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•

12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., May 11,1973
TAKEN TO DOCTOR
The Middleport E-R squad

&lt;mswered

call to Middleport

il

Hill at about 12:20 p.m. Thursd:1y where Herbert Gilkey. who
had become ill while driving,
struck a car driven by Albert
Van Cooney, Pomeroy Route 4.
Damages to both vehicles were
set at approximately 1100.
Gilkey was taken to the office
of Dr. J . J . Davis where he JN"as
treated.

(Continued from page 1)
husband , Gerald Hilferty.
She s tated that present plans
ca ll for the museum to be only
on the firs t floor of the building
which is located on Butternut
Ave. She ci ted the need for
funds with which to make
structural changes, purchase
shelving, ca rpeting and other

items needed for ' the

MASON

DRI~£-IN
,\ ., '

News

Speech

muse~

so that it will " tell a story "
Tather than just becoming a
di!jplay space for objects.
C. E . Blakeslee, president,
was in charge of yesterday's
contes t and meeting .

' '
'
."\ t ,, t "'"' N 11 1 til • 1

Tonight , May 11
Double Feature Program

" THE ABDUCTORS "

Cher i Ca ttaro
( Rated X)

- Pius-

MEIGS THEATRE

"SE DUC E RS "

Tonight .&amp; Saturday
May 11 -12

Saturday, May 12

Double Feature
BARON BLOOO

Joseph Cotten
Elke Somm er
~
(Co lor)
.

l

•

OR . PHlBES
RI SES AGAIN

( Technicolor) .
Vincent Price
Robert Quarry

lPG)

Plus

l PG I

NIGHT OF THE
BLOOD MONSTER

O!RTY HEROES . "'

ITechnicolor)
Frede rick Stafford
Curt Jerg ins

(Co lor )
Chr istopher Lee
!PG)

( Gi

Sun., Mon., Tu e.
May 13-14-15

Sun., Mon ., Tue.

Double Feature Program

May 13-14-1S

'THE MINX "

SHAFT' S
BIG SCORE

An extraordinary e)lciting
show.
(RaledRI

- Piu s" RELAT!ONS "
The love story from

Den-

mark.
I Raled Rl

(Technicolor)
Ric ha rd Roundtree
Moses Gun n
Fea turette :
Love at First Bite,
3 Stooges
Show Starts 1 p. m.

•

• • • rn

Briefs·

t Continued from page I )
quarter of Ohio Thursday, killing at least four persoos, and injuring more than 150 others during a seven-hour period. Willard,
a northcentral Ohio conununity of 6,000, was hardest hit with
three dead, at least one hundred persons injured, and up to 10
persons reported missing. Damage estimates were weU into a
million dollars.
·Another death rest)] ted from a twister that touched down in
Republic. Injuries, missing persons and extensive damage was
reported in Kenton, Bellville and Savannah, where the National
Guard was called in to prevent looting. Tornadoes also bopscotched around the Colwnbus area. More than 30 tornadoes
'were reported in Ohio Thursday afternoon and evening.
WASHINGTON - FOUR TIMES this year federal courts
have ruled President Nixon violated the Constitution when he
decided last December not to spend more than $12 billion appropriated by Congress, some of it over his veto. Thursday, the
Senate voted, 66-24, to try to make it illegal for any president to
im]lOund funds in that manner unless Congress ratifies thi! im·
poundment within ' 60 days.
At the same time, it voted, 86-4, to spend even less than Nixon
proposed in his budget for fiscal 1974, which starts July 1. The
budget called for spending $268.7 billion. The Senate voted to bold
spending to a ceiling $700 million below that figure . If it appropriates over the ceiling, all programs would be cut back
proportionately .
BEIRUT - A THUNDEROUS EXPWSION rocked Beirut
today on the second day of a cease.fire between government
troops and Palestinian guerrillas and an army communique said •
many persons were killed or seriously wounded . New fig hting
also was reported on the border with Syria.
A seven.point cease~fire plan announced Thursday in
Damascus was thought to have ended the fighting , now in its
ninth day, but Isreal was taking no chances and its experienced

Mitchell

•
•

( Conlinue&lt;J from page I )

-Attorney General-designate Elliot L. Richardson promised
to provide the Senate Judiciary Committee with the names of six
or eight persons from which he will choose a special prosecutor
into the Watergate affair.
.
- In an effort to bolster his scandal.,.carred Cabinet and staff,
Nixon nominated CIA Director James R . Schlesinger as defense
secretary and asked former Treasury Secr etary John B . Connally to become a part-time aide.
:...chairman Sam J . Ervin, D-N.C. of the Watergate investi·
gating commi ttee promised his bearings will not impair the
government prosec ution , but he added it is more important to get
to the truth than send "one or two people to jail."
- Former Nixon campaign treasurer Hugh Sloan Jr., in sworn
testimony released Thursday, said ·he tried to warn top White
House aides last June of the potential for a national scandal, but
they we re more concerned about protecting the President.
- Fonner White House counsel Jolm W. Dean, wbo was fired
April 30, said there has been a "concerted effort to get me"
before he reveals all that he knows about the political espionage

case.

evening.

come to 'no'."

In other developments:
Will Provide Names

Said Mltchell Approved
McCord said Liddy told him Mitchell "approved, discussed,
reviewed" tbe espionage plan while he was still attorney general.
McCord said he joined the project because Mitchell's approval
made it seem legal.
,
Golani Brigade continued 11military exercises" in the Golan
Mitchell, who left the Justice Department in Mareh 1972 to
Heights in an implied warning to Syria to keep hands off. A
head up Nixon's campaign and resigned that job shortly after the
military spokesman said tanks and planes were involved in the
Watergate break-in, has admitted participating in meetings
war games.
where espionage was discussed. But he said he never approved
any of it.
McCord told how the spy team first broke into the Democratic
offices last Memorial Day to install wiretaps and photograph
documents. They returned Jime 17, he said, after Liddy reported
that " Mr. Mitchell liked the substance of the photography
material that he had seen and desired a second entry operation to
· do mOre photographic work."
Three persons were injured auto driven by Linda L. Rutt,
Liddy also reported, according to McCord, that Mitchell
in four traffic accidents in- 18, Rt. 2, Patriot. '~here was wanted "certain information" about " one of the leading
vestigated Thursday by the moderate damage to both cars . Democratic candidates" from the office of Hank Greenspun,
Gallia-Meigs P ost Stat~ High- Miss Rutt also complained of editor and publisher of the Las Vegas, Nev., Sun. Liddy later also
way Patrol.
minor injuries but was not told him, he said, that Muskie "would possibly be a target of their
Robert P. Lewis, Rt. I, immediately treated. Lewis interest in connection with the Las Vegas matter."
Idea Was Scrapped
Thurman, was taken to the was charged with driving left
McCor!l
said
Liddy
went
to Las Vegas to do "a casing job," but
Holzer Medical Center by the of cen ter .
Gallia Coun ty volunteer
Myrtle I. Holley, 32, Rt . 2, the idea was scrapped three weeks later.
Liddy also said, accordiJ&gt;g to McCord, that Mitchell trimmed
e mergency squa d following a Crown Ciy, had minor injuries
their
budget for espionage from $450,000 to $250,000 and received
two-car mishap on Rt. 141, one in an a ccident at 3:30p.m . on
and eig ht tenths miles south of Rt . 7, fiv e tenths of a mile north typed logs of conversations monitored through taps at the
,
Rt. 325.
of the Gallia-Lawrence County Democrats' offices.
Ervin, whose committee hearings into the Watergate affair
Officers sai d Lewis' car Line .
collided a t a bridge with an
Officers said a t~uck driven begin next Thursday, was critical in a news conference of the
by Thomas I. Ball, 28, Hun- work of federal prosecutors.
Noting the FBI and U.S. attorneys have been investigating the
tington , alt.e mpted to pass the
Holley car, lost control, went case since last·summer, he said : ''If they can't show they have
off the highway striking the discovered enough evidence to convict people by this time I think
(Con tinued fr om page 1)
., .
Hoiley car and a parked· auto they maybe ought to go out of business."
border with South Vietnam.
He said the Senate probe cannoi ·hinder federal prosecutors
owned -by Verlin Swain, Rt. .1.
The command said the
Crown City. There was because "we can't add very much to the publicity that surrounds
:·central committee of the ·
moderate damage. Mrs. Holley this case."
National Liberation Front
"In view of recent . developments," he added, Hit (the
had mihor injuries.
(NLF-Viet Cong) had been set
A pony was seriously injured Senate probe) is perhaps a little more important because I think
up in Kratie Province about 100
in an accident Thursday it is much more important to learn the trUth about the Watergate
.miles northea s t of Phnom
morning on Rt. 681 in Meigs affair than sending one or two people to jail."
Penh.
He said both Mitchell and Stans will be called to testily publicly
County. The animal, owned by
According to tbe command,
.before
the committee, but they will not be asked about matters
Robert Call oway of Rt. 1,
1,594 government troops and
Reedsville , ran into the path of relating to the Vesco indictment. The same rule will be followed
229 civilians have been killed in
an auto driven by Willie T. if other witnesses are indicte&lt;l by the Washington grand jury, he
the offensive while I, 774
said.
.Jones, 35, Rl . I, Reedscille.
soldiers and 739 civilians have
A final accident occurred at
been wotinded.
DIED IN 19fi8
ANNOUNCE PAIRINGS
Military spokesmen mean- 12:10 p .m. on Rt . 7, one mile
REEDSVIlLE - Mrs. Lena
MARlETT A, Ohio (UPI) while said a convoy of 140 north of Gallipolis, where an Four college division baseball Margaret Murray Pickering,
auto driven by Marcus M.
trucks !l!ld 44 trailers which
teams have been selected to 75 ~ Reedsville, ·who died
rea ched Phnom Penh Thurs- Weber, 58, Addison, struck the play in the six-team double Tuesday, was preceded in
day from the port of Kompong rear end of. a- car operated by
elimination NCAA Mid-East death by her husband, Mark in
Som were carrying rice and Sharon A. Hayes, 26, Rt. I, Regional Tournament at 1968.
fish for the capital. They said Gallipolis.
Southern lliinois University, it
'
the convoy traveled up Higlr
was announced today.
LOCAL TEMPS
way 4 on the 134-mile trip
The teams were Southern
Let the sun shine in - The
without incident.
lliinois, 19-3; Eastern lliinois temperature in downtown
The high command repcirted •.
University, 18-8; Indiana . Pomeroy at 11 a .m. Friday was
earlier that Communist forces
Central University, 16-2; and 68 degrees, the sun shining.
striking in ''perfectly coorMarietta Ohio College, 21-1.
dinated" raids less than five
Southern Illinois will be
miles from Phnom Penh killed
defending its title in the· three18 Cambodian troops in hand·
day event which begins May 24.
tohand combat at two government posts.

Three persons injured
in four auto mishaps

.'

· Tuck your mo ney away in a
Savings Account. Wh ere irs sate from fire , loss
and te mptati on Increases at a steady rat e
ot mterest. And is 1nsur'ed by F.D I.C. Mol her knows best.

pome•oy
•ullo nd

pomeroy
national
.bank
Ihe bank of
the century
esta bli shed

1872

Member

FDIC

.

"Cioing one step further"

Akers' frog in Calaveras JUmps

HOSPITAL
NEWS

Miss Helen E . Follrod, 59, d.
Holzer Mtdlcal Ceoter
Gallip 01is, died Thursday
( Dtseharged)
evening following a long
Keith Cook, Janet Edwards,
illness.
Charles Parks, Cathy Rose,
Miss Follrod was born at Patsy McCarty, James Nibert,
Alfred, Meigs County, the -Gertrude Neal, Mary Grover,
daughter of the late William H. Daniel Brown, Jerry Blevins,
and Enuna Bentz Follrod. She George
Thomas,
Mabel
was also preceded in deathby Snyder, Mrs. Ralph Shain,
two brothers and three sisters. Bessie .Sark, Robert Ruther·
She is survived by these ford, John Pritchard, Irene
sisters, Mrs. Ada Neutzling, Nelson, Richard Houck,
LDngBottom,Rt.l; Mrs. Leola Charles Chancey and Roger
Swartz, Shade, and Mrs. Nina Campbell .
Robi'!son, Coolville, Rt . 1; a
(Births )
brother, Erroll (Jack ) Folicod,
Mrs. Richard Woodard , a
Pomeroy, and several nieces daughter, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
nephews.
:Roger Poe, a son, Jackson;
Miss Follrod attended the Mrs. Ray Bierhup, a son,
Alfred United Methodist Wellston; Mrs. Elwood Hall, a:
Church ,
1
·
son, Oak Hill; Mrs. Richard
Funeral services will be held Saunders,
a
daughter r
Saturday at 3:30 p.m. at the
Gallipolis and Mrs. Fenton
White
Funeral
Home,
Taylor, a daughter, Pomero)'.;
Coolville, with the Rev. Jacob
Lehman officiating. Burial will
be in Bentz Cemetery at
Alfred. Friends may call at the
funeral home after 7 p.m . this

ton.
· Describing the indictments as " irresponsible," Mitchell spent
21'.! hours under questioning by the staff of the Senate Watergate
investigating committee Thursday. Asked by a woman reporter
if he aiBo expects to be indicted on charges directly related to the
Watergate affair, he replied:
" Honey, I have had ~ lot of thoughts about that and they all

·Bombs

u.

Helen FollrOO.
died Thursday

•

and

Time extended ;

'

WHfnesday Utte MiJIIed

League

I End of Second Half)
May 9, 1973

Fulfz-Beniley
92
Rosenbaum -Meadows
90
Hal ter-Rawlings
64
Blakes lee-Hoyt
50
MacDonald-Brenner
so
Moore -Morrow
42
Men
Hi Series - Dan Meadows
501; John Bentley 475; Bernard
Fultz 446.
Hi Game - Dan Meadows
190 ; John Bentley 180; Fred
Morrow 178.
·

Women ·
Hi Series - Virginia Hoyt
458; De lores Tyree 457 ; Betty
Fult z 432.
Hi Game - Virginia , Hoyt
171; Delores Tyree 167 ; Betty
Fultz 161.
·
Team Hi Series - - Fufb.
Be ntley 1796.
Team Hi Game - Fultz Bentley 626.

to applicants

RIO GRANDE The :
Areawide Project on Aging for ·
Gallia, Jackson , Meigs, Scioto
and Vinton counties with ·
headquarters at Rio Grande ·
College, today extended the
filing time to persons to apply
for r· the Home Maintenance
.coordinator position to May 18.
Additional information on
job description, quallfications
and applications may be obtained by writing or calling the
Areawide . Project on Aging,
Rio Grande College, Sox 987,
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674, or
phone 614-24~353, extension

26.

GUILT PLEADED
Harold A. Hodge, Jr.,
Middleport, Thursday pleaded
guilty to Conunon "Pleas Judge
Jolm C. Bacon on a charge of
breaking and entering the Hi
$8570NffiUCK
Ho
Bar owned by Ralph Pratt
RACINE r ~ Mae Cleland,
clerk of R;l!cine Villege, said · on March 28. He was plaC\!d on
today revenue sharing funds probation for one year. A suit
received by tbe village from was filed Thursday by Maggie
Jan. 1 through June 30 of this Winebrenner, dba -Radne
year will be used on the pur- PlaQing Mill, Racine, against
chase of a new fire truck. The David Baumgardner, Mid·
dleport, Rt. 1, for $725.28_.
. total will be $857. .

DICK AKERS, RIGHT. receives warm wish'es for success from Pomeroy
Attorney Fred Crow as Akers prepares to leave for Calaveras County, Calif.

Weather

IJet,OIPd

An Excidlent Time 'To Do Your

MOTHERS DAY SHOPPING
Be sure to see the fine line of Hallmark Mother's Day Cards on the 1st
floor. Select the ones that are just right for you to give or send to your
Mom . Also Hallmark Gift Wrap Paper -and Ribbon - to make a
package that ' s sure to please.

'·

ON THE 1st FLOOR you can buy for your /1/vJm on her day next Sunday
Lingerie . Candy . Watches . Hosiery · Towels · Sheets · Scarves .
Slippers . Jewelry . Houseware gifts such as toasters · irons. skillets cookware . blenders.

~H E 2nd FLOOR -

Select a dress · smock top · co!lrdinated sports~ ~ . luggage . bedspread · drapes · bed pillows · toss cushions · area
rugs - chair and couch throws · T.V. set · radio· stereo record player ·
record album . B track tapes.
·
n ..

ON THE Jrd FLOOR - Furniture gifts that will please your /1/vJm - a
chair · a picture . sofa or living room suite · tables · bedroom suite .
lamps , dinette set.

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC
STREET OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 'TIL 9 P.M.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
.·.

VOL. g NO. 15

POMEROY - J ob positions in the
Meigs Local School District Head Start
program will be open until May 25, Fenton
Taylor, director , said Friday . The summ~r
program will begin June 4 and end July Zl .
Those wishing to apply should write to
fenton Teylor at RD 4, Pon1eroy or at

Meigs High School.
Needed on the staff are 10 IA!achers, 10
teacher aides, one each social worker,
social wor~er aide, nurse, speech
therapist, secretary, and bookkeeper and
six cooks and six c usl.odia:Is.

Your Invited Guest .
Reaching More
Than 12,000
Families

To The Crealer Middle Ohio Valley

6 SECTIONS
Pomeroy-Middleport

SUNDAY, MAY 13, 1973

Gallipolis·Point

Pl easa~t

20 CENTS

..

CHESHIRE - Schools continued a
favorite targe t of thieves and vandals here
Saturday Js Kyger Creek High School
located near here was struck for the
second time in the last four months .
Damages and the va lue of the loot
taken are estimated at $1,800.
All Galli~ County's high schools :_
except Gallia Academy - have been hit"at
least once this sc hool yea r . North Gallia
and Kyger Creek have been struc}l; twice.
Gallia Coun ty sheriff's in vestigator
Ken Deckard repo~ted someone entered
the building between 3:20 and 7 a.m. ·

it
Saturday by brea ki ng a door glass.
Once inside, the intruders entered the
sc hool's main oHice, pried open several
file cabinets and took between $50 and $75
from the three vending machines and the
desk of high. school secretary, Mrs.
Roberta Kail.
The offi ces of Supt. Comer Bradbury
and Principal John C: Wickline were both
ransa cked . Stolen from Bradbury's office
was a calculator , Wpe recorder · and
portable radio. Pencil, paper and candy
dispensing . machines in the halls were
pri ed open , damaged, and mon ey

removed.
Also entered was the school's com.
mercia!, kitchen and art departments. A
large folding door to the school's kitchen
was broken open. A walk·in cooler wa s
forced open, but nothing was taken .
Extensive damage wa s done to the
driv e r 's edu t::a tinn car which was
parked itt the garage adjacent to the art
room . Deckard said the vandal s used a
crow bar or similar In strument to
shatter the car's front window. They
pried th e ca r 's hood up and took a 12 volt
battery . T_he wiring w.a s also cut.
Supl. Bradbury sa id U:e car was the
unly property cove red by insurance. The
school's in.surance policy does not &lt;;over
vand::.lism. Three years ago the Kyger
Creek Buard of Education ded ded to drop

...

the- vandalism clause folluwing e1 sharp
increase in premiums. At prese nt, in ~
surance on the district's three buildings
coste.; over $9,000 per yea r .
In an uurch.ited development, sheriff 's
depu ties F riday arl'eSted seven persons on
breaking and entering charges involving a
-::~:~bin owned by Howard and Peggy Moore
of Columbus. Booked were Thomas Lee
Cathcart. 16, 129 Jackson Pike: John
Patrick McKean, 18, of 50 Chillicothe Rd .;
Jacki e Lee Williairis, 18, of 21:14 Chatham
Ave ., and Roy Edward Harmon, lH , of 2015
Che~t nu t St., and three juveniles.
The house is located on the Starcher Hamr ick Rd. Accordin g to deputies, U1e
group for ced the front and back doors
open.
PRESENTING a $30 check to Nate Thomas, center, is Tom Tope, vice
president of the Gallipolis Merchants. Nate's moth er , Dorothy, has been named
Mother of Th e Year in tbe first annual contest in Gallia County.

Public invited
to give views

Nate's mom is the best

GALLIPOLIS Mrs . Richara
1Dorothy) Thomas, 507 Fourth Ave., has
been named Gallia County 's Mother of the
Year in the fir st.contest sponsored by the
MIDDLEPORT
Midd leport puwer to make such assess ments without Ga llipolis Merchunts Association.
residents were invi ted Saturday to meet being voted on upon by the public. Each
Mrs. Thomas was c hosen from a field
with village council at 7::iD p.m. Monday to proper ly owner whOse land adjoins or is · of 75 ca ndida tes, who were entered by
·express opinions as to what should be done benefitted by repa irs ca n be assessed.
their children. Judgi n ~ was completed
about tbe ir streel~.
' 'It was estimated by an area street
Friday morning . Entries consisted or 50
A spokesman for · the Ch"mbcr of
re pair co mpany that a one loch surface
word essays on why the child 'S mother
Commerce is urging the public tu atte nd
blacktop addition would cost the adshould be the mother of the year .
Monday night's scssiu n, Stating that
joining property owner $5 per front foot,
_., Nate Thomes, 11 , a sixth grader at
Middleport s treets are . unsafe , the
or $250 for 50 foot lot front.
Washi ngton E lementa r y School submitted
chambe r member said :
," Middlepor t coun cil mee l':i Monday tht! followin g essay:
" This is the op ini on of many citizens night at 7:30 p.m . They represent you and
'" She cooks things I like, washes my
who view Lhe rilfany holes in the streets and need you r he lp and advice. Please be there duthes, cleans our house and works to he lp
are aware of the dangerous accidc nl &lt;Jnd express your opinion on what should my brothers
in college. .She works at the
.
poss ibilities ~ The s.c ri ousness is increased be done a bout our stree l'i.
hos pital and ta kes car e of little sick kids.
by the rapid d e~ rioration !.(;~king place.
" It s hould be expla ined that in case She plays games with me on her nights off .
Delay in repctirs now could mean that it assessmenl&lt;; are made, they would apply She is r1ice to my fr iends . Most of a ll, she
will cost several times as much to ac- to non.car owners as well as car owners. " loves me."
comp lish repairs later .
Middleport vil lage council over the
Nate didn 't submit his entry until noon
Middleport residents have to pay for past few years has twice placed a $5 of the final day, but the panel of judges
s treet repairs one way or another. The permissive auto tax fee on residents of the chose his essay on the basis of uniqueness ,.
a uto license tax was 'VOfcd down and the tow n. Both ti mes, however , the meas ure orig inalily and sincerity. Judges for the
only other way foreseeable is a~essment was taken to t he voters through r~ feren­ event were Wilson Wahl, pastor of the
of property owne rs to pay for s treets. Ohio dU/fl action a nd lost. Council had
law gives mun icipal gove rnment the stipu lated both times that proceeds from
the tax would be devoted exclusively to
street maintenance a n.d repair.

a

BERT HARDER AS TEVYE gave a moving performance in the Gallia
Academy production of "Fiddler on The Roof." He re he gives one of the
monologues that brougt)t rousing applau ~e from the full house Friday evening at
Washington Schoo l.

Musical solid' hit
BY DOROTHY COUN.TRYMAN
GALLIPOLIS T he applau se
probably is sti ll ringing in t~e ears of the
young people who presented " Fiddler on
the Roof" to a full house here Friday and
Saturday evenings.
The musical, directed by Mrs. Anne
Fischer, included a cast of 136 Gallia
Academy High School rstudents.
Bert Harder brought the house down
Wi'th a moving portrayal of Tevye, the
milkman, whose world is capsizing around
him. His five daughters arc not on ly his joy
but his sorrow, as the little town of
Anatenka, Russia , is jolted by the hap.
penings in the outside world.
Tevye expla ins in the prologue that life .
for the villa gers is as stable as the position
of the " Fiddler on the Roof, " and the story
of the little village has touched the hearts
of audiences around the world .'
Specialligfiting effects hi ghlighted the
drea m scene when Tevye with the help of a
cast of ghosts, is trying to break the news
to his wife, Go lde, that their oldest
daug h ~r will marry the ta ilor and not the
butcher as was origina lly planned.
The entire cast gave a memorable
performance in the finale; the performance of "Sunrise, Sun set'' during the .,
wedding likely dampaned many eyes.
Andy Hyrne played the part of the
Fiddler and Ginger Dobson portrayed
Tevye's haggling wife. Brant A.tams had
the part of the Rabbi with his son, Mendel,

ii' • •

..

frog this year will be Jelly Bean Vll, a
croaker entered by Gov. Ronald Reagan .
Other governors and their frogs in·
eluded Gov. George C. Wallace of
Alabama. "Little George;" Gov. WiUiam
A. Egan of Alaska, " Mr. Seward's Felly ;"
and Gov. Mike O'Callaghan of Nevada,
" Big Mike ."

Meigs has 38 jobs
with Head Start

66 PAGES

SALEDAYSET
"The Meigs High School VICA
Club will hold a yard sale
Saturday,
May 1g, at the home
MARRIAGE LICENSE
Maywood Charles Johnston, of Dixie Snyder, 176 Beech St.,
68, Portland, and Thelma Middleport, weather permitting, beginning at 9 a.m.
Gladys Kiser, 58, Racine.

OPEN FRIDAY ·and SATURDAY
NIGHT UNTIL 9 O'CLOCK

$2 fee and more than half the contestants
are youngsters. To be &gt;'ligible, frogs must
measure at least fow- Lu:hes from nose to
rear and Maxwell (X)ints out sternly. no
toads are allowed.
MaxweH said so far 18 governors from
across the nation have entered rrogs and 1~
foreign countries wlll be represented. Host

tmts

committee will be appointed
and refreshments served. All
members are urged to attend.

J

next Saturday and Sunday. Akers is a
ro'!!te supervisor for the Keck Distributing
Co.
Meanwhile the UP! reported Saturday
from Angels Camp, Calif., nearly 80,000
persons are expected to jam this once
booming gold mining camp May 17-20 to
watch 2,000 bullfrogs compete in the
century-old Jumping Frog Jubilee.
This tiny Gold Rush town of 3.000 was
the setting Mark Twain used in his short
story, " The Celebrated Jumping Frog of
Calaveras Cotirity" - the basis for the
annual frog jumping contest.
To win the jubilee's top prize money of
$1,200, competitors must . beat the world
record jump set in 1966 by a frog named
Ripper who leaped 19 feet, 3 1-3 inches.
Owners of Ripper were Bill Proctor and
Leonard Hall of Lafayette.
lf a world record ts not set, the final
purse will be only $3011.
Bob Maxwell, a spokesman for the
jubilee, said anyone can enter a frog for a

+

VaTLable cloudiness ~nd
cr.oler with a chance of
showers through ·sunday night
possibly mixed with snow
flurries northeast Sunday
light. High Sunday in the
upper 40s and 50s. Low Sunday
night in the 30s.

BAGS AT CURB
FUNDS ALLOCATED
RACINE :.._ Racine Village
Meigs
County's revenue
council requests that residents
of the community having trash sharing funds for the period of
pickup service to put their bags Jan. 1 through June 30 this
at the curbing to save time. If year, have been allocated by
the request is not followed, the the Meigs County Com·missioners, Auditor Gordon
trash will not be picked up.
Caldwell said today. The
estimated total for the period
will be $127,428, with $89,200 to
DAVTOMEET '
Meigs Chapter l!lo. 53, DAY, be spent on a courthouse
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. construction and remodeling
'at the chapter home on But- . project, and $38,228 on new plat
ternut Ave. A nominating maps.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

POMEROY - Dick Akers, grand prize
winner in the 1972 Big Bend Regatta 's frog
jumping contest. sponsored by the Ohio
Society for Preservation of Bull Frogs,
Inc., left today for C;llaveras CoWlty,
Calif., where he will represent the society
in the famous frog jumping conte;t there.
Akers, a resident of Albany, took part
in the local frog jwnping contest five years
before scoring a win in 1972. He is accompanied to tlte famous California jWTlps
by his wife and iwo sons, Greg a~d Brian,
and will be competing for a top prize of
some $1,200.
II all goes well, Akers will use Ohio
frogs in the Calirornia contest. He has
permission to take six frogs with him from
here. Traveling by car, the Akers family
Will tranSP'Jrt the local frogs in a
styrofoam type aquariwn. However, if the
frogs don't sw-vive, Akers has made
arrangements to secure jumpers in
California .
The California competition will be held

'

played by Louie Griffin.
The three main couples in the play
were ·Tzcite1, Mary Beth Fischer, an d
Motel the tailor , Alan Kemp; Hodel, Patti
We therh olt, and Perchik •the student, Allen
Rose, and Chcn·a, Becky Naskey, · 3nd
Fyedka, Andy Fischer.
. All in all. " Fiddler on the Roof'' ·was a
production that all who saw ' it will never.
for ge t.

When not working at Ho!zer , Mrs.
Thomas enjoys sewing, cooking . and
television. She spends many of hereven ings off plaYing cards with Nate,
although she admitted, 1'He beats me at
everything."
For Mother 's Day, Mrs. Thomas is not
planning any thing special although she
will be starting a week 1s vacation today.
The Thomases are planning to visit
Disney World later on in the summ er with
Nate accompanying them.

Loan program revived .

WASHING TON -· The U. S. Department of Agriculture and Representat~ve
Clarence Miller have · jointly C;~nnounced
that farmers in fi ve Sout~east.crn Ohio
counties a re now eligible for assistance
under the reviv.ed Emergency Disaster
Loan Program admipi stered by the
Farmers Home Administration ( FHA).
designated
by
The
counti es
Agriculture Secretary Ea rl Butz as
elig ible for ' low-i nterest disastet relief
loans as a result of l"st winter's ·severe
weather ct;mditions are Fairfield, Perry,
Lawrence, Jackson, aild Gallia. Farmers
FIRST OF KIND
in these areas who experienced severe
COLUMBUS (U P!) - The Ohio Easter
crop damage a nd cannot obtain assistance
Seal Society will sponsor the first annu 01
fr om commercial sources, may be eligible
Easter !:;eat Pro-Am National Drag Race
for a fed eral loan at 5 pet. interest.
at Marion Raceway a t Larue on June 29-30
Miller said that loan appl~cationG should
and July 1, it was announced today.
be fil ed through loca l FHA offi ces-no la:ter
Jimmy Crum , sport director of WLWC-4,
than July 6, 1973.
has cha llenged all sportscasters and
The Emergency Disaster Loan Program
sportswriters in Ohio to participa te in the .
was shut off last December by the Ad·
Celebrity Race during the program.
mini strati ori because of ove rrun ~ in loan
C;~pplications . The program then contained
a cont rove rsial "forg ivene:;s" clause
ROGERS IN MEXICO ·
MEXICO CITY I UP I ) - Sec re~ry of wh ich p~rmitted applicants to bbrrow
•
money and not have to repay the first
S~rte William P. Rogers arrived here
$5,000
of the loan.
-today on the first leg of his 17-day mission
to Latin America whi ch may pave the way
· Following the Administration 's action,
fol' a visit ~~ter this year by President Rep. Miller directed a sharp letter to the
..
NIXUO .
White House, urging that the prog ram be
WATER GOING OFF
CHES"~ER - Albert Martin of the
Chester-Tuppers Plains WC;~ ter District
an nounced saturda y that water will be
a t Pine Grove, Nease Settlement, Morning
Star and Minersville area fr om 9 a .m.
Monday to "pp~oximately 6 p.m., in order
to repair a breC;~k on Eagle Ridge Road .
The water may be off Tuesday also,
Martln said.

orr

Voc~Ed

Board
signs contract
RIO GRANDE .- The .iackson-Gallia
Joint Vocational Board of Education.
meeting Friday in special Session,signed a
contract with the State Department of
Education which is furnishing $1,200,000
for the constructi on of the joint vocational
~hoo l which will be constructed near
here .
The building will also be constructed.
by fund s provided by the Federal Governm~nt and local taxation . It will be. located
on a 45 acre site formerly owned by W. H.
Ci!lhoun. Miss Virg inia Simms, cler~ of the
Ga llipolis City Schools for the pa_st three
ye~:~rs, was: employed as clefk·lreasurer.
She repla ces Mrs. Margaret Kelley of{)ak
Hill who wp s hired last month .

First Boptis t Churcll, Mrs. Terry Johnson.··
and Mrs. Mildred Bush .
Mrs. Thomas is a nursing assisting in
pedia trics at Hoher Medical Center . She
has been with the Holzer Hospital seve n
year s. Mr. Thomas is news director at
WJEH. In addition to Nate, the Thomases
hav e a dau g ht e r, Cheryl · Enyart,
Gallipolis, who 1s a school teacher at
Ches hirc.Kyget elementary and tw o sons
John , a junior at Ohio University in speech
and hearing, and Bill, a fres hman at Ohio
University, s tud yin g physical therapy.

STEPHEN Ca roll Snowden, 21,
above, son of Mr. and Mrs. Caron K.
S nowd en = 410 He dgewood Or. ,
Gallipolis, will graduate today from
Morehead State U ni ve r~ ity, Morehead,
Ky. , ~· ith a BS degree in business ad·
ministratiun. He is ma rried to the
former Sharon Taylor · of Gallipolis.
After graduation , Mr. Snowden will be
. associated with State Farm Insurance
Comp3njcs in l\'leigs County. Mr. and
Mrs. Snowden will reside at 553 Russell
St .. Middleport.

con tinued in li ght of the disastrous
weather conditi ons which were forcin g
Ohio farmers t&lt;i leave crops unharvested
in the fields. ,
Legislation without the " forgiveness"
provision was recently approved by the
Congress a nd signed into law by the
President. Rep . Miller said that revival of
the program offers ' farmers '·'who need
help the most to get the assistance they
deserve. "
TOO MUCH DRAIN
WASHI NGTON (UPI )-: Rep . William
H. Ha rsha, R.Ohio, said Saturday "it is
time to bring home some, if not all, of our .·
troops home from Europe" because the
~x pense is too much of a drain on the
na tion's dollar~ " Given our own domestic
needs and our critical s turggle with our
own .economy, I do not see how we ca~ or
s hould con tinue to assume "the lion's share
of the defense or Western Europe, II Ha rsha
said in his we'ekly newsletter.
MEETING CANCELLED ·
POMEROY - Jack Kerr , president of
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce, announced Saturday that 'the chi.mber will
not meet Monday. The next.. scheduled
rr.eeling is Monctay ;May 21 at noon at the
Meigs lnn .

,

�3 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, May 13,1973

Outdoor lab project take~
-by Wahama Biology class

Tag Day was successful
&lt;

MIDDLEPORT Tony
May, president of the Mid·
dlepcct Boys League Assn . said
Saturday "Tag Day" here was
one of the most successful
ever.
This year, along with peewee
league, little league and pony

d~ignaled

areas had been
covered in less than an hour
and the bOys were reass1gned.
A special thanks was given
Mrs . Ruby Vaughan , who,
though she has no children in
little lea g ue this ) ear,
nevertheless organized the
house ~to-.hnuse c.anvas.
Anyone who was missed and

leaguers donned uniCorms to
colle&lt;t contributions for the
summer baseball program .
Said May : " Downt own

w1 shes to make a

contrabution

to !lfe boys league s hould
conta c t Mrs Richard Hovatter
at 992-2606 or at 391 South 5th
Avenue. Mrs. Hovatter has
been appointed treasurer by

merchants were so generous in
an earlier drive and the boys so
successful at collecting on the
streets that all of the

the executi\•e committee.
Games are supposed to hegin
on June 1, although no schedule
has been pos~ Within the
next three weeks a Jot must be
done to gel the Middleport field
prepared. A work day will he
&lt;tnnounced soon. All parents
who have children in summer
baseball are asked to be
gener ous with their lime and
ma npower to get the fi elds in
read iness
Lwnber and plywood are
gmng to be needed to fix the
dugouts, May said.

'
•

-

Four removed

from accident
GALLIPOLIS Galha
County's volunteer emergency
squad Friday evening transported Vernon and Carolyn
Sirru)ls, 1143 Eastern Ave., and
their two children, Christi and
Stacey to the Holzer Medical
Center following a traffic
accident oh Rt. 325, one half
miles south or Southwestern
High School.
Also taken to the Holzer
Medical Center Friday were
David C. Rife, 16, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, a member of the
Kyger Creek track team, who
became ill after running the
two mile at Rio Grande
College's track . Rife had an
asthma attack.
Delphia Cummings, 93,
Lincoln Ave., Gallipolis was
admitted as a medical patient
and Clyde Porter, 65, Eureka
Star Rt., was taken · to the
hospital as a medical patient.

CRASH film is
shown Rotarians

constru c ti on barrier The
veh icle was demolished. Young
wa s not injured.
The Middleport emergency
squad wa s ca lled at 12:18 p.m .
Saturday to Clyde Shawv er's
hon.e at No. 2 Cole St. Mr.
Shawver' was pronounced dead

on ar rival of th"e squad . The
body was l;lken to Ewm g's
Funera l Home .
Funeral services will 5e held
Monday at Ewing's Chapel. .
Bunal will be m Ches hire
Cemetery . Add1tonal details
will be announced Monday.

'

'

. TOP PRIZE WINNERS in the Meigs Co unty history
contest staged by the Meigs Co unty Pioneer and Historical
Soc1ety won $15, $12, $10 and $5 with a tie for fourth place
honors. Seated, ! to r, are George Arnott, first; Jim Schmoll,
second ; back , Dave Gerard, third, and Linda Atkrnson and
Steve Warner t1ed lor fourth .

-"

..

have been made for the Jarnt•s
Knapp fetrm OCtlr S8.s.~W:tfros ,
the Norman l...1 evmg farm on

'cleJJned up
tn-state areJJ

3 Baptists name officers

PRESENTED BACKBOARDS - Teacher Ray Goodman's PAWPAW Manufacturing Co. at Gallia Academy High
School Friday presented the Southeastern Ohio Medical
Emergency Squad four backboards for use in its emergency
vehicle services The boards are designed to be used in m-

juries tha\ involve a. victim's back or spinal cord. Accepting
the boards was P!l. Gary Wallace of the Gallipolis Police
Dept. Left to ri ght above are Ptl. Wallace, Ray Goodman, M.
Moss, L. Harmon, E. Ellis, C. Marcum, M. Woodall and R.
McClaskey, memhers of 'PAWPAW.

•

EMS receives PAWPAW gift
GALLIPOLIS
The
PAWPAW Manufacturing Co.,
a state-sponsored vocational
program at Gallia Academy
High School Friday presented
the Southeastern Ohio Medical
Service Emergency Squad four
backboards
lor
their
emergency vehicle service.
The project was conceived
by Gary Wallace, a Gallipolis
police officer and a memher of
the squad, when he approached
Ray Goodman, the company
coordinator, with the idea of
making the backboards. The

wood used in the backboards
was
provided
by
the
emergency squad and the
manpbwer or womanpower
was pro.v1ded by th e Occupational Work Expenence
Laboratory students.
There were 11 ~tudents who
worked on the project; over 20
hours went into the job
The boards were designed to
be used m injuries that involved an accident victim's
back or spinal chord. Since Xrays must be taken through the

boards only wood with a
nonmetahc fimsh could be
used. The boards - three adult
and one infant s1ze - were all
produ ced from one sheet of
four by e1ght plywood.
M1ke Woodall, company
vice-president, stated there
would be no charge since the
emergency squad wa s a nonprofit organization and was
doing such a fine service for all
lhe people in the area and the
commumty. He also noted that
all students worked WJthout
wages on the proJect.

The PAWPAW Co . is
pre se ntly manufacturing
hardwood cutting and chopping
blocks of a size and quality that
IS hard to find in stores
anyinorc, according to Lois
Harmon, a graduatmg senior
and secretary-treasurer of the
program . Orders can be placed
by calhng 446-3763 during any
school day and free deliveries
will be made. The company
plans to sell 1ts wares at the
Gallia County Junior Fair this
swruner.

ACT aids
•

parents
to .adopt

By CHESTER TANNEHILL
POMEROY - The people in ACT,
MIDDLEPORT - A film,
wh1ch s4Jnds for Adopt a Child Today, a
C.R.A.S.H., provided by the
statewide organizahon with a growmg
Ford Motor Co., was shown to
chapter m southeastern Ohio, are doing
the Middleport . Pomeroy
what comes naturally .'
Rotary club Friday evening at
Its members have a sincere interest m
Heath United Methodist
youn g humamty . Some are parents who
Church followmg dinner.
want to adopt a child, others have gone
The film described the
that route, and having a full family, are
present program of the state of
committed by conscience to help others.
Vermont to detect the drunk
For example, consider Mrs. Jerry
dnver and to rehabilitate him
(Martha) Grim of Wellston; secretary of
into a safe driver. Program
chairman Lee McComas the Ohw Valley Chapter of ACT, and a
member of the state board. A former
showed the !ilm.
teacher with a masters de"gree , she
Next Fnday the membership
will be guests of the Pomeroy . mothe rs four absolu tely beautiful Aleutian
Ind1ari children, and one of her and Mr.
Middleport Lions Club 'at the
Gnm 's own who carne along after the
s ummer home o( Richard
adoptions began.
Chambers m Texas ComThere are 30,000 childre n available (or
munity . Servmg will begin at 6
adoption in Ohio this moment," said Mrs.
p.m .
Gnm, " 2,000 of them under age 3."
John Werner, sec retary,
Many of these children are m "foster
presided .
places ," unadapted, placed there by the
courts, many of them in effect forgotten .
"They 're sort of in limbo, " said Mrs.
Grim. " They neither have the advantages
of a lovmg home - wh1ch is thetr nght DIVORCED ASKED
GALUPO!JS - Two suits or littl~ if any c hance of gaining such a
ior divorce were filed Friday in home ."
Gallia County Common Pleas
Mrs. Che ryl Parker of Wellston is
Court. S•lly Lou Young or president o( the Ohw Valley ACT chapter.
Addlaon charged gross neglect She owns and operates a bouttque shop.
of duty and extreme cruelty in Mrs. Edith Newsome of McArthur, Vwton
her ~tlon against George County caseworker, wtth the county
Henry Yowg of Addison. They welfare department, works closely with
were married March 3, 1956 the chapter.
and have five children. Roy W.
The local ohapter believes it is making
Convery, 123 Portsmouth Rd., rapid prog ress m the area of the ch1ld m
. charged willful absence in hi ~ limbo bcc~use mos t southeastern Ohi o
petition against Ina Jean county social serv1ce departments are
Convery, Mt. Clemens, Mich. reviewing situations of then· c h1ldre n m
They were marri~9 and subsidized homes. The objec t is to
hllve oo children.
dctcr·mme what children want to, Hnd

REV. NORRIS

· Meigs

Property

Transfers

Bicyclists
ride south

ACT OFFICERS - Mrs. Cheryl Parker, Wellston; Mrs. Edith Newsome,
McArthur, caseworker, and Mrs. Martha Grim, Wellston, who has adopted four
Aleutian Indian children, are key people in moving children from limbo into loving
homes. Mrs. Parker is president, and Mrs. Grim, secretary of the Ohio Valley ACT
chapter.

should, be adopted. In many cases
adoptive parenLs ca n be found for them .
The Ohio Valley Chapter of AcT Since last August 50 families have
Adopt a Child Today -will meet Thursbecome members of the OhiO Valley ACT . day evening at 7:30 at the VInton County
in whic~ 25 children have become in- National Bank. Mrs. EdUh Newsome,
volv ed, 16 of them being m the MelgsVinton County caseworker, will be the
Galha-Vmton area.
hostess. Persons interested in adopting
ACT 1s eager to facilitate adoptions
ta ch~ld or in helping ot!lcrs adopt oue arc
throu gh a ll legal channels. Primarily, it
welcomed.
seeks to spread mformation to parents
wantmg child ren and to loca te children for
them . Ideally, th1s 1s done through
AUTOPSY PLANNE.D
ch ildren's services boards of the counties
LOGAN, Ohw ( UP! ) - An autopsy
ACT also can work wLlh lawyers who
was planned Saturday in the death of
- for a fee - arrange adoptions.
Ronald
George, 17, Grove C1ly, found in h1s
There 's a saying in "adoptive ctrcles"
that ~' tf you have money you can adopt a car near here. Hockmg County Sheriff
child." It's true ~hat fmdmg fees and Paul Hartman said the doors of the youth's
arran ge ments - whtch would mclude the ca r were locked and the automobile's keys
hospital costs of the mother g1ving up the were ill the ashtray . Rarll!lan said there
baby - easily run m excess of $1,000 to were no signs of violence.
$1,200.
ACT often IS able to reduce this ;
fmanc1al burden . It charges nothing. Its
wm·k Of Jove has been free SinCe a marl
WANTS SLOW DOWN
nam ed Jesus adopted humanity' as hfs
HOT SPRINGS, Va. i UPl ) - Cost of
family nearly 2,000 years a go.
Chi!pter membership is al such a LJV in g Council Dtrector Johm T. Dunlop
told mfluentia l businessmen Saturday they
pal try cos l1llike!y fails to pay the cost of a
mnntnly newsletter dts lnbuted to all shtJuld go slow on pricC mcreases in 1973 if
they expect to see economic stabilization
members full · uf deve lopments m ch1ld
con
troi s relaxed soun.
&lt;-~doptl n n .

2nd Norris book
now on shelves

Five injured in
collision Frid~y

2,000 Scouts

on Saturday

.

Bond.s taken up by court

POMEROY
SJXteerr
defendants were fined and 13
others forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Frank W.
MIDDLEPORT - Plans for
Porter were Darrell J . Tucker,
a rabies cllnic on Saturday,
Gallipolis, $5 and costs illegal
May 19, at the county garage
parking ; Robert D Farmer,
on
the
Roc k
Springs
Cheshire, Robert M. Lewis,
fairgrounds were completed by
Belpre,
Alfredrick
L.
the Meigs County Humane
McKnight , Pomeroy and
Society at Middleport village
Char l es Allensworth ,
hall last week. ·
Pomeroy. $15 and rosts each,
The public clinic wiJ get
speeding; Karl Lee Moore,
BARBARA BAKER
underwa y at 2 p.m . with Dr.
Belpre, $10and costs, stop sign
violation; George R. Morgan,
Dan Notter of Gallipolis in
charge . All dogs ,must be on
Middleport , and Timothy
leashes and cats in containers.
Cornell, Gallipolis, $10 and
Rab1es shots will be $3 each.
costs each, speeding; Leland
Further shots will be available
E. Selbe, Pl . Pleasant, $10 and
if desired including distemper
cost s, passing on yellow line;
and lepeospirosis .
REEDSV ILLE - A family Harold 0 . Sellers, Portland,
The society furthered plans tradition was continued when • Rt. I, Ked Davis, Gallipolis
lor its membership tea to be Barbara J o Baker, 20, Ferry, W. Va., Max Manuel,
held m early June at the home daughter of Charl es and Racine, Rt. 2, Rodney C.
of Mr . and Mrs. James Rick· Lorraine Baker enlisted In the Hysell, Vincent, Ohio, $150 and
man in Middleport. Junior United States Air Force Qn costs each, three days conmembership programs were Ma y 7, at Chicago, Ill.
finement , license suspended
discussed and senior sponsors
She joined two brothers in for six month s, r estri ct ed
driving prlvileges 1 driving
assign~d . The group heard and the Air Force Thomas in his
di scussed the Humane In - rourth enlistm'e nt and Oenms
.
'
veshgators repor ts. Plans . in his third. Both brothers have
were made (or some members se rved in Vi e tnam twi ce
to attend a seminar at Athens German y twice, and Cambodi~
TWO ACCEPTED
on June 16 when J ohn Inman , once.
RIO GRANDE - Paula
Jr. , Great Lak es Regional
Another brother, John , was Morris, daughter of Mr. and
Director, will be present. The in th e Air Force m 1958 and now Mrs . Robert Morris, Mtd sernmar iS for Athens, Fair· lives in East Liverpool, Ohw. dleport Rr:i, anq Jyl Beaver,
field, Gallia, Hocking, Me1gs
M1ss
Baker
attended daughter of Mr. a nd Mrs.
and Washington Counties in Riverview School in Reedsv1Ue Lowell Beaver of Beach St.,
Ohio and for the Parkersburg, and graduated from Kelvyn Middleport have been a ccepted
Park H1gh School in Chicago. for enrollment at Rw Grande.
W. Va ., area
Attending the meeting were She was recently employed in Both will enter Rio Grande the
Mrs. Edwin Coates, Mrs. the offtce of Bankers Life and fall quarter of 1973. Both will
Roscoe F owler, Mrs. Eleanor Cas ualty Insuran ce Co ., graduate at Meigs High School
Zeihlcr, Mrs . W1lham G Ch1cago. She enlisted as an this month .
Baronick, Mrs. William Woods, a1rcraft mechanic and will
Mrs. Ca rl Will, Mrs. Franklin attend Air c raft Mechani cs
HIT..SKIP PROBED
Lewis, Mrs . Robert Roherts, SchooJ after completing six
POMEROY - The Meigs
Miss Car olyn Smith, Mrs. Allen weeks ~ of baste traming in
County Sheriff's Department is
Ball , Mrs. Belly Stewart, Texas.
investigating a hit-skip that
Middleport Mayor J ohn Zerkle
occurred Friday at 8 p.m. at
and Mrs. Clinton Fisher.
the intersection of SR 681 and
124 at Reedsville. The
Wlidentified vehicle struck a
pickup truck owned by Dale
Senior Citizens'
Barr parked at Barr's Ashland
Station . The unidentified car
activities week
was reported to have forced a
second car off the highway
POMEROY - Senior Citizen
RA CIN E - The Grass after hittU..g the truck.
Center activities for the week Reflec tion , a noted bluegrass
are as follows:
band from the Washington, D.
Monday, May 14, 1·3 p.m ., C. area, and Dwane Wolfe imd
Crafts, Dough Flowers.
his Wolf Pack of here will
Tuesday, May 15 - 9:30- 11 headhne a country - bluegrass·
a .m., Mod Podge, small charge gospel special at the MounTomght, Man, Tue.
for craft matenal ; 1-3 p.m., tameer Opry House at 'Milton,
May 13-14-15
ca rds and games.
W Va . May 19, at 8:30 p.m.
SHAFT'S
Wednesday, May 16 - 9:30 •
A versa Hie country_, smger,
BIG SCORE
11 a.m., Knittmg , Anna Bll:lck- Wolfe was "discovered" by the
{Technlcolor)
Ri chard Roundtree
wood , Instructor; 1-3 p.m., egg Mountaineer Opry House
Moses Gunn
car ton
flowers ;
brin g durin g 1ts recent three-s late
Featurflle:
s tyrofoam
egg
ca rton s, talent search. Roundmg out the
Love at Ftrst Bite,
l Stooges
scissors, s traight pins.
evemng will be the Caldwells, a
Show Starts 7 p.m.
Thursday, May 17 - tO . local gospel singing ensemble,
noon , help make craft 1terns to and Eck Gibson and the
sell at Regatta. Bnng Jdea s; 1· Mountaineer Ramblers, the
3 p.m . Cards and games; Opry House 's bluegrass bandRutland Silver Circle Club in-residence .
meets in the afternoon ;
Tickets are $2 for adults and
Harrisonville Golden Age Club $.50 for children between five
Tonight, Mon . &amp; Tues.
meets at 7:30p.m .
and 12. There is a snack and
May 13-14 -15
Fr1day, May 18 - 2-4 p.m. ; record bar open throughout the
Double Feature Program
VIM meeting, "Health Head to performance. Parking IS free .
'T HE MINX"
Toe" , Dr. Marion Fugate.
extraordinary
exciting
The Opry House IS located at
l
s
hC
IW
.
th e Milton exit (EXIt 7) on
I Rated R)
Inters tate 64.
- Pius-

May. 19th

of the bmd

9-Year-Old has close call
POMEROY - Nine-year-&lt;~ld
Kimberly Lute., Rt. I, Long
Bottom , escaped serious injury
around 3:15 p.m. Saturday
when a parked pickup truck
she was sitting in drifted back.
ward and scraped the side of
another parked truck owned by
Raymond Boa twright, address
unknown .
'""
The door of the truck in
which the girl was sttting was
open . The girl's legs were
outside the truck. A commode
plunger which wa s ms1de the
truck was all that prevented
the girl from receiving serious
leg damage . It kept the door
open upon impact.
The ac&lt;::ident wa s investigated by Sher1ff Robert C.
Hartenbach's department.
The girl's mother, Linda J .
Lute, had , parked the truck
along side State Route 248 to go
mto Gaul's Grocery, The girl
and
suffered contusions
abrasions or the nghtleg.
At 3 a .m . Saturday, at the
intersection or Rt. 33 and 7,
Richard Young, Rt. 1, Long
Bottom, was traveling north on
Rt. 7. He apparently fell asleep
at the wheel.
His auto crashed mto a

cttttle li e is. mterested
p;:.s:turc treatment and
provemenL and also in
r1~pttir of the farm pond
Potters Creek. the Norman
improvement of some sp rings.
Hamr~ place near Stone 's Mill
WE ASS ISTED in planning a
and the Troy Huffman !ann on
.
solution
to drainage pr&lt;&gt;ble,ms
Oldtown Creek . Norma n
Lieving is a first-lime farmer around the new Vocational
bl."Cause hts pas t experience School with A. F.. Sommer, Jr.,
ha s been in the · plumbmg director of the school. About
business. RecenUy he was the water problem there
thrilled at the b1rlh of the f~rs t the result of surface water
Lay
calf to be born on his newly coll ects in low areas. Be&lt;:au:se
of this, it wa s decided that
acquired land .
several local people interested
The Huffman fa rm is the surface drainage would be
in the development or an
former Cla rence Adkins place. brought mto play in order to
outdoor learmng center at the
Mr. HuHman is rai sin g beef eliminate the water hole.
Vocational School. We met
once with Buckley's class at
the school to go over soils informati on and some of the
possi ble project' that could be
earned out. We a lso met with
the class and helped conduc t a
tour over the school grounds to
acquaint the students w1th the
' per· l:lolzcr Medical Center by the
physical layout or the land and
GALL!POUS - Five
its possibilities .
sons were injured in a colhs10n Galha Count y Volunteer
Buckley has divided his class at 6:40p.m. Friday on Rt. 325, Emergency Squad.
S1mm s wa s c ited to
mto special groups to work on one and one tenth miles north
Municipal Court for failing to
varwus parts of the plan for the or Rt . 141.
outdoor learning center . We
The Gallia-Meigs Poii! State stop within the assured clear
were thnlled with the eager- Highway Palmi said an auto distance . Bostic was charged
ne ss and enthusiasm these driven by Ve rnon R . Stmms, w1th parking on the roadway.
young people sho wed in 22, Gallipolis, came over a 'There was heavy damage to
tackling this protect.
hillcrest and struck the rear both cars.
A second mtshap occurred on
CONSERVATION
plan s end of a parked auto owned by
Emmett W. Bo sti c, 19, the Sta rcher - Hamrick Rd.
Gallipolis. Vernon R. Simms eight tenths of a mile sou th of
sustained a fractured right Rt. 35 wh ere cars driven by
arm , his wife, Carolyn had a Jackie L. Williams, 18,
possib!e fractured ankle and GallipoliS, and Steve A. Slone,
multiple lacerations of the 18, Rt. 1, Gallipolis,. co ll ided
face, their two children, Olnsti headon. Th ere was moderate
•
Ann and Stacey both had body damage and no c1tahon was
brmses. They were taken to the Jssued .
HU NTINGTON - The final
results of the Tri-State area
Council , Boy Scouts of
America, Keep Amenca
Beautiful Day held Apnl 28
GALLIPOLIS - Deacons, deaconesses, Evelyn Evans,
s howe d about 2,000 Cubs, truste es and other c hurch Gladys Ha ner and Ann a
Scouts, Explorers and adult officers were elected during Willi ams; mi ssionary comleaders !rom 61 Packs, Troops the annual business meeting of mittee, Karen Neal and Larry
and Posts participated m all the First Baptist Church here Marr ; Church Clerk, Hazel
~reas of the Tri-State Area
last week. Elected were : Halleyi fmanctal secretary,
Coun cil
Deacons, Emerson Corbin, Bill Matthews; assistant
By dis tricts they were the Robert Reed and Ernest financial sec re tary, Ja ck
Lawa c a Dts trict, 10 umts ; Wiggles worth ; tru stees, Ca rt e r ; church tx:easurer ,
Midland District 12; Kentucky Michael Davis and Earl Neal; Kathy Keenan; miss ion ar-y
30, and M·G·M 9. They
trea !;!urer, Elva Davis ; Sunday
collected 54 tons of trash, and
school superintendent, Pastor
1.1 tons of materials for
Harry E . Cole and head usher ,
Veterans Memorial Hospital
recychng, cleaned up 144 m1les
John Carhart.
•
of roadside, 16 mtles of
ADMISSIONS - Herman
waterways and shoreline, 140 Jones, Point Pleasant; John
ocres of park land and empty - Eich, Pomeroy; Dorothy
lots, and planted 10,000 trees Lante , Reedsville; Jeffrey
Knighting, Racme ; Carol
and shrubs.
The majority of these units Drake, New Haven.
DISCHARGES - E stelle
will c ont inue working 011
outdoor or indoor conservation Cunningham, Martha Slater,
type projects for the balance of Suzanne Wolfe, Dalphne
the year as a final part or the Bailey, Ollie Tyree, Russell
Stella Lemley, dec., to Carl
SOAR program, of which Keep Cununins, Leora Zwilling.
Lemley, ce r t . uf tra ns.
American Beautiful Day was
Orange.
the first ;tep. Those youth
Craw's Steak House In c. to
members and leaders parGordon Bruce Teaford , ·1.1 1
ticipating in the total SOAR
acres, Chester .
program, who report comKenneth D. Cooke , J eanne
pleted results in the late fall of
Cooke lu Randall . Gen e
this year wtll receive special
Hawley , Darla Jean Hawley,
recognitions in the form of
parce l, Middleport.
colorful patches for the youth
Eva E . Bailey to Myron A
and key chains !or the adults ..
Bailey, Ann C. Balley, l 5 acres,
Robert Forney, Council
Salisbury
SOAR Chairman, and his
Elza Btrch, Cora Birch to
committee w1l1 be assisting the
Elza Birch, Cora Birch , parcel,
units in the final phase of the
Sutton
SOAR program .
Ernest Gnffm, June Grtffin
to Boyd E. Johnson, Ca r olyn
Johnson, 5 a cr es, Olive .
Ge orge
F . Cr emean s,
Audrey M. Cremeans to Syb1l
Ebersbach, parcels, Orange.
Syb1l Ebersbach to George
F . Cremeans , Audrey M.
Cremeans, p;u·cels, Orange.
Glenn M. Kemper, dec ., to
Dor is M. Kemper Barnh1ll,
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Some
FREDBLAETTNAR
Elwyn E . Kemper , Lois Jean
2,700 bicyclists left here
Corlger, afhd of trans., Salem .
Saturday for a 210-mile trip
Dori s M Barnhill, Sterlie A.
Blaettnar with
south to Portsmouth and back
Barnhill, Elwin E . Kemper,
over the weekend in what is
Keith Goble Ford Ruth A Kemper , Lois E.
called the world's largest
Conger , John F Conger to
cycling event.
POME~OY Fred S.
Franklm Rea l Estate , pa rCel,
The 12th annual Tour of the Blaettnar. 209 Sprin ~ Ave.,
Sa lem .
Scioto River Valley is spon- Pomeroy , has jolned the sales
sored by the American Youth s~rr of Ke1th Goble F ord, Inc.,
GUILT PLEADED
Hostels and has attracted Middleport.
..
TAMPA , Fla . (U P! )
riders !his year from 39 states
Mr . . Blaettnar ha s had 42
George ' A.
AccountAnt
and three · foreign countries.
year s of auto selling ex·
Heann
g,
1n
a
plea
The cyclists received a police perience and was an auto
arran gement worked out
escort out of this city and dealer in Pomeroy for 26 years.
Friday, pleaded guilty to one
through several others along An active member of Trinity
coun
t of a two-coun t federal
the way. Ambulance service is Church in Pomeroy where he
mdlCtment chargmg political
being provided by the has held numerous omces, Mr.
American Red Cross and the Blae ttnar a lso is a member of sabotag e durin g the 1972
Fl or ida
DemocratiC
Ohio National Guard is sup-• Pomeroy Lodge 164, F &amp; AM :
presidential
pnmary.
Heanng
plying command cars and a Pomeroy Chapter 80, RAM;
plea ded guilty to publishing
helicopter.
Ohio Valley Commandery 24,
and diStributing th~ 1' Muskie
A fleet of 10 trucks is trans- Knights Tmplar Bos worth
Letter," which accused
porting food, related materials Council 46, R&amp;SM , and the
Democratlc n va ls Sens Henry
and other gear.
York Cross of Honor. A
M Jackson and Hubert H.
'!'he cyclists are expected to graduate of Hio University,
Humphre
y
of
sex ual
consume 40 cases of raisins; Mr, Blaettnar is the son of the
500 pounds of lunch meat, 7,000 late Mr. and Mrs : John F. misconduct.,
slices of cheese; 5,000 orangesi Blaettnar of Pomeroy .
ASK TOWED
countless slices of bread and
Mr. Blaettnar and his w1!e,
GAL,LlPOLIS - Howard J .
more than 25,000 servings of Margaret, have two chtldren ,
beverages.
John, of P omeroy, a teache~ at Read, 291 Albany, N. Y., an
The cyclists formed a string Alexander High School, and attorney ~ and Susa n E .
50 miles long on their 105-nnle Mrs. Nancy Lee, who has been Ph1llips, 25, Gallipolis, atride to Portsmouth, which residing at Parma but is ~rney 1 aP,Phed for a marriage
some made in as £ew as five moving to Charleston, W. Va. , license Friday in Gallia County
Probate Court.
hours.
this weekend .

By Joho Cuopu
Soil C&lt;Jos. Servlc•
MASON - The advance
biology class at Wahama H1gh
School, . whose teacher is
William Buckley, is developing
a proJeCt for an outdoor
laboratory at the Mason
County Vocational School. This
class project is the outgrowth
of . a meeting attended by

.

crlDIC· IS· .
.

2- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Mal' 13, !973

GORDON CARSON

Speaker named
for graduation
!,110 GRANDE - Dr. Alphus
R . Chrfstensen, president of
Rio Grande College Saturday
announced Gordon B. Carson,
Executive Vice PreSident of
Albion College, Albion, Mich .,
will deliver the address for the
97th Commencement on
Sunday, May 13, on the Rio
. Grande College green. The
ceremonies begin at 2:30 p.m.
Mr. Carson graduated from
high school in South Euclid,
received his B. S. degree in
mechanical engineering frol)l
Case Institute of Technology,
his master's degree from Yale
University, and did post
graduate study at Case In·
stitute where he was on the
faculty 12 years.
He holds 11 patents in the
United Slates, Canada and
England for inventions in the
field of automation and
manufacturing, and has been
employed in industry at the C.
H. Quackenbush Company in
Cleveland, the Hawthorne
Works of Western Electric
Company in Chicago, and the
Selby Shoe Company in Portsmouth.
In additiOn to his industry
positions, Carson was with
Ohio State University eight

years, first as Dean ~tf
Engineering and later as Vice
President of Business and
Finance for the UniverSity.
During this period, he was also
Vice President of the Ohio
State University Rese-art h
Foundation, and Director of
the Engineerin~ Experiment
Station.
Case Institute of Technology
awarded him the Doctor of
Engineering degree (Honoris
Causa ), in 1957, and he has
been the recipient of many
other honors,
including
Technical Man of the Year
awarded by the Columbus
Technical Council for 1957-li8.
Mr . Carson has been elected to
the Grade of Fellow by the
Amencan
Society
'Jf
Mechanical Engineers , the
American Association for the
Advancement of Science, and
the American Institute of Industrial Engineers.
' The title of Mr. Carson's
address Sunday will be
'' Diagnosis and Treatment.'' A
total of 177 students will
receive their degrees during
the commencement ceremony.
In case of rain, the program
will be moved to Lyne Center
on campus.

r-------------------------~

! Area Deaths
William Gillian
COOLVILLE William
G11l1an , 66 , who passed away
unexpectedly at his residen ce
Fpday afternoon , was born
in Me1g s County , the son of the
tate E!za and Anna Duskey
Gillian
Mr Gi llian had been i n the
timber bus1ness the greater
part of his l1 fe and at the time
of hts death was employed by
the Oh 1o Vall ey Manufacturing

Corp . at Tuppers Plams
Surviving are hi s w1fe , Ruby,
at home ; three sons, Richard ,
Leon , and Lew iS, a ll of
Coolv il le ; three daughter s,
Mrs Harry (Carol) Dunfee of
Lebanon, Oh 1o; Mrs Howard
(Donna ) Russell , Coolville , and
Mrs Raymond (Linda) Paul of
Columbus ; two sisters, Mrs .
Maff1e Pullins. Coolville, and
Mr s. Carrie Whalley , Shade ;
three brothers , Wayne , Tup·
per s Plams; Harry, Shade. and
Wilbur , of Columbu s, 12
grand c hildren, and several
n1eces and nephews.
He wa s preceded in death by
an infant son , WiU iam Lee, and
two brothers .
Funeral services will be
Monday at 2 p m at th e Wh 1te
Fun era l Home here w1fh the
Rev
Roy Rose oH1c1ating .
B uri al wlll follow 1n the
Coolv die Cem etery . Friends
may call after noon on Sunday

SUNDAY
liMES-SENTINEl
Publtshed ever y Sunday
The
Oh tO
Valley
by
Pub ltshinq Co
GA LLI POLIS
DA ILY TRIBU N E

825 Th ird Ave , Ga l lt pO IIS,

0hiOll563 1
Published e11ery weekday
eve ni ng ex c ept Sa turday
sec ond Class F'o stage Pa1d
at Gall ipOliS, Ohio 45631.
THE DAILY SENTING!L
111 Court Sl , Pomeroy, 0
45769
Purchased eve ry
weekday eventng ex c ept
saturday Entered as second
class ma ili n g matter at
Po meroy , Oh10 Post Off ic e.
By carr te r da i l y and
Su nd av. 55c oer week
MAIL

SU BSCR IPTION RATE S
The Ga lli pO liS Tribu ne m
Oh io and west Yirgm 1a one
year
$1 5, s1 x montlls $8 ,
lhree months 55 , elsewhere
S17 per yea r . S1X months 59,
thr ee month s $5 50
Th e Da l l;r Se nt1nel, one
year' 516 00 , six months 58 .50,
thre e month s ss 00
the Un 1ted Pr ess In ·
ternat1 on a l IS excluS.1 vely
ent it le d to the use for
publicat ion of all . news
dispatches cred1 ted to th1S
newspaper and also the local
new s published herem .

---

·1

Rosa A. Justice
. POMEROY - Mrs. Rosa A.
Justice, 67 , Athens Route 3.
passed away Satur.day mor ning at O' Biennes Hospi tal 1n
Athens following a brief Illne ss
She was born in Athens Countr, ,
a daughter of Argosia Co e
Barnhart of Rt 1 Guyesville,
and of the late Loyal Barnhart
Mrs Justice was a reti red
employe Qf the Athens County
Men tal Health Center
Surv 1vors 1nclude a son, ASI
Jack C Justic~, Naval A1r
Serv 1ce, San Diego, Calif.; a
daughter,
Mrs
Gerald
( Don na) Vermillion , Minot A1r
Force Ba se. N D. . three
brothers , Roy , Guysv•lle .
M1tchell and Forrest , both of
Fort Myers, Fla, and three
grandchi ldren and two great.
grandchildren.
She wa s preceded m death by
her h usband , Dewey Justice, 1n

1966.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 1 p .m . at the Wh 1te
Funeral Home .n Coolville ,
Rev Roy Deeter officiating,
with burial to follow 10 the
Fa1rv i ew Cemetery near
Coolville. Friends may call
aft er 7 p.m Sunday

W. ].'Smith Jr.
GALLIPOLIS - Word was
recetved her e Saturday afternoon of the death of W1lliam
J Sm 1th Sr, 71, ·sandusky,
Ohio Mr Smith died May 6 at
hi s home in Sandusky {1211
Carr St ) foll owi ng a lengthy
i llness He was a former
resident of Bidwel l.
Before h1s ret1rement in 1959.
Mr . Smith was an employe of
lhe Nort h Amer ican ,A.v1ation
Co , in Columbus for 19 years .
Surviving are h-ts widow.
Lendra {Lu cas) Sm1th ; three
daughter s, Mr s
Wendell
(Lois) Evans, Sandusky. Mrs .
Clarence (Mary) Wi seman ,
Norwalk , and Mrs. Robert
(Brenda)
Berkey ,
Berl i n
Heights ; four sons, Donald,
Anchorage, Al aska ; Wi lliam,
Jr ., Vermilt on and Harnson
and Michael, both of San
dusky ; 20 grandchildren . a
great -grandson ; two s1sters ,
.. Mr s. Arm it (Hattie) Fih ·
gerald. Ol1ve H1ll, Ky . and Mrs.
Anne Null , Ashland , Ky .; two
brothers , Orsen and Parley
Eucl aire , both of Grayson ,
Ky .: four hatf -brotl1ers , and
several niec~s and nephews .
He was preceded i.l death by
h1 s parents , Mr. and Mrs.
Harn son Sm dh and a grand •
daughter .
... Funeral serv1 ces were held
las t Wednesday at the Frey
Funeral Home . Bunal was jn
Restlawn Memorial Park m
Sandusky.

RACINE - The Rev. Charles
Norris, formerly of Racine,
pastor of the South Point First
Baptist Churc h, has completed
his second book which has been
published and placed on sale
locally.
The book contains 11 se rmons, e ntitled "Chnst Centered Messages." A portion of
it deals with Darrell Badgley
and hts critical Illness in tht!
spring of 1972. The youthful
Badgley was a victim of
leukemia . The book is for sale
at t)le Middleport Book Store '
and the Racine Department
Store. Residents may cOntact
the Rev. Mr. Norris about the
book by wnting him at Box 5 m
South P omt, Ohio, 45680.

College offers
REP&amp;P again
RIO GRANDE - R10 Grande
Colleg-e will offer a course in
Real E s tate Princtples and
Prac t1ces this summer in
response to numerous requests
foll owing Its first scheduling
last autumn .
This course meets one of the
requ~rements of the Stale of
Oh10 fOr obtammg a permanent
Real Estate Salesm~n 's
Ltcense . It may be taken on
either a ~ ·credit " or " nonc redit " basis. Either way
meets the reqUirements of the
Ohio Real Estate Law.
The cos! for persons taking
for college creiht is $55 per
semester hour, or $110 total for
the two credit hour course. On
a non-credit basis the cost is
$35 per semester hour, or $70
for the course.
The course will meet on
T(]ursday evenings from 6;30
to 9:30 for 10 weeks begmning
Thursday. June 14, in Allen
Hall, Room 214. Registration
can be done in person on
Monday, June 11 before 3:30.
For tho se who can not
register in person, mail a
check before June 1l (for
e1ther $70 or $110) to the
Director of Admissions, Rio
Grande College, Rio Grande,
OhiO 45674 . Include name ,
address, and social security

MI•SS Baker
•
m

USAF

.

Wolfe &amp; Pack

•

estimated $100
GALLIPOLIS - Damages
were set at $100 in a fire Friday
night at Cottage S-2 at the
Gallipolis State Institute.
City f1re chief James A.
Northup sa1d the blaze
origmated in a smgle bedroom
and was believ!'d set by a
resident.
Eleven
hlen
responded to the 47th alarm of
the year.
F~remen were called at 5:13
p m . Friday afternoon to the
Farmers ' Hardware on Second
Ave. where a 1961 Buick owned
by Stanley Conn of Rt. 2,
Bidwell, caught fire due to a
short in the ge.lerator . pamage
was estimated at $35.
I
FINEST JR. MISS
MOBILE , Ala . ( UPI )
Linda Susan Rutledge of Fl.
Leavenworth, Kan ., winner of
the National Junior Miss
Pageant, says the pageant is
" the greatest thing a girl can
get into ." Miss Rutledge, 18,
daughter of a Marine Corps
pilot, whs selected for the title
Friday over high school seniors
from the other 49 states.

-

MITCHELL OUT
NEW YORK ( UP! )
Former Attorney General John
N. Mi !&lt;:hell withdrew from h1s
Wall Street law form Friday, a
day after bcmg indicted on
charges of perJury and obs tru c tmg a federal in vestigation. Mikhcll took a
leave of absence " for personal
reasons" fr om Mudge, Rose,
Guthrie, Alexander and M1~
chell wh1ch will drop the last
name from Its title .

·,..- ~'--.....,
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CHILDREN .......... 75'

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love stor y from Den -

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Tonight -Monday
and Tuesday

on May 19th

•

Places
VALUABLES

at Opry House

number.

Fire damage was

while intoxicated ; Robert
Hudnall, Albany, $25 and costs,
license suspended 30 days,
restr\cted drivlng privileges ;
Gar:ond
E.
Sau nders,
Gallipolis, $10 and costs, left of
center; Robert E . Waldin g,
Racme, Rt. 2, $10 and costs,
failure to register.
Forfeiting bonds were
George R . White, Gallipolis,
$22.50, unsafe vehicle; Ora Leo
Dalley, Portland, Rt. 1, $150,
driving under suspension; Ivan
L. Lane, Middleport, Audrey J.
Tustin , Cleveland,
Ca rl
Thomas Thacher , Chesapeake,
Jose
A.
De lamerens,
Gallipolis ; Danny Hens ley,
Glouster, Neil Frankl, Wipple,
Gec:!rge M. Shuler, Oleshtre,
and Dennis Withers, Ports·
mouth , $27.50 each, speeding;
Bill J . Joseph, Charleston,
$37.50, speeding; Charles J .
Ebersbach , Pomeroy , $357.50 1
drivin g while intoxica t ed ;
Roger D. Unger, Marietta,
$27.50, failur e to stop within
assured clear distan ce.

OF SERVICE"

C~~rer Second &amp; Olive

Gallipolis, Ohio

IIJpolis. Ohio

•

�3 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, May 13,1973

Outdoor lab project take~
-by Wahama Biology class

Tag Day was successful
&lt;

MIDDLEPORT Tony
May, president of the Mid·
dlepcct Boys League Assn . said
Saturday "Tag Day" here was
one of the most successful
ever.
This year, along with peewee
league, little league and pony

d~ignaled

areas had been
covered in less than an hour
and the bOys were reass1gned.
A special thanks was given
Mrs . Ruby Vaughan , who,
though she has no children in
little lea g ue this ) ear,
nevertheless organized the
house ~to-.hnuse c.anvas.
Anyone who was missed and

leaguers donned uniCorms to
colle&lt;t contributions for the
summer baseball program .
Said May : " Downt own

w1 shes to make a

contrabution

to !lfe boys league s hould
conta c t Mrs Richard Hovatter
at 992-2606 or at 391 South 5th
Avenue. Mrs. Hovatter has
been appointed treasurer by

merchants were so generous in
an earlier drive and the boys so
successful at collecting on the
streets that all of the

the executi\•e committee.
Games are supposed to hegin
on June 1, although no schedule
has been pos~ Within the
next three weeks a Jot must be
done to gel the Middleport field
prepared. A work day will he
&lt;tnnounced soon. All parents
who have children in summer
baseball are asked to be
gener ous with their lime and
ma npower to get the fi elds in
read iness
Lwnber and plywood are
gmng to be needed to fix the
dugouts, May said.

'
•

-

Four removed

from accident
GALLIPOLIS Galha
County's volunteer emergency
squad Friday evening transported Vernon and Carolyn
Sirru)ls, 1143 Eastern Ave., and
their two children, Christi and
Stacey to the Holzer Medical
Center following a traffic
accident oh Rt. 325, one half
miles south or Southwestern
High School.
Also taken to the Holzer
Medical Center Friday were
David C. Rife, 16, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, a member of the
Kyger Creek track team, who
became ill after running the
two mile at Rio Grande
College's track . Rife had an
asthma attack.
Delphia Cummings, 93,
Lincoln Ave., Gallipolis was
admitted as a medical patient
and Clyde Porter, 65, Eureka
Star Rt., was taken · to the
hospital as a medical patient.

CRASH film is
shown Rotarians

constru c ti on barrier The
veh icle was demolished. Young
wa s not injured.
The Middleport emergency
squad wa s ca lled at 12:18 p.m .
Saturday to Clyde Shawv er's
hon.e at No. 2 Cole St. Mr.
Shawver' was pronounced dead

on ar rival of th"e squad . The
body was l;lken to Ewm g's
Funera l Home .
Funeral services will 5e held
Monday at Ewing's Chapel. .
Bunal will be m Ches hire
Cemetery . Add1tonal details
will be announced Monday.

'

'

. TOP PRIZE WINNERS in the Meigs Co unty history
contest staged by the Meigs Co unty Pioneer and Historical
Soc1ety won $15, $12, $10 and $5 with a tie for fourth place
honors. Seated, ! to r, are George Arnott, first; Jim Schmoll,
second ; back , Dave Gerard, third, and Linda Atkrnson and
Steve Warner t1ed lor fourth .

-"

..

have been made for the Jarnt•s
Knapp fetrm OCtlr S8.s.~W:tfros ,
the Norman l...1 evmg farm on

'cleJJned up
tn-state areJJ

3 Baptists name officers

PRESENTED BACKBOARDS - Teacher Ray Goodman's PAWPAW Manufacturing Co. at Gallia Academy High
School Friday presented the Southeastern Ohio Medical
Emergency Squad four backboards for use in its emergency
vehicle services The boards are designed to be used in m-

juries tha\ involve a. victim's back or spinal cord. Accepting
the boards was P!l. Gary Wallace of the Gallipolis Police
Dept. Left to ri ght above are Ptl. Wallace, Ray Goodman, M.
Moss, L. Harmon, E. Ellis, C. Marcum, M. Woodall and R.
McClaskey, memhers of 'PAWPAW.

•

EMS receives PAWPAW gift
GALLIPOLIS
The
PAWPAW Manufacturing Co.,
a state-sponsored vocational
program at Gallia Academy
High School Friday presented
the Southeastern Ohio Medical
Service Emergency Squad four
backboards
lor
their
emergency vehicle service.
The project was conceived
by Gary Wallace, a Gallipolis
police officer and a memher of
the squad, when he approached
Ray Goodman, the company
coordinator, with the idea of
making the backboards. The

wood used in the backboards
was
provided
by
the
emergency squad and the
manpbwer or womanpower
was pro.v1ded by th e Occupational Work Expenence
Laboratory students.
There were 11 ~tudents who
worked on the project; over 20
hours went into the job
The boards were designed to
be used m injuries that involved an accident victim's
back or spinal chord. Since Xrays must be taken through the

boards only wood with a
nonmetahc fimsh could be
used. The boards - three adult
and one infant s1ze - were all
produ ced from one sheet of
four by e1ght plywood.
M1ke Woodall, company
vice-president, stated there
would be no charge since the
emergency squad wa s a nonprofit organization and was
doing such a fine service for all
lhe people in the area and the
commumty. He also noted that
all students worked WJthout
wages on the proJect.

The PAWPAW Co . is
pre se ntly manufacturing
hardwood cutting and chopping
blocks of a size and quality that
IS hard to find in stores
anyinorc, according to Lois
Harmon, a graduatmg senior
and secretary-treasurer of the
program . Orders can be placed
by calhng 446-3763 during any
school day and free deliveries
will be made. The company
plans to sell 1ts wares at the
Gallia County Junior Fair this
swruner.

ACT aids
•

parents
to .adopt

By CHESTER TANNEHILL
POMEROY - The people in ACT,
MIDDLEPORT - A film,
wh1ch s4Jnds for Adopt a Child Today, a
C.R.A.S.H., provided by the
statewide organizahon with a growmg
Ford Motor Co., was shown to
chapter m southeastern Ohio, are doing
the Middleport . Pomeroy
what comes naturally .'
Rotary club Friday evening at
Its members have a sincere interest m
Heath United Methodist
youn g humamty . Some are parents who
Church followmg dinner.
want to adopt a child, others have gone
The film described the
that route, and having a full family, are
present program of the state of
committed by conscience to help others.
Vermont to detect the drunk
For example, consider Mrs. Jerry
dnver and to rehabilitate him
(Martha) Grim of Wellston; secretary of
into a safe driver. Program
chairman Lee McComas the Ohw Valley Chapter of ACT, and a
member of the state board. A former
showed the !ilm.
teacher with a masters de"gree , she
Next Fnday the membership
will be guests of the Pomeroy . mothe rs four absolu tely beautiful Aleutian
Ind1ari children, and one of her and Mr.
Middleport Lions Club 'at the
Gnm 's own who carne along after the
s ummer home o( Richard
adoptions began.
Chambers m Texas ComThere are 30,000 childre n available (or
munity . Servmg will begin at 6
adoption in Ohio this moment," said Mrs.
p.m .
Gnm, " 2,000 of them under age 3."
John Werner, sec retary,
Many of these children are m "foster
presided .
places ," unadapted, placed there by the
courts, many of them in effect forgotten .
"They 're sort of in limbo, " said Mrs.
Grim. " They neither have the advantages
of a lovmg home - wh1ch is thetr nght DIVORCED ASKED
GALUPO!JS - Two suits or littl~ if any c hance of gaining such a
ior divorce were filed Friday in home ."
Gallia County Common Pleas
Mrs. Che ryl Parker of Wellston is
Court. S•lly Lou Young or president o( the Ohw Valley ACT chapter.
Addlaon charged gross neglect She owns and operates a bouttque shop.
of duty and extreme cruelty in Mrs. Edith Newsome of McArthur, Vwton
her ~tlon against George County caseworker, wtth the county
Henry Yowg of Addison. They welfare department, works closely with
were married March 3, 1956 the chapter.
and have five children. Roy W.
The local ohapter believes it is making
Convery, 123 Portsmouth Rd., rapid prog ress m the area of the ch1ld m
. charged willful absence in hi ~ limbo bcc~use mos t southeastern Ohi o
petition against Ina Jean county social serv1ce departments are
Convery, Mt. Clemens, Mich. reviewing situations of then· c h1ldre n m
They were marri~9 and subsidized homes. The objec t is to
hllve oo children.
dctcr·mme what children want to, Hnd

REV. NORRIS

· Meigs

Property

Transfers

Bicyclists
ride south

ACT OFFICERS - Mrs. Cheryl Parker, Wellston; Mrs. Edith Newsome,
McArthur, caseworker, and Mrs. Martha Grim, Wellston, who has adopted four
Aleutian Indian children, are key people in moving children from limbo into loving
homes. Mrs. Parker is president, and Mrs. Grim, secretary of the Ohio Valley ACT
chapter.

should, be adopted. In many cases
adoptive parenLs ca n be found for them .
The Ohio Valley Chapter of AcT Since last August 50 families have
Adopt a Child Today -will meet Thursbecome members of the OhiO Valley ACT . day evening at 7:30 at the VInton County
in whic~ 25 children have become in- National Bank. Mrs. EdUh Newsome,
volv ed, 16 of them being m the MelgsVinton County caseworker, will be the
Galha-Vmton area.
hostess. Persons interested in adopting
ACT 1s eager to facilitate adoptions
ta ch~ld or in helping ot!lcrs adopt oue arc
throu gh a ll legal channels. Primarily, it
welcomed.
seeks to spread mformation to parents
wantmg child ren and to loca te children for
them . Ideally, th1s 1s done through
AUTOPSY PLANNE.D
ch ildren's services boards of the counties
LOGAN, Ohw ( UP! ) - An autopsy
ACT also can work wLlh lawyers who
was planned Saturday in the death of
- for a fee - arrange adoptions.
Ronald
George, 17, Grove C1ly, found in h1s
There 's a saying in "adoptive ctrcles"
that ~' tf you have money you can adopt a car near here. Hockmg County Sheriff
child." It's true ~hat fmdmg fees and Paul Hartman said the doors of the youth's
arran ge ments - whtch would mclude the ca r were locked and the automobile's keys
hospital costs of the mother g1ving up the were ill the ashtray . Rarll!lan said there
baby - easily run m excess of $1,000 to were no signs of violence.
$1,200.
ACT often IS able to reduce this ;
fmanc1al burden . It charges nothing. Its
wm·k Of Jove has been free SinCe a marl
WANTS SLOW DOWN
nam ed Jesus adopted humanity' as hfs
HOT SPRINGS, Va. i UPl ) - Cost of
family nearly 2,000 years a go.
Chi!pter membership is al such a LJV in g Council Dtrector Johm T. Dunlop
told mfluentia l businessmen Saturday they
pal try cos l1llike!y fails to pay the cost of a
mnntnly newsletter dts lnbuted to all shtJuld go slow on pricC mcreases in 1973 if
they expect to see economic stabilization
members full · uf deve lopments m ch1ld
con
troi s relaxed soun.
&lt;-~doptl n n .

2nd Norris book
now on shelves

Five injured in
collision Frid~y

2,000 Scouts

on Saturday

.

Bond.s taken up by court

POMEROY
SJXteerr
defendants were fined and 13
others forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Frank W.
MIDDLEPORT - Plans for
Porter were Darrell J . Tucker,
a rabies cllnic on Saturday,
Gallipolis, $5 and costs illegal
May 19, at the county garage
parking ; Robert D Farmer,
on
the
Roc k
Springs
Cheshire, Robert M. Lewis,
fairgrounds were completed by
Belpre,
Alfredrick
L.
the Meigs County Humane
McKnight , Pomeroy and
Society at Middleport village
Char l es Allensworth ,
hall last week. ·
Pomeroy. $15 and rosts each,
The public clinic wiJ get
speeding; Karl Lee Moore,
BARBARA BAKER
underwa y at 2 p.m . with Dr.
Belpre, $10and costs, stop sign
violation; George R. Morgan,
Dan Notter of Gallipolis in
charge . All dogs ,must be on
Middleport , and Timothy
leashes and cats in containers.
Cornell, Gallipolis, $10 and
Rab1es shots will be $3 each.
costs each, speeding; Leland
Further shots will be available
E. Selbe, Pl . Pleasant, $10 and
if desired including distemper
cost s, passing on yellow line;
and lepeospirosis .
REEDSV ILLE - A family Harold 0 . Sellers, Portland,
The society furthered plans tradition was continued when • Rt. I, Ked Davis, Gallipolis
lor its membership tea to be Barbara J o Baker, 20, Ferry, W. Va., Max Manuel,
held m early June at the home daughter of Charl es and Racine, Rt. 2, Rodney C.
of Mr . and Mrs. James Rick· Lorraine Baker enlisted In the Hysell, Vincent, Ohio, $150 and
man in Middleport. Junior United States Air Force Qn costs each, three days conmembership programs were Ma y 7, at Chicago, Ill.
finement , license suspended
discussed and senior sponsors
She joined two brothers in for six month s, r estri ct ed
driving prlvileges 1 driving
assign~d . The group heard and the Air Force Thomas in his
di scussed the Humane In - rourth enlistm'e nt and Oenms
.
'
veshgators repor ts. Plans . in his third. Both brothers have
were made (or some members se rved in Vi e tnam twi ce
to attend a seminar at Athens German y twice, and Cambodi~
TWO ACCEPTED
on June 16 when J ohn Inman , once.
RIO GRANDE - Paula
Jr. , Great Lak es Regional
Another brother, John , was Morris, daughter of Mr. and
Director, will be present. The in th e Air Force m 1958 and now Mrs . Robert Morris, Mtd sernmar iS for Athens, Fair· lives in East Liverpool, Ohw. dleport Rr:i, anq Jyl Beaver,
field, Gallia, Hocking, Me1gs
M1ss
Baker
attended daughter of Mr. a nd Mrs.
and Washington Counties in Riverview School in Reedsv1Ue Lowell Beaver of Beach St.,
Ohio and for the Parkersburg, and graduated from Kelvyn Middleport have been a ccepted
Park H1gh School in Chicago. for enrollment at Rw Grande.
W. Va ., area
Attending the meeting were She was recently employed in Both will enter Rio Grande the
Mrs. Edwin Coates, Mrs. the offtce of Bankers Life and fall quarter of 1973. Both will
Roscoe F owler, Mrs. Eleanor Cas ualty Insuran ce Co ., graduate at Meigs High School
Zeihlcr, Mrs . W1lham G Ch1cago. She enlisted as an this month .
Baronick, Mrs. William Woods, a1rcraft mechanic and will
Mrs. Ca rl Will, Mrs. Franklin attend Air c raft Mechani cs
HIT..SKIP PROBED
Lewis, Mrs . Robert Roherts, SchooJ after completing six
POMEROY - The Meigs
Miss Car olyn Smith, Mrs. Allen weeks ~ of baste traming in
County Sheriff's Department is
Ball , Mrs. Belly Stewart, Texas.
investigating a hit-skip that
Middleport Mayor J ohn Zerkle
occurred Friday at 8 p.m. at
and Mrs. Clinton Fisher.
the intersection of SR 681 and
124 at Reedsville. The
Wlidentified vehicle struck a
pickup truck owned by Dale
Senior Citizens'
Barr parked at Barr's Ashland
Station . The unidentified car
activities week
was reported to have forced a
second car off the highway
POMEROY - Senior Citizen
RA CIN E - The Grass after hittU..g the truck.
Center activities for the week Reflec tion , a noted bluegrass
are as follows:
band from the Washington, D.
Monday, May 14, 1·3 p.m ., C. area, and Dwane Wolfe imd
Crafts, Dough Flowers.
his Wolf Pack of here will
Tuesday, May 15 - 9:30- 11 headhne a country - bluegrass·
a .m., Mod Podge, small charge gospel special at the MounTomght, Man, Tue.
for craft matenal ; 1-3 p.m., tameer Opry House at 'Milton,
May 13-14-15
ca rds and games.
W Va . May 19, at 8:30 p.m.
SHAFT'S
Wednesday, May 16 - 9:30 •
A versa Hie country_, smger,
BIG SCORE
11 a.m., Knittmg , Anna Bll:lck- Wolfe was "discovered" by the
{Technlcolor)
Ri chard Roundtree
wood , Instructor; 1-3 p.m., egg Mountaineer Opry House
Moses Gunn
car ton
flowers ;
brin g durin g 1ts recent three-s late
Featurflle:
s tyrofoam
egg
ca rton s, talent search. Roundmg out the
Love at Ftrst Bite,
l Stooges
scissors, s traight pins.
evemng will be the Caldwells, a
Show Starts 7 p.m.
Thursday, May 17 - tO . local gospel singing ensemble,
noon , help make craft 1terns to and Eck Gibson and the
sell at Regatta. Bnng Jdea s; 1· Mountaineer Ramblers, the
3 p.m . Cards and games; Opry House 's bluegrass bandRutland Silver Circle Club in-residence .
meets in the afternoon ;
Tickets are $2 for adults and
Harrisonville Golden Age Club $.50 for children between five
Tonight, Mon . &amp; Tues.
meets at 7:30p.m .
and 12. There is a snack and
May 13-14 -15
Fr1day, May 18 - 2-4 p.m. ; record bar open throughout the
Double Feature Program
VIM meeting, "Health Head to performance. Parking IS free .
'T HE MINX"
Toe" , Dr. Marion Fugate.
extraordinary
exciting
The Opry House IS located at
l
s
hC
IW
.
th e Milton exit (EXIt 7) on
I Rated R)
Inters tate 64.
- Pius-

May. 19th

of the bmd

9-Year-Old has close call
POMEROY - Nine-year-&lt;~ld
Kimberly Lute., Rt. I, Long
Bottom , escaped serious injury
around 3:15 p.m. Saturday
when a parked pickup truck
she was sitting in drifted back.
ward and scraped the side of
another parked truck owned by
Raymond Boa twright, address
unknown .
'""
The door of the truck in
which the girl was sttting was
open . The girl's legs were
outside the truck. A commode
plunger which wa s ms1de the
truck was all that prevented
the girl from receiving serious
leg damage . It kept the door
open upon impact.
The ac&lt;::ident wa s investigated by Sher1ff Robert C.
Hartenbach's department.
The girl's mother, Linda J .
Lute, had , parked the truck
along side State Route 248 to go
mto Gaul's Grocery, The girl
and
suffered contusions
abrasions or the nghtleg.
At 3 a .m . Saturday, at the
intersection or Rt. 33 and 7,
Richard Young, Rt. 1, Long
Bottom, was traveling north on
Rt. 7. He apparently fell asleep
at the wheel.
His auto crashed mto a

cttttle li e is. mterested
p;:.s:turc treatment and
provemenL and also in
r1~pttir of the farm pond
Potters Creek. the Norman
improvement of some sp rings.
Hamr~ place near Stone 's Mill
WE ASS ISTED in planning a
and the Troy Huffman !ann on
.
solution
to drainage pr&lt;&gt;ble,ms
Oldtown Creek . Norma n
Lieving is a first-lime farmer around the new Vocational
bl."Cause hts pas t experience School with A. F.. Sommer, Jr.,
ha s been in the · plumbmg director of the school. About
business. RecenUy he was the water problem there
thrilled at the b1rlh of the f~rs t the result of surface water
Lay
calf to be born on his newly coll ects in low areas. Be&lt;:au:se
of this, it wa s decided that
acquired land .
several local people interested
The Huffman fa rm is the surface drainage would be
in the development or an
former Cla rence Adkins place. brought mto play in order to
outdoor learmng center at the
Mr. HuHman is rai sin g beef eliminate the water hole.
Vocational School. We met
once with Buckley's class at
the school to go over soils informati on and some of the
possi ble project' that could be
earned out. We a lso met with
the class and helped conduc t a
tour over the school grounds to
acquaint the students w1th the
' per· l:lolzcr Medical Center by the
physical layout or the land and
GALL!POUS - Five
its possibilities .
sons were injured in a colhs10n Galha Count y Volunteer
Buckley has divided his class at 6:40p.m. Friday on Rt. 325, Emergency Squad.
S1mm s wa s c ited to
mto special groups to work on one and one tenth miles north
Municipal Court for failing to
varwus parts of the plan for the or Rt . 141.
outdoor learning center . We
The Gallia-Meigs Poii! State stop within the assured clear
were thnlled with the eager- Highway Palmi said an auto distance . Bostic was charged
ne ss and enthusiasm these driven by Ve rnon R . Stmms, w1th parking on the roadway.
young people sho wed in 22, Gallipolis, came over a 'There was heavy damage to
tackling this protect.
hillcrest and struck the rear both cars.
A second mtshap occurred on
CONSERVATION
plan s end of a parked auto owned by
Emmett W. Bo sti c, 19, the Sta rcher - Hamrick Rd.
Gallipolis. Vernon R. Simms eight tenths of a mile sou th of
sustained a fractured right Rt. 35 wh ere cars driven by
arm , his wife, Carolyn had a Jackie L. Williams, 18,
possib!e fractured ankle and GallipoliS, and Steve A. Slone,
multiple lacerations of the 18, Rt. 1, Gallipolis,. co ll ided
face, their two children, Olnsti headon. Th ere was moderate
•
Ann and Stacey both had body damage and no c1tahon was
brmses. They were taken to the Jssued .
HU NTINGTON - The final
results of the Tri-State area
Council , Boy Scouts of
America, Keep Amenca
Beautiful Day held Apnl 28
GALLIPOLIS - Deacons, deaconesses, Evelyn Evans,
s howe d about 2,000 Cubs, truste es and other c hurch Gladys Ha ner and Ann a
Scouts, Explorers and adult officers were elected during Willi ams; mi ssionary comleaders !rom 61 Packs, Troops the annual business meeting of mittee, Karen Neal and Larry
and Posts participated m all the First Baptist Church here Marr ; Church Clerk, Hazel
~reas of the Tri-State Area
last week. Elected were : Halleyi fmanctal secretary,
Coun cil
Deacons, Emerson Corbin, Bill Matthews; assistant
By dis tricts they were the Robert Reed and Ernest financial sec re tary, Ja ck
Lawa c a Dts trict, 10 umts ; Wiggles worth ; tru stees, Ca rt e r ; church tx:easurer ,
Midland District 12; Kentucky Michael Davis and Earl Neal; Kathy Keenan; miss ion ar-y
30, and M·G·M 9. They
trea !;!urer, Elva Davis ; Sunday
collected 54 tons of trash, and
school superintendent, Pastor
1.1 tons of materials for
Harry E . Cole and head usher ,
Veterans Memorial Hospital
recychng, cleaned up 144 m1les
John Carhart.
•
of roadside, 16 mtles of
ADMISSIONS - Herman
waterways and shoreline, 140 Jones, Point Pleasant; John
ocres of park land and empty - Eich, Pomeroy; Dorothy
lots, and planted 10,000 trees Lante , Reedsville; Jeffrey
Knighting, Racme ; Carol
and shrubs.
The majority of these units Drake, New Haven.
DISCHARGES - E stelle
will c ont inue working 011
outdoor or indoor conservation Cunningham, Martha Slater,
type projects for the balance of Suzanne Wolfe, Dalphne
the year as a final part or the Bailey, Ollie Tyree, Russell
Stella Lemley, dec., to Carl
SOAR program, of which Keep Cununins, Leora Zwilling.
Lemley, ce r t . uf tra ns.
American Beautiful Day was
Orange.
the first ;tep. Those youth
Craw's Steak House In c. to
members and leaders parGordon Bruce Teaford , ·1.1 1
ticipating in the total SOAR
acres, Chester .
program, who report comKenneth D. Cooke , J eanne
pleted results in the late fall of
Cooke lu Randall . Gen e
this year wtll receive special
Hawley , Darla Jean Hawley,
recognitions in the form of
parce l, Middleport.
colorful patches for the youth
Eva E . Bailey to Myron A
and key chains !or the adults ..
Bailey, Ann C. Balley, l 5 acres,
Robert Forney, Council
Salisbury
SOAR Chairman, and his
Elza Btrch, Cora Birch to
committee w1l1 be assisting the
Elza Birch, Cora Birch , parcel,
units in the final phase of the
Sutton
SOAR program .
Ernest Gnffm, June Grtffin
to Boyd E. Johnson, Ca r olyn
Johnson, 5 a cr es, Olive .
Ge orge
F . Cr emean s,
Audrey M. Cremeans to Syb1l
Ebersbach, parcels, Orange.
Syb1l Ebersbach to George
F . Cremeans , Audrey M.
Cremeans, p;u·cels, Orange.
Glenn M. Kemper, dec ., to
Dor is M. Kemper Barnh1ll,
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Some
FREDBLAETTNAR
Elwyn E . Kemper , Lois Jean
2,700 bicyclists left here
Corlger, afhd of trans., Salem .
Saturday for a 210-mile trip
Dori s M Barnhill, Sterlie A.
Blaettnar with
south to Portsmouth and back
Barnhill, Elwin E . Kemper,
over the weekend in what is
Keith Goble Ford Ruth A Kemper , Lois E.
called the world's largest
Conger , John F Conger to
cycling event.
POME~OY Fred S.
Franklm Rea l Estate , pa rCel,
The 12th annual Tour of the Blaettnar. 209 Sprin ~ Ave.,
Sa lem .
Scioto River Valley is spon- Pomeroy , has jolned the sales
sored by the American Youth s~rr of Ke1th Goble F ord, Inc.,
GUILT PLEADED
Hostels and has attracted Middleport.
..
TAMPA , Fla . (U P! )
riders !his year from 39 states
Mr . . Blaettnar ha s had 42
George ' A.
AccountAnt
and three · foreign countries.
year s of auto selling ex·
Heann
g,
1n
a
plea
The cyclists received a police perience and was an auto
arran gement worked out
escort out of this city and dealer in Pomeroy for 26 years.
Friday, pleaded guilty to one
through several others along An active member of Trinity
coun
t of a two-coun t federal
the way. Ambulance service is Church in Pomeroy where he
mdlCtment chargmg political
being provided by the has held numerous omces, Mr.
American Red Cross and the Blae ttnar a lso is a member of sabotag e durin g the 1972
Fl or ida
DemocratiC
Ohio National Guard is sup-• Pomeroy Lodge 164, F &amp; AM :
presidential
pnmary.
Heanng
plying command cars and a Pomeroy Chapter 80, RAM;
plea ded guilty to publishing
helicopter.
Ohio Valley Commandery 24,
and diStributing th~ 1' Muskie
A fleet of 10 trucks is trans- Knights Tmplar Bos worth
Letter," which accused
porting food, related materials Council 46, R&amp;SM , and the
Democratlc n va ls Sens Henry
and other gear.
York Cross of Honor. A
M Jackson and Hubert H.
'!'he cyclists are expected to graduate of Hio University,
Humphre
y
of
sex ual
consume 40 cases of raisins; Mr, Blaettnar is the son of the
500 pounds of lunch meat, 7,000 late Mr. and Mrs : John F. misconduct.,
slices of cheese; 5,000 orangesi Blaettnar of Pomeroy .
ASK TOWED
countless slices of bread and
Mr. Blaettnar and his w1!e,
GAL,LlPOLIS - Howard J .
more than 25,000 servings of Margaret, have two chtldren ,
beverages.
John, of P omeroy, a teache~ at Read, 291 Albany, N. Y., an
The cyclists formed a string Alexander High School, and attorney ~ and Susa n E .
50 miles long on their 105-nnle Mrs. Nancy Lee, who has been Ph1llips, 25, Gallipolis, atride to Portsmouth, which residing at Parma but is ~rney 1 aP,Phed for a marriage
some made in as £ew as five moving to Charleston, W. Va. , license Friday in Gallia County
Probate Court.
hours.
this weekend .

By Joho Cuopu
Soil C&lt;Jos. Servlc•
MASON - The advance
biology class at Wahama H1gh
School, . whose teacher is
William Buckley, is developing
a proJeCt for an outdoor
laboratory at the Mason
County Vocational School. This
class project is the outgrowth
of . a meeting attended by

.

crlDIC· IS· .
.

2- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Mal' 13, !973

GORDON CARSON

Speaker named
for graduation
!,110 GRANDE - Dr. Alphus
R . Chrfstensen, president of
Rio Grande College Saturday
announced Gordon B. Carson,
Executive Vice PreSident of
Albion College, Albion, Mich .,
will deliver the address for the
97th Commencement on
Sunday, May 13, on the Rio
. Grande College green. The
ceremonies begin at 2:30 p.m.
Mr. Carson graduated from
high school in South Euclid,
received his B. S. degree in
mechanical engineering frol)l
Case Institute of Technology,
his master's degree from Yale
University, and did post
graduate study at Case In·
stitute where he was on the
faculty 12 years.
He holds 11 patents in the
United Slates, Canada and
England for inventions in the
field of automation and
manufacturing, and has been
employed in industry at the C.
H. Quackenbush Company in
Cleveland, the Hawthorne
Works of Western Electric
Company in Chicago, and the
Selby Shoe Company in Portsmouth.
In additiOn to his industry
positions, Carson was with
Ohio State University eight

years, first as Dean ~tf
Engineering and later as Vice
President of Business and
Finance for the UniverSity.
During this period, he was also
Vice President of the Ohio
State University Rese-art h
Foundation, and Director of
the Engineerin~ Experiment
Station.
Case Institute of Technology
awarded him the Doctor of
Engineering degree (Honoris
Causa ), in 1957, and he has
been the recipient of many
other honors,
including
Technical Man of the Year
awarded by the Columbus
Technical Council for 1957-li8.
Mr . Carson has been elected to
the Grade of Fellow by the
Amencan
Society
'Jf
Mechanical Engineers , the
American Association for the
Advancement of Science, and
the American Institute of Industrial Engineers.
' The title of Mr. Carson's
address Sunday will be
'' Diagnosis and Treatment.'' A
total of 177 students will
receive their degrees during
the commencement ceremony.
In case of rain, the program
will be moved to Lyne Center
on campus.

r-------------------------~

! Area Deaths
William Gillian
COOLVILLE William
G11l1an , 66 , who passed away
unexpectedly at his residen ce
Fpday afternoon , was born
in Me1g s County , the son of the
tate E!za and Anna Duskey
Gillian
Mr Gi llian had been i n the
timber bus1ness the greater
part of his l1 fe and at the time
of hts death was employed by
the Oh 1o Vall ey Manufacturing

Corp . at Tuppers Plams
Surviving are hi s w1fe , Ruby,
at home ; three sons, Richard ,
Leon , and Lew iS, a ll of
Coolv il le ; three daughter s,
Mrs Harry (Carol) Dunfee of
Lebanon, Oh 1o; Mrs Howard
(Donna ) Russell , Coolville , and
Mrs Raymond (Linda) Paul of
Columbus ; two sisters, Mrs .
Maff1e Pullins. Coolville, and
Mr s. Carrie Whalley , Shade ;
three brothers , Wayne , Tup·
per s Plams; Harry, Shade. and
Wilbur , of Columbu s, 12
grand c hildren, and several
n1eces and nephews.
He wa s preceded in death by
an infant son , WiU iam Lee, and
two brothers .
Funeral services will be
Monday at 2 p m at th e Wh 1te
Fun era l Home here w1fh the
Rev
Roy Rose oH1c1ating .
B uri al wlll follow 1n the
Coolv die Cem etery . Friends
may call after noon on Sunday

SUNDAY
liMES-SENTINEl
Publtshed ever y Sunday
The
Oh tO
Valley
by
Pub ltshinq Co
GA LLI POLIS
DA ILY TRIBU N E

825 Th ird Ave , Ga l lt pO IIS,

0hiOll563 1
Published e11ery weekday
eve ni ng ex c ept Sa turday
sec ond Class F'o stage Pa1d
at Gall ipOliS, Ohio 45631.
THE DAILY SENTING!L
111 Court Sl , Pomeroy, 0
45769
Purchased eve ry
weekday eventng ex c ept
saturday Entered as second
class ma ili n g matter at
Po meroy , Oh10 Post Off ic e.
By carr te r da i l y and
Su nd av. 55c oer week
MAIL

SU BSCR IPTION RATE S
The Ga lli pO liS Tribu ne m
Oh io and west Yirgm 1a one
year
$1 5, s1 x montlls $8 ,
lhree months 55 , elsewhere
S17 per yea r . S1X months 59,
thr ee month s $5 50
Th e Da l l;r Se nt1nel, one
year' 516 00 , six months 58 .50,
thre e month s ss 00
the Un 1ted Pr ess In ·
ternat1 on a l IS excluS.1 vely
ent it le d to the use for
publicat ion of all . news
dispatches cred1 ted to th1S
newspaper and also the local
new s published herem .

---

·1

Rosa A. Justice
. POMEROY - Mrs. Rosa A.
Justice, 67 , Athens Route 3.
passed away Satur.day mor ning at O' Biennes Hospi tal 1n
Athens following a brief Illne ss
She was born in Athens Countr, ,
a daughter of Argosia Co e
Barnhart of Rt 1 Guyesville,
and of the late Loyal Barnhart
Mrs Justice was a reti red
employe Qf the Athens County
Men tal Health Center
Surv 1vors 1nclude a son, ASI
Jack C Justic~, Naval A1r
Serv 1ce, San Diego, Calif.; a
daughter,
Mrs
Gerald
( Don na) Vermillion , Minot A1r
Force Ba se. N D. . three
brothers , Roy , Guysv•lle .
M1tchell and Forrest , both of
Fort Myers, Fla, and three
grandchi ldren and two great.
grandchildren.
She wa s preceded m death by
her h usband , Dewey Justice, 1n

1966.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 1 p .m . at the Wh 1te
Funeral Home .n Coolville ,
Rev Roy Deeter officiating,
with burial to follow 10 the
Fa1rv i ew Cemetery near
Coolville. Friends may call
aft er 7 p.m Sunday

W. ].'Smith Jr.
GALLIPOLIS - Word was
recetved her e Saturday afternoon of the death of W1lliam
J Sm 1th Sr, 71, ·sandusky,
Ohio Mr Smith died May 6 at
hi s home in Sandusky {1211
Carr St ) foll owi ng a lengthy
i llness He was a former
resident of Bidwel l.
Before h1s ret1rement in 1959.
Mr . Smith was an employe of
lhe Nort h Amer ican ,A.v1ation
Co , in Columbus for 19 years .
Surviving are h-ts widow.
Lendra {Lu cas) Sm1th ; three
daughter s, Mr s
Wendell
(Lois) Evans, Sandusky. Mrs .
Clarence (Mary) Wi seman ,
Norwalk , and Mrs. Robert
(Brenda)
Berkey ,
Berl i n
Heights ; four sons, Donald,
Anchorage, Al aska ; Wi lliam,
Jr ., Vermilt on and Harnson
and Michael, both of San
dusky ; 20 grandchildren . a
great -grandson ; two s1sters ,
.. Mr s. Arm it (Hattie) Fih ·
gerald. Ol1ve H1ll, Ky . and Mrs.
Anne Null , Ashland , Ky .; two
brothers , Orsen and Parley
Eucl aire , both of Grayson ,
Ky .: four hatf -brotl1ers , and
several niec~s and nephews .
He was preceded i.l death by
h1 s parents , Mr. and Mrs.
Harn son Sm dh and a grand •
daughter .
... Funeral serv1 ces were held
las t Wednesday at the Frey
Funeral Home . Bunal was jn
Restlawn Memorial Park m
Sandusky.

RACINE - The Rev. Charles
Norris, formerly of Racine,
pastor of the South Point First
Baptist Churc h, has completed
his second book which has been
published and placed on sale
locally.
The book contains 11 se rmons, e ntitled "Chnst Centered Messages." A portion of
it deals with Darrell Badgley
and hts critical Illness in tht!
spring of 1972. The youthful
Badgley was a victim of
leukemia . The book is for sale
at t)le Middleport Book Store '
and the Racine Department
Store. Residents may cOntact
the Rev. Mr. Norris about the
book by wnting him at Box 5 m
South P omt, Ohio, 45680.

College offers
REP&amp;P again
RIO GRANDE - R10 Grande
Colleg-e will offer a course in
Real E s tate Princtples and
Prac t1ces this summer in
response to numerous requests
foll owing Its first scheduling
last autumn .
This course meets one of the
requ~rements of the Stale of
Oh10 fOr obtammg a permanent
Real Estate Salesm~n 's
Ltcense . It may be taken on
either a ~ ·credit " or " nonc redit " basis. Either way
meets the reqUirements of the
Ohio Real Estate Law.
The cos! for persons taking
for college creiht is $55 per
semester hour, or $110 total for
the two credit hour course. On
a non-credit basis the cost is
$35 per semester hour, or $70
for the course.
The course will meet on
T(]ursday evenings from 6;30
to 9:30 for 10 weeks begmning
Thursday. June 14, in Allen
Hall, Room 214. Registration
can be done in person on
Monday, June 11 before 3:30.
For tho se who can not
register in person, mail a
check before June 1l (for
e1ther $70 or $110) to the
Director of Admissions, Rio
Grande College, Rio Grande,
OhiO 45674 . Include name ,
address, and social security

MI•SS Baker
•
m

USAF

.

Wolfe &amp; Pack

•

estimated $100
GALLIPOLIS - Damages
were set at $100 in a fire Friday
night at Cottage S-2 at the
Gallipolis State Institute.
City f1re chief James A.
Northup sa1d the blaze
origmated in a smgle bedroom
and was believ!'d set by a
resident.
Eleven
hlen
responded to the 47th alarm of
the year.
F~remen were called at 5:13
p m . Friday afternoon to the
Farmers ' Hardware on Second
Ave. where a 1961 Buick owned
by Stanley Conn of Rt. 2,
Bidwell, caught fire due to a
short in the ge.lerator . pamage
was estimated at $35.
I
FINEST JR. MISS
MOBILE , Ala . ( UPI )
Linda Susan Rutledge of Fl.
Leavenworth, Kan ., winner of
the National Junior Miss
Pageant, says the pageant is
" the greatest thing a girl can
get into ." Miss Rutledge, 18,
daughter of a Marine Corps
pilot, whs selected for the title
Friday over high school seniors
from the other 49 states.

-

MITCHELL OUT
NEW YORK ( UP! )
Former Attorney General John
N. Mi !&lt;:hell withdrew from h1s
Wall Street law form Friday, a
day after bcmg indicted on
charges of perJury and obs tru c tmg a federal in vestigation. Mikhcll took a
leave of absence " for personal
reasons" fr om Mudge, Rose,
Guthrie, Alexander and M1~
chell wh1ch will drop the last
name from Its title .

·,..- ~'--.....,
WEO

WH£R[ ECONOMY ORI GINAT[S

Everything Is
·Guaranteed
· To SatisfyOr Maney Back
All Good

BACON
2 $1.89
99c
lb.

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"Serving you since 1934"

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the .snow.

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Wednesday

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Sleep

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YOUR IMPORTANT
PAPERS AND
VALUABLE ITEMS
CAN'T BEI
REPLACED!
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PROTECT THEM
AGAINST

fire,
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Cartoon

ADMISSION
ADULT............. '1.50
CHILDREN .......... 75'

CHICKEN
IT'S THE FINEST!

SNACK BOX
DINNER BOX
9 PCS.
CHICKEN
'

2Pcs. CHICKEN
FRENCH FRIES

ROLL

3 Pes. CHICKEN
FRENCH FRIES

SLAW &amp; ROLL

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AND

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• ••••
"THE OLD BANK
WITH NEW IDEAS"

Try Our Delicious Macaroni Salad, Potato Salad, Baked
Beans. - For Easy Pickup Phone 446-2682.

"Home of That Old Fashion G()(Jdness"
"110 YEARS

LEG QUARTERS .
lb.

One

SAFETY
DEPOSIT

Since 1859

lb.

DAN THQM-A·S
AND SON

The House of Commons is
the only building in England
that the sovereign is not allowed to enter .

YOUR

Tiffany Boling
CANDY
SNATCHERS

MEIGS THEATRE

"RELATIONS"
love stor y from Den -

TO KEEP

Tonight -Monday
and Tuesday

on May 19th

•

Places
VALUABLES

at Opry House

number.

Fire damage was

while intoxicated ; Robert
Hudnall, Albany, $25 and costs,
license suspended 30 days,
restr\cted drivlng privileges ;
Gar:ond
E.
Sau nders,
Gallipolis, $10 and costs, left of
center; Robert E . Waldin g,
Racme, Rt. 2, $10 and costs,
failure to register.
Forfeiting bonds were
George R . White, Gallipolis,
$22.50, unsafe vehicle; Ora Leo
Dalley, Portland, Rt. 1, $150,
driving under suspension; Ivan
L. Lane, Middleport, Audrey J.
Tustin , Cleveland,
Ca rl
Thomas Thacher , Chesapeake,
Jose
A.
De lamerens,
Gallipolis ; Danny Hens ley,
Glouster, Neil Frankl, Wipple,
Gec:!rge M. Shuler, Oleshtre,
and Dennis Withers, Ports·
mouth , $27.50 each, speeding;
Bill J . Joseph, Charleston,
$37.50, speeding; Charles J .
Ebersbach , Pomeroy , $357.50 1
drivin g while intoxica t ed ;
Roger D. Unger, Marietta,
$27.50, failur e to stop within
assured clear distan ce.

OF SERVICE"

C~~rer Second &amp; Olive

Gallipolis, Ohio

IIJpolis. Ohio

•

�\
•

I
i - The Sundav Time.- Sentinei.Sundav. Mav 13. 1973

,V

1,

~)

Grace Guild installs
offtcers at dinner meet

NEW OFFICERS of the Rio Grande Mothers League installed Thursday evening are left to right, Carol Rupe, Delores Shockey, Peggy Call, Beverly
Wilkins, Sue Brandeberry, Becky Vanco and Margaret Bryant.
Sherr! J arvis, Debbie Kinder
and Polly Walker. Primary,
grades one through three , Mrs.
J erry McDivitt , superin·
tendent ; teachers, Mrs. James
Dari ner, Mrs. Dean Davis • ·
Mrs. E. E. Eva ns, Mrs. Owen
GALLIPOLIS - . Firs t begin ning at 7:~0 p.m. ·
Lloyd and Mrs. Mike Davis ·
•
Baptist
Church
,has
released
...
The
Son
of
God
"
"
Jesus
assistan
ts, Ruth Ann Layne,
The Ri o Grande Mothers Ma rgaret Bryan t. Mrs. Rupe
League enjoyed a dinner and presented each officer a gold plans for Vacation Bible School will be the theme of the Shelly Wright, Bebby Saunders
the in s tallation of offi ce r s key ri bboned wi th Hie color of June 4 through June 13, under program which will follow the and Beck y Rupe, Junior ,
the direc tion of Mrs. Wilson Reg ular
Baptist
Press grades four thr ough she, Mrs .
Tuesday evening at the her office .
Wahl.
Vacation
Bible
School Francis O'Donnell, superinCOlonial ' Inn, Jackson. Cheryl ' Following the installation,
Classes
will
be
held
ea
ch
prog r a m. Free bus trans· te ndent; teachers Mrs. Earl
Van co gave the devotions the ladies held a short business
evening
from
6:30
to
8:30
with
a
portation will be Orovided for Neal , Mrs. Luke Settle, Mrs.
preceding dinner served to 14 mee ting. The grou p made fi nal
demonstration
program
during
the pu~ils.
Bill Huffman , Mrs. Jess Smith,
members and one gues t.
plans for the rummage sale
the
Wednesday
session
,
Departmental superintend- Mrs. Lloyd Danner and Earl
Officers for the 1973-74 yea r Th ursday, · Fr ida y
and
ents
and teachers for the Neal ; assistants, Steve Brown
were ins talled by OCCL distric t Satu rday. Mrs. Rupe discussed
session· will be, kindergarten, Mrs. Keith'\ Wick, Penny
r resid cnt, Ca rol Rupe. The the possi ble revision of the
'
she was filted ywith a wedding Mrs. Adrian Haner , superinKemper and .Judy Cole. Youth ,
ne w offi cers ar e Delores OCCL programs which will
dtess made from the wrapping te ndent ; teacher s, Debbie
,Rev . Harr"y Cole , superinShockey, president , Peggy change the 10 achievement
pa per and ribbons.
Burnette,
Mrs.
Kenneth
Bostic,
tendent; teachers, Mr . and
Call , vice pres ident , Bev prog ram to a service club
Those attending, were Mrs . Elain e Brown, and Wilani
Mrs. Marion Williams, Beverly
Wil ki ns, s ecretary,
Su e progra m. The meeting conDorothy Houck, Debbie Houck, Wahl ; assistants, Ruth Bostic,
Rusk and Brenda J ean
Brandeberry, treasurer, Becky cl uded wi th a discussion of the
Brenda Johnson, Delores Wall Peggy" Tope , Debbie Carhart, Stewart.
Van co, historian-librarian and .. famil y outing in June.
Cathy Wall, Dorothy
Young,'
s u nshine c hairw om a n,
Mary Young, Pearl Elliott,
Jean SaWlders, Carol Kessel ,
Carolyn Caldwell, Shirley
Dailey, Marsha Bush, Bertina
Smeltzer, Ali ce Williams ,
Mary Long, Edith Long ,
Denise Long, Connie Hemphill,
Stephanie Hemphill , Mrs.
· William Jenkins and Edith
GALLIPOLIS - A bridal wi th an umbrella cake cen- Adkins.
Shower was recently given ln terin g the refr eshment table,
Those sending gifts were
honor of Miss Sue Adkins, whi ch was accented with Delbert Hanna, Genny Yost,
.IJride-cleGt'of Gary J ones, by floating candles. · Multi-color Crystal Sheets, Kay Clark,
the First Church of God.
streame rs ·covered the gift Mary Lanier, Roma Baker,
Each guest was gre.cted wi th table, centered by a bouquet.' Barbara Null, .Cleo McManis,
a lJa ndmade·co rsage of either a
The lad ies were paired to E lain~ J ones, June Snyder,
pink, gree n or yellow carnation make wedding veils \\•ith the Donna Allen, Jane.t Johnson ,
,.
by '~ os td.lse~. Mrs . Connie pri z~ for .the best white tissue Ruth Ann Hamilton, Joyce
Herl\'phill ' ana Mfs. Delores pa ~cr ~ve il going to Pearl Ha rrington, Celestine North
. '
Wail. The hon oree wa s EliJOll and Shirley Pailey. Sonji Owens, LuAnn Whitley,
'
presented a double carnation . After the bride-elect opened Glenna Williams and Margaret
The room was decorated and acknowledged her gifts, Bryant.

Rio Mothers League
installs officers

Baptist Church plans
Vacation Bible School

GALLIPOLIS - Grace Guild
met ror the monthly dinner
session May 7 with Mrs. Hoke
Robinson opening the meeting
with a thought for May, ineluding a thank-yo u for
mothers, grandmothers and
those who have passed away.
The group decided to install
carpeting in the crib nursery or
the church.
Mrs. Bernice McMahon gave
the medita tion on "Women
Power" concern ing the in·
fluence of women in the home,
church, comm unity and
business .
Mrs. Elsie Lusk installed the
new ofFicers during a can ~
dleli ghtl ng ceremony. New
offi cers are Mrs . Ethel
Robinson, president ; Mrs .
Vi pla Carter , vice president

FAC holds
dance classes
GALLIPOLIS
Registra tion is open ror the
Ballroom Dance Classes at the
French Art Colony . The classes
are held Monday and Thursday
evenings for one hour for a six
week period. Mikki Casto •
Cheshire , is instructress . She
leaches rox trot, waltz, swing ,
ch~ ..cha , rumba ! merenque,
samba and tango . Cost to Art
Colony members is $24 ; $30 for
n ~n -members . For registration
or· information call Mrs. John
Byers, 446-1903.

, 5- The Sunday Times ·Sentinel, Sunday, May 13, 19'73

The man who builds a factory builds a tem ple; the
man who works there worships there; and to ..,ach is
due not scorn and blame but
reverence and pralse.-Calvi n Coolidge.

and Mrs . Hel&lt;!h Smith,
secretary and treasurer .
Mrs. Mildred Thomas and
•
Mrs. Else Neal had charge of
the progra m. They presented
color slides of their fli p to
Greece , Corinth, Italy, Rome
and the Isle of Ca pri. Gr eece is
a little larger than Louisiana
and islands make up one-fourth
of the lan d area . The
population is about 1,800,000
and the climate is hot. The
slides included many pictures
of places mentioned in the
Bible.
They
showed
many
souvenirs of their trip ineludin g "worry beads' 1 , vases,
ornaments, cloth and ottrer
decorative items.
The meeting closed with the
Mizpah benediction.

Lady

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

I .Coming.· Events l
~

t.

rn·

Designer

f#Itch.

By PHIL PASTORET
Grow your own ga rd en to
save on food - but what
will yo u cat till harvest
ti me ?

We hear that Las Vegas
jackpo ts on the slo ts now
pay off in sausage patties

instead of dollars.

an orange tinged pink Ooribunda. The Perfume Delight is a pink
hybrid tea and the Bon Bon is a pink and white floribunda . These
flowers rank as the All America Award Winners of 1974. Makes
me wish I had a garden.

LARRY McGRAW aoo his group are still working on gospel
music . The organizational meeting of the Southeastern Ohio
Gospel Music Association (I've already told him it will never fit
in a headline) will be May 21 at 7:30p.m. in Allen Hall at Rio
Grande College. The Association will encompass GalJia, Meigs,
Jackson and Vinton counties. lf you're interested in helping bring
gospel music to the area, you may want to stop by for the
meeting.

++++

favorite lady.

HUNTINGTON Gallieries are sponsoring a
photographic .show in the fall. The show will be a competitive
juried affair and anyone wanting more information on entries
and so on should contact Exhibition 290, Photography and
Cinematography, The Huntington Galleries, Park Hills, Huntington, W. Va., 25701.

-··-""'·

· - -- ~--~

.

j

SAVINGS

Ted Flood; Watchmaker
"We S.ervice What we Sell".

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS
404 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

•

'

'

&lt;' •

.

I

.

·

2 Year, Savings
Certificates
1

Joi' - +-+.J::J

Savings Certificates
$1,000 minimum
\1 Year .

Inside .you 'II find a grid and furnitureto-s~ale that let you plan your rooms just
by moving the c.u t-out furniture on.the grid.
Instead of struggling with the real stuff. ·

\

GALLIPOLIS - The French program.
·City Garden Club held its
The courthouse project was
regular meeting recently at the discussed and plans were made
home of Mrs. Jewell Moore ' for the beautification comwith Mrs. Moore presiding ,
mittee to meet there May 24.
Mrs . Moore opened the The library boxes will also be
devotional period by beginning . taken care of at that time.
Psalm 23, with each member
The Rose Breakfast, JUne I2,
adding a portion of the will be at the Red Carpet Inn
scripture.
stead of in Rio Grande. A tour
Mrs. Grace Bradbury, Mrs. of gardens will follow.
Elaine George and Mrs. Esta
Refreshments were served
Reece represented the club at by the hostess to close the
the regional meeting April H in meeting.
Pomeroy. Mrs. Reece made
·.several arrangements. It was
stressed that members should
PLEASANT VALLEY
use the number 180 in club
DISCHARGES:
Margaret
correspondence.
Rainey, Jacqueline Gabritsch,
Mrs. Moore showed a - Rosemary Oldaker, . Mllxine
cecropis leaf from Jamaica . Chapman, Pink DeVault, Ida
· A thank-you card for a Putney, Marsha Harrison,
chysanthemum, given to Danny Stanley, Stephanie
Florence Trainer, was r~ad .. Johns, Robert Roush, Randall
Ye Olde Village Garden Club Mayes, Oscar Phillips, Helen ·
i!lvited the group to tour Sunday, Timmy Shuler,
Wakeenan with _them May 19. Katherine Ellis, Audrey ArThe tour planned for Old Man's nold, Lisa Bonecutter, Sharoh ·
Cave, May ·13, has been post- Blaine, Rose .Lawhorn, Daisy
poned . Mrs. Harley George Hickel, Alva Stewart, Deborah
reported she had obtained Filson, Sharon Bailes, Hester
spruce seedlings so that the Jones, Katherine Fruth, John
club may participate , _in the Rainey, Phil Hudnall, George
OAGC statewide rree planting S. Love. •

The book also shows
the different styles and colors of phones, to
help you plan for and order all your phones
ir::t advance. This way you can .have them
installed with a single
· ·
visit to your new home.
And there are
other good ideas, too.
. From packing
to decorating to
lighting and
more.
. So send
in the coupon
foryourcopyof
Phone Ideas{!}&gt; Moving Planner.
It's a big help
when you're movirig.
And it's yours for
a coupon.

• • • •

mm1mum

.

Passbook Savings Accounts

\

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DI' J"H&gt;'iit h~· tht• J()th of tlw month :md earn Gum the first.

availahlt• month!~ on a&lt;·eounts of $1,000 or more

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NOW AT BRUNICARDI'S
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SPECIALS .
ON All

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Address---- -- -- ' - -- -

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IL ____ .,.: __ _; __

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Name _ __

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THE GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS (
and .LOAN COMPANY
OPPOSITE POST OFFICE ·

'''

Please fill out this coupon and .
send it to:
Moving Planner
Ohio Bell Telephone Company
P . 0. Box 6060
' Cleveland, Ohio 44114
I woUld like to receiVe a free copy of
Phone Ic!eas &amp; Movin~ Planner:

Save Any Amount Any Time
paid quartl"rly on all certificates

Rathburn ends
36 years at GSI

WORLD ALMANAC

•• '

BAND
INSTRUMENTS,

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P•Y--,----- - -- -- - II

. State _ _

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.PJ'aone Number (
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GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

GALLIPOLIS - The Clay
There are 71 land-grant
Elementary PTA met recently
and universities in
colleges
for its last regular session of
the U n it e d States. They
the year.
were established as a result
The meeting was called to
order by association · president,
Mrs . Marsha Haner. The
Pledge of Allegiance and
devotions followed and Mrs.
Jimmie Evans reported that
$142 was earned .from the pie
social. Mrs. Lilly Haner gave
the secretary's report and
Cleeland Willis reported on the
spring
conference
at
Chesapeake. Superintendent
Kuhn noted that May 25 will he
the last day of school for
students.
The group will donate $10 to
each class for re(reshments on
class trips, and will present gift
certificates to Mrs. Huber, first
grade teacher, Mrs. Berllice
Houck and Mrs. Delores Jeffers. ,.
Ken Deckard presented a
table on drugs, . stressing the
importance of cooperation between school officials, parents
and law officers in'dealing with
the drug· problem.
Mrs. Jean Lemmons' kindergarten class won the at·
tendance banner.
Sixth grade graduation will
be May 11 at 7:30 p.m.' Installation of PTA .officers for
the coming year will fallow the
program .

Write, Visit or C.U 446-4367

"''"log

tor 11"ee
of courM•
and next startl,. dltt. VA

BRUNICARDI
54 State St.,

7

Gallipolis

Ph. 446-0687

Gallipolis
Business Callep
U Locu•t Sr.
Golllpoli•
sr. flog. No.11-02.f0:121
' .

Open
Weekday
Evenings

Til

9
O'CLOCK
In The Silver Bridge Plaza

New Slim
'n Trim

by Playtex

.

Cloud and an Indian translation of Psalm 23. ·
Th ose assisting with the
presentation were
Mrs .
Raymond DeLille, who read
Psalm 23 and Mrs. Greenlee,
Who gave a history or the
American Indian , titled " A
Portrait of Limbo."
The meeting adjourned with
the L()rd 's Prayer and was
followed by refreshments.

IS HONORED
. RACINE - Honored on her
second birthday on May 9 was
.Sheryl Le Ann Johnson ,
daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
Arthur Earl Johnson . She
received be~utiful cards and
money. She has a brother,
Patri ck. William Carleton,
Racine and Eunice Brinker
called in the· evening. Ice
crcamand cake were served.
A sta'rfish is an animal,
but it is called a fi sh because
it JiVes in the sea ..

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eMachine

First, of course is
the d iploma . Next
should be a g ift
worthy of the
ach ievement.
And fo r generations
the g1ft .has been a fine
Bulova watch'.

Non-Skid - Color.Fast
Tank Sweater.: ...... ;•••. :.... '3.99
Scale Cover .................... 11.29
Seat Cover .-..••. ~............. s1.99
Joni Bonnet ••••••••••••••••••
11.59
.
2 Pt. Seat &amp; lid Set. ••.•••• 13.99

Washable
18"x27" OVal Rug ............. 11.59
22"x32" Oval Rug •••••••••••• 12.49
27"x45" Oval Rug ............ 13.99
Ud Cover Regular ••••••.••••.• 11.39
.Ud Cover King •• ~... . . . . . ... • 11:59
White - Sungold · Aztec Gold

Bright Pink · Card ina I Red · Avocado · Ming

Blue · Royal Purple - Orange · Kelly Green

.

A. Stainless stee l sculptured case and link band. Instant change date.
Blue dial. 17 jewels, $65. ·
B. Smart round case blends into notched link bracelet. 17 jewels.
Champagne dial. $80.
C. Gilt dial and dark brown leather strap add to the
smart

lovk. 17 jewels. $60.

'

Clark's Jewelry ·Store
342 Second Ave.

fine STORES''
{]atlipo/iJ, .·Ohw

"ONE OF ·oHIO'S

. Gallipolis, Ohio

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Closed On Sun.

Bul ova quality gives the graduate
a truly de pendable timepiece and Bulova
styling captures the sp irit of youth .

GBC Grads Get

The Belter Jobs!

bring potluct meat furnish.O .
POPLAR RICGE Baptist
Church reviva l beginning at
7: 30 p. m. George Roschar,
evangelis t. Spt!cia l sin ging .
Everyone welcome.
CHESHIRE-Kyger PTA at 7:30
p. m. Kinderga rten and sixth
grade graduation followed by
installation of offi cer s.
BOY SCOUT Troop 200, picnic
at 6:30p.m. at the Bob Evans
Farm Shelter House. E:ach
family bring a picnic lunch,
table service and drink. The
troop will provide charcoa l.
Scouts to be in unirorm.
TUESDAY
LAFAYETTE Shrine Ntun ber
44 will meet at Masonic Temple
at 8 p.m.
GIRL Scouts outdoor skills da y
at Lake Alma 9:30 a .m. to 2
p.m.
Sack
lunch. Car pool·
.
.
mformatwn call 44&amp;-4426.
OPEN GAT E Garden Clu b
meets with Mrs. Dinah Howard
at 7:30 p.m. Mrs. J ake Moore.
guest speaker, Plant sale.

of the first Morrill act of
1862, The World Almanac
says. The name land grant
is applied to them because .
the fed e r a I · government
gave public lands to the
states for the support or the
·
colleges .

The reason?

Business College .

Approved . .

HOUSE OF MUSIC.

PHONE 446-3832

has last
meeting

~ A-Better Job,
Sooner-Go To

~

S. Rt. 33. Cultural reports will
be given by· Phyllis Bennett,
Karen Stanley and Donr.a
Stewart. The losin~ attendance
team wHJ serve .as hastesses.

'Indians' topic of
WSCS.meeting

French . City .Garden ·Clay PTA

/

5,000

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The book is called Phone
Ideas{!}&gt; Mov.ing Planner.
And it can be a very.big help when you
move.

i

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MONDAY
MERCERVILLE Grange will
hos t Patriot Grange with
supper at 7 p. m. Me!Dbers

RODNEY - Mrs. Gerald
Sayre was hostess when the
Rodney Women's Society of
Chl'iStie:tn Scrv:ice met for 'its
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M&lt;Jy session.
AN OUTDOOR recreation workshop will be conducted June
After $inging the theme song,
I, 2 and 3at Lake Hope State Park. The workshop is sponsored by
the 13 members answered roll
the Ohio Department of Natural Resources and the . Ohio
call giving the year they last
Department of Education along with tbe Ohio Association of
GALLIPOLIS - Carl Rath- gathered to honor him with a attended school. Mrs. Augusta
Health, Physical Education and Recreation. Four areas of
burn, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, i-ecently retirement tea and a dinner, at Powell was a guest.
outdoor recreation, boating and water safety, hunting, stalking,
retired after more than 36 which time he received a
Mrs. Rex Greenlee showed
tracking and nature observation, backpacking, tent camping and
years service at the Gallipolis billfold, key case and .an · several items the sociely might
outdoor living and bicycling, land navigation and outdoor
State Institute.
be interested in making and
engraved white Bible. .
traveling will be explored,
Rathburn, who was a
made a mOtion for the group to
Rathburn 'noted ''I have
.
The workshop will be limited to 80 persons and registration of · supervisor ·at the time of his
order
items to be sold. Mrs.
enjoyed working with my
$25 by May 18 is requested. Send checks to Thomas J. Shuster,
retirement, had worked under friends aU these years, and if Garland Lear seconded the
· AdJninistrator, . Recroation Services, · Ohio Department of
eight-suP.,rintendents. He has the Lord is willing, I 'II have motion.
Natural Resources, Fountain Square, Columbus, Ohio 43224.
seen many changes in the time now to travel and camp
A discus."iion was held on the
++++
institution during his em- and fish and do all those things purchase of drapes for the
MY JUST turned&lt;Jeven sister stands somewhat in awe of ployment at GSI . He worked 28
I tlaven 't had time for before. Sunday school' rooms arld a
church services, even though she really enjoys them. On Easter
years at the Farm Cottage I'll also carry the Bible my committee was appointed ror
Sunday we had communion at the Church of What's Hawening which is no longer in use at the
friends gave me to church that purpose . Mrs . Rex
Now and our pastor had told the congregation that he would institution.
Greenlee, Mrs . Joe Miller and
every Sunday.·_·
annoint each one with oil at the end of the service. · Well,
He served with the United
Mrs . Annabelle Ball compooe
somehow, Melissa got this all confused and told me "You've got
the committee .
States Navy during World War
to wear wine."
II.
Mrs. Elva Holbrook was iri
I can 'I top that.
FACTS
charge of the pro·grarn and
His friends an9 co-workers
' HAVE A NICE WEEK.
•
devotions for the evening . She
.
based her presentation on the
A~erican Indians, , readin g
"lndian Life and Hope, " ''The
F oq~ ott e n Americans ," a
prayer by Chief Tom White

GALLIPOLIS
SAVINGS
AND LOAN co.

SAFE

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. Walter L.
Lane, Jr., Gallipolis, are announcing the engagement and
forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Anita Carol to. John
Paul Roberts, son of Virgil Roberts and the late Mrs.
Roberts, Gallipolis. Miss Lane will be a 1973 graduate of
Kyger Creek High School. Roberts attends Gallia Academy
and is employed with Revco Corp. The open church wedding
will be an event of July I at 2 p.m. at. the Nazarene Church .

THE;

club in Moore ·home

OF

Miss Anita Carol lime

++++

Everything's
elegant but the
price. All Seiko
watches are
au tomation-made,
so you pay onl y fo r
the timepiece, not
the time it took to
make .it. Come choose
a lady Seiko for your

THE
SIGN

THE GALL! POLIS Church of
Christ in Christian Union, 2173
Eastorn Ave., will hav~ special
singing· by the La yman
Quartet, Circleville, at 7 p.m.

++++

ZW358-M- 17J
Yell ow, oli11e green d ial. (Also
av altable in while w ith blue d ial,
ZW357M .} $79 .50

We kn ow a fellow who' ll
trade two Goyas ·and a Dali
for a framed porterhouse
steak.

REV. J ERRY MASSI E will be
preachin g a t the Ash St.
Freewill Baptis t Church in
Middleport at 7:30 p. m: The
public is cordially invited.

TilE YEAR'S award winners in the rose field are three
plants called Bahia , Perfume Delight and Bon Bon. The Bahia is

TilE NATIONAL Rice Council is giving away a little recipe
buoklet called "Serve Rice 'n Save." The recipes are relatively
simple and quick to make and you can get a copy by writing Rice
Council, P. 0 . Box 22802, Houston, Tex., 770TI.

BARBS

ADOISON United Methodist
Church will have a special
aftern oon sing featUri ng Uie
ldentiriets from IndianapOlis,
Ind . at 2 p.m . Eve ryo ne
·welcome. Rev. Bill Beagle is
pastor .

++++

Before you move, get a free book
makes
· easier.

lnlt·n ·~t

by

I'LL OPEN this week with apologies for missing last Sunday
due to the lack of space. We're in the process of making some
changes in the back shop at tbe Tribune aoo coosequently only
part of our press is operable at one time, which sort of limits·
what we can do in the·editorial department. The result of all this
switching around, however, should be a lot of improvement, so
bear With us,.readers.

Shower honors
Miss .Adkins

l n lf-rt ·~t

. SUNDAY
SPECIAL service at the Addison Free Will Baptist Church
at 7:30 p.m. Rev. Roy Flutey,
evangelist. Rev . Walter Patte rson, pastor, in vites the
public.

Dorothy J Countryman

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WILL HOLD PICNIC
POMEROY - The Ohio Eta
Phi Sorority will hold a picnic
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at. the
roadside park on the left on U.

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i - The Sundav Time.- Sentinei.Sundav. Mav 13. 1973

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Grace Guild installs
offtcers at dinner meet

NEW OFFICERS of the Rio Grande Mothers League installed Thursday evening are left to right, Carol Rupe, Delores Shockey, Peggy Call, Beverly
Wilkins, Sue Brandeberry, Becky Vanco and Margaret Bryant.
Sherr! J arvis, Debbie Kinder
and Polly Walker. Primary,
grades one through three , Mrs.
J erry McDivitt , superin·
tendent ; teachers, Mrs. James
Dari ner, Mrs. Dean Davis • ·
Mrs. E. E. Eva ns, Mrs. Owen
GALLIPOLIS - . Firs t begin ning at 7:~0 p.m. ·
Lloyd and Mrs. Mike Davis ·
•
Baptist
Church
,has
released
...
The
Son
of
God
"
"
Jesus
assistan
ts, Ruth Ann Layne,
The Ri o Grande Mothers Ma rgaret Bryan t. Mrs. Rupe
League enjoyed a dinner and presented each officer a gold plans for Vacation Bible School will be the theme of the Shelly Wright, Bebby Saunders
the in s tallation of offi ce r s key ri bboned wi th Hie color of June 4 through June 13, under program which will follow the and Beck y Rupe, Junior ,
the direc tion of Mrs. Wilson Reg ular
Baptist
Press grades four thr ough she, Mrs .
Tuesday evening at the her office .
Wahl.
Vacation
Bible
School Francis O'Donnell, superinCOlonial ' Inn, Jackson. Cheryl ' Following the installation,
Classes
will
be
held
ea
ch
prog r a m. Free bus trans· te ndent; teachers Mrs. Earl
Van co gave the devotions the ladies held a short business
evening
from
6:30
to
8:30
with
a
portation will be Orovided for Neal , Mrs. Luke Settle, Mrs.
preceding dinner served to 14 mee ting. The grou p made fi nal
demonstration
program
during
the pu~ils.
Bill Huffman , Mrs. Jess Smith,
members and one gues t.
plans for the rummage sale
the
Wednesday
session
,
Departmental superintend- Mrs. Lloyd Danner and Earl
Officers for the 1973-74 yea r Th ursday, · Fr ida y
and
ents
and teachers for the Neal ; assistants, Steve Brown
were ins talled by OCCL distric t Satu rday. Mrs. Rupe discussed
session· will be, kindergarten, Mrs. Keith'\ Wick, Penny
r resid cnt, Ca rol Rupe. The the possi ble revision of the
'
she was filted ywith a wedding Mrs. Adrian Haner , superinKemper and .Judy Cole. Youth ,
ne w offi cers ar e Delores OCCL programs which will
dtess made from the wrapping te ndent ; teacher s, Debbie
,Rev . Harr"y Cole , superinShockey, president , Peggy change the 10 achievement
pa per and ribbons.
Burnette,
Mrs.
Kenneth
Bostic,
tendent; teachers, Mr . and
Call , vice pres ident , Bev prog ram to a service club
Those attending, were Mrs . Elain e Brown, and Wilani
Mrs. Marion Williams, Beverly
Wil ki ns, s ecretary,
Su e progra m. The meeting conDorothy Houck, Debbie Houck, Wahl ; assistants, Ruth Bostic,
Rusk and Brenda J ean
Brandeberry, treasurer, Becky cl uded wi th a discussion of the
Brenda Johnson, Delores Wall Peggy" Tope , Debbie Carhart, Stewart.
Van co, historian-librarian and .. famil y outing in June.
Cathy Wall, Dorothy
Young,'
s u nshine c hairw om a n,
Mary Young, Pearl Elliott,
Jean SaWlders, Carol Kessel ,
Carolyn Caldwell, Shirley
Dailey, Marsha Bush, Bertina
Smeltzer, Ali ce Williams ,
Mary Long, Edith Long ,
Denise Long, Connie Hemphill,
Stephanie Hemphill , Mrs.
· William Jenkins and Edith
GALLIPOLIS - A bridal wi th an umbrella cake cen- Adkins.
Shower was recently given ln terin g the refr eshment table,
Those sending gifts were
honor of Miss Sue Adkins, whi ch was accented with Delbert Hanna, Genny Yost,
.IJride-cleGt'of Gary J ones, by floating candles. · Multi-color Crystal Sheets, Kay Clark,
the First Church of God.
streame rs ·covered the gift Mary Lanier, Roma Baker,
Each guest was gre.cted wi th table, centered by a bouquet.' Barbara Null, .Cleo McManis,
a lJa ndmade·co rsage of either a
The lad ies were paired to E lain~ J ones, June Snyder,
pink, gree n or yellow carnation make wedding veils \\•ith the Donna Allen, Jane.t Johnson ,
,.
by '~ os td.lse~. Mrs . Connie pri z~ for .the best white tissue Ruth Ann Hamilton, Joyce
Herl\'phill ' ana Mfs. Delores pa ~cr ~ve il going to Pearl Ha rrington, Celestine North
. '
Wail. The hon oree wa s EliJOll and Shirley Pailey. Sonji Owens, LuAnn Whitley,
'
presented a double carnation . After the bride-elect opened Glenna Williams and Margaret
The room was decorated and acknowledged her gifts, Bryant.

Rio Mothers League
installs officers

Baptist Church plans
Vacation Bible School

GALLIPOLIS - Grace Guild
met ror the monthly dinner
session May 7 with Mrs. Hoke
Robinson opening the meeting
with a thought for May, ineluding a thank-yo u for
mothers, grandmothers and
those who have passed away.
The group decided to install
carpeting in the crib nursery or
the church.
Mrs. Bernice McMahon gave
the medita tion on "Women
Power" concern ing the in·
fluence of women in the home,
church, comm unity and
business .
Mrs. Elsie Lusk installed the
new ofFicers during a can ~
dleli ghtl ng ceremony. New
offi cers are Mrs . Ethel
Robinson, president ; Mrs .
Vi pla Carter , vice president

FAC holds
dance classes
GALLIPOLIS
Registra tion is open ror the
Ballroom Dance Classes at the
French Art Colony . The classes
are held Monday and Thursday
evenings for one hour for a six
week period. Mikki Casto •
Cheshire , is instructress . She
leaches rox trot, waltz, swing ,
ch~ ..cha , rumba ! merenque,
samba and tango . Cost to Art
Colony members is $24 ; $30 for
n ~n -members . For registration
or· information call Mrs. John
Byers, 446-1903.

, 5- The Sunday Times ·Sentinel, Sunday, May 13, 19'73

The man who builds a factory builds a tem ple; the
man who works there worships there; and to ..,ach is
due not scorn and blame but
reverence and pralse.-Calvi n Coolidge.

and Mrs . Hel&lt;!h Smith,
secretary and treasurer .
Mrs. Mildred Thomas and
•
Mrs. Else Neal had charge of
the progra m. They presented
color slides of their fli p to
Greece , Corinth, Italy, Rome
and the Isle of Ca pri. Gr eece is
a little larger than Louisiana
and islands make up one-fourth
of the lan d area . The
population is about 1,800,000
and the climate is hot. The
slides included many pictures
of places mentioned in the
Bible.
They
showed
many
souvenirs of their trip ineludin g "worry beads' 1 , vases,
ornaments, cloth and ottrer
decorative items.
The meeting closed with the
Mizpah benediction.

Lady

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

I .Coming.· Events l
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Designer

f#Itch.

By PHIL PASTORET
Grow your own ga rd en to
save on food - but what
will yo u cat till harvest
ti me ?

We hear that Las Vegas
jackpo ts on the slo ts now
pay off in sausage patties

instead of dollars.

an orange tinged pink Ooribunda. The Perfume Delight is a pink
hybrid tea and the Bon Bon is a pink and white floribunda . These
flowers rank as the All America Award Winners of 1974. Makes
me wish I had a garden.

LARRY McGRAW aoo his group are still working on gospel
music . The organizational meeting of the Southeastern Ohio
Gospel Music Association (I've already told him it will never fit
in a headline) will be May 21 at 7:30p.m. in Allen Hall at Rio
Grande College. The Association will encompass GalJia, Meigs,
Jackson and Vinton counties. lf you're interested in helping bring
gospel music to the area, you may want to stop by for the
meeting.

++++

favorite lady.

HUNTINGTON Gallieries are sponsoring a
photographic .show in the fall. The show will be a competitive
juried affair and anyone wanting more information on entries
and so on should contact Exhibition 290, Photography and
Cinematography, The Huntington Galleries, Park Hills, Huntington, W. Va., 25701.

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SAVINGS

Ted Flood; Watchmaker
"We S.ervice What we Sell".

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS
404 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

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2 Year, Savings
Certificates
1

Joi' - +-+.J::J

Savings Certificates
$1,000 minimum
\1 Year .

Inside .you 'II find a grid and furnitureto-s~ale that let you plan your rooms just
by moving the c.u t-out furniture on.the grid.
Instead of struggling with the real stuff. ·

\

GALLIPOLIS - The French program.
·City Garden Club held its
The courthouse project was
regular meeting recently at the discussed and plans were made
home of Mrs. Jewell Moore ' for the beautification comwith Mrs. Moore presiding ,
mittee to meet there May 24.
Mrs . Moore opened the The library boxes will also be
devotional period by beginning . taken care of at that time.
Psalm 23, with each member
The Rose Breakfast, JUne I2,
adding a portion of the will be at the Red Carpet Inn
scripture.
stead of in Rio Grande. A tour
Mrs. Grace Bradbury, Mrs. of gardens will follow.
Elaine George and Mrs. Esta
Refreshments were served
Reece represented the club at by the hostess to close the
the regional meeting April H in meeting.
Pomeroy. Mrs. Reece made
·.several arrangements. It was
stressed that members should
PLEASANT VALLEY
use the number 180 in club
DISCHARGES:
Margaret
correspondence.
Rainey, Jacqueline Gabritsch,
Mrs. Moore showed a - Rosemary Oldaker, . Mllxine
cecropis leaf from Jamaica . Chapman, Pink DeVault, Ida
· A thank-you card for a Putney, Marsha Harrison,
chysanthemum, given to Danny Stanley, Stephanie
Florence Trainer, was r~ad .. Johns, Robert Roush, Randall
Ye Olde Village Garden Club Mayes, Oscar Phillips, Helen ·
i!lvited the group to tour Sunday, Timmy Shuler,
Wakeenan with _them May 19. Katherine Ellis, Audrey ArThe tour planned for Old Man's nold, Lisa Bonecutter, Sharoh ·
Cave, May ·13, has been post- Blaine, Rose .Lawhorn, Daisy
poned . Mrs. Harley George Hickel, Alva Stewart, Deborah
reported she had obtained Filson, Sharon Bailes, Hester
spruce seedlings so that the Jones, Katherine Fruth, John
club may participate , _in the Rainey, Phil Hudnall, George
OAGC statewide rree planting S. Love. •

The book also shows
the different styles and colors of phones, to
help you plan for and order all your phones
ir::t advance. This way you can .have them
installed with a single
· ·
visit to your new home.
And there are
other good ideas, too.
. From packing
to decorating to
lighting and
more.
. So send
in the coupon
foryourcopyof
Phone Ideas{!}&gt; Moving Planner.
It's a big help
when you're movirig.
And it's yours for
a coupon.

• • • •

mm1mum

.

Passbook Savings Accounts

\

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DI' J"H&gt;'iit h~· tht• J()th of tlw month :md earn Gum the first.

availahlt• month!~ on a&lt;·eounts of $1,000 or more

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SPECIALS .
ON All

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THE GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS (
and .LOAN COMPANY
OPPOSITE POST OFFICE ·

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Please fill out this coupon and .
send it to:
Moving Planner
Ohio Bell Telephone Company
P . 0. Box 6060
' Cleveland, Ohio 44114
I woUld like to receiVe a free copy of
Phone Ic!eas &amp; Movin~ Planner:

Save Any Amount Any Time
paid quartl"rly on all certificates

Rathburn ends
36 years at GSI

WORLD ALMANAC

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BAND
INSTRUMENTS,

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GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

GALLIPOLIS - The Clay
There are 71 land-grant
Elementary PTA met recently
and universities in
colleges
for its last regular session of
the U n it e d States. They
the year.
were established as a result
The meeting was called to
order by association · president,
Mrs . Marsha Haner. The
Pledge of Allegiance and
devotions followed and Mrs.
Jimmie Evans reported that
$142 was earned .from the pie
social. Mrs. Lilly Haner gave
the secretary's report and
Cleeland Willis reported on the
spring
conference
at
Chesapeake. Superintendent
Kuhn noted that May 25 will he
the last day of school for
students.
The group will donate $10 to
each class for re(reshments on
class trips, and will present gift
certificates to Mrs. Huber, first
grade teacher, Mrs. Berllice
Houck and Mrs. Delores Jeffers. ,.
Ken Deckard presented a
table on drugs, . stressing the
importance of cooperation between school officials, parents
and law officers in'dealing with
the drug· problem.
Mrs. Jean Lemmons' kindergarten class won the at·
tendance banner.
Sixth grade graduation will
be May 11 at 7:30 p.m.' Installation of PTA .officers for
the coming year will fallow the
program .

Write, Visit or C.U 446-4367

"''"log

tor 11"ee
of courM•
and next startl,. dltt. VA

BRUNICARDI
54 State St.,

7

Gallipolis

Ph. 446-0687

Gallipolis
Business Callep
U Locu•t Sr.
Golllpoli•
sr. flog. No.11-02.f0:121
' .

Open
Weekday
Evenings

Til

9
O'CLOCK
In The Silver Bridge Plaza

New Slim
'n Trim

by Playtex

.

Cloud and an Indian translation of Psalm 23. ·
Th ose assisting with the
presentation were
Mrs .
Raymond DeLille, who read
Psalm 23 and Mrs. Greenlee,
Who gave a history or the
American Indian , titled " A
Portrait of Limbo."
The meeting adjourned with
the L()rd 's Prayer and was
followed by refreshments.

IS HONORED
. RACINE - Honored on her
second birthday on May 9 was
.Sheryl Le Ann Johnson ,
daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
Arthur Earl Johnson . She
received be~utiful cards and
money. She has a brother,
Patri ck. William Carleton,
Racine and Eunice Brinker
called in the· evening. Ice
crcamand cake were served.
A sta'rfish is an animal,
but it is called a fi sh because
it JiVes in the sea ..

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eMachine

First, of course is
the d iploma . Next
should be a g ift
worthy of the
ach ievement.
And fo r generations
the g1ft .has been a fine
Bulova watch'.

Non-Skid - Color.Fast
Tank Sweater.: ...... ;•••. :.... '3.99
Scale Cover .................... 11.29
Seat Cover .-..••. ~............. s1.99
Joni Bonnet ••••••••••••••••••
11.59
.
2 Pt. Seat &amp; lid Set. ••.•••• 13.99

Washable
18"x27" OVal Rug ............. 11.59
22"x32" Oval Rug •••••••••••• 12.49
27"x45" Oval Rug ............ 13.99
Ud Cover Regular ••••••.••••.• 11.39
.Ud Cover King •• ~... . . . . . ... • 11:59
White - Sungold · Aztec Gold

Bright Pink · Card ina I Red · Avocado · Ming

Blue · Royal Purple - Orange · Kelly Green

.

A. Stainless stee l sculptured case and link band. Instant change date.
Blue dial. 17 jewels, $65. ·
B. Smart round case blends into notched link bracelet. 17 jewels.
Champagne dial. $80.
C. Gilt dial and dark brown leather strap add to the
smart

lovk. 17 jewels. $60.

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Clark's Jewelry ·Store
342 Second Ave.

fine STORES''
{]atlipo/iJ, .·Ohw

"ONE OF ·oHIO'S

. Gallipolis, Ohio

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Closed On Sun.

Bul ova quality gives the graduate
a truly de pendable timepiece and Bulova
styling captures the sp irit of youth .

GBC Grads Get

The Belter Jobs!

bring potluct meat furnish.O .
POPLAR RICGE Baptist
Church reviva l beginning at
7: 30 p. m. George Roschar,
evangelis t. Spt!cia l sin ging .
Everyone welcome.
CHESHIRE-Kyger PTA at 7:30
p. m. Kinderga rten and sixth
grade graduation followed by
installation of offi cer s.
BOY SCOUT Troop 200, picnic
at 6:30p.m. at the Bob Evans
Farm Shelter House. E:ach
family bring a picnic lunch,
table service and drink. The
troop will provide charcoa l.
Scouts to be in unirorm.
TUESDAY
LAFAYETTE Shrine Ntun ber
44 will meet at Masonic Temple
at 8 p.m.
GIRL Scouts outdoor skills da y
at Lake Alma 9:30 a .m. to 2
p.m.
Sack
lunch. Car pool·
.
.
mformatwn call 44&amp;-4426.
OPEN GAT E Garden Clu b
meets with Mrs. Dinah Howard
at 7:30 p.m. Mrs. J ake Moore.
guest speaker, Plant sale.

of the first Morrill act of
1862, The World Almanac
says. The name land grant
is applied to them because .
the fed e r a I · government
gave public lands to the
states for the support or the
·
colleges .

The reason?

Business College .

Approved . .

HOUSE OF MUSIC.

PHONE 446-3832

has last
meeting

~ A-Better Job,
Sooner-Go To

~

S. Rt. 33. Cultural reports will
be given by· Phyllis Bennett,
Karen Stanley and Donr.a
Stewart. The losin~ attendance
team wHJ serve .as hastesses.

'Indians' topic of
WSCS.meeting

French . City .Garden ·Clay PTA

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5,000

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The book is called Phone
Ideas{!}&gt; Mov.ing Planner.
And it can be a very.big help when you
move.

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MONDAY
MERCERVILLE Grange will
hos t Patriot Grange with
supper at 7 p. m. Me!Dbers

RODNEY - Mrs. Gerald
Sayre was hostess when the
Rodney Women's Society of
Chl'iStie:tn Scrv:ice met for 'its
'
4+++
M&lt;Jy session.
AN OUTDOOR recreation workshop will be conducted June
After $inging the theme song,
I, 2 and 3at Lake Hope State Park. The workshop is sponsored by
the 13 members answered roll
the Ohio Department of Natural Resources and the . Ohio
call giving the year they last
Department of Education along with tbe Ohio Association of
GALLIPOLIS - Carl Rath- gathered to honor him with a attended school. Mrs. Augusta
Health, Physical Education and Recreation. Four areas of
burn, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, i-ecently retirement tea and a dinner, at Powell was a guest.
outdoor recreation, boating and water safety, hunting, stalking,
retired after more than 36 which time he received a
Mrs. Rex Greenlee showed
tracking and nature observation, backpacking, tent camping and
years service at the Gallipolis billfold, key case and .an · several items the sociely might
outdoor living and bicycling, land navigation and outdoor
State Institute.
be interested in making and
engraved white Bible. .
traveling will be explored,
Rathburn, who was a
made a mOtion for the group to
Rathburn 'noted ''I have
.
The workshop will be limited to 80 persons and registration of · supervisor ·at the time of his
order
items to be sold. Mrs.
enjoyed working with my
$25 by May 18 is requested. Send checks to Thomas J. Shuster,
retirement, had worked under friends aU these years, and if Garland Lear seconded the
· AdJninistrator, . Recroation Services, · Ohio Department of
eight-suP.,rintendents. He has the Lord is willing, I 'II have motion.
Natural Resources, Fountain Square, Columbus, Ohio 43224.
seen many changes in the time now to travel and camp
A discus."iion was held on the
++++
institution during his em- and fish and do all those things purchase of drapes for the
MY JUST turned&lt;Jeven sister stands somewhat in awe of ployment at GSI . He worked 28
I tlaven 't had time for before. Sunday school' rooms arld a
church services, even though she really enjoys them. On Easter
years at the Farm Cottage I'll also carry the Bible my committee was appointed ror
Sunday we had communion at the Church of What's Hawening which is no longer in use at the
friends gave me to church that purpose . Mrs . Rex
Now and our pastor had told the congregation that he would institution.
Greenlee, Mrs . Joe Miller and
every Sunday.·_·
annoint each one with oil at the end of the service. · Well,
He served with the United
Mrs . Annabelle Ball compooe
somehow, Melissa got this all confused and told me "You've got
the committee .
States Navy during World War
to wear wine."
II.
Mrs. Elva Holbrook was iri
I can 'I top that.
FACTS
charge of the pro·grarn and
His friends an9 co-workers
' HAVE A NICE WEEK.
•
devotions for the evening . She
.
based her presentation on the
A~erican Indians, , readin g
"lndian Life and Hope, " ''The
F oq~ ott e n Americans ," a
prayer by Chief Tom White

GALLIPOLIS
SAVINGS
AND LOAN co.

SAFE

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. Walter L.
Lane, Jr., Gallipolis, are announcing the engagement and
forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Anita Carol to. John
Paul Roberts, son of Virgil Roberts and the late Mrs.
Roberts, Gallipolis. Miss Lane will be a 1973 graduate of
Kyger Creek High School. Roberts attends Gallia Academy
and is employed with Revco Corp. The open church wedding
will be an event of July I at 2 p.m. at. the Nazarene Church .

THE;

club in Moore ·home

OF

Miss Anita Carol lime

++++

Everything's
elegant but the
price. All Seiko
watches are
au tomation-made,
so you pay onl y fo r
the timepiece, not
the time it took to
make .it. Come choose
a lady Seiko for your

THE
SIGN

THE GALL! POLIS Church of
Christ in Christian Union, 2173
Eastorn Ave., will hav~ special
singing· by the La yman
Quartet, Circleville, at 7 p.m.

++++

ZW358-M- 17J
Yell ow, oli11e green d ial. (Also
av altable in while w ith blue d ial,
ZW357M .} $79 .50

We kn ow a fellow who' ll
trade two Goyas ·and a Dali
for a framed porterhouse
steak.

REV. J ERRY MASSI E will be
preachin g a t the Ash St.
Freewill Baptis t Church in
Middleport at 7:30 p. m: The
public is cordially invited.

TilE YEAR'S award winners in the rose field are three
plants called Bahia , Perfume Delight and Bon Bon. The Bahia is

TilE NATIONAL Rice Council is giving away a little recipe
buoklet called "Serve Rice 'n Save." The recipes are relatively
simple and quick to make and you can get a copy by writing Rice
Council, P. 0 . Box 22802, Houston, Tex., 770TI.

BARBS

ADOISON United Methodist
Church will have a special
aftern oon sing featUri ng Uie
ldentiriets from IndianapOlis,
Ind . at 2 p.m . Eve ryo ne
·welcome. Rev. Bill Beagle is
pastor .

++++

Before you move, get a free book
makes
· easier.

lnlt·n ·~t

by

I'LL OPEN this week with apologies for missing last Sunday
due to the lack of space. We're in the process of making some
changes in the back shop at tbe Tribune aoo coosequently only
part of our press is operable at one time, which sort of limits·
what we can do in the·editorial department. The result of all this
switching around, however, should be a lot of improvement, so
bear With us,.readers.

Shower honors
Miss .Adkins

l n lf-rt ·~t

. SUNDAY
SPECIAL service at the Addison Free Will Baptist Church
at 7:30 p.m. Rev. Roy Flutey,
evangelist. Rev . Walter Patte rson, pastor, in vites the
public.

Dorothy J Countryman

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WILL HOLD PICNIC
POMEROY - The Ohio Eta
Phi Sorority will hold a picnic
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at. the
roadside park on the left on U.

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7 - TheSunday'finle$-Sentinel,Sunday, May 13, 1973

rf&gt;moving the centers and uSing

Vo twthi11g from selfish·
ness or conceit, but tn humiltty count others better
than· yourselves. Let each of

Hollyhoc ks. which are a
symbol of fertility, have a
lettuce like flavor. Remove the
centers and try them as con·
l.a iners for cocktail dlps .
Violets can be beautifully
used in molded gelatin salads.
jams and syrup and as a
gar nish for desserts. Violet

you look not only to his

• • •

Carnations have a sPicy t.aste

Miss Linda Kemper
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mrs. Mary Jo
Kemper , Gallipolis, is announcing th~ forth coming marriage
of her daughter, Linda, to Dwain Beaver, son of James S.
Beaver, Gallipolis, and Mrs. William F . Bennett, Temple
&lt;;ity , Calif. He is a 1971 graduate of Gallia Academy High
School and is employed at the Jon es Boys. Miss Kemper is a
senior at Gallia Academy. Wedding plans, are incomplete.

GALLIPOLIS - " We have
all eaten flowers!" Mrs. Leona
Woodr ing Smith pointed ou t
that cauJHiower, broccoli and
artichokes are all members of
the flower family in her talk
Th ursday evenin g to mem bers
"nd guests of Gallipolis Garden
Club a t Gra ce
United
Methodis t Church.
After five yectrs of research,
Mrs. Smith, who is a residen t of
Ft. L;&gt;uderdale, Fla ., m~ke• a

· The deep red color of the rose
makes then1 adaptable for use
makes it a favorite to use in
in sa lads and their color adds
jams and syrup as well as a
an exquisite touch as a garnish
garn ish. Rose syrup ca n be
for cottage c heese, potato
easily made by purchasing
sa lad and molded ge latin
rose water at any pharmacy
sale~ds.
Pre si dent
and combining it with light
Eisenhower's recipe for
corn syrup and a touch of food
vegeta bl e so up called for color .

nasturtium s. In Germany this
fl ower was used as a remedy
fur sore throat and wa s used to
bind wOunds to draw out .in!

RIO GRAN DE - The women
of the Calvary Baptist
Auxiliary met reCently at the
church. Mrs . Arlene Tracy led
the devotions "Sending Up
Material." Her meditation was
from Matthew 6: 16-2I and
Daniel 12:3. Her thought was
that the more one does in this
life, the grea ter will be his
reward , in the after life .
Mrs. Gaynelle Tope presided
over the business session when
.Mrs. Doris Lanham reported
that plans had been made for
the Sherwood Singers to
present the program at the

A ques tion and ar.swer
period followed Mrs. Smith 's
talk and she passed around
samples of ca ndied lilacs,
mimosa, mint leaves ~nd roses
and explained how many of
these items could be obtained
in gourm e t food stores .
Refreshments were served .

fection.
full -t ime ca r e~ r lecturing
Chrysanthemums add color
throu ghout United States, and a gourmet touch to salads
Cct nada and the Bahamas on and casseroles. It was once
.
''The Forgotten Art of Flower thought that this flower inCookery' '. This is also the title creased longev ity and restored
M he r book publis hed by natural color to greying hair.
~larp er and Row to be on sale
Borage, which is an herb, has
.
m Augus t.
a cucumber like flavor .
VISITS RELATIVES
Mrs . Smith talked about
GALLIPOLIS
Mark
Gladioli which have a lettuce
some of the 26 common garden like flavor, make beaut'ful and Spurlock. Lon gv iew, Wash .•
family night, June 21. The £Jowers that are edible and nutritious salads.
spent a few days visiting Mr .
g roup is connected with. World illustrated her talk with slides
Remove the center of the and Mrs . Vernon Deweese , Pt.
Vi s ion Child . Care, the showing how these flowers can yucca flower and serve raw in Pleasant and other relatives in
organization through which the be used in the preparation of salads or in so ups. This fl ower the area. Mr. Spurlock is a
auxiliary is .sponsoFing a boy. those of ._ her own gourmet has the tas te · of peas or native of Gallia County. He
Mrs. Irene Brann on shared recipes or as ga rnishes in aspctragus and is hi gh in attended the recent \l'edding of
her experiences at the May 6 soups, sa lads, beverages and protein.
his s on, Michael. He als o
missi onary rally in Jackson. -. de~e rts. Mrs. Smith showed
The chive is a member of visited a sister , Mrs. William
Mrs. Lillian Wilkins presented how ffowers can add color, the onion family and the entire · (Wanda ) Hess in Columbus. He
''Signs of Hope in Miss ions flav or , deco ration and a flow er may , be used in will return Lo the Wes t Coast in
conversation pie ce to dinners casseroles or dips.
Today " as the prog ram.
the next few days. He plans to
A salad course was served t() 'and partie s.
Tulips make br~utiful visit a brother, William
11 members· and Marcia
It is best to use flowers from co ntainers for salads by Spurlock, in Minneapolis.
Wilhem and Beth and Mic hael your own garden to be sure no
'
Lynch ·by the hoste..es. Mrs. sprays have been used on
Second Avenu~
Beverly Hoff a,pd Mrs, Lillian them . If you do use a rose.
Wilkins.
spmy or such, be sure to check
the product lable for the len gth
of time that must elapse before
the poiso n is . no longer
dan ge t·ous. Always wa sh tall
flower. thoroug hly but gently.

Calvary Baptist
women have meet
.

Sends .. .

Albert France weds
Penny Lynn Doyle
CHESHIRE - Mr. and Mrs.
Doyle T. Shuler , Cheshire, are
announcing the marriage · "of
their daughter , Penny LYnn, to
Albert Eugene France , son ·Of
Mr.· and Mrs. Robert France,
Rt. 588, Gallipolis.
The wedding took place May

5 at Murphy , N.C.
The bride i:; a graduate of
Kyger Creek High SchooL The
groom graduated from Ga1lia ·
Academy Hi gh School. The
newlyweds are now residing in
Florida.

Our Rod Laver®tennis socks
.· ·
look so good. · .
Clark Graebner wears them.

lvfM/{Mj!Jri;;Y

Flowc.rs arc best ga thered just
as the morning dew is di:;appea rin g. Wa s h and wrap
loosely in damp paper towels
and refrigerate . .,
Nasturtiwns have a flav or
similar to wate r cress which

Eddie Watterson, Dr. and Mrs. Sigismund Harder and Dr.
andMrs.George Nibert. Mr. and Mrs. Art Hartley, Sr., were
absent.

they are comm only used in

GREETINGS
TO All!
--- &amp;tc.

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Miss Stapleton,
Russell Rose
complete plans
CROWN CITY Mi ss
Beverly Gail
Stapleton,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
William Stapleton, Rt. 2,

f~und
ness.

- Sen . Sarr,t J·. Ervin Jr. D·
N.C., on Pr esident Nixon's
decision
let White
House aidesto appear
before

GALLIPOLIS .:_ The annual
South Central · District Ohio
Child Conservation League
Spring Conference will be held
Saturda.", June 2 at the
Gallipolis Holiday Inn. "The
Hand That Rocks The Cradle"
will be the theme carried out
by the host league, .Toddlers to
Tassels Mothers League, with
· Mrs. Kenneth Bostic and Mrs.
Lester Plymale serving as cochairwomen. OCCL, since its
beginning in 1918, has had as its
aim
and
purpose
the
recognitipn of the child as the
"most valuable asset of the
nation and the one which is the
lease conserved." It has endeavored to " impress upqn
parents that fact that time,
money and effort spent Upon
physical, moral and ethical
culture of the child is the best
of all investments. " It is deeply
conscious that education
without moral foundation is a
menace rather than a strength
to society. It alms to build a
firm foundation for and ·supplement the work of the schools
and other public agencies fot
the welfare of the child. These
.are the aims of OCCL.
The OCCL motto, "A Child
Well Guided TOday, Tomorrow
Will Guide Well Its Own
Destiny,'' is showing paren~ of
America that ~he honie

t rown City and Russell Leon
Rose, so n of Mr: and Mrs.
Walter. Rose, Rt. 1, Northup,
have completed plans for their
wedding at 1:30 p.m . May 20.
The wedding will take place

TODAY, IT'S
STILL ONLY

10.951

TIMELy QUOTES at Kings Chapel
· · when Y0 u
I a1ways reJOice
fnd someone in error has
the path of righteous-

Church with
Ja
ck
Rankin
officiating.
· .
. .
·
Conme Cremeens, p1amst, wii1
provide music 15 minutes prior
to the ceremony .
The cus tom of open church
will be observed with the
reception to follow at the

e

JAWN EY
Jr."WfLERS
C

e

·

422 Second Ave.

Ervin's committee inves· Hannan Trace High School . 'L•---G_a_l.,li;.p.,o.,li.;.s_ _..~c.o
tigat.i ng Wat.e rgate.
cafeteria .
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OPEN
SUNDAY
l · PM TO
6 PM
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ON SALE
SUNDAY

SUNDAY
ONLY!

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training determines, to a great

GalliPOlis, OhiO en

WOMEN'S
STRAW
HANDBAGS

6 PIECE SET

STEAK
KNIVES

~dtheCJassJCIJ; Zii

Stainless steel blades,
Rosewood handle . $1.98

CANVAS
OXFORDS

Value .

99~

COMBINATION

extent, what the child will be
later in life.
., Registration and coffee hour
will begin at 9 a.m. with the
morning business session being
conducted by Mrs . Arthur
Rupe, Jr. , district president, at
9:30a.m. Mrs. William Wolfe,

MADE IN USA
at ILOREN'S

SUNDAY ONLY!

SUNDAY
, ONLY!

55'

WINE &amp; WHITE .
$1.98 Value! Poly Plastic

$18

FLIP UP TOP
CONT

UTILITY
KNIVES

Waste Basket
or Laundr Ha

STRIPED PILLOW CASES

each one .

•WHITE
eMAROON

1 st Quality

eBLACK

Perf.ect qyality , full
· size. Multi stripes. Two
in each package .

EA.

FOR

•BROWN
SUNDAY ONLY !

ALL
WHITE

$16

These great socks are
every bH as cornfo rt ahlc as they · .
are good loo k ing. Th ey 're sof t co fton a nd
.stretch nylon with a cush ion foot and h an d so me
narrow- r ib b ed st riped top. T h e y may not make
- you play like a c hampi on but t hey'l l h e lp you look
like one. One siLc f i·t s 10 to '13 at $1.50 a pair.

99

ENTIRE STOCK

WOMEN'S SPRING

SKIRTS

1

SUNDAY ONLYI
BOYS .SIZE 4 TO 8
. r"'\

SHIRT &amp; SLACKS

SET
PRICE

2

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group .
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He psused beside her and whispered low, ' 'I'll help you across'
you wish to go." .
.
.
Her aged hand on his strong young arm she placed and so without
hurt or harm
·
lie guided her trembling feet along, proved that hi s own were
firm and strong .
.
.
Then back again to his friends he went his yocng heart happy
and well content.
She's somebody 's mother, boys, yOu know, and she's aged and
·
poor and slow,
And 1 hope some fellow will lend a hand to help my mother, you

the famHy shops

318 Second A~e.

66
• PT. PlEASANT .
•MASON
•SILVER BRIDGE

toc~ther

Gallipolis. 0.

A DISCOUNT
O[PARTMlNT ST~I

SHOPPING
All3

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PAIR
ONLY

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Auxiliary, Veterans Me modal

banquet and dance. Dues for

Hospital , 7: 30 p .m., hospital
ca fet eria ; Bernard Fultz ,
prnsecuti.ng attorney, speaker .
BOOK AND learning festival
being held at Tuppers Plains

the year are $1 and alumni

El ementary Sc·hool throu gh
May 15. Books and learning
nwte:rials on display at ihe
sc hool and on booster meeting
night, Ma y 14 . Proceeds rrom
activity go to Jibrury fund . ··

Vic:~

conducted by

Tillis.

.

t'

·

tsDrrP/11

t.

BETTER FOOTWEAR FOR THE FAMILy

IN THE SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA ·

Need
a home improvement
loan?

President

tlwnk~you letter was received

rroiil the Myerses . Refreshments were served to the

CHARLES R. KARR, SR., HAS been advised by his d~ctors
to retire frOm his seat qn the board of the county comm1sstoner .&lt;
The doctors did advise Dick to be active "to a degree," but to
keep away from unnecessary pressure.
.
.To remain active, Mr. Karr has . purchased . the U D~J~e
Through car wash located on Pomeroy's West Mam Street. _It .Ls
the on1y car Wash in Pomeroy where you can wash your car 1n
three minutes for 50 cents .
.
,
· Mr . Karr has improved the operation by addmg new

We certainlY wish Mr. Karr the best, and hope his rc Lrernen

SUNDAY ONLY
WHILE THEY LAST

'
Mye re s, Ronald Osbornes;
Denver Webers , and Warren
Pickenes. The next meeting ls
with the W~lter Browns.

Denver · Weber. Dues were
to llec ted and ideaS were
discussed' for new projects. A

away.
·
And " Somebody's Mother." bowed low her head in her home that
nightandtheprayershe said was , "God:,be kmd to the noble boy
who is somebody 's son, prtde and JOY.

equipment.

REGULAR

unable to attend the reuni on
ar e a.skcd lu send dues tn Mrs.

CHC MEETS
HF.EDSVILLE
The
C.B.C's met' with Mr. and Mrs .
Ernest Whitehead in April.
Their business session wa s

understand,
·
d
· · 1
if ever she's poor, old and gray when he~ own ear son 1s ar

·

1 TQr6
ONLY

Open and well heeled
to lake you to the
nicest places . See our
large selection of
fa shion whiles. Also
in black, blue and
yellow .

attend .

At last one came of the merry troop , the gayest laddie of the

t

is a long and enjoyable one .
AIRMAN KEITH WISECUP, former sportswriter for the
Da'l Sentinel left Wc'&lt;inesday for Minot Air Force Base, N. D.,
foliJo~ing a two weeks leave with his paren~, Mr. a~ Mr~.
James Wisecup, Union .A,ve ., Pomero!. Keith w1ll be stationed m
North Dakota for one year.

The four generation family
attending included Mrs. Mae
Grueser, Mrs. Richard Finlaw,
Mrs. Steven Finhiw and het
two children. Besides Mrs;
Grueser
other
great--·
grandmothers attending were
Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Fost&lt;;_r.
Others present were Mrs .
Ronald Smith, Jane and Jan ,
Mrs. Terry Phalin, Lena and
Amy, Mrs. Robert Kuhn ,
Robin , Janell , and Karla
In gels, Mrs. Ellen Couch,' Mrs .
Robert Couch, Janice and
Jennifer, Mrs. George Skinner
and daughter , Mrs. Mark
Gruese r, Mrs. ViCtor Young,
Jr., . Diana and Janice, Mrs . .
Thomas Smith and Paige, MTs.
Orval Wiles and Anna Kathryn ,
Mrs . Harry Bailey and
daughter , Debbie, Mrs. I. B.
Walker Lola and Bonnie, Mrs .
' '
William
Watson, Mrs. Carl
Hubbard ' .Mrs . Joseph Cook,
Mrs . Hariett Sterrett, Mrs.
James Hawley and Mary Beth.

. SON BORN
RACINE - Mr . and Mrs.
David Shain , Racine, are

DAUGHTER HORN
POMEROY' - Mr. and Mrs.
Fen ton Taylor , Pomeroy, Rt. 4,

anhouncing the birth of their
first baby , a son named Jason
David . . The five pound, two
ounce infant was born May 4 at
the Holzer Medical Center,

announce the birth of a
dau ghter , Jennifer Laurie,!
ThurSday at Holzer Medical
Ce nter, weighing 6 lbs, 13 oz .
The TaylorS are ·l:ll so the

Gallipolis. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Charles M. ll ysell, Pomeroy,
and the paternal grandparenl'i
are Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Shain,
Racine . Mrs. Garnet Ervine,
Portland
is
a
g reat·

paren ts of a

P~4

15 dias

1f.:!

c:t

150
TAWNEY ·
JEWELERS
1

two-year-o~d

422 Secotid Ave .
· lis, Ollio

High School.

..

Ask Us About

g randm o th~ r .

~s,

P
• •

'
HIGHEST HONORS
GLENVILLE, W. Va.
Penny Sue· Burris, Mason,
Business Education. ( 7-12) and
Lan gua ge Arts and Sqcial .
Studies (7·9), will graduate
mag na cum laude on May 12.

0

--

·--·

Phone 675-3000

for

Graduation

•

Hoi~

Park

e

Eagle
Buddy
.•

Our
Our·
,. ,-~
All ~~ MOe!L( MO...:[ SAUS
All
Electric ~!~~· M.toGt ,.o•TMu.. •.... ~... ~~~! Electric
Mobile
Mobile .
Homes.
Homes
~ ~
"v

Our 1974 Vacaiion Club

'lJIIIIIIIJV
.. .

. .. . .

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tc:twn Mditi ' Home!l.'

App~lachian Power Joins In Bring .You This Messa&amp;~
"

I ..

'

..-

You 'll get first clas~ service. The kind that makesOhio Valley ·
Bank a first class bank. Plant shrubbery, pave a dnveway, tnstall
carpeting, paint inside or out , build a patio, etc. We have a
financing plan to fit your needs whatever yo.ur tmprovement.

See

See

000 , ,. , . , , .. , .... .

--- &amp;tC.

~e

• Ba:

-

You'll get·more thaJl
money at 0.\l B.!

••

.,

Has .. ·
Great Gifts
I

DIAMONDS

daughter, J ody. Tay lor ts
assistant princlpal at Mei gs

330 Second .Avenu~

GOING TO RIO
. RIO GRANDE - Miss Ruth
Wood daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Herman WoO(\ of Patriot,
has been accepted for
enrollment at Rio Grande. She
will enter Rio Grande the fall
quarter of 1973 and plans t&lt;
major
· in
E!enlenta~)
Education and Mus1c . She wtll
.graduate at SouthwesteTI\ Hi gil
School this month.
·
.

•··.

RUt/a nd.ht;ah
b ·
""ount'on set

39th a nni versary party, 8 p.m ..
at Ches ter Lodge Hall. All 1
charter members urged ~o

N;';;ffered a helping hand to her so meek, so timid, afraid to stk,
r.est the carriage wheels or horses' feet should crowd her down m
the. slippery street.

7Bc .

PAMIL YSHOI! STOal
Wh~:re

..

I,. /

Refreshments.
TUESDAY
CHESTER LODGE DAV 323,

SUNDAY SPECIAL

RUTLAND - The 44th a nnual alumni reuni on and
FRIENDLY C IH CLE , ban qu et of Rutland Hi gh
SOMEBODY'S MOTHER
.
The woman was old and ragged and gray and bent with the c hill
Trinity Church, 7:30p.m. at the School will be at 6 p.m.,
church.
Mrs. Kenn eth. Harris, '
of the winter day.
,
Saturday, M.ay 26, at the
The street was wet with a recent snow, and the woman s feet
program chairwoman.
Rutland gy mna sium .
A MEETING of all persons
.
were aged and slow .
Round and square dancing
She stood at the crossing and waited long alone, uncared for amid
interested in formin g a Meigs
will be held from 9 p.m. to l
Hi gh
Schoo l
Alumni a .m . with mu sic by Tex
the throng.
Of human beings who passed her by nor heeded the glance of her
Association will be held at 7:30
H;.wrisvn and the V&lt;.tlley Boys.
p.m. at the high school. All
anxious eye.
Reservations, at $:l.50 a person,
interested grads invited,
mus t be paid by Ma y 21 and
Down the street with laughter and shout , glad ir. freedom of
OHIO ETA PHI soro1·ity
may be made with Mrs.
school let out,
·
..
· d h·t · picnic 7 p.m. at roadside park Saun.dra Tilli s, Box .146 , 1
Came the boys, like a flock of sheep, hallmg the &amp;~ow pi 1e w ' e
on left on U. S. J!t. 33.
Rutland, 15775. Each alumni
and deep.
.
th ·
MAY MEETING ." Women 's may take one guest to the.
Past the woman so old and gray hastened the children on .elf

fercnce .

BoJter waist, flare leg
pant with matching or
contrasting shir.t. Save

ON SALE
SUNDAY 1·

Xnt~r\voit~n®

,_

and
enlightening
panel
discussion , "Sex Education Pros and Cons," led by a high
sc hool principal , an Ob·
stetrician, a minister and a
school nurse.
Luncheon will be served at
12:30 p.m . and door prizes of
handmade articles made by
members of the host league
will be given .
The afte rnoon session will
feature the Gallia Academy
Higfi School Madrigals under
the direction ·of Mrs. Anne
· Fischer. The · madrigals are
well known in the area .for their
singing ability and this spring
received a I superior rating in
district competition at Portsl)lOuth ,
Gloria Buck Wallace 's GloEttes Baton Corps will also
provide entertainment. The
Glo-Ettes, too, are well known
and have received state .
championship honors .
Reservations for the conference sh0u1d be niade with
Mrs . Charles Bostic, 498 Maple
Drive, Gallipolis by May 18. All
OCCL membe'" are urged to
a·ltend. Anyone interes ted in
the promotion and goals of
OCCL, or interested in
becoming a member of one Of
the four OCCL League• in this
seven-county area, or starting
a new league are cordially
invited to attend the .. c.on-

.The welcome ,to the mothers
and their daughters and
granddaughters, including a
four generation family, was
extended by Mrs. J. Edward
Foster, president. Mrs. Robert
Kuhn was at the piano for a
program of ra.miliar tunes and
parodies arranged by Mrs.
Albert
Smith ,
program
chairwoman .
· ' Each one attending wa s
presented a bonnet, ..scratch
pads oi colorful nettmg and
Mother 's Day bookmarks for
favors . A tall
candle
surrounded by flowers with
smaller candles at each end
decorated the tea table .
Arrangements or pansies were
used on the other tables .
Sandwiches, cookies, tea and
c.offee were served ·

Use For

handles , stainless
steel. Save JDc on

.

conference.
There will be an interesting

church .

QUART SIZE

6 Style!&gt; . wood

ESQ.UIRE SOCKS®

state CCL president, will bring
us up-to-date on " What 's
Happening in CCL." State and
district officers other than
Mrs. Wolfe will attend ihe

POMEROY - The annual
mother-daughter tea of the
Pomeroy First Baptist Church
was held Thursday night at the

members ur ged to attend .

~-"
.
Pauline Greathouse , while looking through an old autogr~ph
book dated May 9, 1933, found a poem. "Somebodfs Mother,' so
touching that it brought tears to my eyes. I would hke very much
to pass it on to you . If your mother is livin g, just remember to
" remember" her on this, her special d~y:

.

99

Mrs. Norma Zirkle, Mrs. Jean
Zirkle, Mrs . Art Gilmore, Mrs.
Freda Casto, Mr ~ . David

POMEROY - To all mothers everywhere, " Happy Mother's

First Baptist church
has mother, .daughter
tea .Thurs_day evening.

2

SAVE$

OR
BONE &amp; .BROWN

on film, higlllighled the Thursday meeltn~ of the Bradbury
SUNDAY
PTA .
REVIVAL starting Sunday
Mrs . J oa n Wick:-.trom and
at Wes le:;u n Churc h, Car- ·
Mrs . Step•·wnie Miller combondale, '12 miles west or
mented on the program which
Athens on Rt. 56, with the Rev .
was conducted in two 10-week
John Elswick, evangelist, 7 :30
:;cssions under sponsorship of
each evening.
the Ohio Arts Councils in
MONDAY
cooperation
with · Ohio
REV1V AL starting Monday,
University.
7:30 each evening, Hobson
During the meeting, conChri stia n Union Church with
duc.ted by Mr•. Manning Kl oes.
lhe Rev. 0 . ,H. Cart as
new offi cers were elected and
evangelist. Public welcome:
in clud e
Milf ord
Hysell ,
4-H PLEASURE Riders will presipent, Mrs. Robert Fis he r,
sponsor a Meigs Coun ty 4-H vice president, Mrs. J e,an
hor se clinic at 6 p.m. at the Thom as,
seco nd
vice
Meigs County Fair Grounds. pres ident, Mrs. Richard
TUESDAY
Bailey , sec retar y and Mrs.
MEIGS CHAPTER 53 DAV Dave Gruese r, trea surer. Mrs.
&lt;.~t 7: 30p.m . at chapter home on Thomas was elected delegate
Butternut Ave . Nominatin g lo the Meigs County Council of
committee to be appointed. All Parents and ·r eachers . The

By Katie Crow

OCCL will sponsor
spring conference

new orricers were installed by committee ftJr the PTA and
asked for parents to volunteer
William King.
Mrs . Phyll iS Hackett ex- for the committee .
Mrs. Ben Philson's room won
plainc.d a new individualized
math program whi c h the the attendance banner. Mrs .
teaclle rs hope to introduce into Will iam King opened the
1he curriculum thi s fall . Five of meeting by givi ng the PTA
the leachcrs volunteered to prayer . Officers reports were
se rve on the ways and 'means presented .

A

dem onstration on c reati ve
movement and drama , live and

GALIJPOUS- The Monday evening dance class at the
French Art Colony includes, lelt to right, Lyrm Durst and

Miss Beverly Gail Stapleton

'

'

MIDDLEPORT

home of Mrs. Maxine Owens Sigman and David, Jr., and
honoring Mrs. Jack Sigman. Mrs. J ohn Sigman.
Games were played with
Others presenting gifts to
prizes going to Mrs. Charles Mrs. Sigman were Mrs. Karl
Carson. Debbie Carson, Mrs. Owens, Mrs. Ruby Erb, H ...
Leora · Sigman, Mrs. Mildred Don Rea , Mrs, Larry Bunce,
·Mi tch and Mrs. Tom Fields. Mrs . La rr y Thomas , Mrs.
Citke, nuts and punch were Alfred Roush. Mrs. Ernie Wells
served to those named and and Jane Quivey.
Mrs. David Ashley and Lisa.

LCJvendar makes a conversation piece used in

soups ahd stews .

Mrs. Gene

Carson entertained recently
with a layette showe r at the

similar to cloves or cinnamon ,
Day lilies. which have a
c hestn~t and honey navor can
be cleverly used in salads,
casseroles and soups.

alcoholic beverages and fruit
salads.
Instead of saffron. try adding
marigolds to scrambled eggs
and they add color when
cooked with rice. In Holland

Flowers for meals
pres~nted at meet

POMEROY -

The s ecret of happiness is
not in doing what one likes ,
but in liking what one has to
do.-James Barrie, English
playw&lt;ight.
•

spinach.

Mrs. Robert Adams, left, samples some of the flow ers
prepared by Mrs. Leona Woodring Smith, right, during the
meeting of the Ga llipolis Garden Club Thursday evening.

01!"'

inteiests but also to the znterests 'ut others.- Philippians 2:3, 4.

leaves are delicious cooked like

Bradbury PTA installs officers

Shower honors
Mrs. Sigman

THOUGHTS

unly Ihe pcf4Jis.

. I

Is Now Open

-··

�..

•

.

7 - TheSunday'finle$-Sentinel,Sunday, May 13, 1973

rf&gt;moving the centers and uSing

Vo twthi11g from selfish·
ness or conceit, but tn humiltty count others better
than· yourselves. Let each of

Hollyhoc ks. which are a
symbol of fertility, have a
lettuce like flavor. Remove the
centers and try them as con·
l.a iners for cocktail dlps .
Violets can be beautifully
used in molded gelatin salads.
jams and syrup and as a
gar nish for desserts. Violet

you look not only to his

• • •

Carnations have a sPicy t.aste

Miss Linda Kemper
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mrs. Mary Jo
Kemper , Gallipolis, is announcing th~ forth coming marriage
of her daughter, Linda, to Dwain Beaver, son of James S.
Beaver, Gallipolis, and Mrs. William F . Bennett, Temple
&lt;;ity , Calif. He is a 1971 graduate of Gallia Academy High
School and is employed at the Jon es Boys. Miss Kemper is a
senior at Gallia Academy. Wedding plans, are incomplete.

GALLIPOLIS - " We have
all eaten flowers!" Mrs. Leona
Woodr ing Smith pointed ou t
that cauJHiower, broccoli and
artichokes are all members of
the flower family in her talk
Th ursday evenin g to mem bers
"nd guests of Gallipolis Garden
Club a t Gra ce
United
Methodis t Church.
After five yectrs of research,
Mrs. Smith, who is a residen t of
Ft. L;&gt;uderdale, Fla ., m~ke• a

· The deep red color of the rose
makes then1 adaptable for use
makes it a favorite to use in
in sa lads and their color adds
jams and syrup as well as a
an exquisite touch as a garnish
garn ish. Rose syrup ca n be
for cottage c heese, potato
easily made by purchasing
sa lad and molded ge latin
rose water at any pharmacy
sale~ds.
Pre si dent
and combining it with light
Eisenhower's recipe for
corn syrup and a touch of food
vegeta bl e so up called for color .

nasturtium s. In Germany this
fl ower was used as a remedy
fur sore throat and wa s used to
bind wOunds to draw out .in!

RIO GRAN DE - The women
of the Calvary Baptist
Auxiliary met reCently at the
church. Mrs . Arlene Tracy led
the devotions "Sending Up
Material." Her meditation was
from Matthew 6: 16-2I and
Daniel 12:3. Her thought was
that the more one does in this
life, the grea ter will be his
reward , in the after life .
Mrs. Gaynelle Tope presided
over the business session when
.Mrs. Doris Lanham reported
that plans had been made for
the Sherwood Singers to
present the program at the

A ques tion and ar.swer
period followed Mrs. Smith 's
talk and she passed around
samples of ca ndied lilacs,
mimosa, mint leaves ~nd roses
and explained how many of
these items could be obtained
in gourm e t food stores .
Refreshments were served .

fection.
full -t ime ca r e~ r lecturing
Chrysanthemums add color
throu ghout United States, and a gourmet touch to salads
Cct nada and the Bahamas on and casseroles. It was once
.
''The Forgotten Art of Flower thought that this flower inCookery' '. This is also the title creased longev ity and restored
M he r book publis hed by natural color to greying hair.
~larp er and Row to be on sale
Borage, which is an herb, has
.
m Augus t.
a cucumber like flavor .
VISITS RELATIVES
Mrs . Smith talked about
GALLIPOLIS
Mark
Gladioli which have a lettuce
some of the 26 common garden like flavor, make beaut'ful and Spurlock. Lon gv iew, Wash .•
family night, June 21. The £Jowers that are edible and nutritious salads.
spent a few days visiting Mr .
g roup is connected with. World illustrated her talk with slides
Remove the center of the and Mrs . Vernon Deweese , Pt.
Vi s ion Child . Care, the showing how these flowers can yucca flower and serve raw in Pleasant and other relatives in
organization through which the be used in the preparation of salads or in so ups. This fl ower the area. Mr. Spurlock is a
auxiliary is .sponsoFing a boy. those of ._ her own gourmet has the tas te · of peas or native of Gallia County. He
Mrs. Irene Brann on shared recipes or as ga rnishes in aspctragus and is hi gh in attended the recent \l'edding of
her experiences at the May 6 soups, sa lads, beverages and protein.
his s on, Michael. He als o
missi onary rally in Jackson. -. de~e rts. Mrs. Smith showed
The chive is a member of visited a sister , Mrs. William
Mrs. Lillian Wilkins presented how ffowers can add color, the onion family and the entire · (Wanda ) Hess in Columbus. He
''Signs of Hope in Miss ions flav or , deco ration and a flow er may , be used in will return Lo the Wes t Coast in
conversation pie ce to dinners casseroles or dips.
Today " as the prog ram.
the next few days. He plans to
A salad course was served t() 'and partie s.
Tulips make br~utiful visit a brother, William
11 members· and Marcia
It is best to use flowers from co ntainers for salads by Spurlock, in Minneapolis.
Wilhem and Beth and Mic hael your own garden to be sure no
'
Lynch ·by the hoste..es. Mrs. sprays have been used on
Second Avenu~
Beverly Hoff a,pd Mrs, Lillian them . If you do use a rose.
Wilkins.
spmy or such, be sure to check
the product lable for the len gth
of time that must elapse before
the poiso n is . no longer
dan ge t·ous. Always wa sh tall
flower. thoroug hly but gently.

Calvary Baptist
women have meet
.

Sends .. .

Albert France weds
Penny Lynn Doyle
CHESHIRE - Mr. and Mrs.
Doyle T. Shuler , Cheshire, are
announcing the marriage · "of
their daughter , Penny LYnn, to
Albert Eugene France , son ·Of
Mr.· and Mrs. Robert France,
Rt. 588, Gallipolis.
The wedding took place May

5 at Murphy , N.C.
The bride i:; a graduate of
Kyger Creek High SchooL The
groom graduated from Ga1lia ·
Academy Hi gh School. The
newlyweds are now residing in
Florida.

Our Rod Laver®tennis socks
.· ·
look so good. · .
Clark Graebner wears them.

lvfM/{Mj!Jri;;Y

Flowc.rs arc best ga thered just
as the morning dew is di:;appea rin g. Wa s h and wrap
loosely in damp paper towels
and refrigerate . .,
Nasturtiwns have a flav or
similar to wate r cress which

Eddie Watterson, Dr. and Mrs. Sigismund Harder and Dr.
andMrs.George Nibert. Mr. and Mrs. Art Hartley, Sr., were
absent.

they are comm only used in

GREETINGS
TO All!
--- &amp;tc.

I

I

Miss Stapleton,
Russell Rose
complete plans
CROWN CITY Mi ss
Beverly Gail
Stapleton,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
William Stapleton, Rt. 2,

f~und
ness.

- Sen . Sarr,t J·. Ervin Jr. D·
N.C., on Pr esident Nixon's
decision
let White
House aidesto appear
before

GALLIPOLIS .:_ The annual
South Central · District Ohio
Child Conservation League
Spring Conference will be held
Saturda.", June 2 at the
Gallipolis Holiday Inn. "The
Hand That Rocks The Cradle"
will be the theme carried out
by the host league, .Toddlers to
Tassels Mothers League, with
· Mrs. Kenneth Bostic and Mrs.
Lester Plymale serving as cochairwomen. OCCL, since its
beginning in 1918, has had as its
aim
and
purpose
the
recognitipn of the child as the
"most valuable asset of the
nation and the one which is the
lease conserved." It has endeavored to " impress upqn
parents that fact that time,
money and effort spent Upon
physical, moral and ethical
culture of the child is the best
of all investments. " It is deeply
conscious that education
without moral foundation is a
menace rather than a strength
to society. It alms to build a
firm foundation for and ·supplement the work of the schools
and other public agencies fot
the welfare of the child. These
.are the aims of OCCL.
The OCCL motto, "A Child
Well Guided TOday, Tomorrow
Will Guide Well Its Own
Destiny,'' is showing paren~ of
America that ~he honie

t rown City and Russell Leon
Rose, so n of Mr: and Mrs.
Walter. Rose, Rt. 1, Northup,
have completed plans for their
wedding at 1:30 p.m . May 20.
The wedding will take place

TODAY, IT'S
STILL ONLY

10.951

TIMELy QUOTES at Kings Chapel
· · when Y0 u
I a1ways reJOice
fnd someone in error has
the path of righteous-

Church with
Ja
ck
Rankin
officiating.
· .
. .
·
Conme Cremeens, p1amst, wii1
provide music 15 minutes prior
to the ceremony .
The cus tom of open church
will be observed with the
reception to follow at the

e

JAWN EY
Jr."WfLERS
C

e

·

422 Second Ave.

Ervin's committee inves· Hannan Trace High School . 'L•---G_a_l.,li;.p.,o.,li.;.s_ _..~c.o
tigat.i ng Wat.e rgate.
cafeteria .
'
,OJ

OPEN
SUNDAY
l · PM TO
6 PM
!

I

(

· .' 1 r 1
i\

- ~.·

ON SALE
SUNDAY

SUNDAY
ONLY!

/
I

I;

J

training determines, to a great

GalliPOlis, OhiO en

WOMEN'S
STRAW
HANDBAGS

6 PIECE SET

STEAK
KNIVES

~dtheCJassJCIJ; Zii

Stainless steel blades,
Rosewood handle . $1.98

CANVAS
OXFORDS

Value .

99~

COMBINATION

extent, what the child will be
later in life.
., Registration and coffee hour
will begin at 9 a.m. with the
morning business session being
conducted by Mrs . Arthur
Rupe, Jr. , district president, at
9:30a.m. Mrs. William Wolfe,

MADE IN USA
at ILOREN'S

SUNDAY ONLY!

SUNDAY
, ONLY!

55'

WINE &amp; WHITE .
$1.98 Value! Poly Plastic

$18

FLIP UP TOP
CONT

UTILITY
KNIVES

Waste Basket
or Laundr Ha

STRIPED PILLOW CASES

each one .

•WHITE
eMAROON

1 st Quality

eBLACK

Perf.ect qyality , full
· size. Multi stripes. Two
in each package .

EA.

FOR

•BROWN
SUNDAY ONLY !

ALL
WHITE

$16

These great socks are
every bH as cornfo rt ahlc as they · .
are good loo k ing. Th ey 're sof t co fton a nd
.stretch nylon with a cush ion foot and h an d so me
narrow- r ib b ed st riped top. T h e y may not make
- you play like a c hampi on but t hey'l l h e lp you look
like one. One siLc f i·t s 10 to '13 at $1.50 a pair.

99

ENTIRE STOCK

WOMEN'S SPRING

SKIRTS

1

SUNDAY ONLYI
BOYS .SIZE 4 TO 8
. r"'\

SHIRT &amp; SLACKS

SET
PRICE

2

.

.
group .
·
'f
He psused beside her and whispered low, ' 'I'll help you across'
you wish to go." .
.
.
Her aged hand on his strong young arm she placed and so without
hurt or harm
·
lie guided her trembling feet along, proved that hi s own were
firm and strong .
.
.
Then back again to his friends he went his yocng heart happy
and well content.
She's somebody 's mother, boys, yOu know, and she's aged and
·
poor and slow,
And 1 hope some fellow will lend a hand to help my mother, you

the famHy shops

318 Second A~e.

66
• PT. PlEASANT .
•MASON
•SILVER BRIDGE

toc~ther

Gallipolis. 0.

A DISCOUNT
O[PARTMlNT ST~I

SHOPPING
All3

1

'

I

• 42
PAIR
ONLY

~;;~

Auxiliary, Veterans Me modal

banquet and dance. Dues for

Hospital , 7: 30 p .m., hospital
ca fet eria ; Bernard Fultz ,
prnsecuti.ng attorney, speaker .
BOOK AND learning festival
being held at Tuppers Plains

the year are $1 and alumni

El ementary Sc·hool throu gh
May 15. Books and learning
nwte:rials on display at ihe
sc hool and on booster meeting
night, Ma y 14 . Proceeds rrom
activity go to Jibrury fund . ··

Vic:~

conducted by

Tillis.

.

t'

·

tsDrrP/11

t.

BETTER FOOTWEAR FOR THE FAMILy

IN THE SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA ·

Need
a home improvement
loan?

President

tlwnk~you letter was received

rroiil the Myerses . Refreshments were served to the

CHARLES R. KARR, SR., HAS been advised by his d~ctors
to retire frOm his seat qn the board of the county comm1sstoner .&lt;
The doctors did advise Dick to be active "to a degree," but to
keep away from unnecessary pressure.
.
.To remain active, Mr. Karr has . purchased . the U D~J~e
Through car wash located on Pomeroy's West Mam Street. _It .Ls
the on1y car Wash in Pomeroy where you can wash your car 1n
three minutes for 50 cents .
.
,
· Mr . Karr has improved the operation by addmg new

We certainlY wish Mr. Karr the best, and hope his rc Lrernen

SUNDAY ONLY
WHILE THEY LAST

'
Mye re s, Ronald Osbornes;
Denver Webers , and Warren
Pickenes. The next meeting ls
with the W~lter Browns.

Denver · Weber. Dues were
to llec ted and ideaS were
discussed' for new projects. A

away.
·
And " Somebody's Mother." bowed low her head in her home that
nightandtheprayershe said was , "God:,be kmd to the noble boy
who is somebody 's son, prtde and JOY.

equipment.

REGULAR

unable to attend the reuni on
ar e a.skcd lu send dues tn Mrs.

CHC MEETS
HF.EDSVILLE
The
C.B.C's met' with Mr. and Mrs .
Ernest Whitehead in April.
Their business session wa s

understand,
·
d
· · 1
if ever she's poor, old and gray when he~ own ear son 1s ar

·

1 TQr6
ONLY

Open and well heeled
to lake you to the
nicest places . See our
large selection of
fa shion whiles. Also
in black, blue and
yellow .

attend .

At last one came of the merry troop , the gayest laddie of the

t

is a long and enjoyable one .
AIRMAN KEITH WISECUP, former sportswriter for the
Da'l Sentinel left Wc'&lt;inesday for Minot Air Force Base, N. D.,
foliJo~ing a two weeks leave with his paren~, Mr. a~ Mr~.
James Wisecup, Union .A,ve ., Pomero!. Keith w1ll be stationed m
North Dakota for one year.

The four generation family
attending included Mrs. Mae
Grueser, Mrs. Richard Finlaw,
Mrs. Steven Finhiw and het
two children. Besides Mrs;
Grueser
other
great--·
grandmothers attending were
Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Fost&lt;;_r.
Others present were Mrs .
Ronald Smith, Jane and Jan ,
Mrs. Terry Phalin, Lena and
Amy, Mrs. Robert Kuhn ,
Robin , Janell , and Karla
In gels, Mrs. Ellen Couch,' Mrs .
Robert Couch, Janice and
Jennifer, Mrs. George Skinner
and daughter , Mrs. Mark
Gruese r, Mrs. ViCtor Young,
Jr., . Diana and Janice, Mrs . .
Thomas Smith and Paige, MTs.
Orval Wiles and Anna Kathryn ,
Mrs . Harry Bailey and
daughter , Debbie, Mrs. I. B.
Walker Lola and Bonnie, Mrs .
' '
William
Watson, Mrs. Carl
Hubbard ' .Mrs . Joseph Cook,
Mrs . Hariett Sterrett, Mrs.
James Hawley and Mary Beth.

. SON BORN
RACINE - Mr . and Mrs.
David Shain , Racine, are

DAUGHTER HORN
POMEROY' - Mr. and Mrs.
Fen ton Taylor , Pomeroy, Rt. 4,

anhouncing the birth of their
first baby , a son named Jason
David . . The five pound, two
ounce infant was born May 4 at
the Holzer Medical Center,

announce the birth of a
dau ghter , Jennifer Laurie,!
ThurSday at Holzer Medical
Ce nter, weighing 6 lbs, 13 oz .
The TaylorS are ·l:ll so the

Gallipolis. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Charles M. ll ysell, Pomeroy,
and the paternal grandparenl'i
are Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Shain,
Racine . Mrs. Garnet Ervine,
Portland
is
a
g reat·

paren ts of a

P~4

15 dias

1f.:!

c:t

150
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JEWELERS
1

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GLENVILLE, W. Va.
Penny Sue· Burris, Mason,
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carpeting, paint inside or out , build a patio, etc. We have a
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I

DIAMONDS

daughter, J ody. Tay lor ts
assistant princlpal at Mei gs

330 Second .Avenu~

GOING TO RIO
. RIO GRANDE - Miss Ruth
Wood daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Herman WoO(\ of Patriot,
has been accepted for
enrollment at Rio Grande. She
will enter Rio Grande the fall
quarter of 1973 and plans t&lt;
major
· in
E!enlenta~)
Education and Mus1c . She wtll
.graduate at SouthwesteTI\ Hi gil
School this month.
·
.

•··.

RUt/a nd.ht;ah
b ·
""ount'on set

39th a nni versary party, 8 p.m ..
at Ches ter Lodge Hall. All 1
charter members urged ~o

N;';;ffered a helping hand to her so meek, so timid, afraid to stk,
r.est the carriage wheels or horses' feet should crowd her down m
the. slippery street.

7Bc .

PAMIL YSHOI! STOal
Wh~:re

..

I,. /

Refreshments.
TUESDAY
CHESTER LODGE DAV 323,

SUNDAY SPECIAL

RUTLAND - The 44th a nnual alumni reuni on and
FRIENDLY C IH CLE , ban qu et of Rutland Hi gh
SOMEBODY'S MOTHER
.
The woman was old and ragged and gray and bent with the c hill
Trinity Church, 7:30p.m. at the School will be at 6 p.m.,
church.
Mrs. Kenn eth. Harris, '
of the winter day.
,
Saturday, M.ay 26, at the
The street was wet with a recent snow, and the woman s feet
program chairwoman.
Rutland gy mna sium .
A MEETING of all persons
.
were aged and slow .
Round and square dancing
She stood at the crossing and waited long alone, uncared for amid
interested in formin g a Meigs
will be held from 9 p.m. to l
Hi gh
Schoo l
Alumni a .m . with mu sic by Tex
the throng.
Of human beings who passed her by nor heeded the glance of her
Association will be held at 7:30
H;.wrisvn and the V&lt;.tlley Boys.
p.m. at the high school. All
anxious eye.
Reservations, at $:l.50 a person,
interested grads invited,
mus t be paid by Ma y 21 and
Down the street with laughter and shout , glad ir. freedom of
OHIO ETA PHI soro1·ity
may be made with Mrs.
school let out,
·
..
· d h·t · picnic 7 p.m. at roadside park Saun.dra Tilli s, Box .146 , 1
Came the boys, like a flock of sheep, hallmg the &amp;~ow pi 1e w ' e
on left on U. S. J!t. 33.
Rutland, 15775. Each alumni
and deep.
.
th ·
MAY MEETING ." Women 's may take one guest to the.
Past the woman so old and gray hastened the children on .elf

fercnce .

BoJter waist, flare leg
pant with matching or
contrasting shir.t. Save

ON SALE
SUNDAY 1·

Xnt~r\voit~n®

,_

and
enlightening
panel
discussion , "Sex Education Pros and Cons," led by a high
sc hool principal , an Ob·
stetrician, a minister and a
school nurse.
Luncheon will be served at
12:30 p.m . and door prizes of
handmade articles made by
members of the host league
will be given .
The afte rnoon session will
feature the Gallia Academy
Higfi School Madrigals under
the direction ·of Mrs. Anne
· Fischer. The · madrigals are
well known in the area .for their
singing ability and this spring
received a I superior rating in
district competition at Portsl)lOuth ,
Gloria Buck Wallace 's GloEttes Baton Corps will also
provide entertainment. The
Glo-Ettes, too, are well known
and have received state .
championship honors .
Reservations for the conference sh0u1d be niade with
Mrs . Charles Bostic, 498 Maple
Drive, Gallipolis by May 18. All
OCCL membe'" are urged to
a·ltend. Anyone interes ted in
the promotion and goals of
OCCL, or interested in
becoming a member of one Of
the four OCCL League• in this
seven-county area, or starting
a new league are cordially
invited to attend the .. c.on-

.The welcome ,to the mothers
and their daughters and
granddaughters, including a
four generation family, was
extended by Mrs. J. Edward
Foster, president. Mrs. Robert
Kuhn was at the piano for a
program of ra.miliar tunes and
parodies arranged by Mrs.
Albert
Smith ,
program
chairwoman .
· ' Each one attending wa s
presented a bonnet, ..scratch
pads oi colorful nettmg and
Mother 's Day bookmarks for
favors . A tall
candle
surrounded by flowers with
smaller candles at each end
decorated the tea table .
Arrangements or pansies were
used on the other tables .
Sandwiches, cookies, tea and
c.offee were served ·

Use For

handles , stainless
steel. Save JDc on

.

conference.
There will be an interesting

church .

QUART SIZE

6 Style!&gt; . wood

ESQ.UIRE SOCKS®

state CCL president, will bring
us up-to-date on " What 's
Happening in CCL." State and
district officers other than
Mrs. Wolfe will attend ihe

POMEROY - The annual
mother-daughter tea of the
Pomeroy First Baptist Church
was held Thursday night at the

members ur ged to attend .

~-"
.
Pauline Greathouse , while looking through an old autogr~ph
book dated May 9, 1933, found a poem. "Somebodfs Mother,' so
touching that it brought tears to my eyes. I would hke very much
to pass it on to you . If your mother is livin g, just remember to
" remember" her on this, her special d~y:

.

99

Mrs. Norma Zirkle, Mrs. Jean
Zirkle, Mrs . Art Gilmore, Mrs.
Freda Casto, Mr ~ . David

POMEROY - To all mothers everywhere, " Happy Mother's

First Baptist church
has mother, .daughter
tea .Thurs_day evening.

2

SAVE$

OR
BONE &amp; .BROWN

on film, higlllighled the Thursday meeltn~ of the Bradbury
SUNDAY
PTA .
REVIVAL starting Sunday
Mrs . J oa n Wick:-.trom and
at Wes le:;u n Churc h, Car- ·
Mrs . Step•·wnie Miller combondale, '12 miles west or
mented on the program which
Athens on Rt. 56, with the Rev .
was conducted in two 10-week
John Elswick, evangelist, 7 :30
:;cssions under sponsorship of
each evening.
the Ohio Arts Councils in
MONDAY
cooperation
with · Ohio
REV1V AL starting Monday,
University.
7:30 each evening, Hobson
During the meeting, conChri stia n Union Church with
duc.ted by Mr•. Manning Kl oes.
lhe Rev. 0 . ,H. Cart as
new offi cers were elected and
evangelist. Public welcome:
in clud e
Milf ord
Hysell ,
4-H PLEASURE Riders will presipent, Mrs. Robert Fis he r,
sponsor a Meigs Coun ty 4-H vice president, Mrs. J e,an
hor se clinic at 6 p.m. at the Thom as,
seco nd
vice
Meigs County Fair Grounds. pres ident, Mrs. Richard
TUESDAY
Bailey , sec retar y and Mrs.
MEIGS CHAPTER 53 DAV Dave Gruese r, trea surer. Mrs.
&lt;.~t 7: 30p.m . at chapter home on Thomas was elected delegate
Butternut Ave . Nominatin g lo the Meigs County Council of
committee to be appointed. All Parents and ·r eachers . The

By Katie Crow

OCCL will sponsor
spring conference

new orricers were installed by committee ftJr the PTA and
asked for parents to volunteer
William King.
Mrs . Phyll iS Hackett ex- for the committee .
Mrs. Ben Philson's room won
plainc.d a new individualized
math program whi c h the the attendance banner. Mrs .
teaclle rs hope to introduce into Will iam King opened the
1he curriculum thi s fall . Five of meeting by givi ng the PTA
the leachcrs volunteered to prayer . Officers reports were
se rve on the ways and 'means presented .

A

dem onstration on c reati ve
movement and drama , live and

GALIJPOUS- The Monday evening dance class at the
French Art Colony includes, lelt to right, Lyrm Durst and

Miss Beverly Gail Stapleton

'

'

MIDDLEPORT

home of Mrs. Maxine Owens Sigman and David, Jr., and
honoring Mrs. Jack Sigman. Mrs. J ohn Sigman.
Games were played with
Others presenting gifts to
prizes going to Mrs. Charles Mrs. Sigman were Mrs. Karl
Carson. Debbie Carson, Mrs. Owens, Mrs. Ruby Erb, H ...
Leora · Sigman, Mrs. Mildred Don Rea , Mrs, Larry Bunce,
·Mi tch and Mrs. Tom Fields. Mrs . La rr y Thomas , Mrs.
Citke, nuts and punch were Alfred Roush. Mrs. Ernie Wells
served to those named and and Jane Quivey.
Mrs. David Ashley and Lisa.

LCJvendar makes a conversation piece used in

soups ahd stews .

Mrs. Gene

Carson entertained recently
with a layette showe r at the

similar to cloves or cinnamon ,
Day lilies. which have a
c hestn~t and honey navor can
be cleverly used in salads,
casseroles and soups.

alcoholic beverages and fruit
salads.
Instead of saffron. try adding
marigolds to scrambled eggs
and they add color when
cooked with rice. In Holland

Flowers for meals
pres~nted at meet

POMEROY -

The s ecret of happiness is
not in doing what one likes ,
but in liking what one has to
do.-James Barrie, English
playw&lt;ight.
•

spinach.

Mrs. Robert Adams, left, samples some of the flow ers
prepared by Mrs. Leona Woodring Smith, right, during the
meeting of the Ga llipolis Garden Club Thursday evening.

01!"'

inteiests but also to the znterests 'ut others.- Philippians 2:3, 4.

leaves are delicious cooked like

Bradbury PTA installs officers

Shower honors
Mrs. Sigman

THOUGHTS

unly Ihe pcf4Jis.

. I

Is Now Open

-··

�8 _ The Sundav Times- Sentinel. Sundav. May 13,1973

Mis~

Walker, Mr. Benedum
complete wedding plans
POMEHOY - Plans have
been com pleted for the open
churt•h wedding of Miss Bonnie
Eunice Walker, daughter of
Mr. w1d Mrs . I. B. Walker,
Pomeroy R. D. to Dennis
Wayne Benedum, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Francis BenedW11 1
Tuppers Plains.
The wedding will be an event
of Frid•y, May 18, at the
Pomeroy First Baptist Churc h
at 7:30p.m. with a half-hour of
organ music preceding the
ceremony by Mrs. Robert
Kuhn . The Rev . Robert Kuhn
will officia te at the double ring
ce remony.
Attending the bride-elect will
be Miss Shirley Larkins,

Heedsville, maid of honor and
Miss Helen Neat, New York ;
Miss Vera Walker, Columbus,
•nd Mi ss Lola Walker.
Pomeroy, bridesmaids. Lena
Sampson , Tuppers Plains, will
be the flower girl, and Todd
Hysell , Pomeroy, will be the
ringbeCJrer.
Serving as best man for the
groom will be Bill Ritchi e,
Tuppers Plains and the us hers
wilt be Michael Benedum,
Ru sty Walker , a nd Guy
W&lt;.:~lker . Miss Sandra Benedum
will register the guests.
A reception will be held in the

social room .

Attend conference

Mr. mid Mrs. Thomas Weekley

:[ Miss Lawson, Thomas
~ Weekley repeat vows
'

.

"·

:1
'

POMEROY - Baskets of
white gladioli with blue car·
nations and palms decorated
the altar of the Mt. Hermon

' United Brethren Church for the
:·

April

29

wedding

of

Miss

;. • Jenn ifer Lynn. Lawson to
Thomas -E. Weekley.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr . and Mrs. Glen R. Lawson,
Rl. 1-; Minersville, and the

~·

bridegroom is the son of Mr.

•

and Mrs. Charles Weekley,
Guysville . '" The Rev . Robert
Shook offi ciated at the double

ring ceremony fOllowing a
program of nuptial mus ic by
Mrs. Darlene Buckl ey.

;.,,

''~
Given in marriage by. het•
::1 father, the bride was attired in

.~ a white sati n a·line gown with
1.
sheer chiffon sleeves and a
•
:·
,.

•'

'
•'·'·
'·

•••

-.'

.,"

high standup collar . The gown
feature'rt accents of lace as did

POMEROY - Mrs. Teresa
Co llins, Mrs. Marle ne Putman
and Mrs . Marilyn Hannum
repr ese.nted the Riv er v ie w
PTA at the recent District 16
at
s prin g
confe re nce
Chesa pe•ke.
The unit was among seve ral
in District 16 to recei ve a
ce rtifi cate for havin g all
tc(:lchers in the sc hool enrolled
and active in PTA . Seve ral
mem bers of the Riverview unit
also a ttended the MotherDaughter Be-In held at the
Meigs Junior Hi g h School
build ing in Middleport Thursday night.

Mr s. Ja.cob · Johnson and
daughter, Mona , were in
·Columbus a day last week for
the fun e ral servi c~s of Gary
Lee Kin g.
Mrs .
William
Fenton,
Columbus, the former Wilma
Holter of Meigs County, a
sister of Arvil Holter, Bashan ,
is co nfined to the Mercy
Hospital in Columbus. Her
room number is 212.
Mrs .. Richard Weaver has
returned to her home .here
&lt;lfter vi s iting with
her
daughter, Sue, in JackSonville,
Fla. for two weeks.

the headpiece which he ld a
circu lar veil of illusion. The
bride ca rried a bou que t of red
A reception was held at the
rose buds on a wh ite Bible wi th
home
of the l)ride's parents .
CHILD BORN
red satin streamers.
Deco
r·ations
included
white
Se rving as matron of hon or
RACINE _;_ Sp. 4 and Mrs.
for tht.; bride w;;ts .Mrs. Carolyn be lls and pink streamers. The Harold L . Adams ( the former
Bisse ll, an · i::tunt. She Wore a three tiered cake, made by an Garcia McGraw ) are an pink candy flo cked gown with i:tunt of the bride, wa s nouncing the birth of their first
pink valvet ribbon accent and a decorated with roses . Mrs. child May 1 at Tripier Army
Carolyn Biss ell and Miss Medical Hospital in Hawaii.
cor sage of red rosebuds .
Lawson presided at the The 9 lb . 11 oz. baby girl was
Glenda
Jim Day, Guysv ille, wa s the
best man ·and the ushers we re Lo bl e. Mis s LaWson al so named Christi Dpwn. Maternal
Dwi ght Bissell, an uncle of the regis tered the guests.
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
F
or
a
brief
wedding
trip
bride and Mark Lawson, her
Dille McGraw, Rt. I, Hacine ;
thr
ough
Southea
stern
Ohio,
tbe
brother .
paternal grandparents are Mr.
F or her daughter's weddin g! · bri&lt;Je changed into a pink
and Mrs. Melvin Drake, Rt. 2,
dress.
She
is
a
graduate
of
Mrs. Lawson wore a pink
Racine; and. Wayne Adams,
Eastern
High
School,
class
of
poly es ter dre ss with an
Belpre . · Maternal g reat overdress of ilylon net also in 1972 . Weekly graduated from ,, grandmother is Mr~. Rose
pink . She had a red rosebud Federal Hocking, Class of 1971,
McDade , Middleport, and
a
nd
is
employed
at
the
Vi'Sco
corsa ge as did Mrs. Weekley
I paterna·! great-gran dparerits
wh o was m a navv blue en- Plant. He also serves as a 4-H a re Mr . and Mrs. Ray Adams,
Hdvisor.
se mble.
Heedsv ille.

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9 - The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday,May 13,1973

Eight and Forty Phihthea Society
phns june service
visits Vinion
•

POMEROY - Meigs County
Salon 712, Eight and Forty,
members were guests for a
meet~ Monday night of the
Vinton County Salon 752 at
Wilkesville . The salon was
organized by Mrs . Mary
Martin, Pomeroy, while she
was Departemental Ohio Eight
and Forty chapeau.
A feature of the meeting was
a surprise party · honoring
Sherrie .Marshall, a cystic
fibrosis child of Meigs County,
who attended with her mother,
Mrs . Charles
Marshall,
Hemlock Grove. A box .of gifts
and cards were presented to
Sherrie and refreshments of
sandwiches, · salad and soft
drinks were Served.
Attending from the Meigs
County Salon were Mrs.
Martin, Mrs. Eunie Brinker,
Mrs. Marie Boyd, Mrs. Myrtle
Walker, Mrs . Fern Cheesebrew, Mrs. Rhoda Hackett,
Mrs . Eileen Searles, Mrs. Lula
Hampton, Mrs. Julia Hysell,
Mrs. catherine Welsh and Mrs.

POMEROY - Another training session in preparation for
day camp, June 1~23. will be held Monday at 9 a .m . at the home
of Mrs. A. R . Knight, the instructor.
Mr s. Knight ask.s that anyone interested in assisting wi_th any
phase of the day camp program come to the aU-day meetmg, ·or
any part of it, bringing a noseba g lunch .
Scouts are reminded that the registration lee this year has
been reduced to $3 and that the form on the ba ck of the camp
brochure distributed ·earlier this month is to be completed and
turned in to their ·s cout leaders before the end of this. month. The
,
fee is to accomp,a ny the registration form .
Mrs. April Smith, a cadette leader for the past several years,
will have charge of the cadette unit and its activities at the day
camp to be held at Kiashuta near Olester .
.
Additional Brownie and Junior unit leaders and assiStants
are needed.
MIDDLEPORT TROOP 39
The window boxes at the Middleport Public Library have
been filled with caladi~ms by Troop 39 as a civic beautification
project. Monday evening the scouts will meet at Middleport
Village Halllo plant geraniums and peturuas m the heds there. A
wiener roast will follow at the park.
At a meeting last week, Mrs. Rosoe Wise, leader, conducted
a session on fire building and knot tying. The sixth grade girls
presented a "scouts ' own."

Patricia

Howard

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED -Mr . and Mrs. Glispie
Howard, Pomeroy, are announcing the engagement of their
daughter, Patricia Anne, to Larry M . Bissell, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Bissell, long Bottom . The bride-elect is a 1971
graduate of Kyge• Creek High School and attended Columbus
Business University . Her fiance is a 1971 graduate of Eastern
High School and is presently employed at the Dayton
Malleable Iron Co. in Columbus. Wedding plans are incomplete.

SALISBURY JUNIOR TROOP 100
A Mother 's Day project was completed at Thursday night's
meeting of Troop 100.
· ·
.
,
Day camp plans were discussed and the gu-ls were giVen
instruction on the care and proper use of a knife . Regina Dorst
and Kathy Quivey gave a demonstration with their clarinets to
complete requirements for their musician's badges .
It was reported that all of the school pennants made by the
troop have been sold.
'
The girls also recently had a program on flag etiquette. A
skating party was held at the Skate-a-Way rink with members of
the Salisbury Junior Troop.

'S

r

Miss Sizemore honored
RUTLAND A bridal
shower hon oring Miss Gail
Sizemore, bride-elect of John
Anderson, was given Tuesday
night at the Rutland Church of
Chr ist by 1\!0na Johnson, Dione
Clay and Debbie Schoonover .
Games were played with
prizes going to Jackie Hutton
and Donna Boyd. Roxie P~t­
terson won the door prize.
Other guests attending were
Sandy Rusche!, Debra Pierce, .
Dinah El'lewine, J oyce Davis,
Vicky Oberholzer, Linda

Plans completed for
Morrow nuptials
SYRACUSE - Plans have Velda Damron, East Bank, W.
been comp leted for the open- Va., inaid of .honor ; Mrs. John
church wedding of Miss Vicki .Lisle, Pomeroy and Miss .Trina
Ellen Crouch, daughter of Mrs . Ferrell, Syrac use, bridesRuth Crouch, Syracuse, to maids. Gary Morrow will serve
Mark Allen Morrow , son of Mr . as best man for his · brother,
and Mrs . Fred Morrow, and the ushers will be David
Syracuse.
Nicholl s, Co lumbus, and
The wedding will be James Wagner, Columbus. The
Saturday, May 19, at the bride will be given in marriage
As bury United Methodist by ·her brother! Randy Crouch,
Church, Syracuse, with the Flint, Mich .
Rev . Merrill Floyd and the
Gues ts will be registered by
Rev . Fr . Bernard Krajcovic
Miss Teresa Ferrell and Miss
officiating. Music b_x Mrs. Rose
Cathy Francis, Syracuse.
Ann Jenkins , organist, . and
Hostesses for the reception ,
John Lisle, vocalist, will begin
to be held in the church social
C:Jt 6 p.m . with the ce-remony to
room, will be Miss Susie
take place at 6:30 p .m.
Teaford, Syracuse, and Miss
Attendants will be Mis s
Terri cozat:t, Col~m.bus.

Hysell, Bonnie Dillon, Diana
Painter, Edna Russel1, Merle
Johnson, Alma Peterson and
Edna Sizemore.
Sending gifts were Beatrice
Howell, Gladys Cox, Beatrice
Dugan, Elsie Bryant, Jessie
Reeves, Sandy Floccari, Linda
Peterson and Joyce Peterson.
Refreshments were served.

~·
I ,

' rJ:j

r"_.,..""""'....,...,..........,...,...,
See The

Great Look
ln Summer

TO HOLD PARTY
CHESTER ~ Ches ter Lodge
D.A. V. 323 will hold its 39th
anniversary party Tuesday at 8
p.m . at the Chester Lodge Hall.
All charter rnembers are urged
to attend.

Sportswear

·lOLA'S
Main at Sycamore
POMEROY, OHIO

II you're lighting · a losing battle
against heat and humidity in your
Mobile .Home

Miss Kathy Abbott plans
open church ceremony

J

•

&lt;

POMEROY - The openchurch wedding of Miss Kathy
· Abbott, daughter of Mr: and
Mrs . Edgar Abbott, to Paul
Rice, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Rice , will take place
Saturday, May 19, at 6:30p.m.
at the Rock Springs United
Methodist Church .
Mrs . William Radford,
organist, and Mrs. Robert
Sloan, soloist, will present a
program of nuptial music
preceding the ceremony . The
Rev. Robert Bumgarner will
offic iate at the double ring
ceremony which will be
followed bY a reception in the

CLUB TOURS
REEDSVILLE - Members
of the Riverview Garden Club
recently toured Stahl's Nursery at Little Hocking and
dined
at
the
Wilmar
Restaurant in Parkersburg.
They were Mrs.' Frank Bise,
Mrs . Walter Brown, Mrs.
Harliss Frank, Mrs. Herman
Grossnickle, Mrs. Roy Hannum , Mrs. Claremont Harris,
Mrs. Donald Myers, Mrs.
Ronald .Osborne, Mrs. Donald
Putman, Mrs. Denver Weber,
Mrs . Ernest Whitehead, Mrs.
Gene Wilson and .Mrs. Lyle
Balderson. Since Mrs . Donald
Putnwn, dub president, was
celebrating her birthday, a
corsage was presented · to her
by the vice president, Mrs.
Frank. from the members .

church social room .
Attendants for the brideelect will be Miss Connie ·
Grueser, Pomeroy, maid .of
honor ; Miss .Connie · Ra~ord ,
Pomeroy; Miss Vicki Abbott,
Pomeroy , and Miss Sue
Thabet, Mason, W. Va ., will be
the bridesmaids.
Best man will be Steve
Schilling, Columbus and the
ushers will be Mike Barr,
Rutland, David Rice, South
Webs ter ·and Ed Abbott,
Pomeroy . Miss Kim Eblin will
be th e flower girl, and the
ringbearer will be master
Steven Standley, Glouster.

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Call992-5321 For Free Estimate

Foreman
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MIDDLF:rORT, 0.

.

' "" * *

ljokedabo uteveryprom ·
inent man in my lifetirrle.
.\ut I· ne ve• met on&lt;· f didn't
.-Wi!t Rogers . Amr1'i&lt;·"n
, liko
hnmori!'1.

Certificate and key
awards made
CHESHIHE - The annual ner.
awards day program at the
Shorthand : Terry Hall.
Kyger Creek High School was
Yearbook , editor : Terry
held Friday with the principal Hall.
and the teachers in their
Yearbook, assoc.i ate editor:
respective fields making the Shirley Scaggs.
presentation of keys and
Certificates were presented
'Certificates.
to the senior library .aides and
To open the assembly, the district scholarship team of
Conn ie Pr-i-e s t and Jackie 24 members was introduced
Burnett read the class history, and recognized.
decticating it to tw o deceased
Perfect attendance awards
class members, Thelma Yost went to Patricia Norris and
a nd Diane Corne lius. The S.h eila Tucker, sophomores;
prophecy was given by Diane Connie Haskins and Betty
Polcyn and Shirley Scaggs.
Youn g, fres_h men ; Carol
The awards were as follows: Gole man, Arthur Leach, Eddie
V~ledict~wian Key : Dian~ Mollo)lan , Carol Norris, · Mike
Polcyn.
Preston ,' Jan Stidham, and
Sa.Iutatorian Key : Vinton . Pauline White , eighth graders ;
Rankin.
a.nd Margaret Clark, Billy
Open chess tournament McCoy, · Janet Norris, Scott
~
Bert Moshier, first; Richards, Kimberly Russell,
• awards:
Fred Westfall, second .
Caro l Stidham, and Vickie
Student counl?il officers pins : . Stroud, seventh graders.
Marshall French, president ;
Greg McCarty, vice president;
John Roush, secretaryi Diana
Polcyn , treasur.er.
Farmers going on
'l'rophy for . the all-county
basketball tournament team :
May "Day March
Greg McCarty.
Athletic
key:
Orland
Cremeans.
COLUMBUS - Close , to 150
Art awards : Diane Polcyn farmers from across Ohio are
ex pected to shun badly-needed
and David Freeman.
Industrial Arts key : Dave chances to plow- and plant to
travel to Columbus Wednesday
Curnutte.
French key : Shirley Scaggs. to u'rge Prompt movement of
Soc ial
Studies:
Tom Hou se Joi.ht Resolution I3
through the senate so it may be
Withrow.
Home E c onomi ~s: ~iria placed on the ballot in the
November election.
Dillard.
The . measure. is a prop.osed
Certir"icate for essay winner
in the Huntington - Herald amendment to the Ohio· conDispatc h Contes t: Co nnie . s titution which w.ould pave the
way for farm land to be taxes
Priest.
on the basis of its current value
English : Vinton Rankin .
Latin key: Jackie Burnett. for farming , rather than on the
basis of its potential value if
Speech : Shirley Scaggs.
used for another purpose. The
Science: Vinton Rankin.
Mathematics : Diane Polcyn . "May-Day March" as it has
Vocal Music : TQm Withrow . been dubi&gt;ed, was initiated by
l.nstrumental Music : Jeanie the Ohio Farm Bureau
Cla y and Marshall French. • Federation.
Typing : Terry Hall. . ·
Commercial : Nina Dillard.
PLUG PULLERS
Newspaper Editor keys to
CHI CAGO ( UP!)
A
Nina Dillard and Pam Mc.university
res earcher
Carty.
estimated Friday that 8 to 23
Bookkeeping : Kathy Gardpet. of all hospital deaths in the
United States follow delibenite
'
life-term ination decisions by
physicians .. Paul Cameron, an
::~ssociate
pr ofessor ' of
·psychology at the University of
•
18
Louisville
· made his c on- •
. .
elusions in a paper read before
GALLIPOLIS - The quality · a convention of the Midwestern
of- Psychological Associatio.n .
fered by the Central Ohio
Although admitting his data
Breede:rs' Association was the 'was "quite weak ," he said the
main _ toRj.Q discussed at a · patients were -allowed to . die
recent dinner meeting Of the because of :'plug pulling" of
Gallia County COBA Advisory life-s ustainin g machines or
Committee held at the home of other deliberate decisions by
Harold Bennett, COBA District physicians . Hi s conclu s ions .
Manager .
were based·on the records of 86
"Archie , Meadows, · ]?c al · pBiients i'n thr~e Louisville,
COBA technici~n, or any Ky., hospitals. '
member of the . advisory
committee ca n furnish in~
formation on the services ofTHIRD ATOMIC PLANT
fered by the COBA. Meadows .
CLEVELAND (UP! ) - The
can be reached by calling 256Cleveland
· Electric
. 6089.
Illuminating
Co.
annOunced
The committee is composed
of Frank Mills III, Tracey plans Friday to build' a third
Casto, KaH Burleson, Meadows nuclear pow~r plant in norand Merrill Folden . Mills thern Ohio. A spokesman for
rePorted . on the directors CEI said the plant, which was
meeting held recently .in expecl.ed to be -operational in
ColumbUs. lt was .announced eight to 10 years, .. would be
' " that the annual COBA rrc • ting .co nstr ucted · just west of
Vermilion in Berlin Heights.
will be held in November.

Bull quality

COBAtopic

· Cool baring. These stark
white sandals. Lifting
to sunny Summer spirits
with new heel
heights, platforms.

'

. uccANEER
'fl\E B
·
"

Manu seek the favor of o
f.}enerous ma11 . nnd everymtl'
is o (rie nci to a mew who
qives (lifts. - Proverbs 1.9:f).

Pearl Knapp .
Mrs. Martin served as the
installing officer for the 1973-74
officel's of the Salon . The Meigs
Salon accepted the invitation
from Vinton County for a joint
initiation of neW partn.ers on
July 2 al the Wilkesville hall .
Meigs members assisted the
salon With the preparation of
annual reports. Endorsements
for candidates for the departemental posts were read along
with the bulletin from the
departemental chapeau,
Evalina Berkley. The c hildren
and
youth
chairwoman
reported on contributions for
the bed endowment at the
National Jewish Hospital in
Denver and urged the members to continue collecting
Betty Crocker coupons for the
nurses scholarship fund.
A memorial service was held
for deceased partners. Mrs.
Welsh assisted with the candlelight ceremony conducted
by Mrs. Erma Newsome. The
prayer was by Mrs. Hackett.

10% DISCOUNT
TO ·ALL
GRADUATES

I

heritage house
'

Your Thorn McA11 Store
N. 2nd AVE.

1

MIDDLEPORT, 0.
. !

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Auxiliary to
sponsor
social
.

Tl!PPERS PLAINS - A
yelloA and white color scheme
with white wedding bells was
POMEROY - An ice cream solicitation are asked to send
used to decorate the annl:!x of
:social was planned for June 9 their donations lo the departU1c St. Paul's United Methodist
at lhe Bashan firehouse when me1,1t.
Chureh at Tuppers Plains for a
the Ladies Auxiliary of the
Mrs. Thelma White presided
shower in honor of Miss JoAnn
Bashan
Voluqteer
Fire at the meeting which opened
Brooks, bride-elect of William
Depa. l' hnen ~.
nfet
there wi til the pledge and lhe Lord 's
E . Francis .
recenUy.
Prayer. Mrs. Cecelia Bailey
Givin~rthe shower were Mrs.
Serving will begin at 6 p.m. gave the secretary's report and ·
Nancy Collins, Mrs. Brenda
and music will be presented Mrs . Mary K . Holter the
Day and Mrs. Judy Sloter.
during the evening. There will treasurer's report , RefreshGames were played with
also be drawings for tw o $50 ments were served by Mrs .
pri zes going to MariiY,n
bonds. Orders for ice c ream Kathleen Morris and M1·s. Jean
Robinson and Sally Caldwell .
may be placed at 949-53114 or Trusse ll.
Mrs . Jean Du.eer and Bonnie .
949-5183.
Mrs. Morris, Mrs. Geraldine Brooks won the door prize.
A report was given on the Varney, Mrs. Margaret Tuttle,
Jo Ann opened her gifts and
luncheon proceeds at the Dill Mrs. Dorothy Lawson and Mrs.
th~ hostesses served refresh~
sa le. The group made $92.oa on Charlotte
Grant
were ments to Pat Bahr, Nita Jean
the food , received $134.30 in welcomed into membership.· Rilchie, Shirley Balser and
donations and cleared a total of Othe rs attendin~ besides those Pam, !lose Carr, · Evelyn
$226.42 on the p·roject. Those of named were Batt)' V&lt;:m Meter
Spencer, Mrs. Jacob Lehman,
the communitY missed in the &lt;:~nd Mrs. Pearline Lee.
r,orr ainc GOrrell and Linda,
Bonnie Brooks, Hazel Burford,
Mable Hostetter , Paris Koenig,
Florence Wyers, Helen San·
dcrs, Mrs. Blanche Pullins,
Jessie Doddere r , Sally Caldwe ll , Mr s. Mirna Walker,
Marilyn Robinson . Elizabeth
I .yons, ca,·olyn Tripp, Hazel
ll;u·nh il l, Dorothy Stout and
Couni c Kay, Audrey Clark,
K:.tthlce n Fra ncis , K.ath y
Francis, Mrs . Freda Duffy,
REEDSVILLE
The white elepha nt sa le was heiU JcH n Duee r , Mildred Brooks
Hccdsvilte United Methodist during the eve ning and pla ns ' "aud .June!., Patti Holsinger and
Women met with Mrs. Mny were made for ~ picnic supper Huth Brooks and Debbie.
Humphrey for their May ill the Forked Hun Park June 7
Those sendi ng gifl':l were
meeting with the devotional at 6 p.m.
Mildred and Sue Caldwell,
Refreshments were served tO'
topic, " Living by Faith " , led
Mar y Francis VIneyar d,
by Mr s. Mamie Buc kley . Mrs. Gl;1dys Baughman, of Ouiclil Cole. Mr. and Mrs.
Scripture and r eadings were Gahanna; Mr s. Opal R,an.
dolph, Mrs. Alberta Edwards,
g iven by several members.
During the business session, Mrs . Gladys Williams, and
a report was giwm of tho Mrs . Opal Harris, guests, _a nd
RACINE . The . Ruth reported in the treasury .
WMINS IJF' FLEAS
F:aster party at the Childre n's Mrs. Dorotha · Riebel , Mrs.
The
program
was
by
Nondus
Missionary Circ le o£ the.
SACflAMENTO,
Calif.
Hom e and a thank-you note Hose Thoma s , Mr s . . Ruth
Racirie Baptist Church met at Hendricks, the topic ·being \\•as received from there. A Dillon! Mrs . Vivian Hum-phrey, 1UP ! ) - California's top
the horne of Marjorie Grimm '; The Growing Sea s on ".
Ml's . Teddy Muildry , and Mrs. hea lth t~ r£i d:1 1 , citing a young·
Scripture
wa
s
from
Luke
12.
A
with i.nine . members present.
Lillian Pickens, and the above ste r ' s de:1th , ha s warn ed
The meeting W&lt;.~ s opened by · reC:tdin g, !jWhQeve r Makes a
named , a ll members. Door vacat ioners in the Sierra
Helen Pickens. Mrs_. Pickens Garden" and scripture was
prizes were awarded to Mrs. NcvadH to beware of flea s
reported that the group presented by Sandra Boothe .
Thomas, Mrs . Dillon and ·Mrs. whit:h llli:l.Y c.arry Colorado tick
prepared 48 Easter frui.t boxes Olher readings were "The.
fever.
Mondry .
fur the e lderly and shut-ins. Growing Season:•, by Nondus
GAL.LIPOLIS - City police
Thank-you riotes had been Hendricks i '-' A Year Around
Gard
e.n"
by
Martha
Lou
investigated
.two minor traffic
recefved f.rom · Mr. and Mrs.
Ernes t Smith, Vazie Lee , Beeg le; " Marigolds and Men" aca idcnts Fciday . The first
Bessie · Erw-in, Leona Ebers- by Hel en Pickens; "! Love My occ urred on Court St. and First
bach, Sarah Diddle, Mattie Garden" and "The Second Ave . where a truck driven by
Circle, Harry and Lina Curtis , Chance'' by Barbara Gheen ; Charles Smith, 27 , Rt . 3,
Edna Edwards, Ben Quisen- " A Package of Seeds" and Gallipoli s, struc k the rear
berry, Belle Theiss and Lela " What A Farmer's Wife Is" by bun1per on a car operated by
Easterday. The group decided Marx Kay Yost; "Honey Bees'' Wayne Anthony Robinson ; 16,
to send $3 to ·a child in the by Marjorie Grimm; " Gar- 8.18 Third Ave. There was li ght
c hildren 's home havin g a dening" by Phyllis Bailey ; dama ge. No citation was
birthday in May . Martha Lou " My Gard e n" by Emma issued.
Andrew
Lemley ,
45!
Beegle reported that the i\dqms; " A Woman 's Prayer"
Gallipoli
s
,
a
volunteer
by
Nondu
s
Hendricks,
and
.
"
A
deacons had ord~rcd two new
Mother !s Love" by Marjori e fireman, was. involved in an
collectfon plates.
Grimm
.
accident lit 5:15p.m. on Courl
Heierl Picken S, president ,
Sl.
and Second Ave. ' Lemley's
A
birthday
offering
of
14
was
named M~rjorie Grimm to look
into the matter of both circles ta ken •nd colle ction was $7.25. truck with its sire n sounding
ordering new flower vases for The June mee ting will be &lt;lt collided with an auto driven by
Ruth Ellen Hash, :16, Rt. i ,
thz church. There was $33.95 Ollie Mae Cozart's.
""""--,. ----=
Bidwell. Mrs. Ha sh sustained
. min or injuries. Ther e wa s
moderate damage and no
Award made to station owner
charges were filed .
HODNEY - A special award
A fleet of " Gates Mystery
has been presented to John C. Cars" regularly travels across
Mitc hell whO owns and the country stopping at service
STEEL UP, UP .
operates Mitchell's Quaker s latiOn$ . Eac h " Mystery Car"
PITTSBURGH
(UPii - Less
State StatiOn here. The.award, has a purp ose ly installed, worn
than 24 huur&gt; after U. S. Steel
a plaque bearin'g twO · rare fan belt. Award Plaques are
Corp . announced price hikes of
silver dollars (one Eisenhower presented to s talion personnel
$8 tu $12 " ton on sheet mill
Dollar and one Liberty Head who notice the defective belt
producl'l , £our other major
Dollar), two Kennedy Half- and offer to ~cplace it. ,.
steel firms Friday an noun ced
Dollars and a specially minted
simil~r increases. They were
commemorative coin set in an
Wheeling Pitts bul'gh Stee l
automotive engine design, was
Corp ., Kaiser Steel Corp.,
NOW YOU KNOW
pres ented for exceptiona l
The consumption or. chewing Junes &amp; Laughlin Steel Corp .,
customer se rvice by a
gum ruse rapidly during World : •nd Armco Steel Corp. Other
repre se ntate of T~~ Gates
War·s l and U . .
major prodj.1ce rs were e xHubber Compa ny . .
peeled to follow suit.
MIDDLEPORT
A
memorial sen•ice for deceased
members was planned for June
10 and contribution was made
to the Meigs County Crippled
Children's Society during the
Thursday night meeting of the
Philathea Society ' at the
Middleport Churrh of. Christ:
Appointed to plan the
memorial service were Miss
Mildred Haw ley and Mrs.
Denver - ~ice . Arrangements
were also made to serve the
Mowery wedding reception on
June 2 and a committee for
that was a ppointed.
A gift wa.s presented to Mrs.
Norman Yeauger, who will
move next month to Florida.
Read at the meeting was a
lette r from - th e Kentu c ky
Ch•·istian College thanking the
socie ly for a dinner served
choir members on a recent
visit hefe. Communications
were a lso read from Mrs. Ida
Childs, Mr. and Mrs. William
Swett and Conrad Ohlinger.
New yearbooks, prepared by
Mrs. .Oon Erwin, president ,
Mrs. Har old . Wolfe, and the
Me igs Community School ,
were dis tributed·. Mrs. Denver

a

Rice thanked the organization
for a lily, food and visits during
her illness. Reported ill were
Mrs . Gertrude Miller and
William Sweet.
Mrs. Fred I. Gardne r was a
g u~st at the meeting and
thanked the group for ca rds
and prayer for her sister who
remains ill . The Rev. Mr.
Ga rdner, a former pastor f"!OW
residin g in J ohn son City.
Tenn.,. joined the group for
re£reshments.
Devotions. by Mrs. Martha
Childs, carried out the the me
"Sustaining Power of Hope ."
Mothers of the Bible were
given .i n response to roll call.
·The Mothe r 's Day program
was by Mrs. Chester Erwin
who read scripture and a "
meditation " How We Kept
Mother 's Day. " Quotations of
famous men in tribute to their
mothers were given along with
a poem '·Mother 's Way of
Resting." Amy Erwin, a guest,
S&lt;.~ng '' For God So Loved the
World .!'
Re£reshments were served
by Mrs. Don Erwin, Miss
Hawley, Mrs. Lena McKinley,
Mrs. Martha Childs ahd Mrs.
Raymond Stewart.

Mrs. Humphrey
hosts women

Ruth Missionary
circle has meet

Two accidents

Friday minor

•

FUN
FOR ALL

McGuffey
Amusements
COMING TO

RACINE

May 25-28
F!~E WORKS
MON., MAY28 ·

He lp us, help you to buy a
new tire truck. For each
$1 .00 donat ion, receive S
FREE RiDE TICKETS.
Mall Dona tion to:
Racine Volunteer Fire Dept.
Racine. Ohio
Enc lose c ash, check
money or der with self·
addressed sta mped

I

or 10c fo r handl ing .

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PUBLIC NOTICE!
ll!e 1973 Admiral 3-Door Duplex •

The Emergency Medical Ser~ices will be in
operation by June lst, 1973, after which time
the l:wtng Funeral Rome, Pomeroy, Martin
Funeral Home, Rutl'and &amp; the Rawlings-Coats
Funeral Home, Middleport, will not be making
any type ambula.nce calls.

Signed : Ben H.
Thomas C.

Ewin~- Ewing

Funeral Home

Martin - MS~rtin

Funeral Home

freezer/refrigerator 1ND2239

Ll689

Rawlings·Coats Funeral Home

95

Duplex t'reezer-refrigerator , One pu~n . - . and presto!
You get co~d water, cold -saving convenienc? of the 3-door
models. Automatic lcemaker _ . _ exclustve tempered
glass tantilever shelves . _ . "Bookcase" freezer door
- ·-· shelves and automatic door closers. (There are seven 3door Duplex models to choose from plus one 2-door
model.) .Another _great convenience-the new Admiral
Cold Can Carousel! It holds up to twelve 12-ounce soft,
· drink or cans - and always keeps the coldest one up
front and fresh.
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MIDDLEPORT, 0.
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Norman Weber Bnd Veda, Ruth
Walker, Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
Vineyard, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Guthrie, Troy and Tera, Rick
Lehman, Mazie Holsinger .
June Matheny. Betty Chevliar,
Grace Smith, Janet Chapman,
Mrs. Nora Rice, Gertie Hoffman , Mr. and Mrs. Ja c k
Gorrell and family , Ruth Ann
Millhone. Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
Spurlock, Bobby and Billy, Mr.
and Mrs . Ca rl Chichester,
Carla, and Cathy and Mrs.
Belly McDonald .

.A NEW ADMIRAL '73

Q

'l

]o Ann Brooks honored
at recent bridal sbower

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�8 _ The Sundav Times- Sentinel. Sundav. May 13,1973

Mis~

Walker, Mr. Benedum
complete wedding plans
POMEHOY - Plans have
been com pleted for the open
churt•h wedding of Miss Bonnie
Eunice Walker, daughter of
Mr. w1d Mrs . I. B. Walker,
Pomeroy R. D. to Dennis
Wayne Benedum, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Francis BenedW11 1
Tuppers Plains.
The wedding will be an event
of Frid•y, May 18, at the
Pomeroy First Baptist Churc h
at 7:30p.m. with a half-hour of
organ music preceding the
ceremony by Mrs. Robert
Kuhn . The Rev . Robert Kuhn
will officia te at the double ring
ce remony.
Attending the bride-elect will
be Miss Shirley Larkins,

Heedsville, maid of honor and
Miss Helen Neat, New York ;
Miss Vera Walker, Columbus,
•nd Mi ss Lola Walker.
Pomeroy, bridesmaids. Lena
Sampson , Tuppers Plains, will
be the flower girl, and Todd
Hysell , Pomeroy, will be the
ringbeCJrer.
Serving as best man for the
groom will be Bill Ritchi e,
Tuppers Plains and the us hers
wilt be Michael Benedum,
Ru sty Walker , a nd Guy
W&lt;.:~lker . Miss Sandra Benedum
will register the guests.
A reception will be held in the

social room .

Attend conference

Mr. mid Mrs. Thomas Weekley

:[ Miss Lawson, Thomas
~ Weekley repeat vows
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POMEROY - Baskets of
white gladioli with blue car·
nations and palms decorated
the altar of the Mt. Hermon

' United Brethren Church for the
:·

April

29

wedding

of

Miss

;. • Jenn ifer Lynn. Lawson to
Thomas -E. Weekley.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr . and Mrs. Glen R. Lawson,
Rl. 1-; Minersville, and the

~·

bridegroom is the son of Mr.

•

and Mrs. Charles Weekley,
Guysville . '" The Rev . Robert
Shook offi ciated at the double

ring ceremony fOllowing a
program of nuptial mus ic by
Mrs. Darlene Buckl ey.

;.,,

''~
Given in marriage by. het•
::1 father, the bride was attired in

.~ a white sati n a·line gown with
1.
sheer chiffon sleeves and a
•
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high standup collar . The gown
feature'rt accents of lace as did

POMEROY - Mrs. Teresa
Co llins, Mrs. Marle ne Putman
and Mrs . Marilyn Hannum
repr ese.nted the Riv er v ie w
PTA at the recent District 16
at
s prin g
confe re nce
Chesa pe•ke.
The unit was among seve ral
in District 16 to recei ve a
ce rtifi cate for havin g all
tc(:lchers in the sc hool enrolled
and active in PTA . Seve ral
mem bers of the Riverview unit
also a ttended the MotherDaughter Be-In held at the
Meigs Junior Hi g h School
build ing in Middleport Thursday night.

Mr s. Ja.cob · Johnson and
daughter, Mona , were in
·Columbus a day last week for
the fun e ral servi c~s of Gary
Lee Kin g.
Mrs .
William
Fenton,
Columbus, the former Wilma
Holter of Meigs County, a
sister of Arvil Holter, Bashan ,
is co nfined to the Mercy
Hospital in Columbus. Her
room number is 212.
Mrs .. Richard Weaver has
returned to her home .here
&lt;lfter vi s iting with
her
daughter, Sue, in JackSonville,
Fla. for two weeks.

the headpiece which he ld a
circu lar veil of illusion. The
bride ca rried a bou que t of red
A reception was held at the
rose buds on a wh ite Bible wi th
home
of the l)ride's parents .
CHILD BORN
red satin streamers.
Deco
r·ations
included
white
Se rving as matron of hon or
RACINE _;_ Sp. 4 and Mrs.
for tht.; bride w;;ts .Mrs. Carolyn be lls and pink streamers. The Harold L . Adams ( the former
Bisse ll, an · i::tunt. She Wore a three tiered cake, made by an Garcia McGraw ) are an pink candy flo cked gown with i:tunt of the bride, wa s nouncing the birth of their first
pink valvet ribbon accent and a decorated with roses . Mrs. child May 1 at Tripier Army
Carolyn Biss ell and Miss Medical Hospital in Hawaii.
cor sage of red rosebuds .
Lawson presided at the The 9 lb . 11 oz. baby girl was
Glenda
Jim Day, Guysv ille, wa s the
best man ·and the ushers we re Lo bl e. Mis s LaWson al so named Christi Dpwn. Maternal
Dwi ght Bissell, an uncle of the regis tered the guests.
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
F
or
a
brief
wedding
trip
bride and Mark Lawson, her
Dille McGraw, Rt. I, Hacine ;
thr
ough
Southea
stern
Ohio,
tbe
brother .
paternal grandparents are Mr.
F or her daughter's weddin g! · bri&lt;Je changed into a pink
and Mrs. Melvin Drake, Rt. 2,
dress.
She
is
a
graduate
of
Mrs. Lawson wore a pink
Racine; and. Wayne Adams,
Eastern
High
School,
class
of
poly es ter dre ss with an
Belpre . · Maternal g reat overdress of ilylon net also in 1972 . Weekly graduated from ,, grandmother is Mr~. Rose
pink . She had a red rosebud Federal Hocking, Class of 1971,
McDade , Middleport, and
a
nd
is
employed
at
the
Vi'Sco
corsa ge as did Mrs. Weekley
I paterna·! great-gran dparerits
wh o was m a navv blue en- Plant. He also serves as a 4-H a re Mr . and Mrs. Ray Adams,
Hdvisor.
se mble.
Heedsv ille.

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9 - The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday,May 13,1973

Eight and Forty Phihthea Society
phns june service
visits Vinion
•

POMEROY - Meigs County
Salon 712, Eight and Forty,
members were guests for a
meet~ Monday night of the
Vinton County Salon 752 at
Wilkesville . The salon was
organized by Mrs . Mary
Martin, Pomeroy, while she
was Departemental Ohio Eight
and Forty chapeau.
A feature of the meeting was
a surprise party · honoring
Sherrie .Marshall, a cystic
fibrosis child of Meigs County,
who attended with her mother,
Mrs . Charles
Marshall,
Hemlock Grove. A box .of gifts
and cards were presented to
Sherrie and refreshments of
sandwiches, · salad and soft
drinks were Served.
Attending from the Meigs
County Salon were Mrs.
Martin, Mrs. Eunie Brinker,
Mrs. Marie Boyd, Mrs. Myrtle
Walker, Mrs . Fern Cheesebrew, Mrs. Rhoda Hackett,
Mrs . Eileen Searles, Mrs. Lula
Hampton, Mrs. Julia Hysell,
Mrs. catherine Welsh and Mrs.

POMEROY - Another training session in preparation for
day camp, June 1~23. will be held Monday at 9 a .m . at the home
of Mrs. A. R . Knight, the instructor.
Mr s. Knight ask.s that anyone interested in assisting wi_th any
phase of the day camp program come to the aU-day meetmg, ·or
any part of it, bringing a noseba g lunch .
Scouts are reminded that the registration lee this year has
been reduced to $3 and that the form on the ba ck of the camp
brochure distributed ·earlier this month is to be completed and
turned in to their ·s cout leaders before the end of this. month. The
,
fee is to accomp,a ny the registration form .
Mrs. April Smith, a cadette leader for the past several years,
will have charge of the cadette unit and its activities at the day
camp to be held at Kiashuta near Olester .
.
Additional Brownie and Junior unit leaders and assiStants
are needed.
MIDDLEPORT TROOP 39
The window boxes at the Middleport Public Library have
been filled with caladi~ms by Troop 39 as a civic beautification
project. Monday evening the scouts will meet at Middleport
Village Halllo plant geraniums and peturuas m the heds there. A
wiener roast will follow at the park.
At a meeting last week, Mrs. Rosoe Wise, leader, conducted
a session on fire building and knot tying. The sixth grade girls
presented a "scouts ' own."

Patricia

Howard

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED -Mr . and Mrs. Glispie
Howard, Pomeroy, are announcing the engagement of their
daughter, Patricia Anne, to Larry M . Bissell, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Bissell, long Bottom . The bride-elect is a 1971
graduate of Kyge• Creek High School and attended Columbus
Business University . Her fiance is a 1971 graduate of Eastern
High School and is presently employed at the Dayton
Malleable Iron Co. in Columbus. Wedding plans are incomplete.

SALISBURY JUNIOR TROOP 100
A Mother 's Day project was completed at Thursday night's
meeting of Troop 100.
· ·
.
,
Day camp plans were discussed and the gu-ls were giVen
instruction on the care and proper use of a knife . Regina Dorst
and Kathy Quivey gave a demonstration with their clarinets to
complete requirements for their musician's badges .
It was reported that all of the school pennants made by the
troop have been sold.
'
The girls also recently had a program on flag etiquette. A
skating party was held at the Skate-a-Way rink with members of
the Salisbury Junior Troop.

'S

r

Miss Sizemore honored
RUTLAND A bridal
shower hon oring Miss Gail
Sizemore, bride-elect of John
Anderson, was given Tuesday
night at the Rutland Church of
Chr ist by 1\!0na Johnson, Dione
Clay and Debbie Schoonover .
Games were played with
prizes going to Jackie Hutton
and Donna Boyd. Roxie P~t­
terson won the door prize.
Other guests attending were
Sandy Rusche!, Debra Pierce, .
Dinah El'lewine, J oyce Davis,
Vicky Oberholzer, Linda

Plans completed for
Morrow nuptials
SYRACUSE - Plans have Velda Damron, East Bank, W.
been comp leted for the open- Va., inaid of .honor ; Mrs. John
church wedding of Miss Vicki .Lisle, Pomeroy and Miss .Trina
Ellen Crouch, daughter of Mrs . Ferrell, Syrac use, bridesRuth Crouch, Syracuse, to maids. Gary Morrow will serve
Mark Allen Morrow , son of Mr . as best man for his · brother,
and Mrs . Fred Morrow, and the ushers will be David
Syracuse.
Nicholl s, Co lumbus, and
The wedding will be James Wagner, Columbus. The
Saturday, May 19, at the bride will be given in marriage
As bury United Methodist by ·her brother! Randy Crouch,
Church, Syracuse, with the Flint, Mich .
Rev . Merrill Floyd and the
Gues ts will be registered by
Rev . Fr . Bernard Krajcovic
Miss Teresa Ferrell and Miss
officiating. Music b_x Mrs. Rose
Cathy Francis, Syracuse.
Ann Jenkins , organist, . and
Hostesses for the reception ,
John Lisle, vocalist, will begin
to be held in the church social
C:Jt 6 p.m . with the ce-remony to
room, will be Miss Susie
take place at 6:30 p .m.
Teaford, Syracuse, and Miss
Attendants will be Mis s
Terri cozat:t, Col~m.bus.

Hysell, Bonnie Dillon, Diana
Painter, Edna Russel1, Merle
Johnson, Alma Peterson and
Edna Sizemore.
Sending gifts were Beatrice
Howell, Gladys Cox, Beatrice
Dugan, Elsie Bryant, Jessie
Reeves, Sandy Floccari, Linda
Peterson and Joyce Peterson.
Refreshments were served.

~·
I ,

' rJ:j

r"_.,..""""'....,...,..........,...,...,
See The

Great Look
ln Summer

TO HOLD PARTY
CHESTER ~ Ches ter Lodge
D.A. V. 323 will hold its 39th
anniversary party Tuesday at 8
p.m . at the Chester Lodge Hall.
All charter rnembers are urged
to attend.

Sportswear

·lOLA'S
Main at Sycamore
POMEROY, OHIO

II you're lighting · a losing battle
against heat and humidity in your
Mobile .Home

Miss Kathy Abbott plans
open church ceremony

J

•

&lt;

POMEROY - The openchurch wedding of Miss Kathy
· Abbott, daughter of Mr: and
Mrs . Edgar Abbott, to Paul
Rice, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Rice , will take place
Saturday, May 19, at 6:30p.m.
at the Rock Springs United
Methodist Church .
Mrs . William Radford,
organist, and Mrs. Robert
Sloan, soloist, will present a
program of nuptial music
preceding the ceremony . The
Rev. Robert Bumgarner will
offic iate at the double ring
ceremony which will be
followed bY a reception in the

CLUB TOURS
REEDSVILLE - Members
of the Riverview Garden Club
recently toured Stahl's Nursery at Little Hocking and
dined
at
the
Wilmar
Restaurant in Parkersburg.
They were Mrs.' Frank Bise,
Mrs . Walter Brown, Mrs.
Harliss Frank, Mrs. Herman
Grossnickle, Mrs. Roy Hannum , Mrs. Claremont Harris,
Mrs. Donald Myers, Mrs.
Ronald .Osborne, Mrs. Donald
Putman, Mrs. Denver Weber,
Mrs . Ernest Whitehead, Mrs.
Gene Wilson and .Mrs. Lyle
Balderson. Since Mrs . Donald
Putnwn, dub president, was
celebrating her birthday, a
corsage was presented · to her
by the vice president, Mrs.
Frank. from the members .

church social room .
Attendants for the brideelect will be Miss Connie ·
Grueser, Pomeroy, maid .of
honor ; Miss .Connie · Ra~ord ,
Pomeroy; Miss Vicki Abbott,
Pomeroy , and Miss Sue
Thabet, Mason, W. Va ., will be
the bridesmaids.
Best man will be Steve
Schilling, Columbus and the
ushers will be Mike Barr,
Rutland, David Rice, South
Webs ter ·and Ed Abbott,
Pomeroy . Miss Kim Eblin will
be th e flower girl, and the
ringbearer will be master
Steven Standley, Glouster.

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Call992-5321 For Free Estimate

Foreman
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MIDDLF:rORT, 0.

.

' "" * *

ljokedabo uteveryprom ·
inent man in my lifetirrle.
.\ut I· ne ve• met on&lt;· f didn't
.-Wi!t Rogers . Amr1'i&lt;·"n
, liko
hnmori!'1.

Certificate and key
awards made
CHESHIHE - The annual ner.
awards day program at the
Shorthand : Terry Hall.
Kyger Creek High School was
Yearbook , editor : Terry
held Friday with the principal Hall.
and the teachers in their
Yearbook, assoc.i ate editor:
respective fields making the Shirley Scaggs.
presentation of keys and
Certificates were presented
'Certificates.
to the senior library .aides and
To open the assembly, the district scholarship team of
Conn ie Pr-i-e s t and Jackie 24 members was introduced
Burnett read the class history, and recognized.
decticating it to tw o deceased
Perfect attendance awards
class members, Thelma Yost went to Patricia Norris and
a nd Diane Corne lius. The S.h eila Tucker, sophomores;
prophecy was given by Diane Connie Haskins and Betty
Polcyn and Shirley Scaggs.
Youn g, fres_h men ; Carol
The awards were as follows: Gole man, Arthur Leach, Eddie
V~ledict~wian Key : Dian~ Mollo)lan , Carol Norris, · Mike
Polcyn.
Preston ,' Jan Stidham, and
Sa.Iutatorian Key : Vinton . Pauline White , eighth graders ;
Rankin.
a.nd Margaret Clark, Billy
Open chess tournament McCoy, · Janet Norris, Scott
~
Bert Moshier, first; Richards, Kimberly Russell,
• awards:
Fred Westfall, second .
Caro l Stidham, and Vickie
Student counl?il officers pins : . Stroud, seventh graders.
Marshall French, president ;
Greg McCarty, vice president;
John Roush, secretaryi Diana
Polcyn , treasur.er.
Farmers going on
'l'rophy for . the all-county
basketball tournament team :
May "Day March
Greg McCarty.
Athletic
key:
Orland
Cremeans.
COLUMBUS - Close , to 150
Art awards : Diane Polcyn farmers from across Ohio are
ex pected to shun badly-needed
and David Freeman.
Industrial Arts key : Dave chances to plow- and plant to
travel to Columbus Wednesday
Curnutte.
French key : Shirley Scaggs. to u'rge Prompt movement of
Soc ial
Studies:
Tom Hou se Joi.ht Resolution I3
through the senate so it may be
Withrow.
Home E c onomi ~s: ~iria placed on the ballot in the
November election.
Dillard.
The . measure. is a prop.osed
Certir"icate for essay winner
in the Huntington - Herald amendment to the Ohio· conDispatc h Contes t: Co nnie . s titution which w.ould pave the
way for farm land to be taxes
Priest.
on the basis of its current value
English : Vinton Rankin .
Latin key: Jackie Burnett. for farming , rather than on the
basis of its potential value if
Speech : Shirley Scaggs.
used for another purpose. The
Science: Vinton Rankin.
Mathematics : Diane Polcyn . "May-Day March" as it has
Vocal Music : TQm Withrow . been dubi&gt;ed, was initiated by
l.nstrumental Music : Jeanie the Ohio Farm Bureau
Cla y and Marshall French. • Federation.
Typing : Terry Hall. . ·
Commercial : Nina Dillard.
PLUG PULLERS
Newspaper Editor keys to
CHI CAGO ( UP!)
A
Nina Dillard and Pam Mc.university
res earcher
Carty.
estimated Friday that 8 to 23
Bookkeeping : Kathy Gardpet. of all hospital deaths in the
United States follow delibenite
'
life-term ination decisions by
physicians .. Paul Cameron, an
::~ssociate
pr ofessor ' of
·psychology at the University of
•
18
Louisville
· made his c on- •
. .
elusions in a paper read before
GALLIPOLIS - The quality · a convention of the Midwestern
of- Psychological Associatio.n .
fered by the Central Ohio
Although admitting his data
Breede:rs' Association was the 'was "quite weak ," he said the
main _ toRj.Q discussed at a · patients were -allowed to . die
recent dinner meeting Of the because of :'plug pulling" of
Gallia County COBA Advisory life-s ustainin g machines or
Committee held at the home of other deliberate decisions by
Harold Bennett, COBA District physicians . Hi s conclu s ions .
Manager .
were based·on the records of 86
"Archie , Meadows, · ]?c al · pBiients i'n thr~e Louisville,
COBA technici~n, or any Ky., hospitals. '
member of the . advisory
committee ca n furnish in~
formation on the services ofTHIRD ATOMIC PLANT
fered by the COBA. Meadows .
CLEVELAND (UP! ) - The
can be reached by calling 256Cleveland
· Electric
. 6089.
Illuminating
Co.
annOunced
The committee is composed
of Frank Mills III, Tracey plans Friday to build' a third
Casto, KaH Burleson, Meadows nuclear pow~r plant in norand Merrill Folden . Mills thern Ohio. A spokesman for
rePorted . on the directors CEI said the plant, which was
meeting held recently .in expecl.ed to be -operational in
ColumbUs. lt was .announced eight to 10 years, .. would be
' " that the annual COBA rrc • ting .co nstr ucted · just west of
Vermilion in Berlin Heights.
will be held in November.

Bull quality

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f.}enerous ma11 . nnd everymtl'
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qives (lifts. - Proverbs 1.9:f).

Pearl Knapp .
Mrs. Martin served as the
installing officer for the 1973-74
officel's of the Salon . The Meigs
Salon accepted the invitation
from Vinton County for a joint
initiation of neW partn.ers on
July 2 al the Wilkesville hall .
Meigs members assisted the
salon With the preparation of
annual reports. Endorsements
for candidates for the departemental posts were read along
with the bulletin from the
departemental chapeau,
Evalina Berkley. The c hildren
and
youth
chairwoman
reported on contributions for
the bed endowment at the
National Jewish Hospital in
Denver and urged the members to continue collecting
Betty Crocker coupons for the
nurses scholarship fund.
A memorial service was held
for deceased partners. Mrs.
Welsh assisted with the candlelight ceremony conducted
by Mrs. Erma Newsome. The
prayer was by Mrs. Hackett.

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Auxiliary to
sponsor
social
.

Tl!PPERS PLAINS - A
yelloA and white color scheme
with white wedding bells was
POMEROY - An ice cream solicitation are asked to send
used to decorate the annl:!x of
:social was planned for June 9 their donations lo the departU1c St. Paul's United Methodist
at lhe Bashan firehouse when me1,1t.
Chureh at Tuppers Plains for a
the Ladies Auxiliary of the
Mrs. Thelma White presided
shower in honor of Miss JoAnn
Bashan
Voluqteer
Fire at the meeting which opened
Brooks, bride-elect of William
Depa. l' hnen ~.
nfet
there wi til the pledge and lhe Lord 's
E . Francis .
recenUy.
Prayer. Mrs. Cecelia Bailey
Givin~rthe shower were Mrs.
Serving will begin at 6 p.m. gave the secretary's report and ·
Nancy Collins, Mrs. Brenda
and music will be presented Mrs . Mary K . Holter the
Day and Mrs. Judy Sloter.
during the evening. There will treasurer's report , RefreshGames were played with
also be drawings for tw o $50 ments were served by Mrs .
pri zes going to MariiY,n
bonds. Orders for ice c ream Kathleen Morris and M1·s. Jean
Robinson and Sally Caldwell .
may be placed at 949-53114 or Trusse ll.
Mrs . Jean Du.eer and Bonnie .
949-5183.
Mrs. Morris, Mrs. Geraldine Brooks won the door prize.
A report was given on the Varney, Mrs. Margaret Tuttle,
Jo Ann opened her gifts and
luncheon proceeds at the Dill Mrs. Dorothy Lawson and Mrs.
th~ hostesses served refresh~
sa le. The group made $92.oa on Charlotte
Grant
were ments to Pat Bahr, Nita Jean
the food , received $134.30 in welcomed into membership.· Rilchie, Shirley Balser and
donations and cleared a total of Othe rs attendin~ besides those Pam, !lose Carr, · Evelyn
$226.42 on the p·roject. Those of named were Batt)' V&lt;:m Meter
Spencer, Mrs. Jacob Lehman,
the communitY missed in the &lt;:~nd Mrs. Pearline Lee.
r,orr ainc GOrrell and Linda,
Bonnie Brooks, Hazel Burford,
Mable Hostetter , Paris Koenig,
Florence Wyers, Helen San·
dcrs, Mrs. Blanche Pullins,
Jessie Doddere r , Sally Caldwe ll , Mr s. Mirna Walker,
Marilyn Robinson . Elizabeth
I .yons, ca,·olyn Tripp, Hazel
ll;u·nh il l, Dorothy Stout and
Couni c Kay, Audrey Clark,
K:.tthlce n Fra ncis , K.ath y
Francis, Mrs . Freda Duffy,
REEDSVILLE
The white elepha nt sa le was heiU JcH n Duee r , Mildred Brooks
Hccdsvilte United Methodist during the eve ning and pla ns ' "aud .June!., Patti Holsinger and
Women met with Mrs. Mny were made for ~ picnic supper Huth Brooks and Debbie.
Humphrey for their May ill the Forked Hun Park June 7
Those sendi ng gifl':l were
meeting with the devotional at 6 p.m.
Mildred and Sue Caldwell,
Refreshments were served tO'
topic, " Living by Faith " , led
Mar y Francis VIneyar d,
by Mr s. Mamie Buc kley . Mrs. Gl;1dys Baughman, of Ouiclil Cole. Mr. and Mrs.
Scripture and r eadings were Gahanna; Mr s. Opal R,an.
dolph, Mrs. Alberta Edwards,
g iven by several members.
During the business session, Mrs . Gladys Williams, and
a report was giwm of tho Mrs . Opal Harris, guests, _a nd
RACINE . The . Ruth reported in the treasury .
WMINS IJF' FLEAS
F:aster party at the Childre n's Mrs. Dorotha · Riebel , Mrs.
The
program
was
by
Nondus
Missionary Circ le o£ the.
SACflAMENTO,
Calif.
Hom e and a thank-you note Hose Thoma s , Mr s . . Ruth
Racirie Baptist Church met at Hendricks, the topic ·being \\•as received from there. A Dillon! Mrs . Vivian Hum-phrey, 1UP ! ) - California's top
the horne of Marjorie Grimm '; The Growing Sea s on ".
Ml's . Teddy Muildry , and Mrs. hea lth t~ r£i d:1 1 , citing a young·
Scripture
wa
s
from
Luke
12.
A
with i.nine . members present.
Lillian Pickens, and the above ste r ' s de:1th , ha s warn ed
The meeting W&lt;.~ s opened by · reC:tdin g, !jWhQeve r Makes a
named , a ll members. Door vacat ioners in the Sierra
Helen Pickens. Mrs_. Pickens Garden" and scripture was
prizes were awarded to Mrs. NcvadH to beware of flea s
reported that the group presented by Sandra Boothe .
Thomas, Mrs . Dillon and ·Mrs. whit:h llli:l.Y c.arry Colorado tick
prepared 48 Easter frui.t boxes Olher readings were "The.
fever.
Mondry .
fur the e lderly and shut-ins. Growing Season:•, by Nondus
GAL.LIPOLIS - City police
Thank-you riotes had been Hendricks i '-' A Year Around
Gard
e.n"
by
Martha
Lou
investigated
.two minor traffic
recefved f.rom · Mr. and Mrs.
Ernes t Smith, Vazie Lee , Beeg le; " Marigolds and Men" aca idcnts Fciday . The first
Bessie · Erw-in, Leona Ebers- by Hel en Pickens; "! Love My occ urred on Court St. and First
bach, Sarah Diddle, Mattie Garden" and "The Second Ave . where a truck driven by
Circle, Harry and Lina Curtis , Chance'' by Barbara Gheen ; Charles Smith, 27 , Rt . 3,
Edna Edwards, Ben Quisen- " A Package of Seeds" and Gallipoli s, struc k the rear
berry, Belle Theiss and Lela " What A Farmer's Wife Is" by bun1per on a car operated by
Easterday. The group decided Marx Kay Yost; "Honey Bees'' Wayne Anthony Robinson ; 16,
to send $3 to ·a child in the by Marjorie Grimm; " Gar- 8.18 Third Ave. There was li ght
c hildren 's home havin g a dening" by Phyllis Bailey ; dama ge. No citation was
birthday in May . Martha Lou " My Gard e n" by Emma issued.
Andrew
Lemley ,
45!
Beegle reported that the i\dqms; " A Woman 's Prayer"
Gallipoli
s
,
a
volunteer
by
Nondu
s
Hendricks,
and
.
"
A
deacons had ord~rcd two new
Mother !s Love" by Marjori e fireman, was. involved in an
collectfon plates.
Grimm
.
accident lit 5:15p.m. on Courl
Heierl Picken S, president ,
Sl.
and Second Ave. ' Lemley's
A
birthday
offering
of
14
was
named M~rjorie Grimm to look
into the matter of both circles ta ken •nd colle ction was $7.25. truck with its sire n sounding
ordering new flower vases for The June mee ting will be &lt;lt collided with an auto driven by
Ruth Ellen Hash, :16, Rt. i ,
thz church. There was $33.95 Ollie Mae Cozart's.
""""--,. ----=
Bidwell. Mrs. Ha sh sustained
. min or injuries. Ther e wa s
moderate damage and no
Award made to station owner
charges were filed .
HODNEY - A special award
A fleet of " Gates Mystery
has been presented to John C. Cars" regularly travels across
Mitc hell whO owns and the country stopping at service
STEEL UP, UP .
operates Mitchell's Quaker s latiOn$ . Eac h " Mystery Car"
PITTSBURGH
(UPii - Less
State StatiOn here. The.award, has a purp ose ly installed, worn
than 24 huur&gt; after U. S. Steel
a plaque bearin'g twO · rare fan belt. Award Plaques are
Corp . announced price hikes of
silver dollars (one Eisenhower presented to s talion personnel
$8 tu $12 " ton on sheet mill
Dollar and one Liberty Head who notice the defective belt
producl'l , £our other major
Dollar), two Kennedy Half- and offer to ~cplace it. ,.
steel firms Friday an noun ced
Dollars and a specially minted
simil~r increases. They were
commemorative coin set in an
Wheeling Pitts bul'gh Stee l
automotive engine design, was
Corp ., Kaiser Steel Corp.,
NOW YOU KNOW
pres ented for exceptiona l
The consumption or. chewing Junes &amp; Laughlin Steel Corp .,
customer se rvice by a
gum ruse rapidly during World : •nd Armco Steel Corp. Other
repre se ntate of T~~ Gates
War·s l and U . .
major prodj.1ce rs were e xHubber Compa ny . .
peeled to follow suit.
MIDDLEPORT
A
memorial sen•ice for deceased
members was planned for June
10 and contribution was made
to the Meigs County Crippled
Children's Society during the
Thursday night meeting of the
Philathea Society ' at the
Middleport Churrh of. Christ:
Appointed to plan the
memorial service were Miss
Mildred Haw ley and Mrs.
Denver - ~ice . Arrangements
were also made to serve the
Mowery wedding reception on
June 2 and a committee for
that was a ppointed.
A gift wa.s presented to Mrs.
Norman Yeauger, who will
move next month to Florida.
Read at the meeting was a
lette r from - th e Kentu c ky
Ch•·istian College thanking the
socie ly for a dinner served
choir members on a recent
visit hefe. Communications
were a lso read from Mrs. Ida
Childs, Mr. and Mrs. William
Swett and Conrad Ohlinger.
New yearbooks, prepared by
Mrs. .Oon Erwin, president ,
Mrs. Har old . Wolfe, and the
Me igs Community School ,
were dis tributed·. Mrs. Denver

a

Rice thanked the organization
for a lily, food and visits during
her illness. Reported ill were
Mrs . Gertrude Miller and
William Sweet.
Mrs. Fred I. Gardne r was a
g u~st at the meeting and
thanked the group for ca rds
and prayer for her sister who
remains ill . The Rev. Mr.
Ga rdner, a former pastor f"!OW
residin g in J ohn son City.
Tenn.,. joined the group for
re£reshments.
Devotions. by Mrs. Martha
Childs, carried out the the me
"Sustaining Power of Hope ."
Mothers of the Bible were
given .i n response to roll call.
·The Mothe r 's Day program
was by Mrs. Chester Erwin
who read scripture and a "
meditation " How We Kept
Mother 's Day. " Quotations of
famous men in tribute to their
mothers were given along with
a poem '·Mother 's Way of
Resting." Amy Erwin, a guest,
S&lt;.~ng '' For God So Loved the
World .!'
Re£reshments were served
by Mrs. Don Erwin, Miss
Hawley, Mrs. Lena McKinley,
Mrs. Martha Childs ahd Mrs.
Raymond Stewart.

Mrs. Humphrey
hosts women

Ruth Missionary
circle has meet

Two accidents

Friday minor

•

FUN
FOR ALL

McGuffey
Amusements
COMING TO

RACINE

May 25-28
F!~E WORKS
MON., MAY28 ·

He lp us, help you to buy a
new tire truck. For each
$1 .00 donat ion, receive S
FREE RiDE TICKETS.
Mall Dona tion to:
Racine Volunteer Fire Dept.
Racine. Ohio
Enc lose c ash, check
money or der with self·
addressed sta mped

I

or 10c fo r handl ing .

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PUBLIC NOTICE!
ll!e 1973 Admiral 3-Door Duplex •

The Emergency Medical Ser~ices will be in
operation by June lst, 1973, after which time
the l:wtng Funeral Rome, Pomeroy, Martin
Funeral Home, Rutl'and &amp; the Rawlings-Coats
Funeral Home, Middleport, will not be making
any type ambula.nce calls.

Signed : Ben H.
Thomas C.

Ewin~- Ewing

Funeral Home

Martin - MS~rtin

Funeral Home

freezer/refrigerator 1ND2239

Ll689

Rawlings·Coats Funeral Home

95

Duplex t'reezer-refrigerator , One pu~n . - . and presto!
You get co~d water, cold -saving convenienc? of the 3-door
models. Automatic lcemaker _ . _ exclustve tempered
glass tantilever shelves . _ . "Bookcase" freezer door
- ·-· shelves and automatic door closers. (There are seven 3door Duplex models to choose from plus one 2-door
model.) .Another _great convenience-the new Admiral
Cold Can Carousel! It holds up to twelve 12-ounce soft,
· drink or cans - and always keeps the coldest one up
front and fresh.
·

.E. Maxine Gaskill, James- Simpson -

•

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
'

J

I

Norman Weber Bnd Veda, Ruth
Walker, Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
Vineyard, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Guthrie, Troy and Tera, Rick
Lehman, Mazie Holsinger .
June Matheny. Betty Chevliar,
Grace Smith, Janet Chapman,
Mrs. Nora Rice, Gertie Hoffman , Mr. and Mrs. Ja c k
Gorrell and family , Ruth Ann
Millhone. Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
Spurlock, Bobby and Billy, Mr.
and Mrs . Ca rl Chichester,
Carla, and Cathy and Mrs.
Belly McDonald .

.A NEW ADMIRAL '73

Q

'l

]o Ann Brooks honored
at recent bridal sbower

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K
fl arr ·re-s igns
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~~~

POMEROY - Charles R. Karr , Sr.,
retired Friday because or poor health as
MeJgs County Commissioner,
In a letter to the executive Committee
Of the Meigs County Republican Central
Committee, Karr wrote ; "It is with deep
regret that I take this action at this time
However, due to my health and that or m;
wtfe, Leona, I deem it necessary.
. ''I have enjoyed my years serving
M~t~ County residents as county -~orrl­
mtsswner and I extend my sincere thanks
to all my !~lends who have stOOd by me the
ll years 1 held public office."
Karr underwent a complicated heart
operation at University HospitaJ in
Col~bu~ two years ago where an angistat
carotid smus nerve stimulator was implanted in his chest
Mr. Karr , elected three ti~es as

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Poppy Days

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proclaimed

count}'. commissioner, had onP. year to
serve in his present term, He was employed by the Standard Oil Company 'll
years before he began his c&lt;treer in
politics.

.

The Karrs are the parents Of three
c hildren, Mrs . Polly Matthews, Huron,
Ohio; Mrs. Patricia Bauer, Marion, and
Charles R. Karr , Jr., MiddlepOrt. They
have three grandchildren and one , greatgrandchild.

Mr. Karr is a member of the Pomeroy
United Methodist Churc h, Rock Springs
Grange, Middleport Masonic Lodge 3ll3
F &amp;AM, and served as Salisbury Township
trustee three years. Mr . and Mrs. Karr
reside at Pomeroy, Rt. 2, where the
welcome mat is always out.

CliARLES R. KAKR

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of aides' action
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TREATMENT

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adviser, said he receives "an involved. Gray said he learned prepared by E . Howard Hunt
WASHINGTON ( UP!) Former Acting FBI Director L. infinitesimally small'' amoWlt later in a conversation with Jr., one of the original seven
Patrick Gray has testified he of CIA and FBI summaries on then CIA DirectOr Richard men charged in the bugging
"
told President Nixon last July domestic sec urity , and added Helms that th e agency was not case.
that White House aides were tllat in his r&lt;'cent European interested in the witnesses, the
Gray said he assumed Deal)
interfering with his Watergate ·talks he had noticed "no im- sources said.
and Ehrlichman were speaking
investigation and that Nixon pact " of the Watergate scandal
Nixo n cited Dean 's in- with presidential authority and
replied, "Pat, you just continue on U. S. foreign policy,
vestigation in saying last that he never attr'ibuted ''sinis- Hugh W, Sloan Jr., Nixon's August that no person then on ter motives" to them because VOL 8 NO. 15
in the same thorough and
SU NDAY, MAY 13, 1973
PAGE 11
aggressive manner, " Senate · former re-election treasurer, the White House staff or in the he thought it wa s thei[ ''COn·
sources said Saturday,
said in a pre-trial deposition administration were involved fusion'' in understanding the
.~::::::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;;;:;:::::::::::::::::;:;:::;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:~;:::::::::::::::::::::~··::::::::::::::::::::
Nixon said in a natiOnwide that he gave $600,000 in cam- in Watergate. Th e White House problems of the investiga tion,
television broadcast April 30 paign funds to Nixon's personal announced April 30 that Dean the so urces said.
that he had received "repeated lawy er and a White House aide had been asked to resign and
Gray· testifj ed at his ill-fated
for Wlknown purposes.
assurances" that no members
that Ehrlichman, along with Senate confirmation hearings
According to the Senate White House chief of staff H.R. that he gave raw FBI files to
of his administration were
involved in Watergate, and sources~ Gray s~id he began to Haldeman , had stepped down Dean and that Dean "proba- :~:1 . CAMBRIDGE, England (UPI I ~ Scientists at the
}
.
that he believed them until investigate the Waterga te bug- from their posts.
bly" lied to FBI agents when he :;:; Agricultural Research Unit In Cambridge are awalting
;::;
March when new ·develop- ging. on Jun e 21 - four days
Th e soU r ces sa id Gray told them he was not sure if
~::: the birth of what they say will be the world first "deep- :~:: as
ments came to his attention . alter it occured -and that testifi ed that o'n June 28, the HlUlt had an office at the White :~;; freeze" cattle-t wo calves that sjlentlhelr earlyU!e packed
Gray was interviewed by the Dean called him soon af- , day of a scheduled meeting of House.
;:;; in ice. The calves began their days Jnsjde their natural
:;:; .
'
staff of the Senate Watergate terward to ask him not to in- FBI a nd CIA officials, Ehrlic~ ­
Gray resigned last month ;:;: Friesian mothedn a routine pregnancy, a unit spokesman
:;;:
LOS ANGELES (UP!)- The circumstantial," Boudin said.
investigating conimittee · late terview r'cer·tain persons.,_,
man phoned him to say the alter it was re ported that Dean
:;:; attorney for · Daniel EJlsberg "Unl ess enough evidence can
Gray report edly said Dean meeting had been cancelled and Ehr licliman gave him the ::;: said today.
Friday and the sources gave
At their lOth day of life the embroyos were remov.-d
~:~; said Saturday a damage suit c be produced to justify his being
this account of his testimony : told him the CIA wanted to and that it was on the same day Hunt file with the admonition
:=:'
and
placed
In
a
Ice-pack.
·
would be fil&lt;id in Washington named, Mr . Nixon will not be
O!t July 6, 19 days after the interview the same persons · that Dean and · Ehrlichman that it " should never see the
They remained frOzen for a week before being . ~( against Nixon administration included ."
'"'
break-in at the Democratic ' and that the FBI should oot get ordered Gray to destroy a file light of day."
':;: surgically Implanted Into a Hereford ho&gt;1 mother whose :;;i offiCials to recover part of the
Ellsberg, codefendant Annational headquarters in the
;:;: womb had been prepared for them by drugs .
f
estimated $900,000 spent by the thony J . . Russo, their wives,
Watergate complex, Gray said
}
The calves are due to be born at the end of the month.
defense in the Pentagon lawyers and staff held a press
· he called · the Western White
:::: Only then wtll detatls of the work of veterinary surgeon :::: Pai&gt;ers case.
conference Saturday morning.
House at San Clemente, Calif.,
;:~;
Lionel
Rowson
''and
physiologist
Dr.
Ian
Wllmut
be
=
:
~:;
But
attorney
Leonard
Boudin
It followed a champagne
so that Nixon . coufd 11 clear up
:~:~ released. The unll Mpokesman said l~e technJque could :~~ said plans presently did not victory party in Beverly Hllls
the confusion" over the FBI
:;;: enable the long-term storage of different breeds of cattle ii5 .include charging President Friday night attended by about
investigation.
} for use when fanners need to boost a partlcu1ar strain.
:~:; Nixon in si.ich a suit in con- 300 persons, including nine
Gray said he spoke .with
nection with the burglary of jurors , a f te r U.S. Di strict
fonner Rep. Clark MacGregor,
Ellsherg's
gsychiatrist's office Judge Matt Byrne dismissed
who had just become campaign
and wiretapping of E/lsberg's all charges against Ellsberg
manager, and MacGregor told
phone
calls.
and Russo on gro und s of
him, "I'll handle it. 11
" The evidence against the goverrunent misconduct.
A half hour later, Gray said,
President is substantial but
The 42-year-&lt;&gt;ld Ellsberg,
Nixon called to congratulate
referring to the party and his
him on handling an ~rline
conversations
with the jurors,
hijacking. Gray said he took
said the defense now knew. it'
the opportunity to give Nixon
would have had an outright
an "abbreviated version" of
acquittal ifthe case had gone to
the problems he . was enATLANTA (U P! ) The about Watergate even if they
the jury.
countering with White House
newly-nam
ed
cha'irm.an
of
the
had
been
revealed
."
Thus,
he
Asked about his future plans,
n''ll:t' C f
aides. It wa s not known
Nati onal Democra tic Campaign said, his party could not blame
Ellsberg
said he planned to
whether Gray identified them
Committee cautioned his party it.o;; showi ng on the coverup.
CAPE KENNEDY (UP!) - spend a considerable period
'to Nixon.
Saturday agains t over-s treSz! ing
Carter said Watergate .will be Whil e the Skylab 1 as lronauts with his wife, Patricia, and
. Nixon, witlwut say ing
Watergate and said Democrats fr es h enough in vote rs' minds relaxed "in Houstun, ground then go back to " research,
whether MacGregor had
could not blame their shatter- in 1974 to foment "voter crewm en Saturday pushed the writing and
spoken with him, said, " Pat,
co untd own with cl ock-like
ing 1972 Presidential defeat on di stru st of Republicans."
"The press
you just continue your in. t was
"C on trary t o w11a
.
th e precisio n toward· Monday's most .n•orlnrllb!i.
the c.overup of the scandal.
vestigation in th e same
· 1972 ," .he saJ'd , , '1 .d Q no t , l11un
world 's larges
" I hones tly think it would be case m
. ,ch
, h'of the
. t months,"
1
thorough and ag g re ssive
a mis take· to manipulate it Lhink the President and th e "' spa ces IP . or ~ 40 days of the press is
'
manner," Gray testified .
.
. .
,
. .
manned fli ght th1s year.
Co
d
(Watergate} in an overly Wh 1te
HERO SALUTES - Air Force Major Hayden Lockhart salutes his country 's flag during
House w11l be an asset to
If the UB-foot Ion
ngress an
In his testimony Friday, the
partisan manner," the new Republicans around the coun .
g spac_e expose the misconduct
. the playing of .the Star Spangled Banner launching a massed reception in his honor Saturday
sources said Gray mentioned
chairman , Gov . Jimmy Carter try. I don 'i think it would be s l.atwn reaches. a g~od _orbit executive branch."
afternoon in l't. Pleasant. On hi s left is Mayor John Musgrave. Picture by Sam Nichols TTl .
White Ho~e domestic adviser
wise for the Democral'i to try a nd unfoJd s Its . mtncate
RussO, 32, said he planned to
of Ge01·gia told UP!.
John D . Ehrlichman and
Cacter said the deptll of the to. hcm g the administration asse ~bly · normally, Charles spend a year writing a boOk.
presidential counsel John W:
sca ndal already poses a ~hrcat around the neCk of every " Pc~" Con rad, Dr. Jos.eph ~In the meaf!time , Russo said,
Dean Ill among those who
to Republican candiqates at all candidate as many Republica ns Kerwm and Paul J · Wettz Will he intended to work on a
were interfering with the FBI's
levels and was ca using some to tried to do with our (presiden- he laun ~he~ Tuesday to man · " natioQal impeachment efinvestigation .
di sassociate themselves from tial ) nomiiJee in '72."
the sta tiOn for 28_days. · .
fort" against President Nixon.
All three have lost their jobs
13 loaded w1th ·
Ca
rter
said
there
remains
Skylabalready
Russo said he was flying to
President
Nixon's
administraP'L PLEASANT - Air Foree of the event he was· s tarring Maj . Lockhar t walked to the
as a result of the Watergate
2
100
much rebuilding to be done in • P~unds of. canned, frozen Chkago for a meeting to
Maj .. Ha yden Lockhart, eight in, 'and by Miles T. Epling of Moose Hall nea rby for a lion.
scandal and been implicated in
But the governor said the the Democratic Party and that and dned food, B,OOO pounds of' discuss that · action to be atyea rs a prisone r of war in GalliP._olis , of a s pecial rcceptio~ . in his honor, and
efforts to cover it up, and all
Democrats'
image with many Democr'ats s hould guard water,. I,200asplnn, more than tended by hlUldreds of people
la ter returned to Sixth St. to
three are among the 20 wit- North Vietna·m. was -given a America n Legion award .
aga inst falling into the " trap of 700 pieces of . clothmg and including Angela Davis, the
One of the big thrills of the mingle with acq u~lintan ces and volers waS so dis torted during
hero's welcome "in his old
nesses under subpoena to
the 1972 presidential ca mpaign thinking we lost in 1972 beca use thousands of other 1tems to Rev . Ralph Abernathy and
day came when four Air Force well-wis hers.
hometown " Saturday . .
testify at the Senate Watergate
the fa cts'of Watergate did not support three crews for 20 leadersoftheAmericanlndian
At 6 p.m. Saturday night that he was not sure voters
Old friends, neighbors, and fi ghter jels screamed 400 feel
committee 's initial round of
com
~ out ."
weeks .of fli ght around earth . Movement.
would have believed " the fa cts
others by the hundreds anxi~us ove rhea_d on four passes in there ·was a rcc~ pti on for him.
public hearings that begin
\- .
.
sponsored by his hi gh ·school
to g limpse the 1955 graduate of tight form ation.
Thursday.
.
graduating
class.
·,
After a brief concluding talk,
other
Watergate· Point Pleasant High School
In
.
.
ma ssed along Sixth St. long
developments :
- Senate Watergate com- before 1:45 p.m. when th e high
...
-.
mittee
investiga tor s
i.n:- school ban
g!!ll.its.serena&lt;~e.- - WASHINGTON (UP! ) The · 160-page- ,dep os ition Nixon's finan ce chairman ,
v.arious acts of political
terviewed Marine Com- or the form er ptlot.
Hugh W. Sloan Jr., President r eve als that Sloan wa s
Amo.ng those disbursements, · espiona ge and sabotage
A s hort time later ' he
mandar;t Robert
Cushman,
Nixon's former re -elec tion qu es ti oned
closely
by he said , were:
against the Democrat.s last
eme rged from the courthouse
apparently to question ~
PHNOM PENH ( UPl j U. S. B52' and Fills have treasu rer , has testified he gave · Democ ratic lawyers about
- $350 ,000 in cash in a year.
about the CIA's role in the 1971 accompanied by federal, s tate Waves of American fighter - in fl ic ted '' very ta·n gi bl c"
$600,000 in campaigri funds to Contributions and di s bur- briefcase to Gordon Strachan ,
- $199,000 to G. Gordon
· attempt to 'steal P~ntagon and local dignitaries . The bombers were ordered into the damage on the rebels,
who re cen tly resign ed as Liddy, former White House
Nixon's pe rsonal lawyer and a se ments that he handled _
Papers defendant Daniel Ells- chee rs were loud and long.
fight Saturday when hundreds Sihan ouk was quoted as telling White House aide for unknown often cash in his office safe _ general counse~ for the U. S.
aide, finjln ~e counsel for thereberg's psychiatric files .
In close attendance with of rebel troops attacked a con espondent of the French
purposes, accordi~g to court prior to April 7, 1972. Federal Information Agency and who election committee at the time,
- Henry · A.
Ki ssinge r, Maj . Lockhart were Mayor Cam bodian
gove rnm e nt newsmagazine l/Express in an
rer.o.rds .
·
law required full disclosure of at the time was political liaison and later convicted in the
Nixon' s national security John Musgrave, Cong. John positions at the crossroads interview in Peki ng.
" 1 can't imagine what any . all financial transactions after for then White House chief of Water gate bugging . 'the
Slack, Conti. Ken Hec hler and town of Tram Khnar ,. 24 miles · ·A rebel for ce estimated by
individual would be paid tllat that date .
staff H. R. Haldeman. Sloan amount included $83,000, apother offi cials.
WATCH DIET
sou th of Phnom Penh.
g round commanders at 400 to amount of money personally
Sloan ·was a White House said the payment was made
Th e mayor made a brief
·ATLANTA
( UP! )
Mililary sources r e ported 500 me n staged the as:;a ult on for, " · Sloan said. " I think ob- staff assistant before becoming before the April 7 deadline and proved by deputy campaign
Travelers to Mexic~ shouJd speech of welcome to .whic h other rebel troops had Tram Khnar, at the cross roads viously there· would be a trea surer of the Finance was approved by Herbert W. manager Jeb S. Magruder as
watch their diets carefully to Maj . Lockhart's response surrounded Ang Taset, 16 miles of Highway 3 and a junction secondary dis tribution of the Committee to Re-elect the KalTfJbach, Nixon 's personal part of Liddy's budget, and
four Mexican checks totaling
avoid co ntracting typhoid could be summed up as ' 'It's north of Phnom Penh, and r oad leadi ng to adjacent High.
'
funds."
President in March, 1971. He lawyer.
$69,000 dated April 5.
fever, the Center for Disease gOOd to be hOme." He thanked American jet warplanes were way 2.
· Sloan made his s tatements 'in res igned that post last July in
- $250,0oo to Kalmbach, also
- $100,000 to Herbert L.
Control (CDC) warned Friday, the thousands present for directed to that a rea as welL
Military sources said the a pre-trial deposition for the pro lest of "some of the things. prior to April 7 and often
Porter,
then in charge of the reTyphoid has reached em- turning out in hi s honor .
Jn an interyiew published jn fi ghtin g bega11 late Saturday Democrats' $6.-J million civil (he was being) asked to· do. ' 1 merely through receipts for
election cominittee's prngrain
pidemic proportions in MeXico. · Special pr esentations were Paris
Saturday
Prin ce morning with field offi cers damage sui t against the
During that period 1 Sloan contributions which Kalmbach of "surrogate" campaign
made by Mrs. Patty Burdette, No rodom Sihanouk, the exiled reques ting h ~avy U. · S. air
Over 6,300 cases of typhoid Comm ittee ·to Re~lect the said $900,009 to $950,000 was sa id he had received. Kalmmore than double the .1971 of a corsage; by Couticilmen- former head of state. said it support. American planes have President. Thc·case has grown made in di s burseme nts to ba&lt;;h has told the I:'BI he paid s peakers , including about
$11,000 paid under Magruder's
figure - wert reported last at-lar ge Ja c k Fowler and was . only _American bombing been carrying out aboUt 200
nut o( the Jun e 17 bugging of various individuals, ge nerally between $30,000 and $40,000 to authorization after April 7.
Year. Most of the strains are Buster Riffle of a , m ov ie that wa s preventing Cam · st rike ~ a day over Ca mbodia
Democratic nati on.a l hPad- from safes kept in his office Donald H. Segretti, a
- $20,000 to Magruder in
resista"rrt to the 11ormal. l y nhoi~ proj~ctor which Lockhart will bod ian rebel s fro m taking during the course Of thCthreequarters in the Watergate and that of form er Commerce Califorriia lawyer alleged ~o early 1972.
use to show films being taken Phnom Penh .
· \'accine.
mon lh rebel offensive
com plex.
Secretary Maurice H. St.i:tns, ' ~ave played• a ke.t role. m
-. .,

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Democrats told

to look inward

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POPPY DAYS - May 18 and 19 have been proclaimed by Middleport Jv,hn
Zerkle as Po.~py Days in the village. With him above are Kenda Mohler, " Li!UL_
M1ss Poppy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Mohler, and Mr~ . Roy Hendrix,
poppy chairman for the American Legion Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett Post 128.

jtttWaJI ~imts .. itntintl

'·'

'

MIDDLEPORT - Next Friday and
Saturday will be Poppy Days in Middleport. ··
Mayor John Zerkle signed a
proclamation Friday njght setting aside
the two days for the annual observance of
Poppy Days by the American Legion
Auxiliar~' of Feeney-Bennett Post 128.
Both senior and junior members of the
Auxiliary will be on the sfreet.s of the
village both days with · the memoria l
poppy .
Poppy Day is sponsored earh year by ·
the ~merican _Legion and the Auxiliary to
remmd Americans of the sacrifice of Life
and health made by the men of the Armed
Forces. Contributions are devoted entirely
to rehabilitati on and child welfare work
for the veteran and his family .
As exp lained in literature which this
year will be distributed with the memorial
poppy, the weed which Americans call a
poppy is not a source of opium but its seed
is used in ca kes a nd pastry and as a source
of an oil substitute for olive oil .
The Flander's Poppy (Papaver Rh oess)
is a weed of the grain fields. The literature
describes the petals as a rich scarlet color
and "like our hospilalize.d veterans, this
plant Cannot live alone but thrives in
grou ps or clumps ."
'

.

... ---

...,..-

'

�.- . ... . . ..·.:-:..
.
K
fl arr ·re-s igns
J

-

:::~::::;:·:·:···:·:·:·:;;.•.•;·,·:·.:o.•,·.·.· ••..• '..

•
fi.::::::::::~:::!::::-:::::~~~:::::::::::*::::::;:::::::::::~~:3::::::;:::::::::::~:::::;::;;::::;:;:~~::~:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;::::::::$~:~:~;.::::;:&lt;·::::*~:::::::::::::~~:::::::$:::
:-:-:-:.:-:-:·:·:·=·=·=·=·:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:..-.••:·:·:·:-:·:-:.:::::.:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:·:.).-.:·:-:-. :•5.·.~~·:s·:x~.,.:.·6~:.:::.

~~~

POMEROY - Charles R. Karr , Sr.,
retired Friday because or poor health as
MeJgs County Commissioner,
In a letter to the executive Committee
Of the Meigs County Republican Central
Committee, Karr wrote ; "It is with deep
regret that I take this action at this time
However, due to my health and that or m;
wtfe, Leona, I deem it necessary.
. ''I have enjoyed my years serving
M~t~ County residents as county -~orrl­
mtsswner and I extend my sincere thanks
to all my !~lends who have stOOd by me the
ll years 1 held public office."
Karr underwent a complicated heart
operation at University HospitaJ in
Col~bu~ two years ago where an angistat
carotid smus nerve stimulator was implanted in his chest
Mr. Karr , elected three ti~es as

- .

'•
•

Poppy Days

.

-

proclaimed

count}'. commissioner, had onP. year to
serve in his present term, He was employed by the Standard Oil Company 'll
years before he began his c&lt;treer in
politics.

.

The Karrs are the parents Of three
c hildren, Mrs . Polly Matthews, Huron,
Ohio; Mrs. Patricia Bauer, Marion, and
Charles R. Karr , Jr., MiddlepOrt. They
have three grandchildren and one , greatgrandchild.

Mr. Karr is a member of the Pomeroy
United Methodist Churc h, Rock Springs
Grange, Middleport Masonic Lodge 3ll3
F &amp;AM, and served as Salisbury Township
trustee three years. Mr . and Mrs. Karr
reside at Pomeroy, Rt. 2, where the
welcome mat is always out.

CliARLES R. KAKR

•

'••

•

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adviser, said he receives "an involved. Gray said he learned prepared by E . Howard Hunt
WASHINGTON ( UP!) Former Acting FBI Director L. infinitesimally small'' amoWlt later in a conversation with Jr., one of the original seven
Patrick Gray has testified he of CIA and FBI summaries on then CIA DirectOr Richard men charged in the bugging
"
told President Nixon last July domestic sec urity , and added Helms that th e agency was not case.
that White House aides were tllat in his r&lt;'cent European interested in the witnesses, the
Gray said he assumed Deal)
interfering with his Watergate ·talks he had noticed "no im- sources said.
and Ehrlichman were speaking
investigation and that Nixon pact " of the Watergate scandal
Nixo n cited Dean 's in- with presidential authority and
replied, "Pat, you just continue on U. S. foreign policy,
vestigation in saying last that he never attr'ibuted ''sinis- Hugh W, Sloan Jr., Nixon's August that no person then on ter motives" to them because VOL 8 NO. 15
in the same thorough and
SU NDAY, MAY 13, 1973
PAGE 11
aggressive manner, " Senate · former re-election treasurer, the White House staff or in the he thought it wa s thei[ ''COn·
sources said Saturday,
said in a pre-trial deposition administration were involved fusion'' in understanding the
.~::::::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;;;:;:::::::::::::::::;:;:::;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:~;:::::::::::::::::::::~··::::::::::::::::::::
Nixon said in a natiOnwide that he gave $600,000 in cam- in Watergate. Th e White House problems of the investiga tion,
television broadcast April 30 paign funds to Nixon's personal announced April 30 that Dean the so urces said.
that he had received "repeated lawy er and a White House aide had been asked to resign and
Gray· testifj ed at his ill-fated
for Wlknown purposes.
assurances" that no members
that Ehrlichman, along with Senate confirmation hearings
According to the Senate White House chief of staff H.R. that he gave raw FBI files to
of his administration were
involved in Watergate, and sources~ Gray s~id he began to Haldeman , had stepped down Dean and that Dean "proba- :~:1 . CAMBRIDGE, England (UPI I ~ Scientists at the
}
.
that he believed them until investigate the Waterga te bug- from their posts.
bly" lied to FBI agents when he :;:; Agricultural Research Unit In Cambridge are awalting
;::;
March when new ·develop- ging. on Jun e 21 - four days
Th e soU r ces sa id Gray told them he was not sure if
~::: the birth of what they say will be the world first "deep- :~:: as
ments came to his attention . alter it occured -and that testifi ed that o'n June 28, the HlUlt had an office at the White :~;; freeze" cattle-t wo calves that sjlentlhelr earlyU!e packed
Gray was interviewed by the Dean called him soon af- , day of a scheduled meeting of House.
;:;; in ice. The calves began their days Jnsjde their natural
:;:; .
'
staff of the Senate Watergate terward to ask him not to in- FBI a nd CIA officials, Ehrlic~ ­
Gray resigned last month ;:;: Friesian mothedn a routine pregnancy, a unit spokesman
:;;:
LOS ANGELES (UP!)- The circumstantial," Boudin said.
investigating conimittee · late terview r'cer·tain persons.,_,
man phoned him to say the alter it was re ported that Dean
:;:; attorney for · Daniel EJlsberg "Unl ess enough evidence can
Gray report edly said Dean meeting had been cancelled and Ehr licliman gave him the ::;: said today.
Friday and the sources gave
At their lOth day of life the embroyos were remov.-d
~:~; said Saturday a damage suit c be produced to justify his being
this account of his testimony : told him the CIA wanted to and that it was on the same day Hunt file with the admonition
:=:'
and
placed
In
a
Ice-pack.
·
would be fil&lt;id in Washington named, Mr . Nixon will not be
O!t July 6, 19 days after the interview the same persons · that Dean and · Ehrlichman that it " should never see the
They remained frOzen for a week before being . ~( against Nixon administration included ."
'"'
break-in at the Democratic ' and that the FBI should oot get ordered Gray to destroy a file light of day."
':;: surgically Implanted Into a Hereford ho&gt;1 mother whose :;;i offiCials to recover part of the
Ellsberg, codefendant Annational headquarters in the
;:;: womb had been prepared for them by drugs .
f
estimated $900,000 spent by the thony J . . Russo, their wives,
Watergate complex, Gray said
}
The calves are due to be born at the end of the month.
defense in the Pentagon lawyers and staff held a press
· he called · the Western White
:::: Only then wtll detatls of the work of veterinary surgeon :::: Pai&gt;ers case.
conference Saturday morning.
House at San Clemente, Calif.,
;:~;
Lionel
Rowson
''and
physiologist
Dr.
Ian
Wllmut
be
=
:
~:;
But
attorney
Leonard
Boudin
It followed a champagne
so that Nixon . coufd 11 clear up
:~:~ released. The unll Mpokesman said l~e technJque could :~~ said plans presently did not victory party in Beverly Hllls
the confusion" over the FBI
:;;: enable the long-term storage of different breeds of cattle ii5 .include charging President Friday night attended by about
investigation.
} for use when fanners need to boost a partlcu1ar strain.
:~:; Nixon in si.ich a suit in con- 300 persons, including nine
Gray said he spoke .with
nection with the burglary of jurors , a f te r U.S. Di strict
fonner Rep. Clark MacGregor,
Ellsherg's
gsychiatrist's office Judge Matt Byrne dismissed
who had just become campaign
and wiretapping of E/lsberg's all charges against Ellsberg
manager, and MacGregor told
phone
calls.
and Russo on gro und s of
him, "I'll handle it. 11
" The evidence against the goverrunent misconduct.
A half hour later, Gray said,
President is substantial but
The 42-year-&lt;&gt;ld Ellsberg,
Nixon called to congratulate
referring to the party and his
him on handling an ~rline
conversations
with the jurors,
hijacking. Gray said he took
said the defense now knew. it'
the opportunity to give Nixon
would have had an outright
an "abbreviated version" of
acquittal ifthe case had gone to
the problems he . was enATLANTA (U P! ) The about Watergate even if they
the jury.
countering with White House
newly-nam
ed
cha'irm.an
of
the
had
been
revealed
."
Thus,
he
Asked about his future plans,
n''ll:t' C f
aides. It wa s not known
Nati onal Democra tic Campaign said, his party could not blame
Ellsberg
said he planned to
whether Gray identified them
Committee cautioned his party it.o;; showi ng on the coverup.
CAPE KENNEDY (UP!) - spend a considerable period
'to Nixon.
Saturday agains t over-s treSz! ing
Carter said Watergate .will be Whil e the Skylab 1 as lronauts with his wife, Patricia, and
. Nixon, witlwut say ing
Watergate and said Democrats fr es h enough in vote rs' minds relaxed "in Houstun, ground then go back to " research,
whether MacGregor had
could not blame their shatter- in 1974 to foment "voter crewm en Saturday pushed the writing and
spoken with him, said, " Pat,
co untd own with cl ock-like
ing 1972 Presidential defeat on di stru st of Republicans."
"The press
you just continue your in. t was
"C on trary t o w11a
.
th e precisio n toward· Monday's most .n•orlnrllb!i.
the c.overup of the scandal.
vestigation in th e same
· 1972 ," .he saJ'd , , '1 .d Q no t , l11un
world 's larges
" I hones tly think it would be case m
. ,ch
, h'of the
. t months,"
1
thorough and ag g re ssive
a mis take· to manipulate it Lhink the President and th e "' spa ces IP . or ~ 40 days of the press is
'
manner," Gray testified .
.
. .
,
. .
manned fli ght th1s year.
Co
d
(Watergate} in an overly Wh 1te
HERO SALUTES - Air Force Major Hayden Lockhart salutes his country 's flag during
House w11l be an asset to
If the UB-foot Ion
ngress an
In his testimony Friday, the
partisan manner," the new Republicans around the coun .
g spac_e expose the misconduct
. the playing of .the Star Spangled Banner launching a massed reception in his honor Saturday
sources said Gray mentioned
chairman , Gov . Jimmy Carter try. I don 'i think it would be s l.atwn reaches. a g~od _orbit executive branch."
afternoon in l't. Pleasant. On hi s left is Mayor John Musgrave. Picture by Sam Nichols TTl .
White Ho~e domestic adviser
wise for the Democral'i to try a nd unfoJd s Its . mtncate
RussO, 32, said he planned to
of Ge01·gia told UP!.
John D . Ehrlichman and
Cacter said the deptll of the to. hcm g the administration asse ~bly · normally, Charles spend a year writing a boOk.
presidential counsel John W:
sca ndal already poses a ~hrcat around the neCk of every " Pc~" Con rad, Dr. Jos.eph ~In the meaf!time , Russo said,
Dean Ill among those who
to Republican candiqates at all candidate as many Republica ns Kerwm and Paul J · Wettz Will he intended to work on a
were interfering with the FBI's
levels and was ca using some to tried to do with our (presiden- he laun ~he~ Tuesday to man · " natioQal impeachment efinvestigation .
di sassociate themselves from tial ) nomiiJee in '72."
the sta tiOn for 28_days. · .
fort" against President Nixon.
All three have lost their jobs
13 loaded w1th ·
Ca
rter
said
there
remains
Skylabalready
Russo said he was flying to
President
Nixon's
administraP'L PLEASANT - Air Foree of the event he was· s tarring Maj . Lockhar t walked to the
as a result of the Watergate
2
100
much rebuilding to be done in • P~unds of. canned, frozen Chkago for a meeting to
Maj .. Ha yden Lockhart, eight in, 'and by Miles T. Epling of Moose Hall nea rby for a lion.
scandal and been implicated in
But the governor said the the Democratic Party and that and dned food, B,OOO pounds of' discuss that · action to be atyea rs a prisone r of war in GalliP._olis , of a s pecial rcceptio~ . in his honor, and
efforts to cover it up, and all
Democrats'
image with many Democr'ats s hould guard water,. I,200asplnn, more than tended by hlUldreds of people
la ter returned to Sixth St. to
three are among the 20 wit- North Vietna·m. was -given a America n Legion award .
aga inst falling into the " trap of 700 pieces of . clothmg and including Angela Davis, the
One of the big thrills of the mingle with acq u~lintan ces and volers waS so dis torted during
hero's welcome "in his old
nesses under subpoena to
the 1972 presidential ca mpaign thinking we lost in 1972 beca use thousands of other 1tems to Rev . Ralph Abernathy and
day came when four Air Force well-wis hers.
hometown " Saturday . .
testify at the Senate Watergate
the fa cts'of Watergate did not support three crews for 20 leadersoftheAmericanlndian
At 6 p.m. Saturday night that he was not sure voters
Old friends, neighbors, and fi ghter jels screamed 400 feel
committee 's initial round of
com
~ out ."
weeks .of fli ght around earth . Movement.
would have believed " the fa cts
others by the hundreds anxi~us ove rhea_d on four passes in there ·was a rcc~ pti on for him.
public hearings that begin
\- .
.
sponsored by his hi gh ·school
to g limpse the 1955 graduate of tight form ation.
Thursday.
.
graduating
class.
·,
After a brief concluding talk,
other
Watergate· Point Pleasant High School
In
.
.
ma ssed along Sixth St. long
developments :
- Senate Watergate com- before 1:45 p.m. when th e high
...
-.
mittee
investiga tor s
i.n:- school ban
g!!ll.its.serena&lt;~e.- - WASHINGTON (UP! ) The · 160-page- ,dep os ition Nixon's finan ce chairman ,
v.arious acts of political
terviewed Marine Com- or the form er ptlot.
Hugh W. Sloan Jr., President r eve als that Sloan wa s
Amo.ng those disbursements, · espiona ge and sabotage
A s hort time later ' he
mandar;t Robert
Cushman,
Nixon's former re -elec tion qu es ti oned
closely
by he said , were:
against the Democrat.s last
eme rged from the courthouse
apparently to question ~
PHNOM PENH ( UPl j U. S. B52' and Fills have treasu rer , has testified he gave · Democ ratic lawyers about
- $350 ,000 in cash in a year.
about the CIA's role in the 1971 accompanied by federal, s tate Waves of American fighter - in fl ic ted '' very ta·n gi bl c"
$600,000 in campaigri funds to Contributions and di s bur- briefcase to Gordon Strachan ,
- $199,000 to G. Gordon
· attempt to 'steal P~ntagon and local dignitaries . The bombers were ordered into the damage on the rebels,
who re cen tly resign ed as Liddy, former White House
Nixon's pe rsonal lawyer and a se ments that he handled _
Papers defendant Daniel Ells- chee rs were loud and long.
fight Saturday when hundreds Sihan ouk was quoted as telling White House aide for unknown often cash in his office safe _ general counse~ for the U. S.
aide, finjln ~e counsel for thereberg's psychiatric files .
In close attendance with of rebel troops attacked a con espondent of the French
purposes, accordi~g to court prior to April 7, 1972. Federal Information Agency and who election committee at the time,
- Henry · A.
Ki ssinge r, Maj . Lockhart were Mayor Cam bodian
gove rnm e nt newsmagazine l/Express in an
rer.o.rds .
·
law required full disclosure of at the time was political liaison and later convicted in the
Nixon' s national security John Musgrave, Cong. John positions at the crossroads interview in Peki ng.
" 1 can't imagine what any . all financial transactions after for then White House chief of Water gate bugging . 'the
Slack, Conti. Ken Hec hler and town of Tram Khnar ,. 24 miles · ·A rebel for ce estimated by
individual would be paid tllat that date .
staff H. R. Haldeman. Sloan amount included $83,000, apother offi cials.
WATCH DIET
sou th of Phnom Penh.
g round commanders at 400 to amount of money personally
Sloan ·was a White House said the payment was made
Th e mayor made a brief
·ATLANTA
( UP! )
Mililary sources r e ported 500 me n staged the as:;a ult on for, " · Sloan said. " I think ob- staff assistant before becoming before the April 7 deadline and proved by deputy campaign
Travelers to Mexic~ shouJd speech of welcome to .whic h other rebel troops had Tram Khnar, at the cross roads viously there· would be a trea surer of the Finance was approved by Herbert W. manager Jeb S. Magruder as
watch their diets carefully to Maj . Lockhart's response surrounded Ang Taset, 16 miles of Highway 3 and a junction secondary dis tribution of the Committee to Re-elect the KalTfJbach, Nixon 's personal part of Liddy's budget, and
four Mexican checks totaling
avoid co ntracting typhoid could be summed up as ' 'It's north of Phnom Penh, and r oad leadi ng to adjacent High.
'
funds."
President in March, 1971. He lawyer.
$69,000 dated April 5.
fever, the Center for Disease gOOd to be hOme." He thanked American jet warplanes were way 2.
· Sloan made his s tatements 'in res igned that post last July in
- $250,0oo to Kalmbach, also
- $100,000 to Herbert L.
Control (CDC) warned Friday, the thousands present for directed to that a rea as welL
Military sources said the a pre-trial deposition for the pro lest of "some of the things. prior to April 7 and often
Porter,
then in charge of the reTyphoid has reached em- turning out in hi s honor .
Jn an interyiew published jn fi ghtin g bega11 late Saturday Democrats' $6.-J million civil (he was being) asked to· do. ' 1 merely through receipts for
election cominittee's prngrain
pidemic proportions in MeXico. · Special pr esentations were Paris
Saturday
Prin ce morning with field offi cers damage sui t against the
During that period 1 Sloan contributions which Kalmbach of "surrogate" campaign
made by Mrs. Patty Burdette, No rodom Sihanouk, the exiled reques ting h ~avy U. · S. air
Over 6,300 cases of typhoid Comm ittee ·to Re~lect the said $900,009 to $950,000 was sa id he had received. Kalmmore than double the .1971 of a corsage; by Couticilmen- former head of state. said it support. American planes have President. Thc·case has grown made in di s burseme nts to ba&lt;;h has told the I:'BI he paid s peakers , including about
$11,000 paid under Magruder's
figure - wert reported last at-lar ge Ja c k Fowler and was . only _American bombing been carrying out aboUt 200
nut o( the Jun e 17 bugging of various individuals, ge nerally between $30,000 and $40,000 to authorization after April 7.
Year. Most of the strains are Buster Riffle of a , m ov ie that wa s preventing Cam · st rike ~ a day over Ca mbodia
Democratic nati on.a l hPad- from safes kept in his office Donald H. Segretti, a
- $20,000 to Magruder in
resista"rrt to the 11ormal. l y nhoi~ proj~ctor which Lockhart will bod ian rebel s fro m taking during the course Of thCthreequarters in the Watergate and that of form er Commerce Califorriia lawyer alleged ~o early 1972.
use to show films being taken Phnom Penh .
· \'accine.
mon lh rebel offensive
com plex.
Secretary Maurice H. St.i:tns, ' ~ave played• a ke.t role. m
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:;t::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :: : ;:: ::::;:::::: : :::::::::::::::~:::::: : : :: : : ::: : ::::::::::)~:

Democrats told

to look inward

Skylah crew
Is at ease

WOOD
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Maj. Lockhart honored

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POPPY DAYS - May 18 and 19 have been proclaimed by Middleport Jv,hn
Zerkle as Po.~py Days in the village. With him above are Kenda Mohler, " Li!UL_
M1ss Poppy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Mohler, and Mr~ . Roy Hendrix,
poppy chairman for the American Legion Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett Post 128.

jtttWaJI ~imts .. itntintl

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MIDDLEPORT - Next Friday and
Saturday will be Poppy Days in Middleport. ··
Mayor John Zerkle signed a
proclamation Friday njght setting aside
the two days for the annual observance of
Poppy Days by the American Legion
Auxiliar~' of Feeney-Bennett Post 128.
Both senior and junior members of the
Auxiliary will be on the sfreet.s of the
village both days with · the memoria l
poppy .
Poppy Day is sponsored earh year by ·
the ~merican _Legion and the Auxiliary to
remmd Americans of the sacrifice of Life
and health made by the men of the Armed
Forces. Contributions are devoted entirely
to rehabilitati on and child welfare work
for the veteran and his family .
As exp lained in literature which this
year will be distributed with the memorial
poppy, the weed which Americans call a
poppy is not a source of opium but its seed
is used in ca kes a nd pastry and as a source
of an oil substitute for olive oil .
The Flander's Poppy (Papaver Rh oess)
is a weed of the grain fields. The literature
describes the petals as a rich scarlet color
and "like our hospilalize.d veterans, this
plant Cannot live alone but thrives in
grou ps or clumps ."
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l:l-1'hf'.SundavTimes.Sentinei . Srnvt~v M=-vl1

12-The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, May 13, 1973

Council approves hunting, trapping regulations
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Wlldli!e Council said it
renewed some hunting regulations which were to expire and
apjlroved new rules !or tile
1973-H state hunting and
trapping seasons.
Rules for the coming season
would :
- Prohibit an employe of a
licensed commercial fisher man, or an individual fisherman, possessing walleye while
on or .'~turning from Lake Erie

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or its tributaries, except when
permitted by the chief of U1e
division of wildlire.
- Require a trapper to check
his traps at least every 30
hours. Regular sll!el traps set
on land with jaw spreads
greater than six and one-half
inches are prohibited. Also
prohibited are sp ring steel wire
tra!i;'witll jaw spreads greater
than !our and one-half inches
on a side i! square and. If,

three-&lt;juarter
inches
in
diameter. Regular steel traps
set in water are prohibited if
tlley have a jaw spread greater
tllanseven and one-half inches,
as are waterset spring steel
traps with jaw spreads larger
tllan 10 inches on a side if
squ are and 12 i,nches in
diameter if round . Traps with
steel jaws are prohibited.
- Prohibit trapping witllin
400 feet of a state park lodge,

round. not larger than six and

ca bin, cam pground, beach ,

_ Prohibit all huhting except
deer and waterfowl hunting
during deer gWJ season in
counties having such a season.
_ Prohibit deer bow hunting
on Kelleys Island .
_ Prohibit deer gun hunll!rs
using a combination shotgun
rifle-type weapon from possessing rifle type amunition.
_ Make available a limited
number or anterless deer permit s . for
hunting
in
Muskingum, MorP~n . Athens,

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NEW MANAGER
KENNEWICK , Wa sh. (UP! J
- Mike Cloutier, 31, was
named Friday as playing
manager of the Tri.City Imperials of the Class A
Northwest Baseball

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Washington. Hocking, Vinton,
Jackson, Meigs, Paulding and
Henry counties.
- Open the Mercer County
Goose Management Area to
waterfowl hunters on a firstcome, fir.t-&lt;&gt;erved basis during
the first week of tile season because of the unique managemen! situation in that a rea.
- Set forth tile areas for dog
field trials . Trials may be condueled
at
Delaware,

Grand River, Pleasant Valley,
lhdian Creek, Rush Run and
Fallsville wildlife areas, plus
·Berlin Reservoir , Perry
Reclamation Area , Zaleski
State Forest, Delaware State
Park and Stonelick State Park.
- Allow migratory bird
hunting from Opening time
until noon Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday
during 111e waterfoWl season at
Grand River, Delaware and

- Allow the sale of legally
acquired opossum carcas'ses
and squirrel tails.
- Define longbow to mean a
hand-held and handdrawn
weapon which propels an arrow, is held in a drawn position
and triggered by hand without
tile aid of any device having
movable parts.
- Permit goose hunting west
of Ottawa National Wildlife
Refuge in Lucas and Ottawa

closed tn hunting . The area
opened for hunting includes
Metzger Marsh Public Hunting
Area.
- Prohibit persons in parked
vehicles from using artificial
light to spot wildlife whle having hunting weapons in the vehicle.
•
Prohibit groundhog
hunting on the Ohio Power Co.
Recreational Area in Morgan, ·'
Muskingum and Noble coon-

Res thavr:n , Killdeer Plains ,

Big Island WHdJlfe areas.

counties in an area previously

ties.

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Cloutier ctJTrently is promotion and sales manage r for tile

Salt Lake City Angels of tile
Pacific Coast L•a~uc. In addition to Cloutier, the Angels
have promised the Imperials

!pur players.

.

wildlife dis pla v or m1tnrP trnil

Ohio's 1973-74 hunting,
,,

trapping- :dates approved

,.

INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UP! )
COLUMBUS (UPII - The trom Feb. 1, 1974, to 6 p.m . on ·- Veteran Art Pollard, at 46
OhiQ W il dl ife Counc il has ap. Feb. 15, 1974, in .Ash tabula , tile oldest driver in the field,
proved dates for the 1973 - 74 Athens . Belmont. Carroll. Col- crashed to a fi ery death in a

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hunting and trapping seasons.
The council set hunting and

"

trapping season dates , includ ·

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in~QUIRREL:

•.

The season ·will
open Sept. 7 and will continue
through Nov . 10, 1973 on pri ·
vate land . Public hunting will
beg in Sept. 7 and co ntinu e
through Dec. 22, 1973. Hunting
will be permitted from daylight
to dark with a da ily bag limit
of four and, after .the first da y,
a possession timit of eight.

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PHEASANT AND CHUKAR

RACOON AND DPPOSUM :
The season wil l be fr offi Nov . 1,
1973, through Jan . 31, 1974. The
da ily bag lim it for racoon taken
by huntinCI is four w ith huntin9
hour s fr om 6 p.m . to 6 a .m .
WILD TURKEY : Th e seaSon
wiII be from May 1 through
Ma,y 4, 1974, and from Ma y a
through May 11, 1974 . Hun t ing
hours wilt be 6 a .m . to 11 p.m .
with a daily bag and posses.
sion limit of one . Th e sea son
will be in Adams, Gall ia , Hock ing. Ja ckson, OaWren ce, Mei gs,
Monroe , Per ry , Pike, Ross. Sci ·
o to, Vint o n and Wa shing ton
counties .
DEER ;: The season in Zones
1 and 3 will be from Nov . 26
through Nov. 30, 1973; in Zone
2 from Nov . 26 .t hroug h .Nov.
28, 1973 ; and in Zone 4 from
Nov .. 26 through Dec. 1. 1973.
Hour s will be 7:30 a .m. . to 5

PARTRIDGE : The season will
be Nov . 15, 1973 throu gh i)ec.
a. 1973. and Dec. 24, 1973
th ro ugh Jan . 1, 1974, on private.
land. Public hunt ing will begin
Nov. 15 and continue through
Jan . 26, 1974. Hunting hours
wll l be 9 a .m . to 5 p.m ., with
a daily bag limit of two pheasant and two chukar and a pos'Session lim it, after the first day ,
of fou r each. The hen pheasant
zone where either cOcks or hens·
may be taken, is Nov . 15, 1973,
through Jan . 26 , 19'74. The daily~
bag limi t is two cocks or hens
and, after the first day , a posSession limit of four cocks or
hens .
p .m ,
RUFFED GROUSE: The sea Th ere will be no deer gun
son will be Oct. 12, 1973, through season in Zone 5, which also
Feb. 23, 1974. Hunting'' will be now includes Erie , Sandusky,
permitted from daylight to dark Ottawa , Wood, Lorain, Cuyahoga
with a daily bag limit pt three and Med ina counti es , as well
and, after the fir st day, a pos - a s Lucas County, east of th e
session limit of six.
Maumee River .
QUAIL: The season will be
DEER LONGBOW SEASON :
from Nov . 15, 1973, through The sea son wi II be from Oct. 12,
Jan. 26, 1974. Hunting hours will 1973, through Jan . 5, 1974. It
be 9 a .m . to 5 p.m . with a daily will be closed during the deer
bag lim it o1 six and a posses- gun season in counties hav ing
- sia:n limit. after the first day , s~;~c h a season.
of 12.
RAVENNA ARSENAL DEER
RABBIT : The season will open HUNT: The arc hery season will ,
from Nov . 15. 1973, through Jan . be Oct. 13. 20 and 27 and Nov .
26, 1974. Hunting hours wil l be 3 and 10 , 1973. The gUn season
9 a .m. to 5 p.m. with a bag lim - will be Dece mber 8 and 15, 1973.
it of four and a possession lini PRIMITIVE WEAPONS : The
it, after the first day , of eight. primitive weapons hunt w'ill be
Rabbit hunting will be proh ibit- Oct . 29 , 1973, through Nov . 3,
ed oh the Urbana Wildlif,e Area . 1973.
TRAPPING: The trapping
YOUNG HUNTER SPECIAL
season will be from Nov . 15, SEASON: The season will be
1973, through Feb . 15, 1974, and Nov. 3, 1973 and No v. 10, 1973
.extend through April l, 1974 in on Delaware, Grand River, Rest
Lucas County east of the Mau· Hav en, Spring Valley , Spen mee River, and in Ottawa , cer and Woodbury public huntSandusky and Erie counties .
ing a reas.
The beaver season will be

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um biana . Coshocton, Gallia,
Guernsey , Geau ga , Harr ison,
Hocking, Holmes, Jackson , Jef ferson , Lake , Mahoning , Mon roe , Morga n .Muskingum , Noble,
Per"'y, Portage , Stark , Trumbull ,
Tuscarawas, Vinton, and Wash ·
ington counties.

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Crampton has 3-stroke
advantage in Colonial
FORT WORTH, Tex. (UP!)
-

Blitzing Bruce Crampton,

six shots in front of the field af requiring only 31 strokes and
one point, cooled of£ over the building a six-shot lead.
back nine Saturday to ·shoot a
But Crampton slumped on
one-under 69 and salvage a ·the incoming ·nine as his string

three-stroke lead over L!ee
Elder and Tom Weiskopf with
one roWJd to play in , the

of 129 holes without a three-put
green was broken when he took
three to get down from the

Colonial Invitation .
·
front edge of the 16th ,
Crampton, winner of three
Despite Crampton 1s siege,
tournamen IS this year, the the cou~:se allowed only six
toUr's leading money winner - golfers to s hoot under.par
and only $55,000 silort of 1 figures for three rounds .

million, shot his tenth straight
round of par golf or 'better in
quest or his second straight
triumph.
He destroyed the front nine

,

of the testy 7,142-yard, par-10
Colonial Co~ntry Club course ,

Elder fired a 69 Saturday to
sl&lt;!nd at tllree-under 207 and
Weiskopf shot a 70 for a 207 .
Tied for fourth were Mason

Rudolph, Lou Graham and
Jerry Heard . Heard shot a 70,

Mets blank

a

Graham 71 and Rudolph a 67,
the bes t round of the day,
which turned cool after . two

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Pirates 6-0

ba
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of

90-deg ree

peratures .

tiers before . giving up a
smgle to losing pitcher Bob
Moose. The only other Pirates

BONDS STAR
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI J Bobby Bonds, who made two
spectacular plays in the fiel.d,
d bl d d o d th
·, nn' ,· ng
ou e an sc re
ew
run in the bottom of the 'ninth

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seventh inning triple off tile
center field wall provided the
only Pirate tllreat.
The Mets scored one run in
the first inning when Wayne
Garrettsingled , movedtothird
on Felix Millan's single and
scored when Cleon Jones hit
into a double play.
IntheMets eighth,singlesby
Jones, Rusty Staub and Ed
Kranepool and a dou ble by Jim .
Gosger produced two

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practice run Saturday as
qualifications opened for the
Memorial Day "500" auto race .

Pollard , a grandfather from
Medford, Ore., died in
Meth odist Hospital sli ghtly
more than an hour after his
brand·n e w machin e hurtl e d

into the wall in tile short south
chute of the track, burst into
flames i;ind became airborne.

He wa s lifted from his

demolished car, a new Dan

Gurney Eagle, and died of
flam e

inhalation and other

injllri~s .

It was the fir st death at tile
famed speedway since last
year when Jim Malloy of
Denver injured fatally in a
practice accident.
Less than three hours later
David "Swede" SaVage ·, a
"500" sophomore pilot from
Santa Ana, Calif., electrified

th e hu ge throng of an
estimated 250,000 by hurling
his fire engine Red Eagle

Indians rap
Bosox, 10-2
BOSTON (UP! ) - Buddy
8ell and Charlie Spikes paced
an 18-hit attack with seven hil'i
between them Saturday afternoon as the Cleveland In-

dians rapped the Boston Red
Sox 10-2 behind Gaylord
Perry 's six-hit pitching.
Bell opened the garne ·with a
homer into. the cen ter fi eld
bleacners and s tarted a s tring
of four singles that gave the
Indian s two runs in the sixth
innii1g. He also singled in the
fourth and ninth and scored
three times while going four for -five at the plate.

Spikes tagged a triple to
cente r to drive in George
Hendrick as the Indian s
s napped a 2~2 tie with three
run s in the fifth inning. He
scored on a sacr ifice fly by

around the 2111, mile oval at an
average speed or 197.152 miles
per hour on his first lap, He
completed his 10-mile run at a
speed of 196.582, shattering the
1972 records by Bobby Unser of
196.678 and 195.940, for one and
four laps respectively.
Savage,
th e
swiftest
chauffeur in two weeks of
practice, placed next to last in
his " 500" debut last year,

lasting just fiv e laps to be
awarded 32nd place. He was
the lOth qualifier on the first of
four days of time trials to
complet e the 33-&lt;:ar lineup for
the million-dollar Memorial

Day event.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. ( UP I ) -

run homer to left for the In.

George McGinnis fired in 13

dians in the cightlo inning .

points in the third quarter as

hit.

McGinnis, the game's hlgh

The la s t Cleveland run carne
in the ninth when Rusty Torres

scorer with 27 points, was
named the most valuable

slapped a long double to score

player in the championship

Bell.

series.

The Red Sox go t their first
run without a hit ,in the first
inning . Tommy Harper and
Luis Apa ricio drew walks fr om

Kentucky, after

trailing

most of the first half, .went
aheqd of Indiana three times

M AJOR

Gaylord Perry and both men ·
advanced on a wild pitch . .

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LEAGUE

Ecole Ema.e
Sth J -t;nl'te
1

«ej a.

joined

by

for Preakness

teammate Ken Rudolph for
hitting honors. Rudolph's oneBALTIMORE, Md. ( UP!) out double in the fourth inning
se nt 'Jose Cardena l, who had Ecole El&lt;l ge from the Bon
. walked, to third. Kessinger El&lt;lge Sl&lt;!ble of Harry and
then lin~d a hit to rightfield, · Robert Meyerhoff of Baltimore
scoring both runners.

was added to the field of the

Rudolph's first hom er of the
year in the bottom or the eighth

98th running of the Preakness
Stakes Sa turda )l when he

off reliever Billy Wilson gave

sc ored an impressive victory in
the I and !-16th miles of the

the Cubs ari insurance run .
The Phillies gave sta rter and
loser Wayne Twitchell, 0-1, a I ·
·o lead in the first inning after
BUCKS LOSE PAIR

Unser and Mario Andretti, and
suc h other veterans as Lloyd
Luby, Peter Revson, Garry
Bet4enhausep , Jerry Grant,
Bill Vukovich, Gordon . John·
cock, Mike Mosley and Mel
Kenyon .
Pollard, who became 46 just
a week ago and whose best
finish at Indianapolis in prior
appearances was eighth in
1967, was clocked at a speed of
191.4 just before his fatal crash.
Witnesses said he apparently

grass, beca m e airborne, and

flipped several times end over the car crashed, eliminating
end and sideways, ending right him from tile lineup . His place
side up in the southeast turn . was then taken by Wally
Pollard was taken from the Dallenbach, who sta rted in last
cockpit and rushed to th e in- .Place .
field hospital and then to the ' Pollard launched his racing
downtown hospital where he .car eer in Oregon in 1955 in
died.
·
stock car competition and won
· Thoma s
Hanna ,
the th e northwest title for. super-

simply " lost it/ ' the car

crashing into the outside
retaining wall with the right

Preakness Prep at Pimlico
Race Course Saturday .
' Although Torsion ran fifth in
the six-horse' field , tr .. ,· ner
"
J ohnny Campo said he was

speedway's medical director,

modifi ed

said besides flame inhalation
tllat seared Pollard's lungs, he
suffered face, hand and neck
burns and a broken right arm.
Last year the affable Pollard
qualified at a speed of 181.6 for

Milwaukee in 1965. His two
biggest victories under the
USAC banner came in 1969 in a
150-miler at Milwaukee and a
2QO.mile ,e vent at Dover; Del.

who fired in three three-point
!ield goa ls in the closing

early in the third quarter but
after Indiana took its fmallead
at 49-48, the Packers outscored
Kentucky 11-4 the rest of the
quarter for a 56-52 lead going
into the fourth quarll!r. The
closest Kentucky ~ou ld get
after that was the (ina! seven-

auto

r ace

at

Indiana , with Fred Lewis

points.

chipping in II and reserve
Roger Brown 10 for the win-

Kentucky took a brier one
point lead late in the half but
· lodiana went into the dressin g

ners.

During the disastrous tfiird
quartu, Kentucky hit only
three of 22 field goal attempts
for 13.6 pet. and scored only II
points.
Artis Gilmore led Kentucky
with 19 points and Rick Mount, ·

STANDINGS
Los Angeles at San

PD,i nts to.support McGinnis for

game-high 17 rebounds.
Indiana jumped out to a
quick 7-0 lead and maintained
that mar gin much of the first
half witll their largest lead nine

se:conds, had 16,
Donnie F.reeman had 15

Cleveland got another run in the Indiana Pacers broke away
the second when Dun ca n got on from the 'cold ...shooting Kenthro ugh an error , went to · tucky Colonels to win their
second on an infield single , third American BasketbaJI
took third on a groundout and Assoda tion champions hip in
scored on Tom Rag land 's ba se the last fqur years.
. point margin .

Chicago C.u hs
.edge Phils· 3-l

the first inning.
Kessinger was

were former race wiMers AI

the "500" , but lost a wheel in
"practice a few days later and
sustained ,a broken leg when

Pacers win second ABA title ·in row

Harper sco r ed
on Carl · .- National League Standings
By United Press International
Ya s trzemski 's infield ou t.
!Twiligh1 and nigbt games not
Desig nated. hjtter Hegg ie inc luded)
East
Smith tagged a hom e run down
W. L. Pet. GB
J ohn Ellis and Frank Duffy the rig ht field line for the Red
Chicag o
18 13 .581 '
singled hom e R on Loli c h . Sox in the fourth .
New York
16 14 .533 Ph
befm·e the inning was out.
12 13 , 480 3
P err y 1 wh o escaped some Pitts burgh
12 14 .462 J'h
Spikes a lso had singles in the .. e~1dy wildness, pick ed up his Monlreal
Philad e lphia 11 17 .407 5112
third a nd sixth innings while fifth vi c tory again s t four St. Louis
7 21 .250 911'2,
West
goin g three-fo r~five .
losses,. John Curtis, now 1-3,
W. L. Pet. GB
Dave Duncan clubbed a two· look th e loss .
San Francisco 25 11 .694
Houst on
21 11 .656 2
Ci ncinnati
18 12 .600 4
18 15 .545 511'2
Los Ange les
Atla nta 10 18 .357 11
San Diego
11 20 .355 ll lf2
Saturday's Results
New York 6 Pittsburgh 0
Chicago 3 Philadelphia 1
San Francisco 5 Los Angeles 4
San Diego al Allan fa (twilight)
Montreal at St. Lou is (night)_
CHICAGO (UP! ) - Don Cesar Tovar got . hit by a Ci ncinnat i at HOuston ' (n ight)
Sunday's Games
Kessingei' 'S tw Q..run single in Reu schel fas tball. Tovar stole
tAll Times EDT)
the bottoril. ohhe fourth inning second and went to third whe n New York at Pi1tsburgh (1 :35
prov ided Rick Reu schel with Rudolph 's throw went into p.m J
Philad el phia a t Chicago, 2
all the help he needed as the ce nterfield . Tovar scored on (1 :30 p.m . )
Chi cago ri ghthander beat the Willie Montan ez's infield Montrea l at St . Loui s (2 : 15
p.m . )
Philadelphia Phillies 3-1 on a gr ounder .
San Diego at Atlan.ta, 2 (1 :35
five-hitter .
p .m . )
Ci ncinnati at Houston (3 p.m .)
Reuschcl, 3-2, walked three
and s truck out three a nd was
~. ·

l&lt;!gged for an unearned run in

front side and bursting into
flames. It tben spun into the

Among the · other qualifiers

Kentucky shot a cold 38 pet.
from the field , managing .to
convert only 30 of 79 shots.
Indiana hit on only 41.6 pet. (32
of 77 ) of its field goal attempt$.
The

Pacers

won

the

rootn at halftime with a.42-41
lead on a laYUp by Brown.
The l.e ad changed hand s six
tim es at th e start of the second
half before Indian a went &lt;;&gt;n its

17-4 spree.

The wjn was Indiana 's third

rebounding battle , 55-47 with
Darnell Hillman topping the

at Louisville's Freedom Hall in ·

winners with 13. Gilmore had a

tl)e seven game series.

Fran~isco

(3: 15 p .m .)

American League
East
w. f. pet. g.b.
Detr oi f
14 15 .483
Baltimore
13 14 .481
Milwaukee
12 14 .462
'h
Boston
lh,
12 14 .462
New York
12 15 .444 I
Cleveland
13 •17 .433 1'h
West
w. I. pet. g.b.
Chicago
iB 6 .7&gt;0
· Kansa s Ci ty
19 11 .633 2
Oakland
16 14 .533 5
Californ ia
13 13 .500 6
Minnesota
11 13 .458 611'2
Texas
9 16 .360 9
Friday's Results
Boston 4 Cleveland 2
Baltimore 3 New York 0
Detroit 6 Milwaukee 5
Kan City 6 Minnesota 2
Oakland 4 Texas 3
Chicago 7 California 4

IT'S TIME TO MOVE OUR •·
KIT SECTIONAL HOME DISPLAY

vic tori es from Ohio State
oppose
Secretariat and Sham, who ran
Friday9-6and!0-3,movedinto
.
h
Los Angeles Dodgers. Ed second place in the Big Ten. · one-lwo In t e Kentucky
GoOdson's sacrifice fly in the
Derby.
seventh scored Bonds, whoha:d .. ,.._ _ ,
-~singled and stolen tllird, , with
CHAIN LINK FENCE FOR:
the tying run. It was on
Home . Playg,ounds
Goodson 's smash wide of iirst
Store - lndu st'y
that Lopes threw the b~ll away ·
attempting to get" force at
~f~,v~oc~::~/igh, galvd. or
second with one out and the
bases loaded in the 9th .
9-11 -11'12 Gaug·e

-=-...

•
.I

Too Big , none Too

TO MEET MAY 21
POMEROY - The Meigs
Pony League AssOciation will
meet Monday • May 2l at 7 p.m .

In Gallipolis Area 'Call " Uncle John" 446·1697

at Pomeroy City Hall at which
tn Jackson-Oak Hill Area Call (6141 i76 -2237
lime entry fe es will be acFENCED'IVISIONOF
ce pll!d and rules explained. All RAY HOUCK
C
managers are
to attend .. .__ _ _ _ _ _.,._.;.
' ---•P•o•r•t•s•m•o•u•t•h•,•O•h•io_..l

urg~d

·' .
j

...- - - - - - - - - - •

All posts set in concrete. ·
Quick installa1ions or Do-lfYourst:!lf.

more

runs before Moose was lifted
. and reliever Jim Rooker came
on to retire the side.
The Mets added tllree more
runs in the ninth when Garrett
hit a solo home run and Millan
scored on Jones' double after
getting aboard on an error.
Jones later scored !rorr. second
on a fielding error by Davalillo .

•,.

over the

,·

'

.

880 Yard Relay ~ Won by KC
RIO . GRANDE , Kyger Piriiles . Capturing first place TaDor , KC and Lusher , HT. tie .
19' 10".
in 1. 40.&lt;1 ; North Gall ia, second ,
Creek,' trailing by two points events for KC were Joe
High Jump - T. Hopp, KC; Hannan Trace, th ird .
Tony
Hopp , Robinson . NG; Stidham , KC ;
440 Yard Dash - Logan, NG;
goin g into the final event, Stidham ,
Sm
ith , E ; Hopp , KC ; Waller ,
Lusher
.
HT
and
Atherl
on,
E.
ca ptured the mile relay here Lawrence Tabor, Mike Rife, 5' 10".
KC and Norri s, NG . :52 .8.
Friday evening to edge North Chris Haye and the Bobcat ·
Discus Dewilt , NG ; S 180 Yard Low Hurdles m ith, NG; Tabor, KC ; Slout,
Cre
mean
s,
KC
;
Rob inson, NG ;
mile
relay
and
800
yard
relay
1
Gallia , 95 k-94 in the Annual
· Curr y, KC and S. Reeds, E. NG ; Fr ench. KC ;Anderson , E.
Southern Valley Athletic teams.
124'4" .
: 23.3.
North Gallia won last year 's
Shot Put Dewitt, NG ;
880 Yard Run - M. Rile, KC ;
Conferen ce Trac~ Meet.
Cremeans,
KC
;
Runyon.
NG;
Payn
e, NG ;. New e ll. NG ;
meet.
The
meet
was
revived
in
Eastern finished third and
Lawhon , KC and ~. Reeds. E. Athe rt on. E ·and R. Hopp, KC. ·
Hannafi Trace came in fourth . 1972after being discontinued in
41 '5".
.2.09 .1,
2~0 Yard Dash - Log;:m, NG ;
Running Events
No other league schools were · the 1960s.
Sm tth , E ; Waller , KC; Me·
f
120
Yard
High
Hurdles
Norm Persin 1 Rio Grande
represented .
Tabor , KC ; Sm ith., NG.· Ca rty , KC and Miller , NG .
baseball
coach, served as meet · French, KC; Denney , NG and : 23.5 .
Coach Jim Arledge 's track
Two Mile Run - Haye, KC ;
Anderson, E. t 18 .6.
team captured eight firsts director .
100 Yard Dash - Logan , NG ; Harri s, E ; Garn.es, NG: D.
Here 's results o! the SVAC Sm ith , E ; Cu rry. KC ; Mc - Rife , KCand Smit h, E. 11 :22.3.
while Coach Bruce Gabriel's
Mile Relay .....:. Won by KC in
m
~e t :
Carty, KC and Miller , NG.
thinclads had seven firsts.
3.44 .9. North Gallia, second and
Field Events
10.55.
:
Carl Dewitt, Dan Miller,
Pole Vault ,- Stidham, KC ;
Mile Ru.n - M. Rife, KC ; Hannan Tra cC', ihird.
Overall scoring - KC 951;..,;
Sterling Logan , Ralph Smith,
Rob inSon, NG and George, NG. Atherton . E; Payne . NG;
Nor
th Gal lia , 94 ; Ea s tern , 26
8'
6".
"
McCo
y,
E
and
Howard
,
KC.
Gene Payne, George Garnes,
and Hannan Tra ce 71h .
Long Jump - Miller , NG ; 5 03.
and Bruce R~nyo·n paced the
Loqan , NG ; Waller . ·KC ;

another setback,' this time 11t

the hands of the visiting Logan

Come Mow U To•

SPRING.SPECIALS! .
,j;r·
FREE ·
~

equipment with new
Ford Lawn &amp; Garden
Tractor purchase now!
He re's a ,re.al convi nce r to buy now! Buy a new Ford La wn and
Garden Tractor or Rid er Mow er and. d epen ding o n model. get
a mower, dump cart o r grass ba g att achme nt FREE!. Come in ·
and we ' ll give you detai ls .

F

1

1

h

ree mp ements wit purchase of
any Ford Lawn &amp; Garden Tractor at
,

.

List Price.
Livihg Room,

Room, Dining Room
Den, 8 ft.
ceilings, built to F . H.A. spec· l.fl'catl' ons.
Come , in Today. If you are even
thinking of a new home this spring, it
will pay you to buy now. This home
m\.)St move now as we need the space
for a new displ'ay.

W
e'll

.
sell outright or trade. You
can Save a Bundle. (Only one at this
Discount Prl·ce).

c

07-~~

· MOBILE HOME SALES
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
UpperRt.711l PxtDoortoAutoAuclion
Phone 446-9340
Gallipolis. Ohio

·-------------------..-.1

Chieftain s. Final score in
Friday's outing was 3-1.
Once aga in the Marauders
outs lugged the ir opponents .

of lhe sixth inning, that made
the score 2-1 in favor of the
Chi eftains . Twice the Maroon
and Gold were in the position to
lie the score but iri each op.

portunity they got picked off
ba se .
hurled against Logan's Jim

Meigs ' five hits, a!I s in gles:

Kemper. Chaney pitched a

Floyd Burney and Dave Wolfe

three hitter but in that decisive
l.hird inning he walked two and
made two errors·. This enabled
Logan to go ahead . with an
extra run . Chaney fanned five
and issued six base. on balls .
In the seventh, sophomore
Perk AuH, making his second
appearance in as many games;
finished for lhe Marauders.
For Logan, Kemper struck
out nine and walked five.

accounted for the other s in gles.
· Logan scor ed three runs on
three hits, . one each by Kev

Barry, John Corby, and Ken
Culbertson. Logan moved into

fourth place in the SEO Lea gue
with a 3·3
mark.
c •

On Me1gs ' part .there were
too many mental and physical
e rr ors. When the Marauders

c rossed the plate in the bottom

HOUSTON (UP! ) -

Don

Wil~o n ,

the top right·hander on
the Houston Astros ' staff,
ce1ebrated Manage r Leo
·· Durocher's return Friday night
by stopping Cincinnati on three

hi ts as the Astros scored a 5·1
victory and moved two gaines

ahead of the Reds in the battle
for secOnd place in the National

League West.
Durocher had been absent
from his job since April 20
When he WaS

i
1

Equ1pment

251 WEST MAIN STREET
POMEROY OHIO

a

HI lead in tile bottom of the first inning. The Cadets held th e
lead until the tllird inning when tile Mets scored two of U1elr
seven runs . The final score was 7-1. Brerit is the son of Mr.
and Mrs . Mel Clark, West Columbia, W. Va.

GAHS golfers

victory would ·
~ win the ti tie

trip Wellston

·outright .

Games tentatively scheduled

WELLSTON
Gallia
Monday, May 14 - Athens at · Academy High Sehoul's golf

Meigs, varsity .

Tuesday , May 15 - Wahama

defeating host Wellston 162-169

Wednesday , May IG Gallipolis at Meigs ( 2),

on the

Friday, May 18 - Meigs at
Kyger Creek, varsity.
Meigs
000 001 0...1 5 4

Logan
002 000 1- 3 3 0
Chaney (LP J, Ault ( 7th ) a nd
Ash. Kemper and Corby.

Dun can (3rdl. K.ennedy (1st)..
Ba lt imore 020 010 ooo- 3 4 0
New York
000 000 000- 0 3 2
Pa lme r (3·2) and Hendr ic ks;
Kline (2-4) ·and Mun son . HR Hendri cks (1s t) .

Phil a
ooo 003 ooo- J 6 o
Chic a 9 o ·- 030 001 OOx- 4 8 o
Chnslenson. Brett (2), Scarce
(7) and Boone ; Pappa s, Loc ker Oak land
11 1 100 000- 4 9 0
(6) , Aker (9) and Hvndley . WP Tex as
200 000 too---- 3 4 0
- Locker (3. 1) . LP- Brelt {0 1).
Blue, Fingers (7) and Fosse;
HRs- Luz ins ki (1), Hundl ey Hand , Stanhouse
{3)
and
13) .
Su are z, Stelmaszek (8) . WP13 II. LP- Ha11d (2 ·21. HR.New York
200010100- 4 92 Harri s (1s t) .

Pillsbgh

101

Also)

• CABINn DOOR HINGES
• WATER &amp; SEWER LINE FITTINGS
• FURNACE PARTS - Complete Line for
Major Brands

• FURNACE FAR SWITCH MOTOR-TO COMPLETE l
REPLACEMENT PARTS
• AWNINGS &amp; SKIRTS
• AIR CONDITIONERS
• SMALLEST REPLACEMENT ITEMS
To Storm W indow Clips- and A ...

VARIETY OF MOBILE HOMES

ooo 1oo- 3 10 3

Park er. McGraw (7) and Milw
100 110 011 -. 5 10 2
Gr ote. Dyer (7) ; Ellis. Her . Detroit
21 0 120 OO~e- 6 9 3
nandez (7), Giust i (9) and May . · Bell, Short ( 5) and Fe lske;
WP- Park er (3-0). LP- EIIis (J. Lolic h (2.4) and Freeha n. LPJ) . HR - Oilver ( 7lh ).
Be ll (3.JJ . HR~Sco tl (41hl .
Mon treal
000 000 000---0 4 1 Minn
St. Loui s
410 :ZOO l 4x - 12 15 1 Kan Ci ty
Blyleven ,
. Torrez. Walker t2J , Gi lbert
(5), Strohmpyer (8) and Boc · Roof; Dal
cabella , Humphrey (5): Foster Tayl or . LP(1 .3) and Simmon.s . LP- Tor r ez ·--Ma yberry
(3 &lt;I ,

000 002 0~ 2 10 0
100 320 OO x- 6 9 1
Corbin (5) and
Canton (2 - l) and
Siyle ven (2-6) . HR
(9th }.

Chicago
500 000 200- 7 15 1
Cincinnati
000 001 000- 1 3 2 Cali forni a
000 102 100- 4 6 o
Hous lon
030 010 lOx- 5 ll 0
Bahnsen. Fors ter (9) a nd
Nel son, Sprague (5) , Borbon Brinkman; Ryan, Perranoski
1n and Bench,; Wil son 13·31 (6) and Torborg, Stephenson
and Edwards. LP- Ne lson (2 · (B) . WP- Bahnsen 15-21. LP1) . HR ~ May (3,d).
Ryan (4,)) .
Los Ang
000 00( 010- 3 7 0
San Fran
000 000 02()-.c.' 2 6 l
Down ing , Ri c hert (8) , Brewer
(8) and Ferguson ; Mari chal ,
Sosa {9) and Rader . WPDoW nin g (4-1) . LP- Mari chat

14·31 .
Amencan League
Cleveland
110 000 ooo- 2 4 1
Bos jon
021 OOO.Ol x- 4 70
Slrom (1 -J ) and Dun can ;
Tianl (4·3) and F isk . HRs-

SO KEEP IT IN GOOD ORDER!
We Stock PART S &amp; ACCESSO RI ES:
• HITCHE S • MIRROR S • SE WER HOSES
• JA CKS • BATTERY CHARGER S • BRAKE
CONT ROLS , Etc.

DITTO FOR CAMPERS
SEE OUR TAURUS &amp;. TERRY
TRAILERS

AHf- P1ayoff Standings
By Uniled Press International
IFinalsJ
( B~st of Seven)
w. I. gf ·ga
Cincinnati
3 1 19 14
Nova Scotia
1 J 14 19
Friday's Result
Nova· Scotia 5 Cincinna li 2

Something New Has Been Added
AT CARTER &amp; EVANS INC.

team warmed up ror this
week's Dis trict Toui'n&lt;:tment by

at Meigs, varsity .

Reserves .
Thurs day, .May 17
Wellston at Meigs, varsity.

Major League Results
By -United Press International
National League
San Diego al Attanfa , ppd , rain

• WATER HEATERS
ELEMENTS
THERMOSTATS Assorted Bra nds
• DOOR LOCKS (Stocked for Older Models

LIFEGUAR

Fairgreen~ Oou~try

Club course Friday evening.
Coach John Milhoan's Blue
Devils are now 23-4·1 in 18
matches this s pring .

DELUXE .024 GAUGE
, 8" HORilONAL.

Monday, GAHS will play
Logan -Ne Isonville-York at
Log an. Tuesday, Wellston will
visit Gallipolis. The Distric t
Tournament will be held at
Ch illicothe Saturday. Ironton is
defending district champion.

Aluminum
Siding

Topper Orr's one..ovcr~par 36
led the ·slue Devils victory over
Wells \on Friday . . ·Ken New,

Wilson 's shutout bid .

Lee May provided Wilson
with all the offensive s upport
he needed when he hit a tworun homer in the sec ond inning .
Cesar Cedeno also drove in two
·runs with a pair of sing.les.

J ohn Saunders each had ·a 41 .
Dow Saunders .had .a 44 and
~ack Clark 45.
Tom Appledorn had a 37 for
Wellston . Dan Scott fired a 41.
Dave Scott 45, Eric Colley 46

ed $750,000, the club an~oW1ced

five innings befofe Joe Morgan

Fr 1'd ay . .
The 6-foot-3 Piston captain, a

broke the spell with a grountlrule double as the leadofi

seven-year veteran of ·the club,
is the all·tim.e club leader in

batter in the ~ixth . Morgan
even,tually score:d on a single

every categor~ but rebounds .

by J ohnny

Bench

to spoil

For airline reservations around the corner ...
or around the world .. .

and Enon Plummer 50.

"For That Personai &amp; Professional Touch"
FEATURING

•24 New AMF Lanes
• Snack Bar and ·
captain's loUnJ[e

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PROFESSIONAL BALL FITTING,
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STRUCTION AVAILABLE

PHONE
SPECIAL RATES TO: AAC3362
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PART.tES, STUDENTS.

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SERVICE
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• DUPONT LUCITE·
BAKED ENAMEL FINISH

SKYLINE LANE
d PRO•SHOP
Qn
.

Specializing m AMF &amp;
Columbia Bowling Balls.

'

V-GROOVE · INTERLOCKING
SOFFIT &amp; CEILINGS

hospitalize;dd~UW~I~·t_ h~~ ,-~~~~-~~~~~~~~~:-:-::.~~
S

_ _ ~~S.YEAR-€0~'FR-Ae1'' ~-~--an - intesti nal-infection; ll
DETROIT (UP! )_ AU-Star hi s absence the team was
Guard Dave Bing signed a ·new managed by Pres ton Gomez
tllree-year contract with ,tile and compiled a 13-3 record.
Detroit Pistons for an estimat· Wilson pitch~d no-hit oall for

Call446-0699

,-·Tractors

A Bulldog
enable AHS

Astros pound Reds 5-l

THIS SPECIAl. OFFER EXPIRES MAY 31, 1973.

BROWN'S
TRACTOR SALES

Monda y afternoon, Athens
travels to Meigs.

for this week are :

Mounds man Bill Chaney

Mick Ash collected three of

Model 50 Rider Mcwer .
$381
Grass Bag worth ~41.00 at no additional cost.

Model65 Electric Start Riding Mower.
$625
0
t
•
· ump ar worth &gt;49.50 at no additional cost.
Model70 Recoil Start Rider Mower.
$611
34" Mower worth $144 at no additional cost.
Model75 Electric Start Riding Mower .
$76 6
34" Mower worth $144 at no additional cost .
Model 100 Riding Tractor .
$1176
42" Mower worth $207 at no additional cost.
Model 120 Riding Tractor .
$1276
42" Mower worth s'2or at no .additional cost.
M d 11 5 R
o e 4
iding Tractor ..
. $1656
42" Mower worth $207 at no additional cost.

ARMY SECOND baseman Brent Clark, left, Is
congratulated by the New York Mets' Felix Millan at tile
annual Army-New York exhibition game at the U. S. Military
Academy ._A Third Classman (sophomore) , Clark became
tile first Cadet ever~ score against the Mets in the five-game

Friday's linese,ores

SVAC track, -fieJd 111eet

PARTS &amp; ACCESSORIES

Gal., 4 Gal., 5 Gal.

&lt;

series as his hOme run over the right field fence game Army

Kyger Creek captures

SYRACUSE - The Meigs
High diamond squad suffered

SA V/NGS LIKE THESE!

Foyer ·_

squad are left to right, first row , Greg Howard, Greg McCarty, Orland Cremeans, George Curry and Marshall
French. Second row, Coach Jim Arledge, Mark Waller, John
Rumley , Tony Hopp, Jeff. Icard, Marc Lawhon, Lawrence
Tabor , Rusty Hopp, Olris Hays, Mike Rife and Bob Donnett.

Logan "back in fourth
a er 3,..1 league Win

REDU.CED

24x44 .

KC WINS SVAC MEET - Kyger Creek captured the
Annual Southern Valley Atllletic Conferepce Track Meet
Friday evening at Rio Grande College by edging a rugged
Nortll Gallia team , 95 \'z to 94. Eastern and Hannan Trace
were the other league participants. Members of the Bobcat

... but yrJu always need

WE'RE "FIRSTEST" WITH THE "MOSTEST"
• ROOF COATING PAINTS I Gol' , 2 Gal ., 3

I

·

Monday's Games
Philade lphia at St. Louis
(night)
Montreal at Pittsburgh (ni ght)
New York af Chicago
Atlanta at Houston (night)
San Francisco at San Diego .
(night)
t0n1ygamessched ul edl

~~gbasesafu~~Viconathr~ingerr~~~=se:c:oo:d~~·~C~H~IC~A~
G~O~~(~UfP~I~li·~~s~tic~k
~ -Davalillo via a sixth inning basemanDaveLopesSatutday
the ~in~g~b~y~h~isjd~e~c~'•Jo~n~~~e!n~~=ri~~R~o~o~m~,~b~e~a~u~ti~f~uii~K~it~c~h~e~n,,~U~t~i~l~~~~~t-~M~o~d~efi60RecoiiSta~di~~ec
,
p Cart worth $49.50 at no additional cost.

1-~-~+·-_;•llll;~;,·,;.viflii;ost;iff.ir,;iiffife--~:-gjve~tre-p.~
'

tem-

Pl'ITSBURGH(UPI)-Tom ·
Seaver hurled a two,flit shutout
Saturday to give the New York
Mets a ~ victory over the
Pittsburgh Pirall!s.
Seaver retired the first eight

'

tiays

••}

Art Pollard killed in fiery Indy 500 crash

."All New AMF Equipment"
Upper Rt. 7 Kanauga, unlo

REMEMBER THE

LIFEGIJARD

.NAME ...

-

We have In stock also
Backer board and all the
accessories needed_ to install this great aluminum
siding. See It soonl

CARTER &amp; EVANS INC.
85 Olive St.

(Cash &amp; Carry)

Gallipolis, Ohio

�'

l:l-1'hf'.SundavTimes.Sentinei . Srnvt~v M=-vl1

12-The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, May 13, 1973

Council approves hunting, trapping regulations
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Wlldli!e Council said it
renewed some hunting regulations which were to expire and
apjlroved new rules !or tile
1973-H state hunting and
trapping seasons.
Rules for the coming season
would :
- Prohibit an employe of a
licensed commercial fisher man, or an individual fisherman, possessing walleye while
on or .'~turning from Lake Erie

•

•
•

1

or its tributaries, except when
permitted by the chief of U1e
division of wildlire.
- Require a trapper to check
his traps at least every 30
hours. Regular sll!el traps set
on land with jaw spreads
greater than six and one-half
inches are prohibited. Also
prohibited are sp ring steel wire
tra!i;'witll jaw spreads greater
than !our and one-half inches
on a side i! square and. If,

three-&lt;juarter
inches
in
diameter. Regular steel traps
set in water are prohibited if
tlley have a jaw spread greater
tllanseven and one-half inches,
as are waterset spring steel
traps with jaw spreads larger
tllan 10 inches on a side if
squ are and 12 i,nches in
diameter if round . Traps with
steel jaws are prohibited.
- Prohibit trapping witllin
400 feet of a state park lodge,

round. not larger than six and

ca bin, cam pground, beach ,

_ Prohibit all huhting except
deer and waterfowl hunting
during deer gWJ season in
counties having such a season.
_ Prohibit deer bow hunting
on Kelleys Island .
_ Prohibit deer gun hunll!rs
using a combination shotgun
rifle-type weapon from possessing rifle type amunition.
_ Make available a limited
number or anterless deer permit s . for
hunting
in
Muskingum, MorP~n . Athens,

•

tcn1

NEW MANAGER
KENNEWICK , Wa sh. (UP! J
- Mike Cloutier, 31, was
named Friday as playing
manager of the Tri.City Imperials of the Class A
Northwest Baseball

•

Washington. Hocking, Vinton,
Jackson, Meigs, Paulding and
Henry counties.
- Open the Mercer County
Goose Management Area to
waterfowl hunters on a firstcome, fir.t-&lt;&gt;erved basis during
the first week of tile season because of the unique managemen! situation in that a rea.
- Set forth tile areas for dog
field trials . Trials may be condueled
at
Delaware,

Grand River, Pleasant Valley,
lhdian Creek, Rush Run and
Fallsville wildlife areas, plus
·Berlin Reservoir , Perry
Reclamation Area , Zaleski
State Forest, Delaware State
Park and Stonelick State Park.
- Allow migratory bird
hunting from Opening time
until noon Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday
during 111e waterfoWl season at
Grand River, Delaware and

- Allow the sale of legally
acquired opossum carcas'ses
and squirrel tails.
- Define longbow to mean a
hand-held and handdrawn
weapon which propels an arrow, is held in a drawn position
and triggered by hand without
tile aid of any device having
movable parts.
- Permit goose hunting west
of Ottawa National Wildlife
Refuge in Lucas and Ottawa

closed tn hunting . The area
opened for hunting includes
Metzger Marsh Public Hunting
Area.
- Prohibit persons in parked
vehicles from using artificial
light to spot wildlife whle having hunting weapons in the vehicle.
•
Prohibit groundhog
hunting on the Ohio Power Co.
Recreational Area in Morgan, ·'
Muskingum and Noble coon-

Res thavr:n , Killdeer Plains ,

Big Island WHdJlfe areas.

counties in an area previously

ties.

...

\

Cloutier ctJTrently is promotion and sales manage r for tile

Salt Lake City Angels of tile
Pacific Coast L•a~uc. In addition to Cloutier, the Angels
have promised the Imperials

!pur players.

.

wildlife dis pla v or m1tnrP trnil

Ohio's 1973-74 hunting,
,,

trapping- :dates approved

,.

INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UP! )
COLUMBUS (UPII - The trom Feb. 1, 1974, to 6 p.m . on ·- Veteran Art Pollard, at 46
OhiQ W il dl ife Counc il has ap. Feb. 15, 1974, in .Ash tabula , tile oldest driver in the field,
proved dates for the 1973 - 74 Athens . Belmont. Carroll. Col- crashed to a fi ery death in a

''

hunting and trapping seasons.
The council set hunting and

"

trapping season dates , includ ·

.·

in~QUIRREL:

•.

The season ·will
open Sept. 7 and will continue
through Nov . 10, 1973 on pri ·
vate land . Public hunting will
beg in Sept. 7 and co ntinu e
through Dec. 22, 1973. Hunting
will be permitted from daylight
to dark with a da ily bag limit
of four and, after .the first da y,
a possession timit of eight.

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PHEASANT AND CHUKAR

RACOON AND DPPOSUM :
The season wil l be fr offi Nov . 1,
1973, through Jan . 31, 1974. The
da ily bag lim it for racoon taken
by huntinCI is four w ith huntin9
hour s fr om 6 p.m . to 6 a .m .
WILD TURKEY : Th e seaSon
wiII be from May 1 through
Ma,y 4, 1974, and from Ma y a
through May 11, 1974 . Hun t ing
hours wilt be 6 a .m . to 11 p.m .
with a daily bag and posses.
sion limit of one . Th e sea son
will be in Adams, Gall ia , Hock ing. Ja ckson, OaWren ce, Mei gs,
Monroe , Per ry , Pike, Ross. Sci ·
o to, Vint o n and Wa shing ton
counties .
DEER ;: The season in Zones
1 and 3 will be from Nov . 26
through Nov. 30, 1973; in Zone
2 from Nov . 26 .t hroug h .Nov.
28, 1973 ; and in Zone 4 from
Nov .. 26 through Dec. 1. 1973.
Hour s will be 7:30 a .m. . to 5

PARTRIDGE : The season will
be Nov . 15, 1973 throu gh i)ec.
a. 1973. and Dec. 24, 1973
th ro ugh Jan . 1, 1974, on private.
land. Public hunt ing will begin
Nov. 15 and continue through
Jan . 26, 1974. Hunting hours
wll l be 9 a .m . to 5 p.m ., with
a daily bag limit of two pheasant and two chukar and a pos'Session lim it, after the first day ,
of fou r each. The hen pheasant
zone where either cOcks or hens·
may be taken, is Nov . 15, 1973,
through Jan . 26 , 19'74. The daily~
bag limi t is two cocks or hens
and, after the first day , a posSession limit of four cocks or
hens .
p .m ,
RUFFED GROUSE: The sea Th ere will be no deer gun
son will be Oct. 12, 1973, through season in Zone 5, which also
Feb. 23, 1974. Hunting'' will be now includes Erie , Sandusky,
permitted from daylight to dark Ottawa , Wood, Lorain, Cuyahoga
with a daily bag limit pt three and Med ina counti es , as well
and, after the fir st day, a pos - a s Lucas County, east of th e
session limit of six.
Maumee River .
QUAIL: The season will be
DEER LONGBOW SEASON :
from Nov . 15, 1973, through The sea son wi II be from Oct. 12,
Jan. 26, 1974. Hunting hours will 1973, through Jan . 5, 1974. It
be 9 a .m . to 5 p.m . with a daily will be closed during the deer
bag lim it o1 six and a posses- gun season in counties hav ing
- sia:n limit. after the first day , s~;~c h a season.
of 12.
RAVENNA ARSENAL DEER
RABBIT : The season will open HUNT: The arc hery season will ,
from Nov . 15. 1973, through Jan . be Oct. 13. 20 and 27 and Nov .
26, 1974. Hunting hours wil l be 3 and 10 , 1973. The gUn season
9 a .m. to 5 p.m. with a bag lim - will be Dece mber 8 and 15, 1973.
it of four and a possession lini PRIMITIVE WEAPONS : The
it, after the first day , of eight. primitive weapons hunt w'ill be
Rabbit hunting will be proh ibit- Oct . 29 , 1973, through Nov . 3,
ed oh the Urbana Wildlif,e Area . 1973.
TRAPPING: The trapping
YOUNG HUNTER SPECIAL
season will be from Nov . 15, SEASON: The season will be
1973, through Feb . 15, 1974, and Nov. 3, 1973 and No v. 10, 1973
.extend through April l, 1974 in on Delaware, Grand River, Rest
Lucas County east of the Mau· Hav en, Spring Valley , Spen mee River, and in Ottawa , cer and Woodbury public huntSandusky and Erie counties .
ing a reas.
The beaver season will be

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um biana . Coshocton, Gallia,
Guernsey , Geau ga , Harr ison,
Hocking, Holmes, Jackson , Jef ferson , Lake , Mahoning , Mon roe , Morga n .Muskingum , Noble,
Per"'y, Portage , Stark , Trumbull ,
Tuscarawas, Vinton, and Wash ·
ington counties.

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•

Crampton has 3-stroke
advantage in Colonial
FORT WORTH, Tex. (UP!)
-

Blitzing Bruce Crampton,

six shots in front of the field af requiring only 31 strokes and
one point, cooled of£ over the building a six-shot lead.
back nine Saturday to ·shoot a
But Crampton slumped on
one-under 69 and salvage a ·the incoming ·nine as his string

three-stroke lead over L!ee
Elder and Tom Weiskopf with
one roWJd to play in , the

of 129 holes without a three-put
green was broken when he took
three to get down from the

Colonial Invitation .
·
front edge of the 16th ,
Crampton, winner of three
Despite Crampton 1s siege,
tournamen IS this year, the the cou~:se allowed only six
toUr's leading money winner - golfers to s hoot under.par
and only $55,000 silort of 1 figures for three rounds .

million, shot his tenth straight
round of par golf or 'better in
quest or his second straight
triumph.
He destroyed the front nine

,

of the testy 7,142-yard, par-10
Colonial Co~ntry Club course ,

Elder fired a 69 Saturday to
sl&lt;!nd at tllree-under 207 and
Weiskopf shot a 70 for a 207 .
Tied for fourth were Mason

Rudolph, Lou Graham and
Jerry Heard . Heard shot a 70,

Mets blank

a

Graham 71 and Rudolph a 67,
the bes t round of the day,
which turned cool after . two

•••
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.

.

Pirates 6-0

ba
·,
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of

90-deg ree

peratures .

tiers before . giving up a
smgle to losing pitcher Bob
Moose. The only other Pirates

BONDS STAR
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI J Bobby Bonds, who made two
spectacular plays in the fiel.d,
d bl d d o d th
·, nn' ,· ng
ou e an sc re
ew
run in the bottom of the 'ninth

•
•

seventh inning triple off tile
center field wall provided the
only Pirate tllreat.
The Mets scored one run in
the first inning when Wayne
Garrettsingled , movedtothird
on Felix Millan's single and
scored when Cleon Jones hit
into a double play.
IntheMets eighth,singlesby
Jones, Rusty Staub and Ed
Kranepool and a dou ble by Jim .
Gosger produced two

•'

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practice run Saturday as
qualifications opened for the
Memorial Day "500" auto race .

Pollard , a grandfather from
Medford, Ore., died in
Meth odist Hospital sli ghtly
more than an hour after his
brand·n e w machin e hurtl e d

into the wall in tile short south
chute of the track, burst into
flames i;ind became airborne.

He wa s lifted from his

demolished car, a new Dan

Gurney Eagle, and died of
flam e

inhalation and other

injllri~s .

It was the fir st death at tile
famed speedway since last
year when Jim Malloy of
Denver injured fatally in a
practice accident.
Less than three hours later
David "Swede" SaVage ·, a
"500" sophomore pilot from
Santa Ana, Calif., electrified

th e hu ge throng of an
estimated 250,000 by hurling
his fire engine Red Eagle

Indians rap
Bosox, 10-2
BOSTON (UP! ) - Buddy
8ell and Charlie Spikes paced
an 18-hit attack with seven hil'i
between them Saturday afternoon as the Cleveland In-

dians rapped the Boston Red
Sox 10-2 behind Gaylord
Perry 's six-hit pitching.
Bell opened the garne ·with a
homer into. the cen ter fi eld
bleacners and s tarted a s tring
of four singles that gave the
Indian s two runs in the sixth
innii1g. He also singled in the
fourth and ninth and scored
three times while going four for -five at the plate.

Spikes tagged a triple to
cente r to drive in George
Hendrick as the Indian s
s napped a 2~2 tie with three
run s in the fifth inning. He
scored on a sacr ifice fly by

around the 2111, mile oval at an
average speed or 197.152 miles
per hour on his first lap, He
completed his 10-mile run at a
speed of 196.582, shattering the
1972 records by Bobby Unser of
196.678 and 195.940, for one and
four laps respectively.
Savage,
th e
swiftest
chauffeur in two weeks of
practice, placed next to last in
his " 500" debut last year,

lasting just fiv e laps to be
awarded 32nd place. He was
the lOth qualifier on the first of
four days of time trials to
complet e the 33-&lt;:ar lineup for
the million-dollar Memorial

Day event.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. ( UP I ) -

run homer to left for the In.

George McGinnis fired in 13

dians in the cightlo inning .

points in the third quarter as

hit.

McGinnis, the game's hlgh

The la s t Cleveland run carne
in the ninth when Rusty Torres

scorer with 27 points, was
named the most valuable

slapped a long double to score

player in the championship

Bell.

series.

The Red Sox go t their first
run without a hit ,in the first
inning . Tommy Harper and
Luis Apa ricio drew walks fr om

Kentucky, after

trailing

most of the first half, .went
aheqd of Indiana three times

M AJOR

Gaylord Perry and both men ·
advanced on a wild pitch . .

""

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LEAGUE

Ecole Ema.e
Sth J -t;nl'te
1

«ej a.

joined

by

for Preakness

teammate Ken Rudolph for
hitting honors. Rudolph's oneBALTIMORE, Md. ( UP!) out double in the fourth inning
se nt 'Jose Cardena l, who had Ecole El&lt;l ge from the Bon
. walked, to third. Kessinger El&lt;lge Sl&lt;!ble of Harry and
then lin~d a hit to rightfield, · Robert Meyerhoff of Baltimore
scoring both runners.

was added to the field of the

Rudolph's first hom er of the
year in the bottom or the eighth

98th running of the Preakness
Stakes Sa turda )l when he

off reliever Billy Wilson gave

sc ored an impressive victory in
the I and !-16th miles of the

the Cubs ari insurance run .
The Phillies gave sta rter and
loser Wayne Twitchell, 0-1, a I ·
·o lead in the first inning after
BUCKS LOSE PAIR

Unser and Mario Andretti, and
suc h other veterans as Lloyd
Luby, Peter Revson, Garry
Bet4enhausep , Jerry Grant,
Bill Vukovich, Gordon . John·
cock, Mike Mosley and Mel
Kenyon .
Pollard, who became 46 just
a week ago and whose best
finish at Indianapolis in prior
appearances was eighth in
1967, was clocked at a speed of
191.4 just before his fatal crash.
Witnesses said he apparently

grass, beca m e airborne, and

flipped several times end over the car crashed, eliminating
end and sideways, ending right him from tile lineup . His place
side up in the southeast turn . was then taken by Wally
Pollard was taken from the Dallenbach, who sta rted in last
cockpit and rushed to th e in- .Place .
field hospital and then to the ' Pollard launched his racing
downtown hospital where he .car eer in Oregon in 1955 in
died.
·
stock car competition and won
· Thoma s
Hanna ,
the th e northwest title for. super-

simply " lost it/ ' the car

crashing into the outside
retaining wall with the right

Preakness Prep at Pimlico
Race Course Saturday .
' Although Torsion ran fifth in
the six-horse' field , tr .. ,· ner
"
J ohnny Campo said he was

speedway's medical director,

modifi ed

said besides flame inhalation
tllat seared Pollard's lungs, he
suffered face, hand and neck
burns and a broken right arm.
Last year the affable Pollard
qualified at a speed of 181.6 for

Milwaukee in 1965. His two
biggest victories under the
USAC banner came in 1969 in a
150-miler at Milwaukee and a
2QO.mile ,e vent at Dover; Del.

who fired in three three-point
!ield goa ls in the closing

early in the third quarter but
after Indiana took its fmallead
at 49-48, the Packers outscored
Kentucky 11-4 the rest of the
quarter for a 56-52 lead going
into the fourth quarll!r. The
closest Kentucky ~ou ld get
after that was the (ina! seven-

auto

r ace

at

Indiana , with Fred Lewis

points.

chipping in II and reserve
Roger Brown 10 for the win-

Kentucky took a brier one
point lead late in the half but
· lodiana went into the dressin g

ners.

During the disastrous tfiird
quartu, Kentucky hit only
three of 22 field goal attempts
for 13.6 pet. and scored only II
points.
Artis Gilmore led Kentucky
with 19 points and Rick Mount, ·

STANDINGS
Los Angeles at San

PD,i nts to.support McGinnis for

game-high 17 rebounds.
Indiana jumped out to a
quick 7-0 lead and maintained
that mar gin much of the first
half witll their largest lead nine

se:conds, had 16,
Donnie F.reeman had 15

Cleveland got another run in the Indiana Pacers broke away
the second when Dun ca n got on from the 'cold ...shooting Kenthro ugh an error , went to · tucky Colonels to win their
second on an infield single , third American BasketbaJI
took third on a groundout and Assoda tion champions hip in
scored on Tom Rag land 's ba se the last fqur years.
. point margin .

Chicago C.u hs
.edge Phils· 3-l

the first inning.
Kessinger was

were former race wiMers AI

the "500" , but lost a wheel in
"practice a few days later and
sustained ,a broken leg when

Pacers win second ABA title ·in row

Harper sco r ed
on Carl · .- National League Standings
By United Press International
Ya s trzemski 's infield ou t.
!Twiligh1 and nigbt games not
Desig nated. hjtter Hegg ie inc luded)
East
Smith tagged a hom e run down
W. L. Pet. GB
J ohn Ellis and Frank Duffy the rig ht field line for the Red
Chicag o
18 13 .581 '
singled hom e R on Loli c h . Sox in the fourth .
New York
16 14 .533 Ph
befm·e the inning was out.
12 13 , 480 3
P err y 1 wh o escaped some Pitts burgh
12 14 .462 J'h
Spikes a lso had singles in the .. e~1dy wildness, pick ed up his Monlreal
Philad e lphia 11 17 .407 5112
third a nd sixth innings while fifth vi c tory again s t four St. Louis
7 21 .250 911'2,
West
goin g three-fo r~five .
losses,. John Curtis, now 1-3,
W. L. Pet. GB
Dave Duncan clubbed a two· look th e loss .
San Francisco 25 11 .694
Houst on
21 11 .656 2
Ci ncinnati
18 12 .600 4
18 15 .545 511'2
Los Ange les
Atla nta 10 18 .357 11
San Diego
11 20 .355 ll lf2
Saturday's Results
New York 6 Pittsburgh 0
Chicago 3 Philadelphia 1
San Francisco 5 Los Angeles 4
San Diego al Allan fa (twilight)
Montreal at St. Lou is (night)_
CHICAGO (UP! ) - Don Cesar Tovar got . hit by a Ci ncinnat i at HOuston ' (n ight)
Sunday's Games
Kessingei' 'S tw Q..run single in Reu schel fas tball. Tovar stole
tAll Times EDT)
the bottoril. ohhe fourth inning second and went to third whe n New York at Pi1tsburgh (1 :35
prov ided Rick Reu schel with Rudolph 's throw went into p.m J
Philad el phia a t Chicago, 2
all the help he needed as the ce nterfield . Tovar scored on (1 :30 p.m . )
Chi cago ri ghthander beat the Willie Montan ez's infield Montrea l at St . Loui s (2 : 15
p.m . )
Philadelphia Phillies 3-1 on a gr ounder .
San Diego at Atlan.ta, 2 (1 :35
five-hitter .
p .m . )
Ci ncinnati at Houston (3 p.m .)
Reuschcl, 3-2, walked three
and s truck out three a nd was
~. ·

l&lt;!gged for an unearned run in

front side and bursting into
flames. It tben spun into the

Among the · other qualifiers

Kentucky shot a cold 38 pet.
from the field , managing .to
convert only 30 of 79 shots.
Indiana hit on only 41.6 pet. (32
of 77 ) of its field goal attempt$.
The

Pacers

won

the

rootn at halftime with a.42-41
lead on a laYUp by Brown.
The l.e ad changed hand s six
tim es at th e start of the second
half before Indian a went &lt;;&gt;n its

17-4 spree.

The wjn was Indiana 's third

rebounding battle , 55-47 with
Darnell Hillman topping the

at Louisville's Freedom Hall in ·

winners with 13. Gilmore had a

tl)e seven game series.

Fran~isco

(3: 15 p .m .)

American League
East
w. f. pet. g.b.
Detr oi f
14 15 .483
Baltimore
13 14 .481
Milwaukee
12 14 .462
'h
Boston
lh,
12 14 .462
New York
12 15 .444 I
Cleveland
13 •17 .433 1'h
West
w. I. pet. g.b.
Chicago
iB 6 .7&gt;0
· Kansa s Ci ty
19 11 .633 2
Oakland
16 14 .533 5
Californ ia
13 13 .500 6
Minnesota
11 13 .458 611'2
Texas
9 16 .360 9
Friday's Results
Boston 4 Cleveland 2
Baltimore 3 New York 0
Detroit 6 Milwaukee 5
Kan City 6 Minnesota 2
Oakland 4 Texas 3
Chicago 7 California 4

IT'S TIME TO MOVE OUR •·
KIT SECTIONAL HOME DISPLAY

vic tori es from Ohio State
oppose
Secretariat and Sham, who ran
Friday9-6and!0-3,movedinto
.
h
Los Angeles Dodgers. Ed second place in the Big Ten. · one-lwo In t e Kentucky
GoOdson's sacrifice fly in the
Derby.
seventh scored Bonds, whoha:d .. ,.._ _ ,
-~singled and stolen tllird, , with
CHAIN LINK FENCE FOR:
the tying run. It was on
Home . Playg,ounds
Goodson 's smash wide of iirst
Store - lndu st'y
that Lopes threw the b~ll away ·
attempting to get" force at
~f~,v~oc~::~/igh, galvd. or
second with one out and the
bases loaded in the 9th .
9-11 -11'12 Gaug·e

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Too Big , none Too

TO MEET MAY 21
POMEROY - The Meigs
Pony League AssOciation will
meet Monday • May 2l at 7 p.m .

In Gallipolis Area 'Call " Uncle John" 446·1697

at Pomeroy City Hall at which
tn Jackson-Oak Hill Area Call (6141 i76 -2237
lime entry fe es will be acFENCED'IVISIONOF
ce pll!d and rules explained. All RAY HOUCK
C
managers are
to attend .. .__ _ _ _ _ _.,._.;.
' ---•P•o•r•t•s•m•o•u•t•h•,•O•h•io_..l

urg~d

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All posts set in concrete. ·
Quick installa1ions or Do-lfYourst:!lf.

more

runs before Moose was lifted
. and reliever Jim Rooker came
on to retire the side.
The Mets added tllree more
runs in the ninth when Garrett
hit a solo home run and Millan
scored on Jones' double after
getting aboard on an error.
Jones later scored !rorr. second
on a fielding error by Davalillo .

•,.

over the

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880 Yard Relay ~ Won by KC
RIO . GRANDE , Kyger Piriiles . Capturing first place TaDor , KC and Lusher , HT. tie .
19' 10".
in 1. 40.&lt;1 ; North Gall ia, second ,
Creek,' trailing by two points events for KC were Joe
High Jump - T. Hopp, KC; Hannan Trace, th ird .
Tony
Hopp , Robinson . NG; Stidham , KC ;
440 Yard Dash - Logan, NG;
goin g into the final event, Stidham ,
Sm
ith , E ; Hopp , KC ; Waller ,
Lusher
.
HT
and
Atherl
on,
E.
ca ptured the mile relay here Lawrence Tabor, Mike Rife, 5' 10".
KC and Norri s, NG . :52 .8.
Friday evening to edge North Chris Haye and the Bobcat ·
Discus Dewilt , NG ; S 180 Yard Low Hurdles m ith, NG; Tabor, KC ; Slout,
Cre
mean
s,
KC
;
Rob inson, NG ;
mile
relay
and
800
yard
relay
1
Gallia , 95 k-94 in the Annual
· Curr y, KC and S. Reeds, E. NG ; Fr ench. KC ;Anderson , E.
Southern Valley Athletic teams.
124'4" .
: 23.3.
North Gallia won last year 's
Shot Put Dewitt, NG ;
880 Yard Run - M. Rile, KC ;
Conferen ce Trac~ Meet.
Cremeans,
KC
;
Runyon.
NG;
Payn
e, NG ;. New e ll. NG ;
meet.
The
meet
was
revived
in
Eastern finished third and
Lawhon , KC and ~. Reeds. E. Athe rt on. E ·and R. Hopp, KC. ·
Hannafi Trace came in fourth . 1972after being discontinued in
41 '5".
.2.09 .1,
2~0 Yard Dash - Log;:m, NG ;
Running Events
No other league schools were · the 1960s.
Sm tth , E ; Waller , KC; Me·
f
120
Yard
High
Hurdles
Norm Persin 1 Rio Grande
represented .
Tabor , KC ; Sm ith., NG.· Ca rty , KC and Miller , NG .
baseball
coach, served as meet · French, KC; Denney , NG and : 23.5 .
Coach Jim Arledge 's track
Two Mile Run - Haye, KC ;
Anderson, E. t 18 .6.
team captured eight firsts director .
100 Yard Dash - Logan , NG ; Harri s, E ; Garn.es, NG: D.
Here 's results o! the SVAC Sm ith , E ; Cu rry. KC ; Mc - Rife , KCand Smit h, E. 11 :22.3.
while Coach Bruce Gabriel's
Mile Relay .....:. Won by KC in
m
~e t :
Carty, KC and Miller , NG.
thinclads had seven firsts.
3.44 .9. North Gallia, second and
Field Events
10.55.
:
Carl Dewitt, Dan Miller,
Pole Vault ,- Stidham, KC ;
Mile Ru.n - M. Rife, KC ; Hannan Tra cC', ihird.
Overall scoring - KC 951;..,;
Sterling Logan , Ralph Smith,
Rob inSon, NG and George, NG. Atherton . E; Payne . NG;
Nor
th Gal lia , 94 ; Ea s tern , 26
8'
6".
"
McCo
y,
E
and
Howard
,
KC.
Gene Payne, George Garnes,
and Hannan Tra ce 71h .
Long Jump - Miller , NG ; 5 03.
and Bruce R~nyo·n paced the
Loqan , NG ; Waller . ·KC ;

another setback,' this time 11t

the hands of the visiting Logan

Come Mow U To•

SPRING.SPECIALS! .
,j;r·
FREE ·
~

equipment with new
Ford Lawn &amp; Garden
Tractor purchase now!
He re's a ,re.al convi nce r to buy now! Buy a new Ford La wn and
Garden Tractor or Rid er Mow er and. d epen ding o n model. get
a mower, dump cart o r grass ba g att achme nt FREE!. Come in ·
and we ' ll give you detai ls .

F

1

1

h

ree mp ements wit purchase of
any Ford Lawn &amp; Garden Tractor at
,

.

List Price.
Livihg Room,

Room, Dining Room
Den, 8 ft.
ceilings, built to F . H.A. spec· l.fl'catl' ons.
Come , in Today. If you are even
thinking of a new home this spring, it
will pay you to buy now. This home
m\.)St move now as we need the space
for a new displ'ay.

W
e'll

.
sell outright or trade. You
can Save a Bundle. (Only one at this
Discount Prl·ce).

c

07-~~

· MOBILE HOME SALES
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
UpperRt.711l PxtDoortoAutoAuclion
Phone 446-9340
Gallipolis. Ohio

·-------------------..-.1

Chieftain s. Final score in
Friday's outing was 3-1.
Once aga in the Marauders
outs lugged the ir opponents .

of lhe sixth inning, that made
the score 2-1 in favor of the
Chi eftains . Twice the Maroon
and Gold were in the position to
lie the score but iri each op.

portunity they got picked off
ba se .
hurled against Logan's Jim

Meigs ' five hits, a!I s in gles:

Kemper. Chaney pitched a

Floyd Burney and Dave Wolfe

three hitter but in that decisive
l.hird inning he walked two and
made two errors·. This enabled
Logan to go ahead . with an
extra run . Chaney fanned five
and issued six base. on balls .
In the seventh, sophomore
Perk AuH, making his second
appearance in as many games;
finished for lhe Marauders.
For Logan, Kemper struck
out nine and walked five.

accounted for the other s in gles.
· Logan scor ed three runs on
three hits, . one each by Kev

Barry, John Corby, and Ken
Culbertson. Logan moved into

fourth place in the SEO Lea gue
with a 3·3
mark.
c •

On Me1gs ' part .there were
too many mental and physical
e rr ors. When the Marauders

c rossed the plate in the bottom

HOUSTON (UP! ) -

Don

Wil~o n ,

the top right·hander on
the Houston Astros ' staff,
ce1ebrated Manage r Leo
·· Durocher's return Friday night
by stopping Cincinnati on three

hi ts as the Astros scored a 5·1
victory and moved two gaines

ahead of the Reds in the battle
for secOnd place in the National

League West.
Durocher had been absent
from his job since April 20
When he WaS

i
1

Equ1pment

251 WEST MAIN STREET
POMEROY OHIO

a

HI lead in tile bottom of the first inning. The Cadets held th e
lead until the tllird inning when tile Mets scored two of U1elr
seven runs . The final score was 7-1. Brerit is the son of Mr.
and Mrs . Mel Clark, West Columbia, W. Va.

GAHS golfers

victory would ·
~ win the ti tie

trip Wellston

·outright .

Games tentatively scheduled

WELLSTON
Gallia
Monday, May 14 - Athens at · Academy High Sehoul's golf

Meigs, varsity .

Tuesday , May 15 - Wahama

defeating host Wellston 162-169

Wednesday , May IG Gallipolis at Meigs ( 2),

on the

Friday, May 18 - Meigs at
Kyger Creek, varsity.
Meigs
000 001 0...1 5 4

Logan
002 000 1- 3 3 0
Chaney (LP J, Ault ( 7th ) a nd
Ash. Kemper and Corby.

Dun can (3rdl. K.ennedy (1st)..
Ba lt imore 020 010 ooo- 3 4 0
New York
000 000 000- 0 3 2
Pa lme r (3·2) and Hendr ic ks;
Kline (2-4) ·and Mun son . HR Hendri cks (1s t) .

Phil a
ooo 003 ooo- J 6 o
Chic a 9 o ·- 030 001 OOx- 4 8 o
Chnslenson. Brett (2), Scarce
(7) and Boone ; Pappa s, Loc ker Oak land
11 1 100 000- 4 9 0
(6) , Aker (9) and Hvndley . WP Tex as
200 000 too---- 3 4 0
- Locker (3. 1) . LP- Brelt {0 1).
Blue, Fingers (7) and Fosse;
HRs- Luz ins ki (1), Hundl ey Hand , Stanhouse
{3)
and
13) .
Su are z, Stelmaszek (8) . WP13 II. LP- Ha11d (2 ·21. HR.New York
200010100- 4 92 Harri s (1s t) .

Pillsbgh

101

Also)

• CABINn DOOR HINGES
• WATER &amp; SEWER LINE FITTINGS
• FURNACE PARTS - Complete Line for
Major Brands

• FURNACE FAR SWITCH MOTOR-TO COMPLETE l
REPLACEMENT PARTS
• AWNINGS &amp; SKIRTS
• AIR CONDITIONERS
• SMALLEST REPLACEMENT ITEMS
To Storm W indow Clips- and A ...

VARIETY OF MOBILE HOMES

ooo 1oo- 3 10 3

Park er. McGraw (7) and Milw
100 110 011 -. 5 10 2
Gr ote. Dyer (7) ; Ellis. Her . Detroit
21 0 120 OO~e- 6 9 3
nandez (7), Giust i (9) and May . · Bell, Short ( 5) and Fe lske;
WP- Park er (3-0). LP- EIIis (J. Lolic h (2.4) and Freeha n. LPJ) . HR - Oilver ( 7lh ).
Be ll (3.JJ . HR~Sco tl (41hl .
Mon treal
000 000 000---0 4 1 Minn
St. Loui s
410 :ZOO l 4x - 12 15 1 Kan Ci ty
Blyleven ,
. Torrez. Walker t2J , Gi lbert
(5), Strohmpyer (8) and Boc · Roof; Dal
cabella , Humphrey (5): Foster Tayl or . LP(1 .3) and Simmon.s . LP- Tor r ez ·--Ma yberry
(3 &lt;I ,

000 002 0~ 2 10 0
100 320 OO x- 6 9 1
Corbin (5) and
Canton (2 - l) and
Siyle ven (2-6) . HR
(9th }.

Chicago
500 000 200- 7 15 1
Cincinnati
000 001 000- 1 3 2 Cali forni a
000 102 100- 4 6 o
Hous lon
030 010 lOx- 5 ll 0
Bahnsen. Fors ter (9) a nd
Nel son, Sprague (5) , Borbon Brinkman; Ryan, Perranoski
1n and Bench,; Wil son 13·31 (6) and Torborg, Stephenson
and Edwards. LP- Ne lson (2 · (B) . WP- Bahnsen 15-21. LP1) . HR ~ May (3,d).
Ryan (4,)) .
Los Ang
000 00( 010- 3 7 0
San Fran
000 000 02()-.c.' 2 6 l
Down ing , Ri c hert (8) , Brewer
(8) and Ferguson ; Mari chal ,
Sosa {9) and Rader . WPDoW nin g (4-1) . LP- Mari chat

14·31 .
Amencan League
Cleveland
110 000 ooo- 2 4 1
Bos jon
021 OOO.Ol x- 4 70
Slrom (1 -J ) and Dun can ;
Tianl (4·3) and F isk . HRs-

SO KEEP IT IN GOOD ORDER!
We Stock PART S &amp; ACCESSO RI ES:
• HITCHE S • MIRROR S • SE WER HOSES
• JA CKS • BATTERY CHARGER S • BRAKE
CONT ROLS , Etc.

DITTO FOR CAMPERS
SEE OUR TAURUS &amp;. TERRY
TRAILERS

AHf- P1ayoff Standings
By Uniled Press International
IFinalsJ
( B~st of Seven)
w. I. gf ·ga
Cincinnati
3 1 19 14
Nova Scotia
1 J 14 19
Friday's Result
Nova· Scotia 5 Cincinna li 2

Something New Has Been Added
AT CARTER &amp; EVANS INC.

team warmed up ror this
week's Dis trict Toui'n&lt;:tment by

at Meigs, varsity .

Reserves .
Thurs day, .May 17
Wellston at Meigs, varsity.

Major League Results
By -United Press International
National League
San Diego al Attanfa , ppd , rain

• WATER HEATERS
ELEMENTS
THERMOSTATS Assorted Bra nds
• DOOR LOCKS (Stocked for Older Models

LIFEGUAR

Fairgreen~ Oou~try

Club course Friday evening.
Coach John Milhoan's Blue
Devils are now 23-4·1 in 18
matches this s pring .

DELUXE .024 GAUGE
, 8" HORilONAL.

Monday, GAHS will play
Logan -Ne Isonville-York at
Log an. Tuesday, Wellston will
visit Gallipolis. The Distric t
Tournament will be held at
Ch illicothe Saturday. Ironton is
defending district champion.

Aluminum
Siding

Topper Orr's one..ovcr~par 36
led the ·slue Devils victory over
Wells \on Friday . . ·Ken New,

Wilson 's shutout bid .

Lee May provided Wilson
with all the offensive s upport
he needed when he hit a tworun homer in the sec ond inning .
Cesar Cedeno also drove in two
·runs with a pair of sing.les.

J ohn Saunders each had ·a 41 .
Dow Saunders .had .a 44 and
~ack Clark 45.
Tom Appledorn had a 37 for
Wellston . Dan Scott fired a 41.
Dave Scott 45, Eric Colley 46

ed $750,000, the club an~oW1ced

five innings befofe Joe Morgan

Fr 1'd ay . .
The 6-foot-3 Piston captain, a

broke the spell with a grountlrule double as the leadofi

seven-year veteran of ·the club,
is the all·tim.e club leader in

batter in the ~ixth . Morgan
even,tually score:d on a single

every categor~ but rebounds .

by J ohnny

Bench

to spoil

For airline reservations around the corner ...
or around the world .. .

and Enon Plummer 50.

"For That Personai &amp; Professional Touch"
FEATURING

•24 New AMF Lanes
• Snack Bar and ·
captain's loUnJ[e

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PROFESSIONAL BALL FITTING,
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DRILLING&amp; IN· ·
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STRUCTION AVAILABLE

PHONE
SPECIAL RATES TO: AAC3362
CHURCH GROUPS.
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PART.tES, STUDENTS.

'

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• DUPONT LUCITE·
BAKED ENAMEL FINISH

SKYLINE LANE
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Qn
.

Specializing m AMF &amp;
Columbia Bowling Balls.

'

V-GROOVE · INTERLOCKING
SOFFIT &amp; CEILINGS

hospitalize;dd~UW~I~·t_ h~~ ,-~~~~-~~~~~~~~~:-:-::.~~
S

_ _ ~~S.YEAR-€0~'FR-Ae1'' ~-~--an - intesti nal-infection; ll
DETROIT (UP! )_ AU-Star hi s absence the team was
Guard Dave Bing signed a ·new managed by Pres ton Gomez
tllree-year contract with ,tile and compiled a 13-3 record.
Detroit Pistons for an estimat· Wilson pitch~d no-hit oall for

Call446-0699

,-·Tractors

A Bulldog
enable AHS

Astros pound Reds 5-l

THIS SPECIAl. OFFER EXPIRES MAY 31, 1973.

BROWN'S
TRACTOR SALES

Monda y afternoon, Athens
travels to Meigs.

for this week are :

Mounds man Bill Chaney

Mick Ash collected three of

Model 50 Rider Mcwer .
$381
Grass Bag worth ~41.00 at no additional cost.

Model65 Electric Start Riding Mower.
$625
0
t
•
· ump ar worth &gt;49.50 at no additional cost.
Model70 Recoil Start Rider Mower.
$611
34" Mower worth $144 at no additional cost.
Model75 Electric Start Riding Mower .
$76 6
34" Mower worth $144 at no additional cost .
Model 100 Riding Tractor .
$1176
42" Mower worth $207 at no additional cost.
Model 120 Riding Tractor .
$1276
42" Mower worth s'2or at no .additional cost.
M d 11 5 R
o e 4
iding Tractor ..
. $1656
42" Mower worth $207 at no additional cost.

ARMY SECOND baseman Brent Clark, left, Is
congratulated by the New York Mets' Felix Millan at tile
annual Army-New York exhibition game at the U. S. Military
Academy ._A Third Classman (sophomore) , Clark became
tile first Cadet ever~ score against the Mets in the five-game

Friday's linese,ores

SVAC track, -fieJd 111eet

PARTS &amp; ACCESSORIES

Gal., 4 Gal., 5 Gal.

&lt;

series as his hOme run over the right field fence game Army

Kyger Creek captures

SYRACUSE - The Meigs
High diamond squad suffered

SA V/NGS LIKE THESE!

Foyer ·_

squad are left to right, first row , Greg Howard, Greg McCarty, Orland Cremeans, George Curry and Marshall
French. Second row, Coach Jim Arledge, Mark Waller, John
Rumley , Tony Hopp, Jeff. Icard, Marc Lawhon, Lawrence
Tabor , Rusty Hopp, Olris Hays, Mike Rife and Bob Donnett.

Logan "back in fourth
a er 3,..1 league Win

REDU.CED

24x44 .

KC WINS SVAC MEET - Kyger Creek captured the
Annual Southern Valley Atllletic Conferepce Track Meet
Friday evening at Rio Grande College by edging a rugged
Nortll Gallia team , 95 \'z to 94. Eastern and Hannan Trace
were the other league participants. Members of the Bobcat

... but yrJu always need

WE'RE "FIRSTEST" WITH THE "MOSTEST"
• ROOF COATING PAINTS I Gol' , 2 Gal ., 3

I

·

Monday's Games
Philade lphia at St. Louis
(night)
Montreal at Pittsburgh (ni ght)
New York af Chicago
Atlanta at Houston (night)
San Francisco at San Diego .
(night)
t0n1ygamessched ul edl

~~gbasesafu~~Viconathr~ingerr~~~=se:c:oo:d~~·~C~H~IC~A~
G~O~~(~UfP~I~li·~~s~tic~k
~ -Davalillo via a sixth inning basemanDaveLopesSatutday
the ~in~g~b~y~h~isjd~e~c~'•Jo~n~~~e!n~~=ri~~R~o~o~m~,~b~e~a~u~ti~f~uii~K~it~c~h~e~n,,~U~t~i~l~~~~~t-~M~o~d~efi60RecoiiSta~di~~ec
,
p Cart worth $49.50 at no additional cost.

1-~-~+·-_;•llll;~;,·,;.viflii;ost;iff.ir,;iiffife--~:-gjve~tre-p.~
'

tem-

Pl'ITSBURGH(UPI)-Tom ·
Seaver hurled a two,flit shutout
Saturday to give the New York
Mets a ~ victory over the
Pittsburgh Pirall!s.
Seaver retired the first eight

'

tiays

••}

Art Pollard killed in fiery Indy 500 crash

."All New AMF Equipment"
Upper Rt. 7 Kanauga, unlo

REMEMBER THE

LIFEGIJARD

.NAME ...

-

We have In stock also
Backer board and all the
accessories needed_ to install this great aluminum
siding. See It soonl

CARTER &amp; EVANS INC.
85 Olive St.

(Cash &amp; Carry)

Gallipolis, Ohio

�•
H - The Sunday Tunes. S.ntmel, Sunda). \Ia) 13, 1913
I

Big Blacks po~t
6-3 dia1nond win
By JACK ROGERS

De\. tis are 8-and-i

PT
PL EASANT Pt
Pleasant's Bog Bla cks defea ted
Coa ch
J 1m
·Osbo r ne s
de c omated Gal hp o h s Bl ue
De\' Jls, 6-3, at Ordnan ce f oeld
Fnd ay af ternoon vo~ th the
loca l s' Rand) War ner hurling
h1s stxth w1n of the- sea son.
But 1t wasn r a \ 1ctor: to
br ag abou t fl\ e Gallopohs
regula r s " ere absen t and
Osbor ne used .all of hts sub·
stttutes, mcludmg three fresh·
m en, an .,., hat he thought v.a s
supposed to be a scr immage

game
F ac t 1s, he used a sophomore
pitc her , Moke Watson who had
not worked an
w nmg
pr evwu sl) th1s ) ear ,
ff the game 1s to be counted ,
as Coach Rhodes md1cated
the n the B1g Blacks are ll-and3 on the season and the Blue

HJttmg for the losers , aU

SomehO\\ . Warner had h1s
troubles F n da), " alkmg fl\ e
'&gt;'hile f avmng se \ en, an d
gett mg socked for se ven base
hots But sharp f1eldon g kep t the

Blue De\•tls 1n check
Young \1r Watson dodn t do
too badly, e1ther. He went mto
the s1 xth mnmg \I.Jth a 2·2 tie ,
ran out of gas and the local b1g
~ uns started to boom Steve
Le e f1mshed up wtthout perm itting another run
For POi nt Ste\•e Ka) se r had
a perf ec t da: \\llh a s1ngle and
t\~ o-run double and a "" alk
Ste\e \hiler dehvered a one·
run s mgle and 81H Pamter
dr o\ e m a tall} w1th a tnple
Other PPHS hots were a t" o
bacger by Marvm Moore , and
smgles off the bats of J1m
Cha n dle r, Butch Th oma s,

Ran ch Warn er

Ripley upends
Wahama, 10-6
R I PLEY T he R1p lel
V1kongs took ad,antage of 11
h1 Lo:; an d four Wahama error s
Fnda) aftern oon to hand the
'Js JtJn g
Wahama
Whit e
F'alcons a 111-6 setback
R o pl~· pol&lt;: her John B ole) .
me am\hile , limi ted Coach
Grant Barnette s F alcons to
tJ ni} se ven h1ts v. h1le stnkmg
out 13 , \\a lktng four and g omg
the dtstance
T hough Wahama went dO\\ n
to def ea t , the bats of tw o
F alcon play er s sounded l oudh
m Lhe en counter
Da n n ) Gardner , the to p
h t l ter on the Bend Ar ea

sc hool s ba seball team had
three Singles m four tnps to the
pla te
AnoLher JUm or M1ke LevtlS ,
slammed a trople that landed
Some 400 reet from home plate
Le" 1s also had a smgle
Other Wah ama h1ts \\ere
ba se kn ocks by Duane Russell
and \1ar t) Yeager
Ke\ 1n Carnp sta r ted on the
m ound for Wahama , bu t gaH
\\a \ to }{obbJe Belche r and
then Rob La mbert cam e on 1n
re l ief of Belcher Wahama s
rJ!tt hers str uck OUt Sl X and
Halked three

•

•

Oregon

saw chain
1Ceach.

When you buy first chain at regular price.
IN

ONLY

Now' s your chance to stock up on Ore·
gon Saw Cham dunng the f&gt;rst one ce nt
sa le 1n Orego n 's h1story
Just buy any popular cham al the
su ggested pnce and get the seco nd
one for only orw penny It' s good for
loo ps , 2 5', 50 or 100' reels
Say you need a cham for a 20 ' .ba r
An Oregon $· 70 cham sells for $23 15
You get lwo of them for S2316
A penny never bought more Or
worked harder
Th1 s offer ends June 15 , 1973 So
head for

-Penny·A·Chain Sale
in loops or reels.
Mow at your Oregon Saw Chain dealer.

OlfEGON S..w CMm . . . .
Otw£1011

11
\.J.9.~~R!f.

SWISHER IMPLEMENT CO..
Upper Rt. 7

G~llopohs. Oh1o

smgles ,
~l1k e

'¥\ ere

Bret

Wilson,

Berr1d ge, M1ke Watson,

Mark K1eslm g, Bill Holland,
Leon Bn ggs and Kev Sheets
The Bo g Blacks benefoted
fr om e1ght bases on balls and a
dam agmg Blue Oevll error.
G(jlhpohs scored fir st m the
second ""hen Bernd ge and
Watson sm ote t'l4io-Out smgles
and Berndge later stole horne
GAHS made ot ~ m the top
of the lh1rd Wilson, aboa r d Dn
a v.i:ilk , r od e home on
Koeshng s shot to left foeld
The Blacks tied ot w1th two m
the bottom of the thord Fetty
an d Chandler drew walks 1&lt;1th
one out and were bunted up a
,notch by Warner Fetty scored
on a "old p1lch and Mtller
cra cked a run-scon ng smgle
It m oved mto the bottom of
the stxth, kn ot&gt;ed at 2-2, and
eac h team 'Aith f1ve hits
Then soph Watson ran out of
steam M oore opened w1 th a
double to center and M1ller
!:.tr olled Ka) ser lifted a
toy, enng double to center for
t" o t.all1es Pamter whacked a
long tnp le to nght field , then
st~red h1mself when the thtrd
sac ker let a thro\\n ball get
tmiiJ for an error
When Butch Thomas wafked ,
\\ atson " as relieved b) Steve
Lee Lee fanned Doeffmger
an d Fettv, "a i ked
J eH
Gilhspte and Warner to loa d
the bases, then got Timmy
Cott nll on a high bouncer to
mound But the score was n ow
6-2
Gallt polos rallied tn the top of
the seventh Warner walked
the bases loaded w1th two out
Leon Boggs smgled to center
for one run and When Lee also
tned to score, Butch Thomas
shot htm out at the pla te to end

'

the game
Box Score
GALLIPOLIS (31
Playe r
AB R H E
B Wil son , 2b
2 1 1 0
T Wt5e ma n 2b
1 0 0 0
M K tesl tng cf
2 0 I 0
R Ba rcus cf
1 0 0 0
K Shee ts It
l 0 1 0
L Brt gg s If
2 0 1 0
D Burne tte r f
2 0 0 0
G Hol ley rf
1 0 0 0
S Joh nson , lb
3 0 0 0
Steve Lee , 3b
2 0 0 o
T Folden S!i
1 o o o
M Berrtdge c
3 1 1 0
M Wat son p
2 0 1 0
S Lee p
0 0 0 0
B Holl and !iS Jb
2 1 1 1
Totals
25 J 7 1
BIG BLACKS (61
Player
AB R H E
2 1 1 0
J Chandler cl If
J Gt l l tSp te, If
0 0 0 0
R War ner p
2 0 1 0
M M oo r e 3b
2 1 1 0
T Cottr il l, 3b
1 0 0 0
S M tller , ss
2 1 1 1
S Ka'(ser , lb
2 1 2 0
R Gask •ns , l b
0 0 0 0
S Evan s. rf
1 0 0 0
B Pa1n ter rf
'1 1 l I
R Stmpktns, If
J 0 0 0
B Th omas, cf
1 0 1 0
J Holland 2b
1~ 0 o o
J Ooefl nger 2b
2 0 0 0
M Fetty c
2 1 0 0
Totals
21 6 a 2
Score by lnnmgs
Ga tltpO! IS
011 000 1- 3 7 1
Btg Black s
002 OO.t )( - 6 8 2
Left Blacks 6. GAHS 5
R Bl
Kayse r 2 M il ler 1,
Pa mfer 1 Ktes l tng 1, Brtggs 1,
2B H11s Moore Kayser 3B
Hti
Pa tnter
Sacrt f tce
Warner
DP
Wat son to Johnson .
Johnson Berrtdge to Wilson ,
BB Watson 6, Warner 5, Lee 2.
SO Warner 7, Lee 2. Watson 1,
Htts and Run!i Off Watson 8,
and 610 li {none out tn 6th) , Lee
0 and 0 tn 1
Loser M tke Watson tO 1),
Wtnner Randy War ner {6 1) ,
Umptres Red Tuc ker (plate ),
Bob Oltver (bases)

Russell
accepts
posts-

Urbana

Rio golfer captures

Berndsen led the Rio Grande
scoron~ "'Uo hos ll6, Tom

Garvey was next for the
Redmen at 134, Moke Barcus
shot a 135, BtU Hall recorded a
136 and Dou g M c Kmght

MOC medalist honors
RJO GRA.l\'DE - Ro o Grande am ong nme teams m the
sophom&lt;H"e Geor ge Berndse n D1stnct compelthon and
f1red a 116 for medalis t h onors
durang the ~ a d -Oh1 o Co n.
ference Golf Tournament held
last week at Uma Berndsen,
from Qncmnall , had scor es of
44-39-33 to record the lowest
score among Mod&lt;:lho o g olrers
Both the M1d -Ohoo Co nference and the NAlA Dtstn ct
22 T ournaments "ere held
Simultaneously "1 Uo Fondla)
w1nmng the Dtstnct and
Cedarvalle
the
Mad-Oh1 o
Conference champiOnship Rw
Grande flflJ shed
se\ enth

fimshed Wllh a 151
Ri o Grande golf Coach Art

The medalost for the Dastrict

22

Tuurnarnent was Ken
K ocker of Fondlay woth a score
of 112 Kocker headed the AJJ.

placed th~rd behond CedarvtUe
and Mal one on the MOC
tournament Rio Gr:n:d.-had a
team score of ~21 strokes , three
less than 1n 1m
Fondlay won the Dostrtcl 22
Utle wath a score of 462, 15
strokes beller than second
pla ce Walsh of canton, Ohio
fondlay and Wal sh ~ere
followed by · Blurrwn ( 478 ) ,
Cedarvolle 1484 ) , Defiance
1485 1, Malone ( 498 ) , Roo
Grande ! 521 ), WolmJR glon
( 525 ) , and Ohao Domamcan

Dist:nct 22 Team ; others who
quahfoed ror the Distrocl Team
~&lt;ere J1m Murrett of fondlay ,
Jom Roach of Bluffwn , Pelf
M,anguerra of Dehance, Jun
Penn of fondlay and George

•

Lanham ·announced Bemdsen
wa s named the Most Valu.able
Player for 1973 on the RA!dmen
t&lt;am , •nd Boll Hall, a senioo
from Bodwell, Ohio, recetved
' th e Coach 's Award
Rto
Grande &lt;cOncluded the spnng
~olr season at Uma witlo a ~
r ("('Ord

•

BOLENS~
The "tough tractors:·
•

R10 Grande
Berndsen, the Medalist for the
Be rnd sen

of

MOC, was named to the AJJ.
MOC team wo th Chuc~ Simpson and Mark Sophy of Mal one,
Mark
Evans
of
OhiO
Dommtean and Sam Jones of

&lt;535 )

Confer ence teams have been
named m track , tenms, and
g olr
At lhe Mod-Oh1o track
champ10nsh 1p on May 5 at RIP
Grande, Malone won 1ts thtrd
s tra 1ght MOC c r o ~&lt;n The
Pwneer s, coached by Jack
Hi:izen, scored 135 pomts , wh1le
r unner-up Cedarvolle totaled
75 RIO Grande hms)1ed m
th trd , with 43 pomts, and Oh10
Domm1can and Urbana t1ed for
the f our th spot, eacn with 6
pmnts
I nd1v tdual ftrst · place
wwners tnclude Boll Seho!l
IM J,· Mark Green IC ), Ro)
H oll os t M ), Ken R opeta I M I,
Ernoe Welborne ! C J, Seott
Armstrong 1M ) , We ndell
Sk ellel ! M ) , Motchell i C ) , Rtc
'l hompson I M 1. R ock P1t&gt;enger

SEO standings
SEO Stand tng s mcf
Team
W l
Athens
6 0
Ironton
6 1
Waverly
4 2
Logan
3 3
Gal ! tp Oi ts
J 4
Jack son
3 4
1\1\etg s
Q 5
Wei Is ton
0 6
TOTALS
24 2~
Last Week 's Re sults
W~ver l y 8 Galltpotts 4
Gatl tpolts 13 Logan 2
Log an 3 Me tgs 1
Monday ' s Game
Athens at Me tgs
Thursday 's Game
Wells ton at Me tgs
Remamtng Makeup
Logan at Wa verly

R OR
57 6
66 10
24 26
12 33
38 a l
15 41
... 6 22
4 43
222 222

I 'VI J, Baer I U ), and Terry Uoe ho gh JUinP
Cedarvolie 's Yelio" Jack ets
0• en ( M 1 The~ndiVldual poont
repeated
as MOC lennos ktngs
\4; 1nner
was Malone's RICk
Pittenger, who w on the shot put on May 5 at Ceda r volle The
and discus, took second m the host schoo l , coached by
Javehn , and ftmshed third m Murra y Murd och , lalhed 45
pomt.s Malone f1mshed w1th 24
po1nls, wh1le Rto Grande
scor ed 3 Ohio OomtnJcan and
Urbana did not compe te
The Ja ck ets w on all sox
smgles events and all three
doubles matches The All ·
Conference lenms t~am conSISts of Dave Delancey ( 1st
RIO GRANDE - Dr Bruce stngles l , Steve Mollokan ( 2nd),
Curt iS, dtrec tor of Lv ne Center
Jack Poole ! 3rd ), Alan Edlund
ann oun ced Saturday that the ! 4th 1, Don E ggleston 15th ), and
cente r w11l be closed to a ll Chuck Neuhaus ( 6th), all from
actl\ Jty from May 21 unt1l Cedarvi lle
furth er notice (apprmumately
Cedarv tll e's golf squad ,
three
\\. eeks )
C1nc 1nnatt coached b} R obert Gromack1 ,
F'loon ng will be reJ uvenatmg dethroned defendmg champ10n
the ta r tan fl oor 10 the g; m. U rbana on the MOC golf
nas1wn
cha mpiOnship on May 7 at
Dr Curtos added I must ask Lima Fma l sco re s were
that n o one enter the gym- Ced ar ville 484 , Malone and
nasi um area before clearmg Urbana 498 , R10 Grande 521,
"Jth J1m Oliver or myself smce and Oh10 D omLnt c an 525
there w1ll be fresh pamt and Named to the All·MOC team
other surfa ce coats that could ar e
G eo r ge
Bernd sen
be damaged by " a lkmg on l medal!st, RG ) , Sam J ones
them ''
l U I Mark Spohr ( M J, Chuck
L; ne Center wtll not open for Stmpson r :VI), and Mark Evans
ac-tJvJty unhl June 12, 1973
t OD 1

for repair work

Sox new tractors 111 1973 Ofrer ing a lot more than a
cho1ce of horsepow,er You pick the traclor woth the features you want From hydrostatoc drove to 3-speed geared
transm1sston Twm cylinder opposed to overhead valve
to synchro·ba lanced s1ngle cylmder engones Hydraulic
or mechamcal attachment lift Power lock1ng collar or
lock·plll for easy · attachment hook-up. And a chooce of
speed ranges , brake systems and attachments to accomplish any lawn and garden cho1e Bolens Division,
FMC Corporat ion

A GOOD YARD
CHUCK COLLIER
SERVICE STORE
Third &amp; Court

Gallioolis Ph. 446-3314

TO THE
PUBLIC

-'

..........

&lt;_

~

.. .

TERRY
JOHNSON

\

.

Wan!P.~

To Buy

OLD Furntlure, oak tables .
Wooden tee boxes , brass beds,
complete
dt shes
or
households , Wrtte M D
Mtller , Rt 4, Pomeroy. Ohto,
ca It 992 6271
S 13 ftc
TRACTOR hitch adaptor. from
2 pt back lo 3 pi . phone 7423182
51J5tc
WANTED - OLD UPRIGHT
PIANOS Any condthon Pay
$10 each Ftrst floor only
Wnte gtvtng dtrect~ans
P1anos, P 0 Bo)( 188, Sardts,
Ohto 43946
s 13 61p
NO 1 Copper , 50c, rad ia tors,
28c. brass, IBc , battenes, 85c
each clean dry roots. Gtn
seng, S60 yellow root , S4 ,
mayapple, 45c per lb • M A
Halt , Reedsville , Ohm, 378
6249

I WISH to thank all my netgh
bors, fnends and those on fhe
Holzer Medtcal Center staff
for all the prayers, cards,
gtffs, flower s, food, acts of
kmdness and care g t"¥en to me
dur rng
my
recent
hospttaltzatton
I greatly --------'---------S~6 lfc
apprectafe them and may TOP So il , phone 992 3502
5·8·6tc
God nchly bless you
Mrs Fran ces Roberts
5 13 ltp WOULD like to buy a ptcntc
table tn good cond ltton , phone
992 2324
•
Notice
s 11 6tc
__:_
TRY IT - You'll L1ke If The
Sew and Go Shop 10 Alfred USED Gravely mower , phone
All polyester drasttcatly
992 9972
reduced Marked at $2 15 and
s 11 6fp
up Open all day and weekday
even1ngs Ovmer Mrs E T
USED A or B Allts Chalmers
~ataway
tractor for parts
Frank
5·11 6tc
Dodderer, Box 162, Coolvtlle,

- - -- - - -

'

"

KEEP all dogs off Charles
Wolfe Property, at Fatrvtew ,
all day and all ntght
56 12tc
~-----

McDANIELS Custom Slauahter
House and Meat Cutttng,
State and Government tn
s~cted, phone 773 5208
s 6 12tp

~ll''

. HUMIDIFIERS
ftr•
HOI Water Heal 'IC'
~

Plumbing

'

BROTHERS

s

1960 and 1963 Volkswagens,
good conditton. phone 985
4118
S 10 Jtc
1~72

GRAN TORINO, power
steenng , power brakes, atr
condltton•ng, vmyl top Phone
949 5081 anyt1me
5 10 61 c

1972 CAMARO Z28 wheels, tape

player , ca ll 992 3.t53

-:-~==----.:.5.:.9 61p
1966 MUSTANG, 3 speed, 289
engtne , atr condttionel'\, 8
track stereo lape , phone 985
3929 or 985 4141
59 4k

:::-::-~-::--::-__:__

1967 FORD Econolme van
Heavy Duty , phone 992 3502
_ _____________ _:S_:8 6t c

For Sale

BEAUTIFUL Walnut Stereo
Hens. 80c each
radiO tape combma t ron , AM LEGHORN
phone
843 214S
FM radro 8 track tape deck
Balance Sll4 .)6 or terms can _ _ __ __ _:_5_:8 6tc
be arranged Cilll 992 3965
CLOSE OUT on (4) lull s1ze ztg
S 13 6k
zdg sew1ng machtnes For
sew1ng stre t ch
tabrtcs,
H &amp; N DAY old or started
buttonhclcs fan cy des1gns,
Leghorn pullets Both floor or
e tc Pal!ll sltghtty blem1shed
c age
grown
ava tlabte
Ch o1ce of carrymg case or
Poultry
housmg
&amp;
sewmg stand $49 80 cash or
automation Modern Poultry,
terms .wadable
Electr o
399 W M.atn, Pomeroy . 992
phone
992
7755
Hygume
Co
.
2164
58 Ot c
5 13 He :-:-:---:::-::-~~-___;
(2) ELECTROLUX Swoepers
CIJSTOM BUILD
pickup
delv)le model Complete wtfh
camper tops , $215 and up ,
all
cteantng attachments and
phone 742 5387
uses paper b.:lgs Sltg htty used
5 lJ 31p
but clean s and looks ltke new
Wdl sell tor $37 25 cash or
KUHL'S BARGAIN CE NTER
terms avat labl e
Electr o
HAS NEW - NEW - NEW
Hyg1ene Co , ph one 992 7755
fl oral or pla td l iving room
, 5 8 6tc
su1tes. Sl 89 95 and up ; m
Herculon at $139 95 bedroom 4 YEAR OLD regts tered run
Suttes $109 , 7 pc chrome
ntng quarter horse sorrel
dtne11 e, ste p end tabl es ,
s tall ton , phone 9927889 after 5
coff ee tables , S16 95 set Used
pm
app lt ances
automat1c
59 lfc
washers dryers , ranges.
re fngera lor s (I tce maker ) 1972 350 YAMAHA Road b tke tn
We have as usual . an ex
good condtt ton , less than I 600
cellen t assortment of used
miles , call 742 3295 after 4
t urnttuer - bedrooms, many
pm
wardrobes , much mtsc , even
5·9 6tc
round OAK TABLES Come
ou t Rt 7 and see us any day 1968 H ONDA 305 Super Hawk,
except MONDAY (yes, we're
excellen t condtt to n phone
open Sun dayt l " at ca utton
949 5953
l tght " tn Tuppers Plam s
S 9 61 C
phone 667 38.58
5 13 6tc NEW READY Bloomtng
potted fl ower s. stadtng at 50
BLAC K % Tennessee Walker
cents
hangtng basket~,
colt , 11 1 yea rs ol d phone 992
pan
stes
ca bbage, pelun tas ,
3640
mangolds
coleus, lomatoes,
\.
5 13 12t c
pepper s, etc One fourth off
by th e flat , Hubbar.d 's
ALL THE property formerly
Greenh ouse, 300 yards abbv e
owned by Pttfsburgh Coal
ballpark on Syracuse, Oh io
Company and now earned on
4 26 li e
the County tax records of
Metg s County Oh10 tn the
name of Consoltda!JOn Coat REG I STERED Appal oosa
yearltngs
al so
part
Company lo c ated tn the
regtstered
arabtans
one
f o ll owing taxmg d ts trt c l s
green
br
oke
horse
,
Call
Mtke
Chesler Twp E as tern
Jones , 992 6680 or see at E J
L SD
Saltsbury Twp H
ttl Farm , Flatwood s Rd ,
Pom eroy Vtllage , Salt sbur y
Pom~roy Ohto
T wp - Metg s L S D Sutt on
59 4tc
Twp So uthern L S D
Sealed bt ds for th e purc hase
Matenats
of all these properltes (whtch UPHOL STE RY
ny
lon
prtnls
co
tton
pr int s
should be grouped together
vmyls, v~lve t s of all kinds
and cons 1dered as a smgl e btd
Pom eroy Recovery 622 t
tfem l wtll be re cetved at the
M~ltn
51 , phone 99'2 7554
address hsted below unit! 12
5 3 241p
o cloc k ,noon. June 1, 1973
Further tnlormat1on may be
obtamed by contacltng th e 1973 STEREO 8 track A sma ll
balan ce of $88 ~!lor pay $6 SO
under stg ned
Con sol tdatton
per month Phone 992 5331
Coat Company reserves the
4 20 tf c
rtght to re tect any ar,d all
b td s E H Doughty Con
~~----so t•dalton Coat Co , Cad tz, MU ST se ll 1973 deluxe Ztg Za9
se wtng
machtne
Tht s
Ohto 43907
machm
e
darns,
embrot
ders,
5 13 IOt c
mak es
buttonholes,
all
=-::::-:---=-~~wt1hout attachments Jus t
1967 SEARS tent ca mper w1th
dtal and sew Pay balance of
9)1;12 add a room, $350 al so
$38 50 or pay $5 per month
Gtbson Grande electn c steel
Phone 992 5331
gut tar $200 ca ll 985 J985
4 20 tfc
s 11 31p

Business Services
EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

.------------------

- - - - - -- -

- - - -- -

Wanted To Rent

~~---~

HOOD 'S AQUARIUMS l15h
and su pplies, new locatton,
Ash Street, Mtddleport near
park , Phone 992 5443
1 7 ti c
COAL
Ltm es ton e, Excelstor '
Sa lt Works, E Matn Sf ,
Pomeroy Phone 992 3891
) 111
1963 MINNEAPOLIS M oltn e
back hoe and front end loader ,
$2 300 phone 99'}.6048
S 8 Sip
-~-~-~-

- - - -- - For Rent

--~----

Sale

AKC Toy Male Aprtcot Poodle
pup , 12weeksold , shots g tven
and wormed , caW ~ 7 3915 ,
S 13 Sip

PMnProv.O.

But tf the fact ory IS the
ptace to make eve ryth tng
that goes mstde the ktt
chen why shou tdn t the
kttchen ttsel f be built 1n the
factory?

KOSCOT SPECIALS for IW!y
are Hair Ka1r Products In
cl udtng other 1l ems If you
have ever purchased Koscot
Kosmettcs and are not , bel ng
serv1 ced phone Helen Jane
Brown . even tngs also, 992
5113
13 li e

s

THREE Norwegtan ElkhOun ds.
reg fs tered , $25 each , phone

9'12 7232
5 13 6tc
~-~~--

POODLES, AKC pupptes , small
mmta lure, bla ck or wh~te
wormed permanent shots
'$75 , ph one Cool"¥tlte 667 61 14
5 6 12tc

• ••

'"'Y

ROBIE'S ' TRUCK &amp; TIRE ·SERVICE

·--------··············-------.;........... .

PH. 245-5169

~ ;.;.~;.;..

CLEAN Carpets the save and
sa~e way w1fh Blue Lustre
Rent electn c shampooer $1
Ne lsons
Drug
Store ,
Pomeroy , Oh to
5 10 21c
UPHOLSTERY
Matertal s,
regularl y S3 95 only Sl 95
Also r emnant s Pomeroy
Rt!c.overy , 622 E Matn St 1
phone 992 7554
S3241p
NEW FOAM to frll
cus.htons, standard
on ly
~9 95
Recovery, 622 E
phone 992 7554

your old
stze sutle ,
Pomeroy
Matn Sf ,

GARAGE Sale , Wednesday ,
May 16th from 10 a .m ~ to 6
5-3 24tp
p m , chtldren 's and adults'
clothes , carsea1
tamp s,
turntture . toys, dishes Chuck MATURE respons1ble person to
Evan s, Shtrley Johnson and 3
babysll 1n
horne on S LEGHORN hens Pllone: 949
other fatrttltes'clt . the Johnson
S&lt;:co11d tn Mtdd,epor t for 3
4781
home Rt 1, Portland , Oht o
months old baby ttnd 7 year
S 9 3tc
5-13 31c
Qld boy S da ys per week tn ~ ---~-eludin g ~ame weekends
References rcqulr td Job BEAUTIFUL se lection of
PIANO Tuntng . Lane Dan te ls.
slarh e"d ot May
Send ~ ! lowers, wreaths and baskets
992 2082 , 259 Broadway St
tnqu~ries
to
Bo~~:
406 ,
tor Memortal Day Cliff's
,Mtddleport
Gall t1JOI1s. Ohio
Shoe Repa tr M td dleport
- J 61(.
5 10 Stc
56 121c

Help Wanted

-

1969 PLYMOUTH Roadrunner
good condttlon, 383 motor,
automatt c transmtsston , mag
wheels, power sleenng, new
ttres , orange wtfh black vmyl
top $995 , See Charles Bisse ll ,
Chester, Ohto or call 985 3582
5 11 Jtc

_____

$85

992-2448

RODNEY, OHIO

G000 ' 70PLYMOUTH . 4dooc .
$97 5, phone 992 5310
5-11 3tc

· r'&lt;"or Sale

.tO SQ YOS of carpet, $4 a yard ,
ca II after 5 p m 992 2789
s 10 3tc ~-~--~
THE BRIGHT STAR MARKET
1971 TRIUMPH 650 Bonnevtlle,
Makes you an unheard Of
4,500 miles, $995 or best offer ,
offer FREE FREE Free
phone 992 3048
One f1flh of all. the fottowtng
~------_____;_S:.::6 6fp dry grocenes are absolutely
Free example mtntmum
GROCERY bus iness tor sa te
purc ha se of only SB 00 worth
Bulldtng for sale or tease
of these tlem s tn Iota I and you
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
gel another $2 00 or more one
OhiO
to 10 p m for appomtment
fifth of your to t_at purchase
10 31p
J.20 tfc
FREE Select your needs
fr om these hundreds of tlem s
HOME Grown Tomato plants
All canned frutl s, all canned
for garden use , larg e sturdy
vegetables Ko o l Atd , r1 ce
plants , lmpro"¥ed Me)(tcan
WORKING famtly needs two or
puddmg s tello, all dtet Item s,
Hetnz 1350 and Supersontc,
three bedroom house •n
laptaca ma caronts , noodles,
also hot peppers , mangoes
Eastern School Dtstrict ,
spaghellt , box pt zzas, you at so
and ca bbage plants On Rt
anywhere , dependable,
get one f tflh Free on all Baby
124, 500 ft above the State
references, phone 985 3549
F ormula s all dry baby
Park 1n Syracuse, 0 , Thomas
s 13 61p
cereals all1untor baby food s
Hayman
all brands of mstanl lea 25 lb
4 24 33tc
bag s of Gold Medal Flour all
cerea ls all pan cake m1x es
TRAILER, Brown ' s Trailer NEW 2 ptece Modern Ltvtng
all cook tng otis 3 tb 8 oz rars
Room Sut!e wlfh 90 " 3
Park . phone 992 3324
of felly 21b tars prese rves . 5
cush ton sofa , button tufted
S 13 tfc
lb and 4 tb contamers of
back and ex tra htgh back Mr
syrups all shake and bak e
Cha1r , thts week only ,
TWO bedroom s, 2 baths,
tfem s, al l cooktes •nct udmg
$139 95, Cash &amp; Carry ,
beautiful bullt 10 k'ttchen,
swee ty p•e s att mayonnatse,
Pomeroy Recovery , 622 E
located tn Pomeroy, phone
all salad dresst ng, tncludtng
Matn , Pomeroy, phone 992
446 4060 after 5 p m , 446 1279
pourabtes , all peanut butter
7SS4
s 13 6lc
all mu stard all vtnegar , Hot
5 10 6tc
Dog r eltsh al l cake m txcs, all
TWO bedroom mob1le home m
cake frosltng s
BOAT, Motor and tra1ler
Mtddleport, adults only.
We actepl Federal Food
asktng $225 tw o atr con
phone 992 5592
fh ts
c ou pon s and with
d1f1oners - one 15,000 BTU's
5 13 ftc
unheard of one-f tfth Free
and one 8000 BTU's Phone
off er Th ere IS no pla ce you
992 9981
HOUSES - one 2 bedroom and
can b uy all you r grocery
5 10 Jtc
one 4 bedroom, phone 992 2780
tlems for less money 1n l ot.:~ I
or 992 3432
llmtls on quan!lttes you
Np
5 131fc BEDROOM Surte , bookcase
may purcha se and that 's not
atl , youat so getone ltfthFree
headboard, double dresser
on all the foll ow tng non food
wtth mtrror , ntght stand
TWO trailer lots m Mtddleport,
Harlls Frank, Chester, Ohio
112 duplex m Bradbury , phone
tlems
All bar soaps , all
Phone ~85 3368
before 6 p m 992 5693
ilulom a l tc
water
s 10 3tp detergent s. all dtsh
5 14 5tc
12' .Jiummum
fat t, a! t wa &gt;:paper at t loam or
PRIVATE meeting room for GRAVELY Rotary plow atn:l
paper cu ps, alt paper plates
any organtzallon , phone 992
cu tflvat or old tee box, dtnefte
all plast•c spoons. e tc 200
3~7S
set Pnone 992 5510
count paper napktns, yard
3 11 lfc
5 10 Jtc
guard 1nsecf spray, freewr
bag s and wraps, all other
3 AND 4 ROOM furntshed and 1972 KAWASAKI 175, knobby
pla st• c bag s and wraps , all
unfurntshed
apartments
ftres , 21' rtm, e)(cellent
floor waxes and cleaners all
Phone 992 5434
I urnt t ure poI tSh, a II room
.,.'"Ondttton, $495 Phone 992
412tfc
2360
deodon ze rbombs 9ft x 12ft
51051
ALL ELECTRIC, ltke new, 3
. p
rug s tubs bu ckets, clothes
lmes, broom s, mops, c lothes
b
lh
lh
I
r oo ms w1
arge
a , STARCRAFT New &amp; Used
ptns, shot gtm shell s, thermos
elecfrtc wall oven, table top
Travel Trailers and Fold
bottles , thermos re fttt s all
·ange
lar~e
closet,
located
on
down
campe·s
o•
ft
s
1
1n LP
•
• , "'
,
sc h oo 1 supp 1tes, Pus
many
.......~_m S • Pomero~ , see to
11899 ' 22 ft • 7 •n • sc•
1
h
1
E ..
'em s sue assungassesan d
.;f\:&gt;prectate , phone alttpO!ts
$3650 , 20 ft 7 tn SC, $3275,
other 1tems reduced 112 or
"69S39
Starmastec Campers , $13SO,
m or e you~ oqe f t flh F ree
5 II 6tc
We sell service and quality
starts when your total pur
F
a
d CAMP
h
h
h
tnancm~ rrange
c ase reac es $8 00 and t ere
MOBILE home spa ce tn
CO NLE
STARCRAFT
are no quanltly purchase
Syracuse ph one 992 6329
SALES, Rt
62N of Pt
t mtts

Pets

E verylhtng
1n
the
modern mobt le home today
•s factor y bu1 lt
•n the
owners fa von te decor
and a monthly rent stze
payment covers everyfhtng
house, fur ntture ap
pltances , and decor

s 11 61p

'

Real Estate For Sale
7

ROOM frame hou se rn
Harn son vtll e, $6 000 phOne
304 755 2657
5 2-12tc

2 STORY HOME, 5 bedrooms
and bath , basement. butlttn
sweeper , 2 car garage, forced
atr furnace, phone Coolville
667 3.t 79
5 10 3tc
~-,----~~~

HERMIT S AND
SPECU
LATORS _ 12 acr es wood
ed
h t tl
ground ,
small
hou se 1n need of work , pond ,
large garden Sec luded but
close tn La st property on
Wlll ts Htll Road , Pomeroy
Nee d s so me dozer work
$ 1950 00 FIRM Phon e 99 '}
3719 Sundays only
5 10 31p
BEAUTIFUL Country Home on
Tuppers
Platn s
Water
,. system 6 rooms and bath ,
Dasemen l . beauttful built tn

ktl c hen.~ all rooms paneled ,
new furna ce, new '¥tnyl
Stdmg
storm
wtndows
door s ,and
\shutt
ers, 12 storm
miles
fr om Pomeroy , wtlt sel l wtlh
to l and garden or smal
acreage . phone 949 5953
59 6tc
NEW HomesonJour tot or ours
NO MONE
DOWN lor
d b
F H
qual•li
uSi ng costs
Adm eloanuyers
(Ciostng
A
1 f fl b tans
on 1y 1 vane yo o r p
wdh
various
ftnancmg
avatlable
We
lh

--~-- ,~-

ftfth of your total purchase
FREE We occept Federal
F ood Cou pons on all food
dem s Thts offer tS made tn
deep apprecta!Jon for the
thousands of customer s who
have patrontzed our stores
dur tng the past 21 years
, Ge t fh ts hug e one ftffh
Otscounl Free at Brtghl Star
Marke t, Next to the Drtve Inn
Theatre , Ma son, W Va Sa le
end s June 10. 1973
5 11 Jtc

, M tddt eport ,
992 5976 tor Jn.
56 30tc

ASK

-

From the laroest Tru ck or
Bulldozer Radtator to the
::.ma !lest Heater Lore
Na1han Bt9gs
Radtator Spectaltst

SMITH NELSON
. MOTORS, INC.

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open 8 Ttl 5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E Mam , Pomeroy , 0 .

Ph 9922174

Spectahst
Wheel
Alignment
It Must
Be Rtght
or we wtll
~[!!~~llakett R1ght

BLA~IIand

+.-

----

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Pomeroy

MATERIALS CO.
771 5554
Mason, W. Va

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED

992 -2094

24 Hour
Oatly Servtce

606 E. Maon Pomeroy

MODERN
SANITATION

OFFICE SUPPLIES
FURNITURE

84 300atly, 8-12Sat
In the R H Rawt1ng s Son s

Slop In and See
Floor Do splay.

Butldtng

Mtd(\leport, 0

Real Estate For Sale

I

REALTY '

108

E.

Our

DANN Y ' S TV Servtcc, Ma son ,
W Vii Ph one 773 5976
.t-27 ttc

MAIN . . . . . . . . . . .""
POMEROY
LET US SELL YOUR
HOME FOR YOU!

CHILDREN GROW
HOU SES DON ' T So here s a
place that's td eal for a
growtng tamlly ~ large
bedroom s
Jl/ 2
bath s
Beaultfut kll c hen dtnlng
bar, loads of cabmets etc
Carpeftng, sun por ch uftltty
room,
garage
Large
butldlngt!O x70 tnfherear 11'4
Acres ground $21 ,500 00
ILL HEALTH
ts for c ing the sa le of thts
e K c e II en t
bu s tin es s
Establtshed for 5 year s
Good tncome NO PHONE
CALLS PLEASE come tn
and let us dtscuss 1t
YOU PROVIDE
THE FAMILY
we'll provtde every thing else
10 the 5 bedroom home
Mother wilt love 1hts modern
ktl chen , dt shwasher and all
1112 baths dlntng room ,
utility R Full basement
Garage &amp; other butld10gs
$17 000 00
2 MINUTES' WALK
to play~round, swtmm mg
poo l, shopping
5 n1 ce
bedroom s 1112 baths n tee
ktl chen, dtning R , utility R ,
2 gla ssed por ches Storm
door s &amp; wmdow s Garage
LOOK $12,800 00
HENRY E CLELAND,
BROKER
992 2259
If no answer 992 2568

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker
110 Mechanic Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

0 DELL WH EEL Altgnment
loca ted at Crossroad s, Rt 124
comp lete fron t end servtce ,
Jun e up an d brake servt ce
Wh eel s
ba lan ced
etec
lr onteatly All
w o rk
gu a rant eed
Reaso nabl e
rate s Phone 992 3213 or 742
323?
2 t8 lfc
READY MIX
CO NCRETE
deltve red rtg hl to your
pro,ecl Fa st and easy Free
es llm a l es Phon e 992 -3284
Goeglctn Rea dy M t x Co,
M tdd teporl Ohto
6 30 lf c
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABL E rates Ph 446
4782 Ga lltpolt s, John Russell ,
Owner an d Operat or
5 12 lf c

- - - - - -- -

John Tucker, Rt. 4
Pomeroy, 0.
Ph 992-3954
EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
and backhoe work , sephc
lank'S tnstalled . dump trucks
and lo boys for h tre . will haul
fill dtrt, lop sotl, limestone
and gravel , Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers , day phone 992 7089,
ntght phone 992 3525 or ~2
5232
2· 11 tic
SEE US FOR Awntnqs, storm
doors and wtndows , carpor ts,
marquees, alumtnum s1dmg
an d raHmg A Jacob, sales
re pr esenlaltve
For fr ee
es t 1mates , phone Charles
Lt !:. le ! Syracuse,
V
V
Johnson and Son, Inc
3 2 tfc
TRA SH ptckup Phone 992 2285
58 6tc
WILL tnm or cu t trees, clean
ou t base ments, attics, etc
and patnl roofs Phone 949
32il
417301c

C BRADFORD, Auc tt oneer
Co mpl ete ~e r vtce
Ph one 949 3821
Racme Ohto
Cnlt Bradford
5 I He

DOZER and back hoe work,
ponds and sepltc tanks , dttch
tng servtee top sotl, fill dirt,
ltmestone B&amp;K Exca.Ja ftng
Ph one 992 5367 Dt ck Karr , Jr
_ _ _ c _ __
_ 9 1 lfc

E L NA Llnd Whtt e Sewtng
Machtnes
Servtce on all
mak es Reasonab le rates
Th e Sewt ng Center M td
dleport, Ohio
11 16lt c

NOW OPEN ~ Roger Hysell's
Garage, nea r Crossroads on
St Rt 124, aft mechanic work
tnc tu c:l tng au lomatt c trans
mt SS Lon s
Monday
thru
Saturday 8 30 a m to 5 p m
Phone 99'2 7121 or 992-6392
S·3 30tc

HOUSE

Root pa tnftng
and extenor lree
es ttm a tes Ca lt 992 7008 or 992
7:460
•
4 19 30fc
and

mte r~

EXCAVATING Dozers , large
and srn alt, Ba ckhoes and
loaders on track and Hres ,
Dump tru c ks Lo boy
serv tce Sepltc tanks tn
sl al!ed George ( Btl! ) Pullins,
SE PTIC TANKS
AROBIC
phone 992 2478 or 992-7402
SEWAGE
S Y S TEM S
2 9 tfc
CLEANED ,
REPA IRE D
MILL ER SA NITHION.
serv tce and
STEWART. OHIO PH 662 HAR R t
ser vtce calls Phone 992 2522
3035
2 9 tfc ,
lO ~ tfc

s&lt;3N7fi\V

SE WIN G MA C HIN E. ~ Repatr
sc r vtce, all milkes ?92 2284
The Fabnc Shop, Pomeroy
Aulhort zed Stnger Sales and
Servtce We Sharpen Sctssors
3 2~ l( c
AUTOMOBIL E tnsurance been
Can ce ll ed ?
Lo st
your
operator's l tce nse? Catt 992
2966

6 15 tf c

• PHONE ' L Parker for Cattle
A I Stre Servtce, Pomeroy
99 2 2264
5 13 12tc

Real Estate For Sale
HOUSE tn Long Bottom Phone
98S JS29
6 11 tfc
HOUSE, 6 rooms and bath, 829
S Thtrd Ave phone 992-5431
-.--- - -- - - - - -S
:...:
·8 6tc

Real Estate For Sale
39 ACRE f .;~rm 6 room house,
b arn and ou lb~ldtng s 3
mtles off Rt 1 t Chester
phone 985 4205
5 14 41c

FOR Sa te By owner . 3 bedroom
hom e 1n Wonder Htlls,
A I hens Ohto, for tnformafton
ca II 592 47 57
5 11 21c

NEW Total Electrtc frame
NEW LISTING
home, b.:~seboard heat , hard
NICE MOBILE HOME - 3 35 ACRES, brtck hom e 7
wood fl oor s, 3 bedroom, bath,
rooms, ba th, lull ba se ment,
bedroom s, retrrgerator. stove,
l tv mg room, dtntng room,
allached 2 ca r garage 3 or 4
buil t tn ktlchen, breezeway,
nt cc bath 12x70 Schu ll w•lh
bedroom, wa lk tn c lose t s
garage, ctfy water Lot size
fu el ott furna ce Larg e k1l che n
{cedar ltned) , ktlchen ha s
1.00x400
Addtttona'l
tot
and master bedroom Askmg
butt! m oven and range top ,
availab le Tuppers Platns,
rust $6.000 00
lots of bronze gl ow btrch
Ohto Pnce $17,000 Phone
WATER FRONT
ca btn e t s carpeted l1 v1ng
667 6386
SYRACUSE - 4 bedroom s, 2
room, larg e family room and
5 11 3tc
"·lh
f II b
)
d 2
dlnmg area stocked pond
Ud
s, u
asemen , an
1ot s All f or on 1Y $10 ,SOO 00
free ga s and pl enty of water
3 _B~DROOM ranch style tn
miles N of Pomeroy ca ll
8
Pomeroy, w to w carpeting, 2
HOBSON
for appotnlmeni, 992 738~
ca r garage attached, atr
3 BEDROOM S - Bath lot s at
5 13 3tp
t:ondtt.oned , phone 992 5593
cup b oar d s tn lh e k •t c h en
•
· 5116tc
Basem ent, front and back TWO
story
home
full
porch es Drtlled well , and
ba se ment, bath &amp; 1n , for ced 5 ROOM house. basement, gas
garage Now only $8,000 00
atr furnace, large tot, ex
heat. bath, 2 tots , S D
cellen l toca lt on , phone 992
Busktrk , 341 Page St , Mid
BUSINESS BUILDING
7384
dleport, Ohto phone 992 5487
30 ROOM BR tCK - Steam
5 13 Jlp
heat, bar wtfh I 2 3 l tcenses
11 31p
Par kt ng lot $32 ~ 500 00 the pnce
ol a hou se
MIDDLEPORT
2 BEDROOMS
Sal h.
ba se ment, front and ba c k
Happiness for us is selling Real
~
._......._...
All ul•l•f••
NEW HOME
3 BEDROOMS - N1ce kitchen
:::&gt;
wtth slo"¥e and r efrtgerator
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO'S LARGEST
••
0
Lots ot closet s 2 large lots
&gt;
Want only $16,000 00
NEW LISTING
Ql
Here's A New Ltsltng On
tn Bedford
2 ACRES _
Townshtp near Burt 1ngham , ott
Butternut tn Pomeroy
,~~-~~-

s

~k•ng

LOVELY, 3 bedrOOm, 1 floor
pla n . for ce d atr furnace,
hardwo od fl oo rs , excellent
cond tlt on. on Chester Water Rt 33 A real bi.!Y at $1590 00.
Sy stem 10 years old, on 97 A
NEW LISTING
lot on Sta te H1ghway You 80 ACRES - Some ntce laytng
ca n purchase on farm home ' land •n Rutland Townshtp 7
wllh tow down payment TWO room hou se, bath, basement,
R IV E RS
R E A L T Y, drtlled well , and 2 barn s Want
C LA R E N C E
B E L L . ooly 121 500 oo
UPHOLSTER your ow n tur
SALESMAN
240
Fr onl
nttur e Foam cush1on s, any
Martella phone off1ce, 373
WE WORK FULL T IME IN
stze Cotton burlap, swtve l
5916 r.es tden ce, 3735935 or SELL ING
PROPERTY .
bases , ztpper, dacron , web
667 J6SO
NOTHING
ELSE
SOWE CAN
b1ng ,
welt
Pomeroy
6 121c
Reco"¥ery , 622 E Matn St ,
REA L LY
GIVE
YOUR
phone 992 755~
PROPERTY tn Mtddleport tot PROPERTY LtS'r ED WITH
5 3 24fp
132x300 wtth 9 r oom house, US ITS BE ST TRY US FOR A
garage apartment and ex tra CHANGE
BROWN! NC Automatt c, full
butldtng spa ces phone 992
choke, 12 gauge, Versa Mec
77 47 or 985 3805
loader , 12 gauge , Joh nn y
HELEN L tEAFORO
5 13 3tc
Stewa rt Game Caller 2 cr ows
992 -3325
-----.~-~and I owl Phone 949 2789
GDRDQN B. TEAFORD
5 10 3tc ~ ACRE S on State Roule 143. 1
992-3615
mile Sou th of Harr tsonvt lle ,
ASSOCIATES
pony statl ton
several ht me st tes wafe, tap
NDSU~OAYS PLEASE
~ 1 I &lt;:lit , phone 985 4205
Pd Jd c.al I 992 3640
s 13 121c _ _ _ _ _....__ _ _ __
e· l~ lie

s

But It to Your 'Specs
Delivered to Job Site

and

CLELAND

ABOUT

WOOD TRUSSES

GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

991-2101

US

PRE FABRICATED

On Most Artten can Cars

1
1c hes
•-------~---~-~-~
E
iectrica~I~W~o~r~k
~
·
--~~~~
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S
~2
:
1
:
1
c
~
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P
~Ie;a;~in
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~W~V~a~.~he~h]'in~d~R~eid
~
',~~~~~~~~~~~
~~!~
~n~
'k'
··
~~~usr
1
•
of
tlem
s
and
you
w11t
get
one
1
Co,
150
1
1
2

everythmg m your k ttchen
wa s manufa c tured The
modern way

..-., .....

Thanks

Furnace Controls

SELF-SERVICE

Is t he refngerator tn
your ktfchtm handmade?
Of course not It was made
In the
So was the

.

of

Auto Sales

1220 Washtngtan Blvd
423 7521
BELPRE, 0.

HEAnNG &amp;
COOliN(i

COIN OPERATED

(. ..-.-..-..-.....--...-

Card

"'

.o &lt;
~ -

For Sale

Homes For Sale

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

IN LOVING memory of my
mother, Mrs Geor9e Roush
thts Mother s Day
on
Pre ctous memones ltnger,
Mom From Edna E Wtggms
5 13 ltp

"'H

__

By

JOHNSON'S
MOBILE HOME SALES
1110 Ea stern Avenue
Gallipolis, Oh•o
Phone 614 - 446 ~ 3547

Mob

FLEA MARKET al the Buy
R 1te Shop In Add 1son Open
every Sunday at 11 a m
5 10 3tc

_.-

-~
- . ..
. .

Help Wanted

S PM Day Before Publreat•on KNAPP SHOES Comfort, FREE upstair!. apartment for
Monday Oeadllne 9 a m
Quality ,
long
Wear ,
couple wlll!ng to care for
Cance-llet ron Corr-ec tions
Reasonable pn ces Call 992elderly
woman
L1ght
Will be ~ccepte-d unt ll9 am tor
5324
housekeepin g
and cook
Day of Publrcatron
s 3 tfc dtnner Need to help dress
REGULATtONS
mornr ~s as she has broken
The P u bliSh er res.erves the
99
rlg:ht to edrt or re 1ect an v ads
1le
arm
one 2 5435
deemed
ob ject 1 onal
The
5 1J-4tc
pub lisher will not be responSible 1971 HOLLY Park, 12 x 60, like - -- - - - - - - for m.ore than one •ncorrect
new, carpeted , house fur · FEMALE housekeeper to cook
Insert ion
nlture , atr co ndtt lone d .
andcareforelderlywoman1n
Fur WJ~~l:~ervl&lt;•
washer and dryer, with 8~t 32
MtddlepOft , live tn , separate
porch and awning . phone 1kitchen and upsta1rs apart
5 cents per Word one ll'lUrt•on
304 773 5474
men!. S30 per week , phone
Mtn •mum ChCJrge 75c
12 cents per word th ree
59 l otc
992 5435
5-13 .ttc
consecut ive msertlons
18 cents per word sut con
COOK, wattress and ca rhop ,
secuttve tnsert •ons
Air Conditioners
apply tn person, Craw 's Steak
25 Per Cent Dlscbvnt on PCJtd
Awntngs
ads and ads pa td W1th m 10 days
House
CARD OF THANKS
5 10 ttc
Underpinning
&amp; OBITUARY
Sl 50 for SO word mm1mum
WANTED - Someone to stay
Complete mobile home
Each addtftonal word 2c
n1ght w1th an elderly lady m
serVtce plus gtganttc
I LIND ADS
her Mtddleport home Phone
Add •ltonal 2.k Charge per
d1splay · of mobile homes
~92 364-4
Advert1sement
always available at
OFFICE HOURS
S 10 3tc
8 30 a m to 5 00 p m Dally
8 30 a m to 12 00 Noon
Saturday

GUN SHOOT, factory choked
and hand choked guns,
Forked Run Sportsman Club,
Sunday, May 13, 12 noon
5 10 31c

-.- . -

Wh y not see your own
pack age •lOme on dtsptay
here

Notice

ROOFING and Heat tng Repatr,
all types, Spectal - Cleantng
and otltng of blower, complete
check on furnaces , phone 8.t3
2341
5 2 JOtc

I

four-year absence BtU Russell ,
one of best defenstve centers to
ever play pro basketball ,
returns to the sport as coach
and general manager of the
Seattle SuperSomcs
The forme r superstar and
coach of the Boston Celtlcs
stgned a flve-}ear contracb
froda y "tlh the Somes of the
National Basketball Assocta·
tlon Terms were not dtselosed
S &lt;-~m St \lU im &lt;\n prrc:1rlr nt
and owner of the ~omcs, called
Russell "the most dorrunant
player the game has known
and the flnest coach m the
game's htstory "
H e r eplaces Tom Ntssalke,
\\ ho wa,:; fired m January, as
the coach and succeeds Bob
Houbregs as. general manager
H oubre gs qwt last week

~~~~~:~:fr~N
DEADLINE$

CLUB Restaurant , Racme , Ohto
wi II be open 7 days a week
Plate Lunches , $1 35 to S2 50
5 10 3tc

-

••

1

•

For. Fast Results Use ·The s,_,nday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

SHOOTING MATCH . Corn
Hollow Gun Club, turn ftrst
nght after Miles Cemetery,
Rutland
Factory chol&lt;ed
guns only Sunday, May 13th,
I p m
S 10 31c

SVAC standings
S\IAC STANDINGS
Team
W L R OR
6 0 54
6
Symmes Valley
8 2 60 31
Kyger Creek
Sou thern
3 1 27
8
Eastern
3 3 25 15
North Gallta
2 3 25 29
Han nan Tra ce
2 3 21 34
Southwestern
0 12 0 8.t
Last
Week ' s
Results
Sym mes Vall ey 6 Eastern 3.
Symmes Valley 5 Kyger Creek
0 and Kyger Creek 10 Hannan
Trace 3
Thts week's games M onday
~ Hannan Trace at Ea stern
Kyger Creek at Southern
North Galtta at Hannan Trace

nhnel, Sunday, Mayl3,1973

IN LOVING memory of our
Mother an~ Grandmother,
Je ss1e
SISson
on
'hts
Mother 's Day
Deep 10 the heart ltes a piCture.
Of a t,:,ved one latd to res!,
In memory's frame we shall
keep tt, Because she was one
of the best
Sadly mtssed by chtldren,
grandchtldren and great
grandchildren
s lJ. ltp
l

close few days

.

Se ·

IN LOVING memory of our
mother ,
Mrs
James
Hazel1on, Sr • who passed 197 1 12x60 Mobtle Home on
away May 13, 1968
100x200 lot tn Tuppers Platns,
Days of sadness sf1ll are wtlh
S6800 Phone 667 3363 or see
us, Tears of stlence often
Dorsel Mtller
flow ,
s 10 6fp
But her memory keeps her near
us, Stn ce she left us ftve years CASH patd for all makes and
ago
models of mobtle homes
Sadly mtssed by the
Phone area code 614 423 9531 .
chtldren
4 13 tfc
513ltc

L yne Center to

.

•

In MemiiiY

All Mid-Ohio Conference
Dream Teams are released
CANTON - Based on ' per.
formances over the weekend of
May 5-1 , the All-Mod-Oho9

15 - TheSundayTiJnes

--- -,- -

-

..."'-

THE WISEMAN AGENCY

-

REALTOR

"':::&gt;

--"'
"'
Ql

1/1

ell

c:

·-

Q,
Q,

Vf~ry tnterestmg 3 bedroom Spantsh sty led home or,
larg e h1tl stde lot w1th extra lot and 2 car garage
across the street Tht s home tncludes a large lt-vrng
room and ftreplace, d tntng room , ntce kttchen and
break fa st nook plus an unfurn tshed 2nd floor and
full ba sement Call Ike Wtseman nght now for an
appointment

You're Mtssmg A Bargain

ru

.t:.

.S!
ru

c:

ru

:::
:::&gt;
.,..0

-•

We hav e !ht s larg e 5 bedroom home tn Mtddleport
and we thtnk you'll buy tt tf you see It mstde Mr
Sm tth , the own er , tS wdlmg to take a loss and w1ll
help a ltt11e wtth the ftnanc mg but you won't buy tf
you don ' t look Don ' t let someone beat you to tf and
then realtze you JUst made a $5,000 mtstake It's
very altracl•v e tnStde wtth a completely modern
ktlchen 2 very ntce baths and lots of r:oom for any
stze famt ly Call Mrs Selwyn Smtft'l at 992 3486 and
she wil l be happy tn show 1t or calt us collect at
446 3M3

We

!Tlake the buyer the seller and

c

Ql

.t:.
~

&gt;
Q,
Q,

ru

.r::

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-...
"':a
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&gt;

ell

0

�•
H - The Sunday Tunes. S.ntmel, Sunda). \Ia) 13, 1913
I

Big Blacks po~t
6-3 dia1nond win
By JACK ROGERS

De\. tis are 8-and-i

PT
PL EASANT Pt
Pleasant's Bog Bla cks defea ted
Coa ch
J 1m
·Osbo r ne s
de c omated Gal hp o h s Bl ue
De\' Jls, 6-3, at Ordnan ce f oeld
Fnd ay af ternoon vo~ th the
loca l s' Rand) War ner hurling
h1s stxth w1n of the- sea son.
But 1t wasn r a \ 1ctor: to
br ag abou t fl\ e Gallopohs
regula r s " ere absen t and
Osbor ne used .all of hts sub·
stttutes, mcludmg three fresh·
m en, an .,., hat he thought v.a s
supposed to be a scr immage

game
F ac t 1s, he used a sophomore
pitc her , Moke Watson who had
not worked an
w nmg
pr evwu sl) th1s ) ear ,
ff the game 1s to be counted ,
as Coach Rhodes md1cated
the n the B1g Blacks are ll-and3 on the season and the Blue

HJttmg for the losers , aU

SomehO\\ . Warner had h1s
troubles F n da), " alkmg fl\ e
'&gt;'hile f avmng se \ en, an d
gett mg socked for se ven base
hots But sharp f1eldon g kep t the

Blue De\•tls 1n check
Young \1r Watson dodn t do
too badly, e1ther. He went mto
the s1 xth mnmg \I.Jth a 2·2 tie ,
ran out of gas and the local b1g
~ uns started to boom Steve
Le e f1mshed up wtthout perm itting another run
For POi nt Ste\•e Ka) se r had
a perf ec t da: \\llh a s1ngle and
t\~ o-run double and a "" alk
Ste\e \hiler dehvered a one·
run s mgle and 81H Pamter
dr o\ e m a tall} w1th a tnple
Other PPHS hots were a t" o
bacger by Marvm Moore , and
smgles off the bats of J1m
Cha n dle r, Butch Th oma s,

Ran ch Warn er

Ripley upends
Wahama, 10-6
R I PLEY T he R1p lel
V1kongs took ad,antage of 11
h1 Lo:; an d four Wahama error s
Fnda) aftern oon to hand the
'Js JtJn g
Wahama
Whit e
F'alcons a 111-6 setback
R o pl~· pol&lt;: her John B ole) .
me am\hile , limi ted Coach
Grant Barnette s F alcons to
tJ ni} se ven h1ts v. h1le stnkmg
out 13 , \\a lktng four and g omg
the dtstance
T hough Wahama went dO\\ n
to def ea t , the bats of tw o
F alcon play er s sounded l oudh
m Lhe en counter
Da n n ) Gardner , the to p
h t l ter on the Bend Ar ea

sc hool s ba seball team had
three Singles m four tnps to the
pla te
AnoLher JUm or M1ke LevtlS ,
slammed a trople that landed
Some 400 reet from home plate
Le" 1s also had a smgle
Other Wah ama h1ts \\ere
ba se kn ocks by Duane Russell
and \1ar t) Yeager
Ke\ 1n Carnp sta r ted on the
m ound for Wahama , bu t gaH
\\a \ to }{obbJe Belche r and
then Rob La mbert cam e on 1n
re l ief of Belcher Wahama s
rJ!tt hers str uck OUt Sl X and
Halked three

•

•

Oregon

saw chain
1Ceach.

When you buy first chain at regular price.
IN

ONLY

Now' s your chance to stock up on Ore·
gon Saw Cham dunng the f&gt;rst one ce nt
sa le 1n Orego n 's h1story
Just buy any popular cham al the
su ggested pnce and get the seco nd
one for only orw penny It' s good for
loo ps , 2 5', 50 or 100' reels
Say you need a cham for a 20 ' .ba r
An Oregon $· 70 cham sells for $23 15
You get lwo of them for S2316
A penny never bought more Or
worked harder
Th1 s offer ends June 15 , 1973 So
head for

-Penny·A·Chain Sale
in loops or reels.
Mow at your Oregon Saw Chain dealer.

OlfEGON S..w CMm . . . .
Otw£1011

11
\.J.9.~~R!f.

SWISHER IMPLEMENT CO..
Upper Rt. 7

G~llopohs. Oh1o

smgles ,
~l1k e

'¥\ ere

Bret

Wilson,

Berr1d ge, M1ke Watson,

Mark K1eslm g, Bill Holland,
Leon Bn ggs and Kev Sheets
The Bo g Blacks benefoted
fr om e1ght bases on balls and a
dam agmg Blue Oevll error.
G(jlhpohs scored fir st m the
second ""hen Bernd ge and
Watson sm ote t'l4io-Out smgles
and Berndge later stole horne
GAHS made ot ~ m the top
of the lh1rd Wilson, aboa r d Dn
a v.i:ilk , r od e home on
Koeshng s shot to left foeld
The Blacks tied ot w1th two m
the bottom of the thord Fetty
an d Chandler drew walks 1&lt;1th
one out and were bunted up a
,notch by Warner Fetty scored
on a "old p1lch and Mtller
cra cked a run-scon ng smgle
It m oved mto the bottom of
the stxth, kn ot&gt;ed at 2-2, and
eac h team 'Aith f1ve hits
Then soph Watson ran out of
steam M oore opened w1 th a
double to center and M1ller
!:.tr olled Ka) ser lifted a
toy, enng double to center for
t" o t.all1es Pamter whacked a
long tnp le to nght field , then
st~red h1mself when the thtrd
sac ker let a thro\\n ball get
tmiiJ for an error
When Butch Thomas wafked ,
\\ atson " as relieved b) Steve
Lee Lee fanned Doeffmger
an d Fettv, "a i ked
J eH
Gilhspte and Warner to loa d
the bases, then got Timmy
Cott nll on a high bouncer to
mound But the score was n ow
6-2
Gallt polos rallied tn the top of
the seventh Warner walked
the bases loaded w1th two out
Leon Boggs smgled to center
for one run and When Lee also
tned to score, Butch Thomas
shot htm out at the pla te to end

'

the game
Box Score
GALLIPOLIS (31
Playe r
AB R H E
B Wil son , 2b
2 1 1 0
T Wt5e ma n 2b
1 0 0 0
M K tesl tng cf
2 0 I 0
R Ba rcus cf
1 0 0 0
K Shee ts It
l 0 1 0
L Brt gg s If
2 0 1 0
D Burne tte r f
2 0 0 0
G Hol ley rf
1 0 0 0
S Joh nson , lb
3 0 0 0
Steve Lee , 3b
2 0 0 o
T Folden S!i
1 o o o
M Berrtdge c
3 1 1 0
M Wat son p
2 0 1 0
S Lee p
0 0 0 0
B Holl and !iS Jb
2 1 1 1
Totals
25 J 7 1
BIG BLACKS (61
Player
AB R H E
2 1 1 0
J Chandler cl If
J Gt l l tSp te, If
0 0 0 0
R War ner p
2 0 1 0
M M oo r e 3b
2 1 1 0
T Cottr il l, 3b
1 0 0 0
S M tller , ss
2 1 1 1
S Ka'(ser , lb
2 1 2 0
R Gask •ns , l b
0 0 0 0
S Evan s. rf
1 0 0 0
B Pa1n ter rf
'1 1 l I
R Stmpktns, If
J 0 0 0
B Th omas, cf
1 0 1 0
J Holland 2b
1~ 0 o o
J Ooefl nger 2b
2 0 0 0
M Fetty c
2 1 0 0
Totals
21 6 a 2
Score by lnnmgs
Ga tltpO! IS
011 000 1- 3 7 1
Btg Black s
002 OO.t )( - 6 8 2
Left Blacks 6. GAHS 5
R Bl
Kayse r 2 M il ler 1,
Pa mfer 1 Ktes l tng 1, Brtggs 1,
2B H11s Moore Kayser 3B
Hti
Pa tnter
Sacrt f tce
Warner
DP
Wat son to Johnson .
Johnson Berrtdge to Wilson ,
BB Watson 6, Warner 5, Lee 2.
SO Warner 7, Lee 2. Watson 1,
Htts and Run!i Off Watson 8,
and 610 li {none out tn 6th) , Lee
0 and 0 tn 1
Loser M tke Watson tO 1),
Wtnner Randy War ner {6 1) ,
Umptres Red Tuc ker (plate ),
Bob Oltver (bases)

Russell
accepts
posts-

Urbana

Rio golfer captures

Berndsen led the Rio Grande
scoron~ "'Uo hos ll6, Tom

Garvey was next for the
Redmen at 134, Moke Barcus
shot a 135, BtU Hall recorded a
136 and Dou g M c Kmght

MOC medalist honors
RJO GRA.l\'DE - Ro o Grande am ong nme teams m the
sophom&lt;H"e Geor ge Berndse n D1stnct compelthon and
f1red a 116 for medalis t h onors
durang the ~ a d -Oh1 o Co n.
ference Golf Tournament held
last week at Uma Berndsen,
from Qncmnall , had scor es of
44-39-33 to record the lowest
score among Mod&lt;:lho o g olrers
Both the M1d -Ohoo Co nference and the NAlA Dtstn ct
22 T ournaments "ere held
Simultaneously "1 Uo Fondla)
w1nmng the Dtstnct and
Cedarvalle
the
Mad-Oh1 o
Conference champiOnship Rw
Grande flflJ shed
se\ enth

fimshed Wllh a 151
Ri o Grande golf Coach Art

The medalost for the Dastrict

22

Tuurnarnent was Ken
K ocker of Fondlay woth a score
of 112 Kocker headed the AJJ.

placed th~rd behond CedarvtUe
and Mal one on the MOC
tournament Rio Gr:n:d.-had a
team score of ~21 strokes , three
less than 1n 1m
Fondlay won the Dostrtcl 22
Utle wath a score of 462, 15
strokes beller than second
pla ce Walsh of canton, Ohio
fondlay and Wal sh ~ere
followed by · Blurrwn ( 478 ) ,
Cedarvolle 1484 ) , Defiance
1485 1, Malone ( 498 ) , Roo
Grande ! 521 ), WolmJR glon
( 525 ) , and Ohao Domamcan

Dist:nct 22 Team ; others who
quahfoed ror the Distrocl Team
~&lt;ere J1m Murrett of fondlay ,
Jom Roach of Bluffwn , Pelf
M,anguerra of Dehance, Jun
Penn of fondlay and George

•

Lanham ·announced Bemdsen
wa s named the Most Valu.able
Player for 1973 on the RA!dmen
t&lt;am , •nd Boll Hall, a senioo
from Bodwell, Ohio, recetved
' th e Coach 's Award
Rto
Grande &lt;cOncluded the spnng
~olr season at Uma witlo a ~
r ("('Ord

•

BOLENS~
The "tough tractors:·
•

R10 Grande
Berndsen, the Medalist for the
Be rnd sen

of

MOC, was named to the AJJ.
MOC team wo th Chuc~ Simpson and Mark Sophy of Mal one,
Mark
Evans
of
OhiO
Dommtean and Sam Jones of

&lt;535 )

Confer ence teams have been
named m track , tenms, and
g olr
At lhe Mod-Oh1o track
champ10nsh 1p on May 5 at RIP
Grande, Malone won 1ts thtrd
s tra 1ght MOC c r o ~&lt;n The
Pwneer s, coached by Jack
Hi:izen, scored 135 pomts , wh1le
r unner-up Cedarvolle totaled
75 RIO Grande hms)1ed m
th trd , with 43 pomts, and Oh10
Domm1can and Urbana t1ed for
the f our th spot, eacn with 6
pmnts
I nd1v tdual ftrst · place
wwners tnclude Boll Seho!l
IM J,· Mark Green IC ), Ro)
H oll os t M ), Ken R opeta I M I,
Ernoe Welborne ! C J, Seott
Armstrong 1M ) , We ndell
Sk ellel ! M ) , Motchell i C ) , Rtc
'l hompson I M 1. R ock P1t&gt;enger

SEO standings
SEO Stand tng s mcf
Team
W l
Athens
6 0
Ironton
6 1
Waverly
4 2
Logan
3 3
Gal ! tp Oi ts
J 4
Jack son
3 4
1\1\etg s
Q 5
Wei Is ton
0 6
TOTALS
24 2~
Last Week 's Re sults
W~ver l y 8 Galltpotts 4
Gatl tpolts 13 Logan 2
Log an 3 Me tgs 1
Monday ' s Game
Athens at Me tgs
Thursday 's Game
Wells ton at Me tgs
Remamtng Makeup
Logan at Wa verly

R OR
57 6
66 10
24 26
12 33
38 a l
15 41
... 6 22
4 43
222 222

I 'VI J, Baer I U ), and Terry Uoe ho gh JUinP
Cedarvolie 's Yelio" Jack ets
0• en ( M 1 The~ndiVldual poont
repeated
as MOC lennos ktngs
\4; 1nner
was Malone's RICk
Pittenger, who w on the shot put on May 5 at Ceda r volle The
and discus, took second m the host schoo l , coached by
Javehn , and ftmshed third m Murra y Murd och , lalhed 45
pomt.s Malone f1mshed w1th 24
po1nls, wh1le Rto Grande
scor ed 3 Ohio OomtnJcan and
Urbana did not compe te
The Ja ck ets w on all sox
smgles events and all three
doubles matches The All ·
Conference lenms t~am conSISts of Dave Delancey ( 1st
RIO GRANDE - Dr Bruce stngles l , Steve Mollokan ( 2nd),
Curt iS, dtrec tor of Lv ne Center
Jack Poole ! 3rd ), Alan Edlund
ann oun ced Saturday that the ! 4th 1, Don E ggleston 15th ), and
cente r w11l be closed to a ll Chuck Neuhaus ( 6th), all from
actl\ Jty from May 21 unt1l Cedarvi lle
furth er notice (apprmumately
Cedarv tll e's golf squad ,
three
\\. eeks )
C1nc 1nnatt coached b} R obert Gromack1 ,
F'loon ng will be reJ uvenatmg dethroned defendmg champ10n
the ta r tan fl oor 10 the g; m. U rbana on the MOC golf
nas1wn
cha mpiOnship on May 7 at
Dr Curtos added I must ask Lima Fma l sco re s were
that n o one enter the gym- Ced ar ville 484 , Malone and
nasi um area before clearmg Urbana 498 , R10 Grande 521,
"Jth J1m Oliver or myself smce and Oh10 D omLnt c an 525
there w1ll be fresh pamt and Named to the All·MOC team
other surfa ce coats that could ar e
G eo r ge
Bernd sen
be damaged by " a lkmg on l medal!st, RG ) , Sam J ones
them ''
l U I Mark Spohr ( M J, Chuck
L; ne Center wtll not open for Stmpson r :VI), and Mark Evans
ac-tJvJty unhl June 12, 1973
t OD 1

for repair work

Sox new tractors 111 1973 Ofrer ing a lot more than a
cho1ce of horsepow,er You pick the traclor woth the features you want From hydrostatoc drove to 3-speed geared
transm1sston Twm cylinder opposed to overhead valve
to synchro·ba lanced s1ngle cylmder engones Hydraulic
or mechamcal attachment lift Power lock1ng collar or
lock·plll for easy · attachment hook-up. And a chooce of
speed ranges , brake systems and attachments to accomplish any lawn and garden cho1e Bolens Division,
FMC Corporat ion

A GOOD YARD
CHUCK COLLIER
SERVICE STORE
Third &amp; Court

Gallioolis Ph. 446-3314

TO THE
PUBLIC

-'

..........

&lt;_

~

.. .

TERRY
JOHNSON

\

.

Wan!P.~

To Buy

OLD Furntlure, oak tables .
Wooden tee boxes , brass beds,
complete
dt shes
or
households , Wrtte M D
Mtller , Rt 4, Pomeroy. Ohto,
ca It 992 6271
S 13 ftc
TRACTOR hitch adaptor. from
2 pt back lo 3 pi . phone 7423182
51J5tc
WANTED - OLD UPRIGHT
PIANOS Any condthon Pay
$10 each Ftrst floor only
Wnte gtvtng dtrect~ans
P1anos, P 0 Bo)( 188, Sardts,
Ohto 43946
s 13 61p
NO 1 Copper , 50c, rad ia tors,
28c. brass, IBc , battenes, 85c
each clean dry roots. Gtn
seng, S60 yellow root , S4 ,
mayapple, 45c per lb • M A
Halt , Reedsville , Ohm, 378
6249

I WISH to thank all my netgh
bors, fnends and those on fhe
Holzer Medtcal Center staff
for all the prayers, cards,
gtffs, flower s, food, acts of
kmdness and care g t"¥en to me
dur rng
my
recent
hospttaltzatton
I greatly --------'---------S~6 lfc
apprectafe them and may TOP So il , phone 992 3502
5·8·6tc
God nchly bless you
Mrs Fran ces Roberts
5 13 ltp WOULD like to buy a ptcntc
table tn good cond ltton , phone
992 2324
•
Notice
s 11 6tc
__:_
TRY IT - You'll L1ke If The
Sew and Go Shop 10 Alfred USED Gravely mower , phone
All polyester drasttcatly
992 9972
reduced Marked at $2 15 and
s 11 6fp
up Open all day and weekday
even1ngs Ovmer Mrs E T
USED A or B Allts Chalmers
~ataway
tractor for parts
Frank
5·11 6tc
Dodderer, Box 162, Coolvtlle,

- - -- - - -

'

"

KEEP all dogs off Charles
Wolfe Property, at Fatrvtew ,
all day and all ntght
56 12tc
~-----

McDANIELS Custom Slauahter
House and Meat Cutttng,
State and Government tn
s~cted, phone 773 5208
s 6 12tp

~ll''

. HUMIDIFIERS
ftr•
HOI Water Heal 'IC'
~

Plumbing

'

BROTHERS

s

1960 and 1963 Volkswagens,
good conditton. phone 985
4118
S 10 Jtc
1~72

GRAN TORINO, power
steenng , power brakes, atr
condltton•ng, vmyl top Phone
949 5081 anyt1me
5 10 61 c

1972 CAMARO Z28 wheels, tape

player , ca ll 992 3.t53

-:-~==----.:.5.:.9 61p
1966 MUSTANG, 3 speed, 289
engtne , atr condttionel'\, 8
track stereo lape , phone 985
3929 or 985 4141
59 4k

:::-::-~-::--::-__:__

1967 FORD Econolme van
Heavy Duty , phone 992 3502
_ _____________ _:S_:8 6t c

For Sale

BEAUTIFUL Walnut Stereo
Hens. 80c each
radiO tape combma t ron , AM LEGHORN
phone
843 214S
FM radro 8 track tape deck
Balance Sll4 .)6 or terms can _ _ __ __ _:_5_:8 6tc
be arranged Cilll 992 3965
CLOSE OUT on (4) lull s1ze ztg
S 13 6k
zdg sew1ng machtnes For
sew1ng stre t ch
tabrtcs,
H &amp; N DAY old or started
buttonhclcs fan cy des1gns,
Leghorn pullets Both floor or
e tc Pal!ll sltghtty blem1shed
c age
grown
ava tlabte
Ch o1ce of carrymg case or
Poultry
housmg
&amp;
sewmg stand $49 80 cash or
automation Modern Poultry,
terms .wadable
Electr o
399 W M.atn, Pomeroy . 992
phone
992
7755
Hygume
Co
.
2164
58 Ot c
5 13 He :-:-:---:::-::-~~-___;
(2) ELECTROLUX Swoepers
CIJSTOM BUILD
pickup
delv)le model Complete wtfh
camper tops , $215 and up ,
all
cteantng attachments and
phone 742 5387
uses paper b.:lgs Sltg htty used
5 lJ 31p
but clean s and looks ltke new
Wdl sell tor $37 25 cash or
KUHL'S BARGAIN CE NTER
terms avat labl e
Electr o
HAS NEW - NEW - NEW
Hyg1ene Co , ph one 992 7755
fl oral or pla td l iving room
, 5 8 6tc
su1tes. Sl 89 95 and up ; m
Herculon at $139 95 bedroom 4 YEAR OLD regts tered run
Suttes $109 , 7 pc chrome
ntng quarter horse sorrel
dtne11 e, ste p end tabl es ,
s tall ton , phone 9927889 after 5
coff ee tables , S16 95 set Used
pm
app lt ances
automat1c
59 lfc
washers dryers , ranges.
re fngera lor s (I tce maker ) 1972 350 YAMAHA Road b tke tn
We have as usual . an ex
good condtt ton , less than I 600
cellen t assortment of used
miles , call 742 3295 after 4
t urnttuer - bedrooms, many
pm
wardrobes , much mtsc , even
5·9 6tc
round OAK TABLES Come
ou t Rt 7 and see us any day 1968 H ONDA 305 Super Hawk,
except MONDAY (yes, we're
excellen t condtt to n phone
open Sun dayt l " at ca utton
949 5953
l tght " tn Tuppers Plam s
S 9 61 C
phone 667 38.58
5 13 6tc NEW READY Bloomtng
potted fl ower s. stadtng at 50
BLAC K % Tennessee Walker
cents
hangtng basket~,
colt , 11 1 yea rs ol d phone 992
pan
stes
ca bbage, pelun tas ,
3640
mangolds
coleus, lomatoes,
\.
5 13 12t c
pepper s, etc One fourth off
by th e flat , Hubbar.d 's
ALL THE property formerly
Greenh ouse, 300 yards abbv e
owned by Pttfsburgh Coal
ballpark on Syracuse, Oh io
Company and now earned on
4 26 li e
the County tax records of
Metg s County Oh10 tn the
name of Consoltda!JOn Coat REG I STERED Appal oosa
yearltngs
al so
part
Company lo c ated tn the
regtstered
arabtans
one
f o ll owing taxmg d ts trt c l s
green
br
oke
horse
,
Call
Mtke
Chesler Twp E as tern
Jones , 992 6680 or see at E J
L SD
Saltsbury Twp H
ttl Farm , Flatwood s Rd ,
Pom eroy Vtllage , Salt sbur y
Pom~roy Ohto
T wp - Metg s L S D Sutt on
59 4tc
Twp So uthern L S D
Sealed bt ds for th e purc hase
Matenats
of all these properltes (whtch UPHOL STE RY
ny
lon
prtnls
co
tton
pr int s
should be grouped together
vmyls, v~lve t s of all kinds
and cons 1dered as a smgl e btd
Pom eroy Recovery 622 t
tfem l wtll be re cetved at the
M~ltn
51 , phone 99'2 7554
address hsted below unit! 12
5 3 241p
o cloc k ,noon. June 1, 1973
Further tnlormat1on may be
obtamed by contacltng th e 1973 STEREO 8 track A sma ll
balan ce of $88 ~!lor pay $6 SO
under stg ned
Con sol tdatton
per month Phone 992 5331
Coat Company reserves the
4 20 tf c
rtght to re tect any ar,d all
b td s E H Doughty Con
~~----so t•dalton Coat Co , Cad tz, MU ST se ll 1973 deluxe Ztg Za9
se wtng
machtne
Tht s
Ohto 43907
machm
e
darns,
embrot
ders,
5 13 IOt c
mak es
buttonholes,
all
=-::::-:---=-~~wt1hout attachments Jus t
1967 SEARS tent ca mper w1th
dtal and sew Pay balance of
9)1;12 add a room, $350 al so
$38 50 or pay $5 per month
Gtbson Grande electn c steel
Phone 992 5331
gut tar $200 ca ll 985 J985
4 20 tfc
s 11 31p

Business Services
EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

.------------------

- - - - - -- -

- - - -- -

Wanted To Rent

~~---~

HOOD 'S AQUARIUMS l15h
and su pplies, new locatton,
Ash Street, Mtddleport near
park , Phone 992 5443
1 7 ti c
COAL
Ltm es ton e, Excelstor '
Sa lt Works, E Matn Sf ,
Pomeroy Phone 992 3891
) 111
1963 MINNEAPOLIS M oltn e
back hoe and front end loader ,
$2 300 phone 99'}.6048
S 8 Sip
-~-~-~-

- - - -- - For Rent

--~----

Sale

AKC Toy Male Aprtcot Poodle
pup , 12weeksold , shots g tven
and wormed , caW ~ 7 3915 ,
S 13 Sip

PMnProv.O.

But tf the fact ory IS the
ptace to make eve ryth tng
that goes mstde the ktt
chen why shou tdn t the
kttchen ttsel f be built 1n the
factory?

KOSCOT SPECIALS for IW!y
are Hair Ka1r Products In
cl udtng other 1l ems If you
have ever purchased Koscot
Kosmettcs and are not , bel ng
serv1 ced phone Helen Jane
Brown . even tngs also, 992
5113
13 li e

s

THREE Norwegtan ElkhOun ds.
reg fs tered , $25 each , phone

9'12 7232
5 13 6tc
~-~~--

POODLES, AKC pupptes , small
mmta lure, bla ck or wh~te
wormed permanent shots
'$75 , ph one Cool"¥tlte 667 61 14
5 6 12tc

• ••

'"'Y

ROBIE'S ' TRUCK &amp; TIRE ·SERVICE

·--------··············-------.;........... .

PH. 245-5169

~ ;.;.~;.;..

CLEAN Carpets the save and
sa~e way w1fh Blue Lustre
Rent electn c shampooer $1
Ne lsons
Drug
Store ,
Pomeroy , Oh to
5 10 21c
UPHOLSTERY
Matertal s,
regularl y S3 95 only Sl 95
Also r emnant s Pomeroy
Rt!c.overy , 622 E Matn St 1
phone 992 7554
S3241p
NEW FOAM to frll
cus.htons, standard
on ly
~9 95
Recovery, 622 E
phone 992 7554

your old
stze sutle ,
Pomeroy
Matn Sf ,

GARAGE Sale , Wednesday ,
May 16th from 10 a .m ~ to 6
5-3 24tp
p m , chtldren 's and adults'
clothes , carsea1
tamp s,
turntture . toys, dishes Chuck MATURE respons1ble person to
Evan s, Shtrley Johnson and 3
babysll 1n
horne on S LEGHORN hens Pllone: 949
other fatrttltes'clt . the Johnson
S&lt;:co11d tn Mtdd,epor t for 3
4781
home Rt 1, Portland , Oht o
months old baby ttnd 7 year
S 9 3tc
5-13 31c
Qld boy S da ys per week tn ~ ---~-eludin g ~ame weekends
References rcqulr td Job BEAUTIFUL se lection of
PIANO Tuntng . Lane Dan te ls.
slarh e"d ot May
Send ~ ! lowers, wreaths and baskets
992 2082 , 259 Broadway St
tnqu~ries
to
Bo~~:
406 ,
tor Memortal Day Cliff's
,Mtddleport
Gall t1JOI1s. Ohio
Shoe Repa tr M td dleport
- J 61(.
5 10 Stc
56 121c

Help Wanted

-

1969 PLYMOUTH Roadrunner
good condttlon, 383 motor,
automatt c transmtsston , mag
wheels, power sleenng, new
ttres , orange wtfh black vmyl
top $995 , See Charles Bisse ll ,
Chester, Ohto or call 985 3582
5 11 Jtc

_____

$85

992-2448

RODNEY, OHIO

G000 ' 70PLYMOUTH . 4dooc .
$97 5, phone 992 5310
5-11 3tc

· r'&lt;"or Sale

.tO SQ YOS of carpet, $4 a yard ,
ca II after 5 p m 992 2789
s 10 3tc ~-~--~
THE BRIGHT STAR MARKET
1971 TRIUMPH 650 Bonnevtlle,
Makes you an unheard Of
4,500 miles, $995 or best offer ,
offer FREE FREE Free
phone 992 3048
One f1flh of all. the fottowtng
~------_____;_S:.::6 6fp dry grocenes are absolutely
Free example mtntmum
GROCERY bus iness tor sa te
purc ha se of only SB 00 worth
Bulldtng for sale or tease
of these tlem s tn Iota I and you
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
gel another $2 00 or more one
OhiO
to 10 p m for appomtment
fifth of your to t_at purchase
10 31p
J.20 tfc
FREE Select your needs
fr om these hundreds of tlem s
HOME Grown Tomato plants
All canned frutl s, all canned
for garden use , larg e sturdy
vegetables Ko o l Atd , r1 ce
plants , lmpro"¥ed Me)(tcan
WORKING famtly needs two or
puddmg s tello, all dtet Item s,
Hetnz 1350 and Supersontc,
three bedroom house •n
laptaca ma caronts , noodles,
also hot peppers , mangoes
Eastern School Dtstrict ,
spaghellt , box pt zzas, you at so
and ca bbage plants On Rt
anywhere , dependable,
get one f tflh Free on all Baby
124, 500 ft above the State
references, phone 985 3549
F ormula s all dry baby
Park 1n Syracuse, 0 , Thomas
s 13 61p
cereals all1untor baby food s
Hayman
all brands of mstanl lea 25 lb
4 24 33tc
bag s of Gold Medal Flour all
cerea ls all pan cake m1x es
TRAILER, Brown ' s Trailer NEW 2 ptece Modern Ltvtng
all cook tng otis 3 tb 8 oz rars
Room Sut!e wlfh 90 " 3
Park . phone 992 3324
of felly 21b tars prese rves . 5
cush ton sofa , button tufted
S 13 tfc
lb and 4 tb contamers of
back and ex tra htgh back Mr
syrups all shake and bak e
Cha1r , thts week only ,
TWO bedroom s, 2 baths,
tfem s, al l cooktes •nct udmg
$139 95, Cash &amp; Carry ,
beautiful bullt 10 k'ttchen,
swee ty p•e s att mayonnatse,
Pomeroy Recovery , 622 E
located tn Pomeroy, phone
all salad dresst ng, tncludtng
Matn , Pomeroy, phone 992
446 4060 after 5 p m , 446 1279
pourabtes , all peanut butter
7SS4
s 13 6lc
all mu stard all vtnegar , Hot
5 10 6tc
Dog r eltsh al l cake m txcs, all
TWO bedroom mob1le home m
cake frosltng s
BOAT, Motor and tra1ler
Mtddleport, adults only.
We actepl Federal Food
asktng $225 tw o atr con
phone 992 5592
fh ts
c ou pon s and with
d1f1oners - one 15,000 BTU's
5 13 ftc
unheard of one-f tfth Free
and one 8000 BTU's Phone
off er Th ere IS no pla ce you
992 9981
HOUSES - one 2 bedroom and
can b uy all you r grocery
5 10 Jtc
one 4 bedroom, phone 992 2780
tlems for less money 1n l ot.:~ I
or 992 3432
llmtls on quan!lttes you
Np
5 131fc BEDROOM Surte , bookcase
may purcha se and that 's not
atl , youat so getone ltfthFree
headboard, double dresser
on all the foll ow tng non food
wtth mtrror , ntght stand
TWO trailer lots m Mtddleport,
Harlls Frank, Chester, Ohio
112 duplex m Bradbury , phone
tlems
All bar soaps , all
Phone ~85 3368
before 6 p m 992 5693
ilulom a l tc
water
s 10 3tp detergent s. all dtsh
5 14 5tc
12' .Jiummum
fat t, a! t wa &gt;:paper at t loam or
PRIVATE meeting room for GRAVELY Rotary plow atn:l
paper cu ps, alt paper plates
any organtzallon , phone 992
cu tflvat or old tee box, dtnefte
all plast•c spoons. e tc 200
3~7S
set Pnone 992 5510
count paper napktns, yard
3 11 lfc
5 10 Jtc
guard 1nsecf spray, freewr
bag s and wraps, all other
3 AND 4 ROOM furntshed and 1972 KAWASAKI 175, knobby
pla st• c bag s and wraps , all
unfurntshed
apartments
ftres , 21' rtm, e)(cellent
floor waxes and cleaners all
Phone 992 5434
I urnt t ure poI tSh, a II room
.,.'"Ondttton, $495 Phone 992
412tfc
2360
deodon ze rbombs 9ft x 12ft
51051
ALL ELECTRIC, ltke new, 3
. p
rug s tubs bu ckets, clothes
lmes, broom s, mops, c lothes
b
lh
lh
I
r oo ms w1
arge
a , STARCRAFT New &amp; Used
ptns, shot gtm shell s, thermos
elecfrtc wall oven, table top
Travel Trailers and Fold
bottles , thermos re fttt s all
·ange
lar~e
closet,
located
on
down
campe·s
o•
ft
s
1
1n LP
•
• , "'
,
sc h oo 1 supp 1tes, Pus
many
.......~_m S • Pomero~ , see to
11899 ' 22 ft • 7 •n • sc•
1
h
1
E ..
'em s sue assungassesan d
.;f\:&gt;prectate , phone alttpO!ts
$3650 , 20 ft 7 tn SC, $3275,
other 1tems reduced 112 or
"69S39
Starmastec Campers , $13SO,
m or e you~ oqe f t flh F ree
5 II 6tc
We sell service and quality
starts when your total pur
F
a
d CAMP
h
h
h
tnancm~ rrange
c ase reac es $8 00 and t ere
MOBILE home spa ce tn
CO NLE
STARCRAFT
are no quanltly purchase
Syracuse ph one 992 6329
SALES, Rt
62N of Pt
t mtts

Pets

E verylhtng
1n
the
modern mobt le home today
•s factor y bu1 lt
•n the
owners fa von te decor
and a monthly rent stze
payment covers everyfhtng
house, fur ntture ap
pltances , and decor

s 11 61p

'

Real Estate For Sale
7

ROOM frame hou se rn
Harn son vtll e, $6 000 phOne
304 755 2657
5 2-12tc

2 STORY HOME, 5 bedrooms
and bath , basement. butlttn
sweeper , 2 car garage, forced
atr furnace, phone Coolville
667 3.t 79
5 10 3tc
~-,----~~~

HERMIT S AND
SPECU
LATORS _ 12 acr es wood
ed
h t tl
ground ,
small
hou se 1n need of work , pond ,
large garden Sec luded but
close tn La st property on
Wlll ts Htll Road , Pomeroy
Nee d s so me dozer work
$ 1950 00 FIRM Phon e 99 '}
3719 Sundays only
5 10 31p
BEAUTIFUL Country Home on
Tuppers
Platn s
Water
,. system 6 rooms and bath ,
Dasemen l . beauttful built tn

ktl c hen.~ all rooms paneled ,
new furna ce, new '¥tnyl
Stdmg
storm
wtndows
door s ,and
\shutt
ers, 12 storm
miles
fr om Pomeroy , wtlt sel l wtlh
to l and garden or smal
acreage . phone 949 5953
59 6tc
NEW HomesonJour tot or ours
NO MONE
DOWN lor
d b
F H
qual•li
uSi ng costs
Adm eloanuyers
(Ciostng
A
1 f fl b tans
on 1y 1 vane yo o r p
wdh
various
ftnancmg
avatlable
We
lh

--~-- ,~-

ftfth of your total purchase
FREE We occept Federal
F ood Cou pons on all food
dem s Thts offer tS made tn
deep apprecta!Jon for the
thousands of customer s who
have patrontzed our stores
dur tng the past 21 years
, Ge t fh ts hug e one ftffh
Otscounl Free at Brtghl Star
Marke t, Next to the Drtve Inn
Theatre , Ma son, W Va Sa le
end s June 10. 1973
5 11 Jtc

, M tddt eport ,
992 5976 tor Jn.
56 30tc

ASK

-

From the laroest Tru ck or
Bulldozer Radtator to the
::.ma !lest Heater Lore
Na1han Bt9gs
Radtator Spectaltst

SMITH NELSON
. MOTORS, INC.

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open 8 Ttl 5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E Mam , Pomeroy , 0 .

Ph 9922174

Spectahst
Wheel
Alignment
It Must
Be Rtght
or we wtll
~[!!~~llakett R1ght

BLA~IIand

+.-

----

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Pomeroy

MATERIALS CO.
771 5554
Mason, W. Va

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED

992 -2094

24 Hour
Oatly Servtce

606 E. Maon Pomeroy

MODERN
SANITATION

OFFICE SUPPLIES
FURNITURE

84 300atly, 8-12Sat
In the R H Rawt1ng s Son s

Slop In and See
Floor Do splay.

Butldtng

Mtd(\leport, 0

Real Estate For Sale

I

REALTY '

108

E.

Our

DANN Y ' S TV Servtcc, Ma son ,
W Vii Ph one 773 5976
.t-27 ttc

MAIN . . . . . . . . . . .""
POMEROY
LET US SELL YOUR
HOME FOR YOU!

CHILDREN GROW
HOU SES DON ' T So here s a
place that's td eal for a
growtng tamlly ~ large
bedroom s
Jl/ 2
bath s
Beaultfut kll c hen dtnlng
bar, loads of cabmets etc
Carpeftng, sun por ch uftltty
room,
garage
Large
butldlngt!O x70 tnfherear 11'4
Acres ground $21 ,500 00
ILL HEALTH
ts for c ing the sa le of thts
e K c e II en t
bu s tin es s
Establtshed for 5 year s
Good tncome NO PHONE
CALLS PLEASE come tn
and let us dtscuss 1t
YOU PROVIDE
THE FAMILY
we'll provtde every thing else
10 the 5 bedroom home
Mother wilt love 1hts modern
ktl chen , dt shwasher and all
1112 baths dlntng room ,
utility R Full basement
Garage &amp; other butld10gs
$17 000 00
2 MINUTES' WALK
to play~round, swtmm mg
poo l, shopping
5 n1 ce
bedroom s 1112 baths n tee
ktl chen, dtning R , utility R ,
2 gla ssed por ches Storm
door s &amp; wmdow s Garage
LOOK $12,800 00
HENRY E CLELAND,
BROKER
992 2259
If no answer 992 2568

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker
110 Mechanic Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

0 DELL WH EEL Altgnment
loca ted at Crossroad s, Rt 124
comp lete fron t end servtce ,
Jun e up an d brake servt ce
Wh eel s
ba lan ced
etec
lr onteatly All
w o rk
gu a rant eed
Reaso nabl e
rate s Phone 992 3213 or 742
323?
2 t8 lfc
READY MIX
CO NCRETE
deltve red rtg hl to your
pro,ecl Fa st and easy Free
es llm a l es Phon e 992 -3284
Goeglctn Rea dy M t x Co,
M tdd teporl Ohto
6 30 lf c
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABL E rates Ph 446
4782 Ga lltpolt s, John Russell ,
Owner an d Operat or
5 12 lf c

- - - - - -- -

John Tucker, Rt. 4
Pomeroy, 0.
Ph 992-3954
EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
and backhoe work , sephc
lank'S tnstalled . dump trucks
and lo boys for h tre . will haul
fill dtrt, lop sotl, limestone
and gravel , Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers , day phone 992 7089,
ntght phone 992 3525 or ~2
5232
2· 11 tic
SEE US FOR Awntnqs, storm
doors and wtndows , carpor ts,
marquees, alumtnum s1dmg
an d raHmg A Jacob, sales
re pr esenlaltve
For fr ee
es t 1mates , phone Charles
Lt !:. le ! Syracuse,
V
V
Johnson and Son, Inc
3 2 tfc
TRA SH ptckup Phone 992 2285
58 6tc
WILL tnm or cu t trees, clean
ou t base ments, attics, etc
and patnl roofs Phone 949
32il
417301c

C BRADFORD, Auc tt oneer
Co mpl ete ~e r vtce
Ph one 949 3821
Racme Ohto
Cnlt Bradford
5 I He

DOZER and back hoe work,
ponds and sepltc tanks , dttch
tng servtee top sotl, fill dirt,
ltmestone B&amp;K Exca.Ja ftng
Ph one 992 5367 Dt ck Karr , Jr
_ _ _ c _ __
_ 9 1 lfc

E L NA Llnd Whtt e Sewtng
Machtnes
Servtce on all
mak es Reasonab le rates
Th e Sewt ng Center M td
dleport, Ohio
11 16lt c

NOW OPEN ~ Roger Hysell's
Garage, nea r Crossroads on
St Rt 124, aft mechanic work
tnc tu c:l tng au lomatt c trans
mt SS Lon s
Monday
thru
Saturday 8 30 a m to 5 p m
Phone 99'2 7121 or 992-6392
S·3 30tc

HOUSE

Root pa tnftng
and extenor lree
es ttm a tes Ca lt 992 7008 or 992
7:460
•
4 19 30fc
and

mte r~

EXCAVATING Dozers , large
and srn alt, Ba ckhoes and
loaders on track and Hres ,
Dump tru c ks Lo boy
serv tce Sepltc tanks tn
sl al!ed George ( Btl! ) Pullins,
SE PTIC TANKS
AROBIC
phone 992 2478 or 992-7402
SEWAGE
S Y S TEM S
2 9 tfc
CLEANED ,
REPA IRE D
MILL ER SA NITHION.
serv tce and
STEWART. OHIO PH 662 HAR R t
ser vtce calls Phone 992 2522
3035
2 9 tfc ,
lO ~ tfc

s&lt;3N7fi\V

SE WIN G MA C HIN E. ~ Repatr
sc r vtce, all milkes ?92 2284
The Fabnc Shop, Pomeroy
Aulhort zed Stnger Sales and
Servtce We Sharpen Sctssors
3 2~ l( c
AUTOMOBIL E tnsurance been
Can ce ll ed ?
Lo st
your
operator's l tce nse? Catt 992
2966

6 15 tf c

• PHONE ' L Parker for Cattle
A I Stre Servtce, Pomeroy
99 2 2264
5 13 12tc

Real Estate For Sale
HOUSE tn Long Bottom Phone
98S JS29
6 11 tfc
HOUSE, 6 rooms and bath, 829
S Thtrd Ave phone 992-5431
-.--- - -- - - - - -S
:...:
·8 6tc

Real Estate For Sale
39 ACRE f .;~rm 6 room house,
b arn and ou lb~ldtng s 3
mtles off Rt 1 t Chester
phone 985 4205
5 14 41c

FOR Sa te By owner . 3 bedroom
hom e 1n Wonder Htlls,
A I hens Ohto, for tnformafton
ca II 592 47 57
5 11 21c

NEW Total Electrtc frame
NEW LISTING
home, b.:~seboard heat , hard
NICE MOBILE HOME - 3 35 ACRES, brtck hom e 7
wood fl oor s, 3 bedroom, bath,
rooms, ba th, lull ba se ment,
bedroom s, retrrgerator. stove,
l tv mg room, dtntng room,
allached 2 ca r garage 3 or 4
buil t tn ktlchen, breezeway,
nt cc bath 12x70 Schu ll w•lh
bedroom, wa lk tn c lose t s
garage, ctfy water Lot size
fu el ott furna ce Larg e k1l che n
{cedar ltned) , ktlchen ha s
1.00x400
Addtttona'l
tot
and master bedroom Askmg
butt! m oven and range top ,
availab le Tuppers Platns,
rust $6.000 00
lots of bronze gl ow btrch
Ohto Pnce $17,000 Phone
WATER FRONT
ca btn e t s carpeted l1 v1ng
667 6386
SYRACUSE - 4 bedroom s, 2
room, larg e family room and
5 11 3tc
"·lh
f II b
)
d 2
dlnmg area stocked pond
Ud
s, u
asemen , an
1ot s All f or on 1Y $10 ,SOO 00
free ga s and pl enty of water
3 _B~DROOM ranch style tn
miles N of Pomeroy ca ll
8
Pomeroy, w to w carpeting, 2
HOBSON
for appotnlmeni, 992 738~
ca r garage attached, atr
3 BEDROOM S - Bath lot s at
5 13 3tp
t:ondtt.oned , phone 992 5593
cup b oar d s tn lh e k •t c h en
•
· 5116tc
Basem ent, front and back TWO
story
home
full
porch es Drtlled well , and
ba se ment, bath &amp; 1n , for ced 5 ROOM house. basement, gas
garage Now only $8,000 00
atr furnace, large tot, ex
heat. bath, 2 tots , S D
cellen l toca lt on , phone 992
Busktrk , 341 Page St , Mid
BUSINESS BUILDING
7384
dleport, Ohto phone 992 5487
30 ROOM BR tCK - Steam
5 13 Jlp
heat, bar wtfh I 2 3 l tcenses
11 31p
Par kt ng lot $32 ~ 500 00 the pnce
ol a hou se
MIDDLEPORT
2 BEDROOMS
Sal h.
ba se ment, front and ba c k
Happiness for us is selling Real
~
._......._...
All ul•l•f••
NEW HOME
3 BEDROOMS - N1ce kitchen
:::&gt;
wtth slo"¥e and r efrtgerator
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO'S LARGEST
••
0
Lots ot closet s 2 large lots
&gt;
Want only $16,000 00
NEW LISTING
Ql
Here's A New Ltsltng On
tn Bedford
2 ACRES _
Townshtp near Burt 1ngham , ott
Butternut tn Pomeroy
,~~-~~-

s

~k•ng

LOVELY, 3 bedrOOm, 1 floor
pla n . for ce d atr furnace,
hardwo od fl oo rs , excellent
cond tlt on. on Chester Water Rt 33 A real bi.!Y at $1590 00.
Sy stem 10 years old, on 97 A
NEW LISTING
lot on Sta te H1ghway You 80 ACRES - Some ntce laytng
ca n purchase on farm home ' land •n Rutland Townshtp 7
wllh tow down payment TWO room hou se, bath, basement,
R IV E RS
R E A L T Y, drtlled well , and 2 barn s Want
C LA R E N C E
B E L L . ooly 121 500 oo
UPHOLSTER your ow n tur
SALESMAN
240
Fr onl
nttur e Foam cush1on s, any
Martella phone off1ce, 373
WE WORK FULL T IME IN
stze Cotton burlap, swtve l
5916 r.es tden ce, 3735935 or SELL ING
PROPERTY .
bases , ztpper, dacron , web
667 J6SO
NOTHING
ELSE
SOWE CAN
b1ng ,
welt
Pomeroy
6 121c
Reco"¥ery , 622 E Matn St ,
REA L LY
GIVE
YOUR
phone 992 755~
PROPERTY tn Mtddleport tot PROPERTY LtS'r ED WITH
5 3 24fp
132x300 wtth 9 r oom house, US ITS BE ST TRY US FOR A
garage apartment and ex tra CHANGE
BROWN! NC Automatt c, full
butldtng spa ces phone 992
choke, 12 gauge, Versa Mec
77 47 or 985 3805
loader , 12 gauge , Joh nn y
HELEN L tEAFORO
5 13 3tc
Stewa rt Game Caller 2 cr ows
992 -3325
-----.~-~and I owl Phone 949 2789
GDRDQN B. TEAFORD
5 10 3tc ~ ACRE S on State Roule 143. 1
992-3615
mile Sou th of Harr tsonvt lle ,
ASSOCIATES
pony statl ton
several ht me st tes wafe, tap
NDSU~OAYS PLEASE
~ 1 I &lt;:lit , phone 985 4205
Pd Jd c.al I 992 3640
s 13 121c _ _ _ _ _....__ _ _ __
e· l~ lie

s

But It to Your 'Specs
Delivered to Job Site

and

CLELAND

ABOUT

WOOD TRUSSES

GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

991-2101

US

PRE FABRICATED

On Most Artten can Cars

1
1c hes
•-------~---~-~-~
E
iectrica~I~W~o~r~k
~
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--~~~~
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~2
:
1
:
1
c
~
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~Ie;a;~in
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~W~V~a~.~he~h]'in~d~R~eid
~
',~~~~~~~~~~~
~~!~
~n~
'k'
··
~~~usr
1
•
of
tlem
s
and
you
w11t
get
one
1
Co,
150
1
1
2

everythmg m your k ttchen
wa s manufa c tured The
modern way

..-., .....

Thanks

Furnace Controls

SELF-SERVICE

Is t he refngerator tn
your ktfchtm handmade?
Of course not It was made
In the
So was the

.

of

Auto Sales

1220 Washtngtan Blvd
423 7521
BELPRE, 0.

HEAnNG &amp;
COOliN(i

COIN OPERATED

(. ..-.-..-..-.....--...-

Card

"'

.o &lt;
~ -

For Sale

Homes For Sale

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

IN LOVING memory of my
mother, Mrs Geor9e Roush
thts Mother s Day
on
Pre ctous memones ltnger,
Mom From Edna E Wtggms
5 13 ltp

"'H

__

By

JOHNSON'S
MOBILE HOME SALES
1110 Ea stern Avenue
Gallipolis, Oh•o
Phone 614 - 446 ~ 3547

Mob

FLEA MARKET al the Buy
R 1te Shop In Add 1son Open
every Sunday at 11 a m
5 10 3tc

_.-

-~
- . ..
. .

Help Wanted

S PM Day Before Publreat•on KNAPP SHOES Comfort, FREE upstair!. apartment for
Monday Oeadllne 9 a m
Quality ,
long
Wear ,
couple wlll!ng to care for
Cance-llet ron Corr-ec tions
Reasonable pn ces Call 992elderly
woman
L1ght
Will be ~ccepte-d unt ll9 am tor
5324
housekeepin g
and cook
Day of Publrcatron
s 3 tfc dtnner Need to help dress
REGULATtONS
mornr ~s as she has broken
The P u bliSh er res.erves the
99
rlg:ht to edrt or re 1ect an v ads
1le
arm
one 2 5435
deemed
ob ject 1 onal
The
5 1J-4tc
pub lisher will not be responSible 1971 HOLLY Park, 12 x 60, like - -- - - - - - - for m.ore than one •ncorrect
new, carpeted , house fur · FEMALE housekeeper to cook
Insert ion
nlture , atr co ndtt lone d .
andcareforelderlywoman1n
Fur WJ~~l:~ervl&lt;•
washer and dryer, with 8~t 32
MtddlepOft , live tn , separate
porch and awning . phone 1kitchen and upsta1rs apart
5 cents per Word one ll'lUrt•on
304 773 5474
men!. S30 per week , phone
Mtn •mum ChCJrge 75c
12 cents per word th ree
59 l otc
992 5435
5-13 .ttc
consecut ive msertlons
18 cents per word sut con
COOK, wattress and ca rhop ,
secuttve tnsert •ons
Air Conditioners
apply tn person, Craw 's Steak
25 Per Cent Dlscbvnt on PCJtd
Awntngs
ads and ads pa td W1th m 10 days
House
CARD OF THANKS
5 10 ttc
Underpinning
&amp; OBITUARY
Sl 50 for SO word mm1mum
WANTED - Someone to stay
Complete mobile home
Each addtftonal word 2c
n1ght w1th an elderly lady m
serVtce plus gtganttc
I LIND ADS
her Mtddleport home Phone
Add •ltonal 2.k Charge per
d1splay · of mobile homes
~92 364-4
Advert1sement
always available at
OFFICE HOURS
S 10 3tc
8 30 a m to 5 00 p m Dally
8 30 a m to 12 00 Noon
Saturday

GUN SHOOT, factory choked
and hand choked guns,
Forked Run Sportsman Club,
Sunday, May 13, 12 noon
5 10 31c

-.- . -

Wh y not see your own
pack age •lOme on dtsptay
here

Notice

ROOFING and Heat tng Repatr,
all types, Spectal - Cleantng
and otltng of blower, complete
check on furnaces , phone 8.t3
2341
5 2 JOtc

I

four-year absence BtU Russell ,
one of best defenstve centers to
ever play pro basketball ,
returns to the sport as coach
and general manager of the
Seattle SuperSomcs
The forme r superstar and
coach of the Boston Celtlcs
stgned a flve-}ear contracb
froda y "tlh the Somes of the
National Basketball Assocta·
tlon Terms were not dtselosed
S &lt;-~m St \lU im &lt;\n prrc:1rlr nt
and owner of the ~omcs, called
Russell "the most dorrunant
player the game has known
and the flnest coach m the
game's htstory "
H e r eplaces Tom Ntssalke,
\\ ho wa,:; fired m January, as
the coach and succeeds Bob
Houbregs as. general manager
H oubre gs qwt last week

~~~~~:~:fr~N
DEADLINE$

CLUB Restaurant , Racme , Ohto
wi II be open 7 days a week
Plate Lunches , $1 35 to S2 50
5 10 3tc

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For. Fast Results Use ·The s,_,nday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

SHOOTING MATCH . Corn
Hollow Gun Club, turn ftrst
nght after Miles Cemetery,
Rutland
Factory chol&lt;ed
guns only Sunday, May 13th,
I p m
S 10 31c

SVAC standings
S\IAC STANDINGS
Team
W L R OR
6 0 54
6
Symmes Valley
8 2 60 31
Kyger Creek
Sou thern
3 1 27
8
Eastern
3 3 25 15
North Gallta
2 3 25 29
Han nan Tra ce
2 3 21 34
Southwestern
0 12 0 8.t
Last
Week ' s
Results
Sym mes Vall ey 6 Eastern 3.
Symmes Valley 5 Kyger Creek
0 and Kyger Creek 10 Hannan
Trace 3
Thts week's games M onday
~ Hannan Trace at Ea stern
Kyger Creek at Southern
North Galtta at Hannan Trace

nhnel, Sunday, Mayl3,1973

IN LOVING memory of our
Mother an~ Grandmother,
Je ss1e
SISson
on
'hts
Mother 's Day
Deep 10 the heart ltes a piCture.
Of a t,:,ved one latd to res!,
In memory's frame we shall
keep tt, Because she was one
of the best
Sadly mtssed by chtldren,
grandchtldren and great
grandchildren
s lJ. ltp
l

close few days

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Se ·

IN LOVING memory of our
mother ,
Mrs
James
Hazel1on, Sr • who passed 197 1 12x60 Mobtle Home on
away May 13, 1968
100x200 lot tn Tuppers Platns,
Days of sadness sf1ll are wtlh
S6800 Phone 667 3363 or see
us, Tears of stlence often
Dorsel Mtller
flow ,
s 10 6fp
But her memory keeps her near
us, Stn ce she left us ftve years CASH patd for all makes and
ago
models of mobtle homes
Sadly mtssed by the
Phone area code 614 423 9531 .
chtldren
4 13 tfc
513ltc

L yne Center to

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In MemiiiY

All Mid-Ohio Conference
Dream Teams are released
CANTON - Based on ' per.
formances over the weekend of
May 5-1 , the All-Mod-Oho9

15 - TheSundayTiJnes

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THE WISEMAN AGENCY

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REALTOR

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1/1

ell

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Vf~ry tnterestmg 3 bedroom Spantsh sty led home or,
larg e h1tl stde lot w1th extra lot and 2 car garage
across the street Tht s home tncludes a large lt-vrng
room and ftreplace, d tntng room , ntce kttchen and
break fa st nook plus an unfurn tshed 2nd floor and
full ba sement Call Ike Wtseman nght now for an
appointment

You're Mtssmg A Bargain

ru

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We hav e !ht s larg e 5 bedroom home tn Mtddleport
and we thtnk you'll buy tt tf you see It mstde Mr
Sm tth , the own er , tS wdlmg to take a loss and w1ll
help a ltt11e wtth the ftnanc mg but you won't buy tf
you don ' t look Don ' t let someone beat you to tf and
then realtze you JUst made a $5,000 mtstake It's
very altracl•v e tnStde wtth a completely modern
ktlchen 2 very ntce baths and lots of r:oom for any
stze famt ly Call Mrs Selwyn Smtft'l at 992 3486 and
she wil l be happy tn show 1t or calt us collect at
446 3M3

We

!Tlake the buyer the seller and

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16-The Sunday Times. Sentihel. Sunday, 111al· 13, 1973

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Realty, 32 State
Tel. 446·1998

44&amp;1066
ONE

FOR

T HE

ROA D

A

tra veling sa lesma n' s w1fe
went to a pr l1c ch1c ken show
.;ind

cam e

ho m e

w1 l h

a

nuc leus for starl 1ng a h 1tle
c hicken fa rm " How ar e
things?" her husband asked
when he came home " Jus t
fme," she r epl1ed . " I am
going to raise some ChiC kens
1 bought fi ve hens and two
r oos ter s at the poul try show."

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" Why tw o roos ters., .. he

· asked . " Well, " she r epl ied,
" IUS I 1n ca se one of them
deci des to go on the r oad "
NEW LISTINGS
4

.

'..

BEDROOM

house on

Neal

Ave , haS Ctly water, ga s, and
garage apt Sale pr 1ce $14 ,500

AT
CHESH I RE . Oh &lt;o , 3
bedroom home w1l h all c rty
conv eni ences
LISTINGS
47 GARFIELD Ave , very nice
home w1fh new carpet and
drape s. centra l a1r con
d1fion1ng, front room 22 ' x 14' r
with wood burn111g f 1repla ce,
modern
k1tchen ,
full
basemen t, and new cnrport.
Ha s nver v1ew , pnce $22 ,500 .

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3 BEDROOM block dwg on 3
ar;res of lan d, f~repface 1n
fr ont r oom , carpe t. fue l oil
furna ce, pn ced to se ll, $~,000
COTTAGE on Evans Heights,
lot 45' x 125' , modern k1tchen,
the whol e house In excel lent
cond1t1on , also, garag e, pn ce
$15,000
7 ROOM bnck home on Lower
Ri ver Road overlooktng the
Ohio R1ver , moder n k1tcnen ,
carpeted, air condittontng,
full
basement ,
two -c ar
garage, has recentl y been
rede corated
MODERN 1 floor plan on Ad dlson -Bulavllle Rd ., 6 room s,
hardwood floors , modern
ktfchen , rural water , situated
on two lots, pnce $21.000
Present l y rents for S200 per
month .
LARGE older home has been
remodeled , modern kitchen.
new carpeting, two patios,
pltJs ex tra tr a iler pad on lot,
prtce $21 ,000
MODERN 3 bedroom bnck
home. close to hospital , very
nice kilchen and dining area ,
a1r co nd \ ttontng, t wo car
g a r age ,
t mme d t at e
possesswn. p n ce S26,500.
106 SECOND Ave .. bnck home
wlfh nice lot, 1112 baths , steam
heat, f ul l baseme nt, fireplace,
very ntce ktlchen wtth all
appl tances bu tf t .tn , prtce
$30,000.
23 ACRES at Eureka,
red uced to $3,500

pn ce

4 BEDR OOM trade r w1th Jl/ 7
bat hs For Rent.
Office: 446-1066
EVENINGS :
,
Russe ll Wood , 446 -461 8
Ron Ca naday, 446-3636
John I . Richards, 446-0280

For Sale
GOOD CLEA N L UMP and
stoker coa l. Carl Wttl ters, Rio
Grande .Phone 245-51 15

6-11

M AG N ETIC Signs for cars and
trucks . All kinds, Simmons
Pnnftng and Office Equ ip
ment
52 tf

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Corbin &amp; Snyder

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Furniture ~

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CR OWN CIT Y -- 6 rms with
l ull and dr y bo:1 se. L tv . rm ., 16'
x 25', large Rec. Rm wlih
F p , kd chen 12' x 16' with
buil t m cabmefs H .W. floors .
all pane led , car'pet on li v. rm .
and bdrm s II ha s a metal
gar age and locat ed on 2 leveL
shdded lots Pr iced for a
qu1ck sale

25 Locust St.
Howard Brannan, Broker
Ofl 4"6- 2674
Luc1lle Brannon
Eve. 446-1226 or446·2674
L1 ST WITH US NOW!
" WE SELL
BETTER LIVING"

THE PRICE
IS RIGHT
RAMBLING
F"anch
style
NEAR CI TY
All Brt c k, 6rm s
• re&lt;ept ion hall , 5 bedrooms.
and bat h, H .W. fl oors wtfh.
C€J untry s1 ze kitchen and
car p el 1n ltv rm , dm . rm .•
dming area. spa ctous LR ,
ha l l and bat h Liv. rm . IS 14' x
laundry room , gas FA
18' wi th F P. Plenty cabinets,
furna ce. ample sforage. 1;4
b&lt;J r. stove and oven in kit
acre lawn. a wonderful p lace
chen . Free water- and on
for c hil dren , just one mi le
water ltne This bea uty is
fr om clly and only $24,500.
l oc~l ed on
9 A
flat and PERFECTION
sh~1d ed lo t Pr1 ce on l y $25,000.
A T$28,000
GREEN ACRES - 4 bdrms .. QUICK possession to1 this 3 B. R.
home . one a!'Jd 1 bath , a
lar-ge Hv rm and kitchen, new
dream
kilchen and ct1ning
carpe t over H W. firs . Cen
area , beamed ceilmg i n LR
A~r in stalled 2 yrs . ago, at.
and
k1 tchen,
ca rpet
!a ched gar Ovmer has plan s
thr
oughout,
full
di
vi d ed
and hil S pr1ced this one to sell.
basem ent , famtly room ,
Pn ce of $21,000 Includes the
laundry , powder
r-oom ,
drapes, dt shwasher and cook
workshop
and
garage,
large
stove
rol li ng , well landscaped l.;~wn .
YO U' L L LOVE
CEN IE NARY If you are
THECO
UN TRY look ing for loca ti on , quallly
123 ACRES, two s tory home tn
and prtce , don' t pass th is one
extra good co n ddton aod
by. 6 rms , bath , laundry and
carpe ted , 60 acres tillable,
attached
garage .
Pr 1ce
IMge da1 ry barn , illso a
$23.500.
thnv1ng busmess and all 1he
equ
tpment Located 6 mt.
GARF IELD AVE . - L1l&lt; e the
tram
oty Pr ~eed m the low
R1ve r ? 5 rm on matn flr. All
e1gh
tt
es
carpet, full ftnished base .
WOODED AR EA
Large block gar-age plus
20
CAR AT LI VING 10'x 12' meta! bldg .. 4 A. lot
THIS is for the Dr , Lawyer,
wtfh nver fronfaqe . Pnce
merchant, or ch1ef w.th a
r educed to $21 ,500 I mmed1ate
large
d ow n payment An
Pass
·
outs tandmg home with 4,000
EWING TON - 2 ntce btg farm
sq ft ot floor space A,_ cr rcl e
homes . near the new m1ne
drtve leadtng you to a
opentng No 1 has 8 big rms. ,
gr acrous reception 11all wtth
bath and 4 acres, good garden
wmdtng sta1rway and a w .w
land. (Price $12,500 ) . No. 2
Delux e
carpeted home
has 7 rms and bath, large
fea_tures
are
f1eldstone
block garage, near 2 A land ,_
fireplace tn spact ous LR, old
wtth fruit and berries . Spring
bri ck FP in famt l y room , 6
water Price $15,000 .
BR , 41 1 bath , two comple te
ktlch en s, ce ntral air -hea t ,
PLEASANT VALLEY - Near
laundry , private bal cony to
new. 7 rm s, 4 bdrm, all
eac h BR , Anderson wtndows
ca rpet, 11 1 baths Ktf chen has
and doors, redwood deck,
plenty cabinets. dishwasher,
cedar and old bnck gives a
d1 sposa l. stove and oven Thts
graceful look for home or club
house has large rooms, much
hou se, loc ated on a 3 acre
storag e space , central a1r ,
wooded plot i ust 6 mi. from
pal to and tsloca ted on a lar ge
town .
lot and qUtet street Pnced
INVE ST IN
r eal 1st1cally al $28,500
HAPPIN ES S
A LARGE two story brt c k tn
KANAUGA - 2 good homes
!own, 3 BR , 11 :c bath , updated
No. 1, IS a 2 story , 6 btg rms,
kt! c hen ,
dtntng
r oom.
bath, and storag e bldg No 2,
fireplace 1n LR , paneled and
ts on l y 10 years old, 3 bd r m ,
w w ca r pel , full di v1ded
It v rm ., ki !chen, bath and a
ba se ment, elecf r i c hea l , lar ge
lrlrge storag e room
Both
fr ont por ch. deep lot 40' x 175'
houses are m good r epa 1r , on
Excellent loca tiOn and ready
rura l wat er , tn gooo lOcation
to move intO
and would make som eone a
IT'S LOVE
good home or mvestment
AT PUR SE SIGHT.
Prt ce for No 1 1s' $12,900 and SO n ec1r to everylhtng
No 2 IS $1&lt;1 ,900
willktng distance to church,
schoo l and shoppmg a
CHESH I RE -- Need a b&gt;g
beaut1ful bnck 3 BR. J1. 2 bath.
house , have one on Rt 7
carpet throughout, firep lace
North ol village on 1 A lot It
tn LR, lormal D R, the la tes t
ha s 7 b1g rooms. 11 J baths_,
tn ktlchen ltxlures and dmmg
n1ce new fa ctory k1tchcn , w1th
area, lamily room. laundr y,
bar , oven and s,qve. Much of
larg e fr on t por c h, garage and
lht s house has been re ·
ca rport, off stree t par k mg,
cor:~d1 h oned, ntce rec. rm,
wel l es tab lts hed lawn wtfh
new l urnace. new wtnng, new
l ru i t trees
sep t1 c tank, al umtnum s1d1ng,
SPRINGTIME
s lorm d oors and wmdows
CHARMER
Pn ce on\y 517,500.
RA NCH style 3 BR, 2 bat h, w w
carpet, al l bu il t in kt tc hen,
N EW HOMES
tamjly room , laundr y and
ST RT 775 - 5 big rms., 11/2
ca
rport Worskshop, one t hird
bath, 1.254sq. ft ltv. area plus
acre
lawn
carport Free wate r an d
RIVER Vt EW
loca ted on 11h A. lot. $21,000.
PERFECT
for the ftsherman , 6
ST RT 35 - All Brick , 5 rms
11 bath, large deck for
rooms
1
an d bath, attached gar age,
rela t ion. enclosed porch and
fu ll and dry base L ot approx
storage, plent y shade and
100' x 170' This IS an exce ll en t
frutt trees, price $16,000.
buy tor asktng p r i ce of
$14, 000 COTTAGE
$24,000.
WEST 35 Sub- D1v. Bea utiful 3 BR , paneled family room,
la r ge kdche n and LR, par ·
br ick and frame, at I elec . and
ches,
deep lot.
1
al l car pet. 1 2 ba ths , and 2 car
MIDDLEPORT
garage. Located on a fl at lo t
WE
HAVE
3 good homes in the
100' x 125' Pr tce $27,000
vtllage
pn
ced fr om $13,500 to
SMITH ROAD ~ 1 mile from
$17,500. 2 BR to 5 BR an d m
Clly, al l Bnck, al l elec, full
very good loca ti o ns.
carpe t It has a 2 car garage
NEAR ACRE LOT
and located on a 11h A. flat lot .
This is a qualit y bu i lt house 3 BR home - ntce eat tn kit
che n, enclosed porch, ful l
and pnced at $32 ,000
d1vided
base m ent
wlfh
FA RM S
laundry and ga r age. Pnce
NEAR R tO - 40 A. tab base, al l
$14,000
elec. home, 5 rrns and ba t h,
al um . sidtng, storm dr s and
wtndows and tab barn . Pri ce
$1 8,500 .
WOODSMI,LL RD ~ 26acre!h4
room hou ~e and outbu tld1ngs.
$8,200 I j

World's Largest

THE LEADER SINCE 1900 I N
SERVING THE NAT)ON' S
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS.
Ph. 146-0008
NEW LISTI NG
COM'
MERCIAL OR RESIDEN·
TIAL - Nice 6 rm . home 1
lo cat ed olf Eastern Ave.
features 3 BR . L R, dlning
rm ., Kit chen. cellar. cdr port
and large front porch This
home ts mostly 'Ca rpeted and
has alum1num siding and
s torm wmdows
NEW LISTING - S16,900 WITHOUT A DOUBT, this
modern 6 rm home is pnced
way below market value .
Special features tnc tude a 12 x
20 fam ily rm . with patio
doors: n1ce butlt in kitchen
wtlh a separate eat1ng area
and a large lot 10 mmutes
from town
NEW LISTING - NEAR RIO
GRANDE - 4 r oom block
house wllh bath and 5 acres of
land $1D.500

S

LAND CO~
'rT - LARGE
LOT clo&gt;" {).L-h 'on $200
down ~ $50 Pt · V
h
NICE COUNTRY HOME Over an acre of rollmg ground
wllh a nice 6 rm . and bath
home
Carpet, paneling ,
basement and st ate rd.
fran !age are some of the
fea tures of this home.
JUST COMPLETED - New 3
BR al~ electnc home with WW ·
carpet , Thermopane w i ndows, ntce modern k itch en,
large l tvtng room and carpor t
located m a new subdiVISIOn
on a 90x200 lot Easy term s on
$19,500

STATE Route 141 two m1 from
town, 3 BR all electric home
wt th basement an d 2 baths A
bargam at $19,000
STATE Route 160, nicely
remodeled 2 story home with
4 BR and par i basemen t on a
large lot Asktng $14.900
V I NTON - Investm ent, large
vacant store bui ldtn g w i th 2
apartment ups tatrs, $15,000.
TRAILER PARK - 19 spots
close to. Gavtn plan t. 7 mobi le
homes I ncluded in sal e
Potenlla l 1ncome of sn ;ooo
p er year
VINTON -~ LARGE 2 story
home wtth fu ll basement
Attrac t 1ve pn ce mc l udes a
new butf t.,n kitc hen, large
formal dinl ng rm , fireplace
Min ltving rm ., utili t y rm ., and 2
large porch es Would con
si der a trade
APARTMENT
HOUSE ,
3
apartments on upper Route 7
co mpletely furn1shed. If
you're looking for a good
tnveslment. don' t waif
LIKE TO CO LL ECT RE N T'
We have 2 1972 mobt le homes
on a 1·7 acre tot tn Add ison
Twp renttng for over $4,000
pe r yr. Sell1 ng p·r,ce $15,000
APPROVED SUBD I V I SION 16 lo ts tn Addtson Twp . wtth
all ut tl1 f 1es ava il ab le.
PR I CE REDUCED - Ci t y
Elegan t 2 story home features
4, s or 6 BRs. Jl/2 bat hs, new
kit chen, fam il y rm 1 and part
basemen t . The LR and d ining
rm are car peted and ea_ch
have a fireplace
LOTS
FIN ANC IN G
AVAI L AB L E
M obile
homes we lcome. 2 m1. fr om
' new hospita l
FARMS
HARR I SON TW P. woodlan d , $5,900.
V IN TON A R EA s 3. 900

34 acres
18 acres,

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N EW . ~er t a and Bemco mdt ·
tr ess an d box spr ings. Large
selection i n stock - twin, full.
queen size Save up to $40 a
set.
9~ 5 Second Aven ue
446-11 71
276-tf
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TARA

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l'h Baths

J

Pay Only One
Ufi'lity

-------

Need Lots
Of Room ?
IF SO I::SE SU RE AfJD SE E
THIS 5 BEDROOM HOME
WITH PR IVATE MASTER
Q UA RTER S, A LARGE
FAM I L Y
ROOM ,
FIREPLACE ,
DINING
ROOM.
2
BATH S ,
BASEME N T ,
NEW
F URNACE . CARPETING ,
2 CAR GARAGE. LARGE
LOT W ITH CITY WATER
AND SEWER
IN RtO
GRANDE OWNER VERY
A N XIOUS TO S ELL AND
WILL HELP WITH THE
F INANC ING

Excellent Rura l
Neighborhood
VERY ATTRACTIVE 2
BEDROOM HOME W ITH
PLUSH
CARPETING .
BEAUTIFUL
KITCHEN.
VERY NICE LOCATION
ON 3 LOT S (O N E HA S
PAD FOR MOBILE HOME
RENTAL
PURPOSE S
YOU ' LL
LO VE
iHE
BATH
OWNER
WtLL
HELP F INAN CE

Perfect for Your
' family
N EARLY NEW
FULLY
CARPETED 3 BEDROOM
HOME WI T H LO VELY
K: ITCHEN AND DINING
AREA
L ARGE
FLAT
LOT. S M ALL STREAM
A N D 2 CAR GARAGE IT ' S
AL L
YOURS
FOR
$18,90 0 00
AND
I' M
BE T TI N G THAT YOU
WO N 'T FIND ONE TO
COM P ARE
AT
T H IS
PRICE
S1.700 DOWN
BUY S
IT
IF
YOU
QUALIFY

Beautiful Bri ck
4 Acr es. $3 0,000
VERY N IC E 3 BEDROOM
H OM E
WITH
FULL
BASEMENT,
LARGE
BEAUTIFUL
KITCHEN,
WOOD
BURNING
F I REP LAC E .
FULL
BASEMENT,
4
ACRE
FLAT
GROUND ,
2
BARNS, 2 CAR GARAGE,
AND
CARPORT
LOCATED ACROSS THE
ST REET FROM HANNAN
TRACE HIGH SCHOOL
IT ' S A DANDY .

Very Nice 3 Bedroom
Nearly New $19,500.00
TH IS FULLY CARPETED
3 BEDROOM HOME IN ·
CLUDES
A
VERY
PRETTY
KITCHE N ,
NICE BAT H , ATTACHED
GARAGE , LARGE FLA T
LANDS CAPED LOT CI T Y
SCHOOLS, WATER
&amp;
SEWER
OWNER
MOV I NG
TO
NEW
J ER S EY
BET T ER
HURRY

Very Attractive
4 Bedroom Home
PRETTY
AND
MODERN A 2 STORY
COLO NIAL A'S THERE IS
ON .THE MARKE T . AL L
HARDWOOD FLOORS, 2
F IREPLACES.
2 112
BA T H S,
FULL
BASEME N T,
LARGE
ATTRACTIVE KITCH E N
WITH
A LL THE
AP
PLIA N CES,
FOR M AL
D ININ G A N D 1 A CRE
AS

iAN ~~CRAPE~
GARAGE

~~ZtHLEU~"·

THREE
BEDROOM
HOME IN TOWN - NI CE
KITCHE N A N D BA TH ,
JU S T
R I GHT
FOR
FAM ILY STARTI NG OUT
FHA M IGHT APPROVE
T H IS ONE

We Need Listing
•
We Sell More Property than Anyone Else in
Southeastern Ohio.
IF YOU WA N T IT SOLD
CALL US

Gallia Co.'s Largest
Real Estate Sales Agency
Office 446-3643
Evenings Call
E. M. "Ike " W'1seman 446 · 3791J
E. N. Wiseman 446-4500

REAlJORS

RICE'S

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-"!"'-!1'!'~

SAVE 25-30%

NOTICE

IOOU ~ •

AUCTION
SERVICE

"SELL THE AUCTION
WAY"
. AUCTIONEER

,367-7250

PH. 446-3444

.....

1. Only 3 years old
2 Four Iage bedrooms ( Large closets)
3 Two baths
4. 20x25 Recreation room
5. 11 xl4 Laundry Room
6 14x25 Garage
7. 10x12 Paho
8. E&gt;!.cept10nally large lot
9. Central heating
10. Air condittoned
11. AutomatiC washer &amp; dryer
12 Built-tn d1shwa she r &amp; stove
13 Wall to wall carpeftng throug h hom e
14 Marble window sills
15. Drapes, shades &amp; curta1ns
16 Thermopane w1ndows
17 . Nicely landscaped ( High &amp; Dry)
18 T.V. Aenal plus seve ral 1acks
19 5 Large trees, (4 apple)
20 Sand box for kidd1es
.
.
21 Exceptionally ni ce The surroundtngs, locatmn, ne1gh·
bars.

NE W HOM ES on your lot ol"
ours NO MON EY DOWN for
quallf1ed buyers us1ng F . H.
Adm
loan. (Closmg costs
on ly I A vanety of f loor p lans
wlf h
varwus . financing
programs avai lab l e
We
speC1alize tn working w tth
AEP Co. emp loyees although
we are availabl e to a ll . Metgs
Deve l op m en t Co ,, 150 N .
Second Ave., Midd l eport ,
Oh io. Phone 992-5976 for in
format1on
105 tf
BY OWN E R:
Lot s for butldtng or t r ade r s
tn city of Gall i ool1~ nr
jo 1n i ng Galtipol ts Twp.
acros s road from
GS I
ground s on M tll Cr eek Look
and co mpare anywhere
Robert Queen , 1026 Second
Avenue, 446-0168
BY OWN ER 3 bedroom home,
ga r age, new car peting Ph one
446 0955, 120 Mabelene Dr ,
Gal lipolis
61-tf

· iNV ES TM ENT PROPERTY
2 family dwelling located at 631
Third Ave Rent bot h or li ve in
one and rent the other. Both
have new furnaces Has 3
room apar t men t and a 5 room
apartmen t . Call today for an
appointment .
AIR CONDITIONED
See th i s beautiful. 2 yea r ol d,
t)1ree bed room home located
near new hosp tta t. It has all
the features you like. Com
ple t e carpeti.ng, a~ r con
ditioned, built 1n appllcances,
two bath s full basement wt t h
ftntshed rec . rpom Priced in
the 30's.

BEFORE

AFTER
Karr ' s
Barber
Shop , 110 L.yftn

St ,

Pomeroy,

Oh1o , has added a
new serv1ce. We
are now fitting
Men's
Toupees .
We can ht you
w1th a full or a
partial ha1rpu~ce.

STOP in and let MICK show YOU What he- can do for you .

'

KARR'S BARBER SHOP

Offfce Phont! 446f. ft9.f
Evenmg s
C~ a rl es M . Neal 446-1546
J . Michae l Nea l 446-1503

~.ub e rs

2 ACRE lot, 8 mile::. uUl Phone
446-4537.
114-3

liD l ynn St.
POMEROY

Local 400 AFL-C IO

BILL JANES
ARMY-NAVY
DISCOUNT DEPT. STORE

BY OW N ER 3 bedroom house in
Wonder Hill s, Athens. Ohio.
• For 1nformat1on ca ll S92 -4757
'. 114 1

MOTHER 'S DAYEVERYBODY'S SALE

BY OWN ER 3 bedroom home,
ca r pet, new •carpet ing. Phone
446·0955

6HI

FRIDAY, MAY 18 · 10:30 A.M.

•
•

DISPERSAL OF HOLSTEIN DAIRY HERD,
DAIRY EQUIPMENT &amp;FARM MACHINERY

•

-••

•

72 hd . Hol st ein Cows and Hei fer s. 16 Reg . 56
Grade. 66 cows now in produc tion . 8 hd. Top Qual ity Grade Heifer s t o start f r es hen ing Aug .
24th . Herd aver age is now 48 lbs. per cow. All
cows are pur ebred, most ar e si r ed by AB S,
Cur t i ss or Sire· Po wer bul ls, a ll br ed cattl e ur e
ca rr yi ng the servi ces of sires fr om th ese three
insemination groups.
Thi s is a yo ung head. 20 hd. ar e f ir st ca lf
heifer s. 24 hd. are in ei ther thei r second or
third lactation . Herd is Bang s and TB t est ed,
al so vaccinated I VR . BVD, P1 3 and Lepto .
Th ey al so c arry stomach magnets. Herd is on
DH lA lest , record s and tr ansfer s wi ll be
avai labl e at sa le.

..••,.

•

EQUIPME~T,

Realty

CUT LAWN S in Kanauga and
Gallipolis area. 446-4815, Al va
Joi1nson
J 12·3

452 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh io 45631
Oscar Baird
Douglas Wether hott
Br ok ers
614-446-3434
W E BU Y. SElL OR TRA DE
BEAUTIFUL SPLIT-LEVEL l;] dra large home with three
bedrooms , one and half baths,
full basement, cou nty water .
large lot. about lwo m tles out
of fawn , ct ty schools.
ROUTE 35 BEYOND THUR MAN - Very ni ce s1x room
w1th bath home on three
quarters acre m Ja ckson
County . Hardw.ood floor s,
wall to wall car pet, f uel oil
furna ce, cent ral air con .
dihon1ng, prtc ed at only
$18,500.

-------

I

Help Wanted

Danmar Farms

LO W TAX D IST RI CT
Seven ty f1ve ac re fa r m with
very good SIX room house and
bath, fuel od furna ce, Kyger
Creek schoo l d1stnct, p len ty
of water, complete wdh d1esel
tractor and equipmen t
WE HAVE OT HERS - Whelher
you want a far m, vacant land.
house 1n town, or busme o:.
Jocal1on. con ta ct Oh to R1ver
Realty for al l your rea l es tate
needs
Evening s Call446 -4244
Steven Betz444-9583
Johil Fuller 446-4327

FULL OR
PART TIME
Expanding company
needs twelve m en to
work in Gallipolis and
:&gt;oint Pleasant area .
No
e xp e ri e nce
necessary . Mu st have
car .. Call Monday.
Thursday . Friday 9 to
8.

I

MR. VANCE 446-0677

MR. &amp; MRS. ROBERT WATTERSON

NEW TRANSMISSION

HENDERSON, W. VA.
PHONE 675-2167
Farm located on Rt. 35, 6 miles above Pt.
Pleasant, W. Va .
John McNeill &amp; Harold Flax. Auctioneers
Pete Sommer. Cieri\
LUNCH WILL BE SERVED
Don ' t miss thi s Sale! Visit this Heard at
Anytime.

•

-•

I~

MODEL 331 1

I 14

44 X 24 .

1 a 31 SQ. FT , UPPER LEVEL
2 0 7 6 SQ. FT . TOTAL LIVING AREA

'

Open For Inspection

Saturday
1 to 5

TRI.OOUNTY
MOBILE HOMES

Sunday
.1 to 5

YOU'RE

INV IT ED
TO VlSIT!

Built by : B&amp;K Excavating
SALES REPRESENTATIVE:

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR., BROKER
Associa tes: Helen L. Tea ford. Gordon B, Tea ford

PHONE 992-3325

EQUAL HOUSING
OPPOF.TUN IllES

110 MECHANIC STREET

POMEROY, OHIO

GRI\ND
Refreshments
Will Be

Visit
Meigs

Served!

Drive 0ut Today •

Cormty's
Newest

SUNDAY

Dealer!

MAY 13 • 1 TO 7 PM

I

12 and 14' Wide Mobile Homes
24' Double Wides
MA DE B Y SK YLINE CORP.

Will Be Here To
Answer

Natton's largest builder of th1s type

Your Questions!

homes. Oh1o bUJit by Oh to labor.

FREE COUNSELI NG- We'll help you match the
equi pment to t he j ob with a w 1de selection of t r actors ,
accesso ries, and featu res. Come in and tal k it over, try 'em
out today!

Gravely Tractor Sales &amp; Service
Pomeroy , Ohio
Open 8 a .m. titS : 30 Mon . thru Thu rs.
8 a .m. f1l Bp.m . Fr i . and Saturday
WF SERV IC E WHAT

•

3

BEDROOM

Always The Best Deal On Best Homes

•"

•

U¥1tlli 1001

11 J •

MODEL HOME

The Best

JOB-MATCHED SPEED AND POWER!

removal job.
• Performance-p roved in 306-mile Durability Mow.

••

1[010(111 l

New 1973 THE ANSWER TO TOt&gt;AYS

•

"

IIDICDI 2
11 J n

1. The Treadhome is built
according to code .
2. Fully insu lated.
3. Large closets .
4. Storm doors &amp; windows.
5. 2x6 rafters.
6. Copper plumbing.
7. Near ly an acre of land .
8. Prices start at $19,995.00
on your lot co mplet e ready to
move into.

MOBILE HOMES

Factory
Personnel

all-gear dri ve.
• Instant forward-neu t r aJMrever se f 'or easy
man euv ering.
• Attachm en ts f or almost any law n, garden or snow

•"

11

NEW

Where Dealin' Is

Gr avely Model 816 L6.5 HP
Rt dmg Tractor w1th centermounted 50'' mower attachment

• No fluid power losses, no be lts to oli p or break ...

•••
•

I' I

Our New Trendlw m es by N,1tional

Go Mobile With Goble!

2-~

~

t£DROQ I 1

PUBLIC
WHOLESALE

$3.51 HR.

...'•.

~

Design 212

12 MEN NEEDED

-•

~

197l 73 hunti ng license num
bered 312li.JI50. Prize Wifl be
olfer ed upoO rfifurn fo Ivan
Fi l e Sheriff's Department.
112·3

$MONEY$

FORTY ACRES N EAR RIO
G RA NDE Seven room
house on r ol l1ng land is tn cdy
schoo l d1s l ricf. I mmed ia te
possesston, drilled wel l . good
fences, priced under $18.000

8·SPEED11. ALL-GEAR

• Speeds from a bru teMpow er % m p h up to a
let 's-get- home 8 'h mph.
• Attachmen ts run at constant, efficien t speed
regardless of g r ound speed.

-

GOLDEN EMPRESS
VAN DYKE
GRAYWOOD
GRAND HAVI::N
HILLCREST
HALLMARK
ESQUIRE

50

X

12

••

to
70

X

14

CHECK OUR
SPECIALS

UP TO 12 YEAR F IN A NCING
WE SERV ICE WH AT W E SELL

. AT APRICE YOU
CAN AFFORD ! !

KI'NGSBUR:Y
HOMES
'

SALES AND SERVICE

Goble Mobile Homes

992 M
2975

SEll • WE SERVICE WHAT WE SHL

'

IN SIOE Pttinting &lt;tnd yard
work, 446-J38B .

Wanted To Buy

.,.

..

.

t&lt;i

vq

800 series

-'

;-;,-;c;;:;;:-~~­

Wanted

-~----

10, 12, 14 and
16.5 riding
tractors

•

LADY to share weekend care o t M I DDlE AGED lady to li ve in
semi inval1d lady. ' Refer ence
and care for el derly lady. 446
req u1 red Call 446-1364 after S
0832.
p.m .
.
Il l 6
. lll -6

WOMEN wanted for work af
Ha llmark Ca rd Shop, Silver
Bndge Shoppmg Center. Send
name, age , address , phone
number .
expe ri ence ,
refer~nces to Box No. 269, c-o
GallipoliS Oa1ly Tribune .

ROTO-TfLLERS , lawn mowers
repair . 562 Fourth Avenue, ~~~~~=-~~1136
446-1562.
MEEDS LPN o'r retireO RN
32-tl
work in nursi ng home, .:.;an
- -- -- -- - - 'v\ li ve m. Write Box 313, Ironton .
Ohto Route 1.
J&amp; W MOUN T
CLE ANING SE RV ICE
2h
GENERAL house cleaning. We
supply all the cleaning sup. WOMAN , to !tve 1n or sray
. plies . 388 8875 after 6 p.m . cal l
dur i ng day wtlh elderly
388-8865 Weeki y or monthly
woman Light hou sekeepmg
deanmg by appointment.
Call 446-2622 between 4 p.m . to
I
91 If
8pm
111 ·4
ZIG ZAG Ma chi ne qu1!f tng in
-:---:--·---my hom e, 446 0267.
WANT ED lmm ed1al ely
111 -6
Appr enti ce or regtslered
barber in Galllpolts area . Call
WALLPAPERING and pain
446 0002 .
ling Phone 446-9865 or 379111 ·6 .
2471

FARM MACHINERY
JD 1968tractor . Model 4020. F arm all Sup er M .
4-16 Intern at ion al p low No. 541. 3-16 In·
tern a tional plow. No. 53 1, both p lows ar e 3 PH •
JD 12 ft . di sc on ru bbe r . 2 yr . JD 4-row Rot ar y
Hoe. 2 yr . N I spreader PTO, J D 4-r ow corn
pl anter. No. 494 A, Century corn spra y with 200
gal. plast ic tank , Far mhand rake, Gehl
grind er -m ixer. 2 yr s.• Gehl hay condit ioner.
New Hol land baler No. 276, never been used .
New Holland Bal er No. 59, Interna tiona l 2-ro w
cultivat ors. Post hole digger . N I one-row corn
picker . 1966 J D 2-r ow for age ha r ves ter No. 38,
used 3 year s, .2 Cobey ensi laqe wagons. 2
wagons wit h t andem r ea r ax les, wi th 18 and 20
ft . fl at beds, 2 Bot k in gr avi t y bed wag ons,
GMC 1966 2-lon truck with g rai n and st oc k
r ac k w ith fold-down sides, 16ft. bed, 2,000 bu .
wire corn cr ib. No hand tools or other it ems:
Pl ease be prom pt. M ac hiner y wil l sel l fi r st .

Wanted

--

OWNER LEAVING STATE 83·11
Wants to sell lh 1s very lovely . ...,..,... l
- ·----:::=-:-:-::::-::--=---"'-f
three bedroom home 1n quiet •
sharpenmg,
Saws, ,
SCISSors, shears , home and
subdlvlston with city water
and sc hools. full basement
gardqn .. too ls. Sharp Shop.
ha s recreation room wdh
Alley rear 147 Second .
216-h
wood burning ftreplace, tn
excellent condi tion .
REMODELING, bu i lding neW
IMMEDIATE POSSESS ION
rooms , cement, roofing
St dmQ, furnace ins J H
O..Vner will let you move 111
(Jueen &amp; Son, 446·9271.
tomorrow 1n this thret&gt;
II
bedroom ranch with fu l 1
basement and l arge lot .
Garage tn basement. ceramic WILL do baby s1 lling or lronings
10x40 2 BR
$2995
in my home Loca ted Rt 218,
bath, budt -m ki tchen , pr iced
wel l below $20,000
6 min . fr om town References
10x51 2 BR
$3595
reqUtred Ph one Ktngs, 446·
10x56
3
BR
$3995
7460
S R 160 I N V I NTON - Very
12x412 BR
gOOd two story frame home
1106
$3595
with four bedroom s, fu l l bath,
--~~12x51 2 BR
$3995
pain f tng,
c1 ty wate r , wet 1 insulated, WA L LPAPER I NG,
12x56
3
BR
$4295
v1nyl wall covertng s. Dry wal l
fuel oil furnace , double
ltn 1s hmg textured ce t11ng , 12x61l BR
carpor t Only $12,900 .
$4995
fr ee
es ftmate s
Work 20x4 3 3 BR
guaranteed 256-6342
CLOSE TO MARKETS - Th 1s
$6500
very clean, neat, cottage with
110-6 Doubl e wide
3 bedrooms. JS on t he edge ol
town Bui lt -in cabine ts in the
Al l homes are total electnc,
kt tchen, full bath, garage,
completely furn ished , set of
central atr and furnace , wood UOLO coins ai-td si,lve~ dollars . steps, 1/• " blrch paneling,
burning firepla ce, a rea l
Tawney Jewelers . •
·
house type door s, storm
barqatn at only $15,900
73-lf wtndow s
From $250 00
---~~~down,
Delivered
Free .
GOOD MON EY M AKER JU N K autv and scrap metaf
Bu s1ness in the hear t of town
Ph 388·8776
M any more to choose f r om .
which owner wants to sell due
B9 26
to health. Has made a n1ce
proftt steadily for 30 year s
1
Excellent for a cou ple of two WA NTED to buy , se l l or tr ade,
toy elect ric train , 446-4843. j
women Pr iced under $10,000.
240·11
F.IVE AC RES - N ICE HOUSE
- For on ly $10,000 you can be
1n th1s n1ce four rooms and
Ea stern Ave.
Gallipolis, 0.
ba th house 1n good condif1on.
PH. 446-0175
Land tS level to ro lt 1ng, plenty
0f wa ter, fuel o1/ furna ce. A
rea l bargain .

~GRAVELY
Now on all

600 gal. Un ico t ank with new compressor .
Double-4 herringbpne Chore Boy m i lk ing
parlor . compl et e with feeder s and m qtor s.
Chore Boy pipe-line 4-unit mi lker s w ith 3 hp.
motor.

-------Wanted To Do

OHIO RIVER

·- - - - -

Heart Jewelry Bo xes, 3 sizes, 79c . $1.19 · $2 . 19 ; M other's
Day Blouses, $3.49 ; Gi ft s for the Kitchen, 98c up ; 3 pc
Barbecue Sets, S1.49 ; Golf, base ba ll and bowli ng shoes,
ltmited quantity, $4.99 pr.; Saw horses, $1.99 set ;
Childre n's cowboy boot s, $3.99 pr.; Kn 1ves, m ache ttes . 50
di fferent kinds - 29c up ; Cran berr y ash trays, 79c ea .; 12
oz Gla ss Sham Tu mbl ers, 16c ea.; 19 pc. Shettf iel d
Presentation Knife set, only S9 ,95 ; Canvas wash basin,
29c ; 30 Qa t. A m mo boxes, qood for tools, $1.49 : Arm v
Khak i shorts, 99c ; Everead y ~l ash lights, all steel case,
red r efl ec tor ; Quaker M ai d Oil , 37c qt. ; Canvas tarps - a ll
sizes - r educed pn ces, Sc ree n room tents, add a tr a i ler
room plus r egu lar tents. Last Time, $49.95 ; Com pl ete lin e
of Hydraulic Jacks, Ph Ton to 20 Ton, SAVE .
Nam e brand pai nts and v arn ishes - li m 1ted quant 1t y, gat.
99c '_qt. 49c - pt. 29c ; Comp lete Ime of End1 cott Johnson
w ork shoes and boots (double sea m ed, tnple stitched, rea l
lea lherl REDUCED 20 PCT.
8 Track car ster eo w ith speak ers , S37.9S , 8 track tapes,
Soul, Rock, Pop, Country. Wes tern, Top Art1s ts, Only $1.98
each.
Open 9 - S: 30 Daily except Man , &amp; Fr i. 9-9
Open Sunday 12 : 00 - S: 30

Help Wanted

Real Estate For Sale

A .

MEN'S TOUPEES

Help Wanted

- - -- -

114-11

Phone 446-4672
281 State Street
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Notice

TWO.WAY RadiO$ Sales &amp; LET US restore your old ·famity CI\SH BON US ol $2,.500 00 lo
Service. New and \.sed CB's 1
photos . Prices reasonable
High School graduates who
police monitors. antennas.
Tawney's Studio.
•
•
lram ' with us. Offered for
etc. Bob's Citizen Band Radio
51 -tt
li mited lime only. Choose
Equip., Georges Creek Rd ., .
training m mechar11cal or
Gallipolis, Ohlo J46. .4517.
BORROW by Mail fo $800 !
electronic repair, missiles,
Money for any ' purpose .
survey ing . infantry, armor or
- --::-c---- -...:..212-tf
Confidential
Convenient
artillery . Choose the country
DAY CARE
terms - RQberts Loan , Box
where you work . Enlist now.
SUN VALLEY Nursery School
6071P, Whee ling, W. Va . •
go tater . Call your Army
licensed by State of Oh1o, 11,;
recruiter a! :
8l-lf
miles west of new hospital
r; ALLI POLIS 446 3343 ·
577 Sun Valley Dr. Ph . 446· wE HAVE a complete 1ine of
1145
3657. Day care that says " we
watches and diamonds .,
-- - - ' ' - - care . " Madge Hauldren ,
Compare
our
prices WANTED
babysitter
for
Owner ; Loredith &amp; John
anywhere. Tawney 's Jewelry.
summer months on Georges
Hauldren, ()per_!lfor-s.
Creek Road . Phone -i46 0754
51 -If
114-tfl after 5. 30 pm
-----__:.._~--'
MOTORIST MUTUAL IN .
114-3
SURANCE .
One
stop
protection for Auto, Home, WOU L D l1ke middle-aged lady
Busmess and Life. Ray Hawk,
to live tn and care for elderly
Agent , 446 2300. 541 4th Ave .
lady in Meigs County. no
laundry Call 446·7410.
I 00·11
.
113-3

Professional Real Estate Appraiser
' ARTHUR A.
~ NIBERT,
A a A
A.S.A.

PUBLIC SALE

DAIRY

Notice

Notice

Neal Realty

GOOD BUILDING
LOTS ON
ROUTE 35,
446-1997

Notice

IN MEMORY of Alice Halley on
MR. Co11ven,en1 Sa-,.s, " 8e your
th1s Mother' s Day .
own Boss! Own your own
Cod made_a wonderful mother,
convenient food mart!" No
A mother who never grows old ;
e~~:perience
necessary!
He ma_de her smile of the
Con ~o~enien t pro vi des you
sunshme ;
wrth : Attractive new store
And He moulded her heart of
building , advertising , .:om.
pure gold ;
plete
training ,
mer In her- eyes He placed bright'
chandisi
ng
Choice
locations
shlntng stars,
now available! Wrife for Fr ee
In her cheeks fair roses, you
Brochure and foH details to
see.
Indus tr ial Investment &amp;
God made a wonderful mother
Holding Co .. P. 0 Bo• 788 ,
And He gave that dear mothe;
H:untmgton, W. Va . 25717.
to rne .
1 12·3
Sa~ly missed by daughter
Weltha Clagg and Fam ily. ' READING teacher available
for private lessons or small
:::-~=-----..:114- 1 groups,
446-3338.
IN MEMORY of Fa ye B
112-6
Walters who departed th1s H f~
11 years ago, May 13,
NOTARY public at Yellow Cab,
I lost the sunshine and roses
16 Ptne Street.
I lost the heavens of bl ue
I lost the beautiful ra inbow
::-- - - - - - - - . :114-3
I lost the morning dew
PAYING 50 pet over fa ce value
I lost the angel who gave me
tor sliver coin, 446-4921.
summer
114-6
The whole winter through
I lost the gladness that turned ~--------PIANO tun ing, Lane Dan iels.
into sadness
259 Broa dway, M iddleport,
When I lostJou.
992-2082 .
Husban
Owen
and
114-6
children, Clara. Imogene and ~----James .
SWEEPER Repa i rs . Parts .
_ _ _ __ .::__ _~114- 1
Su ppl tes . Phone 367 -7736
Dav 1s Va cuum Cleaner Store,
St . Rt . 7 at Addtson , 0 .

This home musf be sold, owner transferred out of town
Must be seen to be appreciated
OWN E R: ANTHONY KRESGE . Phone, Area 614-446-01 45

Pri ce Reduced
Was $15,900
Now$14,900

JIMME

Call Shirley Adk1ns

•

This absolutely mu st be one of the prett iest hom es 1ns.1de
and out tn the area. Plush carpeting throughout , beaut1ful
klfchen cabine ts wi th range and dishwasher, 211'2 baths,
lovely forma l dining room, large family and rec . room, '1:
car garage and Central Air O.Vner I"J')oving otherw.ise
would not part with it It's brand new and the only one like
it with a Sprtng Valley Estates addre ss.

~~6·0001

1 - For Information

-----

On e of t he Areas' Ni cest New Hom es

NEW COLONI A L WITH 167
ACRES - tht s beautif ul 4 BR
LD IN G s 1t es, bea ut i ful
a l l elect ri c home ha s a built tn
v 1ew, woOOed ft p t on ha rd
road Owner will fmance. 245k i tchen w1th ea flng a_r ea, WW
carpe t, for m al d inmg rm ,
AUCTIONEERS
5320
ST RT 775 --- 80 A 10 m i from
2 fir eptaces, 5 ACR E S, ntce 3 BR one floor
large
fam
il
y
rm
~
113·3
town Good 8 rm house Barn
and 2 ba ths T her e is about 75
plan
ho
rr1e
.
Carp
et
an
d
36' x 60' wtth concrete fir. and
Ill
bl
b
d
acres 1 a e, arn an new
hard wood fl oo r s. A I. S1d
OWNER - 367 -7861
shed s added Concrete St lo 16'
pond Th1 s far m is about 5 mi
NEW &amp; USED FURNITURE
RUS
T
IC
an tique bri ck redwood
D X
50 ' HT
Nea r new
from
R
o
Gr
ande.
Addi
son
Twp
Sold
owner
a
1
854 Second , 446-9523
h1&gt;me,
for
mal liv ing room and
Badger Loader Most of 80 A. OUR very low mark up enables
Ranny Blackburn
sma tt er home so th is home
d
i
n
ing
room,
atl elec t nc.
15 Trac tor land 12 A . bottom.
Branc h Manager,.
avat l ab l e f or i m m ed . oc you to
kitc hen , eating area, dish cupancy.
25 A fl at and 10 A ts gentle_
washer, d 1s posat, etc. ~ 3
slope ASC approved Pond
spacious bedrooms, w ith 3
3
BED
ROOM
hom
e
i
n
town,
DOUBLE
WID
(
3
BR
lurand Wa ter trough . Thts farm
comp l e te baths, paneled
bui l ti n k itchen, car p et ed
nished home. 1970 New M oon .
ha s been l tmed, fer t il i zed and
fam il y room , utility room ,
li ving room an d hall , carport ,
Several lots availa bl e 1f you
tS tn a h1gh productive stage. on all new ltvtng room sui tes.
wa
sher, dryer , ya r d wit h
very
close
to
gol
f
course.
Ca
ll
need lot. Why pay r ent?
Pn ce $43,000
Early Amen can l iving room
shade tr ees, back and Side
446·0519
for
appoint
ment
wt
th
suttes, l nmmed tn maple
ANY HR . 446-1998
over look i ng pond, electnc 2
owner.
CLE A N. well kept 3 BR hom e in
Start as low as $ 171
car
garage, comp lete ca r pet
106-11
ci ty Basement , t wo porc hes,
and
drapes. Job takes us out
garage
$13,500
1973
KA WASAK I
350CC
ol
lown.
CAL L - SEE T HI S
"motorcycle Lt k e new w i th N E W 3 bedroom house , gar age,
BE
SAT
ISF I ED.
e lec tr ic hea l, r an ge, wa ll to LOT S and sma ll acreage in
Warran t y ~h 379·2469.
I F YdU arf! b~Hidmg a rlew
113-2
Gr
eeA
and
Addison
lwps.
wa ll ca rpet, f loor space 1,324
11 2·6
home or remodeling, see us '
With
wa
ter
.
fee t, large lot 100 x 256, near
~----We art&gt; bu ilders D1stri butor
Clay school. Pr iced $18,850
for Ho t poin t App l ia nces ,
RA R E F IND, Usually , ou r
Ot ho 'Bu rd et te , 256-6B84.
Allison Electnc .·
acr eage 1s ou t in the coun try .
85-11
NewGMC
,
154JI
Here's 6 acres· rig ht next to
Tru ck Headquarters
town.
Four BR m odern home.
GROCERY bustness for sale, 1969 Ford 3f4 ton ca m per specia l
Ca
rpet,
basemen t. Three car
butldmg for sale or lease, 1963 Chev. 2 ton du m p
garage.
Idea l loca tion for car
1966 lf2 T . Chev. PU
phone 773.56 JS from a· 30 P.m .
Pi
pes,
G
BD:
or
trai
ler
sa les or gar age.
:
t
P
ES,
p
pes,
1
1
1967 3-d T GM B PU
to 10 p.m . for apporntment
We sell anything for
1966
3
/4
T.
GMC
PU
Cheratan, BBB, Jobey, Hil ~on , DREAM HOM E you ca n affo d
67·11
anybody
. Br ing your
R
r ·
and others . Tawney 's P1pe 1
1960 IH C t ruc k tract or
items
to
Knotts Com d Troph He se 422 Second
.Level):' 3 BR ,ho!'"e on t 141,
1969 111 TO GMC PU
a
n
Y
u
'
ct
l
y
ltm
lf
s
.
Carpet,
n
1
munity
Auction
Barn .
M OT OR HOM E S FOR REN T 1969 G M C 112 ton PU
Ave.
beau
t
i
f
u
l
spac
ioUs
k
itc
h
en
Cor11er
Third
&amp;
Olive.
NOW TAktng reservations for 1967 Ford 1h ton P U
1 99 -tf~;. mcludes range a nd refng .
For appointment call
May, June. Jul y Comp lete 1967 '12 ton Chev .
- - - - - - -- - - La r ge li ving rm . Pa tio See
446 -2917 . Sale every
pnmary insurance prov1 ded 1966 GMC 1/:2 ton P U
'JU:::, 1 taKen tn , deluxe zig zag
today and move tn t omorr ow!
r~t no ex tra cost Rates as low
1970 GM C 117 ton PU
Saturday evening at 7
.sewi n g
machine
T h is
as $150 per week and mileage
1969 112 T . Ford PU
m achine
d arn s.
em1403 Ea stern Ave, Nex t to 1969 Ol d s 88
b r Oi d eri es, overcasts, but Economy Motor Sa les. Ph
1969 Do dge Station Wagon
tonholes, .pay balance $36.501
&lt;146 1425
'1
1971 3 T. Chev truck
or paymen ts can be ar ranged
112-tf 1970 111 T . Chev. P U
446-0255.
1969 11:2: T. Chev. PU
13-11
1965 J/4 T . Chev. PU
tll eed Anoi her ~ldg . f
•U•T•
o•o,
SEE ou r a lu min um bl dgs. 1969 'h T. GMC PU
ALL
T
YPES
of
b
uil
ding
1
1968
12
T.
GM
C
PU
Heavy duty, with floor ing,
ma teri al s, block, brick, sewe r
wir.ed for electric . Also Wes t 1966 3~ T. GM C PU
pipes, wi ndows , lin tels, eoc.
1967
J;4
T
For
d
PU
Vt r ginta ch unk coat, dr ain
Cla ude Winter s, R io Gr and e,
til e, bell 1 ile, cemen t and 19M '12 T. GM C PU
J~y c: !':el)pard 446·0001
0
. Phone 245-512 1 after 5. '
mortar Gal l ipolis Block &amp; 1967 1h T. GM C P U
~__K.____!:ligle
y_4.4 6~ 002
12J-11Coal Co , 1231!2 Ptne, 446-2783. 11jl67 lf2 T. GM C P U
SAYRt~
207-lf 1959 1,2 T. Ford
HORSE~
,
ha
ft
reg
11110r
ga
n
39
ACRE
F
ARM,
6
room
house,
SOMMERS G . M.C.
--~---St alfton an d reg. qua r ter
barn and out buih;tmg, 3 m iles
TRUCKS , INC.
NEW and used instrumen ts,
horse gelding . Ca ll 446·3B79,
of f R1 . 7 l'lt Chester . 61 ,. . .985133 Pine St .
. Br un icardt House 0,1-•Mustc. 54
or 367 1438.
4205.
4&lt;1·2532
Sta te Stree t Phone 44d 0687.
267·11
104 If - - ~-·~-~--112 . . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _•
-- - - ~- ----- - -- - - --=
33 If

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Addison. Ohio

I

Four bedrooms, could be 5. enf1re downstairs is carpeted.
In cludes a large formal d i n~ng room , li vi ng room , parlor
or den . mce ktfchen. J full baths , full ba sement, 5 car
garage and farm pond . 1 mile from pool and htgh sc hool
Low tax area Burn all the natural gas you want for $15 00
per month Put m gas central air and cool your home at
absolutely no cost Price at $42 ,000 00 Make us an offer.

For Sale

2 Bedroom
Townhouses

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Own er Transferred . Must Sell Thi s ·
-Bea utiful Countr y Estate-

For Sale

Townhouse
Apartments

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For Sale

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I
n MemOIY

For Fast ·R esults Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel CliJssifieds
M
ASSIE
I}JhfUllWIL
THE
STROUT
RUSSELL
Sl
MlOD
REALTY
WISEMAN
REALTY
REALTOR
AGENCY
Real E$tate For Sale

l

17-The Sunday Times • - ·
-.,.,nllnel, Sunday, May 13, 1973

33 NORTH OF POMEROY, 0.
ON KINGSBURY ROAD (COUNTY RD. 18)
PHON E 90&gt;-6256

586 Locusl St.
992-7004
Middleport
Op en 8 to 6 Mon . lhru Sat •

Owned and Operated by ~renzo Davis and Sons

'

Register
For

FREE
DOOR
PRIZE

Portable
TV ..
To Be
Given Away
NO PURCHASE
NECESSARY

�I

16-The Sunday Times. Sentihel. Sunday, 111al· 13, 1973

.

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Realty, 32 State
Tel. 446·1998

44&amp;1066
ONE

FOR

T HE

ROA D

A

tra veling sa lesma n' s w1fe
went to a pr l1c ch1c ken show
.;ind

cam e

ho m e

w1 l h

a

nuc leus for starl 1ng a h 1tle
c hicken fa rm " How ar e
things?" her husband asked
when he came home " Jus t
fme," she r epl1ed . " I am
going to raise some ChiC kens
1 bought fi ve hens and two
r oos ter s at the poul try show."

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" Why tw o roos ters., .. he

· asked . " Well, " she r epl ied,
" IUS I 1n ca se one of them
deci des to go on the r oad "
NEW LISTINGS
4

.

'..

BEDROOM

house on

Neal

Ave , haS Ctly water, ga s, and
garage apt Sale pr 1ce $14 ,500

AT
CHESH I RE . Oh &lt;o , 3
bedroom home w1l h all c rty
conv eni ences
LISTINGS
47 GARFIELD Ave , very nice
home w1fh new carpet and
drape s. centra l a1r con
d1fion1ng, front room 22 ' x 14' r
with wood burn111g f 1repla ce,
modern
k1tchen ,
full
basemen t, and new cnrport.
Ha s nver v1ew , pnce $22 ,500 .

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3 BEDROOM block dwg on 3
ar;res of lan d, f~repface 1n
fr ont r oom , carpe t. fue l oil
furna ce, pn ced to se ll, $~,000
COTTAGE on Evans Heights,
lot 45' x 125' , modern k1tchen,
the whol e house In excel lent
cond1t1on , also, garag e, pn ce
$15,000
7 ROOM bnck home on Lower
Ri ver Road overlooktng the
Ohio R1ver , moder n k1tcnen ,
carpeted, air condittontng,
full
basement ,
two -c ar
garage, has recentl y been
rede corated
MODERN 1 floor plan on Ad dlson -Bulavllle Rd ., 6 room s,
hardwood floors , modern
ktfchen , rural water , situated
on two lots, pnce $21.000
Present l y rents for S200 per
month .
LARGE older home has been
remodeled , modern kitchen.
new carpeting, two patios,
pltJs ex tra tr a iler pad on lot,
prtce $21 ,000
MODERN 3 bedroom bnck
home. close to hospital , very
nice kilchen and dining area ,
a1r co nd \ ttontng, t wo car
g a r age ,
t mme d t at e
possesswn. p n ce S26,500.
106 SECOND Ave .. bnck home
wlfh nice lot, 1112 baths , steam
heat, f ul l baseme nt, fireplace,
very ntce ktlchen wtth all
appl tances bu tf t .tn , prtce
$30,000.
23 ACRES at Eureka,
red uced to $3,500

pn ce

4 BEDR OOM trade r w1th Jl/ 7
bat hs For Rent.
Office: 446-1066
EVENINGS :
,
Russe ll Wood , 446 -461 8
Ron Ca naday, 446-3636
John I . Richards, 446-0280

For Sale
GOOD CLEA N L UMP and
stoker coa l. Carl Wttl ters, Rio
Grande .Phone 245-51 15

6-11

M AG N ETIC Signs for cars and
trucks . All kinds, Simmons
Pnnftng and Office Equ ip
ment
52 tf

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Corbin &amp; Snyder

••

Furniture ~

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CR OWN CIT Y -- 6 rms with
l ull and dr y bo:1 se. L tv . rm ., 16'
x 25', large Rec. Rm wlih
F p , kd chen 12' x 16' with
buil t m cabmefs H .W. floors .
all pane led , car'pet on li v. rm .
and bdrm s II ha s a metal
gar age and locat ed on 2 leveL
shdded lots Pr iced for a
qu1ck sale

25 Locust St.
Howard Brannan, Broker
Ofl 4"6- 2674
Luc1lle Brannon
Eve. 446-1226 or446·2674
L1 ST WITH US NOW!
" WE SELL
BETTER LIVING"

THE PRICE
IS RIGHT
RAMBLING
F"anch
style
NEAR CI TY
All Brt c k, 6rm s
• re&lt;ept ion hall , 5 bedrooms.
and bat h, H .W. fl oors wtfh.
C€J untry s1 ze kitchen and
car p el 1n ltv rm , dm . rm .•
dming area. spa ctous LR ,
ha l l and bat h Liv. rm . IS 14' x
laundry room , gas FA
18' wi th F P. Plenty cabinets,
furna ce. ample sforage. 1;4
b&lt;J r. stove and oven in kit
acre lawn. a wonderful p lace
chen . Free water- and on
for c hil dren , just one mi le
water ltne This bea uty is
fr om clly and only $24,500.
l oc~l ed on
9 A
flat and PERFECTION
sh~1d ed lo t Pr1 ce on l y $25,000.
A T$28,000
GREEN ACRES - 4 bdrms .. QUICK possession to1 this 3 B. R.
home . one a!'Jd 1 bath , a
lar-ge Hv rm and kitchen, new
dream
kilchen and ct1ning
carpe t over H W. firs . Cen
area , beamed ceilmg i n LR
A~r in stalled 2 yrs . ago, at.
and
k1 tchen,
ca rpet
!a ched gar Ovmer has plan s
thr
oughout,
full
di
vi d ed
and hil S pr1ced this one to sell.
basem ent , famtly room ,
Pn ce of $21,000 Includes the
laundry , powder
r-oom ,
drapes, dt shwasher and cook
workshop
and
garage,
large
stove
rol li ng , well landscaped l.;~wn .
YO U' L L LOVE
CEN IE NARY If you are
THECO
UN TRY look ing for loca ti on , quallly
123 ACRES, two s tory home tn
and prtce , don' t pass th is one
extra good co n ddton aod
by. 6 rms , bath , laundry and
carpe ted , 60 acres tillable,
attached
garage .
Pr 1ce
IMge da1 ry barn , illso a
$23.500.
thnv1ng busmess and all 1he
equ
tpment Located 6 mt.
GARF IELD AVE . - L1l&lt; e the
tram
oty Pr ~eed m the low
R1ve r ? 5 rm on matn flr. All
e1gh
tt
es
carpet, full ftnished base .
WOODED AR EA
Large block gar-age plus
20
CAR AT LI VING 10'x 12' meta! bldg .. 4 A. lot
THIS is for the Dr , Lawyer,
wtfh nver fronfaqe . Pnce
merchant, or ch1ef w.th a
r educed to $21 ,500 I mmed1ate
large
d ow n payment An
Pass
·
outs tandmg home with 4,000
EWING TON - 2 ntce btg farm
sq ft ot floor space A,_ cr rcl e
homes . near the new m1ne
drtve leadtng you to a
opentng No 1 has 8 big rms. ,
gr acrous reception 11all wtth
bath and 4 acres, good garden
wmdtng sta1rway and a w .w
land. (Price $12,500 ) . No. 2
Delux e
carpeted home
has 7 rms and bath, large
fea_tures
are
f1eldstone
block garage, near 2 A land ,_
fireplace tn spact ous LR, old
wtth fruit and berries . Spring
bri ck FP in famt l y room , 6
water Price $15,000 .
BR , 41 1 bath , two comple te
ktlch en s, ce ntral air -hea t ,
PLEASANT VALLEY - Near
laundry , private bal cony to
new. 7 rm s, 4 bdrm, all
eac h BR , Anderson wtndows
ca rpet, 11 1 baths Ktf chen has
and doors, redwood deck,
plenty cabinets. dishwasher,
cedar and old bnck gives a
d1 sposa l. stove and oven Thts
graceful look for home or club
house has large rooms, much
hou se, loc ated on a 3 acre
storag e space , central a1r ,
wooded plot i ust 6 mi. from
pal to and tsloca ted on a lar ge
town .
lot and qUtet street Pnced
INVE ST IN
r eal 1st1cally al $28,500
HAPPIN ES S
A LARGE two story brt c k tn
KANAUGA - 2 good homes
!own, 3 BR , 11 :c bath , updated
No. 1, IS a 2 story , 6 btg rms,
kt! c hen ,
dtntng
r oom.
bath, and storag e bldg No 2,
fireplace 1n LR , paneled and
ts on l y 10 years old, 3 bd r m ,
w w ca r pel , full di v1ded
It v rm ., ki !chen, bath and a
ba se ment, elecf r i c hea l , lar ge
lrlrge storag e room
Both
fr ont por ch. deep lot 40' x 175'
houses are m good r epa 1r , on
Excellent loca tiOn and ready
rura l wat er , tn gooo lOcation
to move intO
and would make som eone a
IT'S LOVE
good home or mvestment
AT PUR SE SIGHT.
Prt ce for No 1 1s' $12,900 and SO n ec1r to everylhtng
No 2 IS $1&lt;1 ,900
willktng distance to church,
schoo l and shoppmg a
CHESH I RE -- Need a b&gt;g
beaut1ful bnck 3 BR. J1. 2 bath.
house , have one on Rt 7
carpet throughout, firep lace
North ol village on 1 A lot It
tn LR, lormal D R, the la tes t
ha s 7 b1g rooms. 11 J baths_,
tn ktlchen ltxlures and dmmg
n1ce new fa ctory k1tchcn , w1th
area, lamily room. laundr y,
bar , oven and s,qve. Much of
larg e fr on t por c h, garage and
lht s house has been re ·
ca rport, off stree t par k mg,
cor:~d1 h oned, ntce rec. rm,
wel l es tab lts hed lawn wtfh
new l urnace. new wtnng, new
l ru i t trees
sep t1 c tank, al umtnum s1d1ng,
SPRINGTIME
s lorm d oors and wmdows
CHARMER
Pn ce on\y 517,500.
RA NCH style 3 BR, 2 bat h, w w
carpet, al l bu il t in kt tc hen,
N EW HOMES
tamjly room , laundr y and
ST RT 775 - 5 big rms., 11/2
ca
rport Worskshop, one t hird
bath, 1.254sq. ft ltv. area plus
acre
lawn
carport Free wate r an d
RIVER Vt EW
loca ted on 11h A. lot. $21,000.
PERFECT
for the ftsherman , 6
ST RT 35 - All Brick , 5 rms
11 bath, large deck for
rooms
1
an d bath, attached gar age,
rela t ion. enclosed porch and
fu ll and dry base L ot approx
storage, plent y shade and
100' x 170' This IS an exce ll en t
frutt trees, price $16,000.
buy tor asktng p r i ce of
$14, 000 COTTAGE
$24,000.
WEST 35 Sub- D1v. Bea utiful 3 BR , paneled family room,
la r ge kdche n and LR, par ·
br ick and frame, at I elec . and
ches,
deep lot.
1
al l car pet. 1 2 ba ths , and 2 car
MIDDLEPORT
garage. Located on a fl at lo t
WE
HAVE
3 good homes in the
100' x 125' Pr tce $27,000
vtllage
pn
ced fr om $13,500 to
SMITH ROAD ~ 1 mile from
$17,500. 2 BR to 5 BR an d m
Clly, al l Bnck, al l elec, full
very good loca ti o ns.
carpe t It has a 2 car garage
NEAR ACRE LOT
and located on a 11h A. flat lot .
This is a qualit y bu i lt house 3 BR home - ntce eat tn kit
che n, enclosed porch, ful l
and pnced at $32 ,000
d1vided
base m ent
wlfh
FA RM S
laundry and ga r age. Pnce
NEAR R tO - 40 A. tab base, al l
$14,000
elec. home, 5 rrns and ba t h,
al um . sidtng, storm dr s and
wtndows and tab barn . Pri ce
$1 8,500 .
WOODSMI,LL RD ~ 26acre!h4
room hou ~e and outbu tld1ngs.
$8,200 I j

World's Largest

THE LEADER SINCE 1900 I N
SERVING THE NAT)ON' S
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS.
Ph. 146-0008
NEW LISTI NG
COM'
MERCIAL OR RESIDEN·
TIAL - Nice 6 rm . home 1
lo cat ed olf Eastern Ave.
features 3 BR . L R, dlning
rm ., Kit chen. cellar. cdr port
and large front porch This
home ts mostly 'Ca rpeted and
has alum1num siding and
s torm wmdows
NEW LISTING - S16,900 WITHOUT A DOUBT, this
modern 6 rm home is pnced
way below market value .
Special features tnc tude a 12 x
20 fam ily rm . with patio
doors: n1ce butlt in kitchen
wtlh a separate eat1ng area
and a large lot 10 mmutes
from town
NEW LISTING - NEAR RIO
GRANDE - 4 r oom block
house wllh bath and 5 acres of
land $1D.500

S

LAND CO~
'rT - LARGE
LOT clo&gt;" {).L-h 'on $200
down ~ $50 Pt · V
h
NICE COUNTRY HOME Over an acre of rollmg ground
wllh a nice 6 rm . and bath
home
Carpet, paneling ,
basement and st ate rd.
fran !age are some of the
fea tures of this home.
JUST COMPLETED - New 3
BR al~ electnc home with WW ·
carpet , Thermopane w i ndows, ntce modern k itch en,
large l tvtng room and carpor t
located m a new subdiVISIOn
on a 90x200 lot Easy term s on
$19,500

STATE Route 141 two m1 from
town, 3 BR all electric home
wt th basement an d 2 baths A
bargam at $19,000
STATE Route 160, nicely
remodeled 2 story home with
4 BR and par i basemen t on a
large lot Asktng $14.900
V I NTON - Investm ent, large
vacant store bui ldtn g w i th 2
apartment ups tatrs, $15,000.
TRAILER PARK - 19 spots
close to. Gavtn plan t. 7 mobi le
homes I ncluded in sal e
Potenlla l 1ncome of sn ;ooo
p er year
VINTON -~ LARGE 2 story
home wtth fu ll basement
Attrac t 1ve pn ce mc l udes a
new butf t.,n kitc hen, large
formal dinl ng rm , fireplace
Min ltving rm ., utili t y rm ., and 2
large porch es Would con
si der a trade
APARTMENT
HOUSE ,
3
apartments on upper Route 7
co mpletely furn1shed. If
you're looking for a good
tnveslment. don' t waif
LIKE TO CO LL ECT RE N T'
We have 2 1972 mobt le homes
on a 1·7 acre tot tn Add ison
Twp renttng for over $4,000
pe r yr. Sell1 ng p·r,ce $15,000
APPROVED SUBD I V I SION 16 lo ts tn Addtson Twp . wtth
all ut tl1 f 1es ava il ab le.
PR I CE REDUCED - Ci t y
Elegan t 2 story home features
4, s or 6 BRs. Jl/2 bat hs, new
kit chen, fam il y rm 1 and part
basemen t . The LR and d ining
rm are car peted and ea_ch
have a fireplace
LOTS
FIN ANC IN G
AVAI L AB L E
M obile
homes we lcome. 2 m1. fr om
' new hospita l
FARMS
HARR I SON TW P. woodlan d , $5,900.
V IN TON A R EA s 3. 900

34 acres
18 acres,

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N EW . ~er t a and Bemco mdt ·
tr ess an d box spr ings. Large
selection i n stock - twin, full.
queen size Save up to $40 a
set.
9~ 5 Second Aven ue
446-11 71
276-tf
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TARA

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Pay Only One
Ufi'lity

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Need Lots
Of Room ?
IF SO I::SE SU RE AfJD SE E
THIS 5 BEDROOM HOME
WITH PR IVATE MASTER
Q UA RTER S, A LARGE
FAM I L Y
ROOM ,
FIREPLACE ,
DINING
ROOM.
2
BATH S ,
BASEME N T ,
NEW
F URNACE . CARPETING ,
2 CAR GARAGE. LARGE
LOT W ITH CITY WATER
AND SEWER
IN RtO
GRANDE OWNER VERY
A N XIOUS TO S ELL AND
WILL HELP WITH THE
F INANC ING

Excellent Rura l
Neighborhood
VERY ATTRACTIVE 2
BEDROOM HOME W ITH
PLUSH
CARPETING .
BEAUTIFUL
KITCHEN.
VERY NICE LOCATION
ON 3 LOT S (O N E HA S
PAD FOR MOBILE HOME
RENTAL
PURPOSE S
YOU ' LL
LO VE
iHE
BATH
OWNER
WtLL
HELP F INAN CE

Perfect for Your
' family
N EARLY NEW
FULLY
CARPETED 3 BEDROOM
HOME WI T H LO VELY
K: ITCHEN AND DINING
AREA
L ARGE
FLAT
LOT. S M ALL STREAM
A N D 2 CAR GARAGE IT ' S
AL L
YOURS
FOR
$18,90 0 00
AND
I' M
BE T TI N G THAT YOU
WO N 'T FIND ONE TO
COM P ARE
AT
T H IS
PRICE
S1.700 DOWN
BUY S
IT
IF
YOU
QUALIFY

Beautiful Bri ck
4 Acr es. $3 0,000
VERY N IC E 3 BEDROOM
H OM E
WITH
FULL
BASEMENT,
LARGE
BEAUTIFUL
KITCHEN,
WOOD
BURNING
F I REP LAC E .
FULL
BASEMENT,
4
ACRE
FLAT
GROUND ,
2
BARNS, 2 CAR GARAGE,
AND
CARPORT
LOCATED ACROSS THE
ST REET FROM HANNAN
TRACE HIGH SCHOOL
IT ' S A DANDY .

Very Nice 3 Bedroom
Nearly New $19,500.00
TH IS FULLY CARPETED
3 BEDROOM HOME IN ·
CLUDES
A
VERY
PRETTY
KITCHE N ,
NICE BAT H , ATTACHED
GARAGE , LARGE FLA T
LANDS CAPED LOT CI T Y
SCHOOLS, WATER
&amp;
SEWER
OWNER
MOV I NG
TO
NEW
J ER S EY
BET T ER
HURRY

Very Attractive
4 Bedroom Home
PRETTY
AND
MODERN A 2 STORY
COLO NIAL A'S THERE IS
ON .THE MARKE T . AL L
HARDWOOD FLOORS, 2
F IREPLACES.
2 112
BA T H S,
FULL
BASEME N T,
LARGE
ATTRACTIVE KITCH E N
WITH
A LL THE
AP
PLIA N CES,
FOR M AL
D ININ G A N D 1 A CRE
AS

iAN ~~CRAPE~
GARAGE

~~ZtHLEU~"·

THREE
BEDROOM
HOME IN TOWN - NI CE
KITCHE N A N D BA TH ,
JU S T
R I GHT
FOR
FAM ILY STARTI NG OUT
FHA M IGHT APPROVE
T H IS ONE

We Need Listing
•
We Sell More Property than Anyone Else in
Southeastern Ohio.
IF YOU WA N T IT SOLD
CALL US

Gallia Co.'s Largest
Real Estate Sales Agency
Office 446-3643
Evenings Call
E. M. "Ike " W'1seman 446 · 3791J
E. N. Wiseman 446-4500

REAlJORS

RICE'S

. . -...

-"!"'-!1'!'~

SAVE 25-30%

NOTICE

IOOU ~ •

AUCTION
SERVICE

"SELL THE AUCTION
WAY"
. AUCTIONEER

,367-7250

PH. 446-3444

.....

1. Only 3 years old
2 Four Iage bedrooms ( Large closets)
3 Two baths
4. 20x25 Recreation room
5. 11 xl4 Laundry Room
6 14x25 Garage
7. 10x12 Paho
8. E&gt;!.cept10nally large lot
9. Central heating
10. Air condittoned
11. AutomatiC washer &amp; dryer
12 Built-tn d1shwa she r &amp; stove
13 Wall to wall carpeftng throug h hom e
14 Marble window sills
15. Drapes, shades &amp; curta1ns
16 Thermopane w1ndows
17 . Nicely landscaped ( High &amp; Dry)
18 T.V. Aenal plus seve ral 1acks
19 5 Large trees, (4 apple)
20 Sand box for kidd1es
.
.
21 Exceptionally ni ce The surroundtngs, locatmn, ne1gh·
bars.

NE W HOM ES on your lot ol"
ours NO MON EY DOWN for
quallf1ed buyers us1ng F . H.
Adm
loan. (Closmg costs
on ly I A vanety of f loor p lans
wlf h
varwus . financing
programs avai lab l e
We
speC1alize tn working w tth
AEP Co. emp loyees although
we are availabl e to a ll . Metgs
Deve l op m en t Co ,, 150 N .
Second Ave., Midd l eport ,
Oh io. Phone 992-5976 for in
format1on
105 tf
BY OWN E R:
Lot s for butldtng or t r ade r s
tn city of Gall i ool1~ nr
jo 1n i ng Galtipol ts Twp.
acros s road from
GS I
ground s on M tll Cr eek Look
and co mpare anywhere
Robert Queen , 1026 Second
Avenue, 446-0168
BY OWN ER 3 bedroom home,
ga r age, new car peting Ph one
446 0955, 120 Mabelene Dr ,
Gal lipolis
61-tf

· iNV ES TM ENT PROPERTY
2 family dwelling located at 631
Third Ave Rent bot h or li ve in
one and rent the other. Both
have new furnaces Has 3
room apar t men t and a 5 room
apartmen t . Call today for an
appointment .
AIR CONDITIONED
See th i s beautiful. 2 yea r ol d,
t)1ree bed room home located
near new hosp tta t. It has all
the features you like. Com
ple t e carpeti.ng, a~ r con
ditioned, built 1n appllcances,
two bath s full basement wt t h
ftntshed rec . rpom Priced in
the 30's.

BEFORE

AFTER
Karr ' s
Barber
Shop , 110 L.yftn

St ,

Pomeroy,

Oh1o , has added a
new serv1ce. We
are now fitting
Men's
Toupees .
We can ht you
w1th a full or a
partial ha1rpu~ce.

STOP in and let MICK show YOU What he- can do for you .

'

KARR'S BARBER SHOP

Offfce Phont! 446f. ft9.f
Evenmg s
C~ a rl es M . Neal 446-1546
J . Michae l Nea l 446-1503

~.ub e rs

2 ACRE lot, 8 mile::. uUl Phone
446-4537.
114-3

liD l ynn St.
POMEROY

Local 400 AFL-C IO

BILL JANES
ARMY-NAVY
DISCOUNT DEPT. STORE

BY OW N ER 3 bedroom house in
Wonder Hill s, Athens. Ohio.
• For 1nformat1on ca ll S92 -4757
'. 114 1

MOTHER 'S DAYEVERYBODY'S SALE

BY OWN ER 3 bedroom home,
ca r pet, new •carpet ing. Phone
446·0955

6HI

FRIDAY, MAY 18 · 10:30 A.M.

•
•

DISPERSAL OF HOLSTEIN DAIRY HERD,
DAIRY EQUIPMENT &amp;FARM MACHINERY

•

-••

•

72 hd . Hol st ein Cows and Hei fer s. 16 Reg . 56
Grade. 66 cows now in produc tion . 8 hd. Top Qual ity Grade Heifer s t o start f r es hen ing Aug .
24th . Herd aver age is now 48 lbs. per cow. All
cows are pur ebred, most ar e si r ed by AB S,
Cur t i ss or Sire· Po wer bul ls, a ll br ed cattl e ur e
ca rr yi ng the servi ces of sires fr om th ese three
insemination groups.
Thi s is a yo ung head. 20 hd. ar e f ir st ca lf
heifer s. 24 hd. are in ei ther thei r second or
third lactation . Herd is Bang s and TB t est ed,
al so vaccinated I VR . BVD, P1 3 and Lepto .
Th ey al so c arry stomach magnets. Herd is on
DH lA lest , record s and tr ansfer s wi ll be
avai labl e at sa le.

..••,.

•

EQUIPME~T,

Realty

CUT LAWN S in Kanauga and
Gallipolis area. 446-4815, Al va
Joi1nson
J 12·3

452 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh io 45631
Oscar Baird
Douglas Wether hott
Br ok ers
614-446-3434
W E BU Y. SElL OR TRA DE
BEAUTIFUL SPLIT-LEVEL l;] dra large home with three
bedrooms , one and half baths,
full basement, cou nty water .
large lot. about lwo m tles out
of fawn , ct ty schools.
ROUTE 35 BEYOND THUR MAN - Very ni ce s1x room
w1th bath home on three
quarters acre m Ja ckson
County . Hardw.ood floor s,
wall to wall car pet, f uel oil
furna ce, cent ral air con .
dihon1ng, prtc ed at only
$18,500.

-------

I

Help Wanted

Danmar Farms

LO W TAX D IST RI CT
Seven ty f1ve ac re fa r m with
very good SIX room house and
bath, fuel od furna ce, Kyger
Creek schoo l d1stnct, p len ty
of water, complete wdh d1esel
tractor and equipmen t
WE HAVE OT HERS - Whelher
you want a far m, vacant land.
house 1n town, or busme o:.
Jocal1on. con ta ct Oh to R1ver
Realty for al l your rea l es tate
needs
Evening s Call446 -4244
Steven Betz444-9583
Johil Fuller 446-4327

FULL OR
PART TIME
Expanding company
needs twelve m en to
work in Gallipolis and
:&gt;oint Pleasant area .
No
e xp e ri e nce
necessary . Mu st have
car .. Call Monday.
Thursday . Friday 9 to
8.

I

MR. VANCE 446-0677

MR. &amp; MRS. ROBERT WATTERSON

NEW TRANSMISSION

HENDERSON, W. VA.
PHONE 675-2167
Farm located on Rt. 35, 6 miles above Pt.
Pleasant, W. Va .
John McNeill &amp; Harold Flax. Auctioneers
Pete Sommer. Cieri\
LUNCH WILL BE SERVED
Don ' t miss thi s Sale! Visit this Heard at
Anytime.

•

-•

I~

MODEL 331 1

I 14

44 X 24 .

1 a 31 SQ. FT , UPPER LEVEL
2 0 7 6 SQ. FT . TOTAL LIVING AREA

'

Open For Inspection

Saturday
1 to 5

TRI.OOUNTY
MOBILE HOMES

Sunday
.1 to 5

YOU'RE

INV IT ED
TO VlSIT!

Built by : B&amp;K Excavating
SALES REPRESENTATIVE:

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR., BROKER
Associa tes: Helen L. Tea ford. Gordon B, Tea ford

PHONE 992-3325

EQUAL HOUSING
OPPOF.TUN IllES

110 MECHANIC STREET

POMEROY, OHIO

GRI\ND
Refreshments
Will Be

Visit
Meigs

Served!

Drive 0ut Today •

Cormty's
Newest

SUNDAY

Dealer!

MAY 13 • 1 TO 7 PM

I

12 and 14' Wide Mobile Homes
24' Double Wides
MA DE B Y SK YLINE CORP.

Will Be Here To
Answer

Natton's largest builder of th1s type

Your Questions!

homes. Oh1o bUJit by Oh to labor.

FREE COUNSELI NG- We'll help you match the
equi pment to t he j ob with a w 1de selection of t r actors ,
accesso ries, and featu res. Come in and tal k it over, try 'em
out today!

Gravely Tractor Sales &amp; Service
Pomeroy , Ohio
Open 8 a .m. titS : 30 Mon . thru Thu rs.
8 a .m. f1l Bp.m . Fr i . and Saturday
WF SERV IC E WHAT

•

3

BEDROOM

Always The Best Deal On Best Homes

•"

•

U¥1tlli 1001

11 J •

MODEL HOME

The Best

JOB-MATCHED SPEED AND POWER!

removal job.
• Performance-p roved in 306-mile Durability Mow.

••

1[010(111 l

New 1973 THE ANSWER TO TOt&gt;AYS

•

"

IIDICDI 2
11 J n

1. The Treadhome is built
according to code .
2. Fully insu lated.
3. Large closets .
4. Storm doors &amp; windows.
5. 2x6 rafters.
6. Copper plumbing.
7. Near ly an acre of land .
8. Prices start at $19,995.00
on your lot co mplet e ready to
move into.

MOBILE HOMES

Factory
Personnel

all-gear dri ve.
• Instant forward-neu t r aJMrever se f 'or easy
man euv ering.
• Attachm en ts f or almost any law n, garden or snow

•"

11

NEW

Where Dealin' Is

Gr avely Model 816 L6.5 HP
Rt dmg Tractor w1th centermounted 50'' mower attachment

• No fluid power losses, no be lts to oli p or break ...

•••
•

I' I

Our New Trendlw m es by N,1tional

Go Mobile With Goble!

2-~

~

t£DROQ I 1

PUBLIC
WHOLESALE

$3.51 HR.

...'•.

~

Design 212

12 MEN NEEDED

-•

~

197l 73 hunti ng license num
bered 312li.JI50. Prize Wifl be
olfer ed upoO rfifurn fo Ivan
Fi l e Sheriff's Department.
112·3

$MONEY$

FORTY ACRES N EAR RIO
G RA NDE Seven room
house on r ol l1ng land is tn cdy
schoo l d1s l ricf. I mmed ia te
possesston, drilled wel l . good
fences, priced under $18.000

8·SPEED11. ALL-GEAR

• Speeds from a bru teMpow er % m p h up to a
let 's-get- home 8 'h mph.
• Attachmen ts run at constant, efficien t speed
regardless of g r ound speed.

-

GOLDEN EMPRESS
VAN DYKE
GRAYWOOD
GRAND HAVI::N
HILLCREST
HALLMARK
ESQUIRE

50

X

12

••

to
70

X

14

CHECK OUR
SPECIALS

UP TO 12 YEAR F IN A NCING
WE SERV ICE WH AT W E SELL

. AT APRICE YOU
CAN AFFORD ! !

KI'NGSBUR:Y
HOMES
'

SALES AND SERVICE

Goble Mobile Homes

992 M
2975

SEll • WE SERVICE WHAT WE SHL

'

IN SIOE Pttinting &lt;tnd yard
work, 446-J38B .

Wanted To Buy

.,.

..

.

t&lt;i

vq

800 series

-'

;-;,-;c;;:;;:-~~­

Wanted

-~----

10, 12, 14 and
16.5 riding
tractors

•

LADY to share weekend care o t M I DDlE AGED lady to li ve in
semi inval1d lady. ' Refer ence
and care for el derly lady. 446
req u1 red Call 446-1364 after S
0832.
p.m .
.
Il l 6
. lll -6

WOMEN wanted for work af
Ha llmark Ca rd Shop, Silver
Bndge Shoppmg Center. Send
name, age , address , phone
number .
expe ri ence ,
refer~nces to Box No. 269, c-o
GallipoliS Oa1ly Tribune .

ROTO-TfLLERS , lawn mowers
repair . 562 Fourth Avenue, ~~~~~=-~~1136
446-1562.
MEEDS LPN o'r retireO RN
32-tl
work in nursi ng home, .:.;an
- -- -- -- - - 'v\ li ve m. Write Box 313, Ironton .
Ohto Route 1.
J&amp; W MOUN T
CLE ANING SE RV ICE
2h
GENERAL house cleaning. We
supply all the cleaning sup. WOMAN , to !tve 1n or sray
. plies . 388 8875 after 6 p.m . cal l
dur i ng day wtlh elderly
388-8865 Weeki y or monthly
woman Light hou sekeepmg
deanmg by appointment.
Call 446-2622 between 4 p.m . to
I
91 If
8pm
111 ·4
ZIG ZAG Ma chi ne qu1!f tng in
-:---:--·---my hom e, 446 0267.
WANT ED lmm ed1al ely
111 -6
Appr enti ce or regtslered
barber in Galllpolts area . Call
WALLPAPERING and pain
446 0002 .
ling Phone 446-9865 or 379111 ·6 .
2471

FARM MACHINERY
JD 1968tractor . Model 4020. F arm all Sup er M .
4-16 Intern at ion al p low No. 541. 3-16 In·
tern a tional plow. No. 53 1, both p lows ar e 3 PH •
JD 12 ft . di sc on ru bbe r . 2 yr . JD 4-row Rot ar y
Hoe. 2 yr . N I spreader PTO, J D 4-r ow corn
pl anter. No. 494 A, Century corn spra y with 200
gal. plast ic tank , Far mhand rake, Gehl
grind er -m ixer. 2 yr s.• Gehl hay condit ioner.
New Hol land baler No. 276, never been used .
New Holland Bal er No. 59, Interna tiona l 2-ro w
cultivat ors. Post hole digger . N I one-row corn
picker . 1966 J D 2-r ow for age ha r ves ter No. 38,
used 3 year s, .2 Cobey ensi laqe wagons. 2
wagons wit h t andem r ea r ax les, wi th 18 and 20
ft . fl at beds, 2 Bot k in gr avi t y bed wag ons,
GMC 1966 2-lon truck with g rai n and st oc k
r ac k w ith fold-down sides, 16ft. bed, 2,000 bu .
wire corn cr ib. No hand tools or other it ems:
Pl ease be prom pt. M ac hiner y wil l sel l fi r st .

Wanted

--

OWNER LEAVING STATE 83·11
Wants to sell lh 1s very lovely . ...,..,... l
- ·----:::=-:-:-::::-::--=---"'-f
three bedroom home 1n quiet •
sharpenmg,
Saws, ,
SCISSors, shears , home and
subdlvlston with city water
and sc hools. full basement
gardqn .. too ls. Sharp Shop.
ha s recreation room wdh
Alley rear 147 Second .
216-h
wood burning ftreplace, tn
excellent condi tion .
REMODELING, bu i lding neW
IMMEDIATE POSSESS ION
rooms , cement, roofing
St dmQ, furnace ins J H
O..Vner will let you move 111
(Jueen &amp; Son, 446·9271.
tomorrow 1n this thret&gt;
II
bedroom ranch with fu l 1
basement and l arge lot .
Garage tn basement. ceramic WILL do baby s1 lling or lronings
10x40 2 BR
$2995
in my home Loca ted Rt 218,
bath, budt -m ki tchen , pr iced
wel l below $20,000
6 min . fr om town References
10x51 2 BR
$3595
reqUtred Ph one Ktngs, 446·
10x56
3
BR
$3995
7460
S R 160 I N V I NTON - Very
12x412 BR
gOOd two story frame home
1106
$3595
with four bedroom s, fu l l bath,
--~~12x51 2 BR
$3995
pain f tng,
c1 ty wate r , wet 1 insulated, WA L LPAPER I NG,
12x56
3
BR
$4295
v1nyl wall covertng s. Dry wal l
fuel oil furnace , double
ltn 1s hmg textured ce t11ng , 12x61l BR
carpor t Only $12,900 .
$4995
fr ee
es ftmate s
Work 20x4 3 3 BR
guaranteed 256-6342
CLOSE TO MARKETS - Th 1s
$6500
very clean, neat, cottage with
110-6 Doubl e wide
3 bedrooms. JS on t he edge ol
town Bui lt -in cabine ts in the
Al l homes are total electnc,
kt tchen, full bath, garage,
completely furn ished , set of
central atr and furnace , wood UOLO coins ai-td si,lve~ dollars . steps, 1/• " blrch paneling,
burning firepla ce, a rea l
Tawney Jewelers . •
·
house type door s, storm
barqatn at only $15,900
73-lf wtndow s
From $250 00
---~~~down,
Delivered
Free .
GOOD MON EY M AKER JU N K autv and scrap metaf
Bu s1ness in the hear t of town
Ph 388·8776
M any more to choose f r om .
which owner wants to sell due
B9 26
to health. Has made a n1ce
proftt steadily for 30 year s
1
Excellent for a cou ple of two WA NTED to buy , se l l or tr ade,
toy elect ric train , 446-4843. j
women Pr iced under $10,000.
240·11
F.IVE AC RES - N ICE HOUSE
- For on ly $10,000 you can be
1n th1s n1ce four rooms and
Ea stern Ave.
Gallipolis, 0.
ba th house 1n good condif1on.
PH. 446-0175
Land tS level to ro lt 1ng, plenty
0f wa ter, fuel o1/ furna ce. A
rea l bargain .

~GRAVELY
Now on all

600 gal. Un ico t ank with new compressor .
Double-4 herringbpne Chore Boy m i lk ing
parlor . compl et e with feeder s and m qtor s.
Chore Boy pipe-line 4-unit mi lker s w ith 3 hp.
motor.

-------Wanted To Do

OHIO RIVER

·- - - - -

Heart Jewelry Bo xes, 3 sizes, 79c . $1.19 · $2 . 19 ; M other's
Day Blouses, $3.49 ; Gi ft s for the Kitchen, 98c up ; 3 pc
Barbecue Sets, S1.49 ; Golf, base ba ll and bowli ng shoes,
ltmited quantity, $4.99 pr.; Saw horses, $1.99 set ;
Childre n's cowboy boot s, $3.99 pr.; Kn 1ves, m ache ttes . 50
di fferent kinds - 29c up ; Cran berr y ash trays, 79c ea .; 12
oz Gla ss Sham Tu mbl ers, 16c ea.; 19 pc. Shettf iel d
Presentation Knife set, only S9 ,95 ; Canvas wash basin,
29c ; 30 Qa t. A m mo boxes, qood for tools, $1.49 : Arm v
Khak i shorts, 99c ; Everead y ~l ash lights, all steel case,
red r efl ec tor ; Quaker M ai d Oil , 37c qt. ; Canvas tarps - a ll
sizes - r educed pn ces, Sc ree n room tents, add a tr a i ler
room plus r egu lar tents. Last Time, $49.95 ; Com pl ete lin e
of Hydraulic Jacks, Ph Ton to 20 Ton, SAVE .
Nam e brand pai nts and v arn ishes - li m 1ted quant 1t y, gat.
99c '_qt. 49c - pt. 29c ; Comp lete Ime of End1 cott Johnson
w ork shoes and boots (double sea m ed, tnple stitched, rea l
lea lherl REDUCED 20 PCT.
8 Track car ster eo w ith speak ers , S37.9S , 8 track tapes,
Soul, Rock, Pop, Country. Wes tern, Top Art1s ts, Only $1.98
each.
Open 9 - S: 30 Daily except Man , &amp; Fr i. 9-9
Open Sunday 12 : 00 - S: 30

Help Wanted

Real Estate For Sale

A .

MEN'S TOUPEES

Help Wanted

- - -- -

114-11

Phone 446-4672
281 State Street
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Notice

TWO.WAY RadiO$ Sales &amp; LET US restore your old ·famity CI\SH BON US ol $2,.500 00 lo
Service. New and \.sed CB's 1
photos . Prices reasonable
High School graduates who
police monitors. antennas.
Tawney's Studio.
•
•
lram ' with us. Offered for
etc. Bob's Citizen Band Radio
51 -tt
li mited lime only. Choose
Equip., Georges Creek Rd ., .
training m mechar11cal or
Gallipolis, Ohlo J46. .4517.
BORROW by Mail fo $800 !
electronic repair, missiles,
Money for any ' purpose .
survey ing . infantry, armor or
- --::-c---- -...:..212-tf
Confidential
Convenient
artillery . Choose the country
DAY CARE
terms - RQberts Loan , Box
where you work . Enlist now.
SUN VALLEY Nursery School
6071P, Whee ling, W. Va . •
go tater . Call your Army
licensed by State of Oh1o, 11,;
recruiter a! :
8l-lf
miles west of new hospital
r; ALLI POLIS 446 3343 ·
577 Sun Valley Dr. Ph . 446· wE HAVE a complete 1ine of
1145
3657. Day care that says " we
watches and diamonds .,
-- - - ' ' - - care . " Madge Hauldren ,
Compare
our
prices WANTED
babysitter
for
Owner ; Loredith &amp; John
anywhere. Tawney 's Jewelry.
summer months on Georges
Hauldren, ()per_!lfor-s.
Creek Road . Phone -i46 0754
51 -If
114-tfl after 5. 30 pm
-----__:.._~--'
MOTORIST MUTUAL IN .
114-3
SURANCE .
One
stop
protection for Auto, Home, WOU L D l1ke middle-aged lady
Busmess and Life. Ray Hawk,
to live tn and care for elderly
Agent , 446 2300. 541 4th Ave .
lady in Meigs County. no
laundry Call 446·7410.
I 00·11
.
113-3

Professional Real Estate Appraiser
' ARTHUR A.
~ NIBERT,
A a A
A.S.A.

PUBLIC SALE

DAIRY

Notice

Notice

Neal Realty

GOOD BUILDING
LOTS ON
ROUTE 35,
446-1997

Notice

IN MEMORY of Alice Halley on
MR. Co11ven,en1 Sa-,.s, " 8e your
th1s Mother' s Day .
own Boss! Own your own
Cod made_a wonderful mother,
convenient food mart!" No
A mother who never grows old ;
e~~:perience
necessary!
He ma_de her smile of the
Con ~o~enien t pro vi des you
sunshme ;
wrth : Attractive new store
And He moulded her heart of
building , advertising , .:om.
pure gold ;
plete
training ,
mer In her- eyes He placed bright'
chandisi
ng
Choice
locations
shlntng stars,
now available! Wrife for Fr ee
In her cheeks fair roses, you
Brochure and foH details to
see.
Indus tr ial Investment &amp;
God made a wonderful mother
Holding Co .. P. 0 Bo• 788 ,
And He gave that dear mothe;
H:untmgton, W. Va . 25717.
to rne .
1 12·3
Sa~ly missed by daughter
Weltha Clagg and Fam ily. ' READING teacher available
for private lessons or small
:::-~=-----..:114- 1 groups,
446-3338.
IN MEMORY of Fa ye B
112-6
Walters who departed th1s H f~
11 years ago, May 13,
NOTARY public at Yellow Cab,
I lost the sunshine and roses
16 Ptne Street.
I lost the heavens of bl ue
I lost the beautiful ra inbow
::-- - - - - - - - . :114-3
I lost the morning dew
PAYING 50 pet over fa ce value
I lost the angel who gave me
tor sliver coin, 446-4921.
summer
114-6
The whole winter through
I lost the gladness that turned ~--------PIANO tun ing, Lane Dan iels.
into sadness
259 Broa dway, M iddleport,
When I lostJou.
992-2082 .
Husban
Owen
and
114-6
children, Clara. Imogene and ~----James .
SWEEPER Repa i rs . Parts .
_ _ _ __ .::__ _~114- 1
Su ppl tes . Phone 367 -7736
Dav 1s Va cuum Cleaner Store,
St . Rt . 7 at Addtson , 0 .

This home musf be sold, owner transferred out of town
Must be seen to be appreciated
OWN E R: ANTHONY KRESGE . Phone, Area 614-446-01 45

Pri ce Reduced
Was $15,900
Now$14,900

JIMME

Call Shirley Adk1ns

•

This absolutely mu st be one of the prett iest hom es 1ns.1de
and out tn the area. Plush carpeting throughout , beaut1ful
klfchen cabine ts wi th range and dishwasher, 211'2 baths,
lovely forma l dining room, large family and rec . room, '1:
car garage and Central Air O.Vner I"J')oving otherw.ise
would not part with it It's brand new and the only one like
it with a Sprtng Valley Estates addre ss.

~~6·0001

1 - For Information

-----

On e of t he Areas' Ni cest New Hom es

NEW COLONI A L WITH 167
ACRES - tht s beautif ul 4 BR
LD IN G s 1t es, bea ut i ful
a l l elect ri c home ha s a built tn
v 1ew, woOOed ft p t on ha rd
road Owner will fmance. 245k i tchen w1th ea flng a_r ea, WW
carpe t, for m al d inmg rm ,
AUCTIONEERS
5320
ST RT 775 --- 80 A 10 m i from
2 fir eptaces, 5 ACR E S, ntce 3 BR one floor
large
fam
il
y
rm
~
113·3
town Good 8 rm house Barn
and 2 ba ths T her e is about 75
plan
ho
rr1e
.
Carp
et
an
d
36' x 60' wtth concrete fir. and
Ill
bl
b
d
acres 1 a e, arn an new
hard wood fl oo r s. A I. S1d
OWNER - 367 -7861
shed s added Concrete St lo 16'
pond Th1 s far m is about 5 mi
NEW &amp; USED FURNITURE
RUS
T
IC
an tique bri ck redwood
D X
50 ' HT
Nea r new
from
R
o
Gr
ande.
Addi
son
Twp
Sold
owner
a
1
854 Second , 446-9523
h1&gt;me,
for
mal liv ing room and
Badger Loader Most of 80 A. OUR very low mark up enables
Ranny Blackburn
sma tt er home so th is home
d
i
n
ing
room,
atl elec t nc.
15 Trac tor land 12 A . bottom.
Branc h Manager,.
avat l ab l e f or i m m ed . oc you to
kitc hen , eating area, dish cupancy.
25 A fl at and 10 A ts gentle_
washer, d 1s posat, etc. ~ 3
slope ASC approved Pond
spacious bedrooms, w ith 3
3
BED
ROOM
hom
e
i
n
town,
DOUBLE
WID
(
3
BR
lurand Wa ter trough . Thts farm
comp l e te baths, paneled
bui l ti n k itchen, car p et ed
nished home. 1970 New M oon .
ha s been l tmed, fer t il i zed and
fam il y room , utility room ,
li ving room an d hall , carport ,
Several lots availa bl e 1f you
tS tn a h1gh productive stage. on all new ltvtng room sui tes.
wa
sher, dryer , ya r d wit h
very
close
to
gol
f
course.
Ca
ll
need lot. Why pay r ent?
Pn ce $43,000
Early Amen can l iving room
shade tr ees, back and Side
446·0519
for
appoint
ment
wt
th
suttes, l nmmed tn maple
ANY HR . 446-1998
over look i ng pond, electnc 2
owner.
CLE A N. well kept 3 BR hom e in
Start as low as $ 171
car
garage, comp lete ca r pet
106-11
ci ty Basement , t wo porc hes,
and
drapes. Job takes us out
garage
$13,500
1973
KA WASAK I
350CC
ol
lown.
CAL L - SEE T HI S
"motorcycle Lt k e new w i th N E W 3 bedroom house , gar age,
BE
SAT
ISF I ED.
e lec tr ic hea l, r an ge, wa ll to LOT S and sma ll acreage in
Warran t y ~h 379·2469.
I F YdU arf! b~Hidmg a rlew
113-2
Gr
eeA
and
Addison
lwps.
wa ll ca rpet, f loor space 1,324
11 2·6
home or remodeling, see us '
With
wa
ter
.
fee t, large lot 100 x 256, near
~----We art&gt; bu ilders D1stri butor
Clay school. Pr iced $18,850
for Ho t poin t App l ia nces ,
RA R E F IND, Usually , ou r
Ot ho 'Bu rd et te , 256-6B84.
Allison Electnc .·
acr eage 1s ou t in the coun try .
85-11
NewGMC
,
154JI
Here's 6 acres· rig ht next to
Tru ck Headquarters
town.
Four BR m odern home.
GROCERY bustness for sale, 1969 Ford 3f4 ton ca m per specia l
Ca
rpet,
basemen t. Three car
butldmg for sale or lease, 1963 Chev. 2 ton du m p
garage.
Idea l loca tion for car
1966 lf2 T . Chev. PU
phone 773.56 JS from a· 30 P.m .
Pi
pes,
G
BD:
or
trai
ler
sa les or gar age.
:
t
P
ES,
p
pes,
1
1
1967 3-d T GM B PU
to 10 p.m . for apporntment
We sell anything for
1966
3
/4
T.
GMC
PU
Cheratan, BBB, Jobey, Hil ~on , DREAM HOM E you ca n affo d
67·11
anybody
. Br ing your
R
r ·
and others . Tawney 's P1pe 1
1960 IH C t ruc k tract or
items
to
Knotts Com d Troph He se 422 Second
.Level):' 3 BR ,ho!'"e on t 141,
1969 111 TO GMC PU
a
n
Y
u
'
ct
l
y
ltm
lf
s
.
Carpet,
n
1
munity
Auction
Barn .
M OT OR HOM E S FOR REN T 1969 G M C 112 ton PU
Ave.
beau
t
i
f
u
l
spac
ioUs
k
itc
h
en
Cor11er
Third
&amp;
Olive.
NOW TAktng reservations for 1967 Ford 1h ton P U
1 99 -tf~;. mcludes range a nd refng .
For appointment call
May, June. Jul y Comp lete 1967 '12 ton Chev .
- - - - - - -- - - La r ge li ving rm . Pa tio See
446 -2917 . Sale every
pnmary insurance prov1 ded 1966 GMC 1/:2 ton P U
'JU:::, 1 taKen tn , deluxe zig zag
today and move tn t omorr ow!
r~t no ex tra cost Rates as low
1970 GM C 117 ton PU
Saturday evening at 7
.sewi n g
machine
T h is
as $150 per week and mileage
1969 112 T . Ford PU
m achine
d arn s.
em1403 Ea stern Ave, Nex t to 1969 Ol d s 88
b r Oi d eri es, overcasts, but Economy Motor Sa les. Ph
1969 Do dge Station Wagon
tonholes, .pay balance $36.501
&lt;146 1425
'1
1971 3 T. Chev truck
or paymen ts can be ar ranged
112-tf 1970 111 T . Chev. P U
446-0255.
1969 11:2: T. Chev. PU
13-11
1965 J/4 T . Chev. PU
tll eed Anoi her ~ldg . f
•U•T•
o•o,
SEE ou r a lu min um bl dgs. 1969 'h T. GMC PU
ALL
T
YPES
of
b
uil
ding
1
1968
12
T.
GM
C
PU
Heavy duty, with floor ing,
ma teri al s, block, brick, sewe r
wir.ed for electric . Also Wes t 1966 3~ T. GM C PU
pipes, wi ndows , lin tels, eoc.
1967
J;4
T
For
d
PU
Vt r ginta ch unk coat, dr ain
Cla ude Winter s, R io Gr and e,
til e, bell 1 ile, cemen t and 19M '12 T. GM C PU
J~y c: !':el)pard 446·0001
0
. Phone 245-512 1 after 5. '
mortar Gal l ipolis Block &amp; 1967 1h T. GM C P U
~__K.____!:ligle
y_4.4 6~ 002
12J-11Coal Co , 1231!2 Ptne, 446-2783. 11jl67 lf2 T. GM C P U
SAYRt~
207-lf 1959 1,2 T. Ford
HORSE~
,
ha
ft
reg
11110r
ga
n
39
ACRE
F
ARM,
6
room
house,
SOMMERS G . M.C.
--~---St alfton an d reg. qua r ter
barn and out buih;tmg, 3 m iles
TRUCKS , INC.
NEW and used instrumen ts,
horse gelding . Ca ll 446·3B79,
of f R1 . 7 l'lt Chester . 61 ,. . .985133 Pine St .
. Br un icardt House 0,1-•Mustc. 54
or 367 1438.
4205.
4&lt;1·2532
Sta te Stree t Phone 44d 0687.
267·11
104 If - - ~-·~-~--112 . . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _•
-- - - ~- ----- - -- - - --=
33 If

-----

Addison. Ohio

I

Four bedrooms, could be 5. enf1re downstairs is carpeted.
In cludes a large formal d i n~ng room , li vi ng room , parlor
or den . mce ktfchen. J full baths , full ba sement, 5 car
garage and farm pond . 1 mile from pool and htgh sc hool
Low tax area Burn all the natural gas you want for $15 00
per month Put m gas central air and cool your home at
absolutely no cost Price at $42 ,000 00 Make us an offer.

For Sale

2 Bedroom
Townhouses

'

•'
l'

~

Own er Transferred . Must Sell Thi s ·
-Bea utiful Countr y Estate-

For Sale

Townhouse
Apartments

•'
'
''

•

L----------111111!!!111~

For Sale

'
•''

'''

I
n MemOIY

For Fast ·R esults Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel CliJssifieds
M
ASSIE
I}JhfUllWIL
THE
STROUT
RUSSELL
Sl
MlOD
REALTY
WISEMAN
REALTY
REALTOR
AGENCY
Real E$tate For Sale

l

17-The Sunday Times • - ·
-.,.,nllnel, Sunday, May 13, 1973

33 NORTH OF POMEROY, 0.
ON KINGSBURY ROAD (COUNTY RD. 18)
PHON E 90&gt;-6256

586 Locusl St.
992-7004
Middleport
Op en 8 to 6 Mon . lhru Sat •

Owned and Operated by ~renzo Davis and Sons

'

Register
For

FREE
DOOR
PRIZE

Portable
TV ..
To Be
Given Away
NO PURCHASE
NECESSARY

�'

.

.·
...

SMITH NELSON MOTORS. INC.

FINEST AND BEST EQUIPPED LUXURY CARS
OFFERED AT SALE PRICE - - - -

500 E. MAIN

'·•

··,

-:
,.•

.,·
~:

•·:
,.

~:

..•..'

...
•.
•.

Grandville 2 dr . H . T ., gray with black cloth inter ior,
air , tape, AM&amp;FM . Real sharp car .

461 S. 3rd AVE•

STANDARD

GENE PLANTS&amp; SONS
PLUMBING - Heating &amp; Air
Conditioning . 300 Fourth Ave .
187 -tf .
Ph . 446-1637 .

Pl'umbing &amp; Hei!iting
214 Third Ave., 446-3782

.,•

.

LOOK

AT

·: - - - - - - - ' - :;
•,
·,

'.

.

•
.;

::

..•

RUSSEll' S
PlUMBING&amp; HEATING
· Gallipolis, 446-4782
297-tf
DEWITT'S PLUMBING
. AND HEATING
Route 160 at Eve~green
Ph one 446-2735
•
187-tf

V ~

providu the surnt method of

ri d.~ in l[

you r prapertr of termites or ot her
destructive pests and auaran laas th is

se rv ice in writint lor 5 years-b l c~ed
by a combined cash re~ero • of c~er 'li
million dollars . Totll protection at low
cas i-tas~ terms , Our many ntislied
clients dtdn't see II an~ othe r way,

STEWART Electri cal ~e r vice (lo
McGRAW COMPANY
Repai r , house wiring , electric
'.
·~ BULL DOZER, backh oe and
heating . Phon e 446-4561.
271 -tl
land -clearing and develop - - - - - - - - -- '' ment, 446-1502, 388-8230.
100-ptf
BACKHOE AND
TRENCHER
RUSS 'S GLASS Service. glass. CALL Jackson 286-4524. All
for all needs, specializing in
types of ba ckhoeing, septic
windshie ld s,
mirror s,
tanks, footers, etc . Al so all
plexiglass., rescreen, 704 Pine,
types of trenchi ng, wa ter
Rio Grande, 245-5048.
~-·
lines, gas lines, etc.
·
100-tt :-.
89-tf
_..:..

Why shoul d ~ou ?

CAll TODAY FOR AFREE ESTIMATE

O'Dell Termite Selvice

..

Gallipolis, Ph. 446-324$

___

GILLENWATER'S se pti c tank
cleaning and rdpalr, alsO
house wrecking . Ph . 446-9499.
Estdblished in 1940.
169-tf
TERMiTE PHT CONTR.OL
FREE Inspection . Call 446-3245.
Merrill O'Dell, Operator by
Extermihal Termi1e Service .
10 Bel_mont Dr.
267-tf

.

OF A 400 UNIT SINGLE FAMILY HOUSING COMMUNITY!

"

Im p. , 4 de. Real nice 63 model. one owner, 68.621
miles. Real n1ce.

_

We Service
What We Sell

11.enrra1 A1r Conditioning
&amp; Heating
Free Estimate:t.
~tewart•s Hardware

Vinton, Ohio

500 E'. Main St., Pomeroy, OhiO

PLANTS
SEPTIC tank s and
sewer
service . Fast clean ser vice.
Reas_onab le ratec. Ph one 4461637.
98-26

~

Better Buys
On The Best

li

USED CARS

Green finish, gold interior, full power equ ipment.
Cruise Control , new w -s-w tires, Cl ima+e Control air
conditioni ng.

Roto Rooter
SEWER and Drain Cleaning,
Nat_io_
n al
Service
now ,
available locally , For any ·
kind of stopped-up drain, ~all
675-5195, 24 hour Serv.
307. tf

3 NEW 1973
,,

CADILLAC$
IN STOCK

For it is not the h earers
of the law who are· righ teous

1-Coupe DeVille

FULLY

2-Sedan DeVilles

EQUIPPED

before God, but the doers
of the law who will be justified. - Ramans 2: ! 3.

TARA

'

.

3 B. R.'s; big L. R. Beautiful built-in kitc~en with large eating area,

· ceramic tile bath with shower and vanilory, separate,laundry room,
electric ·heat, 6" insulation in ceiling, w-w carpeting, full garage,
70'xl:i0' lot with city type water, sewer, &amp; streets.

FARMERS HOME LOAN;
1260 DOWN &amp; 1128 MO.

$18.950

NEW
HOMES
FOR SALE

. "Can't be live it lakes only 1 qt. of paint for the exterior"
"Best buy we've seen in the area"
o Can.' t believe it's so large ·inside"
'! Best floor plan for a house its size we've ever seen".
"2 of the largest bedrooms we've seen in a house under $35,000"
"We lov.e the high land overlooking the valley".

MODEL HOME FURNITURE &amp; DECORATIONS BY
EMPIRE FURNITURE CO.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
DIRECTIONS: Drive west on Rl. 35 to Rodney - pass Rt. 588 o.n left,
qo 500ft. &amp; take right 200 yds. to house. follow signs. 3 miles from
Gallipolis at city limits.

RODNEY VILLAGE 2
·(PH.

RODNEY, OHIO
245·5303) ·
BUILDERS &amp; DEVELOPERS

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT .
Cadillac · Oldsmobile

· GMAC Financing A\lailable

992 -S342

Pomeroy

Open Eves. Til 6-Til 5 P.M. Sat.
" You ' ll Like Our nuality Wa y of Dciing Bus_i ness"

HEROES OF THE AREA- Southeast Ohio
Emergency Squad and Rescue Teams.
Congratulations During Your Wee.k, May 6-12 .

DEVELOPMENT .
CORP.

Buildi.ng
Sites
Avai Iable . .Kingsberry
Homes built to fit any
specifications.
AI I
Underground Utilities
Provided.

·-----------

Cam ping Equipment
STARCRAFT
traile r
and
folddown highest discount in
tri -s tate . Us ed 1971 Star
Ma ster B, $1,099 , used trai lers .
also financing arranged . We
se rvi ce what we sell. Camp
Conley 'StarCraft Sales behind
Red Carpet Inn . Rt. 62, N . of
Point Pleasant 67.5-5384 .
96-tf

iiHONi:

VOTE WAS LIGHT
COLUMBUS
(UPJ)
Secrel;lry of Slate Ted W.
Brown, who had predicted a
turnout of only 1,680,000 voters
at the May 8 primary, said ·

Friday unofficial returns show

only 1,586,867 '!c!llally voted.
Brown said this represents
only
30.3 pet. of the nearly
STARCRAFT Sp ring sale on .
New and used travel trailers 5,238,000 registered voters In
and fold down campers where the slate..
you gel ser v[ce and quality .
CAMP
CO NLE Y
STAR ·
CRAFT SALES, Rt . 62 N. of
Point Pleasant, beh ind Red
Carpet Inn. 675·5384.
107-11

•

For Information
Or Appointment.

7~.

ONLY

·-·-------------------------73 LTD Country Squire
6 Pa sse nger s talionwagon , deluxe
luggag e rack , d00 2V V 8 eng ine. H -78
w -s w tires , de luxe bumper group , air
concJ .• radio . tinted glass , deluxe wheel
covers. body sid e· molding , cdec . clock,
P . steeri ng , P . brakes, auto . trans .

The last surviving signer
ol the U.S. Constitution was
Jam es

Wt talk to you

like

'

. . ,.

"' ..

\'
I

I

4390

$

73 PINTO
2·dr ., 4 speed trans ., Specia l PG, radio ,
A 78 xl 3 w -s -w tir es, door edge gua rd s,

3270
.

$2180

73 MAVERICK

aut~,:
W-~-W t ir es, rad~~. ~urriper ,
Ex t erior de!co·r group.

6 Cyl.,
gO~rds,

AT YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER

s-2580

1972 Chevrolet Impala $JJ95
71 MERCURY

·1971 CHEVROLET.. ......... $2995
Blaze r 4 wh: drive; aux. top-locki nq frt .,
hubs, V-8, automatic trans ., power steering &amp;
brakes, local low mileage, 1 owner, radio,
spare never used.

ON YOUR DIAL

'-:-:=,-ooiTGAR_____ _
$~901;

3Sl V-Beng ine. auto. 't ran s., P. steering,
P. bra kes, vlnyl roof. excellent cond .

~!l., .

v.a, aut.o. trans ., P. ste.?r ing, fa c. air
cond .. tinted gla ss, 4 new w -s-w tires .
Very sharp.
..;~~.:...;;.;;.·~--·--·--::---------

Firebird · Esprit, local 1-owner car, 350 V-8
er:1gine, power steering &amp; automatic transmission, AM-FM radio, like new while lettered
t ires. 307 V-8. power steering &amp; brakes, radio,
clean ioterior.

6 Pas s Shv ', 400 V -8 eng me, P brakes ,
p
stee nng, tac . air cond., deluxe
luggage ra ck. 4 new _w s-w t1res, 60,000

m i l e~ . _A real __basg~~~~- ----------~·-·-··1

70 CHEVROLET 1h TON PICKUP

$2295
___ . ;. _______________ -+----·--·--··1

1969 CHEVELLE .............!l795

De l tJxe cab, 307 V-Bengine, auto. trans ..
rad io, rea r st ep bumper, full w-eavers,
· Western mirr ors, 'in beautiful ' cond.
70 ,000 miles .
..

Malibu H. T. Cpe .• 307 V-8 eng., automatic,
power steering, good tires, clean vinyl interior
with bucket ~e ats &amp; console, dark grn. fin ish,
radio.

~

of

71 FORD %TON PICKUP
360 V-B engine , 4 speed, rear step
bump er , Western mirror s, 750xl6
rubber - radio. Exce!Jen t ~and .

1969
CHEVROLET. ............$895
Bel Afr, dr., gold finish, clean interior, good

'$25.95

...·------------------·--·--·--·--·
69 FORD RANCHERO 500
$1595

4
tires, 327 V-8 engine, p. steering, radio .
'

1967
BUICK SKYLARit ...$895
Hardtop coupe,
power

· 6 cyl. engine, P. steerjng. A r,ea f sharp
baby doll.

automati c~'
steering, &amp; power brakes, radio.
V-8,

MARTIN FORD SALES, INC.

1966·
MERCURY...:........... $650
Mqnterey H. T. Cpe., local car , clean interior,

417 Second Aw

blue finish with blk. vinyl root, automatic,
power steerit)g &amp; brakes, radio . .

For Sale
MUST Sell L owrey organ,
owned (ess than a year,
perfect cond i tion . Call 4460529.
108-6
'

$2495.00

350 Cu .. ln . V-B engine, lS,OOO lb. 2 speed rear axle,
good 825x20 10 ply t ires, hea vy duty front a. rear
spr ings, 108" cab t o axle, clean cab. Mechanica ll y sound &amp; been regularly serviced.
'

W!=STINGHOUSE re fri gerator
and Maytag square tub
welSher, 446-1259 after 4 p.m .
108-6

..

~ person~.

WMP0/1390

I

4 Or. sedan, auto. trans., P. steer ing ,' P.
brak es, fa c. .;~ir cond:, viny l roof. P.
owne r . Ex sea ts; P. windows ,
cellent rubber ..
cond.

------------------70 TORINO 2 DR. HARDTOP - .
$1795
f-.
71 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN
$2695

1970 PONTIAC................$2295

' 1970 CHEVROLET 2 TON

POMEROY MOTOR CO•.
992-2126

" Your: Chevy Dealer "
oPen Eves. Til 8

G"iltpol

1\

0

For Sale
NEW EUREKA upriqht model
2012A, $59.95. Phone 367 -7736.
Davis Vacuum Cleaner Store,
St. Rt . 7 at Addison . 0 .
LIV IN G
room
sui t e,
refrigerator ,
mi sce llaneous
items. 245-5823.
113-3

2 ~B-E
D~
S~
co-.m
pl-e1e-.. -:
lecl'ric

S1 NGE ft.Sewt n9 Mach ine Sales
&amp; Service. All models in
refrig ., 19" porta ble TV, end
·stock. Free deli'Very . Ser-tice
tables . coff ee table , desk,
gUar."'ntel:!d . Model s ptice
chest of drawers., dresser ,
from $69.95 . French Ci t "
used " bathtub , with basi n ,.
Fabric Shoppe. Singer at=
commode . co mplete with
pro•red dealer, 58 Cour .t St.
fi ttings. After 4 p .m .. ph .- 367 Ph. 4-16-925~ .
7120.
·98-t
107-tf

-.---- '

Pomeroy

UP TO 42 .MONTHS TO .PAY
SEE A MEMBER OF OUR SALES STAFF:

HARLAND WOOD,

1964 CHEVY and 1956 Chevy
Pickup iruc k . Call after 5
p.m . , 446-1241.
111 -6

'

1973 8 TRACK . A small balance
of S8B.64 or pay $6.50 per
month . Phone 446 -0255.
96-tl

GLEN~

MONTGOMERY, BOB BRICKLES

.

.

1973 CH.RYSLER

UPPER ROUTE 7

~. IN STOCK!

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO .

1970 NOVA COUPE
1969 NOVA COUPE
19700LDS.CUTLASS .
2 .DOOR HARDTOP
1971 PONTIAC VENTURA II
2 DOOR HARDTOP
1972 MONTE CARLO COUPE
1972 CHEVROLET CAPRICE
2 DOOR HARDTOP
1968 PONTIAC CATALINA
2 DOOR SEDAN
1971 FORD TORINO
2 DOOR HARDTOP
1972 DUSTER COUPE

'. .

DALE R. SANDERS

'68 PONTIAC CATALINA

600 E. STATE ST.

4 dr . Stationwagon, radio, auto. trans .,
P. steering, P. brakes, Cameo white
finish with blue vinyl interior. Ex cellent cond.

Eastern Ave.

YOUR DEALER FOR
eLINCO.t ~ CONTINENTAL •COUGAR
eMERCURY MONTEGO • COMET
• .CAPRI eDATSUN eSUBARU

Gallipolis, Ohio
'

for Saie

for Sale

Since Smith Auto has. discontinued
Uat.~un, we will be huppy to service

CORB IN &amp; SNYDER Furniture
Compa ny 'Used Furniture:
elec tri c stove. full size coi l
;my
111
sp r ing s, l ull si ze mattress,
lawn c hair , used couch and
chair , rec liner .
112-6 COME to our May sale . Fa ntast ic savings on new fur GOO D USED Bundy trumpet,
niture. 2 pc. living room suit e,
ca ll 446-4952 after 5 PM .
Reg . $1 99 .95 now $ 145.00 , 2 pc.
living room su it e Reg . $299.95
Loolo11g for a mobi le hom e
112·3
1639 Eastern Ave.
nOW on l y $248 . Couch and
Gallipolis
446-3273
lot or &lt;l qua lity mobile home?
196? RAMB LER Stati onwagon.
Nc have both .,, ,
chair $98 with trade . Bedroom
suites with mattress and box
slandard $100. Call after 3 p .
m . &lt;146 1036.
spr ing s only $199.95 . Lot s of
112-3
good used furniture to choose
fr orn .
1965 VOLKSWAGEN and 19M
1969 POINTIAC Firebird, exc . M OB I L E home and lot . 1146-4799. 1 (heve lle . C3 ll _a fter 5:30 p . rr . FOR SALE : Black She tland
367 -0217.
stalli on pony , -11 in. ta ll. 61dcon d., 3 speed std. tran s., be~t
114-6
112-3
985-42Q5.
offer . Ph . 446-2822.
112-3
110-6 2 FOR D ra cing Mag s, good
8
FT
.
TRUCK
Camper
,
air
R.odncy . Cora Rd .
condition . Call 446-2561 . Ask
-----:-:-,..,.-'~---:-:-co
mpressor·
and
paint
MAPLE
boo
k
c.:.
se
bed
an
d
Rodney , Ohio
1973
YAMAHA
500
MX
for Tommy Vaughn .
sp
ray
er;
275
·gallon
oil
tank
245-5491
.
dresser,
Hours
9 a .m. Ia 9 p. m .
M otor cyc le . Ca ll 446 -373 2
ll.t-6
112-3
with fi11er and gaug e, oil fired
M onday thru Sa turday
alt er 5.
hot water hea ter, portabl e
Ph . 245-9374- 245 -50'21
110-6 1972 M.USlANG 302. V8 autO·.•
sleel
shower
wi
th
gi~Ss door
excellent co nd i tion , l ow
-~--~:­
and
fitting s'.
M edicin e OLD D I SHES: depression glass. THREE bedroom double wide
CLOSE OUT on I 4) full size ~ig ­
m il eage . Ph one 446 1699.
ant iques, a(ld Avon Bottles.
ca bine ts with lights, fold ing
.zag sew ing machines. For
114-3
rnob! le trailer . Completely
Ph . 446-2467.
poker
table
,
Remingt
on
furn 1shed and all uti li t ies
100 _20
sewing
st r etch
fabr ics, ~-~--typewri ter with stand. in.- -,--:-'------~­
paid . Rent $250 per month. ·
. hu11onhotes, fancy designs, 1 CH I HUAHUA regi stered $50 ;
sulated dog 1-{ouse. 245 - ~~g2j 69 p'L YMOUTH Barra cu da, 6 Russ&amp;ll Wood, 4~ · 1 066.
ets. Pain l slightly blemished .
1 baby cri b and li nens $25.
Call 446-A222 or 446-0677.
Choice ·a t carrying case or
c yl., auto , P.S .• good tires, ----~-----61 - tf
I
114-J
sewing stand. $49.80 cash or
.
$1,250.
Call
245-5298
.
1970 CHEVELLE Ss 396, I 1ne
term s ava il ab l e . Electro
113 6 2 TRAIL,ER spaces . 446-3B05.
condition, can be seen at ' 139 - - - - - - - - - 114-tf
Hyg iene Co . Phone 446-4312. SIAMESE k ~ ttens, 7 weeks old.
'Sta te Slreet.
110.11
_Call 245-5689 .
H 2-3 AK C TOY Poodle puppi es $75 ~ GARPETS look dull and
114-3
- - - c - - --:--~---~-~-~
and $85 . 256·6247.
drear , remove I he spots as
(21 ELECTROLUX Sweepecs
9 B- 2 ~
J
HORSES,
1
mare,
1
gelding,
I
they ap pear with Blue Lu stre .
deluxe modeL Complete with ALMOST new set of drums .
old
filly,
not
registered
-~~--~---c-Rent
electric shampooer $1 at
year
Ph one 4-16-'4313.
all clean ing attachments and
1957 CHEVY 2 dr. Station
6·0458 .
44
Centra
l Su ppl y. Co.
114-3
uses paper bags . Sligh tly u~d
. 112-6
wagon . M int condition . 270
114-6
but cleans and loqks like new.
H_. P . Balanced, positractio ri
Angus
bu'tis ,
Will se ll for $37 .25 cash or YEARLING
5: 38, 4 speed . Mahy extras . MILLIONS of rug s have been
eligible l or registration . 65 ACRES of va cant ' ground 2
term s available . E lec tro
50 · 446 · 4999 ·
miles
from
Rio
Grande
245
$8
cleaned with ~lue Lustre. It's
Ph one 4&lt;16-3968 after 7 p.m .
Hyg iene Co . Phone 446-4312.
78
5529
.
-f.f
Amer ica' s
f inest.
Rent
114-6
'
110-6
112' 3 ~.Fo_r_.Ren-l~----elcctcic shampooer S1 al G. C.
Murphy, Lower ·s tore .
·
MUST se ll 1973 dgluxe Zig Zag 1962 FORD tra &lt;:; tor . bushhog, 19M GMC C.O.E. Va, 10 speP.d
i 14-6
post hole digger , wagon, disc-.
sewing
madri ne .
This
1969 Brockway · tonv ., 270 2 B_EDROOM tra iler in Chesh ire ......-~---~~~
plow, 50 fence pos t s, 256-6960.
machine dar ns , embroiders ,
·
Cummins , Rt. 915 tran s.. &lt;146·
36 7-7329.
UNFURNISHED
apartment,
1143
makes
bGtton~oles.
all
0275. evenings .
-------,.-~---11 2 -J
446 .9523 or 446- 14
. 43 .
withou t attachments . Just 1112·3
96~6-M_U_S-:T-:A-N-:G:-c-on v-:-. - auto.
114-tf
dial and sew . Pay balance of
EXPANDO
Tra
iler
,
I
or
2
"
tran
s.
2B9
V8
excellen
t
con
$38.50 or pay $5 per mon th .
people-, shade, re'ference HOUSE . 446-4570.
dit ion S595. Phone 245-5873 . 1973 XL 250 Honda, 550 miles .
Phone 446 ·0255.
ex1ra tires . 2 helmets $7f.{J.
required. -146- 1799 -or 446-2906.
114-3
114-3
96 -11
Phone 367 -7593 . ·
~-~
112-3 - - - - - - -- - 1970 PONTIAC Ca t alina , 2 dpor
I -6 -----~-- FURN I SHED apar tm en t.
HOUSE, 4 room and ba'th , tull
1962 FORO Fairla~e Standard .
hard top , PS , pa·, air, 1964 -~·------~--adults only , ulil i ties pa id . 446basement irl • town , no pets ,
. GoOd lran sportatron , $95. 446Cadillac, 2 door hardtop, ful l 1957 CHEVY , 2 d oor, $75 .
0085 .
CaJI 446·0001 or 446-0002.
4525 .
· 388 8579
elec tri c .guitar and ampl i fier •.
1l3.2
113,3 · power , -arr ,
·
·
$'75. Call 367 -7704 after 5 p . m .
.
112·6
--~------c=~
114-1
112-6
-69 PLYMOUTH Barcacuda, 6 ------·---~-:--:··::il:.EEPING rOOms , weekly' 6 OR •SEVE_N acres of bottom
'G MC Dump· with air lift GOOD familv milk .cow. $300.
'
gcound to rent .for corn · J ·
1970
r:ates, free garage par k 1ng,
.
c y I· au t o.. P·S·• good I Ires.
cheater. Ph one 446 -4537 .
'
Hall Sr Cheshrre 367 725B
$1,250. Call 245-52'98 .
Call 38B - 8825~
Libby HoteL
•
··
'
·
·
114·3
112-3
241 -ff
1,13-3
11J.6
_....
. '
NEW 3 br , hom e, . a
con FURN I SHED
apar.tment ,
TWO
bedroom
furnished
home
1968
CAMARO,
very
good
1972 SUPER Beetle VW , 6,000
ditioned, some carpet and
.1Qulls on I ~- Phone 446-1397 or
in
Rio
Grande.
W
ill
sublet
c:bndi t ion. in MaSon , W. Va .
mires . See Lewis Clagg or
se lf cleaning ra,nge. $26,500.
440 -0952.
May 14-Aug . 29. 245 -5422 .
7.73 : 560~ .
phone 446-14_37 .
113-tf
Phonl' 4&lt;16 9380 .
96·11
112-6
11 3-3
11 3-6

Parsons

,- CHECK WITH US FOR PRICE

.Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth

Diltsruts

For Rent

For Sale

-------'

---

i; ·

'

•

•·

ATHENS, OHIO

•1295
WOOD MOTOR SALES

All Cars Are Locully Owned ;md
Some Have Air Conditioning.

For Sale

INC~

SMITH BUICK,

ON ANY HEW

·---------- ..... ~-----------·--·-·•

GOOD DEAL TIME

$

$

2 dr . Hardtop , 35l V -8 engihe , Laser
stripe , viny l sea l s, d isc br akes, P . t\S i ee r ing , G-78 w -S ·W tires, front &amp; rear
bumper guards, radio , wheel covers .

Madison.

A - thought for · llie day:
American poet Ralph Waldo
•tt7-7250
Em er son · S!:!id, "Nature and
Addison, 0.
books
belong to the eyes that
.,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. see
them ."

t

$

-----------------------73 GRAN TORINO

Hardtop seoan, deserT gold with coven trim,
factory air, tinted glass, 350 engine, power
steering &amp; power brakes, radio, guards &amp; all
th e goodi es. Never been titled .

t enan ce 10 yrs. exp~rience. all .
free estimates. Bob Mar cum,
Vinton . Ohio 38B-8798.
103-12

A United States Steel creation : steel studing !instead of wood) 30
. year guaranteed steel lap siding &amp; soffits for a maintenance free
' exterior. Exclusive country estate. setting.

dr. Pillar.ed hardtop , 400 2V . V -8, H w s w tn·es-, deluKe bumper group,
a1r c ond , , radio . tint ed glass, deluxe
wh eel covers , body side mold ing , elec:
c lock, P . steeri ng, P. br-akes, auto .
· tran s.
&lt;I

ONLY

70 Cadillac ·H.T. Sedan

B &amp; M t&lt;OOF ING and main -

Typical Comments from' Open House Visitors

73 FORD LTD

1-·--·---------·--·--,"'··-·--·-·--·--1

De liv ery
Serv i ce . Your
.patr on age
will
be
appr_ecia fed. Ph . 446-0463. •
2-tf

.

.. '

GALLIPOLIS' OHIO.

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLER·
$3990 .PLYMOUTH

d eluxe wheel covers, radio. bumper
guar ds.

~=-----lJ. P. MARTIN &amp; Son Water

The world is divided into
people who . do things and
peo ple who get the credit.
Try, if you can, to belong to
the first class. There's far
less compj!tition. - Dwight
Morrow'· American dipJomat.

· -

Le5obrc Hurdlo p Sodan

Remember We Seroice What We Sell.

144-tf

~----,---.;29-tf

RODNEY, OHIO

$1995 .
•1695
•695
'595

Open Evenings
·'Til 7 p.m, &amp;
Sat 'til 5 p.m.
Service 'Til 12
Noon on Saturda)

992-2174

OUR WORD IS
OUR BOND

•. HOT-Shot Sprav Wash"
CALL us for wash , wax and
d egr~asing of your truck s,
mob1le hom es. aluminum
si ding or anyth ing washable .J
446-4441 .

1:00 'TIL DARK

ONLY

'

--~,.----

OPEN SATURDAYS, SUNDAYS AND EVERY DAY

50 STATE STREET

ONLY

REMEMBER

BANKS TREE SERVICE
FREE es tim.ates, liability insu rance. Pruning, trimm ing.
and cavi t y work , tree and
sfu mp removal. Ph . 446-4953.
73-lf

---------'-

(SECTION 1)

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE INC.

CEWARD CALVERT, Salesman

QR.Y WALL servi ce by con tra c t . Willard . Bosl ay, 446- ROOFING
and
Spouting,
·1 Shingl es
and . Buildup
4954 _
Hot roofs. Free Estimate - 1
282-tf
26 yr . experience . James ..
Marcum , Vinton, Ohio. 3888114.
62-tf

OPEN HOUSE

•2495

We are still making some great deals on new Buicks;
Pontiacs. So before you buy any car new or used
check with us.

BOB
LANE'S.. complete.
Bookkeeping and Tax Ser vice , 424 1!2 Fourth Ave .,
Kanauga . Business by app oi ntment. Ph . 446-1049.
Please ca ll aJter 6 p .m.
278-tf.

SEPTIC TANKS
Cleaned and Installed
Russel l's Plumbing , 446-4iJ82
297-t f

..

'~-

AlBERT E.HJ.IAN
Water Delivery Service
Patriot Star Rt., Gltllipolis
Ph . 379-2133
243-lf .

TOP DOLLAR TRADE-INS

ONLY

Wi ldcat 4 dr ._ H.T., red with black vinyl top, P.S.,
P.B .• auto., a1r cond ., power windows , po-wer sea ts,
one of the ni cest 64 Bui cks you can find .

THOMAS FAIN
EXTERMINATING CO.
Termite &amp; Pest Co1 .trol
Wheelersburg, Ohio

EXTERMITAL TERMITE AND
PEST CONTROL SERVICE

·Services Offered

''

1b

THIS WAY ...

CARTE R'S PLUMBING
A ND HE AT ING
Cor . Fourth &amp; Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 446-4477
165-tf

_

IT

Services Offered

*2495

We have made a special purchase of 1973 BUICK LeSABRES 4 DR
SEDAN~. Equipped Wi!h automatic transmission, power st~ering;
power ~1sc brakes , whtte-wall tires, air co,nditioner, custom seat
. belts, tmted glass, bumper protective strips, bumper guards, door
guards~ remote _mirrow, . carpet savers, deluxe wheel covers,
protective body stde moldmgs. Other Models Priced Accordingly .

/

Lesabre 2 dr. H.T. , white with black vinyl top.
factory air , local .one owner. Pr iced Rig ht.

'•

Services Offered

OUR USED
CAR
•
STOCK IS VERY LOW

Sa_tellile, 2dc. H .T .. V-6. auto .. P. S.. P. B., radio, low ONLy

Catalina 2 dr. H. T., white with black vinyl top,
1adory air, local one owner .

Plumbing &amp; Heating

•CLUB CABS

ONLY

m lleage. One owner .

Wagon , 9 pass., white with wood grain on side, air ,
P. S., P. B. Local one owner .

MIDDLEPORT

''•
:; .Plumbing &amp; Heating

ePICKUPS

WE NEED
USED CARS

Bonneville 4 dr. H.T., yellow w i th beige top. tilt
wheeL air, fr1 pP. player, trunk release. Sh~rp ,

'

'•

Dodge Truc/1s

Catalina Brougham, 4 dr. H.T., green with green
vinyl top·, air, tape player, tilt wheel . One owner .

KEITH GOBLE FORD

••

1Dadge j

I

Grand Pr ix, air, vinyl top. We sold ttlis car ll
months ago. Only has 12,6Sl miles. Like new.

See Keith Goble, Fred Blaettnar or Danny Thompson

'

.

1972 PONTIAC
1971 PONTIAC·
1971 PONTIAC
1971 PLYM.OUTH
1970 PONTIAC
1970 PONTIAC
1969 BUICK
1969 PONTIAC
1964 BUICK
1963 CHEVROLET

YOUR CHOICE OF
35 NEW
DODGE
CARS &amp; TRUCKS

Dodgeurs

finest late model used cars in the Ohio Valley and this week we want
to sell 15 late models. So come on In and see us for a Great Buy.

2
4 67

::
l~.
·...

PH. 992-2174

Make Mother happy in one of these late models. We have some of the

"All the goodies" - 400 cu. in. engine,
Cruisematic Trans., power front disc
brakes, power steering, vinyl insert
body side mldgs., rocker panel mlds .,
electric clock, STEEL BELTED
RADIAL PLY WSW Tl RES, vinyl seat
upholstery, front cornering lights, front
bumper guards , Dual rear seat
speakers, outside remote control mirror,
complete tinted glass, wheel covers, &amp;
rear bumper guards, Radio. Now in
stock at only $

••

•

MOTHER'S DAY SALE

LTD SPECIAL

.

19- The SWlday Times. Sentinel, SWiday, May t~, 1973

QUAIL CREEK
MOBIL£
COMMUNITY
&amp; SALES

our deillership now!
For Rent
SLEEP ING' ROOMS , weekly
rates . Park Gentral Hotel.

308-lf

- - - -- -

APARTMENT for cons1ructior
· men . Ph . 446-0756.
267-tf
FURNISHED apt. adults only·.
Central hea t, parking, 4460338.
27 -tf
TRAILER spaces on Bulaville
Rd . Call 446-3B79 or 367-7438.
104-tl
SLE EPING
Hotel.

rooms ,

Galli a-·
94 -tf

::
O:::F:::F::-1=
c E -sp
_a_c_e-.5-:0-4 ""'"
ss_c_on-d- Ave,
Rear. Ca ll 446 -1397.
'

89-tf

'Mobile Homes for Sale ·

1973
'1970
1964
1971
1972
1968
1972
1970
1970
1970
1969
1968
1967
1966
1964

MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE
REC.ONDITIONED
MOBILE HOMES
12x60 Holly Park
12x6.0 American
10x50 Elcona
12x65 Conc'o rd
12x60 Winston
12x60 Champion
12x 60 Wins ton
12x6·o American
12x60 Roycraft
12x60 Challenger
12x60 Star
12x60 Ranchero
12x60 Topper
10x50 Skyline
10x55 Champion

B&amp;S MOBILE HOMES
Second &amp; Viand St.
Pt. Pleasant
(next to Heck 's )

SeNices Offered

DEAD STOCK
$5.00 SerVit:e Charge
Will removeJour dead
. horse ·an cows
Call Jackson 286-4531

�'

.

.·
...

SMITH NELSON MOTORS. INC.

FINEST AND BEST EQUIPPED LUXURY CARS
OFFERED AT SALE PRICE - - - -

500 E. MAIN

'·•

··,

-:
,.•

.,·
~:

•·:
,.

~:

..•..'

...
•.
•.

Grandville 2 dr . H . T ., gray with black cloth inter ior,
air , tape, AM&amp;FM . Real sharp car .

461 S. 3rd AVE•

STANDARD

GENE PLANTS&amp; SONS
PLUMBING - Heating &amp; Air
Conditioning . 300 Fourth Ave .
187 -tf .
Ph . 446-1637 .

Pl'umbing &amp; Hei!iting
214 Third Ave., 446-3782

.,•

.

LOOK

AT

·: - - - - - - - ' - :;
•,
·,

'.

.

•
.;

::

..•

RUSSEll' S
PlUMBING&amp; HEATING
· Gallipolis, 446-4782
297-tf
DEWITT'S PLUMBING
. AND HEATING
Route 160 at Eve~green
Ph one 446-2735
•
187-tf

V ~

providu the surnt method of

ri d.~ in l[

you r prapertr of termites or ot her
destructive pests and auaran laas th is

se rv ice in writint lor 5 years-b l c~ed
by a combined cash re~ero • of c~er 'li
million dollars . Totll protection at low
cas i-tas~ terms , Our many ntislied
clients dtdn't see II an~ othe r way,

STEWART Electri cal ~e r vice (lo
McGRAW COMPANY
Repai r , house wiring , electric
'.
·~ BULL DOZER, backh oe and
heating . Phon e 446-4561.
271 -tl
land -clearing and develop - - - - - - - - -- '' ment, 446-1502, 388-8230.
100-ptf
BACKHOE AND
TRENCHER
RUSS 'S GLASS Service. glass. CALL Jackson 286-4524. All
for all needs, specializing in
types of ba ckhoeing, septic
windshie ld s,
mirror s,
tanks, footers, etc . Al so all
plexiglass., rescreen, 704 Pine,
types of trenchi ng, wa ter
Rio Grande, 245-5048.
~-·
lines, gas lines, etc.
·
100-tt :-.
89-tf
_..:..

Why shoul d ~ou ?

CAll TODAY FOR AFREE ESTIMATE

O'Dell Termite Selvice

..

Gallipolis, Ph. 446-324$

___

GILLENWATER'S se pti c tank
cleaning and rdpalr, alsO
house wrecking . Ph . 446-9499.
Estdblished in 1940.
169-tf
TERMiTE PHT CONTR.OL
FREE Inspection . Call 446-3245.
Merrill O'Dell, Operator by
Extermihal Termi1e Service .
10 Bel_mont Dr.
267-tf

.

OF A 400 UNIT SINGLE FAMILY HOUSING COMMUNITY!

"

Im p. , 4 de. Real nice 63 model. one owner, 68.621
miles. Real n1ce.

_

We Service
What We Sell

11.enrra1 A1r Conditioning
&amp; Heating
Free Estimate:t.
~tewart•s Hardware

Vinton, Ohio

500 E'. Main St., Pomeroy, OhiO

PLANTS
SEPTIC tank s and
sewer
service . Fast clean ser vice.
Reas_onab le ratec. Ph one 4461637.
98-26

~

Better Buys
On The Best

li

USED CARS

Green finish, gold interior, full power equ ipment.
Cruise Control , new w -s-w tires, Cl ima+e Control air
conditioni ng.

Roto Rooter
SEWER and Drain Cleaning,
Nat_io_
n al
Service
now ,
available locally , For any ·
kind of stopped-up drain, ~all
675-5195, 24 hour Serv.
307. tf

3 NEW 1973
,,

CADILLAC$
IN STOCK

For it is not the h earers
of the law who are· righ teous

1-Coupe DeVille

FULLY

2-Sedan DeVilles

EQUIPPED

before God, but the doers
of the law who will be justified. - Ramans 2: ! 3.

TARA

'

.

3 B. R.'s; big L. R. Beautiful built-in kitc~en with large eating area,

· ceramic tile bath with shower and vanilory, separate,laundry room,
electric ·heat, 6" insulation in ceiling, w-w carpeting, full garage,
70'xl:i0' lot with city type water, sewer, &amp; streets.

FARMERS HOME LOAN;
1260 DOWN &amp; 1128 MO.

$18.950

NEW
HOMES
FOR SALE

. "Can't be live it lakes only 1 qt. of paint for the exterior"
"Best buy we've seen in the area"
o Can.' t believe it's so large ·inside"
'! Best floor plan for a house its size we've ever seen".
"2 of the largest bedrooms we've seen in a house under $35,000"
"We lov.e the high land overlooking the valley".

MODEL HOME FURNITURE &amp; DECORATIONS BY
EMPIRE FURNITURE CO.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
DIRECTIONS: Drive west on Rl. 35 to Rodney - pass Rt. 588 o.n left,
qo 500ft. &amp; take right 200 yds. to house. follow signs. 3 miles from
Gallipolis at city limits.

RODNEY VILLAGE 2
·(PH.

RODNEY, OHIO
245·5303) ·
BUILDERS &amp; DEVELOPERS

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT .
Cadillac · Oldsmobile

· GMAC Financing A\lailable

992 -S342

Pomeroy

Open Eves. Til 6-Til 5 P.M. Sat.
" You ' ll Like Our nuality Wa y of Dciing Bus_i ness"

HEROES OF THE AREA- Southeast Ohio
Emergency Squad and Rescue Teams.
Congratulations During Your Wee.k, May 6-12 .

DEVELOPMENT .
CORP.

Buildi.ng
Sites
Avai Iable . .Kingsberry
Homes built to fit any
specifications.
AI I
Underground Utilities
Provided.

·-----------

Cam ping Equipment
STARCRAFT
traile r
and
folddown highest discount in
tri -s tate . Us ed 1971 Star
Ma ster B, $1,099 , used trai lers .
also financing arranged . We
se rvi ce what we sell. Camp
Conley 'StarCraft Sales behind
Red Carpet Inn . Rt. 62, N . of
Point Pleasant 67.5-5384 .
96-tf

iiHONi:

VOTE WAS LIGHT
COLUMBUS
(UPJ)
Secrel;lry of Slate Ted W.
Brown, who had predicted a
turnout of only 1,680,000 voters
at the May 8 primary, said ·

Friday unofficial returns show

only 1,586,867 '!c!llally voted.
Brown said this represents
only
30.3 pet. of the nearly
STARCRAFT Sp ring sale on .
New and used travel trailers 5,238,000 registered voters In
and fold down campers where the slate..
you gel ser v[ce and quality .
CAMP
CO NLE Y
STAR ·
CRAFT SALES, Rt . 62 N. of
Point Pleasant, beh ind Red
Carpet Inn. 675·5384.
107-11

•

For Information
Or Appointment.

7~.

ONLY

·-·-------------------------73 LTD Country Squire
6 Pa sse nger s talionwagon , deluxe
luggag e rack , d00 2V V 8 eng ine. H -78
w -s w tires , de luxe bumper group , air
concJ .• radio . tinted glass , deluxe wheel
covers. body sid e· molding , cdec . clock,
P . steeri ng , P . brakes, auto . trans .

The last surviving signer
ol the U.S. Constitution was
Jam es

Wt talk to you

like

'

. . ,.

"' ..

\'
I

I

4390

$

73 PINTO
2·dr ., 4 speed trans ., Specia l PG, radio ,
A 78 xl 3 w -s -w tir es, door edge gua rd s,

3270
.

$2180

73 MAVERICK

aut~,:
W-~-W t ir es, rad~~. ~urriper ,
Ex t erior de!co·r group.

6 Cyl.,
gO~rds,

AT YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER

s-2580

1972 Chevrolet Impala $JJ95
71 MERCURY

·1971 CHEVROLET.. ......... $2995
Blaze r 4 wh: drive; aux. top-locki nq frt .,
hubs, V-8, automatic trans ., power steering &amp;
brakes, local low mileage, 1 owner, radio,
spare never used.

ON YOUR DIAL

'-:-:=,-ooiTGAR_____ _
$~901;

3Sl V-Beng ine. auto. 't ran s., P. steering,
P. bra kes, vlnyl roof. excellent cond .

~!l., .

v.a, aut.o. trans ., P. ste.?r ing, fa c. air
cond .. tinted gla ss, 4 new w -s-w tires .
Very sharp.
..;~~.:...;;.;;.·~--·--·--::---------

Firebird · Esprit, local 1-owner car, 350 V-8
er:1gine, power steering &amp; automatic transmission, AM-FM radio, like new while lettered
t ires. 307 V-8. power steering &amp; brakes, radio,
clean ioterior.

6 Pas s Shv ', 400 V -8 eng me, P brakes ,
p
stee nng, tac . air cond., deluxe
luggage ra ck. 4 new _w s-w t1res, 60,000

m i l e~ . _A real __basg~~~~- ----------~·-·-··1

70 CHEVROLET 1h TON PICKUP

$2295
___ . ;. _______________ -+----·--·--··1

1969 CHEVELLE .............!l795

De l tJxe cab, 307 V-Bengine, auto. trans ..
rad io, rea r st ep bumper, full w-eavers,
· Western mirr ors, 'in beautiful ' cond.
70 ,000 miles .
..

Malibu H. T. Cpe .• 307 V-8 eng., automatic,
power steering, good tires, clean vinyl interior
with bucket ~e ats &amp; console, dark grn. fin ish,
radio.

~

of

71 FORD %TON PICKUP
360 V-B engine , 4 speed, rear step
bump er , Western mirror s, 750xl6
rubber - radio. Exce!Jen t ~and .

1969
CHEVROLET. ............$895
Bel Afr, dr., gold finish, clean interior, good

'$25.95

...·------------------·--·--·--·--·
69 FORD RANCHERO 500
$1595

4
tires, 327 V-8 engine, p. steering, radio .
'

1967
BUICK SKYLARit ...$895
Hardtop coupe,
power

· 6 cyl. engine, P. steerjng. A r,ea f sharp
baby doll.

automati c~'
steering, &amp; power brakes, radio.
V-8,

MARTIN FORD SALES, INC.

1966·
MERCURY...:........... $650
Mqnterey H. T. Cpe., local car , clean interior,

417 Second Aw

blue finish with blk. vinyl root, automatic,
power steerit)g &amp; brakes, radio . .

For Sale
MUST Sell L owrey organ,
owned (ess than a year,
perfect cond i tion . Call 4460529.
108-6
'

$2495.00

350 Cu .. ln . V-B engine, lS,OOO lb. 2 speed rear axle,
good 825x20 10 ply t ires, hea vy duty front a. rear
spr ings, 108" cab t o axle, clean cab. Mechanica ll y sound &amp; been regularly serviced.
'

W!=STINGHOUSE re fri gerator
and Maytag square tub
welSher, 446-1259 after 4 p.m .
108-6

..

~ person~.

WMP0/1390

I

4 Or. sedan, auto. trans., P. steer ing ,' P.
brak es, fa c. .;~ir cond:, viny l roof. P.
owne r . Ex sea ts; P. windows ,
cellent rubber ..
cond.

------------------70 TORINO 2 DR. HARDTOP - .
$1795
f-.
71 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN
$2695

1970 PONTIAC................$2295

' 1970 CHEVROLET 2 TON

POMEROY MOTOR CO•.
992-2126

" Your: Chevy Dealer "
oPen Eves. Til 8

G"iltpol

1\

0

For Sale
NEW EUREKA upriqht model
2012A, $59.95. Phone 367 -7736.
Davis Vacuum Cleaner Store,
St. Rt . 7 at Addison . 0 .
LIV IN G
room
sui t e,
refrigerator ,
mi sce llaneous
items. 245-5823.
113-3

2 ~B-E
D~
S~
co-.m
pl-e1e-.. -:
lecl'ric

S1 NGE ft.Sewt n9 Mach ine Sales
&amp; Service. All models in
refrig ., 19" porta ble TV, end
·stock. Free deli'Very . Ser-tice
tables . coff ee table , desk,
gUar."'ntel:!d . Model s ptice
chest of drawers., dresser ,
from $69.95 . French Ci t "
used " bathtub , with basi n ,.
Fabric Shoppe. Singer at=
commode . co mplete with
pro•red dealer, 58 Cour .t St.
fi ttings. After 4 p .m .. ph .- 367 Ph. 4-16-925~ .
7120.
·98-t
107-tf

-.---- '

Pomeroy

UP TO 42 .MONTHS TO .PAY
SEE A MEMBER OF OUR SALES STAFF:

HARLAND WOOD,

1964 CHEVY and 1956 Chevy
Pickup iruc k . Call after 5
p.m . , 446-1241.
111 -6

'

1973 8 TRACK . A small balance
of S8B.64 or pay $6.50 per
month . Phone 446 -0255.
96-tl

GLEN~

MONTGOMERY, BOB BRICKLES

.

.

1973 CH.RYSLER

UPPER ROUTE 7

~. IN STOCK!

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO .

1970 NOVA COUPE
1969 NOVA COUPE
19700LDS.CUTLASS .
2 .DOOR HARDTOP
1971 PONTIAC VENTURA II
2 DOOR HARDTOP
1972 MONTE CARLO COUPE
1972 CHEVROLET CAPRICE
2 DOOR HARDTOP
1968 PONTIAC CATALINA
2 DOOR SEDAN
1971 FORD TORINO
2 DOOR HARDTOP
1972 DUSTER COUPE

'. .

DALE R. SANDERS

'68 PONTIAC CATALINA

600 E. STATE ST.

4 dr . Stationwagon, radio, auto. trans .,
P. steering, P. brakes, Cameo white
finish with blue vinyl interior. Ex cellent cond.

Eastern Ave.

YOUR DEALER FOR
eLINCO.t ~ CONTINENTAL •COUGAR
eMERCURY MONTEGO • COMET
• .CAPRI eDATSUN eSUBARU

Gallipolis, Ohio
'

for Saie

for Sale

Since Smith Auto has. discontinued
Uat.~un, we will be huppy to service

CORB IN &amp; SNYDER Furniture
Compa ny 'Used Furniture:
elec tri c stove. full size coi l
;my
111
sp r ing s, l ull si ze mattress,
lawn c hair , used couch and
chair , rec liner .
112-6 COME to our May sale . Fa ntast ic savings on new fur GOO D USED Bundy trumpet,
niture. 2 pc. living room suit e,
ca ll 446-4952 after 5 PM .
Reg . $1 99 .95 now $ 145.00 , 2 pc.
living room su it e Reg . $299.95
Loolo11g for a mobi le hom e
112·3
1639 Eastern Ave.
nOW on l y $248 . Couch and
Gallipolis
446-3273
lot or &lt;l qua lity mobile home?
196? RAMB LER Stati onwagon.
Nc have both .,, ,
chair $98 with trade . Bedroom
suites with mattress and box
slandard $100. Call after 3 p .
m . &lt;146 1036.
spr ing s only $199.95 . Lot s of
112-3
good used furniture to choose
fr orn .
1965 VOLKSWAGEN and 19M
1969 POINTIAC Firebird, exc . M OB I L E home and lot . 1146-4799. 1 (heve lle . C3 ll _a fter 5:30 p . rr . FOR SALE : Black She tland
367 -0217.
stalli on pony , -11 in. ta ll. 61dcon d., 3 speed std. tran s., be~t
114-6
112-3
985-42Q5.
offer . Ph . 446-2822.
112-3
110-6 2 FOR D ra cing Mag s, good
8
FT
.
TRUCK
Camper
,
air
R.odncy . Cora Rd .
condition . Call 446-2561 . Ask
-----:-:-,..,.-'~---:-:-co
mpressor·
and
paint
MAPLE
boo
k
c.:.
se
bed
an
d
Rodney , Ohio
1973
YAMAHA
500
MX
for Tommy Vaughn .
sp
ray
er;
275
·gallon
oil
tank
245-5491
.
dresser,
Hours
9 a .m. Ia 9 p. m .
M otor cyc le . Ca ll 446 -373 2
ll.t-6
112-3
with fi11er and gaug e, oil fired
M onday thru Sa turday
alt er 5.
hot water hea ter, portabl e
Ph . 245-9374- 245 -50'21
110-6 1972 M.USlANG 302. V8 autO·.•
sleel
shower
wi
th
gi~Ss door
excellent co nd i tion , l ow
-~--~:­
and
fitting s'.
M edicin e OLD D I SHES: depression glass. THREE bedroom double wide
CLOSE OUT on I 4) full size ~ig ­
m il eage . Ph one 446 1699.
ant iques, a(ld Avon Bottles.
ca bine ts with lights, fold ing
.zag sew ing machines. For
114-3
rnob! le trailer . Completely
Ph . 446-2467.
poker
table
,
Remingt
on
furn 1shed and all uti li t ies
100 _20
sewing
st r etch
fabr ics, ~-~--typewri ter with stand. in.- -,--:-'------~­
paid . Rent $250 per month. ·
. hu11onhotes, fancy designs, 1 CH I HUAHUA regi stered $50 ;
sulated dog 1-{ouse. 245 - ~~g2j 69 p'L YMOUTH Barra cu da, 6 Russ&amp;ll Wood, 4~ · 1 066.
ets. Pain l slightly blemished .
1 baby cri b and li nens $25.
Call 446-A222 or 446-0677.
Choice ·a t carrying case or
c yl., auto , P.S .• good tires, ----~-----61 - tf
I
114-J
sewing stand. $49.80 cash or
.
$1,250.
Call
245-5298
.
1970 CHEVELLE Ss 396, I 1ne
term s ava il ab l e . Electro
113 6 2 TRAIL,ER spaces . 446-3B05.
condition, can be seen at ' 139 - - - - - - - - - 114-tf
Hyg iene Co . Phone 446-4312. SIAMESE k ~ ttens, 7 weeks old.
'Sta te Slreet.
110.11
_Call 245-5689 .
H 2-3 AK C TOY Poodle puppi es $75 ~ GARPETS look dull and
114-3
- - - c - - --:--~---~-~-~
and $85 . 256·6247.
drear , remove I he spots as
(21 ELECTROLUX Sweepecs
9 B- 2 ~
J
HORSES,
1
mare,
1
gelding,
I
they ap pear with Blue Lu stre .
deluxe modeL Complete with ALMOST new set of drums .
old
filly,
not
registered
-~~--~---c-Rent
electric shampooer $1 at
year
Ph one 4-16-'4313.
all clean ing attachments and
1957 CHEVY 2 dr. Station
6·0458 .
44
Centra
l Su ppl y. Co.
114-3
uses paper bags . Sligh tly u~d
. 112-6
wagon . M int condition . 270
114-6
but cleans and loqks like new.
H_. P . Balanced, positractio ri
Angus
bu'tis ,
Will se ll for $37 .25 cash or YEARLING
5: 38, 4 speed . Mahy extras . MILLIONS of rug s have been
eligible l or registration . 65 ACRES of va cant ' ground 2
term s available . E lec tro
50 · 446 · 4999 ·
miles
from
Rio
Grande
245
$8
cleaned with ~lue Lustre. It's
Ph one 4&lt;16-3968 after 7 p.m .
Hyg iene Co . Phone 446-4312.
78
5529
.
-f.f
Amer ica' s
f inest.
Rent
114-6
'
110-6
112' 3 ~.Fo_r_.Ren-l~----elcctcic shampooer S1 al G. C.
Murphy, Lower ·s tore .
·
MUST se ll 1973 dgluxe Zig Zag 1962 FORD tra &lt;:; tor . bushhog, 19M GMC C.O.E. Va, 10 speP.d
i 14-6
post hole digger , wagon, disc-.
sewing
madri ne .
This
1969 Brockway · tonv ., 270 2 B_EDROOM tra iler in Chesh ire ......-~---~~~
plow, 50 fence pos t s, 256-6960.
machine dar ns , embroiders ,
·
Cummins , Rt. 915 tran s.. &lt;146·
36 7-7329.
UNFURNISHED
apartment,
1143
makes
bGtton~oles.
all
0275. evenings .
-------,.-~---11 2 -J
446 .9523 or 446- 14
. 43 .
withou t attachments . Just 1112·3
96~6-M_U_S-:T-:A-N-:G:-c-on v-:-. - auto.
114-tf
dial and sew . Pay balance of
EXPANDO
Tra
iler
,
I
or
2
"
tran
s.
2B9
V8
excellen
t
con
$38.50 or pay $5 per mon th .
people-, shade, re'ference HOUSE . 446-4570.
dit ion S595. Phone 245-5873 . 1973 XL 250 Honda, 550 miles .
Phone 446 ·0255.
ex1ra tires . 2 helmets $7f.{J.
required. -146- 1799 -or 446-2906.
114-3
114-3
96 -11
Phone 367 -7593 . ·
~-~
112-3 - - - - - - -- - 1970 PONTIAC Ca t alina , 2 dpor
I -6 -----~-- FURN I SHED apar tm en t.
HOUSE, 4 room and ba'th , tull
1962 FORO Fairla~e Standard .
hard top , PS , pa·, air, 1964 -~·------~--adults only , ulil i ties pa id . 446basement irl • town , no pets ,
. GoOd lran sportatron , $95. 446Cadillac, 2 door hardtop, ful l 1957 CHEVY , 2 d oor, $75 .
0085 .
CaJI 446·0001 or 446-0002.
4525 .
· 388 8579
elec tri c .guitar and ampl i fier •.
1l3.2
113,3 · power , -arr ,
·
·
$'75. Call 367 -7704 after 5 p . m .
.
112·6
--~------c=~
114-1
112-6
-69 PLYMOUTH Barcacuda, 6 ------·---~-:--:··::il:.EEPING rOOms , weekly' 6 OR •SEVE_N acres of bottom
'G MC Dump· with air lift GOOD familv milk .cow. $300.
'
gcound to rent .for corn · J ·
1970
r:ates, free garage par k 1ng,
.
c y I· au t o.. P·S·• good I Ires.
cheater. Ph one 446 -4537 .
'
Hall Sr Cheshrre 367 725B
$1,250. Call 245-52'98 .
Call 38B - 8825~
Libby HoteL
•
··
'
·
·
114·3
112-3
241 -ff
1,13-3
11J.6
_....
. '
NEW 3 br , hom e, . a
con FURN I SHED
apar.tment ,
TWO
bedroom
furnished
home
1968
CAMARO,
very
good
1972 SUPER Beetle VW , 6,000
ditioned, some carpet and
.1Qulls on I ~- Phone 446-1397 or
in
Rio
Grande.
W
ill
sublet
c:bndi t ion. in MaSon , W. Va .
mires . See Lewis Clagg or
se lf cleaning ra,nge. $26,500.
440 -0952.
May 14-Aug . 29. 245 -5422 .
7.73 : 560~ .
phone 446-14_37 .
113-tf
Phonl' 4&lt;16 9380 .
96·11
112-6
11 3-3
11 3-6

Parsons

,- CHECK WITH US FOR PRICE

.Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth

Diltsruts

For Rent

For Sale

-------'

---

i; ·

'

•

•·

ATHENS, OHIO

•1295
WOOD MOTOR SALES

All Cars Are Locully Owned ;md
Some Have Air Conditioning.

For Sale

INC~

SMITH BUICK,

ON ANY HEW

·---------- ..... ~-----------·--·-·•

GOOD DEAL TIME

$

$

2 dr . Hardtop , 35l V -8 engihe , Laser
stripe , viny l sea l s, d isc br akes, P . t\S i ee r ing , G-78 w -S ·W tires, front &amp; rear
bumper guards, radio , wheel covers .

Madison.

A - thought for · llie day:
American poet Ralph Waldo
•tt7-7250
Em er son · S!:!id, "Nature and
Addison, 0.
books
belong to the eyes that
.,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. see
them ."

t

$

-----------------------73 GRAN TORINO

Hardtop seoan, deserT gold with coven trim,
factory air, tinted glass, 350 engine, power
steering &amp; power brakes, radio, guards &amp; all
th e goodi es. Never been titled .

t enan ce 10 yrs. exp~rience. all .
free estimates. Bob Mar cum,
Vinton . Ohio 38B-8798.
103-12

A United States Steel creation : steel studing !instead of wood) 30
. year guaranteed steel lap siding &amp; soffits for a maintenance free
' exterior. Exclusive country estate. setting.

dr. Pillar.ed hardtop , 400 2V . V -8, H w s w tn·es-, deluKe bumper group,
a1r c ond , , radio . tint ed glass, deluxe
wh eel covers , body side mold ing , elec:
c lock, P . steeri ng, P. br-akes, auto .
· tran s.
&lt;I

ONLY

70 Cadillac ·H.T. Sedan

B &amp; M t&lt;OOF ING and main -

Typical Comments from' Open House Visitors

73 FORD LTD

1-·--·---------·--·--,"'··-·--·-·--·--1

De liv ery
Serv i ce . Your
.patr on age
will
be
appr_ecia fed. Ph . 446-0463. •
2-tf

.

.. '

GALLIPOLIS' OHIO.

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLER·
$3990 .PLYMOUTH

d eluxe wheel covers, radio. bumper
guar ds.

~=-----lJ. P. MARTIN &amp; Son Water

The world is divided into
people who . do things and
peo ple who get the credit.
Try, if you can, to belong to
the first class. There's far
less compj!tition. - Dwight
Morrow'· American dipJomat.

· -

Le5obrc Hurdlo p Sodan

Remember We Seroice What We Sell.

144-tf

~----,---.;29-tf

RODNEY, OHIO

$1995 .
•1695
•695
'595

Open Evenings
·'Til 7 p.m, &amp;
Sat 'til 5 p.m.
Service 'Til 12
Noon on Saturda)

992-2174

OUR WORD IS
OUR BOND

•. HOT-Shot Sprav Wash"
CALL us for wash , wax and
d egr~asing of your truck s,
mob1le hom es. aluminum
si ding or anyth ing washable .J
446-4441 .

1:00 'TIL DARK

ONLY

'

--~,.----

OPEN SATURDAYS, SUNDAYS AND EVERY DAY

50 STATE STREET

ONLY

REMEMBER

BANKS TREE SERVICE
FREE es tim.ates, liability insu rance. Pruning, trimm ing.
and cavi t y work , tree and
sfu mp removal. Ph . 446-4953.
73-lf

---------'-

(SECTION 1)

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE INC.

CEWARD CALVERT, Salesman

QR.Y WALL servi ce by con tra c t . Willard . Bosl ay, 446- ROOFING
and
Spouting,
·1 Shingl es
and . Buildup
4954 _
Hot roofs. Free Estimate - 1
282-tf
26 yr . experience . James ..
Marcum , Vinton, Ohio. 3888114.
62-tf

OPEN HOUSE

•2495

We are still making some great deals on new Buicks;
Pontiacs. So before you buy any car new or used
check with us.

BOB
LANE'S.. complete.
Bookkeeping and Tax Ser vice , 424 1!2 Fourth Ave .,
Kanauga . Business by app oi ntment. Ph . 446-1049.
Please ca ll aJter 6 p .m.
278-tf.

SEPTIC TANKS
Cleaned and Installed
Russel l's Plumbing , 446-4iJ82
297-t f

..

'~-

AlBERT E.HJ.IAN
Water Delivery Service
Patriot Star Rt., Gltllipolis
Ph . 379-2133
243-lf .

TOP DOLLAR TRADE-INS

ONLY

Wi ldcat 4 dr ._ H.T., red with black vinyl top, P.S.,
P.B .• auto., a1r cond ., power windows , po-wer sea ts,
one of the ni cest 64 Bui cks you can find .

THOMAS FAIN
EXTERMINATING CO.
Termite &amp; Pest Co1 .trol
Wheelersburg, Ohio

EXTERMITAL TERMITE AND
PEST CONTROL SERVICE

·Services Offered

''

1b

THIS WAY ...

CARTE R'S PLUMBING
A ND HE AT ING
Cor . Fourth &amp; Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 446-4477
165-tf

_

IT

Services Offered

*2495

We have made a special purchase of 1973 BUICK LeSABRES 4 DR
SEDAN~. Equipped Wi!h automatic transmission, power st~ering;
power ~1sc brakes , whtte-wall tires, air co,nditioner, custom seat
. belts, tmted glass, bumper protective strips, bumper guards, door
guards~ remote _mirrow, . carpet savers, deluxe wheel covers,
protective body stde moldmgs. Other Models Priced Accordingly .

/

Lesabre 2 dr. H.T. , white with black vinyl top.
factory air , local .one owner. Pr iced Rig ht.

'•

Services Offered

OUR USED
CAR
•
STOCK IS VERY LOW

Sa_tellile, 2dc. H .T .. V-6. auto .. P. S.. P. B., radio, low ONLy

Catalina 2 dr. H. T., white with black vinyl top,
1adory air, local one owner .

Plumbing &amp; Heating

•CLUB CABS

ONLY

m lleage. One owner .

Wagon , 9 pass., white with wood grain on side, air ,
P. S., P. B. Local one owner .

MIDDLEPORT

''•
:; .Plumbing &amp; Heating

ePICKUPS

WE NEED
USED CARS

Bonneville 4 dr. H.T., yellow w i th beige top. tilt
wheeL air, fr1 pP. player, trunk release. Sh~rp ,

'

'•

Dodge Truc/1s

Catalina Brougham, 4 dr. H.T., green with green
vinyl top·, air, tape player, tilt wheel . One owner .

KEITH GOBLE FORD

••

1Dadge j

I

Grand Pr ix, air, vinyl top. We sold ttlis car ll
months ago. Only has 12,6Sl miles. Like new.

See Keith Goble, Fred Blaettnar or Danny Thompson

'

.

1972 PONTIAC
1971 PONTIAC·
1971 PONTIAC
1971 PLYM.OUTH
1970 PONTIAC
1970 PONTIAC
1969 BUICK
1969 PONTIAC
1964 BUICK
1963 CHEVROLET

YOUR CHOICE OF
35 NEW
DODGE
CARS &amp; TRUCKS

Dodgeurs

finest late model used cars in the Ohio Valley and this week we want
to sell 15 late models. So come on In and see us for a Great Buy.

2
4 67

::
l~.
·...

PH. 992-2174

Make Mother happy in one of these late models. We have some of the

"All the goodies" - 400 cu. in. engine,
Cruisematic Trans., power front disc
brakes, power steering, vinyl insert
body side mldgs., rocker panel mlds .,
electric clock, STEEL BELTED
RADIAL PLY WSW Tl RES, vinyl seat
upholstery, front cornering lights, front
bumper guards , Dual rear seat
speakers, outside remote control mirror,
complete tinted glass, wheel covers, &amp;
rear bumper guards, Radio. Now in
stock at only $

••

•

MOTHER'S DAY SALE

LTD SPECIAL

.

19- The SWlday Times. Sentinel, SWiday, May t~, 1973

QUAIL CREEK
MOBIL£
COMMUNITY
&amp; SALES

our deillership now!
For Rent
SLEEP ING' ROOMS , weekly
rates . Park Gentral Hotel.

308-lf

- - - -- -

APARTMENT for cons1ructior
· men . Ph . 446-0756.
267-tf
FURNISHED apt. adults only·.
Central hea t, parking, 4460338.
27 -tf
TRAILER spaces on Bulaville
Rd . Call 446-3B79 or 367-7438.
104-tl
SLE EPING
Hotel.

rooms ,

Galli a-·
94 -tf

::
O:::F:::F::-1=
c E -sp
_a_c_e-.5-:0-4 ""'"
ss_c_on-d- Ave,
Rear. Ca ll 446 -1397.
'

89-tf

'Mobile Homes for Sale ·

1973
'1970
1964
1971
1972
1968
1972
1970
1970
1970
1969
1968
1967
1966
1964

MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE
REC.ONDITIONED
MOBILE HOMES
12x60 Holly Park
12x6.0 American
10x50 Elcona
12x65 Conc'o rd
12x60 Winston
12x60 Champion
12x 60 Wins ton
12x6·o American
12x60 Roycraft
12x60 Challenger
12x60 Star
12x60 Ranchero
12x60 Topper
10x50 Skyline
10x55 Champion

B&amp;S MOBILE HOMES
Second &amp; Viand St.
Pt. Pleasant
(next to Heck 's )

SeNices Offered

DEAD STOCK
$5.00 SerVit:e Charge
Will removeJour dead
. horse ·an cows
Call Jackson 286-4531

�•
20- The Sunday Times -Senlinel,Sunday,May 13, 1973

v

I .J

Nurses attended
GALLIPOUS - Mrs. Polly
Wetherl)olt, R.N., Mrs. Jean
Clark, R.N., city school nurses
and Miss Ginny Killin, R.N ..
city health nurse, attended the
community Health Nurse
Conference in Jackson Thurs..
day.
The conrerence was sponsored by the Ohio Department
of Health Nursing Division.
The topic was 1 1Nursing
Perspective of Teenage
sexuality.' I Speakers were
Rev. Thomas Snyder, former
· Probate Judge Fowler and Dr.
Paul
Crabtree,
School
Psychologist fr om Portsmouth . The nursing panel
consisted of Mrs. Polly
"Wetherholt, Mrs. Jane Bullock
and Mrs. Pat Medley .

•

•

I

/
LOVE THY NEIGHBOR must be the philosophy of Mrs. Ferman (Lillian ) Moore, above at
left , one of the gracious hostesses ror the eat around the village dinner. Mrs. Moore's neighbors ·
attending the dinner had many verbal bouquets (or Mrs. Moore as they enjoyed delicious
lasagna while her brother, Armand Turley, entertained at the organ.
At right, above 1 Mrs. Selwyn Smith was the dessert course hostess for the eat around.
Patrons found a number of conversation pieces in some of the clever ideas Mrs. Smith has
ca rried out in decorative han~work all relative to her family,

MRS. JEA:NNETTE THOMAS WAS the first hostess or
the "'eat around the village&gt;'• dinner in Middleport Wednesday
where customers enjoyed hors d'oeuvres and the beautiful
antiql'eS of the Thomas home, fon~erly the residence of the
late Capt. John Lyons. Doll and figurine collections were also
among the high points.

Eat-around was
social success
BY llOR HOEFLICH
?111DDLlcPOKl" - "'/\ good
time w"s had by all ."
Soun d trite ? Of cour se, it ·

does, but H docs sw n up nicely
the ll O\'C'l ··ca l i:lrou nd the
\"il\age" st:Jged in Mi ddlepor t
WedrH.•:-;day night.

While the idetJ certai nly was
not ong intd in tl 1c community ,
il \\as differen t, pleasant, not

:1 n eve ry day even t: and
r es iden ts..

in c lud i ng

th e

hos tcssei who mu st have
wvrked l.ikc dogs to get ready ,
lo\' ed 1t!
1\n air of conge ni ality was
Ihe re ever y m inute. Fr om the
:iiiil' putruns uf the dinner
beg;m ll1ei1.' firs t cour::;e ~ll the

II can help pay soaring
hospital and surgical

bills.
A St at~ Farm Hospi ta l/S ur gical policy can he lp pay lor
y our hospital room, m ed ic ine
and. r;n e dica l ser vices re c eived m the hos pita l, an d surgica,l expen ses, Let m e show
you ho w.

Carrol K, Snowden
Park Ceofrill

1

Ho t el Bldg .
Second Ave .
Ga ll i po l i !&gt;, Ohio
, Phon e 446 -4290
Ho"?e 446 -4518

UUI H•IO

p 7168.1

$

@)@

STATE rA RM MUTUAL
' I ",' H.lt

II .''"' 011•&lt;·,

· .~

1•&gt;",· I &lt; ''1&gt; ,.

H-""'"" ~' ·~· 1: '""

An110 ne who due:m 't
.dog food hasn't
care
as JJet . bep1 hit han/

"!01:

ei!01lQh

m t!1e budyet.

THIS WEEK

SPECIAL
1971 GRANDE ·PRIX
e22,476 MILES
eLOCAL OWNER
T, urbo Hydramatic Trans Power Steering
miss ion
Power. Brakes - Power Windows
- Air Conditioner - Radio - many
other option s. Beautiful brown
with vinyl t op. See it. Looks like
new.

BOB REES

PONTIAC, INC.
Corner Third &amp; Court
Ph . 446-1513
Gallipo!is, Ohio

'

like Nellie Zerkle and Ruth
Gosney performed an original,
impromptu dance and as Nellie
sat down, she commented, " No
· fools , no ftin ."
Ruth held the floor to prese nt
her version of the Charleston
with Armand cooperating with
a·ppropriate mus ic . Those
present at the particular time
of the "floor show" at the
Moore home were delighted.
After her Charleston dance,
however, Mrs. Gosney commented that Sadie· Hawkins
bils are "more my thin g.~~
· One has to kn ow Ruth a nd
her se nse of humor to appnicia te that remark.
A few of the dinne r
customers walked the route to
the [our homes for their dinner
courses. Among them were
Mrs. Betty Fultz and two or her
daughters. Come to think of it,
I wonder if they ever finished.
On second thought, I believe

MRS. HAI.DAIN MAY WAS THE HOSTESS for the
second course of the eat around the village dinner Wed·
nesday night. Her ,home is the fgrmer residence of the late
Mr. and Mrs. 0. H. Stewart on Fourth St. A relative
newcomer to the cOmmunity , Mrs. May loved the Wednesday
night hostes.• role.

I editor) and must be slg,ned · with the sign.. 's address.
I Names may be withheld' upoo publlcatloo.' However, oo

I
I
I

~-

. . . .. _. . . .

.

~.--..--- ------..-..~-------..--

Stop in the Furniture Department on the lrd floor . See the excellent new

~~~~~~:~:::::~:~~----------Matchmakers of the Year!

•

•

ecta

rtn
.

Dear Sir:
We would like to take this opportunity to thank the followin g
people who helped to make the recent March of Dimes Health
Hik"e a. great success .
Rev. Glenn Biddle, Mr . and Mrs. Ralph McCormick, Henry's
Brothers Orchards, Adam's Bakery,and McCellan's Dairy , all of
Jackson. ·
Mark Chevilier and Coach Willis Stemen or Wellston .
The Gallia C&lt;lunty Sheriff's Department, and the Gallipolis
candy and Tobacco Company.
Ray Roberts, Jim Oliver, Shirley Richardson, SUe Smith,
Tesa Wagner, RitB De Vault, Mert Miil&lt;ine, Deb Tesi, Lynn
Thornton, Jan Boyle, JoAnne Harotunnian, Lisa Tapia, Carry
C&lt;lutts, Kathy Sedinger, ,Robyn Talakine, ·Jan Wasek, and Lois
Smith, all of Rio Grande.
The Coca-Cola Company of Portsmouth, and a special thanks
to Rio Grande C&lt;&gt;llege for the use of Paul R. Lyne . Center as a
hase for the hike and a place for the rock group SKY to perform.
Again, Thank You.
Mr. and Mrs. Pat McCormick , Rio Grande .

•
YOUR CHOICE
OF SWEETHEART CHESTS

+++ "

NEW parents seem to be the special target or a deceptive
door~to-door sales scheme designed to pressure. consumers into contracts for children's. photographs. Commert:h Director
Dennis .Shaul announced that his deparbnent 1s Consumer
Protection Division is receiving numerous complaints against
several companies acr9ss the state which are offering
misleading children's plans:
"The salesmen from these companies may promise a free
photo album and enlargerrient Of a favorite picture, " Shaul said.
"Unfortunately, you get the free gift only if you sign a contract
for a number of enlargements over a ;period of years. But,
enlargements are all you get with this photo contract. Although
you may sign the contract thinking that you will be getting
photos, you soon discover that the fine print triumphs again! The
contract provides for enlargements onl~. so you have to. buy
the rilm , take the picture and pay for its development before the
'photo plan' is effective. And that's not all: The price [ncreases
with a 'handling charge,' so you are paying almost as much for a
black and white enlargement as you would have to pay to get
color photos-enlarged.''
SHAUL indicated that the tactics used by salesmen include :
_ Issuing contracts which don't contain notice of the right to
cancel a contract during the three-day cooling-&lt;&gt;ff period (:Hiay
cooling-&lt;&gt;ff period protection is available under the Ohio Home
Solicitation Sales Act and the FTC Truth-in-Lending Act, when a
finance agreement is obtained in the persona~ resi~ence of· a
consumer).; - Telling consumers that they cannot cancel the
contract without losing part of their part of their deposit; and Offering a money-back guarantee which is applicable only if ·one
has participated in the photo plan for five years.
"These are blatantly deceptive practices," Shaul said, "and
we want to stop them. We want to prepare cases that will be
turned over for prosecution by the Ohio Attorney General under
the Ohio Consumer Sales Practices Act. We urge consumers to
call the Corrunerce Department's Consumer Protection hotline
as sooil as they are approached by such companies." The tollfree hotline number is 1-!10~282-1960.

+++

SIX Rio Grande College professors will not be returning to
Rio Grande for the 1973-74 term according to the last issue of the
school's paper, The Signals. Some are leaving, others will take a
leave of absence, and one is retiring.

+++

They ar.e : Paul M. Angelides, Dr. Arthur Espenscheid,
Merrill A. Grodin, Amy K. Jones. J. Sherman Porter and carol
D. Reynolds. Angelides . is an assistant professor of social
sciences. Dr. Espenscheid, professor of !=hemistry, is retiring
from .teaching, and Grodin 1 assistant professor Eiducation; wil1 be
on a leave of absence for a year. He will be spending the year at
the University of Miami of Florida . Porter, once a member of the.
Ohio Legislature, will do part-time teaching and research on the
histor·y of Rio Grande College for the preparation of the school's
lOOth anniversary in 1976. Porter is an assistant professor of
political science. Amy Jones is an associate professor of modern
languages. Carol Reynolds who had· directed the dramatic
productions of the speech deparl!jlent will also l)e leaving; she
came to Rio the lleginning of the' 1972-73 school year. Edward
Roark will be returning to Rio Grande to fill the vacancy created
by Miss Reynolds' departure.

+++ ..

TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune
and weekly Gallia Times ... Paul F . Wood promoted to corporal.
Wood is slationed with U. S. Army in Korea ... Evans Packing
Co. , buys plant in Xenia, Bob Evans lessee ... j•. F . Miller resigrui
principal's post at Vinton High School ... Lew Preston elected
pr'esident of Gllll ipoljs Downtown Coaches Club ... State to build
new $125,000 garage for highway department on Rt. 35 ... Middleport defeats GAHS 8-4 in playoff game to capture Southern
Division SEOAL baseball title. Frank Leaby, Notre Dame
Football Coach, guest speaker at Rio Redmen basketball
hanquct . ·

A. #4303-23 Ook* ;•vinyl
IJp ho lstered top; bose
dr ow er . 44 xl6.od8l~ H.
8. #430 4-77 Wolnut• ; vipyl
upho !slered lop; bose
drawer. 44 x 16 x 19* H,

C. #&lt;130.:5 -82 Hardwood
veneen * wi th o Co lon.i~ l
Maple f1nish; fabric
uphol~ter ed top ; bose
drawer . Also : 4305-06
Pine" . 44 K 16 x JBl~ H.

New Hope

B.

(:.

A Lane Swecth Carl Chest is the gift to give when you' re
l\Urc you've found the on·c yol1 want to spend the rest of
you r life with . It's th e gift th at t ~ l l s it like it is in more
than just words. After all , guys like yo urse lf have been
givin g Lane Sweetheart Chests tn thei r best gi rls for o-w:er
lifty years now. If you' re looking fo r a maL chmaker, we
have the gjft fnr you!

YOUR CHOICE OF
MATCHING RECORD CABINETS

A. #J J ':..) -23 Oak.' ; vi nyl
upho htc. __ Iif• '"~p ;
divide rs; wstcrs .
29' . ~ 15 ~ 8 X 18l. H.
B. # 3301 -77 Wa lnu t '; vinyl
upholstered lift t op;
dividers; ca~ l t&gt;rs.
29 1.x15 3 8 x 18ll H.

.

•

C. #3 302 -82 'J-! ardwood
Vl!neer~ '

Mople

I

wilh o Colonia l
fobric

fi ni~h ;

IJpholstered lift top ;

Qividers; cos ten . Aho :
3302-06 Pine* .
29 ' 4J&lt;l5~ 8 x 18) l H.

. B.

To fini sh your matchmaking scheme, give
one of these handsbme Lane® reco rd cabinets.
C rafted with the same meticu]ous care as their mates
. .· . the Lane Sweetheart Chests. Each record
cabinet stores approximately "100 record albums and
about 60 eight-track tapes. So if you're looking
for a gift of exqui site design .. . flawl ess craftsmanship
and values sec,and to none come in today and •
browse around . We have the matchmaker for you!

c.

,.
Be sure to look around at all the other fine furniture on the Jrd floor. Excellent
quality - nationally known brands such as Kroehler - Thomasville - Bassett Queen City- Kemp - Barwick- Heywood Wakefield , Riverside and many more.
Simmons and Serta Mattresses and Boxsprings. A complete selection of infant
and juvenile furniture - Pictures ' lamps- Lamp Shades.
•
Free delivery - continuous service. Use our own sensible credit service.

'

ELBERFELDS IN ·POMEROY
• fintJ veneers, sele(l hardwood solid s.

9 FL OZ.

BABY

LOTION

tab;
lotion

e

HECK'S REG. '1.08

10 FL OZ.
JOHNSON'S

BABY
9oknrmU

••

By Ada Keels
regular appointment at . New
Raccoon Creek has been out Hope Church Sunday morning.
thfl!e times this spring. Keeps His wife was able to acthe farmers from planting company , him . after having
Surgery , along with their girls.
their spring crOps.
. l'.irs. DaiSy Ross received A.fter services, Rev. Cuffie-and
word that Mrs. Madge Scott family visited Deacon Cooper,
from Mechanicsburg, is out of who Was ·not able to attend
hospital recoverjng from her Services.
recent sickness which is · Dr . Edmiston from Vinton ,
pleasing to her many fri ends. was called to Russell Keels to
Mrs. Daisy Ross, local and take care of some cows.
Mrs . Laura Scruggs and
daughter Mrs. Edna Long from
·Columbus, Ohio, attended the Bobbie
Deen
Gorden ,
funeral of George Briggs at Gallipolis, visited th.e latter's
Paint Creek Church Tuesday grandmother , Mrs. Mary
morning where they met many Howard and family Sunday
relatives who formerly lived afternoon .
around here.
Mrs. Russell Keels, daughters
Mrs. Ada Keels received and son, Jeff, from Piqua,
word from her daughter Mrs. Ohio, spent the weekend with
Audrey Pryor sta~ing she and her · husband, Russell and
her husband Dr. Pryor uncle, Robert Cooper .
attended a medical convention
Mrs. Murl Howard a nd son,
in Michigan over the weekend. Christopher and Mrs. Mary .
Mr, Robert Cooper who wa·s Ho"-'ard and grandson, Andy,
a patient in Holzer Medical visited Mrs. Mary Howard's
' Hutcheson
Center for pastten days is able brother, Mr . John
t6 be _home recovering from and dau ghter at Corir th
pneumonia and flu TuesdaY. Monday.
· Mrs: Amy Saunders and
Mrs. Sil v~ Coleman from
brothel- Orville fr om Frank. Morton town, W. Va., visited ·
ford , Ohio visited her brother her ·mother, Mrs. Daisy Ross
Mr. Robert Cooper and nephew over the weekend and Mrs.
Russell "Keels on Wednesday . . Goldie Hogans in Gallipolis.
Mr . and Mrs. Charles
The District Institute will be
Howard · and children from ~eld at New Hope Church
Jackson, Ohio visited his Friday, May 11 at 7:15. We ask
mother Mrs. Mary Howard and each church to send a talent
number to make out the
familr Sunday evening.
Mrs. Mary Howard, sons, program .
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Howard and
Rev . Buffington . fr om
family , . James Howard , son Pomerpy and Jessie Rober ts
Chri stoph er motor~d
to from Rendville, Ohio, visited
Dayton, Ohio Sunday to visit in our Sunda~ . School Sunday.
home of a daughter and sister They were on their way to.
Mrs . Hazle. Xou"ng and fam_ily , Triedfitone to attend service for
where they met Tee. Sergeant the "Gill Girls" of the district
Clarence Howard who came by in .the afternoon .
plane from Minnesota where
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Young
he is statione.d in camp. The. and children fr om Dayton,
Weather w~s very bad out -Qhio visited· her mother Mrs.
there. He enjoyed seeing so Mar y Howard and fa miiy over
many t?f his home folks for a Easter. and attended Mary
short time. He returned to his Alice No rm.Jn wedding at
camp after a short weekend. Paint Creek Church in
Mr . Dick Rou c h, Akron Ga11ipolis Saturday afternoon .·
Ohio,· is visiting some old'
friends , Mr. and Mrs. John
Gamble, for a few days. ·
Thunder travels
Rev. M. Cufrie filled his in five seconds.

baby

76e

oil

32

oz.

HECK'S REG. 89'

O'CEDAR
DUST

$348

PONDS

THERMOWARE HAND

LEMON

HAl R DRYER

REG~.! oz.

HECK's

MOP

'5.~9

RADIO

COLD CREAM

•

DETERGENT

HECK'S REG. '4.99

REALTONE AM / FM

HECK'S REG. '1.24

COlO O.!JioM

AJAX

'

HECK'S REG.

OIL

PON~

tADIES
HOUSE
DRESSES
S299

Health hike a ,,success

.

LAST week, we received another consumer alert from Ohio
Director of Commerce , Dennis Shaul. It pertains to new parents
who have been recent targ~ts of deceptive door-to-door sales
schemes. Here's the article_:

I

Middleport, Ohio
Dear Sir :
As a citizen of Middleport I would: like to say we kn ow the
Liscene Tax. was defeated in Middleport. But let me say one
thing . I was against it before. It had too many places the money
could be used for. Now 1 really think if it \las pot through the
rpooey w~uld be used on our streets. The time has come the way
we are acting it is going to be awful hard for us to get some good
person to take responsibility on them looking after our town . It
just don't pay enough to take the knocks some people want to give
them.
I think we have a good city government, good Police Dept.,
and the best first aid squad in the State. Also , we have good
schools. So why not have good roads ?, and also good side walks to
walk on.
I don't think the officials are trying to run anything down ownecks.
Just look at the side walks they could m~ke ihc property
owner~ to keep up . How many streets we have in this town just
aint got no sidewalks. The people have to walk in the road. So
let's give the people also a good place to walk. ·
Just because we don't like a person that is not 3' very good
reason to try to get everything he puts forth to get defeated . Let's
find some good deeds our City Goverrunent is doing .
Now just to show you all how much interested the mayor
takes in our town, I needen a side walk, needed it bad . ,Some
money came in some way . He called me up and said if I would
furnish the cement he would see I would get a side wail&lt;. He
didn't have to do that. He just took interest in the way the side
"''
walks was in bad Condition. ,
When the people elects the men in the city goverrunent, the
people put faith in them to run the town .
So lets get behind them and praise them a little and push for
the better or our community.
What little bit it is I think everybody in our town would give
$5 a year for better roads; not just automobile owners.
So let's all pray for our city officials. Stand liehind them 100
per cent and see Middleport a place we really are proud of.
- Ben Batey.

Furniture Department, 3rd Floor
-..--..---~.._.._...._.._...._

!

Favors license tax now

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
r..---.

lII

lisle, ackjressing issues, not persooalllles.

l ... t~&amp;ii/h:

WHO IS LYING?
SAIGON ( UPI) - The Viet
Cong said today U. S. warplanes have been bombing in
South
Vietnam since April in
final stop.
"Why don't we do that more
violation of the cease·fire. A U.
Well , it was a great evening. often?"
Those who couldn 't make it,
And - you'd better believe it S. Embassy spokesman said
really missed a treat.
- "A good time WAS had by the charge is false . He did not
elaborate.
Might I ask:
all!"

they r must have becau.s e I do
recall seeing Becky and Barb
doing a step resembling the
" Yellow Brick Road" routine
from " Wizard of Oz" down the
street near the Smith home, the

I

I rtquest, oames will he disclosed. Letters should be In good

Sweetheart Chests and matching Record Cabinets from Lane®

~

At • • •

•

seeiTJed to be in a particular
hurry . And just plain enjoyed
Lhe evening. After all, it was a
dandy night, weatherwise and
those kinds of evenings just
haven't been too frequent.
While the dinner was scheduled
. to run only from 5:30 to 7 p.m.,
that schedu le just didn ' t work
uut, but no one seemed to mind .
It was quite common for many
attending to spend well over
lwo hours· before finishing the
final course.
Helping to give the affair a
rea lly relaxed atmosphere was
the stop at the home of Mrs .
Moore. Her brother 1 ·Armand
Turley, was there to entertain
at the organ. He played all of
the old favOrites and even the
most conse rvative found
themselves tapping an occasional foot as Armand ran
throu gh what seemed an
unlimt"ted repertoirb.
Some of the more forward

home of Mrs . Daniel (Jeannette 1 Thomas until they
finished d e:~ sert at the home of
Mrs. Selwyn Smith, everything
ce~mc up roses.
For a change - and
shouldn 't il happen more often
-· people took time to chat and
visit as lhey moved through the
•
courses of the dinner which
look the m to four homes in the
town .
The event was staged by the
Middlepo rt Amateur Gi:lrdeners and four more gracious
hostesses could not have been
selected for lhe dinner than
Mrs. Thomas, Mrs. Smith,
Mrs. Haldai n May and Mrs.
Ferman Moore.
All have large, older homes
which have been extensively
r ~m od e le d and rcdc&lt;..' oraled. 1t
certain ly must take a ~e rtai n
am ount of courage or
some thing to open yo ur ho!'ne
·to anyone ' ;;n•d everyone who
paid the nominal fe e of $1.50 [or
the dinner. And, inc:ide"ntally,
in these days of high food cosls
who could beat that prke?
A!l four of the women,.
however , fran kly admitted
loving the enterta ining bit and
their homes were ·subject to ·
inspection by a number of
customers who wantEid to see
\Vhat. had been done to ." the old
place."
Th ere were inte res ting
pieces of furniture, collections
and o l'i g in~L decoratiilg . ideas
of the hos tesses to be admired .
l t must have taken hours and
hours not only to prepare the
homes for the occasion but the
m ea l -~ which was delicious certa inly required much time.
The hostesses, however, had
wonderful help during the
dinri er period . Other club
members were right there to
handle \\o·ork chores and to see
that the operation ran
smoothly.
None of the dinner patrons

~:.~.!!'!'!.Times -Sentinei, SWJday, May 13,1973
1I
!.etten o1 -------------------~
opinloa ""welcomed. They ohould he l.. s
I
1 thon 300 words long tor he subject to rtduclloa by the I

Jackson meeting

$158

$7

44
NO. 2208
HECK'S REG. '11.88
$

tl.111 \ Ill

BATH

HECK'S REG. 9.88

$500

AIR QUIPT DELUXE

SIZE .

m_E.....,vi_E_w_ER;.;..-__.H.,.Ec-K·s...R-EG........,...

CERAMIC COOKIE

Vaselin·e

00
1

64¢ ......,.sL...

12 OZ.

4

HECK'S REG. 12.51'

JA
·-·R-.. ~

$266

ASST.
STYLES

HECK'S REG.

·s.n

-e

JERGENS
SOAP

PURE PETROLEUM ·

BAR

HECK'S REG. 13' BAR

JELLY

NO.
6060 ..

. 66 .~
HECK'S REG. 84'
GOLD EAGLE NO. 250

~~~:ARING

HECK'S

R~G.

5

PREMIUM STOCK KNIFE

$ 99

'10.99
16

BROKG! TRH BRAND

oz.

.

·EVERYEADY BIG JIM

MOP&amp;
GLOW

$588

HECK'S
REG. 18.88

·PATCHWORK QUILTS
HECK'S REG.

$

$899

WATERPROOF
LANTERN

00

HECK'S
'
REG.

WITH BATTERY
NO. 101WB

HECK'S
'REG. ·

77•

$

1

88

13.74

1

ARCO
eJIG SAW AITACHMENT
e2 SPEED ANGlE DRIVE

lEBCD

ATTACHME~T

·

Simple, in expensi ve , easy
to use and aHroct ive . Lorge
screen , bu il t -in film marke r;
focus in g,

framing con tro l s

and line cord ·s t orage
posts. Avc'ilo ble lor Super
8, Standard 8 an d Dual 8
film f·a rmots.

HECK'S

eSCREW &amp;NUT DRIVE
ATTACHMENT
eHEDGE AND TRIMMER
ATTACHMENT
YOUR CHOICE

00

REEL
GR£AT£Sl RHl
ACHI£i£M£NI
INTH£ HISTORY
OFSPORT
fiSHING'

99

$

REG • ..

$14.96

HECK'S REG.
·~·

..

sl899

�•
20- The Sunday Times -Senlinel,Sunday,May 13, 1973

v

I .J

Nurses attended
GALLIPOUS - Mrs. Polly
Wetherl)olt, R.N., Mrs. Jean
Clark, R.N., city school nurses
and Miss Ginny Killin, R.N ..
city health nurse, attended the
community Health Nurse
Conference in Jackson Thurs..
day.
The conrerence was sponsored by the Ohio Department
of Health Nursing Division.
The topic was 1 1Nursing
Perspective of Teenage
sexuality.' I Speakers were
Rev. Thomas Snyder, former
· Probate Judge Fowler and Dr.
Paul
Crabtree,
School
Psychologist fr om Portsmouth . The nursing panel
consisted of Mrs. Polly
"Wetherholt, Mrs. Jane Bullock
and Mrs. Pat Medley .

•

•

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/
LOVE THY NEIGHBOR must be the philosophy of Mrs. Ferman (Lillian ) Moore, above at
left , one of the gracious hostesses ror the eat around the village dinner. Mrs. Moore's neighbors ·
attending the dinner had many verbal bouquets (or Mrs. Moore as they enjoyed delicious
lasagna while her brother, Armand Turley, entertained at the organ.
At right, above 1 Mrs. Selwyn Smith was the dessert course hostess for the eat around.
Patrons found a number of conversation pieces in some of the clever ideas Mrs. Smith has
ca rried out in decorative han~work all relative to her family,

MRS. JEA:NNETTE THOMAS WAS the first hostess or
the "'eat around the village&gt;'• dinner in Middleport Wednesday
where customers enjoyed hors d'oeuvres and the beautiful
antiql'eS of the Thomas home, fon~erly the residence of the
late Capt. John Lyons. Doll and figurine collections were also
among the high points.

Eat-around was
social success
BY llOR HOEFLICH
?111DDLlcPOKl" - "'/\ good
time w"s had by all ."
Soun d trite ? Of cour se, it ·

does, but H docs sw n up nicely
the ll O\'C'l ··ca l i:lrou nd the
\"il\age" st:Jged in Mi ddlepor t
WedrH.•:-;day night.

While the idetJ certai nly was
not ong intd in tl 1c community ,
il \\as differen t, pleasant, not

:1 n eve ry day even t: and
r es iden ts..

in c lud i ng

th e

hos tcssei who mu st have
wvrked l.ikc dogs to get ready ,
lo\' ed 1t!
1\n air of conge ni ality was
Ihe re ever y m inute. Fr om the
:iiiil' putruns uf the dinner
beg;m ll1ei1.' firs t cour::;e ~ll the

II can help pay soaring
hospital and surgical

bills.
A St at~ Farm Hospi ta l/S ur gical policy can he lp pay lor
y our hospital room, m ed ic ine
and. r;n e dica l ser vices re c eived m the hos pita l, an d surgica,l expen ses, Let m e show
you ho w.

Carrol K, Snowden
Park Ceofrill

1

Ho t el Bldg .
Second Ave .
Ga ll i po l i !&gt;, Ohio
, Phon e 446 -4290
Ho"?e 446 -4518

UUI H•IO

p 7168.1

$

@)@

STATE rA RM MUTUAL
' I ",' H.lt

II .''"' 011•&lt;·,

· .~

1•&gt;",· I &lt; ''1&gt; ,.

H-""'"" ~' ·~· 1: '""

An110 ne who due:m 't
.dog food hasn't
care
as JJet . bep1 hit han/

"!01:

ei!01lQh

m t!1e budyet.

THIS WEEK

SPECIAL
1971 GRANDE ·PRIX
e22,476 MILES
eLOCAL OWNER
T, urbo Hydramatic Trans Power Steering
miss ion
Power. Brakes - Power Windows
- Air Conditioner - Radio - many
other option s. Beautiful brown
with vinyl t op. See it. Looks like
new.

BOB REES

PONTIAC, INC.
Corner Third &amp; Court
Ph . 446-1513
Gallipo!is, Ohio

'

like Nellie Zerkle and Ruth
Gosney performed an original,
impromptu dance and as Nellie
sat down, she commented, " No
· fools , no ftin ."
Ruth held the floor to prese nt
her version of the Charleston
with Armand cooperating with
a·ppropriate mus ic . Those
present at the particular time
of the "floor show" at the
Moore home were delighted.
After her Charleston dance,
however, Mrs. Gosney commented that Sadie· Hawkins
bils are "more my thin g.~~
· One has to kn ow Ruth a nd
her se nse of humor to appnicia te that remark.
A few of the dinne r
customers walked the route to
the [our homes for their dinner
courses. Among them were
Mrs. Betty Fultz and two or her
daughters. Come to think of it,
I wonder if they ever finished.
On second thought, I believe

MRS. HAI.DAIN MAY WAS THE HOSTESS for the
second course of the eat around the village dinner Wed·
nesday night. Her ,home is the fgrmer residence of the late
Mr. and Mrs. 0. H. Stewart on Fourth St. A relative
newcomer to the cOmmunity , Mrs. May loved the Wednesday
night hostes.• role.

I editor) and must be slg,ned · with the sign.. 's address.
I Names may be withheld' upoo publlcatloo.' However, oo

I
I
I

~-

. . . .. _. . . .

.

~.--..--- ------..-..~-------..--

Stop in the Furniture Department on the lrd floor . See the excellent new

~~~~~~:~:::::~:~~----------Matchmakers of the Year!

•

•

ecta

rtn
.

Dear Sir:
We would like to take this opportunity to thank the followin g
people who helped to make the recent March of Dimes Health
Hik"e a. great success .
Rev. Glenn Biddle, Mr . and Mrs. Ralph McCormick, Henry's
Brothers Orchards, Adam's Bakery,and McCellan's Dairy , all of
Jackson. ·
Mark Chevilier and Coach Willis Stemen or Wellston .
The Gallia C&lt;lunty Sheriff's Department, and the Gallipolis
candy and Tobacco Company.
Ray Roberts, Jim Oliver, Shirley Richardson, SUe Smith,
Tesa Wagner, RitB De Vault, Mert Miil&lt;ine, Deb Tesi, Lynn
Thornton, Jan Boyle, JoAnne Harotunnian, Lisa Tapia, Carry
C&lt;lutts, Kathy Sedinger, ,Robyn Talakine, ·Jan Wasek, and Lois
Smith, all of Rio Grande.
The Coca-Cola Company of Portsmouth, and a special thanks
to Rio Grande C&lt;&gt;llege for the use of Paul R. Lyne . Center as a
hase for the hike and a place for the rock group SKY to perform.
Again, Thank You.
Mr. and Mrs. Pat McCormick , Rio Grande .

•
YOUR CHOICE
OF SWEETHEART CHESTS

+++ "

NEW parents seem to be the special target or a deceptive
door~to-door sales scheme designed to pressure. consumers into contracts for children's. photographs. Commert:h Director
Dennis .Shaul announced that his deparbnent 1s Consumer
Protection Division is receiving numerous complaints against
several companies acr9ss the state which are offering
misleading children's plans:
"The salesmen from these companies may promise a free
photo album and enlargerrient Of a favorite picture, " Shaul said.
"Unfortunately, you get the free gift only if you sign a contract
for a number of enlargements over a ;period of years. But,
enlargements are all you get with this photo contract. Although
you may sign the contract thinking that you will be getting
photos, you soon discover that the fine print triumphs again! The
contract provides for enlargements onl~. so you have to. buy
the rilm , take the picture and pay for its development before the
'photo plan' is effective. And that's not all: The price [ncreases
with a 'handling charge,' so you are paying almost as much for a
black and white enlargement as you would have to pay to get
color photos-enlarged.''
SHAUL indicated that the tactics used by salesmen include :
_ Issuing contracts which don't contain notice of the right to
cancel a contract during the three-day cooling-&lt;&gt;ff period (:Hiay
cooling-&lt;&gt;ff period protection is available under the Ohio Home
Solicitation Sales Act and the FTC Truth-in-Lending Act, when a
finance agreement is obtained in the persona~ resi~ence of· a
consumer).; - Telling consumers that they cannot cancel the
contract without losing part of their part of their deposit; and Offering a money-back guarantee which is applicable only if ·one
has participated in the photo plan for five years.
"These are blatantly deceptive practices," Shaul said, "and
we want to stop them. We want to prepare cases that will be
turned over for prosecution by the Ohio Attorney General under
the Ohio Consumer Sales Practices Act. We urge consumers to
call the Corrunerce Department's Consumer Protection hotline
as sooil as they are approached by such companies." The tollfree hotline number is 1-!10~282-1960.

+++

SIX Rio Grande College professors will not be returning to
Rio Grande for the 1973-74 term according to the last issue of the
school's paper, The Signals. Some are leaving, others will take a
leave of absence, and one is retiring.

+++

They ar.e : Paul M. Angelides, Dr. Arthur Espenscheid,
Merrill A. Grodin, Amy K. Jones. J. Sherman Porter and carol
D. Reynolds. Angelides . is an assistant professor of social
sciences. Dr. Espenscheid, professor of !=hemistry, is retiring
from .teaching, and Grodin 1 assistant professor Eiducation; wil1 be
on a leave of absence for a year. He will be spending the year at
the University of Miami of Florida . Porter, once a member of the.
Ohio Legislature, will do part-time teaching and research on the
histor·y of Rio Grande College for the preparation of the school's
lOOth anniversary in 1976. Porter is an assistant professor of
political science. Amy Jones is an associate professor of modern
languages. Carol Reynolds who had· directed the dramatic
productions of the speech deparl!jlent will also l)e leaving; she
came to Rio the lleginning of the' 1972-73 school year. Edward
Roark will be returning to Rio Grande to fill the vacancy created
by Miss Reynolds' departure.

+++ ..

TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune
and weekly Gallia Times ... Paul F . Wood promoted to corporal.
Wood is slationed with U. S. Army in Korea ... Evans Packing
Co. , buys plant in Xenia, Bob Evans lessee ... j•. F . Miller resigrui
principal's post at Vinton High School ... Lew Preston elected
pr'esident of Gllll ipoljs Downtown Coaches Club ... State to build
new $125,000 garage for highway department on Rt. 35 ... Middleport defeats GAHS 8-4 in playoff game to capture Southern
Division SEOAL baseball title. Frank Leaby, Notre Dame
Football Coach, guest speaker at Rio Redmen basketball
hanquct . ·

A. #4303-23 Ook* ;•vinyl
IJp ho lstered top; bose
dr ow er . 44 xl6.od8l~ H.
8. #430 4-77 Wolnut• ; vipyl
upho !slered lop; bose
drawer. 44 x 16 x 19* H,

C. #&lt;130.:5 -82 Hardwood
veneen * wi th o Co lon.i~ l
Maple f1nish; fabric
uphol~ter ed top ; bose
drawer . Also : 4305-06
Pine" . 44 K 16 x JBl~ H.

New Hope

B.

(:.

A Lane Swecth Carl Chest is the gift to give when you' re
l\Urc you've found the on·c yol1 want to spend the rest of
you r life with . It's th e gift th at t ~ l l s it like it is in more
than just words. After all , guys like yo urse lf have been
givin g Lane Sweetheart Chests tn thei r best gi rls for o-w:er
lifty years now. If you' re looking fo r a maL chmaker, we
have the gjft fnr you!

YOUR CHOICE OF
MATCHING RECORD CABINETS

A. #J J ':..) -23 Oak.' ; vi nyl
upho htc. __ Iif• '"~p ;
divide rs; wstcrs .
29' . ~ 15 ~ 8 X 18l. H.
B. # 3301 -77 Wa lnu t '; vinyl
upholstered lift t op;
dividers; ca~ l t&gt;rs.
29 1.x15 3 8 x 18ll H.

.

•

C. #3 302 -82 'J-! ardwood
Vl!neer~ '

Mople

I

wilh o Colonia l
fobric

fi ni~h ;

IJpholstered lift top ;

Qividers; cos ten . Aho :
3302-06 Pine* .
29 ' 4J&lt;l5~ 8 x 18) l H.

. B.

To fini sh your matchmaking scheme, give
one of these handsbme Lane® reco rd cabinets.
C rafted with the same meticu]ous care as their mates
. .· . the Lane Sweetheart Chests. Each record
cabinet stores approximately "100 record albums and
about 60 eight-track tapes. So if you're looking
for a gift of exqui site design .. . flawl ess craftsmanship
and values sec,and to none come in today and •
browse around . We have the matchmaker for you!

c.

,.
Be sure to look around at all the other fine furniture on the Jrd floor. Excellent
quality - nationally known brands such as Kroehler - Thomasville - Bassett Queen City- Kemp - Barwick- Heywood Wakefield , Riverside and many more.
Simmons and Serta Mattresses and Boxsprings. A complete selection of infant
and juvenile furniture - Pictures ' lamps- Lamp Shades.
•
Free delivery - continuous service. Use our own sensible credit service.

'

ELBERFELDS IN ·POMEROY
• fintJ veneers, sele(l hardwood solid s.

9 FL OZ.

BABY

LOTION

tab;
lotion

e

HECK'S REG. '1.08

10 FL OZ.
JOHNSON'S

BABY
9oknrmU

••

By Ada Keels
regular appointment at . New
Raccoon Creek has been out Hope Church Sunday morning.
thfl!e times this spring. Keeps His wife was able to acthe farmers from planting company , him . after having
Surgery , along with their girls.
their spring crOps.
. l'.irs. DaiSy Ross received A.fter services, Rev. Cuffie-and
word that Mrs. Madge Scott family visited Deacon Cooper,
from Mechanicsburg, is out of who Was ·not able to attend
hospital recoverjng from her Services.
recent sickness which is · Dr . Edmiston from Vinton ,
pleasing to her many fri ends. was called to Russell Keels to
Mrs. Daisy Ross, local and take care of some cows.
Mrs . Laura Scruggs and
daughter Mrs. Edna Long from
·Columbus, Ohio, attended the Bobbie
Deen
Gorden ,
funeral of George Briggs at Gallipolis, visited th.e latter's
Paint Creek Church Tuesday grandmother , Mrs. Mary
morning where they met many Howard and family Sunday
relatives who formerly lived afternoon .
around here.
Mrs. Russell Keels, daughters
Mrs. Ada Keels received and son, Jeff, from Piqua,
word from her daughter Mrs. Ohio, spent the weekend with
Audrey Pryor sta~ing she and her · husband, Russell and
her husband Dr. Pryor uncle, Robert Cooper .
attended a medical convention
Mrs. Murl Howard a nd son,
in Michigan over the weekend. Christopher and Mrs. Mary .
Mr, Robert Cooper who wa·s Ho"-'ard and grandson, Andy,
a patient in Holzer Medical visited Mrs. Mary Howard's
' Hutcheson
Center for pastten days is able brother, Mr . John
t6 be _home recovering from and dau ghter at Corir th
pneumonia and flu TuesdaY. Monday.
· Mrs: Amy Saunders and
Mrs. Sil v~ Coleman from
brothel- Orville fr om Frank. Morton town, W. Va., visited ·
ford , Ohio visited her brother her ·mother, Mrs. Daisy Ross
Mr. Robert Cooper and nephew over the weekend and Mrs.
Russell "Keels on Wednesday . . Goldie Hogans in Gallipolis.
Mr . and Mrs. Charles
The District Institute will be
Howard · and children from ~eld at New Hope Church
Jackson, Ohio visited his Friday, May 11 at 7:15. We ask
mother Mrs. Mary Howard and each church to send a talent
number to make out the
familr Sunday evening.
Mrs. Mary Howard, sons, program .
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Howard and
Rev . Buffington . fr om
family , . James Howard , son Pomerpy and Jessie Rober ts
Chri stoph er motor~d
to from Rendville, Ohio, visited
Dayton, Ohio Sunday to visit in our Sunda~ . School Sunday.
home of a daughter and sister They were on their way to.
Mrs . Hazle. Xou"ng and fam_ily , Triedfitone to attend service for
where they met Tee. Sergeant the "Gill Girls" of the district
Clarence Howard who came by in .the afternoon .
plane from Minnesota where
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Young
he is statione.d in camp. The. and children fr om Dayton,
Weather w~s very bad out -Qhio visited· her mother Mrs.
there. He enjoyed seeing so Mar y Howard and fa miiy over
many t?f his home folks for a Easter. and attended Mary
short time. He returned to his Alice No rm.Jn wedding at
camp after a short weekend. Paint Creek Church in
Mr . Dick Rou c h, Akron Ga11ipolis Saturday afternoon .·
Ohio,· is visiting some old'
friends , Mr. and Mrs. John
Gamble, for a few days. ·
Thunder travels
Rev. M. Cufrie filled his in five seconds.

baby

76e

oil

32

oz.

HECK'S REG. 89'

O'CEDAR
DUST

$348

PONDS

THERMOWARE HAND

LEMON

HAl R DRYER

REG~.! oz.

HECK's

MOP

'5.~9

RADIO

COLD CREAM

•

DETERGENT

HECK'S REG. '4.99

REALTONE AM / FM

HECK'S REG. '1.24

COlO O.!JioM

AJAX

'

HECK'S REG.

OIL

PON~

tADIES
HOUSE
DRESSES
S299

Health hike a ,,success

.

LAST week, we received another consumer alert from Ohio
Director of Commerce , Dennis Shaul. It pertains to new parents
who have been recent targ~ts of deceptive door-to-door sales
schemes. Here's the article_:

I

Middleport, Ohio
Dear Sir :
As a citizen of Middleport I would: like to say we kn ow the
Liscene Tax. was defeated in Middleport. But let me say one
thing . I was against it before. It had too many places the money
could be used for. Now 1 really think if it \las pot through the
rpooey w~uld be used on our streets. The time has come the way
we are acting it is going to be awful hard for us to get some good
person to take responsibility on them looking after our town . It
just don't pay enough to take the knocks some people want to give
them.
I think we have a good city government, good Police Dept.,
and the best first aid squad in the State. Also , we have good
schools. So why not have good roads ?, and also good side walks to
walk on.
I don't think the officials are trying to run anything down ownecks.
Just look at the side walks they could m~ke ihc property
owner~ to keep up . How many streets we have in this town just
aint got no sidewalks. The people have to walk in the road. So
let's give the people also a good place to walk. ·
Just because we don't like a person that is not 3' very good
reason to try to get everything he puts forth to get defeated . Let's
find some good deeds our City Goverrunent is doing .
Now just to show you all how much interested the mayor
takes in our town, I needen a side walk, needed it bad . ,Some
money came in some way . He called me up and said if I would
furnish the cement he would see I would get a side wail&lt;. He
didn't have to do that. He just took interest in the way the side
"''
walks was in bad Condition. ,
When the people elects the men in the city goverrunent, the
people put faith in them to run the town .
So lets get behind them and praise them a little and push for
the better or our community.
What little bit it is I think everybody in our town would give
$5 a year for better roads; not just automobile owners.
So let's all pray for our city officials. Stand liehind them 100
per cent and see Middleport a place we really are proud of.
- Ben Batey.

Furniture Department, 3rd Floor
-..--..---~.._.._...._.._...._

!

Favors license tax now

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
r..---.

lII

lisle, ackjressing issues, not persooalllles.

l ... t~&amp;ii/h:

WHO IS LYING?
SAIGON ( UPI) - The Viet
Cong said today U. S. warplanes have been bombing in
South
Vietnam since April in
final stop.
"Why don't we do that more
violation of the cease·fire. A U.
Well , it was a great evening. often?"
Those who couldn 't make it,
And - you'd better believe it S. Embassy spokesman said
really missed a treat.
- "A good time WAS had by the charge is false . He did not
elaborate.
Might I ask:
all!"

they r must have becau.s e I do
recall seeing Becky and Barb
doing a step resembling the
" Yellow Brick Road" routine
from " Wizard of Oz" down the
street near the Smith home, the

I

I rtquest, oames will he disclosed. Letters should be In good

Sweetheart Chests and matching Record Cabinets from Lane®

~

At • • •

•

seeiTJed to be in a particular
hurry . And just plain enjoyed
Lhe evening. After all, it was a
dandy night, weatherwise and
those kinds of evenings just
haven't been too frequent.
While the dinner was scheduled
. to run only from 5:30 to 7 p.m.,
that schedu le just didn ' t work
uut, but no one seemed to mind .
It was quite common for many
attending to spend well over
lwo hours· before finishing the
final course.
Helping to give the affair a
rea lly relaxed atmosphere was
the stop at the home of Mrs .
Moore. Her brother 1 ·Armand
Turley, was there to entertain
at the organ. He played all of
the old favOrites and even the
most conse rvative found
themselves tapping an occasional foot as Armand ran
throu gh what seemed an
unlimt"ted repertoirb.
Some of the more forward

home of Mrs . Daniel (Jeannette 1 Thomas until they
finished d e:~ sert at the home of
Mrs. Selwyn Smith, everything
ce~mc up roses.
For a change - and
shouldn 't il happen more often
-· people took time to chat and
visit as lhey moved through the
•
courses of the dinner which
look the m to four homes in the
town .
The event was staged by the
Middlepo rt Amateur Gi:lrdeners and four more gracious
hostesses could not have been
selected for lhe dinner than
Mrs. Thomas, Mrs. Smith,
Mrs. Haldai n May and Mrs.
Ferman Moore.
All have large, older homes
which have been extensively
r ~m od e le d and rcdc&lt;..' oraled. 1t
certain ly must take a ~e rtai n
am ount of courage or
some thing to open yo ur ho!'ne
·to anyone ' ;;n•d everyone who
paid the nominal fe e of $1.50 [or
the dinner. And, inc:ide"ntally,
in these days of high food cosls
who could beat that prke?
A!l four of the women,.
however , fran kly admitted
loving the enterta ining bit and
their homes were ·subject to ·
inspection by a number of
customers who wantEid to see
\Vhat. had been done to ." the old
place."
Th ere were inte res ting
pieces of furniture, collections
and o l'i g in~L decoratiilg . ideas
of the hos tesses to be admired .
l t must have taken hours and
hours not only to prepare the
homes for the occasion but the
m ea l -~ which was delicious certa inly required much time.
The hostesses, however, had
wonderful help during the
dinri er period . Other club
members were right there to
handle \\o·ork chores and to see
that the operation ran
smoothly.
None of the dinner patrons

~:.~.!!'!'!.Times -Sentinei, SWJday, May 13,1973
1I
!.etten o1 -------------------~
opinloa ""welcomed. They ohould he l.. s
I
1 thon 300 words long tor he subject to rtduclloa by the I

Jackson meeting

$158

$7

44
NO. 2208
HECK'S REG. '11.88
$

tl.111 \ Ill

BATH

HECK'S REG. 9.88

$500

AIR QUIPT DELUXE

SIZE .

m_E.....,vi_E_w_ER;.;..-__.H.,.Ec-K·s...R-EG........,...

CERAMIC COOKIE

Vaselin·e

00
1

64¢ ......,.sL...

12 OZ.

4

HECK'S REG. 12.51'

JA
·-·R-.. ~

$266

ASST.
STYLES

HECK'S REG.

·s.n

-e

JERGENS
SOAP

PURE PETROLEUM ·

BAR

HECK'S REG. 13' BAR

JELLY

NO.
6060 ..

. 66 .~
HECK'S REG. 84'
GOLD EAGLE NO. 250

~~~:ARING

HECK'S

R~G.

5

PREMIUM STOCK KNIFE

$ 99

'10.99
16

BROKG! TRH BRAND

oz.

.

·EVERYEADY BIG JIM

MOP&amp;
GLOW

$588

HECK'S
REG. 18.88

·PATCHWORK QUILTS
HECK'S REG.

$

$899

WATERPROOF
LANTERN

00

HECK'S
'
REG.

WITH BATTERY
NO. 101WB

HECK'S
'REG. ·

77•

$

1

88

13.74

1

ARCO
eJIG SAW AITACHMENT
e2 SPEED ANGlE DRIVE

lEBCD

ATTACHME~T

·

Simple, in expensi ve , easy
to use and aHroct ive . Lorge
screen , bu il t -in film marke r;
focus in g,

framing con tro l s

and line cord ·s t orage
posts. Avc'ilo ble lor Super
8, Standard 8 an d Dual 8
film f·a rmots.

HECK'S

eSCREW &amp;NUT DRIVE
ATTACHMENT
eHEDGE AND TRIMMER
ATTACHMENT
YOUR CHOICE

00

REEL
GR£AT£Sl RHl
ACHI£i£M£NI
INTH£ HISTORY
OFSPORT
fiSHING'

99

$

REG • ..

$14.96

HECK'S REG.
·~·

..

sl899

�•

I

EDITORIAL

•

BY JACJ( O'BRIAN
TH~ MELODY LINGERS ON
NEW YORK (KFS) - Irving B"lin's songs
are marvelous - and constant. I swear on a
stack of Berlin songs that, at 3:25a.m., as I am
writing this column, "Always," by Irving
-Berlin, is coming out of my radio v1a station
WTFM, New York. On any day or mght, in fact
all day' and night, Berlin melodies permeate the
radio air in the New York area, which ts alive
with the sQ..und of music from 71 stations not
mcludmg TV.
The very profusion of Berlin songs is and
wiD be Irving's hardly elusive, never abstract
monwnent. The rock stations even grab his

Irving Berhn and Victor Herbert -stood their
contrapuntal ground.
SJgmficanUy, Ethelbert Nevin, who died in

Jl-:- Tho; ~~day Times- Sentinel, Sunday, May 13, 1973

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~

~====~~====T=h=e~y'=II=DQ==It=E=ve=r~y=T=i=m=e===~="========~

Long Arm of Law
M~st Hbve Limits

IIPJ. ~EE~S !.IKE BAKING I'OMEMADE
RAISJN BREAC! 60 5.HE PlU&gt;JGES

Rll?&gt;lT IN ...

~f.

T~EN IN T~E MlDOLE Cf' T~ E MJS&gt;-1-

NECE.SSI&gt;.QY"INGREOIENT· • ·

~

It was Has ton's late Hichard Cardinal Cushmg who used

~~

i~
~~

~;::
~
~~;
~~

·.~•_,;~_,!

:

came fast and furious three days
recently when 1110 stxth graders from
&lt;;'!'!
Lawrence County participated in
:::: ''Forest Ecology Days."
i1;
Had it not been for schedulu1g
·:·:
bl
1
1 t
d Sl .
.::.'; • pro ems or ron on an
· th gra ders m
·
:::: La wrence sc hooIs, a ll siX
•··
llJ
ty
uld
h
t'
·
ted
:i:
e coun wo
ave par IClpa . If
·.·:
;:;: arrangemen ts can be rna de, they too
:::: will be involved later.
;:;:
This type of participation and
::::
·
bee
0 ul ha
;:[
vlgo.
people are troly concerned about
ecology and the effects of our society

RAY CROMLEY

Sirica Pressure
Broke VVatergate

f · Generation Rap
~

;:;:
Dmgess, m ge tti'ng
eff orts of B'll
1
.'.':':':
.·:.·: , Forest Ecology Days off the ground. It
··
fl ted · th
;,,._'.~.:. IS reDr.ec Thomas
m o erruick,
ways Ass1stant
;;;:..
Superintendent of ll Ohio Schools
"
~f;:
fr om Columbus made a special trtp to

••

••

~ang~i~.u~vfr:~e~~t :~~CaJt~:~

12 TO 8 SUNDAY

137 PINE STREET
GALliPOLIS, OHIO
-

700 WEST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO

ROUND .STEAK-

.09
BONE-IN

LB.

Church women
to launch new

.
service group

"GAlA"

PLAY SHORTS

'

ATHENS - "Smg Unto the
Lord A New Song" will be the
theme of the day for the ServJce of Celebrallon of the West
Oh10 Conference " United
Methodtst Women" at the
Springfteld Central United
Methodtst Church, Saturday,
May 19
Thls new organization will
emerge from the present
structures of the Women's
Society of Christian Service
and the Wesleyan Servtce
which
together
Gutld ,
represent over 100 years of
service.
The •meeting will begm at
9:45 a .m. with Mrs. M. Clyde
Condrey, prestdent of the
Conference Women's Society of
Chnsban Service and Miss
Sara Cox, Chairperson for the
Conference Wesleyan Service
Gutld, presiding. Thts session
w1ll conclude the final business
of the two organizational
structures.
Election of ofrJcers for the
new organizatton, " United
Methodist Women" will be a
part of the morning agenda,
wtth B•shop F. Gerald Ensley
presiding.
Keynote speaker for the day

wtll be Mrs . H. Olin Troy of
Chattanooga, Tenn ., composer
of the Servtce of Celebration
for
" United
Methodist
Women," "Smg Unto the Lord
A New Song."
Featured at the CelebratJOn
WJll be a new singing group of
"Singmg Wives of Ministers."
Thts group lS made up of
mimsters' wives from the 14
dtstrtcls of the West Ohio
Conference under the auspices
of the Cabinet W1ves. The
"Singing Wives" will make
their debut at this time and will
be singing again for the Annual
Conference at Lakeside in
June . Mrs. John S. (Elinor J
Brown directs the chorus, and
Mrs. Richard (Pat ) Carson JS
the accompanist.
A group of dancers under the
directwn of Mrs. Wm. Glover
wtll lead in a worship expenence using the Christian
Art of Ltturgtcal Dance. The
dan~rs and Mrs Glover are
act1ve members and officers of
the Women's SocJety of
Chnstian Service of the Forest
Chapel Ur.ited Methodist
Church m Cmcmnah.
Mrs. Fred Wmtle, President
of the
North
Central

The Almanac
By Untied Press International
Today ts Sunday, May 13, the
By Mrs. W. H. Thomas
133rd day of 1973 w1th 232 to
Mrs. Mane Vance was a
follow .
'
Saturday afternoon caller of
The m0on is approachmg its
Mrs. Faye VanC\:!.
full phase.
Mr. and Mrs . Lewis
The mornmg stars are
Daughtery, daughter and
Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
granddaughter, and Mr. and
The evening' stars are Venus
Mrs Everett Caldwell were
and Satw-n.
callers of Mr. and Mrs Francis
Those born on this date are
Cardwell one day this week.
under the sign of Taurus.
Mrs . Lena Parsons and
Bribsl1 composer Sir Arthur
· daughter-m-law, Pat Parsons,
Sullivan (of GJ!bert and Sulcalled on Mrs. Anthony
hvan ) was born May 13, 11142.
Ha'milton, who is recuperating
On thJs day m history :
at her home after several days
In 1607, Enghsh colomsts
spent 1n Ho)zer Medical
landed near the Ja mes Rtver m
Ce~ter .
V1rgmia to establish their first
Mr and Mrs. Chester Jones
pennanent residence m the
called on Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
New World. It was ,called
Fmk, Porter.
Jamestown
Guests and callers of Mrs W.
In 1848, the Umted States
H. Thomas dw-mg the week
declared war on Mexico
mcluded Mrs. Thelma GoodIn 1956, a pleasw-e craft
wm, Colllmbus; Warner Craft,
capstzed m the Java Sea and 73
Gallipohs; Mr. and Mrs. R. A.
Indonesians were drowned .
Couden, Columbus; Miss
In 1968, the United States and
Margaret Shtvely 1 Columbus;
North Vietnam began prelim•·
David ShJvely, Jackson; Mr.
nary peace talks m Paris .
and Mrs. Charles Cantrell and ·
two daughters, and Mrs. Edna - " -- - - - - - - -Goodall. Bidwell Route.
well and Mrs. W H. Thomas
Mr. and Mrs . Wtlliam Sifford were business visitors in
and family ; Toledo, calle&lt;) on Gallipolis Monday and called
Mr. and Mrs. John Vance and on the former 's daughter, Mrs.
famtly Sunday.
Garrett Sheets.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Jones
Pheneus
Layne spent
were in Oak Hill Frtday for Tuesday afternoon w1th
medical treatmen t.
Chester Jones.
Mr. and Mrs. James K.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilha.m Sifford
Thomas and son, Gallipolis, and fam1ly, Toledo, visited her
spent an evening with Mr. and mother, Bessie Vance and
Mrs Haldon Thomas.
daugher, Mary, Cherry Ridge.
Mrs. John Vance and They all enjoyed a week's
daughter, Ellen, shopped in vacation
through
West
Gallipolis Friday.
Virginia, Virginia and North
Mr. and Mrs. Francls \!ard- Carolina.

•

REV. JOHN BERGLAN

J

TOWELS

MRS. R. TROY

Mrs. H. Olin Troy wrote "Sing Unto the Lord A New
Song" a service of celebrahon for United Methodist Women.
"Sing Unto the Lord A New Song" wtll be the theme of the
day for the ",Cele,l&gt;ra\ion" Service of the West OhJO Conference Uni!ed Methodist Woinen, May 19th at Springfi~ld
United MethOdist Church, Spririgf•eid, Ohio. Mrs. Troy 'w•ll
be the keynote speaker for the day .
REV. JOHN BERG LAN , DIHECTOR of AdmissJOn' at
the Umted TheologtCal Seminary, Dayton, will admiruster
the Celebratwn of Holy Communion during the Celebration
Service of the West Ohio (,onference Uruted MethodJst
Women, May 19th at Springlteld Umted Methodist Church,
Sprmglield, Ohio .

Jurisdiction Umted Methcxhst
Women will condu ct the mstallahon service for the 197374 West Ohio Conference
United MethodJsl Women.
The Celebrahon of Holy
Commumon will be admimstered by the Rev John K .

Bergland of th e Um ted
Theological Semmary, Dayton,
OhJO
All members and fnends or
U1e Umted MethodJSl Church
are welcome and' cordially
mv1tcd to attend this important
and lnspira t.onal occasiOn

RIGHT TO LIMIT
QUANTITIES
"SCOT FARM"

''TOPPER'S"

BISCUITS

DAWN DOLL

Homestyle or Buttermilk

128{$
/CANS

THRU SUNDAY
MAY 20th WHILE

Born

to Lose

Deer Creek

BERRY'S WORLD

Inc ~~

off" ceremony . The Ohio Deparunent
ticipating.
of_Natural Resources participated by
When observing an Hlegal dump
sending the1r Environmental Coorthe s tudents were asked o~why do you
dlnator' Donna Sz.uhy, down (or the
tlunk people throw tlleir trash here?
week as an Instructor. Ohio's [)jvlSion " They are lazy ." " They don't know
&lt;i Forests and Preserves sent Charhe . a ny better ." " It's isolated, no one can
Knuth down for the week, also as an
see them do it "
mstructor . The U. S. Forest Service
Where qo you put your garbage?
''In the garbage can, in the creek.
(Uip ! )?
Coordinator from Milwaukee,
What do you thmk is the best wa}
Wisconsm.
to prevent this Illegal dumping? '·Fine
Bill Omgess from Lawrence
them," " Increase the fines," ''I don't
County Schools also particJpated as an
kn ow," " How about the sixth
tnstructor. County school superin. grade?," ''Yeah," " hey" - "That's
tendents and teachers gave freely of
us!" and so It went throughout the
llJeJr hme and effort to help make the
da y
lliree days a success
Even the bus drivers got mvolved.
Even the Coca-Cola Company
One hundred and eJghty stud~nts
donated softl drinks in what eise but
lS just a drop, but 1t's a start. A spinoff
returnable bottles.
of U1e week's actwities may be an
outdoor
land lab for Fairland School.
And !he students ? Well, they had
A start. A teacher workshop w1th
a ball. They found out they knew a lot
college credJt this fall to help teachers
about ecology and the environment, so
did the instructors.
teach usmg the process approach to
They were like young colts just let
1eanmg about our environment A
start
out to pas ture. When slow learners
found out their answers were J·ust as
The end result should be a
good (sometl·mes better) as the rest • generation of youngsters across this
they really pitched in and helped theJr
country that wJll be better equ1pped to
team' of four students work out the
make va lue judgments about this
answers · Towards the end of the day
mcreastnDly
complex world of ours
o
even the more unrulY and ad As Dr. Thomas Qwck stated, " A

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~!

~

~od';:';

Log

i-

--

.._

~o;:;~~onhv: y~ars

"The

Hannan Trace

BJIT. ALLANWOLTER
District Ranger
IRONTON - What does a sixth
grader know about ecology and environment? What does a sixth grader
Uunk about strip mining: ? Timber
sales? Water quality ' Litter and
dUmping? Recreation areas? .
The answers to these questions

~l~

h.
190l , lefta widow m abject poverty. T IS gifted

Televisi~n

Your Wayne National Forest

i

MAS!-4 51-&lt;E LOOKS FOR A VERY

to say, m re fere nce to avowed non·Corn m ums.ts who
nevert heless repeated the Commumst !me · " If 1t looks
composer had written inspiring popular music like a duck. waddles like a duck. and quacks hke a duck.
including "The Rosary" and " Mighty Lak' a 1 ca ll 1t a duc k "
At least one fa m 1Jy m Wmthrop, Mass, a nd two ot~ers
Rose" and more classical compositions such as ,
" Water Scenes" and a cantata, "The Quest. " m Collmsv1lle. Ill . arP toda y as king th emselves a slm.Jlar
Betimes he was a concert pianist and fme questJOn.
teacher. He dted at 40. Wtth the advent of
fn Wmthrop last January. 15 bearded, long-hatred men
ASCAP, Mrs. Nevin was saved the degradation wavi ng guns and shoutmg obscenitJes suddt nly invaded a
of poverty and Jtved out her lire thereafter home and proceeded to terroraze Jts occ upants In Collins'
ville on the' e venm g of Apnl 23, a s!malar ~ roup broke
comfor,tpbly, with dignity, without beggmg .
into a house and an apartment, agam mouthmg obscem~
Therefore Irvmg Berlin proved his courage ttes and brandishing weapons and, charges one cornplam ·
early, his talent always. In 1909 when he joined ant, held a gun to hls head and threatened to k1ll h1m .
songs orch-estrated to modern sounds as well as the Snyder music publishing house, no
In all three cases, the jnvaders turned Out to be federal ,
the " wall-to-wall 11 stations. playmg mOre songw riter ever worked so hard , so long, so state and local narcoti CS a gents who, acting on tips , had
traditionally melodic compositions. They are significantly wittily and successfully. In that mJS takenly broken mto the wron g homes In all three
cases, they left without a word of apology
awash wJth lrvmg's fantastic output.
1909,
he
enJOYed
hJs
ftrst
defmite
success
:
The questJO~ Js . If a man looks hke a criminal, talks
year,
Acouple of years ago Irvmg sent to some of
"Sadie Salome," based on the theatTif al furor of like a cr 1mmal and acts hke a cnmmal , what IS he? And
his friends a splendid personal Chnstrnas gift the Metropolitan Opera 's production of how much difference does Jt make 1f he carnes police·
a beauhfully bound, go lf~dged collection of "Salome," the \! Last Tango" of Its heyday. man's 1dentif1cation m h1s pocket ?
piano music ror several hundred of his com- Irving'S' hit was based on comic aspects of "The
Accordmg to Myles J Ambrose. special assistant at.
positions startmg w1th ''Abraham" to " You're
Dance of the Seven Veils" and was written by torney general In char ge of the Off&amp;ce for Drug Abuse
Lonely and I'm Lonely" (from "Louisiana
him to Iynes by Edgar Leslie, first in the Im· Law Enforceme nt, " Drug people are th e very vermm
humamly Occastonally we must adapt th~Jr dress and
Purchase") . We treasure ours.
tactics.,
pressive parade of song hits. In 1911 Irving of
Only a partial Jist of Berlin' songs 1s constarted wrHing words a~d music alone antl his
He did add , however , t hat the agents mvolved 10 these
severa1 days suffering from a
tained in ASCAP's BJOgraphical D1ctlonary ;
songs swept the world With a new style that has • a ffairs •'seem to have been gUJ!ty of a large dose of stuheart ailment. Friends wish
virtually book of Berlin's own would be needed
prevatled beyond the ftrst waves of each song's P•d•ty . People who use t heir badge for Jliegal purposes
him a return to better health
to include everything he's written On the success . ' 'Alexander's Ragtime Band '' struck a are wor se than the cnmmals they seek ' '
soon.
SUNDAY, MAY JJ, 1973
practical side, no doubt eXJsls that Irving Berhn globalenthustasm that hasn't faded yet. Not his
6 00 - F il m 4
Four of th e agents '" the Collms vJlle ra •ds , he said, had
Mr. and Mrs . Jimmie 6 30 - Th1s Week 4 , Bob Harrington 6. Israe l - A Real 1ty 10 ,
1.5 the b1gges t money maker among thousands of
b1ggest moneymaker, it still Is one of his most been suspended and he prom1sed ~ompensatlon for any
Holcomb and daughter Sorlja,
Newsmaker '73 13
members or the Amencan Society or Com· colorful achievements. It was only the begm- damage they dJd One ol the vJct•ms ha s filed s uJt for
7
00
- Commun1que 6, Old Time Gospe l Hour T3, T1 me for
of Columbus, Ohio, visited
$100,000
'
posers , Authors and Pubhshers : for the greateJ
Timothy 4.
mn g.
awhile Sunday with hts 7.30 - Fa1th for Today 8 , Rev1vat F1res 6 , Herald of Truth 3 .
It is questi onab le whether a ny amount of apologies or
part of hts hfe he has wntten words and music
Sales of Alexander 's ragtime smash were
Camera~ :fhree 10, Public Affa1rs 4
gra ndm other Mrs . Orpha
monetary compensatiOn can erase l he memories of those
-and has pubhshed his own great htls. He owm
mult1plymg as lrvtng repeated with three more moments of terror m the minds of the three fam1hes , as
7.45
Mo ~ning Report 4.
Lemon, at the home of Mr. and 8 00 -- Leonard
it all personally and he doesn 't divulge his total
Repass 8 , Gospel Caravan 6. Church Serv1ce
the same yea r :
Mysterious Rag, " "The well as ot hers who have gone through similar expenences
Mrs.
Max
P•ckett
and
famlly
13
.
Mormon
Cho1r
3, Day of D1scovery 4, Billy James Harg 1s
or annual income. Hts net worth is estimated Ragtime Viohn" and " Everybody's Doing It." that have not m ade the headlines
and h1s AJI.Amencan K1ds 10
on
Sugar
Creek
Road.
anywhere up to $100,000,000and beyond. Despite Four htts m a year from one songwriter who
8 30 - Oral Roberts 3, Your Health 4, Day of Discovery 8, Rex
What 1s more dLsturbmg 15 that s uch raids are not 11le·
Mrs. VivJan Blake has been
Humbard 13 ; Rev1val F1res 15, Kathryn Kuhlan 6, Da n
it all, Irving Berhn , as he had his 80th btrlhday wrote words and mustc startled the song- ga l, though Mr Ambrose seemed to im ply th at they were
Young 10
among
the
ailing
lor
the
past
They
are
made
pvsstble
by
the
co
ntroversial
"
no·kn
ock"
May 11, remains a toweringly simple man. He is
pubhshmg world. Especially the remarkable
8
55
- Black Cameo 4
two weeks with a severe attack
prov1s10n of the 1970 Drug Abuse Prevention and Control
never gaudy, tasteless, boastful, nor passively
9 00 - Smama Jub ilee 3; Cadle Chapel 4, Ora! Roberts 10, Rex
facthty for matching beautifully simple music Act, which gives otfJclal s th e n ght to enter prem1 ses With
of the flu and bronchial
Hum bard 6, Old· Fashioned Meeting 8.
or combatively envwus of any other songwnter.
with equally nch pertinent Iynes. Wild, his warrants ~1thout notice based on " probable cause" 1f
9 30 - Church by S1de of th e Road 4, Rev Charles Norns 13,
pneumonia.
She
was
a
patient
He knows the drudgery that goes mto hlS properly educated contemporaries sa 1d, there IS reason to beheve that ev 1dence m1 ght be destroyed
Pebbles &amp; Bamm Bamm 8, Mov1e " Warlock" 10.
in the Holzer Medical Center 10 00
or
someone
profession, especially at the start.
's
life
or
safety
be
enda
ngered
If
nohce
were
- Church Serv1ce 4, Cur ios1ty Shop 6, 13, Garden Club 8 ,
beca use of his total lack of formal musJcal
hosp1 tal for a few days, but ts
Th1s Is The Lifo 3 , Hou r of Fa1th 15.
.
Berhn had been wntmg songs only seven education; of any educatiOn, virtually - two g1ven
now at her home recuperating. 10· 15 - To Be Announced a
It is a far more Sf!rJOus matter than " misgwded zeal"
years and had been a hit tunesmith lor but five years in pubhc grade school was the total. And
10:30- Vlewpo1nt 8 . This 1s The L•fe 15, Captam Noah 3, lns1ght
Fnends wish her a speedy
4
m a good cause , as P reside nt Nixon remarked about the
years when he joined Victor Herbert and the
the memory of his early harsh life softened his Watergate affair If law enforcement officials make a
recovery.
~ ll .OO - PomtofViews6 . Joymllvlng13 , TVChapel3 , Focus on
then-gtan ts of popular melody to form ASCAP, public and pnvate demeanor . He lives practice of adoptmg the methods of cnme m the name of
Columbus 4, Camera Three 8 , Con~umer Report 15
Easter Sunday dmner guests 11 30 - Make A Wi sh 13 , Wally's Workshop 3, tns1ght 15, Face
of course agamst the wtshes or prOducers, cafe luxunously but quietly as a banker; more fightmg crime , and If mnocent people get hurt 1n the procof Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Halley
the Nation a.
owners, dancehal1 proprietors and theatncal qwetly in these gaudier banking days. His home ess. the natwn may eventuall y lose somethmg far more
mcluded
her
mother
Mrs
12.00
- Calv1n Evans 13, Rex Hum bard 8, Columbus Town
promoters who. had enjoyed a free musical ride on Beekman Place is a restrained If rich precio us than tt will ga m by th e roundm g up oJ a few
·
Meeti ng 10, At Issue 3, Doctors On Call 4, CBPA Bowlmg 6;
cnmmals
'
Stanley Waugh of Gallipolls,
Sacred Heart 15
with no regard for the ownership or the com- residence . His estate in the Catskills is a retreat
What It cou ld lose IS a large ch unk of tts fre edom
also Mrs. Dorothy Waugh of 12 30- Rev1va l Fires 13 , Meet the Press 3, 4, 15
modity from whtch they took thetr income.
from Tm Pan Alley and Manhattan 's madness.
Columbus, Ohio, Miss Barbara
1 00 - Lower Lighthouse 13; World Champ1onsh1p Tenn1s 3, -1 ,
It was 1914, the portents and prognoses were
lrvmg Berlm's fantastic succe~s. born of
1
Halley and friend Miss Hillie
1. 3
Newsmaker '73 6. 13
hazy. But the group of top songwriters meeting the rich gift of words and music, has been
Johns
on
of
Medford
New
2
00
F Troop 6. Film 13.
in Luchow's restaurant m then-midtown husbanded by perhaps the canmest executive
1
bth
td'ts
2·
JO
Film13
; Mr . Raberts 6
By L. M. Blake
Mrs . Emma Stroup of 'ersey, o are s .u en at
3 oo - Amencan Spor tsman 6. 13
Manhattan had a firm behef that their work, as busmess acumen in show busmess. His hfe has
Mtss Barbara Halley, who ts Columbus, 0 . spent Saturday Marshall Umvers1ty, Hun - 3 30 - Old Time Gospel Hour 8, Lee Trev1no's Golf for Sw1ngers
anyone's real estate, belonged to them fman· been f1lled with satisfactions, triumphs, great
a student at Marshall evemng visiting with their tingtOn W. Va .
10
ctally and to the listening world as pleasurable sadness fleetingly one of the great American
'
4:00 - Face the Naf1o~ 10, Marshall News Meet1ng 33, Cha rles
Umvers1ty, in Huntington, W. grandfather Garred Blake and
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Mason
Bla 1r's Better World 3, Golf Tournament 6, 13 . It Takes A
entertainment. The top men in their profession romances m the marriage of an up-from-theVa., and her girl friend , also a daughter Lulu Mae ,
Saturday
afTh
ief •
s
pent
awhtle
- Victory Herbert notably - were rich and ghetto Jewish kid loa legendary soctety beauty ;
student at Marshall, Miss
4·30 - Audubon W1ldi Jfe Theatre 33, NH L Act 1on 8 , Urban
Mr. and Mrs . Olaf Ray ternoon visiting with their
gettmg ncher i but the less successful were and their certainly happy~ver-after.
League Presents 10, Samt 15, Perry Mason 3
Htlhe Johnson of Medford, New Wtlliams, spent awhile Wed- daughter Mrs Lloyd Blake
5 00 - Animal World B. Lass1e 10 , R1pples33 , Star Trek 4
strugglmg. Their travatl ended happily because
Tomorrow - the " After."
Jersey, spent their Easter nesday evemng vlsitmg with who has been on th'e sick list
5 15 - Sing, Children, Si ng 33
th
·
·
·
5 30 - Animal World 10 ,• Sesame ·St. 33; It Takes A Th1ef 3,
vacatwn from the Umversity lhe1r son-in-law and daughter wl ppeumoma.
_,_
Protectors 8, Fa•th, for Today 15
n H
1
· vis1tmg with Barbara's parents Mr. and Mrs. Donovan Blake,
Russell
Wolford
reports
he
6
oo
~
News
4,
60·M1nutes
a,
10,
I've
Got
a Secret 13 , Kathry n
ON THE TV DIAL:
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Halley Crown City,
killed a large copperhead
Kuhlman 15
.
,
6
30
- UntamedWorld6 ; NBCNews3, 4.15; Huma n D1mens1on
Sunday: "High Road to Adventure" at 10, WBNS-TV ... And a
and other rf:lattves.
Mr. and Mrs. William J . snake Sunday mormng on the
33. Wa 1t Till Your Father Gets Home 13.
delight, W. C. Fields in his classic, "Never Give a Sucker an
Mrs. Jurrie Reynolds and Queen
ce lebrated
their lawn near h1s home. Mr. 7 00 - Lawrence Welk 13 : In the Know 10, Zoom 20, 33 , Wa1l
Even Break," at 11.30, WSA'lrTV.
Till Your Father Gets Home 6 , Satan to Adventure 3, Th1 s Is
Jenmfer Ott, of Route 588, and twentieth weddmg anniversary Wolfo d had lso killed
r
a
a
Your L1fe 4. Wild Kmgdom 15, Superstars of Rock a
on May 2, their children, Jeffie, copper head s1milar to this one,
7 30 - Let's Make A Deal 6 , D1ck Van Dyke 10, World of D1 sney
3, 4, 15 , Beve rly Hillbillies 8 , The Amencan R1ver 20, 33
Pamela , Marcua, Damel, on New Year's day.
8
00
•
20.- MASH8, 10 . FBI6, 13, In Saner Hours 33 , Turn ing Po1nts
Sunday supper guests of Mr.
DavJd and Terry!, helped them
t=:=::::.:::::::=:::::::::::::::=:::::::::=:::~=::::::·.: ::;.::: ::;. :::::::··:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·!·:·:::·:·:·&gt;:·:'~"»~·::»:·:·:·:::·:-:~;
and Mrs Russell Wolford and
9 · 00 - Masterp1ece Theatre 20, 33 , Mov1e " Where Eagles
celebrate the occasion.
Dare" 6, 13
Jackie Lee Blake of Dayton, family included her father
9 30 _ Barnabr_ Jones 8, 10.
·
j
\
~
~
OhJO, spent the weekend Garrcd Blake, of Gallipolis, 10 00 - Firmg 1ne 20, 33, Night Gallery
vtsJtmg wtth his parents Mr _ Mr and Mrs. Dick WII1s of 10 30 - We Th1nk You Shou ld Know 3 , H1gh Road to Ad ve ntu re
By Helen and Sue Hottel
10, Police Surgeon 15, Probe Conference w1th the Mayor 4,
and Mrs . Leo Blake and Columbus, Ohw, Miss Lulu
Half the George K1rby Comedy Hour 8
Blake of Gallipolis, Mr. and 11 :00 - News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15
family.
'
Tribute to a Friend
Mr . and Mrs. D1ck Wills of Mrs . Aaron Reynolds and son 11:15 - News 6, 8, 10, 13
Dear
Rap:
11 .30 - John ny Carson d, 15, Jack Paar 13, In Con ce rt 13,
By RAY CROMLEY
Columbus, Ohio spent the Terry, Jenmfer Ott, Rtchard
Mov1es " Never Give A Sucker An Even Break " 3 " A Man
I want to tell you about my best friend.
and Ronnie Wolford, all of
Atone" 8, " Mclintock"· 10
weekend
visiting
wLth
her
(Last of two related articles.)
9le's almost twice my age . She's mature, yet she is the first
· 1 00 - News 4, 13.
Route
588.
parents Mr and Mrs. Russell
to Say you're never to old to learn something ·new . I know she
WASHfNGTON !NEAl
Sunday guests of Mr. and
Wolford and family.
'
• MONDAY
, MAY 14, 1973
isn't
perfect,
and
she
would
be
the
first
to
admit
it.
But
I
wouldn't
The more hours this reporter spends 1earlin g Jud ge
Mrs. Dorothy Waugh of Mrs Leo Blake included
6 00 - Sunn se Sem1nar 4, Sacred Heart 10
want her any other way.
John J . S1nca ' s opm10ns the more certam th e concluswn
6 15 - Farmtime 10
Columbus, Ohio spent some Jackte Lee Blake of Dayto~ ,
that th1s 1s a most remarkable man
I've told her thmgs I wouldn't even write m my diary .I know
6
20 - Farm Report 13
few days recently visiting ,with Ohio, Mr. and ~rs . Donme
(1
25 ~ Paul Harvey 13
Perhaps more, than any other man th1s lifelon g Repubmy innermost thoughts are sale with her. I hope she knows the her parents-m-law Mr. and · Blake of Crown Ctty, Mr. and
6 30 - Columbus Today 4, B1ble Answers S Good News 13,
hcan JUdge , an E•senhower appomtee , pned the hd off
same of me.
School Scene 10.
Mrs. Stanley Waugh and other Mrs. George Ward, Barbara
Watergate when, as presiding Judge at the ongmal tl'lal
6
45
- Corncob Report 3
When
I
am
troubled,
I
can
always
turn
to
her.
She
will
never
he kept the press ure on until one man broke
relatives .
and Bryan, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
6
55
- Take Five for L1fe 15 ·
refuse me a shoulder to cry on.
.
" Talk to one man of !Jberty,"' noted Smca,
" and he
VIctor Halley, aged resident Hite, Freddie, Johnme and
7 00 - Today 3, 4, 15 , News, W~ather, Sp:::~rt s 6, CBS News 8, 10 ,
I would never hurt her intentionally, and I know from past
Jeff's Coll1e 13
1
understands you Talk to another and hls tdea of hberty
of the HamJlton Road was Richard, all of Huntington, W.
7 30 - Rompe r Room 6, Rocky &amp; Bu llw lnkle 13. Popeye 10
experiences she would protect me as best she can.
ts the freedom of the wolf to pillage the fold "
taken from Holzer Med 1cal Va ., Mr. and Mrs. Michael
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo10 , New Zoo Revue 13, Lass ie 6. Sesame
1 love her dearly, and I'm sure she knows. But all the Center hospital this week to the Blake and R•ckie Blake, of
Sirica Js a believer m excellence He holds that men
St 33
of educatiOn , wealth and power hold a greater res ponsi·
same, please print this and satisfy my foolish whim by saying to
8 30 - Jack Lalanne13 , New Zoo Revue6
home of his son and daughter- Proctorville, Don Hardesty of
bJ!Jty ror upholdmg moral standards than other men and
B 55 ~ local News 13
her and whoever else may read:
m-lawMr. and Mrs. Bob Halley Rocky Fork Road, called on
9 00 - Paul Dtxon 4, Ph il Donahue 15, C.;Jpt Kangal'"oo 8,
therefore mus t be pum shed more sever ely for their trans·
Mom, I'm proud to be your daughter! - CARRIE OF
Fnendly Junction 10 : AM 3 ; let's Make A Dea l6, Ben Casey
gressions.
·
and famtly Mr. Halley had Garred Blake and daughter in
t3.
FRESNO
He is annoyed, perhaps angered, by mtellectual conbeen a patJent in the hosp1tal Galhpohs, Monday afternoon.
..)
9 25 - Chuck White Reports 10
formity , by men who are content to be average, by men·
9· 30 - To Tell th e Truth 3; Jeopardy 6 , Hollywood 's Talk1ng 10
Dear Carrie:
tal stagnation He IS a believer m the uncommon man .
10 00 - Columbus S1x Call1ng 6, Dick Van Dyke 131 Dinah Shore
3, 15, Joker's Wild 8, 10
.,_
We saved your letter until Mother's Day because it's about
" Government," says Sirica, "is our busmess and we
10
30
Split
Second
13,
Baffle3,
4, 15; $10,000 Pyram1d 8, 10
\
get the kind of government we ask for . If we are to have
the nicest gift a girl can give to her mother.
11
00
Password
13
,
Sale
of
the
Century
3,
4, 15, Love America n
good government, and preserve our freedom , the lawyer
Let's hope quite a lot of "moms" read it along with their
Style 6; Gamb1t 8, 10, Elec Co 20.
(judge) must be m the lead . The corruption of gove rn 11 · 30 - Bew ttched 6, 13. Hol lywood Squares J, 4, 15, Love of L1fe
special breakfast-in-bed on May 13th. - HELEN AND SUE
ments the world over 15 caused by the fa•lure of the .
8, 10, Sesa me St. 20
+++
citizen to meet his re~ pon s tblhhe s
"
11 55 ---- News 8 , Dan lmel's World 10
Helen imd Sue:
12 · 00 - Password 6, News 10, 13, Contact 8 . Bob Braun 50 50
In a speech to students and graduates· "So I urge you.
Club 4, Jeopardy 3, 15
I'm
a
whJte,
middle-class
male
and
I,
too,
feel
discriminated
therefore, to search your so uls and ask yourselves what
12 · 30 - Spl1t Second 6. 3 W's 3, 15; Search for To"morrow 8, 10
you really thmk your goals are in hfe . H yo u feel the
against. Not only minorities (black, red, brown) get first con12 :55 - NBC News 3, 15
motivatiop to beco!Pe a champion of good causes , how·
1 00 - All My Children 6, 13, News 3, It's Your Bet 8 , Gret? n
sideration at colleges or for jobs, but we must alSo contend with
ever unpopular , then don 't put the courtr~om off limits
Acres' 10. Not For' Women CAlly 15
'
women now. Those ''quotas'' rnust be filled - then, if there is any
1
30
30nAMatch3,
4,
15,
Let's
Ma
keADea
l 13 , As the World
" Get in there and fi ght We have too many spectators
money left, we white guys get a whack at things.
Turns
8, 10 , Bowling 6
m this country already ," he t~lls yo un g lawyers And
'2. 00 - Days of Our L1Ves 3, 4, 15 , Newlywed Game 13, M1ke
In the past three weeks I've missed out on two jobs because I
deplores the lack of strong advocates to espouse great
Douglass 6, Guiding l;ght 8, 10.
wasn't female. They're even infiltrating the police department,
'
pnnctples or law
2· 30 - Doctors 3, 4, 15. Dating Game 13 , Edge of Night 8, 10
insisting they be put on regular beats.
3·00 - Another World 3. 4, 15 . General Hospiial 6, 13 . Pnce Is
Sirica is a blunt and pragmatic man , on one occasiOn
R1ght 8. 10, Understanding Afnca 20
deciding that the testimony of one particularly well.
What's a guy to do, outside or becoming a transvestite? 3 30 - Return of Peyton Place 3, 15, One Life to L1 ve 6, 13,
informed Witness would " not be ruled out by carpmg
DONE OUT AND IN ( andneedin~ money for college) ,
Secret Storm 10 , Ptlil Donahue 4 , Fren ch Chef 20 ,
technicahties"
·1For, as he said on another occaswn J
'
Hollywood's Talking 8
DOAI :
" a trial is nothm g really but a stud•ed s ~a r c h for the
4 00 - Mister Cartoon 3, love Ame n ca n Style 13, Fl1ntstones 6 ,
We hear Ma Be11 is looking for '~sons." In some areas the
truth."
Somer:set15 , Sesa me Sf 20, 33 , Mov1e " Meet Me At the Fa1r"
10
.
telephone
company has pulled a switch: it's actively recruiting
He believes ferventl y m our jud1dal system " Des pite
4:30 - Pett1 coa t Junction 3; I Love Lucy 6. Merv Gnffm 4 ;
male operators.
the ImperfectiOns of man . this system contmues to
W1ld, Wild West 13 , Abbott &amp; Costello 8, My little Marg1e 15
work- day after day, year after year - Selthng the dJS'Round-the-clock hours make this work great lor college
5:00
- Bonanza 3, B1g Valley 6, HazelS , Mr Rogers 20, 33,
putes and controversies of litigants w1thm the orderly
students. Good luck! - HELEN AND SUE
Andy Griff1th 15
admmistration of justice
. " In this regard , of law¥ers
5.30 - BeverlY. Hlflb1tl 1es8 , Elecfnc Co 33 , Gome r Pyle, USMC
and judges . " Much •• expected of us in the area of eth•cal
13; Death Valley Days 15, Hodgepodge Lodge 20
Dear Rap :
5 55 - Earl N1g,htingale 15
conduct, and !hat is as tt should be . "
I'm in favor of lowermg discrimmation, but I think our
6 00 - News3, 4, B, 10, 15 , ABC News 13 ; Sesame St 20f Around
At times , too, S1nca IS a believer m very toug h sen·
the Bend 33, Truth or Conseq 6
socieiy is going too far. Betieve me, I'm not prejudiced - just
tences. On sentencmg a man lor 15 to 45 years for armed
6
30
~ ABC News 6 ; CBS News 8, 10. I Dream of Jeann1e 13 ,
robbery .
desperate.
News 3, 4, 15, lns1g ht 33
"It is completely unreasonable to say that pum shment
8.00 - Truth or Conseq 3, Beat the Clock 4, News 6. 10, Circus
1 recently found out that one of my friends, a member of a
13 , Whaf''S My Lme 8, Elec. Cd 20 , Read Your Way Lfp 33 ,
is not a deterrent to cnme I thmk the deterrent effect
minority group, received $1,600 to attend a junior college. He has
Saint 15; Take Five 5
this sentence migh\ have on others JS all the more impor·
a 2.0 grade point average from high school. This is just one of
7 30 - To Tell the Truth 6, Y.oung Dr . Kildare 8 . Hollywood
tant m this case because from th e mformatwn I have
Squares 4; Traffic COurt 10 , Do You Read Me 20 . Mov1e
many
cases.
available to me the defendant ... has apparently been
" Tarzan Escapes" 13, Ep1sode Acfton 33 ; Bobby Goldsboro 3
I am an 18-year-old freshman in a university near my home.
makmJ1 a name for himself among the youthful under·
8 00 - Rowan &amp; Martin's Laugh In 3, 4, 15, Gunsmoke 8, 10 ,
world m the metropolitan area and IS . looked upon with
Jacques Cousteau 6; Stal1n 20, 33.
My mother, a widow, is trying to support my sister and me. I
awe and admiration by thts youthful cnmmal element.
9 00 - Mov1es " Th e Pn va te Na vy of Sgt O' Farre ll'' :l, 4, 15,
work part time to make ends meet.
" Where Eagle s Dare" 6, 13
" I would hope that the sentence unposed m tins case
Yet I apphed lor many scholarships last fall, receiving only
9· 3o-- Dor fs Dav 8. 10.
1973 b¥ NEA
WJII inspJre at least an eq~al amount ol awe m the eyes
10:00 - Women of the Year 1973 8, 10 , What About Tomrrow 6,
one for $250 which lasted only one semester. This was gtven to me
of this element causmg them to think seriously betoH'
"I
guess
this
inflation
b~siness
affects everybody. Hon .
13 ; News 20 , Bill Moyers' Journal 33.
by an organization of which I am a member . .
embarking on any cnminal v?nture
''
ll · OO - News3, 4,6,8, 10, 13,15
estlyl My husband hit t~e ceiling when the bill came lor
Thanks for printing the midd)e-class male's stde qf 1t, Helen
11 ·30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15 ; Dick Cavett 6, 13 , Movies " The
Mr Nixon would do well to consider 1hls man fo1 Ow
Fifi's war,drobe!"
Moon Is Blue" 8 ; "Shoc.,k Corndor " 10.
'
next vacancy on the Sup1eme CoUI't
and Sue. We need help too. - CONCERNED STUDENT
1: 00 - News 13.

·

QUANTITIES

LAST

SPRAY

~AI

TOMATO CATSU

2CAN{$
JFOR

The Hu men e So c1 e/y ol the&gt; Unrled S li'JII'!S

Ti]_e_re are. _s_o_ many puppies and JsJttens

"SIMONIZE"

· "DEL MONTE"

"THERMOS"

SOFT AND EASY

FRUIT ·DRINK

44 QT. STEEL

born in this country that few of them find
permanent homes. The rest of th em lead
lonely, suffering lives-often cut short
under the wheels of a car or in the death
room of a pound .

Don't be responsible lor more suffering
and needless death. Have your pet
spayed or neutered.
A

S"f\IICe o f The Hurnane SoC iety or the Uni ted State s

CAR WAX

.00

PINEAPPLE ORANGE
&amp;
PINEAPPLE GRAPEFRUIT

3
46

ICE CHEST

�•

I

EDITORIAL

•

BY JACJ( O'BRIAN
TH~ MELODY LINGERS ON
NEW YORK (KFS) - Irving B"lin's songs
are marvelous - and constant. I swear on a
stack of Berlin songs that, at 3:25a.m., as I am
writing this column, "Always," by Irving
-Berlin, is coming out of my radio v1a station
WTFM, New York. On any day or mght, in fact
all day' and night, Berlin melodies permeate the
radio air in the New York area, which ts alive
with the sQ..und of music from 71 stations not
mcludmg TV.
The very profusion of Berlin songs is and
wiD be Irving's hardly elusive, never abstract
monwnent. The rock stations even grab his

Irving Berhn and Victor Herbert -stood their
contrapuntal ground.
SJgmficanUy, Ethelbert Nevin, who died in

Jl-:- Tho; ~~day Times- Sentinel, Sunday, May 13, 1973

~;.:o.z.~·*·f.:.:.:::::..&lt;:::=:.:::::;:;:::;::::::::::::::~=::::;:;:;:::::::::;:;:::::::::.:::::::;:::·:::·::&amp;:8:::::::!::::::::·::.?.·::;!:,!:•::;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;::::·:=:·::;.;:·:::::,:;;:;.:::::::-:::::::.-:.~~~::!!::&lt;::::::::!•!·~::::~:::::·:·;.;:::::::::::::::::;.;::::::=:·:=:·:·:::·:·:::·
~

~====~~====T=h=e~y'=II=DQ==It=E=ve=r~y=T=i=m=e===~="========~

Long Arm of Law
M~st Hbve Limits

IIPJ. ~EE~S !.IKE BAKING I'OMEMADE
RAISJN BREAC! 60 5.HE PlU&gt;JGES

Rll?&gt;lT IN ...

~f.

T~EN IN T~E MlDOLE Cf' T~ E MJS&gt;-1-

NECE.SSI&gt;.QY"INGREOIENT· • ·

~

It was Has ton's late Hichard Cardinal Cushmg who used

~~

i~
~~

~;::
~
~~;
~~

·.~•_,;~_,!

:

came fast and furious three days
recently when 1110 stxth graders from
&lt;;'!'!
Lawrence County participated in
:::: ''Forest Ecology Days."
i1;
Had it not been for schedulu1g
·:·:
bl
1
1 t
d Sl .
.::.'; • pro ems or ron on an
· th gra ders m
·
:::: La wrence sc hooIs, a ll siX
•··
llJ
ty
uld
h
t'
·
ted
:i:
e coun wo
ave par IClpa . If
·.·:
;:;: arrangemen ts can be rna de, they too
:::: will be involved later.
;:;:
This type of participation and
::::
·
bee
0 ul ha
;:[
vlgo.
people are troly concerned about
ecology and the effects of our society

RAY CROMLEY

Sirica Pressure
Broke VVatergate

f · Generation Rap
~

;:;:
Dmgess, m ge tti'ng
eff orts of B'll
1
.'.':':':
.·:.·: , Forest Ecology Days off the ground. It
··
fl ted · th
;,,._'.~.:. IS reDr.ec Thomas
m o erruick,
ways Ass1stant
;;;:..
Superintendent of ll Ohio Schools
"
~f;:
fr om Columbus made a special trtp to

••

••

~ang~i~.u~vfr:~e~~t :~~CaJt~:~

12 TO 8 SUNDAY

137 PINE STREET
GALliPOLIS, OHIO
-

700 WEST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO

ROUND .STEAK-

.09
BONE-IN

LB.

Church women
to launch new

.
service group

"GAlA"

PLAY SHORTS

'

ATHENS - "Smg Unto the
Lord A New Song" will be the
theme of the day for the ServJce of Celebrallon of the West
Oh10 Conference " United
Methodtst Women" at the
Springfteld Central United
Methodtst Church, Saturday,
May 19
Thls new organization will
emerge from the present
structures of the Women's
Society of Christian Service
and the Wesleyan Servtce
which
together
Gutld ,
represent over 100 years of
service.
The •meeting will begm at
9:45 a .m. with Mrs. M. Clyde
Condrey, prestdent of the
Conference Women's Society of
Chnsban Service and Miss
Sara Cox, Chairperson for the
Conference Wesleyan Service
Gutld, presiding. Thts session
w1ll conclude the final business
of the two organizational
structures.
Election of ofrJcers for the
new organizatton, " United
Methodist Women" will be a
part of the morning agenda,
wtth B•shop F. Gerald Ensley
presiding.
Keynote speaker for the day

wtll be Mrs . H. Olin Troy of
Chattanooga, Tenn ., composer
of the Servtce of Celebration
for
" United
Methodist
Women," "Smg Unto the Lord
A New Song."
Featured at the CelebratJOn
WJll be a new singing group of
"Singmg Wives of Ministers."
Thts group lS made up of
mimsters' wives from the 14
dtstrtcls of the West Ohio
Conference under the auspices
of the Cabinet W1ves. The
"Singing Wives" will make
their debut at this time and will
be singing again for the Annual
Conference at Lakeside in
June . Mrs. John S. (Elinor J
Brown directs the chorus, and
Mrs. Richard (Pat ) Carson JS
the accompanist.
A group of dancers under the
directwn of Mrs. Wm. Glover
wtll lead in a worship expenence using the Christian
Art of Ltturgtcal Dance. The
dan~rs and Mrs Glover are
act1ve members and officers of
the Women's SocJety of
Chnstian Service of the Forest
Chapel Ur.ited Methodist
Church m Cmcmnah.
Mrs. Fred Wmtle, President
of the
North
Central

The Almanac
By Untied Press International
Today ts Sunday, May 13, the
By Mrs. W. H. Thomas
133rd day of 1973 w1th 232 to
Mrs. Mane Vance was a
follow .
'
Saturday afternoon caller of
The m0on is approachmg its
Mrs. Faye VanC\:!.
full phase.
Mr. and Mrs . Lewis
The mornmg stars are
Daughtery, daughter and
Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
granddaughter, and Mr. and
The evening' stars are Venus
Mrs Everett Caldwell were
and Satw-n.
callers of Mr. and Mrs Francis
Those born on this date are
Cardwell one day this week.
under the sign of Taurus.
Mrs . Lena Parsons and
Bribsl1 composer Sir Arthur
· daughter-m-law, Pat Parsons,
Sullivan (of GJ!bert and Sulcalled on Mrs. Anthony
hvan ) was born May 13, 11142.
Ha'milton, who is recuperating
On thJs day m history :
at her home after several days
In 1607, Enghsh colomsts
spent 1n Ho)zer Medical
landed near the Ja mes Rtver m
Ce~ter .
V1rgmia to establish their first
Mr and Mrs. Chester Jones
pennanent residence m the
called on Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
New World. It was ,called
Fmk, Porter.
Jamestown
Guests and callers of Mrs W.
In 1848, the Umted States
H. Thomas dw-mg the week
declared war on Mexico
mcluded Mrs. Thelma GoodIn 1956, a pleasw-e craft
wm, Colllmbus; Warner Craft,
capstzed m the Java Sea and 73
Gallipohs; Mr. and Mrs. R. A.
Indonesians were drowned .
Couden, Columbus; Miss
In 1968, the United States and
Margaret Shtvely 1 Columbus;
North Vietnam began prelim•·
David ShJvely, Jackson; Mr.
nary peace talks m Paris .
and Mrs. Charles Cantrell and ·
two daughters, and Mrs. Edna - " -- - - - - - - -Goodall. Bidwell Route.
well and Mrs. W H. Thomas
Mr. and Mrs . Wtlliam Sifford were business visitors in
and family ; Toledo, calle&lt;) on Gallipolis Monday and called
Mr. and Mrs. John Vance and on the former 's daughter, Mrs.
famtly Sunday.
Garrett Sheets.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Jones
Pheneus
Layne spent
were in Oak Hill Frtday for Tuesday afternoon w1th
medical treatmen t.
Chester Jones.
Mr. and Mrs. James K.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilha.m Sifford
Thomas and son, Gallipolis, and fam1ly, Toledo, visited her
spent an evening with Mr. and mother, Bessie Vance and
Mrs Haldon Thomas.
daugher, Mary, Cherry Ridge.
Mrs. John Vance and They all enjoyed a week's
daughter, Ellen, shopped in vacation
through
West
Gallipolis Friday.
Virginia, Virginia and North
Mr. and Mrs. Francls \!ard- Carolina.

•

REV. JOHN BERGLAN

J

TOWELS

MRS. R. TROY

Mrs. H. Olin Troy wrote "Sing Unto the Lord A New
Song" a service of celebrahon for United Methodist Women.
"Sing Unto the Lord A New Song" wtll be the theme of the
day for the ",Cele,l&gt;ra\ion" Service of the West OhJO Conference Uni!ed Methodist Woinen, May 19th at Springfi~ld
United MethOdist Church, Spririgf•eid, Ohio. Mrs. Troy 'w•ll
be the keynote speaker for the day .
REV. JOHN BERG LAN , DIHECTOR of AdmissJOn' at
the Umted TheologtCal Seminary, Dayton, will admiruster
the Celebratwn of Holy Communion during the Celebration
Service of the West Ohio (,onference Uruted MethodJst
Women, May 19th at Springlteld Umted Methodist Church,
Sprmglield, Ohio .

Jurisdiction Umted Methcxhst
Women will condu ct the mstallahon service for the 197374 West Ohio Conference
United MethodJsl Women.
The Celebrahon of Holy
Commumon will be admimstered by the Rev John K .

Bergland of th e Um ted
Theological Semmary, Dayton,
OhJO
All members and fnends or
U1e Umted MethodJSl Church
are welcome and' cordially
mv1tcd to attend this important
and lnspira t.onal occasiOn

RIGHT TO LIMIT
QUANTITIES
"SCOT FARM"

''TOPPER'S"

BISCUITS

DAWN DOLL

Homestyle or Buttermilk

128{$
/CANS

THRU SUNDAY
MAY 20th WHILE

Born

to Lose

Deer Creek

BERRY'S WORLD

Inc ~~

off" ceremony . The Ohio Deparunent
ticipating.
of_Natural Resources participated by
When observing an Hlegal dump
sending the1r Environmental Coorthe s tudents were asked o~why do you
dlnator' Donna Sz.uhy, down (or the
tlunk people throw tlleir trash here?
week as an Instructor. Ohio's [)jvlSion " They are lazy ." " They don't know
&lt;i Forests and Preserves sent Charhe . a ny better ." " It's isolated, no one can
Knuth down for the week, also as an
see them do it "
mstructor . The U. S. Forest Service
Where qo you put your garbage?
''In the garbage can, in the creek.
(Uip ! )?
Coordinator from Milwaukee,
What do you thmk is the best wa}
Wisconsm.
to prevent this Illegal dumping? '·Fine
Bill Omgess from Lawrence
them," " Increase the fines," ''I don't
County Schools also particJpated as an
kn ow," " How about the sixth
tnstructor. County school superin. grade?," ''Yeah," " hey" - "That's
tendents and teachers gave freely of
us!" and so It went throughout the
llJeJr hme and effort to help make the
da y
lliree days a success
Even the bus drivers got mvolved.
Even the Coca-Cola Company
One hundred and eJghty stud~nts
donated softl drinks in what eise but
lS just a drop, but 1t's a start. A spinoff
returnable bottles.
of U1e week's actwities may be an
outdoor
land lab for Fairland School.
And !he students ? Well, they had
A start. A teacher workshop w1th
a ball. They found out they knew a lot
college credJt this fall to help teachers
about ecology and the environment, so
did the instructors.
teach usmg the process approach to
They were like young colts just let
1eanmg about our environment A
start
out to pas ture. When slow learners
found out their answers were J·ust as
The end result should be a
good (sometl·mes better) as the rest • generation of youngsters across this
they really pitched in and helped theJr
country that wJll be better equ1pped to
team' of four students work out the
make va lue judgments about this
answers · Towards the end of the day
mcreastnDly
complex world of ours
o
even the more unrulY and ad As Dr. Thomas Qwck stated, " A

l:,~:::::~::,:::,:,:,:,:,:,::,,::,.:::,:.:~::,,::.,:,~:,::,~:::·&gt;:·::::.:,:,:,:,:,::::,,,,,,:,:,:::,:::~:::::::,:;i::::::,:,;:::::::::::::::,:::,:,,:,,::~~:::,:::,,:,:::,,,:,:::,::~;~;-:-:4~

~!

~

~od';:';

Log

i-

--

.._

~o;:;~~onhv: y~ars

"The

Hannan Trace

BJIT. ALLANWOLTER
District Ranger
IRONTON - What does a sixth
grader know about ecology and environment? What does a sixth grader
Uunk about strip mining: ? Timber
sales? Water quality ' Litter and
dUmping? Recreation areas? .
The answers to these questions

~l~

h.
190l , lefta widow m abject poverty. T IS gifted

Televisi~n

Your Wayne National Forest

i

MAS!-4 51-&lt;E LOOKS FOR A VERY

to say, m re fere nce to avowed non·Corn m ums.ts who
nevert heless repeated the Commumst !me · " If 1t looks
composer had written inspiring popular music like a duck. waddles like a duck. and quacks hke a duck.
including "The Rosary" and " Mighty Lak' a 1 ca ll 1t a duc k "
At least one fa m 1Jy m Wmthrop, Mass, a nd two ot~ers
Rose" and more classical compositions such as ,
" Water Scenes" and a cantata, "The Quest. " m Collmsv1lle. Ill . arP toda y as king th emselves a slm.Jlar
Betimes he was a concert pianist and fme questJOn.
teacher. He dted at 40. Wtth the advent of
fn Wmthrop last January. 15 bearded, long-hatred men
ASCAP, Mrs. Nevin was saved the degradation wavi ng guns and shoutmg obscenitJes suddt nly invaded a
of poverty and Jtved out her lire thereafter home and proceeded to terroraze Jts occ upants In Collins'
ville on the' e venm g of Apnl 23, a s!malar ~ roup broke
comfor,tpbly, with dignity, without beggmg .
into a house and an apartment, agam mouthmg obscem~
Therefore Irvmg Berlin proved his courage ttes and brandishing weapons and, charges one cornplam ·
early, his talent always. In 1909 when he joined ant, held a gun to hls head and threatened to k1ll h1m .
songs orch-estrated to modern sounds as well as the Snyder music publishing house, no
In all three cases, the jnvaders turned Out to be federal ,
the " wall-to-wall 11 stations. playmg mOre songw riter ever worked so hard , so long, so state and local narcoti CS a gents who, acting on tips , had
traditionally melodic compositions. They are significantly wittily and successfully. In that mJS takenly broken mto the wron g homes In all three
cases, they left without a word of apology
awash wJth lrvmg's fantastic output.
1909,
he
enJOYed
hJs
ftrst
defmite
success
:
The questJO~ Js . If a man looks hke a criminal, talks
year,
Acouple of years ago Irvmg sent to some of
"Sadie Salome," based on the theatTif al furor of like a cr 1mmal and acts hke a cnmmal , what IS he? And
his friends a splendid personal Chnstrnas gift the Metropolitan Opera 's production of how much difference does Jt make 1f he carnes police·
a beauhfully bound, go lf~dged collection of "Salome," the \! Last Tango" of Its heyday. man's 1dentif1cation m h1s pocket ?
piano music ror several hundred of his com- Irving'S' hit was based on comic aspects of "The
Accordmg to Myles J Ambrose. special assistant at.
positions startmg w1th ''Abraham" to " You're
Dance of the Seven Veils" and was written by torney general In char ge of the Off&amp;ce for Drug Abuse
Lonely and I'm Lonely" (from "Louisiana
him to Iynes by Edgar Leslie, first in the Im· Law Enforceme nt, " Drug people are th e very vermm
humamly Occastonally we must adapt th~Jr dress and
Purchase") . We treasure ours.
tactics.,
pressive parade of song hits. In 1911 Irving of
Only a partial Jist of Berlin' songs 1s constarted wrHing words a~d music alone antl his
He did add , however , t hat the agents mvolved 10 these
severa1 days suffering from a
tained in ASCAP's BJOgraphical D1ctlonary ;
songs swept the world With a new style that has • a ffairs •'seem to have been gUJ!ty of a large dose of stuheart ailment. Friends wish
virtually book of Berlin's own would be needed
prevatled beyond the ftrst waves of each song's P•d•ty . People who use t heir badge for Jliegal purposes
him a return to better health
to include everything he's written On the success . ' 'Alexander's Ragtime Band '' struck a are wor se than the cnmmals they seek ' '
soon.
SUNDAY, MAY JJ, 1973
practical side, no doubt eXJsls that Irving Berhn globalenthustasm that hasn't faded yet. Not his
6 00 - F il m 4
Four of th e agents '" the Collms vJlle ra •ds , he said, had
Mr. and Mrs . Jimmie 6 30 - Th1s Week 4 , Bob Harrington 6. Israe l - A Real 1ty 10 ,
1.5 the b1gges t money maker among thousands of
b1ggest moneymaker, it still Is one of his most been suspended and he prom1sed ~ompensatlon for any
Holcomb and daughter Sorlja,
Newsmaker '73 13
members or the Amencan Society or Com· colorful achievements. It was only the begm- damage they dJd One ol the vJct•ms ha s filed s uJt for
7
00
- Commun1que 6, Old Time Gospe l Hour T3, T1 me for
of Columbus, Ohio, visited
$100,000
'
posers , Authors and Pubhshers : for the greateJ
Timothy 4.
mn g.
awhile Sunday with hts 7.30 - Fa1th for Today 8 , Rev1vat F1res 6 , Herald of Truth 3 .
It is questi onab le whether a ny amount of apologies or
part of hts hfe he has wntten words and music
Sales of Alexander 's ragtime smash were
Camera~ :fhree 10, Public Affa1rs 4
gra ndm other Mrs . Orpha
monetary compensatiOn can erase l he memories of those
-and has pubhshed his own great htls. He owm
mult1plymg as lrvtng repeated with three more moments of terror m the minds of the three fam1hes , as
7.45
Mo ~ning Report 4.
Lemon, at the home of Mr. and 8 00 -- Leonard
it all personally and he doesn 't divulge his total
Repass 8 , Gospel Caravan 6. Church Serv1ce
the same yea r :
Mysterious Rag, " "The well as ot hers who have gone through similar expenences
Mrs.
Max
P•ckett
and
famlly
13
.
Mormon
Cho1r
3, Day of D1scovery 4, Billy James Harg 1s
or annual income. Hts net worth is estimated Ragtime Viohn" and " Everybody's Doing It." that have not m ade the headlines
and h1s AJI.Amencan K1ds 10
on
Sugar
Creek
Road.
anywhere up to $100,000,000and beyond. Despite Four htts m a year from one songwriter who
8 30 - Oral Roberts 3, Your Health 4, Day of Discovery 8, Rex
What 1s more dLsturbmg 15 that s uch raids are not 11le·
Mrs. VivJan Blake has been
Humbard 13 ; Rev1val F1res 15, Kathryn Kuhlan 6, Da n
it all, Irving Berhn , as he had his 80th btrlhday wrote words and mustc startled the song- ga l, though Mr Ambrose seemed to im ply th at they were
Young 10
among
the
ailing
lor
the
past
They
are
made
pvsstble
by
the
co
ntroversial
"
no·kn
ock"
May 11, remains a toweringly simple man. He is
pubhshmg world. Especially the remarkable
8
55
- Black Cameo 4
two weeks with a severe attack
prov1s10n of the 1970 Drug Abuse Prevention and Control
never gaudy, tasteless, boastful, nor passively
9 00 - Smama Jub ilee 3; Cadle Chapel 4, Ora! Roberts 10, Rex
facthty for matching beautifully simple music Act, which gives otfJclal s th e n ght to enter prem1 ses With
of the flu and bronchial
Hum bard 6, Old· Fashioned Meeting 8.
or combatively envwus of any other songwnter.
with equally nch pertinent Iynes. Wild, his warrants ~1thout notice based on " probable cause" 1f
9 30 - Church by S1de of th e Road 4, Rev Charles Norns 13,
pneumonia.
She
was
a
patient
He knows the drudgery that goes mto hlS properly educated contemporaries sa 1d, there IS reason to beheve that ev 1dence m1 ght be destroyed
Pebbles &amp; Bamm Bamm 8, Mov1e " Warlock" 10.
in the Holzer Medical Center 10 00
or
someone
profession, especially at the start.
's
life
or
safety
be
enda
ngered
If
nohce
were
- Church Serv1ce 4, Cur ios1ty Shop 6, 13, Garden Club 8 ,
beca use of his total lack of formal musJcal
hosp1 tal for a few days, but ts
Th1s Is The Lifo 3 , Hou r of Fa1th 15.
.
Berhn had been wntmg songs only seven education; of any educatiOn, virtually - two g1ven
now at her home recuperating. 10· 15 - To Be Announced a
It is a far more Sf!rJOus matter than " misgwded zeal"
years and had been a hit tunesmith lor but five years in pubhc grade school was the total. And
10:30- Vlewpo1nt 8 . This 1s The L•fe 15, Captam Noah 3, lns1ght
Fnends wish her a speedy
4
m a good cause , as P reside nt Nixon remarked about the
years when he joined Victor Herbert and the
the memory of his early harsh life softened his Watergate affair If law enforcement officials make a
recovery.
~ ll .OO - PomtofViews6 . Joymllvlng13 , TVChapel3 , Focus on
then-gtan ts of popular melody to form ASCAP, public and pnvate demeanor . He lives practice of adoptmg the methods of cnme m the name of
Columbus 4, Camera Three 8 , Con~umer Report 15
Easter Sunday dmner guests 11 30 - Make A Wi sh 13 , Wally's Workshop 3, tns1ght 15, Face
of course agamst the wtshes or prOducers, cafe luxunously but quietly as a banker; more fightmg crime , and If mnocent people get hurt 1n the procof Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Halley
the Nation a.
owners, dancehal1 proprietors and theatncal qwetly in these gaudier banking days. His home ess. the natwn may eventuall y lose somethmg far more
mcluded
her
mother
Mrs
12.00
- Calv1n Evans 13, Rex Hum bard 8, Columbus Town
promoters who. had enjoyed a free musical ride on Beekman Place is a restrained If rich precio us than tt will ga m by th e roundm g up oJ a few
·
Meeti ng 10, At Issue 3, Doctors On Call 4, CBPA Bowlmg 6;
cnmmals
'
Stanley Waugh of Gallipolls,
Sacred Heart 15
with no regard for the ownership or the com- residence . His estate in the Catskills is a retreat
What It cou ld lose IS a large ch unk of tts fre edom
also Mrs. Dorothy Waugh of 12 30- Rev1va l Fires 13 , Meet the Press 3, 4, 15
modity from whtch they took thetr income.
from Tm Pan Alley and Manhattan 's madness.
Columbus, Ohio, Miss Barbara
1 00 - Lower Lighthouse 13; World Champ1onsh1p Tenn1s 3, -1 ,
It was 1914, the portents and prognoses were
lrvmg Berlm's fantastic succe~s. born of
1
Halley and friend Miss Hillie
1. 3
Newsmaker '73 6. 13
hazy. But the group of top songwriters meeting the rich gift of words and music, has been
Johns
on
of
Medford
New
2
00
F Troop 6. Film 13.
in Luchow's restaurant m then-midtown husbanded by perhaps the canmest executive
1
bth
td'ts
2·
JO
Film13
; Mr . Raberts 6
By L. M. Blake
Mrs . Emma Stroup of 'ersey, o are s .u en at
3 oo - Amencan Spor tsman 6. 13
Manhattan had a firm behef that their work, as busmess acumen in show busmess. His hfe has
Mtss Barbara Halley, who ts Columbus, 0 . spent Saturday Marshall Umvers1ty, Hun - 3 30 - Old Time Gospel Hour 8, Lee Trev1no's Golf for Sw1ngers
anyone's real estate, belonged to them fman· been f1lled with satisfactions, triumphs, great
a student at Marshall evemng visiting with their tingtOn W. Va .
10
ctally and to the listening world as pleasurable sadness fleetingly one of the great American
'
4:00 - Face the Naf1o~ 10, Marshall News Meet1ng 33, Cha rles
Umvers1ty, in Huntington, W. grandfather Garred Blake and
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Mason
Bla 1r's Better World 3, Golf Tournament 6, 13 . It Takes A
entertainment. The top men in their profession romances m the marriage of an up-from-theVa., and her girl friend , also a daughter Lulu Mae ,
Saturday
afTh
ief •
s
pent
awhtle
- Victory Herbert notably - were rich and ghetto Jewish kid loa legendary soctety beauty ;
student at Marshall, Miss
4·30 - Audubon W1ldi Jfe Theatre 33, NH L Act 1on 8 , Urban
Mr. and Mrs . Olaf Ray ternoon visiting with their
gettmg ncher i but the less successful were and their certainly happy~ver-after.
League Presents 10, Samt 15, Perry Mason 3
Htlhe Johnson of Medford, New Wtlliams, spent awhile Wed- daughter Mrs Lloyd Blake
5 00 - Animal World B. Lass1e 10 , R1pples33 , Star Trek 4
strugglmg. Their travatl ended happily because
Tomorrow - the " After."
Jersey, spent their Easter nesday evemng vlsitmg with who has been on th'e sick list
5 15 - Sing, Children, Si ng 33
th
·
·
·
5 30 - Animal World 10 ,• Sesame ·St. 33; It Takes A Th1ef 3,
vacatwn from the Umversity lhe1r son-in-law and daughter wl ppeumoma.
_,_
Protectors 8, Fa•th, for Today 15
n H
1
· vis1tmg with Barbara's parents Mr. and Mrs. Donovan Blake,
Russell
Wolford
reports
he
6
oo
~
News
4,
60·M1nutes
a,
10,
I've
Got
a Secret 13 , Kathry n
ON THE TV DIAL:
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Halley Crown City,
killed a large copperhead
Kuhlman 15
.
,
6
30
- UntamedWorld6 ; NBCNews3, 4.15; Huma n D1mens1on
Sunday: "High Road to Adventure" at 10, WBNS-TV ... And a
and other rf:lattves.
Mr. and Mrs. William J . snake Sunday mormng on the
33. Wa 1t Till Your Father Gets Home 13.
delight, W. C. Fields in his classic, "Never Give a Sucker an
Mrs. Jurrie Reynolds and Queen
ce lebrated
their lawn near h1s home. Mr. 7 00 - Lawrence Welk 13 : In the Know 10, Zoom 20, 33 , Wa1l
Even Break," at 11.30, WSA'lrTV.
Till Your Father Gets Home 6 , Satan to Adventure 3, Th1 s Is
Jenmfer Ott, of Route 588, and twentieth weddmg anniversary Wolfo d had lso killed
r
a
a
Your L1fe 4. Wild Kmgdom 15, Superstars of Rock a
on May 2, their children, Jeffie, copper head s1milar to this one,
7 30 - Let's Make A Deal 6 , D1ck Van Dyke 10, World of D1 sney
3, 4, 15 , Beve rly Hillbillies 8 , The Amencan R1ver 20, 33
Pamela , Marcua, Damel, on New Year's day.
8
00
•
20.- MASH8, 10 . FBI6, 13, In Saner Hours 33 , Turn ing Po1nts
Sunday supper guests of Mr.
DavJd and Terry!, helped them
t=:=::::.:::::::=:::::::::::::::=:::::::::=:::~=::::::·.: ::;.::: ::;. :::::::··:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·!·:·:::·:·:·&gt;:·:'~"»~·::»:·:·:·:::·:-:~;
and Mrs Russell Wolford and
9 · 00 - Masterp1ece Theatre 20, 33 , Mov1e " Where Eagles
celebrate the occasion.
Dare" 6, 13
Jackie Lee Blake of Dayton, family included her father
9 30 _ Barnabr_ Jones 8, 10.
·
j
\
~
~
OhJO, spent the weekend Garrcd Blake, of Gallipolis, 10 00 - Firmg 1ne 20, 33, Night Gallery
vtsJtmg wtth his parents Mr _ Mr and Mrs. Dick WII1s of 10 30 - We Th1nk You Shou ld Know 3 , H1gh Road to Ad ve ntu re
By Helen and Sue Hottel
10, Police Surgeon 15, Probe Conference w1th the Mayor 4,
and Mrs . Leo Blake and Columbus, Ohw, Miss Lulu
Half the George K1rby Comedy Hour 8
Blake of Gallipolis, Mr. and 11 :00 - News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15
family.
'
Tribute to a Friend
Mr . and Mrs. D1ck Wills of Mrs . Aaron Reynolds and son 11:15 - News 6, 8, 10, 13
Dear
Rap:
11 .30 - John ny Carson d, 15, Jack Paar 13, In Con ce rt 13,
By RAY CROMLEY
Columbus, Ohio spent the Terry, Jenmfer Ott, Rtchard
Mov1es " Never Give A Sucker An Even Break " 3 " A Man
I want to tell you about my best friend.
and Ronnie Wolford, all of
Atone" 8, " Mclintock"· 10
weekend
visiting
wLth
her
(Last of two related articles.)
9le's almost twice my age . She's mature, yet she is the first
· 1 00 - News 4, 13.
Route
588.
parents Mr and Mrs. Russell
to Say you're never to old to learn something ·new . I know she
WASHfNGTON !NEAl
Sunday guests of Mr. and
Wolford and family.
'
• MONDAY
, MAY 14, 1973
isn't
perfect,
and
she
would
be
the
first
to
admit
it.
But
I
wouldn't
The more hours this reporter spends 1earlin g Jud ge
Mrs. Dorothy Waugh of Mrs Leo Blake included
6 00 - Sunn se Sem1nar 4, Sacred Heart 10
want her any other way.
John J . S1nca ' s opm10ns the more certam th e concluswn
6 15 - Farmtime 10
Columbus, Ohio spent some Jackte Lee Blake of Dayto~ ,
that th1s 1s a most remarkable man
I've told her thmgs I wouldn't even write m my diary .I know
6
20 - Farm Report 13
few days recently visiting ,with Ohio, Mr. and ~rs . Donme
(1
25 ~ Paul Harvey 13
Perhaps more, than any other man th1s lifelon g Repubmy innermost thoughts are sale with her. I hope she knows the her parents-m-law Mr. and · Blake of Crown Ctty, Mr. and
6 30 - Columbus Today 4, B1ble Answers S Good News 13,
hcan JUdge , an E•senhower appomtee , pned the hd off
same of me.
School Scene 10.
Mrs. Stanley Waugh and other Mrs. George Ward, Barbara
Watergate when, as presiding Judge at the ongmal tl'lal
6
45
- Corncob Report 3
When
I
am
troubled,
I
can
always
turn
to
her.
She
will
never
he kept the press ure on until one man broke
relatives .
and Bryan, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
6
55
- Take Five for L1fe 15 ·
refuse me a shoulder to cry on.
.
" Talk to one man of !Jberty,"' noted Smca,
" and he
VIctor Halley, aged resident Hite, Freddie, Johnme and
7 00 - Today 3, 4, 15 , News, W~ather, Sp:::~rt s 6, CBS News 8, 10 ,
I would never hurt her intentionally, and I know from past
Jeff's Coll1e 13
1
understands you Talk to another and hls tdea of hberty
of the HamJlton Road was Richard, all of Huntington, W.
7 30 - Rompe r Room 6, Rocky &amp; Bu llw lnkle 13. Popeye 10
experiences she would protect me as best she can.
ts the freedom of the wolf to pillage the fold "
taken from Holzer Med 1cal Va ., Mr. and Mrs. Michael
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo10 , New Zoo Revue 13, Lass ie 6. Sesame
1 love her dearly, and I'm sure she knows. But all the Center hospital this week to the Blake and R•ckie Blake, of
Sirica Js a believer m excellence He holds that men
St 33
of educatiOn , wealth and power hold a greater res ponsi·
same, please print this and satisfy my foolish whim by saying to
8 30 - Jack Lalanne13 , New Zoo Revue6
home of his son and daughter- Proctorville, Don Hardesty of
bJ!Jty ror upholdmg moral standards than other men and
B 55 ~ local News 13
her and whoever else may read:
m-lawMr. and Mrs. Bob Halley Rocky Fork Road, called on
9 00 - Paul Dtxon 4, Ph il Donahue 15, C.;Jpt Kangal'"oo 8,
therefore mus t be pum shed more sever ely for their trans·
Mom, I'm proud to be your daughter! - CARRIE OF
Fnendly Junction 10 : AM 3 ; let's Make A Dea l6, Ben Casey
gressions.
·
and famtly Mr. Halley had Garred Blake and daughter in
t3.
FRESNO
He is annoyed, perhaps angered, by mtellectual conbeen a patJent in the hosp1tal Galhpohs, Monday afternoon.
..)
9 25 - Chuck White Reports 10
formity , by men who are content to be average, by men·
9· 30 - To Tell th e Truth 3; Jeopardy 6 , Hollywood 's Talk1ng 10
Dear Carrie:
tal stagnation He IS a believer m the uncommon man .
10 00 - Columbus S1x Call1ng 6, Dick Van Dyke 131 Dinah Shore
3, 15, Joker's Wild 8, 10
.,_
We saved your letter until Mother's Day because it's about
" Government," says Sirica, "is our busmess and we
10
30
Split
Second
13,
Baffle3,
4, 15; $10,000 Pyram1d 8, 10
\
get the kind of government we ask for . If we are to have
the nicest gift a girl can give to her mother.
11
00
Password
13
,
Sale
of
the
Century
3,
4, 15, Love America n
good government, and preserve our freedom , the lawyer
Let's hope quite a lot of "moms" read it along with their
Style 6; Gamb1t 8, 10, Elec Co 20.
(judge) must be m the lead . The corruption of gove rn 11 · 30 - Bew ttched 6, 13. Hol lywood Squares J, 4, 15, Love of L1fe
special breakfast-in-bed on May 13th. - HELEN AND SUE
ments the world over 15 caused by the fa•lure of the .
8, 10, Sesa me St. 20
+++
citizen to meet his re~ pon s tblhhe s
"
11 55 ---- News 8 , Dan lmel's World 10
Helen imd Sue:
12 · 00 - Password 6, News 10, 13, Contact 8 . Bob Braun 50 50
In a speech to students and graduates· "So I urge you.
Club 4, Jeopardy 3, 15
I'm
a
whJte,
middle-class
male
and
I,
too,
feel
discriminated
therefore, to search your so uls and ask yourselves what
12 · 30 - Spl1t Second 6. 3 W's 3, 15; Search for To"morrow 8, 10
you really thmk your goals are in hfe . H yo u feel the
against. Not only minorities (black, red, brown) get first con12 :55 - NBC News 3, 15
motivatiop to beco!Pe a champion of good causes , how·
1 00 - All My Children 6, 13, News 3, It's Your Bet 8 , Gret? n
sideration at colleges or for jobs, but we must alSo contend with
ever unpopular , then don 't put the courtr~om off limits
Acres' 10. Not For' Women CAlly 15
'
women now. Those ''quotas'' rnust be filled - then, if there is any
1
30
30nAMatch3,
4,
15,
Let's
Ma
keADea
l 13 , As the World
" Get in there and fi ght We have too many spectators
money left, we white guys get a whack at things.
Turns
8, 10 , Bowling 6
m this country already ," he t~lls yo un g lawyers And
'2. 00 - Days of Our L1Ves 3, 4, 15 , Newlywed Game 13, M1ke
In the past three weeks I've missed out on two jobs because I
deplores the lack of strong advocates to espouse great
Douglass 6, Guiding l;ght 8, 10.
wasn't female. They're even infiltrating the police department,
'
pnnctples or law
2· 30 - Doctors 3, 4, 15. Dating Game 13 , Edge of Night 8, 10
insisting they be put on regular beats.
3·00 - Another World 3. 4, 15 . General Hospiial 6, 13 . Pnce Is
Sirica is a blunt and pragmatic man , on one occasiOn
R1ght 8. 10, Understanding Afnca 20
deciding that the testimony of one particularly well.
What's a guy to do, outside or becoming a transvestite? 3 30 - Return of Peyton Place 3, 15, One Life to L1 ve 6, 13,
informed Witness would " not be ruled out by carpmg
DONE OUT AND IN ( andneedin~ money for college) ,
Secret Storm 10 , Ptlil Donahue 4 , Fren ch Chef 20 ,
technicahties"
·1For, as he said on another occaswn J
'
Hollywood's Talking 8
DOAI :
" a trial is nothm g really but a stud•ed s ~a r c h for the
4 00 - Mister Cartoon 3, love Ame n ca n Style 13, Fl1ntstones 6 ,
We hear Ma Be11 is looking for '~sons." In some areas the
truth."
Somer:set15 , Sesa me Sf 20, 33 , Mov1e " Meet Me At the Fa1r"
10
.
telephone
company has pulled a switch: it's actively recruiting
He believes ferventl y m our jud1dal system " Des pite
4:30 - Pett1 coa t Junction 3; I Love Lucy 6. Merv Gnffm 4 ;
male operators.
the ImperfectiOns of man . this system contmues to
W1ld, Wild West 13 , Abbott &amp; Costello 8, My little Marg1e 15
work- day after day, year after year - Selthng the dJS'Round-the-clock hours make this work great lor college
5:00
- Bonanza 3, B1g Valley 6, HazelS , Mr Rogers 20, 33,
putes and controversies of litigants w1thm the orderly
students. Good luck! - HELEN AND SUE
Andy Griff1th 15
admmistration of justice
. " In this regard , of law¥ers
5.30 - BeverlY. Hlflb1tl 1es8 , Elecfnc Co 33 , Gome r Pyle, USMC
and judges . " Much •• expected of us in the area of eth•cal
13; Death Valley Days 15, Hodgepodge Lodge 20
Dear Rap :
5 55 - Earl N1g,htingale 15
conduct, and !hat is as tt should be . "
I'm in favor of lowermg discrimmation, but I think our
6 00 - News3, 4, B, 10, 15 , ABC News 13 ; Sesame St 20f Around
At times , too, S1nca IS a believer m very toug h sen·
the Bend 33, Truth or Conseq 6
socieiy is going too far. Betieve me, I'm not prejudiced - just
tences. On sentencmg a man lor 15 to 45 years for armed
6
30
~ ABC News 6 ; CBS News 8, 10. I Dream of Jeann1e 13 ,
robbery .
desperate.
News 3, 4, 15, lns1g ht 33
"It is completely unreasonable to say that pum shment
8.00 - Truth or Conseq 3, Beat the Clock 4, News 6. 10, Circus
1 recently found out that one of my friends, a member of a
13 , Whaf''S My Lme 8, Elec. Cd 20 , Read Your Way Lfp 33 ,
is not a deterrent to cnme I thmk the deterrent effect
minority group, received $1,600 to attend a junior college. He has
Saint 15; Take Five 5
this sentence migh\ have on others JS all the more impor·
a 2.0 grade point average from high school. This is just one of
7 30 - To Tell the Truth 6, Y.oung Dr . Kildare 8 . Hollywood
tant m this case because from th e mformatwn I have
Squares 4; Traffic COurt 10 , Do You Read Me 20 . Mov1e
many
cases.
available to me the defendant ... has apparently been
" Tarzan Escapes" 13, Ep1sode Acfton 33 ; Bobby Goldsboro 3
I am an 18-year-old freshman in a university near my home.
makmJ1 a name for himself among the youthful under·
8 00 - Rowan &amp; Martin's Laugh In 3, 4, 15, Gunsmoke 8, 10 ,
world m the metropolitan area and IS . looked upon with
Jacques Cousteau 6; Stal1n 20, 33.
My mother, a widow, is trying to support my sister and me. I
awe and admiration by thts youthful cnmmal element.
9 00 - Mov1es " Th e Pn va te Na vy of Sgt O' Farre ll'' :l, 4, 15,
work part time to make ends meet.
" Where Eagle s Dare" 6, 13
" I would hope that the sentence unposed m tins case
Yet I apphed lor many scholarships last fall, receiving only
9· 3o-- Dor fs Dav 8. 10.
1973 b¥ NEA
WJII inspJre at least an eq~al amount ol awe m the eyes
10:00 - Women of the Year 1973 8, 10 , What About Tomrrow 6,
one for $250 which lasted only one semester. This was gtven to me
of this element causmg them to think seriously betoH'
"I
guess
this
inflation
b~siness
affects everybody. Hon .
13 ; News 20 , Bill Moyers' Journal 33.
by an organization of which I am a member . .
embarking on any cnminal v?nture
''
ll · OO - News3, 4,6,8, 10, 13,15
estlyl My husband hit t~e ceiling when the bill came lor
Thanks for printing the midd)e-class male's stde qf 1t, Helen
11 ·30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15 ; Dick Cavett 6, 13 , Movies " The
Mr Nixon would do well to consider 1hls man fo1 Ow
Fifi's war,drobe!"
Moon Is Blue" 8 ; "Shoc.,k Corndor " 10.
'
next vacancy on the Sup1eme CoUI't
and Sue. We need help too. - CONCERNED STUDENT
1: 00 - News 13.

·

QUANTITIES

LAST

SPRAY

~AI

TOMATO CATSU

2CAN{$
JFOR

The Hu men e So c1 e/y ol the&gt; Unrled S li'JII'!S

Ti]_e_re are. _s_o_ many puppies and JsJttens

"SIMONIZE"

· "DEL MONTE"

"THERMOS"

SOFT AND EASY

FRUIT ·DRINK

44 QT. STEEL

born in this country that few of them find
permanent homes. The rest of th em lead
lonely, suffering lives-often cut short
under the wheels of a car or in the death
room of a pound .

Don't be responsible lor more suffering
and needless death. Have your pet
spayed or neutered.
A

S"f\IICe o f The Hurnane SoC iety or the Uni ted State s

CAR WAX

.00

PINEAPPLE ORANGE
&amp;
PINEAPPLE GRAPEFRUIT

3
46

ICE CHEST

�'

'

24- The SW1day Times- Sentinel, Sunday, May 13, 1973

•

2 5- The SW1day Times· Sentinel, SW1day, May 13,1973

our environment. How good a
l,a wn we have depends on our
wiJJingness to invest time,
material and money and
maybe our willingness to mow
, regularly such as two times a
week in the spring if we have a
water.
Lawns and grass do improve vigorously growing lawn.

Grass beauti es, helps-hold soils in place
.
'.

•'•
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buildings.
rocks.
BY C. E. JlLAKESLEE
This past week I made lhe
Farmers use grass as a feed
Ext. Agent, Agriculture.
recomPOMEROY - Grass is a for livestock and are always hi~hest seeding
for
better
ways
of
mendation
I'd
ever
made
in
searching
vital part or our environment.
With the search for improved producing . more grass more trying to come up with a
environment, grass and lawns efficiently and at lower costs. seedlng rate on a part of the
The establishment of grass new highway cut where
have a.ssumed greater import·
ancc than they ever had in the sometimes is taken care of by seeding failed last tall. Nine
nature , At other times it pounds of seed per 1,000 square
past.
feet was recommended! This ls
Grass provides a means of becomes a costly service.
Specialized uses of grass to at the rate of nearly 400 pounds
improve the environment are of seed per acre, which is
New in farmin g
becoming more apparent all of expensive but may be required
rendering unsightly soil the time. Some of our people there because of adverse
beautifuL It also aids in holding were amazed to See the dikes conditions.
this soil in place.
A normal seeding rate is
surroundfng the General
Grass provides a means of James M. Gavin Plant sprout from one to three pounds per
permitting moisture to seep forth with lux.urious grass, l ,OOOsquare feet of varieties or
·nto the soil. Grass slows the seemingly in no time .
blends of Kentucky bluegrass.
movement of water over soil
Problems may de\\elop.
Standard recommendations
thus reducing erosion. The When we have a new highway for pa stures range from
faster water moves over ,soif cut, the con~ractor seeds , the., timothy at four pounds to tall
the greater its ability to pick bare areas as soon as possible. ~ fescue at 10 to 15 pounds per
up particles of soil and carry In some soi l, slope, or moisture acre. Incidentally, timothy and
them down hill. Grass helps conditions the grass may not tall fescue are not recomwa ter " walk" down hill instead grow . An example of grass mended for lawns.
uf " run " down hill.
growing under adverse conAnother place commer.cial
A beautiful well-kept lawn ditions is the Route 33 cuts use wi ll be made of grass is the
iinproves the appearance of where grass seemingly is work behind the Pomeroy
any home and of many growing in the crevices of the Public Library in connection
with the removal .of rock by the
post office. The C.orps of Army
Engineers and .its contractor
are tQ be commended for the
fact they will attempt to divert
the water coming off the cliff
and will use grass and trees in
an attempt to hold the soil in
place.
Another specialized use of
grass is on football and athletic
field s. A special bulletin,
. prepared by the Cooperative
BY BERNARD BRENNER
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UP! )- The Omnibus Farm Bill approved
last week by the Senate Agriculture Committee includes - in

Milk position
improved in
new farm bill

.

.

Extension Service, I.rll5, Turf
For Heavy Use Areas, tells
some of the management
situations in connection with
maintaining grass.
Height of mowing should be
maintained as close to . 2'h:
inches as possible , partic@arly
if tall fescue is used . Athletic
fields can be maintained at this
height throughout the nonplaying season and gradually
reduced to 11 playing height" as
the season nears. Playing
height may vary somewhat,
but coaches should realize that
if they demand the cutting
height lowered below H2 inch,
little or no turf may be present
next year.
Two bulletins were released
this year, "Lawn Establishment," bulletin 546, and "Your
Lawn," bulletin 271, which are
available to any person
wishing information on these
topics.
To illustrate some of the
problems of soil the writer has
asked the question, "Can you
improve our heavy red clay so
itis a desirable garden area?"
Soil specialists indicate that to
try to change clay soil to a
more desirable type can be
very expensive. Forty to sixty
tons of sand per acre might
improve the soil but it would be
extremely expensive, Another
materi31 is ca lcined clay. The
authors repoi"t on these two
items indicate that a srnall
amount of sand may do more

harm than igood . Enough peaL to fine textured ba$ement
coorse sand to make up 50 to 80 soil. This will greatly improve
iLs ph)•sicalmakeup, if you use.
pet. of the resulting mixture
enough peat. Get fibrous peat
will improve the physical
.-;ondition or a clay soil, if I baled sphagnum peat is best)
rather than muck, which
uniformly mixed with it.
Calcined clay, the ' name contains a large amount of
given to clay granules fired at clay . Mix the peat with the
a high temperature, can be upper 3or four inches 9f soil, or
used the sa me as sand. with less soil if you use only a
Calcined clay is more ex- . sma ll amount of peat. Apply at
pensive than most homeowners least a ).inch layer or peat or
'-compost and Work it into the
are willing to pay.
Our organic g~rdening soil.
To summarize, you can have
friends would say use organic
matter, This is one remedy for a good lawn if you follow the
fine textured soils. The dif- basic rules for seeding or
ficulty lies in doing it. Manure sodding. Certain things you can
is out or the question, except on do will make the difference bethe farm where lawn soils are tween success and failure . The
usually best. Compost could be following steps are essential in
used, but sup~ lies arc usuaHy developing a new lawn :
( 1) Control perennial weeds
small .
as
J ohnsongrass,
.If starting a new lawn, add such
quackg rass and nutsedge.
(2) Rough grade the lawn
area . Allow fills to settle and
regrade , if necessary.
( 3) Have soil tested. Apply
lime and corrective fertilizer,
if needed .
14) Plow, rototill, disc, or
otherwise work the soil 4 to 6
inches deep.
( 5) Remove stones, wood and
other debris from the top 4 to 6
inches of the soil.
(6) Allow soil to settle, or
firm with a heavy roller.
(8) Apply starter fertilizer
and rake it in while removing
stones, trash, and other foreign
material. Fill in any small
depressions which are present.
18) Seed or sod ; if sod, ignore
items 9 and 10.
(9) Rake lightly, let some
seed remain on surface .
( 10 ) Mulch, roli lightly and
NEWT OLIVER

Oliver to speak

'

addition to headline-catching ·new programs for grains and

•

cotton - significant new moves to strengthen milk prices.
In last-minute work on the measure, the committee added an
amendment lifting dairy price support fo• the cu rrent 1973-74

•'

.at sports eveJ].t

Pope Papa John died a decade ago
By Louis CASSELS
Uolled Prtss Iotematloua!
Next mooth marks the lOth
anniversary of the death of
Angelo Roncalli, possibly the
greatest Christian teader of the
century.
Who was Angelo Roncalli?
Only o small fraction of the

~~~-

~ DAIRI-

SOL

'
of God and
. Man
.

FOR MILK HOUSE
and ANIMALS

people of the world were aware
that was his given name. In the
latter years of his life, he was
better known affectionately to
millions as Papa John -"Papa
Giovanni" to Romans. To the
world at large he was Pope
John
During a brief reign of less
than five years on the papai
throne, he made , more
' profound and far-reaching
contributions to tbe health of
the Christian movement than
any pope of recent history.
Consider only a few of his
aehievements :
- He ended 500 years of cold
war ainong Christians and
created between Catholics and
Protestants
a
new

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MAY SPECIAL
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REGULAR
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CAN

"ecumenical spirit'. of mutual
respect and cooperation.
- He summoned the Second
Vatican Council and through it
launched the most sweeping
refonns of the Cathotic Church
in a thousand )'ears .
- He won worldwide respect
and affection, not only from
Christians of everv denomination, but from Je~s. Moslems,
Hindus, Buddhists, humanists
and Marxists .
- He restored to the papacy,
through the sheer power of his
personal goodness, a preStige it
had not eRjoyed since the time
of the Borgias.
There have been widespread
suggestions tht Pope John be
. named a saint. The official
word ~rom the papal court in
Rome is that the "cause" of
John XX!ll -that is, the
question of whether he was
truly a saint - is being "investigated through normal
proGedurCs."
Some are accusing the
Vatican of stalling, Criticsand there are many-say·
cardinals of the Roman Curia
who never approved of Pope

John's reforms hope to post(X)ne indefinitely giving them
the posthumous endorsement
implied by canonization .
There is another ,considera.
tion that doubtless enters into
Ole Vatican 's procrastination.
Pope Paul VI, who was Pope
John's chosen successor, has
•
never achJfved
the affection
and respect of his predecessor.
Pope Paul's critics say that
for him to declare his
predecessor a saint - which he
has authority to do any time he
sees fit - would dramatize an
eclipse of papal prestige which
has taken place since John's
death.
Whi1 e some may call him a
poor pope, Paul VI is a good
man, and he certainly would
not stoop personally to withholding canoriization of John
XXIIi in order to protect his
own vanity.
But he doesn't have to do it
personally. He has on)y to
listen to the voices of Curia
courtiers who tell him that the
&lt;~cause" is being handled "in
the normal and proper way ."
That explanation probabl y

sounds reasonable to Paul VI,
who once was a Vatican
bureaucrat himself.
While John XXlll remains
officially Wlcanonized, millions
of Cathotics and non-Catholics
already have proclaimed in
their hearts the saintliness of
this peasant from Bergamo
who was one of the most
humble, compassionate and
courageous figures the church
has prOOuced since Francis of
Assissi.
As Belgium's Cardinal Leo
Suenens put it, John XXIII
"'left men closer to God, and
the world a better place. "
COMMIT CRIMES
CANTON, Ohio 1UPJ) - Two
teenagers are back in jail here
after being paroled from the
Ohio Youth Corrunission in Co.
lumbus on March 28.
The 16-year-olds - not iden.
tified - have been charged
since their parole with 12 auto
thefts, four armed robberies,
tllree breaking and entcrings,
two thefts, one count of shopJifting and the rape of a 15j'C"r·l)ld gi rl.

Ten u·affic cases were terminated this morning - in
Gallipolis Municipal Court.
James L. Stephens, 18,
Henderson, was fined $25 and
costs for failure td yield the
ri ght of way . Forfeiting bonds
were Stuart J . Dekcer, 22,
Cincin nati, $18 speed; Dale
Ro~er WO&lt;KI, 26, Gallipolis, $18
speed: Ross E. Hamrick, 26,
R{. 2, Bidwell , $28 assured
l'lear distance; Danny F .
Stewart, 19, Eureka Star Rt.,
$18 parking on the roadway;
Donald R. Cook, 27, Columbus,
$:tt speed; Louis Young, 56,
Xenia, $33 speed; B. F1 Cory,
611, Worthington, $23 speed;
Thomas C. Johnson, 54, W.
&amp;•lcm, N. C., 118 speed; and
Deborah Bennett, 19, PittsIJurgh, $18 speed .

STORE HOURS:

Air cleared by

HAN NIBA L, Mo. (UPI)
"The air · has been cleared,''
said the daughter of former
Sc.n. Edward V. Long, 0-Mo.,
after autopsy results an.
nounccd Thursday indicated
the senatdl' died of heart
f&lt;1ilurc , and was not poisoned .
Dr. Stanley Hall , a Hannibal
PCII.hologist, announced the
rcsulL':i ~t a tense news con ~
fcrence &lt;:tt Levering HospiUtl .
here . l·htll said the autopsy
Department for ~in &lt;:tp- showCH no findinJ:: of choculaie
poinlment of the date and time in I .ong 's stomach, no evidence
they arc to be photographed. nf poison in his body and no
The cai'Cis will be processed evidence of a l)l'ain tumor.
£Jnd issued inuucdiately .
Since
photog raph s
of
recipients will not be kept on
In !96:l, a truce between
fi le, replacement of a lost card
·will involve going through the whites _cmd Negroes ended in
whole prucess t~g~lin and cost Bi rmingh&lt;IJll , t\la., with the
IJombing o·f the home of Martin
the reci pient $1, the ·t'os t of a
Luther King's brother .
photo·ID cw·d.

QURING MAY ONLY!

9 A..M. TO 9 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY, 252
AVENUE

autopsy of body

Armour* Star Beef- U.S.D.A. Graded Choice- U.S. Gowt. Insp.

.

BONELESS

CHUC ROASTS

FLAT CUTS

ADC recipients need photo card
A sta'ewide program to

provide recipients of Aid to
Dependent Children with color
photo identification cards is
. now in effect, State Welfare
Director Charles W. Bates has
announced .
Bates said the new cards
could virtually eliminate
fraudulent cashing of public
ass istance checks. If used
properly · by recipi.ents, merchants and banks, he said, the

CENTRAL SOYA .OF OHIO
'
Sycamore Streets

3rd &amp;
GAL Ll POLlS, OH 10
"Your. Farm Supply Supermarket"

cards wouid ''save a lot of
money for all concerned, and
make checks easier to cash by
those entitled to them .' '
Bates said lost or st{llen
checks are rlot honored by the
county or the state . Thus, the
me1·chant who cashes the
check loses the full amou nt as
well as the merchandise sold or
the service performed .
In addition, he said, issuing a

new check costs the county and
the state approximately $4
apiece in administrative andclerical costs.
Bates said victims must be
interv iewed and proof of the
loss established. Then they
must wait severa l day s,
usually without resources, for
a new check to be issued .
County A.D .C. recipients
should ca ll the local Welfare

Ib

Wit r l!\et'Vt the right lo
tt mlt quantifies an all
lll!'m' tn lhll ad . Pr lce1
e ff tc lo 'ti! lhru !•t .. Ma'l
t9, 1973. ~one $O ld lo

1

~ater1 .

·marketing year to 80 per cent of the "fair ea rning power parity

price .
In a cOmpanion move, the panel 3pproved an amendment
limiting.dairy product impOrts to a 2 per cent of the total annual
domestic conswnption of milk.
.
llbth amendments are expected to be opposed by the administr8.tion,- which has set dairy supports for the current

marketing year at the legal floor of 75 per cent of parity, and has
been increa$ing dairy import quotas this year in an effort to
coUnter foc;&gt;d inflation for consumers.
Agriculture Secretary Earl L. Butz, rejecting appeals for
higher supports from dairy leaders and lawmakers, has set thiS
year's milk support at $5.29 per hundredw~igbt, or 75 per cent of
parity. Butz had gone a step further by asking Congress to
remove, for future years, the legal barrier against setting sup.
.
ports below 75 per cent of parity.
The senate Agricultw-e Committee amendment would push ·.
supports to roughly about $5.65 ·a hundredweight for the rest of
the year ending March 31, equalling 80 per cent of parity, but
would then allow suppqrts in the following year to drop bac.k to 75
per cent of parity.
In the import field, the ceiling imposed by the Senate bill
would be above the amount of dairy foods imported last year, but
below the amount expected to enter the country this year.
Dairy industry experts estimate that under current law' the
import volume permitted by quotas is about 1.6 per cent of
national consumption. But this year, using discre tionary
provisions, the President has already. authorized over-quota
imports of 25 million pounds of nonfat milk and 64 million pounds
. of cheese.
In addition, he announced a move under which a further 60
million poW1ds of nonfat milk will be admitted by June 30. As a
result, total dairy imports for the year ending JW1e 30 will be
"well above" the 2 per cent of national consumption ceiling
which the Senate amendment would impose.

MASON - The featured
speaker at the Wahama High
School Ail Sports Banquet on
Monday, May 21, at 6:30 p.m.
. at the Red Carpet Inn will be
Newt Oliver, ·rormer .coach of
1\io Grande College and of the
fa bulous Bevo Francis, the ·
greatest scorer in the history of
college basketball.
Oliver has had a colorful
career in \Nhich he coached
junior high school, high school ,
· college and profe ssional
basketba ll.
He Is the only coach in the
history of college basketball to
have developed a player who
averaged 50 points per game,
while scoring 116 and I 13 poinls·
in two re gular , college
basketball games.
Hi s 1952-53 Rio Grande
College coaching record of 39.{)
still stands as the longest
undefeated season in college
basketball.
As a player, Oliver Jed the
nation in collegiate scoring
during the 1947-48 season with
725 points, while setting the alltime season free-throw recora
with 291, and the game record
uf 23 out of 26 free-thrOws for a

Outstanding Power, Comfort
&amp; Economy in the 85-hp Class!

single game. He traveled with
the Harlem Globetrotters three
seasons. Recently, his bOok,
"One Basketball and Glory",
has been hailed as a success
story that has become .a legend
in its own time.
Cost per person will be $2.75.

LANDMARK has EVERYTHING
MAKE YOUR LAWN AND GARDEN WORK EASIER
WITH POWER EQUIPMENT FROM LANDMARK

Business 424
being offered

16 11) WORK HORSE!-

. first session

ARMOUR* STAR BEEFU.S.D.A. Graded Choice-U.S. Govt. Insp•

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Here's our king of the large garden tractors! It's a 16 hp link be-

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tw~en the la~n ~ractors and l~uge farrri tractors. Has hydrostatic
dnve t~at .eliminate~ clutchmg and shifting gears, has integral
hydraulic I1ft that ra~ ses and lowers attachments with your touch
on_the lever. Large 27" by 9.50" ground-hugging tires and deluxe

RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
College will offer Business 424,
business and income taxes, the
first Summer Session of 1973.
· This course i::; designed to
help the student gain a better
knowledge of. federal, state,.
and local taxes . It will include
the computation of vcirious
W.xes under different sets of
circumstances. The.course wi11
be taught by James H. Clark,
Associate
Professor
of
Business Administration .
In order to enroll for credit, a
student must have taken at .
least one basia accounting
.~ourse . This course is considered an accounting course
by the Ohio Accountancy
Board.
Registration will be Monday,
June 11 on campus or it can be
done by mail. The course will
meet four nights per week
(Monday through Thursday)
from 6:30 to 9:10 for five weeks
beginning TuesdaY, June 12.
The course ptovides fOur
semester hours credit.

CUBE STEA~S I~ )59

adjustable _seat let you work in .co111fort. Excellent visibility, foot-.
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Mower attachments for 10, 13 and 16 hp tractors . .... $ 163.95

8 HP 30" REAR-ENGINE RIDER

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Briggs &amp; Stratton 8 hp engin e·, key start ignition, 12-volt electrica l •
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166

• 85-hp• diesel powered by IH-built 360 c u . in. diesel de livers high
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less gear shif1 ing. ·
• Engine delivers exce ll ent fuel econo my .. . engine designed for
hard-pull. high speed tillage
• Inc ludes alllhe '66 Series features plu s options ... Torque Amplifi ~r . Deluxe Safety Cab and more .

GALLIPOLIS - Kermit
fisher, Gallipolis, r,ecently
received a 'letter of com~
mendation , and a cash award
for his suggestion relative to
the elimination of a safety
hazard. The letter and award
were from the Huntington
Corps of Engineers.
Fisher is employed at the
Marmet Lock and Dam, as a
Jock and dam operator leader.
Before going to Marmet, he
was employed at the Gallipolis
Lock and Dam .
He has been employed by the
U.S. Corps of Engineers 25
years.

' Est m.ax PTO hp

See and drive this new 766 tractor _ .. it performs as
good as it looks. Come in and compare the features~

•

Meigs Equipment Co.
.I

PH•.992-2176
..

'

POMEROY

RECEIVES TROPHY
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) - The
Toledo Bar Association, Was
awarded a Merit Trophy here
Thursday dl!ring the 93rd an'naul meeting of the Ohio State
Har Association.
The award was for the ToJedo Bar Association's work in
producing a televi~ion series
depicting the inner workings of
:.ftriaL · ·

TilLER

2995

starter, super
low-tone muffler, a utomatic type differential
and 25" cutting deck. Semi.pneumatic tires
fn front and pneumatic tirf;!s in rear. t:las con_
-_
+nnr seat with back rest. (22--59 12) (32541

in carton
$54.95 set up
~........
-

~wo economy mowers, one pu'sh~ype

rotary, the other selfpropelled, 3 and 3\lz hp Briggs

engmeo;. Money-savmg prices!

TURF TRIM
SELF PROPEU10

· WE DELIVER!
WE SERVICE!
WE FIN·Il.NCE!

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in carton
~ , . . $79.95 set up
S-erving

Meigs~ Gall Ia and Mason

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-----

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3-lb. 1-oz:. PKG.

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Pomeroy, Ohio

EXTRA LIGHT BUTTERM1LKBISCUITS4:.;:,:-, 45c
BA.LLARD OVENREADY BISCUITS 6 :.;:,:-, 65c
BALLARD BUTTERMILK BISCUITS
6 :.;:,:-, 6Sc
HUNGRY JACK FLAKY BUTTERMILK
BISCUITS

Every Tom, Dick, and Mary wants to call Mother on Mqther's
Day. ·
·
And that's great.
·
·
.
But it's not so great when they all ca ll long dtstance ,at once
-and, instead of mothers' som.c of them get busy
signals.
.
Here's a better idea:
.
Call between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. when long distance dtcuits
are least busy.
And dial the call yourself. It will go through faster.
So; to reach Mother faster on Mother's Day, ca ll her between
8 a.m. and 5 p.m. and dial the call yourself. And, if you do nln into ·
. a busysignal, please be pat~cnt and try again in a minute or two.

POMEROY LANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.
Open Mon. -Sat. 8 to 6
992-2 181

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PILLSBURY Refrigerated Features ·

TURF TRIM
MOWER

,$4995

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M ·is for the many people

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Economy tiller, 3\lz hp 8 &amp; S'engine,
93% of weight is over the tines for
better till_ing. ~
Hah n hoe tmes,
1.211 diameter.
20i' Wide.
in carto n
(22- 12-16 )
$134.95 set up

Has rewind

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DETERGENT

CHOCOLATE CHIP . •·••· ""· 53c
FUDGE BROWNIES •••- •~•- ..,53c
PEANUT BUTTER ••• ,;..,, .... 53c

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'

24- The SW1day Times- Sentinel, Sunday, May 13, 1973

•

2 5- The SW1day Times· Sentinel, SW1day, May 13,1973

our environment. How good a
l,a wn we have depends on our
wiJJingness to invest time,
material and money and
maybe our willingness to mow
, regularly such as two times a
week in the spring if we have a
water.
Lawns and grass do improve vigorously growing lawn.

Grass beauti es, helps-hold soils in place
.
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•'•
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buildings.
rocks.
BY C. E. JlLAKESLEE
This past week I made lhe
Farmers use grass as a feed
Ext. Agent, Agriculture.
recomPOMEROY - Grass is a for livestock and are always hi~hest seeding
for
better
ways
of
mendation
I'd
ever
made
in
searching
vital part or our environment.
With the search for improved producing . more grass more trying to come up with a
environment, grass and lawns efficiently and at lower costs. seedlng rate on a part of the
The establishment of grass new highway cut where
have a.ssumed greater import·
ancc than they ever had in the sometimes is taken care of by seeding failed last tall. Nine
nature , At other times it pounds of seed per 1,000 square
past.
feet was recommended! This ls
Grass provides a means of becomes a costly service.
Specialized uses of grass to at the rate of nearly 400 pounds
improve the environment are of seed per acre, which is
New in farmin g
becoming more apparent all of expensive but may be required
rendering unsightly soil the time. Some of our people there because of adverse
beautifuL It also aids in holding were amazed to See the dikes conditions.
this soil in place.
A normal seeding rate is
surroundfng the General
Grass provides a means of James M. Gavin Plant sprout from one to three pounds per
permitting moisture to seep forth with lux.urious grass, l ,OOOsquare feet of varieties or
·nto the soil. Grass slows the seemingly in no time .
blends of Kentucky bluegrass.
movement of water over soil
Problems may de\\elop.
Standard recommendations
thus reducing erosion. The When we have a new highway for pa stures range from
faster water moves over ,soif cut, the con~ractor seeds , the., timothy at four pounds to tall
the greater its ability to pick bare areas as soon as possible. ~ fescue at 10 to 15 pounds per
up particles of soil and carry In some soi l, slope, or moisture acre. Incidentally, timothy and
them down hill. Grass helps conditions the grass may not tall fescue are not recomwa ter " walk" down hill instead grow . An example of grass mended for lawns.
uf " run " down hill.
growing under adverse conAnother place commer.cial
A beautiful well-kept lawn ditions is the Route 33 cuts use wi ll be made of grass is the
iinproves the appearance of where grass seemingly is work behind the Pomeroy
any home and of many growing in the crevices of the Public Library in connection
with the removal .of rock by the
post office. The C.orps of Army
Engineers and .its contractor
are tQ be commended for the
fact they will attempt to divert
the water coming off the cliff
and will use grass and trees in
an attempt to hold the soil in
place.
Another specialized use of
grass is on football and athletic
field s. A special bulletin,
. prepared by the Cooperative
BY BERNARD BRENNER
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UP! )- The Omnibus Farm Bill approved
last week by the Senate Agriculture Committee includes - in

Milk position
improved in
new farm bill

.

.

Extension Service, I.rll5, Turf
For Heavy Use Areas, tells
some of the management
situations in connection with
maintaining grass.
Height of mowing should be
maintained as close to . 2'h:
inches as possible , partic@arly
if tall fescue is used . Athletic
fields can be maintained at this
height throughout the nonplaying season and gradually
reduced to 11 playing height" as
the season nears. Playing
height may vary somewhat,
but coaches should realize that
if they demand the cutting
height lowered below H2 inch,
little or no turf may be present
next year.
Two bulletins were released
this year, "Lawn Establishment," bulletin 546, and "Your
Lawn," bulletin 271, which are
available to any person
wishing information on these
topics.
To illustrate some of the
problems of soil the writer has
asked the question, "Can you
improve our heavy red clay so
itis a desirable garden area?"
Soil specialists indicate that to
try to change clay soil to a
more desirable type can be
very expensive. Forty to sixty
tons of sand per acre might
improve the soil but it would be
extremely expensive, Another
materi31 is ca lcined clay. The
authors repoi"t on these two
items indicate that a srnall
amount of sand may do more

harm than igood . Enough peaL to fine textured ba$ement
coorse sand to make up 50 to 80 soil. This will greatly improve
iLs ph)•sicalmakeup, if you use.
pet. of the resulting mixture
enough peat. Get fibrous peat
will improve the physical
.-;ondition or a clay soil, if I baled sphagnum peat is best)
rather than muck, which
uniformly mixed with it.
Calcined clay, the ' name contains a large amount of
given to clay granules fired at clay . Mix the peat with the
a high temperature, can be upper 3or four inches 9f soil, or
used the sa me as sand. with less soil if you use only a
Calcined clay is more ex- . sma ll amount of peat. Apply at
pensive than most homeowners least a ).inch layer or peat or
'-compost and Work it into the
are willing to pay.
Our organic g~rdening soil.
To summarize, you can have
friends would say use organic
matter, This is one remedy for a good lawn if you follow the
fine textured soils. The dif- basic rules for seeding or
ficulty lies in doing it. Manure sodding. Certain things you can
is out or the question, except on do will make the difference bethe farm where lawn soils are tween success and failure . The
usually best. Compost could be following steps are essential in
used, but sup~ lies arc usuaHy developing a new lawn :
( 1) Control perennial weeds
small .
as
J ohnsongrass,
.If starting a new lawn, add such
quackg rass and nutsedge.
(2) Rough grade the lawn
area . Allow fills to settle and
regrade , if necessary.
( 3) Have soil tested. Apply
lime and corrective fertilizer,
if needed .
14) Plow, rototill, disc, or
otherwise work the soil 4 to 6
inches deep.
( 5) Remove stones, wood and
other debris from the top 4 to 6
inches of the soil.
(6) Allow soil to settle, or
firm with a heavy roller.
(8) Apply starter fertilizer
and rake it in while removing
stones, trash, and other foreign
material. Fill in any small
depressions which are present.
18) Seed or sod ; if sod, ignore
items 9 and 10.
(9) Rake lightly, let some
seed remain on surface .
( 10 ) Mulch, roli lightly and
NEWT OLIVER

Oliver to speak

'

addition to headline-catching ·new programs for grains and

•

cotton - significant new moves to strengthen milk prices.
In last-minute work on the measure, the committee added an
amendment lifting dairy price support fo• the cu rrent 1973-74

•'

.at sports eveJ].t

Pope Papa John died a decade ago
By Louis CASSELS
Uolled Prtss Iotematloua!
Next mooth marks the lOth
anniversary of the death of
Angelo Roncalli, possibly the
greatest Christian teader of the
century.
Who was Angelo Roncalli?
Only o small fraction of the

~~~-

~ DAIRI-

SOL

'
of God and
. Man
.

FOR MILK HOUSE
and ANIMALS

people of the world were aware
that was his given name. In the
latter years of his life, he was
better known affectionately to
millions as Papa John -"Papa
Giovanni" to Romans. To the
world at large he was Pope
John
During a brief reign of less
than five years on the papai
throne, he made , more
' profound and far-reaching
contributions to tbe health of
the Christian movement than
any pope of recent history.
Consider only a few of his
aehievements :
- He ended 500 years of cold
war ainong Christians and
created between Catholics and
Protestants
a
new

.DAIRY
FLY SPRAY

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MAY SPECIAL
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REGULAR
17.75 CAN

$675

CAN

"ecumenical spirit'. of mutual
respect and cooperation.
- He summoned the Second
Vatican Council and through it
launched the most sweeping
refonns of the Cathotic Church
in a thousand )'ears .
- He won worldwide respect
and affection, not only from
Christians of everv denomination, but from Je~s. Moslems,
Hindus, Buddhists, humanists
and Marxists .
- He restored to the papacy,
through the sheer power of his
personal goodness, a preStige it
had not eRjoyed since the time
of the Borgias.
There have been widespread
suggestions tht Pope John be
. named a saint. The official
word ~rom the papal court in
Rome is that the "cause" of
John XX!ll -that is, the
question of whether he was
truly a saint - is being "investigated through normal
proGedurCs."
Some are accusing the
Vatican of stalling, Criticsand there are many-say·
cardinals of the Roman Curia
who never approved of Pope

John's reforms hope to post(X)ne indefinitely giving them
the posthumous endorsement
implied by canonization .
There is another ,considera.
tion that doubtless enters into
Ole Vatican 's procrastination.
Pope Paul VI, who was Pope
John's chosen successor, has
•
never achJfved
the affection
and respect of his predecessor.
Pope Paul's critics say that
for him to declare his
predecessor a saint - which he
has authority to do any time he
sees fit - would dramatize an
eclipse of papal prestige which
has taken place since John's
death.
Whi1 e some may call him a
poor pope, Paul VI is a good
man, and he certainly would
not stoop personally to withholding canoriization of John
XXIIi in order to protect his
own vanity.
But he doesn't have to do it
personally. He has on)y to
listen to the voices of Curia
courtiers who tell him that the
&lt;~cause" is being handled "in
the normal and proper way ."
That explanation probabl y

sounds reasonable to Paul VI,
who once was a Vatican
bureaucrat himself.
While John XXlll remains
officially Wlcanonized, millions
of Cathotics and non-Catholics
already have proclaimed in
their hearts the saintliness of
this peasant from Bergamo
who was one of the most
humble, compassionate and
courageous figures the church
has prOOuced since Francis of
Assissi.
As Belgium's Cardinal Leo
Suenens put it, John XXIII
"'left men closer to God, and
the world a better place. "
COMMIT CRIMES
CANTON, Ohio 1UPJ) - Two
teenagers are back in jail here
after being paroled from the
Ohio Youth Corrunission in Co.
lumbus on March 28.
The 16-year-olds - not iden.
tified - have been charged
since their parole with 12 auto
thefts, four armed robberies,
tllree breaking and entcrings,
two thefts, one count of shopJifting and the rape of a 15j'C"r·l)ld gi rl.

Ten u·affic cases were terminated this morning - in
Gallipolis Municipal Court.
James L. Stephens, 18,
Henderson, was fined $25 and
costs for failure td yield the
ri ght of way . Forfeiting bonds
were Stuart J . Dekcer, 22,
Cincin nati, $18 speed; Dale
Ro~er WO&lt;KI, 26, Gallipolis, $18
speed: Ross E. Hamrick, 26,
R{. 2, Bidwell , $28 assured
l'lear distance; Danny F .
Stewart, 19, Eureka Star Rt.,
$18 parking on the roadway;
Donald R. Cook, 27, Columbus,
$:tt speed; Louis Young, 56,
Xenia, $33 speed; B. F1 Cory,
611, Worthington, $23 speed;
Thomas C. Johnson, 54, W.
&amp;•lcm, N. C., 118 speed; and
Deborah Bennett, 19, PittsIJurgh, $18 speed .

STORE HOURS:

Air cleared by

HAN NIBA L, Mo. (UPI)
"The air · has been cleared,''
said the daughter of former
Sc.n. Edward V. Long, 0-Mo.,
after autopsy results an.
nounccd Thursday indicated
the senatdl' died of heart
f&lt;1ilurc , and was not poisoned .
Dr. Stanley Hall , a Hannibal
PCII.hologist, announced the
rcsulL':i ~t a tense news con ~
fcrence &lt;:tt Levering HospiUtl .
here . l·htll said the autopsy
Department for ~in &lt;:tp- showCH no findinJ:: of choculaie
poinlment of the date and time in I .ong 's stomach, no evidence
they arc to be photographed. nf poison in his body and no
The cai'Cis will be processed evidence of a l)l'ain tumor.
£Jnd issued inuucdiately .
Since
photog raph s
of
recipients will not be kept on
In !96:l, a truce between
fi le, replacement of a lost card
·will involve going through the whites _cmd Negroes ended in
whole prucess t~g~lin and cost Bi rmingh&lt;IJll , t\la., with the
IJombing o·f the home of Martin
the reci pient $1, the ·t'os t of a
Luther King's brother .
photo·ID cw·d.

QURING MAY ONLY!

9 A..M. TO 9 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY, 252
AVENUE

autopsy of body

Armour* Star Beef- U.S.D.A. Graded Choice- U.S. Gowt. Insp.

.

BONELESS

CHUC ROASTS

FLAT CUTS

ADC recipients need photo card
A sta'ewide program to

provide recipients of Aid to
Dependent Children with color
photo identification cards is
. now in effect, State Welfare
Director Charles W. Bates has
announced .
Bates said the new cards
could virtually eliminate
fraudulent cashing of public
ass istance checks. If used
properly · by recipi.ents, merchants and banks, he said, the

CENTRAL SOYA .OF OHIO
'
Sycamore Streets

3rd &amp;
GAL Ll POLlS, OH 10
"Your. Farm Supply Supermarket"

cards wouid ''save a lot of
money for all concerned, and
make checks easier to cash by
those entitled to them .' '
Bates said lost or st{llen
checks are rlot honored by the
county or the state . Thus, the
me1·chant who cashes the
check loses the full amou nt as
well as the merchandise sold or
the service performed .
In addition, he said, issuing a

new check costs the county and
the state approximately $4
apiece in administrative andclerical costs.
Bates said victims must be
interv iewed and proof of the
loss established. Then they
must wait severa l day s,
usually without resources, for
a new check to be issued .
County A.D .C. recipients
should ca ll the local Welfare

Ib

Wit r l!\et'Vt the right lo
tt mlt quantifies an all
lll!'m' tn lhll ad . Pr lce1
e ff tc lo 'ti! lhru !•t .. Ma'l
t9, 1973. ~one $O ld lo

1

~ater1 .

·marketing year to 80 per cent of the "fair ea rning power parity

price .
In a cOmpanion move, the panel 3pproved an amendment
limiting.dairy product impOrts to a 2 per cent of the total annual
domestic conswnption of milk.
.
llbth amendments are expected to be opposed by the administr8.tion,- which has set dairy supports for the current

marketing year at the legal floor of 75 per cent of parity, and has
been increa$ing dairy import quotas this year in an effort to
coUnter foc;&gt;d inflation for consumers.
Agriculture Secretary Earl L. Butz, rejecting appeals for
higher supports from dairy leaders and lawmakers, has set thiS
year's milk support at $5.29 per hundredw~igbt, or 75 per cent of
parity. Butz had gone a step further by asking Congress to
remove, for future years, the legal barrier against setting sup.
.
ports below 75 per cent of parity.
The senate Agricultw-e Committee amendment would push ·.
supports to roughly about $5.65 ·a hundredweight for the rest of
the year ending March 31, equalling 80 per cent of parity, but
would then allow suppqrts in the following year to drop bac.k to 75
per cent of parity.
In the import field, the ceiling imposed by the Senate bill
would be above the amount of dairy foods imported last year, but
below the amount expected to enter the country this year.
Dairy industry experts estimate that under current law' the
import volume permitted by quotas is about 1.6 per cent of
national consumption. But this year, using discre tionary
provisions, the President has already. authorized over-quota
imports of 25 million pounds of nonfat milk and 64 million pounds
. of cheese.
In addition, he announced a move under which a further 60
million poW1ds of nonfat milk will be admitted by June 30. As a
result, total dairy imports for the year ending JW1e 30 will be
"well above" the 2 per cent of national consumption ceiling
which the Senate amendment would impose.

MASON - The featured
speaker at the Wahama High
School Ail Sports Banquet on
Monday, May 21, at 6:30 p.m.
. at the Red Carpet Inn will be
Newt Oliver, ·rormer .coach of
1\io Grande College and of the
fa bulous Bevo Francis, the ·
greatest scorer in the history of
college basketball.
Oliver has had a colorful
career in \Nhich he coached
junior high school, high school ,
· college and profe ssional
basketba ll.
He Is the only coach in the
history of college basketball to
have developed a player who
averaged 50 points per game,
while scoring 116 and I 13 poinls·
in two re gular , college
basketball games.
Hi s 1952-53 Rio Grande
College coaching record of 39.{)
still stands as the longest
undefeated season in college
basketball.
As a player, Oliver Jed the
nation in collegiate scoring
during the 1947-48 season with
725 points, while setting the alltime season free-throw recora
with 291, and the game record
uf 23 out of 26 free-thrOws for a

Outstanding Power, Comfort
&amp; Economy in the 85-hp Class!

single game. He traveled with
the Harlem Globetrotters three
seasons. Recently, his bOok,
"One Basketball and Glory",
has been hailed as a success
story that has become .a legend
in its own time.
Cost per person will be $2.75.

LANDMARK has EVERYTHING
MAKE YOUR LAWN AND GARDEN WORK EASIER
WITH POWER EQUIPMENT FROM LANDMARK

Business 424
being offered

16 11) WORK HORSE!-

. first session

ARMOUR* STAR BEEFU.S.D.A. Graded Choice-U.S. Govt. Insp•

.•

Here's our king of the large garden tractors! It's a 16 hp link be-

a

tw~en the la~n ~ractors and l~uge farrri tractors. Has hydrostatic
dnve t~at .eliminate~ clutchmg and shifting gears, has integral
hydraulic I1ft that ra~ ses and lowers attachments with your touch
on_the lever. Large 27" by 9.50" ground-hugging tires and deluxe

RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
College will offer Business 424,
business and income taxes, the
first Summer Session of 1973.
· This course i::; designed to
help the student gain a better
knowledge of. federal, state,.
and local taxes . It will include
the computation of vcirious
W.xes under different sets of
circumstances. The.course wi11
be taught by James H. Clark,
Associate
Professor
of
Business Administration .
In order to enroll for credit, a
student must have taken at .
least one basia accounting
.~ourse . This course is considered an accounting course
by the Ohio Accountancy
Board.
Registration will be Monday,
June 11 on campus or it can be
done by mail. The course will
meet four nights per week
(Monday through Thursday)
from 6:30 to 9:10 for five weeks
beginning TuesdaY, June 12.
The course ptovides fOur
semester hours credit.

CUBE STEA~S I~ )59

adjustable _seat let you work in .co111fort. Excellent visibility, foot-.
operated d1sc brakes, plenty of work·sav ing attac hments.

!5134995

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4-lb.
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(22-1 96 1)
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(22-1962) 10 HP-Tractor, less mower (4102) ....... $ 769.95
(22•1963) 13 HP Tractor, less mower (4131) . . . . : .. $1119.75
Mower attachments for 10, 13 and 16 hp tractors . .... $ 163.95

8 HP 30" REAR-ENGINE RIDER

$46295

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(22-1958) 34" 8 HP Front Engine, with rewind starter automatic
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25" 5 HP Rear Engine, standard automatic transmiss ion (3255)
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Parkmg brake, foot op~rat~d d1sc_brakes, automotive drive, power
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to run a variety of work-saving attach~Q
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ments. (22-1960) (3383)

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CHASE &amp; SANBORN

Briggs &amp; Stratton 8 hp engin e·, key start ignition, 12-volt electrica l •
system w1th plug-In 110 V charger, super \ow-ione muffler. It has
automatic dnve to 7 MPH with a full_30" floating deck, parking
brake and d1sc wheel brakes. Your wife·

MARGARI
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Fisher rewarded

RINSO

by letter, cash

166

• 85-hp• diesel powered by IH-built 360 c u . in. diesel de livers high
lorque rise performance ... means more d rawbar pull power ...
less gear shif1 ing. ·
• Engine delivers exce ll ent fuel econo my .. . engine designed for
hard-pull. high speed tillage
• Inc ludes alllhe '66 Series features plu s options ... Torque Amplifi ~r . Deluxe Safety Cab and more .

GALLIPOLIS - Kermit
fisher, Gallipolis, r,ecently
received a 'letter of com~
mendation , and a cash award
for his suggestion relative to
the elimination of a safety
hazard. The letter and award
were from the Huntington
Corps of Engineers.
Fisher is employed at the
Marmet Lock and Dam, as a
Jock and dam operator leader.
Before going to Marmet, he
was employed at the Gallipolis
Lock and Dam .
He has been employed by the
U.S. Corps of Engineers 25
years.

' Est m.ax PTO hp

See and drive this new 766 tractor _ .. it performs as
good as it looks. Come in and compare the features~

•

Meigs Equipment Co.
.I

PH•.992-2176
..

'

POMEROY

RECEIVES TROPHY
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) - The
Toledo Bar Association, Was
awarded a Merit Trophy here
Thursday dl!ring the 93rd an'naul meeting of the Ohio State
Har Association.
The award was for the ToJedo Bar Association's work in
producing a televi~ion series
depicting the inner workings of
:.ftriaL · ·

TilLER

2995

starter, super
low-tone muffler, a utomatic type differential
and 25" cutting deck. Semi.pneumatic tires
fn front and pneumatic tirf;!s in rear. t:las con_
-_
+nnr seat with back rest. (22--59 12) (32541

in carton
$54.95 set up
~........
-

~wo economy mowers, one pu'sh~ype

rotary, the other selfpropelled, 3 and 3\lz hp Briggs

engmeo;. Money-savmg prices!

TURF TRIM
SELF PROPEU10

· WE DELIVER!
WE SERVICE!
WE FIN·Il.NCE!

J195

$"'7
in carton
~ , . . $79.95 set up
S-erving

Meigs~ Gall Ia and Mason

Counties

-----

.

.

'

3-lb. 1-oz:. PKG.

I•

HEINZ

@Ohio Bell

HEINZ

STRAINED

1::·: 1

oe

KRAFT

•

Barbecue Sauce

•
'
'

1-P•.
2-o~ .

39e

KRAn

BABY JUICES

Italian Dressinc

6:nz 12~

~~.

69e

LIQUID PLUMR

PILLSBURY REFRI&amp;ERITEI

DRAIN OPENER

COOKIE FEATURES

"

Quart

Bottle

89e

•

Bottle

STRA INED

;

BABY FOODS

'

I

Pomeroy, Ohio

EXTRA LIGHT BUTTERM1LKBISCUITS4:.;:,:-, 45c
BA.LLARD OVENREADY BISCUITS 6 :.;:,:-, 65c
BALLARD BUTTERMILK BISCUITS
6 :.;:,:-, 6Sc
HUNGRY JACK FLAKY BUTTERMILK
BISCUITS

Every Tom, Dick, and Mary wants to call Mother on Mqther's
Day. ·
·
And that's great.
·
·
.
But it's not so great when they all ca ll long dtstance ,at once
-and, instead of mothers' som.c of them get busy
signals.
.
Here's a better idea:
.
Call between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. when long distance dtcuits
are least busy.
And dial the call yourself. It will go through faster.
So; to reach Mother faster on Mother's Day, ca ll her between
8 a.m. and 5 p.m. and dial the call yourself. And, if you do nln into ·
. a busysignal, please be pat~cnt and try again in a minute or two.

POMEROY LANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.
Open Mon. -Sat. 8 to 6
992-2 181

.

PILLSBURY Refrigerated Features ·

TURF TRIM
MOWER

,$4995

.

M ·is for the many people

((

Economy tiller, 3\lz hp 8 &amp; S'engine,
93% of weight is over the tines for
better till_ing. ~
Hah n hoe tmes,
1.211 diameter.
20i' Wide.
in carto n
(22- 12-16 )
$134.95 set up

Has rewind

"

DETERGENT

CHOCOLATE CHIP . •·••· ""· 53c
FUDGE BROWNIES •••- •~•- ..,53c
PEANUT BUTTER ••• ,;..,, .... 53c

•

•
••
••
••
"••
••
•
•

•••

••

�.,

••
26 - The Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sooday, May 13. 1973

Tu ppcrs Plaip-.;

Racine Social Events

•

•&gt;

and Mrs. Robert Graham of

Storys Run

•

BY GLENNA SHULER

or Wilmingfon

and son

~ Mrs:,Evelyo Brlcldes
•
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Brooks
have moved their trailer from
Nl)l"th Carolina to the home of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fon
Halsey where they will be
living. Mrs. Brooks' son, aay,
who is in the Army and
stationed at Fort Knox:, Ky.,
spent the weekend here with
his mother and grandparents.
Mrs. Lois Ebersbach called

weekend guests of her parents,
Mr. a nd Mrs. Ha rry Willford .
Mrs . Dbrothy Harden of
Syracuse spent Sunday with

Mr . and Mrs. James Conkle Mr . and Mrs. Junior Neigler
spent a recent evening with

and family .
Mr . and Mrs. Oliver Onroe, on .Mr. Clifford Bryson ol Pill·
Lower River Road .
sburgh spent a weekend with
Mr . and Mrs. Joe Leach and his parenLc;, Mr. ahd Mrs.
grandson, Roger Leach, spent Hobart Bryson .
a day recently with Mr. and
Mrs. Gretta Siinpson ac·
Mrs . Paul Leach at New companied Mr . and Mrs .
Lexington.
William Hayman to Seymour,
Rev. and Mrs. Otis Chapman Ind ., to visit Mr . and Mrs. Bud
·spent a weekend with Mr. and Simpson .
. Mrs. Henry Bennett at Ansted,
Ml's. Betty Christopherson
W.Va .
ha s returned home from an
Mrs . Perry Bradbury has extended visit in the 'western
returned home from a visit states.
with Mr. and Mrs. Victor ·
The Es ther Circle wJII meet
Argabright and son, Victor, in Monday evening, May 14, at
Cincinnati and Mr. and Mrs. the F'irst Baptist Church.
Robert Wood and fami ly at
Canal Winchester.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Black· Taylor and Lizzie at Gallipolis,
ston, Rock Springs, and Mr .
Mr. and Mrs. James Conkle
and Mrs. Lawrence Leonard of spent a recent day in ColuinPomeroy spent a recent bu&gt;. They called on Mr. and
evening with Mr, and Mrs. Mrs. James Haffey at Grove
· City .
James Conkle. 1
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Perry Bradbury spent a ·
Mrs. Marlin Rife were Mr , and day recently with Mrs. Ina Rife
Mrs. Michael Gardner a nd and Mrs. Ada Pierce in
Michelle of near Washington . Gallipolis.
C.H.; Mr. and Mrs. Darrell
Mr. and Mrs. Marlin Rife
Winkle and Darrell, Jr. of called on Mr. and Mrs . Dallas
Springfield; Mr. and Mrs. Alva Rife in Wellston a recent
Rife, Rt. 1, Middleport ; Mr. Sunday.
and Mrs . Danny Young of
Calling on Mr. and Mrs . Alex
Little Kyger ; Mr. a nd Mrs. Shuler recently were Mr; and
Hurley Rife a nd family of Well- Mrs. Marion Rife a nd Lind;;t of
ston.
Co lumbus; Mrs . William
Mrs. Marie Spires, Dei1i,se Larkin,
Hannibal ;
Mrs.
and Julie, spent a day recently Wendell Roush, Old Kyger ;
with Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Mr. a nd Mrs. Glenn Young and
Caldwell and Mrs. Pauline Michelle, Rt. 1, Bidwell.

1

I

-

on her aunt 1 Mrs. Wayne

were

Brickles,
Monday . Mrs.
Brickles is iU.
Mrs . David Riggs and
children of Vienna, W. Va.,
visited Saturday with Mr. and
Mrs. Oscar Babcock.
Those visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Thurman Babcock were Rev.

,-

~

.

Freeland Norris and sister,
Mrs . Florence Adams of
Racine, Mrs. Ernaline Gorrell
of Beverly, Mr. and Mrs. Ray

Justis and son, or Success,
Wayne Prince, Sammy Rardin
and Mrs. Ralph Wells of Lo~g
Bottom.
Mrs. Vivian Hoffman for·
merly o£ Tuppers Plains but
who has been making her home
with her duaghter, Mrs. Betty
Adams at Elm Grove, W. Va.,
passed away there on May 4
and was returned here for
services at the Tuppers Plains
Methodist Church Monday

where she was a member.
Burial was in

cemetery.

the church

Rev.

taxable as tan~ible personal
property,
" In today's world ol high
taxes, we must continue to
would be valued for tax pur· review Ohio tax structure to
poses at the same 35 pet. assure equity; to assure that
the regressive property-, tax
level," Collins said ,
Real property is land and the does not unfairly burden th~
permanent fixtures on it, such economy of Ohio. Simply pu[,
as buildings. Tangible personal we have the revenue rrom the
property includes machiner)' new income tax which clearly
allows in many ways
~nd equipment, alth ough some
machines becom) classified as mandates - us to remove or
real property when they are adjust the other out-o£-&lt;late,
considered fixtures on the land. · inequitable taxes," Collins
Business inventories are also concluded.

Collins m support ,of tax relief

--

Society News

By Mrs. Francis Morris
Washin~ton, Pa .. and Mr. and
Mrs. Genevieve Estes of Los Mrs. Samuel Andrew ·and son,
Alamitos, Calif .. spent a · few . Doug, ol Weirton. W. Va., and
days and Mr. Kenneth Swart ol David. Nancy and Becky Crow.
Stow, Ohio, ~pent the weekend
Weekend guests ol Mr . and
with their mother. Mrs. James Mrs. David Perry and son,
Swart and their sister, Mrs. Jeffrey, were relatives of
Alfred Crow and family . On Hillsboro.
Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Crow
Mr . and Mrs. Chester
entertained with a birthday Simpson and Mr. and Mrs.
dinner· honoring Mrs. Crow's Ralph Badgley spent · the
mother, Mrs. James Swart. weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Those present were Mrs. Estes Bri~n Simpson and children at
and Mr. Swart, and Mr. and • Baltimore.
Mr . and Mrs. Alan Graham
Mrs. Russell Shrontz and Mr .

•

'
A COW to be see n and not
herded Is trucked from
one store to a noth er in
Omaha , Neb. The model is
a dairv rirm's attentiOn·
getter.' but the passing
motorist didn't seem a bit
cowed by it.

Freeland

Norris officiated at the service
with the Kepner Funeral Home
of Wheeling in charge.
Mrs . Dodson, Mrs. Lola
Griffin, Mrs. Veri Tuttle, and
Mrs. Grace Kuhn all called on
Mrs . Neisel Wea the rman
recently. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Riggs
and family of Logan spent
Saturday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Lindsey Lyons and son
and Mrs. Eulah Swan .
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Wakely and two . children of
Marion visited his aunt, Mrs.
Effie Watson, Saturday.
Eldred Grimes of Athens
caine Monday and took his

man to Athens to see her doctor
for a checkup .
Leone Babcock and Leota
Massar visited Mrs. Mary
Pierce at the home of her
daughter, Mrs. Hobert Newell
of Chester one day last week.
Mrs. Phyllis Rowao visited
Mr. and Mrs . .Fan Hajsey and
brother,
We llie
Halsey,
Monday.
Mrs. Edna Beahrs and Mrs.
Lois Ebersbach made a trip to
Gallipolis Monday for eye
examinations.

sister, Mrs. Neisel Weather·

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one Jetter to each square, to

COLUMBUS
State in the bill. ..
In the _last session of ute
Representative Oaklay C.
Collins &lt;R-IrontonJ has co- Legislature, the assessment
sponsored a bill which would lejels for tangible perso~al
decrease the property tax on property were reduced, wtth
the goa l ol bringing them down
tangible personal property .
" This bill is another step to the 40.50 pet. rang• by 1975.
" This change will be more
toward making our tax
st ructure more equitable, equitable and, importantly,
more efficient to administer,
r re cog ni1:ing that the property
tax is one of the most si nce real property and
reg ress ive ways to tax the tangible personal property
public. The importance and
accept;Jnce or the bill is shown
by the' large number of sponsors : 53, including Democrats
and Republicans," Coll'fs
said .
The bill would assess
tangible personal property at
35 pet. of its value rather than
the current higher rates,
ranging in the 45-W pet. range.
The change to the 35 pet.
assessment would be completed in 1977, the time when all
real property in Ohio will also
be valued for tax purposes at 35
pet.
"The grad~al change to the
35 pet. assessment will help
assure the tax refQrm is accomplished without loss or
revenues to local communities, "
Colli ns said,
" particularly to local school
districts since there is a
specific ·1 hold-:harrnless' clause

'

.,

New Shipments Have
DON'T
Arrived MISS
THIS BUY!

thought s

PILLOWS

EA.

Extra!
If for any reason you
don't nee d the bedroom
s ui l e you can take
$100.00 in Free Mer·
cf.andise
with
any
Living
Room
Sui.te
purchase .
Signed :
Herman Grate

Buy A
.Living Room Suite
NOTICE ... Sola Bed Suit es and Maple
Frame Suite s are EXCLUDED from thi s
offer .

AND FOR ONLY

'1 :. 00 MORE
GET THIS

BEDROOM

SUITE

are

BEDDING BONANZA!

You Get This Beautiful 3-Piece

prayers. There are certai n
moments when , whateve r be
the attitude of the body . the
soul is on its. knees. -Victor
Hu go, Fren ch novelist.

e

~lJ)J~00!1rn® tl.oi -&amp;I.J .;_t '~-

room

u i te ci~~v

FULL SIZE

•

•

MATTRESS
and

•

BOX SPRING

form four ordinary words.

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

I

II l'."i II'

SUNDAY, MAY 13, 1973

•
ACROSS
1--: Open space In
l or est
6.- District in
Germany
10- Amount o wed
1 4 - Vapid
19- Retreat
21- Poasess tve
0/0I'IOUII,

22- Silk wo rm
23- Steps ove r
renee
24- Ptai'IS
26 - Erral'ld
28 - Posl
29 - American
essayist
30- Appear
32- Ctaye., earlh
33 - Decant
34 - Chemical sullhc
35 - Gae li c
3 7 - Want
39- ,Master o l Laws
'(abbr.)
40- Sua in
4 1 - Egypti an
goddi!SS
4 2'- Girl's l'lame
44- Deduce
46 - Ardor
4 7-Aa tsed
48 - Cui
50 - Leedtng
52 - Cou rts
53- lndel in tte
artic le
55 - Wa r god
57- Parent (colloq.)
58- Sh ade
59- An on
60- Pronou n
62 """'""' Br im
64- Stnches
613 ____._, No te ol sca le
68- Pront er"s
measure

69 -

Gaseo us
elemeni
70 - Resort
7 1 - Olllseed
73- l eo ked
conaescendingly
75- Ce rem ony
77·- Solar disk
78 - Chemical
elemen t
60- W orn away
6 1 - Capuchi n
monkey
82- Scorch ing
84- Give
86 - Lyric poem
87- tnslliutlon o r
learn ing
89- Arabian
garment
92 - Ael rnue
Q5 - Oineil
98 - lmitates
99- Glossy pain t
- 101-Keep
103 - Bris11e
104 - Fo011i"-e p art
105 - Dirk
106 - S ymbollor
,
calc ium
107- Sym bol lor
yurium
108 - Bre_ak suddenly
11 0 - Man ·s
nickname
111 ~ Symbol lor t in
11 2 - Movie star
11 3 - Harbor
· 11 5 - HebrCw month
117-Female
119 - A conlinenl
(abbr. )
·
120- Tibe tan p~i es l
121- Pertu rbat iOn
124- Burden
126- Eva lua te
127- Heavy vOlume
12B- Wo oden
hammer

130- Court order
132 - 0tJtalns
133 - Hulled corn
134-Sma ll rug
135- Genus of olive9
137- Mtl nd w rlh
colton
13 9 ~ Ha rl!
140 - Wicked k ing ol
Israel
14 1 - Having du ll
l in ish
14 3 - Volc&lt;~nic

emanation
Chinese le11der
Buccaneers
Wheedler
Answer
Pulfed up
Roman patriot
An c 1ent d rst.ri cl
in Greece
156- Sp ir ilu alls ts
session
157- Erases
lpr inton g)
158 - River 1n
Germany
159 - Hin du pe!lsant
160- Mountains o f
· .3outh Americ a
14 5 146 148-'150di2153154 -

DO WN
12-

Complain
G1ri'S name
:&gt;- Bears w i1 ness

4-

"

E~p ire

5 - Sea eagles
6 - Syinbol to r
samarium
7 - Goa\
8 - Indigo pllint
9 - Unravel
10- 811 11el in a
personal God
11-God ellov!J
12-Stqrage
com partment

p. ""'~

13 - Symbol lor
tan tat um
14 - Heavenl~ · body
15 - Small bird
16 - Assumed
names
17 ...,_.. Shooting star
18 - Slaves ·
20- Pa rad ise
23- Sluoely
25- Sow
27- Choose
28 - Dirt
31 - ·Reward
33 ~ W ampum
36- Sicilian
volcano .
38- Fa ll in drops
4 0..:..__ Openlflg
'41 - Metal
4 3 - Ven \ ilales
45 - Turkish
decress
46 - Flowe r
47- BleSsing
49 - Skin o l trui!
5 1- Ro w s
52- Ma de ol woo l
53 - Wing like
5 4 -0neot
Columbus 's
sh ips
56- Mollified
59 - Cond iment
60 - Preposi 1io n
61- Warhted
63- Sells ·
65- Withered
67- Poem
69- Greek letter
7Q.-,- Pompous
72- Ins truments
74 - Ar lilicia l
l angua g e
76- Note ol scale
77-----' Regions
79- Compass poin t
83- Fr llil drink
85- Calendar

86 - ln lels
07- Headgear {pl.l
88- Unlo ck.
·89- Part of "to be"
90 - Happen'
91 - Warnin11 signa l
, 92 - Attempt
93 - Sell to
co nsumer
94- Nea r
96- Sho rt jacket
97 - Novel by Zola
100 - DJ pl\t ho ng
102- Me tatlastener
I 05 Ident ical ,
109-' Bow o l a ship
112 -- UnitsoiLatvran
c urrenc y
113 - Osti!ntal i on
114 - Vegeiahle
116- Philippine knif e
118- Fat o l swine
120- Pertain ing to
th e side
121- Tee thed
instlum enl
122 - Gouip
123- Girl's nickname
125 -

BOTH PIECES

SHOP OUR

lhC"'c"" '''-

'""'. ""\ """""'

.
m.IAI'

I I

I [J

paged as
I
129 -'- Rip
131 - Stupor
132 - Stare"d
133-Lean·to
134- Army ol!icer
136- Class of
v.ertebraH!s
138-Knobs
140 - The swee\s op
141- Partner
14 2 - Sli ppery
144 - On the ocean
14 7 - Devoured
148 - Uncou th
person
149- Span i sh for
"rl~er' '

151- Shallow ves!el
153- Prelh:: wilh
155- Saint lebbr.l

/'. II' /o'() y

Price!

U i .I/IJ/i Y

Now arrange t.he drcled letters
to form the surprise l;lhswer-, as
:=::::::::::':::::=:=::=::::::::::'_:"":'"~"~estt:d by the aboYe cartoon.

'----'Pri=·rn_::::llte--"-SUR-"--Pft-"~1 ANSWIII
;:_:,:.;_-'
Itm
-'----'1

0 [ I ll ]
(An•'"e"

Jrrnrhh:&amp;: HIKER

DROOP

BANGLE

VANISH

I
-BUT NE.ITHJ::R. IS THE.

MUC!IGE.PI..'! e.Y TJ...\E ·
GE.T~ TO
J.-115 PUSHER···

ufdoor, - NO OVERHEAD

TIME. HE

ROOM

SIZE 12xl5

Expert Expert Is Needed
NORTH
• KQ94
¥ AK103

12

• 10 7 3 2

... 5

EAST

W~ST

.73
.Jl0 82
¥ 874
¥QJ95
+J B6
+Q 5
.• K8742
.AQ 3
SOUTH ( D )
.A 65
• 62
• AK94
... Jl09 6
None vulnerable
West
North East South

1.

1 N.T.
3 N.T .

.

is holding the last diamond.
An expe r t declarer would
make t he hand. After winning the club he would lead
a s pade to dummy and play
a dia m ond to his king. Back
to dummy with a heart to
lead a second diamond. East
would play the queen and
our expert declarer would let
East hold the trick . West
would never get in and the
contract would wrap up.
A really expert East would
foil this play before it got
s tarted . He would review the
bidding and see that South
had to hold both ace and king
of diamonds for his bid. He
mig ht also hold the jack in
which c.;~..se East's queen
would be worthless. Then he.
would see that if Wes t held
three diamonds to the jack
and could gain the lead West
woulrl set the contract.
After that it would be
child 's play lor our top expert to discard his queen of
diamonds to get out of his
partner's way.

NYLON

CARPETS

' $89.95

SERTA-POSTURr 139!~
'

Mattress or Matching Box Spnng

.

'

pi~·

twin or lull

.

111e

SIZE 12xl2

.K754 ¥K754 +AJ9 •az
What do you dO no~?
A-Pass. It is·not a fate worse
than death to play with just
three trumPs opposite fuur and
you have run out uf bids.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of bidding t wo diamonds your partner has jumped
to thL-ee diamonds. What'do you

do now?
Expo 7l' held in . Osaka . .
"""""'" . Japan . w.::..s Asia' s fil'st world

X:OI.I. !I'IOS
' '

rair

'

NYLON

GREATER

CARPETS

Smooth, level support at\d comfort, border to
border! No tufts and no buttons. Durable woven
cover! Sag-resistant border! Firm multi-coil con·
struction for healthful support and comfort!

•

CHAIR SALE

$79.95

;lC~~~~N~OR $29.99

SIZE 9x12

NYLON

Wagon Wheel
.Bunk Bed

U!Q:I:]•!fiN!!J

I tiC

'

'

WIN AT BRIDGE

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Today's hand would be of
very little interest in most
bridge games. The defense
would sta rt with fdur round S
of clubs . East would have t o
--1--~ make a discard on the fourth
lea d .
·
R-+-+~ Since dummy would prob- , (NEWSPAPER. ENTERPRISE ASSN .l
ably have already thrown a
heart and two diamonds East
would see that a small heart
would be safe.
The bidding has been:
Declarer might try to run
North
East
South
four spades or he might play West
1...
P3ss
1+
ace"king and another diaPass
2
+
Pass
2N.T.
m ond.- Either play would
'3 +
_f:lass
?
lead to his d efea t because Pass
You,
South,
hold
:
spades won 't
and West

Unit~~ ~·~lltur•: ~yn• lw ·' r 't

.

SIZE .
RUGS

Mondal)

Amwer: J11fl y it""' C'H'tf/U'r lt1 t'tlt mt£

+

bY

ll MITED QUANTITY

.
68

$

At This

Rass
1 'I
Pass
Pass
3
Pass
PasS
Pass
Pas5
Op;ning lep.d- l$t 4

PI~Vtl;lut,t(l

SALE!

FOR THE SET
_Quilted ·Mattress
- 312 Coi ls

. Time

Precious stone ' ; ' : ; = = : - = = - = = = " " ' = " '

:;~=~:;;~:~,

·CHAIR

Last

'

88¢

.t::

ASSORTED COLORS

FOR

CUNDIFF PROMOTED
MASON, W. Va . 1 - Gary L.
Cundiff, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Elmo L . Cundiff, has been
promoted to airman fir st class
in the U.S. Air Force. Airman
Cundiff is a 1972 graduate of
Wahama High Sc hool.

Certain

MAY SPECIALI
'
12"x12" SOFA

Mri

r :'JPECJAU

And Get the Second Chair

CARPETS

$59.95
,4-Drawer
Maple· Finish HOME* OF

FOR
ONLY

THAT'$ RIGHT
2 FOR •30.00

KELVINATOR
Decor.:1 IC a west ern sty le room
for your young c:owboys wi th .this

ANO

Includes t wo beds . l adder and
good Serta mattr esses

MAYTAG

rustic wag oh whc~&gt;f hunk oed .

EASY tERMS!
FREE DELIVERY!
•

APPLIANCES

¢

WE
DELivER!

THIS CHAIR
'S ALE AT
MASON
FURNITURE
ONLY!

•

�.,

••
26 - The Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sooday, May 13. 1973

Tu ppcrs Plaip-.;

Racine Social Events

•

•&gt;

and Mrs. Robert Graham of

Storys Run

•

BY GLENNA SHULER

or Wilmingfon

and son

~ Mrs:,Evelyo Brlcldes
•
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Brooks
have moved their trailer from
Nl)l"th Carolina to the home of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fon
Halsey where they will be
living. Mrs. Brooks' son, aay,
who is in the Army and
stationed at Fort Knox:, Ky.,
spent the weekend here with
his mother and grandparents.
Mrs. Lois Ebersbach called

weekend guests of her parents,
Mr. a nd Mrs. Ha rry Willford .
Mrs . Dbrothy Harden of
Syracuse spent Sunday with

Mr . and Mrs. James Conkle Mr . and Mrs. Junior Neigler
spent a recent evening with

and family .
Mr . and Mrs. Oliver Onroe, on .Mr. Clifford Bryson ol Pill·
Lower River Road .
sburgh spent a weekend with
Mr . and Mrs. Joe Leach and his parenLc;, Mr. ahd Mrs.
grandson, Roger Leach, spent Hobart Bryson .
a day recently with Mr. and
Mrs. Gretta Siinpson ac·
Mrs . Paul Leach at New companied Mr . and Mrs .
Lexington.
William Hayman to Seymour,
Rev. and Mrs. Otis Chapman Ind ., to visit Mr . and Mrs. Bud
·spent a weekend with Mr. and Simpson .
. Mrs. Henry Bennett at Ansted,
Ml's. Betty Christopherson
W.Va .
ha s returned home from an
Mrs . Perry Bradbury has extended visit in the 'western
returned home from a visit states.
with Mr. and Mrs. Victor ·
The Es ther Circle wJII meet
Argabright and son, Victor, in Monday evening, May 14, at
Cincinnati and Mr. and Mrs. the F'irst Baptist Church.
Robert Wood and fami ly at
Canal Winchester.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Black· Taylor and Lizzie at Gallipolis,
ston, Rock Springs, and Mr .
Mr. and Mrs. James Conkle
and Mrs. Lawrence Leonard of spent a recent day in ColuinPomeroy spent a recent bu&gt;. They called on Mr. and
evening with Mr, and Mrs. Mrs. James Haffey at Grove
· City .
James Conkle. 1
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Perry Bradbury spent a ·
Mrs. Marlin Rife were Mr , and day recently with Mrs. Ina Rife
Mrs. Michael Gardner a nd and Mrs. Ada Pierce in
Michelle of near Washington . Gallipolis.
C.H.; Mr. and Mrs. Darrell
Mr. and Mrs. Marlin Rife
Winkle and Darrell, Jr. of called on Mr. and Mrs . Dallas
Springfield; Mr. and Mrs. Alva Rife in Wellston a recent
Rife, Rt. 1, Middleport ; Mr. Sunday.
and Mrs . Danny Young of
Calling on Mr. and Mrs . Alex
Little Kyger ; Mr. a nd Mrs. Shuler recently were Mr; and
Hurley Rife a nd family of Well- Mrs. Marion Rife a nd Lind;;t of
ston.
Co lumbus; Mrs . William
Mrs. Marie Spires, Dei1i,se Larkin,
Hannibal ;
Mrs.
and Julie, spent a day recently Wendell Roush, Old Kyger ;
with Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Mr. a nd Mrs. Glenn Young and
Caldwell and Mrs. Pauline Michelle, Rt. 1, Bidwell.

1

I

-

on her aunt 1 Mrs. Wayne

were

Brickles,
Monday . Mrs.
Brickles is iU.
Mrs . David Riggs and
children of Vienna, W. Va.,
visited Saturday with Mr. and
Mrs. Oscar Babcock.
Those visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Thurman Babcock were Rev.

,-

~

.

Freeland Norris and sister,
Mrs . Florence Adams of
Racine, Mrs. Ernaline Gorrell
of Beverly, Mr. and Mrs. Ray

Justis and son, or Success,
Wayne Prince, Sammy Rardin
and Mrs. Ralph Wells of Lo~g
Bottom.
Mrs. Vivian Hoffman for·
merly o£ Tuppers Plains but
who has been making her home
with her duaghter, Mrs. Betty
Adams at Elm Grove, W. Va.,
passed away there on May 4
and was returned here for
services at the Tuppers Plains
Methodist Church Monday

where she was a member.
Burial was in

cemetery.

the church

Rev.

taxable as tan~ible personal
property,
" In today's world ol high
taxes, we must continue to
would be valued for tax pur· review Ohio tax structure to
poses at the same 35 pet. assure equity; to assure that
the regressive property-, tax
level," Collins said ,
Real property is land and the does not unfairly burden th~
permanent fixtures on it, such economy of Ohio. Simply pu[,
as buildings. Tangible personal we have the revenue rrom the
property includes machiner)' new income tax which clearly
allows in many ways
~nd equipment, alth ough some
machines becom) classified as mandates - us to remove or
real property when they are adjust the other out-o£-&lt;late,
considered fixtures on the land. · inequitable taxes," Collins
Business inventories are also concluded.

Collins m support ,of tax relief

--

Society News

By Mrs. Francis Morris
Washin~ton, Pa .. and Mr. and
Mrs. Genevieve Estes of Los Mrs. Samuel Andrew ·and son,
Alamitos, Calif .. spent a · few . Doug, ol Weirton. W. Va., and
days and Mr. Kenneth Swart ol David. Nancy and Becky Crow.
Stow, Ohio, ~pent the weekend
Weekend guests ol Mr . and
with their mother. Mrs. James Mrs. David Perry and son,
Swart and their sister, Mrs. Jeffrey, were relatives of
Alfred Crow and family . On Hillsboro.
Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Crow
Mr . and Mrs. Chester
entertained with a birthday Simpson and Mr. and Mrs.
dinner· honoring Mrs. Crow's Ralph Badgley spent · the
mother, Mrs. James Swart. weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Those present were Mrs. Estes Bri~n Simpson and children at
and Mr. Swart, and Mr. and • Baltimore.
Mr . and Mrs. Alan Graham
Mrs. Russell Shrontz and Mr .

•

'
A COW to be see n and not
herded Is trucked from
one store to a noth er in
Omaha , Neb. The model is
a dairv rirm's attentiOn·
getter.' but the passing
motorist didn't seem a bit
cowed by it.

Freeland

Norris officiated at the service
with the Kepner Funeral Home
of Wheeling in charge.
Mrs . Dodson, Mrs. Lola
Griffin, Mrs. Veri Tuttle, and
Mrs. Grace Kuhn all called on
Mrs . Neisel Wea the rman
recently. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Riggs
and family of Logan spent
Saturday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Lindsey Lyons and son
and Mrs. Eulah Swan .
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Wakely and two . children of
Marion visited his aunt, Mrs.
Effie Watson, Saturday.
Eldred Grimes of Athens
caine Monday and took his

man to Athens to see her doctor
for a checkup .
Leone Babcock and Leota
Massar visited Mrs. Mary
Pierce at the home of her
daughter, Mrs. Hobert Newell
of Chester one day last week.
Mrs. Phyllis Rowao visited
Mr. and Mrs . .Fan Hajsey and
brother,
We llie
Halsey,
Monday.
Mrs. Edna Beahrs and Mrs.
Lois Ebersbach made a trip to
Gallipolis Monday for eye
examinations.

sister, Mrs. Neisel Weather·

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one Jetter to each square, to

COLUMBUS
State in the bill. ..
In the _last session of ute
Representative Oaklay C.
Collins &lt;R-IrontonJ has co- Legislature, the assessment
sponsored a bill which would lejels for tangible perso~al
decrease the property tax on property were reduced, wtth
the goa l ol bringing them down
tangible personal property .
" This bill is another step to the 40.50 pet. rang• by 1975.
" This change will be more
toward making our tax
st ructure more equitable, equitable and, importantly,
more efficient to administer,
r re cog ni1:ing that the property
tax is one of the most si nce real property and
reg ress ive ways to tax the tangible personal property
public. The importance and
accept;Jnce or the bill is shown
by the' large number of sponsors : 53, including Democrats
and Republicans," Coll'fs
said .
The bill would assess
tangible personal property at
35 pet. of its value rather than
the current higher rates,
ranging in the 45-W pet. range.
The change to the 35 pet.
assessment would be completed in 1977, the time when all
real property in Ohio will also
be valued for tax purposes at 35
pet.
"The grad~al change to the
35 pet. assessment will help
assure the tax refQrm is accomplished without loss or
revenues to local communities, "
Colli ns said,
" particularly to local school
districts since there is a
specific ·1 hold-:harrnless' clause

'

.,

New Shipments Have
DON'T
Arrived MISS
THIS BUY!

thought s

PILLOWS

EA.

Extra!
If for any reason you
don't nee d the bedroom
s ui l e you can take
$100.00 in Free Mer·
cf.andise
with
any
Living
Room
Sui.te
purchase .
Signed :
Herman Grate

Buy A
.Living Room Suite
NOTICE ... Sola Bed Suit es and Maple
Frame Suite s are EXCLUDED from thi s
offer .

AND FOR ONLY

'1 :. 00 MORE
GET THIS

BEDROOM

SUITE

are

BEDDING BONANZA!

You Get This Beautiful 3-Piece

prayers. There are certai n
moments when , whateve r be
the attitude of the body . the
soul is on its. knees. -Victor
Hu go, Fren ch novelist.

e

~lJ)J~00!1rn® tl.oi -&amp;I.J .;_t '~-

room

u i te ci~~v

FULL SIZE

•

•

MATTRESS
and

•

BOX SPRING

form four ordinary words.

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

I

II l'."i II'

SUNDAY, MAY 13, 1973

•
ACROSS
1--: Open space In
l or est
6.- District in
Germany
10- Amount o wed
1 4 - Vapid
19- Retreat
21- Poasess tve
0/0I'IOUII,

22- Silk wo rm
23- Steps ove r
renee
24- Ptai'IS
26 - Erral'ld
28 - Posl
29 - American
essayist
30- Appear
32- Ctaye., earlh
33 - Decant
34 - Chemical sullhc
35 - Gae li c
3 7 - Want
39- ,Master o l Laws
'(abbr.)
40- Sua in
4 1 - Egypti an
goddi!SS
4 2'- Girl's l'lame
44- Deduce
46 - Ardor
4 7-Aa tsed
48 - Cui
50 - Leedtng
52 - Cou rts
53- lndel in tte
artic le
55 - Wa r god
57- Parent (colloq.)
58- Sh ade
59- An on
60- Pronou n
62 """'""' Br im
64- Stnches
613 ____._, No te ol sca le
68- Pront er"s
measure

69 -

Gaseo us
elemeni
70 - Resort
7 1 - Olllseed
73- l eo ked
conaescendingly
75- Ce rem ony
77·- Solar disk
78 - Chemical
elemen t
60- W orn away
6 1 - Capuchi n
monkey
82- Scorch ing
84- Give
86 - Lyric poem
87- tnslliutlon o r
learn ing
89- Arabian
garment
92 - Ael rnue
Q5 - Oineil
98 - lmitates
99- Glossy pain t
- 101-Keep
103 - Bris11e
104 - Fo011i"-e p art
105 - Dirk
106 - S ymbollor
,
calc ium
107- Sym bol lor
yurium
108 - Bre_ak suddenly
11 0 - Man ·s
nickname
111 ~ Symbol lor t in
11 2 - Movie star
11 3 - Harbor
· 11 5 - HebrCw month
117-Female
119 - A conlinenl
(abbr. )
·
120- Tibe tan p~i es l
121- Pertu rbat iOn
124- Burden
126- Eva lua te
127- Heavy vOlume
12B- Wo oden
hammer

130- Court order
132 - 0tJtalns
133 - Hulled corn
134-Sma ll rug
135- Genus of olive9
137- Mtl nd w rlh
colton
13 9 ~ Ha rl!
140 - Wicked k ing ol
Israel
14 1 - Having du ll
l in ish
14 3 - Volc&lt;~nic

emanation
Chinese le11der
Buccaneers
Wheedler
Answer
Pulfed up
Roman patriot
An c 1ent d rst.ri cl
in Greece
156- Sp ir ilu alls ts
session
157- Erases
lpr inton g)
158 - River 1n
Germany
159 - Hin du pe!lsant
160- Mountains o f
· .3outh Americ a
14 5 146 148-'150di2153154 -

DO WN
12-

Complain
G1ri'S name
:&gt;- Bears w i1 ness

4-

"

E~p ire

5 - Sea eagles
6 - Syinbol to r
samarium
7 - Goa\
8 - Indigo pllint
9 - Unravel
10- 811 11el in a
personal God
11-God ellov!J
12-Stqrage
com partment

p. ""'~

13 - Symbol lor
tan tat um
14 - Heavenl~ · body
15 - Small bird
16 - Assumed
names
17 ...,_.. Shooting star
18 - Slaves ·
20- Pa rad ise
23- Sluoely
25- Sow
27- Choose
28 - Dirt
31 - ·Reward
33 ~ W ampum
36- Sicilian
volcano .
38- Fa ll in drops
4 0..:..__ Openlflg
'41 - Metal
4 3 - Ven \ ilales
45 - Turkish
decress
46 - Flowe r
47- BleSsing
49 - Skin o l trui!
5 1- Ro w s
52- Ma de ol woo l
53 - Wing like
5 4 -0neot
Columbus 's
sh ips
56- Mollified
59 - Cond iment
60 - Preposi 1io n
61- Warhted
63- Sells ·
65- Withered
67- Poem
69- Greek letter
7Q.-,- Pompous
72- Ins truments
74 - Ar lilicia l
l angua g e
76- Note ol scale
77-----' Regions
79- Compass poin t
83- Fr llil drink
85- Calendar

86 - ln lels
07- Headgear {pl.l
88- Unlo ck.
·89- Part of "to be"
90 - Happen'
91 - Warnin11 signa l
, 92 - Attempt
93 - Sell to
co nsumer
94- Nea r
96- Sho rt jacket
97 - Novel by Zola
100 - DJ pl\t ho ng
102- Me tatlastener
I 05 Ident ical ,
109-' Bow o l a ship
112 -- UnitsoiLatvran
c urrenc y
113 - Osti!ntal i on
114 - Vegeiahle
116- Philippine knif e
118- Fat o l swine
120- Pertain ing to
th e side
121- Tee thed
instlum enl
122 - Gouip
123- Girl's nickname
125 -

BOTH PIECES

SHOP OUR

lhC"'c"" '''-

'""'. ""\ """""'

.
m.IAI'

I I

I [J

paged as
I
129 -'- Rip
131 - Stupor
132 - Stare"d
133-Lean·to
134- Army ol!icer
136- Class of
v.ertebraH!s
138-Knobs
140 - The swee\s op
141- Partner
14 2 - Sli ppery
144 - On the ocean
14 7 - Devoured
148 - Uncou th
person
149- Span i sh for
"rl~er' '

151- Shallow ves!el
153- Prelh:: wilh
155- Saint lebbr.l

/'. II' /o'() y

Price!

U i .I/IJ/i Y

Now arrange t.he drcled letters
to form the surprise l;lhswer-, as
:=::::::::::':::::=:=::=::::::::::'_:"":'"~"~estt:d by the aboYe cartoon.

'----'Pri=·rn_::::llte--"-SUR-"--Pft-"~1 ANSWIII
;:_:,:.;_-'
Itm
-'----'1

0 [ I ll ]
(An•'"e"

Jrrnrhh:&amp;: HIKER

DROOP

BANGLE

VANISH

I
-BUT NE.ITHJ::R. IS THE.

MUC!IGE.PI..'! e.Y TJ...\E ·
GE.T~ TO
J.-115 PUSHER···

ufdoor, - NO OVERHEAD

TIME. HE

ROOM

SIZE 12xl5

Expert Expert Is Needed
NORTH
• KQ94
¥ AK103

12

• 10 7 3 2

... 5

EAST

W~ST

.73
.Jl0 82
¥ 874
¥QJ95
+J B6
+Q 5
.• K8742
.AQ 3
SOUTH ( D )
.A 65
• 62
• AK94
... Jl09 6
None vulnerable
West
North East South

1.

1 N.T.
3 N.T .

.

is holding the last diamond.
An expe r t declarer would
make t he hand. After winning the club he would lead
a s pade to dummy and play
a dia m ond to his king. Back
to dummy with a heart to
lead a second diamond. East
would play the queen and
our expert declarer would let
East hold the trick . West
would never get in and the
contract would wrap up.
A really expert East would
foil this play before it got
s tarted . He would review the
bidding and see that South
had to hold both ace and king
of diamonds for his bid. He
mig ht also hold the jack in
which c.;~..se East's queen
would be worthless. Then he.
would see that if Wes t held
three diamonds to the jack
and could gain the lead West
woulrl set the contract.
After that it would be
child 's play lor our top expert to discard his queen of
diamonds to get out of his
partner's way.

NYLON

CARPETS

' $89.95

SERTA-POSTURr 139!~
'

Mattress or Matching Box Spnng

.

'

pi~·

twin or lull

.

111e

SIZE 12xl2

.K754 ¥K754 +AJ9 •az
What do you dO no~?
A-Pass. It is·not a fate worse
than death to play with just
three trumPs opposite fuur and
you have run out uf bids.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of bidding t wo diamonds your partner has jumped
to thL-ee diamonds. What'do you

do now?
Expo 7l' held in . Osaka . .
"""""'" . Japan . w.::..s Asia' s fil'st world

X:OI.I. !I'IOS
' '

rair

'

NYLON

GREATER

CARPETS

Smooth, level support at\d comfort, border to
border! No tufts and no buttons. Durable woven
cover! Sag-resistant border! Firm multi-coil con·
struction for healthful support and comfort!

•

CHAIR SALE

$79.95

;lC~~~~N~OR $29.99

SIZE 9x12

NYLON

Wagon Wheel
.Bunk Bed

U!Q:I:]•!fiN!!J

I tiC

'

'

WIN AT BRIDGE

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Today's hand would be of
very little interest in most
bridge games. The defense
would sta rt with fdur round S
of clubs . East would have t o
--1--~ make a discard on the fourth
lea d .
·
R-+-+~ Since dummy would prob- , (NEWSPAPER. ENTERPRISE ASSN .l
ably have already thrown a
heart and two diamonds East
would see that a small heart
would be safe.
The bidding has been:
Declarer might try to run
North
East
South
four spades or he might play West
1...
P3ss
1+
ace"king and another diaPass
2
+
Pass
2N.T.
m ond.- Either play would
'3 +
_f:lass
?
lead to his d efea t because Pass
You,
South,
hold
:
spades won 't
and West

Unit~~ ~·~lltur•: ~yn• lw ·' r 't

.

SIZE .
RUGS

Mondal)

Amwer: J11fl y it""' C'H'tf/U'r lt1 t'tlt mt£

+

bY

ll MITED QUANTITY

.
68

$

At This

Rass
1 'I
Pass
Pass
3
Pass
PasS
Pass
Pas5
Op;ning lep.d- l$t 4

PI~Vtl;lut,t(l

SALE!

FOR THE SET
_Quilted ·Mattress
- 312 Coi ls

. Time

Precious stone ' ; ' : ; = = : - = = - = = = " " ' = " '

:;~=~:;;~:~,

·CHAIR

Last

'

88¢

.t::

ASSORTED COLORS

FOR

CUNDIFF PROMOTED
MASON, W. Va . 1 - Gary L.
Cundiff, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Elmo L . Cundiff, has been
promoted to airman fir st class
in the U.S. Air Force. Airman
Cundiff is a 1972 graduate of
Wahama High Sc hool.

Certain

MAY SPECIALI
'
12"x12" SOFA

Mri

r :'JPECJAU

And Get the Second Chair

CARPETS

$59.95
,4-Drawer
Maple· Finish HOME* OF

FOR
ONLY

THAT'$ RIGHT
2 FOR •30.00

KELVINATOR
Decor.:1 IC a west ern sty le room
for your young c:owboys wi th .this

ANO

Includes t wo beds . l adder and
good Serta mattr esses

MAYTAG

rustic wag oh whc~&gt;f hunk oed .

EASY tERMS!
FREE DELIVERY!
•

APPLIANCES

¢

WE
DELivER!

THIS CHAIR
'S ALE AT
MASON
FURNITURE
ONLY!

•

�28- ThO; SWlday Times· Sentinel, SWlday, May 13, 1973

Experiment in living like fun
LAS PALMAS, Canary Is·
lands
( UP! 1
Mrs.
Evangeuna' Seymour, 23, a

ago-and who range in occupa.
tion from an African priest to a
French skin diver.
housewife, mother and elec. Voyage Delayed
tronics engineer from Pacific,
The raft was supposed to
Calif., remembers clearly the start its voyage Wednesday,
day she told her husband what crossing the Atlantic al about
she plaMed .
twQ miles an hour 3fld under
"'Have a good time,'" she the command of Maria BJornslam of Sweden.
smd he said.
Mrs. Seymour is convinced
But the departure was
she will do just \hat as she delayed · by storm warnings.
Mrs. Seymour recalled her
prepares to sail on the Acali , a
56-ton raft that will shortly decision Thursday to join the
float across the Atlantic in Acali adventure.
"When I told my husband I
what some Spaniards call a
going on the raft," she
was
" sex cruise" and its Mexican
organizer calls an experiment said, "he just said 'have a good
in social behavior experiment. time. "'
She said he respected her
With her, barring any more
factJ
he
defections, are 10 comparative decis ion - "i n
strangers- five men and five welcomed the responsability of
women who met each for the caring for our two small
first lllTle less than a month children.

" Richard and I have a good
thing going," Mrs. Seymour
said, " and weare close friends,
which is vital for a marriage.
So there was no problem
joining .the experiment.''
One Ting Worrisome
One tiling worrying Mrs.
Seymour were the reports \hat
communal living aboard tlle1
raft would include sex.
"Sex will play a part in the
study/' she said, 11 but no more
than it does in normal life. For
·me, it is quite easy to go
without sex for tllree months."
The voyage was the idea of
Mexican anthropologist Santiago Genoves, who said he
wants to test and study human
capacity for coexistence.
To prevent outside interfer~
ence during the three-month
trip, no magazines or books are

GOP hierarchy shaken

'

By ARNOLD B. SA WISLAK
WASHINGTON (UPI) - In
the heyday of Josef Stalin,
about \he only way outsiders
could get a clue about Kremlin
politics was to study photographs to see who was standing
next to the boss on top of
Lenin's Tomb reviewing
parades in Red Square.
Like that type of long
distance entrail-reading, a let·
ter written last week by one
Republican leader to another
might be one measure of the
Watergate affair's impact on
the GOP hierarchy.
Ronald K. Speed, president
of the liberal-leaning Ripon
Society, wrote \he letter
proposing a number of steps
that could be taken to clean up
the election and campaign
process.
Speed wrote \he letter to
George Bush, Republican National Committee chairman.
There's nothing wrong about
\hat, except that it w~sn 't Bush
who issued the call for "new
standards" to reform political
campaigns. It was Richard
Nixon, the President of the
United Slates and the man who
chose Bush to be chairman.
''New Standards,
What Nixon said was: "I
urge the leaders of both
political partie~. I urge citizens
-all of you everywhere - to

join in working toward a new
set of standards, new rules and
pro ced ures to insure that
future electioq.s will be as
nearly free of such abuses as
they can possibly be made.
This is my goal. I ask you to
join in making it America's."
To which Speed 's response
was an open letter to Bush, not
Nixon, proposing that the
Republican National Committee, not Ule administration, set
up a Task Force on Campaign
Ethics .
Am.ong other proposals
Speed passed On were
suggestions that special
campaign organizahons ''such ·
as the Committee to ReElect
the President" be outlawed,
that candidates be made
"legally accountable" for \he
actions of their campaign
workers, and that individual
campaign contributions be
limited.
Since the Committee to Re·
Elect the President Was
Ni,x on's personal creation,
since the President's (and Sen.
George McGovern 's) fund
raisers used every legal dodge
they coUld think of lo enco urage huge individual
contributions and since the
President has told \he nation
that the 1972 campaign was the
only one in his political career
that he left to others lo run,

perhaps 1t is no wonder that
Speed wrote Bush.
Stain of Watergate

But the letter also may be
one of those small arrows that
pmnt toward btg change . There
have been other signs of Uie
same sort, all indicating that
Republicans outside the White
House are turning their back
on the President and his groUp,
hoping that the s tain of
Watergate will not splash on
them.
A couple of weeks ago, when
V1ce President Spiro T. Agnew
announced that he had con~
fiden ce in the integrity of the
Pres ident, the first or
sometimes second reaction of
many who heard it was sheer
amazement.
,That the vice president
should feel called up_on to
vouch for the honesty of his
boss seemed patronizing at
best.
James Reston, in The New
York Times, suggested that if
Nixon, as v1ce president, had
1ss ued such a statement about
President Eisenhower "Ike
would have kicked h1m over
the Washington Monwnent. "
At last report, the vice
president had not been dropkicked anywhere.

FOODLINER

allowed on board. The raft's
radio, which Mrs. Seymour will
operate., will transmit only. A
guitar will provide the only
entertainment.
Communal debate will take ·
up several hours a day with
different topics in the hands of
the crew, which includes a Jew
and an Arab, a btack American
and a white American, a Jesuit
priest and an agnostic.

SELECTS NCS
WILLARD, Ohio (UP! )
United Press International's
Class AA player of the year,
Mike Buurma, announced
Thursday he has signed a
national letter of intent to
attend North Carolina State.
Buurma, who led Willard
High School to an l~ regular
season record during the past
basketball season; averaged 24
points per game for Coach Bob
Haas' team. The record was
the first unbeaten mark in the
school's history and gave the
&gt;lChool the No. l ranking among
AA teams.

SUNDAY,
MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY

M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER, Middleport
OPEN SUNDAY 12 NOON 'TIL 6

We Want You To Know How Money Works For You

HOYT AlLEN

BilL CARTER

RAULLIN MOYER

RUTLAND- Five area ministers win participate in an intensive " Week
of Prayer," with each nigh\ a different minister coming here to bring a
message on prayer. Each will emphasize the area revival to take place at
the Middleport Junior lligh Sehool from June 3-8.
The "Week of Prayer" begins tonight and continues through Friday,
May 18, with \he following ministers speaking :
Monday, BiU Carter of \he Bradbury Church of Christ, on "The Purpose
of Prayer.''
Tuesday, Eugene Underwood of the Tuppers Plains Church of Christ, on

DAILY 9:00 TO 9:00

SEM 1-~0N ELESS

H'AM PORTIONS

IJet&gt;
oled To The lnleresl.' OJ The Meigs-Mason Area

PORTIONS
VOL. XXV

LB. 99~

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NO. 21

POMEROY-MIODLEPORT, OHIO
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EASTERN'S KING AND QUEEN - Royalty was named Saturday night at Eastern's
annual JUnior Senior Prom. Crowned queen was Joyce Myers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Myers, Chester, and named King was David Baker,son of Mr. and Mrs . Walter Baker, Tupper'
Plains. The theme used at the prom was ''Sweet Surrender'' .

vv~=;:;::::::::T;i:: : : : B;i';l;:lr

GREAT
GLASSWARE

. ATHENS COUNTY
MONTHLY INCOME
ACCOUNT
Interest
c hecks
mailed monthly or
quarterly.

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- Travelers Checks
- Money Orders
- Christmas Club
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Free Rand McNally Atlas.
MATCHING
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By United Press International
..
WASHINGTON - FOLLOWING A RELAXED Mother's Day
weekend at his Camp David, Md., mountain retreat, President
Nixon was back at \he White House today, reportedly putting
final touches on a major proposal to clean up election practices .
White House sources said Nixon will ask Congress this week
to set up a bipartisan commission to recommend new laws aimed
at averting future Watergate scandals. The sources said the
commission would be comprised of 16·20 members and would
aim both at recommending new laws for reforming campaign
practices and seek volWltary agreements to insure fair campaigning.
WASHINGTON - G. BRADFORD COOK, chairman of \he
Securities and Exchange Commission, faces Senate questioning
today about whether he bowed to Republican pressures in \he
performance of h!s duties. The New York grand jury that indicted
former Attorney General John N. Mitchell and former Com,
merce 'Secretary Maurice H. Stans on charges of perjury, conspiring to obstruct justice and to defraud \he United States made
the accusation against Cook, but did not indict him.
It alleged that Cook, while general counsel of th~ SEC before
President Nixon elevated him to chairman last winter, bowed to
Stans~persuastion and dropped reference in a SEC lawsuit to a
secret$250,000 cash contribution to President Nixon's re-election
campaign.
SAIGON - THE VIET CONG ASKED \he Interna\ioral
Conuni¥Jion of Cortrol and sutfervision SWJday to conduct an
emergency investigation of an American bomb,ing raid it said
killed and injured 34 civilians in South Vietnam. The United
States denied the charges and informed sources said U. S. of.
ficials would weleome the probe. The ICCS was schedUled to
discUS. the request at a meeting today .
It was the second Viet Cong complaint in two days about
alleged U.S. bombing inside South Vietnam near the Cambodian
border. The VietCong said the attack took place Saturday at Loc
Tan, two miles north of Loc Ninh and six miles from the Cam·
bodian border. It said two F4 Phantoms fired rockets in the area,
"Killing and injuring 34 persons, aU civilians."
COCOA BEACH, FLA.- PRISONERS OF war who were
denied a chance to watch America's Apollo flights to.the moon
had front.row seats today for \he launch of America's first
I manned space station.
'
1
The three Skylab astronauts, who will ride a rock•t Tuesday
I to catch up with \heir orbiting laboratory, personally invited 600
former POWs to the double-barreled blastoff. Only 34 responded,
but \hal was not the fault of1he townspeople, who offered \he
rows their bomes and apartments in case they couldn't find
motel rooms. Some even volunteered to feed them, take them on
cruises and babysit their children.
CAPE KENNEDY - WHILE THE SKYLAB I astronauts
waited anxiously, their luxW'ious space station was readied for
flight U\is afternoon to push back the frontier of manned orbital
1endurance and achieve the promise of spacenight.
Moonwalk veteran Charles ·'Pete" Conrad, Dr. Joseph P.
1Con 'inued on Page 8)

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MARGARINE

HIGHEST RATES IN THE AREA

MONDAY, MAY 14. 1973

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ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS AND LOAN CO.

The Passion of Prayer. "
Wednesday , Hoyt Allen of the Pomeroy Church of Christ, on ''The Power
of Prayer."
· Thursday, Raullin Moyer of the Middleport Ch~rch of Christ , on
" Prayers of tlle Perfector, Jesus."
Finally, on Friday, Clifford Smith, of the Bradford Chu rch of Christ, on,
"The Practicality or Prayer. "
The services begin nightly at 7: 30 at \he Rutland Church of Christ. The
public is invited .
11

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - The
matter or the mysterious
"Dean papers" and their role
in the Watergate scandal went
before a federal judge today
with the White House, a Senate
committee and \he court all in
\he rWlning to take control of
them .
Chief U.S. Distnct Judge
John ~ - Sirica, who conducted
theWhtergate trial in January,
called a morning hearing to try
to unravel the competing
claims.
Meanwhile, Senate hearings
resumed on the nomination of
Elliot L. Richardson to be
attorney general, and the fastspreading scandal apparently
claimed another casualty as a

enttne

HAM

lb.

EUGENE UNDERWOOD

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MEIGS BRANCH

CUFFORD SMI'm

BONELESS

HEARING HELD
ATHENS, Ol!io (UP)) - A
public hearing will be held here
at Ohio University's ' Baker
Center today by the Governor's
Task Force on Health Care.
Othelj hearings are, set for
Toledo on Monday, Cincinnati
next Wednesday and in Columbus May 21.

.I

,

SPECIAL SAVINGS FOR

SPONSOR NAMED
The Gallipolis Slate Institute
employes softball team is
sponsored this year by G .S I
Teamsters Local No. 413.
Victor Everett, president of
GSI Teamsters No. 413, has
won six out of six practice
games.
Next practice game will be
against the Eagles Club
Sunday; May 13, at 6 p.m. on
the GSl field . The GSJ
Teamsters No. 413 will start·
league play with Grand Cafe.
6:30p.m. Tuesday, May 15, on
the GSI field .

NELSON APPOINTED
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - James
E. Nelson, Ashland, has been
appointed
an
Ashland
Municipal Court judge by Gov.
John J . Gilligan.
NelSon, 42, succeeds Eugene
Puglisi, who resigned.

Court · I settle
Dean. papel-s' role

Tickets '
0 n sale
Tickets for the 1973 Pomeroy
High School Alumm Banquet
and Dance are on sale at the
New York Clothing House or
may be ·secured by writipg the
Pomeroy ~lumni Association,
P. 0. Box 202, Pomeroy .
All reservations should be
made by May 21. Only 300
ticket&amp; are available for the•
dinner .
Reunion classes this year
will be 50th, 1923 ; 45th, 1928;
40th, 1933; 35\h, 1938; 30\h,
1943; 25th, 1948; 2bth , 1953 ;
15th, 1958, and loth, 1963.
Members of the class of 1963
are reminded to contact the
reunion for 1963 committee if
they will be attending a
planned Saturday afternoon
event. They can also do this by
wnting the alumni associatiOn.
The Pomeroy banquet is for
alumni only but the dan ce is
public.
The alumni banquet will be
served beginning .at 6:30 p. m.
on Saturday, May 26, at the
Pomeroy Elementary School
with the dance to follow in the
POmeroy Junior H1gh School
auditorium

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport E·R unit was
called to the home of Sharon
Roush, 24 Railroad St., at 10 :13
p rn . Sunday. Mrs. Roush was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital , treated for overmedication and dismi Ssed.

CAPTAIN DIES
Capt. Jesse P. Hughes, 97,
who was the oldest licensed
pilot on the mland water:vays
system when he took hts last
boat down the Ohio River at 86
In !962, di~d Saturday in
Marietta. For 14 years, Hughes
served aboard the packet
Tacoma, which ran between
Pomeroy and Cincinnatt.

Treasury Department law enforcement official went on
" administrative leave" fonow,
ing a published report linking
him to the affair.
Th~ papers at issue before
Sirica were S\lpped out of
White . House
files
by
presidential counsel John W.
Dean lll shortly before
President l!!ixon fired him
April30. Dean stored them in a '
safe deposit box in the
Alexandria, Va ., National
Bank near wher~ he lives.
No One Knows but Dean
Apparently no one but Dean
knows exacUy what is in the
documents, and he has let it be
known only that \hey are
''classified" papers relating
somehow to the investigation of
the Watergate case now under·
way by a special Senate
committee .
The committee opens public
hearings Thursday, and its
ranking Republican member,
Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr. of
Tennessee, said Sunday Nixon
himself might be invited to
"state his side of the case" at
some point.
Dean, saying he had taken

the secret papers and lock&lt; d
them away because he feared
they might be stolen or
destroyed if left at the White
House, asked the court May I
to take possession of the safe
deposit box keys. He attached
the keys to h ~ petition.
The Justice Department, re.
sponding on behalf of the White
House, said Dean bad no
business laking \he papers and
that the administration wants
them back.
The Se.nate committee
weighed in •last Friday, asking
the court for the keys. It said
its investigators have evidence
that unnamed White House
aides have "illegally and
improperly removed and de·
stroyed records and documents" in the past pertaining
(Continued on Page 8)

Weather
Chance of showers north
today and over the entire state
tonight and Tuesday . Highs
Tuesday in upper 50s to the
lower 60s 1n lhe south. Lows
tonight m the upper 3ds to the
nnd 40s.

Driver charged
in auto wreck
One person was hospil&lt;.llizcd
and another - the dri\•cr was treated and released
followin g a smgle car accident
Sunday at 12:20 a.m in Chesler
Twp . on Twp. road 119, Shenff
Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept.
reported .
.,
Tommy E. Dixon , 32, Reedsville, Rt. l, travelmgeast, went
off the road on the nght in a
curve, struck and broke off a
ut1ltty pole , ripped out approximately 15 feet'of fen ce,
shearing off two fenceposts.
Jerry Hayman , F't. Knox,
Ky ., a passenger, was admitted at Veterans Iylemonal
Hospital, and the driver was
treated and released. The- two
and a second passenger, who
was not mjured, were Laken to
the hospital by the Pomeroy ER squad.
DixOn WklS arres ted f.or
dnving while intoxicated. The
ca r was demolished.
Sa lurday at 5:45 p.m. on
County Road 26, also in Chester

Twp., Earl C Kauff, Jr ., 19,
Hemlock Grove \vas travclinl!,
so uth when hi s car went
ore the road on
the
right in a curve, came
back Hcross the highway
to ii lrike HI\ embankment
olm!!S t headon . The car
bounced back onto. th e highway
and mto a chtch - hevded
backwttl'ds.
K&lt;Juff he~d v1sible injuries but
\\.as not immedtately treated .
He was c1ted for failure to
dnvc on the ri ght half of
ro::~dway . Ther·c was med1urn
dumagc to the &lt;;ar.
Sunday at 2·05 p.m . in
Che,ter Twp. on the Royal.Oak
PJrk Road, Cla rence McComas, 416, Huntmgton, and
Rickie 1.. Hollon, 17, Long
Bottom, Rt. I, was tl·avclmg
cast when Jlullon struck the
McComas cw· in U1e rear .
There were no persona l inJUncs Hnd no citation issued .
There w;1s medium property
d&lt;:l111&lt;1ge.

All became clear
in Nelsonville
By Mrs. Vllma P'ikkoja, Supervisor
Meigs-Jackson-Vinton Counties Bookmobile
Serving as a delegate from Meigs County to the White House
Conference on Aging m Washington, D. C. two years ago was an
honor and an experience of long Ia::; Ling va lue to me, and I hope,
lo the coWJty I represented .
Much has happened in the ensuing two years. When e1ght
Southern Ohio Counties under the very capable leadership of
Mrs. Eleanor Thomas, General Chairman, met for a District
Seven Conference on Aging Friday In Hocking Valley Motor
Lodge, Nelsonville, it was a success without comparison in bh10.
not only by the Wlexpectf?d nwnber attending, (according to Mrs .
Thomas: "We geared to 'have 200, we worked get 300, we asked
space for 400, and we served and accornmo&lt;!ated 500"; if that
isn't progressive success, what is?)
There were 509 people attending a workshop which had the
highest quality speakers, \he keynoter being Or. Arthur S.
Flemming, the tOp orricial in the Adrnmistration on Aging in
Washington , D. C. br. Flemming referred to the 1971 White
House Conference on Aging, and u!:icd the quote from President
Nixon's speech of a 98-ycar-&lt;Jld tclhng him, " I have always
prayed that my last days may he the hestdays."
I heard that speech and I was impressed with the conferenc-e
fCo ntmucd on page 8)

i?

BAND SENIOR Sharon Wilson presents assistant band director Fred Ruth a gift from band
students at the Meigs High School banquet Saturday night.

New
\awards
made
Four special awards were
presented the first time thre e for Instrumental ac·
com plishment - at the annual
Me1gs H1 gh School band
b~mquet Saturday night m the
high school cafeteria.
The spectal awa rds were not
Lhe only innovatwn . Parents
were invited for the first lime.
Almost :100 attended. The usual
d&lt;tnce following the b;mquel
w&lt;Js d1·opped thts year.
Mrs. Kenneth McLaughlin,
Band Booster president, gave.
the weleome following dinner
served by home economics
-studenlr;;. Presiding over the
presentation
of awards
following brief congratulatory
remarks by District Supt.
George Hargraves and H1gh •
School Principal James Diehl,
was band director Dwight
Goins. Goins, hts homespun
inflected a considerable humor
m ~pod form,! was assisted by
Fred Ruth , .\ assistant band
director .
Winning the "most improved
mustcian " award given for the
hr.r;;t hme was a ·senior, Liz

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PAITI WElL, a senior, presents band director Dwight
Goins with a gift at the Saturday night banquet. Goins and
Ruth received engraved plaques froiQ \he students.
Blaettnar, daughter or Mr. and
Mrs. John William Blaettnar of
Pomeroy.
Melame Burl, daughter of
Mr . and Mrs. Marvin Burt of
Pomeroy, won the Arion
Foundation Aw.ard for outstanding musical talent and
possibly the best potential
musically, and Patti Well,
daughter of Mr and Mrs .
Denver Well, Hemlock Grove,
won the coveted John Phillip
Sousa Award. \
\

.Lightning holt bombs pitcher
, LAKE HAVASU CITY, Ariz.
(U P! ) - A bolt of lightning,
described as a column of fire
two feet wide, hit a baseball
pitcher "like a bomb" Sunday
afternoon as he was Winding up
for a pitch in his team's season
opener.
The bolt killed pitcher John
Wade, 19, instantly \hen forked
out, k"nocking every player in
the infield and outfield off his
feet.
At least seven persons were
injured. Two of them, second
baseman Herber\ Noye, 21, and
shortstop Bob Hormann, 33,
were reported in critical
condition &lt;Jt Lake Havas u
Community Hospital.
Lightning struck in the top
ha If of the sixth inmng as
Wade, of the newly formed
Lake Havasu City semipro
team, was about to deliver a
pitch to a batter , froJr. the

Blythe, Calif., team.
One of the injured, Vern L.
" It was like in one of those H9wk, 28, who was playing
science fiction films where rightfield, spoke from a hospi· ·
someone from outer space tal bed, still in shock. 1
"1 saw John windup, then I
would shoot a ray of light at
someone and he would disinte- heard a big boom and I was on
grate," said Glen Baker, a the ground and I could barely
volunteer fireman who was see people corning out of the
stands," Howk said. "Then I
watching the game.
" A cylinder of light came saw people crawling on their
' down and engUlfed the pitch· hands and knees toward \he
er," he said. "1\ looked like his pitcher."
whole body was just one big
Wade's sister witnessed the
flash ."
tragedy from the - bleachers
" ll just vaporized the kid's and raced to the moWJd where
clothing and what was left was her brother lay, screaming,
in shreads '." said an am· "My God, my God, my
bulance operator.
brother." She attempted to "
Then , according to wit- give him mouth to mouth
nesses, the 1ightning leap- resuscitation but he was
frogged from the mound like a already dead.
star shell, first into the infield · Wade's father was the base
and then mto the . outfield, wnpire and was standing near
first base when the lightning
~.nocking everyone off their
feet, and .;ending clouds of dust struck. He was knocked to the
bq.ound but was not injured.
100 fee\ into the air.

-I

Witnesses said there had
been a light rain falling at \he
time and previous lightning
had been seen but was more
than 15 miles away.
Wade, a 1972 graduate of
Lake Havasu High School, was
an all-conference and all-state
player in that year.
The other injured Lake
Havasu players were third
baseman Roger Lambert, 37;
catcher Fred Grover Jr., 19:
James 'Mitchell, 30, and John J .
Chagdes, 39, an umpire.
Hospital officials said no one
on the Blythe teem was in·
jured.

The latter award is g1veh not
only
for
outstanding
mus!Ctanshtp but also for
oustanding personal charac~
leristics.
The fourth award, a drrnn
majorette trophy, went to Julia
Hutchinson , who headed the
majorette corps during the
past year. Goins expla ined that
she was a field director in her
position during the past year
and commended her highly for
(Continued on Page 8)

E-R unit in 3
weekend nms

The Pomeroy emergency
· unit answered a call to Third
St., at 8:46 p.m. Sunday for
Christma Buchanan, who was
suffering stomach pains. She
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital, treated
and released.
. At 11 :02 a.m. Saturday, the.
squad went to the office of Or.
John R1dgway on Main St. for
Ted Hatfield who was ill there.
He was taken to Veterans
MemQrial Hospital and ad·
milled.
At 8:05 p.m. Saturday the
squad went to the Fail
LOCAL TEMPS
Sizemore horne in-Rutland. She
Temp~rature in downtown
was taken to V.eterans
Pomeroy Monday at 11 a. m. Memonal Hospital where she
was 62 degrees under sunny was treated £or a head
skies.
laceration and discharged.

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