:
00lower
Lioht"house
13
;
·wally
's
Work·shop
3;
Man
from
Friends may call at the
Survl·v,·ng are a daughter,
THE F. If.sand Amuse· ments Section of the Ohio 'Department
U.N.C. L. E. 4 ; Old -Time Go5pel Hour 8.
.&gt;
values coUld be obtained from the auditor's office. Bonds,
Rutherford-Corbin Funeral
a
1:30
- Issues
6,·
Mrs. Henry ( Mae ) Spencer, of Agriculture
issued a reminder to the public recently that all
Juliu'
Boros &amp;10Answers
.
· Band Festival~; Outdoors .. wrth
money , etc. could be confirmed by the issuing or holding inHome, Worthington Sunday 7-9
Long Bottom, Route I; four operators of traveling, portable amusement rides are required
2: 00 - NBA Play-Oft 6. 13; NH L Action 8; It Takes A Th1et 4;
stitution. All this could be recorded and compiled on forms
p.m. and Monday 2-4 and 7-9 soris, Eugene, Da. yton , Kermit b 1 to d
'de
t
·
sen
who
is
not
wearing
some
sort
Women 's Golt 10; Sain t 15.
0
specifically designed for estate transfer and taxes, just as are · p.m.
Y aw
eny a"
any per
.
2: 30 - Parent Game 3; Women 's ·Gel·f 8. .
forms lor income tax. We think it is unjust, greedy scavengry of
Virgil, ail at home; 12 of foot protection. ·
3 : 00 ~ stanley Cup Play-Oft 3, 4, 15 ; Ja ck Nicklaus 10.
Funeral services will be gand
randchildren,
34
great.
+++
3:
30 ·_ Go lt Tournament 8, 10.
the dead for lawyers to charge according to percent rather than
conducted Tuesday at 1:30
.
.
De
rtm
t
f
4:
- Marshall Wi
News
GENE R. Abercrombie, Director or the Oh to
pa en
ldlifeMeeting
Theatre33.33.
, 00 :::·Audut5&lt;lh
· by work or skill 'involved! As for ~ppraisal, the same thing goes! . p.m . from the McCoy-Moore grandchildren and 16 great4 30
great-grandchildren .
·Agriculture, said, "In past years \here have been instances
5: 15 ~ Sing, Children, Sin_o 33 ..
Why. charge more for appraising a ma·n •s property after he dies
Funeral Horne in Vinton where
Her
_
parents,
four
sisters
and
wherein
a
barefoot
person
has
received.
an
electrical
shDCk
when
5: 30 - Sesame St . 33. ; Ani mat World 10 ; CBS Sports Il lustrated
than while he was alive?"
friends may call after 10 a.m.
Lawyers explain their high fees by saying " That's what the
brothers, and h~:r. r:nountlng a ride . Qhio
requj.res that aU -rides be properly
: ~ - News 4 ; 60 ·Minutes 8, 10; Ll oy d Bridges 3; Winning on
Tuesday . The Rev . DeLoss four
husband,
Charles,
preceded
grounded
for
patron
safety,
however
,
grounding
procedures
do
My Mind 15.
·
law says we can charge." Now - who are tbe legislators who
Smith will officiate, BuiiaLwHI her in death.
not always •override the possibilities of shock due to various
6: 30- E'arthkeeping 33 ; Untamed WoriQ 6 ; Movie '' The Wizard
make those laws? Lawyers!, mostly!
follow in Vinton Memorial
of Oz" 3, 4, 15 ; Wor.ldof Surviva l1 3.
·
.
Too many have experienced hardships and deprivations· of
F.uneral service will be held factors ."
7:00 - Law.rence Welk 13; UFO 8; In the Know 10; Zoom 20, 33;
Park Cemetery.
frpm Chester United Methodist
Wait Till Your Father Gets Home 6.
what was rightly their own in tile beginning, and I, for one, found
In lieu of flowers the family · Church at Chester Monday c
" WE are suggesting to young and o1d alike, " he continued,
7:30 ·- Let's Mak e A Deal 6; Earth kee pin g 20, 33; Dick Van
people practically grabbing the petition to sign when l'.d tell them.
.
d .
t.
. Dyke 10.
requests contributions be madeafternoon at 2o'clock With Rev . j1hat if" they intend to ride any· Of the amusement ev1ces a
8:00 - FBI 6, 13 ; MASH a. 10.- Threatened .Paradise20,33.
what the petition was ·about!
·
to the Linworth United
R
.
Card
of
Pomeroy
_
,
·county
fairs
,
shopping
centers
and
other
locations,
foot
8: 30 - Mannix 8, 1·0; French Chef 20, 33; McCio" d 3, 4, 15.
.
Robert
Much of that seized from estates was earned by the sur- Methodist Church in Worth-9
:00
-'
Masterpiece
Theatre
20
,
33';-Mdv
ie
"
The
Long
Duel"
6,
officiating. Interment will be In protection in the form of shoes or sandals will be required before
lJ .
vivor. But who gets .it? .Not the survivor-the lawyer! Let's · irigton.
Chester Cemetery. ·
admission to the ride is permitted. "
· 9·: 30 - Barnaby Jone s B. 10. ·
.
sympathize and help the.survivor - not rob him!
'
Spencer
Funeral
Home,
+++
10:
00
·
Fir
ing
:Li
ne
20,
33
;
Safar
i
to
Adventure
3;
Bobby
G.olds·
Let 's do something now for those whom we love and may
·
·
·
bora 4; W ild. Kingdom 15.
Grai:~ Henderson
wish to have the fruits of our work and Savings ! Write your lawBelPre.· is in c harge of
"OUR prupose;" the Director concluded, "is to inform the
10 · 3o - · we Think You Shou ld Know 3 ; Evll Touch 8; High Road
· To Adventure 10i Pol ice Surgeon 15 ; Probe: Conferen ce with
makers! Get up p&lt;titions! Clean up probate !
CHESAPEAKE . Mrs . arrangements. Friends may public in advance so as to avoid the possibility of a person coming
'
f
·
th
disa
··
t
t
f
th e_ Ma
yor 4.. , ·, . .
·
call
there
-anytime.
·
to
the
grounds
barefoot
and
then
acmg
e
ppom
men
o
H
:
News
Dorothy Fierbaugh Tolle, 5115 Augspurger, Hainilion, 0 .,
Grace V. .Henderson, 77, of ilt.
3 4 8 10 15
00
4:;1)11
being denied admittance to tile rides."
11 : 15 ..:.... News 8, 6, 10. 13.
3, Chesapeake, died Friday at
+++
11 : 30 - Jo hn hy Carson 4, 15; Good News 6; News 13 ; Face t he ·
St. Mary 's of an e~tended
Annie
Niday
YEARS
AGO,
from
the
m'
e
s
of
the
oauy
TriblUle
~t~~~~ ~~ ; Movies ,, Arg~nt i ne Nights'' 3; '' The Buster Kea 1on
TWENTY
Cruelty on the highways
illness. Funeral' services will
and weekly Gallia TimeS ... Hank Schroth resigns head GAllS
11 : 45 - Jack Paar Tonite 13 .
be conducted Monday at 2 p.m.
'
GALLIPOI,IS
'Annie
grid
post
...
Junior
Johnson,
21,
killed
in
highway
accident
at
,
·
12:
00 - Movie " Adam ' ' Woman" 10.
Dear Sir :·
at Crown City Methodist M
P
N
.d.
90
·
Co
·
·
·
t
t
·
1:
- News 4 .
oore arsons 1 ay ,
, a Kanauga ... County
nuruss10ners approve reques o m1: 00
This is an open letter to all licensed drivers , animal lovers,
15 - · News 13.
Church by the Rev: Keith resident of Cheshire, died in ··' corporate villag~ of Cheshire ... Thirty-six Blue Devil track
and to those of us who carmot see past their gross work-a-&lt;lay
'
Monday , April9 , 1973
hopefuls drill for opening meet.
world .
6: 00 ~ Sunrise Seminar 4. Sacred Heart 10.
With each spring comes the excitement .of new life, and life Interested in answers
6: 15 - Farm1tme 10 : English 3.
6:
20 - Farm Report 13 .
, _,_ _,_,
yet unborn . It is tragic that the same time of year that contaiils so
me Casey Nursing Home in Mrs . Paul (Ger.trude ) Searls,
6:25 - Paul Ha rvey lJ .
much life and activity marks the beginning of a season of senGallipolis, Ohio
6: 30 - -.Columbus Today 4:' Bible Answers 8; Good News 13 ;
Piketon at II p.m. Friday. She Cheshire RD 2, and Mrs.
. seless slaughter. One can travel along any of tbe many state and
School Scene 10.
AprilS, 1973
.was born May I, 1883, in .the Claren ce ( Freda ) Gilmore ,
Dear Editor:
6 : 45 - Corncob Report 3.
-~county roods in Meigs County and see tile lifeless bodies of many
6 :55 - Take F ive for Li fe 15 .
Evergreen community. ·She Middleport RD I; three
To park or notto park, that is the question !
animals both wild and domestic.
7:00 - Today 3..4, 15 ; News. Weather, Sports 6; CBS. News 8, 10;
This opening statement may seem ridiculous to you, but let married M. D. Parsons in 1962. brothers, " Alfred Farley;
Jeff ' s Collie 13.
The event which brought about this letter happened last
He preceded her in death in Middleport ; Ralph Farley ,
us
'
explain
ourselves
:
7: 30 - Romper Room 6; Slee py Jeffers 8; Rocky &amp; Bu llwink le
Wednesday, March 28. After returning from work in mid13 ; Popeye 10.
,
..
1972.
One
daughter
and
one
son
Murray
City,
Ohio
and
Osborne
Student and teacher parking, is definintely needed at GAHS!
. afternoon, we were sitting in front of our house on Route 124. A
8:
00
Capt
.
Kangaroo
10;
New
Zoo
Re
vue
13;
Lassie
6
;
Sesame
Farley, Canal Winchester, and
St. 33.
Let us direct your attention to Fourth Avenue at 8 ·a.m. preceded her in death .
stray dog casually Strolled across the yard .to cross the road
are
a
sister,
Mrs.
Surviving
8:
30Ja ck Lalanne 13 ; Romper Room 8.; New Zoo Revue 6.
12 grandchildren . ·
anyday Monday through Friday. As yo.u cruise by at 20 miles an
(.scenes like this are common in this area ). After several minutes
8:
55
Local .News 13.
·
She attended the ·church of
of visiting with the dog across the street, the stray started once hour you will note cars on the yellow lines, three feet between Flora Rife, Chesapeake; five
9:00 - Paul Dixon 4 ; Ph il DonahUe 15; Ca pt. Kangaroo B; Mr .
cars (another car could.be parked where two or three cars leave step-sons and three step- Christ in Christian Union at
Roberts6 ; Friendly Junction 10; AM3 ; Dr . Ktldare 13.
more to cross the r oa&lt;\. Upon reaching its center, tbe dog was
9 :25- Chuck Wh ite Reports 10.
·
.
daughters,
Millard
Parsons,
·
Hobson
.
this disiance), student cars in the Ohio Valley Bani!: lot Penstruck by a car and dragged several yarda at the mercy of the
9:30 -- To Tell The Tru th 3; Jeopardy6 ; Hollywood's Talk ing 10.
.
'
.
Crown City; Wilbur Parsons,
nyfare, and anywhere else we can squeeze them in. ·
Services will be Monday at I 10: 00 - Columbus Six Cal lino 6; Dick Van Dyke 13 ; Dinah Shore
driver . Pri or tO striking tile animal, the driver made a slight
3, 15 ; Joker Wild 8, 10.
We have legal room to park not over 15 or 20 cars and GAHS Texas ; Bob Parsons, · St. p.m . from Rawlings · Coats
attempt to halt his
vehicle. The automobile never.
10:
30·Split Se:cond 13 ; Baffle 3, 4." 15; $10 1000 Pyramid 8, 10.
Albans,
W.
Va
.
;
Gordon
Funeral Home with the Rev .
includes 1,400 students! (This does not include the teachers'
completely stopped, but only slowed down enough to allow the
11
:
00
Pa ssword 13; Mr. Rogers 6; Sale of the Cen tury 3. 4. 15 ;
Parsons, Parkersburg ; . Mrs. Darrell Doddrill in charge, and
.
Love American Style6; Gamb it 8. l"o ; Elec. Co. 20.
dying dog to be shoved to the roadsjde. When seeing the canine in parking lot).
Today we were informed that some of our parking places on Eulalah Bennett, Vinton ; Ruth burial in Cheshire Gravel Hill 11 : 30-Bewrt ched 6, 13 ; HollywoodSquares3 ,4, 15 ; love of Life
his rear view mirror the driver quite nonchalantly sped&lt;OO to his
8, 10; Sesame St. 10.
.
Chenoweth. Pacos; Texas, and
State Street are illegal! Thus more parking removed 1 ·
destination .
12:00- Pa ssword 6·; News 10, 13 ; Contact 8; Bob Braun .50-50
Cemetery .
Ruby Crawford, Columbus; · a
Friends may call at the··,.
Club 4 ; Jeopardy 3, 15.
()De question we should answer is: Why do so many students
Scenes like this are common in this area !
daughter-in-law,
Mrs.
Gladys
·
d
12:30
- Spl itSecond6 ; 3 W's3,1 5; SearChf0r Tomorrow8, 10.
lh
24
79
While the dog of this happening may or may not have had an drive? M~t students work half of the day or af..l!!r school and
fu.pera
arne
an
•
p.m
.
1:
00
- All My Ch ildren 6, 1~; News. 3; Secret Storm 8; Green
Adams; .one grandson in Sunday.
owner, many of the animal victims do. One can only bope that need transportation and can't afford chauffeurs.
Acres 20 ; Not For Women Only 15.
1: 20 -;-- Fashions in ·Sewing 3.
We r~gnize the difficulty in accommodating parking Peoria, Dl., and three . great.
roadside pet owners will make better provisions for the safety of
grandchildren.
1:30
- Let ' s Make A' Dea l ·6, 13; 3 On A Match ·3, ~. 15 ; As the
their animals, and that drivers wiiiJ&gt;JI forth an extra effort to spaces and feel t!ie students and the administration should joint· ·World Turns 8, 10 .
'
Funeral services will be held
ly solve this problem.
·
guard life outside tbe automobile as well as within.
2:00 - Days of qur Lives 3, 4 , 15 ; Newlywed Game 13; Mike
Douglas 6 ; Gurd lng Light 8, 10.
3 p.in, today at the McCoyInterested (11 answers, Mary Beth Fischer and Janet Yoho,
Mr. and Mrs. Michael W. Kelly.
2:30
- Dating Game 13 ; Doctors 3, 4, 15 ; Edge of Night a, 10.
THREE
RUNS
MADE
Moore
Funeral
Horne
in
Vlnton
Seniors at GAllS.
3:00
- General f:iosp ita l 6. l'J ;_ Another World 3, 4, 15'; Love
GALLIPOLIS
Three
with Rev. C. J. Lemley ofSplendored .Th rng 8, 10 ; 30-Minutes Wit h 20. . ·
Kids sho11ldn 't have pay
ficiating . Burial will be in emergency run's . were made 3: 30- Ret urn to Peyton Place 3, 15 ; ·One Life to Li ve 6 13 ;
Oughtta be worth $1.25
Secret Storm 10; . French Cht r 20; Merv Griffir1 8; 'Phil
Friday by tile Ga!Ua County
Vinton Memorial Park.
. Donahue 4.
.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Volunteer
Emergency
Squad
..
.
Friends
may
call
after
II
4:00 - Mr . Cartoon J r Ses·ame St. 20;·33; Love Amer ic an S'tyle
Middleport, Ohio 1
April6, 1973 a .m . today at the funeral home. Admitted at the Holzer Medical
1~; Somerset 15; Yuckleberry Hound-Yogi · Bear 6·· Movie
March 31, 1973
Dear Sir:
" The Great Sioux Upr ising" 10.
.
'
'
Center as medical patients
Mr . Editor:
·.·
4:
30
Petticoat
Junct
ion
3;.
I
Love
Lucy
6;
Gilligan's
Isla
rid 8;
The people of Gallia County have very few yearly events to
-were Everett Lancaster, 83, a
Dan iel Boone ~J ; Dick Van Dyke 15; Mer v Griffin&lt;~ .
This letter is to strongly protest against the school kids going· look forward to. Of course, tbe biggest of the ·year is the Junior Mrs. Sarah
resident of Rodney-Cora Rd. , 5: 00- Bonanza J, 4; Hazel 8; Mr . Rogers 20, 33 ; Andy Gr iff ith
to school on two Saturdays, the 7tlfilnd 14th of April.
,
15 ; Big Valley 4.
Fair. The Bob Evans• Fall Festival is getting bigger and better
MIDDLEPORT Mrs . Gertrude Neal, 80, Court St. ,
First of all , the kids didn't strike. It was the teachers. The .each year. The Fourth of July holiday offers four days of very
5: 30 - .Beverly Hil lbillies 8; Elec. Co. 33; Gomer Py le 13 ; 'Death
Sarah Margaret Wise, Mid: · and Sara Dray, 69,9 White Ave .
Valley Days 15; Hodge,x&gt;dge Lodg e 20 .
·
kids were up and ready' to go. The Board of Education is the ones
good ent.ertainment.
5 : 55 -· Earl Nightingale 15.
dleport RD I, 57, who died
who wouldn 't meet with the teachers to setUe it sooner. So why
6:00 - NewsJ. 4, 8, 10, 15 ; ABC News 13 · SeSame St 20· Around
In .the past the annual cancer variety show has . been Saturday morning at Veterans ·
·the Bend 33.
'
· '
should the.kids be punished and made to stay in a school all day
something to look forward to . When this year 's program was Memorial Hospital, was born
.6: 30 - ABC News 6; CBS News 8, 10 ; I Dream of Jeannie 13 ;
on a Saturday ?_
.
. .
News J. 4, 15; Insigh t 33. .
released, I was very disappointed. A very large percent of this . Sept. 13, 1915 in Columbus,
I want the kids to have an education, oot I believe in this case ·area's people are good old country folks who .enjoy c6untry and
7:00
Truth
or
Coo
seq
.
3;
Beat
the
Clock
4 · News 6 10 · Circus
Ohio, tile daughter of the late
FIRE DOUSED
13 ; What's 'My line 8; Elec. Co. 20; Read Your WaYUp 33 ;
Meigs County is carrying things a little too far. Middlepl!r!
gospel music. They are not very much interested in . baton Walter and · Cora . Frasier
Pass It On 15.
GALLIPOLIS
Damage
schools only missed two days this year and had three days left to
twirling or ballet.
Farley . She was also preceded was ffiinor in ·a fire Friday 7: 30 - To Tell the _ Tru~6 ; Young Dr. Kildare B; Hollywood
miss before any-make-up days had to be done.
~
Squ~res 4; Traffrc Court 10 ; l)o You Read Me 20; Ep'isode
The local churches haw some outstanding singing grou)is in death by a brother.
afternoon ·a t tile Federal-Mogul
Ad ron 33 ; Bobby Goldsboro 3; Movie " The K ing·&amp;-1" 13. ·
I just wonder what the teachers and Board of Education
that would be happy to participate. Groups such as The
Sllfvivors are. her husband , . Plant, 2160 Eastern. Ave, City 8:00- ~owan &amp; Martin 's Laugh -In J , 4, 15 ; Spring Is Special 3;
would think if all the kids would sbow up at thejr school with
Rook1es 6; Gun smoke 8, 10 ; V 0 Blues 20, 33.
·
Redeemers, The Shaffer Family, The Young Americans, Tex Willie; three daughters, ·Mrs. . fi~emen said a ·cooling water
protest signs instead of going to schooL
·
9 : 00 -:- _Here 's l ucy 8, 10; Movies " The Secret War of Harry
Harrison and the Grand Squares have always drawn lai-ge Clarence (Hilda) McDaniel, valve in ·a condenser was
. Fngg " 3, 4, 15 ; " Situation Hope l~ss-but Not Seriqus" 6, 13 :
I am glad the teachers got what they wanted.- But I don 't
audiences.
Where ls the War on VD?
·
• · ·
Middleport RD I: Mrs. Russell shutoff causing the condenser
think this "school on Saturday" should be put on the kids, I don 't
9;
30
DOr
is
Day
B,
10;
Book
Beat
20,
33.
· I think the ·Cancer Crusade is something we all want to
00- News 20; Capitol Beat 33 ; Bill Cosby a, 10.
believe the kids shoold or could be made, to go on these-two days. ~ support- and ;e sh-ould have an ailnual program that is en- (Tiiebna Jean) Schoonover, to becOme oVerheated. An 10:
Middleport, and Mrs., Sidney employee used a foam and dry 10: 30 _._ Wa ll Street Week 33.
Everyone else protests or strikes, why not the kids ? They
,
tertaining enough that. anyone would be willing io pay $1.2.5 to (Carol ) Hayman, Middleport chemical extingllisher to put 11 : 00 - News3, 4, 6, B, 10, 13, 15.
sure have gOOd reason 1h ~is case:
11: ~~- ~ohony Carson 3. ~~ 15 ; Rod Serllng at lax 6. 1J ; Movies
see.
.
..,.
RDI; a son, Roland L. Wise-1 out tile fire before the lire
t Make Waves '' 8; '' The lion:'' 10.
Name withheld on request.
1:00 - Focus on Columbus 4;' NeWs ·t J .
Mrs. Cecil Cook, Rt. 3 Middleport RD I; two sisters, department arrived.
2:· 00 -- News 4 .

Gee

'
OPIIDAILY
10 TO 9

~

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~
:·:•

~~

...

99

PRIMUS 'PROPANE

·LANTERNS
$

99

HECK'S
REG. 116.99

ALKA-SELTZER

37°

liMIT
OlE

54•

70Z.

THESPIAJFOIMII
DRY LOOK
• IE,ULAI
• EXTIA HOLII
LIMIT OlE .

HECK'S REG. '1.19

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HECK'S REG.

74C·

HECK'S REG: $23.99

'

i.

25'S

liMIT
DIE

•

Alka· Seltzer

I

AC 10'5

78C

LIMIT
DIE

HECK'S REG. 991

,.

�•
18 -

Tile Sunday fir&gt;-&gt;es· Sentinel, Sunday , AprilS, 1973

,.

I--------------------------~
Letters o1 opllliou are wel&lt;ea~ed. They siiOillcl be leu
I
I, lhu
- aud
words
....be
, tor
be subje&lt;IIO
roduclloa..wr-.
by lho
eel!lor)
mnst
•IPeel
wllli lhe •ic-'1

I Nameo may be wltbhekl UJIOD pabllcau... . However, oa
-'" .....
d ~.e.~
u•• __ ., ..., .... ,_
~
1 request,nam.......
.., d~I....
...........
L . ,_

I

I

taste , address In&amp; i10u.. , Dol persoiUlUtlos.

£}.~~~ · •

1

~lilitDt&amp;.&lt;:

I

I
I

·• • •

l)f,L

''l/l•

•

Not all meat's fault

u~

1

I

1

Area. De_ath s·

1I Mrs. E the I B urns
I _ GALUPOLJS _ Mrs. E••·l

I
I

•

.
.
II
r1 -------------------------1l r1 -------------------------y
·

•,1 II

f
1

19 - The Suprlov Times. Sentinel. Sunn•v AnrilR 19

I.

Burns, 77, of 1969 Dunbar Dr.,
Colwnbus. died at her home
Thursday. She was the
daughter of the late William
and Prudence Crouse Criner of
Gallia County.
She ' was marria! to Frank

Burns, who preceded her. in
death,
AprilS, 1973
She is survived by four
Dear Sir:
daughters
, all of Colwnbus,
At different times , I have been tempted to write a letter to
Mrs. Norma Belbrey, Mrs.
the editor; however, only after reading the letter encouraging all
Imogene Henson, Mrs. Juanita
of us to boycott meat did !_actually decide to take pen in hand ,
Wells and Mrs . Frances
I must admit that my grocery bill has skyrocketed to an all·
Freeman; several grand and
time high , but I don't place all tile blame on meat prices. We ~ve
' g r eat-grandchildre n ;
one
our own beef in the freezer . It is my opinion th;it there a.re other
brother,
Rudy
Criner,
items whic)) have increased in cost at the same rate 'or higher
pereentage than meat. For instance, potatoes, some dairy Gallipolis. Three children, one
siste r and three br oth e r s
prodilcis;-aiiifjlractic ally every other item in the food line.
preceded her in death ,
Now let us venture outside the market and see bow many
Funeral services wiU be held
people are not batting an eye while purchasing cigarettes,
Monday at the Schoedinger
alcohol. And, yes, even " dope, " which I don' t doobt have also
Funeral Home, Columbus .
in&lt;!reas"!! considerably in price.
.

Long Bottom, Oltio

'·rl ' Jl'

Powers. Burial will be in Miller
C.:metery. ·
She was born July 21, 1895 at
Crown City, a daughter of tile
late Slaan and Mary Spurlock
Brurnlield . She was a member
of tile Crown City Methodist
Church. She was preceded in
death by her husband, C. C.
Henderson in 1960.
Survivors in~;lude live
daughters, Mr s . Gertrude
Hamlin , Chesapea ke ( with
whom she made her home ),
Miss Ernestine Henderson of
Wa shington, d}. C.; Mrs.
Wreathe! Wagner of 'Cleveland,
Ohio ; Mrs. Avenell Hagar of
So . .Wales, United Kingdom,
and Mrs. Ruth Ann Lockl:!&lt;lrt of
Chesa peake; : four
so ns ,
Charles Henderson of Ashland;
Ky .; Everette Henderson of
Procto r ville; Ronald Hen- .
derson of Nashville, Tenn., and
Willard Dean Henderson of
Belpre, Ohi9; one sister , MrS.
Hazel Woodyard of Columbus;
two brothers, John Brwnlield ·
of A thalia , , and Sanford
Brumfield of Tampa, Fla.; 12
grandchildren and five greatgrandchildren .
Friends may call at Hall
1
t Pr
·ll
Funera Home a.
octorvt e
after 6 p.m . today.

..

I
I1

Dateline
G8 ll"fa

1t
.•

By .Hobart Wilson Jr.

II

"J

I

....

···········.-.·.-.·.-... ......

~ .._.;,:,. • ••o'•:O"&lt;'•"•' •'"'•"•'••,•,•r.t;•:•:•:•:•:•:~•:•:•:•:•:•:•,•:•:•:
' ················~
...
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• •::.:•'•"•"•!•
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:)$

Th e Poes
t'

~~ -

I
p

Corner

~~

. 1 WAS A STRANGER

ACCORDING to information received from the Gallipolis
Area Welcome Wagon 's sponsor record last week, 16 new
families (totaling
than 50 persons) located in the city or
county during the month of March.

9.:
[:~

HERE 'S a list of till! newcomers, their place of employment,
present address, number of children, and where they came from :
listed in. that order :

:?:

mor~

+++

+++
KESSLEY Carnes, retired, Q-own Oty, Portsmouth; Mrs.
Linda Skinner, 2216 Eastern Ave., three children, Parkersburg ;
John llill, 31 Portsmouth Rd., two children, Columbus ; Mr. and
Mrs. J . N. Alcorn III , Gavin Plant , 83 Cedar ·St., two children,
Fallsburg, Pa.; Unda and Clyde Davis, 46 O!illicotbe Rd.,
Columbus.

+++

By fair weather friends I had long·been fsak
or en;
I couldn't remember how long since I'd prayed.
Even my faith in the Saviour· was shaken,

;~:~

Then I heard His voice saying, "Be not afraid ,"

1[1f

;&lt;!

WithonethooghtinmindLgazedattheriver, , ,
Then silently prayed, ''lord above, be my ~w.de.
The cold,'icy wind from the north made me_shiver
And there in the dsrkness He stood by my stde.

:f:f

1 was a stranger till I heard him say,

:::

~m
:·:·

l:i.
;.;.

~

·t

~~~;

B. and Stepbenie Hallstead, Davis Rd. , Crown City; Mr. and
Mrs . Reed Monroe, Robbins &amp; Myers, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, Pennsylvania; David and Evelyn Camp, plumber, Raccoon Creek Rd .,
one son, Ariwna ; Mr. and Mrs. C. Davis, (retired ) lincoln Pike,
Louisiana · Mr. and Mrs. Thacker, Gavin Plant, Rt. 1, Northup,
. '
three children, Clarksburg, W. Va ,

I
~~j

11

He who gave life can still free you from sin."

My life has cha nged and I'm happy today ; '
I was a stranger and He took me in.

.

'

A faith that is past understanding is mine
For deep.in my heart I found peace when-He came;
Sorrow has changed to a love that's divine;
I WAS A STRANGER"'Tn. HE CALLED MY NAME.
- Forest Kyle, Box 16, Little Hocking, Ohio.

OPEII DAILY

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APRIL
8 &amp;9

SUNDAY
AND

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MHER AND CAUGE CENTER .
'

tachometers· gauges •lesl equipment

.

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:..'"'

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'

ALL
AMERICAN ·TACH
RAC .

SHEAFFER

99

$

HECK'S REG. 85'

NO. 600

RAC
TIMING LIGHT
NO. 523

'12aa

SOUNDESIGN AM/FM

RADIO 8 TRACK
STEREO CHANGER
WITH HEADPHONE AND STAND

·2
'

I

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'

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HECK'S REG. '159.96

$100

PKS.

$

.

35-YJ
2 ONLY

· HECK'S
REG. 11.18

66¢

PEARL DROPS

AJAX HEAVY DUTY

UTILITY DRAWER

TOOTH POLISH
IE,ULAI-SPEAIMIIT

4 ONLY!

$244

HECK'S

73.96

1

REG.'

c

MULTI-PURPOSE

LIMIT
OlE

SAW HORSE .BRACKETS
HECK'S
REG. '1.66
C

9·
9

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HECK'S REG. 54'
WILKINSON
STAINLESS STEEL

PATHFINDER ClEARANCE
OR MARKER LIGHT --

POLAROID
TYPE 108

$144

HECK'S
REG. 12.48

FILM

HARD-MEDIUM
LIMITTWO

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GATE

2.7S OZ.

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REG.

BLADES 5PK.

BAYER tOO'S
ASPIRIN
LIMIT TWO ·.

LIMIT TWO

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MEN'S
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HECK S
REG. 14.29
1

· HECK'S

JEWELRY CHEST

·~
:;:::::.

R~~~~;~88

$499

REG. 79'

70Z.

ULTRA-BRITE
TOOTHPASTE
IEC 01 MIIIT

HECK'S REG. 73' ·

PRIMUS

PROPANE
STOVE'

•14

77

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REG. ,$3.67

FUNNELS

I .

CAMERA

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LIGHTERS

HECK'S REG. 1 PACK 11.00

YASHICA
135MM

'

VU-TANE REFilLABlE

4PACK

HECK'S REG. '17.99

··n. s'nv:,. "k ·\

HECK'S REG. 99'

AA EVEREADY
tRANSISTER
BATTERY

speOO;ng

•

e

HECK'S REG. '13.99

+++

. D?n

PELLETS

00

FOR$

6

Wise

NATIONAL
177 CAL

CARTRIDGE PEN

FOR ALL Y-8 CARS

°

to

9

'

Television Log

LaW

T~

10

,,

These same people boycotting the markets are probably
Mr. Clay
driving up to the picket line in brand new cars, and wouldn 't
+++
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
M.
Freeman,
trucker , 641 Second Ave., five
think of parading with their signs dressed in anything less than
Clay
Gee,
71,
a
VINTON
the. latest fashions .
·
children, Zanesville; Mr .. and Mrs. William Tndd, Robbins &amp;
former resident of Gallia
Myers, 550 Jay Drive, .three girls, ~ringfield; Mr. and Mrs.
Construction of new bomes seems to be progressing right
County,
of
8217
South·Oid
State
along even though tlie cost of one 2x4 is outrageous.
Robert Nelson, Ohio Bell, 52ti Hilda Drive, three boys, ZanesSundar, April a, 1973
Rd ., Westerville, died Frid~y
· So, what point am I trying to make? Only that it seems these
ville· Mr. and Mrs. Harry Chapman, Raven Coal Co.; Rodney,
6:00 - Film 4.
.
at
Doctors
Hospital
In ·
'
·
·
6:30
_
Th
is
week
4;
Newsmaker
'
73
13;
Bob Harrington 6;
people are fooling themselves. Are they planning to boycott
one son, Sardis, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Curry, Rodney, one son,
Lamp Unto My Feet 10.
. ·
. .
Columbus.
every necessity of life ? Why not be a litUe more conservative in
:
two daughters, and Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hardman, Ohio Power,
_
Commun
ique
6;
Old
T1me
Gospel
Hour.
13
,
T rme for
He was a retired Franklin
7 00
all aspects of living and use our brain for what God intended?
Add
'
Wh
ling
Timothy
4
;
Look
Up
&amp;
Live
.
1
0.
.
.
County public school teacher
ll;On,
ee
·
+++
_
Fai
th
For
Today
B;
Rev
1val
F!res
6;
Herald
of
Truth
3,
o
,
7
3
-~Let's don 't punish our family by "skimping" on food and, at the
and administrator. .
M h M
Camera Th ree 10; Cha ng e by Desrg n 4.
.
same time, avoiding to cut down on some items which are
1.L(){)SE NOTES- Those of you who have ·not filed your ins :oo _ Leona rd Repass B; Gospel Caravan 6_; Ch urch Serv1~e
Surviving are his wife, Helen
art a- cE/roy
come tax returns, or purchased new·license plates are reminded
13; Mormon ·Choir. 3; Dax of Discovery 4; B1fly James Harg1 s
actually harmless.
May; a daughter, Mrs. Robert
MINERSVILLE
Martha
and
his AII -Amen can Kids 10. .
.
A concerned housewife and mother.
B: 30 _ Oral Robert s 3; Your Health 4 ; Day. of Drscovery 8; Rex ·
Ball, Columbus; twb grand- Mc Elroy, 9{) years old, of that the deadline for these chores is only a week away ... Paul A.
.
(Name withheld on request) .
Hum bart "13 ; Rev i va l Fires 15 ; Kathryn. Kuhlan 6; Don Young
c hildren ; a bro~her , Robert , of Minersville, Ohio Rou te I Schuster, District ·Director of Internal Revenue for so~hem 1
.
Ohio,
reminds
landlords
that
renegitoation
provisions
pertaining
R
Jackson ; a sister, Mrs. C1oe passed away at The Angel of
8 5 ~·- 8 lack Cameo 4.
Wants reform in probate larDs
9 : 00 _ Singing J ubilee :l ; Cad_te &lt;;ha~et 4; Oral Roberts 10; ex
Lidamood, Jackson , and a half- Mercy Rest Home at Albany , to rental agreements prior to Jan. 11, 1973, which provide for
renegotiation
of
ahigherrent
when
controls
e~d
o
_
r
which
specify
· H.umbard 6; Old-Fashioned Meeting 8·
Hamil ion, Ohio
brother, Ray McCo mber, Ohio Saturday morning at
1
9:
JO
- Church
at th e· Road 4 ; Globetrotters 8 ; Re v.
Charles
Norrby
is .Side
April2, 1973
Ilremen, Ohio, He wa s 12 :05 following an ioxtended the higher rent to be charged when controls end, are ii ega!. In
13 .
Dear Sir:
the Executive Order establishing Phase Ill, President Nixon
10:00 _ Chu rch Service 4 ; Cur iosi ty Shop 6, 13; World Conpreceded in death by a brother. illness.
declared
such
renegotiation
provisions
·
inoper~tive
a
s
terence 3, 10 ; Garden Club 8; Fa ith for Today 15.
I am wondering if any of my fellow-graduates of '32 o( GAllS,
He wa·s a member of the
She was · born ·in Bedford
10 :15- Facing Life 8.
and other friends of Gallipolis and Gallia County have heard of
lO : 3o- lnsight 4 ; Viewpoi nts ; Th is--ls The Li fe 15..
.
Linworth United Methodist Twp. , Meigs County Feb. 25, tmreasonably inconsistent witb the goals of the Economic
Stabilization Program. Landlords who attempt to enforce
11 :00 - TV Chapel 3; Focus On Columbus 4; Pornt of Vrews 6;
the fight in Butler County and other areas for probate reform in . Church, Worthington ; of the
1883, a daughter of the late
··
b'eclto ct.
b th Costof
Joyinlivin g 13 ; Camera -38;ConsumerReport15.
·
Ohio.
a ton Y e
New England Lodge F&amp;AM, Charles and Amanda Pullins, renegotiations provtslons are su J
11 : 3()--- Mak e A·Wi sh 6 , l3 ; Doctors on Ca ll 4; Insi ght 15 ; Face t~e
Nation 8.
·
·p.
.
M
I alone have bad over 600 sign a petition with the following
Worthington, and the Wor- having 'spent her life in Meigs Living Council and the Justice Department to prevent operation
1
of such provisiorts. In addition, tenants may ~nforce the.Lf own
12: 0()---Cal v i n Eva ns 13 ; Rex Humba rd 8; CB A Bow rng 6; eet
heading : "We believe lawyers',· ·appraisors' and court fees
thington Order of Eastern Star, County . She attended 'the
the Press3. 4, 15 ; Urban League Presents 10.
should be unnecessary in transferring property of the deceased
behall in Court.
12 : 30 - Rev i.val Fires 13; Columbus Town Meeti ng 10. ·
·
Chapter No. 287.
Me thodist Church.
io survivors when there is a will and-or no dispute. Property
+++
.
1:
00lower
Lioht"house
13
;
·wally
's
Work·shop
3;
Man
from
Friends may call at the
Survl·v,·ng are a daughter,
THE F. If.sand Amuse· ments Section of the Ohio 'Department
U.N.C. L. E. 4 ; Old -Time Go5pel Hour 8.
.&gt;
values coUld be obtained from the auditor's office. Bonds,
Rutherford-Corbin Funeral
a
1:30
- Issues
6,·
Mrs. Henry ( Mae ) Spencer, of Agriculture
issued a reminder to the public recently that all
Juliu'
Boros &amp;10Answers
.
· Band Festival~; Outdoors .. wrth
money , etc. could be confirmed by the issuing or holding inHome, Worthington Sunday 7-9
Long Bottom, Route I; four operators of traveling, portable amusement rides are required
2: 00 - NBA Play-Oft 6. 13; NH L Action 8; It Takes A Th1et 4;
stitution. All this could be recorded and compiled on forms
p.m. and Monday 2-4 and 7-9 soris, Eugene, Da. yton , Kermit b 1 to d
'de
t
·
sen
who
is
not
wearing
some
sort
Women 's Golt 10; Sain t 15.
0
specifically designed for estate transfer and taxes, just as are · p.m.
Y aw
eny a"
any per
.
2: 30 - Parent Game 3; Women 's ·Gel·f 8. .
forms lor income tax. We think it is unjust, greedy scavengry of
Virgil, ail at home; 12 of foot protection. ·
3 : 00 ~ stanley Cup Play-Oft 3, 4, 15 ; Ja ck Nicklaus 10.
Funeral services will be gand
randchildren,
34
great.
+++
3:
30 ·_ Go lt Tournament 8, 10.
the dead for lawyers to charge according to percent rather than
conducted Tuesday at 1:30
.
.
De
rtm
t
f
4:
- Marshall Wi
News
GENE R. Abercrombie, Director or the Oh to
pa en
ldlifeMeeting
Theatre33.33.
, 00 :::·Audut5&lt;lh
· by work or skill 'involved! As for ~ppraisal, the same thing goes! . p.m . from the McCoy-Moore grandchildren and 16 great4 30
great-grandchildren .
·Agriculture, said, "In past years \here have been instances
5: 15 ~ Sing, Children, Sin_o 33 ..
Why. charge more for appraising a ma·n •s property after he dies
Funeral Horne in Vinton where
Her
_
parents,
four
sisters
and
wherein
a
barefoot
person
has
received.
an
electrical
shDCk
when
5: 30 - Sesame St . 33. ; Ani mat World 10 ; CBS Sports Il lustrated
than while he was alive?"
friends may call after 10 a.m.
Lawyers explain their high fees by saying " That's what the
brothers, and h~:r. r:nountlng a ride . Qhio
requj.res that aU -rides be properly
: ~ - News 4 ; 60 ·Minutes 8, 10; Ll oy d Bridges 3; Winning on
Tuesday . The Rev . DeLoss four
husband,
Charles,
preceded
grounded
for
patron
safety,
however
,
grounding
procedures
do
My Mind 15.
·
law says we can charge." Now - who are tbe legislators who
Smith will officiate, BuiiaLwHI her in death.
not always •override the possibilities of shock due to various
6: 30- E'arthkeeping 33 ; Untamed WoriQ 6 ; Movie '' The Wizard
make those laws? Lawyers!, mostly!
follow in Vinton Memorial
of Oz" 3, 4, 15 ; Wor.ldof Surviva l1 3.
·
.
Too many have experienced hardships and deprivations· of
F.uneral service will be held factors ."
7:00 - Law.rence Welk 13; UFO 8; In the Know 10; Zoom 20, 33;
Park Cemetery.
frpm Chester United Methodist
Wait Till Your Father Gets Home 6.
what was rightly their own in tile beginning, and I, for one, found
In lieu of flowers the family · Church at Chester Monday c
" WE are suggesting to young and o1d alike, " he continued,
7:30 ·- Let's Mak e A Deal 6; Earth kee pin g 20, 33; Dick Van
people practically grabbing the petition to sign when l'.d tell them.
.
d .
t.
. Dyke 10.
requests contributions be madeafternoon at 2o'clock With Rev . j1hat if" they intend to ride any· Of the amusement ev1ces a
8:00 - FBI 6, 13 ; MASH a. 10.- Threatened .Paradise20,33.
what the petition was ·about!
·
to the Linworth United
R
.
Card
of
Pomeroy
_
,
·county
fairs
,
shopping
centers
and
other
locations,
foot
8: 30 - Mannix 8, 1·0; French Chef 20, 33; McCio" d 3, 4, 15.
.
Robert
Much of that seized from estates was earned by the sur- Methodist Church in Worth-9
:00
-'
Masterpiece
Theatre
20
,
33';-Mdv
ie
"
The
Long
Duel"
6,
officiating. Interment will be In protection in the form of shoes or sandals will be required before
lJ .
vivor. But who gets .it? .Not the survivor-the lawyer! Let's · irigton.
Chester Cemetery. ·
admission to the ride is permitted. "
· 9·: 30 - Barnaby Jone s B. 10. ·
.
sympathize and help the.survivor - not rob him!
'
Spencer
Funeral
Home,
+++
10:
00
·
Fir
ing
:Li
ne
20,
33
;
Safar
i
to
Adventure
3;
Bobby
G.olds·
Let 's do something now for those whom we love and may
·
·
·
bora 4; W ild. Kingdom 15.
Grai:~ Henderson
wish to have the fruits of our work and Savings ! Write your lawBelPre.· is in c harge of
"OUR prupose;" the Director concluded, "is to inform the
10 · 3o - · we Think You Shou ld Know 3 ; Evll Touch 8; High Road
· To Adventure 10i Pol ice Surgeon 15 ; Probe: Conferen ce with
makers! Get up p&lt;titions! Clean up probate !
CHESAPEAKE . Mrs . arrangements. Friends may public in advance so as to avoid the possibility of a person coming
'
f
·
th
disa
··
t
t
f
th e_ Ma
yor 4.. , ·, . .
·
call
there
-anytime.
·
to
the
grounds
barefoot
and
then
acmg
e
ppom
men
o
H
:
News
Dorothy Fierbaugh Tolle, 5115 Augspurger, Hainilion, 0 .,
Grace V. .Henderson, 77, of ilt.
3 4 8 10 15
00
4:;1)11
being denied admittance to tile rides."
11 : 15 ..:.... News 8, 6, 10. 13.
3, Chesapeake, died Friday at
+++
11 : 30 - Jo hn hy Carson 4, 15; Good News 6; News 13 ; Face t he ·
St. Mary 's of an e~tended
Annie
Niday
YEARS
AGO,
from
the
m'
e
s
of
the
oauy
TriblUle
~t~~~~ ~~ ; Movies ,, Arg~nt i ne Nights'' 3; '' The Buster Kea 1on
TWENTY
Cruelty on the highways
illness. Funeral' services will
and weekly Gallia TimeS ... Hank Schroth resigns head GAllS
11 : 45 - Jack Paar Tonite 13 .
be conducted Monday at 2 p.m.
'
GALLIPOI,IS
'Annie
grid
post
...
Junior
Johnson,
21,
killed
in
highway
accident
at
,
·
12:
00 - Movie " Adam ' ' Woman" 10.
Dear Sir :·
at Crown City Methodist M
P
N
.d.
90
·
Co
·
·
·
t
t
·
1:
- News 4 .
oore arsons 1 ay ,
, a Kanauga ... County
nuruss10ners approve reques o m1: 00
This is an open letter to all licensed drivers , animal lovers,
15 - · News 13.
Church by the Rev: Keith resident of Cheshire, died in ··' corporate villag~ of Cheshire ... Thirty-six Blue Devil track
and to those of us who carmot see past their gross work-a-&lt;lay
'
Monday , April9 , 1973
hopefuls drill for opening meet.
world .
6: 00 ~ Sunrise Seminar 4. Sacred Heart 10.
With each spring comes the excitement .of new life, and life Interested in answers
6: 15 - Farm1tme 10 : English 3.
6:
20 - Farm Report 13 .
, _,_ _,_,
yet unborn . It is tragic that the same time of year that contaiils so
me Casey Nursing Home in Mrs . Paul (Ger.trude ) Searls,
6:25 - Paul Ha rvey lJ .
much life and activity marks the beginning of a season of senGallipolis, Ohio
6: 30 - -.Columbus Today 4:' Bible Answers 8; Good News 13 ;
Piketon at II p.m. Friday. She Cheshire RD 2, and Mrs.
. seless slaughter. One can travel along any of tbe many state and
School Scene 10.
AprilS, 1973
.was born May I, 1883, in .the Claren ce ( Freda ) Gilmore ,
Dear Editor:
6 : 45 - Corncob Report 3.
-~county roods in Meigs County and see tile lifeless bodies of many
6 :55 - Take F ive for Li fe 15 .
Evergreen community. ·She Middleport RD I; three
To park or notto park, that is the question !
animals both wild and domestic.
7:00 - Today 3..4, 15 ; News. Weather, Sports 6; CBS. News 8, 10;
This opening statement may seem ridiculous to you, but let married M. D. Parsons in 1962. brothers, " Alfred Farley;
Jeff ' s Collie 13.
The event which brought about this letter happened last
He preceded her in death in Middleport ; Ralph Farley ,
us
'
explain
ourselves
:
7: 30 - Romper Room 6; Slee py Jeffers 8; Rocky &amp; Bu llwink le
Wednesday, March 28. After returning from work in mid13 ; Popeye 10.
,
..
1972.
One
daughter
and
one
son
Murray
City,
Ohio
and
Osborne
Student and teacher parking, is definintely needed at GAHS!
. afternoon, we were sitting in front of our house on Route 124. A
8:
00
Capt
.
Kangaroo
10;
New
Zoo
Re
vue
13;
Lassie
6
;
Sesame
Farley, Canal Winchester, and
St. 33.
Let us direct your attention to Fourth Avenue at 8 ·a.m. preceded her in death .
stray dog casually Strolled across the yard .to cross the road
are
a
sister,
Mrs.
Surviving
8:
30Ja ck Lalanne 13 ; Romper Room 8.; New Zoo Revue 6.
12 grandchildren . ·
anyday Monday through Friday. As yo.u cruise by at 20 miles an
(.scenes like this are common in this area ). After several minutes
8:
55
Local .News 13.
·
She attended the ·church of
of visiting with the dog across the street, the stray started once hour you will note cars on the yellow lines, three feet between Flora Rife, Chesapeake; five
9:00 - Paul Dixon 4 ; Ph il DonahUe 15; Ca pt. Kangaroo B; Mr .
cars (another car could.be parked where two or three cars leave step-sons and three step- Christ in Christian Union at
Roberts6 ; Friendly Junction 10; AM3 ; Dr . Ktldare 13.
more to cross the r oa&lt;\. Upon reaching its center, tbe dog was
9 :25- Chuck Wh ite Reports 10.
·
.
daughters,
Millard
Parsons,
·
Hobson
.
this disiance), student cars in the Ohio Valley Bani!: lot Penstruck by a car and dragged several yarda at the mercy of the
9:30 -- To Tell The Tru th 3; Jeopardy6 ; Hollywood's Talk ing 10.
.
'
.
Crown City; Wilbur Parsons,
nyfare, and anywhere else we can squeeze them in. ·
Services will be Monday at I 10: 00 - Columbus Six Cal lino 6; Dick Van Dyke 13 ; Dinah Shore
driver . Pri or tO striking tile animal, the driver made a slight
3, 15 ; Joker Wild 8, 10.
We have legal room to park not over 15 or 20 cars and GAHS Texas ; Bob Parsons, · St. p.m . from Rawlings · Coats
attempt to halt his
vehicle. The automobile never.
10:
30·Split Se:cond 13 ; Baffle 3, 4." 15; $10 1000 Pyramid 8, 10.
Albans,
W.
Va
.
;
Gordon
Funeral Home with the Rev .
includes 1,400 students! (This does not include the teachers'
completely stopped, but only slowed down enough to allow the
11
:
00
Pa ssword 13; Mr. Rogers 6; Sale of the Cen tury 3. 4. 15 ;
Parsons, Parkersburg ; . Mrs. Darrell Doddrill in charge, and
.
Love American Style6; Gamb it 8. l"o ; Elec. Co. 20.
dying dog to be shoved to the roadsjde. When seeing the canine in parking lot).
Today we were informed that some of our parking places on Eulalah Bennett, Vinton ; Ruth burial in Cheshire Gravel Hill 11 : 30-Bewrt ched 6, 13 ; HollywoodSquares3 ,4, 15 ; love of Life
his rear view mirror the driver quite nonchalantly sped&lt;OO to his
8, 10; Sesame St. 10.
.
Chenoweth. Pacos; Texas, and
State Street are illegal! Thus more parking removed 1 ·
destination .
12:00- Pa ssword 6·; News 10, 13 ; Contact 8; Bob Braun .50-50
Cemetery .
Ruby Crawford, Columbus; · a
Friends may call at the··,.
Club 4 ; Jeopardy 3, 15.
()De question we should answer is: Why do so many students
Scenes like this are common in this area !
daughter-in-law,
Mrs.
Gladys
·
d
12:30
- Spl itSecond6 ; 3 W's3,1 5; SearChf0r Tomorrow8, 10.
lh
24
79
While the dog of this happening may or may not have had an drive? M~t students work half of the day or af..l!!r school and
fu.pera
arne
an
•
p.m
.
1:
00
- All My Ch ildren 6, 1~; News. 3; Secret Storm 8; Green
Adams; .one grandson in Sunday.
owner, many of the animal victims do. One can only bope that need transportation and can't afford chauffeurs.
Acres 20 ; Not For Women Only 15.
1: 20 -;-- Fashions in ·Sewing 3.
We r~gnize the difficulty in accommodating parking Peoria, Dl., and three . great.
roadside pet owners will make better provisions for the safety of
grandchildren.
1:30
- Let ' s Make A' Dea l ·6, 13; 3 On A Match ·3, ~. 15 ; As the
their animals, and that drivers wiiiJ&gt;JI forth an extra effort to spaces and feel t!ie students and the administration should joint· ·World Turns 8, 10 .
'
Funeral services will be held
ly solve this problem.
·
guard life outside tbe automobile as well as within.
2:00 - Days of qur Lives 3, 4 , 15 ; Newlywed Game 13; Mike
Douglas 6 ; Gurd lng Light 8, 10.
3 p.in, today at the McCoyInterested (11 answers, Mary Beth Fischer and Janet Yoho,
Mr. and Mrs. Michael W. Kelly.
2:30
- Dating Game 13 ; Doctors 3, 4, 15 ; Edge of Night a, 10.
THREE
RUNS
MADE
Moore
Funeral
Horne
in
Vlnton
Seniors at GAllS.
3:00
- General f:iosp ita l 6. l'J ;_ Another World 3, 4, 15'; Love
GALLIPOLIS
Three
with Rev. C. J. Lemley ofSplendored .Th rng 8, 10 ; 30-Minutes Wit h 20. . ·
Kids sho11ldn 't have pay
ficiating . Burial will be in emergency run's . were made 3: 30- Ret urn to Peyton Place 3, 15 ; ·One Life to Li ve 6 13 ;
Oughtta be worth $1.25
Secret Storm 10; . French Cht r 20; Merv Griffir1 8; 'Phil
Friday by tile Ga!Ua County
Vinton Memorial Park.
. Donahue 4.
.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Volunteer
Emergency
Squad
..
.
Friends
may
call
after
II
4:00 - Mr . Cartoon J r Ses·ame St. 20;·33; Love Amer ic an S'tyle
Middleport, Ohio 1
April6, 1973 a .m . today at the funeral home. Admitted at the Holzer Medical
1~; Somerset 15; Yuckleberry Hound-Yogi · Bear 6·· Movie
March 31, 1973
Dear Sir:
" The Great Sioux Upr ising" 10.
.
'
'
Center as medical patients
Mr . Editor:
·.·
4:
30
Petticoat
Junct
ion
3;.
I
Love
Lucy
6;
Gilligan's
Isla
rid 8;
The people of Gallia County have very few yearly events to
-were Everett Lancaster, 83, a
Dan iel Boone ~J ; Dick Van Dyke 15; Mer v Griffin&lt;~ .
This letter is to strongly protest against the school kids going· look forward to. Of course, tbe biggest of the ·year is the Junior Mrs. Sarah
resident of Rodney-Cora Rd. , 5: 00- Bonanza J, 4; Hazel 8; Mr . Rogers 20, 33 ; Andy Gr iff ith
to school on two Saturdays, the 7tlfilnd 14th of April.
,
15 ; Big Valley 4.
Fair. The Bob Evans• Fall Festival is getting bigger and better
MIDDLEPORT Mrs . Gertrude Neal, 80, Court St. ,
First of all , the kids didn't strike. It was the teachers. The .each year. The Fourth of July holiday offers four days of very
5: 30 - .Beverly Hil lbillies 8; Elec. Co. 33; Gomer Py le 13 ; 'Death
Sarah Margaret Wise, Mid: · and Sara Dray, 69,9 White Ave .
Valley Days 15; Hodge,x&gt;dge Lodg e 20 .
·
kids were up and ready' to go. The Board of Education is the ones
good ent.ertainment.
5 : 55 -· Earl Nightingale 15.
dleport RD I, 57, who died
who wouldn 't meet with the teachers to setUe it sooner. So why
6:00 - NewsJ. 4, 8, 10, 15 ; ABC News 13 · SeSame St 20· Around
In .the past the annual cancer variety show has . been Saturday morning at Veterans ·
·the Bend 33.
'
· '
should the.kids be punished and made to stay in a school all day
something to look forward to . When this year 's program was Memorial Hospital, was born
.6: 30 - ABC News 6; CBS News 8, 10 ; I Dream of Jeannie 13 ;
on a Saturday ?_
.
. .
News J. 4, 15; Insigh t 33. .
released, I was very disappointed. A very large percent of this . Sept. 13, 1915 in Columbus,
I want the kids to have an education, oot I believe in this case ·area's people are good old country folks who .enjoy c6untry and
7:00
Truth
or
Coo
seq
.
3;
Beat
the
Clock
4 · News 6 10 · Circus
Ohio, tile daughter of the late
FIRE DOUSED
13 ; What's 'My line 8; Elec. Co. 20; Read Your WaYUp 33 ;
Meigs County is carrying things a little too far. Middlepl!r!
gospel music. They are not very much interested in . baton Walter and · Cora . Frasier
Pass It On 15.
GALLIPOLIS
Damage
schools only missed two days this year and had three days left to
twirling or ballet.
Farley . She was also preceded was ffiinor in ·a fire Friday 7: 30 - To Tell the _ Tru~6 ; Young Dr. Kildare B; Hollywood
miss before any-make-up days had to be done.
~
Squ~res 4; Traffrc Court 10 ; l)o You Read Me 20; Ep'isode
The local churches haw some outstanding singing grou)is in death by a brother.
afternoon ·a t tile Federal-Mogul
Ad ron 33 ; Bobby Goldsboro 3; Movie " The K ing·&amp;-1" 13. ·
I just wonder what the teachers and Board of Education
that would be happy to participate. Groups such as The
Sllfvivors are. her husband , . Plant, 2160 Eastern. Ave, City 8:00- ~owan &amp; Martin 's Laugh -In J , 4, 15 ; Spring Is Special 3;
would think if all the kids would sbow up at thejr school with
Rook1es 6; Gun smoke 8, 10 ; V 0 Blues 20, 33.
·
Redeemers, The Shaffer Family, The Young Americans, Tex Willie; three daughters, ·Mrs. . fi~emen said a ·cooling water
protest signs instead of going to schooL
·
9 : 00 -:- _Here 's l ucy 8, 10; Movies " The Secret War of Harry
Harrison and the Grand Squares have always drawn lai-ge Clarence (Hilda) McDaniel, valve in ·a condenser was
. Fngg " 3, 4, 15 ; " Situation Hope l~ss-but Not Seriqus" 6, 13 :
I am glad the teachers got what they wanted.- But I don 't
audiences.
Where ls the War on VD?
·
• · ·
Middleport RD I: Mrs. Russell shutoff causing the condenser
think this "school on Saturday" should be put on the kids, I don 't
9;
30
DOr
is
Day
B,
10;
Book
Beat
20,
33.
· I think the ·Cancer Crusade is something we all want to
00- News 20; Capitol Beat 33 ; Bill Cosby a, 10.
believe the kids shoold or could be made, to go on these-two days. ~ support- and ;e sh-ould have an ailnual program that is en- (Tiiebna Jean) Schoonover, to becOme oVerheated. An 10:
Middleport, and Mrs., Sidney employee used a foam and dry 10: 30 _._ Wa ll Street Week 33.
Everyone else protests or strikes, why not the kids ? They
,
tertaining enough that. anyone would be willing io pay $1.2.5 to (Carol ) Hayman, Middleport chemical extingllisher to put 11 : 00 - News3, 4, 6, B, 10, 13, 15.
sure have gOOd reason 1h ~is case:
11: ~~- ~ohony Carson 3. ~~ 15 ; Rod Serllng at lax 6. 1J ; Movies
see.
.
..,.
RDI; a son, Roland L. Wise-1 out tile fire before the lire
t Make Waves '' 8; '' The lion:'' 10.
Name withheld on request.
1:00 - Focus on Columbus 4;' NeWs ·t J .
Mrs. Cecil Cook, Rt. 3 Middleport RD I; two sisters, department arrived.
2:· 00 -- News 4 .

Gee

'
OPIIDAILY
10 TO 9

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~
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~~

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PRIMUS 'PROPANE

·LANTERNS
$

99

HECK'S
REG. 116.99

ALKA-SELTZER

37°

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THESPIAJFOIMII
DRY LOOK
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LIMIT OlE .

HECK'S REG. '1.19

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�•
20 - The SWldav Times ·Sentinel, Sunday, April S, 1973

'Frisco GHS blanks Chesapeake Record ·o pening
.. . 11-0 for second vicior day turnout at
tops ~ eds
~·~·····'"'~"'"""" ~·
y Indians 0 pener
GM.&lt;M'OU&lt; - .,....,.

CINCINNATI (UPI&gt;
The San Fr~ncisco
Giants squandered an early five-run lead and then
came back to beat the Cincinnati Reds 7·5 on Bobby
Bonds' one-out, two·run bases-loaded double in the
ll th inning Saturday.

Garry . Maddox touche~ off · Willoughby and Bobby Bonds

th.e wm nmg rally w1th a smgle

co nn ecte d for consecuU ve

ofll?ser Clay Carroll . After a
sacnf1ce moved Maddox to
second, Da ve Rader was intentw na lly walked . Carr oll
then hit Alan GaiJaghe r with a
pitched ball to load the bases
· and set the s tage for ~onds'
ga me.wi nning blow down the
leftfield line.
Rookie Elias Sosa, the las t of
four Gian t pitChers; picked ~ p
the victory while snuffing out a
R c~l s' threat in the lOth inning
and i hen pitching a scoreless ·
II !11.

hom ers off Red lefty Tom Han .

Until the eighth innin g
Willoughby had restricted the
Reds to a single by J ohnny
Bench and a doub le by Joe
Mor gan and during one stage
r elired 15 batters in a row.

.

•

Sue Dickie
cops second
,
swzm crown
Ge rm a ny
H AM B U RG'
( UP! ) - South African Mer.

Gi ant Ri ghtha nder Ji m
Willoughby n'.E!&amp; working on a

maid Sue Dickie Saturday
captur ed he r second title at the

two-hit shu tout when the Reds
exp loded fo r five runs in the

""'

· htha d
J.
d
r1 g
n er un Ni ay and
o~ ·
;· f
D
B
~mor re •e er uve
urnette
combined their mound efforts
. here Saturday on Memorial
. ld
· F 1e
to blank visiting
Chesapeake !M on just two
.
h tts.
.
The non-lellgue triwnph left
Coach Jim Osborne's Blue
Devils with a 2-1 season mark.
Coach Tom McMillen's Pan!he rs dropped to 1-4 on the
year.
The Blue Devils banged out

by Mark Kiesling, Kev Sheets
and Dave Burnette.
After scoring ·a single run in
the first , GAHS plated five runs
by batting around in the
second. GAHS added five more.
markers as nine men went to
the plate in ·the bottom of the
· th ·n · · g
SIX ' mn ·
Niday hurled the first five
frames for Gallipolis, giving up
harmJess singles to Kirk
Gillen and Kev Rice in the third
rong. Those were the Pantllers'

'was Bobby

Tol an ' ~

home run

The 16-yeaP-old lass cove red

with two mnners aboard which

Hie d istance in 4:30.37 minutes

·
•
•
beating Wes t Germany 'S Uta
Schietz who fini shed second in

clima xed the rally a nd se nt

Willoughby to the .showers.
The Giants bU ilt up a 3-0 lead
at th e expen se o[ J ack

Billingham · before the Red
rig hthande r departed fOr a
pinl: h-hittcr in the sixth inning,
The· last of the tl1ree runs came

on Wi llie McCov ey 's third
inning homer.

The Gian ts went ahea d 5·0 in
lh e · seventh

innin g

wh en

'

BOSTON (UP!) ~ Carl
Yastrzemski clubbed his
seeond home run in two days
and added three otller hits

shigled home a run in Boston's
four run sixth inning outburst,
singled in tlle first and doubled
in the fifth inning before ending
a perfect four-for-four· per.
fonnance witll a walk in tlle
eighth.
Petrocelli's homer came in
the eighth with Yastrzemski
and Reggie Smith aboard after
the Red Sox !)as a lready
wrapped up the game.
Designated hitter Orlando
· Cepeda drove in Boston hms in
the first and fourth innings
witll a pair of sacrifice flies.
The .Yanks got their runs

~~~~~;;hail~!!~:~:~~~;~
as tlle Boston Red Sox trounced

Yastrzemski, who failed to
hit a home run in tlle first 113

games last season, lined a shot
into· rightfield bleachers with

the bases empty in the third
inning for what proved to be
4: 41.09.'
h
On Friday, Miss Dic.ki e won· t e game-winning run as· the
Red Sox took a 3-1 lead .
the 200'me te,· freesty le in the
vastrzemski, who - also
ne w South Afr ican record time
of 2: 10.84 minutes.
And ers Bell bring Of Sweden
gained a comfortable win in the
Me n's 400 Meter Freestyle
which he covered in 4:06.61

Colonels clinch
division
crown
.

minutes.

Ready /or Your In-spection

(6) SECTIONAL MODULAR
DOUBLES To Choose From

•

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UP! ) ~
Rick Mount seized tlle lead for
Kentuckyattllestartofthelast
period with a 15-foot jwnp shot
Saturday .and t~e- Colonels
stormed to a 114-103 victory
over the Virgiflia Squires to
clinc h their ABA Eastern
Division Playoff Series, four
games to one .
The nationally-televised
game drew an ABA record
crowd of !6,687 in Freedom
Hall.
The Colonels parlayed tlle
tim ely shooting of Dan Issei,
Jim O'Brien and Walt Simon
with Artis Gilmore's mastery
of the backboards and Simon's .
excellent defense . against
Julius Erving ro advance to the
final round of the Eastern
Division against the carolina
Cougars.
The first two games of tlle

Best

START AT

........ 58995

SPECIFICATIONS:

* May Be _Bought

With Attached Garoge

6" Aluminum Lap Siding. Gable Roof-rated
40 lbs. Sq. Ft. loading (Code Vented). Asphalt
Shmgles No . 240 (3 in 1 Strip Seal Down). Wood
Single Hung Windows, W· Storms and Screens.
Wood Door w,Aiuminum Storm (·Front &amp;
· rear&gt;. Shutter!'- . Front Side . Exterior Porch
Lights (front &amp;~ rear). Gutters and Downs pouts. 90" Ceiling Throughout . Plank-Style
Ce1hng Board. 3-12 Roof Pitch. Cross-Bridged
Basement Type Door-Rated 40 Ibs. ( !,.ive
Load) Sq . Ft. On-Site Construction Designed
Frame. De ta c hable Hitches . 4" Sidewalls w 14 " Paneling. 2x4 on 16" Centers . Code
Plumbing , Heating, Wiring ._ Lined Wardrobes.
. One _Piece Fiberglass Tub &amp; Shower. Pop-Up
Drams m Bath. Powered Ceiling Vent in Bath .
Code Approved BTU Furnace. 42 Gal. Electric
Wa te r
Heater . 14. Cu.
Ft . Frost Free
Re frigerator . Deluxe ~2" Electric Range,
Range Hood w · Light (Charcoal Packed).
Customized . ~ilchen Cabinetry .._ Styled
Drapery Ensemble w -Under Drape and Tie
Back s, Lving Room, Master Bedroo·m,
D1nette . Nylon Shag or Hi - Lo Ci)rpeting, _Hall,
L1v1ng Room and Dinette w - Tack Bars.
Fe ature Wall of Simulated Texture. Laundry
. Area , Plumbed fo~· Washer &amp; Dryer .' . Fully
In s ulated w -Aiumirum Board Complement.
.
.
We have ·a fwll line of VIN DA[ E M OBILES.
60x 24 ' a s well as 12' &amp; 14' w ides . W ide
sel ec t ion and pri c e ra nge wilh many fl o or
p lan s to choose fro m,

SEE OUR TAURUS &amp; TERRY
TRAILERS

tlle

Bosox trounce Yankees

bottom·.of the eighth inn ing to ' In doo r . S wimm ing Cham.
second straight day, IIJ..5.
ti e the ~c ore .
pionships winning the Women 's
400-mete r fr eesty le.

Steve Holbrook went

.

West Ge r ma n International . the New York Yankees for the

The big blow of the irning

• • • . :. . . ; _

Niday fanned two and
walked tWo dur1'ng hiS
' f1've
innihg stint, In two m
· n1'ngs of
relief, Burnette fanned three
Panthers and retired the final
six Chesapeake batters 1·n·
or..aer
• .· In fact , afte r N'd
I ay
walked Mike Boone in the
four th rung, GAHS Pl'!ch ers
retired the final 11 Panthers in
succession. GAHS played
errorless ball.

or . Seven . Eastern

Divisional Final Series will be
played in North Carolins this
week . The dates have not yet.
been determined.
Ahead m2 . at tlle end of
tllree quarters, Virginia saw its
lead . evaporate when Mount
'pumped in his jwnp shot seven
seconds into the final quarter
and Simon banked in a IS-foot
shot about 30 seconds later to
move the Colonels in front 11683.
The Squires, unable to rely
on Erving for clutch play as

when Gene Michael tagged a
home run down the right field
line in tlle tllird inning and
Horace Clarke scored from
third base on an infield out in
the sixtll. The otller New York
runs came in the ninth on Graig
Nettles' two run homer, his
seco11_d in two days, and an
error by Sox' second baseman
Doug Griffin that allowed
Thurman Munson to score
from second,
Marty Pattin got the win for
Boston but needed nintll inning
relief help from veteran Bob
Veale. Steve Kline gave up
seven of the 10 Boston runs and
took the' loss for the Yankees.
He was . relie.ved by Jim
Magnusrin in tlle sixth inning

who

later'

surrendered

Petrocelli's three-run homer.

tlley have so often in the past,
still fought back to within one
point at 95-94 on a tllree11oirlt
play by Erving, but that
became tlleir last gasp.
Kentucky substitute Ron
Thomas drilled a jump shot
from the circle and two free
throws apiece by Issei and
Simon pushed the Colonels into
a 101·94 advantage.
Issei, the leading scorer of
tlle series, led Kentucky witll 27
points, followed by Simon with
24 and Gilmore and Mount with
20 apiece.
Virginia's leading scorer was
Jim Eakins with 32 points, half
of them in tlle third period.
Erving finished with 3!, but
was held to only eight in the
final hall by the dose-guarding
Simon witll some double-team
assistance. Erving bagged 17
points in the second quarter.
Giltnore was· the game's
leading rebounder with 15,
)Vhile l'.;akins collared 12
rebounds for the Squires.
Erving, usually a big
rebounder factor for Virginia,
was effectively blocked oul.by
the Coloneb; and wound up with
just five rebounds . .
Virginia forged a 62-51 lead
at tlle hall on tllestrength of a
barrage of 10 straight poil)ts to
break a 43-43 tie. The Squires
went ahead 32-29 atthe end of
tlle first period.

Ma1v
. s' hit
'J'
.to
.· rtnS P.'Ll·.
ls
It
NEW YORK (UPl) - Willie
Mays, who hit into a basesloaded double play in the
seventh inning to pull the Mets
out or a potential big inning,
singled home pinch-runner Ted
Martinez with two out in the
ninth · inning Saturday to give
New York a J.o2 victory over tlle
Philadelphia 'Phillies.
Pinch-hitter Ed Kranepool
opened the, Mets ninth by
drawing a walk and. Martinez,
sent in as a runner, moved to
second on (,ln infield out
The Phillies elected to pitch
to Mays, who had gone hitless
in his first four appearances,
but Mays lined a 1·2 pitch off
reliever Dick Selma into center
field to score Martinez.
Mays' hit; his first of the
se~son

in eight at

diS
' .tance

•
•

21 - The Sunday T)mes · Sentinel; Sunday, AprilS. 1973

an

for Chesapeake. He

gave up 11 rUJJs on nine hits, · CLEVELA ND ( UPI )
r
•
anned three and walked four .

Maybe it's part of the nostalgia

CHS committed three errors. craze that is sweeping the
Gallipolis stole three bases, country. All · of a sudde n,
CHS stole two.

baseball is alive and well In
Kev Sheets paced GAHS at ·Cleveland. Yes, Cleveland .
the plate with two singles and a
It was like the 1940s and the
double in four trips. Sheets had
era of Bill Veeck in Cleveland
four RBis, Mark Kiesling bad a
double and single in four trips, a gain Saturday. And there
and scored three runs for the were no· gimmicks . No balls,
winners: Kiesling had two of bats or caps heing given away.
the Devils' three stolen bases. Just opening day and a fine
The Blue Devils will journey pitching match ~ Gaylord
Perry vs. Mickey Lolich.
to Pt. Pieasant Monday for a
" The fans are _there, all they
non-league encounter with the need is the ~ttraction ,"
Big -Blacks.
beamed Cleveland Indians '

Box score -of Saturday's

victory :
Chesapeake Panthers (0)

Player-Pos.
Kev Rice, ss
Dale Holstein, 2b
Rusty Marcum, 2b (4)
Mike Boone, Jb
Bob Runyon , rf
Dave Sheets, c
Pete Rij:e, cf
Denny Burke, 1 b
Kirk Gillen, If
Steve Holbrook, p

AB R H
3 0 1
1 0 0
2 0 0

2 0 0
J

0 0

3 0 0
2 o o
2 0 0

2 0 I

1 0 0
T()TALS
21 0 2
GAHSBLUE DEVILS(IIJ
Player-Pos.
AB "R H
Brett Wilson , 2b

RayWeiher , 2b(6)

Mark Kiesling , cf , 1b
Jim Niday, p

3

1 1

o 1 0
.4 3 2
2· 1 0

Skipper Johnson, 1b 161. 0 1 0
Kev S~ets. If

o 3
2 o o
4

Jim Perry, ss

2 0 0

Bill Holland, ss (31
Dave Burnette, 1b-p
Dave Thomas, c
Leon Briggs, rf
Dick Barcus: rf (6·)
Mike Watson, 3b

president Nick Mile!l as he
watched 74,420 fans jam their
way into Cleveland stadiwn .
The largest crowd to witness
a Cleveland opener since 1948
when 73,163 saw the Indians
play the.St. Louis Browns sat in
53 degree weather to watch
Perry toss a four,hitter as the
Indians handed tlle Detroit
Tigers a 2-1 ·defeat in the
season operier for both teams.
"!! was a great team effort
and I predicted two weeks ago
that we would get 60,000 for the
opening game,'' added Miletti.
"Maybe this is an omen," he
added .when noting that the

Indians won the World Series in
1948. Last year, the biggest
crowd for an Indian game was
37,000. 1n tbe last few years, tlle
Indians have been rumored to
be verge of heading to various
places besides Cleveland
because of poor attendance but
Miletti seems to bave stirred
up new enthusiasm.

WALTON TO PLAY

.'

:INDIANAPOUS, lnd. (UP!)
- Bill Walton, · UCLA's 6-11
super center, has agreed to
play in at ieast two of tlle sixgame series between the
United States team and the
Olympic champion Soviet
• Union Basketball team.
Walton's decision was made
public Saturday evening in a
· joint announcement by tlle
Indianapolis-based American
Athletic Union of the United
States, sponsor of the games,
and Bob Cousy, head coach for
the U. S. Team.

AMONG OUR MANY ENDEAVORS ARE: CARTER &amp; EVANS BUILDING SUPPLIES
CARTER &amp; EVANS TRANSPORTATION, COMME-R·CIAL-BVILDINGS, CRANE WORK ·
AND EXCAVATION, AND THE SPECIAL PROJECTS SHOWN BELOW.
1

o o

000 000 G- 0-2-3
150 005 x-oll -9-0

Winning pitcher- Niday (1 0); Burnette in 6th; Loser Holbrook. Innings pitched Niday 5, Burnette 2; Holbrook ·
6 ; 'At bats off Niday 15,
Burnette 6 ; Holbrook 26 ; Runs
off Holbrook - 11; Base-onballs by - Niday 2; Holbrook
4; Struck out by - Niday 2;
Burnette3 ; Holbrook 3: Left on
'base ,___ GAHS 3, Chesapeake 2.

•ALL CITY UTILITIES

eLANJ)SCAPED LOTS

.-CONCRETE STREETS

•APPLIANCES ·

•

THE NEW HOLZER
MEDICAL CENTER.
AMERICA'S LARGEST TRAVI;L AG,ENCY

TOTAL
OF 36 NEW HOMES
WILL BE
.
.
BUlLT IN THIS BEAUTIFUL SUBDIVISION.
TEN HOUSES HAVE ALREADY BEEN SOLD.
'

Buy or Build!

,...

'

(Night games not included)
East;
.

Baltimore
Boston
Cieve land
Detroit
New York
Milwaukee

W L Pel. GB
2
2
1
0
0
0
. West

0
0
0
1
2
2

1.000
1.000
.000
.000

:ooo
.000

112
Ph
2
2,

W L Pet. Gli

Minnesota
·california

2 o 1.000
1 0 1.000

~~~~a5go

~ ~ :~~~ ~

lf?

Kan~e-s-'C i t y

0 1 .000 11h
Oakland
0 2 .000 2
' Saturday's Results
Cleveland 2 Detroit 1 .
Baltimore B Milwaukee....-7- (10
inn ings )
Bo ston 10 New York 5
Minnesota 5 Oakland J
· Kansas City · at Cali~ornla

· (night)

SanFran.
2 01.000
Houston
1 o 1.000 112
Sa n Digo
1 0 1.000 112
Atlanta
0 1 .000 . 1112
Los Angeles
0 1 .000 1112
Cincinnati
0 2 .000 2
Saturday's Results : .
Ne:-v York 3 PhiladelPhia 2
Chicago 3 M on treal 2 (10 innings)

San Francisco 7 Cincinnati 5
(11 innings)
Los· Angeles

at

S8n

Diego

(night)

. lOnly games S:ched.uled) :
Sunday 's Games

::::

it

FOR SALE
BABY fARMS AT BEAUTIFUL CHAROLAIS HILLS LOCATED ON STATE ROUTE 160 JUST 1 MILE NORTH
OF THE NEW HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
'

'

:l

(·
~:~~:

0

'

IAII Times EST)

Philadelphia at New York 12

10 X40 2 BR
· ~im~o~is at Pittsburgh, 2 (1
p.m.l
·
!Ox512 BR
Montreal af Ch icago 12 : 15 .-. 10x56 3 BR

~~s'ton

p.m.l

at Atlanta 2 11, 30 . 12x41 2 BR
·,
· 12xSI2BR

San Francisco at Cin cinnat i

Chicago at Texas !night)

12-xS-6 3

BR

p.m.) .

12: 15 p.m.)
Los Angeles at San Diego 14
p.m.)

12x 61 ·3 BR
20x43 3 BR

New · York at 'Boston 12 p.m .)
Kansas Ci ty at Cali fornia (5

Ci ncinnati at Atlanta (night)

Double wide

Sunday's Games.

Milwaukee a~ Baltimorej2: 15

p.m.l

.

.

Detroit' at Cleveland (2 p.m . )
at Oakland (4: 30

Minnesof~

Monday's Games

Los Angeles at Houston (f')ight) ,
San Diego at Sah Francisco
(Only games schedu led)

p .m . )

·chicago

e~t

TeXas (8: 30 p.m .)

Monday's Games

·

TO Mf:J:;T TODAY

ATHENS - The annual Fish
Cleve land at New York
and Game Hearing fpr Wildlife
{Only game scheduled)
b~ held here
District Four
. _ National League Standings
tnday, beginning at I p .m. in
By United Press International
(Night games not included)
the meeting room of the Ohio
,
East
·•
of Natural
·Department
'
W L ' Pet. GB
Resour~es Building at 360 East
New Yor k
2 0 1.000
Chicago .
2 0 1.000 '
. State St. Anyone interested in
Pittsburgh
1 0 1.000
St . Louis
0 1 .000 1112 · changes in fishing and hunting
Mon.t real
0 2 .000 2
regulations for 1973 and 1974 Is
Phi ladelph ia
0 2 .000 . 2
urged to attend this mteting.

will

I

)

$2995
$3595
$3995
$3595
$3995
$4295
$4995

::::

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Through the_ years; OhiO Valley Bank h?s incorporated just such ·
ho~e-plannm~ counsel as a part of their total service. II you
.
are m.terested 1n a ,home.mortgage loan of any kind, the people
at Ohio Valley can and wtll be happy to give you all the details on
the ?dvantages and disadvantages of each. When you have
decided whtch method (buy or build) best suits your family's
needs, OVB can arrange a loan that gets things going.

r,)
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li'PROI. a ACRE TIACT ·

I
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NOW LEASING' • • •

'•'•

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TWO BEAUTIFUL BUILDINGS OF 10,000 SQ. FT. EACH

[~j

Space already leased includes a Clothing Care Centre, Fast Food Market,

.~::..-..:

Beauty Salon, and Carry Out Pizza. 2,000 sq. ft. ayailable in first building.

,,-:.:-...

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G.et all the details about our low mortgage rates.

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· Carter &amp; Evans Inc. of . Gallipolis, Ohio recently purchas ed 170 acre s of th e
locally renowned EEE Ran ch and are now offering for .sale this c hoi c e 48 a cre
tract in 21/ , to 5 acre Baby Farms.
·
.
·
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t:ac~ farm is easily accessible from the wide stone r oad . t:acn tarm borders
the Galli a County Rura! ·Water System.
The entire tract is restricted just enough to insure that the beaut iful sc e n e r y
and the pleasant country atmosphere will be maintained ·and no i e nough Ia i'n terfere with enioyable ' co untry .li vi ng .
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CARTER &amp; EVANS, INC. ·

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PltASl I

MOBILE HOMES .
PH. 446·0115

.,-f.&lt;:-Fc ) /."-"'""-

.......

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For an~ far_nily about to make probably the largest and most
expenstve mv_es~men~ of their lives, the answer to the question,
butld .or buy, _tsn t a simple one. Construction costs . :. land
,v(ilues .•. space requirements ... financing charges ... these
are all important questions that must .be answered.

.•..

! ~!

0

Many 'more to (hoose from .

Gallipolis., O,

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:;::

All homes are total electric,
cortlpletely furnishe"d, set of
steps, 1/•" birch paneling,
house -type doors , · Storm
windows. From $250.00
down, Delivered Free.

Eastern Ave.

LOCATED 3.7 MILES WEST OF GALLIPOLIS ON RT. 35

:....~)[

$6500

TRI.(X)UNTY

SPRING VALLEY PLAZA

~:::

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,.

are nOW living in OUr newly
completed homes!
.

MORE FAMILIES LIVE IN NATIONAL HOMES THAN ANY OTHER HOMES IN THE WORLD

~ ,...,_,,...

NEW ·
MOBILE HOMES

••

WISEMAN AGENCY EXCLUSIVE SALES REPRESENTATIVE ,

winner of southpaw Jon
Matlack. Matlack, last year's
Rookie of the Year in tlle
National League, went the full
nine innings for the Mets
allowing only four hits.
. The Phillies tied the score at
. 2-2 in the sixth inning when Bill
Robinson cracked his first
homer of the\season.
The Phillies grabbed a i:O
lead in the first when Robinson
drew a one out walk, stole
second ·and scored on a single
by Willie Montanez. The Mets

PUBLIc
WHOLESAL.E

•

' 1)

bats, made a

Sehna, an ex·Met, lost 'to
New York for the nintll time in
his career. He · has never
beaten the Mets.

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·. Some. Homes are now
·under construction in
this beautiful new
subdivision. Families

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Jones.

W L Pet. 'GB

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ON ST. RT. 35. NEAR

the season and took a 2-llead in
the third on a double by Rusty
Staub and a si~8le l!Y Cleoh
West

'

WEST OF GALLIPOLIS

CZaii446-0699

tied the score in the second on
John ll!ilner.'s first homer of

American League Standings
BY United Press International

•

LOCATED 6 MILES

Score by innings :

Chesapeake
Gallipolis

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A HOME OF YOUR OWN • • •

·P.ARKLANE

·For airline reservations around the -corner ...
or around the world _ ..

26 11 9

TOTALS

.

Nice, the sun-blessed capi.
tal of the Riviera , was
founded by Greeks in the
fourth century B.C.

2 2 1·
1 1 o
1

A GROWING COMPANY .• HELPING GALLIA COUNTY
·GROW • • PHONE 446--4905
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- EXCAVATING AND BUILDING CONTRACTORS

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10,000 sq. ft. in second.

WUI finish

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to suit tennant.

AU buildings complete with sprinkling system ~ .
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CONCRETE PARKING LOT THAT WILL
ACCOMMODATE 125 CARS.
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�•
20 - The SWldav Times ·Sentinel, Sunday, April S, 1973

'Frisco GHS blanks Chesapeake Record ·o pening
.. . 11-0 for second vicior day turnout at
tops ~ eds
~·~·····'"'~"'"""" ~·
y Indians 0 pener
GM.&lt;M'OU&lt; - .,....,.

CINCINNATI (UPI&gt;
The San Fr~ncisco
Giants squandered an early five-run lead and then
came back to beat the Cincinnati Reds 7·5 on Bobby
Bonds' one-out, two·run bases-loaded double in the
ll th inning Saturday.

Garry . Maddox touche~ off · Willoughby and Bobby Bonds

th.e wm nmg rally w1th a smgle

co nn ecte d for consecuU ve

ofll?ser Clay Carroll . After a
sacnf1ce moved Maddox to
second, Da ve Rader was intentw na lly walked . Carr oll
then hit Alan GaiJaghe r with a
pitched ball to load the bases
· and set the s tage for ~onds'
ga me.wi nning blow down the
leftfield line.
Rookie Elias Sosa, the las t of
four Gian t pitChers; picked ~ p
the victory while snuffing out a
R c~l s' threat in the lOth inning
and i hen pitching a scoreless ·
II !11.

hom ers off Red lefty Tom Han .

Until the eighth innin g
Willoughby had restricted the
Reds to a single by J ohnny
Bench and a doub le by Joe
Mor gan and during one stage
r elired 15 batters in a row.

.

•

Sue Dickie
cops second
,
swzm crown
Ge rm a ny
H AM B U RG'
( UP! ) - South African Mer.

Gi ant Ri ghtha nder Ji m
Willoughby n'.E!&amp; working on a

maid Sue Dickie Saturday
captur ed he r second title at the

two-hit shu tout when the Reds
exp loded fo r five runs in the

""'

· htha d
J.
d
r1 g
n er un Ni ay and
o~ ·
;· f
D
B
~mor re •e er uve
urnette
combined their mound efforts
. here Saturday on Memorial
. ld
· F 1e
to blank visiting
Chesapeake !M on just two
.
h tts.
.
The non-lellgue triwnph left
Coach Jim Osborne's Blue
Devils with a 2-1 season mark.
Coach Tom McMillen's Pan!he rs dropped to 1-4 on the
year.
The Blue Devils banged out

by Mark Kiesling, Kev Sheets
and Dave Burnette.
After scoring ·a single run in
the first , GAHS plated five runs
by batting around in the
second. GAHS added five more.
markers as nine men went to
the plate in ·the bottom of the
· th ·n · · g
SIX ' mn ·
Niday hurled the first five
frames for Gallipolis, giving up
harmJess singles to Kirk
Gillen and Kev Rice in the third
rong. Those were the Pantllers'

'was Bobby

Tol an ' ~

home run

The 16-yeaP-old lass cove red

with two mnners aboard which

Hie d istance in 4:30.37 minutes

·
•
•
beating Wes t Germany 'S Uta
Schietz who fini shed second in

clima xed the rally a nd se nt

Willoughby to the .showers.
The Giants bU ilt up a 3-0 lead
at th e expen se o[ J ack

Billingham · before the Red
rig hthande r departed fOr a
pinl: h-hittcr in the sixth inning,
The· last of the tl1ree runs came

on Wi llie McCov ey 's third
inning homer.

The Gian ts went ahea d 5·0 in
lh e · seventh

innin g

wh en

'

BOSTON (UP!) ~ Carl
Yastrzemski clubbed his
seeond home run in two days
and added three otller hits

shigled home a run in Boston's
four run sixth inning outburst,
singled in tlle first and doubled
in the fifth inning before ending
a perfect four-for-four· per.
fonnance witll a walk in tlle
eighth.
Petrocelli's homer came in
the eighth with Yastrzemski
and Reggie Smith aboard after
the Red Sox !)as a lready
wrapped up the game.
Designated hitter Orlando
· Cepeda drove in Boston hms in
the first and fourth innings
witll a pair of sacrifice flies.
The .Yanks got their runs

~~~~~;;hail~!!~:~:~~~;~
as tlle Boston Red Sox trounced

Yastrzemski, who failed to
hit a home run in tlle first 113

games last season, lined a shot
into· rightfield bleachers with

the bases empty in the third
inning for what proved to be
4: 41.09.'
h
On Friday, Miss Dic.ki e won· t e game-winning run as· the
Red Sox took a 3-1 lead .
the 200'me te,· freesty le in the
vastrzemski, who - also
ne w South Afr ican record time
of 2: 10.84 minutes.
And ers Bell bring Of Sweden
gained a comfortable win in the
Me n's 400 Meter Freestyle
which he covered in 4:06.61

Colonels clinch
division
crown
.

minutes.

Ready /or Your In-spection

(6) SECTIONAL MODULAR
DOUBLES To Choose From

•

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UP! ) ~
Rick Mount seized tlle lead for
Kentuckyattllestartofthelast
period with a 15-foot jwnp shot
Saturday .and t~e- Colonels
stormed to a 114-103 victory
over the Virgiflia Squires to
clinc h their ABA Eastern
Division Playoff Series, four
games to one .
The nationally-televised
game drew an ABA record
crowd of !6,687 in Freedom
Hall.
The Colonels parlayed tlle
tim ely shooting of Dan Issei,
Jim O'Brien and Walt Simon
with Artis Gilmore's mastery
of the backboards and Simon's .
excellent defense . against
Julius Erving ro advance to the
final round of the Eastern
Division against the carolina
Cougars.
The first two games of tlle

Best

START AT

........ 58995

SPECIFICATIONS:

* May Be _Bought

With Attached Garoge

6" Aluminum Lap Siding. Gable Roof-rated
40 lbs. Sq. Ft. loading (Code Vented). Asphalt
Shmgles No . 240 (3 in 1 Strip Seal Down). Wood
Single Hung Windows, W· Storms and Screens.
Wood Door w,Aiuminum Storm (·Front &amp;
· rear&gt;. Shutter!'- . Front Side . Exterior Porch
Lights (front &amp;~ rear). Gutters and Downs pouts. 90" Ceiling Throughout . Plank-Style
Ce1hng Board. 3-12 Roof Pitch. Cross-Bridged
Basement Type Door-Rated 40 Ibs. ( !,.ive
Load) Sq . Ft. On-Site Construction Designed
Frame. De ta c hable Hitches . 4" Sidewalls w 14 " Paneling. 2x4 on 16" Centers . Code
Plumbing , Heating, Wiring ._ Lined Wardrobes.
. One _Piece Fiberglass Tub &amp; Shower. Pop-Up
Drams m Bath. Powered Ceiling Vent in Bath .
Code Approved BTU Furnace. 42 Gal. Electric
Wa te r
Heater . 14. Cu.
Ft . Frost Free
Re frigerator . Deluxe ~2" Electric Range,
Range Hood w · Light (Charcoal Packed).
Customized . ~ilchen Cabinetry .._ Styled
Drapery Ensemble w -Under Drape and Tie
Back s, Lving Room, Master Bedroo·m,
D1nette . Nylon Shag or Hi - Lo Ci)rpeting, _Hall,
L1v1ng Room and Dinette w - Tack Bars.
Fe ature Wall of Simulated Texture. Laundry
. Area , Plumbed fo~· Washer &amp; Dryer .' . Fully
In s ulated w -Aiumirum Board Complement.
.
.
We have ·a fwll line of VIN DA[ E M OBILES.
60x 24 ' a s well as 12' &amp; 14' w ides . W ide
sel ec t ion and pri c e ra nge wilh many fl o or
p lan s to choose fro m,

SEE OUR TAURUS &amp; TERRY
TRAILERS

tlle

Bosox trounce Yankees

bottom·.of the eighth inn ing to ' In doo r . S wimm ing Cham.
second straight day, IIJ..5.
ti e the ~c ore .
pionships winning the Women 's
400-mete r fr eesty le.

Steve Holbrook went

.

West Ge r ma n International . the New York Yankees for the

The big blow of the irning

• • • . :. . . ; _

Niday fanned two and
walked tWo dur1'ng hiS
' f1've
innihg stint, In two m
· n1'ngs of
relief, Burnette fanned three
Panthers and retired the final
six Chesapeake batters 1·n·
or..aer
• .· In fact , afte r N'd
I ay
walked Mike Boone in the
four th rung, GAHS Pl'!ch ers
retired the final 11 Panthers in
succession. GAHS played
errorless ball.

or . Seven . Eastern

Divisional Final Series will be
played in North Carolins this
week . The dates have not yet.
been determined.
Ahead m2 . at tlle end of
tllree quarters, Virginia saw its
lead . evaporate when Mount
'pumped in his jwnp shot seven
seconds into the final quarter
and Simon banked in a IS-foot
shot about 30 seconds later to
move the Colonels in front 11683.
The Squires, unable to rely
on Erving for clutch play as

when Gene Michael tagged a
home run down the right field
line in tlle tllird inning and
Horace Clarke scored from
third base on an infield out in
the sixtll. The otller New York
runs came in the ninth on Graig
Nettles' two run homer, his
seco11_d in two days, and an
error by Sox' second baseman
Doug Griffin that allowed
Thurman Munson to score
from second,
Marty Pattin got the win for
Boston but needed nintll inning
relief help from veteran Bob
Veale. Steve Kline gave up
seven of the 10 Boston runs and
took the' loss for the Yankees.
He was . relie.ved by Jim
Magnusrin in tlle sixth inning

who

later'

surrendered

Petrocelli's three-run homer.

tlley have so often in the past,
still fought back to within one
point at 95-94 on a tllree11oirlt
play by Erving, but that
became tlleir last gasp.
Kentucky substitute Ron
Thomas drilled a jump shot
from the circle and two free
throws apiece by Issei and
Simon pushed the Colonels into
a 101·94 advantage.
Issei, the leading scorer of
tlle series, led Kentucky witll 27
points, followed by Simon with
24 and Gilmore and Mount with
20 apiece.
Virginia's leading scorer was
Jim Eakins with 32 points, half
of them in tlle third period.
Erving finished with 3!, but
was held to only eight in the
final hall by the dose-guarding
Simon witll some double-team
assistance. Erving bagged 17
points in the second quarter.
Giltnore was· the game's
leading rebounder with 15,
)Vhile l'.;akins collared 12
rebounds for the Squires.
Erving, usually a big
rebounder factor for Virginia,
was effectively blocked oul.by
the Coloneb; and wound up with
just five rebounds . .
Virginia forged a 62-51 lead
at tlle hall on tllestrength of a
barrage of 10 straight poil)ts to
break a 43-43 tie. The Squires
went ahead 32-29 atthe end of
tlle first period.

Ma1v
. s' hit
'J'
.to
.· rtnS P.'Ll·.
ls
It
NEW YORK (UPl) - Willie
Mays, who hit into a basesloaded double play in the
seventh inning to pull the Mets
out or a potential big inning,
singled home pinch-runner Ted
Martinez with two out in the
ninth · inning Saturday to give
New York a J.o2 victory over tlle
Philadelphia 'Phillies.
Pinch-hitter Ed Kranepool
opened the, Mets ninth by
drawing a walk and. Martinez,
sent in as a runner, moved to
second on (,ln infield out
The Phillies elected to pitch
to Mays, who had gone hitless
in his first four appearances,
but Mays lined a 1·2 pitch off
reliever Dick Selma into center
field to score Martinez.
Mays' hit; his first of the
se~son

in eight at

diS
' .tance

•
•

21 - The Sunday T)mes · Sentinel; Sunday, AprilS. 1973

an

for Chesapeake. He

gave up 11 rUJJs on nine hits, · CLEVELA ND ( UPI )
r
•
anned three and walked four .

Maybe it's part of the nostalgia

CHS committed three errors. craze that is sweeping the
Gallipolis stole three bases, country. All · of a sudde n,
CHS stole two.

baseball is alive and well In
Kev Sheets paced GAHS at ·Cleveland. Yes, Cleveland .
the plate with two singles and a
It was like the 1940s and the
double in four trips. Sheets had
era of Bill Veeck in Cleveland
four RBis, Mark Kiesling bad a
double and single in four trips, a gain Saturday. And there
and scored three runs for the were no· gimmicks . No balls,
winners: Kiesling had two of bats or caps heing given away.
the Devils' three stolen bases. Just opening day and a fine
The Blue Devils will journey pitching match ~ Gaylord
Perry vs. Mickey Lolich.
to Pt. Pieasant Monday for a
" The fans are _there, all they
non-league encounter with the need is the ~ttraction ,"
Big -Blacks.
beamed Cleveland Indians '

Box score -of Saturday's

victory :
Chesapeake Panthers (0)

Player-Pos.
Kev Rice, ss
Dale Holstein, 2b
Rusty Marcum, 2b (4)
Mike Boone, Jb
Bob Runyon , rf
Dave Sheets, c
Pete Rij:e, cf
Denny Burke, 1 b
Kirk Gillen, If
Steve Holbrook, p

AB R H
3 0 1
1 0 0
2 0 0

2 0 0
J

0 0

3 0 0
2 o o
2 0 0

2 0 I

1 0 0
T()TALS
21 0 2
GAHSBLUE DEVILS(IIJ
Player-Pos.
AB "R H
Brett Wilson , 2b

RayWeiher , 2b(6)

Mark Kiesling , cf , 1b
Jim Niday, p

3

1 1

o 1 0
.4 3 2
2· 1 0

Skipper Johnson, 1b 161. 0 1 0
Kev S~ets. If

o 3
2 o o
4

Jim Perry, ss

2 0 0

Bill Holland, ss (31
Dave Burnette, 1b-p
Dave Thomas, c
Leon Briggs, rf
Dick Barcus: rf (6·)
Mike Watson, 3b

president Nick Mile!l as he
watched 74,420 fans jam their
way into Cleveland stadiwn .
The largest crowd to witness
a Cleveland opener since 1948
when 73,163 saw the Indians
play the.St. Louis Browns sat in
53 degree weather to watch
Perry toss a four,hitter as the
Indians handed tlle Detroit
Tigers a 2-1 ·defeat in the
season operier for both teams.
"!! was a great team effort
and I predicted two weeks ago
that we would get 60,000 for the
opening game,'' added Miletti.
"Maybe this is an omen," he
added .when noting that the

Indians won the World Series in
1948. Last year, the biggest
crowd for an Indian game was
37,000. 1n tbe last few years, tlle
Indians have been rumored to
be verge of heading to various
places besides Cleveland
because of poor attendance but
Miletti seems to bave stirred
up new enthusiasm.

WALTON TO PLAY

.'

:INDIANAPOUS, lnd. (UP!)
- Bill Walton, · UCLA's 6-11
super center, has agreed to
play in at ieast two of tlle sixgame series between the
United States team and the
Olympic champion Soviet
• Union Basketball team.
Walton's decision was made
public Saturday evening in a
· joint announcement by tlle
Indianapolis-based American
Athletic Union of the United
States, sponsor of the games,
and Bob Cousy, head coach for
the U. S. Team.

AMONG OUR MANY ENDEAVORS ARE: CARTER &amp; EVANS BUILDING SUPPLIES
CARTER &amp; EVANS TRANSPORTATION, COMME-R·CIAL-BVILDINGS, CRANE WORK ·
AND EXCAVATION, AND THE SPECIAL PROJECTS SHOWN BELOW.
1

o o

000 000 G- 0-2-3
150 005 x-oll -9-0

Winning pitcher- Niday (1 0); Burnette in 6th; Loser Holbrook. Innings pitched Niday 5, Burnette 2; Holbrook ·
6 ; 'At bats off Niday 15,
Burnette 6 ; Holbrook 26 ; Runs
off Holbrook - 11; Base-onballs by - Niday 2; Holbrook
4; Struck out by - Niday 2;
Burnette3 ; Holbrook 3: Left on
'base ,___ GAHS 3, Chesapeake 2.

•ALL CITY UTILITIES

eLANJ)SCAPED LOTS

.-CONCRETE STREETS

•APPLIANCES ·

•

THE NEW HOLZER
MEDICAL CENTER.
AMERICA'S LARGEST TRAVI;L AG,ENCY

TOTAL
OF 36 NEW HOMES
WILL BE
.
.
BUlLT IN THIS BEAUTIFUL SUBDIVISION.
TEN HOUSES HAVE ALREADY BEEN SOLD.
'

Buy or Build!

,...

'

(Night games not included)
East;
.

Baltimore
Boston
Cieve land
Detroit
New York
Milwaukee

W L Pel. GB
2
2
1
0
0
0
. West

0
0
0
1
2
2

1.000
1.000
.000
.000

:ooo
.000

112
Ph
2
2,

W L Pet. Gli

Minnesota
·california

2 o 1.000
1 0 1.000

~~~~a5go

~ ~ :~~~ ~

lf?

Kan~e-s-'C i t y

0 1 .000 11h
Oakland
0 2 .000 2
' Saturday's Results
Cleveland 2 Detroit 1 .
Baltimore B Milwaukee....-7- (10
inn ings )
Bo ston 10 New York 5
Minnesota 5 Oakland J
· Kansas City · at Cali~ornla

· (night)

SanFran.
2 01.000
Houston
1 o 1.000 112
Sa n Digo
1 0 1.000 112
Atlanta
0 1 .000 . 1112
Los Angeles
0 1 .000 1112
Cincinnati
0 2 .000 2
Saturday's Results : .
Ne:-v York 3 PhiladelPhia 2
Chicago 3 M on treal 2 (10 innings)

San Francisco 7 Cincinnati 5
(11 innings)
Los· Angeles

at

S8n

Diego

(night)

. lOnly games S:ched.uled) :
Sunday 's Games

::::

it

FOR SALE
BABY fARMS AT BEAUTIFUL CHAROLAIS HILLS LOCATED ON STATE ROUTE 160 JUST 1 MILE NORTH
OF THE NEW HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
'

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~:~~:

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IAII Times EST)

Philadelphia at New York 12

10 X40 2 BR
· ~im~o~is at Pittsburgh, 2 (1
p.m.l
·
!Ox512 BR
Montreal af Ch icago 12 : 15 .-. 10x56 3 BR

~~s'ton

p.m.l

at Atlanta 2 11, 30 . 12x41 2 BR
·,
· 12xSI2BR

San Francisco at Cin cinnat i

Chicago at Texas !night)

12-xS-6 3

BR

p.m.) .

12: 15 p.m.)
Los Angeles at San Diego 14
p.m.)

12x 61 ·3 BR
20x43 3 BR

New · York at 'Boston 12 p.m .)
Kansas Ci ty at Cali fornia (5

Ci ncinnati at Atlanta (night)

Double wide

Sunday's Games.

Milwaukee a~ Baltimorej2: 15

p.m.l

.

.

Detroit' at Cleveland (2 p.m . )
at Oakland (4: 30

Minnesof~

Monday's Games

Los Angeles at Houston (f')ight) ,
San Diego at Sah Francisco
(Only games schedu led)

p .m . )

·chicago

e~t

TeXas (8: 30 p.m .)

Monday's Games

·

TO Mf:J:;T TODAY

ATHENS - The annual Fish
Cleve land at New York
and Game Hearing fpr Wildlife
{Only game scheduled)
b~ held here
District Four
. _ National League Standings
tnday, beginning at I p .m. in
By United Press International
(Night games not included)
the meeting room of the Ohio
,
East
·•
of Natural
·Department
'
W L ' Pet. GB
Resour~es Building at 360 East
New Yor k
2 0 1.000
Chicago .
2 0 1.000 '
. State St. Anyone interested in
Pittsburgh
1 0 1.000
St . Louis
0 1 .000 1112 · changes in fishing and hunting
Mon.t real
0 2 .000 2
regulations for 1973 and 1974 Is
Phi ladelph ia
0 2 .000 . 2
urged to attend this mteting.

will

I

)

$2995
$3595
$3995
$3595
$3995
$4295
$4995

::::

:~:

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.1"~/'l'l~,(J
&lt;37.1' ....

Through the_ years; OhiO Valley Bank h?s incorporated just such ·
ho~e-plannm~ counsel as a part of their total service. II you
.
are m.terested 1n a ,home.mortgage loan of any kind, the people
at Ohio Valley can and wtll be happy to give you all the details on
the ?dvantages and disadvantages of each. When you have
decided whtch method (buy or build) best suits your family's
needs, OVB can arrange a loan that gets things going.

r,)
r
,,._

1 146 AI:

1

~' ,";;r~=·' ~ ' . ~ll~2"':-;~ :~~~

· '·'-~

--~:: ·

....

Zlt Ac

QlNCf.PT LAYOtn Cl

li'PROI. a ACRE TIACT ·

I
~

l~

,.

:t

1·1

NOW LEASING' • • •

'•'•

:-:·
:~:~

I

TWO BEAUTIFUL BUILDINGS OF 10,000 SQ. FT. EACH

[~j

Space already leased includes a Clothing Care Centre, Fast Food Market,

.~::..-..:

Beauty Salon, and Carry Out Pizza. 2,000 sq. ft. ayailable in first building.

,,-:.:-...

~\~~
t~

:;:~

..

!.!:
....

:::: ..
~~

.,,.:.:

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~i

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SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
CALL 441!1-4905
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-OFFICE SPACE • COMMERCIAL RETAILERS

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....

G.et all the details about our low mortgage rates.

--

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· Carter &amp; Evans Inc. of . Gallipolis, Ohio recently purchas ed 170 acre s of th e
locally renowned EEE Ran ch and are now offering for .sale this c hoi c e 48 a cre
tract in 21/ , to 5 acre Baby Farms.
·
.
·
·
· ·
t:ac~ farm is easily accessible from the wide stone r oad . t:acn tarm borders
the Galli a County Rura! ·Water System.
The entire tract is restricted just enough to insure that the beaut iful sc e n e r y
and the pleasant country atmosphere will be maintained ·and no i e nough Ia i'n terfere with enioyable ' co untry .li vi ng .
·

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1~1

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'•'•

CARTER &amp; EVANS, INC. ·

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:;::
:;::

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WISEMAN AGENCY EXCLUSIVE SALES REPRESENTATIVE ,

winner of southpaw Jon
Matlack. Matlack, last year's
Rookie of the Year in tlle
National League, went the full
nine innings for the Mets
allowing only four hits.
. The Phillies tied the score at
. 2-2 in the sixth inning when Bill
Robinson cracked his first
homer of the\season.
The Phillies grabbed a i:O
lead in the first when Robinson
drew a one out walk, stole
second ·and scored on a single
by Willie Montanez. The Mets

PUBLIc
WHOLESAL.E

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Sehna, an ex·Met, lost 'to
New York for the nintll time in
his career. He · has never
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the season and took a 2-llead in
the third on a double by Rusty
Staub and a si~8le l!Y Cleoh
West

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tied the score in the second on
John ll!ilner.'s first homer of

American League Standings
BY United Press International

•

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Score by innings :

Chesapeake
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'12- The Sunday Time.- Sentinel, Sunday, AprilS, 1m

Sam tells ·
'b~JJa uties '
AUGUSTA, Ga. (UPI )- rt was Ule perfect day
for rainy.day stories, and Sam Snead got a little wet
but didn't disappoint anybody. He told some perfect
beauties.
Only seven Masters ' contestants managed to
tee off before Saturday's third round was washed
out and put off until today, and the 60-year-old
Snead was the last one who did.
He never got past the first
hole. He didn't even finish it in
fact.
" ! hit a good drive right up
.the middle, got halfway down
the hill, and they said turn
around and come on back.''
s&amp;d Snead, drying out in the
clubhouse where he peeled off
his rain slicker and positioned
the umbrella he had used
against one end of the table he
was sitting at.
Snead, who barely made the
36-hole cut with his 74-76-150
which- leaves him nine shots
behind the leaders, made little
fuss about hsving to go out in
Saturday's heavy downpour.
"I've played in a Jot worse
weather before," he sUd
before going off with Miller
Barber.
He was happy to get back
into the dry, warm clubhouse
though and he made a special
point about setting his umbrella against the table. · He
wanted it standing just right so
the water could drip off it.
"At least it wasn't -lightning

thunders I'm coming off there,
rules or no rules," said snead,
"I saw two men get killed in
Kansas City. I think it was in
1946, no, back even before
Ulat."

" Did you see them get hit?"
Snead was asked.
" l didn't see 'em get hit, but
they were lying .m- the ground
when 1 walked by ."
'At that' moment, a passerby
brushed against the table
Snead was sitting at and
inadvertently kno cked down
the umbrella without bothering
to pick it up.
Snead frowned, picked it up
and put it_back the way it had
been before.

111 remember another time,"

someone said to him. "The
rules say they've gotta stop
play as soon as there's any of
that. II
''The minute it lightnings or

Claims-

pole slot ·
in style

AU(:USTA, Ga. (UP!) They never had a chance to
play · the_· third round of the
Masters Saturday, but they .
tried anyway.
The first seven players
.Uready were on the waterlogged Augusta National
course, where It rained all
morning, when officials conceded the obvious and
suspended play.
They waited more than an
hour before postponing the
round until today and moving

the windup of the tournament when the round was c&amp;led.
to Monday .
It was the first rainout at the
"The whole course ..!V.M in Masters, first of the year's four
casual water," ~id Bobby major championships, since
Nichols, the first player to tee the final rou~d was ,washed out
off. " The fairways were such in 1963, the year Jack Nicklaus
that you couldn't believe. When .. won the first of bis four titles
you were putting, it was. tough here.
to read the currents."
The
weather
bureau
Nichols, who said he did not promised little better conexpect even to attempt to play, ditions for today. The rain was
three-putted the ' first green not ex~d to end until 8 a.m.
from 15 feet for a bogey, made EST
y, only about two
a par at the par-5 second hole hours b ore the third round
andhadhithisteeshotonNo . 3 now is scheduled to begin.

" I'd be concerned if I was the
leader." said Nichols, who is 10
strokes behind. "But it doesn 't
really matter to me."
Gay Brewer Jr. the 1967
champion here, Tommy Aaron,
Bob Dickson Jr., and J . C.
Snead were tied for the 3&amp;-ltole
lead with three-under-par 141
scores.
Chi Chi Rodriguez was at 142
and Bob Goalby, the 1968
winner; Grier Jones, M~ashi
"Jumbo" Ozaki and Peter
Oosterhuis aU were at 143.

Nicklaus the favorite as
'
usual was five strokes behind
follo;ing a Horrendous 77
Friday where he was deserted
by his putter.
The "Golden Bear" arrived
at the course just a few
moments after the cancellation
was made offici&amp;.
" Why ?" he wisecracked,
hurrying from his car through
the rain to the clubhouse' door.
· None of the leaders even had
to show up at the course
Sattiroay buf ArftollfPillmer -

Big '0' Bucks' key to title
By United Press International
Oscar Robertson's private
war against Father Time took
on another chapter Saturday
night when the Milwaukee
Bucks' 34-year old backcourt
star led his team against the
Golden State Warriors on the
West Coast.
Robertson, on the lail-&lt;&gt;nd of
a magnificent career, sur -

pri sed nearly 'everyone -

age and injuries will also play a they ( the Bullets) had any type wall," Riordan said, noting the
vita l role.
of-pride;- 4hey would have to Kmcks 3-J lead in games. The
In Friday's action, all the play as well as they did."
t\l.·o teams resume play this
underdogS' prolonged matters
Knick Coach Red Holzman afternoon in New York.
by posting upset victories. agreed, citing the play of Elvin
The Celtics, who looked to
Baltimore stopped the New Hayes who switched places hav e a comfortable edge in
York. Knicks' surge to a four- with Wes Unseld to guard Dave
their series with Atlanta, now
game sweep, winning 96-89 ; Debusschere . " Hayes sure had
· find themselves with a very
Atlanta stopped Boston's win a great night, " Holzman said. good
ch;wce
of
being
skein at two, 118-105, • and ''He seems to do his thing on
deadlocked a t two games
Chi~ago won its first aga}.nst just a bout everybody."
apiece. The Hawks ambushed
Los Angeles, 96-86.
.- ... B~ Mike Riordan , who went Boston on its home court
" I don ' t think we came out to the Bullets as part of the Fnday night and now the two
really ready ," Knicks' guard Monroe deal a year ago,
clubs go back to Atlanta today
Earl Monroe, an ex-Bul1et said poinled out the inevitable. " We where it figures to be a little
after Friday night's _game. " If still have our backs against the
harder for the favored Celts to

Red

increase their lead in games to
3-1.
Chicago also will be at home
with that added advantage of
evening its se ries at two games
apiece with l,os Angeles. The
Bulls, after dropping the first
two games of the series at Lo~
Ange les, cooled the Lakers in
Chicago on Friday and hope to
even things up at home on
Sunday.
The av erage American
now eats more than seven
pounds of pickles a year.

eightstrokesoffthepae@-got

.

particzpatwn

m cage event

Only two SVAC

Devils maul Eagles
-

demolished the Eastern Eagles
in a non-league game here
Friday afternoon, 12-2. Due to it

Griffith to

battle foe
June 2

Moore would walk to ·force in
the tying run .
Stover aimed, fired, · •ond
Moore looked . He guessed
wrong. It was called strike
three, the game was over, and
M1ke Stover had hung on for a
gutty 1-0 decision.
The three hits o(f Stover
were all singles. by Chandler,
M1ller and Fetty . Butch
Tholl]as drew two walks and
Cha~dler had one.
Ripley had base runners in
only the fourth , fifth and
seventh innings and left only
two on base.
Next outing for the Big
Blacks will be Monday. April 9,
when they . host' the Gallipolis
lllue Devils at 3:30.
RIPLEY(! ) .
Player
AB R HE
Randolph , If
2100
Casto , Jb ·
300 0
Adkins . c
1 00 0
Hudson, 3b
2000
Griest , 2b .
3 000
Rhodes, ss
3000
Murray, d
20I 0
Ruben , rf
2000
Stover . p
2000
Totals

20 1 I 0

BIG BLACKS (0)
. AB R HE
Player
Chandler, lf
20 I 0
Thomas, cf
2000
Moore, 3b .
4000
Miller, ss-p
3010
Painter, rf
3000
Doeffinger , 2b
.3000
· Casto , lb
2000
ph- Durst
I 0 0 0
Fetty, c
2 0 I 0
Warner,p
0000
rn-Pearson
0000
Kayser,p
0000
Cottrill, ss
0 00 0
ph-Evans
I 000
Totals

West Virginia 10-run rule, the
game lasted only fiv e mnings .
Ravenswood, which finished

-~--·

23 U 3 0

NE W YORK (UP! ) - In a
decision handed down by the
French Boxing Federati on,
Emile Griffith was given a 90riay suspension Saturday that
preve nts him from fi ghting in
France during that period but
opens the way for his scheduled
Jun e 2 Mtddleweight Title fight
agams t Cham pion Car los
Monzon .

" I got a phone call from ·
France about an hour ago,"
said Griffith's manager Gil
Clancy, who was involved in an
internati ona l di spute last
month when a routine drug test
administered to the former
and
mid . welterweight
dleweight c hampion proved
positive. Clancy insisted at the
time that Griffith had taken
medication For a cold.
After Griffith fou ght a draw
with Max Cohen in Paris on
March 12, he was given a urine
test and the French Boxing
F ederation declared that he
had l&gt;een drugged. Griffith was
suspended and his title fi ght
w1th Monzon in San Remo on
the Riveria was in jeopardy ,
. Then ea rlier this week the
New York State Athletic
Commission cleared Griffith of
the charges -posed by . the
French F ederation.
. "Dewey Fragati (an agent
for French fi ght promoters)
told me that Emile was
suspended for 90 days. I guess
that mea ns he can't fight in
France but the fi ght with
Monzon is go.
"This whole thing is really
'Cr'azy. I never once. have heard
from the boxing federation
over there. But from what I can
fi gure, we can fight anywhere
but in France."

games played

Falcons drop 5-2
tilt to Lancers

-

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lo
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second tn its state last year,
scored two runs in the first
inning, and then took charge.
Hendncks held t.he Eagles to
just three hits and led the
hitting wi th a triple and a
double. Sayre and Kelly also
doubled in · Ravenswood's 12
hits attack.
Alan Duval started on the
inound for the Eagles. He
appeared to hsve the game
pretty much under · control,
yielding only two runs in the
first two innings. ·But the West
Virginians went wild irl the
third with 9 runs and a ll-run
lead . The runs Eastern scored
were in the fourth inning. The 3
Eagle hits came off the bats of
Alan Duval, Bill Osborne, and
catcher Bob Edwards.
The games scheduled · last
Wednesday and Thursday were
rained out and will be played
later. Eastern's record is now
1-2. Monday night, provided the
weather is good, North Gallia
Will play at Eastern.

PLAY FIRST HOME MA'l'CH MONDAY - Gallia
Academy High School, fielding its first tennis squad in more
than 20 years, will play its first home match of the season
against visiting Wellston after school on Memorial Field
Monday evening. The Blue [)evils own a 2-0-1 season mark •

:::"'
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TERRY

I

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''the t'I' vi .s.
Faraway Bay, owned by
Arthur Meyring of Dayton,
Ohio, another Race Time colt,
is the second pick, according to

Il
~

•

Major League Baseball
Major Leagu~ Results
By United Press International

(

Gallipolis, Ohio
. Phone 614-446-3547

•

BOLENS®

Oyer. Wf'- Seaver (1 -0). LPHR.s~Jones 2 llst
&amp; 2nd) .

Carlion (0-ll .
St . Loui s

032 000

ooo- 5

73

000 001 15x- 7 8 o
Gibson , Segui {8) and Si m-

Pitts

mons ;
Blass,. Walker {5),
Rooker (8}, Hernandez (9) and

May. WP.Rooker (1-0) . LP.
Segui (0·1). HRs- Hebner (1sfl.

Torre, Marshall ( 9 ) and
Boccabel la; Jenkin s, Locker (9)
and Hundley . WP- Locker (1 -

New york 301 010 OOQ--.5 8 2
Bostdn
1-43-403 oox-15 20 o
Stottlemyre, McDan iel (3),
Co)( (6) and Munson ; Tiant (1 0) and F isk . LP- Sfottlem yr e
(0- l) : HRs- Vastrzemski (1st),
Fisk 2 (1st &amp; 2nd), Nettl es
I 1st).

ooo 000 ooo- o 3 3
401 01 2 20x-10 13 2

Colborn, Champion !6l. Ryer son (7) and Rodriguez; M cNal ly (1 -01 and Will iams LPColborn (0-1). H Rs- Robinson 2

0) . LP- Torrez 10-1) .

(lsi

(13 innings) ·

Minn
Oakland

Houstonooo 001 000 000
Atlanta

1 ~2 9 .o

000 010 000 000 o- 1 12 0

Roberts , Ray { 10), Crawford

112), Gladding 112), York _(13)

&amp;

Blyleven (1 -0l and M i tter .
wald , Hunter , Gardner ( 4).
Fingers (7) and Fosse . LPHunter (0-11. HRs- Oi iva (1st ),

Holt (lstl , His le (lstl.

18), Upshaw (13 ) and Oa.'es. Kan City
WP- Giadding (1 ·01. LP- Up. Cal if
Busby,
shaw (0. 1.). HR- Wynn llst) .
Los Angeles

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San Diego
ooo 001 03x- 4 9 2
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SERVICE STORE
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Burgmeler (8) and MiJy ; Ryan
( 1-0l and Stephenson. LP-Busby
(0-1) HR-Rob inson (1s t ).

- -.

!Only games schedu led)

Pro Standings
NBA Playoff Stan~in~s
Frlelay·s tcesuiTs
By United Press International Kentucky 106 Virginia 90
(Semifinals)
Carolina 136 New York 113
(Best of Seven)
&lt;On t ~ g_am~s scheduled)
East
w . I. pet.
AHL Playoff Standings
2
1 .667
Boston
By United Press International
1 2 .333
Atlanta
(Quarter-Fina Is)
(Best of Seven I
New York
3 I .750
Series A
1 3 .250
Balti more
w . 1. gf ga
West
Nova Scotia
2 0 12 3
w. I. pet. Providence
0 2 3 12
2 1 .66 7
Milwaukee
Series B
1 2 .333
Golden 5tate
w. 1. gl ga
Boston
1 0 3 2
Los Angeles
2 1 .667 Rochester
0 I 2 3
Chicago
1 2 .333
Series C
Friday 's Results
w. 1. gl ga
Ch icago 96 Los Angeles 86
'C incinnati
2 0 13 '
Baltimore 97 New York 89
Richmond
0 2 ' 13
Atlanta 118 Boston 105 .
Series 0
Standtn~s

I
.4

.200

3

1

1

3

.750
.250

x -Carolina
New York

4

Kentuck y
Virg inia

I

West

.800

Utah

San Diego

w. I. pet.
2 0 1.000
0 2 .000

Indiana
Denver

3
1

1
3

·75C!
.250

• ·CHnCHed playoff se.millnal

w. I. gl ga

Hershey ..
1 0 3
Virginia
0 1 2
Friday's Results
.
CinCinna ti 8,Richmond 3
Hershey 3 Virg inia 2
Nova Scotia Providence 1
!Only games scheduled)

2
3

s

WHA Playoff Results
By United Pres$ International
EaSt
w . 1. gl ga
New England
0 0 0 0
Ottawa
•
0 0 0 0
Cleveland

Philadelphia

1
0

- Dan " Babe" Flossie of
Akron, head football coach at
Akron Garfield where he hss
compiled a 53-5-2 record in the
past six years alone.
- Robert W. Coe, presently
serving as · ;;tate examiner in
charge at
Kent State
University .and a former
years.
football manager at Ohio
- William R. Morris, vice University.
president of the Buckeye Union
- R. Kenneth Kerr of
lnsurance Co. and a member of Athens, owner and president or
the Ohio University Board of the Keck Distributing Co., and
Trustees.
a pasl president of the Green
- Charles H. ·Fulks of ' and White Club and past
Athens, owner and director of chairman of the Athens High
the Athens Medical Laboratory School Bulldog Booster Club.
and p~st president and board
Friday's Results
member Of the Green and
Winnipeg J Minnesota 1
White Club.
(Only game scheduled)

Heavv Outv.

PLASTIC
DUST
· PAN

Rro Grande College
Lyne Center Schedule- Aprii9-1S

DATE- GYMNASIUM

the school.
Ed Olkowski, head
basketball coach at Midland
(Pa. ) High School.
- · Paul Walker, winnlngest
basketball coach in Ohio prep
history, who has been head
cage mentor at Middletown
High School for ·the past 27

MINNESOTA . PAiNTS
.

FREE

all on the road. Members of the 1973 squad are· First row , left
to right - Jim Singer, Rick Thornton, Wayne Davis and Greg
Thomas. Rear - Tom Buis, Randy Will, Scott Epling, Don
Carter and Kenny Will. Not pictured - Gil Price, Dave
Thomas, Paul Hawks and Coach Larry Prater. ·

store and
Come into ~ur
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or free 9 1 •
receive V~
supply lasts.
yours whrle our

POOL

Apr il9-6-9 Tchg . Health Class 203
7· 30 8· 30 Col Swim
6 10. 30 Law Eniorce. Class -204
7-9 College Recreat ion
AprlllQ-6 : 30 Psych . Basis Class-203
7. 30 B: JOOpen Sw1m
6-10 · 30 Law Enforce. Class·204
7·8 College Rec reation
B-10: 30 Men's Intra. Volleyball
Aprllll - 7-9 College Rec .
7 : ~0 - B : 30 Coli. Sw1m
6-10:30 Law Enforce. Class -204
9-10:30 Wom en's Intra . Volleyball
Apr ill 2- 6-10 30 Law Enforce Class-204
Closed
7. 30-11 00 Gospel Sing ·
Aprill3~ 7 - 9 Open Reo:ealian
8-9: 30a .m . GSI Swim
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_April 14- 2-4 Open Recr eation
7-4 Open Sw1m
April15-2-4 Open Rec .
2-4 Open Sw1m
7-9 Open Rec.
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LATEX.
WALL PAINT
•

c&amp;M

.Ratings reveal
top 3-year~olds

• Good Quahty; Economi ca lly Pr iced
• White and A ll Popular Co lors
• ApplieS Eastly, Fast Dry, W ate r Clea n - Up
R•rul•rly S4.2S

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) Colonial Charm and Ricci
Reenie Time will be the top
three-year-old harness horses
of 1973 if the U. S. Trotting
Association's Ninth Annual
Experimental Championship
ratings are correct.
The USTA ratings , 'based on
statistics, observations and
evaluations of colts and fillies ·
that raced Jasl season, are
projections of racmg speed
potential for one miJe on a mile
track under ideal conditions.
The horses are rated against
former world champions and
others on the experimental list.
In Ricci Reenie Time, the
USTA ratings for see a possible
1:55 mile in 1973 for the pacing
colt owned by the Ricd Time
Farms of Long Branch, N. J .
As a two-year-old, Ricci
Reenie Time set a world pacing
mile record of 1:56 I'll last
October.
Albatross polds_ the_World's

Rev-satin

..

2nd) , Baylor I 1st ).

and Edwards ; Gentry, Ham son

w. I. pet.

Ohio

Arnerican League
Chicago at Texas, ppd., rain .

200 000 ooo- 2 6 2 Mi lw
100 000 002- 3 5 2 Bait

Montrea l
Ch_!cago

Bv United Press International
(Semifinals)
(Best of Seven)
East

~alii polis~

Davis. WP- Kirby (1 ·0) . LPSutton

Ryan ; Seaver, McGraw {8) and

ABA Playoff

TAWNEY'S
PIPE
SHOP
422 Second Ave.
,

the Winter-Book, with J . R.
Skipper, owned by Jean and
Russell Miller of Dutton, Ont.,
'r ated third.
Also considered a threat to
Ricci Reenie Time is Valiant
Bret, a Bret Hanover colt
owned by the Gray Brothers of
East Providence, R. 1., and the
World Chsmpion Pacing Filly,
Real Hilarious, a Shadow Wave
daughter owned by William .
Fees Jr. of Grafton, Ohio, and
Frank Dettore of North
Ridgeville, Ohio.
· Faraway Bay won '10 times
Ialit year and banked $46,851,
while J. R· Skipper won
$108,695 with 15 first in 23
starts.
Valiant Bret won nine of 15
starts and picked up $il0,184 for
his owners and Real Hilarious
won 15 of 24 starts and earned
$50,796 last season'.

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TRACTORS

Ricci Reenie Time
heads 'Jug' field

DELAWARE, Ohio (UPI) Ricci Reenie Time, the fastest
; two-year old pacing colt in
: _ hsrness :'story and winner of
) 11 races last year, heads the
field of a record 97 eligibles for
the $100,000 Uttle Brown Jug to
be run here Sept. 20, it was
announced Saturday.
J
Ricci Reenie Time, owned by
the Ricci Farms of Long
'' Branch, N. J ., set the world
•' pacing mark of 1:56.1 for twoyear-&lt;&gt;lds at Lexington, Ky.,
last October. _
_
. The homebred bay colt by
Race Time, trained and driven
~ by Harold Dancer, earned
; $91,810 last season with three
seconds and a third ruong with

· Johnson's Mobile Home

SELECT GROUP
FAMOUS BRANDS .
'

.Ask For uave- The Pipe Expert!

of the Green and White Club's
hoard of directors; at several
out~f~town locationsi or by
mail, by sending a check for
the amoiiiit of the tickets
desired to James Anastas, c-o
· The Athens National Bank,
Athens, Ohio 45701.
This year's honorees are :
- Bob Baur, an · Athens in~
surance agent, a professional
football official, and one of the
foun~ers and former board
~1ember of the . Green and
White ClUb. Baur has also had
wide officiating experience at
!Jte college level.
~ Ted Federici, head football coach at Oregon Clay
(Ohto) High School and former
wrestling and track coach ~t

'

By_

.,'.

Big Blacks lose 1-0
heartbreaker _to RHS

NCAA approves

A'I'HENS - Nine persons
have been selected to be
honorees at the 12th annual
Green and White Recognition
Banquet . The
banquet,
sponsored by the Ohio
U n I v e r s i t y b o o s t e r.
organization, will be held
Wednesday. April : 25, at the
university's Baker Center.
Bill Flemming ." ABC-TV
sportscaster, will be main
speaker for the banquet.
Flemming was among the
American sportscasters on
hand in March for coverage of
the 1972 summer Olympics.
Tickets for the 6:30 p.m.
banquet, priced at $6 each, are
now on sale. They may be
Jurchased from any member

complained that conditions
were miserable.
" The practice tee's got that
much water laying on top of
thegrass,"besaid,holdlng two
fingers an inch apart.
"I played half of No. !,"
Miller Barber yelled over to
Palmer.
.
" Is it wet?" Arnold asked.
" I started up the hill and
couldn't makeit," Barbersaid. •
Jerry Heard played two
holes, went par-par, and observed it was "The best start I
hsd all week."
" It's awful," Heard said.
Palmer recalled he was
"About four Ullder par and
playing the lOth hole" the last
time a round was called off at
the Masters.

Color in the mobile home
today ls not just -limited .to
walls or appliances. The
sa me colorful fabrics used
for
upholstery,
floor
coverings, draperies,
curfains, bed , bath or
kifchen linens in stationary
homes are. of course,
available In mobile homes.
Mobile
home
manufacturers employ
decorators and interior
designers who comb the
market place fqr up-to-date
trends in home fashions
and fabrics coupled with
such
other
welcome
qualities as permanent
press, bonded linings and
backings, fire, stain, sun
and wrinkle-resistance and
minimum shrinkage, these
fabrics promise the mobile
home owner freedom from
work.
. No wonder, then, more
Americans are looking to
mobile homes as the an swer to their search for
modern living at its best.
We have on display a
vast selection of mobile
homes, so stop in now, for
the home that best serves
,your purpose .

--l

OU to honor nine-persons at
12th Green and White Banquet .

as far as the practice tee and

•

PT. PLEASANT - In a fourth and a touch of wildness
game
played in crisp weather cost him. He walked leadof(
SILVERSTONE,
England
under sunny s kies, Coach hitter Cleo Randolph. who
(UP!) Brazil's World
Marcus
McPhail 's visiting moved to second on a wild
Champion driver Emerson
Ripley Vikings hung on to pitch. Randolph moved to third
Fittipaldi Saturday earned the
defeat Skipper Larry Rhodes' on a ground out and raced
pole position for today's InPoint Pleasant Big Blacks, !-{}, home on Jumor Adkins '
ternational Trophy Race- and
at Ordnance Field Friday.
sacrifice squeeze bunt. .
did it in style.
.
It
was
an
errorless,
low-hi!
Miller ca me on in · the
Driving his JPS Lotus-Ford,
· t he Big B1ac ks seventh. walked Adkins, threw
contest, wtth
the long-haired Brazilian
·
h
a wild pitch, but go out of it
recorded ·the fastest lap ever
turmng on most oft e pressure
'th t
'k t
nd
1rt eou s a
but
the
.
Vikings
squeezing
wt
dwot
s
a
achieved at this famous track .
h
th t . ed th
groun ou ,
which its owners, the British
home t e run a ttpp
e · B.u t that one l'un should not
Racing Drivers Club, proudly
scales.
have b·e aten the Big Blacks. ·
called "Britain's fastest cir·
Rtpley
had
had
two
games
Their inability to solve Mike
d
1
k
cuit."
washe
out ast d wee k, at Stover in the clutch did it
11'
Fittipaldi's time was one
Wi tamstown an Par ersIn the third , Warner drew a
minute 16.4 seconds - an
burg South, ahd the victory two-out walk, Jim Chandler
singled to center for th e ftrst
thunder, too, and I told HarneY was their season's debut.
average speed of 137.92 mph 1 ever
'This
is
the
craziest
thing
The
contest
also
marked
the
'
hit of the seawn, and Butch
which ~ 2.4 seconds inside the
official' lap record set in last saw.' This guy is standing by debut as a head baseball coach Thomas walked to load the
year's race by Mike Hailwood Paul'sdri\oe, and we'd come up ·for Larry Rhodes. And~ it bases. They were left stranded.
Steve Miller singled to center
the fairway and were only 40 • inaugurated a set of spanking
in a Surtees.
The Brazilian's teammate in yards away. A bolt of lightning brand new uniforms for the to open the fourth , stole second,
locals, white, trimmed in red was bunted to third by DoefSunday's Formula One race, a hits this guy and kills him."
and black, featuring the Pitts- 'finger, and died there.
non'-chsmpionship event which
burgh .style pull-on jersies,
In the fifth, the Blacks loaded
has attracted all the top
the bases with none out. Fetty
with red stockings.
Marques and drives, is Ronnie
•
•
•
took a pitch in his back then
Peterson of Sweden and he too
second.
Kayser
Southpaw Mike Stover was swiped
showed the power of the JPS
the main hero for the Vikings, strolled. Chandler laid down a
team.
besting three local hurlers. He sacrifice bunt but the play was
•
Peterson's lap of 1:16.6 was
gave up three singles-: fanned unsuccessful trying to cut down
one of several others well inII, walked 5, hit one' batter, but Fetty and the ducks-were on
KANSAS CITY (UP!) - In hsd it in the clutch.
the pond.
side the official mark for the
whst a spokesman described
fiat 2.9 miles track and earned
·Three times the Blacks
An attempt to squeeze home
him a place on the front of the as a "spirit of cooperation," loaded the bases on the senior a run backfired. Fetty was
the ruling body of the . NCAA ace, but each time Stover found trapped off third and run down.
grid.
Former World Champion voted Saturday to _ allow his faltering cool and turned Then Stover got out of it with a ·
Jackie Stewart of Scotland athletes at member instit)ltions them back. He left 9 locals pair of strikeouts.
Finally, the Blacks cooked
to participate in the Russian· stranded on base.
lapped at I: 16.9 in his TyrreliRandv
Warner.Steve up another rally in the .hottom
Basketball Tour which is being
Ford to be third best and was
Kayser,
and
Steve Miller of the ssventh. With one down ,
sponsored by the Amateur
_ followed by Pete Revson of
shared
pitching
duties for the Fetty slammed a single to
Athletic Union.
Rondondo Beach, Cali!., New
The NCAA waived its 31klay locals, with Kayser yielding center. Chandler strolled and
Zealander Denny Hulme and
requirement on applications the run that saddled him with Butch Thomas wangled a walk.
Brazilian Carlos Pace.
the . defeat. He surrendered The bases were loaded again.
for such tours when the AAU
Ripley's lone hit, a harmless In between, pinch hitter Steve
agreed ·to seek its sanction
two-out single to Bob Murrary Evans had rouundcd out: .
' .
after congressional pressure
in the fifth .
With Marvin Moore at bat,
had been exerted on both sides
Warner breezed throu gh Stover fired two quick strikes.
to make the tour possible (or three innings, retiring alfnine Then he missed with three
outstanding collegians, such as batters. He struck out 6, all in a balls. Moore fouled off the 3Bill Walton of UCLA.
. row.
and-2 pitch. The croWd was in
While giving its approval for
Kayser took over in th• an uproar. One more ball and
athletes to play on the tour
April 26 to May 11, the NCAA
expressed what it called
serious reservations.
GALLIPOLIS - Only two
" While the NCAA desires to
league games were played last
cooperate with the Congress in
week in the Southern· Valley
.making the tour possible, we
Athletic Conference Baseball
repeat the timing places the
League.
•
' while
STEWART
Federal- 'hitting with two singles
American team at a co~­
Southern posted a 6-2 victory
petitive disadvantage, which is Hocking scoreq three runs in Danny •Hall chipped in • a
·over Eastern and defending
compounded by a lack o( time .the bottom of the first inning doutJle .
champion Symmes Valley
Rick Harris picked up the
for organizatiorland practice," and went on to grab a 5-2
bombed Hannan Trace. All
victory
over
the
visiting
win
for Federal-Hocking by
NCAA president· Alan J.
other games were postponed
Wahama White Falcons here limiting the Falcons to a .total
Chapman said.
· du~ to wet grounds and .cold
of five hits while fanning seven
Another NCAA spokesman Friday afternoon.
weather, GBmes scheduled
and
issuing one free pass.
Wahama scored its lone runs
said his organization sti!l
Monday are Symmes Valley at
K&lt;ivin Camp worked the
in the first and sixth innings:
considere~ the tour "ill-timed
Southern; Kyger Creek at
Hitters for the Falcons in- distance on the bill for
and ill advised" .
Southwestern and North Gallia
The NCAA's main objection cluded Robbie Belcher with a Wahama, striking out two and
at Eastern.
iS that college players would Pair of singles and Jeff walking two. Four of Federal-1
Thursday, Southern at Kyger
Jose cl&amp;ss time and the tour Gilliland, Danny Gardner and Hocking 's runs were unearned.
Creek; Eastern at I Symmes·
By Innings :
comes at a time when ·many Steve B_pzzard, each with a
Valley and Hpnnan Trace at
Wahama
100 001 0 2 5 4
students are approaching or base knock.
Southwestern,
300 020 X 5 7'l
Jerry Lewis topped the F-H 1'-H
laking final exams.

in first week

•

'

I

paralyzed from the waist down
As always, the, kel' to t~
also."
contest loomed a t celiliiqvhere
Again, . somebody came by . Kar eem Abdul-Jabbar held
and knocked down 'Snead's forth for the Bucks and Nate
umbrella, and again he stood it Thurmond for the Warriors.
up against the table."
But if the Bucks are to continue
"You watch," he said. lheir drive for a second NBA
RAVENSWOOD, W. Va. "Someone's gonna come by crown in
three years,
The highly touted baseball
and knock it down again."
Robertson's ability to ward off
team of Ravenswood High
He paused a moment, then
went back to the thufl\1~ a)ld
lightning.
11
l've had some close calls,"
)laid the man who hss been
playing professional golf for
the past 40 years. "! remember
the time (Gene) Littler and I
were playing one of these
television matches in Miami

and a guy watching us got
killed. I'm not klddin'. You go
ask Littler, he'll tell you.''
Gene Uttler said it was trUe.
"It was late in the 50's and
Sam and I were halfwal'__
through this television match,"
he said. "It started lightning
and thundering and one of the
spectators who had b'een
watching us began running for
his car. He was hit by lightning
and killed."
"Paul Harney and I were
playing in the Buick Open in
Flint, Mich., and was it ever
raining," said Mason Rudolph.
"' 'There was lightning and

•

•

Snead said . " My brother, especially the Warriors Wofford, they call him 'Pe te,' T)lursday night when he scored
was playing with a woman, had 34 points and added eight
her under his umbrella, in fact , assists as the Bucks took a 2-1
when she was hit by lightning lead in the National Basketball
and it killed her stone dead . My - Association Quarter-Fina l
brother was temporarily Serjes__ .

and thundering out there,"

-

SAVE

Record for a three-year-old
pace r , a 1:54 4-5 set in 1971.
Rated a fifth of a second
behind Ri cci Reenie Time In
1973 potenti al was Armbro
Nesbit, follo.wed another a fifth
of a second slower by Faraway
Bay in third.
COloma! Charm , with a
projected 1973 potential of
1:57 4-5, is the first filly ever
se lected to head an experimental ratings.
Owned ·by Castle ton Farm,
Colonia l Charm was the fastest
·jttvenile trotter of either sex in
1972 w1th u 2:00 2-5 clocking.
She is rated one-fifth of a •
second faster th an Arnie I
Almuhurst, the top ranke(l 1
trotter among coil,.
· 1
Rated third at I :58 .J-5 is
Blitzen, · followed by ·Burning 1
Speed at 1:58 2-5 and South I
Bend at I :58 2-5. The world 1
record for a threc-year-&lt;Jid
1
trotter was set by Super Bowl
1
in 1972 at 1:56 2-5.

•

TYCOON LAKE ( Gallla 1 - Clear and normal. Largemouth bass are being taken on deep running plugs, plastic
njghtcrawlers, and large minnows. Bank and boat flshennen
have been successful in all area's of the lake. Seventeen year
old Rick Little of Young's Trailer Court, Gallipolis, re~e ntly
landed a five pound largemouth bass on a Rapala Countdown. The bass measured 22".
FORKED RUN LAKE (Meigs I -Clear and normal. 4951 degrees. Anglers are taking trout on small spinners and
largemouth bass on small spinners and nlghtcrawlers.
Crappies are hJttlng minnows. Boat and shore anglers are
both successful with the best fishing being experienced in the
morning hoprs-:-Best area for fishing Is the lower end of the
lake ncar the dam.
'

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'12- The Sunday Time.- Sentinel, Sunday, AprilS, 1m

Sam tells ·
'b~JJa uties '
AUGUSTA, Ga. (UPI )- rt was Ule perfect day
for rainy.day stories, and Sam Snead got a little wet
but didn't disappoint anybody. He told some perfect
beauties.
Only seven Masters ' contestants managed to
tee off before Saturday's third round was washed
out and put off until today, and the 60-year-old
Snead was the last one who did.
He never got past the first
hole. He didn't even finish it in
fact.
" ! hit a good drive right up
.the middle, got halfway down
the hill, and they said turn
around and come on back.''
s&amp;d Snead, drying out in the
clubhouse where he peeled off
his rain slicker and positioned
the umbrella he had used
against one end of the table he
was sitting at.
Snead, who barely made the
36-hole cut with his 74-76-150
which- leaves him nine shots
behind the leaders, made little
fuss about hsving to go out in
Saturday's heavy downpour.
"I've played in a Jot worse
weather before," he sUd
before going off with Miller
Barber.
He was happy to get back
into the dry, warm clubhouse
though and he made a special
point about setting his umbrella against the table. · He
wanted it standing just right so
the water could drip off it.
"At least it wasn't -lightning

thunders I'm coming off there,
rules or no rules," said snead,
"I saw two men get killed in
Kansas City. I think it was in
1946, no, back even before
Ulat."

" Did you see them get hit?"
Snead was asked.
" l didn't see 'em get hit, but
they were lying .m- the ground
when 1 walked by ."
'At that' moment, a passerby
brushed against the table
Snead was sitting at and
inadvertently kno cked down
the umbrella without bothering
to pick it up.
Snead frowned, picked it up
and put it_back the way it had
been before.

111 remember another time,"

someone said to him. "The
rules say they've gotta stop
play as soon as there's any of
that. II
''The minute it lightnings or

Claims-

pole slot ·
in style

AU(:USTA, Ga. (UP!) They never had a chance to
play · the_· third round of the
Masters Saturday, but they .
tried anyway.
The first seven players
.Uready were on the waterlogged Augusta National
course, where It rained all
morning, when officials conceded the obvious and
suspended play.
They waited more than an
hour before postponing the
round until today and moving

the windup of the tournament when the round was c&amp;led.
to Monday .
It was the first rainout at the
"The whole course ..!V.M in Masters, first of the year's four
casual water," ~id Bobby major championships, since
Nichols, the first player to tee the final rou~d was ,washed out
off. " The fairways were such in 1963, the year Jack Nicklaus
that you couldn't believe. When .. won the first of bis four titles
you were putting, it was. tough here.
to read the currents."
The
weather
bureau
Nichols, who said he did not promised little better conexpect even to attempt to play, ditions for today. The rain was
three-putted the ' first green not ex~d to end until 8 a.m.
from 15 feet for a bogey, made EST
y, only about two
a par at the par-5 second hole hours b ore the third round
andhadhithisteeshotonNo . 3 now is scheduled to begin.

" I'd be concerned if I was the
leader." said Nichols, who is 10
strokes behind. "But it doesn 't
really matter to me."
Gay Brewer Jr. the 1967
champion here, Tommy Aaron,
Bob Dickson Jr., and J . C.
Snead were tied for the 3&amp;-ltole
lead with three-under-par 141
scores.
Chi Chi Rodriguez was at 142
and Bob Goalby, the 1968
winner; Grier Jones, M~ashi
"Jumbo" Ozaki and Peter
Oosterhuis aU were at 143.

Nicklaus the favorite as
'
usual was five strokes behind
follo;ing a Horrendous 77
Friday where he was deserted
by his putter.
The "Golden Bear" arrived
at the course just a few
moments after the cancellation
was made offici&amp;.
" Why ?" he wisecracked,
hurrying from his car through
the rain to the clubhouse' door.
· None of the leaders even had
to show up at the course
Sattiroay buf ArftollfPillmer -

Big '0' Bucks' key to title
By United Press International
Oscar Robertson's private
war against Father Time took
on another chapter Saturday
night when the Milwaukee
Bucks' 34-year old backcourt
star led his team against the
Golden State Warriors on the
West Coast.
Robertson, on the lail-&lt;&gt;nd of
a magnificent career, sur -

pri sed nearly 'everyone -

age and injuries will also play a they ( the Bullets) had any type wall," Riordan said, noting the
vita l role.
of-pride;- 4hey would have to Kmcks 3-J lead in games. The
In Friday's action, all the play as well as they did."
t\l.·o teams resume play this
underdogS' prolonged matters
Knick Coach Red Holzman afternoon in New York.
by posting upset victories. agreed, citing the play of Elvin
The Celtics, who looked to
Baltimore stopped the New Hayes who switched places hav e a comfortable edge in
York. Knicks' surge to a four- with Wes Unseld to guard Dave
their series with Atlanta, now
game sweep, winning 96-89 ; Debusschere . " Hayes sure had
· find themselves with a very
Atlanta stopped Boston's win a great night, " Holzman said. good
ch;wce
of
being
skein at two, 118-105, • and ''He seems to do his thing on
deadlocked a t two games
Chi~ago won its first aga}.nst just a bout everybody."
apiece. The Hawks ambushed
Los Angeles, 96-86.
.- ... B~ Mike Riordan , who went Boston on its home court
" I don ' t think we came out to the Bullets as part of the Fnday night and now the two
really ready ," Knicks' guard Monroe deal a year ago,
clubs go back to Atlanta today
Earl Monroe, an ex-Bul1et said poinled out the inevitable. " We where it figures to be a little
after Friday night's _game. " If still have our backs against the
harder for the favored Celts to

Red

increase their lead in games to
3-1.
Chicago also will be at home
with that added advantage of
evening its se ries at two games
apiece with l,os Angeles. The
Bulls, after dropping the first
two games of the series at Lo~
Ange les, cooled the Lakers in
Chicago on Friday and hope to
even things up at home on
Sunday.
The av erage American
now eats more than seven
pounds of pickles a year.

eightstrokesoffthepae@-got

.

particzpatwn

m cage event

Only two SVAC

Devils maul Eagles
-

demolished the Eastern Eagles
in a non-league game here
Friday afternoon, 12-2. Due to it

Griffith to

battle foe
June 2

Moore would walk to ·force in
the tying run .
Stover aimed, fired, · •ond
Moore looked . He guessed
wrong. It was called strike
three, the game was over, and
M1ke Stover had hung on for a
gutty 1-0 decision.
The three hits o(f Stover
were all singles. by Chandler,
M1ller and Fetty . Butch
Tholl]as drew two walks and
Cha~dler had one.
Ripley had base runners in
only the fourth , fifth and
seventh innings and left only
two on base.
Next outing for the Big
Blacks will be Monday. April 9,
when they . host' the Gallipolis
lllue Devils at 3:30.
RIPLEY(! ) .
Player
AB R HE
Randolph , If
2100
Casto , Jb ·
300 0
Adkins . c
1 00 0
Hudson, 3b
2000
Griest , 2b .
3 000
Rhodes, ss
3000
Murray, d
20I 0
Ruben , rf
2000
Stover . p
2000
Totals

20 1 I 0

BIG BLACKS (0)
. AB R HE
Player
Chandler, lf
20 I 0
Thomas, cf
2000
Moore, 3b .
4000
Miller, ss-p
3010
Painter, rf
3000
Doeffinger , 2b
.3000
· Casto , lb
2000
ph- Durst
I 0 0 0
Fetty, c
2 0 I 0
Warner,p
0000
rn-Pearson
0000
Kayser,p
0000
Cottrill, ss
0 00 0
ph-Evans
I 000
Totals

West Virginia 10-run rule, the
game lasted only fiv e mnings .
Ravenswood, which finished

-~--·

23 U 3 0

NE W YORK (UP! ) - In a
decision handed down by the
French Boxing Federati on,
Emile Griffith was given a 90riay suspension Saturday that
preve nts him from fi ghting in
France during that period but
opens the way for his scheduled
Jun e 2 Mtddleweight Title fight
agams t Cham pion Car los
Monzon .

" I got a phone call from ·
France about an hour ago,"
said Griffith's manager Gil
Clancy, who was involved in an
internati ona l di spute last
month when a routine drug test
administered to the former
and
mid . welterweight
dleweight c hampion proved
positive. Clancy insisted at the
time that Griffith had taken
medication For a cold.
After Griffith fou ght a draw
with Max Cohen in Paris on
March 12, he was given a urine
test and the French Boxing
F ederation declared that he
had l&gt;een drugged. Griffith was
suspended and his title fi ght
w1th Monzon in San Remo on
the Riveria was in jeopardy ,
. Then ea rlier this week the
New York State Athletic
Commission cleared Griffith of
the charges -posed by . the
French F ederation.
. "Dewey Fragati (an agent
for French fi ght promoters)
told me that Emile was
suspended for 90 days. I guess
that mea ns he can't fight in
France but the fi ght with
Monzon is go.
"This whole thing is really
'Cr'azy. I never once. have heard
from the boxing federation
over there. But from what I can
fi gure, we can fight anywhere
but in France."

games played

Falcons drop 5-2
tilt to Lancers

-

'

,.'"'
lo
'"

second tn its state last year,
scored two runs in the first
inning, and then took charge.
Hendncks held t.he Eagles to
just three hits and led the
hitting wi th a triple and a
double. Sayre and Kelly also
doubled in · Ravenswood's 12
hits attack.
Alan Duval started on the
inound for the Eagles. He
appeared to hsve the game
pretty much under · control,
yielding only two runs in the
first two innings. ·But the West
Virginians went wild irl the
third with 9 runs and a ll-run
lead . The runs Eastern scored
were in the fourth inning. The 3
Eagle hits came off the bats of
Alan Duval, Bill Osborne, and
catcher Bob Edwards.
The games scheduled · last
Wednesday and Thursday were
rained out and will be played
later. Eastern's record is now
1-2. Monday night, provided the
weather is good, North Gallia
Will play at Eastern.

PLAY FIRST HOME MA'l'CH MONDAY - Gallia
Academy High School, fielding its first tennis squad in more
than 20 years, will play its first home match of the season
against visiting Wellston after school on Memorial Field
Monday evening. The Blue [)evils own a 2-0-1 season mark •

:::"'
•I&lt;

...••
·~
I.

'
'

r
1

•

TERRY

I

•
•'

'
I

'

'I

·

\
~

I

''the t'I' vi .s.
Faraway Bay, owned by
Arthur Meyring of Dayton,
Ohio, another Race Time colt,
is the second pick, according to

Il
~

•

Major League Baseball
Major Leagu~ Results
By United Press International

(

Gallipolis, Ohio
. Phone 614-446-3547

•

BOLENS®

Oyer. Wf'- Seaver (1 -0). LPHR.s~Jones 2 llst
&amp; 2nd) .

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St . Loui s

032 000

ooo- 5

73

000 001 15x- 7 8 o
Gibson , Segui {8) and Si m-

Pitts

mons ;
Blass,. Walker {5),
Rooker (8}, Hernandez (9) and

May. WP.Rooker (1-0) . LP.
Segui (0·1). HRs- Hebner (1sfl.

Torre, Marshall ( 9 ) and
Boccabel la; Jenkin s, Locker (9)
and Hundley . WP- Locker (1 -

New york 301 010 OOQ--.5 8 2
Bostdn
1-43-403 oox-15 20 o
Stottlemyre, McDan iel (3),
Co)( (6) and Munson ; Tiant (1 0) and F isk . LP- Sfottlem yr e
(0- l) : HRs- Vastrzemski (1st),
Fisk 2 (1st &amp; 2nd), Nettl es
I 1st).

ooo 000 ooo- o 3 3
401 01 2 20x-10 13 2

Colborn, Champion !6l. Ryer son (7) and Rodriguez; M cNal ly (1 -01 and Will iams LPColborn (0-1). H Rs- Robinson 2

0) . LP- Torrez 10-1) .

(lsi

(13 innings) ·

Minn
Oakland

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Atlanta

1 ~2 9 .o

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Roberts , Ray { 10), Crawford

112), Gladding 112), York _(13)

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wald , Hunter , Gardner ( 4).
Fingers (7) and Fosse . LPHunter (0-11. HRs- Oi iva (1st ),

Holt (lstl , His le (lstl.

18), Upshaw (13 ) and Oa.'es. Kan City
WP- Giadding (1 ·01. LP- Up. Cal if
Busby,
shaw (0. 1.). HR- Wynn llst) .
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- -.

!Only games schedu led)

Pro Standings
NBA Playoff Stan~in~s
Frlelay·s tcesuiTs
By United Press International Kentucky 106 Virginia 90
(Semifinals)
Carolina 136 New York 113
(Best of Seven)
&lt;On t ~ g_am~s scheduled)
East
w . I. pet.
AHL Playoff Standings
2
1 .667
Boston
By United Press International
1 2 .333
Atlanta
(Quarter-Fina Is)
(Best of Seven I
New York
3 I .750
Series A
1 3 .250
Balti more
w . 1. gf ga
West
Nova Scotia
2 0 12 3
w. I. pet. Providence
0 2 3 12
2 1 .66 7
Milwaukee
Series B
1 2 .333
Golden 5tate
w. 1. gl ga
Boston
1 0 3 2
Los Angeles
2 1 .667 Rochester
0 I 2 3
Chicago
1 2 .333
Series C
Friday 's Results
w. 1. gl ga
Ch icago 96 Los Angeles 86
'C incinnati
2 0 13 '
Baltimore 97 New York 89
Richmond
0 2 ' 13
Atlanta 118 Boston 105 .
Series 0
Standtn~s

I
.4

.200

3

1

1

3

.750
.250

x -Carolina
New York

4

Kentuck y
Virg inia

I

West

.800

Utah

San Diego

w. I. pet.
2 0 1.000
0 2 .000

Indiana
Denver

3
1

1
3

·75C!
.250

• ·CHnCHed playoff se.millnal

w. I. gl ga

Hershey ..
1 0 3
Virginia
0 1 2
Friday's Results
.
CinCinna ti 8,Richmond 3
Hershey 3 Virg inia 2
Nova Scotia Providence 1
!Only games scheduled)

2
3

s

WHA Playoff Results
By United Pres$ International
EaSt
w . 1. gl ga
New England
0 0 0 0
Ottawa
•
0 0 0 0
Cleveland

Philadelphia

1
0

- Dan " Babe" Flossie of
Akron, head football coach at
Akron Garfield where he hss
compiled a 53-5-2 record in the
past six years alone.
- Robert W. Coe, presently
serving as · ;;tate examiner in
charge at
Kent State
University .and a former
years.
football manager at Ohio
- William R. Morris, vice University.
president of the Buckeye Union
- R. Kenneth Kerr of
lnsurance Co. and a member of Athens, owner and president or
the Ohio University Board of the Keck Distributing Co., and
Trustees.
a pasl president of the Green
- Charles H. ·Fulks of ' and White Club and past
Athens, owner and director of chairman of the Athens High
the Athens Medical Laboratory School Bulldog Booster Club.
and p~st president and board
Friday's Results
member Of the Green and
Winnipeg J Minnesota 1
White Club.
(Only game scheduled)

Heavv Outv.

PLASTIC
DUST
· PAN

Rro Grande College
Lyne Center Schedule- Aprii9-1S

DATE- GYMNASIUM

the school.
Ed Olkowski, head
basketball coach at Midland
(Pa. ) High School.
- · Paul Walker, winnlngest
basketball coach in Ohio prep
history, who has been head
cage mentor at Middletown
High School for ·the past 27

MINNESOTA . PAiNTS
.

FREE

all on the road. Members of the 1973 squad are· First row , left
to right - Jim Singer, Rick Thornton, Wayne Davis and Greg
Thomas. Rear - Tom Buis, Randy Will, Scott Epling, Don
Carter and Kenny Will. Not pictured - Gil Price, Dave
Thomas, Paul Hawks and Coach Larry Prater. ·

store and
Come into ~ur
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or free 9 1 •
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supply lasts.
yours whrle our

POOL

Apr il9-6-9 Tchg . Health Class 203
7· 30 8· 30 Col Swim
6 10. 30 Law Eniorce. Class -204
7-9 College Recreat ion
AprlllQ-6 : 30 Psych . Basis Class-203
7. 30 B: JOOpen Sw1m
6-10 · 30 Law Enforce. Class·204
7·8 College Rec reation
B-10: 30 Men's Intra. Volleyball
Aprllll - 7-9 College Rec .
7 : ~0 - B : 30 Coli. Sw1m
6-10:30 Law Enforce. Class -204
9-10:30 Wom en's Intra . Volleyball
Apr ill 2- 6-10 30 Law Enforce Class-204
Closed
7. 30-11 00 Gospel Sing ·
Aprill3~ 7 - 9 Open Reo:ealian
8-9: 30a .m . GSI Swim
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_April 14- 2-4 Open Recr eation
7-4 Open Sw1m
April15-2-4 Open Rec .
2-4 Open Sw1m
7-9 Open Rec.
7-9 Open Swim

LATEX.
WALL PAINT
•

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.Ratings reveal
top 3-year~olds

• Good Quahty; Economi ca lly Pr iced
• White and A ll Popular Co lors
• ApplieS Eastly, Fast Dry, W ate r Clea n - Up
R•rul•rly S4.2S

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) Colonial Charm and Ricci
Reenie Time will be the top
three-year-old harness horses
of 1973 if the U. S. Trotting
Association's Ninth Annual
Experimental Championship
ratings are correct.
The USTA ratings , 'based on
statistics, observations and
evaluations of colts and fillies ·
that raced Jasl season, are
projections of racmg speed
potential for one miJe on a mile
track under ideal conditions.
The horses are rated against
former world champions and
others on the experimental list.
In Ricci Reenie Time, the
USTA ratings for see a possible
1:55 mile in 1973 for the pacing
colt owned by the Ricd Time
Farms of Long Branch, N. J .
As a two-year-old, Ricci
Reenie Time set a world pacing
mile record of 1:56 I'll last
October.
Albatross polds_ the_World's

Rev-satin

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2nd) , Baylor I 1st ).

and Edwards ; Gentry, Ham son

w. I. pet.

Ohio

Arnerican League
Chicago at Texas, ppd., rain .

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100 000 002- 3 5 2 Bait

Montrea l
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East

~alii polis~

Davis. WP- Kirby (1 ·0) . LPSutton

Ryan ; Seaver, McGraw {8) and

ABA Playoff

TAWNEY'S
PIPE
SHOP
422 Second Ave.
,

the Winter-Book, with J . R.
Skipper, owned by Jean and
Russell Miller of Dutton, Ont.,
'r ated third.
Also considered a threat to
Ricci Reenie Time is Valiant
Bret, a Bret Hanover colt
owned by the Gray Brothers of
East Providence, R. 1., and the
World Chsmpion Pacing Filly,
Real Hilarious, a Shadow Wave
daughter owned by William .
Fees Jr. of Grafton, Ohio, and
Frank Dettore of North
Ridgeville, Ohio.
· Faraway Bay won '10 times
Ialit year and banked $46,851,
while J. R· Skipper won
$108,695 with 15 first in 23
starts.
Valiant Bret won nine of 15
starts and picked up $il0,184 for
his owners and Real Hilarious
won 15 of 24 starts and earned
$50,796 last season'.

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TRACTORS

Ricci Reenie Time
heads 'Jug' field

DELAWARE, Ohio (UPI) Ricci Reenie Time, the fastest
; two-year old pacing colt in
: _ hsrness :'story and winner of
) 11 races last year, heads the
field of a record 97 eligibles for
the $100,000 Uttle Brown Jug to
be run here Sept. 20, it was
announced Saturday.
J
Ricci Reenie Time, owned by
the Ricci Farms of Long
'' Branch, N. J ., set the world
•' pacing mark of 1:56.1 for twoyear-&lt;&gt;lds at Lexington, Ky.,
last October. _
_
. The homebred bay colt by
Race Time, trained and driven
~ by Harold Dancer, earned
; $91,810 last season with three
seconds and a third ruong with

· Johnson's Mobile Home

SELECT GROUP
FAMOUS BRANDS .
'

.Ask For uave- The Pipe Expert!

of the Green and White Club's
hoard of directors; at several
out~f~town locationsi or by
mail, by sending a check for
the amoiiiit of the tickets
desired to James Anastas, c-o
· The Athens National Bank,
Athens, Ohio 45701.
This year's honorees are :
- Bob Baur, an · Athens in~
surance agent, a professional
football official, and one of the
foun~ers and former board
~1ember of the . Green and
White ClUb. Baur has also had
wide officiating experience at
!Jte college level.
~ Ted Federici, head football coach at Oregon Clay
(Ohto) High School and former
wrestling and track coach ~t

'

By_

.,'.

Big Blacks lose 1-0
heartbreaker _to RHS

NCAA approves

A'I'HENS - Nine persons
have been selected to be
honorees at the 12th annual
Green and White Recognition
Banquet . The
banquet,
sponsored by the Ohio
U n I v e r s i t y b o o s t e r.
organization, will be held
Wednesday. April : 25, at the
university's Baker Center.
Bill Flemming ." ABC-TV
sportscaster, will be main
speaker for the banquet.
Flemming was among the
American sportscasters on
hand in March for coverage of
the 1972 summer Olympics.
Tickets for the 6:30 p.m.
banquet, priced at $6 each, are
now on sale. They may be
Jurchased from any member

complained that conditions
were miserable.
" The practice tee's got that
much water laying on top of
thegrass,"besaid,holdlng two
fingers an inch apart.
"I played half of No. !,"
Miller Barber yelled over to
Palmer.
.
" Is it wet?" Arnold asked.
" I started up the hill and
couldn't makeit," Barbersaid. •
Jerry Heard played two
holes, went par-par, and observed it was "The best start I
hsd all week."
" It's awful," Heard said.
Palmer recalled he was
"About four Ullder par and
playing the lOth hole" the last
time a round was called off at
the Masters.

Color in the mobile home
today ls not just -limited .to
walls or appliances. The
sa me colorful fabrics used
for
upholstery,
floor
coverings, draperies,
curfains, bed , bath or
kifchen linens in stationary
homes are. of course,
available In mobile homes.
Mobile
home
manufacturers employ
decorators and interior
designers who comb the
market place fqr up-to-date
trends in home fashions
and fabrics coupled with
such
other
welcome
qualities as permanent
press, bonded linings and
backings, fire, stain, sun
and wrinkle-resistance and
minimum shrinkage, these
fabrics promise the mobile
home owner freedom from
work.
. No wonder, then, more
Americans are looking to
mobile homes as the an swer to their search for
modern living at its best.
We have on display a
vast selection of mobile
homes, so stop in now, for
the home that best serves
,your purpose .

--l

OU to honor nine-persons at
12th Green and White Banquet .

as far as the practice tee and

•

PT. PLEASANT - In a fourth and a touch of wildness
game
played in crisp weather cost him. He walked leadof(
SILVERSTONE,
England
under sunny s kies, Coach hitter Cleo Randolph. who
(UP!) Brazil's World
Marcus
McPhail 's visiting moved to second on a wild
Champion driver Emerson
Ripley Vikings hung on to pitch. Randolph moved to third
Fittipaldi Saturday earned the
defeat Skipper Larry Rhodes' on a ground out and raced
pole position for today's InPoint Pleasant Big Blacks, !-{}, home on Jumor Adkins '
ternational Trophy Race- and
at Ordnance Field Friday.
sacrifice squeeze bunt. .
did it in style.
.
It
was
an
errorless,
low-hi!
Miller ca me on in · the
Driving his JPS Lotus-Ford,
· t he Big B1ac ks seventh. walked Adkins, threw
contest, wtth
the long-haired Brazilian
·
h
a wild pitch, but go out of it
recorded ·the fastest lap ever
turmng on most oft e pressure
'th t
'k t
nd
1rt eou s a
but
the
.
Vikings
squeezing
wt
dwot
s
a
achieved at this famous track .
h
th t . ed th
groun ou ,
which its owners, the British
home t e run a ttpp
e · B.u t that one l'un should not
Racing Drivers Club, proudly
scales.
have b·e aten the Big Blacks. ·
called "Britain's fastest cir·
Rtpley
had
had
two
games
Their inability to solve Mike
d
1
k
cuit."
washe
out ast d wee k, at Stover in the clutch did it
11'
Fittipaldi's time was one
Wi tamstown an Par ersIn the third , Warner drew a
minute 16.4 seconds - an
burg South, ahd the victory two-out walk, Jim Chandler
singled to center for th e ftrst
thunder, too, and I told HarneY was their season's debut.
average speed of 137.92 mph 1 ever
'This
is
the
craziest
thing
The
contest
also
marked
the
'
hit of the seawn, and Butch
which ~ 2.4 seconds inside the
official' lap record set in last saw.' This guy is standing by debut as a head baseball coach Thomas walked to load the
year's race by Mike Hailwood Paul'sdri\oe, and we'd come up ·for Larry Rhodes. And~ it bases. They were left stranded.
Steve Miller singled to center
the fairway and were only 40 • inaugurated a set of spanking
in a Surtees.
The Brazilian's teammate in yards away. A bolt of lightning brand new uniforms for the to open the fourth , stole second,
locals, white, trimmed in red was bunted to third by DoefSunday's Formula One race, a hits this guy and kills him."
and black, featuring the Pitts- 'finger, and died there.
non'-chsmpionship event which
burgh .style pull-on jersies,
In the fifth, the Blacks loaded
has attracted all the top
the bases with none out. Fetty
with red stockings.
Marques and drives, is Ronnie
•
•
•
took a pitch in his back then
Peterson of Sweden and he too
second.
Kayser
Southpaw Mike Stover was swiped
showed the power of the JPS
the main hero for the Vikings, strolled. Chandler laid down a
team.
besting three local hurlers. He sacrifice bunt but the play was
•
Peterson's lap of 1:16.6 was
gave up three singles-: fanned unsuccessful trying to cut down
one of several others well inII, walked 5, hit one' batter, but Fetty and the ducks-were on
KANSAS CITY (UP!) - In hsd it in the clutch.
the pond.
side the official mark for the
whst a spokesman described
fiat 2.9 miles track and earned
·Three times the Blacks
An attempt to squeeze home
him a place on the front of the as a "spirit of cooperation," loaded the bases on the senior a run backfired. Fetty was
the ruling body of the . NCAA ace, but each time Stover found trapped off third and run down.
grid.
Former World Champion voted Saturday to _ allow his faltering cool and turned Then Stover got out of it with a ·
Jackie Stewart of Scotland athletes at member instit)ltions them back. He left 9 locals pair of strikeouts.
Finally, the Blacks cooked
to participate in the Russian· stranded on base.
lapped at I: 16.9 in his TyrreliRandv
Warner.Steve up another rally in the .hottom
Basketball Tour which is being
Ford to be third best and was
Kayser,
and
Steve Miller of the ssventh. With one down ,
sponsored by the Amateur
_ followed by Pete Revson of
shared
pitching
duties for the Fetty slammed a single to
Athletic Union.
Rondondo Beach, Cali!., New
The NCAA waived its 31klay locals, with Kayser yielding center. Chandler strolled and
Zealander Denny Hulme and
requirement on applications the run that saddled him with Butch Thomas wangled a walk.
Brazilian Carlos Pace.
the . defeat. He surrendered The bases were loaded again.
for such tours when the AAU
Ripley's lone hit, a harmless In between, pinch hitter Steve
agreed ·to seek its sanction
two-out single to Bob Murrary Evans had rouundcd out: .
' .
after congressional pressure
in the fifth .
With Marvin Moore at bat,
had been exerted on both sides
Warner breezed throu gh Stover fired two quick strikes.
to make the tour possible (or three innings, retiring alfnine Then he missed with three
outstanding collegians, such as batters. He struck out 6, all in a balls. Moore fouled off the 3Bill Walton of UCLA.
. row.
and-2 pitch. The croWd was in
While giving its approval for
Kayser took over in th• an uproar. One more ball and
athletes to play on the tour
April 26 to May 11, the NCAA
expressed what it called
serious reservations.
GALLIPOLIS - Only two
" While the NCAA desires to
league games were played last
cooperate with the Congress in
week in the Southern· Valley
.making the tour possible, we
Athletic Conference Baseball
repeat the timing places the
League.
•
' while
STEWART
Federal- 'hitting with two singles
American team at a co~­
Southern posted a 6-2 victory
petitive disadvantage, which is Hocking scoreq three runs in Danny •Hall chipped in • a
·over Eastern and defending
compounded by a lack o( time .the bottom of the first inning doutJle .
champion Symmes Valley
Rick Harris picked up the
for organizatiorland practice," and went on to grab a 5-2
bombed Hannan Trace. All
victory
over
the
visiting
win
for Federal-Hocking by
NCAA president· Alan J.
other games were postponed
Wahama White Falcons here limiting the Falcons to a .total
Chapman said.
· du~ to wet grounds and .cold
of five hits while fanning seven
Another NCAA spokesman Friday afternoon.
weather, GBmes scheduled
and
issuing one free pass.
Wahama scored its lone runs
said his organization sti!l
Monday are Symmes Valley at
K&lt;ivin Camp worked the
in the first and sixth innings:
considere~ the tour "ill-timed
Southern; Kyger Creek at
Hitters for the Falcons in- distance on the bill for
and ill advised" .
Southwestern and North Gallia
The NCAA's main objection cluded Robbie Belcher with a Wahama, striking out two and
at Eastern.
iS that college players would Pair of singles and Jeff walking two. Four of Federal-1
Thursday, Southern at Kyger
Jose cl&amp;ss time and the tour Gilliland, Danny Gardner and Hocking 's runs were unearned.
Creek; Eastern at I Symmes·
By Innings :
comes at a time when ·many Steve B_pzzard, each with a
Valley and Hpnnan Trace at
Wahama
100 001 0 2 5 4
students are approaching or base knock.
Southwestern,
300 020 X 5 7'l
Jerry Lewis topped the F-H 1'-H
laking final exams.

in first week

•

'

I

paralyzed from the waist down
As always, the, kel' to t~
also."
contest loomed a t celiliiqvhere
Again, . somebody came by . Kar eem Abdul-Jabbar held
and knocked down 'Snead's forth for the Bucks and Nate
umbrella, and again he stood it Thurmond for the Warriors.
up against the table."
But if the Bucks are to continue
"You watch," he said. lheir drive for a second NBA
RAVENSWOOD, W. Va. "Someone's gonna come by crown in
three years,
The highly touted baseball
and knock it down again."
Robertson's ability to ward off
team of Ravenswood High
He paused a moment, then
went back to the thufl\1~ a)ld
lightning.
11
l've had some close calls,"
)laid the man who hss been
playing professional golf for
the past 40 years. "! remember
the time (Gene) Littler and I
were playing one of these
television matches in Miami

and a guy watching us got
killed. I'm not klddin'. You go
ask Littler, he'll tell you.''
Gene Uttler said it was trUe.
"It was late in the 50's and
Sam and I were halfwal'__
through this television match,"
he said. "It started lightning
and thundering and one of the
spectators who had b'een
watching us began running for
his car. He was hit by lightning
and killed."
"Paul Harney and I were
playing in the Buick Open in
Flint, Mich., and was it ever
raining," said Mason Rudolph.
"' 'There was lightning and

•

•

Snead said . " My brother, especially the Warriors Wofford, they call him 'Pe te,' T)lursday night when he scored
was playing with a woman, had 34 points and added eight
her under his umbrella, in fact , assists as the Bucks took a 2-1
when she was hit by lightning lead in the National Basketball
and it killed her stone dead . My - Association Quarter-Fina l
brother was temporarily Serjes__ .

and thundering out there,"

-

SAVE

Record for a three-year-old
pace r , a 1:54 4-5 set in 1971.
Rated a fifth of a second
behind Ri cci Reenie Time In
1973 potenti al was Armbro
Nesbit, follo.wed another a fifth
of a second slower by Faraway
Bay in third.
COloma! Charm , with a
projected 1973 potential of
1:57 4-5, is the first filly ever
se lected to head an experimental ratings.
Owned ·by Castle ton Farm,
Colonia l Charm was the fastest
·jttvenile trotter of either sex in
1972 w1th u 2:00 2-5 clocking.
She is rated one-fifth of a •
second faster th an Arnie I
Almuhurst, the top ranke(l 1
trotter among coil,.
· 1
Rated third at I :58 .J-5 is
Blitzen, · followed by ·Burning 1
Speed at 1:58 2-5 and South I
Bend at I :58 2-5. The world 1
record for a threc-year-&lt;Jid
1
trotter was set by Super Bowl
1
in 1972 at 1:56 2-5.

•

TYCOON LAKE ( Gallla 1 - Clear and normal. Largemouth bass are being taken on deep running plugs, plastic
njghtcrawlers, and large minnows. Bank and boat flshennen
have been successful in all area's of the lake. Seventeen year
old Rick Little of Young's Trailer Court, Gallipolis, re~e ntly
landed a five pound largemouth bass on a Rapala Countdown. The bass measured 22".
FORKED RUN LAKE (Meigs I -Clear and normal. 4951 degrees. Anglers are taking trout on small spinners and
largemouth bass on small spinners and nlghtcrawlers.
Crappies are hJttlng minnows. Boat and shore anglers are
both successful with the best fishing being experienced in the
morning hoprs-:-Best area for fishing Is the lower end of the
lake ncar the dam.
'

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• 1nh1bi ts ru st 10 min ute dry
• 1nteno rs end Ex1eriors
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24 - Tlie Swulay Times· Sentinel. Swtday , April8, 1973

F

.

'

25- The SIDiday Times · Sentinel,Swtday, April 8, 1973

I .

b

•

- utur~ c_ontrol of U • .S. agricu ture in do~
t
k
By C. E. Blakeslee

Score is 6-5 in
eight.~nings;

.

•

Perry gets wiD
GALLIPOLIS - Senior Dave Burnette scored
from third base on an overthrow in the bottom of the
eighth inning with one out to give Coach Jim
OsbOrne's Gallipolis Blue Devils a 6·5 Southeastern
Ohio League baseball victory over visiting Meigs on
Memorial Field Friday evening.
The triumph left GAHS with a H conference ·
record. Coach Don Wolfe's Marauders dropped too- ·
· 2 in ·league play.
·
Burnette,- who held down
first base and right field Chuck Faulk . slammed a ·
positions lor the Gallians, was booming triple to deep center
safe on a Meigs error opening with one out in the £iflh.
Gallipolis managed only
the bottom of the eighth.
six
hits off Chaney, who went
Burnette look second on a
the 'distan~e for the
"Passed ball. After Bill Chaney
Marauders. Skipper John·
fanned Dave Thomas (Thomas
son's double tile right
attempted a bun! 'on third
SHEETS PUTS..GAHS AHEAD - Senior Blue Devilleftfielder Kev Sheets stole home in the
field
foul line In the second
strike) Freshman Brett Wilson
bottom of the fjfth inning of Friday's game against Meigs to give GAHS a 4-3lead. Meigs cat- ·
was GallipOlis' only extra
pi1Jchhit for senior second
cher Mick Ash had the plate blocked perfectly, and Sheets appeared to be out but the Blue Devil
base hit. Collecting singles
baseman Ray Weiher.
kicked the ball from Ash's outstretched glove hand, thus he was ruled safe by the umpire.
lor
GAHS were Jim Niday,
Burnette stole third. On the
GAHS won,lhJ, in eight innings. (Steve Wilson photos.)
play, catcher Mick Ash at- Mark Kiesling, Kev Sheets,
Dave Thomas and Ray
tempted· to catch Burnette but
PERRY NAILED AT HOME - Sophomore Jim Perry was nailed at home plate by Meigs
Weiher.
the ball bounced past third
catcher Mick Ash in the bottom of the fifth innlng after the Blue Devil third baseman-pitcher
Gallipolis took advantage of
baseman Lou McKinney into
attempted to score from third base on a suicide squeeze play by rightfielder Dave Thomas.
Jef!!ield. Burnette raced home seven Meigs errors b,y scoring
GaiJipolis won its firstSEOAL game of the year in the eighth inning,lhJ.
four unearned rUns. Chaney
with the winning run.
SEOAL STANDINGS
Team
W L R OR
Gallipolis led 5·3 going into · fanned six and walked five .
Athens
2 · 0 20 2
Gallipolis had 12 stolen bases,
the top of tile seventh. GAHS
Ironton
2 0 12 0
four by Leftfielder Kev Sheets
starter Skipper Johnson
. Waverly
2 0 II 4
~nd three hy Burnette.
.
· ·
Gallipoli s
1 1 6 8
walked Chuck FauJk.and-Lou
Logan
1 1 6 8
J ohnson , in six and one-third
McKinney started the !inal
Me igs
o 2 s 13
Starr-Washington {2)
Innings,
fanned nine and
CHESHIRE - Freshman walks to Clay Hudson and John ,. Playerrung.
Jackson
0 2 5 25
Pos.
AB R H
walked seven. Perry fanned southpaw Jeff_Blazer hu~led a Baird and a sacrifice bunt by Airson, 3b
Wellston
0 2 4 9
3 0 0
After
Johnson
got
Floyd
TOTALS
8 8 69 69
Oiiand Cremans.
McClain. p
3 0 0
three
in
one
and
one-third
two
hitter
here
Friday
night
in
Burney to pop up, Meigs
Friday'S Results:
Cook, 1b
1 1 0
Two more runs came across McDaniel.
leadin g the Kyger Creek
Athens 17 Jackson 2
rf
3 1 2
Cenlerfielder Dave Wolfe innings of relief.
Waverly 3 Wellston 1
Meigs jwnped of! to a 2-0 Bobcats to a 16-2 romp over in the second inning on two Harden , 2b
2 0 1
cracked
his
third
single
of
the
Gallipolis 6 Meigs 5 (8)
Trush.
2b
0
0 0
walks,
.
a
single
by
Bruce
.
Ironton 5 Logan 0
game, scoring Faulk. That first inning lead with lwo out. Starr-Washington.
Allberry,ss
2
0 0
Faulk ar.d McKinney walked. • The ;lctory pushed the (Willard) Arnett and Blazer. Mullins, cf
Tuesday's Games:
2 0 0
reduced it to 5-4.
Gallipolis at Jackson .
Three · more runs -scored in Hixenbaugh , cf -p .
1 0 0
Sophomore . Jim ~erry was . Burney and Wolfe followed _ Bobc~ts record to 2-1 wh1le the
.- Wellston at Ironton
Specht.
c
2
0 0
the
third
inning
on
two
walks
WarriOrs are 1)..1.
Logan vs . Waverly
then called from third base to with successive sinvles.
Heller, ph
1 0 0
GAffS tied it up in the first.
Blazer, in going five innings, and hi ts by Arnett and French . Totals
Wednes.d ay's Game :
20 2 3
relieve Johnson with two on
Athens at Meigs
Kyger Creek (16)
Seven
runs
crossed
the
plate
Leadoff
batter
Jim
Niday
flew
fan!Wd
--nin~
.
while
issuing
Friday's Games: ·.•
and one out. McKinriey tied the
PLAYE R'- Pos.
AB R H
in ·the fourth .inning. Hits were French,
Ironton at Gallipolis
cf
4 2 3
score ~5 on a groundout and to left, but scored on three singles to Carter and Greg
Wellston at Jackson
recorded by French, John Belcher, cf
consecutive
MHS
.errors.
Mark
McDaniel.
He
relieved
starter
0
0 0
GAHS error. Perry retired the
WaverlY at Athens
J . Roush, 2b
2. 2 1
Roush,
Hudsony
Cre,
m
eans
and
Kiesling
walked,
stole
secon\l
·
Joe
S\.idham
in
the
first
inning.
Logan at Meigs
· final five Marauders in order to
Neal , 2b ·
0 0 0
Stidham fanned Pat Airson Arnett . Starr-Washington Hudson , c
2 1 I
pick up ·the mound victory, in an~ third, and scored on . a
groundout.
and
Jerry
McClain
but
walked
pu
shed
across
its
two
runs
·
in
Ben
Arnett
,
c
1 0 0
relief.
Cremeans,
lb
2
l 1
GAHS made It 3_2 In the Bob Cook and Harden and the third inning on three walk~ R. Ro1.1sh, Jb
Meigs
collected
·six
o 1 o·
· Battery charges
McCarty,_lf
4 0 0
safeties off Johnson. Besides ~ccond. Ray Weiher was safe yielded an infield sfngle to and a single by Carter.
Baird.
ss
2 l 0
McDaniel led the Warriors
on an error. Johnson McDanie l. Blazer fann ed .
Wolfe's three singles •. Burney
Lucas.
ss
o
0. 0
with tWo singles. French and Rankin, rf
then Niday plated Carter to end the threat.
2 2 0
. dropped by Rogers had two singles in three trips. 'doubled,
Kyger Creek plated three Arnett paced the Bobcats with Metzner, rf
Weiher with ·a single to
Q, 0 ~ o
4 3 3
center.
rtJns in the first inniilg on a three hits each . The ga me was Arnett, 3b
Stidham, p
1 0 0
.,_ Meigs tied it 3-_3 in. the .fifth . leadoff single by centerfielder called after five innings due to Blazer, p
1
3 1
PASADENA, Calif. (UP!) -..
M h 11 F
h .
d darkriess.
Totals
26
16
10
•
'
Fau
_
lk
tripled,
and
scored
on
ars
a
rene
•
an
error
a,
_
n
Art Rogers the photographer
Score
by
innings:
Kyger Creek will play Southwho claimed he had a camera
Wolfe's single. GAHS moved
Starr-Wa,sh .
002 OD-- 2 J 7
western
on
Monday,
Wahama
K.
Creek
232 71 - 16 10 3
·
ahead .4-3 in the fifth. Sheets
pushed into his face by Ohio u.ol'~er.'S
United States tuna fleets. Tuesday, Point Plea sant
McCiairi
!lpl
Hixenbaugh
(4)
state coach Woody Hayes at ~ · '} •
wal~ed , stole second and third, sailing !rom San Diego,
and Specht. Stidham, Blazer, .
and scored on an attempted range as fil'r as the waters Wednesday and South_ern ( 1) twp) and Hudson, Arneh
the Rose Bowl, has dropped the
Thursday.
(5) .
. battery charges.
,
steal at home when the MHS of! Africa and Thailand .
Rogers, a Los Angeles 'rimes
catcher dropped the ball.
staffer, said the charges had
Pinch 'runner Leon Briggs
been
filed
as
a
warning
.
~·-"
IRONTON
Coach
Dick
gave
GAHS a 5-3 lead in the ·
HOURS, 9 TO 8 MONDAY TH RU FRIDAY
~&lt;We got our message acr·o~- Myers' defending Class AA · sixth, scoring from third on
9 TO 5 SA TljRDAY- CLOSED SU NDAY .
to Coach Hayes so the next guy District goll champions picked Mark Kiesling:s single.
would not get belted," Rogers up where th.eY left of! last
Then came Meigs rally in the
said Friday when charges were spring by defeating visiting ~venth, foUowed by the GAHS
dropped. ''My feeling at the Gallipolis, Oak Hill and Ironton comeback in the eighth.
Gallipolis , now l-1, was
lime was that if I didn't do St. Joe · in a quadrangular
something. ev~rytime a match on the Ironton course slated to host Chesapeake in a ..
photographer came on the field Friday evening.
rna keup game .Sa !urday.
he could gel hit."
Final score was Ironton 165, Monday, GAHS plays at P~.
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
. Rogers claimed he suffered GAHal77, Oak Hilll80 a.nd st. · Pleasant. Tuesday,
the
~ws t Sourh o f Sll11 er Bri dge ShopP1ng Plo z·o
3!1 eye frijury when · Rayes Joe 219.
Gallians are at Jackson for a
allel;\edly pushed the camera
Rick Anderson captured league encounter. GAHS will
Phone 446-9340
Gallipolis, Ohio~ into his face.
medalist honors with a three- . host Wahama Thursday_, .
Meigs will host Athens
over-par 38.
The Blue Devils, ·now 4-1 in
Wednesday', and Logan on
two matches this spring; will . Friday. Thursday, the MHS
· hoSt Meigs Monday, LOgan.
reserVes will play at Vinton
Wednesday, and defending
.County.
SEOAL champion Jackson on
In other league games .
Friday.
Friday, · Waverly . dumped
SPONSORED BY
Here's the GAHS-lronton Wellston 3-1, Athens bombed
results:
Jackson 17·2, and co-&lt;lefending
IRONTON (1651 - Rick champion Ironton blanked coAnderson,. 38; Mike Hurley, 42,· defending champion Loga·n, 5. ·
WOOD &amp;
. Kev Waldo, 42 ; Scott Spriggs,
ISN'T IT
0.
43 ; Jeff Massie, 45,
GALLIPOLIS (1771 - Ken
Meigs Marauders {5)
ALUMINUM
COMFORTING

NOW ON DISPLAY

Extension Agent, Agriclllture
POMEROY ~ One of the good things which may corne from
the current consumer protests on food prices is a better understanding of how prices are determined . Traditionally, farmers produce, take the product to the market place, and accept
whatever price is offered.
For many years a change has been going on in agriculture.
Many families have left the farm while the remaining farmers
have become larger operators and have produced more per
farm.
~
·
Throughout . history, control of the food SUpPly has been
important to governments and controlling groups. With farmers
representing less than 10 pet. of !be population
today. they· no
.

.

the NEW ill FARMING
lon~er have a majority voice in government. economics, or
soCiety.
.
_
Questions are being raised today concerning Who will control
u. s. agriculture. This question is so important tilat'·a~
educational meeting has already been scheduled for the Jackson
Area to be held on February 14, 1974 on this topic.
. Publications have been prepared and are available to anyone
mterested on the topic, "Who Will Control U.s. Agriculture."
The six leaflets in the series are, ( 1') The Current Situation
and the Issues; _(2) A Dispersed, O);&gt;en Market Agriculture; (3) A
Corporate Agriculture; (4) A Cooperative Agriculture; (5) A
Gover"!"ent Administered Agriculture, and (6) A Combination:
A Role for Each System.
Control of agriculture is largely vested in those who own or
control the resources and make the ~ey decisions for buying,
,selling, and producing. In reviewing the. situation and the issues,
the authors empha~ze that inaustrializa!ion of our food and fiber
System is a major force that is shifting future control away from

NOW YOU CAN WORM FOR
BOTS AND STRONGYLUS
WITH THE SAME DOSAGE!
-.

ONE PACKET WILL WORM ONE
900 LB. TO 1200 LB. HORSE

LOG.MARK

CENTRAL SOYA
OF OHIO

.'IRAVEJJO

3rd &amp; Sycamore Streets
Gallipolis. Ohio
"Your Farm Supply
Supermarket"

(S) FlpOR PLANS (S)

·

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IT'S HERE • NOW

h
trrump

0 nton-

IUNTBERNCATAIODNEALJ"'

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LAWN AND GARDEN TRACTORS _ __

FROG- ART CONTEST

•

·orawings mu~t be on .Pap~r backed by cardboard or on paint board, using
.any medium, and must include a frog.
.
.
•

·.

An~thing riot conformi'ng will be placed on exhibit only·.

.
ART ENTRIES should be brought to Crow, Crow &amp; Porter's .L aw office, /
deadline Mav 31.

•. TENNIS

.

I .

2

Age
3-6
7-10

Prizes
$10-$5:$1 .

$10-SS -$1

Class
. 1
2

Age
11 -13

$10-$5-52

14-17

$10-$5 -$2

Prizes

Age

1

2

18·29

• 30-100

Prizes '

SJS.SIO·SS
SJS-S1D-S5

NAME ____~----------------

-,

ADORESS'----------~--~~~

·a t

Monday - Gallipolis at Pt.
Pleasant.
Gallipolis at
· tuesday . Jackson.
Thursday Wahama ·•t

Gallipolis.

Fr.day Gallipolis.

·

,

Ironton

at

TRACK
.Monday Jackson at
Gallipolis
.
, ,
Tuesday - Chesapeake at
Gallipolis.
Wednesday - North GalliaMeigs at· Gallipoli~.
Saturday Gallipolis at
Circleville.
, ~ ~, ... GOLF ,
·
Monday
Meigs · · at

Gallipolis ·

Wednesday Logan
Galiipolis.
Fnday
Jacksqn
Gallipolis.

AGE _ _ _ _ TELEPH(.:!_NE _ __
Send to Mrs. · Roy Holter, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769
15, 1973.

Wellston

BASEBALL

SR. DIV. CROAKERS
Class

~

•

''

AB
5
5
2
1
3
4
3
Ron Eas11nan. pr, 41h 0
Mike Nessel road, 2b
I

R
0
0
3
2
0
0
0
0
0

H
0
0
1
0

3 0
TOTALS
31 5
Gallipolis Blue Devils (6)
Player-Pas.
AB R
Jimt:ny Nid?fly, cf
4 1
Mark Kiesling, c
J 1
Kev Sheet's, If
2 1
Steve Slone, ss
4 0
, Jimmy Perry ,Jb-p
J 0
4 ,1
Dave Burnette, rf-1b
Dave Thomas, rf-Jb
4 0
Ray Weiher: , 2b
. 2 1

o
6

Bill Vaughan. 2b
Bob Eason.1b

. GALLIPOLIS - Here's this
Monday
Gallipolis.

Winners will be announced at the Frog Jump, June 16 during
Regatta.
.

Class .

sports card
week ' s spring sports schedule
of Blue Devil athletic teams;

JUDGING - JU~E 1, entries will remain in committee's possession and
will be on display May 31 to June. 20.

MINI DIV. TADPOLES JR. DIV. FROGS

This week's

PJa.v.er-Pos.
Steve Price, ss
Mick Ash, c
Chuc'k Faulk, rf ·
. Lou McKinney, Jb
Floyd Burney, If
Dave Wolfe, cf
BiiiChaney,p

at
at

--

The sun is 30 trillion miles
closer to e•rth than the next
·
nearest star.

Rick Stover, 1b

6re11 Wilson. ph. &amp;1h

2
3
0
0
0

3 o 0
1 o o

H.
1
·1
1
0
0
0
1
1

o o o

Skipper Johnson, P· lb 2 '0-- 1 ·
Leon Briggs, pr, 6th
,: 0 1 o

TOTALS

28 6 6

Score by Innings:
Meigs
2.00 010 20--5·6·7
·GAHS
210 011 01 - 6·6·2
Winning pitcher- Perry '{1·
01 : . Loser - Chaney, (0-1) ;

111ntngspitch~d - Johnson,6l -.

3; Perry, 1 2-J; Chaney , 7 1·3;

At bat· off Johnson, 26 ~
Perry, 5; Chaney , 28; Hits off
Johnson , 6 ; Perry , O;
th·anti'(, 6; ~uns off - John·
son, 5; Perry., 0; Chaney, 6 ;
Base-on. balls off - Johnson, 7;
Perry, 0; Chaney , 5: Strike
·outsby - JohnsQn ,9; Perry ,3;
Chaney, 6 ; Earned runs ' GAHS 2, ·Meigs 4,· Passed balls
- Meigs, 1;. Left on base GAH$ 5, Meigs 9; Umpin:s - .
Tucker' &amp; Wilkes ; Scorer
Harbour ; Time - 2: 45 .

·... TO KNOW

HAVE A

·" ~

GOOD- ROOF OVER YOUR HEAD?
. · Al:love .everything
else be sure you

have a gpod roof.
With many seasons

of blistering sun it's
possible your roof
needs a chec~-up.
This we'll gladly do
et no obligation.

WHITE SEATS
ONLY

No maHer what the chore around your lawn. garden , driveway, walk s, Cub Cadet i ~ at
your beck and .call. From tilling YOtJr garden ... to mowing . YO~r lawn ... throwrng
Snow, Cub Cadet lawn and garden tra ·ctors do the iob faster and better .

'4.69

1

Buy Your Tracto_
r At List Price

If it needs to be
reploced or
repaired; we'll give
you a free estimate

beforeho nd on
lobor ond
material"$..

$10

Your paaner, thicker-lawn
(and a lot of savings)
starts hera. ·
Agrico Grass Food.
I think it's the beat.
It greens your lawn fast.
then slow nitrogen release
feeds it a bnlnnccd diet. Added iron gives your lawn
that. extra rich green color.
That all adds up Loa ·
greener, thicker lawn. And
look at these savings.

.

submitted ·ri.ght away as funds
will be pooled nationally May
31, 197:!. After that date, Farm
Ownership funds may not be
~vailable until some time after
July 1, 197:1.
The local FHA office is
located at 95 Sycamore St.,
Gattipolis , Ohio 45631. Mr .
McNair serves the counties of
Gallia, .Jackson and 1-K~wrence
from
his
Gallipolis
headquarters .. The office is
open Mnnday thru Fridayftom
8 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. and the ·
telephone number is 614-4460565.
Meigs County. served
U1rough the Athens office at 77
E. Stale St., which is open
Monday through Friday from 8
a.m. to 4:45 p.m., phone 614·
592-2110.

1400

OFF·

•r OFF
8JOO

60 lb . hag cnvcrR 15,00Q oq. ft.
Reg. $14.95 now $10.95
40 lb . bag covers 10,000 sq. ft.
Reg . $ 10 ..95 now $8.95
20 lb . bag covers 5, 000 SQ . ft.
Reg. $5.45 now $4.45

Freel Jerry Baker's L(lwn

Management Guide. Get one
at thi.a Agrico ·Dealer:.

AI r·· CO"
,

.

Smeltzer Garden Center
to

Open 9

6 weekdavs

Sunday 1 to 5
4 miles west of Gallipolis on U.S. 35.

HAS .EVERYTHING

POMEROY - Meigs County
farmers interested in no·lill
corn ar·e invited to attend at
No-Till Corn Clinic TueSilay,
Aprii!O at I :30 p.m. at the Rex
Shenefieid ~'arm near Wilkesville.
Dave Boothe, Vinton County
Extension. Agent, Agriculture,
said, "How and what to use in
the way of insecticide, herbicide, seed and fertilizer" will
be covered. Shenefield has a
no-till planter. He will help
· answer questions on its
oPeration.
Those who have planters for
lease, hire or sale have been
invited to attend.
State and Area Extension
Agronomists Sam Bone and
John Underwood will attend.
They have seen no-tillage
throughout the state and have
pntetical suggestions.

Economy Iiiier, 31'2 hp B &amp; S engine,
93% of weight is o'er the lines for
better tilling.
Hahn hoe tmes,
·
12" diameter.
20" wide .
in carton
122-1216)
$134.95 se1 up

S"J 2995

$4995

APRIL 17, 7:30 PM

VALLEY LIVESTOCK CO.
On An. Outright Purch.a se
'

CAROLINA--LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.

.•

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
· Phone: 446·9049 or 446-9760

..

Meigs Equipment Co.

. Point Pleasant

Ph.

Pomeroy

~92-2176
•

•

--

TURF TRIM
MOWER

GLEN McDANIEL
POMEROY - Glen Me,
Daniel, Pomeroy Home &amp; ·
Auto s.tore, recent winner of
a one.week vacation J~t West
Germany for outstanding
sales of SUhl Chain Saws, Is
shown Jn West Germany with
MEETING SET UP
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Dr. . , the Stlhl 031AV (8). The (B)
designated 11 Brake." The
John R. Shaeffer, special
Stlhl "Brake" Is the most
assistant [or environmental
significant safety lnnovallon
affairs to the undersecretary of
In the history of the chain
the Army, will keynote a
saw
business. ChaJn ·Saw
sen:unar here Monday on water
kickback Its the most· com·
management. The program,
mon cause of accidents in the
co-sponsored by the Mid-Ohio
industry. The "Brake" stops
Health Planning Federation
and the state Environmental . tile chain (n less tllan one·
~enth of a second, preventing
Protection Agency, is designed
severe
cuttJilg of the
to provide environmental inoperatoi:o Picture was taken
. formation to legislators,
outside the Sllhllactory near
mayors, city managers,
Stuttgart.
councilmen, county commissioners and health officials.

Y~

MOWER

95 SQ.

Phone 675-1160

GALLIPOLIS
Local credit~ at terms he can meet,
farmers needing Jong-ter.fu · and will be operating a famil&gt;'
· credit to purchase land or farm that will produce a
make · real estate im- substantial portion of hls tOtal
provements may now qualify . income.
for Farmers Home Ad· FHA credit supplements the
ministration loans, FHA local banks and other lenders
Supervisor Vernon McNair in the area. FHA will make a ·
said Saturday.
second ·mortgage !arm real
"We have expanded loan estate loan in conjunction with
authoritie~ to assist eligible ~nother local. lender. In fact,
farmers with practically ·all FHA require~ the..applicant to
their farm credit needs ," get as much of hls credit as
. McNair said.
possible from a bank, Federal
. Farm Ownership loans may Land Bank, or other long-term
be used to purchase land, make lender .
' land and buil~ing imFarm ·Ownership loans are
proveinents, finan ce non-farm repayable over 4Q years at 5
businesses, and refinance pet. interest. The maximum
debts. Eligibility requirements real estate indebtedness
for these loans are, be a citizen,. cannot exceed $100,000.
of the U.S., be at least 21 years . Applications should be
of age, have farm training or
experience .. to · .assure
reasonable prospects of success, be Wlable to acquire other

•

\

312 6th Sl

WASHINGTON (UP!)- The purple dye used lor yean!
to stamp grades on meat and to color everytiUng from ice
cream to pel foods has been banned by the government
because 'new studies Indicate It may cause ·cancer.
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Thursday
revoked its approval ror 10Violet No.1", the technical name
of the dye wltleh has been permitted lor use In the United
States lor the last 22 years.

SPECIAL SALE

Get The

BIRD WINDSEAL ·

SHINGLES
ONLY

Prgple marking dye banned

clinic set

MOBILE HOME SALES

.New, 40 ; Dow Saunders, 43 ;
Jack Clark 46; John Saunders,
. 48 ; Topper Orr, 48 .

specify quantity and quality standards and delivery dates - . are
established by contract before production begins.
Most of us are concerned about what lies ahead. Tbe control
of agriculture has already changed greatly ,'though wide dlf.
ferences exist. among fann commodities. For example, control of
troiler and lettuce production · has become very highly amcentrated iii particular areas. On the other hand, control of cowcall bOe! operations and most small-t:rain production remains
very broad.:nased.'
• ..
.., ••.
Continuation of the trend toward larger and fewer fal'ITlB can
be expected as successful farmers expand their operations.
Increased control of agriculture by the food marketing and farmsupply industries and, perhaps to a lesser extent, by other
oonfarrn investors can also be expected. However. tllose who
have a stake in control of agriculture also have a voice in puhtic
policymaking and the opportunity to influence those policies that
affect control.
Anyone interested in studying this situation further may
secure copies of the leaflets by contacting the County Extension
Office or put the date of February 14, 1974 on their calendar of
·:::::::::::::::::;:::;:::~:=:~~:!:!:!::::::::::;:::::::::: :::;;:;;: ;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;::: . meetings for the coming year.

No-till com ·

cY~e~

OHIO SOCIETY F.OR
PROMOTION .OF BULLFROGS

- from
the farm. As a result, many agricultural products can be
profitably produC&lt;d and sold only if market outlets - wltlch often

FHA loans available

ors
• (DICHLORVOS*)

KC bombs .Warriorsl6-2

:.:~~~a::tii~n.~f;:~~~~~~~:r~~:=~e~~.;

They want dependable supplies ' or low-cost and high·
quality food .
(2) They want to curtail agricultural practices that adversely affect en~ironmental quality and the availability of open
spaces .
(3) They want tax costs of any policy to be in line with the
benefits realized.
( 4) They want a lair share of the benefits of farm programs
to accrue to smaller (as contrasted to large-scale) producers.
Though some think !hat larg~ale Ianning wiU be low..:ost and
efficient, others think big farm corporations wiU try to gain
monopoly contrQis and raise food prices.
The question cOmes up, ••What ls meant by control?''
Control of agriculture is, In large degree, vested In those
individuals or fiims who own o~ otherwise control the resources
used in agriculture and make the key decisions for buying,
selling, and producing . To do this they must be able to effectively
obtain and use the technical information required to remain
l'Ompetitive in farming, and have effective access to markets for
(!)

'• .I

SEO standings

·Expertly Designed
Superbly Built.
Economically priced.

the farm . Access to adequate capital is a key control instrument.
Acquiring economic farm units is becoming costly and
prohibitive to a majority of would-be farmers.
IN 1939, MORE TIIAN one million smaU !arms realized ooly
2.2 pet. of all sales, while the fewer than 2 pet. of farms that had
sales of $100,000 or more made one-third of total sales. Commodities which can be readily adapted to mass productioo are
usually produced on farms of high sales volume.
; For Instance, vegetable and poultry farms had 85 peL and 114
pet. of the value coming from !arms exceeding $100,000 in cash
sales. At the other e•treme, only 18 pet. of the tobacco Blld 35 pet.
of the cash grain canielrom these large !arms.
Over 85 pet ..of all farms in !11e U.S. are sUU operated as
individual or family farms. Only 1.2 pet. are owned by corporations. Twelve per cent of the farms are operated by a part·
nership.
. OveraU, the predominance of grain and general farming,
inclnding dairy and hog production - which have.not undergone
drastic changes in production and marketing organization places the North Central states in a unique position . The individual farm operators in ·this region can stiU more easily
consider production and marketing alternatives than can
producers in some other parts of the cowttry .
In 1969 orily 16 peL of the total .value of production from
farms ln Ohio came from farms wlth over $100,000 or more in
gross _sales. The opposite extreme is California with 75 pet.,
Arizona 86 pet., and F1orida 73 pet. The lowest percentage is 9
pet. in North Dakota.
Qmcerns" ahout . !be future organization and oontrol of
agriculture are nwnerous and varied. Traditional farmers h,ave
a major concern that farming is becoming a large-scale business
and that smaller producers are being squeezed out.
Concerns of the general public, including consumers and
taxpayers, center on at least four broad issues:

.

selling products and buying inputs, such as eqqipment. supplies,

Yearling steers, heifers. bulls. · Also steers.
bul .l s. heifer calves. Cattle do' not have to be
consigned, Gatlle received from 8: 00 a .m. to
5:00p.m. the day of the sale' .
·Expec\ing approx. 500-600 cattie.

. ..

..

Two economy mowers, one pushtype rotary, the other s.e.l f·
propelled, 3 a~d 31;, h~ Bnggs
engtnes. Money-sa v1ng pnces!

TURF TRIM
SELF PROPELLED
S"7J195

in carton
~ , . . $79.95·set up

..
.
---------------------------------~·

PlANT PEP
·----~~ Plant Pep contains 15 plant

food elements. Its special
6-12-6 formula is recommend~dlor pre-plant or side
dressing applications on
roses, flowers, trees, vegetable gardens, shrubs,
strawberries and new lawns.
Plant Pep is the cornbina·
lion most gardeners like as
a specialty fertilizer.

·-

LAWN PEP
•'

A high analysis 22-11-7

c~ntent

of slow release
plant food Ingredients, will
feed your lawn over longer
periods of time. A free·
flowing lawn food, easy to
apply with cyclone or conventional Sjlreader. For a
iihowplace lawn, start with
LANDMARK Lawn P-e~
·$4.75 gets you 7500 sq.
coverage, Instead of usu
5,000.

$475~

___________________________,_,_,_,_
25 lb.
size

50 lb.
3l.r:e

.

YOU CAN
BUY AT

LANDMARK _·.

Everyone
Can!

POMEROY
Serving Meigs', Galli a
and Mason Counties
Ph. 992 -2181
Jack W. Carsey. Mgr.

look for the Big "l" on Route 7 &amp; 33 at the
Upper End of Pomeroy

Open Daily Unti I 6:00 P ·"11·
•

'

�• •

24 - Tlie Swulay Times· Sentinel. Swtday , April8, 1973

F

.

'

25- The SIDiday Times · Sentinel,Swtday, April 8, 1973

I .

b

•

- utur~ c_ontrol of U • .S. agricu ture in do~
t
k
By C. E. Blakeslee

Score is 6-5 in
eight.~nings;

.

•

Perry gets wiD
GALLIPOLIS - Senior Dave Burnette scored
from third base on an overthrow in the bottom of the
eighth inning with one out to give Coach Jim
OsbOrne's Gallipolis Blue Devils a 6·5 Southeastern
Ohio League baseball victory over visiting Meigs on
Memorial Field Friday evening.
The triumph left GAHS with a H conference ·
record. Coach Don Wolfe's Marauders dropped too- ·
· 2 in ·league play.
·
Burnette,- who held down
first base and right field Chuck Faulk . slammed a ·
positions lor the Gallians, was booming triple to deep center
safe on a Meigs error opening with one out in the £iflh.
Gallipolis managed only
the bottom of the eighth.
six
hits off Chaney, who went
Burnette look second on a
the 'distan~e for the
"Passed ball. After Bill Chaney
Marauders. Skipper John·
fanned Dave Thomas (Thomas
son's double tile right
attempted a bun! 'on third
SHEETS PUTS..GAHS AHEAD - Senior Blue Devilleftfielder Kev Sheets stole home in the
field
foul line In the second
strike) Freshman Brett Wilson
bottom of the fjfth inning of Friday's game against Meigs to give GAHS a 4-3lead. Meigs cat- ·
was GallipOlis' only extra
pi1Jchhit for senior second
cher Mick Ash had the plate blocked perfectly, and Sheets appeared to be out but the Blue Devil
base hit. Collecting singles
baseman Ray Weiher.
kicked the ball from Ash's outstretched glove hand, thus he was ruled safe by the umpire.
lor
GAHS were Jim Niday,
Burnette stole third. On the
GAHS won,lhJ, in eight innings. (Steve Wilson photos.)
play, catcher Mick Ash at- Mark Kiesling, Kev Sheets,
Dave Thomas and Ray
tempted· to catch Burnette but
PERRY NAILED AT HOME - Sophomore Jim Perry was nailed at home plate by Meigs
Weiher.
the ball bounced past third
catcher Mick Ash in the bottom of the fifth innlng after the Blue Devil third baseman-pitcher
Gallipolis took advantage of
baseman Lou McKinney into
attempted to score from third base on a suicide squeeze play by rightfielder Dave Thomas.
Jef!!ield. Burnette raced home seven Meigs errors b,y scoring
GaiJipolis won its firstSEOAL game of the year in the eighth inning,lhJ.
four unearned rUns. Chaney
with the winning run.
SEOAL STANDINGS
Team
W L R OR
Gallipolis led 5·3 going into · fanned six and walked five .
Athens
2 · 0 20 2
Gallipolis had 12 stolen bases,
the top of tile seventh. GAHS
Ironton
2 0 12 0
four by Leftfielder Kev Sheets
starter Skipper Johnson
. Waverly
2 0 II 4
~nd three hy Burnette.
.
· ·
Gallipoli s
1 1 6 8
walked Chuck FauJk.and-Lou
Logan
1 1 6 8
J ohnson , in six and one-third
McKinney started the !inal
Me igs
o 2 s 13
Starr-Washington {2)
Innings,
fanned nine and
CHESHIRE - Freshman walks to Clay Hudson and John ,. Playerrung.
Jackson
0 2 5 25
Pos.
AB R H
walked seven. Perry fanned southpaw Jeff_Blazer hu~led a Baird and a sacrifice bunt by Airson, 3b
Wellston
0 2 4 9
3 0 0
After
Johnson
got
Floyd
TOTALS
8 8 69 69
Oiiand Cremans.
McClain. p
3 0 0
three
in
one
and
one-third
two
hitter
here
Friday
night
in
Burney to pop up, Meigs
Friday'S Results:
Cook, 1b
1 1 0
Two more runs came across McDaniel.
leadin g the Kyger Creek
Athens 17 Jackson 2
rf
3 1 2
Cenlerfielder Dave Wolfe innings of relief.
Waverly 3 Wellston 1
Meigs jwnped of! to a 2-0 Bobcats to a 16-2 romp over in the second inning on two Harden , 2b
2 0 1
cracked
his
third
single
of
the
Gallipolis 6 Meigs 5 (8)
Trush.
2b
0
0 0
walks,
.
a
single
by
Bruce
.
Ironton 5 Logan 0
game, scoring Faulk. That first inning lead with lwo out. Starr-Washington.
Allberry,ss
2
0 0
Faulk ar.d McKinney walked. • The ;lctory pushed the (Willard) Arnett and Blazer. Mullins, cf
Tuesday's Games:
2 0 0
reduced it to 5-4.
Gallipolis at Jackson .
Three · more runs -scored in Hixenbaugh , cf -p .
1 0 0
Sophomore . Jim ~erry was . Burney and Wolfe followed _ Bobc~ts record to 2-1 wh1le the
.- Wellston at Ironton
Specht.
c
2
0 0
the
third
inning
on
two
walks
WarriOrs are 1)..1.
Logan vs . Waverly
then called from third base to with successive sinvles.
Heller, ph
1 0 0
GAffS tied it up in the first.
Blazer, in going five innings, and hi ts by Arnett and French . Totals
Wednes.d ay's Game :
20 2 3
relieve Johnson with two on
Athens at Meigs
Kyger Creek (16)
Seven
runs
crossed
the
plate
Leadoff
batter
Jim
Niday
flew
fan!Wd
--nin~
.
while
issuing
Friday's Games: ·.•
and one out. McKinriey tied the
PLAYE R'- Pos.
AB R H
in ·the fourth .inning. Hits were French,
Ironton at Gallipolis
cf
4 2 3
score ~5 on a groundout and to left, but scored on three singles to Carter and Greg
Wellston at Jackson
recorded by French, John Belcher, cf
consecutive
MHS
.errors.
Mark
McDaniel.
He
relieved
starter
0
0 0
GAHS error. Perry retired the
WaverlY at Athens
J . Roush, 2b
2. 2 1
Roush,
Hudsony
Cre,
m
eans
and
Kiesling
walked,
stole
secon\l
·
Joe
S\.idham
in
the
first
inning.
Logan at Meigs
· final five Marauders in order to
Neal , 2b ·
0 0 0
Stidham fanned Pat Airson Arnett . Starr-Washington Hudson , c
2 1 I
pick up ·the mound victory, in an~ third, and scored on . a
groundout.
and
Jerry
McClain
but
walked
pu
shed
across
its
two
runs
·
in
Ben
Arnett
,
c
1 0 0
relief.
Cremeans,
lb
2
l 1
GAHS made It 3_2 In the Bob Cook and Harden and the third inning on three walk~ R. Ro1.1sh, Jb
Meigs
collected
·six
o 1 o·
· Battery charges
McCarty,_lf
4 0 0
safeties off Johnson. Besides ~ccond. Ray Weiher was safe yielded an infield sfngle to and a single by Carter.
Baird.
ss
2 l 0
McDaniel led the Warriors
on an error. Johnson McDanie l. Blazer fann ed .
Wolfe's three singles •. Burney
Lucas.
ss
o
0. 0
with tWo singles. French and Rankin, rf
then Niday plated Carter to end the threat.
2 2 0
. dropped by Rogers had two singles in three trips. 'doubled,
Kyger Creek plated three Arnett paced the Bobcats with Metzner, rf
Weiher with ·a single to
Q, 0 ~ o
4 3 3
center.
rtJns in the first inniilg on a three hits each . The ga me was Arnett, 3b
Stidham, p
1 0 0
.,_ Meigs tied it 3-_3 in. the .fifth . leadoff single by centerfielder called after five innings due to Blazer, p
1
3 1
PASADENA, Calif. (UP!) -..
M h 11 F
h .
d darkriess.
Totals
26
16
10
•
'
Fau
_
lk
tripled,
and
scored
on
ars
a
rene
•
an
error
a,
_
n
Art Rogers the photographer
Score
by
innings:
Kyger Creek will play Southwho claimed he had a camera
Wolfe's single. GAHS moved
Starr-Wa,sh .
002 OD-- 2 J 7
western
on
Monday,
Wahama
K.
Creek
232 71 - 16 10 3
·
ahead .4-3 in the fifth. Sheets
pushed into his face by Ohio u.ol'~er.'S
United States tuna fleets. Tuesday, Point Plea sant
McCiairi
!lpl
Hixenbaugh
(4)
state coach Woody Hayes at ~ · '} •
wal~ed , stole second and third, sailing !rom San Diego,
and Specht. Stidham, Blazer, .
and scored on an attempted range as fil'r as the waters Wednesday and South_ern ( 1) twp) and Hudson, Arneh
the Rose Bowl, has dropped the
Thursday.
(5) .
. battery charges.
,
steal at home when the MHS of! Africa and Thailand .
Rogers, a Los Angeles 'rimes
catcher dropped the ball.
staffer, said the charges had
Pinch 'runner Leon Briggs
been
filed
as
a
warning
.
~·-"
IRONTON
Coach
Dick
gave
GAHS a 5-3 lead in the ·
HOURS, 9 TO 8 MONDAY TH RU FRIDAY
~&lt;We got our message acr·o~- Myers' defending Class AA · sixth, scoring from third on
9 TO 5 SA TljRDAY- CLOSED SU NDAY .
to Coach Hayes so the next guy District goll champions picked Mark Kiesling:s single.
would not get belted," Rogers up where th.eY left of! last
Then came Meigs rally in the
said Friday when charges were spring by defeating visiting ~venth, foUowed by the GAHS
dropped. ''My feeling at the Gallipolis, Oak Hill and Ironton comeback in the eighth.
Gallipolis , now l-1, was
lime was that if I didn't do St. Joe · in a quadrangular
something. ev~rytime a match on the Ironton course slated to host Chesapeake in a ..
photographer came on the field Friday evening.
rna keup game .Sa !urday.
he could gel hit."
Final score was Ironton 165, Monday, GAHS plays at P~.
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
. Rogers claimed he suffered GAHal77, Oak Hilll80 a.nd st. · Pleasant. Tuesday,
the
~ws t Sourh o f Sll11 er Bri dge ShopP1ng Plo z·o
3!1 eye frijury when · Rayes Joe 219.
Gallians are at Jackson for a
allel;\edly pushed the camera
Rick Anderson captured league encounter. GAHS will
Phone 446-9340
Gallipolis, Ohio~ into his face.
medalist honors with a three- . host Wahama Thursday_, .
Meigs will host Athens
over-par 38.
The Blue Devils, ·now 4-1 in
Wednesday', and Logan on
two matches this spring; will . Friday. Thursday, the MHS
· hoSt Meigs Monday, LOgan.
reserVes will play at Vinton
Wednesday, and defending
.County.
SEOAL champion Jackson on
In other league games .
Friday.
Friday, · Waverly . dumped
SPONSORED BY
Here's the GAHS-lronton Wellston 3-1, Athens bombed
results:
Jackson 17·2, and co-&lt;lefending
IRONTON (1651 - Rick champion Ironton blanked coAnderson,. 38; Mike Hurley, 42,· defending champion Loga·n, 5. ·
WOOD &amp;
. Kev Waldo, 42 ; Scott Spriggs,
ISN'T IT
0.
43 ; Jeff Massie, 45,
GALLIPOLIS (1771 - Ken
Meigs Marauders {5)
ALUMINUM
COMFORTING

NOW ON DISPLAY

Extension Agent, Agriclllture
POMEROY ~ One of the good things which may corne from
the current consumer protests on food prices is a better understanding of how prices are determined . Traditionally, farmers produce, take the product to the market place, and accept
whatever price is offered.
For many years a change has been going on in agriculture.
Many families have left the farm while the remaining farmers
have become larger operators and have produced more per
farm.
~
·
Throughout . history, control of the food SUpPly has been
important to governments and controlling groups. With farmers
representing less than 10 pet. of !be population
today. they· no
.

.

the NEW ill FARMING
lon~er have a majority voice in government. economics, or
soCiety.
.
_
Questions are being raised today concerning Who will control
u. s. agriculture. This question is so important tilat'·a~
educational meeting has already been scheduled for the Jackson
Area to be held on February 14, 1974 on this topic.
. Publications have been prepared and are available to anyone
mterested on the topic, "Who Will Control U.s. Agriculture."
The six leaflets in the series are, ( 1') The Current Situation
and the Issues; _(2) A Dispersed, O);&gt;en Market Agriculture; (3) A
Corporate Agriculture; (4) A Cooperative Agriculture; (5) A
Gover"!"ent Administered Agriculture, and (6) A Combination:
A Role for Each System.
Control of agriculture is largely vested in those who own or
control the resources and make the ~ey decisions for buying,
,selling, and producing. In reviewing the. situation and the issues,
the authors empha~ze that inaustrializa!ion of our food and fiber
System is a major force that is shifting future control away from

NOW YOU CAN WORM FOR
BOTS AND STRONGYLUS
WITH THE SAME DOSAGE!
-.

ONE PACKET WILL WORM ONE
900 LB. TO 1200 LB. HORSE

LOG.MARK

CENTRAL SOYA
OF OHIO

.'IRAVEJJO

3rd &amp; Sycamore Streets
Gallipolis. Ohio
"Your Farm Supply
Supermarket"

(S) FlpOR PLANS (S)

·

l

IT'S HERE • NOW

h
trrump

0 nton-

IUNTBERNCATAIODNEALJ"'

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.

LAWN AND GARDEN TRACTORS _ __

FROG- ART CONTEST

•

·orawings mu~t be on .Pap~r backed by cardboard or on paint board, using
.any medium, and must include a frog.
.
.
•

·.

An~thing riot conformi'ng will be placed on exhibit only·.

.
ART ENTRIES should be brought to Crow, Crow &amp; Porter's .L aw office, /
deadline Mav 31.

•. TENNIS

.

I .

2

Age
3-6
7-10

Prizes
$10-$5:$1 .

$10-SS -$1

Class
. 1
2

Age
11 -13

$10-$5-52

14-17

$10-$5 -$2

Prizes

Age

1

2

18·29

• 30-100

Prizes '

SJS.SIO·SS
SJS-S1D-S5

NAME ____~----------------

-,

ADORESS'----------~--~~~

·a t

Monday - Gallipolis at Pt.
Pleasant.
Gallipolis at
· tuesday . Jackson.
Thursday Wahama ·•t

Gallipolis.

Fr.day Gallipolis.

·

,

Ironton

at

TRACK
.Monday Jackson at
Gallipolis
.
, ,
Tuesday - Chesapeake at
Gallipolis.
Wednesday - North GalliaMeigs at· Gallipoli~.
Saturday Gallipolis at
Circleville.
, ~ ~, ... GOLF ,
·
Monday
Meigs · · at

Gallipolis ·

Wednesday Logan
Galiipolis.
Fnday
Jacksqn
Gallipolis.

AGE _ _ _ _ TELEPH(.:!_NE _ __
Send to Mrs. · Roy Holter, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769
15, 1973.

Wellston

BASEBALL

SR. DIV. CROAKERS
Class

~

•

''

AB
5
5
2
1
3
4
3
Ron Eas11nan. pr, 41h 0
Mike Nessel road, 2b
I

R
0
0
3
2
0
0
0
0
0

H
0
0
1
0

3 0
TOTALS
31 5
Gallipolis Blue Devils (6)
Player-Pas.
AB R
Jimt:ny Nid?fly, cf
4 1
Mark Kiesling, c
J 1
Kev Sheet's, If
2 1
Steve Slone, ss
4 0
, Jimmy Perry ,Jb-p
J 0
4 ,1
Dave Burnette, rf-1b
Dave Thomas, rf-Jb
4 0
Ray Weiher: , 2b
. 2 1

o
6

Bill Vaughan. 2b
Bob Eason.1b

. GALLIPOLIS - Here's this
Monday
Gallipolis.

Winners will be announced at the Frog Jump, June 16 during
Regatta.
.

Class .

sports card
week ' s spring sports schedule
of Blue Devil athletic teams;

JUDGING - JU~E 1, entries will remain in committee's possession and
will be on display May 31 to June. 20.

MINI DIV. TADPOLES JR. DIV. FROGS

This week's

PJa.v.er-Pos.
Steve Price, ss
Mick Ash, c
Chuc'k Faulk, rf ·
. Lou McKinney, Jb
Floyd Burney, If
Dave Wolfe, cf
BiiiChaney,p

at
at

--

The sun is 30 trillion miles
closer to e•rth than the next
·
nearest star.

Rick Stover, 1b

6re11 Wilson. ph. &amp;1h

2
3
0
0
0

3 o 0
1 o o

H.
1
·1
1
0
0
0
1
1

o o o

Skipper Johnson, P· lb 2 '0-- 1 ·
Leon Briggs, pr, 6th
,: 0 1 o

TOTALS

28 6 6

Score by Innings:
Meigs
2.00 010 20--5·6·7
·GAHS
210 011 01 - 6·6·2
Winning pitcher- Perry '{1·
01 : . Loser - Chaney, (0-1) ;

111ntngspitch~d - Johnson,6l -.

3; Perry, 1 2-J; Chaney , 7 1·3;

At bat· off Johnson, 26 ~
Perry, 5; Chaney , 28; Hits off
Johnson , 6 ; Perry , O;
th·anti'(, 6; ~uns off - John·
son, 5; Perry., 0; Chaney, 6 ;
Base-on. balls off - Johnson, 7;
Perry, 0; Chaney , 5: Strike
·outsby - JohnsQn ,9; Perry ,3;
Chaney, 6 ; Earned runs ' GAHS 2, ·Meigs 4,· Passed balls
- Meigs, 1;. Left on base GAH$ 5, Meigs 9; Umpin:s - .
Tucker' &amp; Wilkes ; Scorer
Harbour ; Time - 2: 45 .

·... TO KNOW

HAVE A

·" ~

GOOD- ROOF OVER YOUR HEAD?
. · Al:love .everything
else be sure you

have a gpod roof.
With many seasons

of blistering sun it's
possible your roof
needs a chec~-up.
This we'll gladly do
et no obligation.

WHITE SEATS
ONLY

No maHer what the chore around your lawn. garden , driveway, walk s, Cub Cadet i ~ at
your beck and .call. From tilling YOtJr garden ... to mowing . YO~r lawn ... throwrng
Snow, Cub Cadet lawn and garden tra ·ctors do the iob faster and better .

'4.69

1

Buy Your Tracto_
r At List Price

If it needs to be
reploced or
repaired; we'll give
you a free estimate

beforeho nd on
lobor ond
material"$..

$10

Your paaner, thicker-lawn
(and a lot of savings)
starts hera. ·
Agrico Grass Food.
I think it's the beat.
It greens your lawn fast.
then slow nitrogen release
feeds it a bnlnnccd diet. Added iron gives your lawn
that. extra rich green color.
That all adds up Loa ·
greener, thicker lawn. And
look at these savings.

.

submitted ·ri.ght away as funds
will be pooled nationally May
31, 197:!. After that date, Farm
Ownership funds may not be
~vailable until some time after
July 1, 197:1.
The local FHA office is
located at 95 Sycamore St.,
Gattipolis , Ohio 45631. Mr .
McNair serves the counties of
Gallia, .Jackson and 1-K~wrence
from
his
Gallipolis
headquarters .. The office is
open Mnnday thru Fridayftom
8 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. and the ·
telephone number is 614-4460565.
Meigs County. served
U1rough the Athens office at 77
E. Stale St., which is open
Monday through Friday from 8
a.m. to 4:45 p.m., phone 614·
592-2110.

1400

OFF·

•r OFF
8JOO

60 lb . hag cnvcrR 15,00Q oq. ft.
Reg. $14.95 now $10.95
40 lb . bag covers 10,000 sq. ft.
Reg . $ 10 ..95 now $8.95
20 lb . bag covers 5, 000 SQ . ft.
Reg. $5.45 now $4.45

Freel Jerry Baker's L(lwn

Management Guide. Get one
at thi.a Agrico ·Dealer:.

AI r·· CO"
,

.

Smeltzer Garden Center
to

Open 9

6 weekdavs

Sunday 1 to 5
4 miles west of Gallipolis on U.S. 35.

HAS .EVERYTHING

POMEROY - Meigs County
farmers interested in no·lill
corn ar·e invited to attend at
No-Till Corn Clinic TueSilay,
Aprii!O at I :30 p.m. at the Rex
Shenefieid ~'arm near Wilkesville.
Dave Boothe, Vinton County
Extension. Agent, Agriculture,
said, "How and what to use in
the way of insecticide, herbicide, seed and fertilizer" will
be covered. Shenefield has a
no-till planter. He will help
· answer questions on its
oPeration.
Those who have planters for
lease, hire or sale have been
invited to attend.
State and Area Extension
Agronomists Sam Bone and
John Underwood will attend.
They have seen no-tillage
throughout the state and have
pntetical suggestions.

Economy Iiiier, 31'2 hp B &amp; S engine,
93% of weight is o'er the lines for
better tilling.
Hahn hoe tmes,
·
12" diameter.
20" wide .
in carton
122-1216)
$134.95 se1 up

S"J 2995

$4995

APRIL 17, 7:30 PM

VALLEY LIVESTOCK CO.
On An. Outright Purch.a se
'

CAROLINA--LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.

.•

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
· Phone: 446·9049 or 446-9760

..

Meigs Equipment Co.

. Point Pleasant

Ph.

Pomeroy

~92-2176
•

•

--

TURF TRIM
MOWER

GLEN McDANIEL
POMEROY - Glen Me,
Daniel, Pomeroy Home &amp; ·
Auto s.tore, recent winner of
a one.week vacation J~t West
Germany for outstanding
sales of SUhl Chain Saws, Is
shown Jn West Germany with
MEETING SET UP
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Dr. . , the Stlhl 031AV (8). The (B)
designated 11 Brake." The
John R. Shaeffer, special
Stlhl "Brake" Is the most
assistant [or environmental
significant safety lnnovallon
affairs to the undersecretary of
In the history of the chain
the Army, will keynote a
saw
business. ChaJn ·Saw
sen:unar here Monday on water
kickback Its the most· com·
management. The program,
mon cause of accidents in the
co-sponsored by the Mid-Ohio
industry. The "Brake" stops
Health Planning Federation
and the state Environmental . tile chain (n less tllan one·
~enth of a second, preventing
Protection Agency, is designed
severe
cuttJilg of the
to provide environmental inoperatoi:o Picture was taken
. formation to legislators,
outside the Sllhllactory near
mayors, city managers,
Stuttgart.
councilmen, county commissioners and health officials.

Y~

MOWER

95 SQ.

Phone 675-1160

GALLIPOLIS
Local credit~ at terms he can meet,
farmers needing Jong-ter.fu · and will be operating a famil&gt;'
· credit to purchase land or farm that will produce a
make · real estate im- substantial portion of hls tOtal
provements may now qualify . income.
for Farmers Home Ad· FHA credit supplements the
ministration loans, FHA local banks and other lenders
Supervisor Vernon McNair in the area. FHA will make a ·
said Saturday.
second ·mortgage !arm real
"We have expanded loan estate loan in conjunction with
authoritie~ to assist eligible ~nother local. lender. In fact,
farmers with practically ·all FHA require~ the..applicant to
their farm credit needs ," get as much of hls credit as
. McNair said.
possible from a bank, Federal
. Farm Ownership loans may Land Bank, or other long-term
be used to purchase land, make lender .
' land and buil~ing imFarm ·Ownership loans are
proveinents, finan ce non-farm repayable over 4Q years at 5
businesses, and refinance pet. interest. The maximum
debts. Eligibility requirements real estate indebtedness
for these loans are, be a citizen,. cannot exceed $100,000.
of the U.S., be at least 21 years . Applications should be
of age, have farm training or
experience .. to · .assure
reasonable prospects of success, be Wlable to acquire other

•

\

312 6th Sl

WASHINGTON (UP!)- The purple dye used lor yean!
to stamp grades on meat and to color everytiUng from ice
cream to pel foods has been banned by the government
because 'new studies Indicate It may cause ·cancer.
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Thursday
revoked its approval ror 10Violet No.1", the technical name
of the dye wltleh has been permitted lor use In the United
States lor the last 22 years.

SPECIAL SALE

Get The

BIRD WINDSEAL ·

SHINGLES
ONLY

Prgple marking dye banned

clinic set

MOBILE HOME SALES

.New, 40 ; Dow Saunders, 43 ;
Jack Clark 46; John Saunders,
. 48 ; Topper Orr, 48 .

specify quantity and quality standards and delivery dates - . are
established by contract before production begins.
Most of us are concerned about what lies ahead. Tbe control
of agriculture has already changed greatly ,'though wide dlf.
ferences exist. among fann commodities. For example, control of
troiler and lettuce production · has become very highly amcentrated iii particular areas. On the other hand, control of cowcall bOe! operations and most small-t:rain production remains
very broad.:nased.'
• ..
.., ••.
Continuation of the trend toward larger and fewer fal'ITlB can
be expected as successful farmers expand their operations.
Increased control of agriculture by the food marketing and farmsupply industries and, perhaps to a lesser extent, by other
oonfarrn investors can also be expected. However. tllose who
have a stake in control of agriculture also have a voice in puhtic
policymaking and the opportunity to influence those policies that
affect control.
Anyone interested in studying this situation further may
secure copies of the leaflets by contacting the County Extension
Office or put the date of February 14, 1974 on their calendar of
·:::::::::::::::::;:::;:::~:=:~~:!:!:!::::::::::;:::::::::: :::;;:;;: ;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;::: . meetings for the coming year.

No-till com ·

cY~e~

OHIO SOCIETY F.OR
PROMOTION .OF BULLFROGS

- from
the farm. As a result, many agricultural products can be
profitably produC&lt;d and sold only if market outlets - wltlch often

FHA loans available

ors
• (DICHLORVOS*)

KC bombs .Warriorsl6-2

:.:~~~a::tii~n.~f;:~~~~~~~:r~~:=~e~~.;

They want dependable supplies ' or low-cost and high·
quality food .
(2) They want to curtail agricultural practices that adversely affect en~ironmental quality and the availability of open
spaces .
(3) They want tax costs of any policy to be in line with the
benefits realized.
( 4) They want a lair share of the benefits of farm programs
to accrue to smaller (as contrasted to large-scale) producers.
Though some think !hat larg~ale Ianning wiU be low..:ost and
efficient, others think big farm corporations wiU try to gain
monopoly contrQis and raise food prices.
The question cOmes up, ••What ls meant by control?''
Control of agriculture is, In large degree, vested In those
individuals or fiims who own o~ otherwise control the resources
used in agriculture and make the key decisions for buying,
selling, and producing . To do this they must be able to effectively
obtain and use the technical information required to remain
l'Ompetitive in farming, and have effective access to markets for
(!)

'• .I

SEO standings

·Expertly Designed
Superbly Built.
Economically priced.

the farm . Access to adequate capital is a key control instrument.
Acquiring economic farm units is becoming costly and
prohibitive to a majority of would-be farmers.
IN 1939, MORE TIIAN one million smaU !arms realized ooly
2.2 pet. of all sales, while the fewer than 2 pet. of farms that had
sales of $100,000 or more made one-third of total sales. Commodities which can be readily adapted to mass productioo are
usually produced on farms of high sales volume.
; For Instance, vegetable and poultry farms had 85 peL and 114
pet. of the value coming from !arms exceeding $100,000 in cash
sales. At the other e•treme, only 18 pet. of the tobacco Blld 35 pet.
of the cash grain canielrom these large !arms.
Over 85 pet ..of all farms in !11e U.S. are sUU operated as
individual or family farms. Only 1.2 pet. are owned by corporations. Twelve per cent of the farms are operated by a part·
nership.
. OveraU, the predominance of grain and general farming,
inclnding dairy and hog production - which have.not undergone
drastic changes in production and marketing organization places the North Central states in a unique position . The individual farm operators in ·this region can stiU more easily
consider production and marketing alternatives than can
producers in some other parts of the cowttry .
In 1969 orily 16 peL of the total .value of production from
farms ln Ohio came from farms wlth over $100,000 or more in
gross _sales. The opposite extreme is California with 75 pet.,
Arizona 86 pet., and F1orida 73 pet. The lowest percentage is 9
pet. in North Dakota.
Qmcerns" ahout . !be future organization and oontrol of
agriculture are nwnerous and varied. Traditional farmers h,ave
a major concern that farming is becoming a large-scale business
and that smaller producers are being squeezed out.
Concerns of the general public, including consumers and
taxpayers, center on at least four broad issues:

.

selling products and buying inputs, such as eqqipment. supplies,

Yearling steers, heifers. bulls. · Also steers.
bul .l s. heifer calves. Cattle do' not have to be
consigned, Gatlle received from 8: 00 a .m. to
5:00p.m. the day of the sale' .
·Expec\ing approx. 500-600 cattie.

. ..

..

Two economy mowers, one pushtype rotary, the other s.e.l f·
propelled, 3 a~d 31;, h~ Bnggs
engtnes. Money-sa v1ng pnces!

TURF TRIM
SELF PROPELLED
S"7J195

in carton
~ , . . $79.95·set up

..
.
---------------------------------~·

PlANT PEP
·----~~ Plant Pep contains 15 plant

food elements. Its special
6-12-6 formula is recommend~dlor pre-plant or side
dressing applications on
roses, flowers, trees, vegetable gardens, shrubs,
strawberries and new lawns.
Plant Pep is the cornbina·
lion most gardeners like as
a specialty fertilizer.

·-

LAWN PEP
•'

A high analysis 22-11-7

c~ntent

of slow release
plant food Ingredients, will
feed your lawn over longer
periods of time. A free·
flowing lawn food, easy to
apply with cyclone or conventional Sjlreader. For a
iihowplace lawn, start with
LANDMARK Lawn P-e~
·$4.75 gets you 7500 sq.
coverage, Instead of usu
5,000.

$475~

___________________________,_,_,_,_
25 lb.
size

50 lb.
3l.r:e

.

YOU CAN
BUY AT

LANDMARK _·.

Everyone
Can!

POMEROY
Serving Meigs', Galli a
and Mason Counties
Ph. 992 -2181
Jack W. Carsey. Mgr.

look for the Big "l" on Route 7 &amp; 33 at the
Upper End of Pomeroy

Open Daily Unti I 6:00 P ·"11·
•

'

�'
2fi - The Sunday Tunes Sentmel, Sunday Aprll8 1973

.-

•

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 PM Day Before Pub! cat on
Monday Oe&lt;tdllne 9 a m

Cancellat•on

•

-

Correct ons

W II be accepted unt•l 9 a m tor
Day of Publrcat on
REGULATIONS
(
The Pub! sher re!erves the
nght to edt or re[ect any ads
deemed
Obtectronal
The
publtsher w II not be respons bl-e
for more than one •ncorrect

nsert on

RATES

For Want Ad SL&gt;rv•c e
5 cents per Word one nsert on
Mm mum Charge 7Sc
12 cents per word three
consecut OJe rnsertrons
18 cen ts per word s x con

secut ve .nsen ons

25 Per Cent D scount on pa•d
ads c:~nd ads pa1d Wtlh n 10 days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
Sl 50 lor 50 word nm mum
Each add t anal word 2c

BLIND ADS
25c Charge
Advert sement
Add t anal

per

OFFICE HOURS
B 30 a m t o S 00 p m Da ly
8 JO a
m
to 12 00 Noon

Saturday

t='
,,

•••
p

..

'
•'

;ri- The Sunday Tunes

Card of Thanks

Wanted To Buy

Mobile Homes For Sale

WE WISH to e)(f~nd our heart 10 FT ptckup tl'" uCk camper
1970 12 • 50 HOMETTE fur
felt thanks to Rev Eberts
phone 698 8722
nlshed carpeted 2 bedrooms
Mart1n
Funeral
Home
4 4 3tc
washer
&amp;
dryer
vn
fnends and netghbors for
derpmn ng 2 sets of steps
thetr wl!lrds of sympathy WANTED - 3 000 new or vsed
a i r con dlf10ner
excellent
beaut lui floral offer ngs and
tomato stakes call John
cond ton call742 3807 or 742
other kmdness shown at the
McCoy New Matamoras 0
5258
death of our father and
865 2280
4 ll-3tc
grandfather Robert B•ge
4 I 81p
Lambert
---------,----10 X 50 MOBILE home ex
Mrs Donald (Lou•se) Wells CLEAN capper
45c lb
celle nt conc:ltt on expans10n
and grandch ldrell
Rad ators clean
28c lb
l1vtng toom
tully a••
4 8 lip
Brass T8c lb Batter es 70c
cond1t oned phone 992 5905
Grnseng $60 lb M A Hal l
4 6 12tc
HOW CAN we even begm to
Reedsville 378 6'249
thank our many wonderful
3 9 He
f r 1en d s
ne g h bo r s a n d -;-:---;:;n--;-~~--::;:;c;::;-;::
rela t 1ves who helped us so • OR J 4 ton p•ckup truck
mu ch when we needed them?
prefer ~ .. ton Ford wtth low 2 BEDROOM mob•le home
adu tts only on old Rt 33
We also thank you t 1 h e
m leage phone 985 3338
phone
992 6294 l:lr 992 6385
cards v s•ts and he p w te
4 6 3tp
after8pm
Harry was ill and for he
4 B 12tc
encouragement he rece ved
=:-::--:--,.--------;all the t1me fr om co workers
h s doctors and espec•alty the 1967 CHRYSLER good can TWO sleep ng rooms one si ngl e
af'ld one double ava table at
P T Gang at Hoi zer we wll J
d han SSOO or w ll trade for
once phone 992 5440
always remember each ktnd
smal ler car of equal value
4 a 3tc
gesture and espec •att y our
phone 949 5741 after 5 p m
c hildren s fnends whom we
4 6 3tc -=========~---;
cons dered ours also Thank
1·
you aga1 n Mr s Dorothy
GRAY MANOR
M cGufi •n Harry Jr Steven
Lee a~d Debra Lynn Also DEAD Stock horses ca ttl e
APARTMENTS
Harr y s s ster s Mrs Nola
Reasonable
hogs
sheep
Furbee Mrs Helen Blagg
MIDDLEPORT
charge Ca ll 245 5514
Mr
and
M rs
George
2 28 30tc
2 F urn shed Apts w1 th new
(F lorence) G les
furmture w•th or w tho ut
4 8 1tp
ut
l1t es both ha ve 1 or 2
:-=::-:-::-:::-:----,---,~
bedrooms both on ground
I WOULD like to thank all my
floor and have wall to wall
r etat ves and fr en ds for the r PART TIME Na t•onal sup pl ter
w111 tra1n men for l oca l
carpe t Also have pr va te
ca ll s flowers and remem
typew r ter repa.r ng Wr te
entran ces and yard for
br ances to me white I was m
Reg1onal
Manager
Box
25
ch
ldren m n ce ne g h
the hospital speet al tha n k s to
borhood
G
enshaw
Penna
15116
the nurses and staff for fhe1r
4 8 121p
Phone 992 3863 ttl! 3 p m or
kmdness to me at Holzer
992
5844 after 6 00
Med cal Center Mrs Jenn1e _W
_A_N
-:T- E:-:D,----::
E,.X:-::Pc::E:-:R:-:1-=:
E-:NCE D
Han sher
SPEC IALTY SALESMAN TO 6 ROOM HOUSE and bath 2 car
4 B ltc
ESTABLISH
NEW
AC
garage Me gs County Call
COUNTS
GUARANTEED
992
2966 or 992 2724
WE WI SH to ex tend our smcere
WEEKLY DRAW AGAINST
4 5 3tc
thanks to the many fr ends
CO MMIS SIO NS
One ca ll
relal1ves and ne1ghbors for
close r suc h as man who have 3 ANO 4 ROOM furn shed and
the r k ndn ess and sympathy
n
successfu lly sol d land
un furn is hed
apartm ents
dur ng th e II ness and death of
surance mutual funds home
our dear mother Mrs Lovtsa
Phone
992
5434
Improvements
fran ch ses
Fau lkner Speoal thanks to
4 12 tfc
ve nd ng
freezer
plan s
Dr J J Da v s Rev Robert
~-----c-educa t on etc Ca n have
Kuhn Rev Charles Stmons
br ght f uture w th nat onally SLEEP ING Room o'er 1he
and members of the F rst
W1n e
Store
Pomeroy
advert sed company Ex
Baptr s t Chur ch Raw! ngs
references
r
equ
red
phone
trem el y
h gh
earn ng s
Coats Fu 1er..al Home Edna
992 5293
po
tent
al
Our
lop
producers
Maxme Gaskill for th e spec a!
4 3 He
ea rn comm ss ons of $25 000
mus1 c and all those who sent
to sso 000 per year If you can
food
and
flowers
Your
travel extens 1vel y and have a TRAI LER Brown s Tra ler
thoughtfulness w II be long
Park phone 992 3324
good ca r we II prove I to you
remembered The Famtly of
4 3 lfc
For add1f anal
nformat on
Mr s
James
{ Lov sa )
and personal mter v1ew call
Fau lkner
Mr Porter toll free at (800) HOUSE and 2 trailer lots phone
4 B lfc
992 5693
621 1006 (BOO) 621 8182 1800)
~~---'--J 2 Stc
621 7501
4 8 ltp ~-----LARGE all electric apartm ent
2 bedrooms bath panel ng
WE ARE now tak tng orders for
I urn shed
c u sh on floor
Southern Toma toes peppers
ph
one
993
7384
sweet potatoes and on on
4 6 2tc
plants w II be n by May 5th
a t !eas t Jam es Ray H II
PRIVATE meettng room for
Le tart Fal ls Oh o phone 247
any organ zat1on phone 992
2961
3975
4 8 13tc
3 11 Hc
ANTI QUE Shop n Rutland wdl
TRAILER
Ba er s Mark et
now be open Saturday and
Sy r acuse Oh1 o
Sunday l to 6 p m Part al
Ll 6 tfc
ltstmg of tern s on hand n ow CALL
Cherry wa lnut oak fur
--~-~FURNI SHED
2
bedr oo m
n lure
rockers ox yokes
apar tm ent
adut ts
only
p c ture frames kettles 1ron
M iddleport phone 992 387 4
brass baffles trunks round
4 6 tfc
and flat top
1ars wash
PH.
stand s m lk cans 5 anti to
ce boxes
d nner bell s BARTENDER needed wrr1e P 4 BEDROOM 2 ba1h s beaut ful
bu It n k tchen located m
clocks p e safes beds d shes
0 Box 365 Pomeroy salary
Pomeroy
tra ler space at
$90 per week
011 lamps
sect anal book
Chesh•re on Rt 7 water
case
record p layers ( l
4 3 6tc
furn shed phone 446 4060
c yl nder)
more
1tems
after 5 pm 4461279
com ng n
MALE or fema e desk clerk
4 6 6t c
4 8 1tp
m dd le aged must be able to
lve n apply n person Oh10
Hotel M1ddl eport
NEW 2 p ece trad•t anal I vmg
4 3 6tc
room suite w th a extra h1gh
back Mr Cha rand reversible
BOYS G IRLS make money 57 CHEVY 2 door hard1op 55
cush ons regularly $239 95
Otdsmob le
con ta ct Larry
now only 139 95 Your cho ce
se ll ng candy Ca ll 9927784
Hubbard Syracuse
phone
of
color s
Pomeroy
3 30 91p
992 3364
Recovery 622 E Ma n St
----;-- - - 4 J 12tp
Pom er oy Oh o Phone 992
7554
4 5 6tp EXPERIENCED pa n1er
n
tenor and ex ter or Phone
985 3951
3 20 J01p

For Rent

For Sale or Trade

-----Wanted

In Memorv
IN LOVING memory of our son
who passed away Apn I 7
1972 Todd Anthony Grueser
The Rose Shll Grows
Beyond The Wall
Near shady wall a rose once
grew
Budded and blossomed n Gods
tree light
Watered and fed by mornmg
dew
Sheddmg ts sweet ness day and
nrgh1
As t grew and blossomed fatr
and tall
Slowly r stng to loft er he1gh t
It ca me to a crevtce m the wa ll
Through wh1ch there shone a
beam o1 j ght
Onward i t crept w th added
strength
W th never a though t of fear or
pnde
It followed the I ght th rough the
crev ce Ieng th
And unfolded tself on the other
s de
The 1 ght
the dew
the
broaden ng v1ew
Were found the same as they
were before
And 1tlost tselt n beauties new
Breath ng tts fragrjln ce more
and more
Shal l cia m of d eath ca use us to
gnve
And make our courage-ftltnl or
faH?
Nay let us fa tlh and hope
r ece ve
The Rose St I! Grows beyond the
wal l
Scattenng fra grance far and
w de
Just as 1! d d n days of yore
Ju st as t d1d on the other s d e
Just as t wdt forevermore
Sadly m ssed by Mom and
Dad brother J mmy and
grandparents
4 8 ltc

--------

IN LOVING memory of our son
and brother Naval A r Lt Jg
Rtchard A Genhe1mer who
d ed on Ok nawa Apr I 8
1968 n a plane crash Mrs
Olan Genhe mer and tam l y
4 8 ltc

--~----'--

IN MEMORY of Mrs Faye
Logan who passed away 3
years ago today April 8 1970
Dear Mom we love you sttll
T1me alone does not heal
Year after year we m ss you
more
But we ktiow you are wa tmg
ms de Heaven s door
Sa dly m ssed by the fam ly
4 8 He

- - , -- - - - - , -

IN LOVING memory of Irene
Hudson who departed from
her loved ones on Apnl7 1969
But w II forever be remem
bered by her husband
Walter son and daughter n
law Larry and L oda Hudson
and granddaughter
Lor
L¥0 o.,_
4 8 1tp

---~---

Not1ce
SPR lNG clean up of Cemeteries
m Orange Townsh p w1ll start
Apr I 16th Anyone w sh ng to
remove vases or art f c1al
flowers ~hould do so before
that date
They may be
r:eplaced after the cemetenes
are mowed Orange Townsh p
Trustees
EFFECTIVE Monday Aprrl 9
1973 Logan F1re and Safety
Equipment Sales and Serv1ce
R 0 3 Pomeroy Oh o wtll sei I
ent re busmess to Brown s
F re and Safety Equtpn'lent
Sales and--...Serv1 ce Rutland
Oh o W !I lam (Bill) Brown
owner phone 742 4673 I would
l tke to thank al l my customers
for the r support in the past
and hope they w II g ve Mr
Brown a chan ce to serve them
m the future Dw ght Logan
4 6 2tc

--=:-:::----:--c--,-

ALL EYE Make Up products n
Koscot line on spec al thts
month I would I kj;! to serve or
vtslf you Please phone Helen
Jane Brown M ddleport Oh1o
992 5113
4 4 tfc

GUN

SHOOT
Rutland
Leg on
Beech
Grove Rd Sunday Apr t 8th
1rl
4 5 31p
Amer~ ca n

WANTED!

CARRIERS

POMEROY

The Daily Sentinel
992-2156

.,.------

Auto Sales

Business Services

I ke

------

3 9 !lc

1972 CAD Coupe DeVtlle v1nyt
top, gray cl•mate control
AM&amp;FM radio low m•leage
perfect cond1hon Ph 245
5888
A 8 4tc

EXP[RT

~-::::=-::-:--::---:-:--

1965 FORO Statton Wagon tor
sale or trade phone 949 307Q
4 8 3tc

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

1967 (~HEVY Caprtce 4 door
automat •c 327 eng1ne call
742 3344 Roy Ellis College
Ave Rutland Oh1o
4 8 3tp

.,c9:-:6:::9-;:
B7U"I""
c "K--;oS;-ky""'l::-ar
""'k, .--.:2-:o
dOQr
hardtop low mllea9e 4 new
t 1res $1 soo phone 992 5983
after 5 p m
4 4 4tc
SHARP
CHEVEL283
LE
Mat •bu 21964
door hardtop
automat c power st eer mg
new black pamt new bucket
seats call 985 3582 after 5 p
m or see at Charles Bt ssell s
n Ches ler
4 s Jjp

We talk to you

l

Radt.ator

Real Estate For Sale

"HEll"

_HEATING &amp;
COOLING
Furnace Controb

HIIMIDIFIERS
Hot Wafer Heaters
Plumbmg:
Electrocal Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
Music- Music Mus1c

March of Bands
SUN. APRIL 8th

Mob1le Homes For Sale
TOO BIG A FAMILY' TOO
LITTLE ROOM' ADD A
ROOMS BY VEMCO SOLVE
YOUR
PROBLEMS
IN
ST ANTL Y BDRMS DENS
FAMILY RMS SEE THEM
ALL AT Youngs M H Sales
St Rt 7&amp;35 below S lver
Memor al Br dge Galllpol s
4 8 1tc

.:~~A
~S~H
~p-a~
d-;
fo_r_a~l~l~m
~a~k-s~
s and
models of mob le homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
4 13 tfc
A1r Cond1honers
Awnmgs
Underpinning
Co mpl e t e mobtle home
serv ce plus g gant c
d sp lay of mob1l e homes
always ava Iable at

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES
1220 Wa shmglon Blvd
423 JS21
B-ELPRE 0

2 PM bl ??

OWN YOUR HOME AT LOW
COS T - see K ngsbury Home
Sa~es &amp; Serv ce Inc phone
at Wh1spenng Pmes
992 6256 fr om 2 to 7 p m or by
N1te Club
appo ntment 24 w1de t urn shed Made by Sky! ne
Corp
country s largest
Me gs County owned and
operated
F nanc ng
ava table Set up on your lot
GARAGE repa r tune ups
ready for your occu pancy 200
plugs po nts and condenser 8
yards off Rt 33 on County Rd
cyl $17 95 and 6 cyl $14 95
1B Qu1ck delivery Our low
call for appo1ntment Rae ne
overhead
wtll save you sss 12
Garage Ra cme Oh a 949
and 14
Mob le
Homes
36 1
ava labl e K ngsbury Home
4 B 30 tc
Sales &amp; Serv ce Inc
3 25 tfc

Busmess Sen11ces

Wantfn To Buy

OLU furn i tur e oak tabre~
organs d•shes clocks brass
bed s or complete house hold s
Write M D M l ler Rl 4
Pomeroy Oh1o Phone 992
6271
1 7 He

Berry Miler Mob le Homes has
a lo t to of fer when you start
sho pp ng for your Mob le
Home You can beat the h gh
depr ec at on you II have on
your hom e the f rst two years
by shopp ng for a late model
used Mob le Home We have a
huge selec t on of th ese homes
1n stock now and we II do our
level bes t to save yo • money
So lor an honest to goodness
good deal stop tn t oday at
Berry M ller Mobfle Hom e
Sa les 705 Farso n Street
Belp re Oh o phon e 423 9531
....._ open 7 days
4 5 6tc

Virgil B.
Teaford, St.
Broker
110

Mechamc

Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

LATEX PAINT
F'or wood
fm shes

-G UARANTEEDPhone 992 2094

Spectalt~t

773

0

G06

X

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
R EASONABlf ra1es Ph 446
4782 Gallipolis John Russell
,
Ovmer &amp; Operator
5121fc
C BRADFORD Auct oneer
Complete Serv1ce
Phone 949 3821
Racme Oh10
Cn tt Bradford
S 1 1fc

like a person.

masonry

HOGG&amp;ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO

8 To IS
Mo•nd;oy thn Saturday

Pomeroy

and

3.99 gallon

Home &amp; Auto

CONC
r lgh1 10 your
pro1ec t Fast and easy Free
es t lm ates Phone 992 3284
Goegle1n Ready M1x Co
Middleport Oh1o
6 JO He
del iv •e_ro•~

Blue R1dge
lntenor Extenor

On Most Amencan Cars

SMlTH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
99T2174

PAINT SPECIAL'

Wheel Alignment
•5.55

~rom the targe$t
Bulldozer Rad•a1or to the
·sn,al les.~~~~::~; Core
Btggs

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
992 2094
606 E Mam
Pomer ~ {

OFFICE SUPPLIES

55~4

Mason W Va

0 DELL WHEEL alognment
loc ated at Crossroads Rt 124
complete front end serv•ce
tune up and brake service
Wheels
balanced
elec
troniCally
All
work
g uarantee d
Reasonable
rates Ph one 992 3213 or 742
3232
2 18 tfc

and

FURNITURE

TARA

Stop In and See Our
Floor D1splay
?OZER and back hoe work
ponds and sept1c tanks d 1t
chrng serv1ce top soil f1ll
d.rt limestone
B&amp; K Ex
cavatmg Ph one 992 5367
D1ck Ka~r Jr
9 1 tfc

Townhouse
Apartments

SEPT IC
TANK~
A~OBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN
ED REPAIRED MILLER
SANITATION
STEWART
OH 10 PHONE 662 3035
10 4 tfc EXCAVATING oozer loader
EXCAVATING Dozers large
and backhoe work
sepf1c
and --ta nks mstalled dump tru cks
and lo boys for htre wlll haul
f II d1rf top sod limestone
arfd gravel call Bob or Roger
L---~-------.J
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
night phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 1fc
TWO parcel s ten and twenty
HARRISON
S
TV
Servrce
and
~-------~­
acr es Darw n area phone
Serv ce Calls phone 992 2522 G &amp; E Appl ance Repatr repair
992 3029
on all laundry equ pment
2 9 tfc
4 6 4tc
~--~---------'
refr
lgerat on equ pment and
- - - - -- -- - - house
w r ng
weld1ng
E LNA and White :&gt;ew • y
electr c and gas Call 992 3802
HOUSE FOR SAlE 114 Brr ck
Pay Only One
Mach1nes
serv •ce on all
or aft er 4 30 p m ca ll 992
Street Pomeroy Oh10 bnck
Utility
makes Reason;sble rates
6050
house 3 bedrooms excellent
The Sew•ng Center M d
3 21 301p
tocat•or:t close to school and
dleport Ohio
ctty contact Lou Osborne or
Add1son, Oh1o
11 16 tfc
rail 992 5898
SEE US FOR Awnmgs storm
11 26 tfc A:LJTOM081LE nsurance been
doors and wmdows carports
marquees alum mum sld ng
cancelled?
Lost
your
For Information
and radtng A Jacob sales
2
HOU SES
NEW
operator s license? Call 992
representat ve
For free
bedroom s
wall to wall
2966
Ca II Shtrley Adkms
est
m
ates
phone
Charlet;
6 15 tic
carpet
total
electric
L 1sle
Syracu se
V
V
ba se ments ~ _l_jrge wooded
Johnson
and
Son
Inc
SEWING
MACHINES
Reparr
ots 2 car QTrages custom
3 2 He
serv1ce all makes 992 2284
k tchen call 985 3595 or 992
The Fabnc Shop Pomeroy 1
5869
Authonzed Singer Sales an~
328 121c
Serv ce We Sharpen Sctssors
3 29 He
HOUSE by owner
3 or 4
If you cant
bedrooms large rec room
bank money. you c-.n still
larg e pat o modern k tchen WILL trim or cut trees clean
fully carpeted call 992 5248
ou t basements atttcs etc
unt 1 3 p m or 992 3436 after 3
Phone 949 322 1
pm
No Sunday calls
3 11 30tc
4L16tc

WMP0/1390

2 Bedroom
Townhouses

ON YOUR DIAL

Real Estate For Sale

Ph Baths

DAIRY DISPERSAL .
THURSDAY, APRIL 19
The close out af the dan~y
herd of D1x1e and Frank
Sm1fh Complete listmg next
week

367-7250

SAVE CASH

HOUSE m Long Bottom phone
985 3529
6!llfc
WHY LIVE n a trailer when
you can own a t ne 3 bedroom
home for pract cally the same
pr ce? Hom e m country ctose
to hard road al Gall•polts
Ferry W Va 8 rooms f ne
bath and half two th~rd acre
lot small garden plot Only
$10 000 See Mrs Sad e Henry
Gall polls Ferry W Va or
call 675 2946
4 5 3tp

Real Estate For Sale
ROOM house bath
s porch
full basement

front
two
lots S [Y Buskrrk Sr 341
Page 51 M ddlepor1 Oh o
4 8 3tc

-----~

HOUSE FOR SAL€ 2 or 3
bedroo m all paneled wall to
wall carpet f orced a r fur
na ce
18 000
BTU
a.r
cond ttoner full basement
n Ce yard c ty water sewer
and gas close to school
Located m Middleport Pr ce
$10 000 Phone 992 7109
4 5 6tc

~-~--'---

(S~CTION

1)

OF A 400 UNIT SINGLE FAMILY HOUSING COMMUNITY!
OPEN SATURDAYS, SUNDAYS AND EVERY DAY

1:00 'TIL DARK

RODNEY, OHIO

CLELAND
REALTY

-

608 E Matn

Pomeroy
REAL BUY
3 RENTALS - 1 furn1 shed All
EXCELLENT LOCATION
near courthou se INCOME
1 level acre 9 room home Ll
$193 00 "
mon1h
Only
bedrooms porches bath
$1000000
N ce apartment n rear to
NEAR TOWN
rent Larg e storage bulldmg
3 BEDROOMS - Large bath Beaul1ful yard $18 500 00
n~ee kdchen basement front
INCOME PROPERTY
and back porches Garage
N
ce
apartment 2 bedroom $
$9 000 00
bath
d1nmg R w th 10
NEW LISTING
sleep ng rooms over Ready
10x55 MOBILE HOME - And
to renf for mmedtate tn
lot
Ha s 3 bedroom s oty
come CALL TO SEE Just
water natural gas and Oh o
$17 500 00
Power Askmg Just $5700 00
2 YEARS OLD
L 0 T
3 beauttful bedrooms w1th
ON ROUTE 33 Vacant
large closets A kttchen that
re ady for you to butld your own
s a housew tfe s d~:eam
home Askmg $1500 ,
D ntng room wlfh double
RESTAURANT
sl d ng glass doors fo pat1o
EAT OUT - Your very own
Large I vlng room w1th
bu s ness Good future w1th
f replace
Bath
Utlltty
growtng town Askmg Only
room Carpeted Storm doors
$5 000 00 W II take lot on trade
&amp; wmdows Etectnc heat
42 A~RES
Level IQf !00x120 $23 000 00
6 ROOMS - Modern k tchen
SERVICE STATION
and bath N' ce gas furnace
W lh a ll stock and equ•P
barn all m nerals and good
ment
Love l y apartment
fences Only S10 500 00
over 3 bedrooms bath gas
LARGE
furnace
glassed porches
SCENIC V IEW - 4 bedrooms
hardwood floors A STEAL
2 baths front enclosed and
AT JUST $1790000
back porches Gas F A fur
4 YEARS OLD
na ce full base meni 2 car
HERE IS A BUY 4
garage Large r ver front lot
bedrooms bath large ilvmg
All for Barga n o1 $10 500 00
R bar room Large k tchen
NEW HOME
and d1n mg area - load s of
3 BEDROOMS ~ S1o' e
cabine ts 11/:&gt; acre of ground
refrtgeralor
freezer
n
Storm w ndows &amp; doors
beaut ful k1tchen N1c e uti! ty
Cl ose n $16 900 00
and closels CXtly $16 000 May
1'/ 2 YEARS OLD
take a lot on trade
In new add1fton Level tat
NEW LISTING
lOOx100 3 n ce bedrooms w
I ACRE LOTS In Mergs
closets Very modern ktt
school d sir ct Hav e 1he water - ~:hen W range Bath uttllty
taps and se phc tank s n Only
hardwood floors ( some
$2 000 00
carpeting) drapes mcluded
A mCEr carport w th storage
DON T
WASTE
YOUR
room
THIS YOU MUST
VALUABLE TIME LOOKING
SEE $21 500 00
SEE US AND SAVE YOUR
PROPERTY IS MOVING
'
SHOE LEATHER
FAST
LET US SELL
HELEN L TEAFORD
YOURS
GORDON B TEAFORD
HENRY E CLELAND Sr
ASSOCIATES
BROKER
992 361S or 992 332S
992 2259 1f no answer 99~ 2568
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS

Carnahan
Auction Serv1ce
Phone 614 949 2708
2033

or 614

CLOSE OUT on (4) 1973 full size
Zig zag sewmg machmes For
sewing
stretch
fabr cs
buttonholes fancy des1gns
etc Pa nt slightly blem shed
Cho1ce of carrytng case or
sewmg stand $49 80 cash or
terms ava lable
Electro
Hyg •ene Co phone 992 7755
4 4 6tc

"Can't behve 11 takes only 1 qt of pam! for the extenor"
"Best buy we've seen tn the area"
"Can't beheve 1t's so large ms1de"
' Best floor plan for a house 1ls s1ze we've ever seen"
"2 of the largest bedrooms we've seen 1n a house under $35,000"
"We love the h1gh land overlookmg the valley"

$18,950

FARMERS HOME LOAN;
'260 DOWN &amp; 1128 MO.

A Umted States Steel creahon steel studiJlg &lt;mstead of wood) 30
year guaranteed steel lap Sldtng &amp; soff1ts for a mamtenance free
extenor Exclus1ve country estate sethng
3 B R 's

b1g L R

Beauhful built m k1lchen w1th large eatmg area,

ceramic l1le bath w1th shower and vamtory, separate laundry room,
electnc heat, 6" msulat1on tn ce1hng, w w carpetmg, full garage,
70'~120' lot w1th c1ty type water, sewer, &amp; streets

MODEL HOME FURNITURE &amp; DECORATIONS BY
EMPIRE FURNITURE CO
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Dl R E CTION S Dnve west on Rt 35 to Rodney pass Rt 588 on left
qo 500 ft &amp; take nght 200 yds to house follow s1gns 3 m 11es from
Galhpohs at c1ty hm1ts

RODNEY VILLAGE 2
RODNEY, OHIO

(PH. 245·5303)

BUILDERS &amp; DEVELOPERS

SUNDAY APRI L

ACROSS

72.-Rodo.y hill
74-Piace for
combat
76-Pose for

1-ARUat c
mammal

6--Gives up
11-Runs w th

24-Muslcal drama
25--Br m

26--0owny duck
2S-Bet

30-0therwtse
32-Near
33-lndefln te
ar1 cle
34-Po l t cal party
{abbr)
35--Meadow
36--Lu re
37-Poem
38-Pgpen
4 0-Showy flower
42-Mourntul
4 3-Rabb t
44-

82- lterate

84-Boundar es
85--Leg&lt;:~lpaper

86--Kina ot Jungle

88-lnlets
89-Form
90-Country of

'Eu ope
92-Percept ble
94-fndoepoendent
I gMt ng sh ps
98-D fln:;ult
99- T me gone by
100- Mctal
102- Project ng
Ieeth
103-Conden!.ed

QUARTER Horse and saddle
phone 992 3283
4 6 61p

-,..-:---::-::--:---::-:-

1972 APACHE Eagle Fold up
camper .ncludes spare t.re
canopy and plastt c storm
window Tra•ler has been
w1red for electnc 3 outlets
Excellent condlf1on $675 Call
992 5815 after 5 p m
4 5 4tc
JOHN DEERE 2 r ow corn
planter good cond1tton Ben
Btckers Bashan Road Phone
949 4605
4 5 3tc
200 WHITE plas1 c
Ideal for tomato
Dallas Cleland
Phone 949 4121

DOWN

moisture

104-Succo r
105---Pulver .te
106--Ciearer
108-Aico hol c
be11et&lt;:~ge

Unlock

109- Prel x w th
110--Reg stered
nurse {itbb.r,.)
11 1- Bapt smal bas n
1 12- Ctl ast •ses
1 14 -0penwork
f;Jbr c
116--An na l scollt
117-Dele mln'e
119-Quote
120--Makes nto
leather
122- ln the
d rect1on o l

4 5-\last age
47-Protrudlng
nose!i
49- Prov des crew
50--Gul s name
51-Begins
54-Bibl ca l we-ed
55-Intelle ct
56--Moe vilp d

59-Pronoun

60-Resort
62-Term of
endeilrment
64-Unruflled

124- Number

65-Ch nese m1le
66-Prepos ton
67-Suf! )( 1 ke
69-Rent
70-Gra n
71-l llum nated

125-Sn (1 11 c h ldren
126-Faot levers
128-Above (poe t )

-

129-Walk wear y
13I - Deles t
132- Novf! ll v

1-Sp;'lnlsh pots
2-Biem sh
3-Griltu ly
4- Lat
c onj etlan
5-G an
6-Mitil y
students
7-lngred ent
8---CI ck beet e
9 - WhaP (co lloq }
10-Ca penter s
t ool
11--ca led lor
12-Appellat iOn
of Alhe a
13- Veh c c
14 - Tel Ionic de IY
I S- BI!smlrches
16-Si a l on
17-S tm an
18----Con pa5s po nt
19- Bi{rter
20- H &lt;~d d ned
27-Cyprl no d
l sh{cl )

29-Word ol so row
31-hlsehood
36- Mus cal
org&lt;~nlut on
37-Semt prec ous
stone

39- Per od o f time

gl-Amencan
pair ot
92- Huge

93-Un to~ Italian
currency
95- Frv tless
96-Happen again

Campmg Equipment
STARCRAFT tra\lel trader s
and fold down campers
Highest d•scount •n tn sta te
Cam p Conley Starcraft Sales
Route 62 North of Pf
Pleasant beh1nd Red Carpet
Inn 675 S384
83 II

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

40--Emmets
97-0IIil!l:llr
.41-H ghway
99-Sheet ol glass
4 2-Cub c meters
\01 - Prof ted
43- Suspend
105- FII.Shlon
44- Egg shaped
106-Fondles
46--Con unct on
107--Peruse
48- Mouflta ns of • Ill - Loca te
Euro pe
11 2-N p
49- Un de rg o und
lll-Brnk
excavM oo
suddenly
50-Sho rt Jacket
11 5-lnstrume-n t
51 - 0 cha ges
11 !'&gt;-Jot rney forth
a g un
118-Cnes I ke dove
52-r-Oo we l
119- An mal
53- Enthus asm
enclosure
55 ~T tle ot re s pect
121 - Part Of
56-Class fy
Jacket {pi )
~7-0m t Iron
123-P onoun
pronunc at on
125- Expe enced
58-Ceremon es
126--Trop ca l t ree
61 - Damsh
127-1 horoughfare
measure
129-Fades
~3-Den
13 0--Thong of
64 - Young horse
leather
68- Pertarn ng to
131-Rude cabo
Engl a nd
132-Su te ol
70-Stopp ng
0011 s {pi )
71 - A ghled
134- Ve t lale
73 - Recompense
136--D v ng b rds
/4- Related
137- Rent
75- T pp ng
I J9-Ado
77- fru t (p )
140-..Wo llh!lu nd
78- D s la c e
144- Church benc h
meas u e
l45,....A s tate (abbt)
146-----Sphe re
80 - 0ry
147- Terra del
8 1- P 9nou
Fuegan lnd an
83-f u t se-ed
146-Pri! IIX d Stant
84- Pn eel s of
149- Cor ded clo th
l;md
15 1- Negall\le
a 7- The 1 n verse
153- Syn bol for
89-Th ng ~h al
ter n
a !t rac ts
155- Ma n s
90- Fragme nt of
n ckna me
earthe ware
157-A !il ilte (abbr}

BILL'S ARMY-NAVY SURPLUS
85 N. COURT STREET
A THEN$, OHIO
OPEN 9 AM TO S 30 PM DAILY
9 AM TO 9 PM MONDAY AND FRIDAY
SUNDAY 12 TO 5 30 PM FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
Wnght tools now 10 pet off tag pr1ces, Lmcoln
Welder , 2~5 amp , now $92
Top 40 h1ts ~8
tt'ack tapes
everyday low pnce $2 98, New
sh1pment of 011 lamps and glassw&lt;tre pr1c~
for g1ft g1v1ng , complete lme of c"amdhig
equ1pment Just arnved a truckload of tents
from Underwriters Ins Co , Chicago,
Thermos Coleman Hetnk
Nal1onal Brands at b1g sav1ngs
Osh Kosh and 01' Kentuck b1b overalls, $5 69
lo S7 95, Spec1al lot ot work and play shoes,
now reduced 10 pel off Sweat pants and
sh1rts now $2 95 each

36 xll x 009

so,

USED OFFSET PLAtES
HAVE
MANY USES

20~
8forstoo

Gallipolis
Daily Tribune

Surplus Items by the Thousands
R!ty u memory todny.

825 Th1rd Ave
Galhpoll !i 0

The Almanac

By Un1ted Press lntcrnuhonal
l od oy " Su nda} Apo!l 8 lire
98th day or 197! 111tlr 267 to
follow
fhc 111 0011 IS between 1ts llC\\
phase &lt;Jnd frrs l quarter

fhc m01mng
Mer em y Venus

si&lt;Jrs
Mal s

01c
md
New
Sh1pment

Jup1Lcr
Sallu n
I hose born on th1s d&lt;~tc cu c
undCI the SIH n of Anes
I he cve mng stm

IS

Livmg Room Su 1tes

M ov 1e sU.1 Mao y P1 ckford
\\ il S l&gt; or n Apnl B 1891

On thts dC;~ y

111

Augushnc Fla

in Ius sccm.: h

for the fountam of youth

Jn 1917 1\ustJJa and Hungm y
sever cd thp lom 1trc relations
wtth the Unrted Sl.t.llcs- tv-.u
da ys beflll c \mer rca dcclm cd
w 11 on (, c rm&lt;:~ny
I n lP52 Pres1dcnt Hally
l1 um an 01deled gove rnment

J~~~~l=~~~t~:l=C~4~~c~=!~4m~

rfq~+-1--'--+-+::::

SCIZ UI C Of

the

sl89 to s209 D1rect
From Mtll
YOU SAVE• •

lnslm y

In 1513 Ponce de 1 eon of
Spain landed at whatos now St

StCc )

n In
Old I1 genm
s tnkc
96~ dPICSH!Cnt

How Can We Do It? Come ilnd See
6 TRACK TAPES ----:-:--- -- - - - ea S2 98
Country Western Rock Modern
PICTURES new se lection "24 x48
sc enes m c ludmg Rehg1ous

and 18 x24

Many

LOOK AT THISI Double Bed S1te
FITTED BED SHEETS - - -- - - - - ea $2 49

ATTENTION' FISHERMEN
Mav enck No 175
SPIN CASTING REELS ---~----- $3 49

to

FABRIC SPEC IAL•
GROUP OF KNITS Rog 10$3 98 - - - - - Yd $150

Joh n

JUST UNPACKED• Reg $7 00 Value
MEN S WHITE COTTON SOX - - : - -- - - 3 pr Sl 00

IndustJ y

Kenned y m~1dc Bntam s S1r
NEW 2 p ece trad1t1onal I vmg l;;;;i-t--r-f7::f.~t--T-j--iy;ffix;lriitfb:::};o,~-t---J--t--i::::::+.;;;-j--f-i Wmslon Clnu chill an honm cuy
room su fe w •fh a extra htgh
crli zen of Lhe Umtcd Sta tes
back Mr Cha rand revers1ble jiO~-f-~i~tllt-t?;%t~tlli-fofl:;ji&lt;l8j-i-t:lfT7:Fort-l ;--'---,---------l
cushron s regularly s239 95
LARGE SELECTION
now only $139 95 Your cho ce 1;-;-;;t-+~f:'f;i-+-lf----b~f.':'::i-+--ir-t-t--f;-;-;'t:::::ol;;-.-+-+.:~H+.'fft--+---j
of colors Pomeroy Recovery
622 E Mam St
Pomeroy
Oh o Phol')e 992 7554

* MOBILE HOMES*

Acrylic Vmyl Ptasttc
LAT EX I NT PAINl' several co tors

gal$229

MEN'S WORK
PANTS
$598
Dacre l poly ester
r a yon
Ta n
Flare

P

&amp;

Are Here ...

d Bargains
104 W Mam St
CORN

J Doors Below Court

Phone 985 421 1

3 29 24tp

Pa rkwood
Skylines

PANSIES and cabbage plan1 s
Cleland
Farms
&amp;
Greenhouse E Ma n Ra e ne
Gerald ne Cleland

bucksts
p1cktng
Racme

4 5 31c
------,-'------:---:A !OFT MEAT or vege1able
d1spla1 case w•th motor If
you can use 1t call 949 382 1
949 3161 or wr te A
C
Brad1ord Box 116 Racrne 0

Kirkwood

12 &amp; 14' wtde to 70'
Mon

STAR KILLS rats qu ck ly sure
2 12 lbs
$1 69
Ebersbac~
Hardware Suga r Run Mills
P!ckens Hardwar e Mason
4 1 301p

Fn

Til 9- Saturday T1l

6

1nancmg Ava

Stewart's Gun Shop
and Hardware

LARRY'S, .••
MOBILE HOMES
600 W Mam

MAIN ST IN RUTLAND
PH 742 3191

Boy s

------------~~-----------~
MINERS
We Buy Sell
I
SUPPLIES
11
and Trad e
I
GUNS and
1
Belts Hats
II
1
1 Buckets Leg Band s 1 I
KNIVES
1

I
I

..nos

-

I 38-Roman bronze
I 39--Eiectncal
de11ice
14 Q--£..,eryone
141-S lkworm
14 2-Faroe Is lands
wh•rlw iod
14 3-Note of sc&lt;~te
144-Golt shot
14 5-The poplar
14 7-Cipen to view
14 9-Brown k WI
I SO.....-SI&lt;:~ves
152-Br II a ni
success
154-H ndu
prmcess
156-Smoolhs
158- Man feslat ons
! 59-College ofhc als
160-Explo!. on
161 -falllnto d SUIB

por1ra I

m~asured liteps.
l&amp;-Ad he stvesubstance
21-Pe-rta mn&amp;: to
laymen
22-Hol!Wailln
areet ng
23-Warn na:

8, 1973

l33-Par1 of flower
135--Cioth menure

77-ftt.n mal s coat
78-Manulactured
79-Steillth•ly

1 o-r--,s"a-,1:
e --on--;C:;:h-:es te r
UNCLAIMED Ire gh1 1973 B ;L-;O"T"s=--~
track stereo 4 speaker audio
water phone 992 5248 till 3
system will sell for small
p m or 992 3436 after 3 p m
balance S82 50 or pay $6 10 per
4 4 6tc
month Call 992 5331
4 4 6tc 1969 PLYMOUTH Fury 2 dr
·- - - ; - - ' - : - - , - hardtop a1r cond v nyt top
t&lt;NAPP q·uallty shoes for work
$1 100 Call 446 3939
~ou
4 6 5tc
or dress golf shoes $19 99
call 992 5324 Bob Hysel l
GROCERY bus ness for sale ALUMINUM Car 1op boats 10
4 6 tfc
Bulld1ng for sale or lease
12 and 13 fl King sbury Rd
Phone
773 5618 from 8 30 p m
Co Rd 18 Phone 992 6256
1954 FORD Tractor wlfh double
to 10 p m for appo ntmenl
aft er 5 p m
14 plows new 7 ft dtsc
3 20 tfc
3 8 301c
excellent cond1t1on 1968 Ford
Ranger p1ckup h ton V 8
automatiC heavy duty t.res
WIN AT BRIDGE
Saturday Aprol
good cond1hon
see Rog er
Roush phone 247 3551
4 6 3tc
6 GAL tank for Johnson or
Ev nrude outbOard motor 2 h
lb d c f1re extmgu1sher one
new 500x8 boat trailer t1re and
other miscellaneous 1tems
phone 378 6210
4 6 3tp

TypiCal Comments from Open House V1s1tors

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

929-·

(21 ELECTROLUX Sweeper
deluxe model Complete w1th
all cleanmg attachments and
uses paper bags Slightly used
but cleans and looks like new
W1ll sell for $37 25 cash or
terms avai l able
Electro
Hyg1ene Co phone 992 7755
4 4 6fc

6 ROOMS bath new gas fur
nace 2 lots connections for
trader space ca ll 1 304 773
5341
4 8 3tp

OPEN HOUSE

For Sille

AUCTION Saturday April NOW READY Bl oomong
14th, 12 30 p m the personal
potted flowers startmg at
property of the Estate of
SOc hangmg basklts pans1es
Gene\'1eve Stobart w11t be sold
and cabbage Ready soon --..
at the home on Route 3J
Petunias mangotds Co leus
114 mile North of the Bea con
tom atoes peppers etc 1 4 off
Sta1ton Pomeroy and Athens
by the flat Hubbard s Green
Road
Frtg 1da lre
house St Rt 124 above park
refr igerator
West•nghouse
Syracuse Qtuo
electric range and sweeper
4 J ttc
old oak rocker pedestal type
~
round table ant1que bed
COM.L
L1mes1one
c.x~..~•stor
chest on chest sect•onal book
Salt Works E Ma•n St
case and books odd chairs 2
Pomeroy Phone 992 J~t.
platform rockers 2 p~ ltvtng
4 12 tfc
room su i te square stands
clothes HOODs AQUARIL ' " fiSh
and other stands
hamper maple dresser and
and suppl es new klcaf10n
chest
clock
radio
Ash Street Mtddleport near
Weshnghovse TV
G E
park phone 992 5443
Portable TV
me1al bed
1 7 tk
complete
Hollywood bed
·
iH;l&amp;L"'"Nii'D\iA.-;Y;-:o;;;l-;;d-.,or;-;s:;-1a~r1ed
complete 4 dlnetfe cha rs
Leghorn pulleti,.. Both floor or
lamps wmdow fan treadle
ca
ge
grown
available
sewmg machme
buffet
Poultry
hous1ng
&amp;
toaster d1shes utll1ty cart
automat•on Modern Poultry
lawn mower and other ar
399 W Mam Pomeroy 992
ftcles
Eldon
Weeks
2164
Execu1or
The Bradford
4 8 lie
Auction Co A C Bradford
Manager C C Bradford ~H:-:A:-:N-:-N
:--:--:
A~H-::-5-:-h-:-u_s_b_a_n_d_ H_e c tor
Auct1oneer
Terms
Cash
hates hard work so he cleans
not respons ble for acc1dents
the rug s wtfh Blue Lustre
4 8 He
Rent electnc shampooer $1
.,----,-,----Ne lson s
Drug
Store
PAY LESS - GET MORE"
Pomeroy
Ohro
Bestdes our usual stock of
4-11 2tc
clean budget pr tced used
lurnrture KUHL S BARGA IN :-S::E~L-::F-:-C:-0:-N
:-:::
T-:A-:-1N
:-:-::E-:D--t-r a , e I
CENTER now sells NEW
Ira ler 22 ft slee ps 6 good
FURNITURE 3 pc maple or
cond 1t1on pr~ced for qu1ck
walnut bedrooms Sl09
4
sale ca ll after .4 p m 949
drawer chests tmaple or
2601
walnuf) $25 95
5 drawer
4 8 6tc
maple $30 95 Herculon sofas
matchmg chairs $139 95 3 pc ~=-=--:--:-:----:--c-:-:­
MIXED HAY James A Sm th
coffee step table sets $16 95
Hemlock Grove Rd Rl 3
slat seat hardwood rockers
Pomeroy
s s oak straight
$15 95
cha1rs $5 SO ea m quantities
of 4+ 7 pc chrome dmette
$99 also cloth covered sofa
beds sw1vel rockers vmyl
recl1ners ch ld s rockers
sofas wtth matchmg sw1ve l
rockers It pays to check w•th
KUHL S for your NEW or
US ED furniture needs' US ED
APPLIANCES rnclude large
selechon
of
late model
refngerators sas and others
ma1erral s
from $25 {1 gas) elect or gas UPHOLSTERY
rly
$3
95
only
$1 95
regula
dryers $35 auto washers $45
Also
remnarrts
Pomeroy
wringer type port dt sh
Recovery 622 E Ma n St
washer used b1ll1ard table
3 8 30tp
$45 Ma1or appliances are
GUARANTEED 1or 30 days
KUHL S BARGAIN CEN
TER Rt 7 at caul on I gh1
Tuppers Plams Open to 7
closed MONDAYS ONLY
phone 667 3858
4 8 6tc

-------

Employment Wanted

Pets For Sale

OLD FASHIONED re, ,al s1111
n progress at the Porneroy
Wesleya n Holtness Church on
R I 14J S p ~c al serv ces each
even ng at 7 30 p m Speaker
and Pastor Rev
0 Del
Mantey Everyone Welcome
J 26 tfc

- - -- - -

FOR

PAUL s AUTO PARTS now
open for bus ness m old
local on on Rt 7 bypass
Pom eroy We pay top dollar
for wrecked and tunk auto &amp;
tru cks Owner Paul Ba1rd N EW F ISH sh pmen t n at
4 5 6tp
Showalter s Wet Pet Chester
Oh o open da I y 4 p m to 9 30
GUN SHOOT also rrfle ma1ches
p m a ld all day Saturday and
- open s tes only and spec a!
Sun da y
deer slug match Forked Run
4 6 3tc
Sportsman Club Sunday - - - ' - - -Apr I 8th 12 noon
4 5 3t c

cyl1nder many extras
new phone 985 3828

Help Wanted

Nollce

For Sale

Auto Sales
1972 HONDA 500 motorcycle 4

Sentinel. Sunday AprilS 1973

II
II

I
I

next to Jone s

!PHONE 992-7777

l-----------d·
----------~
HUNTING
FISHING LICENSE
&amp;

Larry Evans
Frank Gheen

e e

OPEN

CANOE

e e

Opens Days 9 t116 p m
Closed All Day Thurs
Serv ce After the Sale
See Us Before You Buy
Frank Gheen Sales Mgl'"

7

When to Ignore a Principle
NORTH
.Q76
VK6
• 109832

7

.A 53
WEST
. K 10S
VJI095 3
t 75
.872

soum

EAST
.984 3 2
VQ84
t A
.KQ10 6
(DJ

.AJ
VA 72
t KQJ64
.J94
North South vulnerable
West North
East Soulh
I NT
Pass
3 NT
Pass Pass
Pass
Openmg lead- • J

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

two spades any t1me he
wanted to
What If West held the kon g
of spades' South saw that 1f
West held both the kmg of
spades and the ace of d1a
mond s that three no trump

was not gomg to make on

any lm~ or play Further con
S!deratwn showed h1m that of
he tned the spade fme sse be
fore knockmg out the ace or
diamonds that he co uld make
hts contract as lon g as Ea st
held one o( those two card s
so South Immediately led
and Jo .:o • the spade fmesse
West won and c leared the
hearts but cou ld never get
m to make them and South
wound up w1th h1s mne
tncks
( NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN }

It IS a pretty good prmc1ple

of no trump play to try to de
velop the s uit where you ca n
take the greatest number of
tncks before Joohng around
wtlh any other suit
1
t IS a pretty good genera 1
pnnc1ple but as all rules
45771
4 s 51c you must know when to fol
----------,--,low 1t and when n ot to
2 HORSES
1 regls1ered
The way the cards he
quarter 7 years old gelded
South was lucky to get a
S37S 1 gelded walker 7 years heart lead rather than a elub
old S250 Must sell Call 367 and to have hearts continued
7432
4 5 He after he ducked the f1rst
- - - - - : " " - - - - - , lead He had to wm the sec
and heart m dummy and h1s
3 CAMPS lots for sale run from Immediate Impulse was t o
railroad track fa tow water knock out the ace of d1a,
mark 86 ft w1de at ra1lroad mond s and get four diamond
track .400 ft ldng and 100 ft
lncks set up nght away
w1de at law water mark
Then he thought thmgs
these loti are good and clean over carefully and saw that
no brush Ieveil on Oh o River
he would need two spade
across
from
Pomeroy
Marlon Reynolds Mason W trlcks m order to come to ~
total of mne
Va phone 773 5147
• 3 6tc
GIVe East the king of
spades and he could gel his

1

Right In Tune With The Times

favorite o f sport smen
to go I ght and still not
sacr I ce ru9gedness
At 29 1 pounds there s no
ca noe on the market 1n
or fourteen foot s•ze class
th at ca n match !t' It s the
ca noe on the market today
All knowledgeable
who have tried the SPORT
SPAL eventually beco me owners For the trapper f1sherman
or ca mper who Wilnl s to get off the beaten path the SPORT
SPAL offers the best way to qo A FIVE Ml LE PORTAGE IS
A BREEZE WHEN YOU RE CAR RYING ONLY 29 h
pounas or JY 1 pounds 1t you ele ct to choose the fourteen toot
mode l There s noth ng ex tra to buy w1th the SPORTSPAL
Padd les Ethat oam(r) sea ts rnotor mount and oar brackets
ar e al l ncl uded 11 your plans ca ll for a motor the SPORTS
PAL 12 handles ali of the one to two and a half horse power
model s with ease and the SP0RTSPAL 14 w111 ca rrv a four
hor se power motor beaut tully All SPORTS PALs are m
d1v1dually r egistered and the owner becomes a member of
the SPORTSPAL Club of Amer ca a grow ng and
d• stlngu shed gr oup of outdoor-s men ( R) ETHA'f'OAM sa
of Dow Chem 1ca l Co

New Hallmarks 50xl2 Up To 70xl4
New Golden Empress 50x12 Up To 70xl4

Weoghs Only

POUNDS

Come!
See!

14

••

nOw?

Answer Monday

foot model only

10

pounds more I

Fully Equipped As Shown

f

Avatfable 1n Yellow (Brrchbark) Green and Red

- 'Er-~- l
1

,

Dram hole tort &amp; aft 2

2 l1fe preserver seats

HALLMARK 60x12
A t~lectr c home wtth house type door
ca tt'ledral roof 30 gal water heater fully
ca rpeted all deluxe package Only

Carrytng h1ndles
Motor mount - -

) ~ ~~

ThP b1ddmg has been
\\e!it
North
East
Soulh
1t
Pass
IV
Pass
2 ,.,_
Pass
2NT
Pass
3•
Pass
Pass
4t
Pass
'
You South hold
.K65 VQJ54 tAZ
What do you do now?
A-81d four hearts
Your
partner wilt know that you only
hold four henrl'i but even •f he
has JU5t three thHi may he thl!
bt.&gt;sl spot
•
TODA Y'S QUESTI()N
Your partner contmues to
four spades Wh at do you do

29~

12 Foot Model

'llalerproof cantster n seats
Qu•ck anchor rope lock

Oar locks for towrn1

I

Elhafoa~l n ng

DELIVERED
AND SET UP

Paddle locks tur portag n1
2

Oeta c~able

foam sponsons

Z1nc chromate b rch bark effect

UP TO 12 YEAR FINANCING
WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL

Tough a1rcraft alloy hull

lowm1 eye fore &amp; 1h
SOLD BY

Goble Mobile Homes

Gravely Tractor Sales &amp; Service
Pomeroy Oh1o

S.nd $1 lo• JACOBY MODERN boo&gt;
to 'Wilt at St~dge (c/ o tlus news
H

po~rJ

P 0 BoX" 4B9 Rudto Cff}o

Stcrf1on Nflf Yorlc NY 10019

586 Locust St
992 7004
Middleport
Open 8 to6 Mon thru Sat

'

Dan Thompson
The Oeahn Man

't.o-o....::&gt;&lt;:&gt;-c::&gt;oooc:&gt;o-..:::&gt;&lt;:&gt;-c:&gt;-..ooo....:&gt;&lt;::&gt;-&lt;"1-000"&lt;::&gt;&lt;:&gt;-&lt;:;&gt;-0.00&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;::&gt;..::&gt;-&amp;

Open 8 a m IllS 30 Mon thru Thurs
8 am ftl 8p m F=n and Saturday

992 2.975

�'
2fi - The Sunday Tunes Sentmel, Sunday Aprll8 1973

.-

•

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 PM Day Before Pub! cat on
Monday Oe&lt;tdllne 9 a m

Cancellat•on

•

-

Correct ons

W II be accepted unt•l 9 a m tor
Day of Publrcat on
REGULATIONS
(
The Pub! sher re!erves the
nght to edt or re[ect any ads
deemed
Obtectronal
The
publtsher w II not be respons bl-e
for more than one •ncorrect

nsert on

RATES

For Want Ad SL&gt;rv•c e
5 cents per Word one nsert on
Mm mum Charge 7Sc
12 cents per word three
consecut OJe rnsertrons
18 cen ts per word s x con

secut ve .nsen ons

25 Per Cent D scount on pa•d
ads c:~nd ads pa1d Wtlh n 10 days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
Sl 50 lor 50 word nm mum
Each add t anal word 2c

BLIND ADS
25c Charge
Advert sement
Add t anal

per

OFFICE HOURS
B 30 a m t o S 00 p m Da ly
8 JO a
m
to 12 00 Noon

Saturday

t='
,,

•••
p

..

'
•'

;ri- The Sunday Tunes

Card of Thanks

Wanted To Buy

Mobile Homes For Sale

WE WISH to e)(f~nd our heart 10 FT ptckup tl'" uCk camper
1970 12 • 50 HOMETTE fur
felt thanks to Rev Eberts
phone 698 8722
nlshed carpeted 2 bedrooms
Mart1n
Funeral
Home
4 4 3tc
washer
&amp;
dryer
vn
fnends and netghbors for
derpmn ng 2 sets of steps
thetr wl!lrds of sympathy WANTED - 3 000 new or vsed
a i r con dlf10ner
excellent
beaut lui floral offer ngs and
tomato stakes call John
cond ton call742 3807 or 742
other kmdness shown at the
McCoy New Matamoras 0
5258
death of our father and
865 2280
4 ll-3tc
grandfather Robert B•ge
4 I 81p
Lambert
---------,----10 X 50 MOBILE home ex
Mrs Donald (Lou•se) Wells CLEAN capper
45c lb
celle nt conc:ltt on expans10n
and grandch ldrell
Rad ators clean
28c lb
l1vtng toom
tully a••
4 8 lip
Brass T8c lb Batter es 70c
cond1t oned phone 992 5905
Grnseng $60 lb M A Hal l
4 6 12tc
HOW CAN we even begm to
Reedsville 378 6'249
thank our many wonderful
3 9 He
f r 1en d s
ne g h bo r s a n d -;-:---;:;n--;-~~--::;:;c;::;-;::
rela t 1ves who helped us so • OR J 4 ton p•ckup truck
mu ch when we needed them?
prefer ~ .. ton Ford wtth low 2 BEDROOM mob•le home
adu tts only on old Rt 33
We also thank you t 1 h e
m leage phone 985 3338
phone
992 6294 l:lr 992 6385
cards v s•ts and he p w te
4 6 3tp
after8pm
Harry was ill and for he
4 B 12tc
encouragement he rece ved
=:-::--:--,.--------;all the t1me fr om co workers
h s doctors and espec•alty the 1967 CHRYSLER good can TWO sleep ng rooms one si ngl e
af'ld one double ava table at
P T Gang at Hoi zer we wll J
d han SSOO or w ll trade for
once phone 992 5440
always remember each ktnd
smal ler car of equal value
4 a 3tc
gesture and espec •att y our
phone 949 5741 after 5 p m
c hildren s fnends whom we
4 6 3tc -=========~---;
cons dered ours also Thank
1·
you aga1 n Mr s Dorothy
GRAY MANOR
M cGufi •n Harry Jr Steven
Lee a~d Debra Lynn Also DEAD Stock horses ca ttl e
APARTMENTS
Harr y s s ster s Mrs Nola
Reasonable
hogs
sheep
Furbee Mrs Helen Blagg
MIDDLEPORT
charge Ca ll 245 5514
Mr
and
M rs
George
2 28 30tc
2 F urn shed Apts w1 th new
(F lorence) G les
furmture w•th or w tho ut
4 8 1tp
ut
l1t es both ha ve 1 or 2
:-=::-:-::-:::-:----,---,~
bedrooms both on ground
I WOULD like to thank all my
floor and have wall to wall
r etat ves and fr en ds for the r PART TIME Na t•onal sup pl ter
w111 tra1n men for l oca l
carpe t Also have pr va te
ca ll s flowers and remem
typew r ter repa.r ng Wr te
entran ces and yard for
br ances to me white I was m
Reg1onal
Manager
Box
25
ch
ldren m n ce ne g h
the hospital speet al tha n k s to
borhood
G
enshaw
Penna
15116
the nurses and staff for fhe1r
4 8 121p
Phone 992 3863 ttl! 3 p m or
kmdness to me at Holzer
992
5844 after 6 00
Med cal Center Mrs Jenn1e _W
_A_N
-:T- E:-:D,----::
E,.X:-::Pc::E:-:R:-:1-=:
E-:NCE D
Han sher
SPEC IALTY SALESMAN TO 6 ROOM HOUSE and bath 2 car
4 B ltc
ESTABLISH
NEW
AC
garage Me gs County Call
COUNTS
GUARANTEED
992
2966 or 992 2724
WE WI SH to ex tend our smcere
WEEKLY DRAW AGAINST
4 5 3tc
thanks to the many fr ends
CO MMIS SIO NS
One ca ll
relal1ves and ne1ghbors for
close r suc h as man who have 3 ANO 4 ROOM furn shed and
the r k ndn ess and sympathy
n
successfu lly sol d land
un furn is hed
apartm ents
dur ng th e II ness and death of
surance mutual funds home
our dear mother Mrs Lovtsa
Phone
992
5434
Improvements
fran ch ses
Fau lkner Speoal thanks to
4 12 tfc
ve nd ng
freezer
plan s
Dr J J Da v s Rev Robert
~-----c-educa t on etc Ca n have
Kuhn Rev Charles Stmons
br ght f uture w th nat onally SLEEP ING Room o'er 1he
and members of the F rst
W1n e
Store
Pomeroy
advert sed company Ex
Baptr s t Chur ch Raw! ngs
references
r
equ
red
phone
trem el y
h gh
earn ng s
Coats Fu 1er..al Home Edna
992 5293
po
tent
al
Our
lop
producers
Maxme Gaskill for th e spec a!
4 3 He
ea rn comm ss ons of $25 000
mus1 c and all those who sent
to sso 000 per year If you can
food
and
flowers
Your
travel extens 1vel y and have a TRAI LER Brown s Tra ler
thoughtfulness w II be long
Park phone 992 3324
good ca r we II prove I to you
remembered The Famtly of
4 3 lfc
For add1f anal
nformat on
Mr s
James
{ Lov sa )
and personal mter v1ew call
Fau lkner
Mr Porter toll free at (800) HOUSE and 2 trailer lots phone
4 B lfc
992 5693
621 1006 (BOO) 621 8182 1800)
~~---'--J 2 Stc
621 7501
4 8 ltp ~-----LARGE all electric apartm ent
2 bedrooms bath panel ng
WE ARE now tak tng orders for
I urn shed
c u sh on floor
Southern Toma toes peppers
ph
one
993
7384
sweet potatoes and on on
4 6 2tc
plants w II be n by May 5th
a t !eas t Jam es Ray H II
PRIVATE meettng room for
Le tart Fal ls Oh o phone 247
any organ zat1on phone 992
2961
3975
4 8 13tc
3 11 Hc
ANTI QUE Shop n Rutland wdl
TRAILER
Ba er s Mark et
now be open Saturday and
Sy r acuse Oh1 o
Sunday l to 6 p m Part al
Ll 6 tfc
ltstmg of tern s on hand n ow CALL
Cherry wa lnut oak fur
--~-~FURNI SHED
2
bedr oo m
n lure
rockers ox yokes
apar tm ent
adut ts
only
p c ture frames kettles 1ron
M iddleport phone 992 387 4
brass baffles trunks round
4 6 tfc
and flat top
1ars wash
PH.
stand s m lk cans 5 anti to
ce boxes
d nner bell s BARTENDER needed wrr1e P 4 BEDROOM 2 ba1h s beaut ful
bu It n k tchen located m
clocks p e safes beds d shes
0 Box 365 Pomeroy salary
Pomeroy
tra ler space at
$90 per week
011 lamps
sect anal book
Chesh•re on Rt 7 water
case
record p layers ( l
4 3 6tc
furn shed phone 446 4060
c yl nder)
more
1tems
after 5 pm 4461279
com ng n
MALE or fema e desk clerk
4 6 6t c
4 8 1tp
m dd le aged must be able to
lve n apply n person Oh10
Hotel M1ddl eport
NEW 2 p ece trad•t anal I vmg
4 3 6tc
room suite w th a extra h1gh
back Mr Cha rand reversible
BOYS G IRLS make money 57 CHEVY 2 door hard1op 55
cush ons regularly $239 95
Otdsmob le
con ta ct Larry
now only 139 95 Your cho ce
se ll ng candy Ca ll 9927784
Hubbard Syracuse
phone
of
color s
Pomeroy
3 30 91p
992 3364
Recovery 622 E Ma n St
----;-- - - 4 J 12tp
Pom er oy Oh o Phone 992
7554
4 5 6tp EXPERIENCED pa n1er
n
tenor and ex ter or Phone
985 3951
3 20 J01p

For Rent

For Sale or Trade

-----Wanted

In Memorv
IN LOVING memory of our son
who passed away Apn I 7
1972 Todd Anthony Grueser
The Rose Shll Grows
Beyond The Wall
Near shady wall a rose once
grew
Budded and blossomed n Gods
tree light
Watered and fed by mornmg
dew
Sheddmg ts sweet ness day and
nrgh1
As t grew and blossomed fatr
and tall
Slowly r stng to loft er he1gh t
It ca me to a crevtce m the wa ll
Through wh1ch there shone a
beam o1 j ght
Onward i t crept w th added
strength
W th never a though t of fear or
pnde
It followed the I ght th rough the
crev ce Ieng th
And unfolded tself on the other
s de
The 1 ght
the dew
the
broaden ng v1ew
Were found the same as they
were before
And 1tlost tselt n beauties new
Breath ng tts fragrjln ce more
and more
Shal l cia m of d eath ca use us to
gnve
And make our courage-ftltnl or
faH?
Nay let us fa tlh and hope
r ece ve
The Rose St I! Grows beyond the
wal l
Scattenng fra grance far and
w de
Just as 1! d d n days of yore
Ju st as t d1d on the other s d e
Just as t wdt forevermore
Sadly m ssed by Mom and
Dad brother J mmy and
grandparents
4 8 ltc

--------

IN LOVING memory of our son
and brother Naval A r Lt Jg
Rtchard A Genhe1mer who
d ed on Ok nawa Apr I 8
1968 n a plane crash Mrs
Olan Genhe mer and tam l y
4 8 ltc

--~----'--

IN MEMORY of Mrs Faye
Logan who passed away 3
years ago today April 8 1970
Dear Mom we love you sttll
T1me alone does not heal
Year after year we m ss you
more
But we ktiow you are wa tmg
ms de Heaven s door
Sa dly m ssed by the fam ly
4 8 He

- - , -- - - - - , -

IN LOVING memory of Irene
Hudson who departed from
her loved ones on Apnl7 1969
But w II forever be remem
bered by her husband
Walter son and daughter n
law Larry and L oda Hudson
and granddaughter
Lor
L¥0 o.,_
4 8 1tp

---~---

Not1ce
SPR lNG clean up of Cemeteries
m Orange Townsh p w1ll start
Apr I 16th Anyone w sh ng to
remove vases or art f c1al
flowers ~hould do so before
that date
They may be
r:eplaced after the cemetenes
are mowed Orange Townsh p
Trustees
EFFECTIVE Monday Aprrl 9
1973 Logan F1re and Safety
Equipment Sales and Serv1ce
R 0 3 Pomeroy Oh o wtll sei I
ent re busmess to Brown s
F re and Safety Equtpn'lent
Sales and--...Serv1 ce Rutland
Oh o W !I lam (Bill) Brown
owner phone 742 4673 I would
l tke to thank al l my customers
for the r support in the past
and hope they w II g ve Mr
Brown a chan ce to serve them
m the future Dw ght Logan
4 6 2tc

--=:-:::----:--c--,-

ALL EYE Make Up products n
Koscot line on spec al thts
month I would I kj;! to serve or
vtslf you Please phone Helen
Jane Brown M ddleport Oh1o
992 5113
4 4 tfc

GUN

SHOOT
Rutland
Leg on
Beech
Grove Rd Sunday Apr t 8th
1rl
4 5 31p
Amer~ ca n

WANTED!

CARRIERS

POMEROY

The Daily Sentinel
992-2156

.,.------

Auto Sales

Business Services

I ke

------

3 9 !lc

1972 CAD Coupe DeVtlle v1nyt
top, gray cl•mate control
AM&amp;FM radio low m•leage
perfect cond1hon Ph 245
5888
A 8 4tc

EXP[RT

~-::::=-::-:--::---:-:--

1965 FORO Statton Wagon tor
sale or trade phone 949 307Q
4 8 3tc

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

1967 (~HEVY Caprtce 4 door
automat •c 327 eng1ne call
742 3344 Roy Ellis College
Ave Rutland Oh1o
4 8 3tp

.,c9:-:6:::9-;:
B7U"I""
c "K--;oS;-ky""'l::-ar
""'k, .--.:2-:o
dOQr
hardtop low mllea9e 4 new
t 1res $1 soo phone 992 5983
after 5 p m
4 4 4tc
SHARP
CHEVEL283
LE
Mat •bu 21964
door hardtop
automat c power st eer mg
new black pamt new bucket
seats call 985 3582 after 5 p
m or see at Charles Bt ssell s
n Ches ler
4 s Jjp

We talk to you

l

Radt.ator

Real Estate For Sale

"HEll"

_HEATING &amp;
COOLING
Furnace Controb

HIIMIDIFIERS
Hot Wafer Heaters
Plumbmg:
Electrocal Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
Music- Music Mus1c

March of Bands
SUN. APRIL 8th

Mob1le Homes For Sale
TOO BIG A FAMILY' TOO
LITTLE ROOM' ADD A
ROOMS BY VEMCO SOLVE
YOUR
PROBLEMS
IN
ST ANTL Y BDRMS DENS
FAMILY RMS SEE THEM
ALL AT Youngs M H Sales
St Rt 7&amp;35 below S lver
Memor al Br dge Galllpol s
4 8 1tc

.:~~A
~S~H
~p-a~
d-;
fo_r_a~l~l~m
~a~k-s~
s and
models of mob le homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
4 13 tfc
A1r Cond1honers
Awnmgs
Underpinning
Co mpl e t e mobtle home
serv ce plus g gant c
d sp lay of mob1l e homes
always ava Iable at

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES
1220 Wa shmglon Blvd
423 JS21
B-ELPRE 0

2 PM bl ??

OWN YOUR HOME AT LOW
COS T - see K ngsbury Home
Sa~es &amp; Serv ce Inc phone
at Wh1spenng Pmes
992 6256 fr om 2 to 7 p m or by
N1te Club
appo ntment 24 w1de t urn shed Made by Sky! ne
Corp
country s largest
Me gs County owned and
operated
F nanc ng
ava table Set up on your lot
GARAGE repa r tune ups
ready for your occu pancy 200
plugs po nts and condenser 8
yards off Rt 33 on County Rd
cyl $17 95 and 6 cyl $14 95
1B Qu1ck delivery Our low
call for appo1ntment Rae ne
overhead
wtll save you sss 12
Garage Ra cme Oh a 949
and 14
Mob le
Homes
36 1
ava labl e K ngsbury Home
4 B 30 tc
Sales &amp; Serv ce Inc
3 25 tfc

Busmess Sen11ces

Wantfn To Buy

OLU furn i tur e oak tabre~
organs d•shes clocks brass
bed s or complete house hold s
Write M D M l ler Rl 4
Pomeroy Oh1o Phone 992
6271
1 7 He

Berry Miler Mob le Homes has
a lo t to of fer when you start
sho pp ng for your Mob le
Home You can beat the h gh
depr ec at on you II have on
your hom e the f rst two years
by shopp ng for a late model
used Mob le Home We have a
huge selec t on of th ese homes
1n stock now and we II do our
level bes t to save yo • money
So lor an honest to goodness
good deal stop tn t oday at
Berry M ller Mobfle Hom e
Sa les 705 Farso n Street
Belp re Oh o phon e 423 9531
....._ open 7 days
4 5 6tc

Virgil B.
Teaford, St.
Broker
110

Mechamc

Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

LATEX PAINT
F'or wood
fm shes

-G UARANTEEDPhone 992 2094

Spectalt~t

773

0

G06

X

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
R EASONABlf ra1es Ph 446
4782 Gallipolis John Russell
,
Ovmer &amp; Operator
5121fc
C BRADFORD Auct oneer
Complete Serv1ce
Phone 949 3821
Racme Oh10
Cn tt Bradford
S 1 1fc

like a person.

masonry

HOGG&amp;ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO

8 To IS
Mo•nd;oy thn Saturday

Pomeroy

and

3.99 gallon

Home &amp; Auto

CONC
r lgh1 10 your
pro1ec t Fast and easy Free
es t lm ates Phone 992 3284
Goegle1n Ready M1x Co
Middleport Oh1o
6 JO He
del iv •e_ro•~

Blue R1dge
lntenor Extenor

On Most Amencan Cars

SMlTH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
99T2174

PAINT SPECIAL'

Wheel Alignment
•5.55

~rom the targe$t
Bulldozer Rad•a1or to the
·sn,al les.~~~~::~; Core
Btggs

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
992 2094
606 E Mam
Pomer ~ {

OFFICE SUPPLIES

55~4

Mason W Va

0 DELL WHEEL alognment
loc ated at Crossroads Rt 124
complete front end serv•ce
tune up and brake service
Wheels
balanced
elec
troniCally
All
work
g uarantee d
Reasonable
rates Ph one 992 3213 or 742
3232
2 18 tfc

and

FURNITURE

TARA

Stop In and See Our
Floor D1splay
?OZER and back hoe work
ponds and sept1c tanks d 1t
chrng serv1ce top soil f1ll
d.rt limestone
B&amp; K Ex
cavatmg Ph one 992 5367
D1ck Ka~r Jr
9 1 tfc

Townhouse
Apartments

SEPT IC
TANK~
A~OBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN
ED REPAIRED MILLER
SANITATION
STEWART
OH 10 PHONE 662 3035
10 4 tfc EXCAVATING oozer loader
EXCAVATING Dozers large
and backhoe work
sepf1c
and --ta nks mstalled dump tru cks
and lo boys for htre wlll haul
f II d1rf top sod limestone
arfd gravel call Bob or Roger
L---~-------.J
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
night phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 1fc
TWO parcel s ten and twenty
HARRISON
S
TV
Servrce
and
~-------~­
acr es Darw n area phone
Serv ce Calls phone 992 2522 G &amp; E Appl ance Repatr repair
992 3029
on all laundry equ pment
2 9 tfc
4 6 4tc
~--~---------'
refr
lgerat on equ pment and
- - - - -- -- - - house
w r ng
weld1ng
E LNA and White :&gt;ew • y
electr c and gas Call 992 3802
HOUSE FOR SAlE 114 Brr ck
Pay Only One
Mach1nes
serv •ce on all
or aft er 4 30 p m ca ll 992
Street Pomeroy Oh10 bnck
Utility
makes Reason;sble rates
6050
house 3 bedrooms excellent
The Sew•ng Center M d
3 21 301p
tocat•or:t close to school and
dleport Ohio
ctty contact Lou Osborne or
Add1son, Oh1o
11 16 tfc
rail 992 5898
SEE US FOR Awnmgs storm
11 26 tfc A:LJTOM081LE nsurance been
doors and wmdows carports
marquees alum mum sld ng
cancelled?
Lost
your
For Information
and radtng A Jacob sales
2
HOU SES
NEW
operator s license? Call 992
representat ve
For free
bedroom s
wall to wall
2966
Ca II Shtrley Adkms
est
m
ates
phone
Charlet;
6 15 tic
carpet
total
electric
L 1sle
Syracu se
V
V
ba se ments ~ _l_jrge wooded
Johnson
and
Son
Inc
SEWING
MACHINES
Reparr
ots 2 car QTrages custom
3 2 He
serv1ce all makes 992 2284
k tchen call 985 3595 or 992
The Fabnc Shop Pomeroy 1
5869
Authonzed Singer Sales an~
328 121c
Serv ce We Sharpen Sctssors
3 29 He
HOUSE by owner
3 or 4
If you cant
bedrooms large rec room
bank money. you c-.n still
larg e pat o modern k tchen WILL trim or cut trees clean
fully carpeted call 992 5248
ou t basements atttcs etc
unt 1 3 p m or 992 3436 after 3
Phone 949 322 1
pm
No Sunday calls
3 11 30tc
4L16tc

WMP0/1390

2 Bedroom
Townhouses

ON YOUR DIAL

Real Estate For Sale

Ph Baths

DAIRY DISPERSAL .
THURSDAY, APRIL 19
The close out af the dan~y
herd of D1x1e and Frank
Sm1fh Complete listmg next
week

367-7250

SAVE CASH

HOUSE m Long Bottom phone
985 3529
6!llfc
WHY LIVE n a trailer when
you can own a t ne 3 bedroom
home for pract cally the same
pr ce? Hom e m country ctose
to hard road al Gall•polts
Ferry W Va 8 rooms f ne
bath and half two th~rd acre
lot small garden plot Only
$10 000 See Mrs Sad e Henry
Gall polls Ferry W Va or
call 675 2946
4 5 3tp

Real Estate For Sale
ROOM house bath
s porch
full basement

front
two
lots S [Y Buskrrk Sr 341
Page 51 M ddlepor1 Oh o
4 8 3tc

-----~

HOUSE FOR SAL€ 2 or 3
bedroo m all paneled wall to
wall carpet f orced a r fur
na ce
18 000
BTU
a.r
cond ttoner full basement
n Ce yard c ty water sewer
and gas close to school
Located m Middleport Pr ce
$10 000 Phone 992 7109
4 5 6tc

~-~--'---

(S~CTION

1)

OF A 400 UNIT SINGLE FAMILY HOUSING COMMUNITY!
OPEN SATURDAYS, SUNDAYS AND EVERY DAY

1:00 'TIL DARK

RODNEY, OHIO

CLELAND
REALTY

-

608 E Matn

Pomeroy
REAL BUY
3 RENTALS - 1 furn1 shed All
EXCELLENT LOCATION
near courthou se INCOME
1 level acre 9 room home Ll
$193 00 "
mon1h
Only
bedrooms porches bath
$1000000
N ce apartment n rear to
NEAR TOWN
rent Larg e storage bulldmg
3 BEDROOMS - Large bath Beaul1ful yard $18 500 00
n~ee kdchen basement front
INCOME PROPERTY
and back porches Garage
N
ce
apartment 2 bedroom $
$9 000 00
bath
d1nmg R w th 10
NEW LISTING
sleep ng rooms over Ready
10x55 MOBILE HOME - And
to renf for mmedtate tn
lot
Ha s 3 bedroom s oty
come CALL TO SEE Just
water natural gas and Oh o
$17 500 00
Power Askmg Just $5700 00
2 YEARS OLD
L 0 T
3 beauttful bedrooms w1th
ON ROUTE 33 Vacant
large closets A kttchen that
re ady for you to butld your own
s a housew tfe s d~:eam
home Askmg $1500 ,
D ntng room wlfh double
RESTAURANT
sl d ng glass doors fo pat1o
EAT OUT - Your very own
Large I vlng room w1th
bu s ness Good future w1th
f replace
Bath
Utlltty
growtng town Askmg Only
room Carpeted Storm doors
$5 000 00 W II take lot on trade
&amp; wmdows Etectnc heat
42 A~RES
Level IQf !00x120 $23 000 00
6 ROOMS - Modern k tchen
SERVICE STATION
and bath N' ce gas furnace
W lh a ll stock and equ•P
barn all m nerals and good
ment
Love l y apartment
fences Only S10 500 00
over 3 bedrooms bath gas
LARGE
furnace
glassed porches
SCENIC V IEW - 4 bedrooms
hardwood floors A STEAL
2 baths front enclosed and
AT JUST $1790000
back porches Gas F A fur
4 YEARS OLD
na ce full base meni 2 car
HERE IS A BUY 4
garage Large r ver front lot
bedrooms bath large ilvmg
All for Barga n o1 $10 500 00
R bar room Large k tchen
NEW HOME
and d1n mg area - load s of
3 BEDROOMS ~ S1o' e
cabine ts 11/:&gt; acre of ground
refrtgeralor
freezer
n
Storm w ndows &amp; doors
beaut ful k1tchen N1c e uti! ty
Cl ose n $16 900 00
and closels CXtly $16 000 May
1'/ 2 YEARS OLD
take a lot on trade
In new add1fton Level tat
NEW LISTING
lOOx100 3 n ce bedrooms w
I ACRE LOTS In Mergs
closets Very modern ktt
school d sir ct Hav e 1he water - ~:hen W range Bath uttllty
taps and se phc tank s n Only
hardwood floors ( some
$2 000 00
carpeting) drapes mcluded
A mCEr carport w th storage
DON T
WASTE
YOUR
room
THIS YOU MUST
VALUABLE TIME LOOKING
SEE $21 500 00
SEE US AND SAVE YOUR
PROPERTY IS MOVING
'
SHOE LEATHER
FAST
LET US SELL
HELEN L TEAFORD
YOURS
GORDON B TEAFORD
HENRY E CLELAND Sr
ASSOCIATES
BROKER
992 361S or 992 332S
992 2259 1f no answer 99~ 2568
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS

Carnahan
Auction Serv1ce
Phone 614 949 2708
2033

or 614

CLOSE OUT on (4) 1973 full size
Zig zag sewmg machmes For
sewing
stretch
fabr cs
buttonholes fancy des1gns
etc Pa nt slightly blem shed
Cho1ce of carrytng case or
sewmg stand $49 80 cash or
terms ava lable
Electro
Hyg •ene Co phone 992 7755
4 4 6tc

"Can't behve 11 takes only 1 qt of pam! for the extenor"
"Best buy we've seen tn the area"
"Can't beheve 1t's so large ms1de"
' Best floor plan for a house 1ls s1ze we've ever seen"
"2 of the largest bedrooms we've seen 1n a house under $35,000"
"We love the h1gh land overlookmg the valley"

$18,950

FARMERS HOME LOAN;
'260 DOWN &amp; 1128 MO.

A Umted States Steel creahon steel studiJlg &lt;mstead of wood) 30
year guaranteed steel lap Sldtng &amp; soff1ts for a mamtenance free
extenor Exclus1ve country estate sethng
3 B R 's

b1g L R

Beauhful built m k1lchen w1th large eatmg area,

ceramic l1le bath w1th shower and vamtory, separate laundry room,
electnc heat, 6" msulat1on tn ce1hng, w w carpetmg, full garage,
70'~120' lot w1th c1ty type water, sewer, &amp; streets

MODEL HOME FURNITURE &amp; DECORATIONS BY
EMPIRE FURNITURE CO
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Dl R E CTION S Dnve west on Rt 35 to Rodney pass Rt 588 on left
qo 500 ft &amp; take nght 200 yds to house follow s1gns 3 m 11es from
Galhpohs at c1ty hm1ts

RODNEY VILLAGE 2
RODNEY, OHIO

(PH. 245·5303)

BUILDERS &amp; DEVELOPERS

SUNDAY APRI L

ACROSS

72.-Rodo.y hill
74-Piace for
combat
76-Pose for

1-ARUat c
mammal

6--Gives up
11-Runs w th

24-Muslcal drama
25--Br m

26--0owny duck
2S-Bet

30-0therwtse
32-Near
33-lndefln te
ar1 cle
34-Po l t cal party
{abbr)
35--Meadow
36--Lu re
37-Poem
38-Pgpen
4 0-Showy flower
42-Mourntul
4 3-Rabb t
44-

82- lterate

84-Boundar es
85--Leg&lt;:~lpaper

86--Kina ot Jungle

88-lnlets
89-Form
90-Country of

'Eu ope
92-Percept ble
94-fndoepoendent
I gMt ng sh ps
98-D fln:;ult
99- T me gone by
100- Mctal
102- Project ng
Ieeth
103-Conden!.ed

QUARTER Horse and saddle
phone 992 3283
4 6 61p

-,..-:---::-::--:---::-:-

1972 APACHE Eagle Fold up
camper .ncludes spare t.re
canopy and plastt c storm
window Tra•ler has been
w1red for electnc 3 outlets
Excellent condlf1on $675 Call
992 5815 after 5 p m
4 5 4tc
JOHN DEERE 2 r ow corn
planter good cond1tton Ben
Btckers Bashan Road Phone
949 4605
4 5 3tc
200 WHITE plas1 c
Ideal for tomato
Dallas Cleland
Phone 949 4121

DOWN

moisture

104-Succo r
105---Pulver .te
106--Ciearer
108-Aico hol c
be11et&lt;:~ge

Unlock

109- Prel x w th
110--Reg stered
nurse {itbb.r,.)
11 1- Bapt smal bas n
1 12- Ctl ast •ses
1 14 -0penwork
f;Jbr c
116--An na l scollt
117-Dele mln'e
119-Quote
120--Makes nto
leather
122- ln the
d rect1on o l

4 5-\last age
47-Protrudlng
nose!i
49- Prov des crew
50--Gul s name
51-Begins
54-Bibl ca l we-ed
55-Intelle ct
56--Moe vilp d

59-Pronoun

60-Resort
62-Term of
endeilrment
64-Unruflled

124- Number

65-Ch nese m1le
66-Prepos ton
67-Suf! )( 1 ke
69-Rent
70-Gra n
71-l llum nated

125-Sn (1 11 c h ldren
126-Faot levers
128-Above (poe t )

-

129-Walk wear y
13I - Deles t
132- Novf! ll v

1-Sp;'lnlsh pots
2-Biem sh
3-Griltu ly
4- Lat
c onj etlan
5-G an
6-Mitil y
students
7-lngred ent
8---CI ck beet e
9 - WhaP (co lloq }
10-Ca penter s
t ool
11--ca led lor
12-Appellat iOn
of Alhe a
13- Veh c c
14 - Tel Ionic de IY
I S- BI!smlrches
16-Si a l on
17-S tm an
18----Con pa5s po nt
19- Bi{rter
20- H &lt;~d d ned
27-Cyprl no d
l sh{cl )

29-Word ol so row
31-hlsehood
36- Mus cal
org&lt;~nlut on
37-Semt prec ous
stone

39- Per od o f time

gl-Amencan
pair ot
92- Huge

93-Un to~ Italian
currency
95- Frv tless
96-Happen again

Campmg Equipment
STARCRAFT tra\lel trader s
and fold down campers
Highest d•scount •n tn sta te
Cam p Conley Starcraft Sales
Route 62 North of Pf
Pleasant beh1nd Red Carpet
Inn 675 S384
83 II

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

40--Emmets
97-0IIil!l:llr
.41-H ghway
99-Sheet ol glass
4 2-Cub c meters
\01 - Prof ted
43- Suspend
105- FII.Shlon
44- Egg shaped
106-Fondles
46--Con unct on
107--Peruse
48- Mouflta ns of • Ill - Loca te
Euro pe
11 2-N p
49- Un de rg o und
lll-Brnk
excavM oo
suddenly
50-Sho rt Jacket
11 5-lnstrume-n t
51 - 0 cha ges
11 !'&gt;-Jot rney forth
a g un
118-Cnes I ke dove
52-r-Oo we l
119- An mal
53- Enthus asm
enclosure
55 ~T tle ot re s pect
121 - Part Of
56-Class fy
Jacket {pi )
~7-0m t Iron
123-P onoun
pronunc at on
125- Expe enced
58-Ceremon es
126--Trop ca l t ree
61 - Damsh
127-1 horoughfare
measure
129-Fades
~3-Den
13 0--Thong of
64 - Young horse
leather
68- Pertarn ng to
131-Rude cabo
Engl a nd
132-Su te ol
70-Stopp ng
0011 s {pi )
71 - A ghled
134- Ve t lale
73 - Recompense
136--D v ng b rds
/4- Related
137- Rent
75- T pp ng
I J9-Ado
77- fru t (p )
140-..Wo llh!lu nd
78- D s la c e
144- Church benc h
meas u e
l45,....A s tate (abbt)
146-----Sphe re
80 - 0ry
147- Terra del
8 1- P 9nou
Fuegan lnd an
83-f u t se-ed
146-Pri! IIX d Stant
84- Pn eel s of
149- Cor ded clo th
l;md
15 1- Negall\le
a 7- The 1 n verse
153- Syn bol for
89-Th ng ~h al
ter n
a !t rac ts
155- Ma n s
90- Fragme nt of
n ckna me
earthe ware
157-A !il ilte (abbr}

BILL'S ARMY-NAVY SURPLUS
85 N. COURT STREET
A THEN$, OHIO
OPEN 9 AM TO S 30 PM DAILY
9 AM TO 9 PM MONDAY AND FRIDAY
SUNDAY 12 TO 5 30 PM FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
Wnght tools now 10 pet off tag pr1ces, Lmcoln
Welder , 2~5 amp , now $92
Top 40 h1ts ~8
tt'ack tapes
everyday low pnce $2 98, New
sh1pment of 011 lamps and glassw&lt;tre pr1c~
for g1ft g1v1ng , complete lme of c"amdhig
equ1pment Just arnved a truckload of tents
from Underwriters Ins Co , Chicago,
Thermos Coleman Hetnk
Nal1onal Brands at b1g sav1ngs
Osh Kosh and 01' Kentuck b1b overalls, $5 69
lo S7 95, Spec1al lot ot work and play shoes,
now reduced 10 pel off Sweat pants and
sh1rts now $2 95 each

36 xll x 009

so,

USED OFFSET PLAtES
HAVE
MANY USES

20~
8forstoo

Gallipolis
Daily Tribune

Surplus Items by the Thousands
R!ty u memory todny.

825 Th1rd Ave
Galhpoll !i 0

The Almanac

By Un1ted Press lntcrnuhonal
l od oy " Su nda} Apo!l 8 lire
98th day or 197! 111tlr 267 to
follow
fhc 111 0011 IS between 1ts llC\\
phase &lt;Jnd frrs l quarter

fhc m01mng
Mer em y Venus

si&lt;Jrs
Mal s

01c
md
New
Sh1pment

Jup1Lcr
Sallu n
I hose born on th1s d&lt;~tc cu c
undCI the SIH n of Anes
I he cve mng stm

IS

Livmg Room Su 1tes

M ov 1e sU.1 Mao y P1 ckford
\\ il S l&gt; or n Apnl B 1891

On thts dC;~ y

111

Augushnc Fla

in Ius sccm.: h

for the fountam of youth

Jn 1917 1\ustJJa and Hungm y
sever cd thp lom 1trc relations
wtth the Unrted Sl.t.llcs- tv-.u
da ys beflll c \mer rca dcclm cd
w 11 on (, c rm&lt;:~ny
I n lP52 Pres1dcnt Hally
l1 um an 01deled gove rnment

J~~~~l=~~~t~:l=C~4~~c~=!~4m~

rfq~+-1--'--+-+::::

SCIZ UI C Of

the

sl89 to s209 D1rect
From Mtll
YOU SAVE• •

lnslm y

In 1513 Ponce de 1 eon of
Spain landed at whatos now St

StCc )

n In
Old I1 genm
s tnkc
96~ dPICSH!Cnt

How Can We Do It? Come ilnd See
6 TRACK TAPES ----:-:--- -- - - - ea S2 98
Country Western Rock Modern
PICTURES new se lection "24 x48
sc enes m c ludmg Rehg1ous

and 18 x24

Many

LOOK AT THISI Double Bed S1te
FITTED BED SHEETS - - -- - - - - ea $2 49

ATTENTION' FISHERMEN
Mav enck No 175
SPIN CASTING REELS ---~----- $3 49

to

FABRIC SPEC IAL•
GROUP OF KNITS Rog 10$3 98 - - - - - Yd $150

Joh n

JUST UNPACKED• Reg $7 00 Value
MEN S WHITE COTTON SOX - - : - -- - - 3 pr Sl 00

IndustJ y

Kenned y m~1dc Bntam s S1r
NEW 2 p ece trad1t1onal I vmg l;;;;i-t--r-f7::f.~t--T-j--iy;ffix;lriitfb:::};o,~-t---J--t--i::::::+.;;;-j--f-i Wmslon Clnu chill an honm cuy
room su fe w •fh a extra htgh
crli zen of Lhe Umtcd Sta tes
back Mr Cha rand revers1ble jiO~-f-~i~tllt-t?;%t~tlli-fofl:;ji&lt;l8j-i-t:lfT7:Fort-l ;--'---,---------l
cushron s regularly s239 95
LARGE SELECTION
now only $139 95 Your cho ce 1;-;-;;t-+~f:'f;i-+-lf----b~f.':'::i-+--ir-t-t--f;-;-;'t:::::ol;;-.-+-+.:~H+.'fft--+---j
of colors Pomeroy Recovery
622 E Mam St
Pomeroy
Oh o Phol')e 992 7554

* MOBILE HOMES*

Acrylic Vmyl Ptasttc
LAT EX I NT PAINl' several co tors

gal$229

MEN'S WORK
PANTS
$598
Dacre l poly ester
r a yon
Ta n
Flare

P

&amp;

Are Here ...

d Bargains
104 W Mam St
CORN

J Doors Below Court

Phone 985 421 1

3 29 24tp

Pa rkwood
Skylines

PANSIES and cabbage plan1 s
Cleland
Farms
&amp;
Greenhouse E Ma n Ra e ne
Gerald ne Cleland

bucksts
p1cktng
Racme

4 5 31c
------,-'------:---:A !OFT MEAT or vege1able
d1spla1 case w•th motor If
you can use 1t call 949 382 1
949 3161 or wr te A
C
Brad1ord Box 116 Racrne 0

Kirkwood

12 &amp; 14' wtde to 70'
Mon

STAR KILLS rats qu ck ly sure
2 12 lbs
$1 69
Ebersbac~
Hardware Suga r Run Mills
P!ckens Hardwar e Mason
4 1 301p

Fn

Til 9- Saturday T1l

6

1nancmg Ava

Stewart's Gun Shop
and Hardware

LARRY'S, .••
MOBILE HOMES
600 W Mam

MAIN ST IN RUTLAND
PH 742 3191

Boy s

------------~~-----------~
MINERS
We Buy Sell
I
SUPPLIES
11
and Trad e
I
GUNS and
1
Belts Hats
II
1
1 Buckets Leg Band s 1 I
KNIVES
1

I
I

..nos

-

I 38-Roman bronze
I 39--Eiectncal
de11ice
14 Q--£..,eryone
141-S lkworm
14 2-Faroe Is lands
wh•rlw iod
14 3-Note of sc&lt;~te
144-Golt shot
14 5-The poplar
14 7-Cipen to view
14 9-Brown k WI
I SO.....-SI&lt;:~ves
152-Br II a ni
success
154-H ndu
prmcess
156-Smoolhs
158- Man feslat ons
! 59-College ofhc als
160-Explo!. on
161 -falllnto d SUIB

por1ra I

m~asured liteps.
l&amp;-Ad he stvesubstance
21-Pe-rta mn&amp;: to
laymen
22-Hol!Wailln
areet ng
23-Warn na:

8, 1973

l33-Par1 of flower
135--Cioth menure

77-ftt.n mal s coat
78-Manulactured
79-Steillth•ly

1 o-r--,s"a-,1:
e --on--;C:;:h-:es te r
UNCLAIMED Ire gh1 1973 B ;L-;O"T"s=--~
track stereo 4 speaker audio
water phone 992 5248 till 3
system will sell for small
p m or 992 3436 after 3 p m
balance S82 50 or pay $6 10 per
4 4 6tc
month Call 992 5331
4 4 6tc 1969 PLYMOUTH Fury 2 dr
·- - - ; - - ' - : - - , - hardtop a1r cond v nyt top
t&lt;NAPP q·uallty shoes for work
$1 100 Call 446 3939
~ou
4 6 5tc
or dress golf shoes $19 99
call 992 5324 Bob Hysel l
GROCERY bus ness for sale ALUMINUM Car 1op boats 10
4 6 tfc
Bulld1ng for sale or lease
12 and 13 fl King sbury Rd
Phone
773 5618 from 8 30 p m
Co Rd 18 Phone 992 6256
1954 FORD Tractor wlfh double
to 10 p m for appo ntmenl
aft er 5 p m
14 plows new 7 ft dtsc
3 20 tfc
3 8 301c
excellent cond1t1on 1968 Ford
Ranger p1ckup h ton V 8
automatiC heavy duty t.res
WIN AT BRIDGE
Saturday Aprol
good cond1hon
see Rog er
Roush phone 247 3551
4 6 3tc
6 GAL tank for Johnson or
Ev nrude outbOard motor 2 h
lb d c f1re extmgu1sher one
new 500x8 boat trailer t1re and
other miscellaneous 1tems
phone 378 6210
4 6 3tp

TypiCal Comments from Open House V1s1tors

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

929-·

(21 ELECTROLUX Sweeper
deluxe model Complete w1th
all cleanmg attachments and
uses paper bags Slightly used
but cleans and looks like new
W1ll sell for $37 25 cash or
terms avai l able
Electro
Hyg1ene Co phone 992 7755
4 4 6fc

6 ROOMS bath new gas fur
nace 2 lots connections for
trader space ca ll 1 304 773
5341
4 8 3tp

OPEN HOUSE

For Sille

AUCTION Saturday April NOW READY Bl oomong
14th, 12 30 p m the personal
potted flowers startmg at
property of the Estate of
SOc hangmg basklts pans1es
Gene\'1eve Stobart w11t be sold
and cabbage Ready soon --..
at the home on Route 3J
Petunias mangotds Co leus
114 mile North of the Bea con
tom atoes peppers etc 1 4 off
Sta1ton Pomeroy and Athens
by the flat Hubbard s Green
Road
Frtg 1da lre
house St Rt 124 above park
refr igerator
West•nghouse
Syracuse Qtuo
electric range and sweeper
4 J ttc
old oak rocker pedestal type
~
round table ant1que bed
COM.L
L1mes1one
c.x~..~•stor
chest on chest sect•onal book
Salt Works E Ma•n St
case and books odd chairs 2
Pomeroy Phone 992 J~t.
platform rockers 2 p~ ltvtng
4 12 tfc
room su i te square stands
clothes HOODs AQUARIL ' " fiSh
and other stands
hamper maple dresser and
and suppl es new klcaf10n
chest
clock
radio
Ash Street Mtddleport near
Weshnghovse TV
G E
park phone 992 5443
Portable TV
me1al bed
1 7 tk
complete
Hollywood bed
·
iH;l&amp;L"'"Nii'D\iA.-;Y;-:o;;;l-;;d-.,or;-;s:;-1a~r1ed
complete 4 dlnetfe cha rs
Leghorn pulleti,.. Both floor or
lamps wmdow fan treadle
ca
ge
grown
available
sewmg machme
buffet
Poultry
hous1ng
&amp;
toaster d1shes utll1ty cart
automat•on Modern Poultry
lawn mower and other ar
399 W Mam Pomeroy 992
ftcles
Eldon
Weeks
2164
Execu1or
The Bradford
4 8 lie
Auction Co A C Bradford
Manager C C Bradford ~H:-:A:-:N-:-N
:--:--:
A~H-::-5-:-h-:-u_s_b_a_n_d_ H_e c tor
Auct1oneer
Terms
Cash
hates hard work so he cleans
not respons ble for acc1dents
the rug s wtfh Blue Lustre
4 8 He
Rent electnc shampooer $1
.,----,-,----Ne lson s
Drug
Store
PAY LESS - GET MORE"
Pomeroy
Ohro
Bestdes our usual stock of
4-11 2tc
clean budget pr tced used
lurnrture KUHL S BARGA IN :-S::E~L-::F-:-C:-0:-N
:-:::
T-:A-:-1N
:-:-::E-:D--t-r a , e I
CENTER now sells NEW
Ira ler 22 ft slee ps 6 good
FURNITURE 3 pc maple or
cond 1t1on pr~ced for qu1ck
walnut bedrooms Sl09
4
sale ca ll after .4 p m 949
drawer chests tmaple or
2601
walnuf) $25 95
5 drawer
4 8 6tc
maple $30 95 Herculon sofas
matchmg chairs $139 95 3 pc ~=-=--:--:-:----:--c-:-:­
MIXED HAY James A Sm th
coffee step table sets $16 95
Hemlock Grove Rd Rl 3
slat seat hardwood rockers
Pomeroy
s s oak straight
$15 95
cha1rs $5 SO ea m quantities
of 4+ 7 pc chrome dmette
$99 also cloth covered sofa
beds sw1vel rockers vmyl
recl1ners ch ld s rockers
sofas wtth matchmg sw1ve l
rockers It pays to check w•th
KUHL S for your NEW or
US ED furniture needs' US ED
APPLIANCES rnclude large
selechon
of
late model
refngerators sas and others
ma1erral s
from $25 {1 gas) elect or gas UPHOLSTERY
rly
$3
95
only
$1 95
regula
dryers $35 auto washers $45
Also
remnarrts
Pomeroy
wringer type port dt sh
Recovery 622 E Ma n St
washer used b1ll1ard table
3 8 30tp
$45 Ma1or appliances are
GUARANTEED 1or 30 days
KUHL S BARGAIN CEN
TER Rt 7 at caul on I gh1
Tuppers Plams Open to 7
closed MONDAYS ONLY
phone 667 3858
4 8 6tc

-------

Employment Wanted

Pets For Sale

OLD FASHIONED re, ,al s1111
n progress at the Porneroy
Wesleya n Holtness Church on
R I 14J S p ~c al serv ces each
even ng at 7 30 p m Speaker
and Pastor Rev
0 Del
Mantey Everyone Welcome
J 26 tfc

- - -- - -

FOR

PAUL s AUTO PARTS now
open for bus ness m old
local on on Rt 7 bypass
Pom eroy We pay top dollar
for wrecked and tunk auto &amp;
tru cks Owner Paul Ba1rd N EW F ISH sh pmen t n at
4 5 6tp
Showalter s Wet Pet Chester
Oh o open da I y 4 p m to 9 30
GUN SHOOT also rrfle ma1ches
p m a ld all day Saturday and
- open s tes only and spec a!
Sun da y
deer slug match Forked Run
4 6 3tc
Sportsman Club Sunday - - - ' - - -Apr I 8th 12 noon
4 5 3t c

cyl1nder many extras
new phone 985 3828

Help Wanted

Nollce

For Sale

Auto Sales
1972 HONDA 500 motorcycle 4

Sentinel. Sunday AprilS 1973

II
II

I
I

next to Jone s

!PHONE 992-7777

l-----------d·
----------~
HUNTING
FISHING LICENSE
&amp;

Larry Evans
Frank Gheen

e e

OPEN

CANOE

e e

Opens Days 9 t116 p m
Closed All Day Thurs
Serv ce After the Sale
See Us Before You Buy
Frank Gheen Sales Mgl'"

7

When to Ignore a Principle
NORTH
.Q76
VK6
• 109832

7

.A 53
WEST
. K 10S
VJI095 3
t 75
.872

soum

EAST
.984 3 2
VQ84
t A
.KQ10 6
(DJ

.AJ
VA 72
t KQJ64
.J94
North South vulnerable
West North
East Soulh
I NT
Pass
3 NT
Pass Pass
Pass
Openmg lead- • J

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

two spades any t1me he
wanted to
What If West held the kon g
of spades' South saw that 1f
West held both the kmg of
spades and the ace of d1a
mond s that three no trump

was not gomg to make on

any lm~ or play Further con
S!deratwn showed h1m that of
he tned the spade fme sse be
fore knockmg out the ace or
diamonds that he co uld make
hts contract as lon g as Ea st
held one o( those two card s
so South Immediately led
and Jo .:o • the spade fmesse
West won and c leared the
hearts but cou ld never get
m to make them and South
wound up w1th h1s mne
tncks
( NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN }

It IS a pretty good prmc1ple

of no trump play to try to de
velop the s uit where you ca n
take the greatest number of
tncks before Joohng around
wtlh any other suit
1
t IS a pretty good genera 1
pnnc1ple but as all rules
45771
4 s 51c you must know when to fol
----------,--,low 1t and when n ot to
2 HORSES
1 regls1ered
The way the cards he
quarter 7 years old gelded
South was lucky to get a
S37S 1 gelded walker 7 years heart lead rather than a elub
old S250 Must sell Call 367 and to have hearts continued
7432
4 5 He after he ducked the f1rst
- - - - - : " " - - - - - , lead He had to wm the sec
and heart m dummy and h1s
3 CAMPS lots for sale run from Immediate Impulse was t o
railroad track fa tow water knock out the ace of d1a,
mark 86 ft w1de at ra1lroad mond s and get four diamond
track .400 ft ldng and 100 ft
lncks set up nght away
w1de at law water mark
Then he thought thmgs
these loti are good and clean over carefully and saw that
no brush Ieveil on Oh o River
he would need two spade
across
from
Pomeroy
Marlon Reynolds Mason W trlcks m order to come to ~
total of mne
Va phone 773 5147
• 3 6tc
GIVe East the king of
spades and he could gel his

1

Right In Tune With The Times

favorite o f sport smen
to go I ght and still not
sacr I ce ru9gedness
At 29 1 pounds there s no
ca noe on the market 1n
or fourteen foot s•ze class
th at ca n match !t' It s the
ca noe on the market today
All knowledgeable
who have tried the SPORT
SPAL eventually beco me owners For the trapper f1sherman
or ca mper who Wilnl s to get off the beaten path the SPORT
SPAL offers the best way to qo A FIVE Ml LE PORTAGE IS
A BREEZE WHEN YOU RE CAR RYING ONLY 29 h
pounas or JY 1 pounds 1t you ele ct to choose the fourteen toot
mode l There s noth ng ex tra to buy w1th the SPORTSPAL
Padd les Ethat oam(r) sea ts rnotor mount and oar brackets
ar e al l ncl uded 11 your plans ca ll for a motor the SPORTS
PAL 12 handles ali of the one to two and a half horse power
model s with ease and the SP0RTSPAL 14 w111 ca rrv a four
hor se power motor beaut tully All SPORTS PALs are m
d1v1dually r egistered and the owner becomes a member of
the SPORTSPAL Club of Amer ca a grow ng and
d• stlngu shed gr oup of outdoor-s men ( R) ETHA'f'OAM sa
of Dow Chem 1ca l Co

New Hallmarks 50xl2 Up To 70xl4
New Golden Empress 50x12 Up To 70xl4

Weoghs Only

POUNDS

Come!
See!

14

••

nOw?

Answer Monday

foot model only

10

pounds more I

Fully Equipped As Shown

f

Avatfable 1n Yellow (Brrchbark) Green and Red

- 'Er-~- l
1

,

Dram hole tort &amp; aft 2

2 l1fe preserver seats

HALLMARK 60x12
A t~lectr c home wtth house type door
ca tt'ledral roof 30 gal water heater fully
ca rpeted all deluxe package Only

Carrytng h1ndles
Motor mount - -

) ~ ~~

ThP b1ddmg has been
\\e!it
North
East
Soulh
1t
Pass
IV
Pass
2 ,.,_
Pass
2NT
Pass
3•
Pass
Pass
4t
Pass
'
You South hold
.K65 VQJ54 tAZ
What do you do now?
A-81d four hearts
Your
partner wilt know that you only
hold four henrl'i but even •f he
has JU5t three thHi may he thl!
bt.&gt;sl spot
•
TODA Y'S QUESTI()N
Your partner contmues to
four spades Wh at do you do

29~

12 Foot Model

'llalerproof cantster n seats
Qu•ck anchor rope lock

Oar locks for towrn1

I

Elhafoa~l n ng

DELIVERED
AND SET UP

Paddle locks tur portag n1
2

Oeta c~able

foam sponsons

Z1nc chromate b rch bark effect

UP TO 12 YEAR FINANCING
WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL

Tough a1rcraft alloy hull

lowm1 eye fore &amp; 1h
SOLD BY

Goble Mobile Homes

Gravely Tractor Sales &amp; Service
Pomeroy Oh1o

S.nd $1 lo• JACOBY MODERN boo&gt;
to 'Wilt at St~dge (c/ o tlus news
H

po~rJ

P 0 BoX" 4B9 Rudto Cff}o

Stcrf1on Nflf Yorlc NY 10019

586 Locust St
992 7004
Middleport
Open 8 to6 Mon thru Sat

'

Dan Thompson
The Oeahn Man

't.o-o....::&gt;&lt;:&gt;-c::&gt;oooc:&gt;o-..:::&gt;&lt;:&gt;-c:&gt;-..ooo....:&gt;&lt;::&gt;-&lt;"1-000"&lt;::&gt;&lt;:&gt;-&lt;:;&gt;-0.00&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;::&gt;..::&gt;-&amp;

Open 8 a m IllS 30 Mon thru Thurs
8 am ftl 8p m F=n and Saturday

992 2.975

�•

•

'

•

·--

'?!I= TheSUJldayT•mes-Sentinel Sunu" ~ril8 197J

The Sunday Tunes ·Sentmei_Sunday April! 1913

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Nollce

In Memory

In Memory

IN MEMOHY Of Lula Elhel
F e llureWhat •s home- with out a
mother?

Notice

CARPORT Sale Monda v 9 s
Mam Street rn V1nton
Ctothing &amp; Baby 1tern s

What are all the joys we meet, -::::-- - -- - -- - 82 2
When her lovmg smile no longer .
LET US restOfe your old 1amrly
Greets the commg of our feet
photo s Prr ces r ea sonable
Lula Ethel Fellure
a

of

daughter of the late Taylor

Tawney s St ud o

51 ff

and Luella Beaver Sheets was

Rev. Jennings

born

and _.INCOME Tax Servt ce Wil son
departed th1s l1fe March 28
Rusk 280 State Street Phone
1973 be1ng 66 years of age
446 2476 any trme
She leaves the follow ing
19 II

Cremeans

Feb

24

1907

NotiCe

RU SS S Glass Serv ce Glass for
all needs We sell wt nd sh telds

Nottee

Rad ios Sal es &amp;
Servrce New and used CB s
polrce mon tor s antennas
etc Bob s C•t rzen Ban.;t Radto
Equ rp Geor9es Creek Rd
Gathpol•s Oht o 446 4517

T W O WA Y

ARTHUR A.
~
NIBERT,
A SA
A.S.A.
•

Gothard of Mercerville Mrs
lrv1n (Cass ie) Fellure of
Gallipolis and one brother
LeWI S Sheets of Mercennl/e
She was preceded m death by

Followmg IS a copy of the RadiO
Cremeans Sermon Oct 25 1942

•

two sisters Velv1e and Zen•a
one brother Trella Sheets
On Dec 19 1925 she was

Broadcast of Rev

fh1s unton 3 daughters and 5
sons were born They are

Mrs

I must work the works of him that sent me wh•le tf s
day the mght cometh when no man can work These are the
words that fell from the itps of our dear Savror when h s
drsctples asked h m tn regard to a certarn man that had been
bltnd and hiS eyes opened and he was made to see Hts
d sctples hts followers ask him a question Jesus tn return
spoke these words rn the 4th verse of the 9th diviston-of John
I must work the works of htm that sent me while It Is day
Jesus Chrrst the savtor of the world was sent by God
the Father rnto the world not to do hts wtll but to do the wtll
of h m that sent hrm And from fhe very begrnnmg of ttme
from eternrty Jesus Chrtst Gods Son had hts mtnd ftxed
upon a lost race and that he would work their redemptron
Then Jesus come rnto the world Jesus Chnst the Son of
God was the Great Monarch of Heaven and he set forth a
law of labor Jesus come tnto the world and sa1d
1 must
work the works of htm that sent me
Now thrs afternoon I would lrke that you would thrnk wrth
me as we look mto th s story and into the life s work of our
Lord and Ovr Sav or Jesus (hnst How he become so rn
terested in lost human tty in a lost world that was steeped
and doomed 1n stn yet he was w II ng to leave hts Fathers
home above and come down to earth lay as1de the robe of
nghteousness and fake upon him pur s1ns and bear them to
dark Calvary
Now Jesus rs on a mrsston for hts Father He come to seek
and to save that whrch was lost He come not to be mrnrstered
unto but he come mtn stering He gave hrs ltfe a ransom for
many He come work tng the works of hls Father that had sent
h m God the Father sent Jesus Chrtsf mto thrs world to be
the Savior of the world Jesus Chrrst the Son of God ts God s
appatnted Savror God from ete rnity appo nted a day when
he would save the world through Jesus Chrrst hts only
begotten son
Jesus Chrtst come to be our Savtor and he MUST BE our
Sav or as we accept h m by simple farfh Jesus was busy as
he went about tn the world dojng good mtn ster ng unto th e
needy mtnrsterrng unto the poor the poorest the halt the
lame the bltnd and all those that were affltcted Jesus Chr st
come to be a Savtor to manktnd and keep n m nd he was
Gods appointed Savtor God sent htm rnto the world for the
very purpose of savmg the world and not only sav rng the
world from Its perishable condtt on but he come rnto the
world to destroy the works of the devtl to establ sh
tn
the world
The
law
demanded
r ghteousness
r ghteousness but the people could not keep the law Yet 1t
dld nothrng to make them righteous THANKS BE TO GOO
under tht~ d spensat on of grace th s blessed age whrch we
now life n the law of grace does not only demand
r ghteousness but THANK GOD t giveth nghteousness to
those who wlll belteve rn the Lord Jesus Chnst The
nghteousness that rs taught tn thts New Testament s the
r ghteousness that comes by farth In Jesus Chrtst
AH 1 trust and bel eve upon h m walk w th h m n
fellowsh p He come rnto the world to be a frtend to man
Though he was mrstreated persecuted r:rdrcul~d and at last
was cruc fed but yet he said Father I m w II ng to suffer
tf there s no other way whereby the world can be saved 1 11
dnnk the very drops of the cup death OH t 1 m so glad he
was wlllrng t-te said I must work the works of h m that sent
me while rt rs day He come to do the will of hts Father not
hrs own wtll NO• NOt but he come to do the will of the
Father He dtdn t ltve a lrfe that would please htmself but
THANKS BE TO GOD he lived a lfe that would please h s
Heavenly Father that had sent hrm rnto the world
Come on Brother Come on Srstert leave the lrfe of s n
beh nd come and enlist as a worker tn the great vtneyard of
our Lord and Savtor Jesus Chnst Then let us ftght the battle
and may we ftghter to the end By fatth ttl I death
Hesard lmustworktheworksofhmthat~entme He
sad
My Father work s and I also work
1 work as my
Father works
Listent my brother and srster today the
Lord Jesus Chrrst wants your fellowship he wants your co
operatron Jesus Chr st sable to bless th s world today the
only had the fellowshtp and co operaf on of h s people Those
of you that are not Chnstrans OH' prepare to meet h m
Jesus Chrrst sought you and he sought me as a srnner con
demnee-t&amp;die lost undone and hopeless But THANKS BE
TO-GOO today I m saved by the blood A men THANK GOD
Now I mona mt ss on I'm on a mtsston for my ktng 1 m
on busi:1ess for my Ktng THANK GOD I m tn the battle and
I m battltng on I don t know how long the ftght may last 1
don t know how long the battle rl"',Pybe but lrsten - 1 m rn tf to
the end I m gDI'ng to f ghftt through regardless of the f.nce
But GOD BLESS YOU I m gotng to hold onto the staf The
Word of God The devil may bombard men may oppose but 1
am de term ned by the grace of God to f ghter to the end You
ask me why' Be thou fa thful unto the end and thou shall
rece ve a crown of life THANK GOD 1 m batt I mg for a
crown Now salvation rs a grft by grace wholly apart from
works I m not preachtng to you today that you got to work to
be saved NOt NOt but God bless you by grace you can be
saved and that not of works It s arart from works But listen
we belteve and preach that If you re saved and you have the
grft of salvafton salvatron by grace We belteve works g ves
the frurts of the labors of a child of God If you want to work
- - 1 could qutt preachtng If I wanted to but I don t want to
Those who stt about me today They could qurt praytng they
could qu1t testrfyrng they could qurt worktng for God but
they don t want to
AH you say you got the cause at heart You re walk1ng
m the lrght You want to do someth ng to help the Krngdom
work You want to do somethmg to help God save thrs world
through Jesus Chnst All rtght f ght on my brother ftght ant
Now I sad salvat on was a gift of God wholly apar1 from
works That we are saved by grace through fatth a gift of
God Then we are ready to work for God Now 1 m work ng
that I mtght have a crown I m worktng that 1 mrght be
rewarded I m worktng that I m ght be richly rewarded
The c;.postie Paul tn the 2nd letter to Ttmothy sard
Timothy the lime of my departure sat hand 1have fought
a good ftght I have fmtshed my course I have kept the farth
Henceforth there ts lard up for me a crown of righteousness
not only for me but for all those that love hts appeartng
THANKS BE TO GOD thos afternoon
For our ciosrng thought turn wrth me to the 17th chapter
of St Johns Gospel that prayer of rntercesston and hear
the words of my dear Savror I have gfortfted thee on earth
I have ftntshed the work whtch thou gavest me to do

Sadly Missed by

Denver

(.Mary)

Cox

Scottown

and

Cr ~wn Coty Mrs Ray (Dons)

Saunders

Drane at home sons Ber
nard and Paul of Mercervtlle
Frednck and RJchard at
home
One son
Trella
preceded her In death She ts
also survrved by 5 grand
children
and
2 great
grandchtldren
When a young grrl Ethel
accepted Chnst as her per
sonal Savrour and unrted wrth
the Stloam Bapttsf Church
where her I tfe was a 1 vrng
testrmony of her fa th rn
Chnst and of His savrng and
keeprng power Smce mov ng
to Mercervr lie she attended
Mercervrlle Bapt st Church
and as long as health per
mrtted she was a fa thtul
attender of all the fund ons of
the
Gallta
Baptrst
Assocrahon She was always
wrlllng to help rn any way to
further the cause of Chnst
She got much enjoyment
$tngrng the songs of Zron and
helptng rn whatever the need
might be
Her greatest rnterest was
for her family dorng all she
could to make ltfeTrfjoyable
for her loved ones bu at the
same hme teach ng them the
way of salvatron We cannot
say Ethel s nfluence for good
has ceased for we are con
ftdent that ~er teachmgs and
her example of a I fe lived for
God wtll lrve on in the hearts
of her loved ones and fnends
We feel the foHowtng poem
is very appropnate for this
occaston
THE WATCHER
She always leaned to watch for
us
Anxrous 1f we were late
In wtnfer by f.he wtndow
In summer by the gate

-::-::-:-:-:-----

BORROW by Mall to SSOO'
Money for any purpose
Conf denftal
Conventent
terms - Roberts Loan Box
6071P Wheeltng W Va
83 tr

-

-;-;~;:--;-:-:;;-;:o-c,--c-,---~-77

ATTENTION Housew 1ves and
mothers turn your spare t 1me
tnto extra rncome show ng
beautrful new I ne of famtly
clothrng by Fashron Wagon
Mtnnesota Woolen Co h1gh
comm ss on monthly cash
bonus plus $400 free war
drobe Call 446 3613

T~anks

WE WISH to express our si n
cere thanks to the many
fnends and relattves who
were so k nd dunng the recent
death of our loved one and
mother Frances Paulene
Payne to those who sent
flowers food and cards
Specral thanks to the M cCoy
Funeral Home Rev Vance
Watson
Mrs
Dorothy
Thomas for the beautl1ul
ob fuary Also the organist
Mrs Joarr-Bass and Mrs
Mary Howell Your ktndness
wrll always be remembered
Daughter
Mrs
L1nda
Ragland and fam1ly Stanley
Payne and sons and mother
Roxre Evans
83 I

UL ABNER

For Rent

)LEEP/NG rooms
wee I&lt; I~
rates free garage parkrng
L bby Hotel
241tl

- - - - - -- No!tee

PEOP E WHO

-:----c::-c----- - -- _..:;
81 3
60x12 TRAILER men on ly atr
cond t oned phone after 4 30
367 7272
81 tf

HAVE B0 MIJCH
'10 OFFER. AAE

BE NG WASIEDl

TOBACCO Base I 470 lbs Call
388 9932

VACUUM
CLEANER
SERVICE

-

Wol -

A

NEEDED

[]

~GAIMBY

XJ

I

FULL OR
PART TIME

I

I-lOW S"i!;, &amp;OT
IT F~OM THE
HORSE: S MOUl'H

.(Au-ra

J_,l,.. NUDGE
YH1erd•7'•

'

UNifY

DISOWN

FINALE

A.al•en /Jurde 'M'tN"lc for ~~~- tailor-liNING

•

NEST IS USUALLY FOUND
IN TALL GRASS ON THE GROUND.

~~~-----------806

s3.51 HOUR

ID
MooDy)

Expandmg company
needs twelve men to
work 1n Galhpolls and
Pomt Pleasant areas
No
experience
necessary, must have
car Call Monday br
Tuesday 9 It 1 5

MR. VANCE446-0677

WANTED to buy sell or traae
toy electrtc tram 446 4843
240 tf

~---------­

Wanted To Do

•

Th1s IS a great opportun1ty for some lucky
fam1ly large or small 5 bedrooms completely
carpeted I1V1ng fam•ly and dmmg rooms 2
large bathrooms new k1tchen w1th bulltm cab
K1ds can walk to grade school It s an older
house m an excellent locat1on m Middleport
Was $24 000, but don t let that stop you The
owner must sell (make an offer)

THREE bedroom double wrde
mobtle trarler
Completely
furn1shed and all utllrt es
pald Rent $250 per month
Russe ll Wood d46 1066
61 -tf

'

'

Help Wanted
NEED; LPN or retored RN to'
work tn nursing hom~ can
lrve n Wr te Box 313 Ironton
Ohro Route 1

KITCHEN HELP wanted at
Preston Restaurant Apply rn
.person 463 Second Ave
81 6
PART TIME babysotter wanted
tn my home to sit 2 days a
week Call 446 3939

Down By The Old Mtll Stream
Th1s rusflc beauty does overlook and mclude
the old mill stream along w1th the water falls
and 7 A of land You'll f.nd a large living room
w1th huge rust1c fireplace modern built m
k•tchen (range, dishwasher etc ) Could be 4
or five bedrooms central a1r, full basement
w1th family room and f1replace 1'12 baths and
a front porch overlookmg the falls m the
creek OUJet surroundmg clean fresh country
a1r 1ust 4 miles from town
Wh1te House
For Sale
YES ANDATONLY$20500

3 BR CARPETED LIVING

ROOM
VERY PRETTY
KITCHEN NICE BATH 7
YRS
OLD
EDGE OF
TOWN IN' QUIET NEIGH
BORHOOD

Pnced Reduced
II Was Low
To Start Wtlh

2nd Ave
LARGE OLDER BRICK
PRESENTLY BEING USED
AS A DOUBLE 14 ROOMS
AND ALL BUT ONE HAVE
BEEN MODERNIZED AND
REDECORATED
APARTMENT RENTS FOR
Sl75 00 MO
OWNERS
SIDE INCLUDE S 2 BATHS
4 BEDROOMS DANDY BIG
LOT
IN
EXCELLENT
LOCATION PRICE HAS
BEEN REDUCED

Beaut1ful New
Spht Level
WITH GREAT EYE AP
PEAL YOU LL JU ST LOVE
THE ENTIRE HOME - J
OR
4
BEDROOMS
ijEAUTIFUL
KITCHEN
WITH
RANGE
DISH
WASHER ETC
FORMAL
DINING FAMILY ROOM
AND 2 CAR GARAGE ON
LARGE FLAT LOT BUY
NOW AND PICK OUT ALL
YOUR CARPET WE HAVE
3 LIKE TH IS

Owner Wants Home
SOLD
EXCELLENT CONDITION
4 BEDROOMS
CEN
TRAL
AIR
FU L L
BASEMENT IN TOWN ON
EVANS HGTS
PRICED
S19 900 MAKE ME AN
OFFE~

VERY
VERY NICE 3
BEDROOM
HOME
TERRIFIC
KIT C HEN
CARPET THROUGHOUT 2
CAR GARAGE OWNER
MUST
SELL
IM
MEDIATELY $17 500 BUYS
THI S REAL HONEST TO
GOODNESS BARGAIN

Older Home In
Kyger Creek
School D1stnct

S.n

8. BATH NEW
FURNACE
2 ACRES
S10900 AT THIS PR ICE
YOU CAN MAKE SOME
MONEY
6 ROOMS

Small2 Bedrooms
In Town
O N HENKLE Sl2 900 NI CE
KITCHEN BATH FORCED

AIR FURN ACE

CLOSE TO MINE .- 30 A on
state rd w ttl an almost new
12 x 64 mob le home Spectal
features are cent arr fur
nrshed pafto cellar good
barn and uttltty butld ng Due
to poor health owners have
reduted the pri ce for a qutck
sa le
VACANT LAND
16 A - Harrtson Twp Woods
$3 500

Just A Little
Ntcer For The
Money
0 NLY8MO OLD FULLY
CARPETED BEAUTIFUL
KITCH EN EXTRA LARGE
LOT
ON
CONCRET~
STREE T BETWEEN THE
CITY
AND
NEW
HOSPITAL

18 A - Morgan Twp
frontage

_______________ 82 4

Now takmg applications for
full or part time em
ployment mate or female,
should be 18 or over Apply m
person at Bob Evans Dnve
Inn

FOOD SERVICE MANAGER

GASOUNE AU..EY

I
'

'

We are lookmg for energetic young
men who want to make a career in the
restaurant busmess. Pleasant worktng
conditions, paid vacahons, start as a .
tramee and advance to manager '"
Bob Evans Farm Foods fast
growmg organ1zat1on. Expenence
helpful but not requared. Contact Herb
Bush, 446-1482 at Bob Evans Steak
House.
'

Really 32 State 51
Tel 446 1998
THE LEADER SINCE 1900 IN
SERVING THE NATJON S CROWN CITY - 6 rms with
full and dry base Liv rm 16
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS
x 25 large Rec Rm wtth
Ph
0008
F P kttchen 12 x 16 wtth
NEW
LISTING
JUST
but II rn cabinets H W floors
COMPLETED - New 3 BR
aliJ'aneled carpet on ltv rm
all electrrc home wtth WW
an bdrms It has a metal
carpet Thermopane w tn
garage and located on 2 level
dows n tce modern ktfchen
shaded lots Pri ced for a
large ltvtng room &amp; carport
qut ck sal e
located in a new subdtvtsron
on a 90x200 tot Easy terms on RT 35 - NEW all br ck 3
$19 500
bdrm
Ran c h
ltv
rm
12 x22 factory k ttchen H W
NEW LISTING - Slate Route
floors Nat gas turn heat full
141 two mt from town 3 BR
and dry base Large attached
all electric home wrth
gar
Thermo pane wtndows
basement and 2 baths A
wtth marble s lis
Prrce
bargatn at $19 000
$24 000
NEW LISTING - State Route RODNEY 1972 Schullz
160 nrcely remodeled 2 story
Mobile home 14 x68
all
home with 4 BR and part
Elec
Cen A r exira n ce
basement on a large lot
furnrture and located on 89 A
Askmg $14 900
lot All lor 114 900
NEAR KC H SC - 4 Bdrms
VINTON - Investment large
2 ~tory Colonral all carpet
vacant ~ore building With 2
full f n shed base heat bill
apartment upstairs $15 000
$15 per mo
(Nat Gas)
Located on a 3 A lot Metal
TRAILER PARK - 19 spots
barn 30 x 60 and storage
close to Gavrn plant 7 mobtle
bldg Ask ng $dO 000
homes rncluded m sale
Potenttal rncome of $17 000 NEAR N G H S - Loke new
per yr
Vrndate Mobtle horne Ex
pando liv rm Bay windows
VINTON - Large 2 story home
cen a1r all carpet all elec
w th full basement Attracltve
and beaut fully furntshed It
nce tncludes a new butl1 n
has a porch and carport
ttchen large formal d nlng
Located on 12 A tract of land
rm fireplace n I vmg rm
wrth 700 frontage on St Rt
uttltfy rm and 2 large por
160 All for $19 000
ches Would cons.rder a trade
CLOSE ADDAVILLE SCHOOL
NEW LI STING APART
- J bdrm frame and brack 2
MENT HOUSE 3 apartments
yr old carpet over H W ltv
on upper Route 7 completely
rm paneled Has uftltfy rm
furnrshed If you re Jookrng
and cotper plumbtng Large
for a good tnvestment don t
carpor and 11 A lol Prtce of
wart
S24 000 tncludes stove refr g
and drapes
LIKE TO COLLECT RENT?
We have 2 1972 mobtle homes GEORGES CREEK - I yr old
all elec 5 rms
balh and
on a 1!2 acre lot tn Addtson
ut ltty rural water all carpet
Twp renttng for over S4 000
and all paneled Has metal
per yr
Sellrng prtc~ storag e bldg Pr ce of S19 500
$15000
Includes stove refngerator
APPROVED SUBDIVISION and all drapes Located on h
16 lots rn Addison Twp w th
A lol
ali util tres available
GARF IELD AVE Exira
n
ce
5
rms
and
bath
on
ftr st
NEW LISTING SECOND
floor
wdh
rec
rm
and
AVE - Soltd 2 sto r y home
cooktng fa c lthes tn base Th s
w th 3 BR 1 / 2 baths ltvtng
house has car pet ftl e cell ngs
rm dtn ng rm k tt chen and
panelmg and awnrngs on
garage $14 900
w ndows Located on 4 A lot
wtth plenty nrce shrubbery
PRICE REDUCED - CITY lot has 42 frontage on rtver
Elegant 2 s1ory home featul'es
Gar 20 x 24 plus a new metal
4 5 or 6 BRs Ph baths new
bldg Pnce reduced lo $22 500
kitchen famrly rm and part
basement The LR and dtnrng
rm are carpeted and each BIDWELL - 6bogrms utlfy
and bath 2 story Carpet In
have a fireplace
liv rm
plenty cabinets rn k tchen much paneled and tf
LOTS
FINANCING
has storm drs a.nd w ndows
AVAILABLE
Mobole
Barn 40 x 60 and located on 2
homes welcome 2 mt from
b g lots Pnce $16 000
new hospital
•
EWING
TON
Close
new
m
ne
CHEAP LIVING - Solod 2 story
open rng 8 b g rms bath and
home w th 6 rm and bath on a
plenty
close t space Mo st of
Needs some
2 acre lot
fh
s
house
has
been
repatrs :T"hts home rs about J
remodeled and s located on a
mt from Vrnton and rs pn ced
4 A lot on Raccoon Cr Pr ce
at $5 900
reduced
to S12 500
FARMS
CHESHIRE TWP 43 A
clean mostly grass good 6 CARTER RD - Baby larm 5
A good 2 story 6 rm house
rm and bath home Th is farm
w th bath and laundry
s located on a state rd close
paneltng and ca rpet lt ha s
to 1he new m ne
ce llar poultry house storage
bld9 and garage Plenty good
ADDISON TWP - Thos 64 acre
water Only $14 900
pasture .. ,.m has a large
pond s
• Pr ngs good
CENTENARY - Good 3 or 4
well gooo v-{
and out
bdrm Ranch It has H W
build ngs and
-/) n 2 rd s
floors w th ca rpet tn I v rm
The home ha s ... &lt;!n com
and
hall Some panelrng
pletely remodeled and rs an
large kttchen wtlh. plenty
above average farro horr e
cab n els large bath and
attached gar Ctty wafer and
NEW COLONIAL WITH 167
nat gas A good buy at
ACRES - Th is beauloful 4 BR
$23 500
..
all electric home has a but It m
FARMS
k tchen wtth eat ng area WW
WOODS M II Roaq 26 acres 4
car pet formal din ng rm
rm
house
outbu ldings
largefamrlyrm 2freplaces
$8 200
and 2 baths There 1s about 75
acres t liabl e barn and new NEAR Rto Grande 40 A
pond Th s farm s about 5 m I
from Rio Grande
49 A Kong Rd Sl6 500

e

ROTO TILLE:RS lawn mowers
repatr 562 Fourth Avenue
446 1562
32 tr

APARTMENT for constructron ··-,-- - -- - - -- - 83 5
men Ph 446 0756
·
267 tf MIODLE AGED woman to stay
w th elderly lady In Mergs
County no laundry good
FURNISHED room range
home and wages 446 2410
refr gerator
Pr ivate en
83 3
trance S.ot5 per month ut lrtles
pad men only 446 4416 after
2p m

WANDA. PANDA

YUJIC

I TOHRT

not refuse any

-;::-:== = - - - -- - -82 3
FURNISHED apt adults only CASHIER Recepftontst
Cen tral heat parktng
pleasant personality neat
0338
appearance necessary must
27 tr
be good typ sf good salary
and frtnge benef Is lnqu~re at
ROOMS
for
constructton
Cred1tthrrft Inc JOO Second
worksrs near Gav n Plant
Ave Gallipolis
cook ng room TV room also
92 3
washer and dryer 367 7120 -------~--;c;--;:.==;,=--,--,c::-:- c --79 6 PART TIME National supploer
SLEEPING ROOMS
w II fratn man for local
rates Park Central
weekly
typewrrter repa1rrng Wnte
Hotel
Regronal Manager Box.. 25
308 tf
-:-:::-:-::-=-:-:-:::---:,__ _ :;:
Glenshaw Penna 15116

Repatrs Parts Supplies
New Sweepers $39 95 and up
Carpet
care
products
Shampoo Anti slahc Spot
Removers So1l Retardent
Open 10 a m 5 p m
Phone 367 7736

MEN

- - -- - -

EFFICIENCY
aparlmenl
Redecorated Near bustness ~------~-----2 1f
drstrr ct Pr vate entrance
Women only $85 Uhl ftes BABYSITTER on my nomw
245 9321
pad 446 4416 after 2 p m
81 6
=-:--:-c:-:-__:-~_ _ 78 6
!!MALL furnished apartment SOMEONE to lrve tn wrth
elderly lady call 440 2410
tdea l for older people Call
81 3
446 2235

WHAT A PITY

I Wll:: l:-NOT be responsible for
any debts other than my own
as of thrs date Aprtl 5 197~
Stgned James N Wr ght
81 3

12

Wtll

IF CARPETS look dull and
drear remove spots as they
appear wrth Blue Lustre
Rent electnc shampooer S1 at
G C Murphy Lower Sore
83 6

Bus1ness Opportunities

DAVIS VACUUM
CLEANER STORE

1ve got
mor• d rt

Rodney Cora Rd
Rolln,y Ohoo
Hours9am to9pm
Monday thru Saturday
Ph 245-9374-245-5021_

BACK hoetng and dozmg Phone
ODD JOBS
The men of Alpha Srgma Ph
Harold Mt ller Rf 1 Patrrot
Ohio Collect 643 2451
are w llrng to do odd jobs for
the people n the Gallrpolts
80 6
Jack son area If you have an --- - - - - odd JOb you want done
TOOL
sharpenrng
Saws
wash ng &amp; waxrng tra tors
scissors shears home and
gard~n lools
Sharp Shop
wash ng w ndows or clearmg
rots etc jUSt call245 5353 Ext
Alley rear 147 Second
43 between 8 and 4 30 After s
= =- -'-------__:216 tf
p m call 245 5575
81 3 REMODELING bulldong neW
rooms
cament
roofrng
s dtnQ furnace ms J H
Queen &amp; Snn 446 9271
GRADERS SCRAPERS
~~--~~~~~t
BULLDOZERS BACKHOES
NO exper ence necessary W 11 LAMPS ltght f xtures reparred
tra n Earn $300 to $400 per
Ph 446 4313
week For applrcatron ca ll
83 3
317 635 9283 or wnte to Great
Lakes Development Corp WALLPAPERING and pam
4022 E Wash ngton St
In
tong Phone 440 9665 or 37'1
d anapol s lnd ana 46201
2471
;;---=-------~--=68 26 - - - -- -83 tr

------'-~~

$MONEY$

MOBILE
COMMUNITY
&amp; SALES

Owner Transferred
reasonable offer

----,;;~=~- 80 4 - ---------

Add1son Ohto

UJIICramble theoe foor Jumble1,
Gne letter to each aquare, t.o
"form fo~r ord1nar.r words

QUAIL CREEK

Wanted To Buy

Wa lt ng t I we come home to
her
Anxrous if we are late
Watchrng
from
Heaven s
wmdow
Leanmg from Heavens gate
Sadly mrssed by husband
chtldren and grand children
83 1

JrlYMID~IkJ-u.J..-~,_

We have bo1h a.t

- - - - - - --

Her thoughts were all so full of
us
She never could forget
And so I thtnk that where she rs
She must be watchmg yet

Juanita €remeans Workman

ho~e

1-lot or a quality mob1le home,

DAY CARE
SU N VALLEY Nurs.,y School
licensed by State of Oh o 1112
mtles west of new hospttal TWO bedroom furntshed house
577 Sun Valley Dr Ph 440
n Rro Grande Wtl1 sublet
3657 Day care that says we
May 14 Aug 29 245 5422
care
Madge Hauldren
Owner
Lored th &amp; Johr ----~----------833
Hauldren Operators
HOUSE on Bulavrlle Addtson
114 t
Rd Coli 367 7438 or 446 3879
--::-:--:---~-____:
_ _______________:83 tr
BUr""-'
SE LLING
TRADING S lver dollars
type cor ns stamp collect ons
co rn collectrons also buyrng
s lver corns at top pr ce See GOLD corns and stlver dollars
Gary Wolfe at Corn Show
Tawney Jewelers
Holrday Inn Galllpolrs April
73 tr
8

8

Real Estate for Sale

of the Wayne Nat1ona I Forest Some sties have water

iron1s all have roads electnc1ty ur-derground water
ltnes underground teltphone hnes tn the Galhpoh!!o ex
change Boat Ramp and large parkmg lot All s1tes are.

World's Largest

- - -- - - -

gradua1e w1th 12 years ex
penence Rev Elmer Gerser ~
388-8666.

-

mdlvtdually owned (not a public camp} The 1970 census

showed that TWENTY MllltON people hve W1th1n a 200
m1le rad1us of Gall1po1ts We offer good s11es for campers
mobtle homes and permanent homes all ~•te•s tre 180"

••6

ITS terrlfrc the way were
sellt ng Blue Lustre for
cleanrng ru~s and upholstery
Rent electnc shampooer $1 at
Central Supply Co
83 6

Piana Tuning and
Repair

And tho we mocked her ten
dedy
Who had such fooltsh care
The long way home would seem
more safe
Because she wa ted there

Card of

AGENCY

for Rent
LOoking for a mobrte

Real Estate for Sale

Tel 4461998

Phone 446-4672•
281 State Street
Ohio 45631

ANTIQUE Shop tn Rutland wtll
now be open Saturday and
Sunday ~ 1 to 6 p m Parftal
lrst ng of ttems on hand now Cherry walnut oak fur
n ture
rockers ox yokes
ptcture frames kettles tron
brass batHes trunks ro.und
1ars wash
and flat top
stands m lk cans 5 &amp; 10 ce
boxes d nner bells clocks
p e safes beds drshes otl
lamps secttonal book case
recor d players ( 1 cylmder J
more terns com ng n t
83 1

marred to Milo Fellure To

St. John 9:4

'

SGT STIUPES. .FOREVER

Real Estate for Sale

Realty, 32 State St

WISEMAN

A

----~--------~813

Real Estate For Sale

TilE

Professional Real Estate Appraiser

storm w mdows and doors
awn•ngs and mtrr or s 704
Pme St R o Grand e 245 5048
295 tf
---------2 12 tf
WE HAVE a com ple te line of ---'----- - - wa tches
and
d am en d s I WILL NOT be responst ble for
Cornpa r e
our
pr tces
any debts other than my own
anywhere Tawney s Jewe lry
as of today Aprr l 5 1973
51If S gned F r ank Hammond

s•s ters and brother Mrs Lola

Real Estate For Sale

state rd

112 A - Close to Vmton fronts
on 2 rds $100 per acre
18 A - Ltttle Bulisk n Part al
ftnanctng ava1lable
43 A - KC School Otst Th s
farm rs fenced and ready to
pasture A good barn pon~
and state rd frontage are also
tncluded
2 A - THIS lol has 210 tt
frontage on 325 between
V nton and Rto Grande Ideal
to butld on or park a mobtle
horne

Happtness Is
A place to l1ve where the children have room
to play ms1de and out where dad can have a
work shop and garden where Mother can
en1oy the k•tchen and lovely surroundmgs
Th1s 10 year old 4 bedroom Colon1al mcludes
all th•s plus 2 fireplaces, 2112 baths 2 car
garage and about an acre of land The heat b11i
1s only $14 00 permo and the basement has
both family und rec room You cant build 1t
for the ask1ng pnce Located on Rt 141 2'12
miles out

60 A - Addison Twp
and woods

PUBLIC
NOTICE

2 HOUSES tn Centervtlle with 6
rooms and baths aboUt
acre to e11ch place Sell
reasonable 245 93S3

v..

We sell anything for
anybody Bnng your
1fems to Knotts Com
muntty Auchon Barn
Corner Th1rd &amp; Ohve
For appomtment call
446 2917
Sale every
evening ttf 7

New Brick Home
3 Bedrooms, carpetmg throughout,
built m kitchen, dishwasher, d1sp.,
range, oven All electr1c w1th central
a1r cond 2 car garage With electnc
door opener. large lot 100x235 1 m1le
past new hospital. Over all, th1s 1s a
real mce home pnced r1ght Call 4461079 or 446 1854.
6A.fi1Ch0 REAl'TOit'S

RUSSEU

"
HEADQUARTERS for Gallla
County Real Estate Listings
needed

WOOD
REALTOR

14 CHILLICOTHE Road 2 or 3
bedroom
home
bath
basement and garage Good
cond tt lon

446-1066
PATIENCE and delay ach1eve
more than force and rage
IT I S better to begtn dorng our
duty late than never

MODERN 6 room house on
Chestnut St Electric butl1 In
stove modern cab inets 3
bedroom s storm doors and
w ndows Prtce $13 650
4 ROOM house on 1 acre lot
House about 3 weeks old Two
nice oulbutld ng s
Pr ce
$6 000

106 SECOND Av e Brtck home
wrth nrce lot 1 h baths steam
heat ful I basement fireplace
Very ntce ktfchen wtth all
appl ances butlt n
24 ACRES Yi th a large 7 room
house bath new furna ce On
Sf Rt 233 Has Ira ler spot
Price reduced to Sll 000
23 ACRES al Eureka
reduced lo $3 500

Pri ce

RENTALS
TWO
bed room
furnrshed
aparTment All utrl ties pard
$125 per month No pels or
childre n
DOUBLE w de moblle home
Furn shed Close to town Ha s
central a r condtfton ng
.fohn I Richards 446 0280
Offrce 446 1066
Eventngs
Ron Caoaday 446 3636
Russell Wood 446 4618

Neal Realty

ONE AN
DONE
THIRD
ACRE
LOT
Located 9 mrles from fawn on
Poss um Tr ot Road Septtc
tank rnstalied water tap pa1d
for graded for tra ler and has
concrete spots for trailer
TWO MILE S OUT - Lovely
blocks Priced at $4 500
ranch home wtfh three
3BEDROOM
bedroom s ceramrc bath
garage in basement extra LOCATED at 1809 Chestnut
Street Fully carpeted m
large
lot
tm med ate
ltvtng room and all bedrooms
possess bn pnced tor qu ck
Take a look and make us an
sale
offer
Offrce Phone 44f&lt;.1'9./
NEAR MEIGS MINE - F ve
Eve"'ngs
mrnutes out of Vmton 13 5
Charles M Neal 446 1546
acres wrth ntce frve room
J Michael Neal 446 1503
house wrth full bath tobacco
base barn low fa x dtsfnct
RETIRE WITH INCOME
Two apartments m large old
home rn heart of town Pnced
for qurck sale

"SELL THE AUCTIUI'4
WAY"

JIMME SAYRE
AUCTIONEER

PH. 446-3444

Serv1ces Offered

DEAD STOCK
SS 00 Service Ch111rge
Will removeJour dead
horse an cows
Call Jacks0!1 266 4531
BACKHOE and Trencher Call
Jackson 2664524 All types ol
backhoelng septic tanks
tooters etc Also all types of
trecnlng water 1 nes gas
ltnes etc
83 3
INSTALLING
aluminum
stdmg gutters and down
- spoUts For free esftmate call
collect 367 0128
83 26
KIESLING S carpet cleantng
serv tce n your home or
bus1ness Free estimate~
Phone 446 4408 anyt rme
83 H

Ql.l6·0001

- - -- - -

t.:entrat Air Condlt1onmg
ll KE new 3 BR home 1 h bath
&amp; Heatmg
nice built ln kitchen range
Free Esftmates
r efrigerator washer and
~tewart s Hardware
dryer ca rpet In Irving room
Vtnton Ohto
and bedroom s has natural
144 I
gas heat large lot located 4
mtles up Route 7 In Country
HAFFELT S CARPETING
Are estates can help finance
IF
YOU are bulldtng a new
Inquire at Corbin and Snyder
home
or need new carpet
Furniture Co .:146 1171 aff'er 5
phone
Jerry Haffelt 4461158
p m 446 2573
for
free
estimates
74 tr
275 tl

Oel tvery
Servt ce
Your
patronage will
be
ap
precrated Ph 446 0463
2 If

- ----

THOMAS FAIN
EXTERMINATING CO
Term rte &amp; Pest Control
Wheelersburg Oh o
S:tEWAaRT Electrrcal Serv tce &amp;
Repair house wiring electric
heating Phone 446 4561

271tr

Plumbmg &amp; Heattng
GENE1&gt;lAPf1T&amp;&gt;ONS
PLUMB lNG - Heahng &amp; Atr
Condit on ng 300 Fourth Ave
Ph 446 1637
48 tr
CARTERS PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth &amp; Pine
Phone 446 3888 or 446 4417
'
165

tr

STANDARD
Plumbtng &amp; He4t1ng
~ 14 Thtrd Ave 446 3782
187

tr

RUSSELLS
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING
Ga lttpohs 446 4782
29711
DEWITT S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route l60al Evergreen
Phone 446 2735
187 t f

lost
WALKER COON HOUND
bla ck and wh1fe In v c ntfy of
Gag e and R o Grande Nam e
on coll ar Ray Huff Ph 867
8377 or 379 2621
81 3

MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE
RECONDITIONED
MOBILE HOMES
1973 12x60 Holly Park
1970 12x60 Ameri can
1964 10x50 Elcona
1971 12x65 Concord
1972 12x60 Wln ston
l~M 12)(60 Champ1on
B&amp;S MOBilE HOMES
Second &amp; Vtand Sf
Pt Pleasant
(nextto Heck sl
64

DEVELOPMENT
OORP.

NEW
HOMES
FOR SALE

------

- - -- - -

----------PHONE

367-7250

o

.1

-"-==========----==========~

BY
OWNER
bedroom home
carpe
t new 3carpetrng
Phone r
446 0955
________________6
, 1 tf

For Sale
SINGER Sewong Machine Sales
&amp; Servtce All models In
stock Free delivery Se~vrce
guat.,nteed Models pr:lce
fr6rn $69 95 French Ctt
Fabric Shoppe Smger ap
proved dealer 58 COurt St.
Ph 416 9255

- - --

308

--.,.

Do to 111 health must sell 585,000 tn mer
chand1se, S20 000 rn f1xtures, large store
butldmg, 8 room house, 4 room house, 4 room
Apt All on same p1ece of ground

ALL FOR '57,500
PHONJ 428-3306

940 Murdock Ave.
'

ParkerWurg, W. Va.

AUCTIONf
TRACTOR.fAR/1\ EQUIPMENT
"
MISCELLANEOUS
LOCATED 2 m1les northwest of Hamden,
Oh10 on Townshtp Road 194, 8 mrles northwest
of Wellston, Oh1o, 3 mtles north of State Route
327 Watch for auct•on arrows off Route 327

SATURDAY, APRIL 14, 1973 AT 12:00 NOON
W D All s Chalmers 45 dtesel 1957 mOdel Allis Chalmers
rear mounted 2 14 plow {2 way on hills de) Coop a ft
dtsk AC cultivators Coop 13 7 grain drill almost new
Ford ~ cylinder manure loader wtth bucket &amp; fork
Freman loader for W 0 or IHC tractors New Idea PTO
flail manure spreader lt:iC7 ft cult packer AC7 ff twrn
drive mower AC roll type balet AC PTO side delivery
rake rear mount IHC 2A hay condtt1oner AC forage
harvester wtth corn head Gatl forage bed on New Idea
heavy duty wagon John Deere No 216 forage bed on a
heavy duty John Deere 8 ton wagon 2 wagons wtth 7 x14
flat beds wtth gram stdes all the above wagons on rubber
lnternahonal2 row mounted planter ftts HC or B 2 row
Btack Hawk planter 1 000 gallon water tank PTO por
table Papec hammer m II many other mtscellaneoUs
items
TERMS Cash day ofsale
Lunch served

J E IJIMI BROWN&amp; FAMILY
Sale conducted by
STANLEY &amp; SON
Aucfloneers &amp; Realtors
116 East 4th St Chllltcothe OhiO
Phone 775 3330
Eve 114
\

•

tr

TARA

NEW Brick with extra lot DRY WALL service by con
dou ble garage total electric
tract Wtllard Bosley 446
3 bedroom large living room
4954
and dining area 2 bi!lths wail
to wall carpet Thermo Pane
windows Marble srlls close
Rolo Rooter
to town Call 4.46 3563 after 7 SEWER and Drain Cleaning
pm
National
Service
now
83 1 available
locally For any
kond ot stopped up drain call
4 ROOM house 2 bedroom
675 5195 24 hour Serv
utlltfy and bath just newly
307 tr
remodeled Ins de W to W
------------~
carpettng in all rooms
TERMITE PEST CON 1 t&lt;UL
Gallipolis School District FREE ln spectoon Coli 446 3245
rural water $12 000 Ph 446
Merr ill 0 Dell Operator by
2!147 or 446 1023
Extermlnal Termite Service
83 3
Bulid•ng
S1tes
10 Belmont Or
-----267
tr
Available Kmgsberry
35 ACRES more or less approx
Homes built to f1t any
1 200 ft
frontage
some
and
::.pouting
tlmber rural water 446 49.48 ROOFING
All
ngles
and
Buildup speclf•catlons
83 3 Sh
Hotroofs Free Estimate Underground Ut111tles
26 yr experience
James
NEARLY new Brick hom e
Provided
Marcum Vinton Ohio 388
Lower Route 7 256 1198
8114
~--------~56 tf
62 tf
For lnformafton
-::
------"------~
1LOTS on Lower Rtver Route 7 SEPT IC tanks Installed back
Or Appotnlment
Call Charles Bodimer 256
hoe work of ai I kmds C U
1198
M rller Box 114 Rto Grande
56 tf
245 Sl3S
~::-:-~:-:-:-:--::-:,_--..,....c-:_
78 26
HOUSE 910 Fourth Ave Call
446 945'i
rnorntngs
and
weekends
GALLIA Electncran Servtce
Add1son.
Phone 446 9391
79 5
------~----~
7326 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALEI-

H. Kuhn

.0 P MARTIN &amp; Son Waler

Mobile Homes for Sale

Jay Sheppard 446 0001
Denver K HIQiey 446 OC!.D.!

2 STDR Y 3 bedroom all elect
br.lck car pet throughout
'Hot Shot Spray Wash'
disposal
new cabinets In
MOD&amp;RN 3 bedroom brick
kitchen dining room and CALL us for wash wax and
degrea5lng of your trucks
home close to hosp1fal Very
ftreplace llh baths deep lot
mobile homes aluminum
n ce kitchen and dlnrng area
1052 Second Ave Call 446 1997
siding or anything washable
A r cond I onlng Two car
after 5 p m dally on Sundays
446 4441
garage
I m medIate
anyftme
W&gt;j f9:tf
possess on Pr ce S26 500
59 tr

OHIO RIVER
Realty

AUCTION
SERVICE

FISHING Paradtse overlook ng
Ohio River One acre on
Campaign
Creek
two
bedrooms big llv1ng room
wtlh fireplace modern ktt
chen wt th gas stove and
Fr gJda re Covered porch
Elec heat

ServiCes Offered

NEW LISTINGS
ALBERT EHMAN
7 ROOM bnck home on Lower
Water
Delivery Servtce
Rtver Road overlookmg the ONE LOT on Rt 141 Good
Patriot Star Rt t.ltiltpolts
fr on tage Water a val Iable
Oh o River !V.odern krtchen
Ph 379 2133
Also lots at Tycoon Lake
carpeted a r cond rf 1onrng
243 II
full basement
two ca~
GOl
NG
bustness
tor
sale
In
garage Has recent! y been
LANE S
complete
Jackson Co Includes Bus BOB
redecorated
Bookkecptng
and
Tax Ser
Bldgs very ni ce 3 BR home
vrce 424'h Fourth Ave
and lots of frontage on State
MODERN 1 floor plan on Ad
Kanauga Business by ap
Road
dtson Bulavllle Rd 6 rooms
po10tment
Ph
446 1049
hardwood floors modern
Please call after 6 p m
k•tchen rural wafer
This LISTINGS needed All pnce
278 tit
ranges All areas Phone and
property srtuated on two lots
we will come out Call Today
Price $21 000 Presently rents
BANKS TREE SERVICE
We buY sell and trade
for $200 per month
FREE estimates llabtltty In
surance Pruning trtmmrng.
LARGE older home has been
and cav rty work tree and
remodeled modern krtchen
stump removal Ph d46 4953
new carpetlng two patr6s
73 II
extra Ira ler pad on lot Price
$23 500

NEW LISTING
BEFORE
you buy any house
CORA - 143 A 80 A l lat and
see lh s beaut ful 2 year old
Raccoon bottom modern
three bedroom home located
home and good barn
on a large tot m Sprtng Valley
Sub D•vrs1on Th1s home has
WARD Rd 163 A vacant land
F nanctng ava lable
all the modern features you
want Has a full basement
Any Hr - 446 1998
w th TV room that Is paneled
and ca q:e ted
Home ts
completely carpeted even
k I chen and baths Other
f e a t u res
ar e
gar bag e
d sposa l dts hwasher but It Jn
s tove
central
atr
4S2 Second Ave
cond ttonrng and two baths
Galhpolts Ohi045631
Call today for appointment
614 446 3434
Prced rn the ~s

65 A - ADDISON Twp - BT
rd good barn 20 A It liable
balance tn pasture and woods EDGE 0 TOWN - Cule cottage
on nrce lot Two blocks from
38 A - OVERLOOKS lhe Ohoo
markets three bedrooms full
R ver s m t from town rn
bath garage furnace heat
Galltpoi s School 0 st
Evenings Call446 4244
Steven Befl446 9583
RANNY BLA~KBURN
John Fuller 245 9311

Gallla Co's Largest
Real Estate Sales Agency
Offtce 446 3643
Evenmgs Call
E M "Ike" W1seman 446 3796
E N Wiseman 446 4500

NEW 3 BR house garage
ceram c t le bath
w to w
carpet large lot near Clay
school Lower River Road,
Otho Burdette 256 6884
63 If

pa sture

BIDWELL - 30 A Good house

frontage Close tfiough to the new hospital and the ftew
Power Plant Priced at SSOO and up Terms If des1red
offered by owners DILLON &amp; BAILEY P 0 BOX ll6
Galhpohs.. OhiO 4$631 Pllone 1614) 4462730

1961

�•

•

'

•

·--

'?!I= TheSUJldayT•mes-Sentinel Sunu" ~ril8 197J

The Sunday Tunes ·Sentmei_Sunday April! 1913

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Nollce

In Memory

In Memory

IN MEMOHY Of Lula Elhel
F e llureWhat •s home- with out a
mother?

Notice

CARPORT Sale Monda v 9 s
Mam Street rn V1nton
Ctothing &amp; Baby 1tern s

What are all the joys we meet, -::::-- - -- - -- - 82 2
When her lovmg smile no longer .
LET US restOfe your old 1amrly
Greets the commg of our feet
photo s Prr ces r ea sonable
Lula Ethel Fellure
a

of

daughter of the late Taylor

Tawney s St ud o

51 ff

and Luella Beaver Sheets was

Rev. Jennings

born

and _.INCOME Tax Servt ce Wil son
departed th1s l1fe March 28
Rusk 280 State Street Phone
1973 be1ng 66 years of age
446 2476 any trme
She leaves the follow ing
19 II

Cremeans

Feb

24

1907

NotiCe

RU SS S Glass Serv ce Glass for
all needs We sell wt nd sh telds

Nottee

Rad ios Sal es &amp;
Servrce New and used CB s
polrce mon tor s antennas
etc Bob s C•t rzen Ban.;t Radto
Equ rp Geor9es Creek Rd
Gathpol•s Oht o 446 4517

T W O WA Y

ARTHUR A.
~
NIBERT,
A SA
A.S.A.
•

Gothard of Mercerville Mrs
lrv1n (Cass ie) Fellure of
Gallipolis and one brother
LeWI S Sheets of Mercennl/e
She was preceded m death by

Followmg IS a copy of the RadiO
Cremeans Sermon Oct 25 1942

•

two sisters Velv1e and Zen•a
one brother Trella Sheets
On Dec 19 1925 she was

Broadcast of Rev

fh1s unton 3 daughters and 5
sons were born They are

Mrs

I must work the works of him that sent me wh•le tf s
day the mght cometh when no man can work These are the
words that fell from the itps of our dear Savror when h s
drsctples asked h m tn regard to a certarn man that had been
bltnd and hiS eyes opened and he was made to see Hts
d sctples hts followers ask him a question Jesus tn return
spoke these words rn the 4th verse of the 9th diviston-of John
I must work the works of htm that sent me while It Is day
Jesus Chrrst the savtor of the world was sent by God
the Father rnto the world not to do hts wtll but to do the wtll
of h m that sent hrm And from fhe very begrnnmg of ttme
from eternrty Jesus Chrtst Gods Son had hts mtnd ftxed
upon a lost race and that he would work their redemptron
Then Jesus come rnto the world Jesus Chnst the Son of
God was the Great Monarch of Heaven and he set forth a
law of labor Jesus come tnto the world and sa1d
1 must
work the works of htm that sent me
Now thrs afternoon I would lrke that you would thrnk wrth
me as we look mto th s story and into the life s work of our
Lord and Ovr Sav or Jesus (hnst How he become so rn
terested in lost human tty in a lost world that was steeped
and doomed 1n stn yet he was w II ng to leave hts Fathers
home above and come down to earth lay as1de the robe of
nghteousness and fake upon him pur s1ns and bear them to
dark Calvary
Now Jesus rs on a mrsston for hts Father He come to seek
and to save that whrch was lost He come not to be mrnrstered
unto but he come mtn stering He gave hrs ltfe a ransom for
many He come work tng the works of hls Father that had sent
h m God the Father sent Jesus Chrtsf mto thrs world to be
the Savior of the world Jesus Chrrst the Son of God ts God s
appatnted Savror God from ete rnity appo nted a day when
he would save the world through Jesus Chrrst hts only
begotten son
Jesus Chrtst come to be our Savtor and he MUST BE our
Sav or as we accept h m by simple farfh Jesus was busy as
he went about tn the world dojng good mtn ster ng unto th e
needy mtnrsterrng unto the poor the poorest the halt the
lame the bltnd and all those that were affltcted Jesus Chr st
come to be a Savtor to manktnd and keep n m nd he was
Gods appointed Savtor God sent htm rnto the world for the
very purpose of savmg the world and not only sav rng the
world from Its perishable condtt on but he come rnto the
world to destroy the works of the devtl to establ sh
tn
the world
The
law
demanded
r ghteousness
r ghteousness but the people could not keep the law Yet 1t
dld nothrng to make them righteous THANKS BE TO GOO
under tht~ d spensat on of grace th s blessed age whrch we
now life n the law of grace does not only demand
r ghteousness but THANK GOD t giveth nghteousness to
those who wlll belteve rn the Lord Jesus Chnst The
nghteousness that rs taught tn thts New Testament s the
r ghteousness that comes by farth In Jesus Chrtst
AH 1 trust and bel eve upon h m walk w th h m n
fellowsh p He come rnto the world to be a frtend to man
Though he was mrstreated persecuted r:rdrcul~d and at last
was cruc fed but yet he said Father I m w II ng to suffer
tf there s no other way whereby the world can be saved 1 11
dnnk the very drops of the cup death OH t 1 m so glad he
was wlllrng t-te said I must work the works of h m that sent
me while rt rs day He come to do the will of hts Father not
hrs own wtll NO• NOt but he come to do the will of the
Father He dtdn t ltve a lrfe that would please htmself but
THANKS BE TO GOD he lived a lfe that would please h s
Heavenly Father that had sent hrm rnto the world
Come on Brother Come on Srstert leave the lrfe of s n
beh nd come and enlist as a worker tn the great vtneyard of
our Lord and Savtor Jesus Chnst Then let us ftght the battle
and may we ftghter to the end By fatth ttl I death
Hesard lmustworktheworksofhmthat~entme He
sad
My Father work s and I also work
1 work as my
Father works
Listent my brother and srster today the
Lord Jesus Chrrst wants your fellowship he wants your co
operatron Jesus Chr st sable to bless th s world today the
only had the fellowshtp and co operaf on of h s people Those
of you that are not Chnstrans OH' prepare to meet h m
Jesus Chrrst sought you and he sought me as a srnner con
demnee-t&amp;die lost undone and hopeless But THANKS BE
TO-GOO today I m saved by the blood A men THANK GOD
Now I mona mt ss on I'm on a mtsston for my ktng 1 m
on busi:1ess for my Ktng THANK GOD I m tn the battle and
I m battltng on I don t know how long the ftght may last 1
don t know how long the battle rl"',Pybe but lrsten - 1 m rn tf to
the end I m gDI'ng to f ghftt through regardless of the f.nce
But GOD BLESS YOU I m gotng to hold onto the staf The
Word of God The devil may bombard men may oppose but 1
am de term ned by the grace of God to f ghter to the end You
ask me why' Be thou fa thful unto the end and thou shall
rece ve a crown of life THANK GOD 1 m batt I mg for a
crown Now salvation rs a grft by grace wholly apart from
works I m not preachtng to you today that you got to work to
be saved NOt NOt but God bless you by grace you can be
saved and that not of works It s arart from works But listen
we belteve and preach that If you re saved and you have the
grft of salvafton salvatron by grace We belteve works g ves
the frurts of the labors of a child of God If you want to work
- - 1 could qutt preachtng If I wanted to but I don t want to
Those who stt about me today They could qurt praytng they
could qu1t testrfyrng they could qurt worktng for God but
they don t want to
AH you say you got the cause at heart You re walk1ng
m the lrght You want to do someth ng to help the Krngdom
work You want to do somethmg to help God save thrs world
through Jesus Chnst All rtght f ght on my brother ftght ant
Now I sad salvat on was a gift of God wholly apar1 from
works That we are saved by grace through fatth a gift of
God Then we are ready to work for God Now 1 m work ng
that I mtght have a crown I m worktng that 1 mrght be
rewarded I m worktng that I m ght be richly rewarded
The c;.postie Paul tn the 2nd letter to Ttmothy sard
Timothy the lime of my departure sat hand 1have fought
a good ftght I have fmtshed my course I have kept the farth
Henceforth there ts lard up for me a crown of righteousness
not only for me but for all those that love hts appeartng
THANKS BE TO GOD thos afternoon
For our ciosrng thought turn wrth me to the 17th chapter
of St Johns Gospel that prayer of rntercesston and hear
the words of my dear Savror I have gfortfted thee on earth
I have ftntshed the work whtch thou gavest me to do

Sadly Missed by

Denver

(.Mary)

Cox

Scottown

and

Cr ~wn Coty Mrs Ray (Dons)

Saunders

Drane at home sons Ber
nard and Paul of Mercervtlle
Frednck and RJchard at
home
One son
Trella
preceded her In death She ts
also survrved by 5 grand
children
and
2 great
grandchtldren
When a young grrl Ethel
accepted Chnst as her per
sonal Savrour and unrted wrth
the Stloam Bapttsf Church
where her I tfe was a 1 vrng
testrmony of her fa th rn
Chnst and of His savrng and
keeprng power Smce mov ng
to Mercervr lie she attended
Mercervrlle Bapt st Church
and as long as health per
mrtted she was a fa thtul
attender of all the fund ons of
the
Gallta
Baptrst
Assocrahon She was always
wrlllng to help rn any way to
further the cause of Chnst
She got much enjoyment
$tngrng the songs of Zron and
helptng rn whatever the need
might be
Her greatest rnterest was
for her family dorng all she
could to make ltfeTrfjoyable
for her loved ones bu at the
same hme teach ng them the
way of salvatron We cannot
say Ethel s nfluence for good
has ceased for we are con
ftdent that ~er teachmgs and
her example of a I fe lived for
God wtll lrve on in the hearts
of her loved ones and fnends
We feel the foHowtng poem
is very appropnate for this
occaston
THE WATCHER
She always leaned to watch for
us
Anxrous 1f we were late
In wtnfer by f.he wtndow
In summer by the gate

-::-::-:-:-:-----

BORROW by Mall to SSOO'
Money for any purpose
Conf denftal
Conventent
terms - Roberts Loan Box
6071P Wheeltng W Va
83 tr

-

-;-;~;:--;-:-:;;-;:o-c,--c-,---~-77

ATTENTION Housew 1ves and
mothers turn your spare t 1me
tnto extra rncome show ng
beautrful new I ne of famtly
clothrng by Fashron Wagon
Mtnnesota Woolen Co h1gh
comm ss on monthly cash
bonus plus $400 free war
drobe Call 446 3613

T~anks

WE WISH to express our si n
cere thanks to the many
fnends and relattves who
were so k nd dunng the recent
death of our loved one and
mother Frances Paulene
Payne to those who sent
flowers food and cards
Specral thanks to the M cCoy
Funeral Home Rev Vance
Watson
Mrs
Dorothy
Thomas for the beautl1ul
ob fuary Also the organist
Mrs Joarr-Bass and Mrs
Mary Howell Your ktndness
wrll always be remembered
Daughter
Mrs
L1nda
Ragland and fam1ly Stanley
Payne and sons and mother
Roxre Evans
83 I

UL ABNER

For Rent

)LEEP/NG rooms
wee I&lt; I~
rates free garage parkrng
L bby Hotel
241tl

- - - - - -- No!tee

PEOP E WHO

-:----c::-c----- - -- _..:;
81 3
60x12 TRAILER men on ly atr
cond t oned phone after 4 30
367 7272
81 tf

HAVE B0 MIJCH
'10 OFFER. AAE

BE NG WASIEDl

TOBACCO Base I 470 lbs Call
388 9932

VACUUM
CLEANER
SERVICE

-

Wol -

A

NEEDED

[]

~GAIMBY

XJ

I

FULL OR
PART TIME

I

I-lOW S"i!;, &amp;OT
IT F~OM THE
HORSE: S MOUl'H

.(Au-ra

J_,l,.. NUDGE
YH1erd•7'•

'

UNifY

DISOWN

FINALE

A.al•en /Jurde 'M'tN"lc for ~~~- tailor-liNING

•

NEST IS USUALLY FOUND
IN TALL GRASS ON THE GROUND.

~~~-----------806

s3.51 HOUR

ID
MooDy)

Expandmg company
needs twelve men to
work 1n Galhpolls and
Pomt Pleasant areas
No
experience
necessary, must have
car Call Monday br
Tuesday 9 It 1 5

MR. VANCE446-0677

WANTED to buy sell or traae
toy electrtc tram 446 4843
240 tf

~---------­

Wanted To Do

•

Th1s IS a great opportun1ty for some lucky
fam1ly large or small 5 bedrooms completely
carpeted I1V1ng fam•ly and dmmg rooms 2
large bathrooms new k1tchen w1th bulltm cab
K1ds can walk to grade school It s an older
house m an excellent locat1on m Middleport
Was $24 000, but don t let that stop you The
owner must sell (make an offer)

THREE bedroom double wrde
mobtle trarler
Completely
furn1shed and all utllrt es
pald Rent $250 per month
Russe ll Wood d46 1066
61 -tf

'

'

Help Wanted
NEED; LPN or retored RN to'
work tn nursing hom~ can
lrve n Wr te Box 313 Ironton
Ohro Route 1

KITCHEN HELP wanted at
Preston Restaurant Apply rn
.person 463 Second Ave
81 6
PART TIME babysotter wanted
tn my home to sit 2 days a
week Call 446 3939

Down By The Old Mtll Stream
Th1s rusflc beauty does overlook and mclude
the old mill stream along w1th the water falls
and 7 A of land You'll f.nd a large living room
w1th huge rust1c fireplace modern built m
k•tchen (range, dishwasher etc ) Could be 4
or five bedrooms central a1r, full basement
w1th family room and f1replace 1'12 baths and
a front porch overlookmg the falls m the
creek OUJet surroundmg clean fresh country
a1r 1ust 4 miles from town
Wh1te House
For Sale
YES ANDATONLY$20500

3 BR CARPETED LIVING

ROOM
VERY PRETTY
KITCHEN NICE BATH 7
YRS
OLD
EDGE OF
TOWN IN' QUIET NEIGH
BORHOOD

Pnced Reduced
II Was Low
To Start Wtlh

2nd Ave
LARGE OLDER BRICK
PRESENTLY BEING USED
AS A DOUBLE 14 ROOMS
AND ALL BUT ONE HAVE
BEEN MODERNIZED AND
REDECORATED
APARTMENT RENTS FOR
Sl75 00 MO
OWNERS
SIDE INCLUDE S 2 BATHS
4 BEDROOMS DANDY BIG
LOT
IN
EXCELLENT
LOCATION PRICE HAS
BEEN REDUCED

Beaut1ful New
Spht Level
WITH GREAT EYE AP
PEAL YOU LL JU ST LOVE
THE ENTIRE HOME - J
OR
4
BEDROOMS
ijEAUTIFUL
KITCHEN
WITH
RANGE
DISH
WASHER ETC
FORMAL
DINING FAMILY ROOM
AND 2 CAR GARAGE ON
LARGE FLAT LOT BUY
NOW AND PICK OUT ALL
YOUR CARPET WE HAVE
3 LIKE TH IS

Owner Wants Home
SOLD
EXCELLENT CONDITION
4 BEDROOMS
CEN
TRAL
AIR
FU L L
BASEMENT IN TOWN ON
EVANS HGTS
PRICED
S19 900 MAKE ME AN
OFFE~

VERY
VERY NICE 3
BEDROOM
HOME
TERRIFIC
KIT C HEN
CARPET THROUGHOUT 2
CAR GARAGE OWNER
MUST
SELL
IM
MEDIATELY $17 500 BUYS
THI S REAL HONEST TO
GOODNESS BARGAIN

Older Home In
Kyger Creek
School D1stnct

S.n

8. BATH NEW
FURNACE
2 ACRES
S10900 AT THIS PR ICE
YOU CAN MAKE SOME
MONEY
6 ROOMS

Small2 Bedrooms
In Town
O N HENKLE Sl2 900 NI CE
KITCHEN BATH FORCED

AIR FURN ACE

CLOSE TO MINE .- 30 A on
state rd w ttl an almost new
12 x 64 mob le home Spectal
features are cent arr fur
nrshed pafto cellar good
barn and uttltty butld ng Due
to poor health owners have
reduted the pri ce for a qutck
sa le
VACANT LAND
16 A - Harrtson Twp Woods
$3 500

Just A Little
Ntcer For The
Money
0 NLY8MO OLD FULLY
CARPETED BEAUTIFUL
KITCH EN EXTRA LARGE
LOT
ON
CONCRET~
STREE T BETWEEN THE
CITY
AND
NEW
HOSPITAL

18 A - Morgan Twp
frontage

_______________ 82 4

Now takmg applications for
full or part time em
ployment mate or female,
should be 18 or over Apply m
person at Bob Evans Dnve
Inn

FOOD SERVICE MANAGER

GASOUNE AU..EY

I
'

'

We are lookmg for energetic young
men who want to make a career in the
restaurant busmess. Pleasant worktng
conditions, paid vacahons, start as a .
tramee and advance to manager '"
Bob Evans Farm Foods fast
growmg organ1zat1on. Expenence
helpful but not requared. Contact Herb
Bush, 446-1482 at Bob Evans Steak
House.
'

Really 32 State 51
Tel 446 1998
THE LEADER SINCE 1900 IN
SERVING THE NATJON S CROWN CITY - 6 rms with
full and dry base Liv rm 16
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS
x 25 large Rec Rm wtth
Ph
0008
F P kttchen 12 x 16 wtth
NEW
LISTING
JUST
but II rn cabinets H W floors
COMPLETED - New 3 BR
aliJ'aneled carpet on ltv rm
all electrrc home wtth WW
an bdrms It has a metal
carpet Thermopane w tn
garage and located on 2 level
dows n tce modern ktfchen
shaded lots Pri ced for a
large ltvtng room &amp; carport
qut ck sal e
located in a new subdtvtsron
on a 90x200 tot Easy terms on RT 35 - NEW all br ck 3
$19 500
bdrm
Ran c h
ltv
rm
12 x22 factory k ttchen H W
NEW LISTING - Slate Route
floors Nat gas turn heat full
141 two mt from town 3 BR
and dry base Large attached
all electric home wrth
gar
Thermo pane wtndows
basement and 2 baths A
wtth marble s lis
Prrce
bargatn at $19 000
$24 000
NEW LISTING - State Route RODNEY 1972 Schullz
160 nrcely remodeled 2 story
Mobile home 14 x68
all
home with 4 BR and part
Elec
Cen A r exira n ce
basement on a large lot
furnrture and located on 89 A
Askmg $14 900
lot All lor 114 900
NEAR KC H SC - 4 Bdrms
VINTON - Investment large
2 ~tory Colonral all carpet
vacant ~ore building With 2
full f n shed base heat bill
apartment upstairs $15 000
$15 per mo
(Nat Gas)
Located on a 3 A lot Metal
TRAILER PARK - 19 spots
barn 30 x 60 and storage
close to Gavrn plant 7 mobtle
bldg Ask ng $dO 000
homes rncluded m sale
Potenttal rncome of $17 000 NEAR N G H S - Loke new
per yr
Vrndate Mobtle horne Ex
pando liv rm Bay windows
VINTON - Large 2 story home
cen a1r all carpet all elec
w th full basement Attracltve
and beaut fully furntshed It
nce tncludes a new butl1 n
has a porch and carport
ttchen large formal d nlng
Located on 12 A tract of land
rm fireplace n I vmg rm
wrth 700 frontage on St Rt
uttltfy rm and 2 large por
160 All for $19 000
ches Would cons.rder a trade
CLOSE ADDAVILLE SCHOOL
NEW LI STING APART
- J bdrm frame and brack 2
MENT HOUSE 3 apartments
yr old carpet over H W ltv
on upper Route 7 completely
rm paneled Has uftltfy rm
furnrshed If you re Jookrng
and cotper plumbtng Large
for a good tnvestment don t
carpor and 11 A lol Prtce of
wart
S24 000 tncludes stove refr g
and drapes
LIKE TO COLLECT RENT?
We have 2 1972 mobtle homes GEORGES CREEK - I yr old
all elec 5 rms
balh and
on a 1!2 acre lot tn Addtson
ut ltty rural water all carpet
Twp renttng for over S4 000
and all paneled Has metal
per yr
Sellrng prtc~ storag e bldg Pr ce of S19 500
$15000
Includes stove refngerator
APPROVED SUBDIVISION and all drapes Located on h
16 lots rn Addison Twp w th
A lol
ali util tres available
GARF IELD AVE Exira
n
ce
5
rms
and
bath
on
ftr st
NEW LISTING SECOND
floor
wdh
rec
rm
and
AVE - Soltd 2 sto r y home
cooktng fa c lthes tn base Th s
w th 3 BR 1 / 2 baths ltvtng
house has car pet ftl e cell ngs
rm dtn ng rm k tt chen and
panelmg and awnrngs on
garage $14 900
w ndows Located on 4 A lot
wtth plenty nrce shrubbery
PRICE REDUCED - CITY lot has 42 frontage on rtver
Elegant 2 s1ory home featul'es
Gar 20 x 24 plus a new metal
4 5 or 6 BRs Ph baths new
bldg Pnce reduced lo $22 500
kitchen famrly rm and part
basement The LR and dtnrng
rm are carpeted and each BIDWELL - 6bogrms utlfy
and bath 2 story Carpet In
have a fireplace
liv rm
plenty cabinets rn k tchen much paneled and tf
LOTS
FINANCING
has storm drs a.nd w ndows
AVAILABLE
Mobole
Barn 40 x 60 and located on 2
homes welcome 2 mt from
b g lots Pnce $16 000
new hospital
•
EWING
TON
Close
new
m
ne
CHEAP LIVING - Solod 2 story
open rng 8 b g rms bath and
home w th 6 rm and bath on a
plenty
close t space Mo st of
Needs some
2 acre lot
fh
s
house
has
been
repatrs :T"hts home rs about J
remodeled and s located on a
mt from Vrnton and rs pn ced
4 A lot on Raccoon Cr Pr ce
at $5 900
reduced
to S12 500
FARMS
CHESHIRE TWP 43 A
clean mostly grass good 6 CARTER RD - Baby larm 5
A good 2 story 6 rm house
rm and bath home Th is farm
w th bath and laundry
s located on a state rd close
paneltng and ca rpet lt ha s
to 1he new m ne
ce llar poultry house storage
bld9 and garage Plenty good
ADDISON TWP - Thos 64 acre
water Only $14 900
pasture .. ,.m has a large
pond s
• Pr ngs good
CENTENARY - Good 3 or 4
well gooo v-{
and out
bdrm Ranch It has H W
build ngs and
-/) n 2 rd s
floors w th ca rpet tn I v rm
The home ha s ... &lt;!n com
and
hall Some panelrng
pletely remodeled and rs an
large kttchen wtlh. plenty
above average farro horr e
cab n els large bath and
attached gar Ctty wafer and
NEW COLONIAL WITH 167
nat gas A good buy at
ACRES - Th is beauloful 4 BR
$23 500
..
all electric home has a but It m
FARMS
k tchen wtth eat ng area WW
WOODS M II Roaq 26 acres 4
car pet formal din ng rm
rm
house
outbu ldings
largefamrlyrm 2freplaces
$8 200
and 2 baths There 1s about 75
acres t liabl e barn and new NEAR Rto Grande 40 A
pond Th s farm s about 5 m I
from Rio Grande
49 A Kong Rd Sl6 500

e

ROTO TILLE:RS lawn mowers
repatr 562 Fourth Avenue
446 1562
32 tr

APARTMENT for constructron ··-,-- - -- - - -- - 83 5
men Ph 446 0756
·
267 tf MIODLE AGED woman to stay
w th elderly lady In Mergs
County no laundry good
FURNISHED room range
home and wages 446 2410
refr gerator
Pr ivate en
83 3
trance S.ot5 per month ut lrtles
pad men only 446 4416 after
2p m

WANDA. PANDA

YUJIC

I TOHRT

not refuse any

-;::-:== = - - - -- - -82 3
FURNISHED apt adults only CASHIER Recepftontst
Cen tral heat parktng
pleasant personality neat
0338
appearance necessary must
27 tr
be good typ sf good salary
and frtnge benef Is lnqu~re at
ROOMS
for
constructton
Cred1tthrrft Inc JOO Second
worksrs near Gav n Plant
Ave Gallipolis
cook ng room TV room also
92 3
washer and dryer 367 7120 -------~--;c;--;:.==;,=--,--,c::-:- c --79 6 PART TIME National supploer
SLEEPING ROOMS
w II fratn man for local
rates Park Central
weekly
typewrrter repa1rrng Wnte
Hotel
Regronal Manager Box.. 25
308 tf
-:-:::-:-::-=-:-:-:::---:,__ _ :;:
Glenshaw Penna 15116

Repatrs Parts Supplies
New Sweepers $39 95 and up
Carpet
care
products
Shampoo Anti slahc Spot
Removers So1l Retardent
Open 10 a m 5 p m
Phone 367 7736

MEN

- - -- - -

EFFICIENCY
aparlmenl
Redecorated Near bustness ~------~-----2 1f
drstrr ct Pr vate entrance
Women only $85 Uhl ftes BABYSITTER on my nomw
245 9321
pad 446 4416 after 2 p m
81 6
=-:--:-c:-:-__:-~_ _ 78 6
!!MALL furnished apartment SOMEONE to lrve tn wrth
elderly lady call 440 2410
tdea l for older people Call
81 3
446 2235

WHAT A PITY

I Wll:: l:-NOT be responsible for
any debts other than my own
as of thrs date Aprtl 5 197~
Stgned James N Wr ght
81 3

12

Wtll

IF CARPETS look dull and
drear remove spots as they
appear wrth Blue Lustre
Rent electnc shampooer S1 at
G C Murphy Lower Sore
83 6

Bus1ness Opportunities

DAVIS VACUUM
CLEANER STORE

1ve got
mor• d rt

Rodney Cora Rd
Rolln,y Ohoo
Hours9am to9pm
Monday thru Saturday
Ph 245-9374-245-5021_

BACK hoetng and dozmg Phone
ODD JOBS
The men of Alpha Srgma Ph
Harold Mt ller Rf 1 Patrrot
Ohio Collect 643 2451
are w llrng to do odd jobs for
the people n the Gallrpolts
80 6
Jack son area If you have an --- - - - - odd JOb you want done
TOOL
sharpenrng
Saws
wash ng &amp; waxrng tra tors
scissors shears home and
gard~n lools
Sharp Shop
wash ng w ndows or clearmg
rots etc jUSt call245 5353 Ext
Alley rear 147 Second
43 between 8 and 4 30 After s
= =- -'-------__:216 tf
p m call 245 5575
81 3 REMODELING bulldong neW
rooms
cament
roofrng
s dtnQ furnace ms J H
Queen &amp; Snn 446 9271
GRADERS SCRAPERS
~~--~~~~~t
BULLDOZERS BACKHOES
NO exper ence necessary W 11 LAMPS ltght f xtures reparred
tra n Earn $300 to $400 per
Ph 446 4313
week For applrcatron ca ll
83 3
317 635 9283 or wnte to Great
Lakes Development Corp WALLPAPERING and pam
4022 E Wash ngton St
In
tong Phone 440 9665 or 37'1
d anapol s lnd ana 46201
2471
;;---=-------~--=68 26 - - - -- -83 tr

------'-~~

$MONEY$

MOBILE
COMMUNITY
&amp; SALES

Owner Transferred
reasonable offer

----,;;~=~- 80 4 - ---------

Add1son Ohto

UJIICramble theoe foor Jumble1,
Gne letter to each aquare, t.o
"form fo~r ord1nar.r words

QUAIL CREEK

Wanted To Buy

Wa lt ng t I we come home to
her
Anxrous if we are late
Watchrng
from
Heaven s
wmdow
Leanmg from Heavens gate
Sadly mrssed by husband
chtldren and grand children
83 1

JrlYMID~IkJ-u.J..-~,_

We have bo1h a.t

- - - - - - --

Her thoughts were all so full of
us
She never could forget
And so I thtnk that where she rs
She must be watchmg yet

Juanita €remeans Workman

ho~e

1-lot or a quality mob1le home,

DAY CARE
SU N VALLEY Nurs.,y School
licensed by State of Oh o 1112
mtles west of new hospttal TWO bedroom furntshed house
577 Sun Valley Dr Ph 440
n Rro Grande Wtl1 sublet
3657 Day care that says we
May 14 Aug 29 245 5422
care
Madge Hauldren
Owner
Lored th &amp; Johr ----~----------833
Hauldren Operators
HOUSE on Bulavrlle Addtson
114 t
Rd Coli 367 7438 or 446 3879
--::-:--:---~-____:
_ _______________:83 tr
BUr""-'
SE LLING
TRADING S lver dollars
type cor ns stamp collect ons
co rn collectrons also buyrng
s lver corns at top pr ce See GOLD corns and stlver dollars
Gary Wolfe at Corn Show
Tawney Jewelers
Holrday Inn Galllpolrs April
73 tr
8

8

Real Estate for Sale

of the Wayne Nat1ona I Forest Some sties have water

iron1s all have roads electnc1ty ur-derground water
ltnes underground teltphone hnes tn the Galhpoh!!o ex
change Boat Ramp and large parkmg lot All s1tes are.

World's Largest

- - -- - - -

gradua1e w1th 12 years ex
penence Rev Elmer Gerser ~
388-8666.

-

mdlvtdually owned (not a public camp} The 1970 census

showed that TWENTY MllltON people hve W1th1n a 200
m1le rad1us of Gall1po1ts We offer good s11es for campers
mobtle homes and permanent homes all ~•te•s tre 180"

••6

ITS terrlfrc the way were
sellt ng Blue Lustre for
cleanrng ru~s and upholstery
Rent electnc shampooer $1 at
Central Supply Co
83 6

Piana Tuning and
Repair

And tho we mocked her ten
dedy
Who had such fooltsh care
The long way home would seem
more safe
Because she wa ted there

Card of

AGENCY

for Rent
LOoking for a mobrte

Real Estate for Sale

Tel 4461998

Phone 446-4672•
281 State Street
Ohio 45631

ANTIQUE Shop tn Rutland wtll
now be open Saturday and
Sunday ~ 1 to 6 p m Parftal
lrst ng of ttems on hand now Cherry walnut oak fur
n ture
rockers ox yokes
ptcture frames kettles tron
brass batHes trunks ro.und
1ars wash
and flat top
stands m lk cans 5 &amp; 10 ce
boxes d nner bells clocks
p e safes beds drshes otl
lamps secttonal book case
recor d players ( 1 cylmder J
more terns com ng n t
83 1

marred to Milo Fellure To

St. John 9:4

'

SGT STIUPES. .FOREVER

Real Estate for Sale

Realty, 32 State St

WISEMAN

A

----~--------~813

Real Estate For Sale

TilE

Professional Real Estate Appraiser

storm w mdows and doors
awn•ngs and mtrr or s 704
Pme St R o Grand e 245 5048
295 tf
---------2 12 tf
WE HAVE a com ple te line of ---'----- - - wa tches
and
d am en d s I WILL NOT be responst ble for
Cornpa r e
our
pr tces
any debts other than my own
anywhere Tawney s Jewe lry
as of today Aprr l 5 1973
51If S gned F r ank Hammond

s•s ters and brother Mrs Lola

Real Estate For Sale

state rd

112 A - Close to Vmton fronts
on 2 rds $100 per acre
18 A - Ltttle Bulisk n Part al
ftnanctng ava1lable
43 A - KC School Otst Th s
farm rs fenced and ready to
pasture A good barn pon~
and state rd frontage are also
tncluded
2 A - THIS lol has 210 tt
frontage on 325 between
V nton and Rto Grande Ideal
to butld on or park a mobtle
horne

Happtness Is
A place to l1ve where the children have room
to play ms1de and out where dad can have a
work shop and garden where Mother can
en1oy the k•tchen and lovely surroundmgs
Th1s 10 year old 4 bedroom Colon1al mcludes
all th•s plus 2 fireplaces, 2112 baths 2 car
garage and about an acre of land The heat b11i
1s only $14 00 permo and the basement has
both family und rec room You cant build 1t
for the ask1ng pnce Located on Rt 141 2'12
miles out

60 A - Addison Twp
and woods

PUBLIC
NOTICE

2 HOUSES tn Centervtlle with 6
rooms and baths aboUt
acre to e11ch place Sell
reasonable 245 93S3

v..

We sell anything for
anybody Bnng your
1fems to Knotts Com
muntty Auchon Barn
Corner Th1rd &amp; Ohve
For appomtment call
446 2917
Sale every
evening ttf 7

New Brick Home
3 Bedrooms, carpetmg throughout,
built m kitchen, dishwasher, d1sp.,
range, oven All electr1c w1th central
a1r cond 2 car garage With electnc
door opener. large lot 100x235 1 m1le
past new hospital. Over all, th1s 1s a
real mce home pnced r1ght Call 4461079 or 446 1854.
6A.fi1Ch0 REAl'TOit'S

RUSSEU

"
HEADQUARTERS for Gallla
County Real Estate Listings
needed

WOOD
REALTOR

14 CHILLICOTHE Road 2 or 3
bedroom
home
bath
basement and garage Good
cond tt lon

446-1066
PATIENCE and delay ach1eve
more than force and rage
IT I S better to begtn dorng our
duty late than never

MODERN 6 room house on
Chestnut St Electric butl1 In
stove modern cab inets 3
bedroom s storm doors and
w ndows Prtce $13 650
4 ROOM house on 1 acre lot
House about 3 weeks old Two
nice oulbutld ng s
Pr ce
$6 000

106 SECOND Av e Brtck home
wrth nrce lot 1 h baths steam
heat ful I basement fireplace
Very ntce ktfchen wtth all
appl ances butlt n
24 ACRES Yi th a large 7 room
house bath new furna ce On
Sf Rt 233 Has Ira ler spot
Price reduced to Sll 000
23 ACRES al Eureka
reduced lo $3 500

Pri ce

RENTALS
TWO
bed room
furnrshed
aparTment All utrl ties pard
$125 per month No pels or
childre n
DOUBLE w de moblle home
Furn shed Close to town Ha s
central a r condtfton ng
.fohn I Richards 446 0280
Offrce 446 1066
Eventngs
Ron Caoaday 446 3636
Russell Wood 446 4618

Neal Realty

ONE AN
DONE
THIRD
ACRE
LOT
Located 9 mrles from fawn on
Poss um Tr ot Road Septtc
tank rnstalied water tap pa1d
for graded for tra ler and has
concrete spots for trailer
TWO MILE S OUT - Lovely
blocks Priced at $4 500
ranch home wtfh three
3BEDROOM
bedroom s ceramrc bath
garage in basement extra LOCATED at 1809 Chestnut
Street Fully carpeted m
large
lot
tm med ate
ltvtng room and all bedrooms
possess bn pnced tor qu ck
Take a look and make us an
sale
offer
Offrce Phone 44f&lt;.1'9./
NEAR MEIGS MINE - F ve
Eve"'ngs
mrnutes out of Vmton 13 5
Charles M Neal 446 1546
acres wrth ntce frve room
J Michael Neal 446 1503
house wrth full bath tobacco
base barn low fa x dtsfnct
RETIRE WITH INCOME
Two apartments m large old
home rn heart of town Pnced
for qurck sale

"SELL THE AUCTIUI'4
WAY"

JIMME SAYRE
AUCTIONEER

PH. 446-3444

Serv1ces Offered

DEAD STOCK
SS 00 Service Ch111rge
Will removeJour dead
horse an cows
Call Jacks0!1 266 4531
BACKHOE and Trencher Call
Jackson 2664524 All types ol
backhoelng septic tanks
tooters etc Also all types of
trecnlng water 1 nes gas
ltnes etc
83 3
INSTALLING
aluminum
stdmg gutters and down
- spoUts For free esftmate call
collect 367 0128
83 26
KIESLING S carpet cleantng
serv tce n your home or
bus1ness Free estimate~
Phone 446 4408 anyt rme
83 H

Ql.l6·0001

- - -- - -

t.:entrat Air Condlt1onmg
ll KE new 3 BR home 1 h bath
&amp; Heatmg
nice built ln kitchen range
Free Esftmates
r efrigerator washer and
~tewart s Hardware
dryer ca rpet In Irving room
Vtnton Ohto
and bedroom s has natural
144 I
gas heat large lot located 4
mtles up Route 7 In Country
HAFFELT S CARPETING
Are estates can help finance
IF
YOU are bulldtng a new
Inquire at Corbin and Snyder
home
or need new carpet
Furniture Co .:146 1171 aff'er 5
phone
Jerry Haffelt 4461158
p m 446 2573
for
free
estimates
74 tr
275 tl

Oel tvery
Servt ce
Your
patronage will
be
ap
precrated Ph 446 0463
2 If

- ----

THOMAS FAIN
EXTERMINATING CO
Term rte &amp; Pest Control
Wheelersburg Oh o
S:tEWAaRT Electrrcal Serv tce &amp;
Repair house wiring electric
heating Phone 446 4561

271tr

Plumbmg &amp; Heattng
GENE1&gt;lAPf1T&amp;&gt;ONS
PLUMB lNG - Heahng &amp; Atr
Condit on ng 300 Fourth Ave
Ph 446 1637
48 tr
CARTERS PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth &amp; Pine
Phone 446 3888 or 446 4417
'
165

tr

STANDARD
Plumbtng &amp; He4t1ng
~ 14 Thtrd Ave 446 3782
187

tr

RUSSELLS
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING
Ga lttpohs 446 4782
29711
DEWITT S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route l60al Evergreen
Phone 446 2735
187 t f

lost
WALKER COON HOUND
bla ck and wh1fe In v c ntfy of
Gag e and R o Grande Nam e
on coll ar Ray Huff Ph 867
8377 or 379 2621
81 3

MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE
RECONDITIONED
MOBILE HOMES
1973 12x60 Holly Park
1970 12x60 Ameri can
1964 10x50 Elcona
1971 12x65 Concord
1972 12x60 Wln ston
l~M 12)(60 Champ1on
B&amp;S MOBilE HOMES
Second &amp; Vtand Sf
Pt Pleasant
(nextto Heck sl
64

DEVELOPMENT
OORP.

NEW
HOMES
FOR SALE

------

- - -- - -

----------PHONE

367-7250

o

.1

-"-==========----==========~

BY
OWNER
bedroom home
carpe
t new 3carpetrng
Phone r
446 0955
________________6
, 1 tf

For Sale
SINGER Sewong Machine Sales
&amp; Servtce All models In
stock Free delivery Se~vrce
guat.,nteed Models pr:lce
fr6rn $69 95 French Ctt
Fabric Shoppe Smger ap
proved dealer 58 COurt St.
Ph 416 9255

- - --

308

--.,.

Do to 111 health must sell 585,000 tn mer
chand1se, S20 000 rn f1xtures, large store
butldmg, 8 room house, 4 room house, 4 room
Apt All on same p1ece of ground

ALL FOR '57,500
PHONJ 428-3306

940 Murdock Ave.
'

ParkerWurg, W. Va.

AUCTIONf
TRACTOR.fAR/1\ EQUIPMENT
"
MISCELLANEOUS
LOCATED 2 m1les northwest of Hamden,
Oh10 on Townshtp Road 194, 8 mrles northwest
of Wellston, Oh1o, 3 mtles north of State Route
327 Watch for auct•on arrows off Route 327

SATURDAY, APRIL 14, 1973 AT 12:00 NOON
W D All s Chalmers 45 dtesel 1957 mOdel Allis Chalmers
rear mounted 2 14 plow {2 way on hills de) Coop a ft
dtsk AC cultivators Coop 13 7 grain drill almost new
Ford ~ cylinder manure loader wtth bucket &amp; fork
Freman loader for W 0 or IHC tractors New Idea PTO
flail manure spreader lt:iC7 ft cult packer AC7 ff twrn
drive mower AC roll type balet AC PTO side delivery
rake rear mount IHC 2A hay condtt1oner AC forage
harvester wtth corn head Gatl forage bed on New Idea
heavy duty wagon John Deere No 216 forage bed on a
heavy duty John Deere 8 ton wagon 2 wagons wtth 7 x14
flat beds wtth gram stdes all the above wagons on rubber
lnternahonal2 row mounted planter ftts HC or B 2 row
Btack Hawk planter 1 000 gallon water tank PTO por
table Papec hammer m II many other mtscellaneoUs
items
TERMS Cash day ofsale
Lunch served

J E IJIMI BROWN&amp; FAMILY
Sale conducted by
STANLEY &amp; SON
Aucfloneers &amp; Realtors
116 East 4th St Chllltcothe OhiO
Phone 775 3330
Eve 114
\

•

tr

TARA

NEW Brick with extra lot DRY WALL service by con
dou ble garage total electric
tract Wtllard Bosley 446
3 bedroom large living room
4954
and dining area 2 bi!lths wail
to wall carpet Thermo Pane
windows Marble srlls close
Rolo Rooter
to town Call 4.46 3563 after 7 SEWER and Drain Cleaning
pm
National
Service
now
83 1 available
locally For any
kond ot stopped up drain call
4 ROOM house 2 bedroom
675 5195 24 hour Serv
utlltfy and bath just newly
307 tr
remodeled Ins de W to W
------------~
carpettng in all rooms
TERMITE PEST CON 1 t&lt;UL
Gallipolis School District FREE ln spectoon Coli 446 3245
rural water $12 000 Ph 446
Merr ill 0 Dell Operator by
2!147 or 446 1023
Extermlnal Termite Service
83 3
Bulid•ng
S1tes
10 Belmont Or
-----267
tr
Available Kmgsberry
35 ACRES more or less approx
Homes built to f1t any
1 200 ft
frontage
some
and
::.pouting
tlmber rural water 446 49.48 ROOFING
All
ngles
and
Buildup speclf•catlons
83 3 Sh
Hotroofs Free Estimate Underground Ut111tles
26 yr experience
James
NEARLY new Brick hom e
Provided
Marcum Vinton Ohio 388
Lower Route 7 256 1198
8114
~--------~56 tf
62 tf
For lnformafton
-::
------"------~
1LOTS on Lower Rtver Route 7 SEPT IC tanks Installed back
Or Appotnlment
Call Charles Bodimer 256
hoe work of ai I kmds C U
1198
M rller Box 114 Rto Grande
56 tf
245 Sl3S
~::-:-~:-:-:-:--::-:,_--..,....c-:_
78 26
HOUSE 910 Fourth Ave Call
446 945'i
rnorntngs
and
weekends
GALLIA Electncran Servtce
Add1son.
Phone 446 9391
79 5
------~----~
7326 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALEI-

H. Kuhn

.0 P MARTIN &amp; Son Waler

Mobile Homes for Sale

Jay Sheppard 446 0001
Denver K HIQiey 446 OC!.D.!

2 STDR Y 3 bedroom all elect
br.lck car pet throughout
'Hot Shot Spray Wash'
disposal
new cabinets In
MOD&amp;RN 3 bedroom brick
kitchen dining room and CALL us for wash wax and
degrea5lng of your trucks
home close to hosp1fal Very
ftreplace llh baths deep lot
mobile homes aluminum
n ce kitchen and dlnrng area
1052 Second Ave Call 446 1997
siding or anything washable
A r cond I onlng Two car
after 5 p m dally on Sundays
446 4441
garage
I m medIate
anyftme
W&gt;j f9:tf
possess on Pr ce S26 500
59 tr

OHIO RIVER
Realty

AUCTION
SERVICE

FISHING Paradtse overlook ng
Ohio River One acre on
Campaign
Creek
two
bedrooms big llv1ng room
wtlh fireplace modern ktt
chen wt th gas stove and
Fr gJda re Covered porch
Elec heat

ServiCes Offered

NEW LISTINGS
ALBERT EHMAN
7 ROOM bnck home on Lower
Water
Delivery Servtce
Rtver Road overlookmg the ONE LOT on Rt 141 Good
Patriot Star Rt t.ltiltpolts
fr on tage Water a val Iable
Oh o River !V.odern krtchen
Ph 379 2133
Also lots at Tycoon Lake
carpeted a r cond rf 1onrng
243 II
full basement
two ca~
GOl
NG
bustness
tor
sale
In
garage Has recent! y been
LANE S
complete
Jackson Co Includes Bus BOB
redecorated
Bookkecptng
and
Tax Ser
Bldgs very ni ce 3 BR home
vrce 424'h Fourth Ave
and lots of frontage on State
MODERN 1 floor plan on Ad
Kanauga Business by ap
Road
dtson Bulavllle Rd 6 rooms
po10tment
Ph
446 1049
hardwood floors modern
Please call after 6 p m
k•tchen rural wafer
This LISTINGS needed All pnce
278 tit
ranges All areas Phone and
property srtuated on two lots
we will come out Call Today
Price $21 000 Presently rents
BANKS TREE SERVICE
We buY sell and trade
for $200 per month
FREE estimates llabtltty In
surance Pruning trtmmrng.
LARGE older home has been
and cav rty work tree and
remodeled modern krtchen
stump removal Ph d46 4953
new carpetlng two patr6s
73 II
extra Ira ler pad on lot Price
$23 500

NEW LISTING
BEFORE
you buy any house
CORA - 143 A 80 A l lat and
see lh s beaut ful 2 year old
Raccoon bottom modern
three bedroom home located
home and good barn
on a large tot m Sprtng Valley
Sub D•vrs1on Th1s home has
WARD Rd 163 A vacant land
F nanctng ava lable
all the modern features you
want Has a full basement
Any Hr - 446 1998
w th TV room that Is paneled
and ca q:e ted
Home ts
completely carpeted even
k I chen and baths Other
f e a t u res
ar e
gar bag e
d sposa l dts hwasher but It Jn
s tove
central
atr
4S2 Second Ave
cond ttonrng and two baths
Galhpolts Ohi045631
Call today for appointment
614 446 3434
Prced rn the ~s

65 A - ADDISON Twp - BT
rd good barn 20 A It liable
balance tn pasture and woods EDGE 0 TOWN - Cule cottage
on nrce lot Two blocks from
38 A - OVERLOOKS lhe Ohoo
markets three bedrooms full
R ver s m t from town rn
bath garage furnace heat
Galltpoi s School 0 st
Evenings Call446 4244
Steven Befl446 9583
RANNY BLA~KBURN
John Fuller 245 9311

Gallla Co's Largest
Real Estate Sales Agency
Offtce 446 3643
Evenmgs Call
E M "Ike" W1seman 446 3796
E N Wiseman 446 4500

NEW 3 BR house garage
ceram c t le bath
w to w
carpet large lot near Clay
school Lower River Road,
Otho Burdette 256 6884
63 If

pa sture

BIDWELL - 30 A Good house

frontage Close tfiough to the new hospital and the ftew
Power Plant Priced at SSOO and up Terms If des1red
offered by owners DILLON &amp; BAILEY P 0 BOX ll6
Galhpohs.. OhiO 4$631 Pllone 1614) 4462730

1961

�',

•

r--~--~------------~i

30 - The Sunday T~ ·Sentinel, Sunday, April8, 1973

APRIL SHOWERS .. BRINGS
~OWN U'SED CAR PRICES
AT SMITH NILSON MOTORS

II
II
I
II

1971 BUICK ---!~-~~~~~-------~------~----':1~~~
1971 .PONTIAC .--~R~!~!!!!~2-~~~I:. _________ _: ____, 37~ 5
1970 BONNEVILLE ---~9.~~:!--F!~~~~~~---.:. ___ .:...:'28~5
1970 BONNEVILLE ---4-~~~!:.!!!ft _____________.!.27 ~ 5

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•'

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II

1970 DODGE ----~!~-~!.~~~~~-------,-------!.17~5
1970 FORD----~1~~!~~!~~~!---------------!2~~~
1969 FORD·---~.!&lt;l!t~~.!!~------.;. ____________ .!.17~ ~

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,. OUR WORD IS

"

OUR BOND

500

E.

992-2174

/-

8

Main St. , Pomeroy. Ollto

tires, white finish , showroom clean interior. A sharp car

anyOfle wil l like,

1970 CHEVROLET CAPRIC£ ....... '2095
HT Cpe ., lOcal ·1 owner car, da·rk grn. finish , ,matching
green interior . tires show little wear ,. V-8, automatic
trans., powe r stee r ing &amp; brakes, plenty of comfort &amp; eye

appeal lo thi s car .

1970 DODGE POLARA .. :..........
J1695·
·
a door. fa ctory air, v ,a engine, automatic power steering

&amp; brakes, good w-w t ires, rad io, clean i nterior, white

1969 CHEVROLET IMPALA .........'1895 . I

1
1

ter ior , white finish . V-8 engine, automatic transmission ,
power steering &amp; brakes. radio &amp; man y other ~xtras .

I
I
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I

1968 CHEVELLE MALIBU ...........~1295

Station wagon, local 1 owner new car trade-in,

I
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73 FORD LTD

Corbin &amp; Snyder1
Furniture II

4 DR. PILLARED HARDTOP .
.....
,

••"

queen size. Save up to S40 a

( o·oes not have viny l roof as pictured)

1965

radio , re mote control mirror , delv xe wh ee l c o ver s.

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·,
•

MARTIN FORD PR.ICE

•

•3990

•

•'•

AND
SNYDER
USECORBIN
D F URNI
T URE
: 2 piece

.•

coH spri ngs ,
·
N EW : Linoleum rugs. in 3 sizes:
9 x 12. 12 x 12, 12 x 15, good

Hr Cpe. , V-8, au-t omat ic, P.S., radio, good tires. bucke t
seafs .

..
Check Th ese Outstanding Buys

I

1966 MERCURY COMET

.

79-H

COR N and hay, 256-1198.

..•

56

-tt

- - -- --

'

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.
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1
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hres, 5 speed trans .

I
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825x20 ti res, So lid cab.

I
I

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. VOLKSWAGEN

''
''
' .

._ ....

USED CAR SPECIALS
--·..

stoke r coal . Carl Winters, Rio I

111

6_

I
~:~~ ~'!,';,~~~; t~;n c~~~~rspecial~

I

1966 11:;&gt;. T . Chev . P U

,.'

1966
1960

1972
1971
1971
1971

Cheyenne Pick-up , V-8, au-SOLD S, , fact. air (7,800 miles I.
Comet4 dr ., small v .a, auto ., light blue, real sharp .
Datsun, ldr ,, auloma.l ic, red with black interior.
Plymouth, Sebring 2 dr . H.T ,, V-8, P . S., vinyl top . Excelle nt
---

-- -

$3495
$2088
$1688
$2495

1970 V. W. S~. Back , gre en , 4 sp SOLDtr cond ,, radio , sharp .
$1988
1970 Maverrck, 6 cyL , 3-speed, new tires . A sharp one.
$1488 ·
$1495
1970 V: W. Bug, dark gr een, 4 speed, loaded with e~lra s.
1~70 F tal2 dr : Sed ., 4-spe ed . (A good economy carl .
$888
1970 Dodg e Dart , auto ., P.S,, \li tSOLDP· air cond . Extra c lean &amp; sharp. $1895
1970 Toyota Corona 4 dr ., auto ., air cond ., only 28,000 m i les.
1969 Monle go 2"dr . . H. T,, auto., vinyl lop , only 27 ,000 miles .'1969 Mustang F. B., V-8, 4 speed, radio .
·
··
1969 Nova , 2 dr . sed ., 6 cyl ., std . SOLD , Beauliful' blue fin ish.
1969 V. W, Bug , 4 s peed , red , radio, nice ca r.
·1969 Caprice, V-8, auto ,, P .
P . B., P. W., air cond. Sharp .
1969 V , W, Sq . Back, 4 speed , radio, red .
1969 V . W. Fas t Bac k, auto , radio , tan f ini s h , A r e al n ice c ar .
1968 Fury ~Ill Fast Back, Alymo SQLOree n with vinyl top , V- 8 ~ auto .,

s.,

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19t.B.Forci, Ga u oo, 2 dr . H. T;, V-8, auto ., P.

1972
1972
1970
1970

s., light gree n .

$1788
$1595
$ 1388
$1588
$1188
$1888
$1488
$1488 •
$1495
$1088

.· NEW TRADE INS

Gran Torino, 4 dr., V-8, vinyl lop, P , S., A. C.
Ford Pickup, V-8, auto., P . S., brown , ·
Chevelle, 2 dr. H. T., red &amp; blk, V-8, auto,, P. S,
Maverick, 2 dr ., 6 c yL , a uto., yellow.

$3295
$3188
$2295
$1595

We have just recently.
.
.traded for five real .nice
Volk swagen Bugs.

DON WATTS VOLKSWAGEN, INC~
- ~-

1969
1969
1967
1967

1966
1970

1
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And

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1970

112

1969 y,
1968 '12
1966 "'
1967

l/4

GallipoUs

446-3273

tr uck
T . Chev . PU
T . Chev. PU
T . Chev. PU
T. GMC P U
T. GMC PU
T. GMC P U

NOW ·YOU CAN SAVE
UPTO

..:

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White with green viny l top, green in terior, fu ll
power equipment, AM -F M radio, T&amp; T w heel.
Cl imate Cont rol ai r conditi oning.

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•

•4000 .

1968 'h T. GMC PU
1967 112 T, GMC PU
1967 112 T, GMC PU

3 Pc. Bedroom Suite from '69.95
to sl39.95

1959 112 T. Ford

SOMM fi R5 G,M,C.
TRUCKS, INC,

Pa·rsons

Cadillac . Oldsmobile
- '"' GMAC Fj nancing AYB!ilabll!!

141 5 Ea stern Avenue

-

bedroom suites, chest as low
as $9.95 washer and dryers,
dlnin·g room sui te ·with table
· and 4 chairs and bvffet,
specia l th is week only, $25.
New furnift.,~re. Special Sofa
bed, $56 .

STANDARD Oil Dealership,
located In Rio Grande, -Oh-io.-...
Excellent lo.;:ation and e)(.
cellent gal lonage, contact at
2&lt;5-5378.
80·18

.'

71 CHEV. BELAIR

Honda Offers
. .
You More
Motorcycle
Models Than
Any Other
Ma!lufaclurer

Honda
Has
It
All . ..
.

•
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-;

Gas. Cook Stoves s39.95

'24~5

Used TV '29.95 to '125.00

.

~- Yrail Bikes .

Minibikes •

•

WOOD MOTOR SALES

Large sele ction of dishes and pottery , Many
mor e ite m s to c hoose from .

Eastern Ave.

"

For Sale

Gallipolis,

.•

0.

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•
•

Fo Sal

ALL TYPES at · builaong
_ ..moterials. block, brick, sewer
FINANCING AVAILABLE
,
,.
r .e
pipes, windows, lintels, eoc.
~
'NEW and used Instr umen ts, 1969 OL DS Delta 88, hardtop, PS
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
Brun icard i House of Mu:sic. 54
&amp; PB, ai r cond itioning, ·ex. Hours 9105 Mon . thru Sat .
State Street. Phone 446-0687,
cell en t condit ion, 256-6737.
0. Phone HS -5121 after s.
- - - - - - - - 123-t' . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~. . _ _ _ _;_,_ _ _ _3_3-tf, '
79-6
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On/Off Road Bikes

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Dirt Bikes

SMITH AUTO -SALES
KANAU\iA, OHIO
'

NEW 1973 Zig -Zag Sewing
Machines in orig inal factory
carton . Zlg . Zag to ma ke
buttonholes, sew Ofl bull ons .
monagrams, and ma~e lan ey
designs wllh just the tw is t of a
s ingle-dial. left in fayaway _
and neyer been used. VJ ill sell
tor oniy $47 cash. or ter ms
ava ilable . El ectro Hyg i~ne
Co. Phone --146--1312'.

;

8J.6

131 e·tECTROLUX Va c uum
For
Cleane rs com ple te wi th at FREEZER beet. Cal l B. K.
tachmcnts, cordwinder .and
H' 1
paint spray.
Used
bu t ih$34.
ll~e
1
tgey, 245 .5255 evenngs
or
new
condition
. Pay
45
245-521 8.
cash or budget plan avaH~ble .
80-26
Electro · Hygiene co . Phone
_4312.
446
197PIBM0f NT ~ _Carl o, air , PS .,
83 _6
. ac 1 ory s 1ereo 1ap e,
exce ll en t condition. ~ 67 - 7723 . - - - -- - - 81-3
TRI -STATE
-------MOB IL E HOM ES SALES
KA NAU GA, OHIO,
WH.ITE Toy Poodles, AKC .
AC RO SS FROM HI -WA Y
registered, 12 weeks to 3
INN, KANAUGA
years old, J femal e, 2 males,
house trained and these mak e 10 )( so Frontier
. 10 )( 48 Richardson
lovely pets. 446-9539.
82-6 10 )( 46 Anit:rican
New Moon
- - -- - - - 1010 xx 50
46 Peerless
1967 APACHE fol,d out camper
with metal top . 446-3993 after a x 45 New Moon
1
6 anytime on weekends.
12 )( 70 Kir,19_5_w~~ .
82-J 10 x 35 A'tlani1 c IV\ob1le Ottice
Used Mobile Homes ·
Phone 446-0816
AKC min iature Sc hnau ze r ,
22-tt
She1.1and Sheep dog , Ba ss~ t
Hound , Cocker Spaniel, an~
for $50, over stocked K &amp; P
1965 FORD Gala)(ie 500. 446Kennels. 388-8274.
82-6 288S.
81 -3
'
so · Q A HONDA, Nimrod - - - - - - - - Camper, sl~eps 4, 446-3641 . 197? MAVERICK , 6 cy l. 3 speed.
-82·3 Phone 3.88·9962,
-----~-81 -3
BOLENS 770, 7 hp. rid ing lawn - - - - - - - - tractor, 32 in. mower, ex'- 2 HORSE-S.- 1 regi stered
ceuent condition . 446-4327.
quarter. 7 year geld ing $375. l
82-3 gelde~ Walker 7 year·s S250.
----~--Must sell 367-7432 .
81 -tf
1970 BSA Chopper $1 )100. 6751758
--'---- - - - - 82-12 USE 0 kitchen aid dishwasher
and si nk combination. Rifles, .
S112 ton air condi'tioner 3 phase, 22 magnum with sco pe; Colt
Allis Chalmers farm Tractor semi -auto. 22, call after 4 p.
with plow and sic kle bar. · m. 446-0793.
81 -3
Phon.&amp; 256-6470 .
82-3 - - - - - - - - -

Sale

.

4 Or , s edan , 350 c u . in ., V-8 engine, a ut o .
trans , p. stee ring , p . brakes, lac. air cond .,
Rosewood metalli c f in ish wi th bl k. v.in y l in t e ri o r , w-~- w tir e s ' E xtra n ice.

Maytag Wringer Washers '49.95

Sale

- .161951 BUI CK Hearse, 2 owi-lers, t9S7 CHEVY 2 dr . Sta tion ATTE NTIO N. FARMERS
needs cl utc h, otherwise in
wagon. Mint - condition. 270---~- 16 - 16 or 6-24-24 ter til .tze~ $87
e)(cel lent r unni ng ·condition.
H.P. Ba lanced , pos itract ion
per ton through Apnl 7,
Best o1fer. 446-1065 after 4 5: 38, 4 speed. Many e)(tras
week ly price adjustment .
K;enne~h_Higley ..__ 245- 52JB . .......
SB50. 446-4999.
p.m.
80-4
83-S
7a.tt

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_9x12 New Linoleum Rugs s3.95

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Pomeroy

Open Eves. Til6- Tii5 ' P . M. Sat.
"You'll Like Our Qual ity Way of Doing BusJness"

·Chest of Drawers s7.9S to s19.95

7 COUC HES starting at SIS,

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133 Pin e St .

267-tf

For Sale

Gallipolis, Ohio

. HCVDA

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KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
992-5342

For Sale ·

SMITH
SAYS

Us, Wh y Don 't You ? ?

1972 PONTIAC

!3 )

.

· · From Mighty io Min( Honda has it alii

'3700
'

OR. MONACO NOW IN STOCK!

50 State Street

•

. Yo ur Neighbor Dealt With

600 E. Sta te Street
Ath ens, Ohio

ON ANY DODGE POLARA

ARROLL NORRIS DODGE INC•

••

noc·

Da le R. Sa nders In c.

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70 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

'1 I 00000.

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Control. air cond ition ing. /Ow mileag·e. Sha r p!

T . Ford PU

446-2532

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G ALLIPOLI~. ·OHIO

"""'"'""-

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UPPER ROUTE 7

taadge

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..•'••:

70 Cadillac H.T. Coupe

Good Selection of
U!~ed Furniture ·

SMITH BUitK, 'IN·C.

.·•• .

Bette' 8
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f Uy5 .
·on The Best

SEE A MEMBER OF OUR SALES STAFF:

Dodge Cars

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UP TO 42 _MONTHS TO PAY

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· Corne r of Third and Cedar
Now Open For !'lu s jness

C h~v.

1970 CHEVELLE. exce ll ent
cond iti on, best off er, 446-0563
after· 5 p.m.

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To Go!

TO CHOOSE FROM

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I P5obr"' Hard/Of) Sur:Jctn

1966 COMET, 390, one owner ,
good cond ition . Call after 6
p.m. 388·8823

.

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CEDAR STREET FURNITURE

1969 Olds 88

YEARLING Angu s Bulls ,
eligible tor registration. Ph .
446-3968 atter 7 p.m.

•,

Fu ll power, go ld finish, matching Inter ior, Climate

1969 Dodge Stat ion Wagon

-------

NOW'S THE TIME!

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,•

• 35 USED CARS

1639 Eastern Ave.

1973

W e have made .a special purchase of
BUICK LeSABRES, 4 DR.
SEDAN ~. Equ1pped with automatic transmission, power steering,
power ~1sc brakes, white -wall tires, air conditioner, custom seat
be lts, h n t ed glass, bumper protective strips, bUilJper guards, il o or
guard s, remote mif row, carpet savers, de l ulte wheel covers
protective body side molding s. Other Models Priced According ly:

HARLAND WOOD, GLENN MONTGOMERY, BOB·BRICKL.ES

'

-------:--

Monda y 12 Noon 1119 P.M.
Tues., Wed., Fri. 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
. Thu r, 8 A.M. to 9 P.M.-Sat. 8 A.M. lo 12 Noon

·

Be-lair, 6 cyl. auto. tran s., one
owner , 40,000 Sl ,350. See at 541
4th Ave.

Martin Ford has a good selection of 1973 Ford 112 &amp; J/4 Ton .
Pickup Trucks . All priced lower than anyone in the area .
Remember - No Salesmen No. Sales Commission to pa·y .
means a Better Deal for You!

••

eALL NEW CARS IN
STOCK ARE DISCOUNTED

I

Pomeroy '

-----1970 CHEVROLET, 4 door ,

1968 FURY Ill Pfymou th , 2
door. F·a ir, P.S. &amp; P.B., 4461397. See at -· 414 Edgewood
Qri"¥e.

$3862
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83-6

]973 RiCKMAN 250 CC l',loto
Cross , e)(cellent condition
$895. 1957 Chev . · Van Truck,
• 283 Che"¥y engi ne both SlOO.
Call 388-8254 .
83-3

1973 FURY Ill 4 DR. SEDAN

For Sale

1969 'It T . Ford P U .

1969 V2
1965 :~;..

co.

POMEROY ·MOTOR

'64 FORD Faicon, 446-1452.

· ROTO -TILLER and radio
recorder player com bination.
Call before noon. 446--3722 .
83-3

.

A ir and a ll the ex tras.

II1
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trading policy!

..-----~--------------c

T. GMC 'PU
IHC 1ruc:k tractor .
'I' TO. GMC PU
GM C 'lz ton PU
Ford lh ton PU
'12 ton Chev.
GMC 'I' ton PU
GMC v, ton PU
'I&lt;

1971 3 T.

&amp;

" Your Chevy Dea le r "
992-2 126. .
~en Eve s . Til8
·

1967 JJ,I T. GMB PU .

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truckN~~.~~~rters

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We ·are here to please you ••• you'll .

, _,
-,.--_- - - - - I
GOOD CL,EA N LUMP and I
Gra nde. Phone 24,S51 t5

..

a ir . 256-6SS8,

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9oo

1965 BUICK LaSabre, fa ctory

1958 PL YMOU'fH, 4 door ,
automat ic tran smission, good
mech.;~nical condition, good
tires. 256-6707.

$4475

I

I Needs mofor work , good body ,
1 automati c trans., r~dio . ·
1
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1967 F IAT 8SO Spider . Call 446-llike our appraisals
0007 after S. ··
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. 446-11 71
- - . , . . - - - - --

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500 ....... '495

FORD

A ir and all th e extra s.

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DODGE · CORO~ET

condition, -446-35-48.

SPLIT level trailer, J bedroom
bath and hc'll f, 367-7167 .

$200 I
~i~:!£~~~l~}~"nk2 ;~~~~m: 1 !:~!mPG~£ ~8~o Tb0 ~ speed $995 1 Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth ·
~~~~~~~Ln: Aven::tterns I !.~~~b ~~~~~~~n.~ c~~~ood $595 ~~~-----------·-----·
se t. 955 Second Avenue .
446 11 71
276-tf
.

400 2 BBL , w -s ·w tires, d e lu xe bumpe r g r oup , la c. a ir i:ond :, tinted g lass,

6 cylinder,

2 DOOR HARDTOP

The hOt one &amp; Sure to please, V-a, automat-ic . ..good tires,
good body with green fini sh, rad io, a special any day.

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NEW: Serta a nd Bemco mat- I
tress and box springs. La rge I
se lection in stock - twi n, full, I

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1966
CHEVELLE HT CPE. ...........~749
.

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1967 FOR 0 Galaxie, SOO GOQd

No Salesmen!
No Sales
Commission!

1973 CHRYSLER NEWPORT

V-8 automa tic -tran s .. power stee:ring &amp; brakes, . rad io,

g~od t ires. priced to please .

MARTIN

NEW GEIVERif'IOI\I

$3550 ,-·

1966 OLDS F85 CPE................. '595

1

83 3

------

73 FDFID PICKUPS

318 engine, P.S., P.B.

I

Loca l 1 owner car with low mileage. Beautiful cream
fin ish, good black nylon top, bucket seats, console. new lst
line w-w tires , V-8, automatic, p. steering, one of the
scarce ones &amp; a real sport car.

us . Phone 446-0874.

2 DOOR HARDTOP

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1968 CAMARO CONV. .. ··· ........ .s1695

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cast\

adding machine i9 S. Glan
display case Zl" ~~; 8" "' 1-4" ,

1973 . SATELLITE .SEBRING

I

has' been cared for, 307 V-8, automatic trans., power
steer ing, rad io, good 1st line tires , vinyl interior trim,
steel blue finish . Hurry in!

an
SMITH-CORONA
n:s1gcr

$2950

I

m-

pkg .,

campo&lt;

S6.SO. Phone .u6 017&lt;1 ,

AND ARE AT

• ,:--

· 1973 DUSTER'

'I

1

,:,..
...

·vln~·

,,•t??-:·.

Joe J ohnson

$2630

Sun Roof, Spacemaker
automatic trans .

SELF CONTAINED

Hottest Deals in Town

2 Seat St. Wagon, local 1 owner car &amp; it shows how welt it

I

For Sale

YOUR CHOICE

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Open Evenings
1il 7 p.m. &amp;
Sat. 'til 5 p.m.
Service 1il 12
Noon on Saturday

·sMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC

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4 Door Seda n, 32.000 miles by ori g inal local owner . V :8
engine, au tomatic trans .. power steering, radio, good w-w

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REMEMBER
We Seroice
What We Sell-

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1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU ...........s1995 1

For Sale

THEY'VE GOT TO BE THE

2 - 1973 GOLD DUSTERS

I

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CEWARD CALVERT, Salesman

Bill

finish with vinyl top .

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1968 fORD -----~!!&gt;.!!!~c~~-------------------'-14~ 5
BONNEVILLE 2 DR. HJ. ONLY
1966 PONTIAC 34,521
MILES ON THIS BEAUTY ·----------.!9~ ~
1969 OLDS --~l!~~~v~!:.~E!!:lf:!:... _______________ .!_19~"5··

'

USED CAR . ! GALLIPOLIS
I
BEST II CHRYSLER·
L~W
BUYS II .PLYMOUTH
M
I
NEW CAR SALE
POMEROY MOJDJL I
I

!

31- The Sunday Times · Senlipel, Sunday, April8, 1973

•

---=----

----CAMPER, Apache, sto"¥e,

CATAL.INA Brougham, 15,000
miles, a ir cond . Xtra Ni ce .

•3595
BO NN EV I LLE Brougham, 4
dr. Hdtp .. air c ond ., 60, 40 s eat.
powe r windows, se at. door
loc ks, new · Prem t ire s . Nice.

1970 MERCURY
MARQUIS 4 dr . Hdlp ., 8,000
actu a l mi les, s howroo m condi ti on . · a ir cond ., black with
b lac k vfnyl lop.

•·

'269
1972 VEGA
HATCHBACK, r a dio , 4 s peed ,
12 ,000 mi les .
. ..

.9
'1895
OLDER MODEL CLEARANCE
THESE CARS HAVE TO BE SOLD. WE NEED THE ROOM

'67 PONTIAC 4 DR...............................$595
'69 OPEL STA. WAGON -....................._.JA95
'67 CHEVELLE SEDAN .......................... $495
'65 BUICK LeSABRE ............................. ~395
'64 FORD 2 DR. HDJP..........................nOD
'60 FALco N··.············· .................. -. ................$75
'62 FALCON ...............................................~75
'

Sale . .

For
1969 MERCURY Comet. 47,000
heater, dinett e, slee ps 6 and · m iles, e)(cellent runn ihg
condit ion, with e)( lra s. Phone JUST taken in , de l'u xe zig zag GROCERY business for sale ,
18" Lawn Boy Mower, Call
USED FURNITURE
367-7444 between 6 &amp; 8.
at_ter 5 p.m. &lt;146- 1 ~40.
sewi n,g
mach ine .
This
building lor sale or lease ,
82 3
SALE-20 P CT. OFF
machin e.
darn S,
em ·
phone /73-5618 from a:30 p.m.
broider ies , ove r casts , but to 10 p.m . for appofntmen1.
ON ALL USED
accessories ; .tonholes , pay ba lance '$36.50
67·tf
EYE LEVEL oven and counter CHIN CHILLA's
FURNITURE IN STOCK
cages. water bottles; blue
or payments can bf? ar r an9ed.
~
range. Call 446-2235.-.
THAT'S Rig ht. Rice's Wil l give .
sparkle
dust
,
etc.
good
garden
446-0255.
'81-3
. you 20 pet. off on oUr reg ular
tractor, all accessories,
13·tf
IF Yc5U are bu il ding a new low prices. They m!JSt go to
turn
ing plow disk cultivator,
home or remodeling, see us. make room for more mer - ·
1971 VW, -Super Beetle, . one
Wea r~ builders. Distributor
c;handise co ming ln . No
owner ,·J3,000miles. $1595 . Ph . . etc., meai slicing mach ine .
Richard Lawhorn . Call 388-.
for Hotpo int APp liances, reasonable offer refused .
446-0008.
Need
Another
Bldg
.?
81 -tf 8528. Cal l after 6 p. m. ·
All ison EJectr ic .
81 -6 S.EE our alumin·um bldg s.
154-tf
Heavy · duty , wit h. flooring ,
wir.ed
lor
electric.
Al
e;..,
Wcs.t
PIPES, Pipe;. Popes, GBD, 1973 Plj:KMAN 2SO -CC Moto
Virginia ch'Jnk co.d Jroiir\ MAGNETIC Signs lor cars and
Cheratan , BBB, Jobey, ·Hilson , Cross, exc~llenl condi tion
tile, bell tile, cemen l ,an d
trucks All kinds, Simmons
and others. Tawney's Pipe ·· $895, 1957. ·Chev .- V~n Tr uck,.
•
Printirig and Offic:e Equipmortar. ' Ga llipolis Block _&amp;
and Trophy ·Hovse, 422.Second '283 Che ... y engine both &lt;li lOO .
•
1 2 Pine, 446-2783.
Coal
Co.,
123
ment.
NEW
.
&amp;
USEO
FUliNITUliE
Ave.
Call 388-8254,
207 -tt
S2-.tf
154 Second, 446- 9~23
m -tt·,
81-3 .

For Sale

For Sale

R·ICE'S

----'-----

�',

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r--~--~------------~i

30 - The Sunday T~ ·Sentinel, Sunday, April8, 1973

APRIL SHOWERS .. BRINGS
~OWN U'SED CAR PRICES
AT SMITH NILSON MOTORS

II
II
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II

1971 BUICK ---!~-~~~~~-------~------~----':1~~~
1971 .PONTIAC .--~R~!~!!!!~2-~~~I:. _________ _: ____, 37~ 5
1970 BONNEVILLE ---~9.~~:!--F!~~~~~~---.:. ___ .:...:'28~5
1970 BONNEVILLE ---4-~~~!:.!!!ft _____________.!.27 ~ 5

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1970 DODGE ----~!~-~!.~~~~~-------,-------!.17~5
1970 FORD----~1~~!~~!~~~!---------------!2~~~
1969 FORD·---~.!&lt;l!t~~.!!~------.;. ____________ .!.17~ ~

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,. OUR WORD IS

"

OUR BOND

500

E.

992-2174

/-

8

Main St. , Pomeroy. Ollto

tires, white finish , showroom clean interior. A sharp car

anyOfle wil l like,

1970 CHEVROLET CAPRIC£ ....... '2095
HT Cpe ., lOcal ·1 owner car, da·rk grn. finish , ,matching
green interior . tires show little wear ,. V-8, automatic
trans., powe r stee r ing &amp; brakes, plenty of comfort &amp; eye

appeal lo thi s car .

1970 DODGE POLARA .. :..........
J1695·
·
a door. fa ctory air, v ,a engine, automatic power steering

&amp; brakes, good w-w t ires, rad io, clean i nterior, white

1969 CHEVROLET IMPALA .........'1895 . I

1
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ter ior , white finish . V-8 engine, automatic transmission ,
power steering &amp; brakes. radio &amp; man y other ~xtras .

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1968 CHEVELLE MALIBU ...........~1295

Station wagon, local 1 owner new car trade-in,

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73 FORD LTD

Corbin &amp; Snyder1
Furniture II

4 DR. PILLARED HARDTOP .
.....
,

••"

queen size. Save up to S40 a

( o·oes not have viny l roof as pictured)

1965

radio , re mote control mirror , delv xe wh ee l c o ver s.

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·,
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MARTIN FORD PR.ICE

•

•3990

•

•'•

AND
SNYDER
USECORBIN
D F URNI
T URE
: 2 piece

.•

coH spri ngs ,
·
N EW : Linoleum rugs. in 3 sizes:
9 x 12. 12 x 12, 12 x 15, good

Hr Cpe. , V-8, au-t omat ic, P.S., radio, good tires. bucke t
seafs .

..
Check Th ese Outstanding Buys

I

1966 MERCURY COMET

.

79-H

COR N and hay, 256-1198.

..•

56

-tt

- - -- --

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hres, 5 speed trans .

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825x20 ti res, So lid cab.

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. VOLKSWAGEN

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USED CAR SPECIALS
--·..

stoke r coal . Carl Winters, Rio I

111

6_

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~:~~ ~'!,';,~~~; t~;n c~~~~rspecial~

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1966 11:;&gt;. T . Chev . P U

,.'

1966
1960

1972
1971
1971
1971

Cheyenne Pick-up , V-8, au-SOLD S, , fact. air (7,800 miles I.
Comet4 dr ., small v .a, auto ., light blue, real sharp .
Datsun, ldr ,, auloma.l ic, red with black interior.
Plymouth, Sebring 2 dr . H.T ,, V-8, P . S., vinyl top . Excelle nt
---

-- -

$3495
$2088
$1688
$2495

1970 V. W. S~. Back , gre en , 4 sp SOLDtr cond ,, radio , sharp .
$1988
1970 Maverrck, 6 cyL , 3-speed, new tires . A sharp one.
$1488 ·
$1495
1970 V: W. Bug, dark gr een, 4 speed, loaded with e~lra s.
1~70 F tal2 dr : Sed ., 4-spe ed . (A good economy carl .
$888
1970 Dodg e Dart , auto ., P.S,, \li tSOLDP· air cond . Extra c lean &amp; sharp. $1895
1970 Toyota Corona 4 dr ., auto ., air cond ., only 28,000 m i les.
1969 Monle go 2"dr . . H. T,, auto., vinyl lop , only 27 ,000 miles .'1969 Mustang F. B., V-8, 4 speed, radio .
·
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1969 Nova , 2 dr . sed ., 6 cyl ., std . SOLD , Beauliful' blue fin ish.
1969 V. W, Bug , 4 s peed , red , radio, nice ca r.
·1969 Caprice, V-8, auto ,, P .
P . B., P. W., air cond. Sharp .
1969 V , W, Sq . Back, 4 speed , radio, red .
1969 V . W. Fas t Bac k, auto , radio , tan f ini s h , A r e al n ice c ar .
1968 Fury ~Ill Fast Back, Alymo SQLOree n with vinyl top , V- 8 ~ auto .,

s.,

..

•

19t.B.Forci, Ga u oo, 2 dr . H. T;, V-8, auto ., P.

1972
1972
1970
1970

s., light gree n .

$1788
$1595
$ 1388
$1588
$1188
$1888
$1488
$1488 •
$1495
$1088

.· NEW TRADE INS

Gran Torino, 4 dr., V-8, vinyl lop, P , S., A. C.
Ford Pickup, V-8, auto., P . S., brown , ·
Chevelle, 2 dr. H. T., red &amp; blk, V-8, auto,, P. S,
Maverick, 2 dr ., 6 c yL , a uto., yellow.

$3295
$3188
$2295
$1595

We have just recently.
.
.traded for five real .nice
Volk swagen Bugs.

DON WATTS VOLKSWAGEN, INC~
- ~-

1969
1969
1967
1967

1966
1970

1
I
I
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I

And

·

'

1970

112

1969 y,
1968 '12
1966 "'
1967

l/4

GallipoUs

446-3273

tr uck
T . Chev . PU
T . Chev. PU
T . Chev. PU
T. GMC P U
T. GMC PU
T. GMC P U

NOW ·YOU CAN SAVE
UPTO

..:

.·,..•'
•'

•••
•

•

'•
"

:·••
."'•...

..

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I

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•

•

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•

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White with green viny l top, green in terior, fu ll
power equipment, AM -F M radio, T&amp; T w heel.
Cl imate Cont rol ai r conditi oning.

•
•
•

•4000 .

1968 'h T. GMC PU
1967 112 T, GMC PU
1967 112 T, GMC PU

3 Pc. Bedroom Suite from '69.95
to sl39.95

1959 112 T. Ford

SOMM fi R5 G,M,C.
TRUCKS, INC,

Pa·rsons

Cadillac . Oldsmobile
- '"' GMAC Fj nancing AYB!ilabll!!

141 5 Ea stern Avenue

-

bedroom suites, chest as low
as $9.95 washer and dryers,
dlnin·g room sui te ·with table
· and 4 chairs and bvffet,
specia l th is week only, $25.
New furnift.,~re. Special Sofa
bed, $56 .

STANDARD Oil Dealership,
located In Rio Grande, -Oh-io.-...
Excellent lo.;:ation and e)(.
cellent gal lonage, contact at
2&lt;5-5378.
80·18

.'

71 CHEV. BELAIR

Honda Offers
. .
You More
Motorcycle
Models Than
Any Other
Ma!lufaclurer

Honda
Has
It
All . ..
.

•
'

.

-;

Gas. Cook Stoves s39.95

'24~5

Used TV '29.95 to '125.00

.

~- Yrail Bikes .

Minibikes •

•

WOOD MOTOR SALES

Large sele ction of dishes and pottery , Many
mor e ite m s to c hoose from .

Eastern Ave.

"

For Sale

Gallipolis,

.•

0.

•
•
•

Fo Sal

ALL TYPES at · builaong
_ ..moterials. block, brick, sewer
FINANCING AVAILABLE
,
,.
r .e
pipes, windows, lintels, eoc.
~
'NEW and used Instr umen ts, 1969 OL DS Delta 88, hardtop, PS
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
Brun icard i House of Mu:sic. 54
&amp; PB, ai r cond itioning, ·ex. Hours 9105 Mon . thru Sat .
State Street. Phone 446-0687,
cell en t condit ion, 256-6737.
0. Phone HS -5121 after s.
- - - - - - - - 123-t' . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~. . _ _ _ _;_,_ _ _ _3_3-tf, '
79-6
I

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On/Off Road Bikes

..
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Dirt Bikes

SMITH AUTO -SALES
KANAU\iA, OHIO
'

NEW 1973 Zig -Zag Sewing
Machines in orig inal factory
carton . Zlg . Zag to ma ke
buttonholes, sew Ofl bull ons .
monagrams, and ma~e lan ey
designs wllh just the tw is t of a
s ingle-dial. left in fayaway _
and neyer been used. VJ ill sell
tor oniy $47 cash. or ter ms
ava ilable . El ectro Hyg i~ne
Co. Phone --146--1312'.

;

8J.6

131 e·tECTROLUX Va c uum
For
Cleane rs com ple te wi th at FREEZER beet. Cal l B. K.
tachmcnts, cordwinder .and
H' 1
paint spray.
Used
bu t ih$34.
ll~e
1
tgey, 245 .5255 evenngs
or
new
condition
. Pay
45
245-521 8.
cash or budget plan avaH~ble .
80-26
Electro · Hygiene co . Phone
_4312.
446
197PIBM0f NT ~ _Carl o, air , PS .,
83 _6
. ac 1 ory s 1ereo 1ap e,
exce ll en t condition. ~ 67 - 7723 . - - - -- - - 81-3
TRI -STATE
-------MOB IL E HOM ES SALES
KA NAU GA, OHIO,
WH.ITE Toy Poodles, AKC .
AC RO SS FROM HI -WA Y
registered, 12 weeks to 3
INN, KANAUGA
years old, J femal e, 2 males,
house trained and these mak e 10 )( so Frontier
. 10 )( 48 Richardson
lovely pets. 446-9539.
82-6 10 )( 46 Anit:rican
New Moon
- - -- - - - 1010 xx 50
46 Peerless
1967 APACHE fol,d out camper
with metal top . 446-3993 after a x 45 New Moon
1
6 anytime on weekends.
12 )( 70 Kir,19_5_w~~ .
82-J 10 x 35 A'tlani1 c IV\ob1le Ottice
Used Mobile Homes ·
Phone 446-0816
AKC min iature Sc hnau ze r ,
22-tt
She1.1and Sheep dog , Ba ss~ t
Hound , Cocker Spaniel, an~
for $50, over stocked K &amp; P
1965 FORD Gala)(ie 500. 446Kennels. 388-8274.
82-6 288S.
81 -3
'
so · Q A HONDA, Nimrod - - - - - - - - Camper, sl~eps 4, 446-3641 . 197? MAVERICK , 6 cy l. 3 speed.
-82·3 Phone 3.88·9962,
-----~-81 -3
BOLENS 770, 7 hp. rid ing lawn - - - - - - - - tractor, 32 in. mower, ex'- 2 HORSE-S.- 1 regi stered
ceuent condition . 446-4327.
quarter. 7 year geld ing $375. l
82-3 gelde~ Walker 7 year·s S250.
----~--Must sell 367-7432 .
81 -tf
1970 BSA Chopper $1 )100. 6751758
--'---- - - - - 82-12 USE 0 kitchen aid dishwasher
and si nk combination. Rifles, .
S112 ton air condi'tioner 3 phase, 22 magnum with sco pe; Colt
Allis Chalmers farm Tractor semi -auto. 22, call after 4 p.
with plow and sic kle bar. · m. 446-0793.
81 -3
Phon.&amp; 256-6470 .
82-3 - - - - - - - - -

Sale

.

4 Or , s edan , 350 c u . in ., V-8 engine, a ut o .
trans , p. stee ring , p . brakes, lac. air cond .,
Rosewood metalli c f in ish wi th bl k. v.in y l in t e ri o r , w-~- w tir e s ' E xtra n ice.

Maytag Wringer Washers '49.95

Sale

- .161951 BUI CK Hearse, 2 owi-lers, t9S7 CHEVY 2 dr . Sta tion ATTE NTIO N. FARMERS
needs cl utc h, otherwise in
wagon. Mint - condition. 270---~- 16 - 16 or 6-24-24 ter til .tze~ $87
e)(cel lent r unni ng ·condition.
H.P. Ba lanced , pos itract ion
per ton through Apnl 7,
Best o1fer. 446-1065 after 4 5: 38, 4 speed. Many e)(tras
week ly price adjustment .
K;enne~h_Higley ..__ 245- 52JB . .......
SB50. 446-4999.
p.m.
80-4
83-S
7a.tt

'.

_9x12 New Linoleum Rugs s3.95

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Pomeroy

Open Eves. Til6- Tii5 ' P . M. Sat.
"You'll Like Our Qual ity Way of Doing BusJness"

·Chest of Drawers s7.9S to s19.95

7 COUC HES starting at SIS,

'

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133 Pin e St .

267-tf

For Sale

Gallipolis, Ohio

. HCVDA

•

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
992-5342

For Sale ·

SMITH
SAYS

Us, Wh y Don 't You ? ?

1972 PONTIAC

!3 )

.

· · From Mighty io Min( Honda has it alii

'3700
'

OR. MONACO NOW IN STOCK!

50 State Street

•

. Yo ur Neighbor Dealt With

600 E. Sta te Street
Ath ens, Ohio

ON ANY DODGE POLARA

ARROLL NORRIS DODGE INC•

••

noc·

Da le R. Sa nders In c.

•

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•

70 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

'1 I 00000.

'

Control. air cond ition ing. /Ow mileag·e. Sha r p!

T . Ford PU

446-2532

•

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G ALLIPOLI~. ·OHIO

"""'"'""-

•

1·

- ·

UPPER ROUTE 7

taadge

:.•
..•'••:

70 Cadillac H.T. Coupe

Good Selection of
U!~ed Furniture ·

SMITH BUitK, 'IN·C.

.·•• .

Bette' 8
..
f Uy5 .
·on The Best

SEE A MEMBER OF OUR SALES STAFF:

Dodge Cars

•

J

UP TO 42 _MONTHS TO PAY

•

I r-------------:--;:;:;:=~~1
I
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· Corne r of Third and Cedar
Now Open For !'lu s jness

C h~v.

1970 CHEVELLE. exce ll ent
cond iti on, best off er, 446-0563
after· 5 p.m.

'

To Go!

TO CHOOSE FROM

I

I P5obr"' Hard/Of) Sur:Jctn

1966 COMET, 390, one owner ,
good cond ition . Call after 6
p.m. 388·8823

.

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CEDAR STREET FURNITURE

1969 Olds 88

YEARLING Angu s Bulls ,
eligible tor registration. Ph .
446-3968 atter 7 p.m.

•,

Fu ll power, go ld finish, matching Inter ior, Climate

1969 Dodge Stat ion Wagon

-------

NOW'S THE TIME!

..
,•

• 35 USED CARS

1639 Eastern Ave.

1973

W e have made .a special purchase of
BUICK LeSABRES, 4 DR.
SEDAN ~. Equ1pped with automatic transmission, power steering,
power ~1sc brakes, white -wall tires, air conditioner, custom seat
be lts, h n t ed glass, bumper protective strips, bUilJper guards, il o or
guard s, remote mif row, carpet savers, de l ulte wheel covers
protective body side molding s. Other Models Priced According ly:

HARLAND WOOD, GLENN MONTGOMERY, BOB·BRICKL.ES

'

-------:--

Monda y 12 Noon 1119 P.M.
Tues., Wed., Fri. 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
. Thu r, 8 A.M. to 9 P.M.-Sat. 8 A.M. lo 12 Noon

·

Be-lair, 6 cyl. auto. tran s., one
owner , 40,000 Sl ,350. See at 541
4th Ave.

Martin Ford has a good selection of 1973 Ford 112 &amp; J/4 Ton .
Pickup Trucks . All priced lower than anyone in the area .
Remember - No Salesmen No. Sales Commission to pa·y .
means a Better Deal for You!

••

eALL NEW CARS IN
STOCK ARE DISCOUNTED

I

Pomeroy '

-----1970 CHEVROLET, 4 door ,

1968 FURY Ill Pfymou th , 2
door. F·a ir, P.S. &amp; P.B., 4461397. See at -· 414 Edgewood
Qri"¥e.

$3862
I
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.
83-6

]973 RiCKMAN 250 CC l',loto
Cross , e)(cellent condition
$895. 1957 Chev . · Van Truck,
• 283 Che"¥y engi ne both SlOO.
Call 388-8254 .
83-3

1973 FURY Ill 4 DR. SEDAN

For Sale

1969 'It T . Ford P U .

1969 V2
1965 :~;..

co.

POMEROY ·MOTOR

'64 FORD Faicon, 446-1452.

· ROTO -TILLER and radio
recorder player com bination.
Call before noon. 446--3722 .
83-3

.

A ir and a ll the ex tras.

II1
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trading policy!

..-----~--------------c

T. GMC 'PU
IHC 1ruc:k tractor .
'I' TO. GMC PU
GM C 'lz ton PU
Ford lh ton PU
'12 ton Chev.
GMC 'I' ton PU
GMC v, ton PU
'I&lt;

1971 3 T.

&amp;

" Your Chevy Dea le r "
992-2 126. .
~en Eve s . Til8
·

1967 JJ,I T. GMB PU .

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truckN~~.~~~rters

,_

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We ·are here to please you ••• you'll .

, _,
-,.--_- - - - - I
GOOD CL,EA N LUMP and I
Gra nde. Phone 24,S51 t5

..

a ir . 256-6SS8,

.'

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1
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9oo

1965 BUICK LaSabre, fa ctory

1958 PL YMOU'fH, 4 door ,
automat ic tran smission, good
mech.;~nical condition, good
tires. 256-6707.

$4475

I

I Needs mofor work , good body ,
1 automati c trans., r~dio . ·
1
I ... ······ ········ .. .. ................................. I

1967 F IAT 8SO Spider . Call 446-llike our appraisals
0007 after S. ··
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1

. 446-11 71
- - . , . . - - - - --

•
.

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500 ....... '495

FORD

A ir and all th e extra s.

··

3

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. •
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DODGE · CORO~ET

condition, -446-35-48.

SPLIT level trailer, J bedroom
bath and hc'll f, 367-7167 .

$200 I
~i~:!£~~~l~}~"nk2 ;~~~~m: 1 !:~!mPG~£ ~8~o Tb0 ~ speed $995 1 Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth ·
~~~~~~~Ln: Aven::tterns I !.~~~b ~~~~~~~n.~ c~~~ood $595 ~~~-----------·-----·
se t. 955 Second Avenue .
446 11 71
276-tf
.

400 2 BBL , w -s ·w tires, d e lu xe bumpe r g r oup , la c. a ir i:ond :, tinted g lass,

6 cylinder,

2 DOOR HARDTOP

The hOt one &amp; Sure to please, V-a, automat-ic . ..good tires,
good body with green fini sh, rad io, a special any day.

I
I
NEW: Serta a nd Bemco mat- I
tress and box springs. La rge I
se lection in stock - twi n, full, I

.'·,'

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1966
CHEVELLE HT CPE. ...........~749
.

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1967 FOR 0 Galaxie, SOO GOQd

No Salesmen!
No Sales
Commission!

1973 CHRYSLER NEWPORT

V-8 automa tic -tran s .. power stee:ring &amp; brakes, . rad io,

g~od t ires. priced to please .

MARTIN

NEW GEIVERif'IOI\I

$3550 ,-·

1966 OLDS F85 CPE................. '595

1

83 3

------

73 FDFID PICKUPS

318 engine, P.S., P.B.

I

Loca l 1 owner car with low mileage. Beautiful cream
fin ish, good black nylon top, bucket seats, console. new lst
line w-w tires , V-8, automatic, p. steering, one of the
scarce ones &amp; a real sport car.

us . Phone 446-0874.

2 DOOR HARDTOP

I

1968 CAMARO CONV. .. ··· ........ .s1695

I
I

cast\

adding machine i9 S. Glan
display case Zl" ~~; 8" "' 1-4" ,

1973 . SATELLITE .SEBRING

I

has' been cared for, 307 V-8, automatic trans., power
steer ing, rad io, good 1st line tires , vinyl interior trim,
steel blue finish . Hurry in!

an
SMITH-CORONA
n:s1gcr

$2950

I

m-

pkg .,

campo&lt;

S6.SO. Phone .u6 017&lt;1 ,

AND ARE AT

• ,:--

· 1973 DUSTER'

'I

1

,:,..
...

·vln~·

,,•t??-:·.

Joe J ohnson

$2630

Sun Roof, Spacemaker
automatic trans .

SELF CONTAINED

Hottest Deals in Town

2 Seat St. Wagon, local 1 owner car &amp; it shows how welt it

I

For Sale

YOUR CHOICE

I

I

Open Evenings
1il 7 p.m. &amp;
Sat. 'til 5 p.m.
Service 1il 12
Noon on Saturday

·sMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC

I
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I
I1
I
I
I
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4 Door Seda n, 32.000 miles by ori g inal local owner . V :8
engine, au tomatic trans .. power steering, radio, good w-w

I

I

.

REMEMBER
We Seroice
What We Sell-

I

1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU ...........s1995 1

For Sale

THEY'VE GOT TO BE THE

2 - 1973 GOLD DUSTERS

I

I

CEWARD CALVERT, Salesman

Bill

finish with vinyl top .

I

1968 fORD -----~!!&gt;.!!!~c~~-------------------'-14~ 5
BONNEVILLE 2 DR. HJ. ONLY
1966 PONTIAC 34,521
MILES ON THIS BEAUTY ·----------.!9~ ~
1969 OLDS --~l!~~~v~!:.~E!!:lf:!:... _______________ .!_19~"5··

'

USED CAR . ! GALLIPOLIS
I
BEST II CHRYSLER·
L~W
BUYS II .PLYMOUTH
M
I
NEW CAR SALE
POMEROY MOJDJL I
I

!

31- The Sunday Times · Senlipel, Sunday, April8, 1973

•

---=----

----CAMPER, Apache, sto"¥e,

CATAL.INA Brougham, 15,000
miles, a ir cond . Xtra Ni ce .

•3595
BO NN EV I LLE Brougham, 4
dr. Hdtp .. air c ond ., 60, 40 s eat.
powe r windows, se at. door
loc ks, new · Prem t ire s . Nice.

1970 MERCURY
MARQUIS 4 dr . Hdlp ., 8,000
actu a l mi les, s howroo m condi ti on . · a ir cond ., black with
b lac k vfnyl lop.

•·

'269
1972 VEGA
HATCHBACK, r a dio , 4 s peed ,
12 ,000 mi les .
. ..

.9
'1895
OLDER MODEL CLEARANCE
THESE CARS HAVE TO BE SOLD. WE NEED THE ROOM

'67 PONTIAC 4 DR...............................$595
'69 OPEL STA. WAGON -....................._.JA95
'67 CHEVELLE SEDAN .......................... $495
'65 BUICK LeSABRE ............................. ~395
'64 FORD 2 DR. HDJP..........................nOD
'60 FALco N··.············· .................. -. ................$75
'62 FALCON ...............................................~75
'

Sale . .

For
1969 MERCURY Comet. 47,000
heater, dinett e, slee ps 6 and · m iles, e)(cellent runn ihg
condit ion, with e)( lra s. Phone JUST taken in , de l'u xe zig zag GROCERY business for sale ,
18" Lawn Boy Mower, Call
USED FURNITURE
367-7444 between 6 &amp; 8.
at_ter 5 p.m. &lt;146- 1 ~40.
sewi n,g
mach ine .
This
building lor sale or lease ,
82 3
SALE-20 P CT. OFF
machin e.
darn S,
em ·
phone /73-5618 from a:30 p.m.
broider ies , ove r casts , but to 10 p.m . for appofntmen1.
ON ALL USED
accessories ; .tonholes , pay ba lance '$36.50
67·tf
EYE LEVEL oven and counter CHIN CHILLA's
FURNITURE IN STOCK
cages. water bottles; blue
or payments can bf? ar r an9ed.
~
range. Call 446-2235.-.
THAT'S Rig ht. Rice's Wil l give .
sparkle
dust
,
etc.
good
garden
446-0255.
'81-3
. you 20 pet. off on oUr reg ular
tractor, all accessories,
13·tf
IF Yc5U are bu il ding a new low prices. They m!JSt go to
turn
ing plow disk cultivator,
home or remodeling, see us. make room for more mer - ·
1971 VW, -Super Beetle, . one
Wea r~ builders. Distributor
c;handise co ming ln . No
owner ,·J3,000miles. $1595 . Ph . . etc., meai slicing mach ine .
Richard Lawhorn . Call 388-.
for Hotpo int APp liances, reasonable offer refused .
446-0008.
Need
Another
Bldg
.?
81 -tf 8528. Cal l after 6 p. m. ·
All ison EJectr ic .
81 -6 S.EE our alumin·um bldg s.
154-tf
Heavy · duty , wit h. flooring ,
wir.ed
lor
electric.
Al
e;..,
Wcs.t
PIPES, Pipe;. Popes, GBD, 1973 Plj:KMAN 2SO -CC Moto
Virginia ch'Jnk co.d Jroiir\ MAGNETIC Signs lor cars and
Cheratan , BBB, Jobey, ·Hilson , Cross, exc~llenl condi tion
tile, bell tile, cemen l ,an d
trucks All kinds, Simmons
and others. Tawney's Pipe ·· $895, 1957. ·Chev .- V~n Tr uck,.
•
Printirig and Offic:e Equipmortar. ' Ga llipolis Block _&amp;
and Trophy ·Hovse, 422.Second '283 Che ... y engine both &lt;li lOO .
•
1 2 Pine, 446-2783.
Coal
Co.,
123
ment.
NEW
.
&amp;
USEO
FUliNITUliE
Ave.
Call 388-8254,
207 -tt
S2-.tf
154 Second, 446- 9~23
m -tt·,
81-3 .

For Sale

For Sale

R·ICE'S

----'-----

�•

32 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, AprilS, 1973

.Adulthood bill up in senate ,
By LEE LEONARD
contracts, marrying without
UP! Statehouse Reporter
consent , obtaining loans, filing
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The lawsuits , and other legal acts.
Ohio Senate IS to vote Tuesday
House Democrats will be
on~ bill which would lower the hurrying this week to revamp
age of adulthood from 21 to lB. the general appropriations bill
The same proposal, an out- in line with the re comJll'OWth of the constitutional mendallons or Gov. John J.
amendment reducing the vot- Gilligan , who announced last
ing age, cleared uie Senate last week that an additional $118
year, but d100 m the House.
million will be availab le for
At that time, the Senate in- serted
a
controversial
pmosion authorizing 111-to-2().
year olds to purchase and drink
alcoholic beverages.
Such a proviswn has not yet
gone into the bill this year, but
anattemptmaybemadeon the
Senate floor to insert it . Sen.
Harry Meshel, D-Youngstown,
BURLINGTON. Ohio (UP! )
and ~n. Donald E. Lukens, R- The first National Bank of
Middietown, who successfully
Ironton was robbed for the flrst
put m the drinking provision
time in its 124-year history
last year, are prime ca ndidates
Fnda y when a gunman entered
to try the amendment agam . .
the Burlington branch and
The bill, sponsored by Sen .
escaped with an undetermmed
Stanley J . Aronoff, Ramount of cash.
Cincinnati, sets the age of
Police said the man, o(
maJority at 18 for Slgmng
mediUm bu1ld and '" hiS 20s,
forced three tellers to lie on the
floor before he fled to a waiting
auto Witnesses told pollee a
man of the same descnption
was seen waiting tn a car w1th
a companion about a block
away from the bank shortly
befote the robbery.

I ron ton bank

k fi
h
ta en or cas

in 1st robbery

A
NEIGHBOR
OF-vOURS
S11

NO ONE HURT
POMEROY - No one was
hurt in a single car accident
Fnday at ·, :45 a.m. in Salem
your
Tow nship Shenff Robert C.
trmilr
Hartenbach's Dept. said that
iniUflnCI
Benjamtn 'Pnce Fix, St,
n"dJ
Carrol K. Snowden
Albans, was traveling west on
Park Central Hotel Bldg .
SR
124 when his car went out of
Ph. 446-4290
Home 446 -4518
control off the highway to the
r.::::-:":"G:;_;a IIi po Iis
'"" ,....
Likl.
right, and when he applied
goorf n1igllbor,
brakes, the car sk•dded off the
-S1111 f1tm
..
-road
mto a ditch on the left and
•
11 thtrr
turned over, Thre was heavy
Sl~te Farm ln~ur ance Compan1e!.
damage to the car and no
Home Otf1ces : Bloom ington , !lh no1!.
, __ _ _ _ _ _ p 7305
Cilatwn.

,.,
"'

him

I N&gt; V IIIHI

fiscal I973-7li.
The governor propused
spo:nding $M million of the
extra money on public school
. subsidies and ,another $34.7
_milhon to higher education _
education .
A substitute bill is t~ be
drawn up and presented to the
House finance Committee,

Volunteers

in clean up
• • •

actiVIties
HUNTINGTON - four area
volunteers _will be chairmen of
their distri cts when close to
1,000 Tn-State Area Cubs and
Scouts " clean up their TriState neighborhoods" on April
28.
The four are assisting the
scouting movement in coordina ling plans for Keep
Amen ca Beautiful Day,
Saturday, Apnl 28. Scott Vass
of Huntington, the OwensIllinOis executive who is Keep
America
Beautiful Day
chairman lor the Tri-State
Area COuncil, said the district
volunteers· are :
Lawaca
District, Jtm
Wage r s, 136 Honeysuckle
. Lane, Huntington.
.
Mtdland District, Jefry Fox,
2828 Saltwell Road, Huntington .
Kentucky District, Bill
Brooks, 2716 Carolyn Street,
Ashland.
M-G-M DIStrict, Loren Neal,
Route I, Bidwell.
The four will coordmate
acttvities in thetr area as explorers, scouts a1'1d Cub scouts
from more than 40 units pian
and execute cleanup and
conservation projects. A year
ago, scouts picked up more
than 45 tons of trash in the TriState Area .

NLRB suit
•

lS

PT. PLEASANT - An unfair
labor practice suit has been
flied w&lt;th the National Labor
Relations Board of Cincinnati
by S. D. Littlepage, attorney
for the Filley &amp; Shilling
'fruckmg Company of New
Haven, against the Special
Haulers Local 100.
The suit states the strike now
10 progress at the truckmg
co mpany terminal is a
se condary boycott and is
prohibited by law.
It was announced last
Tuesday by the president of the
Fraternal Association of
Special Haulers Local 100 that
picket lines had been set up at
the company terminal and that
Fraley &amp; Shilling were the
prime contract carriers for
Foote Mmeral Company.
The local also said the
company had been notified that
picket hnes would be set up
there if any Fraley &amp; Shilling
trucks were loaded.

NO REASONABLE

OFFER REFUSED
l PONTIAC$ I

1971 Catalina, 4 dr. hardtop, a1r condit ion , sharp
1971 Pontiac GTO 2 dr. hardtop, beaut1ful wh1te w1th
black v1nyl top
1969 Pont1ac Tempest Custom S, a1r, one owner,
sha rp car.
1967 Pontiac Bonnev1lle 4 dr hardtop, one lo ca l
owner . Sharp Has a1r conditioning
1966 Pontiac Bonnevi lle 2 dr . hardtop ReC\ I sharp
car. Full power A·C,
1966 Pontiac Bonneville 4 dr hardtop Anoth er
sharp car.
1966 Pontiac Starchief, a1r, full power
1965 Ponhac Bonneville , Converhble.

•

\

BUICKS

"'

m

"'
n

&lt;

m

I

COME SEE US AT .. _

BOB REES

PONTIAC, INC.
Under New Management
orner Third &amp; Court St.

Phone 446-1513

Ministerial Association

"'"'....

.,

!;:

&lt;
'-7;~:;-;;:-;E:---;:'pA-:-::-R:;:IT ~

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCf·IARGES: Mrs. Hottie
Hussell , Mt. Alto; Mrs. Denms
C:nglish, Mrs. Guy Me•
WJ!liams, Densil Roush, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Garland
Mayes, Gallipolis ferry; Clyde
Weaver, New Haven; Mrs .
Archie Starcher, Gallipolis;
Matt1e
Huffman,
Point
Pleasant; C:sther Roush,
Letart; .George Mayes, Henderson; Mrs. Ottie Benson,
Ashton .
Ne\\ C1tiz'ens, April 7, a son
to Mr . and Mrs. Char les
Landers, Pomeroy .

BARBARA ANTHONY

DONNA BOYD

MINISTERS Of PARTICIPATING churches of the Middleport
will hold community Good Friday services, Apnl20 from 12 noon to 3 p.m. at the Middleport
Church of Christ, with the Rev. Raullin Moyer host pastor. Participating ministers are, front
row, 1..-, Rev. Moyer, Rev. Dwight Zavitz; back row, Rev. Audry Miller, Rev. Charles Simons
and Rev. Robert Bumgarner. Absent were the Rev. Henry Keys, Jr., and the Rev. Roy Carter .
Business establishments will be closed from noon until 1 p.m. The public is asked to 'Please
cooperate in order that aU personnel-will be free to attend the service.
TWO ON LIST
POMEROY - Two Meigs
County students - have been
named to the honor roil for the
Winter. tenn at Mount Vernon

Nazarene College m Mount
Vernon , Ohio. They were Mary
Lou K1ng of Route 2, and Susan
Rusche!, 119 Ebenezer Street,
both of Pomeroy,

A thought for the day:
American statesman Benjamin
frankhn said, "He that goes a
borrowing goes a sorrowing."

Delegates and alternates to 27th Annual Buckeye Girls'
State scheduled June 14-24 at Capital University, Columbus,
have been selected by the AmeriCan Legion Auxilianes of
feeney-BeMett Post 20ll, Mlddleport, and Drew Webster
Post 39, Pomeroy,
Girls selected to attend Girls' State under sponsorship or
co-sponsorship of the Auxiliary of feeney-Bennett Post are
Donna Marie Boyd, Barbara Jean Anthony, and Ingrid
Darlene Hawley, delegates, with Jacqueline Hutton, alternate, aU juniors at Meigs High School; and Jane Danell
Whitehead, Tony a Elaine Keebaugh and Nancy Jean Miller,
delegates, and Paula Hauber, alternate, all juniors at
Eastern High School.
Selected as delegate by the Drew Webster Post Auxiliary IS
Diana Carsey, junior at Me1gs High School. Her alternate is
Diane McAngus, also a student at Meigs High.
Miss Boyd, daughter of Mr. and Mrs . Lawrence Boyd,
Middleport, is on the student council and a member of the

and Chair Throws - Toss cushions - Bed
Pillows.
Everything you need for home improvement
for Spring and Sum111er 1973.

VOL XX~ No. 250

future Business Leaders. She attends Sunday School at
Mount Moriah Baptist Church and her hobbies: are -sewing
and readmg .
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Anthony, Middleport,
Miss Anthony plays in both the marchmg and the concert
bands of Meigs High School. She •s active in the Tennis Club
and had a role in the junior class play . Her hobbles are
bowling, music and swimming. A ll)ember of the Middleport
First BaptLst Church she is pianist for the Junior Department
and Sings in the church choir. She IS co-sponsored at Girls'
State by the Citizens Nat10nal Bank.
Miss Hawley , co-sponsored by Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority. is the daughter of Mrs. Dianne
Hawley of Pomeroy and the late Clarence Hawley. She IS a
member of Trinity Church and a member of the youth group
there. For eight years she has been active in 4-H and is now a
member of the Middleport Merry Munchers Club. She serves
on the Me~gs County Junior fan· Board, the Meigs County Ul

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Drapery Hardware

Sing le Rods - Double Rods · Draw Drapes
- You nam e the problem and it ca n be
solve~ by using Kirsch drapery hardware.
See the complete selec ti on now at
Elberfelds. Brackets . Traverse Rocfs .
Sing le Rods - Double Rods - Rods for
sheers wtth drapes over them . Sash Rods Cafe Rods Big select1on of widths fr om 18
mches tb 120 inches - wider by special
order servtce Take t1me to see this fine
Kirsch line of Drapery Hardware

Custom Made Draperies
•

Ready for you to see and select . New patterns in custom made draperies.
Hundreds of patterns and co lors for your easy selection - Lined or
unlined - any width - any length .
For those who want the very best in window treatment - don 't settle for
less than the fine line of custom made drapes at Elberfelds. Allow about 2
weeks for delivery .

Elberfelds Are. Headquarters For
Joanna Window Shades
Select your favorite quality and color in the proper size from our convenient window shade center.
Stock shades in sizes 36 inches wide up to 72 inches and if you have
narrower windows, we'll cut then) to your measure free of charge.
For windows that need special size (width or length) - ask about
E!berfelds special order window shade service.

:~~~~-~

Special orders for wider shades or
longer length are given-' spe-cial
attention and delivery is prompt.

Advisory Committee, and is a member of U1e Meigs County 4H .Jumor Leadership Club.
At Meigs High School, Miss Hawley IS active m the Tennis
Club, is a member o£ the National Honor
Society, on the yearbook staff, plays with the symphonic
band and was a nagbearer with "the marchmg band . She IS
also a candystriper at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
MISs Hutton, alternate to the three Meigs H1gh School
delegates, is Ute daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Manford Hutton,
Middleport. She is a member of th e foture Homemakers of
America, two years; U1e Future
. Business Leaders ' and the
Natwnal Honor Society,
Co-sponsored by the Recdsvllle_Cornmunity Builders Class,
M1ss Whitehead is the daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead- of Reedsville. She is a five year member of
Eastern H1gh School's marching hand, has played with .the
concert band for f1ve years, and the s ta~e band and pep band
(Continued on Page 5)

JANE WHITEHEAD

TONYA KEEBAUGH

NANCY MILLER

PAULA HAUBER

Boycatt fails
to dent high
•
meat przces

MONDAY, APRIL 9, 1973

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS
ll_y Uniltld Press International
Mrs. Rose Isetti of Louisville, Ky ., summed up
the week long meal boycott for many a housewife:
"I have only a vague memory of beef. Veal I have
totally forgotten. 1t wa~ all so long ago."
The boycott, which officially ended at midnight
Saturday, genera lly succeeded in cutting down on
meat sales. But, with a few notable exceptions , it
failed to put a dent in high meat prices.
There were, however, some bright spots.

Blockade broken

1\irsc'"'

In stock at all t imes 1n the c~rta1n und
drapery depa rtment . Ven~tian blinds f_rom
2&lt;1 1nches wide up to and mcludtng 36 1nch
width - all 64 1nches long.

JACQUELINE HUTTON

Devoted To The /ntere.~t.~ OJTiw Meiw-Ma.mn Area

A complete new selection ot tine quality
drapes. Fiberglas - Fashionglass. Rayon
and Acetate blends - solid colors and a
tremendous array of patterns and color s for
any room in your home . Many styles have
the popular thermal lining - most all are
permar;&gt;ent press.
Be sure to see this fine line of drape~ ies.
Buy the pattern and color you like best in
the proper size for your windows.

Venetian Blinds

INGRID HAWLEY

entine

Ready Made Draperies

Racine.

D1scharg&lt;¥J_ - Paul Burns,
Mary G1·ady, Cha rlotte Patterson, Catherine Wood,
Gladys Rumfleid, James
Jones J - charles , Ferguson,
Betty Carsey, Debora Holland,
Mary Roush.

DIANA CARSEY

G-irls State delegates, alternates are announced

E lberfelds invite you for a visit to the busy
drapery department now to see the Large
selection of Curtains and Draperies. Kirsch
drapery hardware- window shades - venetian
blinds - Roll-up blinds - Bedspreads - Couch '

Admitted - Myrtle Bentz,
Minersville; Clarence Koehler,
Reedsville; Pauline Russell,
Middl eport; Rita Stump,
Cheshire; Vick1e Roush,

1967 Chev. Bel A1r 4 dr . sedan, local owner car.
1964 Chev. Stat1'on _Wagon . Runs good

1972 Chrysler Newport Royal4 dr hardtop A C Full
oower , l1ke new, local owner
_1970 Ford Galaxie 500 v.a, 2 dr . hardtop, marOull,
real clean cA r
2-1966 Olds Custom V1sta cru1ser wagon, 2 sea ts
'1965 Plymourn 2 dr. hardtop Runs good 1
1964 Mercury Monclair 4 dr. sedan Cheilo

DIANE McANGUS

Drapery and -Curtain Department on the Second Floor

Veterans Memorial Hospital

wagon .

[ ~OTHERS f

'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

NEWS

~

st~tion

committee, said he hopes tD
hear proponents of tlle EllA
Tuesday, opponents the
following Tuesday and then be
ready for a committee vo'te.
The House State Government
Committee will meet Wedn.,..
day night for a final hearing on
a proposed code of ethics for
public officials and employes.
l\ep. Michael DeiBane, D-Hubbard. committee chairman,
was forced to schedule the
extra hearing to accommodate
members who complained theY
were being !1slampeded." into a
quick vote 011. the matter.
The- conimittee will hold
another hearing on the ethiCS
prgposal next week to receive
amendfi1ents and then vote on
it.
The House Insurance Committee will open hearings
Tuesday afternoon into a pair
of 110o-fault" automobile in~
surance bills.
The Senate Commerce and
Labor Committee will continue
hearmgs Wednesday afternoon
on a series of unemployment
compensation bills.
Both
chambel"S
have
scheduled "skeleton" sessions
for Monday, and full floor
sessions for Tuesday.

HOSPITAL

1968 Bu1:k Le5abre 2 dr hardrop Sharp
1968 Buick 4 dr. sedan , full power
. 1964 Buick Skylark 2 seat

filed

which is trying to wrap up
hearings on the complex fiscal
document.
House Speaker A.G. Lanciooe, 0-Bellaire, expressed
concern last week that the
administration's proposed
changes might delay House.
passage of the budget bill.
Lancione said he still hopes
Ule Finance Committee can act
on the proposal by the end of
the week, with a floor vote the
roilowing week, before the
planned EasteLrecess.
He repeated, however, there
will be no Easter recess for the
House 1f the budget has not
been passed .
uwe have to give the Senate
two full months until the end of
the fiscal year June 30 to deal
with the budget," Lancione
said, " or they'll complain we
didn'tgive them enough time.' '
The Senate Elections Committee will hold its first public
hearing on the "equal rights"
amendment to the U.S. Constitution, passed by the House two
weeks ago. The hearing will be
held in the Ohio bepartments
Building, which has a larger
hearing room than the
Statehouse.
Aronoff, chairman of the

Curtains
See the com nlete selection of
Cape Cod Curta_ins in white,
red, gold, blue, yellow,' green,
orchid and pink in lengths
from ,24 inches long to 63 inches long. Valances to match.
You'll find dacron sheer
curtains in all lengths 36 inches to 90 inches long - 80
inches wide to the pair. A
tremendous selection of solid
CQJors and white.
;-. Bo"Y these dacron sheers for
la.sting - beauty, minimum
care. •

ELBERFELDs--IN POMEROY
--.

ll!LE HONORED - Nick Thle, center, was presented the
SV AC's Most Vaiuble Back Trophy, Saturday night during
the Sout,hern High School Basketball Banquet. The annual
award is co-sponsored by Radio Station WJEH and the
Sunday Times-Sentinel. Bill Gray, left, WJEH Sports
Dir"'\tor, and Dale Rothgeb, Jr., right, Times-Sen!inel
staffer, made the presentation, The trophy would have been
given at the AllSVAC Sports Banquet but that event has been
cancelled. Similar trophies will be presented to Ky ger
Creek's Orland Cremeans, the league 's Jllost Valuable
Lineman, and)o Phil Robinson of Symmes Valley, SVAC's
Most Valuable Basketball player.

PHNOM PENH (UP!) Five sh1ps sped through a rain
of artillery fire under cover of
· U.S. bombs and bullet' Sunday
ta break a 19-day Communist
blockade of the Mekong River
and carry vital su pplies to
Phnom Penh.
Two petroleum tankers and
three cargo ships were part of
an orginal rehef neet of 19
vessels that left South Vietnam
for the Cambodian capital.
Despiteheavybombingralds
by American warplanes, ineluding B52s, a Commumst
artillery barrage again'lt the
convoy set a Panamanwn
cargo ship ablaze on the river
and forced 1.1 other ships to
turn back . The rest of the
convoy was reported rerormmg to make a second attempt
today.
The sh1ps that made •t to
Phnom Penh earned fuel, food
. BOOSTERS TO ME£'!'- ·
The Eastern Band Boosters
Will meet at 7 30 p m. Tuesday
at the high school for
d1scuss1ons on band camp, ta g

and ammumtion, all '" short
supply after Communist forces
:;evered all main land and
water routes.
' The Communist-led offenstve
m Cambodw had cut all m~Jor
supply routes to the capital and
ruel supplies were exhausted
and •food stocks dwmdhng
when the ships broke the
Mekon g blockade.
Earlier, U.S. Air l'orce Ct30
Hercules transport planes had
started an airlift or ammunition and other war su~
phes into the capita l and other
government strongholds encircled or endangered by
Commumsts.
Capt. Lo See Chang, who
pifot-ed the Panamanian cargo
sh1p Lucky Star on t he
hazardous 60-mile voyage up
the Mekong, said an inibal
Communist atta ck hit the
convoy while it ., was still in
South VIetnam. He sa1d most of
the ships then turned back to
the port of Tan Chau in South
Vietnam.
"I've,. sailed this river 20
t1mes and this was the worst
tnp I've ever had/' he said.

raced up the river, it was hit caught fire on the river .
Lo reported heavy American
w1th several rounds of artillery
fire , bazooka shells and at least air support pounded both sides
100 rounds or small arms f1re. of the r.iver in advance of the
The only casualty reported m convoy, but appeared to have
the operataon was a seamen little Success in silencing
wounded when h1s ship, the Ali, Communist guns.

Picasso Isolated
MOUGINS, France (UP! ) In death, Pablo Pica sso
remamed as isolated from hts
neighbors as he did m hfe, his
body lying m lonely sll&lt;te in his
t:irt-f1lled Medi lerrancan villa
behmd locked 1ron gates that
kept awt~y both his mourmng
neighbors and the cunous
outsiders.
But around the wOrld, adn-urers and arttsl'i poured out
tributes Lo the Spantard they
honurcd as the 2oth century's
most mfluentJ~l &lt;::~nd producllve
pamter .
Picas.'io d1ed Sunday of lung
congestJon and heart failure
shortly after he sent the last 200

pamtmgs he did to the c.: 1ty of
Av1gnon for an exhibition.
Picasso Jived the last 10
years of his life a rec.:l use and
even the mayor of nearby
V'"ctllouns was turned away
fr om the 1ron gate barrmg the
little road to his tile-roofed,
vme-covc1·ed stone villa. Only
two dfJclors. his lawyer, a son
and his w1fe mourned inside
the vil la
Some cntics questioned the
grcCJ tne,ss of some aspecl'i of
Picasso's works, but most
agrted h1 s brilliance lay m the
uum&lt;::~lched Vi!ricty of his
output - from abstr:1d lo
realt st1c palnbng, from paper
collage:s to ccrain1cs.

Consumers in Wisconsin ,
Pennsylvnnw, West V1rginia ,
Ohio and Maryland today will
be able to refHrnilwnzc themselves w1th the tastes of their
favonte cuts of meat at
reduced pric"Cs.
The Kohl Cor p , lhe largest
food concern in Wisconstn,
announced that, effective
today, meill prices will be
reduced to 15 per cent br 1ow
ceiling prices, marking what a
company spokesma n said
would be an average savmg of
20 cenlr; per pound on most
fresh meal~ .
The Godfrey Co. of Waukesha, Wis., also annoUnced that
meat pnces at 1ts Sentry food
Stores would be lowered this
week, but &lt;lid not specify the
amount of the price reductions.
In Pittsburgh, the F'oodland
cham store, with 104 stores in
Pennsy lvania, West Virginia,
Ohio and Maryland, said it

would cut meat prices by 10
c~nl':i a pound on some items
and as much as 30 cents per·
pound on prime cuts effective
today.
- " ft 's a gamble, but we hope
.the volume of sales will make
up the difference," Foodland's
meat operations manager said.
"1f not, we're m trouble."
Boycott leaders today were
preparing to follow up the
pocketbook protest with a longrange campaign against high
food pnces. Consumers groups
and boycott organizers planned
u meetmg in Washmgton to
coordinate future activtlies.
The butchers union, which
SfJW many of. its members la1d
off as a result of the boycott,
called on President NLXon to
fire Agriculture Secretary Earl
Butz, a leading opponent of
farm price controls.

•

keep
deputies busy

By United Press International
MARIETIA, OHIO - THREE CANOES of a Boy Scout
· expedition capsized in the debris-laden Little Muskmgum River
near here Sunday and a 12-year-oid boy was missmg and
presumed drowned. Willard C. Hassman of Cameron di!jappeared in the water while 14 other scouts from the Woodsfield
area and their scoutmaster escaped injury. Two other canoes on the five-canoe trip did not tip over.
Shenff's Robert C. HarThe three canoes capsized about B:30 a.m. Sunday. Volunteer tcnbach's Dept. was busy over
firemen and deputies from the Washing,ton County sheriff's of- the weekend and early today
fice searched the area and draggetl the river the rest of the day
investigating traffic accidents. '
but could not locate Hassman .
Saturday at 4 p.m. no one
was in]·ured ' m a three-car
CINCINNATl_.,-CBS NEWSMAN WALTER CRONKITE told crash,.on SR 7. Boneta June
a weekend, meeting of businessmen here they would "wander
Darst; 47, Rutland , was
blind and deaf through the market place" if a free · press IS
stopped on Rt. 7 to make a left
destroyed in the United States. Cronk,ite said he fears this mlght turn onto 124 when a car driven
happen as a result of r'ece.nt actions by the federal government
by George DeG oins, 49,
and U.S. Supreme Court, regarding the confidentiality of news Chesterh ill , Ohio, traveling
sources.
.north on 7, struck the Darst
"In the atmosphere this (Nil(on ) administration has created, veh1cle tn the rear . The Darst
the Supreme Court has stripped the .press of the pnvilege to
car in turn swung around and
protect its sources and without such protection a free press
struck a car traveling south on
carmot survive," Cronkite said Saturday. "There 's a clear and
7 driven by Johnnie H. Nash,
very present danger to that foundation of democracy wh1ch is the
32, Middleport.
freedom of the press, the freedom without wh1ch you, the
There was medtum danJage
businessmen , would wander bhnd and deaf through the market
to all the vehicles. Gmns was
place ."
arrested for excesslve speed
At 5·45 p m. Saturday on
SAIGON -TWO MORE HEUCOPTERS on cease-Y1re duty
were fired on early today shortly after the Viet Cong confirmed county road 39 in Bedford
that all nine men aboard a truce chopper downed Saturday were Twp., Roger Schultz, Pomeroy,
killed. A Viet j;ong spokesman said the helicopter downed Rt. 3 wa~ traveling southwest
Saturday was flyin g 14 miles outside its assigned air,corridor. and Margaret I. Sheets ,
The spokesman said the Provisional Reyolutionary Government Hemlock Grove, was traveling
northeast when their vehicles
(Vie tCong ) "deeply reg.-ts thiS unexpect ed accident ."
The victims, he said-;included three American crewmen plus collided in a curve. There were
two PRG officers and one Canadian, one Indonesian and two no tnjuries or arrests, and only
HWlgarian members of the rOur.nation International Com~ medium property damage.
Sunday at 10:32 p.m . on SR 7
·mission of Control and Supervision that oversees the Vietnam
(Continued on Page 8)
in Chester, Howard f . Dunfee,
I

39, Coolville, was traveling

north when he went of( the road
the ri ght, came back across
the highway over a hill, .then
finall y back onto the road.
Dunree was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hosp1t.al
by the Pomeroy ER squad
where he was treated and
released . He was cited for
reckless operatiOn .
Monday at 8:05a .m. on SR 7
in Salisbury Twp. Steven P.
Hawk , 17, Rutland, was
traveling no~th when he came
upon another vehicle, also
movmg north . He applied
brakes, which fai led. He cut to
the right, going off the road on
the nght, and traveled 88 feet
northeast into a creek.
The Pomeroy ER squad was
called although Hawk was not
injured . He was cited to court·
for excessive speed.
Of)

Ram ton1ght, becoming
mixed with snoW west portion .
Low 10 the 30s. Tuesday cloudy
and colder with light snow,
mainly nol'theast portion, high
in upper :10s and lower 40s.

Mr. -Eddy ]r. zs on schedule
By Mrs. Vilma Plkkoja
Bookmobile Supervisor
Many have asked, "Wll~l~_bout the new Bookmobile '?"
Yes, we have heard from Mr . Eddy , Jr. Gerstenslagers Co.
1n Wooster assurcQ us they are on schedule. We had word from J .
J . Ph1lip, f&lt;eld supervisbr , that hP,may he going to Wooster this
week to see about the Bbokmobile." If the inspectiOn goes well,
then Mr. Eddy, Jr. , should be on the road that Mr. Eddy
Educator traveled so well the past e~ght year.
Wllerc there '('V progr3(1'1 for ret1nng bookmobiles, Mr
Eddy certainly could expect anyday now to be told, " this is your
life, Mr . Eddy·Educator !

a

ThL(), and that, about our library service :
bid you knbw that Mrs. Nellie Vale, presently member of the
local library board, and Mrs. faye Sauer, President of AAUW in
Meigs County, could tell you the story, why we have the book:
mobile 1

D1d you know that Mr. C. E. Blakeslee and Mr. Lee McComas, the library Board Presidents of 1964, could tell you all
about the fmc print that goes mto writing &lt;:t program that gave
you· U1e Bookmobile in Meigs CountY?
Did you know that Meigs County Garage in Rock Springs
fairgroundS was the place where , the first 6,000 books were
unloaded and then carried to Junior Buiidmg in fairgrounds .
And ask the librarian why she came and stood under the blowerheaters in the big garage after the snow plows had left for road
work!
ASK BOB PICKETI and Mrs. Theima Lytle, the first employees to join the staff in 1965 what we used as our first book
truck? It was Mrs. Lytle's grandmother's whee] chair!
That is the way we started our book collection that stands
presently on 60,000 volumes, plus records, some slides and
Braille books for the blind .
DID YOU KNOW that Tuppers Plains grade school was the
first school we visited ? At that time the bookmobile we had expected early in March was delayed through strikes and material
shortages, and did not arrive until the .middle of July. Yet we
started our service to the schools by taking the books out in
P,.ivate cars and arranging the tables in the school hall m the

manner the bookmobile shelves would be. It worked, and when
Uw bookmobile arrived, we had no problems explaming how to
get a book. The students were ready .
- · Now, half a million books loaned and more than 100,000 miles
traveled, we are givmg acclaim and appreciation to our trusty
Mr Eddy Educator.
.
LAST WEEK when we pulled up to the new Eisenstein
Housing road and Eddy's m 0tor started coughing, the driver,
Bob Pickett, was overheard saying, " Now, now, don 't give up
yet'" And we all remembered what we bad been told at the last'
inajor check-upl " It's a well maintained old machlrle, mostlY
gomg on origmal parts, and there are no problems we ca n predict
I or when they will come) but we caruiot guarantee tha t-you could
make it to Pomeroy from Manetta because if the parts start
givi ng up tt has to be complete replacement of most of them
(Remember the 'one Hoss Say'?)"
And when Bob turned to me, asking, "Do you remember
eight years ago when we bro\lght Mr. Eddy from Wooster ?" Did
I remember !
'
'
Bob drove the then new bookmobile on the route- from
Wooster to Columbus to Athens and home. (There was no IR 77).
We arrived in Columbus at rush hour. Well., we made it to
Pomeroy the same_day, and when we turned to the fair grounds,
there was Bob, Sitting tall and proud after the longest day,
because it was the first one for both of them : Bob and the new red
and white bookmobile.
Oh yes, did you know that our local newspapers could tell you
a story how a name was chosen for our bookmobile? From 3,218
eatries a little Salem Center second grader came out Ute wirmer.
But who ever dreamed the work that went to the honor of being a
judge? We d1dn 't. The newspaper editors carried out the task
- part of our show.
'
and so they, tno, are
Now, there Is no bracelet or book to hand to anybody, but just
the nagging worry, WHO WILL CARE ENOUGH?
.
Are there ·fund,s in the State Revenue Sharing for our
program to repla ce the loss of the federal funds, if that sliould
come?
Are we, in Meigs, Jackson and Vinton Counties no more than
just a name in Appalachia, and wil1 our representatives in
Washington have enough backing tQ tell our story?

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