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Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 13,1973

Martha

Checks
Mailed

TWO-YEAR
CERTIFICATES
OF DEPOSIT

%

(ConUnued from Pijge 1)
the Washington Evening StarNews and !&lt;liked to Edltoc
Newbold Noyes.
The real Martha telephones
when the spirit moves her, does
not give out her telephone
number and says only whal she
wants to say, and no more.
Th·e irrepressible Martha
became famous for her telephone calls early in the Nixon
admiqistraUon. When qui2Zed
by senators about telephone
logs showing late night calls
from his apl!'tment to the
White House as recently as last
March 31-days after Mitchell
·. said he made his last contact
with Nixon- the former atllr·
ney general reminded the
· investigators "there is
someone else at my home who
. uses my phone constanUy."

Pays You

'50.00
PER MONTH

(Minimum Deposit
$10,000)

News.

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharges: George German, Gallipolis. Ferry; Thelma
EUiolt, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Lena Crookham, Leon; Mrs.
Byrd Blaine, Gallipolis Ferry ;
Mrs. Leona·rd See, Southside;
Mrs. Willie King, Arbuckle;
George Wamsley, Henderson ;
Paula Parnes, West Columbia ;
Harold Leighty, St. Albans;
Gary Treadway and Her.bert
Webb, Southside.

h

'•

1

Double Fe.ature Program
"200 MOT"£ LS"
- PlusA FISTFULLOF
. DYNAMITE

James Coburn

Pays You

'23.96
PER MONTH
(Minimum Deposit
1
5,000)

ATHENS COUNTY
MONTHLY INCOME
ACCOUNT

Sale!

FIRE HAZARD CWSED
BATON ROUGE, La. (UPI)
- Fire officials ordered a
small sectibn of Louisiana's
Capitol ~!eared Thursday after
dechiring it &amp;Jire hazard.
Reporters in the 31-story
Capitol press room, directly_
above the sub basement section which was condemned,
won a · reprieve. Deputy Fire
Marshal MarUn Fritcher gave
the newsmen five days to clean
up tb!lir offices before he would
order them closed.

10-Speed
·. Bicycles
Special Sale p,rices on famous AMF Roadmaster 10 speed bikes. The
Schorcher with racing handle bars. racing seat. caliper brakes front and
rear with hooded levers. lightweight, reflective rat trap pedals.
Be sure to see all the other boys and girls bicycles on sale. 26 inch standard bikes - s speeds · 3 speeds " training wheel bikes aJ:Id bicycles built
for two.
·

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
Visit Elberfelds Warehouse on Mechanic Street- Open both Friday and
. Saturday mghts until 9.

ADJOURNMENT I?USH
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Pres·
sures started building on major
legislation shortly before Ohio
lawmakers recessed for the
weekend Thursday, and
leaders in the Ohio General
Assembly are still pushing for
sn early August adjournment.
'The hectic pace in the House
snd Senate featured committee
approval of a pay raise bill for
judges, elected state officials
snd legislators,

Call No. 486

of Pomeroy in the State of Ohio, at the close of blllllness on June 30 1973
published In response to call made by Comptroller of tbe currency, Unde; Tille
12, United States Code, Section 161.
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks • • : · • · • • • • • • • • •
• $1,090,160.13
u.s. Treasury securities • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . . . . . 2 915 415 63
Obligations of other U.S. Government
' ' ·
agendes snd corporations • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 483,524.26
Obhgattons ,,
of Stales snd political sulxlivisions • . . . . " • 1 538I'l:J7.25
Ot)ler secunt1es • • · • • - - - - • • • • • . . . • • • •I31,742.50
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell • • • • : •
• • • •
5,800,000.00
Loans • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . . . • •
6,660,437.71
Bank premises, furniture snd fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises • • . •
• 255;307.35
Other assets • • • • • • • • ~ • • • •
• • 6,3%.24
TOTAL ASSETS • • • • • • • :- • . . •
$18,781,240.()7
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations • • • • • • • • • • • • • . • • • • $ 3,907,280.12
. Time and savings deposits of individuals,
.
psrt~erships, snd corporations • • • • • • • • • • • • • 10,702,641.63
Deposits of United States Government • • • • • • • • • • • 97,097.68
Deposits of Stat~s and political subdivisions • • • • • • • • • 2,403,307.19
Certified and officers' checks, etc. • • • • • • • • • • • • • 70 728 58
TOTAL DEPOSITS • • . . . • • • • $17,181,055.20
' .
(a) Total cemand deposits • • • • • . •
$ 5,M:l,450.96
(b) Total time and savings deposits • • • • .. $11·327 604.24
Other liabilities • • · • • . . . . • • • • • : .' • • • 175,423.69
TOTAL LIA.BILITIES · • . . v • • • • • • • • • • $17,356,476.89
RESERVES ON WANS AND SECURmES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
'
·
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) . . . . • • ••• •· • ,• .•
$811,518.76
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES · .
$811,518.76
.
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
·Equity capital-total • • • • • • •
• $1.336,242.4.
Common Stock-total par value • • • . • •
• • • 200,000.00
No. shares authorized 8 000
No. shares outstanding o:ooo
Surplus • • • • • . • . .• • • • . . . • • • • • • • • • 800,000.00
Undivided profits • • • . . • • • • •
~ • .. 336,242.42
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
•
$1,336,242.42
TOTAL LIABILITIES, RESERVES, AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS . . . •
$18,781,240.07
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar
days ending with call date . . . • • • • • • • • •• •
$16,721 ,472.60
Av.erage or total loans for the 15 calendar
days ending with call date • • • • • • • • • . . . • • • $ 6,653,255.77

'LIVE ENTERTAINMENT

Disciples of Time
3·PIEC~ GROUP

FROM LOUISA, KY.

They Play It All
•

All deposits are insured to $20,000.00 by
the Federal Savings
and Loan Insurance
Corporation.

•

'

SATURDAY NIGHT
10 TIL 2

SUNDAY, JULY 15, 1973

Gaillpolls-Point Pleasant

POMEROY

Disaster-alert
·at power plant
BY DALE ROOHGEB JR.
CHESHIRE - The dead were losers as always - but the injured received quick
and efficient care In an industrial
"disaster" at the Kyger Creek Power
Plant near here Saturday morning.
· Of the 50 casualties, seven -were
presumed dead on arrival at Holzer
Medical Center and 43 , were given
emergency treatment and removed either
to Holzer or to Pleasant Valley Hospital in
Pl. Pleasant.
·
It was all make-believe, but the kind of
tragedy that conceivably may be visited

some day upon this area where the power
industry is becoming a dominant fact in
development of the Mid-Ohio Valley.
To carry it off, area emergency
squads, fire departments and •hospitals
participated in a simulated explosion,
disaster-alert program.
The drill was sponsored by ,the MidOhio Valley Industry Emergency Planning
Council in cooperation wit11 Joe Fenderbosch, Kyger ' Creek Plant safety
director; Hugh Kirkel, executive vicepresident of the Holzer Medical Center and
his assistant, Robert Fanning.

TYPICAL SCENE
Saturday's simulated disaster
at the Kyger Creek Power
any
Plant brought out
medical technicians to are for
the "injured ." The outheast
· Ohio Ambulance ervice sent
ambulances from Gallipolis,
Pomeroy, and Athens. Also
participating were the Gallia
County , Middleport, Pomeroy
and Point Pleasant Volunteer
Emergency Squads, and the
Wilcoxen, Chapman and
Stevens Funeral Homes .in
Point Pleasant.
The simulated explosion occurred at
9:25 a.m. In the tunnel system at Kyger
Creek Plant. It caused a fire in an oil
storage room in the basment of the plant.
Other fires were extinguished in a coal

Pomeroy-Middleport

We, the undersign&lt;'&lt;! directors attest the co~rectness or this report of condition and declurc that it has been examined by us and to the best of . our
knowledge und belief Is true and correet
Edison Hobstcttor
Horace Karr - Direetqrs
Wurren Pickens

POMEROY - Financial help for
Pomeroy to, repair its ri~erfront parking
lots which are slipping into the Ohio River
may come through the U. S. Corps of
Engineers.
Sixteen psrking spaces on the upper
lot have been blocked off several weeks
becallSil erosion has da!Jlaged the base of
the wall.

Several meetings on the·situation have
been held, and Cong. Clarence Miller ~s
inspected the site.
At first, the U.S. Corps of Engineers
indicated that help could not come through
it . However, a letter to Cong. Miller from
Orland K. Hill, acting district engineer,
Huntington , indicates a possible change of

Settl~ment reached
GALLIPOLIS . - A $911-million setUemen! of Ohio Bell's two year old rate
case ~as been agreed upon by the
telephope company and virtually all those
who actively psrticipsted in the case. The
agreement has been presented to th PUCO
in Columbus and Ohio Bell Vice President,
Joe Read, said Saturday the psrties involved urge the Commission to approve
this compromise.
Of tJle 19 cities, business firms,
univer~ities snd individuals who had
argue&lt;! Bell's $166-inillion request, 17 heve
now agreed to the new figure.
The agreement recognizes that, even
with PVCO approval, the new rates cannot
go into effect until the federal government
price freeze ends.
"While ibis settlement is less than
what we still feel is needed " Reed said,
"time ~as become a relentless foe. Our
case was flied on August 9, 1971. It is now
two yeJ~"S later. We have agreed to the $98-

million figure becalise we desperately
need more revenue immediately. There
are major service improvement projects
that must be started or we simply will not
be able to meet the calling needs of our
customers In the immediate future."
For most Ohio homeowners the new
rate structure will amount to an increase
of about 16 pet. over present exchange
rates.
The cost to install telephone service
will go from $9.75 to $16 for residence
customers and to $20 for businesses. The
CO!llpany wlll also begin charging for nonpublished service, at 50 cents per month.
For long distance calling within Ohio,
the company will institute separate rates \
for direct-distance-dialed (ODD) calla, for
person-to-person calls, and for operator·
handled calls (station-to-station, collect,
credit card billed-to-third number, etc.)
Ohio Bell, whose toll schedule applies
(Continued on psge 2)

PRICE 20 CENTS

out June 30.
The six plants struck are the Kammer
and Mitchell at Moundsville, W. Va., the
Windwr plant at Power, W. Va., the Tidd .
and Cardinal plants at Brlllisnt, Ohio, and
the Philo plant at Philo, Ohio.

Union claims order
came during lunch
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The Americsn
Federation of State, County and Municipal
Employes Union said Friday the 60 employes suspended from Holzer Hospital at
Gallipolis were on a regularly scheduled
1\lllch break. The hospital called it a work
stoppage and suspended the workers.
"Councli 53 of the union unequivocably
denounces and condemns management's
faUure or unwillingness to meet with our ,
represenl&lt;llive on a r~tlonal basis to
promote and protect the vital public in·
ttrest whlc!liS at stake," the council said . .

&amp;ene along Hiland Cemetery Road
POMEROY - Hopefully, the recent establishment of the Meigs County
Lsndfill dump by the county commissioners will discourage further open dumping
such as the scene at right. Over $100,000 has been spent to establish the county
landfill and equipment to pickup trash and waste from 30 containers being placed
in the townships .
·
This pictilre is typical of the trash, rubbish and garbage piled along each side
of the Hiland Cemetery RO.d, at the back door of Pomeroy. This open dumping,
upparently one of the worst in the county, is continuing with no action as yet either
to getthe open dumping stopped or.to cover the masses of trash along both sides of
the road. The Hiland Cemetery Road is in Salisbury Township, just off the new
Route 7by,pass. At the end of the road is the Hiland Cemetery.

Epling sttlrs in Gallia Country

..

'

handling area and a coal conveyor tunnel.
At the time or the simulated explosion,
students from the Holzer School of Nursing
. were touring the plant. They became the
disaster victims for the plant employees
li!\d emergency squadmen, who arrived
shortly.
All "victims" were "planted," which
made rescue efforts a lillie harder, but
(Continued on page 2)

CANTON , Ohio (UP!) - Negotiating
sessions have been scheduled between the
Ohio Power Co . and the striking Utility
Workers Union of A'nerica. The union has
struck Ohio Power's six plants and -three
operating divisions in a contract dispute.
Apargaining session is scheduled next
Friday in Steubenville and another July 23
here. The first session will cover workers
at the six plants and the second will be for
operating divisions,
The contract governing the workers ·at
the power plant.&lt;~ expired May 31 snd the
one,covering the operating divisions ran

Help or Pomeroy wall possible

Mulne Grlfllth
.

KYGER CREEK PLANT
employees Saturday prepare
above to load two more victims
of a simulated gas explosion at
the power plant, Disaster
victims in the mock exercise
were planted in three different
locations.

MILLER SESSION SET
GALLIPOLIS - A representative
from the office of Oth District
Congressman Clarence E. "~'!filler wiU hold
an open door session here Jply 17 from 9 to
cooperation from the .Village of other 11 a.m. at the Gallla ,CollntY 'Co\uittmil~.
heart ,
legally
respon•ible, fillllncially capsble,
"Following is a part of tbat l~ttefl
"As you know from previous CQntacis, and willlng sponsor. The non-Federal
the mayor of Pomeroy had been noified sponsor will be required to provide lands,
prior to the i7 June m!)eting at Pomeroy easements, and rights-of-way for the work,
that corrective action for the erosion of hold the United Sl&lt;ltes free fr(}m damages
psrking lot did not appear to fall within the due to the contruction and subsequent
purview of authority available to .the Corps maintenance of the project; maintain the
of Engineers. Review of the information project after completion; and assume
contained in your letter and additional responsibility for all costs in excess of
data provided by the City has resulted in a Federal limitations which is $50,000 under
determination that the psrking lot is an present iegisiation, In that respect, it
essential facility · serving the general should be noted that no detailed cost
public snd that protection of the psrking estimate for the required work has been
lot is extremely important to the economy prepared to de.termine the amount of nonFederal contribution that may be
of the village.
The District there!ore will proceed required. It should be recoghlzed that
with preparation of the reports required to initiation of a study at the district level
·determine appropriate action under does not commit the Federal government
authority provided by Section 14 of the to performing the work since such action is
Flood Control Act of 1946, contingent upon subject to approval snd allocation of funds
from review echelons within the Corps of
further coordination· with the village
"It will be necessary to obtain local Engineers.

. I, Mlixlne Griffith •. Cashier.• of the above-numcd bank do hereby declare
. :~~e~is report of condition 1s n-ue and corretL to the best of my knowledge and

The -MEIGS INN
PH. 992-3629

Hours : Mon.: Wed .,
9to 3
Thurs. 91o Noon
Friday 91o 6
Sat., 9 to noo~

Charter No.l980 . ·
Nallonal Bank Region No.4
REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING
DOMESTIC SUI!SIDIARIES, OF mE

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK.

POW ON PROBATION
(PGI
EL CAJON, Calif. (UP!) Juan M. Astorga, a former
Army specialist who was held
SATURDAY
July 14
captive 10 months in North
Double Feature
Vietnam, was placed on a
THE PUBLIC EYE
year's probation Thursday
Mia Farrow
Topol
after pleading guilty to two
M ichael Jayston
traffic offenses.
CGI
Astorga hit another car on a
Plus
locallreeway Apri112 and was
'tHE GROUNDSTAR
CONSPIRACY"
charged with hit-and-run and
!Color
reckless driving. The charges
Georg~ Peppard
LOCAL TEMPS
-later were reduced to speeding
Michael Sarrazin
It was 76 degrees in down"
and ma~ing an unsafe lane town Pomeroy Friday at 11
(PGI
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.. . change.
a.m. under sunny skies.

Interest checks
mailed monthly.

VOL. 8 NO. 24

Open Friday and Saturday Nights Until 9

New ·Group At The Meigs This Week

A-C-M-1-A .

3 SECTIONS

30 PAGES •

'

DECLARED SANE
CANTON, Ohio (UP!) - A
Canal Fulton man who spent 44
years in the state Hospital for
the Criminally Insane at Lima
has been declared sane and fit
to stand trial on two murder
charges. However, officials
said it has not yet been decided
whether to bring Edward
Kallenbaugh, !]OW 65, to court
for the slaying of Mr. and Mrs.
John Oser on their farm near
here in 1929.

!Color)
Rod Steiger ·

Families

Dev.,ted To TM Greater Middle Ohio Vallev

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

.
(Continued from Page I)
DC7 carrying relief supplies to victtrns of the Nicaraguan earthquake crashed shortly after takeoff from San Juan,. Puerto
Rico,
.
, 'In its report on the accident, the National Transportation
Safety Board said the plane was 4,193 pounds overweight when it
took off; an engine failure was blamed on an· earlier taxiing
·accident; the plane had not been flowri " in approximately four
month'!&gt;" prior to the crash, snd another engine failed to develop
"full power" on takeoff because of "excessive wear. "

What Z'at?
Rough Riders

·.•r '

tmts·

..~

• • in Briefs

Color cartoons :

;,( orltrrNql'l,.

Moatiy Iunny Smtday und
cooler w1U1 highs in the 701!
except ror u lew IIOit south.
MoaUy clear and cool Sunday
night with Iowa In th~ 50s.
Sunny nnd cool Monday with
highll in the 70s.

Your Invited Gue1d
Jl eaching More
Than 12,000

..

PANSY THOMAS, umlrella against rain one day last
week, is delivering her Daily Sentinels in the Monkey Rim
area, Psnsy lives~~ 422 W. Main .St., Pomeroy. Above, ri~ht,
Trina Bachtel,age I, of Monkey Run is dressed for the warm
temperature the same day at the U-Drive-Thru car wash, W.
Main St., Pomeroy. Pictures by J. Sam Nichols Ill.

C PG )

MASON DRIVE-IN

•

Weather

----

MEIGS THEATRE .

Tonight, July 13

Avtomatlcaltv
Renewable

•

REGISTER MONDAY
HUNTINGTON
Registration for the second
summer session at Marshall . ::::::::::~:::::::::::~::::::::::::::::;:;:::~~i!~!:.;:~:~:~;~:~:::::::
University will be held MonREMINDER
day, July 16, beginning at 8
Area residents were
a.m. in Smith Hall Auditorium,
reminded today that tickets
Room 154.
forlhe initial performance of
"Ga!Ua Country" will be
available at lhe gate this
evening. The pageant begins
Tonight, Sat., Sun.
at ~:45 p.m. at the Bob Evans
July 13·14-15
Farms amphitheater, Rio
THE LAST
AMERICAN HERO
Grande. Reserve seals are
(Technicolorl
$2.50, general admission $2,
Jeff Bridges
and student tickets $1.
Va larie Perrine

Thrill Spill
. Show Starts 1 p.m .

ONE-YEAR
CERTIFICATES
OF DEPOSIT

.~

~.:.

•

Automaticall y
Renewable ,.

•

'I

LEITER SOW
NEW YORK (UP!) - A
letter written by Watergate
conspirator James W. McCord
that revealed Central Intelligence Agency informer melh·
ods during 1956-58 was sold for
$950 Thursday night at the
Charles Hamilton Galleries.
The letter was purchased by
Alan Ackerman, of New York,
a private collector. McCord
was one of seven men con~
victed of the June 17, 1972
burglary at the Democratic
National Headquarters in the
Watergate apartment complex
· in Washington, D.C.

Hober Jlledlnl Cenler
(Diliebarjed)
Mary Adams, Nina Vougluln,
Emmet MontgQillery, Randy
Hall, Freda Edinger, Harry
· Wheeler, Jomes Shawver,
Virginia McDaniel, DebOrah
Notts, Newouana Jjarvey, Nell
Gills, . John Genii!, John
Gamble, Rose l&gt;dwords,
Norman Dean, Vincent
Cle.land, Halcle Burdette,
Mildred Bottrell apd Roger
Athey.
(Births)
Mrs. Delbert Johnston, a son,
Wellston, Mrs. Ralph Shaine, a
son, Syracuse, Mrs. Lsrry
Pickett, a son, Crown City,
Mrs. Charles "Phillips, a son,
Coalton , Mrs. , Richard Me·
Fann; a son, Oak Hlllond Mrs.
Marvin McCain, a son, Oak
Hill.

JI,OCK SHELTER AWNG RACCOON CREEK - Here's
a scene frqm a Gallia Country rock shelter along Raccoon

Creek aroMd 1792. On left is Daniel Boone (played by Blll
Spires). On right is Col . Robert Safford (played by John A.
Epling) ,

BY JAN COUNTRYMAN
GALLIPOI,JS - With a whole lot of
work they did it.
N_ot only does this apply to the French
•1ve Hundred and other early Gallia
settlers, but to the cast and crew of "Gallis
Com\try," Ohio's newest outdoor drama .
'11m drama is cu1·rently playing this
evening (Sunday) and next Friday,
Saturd•y and Sund•y at the Bob EvansFarms amphitheater. The progrum begins
each evening about dark, between 8:45 and
9:30 p.m. depending on weather conditions.
"Galiia Country" is full of good songs
and superb costuming in .a setting that
perhaps is unsurpassed in wuthern Ohio.
The natural •mphiUteater is separated
from the farm c'(linplcx, allowing an
IUtintel'l'uptcd evening of entertainment
for wl111t can be " c•paoity crowd of 500 ut
this stage of Its development .
.
About 300 to 400 of the seats were
occupied for ~'r ldoy 's premier of the
·musical, written by Lee OUrieux and ably
directed by Muri Rush . Anne Fischer Is
musical direetor of tho m:ogram with
Gillian Moore in charge of choreography ,
The play is essentially 11 series of
(Continued on page 2)

•

.l

I

•

I

BOB EVANS, whose idea It was, and whose money ia underwritllll! the current
production of Gallla Country, at right, and J . Sam Nichols UJ, lett , and Plul
Wagner, were on hand ncar the natural stage setting on the Bob Evana Farme at
Rio Grande Friday night for openll'lll night. Wagner Is president ot the Gallla
County Dramutic Arts Society; Nichols a photographer for the Ohio Valley
Publishing po.

It

�)

,.

Television Log,
,
SU NDAY, JULY ll, 1913
6· DO - Tr•velog u• 4.
AC

has pin ·

--.....

·-

. -"

OPENING SCENE - This is the opening scene of "Gallia Country" ___
being presented by the Gallia Dramatic Arts Society at the Bob Evans

-~

Farms amphitheater Rio Grande. Judge Bradbury (Roger Williams) and
company start off with a patriotic song and dance medley in the Gallipolis
City Park in the 1890s.

Court orderS

'Gallia Country' a hit at Rio
.

Daniel Bodne. A talented baritone, Spires
Nora Price and her crew ha ve done
(Continued from Pa_ge t )
sketches, each portraying an era in the presents "The Hills of Kentucky" with ·wonders with ciJstuming and the unsung
history of "Gallia Country." The play is heart-rending longing. Roger Williams is heroines and heroes in the make-up
relatively loose in structure; in its impressive as Judge Bradbury who both department 1they 're not listed in the
premier, some of the scenes didn 't quite opens and closes the play, and the other program) could pass for professionals, at
move in comfortable succession, and characters give memorable perform- least from the audience's point of view.
Th play is touched with music and
there were some long pauses while props ances.
There are moments when the mirth and, while it can't be called an
and characters are rearranged. ,But
choreography,
although very good indeed, altogether accurate history, it really isn't
overall, the production is quite good.
Roses have to go to John Epling, w)lo seems just a trifle out of place. There are meant to be, "Gallia Country" promises to
gave a moving and dynamic portrayal of others, as In Roxy's Emporium, and at the improve. Even Friday evening brought
Col. Safford, both in the first act (circa mill, where it is beautifully done and adds constructive comments from the members
of the crew and cast on ways to make it
1792), and later (1863) at Fortification Hill measurably ro the production.
Perhaps
the
most
impressive
thing
better.
in Galltpolis. Epling carries with him the
Definit~ly worth the dri ve to · Rio
aura of dignity and Patriotic pride that about "Gallia Country" is that the cast is
nearly
all
amateur,
each
seeming
to
enjoy
threads its way through all pioneer stories
Grande, "Gallia Country" looks as though
it may have come to stay.
Bill Spires is excellent in the part of doing the P.esentation thoroughly.

Bell phones
(Continued from Page I)
ro the enffre state, also proposes to institute initial rate periods ot' one minute
instead of the present three minutes for
DOD calls, which don't require any
operator assistance. This would allow a
customer to make a brief .intrastate toli
call for Jess than he now pays.
OVerall, the intrastate toll increases
range from four cents to 45 cents for initial
periods, and from one cent to seven cents
for additionid periods, depending on the
distance, time of day and type of call.
. In the Gallipolis calling area, the
monthly rate increase for residence
telephone service will be 75 cents for a twoparty line and 95 cents for a private line.
Business rates will increase by $2.60 for a
single line or $7.95 for a trunk line that
terminates in a private switchboard.
In the Cheshire and Rio Grande calling
areas, the monthly rate increase for
residence telephone service will ·be 70
cents for a two-party line and 90 cents for a
private line. Business rates will Increase
by $2.40 for a single line or $7.35 for a trunk
line terminating on a private switchboard.

desegregation
in Dayton
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) - The
Dayton School Board is under a·
court order to implement a
desegregation plan this fall.
U.S. District Court Judge
Carl B. Rubin on Friday ordered the board to begin a plan
it had submitted to the court
after being found guilty earlier
this year of creating
"segregated facilities."
Rubin partially approved a
plan submitted by the conservative four -member
majority of the board. A plan
submitted by the board's threemember liberal minority,
which was supported by the
local NAACP chapter, and a
proposal offered by the Dayton
Teachers Association; also had
been considered by Rubin.
Both plans had sought wider
integration of the 48,000 -.
student school system, which is·
45 per cent black.
The plan Rubin ordered
is
based
implemented
primarily on the establishment
of four science centers to which
all pupils will attend from two
to 18 times per schooi·year. Bus.
transportation to the centers is
to be used.

Th e swallow s of San Juan
Capistrano migrate to Argen·
tina. They leave in late Octo$500 PRESENTED TO CANCER FUND - Mrs. Sharon Riffle, Middleport, . ber . re turn about March 19.
center named by the local cancer society to receive the Ohio Society for the St . Joseph 's Day. The migration takes abou t 10 days.
Promotion of the Bull Frog's annual contribution of a $500 bond, was presented her
gift. Saturday morning by James Clatworthy, Grand Croaker, left. Miss Riffle, a
registered nurse at Pleasant Valley Hospital, will present the gift to Mrs. Ferman
Moor~, right, presidentofthe Meigs County Cancer Society .

were treated at both tlospitals.
pound fracture of the arm ; Sue Lyon,
At the Holzer Medical Cente r , a
Gallipolis, compound fracture of l e~; woman wa s admitted sufferi ng from labor
Margaret Ehman, 14 Pine St., Gal li poliS, pains; a 12year old Jackson youth reQui red
medicaL· Karen Sm i th, address not surgery for a fra c tured ankl e, an d a 64·
available, third degree burns; Linda year old Jac kson r es id ent was adm itted as
Pitney, address not available. th ird degree . a medical patient .
bufns; , Four victims, whose names were
Acr oss the ri ver , doc tor s al so hand led
not reaqlly ava ilable, were given delar,ed a leg fra ct ur e o per a tion ,· d is loc ated
or i mmediate treatment . A hospdal shoulder and two heart cases.
spokesman said delay treatment meant
The drill was planned in order to see
the victim was not ser ious or did not need just how compan y per sonnel, hospi tal
immediate attention.
personnel and vari ous emerge ncy squads
The Holzer med ical staff consi sting of would r eact.
doctors, nurses, aides X-ray techn icians
Fire depar tments part ici pating were
and supervisors were on hand to handle all Gallipolis, Point Pleasant, Pomeroy and
patients as they arrived. Volunteers from Middleport.
the Volunteer Service League and Gray
Gallla County sherif f's deputie s
Ladles worked with the victims' fam il ies dir ected traffic at the plant and the Holze r
to provide information as soon as poss ible ~dical Center . Area newsm en wer e
also ta glve a helping hand and sometimes a\ sis ted in t hei r work by Bob Daniel,
consoling word .
Holzer Cl inic Ad mi nistrat or , and Jim
Dr. Richa rd Slack, chief of staff at Blev ins, hi s assi stant. A press r oom wa s
Pl easant Va l ley Hos pi tal In Point set-up in the Clinic Busi ness Of fice nea r
Plea sant, had charge of the overall the Hol ze r Hospi ta l Emergency Room .
operat ions there. Ei ghteen victims, mos t
A detail ed r epor t on Sa tur da y ' s
of whom suffered simulated symptom s of Gim ulated drill w ill be prepared for
chlorine gas inha lat ion wer e treated at critique by hospital. plant an d other of .
Pleasant Valley .
flc lals on July 17.
The most ser ious case wa s that of
It wa s l earned la te Saturda y aft ern oo n
Teresa McCarty of Point Pleasant, who that two of the mock victims became ill
would have been a surgery victim for the during the dri ll. They suffered from heat
amputation of her right arm. Two patients e)( hausti on and were treated at the pl ant
were dead on arrivaL
·
and later at the hospital.
.
Treated were Mary Utterback, gas
Gallia County volvnteer em erg ency.
inhalation ; Brenda Stevens, Darl ene squadmen had to transfer one of its vic Chapman, Betty Kimberling , Debra ti m? f~ om the ambulance In ord er to an .
Walker, Debra Philson, all for gas swer to call ror an expa ctant m other . The
· Oak Hill, smoke inhalat ion ; Janet inhalation : Marilyn Martin for second and woman gave bir th to twin s th r ee minutes
Woodard, Rt. 2, Waterford, first, second th ird degree burns ; Lauri Brady , fra c. after her ar riva l at the hospital.
and third degree burns ; Sandy T ~rry, l ured wri st and amputated m iddl e finger ;
Gallipolis, smoke inhalation ; Su san ' M.' Vana Bordman , abrasi ons and second
Sheets, 18, Gallipolis, smoke Inhalation; deg ree burns ; Shelia Pi cker s. se vere heap
Mamma McNar, Portsmouth, fac ial burn s In jur y and lacerat ions; Tony Fowl er ,
MEIGS GETS $3,818.08
and possible blindness ; Peggy Saunders, fr ac tured r ight arm and la cerat ions ;
Donahue,
smoke
Inhalation
and
Brenda
POMEROY
- A total of $4,902,920.04
18, Rt. 3, Ironton, first , second and th ird
la
ce
ra
li
on
s.'
Mal
e
na
Dun
can,
smok
e
degree burns ; Shir ley Hodges, 20,
in local government fund money 'has been

f

6: 00 - News 4, 6: CB S News Re tr ospectiv e a, 10 .

•

-

-

••.

. ,, 1

.

6:30- NBC News 3, 4, 15; Un tamed World 6; Audubor Wildilte_1
Theatre 33 .

in 30 cases
POMEROY - An even 1 ~
defendan Ia each - 30 In u11 were lined or lorfelted bonds In
Meigs CoWJty Court Friday
with Judge Fra nk W. Porter
presiding.
Fined were Thomas A.
Mathes, South Point, Ohio,
Eugene H.' French, Middleport,
Debbie Roush, Rt. 2, Racine,
Gary D. Slaven, Middleport,
$10 and coots each, speeding;
· Thomas E. &amp;mlth, PomerQ)',
Roger B. Pearch, Middleport,
Charles E. Jones, Rt. I, Langsville, $10 and costs, left of
cent e~ ;
Basil
Haynes,
Pomeroy, Dennis Tolley, iu. 3,
Albany, $150 and costs, 3 days
confinement, and 6 months
restricted license suspension
each, OW!; Amos B. Cross,
Rutland, $5 and · costs,
speeding; Maurice G. Gagnon,
Rt. I, Minersville, $15 and
costs, speeding; ' Lewis B.
McKinney, Middleport, $10 and
costs, failure to yield right of
way ; Calvin W. Ruble ,
Coolville, $15 and costs ,
allowing an unlicensed &lt;!river
operate a vehicle ; Walter
Roush, Syracuse, $10and costs,
failure to keep on right half of
road; and Evelyn B. Ward, Rt.
4, Pomeroy, $14 and costs,

7 : 00 ~ Lo;~ wr e n ce

The Al~aoac

By United Press International
Today i~ Sunday, July 15, the
!96th day of 1973 with 169 to

Welk 13 ; Zoom 20,33, Wai t Till Your Fa ther
Gets Home 6; This Is Your Life 4; Wi ld Ki ngdom )5; Super --:
stars of Ro ck 8; Safa ri to Advenure J i Salute 1o the,zoo 10.
,

SUNDAY
TIMES-SENTINEL

7: 30 _ Let's Make A Deal 6; World ot Disney 3, '· ll : Beverly •
Hiilbillies 8: Dick Van Dyke 10 : French Chef 20, ll .
:
8:DO - MAS HB ; FB I6, 1l : Evcningat Pops 20, 33.
6: 30- Mannix 8, IO ; Columbo3 , d, 15.

:

Published every Sunday
by
Th e
Oh io
Va l le y
Pub\ishina Co .
GALLIPOLI S
DAILY TRI B U ~J; .
825 Th ird Av e., Gal l I polis.
Ohio 4563 1
Publ ished every wee kd ay
evening e xc ep t Saturda y.
Second Cla ss Postage Pa id

follow .
9: 00 - M aster piece Theatre 20, 33; Movie "G rQnd Slam" 6, q.
The moon is in its full phase . 9:30 - Barnaby Jo nes 8, 10.
•'
·
ta
e M rs 10:00 - Firinglin e 20,33 i N ightGall er yJ , d, 15.
·
:
Th
e mornmg s rs ar a ' 10: 30 - High Road to Adve nt ure 10 ; Pollee Surgeon 1 ~; Half rhe 1
Jupiter lmd Saturn.
.
Geor ge Ki r by Com ed y Hour B; We Think You Should Know 3. 1 •
The evening stars are Mer- 11 : oo- NeWs 3, 4, 6, a, 10, 13, 15.
.';
:: .
11 : 15 -

News 6, 8, 10, 13.

1

curyand Venus.
11 : 30 - Johnn y Ca r son 4, 15; Mov ies " Behi nd th e Eigh t Ba ll" 3 j j
Those born on thls d8te are ·
"Another Time, Anolh ~r Place" 8: " Cu l ler 's Trai l" 10 , 1
under the sign of Cancer.
12:00 - In Concert 13.
·
1
00
4
'
·
pa1'nter
Rembrandt
Roller
Derby
Dutch
2: 00 - News 4 .
was born July 15, 1606.
On this day in history :
MONDAY, JULY 16, 1973
'',
In 1912, the United States, led 6: 00 - Su nr ise Semi nar 4 ; Sacred Hea rt 10 .
by all-around athlete Jim. 6: 15 - Farmt lme 0.
6: 20 - Farm Report 13.
Thorpe, won the Olympic 6 . 25 - Paul Ha r vey 1$.
Games in Stockholm , Sweden.
6: 30 - Columbus Today 4, Bible Answer s 8 ; School Scene 10 ;
Good News 13.
In 1945, Italy dec1ared war on
6 ~ 45 - Cor ncob Report 3,
·
.~
its formerAxis partner, Japan. 7:DO - Today 3, 4; I S; News, Weather, Sports 6; CBS News 8, 10.: ;
Jeff's Collie 13.
.•
In 1964, Arizona Sen. Barry
7:
30Romper
Room6
;
PopeyelO
;
Rocky&amp;
Bu
ll
wi
nkl
e
13.
Goldwater was nominated as 8: 00 - Capt. Kangaroo 10 ; Lassie 6; Sesam e St. 33; New Zoo .'
the Republican presidential
Revue 13.
1 •
8:30New
Zoo
Ree
6
;
J
a
c
k
La
l
an
ne
13
,.
candidate. He was soundly
8:55 - ·News 13
.
beaten in November by Lyndon 9· 00 - Paul Dixon 4; Ph il Donahue 15; Fri endl y Junction lO i
Johnson.
·
A: M . 3; Let 's Make A Deal 6; Merv Gr iff in 8: Peyton Pl ace :
Roger s 33.
In 1971, President Richard 9: 2513;- Mr.
Ma the ma 33.
Nixon disclosed plans to make 9:30- To Tell the Tru th 3; Jeopardy 6; Peyton Place 13.
an unprecedented visit to 9: 40 .:.... Phy s1cs Demonstration s 33.
- Chuck Whi te Reports 10.
..
_
Communist China. He made the 109:55
:00 - Dick Van Dvk P. 1:1 : Dinnh Shnre 3. 5; Jok er 's Wild 8, 10:111
weeklong visit in February,
Maggi e &amp; The Beaut if ul Machi ne 33, Wil d , Wil d Wes t 6 .
:
10:30
Split
Second
13:
B
aff
le
3,
4,
1S,
$10,000
Py
ram
id
8,
10;
Tin
1972.
0

at Gall ipol is , Ohio 45631.
T HE D A ILY SENTIN E L

1

1

, A thought for the day :
American writer Mark Twain
said, "Truth is the most
valuable thing we have . let's
economize it."

Lad y 33 .
"
•
11 :00 - Password 13 ; Love, Amer ica n St yl e 6 ; Gam bit 8, lO ;%
Wi za rd of Oz 3, 4 15; Wh y 33 .
•
11 · 30 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4 15; Love of Li fe 3, 10; Bra dy•
Bunch 6, 13.
:
11 : 55 - News 8, Dan !mel's Wor l d 10.
1111
12: 00 - Pa sswor d 6; Bob Brau n' s 50-50 Club I! ; Jeopardy J, 15 ; :
News 8.
•
12: 30,...... Spl it Second 6; 3 W' s 3, 15 ; Search f or T om or row a, 10
fl'
12: 55 - NBC News 3, 15.
"
1:00 - All My Children 6, 13; ll's Your Bet 8; Gr een Acr es 10 ;
~
Fre~ c h Chef 33 ; Not For Women Only 15; News J.
;
1: 20 , Fashion s in Sew ing 3.
·'
it
1:30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, I S; Le t's Make A Deal 13•; As T h e~
World Turn s a, 10; Amet ican Ody sse y 33 ; Bow ling 6 J
J'2:00 ~ Da ys of Our L ives 3, 4, 15 ; Newl ywed Gam e 13-;' M ikel

Douglas 6; Guiding Light 8, 10.
ll
2 : $0 ~ Doctors 3, 4, 15; Da ting Game 13; Edge ol Night 8, 10; Ott !

The Record 33 . .
"'
3:00 - Artolher Worl d 3, 4, 15,· Gener al Hos pila l 6 13; Pr ice Is:
Righ t 8, 10; Oleanna T rai l 33 .
• ,
•
3: 30- Return to Peyton Place 3, 15; One Li f e to Lived, 13 ; Phil •
0Qnohue4 ; Holly wood's Talking 8; Secr el Storm l Q; Time tor:
Timo thy 33 .
•
4 : 00 ~ Mr Ca d oon 3; Love. Amer ican Style I$; l'iuck 1&amp; Yoq i 6: :
Som er se t 15; Secret Storm B; Sesam e St . 33; Movie ' 1 The 1111
Happy Time" 10
'
1o
4: l 0- Petti coat Juncti on 3; Mer v Gr i ffin 4; F -Troop ~ ; Ab bot t :
&amp; CostelloB; My Litt le Margie 15 ; Dak tari 13.
I
1o
5:00 - Bona nza 3; Her e Come the Bridos 6; Ha ze l fl ; Mr . R og er s ~
20, 33; An dy Griffi th I S.
•
5: 30 - Beverly Hillbill ies 8; Elec tri c Co. 33; Gomer ! Pyle 1 3 ; ~

Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Trails West 15.

5:55 -

•

Earl Nightinga le 15.

6:0o-- News 3, 4, 8. 10. IS; ABC News 13; Sesame St.
~ ~u~n .
·

11

20 ; ~

;

6: 00- AB C News6 ; CBS News B, O; I Dream of Jea nnie 13. News"

3. 4, 15; How Do Your Child ren Grow? 33 .

7 : 00- lru t~ or CO ~seq . J ; Beat the Cloc k

ti
4; News 6, 10 ; Circus;;

13; What s M_y L1ne 8 ; Elec. Co. 20; Di scover Flyi ng 33; Sain l lll'
15; Take: F1 ve 5.
!Ill

7:3Q--To Teli 'lhe f ru th 6; Young Dr. K il da r~ 8; Ho ll ywood:

Squ.ar e.s 4; Traffi c Court 10; ·Chan-ese Way 20; Ep isode: •
Act•on 33 ; Bobby Go ldsboro 3; M ov ie " Lovers.&amp; Lollipops":

13.
.
.
.
8:0RO - kl GunsmToke 8. 10; Base ba ll Prc-Gome Show · 3,
oo es 6: ogether - Chuck Mang ione ld, 33.
8:1S- Base ball 3. 4, 15.

•

4, I S; !

"

#

9: 00 - Her e's Lucy 8, 10; Movie " Gu nn" 6, 13.

"

9:30- Dor is Day 8, 10; Book Beaf20, 33:
10: DO - Medi cal Center 8, 10; News 20; Pa ul Nuchlms 33
10: I S - The Silent Years 20.
·

:
'

11 : 30- Johnn y 'c arson 3, 4, 15; M ar joe's Coun lr y 6, 13; Movl ,~
" Uarby 's
Range r s"
8;
"Ring
of
Fi r e"
10
1:00 - Perr y Mason 4; News 13.
·
2: 00 - Perry Ma son 4 ; News 13.
·
I!
2: 00 - Focu s on Columbvs 4.
· ~

3:00 - News '

~

., '

own good, us I thought my purcnts ought it; know.
Well, my oth c&amp;
"
li
sister overheard me; and when Dad punlshed Si~t.c r No. 1 (s~
much she had to stand up nnd eat dinne r), Sister No. 2 told her
who snitched.
·
'
'
~
They got even by breaking my boat modcts 'aoo ~ess lng up
my tapo recorder. Then they took money frinn.the cabinet an&lt;C
planted it in Illy room, and when Mom found It I got spanked, so C
figured I'd get even, and planted cigarettes In my_~l~ters' room ~
but that backfired, because Dad saw rne, and now l'rn grounded=
I came home from school today und found my rt~ dJo busted
Should I squeal or what? And wus l wrong in telling my folks tha
my sister hltchhikes, as she could end up dcod or so•nothlng?
I wish my sisters werc,ffke you, Sue. - PAI ,JOEY
Dear Joey :
·
C
1
Funny ... my sister always wi•hcd J wa s llko somcb(l(Jy eiB&amp;
(anybody else! ) when we we re ~row h1g up togcthul'. Bu t wc • 1·~
be8t friends n~w. Maybe It will happon to you . ., oomcituy . _ SUI•~
·H I
:
Dear Pal Jooy :
=
Until it docs - wltll,y&lt;mr In lent for troublo - maybu yuu;
j)llren!B should consider summer camp for y011 - ull y ''"round ~

~ HELEN

.

. . .

•

•

lll Court St., Pom eroy , 0 .
Pur c ha se d e ve ry
we ekd a y ev en i ng exc ept
Saturday . Entered as sec ond
cl ass m ai ling m att er a t
Pomeroy, Ohio Pos l Off ice .
By c ar r i er daily and
Sundav, SSe oer week .
MAIL
SUB SC RIPTION RATE S
Th e Gallipoli s Tribu"ne in
Oh io and West Virginia one
year
$15, si x months $9,
three mon ths $5 , e lsewhere
S1 7 per year, si x m onth s $9,
three months $5.50. ·
The Da lly Sentinel , one
year 516.00 , six month s SB.SO,
thre e months SS.OO .
T h e United Pr es s In ternational is ex clv s ively
ent i t l ed to the us e for
publication of all n ews
di spat ch es credit ed to thi s
newspaper and also .th e loc al
news publ ished her ein .
457 69 .

..

NOTE FRpM ''SHORTED OUT's" gJrl who is typing this for
him : Recen.tly your col~mn carrieq several letters from ·selfstyled leg-men. How about a word from us leg-girls who appreciate a weU.turned, well-tanned masculine lbnb? We like our,
guys in shorts and are not above a whistle every now and then.- ·
Gallipolis, breathing dlff l cul~les; Diane Inhalation ; Linda Adkins, third degree distributed In Ohio by State Auditor Joseph S:O.'S GIRL
and Tammy F owler, abdo mlilt~l
Bonecutter, 1~, Gallipol is, compound burns
injuries.
T. Ferguilon. Meigs Co unty received
fracture of lower right le~; Joan Grimm,
· Durin~ the peak of the simulated
DEAR SHORTED OUT AND HIS GIRL:
17, Point Pleasant, poss1ble lower ba ck
$3,818.08 of it.
emergencies, actual em.ergency ca s.es
Thanks for writing again, even !bough (forgive us lf we're
wrong) yo u MAY be pulling our leg over the great iedcrh06en
flap. Anyway, you've provided a nite change or pace, und we love
yo u, lea ther or not. - HELEN
Hughey said it hopes to build
+++
NOTE
TO
.S.O.'S
GIRL
:
1,020
of
the
machines
during
• COLLEGE STATION, Tex.' "zapper" with Texas A&amp;M weighed 32,000 pounds, is 22
I like 'em too - well-turned male legs, I mean. 1And I'm In
(UP!) - ScienUsts Friday University, said the machine . feet long, eight feet wide and the next 10 years.
" We plan to offer a custom the right place for them . gut l!ere I~ California even our pootmen
demonstrated a 16-ton mac)line slays weeds, fungi, nematodes nearly 10 feet high. [l has a
(or 11t least tt1e next two wea r shorts on their "appointed rounds.") - SUE
service
which they say kills weeds and and soil insect• by applying •·oad speed of lO miles per hour,
Insect !JOs'-'! Immediately with microwaves directly to the soil but in the field moves at one- yea rs, " he said. "Later , we
+++
Dear
Rap
:
hope
to
use
u
lease
or
license
nme or the harmful after ef- at any depth up to two feel.
half to four miles an hour. It
fecl.l of chemical polsqns.
Pal Joey again, from at!ton, New Jersey. You probably
Treated soil is immediately · can treat up to 75 acres a day, method of operation." It was
designed for use in fields where think I get In to il lot ol trouble (NOTE FROM HANDS : That we
John Hughey, president of ready for planting with .no Hughey said .
Oceanot~raphy
International concern for :oxic results. The
Later commercial models present costs of killing weeds do, and maybe YOU aren 't for real either, but you're fun , so we
Corp. w!Uch develope1 the 1.apper demonstrated Friday are expected to weigh 10 tons. un~ pests exceeds $15 an acre. print whatever you send us) , but here I go again.
One of my sisters hitchhikes a lot Und r tattled on her for her

•

Time .toJI
1 T th n

..

Rap:
This is "Shorted Out" who wrote about the lederhosen
(leather pants) I wanted to wear ro a friend's wedding, because
my mother forbade it.
You advised me to wear asuit and ·my mother to ·get off my
back. Since she dictn 't follow your advice I wasn 't planning to
either, but I've changed my mind. My girl says you like to hea~
how things turnedout, so I'm writing bock even though it's sort of
embarrassing.
Both my girl and her folks were away on a recent weekend,
and they asked me to stay at the house .with her 14-year-old
brother - not babysit, but just a friend .
·
I was out shooting baskets in my .short leather _,ants when
tWo girls drove up looking for my girlfriend who they'a met at
college . Davy, the young brother, had j.ust come back from the
church and had on a suit. The girls'got to talking and l suddenly
realized they thought I was the kid brother, and Davy was the
guy my girl dated. He gave me a wink and we played the game,
but I tell you it was weird. There I sat on the grass·, cross legged,
drinking milk and calling girls younger than me "Ma'am," and
telling them about junior hi, and Davy was living It up as a 21).
year.ald 11man."
Then and tbere I knew my mother was right for once - I
might be tak~n for a ring boy at the wedding, if I wore my
lederhosen, so it's a suit for me. I may even try to grow a .
moustache before the date.
My girl still prefers my shorts and I'll wear them for casual
parties, but I thought you'd like to know how I was - SHORTED
OUT, PUT DOWN AND GROWING UP

Zapper doing poisons' job

lj ;

1

~

in jury ; Susie Budd, 18, Gallipoi (S, com -

fl

t j Sp 1

ons ~ n . r

Com mun Iqve ..,• ; Old Time Cosp I Hour
Timothy A; Loo k Up &amp; .Live IQ.

Migration

Disaster

I

10.
7:00

Court rules

MIDDLEP(lHT - l'he Bob
7·30
Fai th l or TodAy 8; Rev!v..,l Fires 6; H ral f,'l o ru ~ J
Coats pin, emblematic of the
· Camera Three 10.
,
l...!
best in local Rotartanlsm, was
1· &lt;S - News 4.
'
L S
I t~·
8· oo _ Leonard Repass 8; Gospel CMRV"an 61 Churcn erv
presented Friday evening to
· 13; Billy James Hargis and his All AmericA n Kids 10; M.OtW
new club president Horold
mon Choir 3; Da y of Discovery 4,
.
,
.
, ••
Hubbord following dinner ut
B· 30- Oral Roberts 3· Your Hca llh 4 ; Day ot D•scovory B• 0Rc•
· HUmbard 13; R evl~al Fi res JS ; Ka l hryn Kuhl man 6; en•
Heath United Methodi st
·
Young 10.
I
Church. The late Bob Coats
Black
ameo
4.
R b 1 10 •· Re II·
B:SS -- Singi
was a prominent Middleport
9:DO
ngCJui&gt;
ll~e 3; Cadle Cha pel 4; Oral o or s
Humbard 6: Old· Fa shioned MeetingS.
"
businessman and a past
9:30- Church by Side of the Roa d 4i Pebbles &amp; lla mm Bamlf,';
president of the club .
8; Christ Is the Answer 13.
C
··
The presentation was made 10· 00 - Church Services 4 · Curiosi ty Shop 6, 13. Ga rden lub i f-•
· This Is The Li te J; Fa ith tor Today IS; Movie "Angel and t~ p;
by outgoing President Gene
Badma n" 10.
.
, "''
Riggs who has worn It the past 10: IS - Ta lking Hands 8.
Rotary year . In another end-of- 10:30 - Vi ewpoint B; Thi s Is The Lite IS ; Capt itln Noah 3; Insight!
4
,l',
the-year ritual, a past- 11 :Oti - Point of View 6; Jo y In Livi ng I3: TV Chapel 3: Focus~~..
president's pin was presented
Columb us 4; Cam era Thr ee 8.; Acros.s tho Fenco\5 ,
.
1 t 15 , F o;~oo .
11:30
This
Is
the
An
swer
3
:
Make
A
W1sh
6,
t3
;
lnsl
g~
to Riggs.
the Nation 8.
cJ 1'
Program cl)airman Bob 12:00
- At Issue 3; Rex Humbaf"d 8; Bow ling 6; Doctor s on ar
4; Ur ban Leagu e JO; Rev . Calvin Eva ns 13; Sacted Heart Hi t ,
Bumgarner Introduced club
12: ~0 - Revilla / Fires 13; Face the Nati on 10 ; Meet th e press J, ~~
member Chet Tannehill who
reviewed the book, "Yester1 : 0~:... Lower Lighthouse 13; Old Time Gospel Hour 8; Ka th rYn
Kuhlma n I S; The Iss ue 10 ; Parent Gam&lt;rl ; Challenge Gol( '
day's People" by Jack Weller,
Cl ub 4.
t th G ds' l'
a sociological study of the
1: JO - Iss ues andAnswer s 6. l J,· Movit&gt;"Twl llqht or , e o .
3 ; Ca r and Track 15.
·
. ·
"· ·
modern Appalachian Mountain
2·
00
Lassie
10
·
Perr
y
Mason
Ji
Arthur
Smith
6;
Wes
terJl
1
culture (University of Ken' Theater 15 ; Mdvie$ " The Trul h Abou t ~pr i ng " 41 " 13 WeS!
tucky Press, 1955).
Stree t " 6; Streets of San Fran cisco 13.
2:30 - Death Val ley Days 10
Bumgarner announced he
3:00 - CBS Sports 8, 10; Owe~ Marshal i ll.
.
hopes to have a timely,
3· 30 - UF0 6; Every body Can Be Somebod y 3.
relevant book reviewed once a
4 ~ 00 - Sesame St . 33; Juven ile Jury 4; Mar cus Welby, M. ~· 13 "' 1
4:30 - NF L Ac t1on '73 8; Pr imus 4 ; Ma ncmi Genera l1 on 41o•:. }
month during the oncoming
Tenni s 10.
,1 ,.
,,,
year. Ladies of the church
5:00 - Animal World 8 ; Star T rek d; Jonathan Winter s 6 ;
Pl ay house N. Y. 8 1ogr ap hy 33; Mov1e " Th e Rains of Ra n j
served the dinner.
chlpur" 11: Sports Challenge 10.
.
..
11
5:30 '- CBS Sports lll ustra te&lt;J .8, 10; World ot Svmva l 6,
Ta kes A Thief 3.
·
··

'
True(?) Friends Write Again

(Continued from Page I)
more realistic. Kyger Creek plant employees aided by technicians from the
Southeast Ohio Emergency Ambulance
Service,-volunteers from the Gallia County
Emergency Squad, Middleport and Pomroy Emergency Squads and attendants
from the Wilcoxen, Chapman and Stevens
Funeral Homes of Point Pleasant ,
removed the victims.
In all, seven were described as dead on
arrival at the Holzer Medical Center.
There were 50 casualties (all student
nurses), 15 . ambulance patients and 3S
ambulatory patients. Medical and surgical
treatment was required for some while
treatment for smoke inhalation and
chlorine gas was administered at the
Holzer Medical Center and Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Victims were also given medical attention at the scene from the highly
trained technicians from the SEOEMS and
volunteer E·R squads. _
,
Victims transported to the Holzer Med
ical Center and their simulated Injuries
were as follows ;
Deborah McCoy, 421 ~as t South St.,

6; 30 _ This Week 4; Newsml'lker ' 7113 ,· llktt

•

•
3 TheSundayTime• · Scntinei,Sund•y,July 15, 197:t

1

Call No. 486

A,. II ie·v ••n•••nl
Ttl~· NfJ!WI 1'1'111' uf 11.1 70 WitS
.•w.n'dt•d "' Dr Nmm un llur
GALLI POL IS - Gnil lo Ju u~-: . " l nr m ~&lt;' u • ull t~ t . wh o
1ta&lt; pi llyo·d" leading ro le In
County Sheriff'• deputies lilt' " gree n r c "ltl lu fi( JII 1'ht•
reported an accident •' rt&lt;tay 1 ·omm•tt£&lt;L~ ~pi•n( ica ll y ri i('(J
ofternoon when u cur driven by Bori ;Ju,:(~ work 1n dtlvt• lnJJi n~
Terry B. Stephens, 17, Rt. l, n(' W wh eal !i li"IIJ I1 " thul pro.
(lu (,' t' big..:cr yie ld!! tiH.w th e
Patriot, crash ~d Into a bridge old
vari eties.
abutment.
Stephens was reportedly
+ + +
approaching a one-land bridge
The ~ays arc getting •horwr
when he saw an auto driven by - but no! 0 11 !he job.
William J . Ui.xters, Colwn pus,
crossing the b rid~e from the
other direction. Stephens lett
he couidn '~to p In time, so he
Tonight, July 1l
steered into 1 the end of the
bridge, to avoid a head-on
TH E LAST
AMERICAN HERO
collision. No injuries were
( Techn lcotor1
reported.
Jeff Bridges

Bridge struck

ol

MEIGS THEATRE

CASH, CHAlOI,
I.AY·AWAY
SHOP EA RLY WH ilE
QUAjqTtTIES lAST

DOLL

RS

STRETCH

~"¥!# ®

DISCOUNT

DllltOIAaLI

SPECIAL! .

···~···

DAYTIME 30's

Ve lar le Perr ine

· lPG)
speeding.
Co
lor
ca
rtoon
s:
,
Forfeiting bond• were
What Z'al?
Charl es R. Leonard, ColumROugh Rider s
bus, $22.50, defective muffler ;
Thrill Spitl
Show Starts 7 p.m.
Roy Proffitt, Racine, $150,
water polluting; Donald - E.
Mon. thru Thurs.
Woods, New Haven, W. Va.,
July 16- 17- 18 · 1~
$22.50, no muffler ; Eldon R.
NOT OPEN
Blake, Rt. I, Reedsville, $27.50,
failure 'to yield right of. wuy;
Everett R. Robie, $25, Intoxication; Paul D. Grove,
Hubbard, Ohio, $27.50, passing
at an intersection; Roger R.
Byard, Ceredo, W. Va. ,
Wiiliam R. Brown, Dunkalk,
Tonight, Monday
Md ., Char les A. Roberts,
&amp; Tuesday
Parkersburg, Luster Lamber,
North Lima, Ohio, David F.
Mcllyar , Cambridge , Ohio ,
Steven Johnson, Huntington,
Henry Kingery, Huntington,
. ,···~\"' ~.
Robert Boggess, Kenna , W. ~ PAN.IoVI SION• COl0~ 8Y 0E LUI'.P
Va., and Glenna L. Riebel, Rt.
3, Pomeroy, $27 .50 each,
Plus
speeding.
· Dyan Cannon
Robert Ryan

REGULAR 575.94
12.., PORTABLE IV

88

$

12" diogonol pic tu re. Big 4" spea ker . Advanced

"":~~.The

H.• ·t -Rock

Love Machine rR&gt;

.Avocado In Color

I,~ I Ill

Tonight,

\1 I
Noqhll)o

Mon., Tues.

JULY IS-16-17

Double Feature Program

"THE HOT ROCK"
Robert Redford
Geo. Sega I &amp; Co.
PLUS '
GP
"THE CONCERT
FOR BANGLADESH "

CHAIN

A1,A CHMINTS

CHAIR

Tonight thru
Wednesday

\',/

!,lull

Pinless, so a bsorbent!
Fit babies 12-22 lbs.

ALUMINUM

MASON DRIVE-IN
r, C 11

·137

I ·HOOK

Plastic Webb
Folds Down
to Store
Weather Proof

Huge Insect
The la rges t prehis tor ic in·
sect ever found was a dr agonfly with a 2·foot wing spread . Today , th e la rges t
dragonfly has a wing spread
slightly over 7 inches .

REG.

'1.67

d esign circ uit ry for clea rer pi ct ure. Supe r br1g ht
alum in i zed pi c fure l ub e Bud ! in tele scop1 r,
a n)enna . V o lu me, brigh tness, contras t con tro l '

Class

COMFORTABLE PlACE TO BE ON ASUMMER DAY!

of.'

HAMMOCK LOUNGE

FOR

George Harri son
and F r iend s

Weath e rized .Canvas bed with
polyurethan e pi llow . Strong tubular
stee l frame sets up easily and stores
compactly . Roomy 30" x 80" size .
Gree n with white fringe . Save now.•.

G

Charter No. 136
National Bank Region No.4
REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING
DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES, OF TilE

The -First National Bank

SOFT
AND
ABSORBENT

1, Marlin G. Kerns, Executive Vlcc Prc~ldont , oflhe nbovc-nnm ~d bank do
hereby declare thut this roporl of condition is true !ltl(i COITOCI to the bc•t of thy .
knowled8e and belief.
Marlin G. Kerns, Exllcutivc Vice President
John E. Hollldpy
ltu111ell D. Wood - Dlrccloro
C. M. ltamoay

!

'
/.

-

I

· REG. '14.33

BATH TOWELS·
l

.,. '

'

LEADING

•3.39

94

SOFT THIRSTY

of Gallipolis, In the state or Ohio, at the close of buSilleSS 011 June 30, 1973
published In response to call made by Comptroller of the currency, under Title
IZ; United States Code, Section 161.
ASSETS
Cosh and due from hanks - - - - - - - - - - • • - · • • - - - $1,532,526.21
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1,759,972.97
Obligations of States and political subdivisions • • .- 2,879,433.92
Other securities - - - - - - - - - - - - - · • - ·
- • 110,750.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
1,400,000.00
under agreements to resell - - - - - . - • • - •
8,064,519.41
Loans • - - - - - - - · - • - - · - • • · ·
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
- 165,045.75
other asseis representing bank premises - - - - - 7,306:97
Real estate owned other than hank premises $15,919,555.23
TOTAL ASSETS • - - • • • - - - - - LIABD..ITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
- - • - $4,619,171.53
and corporations - - - - - • - - - - - Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations - - - - - - - - • - - - - 8,492,291.94
123,279.78
Deposits of United States Government - - - - - - . Deposits of States and political subdivisions • - - · - - - - - - 345,795.42
124,142.68
Certified and officers' checks, etc. - - - - - - -· - - • TOTAL DEPOSITS • • - • - - - • - $1:1,704,1i81.35
(a) Total demand deposits - - .._ - . - • - - $ 5,212,389.41
(b) Total time and savings deposits - - - • · $ 6,492,291.94
Other liabilities - - - - - - - -· - - . • - - • • - 595,8.18.11
TOTAL LIABILITIES - • • - - - - .- - - - - - - - $14,300,519.46
REliERVES ON LOANS AND SECUitrr!ES
Reserve for bad debt losse ~ on loans
$1211,88:!.24
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) • • ,-~ . - • · · · • •
$128,88:1.24
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS 1AND SECURITIES - _. CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
- - $1 ,490,152.53
Equity capital-total - - · • •
100,000.00
Commotl Stock-total p!lr value
No . shares authorized 1,000
No. shares outstanding 1,000
$1,100,000.00
'Surplus '• - • · - - ·
- • - • • - • • • •
- 290,tii2.ii3
Undivided profits • • · • • • • • · •
1,400,152.ii3
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
TOTAL LIABILiTIES, RESERVES, AND
$15,919,555.2:1
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS - - - • • •
- -'
MEMORANDA
Averuge of total deposits for the 15 calcndUI· ·
days ending with call dato • • - • • • • - - - - - - - - $13,748.11411.37
Average of \Otallouns for the 15 calendar
,
days ending with call date • - - - - - - • - · • • • • • 6,036,881.31

SAV'E1 $

'

Closeout Price

LAD~

PAPER TOWELS
ROLLS
27~

VALUES TO 96¢

2rofl OO

$ 00

sr .Ea.

Ea.

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA ONLY

LADIES
SLEEVELESS SKIMMERS

BOYS'
TANK
TOPS

Cool and Casual
Machine Washable
75% Dacron 25% Polyester

or
CUT
OFFS
$}57

2 FOR s3oo
Reg.
spa EA.
8 to 18

SIL VER BIVIJGB
PLAZA

MADE FRESH DAILY
IN STORE

HAM SALAD
~~

LB.

DELl SPECIALS
Fresh Sliced

BAKED HAM
Reg. 1!1' lb.
' NOW

SILVER ·BRIDGE PLAZA OPEN 1 TO 6 SUNDAY
THESE SPECIALS AVAILABLE AT SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA,
BOTH GALLIPOLIS STORES AND PT. PLEASANT STORE

$154LB.

�)

,.

Television Log,
,
SU NDAY, JULY ll, 1913
6· DO - Tr•velog u• 4.
AC

has pin ·

--.....

·-

. -"

OPENING SCENE - This is the opening scene of "Gallia Country" ___
being presented by the Gallia Dramatic Arts Society at the Bob Evans

-~

Farms amphitheater Rio Grande. Judge Bradbury (Roger Williams) and
company start off with a patriotic song and dance medley in the Gallipolis
City Park in the 1890s.

Court orderS

'Gallia Country' a hit at Rio
.

Daniel Bodne. A talented baritone, Spires
Nora Price and her crew ha ve done
(Continued from Pa_ge t )
sketches, each portraying an era in the presents "The Hills of Kentucky" with ·wonders with ciJstuming and the unsung
history of "Gallia Country." The play is heart-rending longing. Roger Williams is heroines and heroes in the make-up
relatively loose in structure; in its impressive as Judge Bradbury who both department 1they 're not listed in the
premier, some of the scenes didn 't quite opens and closes the play, and the other program) could pass for professionals, at
move in comfortable succession, and characters give memorable perform- least from the audience's point of view.
Th play is touched with music and
there were some long pauses while props ances.
There are moments when the mirth and, while it can't be called an
and characters are rearranged. ,But
choreography,
although very good indeed, altogether accurate history, it really isn't
overall, the production is quite good.
Roses have to go to John Epling, w)lo seems just a trifle out of place. There are meant to be, "Gallia Country" promises to
gave a moving and dynamic portrayal of others, as In Roxy's Emporium, and at the improve. Even Friday evening brought
Col. Safford, both in the first act (circa mill, where it is beautifully done and adds constructive comments from the members
of the crew and cast on ways to make it
1792), and later (1863) at Fortification Hill measurably ro the production.
Perhaps
the
most
impressive
thing
better.
in Galltpolis. Epling carries with him the
Definit~ly worth the dri ve to · Rio
aura of dignity and Patriotic pride that about "Gallia Country" is that the cast is
nearly
all
amateur,
each
seeming
to
enjoy
threads its way through all pioneer stories
Grande, "Gallia Country" looks as though
it may have come to stay.
Bill Spires is excellent in the part of doing the P.esentation thoroughly.

Bell phones
(Continued from Page I)
ro the enffre state, also proposes to institute initial rate periods ot' one minute
instead of the present three minutes for
DOD calls, which don't require any
operator assistance. This would allow a
customer to make a brief .intrastate toli
call for Jess than he now pays.
OVerall, the intrastate toll increases
range from four cents to 45 cents for initial
periods, and from one cent to seven cents
for additionid periods, depending on the
distance, time of day and type of call.
. In the Gallipolis calling area, the
monthly rate increase for residence
telephone service will be 75 cents for a twoparty line and 95 cents for a private line.
Business rates will increase by $2.60 for a
single line or $7.95 for a trunk line that
terminates in a private switchboard.
In the Cheshire and Rio Grande calling
areas, the monthly rate increase for
residence telephone service will ·be 70
cents for a two-party line and 90 cents for a
private line. Business rates will Increase
by $2.40 for a single line or $7.35 for a trunk
line terminating on a private switchboard.

desegregation
in Dayton
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) - The
Dayton School Board is under a·
court order to implement a
desegregation plan this fall.
U.S. District Court Judge
Carl B. Rubin on Friday ordered the board to begin a plan
it had submitted to the court
after being found guilty earlier
this year of creating
"segregated facilities."
Rubin partially approved a
plan submitted by the conservative four -member
majority of the board. A plan
submitted by the board's threemember liberal minority,
which was supported by the
local NAACP chapter, and a
proposal offered by the Dayton
Teachers Association; also had
been considered by Rubin.
Both plans had sought wider
integration of the 48,000 -.
student school system, which is·
45 per cent black.
The plan Rubin ordered
is
based
implemented
primarily on the establishment
of four science centers to which
all pupils will attend from two
to 18 times per schooi·year. Bus.
transportation to the centers is
to be used.

Th e swallow s of San Juan
Capistrano migrate to Argen·
tina. They leave in late Octo$500 PRESENTED TO CANCER FUND - Mrs. Sharon Riffle, Middleport, . ber . re turn about March 19.
center named by the local cancer society to receive the Ohio Society for the St . Joseph 's Day. The migration takes abou t 10 days.
Promotion of the Bull Frog's annual contribution of a $500 bond, was presented her
gift. Saturday morning by James Clatworthy, Grand Croaker, left. Miss Riffle, a
registered nurse at Pleasant Valley Hospital, will present the gift to Mrs. Ferman
Moor~, right, presidentofthe Meigs County Cancer Society .

were treated at both tlospitals.
pound fracture of the arm ; Sue Lyon,
At the Holzer Medical Cente r , a
Gallipolis, compound fracture of l e~; woman wa s admitted sufferi ng from labor
Margaret Ehman, 14 Pine St., Gal li poliS, pains; a 12year old Jackson youth reQui red
medicaL· Karen Sm i th, address not surgery for a fra c tured ankl e, an d a 64·
available, third degree burns; Linda year old Jac kson r es id ent was adm itted as
Pitney, address not available. th ird degree . a medical patient .
bufns; , Four victims, whose names were
Acr oss the ri ver , doc tor s al so hand led
not reaqlly ava ilable, were given delar,ed a leg fra ct ur e o per a tion ,· d is loc ated
or i mmediate treatment . A hospdal shoulder and two heart cases.
spokesman said delay treatment meant
The drill was planned in order to see
the victim was not ser ious or did not need just how compan y per sonnel, hospi tal
immediate attention.
personnel and vari ous emerge ncy squads
The Holzer med ical staff consi sting of would r eact.
doctors, nurses, aides X-ray techn icians
Fire depar tments part ici pating were
and supervisors were on hand to handle all Gallipolis, Point Pleasant, Pomeroy and
patients as they arrived. Volunteers from Middleport.
the Volunteer Service League and Gray
Gallla County sherif f's deputie s
Ladles worked with the victims' fam il ies dir ected traffic at the plant and the Holze r
to provide information as soon as poss ible ~dical Center . Area newsm en wer e
also ta glve a helping hand and sometimes a\ sis ted in t hei r work by Bob Daniel,
consoling word .
Holzer Cl inic Ad mi nistrat or , and Jim
Dr. Richa rd Slack, chief of staff at Blev ins, hi s assi stant. A press r oom wa s
Pl easant Va l ley Hos pi tal In Point set-up in the Clinic Busi ness Of fice nea r
Plea sant, had charge of the overall the Hol ze r Hospi ta l Emergency Room .
operat ions there. Ei ghteen victims, mos t
A detail ed r epor t on Sa tur da y ' s
of whom suffered simulated symptom s of Gim ulated drill w ill be prepared for
chlorine gas inha lat ion wer e treated at critique by hospital. plant an d other of .
Pleasant Valley .
flc lals on July 17.
The most ser ious case wa s that of
It wa s l earned la te Saturda y aft ern oo n
Teresa McCarty of Point Pleasant, who that two of the mock victims became ill
would have been a surgery victim for the during the dri ll. They suffered from heat
amputation of her right arm. Two patients e)( hausti on and were treated at the pl ant
were dead on arrivaL
·
and later at the hospital.
.
Treated were Mary Utterback, gas
Gallia County volvnteer em erg ency.
inhalation ; Brenda Stevens, Darl ene squadmen had to transfer one of its vic Chapman, Betty Kimberling , Debra ti m? f~ om the ambulance In ord er to an .
Walker, Debra Philson, all for gas swer to call ror an expa ctant m other . The
· Oak Hill, smoke inhalat ion ; Janet inhalation : Marilyn Martin for second and woman gave bir th to twin s th r ee minutes
Woodard, Rt. 2, Waterford, first, second th ird degree burns ; Lauri Brady , fra c. after her ar riva l at the hospital.
and third degree burns ; Sandy T ~rry, l ured wri st and amputated m iddl e finger ;
Gallipolis, smoke inhalation ; Su san ' M.' Vana Bordman , abrasi ons and second
Sheets, 18, Gallipolis, smoke Inhalation; deg ree burns ; Shelia Pi cker s. se vere heap
Mamma McNar, Portsmouth, fac ial burn s In jur y and lacerat ions; Tony Fowl er ,
MEIGS GETS $3,818.08
and possible blindness ; Peggy Saunders, fr ac tured r ight arm and la cerat ions ;
Donahue,
smoke
Inhalation
and
Brenda
POMEROY
- A total of $4,902,920.04
18, Rt. 3, Ironton, first , second and th ird
la
ce
ra
li
on
s.'
Mal
e
na
Dun
can,
smok
e
degree burns ; Shir ley Hodges, 20,
in local government fund money 'has been

f

6: 00 - News 4, 6: CB S News Re tr ospectiv e a, 10 .

•

-

-

••.

. ,, 1

.

6:30- NBC News 3, 4, 15; Un tamed World 6; Audubor Wildilte_1
Theatre 33 .

in 30 cases
POMEROY - An even 1 ~
defendan Ia each - 30 In u11 were lined or lorfelted bonds In
Meigs CoWJty Court Friday
with Judge Fra nk W. Porter
presiding.
Fined were Thomas A.
Mathes, South Point, Ohio,
Eugene H.' French, Middleport,
Debbie Roush, Rt. 2, Racine,
Gary D. Slaven, Middleport,
$10 and coots each, speeding;
· Thomas E. &amp;mlth, PomerQ)',
Roger B. Pearch, Middleport,
Charles E. Jones, Rt. I, Langsville, $10 and costs, left of
cent e~ ;
Basil
Haynes,
Pomeroy, Dennis Tolley, iu. 3,
Albany, $150 and costs, 3 days
confinement, and 6 months
restricted license suspension
each, OW!; Amos B. Cross,
Rutland, $5 and · costs,
speeding; Maurice G. Gagnon,
Rt. I, Minersville, $15 and
costs, speeding; ' Lewis B.
McKinney, Middleport, $10 and
costs, failure to yield right of
way ; Calvin W. Ruble ,
Coolville, $15 and costs ,
allowing an unlicensed &lt;!river
operate a vehicle ; Walter
Roush, Syracuse, $10and costs,
failure to keep on right half of
road; and Evelyn B. Ward, Rt.
4, Pomeroy, $14 and costs,

7 : 00 ~ Lo;~ wr e n ce

The Al~aoac

By United Press International
Today i~ Sunday, July 15, the
!96th day of 1973 with 169 to

Welk 13 ; Zoom 20,33, Wai t Till Your Fa ther
Gets Home 6; This Is Your Life 4; Wi ld Ki ngdom )5; Super --:
stars of Ro ck 8; Safa ri to Advenure J i Salute 1o the,zoo 10.
,

SUNDAY
TIMES-SENTINEL

7: 30 _ Let's Make A Deal 6; World ot Disney 3, '· ll : Beverly •
Hiilbillies 8: Dick Van Dyke 10 : French Chef 20, ll .
:
8:DO - MAS HB ; FB I6, 1l : Evcningat Pops 20, 33.
6: 30- Mannix 8, IO ; Columbo3 , d, 15.

:

Published every Sunday
by
Th e
Oh io
Va l le y
Pub\ishina Co .
GALLIPOLI S
DAILY TRI B U ~J; .
825 Th ird Av e., Gal l I polis.
Ohio 4563 1
Publ ished every wee kd ay
evening e xc ep t Saturda y.
Second Cla ss Postage Pa id

follow .
9: 00 - M aster piece Theatre 20, 33; Movie "G rQnd Slam" 6, q.
The moon is in its full phase . 9:30 - Barnaby Jo nes 8, 10.
•'
·
ta
e M rs 10:00 - Firinglin e 20,33 i N ightGall er yJ , d, 15.
·
:
Th
e mornmg s rs ar a ' 10: 30 - High Road to Adve nt ure 10 ; Pollee Surgeon 1 ~; Half rhe 1
Jupiter lmd Saturn.
.
Geor ge Ki r by Com ed y Hour B; We Think You Should Know 3. 1 •
The evening stars are Mer- 11 : oo- NeWs 3, 4, 6, a, 10, 13, 15.
.';
:: .
11 : 15 -

News 6, 8, 10, 13.

1

curyand Venus.
11 : 30 - Johnn y Ca r son 4, 15; Mov ies " Behi nd th e Eigh t Ba ll" 3 j j
Those born on thls d8te are ·
"Another Time, Anolh ~r Place" 8: " Cu l ler 's Trai l" 10 , 1
under the sign of Cancer.
12:00 - In Concert 13.
·
1
00
4
'
·
pa1'nter
Rembrandt
Roller
Derby
Dutch
2: 00 - News 4 .
was born July 15, 1606.
On this day in history :
MONDAY, JULY 16, 1973
'',
In 1912, the United States, led 6: 00 - Su nr ise Semi nar 4 ; Sacred Hea rt 10 .
by all-around athlete Jim. 6: 15 - Farmt lme 0.
6: 20 - Farm Report 13.
Thorpe, won the Olympic 6 . 25 - Paul Ha r vey 1$.
Games in Stockholm , Sweden.
6: 30 - Columbus Today 4, Bible Answer s 8 ; School Scene 10 ;
Good News 13.
In 1945, Italy dec1ared war on
6 ~ 45 - Cor ncob Report 3,
·
.~
its formerAxis partner, Japan. 7:DO - Today 3, 4; I S; News, Weather, Sports 6; CBS News 8, 10.: ;
Jeff's Collie 13.
.•
In 1964, Arizona Sen. Barry
7:
30Romper
Room6
;
PopeyelO
;
Rocky&amp;
Bu
ll
wi
nkl
e
13.
Goldwater was nominated as 8: 00 - Capt. Kangaroo 10 ; Lassie 6; Sesam e St. 33; New Zoo .'
the Republican presidential
Revue 13.
1 •
8:30New
Zoo
Ree
6
;
J
a
c
k
La
l
an
ne
13
,.
candidate. He was soundly
8:55 - ·News 13
.
beaten in November by Lyndon 9· 00 - Paul Dixon 4; Ph il Donahue 15; Fri endl y Junction lO i
Johnson.
·
A: M . 3; Let 's Make A Deal 6; Merv Gr iff in 8: Peyton Pl ace :
Roger s 33.
In 1971, President Richard 9: 2513;- Mr.
Ma the ma 33.
Nixon disclosed plans to make 9:30- To Tell the Tru th 3; Jeopardy 6; Peyton Place 13.
an unprecedented visit to 9: 40 .:.... Phy s1cs Demonstration s 33.
- Chuck Whi te Reports 10.
..
_
Communist China. He made the 109:55
:00 - Dick Van Dvk P. 1:1 : Dinnh Shnre 3. 5; Jok er 's Wild 8, 10:111
weeklong visit in February,
Maggi e &amp; The Beaut if ul Machi ne 33, Wil d , Wil d Wes t 6 .
:
10:30
Split
Second
13:
B
aff
le
3,
4,
1S,
$10,000
Py
ram
id
8,
10;
Tin
1972.
0

at Gall ipol is , Ohio 45631.
T HE D A ILY SENTIN E L

1

1

, A thought for the day :
American writer Mark Twain
said, "Truth is the most
valuable thing we have . let's
economize it."

Lad y 33 .
"
•
11 :00 - Password 13 ; Love, Amer ica n St yl e 6 ; Gam bit 8, lO ;%
Wi za rd of Oz 3, 4 15; Wh y 33 .
•
11 · 30 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4 15; Love of Li fe 3, 10; Bra dy•
Bunch 6, 13.
:
11 : 55 - News 8, Dan !mel's Wor l d 10.
1111
12: 00 - Pa sswor d 6; Bob Brau n' s 50-50 Club I! ; Jeopardy J, 15 ; :
News 8.
•
12: 30,...... Spl it Second 6; 3 W' s 3, 15 ; Search f or T om or row a, 10
fl'
12: 55 - NBC News 3, 15.
"
1:00 - All My Children 6, 13; ll's Your Bet 8; Gr een Acr es 10 ;
~
Fre~ c h Chef 33 ; Not For Women Only 15; News J.
;
1: 20 , Fashion s in Sew ing 3.
·'
it
1:30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, I S; Le t's Make A Deal 13•; As T h e~
World Turn s a, 10; Amet ican Ody sse y 33 ; Bow ling 6 J
J'2:00 ~ Da ys of Our L ives 3, 4, 15 ; Newl ywed Gam e 13-;' M ikel

Douglas 6; Guiding Light 8, 10.
ll
2 : $0 ~ Doctors 3, 4, 15; Da ting Game 13; Edge ol Night 8, 10; Ott !

The Record 33 . .
"'
3:00 - Artolher Worl d 3, 4, 15,· Gener al Hos pila l 6 13; Pr ice Is:
Righ t 8, 10; Oleanna T rai l 33 .
• ,
•
3: 30- Return to Peyton Place 3, 15; One Li f e to Lived, 13 ; Phil •
0Qnohue4 ; Holly wood's Talking 8; Secr el Storm l Q; Time tor:
Timo thy 33 .
•
4 : 00 ~ Mr Ca d oon 3; Love. Amer ican Style I$; l'iuck 1&amp; Yoq i 6: :
Som er se t 15; Secret Storm B; Sesam e St . 33; Movie ' 1 The 1111
Happy Time" 10
'
1o
4: l 0- Petti coat Juncti on 3; Mer v Gr i ffin 4; F -Troop ~ ; Ab bot t :
&amp; CostelloB; My Litt le Margie 15 ; Dak tari 13.
I
1o
5:00 - Bona nza 3; Her e Come the Bridos 6; Ha ze l fl ; Mr . R og er s ~
20, 33; An dy Griffi th I S.
•
5: 30 - Beverly Hillbill ies 8; Elec tri c Co. 33; Gomer ! Pyle 1 3 ; ~

Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Trails West 15.

5:55 -

•

Earl Nightinga le 15.

6:0o-- News 3, 4, 8. 10. IS; ABC News 13; Sesame St.
~ ~u~n .
·

11

20 ; ~

;

6: 00- AB C News6 ; CBS News B, O; I Dream of Jea nnie 13. News"

3. 4, 15; How Do Your Child ren Grow? 33 .

7 : 00- lru t~ or CO ~seq . J ; Beat the Cloc k

ti
4; News 6, 10 ; Circus;;

13; What s M_y L1ne 8 ; Elec. Co. 20; Di scover Flyi ng 33; Sain l lll'
15; Take: F1 ve 5.
!Ill

7:3Q--To Teli 'lhe f ru th 6; Young Dr. K il da r~ 8; Ho ll ywood:

Squ.ar e.s 4; Traffi c Court 10; ·Chan-ese Way 20; Ep isode: •
Act•on 33 ; Bobby Go ldsboro 3; M ov ie " Lovers.&amp; Lollipops":

13.
.
.
.
8:0RO - kl GunsmToke 8. 10; Base ba ll Prc-Gome Show · 3,
oo es 6: ogether - Chuck Mang ione ld, 33.
8:1S- Base ball 3. 4, 15.

•

4, I S; !

"

#

9: 00 - Her e's Lucy 8, 10; Movie " Gu nn" 6, 13.

"

9:30- Dor is Day 8, 10; Book Beaf20, 33:
10: DO - Medi cal Center 8, 10; News 20; Pa ul Nuchlms 33
10: I S - The Silent Years 20.
·

:
'

11 : 30- Johnn y 'c arson 3, 4, 15; M ar joe's Coun lr y 6, 13; Movl ,~
" Uarby 's
Range r s"
8;
"Ring
of
Fi r e"
10
1:00 - Perr y Mason 4; News 13.
·
2: 00 - Perry Ma son 4 ; News 13.
·
I!
2: 00 - Focu s on Columbvs 4.
· ~

3:00 - News '

~

., '

own good, us I thought my purcnts ought it; know.
Well, my oth c&amp;
"
li
sister overheard me; and when Dad punlshed Si~t.c r No. 1 (s~
much she had to stand up nnd eat dinne r), Sister No. 2 told her
who snitched.
·
'
'
~
They got even by breaking my boat modcts 'aoo ~ess lng up
my tapo recorder. Then they took money frinn.the cabinet an&lt;C
planted it in Illy room, and when Mom found It I got spanked, so C
figured I'd get even, and planted cigarettes In my_~l~ters' room ~
but that backfired, because Dad saw rne, and now l'rn grounded=
I came home from school today und found my rt~ dJo busted
Should I squeal or what? And wus l wrong in telling my folks tha
my sister hltchhikes, as she could end up dcod or so•nothlng?
I wish my sisters werc,ffke you, Sue. - PAI ,JOEY
Dear Joey :
·
C
1
Funny ... my sister always wi•hcd J wa s llko somcb(l(Jy eiB&amp;
(anybody else! ) when we we re ~row h1g up togcthul'. Bu t wc • 1·~
be8t friends n~w. Maybe It will happon to you . ., oomcituy . _ SUI•~
·H I
:
Dear Pal Jooy :
=
Until it docs - wltll,y&lt;mr In lent for troublo - maybu yuu;
j)llren!B should consider summer camp for y011 - ull y ''"round ~

~ HELEN

.

. . .

•

•

lll Court St., Pom eroy , 0 .
Pur c ha se d e ve ry
we ekd a y ev en i ng exc ept
Saturday . Entered as sec ond
cl ass m ai ling m att er a t
Pomeroy, Ohio Pos l Off ice .
By c ar r i er daily and
Sundav, SSe oer week .
MAIL
SUB SC RIPTION RATE S
Th e Gallipoli s Tribu"ne in
Oh io and West Virginia one
year
$15, si x months $9,
three mon ths $5 , e lsewhere
S1 7 per year, si x m onth s $9,
three months $5.50. ·
The Da lly Sentinel , one
year 516.00 , six month s SB.SO,
thre e months SS.OO .
T h e United Pr es s In ternational is ex clv s ively
ent i t l ed to the us e for
publication of all n ews
di spat ch es credit ed to thi s
newspaper and also .th e loc al
news publ ished her ein .
457 69 .

..

NOTE FRpM ''SHORTED OUT's" gJrl who is typing this for
him : Recen.tly your col~mn carrieq several letters from ·selfstyled leg-men. How about a word from us leg-girls who appreciate a weU.turned, well-tanned masculine lbnb? We like our,
guys in shorts and are not above a whistle every now and then.- ·
Gallipolis, breathing dlff l cul~les; Diane Inhalation ; Linda Adkins, third degree distributed In Ohio by State Auditor Joseph S:O.'S GIRL
and Tammy F owler, abdo mlilt~l
Bonecutter, 1~, Gallipol is, compound burns
injuries.
T. Ferguilon. Meigs Co unty received
fracture of lower right le~; Joan Grimm,
· Durin~ the peak of the simulated
DEAR SHORTED OUT AND HIS GIRL:
17, Point Pleasant, poss1ble lower ba ck
$3,818.08 of it.
emergencies, actual em.ergency ca s.es
Thanks for writing again, even !bough (forgive us lf we're
wrong) yo u MAY be pulling our leg over the great iedcrh06en
flap. Anyway, you've provided a nite change or pace, und we love
yo u, lea ther or not. - HELEN
Hughey said it hopes to build
+++
NOTE
TO
.S.O.'S
GIRL
:
1,020
of
the
machines
during
• COLLEGE STATION, Tex.' "zapper" with Texas A&amp;M weighed 32,000 pounds, is 22
I like 'em too - well-turned male legs, I mean. 1And I'm In
(UP!) - ScienUsts Friday University, said the machine . feet long, eight feet wide and the next 10 years.
" We plan to offer a custom the right place for them . gut l!ere I~ California even our pootmen
demonstrated a 16-ton mac)line slays weeds, fungi, nematodes nearly 10 feet high. [l has a
(or 11t least tt1e next two wea r shorts on their "appointed rounds.") - SUE
service
which they say kills weeds and and soil insect• by applying •·oad speed of lO miles per hour,
Insect !JOs'-'! Immediately with microwaves directly to the soil but in the field moves at one- yea rs, " he said. "Later , we
+++
Dear
Rap
:
hope
to
use
u
lease
or
license
nme or the harmful after ef- at any depth up to two feel.
half to four miles an hour. It
fecl.l of chemical polsqns.
Pal Joey again, from at!ton, New Jersey. You probably
Treated soil is immediately · can treat up to 75 acres a day, method of operation." It was
designed for use in fields where think I get In to il lot ol trouble (NOTE FROM HANDS : That we
John Hughey, president of ready for planting with .no Hughey said .
Oceanot~raphy
International concern for :oxic results. The
Later commercial models present costs of killing weeds do, and maybe YOU aren 't for real either, but you're fun , so we
Corp. w!Uch develope1 the 1.apper demonstrated Friday are expected to weigh 10 tons. un~ pests exceeds $15 an acre. print whatever you send us) , but here I go again.
One of my sisters hitchhikes a lot Und r tattled on her for her

•

Time .toJI
1 T th n

..

Rap:
This is "Shorted Out" who wrote about the lederhosen
(leather pants) I wanted to wear ro a friend's wedding, because
my mother forbade it.
You advised me to wear asuit and ·my mother to ·get off my
back. Since she dictn 't follow your advice I wasn 't planning to
either, but I've changed my mind. My girl says you like to hea~
how things turnedout, so I'm writing bock even though it's sort of
embarrassing.
Both my girl and her folks were away on a recent weekend,
and they asked me to stay at the house .with her 14-year-old
brother - not babysit, but just a friend .
·
I was out shooting baskets in my .short leather _,ants when
tWo girls drove up looking for my girlfriend who they'a met at
college . Davy, the young brother, had j.ust come back from the
church and had on a suit. The girls'got to talking and l suddenly
realized they thought I was the kid brother, and Davy was the
guy my girl dated. He gave me a wink and we played the game,
but I tell you it was weird. There I sat on the grass·, cross legged,
drinking milk and calling girls younger than me "Ma'am," and
telling them about junior hi, and Davy was living It up as a 21).
year.ald 11man."
Then and tbere I knew my mother was right for once - I
might be tak~n for a ring boy at the wedding, if I wore my
lederhosen, so it's a suit for me. I may even try to grow a .
moustache before the date.
My girl still prefers my shorts and I'll wear them for casual
parties, but I thought you'd like to know how I was - SHORTED
OUT, PUT DOWN AND GROWING UP

Zapper doing poisons' job

lj ;

1

~

in jury ; Susie Budd, 18, Gallipoi (S, com -

fl

t j Sp 1

ons ~ n . r

Com mun Iqve ..,• ; Old Time Cosp I Hour
Timothy A; Loo k Up &amp; .Live IQ.

Migration

Disaster

I

10.
7:00

Court rules

MIDDLEP(lHT - l'he Bob
7·30
Fai th l or TodAy 8; Rev!v..,l Fires 6; H ral f,'l o ru ~ J
Coats pin, emblematic of the
· Camera Three 10.
,
l...!
best in local Rotartanlsm, was
1· &lt;S - News 4.
'
L S
I t~·
8· oo _ Leonard Repass 8; Gospel CMRV"an 61 Churcn erv
presented Friday evening to
· 13; Billy James Hargis and his All AmericA n Kids 10; M.OtW
new club president Horold
mon Choir 3; Da y of Discovery 4,
.
,
.
, ••
Hubbord following dinner ut
B· 30- Oral Roberts 3· Your Hca llh 4 ; Day ot D•scovory B• 0Rc•
· HUmbard 13; R evl~al Fi res JS ; Ka l hryn Kuhl man 6; en•
Heath United Methodi st
·
Young 10.
I
Church. The late Bob Coats
Black
ameo
4.
R b 1 10 •· Re II·
B:SS -- Singi
was a prominent Middleport
9:DO
ngCJui&gt;
ll~e 3; Cadle Cha pel 4; Oral o or s
Humbard 6: Old· Fa shioned MeetingS.
"
businessman and a past
9:30- Church by Side of the Roa d 4i Pebbles &amp; lla mm Bamlf,';
president of the club .
8; Christ Is the Answer 13.
C
··
The presentation was made 10· 00 - Church Services 4 · Curiosi ty Shop 6, 13. Ga rden lub i f-•
· This Is The Li te J; Fa ith tor Today IS; Movie "Angel and t~ p;
by outgoing President Gene
Badma n" 10.
.
, "''
Riggs who has worn It the past 10: IS - Ta lking Hands 8.
Rotary year . In another end-of- 10:30 - Vi ewpoint B; Thi s Is The Lite IS ; Capt itln Noah 3; Insight!
4
,l',
the-year ritual, a past- 11 :Oti - Point of View 6; Jo y In Livi ng I3: TV Chapel 3: Focus~~..
president's pin was presented
Columb us 4; Cam era Thr ee 8.; Acros.s tho Fenco\5 ,
.
1 t 15 , F o;~oo .
11:30
This
Is
the
An
swer
3
:
Make
A
W1sh
6,
t3
;
lnsl
g~
to Riggs.
the Nation 8.
cJ 1'
Program cl)airman Bob 12:00
- At Issue 3; Rex Humbaf"d 8; Bow ling 6; Doctor s on ar
4; Ur ban Leagu e JO; Rev . Calvin Eva ns 13; Sacted Heart Hi t ,
Bumgarner Introduced club
12: ~0 - Revilla / Fires 13; Face the Nati on 10 ; Meet th e press J, ~~
member Chet Tannehill who
reviewed the book, "Yester1 : 0~:... Lower Lighthouse 13; Old Time Gospel Hour 8; Ka th rYn
Kuhlma n I S; The Iss ue 10 ; Parent Gam&lt;rl ; Challenge Gol( '
day's People" by Jack Weller,
Cl ub 4.
t th G ds' l'
a sociological study of the
1: JO - Iss ues andAnswer s 6. l J,· Movit&gt;"Twl llqht or , e o .
3 ; Ca r and Track 15.
·
. ·
"· ·
modern Appalachian Mountain
2·
00
Lassie
10
·
Perr
y
Mason
Ji
Arthur
Smith
6;
Wes
terJl
1
culture (University of Ken' Theater 15 ; Mdvie$ " The Trul h Abou t ~pr i ng " 41 " 13 WeS!
tucky Press, 1955).
Stree t " 6; Streets of San Fran cisco 13.
2:30 - Death Val ley Days 10
Bumgarner announced he
3:00 - CBS Sports 8, 10; Owe~ Marshal i ll.
.
hopes to have a timely,
3· 30 - UF0 6; Every body Can Be Somebod y 3.
relevant book reviewed once a
4 ~ 00 - Sesame St . 33; Juven ile Jury 4; Mar cus Welby, M. ~· 13 "' 1
4:30 - NF L Ac t1on '73 8; Pr imus 4 ; Ma ncmi Genera l1 on 41o•:. }
month during the oncoming
Tenni s 10.
,1 ,.
,,,
year. Ladies of the church
5:00 - Animal World 8 ; Star T rek d; Jonathan Winter s 6 ;
Pl ay house N. Y. 8 1ogr ap hy 33; Mov1e " Th e Rains of Ra n j
served the dinner.
chlpur" 11: Sports Challenge 10.
.
..
11
5:30 '- CBS Sports lll ustra te&lt;J .8, 10; World ot Svmva l 6,
Ta kes A Thief 3.
·
··

'
True(?) Friends Write Again

(Continued from Page I)
more realistic. Kyger Creek plant employees aided by technicians from the
Southeast Ohio Emergency Ambulance
Service,-volunteers from the Gallia County
Emergency Squad, Middleport and Pomroy Emergency Squads and attendants
from the Wilcoxen, Chapman and Stevens
Funeral Homes of Point Pleasant ,
removed the victims.
In all, seven were described as dead on
arrival at the Holzer Medical Center.
There were 50 casualties (all student
nurses), 15 . ambulance patients and 3S
ambulatory patients. Medical and surgical
treatment was required for some while
treatment for smoke inhalation and
chlorine gas was administered at the
Holzer Medical Center and Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Victims were also given medical attention at the scene from the highly
trained technicians from the SEOEMS and
volunteer E·R squads. _
,
Victims transported to the Holzer Med
ical Center and their simulated Injuries
were as follows ;
Deborah McCoy, 421 ~as t South St.,

6; 30 _ This Week 4; Newsml'lker ' 7113 ,· llktt

•

•
3 TheSundayTime• · Scntinei,Sund•y,July 15, 197:t

1

Call No. 486

A,. II ie·v ••n•••nl
Ttl~· NfJ!WI 1'1'111' uf 11.1 70 WitS
.•w.n'dt•d "' Dr Nmm un llur
GALLI POL IS - Gnil lo Ju u~-: . " l nr m ~&lt;' u • ull t~ t . wh o
1ta&lt; pi llyo·d" leading ro le In
County Sheriff'• deputies lilt' " gree n r c "ltl lu fi( JII 1'ht•
reported an accident •' rt&lt;tay 1 ·omm•tt£&lt;L~ ~pi•n( ica ll y ri i('(J
ofternoon when u cur driven by Bori ;Ju,:(~ work 1n dtlvt• lnJJi n~
Terry B. Stephens, 17, Rt. l, n(' W wh eal !i li"IIJ I1 " thul pro.
(lu (,' t' big..:cr yie ld!! tiH.w th e
Patriot, crash ~d Into a bridge old
vari eties.
abutment.
Stephens was reportedly
+ + +
approaching a one-land bridge
The ~ays arc getting •horwr
when he saw an auto driven by - but no! 0 11 !he job.
William J . Ui.xters, Colwn pus,
crossing the b rid~e from the
other direction. Stephens lett
he couidn '~to p In time, so he
Tonight, July 1l
steered into 1 the end of the
bridge, to avoid a head-on
TH E LAST
AMERICAN HERO
collision. No injuries were
( Techn lcotor1
reported.
Jeff Bridges

Bridge struck

ol

MEIGS THEATRE

CASH, CHAlOI,
I.AY·AWAY
SHOP EA RLY WH ilE
QUAjqTtTIES lAST

DOLL

RS

STRETCH

~"¥!# ®

DISCOUNT

DllltOIAaLI

SPECIAL! .

···~···

DAYTIME 30's

Ve lar le Perr ine

· lPG)
speeding.
Co
lor
ca
rtoon
s:
,
Forfeiting bond• were
What Z'al?
Charl es R. Leonard, ColumROugh Rider s
bus, $22.50, defective muffler ;
Thrill Spitl
Show Starts 7 p.m.
Roy Proffitt, Racine, $150,
water polluting; Donald - E.
Mon. thru Thurs.
Woods, New Haven, W. Va.,
July 16- 17- 18 · 1~
$22.50, no muffler ; Eldon R.
NOT OPEN
Blake, Rt. I, Reedsville, $27.50,
failure 'to yield right of. wuy;
Everett R. Robie, $25, Intoxication; Paul D. Grove,
Hubbard, Ohio, $27.50, passing
at an intersection; Roger R.
Byard, Ceredo, W. Va. ,
Wiiliam R. Brown, Dunkalk,
Tonight, Monday
Md ., Char les A. Roberts,
&amp; Tuesday
Parkersburg, Luster Lamber,
North Lima, Ohio, David F.
Mcllyar , Cambridge , Ohio ,
Steven Johnson, Huntington,
Henry Kingery, Huntington,
. ,···~\"' ~.
Robert Boggess, Kenna , W. ~ PAN.IoVI SION• COl0~ 8Y 0E LUI'.P
Va., and Glenna L. Riebel, Rt.
3, Pomeroy, $27 .50 each,
Plus
speeding.
· Dyan Cannon
Robert Ryan

REGULAR 575.94
12.., PORTABLE IV

88

$

12" diogonol pic tu re. Big 4" spea ker . Advanced

"":~~.The

H.• ·t -Rock

Love Machine rR&gt;

.Avocado In Color

I,~ I Ill

Tonight,

\1 I
Noqhll)o

Mon., Tues.

JULY IS-16-17

Double Feature Program

"THE HOT ROCK"
Robert Redford
Geo. Sega I &amp; Co.
PLUS '
GP
"THE CONCERT
FOR BANGLADESH "

CHAIN

A1,A CHMINTS

CHAIR

Tonight thru
Wednesday

\',/

!,lull

Pinless, so a bsorbent!
Fit babies 12-22 lbs.

ALUMINUM

MASON DRIVE-IN
r, C 11

·137

I ·HOOK

Plastic Webb
Folds Down
to Store
Weather Proof

Huge Insect
The la rges t prehis tor ic in·
sect ever found was a dr agonfly with a 2·foot wing spread . Today , th e la rges t
dragonfly has a wing spread
slightly over 7 inches .

REG.

'1.67

d esign circ uit ry for clea rer pi ct ure. Supe r br1g ht
alum in i zed pi c fure l ub e Bud ! in tele scop1 r,
a n)enna . V o lu me, brigh tness, contras t con tro l '

Class

COMFORTABLE PlACE TO BE ON ASUMMER DAY!

of.'

HAMMOCK LOUNGE

FOR

George Harri son
and F r iend s

Weath e rized .Canvas bed with
polyurethan e pi llow . Strong tubular
stee l frame sets up easily and stores
compactly . Roomy 30" x 80" size .
Gree n with white fringe . Save now.•.

G

Charter No. 136
National Bank Region No.4
REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING
DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES, OF TilE

The -First National Bank

SOFT
AND
ABSORBENT

1, Marlin G. Kerns, Executive Vlcc Prc~ldont , oflhe nbovc-nnm ~d bank do
hereby declare thut this roporl of condition is true !ltl(i COITOCI to the bc•t of thy .
knowled8e and belief.
Marlin G. Kerns, Exllcutivc Vice President
John E. Hollldpy
ltu111ell D. Wood - Dlrccloro
C. M. ltamoay

!

'
/.

-

I

· REG. '14.33

BATH TOWELS·
l

.,. '

'

LEADING

•3.39

94

SOFT THIRSTY

of Gallipolis, In the state or Ohio, at the close of buSilleSS 011 June 30, 1973
published In response to call made by Comptroller of the currency, under Title
IZ; United States Code, Section 161.
ASSETS
Cosh and due from hanks - - - - - - - - - - • • - · • • - - - $1,532,526.21
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1,759,972.97
Obligations of States and political subdivisions • • .- 2,879,433.92
Other securities - - - - - - - - - - - - - · • - ·
- • 110,750.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
1,400,000.00
under agreements to resell - - - - - . - • • - •
8,064,519.41
Loans • - - - - - - - · - • - - · - • • · ·
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
- 165,045.75
other asseis representing bank premises - - - - - 7,306:97
Real estate owned other than hank premises $15,919,555.23
TOTAL ASSETS • - - • • • - - - - - LIABD..ITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
- - • - $4,619,171.53
and corporations - - - - - • - - - - - Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations - - - - - - - - • - - - - 8,492,291.94
123,279.78
Deposits of United States Government - - - - - - . Deposits of States and political subdivisions • - - · - - - - - - 345,795.42
124,142.68
Certified and officers' checks, etc. - - - - - - -· - - • TOTAL DEPOSITS • • - • - - - • - $1:1,704,1i81.35
(a) Total demand deposits - - .._ - . - • - - $ 5,212,389.41
(b) Total time and savings deposits - - - • · $ 6,492,291.94
Other liabilities - - - - - - - -· - - . • - - • • - 595,8.18.11
TOTAL LIABILITIES - • • - - - - .- - - - - - - - $14,300,519.46
REliERVES ON LOANS AND SECUitrr!ES
Reserve for bad debt losse ~ on loans
$1211,88:!.24
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) • • ,-~ . - • · · · • •
$128,88:1.24
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS 1AND SECURITIES - _. CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
- - $1 ,490,152.53
Equity capital-total - - · • •
100,000.00
Commotl Stock-total p!lr value
No . shares authorized 1,000
No. shares outstanding 1,000
$1,100,000.00
'Surplus '• - • · - - ·
- • - • • - • • • •
- 290,tii2.ii3
Undivided profits • • · • • • • • · •
1,400,152.ii3
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
TOTAL LIABILiTIES, RESERVES, AND
$15,919,555.2:1
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS - - - • • •
- -'
MEMORANDA
Averuge of total deposits for the 15 calcndUI· ·
days ending with call dato • • - • • • • - - - - - - - - $13,748.11411.37
Average of \Otallouns for the 15 calendar
,
days ending with call date • - - - - - - • - · • • • • • 6,036,881.31

SAV'E1 $

'

Closeout Price

LAD~

PAPER TOWELS
ROLLS
27~

VALUES TO 96¢

2rofl OO

$ 00

sr .Ea.

Ea.

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA ONLY

LADIES
SLEEVELESS SKIMMERS

BOYS'
TANK
TOPS

Cool and Casual
Machine Washable
75% Dacron 25% Polyester

or
CUT
OFFS
$}57

2 FOR s3oo
Reg.
spa EA.
8 to 18

SIL VER BIVIJGB
PLAZA

MADE FRESH DAILY
IN STORE

HAM SALAD
~~

LB.

DELl SPECIALS
Fresh Sliced

BAKED HAM
Reg. 1!1' lb.
' NOW

SILVER ·BRIDGE PLAZA OPEN 1 TO 6 SUNDAY
THESE SPECIALS AVAILABLE AT SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA,
BOTH GALLIPOLIS STORES AND PT. PLEASANT STORE

$154LB.

�I.

-

'

:J.. _ Tllll Sunda~ Time• -Sentinel, Sundlly •July 15, 1973

WE FEATURE

rA~Q..W&amp;/MW..W..W.&lt;W..:&lt;::w~

~fan's

I Coming I

Side

I Events I

by
'

UI\TESY
'

,

TRY

• 'l'

'

P.EACH ICE CREAM

~

-..

\

:t~, ,

S1'0P JN AND
TRY A

WITH THE climbing prices Uie solid oak floor may soon
become a thing of the past. According to Arllll!irong Floors, the
cost or common grade oak floor has just about doubled in the last
year. I find It sad that so many people hide their oak floors under
wall to wall carpeting and area rugs. The wood is so pretty.

DELICIOUS
This picture of the living Roush family tree was presented to Mrs. Melissa Roush, on the
occasion of her 92nd birthday, by her relatives.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert McGuire

Miss Ellis weds
Robert McGuire .
CORA - Miss Rhonda Ellis,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Ellis, Cora, became the bride
of Robert McGuire, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John B. McGuire,
Northup, in a 4 p.m. ceremony,
June 2, at Cora Church.
Rev. Charles Williams, uncle
of the groom, performed the
ceremony. Mr. and Mrs.
George Pope, cousin of the
bride, played the wedding
march. The altar . was
decorated with a variety of
flowers.
Escorted .to the altar- by her
father, the bride stopped to
present her mother a rose. She
chose a chantilly lace over
satin ballerina length gown and
a short bridal veil. She carried
a white Bible, a gift from her
aunt, Virginia Roush, topped
with roses.
The attendants wore floor
length gowns of floral nylon
over taffeta. Miss Debbie
Tackett served as maid of
honor. Her gown·was of powder

·blue and she carried a bouquet
of daisies. Miss Juanita
Spurlock was bridesmaid. Her
gown was in lilac and she also
carried a bouquet of daisies.
Ronnie Ellis, brother of the
bride, served as best man.
Usher was George Pope.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Ellis wore a dress of blue
. polyester with white trim and
jacket to match. Her corsage
was of pink roses. Mrs.
McGuire wore a pink polyester
dress and a roSe corsage.
A reception honoring the
couple was held at the grange
hall. The bride's table featured
a l!lree-tier cake made and
decorated by Margaret Smith,
aunt of the bride.
Out-of-town guests were Rev.
and Mrs. Charles Williams,
Marion; Mrs. Robert Crabtree,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Leroy
Nibert, Gallipolis Ferry, W.
Va.
The couple resides on
Scottown Route.

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Salem A. Yates
Racine, is anno~cing the engagement and .approaching
. marriage of his daughter, Sharon Kay Yates, to Billy Houze
Cretsinger, son of Mr. and Mrs. Vergil 0 . Cretsinger, Shady
Valley, Tenn. The open church wedding will take place on
Saturday, July 211,-at 7:30p.m. at the Chapel Hill Church of
Christ in Gallipolis.

•
OLYMPIAD OPENS
ATHENS (UP!)- The sixth
Olylllpiad of Song opened
Friday with one minute of
silence in honor ol Brazilian
singer -composer Agostino Dos
Santos, killed In the crash of a
Varig airliner in Paris Wednesday. More than 40,000
persons gathered in the allmarble Olympic Stadium stood
to attention as an orchestra
opened the festival with Dos
Santos' ballad, "Peace Without
Color."

,..
TRUCKS IN VIOLATION
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio aald Friday a recent
check along Interstate 70 near
lAndon put 38 trucks out of
service for a variety of safety
violations. A PUCO spokesman aald violations Included
wom Urea, defective brakes,
air leaks; lack of safety
equipment and faulty fuel
JllrU.
"
I

1J

Mrs. Roush celebrates 92nd birthday
GAUJPOUS - Thlrty-nine Bolander, Tess and Junior, all
relatives gathered at the home of Marion; Mrs. Demos
of Mr . and Mrs. Howard Kyrazis, Livermore, Calif.;
Brannon to help Mrs. ~Iissa Mr. and Mrs. Harry Roush and
Roush celebrate her 92nd daughter, Sandra and Marela,
birthday on Sunday, July 8. Ashville, N. C.; Mr. and Mrs.
The family enjoyed a buffet Richard Fowler and sons,
dinner and presented Mrs. · David and Mack, Mason, W.
Roush with a picture tree of all Va.; Mr: and Mrs. Dean
her family .
Frazier and family, Rick, April
Attending were Mrs. Myrtle and Denise, Point Pleasant;
Goetting, Waco, Tex.; Mr. and Joe Frazier, Jacksonville,
Mrs . Gl~nn Roush, Porter; Mr. Fla.; Mr. and Mrs. William
and Mrs. George · Roush, Mr. Frazier, Mr. and Mrs. Howard
and Mrs. Ronald Bolander and Brannon, Mrs. Dorothy
Donna, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Frazier and children, Susan,

The Finest

------------

'I

HOT TASTY

Danny and Jerry, Mindy,
Bruce and Greg Frazier, all of
Gallipolis and the honored
guest.
Three grandchildren were
not able to be present, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Frazier and
family, Columbia, S. C.; Mr,
and Mrs. Bernard ·Roush and
family,Houston, Tex.; Mr. and
Mrs. Edward Norman and
family, Chicago, IlL
One great-grandson, Earl
Bolander, is in Germany in the
Armed Forces.

:

MILK SHAKE

~qakt ~qn~pr
"Home of That Old

}'t•shio~ted

Comer of Second &amp;Olive

Goodness"

SCOTTOWN- Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Stumbo, Rt. I, Scottown,
are announcing the marriage
of their daughter, Betty, to
Kenneth William's, son of Mr.and Mrs. Parker Williams,

Patriot.
The couple exchanged vows
July 5 in Clintwood, Va.
The g•oom is employed at
the Goodyear Plant in Apple
Grove, W.Va.

Gallipolis, 0.

"'

601 2nd Ave.--

446-1774

JULY 12-21
~

INSTALLED
PER SQ. YD.

501 Nylon __ .;._~------ $6.00
Shags _______________ $7.50
Kitchen Carpet ·-------$6.99
Art. Turf .-------------$7.20
CARRY OUTS

Indoor Outdoor -------~2.99.
SOl Nylon -~---------!3.75
..

. FOAM PADDING
Installation Guaranteed for Life of
Carpet.
~

' I

SEMI·ANNUAL

~:

••

'

'

.,

GROUP OF MENS SUITS
and SPORT COATS

Get yourself some great values In this genuine
clearance sale of fine quality men's fashions. This year
our selections are greater than ever, all items are from
our regular current stock - selections are bro~d and
Inviting.
·

Reduced 50% to 70%

·Forces ruff, discard - slam

ENTIRE STOCK

HART SCHAFFNER &amp; MARX SUITS

Were to 140.00 .......... ......... ..... now 105.00
Were to 130.00 ................... ... ····now· 97.00
Were to 125.00 .......................... now..93.00
ENTIRE STOCK

PALM BEACH, JOHNNY CARSON, SEWELL SUITS
Were to llO.OO ............... ...........now 82.00

Were to 99.00 ...... ......... ............ now 79.00
Were to 80.00 ............................ now 64.00
Were to 60.00 ..................... ~ ... now 48.00

Reduced 20%·25%
FLORSHEIM SHOES .
Were 24.95 to 29.95
•

SWI MWEAR &amp; WALK SHORTS
Were 7.00 to 10.00

~

5.56

to

"

lADIES.SUMMER MDSE.

Seiko's
DXseries
watch.
It's like
having your
. own little robot.
A Seiko DX watch can tell
you the day and the date as
well as the exact time. ·Plus
it's self·wlndln&amp;. 98.2 11.
water-test.ed, hasasynchronized second settln&amp;and a
bi-lin&amp;uellnstant day·datl
chen&amp;e calendar. And bl·
cause irs made by automation, it gives you space·qe
accuracy at assembly line
prices. With a Selko watch
you pay only for the timepiece, not the tlllll lt'tool&lt;
to make II.

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE ·
l42 Second Ave.

I

25%

now

to

~ Rose,"

40% oft

Were 6,00 to 12.00 ·

to

U6

ENTIR E STOCK

MENS SUMMER DRESS SlACKS "
Many are Double Knlf

Were l 1.00 to 25.00

now

8.76

1"8.96

GROUP OF

MENS SUMMER DRESS SlACKS

now4Q% oft
BOYS WEAR DEPARTMENT
now

20% to 33%% oH

Thomas Clothiers
G,allipolis, O!Jiu

10 DIAMONDS
$295.00
Tawney Jewelers
422 Sec. Ave.

•

t

Gallipolis

Second Avenu~

ACfiNG DmECTOR QUITS
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Robert H. Baker, 30,
Cleveland, has resigned as
acting direcwr of finance for
the state, Gov. John J . Gilligan
announced Friday . Gilligan
said Baker was resigning to
return to law practice in
Cleveland . The governor
praised Baker's work on· the
recently - adopted biennial
budget and said he accepted
the resignation "with deep
regret."

Clearance
SUMMER
MERCHANDISE

---

ARGYLE PLAI OS
By RUSS
Polyester Knits In
Grey and Berry Argyle Plaid
Solid Color Pants .............. }12.00
Argyle Pants ....................... 115.00
layered Top...................... 120.00
Pleated Skirt ............ _........ 114.00
Blazer........................ ,..... $25.00
..

Missy Sizes

412-414 Second Ave. ··

Gallipolis, 0.

107th ANNIVERSARy.·

lt's You" and ~~sin­

The cast Is predominantly
made up of Athens community
•· residents who supplement the
= perforr'r\ances of the regular
•• OVST company.
~ Professor Hlil Is being
: portrayed by Mal Bowes, a
• Ph.D. student In comparative
'' nrts at Ohio University, while
= Marian the librarian wlil be
• played by Mary CrlU:~· a
~ member oftheOVST company.
~ Bob Goyer Is cast ~a Mayor
ij Shinn, Joan Vaughan Is Mrs,
C PMroo, and the ladle• quintet
~ which sings "Pickallttle" Is
made liP 111: Lucille King, Mary
2 Jo Bowes, Sylvia Abbott,
= Jamie Tevl1 and Mary Ann
; Jl'lournoy.
The barbershop quintet Ia
•
• made up of Jlrn Dilley, Ralph
: Iurd, Greg Hlll, Doug Comp: ton and Dan Clemenz.
:
River Clly town1ptople and
kldl Include Karen ValenUne,
.I Barbara Stqut, Nancy Craig,
Karla Eldridge, Kenny
: Samaan,· t!lerry Coy, Carl
'"'" Hedl•, Ch't.ct Ke1m1, Chrla

~

SPORT &amp; DRESS SHIRTS

4.76

11

= cere. "

~

ENTIRE STOCK MENS

now

1

•

7.96

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT- Mr. and Mrs. Larry C.
Smith, Rt. 2, Bidwell, are proud to announce the engagement
of their daughter, Brenda Kay, to Glen H. Elkins, eyon of Mr.
and Mrs. Ivan L. Elkins, Jackson. Miss Smith Is a 1971
graduate of Gallia Academy High School and is a senior at
Rio Grande College majoring in communications. She Is a
member of Lambda Omicron Psi sorority. Mr. Elkins Is a
1968 graduate of Jackson High School and attended Purdue
University and Ohio University Chillicothe Branch. He is
employed by Ufe of Virginia Insurance Company in
Columbus. Wedding plans are incomplete.

2.

MENS SPORT COATS
GROUP OF

a:eit:H!**lu

23••
6.

ENTIRE STOCK OF

ENTIRE STOCK

'--"''li,·~...------•..--111!!--.1 __ Galllpolls,_OI!Io t _
'

Ohzo ·Valley Theater
rpresents Music Man

••

-

ENTIRE STOCK

GALLIPOLIS CARPETING

College News

Miss Brenda Kay Smith

=

Now 15.00 to 21.90

.c ·

MONDAY
BUSINESS and Professional
Women meet at 6:30 p.t!J. at
Oscar's. Patti Wetherholt will
present the program on
Buckeye GirLs' State.

...

.'

'

Candystripers
honored at HM C

NOW YOU KNOW
London's policemen were
named "Bobbies" after Sir
Robert Peel, British nome
secretary who founded the
city's first disciplined police
force in 1829.
.

Miss Pamela Henry

"'

AND', A

GOSPEL Baptist Church
An_nual HQmecumlng, morning
and afternoon services with a
baske t lunch at noon. Public Is
invited ,
CHERRINGTON Runion at the
Thurman United Methodist
Church. Baoket dinner at noon,
bring table servke. .
.
J . A. SHEETS family reunion
will be held at · the Northup
Baptist Church yard. Basket
dinner.

OHIO WAS represented in the National Chicken Cooking JUNIOR and senior band
Contest two weeks ago by Mrs. l.itwrence Rudzinski, Centerville. practice at North Gallia High
Although I still haven't heard how she did in the competition, her School froin 6 to 8 p.m.
"Hong Kong Chicken" recipe certainly looks delicious. Here it
is.
3 whole boiler-fryer chicken breasts, halved, boned, skinned .
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr..al1d Mrs. Wallace
and cut in l-inch pieces
·
R. Henry, Eureka Star Route·, announce the engagement of
v, cup soy sauce
NOTRE DAME, Ind . .. their daughter, Pamela Jean to John R. Thomas, Jr., son of
1 tbsp. sugar
Among the · 2,136 students
. ·~ Mr. and Mrs. Richard Thomas, &amp;07 Fourth Ave. Miss Henry
1 tbsp. dry sherry
receiving degrees at the· !28th
:; is a 1970 graduate of Gallla Academy High School and will be
1liz tsp. meat seasOnsing
annual spring commencement
:,: a senior at Ohio University majoring In Secondary
1 tsp. corn starch
of. the University of Notre
• Education, Communications. Thomas is also a 1970 graduate
v, tsp. garlic powder
Dame, was Da'vid V. Johnson,
• of Gallia Academy and will be a senior ·at Ohio University
v, tsp. ground ginger
son of Mr. and Mrs . L.. Vance
"' majoring in Speech and Hearing Sciences. A september
v, tsp. pepper
Johnson, 514 Third Ave .,
weddlll~ is being planned.
·
One-third cup corn oil, divided
Gallipolis. Jonson majored in
"'••
2green pappers, cutin 12 inch cubes (about 2c4ps)
sociology and received his
.
I can (8¥.! ounees) sliced bamboo shoots . drained
degree in the college of ArtS
2 tbsp. honey
and Letters.
If.! cup cashews
In a deep bowl, mix together soy sauce, sugar, dry sherry,
RIO GR"ANDE . .:.. Galli a
seasoning, salt, corn starch, garlic powder, ginger and pepper. County residents admitted to
Add chicken and toss gently to coat pieces well. Drain chicken
Rio Grande College for the fall
pieces and reserve liquid.
quarter include Elizabeth .
Heat 2tbsps. of the corn oil in a Hl-inch fry pan over medium McGhee, daughter of Mr. and
••
heat. Add the chicken pieces; cook, stirring constantly, until
Mrs. Myron "Bud" McGhee,
chicken is browned on all sides about ~ to 7 minutes •. or until
: ATHENS
Professor King, Andy Stout, Don West,
367 Debby Dr ., Gallipolis, who
done. Remove chicken from iJ;ln with slotted spoon and pla,ce on will major in art; Aletha
: Harold Hill will be in Athens Joseph McConnell, Dale
platter. Cover with aluminum foiL Drain off any liquid in fry pan.
Campbell, daughter of Mr. and
~ for the next week to peddle his Shields, Bill Willman, Susan
Add the remaining corn oil to fry pan; heat. Stir in peppers,
Mrs. Thomas R Campbell, Rt.
: boys band idea on the stage of Sherman, · Jennifer Ash,
bamboo shoots and 2 tbsps. of the reserved soy sauce mixture.
2, Vinton, who will major in
:; the Forum Theater in the Joanne Kaplan, Mary Therese
Crook, uncovered, until the peppers are tender.crisp, about 3 w 4
: Radio - ;·Television - Com- Baener., Janet Watson and minutes. Return the brqwned chicken to the fry pan and stir · elementary edu.catlon; Mrs
Beverly L. Chapman, daughter
: muiilca tibns Building on Marcilyn Brien!.
gently to combine with the vegetable mixture . Add the honey and
~ College Sjreet.
Other townspeople in · the cook, uncovered, 2 w3 minutes longer. Just before serving, add of Mrs. Margaret Johnson,
Crown City, who will major in
The ev~nt will be the sw:il- show include Cor.win Croy as a the cashews. SePVe with rice. Makes 6 servings .
math.
•: mer's secpnd production of the traveling salesman, John ·
~ Ohio Vall~y Summer Theater Fleischauer as Charlie Cowell,
HAVE A NICE WEEK.
ATHENS - The spring
" (OVST) in the form of Meridith Charles Brient as Marcellus
quarter Deen's List at Ohio
-~ Willson's "The Music Man" Washburn, Scott Inman as .
WIN
AT
BRIDGE
University included 2,200 upper
:.: which opens at 8:30 p.m. and Tommy Djills, Elizabeth Dodd
classmen
and 500 freshmen .
~ runs July 18 through 22.
as
Amaryllis,
Daryl
Included on the list were
: According
to
James Wickstrom as Winthrop Paroo,
UConover', ·· Oh.l6 University Marcy\ Cox as Grac.le Shinn,
dor of New York .
' sophomores, Nancy Lee Steele,
NORTH
11
: professor of comparative arts Barb Laifer as Zaneeta Shinn
Hi s two-club opening was Rt. I, Ewington,' Christopher
• 54
artificial as was North "s two- M. Griffin, 618Second Ave
,
: who is directing the show, "T~e and Bruce Keeney as the
. ·\' K74
heart
response.
The
final
sixGallipolis, . and Danny Dale
~ Music Man" is the story of constable.
t QS53
club contract was a good one , Horton, RL I, T)l.urman;
: Professor Harold Hill, a slick
A!hens
High
School
+Q 107 3
but chances looked slim indeed
WEST
EAST
~; salesman of · musical iri- musicians who make up the
after West opened the 10 of se,niors, f\Onald L. Janey, 416
+KJ97 32
• Q1086
diamonds.
Jackson Pike, Pamela N.
~ struments and his encounter River City band are Howie
• J862
\'10 3
John decided that West Maggied, 434 Hedgewood Dr.,
,; with the solid, hard-working, Dean, Laura and Theresa
+109
+
KJ 42
wasn't
leading from the king, and Paula K. Vornholt, 446
~ highly principled and maybe-a- Fieler, Susan Harlan, Ellen
. + 652
+8 ..
but it wouldn 't do him any good Spruce St. Ext., Gallipolis.
: bit-stodgy residents of River Herbener, Laura Samaan,
SOUTH tD I
to hold back dumm y's queen so
Bruce Simpson, Mark Slagle,
: City, Iowa.
+A
he played it. East produced the
\'AQ9 5
king and John won wilh the
• The play is a scenario of Mike Wheaton and Susan
East could not afford to overt A 76
~ reluctantly developing com- Worthing.
'
ace.
take
and West had to give John
+AKJ94
He cashed the ace and king aruff, discard and the siam.
: munity spirit and in~vidual
Individuals working behind
East-West vulnerable
of trumps. East dropped the six · ( N~WSPAPEA EtHERPRISE ASSN I
: character, Conover satd. As the scenes include Dan
West
North
East
South or spades. '·
• Professor Hill launched "his Wilhelm who designed the set;
John took his spade ace; led
: one-man campaign to bring the Stan Abbott, lighting director;
Pass 2\'
Pass
a club to dummy while East let
Pass 4•
. Pass
: townspeople to an appreciation Kate Barnett, costumes; Joan
go of a low diamond . Then he The bidding has been :
Pass
Pass
Pass
South
: and enjoyment of life, he Wickstrom, assisted by Joy
ruffed dummy"s last spade ;. West
North
East
Opening lead- tiO
t\'
cashed his ace of hearts ; led a
: himself learns some principles Huntley, choreography;
Pass
heart
to
dummy's
king
and
notPass
2+
: and becomes a more ethical Eugene W(ckstrom, musical
Pass
;IN .T.
ed the fall of the 10 from West. l,.ass
Jt
: person. ~ '
director and pianist; Robert By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
PaS$
5+
ll was now tim e rar some Pass
4¥
?
" Moods' and emotions of the Wortman bass player ; Paul
Pass
Here is a real gem of a hand real thought. John came to the p.,,. . 6\'
J show are illustrated in the Shivers, drummer ; and Ann played recently by John Solo- conc lu sion East had started · You, South, hold :
with exactly eight red cards so +A Q 7 6 \'K Q 9 8 &gt; +A ! +6 3
which It presents. These Kemmerle, assistant to
••= music
school board squabble and the th.at West had started with four What do you dp now? .
range from bol$terous hilarity director Conover.
of that COlor.
A- Pass. You have bid your full
• illustrated by "76 Trombones,"
Conover emphasized that Del Sartee ladies' gossip
Hence. We st was now hold . \'uhutl. ~,.,.:.... ·
'
: through a kind of cynicism in "The Music Man" utilizes real session cari be recognized in ing just one red card whicli
· ,tODAY'SQUESTION
: "Sadder, But Wiser Girl," to people, not caricatures, riot any small town . The humor would be either the jack of What do Y•u,o~p Wl\h: ••• '
: the lonely pathos portrayed by stereotypes, but people with a depends upon the perform- hearts or a diamond . In that +AQ6\'AQ4+K•l+ila'u
,,f ,{
: "Goodnight My Someone." In deeply-rooted sense of ethics ance's technical faithfulness to case there wa s n·o rea so n for
~ addition, "Gar.y, Indiana" is a a.nd sincere emotions. Music Is the real small-town Iowans of John not to play a heart and
...
finesse his nine.
: rousing heart-warmer and used fundamentally as a 1912
If West produced the jack he
••w "Till There Was You" provides functional element of the story. ' Curtain timeis.S:30p.m
• would have to give .John a rul!
~ a vehicle .for the. romantic
Music Man' really is a Ticket l"cservatwns may be., and discard for the same down
show for non-professionals," made at the box office In Kant- one that would result if John
* theme. •
:1 Humorous commentary on he said. "Naturalness imd ncr Hall (old Speech Building) rose with the queen .
John played the nine. When it
on College Street-or by calling
~ small town life Is provided in humanness are strong qualities
Tuesday thro •h held he cashed the queen and
~ "Plckallttle" · while the bar- that carry throughout the 594-5oio
, .
u, played a low d.amond . West
produced the nine.
~ bershop fan will have "Llda show . The authenticity of the Sunday from 2-9 p.m.

.

FRENCH FRIES

Kenneth Williams
weds Miss Stumbo

GALLIPOLIS - June 4, Susan Frazier, R.N., assistant
Davis Hall, in the Holzer director. The top hour award
Medical Center (HMC) School was given to Beverly
of Nursing was the scene of the Stapleton, Hannan Trace High
annual HMC Candystriper School, who had 170 hours of
award presentations. ·
service.
Eighty-seven girls from five
Flowers we~e presented to
high schools, Gallia Academy, · Cathy Pickens. Mrs . Mary
Hannan Trace, North Gallia, Jean Walkers, Director of
Southwestern and Kyger HMC Volunteers, assisted by
Creek, ":hO have contributed passing out programs.
6,130 hours of service to
The speaker was Dana I.
patients at the center were Miller, .R.N., in-service
presented awards ))y Cathy . director and director of junior
Pickens, R.N., director, and volunteers, Jackson General
Hospital, Ripley, W. Va., who
spoke about "Midwifery."
FIRM CHARGED
ASHTABULA, Ohio (UPI)Environment Control Corp. has
MARRIAGE LICENSE
been charged by the state of
GALLIPOLIS - David A.
Ohio with pollution. The state Nolan, 20, Gallipolis, elecattorney general's office filed
trician, and Unda L. Rutt, 18,
suit in ·Ashtabula County Patriot, student.
Common Pleas Court .Friday
a,cainst the firm, which
operates a landfill near here.
The state accused the company
of polluting a tributary of L3ke
Erie.

Miss Sharon Kay Yates

FOOTL.ONG
HOTDOG

•

~UNDAY

Dorothy J Countryman
WHEN WAB the last time you thottghi seriously about
renovating a bam? I was baling hay _this past Monday and the
thought crossed mY mind several times.
My parents have a biB old hlp.roof barn that dates back
about an hundred years. Once you get to tile hayloft you sort of
have to brace yourself oldeways to be able to stand up. The floor
slants downward toward the loft door, about 14 feet orr the
ground , Added to this slanting floor, we have the problem of a
lopsided stall floor . Since I've been contemplating. adding a
saddle horse to my possesllions, my Mom says we'll have to do
something about the stall, too, It '~ going to be a long summer.

.

SEEN AND HEARD
GALLIPOLIS - Among
!hose vlsiUng Myrtle Beach, S.
C., this year are the lollowlng
Galllpolltans: Mr. and 'Mrs. Ed
Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. Nell
Sanders, Mr. and Mra. Richard
carter, Mr.· and Mre. Odie
O'Donnell, Dr. and Mrs. Jay
Brad~haw, Dr. and Mrs. Jim
, Dalley, Mr. and Mrs . Bob
Saunders, Mr. and Mra, Ike
Wiseman, Mr. and Mrs. Dean
Evans, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Joe
Evans, Mr and Mrs. Earl Neff
and Mr. and Mrs. Harold V.
Lookado.

r!J~=

STORE HOURS
Mon . &amp; Fri.
l i )Ollllp .m.
Tues. Wed . I Sat .
9: 30tll5p.m.
Thursday
9:30 til12 noon

arl'!5
STOU

Whort tho ~mlly JhopJ 1011tltor

328 Socooo Afl,

Gallipolis, 0.

NOW IN PROGRESS!
GREAT _SAVINGS ON

e SUITS
e SHOES
OPEN
e SPORT SHIRTS MON. &amp; FRI.
•

• SPORT COATS
'

NIGHT TIL

8:00 p~

�I.

-

'

:J.. _ Tllll Sunda~ Time• -Sentinel, Sundlly •July 15, 1973

WE FEATURE

rA~Q..W&amp;/MW..W..W.&lt;W..:&lt;::w~

~fan's

I Coming I

Side

I Events I

by
'

UI\TESY
'

,

TRY

• 'l'

'

P.EACH ICE CREAM

~

-..

\

:t~, ,

S1'0P JN AND
TRY A

WITH THE climbing prices Uie solid oak floor may soon
become a thing of the past. According to Arllll!irong Floors, the
cost or common grade oak floor has just about doubled in the last
year. I find It sad that so many people hide their oak floors under
wall to wall carpeting and area rugs. The wood is so pretty.

DELICIOUS
This picture of the living Roush family tree was presented to Mrs. Melissa Roush, on the
occasion of her 92nd birthday, by her relatives.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert McGuire

Miss Ellis weds
Robert McGuire .
CORA - Miss Rhonda Ellis,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Ellis, Cora, became the bride
of Robert McGuire, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John B. McGuire,
Northup, in a 4 p.m. ceremony,
June 2, at Cora Church.
Rev. Charles Williams, uncle
of the groom, performed the
ceremony. Mr. and Mrs.
George Pope, cousin of the
bride, played the wedding
march. The altar . was
decorated with a variety of
flowers.
Escorted .to the altar- by her
father, the bride stopped to
present her mother a rose. She
chose a chantilly lace over
satin ballerina length gown and
a short bridal veil. She carried
a white Bible, a gift from her
aunt, Virginia Roush, topped
with roses.
The attendants wore floor
length gowns of floral nylon
over taffeta. Miss Debbie
Tackett served as maid of
honor. Her gown·was of powder

·blue and she carried a bouquet
of daisies. Miss Juanita
Spurlock was bridesmaid. Her
gown was in lilac and she also
carried a bouquet of daisies.
Ronnie Ellis, brother of the
bride, served as best man.
Usher was George Pope.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Ellis wore a dress of blue
. polyester with white trim and
jacket to match. Her corsage
was of pink roses. Mrs.
McGuire wore a pink polyester
dress and a roSe corsage.
A reception honoring the
couple was held at the grange
hall. The bride's table featured
a l!lree-tier cake made and
decorated by Margaret Smith,
aunt of the bride.
Out-of-town guests were Rev.
and Mrs. Charles Williams,
Marion; Mrs. Robert Crabtree,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Leroy
Nibert, Gallipolis Ferry, W.
Va.
The couple resides on
Scottown Route.

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Salem A. Yates
Racine, is anno~cing the engagement and .approaching
. marriage of his daughter, Sharon Kay Yates, to Billy Houze
Cretsinger, son of Mr. and Mrs. Vergil 0 . Cretsinger, Shady
Valley, Tenn. The open church wedding will take place on
Saturday, July 211,-at 7:30p.m. at the Chapel Hill Church of
Christ in Gallipolis.

•
OLYMPIAD OPENS
ATHENS (UP!)- The sixth
Olylllpiad of Song opened
Friday with one minute of
silence in honor ol Brazilian
singer -composer Agostino Dos
Santos, killed In the crash of a
Varig airliner in Paris Wednesday. More than 40,000
persons gathered in the allmarble Olympic Stadium stood
to attention as an orchestra
opened the festival with Dos
Santos' ballad, "Peace Without
Color."

,..
TRUCKS IN VIOLATION
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio aald Friday a recent
check along Interstate 70 near
lAndon put 38 trucks out of
service for a variety of safety
violations. A PUCO spokesman aald violations Included
wom Urea, defective brakes,
air leaks; lack of safety
equipment and faulty fuel
JllrU.
"
I

1J

Mrs. Roush celebrates 92nd birthday
GAUJPOUS - Thlrty-nine Bolander, Tess and Junior, all
relatives gathered at the home of Marion; Mrs. Demos
of Mr . and Mrs. Howard Kyrazis, Livermore, Calif.;
Brannon to help Mrs. ~Iissa Mr. and Mrs. Harry Roush and
Roush celebrate her 92nd daughter, Sandra and Marela,
birthday on Sunday, July 8. Ashville, N. C.; Mr. and Mrs.
The family enjoyed a buffet Richard Fowler and sons,
dinner and presented Mrs. · David and Mack, Mason, W.
Roush with a picture tree of all Va.; Mr: and Mrs. Dean
her family .
Frazier and family, Rick, April
Attending were Mrs. Myrtle and Denise, Point Pleasant;
Goetting, Waco, Tex.; Mr. and Joe Frazier, Jacksonville,
Mrs . Gl~nn Roush, Porter; Mr. Fla.; Mr. and Mrs. William
and Mrs. George · Roush, Mr. Frazier, Mr. and Mrs. Howard
and Mrs. Ronald Bolander and Brannon, Mrs. Dorothy
Donna, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Frazier and children, Susan,

The Finest

------------

'I

HOT TASTY

Danny and Jerry, Mindy,
Bruce and Greg Frazier, all of
Gallipolis and the honored
guest.
Three grandchildren were
not able to be present, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Frazier and
family, Columbia, S. C.; Mr,
and Mrs. Bernard ·Roush and
family,Houston, Tex.; Mr. and
Mrs. Edward Norman and
family, Chicago, IlL
One great-grandson, Earl
Bolander, is in Germany in the
Armed Forces.

:

MILK SHAKE

~qakt ~qn~pr
"Home of That Old

}'t•shio~ted

Comer of Second &amp;Olive

Goodness"

SCOTTOWN- Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Stumbo, Rt. I, Scottown,
are announcing the marriage
of their daughter, Betty, to
Kenneth William's, son of Mr.and Mrs. Parker Williams,

Patriot.
The couple exchanged vows
July 5 in Clintwood, Va.
The g•oom is employed at
the Goodyear Plant in Apple
Grove, W.Va.

Gallipolis, 0.

"'

601 2nd Ave.--

446-1774

JULY 12-21
~

INSTALLED
PER SQ. YD.

501 Nylon __ .;._~------ $6.00
Shags _______________ $7.50
Kitchen Carpet ·-------$6.99
Art. Turf .-------------$7.20
CARRY OUTS

Indoor Outdoor -------~2.99.
SOl Nylon -~---------!3.75
..

. FOAM PADDING
Installation Guaranteed for Life of
Carpet.
~

' I

SEMI·ANNUAL

~:

••

'

'

.,

GROUP OF MENS SUITS
and SPORT COATS

Get yourself some great values In this genuine
clearance sale of fine quality men's fashions. This year
our selections are greater than ever, all items are from
our regular current stock - selections are bro~d and
Inviting.
·

Reduced 50% to 70%

·Forces ruff, discard - slam

ENTIRE STOCK

HART SCHAFFNER &amp; MARX SUITS

Were to 140.00 .......... ......... ..... now 105.00
Were to 130.00 ................... ... ····now· 97.00
Were to 125.00 .......................... now..93.00
ENTIRE STOCK

PALM BEACH, JOHNNY CARSON, SEWELL SUITS
Were to llO.OO ............... ...........now 82.00

Were to 99.00 ...... ......... ............ now 79.00
Were to 80.00 ............................ now 64.00
Were to 60.00 ..................... ~ ... now 48.00

Reduced 20%·25%
FLORSHEIM SHOES .
Were 24.95 to 29.95
•

SWI MWEAR &amp; WALK SHORTS
Were 7.00 to 10.00

~

5.56

to

"

lADIES.SUMMER MDSE.

Seiko's
DXseries
watch.
It's like
having your
. own little robot.
A Seiko DX watch can tell
you the day and the date as
well as the exact time. ·Plus
it's self·wlndln&amp;. 98.2 11.
water-test.ed, hasasynchronized second settln&amp;and a
bi-lin&amp;uellnstant day·datl
chen&amp;e calendar. And bl·
cause irs made by automation, it gives you space·qe
accuracy at assembly line
prices. With a Selko watch
you pay only for the timepiece, not the tlllll lt'tool&lt;
to make II.

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE ·
l42 Second Ave.

I

25%

now

to

~ Rose,"

40% oft

Were 6,00 to 12.00 ·

to

U6

ENTIR E STOCK

MENS SUMMER DRESS SlACKS "
Many are Double Knlf

Were l 1.00 to 25.00

now

8.76

1"8.96

GROUP OF

MENS SUMMER DRESS SlACKS

now4Q% oft
BOYS WEAR DEPARTMENT
now

20% to 33%% oH

Thomas Clothiers
G,allipolis, O!Jiu

10 DIAMONDS
$295.00
Tawney Jewelers
422 Sec. Ave.

•

t

Gallipolis

Second Avenu~

ACfiNG DmECTOR QUITS
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Robert H. Baker, 30,
Cleveland, has resigned as
acting direcwr of finance for
the state, Gov. John J . Gilligan
announced Friday . Gilligan
said Baker was resigning to
return to law practice in
Cleveland . The governor
praised Baker's work on· the
recently - adopted biennial
budget and said he accepted
the resignation "with deep
regret."

Clearance
SUMMER
MERCHANDISE

---

ARGYLE PLAI OS
By RUSS
Polyester Knits In
Grey and Berry Argyle Plaid
Solid Color Pants .............. }12.00
Argyle Pants ....................... 115.00
layered Top...................... 120.00
Pleated Skirt ............ _........ 114.00
Blazer........................ ,..... $25.00
..

Missy Sizes

412-414 Second Ave. ··

Gallipolis, 0.

107th ANNIVERSARy.·

lt's You" and ~~sin­

The cast Is predominantly
made up of Athens community
•· residents who supplement the
= perforr'r\ances of the regular
•• OVST company.
~ Professor Hlil Is being
: portrayed by Mal Bowes, a
• Ph.D. student In comparative
'' nrts at Ohio University, while
= Marian the librarian wlil be
• played by Mary CrlU:~· a
~ member oftheOVST company.
~ Bob Goyer Is cast ~a Mayor
ij Shinn, Joan Vaughan Is Mrs,
C PMroo, and the ladle• quintet
~ which sings "Pickallttle" Is
made liP 111: Lucille King, Mary
2 Jo Bowes, Sylvia Abbott,
= Jamie Tevl1 and Mary Ann
; Jl'lournoy.
The barbershop quintet Ia
•
• made up of Jlrn Dilley, Ralph
: Iurd, Greg Hlll, Doug Comp: ton and Dan Clemenz.
:
River Clly town1ptople and
kldl Include Karen ValenUne,
.I Barbara Stqut, Nancy Craig,
Karla Eldridge, Kenny
: Samaan,· t!lerry Coy, Carl
'"'" Hedl•, Ch't.ct Ke1m1, Chrla

~

SPORT &amp; DRESS SHIRTS

4.76

11

= cere. "

~

ENTIRE STOCK MENS

now

1

•

7.96

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT- Mr. and Mrs. Larry C.
Smith, Rt. 2, Bidwell, are proud to announce the engagement
of their daughter, Brenda Kay, to Glen H. Elkins, eyon of Mr.
and Mrs. Ivan L. Elkins, Jackson. Miss Smith Is a 1971
graduate of Gallia Academy High School and is a senior at
Rio Grande College majoring in communications. She Is a
member of Lambda Omicron Psi sorority. Mr. Elkins Is a
1968 graduate of Jackson High School and attended Purdue
University and Ohio University Chillicothe Branch. He is
employed by Ufe of Virginia Insurance Company in
Columbus. Wedding plans are incomplete.

2.

MENS SPORT COATS
GROUP OF

a:eit:H!**lu

23••
6.

ENTIRE STOCK OF

ENTIRE STOCK

'--"''li,·~...------•..--111!!--.1 __ Galllpolls,_OI!Io t _
'

Ohzo ·Valley Theater
rpresents Music Man

••

-

ENTIRE STOCK

GALLIPOLIS CARPETING

College News

Miss Brenda Kay Smith

=

Now 15.00 to 21.90

.c ·

MONDAY
BUSINESS and Professional
Women meet at 6:30 p.t!J. at
Oscar's. Patti Wetherholt will
present the program on
Buckeye GirLs' State.

...

.'

'

Candystripers
honored at HM C

NOW YOU KNOW
London's policemen were
named "Bobbies" after Sir
Robert Peel, British nome
secretary who founded the
city's first disciplined police
force in 1829.
.

Miss Pamela Henry

"'

AND', A

GOSPEL Baptist Church
An_nual HQmecumlng, morning
and afternoon services with a
baske t lunch at noon. Public Is
invited ,
CHERRINGTON Runion at the
Thurman United Methodist
Church. Baoket dinner at noon,
bring table servke. .
.
J . A. SHEETS family reunion
will be held at · the Northup
Baptist Church yard. Basket
dinner.

OHIO WAS represented in the National Chicken Cooking JUNIOR and senior band
Contest two weeks ago by Mrs. l.itwrence Rudzinski, Centerville. practice at North Gallia High
Although I still haven't heard how she did in the competition, her School froin 6 to 8 p.m.
"Hong Kong Chicken" recipe certainly looks delicious. Here it
is.
3 whole boiler-fryer chicken breasts, halved, boned, skinned .
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr..al1d Mrs. Wallace
and cut in l-inch pieces
·
R. Henry, Eureka Star Route·, announce the engagement of
v, cup soy sauce
NOTRE DAME, Ind . .. their daughter, Pamela Jean to John R. Thomas, Jr., son of
1 tbsp. sugar
Among the · 2,136 students
. ·~ Mr. and Mrs. Richard Thomas, &amp;07 Fourth Ave. Miss Henry
1 tbsp. dry sherry
receiving degrees at the· !28th
:; is a 1970 graduate of Gallla Academy High School and will be
1liz tsp. meat seasOnsing
annual spring commencement
:,: a senior at Ohio University majoring In Secondary
1 tsp. corn starch
of. the University of Notre
• Education, Communications. Thomas is also a 1970 graduate
v, tsp. garlic powder
Dame, was Da'vid V. Johnson,
• of Gallia Academy and will be a senior ·at Ohio University
v, tsp. ground ginger
son of Mr. and Mrs . L.. Vance
"' majoring in Speech and Hearing Sciences. A september
v, tsp. pepper
Johnson, 514 Third Ave .,
weddlll~ is being planned.
·
One-third cup corn oil, divided
Gallipolis. Jonson majored in
"'••
2green pappers, cutin 12 inch cubes (about 2c4ps)
sociology and received his
.
I can (8¥.! ounees) sliced bamboo shoots . drained
degree in the college of ArtS
2 tbsp. honey
and Letters.
If.! cup cashews
In a deep bowl, mix together soy sauce, sugar, dry sherry,
RIO GR"ANDE . .:.. Galli a
seasoning, salt, corn starch, garlic powder, ginger and pepper. County residents admitted to
Add chicken and toss gently to coat pieces well. Drain chicken
Rio Grande College for the fall
pieces and reserve liquid.
quarter include Elizabeth .
Heat 2tbsps. of the corn oil in a Hl-inch fry pan over medium McGhee, daughter of Mr. and
••
heat. Add the chicken pieces; cook, stirring constantly, until
Mrs. Myron "Bud" McGhee,
chicken is browned on all sides about ~ to 7 minutes •. or until
: ATHENS
Professor King, Andy Stout, Don West,
367 Debby Dr ., Gallipolis, who
done. Remove chicken from iJ;ln with slotted spoon and pla,ce on will major in art; Aletha
: Harold Hill will be in Athens Joseph McConnell, Dale
platter. Cover with aluminum foiL Drain off any liquid in fry pan.
Campbell, daughter of Mr. and
~ for the next week to peddle his Shields, Bill Willman, Susan
Add the remaining corn oil to fry pan; heat. Stir in peppers,
Mrs. Thomas R Campbell, Rt.
: boys band idea on the stage of Sherman, · Jennifer Ash,
bamboo shoots and 2 tbsps. of the reserved soy sauce mixture.
2, Vinton, who will major in
:; the Forum Theater in the Joanne Kaplan, Mary Therese
Crook, uncovered, until the peppers are tender.crisp, about 3 w 4
: Radio - ;·Television - Com- Baener., Janet Watson and minutes. Return the brqwned chicken to the fry pan and stir · elementary edu.catlon; Mrs
Beverly L. Chapman, daughter
: muiilca tibns Building on Marcilyn Brien!.
gently to combine with the vegetable mixture . Add the honey and
~ College Sjreet.
Other townspeople in · the cook, uncovered, 2 w3 minutes longer. Just before serving, add of Mrs. Margaret Johnson,
Crown City, who will major in
The ev~nt will be the sw:il- show include Cor.win Croy as a the cashews. SePVe with rice. Makes 6 servings .
math.
•: mer's secpnd production of the traveling salesman, John ·
~ Ohio Vall~y Summer Theater Fleischauer as Charlie Cowell,
HAVE A NICE WEEK.
ATHENS - The spring
" (OVST) in the form of Meridith Charles Brient as Marcellus
quarter Deen's List at Ohio
-~ Willson's "The Music Man" Washburn, Scott Inman as .
WIN
AT
BRIDGE
University included 2,200 upper
:.: which opens at 8:30 p.m. and Tommy Djills, Elizabeth Dodd
classmen
and 500 freshmen .
~ runs July 18 through 22.
as
Amaryllis,
Daryl
Included on the list were
: According
to
James Wickstrom as Winthrop Paroo,
UConover', ·· Oh.l6 University Marcy\ Cox as Grac.le Shinn,
dor of New York .
' sophomores, Nancy Lee Steele,
NORTH
11
: professor of comparative arts Barb Laifer as Zaneeta Shinn
Hi s two-club opening was Rt. I, Ewington,' Christopher
• 54
artificial as was North "s two- M. Griffin, 618Second Ave
,
: who is directing the show, "T~e and Bruce Keeney as the
. ·\' K74
heart
response.
The
final
sixGallipolis, . and Danny Dale
~ Music Man" is the story of constable.
t QS53
club contract was a good one , Horton, RL I, T)l.urman;
: Professor Harold Hill, a slick
A!hens
High
School
+Q 107 3
but chances looked slim indeed
WEST
EAST
~; salesman of · musical iri- musicians who make up the
after West opened the 10 of se,niors, f\Onald L. Janey, 416
+KJ97 32
• Q1086
diamonds.
Jackson Pike, Pamela N.
~ struments and his encounter River City band are Howie
• J862
\'10 3
John decided that West Maggied, 434 Hedgewood Dr.,
,; with the solid, hard-working, Dean, Laura and Theresa
+109
+
KJ 42
wasn't
leading from the king, and Paula K. Vornholt, 446
~ highly principled and maybe-a- Fieler, Susan Harlan, Ellen
. + 652
+8 ..
but it wouldn 't do him any good Spruce St. Ext., Gallipolis.
: bit-stodgy residents of River Herbener, Laura Samaan,
SOUTH tD I
to hold back dumm y's queen so
Bruce Simpson, Mark Slagle,
: City, Iowa.
+A
he played it. East produced the
\'AQ9 5
king and John won wilh the
• The play is a scenario of Mike Wheaton and Susan
East could not afford to overt A 76
~ reluctantly developing com- Worthing.
'
ace.
take
and West had to give John
+AKJ94
He cashed the ace and king aruff, discard and the siam.
: munity spirit and in~vidual
Individuals working behind
East-West vulnerable
of trumps. East dropped the six · ( N~WSPAPEA EtHERPRISE ASSN I
: character, Conover satd. As the scenes include Dan
West
North
East
South or spades. '·
• Professor Hill launched "his Wilhelm who designed the set;
John took his spade ace; led
: one-man campaign to bring the Stan Abbott, lighting director;
Pass 2\'
Pass
a club to dummy while East let
Pass 4•
. Pass
: townspeople to an appreciation Kate Barnett, costumes; Joan
go of a low diamond . Then he The bidding has been :
Pass
Pass
Pass
South
: and enjoyment of life, he Wickstrom, assisted by Joy
ruffed dummy"s last spade ;. West
North
East
Opening lead- tiO
t\'
cashed his ace of hearts ; led a
: himself learns some principles Huntley, choreography;
Pass
heart
to
dummy's
king
and
notPass
2+
: and becomes a more ethical Eugene W(ckstrom, musical
Pass
;IN .T.
ed the fall of the 10 from West. l,.ass
Jt
: person. ~ '
director and pianist; Robert By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
PaS$
5+
ll was now tim e rar some Pass
4¥
?
" Moods' and emotions of the Wortman bass player ; Paul
Pass
Here is a real gem of a hand real thought. John came to the p.,,. . 6\'
J show are illustrated in the Shivers, drummer ; and Ann played recently by John Solo- conc lu sion East had started · You, South, hold :
with exactly eight red cards so +A Q 7 6 \'K Q 9 8 &gt; +A ! +6 3
which It presents. These Kemmerle, assistant to
••= music
school board squabble and the th.at West had started with four What do you dp now? .
range from bol$terous hilarity director Conover.
of that COlor.
A- Pass. You have bid your full
• illustrated by "76 Trombones,"
Conover emphasized that Del Sartee ladies' gossip
Hence. We st was now hold . \'uhutl. ~,.,.:.... ·
'
: through a kind of cynicism in "The Music Man" utilizes real session cari be recognized in ing just one red card whicli
· ,tODAY'SQUESTION
: "Sadder, But Wiser Girl," to people, not caricatures, riot any small town . The humor would be either the jack of What do Y•u,o~p Wl\h: ••• '
: the lonely pathos portrayed by stereotypes, but people with a depends upon the perform- hearts or a diamond . In that +AQ6\'AQ4+K•l+ila'u
,,f ,{
: "Goodnight My Someone." In deeply-rooted sense of ethics ance's technical faithfulness to case there wa s n·o rea so n for
~ addition, "Gar.y, Indiana" is a a.nd sincere emotions. Music Is the real small-town Iowans of John not to play a heart and
...
finesse his nine.
: rousing heart-warmer and used fundamentally as a 1912
If West produced the jack he
••w "Till There Was You" provides functional element of the story. ' Curtain timeis.S:30p.m
• would have to give .John a rul!
~ a vehicle .for the. romantic
Music Man' really is a Ticket l"cservatwns may be., and discard for the same down
show for non-professionals," made at the box office In Kant- one that would result if John
* theme. •
:1 Humorous commentary on he said. "Naturalness imd ncr Hall (old Speech Building) rose with the queen .
John played the nine. When it
on College Street-or by calling
~ small town life Is provided in humanness are strong qualities
Tuesday thro •h held he cashed the queen and
~ "Plckallttle" · while the bar- that carry throughout the 594-5oio
, .
u, played a low d.amond . West
produced the nine.
~ bershop fan will have "Llda show . The authenticity of the Sunday from 2-9 p.m.

.

FRENCH FRIES

Kenneth Williams
weds Miss Stumbo

GALLIPOLIS - June 4, Susan Frazier, R.N., assistant
Davis Hall, in the Holzer director. The top hour award
Medical Center (HMC) School was given to Beverly
of Nursing was the scene of the Stapleton, Hannan Trace High
annual HMC Candystriper School, who had 170 hours of
award presentations. ·
service.
Eighty-seven girls from five
Flowers we~e presented to
high schools, Gallia Academy, · Cathy Pickens. Mrs . Mary
Hannan Trace, North Gallia, Jean Walkers, Director of
Southwestern and Kyger HMC Volunteers, assisted by
Creek, ":hO have contributed passing out programs.
6,130 hours of service to
The speaker was Dana I.
patients at the center were Miller, .R.N., in-service
presented awards ))y Cathy . director and director of junior
Pickens, R.N., director, and volunteers, Jackson General
Hospital, Ripley, W. Va., who
spoke about "Midwifery."
FIRM CHARGED
ASHTABULA, Ohio (UPI)Environment Control Corp. has
MARRIAGE LICENSE
been charged by the state of
GALLIPOLIS - David A.
Ohio with pollution. The state Nolan, 20, Gallipolis, elecattorney general's office filed
trician, and Unda L. Rutt, 18,
suit in ·Ashtabula County Patriot, student.
Common Pleas Court .Friday
a,cainst the firm, which
operates a landfill near here.
The state accused the company
of polluting a tributary of L3ke
Erie.

Miss Sharon Kay Yates

FOOTL.ONG
HOTDOG

•

~UNDAY

Dorothy J Countryman
WHEN WAB the last time you thottghi seriously about
renovating a bam? I was baling hay _this past Monday and the
thought crossed mY mind several times.
My parents have a biB old hlp.roof barn that dates back
about an hundred years. Once you get to tile hayloft you sort of
have to brace yourself oldeways to be able to stand up. The floor
slants downward toward the loft door, about 14 feet orr the
ground , Added to this slanting floor, we have the problem of a
lopsided stall floor . Since I've been contemplating. adding a
saddle horse to my possesllions, my Mom says we'll have to do
something about the stall, too, It '~ going to be a long summer.

.

SEEN AND HEARD
GALLIPOLIS - Among
!hose vlsiUng Myrtle Beach, S.
C., this year are the lollowlng
Galllpolltans: Mr. and 'Mrs. Ed
Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. Nell
Sanders, Mr. and Mra. Richard
carter, Mr.· and Mre. Odie
O'Donnell, Dr. and Mrs. Jay
Brad~haw, Dr. and Mrs. Jim
, Dalley, Mr. and Mrs . Bob
Saunders, Mr. and Mra, Ike
Wiseman, Mr. and Mrs. Dean
Evans, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Joe
Evans, Mr and Mrs. Earl Neff
and Mr. and Mrs. Harold V.
Lookado.

r!J~=

STORE HOURS
Mon . &amp; Fri.
l i )Ollllp .m.
Tues. Wed . I Sat .
9: 30tll5p.m.
Thursday
9:30 til12 noon

arl'!5
STOU

Whort tho ~mlly JhopJ 1011tltor

328 Socooo Afl,

Gallipolis, 0.

NOW IN PROGRESS!
GREAT _SAVINGS ON

e SUITS
e SHOES
OPEN
e SPORT SHIRTS MON. &amp; FRI.
•

• SPORT COATS
'

NIGHT TIL

8:00 p~

�8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Swlday, July 15,1973

r~:t:&lt;.-~~-~

~

New

I Arriwls
•,.

•

''
'

•

-

•'
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The barge Point Counterpoint anchored in Gallipolis

Wednesday to bring area residents an eveninG~~ music !rom
the American Wind Symphony.
·

Two concerts highlight. Gallia week '

1
if certs
GALLIPOLJS- Two con·
entertained Gallia.

evening concerts from the
b!lfge· Point Counterpoint.
- . ' Coilnty residents last week as
Boudreau conceived.the idea
! the American Wind Symphony of the barge alter graduating
: and the Singing Rambos ap- !rom Manhatten's Julliard
• peared on Wednesday and School in 1952 where he played
[ Thursday evenings.
trumpet. The energetic con1 The
Wind Symphony, ductor walked
streets,
) sponsored by the French Art knocklng on doors, · to get
• Colony, played to a crowd of donations to convert the barge ·
' about 350 along the park front and start the orchestra. The
• Wednesday evening.
· · Initial funds lor ths project
: The brainchild of Robert 1came !rom H. J. Heinz, II and
; Boudreau, the symphony tours Duquesne University.
: America's river systems from
The big barge with its special
· May 26 to July 16 presenting lighting and touring organ, on

New exhibits now
~ on display at Riverby
GALLIPOLIS - There are
tw~ exhibits on display in the
galleries of the French Art
Colony throughout the month of
July.
· In the entrance hall and
Gallery one is displayed the
1972-73 traveling exhibit of
prize-winning entries in the
Washington Square Outdoor
Art Exhibit. This is the world's
largest and most famous
outdoor art show, held' on the
sidewalks of' ·Greenwich
Village in and around historic
Washington Square.
' Valuable cash prizes and
scholarships have been made
available to the exhibitors in
each sennioannual show. This 1~
an exceptionally line exhibit,
and includes oils, watercolors,
etchings, lithographs and
serigraphs.
The exhibit in Gallery two is
a collection of 25 color etchings
by artist · Carol ·Yudin,
Belleville, N. J ., whose work
has been wit;lely exhibited in
this country and abroad.

Unlike other printing
techniques which demand a
dillerent plate for each color
and difficult registration, in
color etching there is only on
plate which is inked, wiped and
inked again and again, each
application of color demanding
a different method of
prepration. The plate is put
through the etching press only
once for each COII!pleted print.
Sfnce the artist is so involved in
the aclual printing of the et·
chlngs, they become very
personal, very limited editions.
All of the items in the two
exhibits at Riverby are lor
sale. Both shows were secured
through Old Bergen Art Guild,
Bayonne, N. J.
The galleries at Riverby are
open every Saturday and
Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m., on
Tuesdays from 10 a.m. to 3
p.m., and special tours may be
arranged throughout the week
by calling Mrs. C. "Mac"
McGinness ..

~lYMIDlbrn®I/,J lolowHJ .-1 ,.W
loy IH 1\HII 1\IHJOI [l

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Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to

JAUV

1\'EVET

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JliiiHCOII

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. ,. J:;:.;U:.::I-~I.~l-'"!......,.-..,.,.....,
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1et1era
Now arronre t he
to form the surprise answeri aa
:::~==;=::===;t:,~,1 IUiJ!Ited by'the above cortoon,
.

.

~

1

IPritt 1M SIIIPIIlSUIISWIIIlirll AN [ X1 I IX XX)
(An•"!'ert

MOnd~a,r)

Nash- Mark Boecker weds
Ce Ce Ann'e Russ.e11

Quar'tet Convention, at
ville · Tenn. were also on the
prog'ram . '
The Rambos . will return to
Guilla County sometime in the
!all , according to Larry
McGraw, local promoter and
director ol the Southeastern
Ohio
Gospel
Music
Association, which sponsors
the concerts.
Memberships in the music
· organization are available at
U1is time, with further information on concerts and
meetings to be released later.

Club to sponsor shows
GALLIPOLJS - The Gallia
County Riding Club, Inc.; will
sponsor a SEOHEA approved
point horse show, Sunday, July
22, at the Gallia County Junior
Fairgrounds, Gallipolis.
The show will be held rain or
shine and will feature a Paso
Fino custome exhibition prior
to the performance classes.
The 19 halter classes will
begin at 10 a.m. with an entry
fee of 50 cents. Performance
classes will begin at I p.m. with
24 classes being shown. Entry
lees lor performance classes
will .be $1.50 and 50 cents lor
youth. Youth c.lasses ·will
receive ' a trophy and five

ribbons. Prize money of $5, $4,
$3, $2 and $1 and ribbons will be
awarde(j.
Luncll will be available on
the grounds. Gate donation will
be $1 with children under 12
admitted free .
Jim Singleton will serve as
judg_e with Larry DeWitt as
ringmaster. Skip Meadows will
be the announcer.
SEOHEA secretary is Chris
Mcilyar, phone 374-5253.
The club will not be
resp&lt;insible lor accidents aJid
reseryes the right to have a
qualified veterinarian check
any horse suspected of being
drugged.

Piano recital-given
VINTON- Piano students of
Mrs.
Kathleen
Greene
presented a reci'tal at the
Fellowship Chapel in Vinton,
Sunday, July 8, at 2:30 p.m.
The program was opened by
the
audience
singing
"America," accompanied by
Anthony Mulholand. Phyllis
Mulholand led the singing.
Selections presented were
"Chimes," 11 Rain on the Roof"
and ''Good King Wencelas" by
Judy Hively; "Country Gar·
den "

form four ordinary words.

I

loan from the Rodgers Organ
Company, Is towed along the
river by tow captains who
know the barge and its purpose, saving the company
about $12,000 a year.
Wednesday's program was
highlighted by special ellects
in lighting and an organ solo by
Richard Morris.
The Singing Rambos
presented an evening' of gospel
musictoacrowdofabout400at
the Lyne Center, Rio Grande,
Thursday. The Monarchs ol
Wooster, Ohio, second place
singers in last year's National

and

' 11n

Church,"

Mrs. Mark Boecker

Mulholand at the piano.
Refreshments of mints, nuts,
cookies and punch were served
by Mrs. Greene 's nieces,
Janice Harres and Jane Ann
Denney. Mrs. Opal Callihan
registered the guests.
Mrs. Greene extends thanks
to all who helped in any way
and to Pastor Geiser lor the use
or the church.

•

$100GIVEN SQUAD
GALLIPOLJS - The Dickey
Chapel Church recently
donated $100 to the Gallia
County Volunteer Emergency
Squad. The squadmen express
their appreciation to the
church.

Steven Stojanvoski; "Oif We
Go" by Delores Wooldridge;
"Starlight Waltz" by Natalie
Stojonovski; The Nightingale
and the Cuckoo" and "A Trial
Flight" by Jimmy Bush;
"Brian's Song"· by Janey
Harris; "Love Story " and
"Toreador Song" by Cindy
Pauley; "By the Seaside" and
"Jesus Christ is Lord" by
Tammi Stewart; "Calm as the
Night" by Penny Mulholand;
nLast Date" and " June
Flowers"
by
Trhonda
Callihan; "On Wings or Song"
DAN THOMAS
by Anthony Mulhohlnd.
AND SON
The closing song was "GOd
"Serving you since1936"
Be With You" with Penny . ._,.;G;,oal~liplioiiili;s.~O;;,h;;,;io;....
· ..1

f,j,

CHESHIRE - Miss CeCe
Anne
Russell
became
the
bride
of
Mark
Steven Boecker, September 30 jn the wedding
chapel of the Christian Church
in Rolla, Mo.
.
Rev. A. B. Pratt officiated
{or the son ol Mr. and· Mrs.
Fred Boecker Bay Viliage
and the daughter of Mr. and

CIC Club
has picnic·

Mrs. . Richard
Russell,
Cheshire.
Mrs. Boec&lt;er is the grand·
daughter of Mrs Violet Russell,
Cheshire, and 'Mrs . Sherley
WoOds, Marysville.
She is a graduate of Bay Jligh
School, Bay Village and attended
Murray
St~te
University, Murray, Ky.
Boecker is a graduate of Bay
High School and is a senior in
computer science at the
University of Missouri, Rolla.

GAt.t.JPOLIS '- The
Gallipolis SQI199l ol f!;acUcal
Nursing l"lll gradUfl~ ~ta llral
clu&amp;l ol 19 sludenta on A1111uat
19. The studenta have met all
qualiflcaliOIUI to lake' their
State Boar~ EltJmllllllll~ In
November !Qr reglslr4Slon 81
Licensed Practical Nurses.
A new class will stprt on
October 1. lnlereatecl Ersons
are to contact tile Ohio ureliu ·
ol Employment Bervl es for ·
admission requlreroen~.

BYCHARUI:NEHOEfl'UCH
POMEROY - lrll Kelton
h111 fuUIIIed her dream ol
gradii.Ung from an art IChQOl.
, She . recenUy completecl the
· Fa~oua Artists School'~
cour~ In drawing and painting
and proudly displays her
Cert!flca'le of Reco~lt!on .
Fof her final work with the
Westport, Conn. corre~tponden co school, Mrs . Kelton
painied a ~till lite lor which she
received tile comment •
·"suptrlor ' work... In a lctte;
accompanying her certificate.
It took Iris three years to
complete tile course ..: a bit
longer than expected, due to
eye problems and subsequent
surgelry - and durlngthat Ume
she studied technique and
submitted 24 paintings for
criticism.
A walk ·through the Iris and
Aaroll Kelton home on
Welchtown 'Hill leaves little
doubt ··that therein resides
someone with a love lor
painting. The walls are
adorned with flowers, scenery,
still lj,fe and portraits In oils,
acrylics, watercolors, and
charcoals.
Iris' love lor painting and
drawing dales back to her
early childhood days when
there was neither the time,
. money, or encouragement 1o
develop her ~~!lent.
' and
Later as a busy wife
mother, her pleasure came

I

BOOSTERS TO ME~T
PATRIOT• - The I South·
western Booster orea.ljlzatlon
will meet at 8 p.m. Mof\day ln
the high school. Ttl!!nkp were ,
~ng extended by the ~ters ,
~eryone who helped, make ,
the chicken ba~becue fi success.
'''

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•'

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Large Group of DRESS SANDALS1

.

Storewide Oearance
Sale Now In

\;

~~ ! ( ;. ~ 0 ~' O RI~ I ~~H S

To Satisfy-

Money Back

ROOT BEER BARRELS

•'
•'

BUTTERSCOTCH
BUTTONS
'

pkg.

49~

isone t

•••

•

••

i}

MAJORIDE CONTEST ENTRY
.. DEADLINE

Name

Head Majorette or Advisor._ _ _ _ _ __

Addrttl _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Phone Number_ _ _ _ _ _ __
, Number In Corp. _ _ _ __
Uf,.....,;,_

(

_..._...,._ _ _ _

-~

-

.. - - - - '

f

TUES., WED., THURS.............. 9:30 'til 5:00
FRIDAY.~ ................... 9:30 'til 7:30 PM
SATURDAY.. ..................... 9:30 'til 4 PM.
WNCH 1 'til 2

get a beautiful

B"x10"

Living Color
Portrait

onlv88C

I!,Babies- children- adults- g1aups - . 1 ~peciol
of each person singly only 88¢, plus 50¢ film fee.
Groups $1 .00 per person, plus one 50¢ film fee.

II Select from finished pictuJts in radiant block and
.
white and living color.

•llonu,s quality "Guoro~teed Satisfaction."
~limit -

one Spetiol per child.

Fast delivery -

courteous .&lt;ervice.

GALLIPOLIS
SAVINGS
AND LOAN co.

tor ABetter Job,
Sooner-Go To

SAFE

Business College

SAVINGS

.
Tee off on a better looking home!

2 Year, Savings .
Certificates

5,000
..

1

mm1mum

I' ,

SAVE$$$ NOWI
COMPARE OUR PRICES
and SERVICE!

Not when you can get all the cash you need with an
OVB home improvement loan. We may hesitate to finance your
golf lessons, but we do have a finance plan to fit any
handicap affecting your home improvement.

,

*Plus ·SO; ·
Film Fee

Savings Certificates
$1,000 minimum
1 Year

INSTRUMENTS

'•

of School Represented _ _ _ _ __

AddresS--'----~---"----

.HOURS

e BAND

'

Entries in the Majorette Contest to be held
at the Gallia County Jr. Fair July 31st. should
be in the hatlds of the Chairman by July 27th.
The contest will be he!d with trophies
. awarded to First. Second' anq Third place
winners; individual trophies to First Place
winner. Judging consists of Abil it)' to Perform
Routine, Poise Maintained throughout
Routine. Originality of Routine, Originality In
Costume. Showmanship throughout Roktlne.
Precision of Performance; Superior Rating
offers 45 Points In all six phases.
Entries are to be sent to Wanda Eshenaur,
' WJEH Radio. Box ' 448, Gallipolis. Oh .; the
following to be completed.
·

July 17th thru 2lsf

Gallipolis
Business College

e PIANOS
e ORGANS

•

but a home handicap?

i" 'ht IMalre - A HIT

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

Now
. On • • •

STARLIGHT KISSES
OZ.

damage, putUng a dent on lhl
hood of the Betz car,

5 BIG DAYS

OF

Guaranteed

16

Hoover !ailed to ·see a car
behind him, driven by Virginia

THE
SIGN

!,

LEMON DROPS

K. Belz, 84, Rt. t; Galllpoiil.

DEPT.
STORE

- -- - Everything Is

o~

Clark-Ridge offering new
2112 bath split level home

Progress

I

r

to let another vehicle turn into

u gas station . In backing; The Hoover auto did minot

Mini buses in business Monday

.Graham will hold close to middle

f?or~P/1(

I,,,,

GALJ..IPOLIS - Four ac·
cldenll.l were reported ~'ri day
by Gallipolis pollee . .
, At 10:05 a.m., pollee Investigated an accident on
Burkhart Lane of! Porll.lrnouth
Rd, where Gerald H. Smith, 38,
Rl, 2, Bidwell, was stopped to
turn around In a driveway and
did not see a car driven by
Susan K. Frazier, 22, 998
F'ourth Av~ .. Gallipolis.
Frazier started to back up to
get out of the way ol Smith; but
could not make it in time.
Smith's car did only minor
damage, denting the lelt front
lender and breaking a signal
light on the Frazier car.

from joining tl)e children ln
their uri projects.
II WBIJil 't until years later,
however, that she became
acquainted with a retired ari
teacher In Ripley, W, Va. and
began taking lessons. A move
frorn Rip!ey wa location where ·
per110nal Instruction wea nol
available prompted Iris tO
enroll with Famous Artists,
She Is now Interested in
gaining personal instruction to
further develop her skills.
While she has no d.ea!re to go
prolessloMI In her painting,
!rill dellghtsln painting for her
relatives and friends whoae
appreciation ol her creations Ia
"bolter than money."
The diploma from the
Famous Artists School, yet
unframed,.will hand among the
palntlnga and for Irls wll) be a
symbol of her dream lulfllled.

At 1:35 p.m., the police
department reported a two-car
· accident on First Ave., near
Sycamore St. Iris M. Clifton,
MRS. IRIS KELTON, graduate of the Famoua Artists School, displays here her diplorru
28, Rt. I, Gallipolis, had
and her final painting in the course whtch earned the ·comment "superior work" from her Instopped
In a line ol traffic and
structor.
was looking down into her
pocketbook when she though!
traffic had started again. She
took her roo( orr the brake and
hit the car in front or her,
driven by Joan V. Folden, 41,
POMEROY ·- Two mini buses lor the there the buses go to various locations in residences may have f.\lis service by Patriot Star Rd ., Gallipolis.
convenience of Meigs County's senior Pomeroy and Middleport. In the af. calling on the day before they wish the bus
Damage was minor with
citizens will go into operation Monday. '-ternoon, th buses return the residents to to stop, They may contactthe center, 99271186 or 992-7884; Rosalie Sayre, 742-4848; Folden's car receiving a dent
The buses will not only provide trans• their locality.
portation for senior cll!zens who are in·
Central pickup points in the vari~us Martha Mays, 698-2285, or Marie Swan and In its rear bwnper and trunk
lid . The Clifton car suffered
~olved In a volunteer program of worklng communities will include: Dexter, post Monad Wilson, 'g1J5.J986.
There is no set charge lor any trans· minor damage to the grill and
tn vartous locations but lor all senior office; Langsville, post office; Salem
cjtizens who need to go to a doctor, grocery Center, the store; Langsville, Bolin's portation but donations towards the ex· Iron t bwnper .
or elsewhere.
. store; Long Bottom, post olf!ce; Portland, pense of the buses will be accepted. The
Both buses will operate Monday post office; Bashan, store; Harrisonville, schedules may be changed later since the
On Second Ave: near Court ·
through Thursday with only one of the store; Chester, post ollice; Rutland, post first schedules have been drawn ·up on a St., Friday afternoon, a pick-up
vehicles operating each Friday. The buses office; Alfred, store; Redsville, store; trial basis. Senior citizens are urged to truck driven by Lecta Belle
.
'
CUNNINGHAM LEAVES . go to the senior citizens center in the .Tuppers Plains, Racine and Syracuse, all check schedules posted in post offices and Gervig, 40, Patriot Star Rd.,
at olhr central points in towns throughout Gallipolis, backed into the
COLYMBUS (UP!)- RDr. Pomeroy Junior High School and !rom at the commiUlity post offices.
· Those wishing to be picked up at their the county.
parked carol Robert L. Long,
Lowell D. Cunningham,
40,
556 Fourth Ave., Gallipolis.
conun!ssloner of the Division
you
deify
sex,
just
as
when
you
Minor damage was incurred by
of Forensic Psychiatry In the
deify
food,
drinks,
sports
or
the Long car, with a dented
state Depa\'llnept of Mental
knowledge,
you
remove
it
from
to
revile
the
drug
user
because
bumper and broken fog light,
Health and Mental RetarST. PAUL, Minn. (UPI) - Jesus."
its
true
perspective
to
a
role
it
Rex Hoover, 20, 271 Mill
dation, has realgned, effective Billy Graham told an audience The fames North Carolina "It's the guy making the money
wos
never
really
meant
to
Creek Rd., Gallipolis. let his
Aug. 18.' Cunningham, 51, said ol 21,000 assembled Friday evangelist opened the Upper we ought to go after."
play.~~
As
for
sex,
·
he
said,
"when
car drift backwards on Pine St.
he intends to set uP a private night for . the ~pening ot' his Midwest Crusade at the state
psychiatric practice In Eustis, third Minnesota Crusade that fairgrounds in St. Paul, where
Fla.
hs is "a mess.enger boy for more than 250,000 persons are
expected to hear him speak
during the next 10 days. In a
reference to politics he said:
"1'11 remember to stand not
to the right or to the left, but in
the center" he said. "That's as
far as I'm going into politics."
In his sermon, the 54-yearstyles and colors. The
GALLlPOLJS - A new four· family room.
old Graham compared each
person's judgment day to the bedroom, 212 bath Dutch The Longwood, built on a bathrooms are available in a
Watergate hearings . .He told colonial split-level mOdel will homeowner's ·lot, is priced at choice of live colors including
his audience , there · is a .be introduced next weekend, $24,005, with the exterior decorator style vanettes.
In all, Rjdge Homes offers
judgment day that no one can July 21-22, by Delbert F. Clark, completely erected and ready
more
than 1,000 choices of
escape. Then he listed drugs, president, Clark-Ridge Homes, lor interior finishing. Many
sex and mysticism as three Jackson Pike and Bulaville . Ridge home buyers do some of styles colors and materials for
windows ,
Rd., Gallipolis, local Ridge the interior finishing · them· roofs, siding,
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA . escape routes many persons Homes
paneling,
carpeting,
tile,
dealer.
selves, saving as much as
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • seek. He told his audience not
,lighting and plumbing fixtures.
The new model is among 35 $4,000.
.
custom-built ranch, split-level,
Included in the basic price of
bi-le vel, two story, Cape COd the home is wall-to-wall carand vacation homes being peting in a chOice ol six colors.
offered locally by ·Ridge
Also included in the price is a
Homes, the largest home color • coordinated kitchen
manufacturer east of the with a General Electric
Mississippi. Ridge, a division refrigerator · freezer, electric
of Evans PrOduce Co., Port· or gas range and range hood,
land, Ore., has manufactured Riviera cabinets and Formica
close to 25,000 homes the past counter-lops in a wide range ol
16 years.
Despite the lack of mortgage , - - -- - -----,
money in some areas, Ridge
has adequate mortgage funds
to cover afl of its home buyers
incl~ding families with incomes ,as low as $7,500.
The Dutch colonial , the
Longwood, has a distinctive
GBC Grads Gel
gambrel roof and a true center
The Better Jobs!
hall plan that minimizes trallic
Write, Visit or Call 446·4367
I
I
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I
through the living areas.
tor free ca1a log of courses
The split-level design in· and next starting date . VA
eludes a large living room, ·18 Approved .
It, by 13 ft. 6 in ., of! the entrance Ioyer. The lower level
has a family room, powder
room ; laundry room and
garage .
The home also has a recessed 36 Locust St.
Gallipolis
Sl
.
Rog.
No
,
"
-02·00328
front entrance as well as direct
entrances to the kitchen and L:-~------~_j

Mr and loll's.Qayland Buah, •
Oak Dr., Gallipolis, announ.ced !'
the birth or a daughteo, Vicki
Lynn, welghing-5TEis., 13 oz., at '
the Holzer Medical Center, ,
Friday afternoon.
•'

(,

Four m.ishaps inve~tigated

Dream fulfilled

· graduates IIOOP

$4

.

Antwer: Thil eaoenl ctrme «I " bluMI

Fir 1 LPN clauI

VARIOUS HEEL HEIGHTS · '
Veteran.• Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Leonard
97
''
Lunsford, Pomeroy; Wendy
VALUES TO 19.99 NOW
•
Gibbs, Hartford, Herman
••
Jones, Leon·; Lawrence Hysell,
KANAUGA - .The annual Rutland; Joseph · MeKnight,
••
CIC family ,picnic was held New, Haven; Koleen Kirkham,
••
·Va.;
Donald '
Th,ursday at the roadside park Vienna,
I£1T.(R FOOTWEAR FOR -THE FAMILY
McKenize, (&gt;O)lleroy.
in Kanauga.
DISCHARGES - William
In The Silver Bridge Shopping Plaza
Present
were
Ruth
Graham,
Robert
Baker,
Diana
Open
Mon. thru Sat. 10til9. Sun. 1111' · ; •
Daugherty, Virginia Grover
Brogan,
Dana
McCain,
Lena Mae Raike, John Raike,
'---~-----.....,;o.l '
Thelma Lester, Pina Ward, Dr. Stephen LaValley.
'
Edna Gettles, Evelyn Rothgeb,
'
'
Gus and Ethel Steele, Jeanie
Vance, Karen Dray, Evelyn
and Carl Morrow, Helen and
Vernon Grumbling.
The wedding ·anniversary
and birthdays or Mr. and Mrs.
C9rl Morrow were observed.
The. August meeting will be
at the home of Mrs. Nettie
I
Adams.
'
'

Jun&gt;bloo: PANIC GAUDY IISICT MAYHIM
Yctlcrd•y'•

Mr. and Mrs. William Evan
Casey, Rl. 3, Gal!!polls, are
proud to announc-e the birth or
their first child, a. son, on June
25, The new arrival has been
tlllmed Evan Ashworth Casey.
The baby weighed 7pounds, 2¥.
ounces . Maternal grand·
parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Adam Payne, Jr., Thij11Ilan.
Paternal grandparents are Mr
and Mrs. William A, Casey,
\)allipolis.
EUREKA - Mr. and Mrs.
COdy R. llQOthe, Eureka Star
Route, Gallipolis, Me- an. not)llcing the birth or their first
chii&lt;J, a . son July 13, at the
Holzer Medical Center. The
infant, weighing seven pounds
and ·nine ounces and 20 inches
long, has been named COdy
Todd. Maternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Murray E.
Church, Crown City. Mr. and
Mrs. Olin D. Boothe, Pomeroy,
are paternal grandparents.
Great-grandfalher is Edward
Boothe, Racine.

7 - The Sunda~ Times· Sentlnei,Sun~•y,July ID, U173

I

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BRUNICARDI
HOUSE OF MUSIC
"SOUTHERN OHIO'S OLDEST MUSIC CE"TER"

SAVINGS TIME

Passbook Savings Accounts

At K &amp;K Mobile Homes
Save Up To 11000.00 On Mobile Homes

Save Any Amount 1\ny Time

On Sales Lot
Sizes 12. x 52's .UP To 14. x 70's
Delivery &amp; ~mplete Set-Up At .
No Extra Cost.

See
Our
All

Electric
Mobile
Homes.

~~ODIL.C
PAUL. 6 MAD CH. NOMl' HUP

I.IW"' I " '

HOMf S. ALE S
ruiiKII
1 ~&lt;1· 10 lUI

QIIIIIIIIIV
Power Joins In

You This

lnterc·~t paid IJltarh·rly on aU c·ertifil'alt•s

Deposit hy tht· lOth of tlw month and enm from the 61'81.
lnlt•rt·.~ t nvnilahll' monthly on ac(•ount~ of SUIOQ or more

THE GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS
and LOAN COMPANY

See
Our
All
Electric
Mobile
Homes.

OPPOSITE POST OFFICE
.· ~ ··

PHONE 446·3832

GALLIPOUS, OHIO

�8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Swlday, July 15,1973

r~:t:&lt;.-~~-~

~

New

I Arriwls
•,.

•

''
'

•

-

•'
'

The barge Point Counterpoint anchored in Gallipolis

Wednesday to bring area residents an eveninG~~ music !rom
the American Wind Symphony.
·

Two concerts highlight. Gallia week '

1
if certs
GALLIPOLJS- Two con·
entertained Gallia.

evening concerts from the
b!lfge· Point Counterpoint.
- . ' Coilnty residents last week as
Boudreau conceived.the idea
! the American Wind Symphony of the barge alter graduating
: and the Singing Rambos ap- !rom Manhatten's Julliard
• peared on Wednesday and School in 1952 where he played
[ Thursday evenings.
trumpet. The energetic con1 The
Wind Symphony, ductor walked
streets,
) sponsored by the French Art knocklng on doors, · to get
• Colony, played to a crowd of donations to convert the barge ·
' about 350 along the park front and start the orchestra. The
• Wednesday evening.
· · Initial funds lor ths project
: The brainchild of Robert 1came !rom H. J. Heinz, II and
; Boudreau, the symphony tours Duquesne University.
: America's river systems from
The big barge with its special
· May 26 to July 16 presenting lighting and touring organ, on

New exhibits now
~ on display at Riverby
GALLIPOLIS - There are
tw~ exhibits on display in the
galleries of the French Art
Colony throughout the month of
July.
· In the entrance hall and
Gallery one is displayed the
1972-73 traveling exhibit of
prize-winning entries in the
Washington Square Outdoor
Art Exhibit. This is the world's
largest and most famous
outdoor art show, held' on the
sidewalks of' ·Greenwich
Village in and around historic
Washington Square.
' Valuable cash prizes and
scholarships have been made
available to the exhibitors in
each sennioannual show. This 1~
an exceptionally line exhibit,
and includes oils, watercolors,
etchings, lithographs and
serigraphs.
The exhibit in Gallery two is
a collection of 25 color etchings
by artist · Carol ·Yudin,
Belleville, N. J ., whose work
has been wit;lely exhibited in
this country and abroad.

Unlike other printing
techniques which demand a
dillerent plate for each color
and difficult registration, in
color etching there is only on
plate which is inked, wiped and
inked again and again, each
application of color demanding
a different method of
prepration. The plate is put
through the etching press only
once for each COII!pleted print.
Sfnce the artist is so involved in
the aclual printing of the et·
chlngs, they become very
personal, very limited editions.
All of the items in the two
exhibits at Riverby are lor
sale. Both shows were secured
through Old Bergen Art Guild,
Bayonne, N. J.
The galleries at Riverby are
open every Saturday and
Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m., on
Tuesdays from 10 a.m. to 3
p.m., and special tours may be
arranged throughout the week
by calling Mrs. C. "Mac"
McGinness ..

~lYMIDlbrn®I/,J lolowHJ .-1 ,.W
loy IH 1\HII 1\IHJOI [l

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Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to

JAUV

1\'EVET

II

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JliiiHCOII

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. ,. J:;:.;U:.::I-~I.~l-'"!......,.-..,.,.....,
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1et1era
Now arronre t he
to form the surprise answeri aa
:::~==;=::===;t:,~,1 IUiJ!Ited by'the above cortoon,
.

.

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IPritt 1M SIIIPIIlSUIISWIIIlirll AN [ X1 I IX XX)
(An•"!'ert

MOnd~a,r)

Nash- Mark Boecker weds
Ce Ce Ann'e Russ.e11

Quar'tet Convention, at
ville · Tenn. were also on the
prog'ram . '
The Rambos . will return to
Guilla County sometime in the
!all , according to Larry
McGraw, local promoter and
director ol the Southeastern
Ohio
Gospel
Music
Association, which sponsors
the concerts.
Memberships in the music
· organization are available at
U1is time, with further information on concerts and
meetings to be released later.

Club to sponsor shows
GALLIPOLJS - The Gallia
County Riding Club, Inc.; will
sponsor a SEOHEA approved
point horse show, Sunday, July
22, at the Gallia County Junior
Fairgrounds, Gallipolis.
The show will be held rain or
shine and will feature a Paso
Fino custome exhibition prior
to the performance classes.
The 19 halter classes will
begin at 10 a.m. with an entry
fee of 50 cents. Performance
classes will begin at I p.m. with
24 classes being shown. Entry
lees lor performance classes
will .be $1.50 and 50 cents lor
youth. Youth c.lasses ·will
receive ' a trophy and five

ribbons. Prize money of $5, $4,
$3, $2 and $1 and ribbons will be
awarde(j.
Luncll will be available on
the grounds. Gate donation will
be $1 with children under 12
admitted free .
Jim Singleton will serve as
judg_e with Larry DeWitt as
ringmaster. Skip Meadows will
be the announcer.
SEOHEA secretary is Chris
Mcilyar, phone 374-5253.
The club will not be
resp&lt;insible lor accidents aJid
reseryes the right to have a
qualified veterinarian check
any horse suspected of being
drugged.

Piano recital-given
VINTON- Piano students of
Mrs.
Kathleen
Greene
presented a reci'tal at the
Fellowship Chapel in Vinton,
Sunday, July 8, at 2:30 p.m.
The program was opened by
the
audience
singing
"America," accompanied by
Anthony Mulholand. Phyllis
Mulholand led the singing.
Selections presented were
"Chimes," 11 Rain on the Roof"
and ''Good King Wencelas" by
Judy Hively; "Country Gar·
den "

form four ordinary words.

I

loan from the Rodgers Organ
Company, Is towed along the
river by tow captains who
know the barge and its purpose, saving the company
about $12,000 a year.
Wednesday's program was
highlighted by special ellects
in lighting and an organ solo by
Richard Morris.
The Singing Rambos
presented an evening' of gospel
musictoacrowdofabout400at
the Lyne Center, Rio Grande,
Thursday. The Monarchs ol
Wooster, Ohio, second place
singers in last year's National

and

' 11n

Church,"

Mrs. Mark Boecker

Mulholand at the piano.
Refreshments of mints, nuts,
cookies and punch were served
by Mrs. Greene 's nieces,
Janice Harres and Jane Ann
Denney. Mrs. Opal Callihan
registered the guests.
Mrs. Greene extends thanks
to all who helped in any way
and to Pastor Geiser lor the use
or the church.

•

$100GIVEN SQUAD
GALLIPOLJS - The Dickey
Chapel Church recently
donated $100 to the Gallia
County Volunteer Emergency
Squad. The squadmen express
their appreciation to the
church.

Steven Stojanvoski; "Oif We
Go" by Delores Wooldridge;
"Starlight Waltz" by Natalie
Stojonovski; The Nightingale
and the Cuckoo" and "A Trial
Flight" by Jimmy Bush;
"Brian's Song"· by Janey
Harris; "Love Story " and
"Toreador Song" by Cindy
Pauley; "By the Seaside" and
"Jesus Christ is Lord" by
Tammi Stewart; "Calm as the
Night" by Penny Mulholand;
nLast Date" and " June
Flowers"
by
Trhonda
Callihan; "On Wings or Song"
DAN THOMAS
by Anthony Mulhohlnd.
AND SON
The closing song was "GOd
"Serving you since1936"
Be With You" with Penny . ._,.;G;,oal~liplioiiili;s.~O;;,h;;,;io;....
· ..1

f,j,

CHESHIRE - Miss CeCe
Anne
Russell
became
the
bride
of
Mark
Steven Boecker, September 30 jn the wedding
chapel of the Christian Church
in Rolla, Mo.
.
Rev. A. B. Pratt officiated
{or the son ol Mr. and· Mrs.
Fred Boecker Bay Viliage
and the daughter of Mr. and

CIC Club
has picnic·

Mrs. . Richard
Russell,
Cheshire.
Mrs. Boec&lt;er is the grand·
daughter of Mrs Violet Russell,
Cheshire, and 'Mrs . Sherley
WoOds, Marysville.
She is a graduate of Bay Jligh
School, Bay Village and attended
Murray
St~te
University, Murray, Ky.
Boecker is a graduate of Bay
High School and is a senior in
computer science at the
University of Missouri, Rolla.

GAt.t.JPOLIS '- The
Gallipolis SQI199l ol f!;acUcal
Nursing l"lll gradUfl~ ~ta llral
clu&amp;l ol 19 sludenta on A1111uat
19. The studenta have met all
qualiflcaliOIUI to lake' their
State Boar~ EltJmllllllll~ In
November !Qr reglslr4Slon 81
Licensed Practical Nurses.
A new class will stprt on
October 1. lnlereatecl Ersons
are to contact tile Ohio ureliu ·
ol Employment Bervl es for ·
admission requlreroen~.

BYCHARUI:NEHOEfl'UCH
POMEROY - lrll Kelton
h111 fuUIIIed her dream ol
gradii.Ung from an art IChQOl.
, She . recenUy completecl the
· Fa~oua Artists School'~
cour~ In drawing and painting
and proudly displays her
Cert!flca'le of Reco~lt!on .
Fof her final work with the
Westport, Conn. corre~tponden co school, Mrs . Kelton
painied a ~till lite lor which she
received tile comment •
·"suptrlor ' work... In a lctte;
accompanying her certificate.
It took Iris three years to
complete tile course ..: a bit
longer than expected, due to
eye problems and subsequent
surgelry - and durlngthat Ume
she studied technique and
submitted 24 paintings for
criticism.
A walk ·through the Iris and
Aaroll Kelton home on
Welchtown 'Hill leaves little
doubt ··that therein resides
someone with a love lor
painting. The walls are
adorned with flowers, scenery,
still lj,fe and portraits In oils,
acrylics, watercolors, and
charcoals.
Iris' love lor painting and
drawing dales back to her
early childhood days when
there was neither the time,
. money, or encouragement 1o
develop her ~~!lent.
' and
Later as a busy wife
mother, her pleasure came

I

BOOSTERS TO ME~T
PATRIOT• - The I South·
western Booster orea.ljlzatlon
will meet at 8 p.m. Mof\day ln
the high school. Ttl!!nkp were ,
~ng extended by the ~ters ,
~eryone who helped, make ,
the chicken ba~becue fi success.
'''

I

I

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•
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•'

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Large Group of DRESS SANDALS1

.

Storewide Oearance
Sale Now In

\;

~~ ! ( ;. ~ 0 ~' O RI~ I ~~H S

To Satisfy-

Money Back

ROOT BEER BARRELS

•'
•'

BUTTERSCOTCH
BUTTONS
'

pkg.

49~

isone t

•••

•

••

i}

MAJORIDE CONTEST ENTRY
.. DEADLINE

Name

Head Majorette or Advisor._ _ _ _ _ __

Addrttl _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Phone Number_ _ _ _ _ _ __
, Number In Corp. _ _ _ __
Uf,.....,;,_

(

_..._...,._ _ _ _

-~

-

.. - - - - '

f

TUES., WED., THURS.............. 9:30 'til 5:00
FRIDAY.~ ................... 9:30 'til 7:30 PM
SATURDAY.. ..................... 9:30 'til 4 PM.
WNCH 1 'til 2

get a beautiful

B"x10"

Living Color
Portrait

onlv88C

I!,Babies- children- adults- g1aups - . 1 ~peciol
of each person singly only 88¢, plus 50¢ film fee.
Groups $1 .00 per person, plus one 50¢ film fee.

II Select from finished pictuJts in radiant block and
.
white and living color.

•llonu,s quality "Guoro~teed Satisfaction."
~limit -

one Spetiol per child.

Fast delivery -

courteous .&lt;ervice.

GALLIPOLIS
SAVINGS
AND LOAN co.

tor ABetter Job,
Sooner-Go To

SAFE

Business College

SAVINGS

.
Tee off on a better looking home!

2 Year, Savings .
Certificates

5,000
..

1

mm1mum

I' ,

SAVE$$$ NOWI
COMPARE OUR PRICES
and SERVICE!

Not when you can get all the cash you need with an
OVB home improvement loan. We may hesitate to finance your
golf lessons, but we do have a finance plan to fit any
handicap affecting your home improvement.

,

*Plus ·SO; ·
Film Fee

Savings Certificates
$1,000 minimum
1 Year

INSTRUMENTS

'•

of School Represented _ _ _ _ __

AddresS--'----~---"----

.HOURS

e BAND

'

Entries in the Majorette Contest to be held
at the Gallia County Jr. Fair July 31st. should
be in the hatlds of the Chairman by July 27th.
The contest will be he!d with trophies
. awarded to First. Second' anq Third place
winners; individual trophies to First Place
winner. Judging consists of Abil it)' to Perform
Routine, Poise Maintained throughout
Routine. Originality of Routine, Originality In
Costume. Showmanship throughout Roktlne.
Precision of Performance; Superior Rating
offers 45 Points In all six phases.
Entries are to be sent to Wanda Eshenaur,
' WJEH Radio. Box ' 448, Gallipolis. Oh .; the
following to be completed.
·

July 17th thru 2lsf

Gallipolis
Business College

e PIANOS
e ORGANS

•

but a home handicap?

i" 'ht IMalre - A HIT

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

Now
. On • • •

STARLIGHT KISSES
OZ.

damage, putUng a dent on lhl
hood of the Betz car,

5 BIG DAYS

OF

Guaranteed

16

Hoover !ailed to ·see a car
behind him, driven by Virginia

THE
SIGN

!,

LEMON DROPS

K. Belz, 84, Rt. t; Galllpoiil.

DEPT.
STORE

- -- - Everything Is

o~

Clark-Ridge offering new
2112 bath split level home

Progress

I

r

to let another vehicle turn into

u gas station . In backing; The Hoover auto did minot

Mini buses in business Monday

.Graham will hold close to middle

f?or~P/1(

I,,,,

GALJ..IPOLIS - Four ac·
cldenll.l were reported ~'ri day
by Gallipolis pollee . .
, At 10:05 a.m., pollee Investigated an accident on
Burkhart Lane of! Porll.lrnouth
Rd, where Gerald H. Smith, 38,
Rl, 2, Bidwell, was stopped to
turn around In a driveway and
did not see a car driven by
Susan K. Frazier, 22, 998
F'ourth Av~ .. Gallipolis.
Frazier started to back up to
get out of the way ol Smith; but
could not make it in time.
Smith's car did only minor
damage, denting the lelt front
lender and breaking a signal
light on the Frazier car.

from joining tl)e children ln
their uri projects.
II WBIJil 't until years later,
however, that she became
acquainted with a retired ari
teacher In Ripley, W, Va. and
began taking lessons. A move
frorn Rip!ey wa location where ·
per110nal Instruction wea nol
available prompted Iris tO
enroll with Famous Artists,
She Is now Interested in
gaining personal instruction to
further develop her skills.
While she has no d.ea!re to go
prolessloMI In her painting,
!rill dellghtsln painting for her
relatives and friends whoae
appreciation ol her creations Ia
"bolter than money."
The diploma from the
Famous Artists School, yet
unframed,.will hand among the
palntlnga and for Irls wll) be a
symbol of her dream lulfllled.

At 1:35 p.m., the police
department reported a two-car
· accident on First Ave., near
Sycamore St. Iris M. Clifton,
MRS. IRIS KELTON, graduate of the Famoua Artists School, displays here her diplorru
28, Rt. I, Gallipolis, had
and her final painting in the course whtch earned the ·comment "superior work" from her Instopped
In a line ol traffic and
structor.
was looking down into her
pocketbook when she though!
traffic had started again. She
took her roo( orr the brake and
hit the car in front or her,
driven by Joan V. Folden, 41,
POMEROY ·- Two mini buses lor the there the buses go to various locations in residences may have f.\lis service by Patriot Star Rd ., Gallipolis.
convenience of Meigs County's senior Pomeroy and Middleport. In the af. calling on the day before they wish the bus
Damage was minor with
citizens will go into operation Monday. '-ternoon, th buses return the residents to to stop, They may contactthe center, 99271186 or 992-7884; Rosalie Sayre, 742-4848; Folden's car receiving a dent
The buses will not only provide trans• their locality.
portation for senior cll!zens who are in·
Central pickup points in the vari~us Martha Mays, 698-2285, or Marie Swan and In its rear bwnper and trunk
lid . The Clifton car suffered
~olved In a volunteer program of worklng communities will include: Dexter, post Monad Wilson, 'g1J5.J986.
There is no set charge lor any trans· minor damage to the grill and
tn vartous locations but lor all senior office; Langsville, post office; Salem
cjtizens who need to go to a doctor, grocery Center, the store; Langsville, Bolin's portation but donations towards the ex· Iron t bwnper .
or elsewhere.
. store; Long Bottom, post olf!ce; Portland, pense of the buses will be accepted. The
Both buses will operate Monday post office; Bashan, store; Harrisonville, schedules may be changed later since the
On Second Ave: near Court ·
through Thursday with only one of the store; Chester, post ollice; Rutland, post first schedules have been drawn ·up on a St., Friday afternoon, a pick-up
vehicles operating each Friday. The buses office; Alfred, store; Redsville, store; trial basis. Senior citizens are urged to truck driven by Lecta Belle
.
'
CUNNINGHAM LEAVES . go to the senior citizens center in the .Tuppers Plains, Racine and Syracuse, all check schedules posted in post offices and Gervig, 40, Patriot Star Rd.,
at olhr central points in towns throughout Gallipolis, backed into the
COLYMBUS (UP!)- RDr. Pomeroy Junior High School and !rom at the commiUlity post offices.
· Those wishing to be picked up at their the county.
parked carol Robert L. Long,
Lowell D. Cunningham,
40,
556 Fourth Ave., Gallipolis.
conun!ssloner of the Division
you
deify
sex,
just
as
when
you
Minor damage was incurred by
of Forensic Psychiatry In the
deify
food,
drinks,
sports
or
the Long car, with a dented
state Depa\'llnept of Mental
knowledge,
you
remove
it
from
to
revile
the
drug
user
because
bumper and broken fog light,
Health and Mental RetarST. PAUL, Minn. (UPI) - Jesus."
its
true
perspective
to
a
role
it
Rex Hoover, 20, 271 Mill
dation, has realgned, effective Billy Graham told an audience The fames North Carolina "It's the guy making the money
wos
never
really
meant
to
Creek Rd., Gallipolis. let his
Aug. 18.' Cunningham, 51, said ol 21,000 assembled Friday evangelist opened the Upper we ought to go after."
play.~~
As
for
sex,
·
he
said,
"when
car drift backwards on Pine St.
he intends to set uP a private night for . the ~pening ot' his Midwest Crusade at the state
psychiatric practice In Eustis, third Minnesota Crusade that fairgrounds in St. Paul, where
Fla.
hs is "a mess.enger boy for more than 250,000 persons are
expected to hear him speak
during the next 10 days. In a
reference to politics he said:
"1'11 remember to stand not
to the right or to the left, but in
the center" he said. "That's as
far as I'm going into politics."
In his sermon, the 54-yearstyles and colors. The
GALLlPOLJS - A new four· family room.
old Graham compared each
person's judgment day to the bedroom, 212 bath Dutch The Longwood, built on a bathrooms are available in a
Watergate hearings . .He told colonial split-level mOdel will homeowner's ·lot, is priced at choice of live colors including
his audience , there · is a .be introduced next weekend, $24,005, with the exterior decorator style vanettes.
In all, Rjdge Homes offers
judgment day that no one can July 21-22, by Delbert F. Clark, completely erected and ready
more
than 1,000 choices of
escape. Then he listed drugs, president, Clark-Ridge Homes, lor interior finishing. Many
sex and mysticism as three Jackson Pike and Bulaville . Ridge home buyers do some of styles colors and materials for
windows ,
Rd., Gallipolis, local Ridge the interior finishing · them· roofs, siding,
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA . escape routes many persons Homes
paneling,
carpeting,
tile,
dealer.
selves, saving as much as
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • seek. He told his audience not
,lighting and plumbing fixtures.
The new model is among 35 $4,000.
.
custom-built ranch, split-level,
Included in the basic price of
bi-le vel, two story, Cape COd the home is wall-to-wall carand vacation homes being peting in a chOice ol six colors.
offered locally by ·Ridge
Also included in the price is a
Homes, the largest home color • coordinated kitchen
manufacturer east of the with a General Electric
Mississippi. Ridge, a division refrigerator · freezer, electric
of Evans PrOduce Co., Port· or gas range and range hood,
land, Ore., has manufactured Riviera cabinets and Formica
close to 25,000 homes the past counter-lops in a wide range ol
16 years.
Despite the lack of mortgage , - - -- - -----,
money in some areas, Ridge
has adequate mortgage funds
to cover afl of its home buyers
incl~ding families with incomes ,as low as $7,500.
The Dutch colonial , the
Longwood, has a distinctive
GBC Grads Gel
gambrel roof and a true center
The Better Jobs!
hall plan that minimizes trallic
Write, Visit or Call 446·4367
I
I
•
I
through the living areas.
tor free ca1a log of courses
The split-level design in· and next starting date . VA
eludes a large living room, ·18 Approved .
It, by 13 ft. 6 in ., of! the entrance Ioyer. The lower level
has a family room, powder
room ; laundry room and
garage .
The home also has a recessed 36 Locust St.
Gallipolis
Sl
.
Rog.
No
,
"
-02·00328
front entrance as well as direct
entrances to the kitchen and L:-~------~_j

Mr and loll's.Qayland Buah, •
Oak Dr., Gallipolis, announ.ced !'
the birth or a daughteo, Vicki
Lynn, welghing-5TEis., 13 oz., at '
the Holzer Medical Center, ,
Friday afternoon.
•'

(,

Four m.ishaps inve~tigated

Dream fulfilled

· graduates IIOOP

$4

.

Antwer: Thil eaoenl ctrme «I " bluMI

Fir 1 LPN clauI

VARIOUS HEEL HEIGHTS · '
Veteran.• Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Leonard
97
''
Lunsford, Pomeroy; Wendy
VALUES TO 19.99 NOW
•
Gibbs, Hartford, Herman
••
Jones, Leon·; Lawrence Hysell,
KANAUGA - .The annual Rutland; Joseph · MeKnight,
••
CIC family ,picnic was held New, Haven; Koleen Kirkham,
••
·Va.;
Donald '
Th,ursday at the roadside park Vienna,
I£1T.(R FOOTWEAR FOR -THE FAMILY
McKenize, (&gt;O)lleroy.
in Kanauga.
DISCHARGES - William
In The Silver Bridge Shopping Plaza
Present
were
Ruth
Graham,
Robert
Baker,
Diana
Open
Mon. thru Sat. 10til9. Sun. 1111' · ; •
Daugherty, Virginia Grover
Brogan,
Dana
McCain,
Lena Mae Raike, John Raike,
'---~-----.....,;o.l '
Thelma Lester, Pina Ward, Dr. Stephen LaValley.
'
Edna Gettles, Evelyn Rothgeb,
'
'
Gus and Ethel Steele, Jeanie
Vance, Karen Dray, Evelyn
and Carl Morrow, Helen and
Vernon Grumbling.
The wedding ·anniversary
and birthdays or Mr. and Mrs.
C9rl Morrow were observed.
The. August meeting will be
at the home of Mrs. Nettie
I
Adams.
'
'

Jun&gt;bloo: PANIC GAUDY IISICT MAYHIM
Yctlcrd•y'•

Mr. and Mrs. William Evan
Casey, Rl. 3, Gal!!polls, are
proud to announc-e the birth or
their first child, a. son, on June
25, The new arrival has been
tlllmed Evan Ashworth Casey.
The baby weighed 7pounds, 2¥.
ounces . Maternal grand·
parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Adam Payne, Jr., Thij11Ilan.
Paternal grandparents are Mr
and Mrs. William A, Casey,
\)allipolis.
EUREKA - Mr. and Mrs.
COdy R. llQOthe, Eureka Star
Route, Gallipolis, Me- an. not)llcing the birth or their first
chii&lt;J, a . son July 13, at the
Holzer Medical Center. The
infant, weighing seven pounds
and ·nine ounces and 20 inches
long, has been named COdy
Todd. Maternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Murray E.
Church, Crown City. Mr. and
Mrs. Olin D. Boothe, Pomeroy,
are paternal grandparents.
Great-grandfalher is Edward
Boothe, Racine.

7 - The Sunda~ Times· Sentlnei,Sun~•y,July ID, U173

I

.

BRUNICARDI
HOUSE OF MUSIC
"SOUTHERN OHIO'S OLDEST MUSIC CE"TER"

SAVINGS TIME

Passbook Savings Accounts

At K &amp;K Mobile Homes
Save Up To 11000.00 On Mobile Homes

Save Any Amount 1\ny Time

On Sales Lot
Sizes 12. x 52's .UP To 14. x 70's
Delivery &amp; ~mplete Set-Up At .
No Extra Cost.

See
Our
All

Electric
Mobile
Homes.

~~ODIL.C
PAUL. 6 MAD CH. NOMl' HUP

I.IW"' I " '

HOMf S. ALE S
ruiiKII
1 ~&lt;1· 10 lUI

QIIIIIIIIIV
Power Joins In

You This

lnterc·~t paid IJltarh·rly on aU c·ertifil'alt•s

Deposit hy tht· lOth of tlw month and enm from the 61'81.
lnlt•rt·.~ t nvnilahll' monthly on ac(•ount~ of SUIOQ or more

THE GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS
and LOAN COMPANY

See
Our
All
Electric
Mobile
Homes.

OPPOSITE POST OFFICE
.· ~ ··

PHONE 446·3832

GALLIPOUS, OHIO

�l.

.,

•

.,

9

$81 million in credit
purchase , develop,
or
refinance their farms, Bnd
borrowed $5.76mlllion for.farm
ope r a t ing p urposes .
Emergency loans were made
to 313 farmers totalling $1.9
million. Ohio farmers received
over $12 million in loans which
was the largest farmer
program loan volume for Ohio
in the history of •' HA.
The Farmers Home Ad·
ministration Director said 20
commurtity im provement
projects received over $7.7
million in loans and grants
during the year, primarily for
financing r ura l water and
waste disposal systems.

Gallia 4-H Ouh News
Bidwell Busy Bees 4-H Club
met July 11 with Mrs. Leora
Thaxton . Tamie Thaltton
presided . Julie Smith led
devotions. Tamie Thaxton had
charge of the program. The
purpose of the meeting was to
make sure all the members
taking cooking were ready for
judging July 12. The Bidwell
Busy Bees collected for the
American Cancer fund on July
7. They collected ~.84. They
are also selling fair stickers.
Anyone wishing to buy a

sticker can call June Smlth at
38U836. The next meeing will
be with Mrs Gladys McCelland
July 18. Club advisors are Mrs.
Gladys McCelland, Mrs. Leora
Thaxtiffi'..and Mrs. June Smith.
Club members present were
Cindy Roberts, Debbie Smith,
Margie , ThaxtQn, Kathy
Roberts, Sheri Hollingshead,
Venessa Pleasants , Delores
Evans and Marsha McCelland.
- Reporter Julie Smith.
Vinton Highlighters 4·H Club

Second Avenu~

~'~ Yes!
We Have
Half Sizes

--- &amp;tc.

'

Galfipolis, Ohio

~

e...
•

'

•

Rural' Ohioans extended
COLUMBUS - The Farmers
!lome Administration ex·
tended Sill mliUon in credit to
the rural people of Ohio during
Flacal Year 1973. Lester M.
Stone, Farmers Home Ad·
ministration State Director,
said the agency processed
individual housing loans to
3,580familles for more than $57
million , . compared to $56
miUion during the previous
fiscal year. In the Rural Rental
Housing Program 12 loans
were made totalling $3.8
million.
Farmers in Ohio; who lacked
other sources of credit, turned
to Farmers Home Ad·
ministration ior $4.4 ·million to

'
~

I

Sixteen cited
to city cow1

BAitBS

Two runs made

GALLIPOLIS - Sixt e~n
persons were cited to traffic
court Friday by the Gallipolis
Police Deparhnent .
Cited were, Michael Clifford,
31, Mill Creek Rd., Gallipolis;
speed; ThOmas E. Callicoat,
18, R\. I, Gnllipolis, illegal
muffler ; Iris M. Cllflon, 28, Rt.
I, Gallipolis~ ACD ; Robert L.
Smith, Rt. Cheshire, speed ;
Robert L. Sievers, 9~ Vine St.,
Gallipolis, speed ; Melody F.
Griffith, Rt. 2. Vinton, speed ;
John W. Brown , Ashland," Ky .,
speed ; .Julie A. Webb,
Gallipolis, •peed ; Joanne
Sisson, Rt. , Northup, speed;
Lar ry L. Long, 24, Rt. 2, .Bid·
well, speed; l.;~ rk Napier, Jr.,
SO, Rl. I, Bidwell, speed;
Marilyn L. Childers, 8,
Gallipolis, speed; Leahanna
Allen, 38, 1069 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis, speed; David L.
Woodall, 24, 862 First Ave.,
Gallipolls, speed ; Larry D.
Elliott, 26, [.,ower River Rd.,
Gallipolis, speed; and Dallas
Wetherholt, 6:1, Rt. 1, Thur·
man , speed.

'

137 PINE STREET
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Coachmen line
•
~nNill•'S ~ABULOUS DISCOUNTERS!

in French City

GALLI PO US - French City
Mobile Home Center here has
been selected as the factory
authorized dealer for Coach·
men Homes, a division of
Coachmen Industries, Inc.,
Middlebury, Ind .
Th) firm will sell Coach· '
men's complete line of
medium.priced Middlebury
mob.lle homes, in a va riety of
sizes:
floorplans and decors.
met J uly 6. with Mr . and Mrs.
Harold Pauley. Cindy Pauley Joe Giles and Jim Staats are
presided. Mrs.. Harold Pauley co..,wners bf the dealership.
and Mrs. Betty Davis had They have been In the mobile
charge of the program. Club home business in the area five
discussed fa ir projects and years.
Coachmen mobile homes will
working at the fair. Club
members present were Carol be displayed on the French
Davis, Vicky Powers, Sharon City Mobile Home Center's 31&gt;
Miller, Trhonda Callihan , acre lot located on Upper River
Teresa Whitely , Becky, Road in Gallipolis. The ·
Valerie, and Karen Powers, .maintains a complete mQ.bi!e
Ron Davis, Gwen, .Brian, and home service department, and
Randy Hamilton, Patty and carries a wide selection of
Boliby Alley and Roberta mobile home parts and ac.
Alley. - Reporter Sharon cessories . .Compiete fimlncing
and insurance programs are
Miller .
also available through the
Eno Sail-On 4·H Club met , dealership.
July 9 at Eno Grange Hall.. ----:-~-_.:.__ _ __
Doug Siss(on presided. Krista! to go to be judged. The next
Hash had charge of the meeting will he July 16, at 1
program. Demonstration was p.m. Mrs. Sission and Lisa
'by Linda Jenkins in caramel Sission were guests.
apples. Club talked about when Reporter Sonya Mitchell.

.
'
•

________ ,
ROUND STEAK

to be offered

'nENCH

CITY
BRAND" .

700 WEST MAIN STREET
• POMEROY, OHIO

"All Star''

BEACH
. '

CHOCOLATE

'

TOWELS

MILK

REG. 11.59

4qv£$.
/

"Geisha"

MANDARIN'
ORANGES

WITH THIS JULY SPECIAL
FOR JULY 16 TO 31 ONLY

"/ '

FREE PADDING

State of Ohio County of Meigs ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 12th'l!ay of July, 1973.
Addie W. Norris, Notary Public
My commission eJtpires March 20, 1974.

130FF

. 11
cans ·

".

".

$
·

Installed With
Free Padding

Wait!

KITCHEN CARPET
WITH
IN TWEED
Prices includes
Installation

KIDNEY BEANS

6

15o($ ·

YARD

I

cans , .. ~

. SQUARE

RUBBER
BACKING

YARD

Free Padding

I

•a .
.

CLEARANCE

.

SQUARE
YARD

.

OPEN MONDAYTHRU SATURDAY9 TOS
FRIDAY NIGHTTILLB:OO
BUDGET TERMS OR BANK AMERICARD

KING SIZE
\

SUMMER

CARPET-LAN.D INC.
992·7590

"HEINERS"

LADIES &amp; GIRlS

''

116 W. MAIN

POMEROY ~ "A Look into
the Past, Present and Future"
was the theme of the program
presented by Mrs. Nellie Vale,
lecturer for the Laurel Grange,
visitors at the Rock Springs
Grange meeting Thursday
night.
To open the program, Mrs.
Vale recognized three mem·
bers of the Laurel Grange who
!U'e 50 year members. She read
"The Golden Anniversary of
Laurel Grange," there was a
plano solo by Pam Holcomb, a
reading "Field Work in
Grange" by Avanell Halliday,
and an article "A Bonnett" by
Ann Elizabeth Turner. Mrs.
Freda , Kennedy read "The
Gfangen, George Radekin,
"All Kinds of Members," and
Mrs.
Maude
Holcomb,
"1'ogether" to depict the past
segmepl of grange activity.
For the present there was a
reading of tribute to Mrs.
Turner, a teacher ; two skits,
one by the Halliday family and
the other by Marsha and Pam
Holcomb; and readings ,
"Treasure Chest" by Mrs.
Chester Bigomy, "Did You
Know " by Mrs. Juanita
Radekin, "Low Calorie Diet"
by Nellie Vale, "When Pa is
Sick" by Billy Holcomb, and
"Absenteeism" by Mrs. Vale.

Marsha .Holcomb concluded
ths segment with a piano solo.
·For the future part of .111e
program, Pam Holcomb gave
her 4·H safety essay titled "A
Cal's Tail " , and Everett
Holcomb spoke .about the
future of the vo.ag program at
Meigs High School. There were
questions and answers on Ohio
by Mrs. Vale.
During the business meeting
a thank·you note was read
from Mrs. · Pauline Atkins.
Plans were made for the Rock
Springs Grange to visit the
Ohio Valley Grange, Thursday,
Aug . 9: Reported ill were Joe
Weyersmiller and Lynn
Enevoldsen.
Refreshments were ·served
at the close of the meeting .
Attending were 16 visitors from
Laurel Grange and one from
Little Kyger Creek Grange.

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mrs Chester Wigal is
announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of
her daughter, Sue Ann Grogan, to Gary Lee Simpson, son of
Mr and Mrs. Paul Simpson, Pomeroy. The bride-elect ls the ·
daughter of the late Lawrence Grogan. Both Miss Grogan
and her fiance are graduates of Meigs High School. She is
employed at the Pleasant Valley Hospital, and he is em·
played at the Walker Textran Corp., Parkersburg, W. Va The
wedding will be solemn~ at the Middleport Church of
O!rist on August 25 at 7:30p.m. The custom of open church
will be observed.

Party honors
•
jay Bostick
RACINE ~ Mr. and Mrs.
Jack 'Bostick, Sr. entertained
last Sunday with a party
honoring their youngest son,
Jay (Jack, Jr.) with a cookout
on his fifth birthday an .
niversary .
Gifts were presented to the
honored guest. Attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Cummins, Rusty and Tony a, Floyd
Cummins, Addie Cummins ,
Mr . and Mrs. Bob Roy , Mrs.
Laura Circle, Jim Jackson,
Mrs. Floren~e Thornton, Jeff
and Rex, Larry Cummins,
· Mrs. Jack Cummins, Todd and ·
Missy , Marilyn Williams,

Sew Rite Club contributes
POMEROY - Acontribution
of $25 was made to the
Pomeroy firemen by the Sew
Rit&amp;Sewing Glub at a meeting
Wednesday night.
Mrs. Judy Potter presided at
the meeting which was hosted
by Mrs. Lenora McKnight and
Mrs. Evelyn Gilmore and held
at the club house. Mrs. Betty
Wehrung contributed the item
for the auction with Mrs.

next one.
Mrs. Flo Strickland received
a birthday gift from her secret
pal. Mrs. Mildred Wells and
Mrs. Wehrung will be hostesses
for the next meeting. The
hostesses served a salad
course to those named and
Mrs . Shirley Baity, Mrs.
Martha Hoffman, Mrs. Lucy
White, Mrs. Joan Hoffman,
Mrs. Pandora Collins and Mrs.

f:~N~ic;k~a:nd~~~B~o:stl~c~k.._J~an:;ice~N~e;ut::z~g. .to. .g•.·ve•. •Uw
. .•N•e•tt•ie•B•o•ye•r•
. . . . . . . . .. . .

ELM HILL • All Meat Slic9d

First classes
assured
ATHENS - For the first
time in history, public school
classes for deaf and hearing
impaired children will be of-

executive director of lhe
Southeastern Ohio Regional
Education Agency (SEOR.EA) ,
announced Friday that . the
classroom units were approved
for the 1973·74 school year by
the Ohio Department of
Education for the Marietta
City, Logan City and Meigs
County districts.
· Welnfurtner said the class in
Th is Frigidaire Custom Imperial refrigerator·
Marietta will serve . hearing
freeze r stores up to 166 pounds of foods in
impaired children in Monroe,
Its 4.75 cu. ft. two·shelf top freezer , del ivers
Morgan and Washington
organ ized storage throughout. even In the
Counties; the Logan unit
doors. Helps keep 31 .0 qts. of fruit s and
Athens, Hocking and Perry
vegetables fresh and crisp In twin Hydrators.
Counties and the Meigs County
Keeps 11.4 pounds of most good quality,
unit Gallia, Jackson, Meigs
fresh cut meats fresh without freezing up to
and VInton Counties.
7 days, thanks to its Flowing Cold Meat
Activities in preparation for
Tender. Tough , easy·lo·clean cabinet liner
the
beginning of classes this
resists stains. has no seams to trap dirt.
fall included a summer
1
workshop for hearing impaired
children and their parents at
1
Ohio University sponsored by
SEOREA, the School of
Hearing and Speech Sciences
5
und
the hearing conservation
SALE'379'
Model FPCt3·110TU
project.
Welnfurtner said the three
classes to begin this year are
for early elementary.age
children and plans call for
e~pansion of classes for the
1974-75 school year.
Classes for the hearing
impaired are the first so-called
This 15.2 cu. ft . Frigidaire Imperial
"low . Incident" units to be
refrlgerator·freezer features a
approved for Southeastern
4.75 cu. ft. top Ieazer that holds
Ohio . SEOREA has also
up to 166 pounds or fro zen foods .
received approval for a
The lull·wldlh door shelves,.plus
coordinator
of low incident
.
li sliding ehell and an adju stable
handicaps to develop classes
refrigerator shell offer organized
for blind and visually impaired
flexibility. Ooor compartments
'
and crippled children lor the
ror snacks and eproads keep
1974·75 school year .
small Items handy.
The Southeastern Ohio
1
Regional Education Agency
•
serves
30 school dislricls in
Model FPI,.1S2TU
Athens, Galiia, Hocking ,
Jack son, Meigs, Monroe,
. L£•349 91
_ _ _.,.. ...,..__.__ _ _ _.,._ _ _. . Mlj[gan , Perry, Vinton, and
•
1\'IIShington Counties. ·

BOLOGNA ••••••••1• 1~· .v!~ ~~. 69e
VIETTI

ARGO

Hot Dog Sauce

Green Beans

5 Cans

1~ oz.

.4 lloz.$100
Cans

$100

·

AJAX
LIQUID .

aoz. .&amp;ttle
··

.,

With Free Sponge

CLEANER ••••••• ••••••••••••
IGA

CORN FLAKES

318

OZ.

Boxes

$100

0~

KRAFT

PARTY MINTS

3

·

8 oz.

Boxes

Trade In 100.00

HEAV.Y KODEL POLYESTER
GOQd Color Choice
·· . 95
Installed With

Laurel-Grange visits
Rock Springs·meeting

Miss Sue Ann Grogan

$100

479.95

Act
Today!

.

at extra charge.

DARK RED·

SQUARE

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs Victor
Hysell, Rt. I, Minersville, are ·announcing the engagement
and approac~iog marriage of their daughter, Leota Grace, to
Gene Chaney, son of Mr. and Mrs, John Chaney, Rt. 1,
Minersville. The open church wedding will be an event of
August 5at 2p.m. at the Forest Run Methodist Church. Miss.
Hysell is a 1989 graduate of Southern High School and a 1973
graduate of Ohio Univer~ty with a bachelor's degree in
special education. She has .heen employed to teach in the
Meigs Local School District. Chaney is a 1973 graduate of
Estern High School and plans to attend the Nelsonville
Vocational School.

17.0 cu. ft-.1000/o Frost·Proof.
.· Reaclv for
Ice A\aku,
novr or later,

"Seaside"

•

Miss Leota Grace Hysell

SUNDAY
REUN ION OF desc:endsnla
Of Henry and Mary Frederick,
Sunday, at Portland Park.
Basket dinner at 1 p.m.; take
own table service.
OHIO VA)..LEY Commandery 24, Knights Templar,
. annual picnic at the Shrine.
Park in Racine, 2 p.m. Sunday.
Ali Sir Knights, families and
widows invited. Chicken and
beverage to be furnis hed.
Those attending to -take a
C!IVered dish and their own
table servk-e. .
THE YOUNG Apostles a
gospel singing group, at the
Zion Chu rch, Harr isonville
·Road, 2 p:m. Sunday. Public.
In vited.
. WEDNESDAY
WINDING Trail Garden
Club, 8 p.m. at the home of
Mrs .
Earl
Thoma.
Arrangements to carry out the
theme " In the Good Old
Swnmertime''.
PAST Presidenls, American
Legion Au xiliary, ·Drew
· Webster Post 39, 6:30 p.m. at
the Owen Wal~on campsite at
Racine.

fered this fail in southeastern
r-------------------------------------.. Ohio.
Dr. Robert L. Weinfurtnr,

PlusFREE
Installation

VIN)YL
~ CHAIR
. , PADS

.

Cash and due from banks • ••••• ••• •• ••• • ••• • $1,280,939.08
U.S. Tr~sury securities •.. . •••• • •• • • ••• • • • 2,508,304.71
Obligations of other U.S. Government
agencies and corporations . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 487 781 30
·Obligations of States and political subdivisions • • • • • • • • 1,074:930:43
Other securities • - • • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • 21 ,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreemenls to resell • - - • • •
- - . 900,000.00
Other loans • • • • • • _ . • . • • •
- • - • 7,!102,817.32
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises • • • •
• • 43&lt;1,587.85 -Otherassels • • • • • ••• ' •• - • • •
• • 4,236.63
TOTAL ASSETS • • • • • • - - • • ...
$14,614,597.32
LIABU.ITJES
Demand deposils of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations - • - - • • • • • • • • • • • • • - $3,083,298.52
Time and savings deposils of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations • - ••• ••. • • • • • •• 9,268,126.89
Deposits of United States Government • • • • • • • • . • • 101,756.77
Deposils of States and political subdivisions • • • • • - • • • • 702,214.69
Deposits of commercial banks - • • - - • • • • • • • •
• 292.47
Certified and officers' checks, etc. • • • - • - • - - - • • 70,654.81
TOTAL DEPOSITS - • • • - • - • • $13,226,344.15
(a) Total demand depo8ils - • • - - • - • $ 3,6481217.26
(b) Total time and $8VIngs deposits • • • • • $ 9,578,126,89
Other liabilities • - • • • - • - - • • • • • • • • • 450,006.38
TOTAL UABIUTJES • - • • • • • • . • • • • • • $13,676,350.53
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
(set up IJ'li'Suantto IRS ri!llngs) •• - • - • - - - - - - - •• $381259.52
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES • • . • • $38,259.52
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity Capitai•Tota) • • • • • • - • - • • . . • . $899,987.27
Common stock· total par value - - - - - - - - - • 300,000.00
No. shares authorized 12,000
No. share.s oulsta,nding 12,000
Surplus • • • - • - - • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 400,000.00
Undivided profits : . . . • . . . . .
199,987.27
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
899,987.27
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
$14,614,597.32
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS - - • • •
.MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits ior the 15 calendar
days ending with call date • • • • • - . • . • • • • • . • $13,154,318.37
Average of total loans for the 15 calendar
days ending with call date - • - - •••• - ••• ••• • 9,150,122.75
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
Pledged assets and securities loaned (book vatue):
•
U.S. Government obligations, direct and guaranteed,
Pledged to secure deposits and other llabllilies - - • - • $700,000.00

1

~ Calendan

ASSETS

'

We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this report of
condition and declare tbat it has been eJtamined by us and to the best of our
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
Theodore T. Reed, Jr.
Fred W. Crow, Jr.- Directors
Leslie F. Fulh

SUMMER
SLEEPWEAR

-r

of$

4

or Pomeroy, Ohio and Forel4n and Domn tlc SubsldiariH, at the cl01e ol
bualne81 June 30, 1173, 1 B\!lle beaklng blltllutlon orpolzod and openttl"'
under the beoklng lawa Oll thil Slate and a member of the Fedel'lll RHerve
Syo!em. Publlohed In aceordance with a· call made by the State Dulling
Aulhorltleo and by the Federal Reoerve Bank of this District.
. •

I, Roger W. Hysell, Cashier, of the above-riamed bank do hereby declare
that thf:! report of condition is true to the best of my knowledge and helle!.
Roger W. lfyseU

'

Good Choice of
Colors .

~ Social

I

The Farmers Bank and Savings _Company

9 to .9 DAILY eNOon to 8 SUNDAY

.w·E'RE HOLDING PRICES

NYLON

+ +

Baby lood 11 mlf hl y n ptn."
aive whe n " ba by ' h 22 , and
with a labwloua appolltt .

·
StaleNo. mx
CONSOLIDATED "EPORT Ot' CONDITION OF

' '

501

~3)~@·: · ' 1 ,;,&gt;.'~~$-~

TnklnM a plunc " lrownt•d
"Jlf"' 11.1 •irp&lt;J•·t pcr•nnnol

By PHIL PASTUHt~T
Old·tl men recall when ynu
could ta ke a trip wilhout tak ·
In&amp; a pill ,

'GALLIPOLIS - The Galltu
County Volunteer Emerwency
Sqund made two runs F'riday.
The squud was called to the
residence of Edeth Bradley , 1;,
Dun Jones Rd., where she w1is
re portedly having nerv ous
problems. No lrentment was
required enroute to Ro~er
Medical Center.
Ida Green, 80, 115 Bastian!
Dr., cmnplnined of difficulty in
br eathing. 1'he emergency
squad administered first aid at
the scene and on the way to
Holzer Medical Cnter.

CARPETI·N.G SALEJ.J

Don 't

•

-:-The Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sltl1day, July 16, Jll73

.
'.
8- The Sunday ·Times ·Sentinei,Stulday, July 15,1973

BREAD

'

SPORTSWEAR

.

Flexible, orta.llzecl Jtorate, plus
IC)OOio 1'1 ost·Proof ,,_..,. ..
e0ia¥e..ence. ·

C~EARANCE.

1

MEN!S &amp;BOY'~,

SUMMER
' '
SPORTSWEAR

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

•

LONG GREEN

CUCUMBERS

lO~each

Gal.

Carton
'

ARNOLD GRATE
742-4211

' POMEROY

I.G.A.

l38Ff

399.95

Trade In '50.00

'

.
.• 1

RUTLAND

M&amp;R SHOPPING
CENTER
,

IGA FOODLINER
MIDDLEPORT · ·

�l.

.,

•

.,

9

$81 million in credit
purchase , develop,
or
refinance their farms, Bnd
borrowed $5.76mlllion for.farm
ope r a t ing p urposes .
Emergency loans were made
to 313 farmers totalling $1.9
million. Ohio farmers received
over $12 million in loans which
was the largest farmer
program loan volume for Ohio
in the history of •' HA.
The Farmers Home Ad·
ministration Director said 20
commurtity im provement
projects received over $7.7
million in loans and grants
during the year, primarily for
financing r ura l water and
waste disposal systems.

Gallia 4-H Ouh News
Bidwell Busy Bees 4-H Club
met July 11 with Mrs. Leora
Thaxton . Tamie Thaltton
presided . Julie Smith led
devotions. Tamie Thaxton had
charge of the program. The
purpose of the meeting was to
make sure all the members
taking cooking were ready for
judging July 12. The Bidwell
Busy Bees collected for the
American Cancer fund on July
7. They collected ~.84. They
are also selling fair stickers.
Anyone wishing to buy a

sticker can call June Smlth at
38U836. The next meeing will
be with Mrs Gladys McCelland
July 18. Club advisors are Mrs.
Gladys McCelland, Mrs. Leora
Thaxtiffi'..and Mrs. June Smith.
Club members present were
Cindy Roberts, Debbie Smith,
Margie , ThaxtQn, Kathy
Roberts, Sheri Hollingshead,
Venessa Pleasants , Delores
Evans and Marsha McCelland.
- Reporter Julie Smith.
Vinton Highlighters 4·H Club

Second Avenu~

~'~ Yes!
We Have
Half Sizes

--- &amp;tc.

'

Galfipolis, Ohio

~

e...
•

'

•

Rural' Ohioans extended
COLUMBUS - The Farmers
!lome Administration ex·
tended Sill mliUon in credit to
the rural people of Ohio during
Flacal Year 1973. Lester M.
Stone, Farmers Home Ad·
ministration State Director,
said the agency processed
individual housing loans to
3,580familles for more than $57
million , . compared to $56
miUion during the previous
fiscal year. In the Rural Rental
Housing Program 12 loans
were made totalling $3.8
million.
Farmers in Ohio; who lacked
other sources of credit, turned
to Farmers Home Ad·
ministration ior $4.4 ·million to

'
~

I

Sixteen cited
to city cow1

BAitBS

Two runs made

GALLIPOLIS - Sixt e~n
persons were cited to traffic
court Friday by the Gallipolis
Police Deparhnent .
Cited were, Michael Clifford,
31, Mill Creek Rd., Gallipolis;
speed; ThOmas E. Callicoat,
18, R\. I, Gnllipolis, illegal
muffler ; Iris M. Cllflon, 28, Rt.
I, Gallipolis~ ACD ; Robert L.
Smith, Rt. Cheshire, speed ;
Robert L. Sievers, 9~ Vine St.,
Gallipolis, speed ; Melody F.
Griffith, Rt. 2. Vinton, speed ;
John W. Brown , Ashland," Ky .,
speed ; .Julie A. Webb,
Gallipolis, •peed ; Joanne
Sisson, Rt. , Northup, speed;
Lar ry L. Long, 24, Rt. 2, .Bid·
well, speed; l.;~ rk Napier, Jr.,
SO, Rl. I, Bidwell, speed;
Marilyn L. Childers, 8,
Gallipolis, speed; Leahanna
Allen, 38, 1069 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis, speed; David L.
Woodall, 24, 862 First Ave.,
Gallipolls, speed ; Larry D.
Elliott, 26, [.,ower River Rd.,
Gallipolis, speed; and Dallas
Wetherholt, 6:1, Rt. 1, Thur·
man , speed.

'

137 PINE STREET
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Coachmen line
•
~nNill•'S ~ABULOUS DISCOUNTERS!

in French City

GALLI PO US - French City
Mobile Home Center here has
been selected as the factory
authorized dealer for Coach·
men Homes, a division of
Coachmen Industries, Inc.,
Middlebury, Ind .
Th) firm will sell Coach· '
men's complete line of
medium.priced Middlebury
mob.lle homes, in a va riety of
sizes:
floorplans and decors.
met J uly 6. with Mr . and Mrs.
Harold Pauley. Cindy Pauley Joe Giles and Jim Staats are
presided. Mrs.. Harold Pauley co..,wners bf the dealership.
and Mrs. Betty Davis had They have been In the mobile
charge of the program. Club home business in the area five
discussed fa ir projects and years.
Coachmen mobile homes will
working at the fair. Club
members present were Carol be displayed on the French
Davis, Vicky Powers, Sharon City Mobile Home Center's 31&gt;
Miller, Trhonda Callihan , acre lot located on Upper River
Teresa Whitely , Becky, Road in Gallipolis. The ·
Valerie, and Karen Powers, .maintains a complete mQ.bi!e
Ron Davis, Gwen, .Brian, and home service department, and
Randy Hamilton, Patty and carries a wide selection of
Boliby Alley and Roberta mobile home parts and ac.
Alley. - Reporter Sharon cessories . .Compiete fimlncing
and insurance programs are
Miller .
also available through the
Eno Sail-On 4·H Club met , dealership.
July 9 at Eno Grange Hall.. ----:-~-_.:.__ _ __
Doug Siss(on presided. Krista! to go to be judged. The next
Hash had charge of the meeting will he July 16, at 1
program. Demonstration was p.m. Mrs. Sission and Lisa
'by Linda Jenkins in caramel Sission were guests.
apples. Club talked about when Reporter Sonya Mitchell.

.
'
•

________ ,
ROUND STEAK

to be offered

'nENCH

CITY
BRAND" .

700 WEST MAIN STREET
• POMEROY, OHIO

"All Star''

BEACH
. '

CHOCOLATE

'

TOWELS

MILK

REG. 11.59

4qv£$.
/

"Geisha"

MANDARIN'
ORANGES

WITH THIS JULY SPECIAL
FOR JULY 16 TO 31 ONLY

"/ '

FREE PADDING

State of Ohio County of Meigs ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 12th'l!ay of July, 1973.
Addie W. Norris, Notary Public
My commission eJtpires March 20, 1974.

130FF

. 11
cans ·

".

".

$
·

Installed With
Free Padding

Wait!

KITCHEN CARPET
WITH
IN TWEED
Prices includes
Installation

KIDNEY BEANS

6

15o($ ·

YARD

I

cans , .. ~

. SQUARE

RUBBER
BACKING

YARD

Free Padding

I

•a .
.

CLEARANCE

.

SQUARE
YARD

.

OPEN MONDAYTHRU SATURDAY9 TOS
FRIDAY NIGHTTILLB:OO
BUDGET TERMS OR BANK AMERICARD

KING SIZE
\

SUMMER

CARPET-LAN.D INC.
992·7590

"HEINERS"

LADIES &amp; GIRlS

''

116 W. MAIN

POMEROY ~ "A Look into
the Past, Present and Future"
was the theme of the program
presented by Mrs. Nellie Vale,
lecturer for the Laurel Grange,
visitors at the Rock Springs
Grange meeting Thursday
night.
To open the program, Mrs.
Vale recognized three mem·
bers of the Laurel Grange who
!U'e 50 year members. She read
"The Golden Anniversary of
Laurel Grange," there was a
plano solo by Pam Holcomb, a
reading "Field Work in
Grange" by Avanell Halliday,
and an article "A Bonnett" by
Ann Elizabeth Turner. Mrs.
Freda , Kennedy read "The
Gfangen, George Radekin,
"All Kinds of Members," and
Mrs.
Maude
Holcomb,
"1'ogether" to depict the past
segmepl of grange activity.
For the present there was a
reading of tribute to Mrs.
Turner, a teacher ; two skits,
one by the Halliday family and
the other by Marsha and Pam
Holcomb; and readings ,
"Treasure Chest" by Mrs.
Chester Bigomy, "Did You
Know " by Mrs. Juanita
Radekin, "Low Calorie Diet"
by Nellie Vale, "When Pa is
Sick" by Billy Holcomb, and
"Absenteeism" by Mrs. Vale.

Marsha .Holcomb concluded
ths segment with a piano solo.
·For the future part of .111e
program, Pam Holcomb gave
her 4·H safety essay titled "A
Cal's Tail " , and Everett
Holcomb spoke .about the
future of the vo.ag program at
Meigs High School. There were
questions and answers on Ohio
by Mrs. Vale.
During the business meeting
a thank·you note was read
from Mrs. · Pauline Atkins.
Plans were made for the Rock
Springs Grange to visit the
Ohio Valley Grange, Thursday,
Aug . 9: Reported ill were Joe
Weyersmiller and Lynn
Enevoldsen.
Refreshments were ·served
at the close of the meeting .
Attending were 16 visitors from
Laurel Grange and one from
Little Kyger Creek Grange.

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mrs Chester Wigal is
announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of
her daughter, Sue Ann Grogan, to Gary Lee Simpson, son of
Mr and Mrs. Paul Simpson, Pomeroy. The bride-elect ls the ·
daughter of the late Lawrence Grogan. Both Miss Grogan
and her fiance are graduates of Meigs High School. She is
employed at the Pleasant Valley Hospital, and he is em·
played at the Walker Textran Corp., Parkersburg, W. Va The
wedding will be solemn~ at the Middleport Church of
O!rist on August 25 at 7:30p.m. The custom of open church
will be observed.

Party honors
•
jay Bostick
RACINE ~ Mr. and Mrs.
Jack 'Bostick, Sr. entertained
last Sunday with a party
honoring their youngest son,
Jay (Jack, Jr.) with a cookout
on his fifth birthday an .
niversary .
Gifts were presented to the
honored guest. Attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Cummins, Rusty and Tony a, Floyd
Cummins, Addie Cummins ,
Mr . and Mrs. Bob Roy , Mrs.
Laura Circle, Jim Jackson,
Mrs. Floren~e Thornton, Jeff
and Rex, Larry Cummins,
· Mrs. Jack Cummins, Todd and ·
Missy , Marilyn Williams,

Sew Rite Club contributes
POMEROY - Acontribution
of $25 was made to the
Pomeroy firemen by the Sew
Rit&amp;Sewing Glub at a meeting
Wednesday night.
Mrs. Judy Potter presided at
the meeting which was hosted
by Mrs. Lenora McKnight and
Mrs. Evelyn Gilmore and held
at the club house. Mrs. Betty
Wehrung contributed the item
for the auction with Mrs.

next one.
Mrs. Flo Strickland received
a birthday gift from her secret
pal. Mrs. Mildred Wells and
Mrs. Wehrung will be hostesses
for the next meeting. The
hostesses served a salad
course to those named and
Mrs . Shirley Baity, Mrs.
Martha Hoffman, Mrs. Lucy
White, Mrs. Joan Hoffman,
Mrs. Pandora Collins and Mrs.

f:~N~ic;k~a:nd~~~B~o:stl~c~k.._J~an:;ice~N~e;ut::z~g. .to. .g•.·ve•. •Uw
. .•N•e•tt•ie•B•o•ye•r•
. . . . . . . . .. . .

ELM HILL • All Meat Slic9d

First classes
assured
ATHENS - For the first
time in history, public school
classes for deaf and hearing
impaired children will be of-

executive director of lhe
Southeastern Ohio Regional
Education Agency (SEOR.EA) ,
announced Friday that . the
classroom units were approved
for the 1973·74 school year by
the Ohio Department of
Education for the Marietta
City, Logan City and Meigs
County districts.
· Welnfurtner said the class in
Th is Frigidaire Custom Imperial refrigerator·
Marietta will serve . hearing
freeze r stores up to 166 pounds of foods in
impaired children in Monroe,
Its 4.75 cu. ft. two·shelf top freezer , del ivers
Morgan and Washington
organ ized storage throughout. even In the
Counties; the Logan unit
doors. Helps keep 31 .0 qts. of fruit s and
Athens, Hocking and Perry
vegetables fresh and crisp In twin Hydrators.
Counties and the Meigs County
Keeps 11.4 pounds of most good quality,
unit Gallia, Jackson, Meigs
fresh cut meats fresh without freezing up to
and VInton Counties.
7 days, thanks to its Flowing Cold Meat
Activities in preparation for
Tender. Tough , easy·lo·clean cabinet liner
the
beginning of classes this
resists stains. has no seams to trap dirt.
fall included a summer
1
workshop for hearing impaired
children and their parents at
1
Ohio University sponsored by
SEOREA, the School of
Hearing and Speech Sciences
5
und
the hearing conservation
SALE'379'
Model FPCt3·110TU
project.
Welnfurtner said the three
classes to begin this year are
for early elementary.age
children and plans call for
e~pansion of classes for the
1974-75 school year.
Classes for the hearing
impaired are the first so-called
This 15.2 cu. ft . Frigidaire Imperial
"low . Incident" units to be
refrlgerator·freezer features a
approved for Southeastern
4.75 cu. ft. top Ieazer that holds
Ohio . SEOREA has also
up to 166 pounds or fro zen foods .
received approval for a
The lull·wldlh door shelves,.plus
coordinator
of low incident
.
li sliding ehell and an adju stable
handicaps to develop classes
refrigerator shell offer organized
for blind and visually impaired
flexibility. Ooor compartments
'
and crippled children lor the
ror snacks and eproads keep
1974·75 school year .
small Items handy.
The Southeastern Ohio
1
Regional Education Agency
•
serves
30 school dislricls in
Model FPI,.1S2TU
Athens, Galiia, Hocking ,
Jack son, Meigs, Monroe,
. L£•349 91
_ _ _.,.. ...,..__.__ _ _ _.,._ _ _. . Mlj[gan , Perry, Vinton, and
•
1\'IIShington Counties. ·

BOLOGNA ••••••••1• 1~· .v!~ ~~. 69e
VIETTI

ARGO

Hot Dog Sauce

Green Beans

5 Cans

1~ oz.

.4 lloz.$100
Cans

$100

·

AJAX
LIQUID .

aoz. .&amp;ttle
··

.,

With Free Sponge

CLEANER ••••••• ••••••••••••
IGA

CORN FLAKES

318

OZ.

Boxes

$100

0~

KRAFT

PARTY MINTS

3

·

8 oz.

Boxes

Trade In 100.00

HEAV.Y KODEL POLYESTER
GOQd Color Choice
·· . 95
Installed With

Laurel-Grange visits
Rock Springs·meeting

Miss Sue Ann Grogan

$100

479.95

Act
Today!

.

at extra charge.

DARK RED·

SQUARE

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs Victor
Hysell, Rt. I, Minersville, are ·announcing the engagement
and approac~iog marriage of their daughter, Leota Grace, to
Gene Chaney, son of Mr. and Mrs, John Chaney, Rt. 1,
Minersville. The open church wedding will be an event of
August 5at 2p.m. at the Forest Run Methodist Church. Miss.
Hysell is a 1989 graduate of Southern High School and a 1973
graduate of Ohio Univer~ty with a bachelor's degree in
special education. She has .heen employed to teach in the
Meigs Local School District. Chaney is a 1973 graduate of
Estern High School and plans to attend the Nelsonville
Vocational School.

17.0 cu. ft-.1000/o Frost·Proof.
.· Reaclv for
Ice A\aku,
novr or later,

"Seaside"

•

Miss Leota Grace Hysell

SUNDAY
REUN ION OF desc:endsnla
Of Henry and Mary Frederick,
Sunday, at Portland Park.
Basket dinner at 1 p.m.; take
own table service.
OHIO VA)..LEY Commandery 24, Knights Templar,
. annual picnic at the Shrine.
Park in Racine, 2 p.m. Sunday.
Ali Sir Knights, families and
widows invited. Chicken and
beverage to be furnis hed.
Those attending to -take a
C!IVered dish and their own
table servk-e. .
THE YOUNG Apostles a
gospel singing group, at the
Zion Chu rch, Harr isonville
·Road, 2 p:m. Sunday. Public.
In vited.
. WEDNESDAY
WINDING Trail Garden
Club, 8 p.m. at the home of
Mrs .
Earl
Thoma.
Arrangements to carry out the
theme " In the Good Old
Swnmertime''.
PAST Presidenls, American
Legion Au xiliary, ·Drew
· Webster Post 39, 6:30 p.m. at
the Owen Wal~on campsite at
Racine.

fered this fail in southeastern
r-------------------------------------.. Ohio.
Dr. Robert L. Weinfurtnr,

PlusFREE
Installation

VIN)YL
~ CHAIR
. , PADS

.

Cash and due from banks • ••••• ••• •• ••• • ••• • $1,280,939.08
U.S. Tr~sury securities •.. . •••• • •• • • ••• • • • 2,508,304.71
Obligations of other U.S. Government
agencies and corporations . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 487 781 30
·Obligations of States and political subdivisions • • • • • • • • 1,074:930:43
Other securities • - • • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • 21 ,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreemenls to resell • - - • • •
- - . 900,000.00
Other loans • • • • • • _ . • . • • •
- • - • 7,!102,817.32
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises • • • •
• • 43&lt;1,587.85 -Otherassels • • • • • ••• ' •• - • • •
• • 4,236.63
TOTAL ASSETS • • • • • • - - • • ...
$14,614,597.32
LIABU.ITJES
Demand deposils of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations - • - - • • • • • • • • • • • • • - $3,083,298.52
Time and savings deposils of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations • - ••• ••. • • • • • •• 9,268,126.89
Deposits of United States Government • • • • • • • • . • • 101,756.77
Deposils of States and political subdivisions • • • • • - • • • • 702,214.69
Deposits of commercial banks - • • - - • • • • • • • •
• 292.47
Certified and officers' checks, etc. • • • - • - • - - - • • 70,654.81
TOTAL DEPOSITS - • • • - • - • • $13,226,344.15
(a) Total demand depo8ils - • • - - • - • $ 3,6481217.26
(b) Total time and $8VIngs deposits • • • • • $ 9,578,126,89
Other liabilities • - • • • - • - - • • • • • • • • • 450,006.38
TOTAL UABIUTJES • - • • • • • • . • • • • • • $13,676,350.53
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
(set up IJ'li'Suantto IRS ri!llngs) •• - • - • - - - - - - - •• $381259.52
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES • • . • • $38,259.52
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity Capitai•Tota) • • • • • • - • - • • . . • . $899,987.27
Common stock· total par value - - - - - - - - - • 300,000.00
No. shares authorized 12,000
No. share.s oulsta,nding 12,000
Surplus • • • - • - - • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 400,000.00
Undivided profits : . . . • . . . . .
199,987.27
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
899,987.27
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
$14,614,597.32
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS - - • • •
.MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits ior the 15 calendar
days ending with call date • • • • • - . • . • • • • • . • $13,154,318.37
Average of total loans for the 15 calendar
days ending with call date - • - - •••• - ••• ••• • 9,150,122.75
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
Pledged assets and securities loaned (book vatue):
•
U.S. Government obligations, direct and guaranteed,
Pledged to secure deposits and other llabllilies - - • - • $700,000.00

1

~ Calendan

ASSETS

'

We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this report of
condition and declare tbat it has been eJtamined by us and to the best of our
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
Theodore T. Reed, Jr.
Fred W. Crow, Jr.- Directors
Leslie F. Fulh

SUMMER
SLEEPWEAR

-r

of$

4

or Pomeroy, Ohio and Forel4n and Domn tlc SubsldiariH, at the cl01e ol
bualne81 June 30, 1173, 1 B\!lle beaklng blltllutlon orpolzod and openttl"'
under the beoklng lawa Oll thil Slate and a member of the Fedel'lll RHerve
Syo!em. Publlohed In aceordance with a· call made by the State Dulling
Aulhorltleo and by the Federal Reoerve Bank of this District.
. •

I, Roger W. Hysell, Cashier, of the above-riamed bank do hereby declare
that thf:! report of condition is true to the best of my knowledge and helle!.
Roger W. lfyseU

'

Good Choice of
Colors .

~ Social

I

The Farmers Bank and Savings _Company

9 to .9 DAILY eNOon to 8 SUNDAY

.w·E'RE HOLDING PRICES

NYLON

+ +

Baby lood 11 mlf hl y n ptn."
aive whe n " ba by ' h 22 , and
with a labwloua appolltt .

·
StaleNo. mx
CONSOLIDATED "EPORT Ot' CONDITION OF

' '

501

~3)~@·: · ' 1 ,;,&gt;.'~~$-~

TnklnM a plunc " lrownt•d
"Jlf"' 11.1 •irp&lt;J•·t pcr•nnnol

By PHIL PASTUHt~T
Old·tl men recall when ynu
could ta ke a trip wilhout tak ·
In&amp; a pill ,

'GALLIPOLIS - The Galltu
County Volunteer Emerwency
Sqund made two runs F'riday.
The squud was called to the
residence of Edeth Bradley , 1;,
Dun Jones Rd., where she w1is
re portedly having nerv ous
problems. No lrentment was
required enroute to Ro~er
Medical Center.
Ida Green, 80, 115 Bastian!
Dr., cmnplnined of difficulty in
br eathing. 1'he emergency
squad administered first aid at
the scene and on the way to
Holzer Medical Cnter.

CARPETI·N.G SALEJ.J

Don 't

•

-:-The Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sltl1day, July 16, Jll73

.
'.
8- The Sunday ·Times ·Sentinei,Stulday, July 15,1973

BREAD

'

SPORTSWEAR

.

Flexible, orta.llzecl Jtorate, plus
IC)OOio 1'1 ost·Proof ,,_..,. ..
e0ia¥e..ence. ·

C~EARANCE.

1

MEN!S &amp;BOY'~,

SUMMER
' '
SPORTSWEAR

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

•

LONG GREEN

CUCUMBERS

lO~each

Gal.

Carton
'

ARNOLD GRATE
742-4211

' POMEROY

I.G.A.

l38Ff

399.95

Trade In '50.00

'

.
.• 1

RUTLAND

M&amp;R SHOPPING
CENTER
,

IGA FOODLINER
MIDDLEPORT · ·

�•

•

'

•

II - The ~day Ttmu ·Sentinel, S-..day, July l$, 1973

''

•

·
, Party honors Mrs. M urray .

10- tbe&amp;mdayTime.s -sentinei,Sunday,July 15,1973

MIDDI£PORT - A dinner
purty honoring Mrs . James
Murray, Middleport, on her
93rd birthday and her. greatgranddnughter, Tammy Giles
of Ravenswood, W. Va . 'on her
fifth birthday, both born on
1July 9, was celebrated Sunday

Mobile x-ray.
bus coming on
July 24-25-26
POMEROY - Mrs. Jane
Brown, Meigs County TB and
Health Association Nurse ,
an nounced Friday that the
mobile x-ray bus will be on
the Rev . and Mrs. Cecil Wise, Pomeroy's upper parking lot,
Miss Joan Wise, Mrs. Roxie next to the barbecue stand,
Oiler, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin! July 24, 25 and 26 from 2 to 7
Bonecutter, Mrs. Rosemary p.m. daily.
Hysell, Mrs. Bruce Teaford,
Ths purpose of the mobile
Sherrie Teaford, Rosalie Wise, unit is for those persons who
Mr . and Mrs. Larry Jeffers, have been · notified by letter
Mrs . Nancy Manley , Mrs . that they mu.st be x-rayed.
Jennnie BuckleY,, Rita Casto, Those who received letters
Kimberly Buctley, Penny mustbringths letter when they
Jeffers, Candy Carmichael, come. If lor any reason Mrs.
Mrs Loretta Tiemeyer, Lester Bro.wn has not conta~ted a
Byers, Mr. and Mrs. Wesley · postllvereactor, they too are to
Young Annie Hager John Dill take advantage of the serv1ce.
Daisy 1Mae Sisson,' Mr. and
Mrs. Brown also reported
Mrs . Lawrence Manley, that all teache.rs a?d school
Jeannie Casto, Barbara Me- personnel of Metgs Htgh School
Dade, Mrs . Ruby Eynon, are to appear at the Meigs
Timmy, Debbie, Donny, and. County Health. Department
Dana Eynon, Ronnie, Kenny, J~e 23 for skm tests. The
Larry Snyder, Mrs. Bernard office.Is open from 8:30a .m. to
Wallace, Sherrie Hysell and 12 noon and from 1 to 4 p,.m.
Jut ie Hysell.
.::::::=::::::~:=:~=:~::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::r.:
Mrs. Wallace handled the
POMEROY- Mr and Mrs.
decorating for the anniversary John Redovian, Flatwoods Rd.,
party. Nwnerous gifts and are announcing birth of Leigh
flowers were presented to the Ann Redovian, weighing 7 lbs.
couple. Assisting with the and 3 oz. at Holzer Medical
serving were Mrs. Wallace and ·Center Friday.
Mrs. Tiemeyer.

Observe 46th anniversary

Miss jenny Proffitt
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED -The engagement and
approaching marriage of Miss Jenny Marie Proffitt to Mark
Edwin Smith, son of Mrs. Evelyn Smith, Syracuse, and the
late Harold E. Smith, is being announced by her parents, Mr
and Mrs. Dale R Proffitt, Portland. Miss Proffitt is presently
employed at the Farmers Bank and Savings Co. Smith is comanager of the Meigs Equipment Co. The open c~urch
wedding will be an event of August 4 at 7:30 p.in. at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ.

POMEROY - Agnes and Eldon Weeks, who will celebrate .
their golden wedding anniversary next SUnday, are asking that
their friends not bring gifts, that they just c9ffie and join in the
observance of the occasion.
The open house hours are from 2 to 5 p.m. but Mr. and Mrs.
Weeks are extending an invitation to everyone to come at noon
for a "carry.in" dinner.

SELDOM DO the Gilmores, Elza and'Evelyn, get out of town,
so their five days at Fox Lake, Dl., with their son, Joe, and Linda
POMEROY- Mt. and Mrs.
was quite a treat. Their sons, Mike, still at home, and Roger, an · Marion Parker, Long Bottom,
OSU
student, accompanied them
on the trip. are announcing the recent
Highlights of their vacation were an afternoon tour of the marriage of their daughter,
Picard China Co. at Anlloch,.Dl. where Joe Js employed, a day at Carolyn Loul•e, .to Lewis E.
the Milwaukee Zoo, another day at Lake Geneva, and a picnic on Smith; son of Mrs. Freida
the shore of Lake Michigan. Linda accompanied the Gilmores Smith, Pomeroy, and the late
back to Pomeroy for a two week visit with her parents, Mr. a~d Ed Smith.
Mrs. Gardner Wehrung.
The couple was married

IF YOU ARE a senior citizen and interested in going to the
· Ohio State Fair on Southern Ohio Day, August 24 make your
reservations now at the senior Citizens Center in the old
Pomeroy Junior High School building.
Eleanor Thomas, Meigs County Council project director,
advises that two air-conditioned buses have been chartered for
that day. Cost of the bus ticket and admission into the
fairgrounds will be between $6.50 and $7.75 and once inside the
grounds a shuttle bus will provide transportation directly to the
senior citizens' tents. Mrs. Thomas suggests that those going
plan to take a sack lunch pr have adequate money to purchase
their food. But the important thing right now is to telephone in
. your reservation.
Incidentally, Mrs. Thomas is one of th(ee chairpersons for
Southern Ohio Day at State Fair. There will be lots of activities
for the senior citizens including a talent contest, and ihe deadline
for entering that is July 25:
Special awards will be'given and each county may nominate
someone to receive. \he prominent senior citizens award the
community service award, the senior volunteer service a~ard
or the Mr. Senior Citizen award. Nominations can be made b;
individuals or organizations by simply sending the name of the
person, the award for which he is nominated, and the reasons for
. the nomination to the Meigs County Council on Aging, Pomeroy.
Entertainment that·day will include the Dixieland Band the
• Youth Choir, the All.Ohio Boys Band and the All .Ohio Syrnph'ony.
There will he numerous displays, demonstrations on nutrition
. people there to confer with about social services, and free .coff~
and soft drinks all day.
The important thing is that the local Council on Aging know
just how many senior citizens want to mak the trip to Columbus
and who wants to participate in the talent contest.
'
Again the deadline for getting in on the talent contest is July
25; thede,adline for making bus reservations is August i, and the
number to call is 992-7886.

Patrol will press
rules for bicycles
GALLIPOLIS - Officers of
the Ohio Sate Highway Patrol,
Galli a; Meigs Post, in response
to a drastic increase in bicycle
accidents and fatalities, are
rigidly enforcing traffic laws
within this vehicle group according to Lt. Wigglesworth,
Post commander.
"Bicycles and motorcycles
are subject to the same laws as
cars, trucks and other
vehicles." Lt. Wigglesworth•
said. "However many cycle
users exhibit an outright
disregard for these laws and
therefore present a traffic
hazard.to other vehicles while
endangering themselves."
He listed the following
frequent actions of bicycle
riders that are illegal and
extremely dangerous:
-Not stopping at stop signs,
traf(lc llshts, driveways, and
oilier areas that/call foe a full

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stop before proceeding.
- Carrying more persons
than the vehicle is designed to
transport.
- Traveling at dusk or at
night wiih insufficient lighting.
, -Not signaling for' turns.
- Driving on the wrong side
of the road, against the traffic.
"We encourage bicyclists to
study Ohio traffic regulations If
they are unfamiliar with them,
to obey these regulations, and
avoid involvement In a serious
traffic accident," Lt Wtggiesowrth said.

Ripe Old Age
The Caucasus mountain re·
g10n of the Sovie t Union is
home to the world 's largest
well·documenled numher of
people above 100 years old . A
1970, census placed the re·
glon s number or centenarians
al 4.500 l()oljj ,000.

Divorce asked

I

GALLIPOLIS - Franklin J .
Jones, Cheshire, ha~ Jiled for
divorce from his wife, Cherry
Lynn, in Common Pleas Court.
Jones charges extreme cruelty
and gross neglect of duty. They
were married April 22, 1973,
and have no chlldren.
Margaret M. Goodman, 30,
York, Pa., has filed a
reciprocal support action
against her ex-husband,
Raymond H. Goodman, 30, Rt.
l, Vinton. Mrs. Goodman
charges that the defendant has
refused and neglected to
provide support for their one
child, whom Mrs. Goodman
received custody or in a
divorce proceeding on July 5,
i972.

Men's Suits
Wool, Dacron
Knit
Men's
Sport
Coats

We have added more
merchandise to our rack
of Men 's and Boys'

Suits and Sport Coats

Foreman &amp; Abbott

t

.
~

;M~· and Mrs; Harry S!awter ·

Da~id Sla11!~er., . weds
··Miss Rhea j. Mora

$68·
9
95
tl . .

. i...
~

Your Thom MeAn Store
225 N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport

of

SALE!

HER--- .--~-

Ladies'
Pant Suits and
Better Dresses

MENS: WHITE SHOES

NOW

LADIES: SPECTATORS
HUSH PUPPIES AND MISS AMERICA

Ladies' Blouses
and Knit Toos

Stvled by Lady
M~nhattan,

Lori

BAKER FURNITURE

Ladies' SLACKS
Polyester Knits,
Denims and
Permanent Press

ladies'
Shorts and
Knit Tops

1- Table of Men's
I
.
·Permanent Press PantsValues To 12.00

1- Rack ladies'
Pant Suits
Pant Dre~ses

I

Jfl,,

heritage house

Men's Short Sleeve
Dress Shirts and
Sport Shirts

ssooPR.

Men's Dress
and Casual
Pants

1- TaoJe Ladies'
Shorts, Blouses
Pedal Pushers

Men's Dress
Straw
Hats

Ladies' Knit

Men's Numbered
·and Lettered
T-SHIRTS

Ladies'
Hosiery and
Hose

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THE SHOE BOX- M
-iddle-port

.....

TWO-YEAR
CERTIFICATES
OF DEPOSIT

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

NOW

20.0/C'oOFF luggage 20 O//0
20 0/0FF
NO LAY-AWAYS
I_CO___.
NO APPROVALS'
50 0/0oFF
A~ SA. LES CASH• .
/C
-~2S!liz:e~~s ~27:·~29
Bah r Cloth lers
50 0//C00FF MIDDLEPORT, o~
Me~

!- Table
· Bermuda Shorts

e. :.:Me: n:. :·s~.:Si: ,ze:_:s

2:=.._.9
-31

..

Pays you •••
.~50.00 per· month
(Minimum Deposit, slO,OOO)

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A-C-M-1-A
•

ATHENS COUNTY
.MONTHLY INCOME
~
ACCOUNT

COATS

t~B-:erm._ud.-a. _sh..;. or,ts. ;. ____,.....___

Men's Shirts
and
Shirt Jacs

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connlee

30%0FF
30%0FF
50 %

:~

·s

1699

SWIM WEAR

Men's
Swim Trunks

Caii992-S321 For Free Estimate

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LADIES'

Jackets and
Windbreakers

tection.

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A look that 's near the top on everyone's
list of favorites: Co~nle's strapbound
casual. Comfort? Loads of it! Super
looks? See for yourself! .Everyone's
wantin' it to pair with their new shirt·
waists and pant put·togethers . Black.
Brown. and Navy

Men's Knit
Pullover
Shirts

Men's Lightweight-

• A flexible dUct kill hal hooks
up easily to your ·exiatlng
duct w()rk. .
• A bigger blower molor lor • Fast, easy fn1tallatlon, cornbetter air circulalion.
pie! ely out-ot-ctoora.
• Amana 'Electro-coating lin· • Engllie~red for Quiet operaieh for maximum rust prolion. indoors and oul.

put this casual
on your
"most-wanted" list

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VISITS SISTER
Mr and Mrs Edgar Peoples,Columbus, have returned to
their home after spending
several days with her sister,
Mrs. Bertha Dailey, P&lt;mieroy, .
and visiting relatives in West
Virginia .

agatnsl heat and humidity in your
Mob1le Home . 1 •

NOW

••h.

.A NEW ADMIRAL '73

lOLA'S

R HIM

PLAN BIBLE SCHOOL
FOREST RUN - Forest Run
Methodist Church will hold
Bible school for one week
beginning Monday from 6:30 to
8 p.m. Everyone is welcome to
attend .

If ~ou're fighting a- IQsing battle

f

. ]f!/y
Clearance
Ladies' Fashions
- AccesSories

SALE CONTINUES. ~SAVINGS OF 20% To 50

SON BORN
POMEROY - Mr and Mrs.
Scott L. Walton, Mulberrv
Heights, Pomeroy, the former
Geri Bowling, Gallipolis, are
announcing the birth of their
first child, an dght pound son,
Sean Lynn, on July 6 at the
Holzer Medical · Center.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs . .Kermit L. Walton,
Pomeroy, and maternal
grandparents are Mrs. Pearl
)Bowling, Gallipolis, and G. C.
!Bowling, Homossasa Springs,
Fla . The maternal greatgrandparent is Mrs. Rose
Cunningham, Gallagher, W.
Va
, and the paternal greatgrandparents are Oscar
Poetker, Jackson and Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Walton, Wellston.

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Save Dollars!

BAHR'S SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE

June 2 in Pearisburg, Va.
Mrs. Smith is a graduate of
Ohio University arid is
presently employed in the
Eastern Local School Dlstrici.
Smith is employed with the Sen
Tom Corporation. They reside
in Middleport.

1

BOOSTERS TO MEET
POMEROY - The. Meigs
High School Band Boosters will
meet at 7:30p.m. Wednesday
at the high school band room.
Parents needing a list of articles to be taken to band camp
can secure it from director
Dwight Goins at that time.

•·
with n dinner party at the
Murray home .
.
The table was covered with a
~lue and white cloth and
featured u center arrangement
of blue hydrangeas from the
garden of Mrs. Murray. Gifts
and cards were presented to
the honored guests . and piclures were taken in the afternoon. Mrs. Murray received
several calls of congratu-

IS PATIENT
MIDDLEPORT - Richard
Richmond is a surgical patient
at the Holzer Medical Center.
.His room number is 231.

Lewis E. Smith
weds Miss Parker

day to Grandmother and
la(ions.
Attending the obaetVJnCe Tammy".
were Mr. an~ Mrs. William
Dow, Mr. and Mra. Dwaine
Giles, Tammy and Angela, Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Comer, their
daughter and son, all of
Ravenswood, and William
Murray, Worthington, Ky. Due ·
lo Illness Mr. and Mrs. Randolph Ward, son-in-law and
daughter of Mrs. Murray, were
unable to attend.
Main al Sycamore
The decorated birthday cake
POMEROY. OHIO
was Inscribed "Happy Birth·

'

Mr. and Mrs. George Casto

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
George Casto celebrated their
46th wedding anniversary
recenlly with a party at the
home of their daughter, Mrs.
Fred Snyder, Lincoln Hill.
Wedding bells and blue and
yellow streamers decorated
the home. The anniversary
table featured a white lace
cloth with blue bow decorations
at the corners. A three tiered
wedding cake topped with
white wedding hells centered
the table. Vases of yellow
mums were at each end of the
table. The cake was served
with ice cream, mints, potato
chips, coffee and soft drinks .
Games were played and prizes
were presented to the Rev .
Cecil Wise, the oldest man
attending, M~s . Cecil Wise, the
oldest woman, Larry Jeffers,
the youngest father , Mrs.
Becky Teaford, the youngest
mother and Joan Wise the
door prize.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Bentz and daughter,
Dreama Sue, Mrs. Jw:- es Fink,

No Lava
MI!&gt;S 'alhy Nllblc, Ccdill'VIIIc ;· Jeffers and Mike t.awson,
while swooUJCurt roses illy or slrccL length dress and wore a into a green und hlue punt suit
Though an erupting volc1no
and wore the rosebud CIJI'""ge IU hurd Gulhcil, L&lt;l('kbourne; Albany .
the valley and baby's breuth, white carnutlon cor!Wge.
br1ngs Lo 1nind p1ctures of
nurlng the cerctnony the from her wt'&lt;ldin~ l)l)uquet. Mr . und Mrs. Carl Close,
flowmg rivers of boiling l.lva, ·
She !Vlii'C ~ gold locket, a gift
Marletlll;
Mr
and
Mrs.
Floyd
not
all act1ve volcanos emit
J'lo.•rl·fmll ar1 Vet&gt;p
from the groom, F'or the couple movL'&lt;l to the altar for MIH.I Mary Mora c·au~ht th~
lava
. Mount Taal in the Phil·
Rruoklns,
Athens:
Wallace
CIHtrh•s Curtis. •lect •d vice"IIOOicthlng oid" lladlllon, she the cumllellghtlng service. The . bridal bouquet , and Cral~
•pp•ne
s, with ' a history of
Mcclurg , Georgia; Mrs. Earl r&lt;\s rtl,1n t undc·r· Presrdent
carried a bit of ribbon frpm her candles, given to the bride and llnycs, the bl·idc's Karl.cr, a
dcolh
destruction , ha $
Jngcll:;, Sr , and Mrs. Charlotte lcrbert Hoover, w}J s of IndJan spewedand
forth
noxlou• gases,
malernul ~real-grandmother 's groom hy the minister an~ handmade gift from Mrs.
M. ,Jenks, Muson, W. Va ; Mrs. ancc!itry fir s ffi(Jthcr was a steaming mud and
and
signifying
their
separate
lines,
Vernon
Nease
.
wedding dress and Miss
lull -blooded· mcm hcr of the
Ge
ne
Jeffers,
Miss
Margie
·While-hot
rocks
b~t
never
The bride Is u junior in home
Kaw tribe ·
Charlene Wolff' I gold earrings. were lighted from the altar
lava .
candles.
Together
they
lighl.cd
economics
1
11
Ohio
Stale
Mltl8 Margie .I elfers, Albany,
wns maid of honor. Bridesmaid the single and larger candle University where she Is now
was Miss Wolff, .Cleveland, representing the unl'on of their attending the summer quurlcl',
The groom re ceived his
college roommate of U1e bride . llvets.
•
While the guests moved bachelor of science degree
Miss Mary Mora, sister of the
through
the receiving line, the from the Collc~c of Agriculture
~Ide, was the junior ~rides­
maid , and Miss Angela church bells pealed. MijjS Tina and Home F:conomics cufn
Marlnaccl, niece of the groom, Marinucci, niece of the groom, laude, with di stinction in
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was flower girl. Rlngbearer gave each guest a pink nctliid Agronomy, at Ohln Stule"June
8. lie Is now with the Franklin
•
H'
was Master Bryan f.ee Ingels, rice packel.
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Mi"" Robyn MU!s, m. 3, County Soli and Water.. Connephew of the bride.
·r.
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The bride's aitendanill wore Pomeroy. attired in " pink SCI'VUtlon Service with offices
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pink . robbin-plaid cotton flo1·at floor length gown , in Columbus.
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'!'he couple ar~ at home to
~ . '
seersucker . They
were registered the guests at u table
!I,
1
covered
in
white
silk
with
gold
U1eir
friends at their newly
designed with round necklines
t"
fringe.
On
the
table
was
a
·
furnished
apartment
on
Slinch'i
short pyffed sleeves empire
crystal
howl
on
a
gold
base
In
comb
Drive,
Columbus.
waists with a band of ~elf·
Following the weddin g
material
defining the waistline · which floated a single rose.
•t
and terminating in along tieat Following the ceremoy, it was rehear.a l on Friday evening,
the back. The softly gathered presented to Mrs. Karr, the wedding party joined
families and friends for a
skirts were floor length. Pic- organist.
The wedding reception wail supper on the lawn allhe Mora
'
lure hats of · deep pink corn·
held at the home of the bride's home . During the evening, the
pleted their costume.
The attendants ' colonial parents. The bride's table, bride 11nd groom presented
bouques were of pompons covered with a white.cloth with gifts to their attendants and
tinted in the tooes of pink of the lace inserts, featured a three members of the wedding party .
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.,
Attending from out of the
dresses . The flower girl wore a tiered wedding cake Lopped
ff
Door length gown of identical with white satin wedding bells county ""rc Mr. and Mrs.
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design with a headband of in a heart·shaped filagre e Myron W&lt;J.ff, Miss Charlene
'I
the same material edged In frame . Pink roses and white Wolff, Miss 'llarcia Wolff and
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deep pink net and enhanced spun-sugar wedding bell s Miss Ca rol Ann Duerr,
I.
with pink lily ; of the valley. decorated the layers separated Cleveland; Mr . and Mrs.
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Hiram 0. Slawter and Paige,
Eech wore a heart-shaped by filagreed ,;olumns.
White tapers in crystal Fort Thomas, Ky.; Mr. and
locket, gifts of the bride .
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George Derringer, Dayton, candelabra used· at the wed- Mrs. Paul Hill and family,
was best man. Ushers were ding reception of the bride's Indianapolis, Ind.; Miss Kathy
and George
· Stephen Dittmer, Cincinnati, mother were on either side of Wyoroster
· and Ray Karr, Pomeroy. They the cake. Daisy and wedding Derringer, Dayton; David H.
wore formal attire and white bell mints were in pink and Mora, Nellis Air Force Base,
carnation boutonnieres. Th~ white. Leathertcaf · and Nevada; Mrs. John Butcher,
...
..
groom's boutonniere was a . periwinkle surrounded the Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hayes,
cake and the punch bowl in Cra ig Hayes, Belpre; Miss
white rosebud.
I
For her daughter's wedding, which floated a ring mold of Anette Kaufman, Parkers1',
and Mrs.
Mrs. Mora chose a floor length pink roses. The stemmed nut bw·g, W. Va.; Mr
POMEROY - The marriage seven-branch
candelabra . gown of blue polyester crepe dish of antique crystal used on Norman Fisher, Senecaville;
of Miss Rhe~ Jeanne(£e:.Mora, entwined with greenery.
with scoop nee~ and double the table is a prized possession· Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Fisher
daugh~ of' . M,r. ~Qd , Mrs.
A white prayer bench ruffle collar. Her corsage was of the groom, the gift of his late and family, Cambridge; Mr.
I•
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and Mrs. Robert Shumaker,
· Donald" e. Mora Rt. 3, completed ' the setting. A white carnations edged in blue. grandmother.
Presiding at the refreshment Mrs . Delbert · Robinson ,
Pomeroy, and Harry David hurri ca~~ candle encircled The mother of the grooin chose
Slawter son of Mr. and Mrs . . with daisies was ·on the organ a gown of peach polyester table were Mrs. Paul Hayes, · Somerset; Mr . and Mrs. Vince
11111 1973 Admlral . 3~oo.· Duplex •,·
Hiram Slawter, Rt. , Mid: 1 anii on he piano was a white crepe. The standup collar of aunt of the bride, Miss Robyn Marinacci and daughters,
dleport, was solemnized at the arrangement in a polished the white top was banded in Mills and Miss Cathy Smith . Reynoldsburg.
free-/refrigerator IND2239 ·
Mr. and Mrs. James Smith
Chester United Methodist wood candelabrum, made and silk embroidered braid which .Mrs Earl Ingels, Jr., sister of
Church, Saturday, June 16, .at presented· to the Chester circled ttie waist and defined the bride, was hostess . and daughters, Columbus;
7:30p.m.
Church by George Genpeimer. the lines of the floor length She was assisted by Mrs. Waid Miss Debbie Smith , Steve
The ~ey , Robert Card per- _White, 110wa-marked .the pews. skirt. Her corsage was while Spencer ·and Mrs . Leonard Dittmer, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Duplex freezer-refrigerator . One push ... and presto!
Hayes, Mrs. Daniel Hayes,
formed the double ring
Given in marriage by her carnations edged in pink. Mrs. Erwin.
You get cold water, cold -saving convenience the 3-door
For a. short wedding trip to David Hayes, Cincinnati; Miss
ceremdLy. Mrs. Horace Karr, father, the bride chose a bridal Pearl Mora, grandmother of
models. Automatic lcemaker ... exclusive tempered
organisl, 'presented a half-hol!l' gown of white silk organza over lhe bride, was in an apricot Kentucky, the bride changed Linda Nutter, Worthingto n;
glass cantilever shelves . .. "Bookcase" freezer door
of pre·l)l!JitW musi~incll\,d~~g,... smnrn. r ~(leta, designed with
shelves and avtomatic door closers. (There are seven 3- 1
0, Perfect Love " "Tara's empire bodice and bishop
Theme," "Twelfth of Never" sleeves. 'The standup collar
door Duplex models to choose from plus one 2-door
and "Romance.'' Mrs. '·Dale was ·outlined with venice lace
model.) Another _great convenience· the new Admiral
Machir, soloist, sang "If," in rose design which also enCold Can Ca~ousel! It holds up to twelve 12-ounce soft
"Whil~~TI1,9U.RQes~f..~W,i!J1,., circled the upper. ~leeves and
drink. or cans ·_ and always keeps the co ldest one up
These Hands,'1'.'and t!tlhng ·thi!· --cuffs. Narrow' bands of the
front and fresh
.
ceremony, "The Lord's same lace extended from the
r.:..:.:.,,--Prayer."
shoulder to the hem enhancing
White 'flowers, candles and the lines of the gown.
greenery decorated the saneA satin band circling the
tuary • for ~h~ candl~llght waist ended in a flat bow at the
servic-e, Mark Mora, brother of back. The detachable train was
the bride, was acolyte. In the edged with lace as was the
altar .v.ases . were gladioli, bridat'veil of silk illusion which
cushion mums, and clipped fell in graceful 'folds from an
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY
palm. ~White column urns of. , open-crown juliette bridal cap
Culligan daisies.stood op ~jther of lace roses embossed with
side of the chancel steps. seed pearls.
Within the chancel were two
Her bridal· bouquet was of
N. 2nd

ONE-YEAR
CERTIFICATES
OF DEPOSIT

.%cr;
\

Pays ·vou •••
'23,96 ·per month
(Minimum De,posit, 55,000)

INTEREST CHECKS MAILED
MONTHLY

and Women 's

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OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT NOW!
All Deposits Insured io S20,ooo

by Tllf ~~~tra'l $avlng~ and

'

Loan Insurance Corp.

Hours; Mon.-Wed .. 9 to 3~ Thurs . 91o Noon- Friday 9 to 6- Sat. 9to noon

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II - The ~day Ttmu ·Sentinel, S-..day, July l$, 1973

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, Party honors Mrs. M urray .

10- tbe&amp;mdayTime.s -sentinei,Sunday,July 15,1973

MIDDI£PORT - A dinner
purty honoring Mrs . James
Murray, Middleport, on her
93rd birthday and her. greatgranddnughter, Tammy Giles
of Ravenswood, W. Va . 'on her
fifth birthday, both born on
1July 9, was celebrated Sunday

Mobile x-ray.
bus coming on
July 24-25-26
POMEROY - Mrs. Jane
Brown, Meigs County TB and
Health Association Nurse ,
an nounced Friday that the
mobile x-ray bus will be on
the Rev . and Mrs. Cecil Wise, Pomeroy's upper parking lot,
Miss Joan Wise, Mrs. Roxie next to the barbecue stand,
Oiler, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin! July 24, 25 and 26 from 2 to 7
Bonecutter, Mrs. Rosemary p.m. daily.
Hysell, Mrs. Bruce Teaford,
Ths purpose of the mobile
Sherrie Teaford, Rosalie Wise, unit is for those persons who
Mr . and Mrs. Larry Jeffers, have been · notified by letter
Mrs . Nancy Manley , Mrs . that they mu.st be x-rayed.
Jennnie BuckleY,, Rita Casto, Those who received letters
Kimberly Buctley, Penny mustbringths letter when they
Jeffers, Candy Carmichael, come. If lor any reason Mrs.
Mrs Loretta Tiemeyer, Lester Bro.wn has not conta~ted a
Byers, Mr. and Mrs. Wesley · postllvereactor, they too are to
Young Annie Hager John Dill take advantage of the serv1ce.
Daisy 1Mae Sisson,' Mr. and
Mrs. Brown also reported
Mrs . Lawrence Manley, that all teache.rs a?d school
Jeannie Casto, Barbara Me- personnel of Metgs Htgh School
Dade, Mrs . Ruby Eynon, are to appear at the Meigs
Timmy, Debbie, Donny, and. County Health. Department
Dana Eynon, Ronnie, Kenny, J~e 23 for skm tests. The
Larry Snyder, Mrs. Bernard office.Is open from 8:30a .m. to
Wallace, Sherrie Hysell and 12 noon and from 1 to 4 p,.m.
Jut ie Hysell.
.::::::=::::::~:=:~=:~::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::r.:
Mrs. Wallace handled the
POMEROY- Mr and Mrs.
decorating for the anniversary John Redovian, Flatwoods Rd.,
party. Nwnerous gifts and are announcing birth of Leigh
flowers were presented to the Ann Redovian, weighing 7 lbs.
couple. Assisting with the and 3 oz. at Holzer Medical
serving were Mrs. Wallace and ·Center Friday.
Mrs. Tiemeyer.

Observe 46th anniversary

Miss jenny Proffitt
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED -The engagement and
approaching marriage of Miss Jenny Marie Proffitt to Mark
Edwin Smith, son of Mrs. Evelyn Smith, Syracuse, and the
late Harold E. Smith, is being announced by her parents, Mr
and Mrs. Dale R Proffitt, Portland. Miss Proffitt is presently
employed at the Farmers Bank and Savings Co. Smith is comanager of the Meigs Equipment Co. The open c~urch
wedding will be an event of August 4 at 7:30 p.in. at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ.

POMEROY - Agnes and Eldon Weeks, who will celebrate .
their golden wedding anniversary next SUnday, are asking that
their friends not bring gifts, that they just c9ffie and join in the
observance of the occasion.
The open house hours are from 2 to 5 p.m. but Mr. and Mrs.
Weeks are extending an invitation to everyone to come at noon
for a "carry.in" dinner.

SELDOM DO the Gilmores, Elza and'Evelyn, get out of town,
so their five days at Fox Lake, Dl., with their son, Joe, and Linda
POMEROY- Mt. and Mrs.
was quite a treat. Their sons, Mike, still at home, and Roger, an · Marion Parker, Long Bottom,
OSU
student, accompanied them
on the trip. are announcing the recent
Highlights of their vacation were an afternoon tour of the marriage of their daughter,
Picard China Co. at Anlloch,.Dl. where Joe Js employed, a day at Carolyn Loul•e, .to Lewis E.
the Milwaukee Zoo, another day at Lake Geneva, and a picnic on Smith; son of Mrs. Freida
the shore of Lake Michigan. Linda accompanied the Gilmores Smith, Pomeroy, and the late
back to Pomeroy for a two week visit with her parents, Mr. a~d Ed Smith.
Mrs. Gardner Wehrung.
The couple was married

IF YOU ARE a senior citizen and interested in going to the
· Ohio State Fair on Southern Ohio Day, August 24 make your
reservations now at the senior Citizens Center in the old
Pomeroy Junior High School building.
Eleanor Thomas, Meigs County Council project director,
advises that two air-conditioned buses have been chartered for
that day. Cost of the bus ticket and admission into the
fairgrounds will be between $6.50 and $7.75 and once inside the
grounds a shuttle bus will provide transportation directly to the
senior citizens' tents. Mrs. Thomas suggests that those going
plan to take a sack lunch pr have adequate money to purchase
their food. But the important thing right now is to telephone in
. your reservation.
Incidentally, Mrs. Thomas is one of th(ee chairpersons for
Southern Ohio Day at State Fair. There will be lots of activities
for the senior citizens including a talent contest, and ihe deadline
for entering that is July 25:
Special awards will be'given and each county may nominate
someone to receive. \he prominent senior citizens award the
community service award, the senior volunteer service a~ard
or the Mr. Senior Citizen award. Nominations can be made b;
individuals or organizations by simply sending the name of the
person, the award for which he is nominated, and the reasons for
. the nomination to the Meigs County Council on Aging, Pomeroy.
Entertainment that·day will include the Dixieland Band the
• Youth Choir, the All.Ohio Boys Band and the All .Ohio Syrnph'ony.
There will he numerous displays, demonstrations on nutrition
. people there to confer with about social services, and free .coff~
and soft drinks all day.
The important thing is that the local Council on Aging know
just how many senior citizens want to mak the trip to Columbus
and who wants to participate in the talent contest.
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Again the deadline for getting in on the talent contest is July
25; thede,adline for making bus reservations is August i, and the
number to call is 992-7886.

Patrol will press
rules for bicycles
GALLIPOLIS - Officers of
the Ohio Sate Highway Patrol,
Galli a; Meigs Post, in response
to a drastic increase in bicycle
accidents and fatalities, are
rigidly enforcing traffic laws
within this vehicle group according to Lt. Wigglesworth,
Post commander.
"Bicycles and motorcycles
are subject to the same laws as
cars, trucks and other
vehicles." Lt. Wigglesworth•
said. "However many cycle
users exhibit an outright
disregard for these laws and
therefore present a traffic
hazard.to other vehicles while
endangering themselves."
He listed the following
frequent actions of bicycle
riders that are illegal and
extremely dangerous:
-Not stopping at stop signs,
traf(lc llshts, driveways, and
oilier areas that/call foe a full

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stop before proceeding.
- Carrying more persons
than the vehicle is designed to
transport.
- Traveling at dusk or at
night wiih insufficient lighting.
, -Not signaling for' turns.
- Driving on the wrong side
of the road, against the traffic.
"We encourage bicyclists to
study Ohio traffic regulations If
they are unfamiliar with them,
to obey these regulations, and
avoid involvement In a serious
traffic accident," Lt Wtggiesowrth said.

Ripe Old Age
The Caucasus mountain re·
g10n of the Sovie t Union is
home to the world 's largest
well·documenled numher of
people above 100 years old . A
1970, census placed the re·
glon s number or centenarians
al 4.500 l()oljj ,000.

Divorce asked

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GALLIPOLIS - Franklin J .
Jones, Cheshire, ha~ Jiled for
divorce from his wife, Cherry
Lynn, in Common Pleas Court.
Jones charges extreme cruelty
and gross neglect of duty. They
were married April 22, 1973,
and have no chlldren.
Margaret M. Goodman, 30,
York, Pa., has filed a
reciprocal support action
against her ex-husband,
Raymond H. Goodman, 30, Rt.
l, Vinton. Mrs. Goodman
charges that the defendant has
refused and neglected to
provide support for their one
child, whom Mrs. Goodman
received custody or in a
divorce proceeding on July 5,
i972.

Men's Suits
Wool, Dacron
Knit
Men's
Sport
Coats

We have added more
merchandise to our rack
of Men 's and Boys'

Suits and Sport Coats

Foreman &amp; Abbott

t

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;M~· and Mrs; Harry S!awter ·

Da~id Sla11!~er., . weds
··Miss Rhea j. Mora

$68·
9
95
tl . .

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Your Thom MeAn Store
225 N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport

of

SALE!

HER--- .--~-

Ladies'
Pant Suits and
Better Dresses

MENS: WHITE SHOES

NOW

LADIES: SPECTATORS
HUSH PUPPIES AND MISS AMERICA

Ladies' Blouses
and Knit Toos

Stvled by Lady
M~nhattan,

Lori

BAKER FURNITURE

Ladies' SLACKS
Polyester Knits,
Denims and
Permanent Press

ladies'
Shorts and
Knit Tops

1- Table of Men's
I
.
·Permanent Press PantsValues To 12.00

1- Rack ladies'
Pant Suits
Pant Dre~ses

I

Jfl,,

heritage house

Men's Short Sleeve
Dress Shirts and
Sport Shirts

ssooPR.

Men's Dress
and Casual
Pants

1- TaoJe Ladies'
Shorts, Blouses
Pedal Pushers

Men's Dress
Straw
Hats

Ladies' Knit

Men's Numbered
·and Lettered
T-SHIRTS

Ladies'
Hosiery and
Hose

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THE SHOE BOX- M
-iddle-port

.....

TWO-YEAR
CERTIFICATES
OF DEPOSIT

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

NOW

20.0/C'oOFF luggage 20 O//0
20 0/0FF
NO LAY-AWAYS
I_CO___.
NO APPROVALS'
50 0/0oFF
A~ SA. LES CASH• .
/C
-~2S!liz:e~~s ~27:·~29
Bah r Cloth lers
50 0//C00FF MIDDLEPORT, o~
Me~

!- Table
· Bermuda Shorts

e. :.:Me: n:. :·s~.:Si: ,ze:_:s

2:=.._.9
-31

..

Pays you •••
.~50.00 per· month
(Minimum Deposit, slO,OOO)

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A-C-M-1-A
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ATHENS COUNTY
.MONTHLY INCOME
~
ACCOUNT

COATS

t~B-:erm._ud.-a. _sh..;. or,ts. ;. ____,.....___

Men's Shirts
and
Shirt Jacs

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connlee

30%0FF
30%0FF
50 %

:~

·s

1699

SWIM WEAR

Men's
Swim Trunks

Caii992-S321 For Free Estimate

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LADIES'

Jackets and
Windbreakers

tection.

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A look that 's near the top on everyone's
list of favorites: Co~nle's strapbound
casual. Comfort? Loads of it! Super
looks? See for yourself! .Everyone's
wantin' it to pair with their new shirt·
waists and pant put·togethers . Black.
Brown. and Navy

Men's Knit
Pullover
Shirts

Men's Lightweight-

• A flexible dUct kill hal hooks
up easily to your ·exiatlng
duct w()rk. .
• A bigger blower molor lor • Fast, easy fn1tallatlon, cornbetter air circulalion.
pie! ely out-ot-ctoora.
• Amana 'Electro-coating lin· • Engllie~red for Quiet operaieh for maximum rust prolion. indoors and oul.

put this casual
on your
"most-wanted" list

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VISITS SISTER
Mr and Mrs Edgar Peoples,Columbus, have returned to
their home after spending
several days with her sister,
Mrs. Bertha Dailey, P&lt;mieroy, .
and visiting relatives in West
Virginia .

agatnsl heat and humidity in your
Mob1le Home . 1 •

NOW

••h.

.A NEW ADMIRAL '73

lOLA'S

R HIM

PLAN BIBLE SCHOOL
FOREST RUN - Forest Run
Methodist Church will hold
Bible school for one week
beginning Monday from 6:30 to
8 p.m. Everyone is welcome to
attend .

If ~ou're fighting a- IQsing battle

f

. ]f!/y
Clearance
Ladies' Fashions
- AccesSories

SALE CONTINUES. ~SAVINGS OF 20% To 50

SON BORN
POMEROY - Mr and Mrs.
Scott L. Walton, Mulberrv
Heights, Pomeroy, the former
Geri Bowling, Gallipolis, are
announcing the birth of their
first child, an dght pound son,
Sean Lynn, on July 6 at the
Holzer Medical · Center.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs . .Kermit L. Walton,
Pomeroy, and maternal
grandparents are Mrs. Pearl
)Bowling, Gallipolis, and G. C.
!Bowling, Homossasa Springs,
Fla . The maternal greatgrandparent is Mrs. Rose
Cunningham, Gallagher, W.
Va
, and the paternal greatgrandparents are Oscar
Poetker, Jackson and Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Walton, Wellston.

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Save Dollars!

BAHR'S SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE

June 2 in Pearisburg, Va.
Mrs. Smith is a graduate of
Ohio University arid is
presently employed in the
Eastern Local School Dlstrici.
Smith is employed with the Sen
Tom Corporation. They reside
in Middleport.

1

BOOSTERS TO MEET
POMEROY - The. Meigs
High School Band Boosters will
meet at 7:30p.m. Wednesday
at the high school band room.
Parents needing a list of articles to be taken to band camp
can secure it from director
Dwight Goins at that time.

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with n dinner party at the
Murray home .
.
The table was covered with a
~lue and white cloth and
featured u center arrangement
of blue hydrangeas from the
garden of Mrs. Murray. Gifts
and cards were presented to
the honored guests . and piclures were taken in the afternoon. Mrs. Murray received
several calls of congratu-

IS PATIENT
MIDDLEPORT - Richard
Richmond is a surgical patient
at the Holzer Medical Center.
.His room number is 231.

Lewis E. Smith
weds Miss Parker

day to Grandmother and
la(ions.
Attending the obaetVJnCe Tammy".
were Mr. an~ Mrs. William
Dow, Mr. and Mra. Dwaine
Giles, Tammy and Angela, Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Comer, their
daughter and son, all of
Ravenswood, and William
Murray, Worthington, Ky. Due ·
lo Illness Mr. and Mrs. Randolph Ward, son-in-law and
daughter of Mrs. Murray, were
unable to attend.
Main al Sycamore
The decorated birthday cake
POMEROY. OHIO
was Inscribed "Happy Birth·

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Mr. and Mrs. George Casto

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
George Casto celebrated their
46th wedding anniversary
recenlly with a party at the
home of their daughter, Mrs.
Fred Snyder, Lincoln Hill.
Wedding bells and blue and
yellow streamers decorated
the home. The anniversary
table featured a white lace
cloth with blue bow decorations
at the corners. A three tiered
wedding cake topped with
white wedding hells centered
the table. Vases of yellow
mums were at each end of the
table. The cake was served
with ice cream, mints, potato
chips, coffee and soft drinks .
Games were played and prizes
were presented to the Rev .
Cecil Wise, the oldest man
attending, M~s . Cecil Wise, the
oldest woman, Larry Jeffers,
the youngest father , Mrs.
Becky Teaford, the youngest
mother and Joan Wise the
door prize.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Bentz and daughter,
Dreama Sue, Mrs. Jw:- es Fink,

No Lava
MI!&gt;S 'alhy Nllblc, Ccdill'VIIIc ;· Jeffers and Mike t.awson,
while swooUJCurt roses illy or slrccL length dress and wore a into a green und hlue punt suit
Though an erupting volc1no
and wore the rosebud CIJI'""ge IU hurd Gulhcil, L&lt;l('kbourne; Albany .
the valley and baby's breuth, white carnutlon cor!Wge.
br1ngs Lo 1nind p1ctures of
nurlng the cerctnony the from her wt'&lt;ldin~ l)l)uquet. Mr . und Mrs. Carl Close,
flowmg rivers of boiling l.lva, ·
She !Vlii'C ~ gold locket, a gift
Marletlll;
Mr
and
Mrs.
Floyd
not
all act1ve volcanos emit
J'lo.•rl·fmll ar1 Vet&gt;p
from the groom, F'or the couple movL'&lt;l to the altar for MIH.I Mary Mora c·au~ht th~
lava
. Mount Taal in the Phil·
Rruoklns,
Athens:
Wallace
CIHtrh•s Curtis. •lect •d vice"IIOOicthlng oid" lladlllon, she the cumllellghtlng service. The . bridal bouquet , and Cral~
•pp•ne
s, with ' a history of
Mcclurg , Georgia; Mrs. Earl r&lt;\s rtl,1n t undc·r· Presrdent
carried a bit of ribbon frpm her candles, given to the bride and llnycs, the bl·idc's Karl.cr, a
dcolh
destruction , ha $
Jngcll:;, Sr , and Mrs. Charlotte lcrbert Hoover, w}J s of IndJan spewedand
forth
noxlou• gases,
malernul ~real-grandmother 's groom hy the minister an~ handmade gift from Mrs.
M. ,Jenks, Muson, W. Va ; Mrs. ancc!itry fir s ffi(Jthcr was a steaming mud and
and
signifying
their
separate
lines,
Vernon
Nease
.
wedding dress and Miss
lull -blooded· mcm hcr of the
Ge
ne
Jeffers,
Miss
Margie
·While-hot
rocks
b~t
never
The bride Is u junior in home
Kaw tribe ·
Charlene Wolff' I gold earrings. were lighted from the altar
lava .
candles.
Together
they
lighl.cd
economics
1
11
Ohio
Stale
Mltl8 Margie .I elfers, Albany,
wns maid of honor. Bridesmaid the single and larger candle University where she Is now
was Miss Wolff, .Cleveland, representing the unl'on of their attending the summer quurlcl',
The groom re ceived his
college roommate of U1e bride . llvets.
•
While the guests moved bachelor of science degree
Miss Mary Mora, sister of the
through
the receiving line, the from the Collc~c of Agriculture
~Ide, was the junior ~rides­
maid , and Miss Angela church bells pealed. MijjS Tina and Home F:conomics cufn
Marlnaccl, niece of the groom, Marinucci, niece of the groom, laude, with di stinction in
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was flower girl. Rlngbearer gave each guest a pink nctliid Agronomy, at Ohln Stule"June
8. lie Is now with the Franklin
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was Master Bryan f.ee Ingels, rice packel.
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Mi"" Robyn MU!s, m. 3, County Soli and Water.. Connephew of the bride.
·r.
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The bride's aitendanill wore Pomeroy. attired in " pink SCI'VUtlon Service with offices
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pink . robbin-plaid cotton flo1·at floor length gown , in Columbus.
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'!'he couple ar~ at home to
~ . '
seersucker . They
were registered the guests at u table
!I,
1
covered
in
white
silk
with
gold
U1eir
friends at their newly
designed with round necklines
t"
fringe.
On
the
table
was
a
·
furnished
apartment
on
Slinch'i
short pyffed sleeves empire
crystal
howl
on
a
gold
base
In
comb
Drive,
Columbus.
waists with a band of ~elf·
Following the weddin g
material
defining the waistline · which floated a single rose.
•t
and terminating in along tieat Following the ceremoy, it was rehear.a l on Friday evening,
the back. The softly gathered presented to Mrs. Karr, the wedding party joined
families and friends for a
skirts were floor length. Pic- organist.
The wedding reception wail supper on the lawn allhe Mora
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lure hats of · deep pink corn·
held at the home of the bride's home . During the evening, the
pleted their costume.
The attendants ' colonial parents. The bride's table, bride 11nd groom presented
bouques were of pompons covered with a white.cloth with gifts to their attendants and
tinted in the tooes of pink of the lace inserts, featured a three members of the wedding party .
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Attending from out of the
dresses . The flower girl wore a tiered wedding cake Lopped
ff
Door length gown of identical with white satin wedding bells county ""rc Mr. and Mrs.
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design with a headband of in a heart·shaped filagre e Myron W&lt;J.ff, Miss Charlene
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the same material edged In frame . Pink roses and white Wolff, Miss 'llarcia Wolff and
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deep pink net and enhanced spun-sugar wedding bell s Miss Ca rol Ann Duerr,
I.
with pink lily ; of the valley. decorated the layers separated Cleveland; Mr . and Mrs.
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Hiram 0. Slawter and Paige,
Eech wore a heart-shaped by filagreed ,;olumns.
White tapers in crystal Fort Thomas, Ky.; Mr. and
locket, gifts of the bride .
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George Derringer, Dayton, candelabra used· at the wed- Mrs. Paul Hill and family,
was best man. Ushers were ding reception of the bride's Indianapolis, Ind.; Miss Kathy
and George
· Stephen Dittmer, Cincinnati, mother were on either side of Wyoroster
· and Ray Karr, Pomeroy. They the cake. Daisy and wedding Derringer, Dayton; David H.
wore formal attire and white bell mints were in pink and Mora, Nellis Air Force Base,
carnation boutonnieres. Th~ white. Leathertcaf · and Nevada; Mrs. John Butcher,
...
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groom's boutonniere was a . periwinkle surrounded the Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hayes,
cake and the punch bowl in Cra ig Hayes, Belpre; Miss
white rosebud.
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For her daughter's wedding, which floated a ring mold of Anette Kaufman, Parkers1',
and Mrs.
Mrs. Mora chose a floor length pink roses. The stemmed nut bw·g, W. Va.; Mr
POMEROY - The marriage seven-branch
candelabra . gown of blue polyester crepe dish of antique crystal used on Norman Fisher, Senecaville;
of Miss Rhe~ Jeanne(£e:.Mora, entwined with greenery.
with scoop nee~ and double the table is a prized possession· Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Fisher
daugh~ of' . M,r. ~Qd , Mrs.
A white prayer bench ruffle collar. Her corsage was of the groom, the gift of his late and family, Cambridge; Mr.
I•
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and Mrs. Robert Shumaker,
· Donald" e. Mora Rt. 3, completed ' the setting. A white carnations edged in blue. grandmother.
Presiding at the refreshment Mrs . Delbert · Robinson ,
Pomeroy, and Harry David hurri ca~~ candle encircled The mother of the grooin chose
Slawter son of Mr. and Mrs . . with daisies was ·on the organ a gown of peach polyester table were Mrs. Paul Hayes, · Somerset; Mr . and Mrs. Vince
11111 1973 Admlral . 3~oo.· Duplex •,·
Hiram Slawter, Rt. , Mid: 1 anii on he piano was a white crepe. The standup collar of aunt of the bride, Miss Robyn Marinacci and daughters,
dleport, was solemnized at the arrangement in a polished the white top was banded in Mills and Miss Cathy Smith . Reynoldsburg.
free-/refrigerator IND2239 ·
Mr. and Mrs. James Smith
Chester United Methodist wood candelabrum, made and silk embroidered braid which .Mrs Earl Ingels, Jr., sister of
Church, Saturday, June 16, .at presented· to the Chester circled ttie waist and defined the bride, was hostess . and daughters, Columbus;
7:30p.m.
Church by George Genpeimer. the lines of the floor length She was assisted by Mrs. Waid Miss Debbie Smith , Steve
The ~ey , Robert Card per- _White, 110wa-marked .the pews. skirt. Her corsage was while Spencer ·and Mrs . Leonard Dittmer, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Duplex freezer-refrigerator . One push ... and presto!
Hayes, Mrs. Daniel Hayes,
formed the double ring
Given in marriage by her carnations edged in pink. Mrs. Erwin.
You get cold water, cold -saving convenience the 3-door
For a. short wedding trip to David Hayes, Cincinnati; Miss
ceremdLy. Mrs. Horace Karr, father, the bride chose a bridal Pearl Mora, grandmother of
models. Automatic lcemaker ... exclusive tempered
organisl, 'presented a half-hol!l' gown of white silk organza over lhe bride, was in an apricot Kentucky, the bride changed Linda Nutter, Worthingto n;
glass cantilever shelves . .. "Bookcase" freezer door
of pre·l)l!JitW musi~incll\,d~~g,... smnrn. r ~(leta, designed with
shelves and avtomatic door closers. (There are seven 3- 1
0, Perfect Love " "Tara's empire bodice and bishop
Theme," "Twelfth of Never" sleeves. 'The standup collar
door Duplex models to choose from plus one 2-door
and "Romance.'' Mrs. '·Dale was ·outlined with venice lace
model.) Another _great convenience· the new Admiral
Machir, soloist, sang "If," in rose design which also enCold Can Ca~ousel! It holds up to twelve 12-ounce soft
"Whil~~TI1,9U.RQes~f..~W,i!J1,., circled the upper. ~leeves and
drink. or cans ·_ and always keeps the co ldest one up
These Hands,'1'.'and t!tlhng ·thi!· --cuffs. Narrow' bands of the
front and fresh
.
ceremony, "The Lord's same lace extended from the
r.:..:.:.,,--Prayer."
shoulder to the hem enhancing
White 'flowers, candles and the lines of the gown.
greenery decorated the saneA satin band circling the
tuary • for ~h~ candl~llght waist ended in a flat bow at the
servic-e, Mark Mora, brother of back. The detachable train was
the bride, was acolyte. In the edged with lace as was the
altar .v.ases . were gladioli, bridat'veil of silk illusion which
cushion mums, and clipped fell in graceful 'folds from an
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY
palm. ~White column urns of. , open-crown juliette bridal cap
Culligan daisies.stood op ~jther of lace roses embossed with
side of the chancel steps. seed pearls.
Within the chancel were two
Her bridal· bouquet was of
N. 2nd

ONE-YEAR
CERTIFICATES
OF DEPOSIT

.%cr;
\

Pays ·vou •••
'23,96 ·per month
(Minimum De,posit, 55,000)

INTEREST CHECKS MAILED
MONTHLY

and Women 's

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II

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OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT NOW!
All Deposits Insured io S20,ooo

by Tllf ~~~tra'l $avlng~ and

'

Loan Insurance Corp.

Hours; Mon.-Wed .. 9 to 3~ Thurs . 91o Noon- Friday 9 to 6- Sat. 9to noon

�..

I

12 - Tho S111day Times- Sentinel, SWiday, July I~ 1973

Beat....

Richley coming to
Meigs Thursday

.: ; )

Of the Bend ··: -,
~r

a

~_.r

IJob 1/0f'jlich

POMEROY - Laurie Lea Schaefer, Miss America of 1972,
who has a number of friends in the Big Bend area, will be
starring ln ''The Music Man" with John Davidson, film and
television star, at Veterans Memorial Auditorium in Columbus,
July 17 ihrough July 22.
Ron Pataky, Columbus newspaper theater editor, caught
Laurie In the show at Dayton the past week. He wrote :
"John eo-&amp;tars with Laurie Lea Schaefer a gal who
establlahed in short order that she can do considerably more than
stand In an evening gown and weep joyous tears at being named
Miss America of 1972,
"John Kimley has called her a legitimate talent, and she is
precisely that -a gorgeous voice which she knows just how to
use-a wonderfully natural flair for the light comedy required
by the Marion-Librarian role: just about every pJus imaginable.
Laurie ~as simply terrific. "
Laurie started her long trek up the Miss America ladder in
Pomeroy a few years back.

_ _ _ _ _~s_UN_D...
AY_&amp;_MONDAY, JULY 15th &amp; 16th ONLY
R- 72

PANASONIC
MEMBERS OF OHIO ETA PHI Chapter and Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter of Beta Sigma Pili Sorority will be handling the ticket
gates at the Meigs Counl)' Fair next month. The two groups are
composed of some real workers so that coiUity fair board w.U get
a job well done. The sorority gals hope t,o secure a bit of help
along the tough route of staffing the ticket sales areas for the fair
from their husbands.
I'OMEROY POSTMASTER James Soulsby indicates that
nothing much seems to be happening in getting the Pomeroy Post
Office ready for occupancy since the rockwork has been completed. The post office was heavily damaged as a result of the
slide and although a contract has been awarded for the repair of
the structure, no work has yet begun. Meantime, the postal
employes are operating out of the Pomeroy senior high building.
By the way, of course you probably have noticed those attractive presidential busts in lbe senior high building while
visiting the post office, They've been around for many years but
seem to be pieces that shoUld be on display somewhere Instead of
being left in the normally abandoned Pomeroy high school
structure.
·

TOOT·A-LOOP RADIO
Hear it- Wear
it Who but
Po no sonic
cou ld make a ·
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as a bracelet?
A twist and it
sets on table o.r desk top . Lightweight lor easy bracelet carrying.
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••Thts extension is needed/'
Collins said, "because many
citizens who qualify for the
Homes~ad Exemption did not
realize they must reapply for
their exemption each year.
Therefore, any one who is
qualified and has failed to
apply by June 5 would still he
fble to apply by August I,
~rovided the Governor signs
the bill into law.
"Under the new budget law,"
Collins said,, "individuals over

.. .

65 can receive homestead

Working Ohio married
couples, according to Collins,
would also receive·a reduction
in their state income tax rates.
"This change was needed,"
Collins sa id , " because the
current law forced married .
Ohio couples who filed a joint
federal income tax return to
file a joint sLate return- which
frequently cost them more
taxes than filing separate sti.te
'income tax returns: We just
should ~ penalize our
married
working Ohio
Couples."
The income tax reduction is
also scaled on the basis of the
couple's income, with lower
income couples getting larger
tax reductions.
·

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REG.

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JOHNSON'S
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'16~
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83 DECON

HECK'S REG. $1.48

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fLOWER

PAGE 13

CAP advan.cing
COLUMBUS (UP! I
Gov. John J. Gilligan told the
Ohio Association of Community Action Agencies
friday night Ohio continued
to take giant steps In the
program, despite several
cutbacks.
Gilligan said Ohio was the
only state In the nation to
make a substantial commitment to community
action programs in the face
of lederal cutbacks. "We
fought in the Ge neral
Assembly for $4 million to
keep Ohio's 48 commu•ity
action agencies open and
functioning," he said, "and
we succeeded in winning $3
million."

HECK'S REG. $1.48
.

$499

PLASTIC DRAPES

HECK 'S REG. $2 .76

. '.' .. ;... ' ..... ' ... ~ ~!?:. ~~:?~.~

3"

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PIK .......~ .............~.~~·..$.:~:~~
4

Client was Nixon

HECK'S
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68~

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

. WASHINGTON (UP! ) First Lady Pat Nixon, encouraged by hundreds of
messages from well-wishers,
spent 10ore than an hour with ·
her alling hi)Sband Saturday
but declined later 10 provide
any personal report oil . the
President's bout with viral
pneumonia.
Mrs. Nixon, dressed in a pink
and white shirtwaist, arrived
at Bethesda ~aval Hospital in
suburban Maryland about 2
p.m. EDT With her daughter
Julie and son-in-law, David
Eisenhower.
When the family emerge(!
. shortly after 3 p.m., Mrs.
Nixon avoided questioner~ and
stepped immediately into a
White House ·limousine.
"She doesn't want to say
anything, " Press Secretary
Ronald L. Ziegler told reporters, who were restrained by a

·-

visit.''

ALL YOU NEED, as every angier knows, is a little
bait, a rod , a good spot and plenty of patience.

Fighting continues in Cambodia

New terrorism is expected

.

•
·-+·1

Pat: no comment

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Attorney H. Chapman Rose, 66,
Saturday confirmed that he met with President Nixon Easter
weekend and on several other occasions to discuss the Watergate
incident.
The White House revealed the meetings Friday after special
presidential .counsel Richard A. Moore testified before Senate
Watergate Committee that he suggested Nixon consult a
"prominent lawyer" w'th whom to discuss the incident.
"I can confirm that I have consulted with the President and
essentially on that Easter weekend," Rose said. "It was un, compensated, but it certainly was professional - a lawyer
Rose said he also had subsequent conversations with the
President, but declined to reveal where, when or the content of
those Ia lks .
"It's a lawyer-client relationship, and I'm not free to discuss
it.'' Rose said.
The initial rqeeting took place at Nixon's Key Biscayne,
home. Rose was an assistant secretary and later undersecretary
of the Treasury during the Eisenhower administration and Is
considered a long-time friend of the President.

half hours sleep Friday night
with the help of an analgesic,
Tkach said.
Mter Nixon is released from
the hospital, Tkach sald he had
recommended that the President go to his retreat at camp
David, Mct:, for 10 days, when
he can Increase his workload to
to 50 per .cent of normal.
Tkach said tbe doctors want
to keep Nixon away from
anything that would contribute
to physical or mental exha)IStlon, but the President ''Wants
to be in the thick of it."
"I would prefer that he go to
California," Tkach said,
The President Is "ve11 alert,
but .he's tired, fatigued,"
Tkach said. "He's sick. His
EDT.
The Presi(lent had seven and mind Is very active and clear."

WASHINGTON (UPI ) - medical team has insisted that
President Nixon showed a he remain in bed "to he sure
"very slight improvement" in there is no relapse."
his bout wlth viral pneumonia
Examined by · a ·team of
Saturday, but his physicians doctors at 10 a .m. EDT,
conllnued to describe him as a Nixon's temperature was 100
"slck man."
degrees- unchanged from the
Nixon's chest pains tapered previous midnight reading. His
off slightly during his third day temperature
had been
at Bethesda Naval Medical hovering between 101 aod 102
Center and he responded to • degrees when he entered the
inhalation therapy, according hospital Thursday nigh!.
to Dr. Walter Tkach, the PresiTkach said that there had
dent's personal physician. He
has been undergoing \he been some spread of the
pneumonia to .the lower left
therapy four times a day.
Tkach, in a mid-&lt;Jay medical lung, but it was concentrated
briefing, added that Nixon's mainly on the right side of his
chest . Nixon was to have
. another chest x-ray at ~ p.m.

'No!"' to Ule tests.
. Australian Prime Minister
Go ugh Whitlam ordered
special security to be maintained on French property in
Australia during the next
several days to protect it from
protest action when and if the
tests are resumed.

Viet Cong make charges

CAN .......... :.....~.~~~.~~·.6.~ .. 88~
HECK'S

.

President better

STRIKE ENDED
CLEVELAND (UP!) - A
s ix-week strike by -Teamsters
Local 392, which had halted all
moving company operations in
the greater Cleveland area
since JW\e 4, ended Saturday
when moving and storage
workers vo\ed to accept ·a
contract proposal made by the
companies.

rope around the hospital's VIP
entrance. ·"She's leaving tlu:t
to the doctors."
David commented that the ·
President is "coming -along,"
and Julie added that her father
seemed to he "better."
ft was the family's second
visit in as many days.

. CIA director-designate
William Colby looks optimistlc In this appeara nee before the Senate
Armed Sarvicea Com mittee in Washington .

Soviets, Egypt in accord

HECK'S REG. 16.99

$199

HECK'S

In Melbourne, a group of
French nationals living in
Australia staged a peaceful
demonstration in front of the
French consulate Saturday to
protest the resumption of the
tests.
. They read a staiement
addressed to French President
Georges Pompidou saying
"The French of Australia sav

re ce ive Phase JV recom- assuming hls re.covery contin•
mendations from hiS economic ues on schedule.
Although the exact shape or
advisers Monday and that the
White House then would have Phase IV Is stU! a rnystery,
more information on the liming Nixon outlined Its prlncipal
goals and framework when he
of the announcement.
"The work ls moving along imposed the price freeze JW\e
13, saying it would last no more
on sc)wdule," Ziegler said.
But Ziegler also indicated. than 60 days.
The new program wlll he
that lbe Phase IV program,
generally
tougher than Phase
which will replace the .current
price freeze with a broad set of Ill, which relied on corporate ·
wage. and price standards good wlll to keep price incovering most of the economy, creases within a set of
would not he unveiled Wltil voluntary guidelines .. Nixon
Nixon was released from the said the food and oil industry ·
wlil he singled out for special
hospital.
The Pre.sident's doctors have treatment since the cost of
speculated that this probably groceries and gasoline has
will not he until the middle of provided most of the push In
next week at the earllest 1 · the latest round of Inflation.

PHNOM PENH (.UPI) - American warplanes, including Air from the capital were lost· to Communist forces, drawing the
Force B52s, bombed rebel positions north and south of Phnom government lines to only 10 miles of the center of Phnom Penh.
Penh Saturday following a government ·evacuation that has
, b t'f
.
t d moved the southern defense perimeter to within 10 miles of the
ROME (up') - A German, a bo ut a eau 1 u1 Simu1a e
girlfriend or J . Paul Getty Ill, kidnaping, organized to perfec- ca~;.~:~ry sources said 'the air strikes were aimed at destroying
CAIRO (UPI) - Hafez Ismail, an adviser to Egyptian
hippie grandson of the oil lion " several months ago when cambodian mllitary hardware abandoned by the retreating
billionaire, told police Saturday he was in a ''very precarious" government troops. U.S. B52s, F4 Phantoms, swingwlng Fllls president Anwar Sedan, returned from a three;Jay visit to
Moscow Saturday and said the Soviet Union and Egypt are in
.the missing teen-ager may have financial situation.
and F105 craft were called in to strike the new insurgent "total accord" on their fugure relationship and the Middle East
faked hls own kidnaping to
"I think that is rathei· positions, field ., reports said.
'
.
.
crisis .
collect any ransom that might farfetched. ! won't consider
Authoritative military sources sald Saturday Cambodian
Ismail told newsmen the Soviet Union is "determined to
thut," said )1ls mother • the troops completed a major evacuation Friday of positions south of strengthen the Egyptian and Arab capability to confront the
be paid for his release.
The . youth's mother, Mrs. former actre.ss Gall Harris.
d
ed d · b k
Gail Getty, called the possibiii- Police said that hoax or not, · the capital where three ays ago they trl to nve ac en- Zionist occupation, which is backed by imperialism, Wltil this
trenched rebels in the region of Kompon Kantuot and Kompong aggression is liquidated and ·the aspirations of the Palestinian
ty too "farfetched" for her to a nationwide.search was Wider 'l'uol, about 12 miles from the city center.
people are realized.
·
believe.
way for the youth and Interpol
One of the objects of the government operation was to reach
"'fue two sides are in total accord in their assessment of the
. Getty, 17, was last reported had been asked to try to trace . two battalions of troops encircled in a school near Kompong Middle East situation," Ismail said. "They are also in
seen Monday night in the him in other countries.
Kunluot.ln the course of the subsequent evacuAtion, the sources ugreement on future steps they will take and in their approach
company of ·o girl at a coffee
The boy's father was reported said, the troops in the school were able to reach the government's to relation( between the two coWl tries., shop on Rome's Piazza Novona. by friends to be in London. He front lines, now pushed back almost two miles closer to the
Political sources said Ismail's Moscow visit was mainly
on Thursday his mother, who is is the son o! J . Paul Getty, the capital.
ahned at acquiring information on the I'esulis of summit talks
divorced lrorri J. Paul Getty internationally known oil bil- The sources said abriOsl two miles of Highway 3 I'Unning south last month between President Nixon and the Soviet CommWlist
Jr ., received a telephone call at · llonaire.
party general •ecretary, Leonid I. Brezhnev, and to coordinate
her RBme apartment from a Mrs. Getty, who has married
Egyptian and Soviet policies on the Middle East.
tnan who said her son hod been ond divorced since her markidnaped . and to ge t ready lo riage to Getty but has retained
pay ransom . Mrs. Gelty told his name, suld she did nol
pollee the caller did not specify expect he~ son's fathor to come
SAIGON (UPI) - The Viet Cong' chaiged Satu•·rlay Sauth
BELFAST (UPI) - The outlawed Irish Republicon -AI'In)'
to Rome at the moment. VIetnamese gunners were shelllng the area northeast of Saigon
8 ransom amount.
Pollee 110id one of Getty's Ge tty 's most recent wife, model where they had promised to release two Canadian peacekeeping t lHA) may unleash a new campaign of bombing and
assassination to back up iis cla~n of gaining more strength and
friends, Identified us Martine Tnlllha Pohi , died ln Home of team offl~-ers missing for more than two weeks .
Zucher, 2~. !Wld the ·youth had un overdose ol heroin during The scheduled repatriation Saturday mornln~ was postponed support In Northern lrefand, Britlah army spokesman said
Saturday .
'
talked to her of rnkin~ his own divorce proceedings last yeur.
untii Sunday .
TI1c
spokesmen
said,
however,
that
U1e
growing
power IRA
kidnaping lo raise money ,
·- The yo un g Getty did not live A spokesman lo•· the VIet Cong's Provisional Revolutionary
"One ol his girlfriends told us regularly at his mothcr'a· Government (PRG ) also ex presMed concern the Canadians, who lenders claimed In a clandestine news conferenee Friday in
under questioning that Ge tty npartmcnt, und since she had Initially we·re repo1·ted in good health, saying they muy huve Dublin nc.tually Indicated that the organization was becoming
weakor. Irish politicians agreed.
declared confidentially to her returned only 1'hundoy from u suffered from extensive mpvlng on fool to various positions.
"We nre delighted that the (IRA) Provisional Council find it
that he was penniless and that vacation his nbscncc was pot The "':" offlcers-Capts. Ian Pallen, 31, of Toronto; und
the only system of getting cash noticed until the phone call. · Fletcher Thomson, 25, of Ottawa-dlsappeured June 28 while on necessary to boost their own morale by calling n news conwoutd be to ilinudatc a
'The iong-hai(ed blond yo uth a !net-finding mission in the VIet Cong-controlled jungle area ference," said one army spokesmun . "We are not at.all surprised
that.I! degenerated into a session of heated arguments and· unl&lt;ld~aplng," a polfce official was kn own to .frequent Piazza near Xunn l.oc, 10 miles northeast of Saglon.
suld ,
Navono, Piazza dl Spagna und ' A Viet Cong spokesman said saiurday two truceo\Oum hell- supported claims about the IRA's strel\llth . "Not so long ago the
The official said the Miss Santu Moria In Trastevere, copters would leave Saigon for Xuan Loc before noon 'local time IRA would not have bothered to make such on elaborately staged
Zacher. u (lorman living In fuvorite gathering plnccs tor Sunday to pick up Patl1,111 and 'rhomson . The spokesman said lt announcement. They would simply have unleashed another burst
!tome, suid Ge tty had talked Home's hippies.
, wos hoped the ~anadlon offlcrr• could he released tho smne duy. of violence ."

SHEAR
70 ·065

distinct possibility that the test
will be held sometime between
Sunday and Wednesday."
Aweather report in Papeete
said clear skies that had
prevailed in the test area as
late as Friday night had begun
to cloud over, raising the
possibility of storms that could
disrupt testing.
The resumption of the atmospheric testing has been
protested by Australia, New
Zealand and other areas of the
South Pacific, as well as by
some nations on the western
coast of South America,.
beca use of the danger of'
nuclear fallout that tiley
produce.
France has conducted its
testing in the area for several
years, but only recently have
the protests grown to significant levels. The International
Court of Justice in The Hague
has issued an injunction
against the resumption of
testing, but France annoiUiced
that it would ignore the court
order.
France has insisted the tests
are necessary for its national
defense.

Young Getty may
befakingit.all

HECK 'S REG. 66c

99e

WATER

first public official t&lt;l he named "Man of
the Year" by the Mahoning Valley lnduslrlal Council.
He adheres to the concept of total
lransportation planning , and believes that
lransportation is the single most important catalyst to healthy economic and orderly commWiity development.
Richley, an activist in all transportation matters, firmly believes ln the
Department's motto:
"The Future Belongs to Those Who
Prepare For It."

reviewed various option., for
his revised anti-inflation
program during a 4Q.minute
meeting with his chief of staff,
Gen . Alexander M. Haig, Jr.,
at Bethesda Naval Medical
Center, where Nixon was said
to he recovering from viral
pneumonia.
Ot her administration
sources said Phase IV would be
announced VVednesday or
Thursday by senior economic
officials. This indicated that
Nixo n would . not go on
television to personally explain
the program, a practice he has
followed in the past In introducing major econmic
policy shifts.
Ziegler said Nixon would

"

UL BERNZ kiT

33~ ·

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SALAD BOWL

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SMALL. MEDIUM, LARGE

Heck's Reg. 88c

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BASKETBALL

REG. 99'

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MAX

HECK'S REG '1.98

7 Ol.

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FOR MEN

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"For That Personal &amp; Professional Touch"
FEATURING
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HECK'S REG. 23'

$1

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SKYLINE LANES
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BARS FOR

WAX P·APER
FOR

HD-3

ALKA·SELTZER

J. PHILLIP RICHLEY

SUNDAY, JULY 15, 1973

NO. 24

. PETE, Tahiti (UP!) France's controvers i.al
resumption of nuclear t!\llting
in the South Pacific appears to
have been postponed and may
not occur until sometime next
week, officials in various
countries of the area said
Saturday.
,The te; ung . at the Mururoa
Atoll; 720 miles southea·st of
Tahiti, had been expected to
begin Saturday. The day is
observed by the French as
Bastille Day, honoring the
uprising In 1789 that led to the
French revolution.
One clue to postponrnent was
the fact cited by Tahitian officials that the French hellcopter-carrier ship Or~ge ,
which is assigned to the tests,
has returned to T~hiti from the
testing area. French Naval
Adm. Christian Claverie, who
is in cha.rge of the testing, also
was away from his post
celebrating Bastille Day with
Tahitian Gov. Pierre Angeli on
the island of Raiatea.
In, Canberra, a spokesman
for the Australian Department
of Foreign Affairs said his
government now regards "as a

2 39¢

SOAP

19-766

on two citizen groups

88

REGULAR SIZE

Taxrefortns ease burden

tions."

vot. a

CUT-RITE

DIAL

LAWN
SHEAR

WASHINGTON (UP! )
President Nixon m&lt;!de some
fl~ai decisions on Phase IV of
his economic polity Saturday,
but aid,es indicated the new
wage-price control plan would
not he announced before his
expected release from the
hospital next week.
White HotL•e Pre•s Secretary.
Ronald L, Ziegler, in· reporting
the President's action, offered
no clues·on what aspecl• .of the
comprehensive eco.nomic
stabilization program had
received Nixon'• stamp of
approval.
Ziegler said the President

Superbly comfortabl,, lightweight ond durably molded

of tough polypropylene plastic that is stronqer thon metal.

HECK'S
REG. $16

WHEN YOU TAKE THAT Sunday spin, do drive up the
Hiland Cemelt!ry Road ln Salisbury Township. You won 't believe
the piles of garbage and trash that are •on both sides of the road
leading to the cemetery despite laws that there is to be no open
dumping. Such an accumulation couldn't have taken place
overnight and yet no one apparently has done anything about it.
Disgusting, to say the least!

.

Reg.
$4.44 Ea.

HECK'S
REG. ss~
, jl

Phase IV
. decisions

Heck's

·-

'

When legislation was pos~~td creating the
Ohio Department or Transportation, Phtl
llichley woo lnstaileil as Us first director
on September 30, 1972.
Gov , Gilllga~ has called hlm
"uniquely qualified for this extremely
Important and difficult job," pointing to
his "vast experience, not only In administration and engineering, but In the
vitally important ·area of mass transit and
jts relationship to highway prograllls."
Richley brought to the Department ol
Transportation a considerable wealth of
knowledge and experience in transportation and its related fields. He has
worked for the City of Youngstown as
Assistant City Engineer, Sanitary
Engineer, and Co mrrilssioner of
Engineering .
In 1966 he was elected Mahonlng
County Engineer by the largest plurollty
ever recorded in that county, and served in
that position until 1:71 when he was ap-.
pointed Director of the Ohio Department of
Highways.
After a tour o( duty with the U.S. Navy
during World War II, Richley attended
John Carroll University and.the University
of Michigan: he rece.ived his engineering
degree from Youngstown State University.
Because of his extensive background
and experience, coupled wlth community
invo lvement, Richiey has received
numerous community and civic awards.
Among thm are "Man of the Year" in 1971
by his professional peers in the Mahoning
Valley; "Man of the Year" in 1972 by the
Italian-American Democratic League of
Cuyahoga County, and this year was the

sco·op CHAIRS

CHAIR WEBBING
J• ·I

exemptions if their· income is
below $10,000. Before, the
upper limit was $8,000. The
amoiUit of the exemption then
depends upon the individuals
and his or her spouse's income,
with lower income individuals
being granted larger exemp-

0

HECK'S REG. $13.96

FRIENOS HERE HAVE learned that Ida B. Donahue,
formerly of Racine Route 2, is confined to Memorial Hospital in
SaraSota F1a. cards may be sent to her at the hospital; 1901
Arlington St., Sarasota, Fla.

COLUMBUS
State
Representative Oakley C
Collins (R-lronton ) said Friday
elderly citizens and working
Ohio couples will be the
primary beneficiaries of two
.. tax reform measures con.
tained in the state budget by
the Legislature.
Representative Collins also
pointed 0\lt that S. B. 247
recently passed by the Ohio
General Assembly would
extend the deadline for
Homestead Eemption applications from June 5 to
August 1.

off

$988

. MRS. VltMA PIKKOJA has high praise for Congressman
Clarence Miller and his work and support for libraries. The
House has passed a bill which would appropriate funds for
library services in the fiscal year of '74.

THE ANNOUNq;MENT THAT Dr. and Mrs. Edmund
'Butrimas would be leaving Meigs County after over 20 years'
residency came as a surprise and shock to many. After so long
being here, everyone just assumed that Dr. and Mrs. Butrlmas
would be here forever . Dr. Butrimas has traveled to the corners
of Meigs County in his medical practice and apparently felt that
he should get into a little earlier work situation to wrap up his
career. Dr. and Mrs Butrimas have loved Meigs County so lhe)
are leavingwlthafeellngofmixed emotions . The Pomeroy office
of the doctor will close Oct. 1.

POMEROY - The second In a aeries
of lnformatlonol meeting~ Is scheduled for
Thursduy at 8 p.m. at Meigs High School
with J. Phllllp Rlohley, director ofthe Ohio
llllpartment ol Transportation, as guest
speaker, E. A. Wingett, chalrmU!l of the ·
Meigs County Democrat Central Com·
mitlee, announced Friday.
The meetings, ~po9sored by the
Democrat Committee, are open to .
the PUblic.
.
Wjngett said It is the purpose of the
committee to acquaint Meigs · County
residents with members of the Governor's
cabinet and with other high state offlclols.
The meeting will serve ~ dual purpose
as they also will acquaint the people with..
the duties of state officials and the
problems that face Meigs County in the
extension of U. S. 33 and SR 124.
Following Rlchiey's talk, a question
and answer period wlll be held. Max
Farley, Division 10 Engineer, Marietta,
will be master of ceremonies. ·
Activities scheduled in August by the
committee include .a booth at the Meigs
County Fair; in September., a meeting
with a representalive of the Department of
Taxation: In October, a dinner with.
Gertrude Donahey, state treasurer, as
guest speaker, and in November a
meeting with the Director of Agriculture
speaker .
About Mr. Richley :
In 1970 when Ohio began to consider
the need for total transportation planning,
Mr. Richley, then Director of the Ohio
Department of Highways, was the
foremost spokesman of that movement.

.'

'

'.

•

-I

''

Strength failed
airliner ·crewman·
PARIS (UP!) - A surviving extinguishers.
"It was a nightmare," he
crewman of a Brazilian
airliner crash said Saturday said. "The smoke got so thick
some of the 122 passengers who I could not see the
died might have been saved passengers."
He said he had no oxygen
had he been able to open an
mask,
only a wet cloth. "I was
emergency door and release
suffocating and I thought io
the escape chute.
"I was not strong enough ," myself - this is vary, very ·
Frenchman Alain Tersis, a 27· bud."
When the plane ground to a
yea•·-&lt;Jid steward, told a news
halt, he tried to move the lever
conference at Orly airport.
opening the emergency door .
Twelve persons survived, "Unfortunately I was very
11 of them crew members, weal!:. The smo~e ha4 made me
when Capt. Gilbert Araujo da feel sick."
Silva Wednesday brought his · He leaned agalnstthe door . It
biazin g · Brazilian Varig. opened and he fell to the
Airlines ·Boeing 707 to a gro und, gulping fresh air.
crash landing in a lettuce field
Tersis said he helped another
only 00 seconds' nying time steward who was shouting :
fr.omOdy Airport runway.
"Get me out! Get me out I"
or Uie 122 killed, three were 1'hen the door rcclosed parAmerl.cans. varlg Alrllnes tially.
officials identified them as
"It Is posalble that If I had
Bernard Regan , Ello Rosa and tho strength to open the door
Yole Hosa. Their hometowns completely and releaae the
are not Immediately known. emergency chute, 1ome
Tersis told newsmen the lire passengen might have Been
broke out in the rear tollels as 1!8Ved,'' Terals•ld. "Alor11dy
he and another steward fought · son.e ~le . were duhln1
it unsuccessfully with flre towurd the pluM."
I

•t

�..

I

12 - Tho S111day Times- Sentinel, SWiday, July I~ 1973

Beat....

Richley coming to
Meigs Thursday

.: ; )

Of the Bend ··: -,
~r

a

~_.r

IJob 1/0f'jlich

POMEROY - Laurie Lea Schaefer, Miss America of 1972,
who has a number of friends in the Big Bend area, will be
starring ln ''The Music Man" with John Davidson, film and
television star, at Veterans Memorial Auditorium in Columbus,
July 17 ihrough July 22.
Ron Pataky, Columbus newspaper theater editor, caught
Laurie In the show at Dayton the past week. He wrote :
"John eo-&amp;tars with Laurie Lea Schaefer a gal who
establlahed in short order that she can do considerably more than
stand In an evening gown and weep joyous tears at being named
Miss America of 1972,
"John Kimley has called her a legitimate talent, and she is
precisely that -a gorgeous voice which she knows just how to
use-a wonderfully natural flair for the light comedy required
by the Marion-Librarian role: just about every pJus imaginable.
Laurie ~as simply terrific. "
Laurie started her long trek up the Miss America ladder in
Pomeroy a few years back.

_ _ _ _ _~s_UN_D...
AY_&amp;_MONDAY, JULY 15th &amp; 16th ONLY
R- 72

PANASONIC
MEMBERS OF OHIO ETA PHI Chapter and Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter of Beta Sigma Pili Sorority will be handling the ticket
gates at the Meigs Counl)' Fair next month. The two groups are
composed of some real workers so that coiUity fair board w.U get
a job well done. The sorority gals hope t,o secure a bit of help
along the tough route of staffing the ticket sales areas for the fair
from their husbands.
I'OMEROY POSTMASTER James Soulsby indicates that
nothing much seems to be happening in getting the Pomeroy Post
Office ready for occupancy since the rockwork has been completed. The post office was heavily damaged as a result of the
slide and although a contract has been awarded for the repair of
the structure, no work has yet begun. Meantime, the postal
employes are operating out of the Pomeroy senior high building.
By the way, of course you probably have noticed those attractive presidential busts in lbe senior high building while
visiting the post office, They've been around for many years but
seem to be pieces that shoUld be on display somewhere Instead of
being left in the normally abandoned Pomeroy high school
structure.
·

TOOT·A-LOOP RADIO
Hear it- Wear
it Who but
Po no sonic
cou ld make a ·
· radio you wear
as a bracelet?
A twist and it
sets on table o.r desk top . Lightweight lor easy bracelet carrying.
Battery operation. Built-in ferrite
core antenna. 2 !4" PM dynamic
speaker.
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BOX FANS
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ROTARY

'·

8
HECK'S $3.66

••Thts extension is needed/'
Collins said, "because many
citizens who qualify for the
Homes~ad Exemption did not
realize they must reapply for
their exemption each year.
Therefore, any one who is
qualified and has failed to
apply by June 5 would still he
fble to apply by August I,
~rovided the Governor signs
the bill into law.
"Under the new budget law,"
Collins said,, "individuals over

.. .

65 can receive homestead

Working Ohio married
couples, according to Collins,
would also receive·a reduction
in their state income tax rates.
"This change was needed,"
Collins sa id , " because the
current law forced married .
Ohio couples who filed a joint
federal income tax return to
file a joint sLate return- which
frequently cost them more
taxes than filing separate sti.te
'income tax returns: We just
should ~ penalize our
married
working Ohio
Couples."
The income tax reduction is
also scaled on the basis of the
couple's income, with lower
income couples getting larger
tax reductions.
·

!"'""""' """"" """"" "'""!
f:ONl{NlS 25 TAf.ILET S

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REG.

.

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PEARL
DROPS
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Captain's Loun1e

Specialitl~g

In · AMF &amp;

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REG. 117!Jj

JOHNSON'S
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SHAMPOO
HECK'S

'16~
HECK'S REG. $2.18

83 DECON

HECK'S REG. $1.48

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446-3362

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WHEEL
CHOCKS.............. :aa~
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HECK 'S R E;G. 48c

fLOWER

PAGE 13

CAP advan.cing
COLUMBUS (UP! I
Gov. John J. Gilligan told the
Ohio Association of Community Action Agencies
friday night Ohio continued
to take giant steps In the
program, despite several
cutbacks.
Gilligan said Ohio was the
only state In the nation to
make a substantial commitment to community
action programs in the face
of lederal cutbacks. "We
fought in the Ge neral
Assembly for $4 million to
keep Ohio's 48 commu•ity
action agencies open and
functioning," he said, "and
we succeeded in winning $3
million."

HECK'S REG. $1.48
.

$499

PLASTIC DRAPES

HECK 'S REG. $2 .76

. '.' .. ;... ' ..... ' ... ~ ~!?:. ~~:?~.~

3"

'1 ••
PIK .......~ .............~.~~·..$.:~:~~
4

Client was Nixon

HECK'S
,REG. 89'

68~

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

. WASHINGTON (UP! ) First Lady Pat Nixon, encouraged by hundreds of
messages from well-wishers,
spent 10ore than an hour with ·
her alling hi)Sband Saturday
but declined later 10 provide
any personal report oil . the
President's bout with viral
pneumonia.
Mrs. Nixon, dressed in a pink
and white shirtwaist, arrived
at Bethesda ~aval Hospital in
suburban Maryland about 2
p.m. EDT With her daughter
Julie and son-in-law, David
Eisenhower.
When the family emerge(!
. shortly after 3 p.m., Mrs.
Nixon avoided questioner~ and
stepped immediately into a
White House ·limousine.
"She doesn't want to say
anything, " Press Secretary
Ronald L. Ziegler told reporters, who were restrained by a

·-

visit.''

ALL YOU NEED, as every angier knows, is a little
bait, a rod , a good spot and plenty of patience.

Fighting continues in Cambodia

New terrorism is expected

.

•
·-+·1

Pat: no comment

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Attorney H. Chapman Rose, 66,
Saturday confirmed that he met with President Nixon Easter
weekend and on several other occasions to discuss the Watergate
incident.
The White House revealed the meetings Friday after special
presidential .counsel Richard A. Moore testified before Senate
Watergate Committee that he suggested Nixon consult a
"prominent lawyer" w'th whom to discuss the incident.
"I can confirm that I have consulted with the President and
essentially on that Easter weekend," Rose said. "It was un, compensated, but it certainly was professional - a lawyer
Rose said he also had subsequent conversations with the
President, but declined to reveal where, when or the content of
those Ia lks .
"It's a lawyer-client relationship, and I'm not free to discuss
it.'' Rose said.
The initial rqeeting took place at Nixon's Key Biscayne,
home. Rose was an assistant secretary and later undersecretary
of the Treasury during the Eisenhower administration and Is
considered a long-time friend of the President.

half hours sleep Friday night
with the help of an analgesic,
Tkach said.
Mter Nixon is released from
the hospital, Tkach sald he had
recommended that the President go to his retreat at camp
David, Mct:, for 10 days, when
he can Increase his workload to
to 50 per .cent of normal.
Tkach said tbe doctors want
to keep Nixon away from
anything that would contribute
to physical or mental exha)IStlon, but the President ''Wants
to be in the thick of it."
"I would prefer that he go to
California," Tkach said,
The President Is "ve11 alert,
but .he's tired, fatigued,"
Tkach said. "He's sick. His
EDT.
The Presi(lent had seven and mind Is very active and clear."

WASHINGTON (UPI ) - medical team has insisted that
President Nixon showed a he remain in bed "to he sure
"very slight improvement" in there is no relapse."
his bout wlth viral pneumonia
Examined by · a ·team of
Saturday, but his physicians doctors at 10 a .m. EDT,
conllnued to describe him as a Nixon's temperature was 100
"slck man."
degrees- unchanged from the
Nixon's chest pains tapered previous midnight reading. His
off slightly during his third day temperature
had been
at Bethesda Naval Medical hovering between 101 aod 102
Center and he responded to • degrees when he entered the
inhalation therapy, according hospital Thursday nigh!.
to Dr. Walter Tkach, the PresiTkach said that there had
dent's personal physician. He
has been undergoing \he been some spread of the
pneumonia to .the lower left
therapy four times a day.
Tkach, in a mid-&lt;Jay medical lung, but it was concentrated
briefing, added that Nixon's mainly on the right side of his
chest . Nixon was to have
. another chest x-ray at ~ p.m.

'No!"' to Ule tests.
. Australian Prime Minister
Go ugh Whitlam ordered
special security to be maintained on French property in
Australia during the next
several days to protect it from
protest action when and if the
tests are resumed.

Viet Cong make charges

CAN .......... :.....~.~~~.~~·.6.~ .. 88~
HECK'S

.

President better

STRIKE ENDED
CLEVELAND (UP!) - A
s ix-week strike by -Teamsters
Local 392, which had halted all
moving company operations in
the greater Cleveland area
since JW\e 4, ended Saturday
when moving and storage
workers vo\ed to accept ·a
contract proposal made by the
companies.

rope around the hospital's VIP
entrance. ·"She's leaving tlu:t
to the doctors."
David commented that the ·
President is "coming -along,"
and Julie added that her father
seemed to he "better."
ft was the family's second
visit in as many days.

. CIA director-designate
William Colby looks optimistlc In this appeara nee before the Senate
Armed Sarvicea Com mittee in Washington .

Soviets, Egypt in accord

HECK'S REG. 16.99

$199

HECK'S

In Melbourne, a group of
French nationals living in
Australia staged a peaceful
demonstration in front of the
French consulate Saturday to
protest the resumption of the
tests.
. They read a staiement
addressed to French President
Georges Pompidou saying
"The French of Australia sav

re ce ive Phase JV recom- assuming hls re.covery contin•
mendations from hiS economic ues on schedule.
Although the exact shape or
advisers Monday and that the
White House then would have Phase IV Is stU! a rnystery,
more information on the liming Nixon outlined Its prlncipal
goals and framework when he
of the announcement.
"The work ls moving along imposed the price freeze JW\e
13, saying it would last no more
on sc)wdule," Ziegler said.
But Ziegler also indicated. than 60 days.
The new program wlll he
that lbe Phase IV program,
generally
tougher than Phase
which will replace the .current
price freeze with a broad set of Ill, which relied on corporate ·
wage. and price standards good wlll to keep price incovering most of the economy, creases within a set of
would not he unveiled Wltil voluntary guidelines .. Nixon
Nixon was released from the said the food and oil industry ·
wlil he singled out for special
hospital.
The Pre.sident's doctors have treatment since the cost of
speculated that this probably groceries and gasoline has
will not he until the middle of provided most of the push In
next week at the earllest 1 · the latest round of Inflation.

PHNOM PENH (.UPI) - American warplanes, including Air from the capital were lost· to Communist forces, drawing the
Force B52s, bombed rebel positions north and south of Phnom government lines to only 10 miles of the center of Phnom Penh.
Penh Saturday following a government ·evacuation that has
, b t'f
.
t d moved the southern defense perimeter to within 10 miles of the
ROME (up') - A German, a bo ut a eau 1 u1 Simu1a e
girlfriend or J . Paul Getty Ill, kidnaping, organized to perfec- ca~;.~:~ry sources said 'the air strikes were aimed at destroying
CAIRO (UPI) - Hafez Ismail, an adviser to Egyptian
hippie grandson of the oil lion " several months ago when cambodian mllitary hardware abandoned by the retreating
billionaire, told police Saturday he was in a ''very precarious" government troops. U.S. B52s, F4 Phantoms, swingwlng Fllls president Anwar Sedan, returned from a three;Jay visit to
Moscow Saturday and said the Soviet Union and Egypt are in
.the missing teen-ager may have financial situation.
and F105 craft were called in to strike the new insurgent "total accord" on their fugure relationship and the Middle East
faked hls own kidnaping to
"I think that is rathei· positions, field ., reports said.
'
.
.
crisis .
collect any ransom that might farfetched. ! won't consider
Authoritative military sources sald Saturday Cambodian
Ismail told newsmen the Soviet Union is "determined to
thut," said )1ls mother • the troops completed a major evacuation Friday of positions south of strengthen the Egyptian and Arab capability to confront the
be paid for his release.
The . youth's mother, Mrs. former actre.ss Gall Harris.
d
ed d · b k
Gail Getty, called the possibiii- Police said that hoax or not, · the capital where three ays ago they trl to nve ac en- Zionist occupation, which is backed by imperialism, Wltil this
trenched rebels in the region of Kompon Kantuot and Kompong aggression is liquidated and ·the aspirations of the Palestinian
ty too "farfetched" for her to a nationwide.search was Wider 'l'uol, about 12 miles from the city center.
people are realized.
·
believe.
way for the youth and Interpol
One of the objects of the government operation was to reach
"'fue two sides are in total accord in their assessment of the
. Getty, 17, was last reported had been asked to try to trace . two battalions of troops encircled in a school near Kompong Middle East situation," Ismail said. "They are also in
seen Monday night in the him in other countries.
Kunluot.ln the course of the subsequent evacuAtion, the sources ugreement on future steps they will take and in their approach
company of ·o girl at a coffee
The boy's father was reported said, the troops in the school were able to reach the government's to relation( between the two coWl tries., shop on Rome's Piazza Novona. by friends to be in London. He front lines, now pushed back almost two miles closer to the
Political sources said Ismail's Moscow visit was mainly
on Thursday his mother, who is is the son o! J . Paul Getty, the capital.
ahned at acquiring information on the I'esulis of summit talks
divorced lrorri J. Paul Getty internationally known oil bil- The sources said abriOsl two miles of Highway 3 I'Unning south last month between President Nixon and the Soviet CommWlist
Jr ., received a telephone call at · llonaire.
party general •ecretary, Leonid I. Brezhnev, and to coordinate
her RBme apartment from a Mrs. Getty, who has married
Egyptian and Soviet policies on the Middle East.
tnan who said her son hod been ond divorced since her markidnaped . and to ge t ready lo riage to Getty but has retained
pay ransom . Mrs. Gelty told his name, suld she did nol
pollee the caller did not specify expect he~ son's fathor to come
SAIGON (UPI) - The Viet Cong' chaiged Satu•·rlay Sauth
BELFAST (UPI) - The outlawed Irish Republicon -AI'In)'
to Rome at the moment. VIetnamese gunners were shelllng the area northeast of Saigon
8 ransom amount.
Pollee 110id one of Getty's Ge tty 's most recent wife, model where they had promised to release two Canadian peacekeeping t lHA) may unleash a new campaign of bombing and
assassination to back up iis cla~n of gaining more strength and
friends, Identified us Martine Tnlllha Pohi , died ln Home of team offl~-ers missing for more than two weeks .
Zucher, 2~. !Wld the ·youth had un overdose ol heroin during The scheduled repatriation Saturday mornln~ was postponed support In Northern lrefand, Britlah army spokesman said
Saturday .
'
talked to her of rnkin~ his own divorce proceedings last yeur.
untii Sunday .
TI1c
spokesmen
said,
however,
that
U1e
growing
power IRA
kidnaping lo raise money ,
·- The yo un g Getty did not live A spokesman lo•· the VIet Cong's Provisional Revolutionary
"One ol his girlfriends told us regularly at his mothcr'a· Government (PRG ) also ex presMed concern the Canadians, who lenders claimed In a clandestine news conferenee Friday in
under questioning that Ge tty npartmcnt, und since she had Initially we·re repo1·ted in good health, saying they muy huve Dublin nc.tually Indicated that the organization was becoming
weakor. Irish politicians agreed.
declared confidentially to her returned only 1'hundoy from u suffered from extensive mpvlng on fool to various positions.
"We nre delighted that the (IRA) Provisional Council find it
that he was penniless and that vacation his nbscncc was pot The "':" offlcers-Capts. Ian Pallen, 31, of Toronto; und
the only system of getting cash noticed until the phone call. · Fletcher Thomson, 25, of Ottawa-dlsappeured June 28 while on necessary to boost their own morale by calling n news conwoutd be to ilinudatc a
'The iong-hai(ed blond yo uth a !net-finding mission in the VIet Cong-controlled jungle area ference," said one army spokesmun . "We are not at.all surprised
that.I! degenerated into a session of heated arguments and· unl&lt;ld~aplng," a polfce official was kn own to .frequent Piazza near Xunn l.oc, 10 miles northeast of Saglon.
suld ,
Navono, Piazza dl Spagna und ' A Viet Cong spokesman said saiurday two truceo\Oum hell- supported claims about the IRA's strel\llth . "Not so long ago the
The official said the Miss Santu Moria In Trastevere, copters would leave Saigon for Xuan Loc before noon 'local time IRA would not have bothered to make such on elaborately staged
Zacher. u (lorman living In fuvorite gathering plnccs tor Sunday to pick up Patl1,111 and 'rhomson . The spokesman said lt announcement. They would simply have unleashed another burst
!tome, suid Ge tty had talked Home's hippies.
, wos hoped the ~anadlon offlcrr• could he released tho smne duy. of violence ."

SHEAR
70 ·065

distinct possibility that the test
will be held sometime between
Sunday and Wednesday."
Aweather report in Papeete
said clear skies that had
prevailed in the test area as
late as Friday night had begun
to cloud over, raising the
possibility of storms that could
disrupt testing.
The resumption of the atmospheric testing has been
protested by Australia, New
Zealand and other areas of the
South Pacific, as well as by
some nations on the western
coast of South America,.
beca use of the danger of'
nuclear fallout that tiley
produce.
France has conducted its
testing in the area for several
years, but only recently have
the protests grown to significant levels. The International
Court of Justice in The Hague
has issued an injunction
against the resumption of
testing, but France annoiUiced
that it would ignore the court
order.
France has insisted the tests
are necessary for its national
defense.

Young Getty may
befakingit.all

HECK 'S REG. 66c

99e

WATER

first public official t&lt;l he named "Man of
the Year" by the Mahoning Valley lnduslrlal Council.
He adheres to the concept of total
lransportation planning , and believes that
lransportation is the single most important catalyst to healthy economic and orderly commWiity development.
Richley, an activist in all transportation matters, firmly believes ln the
Department's motto:
"The Future Belongs to Those Who
Prepare For It."

reviewed various option., for
his revised anti-inflation
program during a 4Q.minute
meeting with his chief of staff,
Gen . Alexander M. Haig, Jr.,
at Bethesda Naval Medical
Center, where Nixon was said
to he recovering from viral
pneumonia.
Ot her administration
sources said Phase IV would be
announced VVednesday or
Thursday by senior economic
officials. This indicated that
Nixo n would . not go on
television to personally explain
the program, a practice he has
followed in the past In introducing major econmic
policy shifts.
Ziegler said Nixon would

"

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33~ ·

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SMALL. MEDIUM, LARGE

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MAX

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FEATURING
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SKYLINE LANES
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WAX P·APER
FOR

HD-3

ALKA·SELTZER

J. PHILLIP RICHLEY

SUNDAY, JULY 15, 1973

NO. 24

. PETE, Tahiti (UP!) France's controvers i.al
resumption of nuclear t!\llting
in the South Pacific appears to
have been postponed and may
not occur until sometime next
week, officials in various
countries of the area said
Saturday.
,The te; ung . at the Mururoa
Atoll; 720 miles southea·st of
Tahiti, had been expected to
begin Saturday. The day is
observed by the French as
Bastille Day, honoring the
uprising In 1789 that led to the
French revolution.
One clue to postponrnent was
the fact cited by Tahitian officials that the French hellcopter-carrier ship Or~ge ,
which is assigned to the tests,
has returned to T~hiti from the
testing area. French Naval
Adm. Christian Claverie, who
is in cha.rge of the testing, also
was away from his post
celebrating Bastille Day with
Tahitian Gov. Pierre Angeli on
the island of Raiatea.
In, Canberra, a spokesman
for the Australian Department
of Foreign Affairs said his
government now regards "as a

2 39¢

SOAP

19-766

on two citizen groups

88

REGULAR SIZE

Taxrefortns ease burden

tions."

vot. a

CUT-RITE

DIAL

LAWN
SHEAR

WASHINGTON (UP! )
President Nixon m&lt;!de some
fl~ai decisions on Phase IV of
his economic polity Saturday,
but aid,es indicated the new
wage-price control plan would
not he announced before his
expected release from the
hospital next week.
White HotL•e Pre•s Secretary.
Ronald L, Ziegler, in· reporting
the President's action, offered
no clues·on what aspecl• .of the
comprehensive eco.nomic
stabilization program had
received Nixon'• stamp of
approval.
Ziegler said the President

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of tough polypropylene plastic that is stronqer thon metal.

HECK'S
REG. $16

WHEN YOU TAKE THAT Sunday spin, do drive up the
Hiland Cemelt!ry Road ln Salisbury Township. You won 't believe
the piles of garbage and trash that are •on both sides of the road
leading to the cemetery despite laws that there is to be no open
dumping. Such an accumulation couldn't have taken place
overnight and yet no one apparently has done anything about it.
Disgusting, to say the least!

.

Reg.
$4.44 Ea.

HECK'S
REG. ss~
, jl

Phase IV
. decisions

Heck's

·-

'

When legislation was pos~~td creating the
Ohio Department or Transportation, Phtl
llichley woo lnstaileil as Us first director
on September 30, 1972.
Gov , Gilllga~ has called hlm
"uniquely qualified for this extremely
Important and difficult job," pointing to
his "vast experience, not only In administration and engineering, but In the
vitally important ·area of mass transit and
jts relationship to highway prograllls."
Richley brought to the Department ol
Transportation a considerable wealth of
knowledge and experience in transportation and its related fields. He has
worked for the City of Youngstown as
Assistant City Engineer, Sanitary
Engineer, and Co mrrilssioner of
Engineering .
In 1966 he was elected Mahonlng
County Engineer by the largest plurollty
ever recorded in that county, and served in
that position until 1:71 when he was ap-.
pointed Director of the Ohio Department of
Highways.
After a tour o( duty with the U.S. Navy
during World War II, Richley attended
John Carroll University and.the University
of Michigan: he rece.ived his engineering
degree from Youngstown State University.
Because of his extensive background
and experience, coupled wlth community
invo lvement, Richiey has received
numerous community and civic awards.
Among thm are "Man of the Year" in 1971
by his professional peers in the Mahoning
Valley; "Man of the Year" in 1972 by the
Italian-American Democratic League of
Cuyahoga County, and this year was the

sco·op CHAIRS

CHAIR WEBBING
J• ·I

exemptions if their· income is
below $10,000. Before, the
upper limit was $8,000. The
amoiUit of the exemption then
depends upon the individuals
and his or her spouse's income,
with lower income individuals
being granted larger exemp-

0

HECK'S REG. $13.96

FRIENOS HERE HAVE learned that Ida B. Donahue,
formerly of Racine Route 2, is confined to Memorial Hospital in
SaraSota F1a. cards may be sent to her at the hospital; 1901
Arlington St., Sarasota, Fla.

COLUMBUS
State
Representative Oakley C
Collins (R-lronton ) said Friday
elderly citizens and working
Ohio couples will be the
primary beneficiaries of two
.. tax reform measures con.
tained in the state budget by
the Legislature.
Representative Collins also
pointed 0\lt that S. B. 247
recently passed by the Ohio
General Assembly would
extend the deadline for
Homestead Eemption applications from June 5 to
August 1.

off

$988

. MRS. VltMA PIKKOJA has high praise for Congressman
Clarence Miller and his work and support for libraries. The
House has passed a bill which would appropriate funds for
library services in the fiscal year of '74.

THE ANNOUNq;MENT THAT Dr. and Mrs. Edmund
'Butrimas would be leaving Meigs County after over 20 years'
residency came as a surprise and shock to many. After so long
being here, everyone just assumed that Dr. and Mrs. Butrlmas
would be here forever . Dr. Butrimas has traveled to the corners
of Meigs County in his medical practice and apparently felt that
he should get into a little earlier work situation to wrap up his
career. Dr. and Mrs Butrimas have loved Meigs County so lhe)
are leavingwlthafeellngofmixed emotions . The Pomeroy office
of the doctor will close Oct. 1.

POMEROY - The second In a aeries
of lnformatlonol meeting~ Is scheduled for
Thursduy at 8 p.m. at Meigs High School
with J. Phllllp Rlohley, director ofthe Ohio
llllpartment ol Transportation, as guest
speaker, E. A. Wingett, chalrmU!l of the ·
Meigs County Democrat Central Com·
mitlee, announced Friday.
The meetings, ~po9sored by the
Democrat Committee, are open to .
the PUblic.
.
Wjngett said It is the purpose of the
committee to acquaint Meigs · County
residents with members of the Governor's
cabinet and with other high state offlclols.
The meeting will serve ~ dual purpose
as they also will acquaint the people with..
the duties of state officials and the
problems that face Meigs County in the
extension of U. S. 33 and SR 124.
Following Rlchiey's talk, a question
and answer period wlll be held. Max
Farley, Division 10 Engineer, Marietta,
will be master of ceremonies. ·
Activities scheduled in August by the
committee include .a booth at the Meigs
County Fair; in September., a meeting
with a representalive of the Department of
Taxation: In October, a dinner with.
Gertrude Donahey, state treasurer, as
guest speaker, and in November a
meeting with the Director of Agriculture
speaker .
About Mr. Richley :
In 1970 when Ohio began to consider
the need for total transportation planning,
Mr. Richley, then Director of the Ohio
Department of Highways, was the
foremost spokesman of that movement.

.'

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-I

''

Strength failed
airliner ·crewman·
PARIS (UP!) - A surviving extinguishers.
"It was a nightmare," he
crewman of a Brazilian
airliner crash said Saturday said. "The smoke got so thick
some of the 122 passengers who I could not see the
died might have been saved passengers."
He said he had no oxygen
had he been able to open an
mask,
only a wet cloth. "I was
emergency door and release
suffocating and I thought io
the escape chute.
"I was not strong enough ," myself - this is vary, very ·
Frenchman Alain Tersis, a 27· bud."
When the plane ground to a
yea•·-&lt;Jid steward, told a news
halt, he tried to move the lever
conference at Orly airport.
opening the emergency door .
Twelve persons survived, "Unfortunately I was very
11 of them crew members, weal!:. The smo~e ha4 made me
when Capt. Gilbert Araujo da feel sick."
Silva Wednesday brought his · He leaned agalnstthe door . It
biazin g · Brazilian Varig. opened and he fell to the
Airlines ·Boeing 707 to a gro und, gulping fresh air.
crash landing in a lettuce field
Tersis said he helped another
only 00 seconds' nying time steward who was shouting :
fr.omOdy Airport runway.
"Get me out! Get me out I"
or Uie 122 killed, three were 1'hen the door rcclosed parAmerl.cans. varlg Alrllnes tially.
officials identified them as
"It Is posalble that If I had
Bernard Regan , Ello Rosa and tho strength to open the door
Yole Hosa. Their hometowns completely and releaae the
are not Immediately known. emergency chute, 1ome
Tersis told newsmen the lire passengen might have Been
broke out in the rear tollels as 1!8Ved,'' Terals•ld. "Alor11dy
he and another steward fought · son.e ~le . were duhln1
it unsuccessfully with flre towurd the pluM."
I

•t

�•
14 -The Sllnda~ Times- Sentinel, Sunday, July 15, 1973

QUOTES

..~.-;~ ,.~-:~,r:' .~ ·.r~;;

AcJivities set

Tuesday, 1-!, euchre,
checkers.
I
Wednesday , 10 :30-12:00,
POMEROY - The Senior
crocheting,
Mae Weber, Inatlzen bus will begin operation
s~ tllday that Ius dt:'~trudtvr
Monday, July 16. Those structor.
for&lt;·e can lx1 ('oJnt :- tm\!d ond W('
Thursday , . l, Attorney c;tn
wishing to ride the bus are
turn hun toward pea c~rul
urged to check the schedule Robert Buck will speak on pursu 1ts for all mankiurl
. . . ., Vice llresidenl A~;tnt' " un
located In post offices or other legal matters.
nu c l~ar intpasse.
Open
house
Is
held
Monday
central locations in each town.
Thz activity schedule this through Friday, 8:3()..4 :30 with
Lih\ IS str uggle and ' till'
quilting, rug hooking, shuffle- struggh.• must go on
week is :
Monday, 1-3, decopage . board, and various other ac· - Sheik Mohammed Abdullah.
Kashmir leader.
Bring item lo be decorated. · tivities. •

'

s

•

L

I~ - Th• Sw1day_Tim -a· Sentinel, swulay, July 1~.

ayre fads
to
•
wm post•tIOn
.

P'l'. PL8ASAN1' - Another
attempt to appoint a principal
for Wahamu High School!ailed
and both the bend urea school
and Point Pleasant High
remained without principals
following a Board of Education
meeting Thursday evening
consumed mostly by hearing
grievances fn a ciosed-door
Supt. Cllarles Withers once
more put a bid in to employ
Ralph Snyre of New Haven as
the WHS principal, but · his
recommendation was defeated
in a 3-2 vote.
Board member Bill Withers
moved . to . acce pt the

su perin tenden t 's recomfor placing Sayre at
Wnhama and Ray Fields gave
the second, but when Harry
Siders, board president, called
for !he vote the motion foiled
with Robert Adkins, Bill Brady
and Siders voting no.
Brady said he wants to make
a chulce . . He Indicated
displeasure over waiting until
July 1 before interviews were
made.
•.
Regarding applications for
administrative posts at several
schools, Brady said, "I think
we still need to seek and search
out... " .
~lendatlon

STORE HOURS:

9 TIL 9 DAILY-CLOSED SUNDAY
252 THIRD AVE.; GALLIPOLIS

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

1

Area Deaths

RHODA B. HALE
COLUMBUS - Rhoda B.
Hale , 74, 5072 Teddy Dr.,
Columbus, died at 9:30 a.m.
Saturday in St . Luke's Nursing
Center, Columbus. She had
been ih failing health about two
months.
Born January 2, 1899, in
Virginia, she was the daughter
of the late Lemuel and Mary
Stanley. Her husband, Wiltiam
J. Hale, died in 1962, and one
son, Lawrenee, was killed in
World War II.
Shf is survived by two sons,
James, Columbus, and Nile,
Alamogordo, N. M. ; five
grandchildren; three brothers;
a sister, and a half-brother.
She resided many years in
the Waterloo community and
lived in Columbus 2¥.! years.
She was a member or the
Waterloo Methodist Church.
. The funeral will be Tuesday
at 1 p.m. at the Waugh-HalleyWood
Funeral
Home,
Gallipolis, with the Rev. Paul
Watson officiating. Burial will
follow in the Woodland
Cemetery, Ironton.
Friends may call at the
funeral home fr om 2 to 4 and 7
to 9 p.m. Monday.

•

JAMES CHATTIN
MASON - James Harold ·
Chattin, 63, Mason, died Friday
e~ening at Pleasant Valley
Hospital. Mr. Chat~n was born
Aug . 21, 1909 In Mason County.
He was preceded in death by
his father, James Robert
Chattin.
Surviving are his mother,
Abbie Steele Chattin, Clifton;
his wife, Susie, Mason; a
daughter, Mrs. Margaret
Powell of Racine ; two grandchildren; three brothers, Oris
and Robert, Point Pleasant,
and John Chattin, Mason, and
two sisters, Mr~ . Marjorie
Ball, Pomeroy Route 2, and
Mrs . Dorothy
Manard,
Columbus.
Funeral services will be atll
a.m. Monday at the Foglesong
Funeral Home with the Rev.

· TROON, Scotland ( UPI) Tom Weiskopf, playlnv "the
best golf of my life," fired a
final rOIUld 70 to Win the
$125,000 Brlllsh Open Golf
Championships by three
strokes Saturday from U. s.
Open champion Johnny Miller
and British veteran Nell Coles.
Weiskopf led through every
round and cracked Miller's
challenge on the final nine
holes, finishing 12-under-par at
276 to tie Arnold Palmer's
British Open record· ll years
ago on the same 7,064-yard par

l

U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED
"

MRS. M,\RY WALL
CROWN CITY - Mrs. Mary .
C. Wall, 77, Rt. 2, Crown City,
formerly of Platform, Ohio,
died at 8:05 a.m. Saturday at
Holzer Medical Center. She
was born May 20, 1896 in Gallia
Co!Ully, the daughter of the late
Billy and Bertie Church Sheets.
She attended the Scottown
United Methodist Church,
She was the wife or the late J.
T. Wall who died in 1971. They
owned and operated a general
store in Platform until his
. death.
She is survived by four
daughters, Mrs. Gladys
Brammer, Gallipolis; Mrs.
Elizabeth Wade, Scottown;
Mrs. Jennie Pinkerman, in
California, and Mrs.' Maxine
Waugh, Crown City; two sons,
Paul, Ironton, and Amos,
Chesapeake; three sisters,
Mrs. Sadie Irion, Mrs. Willa
Sheets, and Mrs. Jewell Sheets,
and one brother, Brady Sheets,
all of Gallipolis; 16 grandchildren, and several greatgrandchildren.
Services will be at 2 p.m.
Monday . at the Schneider
flllleral Home, Chesapeake.
Burial will be :at the Perkins
Ridge Cemetery, Scottown.
Friends may call after 2 p.m.
today.

Chuck Steaks
CENTER CUTS

.

~
'

lb.
Cube Steaks

Boneless

No

• • •

Waste

.

lb.

SJ59

BONElESS

"

• •• •

we ru..-vt

• Ill.

SJ19
,

.

the rithl te lim II .,anti lies on all ittm• in tlli l ad . Price. tfftctlve th"r u So~t., July 21 , an. None toldlte dtilen .

lf,oNiffl p,('m&lt;IH',.,

U.S (,o .. •

•

;,.,pt&gt;th•d

Ppnnvfare
u !1. Gov1 ln!ipertpd

MARVAL BRAND
USDA lnspecled

SLICED

FRESH

BEEF
LIVER

GROUND

Hen Turkey
Hindquarters

BEEF
Family Pok J .lbs. or More

1' 1 lo 21-z lb. Avg.

lb.59c lb.89c

lb.

49¢

NORTHWESTERN

L. E. McHAFFIE
RUTLAND - Lawrence E.
McHaffie, 86, formerly of this
area, died.Friday at Lindview ·
Nursing Home, Grandville. He
is survived by one brother,
Ray, Grove City.
F!Uleral services will be held
Monday at 2 p.m. al the Martin
F!lllerai · Home, Rutland, with
the Rev . Scott Carter officiating. Burial will be in
Miles Cemetery. friends may
call at the funera l home
anytime .

CHERRIES

lb.

Sweet &amp; Flavorful "
.

SLICED

... 1

me out.''
Staubach won the No. 1 job
last year but Morton took over
after an injury to Roger and led
the Cowboys into the playoffs
for the seventh straight year.
Coach Tom Landry has said
the two would battle again this
summer for the starting job

~-

BING
ST~TE FARE

THOUSAND OAKS, Calif.
(UP!) - It is the small print on
. the contract which prompted
the current standoff between
the Dallas Cowboys and eightyear veteran quarterback
Craig Morton .
The 30-year-old Morton
admitted Saturday
the
Cowboys had offered him
a rralse In salary although his current pact with
the club has one year to run.
While the pay hike wasn't
entirely to. his liking, Morton
indicated the main bone of
contention was incentive
· clliu11es which would pay him
bomi11es if he met certain
standards . such as starting
status and passing performances.
. J'[ don't think it's fair to have
Incentives included in the
contract," Morton said at his
motel not far from the team's
summer camp at California
Lutheran College .
He wants the incentives built
Into the body of the contract
because, he said, ''Right now
I'm 30 and In the best physical
conditiOn in which I've ever
come to camp. I've been (with
" the team) eiglit years now and
' whether I start or not, I feel
. I'm the No. 1 quarterback and
, I'm going to negotiate on that
, basis.
"No matter what they say,
Roger (Staubach) has to beat

and Morton would not be
subject to a fine until Monday.
Cowboys president Tex.
Schramm, with whom Morton
has been re-negotiating, said
.he was surprised that his
quarterback's demands came
on -so strong at this poi nt,
considering his excellent
physical condition .
"He participated in our offseason program and went
through the complete quarterback school," Schramm
said.
Morton said he ~~can't work·
under the existing incentive
program" and doesn't think he
"should be docked (for ) sitting
oq the bench."
Morton
denied
he
"demanded" to be traded but
did ·feel that ·under the
stalemate "they .would try to
deal me off."
"I feel ! '111 expendable,
which is the way they make
you feel," Morton said.
But, the·fact Morton said he
would reamin a\ his motel at
least to Monday indicated the
breach may not be as wide as it
first appeared.
.
LATROBE, Pa. (UP!)- The .
Pittsburgh Steelers, champions of the central division of
the American Football Conference of the National
Football League, began
training today at St. Vincent
College. ·
Clluck Noll, who took over as
head coach In i969, will greet«
players and 36 rookies. Sixteen
first year players were drafted
lhis ·year, 17 are free agents
and three are 1972 draftees who
will try .again to make the
team.
Cornerback James Thomas,

..•
•'

'

"

"

4

·WHITE BREAD !
1-lb. 4-oz. Loaves

r

SMUCKER'S

GRAPE JELLY
.2-lb. Jar
July 13, 1973
Rio Grande, Ohio

BftAlJSc OF ALL THE
INSECT!&gt; THE'{ €Arl

•

Dear Editor:
I would like to respond to a letter in your colwnn three weeks
ago fro~ a R10Grande College student, Pamillack.
BasiCally, ~he was correct in all her points. Rio Grande
College IS offermg t_he opport!lllity for any Individual living in
Galha, Jackson, Me1gs or Vinton Co!lllty to receive up to $1 000
toward their $1,710 tuition cost.
'
. All they ha~e to do is live in one of the four counties, be a
flrst-llme, full -t1me student, and enroll at Rio Grande College
full-time this fall. Th1s g1ft, coupled with other financial assist- ·
an.ce available, means many of the new students will attend Rio
Grande .College next year absolutely tuition-free
· ~iss Bl~ck said there aren't too m~~Y peo~le in the fouii
count1es takmg advantage of this offer. On the surface, this may
see~ to _be accurate; however, we have already processed 125•
apphcahons
from th e four county area thus far , and we are
.
expectmg to ha.ve. many more before the fall quarter starts. But
·even ~t 125, this 1s an mcrease of ao students over the number
that enrolled from these CO!lllties last year.
She also_asked why we don't offer this program to four different counties, and the answer Is because this whole idea was
created by the R1o Grande Community College Soard or
Trust';"'· They wanted to prove to the Ohio Board of Regents that
lh_ere" a need for lower cost education in the Community Coli e
District of Gallla, Jackson, Meigs and ·Vinton Counties. eg ·
So, while the money of up to $500,000for this program i8 being
raised by the Rio Grande College Board of Trustees, the initial
req~est came from the Rio Grande Community College Board •
and IS designed to cover the Community College District .
BeCaWie of this program, Rio Grande College may be ~ne of the
few colleges 1n Ohio that will show an Increase In enrollment this
year.

!.

Slnce:-ely,
.
DeanS. Brown
Director of Admlaslons and Records
f-lo Grande College
1

ENGLISH
MOUNTAIN

GREEN BEANS

for

15 %-oz. Cans

UTIA LIGHT

~~_!rleerated

Buttermilk Bimits . 4~~; 47'

r'

."' N.B.C. FEATURES
1~u.••. 59
Oreo' Supreme sANDWicH
COOKIES • ' '
"'12•· c
·"· 41c
Ritz Crackers . . . . . . . . . . "•·
SNYDERS

POTATO CHiltl
1-lb. 2-oz.

"kg.

$109

KRAFT CHEFS SURPRISE
SLO,YJOIIUPPII . .. .. .. ..
COLONIAL IUPPII
' .. ' .. ' ' ' · • · · 15 " · 67c
HOMISPUNIUI'Pit ..... .. .. .... ' ... . ........... .,,
CHILl MACAIONIIUP,Ii ............• . .... ~~ ... .. 7&lt;
FISHIIMAN'I IUPP..
' ' ' .. ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' · · 14 '" ' 67 &lt;
IANCHIIO IUml
" " . "" . " " · .. " " ·'·" ' 61c

had complete control of
myself. ll wus the oost Rolf of
my life."
·
Miller shot an even par 72
after choking on three-foot and
fiv e-fool putt. on ths 15th and
16th hole• Just when he needed
to apply the pressure. He ended
nine-under at 279.
"Naturally I would like to
have won," said~Mill'er , ~~ Bull
didn't hit the putts when r
needed'them . Tom played very
well, pulling them when he
needed."

Jock Nickl;ws recovered
ofter a disastrous 76 Friday to
shutter the course record with
o 65 !hut put him in fourth spot,
eight-under on 280. The Golden
Bear, who like Weiskopf comes
from Columbus, Ohio, fir ed six
birdies and "'' eagle three on
the 481-yard lith, but marred
his sensational round with a
bo~ e y five at the 17th.
Coles, the balding 33-ycar.old
lll'iton who has represented his
country in lhe past six Ryder
Cup matches, holed a tO-foot

illrdle putt on the 18th to lie
·Milh;r for second place and
each received $9,42:i.
Bert Yancey came home In "
two-under-par 70 to e_,id al 281 ,
five strokes ahead of next man
Pe i&lt;Jr Butler of Britain.
If Wcl•kopl, who never threeputted. ln. any round, fe ll any
pressure on him as he went ou t
in drenching rui n, he didn 't
show it. Miller hou~cd 30-yards
into the rough orr the second
teo to end the :!91-yarder with a
bogey and the '30-year-old

Weiskopf, who Thursday said
he would not call himself a
~rcat ~o lfcr until he had won a
major title, apnlicd the
pressure with a 20 foot birdie
pull at the next hole.
Miller birdied the fifth hut
Welsk11p£ cume right back with
another red-hot eiJort from 25
feet on the sixth to go 12-under
lor the tournament.
Bolh men birdied the lith
where Nicklaus drove chipped
and pulled to an. ea~le hut
Weiskopf had his only bogey-on

U1c J:ith when he hooked 40'
yards off the ~reen,pil&lt;;hed up
short and missed a 15-foot
chance .
Miller now had 'four holes to
make up two shol• but saw his
putting touch desert him
completely, bogied the 15th and
ended three sh9L• adri(t.
For defending champion Lee
Trevino, who had confiden tly
sta ted he was going to win his
thi t·d straight British crown,
the tourname nt was a glum
one . But Super Mex at least

Revson cops Grand Prix

ended with a nourish, closing
out with a 611 after his 75-73-73
for u 289, 10 strokes far away
fr om the winner.
Astroke back of Trevino wa&lt;
lite man whose record was lied.
Palmer matched par with a
final round 72and a total of 290, .
Bruce Crampton, the leading
money winner making a rare
appea rance in Britain, was
nowhere, finishing at 292.
·

·Lions club
•
sponsormg

the Steelers' first draft choi ce,
and linebacker Gail Clark, the
· Revson was among the
fourth pick, will miss drills
SILVERSTONE, England win a formul a one GP, a seri., Mexican GP and Phil Hill, the
leaders
throughout the ra ce.
becalllie they are working out (UP!) - Peter Revson, a 34· · that has been dominated by 1961 World Champion. •
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Rev son's time for the 200- He to ok command ·. from
with the college All Stars. year-&lt;&gt;ld heir to a cosmetic European und South American
Peterson after the 39th of the 67 - Middleport Lions Club is
Defensive back Ken Phares, fortune , won his first formula drivers. His previous best this mile race was one hour, 20
laps
on the 2.9-mile.circuit and sponsoring a hole-in.one golf
was forced to withdraw from one Grand Pri&lt; race Saturday year was second place in the minutes and 18.5 seconds. He
held on to beat the Swede's JPS contest July 23 lhru July 28 at
the All star game because of when he scored by a com· South African GP, fourth in the averaged 13L75 miles an hour.
The handsome bachelor from Lo tu s-~'ord . Revson's McLaren the Pomeroy Golf Club.
knee surgery.
forlable margin over Sweden's Spanish and liflh al Monte
A golfer hitting a hole-ln-&lt;&gt;ne
Redondo Beach, Calif., who teammate De_nny Hulme of
. Glen Nardi, a lineman from Ronnie Peterson in a ·British Carlo.
New
Zealand
was
third
.
will
receive $200. Proceeds
Navy chosen on the 16th round, GP Classic that was marred by
The last American to win a will race in the Can-Am seri es
James
Hunt
of
Britain
was
froln the event will gli toward
wili be delayed indefinitely an eight-car accident in the GP was Mario Andretli of at Catkins Glen , N. V., next
foitrth
in
a
privately
entered
the club's sight conservation ·
be.cause of a military com- very first lap.
Nazareth, Pa., who won the weekend, picked up nine points
March-Ford
and
Francoi
s
program.
The club will award
mitment.
Revson, at ths wheel of a South African event in 1971. for his GP victory and vaulted
Physicals, the selection of Works McLaren, thus became Before that it was Ritchie into sixth place in the World Cevert, second to Peterson in three trophies, a ladies, men's
equipment and picture taking only the 'rourth American to Gunter back in 1965 with the Driver Standings with 20 the July 1 French Grand Prix, and jUllior trophy for 16 year
points . There are six events came in fifth with a Tyrrell- olds and under.
will take up most of Sunday.
The golfer hitting to the hole
remaining in the 15-race World ford ·. Argentina 's Carlos
Two-a-day practice sessions
Reuternann
was
·sixth
in
a
will bet a matched set of golf
Championship Series which is
will begin Monday and will
Brabham-Ford.
clubs.
concluded wihh the U. S. Grand
continue for at least two weeks.
The Steelers opeo_ their sixGALVESTON, Tex. (UPI ) - eight games Jackson played in Prix at Watkins Glen in Ocgame pre-season schedule The Texas State Teachers last year.
Iober.
Saturday night, Aug. 4, against Association said Saturday it
The Galveston school board
Jackie Stewart, a two-time
Due To The Tremendous
the Baltimore Colts at Three will investigate how Ball High first demoted Woolley to a champion from Scotland, who
Rivers Stadiwn in Pittsburgh. School Coach Joe Woolley maintenance department job had a 20-yard lead before the
Public Response To Our
Three days !liter the squad helped rig the transcript of but voted 4·3 Wednesday to race was halted for an hour and
must be cut to 60 players.
Oklahoma quarterback Kerry reinstate him, leading his 40 minutes, finished ·down the
Red Pin Bowling We Have
The Steelers posted an 11-3 Jackson.
assistants to resign . Woolley fi eld. Emerson Filtipaldi of
record last year, the best in 40 · The Galveston chapter of the has a 35-10 record in four years Brazil , trailing Stewart by one
Extended Re~ Pin Bow.l.rn.g
'years of competition and won state group asked for the atBall and last seasonhis team point, 4!-43, in the .standings,
their first division title. The investigation and also praised · rea ched the slate quar- did not fini sh.·· Nelther driver
To Thursday and Friday
Miami Dolphins defeated them the eight assistant coaches who terfinals.
picked up ·points since these
for the AFC Tille en route to resigned in protest over
Woolley also admitted he are alloted only for the first six
From 7 Till2
Super Bowl championship.
Wooley 's reinstatement.
helped change the transccipt fin ishers.
" We of the Galveston for Michael Phillips, a center
The race got off to a senEducation Association com- at Oklahoma. The former sational start on . one of the
mend them (assistant coaches) registrar at Ball said she fastest tracks in race-crazy
GET READY FOR YOUR WINTER LEAGUES NOW
for their courage and· chan~ed his transcript al th e Brita in and the crowd of 100,000
BY BOWLING 12 TO 5 ON SAT. &amp; SUN. AT THE
prolessional consciousness to request of Woolley and Prin- gasped when Jody Scheckter,
defend ,the high standafds of cipal Richard Streiff.
the 23-year-&lt;&gt;ld South African
SPECIAL RATE OF 40' A GAME
inorality on which our duties as
Mrs. Betty Bemsaid she first who leads the Formula 5000
Jeaphers are based,'' Chapter refused Woolley's request. and Series in the U. S., ·went.out of
President Socorrita Cruz said. they went to Streiff's office.
control and an eight-car pile-up,
" The
entire
leaching
"Mr . Streiff directed me to ensued, reducing the original
profession is in a three-ring . exec ute this change," she said . starting field of 28 to 19. Briton
''This transcript with the Jackie Oliver was not involved
BOSTON (UP!) - Carl circus because of this."
KANAUGA, 0.
UPPER RT. 7
Woolley, 35, admit£ed he changed nwnber and the class ' in the crash, but did not start
Yastrzemskl's triple and a
single by Orlando Cepeda in ordered Jackson's transcript standing was sent to the second time around.
the eighth inning Saturday changed to improve his grades University of Oklahoma."
Mrs. Bero and Streiff both
enabled the Boston Red Sox to and keep the ~youth at
eke out a 6-l'i win over the Texas Oklahoma. The No. 2 ranked resigned last summer. Streiff
Sooners disclosed the NCAA denied he ordered Mrs. Bero to
Rangers Saturday.
The Rangers, down 4-0 at one rule violation and forfeited make the change.
point., tied the game in the top
af the eighth on a single by Alex
Johnson, a pair .of infield outs,
RIO GRANDE COLLEGE
Lyne Center Schedule
and a wild pitch by Boston
July IS-22, 1973
reliever Bob Bolin.
POOL
DATE-GYMNASIUM
1:30-3:30 Open Swi m
But Luis Aparicio opened the July 15- l : 30·3: 30 Open Rec rea tion
7-B: JOOpen Swim
7-8:30 Open Recreation
bottom half of the inning with a
8:
30-10
Camp Crescendo
9·l0 Camp Crescenco ,
single and scored easily when July 16- 7-B: JO Open Recreation
1: JO:J:300pen Swim
4-5 Sw.im Lessons
9·10 Camp Crescenco
Yaslrzemski pounded 'a triple
·
7-8:30 Open Swim
to ceni&lt;Jrfield. Cepeda followed
8:30-10 Camp Crescendo
1:30-3:30Open Swim
with a bouncing single to left July 17- 7-8:300pen Recreation
4-5 Swim Lessons
9-10 Ca.rnp Crescendo
that scored Yastrzemskl .
7·8:300pen Sw im
The Red Sox took a l-0 lead
8: JQ. 10 "Camp Crescen do
1: 30·3:30 Open Swi m
on Tommy Harper's home run Ju ly 18- 7·8:30 Open Recreation
4-,5 Swim Les son s
9-10
Camp
Cresce
ndo
to lead off the first inning, then
7-B: 30 Open Swim
moved to a 4-0 advantage with
8: 30· 10 Camp Crescendo
I : 30-3:30 Open Swim
July
1
;7·8:
30
Open
Recreation
a three run second inning that
4-5 Swim Lessons
9-lO Camp Crescendo
When roaches laugh at other
was capped by Doug Griffin 's
7-8:30 Open Swim
products, use ARAB ROACH·
B: 30-10 Camp Crescendo
two-run double high off the wall
DETH
KIT. None escape."..
1:30-3:30Swaim
Ju ly 20- 7-8:30 Open Recreation
in lertcenter field.
even
resista
nt roaches. 8-oth
"..e-.:::..~,..;-.~--:.~~4-5
Swim
Lessons
9-10 Ca mp Crescen do
The Rangers got three runs
7-8: JO Open Swim
immediate and lasting results .
B: JQ ..JQ Camp Cresce ndo
in the sixth as Alex Johnson
Easy to use. Guaranteed to give
I : 30-3:30 Open Swi m
21- 1:30-3:30 Open Recreation
professional-exterminator
results
doubled and scored on Rico July
1: JQ.J: 30 Open Swim
July 22- 1: 30-3: 30 Open Rec reation
when
used
as
directed
.
Carty's b,ase hit before Bill
7-8:30 Open Swim
7-8:30 Open Recreation
8: 30-10_Camp Cresce ndo
9-10 Canip Crescendo
Sudakis tagged a homer to left.
Bolin, who relieved starter
Bill Lee after Johnson's single
in the eighth,- gave up run to
the Rangers in the ninth when,
with two out, consecutive
singles by Dave Nelson, Vic
Harris and Johnson brought in
a run .
Bolin was then relieved by
Bob Veale who got Rico Curly
to ground out. on his first pitch .
It was the lOth save for
Veale, while Bolin got his
'· second win In four decision., .
Jackie Brown, rcocently culled
up f1·om Spokane, took the loss ..

Investigation underway.

golf event

r--------"'!"----------.

Cepeda's

,single is
I'

•

•

difference

SKYLINE LANES

a

CUT

,Pillsbury

rills

wins

Football training notes

ARMIUR *STAR BEEF---U.S.D.A. GRADED CHOICE

George Hoschar officiating.
Burial will be in Kirkland
Memorial Gardens. Friends
may call at the funeral home
after 3 p.m. on Sunday.

72 Troon SeaBidc Links.
It was Weiskopf's first major
tournament win and his fourth
. victory In a.seven week hotspell, earnlhg him $14,300 to
boost his yearly earnings lo
$l75,3 27 .
"I was never really conscious of John playilJg," said
Weiskopf ot the · last-day
pressure. "I tried to remember
things 1 had done before in
major tournaments to lose. I
remembered making too many
last decisions yesi&lt;Jrday and
today I was much slower and

• •

•

0

•

session.

ll
b
II

1973

PROMISE
MARGARINE
1-lb. Stick
Pkg.

57 e

DUNCAN .HlNii
ANGIL FOOD &gt;

CAKE MI)C
14 Y.·o•·

Pkg, .

69e

CRISCO
SHORTENING '
3 ·tb.

9 9e

L::;;:;;:;;:;;::;:;:;=···.....;";'ii"ii·...;;
..............~~•.•ii,:i"ii'~~::iiic"ii";;;;;;;;:;=:::::;;~

DISCOVER
HOW EASY IT IS
TO INSTALL AN

(l'lcnse Order By Name)

~ AtMittOftCJ
We 'll show you how . step by stop , to in stall
an Armstrong· Cei ling . It's one of the easiest and
most noticeable home improvements you can
make ... and so economical when you do it
yourself. Come In and soe our largo so loction of ·
ceiling tile .

Carolina Lumber &amp; Supply Co.
Poinl Plusent

312 6th St.
Phone 675-1160

. • \J .

'

.

'

TEAM ARRIVES
STOKE MANDEVILLE ,
IJ:nglund (UP!) - Tho United
Stut~s wheelchulr tcum fOI' th o
July !5,21 '' P~ralymplcs "
gumes arrived Snlu1·day. Tho
Amctlcnn 35-strong team, of
men and wom~n wheelchair
athletes will be umon~ 520
enlri •s from 64 countries
rcprescnlln~ all five continents
nl the gumes. EvenL~ to be
contested Include nrchery,
bowls, welghtll!tlng, snooker,
table tennis, fencing, •wlmmlng, b!ISkctbollnnd trnck und
fl o!d.

e 2 PI[CES OF FINGER
UCKIN' GOOD CI1 1CKEN
eMASHED POl'ATOES
&amp;

GRAVY

e DELICIOUS HOT ROll
Just what the busy shopper wants.

Visit the Colonel
COlONel SANDCRS' R(CiPt

Kutuek~ fried Chieku ~
BOB EVANS DRIVE-IN
EAITE~N

AVE .

GALLI POLIS. OHIO

LIVING
AT ITS BEST...

Enjoy ·your patio this summer. Use Arab Patio Fog to
kill and repel fli.es, mosquitoes, gnats, wasps, hornets
and others, Including flying moths. Also kills ants,
crickets, centip~des. plus many other crawling Insects.
Effect'

.CARTER &amp; EVANS .INC.
87 Olive Street

Galllpoll1, Ohio
'

'

�•
14 -The Sllnda~ Times- Sentinel, Sunday, July 15, 1973

QUOTES

..~.-;~ ,.~-:~,r:' .~ ·.r~;;

AcJivities set

Tuesday, 1-!, euchre,
checkers.
I
Wednesday , 10 :30-12:00,
POMEROY - The Senior
crocheting,
Mae Weber, Inatlzen bus will begin operation
s~ tllday that Ius dt:'~trudtvr
Monday, July 16. Those structor.
for&lt;·e can lx1 ('oJnt :- tm\!d ond W('
Thursday , . l, Attorney c;tn
wishing to ride the bus are
turn hun toward pea c~rul
urged to check the schedule Robert Buck will speak on pursu 1ts for all mankiurl
. . . ., Vice llresidenl A~;tnt' " un
located In post offices or other legal matters.
nu c l~ar intpasse.
Open
house
Is
held
Monday
central locations in each town.
Thz activity schedule this through Friday, 8:3()..4 :30 with
Lih\ IS str uggle and ' till'
quilting, rug hooking, shuffle- struggh.• must go on
week is :
Monday, 1-3, decopage . board, and various other ac· - Sheik Mohammed Abdullah.
Kashmir leader.
Bring item lo be decorated. · tivities. •

'

s

•

L

I~ - Th• Sw1day_Tim -a· Sentinel, swulay, July 1~.

ayre fads
to
•
wm post•tIOn
.

P'l'. PL8ASAN1' - Another
attempt to appoint a principal
for Wahamu High School!ailed
and both the bend urea school
and Point Pleasant High
remained without principals
following a Board of Education
meeting Thursday evening
consumed mostly by hearing
grievances fn a ciosed-door
Supt. Cllarles Withers once
more put a bid in to employ
Ralph Snyre of New Haven as
the WHS principal, but · his
recommendation was defeated
in a 3-2 vote.
Board member Bill Withers
moved . to . acce pt the

su perin tenden t 's recomfor placing Sayre at
Wnhama and Ray Fields gave
the second, but when Harry
Siders, board president, called
for !he vote the motion foiled
with Robert Adkins, Bill Brady
and Siders voting no.
Brady said he wants to make
a chulce . . He Indicated
displeasure over waiting until
July 1 before interviews were
made.
•.
Regarding applications for
administrative posts at several
schools, Brady said, "I think
we still need to seek and search
out... " .
~lendatlon

STORE HOURS:

9 TIL 9 DAILY-CLOSED SUNDAY
252 THIRD AVE.; GALLIPOLIS

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

1

Area Deaths

RHODA B. HALE
COLUMBUS - Rhoda B.
Hale , 74, 5072 Teddy Dr.,
Columbus, died at 9:30 a.m.
Saturday in St . Luke's Nursing
Center, Columbus. She had
been ih failing health about two
months.
Born January 2, 1899, in
Virginia, she was the daughter
of the late Lemuel and Mary
Stanley. Her husband, Wiltiam
J. Hale, died in 1962, and one
son, Lawrenee, was killed in
World War II.
Shf is survived by two sons,
James, Columbus, and Nile,
Alamogordo, N. M. ; five
grandchildren; three brothers;
a sister, and a half-brother.
She resided many years in
the Waterloo community and
lived in Columbus 2¥.! years.
She was a member or the
Waterloo Methodist Church.
. The funeral will be Tuesday
at 1 p.m. at the Waugh-HalleyWood
Funeral
Home,
Gallipolis, with the Rev. Paul
Watson officiating. Burial will
follow in the Woodland
Cemetery, Ironton.
Friends may call at the
funeral home fr om 2 to 4 and 7
to 9 p.m. Monday.

•

JAMES CHATTIN
MASON - James Harold ·
Chattin, 63, Mason, died Friday
e~ening at Pleasant Valley
Hospital. Mr. Chat~n was born
Aug . 21, 1909 In Mason County.
He was preceded in death by
his father, James Robert
Chattin.
Surviving are his mother,
Abbie Steele Chattin, Clifton;
his wife, Susie, Mason; a
daughter, Mrs. Margaret
Powell of Racine ; two grandchildren; three brothers, Oris
and Robert, Point Pleasant,
and John Chattin, Mason, and
two sisters, Mr~ . Marjorie
Ball, Pomeroy Route 2, and
Mrs . Dorothy
Manard,
Columbus.
Funeral services will be atll
a.m. Monday at the Foglesong
Funeral Home with the Rev.

· TROON, Scotland ( UPI) Tom Weiskopf, playlnv "the
best golf of my life," fired a
final rOIUld 70 to Win the
$125,000 Brlllsh Open Golf
Championships by three
strokes Saturday from U. s.
Open champion Johnny Miller
and British veteran Nell Coles.
Weiskopf led through every
round and cracked Miller's
challenge on the final nine
holes, finishing 12-under-par at
276 to tie Arnold Palmer's
British Open record· ll years
ago on the same 7,064-yard par

l

U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED
"

MRS. M,\RY WALL
CROWN CITY - Mrs. Mary .
C. Wall, 77, Rt. 2, Crown City,
formerly of Platform, Ohio,
died at 8:05 a.m. Saturday at
Holzer Medical Center. She
was born May 20, 1896 in Gallia
Co!Ully, the daughter of the late
Billy and Bertie Church Sheets.
She attended the Scottown
United Methodist Church,
She was the wife or the late J.
T. Wall who died in 1971. They
owned and operated a general
store in Platform until his
. death.
She is survived by four
daughters, Mrs. Gladys
Brammer, Gallipolis; Mrs.
Elizabeth Wade, Scottown;
Mrs. Jennie Pinkerman, in
California, and Mrs.' Maxine
Waugh, Crown City; two sons,
Paul, Ironton, and Amos,
Chesapeake; three sisters,
Mrs. Sadie Irion, Mrs. Willa
Sheets, and Mrs. Jewell Sheets,
and one brother, Brady Sheets,
all of Gallipolis; 16 grandchildren, and several greatgrandchildren.
Services will be at 2 p.m.
Monday . at the Schneider
flllleral Home, Chesapeake.
Burial will be :at the Perkins
Ridge Cemetery, Scottown.
Friends may call after 2 p.m.
today.

Chuck Steaks
CENTER CUTS

.

~
'

lb.
Cube Steaks

Boneless

No

• • •

Waste

.

lb.

SJ59

BONElESS

"

• •• •

we ru..-vt

• Ill.

SJ19
,

.

the rithl te lim II .,anti lies on all ittm• in tlli l ad . Price. tfftctlve th"r u So~t., July 21 , an. None toldlte dtilen .

lf,oNiffl p,('m&lt;IH',.,

U.S (,o .. •

•

;,.,pt&gt;th•d

Ppnnvfare
u !1. Gov1 ln!ipertpd

MARVAL BRAND
USDA lnspecled

SLICED

FRESH

BEEF
LIVER

GROUND

Hen Turkey
Hindquarters

BEEF
Family Pok J .lbs. or More

1' 1 lo 21-z lb. Avg.

lb.59c lb.89c

lb.

49¢

NORTHWESTERN

L. E. McHAFFIE
RUTLAND - Lawrence E.
McHaffie, 86, formerly of this
area, died.Friday at Lindview ·
Nursing Home, Grandville. He
is survived by one brother,
Ray, Grove City.
F!Uleral services will be held
Monday at 2 p.m. al the Martin
F!lllerai · Home, Rutland, with
the Rev . Scott Carter officiating. Burial will be in
Miles Cemetery. friends may
call at the funera l home
anytime .

CHERRIES

lb.

Sweet &amp; Flavorful "
.

SLICED

... 1

me out.''
Staubach won the No. 1 job
last year but Morton took over
after an injury to Roger and led
the Cowboys into the playoffs
for the seventh straight year.
Coach Tom Landry has said
the two would battle again this
summer for the starting job

~-

BING
ST~TE FARE

THOUSAND OAKS, Calif.
(UP!) - It is the small print on
. the contract which prompted
the current standoff between
the Dallas Cowboys and eightyear veteran quarterback
Craig Morton .
The 30-year-old Morton
admitted Saturday
the
Cowboys had offered him
a rralse In salary although his current pact with
the club has one year to run.
While the pay hike wasn't
entirely to. his liking, Morton
indicated the main bone of
contention was incentive
· clliu11es which would pay him
bomi11es if he met certain
standards . such as starting
status and passing performances.
. J'[ don't think it's fair to have
Incentives included in the
contract," Morton said at his
motel not far from the team's
summer camp at California
Lutheran College .
He wants the incentives built
Into the body of the contract
because, he said, ''Right now
I'm 30 and In the best physical
conditiOn in which I've ever
come to camp. I've been (with
" the team) eiglit years now and
' whether I start or not, I feel
. I'm the No. 1 quarterback and
, I'm going to negotiate on that
, basis.
"No matter what they say,
Roger (Staubach) has to beat

and Morton would not be
subject to a fine until Monday.
Cowboys president Tex.
Schramm, with whom Morton
has been re-negotiating, said
.he was surprised that his
quarterback's demands came
on -so strong at this poi nt,
considering his excellent
physical condition .
"He participated in our offseason program and went
through the complete quarterback school," Schramm
said.
Morton said he ~~can't work·
under the existing incentive
program" and doesn't think he
"should be docked (for ) sitting
oq the bench."
Morton
denied
he
"demanded" to be traded but
did ·feel that ·under the
stalemate "they .would try to
deal me off."
"I feel ! '111 expendable,
which is the way they make
you feel," Morton said.
But, the·fact Morton said he
would reamin a\ his motel at
least to Monday indicated the
breach may not be as wide as it
first appeared.
.
LATROBE, Pa. (UP!)- The .
Pittsburgh Steelers, champions of the central division of
the American Football Conference of the National
Football League, began
training today at St. Vincent
College. ·
Clluck Noll, who took over as
head coach In i969, will greet«
players and 36 rookies. Sixteen
first year players were drafted
lhis ·year, 17 are free agents
and three are 1972 draftees who
will try .again to make the
team.
Cornerback James Thomas,

..•
•'

'

"

"

4

·WHITE BREAD !
1-lb. 4-oz. Loaves

r

SMUCKER'S

GRAPE JELLY
.2-lb. Jar
July 13, 1973
Rio Grande, Ohio

BftAlJSc OF ALL THE
INSECT!&gt; THE'{ €Arl

•

Dear Editor:
I would like to respond to a letter in your colwnn three weeks
ago fro~ a R10Grande College student, Pamillack.
BasiCally, ~he was correct in all her points. Rio Grande
College IS offermg t_he opport!lllity for any Individual living in
Galha, Jackson, Me1gs or Vinton Co!lllty to receive up to $1 000
toward their $1,710 tuition cost.
'
. All they ha~e to do is live in one of the four counties, be a
flrst-llme, full -t1me student, and enroll at Rio Grande College
full-time this fall. Th1s g1ft, coupled with other financial assist- ·
an.ce available, means many of the new students will attend Rio
Grande .College next year absolutely tuition-free
· ~iss Bl~ck said there aren't too m~~Y peo~le in the fouii
count1es takmg advantage of this offer. On the surface, this may
see~ to _be accurate; however, we have already processed 125•
apphcahons
from th e four county area thus far , and we are
.
expectmg to ha.ve. many more before the fall quarter starts. But
·even ~t 125, this 1s an mcrease of ao students over the number
that enrolled from these CO!lllties last year.
She also_asked why we don't offer this program to four different counties, and the answer Is because this whole idea was
created by the R1o Grande Community College Soard or
Trust';"'· They wanted to prove to the Ohio Board of Regents that
lh_ere" a need for lower cost education in the Community Coli e
District of Gallla, Jackson, Meigs and ·Vinton Counties. eg ·
So, while the money of up to $500,000for this program i8 being
raised by the Rio Grande College Board of Trustees, the initial
req~est came from the Rio Grande Community College Board •
and IS designed to cover the Community College District .
BeCaWie of this program, Rio Grande College may be ~ne of the
few colleges 1n Ohio that will show an Increase In enrollment this
year.

!.

Slnce:-ely,
.
DeanS. Brown
Director of Admlaslons and Records
f-lo Grande College
1

ENGLISH
MOUNTAIN

GREEN BEANS

for

15 %-oz. Cans

UTIA LIGHT

~~_!rleerated

Buttermilk Bimits . 4~~; 47'

r'

."' N.B.C. FEATURES
1~u.••. 59
Oreo' Supreme sANDWicH
COOKIES • ' '
"'12•· c
·"· 41c
Ritz Crackers . . . . . . . . . . "•·
SNYDERS

POTATO CHiltl
1-lb. 2-oz.

"kg.

$109

KRAFT CHEFS SURPRISE
SLO,YJOIIUPPII . .. .. .. ..
COLONIAL IUPPII
' .. ' .. ' ' ' · • · · 15 " · 67c
HOMISPUNIUI'Pit ..... .. .. .... ' ... . ........... .,,
CHILl MACAIONIIUP,Ii ............• . .... ~~ ... .. 7&lt;
FISHIIMAN'I IUPP..
' ' ' .. ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' · · 14 '" ' 67 &lt;
IANCHIIO IUml
" " . "" . " " · .. " " ·'·" ' 61c

had complete control of
myself. ll wus the oost Rolf of
my life."
·
Miller shot an even par 72
after choking on three-foot and
fiv e-fool putt. on ths 15th and
16th hole• Just when he needed
to apply the pressure. He ended
nine-under at 279.
"Naturally I would like to
have won," said~Mill'er , ~~ Bull
didn't hit the putts when r
needed'them . Tom played very
well, pulling them when he
needed."

Jock Nickl;ws recovered
ofter a disastrous 76 Friday to
shutter the course record with
o 65 !hut put him in fourth spot,
eight-under on 280. The Golden
Bear, who like Weiskopf comes
from Columbus, Ohio, fir ed six
birdies and "'' eagle three on
the 481-yard lith, but marred
his sensational round with a
bo~ e y five at the 17th.
Coles, the balding 33-ycar.old
lll'iton who has represented his
country in lhe past six Ryder
Cup matches, holed a tO-foot

illrdle putt on the 18th to lie
·Milh;r for second place and
each received $9,42:i.
Bert Yancey came home In "
two-under-par 70 to e_,id al 281 ,
five strokes ahead of next man
Pe i&lt;Jr Butler of Britain.
If Wcl•kopl, who never threeputted. ln. any round, fe ll any
pressure on him as he went ou t
in drenching rui n, he didn 't
show it. Miller hou~cd 30-yards
into the rough orr the second
teo to end the :!91-yarder with a
bogey and the '30-year-old

Weiskopf, who Thursday said
he would not call himself a
~rcat ~o lfcr until he had won a
major title, apnlicd the
pressure with a 20 foot birdie
pull at the next hole.
Miller birdied the fifth hut
Welsk11p£ cume right back with
another red-hot eiJort from 25
feet on the sixth to go 12-under
lor the tournament.
Bolh men birdied the lith
where Nicklaus drove chipped
and pulled to an. ea~le hut
Weiskopf had his only bogey-on

U1c J:ith when he hooked 40'
yards off the ~reen,pil&lt;;hed up
short and missed a 15-foot
chance .
Miller now had 'four holes to
make up two shol• but saw his
putting touch desert him
completely, bogied the 15th and
ended three sh9L• adri(t.
For defending champion Lee
Trevino, who had confiden tly
sta ted he was going to win his
thi t·d straight British crown,
the tourname nt was a glum
one . But Super Mex at least

Revson cops Grand Prix

ended with a nourish, closing
out with a 611 after his 75-73-73
for u 289, 10 strokes far away
fr om the winner.
Astroke back of Trevino wa&lt;
lite man whose record was lied.
Palmer matched par with a
final round 72and a total of 290, .
Bruce Crampton, the leading
money winner making a rare
appea rance in Britain, was
nowhere, finishing at 292.
·

·Lions club
•
sponsormg

the Steelers' first draft choi ce,
and linebacker Gail Clark, the
· Revson was among the
fourth pick, will miss drills
SILVERSTONE, England win a formul a one GP, a seri., Mexican GP and Phil Hill, the
leaders
throughout the ra ce.
becalllie they are working out (UP!) - Peter Revson, a 34· · that has been dominated by 1961 World Champion. •
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Rev son's time for the 200- He to ok command ·. from
with the college All Stars. year-&lt;&gt;ld heir to a cosmetic European und South American
Peterson after the 39th of the 67 - Middleport Lions Club is
Defensive back Ken Phares, fortune , won his first formula drivers. His previous best this mile race was one hour, 20
laps
on the 2.9-mile.circuit and sponsoring a hole-in.one golf
was forced to withdraw from one Grand Pri&lt; race Saturday year was second place in the minutes and 18.5 seconds. He
held on to beat the Swede's JPS contest July 23 lhru July 28 at
the All star game because of when he scored by a com· South African GP, fourth in the averaged 13L75 miles an hour.
The handsome bachelor from Lo tu s-~'ord . Revson's McLaren the Pomeroy Golf Club.
knee surgery.
forlable margin over Sweden's Spanish and liflh al Monte
A golfer hitting a hole-ln-&lt;&gt;ne
Redondo Beach, Calif., who teammate De_nny Hulme of
. Glen Nardi, a lineman from Ronnie Peterson in a ·British Carlo.
New
Zealand
was
third
.
will
receive $200. Proceeds
Navy chosen on the 16th round, GP Classic that was marred by
The last American to win a will race in the Can-Am seri es
James
Hunt
of
Britain
was
froln the event will gli toward
wili be delayed indefinitely an eight-car accident in the GP was Mario Andretli of at Catkins Glen , N. V., next
foitrth
in
a
privately
entered
the club's sight conservation ·
be.cause of a military com- very first lap.
Nazareth, Pa., who won the weekend, picked up nine points
March-Ford
and
Francoi
s
program.
The club will award
mitment.
Revson, at ths wheel of a South African event in 1971. for his GP victory and vaulted
Physicals, the selection of Works McLaren, thus became Before that it was Ritchie into sixth place in the World Cevert, second to Peterson in three trophies, a ladies, men's
equipment and picture taking only the 'rourth American to Gunter back in 1965 with the Driver Standings with 20 the July 1 French Grand Prix, and jUllior trophy for 16 year
points . There are six events came in fifth with a Tyrrell- olds and under.
will take up most of Sunday.
The golfer hitting to the hole
remaining in the 15-race World ford ·. Argentina 's Carlos
Two-a-day practice sessions
Reuternann
was
·sixth
in
a
will bet a matched set of golf
Championship Series which is
will begin Monday and will
Brabham-Ford.
clubs.
concluded wihh the U. S. Grand
continue for at least two weeks.
The Steelers opeo_ their sixGALVESTON, Tex. (UPI ) - eight games Jackson played in Prix at Watkins Glen in Ocgame pre-season schedule The Texas State Teachers last year.
Iober.
Saturday night, Aug. 4, against Association said Saturday it
The Galveston school board
Jackie Stewart, a two-time
Due To The Tremendous
the Baltimore Colts at Three will investigate how Ball High first demoted Woolley to a champion from Scotland, who
Rivers Stadiwn in Pittsburgh. School Coach Joe Woolley maintenance department job had a 20-yard lead before the
Public Response To Our
Three days !liter the squad helped rig the transcript of but voted 4·3 Wednesday to race was halted for an hour and
must be cut to 60 players.
Oklahoma quarterback Kerry reinstate him, leading his 40 minutes, finished ·down the
Red Pin Bowling We Have
The Steelers posted an 11-3 Jackson.
assistants to resign . Woolley fi eld. Emerson Filtipaldi of
record last year, the best in 40 · The Galveston chapter of the has a 35-10 record in four years Brazil , trailing Stewart by one
Extended Re~ Pin Bow.l.rn.g
'years of competition and won state group asked for the atBall and last seasonhis team point, 4!-43, in the .standings,
their first division title. The investigation and also praised · rea ched the slate quar- did not fini sh.·· Nelther driver
To Thursday and Friday
Miami Dolphins defeated them the eight assistant coaches who terfinals.
picked up ·points since these
for the AFC Tille en route to resigned in protest over
Woolley also admitted he are alloted only for the first six
From 7 Till2
Super Bowl championship.
Wooley 's reinstatement.
helped change the transccipt fin ishers.
" We of the Galveston for Michael Phillips, a center
The race got off to a senEducation Association com- at Oklahoma. The former sational start on . one of the
mend them (assistant coaches) registrar at Ball said she fastest tracks in race-crazy
GET READY FOR YOUR WINTER LEAGUES NOW
for their courage and· chan~ed his transcript al th e Brita in and the crowd of 100,000
BY BOWLING 12 TO 5 ON SAT. &amp; SUN. AT THE
prolessional consciousness to request of Woolley and Prin- gasped when Jody Scheckter,
defend ,the high standafds of cipal Richard Streiff.
the 23-year-&lt;&gt;ld South African
SPECIAL RATE OF 40' A GAME
inorality on which our duties as
Mrs. Betty Bemsaid she first who leads the Formula 5000
Jeaphers are based,'' Chapter refused Woolley's request. and Series in the U. S., ·went.out of
President Socorrita Cruz said. they went to Streiff's office.
control and an eight-car pile-up,
" The
entire
leaching
"Mr . Streiff directed me to ensued, reducing the original
profession is in a three-ring . exec ute this change," she said . starting field of 28 to 19. Briton
''This transcript with the Jackie Oliver was not involved
BOSTON (UP!) - Carl circus because of this."
KANAUGA, 0.
UPPER RT. 7
Woolley, 35, admit£ed he changed nwnber and the class ' in the crash, but did not start
Yastrzemskl's triple and a
single by Orlando Cepeda in ordered Jackson's transcript standing was sent to the second time around.
the eighth inning Saturday changed to improve his grades University of Oklahoma."
Mrs. Bero and Streiff both
enabled the Boston Red Sox to and keep the ~youth at
eke out a 6-l'i win over the Texas Oklahoma. The No. 2 ranked resigned last summer. Streiff
Sooners disclosed the NCAA denied he ordered Mrs. Bero to
Rangers Saturday.
The Rangers, down 4-0 at one rule violation and forfeited make the change.
point., tied the game in the top
af the eighth on a single by Alex
Johnson, a pair .of infield outs,
RIO GRANDE COLLEGE
Lyne Center Schedule
and a wild pitch by Boston
July IS-22, 1973
reliever Bob Bolin.
POOL
DATE-GYMNASIUM
1:30-3:30 Open Swi m
But Luis Aparicio opened the July 15- l : 30·3: 30 Open Rec rea tion
7-B: JOOpen Swim
7-8:30 Open Recreation
bottom half of the inning with a
8:
30-10
Camp Crescendo
9·l0 Camp Crescenco ,
single and scored easily when July 16- 7-B: JO Open Recreation
1: JO:J:300pen Swim
4-5 Sw.im Lessons
9·10 Camp Crescenco
Yaslrzemski pounded 'a triple
·
7-8:30 Open Swim
to ceni&lt;Jrfield. Cepeda followed
8:30-10 Camp Crescendo
1:30-3:30Open Swim
with a bouncing single to left July 17- 7-8:300pen Recreation
4-5 Swim Lessons
9-10 Ca.rnp Crescendo
that scored Yastrzemskl .
7·8:300pen Sw im
The Red Sox took a l-0 lead
8: JQ. 10 "Camp Crescen do
1: 30·3:30 Open Swi m
on Tommy Harper's home run Ju ly 18- 7·8:30 Open Recreation
4-,5 Swim Les son s
9-10
Camp
Cresce
ndo
to lead off the first inning, then
7-B: 30 Open Swim
moved to a 4-0 advantage with
8: 30· 10 Camp Crescendo
I : 30-3:30 Open Swim
July
1
;7·8:
30
Open
Recreation
a three run second inning that
4-5 Swim Lessons
9-lO Camp Crescendo
When roaches laugh at other
was capped by Doug Griffin 's
7-8:30 Open Swim
products, use ARAB ROACH·
B: 30-10 Camp Crescendo
two-run double high off the wall
DETH
KIT. None escape."..
1:30-3:30Swaim
Ju ly 20- 7-8:30 Open Recreation
in lertcenter field.
even
resista
nt roaches. 8-oth
"..e-.:::..~,..;-.~--:.~~4-5
Swim
Lessons
9-10 Ca mp Crescen do
The Rangers got three runs
7-8: JO Open Swim
immediate and lasting results .
B: JQ ..JQ Camp Cresce ndo
in the sixth as Alex Johnson
Easy to use. Guaranteed to give
I : 30-3:30 Open Swi m
21- 1:30-3:30 Open Recreation
professional-exterminator
results
doubled and scored on Rico July
1: JQ.J: 30 Open Swim
July 22- 1: 30-3: 30 Open Rec reation
when
used
as
directed
.
Carty's b,ase hit before Bill
7-8:30 Open Swim
7-8:30 Open Recreation
8: 30-10_Camp Cresce ndo
9-10 Canip Crescendo
Sudakis tagged a homer to left.
Bolin, who relieved starter
Bill Lee after Johnson's single
in the eighth,- gave up run to
the Rangers in the ninth when,
with two out, consecutive
singles by Dave Nelson, Vic
Harris and Johnson brought in
a run .
Bolin was then relieved by
Bob Veale who got Rico Curly
to ground out. on his first pitch .
It was the lOth save for
Veale, while Bolin got his
'· second win In four decision., .
Jackie Brown, rcocently culled
up f1·om Spokane, took the loss ..

Investigation underway.

golf event

r--------"'!"----------.

Cepeda's

,single is
I'

•

•

difference

SKYLINE LANES

a

CUT

,Pillsbury

rills

wins

Football training notes

ARMIUR *STAR BEEF---U.S.D.A. GRADED CHOICE

George Hoschar officiating.
Burial will be in Kirkland
Memorial Gardens. Friends
may call at the funeral home
after 3 p.m. on Sunday.

72 Troon SeaBidc Links.
It was Weiskopf's first major
tournament win and his fourth
. victory In a.seven week hotspell, earnlhg him $14,300 to
boost his yearly earnings lo
$l75,3 27 .
"I was never really conscious of John playilJg," said
Weiskopf ot the · last-day
pressure. "I tried to remember
things 1 had done before in
major tournaments to lose. I
remembered making too many
last decisions yesi&lt;Jrday and
today I was much slower and

• •

•

0

•

session.

ll
b
II

1973

PROMISE
MARGARINE
1-lb. Stick
Pkg.

57 e

DUNCAN .HlNii
ANGIL FOOD &gt;

CAKE MI)C
14 Y.·o•·

Pkg, .

69e

CRISCO
SHORTENING '
3 ·tb.

9 9e

L::;;:;;:;;:;;::;:;:;=···.....;";'ii"ii·...;;
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DISCOVER
HOW EASY IT IS
TO INSTALL AN

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Poinl Plusent

312 6th St.
Phone 675-1160

. • \J .

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TEAM ARRIVES
STOKE MANDEVILLE ,
IJ:nglund (UP!) - Tho United
Stut~s wheelchulr tcum fOI' th o
July !5,21 '' P~ralymplcs "
gumes arrived Snlu1·day. Tho
Amctlcnn 35-strong team, of
men and wom~n wheelchair
athletes will be umon~ 520
enlri •s from 64 countries
rcprescnlln~ all five continents
nl the gumes. EvenL~ to be
contested Include nrchery,
bowls, welghtll!tlng, snooker,
table tennis, fencing, •wlmmlng, b!ISkctbollnnd trnck und
fl o!d.

e 2 PI[CES OF FINGER
UCKIN' GOOD CI1 1CKEN
eMASHED POl'ATOES
&amp;

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e DELICIOUS HOT ROll
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LIVING
AT ITS BEST...

Enjoy ·your patio this summer. Use Arab Patio Fog to
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and others, Including flying moths. Also kills ants,
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Effect'

.CARTER &amp; EVANS .INC.
87 Olive Street

Galllpoll1, Ohio
'

'

�.
I

16 - The SWiday Times- Sentinel, Swtday, July 15, !973

I

•..

"

'

Three more teams
eliminated ·at KC

n

'

,.....,

The Chillicothe American the Chillicothe pitcher struck
Legion Baseball team defeated him just above the nose. Roush
Meigs, 4-1, Saturday afternoon, laid motionless for a few
but Meigs lost more than just minutes before he was helped
of!the!ieldand taken to Holzer
the ball game.
._
They lost J ohn Roush, the Medical Center for treatment . .
team's top hitter, possibly for It Is believed he' may have
the .rest of the season, just one suffered a broken nose, but at
·week befor e the district press time Saturday, Holzer
tournament begins at Athens. Medical Center reported that
Rouoh was leading ofi the top the x-rays had not yet been
of the sixth when a fastball by completed.

Chillicothe w_asted no time in
getting to Mmgs starter and
loser, John Baird, scoring
twice in the third on a single,
walk, fielder's choice and 2
more singles.
·
Meigs came back in the
fourth to close the g~p to 2-1 on
a single by Roush, 11 fielder's
choice and an error on the
catcher. '
Chillicothe all but rapped it

Gr'een post vtct·o rtes

up in the sixth, adding 2 more
rwts on a single, •doubie and
another single , liS the
Chillicothe pitcher, Hill ,
stymied the Meigs bats,
whirnng 14.
Baird went the distance for
Meigs, striking out 10, walking
3 and giving up 10 hils. All 4
Chillicothe runs were earned.
Hall also went the dlstante
for Chillicothe, striking out H,

walki_ns_only l nnd giving up
just 6 htts.
Top hitters for Meigs were
Lou McKinney with a triple :
and single, ,John Roush with a
VINTON
Bidwell,
Single, and Baird, Mike slunnnlng 30 hits off opposing
!'lesselroad and Mick Ash with pitching, trowtced Vinton, 31-2,
one single apiece.
in Gallia Cowtty pony league
Meigs' record now stand• at &amp;cllon Friday .
IHO, and will rap up regular
Bidwell clobbered Vinton
season play today in a I :30 pltcbers Tackett, Oiler and
doubleheader against New Justice for two runs in the first,
Haven at Racine.
nine in the se&lt;:ond, seven in the
third, three in tM fourth, five
in the fifth and fl ve in the
seventh.

Hinson, Johnson tied
'Ame'r'iun League Standings
By United Press International
(Night games not included)
East
W. L. Pel. G.B.
New York
51 42 .548
Boston
47 40 .540 1
De troll
48 42 .533 w.
Baltimore
44 39 .590 2
Milwaukee

Cleveland

43

45

.489

S lf1

33 58 .363 17
West
W. L. Pel. G.B.
Oaklahd.
51 39 .567
Kansas City 50 44 .532 3
Chicago
46 42 .523 4
California
45 43 .511 5
M innesota

Texas

45

43

5

.511

31 57 · .352 19
Saturday's Games

ROBINSON, Ill. (UP! ) Larry Hinson fashioned a
seven-under par 64 and Howie
Johnson, who has not won a
PGA Tournament in 14 years,
shot a 67 Saturday to tie with
six-under par 207s for the early
third round lead in the $125,000
Shrine-Robinson Open Golf
Classic.
But six players who were
deadlocked for ths lead after 36
holes Friday with five-under
par 137s were in the finul two

p.m.)

Mon treal al Atlanta, 2:15 p.m.
New York at Cincinnati, 2: 15

p.m.

Chicago at ~os Angeles, 5 p.m .
Sl. Louis at San Diego, 4 p.m .
Pittsburgh at San Fran cisco,
3"15 p.m.
Monday 's·Games

Los Angeles at Pittsburgh,

nlvht
San Francisco at

St.

•
Louis.

night
Ph iladelphia at Cincinnati ,
night
Montreal at Houston, night
New York at Atlanta, night
I Only games sched~ted)

Kansas City 4 New York 2
Boston 6 Texas 5

Detroit 2 California 1
Cleveland J Minnesota 0

Oakland· at Milwaukee, night
Baltimore at Chi~:ago, , night

Cleveland at·Minnesota, 3 p.m .

Baltimore at Chicago, 2:1 5
p.m.
Oakland at Milwaukee. 2: 30

p.m .

.

Kansas City at New York 2
Texas at Bo_ston, 2 p'. m .

1

'

Monday's Games
Ballimore at Oakland, night
Cleveland at California, night
Kansas City at Detroit, night
Chicago at Boston, night

!Only Games Scheduled!
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East

~· ~9 P~~i G.B.

Chicago
St. Louis
Montreal

Pittsburgh
Philadelphia

45 42 _517 4
42 44 .488 6'h

!\

~ :~~ ~;~

DETROIT (UP!) - Two
. consecutive wild pitches by
reliever Dave Sells with the
bases loadedand two out in the
ninth inning spoiled an excellent performance by Rudy
May and gave the Detroit
Tigers their sixth straight;
victory, 2·1, over the California
Angels before 40,444 fans and a ·
national television audience
Saturday.
May had given up nine hils in
thelirstfihveinningsbutretired
10 straig t batters until Ike
Brown opened the ninth with a
single to deep short. One out
later, pinch hitter Willie
Horton,. who has a pulled
bamstring, waike_d and Jirn

37 48 .435 II
West
W. l. Pet. G.B.
Los Angeles 57 34 .626
Cincinnati
50 40 .556 611• Northrup ran 'f9r him.
San Fran .
51,
6'h . Ed !Jrinkman then hit ali
49 4415- .544
Houston
·521 9 '~• easy double play bal.! to third
Atlanta
42 51 .452 16
·
San Diego
31 · 58 .348 25
which . AI Gallagher nearly
Saturday's Results
threw away, ·forcing 'Sandy .
Pittsburgh 7 San Fran,isco 2
Housfon at Philadelphia, night Alomar to go,right of lhe bag to
Montreal at Atlanta, night
take the throw. Northrup was
Ney.- York at Cincinnati, night called out on the play although
Chicago at Los Angeles, night •
St , Louis 'at San Diego, nigh t the TV replay appeared to
Sunday's
show
tAt!
TimesGomes
EOTl · ·
of! th theb throw pulled Alomar
Houston at Philadelphia, (1 :30
e ag.
New York

Arter the argument had
subsided, with third base coach
Joe Schultz being thrown out of
the game, Mickey· Stanley was
walked on foUr pitches to load
the bases with two outs and
Seils was brought on.
~
Gates Brown batted for Tony
Taylor and fouled off the first
two pitches for sb'ikes before
taking a balL Sells then threw
his first wild pitch to lie up the

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) Rennie Stennett, Manny
Sanguillen and Al Oliver each
drove in a pair of runs during a
six-rwt second inning
ra 11 y
·
Saturday and Jim Rooker weni
the distance for the first time in
h p· t
1ea d'mg th e Pit'-b
"' urg Ira es
to a 7-2 victory over the San
Francisco Giants.
Stenne 11 an d Sangu1.11en
drove in their runs with singles

GOLF· CONTEST
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PI"ltsburgh lops GI"ants

*-***********************************************..

For 'A'"k • 3 TROPHIES
I.Adk•' Trop1ay • Mrn'• Trophy .

R •

Bad pitches are cosily

Sunday's Games

lAtl Times EOTl

threesomes on the course Dickson were seven-under
Satqrday, needing only to after 48 holes.
break 70 to go under the 54 hole
totals of Hillson and Johnson.
They are defending cbampion Grier Jones, )llike Morley,
OJ3S
Babe Hiskey, Charles Coody,
Dean Beman and IJobby
Greenwood .
Others making a run at the
lead were Andy North, eightunder after 45 holes and Bob
Lewis, also eight-under after
•
48. Labron Harris and Bob
NEW YORK (UP!) - Cookie
Rojas drove in two rwts with a
homer and a triple Saturday to
pace the Kansas City Royals to
' a 4-2 victory over the New York
Yankees.
The loss left the Yankees
game, intentionally walked . only one game ahead of Boston
. Brown to load up the bases and in the American League East
then was wild on his first pitch
Rojas who bad three of th ·
to AI 1\Jlline. to end the game. Royal.-' six hits, got Karisa:
Rudy Meoli had gtven May, City off to a l-0 lead in the first
6-7; a 1-0 lead in the fourth inning with his fourth homer or
inning with his first Major the season off loser George
League hil{!ler in 178 at-bats. Medlchand and capped a 1 aJoe Coleman_raised hi~ record fWI seventh with a two;ut
to 14-8, gtvmg up SIX hits, triple to right-center that
walking six and striking out scored Kansas City's final run .
six.
He also singled and scored a
rwt in the second on a single by
Ed Kirkpatrick.
Steve Busby, who pitched a
no-hitter earlier this season
and turned in a club record 13
strikeoutsinhislast start, went
eight. innings to get credit for
hi
while Oliver belled his 14th s seventh win against nine
homer and added a ninth in- losses. Busby allowed only five
ning RBI with a doubl~.
hits over the first eight innings
Rooker, who went 6 1-3 in- but was relieved by D!Jug Bird
·
· h.IS 1onges t prevtous
·
w1·th no outs in the nt·nth iafter
nmgs m
··
start, stopped the Giants on giVIng up a slngl~ to Graig
live hils in gaining his third Nettles and a double to Johnny
victory in five decisions. Ron Callison.
Bryant, touched for seven hits
and six fWIS in 12-3 Innings,
suffered ht's .seventh de'-at
"'
compared to 13 victories.
Brooker held the Giants
hitless through the first four
innings but Gary Thomasson
opened the fifth with a double.
Two outs later pinch hitter
By
Chris Speier singled to score .
San Francisco's first run and
TERRY
the second came in the sixth on
;
JOHNSON
a solo homer by Gary MalI
thews.
'
Atthtturh of !he present

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WILDER WINS
BUFFALO, N. Y. (UP!) Diane Wilder of Amsterdam;
N.Y., took her third New York
State Wo111en 's Amateur Golf
championship .in eight years
Saturday as she beat Terry
Gerber of Syracuse, 5 and 4, at ·
·the Transit Valley Cowttry

Salem
Cente r ville
Vinton
Rio Grande

the attention of fhe public,
many imaginati ve in ven tors were tinker i ng
with ideas for different
type s
of
horseless
ca rriages.
Today the mobile hom e,
like th e 3utomobile, is
ex tremely popular , sty li sh
and modern, and when you
see them. you are bound to
think they are the acme ot
perfection - and they are

- buf this doesn' t stop the
manufactuerers of mobil e
homes from Improving on
perfection, for each year
th e mobile home becom es
more desi rable, mor e
IY!Odern in desi gn, decor
and furni shings and more

popular . This can only be
the resu lf of fine quality
w or kma n s hi p and
materlil ls and th e for esi ght
of the menufactuerers In
provi ding eve ry mod ern
device and applianCe to
make .mObile hom e living
more enjoy&amp;ble.
Here .we can pnly tell you
about the t ine qualiti es and
fea tures o·t mobil e homes, ·
but If you visit u s, you Will
see for yourself what

4
4

J

-s

well] Green 6 ; Addaville 4 Rio
Grande 0,· Centervi lle 12 Sa lem
11 ,' Vinton 9 Centerville J ;

Bidwell/ Addavllle 3; Salem 13

Cheshire

Gran·de 2.

8;

Green

11

Rio

,

VINTON ROMPS
Vinton slammed 17 hits
Thursday night to defeat
Addaville, 21~ in a Gallia
County Pony League make-up

game.
Wheeler, Tackett, Bush,
Norman , and Oiler led the
Dodgers ' attack. Oiler had two
doubles and a single. ·Baird
paced Addaville with a double
and single. Other hitters were
Westfall, Shoemaker and
Fraley. Tackett was the
winning pitcher. He was
re lieved by Norman and Oiler .
Fraley was charged with the
loss.

Ciub.MissWilder,26,golapar
four on the 14th hole of the
second !&amp;-hole round to close
out the match. Alter the early
round she had led by one hole.
'

,

By Denny Fobes

c;;reen

Southwe•tern
Addaville

4 S 44

70

8 42 82
1 9 30 m
1

Last week 's results :
Bidwell 4 Cheshire 3;

.

Vinton
2 Addaviile 8; B.idwell 31
Vinton 1; Green 20 Atldavllle 4i
CJ,;k HillS Southwestern 6; Oak
Hill 7 Southwestern ,3.
This week 's gam~s:

Tuesday- Oak' Hill at
Bidwell ; .Addavitte l at Soutl&gt;
w'est er n and
Vinton
at
Cheshire. ·
'
' Friday - Bidwell at Addavilla; Cheshire at Oak Hi I)
ilnd Southwestern at Green.

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~ Jim Defilllppl, a businessman
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: second straight day or 96 hils
~ out of 100 shota Saturday to
~ take the second round lead · in
: the Clay Pigeon Phase of the
' United States National Shotgun
Championships.
' Defjlllppi, a 26-year-oid
, former Air Force shotgunner,
:, has 19{i out of 200 _going into
, Stinday's• final round of 100
, shota. Tied for second place
: with 195hils were Frank Little
~. pf Mechanicsburg, Pa., and
• tJ'mY Maj. Ken Gilbert or
; p.lwnbus, Ga.
• Hugh Bowie of Auburn,
,: ~ash., was in fourth place with
• t94 hils. Three shots were tied
~ lor fifth and 192 hits - Walter
~ Zobeli of Jackson, Mont.,
: Navy shotgunner Paul Spoon of
: VIrginia t&gt;•ch, Va., and Harry '
, Skalsky ,or Raleigh, N. c.
• Sunday's final round will
decide the selection of a four• man team to ropre~ent

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GAL[,! POLIS - The Phillles
~ erupted for seven runs in the
= bottom or the ·fourth inning
• here Friday night to defeat the
=defend In~ chomps, the Giants,
=p-ii on Memorial Field.
: The ~hila had previously
=scored four runs In the third
: frame . The Giunta plated two
=runs in tile. fourt~ and roui In
Cthe sixth. Chester Tackett led
tho winners with a double and
alnK ie In four at·· bat. Jim
=&amp;Iunden tripled and singled
~ for the Phils.
·.
= Tony Folden lod the Giants
with two hits in four trips to the
plato. Terry Wull, In going the
• distance for the winners,
fanned six. Brent . Saundert
J IUffered the defeat. 'l'he Olanta
q:re i-'1 o~ the season.
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Gu lllpollb fted Sox, · · 6·1.
Blallkenslolp, F'o8ter, Sterrett,
Slayton ond Doughmund had
hits for the winners. The Red
Sox collected five hits led by
McKenzie 's two singles.
Haner, Watson and ·Persinger
had the other safeties.
Watson was the· losing pitcher.
Point Pleasant City Ice and
Fuel ·defeated Syracuse'•
Astros, 11-2 in the evening
finale. D. Brake led the winners with three hiL~. M. Forbes,
T. McNickle had, hils for the
Astros.

ROGER HORNSBY

Phils' pitcher
fires no-hitter
Jeff McKinney fired a nohitter and hi s teammate s
banged out. 19 hila as the
Pomeroy Phil.lies won their
lOth game in a row, pounding
Eastern, 25-0.
McKinney struck out 13 and
walked only 2.
The Phils were led by Kenny
Mankin with 3 triples and a.
single and Mike Nesselroad
with a 3 run homer.
Also contributing hits off
Eastern pitchers Kuhn, Barber
and Riffle were John Blake and
McKinney with a triple, double
a.nd single each, Churlie
Marshall with a double and 2
Tingles, Larry Fridley with 2
·singles and Steve Pickens,
Dave Cole and Ed Sisson with a
single each.
. In other Pomeroy pony
league action Friday, the
Athletics defeated Racine, 6-4,
arid Syracuse got by Rutland,
9-6.
· A's winning pitcher Dale
Browning needed relief help
from Greg Smith in the sixth
inning, as the 2 combined to
hold Racine to a double by
Teaford and single by Sayre .
A's top hitters were Bobby
McClure and Rick Johnson

with a single each, Smith with
a double and Browning with a
double and single.
In Syracuse's win, Steve
Stewart and Tim Cundiff
combined to hold Rutland to
jusl3 hits. Stewart struckout 6
and walked 4 while Cundiff
struck out6 and walked oniy 1.
J . Anderson "was charged wjth
the loss for ·Rutland .
·
· Top hitters for Syracuse
were K. Winebrenner with 2
singles, Greg Cundiff, Tim
Cundiff and T. Woods, ali With
a double and Stewart with a
single.
Dugan doubled for Rutland and was helped by Anderson
and Fitzpatrick with a single
each.
MRS. COURT WINS
DUBLI N
(UP!)
Australian Margaret Court,
who spent 10 days winning
$1,750 at Wimbledon, picked up
three times that in half the
lime by winning ths Women's
title at ths Irish Open Tennis
Championships Saturday. The
Australian, eliminated in the
semi-finals at Wimbledon, won
$6,250 by defeating British NO.
1 Virginia Wade, 6-2, 6-4, at the
end of the five-&lt;lay tournament.
.;
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CHESHIHE - Pl. Plea ... nt
Kiwunls, Point Pleasant City
. • lee and Fuel and Green advanced t' rlduy night in the .15th
Annual Kyger Creek Utile
League Tournament.
Point Pleasant Kiwanis
slammed nine hits in blasting
the Middleport Mets, 16-0.
Rogers, Parler, and Stepp had
hila for the winners while .
Becker had the only Met hit.
Porter was the winning pitcher
and Becker was charged with
the lo•s. The game was called
after four Inning•.
G•·een, behind the pitching of
Edelmann defeated the

The old ball park vs. the new stadlwns
Which are better? It's a toss-up in many books with both
having advantages and disadvantages.
· Take for instance the old parks. Many people, who were
regulars at Q-osley F'leld and Frobes Field in Pittsburgh, say you
can't beat the old parks for feeling Uke you're part of the ball
l!ame. With_the older, smaller parks, there also seems to be· a
spirit of genuine speed de corps. For example, Comisky Park in
Chicago (now White Sox Park) Is well l!nown for its. avid and
friendly fans. One night, while listening to an Indians-While So·x
game, the Cleveland annoWicers could hear the fans along the
first and third base lines yelling back and forth and calling each
other by' first names.
' Thislsplrit was also evident in the nationally televised RedsExpos game Monday night in Montreal. The fans in tiny Jarry
Park were obviously involved in and a part of the game,
screaming at every pitch's delivery.
·· Another advantage of small · parks, especially for those
teams that don't draw very well, is that a small crowd looks big
\vhen jammed into a small park; whereas, the Indians' usual
\3,000 looks lost In huge Municipal Stadiwn., the largest in the
majors '
But the new, large stadiums hilve their advantages too.
There's •the wider aisles and better seating to provide more
comfort "for the fans . There are also better concession
arrangementa so fans don't haye to wait in long lines and miss
half an inning.
Better parking and easier access to the stadium are also
improvements the new stadiums have brought.
, So.who wins? There's good and bad things about both. Being
~th~ tradltionaliBt that I am, I'll take the old, cozy parks. What do
;you think? Send your preference, along with comments, to the
&gt;Times-Sentinel, care of the Sports Desk.
The Pomeroy-Middleport Lions Club is sponsoring a hole-in. 'one contest at the Pomeroy Golf Club, July 23-28. From 5 p.m. till
dark, anyone who fires an ace will receive $200. It costs $1 for 5
'chances ~nd the proeeeds will go for sight conservation
programs. Three trophiee will also be awarded - a ladies' .
trophy, men's trophy and a junior trophy for golfers 16 years of
age or younger There will also be additional prizes dally and the
:one coming closest to the .hole will win a matched set or golf
clubs. Seventy-six area merchants are also taking part in
sponsoring th event
.
Dave ·.Roberts Houston pitcher and former Gallipolltan,
defeated the mets, 7·1, Wednesday night. Roberta gave up 10 hits
lit raising his record to 8-7. His lifetime record is now 42-46, in
.Jhree years with the San Diego Padres and one year with the
•••Astros.
:
Rwnor has it that the first Meigo Legion tournament game
~ next weekend will be umpired by the same lovable couple who
; played imposters at Lancaster a ~ek ago today. Good luck,
• Meigs.
·
~
The Legion team will be practicing every night this we.ek, or
: as near to every night as possible, In preparation for the District
=6 tourney at Athens; If Meigs can take 3 out of 4 at Athens, some
: of no maybe spending·a week in Ashland (and getting some good
: old German home cooked meals at a certain writer's nearby
: hometown).

GALLI ACOUNT'( PONY
LEAGUE STANDINGS
TEAM
Wi L R OR
Bidwell
9 1 149 2'2
Cheshire
8 1 119 3p
Oak Hill
5 3 40 36
Vinton
4 •· 5 51 84

- -- - - - - - -

mean that they w::ore not

lhelfzed an~ t hi..,Jg ht
ab
in the minds of
pro essive home builder s.
Long before the first
automobile ever r eached

2
2
2
1

Chesh ire
0 5
Last Week's Resutls : Bid-

the public, but this does not

BLOOMINGTON, Minn.
(UPI) - Dick Tidrow scattered four hila and Rusty
Torres hit a two-rwt btJmer to
lead the Cleveland Indians to a
3-0 victory over the Min~esota
Twins Saturday.
Tidrow earned his seventh .
victory of t!)e season against
nine losses as he outdueled Jim
Kaat who allowed only five
Indians hits. Tidrow didn't
allow a Twin past first base
and issued only one walk.
The Indians scored the first
flUI of the game in the second
inning. Charlie Spikes walked
to lead of! and advanced to
third on ·c hris Chambliss'
single to center he scored on a ·
two-out single by shortstop
Frank Duffy.
Torres hit his fourth home
flUI of the season 390-foot Into
the · 'left · field bleachers
following a walk to Chambliss
In the seventh inning.
Rookie Bill Campbell made
his Orst Major League appearance for the Twins as he
pitched the ninth Inning in
relief of Kaat.

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OHIO VALLEY
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LEAGUE STAONINGS
TEAM
WL
Bld ... ell
6 0
Addavllle
5 1
Green
5 1

cen tur , mobile hom es
were n t even heard of, by

Tidrow
hurls
shutout

.ERWIN'S GULP SlAVIC!

DAILY SINTINIL '
Goii8LIR'8 I£WiutY

ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UP! ) Second-seeded Trey Waltke of
St. Louis won the Boys 18·
Division Title in the St. Louis
Junior Invitational Tennis
Tournament Sa turday by
defeating fourth 'seeded
Michael Grant, Roslyn, N. Y.,
6-1, 6-1.
In the Boys 16 Division Final,
Brian Mitchell, ColUmbia, Mo.,
defeated Dan Valentincic, Fort
Worth, Tex., 6-3, 2-li, 6-1.
Top-seeded Kathy May,
l3everly Hills, Calif., took the
title in the Girls 18 Division by
downing Sue aoyle, San Diego,
Calif., the second seed, 6-3, 6-1.
The Girls 16Title was won by
Shelly Hudson, St. Louis, who
upset top-seeded Betsy
Nagelson, Si. Petersburg, F'ia.,
6-2, 7-6. Unseeded Chris
Fulgenzi, Grosse Point, Mich.,
defeated Uoyd Hatcher, Richmond, V~ .•6-2, 6-2,'for the Girls
14 Title.

·sports
Desk

·

doubles and 2 sln~ Ies, Welcl{
with • triple, double end z
singles, Ca!Yin MlnniB with ~·
triple, double and 2 slnglea,
Homer McMillan with ll.
doubles and 2 singles, Greg
James with 2 triples and a
double, Mark Theiss with 2
triples and a single, Mike
Casey with 3 singles, Bill Shall
with a do~bie and si~gle and
Bruce Runyon and Eddie
Cisneros with I double esc)!.
Bidwell remains jn firs~
place in the league with a 9-1
record one game a)lead or
Cheshire . Oak Hill, the only
team t0 beat Bidwell this
season, will be the league ·
leader 's opponent Tuesday
night.
In other games c;reen
bOmbed Addaviile, 20-&lt;1 while
Oak Hili upended Southweoterq
twice, &amp;- . in a suspended game
and 7-3 in a regular contest. .,
ln the Green-Addaville
game, Burris, Graham, anc!
Brown had two hits each for th~
winners. Brown •lammed two
home runs. Jamie Westfall and
Steve Shoemaker paced Addnville with two hils each.
Bobbie Evan• was th~
winning pitcher while Westfall
took the loss.
·

Meanwhile
Bidwe ll
righthander Gene Welch held
Vinton hitters to . only four
safeties, while striking out 12
and walking 6.
Vinton's hits came off the
bats of Wheeler, Norman, who
slammed a double to bring
home bOth rwts, K. Davis and
Spencer.
Leading the Bidwell attack
were Fred Logan with 3

Waltke wins

the

America in two international
matches later this year. The
top four finishers in the field of
85 will travel to the Confederation of .the Americas
Shooting Championships at
Mexico City in October and to
the World Moving . Target
Championships at MelbOurne,
Australia in November.

Allison
has pole
TRENOON, N. J. (UP!) Defending Champion Bobby
Allison of Hueytown, Ala.,
grabbed the pole position
Saturday for Sunday's annual
$45,000 Northern 300 at Trenton
Speedway.
The 36-year-old Allison,
driving
the
Coca-Cola
Chevrolet, toured the II&gt; mile
kidney-shaped speedway at a
speed of 131.707 miles per hour,
beating a field of 30 NASCAR
Grand National cars.
Qualifying second was four·
Urne grand national champion
Richard Petty of Randler!lnn,
N. C., in the STP Dodge at
t31.157 mph. Calc Yarborough
or Timmonsville, S. C., was
third at 131.068 in a Chevrolet
and Buddy Baker of Charlotte,
N. C., was fourth at 130.545
mph.
Aili•on, who last year won
more than a quarter mlllion
dollars on tho Winston Cup
Curcuit, but who hns mnnuged
to clear only $50,000 so lur this
sea•on, was pleased with his
effort.
"I'm proud ·to start on the
pole because It was the race or
lhe day and I won It," he said.
"But I'd rather lead the last lnp
tomorrow, That's always th~
bl!llt one to lead."
Roundln~ · out · the to11 tO
qualifiers are Cecil Gordon,
fourth at 130.120 ; Benny
Parsons at 129.742, Richard
Childress with 127.567, Henley
Gr1y IlL 126.4116, J . D. McDuffie
at 126.m and Rookie Lennie
Pond at 12h33.
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I

16 - The SWiday Times- Sentinel, Swtday, July 15, !973

I

•..

"

'

Three more teams
eliminated ·at KC

n

'

,.....,

The Chillicothe American the Chillicothe pitcher struck
Legion Baseball team defeated him just above the nose. Roush
Meigs, 4-1, Saturday afternoon, laid motionless for a few
but Meigs lost more than just minutes before he was helped
of!the!ieldand taken to Holzer
the ball game.
._
They lost J ohn Roush, the Medical Center for treatment . .
team's top hitter, possibly for It Is believed he' may have
the .rest of the season, just one suffered a broken nose, but at
·week befor e the district press time Saturday, Holzer
tournament begins at Athens. Medical Center reported that
Rouoh was leading ofi the top the x-rays had not yet been
of the sixth when a fastball by completed.

Chillicothe w_asted no time in
getting to Mmgs starter and
loser, John Baird, scoring
twice in the third on a single,
walk, fielder's choice and 2
more singles.
·
Meigs came back in the
fourth to close the g~p to 2-1 on
a single by Roush, 11 fielder's
choice and an error on the
catcher. '
Chillicothe all but rapped it

Gr'een post vtct·o rtes

up in the sixth, adding 2 more
rwts on a single, •doubie and
another single , liS the
Chillicothe pitcher, Hill ,
stymied the Meigs bats,
whirnng 14.
Baird went the distance for
Meigs, striking out 10, walking
3 and giving up 10 hils. All 4
Chillicothe runs were earned.
Hall also went the dlstante
for Chillicothe, striking out H,

walki_ns_only l nnd giving up
just 6 htts.
Top hitters for Meigs were
Lou McKinney with a triple :
and single, ,John Roush with a
VINTON
Bidwell,
Single, and Baird, Mike slunnnlng 30 hits off opposing
!'lesselroad and Mick Ash with pitching, trowtced Vinton, 31-2,
one single apiece.
in Gallia Cowtty pony league
Meigs' record now stand• at &amp;cllon Friday .
IHO, and will rap up regular
Bidwell clobbered Vinton
season play today in a I :30 pltcbers Tackett, Oiler and
doubleheader against New Justice for two runs in the first,
Haven at Racine.
nine in the se&lt;:ond, seven in the
third, three in tM fourth, five
in the fifth and fl ve in the
seventh.

Hinson, Johnson tied
'Ame'r'iun League Standings
By United Press International
(Night games not included)
East
W. L. Pel. G.B.
New York
51 42 .548
Boston
47 40 .540 1
De troll
48 42 .533 w.
Baltimore
44 39 .590 2
Milwaukee

Cleveland

43

45

.489

S lf1

33 58 .363 17
West
W. L. Pel. G.B.
Oaklahd.
51 39 .567
Kansas City 50 44 .532 3
Chicago
46 42 .523 4
California
45 43 .511 5
M innesota

Texas

45

43

5

.511

31 57 · .352 19
Saturday's Games

ROBINSON, Ill. (UP! ) Larry Hinson fashioned a
seven-under par 64 and Howie
Johnson, who has not won a
PGA Tournament in 14 years,
shot a 67 Saturday to tie with
six-under par 207s for the early
third round lead in the $125,000
Shrine-Robinson Open Golf
Classic.
But six players who were
deadlocked for ths lead after 36
holes Friday with five-under
par 137s were in the finul two

p.m.)

Mon treal al Atlanta, 2:15 p.m.
New York at Cincinnati, 2: 15

p.m.

Chicago at ~os Angeles, 5 p.m .
Sl. Louis at San Diego, 4 p.m .
Pittsburgh at San Fran cisco,
3"15 p.m.
Monday 's·Games

Los Angeles at Pittsburgh,

nlvht
San Francisco at

St.

•
Louis.

night
Ph iladelphia at Cincinnati ,
night
Montreal at Houston, night
New York at Atlanta, night
I Only games sched~ted)

Kansas City 4 New York 2
Boston 6 Texas 5

Detroit 2 California 1
Cleveland J Minnesota 0

Oakland· at Milwaukee, night
Baltimore at Chi~:ago, , night

Cleveland at·Minnesota, 3 p.m .

Baltimore at Chicago, 2:1 5
p.m.
Oakland at Milwaukee. 2: 30

p.m .

.

Kansas City at New York 2
Texas at Bo_ston, 2 p'. m .

1

'

Monday's Games
Ballimore at Oakland, night
Cleveland at California, night
Kansas City at Detroit, night
Chicago at Boston, night

!Only Games Scheduled!
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East

~· ~9 P~~i G.B.

Chicago
St. Louis
Montreal

Pittsburgh
Philadelphia

45 42 _517 4
42 44 .488 6'h

!\

~ :~~ ~;~

DETROIT (UP!) - Two
. consecutive wild pitches by
reliever Dave Sells with the
bases loadedand two out in the
ninth inning spoiled an excellent performance by Rudy
May and gave the Detroit
Tigers their sixth straight;
victory, 2·1, over the California
Angels before 40,444 fans and a ·
national television audience
Saturday.
May had given up nine hils in
thelirstfihveinningsbutretired
10 straig t batters until Ike
Brown opened the ninth with a
single to deep short. One out
later, pinch hitter Willie
Horton,. who has a pulled
bamstring, waike_d and Jirn

37 48 .435 II
West
W. l. Pet. G.B.
Los Angeles 57 34 .626
Cincinnati
50 40 .556 611• Northrup ran 'f9r him.
San Fran .
51,
6'h . Ed !Jrinkman then hit ali
49 4415- .544
Houston
·521 9 '~• easy double play bal.! to third
Atlanta
42 51 .452 16
·
San Diego
31 · 58 .348 25
which . AI Gallagher nearly
Saturday's Results
threw away, ·forcing 'Sandy .
Pittsburgh 7 San Fran,isco 2
Housfon at Philadelphia, night Alomar to go,right of lhe bag to
Montreal at Atlanta, night
take the throw. Northrup was
Ney.- York at Cincinnati, night called out on the play although
Chicago at Los Angeles, night •
St , Louis 'at San Diego, nigh t the TV replay appeared to
Sunday's
show
tAt!
TimesGomes
EOTl · ·
of! th theb throw pulled Alomar
Houston at Philadelphia, (1 :30
e ag.
New York

Arter the argument had
subsided, with third base coach
Joe Schultz being thrown out of
the game, Mickey· Stanley was
walked on foUr pitches to load
the bases with two outs and
Seils was brought on.
~
Gates Brown batted for Tony
Taylor and fouled off the first
two pitches for sb'ikes before
taking a balL Sells then threw
his first wild pitch to lie up the

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) Rennie Stennett, Manny
Sanguillen and Al Oliver each
drove in a pair of runs during a
six-rwt second inning
ra 11 y
·
Saturday and Jim Rooker weni
the distance for the first time in
h p· t
1ea d'mg th e Pit'-b
"' urg Ira es
to a 7-2 victory over the San
Francisco Giants.
Stenne 11 an d Sangu1.11en
drove in their runs with singles

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Sunday's Games

lAtl Times EOTl

threesomes on the course Dickson were seven-under
Satqrday, needing only to after 48 holes.
break 70 to go under the 54 hole
totals of Hillson and Johnson.
They are defending cbampion Grier Jones, )llike Morley,
OJ3S
Babe Hiskey, Charles Coody,
Dean Beman and IJobby
Greenwood .
Others making a run at the
lead were Andy North, eightunder after 45 holes and Bob
Lewis, also eight-under after
•
48. Labron Harris and Bob
NEW YORK (UP!) - Cookie
Rojas drove in two rwts with a
homer and a triple Saturday to
pace the Kansas City Royals to
' a 4-2 victory over the New York
Yankees.
The loss left the Yankees
game, intentionally walked . only one game ahead of Boston
. Brown to load up the bases and in the American League East
then was wild on his first pitch
Rojas who bad three of th ·
to AI 1\Jlline. to end the game. Royal.-' six hits, got Karisa:
Rudy Meoli had gtven May, City off to a l-0 lead in the first
6-7; a 1-0 lead in the fourth inning with his fourth homer or
inning with his first Major the season off loser George
League hil{!ler in 178 at-bats. Medlchand and capped a 1 aJoe Coleman_raised hi~ record fWI seventh with a two;ut
to 14-8, gtvmg up SIX hits, triple to right-center that
walking six and striking out scored Kansas City's final run .
six.
He also singled and scored a
rwt in the second on a single by
Ed Kirkpatrick.
Steve Busby, who pitched a
no-hitter earlier this season
and turned in a club record 13
strikeoutsinhislast start, went
eight. innings to get credit for
hi
while Oliver belled his 14th s seventh win against nine
homer and added a ninth in- losses. Busby allowed only five
ning RBI with a doubl~.
hits over the first eight innings
Rooker, who went 6 1-3 in- but was relieved by D!Jug Bird
·
· h.IS 1onges t prevtous
·
w1·th no outs in the nt·nth iafter
nmgs m
··
start, stopped the Giants on giVIng up a slngl~ to Graig
live hils in gaining his third Nettles and a double to Johnny
victory in five decisions. Ron Callison.
Bryant, touched for seven hits
and six fWIS in 12-3 Innings,
suffered ht's .seventh de'-at
"'
compared to 13 victories.
Brooker held the Giants
hitless through the first four
innings but Gary Thomasson
opened the fifth with a double.
Two outs later pinch hitter
By
Chris Speier singled to score .
San Francisco's first run and
TERRY
the second came in the sixth on
;
JOHNSON
a solo homer by Gary MalI
thews.
'
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WILDER WINS
BUFFALO, N. Y. (UP!) Diane Wilder of Amsterdam;
N.Y., took her third New York
State Wo111en 's Amateur Golf
championship .in eight years
Saturday as she beat Terry
Gerber of Syracuse, 5 and 4, at ·
·the Transit Valley Cowttry

Salem
Cente r ville
Vinton
Rio Grande

the attention of fhe public,
many imaginati ve in ven tors were tinker i ng
with ideas for different
type s
of
horseless
ca rriages.
Today the mobile hom e,
like th e 3utomobile, is
ex tremely popular , sty li sh
and modern, and when you
see them. you are bound to
think they are the acme ot
perfection - and they are

- buf this doesn' t stop the
manufactuerers of mobil e
homes from Improving on
perfection, for each year
th e mobile home becom es
more desi rable, mor e
IY!Odern in desi gn, decor
and furni shings and more

popular . This can only be
the resu lf of fine quality
w or kma n s hi p and
materlil ls and th e for esi ght
of the menufactuerers In
provi ding eve ry mod ern
device and applianCe to
make .mObile hom e living
more enjoy&amp;ble.
Here .we can pnly tell you
about the t ine qualiti es and
fea tures o·t mobil e homes, ·
but If you visit u s, you Will
see for yourself what

4
4

J

-s

well] Green 6 ; Addaville 4 Rio
Grande 0,· Centervi lle 12 Sa lem
11 ,' Vinton 9 Centerville J ;

Bidwell/ Addavllle 3; Salem 13

Cheshire

Gran·de 2.

8;

Green

11

Rio

,

VINTON ROMPS
Vinton slammed 17 hits
Thursday night to defeat
Addaville, 21~ in a Gallia
County Pony League make-up

game.
Wheeler, Tackett, Bush,
Norman , and Oiler led the
Dodgers ' attack. Oiler had two
doubles and a single. ·Baird
paced Addaville with a double
and single. Other hitters were
Westfall, Shoemaker and
Fraley. Tackett was the
winning pitcher. He was
re lieved by Norman and Oiler .
Fraley was charged with the
loss.

Ciub.MissWilder,26,golapar
four on the 14th hole of the
second !&amp;-hole round to close
out the match. Alter the early
round she had led by one hole.
'

,

By Denny Fobes

c;;reen

Southwe•tern
Addaville

4 S 44

70

8 42 82
1 9 30 m
1

Last week 's results :
Bidwell 4 Cheshire 3;

.

Vinton
2 Addaviile 8; B.idwell 31
Vinton 1; Green 20 Atldavllle 4i
CJ,;k HillS Southwestern 6; Oak
Hill 7 Southwestern ,3.
This week 's gam~s:

Tuesday- Oak' Hill at
Bidwell ; .Addavitte l at Soutl&gt;
w'est er n and
Vinton
at
Cheshire. ·
'
' Friday - Bidwell at Addavilla; Cheshire at Oak Hi I)
ilnd Southwestern at Green.

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Ohio (UP!) .,...
~ Jim Defilllppl, a businessman
: from Oglesby, Ill., posted his
: second straight day or 96 hils
~ out of 100 shota Saturday to
~ take the second round lead · in
: the Clay Pigeon Phase of the
' United States National Shotgun
Championships.
' Defjlllppi, a 26-year-oid
, former Air Force shotgunner,
:, has 19{i out of 200 _going into
, Stinday's• final round of 100
, shota. Tied for second place
: with 195hils were Frank Little
~. pf Mechanicsburg, Pa., and
• tJ'mY Maj. Ken Gilbert or
; p.lwnbus, Ga.
• Hugh Bowie of Auburn,
,: ~ash., was in fourth place with
• t94 hils. Three shots were tied
~ lor fifth and 192 hits - Walter
~ Zobeli of Jackson, Mont.,
: Navy shotgunner Paul Spoon of
: VIrginia t&gt;•ch, Va., and Harry '
, Skalsky ,or Raleigh, N. c.
• Sunday's final round will
decide the selection of a four• man team to ropre~ent

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GAL[,! POLIS - The Phillles
~ erupted for seven runs in the
= bottom or the ·fourth inning
• here Friday night to defeat the
=defend In~ chomps, the Giants,
=p-ii on Memorial Field.
: The ~hila had previously
=scored four runs In the third
: frame . The Giunta plated two
=runs in tile. fourt~ and roui In
Cthe sixth. Chester Tackett led
tho winners with a double and
alnK ie In four at·· bat. Jim
=&amp;Iunden tripled and singled
~ for the Phils.
·.
= Tony Folden lod the Giants
with two hits in four trips to the
plato. Terry Wull, In going the
• distance for the winners,
fanned six. Brent . Saundert
J IUffered the defeat. 'l'he Olanta
q:re i-'1 o~ the season.
:

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Gu lllpollb fted Sox, · · 6·1.
Blallkenslolp, F'o8ter, Sterrett,
Slayton ond Doughmund had
hits for the winners. The Red
Sox collected five hits led by
McKenzie 's two singles.
Haner, Watson and ·Persinger
had the other safeties.
Watson was the· losing pitcher.
Point Pleasant City Ice and
Fuel ·defeated Syracuse'•
Astros, 11-2 in the evening
finale. D. Brake led the winners with three hiL~. M. Forbes,
T. McNickle had, hils for the
Astros.

ROGER HORNSBY

Phils' pitcher
fires no-hitter
Jeff McKinney fired a nohitter and hi s teammate s
banged out. 19 hila as the
Pomeroy Phil.lies won their
lOth game in a row, pounding
Eastern, 25-0.
McKinney struck out 13 and
walked only 2.
The Phils were led by Kenny
Mankin with 3 triples and a.
single and Mike Nesselroad
with a 3 run homer.
Also contributing hits off
Eastern pitchers Kuhn, Barber
and Riffle were John Blake and
McKinney with a triple, double
a.nd single each, Churlie
Marshall with a double and 2
Tingles, Larry Fridley with 2
·singles and Steve Pickens,
Dave Cole and Ed Sisson with a
single each.
. In other Pomeroy pony
league action Friday, the
Athletics defeated Racine, 6-4,
arid Syracuse got by Rutland,
9-6.
· A's winning pitcher Dale
Browning needed relief help
from Greg Smith in the sixth
inning, as the 2 combined to
hold Racine to a double by
Teaford and single by Sayre .
A's top hitters were Bobby
McClure and Rick Johnson

with a single each, Smith with
a double and Browning with a
double and single.
In Syracuse's win, Steve
Stewart and Tim Cundiff
combined to hold Rutland to
jusl3 hits. Stewart struckout 6
and walked 4 while Cundiff
struck out6 and walked oniy 1.
J . Anderson "was charged wjth
the loss for ·Rutland .
·
· Top hitters for Syracuse
were K. Winebrenner with 2
singles, Greg Cundiff, Tim
Cundiff and T. Woods, ali With
a double and Stewart with a
single.
Dugan doubled for Rutland and was helped by Anderson
and Fitzpatrick with a single
each.
MRS. COURT WINS
DUBLI N
(UP!)
Australian Margaret Court,
who spent 10 days winning
$1,750 at Wimbledon, picked up
three times that in half the
lime by winning ths Women's
title at ths Irish Open Tennis
Championships Saturday. The
Australian, eliminated in the
semi-finals at Wimbledon, won
$6,250 by defeating British NO.
1 Virginia Wade, 6-2, 6-4, at the
end of the five-&lt;lay tournament.
.;
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CHESHIHE - Pl. Plea ... nt
Kiwunls, Point Pleasant City
. • lee and Fuel and Green advanced t' rlduy night in the .15th
Annual Kyger Creek Utile
League Tournament.
Point Pleasant Kiwanis
slammed nine hits in blasting
the Middleport Mets, 16-0.
Rogers, Parler, and Stepp had
hila for the winners while .
Becker had the only Met hit.
Porter was the winning pitcher
and Becker was charged with
the lo•s. The game was called
after four Inning•.
G•·een, behind the pitching of
Edelmann defeated the

The old ball park vs. the new stadlwns
Which are better? It's a toss-up in many books with both
having advantages and disadvantages.
· Take for instance the old parks. Many people, who were
regulars at Q-osley F'leld and Frobes Field in Pittsburgh, say you
can't beat the old parks for feeling Uke you're part of the ball
l!ame. With_the older, smaller parks, there also seems to be· a
spirit of genuine speed de corps. For example, Comisky Park in
Chicago (now White Sox Park) Is well l!nown for its. avid and
friendly fans. One night, while listening to an Indians-While So·x
game, the Cleveland annoWicers could hear the fans along the
first and third base lines yelling back and forth and calling each
other by' first names.
' Thislsplrit was also evident in the nationally televised RedsExpos game Monday night in Montreal. The fans in tiny Jarry
Park were obviously involved in and a part of the game,
screaming at every pitch's delivery.
·· Another advantage of small · parks, especially for those
teams that don't draw very well, is that a small crowd looks big
\vhen jammed into a small park; whereas, the Indians' usual
\3,000 looks lost In huge Municipal Stadiwn., the largest in the
majors '
But the new, large stadiums hilve their advantages too.
There's •the wider aisles and better seating to provide more
comfort "for the fans . There are also better concession
arrangementa so fans don't haye to wait in long lines and miss
half an inning.
Better parking and easier access to the stadium are also
improvements the new stadiums have brought.
, So.who wins? There's good and bad things about both. Being
~th~ tradltionaliBt that I am, I'll take the old, cozy parks. What do
;you think? Send your preference, along with comments, to the
&gt;Times-Sentinel, care of the Sports Desk.
The Pomeroy-Middleport Lions Club is sponsoring a hole-in. 'one contest at the Pomeroy Golf Club, July 23-28. From 5 p.m. till
dark, anyone who fires an ace will receive $200. It costs $1 for 5
'chances ~nd the proeeeds will go for sight conservation
programs. Three trophiee will also be awarded - a ladies' .
trophy, men's trophy and a junior trophy for golfers 16 years of
age or younger There will also be additional prizes dally and the
:one coming closest to the .hole will win a matched set or golf
clubs. Seventy-six area merchants are also taking part in
sponsoring th event
.
Dave ·.Roberts Houston pitcher and former Gallipolltan,
defeated the mets, 7·1, Wednesday night. Roberta gave up 10 hits
lit raising his record to 8-7. His lifetime record is now 42-46, in
.Jhree years with the San Diego Padres and one year with the
•••Astros.
:
Rwnor has it that the first Meigo Legion tournament game
~ next weekend will be umpired by the same lovable couple who
; played imposters at Lancaster a ~ek ago today. Good luck,
• Meigs.
·
~
The Legion team will be practicing every night this we.ek, or
: as near to every night as possible, In preparation for the District
=6 tourney at Athens; If Meigs can take 3 out of 4 at Athens, some
: of no maybe spending·a week in Ashland (and getting some good
: old German home cooked meals at a certain writer's nearby
: hometown).

GALLI ACOUNT'( PONY
LEAGUE STANDINGS
TEAM
Wi L R OR
Bidwell
9 1 149 2'2
Cheshire
8 1 119 3p
Oak Hill
5 3 40 36
Vinton
4 •· 5 51 84

- -- - - - - - -

mean that they w::ore not

lhelfzed an~ t hi..,Jg ht
ab
in the minds of
pro essive home builder s.
Long before the first
automobile ever r eached

2
2
2
1

Chesh ire
0 5
Last Week's Resutls : Bid-

the public, but this does not

BLOOMINGTON, Minn.
(UPI) - Dick Tidrow scattered four hila and Rusty
Torres hit a two-rwt btJmer to
lead the Cleveland Indians to a
3-0 victory over the Min~esota
Twins Saturday.
Tidrow earned his seventh .
victory of t!)e season against
nine losses as he outdueled Jim
Kaat who allowed only five
Indians hits. Tidrow didn't
allow a Twin past first base
and issued only one walk.
The Indians scored the first
flUI of the game in the second
inning. Charlie Spikes walked
to lead of! and advanced to
third on ·c hris Chambliss'
single to center he scored on a ·
two-out single by shortstop
Frank Duffy.
Torres hit his fourth home
flUI of the season 390-foot Into
the · 'left · field bleachers
following a walk to Chambliss
In the seventh inning.
Rookie Bill Campbell made
his Orst Major League appearance for the Twins as he
pitched the ninth Inning in
relief of Kaat.

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ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UP! ) Second-seeded Trey Waltke of
St. Louis won the Boys 18·
Division Title in the St. Louis
Junior Invitational Tennis
Tournament Sa turday by
defeating fourth 'seeded
Michael Grant, Roslyn, N. Y.,
6-1, 6-1.
In the Boys 16 Division Final,
Brian Mitchell, ColUmbia, Mo.,
defeated Dan Valentincic, Fort
Worth, Tex., 6-3, 2-li, 6-1.
Top-seeded Kathy May,
l3everly Hills, Calif., took the
title in the Girls 18 Division by
downing Sue aoyle, San Diego,
Calif., the second seed, 6-3, 6-1.
The Girls 16Title was won by
Shelly Hudson, St. Louis, who
upset top-seeded Betsy
Nagelson, Si. Petersburg, F'ia.,
6-2, 7-6. Unseeded Chris
Fulgenzi, Grosse Point, Mich.,
defeated Uoyd Hatcher, Richmond, V~ .•6-2, 6-2,'for the Girls
14 Title.

·sports
Desk

·

doubles and 2 sln~ Ies, Welcl{
with • triple, double end z
singles, Ca!Yin MlnniB with ~·
triple, double and 2 slnglea,
Homer McMillan with ll.
doubles and 2 singles, Greg
James with 2 triples and a
double, Mark Theiss with 2
triples and a single, Mike
Casey with 3 singles, Bill Shall
with a do~bie and si~gle and
Bruce Runyon and Eddie
Cisneros with I double esc)!.
Bidwell remains jn firs~
place in the league with a 9-1
record one game a)lead or
Cheshire . Oak Hill, the only
team t0 beat Bidwell this
season, will be the league ·
leader 's opponent Tuesday
night.
In other games c;reen
bOmbed Addaviile, 20-&lt;1 while
Oak Hili upended Southweoterq
twice, &amp;- . in a suspended game
and 7-3 in a regular contest. .,
ln the Green-Addaville
game, Burris, Graham, anc!
Brown had two hits each for th~
winners. Brown •lammed two
home runs. Jamie Westfall and
Steve Shoemaker paced Addnville with two hils each.
Bobbie Evan• was th~
winning pitcher while Westfall
took the loss.
·

Meanwhile
Bidwe ll
righthander Gene Welch held
Vinton hitters to . only four
safeties, while striking out 12
and walking 6.
Vinton's hits came off the
bats of Wheeler, Norman, who
slammed a double to bring
home bOth rwts, K. Davis and
Spencer.
Leading the Bidwell attack
were Fred Logan with 3

Waltke wins

the

America in two international
matches later this year. The
top four finishers in the field of
85 will travel to the Confederation of .the Americas
Shooting Championships at
Mexico City in October and to
the World Moving . Target
Championships at MelbOurne,
Australia in November.

Allison
has pole
TRENOON, N. J. (UP!) Defending Champion Bobby
Allison of Hueytown, Ala.,
grabbed the pole position
Saturday for Sunday's annual
$45,000 Northern 300 at Trenton
Speedway.
The 36-year-old Allison,
driving
the
Coca-Cola
Chevrolet, toured the II&gt; mile
kidney-shaped speedway at a
speed of 131.707 miles per hour,
beating a field of 30 NASCAR
Grand National cars.
Qualifying second was four·
Urne grand national champion
Richard Petty of Randler!lnn,
N. C., in the STP Dodge at
t31.157 mph. Calc Yarborough
or Timmonsville, S. C., was
third at 131.068 in a Chevrolet
and Buddy Baker of Charlotte,
N. C., was fourth at 130.545
mph.
Aili•on, who last year won
more than a quarter mlllion
dollars on tho Winston Cup
Curcuit, but who hns mnnuged
to clear only $50,000 so lur this
sea•on, was pleased with his
effort.
"I'm proud ·to start on the
pole because It was the race or
lhe day and I won It," he said.
"But I'd rather lead the last lnp
tomorrow, That's always th~
bl!llt one to lead."
Roundln~ · out · the to11 tO
qualifiers are Cecil Gordon,
fourth at 130.120 ; Benny
Parsons at 129.742, Richard
Childress with 127.567, Henley
Gr1y IlL 126.4116, J . D. McDuffie
at 126.m and Rookie Lennie
Pond at 12h33.
·~

. KlRKWUUtl

HCME8

60'x 12'
2 Bedroom

• division ol REDMAN lndu•trMs, Inc.
l'j

"DROP
'

.,.

I f

IN

•

AFTER

2 BEDROOM - FRONT KITCHEN ·- HOUSE
DOORS &amp; WINDOWS - BAY WINDOWS CERTIFICATION
YEAR WARRANTY
Y FURNISIIED - FREE DELIVERY
iETUP -ALL THE FINE KIRKWOOD FEATURES AT
AL PRICE.

l (2) GAS HEAT ........ ·qay:~
) GUN OIL FURNACE • , .••••.••••• Add 1
TOTAL ELECTRIC ••••......••.•• Add 1
ONLY (51 QUALITY MOBIL~S AT THESE PRICESII

We hove a full lin ~ of VJ I--J DA LE MOBILES,
60x?4 ' - os well as 12' &amp; 14 ' wides . Wid e
' selection ond pric~ range. wilh many floo r
plans to choose fron1 .

SEE OUR TAURUS&amp;. TERRY
. TRAI~ERS

''WI Ul THI OLDUT MOIILIIOMI DIALIR IN U. OHIO.''

WORK

*
*
*
*
*
*

LADDERS
DIVING BOARDS
POOL TOYS
LIFE RINGS
.
CHEMICALS
••
FLOATING CHAIRS

*
*

'

•

"

**
*
**

SWEEPERS
DIP NETS
HOSE
PAINT
TEST KITS
FILTERS
ETC.

�1
'

' Tunc . • L\
lO • ~rttt 5un\i.Jy

I

18-

T)le Sunday 'fimes • S..nttnel, Sundn), July IS, 1973

bisect, disease pests at work
81( C. E. BLAKFSLEE
County Elt. Agent, Agriculture

POMEROY - Insect and disease pests and
even weather condition results are causing more
calls to.the extension office this month. For the last
month or so we have had too much molslure, but in
July and August we usually have too litUe, so this
causes trouble to our plants also.
In controlling insects and disease the first
requirement is correct Identification. It is practically impossible to identify a disease if the twig or

the NEW in FA.RMING
leaf or stem has been dead a week or more. After a
disease strikes it may be too late for control !hal

season.
Foliage blights, fruit and stem rots may result
in total loss lf a preventive material is not applied to
protect the plant. Resistant varieties may be more
suitable. Otherwise specific control ,measures are
often needed for certain diseases.
Protective materials are just what they are said
to be. They protect the plant and any new growth or
fruits that may form. These materials must be
applied before a disease problem becomes
establlshed and .should be put on at regular in·
tervals. U you go off for a month's vacation and
weather conditions are favorable for disease
development, you may return to find many dead or
dying plants; if protective materials were not applied In the interim period.
Our commercial vegetable growers usually use
fungicides on a regular schedule to prevent disease.
Fungicides are usually applied at 7 to 10 day in·
tervals, or more often when plants are growing
rapidly.
H0111e vegetable growers sometimes hope
, disealie cootrol will not, be needed and concentrate
more oo insect control. Some of the common insects
. are aphids or plant lice, loopers, corn earworm,
Mexican beetle, and striped cucumber beetle,
Detailed recommendations for controlling home

I

I

I Dateline

I

I

Gallia

I

By Hobart Wilson Jr.

WHEN Coach C. L. (Jobnny ) Ecker's Gallipolis B!ue Devils
open their 1973 high school football campaign at Akron Manchest~r on Saturday, Sept. 8, the GAHS grldmen may cir may not
be accompanied by the Blue and White marching band.

+++
THE final decision will be left up to Rod Tolliver, the
Gallians' new instnnnental music director. If the Blue Devil
marching band is "ready" for the 1973 opener, members will
make that limg trip north for an afternoon performance. If
Director Tolliver feels the musicllins need more work, it's
doubtful they will take part in opening game activities.

.

.

+++

.

AT this point, we feel the Blue Devil musicians will be right
there cheering the mue Devils .on to victory come Sept. 8.
Tolliver, who was hired by the city board month ago, has
already ''rejuvenated" the entire band program; The musicians
really seem to enjoy what they are doing this year.

a

;

-+++

IT will be a long hard climb before the Blue Devil musicians

are "back on top" in southern Ohio competition. 'foltiver, a
graduate of Ohio State University, has established a rigorous
trairiing program (July 5 tbrough Aug. 24) If musicians are faithful and obey Tolliver's requests, GAHS once again will field one
of the most respected bands In southern Ohio.

+++

AREA visitors looking for ~mething to do today and this
evening are reminded of the boat and recreational outdoor show,
slated from noon until dark, at the Middleport marina in Meigs
County. This evening, the third presentation of "Gallla Country"
Is scheduled for the amphitheatre at Bob Evans Farms, Rio
Grande, Gallia County, beginning at 8:45 o'clock.

+++
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune
and weekly Gallla Times ,.. , Charles Butler joins Trib.uneTimes
editorial slaff ... White's Greenhouse in Gallipolis to relocate in
Kanauga .,. George E. Bush promoted to brigadier general upon
arrival in Anchorage, Alaska ·... Effie J . Hllyard resigns as
society editor of Tribune-Times ... Pt. Plea,sant captures seventh
annual Howard Verges swimming meet, tops Gallipolis team Bl59 ... Howard B. Saunders beaten ·one stroke by Arnold Palmeri~
finals of Ohio Amateur Golf Tournament at Pineridge Country
Club, Wickliffe, Ohio.

Service Corps

i~

struction will start soon on a
new refinery to produce naptha
and low sulphur residual fuel
on the wuth shore. The 100,000barrel-a-&lt;lay production will go
to the U. S. Eastern Seaboard.

funded

RIO GRANDE - ACTION, senior centers.
(ACE) and University Year for
the Citizens Service Corps, has • RSVP was started in 1969 by ACTION.
awarded $43,016 to Rio.Grande the U. S. Department of
College to operate a Retired Health, Education and Welfare
Senior Volunteer Program and became operational in
(RSVP) according to ACTION July, 1971, when it became part
Director Mike Balznao in of ACTION.
·
Washington.
RSVP is planned, organized
RSVP is a national program and operated on the local level.
lo develop significant · volun- It is developed under the
leer service in local com· auspices of an established
munities for men Bnct women community
serv ic'e
age 60 and over.
' organizalion or agency. Any
The one. year grant will retired person age 60 and over
enable the group to· slarl · an ean become a RSVP volunteer;
RSVP .in Gallia, Jackson and there are no education , income
Vinton counties, placing 150 or experience requirements .
Senior Volunteers in service
RSVP volunteers serve
therlrst year, and as many as wilhou( co mp ensation,
400 in the next five. More than although they may be reimDIESE~
16 pet. of the tfl-county area is· bur sed for such expenses as
age 60 and over: An- transporlation and meals.
nouncements for positions
Other AC1'10N programs are
available will be made in the lhe Peace Corps, Volunteers in
near future.
Service to America (VISTA),
Rio Grande College ad- Foster Grandparents
ministers an areawide project Program, Service Corps of.
on aging which is responsible Retired Executives (SCORE),
for developing nutrition and Active Corps of Executives
senior centers for alive-county
area. Dr. Alphus Christensen is in Virginia are North Fork oi
college president: Carl Pound Lake and John W.
Dahlberg is vice-president for Flannagan Reservoir. 'fhe
development.
Corps and the ·commonwealth
of Virginia are involved in
The RSVP will place recreation management at
vplunteers in cooperation Flannagan, while lhe Corps
public and private social and Wise County share th
agencies throughout the lhree operation at North Fork.
counties. Senior volunteers wi ll
In West Virginia, lhe Hun·
serve in a nursing home, tington District manages all
community me ntal health facilities at Sutton, Summers·
assooiation, day care center ville and East Lynn Lakes. The
and · the Jackson County slate operates a slate park at
juvenile court. Volunteers also Bluestone Lake . Other areas .
may be placed with family operaled under' Corps of
planning programs, libraries, Engineers leases include the
schools for the mentally bpulic I&gt; p ublic boat launc~i 1
PHONE 992·2176
relarded, public schools and and park areeas along the Ohio
River.

USED

TRACTOR
SPECIAL

In MemOI'I

,,

AttD

Camping Equipment

passed, a federal policy was
initiated for gradual application of the local participation principles of the Act
to recreation development at
projects authorized before it
was enacted.
After July I , 197$, the
principles of the 1965 Act will
be applied generally across the
board to construction and
operation of new park areas at
completed Corps of Engineers
projects.
This action supporls 'the
Administration goal of increas ing non-federal involvement in local program.
The Corps will continue · to
operate already developed
areas. However, federal induc~ men!B will be offered to
find local sponsors to control
and operate 'those areas also.
Should local or private
agencies have any questions or
an interest in participating in
!his program , they should
contact the Huntington (W.
Va,) District office;
It was noted however thai
since guidelines for participation by privalj! firms
have not yet been determined
ai the Washington level, it is
not possible lit this time to

'I

SUPPLI.ES

------

WANTED

Notice

=GALLIA COUNTY

YARD Sale, Tuesday July 17, at
9 a.m. at Stale Roule 554 In
Kyger. Mrs . Wa yne Sisson.

'•

----~.:__..:_'66- 1
DAY CARE

JUNIOR FAIR
"

MASON COUNTY

II

Ti.

JUNIOR FAIR

Experienced Medical
Secretaries
Contact Eva Northup,
Holzer .Medical Center
Clinic. Gallipolis, Ohio.

SUN VALLEY Nursery School,
licensed by Stale of Ohio, 1'1&gt;
miles y;es t of new hospital.
511 Sun Valley Dr. Ph. 446·
3657. Day care thol says "we
care." Madge Hau ldren
Owner : Loredllh and Joh~
Hauldren, Operators.

I

446-5189 ,

WANfEtJ:

= -::-:-:------__:_
114.11

Land· &amp; ~ome

TWO·WAY Rodlos Sales &amp;
Service. New and used CB's,

\

,,

SALESMAN

pollee monitors, antennas,

•8

Full &amp; Part lime

etc. Bob's Citizen Band Rad io
Equip ., Georges Creek Rd.,
Galli IIJ, O~lo 1146·4517.
-~.-----~212·tf
FOR UR needs In Portrait com ertlal and wedding
phol r, phy, ca ll Tawney's
Stud ,\ ,4-46,1615, Gallipolis&gt;

PreOpening Sales
Now Starting
· Grud Opening
First Week in August

Ohi '•lj~ t1 ' .
1

.;1

''

Timbre Ridge

'

•

INTERNATIONAL

'

.,.

FARMALL 544 .

Compare

I,

Huntington Di.qtrict

-·· .--

105 FREE Ice Cr~am Bars
or 15 half·ga ll ons of ice
cre~ m

fr ee with Ihe Unico
15 cu . ft . chos t.

•
SALE TIME JUlY I I RU .1111 Y II
YOU CAN BUY fROM ANY IANtlMAHK Ill All II I v.•tvoo•· 1 ,m'

---

~

------

til e wr i tt en ex ception s to sa id
acc ounts or to m afl (lrs per
ta ln lng to the exec ut ion Of the
lrl! st , not l e~s than l ive day s
pnor to the dat e·~ ' fo r hearing .
R , Wd tl am Jenk lns
Judg e
Patr icia Com pton
Deputy Cle rk

decea sed .

No. 14.346. First and F ina l
ac count of Ed it h I . Rob ertt, July 15
Administratr ix nf the Esta te. of
Ar,thur E . Roberts, dec eased .
No . 1.4,653 Fi rst and F Ina I
Account of John E . Halliday.·
PUBLIC NO TICE
E"ICecutor of th e Es tate of
Sea l ed bidS Will be received In
Margaret
P.
Skidmore, the off ice of th e Village Clerk ,
decea sed .
Pomeroy, Ohio , until 12 o'c loc k
No . 14,674 F l rst . Fin a l and no.on on Jt.ljy 30. 1973, on any ot
D istributive A cc ount of John c . the follow ing proposals ,
Wi c kline , E)(euutor at the
1. ·For the purchase by the
Es ti!lte of Margaret Eulalle Village of Pomeroy of ll new
197o4 four door five passenger
Wick l ine. d~ceased .
No. 14 ,729 First , F inal and sedan with lhe foll ow ing added
Distributrve ac: count ot Nell ie equipment .
E . Sheets Executr iX ol the
400 cubic inch engine 4 bar r el I
Es tate of Dent E . Sheet s, carburetor , Min : VB
deceased .
Power steering
No. 14 .736 Fr !s t. Fina l and
F ive black ties
O i s~ributlve Account ot Audrey
Foa~ rubber front seat.
Johnson , · Executrix ot th e
Spotlight on left hand S1 de
Estate of L i ll ian M -c Call.
Oil filter
deceased .
Police Chassis package
No. 14,761 First, Final and
Heavy duty ba tt er y 80_ AMP
Distributive Account of Louise
Alt ernator 100 AMP Min .

me , and .t he .bld mu st be
ac.com panled by a chec k or
bond In the lHJm or \100 00 to th e
sa t ls ta c t lo ri of th e · V l ltao e
Coun cil as a guaranty that It th e
bld Is acc epted , contra ct w i ll be
ent er ed mto and It s p e r
rorman ce properly secur ed .
These check s or bond s w ill
be r eturned at on ce to all ex cept
th e succ es s ful bi dder . Hi s
ch ec ks or bond w ill be held unt il
th e conlracl or bid Is property
exec ut ed by h ltn ,
The r ig ht i"S reserved to
r ej ect any and all bids ,
Jane Wai"ton, Clerk
Vl llageo"f Pomeroy
( 7) 8, 12 , 18 , 3t c

196 I FORD Thunderbird, all

power . runs g ood . $1 75 . Ca ll

7·10·61c

KOSCOT KOS METICS and

NOW OPEN, P.and J. Odds and
En ds, Glorified junk, IP·
pllonces. furniture. 215 North
July . Phone Helen Jane
Second, Middl eport.
erown, 992 5113.
M9 . :J0fc
6·29 ·fiC
1973 - Zig Zag sewing machine. ONE 1200acre lol for sa"ie . 60 AC
Name Br and Wigs . Spec;la(
pr ices during month oJ

~a l e

Thi s m ac hi ne darns, em.
broi der s, over casts. bu1fon
holes .
All w i thout at-

a l l -crop

Hanes·ter.

Phone 142 3656.

also .

tachmen ts. Pay l&gt;alance ol
$38.50 or pay $5 per month .
Call 992.533 1.
6- IO· II C

949 5913.

] . j) .J I C

Travel TralleJs for sa le

STARCRAFT -

5th An ·

niversary Sa l e on all trav el
trailer s
and
f.ol d -down
campers , Check our dea ls for
qual ity service and pri ces.

1970 Apahe Ramada 2-11. for
!99 5.
CAMP CONLEY
STARCRAFT SALES, Rl. 62

--"4"----------'-.,;_....;.
North o f Poi nt Plea sant
EXCELS IOR Sail Works. E. ' behind Red Carpel Inn, Phone
Main Sl., Pomeroy . All kinds (3041 675·5384.
of salt water pellets, water
7·13-31c
nuggets, bloc k sa lt and ·own
Ohio River Sail. P~one 992- HANGING Baskets, gerani ums.
3891.
begon i as , double petun ias,·
6·5·1fC combination pots . Cle l and

==::-:-----'GROCERY business tor sale .'
Bui lding for sale or lea se.

Phone 173·5618 from 8:30p.m .'

Farm and GreenhO;use, E .
Ma i n ,

Racine .

Geraldin e

Cleland .

6·27·1fc

to 10 p .m . for appoin lment .

3-20.ft c

·

•

•

·~·

our

.·TARA

prices

, YARD SALE, Wed. , Thurs .,
Fri., and Sal. 9 lill6, al 1902
' -·-

Townhouse
Apartments

Eastern
Avenue ,
auto .
washer, dryer, couch, storm .

doors. antique dishes,
clothing , baby
Items,
·~ bedroom '~~::~~J;ctr}~ ·~~~~

,.li

•

·IS
~.

'

1 ------~~~L-~-e­

DEAD. stock, ·horses, cattle,
hogs , sheep, reasonable
charge. Call 245-5514.
149-30

2 Bedroom
Townhouses ·

-~r-----''--

SWEEPiiR Repairs Paris,
' Supplies. Phone 367·7736.
Davis Vacuum Cleaner Store,

10 a.m.-5 p.m . Addison, Ohio.
114·1f

·•
~

., RUSS'S GLASS Seryice,. glass
• lor all needs,' specializing In

· Excellent Condition
,
Traded For Larger

·Ph Baths

.

m'rrors,

windshield 's ,
I

plexlglass. rescreen, 704 Pine,
1 Rio Grande, 245·5048.
·
J
1.11

Pay Only One
Utility

'

Addison, Ohio

-------

Now open in R 10
GRANDE
Mary's
, Beauty Par tor. For
.• appointment Call 2459321.

Tractor.

!=or Information
Call Shirley Adkins

. 367-7250

Stop saving.
You probably have more than
you need to build your
dream home now.
With Ridge Homes a family can own the
home they wan t fcir· as littl e cash as one
month 's renl. Yes, one month 's rent! You'll
find the whole exciting s 'ory in the new
Ridge Homes Booklet, " Plann ing , Choosing, and Building the hom e th at's right for
your family."
It's 88 colorful pages ol
pure inspiratio n
In it you'll read an
article written by Francis Reers , a typical
Ridge cus tome r, who tells how he built his
own Ridge home with hardly any out-ofpocket cash at all. And Franci s Reers isn 't
alone Thousands of Ridge families got
their dream homes !he exact same way
and your family can do it too!

CO~

POMEROY, OHIO

'

liks your lcs Cre•m in ' BAR, .. or by ths SCOOP?

EITHER WAY IT'S
.,
From.the f.loor up.,.lnslde and out.•. you·r
FOrest
Plrk home Is designed for
'
carefree living. Spacious rooms, lots of
storage · areas, easy to clean and
rill"alntaln. If Modern decor Is your cho.lce
you'll like Its look of ·lightness that
accents easy living. Available In 60' and
65' lengths, and a wide array of floor
plans In 12' &amp; 14' widths.
·stop 8y and SH the Beautiful Front
DlneHe with ~lldlng Olaas Door. Early
American Decor, Total Electric .
.

7 ICE CR~AM BARS, or A HALF-GALLON oi
ICE CREAM FREE for EACH CUBIC FQOT 'o"
buy NOW in a UNICO CHEST or U'P~Itl'H¥
FREEZER
•.
, l'

POMERQ. ~ ::~. ~~
:")i :

9·15·61c

--

NIBERT,

51 .ff

('(

available . Phone 991-2984 .

For Sale

STOVE S, .... fr lger otors. GROC ERY Business In Tuppers
Was her s. --o-r ycrs.
Deep
f'lolns. Ol!lo. Will Hll otock,
F ree1es . P and J Hom e
equ.ipmont , bulldln~ and
Mit lnlenance, 166 Mill Street. .. tro lot or Will ltaot
Mlddleporl.
build ing , Coli 667.3210 In
1 10 61c
Tuppers Plain&amp; or 985.3f57 In
Chester.
(3) TWIN NEE DL E Sewing
1Htc
Mac hines 1973 Model In -~-~---7:....:.;·
Wal nu t sl an d. All fe atures LIVING Room Sullt, $20, ~w
bui ll in to make fan cy desi gns
Rugs, S29.95 to U9.95, C1blntl
and do slrelch sewing . Also sink. 125, Chair~, U.9S and up.
button holes, bli nd hern s, etc .
Breakfast Set, 11A.95, Play
$43.35 cash price or lerms Pens, S3 ond up, P and J Odds
available . Phone 992 · 2984.
and Ends, 215 North Soc011d.
7·10·61c Middleport.

'~

LWJ

anywh~re. Tawney's Jewelry.

...

For Sale

For .Sale

Phone 446·4672
281 Stale Street
\
Gallipolis,
''' - - - - 'Ohio4S631
- - - - - • • - - - - - - - -..
' WE HAVE a complete' line of
watches and diamonds.

c r e~m

Uss our
E8sy Pay
Budgst Plan/

Vln';'l IJ()hOillo i Cr y
Ai r cond itioner
Wheel Base 120 tn,nes M in
Po w er d isc; br&amp; ktol

AI\~~
A.S.A.

147 FREE Ice Cream Bars
or 21 half,yall on s of ice

free wlih the supe r·
SIZed Un 1CO 25 c·u . fl
chest lr eeze r.
sale pric ed
il l only

dtl tHt!tl! !.l
No t A,1tl6 r lniL 1 lnlll an(l
Dll tr lb ut hHl nccoun t ot Pn tr •C:Ilt

following · named per son s and
estat es -hev e b een tiled In sa id
Court of Ga.ttla County , Oh io. fo r
approvHI and · settlement .
No. 14,044 First, Fina l and
Distr i butive acc:ount of P-atr ici a
Ann Henson , Ad m lnl slratr lx ol
the E5tat e of.. Ora Con le y,

'

lol - · -

1. l)l o10n rt-IJr 11 .('1 •·

Auluffio llt tr ln!.ml!.sl on

614/2S6 - 6~9S

ARTJIU~ ~·

.

175 FREE Ice Cream Bars
or 25 halt·ya ll ons ot 1ce

,, ~"JH• v e

"H'

Contact. .. M1. James Dovle

A

"'l

Jrd &amp; Sycamore Streets
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
.
Your Farm Supply Supermarket'! ·•

WITH FRE·E ICE CREAM
cre(Jm lr ee w1th the lJni co
21 cu. II . Up righ t fr eezer.
sa le pn ced
at only

u,

flou~h.

•

Loke Estates

ESStONAL REAL
ESTr TE A~~RAISER

NTRAL SOYA

'MEIGS EQUIPMENT

Best Buys Anywhere

(.U it ' '

Wundill

Lawrence Counl(l

145-tf

l,l

PR

ENGINE

enler into any detailed
negotiations with such firms.
Nevertheless, expressions of
interest from private firms,
would be helpful in planning for
future recreation de¥flopmenl
at completed projects.
'fhe Hunlington District
includes parts of Ohio, West
Virginia, Kentucky, Virginia
and North Carolina.
In Ohio, completed projects
operated by Ihe district include
Delaware, Deer Creek, Tom
Jenkins Dam (Burr Oak Lake)
and the entire Muskingum
River Basin dam system including Dillon and North
Branch of Kokosing.
While the Corps of Engineers
operales and mainlains the
dams, recrealion facilities at
the above projects are
operated by the Slate of Ohio
except for those operated by
the Mu skingum Watershed
Conservancy District.
In Kentucky the Huntington
District operates Grayson,
Dewey and Fishtrap .dams.
ReGreatlon · .it Grayson and
Dewey (Je nny Wiley State
Park) is handled primarily by
the Commonwclath of Ken.
lucky.
··

j o('

-----

Local money, control will
be extended in CQrps jobs.
HUNTINGTON, W. Va
Local control O}ler and lnv.estment in recreation areas at
Army Corps of Engineers
projects may be expanded
under a recent policy change.
Beginning this July new
recreation developments at
completed Corps ·projects will
be determined to a great extent
by local sponsors. Generally,
such areas will not be
developed Without 50 pet. nonfederal cost sharipg.
. Local interests would
operate and maintain !he park
facili ties which they had
sponsored lhrough cost
sharing. The 1965 Federal
Water i&gt;'ro]ect Recreation Act
added recreation as a project
purpose · to more traditional
fwlctions such as flood control,
Navigation and hydroelectric
Jl0l1'er.
That Jaw requires that non·
federal agencies or entities pay
50 pet. ol the eeparable cost of
recreatiQn development at
multipurpose projects
authorized by Congreas after
the Act was enacted, and also
UIUine all c11111 for operation
and maintenance of the park
laciliUes.
,
Shorly alter the l Act was

H~Nl'lh ,
~ot,t l u o t

------------

52 H.P.

Save
Dollars
Now On
This One!

I!

1

IN MEMORY ol Jeffery Ai&amp;n PIAN O lun ing and r ~ ai r ,
NEW 1 v•tce Ear l y A mer ican
- MOTOR HOME
R"'I\My, ono y"r old loday. dlscoun ts to schoo l&amp;, chvrches ·
living room sul le In 100 pel.
(You drlvtltl
Peac-lvl be thy 1ieep. dear and professionals. 446 0022, FOR RENT, complelp prlmbry Anrl OIHdcts , Adrl'l lnl"' lratrlx o t
ny lon fTI8 Ierla l w ilh scot ch
(&amp; 11'11 11.1 o f Wi'fyo n l1 Tllom ..'l$
HoOf Gu tt er &amp;
JOO, I~ It OW"!' flo bre•lhe lhy
gard Md rrr&amp;ple wood trim
1641 2 l nsur~ nce ~ rovlded . Rates as the
On n lets , b kil Way n e T Dan ll.l la,
Cetrb r a t ~d speeQomttte r and
name, In life we loved you
mln g an d S inch fottm
low as 520 per d•y on weekly tJeceucd
-~
pollee bod y pa'cka&lt;; e opt tons end
dearly, In death we do lhe
FREE
basis. 1401 Eastern Ave. Ph. NQ l.t ,HH f Jrs t and irl&amp;J tr a n st urr lng r adio, .si r en , ous~lons . Only Sl89.95 cash
same .
and
( Arr y ,
Pom eroy
Tl ~ E J1, wheel wllh each
446·1425.
'
Ac-count of Vli rn a rd F&lt;"J tt om •• llltlh ln g &amp;IQ n blS. · llr t: ex
Sadly rrtlutd .by · Ruth, camper lrftller sold before
Recovery, 622 e. Mitin Strecl.
OV&amp;I'CJ IM or th~ Et tat e ot ~ IJh C t tnu\l ts n, ra and pr o t ec t ive
Phone 992-7554.
Jock, Carol I , 6obby .
Ann e FIIIIQn , o m inor a1HJ lo r'r v Shleld fro m prbs.e[JJ, ca r to n ew
Aug . I. Vacallqn ·lime July
·166. 1 bes t discount , Pri ces. som e
Pallen
a
m
tnor
.
.
cor
..
7.12 61 &lt;
APACH E SOLID STA TE ,
No
,
1A
,69
3
Fi
r
t
t
,
Fi
nal
2.
r
or
n
te
hy
lire
Vlll ~ge ot
Am
eri
ca's
large&amp;
l·se
lllng
up lo S300. Trades wonted.
O lt tr ! b~ ll v e
n cc ounl P-om eroy fl.5 1971 DodQe to ur CLOSE OUT on now zlg.zag
Amsbary's Apache Trailer
loldlng camping trailer , Gel oa fnd Hugh
Wanlpd to Rent or Buy Sal
· c.
N liUy ,
eK door 8 c vl lnQer , A door sedan
sew ing m ach ines for sew ing
es . 631 Fourlh Ave.,
your deal and then see Ams- ec ut or ot th e Es t at e of Joh n without r adio eq ui pm ent , IJ r e
stretch flltlr ics. button holes.
UNF f!NISH~O 2 or 3 BR Gallipolis, 446-0239.
bary, We · will not be un · w. I.Jn roe, deceased .
exti ng uisher. si r en . fl as h ing
ho
In Kyger Creek ochool
dersold . AMSBARY ' S No . i 4, 209 Firs t and fi nal signals and pro tec t h,.e Sh ie ld . f a n c y d esig ns, e lc . Pa in t
164·11
Th e bidder m~ v sHtl e either ' sllghll¥ blemished Choice. ol.
dis let. 4-46.2302.
APACHE TRAILER SAL ES, acc: ou n t of Boyd E . Welling ton . what
h e w i lt g i ve for the 1972
ca rrJ 1n g cese or se w1ng
631
Fourth
Ave
..
Gall
ipolis.
166·3
C.va rrJ I&amp;n of the per son and o oaoe or w ha t am ount h e w ill
stan . $49.80 or cas h or terms
Found
C&gt;hlo,
446·0239.
·
es tat e of M er l d !t h Cla i r e allow u a lr i!!l d e In for tt1 e n ew
--~,~------------availa
ble. P ~one 992·2984.
YOUNG femal e bla ck and
149·11 w ctlfn-(lton
.
II
Unl eos e"~C ce ptlon s. M e f lied PO ce cr uiser desc r ibed abov e.
7-15 61c
lost - ·'
trown German Shepherd . 367·
Eac h b ld&lt;Jer may bid for
th er e to . u .ld a cc:ounts w i ll be &amp;l ther th e purd'iine of t he 1972
SEAL POINT Siamese cal , 9 1583 .
to r hear ing befor e $Bid Couq , Dodg e or for the sale to t he E LECTROL UX sweep ers,
PROBATE NOTICE
164-3
mon ths old, np collar, Reward
on Th e 15th day ot Av g us t , 19~3. · Village of Pom eroy of a n e w
APPROVAL
ANO
delu•e model. Comple te w it~
525. Loslln ·vlclnlly of V!nlon --~---at wh l.ch ti me said account sw ltl pol lee cru iser dt!sc.r lbed llbo Ve
SETTlEMENT
all Cleani ng attach men ts and
Court. Call Peler Jasls. 446·
OF ACCOUNTS
be con ~l d e r cd and cont inu ed or both . E ach bi d mu st cont ai n"
uses . paper bags. Sllghlly
4959.
•
Wanted
court af Common Pleas , from day to do~~y un til finally t ~e f ull ne me of every per son or
used
, but cleans and look s like
165·3
Probate Division .
new . For $37 .25 cash , or term s
Accounts and vou cher s ot th o d l 2'0°; ~~ e~~on l nl ef est ed may ; gmpany Inter es ted .In th e

I

0

I

I

GALLI POLIS r Galli poll'
Rotary will nguin sponsor lhe
Gurden •rrnctor pull at the
Glllliu Counly Junior Fuir on
Wco;lnesduy, Au~u s ll , 1973ut I
o'clock p,Jll,
Jnformallon and entry
blanks can be obtulned from
Foster Red Horse Service
Station, 391 Jackson Pike
(across from lulr' g1·ounds),
Gallipolis; Sheets' Sohio
Service Slntion , Court &amp;
Second Sts., Gallipolis, . nnd
Donald M. Robinson, Buckeye
Rural Electric O!..,p, llJ Third
Ave., Gallipolis.

ornumenlals infcs te&lt;l with lnsecls or mites, The
vegelable garden insects are avulloble by conderision Is not nlways !ln easy one to make because
lactlng the Extension Office and asking for bulletin
the•·e are usually several fa ctors wh ich we must
l98.
consider
before we can decide what to clo.
Slugs are becoming more common in rl'Ccnl
The first thing lo do is to identify Um pesl.
years. Would you believe beer ana even slale beer
Maybe a neighbor hns hud the same trouble
at that, may have a place in slug control.
previously.
Tile Extension Office is able to ldenUfy
Around the house and yard mosquitoes, ·ants
many pests or will send them to Ohio !)'tate
and spiders, and even fleas present problems.
University for positive identlficullon.
Occasiooally vacalioners relurn to their home, or
Another problem is the degree of Infestation .
new home-&lt;Jwners move into a dwelling which has
Until a certain number of insects is present on a
been vacant for several weeks, only to lind It
phml.'
control measures are not needed. fl's not
overrun with fleas. This shocks the homeowner.
always ensy to kllQw when there are enough Insects
Actually, immature fleas developed into adult fleus
present to justify control measures. One thousand
during the period the horne was unoccupied. The
caterpilllu·s eating . leaves might completely
original source of the fleas was the pet cat, o~ dog.
defoliate.u trc&gt;e In two weeks, whereas that same
· An " ln~nt Answer Sheet" on these and many
numberof
.aphids would hardly be noted. Yet 1,000
other insects is available from our office.
aphids today may become 100,000 in a month. This
Heck's gift to
Just this week the writer observed the small
may bo more than a plant eould tolerate.
MU worth $50,000
bagwonns developing on juniper. In a couple of
In
some
cases
doing
llQthlng
is
the
best
course
of
weeks these will be full grown and lots of defolialion
aclion because predators, parasites, and other
HUNTINGTON - Officials
will have taken place . Control materials listed for
factors take over, and the pests soon disappear. of Heck's Inc., Saturday anbag worms on Juniper, in bulletin 504, Insect and
Most established trees can be eomplelely defoliated nounced the ·gift of $50,000
Mite Control on Or'namentals, include Cygon, Sevin,
without any apparent permanent harm to them, but worth of the Charleston-based
diazinon, chlordane and malathion . This bulletin is
defoliation
may weaken younger- or newly trans- company's stock to Marshall
free by calling !he extension office.
planted trees and most shrubs until they die or University.
Included in the list of early July pests and
become susceptible and attractive to other injurious
Presenting the unrestricted
SUggested control time are the hosl and pest as
pests.
gift
was Nathan ·Haddad of
follows : Arborvitae, bagworms ; Ash (Moraine),
Doing nothing may rsult in the beauty of a plant Madison, W. Va., in behalf of
lilac bOrer ; Birch, Bronze birch borer: Fir,
being
destroyed or a pest becoming numerous !)is· son, Fred Haddad, board
bagworms, Pales weevil ; Flowering fruit trees,
enough to make a general nuisance of itself. In the chairman and chief executive
flatheaded borer, Sam Joe scale, peache tree borer ;
case of a heavy borer or scale infestation, doing · officer of Heck's. Also taking
Honey locus!, mimpsa webworm ; Juniper,
nothing coult result in the death of a plant, re- part in the presentation were
bagworms; Lilac, lilae borer; Locust, locust leaf
gardless of its' age or size.
Russell Isaacs, president of
miner ; Magnolia, yellow .poplar weevil ; Maple,
Very often a person may lake the time and Heck's, and Paul Skaff,
flathe~ded borer and cottony maple scale ; Mimosa,
effort
to spray a plant only to be dissatisfied with grandson. of Nathan Haddad
mimosa webworm ; Moraine ash, lilac borer ; Oak,
flatheaded apple tree borer; Pine, northern pine . the results and now know why lhe treatment didn't and a Marshall student.
work. Some things that may be resj)onsible for the
weevil and Pales weevil; Silver maple, cotlony
insecticide
not performing satisfactor iiy are
maple scale; Spruce, spruce bud scale and Tulip
REFINERY PLANNED
correct timing and thorough application of sprays,
tree, yellow p(Jplar weeviL
CHRISTIANSTED, St. Croix,
wrong insecticide used weather responsible, new
Whenever pests appear there are decisions to
V.
I. (UP!) - The Virgin
be made Shall we spray or not spray? This question . generations of insects occur, insectS' reinfest trees, Islands Refinery O!rporation
and storage life of inseclicides.
often confronts us when we suddenly find one of our
announced Friday that con-

r-----------------..;.-----~-1

,,

~otary chili i staging garden tractor pull

q/J

LANDMARK

I

&amp;'~~~

JACK W. CARSEY1 Mr. ,

1n '' s~e Jlm'Siuts or Joa Giles
Jvstsoulh ofl~- Sliver llridge Plaza
Phone 446-9340
GalJipolis, Ohio

II'

project~ ..~-----. . . .~-:----~---------~---. . . .~-~----------•••••••-'•1.
•

.

.

A Ridge manufactured home is a
better h_l!me ind a better value.

Like the car you drive and !he cloth es
you wear, your Rid ge home is a resull 'of ·
the most modern, large-sca le production
tec hniques avai l ~ble . Each componenl
part is precision-cu t at the Ridge planl.
!hen s hipped to the homesile in lwo slages .

Yes, Ridge even has mortgage money.

ciency and low cost. This is why a manufactured home is the best answer for so
ma ny families . In facl, by 1975, about hall
of a ll new homes will be factory-produced!
You make a' Ridge home ei&lt;actly
what you want It to be.
What's your pleasure? Ra ncher? Bilevel ? You"ll find it amo ng Ridge Hom es'
basic models. Then that dream starts com ing !rue. Your Ridge home will be tailormade for you thanks lo the hundreds of
leatures and options you can choose from .
At no extra charge you can c hange the
!loot plan ... c hoose !he exterior design
... selecl your kitch en, bathroom fixtures,
color scheme . .. everything' The choice
is e ntirely yours!
Save thousands by doing some
ol the work yourself.
Can you swing a hammer? Or handle a
saw? Then you· can save yourself up to
$4,000 on your new Ridge home by doing
some ol the interior finis hing work yoursel f. We'll take care ol !he Iough jobs for
you . Like !he foundation and weather proof exterior. Then you c;an fini sh up as
much of !he interior as you want. Or &lt;;lS
littl e. And yo ur Ridge dealer will be right
there if you need any help or professional advice. Thousands of famihes
helped build their own Ridge homes
this way, and ended up with more
home than they. ever fh ought fhey
could afford.

t;__ _ _ _ _ ._ _ _ __...._;_) • .

.I

When you build with· Ridge you don't
~ave to worry about getting a mortgage. ·
We have our own financial resources and
finan ci ng plans to help people build their
new homes . So stop saving lor that new
home. And start planning fo build it .
today!
Now you should see our Magazine.
There's a free copy waiting at
your Ridge dealer's.
Now that you know something about
R.idge, maybe you 'd like to know more.
Okay. Visit your Ridge dealer. He'll give
you your free copy of the 88-page Ridge
Homes Magazine , " Planning, Choosing,
and Bui lding the home !hat's right for your
fami ly." You 'll see all 35 Ridge home
models, · deco rator ideas, do-it-yourself
tips, choices and .options galo re . , . and,
· of cgurse, the feature artic le written by a
man who bu ill his Ridge home with less
cash than a month's rent! And his story's
not at all unusual. So get your free magazine at your Ridge dealer's. Or
mail the coupon. It's your
fir.s t big step toward
making your dream
home come true.

r- -~---- - -- --------- --------- - ----1

I

-

. / .....

\

1 flfiDQ. Hom•s
I •..,..,,..,,.®._.....,....,,. ,_ ..,,
I

No. PSGTm

.

RIDGE HOMES
Bo~ 1000
Conshohocken ,

.

I

I

Pa , L9428

1 ,
Ple~tse sund me my free copy of your new 88 pAije, ftlll color Atdge
Hurnes M.aguine.

MOBILE HOME SALES

Serving Meigs, G'!llla, Muon CountJtt
·
Open Mon.-Sat , :rll6r 00 P.M,
. PHONE f92 -2111

.
.
Ridge Homes Is the reason.
Who is Ridge Homes? we ·re one of the
country's largest home manufacturers .
And now there's .a Ridge Homes dealer
here. too. In a nutshell, what Ridge offers
Is a program that helps people of moderate income get the exact home they've
always wanted . Nearly 25,000 \satisfied
Ridg e homeowners are proof )ha t our
program works . Even when mortgage
money is tight, more tamilies than ever
build Ridge homes.

First come the materi ~ ls a nd com ponents
for lhe weatherproof exterior, Which is
erected on the foundation by ski lled pr-ofessionals . Then , after thai is erected, the
inte rior finish ing materi als arrive. Unlike
homes built the old-fashioned way, a Ridg e
hom e gives you consistent quality, e lfi -

1
II

NAME

~

ADORE S

I

10WN

There's a
new Ridge d~aler in town.
In the Galttpolls, Ohio/Pt. Pleasant, WV Are&amp;:

I

.,_.. __ .

'&amp;

l ' 1 We'ro looking lor • building iol in _

l

CLARK·RIDGE HOMES

- - _PHONE

STATE --· •

liP

ltownl

I 1Wo '""-•-,bulldlnR
lol In ____ ...., _________
---- _
ilownl J
1--·--·-----....;
•_ _ ;...; ____
I

Deibel:! F. Clark
Roule 160
(At tho intersection of JAckson Pike &amp; Bulovllle Rd .)
Galhpolls
614 446•9714

•

•

�1
'

' Tunc . • L\
lO • ~rttt 5un\i.Jy

I

18-

T)le Sunday 'fimes • S..nttnel, Sundn), July IS, 1973

bisect, disease pests at work
81( C. E. BLAKFSLEE
County Elt. Agent, Agriculture

POMEROY - Insect and disease pests and
even weather condition results are causing more
calls to.the extension office this month. For the last
month or so we have had too much molslure, but in
July and August we usually have too litUe, so this
causes trouble to our plants also.
In controlling insects and disease the first
requirement is correct Identification. It is practically impossible to identify a disease if the twig or

the NEW in FA.RMING
leaf or stem has been dead a week or more. After a
disease strikes it may be too late for control !hal

season.
Foliage blights, fruit and stem rots may result
in total loss lf a preventive material is not applied to
protect the plant. Resistant varieties may be more
suitable. Otherwise specific control ,measures are
often needed for certain diseases.
Protective materials are just what they are said
to be. They protect the plant and any new growth or
fruits that may form. These materials must be
applied before a disease problem becomes
establlshed and .should be put on at regular in·
tervals. U you go off for a month's vacation and
weather conditions are favorable for disease
development, you may return to find many dead or
dying plants; if protective materials were not applied In the interim period.
Our commercial vegetable growers usually use
fungicides on a regular schedule to prevent disease.
Fungicides are usually applied at 7 to 10 day in·
tervals, or more often when plants are growing
rapidly.
H0111e vegetable growers sometimes hope
, disealie cootrol will not, be needed and concentrate
more oo insect control. Some of the common insects
. are aphids or plant lice, loopers, corn earworm,
Mexican beetle, and striped cucumber beetle,
Detailed recommendations for controlling home

I

I

I Dateline

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I

Gallia

I

By Hobart Wilson Jr.

WHEN Coach C. L. (Jobnny ) Ecker's Gallipolis B!ue Devils
open their 1973 high school football campaign at Akron Manchest~r on Saturday, Sept. 8, the GAHS grldmen may cir may not
be accompanied by the Blue and White marching band.

+++
THE final decision will be left up to Rod Tolliver, the
Gallians' new instnnnental music director. If the Blue Devil
marching band is "ready" for the 1973 opener, members will
make that limg trip north for an afternoon performance. If
Director Tolliver feels the musicllins need more work, it's
doubtful they will take part in opening game activities.

.

.

+++

.

AT this point, we feel the Blue Devil musicians will be right
there cheering the mue Devils .on to victory come Sept. 8.
Tolliver, who was hired by the city board month ago, has
already ''rejuvenated" the entire band program; The musicians
really seem to enjoy what they are doing this year.

a

;

-+++

IT will be a long hard climb before the Blue Devil musicians

are "back on top" in southern Ohio competition. 'foltiver, a
graduate of Ohio State University, has established a rigorous
trairiing program (July 5 tbrough Aug. 24) If musicians are faithful and obey Tolliver's requests, GAHS once again will field one
of the most respected bands In southern Ohio.

+++

AREA visitors looking for ~mething to do today and this
evening are reminded of the boat and recreational outdoor show,
slated from noon until dark, at the Middleport marina in Meigs
County. This evening, the third presentation of "Gallla Country"
Is scheduled for the amphitheatre at Bob Evans Farms, Rio
Grande, Gallia County, beginning at 8:45 o'clock.

+++
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune
and weekly Gallla Times ,.. , Charles Butler joins Trib.uneTimes
editorial slaff ... White's Greenhouse in Gallipolis to relocate in
Kanauga .,. George E. Bush promoted to brigadier general upon
arrival in Anchorage, Alaska ·... Effie J . Hllyard resigns as
society editor of Tribune-Times ... Pt. Plea,sant captures seventh
annual Howard Verges swimming meet, tops Gallipolis team Bl59 ... Howard B. Saunders beaten ·one stroke by Arnold Palmeri~
finals of Ohio Amateur Golf Tournament at Pineridge Country
Club, Wickliffe, Ohio.

Service Corps

i~

struction will start soon on a
new refinery to produce naptha
and low sulphur residual fuel
on the wuth shore. The 100,000barrel-a-&lt;lay production will go
to the U. S. Eastern Seaboard.

funded

RIO GRANDE - ACTION, senior centers.
(ACE) and University Year for
the Citizens Service Corps, has • RSVP was started in 1969 by ACTION.
awarded $43,016 to Rio.Grande the U. S. Department of
College to operate a Retired Health, Education and Welfare
Senior Volunteer Program and became operational in
(RSVP) according to ACTION July, 1971, when it became part
Director Mike Balznao in of ACTION.
·
Washington.
RSVP is planned, organized
RSVP is a national program and operated on the local level.
lo develop significant · volun- It is developed under the
leer service in local com· auspices of an established
munities for men Bnct women community
serv ic'e
age 60 and over.
' organizalion or agency. Any
The one. year grant will retired person age 60 and over
enable the group to· slarl · an ean become a RSVP volunteer;
RSVP .in Gallia, Jackson and there are no education , income
Vinton counties, placing 150 or experience requirements .
Senior Volunteers in service
RSVP volunteers serve
therlrst year, and as many as wilhou( co mp ensation,
400 in the next five. More than although they may be reimDIESE~
16 pet. of the tfl-county area is· bur sed for such expenses as
age 60 and over: An- transporlation and meals.
nouncements for positions
Other AC1'10N programs are
available will be made in the lhe Peace Corps, Volunteers in
near future.
Service to America (VISTA),
Rio Grande College ad- Foster Grandparents
ministers an areawide project Program, Service Corps of.
on aging which is responsible Retired Executives (SCORE),
for developing nutrition and Active Corps of Executives
senior centers for alive-county
area. Dr. Alphus Christensen is in Virginia are North Fork oi
college president: Carl Pound Lake and John W.
Dahlberg is vice-president for Flannagan Reservoir. 'fhe
development.
Corps and the ·commonwealth
of Virginia are involved in
The RSVP will place recreation management at
vplunteers in cooperation Flannagan, while lhe Corps
public and private social and Wise County share th
agencies throughout the lhree operation at North Fork.
counties. Senior volunteers wi ll
In West Virginia, lhe Hun·
serve in a nursing home, tington District manages all
community me ntal health facilities at Sutton, Summers·
assooiation, day care center ville and East Lynn Lakes. The
and · the Jackson County slate operates a slate park at
juvenile court. Volunteers also Bluestone Lake . Other areas .
may be placed with family operaled under' Corps of
planning programs, libraries, Engineers leases include the
schools for the mentally bpulic I&gt; p ublic boat launc~i 1
PHONE 992·2176
relarded, public schools and and park areeas along the Ohio
River.

USED

TRACTOR
SPECIAL

In MemOI'I

,,

AttD

Camping Equipment

passed, a federal policy was
initiated for gradual application of the local participation principles of the Act
to recreation development at
projects authorized before it
was enacted.
After July I , 197$, the
principles of the 1965 Act will
be applied generally across the
board to construction and
operation of new park areas at
completed Corps of Engineers
projects.
This action supporls 'the
Administration goal of increas ing non-federal involvement in local program.
The Corps will continue · to
operate already developed
areas. However, federal induc~ men!B will be offered to
find local sponsors to control
and operate 'those areas also.
Should local or private
agencies have any questions or
an interest in participating in
!his program , they should
contact the Huntington (W.
Va,) District office;
It was noted however thai
since guidelines for participation by privalj! firms
have not yet been determined
ai the Washington level, it is
not possible lit this time to

'I

SUPPLI.ES

------

WANTED

Notice

=GALLIA COUNTY

YARD Sale, Tuesday July 17, at
9 a.m. at Stale Roule 554 In
Kyger. Mrs . Wa yne Sisson.

'•

----~.:__..:_'66- 1
DAY CARE

JUNIOR FAIR
"

MASON COUNTY

II

Ti.

JUNIOR FAIR

Experienced Medical
Secretaries
Contact Eva Northup,
Holzer .Medical Center
Clinic. Gallipolis, Ohio.

SUN VALLEY Nursery School,
licensed by Stale of Ohio, 1'1&gt;
miles y;es t of new hospital.
511 Sun Valley Dr. Ph. 446·
3657. Day care thol says "we
care." Madge Hau ldren
Owner : Loredllh and Joh~
Hauldren, Operators.

I

446-5189 ,

WANfEtJ:

= -::-:-:------__:_
114.11

Land· &amp; ~ome

TWO·WAY Rodlos Sales &amp;
Service. New and used CB's,

\

,,

SALESMAN

pollee monitors, antennas,

•8

Full &amp; Part lime

etc. Bob's Citizen Band Rad io
Equip ., Georges Creek Rd.,
Galli IIJ, O~lo 1146·4517.
-~.-----~212·tf
FOR UR needs In Portrait com ertlal and wedding
phol r, phy, ca ll Tawney's
Stud ,\ ,4-46,1615, Gallipolis&gt;

PreOpening Sales
Now Starting
· Grud Opening
First Week in August

Ohi '•lj~ t1 ' .
1

.;1

''

Timbre Ridge

'

•

INTERNATIONAL

'

.,.

FARMALL 544 .

Compare

I,

Huntington Di.qtrict

-·· .--

105 FREE Ice Cr~am Bars
or 15 half·ga ll ons of ice
cre~ m

fr ee with Ihe Unico
15 cu . ft . chos t.

•
SALE TIME JUlY I I RU .1111 Y II
YOU CAN BUY fROM ANY IANtlMAHK Ill All II I v.•tvoo•· 1 ,m'

---

~

------

til e wr i tt en ex ception s to sa id
acc ounts or to m afl (lrs per
ta ln lng to the exec ut ion Of the
lrl! st , not l e~s than l ive day s
pnor to the dat e·~ ' fo r hearing .
R , Wd tl am Jenk lns
Judg e
Patr icia Com pton
Deputy Cle rk

decea sed .

No. 14.346. First and F ina l
ac count of Ed it h I . Rob ertt, July 15
Administratr ix nf the Esta te. of
Ar,thur E . Roberts, dec eased .
No . 1.4,653 Fi rst and F Ina I
Account of John E . Halliday.·
PUBLIC NO TICE
E"ICecutor of th e Es tate of
Sea l ed bidS Will be received In
Margaret
P.
Skidmore, the off ice of th e Village Clerk ,
decea sed .
Pomeroy, Ohio , until 12 o'c loc k
No . 14,674 F l rst . Fin a l and no.on on Jt.ljy 30. 1973, on any ot
D istributive A cc ount of John c . the follow ing proposals ,
Wi c kline , E)(euutor at the
1. ·For the purchase by the
Es ti!lte of Margaret Eulalle Village of Pomeroy of ll new
197o4 four door five passenger
Wick l ine. d~ceased .
No. 14 ,729 First , F inal and sedan with lhe foll ow ing added
Distributrve ac: count ot Nell ie equipment .
E . Sheets Executr iX ol the
400 cubic inch engine 4 bar r el I
Es tate of Dent E . Sheet s, carburetor , Min : VB
deceased .
Power steering
No. 14 .736 Fr !s t. Fina l and
F ive black ties
O i s~ributlve Account ot Audrey
Foa~ rubber front seat.
Johnson , · Executrix ot th e
Spotlight on left hand S1 de
Estate of L i ll ian M -c Call.
Oil filter
deceased .
Police Chassis package
No. 14,761 First, Final and
Heavy duty ba tt er y 80_ AMP
Distributive Account of Louise
Alt ernator 100 AMP Min .

me , and .t he .bld mu st be
ac.com panled by a chec k or
bond In the lHJm or \100 00 to th e
sa t ls ta c t lo ri of th e · V l ltao e
Coun cil as a guaranty that It th e
bld Is acc epted , contra ct w i ll be
ent er ed mto and It s p e r
rorman ce properly secur ed .
These check s or bond s w ill
be r eturned at on ce to all ex cept
th e succ es s ful bi dder . Hi s
ch ec ks or bond w ill be held unt il
th e conlracl or bid Is property
exec ut ed by h ltn ,
The r ig ht i"S reserved to
r ej ect any and all bids ,
Jane Wai"ton, Clerk
Vl llageo"f Pomeroy
( 7) 8, 12 , 18 , 3t c

196 I FORD Thunderbird, all

power . runs g ood . $1 75 . Ca ll

7·10·61c

KOSCOT KOS METICS and

NOW OPEN, P.and J. Odds and
En ds, Glorified junk, IP·
pllonces. furniture. 215 North
July . Phone Helen Jane
Second, Middl eport.
erown, 992 5113.
M9 . :J0fc
6·29 ·fiC
1973 - Zig Zag sewing machine. ONE 1200acre lol for sa"ie . 60 AC
Name Br and Wigs . Spec;la(
pr ices during month oJ

~a l e

Thi s m ac hi ne darns, em.
broi der s, over casts. bu1fon
holes .
All w i thout at-

a l l -crop

Hanes·ter.

Phone 142 3656.

also .

tachmen ts. Pay l&gt;alance ol
$38.50 or pay $5 per month .
Call 992.533 1.
6- IO· II C

949 5913.

] . j) .J I C

Travel TralleJs for sa le

STARCRAFT -

5th An ·

niversary Sa l e on all trav el
trailer s
and
f.ol d -down
campers , Check our dea ls for
qual ity service and pri ces.

1970 Apahe Ramada 2-11. for
!99 5.
CAMP CONLEY
STARCRAFT SALES, Rl. 62

--"4"----------'-.,;_....;.
North o f Poi nt Plea sant
EXCELS IOR Sail Works. E. ' behind Red Carpel Inn, Phone
Main Sl., Pomeroy . All kinds (3041 675·5384.
of salt water pellets, water
7·13-31c
nuggets, bloc k sa lt and ·own
Ohio River Sail. P~one 992- HANGING Baskets, gerani ums.
3891.
begon i as , double petun ias,·
6·5·1fC combination pots . Cle l and

==::-:-----'GROCERY business tor sale .'
Bui lding for sale or lea se.

Phone 173·5618 from 8:30p.m .'

Farm and GreenhO;use, E .
Ma i n ,

Racine .

Geraldin e

Cleland .

6·27·1fc

to 10 p .m . for appoin lment .

3-20.ft c

·

•

•

·~·

our

.·TARA

prices

, YARD SALE, Wed. , Thurs .,
Fri., and Sal. 9 lill6, al 1902
' -·-

Townhouse
Apartments

Eastern
Avenue ,
auto .
washer, dryer, couch, storm .

doors. antique dishes,
clothing , baby
Items,
·~ bedroom '~~::~~J;ctr}~ ·~~~~

,.li

•

·IS
~.

'

1 ------~~~L-~-e­

DEAD. stock, ·horses, cattle,
hogs , sheep, reasonable
charge. Call 245-5514.
149-30

2 Bedroom
Townhouses ·

-~r-----''--

SWEEPiiR Repairs Paris,
' Supplies. Phone 367·7736.
Davis Vacuum Cleaner Store,

10 a.m.-5 p.m . Addison, Ohio.
114·1f

·•
~

., RUSS'S GLASS Seryice,. glass
• lor all needs,' specializing In

· Excellent Condition
,
Traded For Larger

·Ph Baths

.

m'rrors,

windshield 's ,
I

plexlglass. rescreen, 704 Pine,
1 Rio Grande, 245·5048.
·
J
1.11

Pay Only One
Utility

'

Addison, Ohio

-------

Now open in R 10
GRANDE
Mary's
, Beauty Par tor. For
.• appointment Call 2459321.

Tractor.

!=or Information
Call Shirley Adkins

. 367-7250

Stop saving.
You probably have more than
you need to build your
dream home now.
With Ridge Homes a family can own the
home they wan t fcir· as littl e cash as one
month 's renl. Yes, one month 's rent! You'll
find the whole exciting s 'ory in the new
Ridge Homes Booklet, " Plann ing , Choosing, and Building the hom e th at's right for
your family."
It's 88 colorful pages ol
pure inspiratio n
In it you'll read an
article written by Francis Reers , a typical
Ridge cus tome r, who tells how he built his
own Ridge home with hardly any out-ofpocket cash at all. And Franci s Reers isn 't
alone Thousands of Ridge families got
their dream homes !he exact same way
and your family can do it too!

CO~

POMEROY, OHIO

'

liks your lcs Cre•m in ' BAR, .. or by ths SCOOP?

EITHER WAY IT'S
.,
From.the f.loor up.,.lnslde and out.•. you·r
FOrest
Plrk home Is designed for
'
carefree living. Spacious rooms, lots of
storage · areas, easy to clean and
rill"alntaln. If Modern decor Is your cho.lce
you'll like Its look of ·lightness that
accents easy living. Available In 60' and
65' lengths, and a wide array of floor
plans In 12' &amp; 14' widths.
·stop 8y and SH the Beautiful Front
DlneHe with ~lldlng Olaas Door. Early
American Decor, Total Electric .
.

7 ICE CR~AM BARS, or A HALF-GALLON oi
ICE CREAM FREE for EACH CUBIC FQOT 'o"
buy NOW in a UNICO CHEST or U'P~Itl'H¥
FREEZER
•.
, l'

POMERQ. ~ ::~. ~~
:")i :

9·15·61c

--

NIBERT,

51 .ff

('(

available . Phone 991-2984 .

For Sale

STOVE S, .... fr lger otors. GROC ERY Business In Tuppers
Was her s. --o-r ycrs.
Deep
f'lolns. Ol!lo. Will Hll otock,
F ree1es . P and J Hom e
equ.ipmont , bulldln~ and
Mit lnlenance, 166 Mill Street. .. tro lot or Will ltaot
Mlddleporl.
build ing , Coli 667.3210 In
1 10 61c
Tuppers Plain&amp; or 985.3f57 In
Chester.
(3) TWIN NEE DL E Sewing
1Htc
Mac hines 1973 Model In -~-~---7:....:.;·
Wal nu t sl an d. All fe atures LIVING Room Sullt, $20, ~w
bui ll in to make fan cy desi gns
Rugs, S29.95 to U9.95, C1blntl
and do slrelch sewing . Also sink. 125, Chair~, U.9S and up.
button holes, bli nd hern s, etc .
Breakfast Set, 11A.95, Play
$43.35 cash price or lerms Pens, S3 ond up, P and J Odds
available . Phone 992 · 2984.
and Ends, 215 North Soc011d.
7·10·61c Middleport.

'~

LWJ

anywh~re. Tawney's Jewelry.

...

For Sale

For .Sale

Phone 446·4672
281 Stale Street
\
Gallipolis,
''' - - - - 'Ohio4S631
- - - - - • • - - - - - - - -..
' WE HAVE a complete' line of
watches and diamonds.

c r e~m

Uss our
E8sy Pay
Budgst Plan/

Vln';'l IJ()hOillo i Cr y
Ai r cond itioner
Wheel Base 120 tn,nes M in
Po w er d isc; br&amp; ktol

AI\~~
A.S.A.

147 FREE Ice Cream Bars
or 21 half,yall on s of ice

free wlih the supe r·
SIZed Un 1CO 25 c·u . fl
chest lr eeze r.
sale pric ed
il l only

dtl tHt!tl! !.l
No t A,1tl6 r lniL 1 lnlll an(l
Dll tr lb ut hHl nccoun t ot Pn tr •C:Ilt

following · named per son s and
estat es -hev e b een tiled In sa id
Court of Ga.ttla County , Oh io. fo r
approvHI and · settlement .
No. 14,044 First, Fina l and
Distr i butive acc:ount of P-atr ici a
Ann Henson , Ad m lnl slratr lx ol
the E5tat e of.. Ora Con le y,

'

lol - · -

1. l)l o10n rt-IJr 11 .('1 •·

Auluffio llt tr ln!.ml!.sl on

614/2S6 - 6~9S

ARTJIU~ ~·

.

175 FREE Ice Cream Bars
or 25 halt·ya ll ons ot 1ce

,, ~"JH• v e

"H'

Contact. .. M1. James Dovle

A

"'l

Jrd &amp; Sycamore Streets
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
.
Your Farm Supply Supermarket'! ·•

WITH FRE·E ICE CREAM
cre(Jm lr ee w1th the lJni co
21 cu. II . Up righ t fr eezer.
sa le pn ced
at only

u,

flou~h.

•

Loke Estates

ESStONAL REAL
ESTr TE A~~RAISER

NTRAL SOYA

'MEIGS EQUIPMENT

Best Buys Anywhere

(.U it ' '

Wundill

Lawrence Counl(l

145-tf

l,l

PR

ENGINE

enler into any detailed
negotiations with such firms.
Nevertheless, expressions of
interest from private firms,
would be helpful in planning for
future recreation de¥flopmenl
at completed projects.
'fhe Hunlington District
includes parts of Ohio, West
Virginia, Kentucky, Virginia
and North Carolina.
In Ohio, completed projects
operated by Ihe district include
Delaware, Deer Creek, Tom
Jenkins Dam (Burr Oak Lake)
and the entire Muskingum
River Basin dam system including Dillon and North
Branch of Kokosing.
While the Corps of Engineers
operales and mainlains the
dams, recrealion facilities at
the above projects are
operated by the Slate of Ohio
except for those operated by
the Mu skingum Watershed
Conservancy District.
In Kentucky the Huntington
District operates Grayson,
Dewey and Fishtrap .dams.
ReGreatlon · .it Grayson and
Dewey (Je nny Wiley State
Park) is handled primarily by
the Commonwclath of Ken.
lucky.
··

j o('

-----

Local money, control will
be extended in CQrps jobs.
HUNTINGTON, W. Va
Local control O}ler and lnv.estment in recreation areas at
Army Corps of Engineers
projects may be expanded
under a recent policy change.
Beginning this July new
recreation developments at
completed Corps ·projects will
be determined to a great extent
by local sponsors. Generally,
such areas will not be
developed Without 50 pet. nonfederal cost sharipg.
. Local interests would
operate and maintain !he park
facili ties which they had
sponsored lhrough cost
sharing. The 1965 Federal
Water i&gt;'ro]ect Recreation Act
added recreation as a project
purpose · to more traditional
fwlctions such as flood control,
Navigation and hydroelectric
Jl0l1'er.
That Jaw requires that non·
federal agencies or entities pay
50 pet. ol the eeparable cost of
recreatiQn development at
multipurpose projects
authorized by Congreas after
the Act was enacted, and also
UIUine all c11111 for operation
and maintenance of the park
laciliUes.
,
Shorly alter the l Act was

H~Nl'lh ,
~ot,t l u o t

------------

52 H.P.

Save
Dollars
Now On
This One!

I!

1

IN MEMORY ol Jeffery Ai&amp;n PIAN O lun ing and r ~ ai r ,
NEW 1 v•tce Ear l y A mer ican
- MOTOR HOME
R"'I\My, ono y"r old loday. dlscoun ts to schoo l&amp;, chvrches ·
living room sul le In 100 pel.
(You drlvtltl
Peac-lvl be thy 1ieep. dear and professionals. 446 0022, FOR RENT, complelp prlmbry Anrl OIHdcts , Adrl'l lnl"' lratrlx o t
ny lon fTI8 Ierla l w ilh scot ch
(&amp; 11'11 11.1 o f Wi'fyo n l1 Tllom ..'l$
HoOf Gu tt er &amp;
JOO, I~ It OW"!' flo bre•lhe lhy
gard Md rrr&amp;ple wood trim
1641 2 l nsur~ nce ~ rovlded . Rates as the
On n lets , b kil Way n e T Dan ll.l la,
Cetrb r a t ~d speeQomttte r and
name, In life we loved you
mln g an d S inch fottm
low as 520 per d•y on weekly tJeceucd
-~
pollee bod y pa'cka&lt;; e opt tons end
dearly, In death we do lhe
FREE
basis. 1401 Eastern Ave. Ph. NQ l.t ,HH f Jrs t and irl&amp;J tr a n st urr lng r adio, .si r en , ous~lons . Only Sl89.95 cash
same .
and
( Arr y ,
Pom eroy
Tl ~ E J1, wheel wllh each
446·1425.
'
Ac-count of Vli rn a rd F&lt;"J tt om •• llltlh ln g &amp;IQ n blS. · llr t: ex
Sadly rrtlutd .by · Ruth, camper lrftller sold before
Recovery, 622 e. Mitin Strecl.
OV&amp;I'CJ IM or th~ Et tat e ot ~ IJh C t tnu\l ts n, ra and pr o t ec t ive
Phone 992-7554.
Jock, Carol I , 6obby .
Ann e FIIIIQn , o m inor a1HJ lo r'r v Shleld fro m prbs.e[JJ, ca r to n ew
Aug . I. Vacallqn ·lime July
·166. 1 bes t discount , Pri ces. som e
Pallen
a
m
tnor
.
.
cor
..
7.12 61 &lt;
APACH E SOLID STA TE ,
No
,
1A
,69
3
Fi
r
t
t
,
Fi
nal
2.
r
or
n
te
hy
lire
Vlll ~ge ot
Am
eri
ca's
large&amp;
l·se
lllng
up lo S300. Trades wonted.
O lt tr ! b~ ll v e
n cc ounl P-om eroy fl.5 1971 DodQe to ur CLOSE OUT on now zlg.zag
Amsbary's Apache Trailer
loldlng camping trailer , Gel oa fnd Hugh
Wanlpd to Rent or Buy Sal
· c.
N liUy ,
eK door 8 c vl lnQer , A door sedan
sew ing m ach ines for sew ing
es . 631 Fourlh Ave.,
your deal and then see Ams- ec ut or ot th e Es t at e of Joh n without r adio eq ui pm ent , IJ r e
stretch flltlr ics. button holes.
UNF f!NISH~O 2 or 3 BR Gallipolis, 446-0239.
bary, We · will not be un · w. I.Jn roe, deceased .
exti ng uisher. si r en . fl as h ing
ho
In Kyger Creek ochool
dersold . AMSBARY ' S No . i 4, 209 Firs t and fi nal signals and pro tec t h,.e Sh ie ld . f a n c y d esig ns, e lc . Pa in t
164·11
Th e bidder m~ v sHtl e either ' sllghll¥ blemished Choice. ol.
dis let. 4-46.2302.
APACHE TRAILER SAL ES, acc: ou n t of Boyd E . Welling ton . what
h e w i lt g i ve for the 1972
ca rrJ 1n g cese or se w1ng
631
Fourth
Ave
..
Gall
ipolis.
166·3
C.va rrJ I&amp;n of the per son and o oaoe or w ha t am ount h e w ill
stan . $49.80 or cas h or terms
Found
C&gt;hlo,
446·0239.
·
es tat e of M er l d !t h Cla i r e allow u a lr i!!l d e In for tt1 e n ew
--~,~------------availa
ble. P ~one 992·2984.
YOUNG femal e bla ck and
149·11 w ctlfn-(lton
.
II
Unl eos e"~C ce ptlon s. M e f lied PO ce cr uiser desc r ibed abov e.
7-15 61c
lost - ·'
trown German Shepherd . 367·
Eac h b ld&lt;Jer may bid for
th er e to . u .ld a cc:ounts w i ll be &amp;l ther th e purd'iine of t he 1972
SEAL POINT Siamese cal , 9 1583 .
to r hear ing befor e $Bid Couq , Dodg e or for the sale to t he E LECTROL UX sweep ers,
PROBATE NOTICE
164-3
mon ths old, np collar, Reward
on Th e 15th day ot Av g us t , 19~3. · Village of Pom eroy of a n e w
APPROVAL
ANO
delu•e model. Comple te w it~
525. Loslln ·vlclnlly of V!nlon --~---at wh l.ch ti me said account sw ltl pol lee cru iser dt!sc.r lbed llbo Ve
SETTlEMENT
all Cleani ng attach men ts and
Court. Call Peler Jasls. 446·
OF ACCOUNTS
be con ~l d e r cd and cont inu ed or both . E ach bi d mu st cont ai n"
uses . paper bags. Sllghlly
4959.
•
Wanted
court af Common Pleas , from day to do~~y un til finally t ~e f ull ne me of every per son or
used
, but cleans and look s like
165·3
Probate Division .
new . For $37 .25 cash , or term s
Accounts and vou cher s ot th o d l 2'0°; ~~ e~~on l nl ef est ed may ; gmpany Inter es ted .In th e

I

0

I

I

GALLI POLIS r Galli poll'
Rotary will nguin sponsor lhe
Gurden •rrnctor pull at the
Glllliu Counly Junior Fuir on
Wco;lnesduy, Au~u s ll , 1973ut I
o'clock p,Jll,
Jnformallon and entry
blanks can be obtulned from
Foster Red Horse Service
Station, 391 Jackson Pike
(across from lulr' g1·ounds),
Gallipolis; Sheets' Sohio
Service Slntion , Court &amp;
Second Sts., Gallipolis, . nnd
Donald M. Robinson, Buckeye
Rural Electric O!..,p, llJ Third
Ave., Gallipolis.

ornumenlals infcs te&lt;l with lnsecls or mites, The
vegelable garden insects are avulloble by conderision Is not nlways !ln easy one to make because
lactlng the Extension Office and asking for bulletin
the•·e are usually several fa ctors wh ich we must
l98.
consider
before we can decide what to clo.
Slugs are becoming more common in rl'Ccnl
The first thing lo do is to identify Um pesl.
years. Would you believe beer ana even slale beer
Maybe a neighbor hns hud the same trouble
at that, may have a place in slug control.
previously.
Tile Extension Office is able to ldenUfy
Around the house and yard mosquitoes, ·ants
many pests or will send them to Ohio !)'tate
and spiders, and even fleas present problems.
University for positive identlficullon.
Occasiooally vacalioners relurn to their home, or
Another problem is the degree of Infestation .
new home-&lt;Jwners move into a dwelling which has
Until a certain number of insects is present on a
been vacant for several weeks, only to lind It
phml.'
control measures are not needed. fl's not
overrun with fleas. This shocks the homeowner.
always ensy to kllQw when there are enough Insects
Actually, immature fleas developed into adult fleus
present to justify control measures. One thousand
during the period the horne was unoccupied. The
caterpilllu·s eating . leaves might completely
original source of the fleas was the pet cat, o~ dog.
defoliate.u trc&gt;e In two weeks, whereas that same
· An " ln~nt Answer Sheet" on these and many
numberof
.aphids would hardly be noted. Yet 1,000
other insects is available from our office.
aphids today may become 100,000 in a month. This
Heck's gift to
Just this week the writer observed the small
may bo more than a plant eould tolerate.
MU worth $50,000
bagwonns developing on juniper. In a couple of
In
some
cases
doing
llQthlng
is
the
best
course
of
weeks these will be full grown and lots of defolialion
aclion because predators, parasites, and other
HUNTINGTON - Officials
will have taken place . Control materials listed for
factors take over, and the pests soon disappear. of Heck's Inc., Saturday anbag worms on Juniper, in bulletin 504, Insect and
Most established trees can be eomplelely defoliated nounced the ·gift of $50,000
Mite Control on Or'namentals, include Cygon, Sevin,
without any apparent permanent harm to them, but worth of the Charleston-based
diazinon, chlordane and malathion . This bulletin is
defoliation
may weaken younger- or newly trans- company's stock to Marshall
free by calling !he extension office.
planted trees and most shrubs until they die or University.
Included in the list of early July pests and
become susceptible and attractive to other injurious
Presenting the unrestricted
SUggested control time are the hosl and pest as
pests.
gift
was Nathan ·Haddad of
follows : Arborvitae, bagworms ; Ash (Moraine),
Doing nothing may rsult in the beauty of a plant Madison, W. Va., in behalf of
lilac bOrer ; Birch, Bronze birch borer: Fir,
being
destroyed or a pest becoming numerous !)is· son, Fred Haddad, board
bagworms, Pales weevil ; Flowering fruit trees,
enough to make a general nuisance of itself. In the chairman and chief executive
flatheaded borer, Sam Joe scale, peache tree borer ;
case of a heavy borer or scale infestation, doing · officer of Heck's. Also taking
Honey locus!, mimpsa webworm ; Juniper,
nothing coult result in the death of a plant, re- part in the presentation were
bagworms; Lilac, lilae borer; Locust, locust leaf
gardless of its' age or size.
Russell Isaacs, president of
miner ; Magnolia, yellow .poplar weevil ; Maple,
Very often a person may lake the time and Heck's, and Paul Skaff,
flathe~ded borer and cottony maple scale ; Mimosa,
effort
to spray a plant only to be dissatisfied with grandson. of Nathan Haddad
mimosa webworm ; Moraine ash, lilac borer ; Oak,
flatheaded apple tree borer; Pine, northern pine . the results and now know why lhe treatment didn't and a Marshall student.
work. Some things that may be resj)onsible for the
weevil and Pales weevil; Silver maple, cotlony
insecticide
not performing satisfactor iiy are
maple scale; Spruce, spruce bud scale and Tulip
REFINERY PLANNED
correct timing and thorough application of sprays,
tree, yellow p(Jplar weeviL
CHRISTIANSTED, St. Croix,
wrong insecticide used weather responsible, new
Whenever pests appear there are decisions to
V.
I. (UP!) - The Virgin
be made Shall we spray or not spray? This question . generations of insects occur, insectS' reinfest trees, Islands Refinery O!rporation
and storage life of inseclicides.
often confronts us when we suddenly find one of our
announced Friday that con-

r-----------------..;.-----~-1

,,

~otary chili i staging garden tractor pull

q/J

LANDMARK

I

&amp;'~~~

JACK W. CARSEY1 Mr. ,

1n '' s~e Jlm'Siuts or Joa Giles
Jvstsoulh ofl~- Sliver llridge Plaza
Phone 446-9340
GalJipolis, Ohio

II'

project~ ..~-----. . . .~-:----~---------~---. . . .~-~----------•••••••-'•1.
•

.

.

A Ridge manufactured home is a
better h_l!me ind a better value.

Like the car you drive and !he cloth es
you wear, your Rid ge home is a resull 'of ·
the most modern, large-sca le production
tec hniques avai l ~ble . Each componenl
part is precision-cu t at the Ridge planl.
!hen s hipped to the homesile in lwo slages .

Yes, Ridge even has mortgage money.

ciency and low cost. This is why a manufactured home is the best answer for so
ma ny families . In facl, by 1975, about hall
of a ll new homes will be factory-produced!
You make a' Ridge home ei&lt;actly
what you want It to be.
What's your pleasure? Ra ncher? Bilevel ? You"ll find it amo ng Ridge Hom es'
basic models. Then that dream starts com ing !rue. Your Ridge home will be tailormade for you thanks lo the hundreds of
leatures and options you can choose from .
At no extra charge you can c hange the
!loot plan ... c hoose !he exterior design
... selecl your kitch en, bathroom fixtures,
color scheme . .. everything' The choice
is e ntirely yours!
Save thousands by doing some
ol the work yourself.
Can you swing a hammer? Or handle a
saw? Then you· can save yourself up to
$4,000 on your new Ridge home by doing
some ol the interior finis hing work yoursel f. We'll take care ol !he Iough jobs for
you . Like !he foundation and weather proof exterior. Then you c;an fini sh up as
much of !he interior as you want. Or &lt;;lS
littl e. And yo ur Ridge dealer will be right
there if you need any help or professional advice. Thousands of famihes
helped build their own Ridge homes
this way, and ended up with more
home than they. ever fh ought fhey
could afford.

t;__ _ _ _ _ ._ _ _ __...._;_) • .

.I

When you build with· Ridge you don't
~ave to worry about getting a mortgage. ·
We have our own financial resources and
finan ci ng plans to help people build their
new homes . So stop saving lor that new
home. And start planning fo build it .
today!
Now you should see our Magazine.
There's a free copy waiting at
your Ridge dealer's.
Now that you know something about
R.idge, maybe you 'd like to know more.
Okay. Visit your Ridge dealer. He'll give
you your free copy of the 88-page Ridge
Homes Magazine , " Planning, Choosing,
and Bui lding the home !hat's right for your
fami ly." You 'll see all 35 Ridge home
models, · deco rator ideas, do-it-yourself
tips, choices and .options galo re . , . and,
· of cgurse, the feature artic le written by a
man who bu ill his Ridge home with less
cash than a month's rent! And his story's
not at all unusual. So get your free magazine at your Ridge dealer's. Or
mail the coupon. It's your
fir.s t big step toward
making your dream
home come true.

r- -~---- - -- --------- --------- - ----1

I

-

. / .....

\

1 flfiDQ. Hom•s
I •..,..,,..,,.®._.....,....,,. ,_ ..,,
I

No. PSGTm

.

RIDGE HOMES
Bo~ 1000
Conshohocken ,

.

I

I

Pa , L9428

1 ,
Ple~tse sund me my free copy of your new 88 pAije, ftlll color Atdge
Hurnes M.aguine.

MOBILE HOME SALES

Serving Meigs, G'!llla, Muon CountJtt
·
Open Mon.-Sat , :rll6r 00 P.M,
. PHONE f92 -2111

.
.
Ridge Homes Is the reason.
Who is Ridge Homes? we ·re one of the
country's largest home manufacturers .
And now there's .a Ridge Homes dealer
here. too. In a nutshell, what Ridge offers
Is a program that helps people of moderate income get the exact home they've
always wanted . Nearly 25,000 \satisfied
Ridg e homeowners are proof )ha t our
program works . Even when mortgage
money is tight, more tamilies than ever
build Ridge homes.

First come the materi ~ ls a nd com ponents
for lhe weatherproof exterior, Which is
erected on the foundation by ski lled pr-ofessionals . Then , after thai is erected, the
inte rior finish ing materi als arrive. Unlike
homes built the old-fashioned way, a Ridg e
hom e gives you consistent quality, e lfi -

1
II

NAME

~

ADORE S

I

10WN

There's a
new Ridge d~aler in town.
In the Galttpolls, Ohio/Pt. Pleasant, WV Are&amp;:

I

.,_.. __ .

'&amp;

l ' 1 We'ro looking lor • building iol in _

l

CLARK·RIDGE HOMES

- - _PHONE

STATE --· •

liP

ltownl

I 1Wo '""-•-,bulldlnR
lol In ____ ...., _________
---- _
ilownl J
1--·--·-----....;
•_ _ ;...; ____
I

Deibel:! F. Clark
Roule 160
(At tho intersection of JAckson Pike &amp; Bulovllle Rd .)
Galhpolls
614 446•9714

•

•

�21 - The SWlday Tim

20- ,.....~ nrlRv

unnav lulv l~ I"~

rime• :irntlncl

For Fast Results Use The Su,nday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Card of Thanks

s

------

--,---,-,~----

Notice

-'-------

HelD Wanted

sew ng

M O O LE home spa ce
Sy acuse Phone 992 6329
6 2 lie

DEAD STOCK horses call e
easonable GENERAL k chen he p
hogs
sheep
charge Call Ul 5514
expe ence necessary App y PR IV ATE m ee t ng oon fo
6 26 30tc
any or gan za t on phone 992
n pe son at the Me gs nn
J915
7 12 6tc
c
3
=,.,-,----w LL ha ve open ng August 27 .-~--~-....,__ __
for Beauty operato w th Oh o FUR NI SHED apa men by the
l cense Send erl es to Box
mon h M e gs nn Pom e oy
179 An caeo The Day
72fc
Sent nel Pom eroy Oh o
- - - -- - - - - 7 6 p ROOMS by the week $18 up
Me gs nn Pome oy
THE MEIGS INN takes p de n
serv ng only the f nest food
w th fast courteous serv ce
So f you e neat and at
trac ve and w sh to o n ou
fr end y staff p ease app y n

-------

person

7 26tc
HOUSE
3 bed oom
un
fu n shed po ch and ya d
Ca 992 2780 o 992 3432
7 8 lie

Pets For Sale

BODY work and paint L ncoln AKC BR TTANY Span e s pups
H II Phone 992 5271
ready to go M
Ed s Br t -:-::-::-::-:----c - - - - 1 2 2tc
bah mob e
tanys St Rt 50 A near 3 BEDR OOM
home 308 Page S ee l 992
Athens Call 448 2089
RUTLAND Gun Cub
New
3509
1 II 5 c
Lima Road Sunday July 15
7 8 ttc
P m H gh Powered R ties 50
::-::-:-.,------__.:..._
yd and 300 yd
TRAILER B owns Tra er
1 IS He
Park M ne sv e Oh o 992
l324

Wantett To Buy

1 5 fc
0 MONTH old Reg ste ed
En~llsh Setter lema e Has
reg st at on papers Call992
3278 $40

For Sale
NE\\ AVON bottles
6 24 30tc

For Rent

SUNDAY July

15

65- Nea
66- a ec
6 -Foas a

couch

s 00

ant que

Wedd ng

se

$ 200
va ue
$250
E ngageme n t r ng
$ 000
va ue fo $200 An ques
Jew elry
PLUS
Ant que
tewe y o d and new p c ure
f ames ant ques to everyday
household ems clo hes e c
L ocated on Meeha n c S ee l
acr:oss
rpm
E be felds
Wa ehouse
1 s Jlp

------

s p (abb )
2 -One who

- n"'-ls c ~Qn
3-B 11 e
4 - &amp;"'4&gt;0fa y ahe e
76 - S a 1'1 0 ICOfll

9-P oo eade s

""'
,.,,.

!1 - RenS oand
1!2

Goddesso

!14

De endfl o T oy

85

Ga den oo

8-Fom&amp;Rssa
90

"'

Sham

92-COfl'4l&amp;U po

93 - S 1 pos
95
B• a
9 - Ab sorbed
98-Hypo 1'111 a

1973
-Ma

69 - Aoman olf a

s

---~--'-'~

Mob1le Homes For Sale
TRYING o buy a mob e home?
Been
u r ne d
down'
Remember
ca n say yes
when o he s say no
Ca
F ank 9'12 7111 I c.., he p
Larry s Mob le H om e~ Sa es
600 Wes t Ma n S ee

Pom e oy Oh o

55 x 0 3 BEDROOM 308 Page
Street 992 3509
7 6 fc

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

20-Tha wh h

o amp and c han
e ec t c
ght and
e
6 oak cha s
amp old s de board
o wood ab e
desk V c t ala and
3 ourrd op trunk s
v o n ma ntle cock ock ng
c ha
p ano
wa d obes
ches o d awe s beds sofa
11 ng oom su te e ev s ons
og a
stoo
pcues
smok ng
s and
va e t
ef ge a lar lnt ches deep
t eeze book case qu t s
s one a s bottl es d shes
book s and many o he m sc
ems
C a ence F a ey
O.vne
Not re spons b e fo
ace d en s Lun ch se rv&amp;d
Term s Cash Pos t ve I D
L oyd D Jl nge
Auc t onee
R
Shad e Oh o Ph p)le ~96
269
7 5 tc

e
49 -

""

Fas o
Beg

so- ong
5 - B dened
DOWN

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES
220 Was h ngton Blvd
473752
BELPRE 0

Auto Sales
966 PONTIAC Tempes cus om
coupe fo sa e 6 cv nde 2
doo au oma c ansm ss on
p owe
s eer ng
powe
b akes
ad o a v ny b ue
nler or b ue f n sh I ke new

res A c ean economy car
w th low m leage Pr va e
owne r
mu s
Phoo e 992 6280

sac r f ce

· -------------~-' 56p

Stop In and See Our
Floor D1splay
EXCAVAT ING

phone 992 2478 o 9'12 7402

001\00N I

TilFORD
AUOCilfP

m,.m,.,...,,.ll

NOI.l I'IOS

DOZER and ba ck hoe wo k
ponds and sept c anks d tch
ng se v ce op so I f
d
I mes one B&amp;K Excava no

and Wh e Sew ng
Mach nes
Se v ce on a I
ma k es Reasonab e a l es'
Th e Sew ng Ce n e
M d
d epo
Oh o
11 16 1 c

,

We a e

--·-.,--

Beef cu i

I

l e ng Ev ans P em er
o you o de fa your

ecw

J:i!!ld Quo e s F on &gt; Quarto s
S des R bs Lo ns Rounds
CUT WRAPPED- FROZEN
D1ck Vaughan

"'

Ph J92 2174
REA DY MIX

Pome oy
CO NCRtTE

de ve ed
gh
o you
p oted Fas and easy Free
es t ma es Phone 992 3284

Goeg e n Ready Mi x Co
M ddlepo I Oh o
6 30 trc
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE a es Ph 446
4782 Ga po s John Russe
Owne and Ope a o
5 2 fc

F oo

Comp le e Se

v ce

Ph one 949 382
Rae ne Oh o
Cr t B adford

~W;-;A~N=T:-E:-D--:-L-:-g-:-h-:-t-&lt;11-ou-s-ew~
ork

0

ca e for sem nv.a lid Must
1
1
u• ..,.,1
ve n Ca•f • ! 6~19 after 5
7 26 P

Real Estate For 5ale

REFRIGERATOR Repa
Ar
Cond t on ng
Heat ng
E e c r Ca
R e p..a
Res cfent a or com me c a
auto a condl on ng 266M II
Street 992 3509
6 29 30tc

4 BEDROOM house 2 baths OPEN
Roger Hyse I s
r ve f ontage Syracuse
Garage nea crossroads on St
Phone 992 2360
Rt 124 a mechan ca wo k
6 27 ttc
nc ud ng
aut
ans
m ss on
M onday F lday
HOUSE to sa e by ow ner 3
8 lO a m o 5 p m Satu day
bedrooms new furnace roof
8 30 o 2 noon - unless by
and w r ng
Wa to wa
appo ntment Phone 992 5682
ca pe ng large ot ca port
099272
on fence In fran
Look o
6 27 30tc
and p ne I ees In s ~e yard
Con act Mr Eldon Walburn
WI L K NSON Sma I Eng ne
230 Un on Averwe Pome oy
Sa es and Se v ce 8 0 3rd St
Oh o Phone 9'12 2805
M ddlepo Lawn m owe and
_ _ _ _ _ _ __::6_:::l tic
cha n saw I' epa
F ee p cku p
and dP. ve v Phone 992: 3092
NEW 3 bedroom a elec r c
Also Br ggs and St a ton an d
home w th one ca garage and
Tecumseh parts
one ac e of g ound on F at
6 2 301c
woods oad Phone 992 2735
7 13 6tc
5 ROOM house ba h basement
gas heat 2 ots S D Bus&lt; rk
l4 Page St ee Mdd epo t
7 13 31p
MODERN 6 oom
I oor plan
home
w h
deta c hab e
garage A I newly pa nted
Located on n ce leve ot 50 x
20 a 619 Page S
M d
Oh o Fo
fu the
d epbr
defet s con ta ct Dav d R
23 Grandv ew Road

4l725 or
6 5 fie

1 ROOM hou se w h bath n
Ru land a
cund t oned
ca peted gas furna ce d sh
washer doub e oven range
double ga age Ia ge carpo
i4 a cres c eared and fenced
s mal
barn and
othe
build ngs Phone 614 742 6834

r

--------------=5~30

•

;:•
:
•

e
•

••

!
:

DELL WHEEL A lgnm en t
oca ed a C ass oads R 24
now p ack o wo &lt; Compete
f on end service tune up and
brake
serv ce
Whee s
balanced elec on cally A
work guaranteed Rea ~onab e
ra es Phone 742 l232
2 18 tic

~_,...,.----r-"~-

p AND J Home Malnlenance
and Repa
Heat ng A
Cond ton ng
Refrlgerat on
P umb ng E eel lea Ap
Auto

A li

Con

fc

EXCA VAT NG do ze
oade
sep c
and backhoe wo k
anks nsta ed dump ucks
and o boy s for h e w haul
Ill d rt t op so
I rnes tone
and gravel Ca Bob or Rage
Jet ers day phone 992 7089
n gl'\ phone 992 3525 or 992

sm

2 11 fc

I • t 20 years
ex per ence
Class A
body man By un on
Free
es mates J &amp; B Auto Body
M ee han c Sf ee across from
E be feld s Wa ehou.se
115 l c

\;--~,,_;Rt:n~l

-::f.-:-:
U-:R-:-:
N:::
I T::-:-U.
:::.11,i:E:c-S
_::
g and
llef nlsHing
Abraham s
An ques 32 Fayette Street
Nelsonv e Oh o Phone 753
302
7 3 30tc
FOR

FREE esl mates

a um num s d ng

on

StQrn Doors

and W ndows
Carper s
Ma quees and Ra ng Phone
Char es L s e Sy acuse Oh o
Ca
Jacob Sa l es Rep
resentat ve V V Johnson
and Son nc

Compare These
Hot Weather
Prtces
3 Ton Centra I arr for
mobtle home 12x60 or
14x70

*750

Central atr for homes
Hooked up to your
furnace
Prrces start
as low as $550

'July Specllll
Larry s of Pomeroy

6 of tnsulalton blown
tnlo alltc for only 15c
per sq II wtlh pur
chase of atr cond

"UNDeR SE~L,.
Dnve a Ltllle
Save a Lot'

PHONE 992-7320
ANYTIME

e e • e e e e e e e e e e e tea e e t eta a

NOTICE TO All CLIENTS
OF THE FORMER

DAVIS-WARNER INS. SERVICE

••

••
••
••
••

•

Has Opened An Offtce At :
lOOl!2 E Matn St Pomeroy (Over the •
Blue &amp; Grey Restaurant) Under the :
Name of Dayts Insurance Serv•ce
Mr

'0

Wa

7 II 6 p - - - - - - - - -

••
•••
•

MlddlepdH 0

992 2101

5 I fc

WILL TRIM o cut trees or
7 YI?AR OLD ma e Not
shrubbery A so pa nt oafs
part cui a w h k nd of ob
Phone 949 322
Phone 985 3849

•
•
•
•
•
•

n the R
Bu d ng

p ances

Em 11loym ent Wanted

Ieee

It Mus!
Be R1ghf
orwew II
t R ght

d t on ng
Res denNaf o
Com me c a 266 M I St ee
992 3509 2A hou serv ce a
wo k gua an l eed
7 0 6tc

AUTOMOB LE nsu ance been
Lo s
yo u SEWING MACH NES Repa
cance e d ?
opera o s tense Ca 992
se rv ce all makes 992 2284
7428
The Fabr Shop Pome oy
6 5 li e
Au hor zed S nge Sa es and
Se v ce We Sharpen Sc sso s
3 29 fc

•
\

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

SE PTIC TANKS AROB I C
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
Remade ng Ce am c t e
CLEANED
REPAIRED
baths Box 2BD Rut and 742
M LLER SAN TATION
3664
STEWART OHIO PH 662
6 26 c
3035

RON SHEPARD

·-- . . . . . _""'

0 ck &amp; D1te
really
know
how to cui up

Opon8T 15
Monday thru Saturda y
606 E Ma n Poll)eroy 0

Phone 742-6271

C BRADFORD Auct onee
E LNA

••

custom meat cutttng

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Phone 992 5367 o 992 386
91 c

••

The Shop

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992 2094

29 t c

Cam br dge Oh o
Phone 992 3904

NEW LISTING
40 ACRES - On had oad
La ge gamb e oaf barn co n
c b hen house house and
o her s All m ne als Good 7
oom house w h bath and o s
o
pane ng
Ask ng
ust
$650000

• ~ arge

and sma ll
Ba ck hoes and
oade s on
ack and t res
Dump tr uc k s Lo boy
se v ce Sept c tank s n
s a red Geo ge B
Pu ns

Ru land Townsh p

Htii.'IIH f'ilFclltD

F

Doze

hay 7 oom house Located n

LOOK AHEAD PLAN NOW
BUY PROPERTY FOR YbtJ
AND
YO UR
FA M L Y S
FUTURE TH NK BIG AND
SEE US TODAY

Pleasant Rtdge Road
POMEROY OHIO

FURNITURE

Yates

NEW LISTING
NEW HOME
S bedrooms
ca peted n ce k tchen w th
bu t n range Fu I basement
w th ga age ut I ly and tam ly
oom On y $20 000 00
NEW LISTING
POMEROY
6 ooms l~rge
ba h new ga s fo ced a fur
nace
Ba ck porch with n
wa k ng d s ance of s ores
$10 500 00

on Mqst Ame ~an Cars

From he Ia oes
Bu do&lt;e Radiator l o the
~ ma es Healer Lor e
Nathan B ggs
Rad1afor Special st

and

OVER 200 ACRES
ON Route 325
' s ory
t arne home 3 bedrooms
po ches 7 bu d ng s nea
house and 2 arge ba ns
ac oss the oad W th n 2
m es of m ne No
$35 000 00
42ACRES
CLOSE om ne No
Fa rl y
leve and lo s of wo ods
Wou d be I ne tor bu ld ng
s es 19 000 oo
IOACRES
Nea
Ra e ne A ll e ec r c
home about 2 yea s o d 2
bed ooms
bath
fu ll
basemen 6 acres now n
ave A n ce p ace to ve
$500000
7 ACRES
C ose o Pome oy La ge 2
s o y home has 4 bed ooms
a
~ s f t l ed and pane ed 3
hav e wal
o wa
ca pe
D n ng
oom carpe ed
mode n bath full basemen
F 0 to ced a heat garage
and bu d ng sto m doors
and w ndows A um s d ng
$ 7 00000

CATTLE FARM
45 ACRES
Fence s 15 ac es
a co n and about 25 acres of

15 Locuat $1

Ahgpment

OFFICE SUPPLIES

$500000

to

*5.55

REALTY

w~ ,e l

992 2094
606 E Mam Pomeroy

MINERSVILLE
3 bedroom s bath k chen
has o s of base cab n.els
po ches and ots of g ound
GONG AT JUST $6 500 00
33 ACRES
Jus off Rou e 124 beyond
Ru and
Abouf 10 fo
cui va, 0('1 the ba ance fo
pas ure
Home has
J
bed ooms new bat h and new
o ced a r hea ng sys em
N ce k tchen w th lots of new
ab net s
A BUY AT

has tam y room bar and
u ty room Ca por
l:arge

Roof1ng Spout~ng
Home Remodelmg

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

E MAl N '-;,;;,;~~
POMEROY

BERRY M L LER Mob le Home
Sa es has a o o offer when
you s tar shopp1ng o you
mob e home You can bea
he h gh dep ec a on you
have on you home he
s
two yea s by shopp ng fo a
HAV NG TROUBLE WITH
a e mode used mob e home
THE SALE OF YOUR
He e a e so me eve y day low
PROPERTY? LET US DO
pr ces
T FOR YOU NO SALE
65 x 2 f o es Pa ~ 3 bed oom
NO CHARGE
$5 795 sa ye 12 soo
HENRY E qEI,J\ND
53 X i2 1'/~ ar 2 b~droom
BROKER
$3 995
992 2259
60 x 12 Allan c 3 bedroom
No
answer
992 2568
$4 495
60 x 2 Champ on 2 bedroo m
$4 495
60 x 12 M onar ch new S7 795
now on y $5 995
60 x 2 PM C {Sove e gn
$5 295
46 x 10 A mo $2 495
50 x 10 R cha dson $2 695
These a e m os t y a Ia e mode l
hom es and he pr ces nc ude
you de very and comp le e
se t up So fo an hones o
goodn ess good dea s op n
today a Ber y M e Mob e
NEW LISTING
Homes Sa es 705 Far so n
~
3
S ree
Be p e Oh o phone MULBERRY AVE
bed
oom
staley
b
ck
w
h
423 9531 - c osed Sunday s
7 10 6 c arge mode n k tchen doubl e
S S s nk and d sposa Gas
ar ced a r furna ce gas log
t ep ace n d n ng Ga age to
Atr Condtltoners
2 ca s
W h n wa k ng of
Awnmgs
sto es and work
Wan t
Underpmmng
$2 5 000 00
NEW LISTING
Ca mp e e mob e home
POMEROY - 3 bedrooms a
se ce - p us g ga nt c
c ond t oned b ck Sta n ess
d spa y o m ob e homes
bake and cook un ts ti ce ba
a ways a a abe a
w th abl e she f Full basemen

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
•

For Estimates

Davrs

•

We are '" a postlton to service your tn

s~,rance

needs It wtll npt be necessary for you
t111~1ilil•nv st1lement mailed or given lo you to
hav '/y the same protection on your tar or
We will gtve you honest and efllcienl
ser vice Please stop ~Y or call as~~ the re•son
of the dtvl~ion of the Davts Warner Insurance
Agen r!y

pr~erty

•••
•

•
:
•
•
•
•

e

••
LORENZO D. DAVIS ,:

P.NONE 992·5120

:

•............•...•......... :

14
12

70-12
X 65 -14
X

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate for Sale

&amp;

50
X 64'
X

We Feature Some
of the Fmest

*fARKWOOD
*KIRKWOOD

*FLEET\\OOD

*ACADEMY'
(By Skyline)

LARRY'S
MOBILE HOMES
Larry Evans Owner
Fronk Gheen S~ lao Mgr

Ph 992 7777
~OMEROY OHIO
Next Door loth~
Jones Boys

OPEN SUN 1-6 p M
DAILY 9-6

How1rd Bronnon Broker
Off 446 1674
Luclllo Brinnon
Eve 446 1226 or 446 2674
MODERN RANCH
3 BR
t le bath
carpet
throughout bea~t lu k !chen
featuring n ce wood ca b nets
oven renge dishwa sher
dinette w,fh patio doon
fin ahed ga age a drapes
and curtains we I landscaped
lot $24 500
BRICK &amp; FRAME
ONE story 3 BR a comfortable
eot In kitchen w th all the
built Ins carpet In LR and
centr~t a r
fin shed
hal
9arage level lot 80 x 150'
.• ated n young area of new
home• and grow ng faml es
$24 500
TWOSTDRY HOME
SIX room 3 BR large LR fu y
carpeted a dream k tchen
featuring all the bu t Ins and
patio doors din ng room
front porch concrete pat o
car)lort btg lot I mile from
c ty $23 000
COTTAGE
2 BR
,
DOWN by the River
bath laundry U sha~e k t
chen with spac ous din ng
area screened porch two
over s ze decks over ook ng
the rver and h lis S de room
could double for BR Very
large shaded grove $15 500
DIAL YOUR WEATHER
IN this central a r 3 BR ran
cher brick and frame home 3
BR all built In k tchen n
coppertone large din ng
area laundry room forced
a r furnace ural water
carport storage bu ld ng
large eve lot Kyger Creek
D st $21 000
RANCH HOME
REDWOOD S BR oversize
ca peted LR a woman s
dream kitchen and din ng
area with a bu It n china and
nen storage wa
forced air
furnace city water 3 ac e
ot $24 500
MODERN
ONE floor fury carpeted w jh
central at Beautlfu kitchen
w th slid ng doors fo the pat o
f n shed garage lot 100 x 185
located on BT road 2 m
from Gall po s $26 500
NEW HOMES
3 NEW homes near completion
priced S27 500 S29 500 $32 000
A homes can be seen any
t me by calling 446 2674 Buy
now and locate before schoo
starts
A BRICK
IN TOWN
ALL electr c two story 3 BR
1 ' bath eat In kitchen
formal DR spac ous LR with
f replace fu ly carpeted
large front porch full ~ vfded
basijtnenl deep lot Qu ck
possession
BUSINESS
F you are th nk ng of going n
bus ness for yourself check
the
BRAN NON
w th
REALTY We have SIX good
bus nesses for sale n deal
local ons and showing good
profits
64 A FARM
8 MILES from Gall pols - a
n ce two story farm home
w fh a banquet s ze k tchen l
and
bath
carpel
BR
hroughout part basement
oil furnace two ca garage
one barn ch cken house hog
h too shed granary and
shop l wells spr ng and
creek wafer Idea for a r ding
farm
PRIVACY
MEANS tam ly peace In th s
wo sfory 5 BR - two bath
home LarQe eat In klfchen
w th
range
oven
efrlgerator disposal and
d shwasher
carpet
thro~ghout gas furnace n
full basement city water 3
ca r garage
" m
to
Gallipolis All this plus 6
acres of ground
NEW LISTING
MOVE r ght n I Are you
urgent y In need of a home?
We have one available a very
n ce rancher near the golf
course vinyls ding l BR and
bafh eaf In k tchen laundry
room HW floors garage
awn ngs storm windows and
doors concre te d ve and a
wei landscaped lawn storage
bu ld ng Call 446 2674

Neal Realty
NEW LISTING
1970 6~x 12 SCHULT 2 BR mobile
home located on a 2 acre lot
about 4 m es from town Th s
home has had exce llent care
l tnd has a r cond
sfo m
windows washer
dryer
smaf storage bu ldlng Would
make a good nvestment or a
n ce home
WE HAVE tour sma I homes on
one lot n town that would
make a good nves tment Buy
all lou tor $18 500 Annual
ental • $2 040
VACANT LAND
APPROX 9 acres on Ke ton Rd
About 1 m e from town
would consider se l ng on
and contract $3 500
SAM NEAL • now assoc a ted
w lh Nea Realty If you are
buying or seiling call Sam at
446 7358 he s ready to serve
you
Offlco Phone 446 1694
Eventna•
Chotltl M Noal446 1!46
J Mlchoel Neot446 1503
SAM NEAL 446 7358

FOR SALE
House 2'12 acres 3 or 4
bedrooms city sthool
dislrtcl
2 miles out
141
Will
show
anytime 446 2323

3 CHOICE acrea aultoble lor
bUilding on R t 160 appro• 120
If fronlego 245 5142
166 3

Real Estate For ~le

Real Estate For Sale

REALTORS

RUSSEU

MASSIE

THE

SpecialiSt

608

boa ds
rl
e
chande
a add n
w h n
en d s
eco d s

----~-----'-

OLD turn lure oak tab es
clocks ce boxes brass beds
d shes
or
cornp ete AKC Go den Re eve pupp es
$40
and one
1 mon h
househo ds Wr e M
D
We marner pup $50 {6 4) 742
M er Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o
6834
call 992 6271
6 21 fc
5 13 lfc

'"

o d cup

CAS H pa d fo a makes and
mode s of rnob e ho mes
Phone a ea code 6 4 423 953
4 3 fc

..:.._--~--

"K"E"'W"'P"'I"E,--d7o77
1 s- a-n--;
d- an- y-c
t hI n g
else efafed to Kewples Also
old postcards In good con
d t on write and descr be
terns a I so pr ce wanted
Alyce Schne der
45 South
Kanawha Buckhannon W
Va 26201
_ _ _ _ _ _ __ 7_8 30fp

n ach nes

7 11 18 c

PARKVIEW Kenne s
oy male and 1
Phone 992 5443

WANTED- Llsed mere hand se
for aud on We buy we
se I whole houseful or s ngle
p eces
cons gnment or
pe centage We w I hau
Phone 992 l354 Hayman s
6 530ft

6- Rages

Real Estate For Sale

s

1 36 p

9-Ae

STRIPPERS
We Sl p Pa ntl varn shes
Etc: om Furn tur e
Anflques MOdern Metals
N o ru n ous I yes or caust cs
used
Ptek Up Service
Available
We Buy &amp; Self Pinllquos
Dick Seyler Owner
Kerr St
Pomeroy D
Phone 991 2798

------

prec at on and thanks to D
Telle and a of the nurses
for the r he pfu ness and
kindness to me d ur ng m y
stay In the hosp tal A so the
ones who sent me suc h
beaut fu t:ards and etters
The flowers and the v s ts
w th me Alma B Wh te
715 lie

"''

Hoard House

Wanted

1

e-Wde
11 -0pe gab e

D1ck's

------

-WI---SH to express my ap

1- Conne edmaa.

Business Services

972 HON OA 500 Motorcycl e BEAUTIFUL Wo nut Stereo
ONE ROW co n p cker Rober MODULAR 1 bod oon t ouse
ad o - 8 t ack tap;e com
Ca I 985 3828 aile 6 p m
to
en
tu
n
shed
u
t
es
Tr pp 667 394
b
na tion AM FM r•dlo. 4 way
7
5
l
c
P" d Ca 992 738' o 99? ?621
715 lip
speake
sound
sys tem
7
3
c
--------Be
ance
$
10
92
or
use our
DAIRY COWS 13 n produc on
WANTED to buy M a ard
budget
term
s
Co
li
997
3'165
one
w
be
f
esh
n
hree
2 BEDROOM mob e home
Duc&lt;s 992 2789
7 IS 6tc
weeks
Co
84l
m•
alter
6
awn ng and pa o A I ut t es
115 41c
p n
pad Pri v ate oca o
- - -- - - - ' - - - 1 IS 3 c H &amp; N DAY old or star ed
upsta s turn shed apa I
Leghorn pulle s Boll f oor o
men
2 bed ooms
AI
cage
grown
ava lab e
BRUSH
HOGS
4x5
I
phone
SECRETARY wou dIke de to
20 m nutes
om Ci-"
tr
y
hou
s
ng ·
&amp;
Pou
992
6329
and from Oh a Un vers t y
n
plant
Robe I
H II
oma
on
Modern
Paul
y
au
7 5 fc
Leave ne'ssage at 985 3928
Racine Oh o 949 38
399 W Main Pomer oy 992
7 l 3tp
7 57 p
2164
PUBLIC AUCTION
40 ACRES m ore o
ess TRA IL ER hon e w th Ia ge SATURDAY Ju y 2 973
00 --------~1-5 I c
a n Dyesv e Oh o Fo ow .~
wooded h gh d y oad and
carpe ed d n ng oorn added
Box 952 La ncas te
powe
Rou a 43 fo he Co um b ..
Funlshed fo
o 2 adults
Oh o 43 130
Schoo
it d fo ow auct on . - - - - - - - - - , . , - - .
P easan oca on Mulbe y
s gns to Dyesv li e I pur
He ghts Phone 992 2773
chased he o d Va e farm n
7 5 3l c
Dyesv e and w
se ll the
pe sana
lem s at Publ c
3 AND 4 ROOM t1J shed and
Auct on They a e as fo ll ows
apa me s
u fu n shed
Muzz e Loading R fie Coffee
Phone 992 5434
ab es wash stands Tread e

WE WISH to extend our most
" nrP.rP. thanks and ap
preclat on to all of the people
of the M dd eport Church ot
Chr stand Pr mary Depar t
men!
for
the wonder
tul
farewel
!&gt;arty
n our honor
Sunday
We aooreclafe the Q Us the
money t ee the p ayers and
a of the efforts of fhoe who
helped n any way The
Raul In Moyer Fm ly
115 ltp

ACROSS

Rul Estate For Slle

for Sale

for Sale

For Rent

Wanted To Buy

Sentinel SWldiiY Julv 15 IU73

Real Estate for Sale

STROUT

Real -£state For Sale

OHIO RIVER
Realty

AUCTIONEERS
DUDES D LITE
3 MI LES from town 14 acres
OSclr Ill trd
900 I ontage on Rt 141 Rural
Doug Wotherholl
water c stern! fences Owner
Broken •46 JU4
w II sell w h or w thou!
GRANDVIEW ESTATES
tr a e and bern
Many
World~ La. yt::.f
N ICE !rllevel three or lour
CROWN C ITY Cheap
poss bll lies for Baby Farm or
bed oom home fem lv room
THE
LEADER
SINCE
1900
IN
Hose Ranch
housing ~ rooms &amp; bafh I v
SERVING THE NATJON S one and iw)lf balhs central air
Business
rm 12 x 19 H W f oon
GAVIN GOLD
con and garage Call now
Doctor
I don t like the way HASN T lnf uenced the pr ce ot BUYERS &amp; SELLERS
New Listtng
Opportuntly
slorm doors and windows
you
Ike th e price
Ph
A46
0008
your
wlf•
looks
Th s n ce home a only 8 yrs
his 3 bl'droom home w th 5
In Town
MILLS VILLAGE
1
5 ~ENTED UN TS
Husb1nd
I
m
not
cruy
old and s n good repair II
acres n Add son Twp Plenty NEW L I ST IN G
Over 3" e&gt; V 6 RY ove ly three bedroom
CO MMERCIA~
lA
about ~er look• either but she
has aut lily bldg 8 • 16 aod
of yard new alum num sid ng
w l h o s of pines Th s s m brlc&lt; home w th tam ly room
RES DENTAL
toke• good care of me and !he
located
on
52
A
ot
Pr
ced
and beth home has a full and den on man floor beautiful
LARGE
4
ROOM
an d storm windows
plus
P ~ODUC N G
19 600
kids
for
o
qu
ck
...,
e
at
S12
900
COL ON A L HOME ON
ou
t
build
ngo
basement and 5 located on th ca rpet throughout two baths
ANNUAL NCOME 560
NEW LISTINGS
2ND AVE TH S HOM E
THE
DOCTORS
Woods M I Rd tmmed ale two f replaces central ai r con
FT WATER FRONTAGE
EVERGREE N - 5 oom s and
HAS BEEN RECENTLY
MODERN new brick home on o ARE c ose and the price Is r ghf
possess on $ .4 700
464 FT BYWAY FRON
full basement w th rec room
ba
th
on
rura
l
water
It
has
RE MOD ELED
ANO
largo lot with 3 bedrooms
on th • lovely Spanish home
TAGE T S A HECK OF
and
attached garage Large
alurn
num
s
d
ng
storm
doors
OFFE~S PLENTY OF
modern kitchen w th d sh
with f ont porch I le roof and
AN NVESTMENT
quality
home with cho de
and w ndows lu
he~t
2
ROO M NS DE AND out
Th s
wa15her and d sposa l Gas
garage Plu s 3 BR double LOW DOWN PAYMENT
locat
on
base
a
nd
a
sto
age
b
dg
This
NEW
K TCHEN
h
furnace ce ntra a r co n
w de fu n shed mob le home n cely rem ade ed 2 story
Don I Let Thts
CENTENARY
house .s in good epal r and
~BAT H S FORMAL L VING
home nc udes a new factory
d
ton
ng
uf
Illy
room
double
on back ot property that could
BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom home
p Iced a! $ 4 000
A ND D N NG LARGE
One Shp Away
kitchen forma d n ng rm
garage panel~d Lol90xx2l7
make your payments
fully carpeted with nice k I chen
FOYE~ AN D LARGE LOT
v ng rm w lh WB I rep ace fu I basement garage and en
From
You
C
ose
to
Ho
zer
Med
ca
LET'S
MAKE
A
DEAL
W TH PAT 0
OWNER
WHIT E AVE - 4 n ce rms &amp;
3 BR fu basement and extra lot Nice local on just
Center
SAYS Owner on th s l BR br ck
WANTS
T SOL D
M
bath Lot 00 X too Pr ce
VERY N CE 3 BED~OOM
shady awn I 5 900
home
In
Jack
son
Co
Pr
ce
r ght for your tam ly
MED ATELY
S7 000
HOME WTH FA MLY
RIVER property on
lot
nc
udes
go
nJI
business
8
LOWER RIVER ROAD
ROOM
F REPLACE
NEARLY OWNER wants home sold New
130 x440
Three bedroom s
ac
es
and 800 road frontage INVE STMENT
EVERGREEN
969
K
rk
WIFE
APPROVED
NEW Res lau ant and al electr c J bedroom home
modern kitchen w th d sposal
on Sl Rt R ght on Jackson
wood Mobile Home wi th 2
K TC HEN
LARGE
New Ltsltng
ca
y
out
food
serv ce Real fully carpefl'd garage and a
Fuel o I heat c ty water Two
cons der
Lake Owner w
~ V N G ROOM
VE~Y
m s added located on ' A
es
ale
and
a
equ
pment goes nice evel lot Look today and
3 Or 4 Bedroom
car garage Has new drapes
trade and help you get started
NEAT &amp; CLEAN 122 SOO
lla l land Use either good
w
th sale Located near Gav n make us an offer
and
carpet
Located
on
State
the
bus.lness
n
1
N
C TV
SC HOOL
dr led wei a Rural Water
Plus 2 1 Acres
Pant
Route 1 ;, m le North of Rf
5 GREEN ACRES
NEIGHBORHOOD ROAD
D STRICT
M LE OUT
PrceS2700
PLU S 3 BR home n Jackson Co
28
NICE 3 bedroom sect onal home
OF
TOWN
BE THE F RST TO SEE
On y 7 ml es from Rio F HA WOUL D PROBABLY
POPLAR RIDGE RD
n city schoo d sfr ct forced a r
tH S VERY N CE 3 OR 4
FINANCE THIS ONE
301 Acre Farm
KYGER
C
eek
School
new
split
G ande Only $15 000
fu
nace w ndow air cond tioner
Country
I
v
ng
of
Its
best
4
BEDROOM 2 ST ORY
$16 900 buys th s n ce 6 rm and a nice lot Good v ng for
evel 3 B R home all e ec
PEYTON
P.LACE
miles
off
Rt
7
beaut
ful7
big
EXCELLENT
PA
ST
URE
MOME LARGE l V NG
homewtha 2x 20fam ly m only s l :100
heat pump a r condition IT S NOT VInton s the ocat on
rooms 4 bd rm rec rm 2
FOR BEEF 2 LA~GE
0 N NG K TCHEN AND
and modern bu It n k tchen
fam
y
oom
n
ce
k
fchen
of th s n ce 2 BR home w
4 ACRES
baths klfchen 2 x 25 w th
BARNS
LAR:GE
DEN ALL CA R~ETED
w
th
d
sposa
d
shwasher
LOVELY new home with 1 800
garage and garden spot ght
bar and plenty n ce cab nets
TOBACCO BA SE F YOU
K
TCHEN
S
r efr g e ra or ranoe ut 1 ty
on Jackson Ave
P ced we EASTERN AVE $14 500 v ng space four bedrooms
WANT TO RASE CATTLE
It has a full base with garage
ESPECIALLY
N CE
I DEAL FOR HOME OR BIZ tam dy room three baths full
room
one
ca
garage
Pr
ce
below mar ket
TH IS S THE PLACE
26 x 24 Plenty water and
W TH ALL APPLIANCES
r educed
- N ce 6 m home featu es basement with two car garage
IT DOESN TTAKE
BU LT N LARGE LAWN
152 500
located on 10 acres fenced
some pane ng and carpet ng Best buy I ve seen
A
THIEF
PLU S2 ACRE S NEEO S A
and Only S27 500
3
Bedroom
Brtck
p us alum num s d ng storm
BRICK
sp
t
eve
w
th
hat
TO
stea l
tfl s
nve~ tme nt
L TTLE PANT AND S
5 ACRES
w ndow s and carport.
basement
3
B
R
tu
ly
PR CEO AT 124 900 00
FOUR room house cealed on
property on Fourth Ave Three
EXCELLENT HOME IN
ADD SON - I m e off R 7
carpeted n ce k !chen w th
OWNER HOP NG FOR
apartments $10 000
T ck R dge Road spr ng wafer
AN EXCELLENT NE ( H
beau fu
rambl ng 7 rm
ENO
OVER AN ACRE of n ce place n the country on a
QU CK SALE
d sposal
d shwasher
BO~HOOD
1 , BATHS
VACANT
LAND
1 arne Ranch on A o It has ref gerator and freezer cen
and p us a ovely 6 rm
BEAUT FUL KITCHEN 2
hardtop road priced at SS 000
35 ACRES Thompson Road
everyth ng a carpet over
country home Lots of goOd
air
and
heat
pump
fam y
ra
CAR GARAGE CENTRAL
7 ACRES
New Ltslmg
ees
Morgan
Twp
Lots
of
t
HWfscena
FPn
v ng can be had tor only THREE room house
room 2 car ga age n Kyger
A R ON PERFECT LOT
two
Weekenders
par
ad
se
ec rm N Gas heat 2 baths
$16900
Creek Schoo D st Price
bu d ngs n ce 14 x 64 mobile
v m 15 x 26 and a k chen
EXCELLENT LOCAT ON
reduced
home a r con severe good
3 ACRES plus fantast c v ew
AT EDGE OF TOWN 3
Butldt ng Lots
ave Low taxes
he M s w
1 YEAR OLD - Lovely 5 rm a
bu ld ng s te s Can be bought
Po
lly
fenced
Md
son
Twp
NICE
BEDROOMS
and good schools AI of th s
Best Selechon Ever
e ec r c home c ose to new w th or w thout mob e home
2 BR on Garf e d Ave lot 42 X
Make offe on th s m n
FAMLY ROOM LARGE
for $l2 500
hosp ta ofle s l BR ba h
410 to the Oh o River full
21 ACRES
ranch
LV NG AND PRETTY
WE
HAVE
LARGE
WW carpet garage br ck NICE rol ng land w th a good
C
TY
821
Second
Ave
6
b
g
basement
gas
furnace
bath
K TCHEN
SEE THIS
SELECT ON OF PR ME
fr ont and 100 It frontage four bedroom house bath
ms and bath 2 story fram e
carpeted nice kitchen w fh DREAM N ot the country 1 te
ONE
MMED ATE OC
BUILD NG LOTS FROM
$22 500
on
a
large
c
ty
of
It
has
a
lie
CUPANCY
refr
gerato
sJo
m
doors
and
plenty of water two car garage
You
dreams
come
true
at
'ACRE UP TO 10 ACRES
bock garage and sto age
windows Ia ge garage meta
and a workshop with a
Rancho Our baby farms "
CLOSE TO TOWN OR N
bldg Th s hou se s sound
storage bu ld ng concrete
Raq::oon Twp a e se ling BRAND NEW &amp; PRICED f replace Good country llv ng
THE
COUNTRY
PR
CEO
Read
These
RIGHT at S22 SOO
This
structura l y w h 1ust a tile
driveway and pat o Price
222 ACRES
FROM$3000 UP I F YOU
now On y a few eft Take
qua
ty
bu
II
3
BR
home
has
a TOP da ry farm owner must
pa
nt
would
make
some
one
a
Descrtpltons
We II
$21 000
ARE
TH NK NG
OF
you cho ce of 5 6 7 and one
br ck front garage factory sell due to health Large barn
n ce comfo able home n a
BU LONG BE SURE
10 acre tract before I s too
Show You One Or All
kitchen w th a arge d n ng 529 ton s o new Grade A
AND SEE THESE
good res dent a area Pr ce LOTS on R ver at Add son 00
ate Fo persona show ng
area WW carpet 2 bafhs 22 m k ng par or herd can be
on y ~ 0 000
X
701 and co~nty water
see Steve Oenve or Joy
NEARLY NEW 3
f LR and a large lot 10m
purchased w th the farm It
$l
000
ea
Owner W1ll
Te ms ava able
CENTENARY
If you are
BEDROOM
W TH
from own
des red Home is ver
vab e
&gt;ACRE
LOTS
BEAUT FUL K TCHEN
oo&lt; ng fo ocat on quality
Help Fmance
100
A
LAND
n
Per
y
Twp
on
w
th
ots
of
room
Plenty
of
Rl
41
county
water
STATE
GARAGE AND LARGE
and price don t pass th s one
CLOSE NORTH GALLI A HIGH water pasture crop and
State Route and Rura Water
Green Twp EZ terms
FLAT LOT CARPETED
F YOU WANT A LARGE
by 6 rms bath aundry and
N ce y remode ed
SCHOOL
Even ngs Cafl446 4244
$10 000
THROUGHOUT
19.0
COUNTRY HOME WITH
attached garage
Price
7
rrn
home
on ~ large ot
Sleven Bell 446 9583
2 3 BEDROOM HOUSE
PLENTY OF ROOM N
$2l 500
Owne an x ous to sell
John Fulfer 446 4327
22 A on Spruce Sf Exlens on
W TH
F REPLACE
S DE AND OUT SEE TH S
$22 000
GARAGE
BASEMENT
TODAY
4
OR
5
ACROSS HWY from AD
NEW LISTING-OWNER BOU
EXTRA LOT
S~2 900
BE D~OOMS
FORMAL
DAVILLE SC - Beaut fu 5
GHT A FARM and s w II In~
MAKE OFFER OWNER
D NING 3 BATHS FULL
rm br ck &amp; frame w th Are you look ng for a very n ce
to pa I w th th s lovely 3 BR.
W LL HELP F NANCE
BASEMENT ON 2 &gt; A
home in city on Second Ave ?
ul ty rm &amp; bafh
arge
nome w m n wa K ng o stance- MOBILE home space close to
3 4 BEDROOMS FULL
LOT
N EXCELLENT
Excel en! condlt on
two
ca par Loca ed on 2 A flat
hospital on State Route 35
of the hospital
Spec al
BASEMENT
F AM LV
LOCAT ON
M LE
story t wo bedrooms and
lo
P
ce
educed
fo
$22
SOO
446 0294 or 367 7736
featu es are a formal din ng
ROOM CA~ PETED L R
FROM
SC HOOL AND
arge d n ng
oom
bath
Ill If
rm
carpeted
LR
w
fh
&amp; D N NG ROOM S2D 500
POOL KYGER CREEK
downsfa rs
shower
lull
ST RT 218
4room house and
I ep ace full basement
TAX 0 ST
BUYS TH S BA~GA N
basement
second story
A lot On y $6 000
ovely den fin shed n knotty 3 BEDROOM 1972 Mob e home
Steve Roach 446 4677
fin
shed
can
be made nto
I nen cookware a r con
4 LOVELY 3 BEDROOM
p ne w th wood burn ng FP
Owner Wtll
three bedrooms good ~arage
KANAUGA
Neat 5 room
Jay Sheppard 446 0001
d t oned
telev s on
fur
W TH FAM LV ROOM
garage and a large 00x300
a so a n ce renta In back with
cot age less han 10 yrs o d
Denver K Higley 446 000
n
shed
W
I
renf
to
l
men
S20
AND
EXTRA
LOT
Help F1nance
lot Shown by appointment
separate dr veway close to
H W f oo s p enty k tchen
LARGE
ROOMS
a
week
each
$50
deposit
on
y
Thts 4 Bedroom
g ocery slo e ot 77 X 43
equlred Ready July 1 992
TH~OUGHOUT
EXTRA
cab nets bath &amp; ut ty oom
Home
GOOD BUY
OWNER
It has a ca port w th large
3509 M dd eporf Ohio
NEW LISTING ~ STATE
A LAND at Northup (i)hlo
LEAV NG A~EA
s Ia age
m
Pr ce only
146 If
GENE PLANTS &amp; SON
ROUTE 588 - A most new 3
w
th 2 bedroom home w th ful
5 S 1 500 0 R BEST
$14
9.00
F YOU NEED HELP
PlUMBING - Heat ng - A r
BR ranch Th s beauty has a
OFFER BUYS TH S 3
basement arge vlng room
FARMS
F NANC NG AND NEED
Condit onlng 300 Fourth Ave
ovely bu It In kitchen WW SLEEPING rooms weekly
BEDi,RDOM HOUSE AT
3 n ce closets stove and deep
A LARGE HOME YOU
rates tree garage parking
Ph 446 16l7
carpet
air co nd
2 car
EDGE OF TOWN CAR
27 A ON St Rl 141 below
freeze storm w ndows and
CAN GET IT HERE 3
L bby Hotel
4811
garage
and114acresof
and
PET
L V NG ROOM
Cadmus It has a Mechanics
door fuel oil furnace rural
BATHS FAM LV ROOM
241 If
The full basement ncludes a
B G KITCHEN
Gar 5 oom house wi h at
F REPLACE
K TCHEN
water bath large garage
CARTERS
PLUMBING
Ia
ge
stone
f
replace
bu
f
n
6 ~ KE NEW MOB LE
!ached sto e bldQ
also a
AND
D N NG
ALL
and pal o Pr ce $20 000
AND HEATING
bar bath laundry rm and an TRAILER spaces 446 3B79 or
HOME ON AN ACRE LOT
DOWNSTA RS
CAR
second house that could be
3677438
Cor Fourth &amp; P ne
unfln she~ 4th BR
ON THE RVER VE~Y
PETED
EXCELLENT
repa red Buy the bundle for 3 BEDROOM house k tchen
154 If
446
l888
or
446
4417
Phone
N CE HOME AND EX
LOCAT ON
N
R 0
$18 000
bath and n ce front porch at
165
tf
CELLENT LOT
WE
NEED
AN
OF~ER
60
GRANDE
Chesh re Oh o Pr ce reduced
Gaflfa
ac es vacant land n Addison SLEEPING rooms
ST RT 2 8 11 A Ap
to $12 500
Hotel
RUSSELLS
Twp - about 20 acres II able
prox malely
0 A Guyan
We Need Ltsltng
94 If
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING
w th the ba ance n woods
Bottom balaoce shill gentle 47 Garf eld Ave
very
n
ce
Gall polls 446 4782
slope and flo 1 829 lb lob
We Sell More Property than Anyone Else trl
home with new carpet and
297 It HOME PLUS NCOME
2 APARTMENT and new mobile
sell
2
381
lb
fh
s
year
base
Southeastern Ohto
drapes centra a r con
horne central a r and heat
a
most
new
a
electr
c
mob
e
buyer gets hall the
73
dlt on ng front room 22 x 14
exce
lent condition ~46 Ol38
DEWITT
S
PLUMBING
homes
located
m
le
off
oute
p
oceeds
It
has
a
5
m
F YOU WAN T T SOLD
w fh woodburn ng f replace
137 If
AND HEATING
7 n Addison Twp L ve n one
CALL U S
modern house plenty water
modern
kitchen
lui
Route
I&gt;Oat
Evergreen
and rent the other
good barn 60 x 66 w lh 10 cow
basement new ca rpo I and
4 BR 1 ' bath central air
Phone 446 2735
APARTMENT
HOUSE
Gal Ita Co S Largest
slane h ons Th s s a good buy
r ver v ew Pr ce $22 500
double wide a I Ql I t es pa d
8711
Upper rou e 7 - th s p operty
for $21 500
Rea I Estate Sales Agency
$250 mo 446 1~
could
pay
for
tse
f
n
5
years
Ofltce 446 3643
VACANT LAND
COTTAGE on Evans Helghfs
SJtf
STANDARD
Call today and find out how
25
A
Level
land
at
Rodney
On
ol
45
X
125
mode
n
k
tchen
Plumb ng &amp; Heating
Evenmgs Call
water ne p ce 535 000
the who e house n exce ent
214 Th d Ave 446 3782
6
ADD SON TOWNSHIP
E M
Ike
Wtseman446 37961
Look ng tor a mob1le home
cond ton a so garage Pr ce
87 If
LOTS - ASKING 540000
63 A Wa d Rd F nanc ng
E N Wtseman 446 4500
lot ot a qual tv mob le hdme?
515 000
ava abl~ $ 8 000
L----~----------------We have both at
NEW SECT ONAL - KC School
A ~ARGE home w th 5
Dst
s
6900
w
sound
9 A ac oss hwy from Sh ne
bedrooms modern k tchen
BY OWNER 1 m es from
cheap after you see th s love y
Club On u a wate
ne
2 ba h g~s furna ce smal
Country
home
on
Gall po s most beaut ful
3 BR a I e eel c home w th 2
S NGER Sewing Mach ne Sales
$ 7 000
basement new oof larg e lot
country home around 4 years
baths shag carpet un
&amp; Service A
modes n
Raccoon Creek 3 plus
4l X 175 on Second Ave
ANY HR 446 1998
o d 2 bedroom all elect lc
derground ut I t es beam
stock Free del very Service
acres 3 B R carpeted
br ck rancher farge carpeted
ce ilings arge flat lot and ow
guaranteed Models p ce
OFFICE 446 1066
ltvtng
room
wtth
game room b~ It In k !chen
down payment
f om $69 95 French C ty
EVENINGS
Ia ge lot good boating
Fab lc Shoppe S nge ap
ftreplace ctty schools
Russell Wood 446 4618
$29.500 full price lmmed ale
proved
dealer 58 Court Sf NEW LIST NG - Th s nee 1
Ron Canaday 446 3636
Rodney Cora Rd
197l - Z g Zag sewing moch ne
Ph 446 9255
m home Is about 12 yrs o d
possess on Phone 256 1369 $37 500 Call 446 0089
John I Rtehards 446 0280
Rodney Oh o
Th s mach ne darns
em
befo e 5 p m or phone
and oc a ed n a qu e sub
31Ml I
Hours9am tot~pm
Proc
Hun nglon 6977425 after 6 JO SE PH Realty Co
d v son on US 35 HW floo s 3
broiders overcasts button
Monday thru Saturday
hoes
All
w thou!
at
BRs large din ng rm u ty
forv le Ohio 886 6440 45 '
pm
Ph 245 9374- 245 5021
1624
acres lays nice 125 b
rm and ca po I a e on y a
tachments Pay balance of
tobacco base old 7 room
few of he spec al lea ures
Sl8 50 or pay $5 per monlh
house w th picturesque view
LARGE water trpnt lot good
$22 000
BRADBURY
eft clency
137 f( · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
Ca I 446 0255
boating deal for summer
Separate Ira ler hookup
apartmenls Adulfs only no
cyc lone cellar with water
WE HAVE LOTS &amp; VACANT
home orcamp s te Phone 256
pets avallab e July 10 open
comp lete $ S 500 or house GOOD C EAN LUMP and
WOODLAND
N
ALL
1369 before 5 p m o phone
lor appl cat ons 129 Second
stoker coal Car Winters Rio
DIRECTION S FINAN
w th ' acre $4 500 After
Huntington 697742S afte 6
Ave
Grande Phone 245 5115
hours call Robert Bunsey 304
CIN G AVAILABLE ON
ptn
160 If
611
62 4
736 7315
MOST PARCELS
162 5
LIST NGS
N EE DED
CLOSE to own brand new B
_Y
__O
_W
_N
_E
_R
___
l _ y_ea
- - -o- d 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
SLEEPING room range and
ESPEC.ALL Y FARMS
summer cottage 2 bedrooms
refr gerator ut lites pa d US
NATIONWIDE
AD
built n k tchen bath and
frame
al
e
ectr
c
bedroom
per month men only Calf 446
Locatton
From
Galltpolts
follow
Route
1
VERTISING
PAYS
shower arge lake front ot
thermopane glass aftached
l 844 after 1 p m
Ronny
Blackburn
Phone 256 ll69 before 5 p m
ga age 2 m les from town oo
south approxtmateiy 18 mtles turn nght on
16l 6
Branch Manager
o phone Hunt ngton 697 7425
SR 588 Phone 446 0313
the
Hannan
Trace
Road
and
go
'11
mtle
turn
afte 6 p m
161 6
162 4 - -- - - - - rtghl and follow the Swan Creek Road 2 mtles
--------BY OWNER 3 ~~~ 1 2 baths 2
Watch for Sale Stgns
HOUSE w th attached garage
car garage large kitchen
comp efoly furn shed. ncl
d n ng area 1 replace be
range refrigerator wosher
tween town and hospital 446
dryer 2 BR bath LR kit
9274
chen utility rm e&lt;fra larg e
U930
family rm
large concre te
Located on West Matn Street (Rear) m Oak
patio approx one ha f acre SHULTZ mob le home 12 x 65
One good herd bull 2 yearllnQ h eifers 3 cows
Htll
Ohto Watch for Stgns
lot w th largo automollve
t t out LR w th l acres ot
with calves by side Health papers w II be
wo kshop and ut I ty building
and all necesslt es on
furnished
Raccoon Creek 446 0077
Ca I 446 2812 after S p m
1626
165 3
SATURDAY JULY21 1973
Starlmg at 10 30 A M
LAND n R o Grande In c ty
lim Is or out 1 to 10 acres
FOR SALE
1 reg stored
owner con I nonce 245 5l20
Morgan
mare
and colt 446
162 6
Farm wagon new Hol1&lt;1nd tobacco setter 32
Cons st ng n part of Oak S de Board w th Beveled
3879 or 367 74l8
foot
hay
eievalor
Case
manure
spreader
M
ror 6 Oak Chars with Lions Paw Feet Rocking
Building
Sites
Cha rs Chairs Beaut fu Old Pictures and Frames Old
Oliver hay baler Oltver hay rake 2 bottom 12
I".Va' I able Klngsberry
Jewel y st II on theca ds &amp; some 24kt gold) of all k nds
Inch Ford plows (like new) 3 pi hitch tractor
Homes buill to fit at'ly
unma ked Weller Clocks of al k nds Hat Pins Watch es
scoop {used very I title) 3 pt h tch scraper
Stone Jars &amp; Jugs Old Glass Top Frulf Jars ROger
IStHIC ill cations
All
Brothers Sliver Monogrammed S lver Old Irons
blade
500
bales
of
good
mixed
hay
also
hand
untJE rground Utilities
Quadruple
Pate Casserole Merbleo &amp; Combos Dlohos 11o
tools such
p tchforks
shovels
c hain
Prr1v1ded
G assware Trunks Th mbt.- Old Eye Glasses Crocks
binders and other m scellaneous items
Botlles Scales M k Bolt es etc Lofo of Antiques and

WISEMAN
AGENCY

Realty 32 State St
Tel 4461998

WOOD

REALTY

REALTOR
446-1066

For Rent

qq6-0001

---'----

Plumbmg &amp; Heatrng

- - -- - -

-----

- - - -- -

------ - - - -- -

- - - - --

------

------

- - -- - -----For Sale

QUAIL CREEK

MOBILE
COMMUNITY
&amp;SALES

For Sale

------

------

--------

TARA

PUBLIC SALE

TliURSDAY, JULY 19, 1973, 11:00 A.M.

------

------

DEVELOPMENT
OORP.

NEW
HOMES
FOR SALE

For Sale

PUBLIC
NOTICE

Wo .. n anything for
enybod1 Bring your
Item• to Knoth Com
munlly Auction Born
Corn or Third &amp; 011 vt
For lppolnlmont uti
1!6 6967 lftor 5 p m
Sole evory S.turd1y
evening 11 1 o Clock

AUCTION
SERVICE

''SEU

IHt ~CTION

WAY"

PUBLIC AUOION

MACHINERY. AND TOOLS

as

---------For Information

Or Appointment

JIMME SAYRE

PHONE

AUCTIONEER

367-7250

PH. 446-3444

9-HEREFORD CATTLE-9

Addiso._n

0

Co ec lor s Item s A very large sale
TERMS CASH
Lunch Available
CECILIPETE) PHILLIPS OWNER
AUCTIONEERS
Lee Johnson
Tommy Joe Stewart
Crown Ctly Ohto
Gallipolis Ohio
Phone 256 6740
Phone 446 3941

TERMS CASH
TERMS CASH
LUNCH WILL BE SERVID
Dorl Albon
- AUCTIONEERsKtnntllo Swoltt
Oiok Hill OhiO
G1lllpolle (IIIIo
NOT RESPONSIBLE FI)R ACCIDINTS

�21 - The SWlday Tim

20- ,.....~ nrlRv

unnav lulv l~ I"~

rime• :irntlncl

For Fast Results Use The Su,nday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Card of Thanks

s

------

--,---,-,~----

Notice

-'-------

HelD Wanted

sew ng

M O O LE home spa ce
Sy acuse Phone 992 6329
6 2 lie

DEAD STOCK horses call e
easonable GENERAL k chen he p
hogs
sheep
charge Call Ul 5514
expe ence necessary App y PR IV ATE m ee t ng oon fo
6 26 30tc
any or gan za t on phone 992
n pe son at the Me gs nn
J915
7 12 6tc
c
3
=,.,-,----w LL ha ve open ng August 27 .-~--~-....,__ __
for Beauty operato w th Oh o FUR NI SHED apa men by the
l cense Send erl es to Box
mon h M e gs nn Pom e oy
179 An caeo The Day
72fc
Sent nel Pom eroy Oh o
- - - -- - - - - 7 6 p ROOMS by the week $18 up
Me gs nn Pome oy
THE MEIGS INN takes p de n
serv ng only the f nest food
w th fast courteous serv ce
So f you e neat and at
trac ve and w sh to o n ou
fr end y staff p ease app y n

-------

person

7 26tc
HOUSE
3 bed oom
un
fu n shed po ch and ya d
Ca 992 2780 o 992 3432
7 8 lie

Pets For Sale

BODY work and paint L ncoln AKC BR TTANY Span e s pups
H II Phone 992 5271
ready to go M
Ed s Br t -:-::-::-::-:----c - - - - 1 2 2tc
bah mob e
tanys St Rt 50 A near 3 BEDR OOM
home 308 Page S ee l 992
Athens Call 448 2089
RUTLAND Gun Cub
New
3509
1 II 5 c
Lima Road Sunday July 15
7 8 ttc
P m H gh Powered R ties 50
::-::-:-.,------__.:..._
yd and 300 yd
TRAILER B owns Tra er
1 IS He
Park M ne sv e Oh o 992
l324

Wantett To Buy

1 5 fc
0 MONTH old Reg ste ed
En~llsh Setter lema e Has
reg st at on papers Call992
3278 $40

For Sale
NE\\ AVON bottles
6 24 30tc

For Rent

SUNDAY July

15

65- Nea
66- a ec
6 -Foas a

couch

s 00

ant que

Wedd ng

se

$ 200
va ue
$250
E ngageme n t r ng
$ 000
va ue fo $200 An ques
Jew elry
PLUS
Ant que
tewe y o d and new p c ure
f ames ant ques to everyday
household ems clo hes e c
L ocated on Meeha n c S ee l
acr:oss
rpm
E be felds
Wa ehouse
1 s Jlp

------

s p (abb )
2 -One who

- n"'-ls c ~Qn
3-B 11 e
4 - &amp;"'4&gt;0fa y ahe e
76 - S a 1'1 0 ICOfll

9-P oo eade s

""'
,.,,.

!1 - RenS oand
1!2

Goddesso

!14

De endfl o T oy

85

Ga den oo

8-Fom&amp;Rssa
90

"'

Sham

92-COfl'4l&amp;U po

93 - S 1 pos
95
B• a
9 - Ab sorbed
98-Hypo 1'111 a

1973
-Ma

69 - Aoman olf a

s

---~--'-'~

Mob1le Homes For Sale
TRYING o buy a mob e home?
Been
u r ne d
down'
Remember
ca n say yes
when o he s say no
Ca
F ank 9'12 7111 I c.., he p
Larry s Mob le H om e~ Sa es
600 Wes t Ma n S ee

Pom e oy Oh o

55 x 0 3 BEDROOM 308 Page
Street 992 3509
7 6 fc

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

20-Tha wh h

o amp and c han
e ec t c
ght and
e
6 oak cha s
amp old s de board
o wood ab e
desk V c t ala and
3 ourrd op trunk s
v o n ma ntle cock ock ng
c ha
p ano
wa d obes
ches o d awe s beds sofa
11 ng oom su te e ev s ons
og a
stoo
pcues
smok ng
s and
va e t
ef ge a lar lnt ches deep
t eeze book case qu t s
s one a s bottl es d shes
book s and many o he m sc
ems
C a ence F a ey
O.vne
Not re spons b e fo
ace d en s Lun ch se rv&amp;d
Term s Cash Pos t ve I D
L oyd D Jl nge
Auc t onee
R
Shad e Oh o Ph p)le ~96
269
7 5 tc

e
49 -

""

Fas o
Beg

so- ong
5 - B dened
DOWN

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES
220 Was h ngton Blvd
473752
BELPRE 0

Auto Sales
966 PONTIAC Tempes cus om
coupe fo sa e 6 cv nde 2
doo au oma c ansm ss on
p owe
s eer ng
powe
b akes
ad o a v ny b ue
nler or b ue f n sh I ke new

res A c ean economy car
w th low m leage Pr va e
owne r
mu s
Phoo e 992 6280

sac r f ce

· -------------~-' 56p

Stop In and See Our
Floor D1splay
EXCAVAT ING

phone 992 2478 o 9'12 7402

001\00N I

TilFORD
AUOCilfP

m,.m,.,...,,.ll

NOI.l I'IOS

DOZER and ba ck hoe wo k
ponds and sept c anks d tch
ng se v ce op so I f
d
I mes one B&amp;K Excava no

and Wh e Sew ng
Mach nes
Se v ce on a I
ma k es Reasonab e a l es'
Th e Sew ng Ce n e
M d
d epo
Oh o
11 16 1 c

,

We a e

--·-.,--

Beef cu i

I

l e ng Ev ans P em er
o you o de fa your

ecw

J:i!!ld Quo e s F on &gt; Quarto s
S des R bs Lo ns Rounds
CUT WRAPPED- FROZEN
D1ck Vaughan

"'

Ph J92 2174
REA DY MIX

Pome oy
CO NCRtTE

de ve ed
gh
o you
p oted Fas and easy Free
es t ma es Phone 992 3284

Goeg e n Ready Mi x Co
M ddlepo I Oh o
6 30 trc
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE a es Ph 446
4782 Ga po s John Russe
Owne and Ope a o
5 2 fc

F oo

Comp le e Se

v ce

Ph one 949 382
Rae ne Oh o
Cr t B adford

~W;-;A~N=T:-E:-D--:-L-:-g-:-h-:-t-&lt;11-ou-s-ew~
ork

0

ca e for sem nv.a lid Must
1
1
u• ..,.,1
ve n Ca•f • ! 6~19 after 5
7 26 P

Real Estate For 5ale

REFRIGERATOR Repa
Ar
Cond t on ng
Heat ng
E e c r Ca
R e p..a
Res cfent a or com me c a
auto a condl on ng 266M II
Street 992 3509
6 29 30tc

4 BEDROOM house 2 baths OPEN
Roger Hyse I s
r ve f ontage Syracuse
Garage nea crossroads on St
Phone 992 2360
Rt 124 a mechan ca wo k
6 27 ttc
nc ud ng
aut
ans
m ss on
M onday F lday
HOUSE to sa e by ow ner 3
8 lO a m o 5 p m Satu day
bedrooms new furnace roof
8 30 o 2 noon - unless by
and w r ng
Wa to wa
appo ntment Phone 992 5682
ca pe ng large ot ca port
099272
on fence In fran
Look o
6 27 30tc
and p ne I ees In s ~e yard
Con act Mr Eldon Walburn
WI L K NSON Sma I Eng ne
230 Un on Averwe Pome oy
Sa es and Se v ce 8 0 3rd St
Oh o Phone 9'12 2805
M ddlepo Lawn m owe and
_ _ _ _ _ _ __::6_:::l tic
cha n saw I' epa
F ee p cku p
and dP. ve v Phone 992: 3092
NEW 3 bedroom a elec r c
Also Br ggs and St a ton an d
home w th one ca garage and
Tecumseh parts
one ac e of g ound on F at
6 2 301c
woods oad Phone 992 2735
7 13 6tc
5 ROOM house ba h basement
gas heat 2 ots S D Bus&lt; rk
l4 Page St ee Mdd epo t
7 13 31p
MODERN 6 oom
I oor plan
home
w h
deta c hab e
garage A I newly pa nted
Located on n ce leve ot 50 x
20 a 619 Page S
M d
Oh o Fo
fu the
d epbr
defet s con ta ct Dav d R
23 Grandv ew Road

4l725 or
6 5 fie

1 ROOM hou se w h bath n
Ru land a
cund t oned
ca peted gas furna ce d sh
washer doub e oven range
double ga age Ia ge carpo
i4 a cres c eared and fenced
s mal
barn and
othe
build ngs Phone 614 742 6834

r

--------------=5~30

•

;:•
:
•

e
•

••

!
:

DELL WHEEL A lgnm en t
oca ed a C ass oads R 24
now p ack o wo &lt; Compete
f on end service tune up and
brake
serv ce
Whee s
balanced elec on cally A
work guaranteed Rea ~onab e
ra es Phone 742 l232
2 18 tic

~_,...,.----r-"~-

p AND J Home Malnlenance
and Repa
Heat ng A
Cond ton ng
Refrlgerat on
P umb ng E eel lea Ap
Auto

A li

Con

fc

EXCA VAT NG do ze
oade
sep c
and backhoe wo k
anks nsta ed dump ucks
and o boy s for h e w haul
Ill d rt t op so
I rnes tone
and gravel Ca Bob or Rage
Jet ers day phone 992 7089
n gl'\ phone 992 3525 or 992

sm

2 11 fc

I • t 20 years
ex per ence
Class A
body man By un on
Free
es mates J &amp; B Auto Body
M ee han c Sf ee across from
E be feld s Wa ehou.se
115 l c

\;--~,,_;Rt:n~l

-::f.-:-:
U-:R-:-:
N:::
I T::-:-U.
:::.11,i:E:c-S
_::
g and
llef nlsHing
Abraham s
An ques 32 Fayette Street
Nelsonv e Oh o Phone 753
302
7 3 30tc
FOR

FREE esl mates

a um num s d ng

on

StQrn Doors

and W ndows
Carper s
Ma quees and Ra ng Phone
Char es L s e Sy acuse Oh o
Ca
Jacob Sa l es Rep
resentat ve V V Johnson
and Son nc

Compare These
Hot Weather
Prtces
3 Ton Centra I arr for
mobtle home 12x60 or
14x70

*750

Central atr for homes
Hooked up to your
furnace
Prrces start
as low as $550

'July Specllll
Larry s of Pomeroy

6 of tnsulalton blown
tnlo alltc for only 15c
per sq II wtlh pur
chase of atr cond

"UNDeR SE~L,.
Dnve a Ltllle
Save a Lot'

PHONE 992-7320
ANYTIME

e e • e e e e e e e e e e e tea e e t eta a

NOTICE TO All CLIENTS
OF THE FORMER

DAVIS-WARNER INS. SERVICE

••

••
••
••
••

•

Has Opened An Offtce At :
lOOl!2 E Matn St Pomeroy (Over the •
Blue &amp; Grey Restaurant) Under the :
Name of Dayts Insurance Serv•ce
Mr

'0

Wa

7 II 6 p - - - - - - - - -

••
•••
•

MlddlepdH 0

992 2101

5 I fc

WILL TRIM o cut trees or
7 YI?AR OLD ma e Not
shrubbery A so pa nt oafs
part cui a w h k nd of ob
Phone 949 322
Phone 985 3849

•
•
•
•
•
•

n the R
Bu d ng

p ances

Em 11loym ent Wanted

Ieee

It Mus!
Be R1ghf
orwew II
t R ght

d t on ng
Res denNaf o
Com me c a 266 M I St ee
992 3509 2A hou serv ce a
wo k gua an l eed
7 0 6tc

AUTOMOB LE nsu ance been
Lo s
yo u SEWING MACH NES Repa
cance e d ?
opera o s tense Ca 992
se rv ce all makes 992 2284
7428
The Fabr Shop Pome oy
6 5 li e
Au hor zed S nge Sa es and
Se v ce We Sharpen Sc sso s
3 29 fc

•
\

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

SE PTIC TANKS AROB I C
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
Remade ng Ce am c t e
CLEANED
REPAIRED
baths Box 2BD Rut and 742
M LLER SAN TATION
3664
STEWART OHIO PH 662
6 26 c
3035

RON SHEPARD

·-- . . . . . _""'

0 ck &amp; D1te
really
know
how to cui up

Opon8T 15
Monday thru Saturda y
606 E Ma n Poll)eroy 0

Phone 742-6271

C BRADFORD Auct onee
E LNA

••

custom meat cutttng

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Phone 992 5367 o 992 386
91 c

••

The Shop

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992 2094

29 t c

Cam br dge Oh o
Phone 992 3904

NEW LISTING
40 ACRES - On had oad
La ge gamb e oaf barn co n
c b hen house house and
o her s All m ne als Good 7
oom house w h bath and o s
o
pane ng
Ask ng
ust
$650000

• ~ arge

and sma ll
Ba ck hoes and
oade s on
ack and t res
Dump tr uc k s Lo boy
se v ce Sept c tank s n
s a red Geo ge B
Pu ns

Ru land Townsh p

Htii.'IIH f'ilFclltD

F

Doze

hay 7 oom house Located n

LOOK AHEAD PLAN NOW
BUY PROPERTY FOR YbtJ
AND
YO UR
FA M L Y S
FUTURE TH NK BIG AND
SEE US TODAY

Pleasant Rtdge Road
POMEROY OHIO

FURNITURE

Yates

NEW LISTING
NEW HOME
S bedrooms
ca peted n ce k tchen w th
bu t n range Fu I basement
w th ga age ut I ly and tam ly
oom On y $20 000 00
NEW LISTING
POMEROY
6 ooms l~rge
ba h new ga s fo ced a fur
nace
Ba ck porch with n
wa k ng d s ance of s ores
$10 500 00

on Mqst Ame ~an Cars

From he Ia oes
Bu do&lt;e Radiator l o the
~ ma es Healer Lor e
Nathan B ggs
Rad1afor Special st

and

OVER 200 ACRES
ON Route 325
' s ory
t arne home 3 bedrooms
po ches 7 bu d ng s nea
house and 2 arge ba ns
ac oss the oad W th n 2
m es of m ne No
$35 000 00
42ACRES
CLOSE om ne No
Fa rl y
leve and lo s of wo ods
Wou d be I ne tor bu ld ng
s es 19 000 oo
IOACRES
Nea
Ra e ne A ll e ec r c
home about 2 yea s o d 2
bed ooms
bath
fu ll
basemen 6 acres now n
ave A n ce p ace to ve
$500000
7 ACRES
C ose o Pome oy La ge 2
s o y home has 4 bed ooms
a
~ s f t l ed and pane ed 3
hav e wal
o wa
ca pe
D n ng
oom carpe ed
mode n bath full basemen
F 0 to ced a heat garage
and bu d ng sto m doors
and w ndows A um s d ng
$ 7 00000

CATTLE FARM
45 ACRES
Fence s 15 ac es
a co n and about 25 acres of

15 Locuat $1

Ahgpment

OFFICE SUPPLIES

$500000

to

*5.55

REALTY

w~ ,e l

992 2094
606 E Mam Pomeroy

MINERSVILLE
3 bedroom s bath k chen
has o s of base cab n.els
po ches and ots of g ound
GONG AT JUST $6 500 00
33 ACRES
Jus off Rou e 124 beyond
Ru and
Abouf 10 fo
cui va, 0('1 the ba ance fo
pas ure
Home has
J
bed ooms new bat h and new
o ced a r hea ng sys em
N ce k tchen w th lots of new
ab net s
A BUY AT

has tam y room bar and
u ty room Ca por
l:arge

Roof1ng Spout~ng
Home Remodelmg

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

E MAl N '-;,;;,;~~
POMEROY

BERRY M L LER Mob le Home
Sa es has a o o offer when
you s tar shopp1ng o you
mob e home You can bea
he h gh dep ec a on you
have on you home he
s
two yea s by shopp ng fo a
HAV NG TROUBLE WITH
a e mode used mob e home
THE SALE OF YOUR
He e a e so me eve y day low
PROPERTY? LET US DO
pr ces
T FOR YOU NO SALE
65 x 2 f o es Pa ~ 3 bed oom
NO CHARGE
$5 795 sa ye 12 soo
HENRY E qEI,J\ND
53 X i2 1'/~ ar 2 b~droom
BROKER
$3 995
992 2259
60 x 12 Allan c 3 bedroom
No
answer
992 2568
$4 495
60 x 2 Champ on 2 bedroo m
$4 495
60 x 12 M onar ch new S7 795
now on y $5 995
60 x 2 PM C {Sove e gn
$5 295
46 x 10 A mo $2 495
50 x 10 R cha dson $2 695
These a e m os t y a Ia e mode l
hom es and he pr ces nc ude
you de very and comp le e
se t up So fo an hones o
goodn ess good dea s op n
today a Ber y M e Mob e
NEW LISTING
Homes Sa es 705 Far so n
~
3
S ree
Be p e Oh o phone MULBERRY AVE
bed
oom
staley
b
ck
w
h
423 9531 - c osed Sunday s
7 10 6 c arge mode n k tchen doubl e
S S s nk and d sposa Gas
ar ced a r furna ce gas log
t ep ace n d n ng Ga age to
Atr Condtltoners
2 ca s
W h n wa k ng of
Awnmgs
sto es and work
Wan t
Underpmmng
$2 5 000 00
NEW LISTING
Ca mp e e mob e home
POMEROY - 3 bedrooms a
se ce - p us g ga nt c
c ond t oned b ck Sta n ess
d spa y o m ob e homes
bake and cook un ts ti ce ba
a ways a a abe a
w th abl e she f Full basemen

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
•

For Estimates

Davrs

•

We are '" a postlton to service your tn

s~,rance

needs It wtll npt be necessary for you
t111~1ilil•nv st1lement mailed or given lo you to
hav '/y the same protection on your tar or
We will gtve you honest and efllcienl
ser vice Please stop ~Y or call as~~ the re•son
of the dtvl~ion of the Davts Warner Insurance
Agen r!y

pr~erty

•••
•

•
:
•
•
•
•

e

••
LORENZO D. DAVIS ,:

P.NONE 992·5120

:

•............•...•......... :

14
12

70-12
X 65 -14
X

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate for Sale

&amp;

50
X 64'
X

We Feature Some
of the Fmest

*fARKWOOD
*KIRKWOOD

*FLEET\\OOD

*ACADEMY'
(By Skyline)

LARRY'S
MOBILE HOMES
Larry Evans Owner
Fronk Gheen S~ lao Mgr

Ph 992 7777
~OMEROY OHIO
Next Door loth~
Jones Boys

OPEN SUN 1-6 p M
DAILY 9-6

How1rd Bronnon Broker
Off 446 1674
Luclllo Brinnon
Eve 446 1226 or 446 2674
MODERN RANCH
3 BR
t le bath
carpet
throughout bea~t lu k !chen
featuring n ce wood ca b nets
oven renge dishwa sher
dinette w,fh patio doon
fin ahed ga age a drapes
and curtains we I landscaped
lot $24 500
BRICK &amp; FRAME
ONE story 3 BR a comfortable
eot In kitchen w th all the
built Ins carpet In LR and
centr~t a r
fin shed
hal
9arage level lot 80 x 150'
.• ated n young area of new
home• and grow ng faml es
$24 500
TWOSTDRY HOME
SIX room 3 BR large LR fu y
carpeted a dream k tchen
featuring all the bu t Ins and
patio doors din ng room
front porch concrete pat o
car)lort btg lot I mile from
c ty $23 000
COTTAGE
2 BR
,
DOWN by the River
bath laundry U sha~e k t
chen with spac ous din ng
area screened porch two
over s ze decks over ook ng
the rver and h lis S de room
could double for BR Very
large shaded grove $15 500
DIAL YOUR WEATHER
IN this central a r 3 BR ran
cher brick and frame home 3
BR all built In k tchen n
coppertone large din ng
area laundry room forced
a r furnace ural water
carport storage bu ld ng
large eve lot Kyger Creek
D st $21 000
RANCH HOME
REDWOOD S BR oversize
ca peted LR a woman s
dream kitchen and din ng
area with a bu It n china and
nen storage wa
forced air
furnace city water 3 ac e
ot $24 500
MODERN
ONE floor fury carpeted w jh
central at Beautlfu kitchen
w th slid ng doors fo the pat o
f n shed garage lot 100 x 185
located on BT road 2 m
from Gall po s $26 500
NEW HOMES
3 NEW homes near completion
priced S27 500 S29 500 $32 000
A homes can be seen any
t me by calling 446 2674 Buy
now and locate before schoo
starts
A BRICK
IN TOWN
ALL electr c two story 3 BR
1 ' bath eat In kitchen
formal DR spac ous LR with
f replace fu ly carpeted
large front porch full ~ vfded
basijtnenl deep lot Qu ck
possession
BUSINESS
F you are th nk ng of going n
bus ness for yourself check
the
BRAN NON
w th
REALTY We have SIX good
bus nesses for sale n deal
local ons and showing good
profits
64 A FARM
8 MILES from Gall pols - a
n ce two story farm home
w fh a banquet s ze k tchen l
and
bath
carpel
BR
hroughout part basement
oil furnace two ca garage
one barn ch cken house hog
h too shed granary and
shop l wells spr ng and
creek wafer Idea for a r ding
farm
PRIVACY
MEANS tam ly peace In th s
wo sfory 5 BR - two bath
home LarQe eat In klfchen
w th
range
oven
efrlgerator disposal and
d shwasher
carpet
thro~ghout gas furnace n
full basement city water 3
ca r garage
" m
to
Gallipolis All this plus 6
acres of ground
NEW LISTING
MOVE r ght n I Are you
urgent y In need of a home?
We have one available a very
n ce rancher near the golf
course vinyls ding l BR and
bafh eaf In k tchen laundry
room HW floors garage
awn ngs storm windows and
doors concre te d ve and a
wei landscaped lawn storage
bu ld ng Call 446 2674

Neal Realty
NEW LISTING
1970 6~x 12 SCHULT 2 BR mobile
home located on a 2 acre lot
about 4 m es from town Th s
home has had exce llent care
l tnd has a r cond
sfo m
windows washer
dryer
smaf storage bu ldlng Would
make a good nvestment or a
n ce home
WE HAVE tour sma I homes on
one lot n town that would
make a good nves tment Buy
all lou tor $18 500 Annual
ental • $2 040
VACANT LAND
APPROX 9 acres on Ke ton Rd
About 1 m e from town
would consider se l ng on
and contract $3 500
SAM NEAL • now assoc a ted
w lh Nea Realty If you are
buying or seiling call Sam at
446 7358 he s ready to serve
you
Offlco Phone 446 1694
Eventna•
Chotltl M Noal446 1!46
J Mlchoel Neot446 1503
SAM NEAL 446 7358

FOR SALE
House 2'12 acres 3 or 4
bedrooms city sthool
dislrtcl
2 miles out
141
Will
show
anytime 446 2323

3 CHOICE acrea aultoble lor
bUilding on R t 160 appro• 120
If fronlego 245 5142
166 3

Real Estate For ~le

Real Estate For Sale

REALTORS

RUSSEU

MASSIE

THE

SpecialiSt

608

boa ds
rl
e
chande
a add n
w h n
en d s
eco d s

----~-----'-

OLD turn lure oak tab es
clocks ce boxes brass beds
d shes
or
cornp ete AKC Go den Re eve pupp es
$40
and one
1 mon h
househo ds Wr e M
D
We marner pup $50 {6 4) 742
M er Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o
6834
call 992 6271
6 21 fc
5 13 lfc

'"

o d cup

CAS H pa d fo a makes and
mode s of rnob e ho mes
Phone a ea code 6 4 423 953
4 3 fc

..:.._--~--

"K"E"'W"'P"'I"E,--d7o77
1 s- a-n--;
d- an- y-c
t hI n g
else efafed to Kewples Also
old postcards In good con
d t on write and descr be
terns a I so pr ce wanted
Alyce Schne der
45 South
Kanawha Buckhannon W
Va 26201
_ _ _ _ _ _ __ 7_8 30fp

n ach nes

7 11 18 c

PARKVIEW Kenne s
oy male and 1
Phone 992 5443

WANTED- Llsed mere hand se
for aud on We buy we
se I whole houseful or s ngle
p eces
cons gnment or
pe centage We w I hau
Phone 992 l354 Hayman s
6 530ft

6- Rages

Real Estate For Sale

s

1 36 p

9-Ae

STRIPPERS
We Sl p Pa ntl varn shes
Etc: om Furn tur e
Anflques MOdern Metals
N o ru n ous I yes or caust cs
used
Ptek Up Service
Available
We Buy &amp; Self Pinllquos
Dick Seyler Owner
Kerr St
Pomeroy D
Phone 991 2798

------

prec at on and thanks to D
Telle and a of the nurses
for the r he pfu ness and
kindness to me d ur ng m y
stay In the hosp tal A so the
ones who sent me suc h
beaut fu t:ards and etters
The flowers and the v s ts
w th me Alma B Wh te
715 lie

"''

Hoard House

Wanted

1

e-Wde
11 -0pe gab e

D1ck's

------

-WI---SH to express my ap

1- Conne edmaa.

Business Services

972 HON OA 500 Motorcycl e BEAUTIFUL Wo nut Stereo
ONE ROW co n p cker Rober MODULAR 1 bod oon t ouse
ad o - 8 t ack tap;e com
Ca I 985 3828 aile 6 p m
to
en
tu
n
shed
u
t
es
Tr pp 667 394
b
na tion AM FM r•dlo. 4 way
7
5
l
c
P" d Ca 992 738' o 99? ?621
715 lip
speake
sound
sys tem
7
3
c
--------Be
ance
$
10
92
or
use our
DAIRY COWS 13 n produc on
WANTED to buy M a ard
budget
term
s
Co
li
997
3'165
one
w
be
f
esh
n
hree
2 BEDROOM mob e home
Duc&lt;s 992 2789
7 IS 6tc
weeks
Co
84l
m•
alter
6
awn ng and pa o A I ut t es
115 41c
p n
pad Pri v ate oca o
- - -- - - - ' - - - 1 IS 3 c H &amp; N DAY old or star ed
upsta s turn shed apa I
Leghorn pulle s Boll f oor o
men
2 bed ooms
AI
cage
grown
ava lab e
BRUSH
HOGS
4x5
I
phone
SECRETARY wou dIke de to
20 m nutes
om Ci-"
tr
y
hou
s
ng ·
&amp;
Pou
992
6329
and from Oh a Un vers t y
n
plant
Robe I
H II
oma
on
Modern
Paul
y
au
7 5 fc
Leave ne'ssage at 985 3928
Racine Oh o 949 38
399 W Main Pomer oy 992
7 l 3tp
7 57 p
2164
PUBLIC AUCTION
40 ACRES m ore o
ess TRA IL ER hon e w th Ia ge SATURDAY Ju y 2 973
00 --------~1-5 I c
a n Dyesv e Oh o Fo ow .~
wooded h gh d y oad and
carpe ed d n ng oorn added
Box 952 La ncas te
powe
Rou a 43 fo he Co um b ..
Funlshed fo
o 2 adults
Oh o 43 130
Schoo
it d fo ow auct on . - - - - - - - - - , . , - - .
P easan oca on Mulbe y
s gns to Dyesv li e I pur
He ghts Phone 992 2773
chased he o d Va e farm n
7 5 3l c
Dyesv e and w
se ll the
pe sana
lem s at Publ c
3 AND 4 ROOM t1J shed and
Auct on They a e as fo ll ows
apa me s
u fu n shed
Muzz e Loading R fie Coffee
Phone 992 5434
ab es wash stands Tread e

WE WISH to extend our most
" nrP.rP. thanks and ap
preclat on to all of the people
of the M dd eport Church ot
Chr stand Pr mary Depar t
men!
for
the wonder
tul
farewel
!&gt;arty
n our honor
Sunday
We aooreclafe the Q Us the
money t ee the p ayers and
a of the efforts of fhoe who
helped n any way The
Raul In Moyer Fm ly
115 ltp

ACROSS

Rul Estate For Slle

for Sale

for Sale

For Rent

Wanted To Buy

Sentinel SWldiiY Julv 15 IU73

Real Estate for Sale

STROUT

Real -£state For Sale

OHIO RIVER
Realty

AUCTIONEERS
DUDES D LITE
3 MI LES from town 14 acres
OSclr Ill trd
900 I ontage on Rt 141 Rural
Doug Wotherholl
water c stern! fences Owner
Broken •46 JU4
w II sell w h or w thou!
GRANDVIEW ESTATES
tr a e and bern
Many
World~ La. yt::.f
N ICE !rllevel three or lour
CROWN C ITY Cheap
poss bll lies for Baby Farm or
bed oom home fem lv room
THE
LEADER
SINCE
1900
IN
Hose Ranch
housing ~ rooms &amp; bafh I v
SERVING THE NATJON S one and iw)lf balhs central air
Business
rm 12 x 19 H W f oon
GAVIN GOLD
con and garage Call now
Doctor
I don t like the way HASN T lnf uenced the pr ce ot BUYERS &amp; SELLERS
New Listtng
Opportuntly
slorm doors and windows
you
Ike th e price
Ph
A46
0008
your
wlf•
looks
Th s n ce home a only 8 yrs
his 3 bl'droom home w th 5
In Town
MILLS VILLAGE
1
5 ~ENTED UN TS
Husb1nd
I
m
not
cruy
old and s n good repair II
acres n Add son Twp Plenty NEW L I ST IN G
Over 3" e&gt; V 6 RY ove ly three bedroom
CO MMERCIA~
lA
about ~er look• either but she
has aut lily bldg 8 • 16 aod
of yard new alum num sid ng
w l h o s of pines Th s s m brlc&lt; home w th tam ly room
RES DENTAL
toke• good care of me and !he
located
on
52
A
ot
Pr
ced
and beth home has a full and den on man floor beautiful
LARGE
4
ROOM
an d storm windows
plus
P ~ODUC N G
19 600
kids
for
o
qu
ck
...,
e
at
S12
900
COL ON A L HOME ON
ou
t
build
ngo
basement and 5 located on th ca rpet throughout two baths
ANNUAL NCOME 560
NEW LISTINGS
2ND AVE TH S HOM E
THE
DOCTORS
Woods M I Rd tmmed ale two f replaces central ai r con
FT WATER FRONTAGE
EVERGREE N - 5 oom s and
HAS BEEN RECENTLY
MODERN new brick home on o ARE c ose and the price Is r ghf
possess on $ .4 700
464 FT BYWAY FRON
full basement w th rec room
ba
th
on
rura
l
water
It
has
RE MOD ELED
ANO
largo lot with 3 bedrooms
on th • lovely Spanish home
TAGE T S A HECK OF
and
attached garage Large
alurn
num
s
d
ng
storm
doors
OFFE~S PLENTY OF
modern kitchen w th d sh
with f ont porch I le roof and
AN NVESTMENT
quality
home with cho de
and w ndows lu
he~t
2
ROO M NS DE AND out
Th s
wa15her and d sposa l Gas
garage Plu s 3 BR double LOW DOWN PAYMENT
locat
on
base
a
nd
a
sto
age
b
dg
This
NEW
K TCHEN
h
furnace ce ntra a r co n
w de fu n shed mob le home n cely rem ade ed 2 story
Don I Let Thts
CENTENARY
house .s in good epal r and
~BAT H S FORMAL L VING
home nc udes a new factory
d
ton
ng
uf
Illy
room
double
on back ot property that could
BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom home
p Iced a! $ 4 000
A ND D N NG LARGE
One Shp Away
kitchen forma d n ng rm
garage panel~d Lol90xx2l7
make your payments
fully carpeted with nice k I chen
FOYE~ AN D LARGE LOT
v ng rm w lh WB I rep ace fu I basement garage and en
From
You
C
ose
to
Ho
zer
Med
ca
LET'S
MAKE
A
DEAL
W TH PAT 0
OWNER
WHIT E AVE - 4 n ce rms &amp;
3 BR fu basement and extra lot Nice local on just
Center
SAYS Owner on th s l BR br ck
WANTS
T SOL D
M
bath Lot 00 X too Pr ce
VERY N CE 3 BED~OOM
shady awn I 5 900
home
In
Jack
son
Co
Pr
ce
r ght for your tam ly
MED ATELY
S7 000
HOME WTH FA MLY
RIVER property on
lot
nc
udes
go
nJI
business
8
LOWER RIVER ROAD
ROOM
F REPLACE
NEARLY OWNER wants home sold New
130 x440
Three bedroom s
ac
es
and 800 road frontage INVE STMENT
EVERGREEN
969
K
rk
WIFE
APPROVED
NEW Res lau ant and al electr c J bedroom home
modern kitchen w th d sposal
on Sl Rt R ght on Jackson
wood Mobile Home wi th 2
K TC HEN
LARGE
New Ltsltng
ca
y
out
food
serv ce Real fully carpefl'd garage and a
Fuel o I heat c ty water Two
cons der
Lake Owner w
~ V N G ROOM
VE~Y
m s added located on ' A
es
ale
and
a
equ
pment goes nice evel lot Look today and
3 Or 4 Bedroom
car garage Has new drapes
trade and help you get started
NEAT &amp; CLEAN 122 SOO
lla l land Use either good
w
th sale Located near Gav n make us an offer
and
carpet
Located
on
State
the
bus.lness
n
1
N
C TV
SC HOOL
dr led wei a Rural Water
Plus 2 1 Acres
Pant
Route 1 ;, m le North of Rf
5 GREEN ACRES
NEIGHBORHOOD ROAD
D STRICT
M LE OUT
PrceS2700
PLU S 3 BR home n Jackson Co
28
NICE 3 bedroom sect onal home
OF
TOWN
BE THE F RST TO SEE
On y 7 ml es from Rio F HA WOUL D PROBABLY
POPLAR RIDGE RD
n city schoo d sfr ct forced a r
tH S VERY N CE 3 OR 4
FINANCE THIS ONE
301 Acre Farm
KYGER
C
eek
School
new
split
G ande Only $15 000
fu
nace w ndow air cond tioner
Country
I
v
ng
of
Its
best
4
BEDROOM 2 ST ORY
$16 900 buys th s n ce 6 rm and a nice lot Good v ng for
evel 3 B R home all e ec
PEYTON
P.LACE
miles
off
Rt
7
beaut
ful7
big
EXCELLENT
PA
ST
URE
MOME LARGE l V NG
homewtha 2x 20fam ly m only s l :100
heat pump a r condition IT S NOT VInton s the ocat on
rooms 4 bd rm rec rm 2
FOR BEEF 2 LA~GE
0 N NG K TCHEN AND
and modern bu It n k tchen
fam
y
oom
n
ce
k
fchen
of th s n ce 2 BR home w
4 ACRES
baths klfchen 2 x 25 w th
BARNS
LAR:GE
DEN ALL CA R~ETED
w
th
d
sposa
d
shwasher
LOVELY new home with 1 800
garage and garden spot ght
bar and plenty n ce cab nets
TOBACCO BA SE F YOU
K
TCHEN
S
r efr g e ra or ranoe ut 1 ty
on Jackson Ave
P ced we EASTERN AVE $14 500 v ng space four bedrooms
WANT TO RASE CATTLE
It has a full base with garage
ESPECIALLY
N CE
I DEAL FOR HOME OR BIZ tam dy room three baths full
room
one
ca
garage
Pr
ce
below mar ket
TH IS S THE PLACE
26 x 24 Plenty water and
W TH ALL APPLIANCES
r educed
- N ce 6 m home featu es basement with two car garage
IT DOESN TTAKE
BU LT N LARGE LAWN
152 500
located on 10 acres fenced
some pane ng and carpet ng Best buy I ve seen
A
THIEF
PLU S2 ACRE S NEEO S A
and Only S27 500
3
Bedroom
Brtck
p us alum num s d ng storm
BRICK
sp
t
eve
w
th
hat
TO
stea l
tfl s
nve~ tme nt
L TTLE PANT AND S
5 ACRES
w ndow s and carport.
basement
3
B
R
tu
ly
PR CEO AT 124 900 00
FOUR room house cealed on
property on Fourth Ave Three
EXCELLENT HOME IN
ADD SON - I m e off R 7
carpeted n ce k !chen w th
OWNER HOP NG FOR
apartments $10 000
T ck R dge Road spr ng wafer
AN EXCELLENT NE ( H
beau fu
rambl ng 7 rm
ENO
OVER AN ACRE of n ce place n the country on a
QU CK SALE
d sposal
d shwasher
BO~HOOD
1 , BATHS
VACANT
LAND
1 arne Ranch on A o It has ref gerator and freezer cen
and p us a ovely 6 rm
BEAUT FUL KITCHEN 2
hardtop road priced at SS 000
35 ACRES Thompson Road
everyth ng a carpet over
country home Lots of goOd
air
and
heat
pump
fam y
ra
CAR GARAGE CENTRAL
7 ACRES
New Ltslmg
ees
Morgan
Twp
Lots
of
t
HWfscena
FPn
v ng can be had tor only THREE room house
room 2 car ga age n Kyger
A R ON PERFECT LOT
two
Weekenders
par
ad
se
ec rm N Gas heat 2 baths
$16900
Creek Schoo D st Price
bu d ngs n ce 14 x 64 mobile
v m 15 x 26 and a k chen
EXCELLENT LOCAT ON
reduced
home a r con severe good
3 ACRES plus fantast c v ew
AT EDGE OF TOWN 3
Butldt ng Lots
ave Low taxes
he M s w
1 YEAR OLD - Lovely 5 rm a
bu ld ng s te s Can be bought
Po
lly
fenced
Md
son
Twp
NICE
BEDROOMS
and good schools AI of th s
Best Selechon Ever
e ec r c home c ose to new w th or w thout mob e home
2 BR on Garf e d Ave lot 42 X
Make offe on th s m n
FAMLY ROOM LARGE
for $l2 500
hosp ta ofle s l BR ba h
410 to the Oh o River full
21 ACRES
ranch
LV NG AND PRETTY
WE
HAVE
LARGE
WW carpet garage br ck NICE rol ng land w th a good
C
TY
821
Second
Ave
6
b
g
basement
gas
furnace
bath
K TCHEN
SEE THIS
SELECT ON OF PR ME
fr ont and 100 It frontage four bedroom house bath
ms and bath 2 story fram e
carpeted nice kitchen w fh DREAM N ot the country 1 te
ONE
MMED ATE OC
BUILD NG LOTS FROM
$22 500
on
a
large
c
ty
of
It
has
a
lie
CUPANCY
refr
gerato
sJo
m
doors
and
plenty of water two car garage
You
dreams
come
true
at
'ACRE UP TO 10 ACRES
bock garage and sto age
windows Ia ge garage meta
and a workshop with a
Rancho Our baby farms "
CLOSE TO TOWN OR N
bldg Th s hou se s sound
storage bu ld ng concrete
Raq::oon Twp a e se ling BRAND NEW &amp; PRICED f replace Good country llv ng
THE
COUNTRY
PR
CEO
Read
These
RIGHT at S22 SOO
This
structura l y w h 1ust a tile
driveway and pat o Price
222 ACRES
FROM$3000 UP I F YOU
now On y a few eft Take
qua
ty
bu
II
3
BR
home
has
a TOP da ry farm owner must
pa
nt
would
make
some
one
a
Descrtpltons
We II
$21 000
ARE
TH NK NG
OF
you cho ce of 5 6 7 and one
br ck front garage factory sell due to health Large barn
n ce comfo able home n a
BU LONG BE SURE
10 acre tract before I s too
Show You One Or All
kitchen w th a arge d n ng 529 ton s o new Grade A
AND SEE THESE
good res dent a area Pr ce LOTS on R ver at Add son 00
ate Fo persona show ng
area WW carpet 2 bafhs 22 m k ng par or herd can be
on y ~ 0 000
X
701 and co~nty water
see Steve Oenve or Joy
NEARLY NEW 3
f LR and a large lot 10m
purchased w th the farm It
$l
000
ea
Owner W1ll
Te ms ava able
CENTENARY
If you are
BEDROOM
W TH
from own
des red Home is ver
vab e
&gt;ACRE
LOTS
BEAUT FUL K TCHEN
oo&lt; ng fo ocat on quality
Help Fmance
100
A
LAND
n
Per
y
Twp
on
w
th
ots
of
room
Plenty
of
Rl
41
county
water
STATE
GARAGE AND LARGE
and price don t pass th s one
CLOSE NORTH GALLI A HIGH water pasture crop and
State Route and Rura Water
Green Twp EZ terms
FLAT LOT CARPETED
F YOU WANT A LARGE
by 6 rms bath aundry and
N ce y remode ed
SCHOOL
Even ngs Cafl446 4244
$10 000
THROUGHOUT
19.0
COUNTRY HOME WITH
attached garage
Price
7
rrn
home
on ~ large ot
Sleven Bell 446 9583
2 3 BEDROOM HOUSE
PLENTY OF ROOM N
$2l 500
Owne an x ous to sell
John Fulfer 446 4327
22 A on Spruce Sf Exlens on
W TH
F REPLACE
S DE AND OUT SEE TH S
$22 000
GARAGE
BASEMENT
TODAY
4
OR
5
ACROSS HWY from AD
NEW LISTING-OWNER BOU
EXTRA LOT
S~2 900
BE D~OOMS
FORMAL
DAVILLE SC - Beaut fu 5
GHT A FARM and s w II In~
MAKE OFFER OWNER
D NING 3 BATHS FULL
rm br ck &amp; frame w th Are you look ng for a very n ce
to pa I w th th s lovely 3 BR.
W LL HELP F NANCE
BASEMENT ON 2 &gt; A
home in city on Second Ave ?
ul ty rm &amp; bafh
arge
nome w m n wa K ng o stance- MOBILE home space close to
3 4 BEDROOMS FULL
LOT
N EXCELLENT
Excel en! condlt on
two
ca par Loca ed on 2 A flat
hospital on State Route 35
of the hospital
Spec al
BASEMENT
F AM LV
LOCAT ON
M LE
story t wo bedrooms and
lo
P
ce
educed
fo
$22
SOO
446 0294 or 367 7736
featu es are a formal din ng
ROOM CA~ PETED L R
FROM
SC HOOL AND
arge d n ng
oom
bath
Ill If
rm
carpeted
LR
w
fh
&amp; D N NG ROOM S2D 500
POOL KYGER CREEK
downsfa rs
shower
lull
ST RT 218
4room house and
I ep ace full basement
TAX 0 ST
BUYS TH S BA~GA N
basement
second story
A lot On y $6 000
ovely den fin shed n knotty 3 BEDROOM 1972 Mob e home
Steve Roach 446 4677
fin
shed
can
be made nto
I nen cookware a r con
4 LOVELY 3 BEDROOM
p ne w th wood burn ng FP
Owner Wtll
three bedrooms good ~arage
KANAUGA
Neat 5 room
Jay Sheppard 446 0001
d t oned
telev s on
fur
W TH FAM LV ROOM
garage and a large 00x300
a so a n ce renta In back with
cot age less han 10 yrs o d
Denver K Higley 446 000
n
shed
W
I
renf
to
l
men
S20
AND
EXTRA
LOT
Help F1nance
lot Shown by appointment
separate dr veway close to
H W f oo s p enty k tchen
LARGE
ROOMS
a
week
each
$50
deposit
on
y
Thts 4 Bedroom
g ocery slo e ot 77 X 43
equlred Ready July 1 992
TH~OUGHOUT
EXTRA
cab nets bath &amp; ut ty oom
Home
GOOD BUY
OWNER
It has a ca port w th large
3509 M dd eporf Ohio
NEW LISTING ~ STATE
A LAND at Northup (i)hlo
LEAV NG A~EA
s Ia age
m
Pr ce only
146 If
GENE PLANTS &amp; SON
ROUTE 588 - A most new 3
w
th 2 bedroom home w th ful
5 S 1 500 0 R BEST
$14
9.00
F YOU NEED HELP
PlUMBING - Heat ng - A r
BR ranch Th s beauty has a
OFFER BUYS TH S 3
basement arge vlng room
FARMS
F NANC NG AND NEED
Condit onlng 300 Fourth Ave
ovely bu It In kitchen WW SLEEPING rooms weekly
BEDi,RDOM HOUSE AT
3 n ce closets stove and deep
A LARGE HOME YOU
rates tree garage parking
Ph 446 16l7
carpet
air co nd
2 car
EDGE OF TOWN CAR
27 A ON St Rl 141 below
freeze storm w ndows and
CAN GET IT HERE 3
L bby Hotel
4811
garage
and114acresof
and
PET
L V NG ROOM
Cadmus It has a Mechanics
door fuel oil furnace rural
BATHS FAM LV ROOM
241 If
The full basement ncludes a
B G KITCHEN
Gar 5 oom house wi h at
F REPLACE
K TCHEN
water bath large garage
CARTERS
PLUMBING
Ia
ge
stone
f
replace
bu
f
n
6 ~ KE NEW MOB LE
!ached sto e bldQ
also a
AND
D N NG
ALL
and pal o Pr ce $20 000
AND HEATING
bar bath laundry rm and an TRAILER spaces 446 3B79 or
HOME ON AN ACRE LOT
DOWNSTA RS
CAR
second house that could be
3677438
Cor Fourth &amp; P ne
unfln she~ 4th BR
ON THE RVER VE~Y
PETED
EXCELLENT
repa red Buy the bundle for 3 BEDROOM house k tchen
154 If
446
l888
or
446
4417
Phone
N CE HOME AND EX
LOCAT ON
N
R 0
$18 000
bath and n ce front porch at
165
tf
CELLENT LOT
WE
NEED
AN
OF~ER
60
GRANDE
Chesh re Oh o Pr ce reduced
Gaflfa
ac es vacant land n Addison SLEEPING rooms
ST RT 2 8 11 A Ap
to $12 500
Hotel
RUSSELLS
Twp - about 20 acres II able
prox malely
0 A Guyan
We Need Ltsltng
94 If
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING
w th the ba ance n woods
Bottom balaoce shill gentle 47 Garf eld Ave
very
n
ce
Gall polls 446 4782
slope and flo 1 829 lb lob
We Sell More Property than Anyone Else trl
home with new carpet and
297 It HOME PLUS NCOME
2 APARTMENT and new mobile
sell
2
381
lb
fh
s
year
base
Southeastern Ohto
drapes centra a r con
horne central a r and heat
a
most
new
a
electr
c
mob
e
buyer gets hall the
73
dlt on ng front room 22 x 14
exce
lent condition ~46 Ol38
DEWITT
S
PLUMBING
homes
located
m
le
off
oute
p
oceeds
It
has
a
5
m
F YOU WAN T T SOLD
w fh woodburn ng f replace
137 If
AND HEATING
7 n Addison Twp L ve n one
CALL U S
modern house plenty water
modern
kitchen
lui
Route
I&gt;Oat
Evergreen
and rent the other
good barn 60 x 66 w lh 10 cow
basement new ca rpo I and
4 BR 1 ' bath central air
Phone 446 2735
APARTMENT
HOUSE
Gal Ita Co S Largest
slane h ons Th s s a good buy
r ver v ew Pr ce $22 500
double wide a I Ql I t es pa d
8711
Upper rou e 7 - th s p operty
for $21 500
Rea I Estate Sales Agency
$250 mo 446 1~
could
pay
for
tse
f
n
5
years
Ofltce 446 3643
VACANT LAND
COTTAGE on Evans Helghfs
SJtf
STANDARD
Call today and find out how
25
A
Level
land
at
Rodney
On
ol
45
X
125
mode
n
k
tchen
Plumb ng &amp; Heating
Evenmgs Call
water ne p ce 535 000
the who e house n exce ent
214 Th d Ave 446 3782
6
ADD SON TOWNSHIP
E M
Ike
Wtseman446 37961
Look ng tor a mob1le home
cond ton a so garage Pr ce
87 If
LOTS - ASKING 540000
63 A Wa d Rd F nanc ng
E N Wtseman 446 4500
lot ot a qual tv mob le hdme?
515 000
ava abl~ $ 8 000
L----~----------------We have both at
NEW SECT ONAL - KC School
A ~ARGE home w th 5
Dst
s
6900
w
sound
9 A ac oss hwy from Sh ne
bedrooms modern k tchen
BY OWNER 1 m es from
cheap after you see th s love y
Club On u a wate
ne
2 ba h g~s furna ce smal
Country
home
on
Gall po s most beaut ful
3 BR a I e eel c home w th 2
S NGER Sewing Mach ne Sales
$ 7 000
basement new oof larg e lot
country home around 4 years
baths shag carpet un
&amp; Service A
modes n
Raccoon Creek 3 plus
4l X 175 on Second Ave
ANY HR 446 1998
o d 2 bedroom all elect lc
derground ut I t es beam
stock Free del very Service
acres 3 B R carpeted
br ck rancher farge carpeted
ce ilings arge flat lot and ow
guaranteed Models p ce
OFFICE 446 1066
ltvtng
room
wtth
game room b~ It In k !chen
down payment
f om $69 95 French C ty
EVENINGS
Ia ge lot good boating
Fab lc Shoppe S nge ap
ftreplace ctty schools
Russell Wood 446 4618
$29.500 full price lmmed ale
proved
dealer 58 Court Sf NEW LIST NG - Th s nee 1
Ron Canaday 446 3636
Rodney Cora Rd
197l - Z g Zag sewing moch ne
Ph 446 9255
m home Is about 12 yrs o d
possess on Phone 256 1369 $37 500 Call 446 0089
John I Rtehards 446 0280
Rodney Oh o
Th s mach ne darns
em
befo e 5 p m or phone
and oc a ed n a qu e sub
31Ml I
Hours9am tot~pm
Proc
Hun nglon 6977425 after 6 JO SE PH Realty Co
d v son on US 35 HW floo s 3
broiders overcasts button
Monday thru Saturday
hoes
All
w thou!
at
BRs large din ng rm u ty
forv le Ohio 886 6440 45 '
pm
Ph 245 9374- 245 5021
1624
acres lays nice 125 b
rm and ca po I a e on y a
tachments Pay balance of
tobacco base old 7 room
few of he spec al lea ures
Sl8 50 or pay $5 per monlh
house w th picturesque view
LARGE water trpnt lot good
$22 000
BRADBURY
eft clency
137 f( · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
Ca I 446 0255
boating deal for summer
Separate Ira ler hookup
apartmenls Adulfs only no
cyc lone cellar with water
WE HAVE LOTS &amp; VACANT
home orcamp s te Phone 256
pets avallab e July 10 open
comp lete $ S 500 or house GOOD C EAN LUMP and
WOODLAND
N
ALL
1369 before 5 p m o phone
lor appl cat ons 129 Second
stoker coal Car Winters Rio
DIRECTION S FINAN
w th ' acre $4 500 After
Huntington 697742S afte 6
Ave
Grande Phone 245 5115
hours call Robert Bunsey 304
CIN G AVAILABLE ON
ptn
160 If
611
62 4
736 7315
MOST PARCELS
162 5
LIST NGS
N EE DED
CLOSE to own brand new B
_Y
__O
_W
_N
_E
_R
___
l _ y_ea
- - -o- d 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
SLEEPING room range and
ESPEC.ALL Y FARMS
summer cottage 2 bedrooms
refr gerator ut lites pa d US
NATIONWIDE
AD
built n k tchen bath and
frame
al
e
ectr
c
bedroom
per month men only Calf 446
Locatton
From
Galltpolts
follow
Route
1
VERTISING
PAYS
shower arge lake front ot
thermopane glass aftached
l 844 after 1 p m
Ronny
Blackburn
Phone 256 ll69 before 5 p m
ga age 2 m les from town oo
south approxtmateiy 18 mtles turn nght on
16l 6
Branch Manager
o phone Hunt ngton 697 7425
SR 588 Phone 446 0313
the
Hannan
Trace
Road
and
go
'11
mtle
turn
afte 6 p m
161 6
162 4 - -- - - - - rtghl and follow the Swan Creek Road 2 mtles
--------BY OWNER 3 ~~~ 1 2 baths 2
Watch for Sale Stgns
HOUSE w th attached garage
car garage large kitchen
comp efoly furn shed. ncl
d n ng area 1 replace be
range refrigerator wosher
tween town and hospital 446
dryer 2 BR bath LR kit
9274
chen utility rm e&lt;fra larg e
U930
family rm
large concre te
Located on West Matn Street (Rear) m Oak
patio approx one ha f acre SHULTZ mob le home 12 x 65
One good herd bull 2 yearllnQ h eifers 3 cows
Htll
Ohto Watch for Stgns
lot w th largo automollve
t t out LR w th l acres ot
with calves by side Health papers w II be
wo kshop and ut I ty building
and all necesslt es on
furnished
Raccoon Creek 446 0077
Ca I 446 2812 after S p m
1626
165 3
SATURDAY JULY21 1973
Starlmg at 10 30 A M
LAND n R o Grande In c ty
lim Is or out 1 to 10 acres
FOR SALE
1 reg stored
owner con I nonce 245 5l20
Morgan
mare
and colt 446
162 6
Farm wagon new Hol1&lt;1nd tobacco setter 32
Cons st ng n part of Oak S de Board w th Beveled
3879 or 367 74l8
foot
hay
eievalor
Case
manure
spreader
M
ror 6 Oak Chars with Lions Paw Feet Rocking
Building
Sites
Cha rs Chairs Beaut fu Old Pictures and Frames Old
Oliver hay baler Oltver hay rake 2 bottom 12
I".Va' I able Klngsberry
Jewel y st II on theca ds &amp; some 24kt gold) of all k nds
Inch Ford plows (like new) 3 pi hitch tractor
Homes buill to fit at'ly
unma ked Weller Clocks of al k nds Hat Pins Watch es
scoop {used very I title) 3 pt h tch scraper
Stone Jars &amp; Jugs Old Glass Top Frulf Jars ROger
IStHIC ill cations
All
Brothers Sliver Monogrammed S lver Old Irons
blade
500
bales
of
good
mixed
hay
also
hand
untJE rground Utilities
Quadruple
Pate Casserole Merbleo &amp; Combos Dlohos 11o
tools such
p tchforks
shovels
c hain
Prr1v1ded
G assware Trunks Th mbt.- Old Eye Glasses Crocks
binders and other m scellaneous items
Botlles Scales M k Bolt es etc Lofo of Antiques and

WISEMAN
AGENCY

Realty 32 State St
Tel 4461998

WOOD

REALTY

REALTOR
446-1066

For Rent

qq6-0001

---'----

Plumbmg &amp; Heatrng

- - -- - -

-----

- - - -- -

------ - - - -- -

- - - - --

------

------

- - -- - -----For Sale

QUAIL CREEK

MOBILE
COMMUNITY
&amp;SALES

For Sale

------

------

--------

TARA

PUBLIC SALE

TliURSDAY, JULY 19, 1973, 11:00 A.M.

------

------

DEVELOPMENT
OORP.

NEW
HOMES
FOR SALE

For Sale

PUBLIC
NOTICE

Wo .. n anything for
enybod1 Bring your
Item• to Knoth Com
munlly Auction Born
Corn or Third &amp; 011 vt
For lppolnlmont uti
1!6 6967 lftor 5 p m
Sole evory S.turd1y
evening 11 1 o Clock

AUCTION
SERVICE

''SEU

IHt ~CTION

WAY"

PUBLIC AUOION

MACHINERY. AND TOOLS

as

---------For Information

Or Appointment

JIMME SAYRE

PHONE

AUCTIONEER

367-7250

PH. 446-3444

9-HEREFORD CATTLE-9

Addiso._n

0

Co ec lor s Item s A very large sale
TERMS CASH
Lunch Available
CECILIPETE) PHILLIPS OWNER
AUCTIONEERS
Lee Johnson
Tommy Joe Stewart
Crown Ctly Ohto
Gallipolis Ohio
Phone 256 6740
Phone 446 3941

TERMS CASH
TERMS CASH
LUNCH WILL BE SERVID
Dorl Albon
- AUCTIONEERsKtnntllo Swoltt
Oiok Hill OhiO
G1lllpolle (IIIIo
NOT RESPONSIBLE FI)R ACCIDINTS

�'

...

:

22 - The SUnda; Times - Sentinel, Sunday, July 15, 1973

BUY NOW

July·Specials

SHOP AROUND THEN COME ·DOWN
TO
..
SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

. 1972 NOVA "6"·--·- --------2295
1

1-73 SEDAN DeVILLE
DEMONSTRATOR

4-door . local t-owner. light green finish. good
tir es. automatic tran s missio n. powe r s teer ing ,
radio, real economy.

SAVEl

--------------------------

2-seat wagon o'350 V-B engin e. power steeri ng &amp;
power brakes, automatic transmi ss ion , radio ,
positractlon rear axle, good tires. peig e finish ,
excessive mileage but regularl y serviced &amp; '·
priced to go.

Clearance!

.

e

green leiither Interior, lull power equlpmenl.

stereo radio with tape pla ye r , power antenna,

trn ted

glass, power doo r locks. T&amp; T wheel, cru ise contro_l,
!!feel belled Radial tires and Clima te Contr ol ~·r ·

i
l

=

roof, blue interior with dua l com lorf sea l, AM-FM
stereo radiO with tape player. power antenna, tinted
glass, power door locks, T&amp; T wheel. cruise control,
stee l belted radial t ires and Climate Con-trol air con ditioning .

''

Bonneville

~

roof , green interior, full power equ lpment, tirited glass,
power door locks, .T&amp; T wheel , Guidematic headlight
contro l. steel belted Radial tires , AM-FM radio and
Climate Control air condition ing.

[r
••
,.',.'

2 More Sedan
De Villes Coming!

f

t

See: Ceward Calvert, Peggy Story or Bi!l Nelson_
We Service
What Ule Sell

I

71 CHEV.

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
Cadillat · Oldsmobile
GMAC Financing Available

992-5342

Open Eves'. Til6-Til

Ton·--------- 2589
1

o/.1

350 . V-8, 15" H. Duly tires, 3 speed std. trans .•
red finish, sharp as new truck inside &amp; out.

OUR WORD IS
OUR
BOND
•

Pomeroy

s P.M. Sat.

IMMEDIATE

" You'll like Our Quality Way of Doing Business"

.soo

E. Main St., Pomeroy, ()hi.o ·

For Rent

TRAILER spaces on Route 7, IN CHESHIRE, 2 bedroom
positively no drinking, no
singles. $40 per mo., water
and sewer furnished. 256-1180.

conditioned, water

·furnish~d .­

162-6 . $135 per month. call 367-7645.
163-4

V-B, auto. trans .. P.S.

PRICES SLASHED!

992-2126

For Rent
NOW

I

2 000~,. !1-T.. V-B, auto. trans, \(lnyl
~oof. ·
.

.

68x14 -

2 ·BEDROOMS

" Golden Empress" in Spanish decor. Fully carpeted,
· house type door, storms &amp; screens. Deluxe all thru with
Fiberglass tub and shower, bath &amp; lh, If/' chestnut
paneling. Famous Guerdon quality home. Delivered and
1
se t up.
.

fully

carpeted ,

No pets. Call Oakwood apart.
ments. 446-3643.

64x 14 ....,. 3 BEDROOMS

"Golden Empress". tully carpeted, house type door,
storms &amp; sc reens . Deluxe throughout with bath &amp; half,
Fiberglass tub &amp; shower, 1;,.'' Chestnut paneling, 30 gal.
water heater. Top line home by GUerdon . Delivered and
~t u p.
·

'~~~

:

Cle!~~nce

$7895

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

60x12 -

2 BEDROOMS

By Hallmark. Total electric, fully carpeted , cat hedral
ceiling, all storms &amp; screens, house type door . A quality
home redu ced in price to go . Delivered and set up.

- - , -- -- 4 ROOMS and bath,

un -

furnished , centrally located,

$120 par month Call 446-3B44
after 1 p.m .
165-6

992-2196 ;

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

166·3

LA DIES, 5 immediate openings EXPERIENCED

Help Wanted

full or parttime and choose
your own hours , for in te rviews cal l 446- 4 03~.
164-3

GENERAL Mechani c with

wheel
alignment
and
·balancing ex;per ience. Con Ia cI Har, old Davis, Ga II ipol is :-:
N::
E::E::
D::
S-:L'::P-:N-:o_r_r_e':':
t i-re-:d-:R
::-:N to

Motor Co. 446-3672.

· 151.tf

work In nur sl nQ home. Can
live in. Wr ite Box 313, Rt. 1.

~::-:-:--::--::------

fully CLEANING Woman . Apply in
baths

$160. 245-5439.

Ironton, Oh io.

person affer 2: 30p.m. Fr en ch _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _165-3

Quarters.
165-lf

-----

SLEEPING ROOMS, weekly
rafes . Park Cenfral Hotel.

306-11
-'-~:-:-:=-:--~

145-lf

EXPERIENCED

body · metal socia security plates .
Free scales kit. Charles F.

mechan ic , con tact Harold

Inboden, P. 0 . . Box 19701 ,
Columbus, Ohio 43219.
166· I

Davis. Gallipolis Motor Co.
446-3672.
140-lf

-:-:-:-:-::--:- - -

2 BR . MOBILE HOME. Upper
River Road. 446-0008.
155-lf

Friday 10 to 9, 446•0677.

--.,---.,----,:-:-:-

EXTRA moner - sell engraved

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

APARTMENT for construction
men. P . 446-0756.
267-11

you've

rYlOSf

homes

pl ci yment

Ser v ices ,

Second Avenue. An

443

Equal

Opportunity Empl oyer .

.

•

165·3

WELCOME Wag on hostess

wanted
for
Pomeroy .
Gallipolis-Rome area . Mature

Anton. 56 Avon Place, Athens,
Ohio, Area ~ode 61~ - 592 · 1214
or Gall ipol is 446·0041.
166·3

Manager's offi ce, 518 Second
Avenue .

have car, call MondCi y .l hru

1639 Eastern Ave.
'It•

· - - - - --

TRENDHOMES by NATIONAL

ever seen .

and

referen'"s .

Construction,

Ave.,

446 · 3~8

107

Second

or 446-9867 .
152-15

plann inQ.

, su per io r

wafk through

a

Many Other
Mobile Homes

Design 212

MODEL HOME LOCATED
1 MILE N. OF FIVE POINTS
ON RT. 7, POMEROY, 0.

All Floor Plans
50x12 to 70xl4
2 &amp; 3 Bedrooms

lfDIOOil l

llfi.G

1!11

Open For l11spechon
SAT. &amp; SUN. - 1 TOS· P.M.

~OOM '

IS I 14

L Jlll

44 )( 24

1038SQJT. UPP•R LEVEL
.
207UQ. FT. TOTALLIVINQAAEA

- __

. ."

...... -

".

II

,,...._~r..o-

" .. ---...-

""B_!!ILT BY..___.....,.
B&amp;K EXCAVATING
,_...__. ................
SALESREPRESENTATIVE:
.

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR., BROKER
Associates: Helen L. Teaford, Gordon·

B, Teaford

PHONE 992-332.5
EQ~AL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITIES ·

'

110 MECHANIC SJREET

POMEROY, OHIO

TOOL

sharpening ,

~clssors,

saws,

shears, home and

garden lopts. Sharp Shop,
Alley rear, 147 Second.
216·11
.

For Rent or Lease
OFFICE. space lor Ieese, 2~d
Ave. ecron from City Par~ .
Available alter July 31 . Call .
446· 1819 or aee John Ecker.
131 -lf

.

.

Robbins &amp;Myers.
GALLI POLIS, 0.

Byerly

FINANCING
WF. SERVICE
WHAT WE SELL

fea1Ure.s from
front to the ~a ck . 9~~·­

AT

.

· experience,
job. Also do rooting,
free 4yr
estimates
. local

B&amp; WMDiiNT
CLEANING SEI!VICE
GENERAL hOuse cleenlng . We
supply all the cleaning sup.
plies . 388-8875atter 6 p.m. call
38B·B865. Weekly or monthly
cleaning by appointment.
91 -lf

many

styl es
Each home a superb
model with su per ior

you'll know .

-E XPANSION

storm door with each 1,000 ft.
min. an alum . or vlhyl siding

s.tu nning

ha ve

"

1'

•

Local manufacturer has grown In production and 1$ now

expanding facilities. New jobs now open, excellent
working condition and good ~age . fringe benetlls.

·REPAIR TECHNICIAN ·
Experience in Maintenance &amp; Repair ol progreulve dleo,
(carbide) jigs and fixtures work.

TOOL DESIGNER
Design Production looting, handle equipment ollerottons
and maintain prints - ot lea~! one year of mech~nlcol
drawing eXperience- and knowledge of g_
enerlll ma chine

tools reqUired .

Machi ne maintenance rePftlr exper'lence In mnchlne
repair .

PROCESS PLANNER TRAINEE
2

ve~r · usoclale technl r-~~~

dMiree. No e)'tperlence

nocessory. Will learn to specify method and tooling
·
necled with manufacturer of electric motors olldcorp
pertorm machine &gt;l~dles .

Come In and makt 'IPiillcaiiQn btlw.. n e A.M. ;. 4 P.M.
OR MAIL ATTACHED 1

ROlliN$ &amp; MYIRS, INC.
Bob /licCormlc~ Rd. of! Rl. lt
GA~LIPDLIS, 0 ,

DOWNTOWN b~stneos space
for tease, 2nd Ave., acrou
from City Park. Approx . 2,1100
Sq. Ft., available after July
31. Call ~46- 1819 or 406-1176 or
see John Ecker.

•

Gallipolis

I am Interested In Position of- - - - -- - - NAME ---------------TILIPHON I -------·1
STREET------..._....:.._ _ _ __

-,---,.~...:..~--131-lf LJi'~T~V;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~JT~A~U:.;;;;:J

•

t

lo!

446-3273

600 E. STATE ST.
&amp; 1200 E. STATE ST.
'' '
· '"' ·

. ATHENS,.OHIO
YOUR DEALER FOR

1

Since Smith Auto h11s discontinued
D11tsun ' w~ will be h11ppy
to 'service
.
.
any Datsuns 11 t out deplershiJl·

..

~.................................
.,
'
''
:• For le
: 196B HONDA 350 -excet'terit 1972 'I• ton Chevy truck, 350
lt condition, S350. 446-0851. ,_ engine, .low mileage. 38B·8630.

.

1~

'• 12

Av~nue.

SAYS

At

track stereo in lOvely

446-444 1.

han~ -

1970 GMC '" ton Pickup, Ex- rubbed walnut console. Pay ----.,.-~--cellent Condition. 256-6544.
bat•one e of $101 ·••o or pay ••
10 HO LLEY Bros.
· · Construction,
·
~166·3 per month. Call 446-0255.
bulldozing, back hoe work, .
59 · 11
19 62 FORD Falcon Auto . ----~-..,.---1_
ditch ing, under roads, boring.
Trans. , good running con- 1958 VOLKSWAGEN, 40 H.P. Phone 245-SOIB or 245-5006.
118 ·11
dillon. 446-4379.
motor. looks good, runs good .
166·3 Priced to sell. $275. Phone 446· - -C-en- t-ra_I_A_ir_C_o-nd_i_llo-n-in-g
4999.
&amp; Healing
1970 BSA 4dl motorcycle, 446·
162 ·6
.
Fre~
Estima1es
9669. Call after 5 p.m.
Stewart's Hardware
165·3 J967 OLDSMOBILE 4 door , PS
Vinton, Ohio
--::----,--&amp; PB, extra clean , can be
5 YEAR OLD black Appaloosa
seen
at
· Meadowbrook --~-----mare and sorrel colt 5400, 1
Dr
..
Poin\
.
Pleasant, 675· INSTALLING
a luminum
Year old regisler ed A~abian
2195.
163·6
siding
,
gutters
and down
colt 5250. 446· tB09.
spouts. For free estima te call
- - - - - : : -'-'---166·3 12 x 65 FT. 1972 Ramada OC· collect 367-01 2B.
130-26
1971 14 x 64 MOBILE home on
cupied B months. Call 446·
lot in Cheshire. Call 367 - 7~35
0692 .
~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iii;.
after 5 p.m.
163-6
166 ·25' 1-9_7_1 _M-IN-c_________
l b-ikc-e-,_g_oo_dc-c-o-nd'Cilion
":' , LOOK
.
~
" NEVER used anything like
S&lt;l. Phone 446·0050 ·
AT IT
1
3
it," says users of Blue lustre
64THIS WAY
lor clean ing carpel. Rent --------~
• ·• •
electric shampooer S1 at 1973 HONDA Elsinore, CR 250 M EXTERMITAL TERMITE AND

c0

·

166 _6

Mo to rcycle . 446 -3732 after

5:30p.m.

162-5

x 60 '1973 .MOBILE home, 2 2 'MALE AKC · registered
: BR , l!x~e ttenl co~d(llon. ~~7 .
Dachshund lor sale and one to
, 0224 ilr 367-7698.
lrade. Phone 3B8·8B75.
'
162·6
165-3
NEW EUREKA uprigHt model ~KrE-N,:.N"'E_l_S..,....
of-!=-al-h-oun, AKC
' 'Ot2A, S59.95. Phone 367-7736 .
Toy Poodle PuPPies an.d
: Davl• Vacuum Cleaner Store,
Siamese ktllens, 256-6247.
, St. R'l. 7, at Addison, 0 .
·
165-26

1973

CHEV~

'3795
1972 MUSTANG
V-8, auto., P.S., P . B., 19,000
miles, sharp, LeSabre trade .

siding or anything washable.

166-3 TWO left in layaway 1913 B

_ _ _ _ _ _...,.:.__

DATSON Phone 592-4463

'
:,

2124112 Eastern

entra t Supply

JeCAPRI • DATSUN • SUBARU. • MARK IV
., ' '

Ru ssell 's. Plumbing, 446-47B2
1966 PONT. Bonn. 2 dr . Hard· COACHMAN Travel Trailers.
297-lf
lop. Air cond .. new paint, very Mol or Homes, 5th Wheel, - - - , - - - - - ; good cond. $500. 245·5873.
Truck Campers, App le City GILLENWATER'S septic tank
166·3 Auto Sales, Rl. 35 N. Ja ckson , clean ing and repai r, al so
-------~Ohio. Phone 286-5700.
house wrecki ng . Ph . 446-9499.
1963 - 9 passenger Chevrolet
118-11
Established in 1940.
·
slat,lon wagon, also iron gate. ----=---~-446-3521.
PRINTED
wedding
an 166-3
nouncemelit and invitations, 3
Spray Wash"
'C":'------. to 5 days servic~. Simmons CALLHot-Shot
·us for wash , wa x and
'71 GREMELIN X, A-1 con.
Ptg . &amp; Office Equip. 446-1397. degreasing of your trucks,
dillon . Call 446-2642 or see al
140-lf mobile homes, a lu minum

c

•MERCURY MONTEGO • COMET
•.)

In Stock
-All Going

Chey e nne Suburban, 13,000
miles, nice to pull camper .

..

b

V

, L&amp;M Phone _592-4491

'

••'
••

4161 .

r

• LINCOLN CONTINENTAL • COUGAR

Write P..O. Box 44,
BABYSITTER In my home,
Ferry, Ohio 43935 or phone middle -aged · woman
614-4B4-4440.
preferred.
References
166·12 required. 446-3690.
163-6

166-4 15 DAY SPE'CIAL ,- A flee

160·5

UP T012 YEAR

We

£

DALE'" R. SANDERS.·INC.
' ;

cro~ks.
Mar•ln~

BRANCH PLANT

*

·'

Wanted

glass,_blue decorated

166-3

WALLPAPERING and paint.
ing . Phone 446-9865 or i79·
2471.
f
B3-l

S86 Locust St,
992-7004
Middleport
Open 8 to 6 Mon. thru Sat.
Open Dolly 8 to 6, (Closed Sundays): Open Anytime by
Appointment. Conlacl Dan Thomoson or Tom L."venrl.r

. .

individual. flexible
hours to . .-----------~~~~~~------. . .
perform
an
tmp\ortant
community service. GOod
income. Call or write Shirley

That 's wh y your
marvelous new hOme
will look far more
than yOlJ pa id for i t .

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

n2~

·Gallipolis ~.Chrysler-Plymouth

Middleport, 0,

Wantetl To Buy

- Repa i r, hou se wi ri ng ,
electri c heating . Phone 446 -

SEPTIC TANKS

'26.7 5

t

50 New Buicks

DOC
SMITH

TERMITE PEST CONTROL
FREE Inspection. Call 446-3245.
Merrill O' Dell , Operator by

Cleaned and insta lled

CAMPER TOP, auto. trans., P.S., P. B.. A-1.

BABYSITTER, 446-1457 after 5
with typing and shorthand. OLD furniture , cupboard,
p.m.
Apply at Bureau of Em ·
desks, chests, also guns,
164·3

Do

---------------~-----·-------..
The '

bookkeeper

MALE or femal e, parllime SB4'a WATER treatment plant Wanted To
week, fu ll time $140, must ope ra to r . Appl y at .City BABYS ITTING . 446·4484.

•

. lmag lnet ive

WAS
$6695

Call 3BB-BB25.

162-tf
HOUSE In Gallipolis, 446-379B.
165-3

.

n~R~

.

164·3

DRY WAL L servi ce · by con.
tract. Willard Bosley, 446·
4954.

STEWART Electrical

FARMS
RESTAURANTS

$1495

2HJi.EVY ~1/V.o~ ~~~~e

e OPEN JULY 30

5. 3rd Ave.

carpeted house, 1112

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

1223.

:-::-:::-:-::-::--~-.,-­

2 DOOR
. CU PE, 6 Cyl., auto. trans., light blue.'

refrigerator, and stove fur nished. Located 1/:i mile from 3 BEDROOM mobile home
located In Bidwell. No pets
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .
downtown on 160 (old Rt . 35) .

MODERN 3 bedroom,

.

home, adults preferred. 256-

pointment. Ph . 446-1049 .
Please call alter 6 p.m .
27B-If

Exlerminet l Term ite Service,

.

'

:lA : F,1 P~P~~VERICK

KEITH GOBLE FORD, .INC.

efficf .ency FURNISHEO 2 bedroom mopile

apartments consisting o·t
living room, bedroom, and

I

FOR VACATIONS

Pomeroy

For Rent

available

bath ,

3 GREAT BARGAINS

"Your Chevy Dealer "
Open Eves .. Til8

Servi(e . 424 lf2 Fourth Ave .,
Kanauga . · Business by · ap.

0 8elmon t Dr .

. '6~.¥~~.CU~·'( MONTE~O M~$1495

I

WILL BE CLOSED THE WEEK OF JULY 23 THRU 28th

BOB LANE'S
Complete Bookkeepfng and Tax

•

•• •
•••
t
ii
••
1..

GALLIPOLIS. OHIU

Services Offered

'12 TON PICKUP, V-B, standard 'lh tft.

NEW 1973
GOLD DUSTERS

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

to Bob Evans Farms, P.O. Box 7863, Station G., Colum.
bus, Ohio. 43207 .

"69"f~T,E~N.~1"10NAI,.~
, ,.
, _,.--51295

~

LY
eE

Midwest ... best-known because ot the sausage and
restaurants that bear his name and hls reputation for
quality . Now. as the company e_
xpands an~ builds more
restaUrants, manag~ment trainees are needed, men who
. can move quickly into posftions as assistant managers
and managers. If you have a si ncere interest i~ r es ta urant
business and if you w;;1nt to work in an organization· where
standards of quaHty and service are the higheSt, we can
offer you an exciting and rewarding futu re. For fur1h er
information, ca ll· Herb Bush at 446-1482 or send a res um e

'

'

'

;-

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

Bob Evans is probabl y the best -known farmer In the

69' FORD MUSTANG _ _ ___.,1595

'

Goble Mobile
Homes ...

SEE THEM NOW AT • •

. RESTAURANT
MANAGEMENT TRAINEES

$1995

•

OUR PARTS AND SERVICE DEPARTMENTS

ROAD BIKES

50 STATE ST•

~ DOOR H.T., air cond ., P.S .• vinyl roof.

C-30 Step van, 12 ft., V-8 automatic.
G-10 Chevy Van 125" w-base, V-8, automatic.
K-10 Blazer, 4 wh. drive, V-8 automatic .

peled LR and Bedroom, air

.

H.T., V-B, auto. trans., P.S., P. disc brakes,

C-20 Pickups a·•, V-Bautomatic,·( 1J 4 wh . drive.

trailer, extended LR, car-

·-

$3495

70 OLDS CUTLASS _ _ _ _ $2295·

•"•

EL CAMINO- V-8, automatic, ak.
C.IO Pickups 8', V-8, std. &amp; automatic trans.

~ONDALINE

KANAUGA, OHIO
From Mighty to Mini, Honda has It all•

' lucket se ats, console, only 5,700 miles.

••
••
•

NEW 73 CHEV. TRUCKS
For Rent

J •. 000~

•

·· We Want To Make You Happy

D~LIVERY

'7 0 DGE CHALLENGER ·

••
=

Open Evenings
'1il 7,p.m. &amp;
Sat. 'til 5 p.m.
SeiVice Til 12
.Noon oil Saturda:r

TRAIL BIKES

Some of the "standard extras" on the
Dodge Colt that represent "optional
equipment"
on
some
other
domesti c ally available subcompacts
include adjustable steering column,
front wheel disc brakes, flow-through
ventllallo1'1. and full synchromnh four ·
speed transmission .
A radio antenna that Is part of the
(leck .lld ; flow through ventilation and
fully·recllning front seats that are
standard (except In coupe) are
examples of the Innovation and extra
value of the Dodge Colt.

ON/OFF ROAO BIKES

SMITH AUTO SALES

HT, V-B, auto. trans. , PS, bucket seals, 13,000

- -·$1795

•••
••
.•
•••
••
•••
•

Wildcat. Sharp 64, air, P. W., P.S.

REMEMBER

$2795

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

••
•w

Skylark, 2 dr . H. T., air, vinyl top, one owner .

Cpe., silver grey finish with wh. vinyl root.
clean interior , full power equipment including
factory air. power windows &amp; tilt .&amp; Tel. st .
wheel. Local ' I owner car &amp; had regular ser ·
vice.

'72 DODGE CHAL:·LENGER .

~

Riviera, air, one owner . Sharp.

MINIOIKFS

MORE MODELS • MORE SERVICE
MORE ACCESSORIES • MORE PARTS

SPORT COUPE,' PS, PB.' air, 16,000 miles.

••
••
•
•••
•

G .T.O .• auto., P.S., P.B., 48,62.1 miles . Sharp .

,f'

'73 OLDSICUTLASS 2 DR.--· $3595

..••.
..
•

L.T.D., air, local one owner .

1968 OLDS TORONAD0-----·'1695 .

'

•
••=

black.

Dlll11JIKES

· All the many worlds of
motorcycling in one place.

2 DOOR HT, P.S., P. B.. air, only 8,200 miles.

.•..

dr. H. T., air, power windows, rough.

Chevelle S .S ., auto., red

.3 PONTI~!: LUXURY LliMjtn$..S3695

"'••

dr. , 6,181 miles.

vCHECK THESE USED
CA:R VALUJ.iS! .

l

ec
.

Gray with Black Top

Green and Green Top·

DODGE COLT!

, CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER

=
::

$4475

MORE FOR THE
MONEY •.•• .

SOUTHEASTER~ PHIO'S LARGEST

!

Lesabre 4 dr . H.T. , air, lillie body damage .

4 Door , 6 cyt. , automatic trans. , P. steering,
radio, good tires, blue finish. clean interior .

SEDAN DEVILLE - forest green, green vinyl

(I)

5427.05
1952,05

Granville, 2 dr . H.T., air, one owner.

1969 PONTIAC TEMPESL;:. ___ ,$1295

'r'

•
=
E
:
•

1

Your Price
+ Tax &amp; Tille

DEMO

Cat. Brougham. air ,

4 Door , V-8, automatic, P. steering , clean
interior, good tires, radio , blue finish .

'

=
..••

BIG SAVINGS ON USED CARS
1972 PONTIAC
4
'3695
19Jl PONTIAC
'3395
1971 BUICK
'2395
1970 PONTIAC
4
'1895
1969 CHEVROlET
&amp;
'1695
1969 FORD
'1695
1968 BUICK
'1695
1968 BUICK
'1695
1968 PONTIAC ·
'1495
1964 BUICK ·
'595

1970 PLY. FURY IlL ________ '1495

~

•

Smith Nelson Dis.

$4179

Your ·Price
+ Tax &amp; Tille

Color Dark Blue

Custom Coupe, local t-owner car, like new
while-wall tires, factory air . automatic trans mission, power steering &amp; brakes . Dark green
finish with black vinyl roof. spotless interior.
radio . Real sharp!

()) SEDAN DEVILLE - diplomat blue, blue vinyl

1

Smith Nelson Dis .

'$4129

Your . Price
+ Tax &amp; Tille

1971 CHEVROLET IMPALA·---- 12795

condi tioning .

••
•

List Prite

5104.90
1925.90

List Price

4987.05
1
858.05

Smith Nelson Dis .

Coupe, t -owner c ar. less than 33,000 miles .
brown fin ish with matching vinyl roof and
vinyl interior , 302 V-8 engine. s tandard tran smission. power steering. and brakes, radio ,
really sharp.

A~ - FM

a•

1973 Pontiac Bonn. 4 Dr. HT

1973 Pontiac Cat. 2 Dr. HT

1

List Price

1971 FORD TORINO 500 ·----·12095

COUPE DEVI·LLE - Sage green. green vinyl root,

( 1)

1973 Buick LeSabre 2 Dr. HT

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLER•
·PLYMOUTH

=
••

FOR THE BEST NEW CAR DEAL IN TOWN AND
GREAT USED CAR BUYS

1972 CHEVY BROOKWOOD-----12195

End of Model Year .

:

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

,-

~1 - The Sunday TlmH • §entintl, Sunday, July 15, 1973

•2995
1971 CHEV.
Malibu 4 dr., air cond ., viny l
top. 29,000 miles. Ni ce.

'2495

1972 BUICK
LeSabre 4 dr. Hdlp .• custom, ·
air, vinyl jop, was $3695. New
Le Sabre trade.

'3495
1971 BUICK
•

Skylark, 2 dr . Hdlp .. vinyl top,
one !ocai owner, extra, extra
nice.

'2495
1971 v.w.

Tu.d or. Type II I. 19,000 miles,
like new cond. , new LeSa bre
trade .

'1995

1973 Buick LeSabre 4 dr. Sedans
Equipped with automiftic transmission. power steering, power disc
brakes, white-wall tires, air conditioner, custom seat belts, tinted
glass, bumper protective stri ps , bumper guards, door guards,
remote mirror, carpet savers, deluxe wheel covers. protective body
side moldings. Other Models Priced According ly.

PEST CONTROL SERVICE
pro¥idn the s\lrUt method of ridding
propelly of lermitn or other
des t r ~ c live puts a"nd ( Uirl nltu lhis
wvite io wrltin g lor 5 )'ears-.bac ked
~ o ur

FREE
A CB450, 40" electric
Tl R E &amp; Wheel with eac h 1971 HOND
stove, 446-1352.
~r a [ Ombind u sh reser~e of o~er lA
Camper sale .tretore Aug . 1 16~- 7 mill
io11 do llar~ . Totti protection 1! low
tos t- east telms . Our many s11isflt d
Vacation lime Jul'l best --------~
cli t n l ~ didn ' t ~ee it any ot~er way .
discount prices - some up to
DODGE Swinger 340, black W
hy shou ld ,ou?
'
S300. Trades wanted . Ams. 1970
bary Apache Trailer Sales, with while, vinyl top, 11 •400 ' CAll TODAY fOR AfREE ESTIMAlE
631 Mh Ave., Gallipolis . ·
Call after 4:30, 446-4732.
16 4-6
164-lf
O'Dell Term ~e Se!Vice
--------APPALOOSA mare gentle, well
· Gallipolis, Ph. 446-3245
SERVICE age bull :v, Charola is,
broken, 6 years old. 3BB·9'191
'I• Hereford. 446-2596.
· or 367.74Bl.
· '
166·3
164-7
FOR sale 6y owner new 3 BR

.

'.

UP TO 60 MONTHS TO PAY

house with carpet, only lived

In 3 months, gas heat , 3 lois,
beaulllul view, .full basement .
Located In Plants Sub·
divi sion. Price $25,500. Call
446-3!09.
159-10

DEAD STOCK
$5 .00 Service Charge

-~----

Will remove your dead
horse and cows

!

Call Jackson 2B6-453 1

Services Offered

For Sale

THOMAS FAIN
AL L TYPES of bu ilding
SE PTIC tanks ·cleaned, serving
EXTER MINATING CO. "
materi als, block , bric k, sewer
Ga ll Ia &amp; Mason counties . Fast
Termite &amp; Pes! Control
windows, lintels, etc .
pipes,
dependable services. George
Wh eelersburg, Ohio
'
Cla
ude
Winters Rio Grande,
: ~--~::-:-:~:':.':':"::::1964 DODGE 4 door In good
Plan ts, owner . Phone 675· - -----::-:=-0
.
Phone
245-5121 after 5.
I
USED FURNITURE
cond ition, 367-7158, call after S
50'19
ROTO ROOTER
123·11
, 3 PC,r, MEAVV , solid basset p.m . or 'see Qetmar Clark on
111 · 11 SE WER and Drain Cf.ean ing .
' bedroom sui te - 3 seta ot Addlson-Bulavllle R'oad. • ·
--~-----Nationa l
Se r vice'
now
' good cloan bo• sprl~gs• an~
,
•,
·165-3
ROOFING
and
Spou
llng
.
avai
lab
le
loca
lly
.
For
any tBFT. 7 fnSTARCRAFT
. lhru 2411. 71n. travel
mattresses ...,. ~ QOO(I 1' 1 rrc~
I
1
Sh ingles
and
Bui ldup
Free
Estimate
_
.
kind
ol
stopped-up
drai
n,
call
trai
lers
,
se ll contained from
Hotroots.
26
'· dlnello sol ""'' two pc. ltv ng
. MOBILE HOMES
. NE W: Scrta' and Bemco mal
yr
.
exper
ie
nce
.
Jam
es
675-5195,
24
hour
Serv.
.
$625
to
$1 ,050 discount fo ld
room eul to - 2 l~r~~ l~mp;
FOR SALE '
tress· and bo• springs. Large.
New GMC
down ca mpers. also it will pay
Marcu
m,
VInton,
Ohio.
3BB·
_
_
_
_
__
_
__
JO
I-tf
ll ko brond new •- pc. ond 1
RECONDITIONED
selection In stock - twin , lull,
Truck Headquarters
you to check our prices .
'
table set oxlrft hoo v'y- 2 dftrk
MOBILE HOMES
queen size . Save up to $40 a · 1969 Ford 3,~ ton camoer sccc tal B114:
McGRAW COMPANY
CAMP CONLEY STAR
end loblos - 2 odd dinotte 1971 12 x 65 3 BR V D k
I
196B GMC 34 ton pickup
62-ll BULLDOZER , ba ckh oe and . CRAFT SALES, Rt . 62 North
BR
an ( e
se ·
chairs - coli • nrlngs - 2
1967 :t;, T. GMC PU
d bl bod&amp;._ 2 Eouct101 _ 1 1970 12 x 60 3
RoyCral , 2 air
955 Second Avenue
land clearing and Septic tank .
ot Pt . Pleasant, behi nd Red
ALBERT EHMAN
19.66 'I• T. GMC PU
b
ou •
b
cond
iti
oners
446·1171
446-1502, 3BB-B230 .
1
1
1
Carpel Inn. Phone 675-53B4 .
Wat
er
Deli
very
Service
living room C'" r • Y 197Q ~ ~ x 6 2 BR Chat len er
276-tf 1969 b T. GMC PU
100-11
157-lf
Pal~ lot Star Rt .. Gallipolis
1969 GMC 1;, ton PU
'1 lrTnRi r ';m 1 ,~ ~ P~il~~~~~~~j •19A6 0 x 2 BR Skyftn:
Ph
.
379-2133
v lf'f .
12 x 60 2 BR Baron
NTIN G, in feri or and ex
1957 CHEVY 2 dr . Slatton 1969 Chev rolet 'n ton pi ckup
1 1'~ d fro 'no 1969
243-11 PAl
; Nyl on covor
19A'
tO
~
ss
2
BR
Princess
11
wagon. Mini condiiiM . 270 1967 lh ton Chev .
te
rt
or, roof pa int ing, gutters.
------~
Y 19~1 10 x so 2'BR Monarch
' with culora
repaired
and pai nt ed. ,Free
H.P. B•l•nced , posl lrecll on 1966 GMC t;, ton PU
BANKS TREE SERVICE
1 Iampp,
'
1955 8 K 46 2 BR Londola
. 5: 3B, 4 speed. Many . &amp;• Ires 1969 '" T. Ford PU
csll
males.
Call 446-7353 .
FREE estimates, liabili ty In·
1969 Olds BB
'I
153 12
iii
. ,
19.!5 l~J X 55 l BR Roycroft ·
SB50. 446·4999.
surance . Pruning , trim ming
'
BaS MOBILE HOMES
78-lf 1969 Dodge Slatton W~gon ·
USED bedr oo m sui tes,
and cavi ty work, .tree and BLOCK and Concre te work 7 star
ting at $59.95 .""d up.
stump removal. Ph , 446-4953 .
·
· ~·•ond&amp;VIandsl.
Pt. Pte..anl
Several used ,living room
driveways, p~f!a.s ; ' ste ps ,
1961 BSA 650, good condition . 19)0 '" T. Chev . PU
73· If
1969 t;, T. Chov . PU
,
·I Nexll~ Heck's)
suites . dinette se ts, and other
Coil 446·9371. ·
w.a!Rs . porches, retaining
1969
W
T.
GMC
PU
1&lt;9.!1
Items. New lurn lture special
wa
ll
s
and
f01.mdall
ons.
162-1
MOTORIST MUTUIIL
1966 'n T. GMC PU
Rea
so
nably
do
ne.
Free
In li ving room sulles. S88 .and
NI!W I UI ID f'UR HITUR&amp; ONE; o(, lh' firer lhtngs of lito- --~
INSURANCE
F-O_R_D_,:v,-,-,-.c-1.-a-n-,n...:o- rusl , 1966 'I• T. GMC PU
19
70
tlmates.
446-7353.
es
· ',
~~~ Itt
, Ut f II
,
THE bes t Insurance at the best
151·11
fllv• ' Lus tro cftrpot eleanor . other extros. s1. 995. 446·9534.
IS4· 12 Ufl-- - .
price
.
Fot
auto
,
ho
me
,
Hont
oloctrlc
oh•mpooor
$1
at
&lt;
2.
1968
,.,
T.
GMC
PU
: PWe&amp; rtpn, Pip,••· oap,
business end lite. Ra y Hawk,
r--------,;_
' -16 ;6 1967 1/o T. GMC PU
Ctnlral Supply Co.
Need Another Bldg.?
· ' Cherolnn, filii\, JobtY,1 Mlpi•Q~
BACKHOE DOZER
agent,
446·2300, 541 4th Ave.
116 6
t967 'h T. GMC PU
SEE
our aluminum bldgs .
'I and olhqrs. 'f~wn' y • lpe
TRENCHER
. 150-lf
• 1970 C~V. KINGSWOOD 1968 '-'• T. GMC PU
duty wllh flooring,
H
eavy
and Trophy Hou••· ~72 • ord
CAL L Jackson 286-4524. A:ll
B
LuE
-.
L
us
"
7
1
r
_
e
_n~
otonly-rl~s
ESTATE
WAGON
wired
for
electric . Also West
1969 ''' ton GMC PU
I Ave.
199 li
types ot backhoelng, septic
D. P. Marl in &amp; Son Water
c~ roals of soli but leave. pile
SOMMERS G.M.C.
VIrgin
ia
chunk
coat, drain
tanks, tooters. etc. Also all
Delivery Serv ice , Your
I
l Ori ftnd lolly . Rent aleclrle ·350 V-8, factory air, di ac
TRUCKS, INC . .
tile,
bell
li
te,
cement
and
types ol lrenchlng, water
patronage will be ap ahompooor $1 al G. C. Mur· b
mortar.
Gallipolis
Bloak
&amp;
m
Pine
St.
pl1y, Sliver Bridge Ploro .
rakes, &amp;o.s.•. P. B., ~Icc. Iall
lin es . 9~~ 1\ n('~, Cl" ,
fllJII •••· 2!li·!l()Q,
precloted. Ph. 446·0463.
1PAN T Pug tll_
446-2532
Coa
t
Co.,
123'1
'
Pine,
446-2783.
1
16~ J
_
___ ,_166.6 gato, many o\her e•tru ..
2 If
•
207-lf
·'
_
_ -•
Call ~46 . t5o~.
1
.~ r
. '
w
··------~~--------~

"

0

• R"

·'I

10

- - -- - -

so

••n

IC8 S,,
..

,'

00

$

.-

Parsons

For Sale '
Trying lo buy a mobile home?
Been
l~rnod
down?
Remember, I can say "ytS"
when others say "no.u Call

Frank, 992-7777, I can help,
LARRY'S MOBILE
HOME SALES
600 West Mil in Streel
Pomeroy, Ohio
164-17
1972 FORD pickup with top, 1963
Pon tiac Gran Prix, 389 Cu.

in ., 4 spd . 367-7306 alter 4::10
p.m.

'

161·6

1973 8 TRACK. A small balance
ot $88.64 or poy $6.50 por
month . Phone 446-0255.
96· 11

NEW and used tnslrum•nts,
Brunlcardi House of Muolc : 5~
Stale Street. Phone '406·0617.
33-11
IF YOU ere building e new
home or remodeling, 1M us,
We are builders. Dltlrlbutor
for Holpolnl Appl!enc••·
Allison Electric.
1~11

GROCERY bus Inti• lor Nit,
building for sole or INN.
phone173-5611 from I: :10 P-Ill·
lo tO p.m. for appo!nlmll!t.

..

-

..

·7·!1

�'

...

:

22 - The SUnda; Times - Sentinel, Sunday, July 15, 1973

BUY NOW

July·Specials

SHOP AROUND THEN COME ·DOWN
TO
..
SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

. 1972 NOVA "6"·--·- --------2295
1

1-73 SEDAN DeVILLE
DEMONSTRATOR

4-door . local t-owner. light green finish. good
tir es. automatic tran s missio n. powe r s teer ing ,
radio, real economy.

SAVEl

--------------------------

2-seat wagon o'350 V-B engin e. power steeri ng &amp;
power brakes, automatic transmi ss ion , radio ,
positractlon rear axle, good tires. peig e finish ,
excessive mileage but regularl y serviced &amp; '·
priced to go.

Clearance!

.

e

green leiither Interior, lull power equlpmenl.

stereo radio with tape pla ye r , power antenna,

trn ted

glass, power doo r locks. T&amp; T wheel, cru ise contro_l,
!!feel belled Radial tires and Clima te Contr ol ~·r ·

i
l

=

roof, blue interior with dua l com lorf sea l, AM-FM
stereo radiO with tape player. power antenna, tinted
glass, power door locks, T&amp; T wheel. cruise control,
stee l belted radial t ires and Climate Con-trol air con ditioning .

''

Bonneville

~

roof , green interior, full power equ lpment, tirited glass,
power door locks, .T&amp; T wheel , Guidematic headlight
contro l. steel belted Radial tires , AM-FM radio and
Climate Control air condition ing.

[r
••
,.',.'

2 More Sedan
De Villes Coming!

f

t

See: Ceward Calvert, Peggy Story or Bi!l Nelson_
We Service
What Ule Sell

I

71 CHEV.

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
Cadillat · Oldsmobile
GMAC Financing Available

992-5342

Open Eves'. Til6-Til

Ton·--------- 2589
1

o/.1

350 . V-8, 15" H. Duly tires, 3 speed std. trans .•
red finish, sharp as new truck inside &amp; out.

OUR WORD IS
OUR
BOND
•

Pomeroy

s P.M. Sat.

IMMEDIATE

" You'll like Our Quality Way of Doing Business"

.soo

E. Main St., Pomeroy, ()hi.o ·

For Rent

TRAILER spaces on Route 7, IN CHESHIRE, 2 bedroom
positively no drinking, no
singles. $40 per mo., water
and sewer furnished. 256-1180.

conditioned, water

·furnish~d .­

162-6 . $135 per month. call 367-7645.
163-4

V-B, auto. trans .. P.S.

PRICES SLASHED!

992-2126

For Rent
NOW

I

2 000~,. !1-T.. V-B, auto. trans, \(lnyl
~oof. ·
.

.

68x14 -

2 ·BEDROOMS

" Golden Empress" in Spanish decor. Fully carpeted,
· house type door, storms &amp; screens. Deluxe all thru with
Fiberglass tub and shower, bath &amp; lh, If/' chestnut
paneling. Famous Guerdon quality home. Delivered and
1
se t up.
.

fully

carpeted ,

No pets. Call Oakwood apart.
ments. 446-3643.

64x 14 ....,. 3 BEDROOMS

"Golden Empress". tully carpeted, house type door,
storms &amp; sc reens . Deluxe throughout with bath &amp; half,
Fiberglass tub &amp; shower, 1;,.'' Chestnut paneling, 30 gal.
water heater. Top line home by GUerdon . Delivered and
~t u p.
·

'~~~

:

Cle!~~nce

$7895

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

60x12 -

2 BEDROOMS

By Hallmark. Total electric, fully carpeted , cat hedral
ceiling, all storms &amp; screens, house type door . A quality
home redu ced in price to go . Delivered and set up.

- - , -- -- 4 ROOMS and bath,

un -

furnished , centrally located,

$120 par month Call 446-3B44
after 1 p.m .
165-6

992-2196 ;

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

166·3

LA DIES, 5 immediate openings EXPERIENCED

Help Wanted

full or parttime and choose
your own hours , for in te rviews cal l 446- 4 03~.
164-3

GENERAL Mechani c with

wheel
alignment
and
·balancing ex;per ience. Con Ia cI Har, old Davis, Ga II ipol is :-:
N::
E::E::
D::
S-:L'::P-:N-:o_r_r_e':':
t i-re-:d-:R
::-:N to

Motor Co. 446-3672.

· 151.tf

work In nur sl nQ home. Can
live in. Wr ite Box 313, Rt. 1.

~::-:-:--::--::------

fully CLEANING Woman . Apply in
baths

$160. 245-5439.

Ironton, Oh io.

person affer 2: 30p.m. Fr en ch _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _165-3

Quarters.
165-lf

-----

SLEEPING ROOMS, weekly
rafes . Park Cenfral Hotel.

306-11
-'-~:-:-:=-:--~

145-lf

EXPERIENCED

body · metal socia security plates .
Free scales kit. Charles F.

mechan ic , con tact Harold

Inboden, P. 0 . . Box 19701 ,
Columbus, Ohio 43219.
166· I

Davis. Gallipolis Motor Co.
446-3672.
140-lf

-:-:-:-:-::--:- - -

2 BR . MOBILE HOME. Upper
River Road. 446-0008.
155-lf

Friday 10 to 9, 446•0677.

--.,---.,----,:-:-:-

EXTRA moner - sell engraved

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

APARTMENT for construction
men. P . 446-0756.
267-11

you've

rYlOSf

homes

pl ci yment

Ser v ices ,

Second Avenue. An

443

Equal

Opportunity Empl oyer .

.

•

165·3

WELCOME Wag on hostess

wanted
for
Pomeroy .
Gallipolis-Rome area . Mature

Anton. 56 Avon Place, Athens,
Ohio, Area ~ode 61~ - 592 · 1214
or Gall ipol is 446·0041.
166·3

Manager's offi ce, 518 Second
Avenue .

have car, call MondCi y .l hru

1639 Eastern Ave.
'It•

· - - - - --

TRENDHOMES by NATIONAL

ever seen .

and

referen'"s .

Construction,

Ave.,

446 · 3~8

107

Second

or 446-9867 .
152-15

plann inQ.

, su per io r

wafk through

a

Many Other
Mobile Homes

Design 212

MODEL HOME LOCATED
1 MILE N. OF FIVE POINTS
ON RT. 7, POMEROY, 0.

All Floor Plans
50x12 to 70xl4
2 &amp; 3 Bedrooms

lfDIOOil l

llfi.G

1!11

Open For l11spechon
SAT. &amp; SUN. - 1 TOS· P.M.

~OOM '

IS I 14

L Jlll

44 )( 24

1038SQJT. UPP•R LEVEL
.
207UQ. FT. TOTALLIVINQAAEA

- __

. ."

...... -

".

II

,,...._~r..o-

" .. ---...-

""B_!!ILT BY..___.....,.
B&amp;K EXCAVATING
,_...__. ................
SALESREPRESENTATIVE:
.

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR., BROKER
Associates: Helen L. Teaford, Gordon·

B, Teaford

PHONE 992-332.5
EQ~AL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITIES ·

'

110 MECHANIC SJREET

POMEROY, OHIO

TOOL

sharpening ,

~clssors,

saws,

shears, home and

garden lopts. Sharp Shop,
Alley rear, 147 Second.
216·11
.

For Rent or Lease
OFFICE. space lor Ieese, 2~d
Ave. ecron from City Par~ .
Available alter July 31 . Call .
446· 1819 or aee John Ecker.
131 -lf

.

.

Robbins &amp;Myers.
GALLI POLIS, 0.

Byerly

FINANCING
WF. SERVICE
WHAT WE SELL

fea1Ure.s from
front to the ~a ck . 9~~·­

AT

.

· experience,
job. Also do rooting,
free 4yr
estimates
. local

B&amp; WMDiiNT
CLEANING SEI!VICE
GENERAL hOuse cleenlng . We
supply all the cleaning sup.
plies . 388-8875atter 6 p.m. call
38B·B865. Weekly or monthly
cleaning by appointment.
91 -lf

many

styl es
Each home a superb
model with su per ior

you'll know .

-E XPANSION

storm door with each 1,000 ft.
min. an alum . or vlhyl siding

s.tu nning

ha ve

"

1'

•

Local manufacturer has grown In production and 1$ now

expanding facilities. New jobs now open, excellent
working condition and good ~age . fringe benetlls.

·REPAIR TECHNICIAN ·
Experience in Maintenance &amp; Repair ol progreulve dleo,
(carbide) jigs and fixtures work.

TOOL DESIGNER
Design Production looting, handle equipment ollerottons
and maintain prints - ot lea~! one year of mech~nlcol
drawing eXperience- and knowledge of g_
enerlll ma chine

tools reqUired .

Machi ne maintenance rePftlr exper'lence In mnchlne
repair .

PROCESS PLANNER TRAINEE
2

ve~r · usoclale technl r-~~~

dMiree. No e)'tperlence

nocessory. Will learn to specify method and tooling
·
necled with manufacturer of electric motors olldcorp
pertorm machine &gt;l~dles .

Come In and makt 'IPiillcaiiQn btlw.. n e A.M. ;. 4 P.M.
OR MAIL ATTACHED 1

ROlliN$ &amp; MYIRS, INC.
Bob /licCormlc~ Rd. of! Rl. lt
GA~LIPDLIS, 0 ,

DOWNTOWN b~stneos space
for tease, 2nd Ave., acrou
from City Park. Approx . 2,1100
Sq. Ft., available after July
31. Call ~46- 1819 or 406-1176 or
see John Ecker.

•

Gallipolis

I am Interested In Position of- - - - -- - - NAME ---------------TILIPHON I -------·1
STREET------..._....:.._ _ _ __

-,---,.~...:..~--131-lf LJi'~T~V;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~JT~A~U:.;;;;:J

•

t

lo!

446-3273

600 E. STATE ST.
&amp; 1200 E. STATE ST.
'' '
· '"' ·

. ATHENS,.OHIO
YOUR DEALER FOR

1

Since Smith Auto h11s discontinued
D11tsun ' w~ will be h11ppy
to 'service
.
.
any Datsuns 11 t out deplershiJl·

..

~.................................
.,
'
''
:• For le
: 196B HONDA 350 -excet'terit 1972 'I• ton Chevy truck, 350
lt condition, S350. 446-0851. ,_ engine, .low mileage. 38B·8630.

.

1~

'• 12

Av~nue.

SAYS

At

track stereo in lOvely

446-444 1.

han~ -

1970 GMC '" ton Pickup, Ex- rubbed walnut console. Pay ----.,.-~--cellent Condition. 256-6544.
bat•one e of $101 ·••o or pay ••
10 HO LLEY Bros.
· · Construction,
·
~166·3 per month. Call 446-0255.
bulldozing, back hoe work, .
59 · 11
19 62 FORD Falcon Auto . ----~-..,.---1_
ditch ing, under roads, boring.
Trans. , good running con- 1958 VOLKSWAGEN, 40 H.P. Phone 245-SOIB or 245-5006.
118 ·11
dillon. 446-4379.
motor. looks good, runs good .
166·3 Priced to sell. $275. Phone 446· - -C-en- t-ra_I_A_ir_C_o-nd_i_llo-n-in-g
4999.
&amp; Healing
1970 BSA 4dl motorcycle, 446·
162 ·6
.
Fre~
Estima1es
9669. Call after 5 p.m.
Stewart's Hardware
165·3 J967 OLDSMOBILE 4 door , PS
Vinton, Ohio
--::----,--&amp; PB, extra clean , can be
5 YEAR OLD black Appaloosa
seen
at
· Meadowbrook --~-----mare and sorrel colt 5400, 1
Dr
..
Poin\
.
Pleasant, 675· INSTALLING
a luminum
Year old regisler ed A~abian
2195.
163·6
siding
,
gutters
and down
colt 5250. 446· tB09.
spouts. For free estima te call
- - - - - : : -'-'---166·3 12 x 65 FT. 1972 Ramada OC· collect 367-01 2B.
130-26
1971 14 x 64 MOBILE home on
cupied B months. Call 446·
lot in Cheshire. Call 367 - 7~35
0692 .
~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iii;.
after 5 p.m.
163-6
166 ·25' 1-9_7_1 _M-IN-c_________
l b-ikc-e-,_g_oo_dc-c-o-nd'Cilion
":' , LOOK
.
~
" NEVER used anything like
S&lt;l. Phone 446·0050 ·
AT IT
1
3
it," says users of Blue lustre
64THIS WAY
lor clean ing carpel. Rent --------~
• ·• •
electric shampooer S1 at 1973 HONDA Elsinore, CR 250 M EXTERMITAL TERMITE AND

c0

·

166 _6

Mo to rcycle . 446 -3732 after

5:30p.m.

162-5

x 60 '1973 .MOBILE home, 2 2 'MALE AKC · registered
: BR , l!x~e ttenl co~d(llon. ~~7 .
Dachshund lor sale and one to
, 0224 ilr 367-7698.
lrade. Phone 3B8·8B75.
'
162·6
165-3
NEW EUREKA uprigHt model ~KrE-N,:.N"'E_l_S..,....
of-!=-al-h-oun, AKC
' 'Ot2A, S59.95. Phone 367-7736 .
Toy Poodle PuPPies an.d
: Davl• Vacuum Cleaner Store,
Siamese ktllens, 256-6247.
, St. R'l. 7, at Addison, 0 .
·
165-26

1973

CHEV~

'3795
1972 MUSTANG
V-8, auto., P.S., P . B., 19,000
miles, sharp, LeSabre trade .

siding or anything washable.

166-3 TWO left in layaway 1913 B

_ _ _ _ _ _...,.:.__

DATSON Phone 592-4463

'
:,

2124112 Eastern

entra t Supply

JeCAPRI • DATSUN • SUBARU. • MARK IV
., ' '

Ru ssell 's. Plumbing, 446-47B2
1966 PONT. Bonn. 2 dr . Hard· COACHMAN Travel Trailers.
297-lf
lop. Air cond .. new paint, very Mol or Homes, 5th Wheel, - - - , - - - - - ; good cond. $500. 245·5873.
Truck Campers, App le City GILLENWATER'S septic tank
166·3 Auto Sales, Rl. 35 N. Ja ckson , clean ing and repai r, al so
-------~Ohio. Phone 286-5700.
house wrecki ng . Ph . 446-9499.
1963 - 9 passenger Chevrolet
118-11
Established in 1940.
·
slat,lon wagon, also iron gate. ----=---~-446-3521.
PRINTED
wedding
an 166-3
nouncemelit and invitations, 3
Spray Wash"
'C":'------. to 5 days servic~. Simmons CALLHot-Shot
·us for wash , wa x and
'71 GREMELIN X, A-1 con.
Ptg . &amp; Office Equip. 446-1397. degreasing of your trucks,
dillon . Call 446-2642 or see al
140-lf mobile homes, a lu minum

c

•MERCURY MONTEGO • COMET
•.)

In Stock
-All Going

Chey e nne Suburban, 13,000
miles, nice to pull camper .

..

b

V

, L&amp;M Phone _592-4491

'

••'
••

4161 .

r

• LINCOLN CONTINENTAL • COUGAR

Write P..O. Box 44,
BABYSITTER In my home,
Ferry, Ohio 43935 or phone middle -aged · woman
614-4B4-4440.
preferred.
References
166·12 required. 446-3690.
163-6

166-4 15 DAY SPE'CIAL ,- A flee

160·5

UP T012 YEAR

We

£

DALE'" R. SANDERS.·INC.
' ;

cro~ks.
Mar•ln~

BRANCH PLANT

*

·'

Wanted

glass,_blue decorated

166-3

WALLPAPERING and paint.
ing . Phone 446-9865 or i79·
2471.
f
B3-l

S86 Locust St,
992-7004
Middleport
Open 8 to 6 Mon. thru Sat.
Open Dolly 8 to 6, (Closed Sundays): Open Anytime by
Appointment. Conlacl Dan Thomoson or Tom L."venrl.r

. .

individual. flexible
hours to . .-----------~~~~~~------. . .
perform
an
tmp\ortant
community service. GOod
income. Call or write Shirley

That 's wh y your
marvelous new hOme
will look far more
than yOlJ pa id for i t .

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

n2~

·Gallipolis ~.Chrysler-Plymouth

Middleport, 0,

Wantetl To Buy

- Repa i r, hou se wi ri ng ,
electri c heating . Phone 446 -

SEPTIC TANKS

'26.7 5

t

50 New Buicks

DOC
SMITH

TERMITE PEST CONTROL
FREE Inspection. Call 446-3245.
Merrill O' Dell , Operator by

Cleaned and insta lled

CAMPER TOP, auto. trans., P.S., P. B.. A-1.

BABYSITTER, 446-1457 after 5
with typing and shorthand. OLD furniture , cupboard,
p.m.
Apply at Bureau of Em ·
desks, chests, also guns,
164·3

Do

---------------~-----·-------..
The '

bookkeeper

MALE or femal e, parllime SB4'a WATER treatment plant Wanted To
week, fu ll time $140, must ope ra to r . Appl y at .City BABYS ITTING . 446·4484.

•

. lmag lnet ive

WAS
$6695

Call 3BB-BB25.

162-tf
HOUSE In Gallipolis, 446-379B.
165-3

.

n~R~

.

164·3

DRY WAL L servi ce · by con.
tract. Willard Bosley, 446·
4954.

STEWART Electrical

FARMS
RESTAURANTS

$1495

2HJi.EVY ~1/V.o~ ~~~~e

e OPEN JULY 30

5. 3rd Ave.

carpeted house, 1112

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

1223.

:-::-:::-:-::-::--~-.,-­

2 DOOR
. CU PE, 6 Cyl., auto. trans., light blue.'

refrigerator, and stove fur nished. Located 1/:i mile from 3 BEDROOM mobile home
located In Bidwell. No pets
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .
downtown on 160 (old Rt . 35) .

MODERN 3 bedroom,

.

home, adults preferred. 256-

pointment. Ph . 446-1049 .
Please call alter 6 p.m .
27B-If

Exlerminet l Term ite Service,

.

'

:lA : F,1 P~P~~VERICK

KEITH GOBLE FORD, .INC.

efficf .ency FURNISHEO 2 bedroom mopile

apartments consisting o·t
living room, bedroom, and

I

FOR VACATIONS

Pomeroy

For Rent

available

bath ,

3 GREAT BARGAINS

"Your Chevy Dealer "
Open Eves .. Til8

Servi(e . 424 lf2 Fourth Ave .,
Kanauga . · Business by · ap.

0 8elmon t Dr .

. '6~.¥~~.CU~·'( MONTE~O M~$1495

I

WILL BE CLOSED THE WEEK OF JULY 23 THRU 28th

BOB LANE'S
Complete Bookkeepfng and Tax

•

•• •
•••
t
ii
••
1..

GALLIPOLIS. OHIU

Services Offered

'12 TON PICKUP, V-B, standard 'lh tft.

NEW 1973
GOLD DUSTERS

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

to Bob Evans Farms, P.O. Box 7863, Station G., Colum.
bus, Ohio. 43207 .

"69"f~T,E~N.~1"10NAI,.~
, ,.
, _,.--51295

~

LY
eE

Midwest ... best-known because ot the sausage and
restaurants that bear his name and hls reputation for
quality . Now. as the company e_
xpands an~ builds more
restaUrants, manag~ment trainees are needed, men who
. can move quickly into posftions as assistant managers
and managers. If you have a si ncere interest i~ r es ta urant
business and if you w;;1nt to work in an organization· where
standards of quaHty and service are the higheSt, we can
offer you an exciting and rewarding futu re. For fur1h er
information, ca ll· Herb Bush at 446-1482 or send a res um e

'

'

'

;-

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

Bob Evans is probabl y the best -known farmer In the

69' FORD MUSTANG _ _ ___.,1595

'

Goble Mobile
Homes ...

SEE THEM NOW AT • •

. RESTAURANT
MANAGEMENT TRAINEES

$1995

•

OUR PARTS AND SERVICE DEPARTMENTS

ROAD BIKES

50 STATE ST•

~ DOOR H.T., air cond ., P.S .• vinyl roof.

C-30 Step van, 12 ft., V-8 automatic.
G-10 Chevy Van 125" w-base, V-8, automatic.
K-10 Blazer, 4 wh. drive, V-8 automatic .

peled LR and Bedroom, air

.

H.T., V-B, auto. trans., P.S., P. disc brakes,

C-20 Pickups a·•, V-Bautomatic,·( 1J 4 wh . drive.

trailer, extended LR, car-

·-

$3495

70 OLDS CUTLASS _ _ _ _ $2295·

•"•

EL CAMINO- V-8, automatic, ak.
C.IO Pickups 8', V-8, std. &amp; automatic trans.

~ONDALINE

KANAUGA, OHIO
From Mighty to Mini, Honda has It all•

' lucket se ats, console, only 5,700 miles.

••
••
•

NEW 73 CHEV. TRUCKS
For Rent

J •. 000~

•

·· We Want To Make You Happy

D~LIVERY

'7 0 DGE CHALLENGER ·

••
=

Open Evenings
'1il 7,p.m. &amp;
Sat. 'til 5 p.m.
SeiVice Til 12
.Noon oil Saturda:r

TRAIL BIKES

Some of the "standard extras" on the
Dodge Colt that represent "optional
equipment"
on
some
other
domesti c ally available subcompacts
include adjustable steering column,
front wheel disc brakes, flow-through
ventllallo1'1. and full synchromnh four ·
speed transmission .
A radio antenna that Is part of the
(leck .lld ; flow through ventilation and
fully·recllning front seats that are
standard (except In coupe) are
examples of the Innovation and extra
value of the Dodge Colt.

ON/OFF ROAO BIKES

SMITH AUTO SALES

HT, V-B, auto. trans. , PS, bucket seals, 13,000

- -·$1795

•••
••
.•
•••
••
•••
•

Wildcat. Sharp 64, air, P. W., P.S.

REMEMBER

$2795

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

••
•w

Skylark, 2 dr . H. T., air, vinyl top, one owner .

Cpe., silver grey finish with wh. vinyl root.
clean interior , full power equipment including
factory air. power windows &amp; tilt .&amp; Tel. st .
wheel. Local ' I owner car &amp; had regular ser ·
vice.

'72 DODGE CHAL:·LENGER .

~

Riviera, air, one owner . Sharp.

MINIOIKFS

MORE MODELS • MORE SERVICE
MORE ACCESSORIES • MORE PARTS

SPORT COUPE,' PS, PB.' air, 16,000 miles.

••
••
•
•••
•

G .T.O .• auto., P.S., P.B., 48,62.1 miles . Sharp .

,f'

'73 OLDSICUTLASS 2 DR.--· $3595

..••.
..
•

L.T.D., air, local one owner .

1968 OLDS TORONAD0-----·'1695 .

'

•
••=

black.

Dlll11JIKES

· All the many worlds of
motorcycling in one place.

2 DOOR HT, P.S., P. B.. air, only 8,200 miles.

.•..

dr. H. T., air, power windows, rough.

Chevelle S .S ., auto., red

.3 PONTI~!: LUXURY LliMjtn$..S3695

"'••

dr. , 6,181 miles.

vCHECK THESE USED
CA:R VALUJ.iS! .

l

ec
.

Gray with Black Top

Green and Green Top·

DODGE COLT!

, CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER

=
::

$4475

MORE FOR THE
MONEY •.•• .

SOUTHEASTER~ PHIO'S LARGEST

!

Lesabre 4 dr . H.T. , air, lillie body damage .

4 Door , 6 cyt. , automatic trans. , P. steering,
radio, good tires, blue finish. clean interior .

SEDAN DEVILLE - forest green, green vinyl

(I)

5427.05
1952,05

Granville, 2 dr . H.T., air, one owner.

1969 PONTIAC TEMPESL;:. ___ ,$1295

'r'

•
=
E
:
•

1

Your Price
+ Tax &amp; Tille

DEMO

Cat. Brougham. air ,

4 Door , V-8, automatic, P. steering , clean
interior, good tires, radio , blue finish .

'

=
..••

BIG SAVINGS ON USED CARS
1972 PONTIAC
4
'3695
19Jl PONTIAC
'3395
1971 BUICK
'2395
1970 PONTIAC
4
'1895
1969 CHEVROlET
&amp;
'1695
1969 FORD
'1695
1968 BUICK
'1695
1968 BUICK
'1695
1968 PONTIAC ·
'1495
1964 BUICK ·
'595

1970 PLY. FURY IlL ________ '1495

~

•

Smith Nelson Dis.

$4179

Your ·Price
+ Tax &amp; Tille

Color Dark Blue

Custom Coupe, local t-owner car, like new
while-wall tires, factory air . automatic trans mission, power steering &amp; brakes . Dark green
finish with black vinyl roof. spotless interior.
radio . Real sharp!

()) SEDAN DEVILLE - diplomat blue, blue vinyl

1

Smith Nelson Dis .

'$4129

Your . Price
+ Tax &amp; Tille

1971 CHEVROLET IMPALA·---- 12795

condi tioning .

••
•

List Prite

5104.90
1925.90

List Price

4987.05
1
858.05

Smith Nelson Dis .

Coupe, t -owner c ar. less than 33,000 miles .
brown fin ish with matching vinyl roof and
vinyl interior , 302 V-8 engine. s tandard tran smission. power steering. and brakes, radio ,
really sharp.

A~ - FM

a•

1973 Pontiac Bonn. 4 Dr. HT

1973 Pontiac Cat. 2 Dr. HT

1

List Price

1971 FORD TORINO 500 ·----·12095

COUPE DEVI·LLE - Sage green. green vinyl root,

( 1)

1973 Buick LeSabre 2 Dr. HT

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLER•
·PLYMOUTH

=
••

FOR THE BEST NEW CAR DEAL IN TOWN AND
GREAT USED CAR BUYS

1972 CHEVY BROOKWOOD-----12195

End of Model Year .

:

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

,-

~1 - The Sunday TlmH • §entintl, Sunday, July 15, 1973

•2995
1971 CHEV.
Malibu 4 dr., air cond ., viny l
top. 29,000 miles. Ni ce.

'2495

1972 BUICK
LeSabre 4 dr. Hdlp .• custom, ·
air, vinyl jop, was $3695. New
Le Sabre trade.

'3495
1971 BUICK
•

Skylark, 2 dr . Hdlp .. vinyl top,
one !ocai owner, extra, extra
nice.

'2495
1971 v.w.

Tu.d or. Type II I. 19,000 miles,
like new cond. , new LeSa bre
trade .

'1995

1973 Buick LeSabre 4 dr. Sedans
Equipped with automiftic transmission. power steering, power disc
brakes, white-wall tires, air conditioner, custom seat belts, tinted
glass, bumper protective stri ps , bumper guards, door guards,
remote mirror, carpet savers, deluxe wheel covers. protective body
side moldings. Other Models Priced According ly.

PEST CONTROL SERVICE
pro¥idn the s\lrUt method of ridding
propelly of lermitn or other
des t r ~ c live puts a"nd ( Uirl nltu lhis
wvite io wrltin g lor 5 )'ears-.bac ked
~ o ur

FREE
A CB450, 40" electric
Tl R E &amp; Wheel with eac h 1971 HOND
stove, 446-1352.
~r a [ Ombind u sh reser~e of o~er lA
Camper sale .tretore Aug . 1 16~- 7 mill
io11 do llar~ . Totti protection 1! low
tos t- east telms . Our many s11isflt d
Vacation lime Jul'l best --------~
cli t n l ~ didn ' t ~ee it any ot~er way .
discount prices - some up to
DODGE Swinger 340, black W
hy shou ld ,ou?
'
S300. Trades wanted . Ams. 1970
bary Apache Trailer Sales, with while, vinyl top, 11 •400 ' CAll TODAY fOR AfREE ESTIMAlE
631 Mh Ave., Gallipolis . ·
Call after 4:30, 446-4732.
16 4-6
164-lf
O'Dell Term ~e Se!Vice
--------APPALOOSA mare gentle, well
· Gallipolis, Ph. 446-3245
SERVICE age bull :v, Charola is,
broken, 6 years old. 3BB·9'191
'I• Hereford. 446-2596.
· or 367.74Bl.
· '
166·3
164-7
FOR sale 6y owner new 3 BR

.

'.

UP TO 60 MONTHS TO PAY

house with carpet, only lived

In 3 months, gas heat , 3 lois,
beaulllul view, .full basement .
Located In Plants Sub·
divi sion. Price $25,500. Call
446-3!09.
159-10

DEAD STOCK
$5 .00 Service Charge

-~----

Will remove your dead
horse and cows

!

Call Jackson 2B6-453 1

Services Offered

For Sale

THOMAS FAIN
AL L TYPES of bu ilding
SE PTIC tanks ·cleaned, serving
EXTER MINATING CO. "
materi als, block , bric k, sewer
Ga ll Ia &amp; Mason counties . Fast
Termite &amp; Pes! Control
windows, lintels, etc .
pipes,
dependable services. George
Wh eelersburg, Ohio
'
Cla
ude
Winters Rio Grande,
: ~--~::-:-:~:':.':':"::::1964 DODGE 4 door In good
Plan ts, owner . Phone 675· - -----::-:=-0
.
Phone
245-5121 after 5.
I
USED FURNITURE
cond ition, 367-7158, call after S
50'19
ROTO ROOTER
123·11
, 3 PC,r, MEAVV , solid basset p.m . or 'see Qetmar Clark on
111 · 11 SE WER and Drain Cf.ean ing .
' bedroom sui te - 3 seta ot Addlson-Bulavllle R'oad. • ·
--~-----Nationa l
Se r vice'
now
' good cloan bo• sprl~gs• an~
,
•,
·165-3
ROOFING
and
Spou
llng
.
avai
lab
le
loca
lly
.
For
any tBFT. 7 fnSTARCRAFT
. lhru 2411. 71n. travel
mattresses ...,. ~ QOO(I 1' 1 rrc~
I
1
Sh ingles
and
Bui ldup
Free
Estimate
_
.
kind
ol
stopped-up
drai
n,
call
trai
lers
,
se ll contained from
Hotroots.
26
'· dlnello sol ""'' two pc. ltv ng
. MOBILE HOMES
. NE W: Scrta' and Bemco mal
yr
.
exper
ie
nce
.
Jam
es
675-5195,
24
hour
Serv.
.
$625
to
$1 ,050 discount fo ld
room eul to - 2 l~r~~ l~mp;
FOR SALE '
tress· and bo• springs. Large.
New GMC
down ca mpers. also it will pay
Marcu
m,
VInton,
Ohio.
3BB·
_
_
_
_
__
_
__
JO
I-tf
ll ko brond new •- pc. ond 1
RECONDITIONED
selection In stock - twin , lull,
Truck Headquarters
you to check our prices .
'
table set oxlrft hoo v'y- 2 dftrk
MOBILE HOMES
queen size . Save up to $40 a · 1969 Ford 3,~ ton camoer sccc tal B114:
McGRAW COMPANY
CAMP CONLEY STAR
end loblos - 2 odd dinotte 1971 12 x 65 3 BR V D k
I
196B GMC 34 ton pickup
62-ll BULLDOZER , ba ckh oe and . CRAFT SALES, Rt . 62 North
BR
an ( e
se ·
chairs - coli • nrlngs - 2
1967 :t;, T. GMC PU
d bl bod&amp;._ 2 Eouct101 _ 1 1970 12 x 60 3
RoyCral , 2 air
955 Second Avenue
land clearing and Septic tank .
ot Pt . Pleasant, behi nd Red
ALBERT EHMAN
19.66 'I• T. GMC PU
b
ou •
b
cond
iti
oners
446·1171
446-1502, 3BB-B230 .
1
1
1
Carpel Inn. Phone 675-53B4 .
Wat
er
Deli
very
Service
living room C'" r • Y 197Q ~ ~ x 6 2 BR Chat len er
276-tf 1969 b T. GMC PU
100-11
157-lf
Pal~ lot Star Rt .. Gallipolis
1969 GMC 1;, ton PU
'1 lrTnRi r ';m 1 ,~ ~ P~il~~~~~~~j •19A6 0 x 2 BR Skyftn:
Ph
.
379-2133
v lf'f .
12 x 60 2 BR Baron
NTIN G, in feri or and ex
1957 CHEVY 2 dr . Slatton 1969 Chev rolet 'n ton pi ckup
1 1'~ d fro 'no 1969
243-11 PAl
; Nyl on covor
19A'
tO
~
ss
2
BR
Princess
11
wagon. Mini condiiiM . 270 1967 lh ton Chev .
te
rt
or, roof pa int ing, gutters.
------~
Y 19~1 10 x so 2'BR Monarch
' with culora
repaired
and pai nt ed. ,Free
H.P. B•l•nced , posl lrecll on 1966 GMC t;, ton PU
BANKS TREE SERVICE
1 Iampp,
'
1955 8 K 46 2 BR Londola
. 5: 3B, 4 speed. Many . &amp;• Ires 1969 '" T. Ford PU
csll
males.
Call 446-7353 .
FREE estimates, liabili ty In·
1969 Olds BB
'I
153 12
iii
. ,
19.!5 l~J X 55 l BR Roycroft ·
SB50. 446·4999.
surance . Pruning , trim ming
'
BaS MOBILE HOMES
78-lf 1969 Dodge Slatton W~gon ·
USED bedr oo m sui tes,
and cavi ty work, .tree and BLOCK and Concre te work 7 star
ting at $59.95 .""d up.
stump removal. Ph , 446-4953 .
·
· ~·•ond&amp;VIandsl.
Pt. Pte..anl
Several used ,living room
driveways, p~f!a.s ; ' ste ps ,
1961 BSA 650, good condition . 19)0 '" T. Chev . PU
73· If
1969 t;, T. Chov . PU
,
·I Nexll~ Heck's)
suites . dinette se ts, and other
Coil 446·9371. ·
w.a!Rs . porches, retaining
1969
W
T.
GMC
PU
1&lt;9.!1
Items. New lurn lture special
wa
ll
s
and
f01.mdall
ons.
162-1
MOTORIST MUTUIIL
1966 'n T. GMC PU
Rea
so
nably
do
ne.
Free
In li ving room sulles. S88 .and
NI!W I UI ID f'UR HITUR&amp; ONE; o(, lh' firer lhtngs of lito- --~
INSURANCE
F-O_R_D_,:v,-,-,-.c-1.-a-n-,n...:o- rusl , 1966 'I• T. GMC PU
19
70
tlmates.
446-7353.
es
· ',
~~~ Itt
, Ut f II
,
THE bes t Insurance at the best
151·11
fllv• ' Lus tro cftrpot eleanor . other extros. s1. 995. 446·9534.
IS4· 12 Ufl-- - .
price
.
Fot
auto
,
ho
me
,
Hont
oloctrlc
oh•mpooor
$1
at
&lt;
2.
1968
,.,
T.
GMC
PU
: PWe&amp; rtpn, Pip,••· oap,
business end lite. Ra y Hawk,
r--------,;_
' -16 ;6 1967 1/o T. GMC PU
Ctnlral Supply Co.
Need Another Bldg.?
· ' Cherolnn, filii\, JobtY,1 Mlpi•Q~
BACKHOE DOZER
agent,
446·2300, 541 4th Ave.
116 6
t967 'h T. GMC PU
SEE
our aluminum bldgs .
'I and olhqrs. 'f~wn' y • lpe
TRENCHER
. 150-lf
• 1970 C~V. KINGSWOOD 1968 '-'• T. GMC PU
duty wllh flooring,
H
eavy
and Trophy Hou••· ~72 • ord
CAL L Jackson 286-4524. A:ll
B
LuE
-.
L
us
"
7
1
r
_
e
_n~
otonly-rl~s
ESTATE
WAGON
wired
for
electric . Also West
1969 ''' ton GMC PU
I Ave.
199 li
types ot backhoelng, septic
D. P. Marl in &amp; Son Water
c~ roals of soli but leave. pile
SOMMERS G.M.C.
VIrgin
ia
chunk
coat, drain
tanks, tooters. etc. Also all
Delivery Serv ice , Your
I
l Ori ftnd lolly . Rent aleclrle ·350 V-8, factory air, di ac
TRUCKS, INC . .
tile,
bell
li
te,
cement
and
types ol lrenchlng, water
patronage will be ap ahompooor $1 al G. C. Mur· b
mortar.
Gallipolis
Bloak
&amp;
m
Pine
St.
pl1y, Sliver Bridge Ploro .
rakes, &amp;o.s.•. P. B., ~Icc. Iall
lin es . 9~~ 1\ n('~, Cl" ,
fllJII •••· 2!li·!l()Q,
precloted. Ph. 446·0463.
1PAN T Pug tll_
446-2532
Coa
t
Co.,
123'1
'
Pine,
446-2783.
1
16~ J
_
___ ,_166.6 gato, many o\her e•tru ..
2 If
•
207-lf
·'
_
_ -•
Call ~46 . t5o~.
1
.~ r
. '
w
··------~~--------~

"

0

• R"

·'I

10

- - -- - -

so

••n

IC8 S,,
..

,'

00

$

.-

Parsons

For Sale '
Trying lo buy a mobile home?
Been
l~rnod
down?
Remember, I can say "ytS"
when others say "no.u Call

Frank, 992-7777, I can help,
LARRY'S MOBILE
HOME SALES
600 West Mil in Streel
Pomeroy, Ohio
164-17
1972 FORD pickup with top, 1963
Pon tiac Gran Prix, 389 Cu.

in ., 4 spd . 367-7306 alter 4::10
p.m.

'

161·6

1973 8 TRACK. A small balance
ot $88.64 or poy $6.50 por
month . Phone 446-0255.
96· 11

NEW and used tnslrum•nts,
Brunlcardi House of Muolc : 5~
Stale Street. Phone '406·0617.
33-11
IF YOU ere building e new
home or remodeling, 1M us,
We are builders. Dltlrlbutor
for Holpolnl Appl!enc••·
Allison Electric.
1~11

GROCERY bus Inti• lor Nit,
building for sole or INN.
phone173-5611 from I: :10 P-Ill·
lo tO p.m. for appo!nlmll!t.

..

-

..

·7·!1

�M- The Sw!day Times. ~ntinel, Sunday, July 1$, 1973
:

u;;;;·~..~

LAST DAY FOR TEST
GALLIPOLIS - Kay
Weodward, 4-H Summer
Aoolllaat, olrealed Saturday
IIIII Jaly Zt illbe lut day' to
&amp;et a T.B. Test wbloh
e~~~bll!a •~ lo work In the 4·
H Food Booth at the Gallla
County Junior Fair July 31
lbrougb Aug. 4, 1973. In order
to work, one must lie If yean
of age and pan the T. B.
Toot.
We are encouraging ~pie
to aign up lor the days they
can work or sllliply sign 11\eir
names to the list so the extension service may contact
them.
,

Mine mechanics
will·he trained
'

.

.

ELBERFELD$ IN .POMEROY.

consideration for enlry into the .
!)rogram. In order to be eligible
lor enrollment, an nppliCBnl
. must have ~ minimum lOth
grade educatiOn or equivalent
and be at least 18 years of age.
The mme
machmery
mechanics program, coordtnated by the Ohto Bureau
of Employment Services
(OBES) and the Meigs County
local Board of E;ducalion, is
approved by the Manpower
Training and Development
-»."&lt;:::!&gt;'!~=*~!:=~:!:=:!~:::=:~:~:::~~::::._~}
section of the U. S. Department
of Labor.
Unemployed workers and
Vietnam-era . Vetera ns in·
teres led in lrammg may enroll
at the local office of the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services, 443 Second Ave .,
POMEROY - A Chester Gallipolis.
man was cited to court on
REH!i:ABSALSET
~§~§;~ charges of assured clear
POMEROY - The Meigs
')
distance following a three car
accident on Mulberry Ave .. High School Band will practice
Friday at 6:59p.m
•the at 6 p.m. Thursday and Ftiday
~~ Pomeroy Police Department at the high school, Director
Dwight Goins said . All
reported.
· William Stephenson, Jr .,, members are asked ·. to be
Pomeroy, wa's stopped in line present. The band will go to
of traffic when Delmar camp at Marietta on July 29.
Carrol K.
Larkins, Chester, driving
UNRESTRICTED USE
behind Stephenson, failed to
Snowden
WASHINGTON (UP!)- The
Park Central stop and struck his car in the
Senate
Friday approved
Hotel Bldg.
Second
Ave. rear forcing the stephenson le gisla tion permitting
!'hone 446-429(1 car into a parked car belonging
Home 446·4511 to Thomas McKay, Jr. Larkins unrestricted use of black
Gall!oolis
powder for antique and replica
. P 7338
was cited to court. There were
The bill, approved 78
ST A T E ·i ·A RM "'" .... no personal injuries. There was firearms.
to 8, exempted black powder
L"[ tNSURANC[
heavy property damage to the from licensing, permit, transHomt OffiCI: etoornlnt!OII, Illinois ,.,,_.." 11 LarkinS and Stephenson CarS
portation , and
storage
Lllr• • coOd ne11ttDor, St•t• '•"" •• rn,,., and light to the McKay venicle.
reslrictions.

--;;F=a-·m
- -':.:-;,- -. -:-ty-:l'e·11 8

-

Southeastern Ohio residents
will benefit from a · federal
!raining grant in excess of
$75,000 to inslruct 20 persons as
mine machinery mechanics.
Tentative starting dale for
the program is Aug. 6, 1;73 at
Pomeroy Jlll!ior High &amp;:hoot
on East Main Slfeet, Pomeroy.
The 30-week ltalning course
will include instruction In
maintenance and repair of
underground bituminous coal
mining machinejy as well as
the principles of mechanical,
eleclrical and hydraulic repair
of machinery.
By federal directive, Viet.
nam-&lt;Jra Veterans enjoy first

ere

Driver cited

co""""'

THIS WAS ASCENE.AT the Middleport Marina Sunday
when the Middleport Chamber of Commerce staged its first
Outdoor Recreation and Boating Show with Telt Harrison
and the Valley Boys providing musical entertainment for.a
couple of houra. Despite showers and threatening rain, the
crowd on band for the first show was large.
AT RIGHT - Charles Whittington, Middleport, volunteered lo let archery champions Dean Hupp and Wayne Carr
shoot an apple off his head as in the William Tell legend. The
archers from the Mountain State· Sportsmen's Assn .,
Parkersburg, didn't actually take up Whittington's offer, but
there was great anticipation - and kidding - around for a
while .

A

•

L

enttne
. . .

Devoted To 17uJ lnlflre.t. Of 17ae Meiga· Mmoo Area

VOL. XXV

NO. 64

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHir.

MONDAY, JULY 16, 1973

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS '

•

strz e
MARION , Ohio (UPI)
Operators, installers, linemen
and some clerical Workers at
General Telephone Co. offices
in 70 Ohio counties struck at 6
a.m. today - the first strike by
company personnel since 1957.
Managers
and
other
I!,Upervisory personnel were
called hi to replace the over
2,800 striking Communications
Workers of America members

and "maintain service as near
normal as possible."
Negotiators !\let throughout
the weekend here and until

..
STOCK NO.
73-70

3080,70
1235.70

fN;;;;;,:·:::,i:;;,"' B;I;/;11

FACTORYSTICKER PRICE 1
BOB. RE ES PONTIAC
DISCOUNT

guards, body side moldings, power steering,

lrlm rings, AM radio. front bumper guards.

SALE PRICE
STOCK NO.
73-53

4775.90
1780,90

FACTORY STICKER PRICE 1

400 erig ., deluxe wheel covers, door edge

BOB REES PONTIAC
DISCOUNT

guards, body side moldings, vinyl , front and
rear bUmper guards, protective rubber

bumper strips, custom air conditioning,
H7Bx15 W-W tires. AM radio.

ST~~-~BNO.

By United Press International
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON has reached what
doctors term the halfway point in his reeovery from Viral
pneumonia but will remain in Bethesda Naval Hospital until at
least Friday.
Maj . Gen. Walter R. Tkach, chief White House physician,
said Sunqay Nixon's progress was "excellent" and that he was
"about mid-way" in his recovery from the illness that sent him to
the hospital last Thursday. A chest X-ray taken Sunday afternoon showed a continued "improving trend" and Nixon's
temperature had dropped from 100 to 99 degrees,

CATALINA HT COUPE

Burma brown . Cameo white top, soft ray
glass {all), front and rear floor mats, 2 BBL

$3995

·· SALE PRICE

'
WASHINGTON - WITHIN A MATIER
of days, American
consumers and businessmen will be governed by a new set of
economic rules : Phase IV of President Nixon's economic gameplan . Barring some unexpected complication, such as a wor·
S!lning .of the President's illness, the latest attempt to stabilize
Utenatlon'sexplosive economy will be announced some time this
week.
White House Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said Nixon
approved some Pllrts of the program from his hospital bed .
Saturday and will make more decisions today. The actual 'III·
nouncement probably will be made by Nixon's top economic
advisers : Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz, Cost of Living
Council (COLC) Director John T. Dunlop and Herbert Stein,
chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers.

GRANDVILLE 2 DR. HT COUPE

Mesa Tan -White (;ordova Top, soft ray glass
(all), custom air conditioning, H78xl5 W-W FACTORY STICKER PRICE 1

tires, front and r'ear custom seat belts, front
shoulder strap, custom front and rear seat,
rear passenger assist !itraps, remote control

mirror, AM radio, door edge guards, stainless
steel body side moldings, front and rear
bumper guards, protective rubber bumper

ST~~-~JNO.

5480,05
1935,05

BOB REES PONTIAC
DISCOUNT

$4545

SALE PRICE

strips.

BONNEVILLE 4 DR. SEDAN

State Green-White Too . soft rav olass, (all)

$4967.05
.
BOB REES PONTIAC . 1822.05
DISCOUNT

FACTORY STICKER PRICE

custom alr conditioning, AM radio, fron1 floor

mats, remote control' mirror, H78xl5 W-W
tires, door edge guards, body side moldings,
front bumper guards, rear bumper guards,

SALE .PRICE

protective rubber bumper strips.

PHNOM PENH - U. S. WARPLANES STRUCK within
seven miles of Phnom Penh today in the closest raids since April,
supparllng government forces in efforts to repulse a Communist
attack just south of the capitaL Fighting was reported oh nearly
ali sides of Phnom Penh.
,,
The bombing to the south of Takhmau, a suburb four miles
outside of Phnom Penh, was clearly audible in the capital and
lasted most of Sunday night. It marked the !30th consecutive
day of intensified U.S. bombing . Despite the heavy American air
suppart by FH and Fill fighter-bombers, lield reports said three
government battalions fled their positions and swam across the
Bassac River.

$4145

•

VENTURA 4 DR. SEDAN

STOCK NO
73-69

· Florentine Red-White Cordova Top, air

COI\dltioning, fully equipped .

VENTURA 4 DR. SEDAN
STOCK NO.
73-72

STOCK NQ.
73-62

STOCK NO.
73-47

CATALINA HT COUPE

Factory Sticker Price $3866.70

Bob Rees Pontiac Discount$ 371.70

SALE PRICE

SALE PRICE
Bob Rees

Florentine Red-Burgundy lop, custom
air condltlonln~, fully equipped.

SALE PRICE
Factory Slicker Price $4226.60

LeMANS 4 DR. HT

Bob Rees Pontiac Dlscounl $ 531.60

Burma Brown.Wh ite Top, custom arr ·
conditioning, fu lly equipped.

SALE PRICE

$3695

COME SEE US AT •••

BOB .REES PONTIAC, INC.
Corntr Third &amp; Court Sf.

•

Pilone 446-15) 3

Gallipolis, Ohio ·

Elberfelds have their own service department - trained technicians
modern
equipped shop .and maintain continuous
ser ~ice on RCA products.

•
·i

'.

. ,.

One person was hospitalized
avd three others were treated
arid released following four
accidents investigated over the
weekend.
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept. said that

THE SOUDERS HARDWARE Co. of Hamden provided free rides on this raft boat to
visitors at. Ute First Outdoor Recreatio.1 and Boating Show staged Sunday at the Middleport
Marina by the Middleport Chamber of Commerce. Exhibits of boating and recrea tion
equipment were featured although some exhibitors were held out of exhibiting at the last
moment by threatening InClement weather and last minute problems.

Jaycees to attend institute
Pomeroy Town hall, Richard
Poulin, president, reported on
the district 93 Presidents'
Council in Athens. II was announced that Ralph Werry,
external vice president, Meigs
Chupter, was appointed
District 93 Porade of Chapters
chairman .
Poulin unnoolnced tha t Vlctoo·
Gill! I
hus been named

Berry given, up. to Lancaster

Ask about Elllerfelds sensibie
credit service.

ELB:ERFELDS
IN POMEROY

THE MIDDLEPORT Chamber of Commerce members
and their families, headed by George Ingels, chamber
president, operated a refreshment stand at the First Outdoor
and Recreation and Boating Show Sunday by the Middleport
Chamber at tile 'Marina.

The Meigs County Jaycees
will have representatives at
the Jaycees Mid-American
Institute at Ohio University on
July 27 and 28 sponsored by the
Athens Jaycees.
· Comprising the institute area
SAIGON - TWO CANADIAN OFFICERS freed after 18 days are chambers ot Kentucky,
as captives of the Viet Cong said today they were captured Illinois, Indiana, Michigan and
because the Communists thought they were American spies. Ohio.
During the meeting a t
Capt. !an Patten, 31, and Fletcher Thorpson, 25, were released
Sunday along with two captured South Vietnamese drivers. They '
appeared healthy and fit.
"We were told we were recognized as Americans on an Intelligence mission," Patten said. "TI1ey could not distinguish us
Jose ph Dan Ber ry, 2a,
from Americans." .The two officers are members of the pcu•"" Middleport appeared before
keeping International Commission of Control and Supervision Meigs County Court Judge
(lCCS ) and were capturCII June 28Jn an area 35 miles east or Frunk W. Porter Friday where
Saigon that is ciltimed by both the Viet Cong and U1c South he was bound over to th grund
Vietnamese government. The Viet Cong did not acknowledge jury under a $1.000 bond, Meigs
they ,were holding the men unt,illuat Monduy.
County Sheo·i[f Hobert C.
Hurtenbach r~ported.
JACICSON, OHIO - FOUR P.ERSONS WE;RE killed and
Berry posted bond and was
three Injured Sunday in a two~ar crash on Ohio 93 one mile south returned Sunday to the l.an·
caster Police Dept, on charges
ol here.
.
Ofrtdal~ Identified the victims as George Ward, 53, Ironton ;
Ill nllegcdly illlvlng stolen u
LatTY Willis, 24, South Point; Cheswr Ruvencraft, 50, Ironton: cur..
(Continued on page 2)
Severn! weeks ugo Berry wns

Bob Rees

Porcelain Blue, white cordova top.

the state.
Don Detweiler, the company's public relations
director, .said no time lor
resumption of negotiations has
been set.
"However we expect to
reach
some
sort
of
arrangement to resume the
talks, possibly some time
today," Detweiler said.
Wages and union security
are the main dissension points
between General and the UW A,
Detweiler said.
Detweiler did not disclose
, details of the pay djspute. O,n

Four hurt in traffic mishaps

VENTURA 4 DR. SEDAN

Regatla.Biue-Whlte lop, remole mirror. turbo
hydramatic transmission, E78xl4 W-W!Ires,
dual horns, rear seat speaker. door edge

early today without reaching a
settlement on a new contract.
The old agreement expired in
early July, but was extended
until 6 a.m. today. THere was
no fW'Iher extension and a
strike began.
The walkout afkcts 301!,000
cusl'bmers in such communities as Marion, Athens,
Portsmou th, Wilmington,
Waverly, New Philadelphia,
Circleville, Celina, PomeroyMiddleport, and Troy:'
Picket lines were set up at
Gener,al's main offices here
and ·at local ofli~s throughout

'

parliamentarian of U&gt;e local
chapter and Earl Ingels, Rich
Crow and Ken Collins will head
a new program known as lho
"Haunted House Program,"
deU.iis of which will be . announ ced.

The Jaycees voted $50 to the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce for· the F&gt;·&lt;i~ El&lt;tii io&lt;:tivitics of Ute regalla . Dick
Abel , District 93 vice president,
was 11 guest who reported on
the A ii .S~t t e and the MidAmerican lpstituto.
Meetings nn nouncod for lhc
coming month in clude th e
district rneellng · at Belpre, !on
ail s~tte meeting ut Wirkiiffe,
and the Jaycee Golf 'l'ournam nl at Bveriy.

Roger W. Partlow, Pomeroy,
Rt. 3, driving a motorcycle on
county road 26, and Vicki K.
Deem, Pomeroy, driving an
auto south on county road 82,
collided at the intersection of 26
and 82.
Partlow was taken to
Ve terans Memorial Hospjtai
by EMS and admitted. He
suffered a fractUred leg and
abrasions. Vicki Deem wits
ciled to court for failure to
yield right of way . · The
Pomeroy ER squad was also
called to the scene. .
At 1 p.m. Saturday tn Sutton
Twp., Pamela Wesler, Mtnersville, driving a compact bustype vehicle, lost . conttol in
loose gravel, went off the htghway into a cor11fieid, and
turned over.
The driver and two
passengers, John Henry
Bunyan , Minersville, Rt. I, and
Roger M. Fox, New York, were·
taken to Veteran Memorial
Hospital by priv ate car,
treated and released . No
citation was issued .
·Sunday al9 :43 a.m. in Salem
Twp., Wilma J. Whitley,
Radcliff, collided in a curve
with a car driven by Charles
McMillian , Vinton, Rt. L

Meigs EMS
on three runs
over weekend
At 12:18 pJn. Saturday, the
unit went to Pomeroy Route 3
to assist Roger Partlow who
was injw·ed in a motorcycle
ac~i d ent on the Flatwoods
rand. He was .taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
At4 :43a.m.Sunday , the unit
went to Chester Road to assist
Patty Barton who was having
difficulty breathi n ~. She was
taken to the Holzer Medical
Center . At 11 :38 a.m. Sunday,
the unit went to Wright St.,
Pomeroy , fo r Charles Col'det•
who had fractured his ankle.
He was taken to Veterans
MomoriaJ HospitaL

fll ken into c us~ody by the
Middleport Police Dept. on n
charge of breaking and entering the Firestone .Store In
Middleport. On July 10 Judge
Por ter ot·dercd Berry be sent to
Athens Sl11te ll os pilai for
obset·vulon from where he'
escaped twice. He .,was ap~() W YOU KNOW
prehended by the Slt1te HighLOCAl, TEMPS
way Patrol in a ro11U check at The Melropoliflln Museum or
The temperature In downJackson, he !lollS chnrKed with Arl in New York houses lhe town Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
possession of two stolen guns i&lt;u·gcst collecllon of urt In the Mond11y wus 76 degrees under
United Slules.
nnct fi cnr .
sunny skies.

Mrs. Whttley claimed injuries but was not immediately
lreated. No citation w•s issued.
There was medium damage to
both vehicles.
At 11 p.m. Sunday in
Columbia Twp., Wilson Hunt,
Albany, struck two parked
vehicles belonging to Candice
Desours, Athens and June
Rosenblum, Albany, Rt. 3.
Hunt was arrested on a
charge of reckless operation.
There was medium property
damage to all three vehicles .
No personal injuries were
reported.

the union security Issue, he
said UWA negotiators have
questioned the company's offer
of agency shops.
New employes would not be
required to join the union in an
agency shop, but would pay a
monthly "service charge"
comparable to union dues.
Under present policy, workers
who don't join the union pay :to
"service charge" partially an
open shop, petweiler said.
General Telephone was lust
slruck in 1957 when workers
remained off their jobs for nine
months.
''
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Cooler during the period
with a chance of ' showell
Wednesday and thursday.
Daytime highs in the 80s
Wedneaday, lowering to the
70s by Friday. Lows at night
in the 80s Monday, lowering
to the 50s and lower .80s by

&gt;~~1~:,;,,;~;;«;:;::~~:,~::=:::: : :~:~:::~:::::::~:::::

Weather ·
M tl
d
t
os y sunny an p1easan
today and Tuesday. High
temperatiU'es today in the mid
to upper 70s and Tuesday In the
upper 708 and lower 80s . Clear
and cool tonight. Lows in the
mid to uplJer 50s.
.

carnage on T uhe
·

may get results
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
· COLUMBUS (UP! ) - State
. Highway Safety Director Eugene "Pete" O'Grady says his
department will urge local
television stations "to bring
highway carnage into our
living rooms" if that's what it
takes to jolt Ohioans into
driving more carefully.
Ohio led the nation in highway fataliti es durin g the
FoW'th of July holiday period
with 22.
O'Grady said television stations,are being encouraged to
show closeups of broken and
bleeding bodies in an effort to
drfve the safety message .
' home.
" If this is the way to put
highway carnage in our Jiving
rooms to the point where we
become upset about it like we
did the Vietnam War, then I'm ·
for II,'' Ite Sllid.
"We've seen over the past.JO
years what can happen when
the public becomes aroused
about something. The people
aHainst the Vietnam War made
such a loud protest, such a din,
that it was dlffi&lt;:UIL for those
who favored the war to get
their Views across.
"People got tired or Waller
Cronkite serving that blood and
b'llls with their dinner every
night, and 'lifter.. awhile, the
young people an~ the mothers

and • everybody else was
against the war." '
May Change Fonnat
O'(:rady said he is considering dropping the monotonous
Monday morning statistics report of the previous weekend's
traffic deaths, whkh means lit- .
tie lo the average reader or
listener, and replacing it with a
weekly in-depth piece about the
hurt and hardship of an accident victim, and the circumstances leading lo the accident.
"! am tired of playing a
numbers game with Ohio citizens," he said. "1.'oo 'many
families lace the _, tragedy of
senseless death because we
hav~ failed to translate our
fata lity statisti cs into the
human
misery
they

represent."
"We 're built to shun. ali pain
and agony,'' O'Grady said.
"We don't stop at' any point in
our lives and contemplate that
what we are doing iviil result in
death. Our mi~d Is always on
something else." .
O'Grady .said he feels the
mandatory usc of seatbelts
would save many lives, and
wishes that people who have
been spared their .lives or lltrious Injury be.:ause ot lhf
safety straps would comment
publicly.
'
· No Sup!JOrl For Bill
· Legislation requiring the u.e
(Continued Qn page 2)
I

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