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I

I

·1

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•

. J

Gallians Keep
Rotary Relays
Title Trophy

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10-The Dtlily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April23, 1971

·.Education In Ohio Studied by Leaders
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.

'

and stated that our present most pressing priority is
(Continued from page II
·Haw do we achieve these goals? Dr. Essex calls for the construction of new and improved educational
a unified, non-partisan approach that wiU provide the thoroughfares; He urged us to "get together", resolve
vital financial support that his proposals require. We our diffe~nces in effective compromise and get on
must base the support of education on a source that is with this important job.
I sincerely trust that my notes were accurate and
~espmsive to the economy -an income tax. We have
that
I _reported Dr. Essex's remarks with a
the means to do it. in Ohio. We need only the firm
corresponding accuracy.
resolve to act.
In the evening session we heard from House
In conclusion, Dr. Essex emphasized that Ohio
faces the unfortunate situation of playing "catch up". Speaker Kurfess, Senator Oliver Ocasek, Cleveland
All aports fans know the meaning and problems of this Superintendent Paul Briggs, Strasburg - Franklin
condition. He.concluded by citing the great progress "in Local Superintendent Paul Taylor, Columbus Attorney
highway construction in our state over the past decade C. E. Glander, and Montgomery County Superin-

tendent Kenneth Crim.
.
.
In the "in betw~n" lime we attended three "additional small group sessions and conSumed two very
delicious Jefl!lings Foundation purchased meals. All in
all - a full day from 7a.m..to llp.m.- nevertheless a
thought-provoking and stimulating day of experienc~sProposals of great importance are presently under
consideration in the state legislative ·committee rooms
and chambers. The depth of their signiflcalice and the
breadth of their eventual ramifications were certainly
emphasized by "this conference. The Martha Holden
Jermings Foundation is to be commended for its
generous financial support of this meaningful
educational event.
·

14 Boys Teams, Five

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Extended Oblo Weather
Outlook - Sunday through
· Tuesday:
Continued cool Sunday
through Tuesday wltb a
chance of showers, mainly
. Fourteen boys track squads
south, Monday and east and five girls teams are entered
Tuesday. Highs In the 50s and in the Fourth Annual Gallipolis
lower 60s. Lows In the 30s and -Rotary Club Relays according
lower ((Is. ·
tO Dean Circle, meet coordinator.
The annual event will be held
LOCAL TEMPS
on Gallipolis' Memorial Field
The temperature in downtown
Saturday, beginning at 10:45
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Friday
Wider partially sWiny skies was a.m.
Boys teams entered' are
56 degrees.

.Girls Teams In Relays

Last to Die on an Error tWho?)
Tonight, Sat. &amp; Sun.

APRIL 23-24-25
- JII.UI ...

DOUIIII'IAIUB

n

COLOI

... lit
!1.
? 1. . . . .

)ACQUEUNE BISSET
iMBROWN
,..._~

Jl'Y,IH

COI"Q~

Ill

''SOMETHING: FOR
EVERYONE"
Starri'18
Michael York
And.
Angell Lln1bury
Rated (R)

I

Katie C. Wilson
Died Thurschy

WASHINGTON &lt;UPI) - Nine hundred Vietnam veterans,
marching silently past the White House in a demonstration for
withdrawal of U. S. forces from Indochina, may be reaching
President Nixon as no other antiwar groups have been able to do.
'111e battle-dressed veterans, wearing the medals and ribbons
they won in Vietnam, walked or rolled in wheelc.hairs in a ~an­
dlelight parade Thursday night so silent it couldn't be heard half a
·block away. They carried the flag upside down- depicting what
one spokesman said was the military's acknowledged signal of
distress.

HARRISONVILLE - Mrs.
Katie C. Wilson,
86,
Harrisonville, died Thursday
afternoon
at
Veterans
Memorial Hospital. She was
baptized at the Church of Christ
in -Middleport but attended the
Community
Church
at
Harrisonville,
She is ' survived by three
daughters, Mrs. Jake (Vinas)
Lee of Racine; Mrs. David M.
"Which way?"
(Ada ) Easterday, Lawton,
''To your left."
Okla., and Mrs. Asa (Nora)
He told of a friend who died recently in a
the slreet without a limb, an arm, a face,
"Uke thls?"
Jordan, Middleport; a sister,
veterans
hospital
in
New
York
while
his
and
small
boys
ask
why."
"Yes, I wanted to see what was on your
Mrs. Esta Dean, and a .brother,
wardma tes despera !ely tried to obtain
~~Where are our 1eaders?"
chest. That's a Silver Star."
Howard Welch, both of
Kerry is a Yale graduate who served in a help. "They rang the bell. There was no Downlngton; four grandWounded Three Times
Navy river patrol unit in Vietnam and how one there. "
Yes, sir."
two
greatAnd those who return physically in one children,
he said he and the other members of the
"And that is a Purple Heart?"
grandchildren, and several
Vietnam Veterans Against the War were piece often rome back, he said, with nieces and nephews. She was
11
Yes."
"With three clusters on it. You have on "a last mission-to search out and psychological troubles and expensive drug preceded in death by her
destroy the last vestiges of this barbaric habits. "A $12 habit in Vietnam costs $90 to husband, Howard;
been woWided three times."
five
support in the United States. It's very
War."
"Yes.n
brothers,
and
five
sisters.
He contended the United States had widespread."
"I have no furtber questions."
FWieral services will be held
Members of the committee sat in rapt
Created a monster" in VietnamThe room erupted in applause.
at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Ewing
For nearly two hours, former Lt. (jg 1 refusing to leave a war which nearly silence and afterwards said it was among Funeral Home with the Rev.
(Continued from page 1)
John Kerry, 'll, Waltham, Mass., told the everyone now considers a tragic mistake. the most eloquent pleas for disengagement Charles Simons officiating.
committee, the Congress and the And if it is a mistake, he said, why are from Vietnam they had heard.
Chairman J. William Fp)bright, D-Ark,, Burial will be in the Wells States would come and that
American people why he has led a rag-tag more men being told to die or be maimed
gently urged Kerry not to lose faith in the Cemetery. Friends may call at America would win the war.
army of nearly 1,000 veterans to Wash- there while the withdrawal continues?
Her husband, who died 12 years
"Haw do you ask a man to be the last to political system and to recognize that the fWieral home any time.
Ington to protest the war in Indochina.
ago, constantly had to warn her
"We're angry because we feel we've die in .Vle1nam?" he asked the senators. Vietnam was not designed by "evil men"
against airing her views against
heen used In the worst fashion by !hi§ · "How do you ask a man to be the last to die but was a serious "mistake in judgment"
Hi tier, Mrs. Kaltenbach rethat, now must be corrected.
counlry ," he said. "Our brothers go down for a mistake?"
ports.
As the war progressed, the
ALBANY - Millard L. highly prizes family coffee
Brickles, 53, died Tuesday at service was packed in a large
Veterans Memorial Hospital. hox with excelsior and a Jot of
Mr. Brickles was a veteran of junk piled on top. The box was
World War II and operated a put In the basement of the home
service station here.
Library trustees were told leaflets, posters and book bags . the state library development
and store after being made to
they can · be their public Librarians and volunteers division, also
reviewed Four divorces were granted
He was preceded in death in appear quite insignificant. As a
and 12 cases were dismissed in
library's most effective also will take the OVAL book- proposed legislation.
February by a daughte.r, further precaution, the box was
Meigs CoWity Common Pleas
· spokesmen at a meeting of the mobile to festivals, city shop- Other OVAL officers are
Juanita Louse. He is survived placed under a stairway area
Ohio Valley Area Libraries ping centers and even on door- Jonathan Louden, director of Court Thursday.
by his wife, Esta; one son, for a lillie more protection
Council (OVAL) at Blosser's to-door visits in rural areas. To the Gallia County district Raymond W. Holsinger was Larry Herbert, at home; two
against the bombing. Well, the
granted a divorce from AnnaL.
Restaurant in Logan Thursday inform businessmen and library and of the Briggs'
daughters,
Gladys,
at
home,
bombing came and the home
Holsinger and Jimmie G. King
night.
women about library services, Lawrence County public from Shirley A. King, each on and Mrs. Carolyn Perry, was in rubble but underneath It
·· Mrs. Nellie Vale, Mrs. Vilma books and leaflets wiU be taken library, , vice president, and
charges of gross neglect of duty. Reynoldsburg; three sisters, all safely packed was the coffee
Pikkoja and C. E. Blakeslee to meetings of business groups Terry L. McLaughlin, assisting
Mrs . Josephine Dilcher, in service .
Mildred
Brooks
was
granted
a
from !he Pomeroy-Middleport and service clubs.
director of the Portsmouth
Florida; Mrs. Grace Price, in The family had to be
and Meigs Extension libraries Mrs. Emelyne Reed, OVAL Public library, secretary- divorce from Paul Brooks and Illinois, and Mrs. Mildred separated at times during the .
Mary Ruth Lawrence from
were among the 58 persons who president, and a trustee of the treasurer.
Cleelan, Springfield; three war. Two of the children were
Joseph
Dale
Lawrence,
each
on
attended the meeting.
brothers, Howard, in Indiana; sent to !he coWiiry, another
Chillicothe and · Ross CoWity Each county in the OVAL has
Alice Norton, a library public Public Library, presided. three representatives to the charges of gross neglect of duty Avery, Louisville, Ky., and went with a doctor brother of
relations consultant from New Members discussed a survey of coWlcil which is the governing and extreme cruelty .
Delbert, of Springfield, Ohio. Mrs. Kaltenbach. The eldest
Cases
dismissed
were
Janice
York, who is working with the bookmobile service which was body. Members. include both
FWieral services were held was pressed Into service with a
Lee vs Louis D. Lee, Edward
OVAL llbraries on a public conducted in the region by John librarians and trustees.
today at 2 p.m. at the Blgony youth war group. Mr _and Mrs.
Lemaster vs Bonnie Lemaster, Funeral Home with the Rev.
information project, said:
Stork of Lima and David Roach
Kaltenbach resided for a time in
Lucille Diehl vs Danny Ray
AUXILIARY TO MEET
" Your work and civic ac~ of Dayton.
Jay Stiles officiating. Burial the home of a priest, and in a
tlvities give you opportunities Norton Webster, legal coWisei The auxiliary of Drew Diehl, Dollie Acree vs Ervin Joe was in Wells Cemetery.
convent.
every day to tell others about for the Ohio Library Assn . and Webster Post 39, American Acree, James Barnett vs Kyle
When the war was over, the
library services. You also can the Ohio Library Trustees Legion, will meet at 7:30 p.m. Barnett, Kenneth H. Romine vs
Kaltenbachs
began . the hard
Avery
Sue
Romine,
Ralph
T.
bring to your library staff Assn., discussed legislation Tuesday. Mrs. Jean Wright,
task of clearing their home site.
valuable information about affecting libraries pending in children and youth chairman, Bass vs Clebith 0. Bass, Rita C.
Each brick.was salvaged from
library services and community the 109th General Assembly and reports that Mrs. Judy Crooks, Arnold vs William Edward
the rubble by the couple and
Arnold,
Bernice
H.
Blair
vs
needs."
the 92nd Congress. Major teacher of the Meigs Com- Jessie E. .Blair, Clarence (Continued from page I)
they were able to secure
This year 12 libraries in the proposals in Ohio include repeal munity School, will speak.
in
the
contest
were
Mrs.
Daisy
OVAL chose " increasing of the intangibles tax and Members having Betty Crocker William Andrews vs Florence Blakeslee, Mrs. Jeanne Bowen, bricklayers to rebuild their
home and store. Two years ago
E. Andrews, Gerald Lee Mclibrary use" as a major goal. funding of libraries from coupons are to turn them in.
Mrs.
Liza
Hobbs,
Mrs.
Martha
the rebuilt structure was
Daniel vs Connie McDaniel, and
The theme of their campaign, general revenue. Nationally,
Husted
and
Mrs.
Dorothy
replaced by a brand new homeMartha Jean Edwards vs
which will begin next month is, the amount of funding of the
MARRIAGE LICENSE
Oliver.
store
combination.
Marvin
Ray
Edwards.
"Whatever You're Looking For Library Services and Con- Eldon Dwain Brown, 22,
"It was hilrd, but our family
- Try Your Public Library." struction Act is Wldecided.
Stewart, Ohio, and Shirley Ann
managed to stay alive during
LODGE TO MEET
HAS SURGERY
Libraries will distribute Richard H. Checki, head of Rucker , 19, Coolville, Rt. 2.
There will be a special
Mrs. Anthony Graber' the war- My .. usband said that
ti
Dayton, former Pomeroy we would just have to start over
mee ng of Middleport Lodge resident, is confined to the Good and that's what we did," Mrs.
363, F&amp;AM, at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday to honor past masters Samaritan Hospital there where Kaltenbach recalls.
·~f the lodge and to confer !he she has undergone surgery for a Interesting and intelligent,
(Continued ·from page 1)
master mason degree. All fractured hip suffered In a fall Mrs. Kaltenbach has little
Director William Ruckelshaus in February gave Cleveland 180 master masons are invited. on Wednesday. Her home ad- difficulty with the English
days tocomeupwltha program to clean up its waters.
Refreshments wiU be served. dress is 419 Homewood Ave., language. She learndd to speak
'·
Dayton.
·
English during her years In _
Robert King is wor$hipful
New York City and remembers
Cong. Boggs R idi~uled
master.
it
well even though she has
WASHINGTON - HOUSE DEMOCRATIC Leader Hale
ATTENTION, BOYS!
SPEAKER NOTED
spoken it very little since her
Boggs says the reluctance of legislators to speak out about the
All boys who have not signed The Rev. Russell Lester will return to her native Germany in
FBI's surveillance of civilians has made even congressmen to participate in the Racine Pee speak at !he Middleport First the early 30s.
"prisoners" of the agency _Boggs made the charge Thursday in a wee league, little league and Uni~ Presbyterian Church at Despite a difficult life, Mrs.
80-minute floor speech in which he renewed his call for the pony league are asked to do so 7:30p.m. Sunday to conclude a Kaltenbach appears younger
[)
resignation of FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover. The Louisiana as soon as possible by calling series of special services. His than her years, leaving no doubt
Democrat said the FBI has tapped his home and office telephone. Evelyn "Young at 949..'1741. All topic will be "What's Next as to her determination
~l
Attorney General John N. Mitchell said Boggs failed to boys must have team In- George" which will outline th~ capability and vitality.
"substantiate his wtid charges" and tries to hide "his untruths by surance, even if covered ·by · role of a Christian In his com- &lt; ~nyone could deliver the pormaking otber equally unwarranted attacks on..the FBI and its another policy. The cost is $2 munity and the world. Mrs. Ben celain coffee service safely
director," Republican members of the House generally derided per boy and can be sent to or Neutzling of Pomeroy wiD be from Gennany to Middleport
given to Kay Warden, Racine. organist for the service.
Boggs allegations as devoid of evidence.
she could -and sbe did!
'
1
By JOHN HAIL
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The cleanshaven former combat officer faced the
Senate Foreign Relations 'Committee. He
said he and the ragged men in the room
hehind him were angry~bout the war,
aboot the Indifference of America, and
about the prospect of a last American who
will yet die before the troops leave Vietnam.
'.'Could you move your microphone?"
ssked Sen. Stuart Symington, D-Mo.

11

You plant it.
We make it

de!ending champion Gallipolis;
Portsmouth" East, Logan,
Chesapeake, Rock Hill, Ironton,
North Gallia, Wahama, South
Point, Meigs, Wheelersburg, ·
Wellston, Kyger Creek and
Marietta.
Girls teams participating are
Gallipolis, defending cochampion; North Gallia ,
Jackson, Kyger Creek and
South Point.
·
More than 300 boys and girls
from southern Ohio and neighboring West Virginia will take
part in Saturday's activities.
Marietta, Chesapeake and
Ironton are heavily favored to
take the title away from !he
defending champion Blue
Devils.
There is no clear cut favorite
in the girls event.
Points will he awarded individuals on a 6-4-3-2-1 basis.
A scratch l)leeting will open
the dsy-long event at 10 a.m., in
front of the press box. Actual
activities will begin at 10:45
a.m., and rWl through 5 p.m.
Thirty-seven trophies and 118
ribbons will be presented
various winners.
Previous boys winners are
Gallipolis, 1968; Chesapeake,
1969, and Gallipolis, 1970.
Previous girls winners are
Gallipolis, 1969; Parkersburg
South and Gallipolis, 1970.

Silver

11

N. L. Brickles.
JJiet!, Tueschy

Library Trustees Briefed

Give us your money to save, and

we'll make sure that It earns good iOl~ rest. And is safely
Insured upto$20,000. And Is there when you need it. OK?

Contln_u~us S~rvlce

On
Fridays 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.,
(

POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK
RUTLAND

POMEROY
Seroing Meigs County
Since 1872

'

Member Federal Reserve System

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

All Accounts Insured Up To S20,000.J!.O ,

Speech

TIMBERLAKE BY POLORON

•. , Timberlake 141fz' truck

camper~

only s1319
•

Court Grants
Four Divorces

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...

GALLIPOLIS - Coach Orval Fee's
Gallia Academy High School Blue Devils
retained possession or the Rotary Relays
title on Memorial Field here Saturday by
nosing out runner-up Chesapeake 41-36'h.
Fourteen area squads participated in
the fourth "annual event. It was Gailia's
third championship in four years.
, Five meet records were established
during nine-hour, 15-cvent session,
conducted In windy 60-degree temperatures.
Gallia's Steve Stebbins set a new mark
in the 100-yard dash with a :10.1 performance. Danny Wilson, Chesapeake,
held the old mark or :10.5, set in 1970.

\

TWENTY-THREE area thinclads were entered in the 100-yard dash
event during Satm"day's Fourth Annual Rotary Relays. Scene above was
taken during first preliminary run. After all the preliminaries, Gallia 's

Steve Stebbins came through ·on top with a record-breaking :10.1, a shade
better tban North Gallia's Harvey Brown.
.

+

tmts
Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

THREE SECTIONS

32 PAGES

VOL VI NO. 13

SUNDAY, APRIL 25, 1971

Pomeroy-Middleport

Area EconomyShowing Lie
MIDDLEPORT- Edison· Hobstetier,
president of the Pomeroy National Bank,
·sees the deft hand of the Federal Reserve
Board in the reviving National economy.
Hobstetter, guest speaker when the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club dined at
the Legion Hall Friday evening, explained
how the Federal Reserve governors
control the amount of money in circulation
through devices such as the prime interest
rate and requirements on reserves
retained by member national banks.
A banker with experience that began
in the 20s before~ great stock market
crash of 1929, H tetter reviewed the
chan}les lhat ha e oecurred in the indusiry.
· ·
He criticized especially restrictions of
the 1960s "embodied in such laws as the
truth in lending la.w, on the ground that
they are not needed.
Hobstetter, who said his deepest interestin banking is in the operations of the
Federal Reserve Board, indicated the
recent upswing in the economy has
followed tpe relaxing of interest rates by
the board, permitting more money to he
available.
In a look at t¢ay's world, in which
banks will have greater infiuence, Hobstetter cited pollution, unemployment,
hou~ng, and ghetto conditions, among
othera, aa chief problems of the future.

He said: "In Meigs County today
probably the greatest thing we need is
more housing . I Wlderstand there probably
will be annoWicement soon of an 800-unit
project.
Mr. Hobstetter introduced Dennis
Kenney, vice-president of the Pomeroy
National Bank since 14st autumn, who
declared he found Meigs County people
friendly and helpful.
But Kenney said this area has
problems, many of them deriving from the
departure of its young people to find
rewarding employment elsewhere.
He mentioned three persons who in the
brilif time he bas been in Pomeroy he
thought were dedicating extraordinary
time and effort ·to improving conditions.
He listed Bernard Fultz, Frank W. Porter
and Mr. Hobstetter.
·Rotarian George Meinhart introduced
Mr. Hobstetter. President Charles Simons
presided.
THEFT REPORTED
GALLIPOLIS - Gary. Tenney, Middleport, reported a theft to the Gallia
Cou nty sheriff's department Friday.
· Tenney said someone took a stereo tape
player and 10 tapes from his car parked at
the Chris Craft Plant parking lot on
E\!Siern Ave.

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Escapee Caught

DSTis Here
Clocks In Ohio, as In most other
stales, will he turned ahead one-hour at
2 a.m. Sunday when Daylight Savings
Time returns.
"DST" will remain ·In effect,
bringing· more daylight hours lo the
state, until the final Sunday In October
when Eastern Standard Time wUl
return. Clocks should be moved ahead
one hour at 2 a.m. Sunday, or upon
retiring Saturday l!ight. ·

Monday: Blood Day

GALLIPOLIS - A 16-year old
. walkaway from the Leckie Forestry
Camp, McDowell County, W. Va. and the
Gallia County Jail, was apprehended after
a chase on· foot Fri!lay afternoon in Pt.
Pleasant, Returned · here to face escape
charges Saturday was Richard Lee
Cleveland, 16, Huntington.
According to a Gallia County sheriff's
department spokesman, deputies received
a tip Friday that Cleveland was living in
the Pt. Pleasant area.
TWo deputies, ~oss Hamrick and Wayne
Davis, and city patrolman Gary Wallace
went to Pt. Pleasant to search lor
"cleveland, aided by Pt. Pleasant police
officers. Cleveland was observed soon
running toward the lloodwall. He was
slopped by Wallace and Davis but
managed to break free.

POMEROY - Monday is Blood Donor
Day in Meigs CoWity. Residents who live
in or near Meigs County may be a don&lt; if
they are in good health and between the
ages of 18 and 66. The bloodmobile will be
at the Pomeroy Elementary School,
Mulberry Ave., from 1 to 6 p.m.
Vernon Nease, blood" program
chairman, asks everyone who can to be
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Senate Majority .
there. The volunteers who work at the Whip Michael J. Maloney, R-Cincinna\1,
bloodmobile extend their appreciation to said Saturday there is growing evidence
those who have donated and supported the that Gov. John J . Gilligan's proposed
blood program in the past.
personal and . corporate income taxes
cannot stand the test of constitutionality.
Maloney said he arrived at this conclusion after a series of conferences with
"acknowledged tax experts who have no
Sunny and mild Sunday. Mainly clear axes to grind." He did not ldefltify the tax
and cold Sunday night, lows from the experts.
upper 20s to the mid 30s. Increasing
"Unanimously, those asked to review
cloudiness and mild Monday, highs from the proposed tax legislation agree that the
the 50s north to the 60s south.
,.
procedures set forth for calculating both

He was finally cornered in a basement in
!he First St. area, taken into custody, and
lodged in the Mason County jail pending
arrival of Cabell County authorities.
Young Cleveland had been arrested here
last Tuesday afternoon by patrolmen
Wallace and Bennie Pennington. He had
been sought for the past two months by
West Virginia authorities for escaping
from the camp. Seen on several occasions
in the Gallipolis area, Cleveland had been
able to elude the officers.
After his arrest Tuesday, he was
transferred from the city building to the
Gallia County Jail. Later, when he was
permitted out of his cell to make a
telephone call, and upon entering the main
corridor of the sheriff's office, he walked
past two deputies and dashed to freedom.

.

Mark Davis, a member of Marietta's
Jayvees, set a new mark in the pole vault,
going 13 feet. The old mark was 12'~", set
in 1970 by Ironton's Greg Cronacher. Davis
edged Logan's Wartbman after a two and
one-half hour battle.
1
Dave Cernus, · another Marietta
Jayvee, set a mark in the 180-low hurdles
with a :21.4 effort, bettering Ironton's
Chuck Keller's 1970 effort of :21.8 by four
tenths of a second .
Norlh Gallia's Harvey Brown set a
new record in the 220-dash, finishing with
an amazing :22 effort. The old mark was
:22.6, set by Meigs' John Ritchhart in 1970.
The GAHS 880-yard relay team bettered last year 's winning performance by
.6 thus retaining possession of that event
plus a new record.
'
Gallipolis' Steve Stebbins captured
the Individual scoring trophy with 161-2
points.
Stebbins captured first in the long
jump, 100-yard dash; was third in the 440yard dash, and was a member of the
winning. 880-yard relay team.
Points were given on a 6-4-3-2-l .basis.
Marieiia's Cernus finished second in individual scoring with -11 points.
The Marietta Jayvees finished third
with 36 points. Rock Hill was fourth with
~7. Logan's Chieftains rounded out the top
"ith 231-2 points.
•. , Chesapeake Panthers entered
Saturday's meet with a 3~9 record in eight
meets. GAHS was H-7 in six meets.
Paul Wagner, president of the
(Continued on page 16)

Legality in Doubt

Weather

personal and business tax liability violate
the constitutional requirement that laws
have uniform application and raise serious questions under the equal protection
clause of the United States Constitution,"
Maloney said.

.

1-

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio extended outlook Tuesday
through. Thursday
,
A chance of showers malilly west
Tuesday and Wedaesday and over lhe
state Thursday. High temperatures In
the low 50s nortb to lhe low OOs south
and lows ln the mid 30s north to the low
40s south.

Don't Go by Air
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UP!)- If you're
coming to the Kentucky · Derby next
Saturd~y, travel - by · road, rail or
recognized air routa ..Direct fiights to the
track are stringently discouraged }'Y the
au"'oriUet ,.
. \'
Two skydivers who tried to drop In at
Churchill Downs just before post time last
year wound up in the ·hands of the law.
"One of those jokers' managed to fioat
down In the infield at Churchill Downs, but
the other landed on someone's roof over on
Third Street," said Police Maj. Jack Kley.

C. Emory Glander, counsel to the special
task force which made tax recomDIES IN CYCLE. CRASH
mendations for the governor, had isaued
SANDU.SKY,
Ohio ( UPI) - Gall L.
opinions to the task force Indicating "the
personal and • corporation taxes after Wagner, 21, Clyde, Ohio, died &amp;iturday of
which Gllllgan patterned his proposals injuries sustained late Friday when her
motorcycle crashed on Ohio 269 near here.
would withstand ·colD"t tests.

News ... in Briefs

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_[&amp;

1i

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\

Damage Moderate

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Your ·campsite• are limited only by the places your pickup can go, when you take this
completely eqyipped Timberlake truck ·camper along - Sleeps 6 on 4" thick poiyfOilm
mattresses - Handy galley with 3-burner stove and oven (optional), 75-lb. capacity icebox
and sink - 17-galton water taQk.and marine pilmp- Fully Insulated - 9,000 BTU heater
with thermostat - Flush toilet - 110-volt and 12-vott Interior lights - HMdy gas botllc
sforage compartme!lf is accessible from outside.
'i ••

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Tonight &amp; Saturday
Apr/123-24
Edgar Allen Poe's
CRY OF THE
BA:NSHEE
(Technlcolor}
VIncent Price
Hugh Griffith
MARLOWE
(Technlcolorl
James Garner
Jayle HunnlcuH
. with parental

GP

Sun. - Mon.- Tuei.
Aprii2S-26-27
"WUSAu

LOVE IT OR
LEAVE IT
(Ttc~nlcolor}
Paul Newman
Joan Wlll&gt;dward
Colorcortoont:
Big Bid Bollcat
Good Foiry
·
SHOW STARTS 7 P,M.

Medium , damages were
reported in a single car accident
Thursday at 11:15 p.m. on· SR 7
just south of county road 26.
The' Meigs County Sheriff's
dept. said Earl F, Ingels, 24,
Pomeroy, Rt. 3, was traveling
north when he passed a vehicle
driven by Daniel Hill, 18,
Moorehaven, Fla., moving In
the same direction, and losing ,
control, went into the guardrail .
There were no injuries or
arrests.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Darrell
Mitchell, . Rutland; Ethel
Collins, Shade; Wllllatn
Buchanan,. Pomeroy; Joh:t
WGllama, Minersville; .William
Landers, Polneroy.
DISCHARGED -

Elberfelds In .Pome~ are open both Friday
and Saturday nights until 9. Terrific values ·for
th~ ·two day' sale in every department all ov~r. .
the ~re • Ready to wear • Mens and Boys
Wear • Ungerie • Drapery an~ Dress Goods •
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Housewares • Furniture and Applia,qces.
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Also at our ~are~use on Mlchanic Street.
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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

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'roM HAMM, RIGHT, AND CLAYTON COFFEY, Vocational Instructor at

Southern High School with olie or'the five cows used in Tom's FF Aproject that won
for him the District Datfy Award. Three of the five cows were first calf heifers.
The five. cows averaged 13,200 lbs. of milk per cow per year.

THERE IS NO GENERAT~ON GAP ~iweeo Tom Hamm, right, and his
father, Virgil, as the two bave a wonderful working relatlonshlp. Tom loves farming. Upon graduation he will,spend all his time working on the 205-acre farm .
Tom Is the fourth generation of the Hamm family to work the farm.

Tom Hamm Awarded State.FFA Degree
'

BY ,KATIE CROW
. POMEROY- Meigs county is by far a
better place with a young man in it such as
Tom Hamm.
Tom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Hamm, Nease Settlement and a senior at
Southern High SChool, was the only young
Meigs countian to retllive the . Future
Fanners of America (FFA) State'Farmer
Degree Saturday night in Columbus, ·
The State Ilegreerls awarded only one
per cent of the students enrolled in
vocational a~jculture in Ohio.
Tom will graduate in May from
Southern High SChool. Upon gradtllltion.he
will share the duUes and reaponsiblllties of
farm Ufe with hiJ father.
There is no IIUCh thing aa a generation
gap between father and son in the Hamm
.

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household. There are ~rQng ties and excellent relationship lletween the, two_ ·one ·
but has to listen to,rind Ibis very evident.
To win the honored State Degree
Tom's participation in. State, Local arid
National FFA activities played an important role as did ljis farming program
over the past four years and his ~cholarshlp and leadership ability_.
·'
Being a district dairy aiv&amp;J'd ~&gt;:inner
enabled him to be a contestant for the
State Farmer Degree. ; ,
Tom is the fourth generation of the
Ham_mfamily to operate the 205 acre fartn
which is located on Amburger Road In '
Nease SetUement.
The Hamms have 80 head of Holstein
ca tile, 45 of which they milk daily. The
.major crop Ia hay. They average nve tofl8·

.
of hay per acre. Some corn is also grown.
Tom noted that $110,000 is invested In
the farm and with an additional inv.estment of $80,000 It could become a two
family fann .
.
The Hamms say there js room for
improvement In their dairy business .. Tom.
noted that his goal is to spend maximum
time milking cows and a minimum amount
of time with crops.
·

His father recalled there are one
million full time fanners in the United.
States who produce enough to feed 200
million. P!!ople. The a'lerage farmer today
Is 50 years or older. ·
.
.U Tom rioted, farming of any type "is
hard work. "II. takes 16 hours a. day 386
days a year. But I wouldn't'trade fann life

for anything," he said.
.Some of Tom's activities include
president of the National Honor Society,
member of st: John Lutheran Church,
second term as Meigs County. Junior Fair
Board presid~t , and past president of
Racine FF A Chapter. He was selected an
outstaniling teenager of America in 1971
and attended the American Institute of
Cooperation convention last summer. He.
receive · the 1968 county conservation
... ward .n d the 1969 county FFA
achievement award, and was Star Chapter
Farmer in 1970.
Congratulations to this young man
who was ·' prllSfnled his State award
Saturday night dudng the State FFA
Convention at the Youth Center in
columbus.!
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COMEDY TEAM -Fred Martin, lefl, and Robert Willey, right, Rio Gl'llldf
College students did comedy routines between acta for the Cancer Cruside V..-lety
Show Salurd~y night at the Washington Auditorium. The th~-hour ijtciw wu
presented by RG students under the dlrertl~ Uf MerUn ROIS, Prol:eeds went to the
Gallia County Unit, Americllfl Cancer Society. (MOre picture$ on page 4) .
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2-The Sunday 'l'lmel- Sentinel, Sunday, Aprll?!&gt;, 1971

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Mees Will Run Parade
POMEROY - Chamber of
Commerce · president Bill
Gruese• ·announced Saturday
appointment of Jim Mees,
WMPO Radio, as qhairman of
this year's Big send Regatta
Parade. Mees will be assisted '
by Wendell Hoover . .
· Tentative plans call for the
parade to begin in Middleport at
6 p.m. June 18, the opening day
for the annual Regatta activities. Contrary to the years
past, the parade Will move
through Middleport and
Pomeroy without stopping.
Mees, a former member of
the Meigs County Jaycees, has
been affiliated with regatta
activities the past seven years.
He also .has been engaged in
. promotion of the Meigs County
Junior Miss Pageant several

•

:.a Of Cryo']Jrecipitates
He, need ed 121 vn n...,

D
14 raw

years.
He was coordinator of the

Bloodmobile on Monday Bad
POMEROY - Sometimes
even pulling of a tooth may
require the use of a great deal of
blood derivatives, Meigs County
American Red Cross Chapter
officials point out in announcing
a bloodmobile visit for Monday
at the Pomeroy Elementary
School from 1 to 6 p.m.
Officials point out the case of
Gerald Healy, 20, pictured
above, who required 121 units of
!;ted Cross cryoprecipitates to
stop bleeding after having a
tooth pulled.
Healy, a student at Gelmont
Abbey
College,
is
a
hemophiliac. In the picture he

holds the 121 unit. packs
provided for him by the Red
Cross Regional Blood Center in
Charlotte, N. C.
Cryoprecipitates are
separated from frozen plasma
after it is thawed and used in the
treatment of hemophiliacs
during bleeding episodes.
Frozen plasma is one of several
components extracted fro~
blood ~Y the Red Cross so that IO
many. mstances a smgle. blood
donation wtJI help a vartety of
patients:
. .
Walk·tn donors are mvtted to
visit the bloodmobile at the
Pomeroy school on Mulberry
Ave. Monday.

Tax
Total Up

POMEROY- The total tax
and special . assessment
delinquency in Ohio, after final
tax settlements in 1970,
amounted to $95.4 million,
according to a new study
,released by the Ohio Public
· Expenditure Council.
This represents an increase of
$15.6 million, or 19.5 per cent
over 1969. Delinquent taxes on
real estate and public utility
property accounted for $13.4
million or 85.7 per cent of the
total statewide increase.
The total tax delinquency in
17 counties exceeded $1 million
in 1970. It should be noted that 20
counties showed a reduction in
the total tax delinquency during
this period of time, the council
said. Amajor portion of the 1970
delinquency increase can be
attributed to the financial
difficulties encountered by the
Penn Central Transportation
Co.
In Meigs County, the total tax
and special assessment
delinquency after final tax
settlements in 1970 amounted to
$224,889. This was an increase of
$32,377, or 16.8 per cent from th•
total delinquency in 1969. Meigs
County ranked 14th in the state
when considering total tax
delinquencies on a per capita
basis. The total delinquency in
Meigs County amounted to
$11.36 per capita in 1970.

POMEROY - Fourteen
defendanl.!! were fined and 15
forfeited bonds in Meigs County
Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Frank W.
Porter ' were Mary Lou
Gatewood, Washington , C. H.,
Judith M. Crooks, Middleport,
and Mark Duerr, Syracuse, $15
and costs each, speeding ; Lewis
Miller, Tuppers Plains, $10 and
cos I.!!, failure to yield ; Martha
B. Fry, Middleport, $10 and
cosl.!!, passing at intersection;
Gene Congo, Long Bottom, $5
and costs; no red flag on
overhang; Donald H. Weaver,
Langsville, Rt. I, $5 and cosl.!!,
overwidth load; Joseph Ankron,
Racine, and Charles W. Bailey,
Pomeroy, $150 and costs each,
three days in jail, license
suspended for six months with
restricted driving privileges,
driving while intoxicated;
Templeton Grueser, Pomeroy,
Rt. I, $25 and cosl.!!, permitting
minor to operate vehicle ;
William Johnson, Pomeroy, Rt.
2, $10 and costs , expired
operators license; Jon Wayne
Pierce, Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
failure to yield half of roadway;

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Arnold Boggs

VINTON · _ Arnold Bogg.s,
Vinton, age 58, was ·dead on
arrival Saturday at the Holzer
Medical Center.
.

Mr. Boggs was born at
Stonega, Va., January 15; 1913
and was pre.ceded in death by
his parents, James and Susan
Whitiker Boggs and his first
wife Mary' Bill Hilton, whom he
married in 1933 il) Whitesburg,
K y.
, He is survived by the
following children of his first
Ralph Snider, Middleport, $5 marriage; Mrs. Ed (Cisra Sue)
and costs, defective vehicle; Roman, Sheffield Lake, -Ohio,
Dana W. Murray, Pomeroy, Rt. suburb of Cleveland; Mrs. Lois
Jennette Yonts, Cleveland;
2, $20 and cosl.!!, speeding.
Forfeiting bonds were Mrs. Bobby (Carol) Sloan,Rt.l,
Richard E. Gill, Whipple, Ohio, Ewington; Mrs. Richard
$100 posted, reckless operation; (Laurel Jane) Kaiser, Canton
Robert E. Dugger, London, Ky., and Mrs . James (Georgia)
$27.50, speeding;
James Chase , Sheffield Lake. His
Schoen, Marietta, and John second wife, Thursey Thacker
Mandeville, St. Albans, $27.50 Boggs, whom he married in 1959
each, passing at intersection; at Wise, Va., survives, along
Lewis H. Bush, Akron, $27.50, with three step-children: Jackie
passing on double yellow line; Ray Chaffins, California; Mrs.
Stanley Watson, Racine, RD, Patricia Sue Folger, Cincinnati
$25, tresp.~ssing; Michael and David Earl Chalfin at
Wilson, Parkersburg, $27.50, home. Seventeen grandchildren
passing on double 'yellow line survive, two sisters, Mrs.
and $27.50, expired operators Maudie Mossgrove, Whileslicense; Ronald Bachtel, burg, Ky., and Mrs. Alice Webb,
Pomeroy, and Charles Ebers- Woodsville, Ohio and three
bach, $34.55 each, fishing brothers,. James Boggs of
without a license; John A. Virginia Beach, Va .; Jeanus
Jenkins, Gallipolis, Rt. I , $37.50, Boggs, Whitesburg, Ky: and
speeding; Max Hill, Letart, RD, Howard Boggs, Indianapolis,
$25, disturbing the peace; Ind.
Patrick J. Burns, Vienna, W.
Mr.. Boggs was a member of
Va ., $37.50, speeding ; David the Deer Creek Free Will
Pierce, Racine, Rt. 2, $27.50, Baptist Church.
failure to display license; Ray
Funeral arrangements will be
Fitch, Cheshire and ,Bill Cor- announced by the McCoy
nell , Pomeroy, RD, $50 each, Funeral Home, Vinton.
assault ·and battery.

Fines

Katie R. Crooks

•tt
Ratfield GUl y

Crooks of Vienna, W. Va.;
anoiher granddaughter, Mrs.
Jonell~ Damron of Vienna, and
two great-grandchildren. Her
son, John H. Crooks, Jr ., died
May 5 !968.
,'

Mrs. Mary Dunn

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs: Mary
Martin Dunn 85 wife of Rev. B.
E. Dunn; dled' at 3:30 a.m.
Saturday at her home, 41 Grape
St.
She was the daughter of the
late John T. and Mary Belle
Walker Martin . Born, Aug. 19,
1885, she spent most of her life
in Gallia County. In addition to
her husband, she is survived by
a nephew, Harris Depping of
G a IIi Po I is.
Funeral
arrangements will be announced by the McCoy·
Wetherholt Funeral Home.

3- The SUndsy Tlffies- Sentinel, Sunday, April?!&gt;, 1971 ·

ASK TO wt;O
GALLIPOLIS - Applying for
a marriage lit"ense Friday in
Gallia (:ounty Probate Court
were Kenneth Earl Cremeans,
20, Gallipolis, stock clerk and
Mary Katherine Miller , 18,
Gallipolis, cashier.

Defense: Budget In Real Dan.ger
BY WILLIAMS. WHITE
WASHINGTON.- Now is the spring' ~f discontent - and this
lime ~ of a special danger - to all who believe in the maintenance of at least a barely adequate military dele~ of the
United States.
For a host of budgekutters motivated by dozens of reasons
whether honest pacifism or an anti-Vietnam war-ism so extrem~
as to ~ ne~ly psychotic, or plsin and simple demagoguery, are
(llthermg m and about Congress to tear the defense budget to
shreds if they can.
The hard fact, moreover. is that while anti-Pentagonitis in its

.MEIGS THEATRE
.
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Tonight-Man.-Tues.
April25·26·27
"WUSA 0
LOIIE IT OR
LEAVE IT
1Technicotorl
Paul Newma n

Joan Woodward

Colorca rtoons:
Big Bad Bobcat
Good Fairy
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
Aprii2B-29
NOT OPEN

Alexander Fisher
POMEROY - Alexander H.
Fisher, 92, Lasley St., Pomeroy,
died Friday evening in Veterans
. ONE WEEK
Memorial Hospital after a long
illness.
Tonight thru Wednesday
He was a member of the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church and of .pomeroy Lodge
No. 164 F &amp; AM, receiving his 50
year pin in February of 1964.
Surviving are a son, Herman·
A. Fisher, Titusville, Fla.; his
•
FR/IN~O~ IC H
son-in-law and daughter,
PRO~JCTI ~
Lutrel)e F. and Edna
PETER
Schoenleb, Pomeroy, with
SELLERS
whom he made his home ;
GOlDIE
grandsons Richard Fisher,
Glendora, Calif.; Edgar Vale,
Sanford, Fla.; Joe Fisher ,
Sanford, Fla.; John Bryant,
CllOR · From Columtlil Plcht ts
Vinton, Ohio; a granddaughter,
Mrs. John Werry, Hemlock
Cartoon
Grove, 10 great-grandchildren
No
one
under 17 years
and
three
great-great.
of age admitted.
grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by
his wife, Carrie Miller Fisher; a
daughter, Mrs. Ella Bryant; a
son, Harold Fisher; his parents,
two brothers and two sisters.
. Services will be 2 p.m.
Mo~day at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Robert
Card officiating. Burial will be
in the Beech. Grove Cemetery.
Friends may call any time at
the funeral home.

Buy Seeds;
Fertilizer

Singers Come to School

M~S,9,N DRIVI·IN
R

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$

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15,5QO

-IBI~A~I:A;:

ATTRACTIVE ALl ·ELEC.TRIC ,HOME .. ·.

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* lOCATED QN . EXTRA LARGE LO.T ·
· * WALL TO WALL CARPU' ·
·THREE 8·EDROOMS ·
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* BATH &amp; HAiF
• KlTCHEI COM~LETE WITH UMGE &amp; RURIGERAlOR.··.

or.

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Not Now and Maybe Never

J

Dllr Sir: •

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111tlelpate

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. -Tilt nuon I Ill\ wriUng thla letter is to discourage anyone

SPENCER GRADUATES
RACINE - Navy Airman
Apprentice Ernest E. Spencer,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Eison F.
Spencer Qf Main St., Racine,
was graduated from the
A••lation Structural Mechanic
Hydraulics Course at Naval Air
• Jack W. Crisp, Prelident
Training Center, '
Q-eek
Dillrlct

111-w• toa 1e11er tliat appeared in your paper a few weeks from organlllnl any movement, group, or committee to en'
•owritten by Mr. Jlan'y Bias: suggesting that I 1M: drafted to run courage my candidacy. To those many people who have caUed
f11r Illite Rlja u J' ""' from the 27th House District.
andwrlttenletleninanswer to IJie11118iestlon for draft( by Barry
lweuldW.IO~~~JIUIIii~Uv ·: . ·cyllliiCh IIJlllfedate the lltal) Ill)' IIIII* you to tbeJ;n fill' theV interest and faith in me,
In tilatletter. Iallo8pprectate bul.l allo Ill qaln •I said to lhlltlln person, I have no inman 1ee101 to have 1n me. 1 118J'ee ·llntltiiiiCIIIIIIIrc UIIMIIdete'I'Gr any of!lce ofetther political party
lbOul Metga and Galila Co111tle1 · • • Ill b•ht• 1eat.
ClOIIlpll'ed to olber IUI'I'OUJICiing ·

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belnl• c:andldate for. any office.

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purposes. ·

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New Matchups in TV Heavies

HAWN

Three SeS
·
· ury
Go tO J

Boosters to

equally prudent policy of being reasonably prepored to defend
me's country.
And,t&lt;agically, it happens that the good guys have a great deal
going for them. There is frustration with the war in Vieinam.
There is the embedded pseudOoCeligious ethic that the Pentagon
must represent evil since power itself is evil _power perforce
.
il ""· d · bl
tim
d
i1
be mg ev u=ause power IS un ema Y some es use 1or ev
·

There IS the cumulative weight,
so useful to the budget·
..
he
h
tte
cu rs, of year.upon
year
of
ostility
toward,
and
slander
of,
t
.
.
.
mere fact of military serVIce. This arises largely from senators
,
,
nd
. d b t . ti
db ,
d
whoIove .pea~ - a never mm a ou JUS ce an onor an
conceptsllketheoldonethatthestronghaveanmescapable duty
the White Paper
to come to the rescue of the weak and vppressed.
most virulent fonn has become a regular spring phenomenor'
. !"en, there is the un~ti ~· lted tragedy of the c?"~. of Lt.
there is far more reaso~ than heretofore to fear that a strange ~ilJiam Calley, whose conviction ~I ~e murder of civilians .m
coalition of tender conscience, however misplaced, and kookery, VIetnam is being used by many to indiCt the entire armed forces
however absurd, may carry the day.
of the United States, not to mention the entire United states itself.
Finally, there is the matter of two obvious and perilous
Under the· general direction of Field Marshal William
Proxmire, otherwise known as the Senator from Wisconsin, is weaknesses involving the Nixon Administration it.self. The first is
being mounted a carefully orchestrated campaign. Its . effect that the President bas never been able to close the alleged
could be to make absolutely certain what is already greatly "credibility gap" over Vietnam, though God knows he has tried.
feared by men who really know something about military affairs. He has indeed tried too much, protested too much, because the
This is that the Soviet Union, having at minimum reached parity public opinion polls are themselves being misread. When X
with the United States in the weaponry of ultimate destruction is number of people say the President is not telling them all he
knows or ought to tell them, what a significant section is really
indeed outstripping us.
'
The reasoning of the good guys here is that weapons kill saying, humanly, is that damn it all he is not telling them what
people and so are the actual causeS rather than the mere im- they would like to know. And what they would like to know is that
plements of wars. Wars, in truth, are almost invarisbly started . there is a quick, an easy and an honorable exit from Vietnam
because the potential adversary knows that his intended victim which wilrltllow us all to forget the whole thing right away.
The second bole in the President's line of defense is simply
bas become weak enongh to make the adventure of aggression
that, master politician'l!tough he personally is, his roster of real
both safe and productive.
Now, the good guys know, of course, that in ordinary, political pros in the White House palace gusrd is far too short.
everyday life any man who insists upon making a doormat of Good managerial type he basin plenty; savvy types able to fight
blmsell positively invites some .bully to step upon hlm. They are the budget-cutting good guys with their own techniques of overuna.ble, however, to see the obvious analogy between a pro dent simplification and gross mpm sentimentalism he has not got in
policy of being reasonably prepared to defend oneself and an sufficient numbers.

PT . PLEASANT - Mrs .
Katie Rice Crooks, 88, 2218
Lincoln
Av~nue ,
Point
Pleasant, died Friday at the
GALLIPOLIS - One of three trio had been hitchhiking on Rt. home of a granddaughter, Mrs.
persons arrested April B in 23, south of Columbus when he David Dawson at Cottageville
with whom she had been
connection with the theft of a offered them a ride.
After
entering
Gallia
County,
temporarily residing.
1970 Ford taken at gunpoint in
Funeral services will.· be
Gallia County from Robert the trio pulled a gun and forced
him
to
drive
to
a
county
road
conducted
today at 1:30p.m. at
Stewart, 43, Blacklick, Ohio,
Franklin County, entered a where he was robbed knocked the Crow-Russell Funeral
guilty plea Friday in Common unconscious lied and 'thrown in Home. Burial will be in the Lone
Fund to Counter Communism
a ditch .
'
' Oak Cemetery. The Rev. 0. H.
Pleas Court w~en arraigned on
Port Clinton, Obi~
Carder will officiate.
Lewis B. Shaw
a Bill of Information.
AprlllB,
1971
Mrs. Crooks was born August GALLIPOLIS .:.. Word was
;.
David Hatfield, 19, Columbus,
POMEROY -Slate school 27, 1882, in Mason County. She
~ To The Editor:
formerly of Delbarton, W. Va. , foundation subsidy payments was the ' daughter of the late received here from California
£ The small man next to me in the little green Volkwagen spoke
entered his plea before Judge for April in Meigs County Thomas and Annie Emanuel last week of the death of Lewis
~ with a strong Korean accent. He spoke earnestly, "I cried many
Ronald R. Calhoun. Judge to,aled $170,969.52,. ,,~ ~?rd,~g . Rice. and widpw of ,John, .1;1. Billings Shaw, son of Helen
~ limii·8S I traveled thru Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas.' Who
Calhoun postponed sentencing to Joseph T. Ferguson, state Crooks who dfed in March 1970. Ker~'sand' LewiS Billlngs ' S~aw~ 1
'
~ would know the burden on lily heart? Who will understand why I
until a probation report is auditor.
Sr.
Survivors include a daughter- He was, born .and reared in
COlO!~ Del...
ii ~g for my gas and solicit for my mo!fllodglng?" This man,
completed.
Deductions from the total in-law, Mrs. Goldie (John H.)
•
Un~ed Ar11sts;
:( deeply expressive, had just completed willi me a day of trying to
Gallipolis at the familY home,
Hatfield and two others, include $3,709 lor school
•~ raise funds. Have you ever asked people to give you money - to
Plus
454 Third Ave .. Mr. Shaw spent
David Shanks, 30, and Bunny employes relirement;
j donate to your cause? For me it is difficult though I try not to Jet it
Shanks, 20, Columbus, were $20,714.19 for state teachers
C
.
a
most of his life in the Chicago
~ show thru. l'.ve always worked for a living and have earned my
area and on the West Coast:
apprehanded in the early retirement, and $6,597.96 to
~ own way. I'm sort of proud of that. I don't llke to beg. This little
He served with Chennault's
mormng hours on Thursday, the Meigs County Board of
famous flying Tigers in. China
:~ man nell to me- Dr. Nam Olin Cha from·South Korea, was not
April 8 at a roadblock near Education. Amounts received
. .
and during .World War II was
;; happy begging either. He could have been living weir with great
Hanover, W. Va. They were by the local districts
GALLIPOLIS
Three
civil
awarded
the Purple Heart and
charged in the theft of Stewart's following ,the ·deductions
:: respect from his people in Korea. But instead he is traveling over
actions involving money have the Silver Cross.
car on April 7. Stewart, a ser· Include Eastern, $22,537.78;
:; the length and lreadth of the U. S. and Canada trying to gain
been set down for 'jury trials Funeral services were held in
vice engineer for a New York Meigs Local, $94,584.01 and
:; financial support for his project.
Monday
in Gallia County northern California . He is
firm, was enroute here on a Southern, $22,826.58.
::
What is this project? Dr. Cha is an Independent Presbyterian
service call. Stewart said the '' · .&gt;·:K: . .,.,.::,:..:'::'''· .,::·· :. :.··. '''·:.'''··.'!-:'' '':'':' Common Pleas Court by Judge survived by his wife Irene,
' : Olrtstian Minister who feels a great ·conviction that America is
Ronald ~· c.alhoun. One is three children· and grand::: the last hope of the world for freedom. He has studied in America
Havannah Blackburn, Rt. 1, children. He is also survived by
:; for eight years receiving Th.M. and Ph.D. degrees. His part in
POMEROY - It was agreed
Cartoon
Vinton, vs M~lvin Blackburn, two sisters, Mrs . Crilla
': : America lies in spreading the Christian Gospel and in fighting to purchase fertilizer and grass
. also Rt. I, Vmton ; The ISSUe Stiverson and Miss.NeJle Shaw,
:; against Communism. Dr. Cba was a Confucianist and a Buddhist seed for the football fields in
·
'
involves $8,000 and the sale of a G~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~;;;
~: until he was 19 when from a sick bed he was converted to Christ. Pomeroy and Middleport and
PO~,EROY - " Youth of numbers are coordinated to 40 .acre farm in Morgan Twp. I
;: He lived thru the brutal personal elJlCrlences of the Japanese the practice field at the new Today a group of 50 smgers relate a story of how one can
Asecond action is the result of
;: occupation of Korea and later saw and elJlCrienced first hand the school during the April meeting
from Proctorville and Rome escape with Christ yet be in a traffic accident June 24, 1969.
;I brutalities of the North Korean and Olinese Communists. Now of the Meigs Local Athletic United Methodist Churches, will touch with reality. The score, Veva F."and Charles F. Gard-.
:j living in Los Angeles he is watching America being taken over Boosters.
be at the Meigs Junior High also arranged by Carmicahel, ner, Jr., Rt. 1, Middleport, are
During the meeting, presided School in Middlepor.t, Monday contains humorous satire ·as the plaintiffs in the suit against
•,.
:· thru external propaganda and internal decay and subversion. Los
-A CAl! lOON Nl ollll Y
over
by
the
Rev.
Bill
Perrin,
.; Angeles is probably the key point of entry on the West Coast for
as part of the Meigs Umted well as a seriou~ meS'!Bge.
Everett · W. Lancaster, 2191
,!; Red Chinese literature. From there this poison spresds across vice president, It was also voted Methodist Youth Fellowship Youth of Today is under the Eastern Ave. Plaintiffs seek
:;; · America. Dr. Cha Is starting a mission to print Christian and anti- to purchase a tape and a progra~. .
-ft.UI, - ·,
.
. direction of Bob Vincent , $5,310.12 for ·damages and exfiberglass
pole
for
the
track
Tonight,
Apri
I
25
:;: Christian literature to counteract this flow of Red propaganda.
Ali JUniOr and semor high Church choir director and their penses· incurred.
.
·
'
''SOMETHING FOR
::
He will print in Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and English. He tum.
youth leaders and young adull.!! pastor, the Rev. Gerald Moyer. . A traffic accident iS a'lso the
'aau111 IIATUII
EVE~YONE'' · .
:j has the education, he bas the printing machinery, he has the office · Me.mbers of the baseball in the co.unty, rega~dl~ss of The program is at 7:30p.m.
basis·ofthe thlr~ action filed by
team
and
coaches,
Ed
Bartels
.:• Door space to do the job, be has the zeal and the knowledge
church aff1hatwn, ar~ mv1ted to
Modena and John Rife, '• •COlOI .
Starring'
and
Terry
Ohlinger,
were
•' necessary. All he lacks now is the mmey to pay special typists,
attend.
.
. Chesapeake, ag~inst·· Ben
Youth of Today wtll present
Eachus and ~ames Merry,
interpreters, writers, photographers, artists, etc. to make this present and were introduced.
Michael ,York
Team members attending were
" Nat~ raJ High" by . Ra.lph
Merry Stone Co., Rt. 1, Bidwell.
C
••••
II
eo
printing operation go. He is trying to raise $20,000 as a minimum
And .
Jed Will, Rick Van Mall:e,
JACQUELINE BISSEt
Carmichael. Natural Htgh ts a
YOUTH HURT
. Plaintiffs are seekin~ $61,697.55
starter fund. It'll take him a year of hard work to raise It at th~
Roger Abbott, aoger Dixon,
Angela Lllnsbury
JIM BROWN
rate he's going. But he should be printing now. America is in Ron Clonch, Chip Haggerty, musical dramaltzation of two GALLIPOLIS _ David B. for ·injuries and expenses inRated (R)
young couples, one seekmg an Cole, 19, 1 Vine st., was ad- curred as a result of a traffic
trouble. She needs bls help now! ·
Steve Dunfee, Gene Powell,
We arrive4 home lat,e. We received several promises. One Stan Wilson, David Boyd, Ed escape on drugs and the other . milled to the Holzer M~ical accident. April I, .1970 'at 'the
man was still lri F1orlda so we'll go back April 24th when he young, Bob Blackston, Rick seekmg a htgh of enhghtment Center at· 2 a.m. Saturday for intersection of ltt. 35 .and ·Rt. ....,_..,,..._ _ _ _ _ _~!""'"...;,______.
through Jesus Christ. Some 20 observation following a single ·588.•
·
arrives home. Tomorrow we'll see others.
Ash, Charles Eastman, Lou
car accident at !2:45a.m. on Rt.
I'm an American, also deeply con~rned about Am~rica's McKinney, Floyd Burney and
588, two and five tenths miles
.
.
future. I'm a District Americanism Olairman in the American · Tom Cooke. The track and golf
MEETING ANNOUNCED
south
of
Gallipolis.
According
to
Legion. I promised Dr. Cba I'd try to help him raise the needed teams will be guests at the next
MASON .J. Ed White,
president of the Wahama the Ohio State Highway. Pstrol,
money .I'm sending this letter to every newspaper in Ohio. I think meeting.
that will be almost 400 newspapers. If every newspaper prints this
Refreshments were served by Athletic Boosters, has an- Cole lost control of his auto
letter; and If everyone reading this letter would send at least one Mrs. Horace Abbott, Mrs. John nounced plans for a meeting to avoiding a collision with two
dollar to Korea Bible Mission, Inc., P. 0. Box 20683, Los Angeles, Well, Mrs. Norman Van Maire, be held at 7:30p.m. Monday in unidentified vehicles. Cole's car
went off the roadway into an
Calif. 900011 Dr. Ola would be printing and malllng In May. But if Mrs. Leota Smith, Mrs. Richard the school gymnasium. Election
embankment. The case is still
we can't raise this money It may be as late as March·of 1972 before Young, Mrs. Don Wilson, Mrs. of officers will take place and
Guy Morris, Mrs. Herbert distribution of the by-laws and under investigation.
he starts.
·
America needs the information he has; to see how she is being Dixon and Mrs. Colleen Dunfee. constitution will be made. Mr.
.
.'
White urges all members to
•
defeated, and to then strengthen herself and go on to national
JUDGMENT RENDERED
attend.
survival and a new health. Communist must be stopPed. I hope
ASHBROOK co-sPONSORS
PT. PLEAsANT· - Judge
WASHINGTON (UPI) - John
··ou will help
Cba help America to defeat Communism and 11.11
'
'
.
James Lee Thompson, in Ma!!On
DIVORCE GRANTED
!hose behind the scenes forces that•make up this international Ashbrook of Ohio is one of three
County
Circuit
Court
Friday,
conspiracy. PleiiSil send at least a dollar today. Thank you and House Republicans who are co. POMEROY - ·Harold Sm~th granted judgment in the
sponsoring Ji proposed con· was granted a divorce in Meigs
•
God bless each one of you.
..
amount of $409.26 to the
stltutional
amendment
Intended
County
Common
Pleas
Court
EdWjlliams
*·
to outlaw mandatory busing of from Esther Smith on charges plaintiffs in a civil action.
.
'
1st District Americanism Cbrm.
children · to achieve racial of gross neglect of duty and Judgment was given to Junior
·
Department of Ohio
Wedge, Everett Wedge and
balance in schools.
extreme cruelly.
20118 NW Catawba Rd.
El~in Wedge in the suit against
·Port Clinton, 43452
Fannie Ellen Perry and .John M.
'State Rep~tative or any other office and I do not at this time Burdette.
Cellllnlctlve Lelten ol OpiiHI, Ill load lUte, are
welcomed. 'l'be editor ftl«l'M tile rtpllo ll!orlea lelten.
AJI 1e1ten mill lie 1lped, wllh a lid1 addreu, alll!oa&amp;h
bdllallmay be Uled apoa requell.

1

first annual Mason ' Coimty
Junior Miss Pageant staged in
December of last year at the
Wahama High Sc~ool.
Hoover, public relations
agent for Columbus and
Southern Ohio Eleetric Company, has also worked with the
regatta several years . In past
regatta parades Hoover and

.
Tom Cassell, also. ~ Columb1a
Gas of Ohw, have JOtntiy staged
the . pa!ade, whtch marks the
begmmng of the regatta .
Trophies and ·cash awards
will be presented to participants
in the parade. This year Mees
said he hoped to have every
band in the surrounding area in
the "biggest parade ever."

r--------------------------,
! Area Deaths . !

.

Y, ·APRIL 25
IIILOWAY ST.· ~BOll, · W. VA.
•

'.

By RICK DU BROW
HOLLYWOOD(UPI)-Strongly entrenched television series
like "The FBI •" "Ironside •"
"Bonanza" and "The Mod
Squad" will be challenged head·
on by tough new program
competition in the season
starting this fall.
"The FBI," a solid ratingsgetter for ABC-TV, will run up
against CBS.TV's early~venlng
Sunday Movies, as well as the
new Jimmy Stewart series and
the long-running Walt Disney
program, both on NBC-TV.
11

lronside" and "Mod Squad,"

meanwhile, will match up
against each other as part of a
three-network dogfight opening
the Tuesday night schedules.
The third entry here is (;len
Campbell's variety series.
~, ni~t ·ltas developed
into&lt;J powerhouse for ABC-TV,
with "Mod Squad," "Movie of
the Week" and '"Marcus Welby,
M.D."-and the opposing net·
works, wiped out by this lineup,
are going all out to beat it.
Therefore, NBC-TV ' moved
"Ironside" from Thursdays to
square off directly with "Mod
Squad," and CBs-TV switched
Campbell from Sundays to. the
same Tuesday time slot.
The "Movie of the Wkee," by.
the way; will get something of
a challenge too, with CB8-TV

THE

•

transferring "Hawaii Five.()" new "young adult" programming,and "Gunsmoke" basical~
to Tuesdays to oppose it.
As for NBC..TV's "Bonanza," ly aimed at traditiomil viewers,
it will still be' up against ABC- the matchup could be a highly
TV's Sunday Movies, but ·in revealing audience study in
addition the competition now itself.
will include CBS.TV's new . Qn Wednesdays, "Medical
Glenn Ford series, about a ·Center," which surprised alcontemporary lawman in the most everyone by shooting up
high in the ratings this season
Southwest.
There are other interesting will be going up against two
matchup. For example, on series with star movie namesMondays, CBS-TV's " Gun- Henry Fonda and Shirley
smoke" and NBC-TV's "Laugh- MacLaine. Fonda's show is the
In " will be against each other returning "The Smith Family,"
for a lull hour, the first time a successful midseason entry
this has ever happened. Against this year, and Miss MacLaine
them, ABC-TV has tossed in will be making her video series
"Nanny and the Professor," debut as a traveling photojour·
which doesn't figure to have
much of a chance except for a
fluke.
"Laugh-In ," though stiJI rath·
er for!llidapie, sliPm a good · 1PT;· "PLEASANT '""' One
deal in the ratings this season, person was injured as the result
and with the loss of such of a single-vehicle mishap early
regulars as Goldie Hawn and Saturday morning on' U. S.
Judy Carne, and the reported Route 3~ near the Silver
expectation that Arte Joson Memorial Bridge.
may also not be around, the
Samuel V. Simpkins, 19, Rt. 1,
series wlU never reach II.!! Grandview Heights, was adformer pinnacle.
mitted to Pleasant Valley
"Gunsmoke," meanwhile, de· Hospital and is reported to be in
spite an occasional slip down "good" condition. The extent of
the ratings ladder, continues to his injury was not learned.
amaze experl.!! with its steady,
City Police were in pursuit
strong perfonnance in the
numbers game. With "LaughDIVORCE ASKED
In " a leading example of the
GALLIPOLIS - Charging
gross neglect of duty, Charlotte
A. Hauldren filed a petition
seeking a divorce from
Raymond Hauldren. They were
married June 28, 1961 and have
one child.

nalist.
On Saturdays, CBS-TV just
might have the makings of a
very strong ratings lineup. II
begins with the established "My
Three Sons." Then come
"Funny Face," with Sandy
Duncan as a model; the new
Dick Van Dyke series; the
Mary Tyler Moore show, which
got off to a flying start this
season; and, finally , "Mission:

Impossible." However , "Mission: Impossible" will be
opposed on ABC-TV by the new
Roger Moore-Tony Curtis adventure series, "The Persuaders."

GALLIPOLIS - Jim p .
Graham , 57: was cited to
Municipal Court for improper
backing fo)lowing a minor
accident at 9:35a.m. Friday on
Second Ave. City police said
Graham backed from a parking
space and struck a car owned
by Edna Mae Montgomery,
Crown City. There was minor
damage to both cars.
A second back'mg mts
· hap
d .t · .
th
occurre a 4. 28 p.m. on e
Pennyfare parking. lot. Ac·
cording to the report, Floyd
Workman 77 Eureka Star Rt
was atte~pti~g to back from ~
parking space and struck an
auto driven by Alicia Gillen·
water, 35, Rt. 2, Crown City,
causing minor damage to bo1h
vehicles.

GAL.LIPOLIS - Checks
·totaling $121,933.40 hav~ been
mailed .to Galha County s four
state supported school dostr1cts
accordm g to State Audttor
Joseph T. Ferguson . .
Galhpolls City receiVed the
most $59,988.46. Other payments ·were North Gallia '
$22,445.22; Hannan Trace,
$22 ,539 . 12·, South western ,
$16 •960 ·60 and the Gallia County
Board of Education, $3,595. The
Kyger Creek District does not
receive stale aid due to its low
inside millage.

Five Inmates
To Go Free

24 Brownies ·Visit-Plant
GALLIPOLIS - Twenty-lour
members of Brownie Trodp 29
of Pl. Pleasant sponsored tiy the
Presbyterian Church there
loured the photo offset printing
plant of the Ohio Valley
Publishing Co. here Saturday.
The plant prints the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, the PomeroyMiddleport Daily Sentinel .. the
Sunday-Times Sentinel, and the
Pt. Pleasant Register.
Troop leaders witli the girls
were Mrs. John Hilbert and
Mrs. Rufu s Cromartie and
senior scout Susie McKinney.
Ladies helping transport the

girls here were Mrs. Paul
Harbret'ht, ·Mrs. Charles ·Mc·Culloch and Mrs. Robert
Roberl•. Bob Wingett, editor or
The Register, led the party
through the plant.
E-R CALLED
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
emergency . unit was called to
the Guy Bolen home ·in
Harrisonville at 4 p.m. Friday.
Bolen was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was admitted for treatment of
an illness.

HURT IN FALL
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Robert
F. Anders, 38, 110 Locust St.,
Henderson, was admitted to the
Holzer Medical Center Friday
evening following"" accident at
her home. She sustained
lacerations of the stomach and
side when she fell through the
floor of her attic.

LIMA, Ohio (UPI ) - Five
inmates who served a total of
153 years at the state Hospital
for the Criminally Insane here
were ordered released after it
was learned they had never
been convicted or sentenced for
any crime.
Allen County Probate ·Court
Judge David Steiner Friday
said the men were not
criminally insane, as defined by
Ohio law, but apparently· had
been forgotten by the courts and
the hospital officials. They were
identified as :
- Everett Smith , 49,
Columbus, sent to the institution
in 1940 after admitting the theft
of three gallons of gasoline from
an auto.
- Guy Tolle , 71, Winchester,
Adams County, ~barged with an
attempted rape 41 years ago.
- William Davis, 70, Mid·
dletown , accused of killing his
wife and sent to the hospital in
1939.
Holt Fletcher, 55,
Cleveland, arrested on a bad
check charge 22 years ago.
- Robert A. Onion, 50,
Conneaut , committed after
being charged with assault to
commit rape 24 years ago.

Extra Heavy Pil e, 15 ft . width . Colors: Green
or Gold .

Since 18

*995
•
sq. yd.

l:ua:~ng

rs

Guaranteed
To SatisfyOr Money Back

Yukon Club

Variety
of
Aavors

Padding &amp; Labor
Included With
20 Sq. Yd. or More

Heavy Pile. 15ft. width. Colors: Blue, Green
or Gold .

•a•s

Padding &amp; Labor
Included With
sq. yd.
20 Sq. Yd. or More
Other
-$--.....,..-!P~adding &amp; Labor
Carpets
Included W~h
As Low As
sq. yd. 20 Sq. Yd. or More

95
6

INDOOR.OUTDOOR, KITCHEN &amp; 'BATH
CARPET NOT INCLUDED IN THIS
SPECIAL

842

can

.....
Phone. 446·1405
Galli palls

Chase Ends In Wreck

~R·AC~~

when Simpkins wrecked. He
was cited by City Police on a
DWI charge.
Di!imty SHer iff B'ob Huffman
made the investigation after
receiving the call at 12:15 a.m.
Damages of $200 resulted
from a one-car mishap on
Redmond Ridge, two miles east
of Henderson at 5:30 p.m.
Friday, but no injuries were
reported.
Deputy Sheriff Bob Uhl investigated and identified the
driver as Mary Loretta Kasee,
34, Route 2, Gallipolis, Ohio.

I

SURGERY .TAKEN
MIDDLEPORT - Frank
Beach of Middleport underwent
surgery Friday at the Holzer
Medical Center. His room
number is 383.

•

l

TIMES-SENTINEL

I

Pll~lllhtd tvtrv wH kUV ltvtnlng U t t PI
~ttv r lla r, SttOOII Cla n I'O i ltlfl Pl iO It

I Gal ll pal 1,

•

TH E DAllY S ENTIN E l

J

1

O ~ i o, Hill

Ill

Co..,r l

st ,

Pomer oy , o , H169

I

1

"""II.M.-.IL

want that

wonderful
·feeling... "

'

I

I

POWER
MOWER

FOLDING ·
ALUMINUM
FRAME

I

I
I
I

I

3~

HP

BRIGGS STRATION

NON TILT
BASE

su BSCRIP TIO N A.-. r e s

The Ga ltlpGIII lr l ~un e 10 Oh iO t ml Welt
VlrQ h'l ll , Ont ynr II J 00 , sl • maniU 57 .
I lhr n mon lhl 54 JO , o:llt whert, ant yn r
I '' l slo m ont hs U , lhree monlhs U 00.
I
The Otll y Se ntinel , ""'' yu r 11•00 1 1lo
mo ntt11 II U J l hrtt m on ths
JO
I Tht UnlltCI Prtn lnl trn t llonal Is n .
1 t h.t l l\lth "" l!l t&lt;t tO tnt uH tor publiUIIon
I 01 Ill newt CI ISP II C!In ' r t(llltd 10 !Il lS
nt wlptptr and 1 1.0 tht loctl n twt
I llllbh l htd hr re ln

REG. 54.77
22" CUT

LAWN
CHAIR

BY ct rrl er dilly l nd Sun da y, soc PIH" I

I

SAVE 10%

REG. 177

Pubi iJhed tvtr y w~e lo. d a y e-enln g u cept I
I Satu rday En ttred 11 ucond clns m i llin g 1
1 ma Tter at Pome roy , OMo , Post Olflt t
I
J
T E AM S OF ~UII S CR I PT I ON

"If you

'

,.

i

I
I

1
MILLERCEGISLATION AIMED AT AMERICA'S NEEDS
I
MARRIAGE LICENSE
'4
I
H.J. Res. 358 - Amendment to permit prayer or meditation in
1
POMEROY - Robert Keith
I
school or public building. ·
Arms, 26, Pomeroy and Myrta
I
1
H.R:. 4744-Authorize~ the four-year extension of the ApLynne McGuire, 20, Pomeroy.
~----------------- - J
palachia Program.
.
,
H.R, 4f3'f - Legislation making it a federal offense to kiJI a
fireman or policeman. '
H.R. 5064 - Provides incentives for the establishment ol new
or expanded job producing rura! il}dustries.
COMING EVENTS
'
May 16 - Partiilipate in Rio Grande College Commencement
, exercises; Rio Grande, Ohio.
·
.
·
!'My 28 - Tour of $79 million Willow ~land Locks and Dam
project.
ONENERGYTASKFORCE
,
Rep .. James McClure, Chainnan of .the Republican Task
Force ori Energy and Resources announced the appointment of
'
Cong~essman Miller to the energy research committee. The task
force is designed to analyze and recommend means to increase
our national en~rgy supplies.
.
. OPEN.IJOORS-EVERYCOUNTY
. During the past two months, ,Rep. Miller or his distriCt
assistant, Wayne Todd, conducted at least one Open Door session
in every county of the 13-coun.ty Congressional District. More are
pllinned and Miller invites the citizens of Southeastern Ohio to, ,
stop and meet with him.
. ·
•.
· RJ,l:CENT GRANTS AND LOANS
/
A partial listing includes:
$38o,ooo ARC ·-construction · grant to Musk.ingum Area
Vocational School.
··
$208,200 EPA sewage construction grants to The P~s .
·$211,000 ~Hi\ loan to water system for Noble County. .
.
" •.. feeli~g of l&lt;nqwing you have extra
$312,000 HEW construction grant to Good Samaritan Hospital,
cash ~o spare if and when you want it,
1AnesVrne.
$188,000 EDA water system grant to'the City of Jackson.
open an interest-earning savings ac· $127,500 Interior Dept. grant to Old · Man'~ Cave Park, ·
count here and now - add to it every
Hocking County. . .
·
·' .
. •
month or payday!"
·
·
. . $:!00,31Unterior ~pt. grant to Blue .I~~k Park, Dunc~n
Falls. ·
.
. ON CURRENT MAmRS
· · SST- "I feel that the SST shoulcl be bullt with private ompilal
and not taxpayer's doll8rs. The government has more than
. fulfilled its obligation ~ the development ofthis aircraft." ·.
~oned Autos - '.'I have co-41p0nsored legislation whicll
-,nt deal with the abandoned auto and change It from a national ·
eyeaore into natlonalas~el by recycling auto hulks back into the
steel makiDg procet18.'~ .•
"A se'nseless act of violence. Abhorred bf
•

SAVE 20%

I
P~Dtl ued •~ ery S!lfldl y by !ht Oh iG I
I Vl llt y P ~bll5 h l n ! &lt;o
I
I
GALLIPO U Q j~, ll'l' TR IBIJNE
IU Thlra ., .,, , Galllp.olls, OhiO, d6J l

9PM

MONDAY

,-------------------·
SUNDAY
l
1

NEWSLETTER

'

$121,934 Coming
To Schools Here

Driver Cited to
Municipal Court

77

$297
Blue, Green and 'lime

LIMIT 1
IN CARTON

LIMIT 3

SAVE 18%

SAVE 25%
1.99

REG. 1.77
• Super Special

SPREADING

YEWS
(CUSPIDATA)

el0-12"
eREADY TO ·sET
eDISEASE RESISTANT

EXTRA

lARGE
JACKSON &amp;

for
IN GALLIPOLIS

00

PERKINS

ROSES·

LIMIT 3

�.·
'

.
. I

•

2-The Sunday 'l'lmel- Sentinel, Sunday, Aprll?!&gt;, 1971

'

Mees Will Run Parade
POMEROY - Chamber of
Commerce · president Bill
Gruese• ·announced Saturday
appointment of Jim Mees,
WMPO Radio, as qhairman of
this year's Big send Regatta
Parade. Mees will be assisted '
by Wendell Hoover . .
· Tentative plans call for the
parade to begin in Middleport at
6 p.m. June 18, the opening day
for the annual Regatta activities. Contrary to the years
past, the parade Will move
through Middleport and
Pomeroy without stopping.
Mees, a former member of
the Meigs County Jaycees, has
been affiliated with regatta
activities the past seven years.
He also .has been engaged in
. promotion of the Meigs County
Junior Miss Pageant several

•

:.a Of Cryo']Jrecipitates
He, need ed 121 vn n...,

D
14 raw

years.
He was coordinator of the

Bloodmobile on Monday Bad
POMEROY - Sometimes
even pulling of a tooth may
require the use of a great deal of
blood derivatives, Meigs County
American Red Cross Chapter
officials point out in announcing
a bloodmobile visit for Monday
at the Pomeroy Elementary
School from 1 to 6 p.m.
Officials point out the case of
Gerald Healy, 20, pictured
above, who required 121 units of
!;ted Cross cryoprecipitates to
stop bleeding after having a
tooth pulled.
Healy, a student at Gelmont
Abbey
College,
is
a
hemophiliac. In the picture he

holds the 121 unit. packs
provided for him by the Red
Cross Regional Blood Center in
Charlotte, N. C.
Cryoprecipitates are
separated from frozen plasma
after it is thawed and used in the
treatment of hemophiliacs
during bleeding episodes.
Frozen plasma is one of several
components extracted fro~
blood ~Y the Red Cross so that IO
many. mstances a smgle. blood
donation wtJI help a vartety of
patients:
. .
Walk·tn donors are mvtted to
visit the bloodmobile at the
Pomeroy school on Mulberry
Ave. Monday.

Tax
Total Up

POMEROY- The total tax
and special . assessment
delinquency in Ohio, after final
tax settlements in 1970,
amounted to $95.4 million,
according to a new study
,released by the Ohio Public
· Expenditure Council.
This represents an increase of
$15.6 million, or 19.5 per cent
over 1969. Delinquent taxes on
real estate and public utility
property accounted for $13.4
million or 85.7 per cent of the
total statewide increase.
The total tax delinquency in
17 counties exceeded $1 million
in 1970. It should be noted that 20
counties showed a reduction in
the total tax delinquency during
this period of time, the council
said. Amajor portion of the 1970
delinquency increase can be
attributed to the financial
difficulties encountered by the
Penn Central Transportation
Co.
In Meigs County, the total tax
and special assessment
delinquency after final tax
settlements in 1970 amounted to
$224,889. This was an increase of
$32,377, or 16.8 per cent from th•
total delinquency in 1969. Meigs
County ranked 14th in the state
when considering total tax
delinquencies on a per capita
basis. The total delinquency in
Meigs County amounted to
$11.36 per capita in 1970.

POMEROY - Fourteen
defendanl.!! were fined and 15
forfeited bonds in Meigs County
Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Frank W.
Porter ' were Mary Lou
Gatewood, Washington , C. H.,
Judith M. Crooks, Middleport,
and Mark Duerr, Syracuse, $15
and costs each, speeding ; Lewis
Miller, Tuppers Plains, $10 and
cos I.!!, failure to yield ; Martha
B. Fry, Middleport, $10 and
cosl.!!, passing at intersection;
Gene Congo, Long Bottom, $5
and costs; no red flag on
overhang; Donald H. Weaver,
Langsville, Rt. I, $5 and cosl.!!,
overwidth load; Joseph Ankron,
Racine, and Charles W. Bailey,
Pomeroy, $150 and costs each,
three days in jail, license
suspended for six months with
restricted driving privileges,
driving while intoxicated;
Templeton Grueser, Pomeroy,
Rt. I, $25 and cosl.!!, permitting
minor to operate vehicle ;
William Johnson, Pomeroy, Rt.
2, $10 and costs , expired
operators license; Jon Wayne
Pierce, Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
failure to yield half of roadway;

'

.

·

Arnold Boggs

VINTON · _ Arnold Bogg.s,
Vinton, age 58, was ·dead on
arrival Saturday at the Holzer
Medical Center.
.

Mr. Boggs was born at
Stonega, Va., January 15; 1913
and was pre.ceded in death by
his parents, James and Susan
Whitiker Boggs and his first
wife Mary' Bill Hilton, whom he
married in 1933 il) Whitesburg,
K y.
, He is survived by the
following children of his first
Ralph Snider, Middleport, $5 marriage; Mrs. Ed (Cisra Sue)
and costs, defective vehicle; Roman, Sheffield Lake, -Ohio,
Dana W. Murray, Pomeroy, Rt. suburb of Cleveland; Mrs. Lois
Jennette Yonts, Cleveland;
2, $20 and cosl.!!, speeding.
Forfeiting bonds were Mrs. Bobby (Carol) Sloan,Rt.l,
Richard E. Gill, Whipple, Ohio, Ewington; Mrs. Richard
$100 posted, reckless operation; (Laurel Jane) Kaiser, Canton
Robert E. Dugger, London, Ky., and Mrs . James (Georgia)
$27.50, speeding;
James Chase , Sheffield Lake. His
Schoen, Marietta, and John second wife, Thursey Thacker
Mandeville, St. Albans, $27.50 Boggs, whom he married in 1959
each, passing at intersection; at Wise, Va., survives, along
Lewis H. Bush, Akron, $27.50, with three step-children: Jackie
passing on double yellow line; Ray Chaffins, California; Mrs.
Stanley Watson, Racine, RD, Patricia Sue Folger, Cincinnati
$25, tresp.~ssing; Michael and David Earl Chalfin at
Wilson, Parkersburg, $27.50, home. Seventeen grandchildren
passing on double 'yellow line survive, two sisters, Mrs.
and $27.50, expired operators Maudie Mossgrove, Whileslicense; Ronald Bachtel, burg, Ky., and Mrs. Alice Webb,
Pomeroy, and Charles Ebers- Woodsville, Ohio and three
bach, $34.55 each, fishing brothers,. James Boggs of
without a license; John A. Virginia Beach, Va .; Jeanus
Jenkins, Gallipolis, Rt. I , $37.50, Boggs, Whitesburg, Ky: and
speeding; Max Hill, Letart, RD, Howard Boggs, Indianapolis,
$25, disturbing the peace; Ind.
Patrick J. Burns, Vienna, W.
Mr.. Boggs was a member of
Va ., $37.50, speeding ; David the Deer Creek Free Will
Pierce, Racine, Rt. 2, $27.50, Baptist Church.
failure to display license; Ray
Funeral arrangements will be
Fitch, Cheshire and ,Bill Cor- announced by the McCoy
nell , Pomeroy, RD, $50 each, Funeral Home, Vinton.
assault ·and battery.

Fines

Katie R. Crooks

•tt
Ratfield GUl y

Crooks of Vienna, W. Va.;
anoiher granddaughter, Mrs.
Jonell~ Damron of Vienna, and
two great-grandchildren. Her
son, John H. Crooks, Jr ., died
May 5 !968.
,'

Mrs. Mary Dunn

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs: Mary
Martin Dunn 85 wife of Rev. B.
E. Dunn; dled' at 3:30 a.m.
Saturday at her home, 41 Grape
St.
She was the daughter of the
late John T. and Mary Belle
Walker Martin . Born, Aug. 19,
1885, she spent most of her life
in Gallia County. In addition to
her husband, she is survived by
a nephew, Harris Depping of
G a IIi Po I is.
Funeral
arrangements will be announced by the McCoy·
Wetherholt Funeral Home.

3- The SUndsy Tlffies- Sentinel, Sunday, April?!&gt;, 1971 ·

ASK TO wt;O
GALLIPOLIS - Applying for
a marriage lit"ense Friday in
Gallia (:ounty Probate Court
were Kenneth Earl Cremeans,
20, Gallipolis, stock clerk and
Mary Katherine Miller , 18,
Gallipolis, cashier.

Defense: Budget In Real Dan.ger
BY WILLIAMS. WHITE
WASHINGTON.- Now is the spring' ~f discontent - and this
lime ~ of a special danger - to all who believe in the maintenance of at least a barely adequate military dele~ of the
United States.
For a host of budgekutters motivated by dozens of reasons
whether honest pacifism or an anti-Vietnam war-ism so extrem~
as to ~ ne~ly psychotic, or plsin and simple demagoguery, are
(llthermg m and about Congress to tear the defense budget to
shreds if they can.
The hard fact, moreover. is that while anti-Pentagonitis in its

.MEIGS THEATRE
.
..
'

Tonight-Man.-Tues.
April25·26·27
"WUSA 0
LOIIE IT OR
LEAVE IT
1Technicotorl
Paul Newma n

Joan Woodward

Colorca rtoons:
Big Bad Bobcat
Good Fairy
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
Aprii2B-29
NOT OPEN

Alexander Fisher
POMEROY - Alexander H.
Fisher, 92, Lasley St., Pomeroy,
died Friday evening in Veterans
. ONE WEEK
Memorial Hospital after a long
illness.
Tonight thru Wednesday
He was a member of the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church and of .pomeroy Lodge
No. 164 F &amp; AM, receiving his 50
year pin in February of 1964.
Surviving are a son, Herman·
A. Fisher, Titusville, Fla.; his
•
FR/IN~O~ IC H
son-in-law and daughter,
PRO~JCTI ~
Lutrel)e F. and Edna
PETER
Schoenleb, Pomeroy, with
SELLERS
whom he made his home ;
GOlDIE
grandsons Richard Fisher,
Glendora, Calif.; Edgar Vale,
Sanford, Fla.; Joe Fisher ,
Sanford, Fla.; John Bryant,
CllOR · From Columtlil Plcht ts
Vinton, Ohio; a granddaughter,
Mrs. John Werry, Hemlock
Cartoon
Grove, 10 great-grandchildren
No
one
under 17 years
and
three
great-great.
of age admitted.
grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by
his wife, Carrie Miller Fisher; a
daughter, Mrs. Ella Bryant; a
son, Harold Fisher; his parents,
two brothers and two sisters.
. Services will be 2 p.m.
Mo~day at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Robert
Card officiating. Burial will be
in the Beech. Grove Cemetery.
Friends may call any time at
the funeral home.

Buy Seeds;
Fertilizer

Singers Come to School

M~S,9,N DRIVI·IN
R

.... Iii
·--

$

'

15,5QO

-IBI~A~I:A;:

ATTRACTIVE ALl ·ELEC.TRIC ,HOME .. ·.

.
.
.
* lOCATED QN . EXTRA LARGE LO.T ·
· * WALL TO WALL CARPU' ·
·THREE 8·EDROOMS ·
..
* BATH &amp; HAiF
• KlTCHEI COM~LETE WITH UMGE &amp; RURIGERAlOR.··.

or.

I

I

~

~

• •

o.

Not Now and Maybe Never

J

Dllr Sir: •

.

111tlelpate

. .

. -Tilt nuon I Ill\ wriUng thla letter is to discourage anyone

SPENCER GRADUATES
RACINE - Navy Airman
Apprentice Ernest E. Spencer,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Eison F.
Spencer Qf Main St., Racine,
was graduated from the
A••lation Structural Mechanic
Hydraulics Course at Naval Air
• Jack W. Crisp, Prelident
Training Center, '
Q-eek
Dillrlct

111-w• toa 1e11er tliat appeared in your paper a few weeks from organlllnl any movement, group, or committee to en'
•owritten by Mr. Jlan'y Bias: suggesting that I 1M: drafted to run courage my candidacy. To those many people who have caUed
f11r Illite Rlja u J' ""' from the 27th House District.
andwrlttenletleninanswer to IJie11118iestlon for draft( by Barry
lweuldW.IO~~~JIUIIii~Uv ·: . ·cyllliiCh IIJlllfedate the lltal) Ill)' IIIII* you to tbeJ;n fill' theV interest and faith in me,
In tilatletter. Iallo8pprectate bul.l allo Ill qaln •I said to lhlltlln person, I have no inman 1ee101 to have 1n me. 1 118J'ee ·llntltiiiiCIIIIIIIrc UIIMIIdete'I'Gr any of!lce ofetther political party
lbOul Metga and Galila Co111tle1 · • • Ill b•ht• 1eat.
ClOIIlpll'ed to olber IUI'I'OUJICiing ·

I

0

. . . 0 S.E.

belnl• c:andldate for. any office.

.

... .

S

purposes. ·

.

.

New Matchups in TV Heavies

HAWN

Three SeS
·
· ury
Go tO J

Boosters to

equally prudent policy of being reasonably prepored to defend
me's country.
And,t&lt;agically, it happens that the good guys have a great deal
going for them. There is frustration with the war in Vieinam.
There is the embedded pseudOoCeligious ethic that the Pentagon
must represent evil since power itself is evil _power perforce
.
il ""· d · bl
tim
d
i1
be mg ev u=ause power IS un ema Y some es use 1or ev
·

There IS the cumulative weight,
so useful to the budget·
..
he
h
tte
cu rs, of year.upon
year
of
ostility
toward,
and
slander
of,
t
.
.
.
mere fact of military serVIce. This arises largely from senators
,
,
nd
. d b t . ti
db ,
d
whoIove .pea~ - a never mm a ou JUS ce an onor an
conceptsllketheoldonethatthestronghaveanmescapable duty
the White Paper
to come to the rescue of the weak and vppressed.
most virulent fonn has become a regular spring phenomenor'
. !"en, there is the un~ti ~· lted tragedy of the c?"~. of Lt.
there is far more reaso~ than heretofore to fear that a strange ~ilJiam Calley, whose conviction ~I ~e murder of civilians .m
coalition of tender conscience, however misplaced, and kookery, VIetnam is being used by many to indiCt the entire armed forces
however absurd, may carry the day.
of the United States, not to mention the entire United states itself.
Finally, there is the matter of two obvious and perilous
Under the· general direction of Field Marshal William
Proxmire, otherwise known as the Senator from Wisconsin, is weaknesses involving the Nixon Administration it.self. The first is
being mounted a carefully orchestrated campaign. Its . effect that the President bas never been able to close the alleged
could be to make absolutely certain what is already greatly "credibility gap" over Vietnam, though God knows he has tried.
feared by men who really know something about military affairs. He has indeed tried too much, protested too much, because the
This is that the Soviet Union, having at minimum reached parity public opinion polls are themselves being misread. When X
with the United States in the weaponry of ultimate destruction is number of people say the President is not telling them all he
knows or ought to tell them, what a significant section is really
indeed outstripping us.
'
The reasoning of the good guys here is that weapons kill saying, humanly, is that damn it all he is not telling them what
people and so are the actual causeS rather than the mere im- they would like to know. And what they would like to know is that
plements of wars. Wars, in truth, are almost invarisbly started . there is a quick, an easy and an honorable exit from Vietnam
because the potential adversary knows that his intended victim which wilrltllow us all to forget the whole thing right away.
The second bole in the President's line of defense is simply
bas become weak enongh to make the adventure of aggression
that, master politician'l!tough he personally is, his roster of real
both safe and productive.
Now, the good guys know, of course, that in ordinary, political pros in the White House palace gusrd is far too short.
everyday life any man who insists upon making a doormat of Good managerial type he basin plenty; savvy types able to fight
blmsell positively invites some .bully to step upon hlm. They are the budget-cutting good guys with their own techniques of overuna.ble, however, to see the obvious analogy between a pro dent simplification and gross mpm sentimentalism he has not got in
policy of being reasonably prepared to defend oneself and an sufficient numbers.

PT . PLEASANT - Mrs .
Katie Rice Crooks, 88, 2218
Lincoln
Av~nue ,
Point
Pleasant, died Friday at the
GALLIPOLIS - One of three trio had been hitchhiking on Rt. home of a granddaughter, Mrs.
persons arrested April B in 23, south of Columbus when he David Dawson at Cottageville
with whom she had been
connection with the theft of a offered them a ride.
After
entering
Gallia
County,
temporarily residing.
1970 Ford taken at gunpoint in
Funeral services will.· be
Gallia County from Robert the trio pulled a gun and forced
him
to
drive
to
a
county
road
conducted
today at 1:30p.m. at
Stewart, 43, Blacklick, Ohio,
Franklin County, entered a where he was robbed knocked the Crow-Russell Funeral
guilty plea Friday in Common unconscious lied and 'thrown in Home. Burial will be in the Lone
Fund to Counter Communism
a ditch .
'
' Oak Cemetery. The Rev. 0. H.
Pleas Court w~en arraigned on
Port Clinton, Obi~
Carder will officiate.
Lewis B. Shaw
a Bill of Information.
AprlllB,
1971
Mrs. Crooks was born August GALLIPOLIS .:.. Word was
;.
David Hatfield, 19, Columbus,
POMEROY -Slate school 27, 1882, in Mason County. She
~ To The Editor:
formerly of Delbarton, W. Va. , foundation subsidy payments was the ' daughter of the late received here from California
£ The small man next to me in the little green Volkwagen spoke
entered his plea before Judge for April in Meigs County Thomas and Annie Emanuel last week of the death of Lewis
~ with a strong Korean accent. He spoke earnestly, "I cried many
Ronald R. Calhoun. Judge to,aled $170,969.52,. ,,~ ~?rd,~g . Rice. and widpw of ,John, .1;1. Billings Shaw, son of Helen
~ limii·8S I traveled thru Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas.' Who
Calhoun postponed sentencing to Joseph T. Ferguson, state Crooks who dfed in March 1970. Ker~'sand' LewiS Billlngs ' S~aw~ 1
'
~ would know the burden on lily heart? Who will understand why I
until a probation report is auditor.
Sr.
Survivors include a daughter- He was, born .and reared in
COlO!~ Del...
ii ~g for my gas and solicit for my mo!fllodglng?" This man,
completed.
Deductions from the total in-law, Mrs. Goldie (John H.)
•
Un~ed Ar11sts;
:( deeply expressive, had just completed willi me a day of trying to
Gallipolis at the familY home,
Hatfield and two others, include $3,709 lor school
•~ raise funds. Have you ever asked people to give you money - to
Plus
454 Third Ave .. Mr. Shaw spent
David Shanks, 30, and Bunny employes relirement;
j donate to your cause? For me it is difficult though I try not to Jet it
Shanks, 20, Columbus, were $20,714.19 for state teachers
C
.
a
most of his life in the Chicago
~ show thru. l'.ve always worked for a living and have earned my
area and on the West Coast:
apprehanded in the early retirement, and $6,597.96 to
~ own way. I'm sort of proud of that. I don't llke to beg. This little
He served with Chennault's
mormng hours on Thursday, the Meigs County Board of
famous flying Tigers in. China
:~ man nell to me- Dr. Nam Olin Cha from·South Korea, was not
April 8 at a roadblock near Education. Amounts received
. .
and during .World War II was
;; happy begging either. He could have been living weir with great
Hanover, W. Va. They were by the local districts
GALLIPOLIS
Three
civil
awarded
the Purple Heart and
charged in the theft of Stewart's following ,the ·deductions
:: respect from his people in Korea. But instead he is traveling over
actions involving money have the Silver Cross.
car on April 7. Stewart, a ser· Include Eastern, $22,537.78;
:; the length and lreadth of the U. S. and Canada trying to gain
been set down for 'jury trials Funeral services were held in
vice engineer for a New York Meigs Local, $94,584.01 and
:; financial support for his project.
Monday
in Gallia County northern California . He is
firm, was enroute here on a Southern, $22,826.58.
::
What is this project? Dr. Cha is an Independent Presbyterian
service call. Stewart said the '' · .&gt;·:K: . .,.,.::,:..:'::'''· .,::·· :. :.··. '''·:.'''··.'!-:'' '':'':' Common Pleas Court by Judge survived by his wife Irene,
' : Olrtstian Minister who feels a great ·conviction that America is
Ronald ~· c.alhoun. One is three children· and grand::: the last hope of the world for freedom. He has studied in America
Havannah Blackburn, Rt. 1, children. He is also survived by
:; for eight years receiving Th.M. and Ph.D. degrees. His part in
POMEROY - It was agreed
Cartoon
Vinton, vs M~lvin Blackburn, two sisters, Mrs . Crilla
': : America lies in spreading the Christian Gospel and in fighting to purchase fertilizer and grass
. also Rt. I, Vmton ; The ISSUe Stiverson and Miss.NeJle Shaw,
:; against Communism. Dr. Cba was a Confucianist and a Buddhist seed for the football fields in
·
'
involves $8,000 and the sale of a G~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~;;;
~: until he was 19 when from a sick bed he was converted to Christ. Pomeroy and Middleport and
PO~,EROY - " Youth of numbers are coordinated to 40 .acre farm in Morgan Twp. I
;: He lived thru the brutal personal elJlCrlences of the Japanese the practice field at the new Today a group of 50 smgers relate a story of how one can
Asecond action is the result of
;: occupation of Korea and later saw and elJlCrienced first hand the school during the April meeting
from Proctorville and Rome escape with Christ yet be in a traffic accident June 24, 1969.
;I brutalities of the North Korean and Olinese Communists. Now of the Meigs Local Athletic United Methodist Churches, will touch with reality. The score, Veva F."and Charles F. Gard-.
:j living in Los Angeles he is watching America being taken over Boosters.
be at the Meigs Junior High also arranged by Carmicahel, ner, Jr., Rt. 1, Middleport, are
During the meeting, presided School in Middlepor.t, Monday contains humorous satire ·as the plaintiffs in the suit against
•,.
:· thru external propaganda and internal decay and subversion. Los
-A CAl! lOON Nl ollll Y
over
by
the
Rev.
Bill
Perrin,
.; Angeles is probably the key point of entry on the West Coast for
as part of the Meigs Umted well as a seriou~ meS'!Bge.
Everett · W. Lancaster, 2191
,!; Red Chinese literature. From there this poison spresds across vice president, It was also voted Methodist Youth Fellowship Youth of Today is under the Eastern Ave. Plaintiffs seek
:;; · America. Dr. Cha Is starting a mission to print Christian and anti- to purchase a tape and a progra~. .
-ft.UI, - ·,
.
. direction of Bob Vincent , $5,310.12 for ·damages and exfiberglass
pole
for
the
track
Tonight,
Apri
I
25
:;: Christian literature to counteract this flow of Red propaganda.
Ali JUniOr and semor high Church choir director and their penses· incurred.
.
·
'
''SOMETHING FOR
::
He will print in Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and English. He tum.
youth leaders and young adull.!! pastor, the Rev. Gerald Moyer. . A traffic accident iS a'lso the
'aau111 IIATUII
EVE~YONE'' · .
:j has the education, he bas the printing machinery, he has the office · Me.mbers of the baseball in the co.unty, rega~dl~ss of The program is at 7:30p.m.
basis·ofthe thlr~ action filed by
team
and
coaches,
Ed
Bartels
.:• Door space to do the job, be has the zeal and the knowledge
church aff1hatwn, ar~ mv1ted to
Modena and John Rife, '• •COlOI .
Starring'
and
Terry
Ohlinger,
were
•' necessary. All he lacks now is the mmey to pay special typists,
attend.
.
. Chesapeake, ag~inst·· Ben
Youth of Today wtll present
Eachus and ~ames Merry,
interpreters, writers, photographers, artists, etc. to make this present and were introduced.
Michael ,York
Team members attending were
" Nat~ raJ High" by . Ra.lph
Merry Stone Co., Rt. 1, Bidwell.
C
••••
II
eo
printing operation go. He is trying to raise $20,000 as a minimum
And .
Jed Will, Rick Van Mall:e,
JACQUELINE BISSEt
Carmichael. Natural Htgh ts a
YOUTH HURT
. Plaintiffs are seekin~ $61,697.55
starter fund. It'll take him a year of hard work to raise It at th~
Roger Abbott, aoger Dixon,
Angela Lllnsbury
JIM BROWN
rate he's going. But he should be printing now. America is in Ron Clonch, Chip Haggerty, musical dramaltzation of two GALLIPOLIS _ David B. for ·injuries and expenses inRated (R)
young couples, one seekmg an Cole, 19, 1 Vine st., was ad- curred as a result of a traffic
trouble. She needs bls help now! ·
Steve Dunfee, Gene Powell,
We arrive4 home lat,e. We received several promises. One Stan Wilson, David Boyd, Ed escape on drugs and the other . milled to the Holzer M~ical accident. April I, .1970 'at 'the
man was still lri F1orlda so we'll go back April 24th when he young, Bob Blackston, Rick seekmg a htgh of enhghtment Center at· 2 a.m. Saturday for intersection of ltt. 35 .and ·Rt. ....,_..,,..._ _ _ _ _ _~!""'"...;,______.
through Jesus Christ. Some 20 observation following a single ·588.•
·
arrives home. Tomorrow we'll see others.
Ash, Charles Eastman, Lou
car accident at !2:45a.m. on Rt.
I'm an American, also deeply con~rned about Am~rica's McKinney, Floyd Burney and
588, two and five tenths miles
.
.
future. I'm a District Americanism Olairman in the American · Tom Cooke. The track and golf
MEETING ANNOUNCED
south
of
Gallipolis.
According
to
Legion. I promised Dr. Cba I'd try to help him raise the needed teams will be guests at the next
MASON .J. Ed White,
president of the Wahama the Ohio State Highway. Pstrol,
money .I'm sending this letter to every newspaper in Ohio. I think meeting.
that will be almost 400 newspapers. If every newspaper prints this
Refreshments were served by Athletic Boosters, has an- Cole lost control of his auto
letter; and If everyone reading this letter would send at least one Mrs. Horace Abbott, Mrs. John nounced plans for a meeting to avoiding a collision with two
dollar to Korea Bible Mission, Inc., P. 0. Box 20683, Los Angeles, Well, Mrs. Norman Van Maire, be held at 7:30p.m. Monday in unidentified vehicles. Cole's car
went off the roadway into an
Calif. 900011 Dr. Ola would be printing and malllng In May. But if Mrs. Leota Smith, Mrs. Richard the school gymnasium. Election
embankment. The case is still
we can't raise this money It may be as late as March·of 1972 before Young, Mrs. Don Wilson, Mrs. of officers will take place and
Guy Morris, Mrs. Herbert distribution of the by-laws and under investigation.
he starts.
·
America needs the information he has; to see how she is being Dixon and Mrs. Colleen Dunfee. constitution will be made. Mr.
.
.'
White urges all members to
•
defeated, and to then strengthen herself and go on to national
JUDGMENT RENDERED
attend.
survival and a new health. Communist must be stopPed. I hope
ASHBROOK co-sPONSORS
PT. PLEAsANT· - Judge
WASHINGTON (UPI) - John
··ou will help
Cba help America to defeat Communism and 11.11
'
'
.
James Lee Thompson, in Ma!!On
DIVORCE GRANTED
!hose behind the scenes forces that•make up this international Ashbrook of Ohio is one of three
County
Circuit
Court
Friday,
conspiracy. PleiiSil send at least a dollar today. Thank you and House Republicans who are co. POMEROY - ·Harold Sm~th granted judgment in the
sponsoring Ji proposed con· was granted a divorce in Meigs
•
God bless each one of you.
..
amount of $409.26 to the
stltutional
amendment
Intended
County
Common
Pleas
Court
EdWjlliams
*·
to outlaw mandatory busing of from Esther Smith on charges plaintiffs in a civil action.
.
'
1st District Americanism Cbrm.
children · to achieve racial of gross neglect of duty and Judgment was given to Junior
·
Department of Ohio
Wedge, Everett Wedge and
balance in schools.
extreme cruelly.
20118 NW Catawba Rd.
El~in Wedge in the suit against
·Port Clinton, 43452
Fannie Ellen Perry and .John M.
'State Rep~tative or any other office and I do not at this time Burdette.
Cellllnlctlve Lelten ol OpiiHI, Ill load lUte, are
welcomed. 'l'be editor ftl«l'M tile rtpllo ll!orlea lelten.
AJI 1e1ten mill lie 1lped, wllh a lid1 addreu, alll!oa&amp;h
bdllallmay be Uled apoa requell.

1

first annual Mason ' Coimty
Junior Miss Pageant staged in
December of last year at the
Wahama High Sc~ool.
Hoover, public relations
agent for Columbus and
Southern Ohio Eleetric Company, has also worked with the
regatta several years . In past
regatta parades Hoover and

.
Tom Cassell, also. ~ Columb1a
Gas of Ohw, have JOtntiy staged
the . pa!ade, whtch marks the
begmmng of the regatta .
Trophies and ·cash awards
will be presented to participants
in the parade. This year Mees
said he hoped to have every
band in the surrounding area in
the "biggest parade ever."

r--------------------------,
! Area Deaths . !

.

Y, ·APRIL 25
IIILOWAY ST.· ~BOll, · W. VA.
•

'.

By RICK DU BROW
HOLLYWOOD(UPI)-Strongly entrenched television series
like "The FBI •" "Ironside •"
"Bonanza" and "The Mod
Squad" will be challenged head·
on by tough new program
competition in the season
starting this fall.
"The FBI," a solid ratingsgetter for ABC-TV, will run up
against CBS.TV's early~venlng
Sunday Movies, as well as the
new Jimmy Stewart series and
the long-running Walt Disney
program, both on NBC-TV.
11

lronside" and "Mod Squad,"

meanwhile, will match up
against each other as part of a
three-network dogfight opening
the Tuesday night schedules.
The third entry here is (;len
Campbell's variety series.
~, ni~t ·ltas developed
into&lt;J powerhouse for ABC-TV,
with "Mod Squad," "Movie of
the Week" and '"Marcus Welby,
M.D."-and the opposing net·
works, wiped out by this lineup,
are going all out to beat it.
Therefore, NBC-TV ' moved
"Ironside" from Thursdays to
square off directly with "Mod
Squad," and CBs-TV switched
Campbell from Sundays to. the
same Tuesday time slot.
The "Movie of the Wkee," by.
the way; will get something of
a challenge too, with CB8-TV

THE

•

transferring "Hawaii Five.()" new "young adult" programming,and "Gunsmoke" basical~
to Tuesdays to oppose it.
As for NBC..TV's "Bonanza," ly aimed at traditiomil viewers,
it will still be' up against ABC- the matchup could be a highly
TV's Sunday Movies, but ·in revealing audience study in
addition the competition now itself.
will include CBS.TV's new . Qn Wednesdays, "Medical
Glenn Ford series, about a ·Center," which surprised alcontemporary lawman in the most everyone by shooting up
high in the ratings this season
Southwest.
There are other interesting will be going up against two
matchup. For example, on series with star movie namesMondays, CBS-TV's " Gun- Henry Fonda and Shirley
smoke" and NBC-TV's "Laugh- MacLaine. Fonda's show is the
In " will be against each other returning "The Smith Family,"
for a lull hour, the first time a successful midseason entry
this has ever happened. Against this year, and Miss MacLaine
them, ABC-TV has tossed in will be making her video series
"Nanny and the Professor," debut as a traveling photojour·
which doesn't figure to have
much of a chance except for a
fluke.
"Laugh-In ," though stiJI rath·
er for!llidapie, sliPm a good · 1PT;· "PLEASANT '""' One
deal in the ratings this season, person was injured as the result
and with the loss of such of a single-vehicle mishap early
regulars as Goldie Hawn and Saturday morning on' U. S.
Judy Carne, and the reported Route 3~ near the Silver
expectation that Arte Joson Memorial Bridge.
may also not be around, the
Samuel V. Simpkins, 19, Rt. 1,
series wlU never reach II.!! Grandview Heights, was adformer pinnacle.
mitted to Pleasant Valley
"Gunsmoke," meanwhile, de· Hospital and is reported to be in
spite an occasional slip down "good" condition. The extent of
the ratings ladder, continues to his injury was not learned.
amaze experl.!! with its steady,
City Police were in pursuit
strong perfonnance in the
numbers game. With "LaughDIVORCE ASKED
In " a leading example of the
GALLIPOLIS - Charging
gross neglect of duty, Charlotte
A. Hauldren filed a petition
seeking a divorce from
Raymond Hauldren. They were
married June 28, 1961 and have
one child.

nalist.
On Saturdays, CBS-TV just
might have the makings of a
very strong ratings lineup. II
begins with the established "My
Three Sons." Then come
"Funny Face," with Sandy
Duncan as a model; the new
Dick Van Dyke series; the
Mary Tyler Moore show, which
got off to a flying start this
season; and, finally , "Mission:

Impossible." However , "Mission: Impossible" will be
opposed on ABC-TV by the new
Roger Moore-Tony Curtis adventure series, "The Persuaders."

GALLIPOLIS - Jim p .
Graham , 57: was cited to
Municipal Court for improper
backing fo)lowing a minor
accident at 9:35a.m. Friday on
Second Ave. City police said
Graham backed from a parking
space and struck a car owned
by Edna Mae Montgomery,
Crown City. There was minor
damage to both cars.
A second back'mg mts
· hap
d .t · .
th
occurre a 4. 28 p.m. on e
Pennyfare parking. lot. Ac·
cording to the report, Floyd
Workman 77 Eureka Star Rt
was atte~pti~g to back from ~
parking space and struck an
auto driven by Alicia Gillen·
water, 35, Rt. 2, Crown City,
causing minor damage to bo1h
vehicles.

GAL.LIPOLIS - Checks
·totaling $121,933.40 hav~ been
mailed .to Galha County s four
state supported school dostr1cts
accordm g to State Audttor
Joseph T. Ferguson . .
Galhpolls City receiVed the
most $59,988.46. Other payments ·were North Gallia '
$22,445.22; Hannan Trace,
$22 ,539 . 12·, South western ,
$16 •960 ·60 and the Gallia County
Board of Education, $3,595. The
Kyger Creek District does not
receive stale aid due to its low
inside millage.

Five Inmates
To Go Free

24 Brownies ·Visit-Plant
GALLIPOLIS - Twenty-lour
members of Brownie Trodp 29
of Pl. Pleasant sponsored tiy the
Presbyterian Church there
loured the photo offset printing
plant of the Ohio Valley
Publishing Co. here Saturday.
The plant prints the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, the PomeroyMiddleport Daily Sentinel .. the
Sunday-Times Sentinel, and the
Pt. Pleasant Register.
Troop leaders witli the girls
were Mrs. John Hilbert and
Mrs. Rufu s Cromartie and
senior scout Susie McKinney.
Ladies helping transport the

girls here were Mrs. Paul
Harbret'ht, ·Mrs. Charles ·Mc·Culloch and Mrs. Robert
Roberl•. Bob Wingett, editor or
The Register, led the party
through the plant.
E-R CALLED
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
emergency . unit was called to
the Guy Bolen home ·in
Harrisonville at 4 p.m. Friday.
Bolen was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was admitted for treatment of
an illness.

HURT IN FALL
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Robert
F. Anders, 38, 110 Locust St.,
Henderson, was admitted to the
Holzer Medical Center Friday
evening following"" accident at
her home. She sustained
lacerations of the stomach and
side when she fell through the
floor of her attic.

LIMA, Ohio (UPI ) - Five
inmates who served a total of
153 years at the state Hospital
for the Criminally Insane here
were ordered released after it
was learned they had never
been convicted or sentenced for
any crime.
Allen County Probate ·Court
Judge David Steiner Friday
said the men were not
criminally insane, as defined by
Ohio law, but apparently· had
been forgotten by the courts and
the hospital officials. They were
identified as :
- Everett Smith , 49,
Columbus, sent to the institution
in 1940 after admitting the theft
of three gallons of gasoline from
an auto.
- Guy Tolle , 71, Winchester,
Adams County, ~barged with an
attempted rape 41 years ago.
- William Davis, 70, Mid·
dletown , accused of killing his
wife and sent to the hospital in
1939.
Holt Fletcher, 55,
Cleveland, arrested on a bad
check charge 22 years ago.
- Robert A. Onion, 50,
Conneaut , committed after
being charged with assault to
commit rape 24 years ago.

Extra Heavy Pil e, 15 ft . width . Colors: Green
or Gold .

Since 18

*995
•
sq. yd.

l:ua:~ng

rs

Guaranteed
To SatisfyOr Money Back

Yukon Club

Variety
of
Aavors

Padding &amp; Labor
Included With
20 Sq. Yd. or More

Heavy Pile. 15ft. width. Colors: Blue, Green
or Gold .

•a•s

Padding &amp; Labor
Included With
sq. yd.
20 Sq. Yd. or More
Other
-$--.....,..-!P~adding &amp; Labor
Carpets
Included W~h
As Low As
sq. yd. 20 Sq. Yd. or More

95
6

INDOOR.OUTDOOR, KITCHEN &amp; 'BATH
CARPET NOT INCLUDED IN THIS
SPECIAL

842

can

.....
Phone. 446·1405
Galli palls

Chase Ends In Wreck

~R·AC~~

when Simpkins wrecked. He
was cited by City Police on a
DWI charge.
Di!imty SHer iff B'ob Huffman
made the investigation after
receiving the call at 12:15 a.m.
Damages of $200 resulted
from a one-car mishap on
Redmond Ridge, two miles east
of Henderson at 5:30 p.m.
Friday, but no injuries were
reported.
Deputy Sheriff Bob Uhl investigated and identified the
driver as Mary Loretta Kasee,
34, Route 2, Gallipolis, Ohio.

I

SURGERY .TAKEN
MIDDLEPORT - Frank
Beach of Middleport underwent
surgery Friday at the Holzer
Medical Center. His room
number is 383.

•

l

TIMES-SENTINEL

I

Pll~lllhtd tvtrv wH kUV ltvtnlng U t t PI
~ttv r lla r, SttOOII Cla n I'O i ltlfl Pl iO It

I Gal ll pal 1,

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want that

wonderful
·feeling... "

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POWER
MOWER

FOLDING ·
ALUMINUM
FRAME

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BRIGGS STRATION

NON TILT
BASE

su BSCRIP TIO N A.-. r e s

The Ga ltlpGIII lr l ~un e 10 Oh iO t ml Welt
VlrQ h'l ll , Ont ynr II J 00 , sl • maniU 57 .
I lhr n mon lhl 54 JO , o:llt whert, ant yn r
I '' l slo m ont hs U , lhree monlhs U 00.
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The Otll y Se ntinel , ""'' yu r 11•00 1 1lo
mo ntt11 II U J l hrtt m on ths
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I Tht UnlltCI Prtn lnl trn t llonal Is n .
1 t h.t l l\lth "" l!l t&lt;t tO tnt uH tor publiUIIon
I 01 Ill newt CI ISP II C!In ' r t(llltd 10 !Il lS
nt wlptptr and 1 1.0 tht loctl n twt
I llllbh l htd hr re ln

REG. 54.77
22" CUT

LAWN
CHAIR

BY ct rrl er dilly l nd Sun da y, soc PIH" I

I

SAVE 10%

REG. 177

Pubi iJhed tvtr y w~e lo. d a y e-enln g u cept I
I Satu rday En ttred 11 ucond clns m i llin g 1
1 ma Tter at Pome roy , OMo , Post Olflt t
I
J
T E AM S OF ~UII S CR I PT I ON

"If you

'

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i

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1
MILLERCEGISLATION AIMED AT AMERICA'S NEEDS
I
MARRIAGE LICENSE
'4
I
H.J. Res. 358 - Amendment to permit prayer or meditation in
1
POMEROY - Robert Keith
I
school or public building. ·
Arms, 26, Pomeroy and Myrta
I
1
H.R:. 4744-Authorize~ the four-year extension of the ApLynne McGuire, 20, Pomeroy.
~----------------- - J
palachia Program.
.
,
H.R, 4f3'f - Legislation making it a federal offense to kiJI a
fireman or policeman. '
H.R. 5064 - Provides incentives for the establishment ol new
or expanded job producing rura! il}dustries.
COMING EVENTS
'
May 16 - Partiilipate in Rio Grande College Commencement
, exercises; Rio Grande, Ohio.
·
.
·
!'My 28 - Tour of $79 million Willow ~land Locks and Dam
project.
ONENERGYTASKFORCE
,
Rep .. James McClure, Chainnan of .the Republican Task
Force ori Energy and Resources announced the appointment of
'
Cong~essman Miller to the energy research committee. The task
force is designed to analyze and recommend means to increase
our national en~rgy supplies.
.
. OPEN.IJOORS-EVERYCOUNTY
. During the past two months, ,Rep. Miller or his distriCt
assistant, Wayne Todd, conducted at least one Open Door session
in every county of the 13-coun.ty Congressional District. More are
pllinned and Miller invites the citizens of Southeastern Ohio to, ,
stop and meet with him.
. ·
•.
· RJ,l:CENT GRANTS AND LOANS
/
A partial listing includes:
$38o,ooo ARC ·-construction · grant to Musk.ingum Area
Vocational School.
··
$208,200 EPA sewage construction grants to The P~s .
·$211,000 ~Hi\ loan to water system for Noble County. .
.
" •.. feeli~g of l&lt;nqwing you have extra
$312,000 HEW construction grant to Good Samaritan Hospital,
cash ~o spare if and when you want it,
1AnesVrne.
$188,000 EDA water system grant to'the City of Jackson.
open an interest-earning savings ac· $127,500 Interior Dept. grant to Old · Man'~ Cave Park, ·
count here and now - add to it every
Hocking County. . .
·
·' .
. •
month or payday!"
·
·
. . $:!00,31Unterior ~pt. grant to Blue .I~~k Park, Dunc~n
Falls. ·
.
. ON CURRENT MAmRS
· · SST- "I feel that the SST shoulcl be bullt with private ompilal
and not taxpayer's doll8rs. The government has more than
. fulfilled its obligation ~ the development ofthis aircraft." ·.
~oned Autos - '.'I have co-41p0nsored legislation whicll
-,nt deal with the abandoned auto and change It from a national ·
eyeaore into natlonalas~el by recycling auto hulks back into the
steel makiDg procet18.'~ .•
"A se'nseless act of violence. Abhorred bf
•

SAVE 20%

I
P~Dtl ued •~ ery S!lfldl y by !ht Oh iG I
I Vl llt y P ~bll5 h l n ! &lt;o
I
I
GALLIPO U Q j~, ll'l' TR IBIJNE
IU Thlra ., .,, , Galllp.olls, OhiO, d6J l

9PM

MONDAY

,-------------------·
SUNDAY
l
1

NEWSLETTER

'

$121,934 Coming
To Schools Here

Driver Cited to
Municipal Court

77

$297
Blue, Green and 'lime

LIMIT 1
IN CARTON

LIMIT 3

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SAVE 25%
1.99

REG. 1.77
• Super Special

SPREADING

YEWS
(CUSPIDATA)

el0-12"
eREADY TO ·sET
eDISEASE RESISTANT

EXTRA

lARGE
JACKSON &amp;

for
IN GALLIPOLIS

00

PERKINS

ROSES·

LIMIT 3

�Sflday Times· Ser•tlneil; SUrlday, APrl 25,1971

,,

.

4-Thf Sunday Times. Sentinel, Semrlay, April Z5,1971

Rio Gra'nde College .Students Present Gancer variety Show

Anniversary

._"'"'a ·Saunders is
· e of Thomas Carr

.

I

Miss

BACK STAGE CON·
FERENCE - Mrs. Olive
Bernard, left, har]iist, Rich
Litton, and Edie Ross ,
pianists, during intermission
at Friday night's cancer
benefit show. Mrs. Bernard
played "Chanson Dans La
Nuite." Mr. Utton and Mrs.
Ross accompanied the
Grande Chorale's presen.
lations, "He Ain't Heavy,"
"Traces" .and uwe've Only
Just Begun."

i
I

For her daughter's wedding

by Murrays

lme knit dress with a corsage or
gold mums.
·
· The bridegroom 's JllOiher
wore a blue dress with matching accessories: She alSo
wore a white mum corsage. .
A reception at the bride's
home was held immediately
following the ceremony. The
bride's table was centered with
the traditional wedding cake
and punch bowl.
For her honeymoon the bride
changed to a traveling costume
of beige and tirown wool.
The bride is a senior at
Marshall University majoring
in busihess education. She is a
member of . Pi Omega Pi,
business education, honorary
and Kappa Della Pi, national
educational honorary, and is·
s•udent eaching at Chesapeake
High School.
The bridegroom is a senior at
Marshall University majo~ing
in finance , Army ROTC, and
Delta Pi ·omega , National
Dramatic Fraternity·. After ·
completion of his military duty
he will be employed by First
and Merchants National "Bank
of Richmond, Va .

BIDWELL -- e The iOfilen""f:
wedding anniversary of Mr. and
Mrs. Anthony Murray, Bidwell,
was celebrated ·On Tuesday,
April 20 ..
· Asurprise dinner at Pomeroy
· was given in honor of the couple
by their daughter. Mrs. William
(Reva ) Fraley and their son,,
Charles Murray. Others at-·
tending were Mr . William
Fraley, Marlene Fraley, Mrs.
Charles Murray," Terri Lynn ·
and David Murray .
After returning to their home
they were again surprised by a
beautiful decorated anniversary cake and a golden
floral center piece.
The couple received gifts and
many cards from relatives and
. friends..

Taylor sang,! Don't Know How to Love Him from "Superstar." Mrs. White did a comedy
number, Second Hand Rose. Both young women are Rio Grande studenls and are in the Rio
GraDdeCborale. MissTaylorwillappear in, I Do! !Do! May6 to9at8p.m.

RIO GRANDE - "! DO! I
DO!," a musical that tells the
story of a lliar~iage; will be the
final Rio Grande ·Co il eg~
Theatre production this season.
The play will run May6, 7, 8 and
9, in Community Hall. Curtain
time is 8 p.m.
Based on Jan de Hartog's

"The Fourposter," "I DO! I
DO!" is a chronicle of life, the
story of Michael and Agnes
from their wedding day through
old age. The birth of their
· children, quarrels, money
problems and love are all told in
a warm and sentimental style,
sometimes brassy and bold,
alternately soft and touching.
The cheerful, tuneful score by
Tom Jones and Harvey Schmidt
runs through the story,
mirroring and dramatizing the
moods and events in the lives of
Michae~ lind Agnes •.Show tunes
from the play include "I DO! I
DO!" , " My Cup Runneth
Over," and "What Makes A

DRAMATIC READING Phll Pickens read original
poetry for the cancer variety
show.

Tree Acreage
At the time of the landing
of the Pilgrims, there were
937-million acres of superb
virgin forest in the United
States, including all territory
except the Great Plains and
some western desert areas .
LEAD IN MUSICAL Brian Raines, who will play
the male lead in "I Do! I Do!"
to be presented at Rio Grande
College on May 6 to 9, sang,
What Kind of Fool am I?

&lt;

•

'"!

{ ti

4

'

I

,,

1

' IU

OOFT SHOE ROUTINE - Fred MarUn and Robert WWey filled m between acis during the
show. Mr. Willey also did impersonations.

SECOND ROUND
OF EMPIRE'S 25th

Fixed Easter Date
The Council of Nicaea , in
A.D. 325, dec l ared that
Easter must be celebrated
by Christians everywhere on
the Sunday following the 14th
day of the Paschal full moon
after the. spring, or vernal,
equinox .

1

HURRY.! HURRY! HURRY I
ONLY 4 DAYS &amp; 1 HOUR
UNTIL WE GIVE AWAY A•••

r

$500 DINING.
ROOM SUITE

STRATOlOUNGERS
"HONEY BUN"- Beth Bastian!, Gallipolis sophomore,
did a two-dance routine for the variety show. Her other
number was a flapper dance.

REQ.INERS

Domesday Book
The Domesday Book is a
record of a general survey of
England ordered for taxation
purposes by William the Con·
queror in 1086. It is a valu·
able source of historical in·
formation .

j

II

.

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REG.

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REG

UGHTING .,... Steve U!Oe was in charge of lights for the
Rio·Grande Cancer Variety Show.

,
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•••

•
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••
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••
•

Brian Raines, a sophomore
from Harrisburg, Pa., will play
both male leads, while the
female lead will be split be·
tween Shirley Richardson, a
freshman from Xenia, and Evie
Taylor, a junior from Rio
Grande. The two casls are
under the direction of Edward
Roark, instructor of speech at
the college. Handling the orchestra for the four nights will
be Rick Litton, a senior from
Jackson.
"I DO! I DO!", according to
Roark, will be an evening full of
laughter, tears, fun and . enjoyment. He noted that this is
the first musical produced by
the Rio Grande College Theatre
in three seasons, and added that
this play is fam ily entertainment at its finest.
During the 1970-71 season, the
Rio Grande College Theatre
presented ''Hamlet" and "Oh
Dad, Poor Dad, Mamina's Hung
You in the Closet and I'm
Feelin' So Sad." Reservations
for any of the four nights of "I
DO! I DO!" can be milde by
contacting the college.

•
•

•

B&amp;PW Again
GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis Business and
Professional Woman's' Club is
offering the WRAP (Woman
f.\esponsible ,for •. Accident
Prevention )
course
in
Gallipolis.
The first meeting of the
defensive driving course will be
April 29 at 7 p.m. at .the First
Presbyterian Church. Instructor will be Roger Brwn·
field of Gallia Academy High
School. Also serving as in·
structors will be Police Chief
John Taylor and a member of
the State Highway Patrol.
The meeting is open to the
public and refreshments will be
served. A door prize will be
awarded .

~

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'UM /Th'IJ Ql,l·tlVTIT/E.'i!

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS

•••
••

'45000
I :

otna

with Mrs. ''Iaurice Alverson Con trol Program and asked to
Thursday. He spoke on the care be ready to back the program.
and growing of roses. The Members were also reminded
hostess chose for devotions to that dues of $4 are now payable
Doesn't she de selVa
read, Beatitudes of a for next year.
the ''very best?"
Housewife, followed by prayer. The new slate of oflicers ·
Disc\lssion was on the voted on and accepted were as ------~----1
planting of petunias in the follow&gt;: President, Mrs .
planters for beautification, at Charles Steinbeck; vice
the entrances of each F.SV area president, Mrs. Dan Thomas,
plus the planter at the secretary, Mrs. Charles Knotts
404 Second Ave.
fairground. A flat will also be and treasw;er, Mrs. Don M.
Ga ilipolis , Ohio
donated to the county home lor Brown.
planting.
Co-hostesses Mrs. J. Paul
GALLIPOLIS - Mr . and Mrs.
Members were informed of Joyal and Mrs. John Elardo
Denver Slagle, Sarasota, Fla., the Gallia County Mosquito served dessert.
formerly of Gallipolis, will
observe their golden an· • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
niversary April 28. They were
married April 28 in the
Episcopal Church.
An open house is being
planned in their honor at the
home of Mr. ·and Mrs. John S.
Baker, 161 Garfield Extension,
on May 2 from 2 to 6 p.m.
takes its first forward step Mr. and Mrs. Slagle are both
in Faith.-August Schlegel. t·etirees of the Gallipolis State
German poet.
Institute.

MILES OF SMILES!
When you have a busy day and wa nt
the most comfortable shoe possible.
you'll keep smiling when wearing
California Cobbler s' "Smile". Made
with incomparable sugar kid and
styled perfectly on a beautiful stacked
heel. For today's busy world, from
California Cobblers for only $14.95.
Colors: Blue &amp; White &amp; Beige.
'
·

BASSETT TABLES

5 PIECE

ClRDII

Offers WRAP

Cobblers ~·~r®

••

CHAIRS

BEDROOM.SUI

DAY

Mrs. Thomas R. Carr

t

CAUFORNIA

•

5-Pifci-------------.-----.,..-·-COUCH
-----------------------&amp;
SUITE 14:~~·5 '24995
2 alAIRS
'4~~~g5 •34995 ITALIAN
4liEcE"--REG.-~89:95------:.--:~--·-·

ALL FURNITURE
NOW ON SALE!
COME-SHOP-SAVE

but exhaustive musical for two
performers. Because each
player must sing, dance and
play instruments during the
performance, two casls have
been selected to appear on
alternate nights.

•

'99.95

MOTBE&amp;•a

••

•

3 GROUPS

Sunday, May 9

GSI.Retirees
To Observe
Anniversary

••
•

Yes, we wi ll give away absolutely FREE your
ssoo.o.o Regular Retail Dining
Room Su1te. Come m and Register, no pur·
chase necessary.

12 REG; PRICE
"MOMS " MABREY
Sandy Hunter
Moms Mabrey

"I DO! I DO!" opened on
Broadway in 1967, and ran 591
performances starring Mary
Martin and Robert Preston.
David Merrick produced the
show, with Gover Champion
directing. Jones, who wrote the
book and lyrics for the show,
also has to his credit "110
Degree in the Shade," and "The
Fan las tics."
The play is unique, a perfect

•
•
••
••

choic~ of any

oouCH"&amp;CiiAiit----;iG~----- ---:-

Early American

Woman."

••

FRI., APRIL 30 AT 10 AM.

RECLINERS

HAMMING IT UP - Alvis
Moore, a master of comedy,
hams it up for the
photographer. Posing with
him is Ealnor. Reid. Moore
served as master of
ceremonies and presented
several vocal selections,
· accompanying himself on the
piano. Miss Reid did modern
and African dance interpretations.

~~

...

•

WHAT IS A WOMAN
Shirley Richardson sings
selection from the musical.

'

l

-Mr: and Mrs. Anthony Murray

GALLIPOLIS - Billy Houck
was guest speaker for the
Fairview Spring
Valley
Homemakers Club meeting

Do! I Do!' Slated at
Rio .Grande May 2·9

am Su.!an White check the prugi8in. Miss

•

. Billy Houck is Speaker for F-SV Club

~,
FEMALE VOCAIJSTS- Evie Taylor,left,

J.O;&gt;.DON I UPIJ·-The British
.t+'nrcslry Cmnmission.said Fri·
&lt;la y . it reserved the right to
resume use of a· herbicide
called 245-T despite complainls
fromfarinwo rkers the chemical
left them· impotent.
A commission · spokesman
Sllid use of the herbicide had
not actually resW\Ied but that
" we just gave ourselves the .
right to do so if there is a need
and we feel i~clined."

Observed

. S. Saunders of Rt. 1 ~rs. Saunders wore a green A

became the bride of
Carr, Beckley, W,
p..m. Feb, 5. Vows of the
dou(IE ring ceremony were
by .'the Rev. Charles W.
LJWier in lhe bride '~ h~me.
the daughter of Mr. and
J. Everett Saunders. The
qi,ldlegr.oom is the son of Mr.
. Justin R. Carr.
baskets of white
green~ry and seven
cannelabra decorated
home.
The bride wore a formal gown
of Satapeau with empire
•waistline and bishop sleeves. An
attached redlngote of chantilly
lace swept into a full Watteau
train in the back.
Her . bouffant veil of silk
illusion was attached to a lace
bow accented with pearls.
She carried a cascade of
white roses and ivy.
Matron of honor, Patty
Johnson, wore a full length
burgundy velvet gown with
whiie lace trim and carried a
bouquet of pink and white
carnations.
·James Gilchrist Ill · of
Beckley, W. Va . was best man.

II ANI ;Jo:!lOljS HEKBJCIOt;

2 Co

.

·

Floors of Fabrics &amp;
Do Custom Dress Making
Singer Sales &amp; service
446-92C5
58 Court .

Gallipolis, 0 .

F R.E E 60c Bonus Certificate

THE Nl
I

KHOCK·AROUND D~ESS
FOR ATINY, PRICE!"
.

.

Wear on the golf course, wear in the yard, or going into town. ~s per cent da cron · polyester,
35 per cent combed cotton , double stilched ~ollar. a~m~ole , lront. bel l &amp; pockets. Per.
manent ·press. lull) washable, In beige, na vy, lilac, maize and light blue.
.

'

...

�Sflday Times· Ser•tlneil; SUrlday, APrl 25,1971

,,

.

4-Thf Sunday Times. Sentinel, Semrlay, April Z5,1971

Rio Gra'nde College .Students Present Gancer variety Show

Anniversary

._"'"'a ·Saunders is
· e of Thomas Carr

.

I

Miss

BACK STAGE CON·
FERENCE - Mrs. Olive
Bernard, left, har]iist, Rich
Litton, and Edie Ross ,
pianists, during intermission
at Friday night's cancer
benefit show. Mrs. Bernard
played "Chanson Dans La
Nuite." Mr. Utton and Mrs.
Ross accompanied the
Grande Chorale's presen.
lations, "He Ain't Heavy,"
"Traces" .and uwe've Only
Just Begun."

i
I

For her daughter's wedding

by Murrays

lme knit dress with a corsage or
gold mums.
·
· The bridegroom 's JllOiher
wore a blue dress with matching accessories: She alSo
wore a white mum corsage. .
A reception at the bride's
home was held immediately
following the ceremony. The
bride's table was centered with
the traditional wedding cake
and punch bowl.
For her honeymoon the bride
changed to a traveling costume
of beige and tirown wool.
The bride is a senior at
Marshall University majoring
in busihess education. She is a
member of . Pi Omega Pi,
business education, honorary
and Kappa Della Pi, national
educational honorary, and is·
s•udent eaching at Chesapeake
High School.
The bridegroom is a senior at
Marshall University majo~ing
in finance , Army ROTC, and
Delta Pi ·omega , National
Dramatic Fraternity·. After ·
completion of his military duty
he will be employed by First
and Merchants National "Bank
of Richmond, Va .

BIDWELL -- e The iOfilen""f:
wedding anniversary of Mr. and
Mrs. Anthony Murray, Bidwell,
was celebrated ·On Tuesday,
April 20 ..
· Asurprise dinner at Pomeroy
· was given in honor of the couple
by their daughter. Mrs. William
(Reva ) Fraley and their son,,
Charles Murray. Others at-·
tending were Mr . William
Fraley, Marlene Fraley, Mrs.
Charles Murray," Terri Lynn ·
and David Murray .
After returning to their home
they were again surprised by a
beautiful decorated anniversary cake and a golden
floral center piece.
The couple received gifts and
many cards from relatives and
. friends..

Taylor sang,! Don't Know How to Love Him from "Superstar." Mrs. White did a comedy
number, Second Hand Rose. Both young women are Rio Grande studenls and are in the Rio
GraDdeCborale. MissTaylorwillappear in, I Do! !Do! May6 to9at8p.m.

RIO GRANDE - "! DO! I
DO!," a musical that tells the
story of a lliar~iage; will be the
final Rio Grande ·Co il eg~
Theatre production this season.
The play will run May6, 7, 8 and
9, in Community Hall. Curtain
time is 8 p.m.
Based on Jan de Hartog's

"The Fourposter," "I DO! I
DO!" is a chronicle of life, the
story of Michael and Agnes
from their wedding day through
old age. The birth of their
· children, quarrels, money
problems and love are all told in
a warm and sentimental style,
sometimes brassy and bold,
alternately soft and touching.
The cheerful, tuneful score by
Tom Jones and Harvey Schmidt
runs through the story,
mirroring and dramatizing the
moods and events in the lives of
Michae~ lind Agnes •.Show tunes
from the play include "I DO! I
DO!" , " My Cup Runneth
Over," and "What Makes A

DRAMATIC READING Phll Pickens read original
poetry for the cancer variety
show.

Tree Acreage
At the time of the landing
of the Pilgrims, there were
937-million acres of superb
virgin forest in the United
States, including all territory
except the Great Plains and
some western desert areas .
LEAD IN MUSICAL Brian Raines, who will play
the male lead in "I Do! I Do!"
to be presented at Rio Grande
College on May 6 to 9, sang,
What Kind of Fool am I?

&lt;

•

'"!

{ ti

4

'

I

,,

1

' IU

OOFT SHOE ROUTINE - Fred MarUn and Robert WWey filled m between acis during the
show. Mr. Willey also did impersonations.

SECOND ROUND
OF EMPIRE'S 25th

Fixed Easter Date
The Council of Nicaea , in
A.D. 325, dec l ared that
Easter must be celebrated
by Christians everywhere on
the Sunday following the 14th
day of the Paschal full moon
after the. spring, or vernal,
equinox .

1

HURRY.! HURRY! HURRY I
ONLY 4 DAYS &amp; 1 HOUR
UNTIL WE GIVE AWAY A•••

r

$500 DINING.
ROOM SUITE

STRATOlOUNGERS
"HONEY BUN"- Beth Bastian!, Gallipolis sophomore,
did a two-dance routine for the variety show. Her other
number was a flapper dance.

REQ.INERS

Domesday Book
The Domesday Book is a
record of a general survey of
England ordered for taxation
purposes by William the Con·
queror in 1086. It is a valu·
able source of historical in·
formation .

j

II

.

'7995
'99.95
REG. •9995
'119.95
REG.

· REWNERS ~~~:9t219 95
·coR~ER GROUP'
Gold Velve~ 3 Pieces

REG

1899.95'69995

------------------------REG
CORNER GROUP

3 Pieces
"' 1449.95. •399 95
COUCH---------;~------ ~---95
1349.95
&amp; .CHAIR
.

•174

•

------------------------COUCH &amp; CHAIR
REG

UGHTING .,... Steve U!Oe was in charge of lights for the
Rio·Grande Cancer Variety Show.

,
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~nwincial

'559.95 '46995

'499.95 •39995

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

COUCH &amp; CHAIR

Italian

REG.
'389.95

•32995

IGUnd

~

•••

•
•
••
•
••
•

Brian Raines, a sophomore
from Harrisburg, Pa., will play
both male leads, while the
female lead will be split be·
tween Shirley Richardson, a
freshman from Xenia, and Evie
Taylor, a junior from Rio
Grande. The two casls are
under the direction of Edward
Roark, instructor of speech at
the college. Handling the orchestra for the four nights will
be Rick Litton, a senior from
Jackson.
"I DO! I DO!", according to
Roark, will be an evening full of
laughter, tears, fun and . enjoyment. He noted that this is
the first musical produced by
the Rio Grande College Theatre
in three seasons, and added that
this play is fam ily entertainment at its finest.
During the 1970-71 season, the
Rio Grande College Theatre
presented ''Hamlet" and "Oh
Dad, Poor Dad, Mamina's Hung
You in the Closet and I'm
Feelin' So Sad." Reservations
for any of the four nights of "I
DO! I DO!" can be milde by
contacting the college.

•
•

•

B&amp;PW Again
GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis Business and
Professional Woman's' Club is
offering the WRAP (Woman
f.\esponsible ,for •. Accident
Prevention )
course
in
Gallipolis.
The first meeting of the
defensive driving course will be
April 29 at 7 p.m. at .the First
Presbyterian Church. Instructor will be Roger Brwn·
field of Gallia Academy High
School. Also serving as in·
structors will be Police Chief
John Taylor and a member of
the State Highway Patrol.
The meeting is open to the
public and refreshments will be
served. A door prize will be
awarded .

~

2 · WINGBACK &amp; REG
PERSIMMON VELVET '139.954
t5
-SPANISH-------------""------·-·

114
CHAIR
'1::~s '11995
------------------·----··--.BLACK VINYL
REG. '129'5
'1 59.95
WERE
•••

RE

MODERN SUITE

'269~5 .• 2299 5

CONTEMPORARY SUITE

••

Don't Miss The Best Drape Buy Evir

SAJIE 10'%
-

I' •

"..

'

·•

On Everything You
Buy During Our
Anniversary Sale!

ONE TOUCH SEWING
NOW

$}1Q2fl

fiRST TIME EVER! ll's truel A brand-new
Golden Touch &amp; Sew• sewing machine by Singer
In the Early American Montpelier desk. At
saving you could never get before!
It's the machine 'that does so much
with just one touch .

a

.. ;:; ...
......

GET THE CABINET FREE

•

PERM. PRESS PRINTS!
.
Mo~ . Tues. Wed.'Sat. 9-5
Thur. 9-12, Fri. 9-8 P.M.

•

FRENCH ·ciTY

FABRIC.SHOPPE
Simplicity, McCalls •. Bu~ terick, V~ue Patte rns

.•••

•
•'

••
••'
•

I !
ANNIVERSARY
SPECIAL!

OPEN MON. TIL8 P.M.

.

Ready-Made Drapes
I

....

SMILE

LARGE SIZES .75", 100", j 50, .

'UM /Th'IJ Ql,l·tlVTIT/E.'i!

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS

•••
••

'45000
I :

otna

with Mrs. ''Iaurice Alverson Con trol Program and asked to
Thursday. He spoke on the care be ready to back the program.
and growing of roses. The Members were also reminded
hostess chose for devotions to that dues of $4 are now payable
Doesn't she de selVa
read, Beatitudes of a for next year.
the ''very best?"
Housewife, followed by prayer. The new slate of oflicers ·
Disc\lssion was on the voted on and accepted were as ------~----1
planting of petunias in the follow&gt;: President, Mrs .
planters for beautification, at Charles Steinbeck; vice
the entrances of each F.SV area president, Mrs. Dan Thomas,
plus the planter at the secretary, Mrs. Charles Knotts
404 Second Ave.
fairground. A flat will also be and treasw;er, Mrs. Don M.
Ga ilipolis , Ohio
donated to the county home lor Brown.
planting.
Co-hostesses Mrs. J. Paul
GALLIPOLIS - Mr . and Mrs.
Members were informed of Joyal and Mrs. John Elardo
Denver Slagle, Sarasota, Fla., the Gallia County Mosquito served dessert.
formerly of Gallipolis, will
observe their golden an· • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
niversary April 28. They were
married April 28 in the
Episcopal Church.
An open house is being
planned in their honor at the
home of Mr. ·and Mrs. John S.
Baker, 161 Garfield Extension,
on May 2 from 2 to 6 p.m.
takes its first forward step Mr. and Mrs. Slagle are both
in Faith.-August Schlegel. t·etirees of the Gallipolis State
German poet.
Institute.

MILES OF SMILES!
When you have a busy day and wa nt
the most comfortable shoe possible.
you'll keep smiling when wearing
California Cobbler s' "Smile". Made
with incomparable sugar kid and
styled perfectly on a beautiful stacked
heel. For today's busy world, from
California Cobblers for only $14.95.
Colors: Blue &amp; White &amp; Beige.
'
·

BASSETT TABLES

5 PIECE

ClRDII

Offers WRAP

Cobblers ~·~r®

••

CHAIRS

BEDROOM.SUI

DAY

Mrs. Thomas R. Carr

t

CAUFORNIA

•

5-Pifci-------------.-----.,..-·-COUCH
-----------------------&amp;
SUITE 14:~~·5 '24995
2 alAIRS
'4~~~g5 •34995 ITALIAN
4liEcE"--REG.-~89:95------:.--:~--·-·

ALL FURNITURE
NOW ON SALE!
COME-SHOP-SAVE

but exhaustive musical for two
performers. Because each
player must sing, dance and
play instruments during the
performance, two casls have
been selected to appear on
alternate nights.

•

'99.95

MOTBE&amp;•a

••

•

3 GROUPS

Sunday, May 9

GSI.Retirees
To Observe
Anniversary

••
•

Yes, we wi ll give away absolutely FREE your
ssoo.o.o Regular Retail Dining
Room Su1te. Come m and Register, no pur·
chase necessary.

12 REG; PRICE
"MOMS " MABREY
Sandy Hunter
Moms Mabrey

"I DO! I DO!" opened on
Broadway in 1967, and ran 591
performances starring Mary
Martin and Robert Preston.
David Merrick produced the
show, with Gover Champion
directing. Jones, who wrote the
book and lyrics for the show,
also has to his credit "110
Degree in the Shade," and "The
Fan las tics."
The play is unique, a perfect

•
•
••
••

choic~ of any

oouCH"&amp;CiiAiit----;iG~----- ---:-

Early American

Woman."

••

FRI., APRIL 30 AT 10 AM.

RECLINERS

HAMMING IT UP - Alvis
Moore, a master of comedy,
hams it up for the
photographer. Posing with
him is Ealnor. Reid. Moore
served as master of
ceremonies and presented
several vocal selections,
· accompanying himself on the
piano. Miss Reid did modern
and African dance interpretations.

~~

...

•

WHAT IS A WOMAN
Shirley Richardson sings
selection from the musical.

'

l

-Mr: and Mrs. Anthony Murray

GALLIPOLIS - Billy Houck
was guest speaker for the
Fairview Spring
Valley
Homemakers Club meeting

Do! I Do!' Slated at
Rio .Grande May 2·9

am Su.!an White check the prugi8in. Miss

•

. Billy Houck is Speaker for F-SV Club

~,
FEMALE VOCAIJSTS- Evie Taylor,left,

J.O;&gt;.DON I UPIJ·-The British
.t+'nrcslry Cmnmission.said Fri·
&lt;la y . it reserved the right to
resume use of a· herbicide
called 245-T despite complainls
fromfarinwo rkers the chemical
left them· impotent.
A commission · spokesman
Sllid use of the herbicide had
not actually resW\Ied but that
" we just gave ourselves the .
right to do so if there is a need
and we feel i~clined."

Observed

. S. Saunders of Rt. 1 ~rs. Saunders wore a green A

became the bride of
Carr, Beckley, W,
p..m. Feb, 5. Vows of the
dou(IE ring ceremony were
by .'the Rev. Charles W.
LJWier in lhe bride '~ h~me.
the daughter of Mr. and
J. Everett Saunders. The
qi,ldlegr.oom is the son of Mr.
. Justin R. Carr.
baskets of white
green~ry and seven
cannelabra decorated
home.
The bride wore a formal gown
of Satapeau with empire
•waistline and bishop sleeves. An
attached redlngote of chantilly
lace swept into a full Watteau
train in the back.
Her . bouffant veil of silk
illusion was attached to a lace
bow accented with pearls.
She carried a cascade of
white roses and ivy.
Matron of honor, Patty
Johnson, wore a full length
burgundy velvet gown with
whiie lace trim and carried a
bouquet of pink and white
carnations.
·James Gilchrist Ill · of
Beckley, W. Va . was best man.

II ANI ;Jo:!lOljS HEKBJCIOt;

2 Co

.

·

Floors of Fabrics &amp;
Do Custom Dress Making
Singer Sales &amp; service
446-92C5
58 Court .

Gallipolis, 0 .

F R.E E 60c Bonus Certificate

THE Nl
I

KHOCK·AROUND D~ESS
FOR ATINY, PRICE!"
.

.

Wear on the golf course, wear in the yard, or going into town. ~s per cent da cron · polyester,
35 per cent combed cotton , double stilched ~ollar. a~m~ole , lront. bel l &amp; pockets. Per.
manent ·press. lull) washable, In beige, na vy, lilac, maize and light blue.
.

'

...

�'

••
•

1- The Sunday Times-- sentinel, Sunday, April25, 1971

Pres~ytedan Youth Camp to Be Site of Girl Scout l1ay Camp --~

Just Between .
Us

GALLIPOLIS
Announcement is being made that
the Girl Scout Day Camp will be
held at a new site this year, that
of the Presbyterian Youth
Camp on
Mill Creek '
Road. This proper\y is the
former Gilman farm, which
now belongs to the First
Presbyterian Church in
Gallipolis.
"We feel very fortunate to
have the opportunity to use this
camp" is the feeling of those
who will be directing the camp
this year. The farm en-

By Pat Houck
The;.ore I talk to groups of young people the more I enjoy it.
Twice this week I had the privilege of doing this, once to a 4-H
group and again to a junior high sehool class.
.
· It was rewarding when they responded and asked questmns
that revealed they were interested and thinking about what I was
talking a~out.
Then too, I had a feeling of wonder when I realize my words
might influence their entire lives.
SOMEONE BROUGHT ME a clipping abOQt a new bill which
will establish a National Cancer Authority. You probably read
about it in Ann Landers column. WeD, I'm' like Ann, I think it's
'important enough to repeat again and again. She encouraged
each of her readers to let their senators know they want Bill S-34
passed. I'm doing the same. Now don't just pass on by this. Do it
now.
Think of the statistics. 'Of the 200 million Americans alive
today, 50 million will develop cancer. Approximately 34 million
wlU die of it. Cancer claims the lives of more children under 15
than any other illness. Had enough? Then send that letter or
better yet, a telegram to your senator in care of the Senate Office
Building, Washington, D. C. 20510.

compasses many acres of order made payable to Seal of
wooded, open, hilly, and even Ohio Girl Scout Council or in
some cave-like formation some cases a campership
areas. For Scout program it is statement will be attached in
ideal. The girls will have plenty lieu of check or money order.
of room to hike, camp, ·and The program at camp this
engage in aU kinds of outdoor year · will ·inci!Hie some new
program.
. ~ things and some old things, as
Registration is now open and did the training which was just
all girls are to register through completed by the people who
their troop leaders. Camp are to be the Administrative
folders have been distributed Stall. For two days last week,
and the leaders will help the training was given by the
girls in the way the forms are to Council in ChUlicotlie·and it was
be completed. No cash wiD be attended by Mrs. John Gr.oth
accepted. Payment must be in wh.o wiD again be the director of
the form of a check or money the GaUia Day Comp. Mrs. Bill
Shaffer, who will be the
assistant director, and Mrs.
Eldon Wuerch, who has been
the director in the past but this
year will assume the .responsibility of the business
manager.
One of the big changes which
Willis served as best man.
was brought back from the
Mrs. Evans is employed as a training sessions this year is
Teller by the Exchange how the children ~re being
National Bank of Winter Haven, placed in camp troops. Girls
and Mr. _Evans as s~pervisor of who are currenUy in the third
the Orkm Extermmating Co. grade and wiD flyup before this
Wmter Haven branch. They are ·school year ends will come ·to
mak!Rg )heir home at 2225 Ave. Day camp as Junior Girl
C, SW, Wmter 1Javen, F,la.
Scouts. The same will be true of
Mrs.EvansisthenieceofMr. sixth grade girls who are now
and Mrs. James E. Danner and completing the Junior program
Ehse K1mbaU.
_ they will come to camp as
•
Cadettes and the ninth grade
.
girls who wish to, may come.as
Program Aides instead of .
campers.
Sayre, gave an informative talk Because of the new location
on their trip to the convention. there . . are _many new
Mr. Sayre gave the three R's of poss1b1hties _which, could he
the grange - right, respect, and mcorpo~ated mto the progra_m.
responsibility.
The lrammg for the sial~, which
Worthy Lecturer Mrs. has already been recrwted for
Kathleen Durst, ha~ 'a short this sea~on, will be held on the
program
following
the first, third and fourth Tuesdays
delegate's report. It featured in May at the camp site:'? that
readings by granse n.embers. the leaders can familiarize
The program was closed by themselves with the area.
singing The Old Rugged Cross TrJmsportation, as before,
and rel~eshments were served. will be by parents carpools, and

Przybylski-Evans Vows
Exchanged in Florida .
FLORIDA - Announcement
is being made of the marriage
of Mary Jean Przybylski,
daughter of Mrs. Charles C.
Cunningham and Charles S.
Freese,loHurdes M. Evans, Jr.
The double-ring ceremony
was solemnized by Eloy
Delgado, Jus&lt;ice of the Peace,
at 2:30p.m. on April 4 in the
home of the bride.
Mrs. Joan Alderman was
matron or. honor and .Wisll&gt;r

THE PARK IS carpeted in purple these days. Some small
groundcover is blooming prOfusely tliere. lt's a deeper color than
the haze.Jlke lavender of the redbud lrees.

TilE TAWNEY FARMS on Rt. iill8 going toward Rodney are
beautiful, cared-for, ioved.Jooking ~ces. This week so~eo~
was plowing·the field on one side and on the other was a field m
which Jersey cows, resting contentedly, chomping at piles of hay.
The new plowed ground, the )jay, and the cattle were all the same
BIDWELL _ Harris Grange
shade of golden brown. An artist could have fun painting that.
opened in regular form April 8.
with Worthy Master, Danny
THE GALLIPOLIS GARDEN CLUB is doing it again. Trying Hively, in the chair. The charter
to make Gallipolis more beautiful, that is.
was draped in honor of Mrs, D.
They are selling geraniums. They had a great deal of success E Burdell
with their red dogwood trees sales, (the results of which will
·Delegate~ to the state conenriCh thelives of those who follow in our footsteps,) that they vention, Mr . and Mrs. Roy
decided to do something else. Now they want the summer to lie
· colorful and bright with blooming geraniums. When they find GOLD STOCKS DIP
something for winter, they will have it made. Knowing those
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
Garden Club ladies, they might just do that.
Treasury Department says U.S.
gold stocks declined last month
SPEAKING OF THOSE dogwood lrees reminds
that they .to the lowest point in two
should be watered. Mrs. Gloss says to water them deep. They years.
needilrightnow since we have nothadraln.
'
The gold figure went down
$76 million to $10.96 billion, the
ISN'T "PROJECT PRIDE" great?
lowest level since April, 1969,
when the nation was pulling out
IT SEEMS ALL I'M WRITING about is beautification. But of the 1968 gold crisis.
Concern has been expressed
Isn't spring a good time for this subject? Wouldn't it be nice if the
by
some economists recently
city (as if they didn't have enough to do) would take a couple of
because dollar holdings of
afternoons and clear the river bank on upper First Ave.?
The people who Uve there have cleaned and cleared most of foreign central banks, which
the bank on the river side and the view of the river there is technically are convertible to
something. That row of forsythia along the Davis-Kyger line is a gold, far exceed the gold stock.
bu.rst of yellow bloom.
Ado pled Year Later
Think how beautiful a smooth unbroken river front would be
Congress adopted a design
- 101tiUr!Sllf'llftlieyeiiter1oW!fftO!Il tlllitarea?
• , •., · • •·
lor a national flag on June
If the city can't do it, maybe the boy scouts could get per- 14, 1777, almost one year
mission, or some other civic group~ It's just a suggestion I'm after approving the Declara·
tion of Independence, accord·
throwing out with the hope someone catches it.
ing to Encyclopaedia Britan·
nica.

Grange De·legates Gl've Trl'p Report

me

parents will be called when The dates for camp this year
camp time is nearer and asked are Monday through Thursday,
to assist in transporting their June 21-24 and Monday through
Thursday, June 28-July' I. The
children to and from camp.

"""'" fl&gt;e for the
and the reuiislr11tiQ,
May 15.
may register only
quol&lt;t has not
parents should
with the camp
assistant director.

'J1Ie 8undl7 Ta-. Senlipe\, l!mdar. April»' lfll
. 7·- .

weeks is~
deadUne ill
date girl(
the camlf
filled anq:
direct!}:'

Joyful Event
At Frost Home

Mrs. Verna Chamberlain, Mrs.
Sandy George, Mrs . Dale
McMillin, Mrs. Virgil Cross,
Mrs. Judy Chevalier, Mrs. Milt
Houdashelt, Mrs. Unda Greene,
Mrs. Connie Hemphill, Miss
Debby Sheets, Mrs. Judy Baird,
Mrs. Oscar Baird, Mrs. Betty
Owens, Miss Dena Owens, Miss
Carel Hansen, Mrs . Leann
Harrison, Mrs. Nancy Sheets,
Mrs . Marsha Smith, Miss Sue
Thompson, Miss Paula Young,
Mrs. Kristi Humphreys, Miss
Eleanor Salmons, Miss Unda
Salmons, Mrs. Alva Cross, Mrs.
Carol Smith, Mrs. Mary Spears,
Mrs. Joyce Twyman and Mrs.
Patsy Hager.
Sending gilts were: Mrs. Neal
Clark, Miss Bonnie Wetherholt,
Mrs. Karen Baird, Mrs. Elsie
Gooch, Mrs. Ruby Thompson,
Mrs. Ariella Vanover, Mrs.
Bonnie Baird, Mrs. Janet
Cardwell, Mrs. Janice Smith,
Mrs. Garnet Milliron, Mrs. June
Francies and Mrs: Clyde Smith.

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OFF

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Priced From

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ENGAGEMENT .ANNOUNCEMENT - Mr. and Mrs.
. Jphn M. ~er, of Route I, Bidwell, ·~re announcing the
engag~nlenl and approaching marriage of their daUghter'
Barbara Sue Hager, of 4.1ii East Court Street, Washington C.
H., toM. Wayne Wolfe, also of Washington C. H.
1 The wedding wiD lake place on Saturday, May 8, at 4:30
pin. in the First Presbyterian Church, of Gallipolis.
·i Miss Hager is a teacher In the· Adena Local School
sfstem, at Clarksburg. Her fiance is employed at Cudahey's,
jn Washington C. H.
· The gracious custom of open churcb will be observed.

'3" to •15"
Largest Selection

Ever

' ....~ .1'1

20%
off
~
• BankAmericard

Mon. Tues. Wed.

• Roberts

Sat. 9-5
Thur. 9·12, Fri. 9-8 pm,

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Mr. and Mrs. Eaf Reynolds

The aythe police c

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:~~~~ANN;~!V~E~RSAR~Ey~SMr~·:;and

are

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wedding "'IlMrs . . Earl
on March 18. Marrled·ln Floyd County, Ky., they
of five chlldren, Rodney, Gulenda Sue,
and Greg. The couple W88 honored with a dinner
and relatives attended. Gifts were opened and

A TOUCH OF JEALOUSY
Dear Helen :
_Last year in eighth grade, 'we didn't get any privileges,
mainly because the grade before us had abused theirs. It was a
terribly year, without any fun. Whatever littie we got, we had to
light for, and then It turned ou~ wrong. We were a nice bunch of
kids, too, now graduated to high scbool.
So this year, they have a new principal and it seems the school
is bending over backwards. Those litue eighth graders get rallies,
assemblies, dances, games, lrips- things we older kids enjOy in
high school.
I'm wondering if maybe they're getting too much. By having
aU this now, what have they got to look forward to? Don't you
think there's such a thing as going too far? -GROWN UP
'
Dear Grown Up :
Do I detect a few jealousy pangs?
It's tough figh\ing aU year so that the next class will reap the.
beilefits, but don'tbegrudge them. I hardly think these privileges
will spoil the eighth graders any more than they would have
spoiled you - if you'd been luckier. - H.
Dear Helen:
At our house, we're aU scared to say a word around my
father. He loves only himself and everyone else is good for
nothing, especially Negroes.
. '
He is "never wrong," constantly ·cussing, fussing and
bickerinli. At the dinner table, he's on ev~one's back. If we open
our mouths, he shouts.us down. He bullies and browbeats. Our
bigeest phrase is "Yes Sir."
He howls if we want to spend a dollar, but he buys anything he
wants for hims61!, including medicine be doesn't need. You should
see the sleeping pills, pain pUis, cold tablets, pep pUis - he even
uses my mother's allergy and bormone piUs.
It makes him furious if any of us doesn't clean up every bite
on our,plates, but he has a mile-long list of foods he won 't touch
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
(so Mom can't fix them).
Charles E. Kitchen of Route 2,
Mom just confided in me (sinee I got engaged and we're sort Patriot, are announcing the
of women together now) that she'd like to leave him, but what marriage of their daughter,
about the kids? And she doesn't think she could get a job at her Juanita Lou, to Tommy Eugene
age.Besides,there'smydivorcedsisterandherlittleboywhoare Kerwood, son of Mr. and Mrs.
living with us.
. . Ralph Kerwood, 33 Smithers
1can take it, for !have only another year before I'm married, Ave., Gallipolis. The · canbut I get sick, thinking how Mom has cowered aU these years - dlelight ceremony was an event
and still will. She has set the pattern for aU of us. We don't fight of March 27 at 2p.m. in the First
back. We're good, quiet kids, but ready to explode.
United Presbyterian Church,
Js there any hope of change? _ D.S.
Gaihpolis, with the Rev. Glen
D.
Hueholt officiating.
Dear ·· 1
.
h tak ·t d take. it and TAKE it • Miss Nancy Ferguson,
My pe peeve IS women w o e 1 , an
,
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"! th ood of the children " Had you.r mother ilsserted herself Galhpohs, served as ma1d o
or e g
.
.J
honor and Mr Mike Hager
long ago she might not
have
a
tyrant
for
a
husband.
It
may
not
be
B"d
d.
bes t man'.
·
d
tst H
1 we11 , serve as
.toolate,evennow.Riseup, oorma .- ·
Thebrideworeastreetlength
Dear Helen:
.
· . .
gown of white lace featuring an
Here's a question I het you've nev~r ha~. If the k~d m the car empire waist and scalloped
accident seems high on drugs, but is m pam, would It be safe to neckline. A large ·lace bow with
administer a pain killer? - MARK
streamers was secured at the
Dear Mark :
back neckline. White lace
My doc~r says -that shots or other _pain killers are sel~m gloves completed the bride's
. .A~MIJ!l~ s~e ~f t~ccjl!,en_.1.~therli,JI~~~-·~ .Dt-c~l\!l\~· S)le, carried a · satin
volved or not. M..O!It dennite1y a layman 81111-iila' l'l~vll:R g1ve

Scientists theorize t h at,
with · a powerful rocket, a
round trip to the plane~ Mars
RIVERSIDE Study Club will would take 400 days, mcludmeet with Mrs . Howard . ing 40 days spent ln explor·
Leimann, 1 p. m.
ing the planet.
WEDNESDAY
LAF AVETTE
Post
327
American Legion and American
Legion Auxiliary oyster supper
at 6:30 p.m. at the hall.

HOME

nts

LOANS
think . . Stop in today
and talk with us. We'll
help you set up a lo111•l
cost, long term
that's easy to pay.

GALLIPOLIS

Gallipolis
at 7:30 p. m.

SAVINGS
LOAN CO.

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ft·IJI 11 0111
--. po •·
o

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••••••••••••••

tacted by the committee but
anyone else wishin~ to nlake a
reservation is asked to call Mrs.
Frank Porter, 446-3271 or Mrs.
· Richard Simpson, 446-9748.
Races start at approxunately
8 p.m.

RT. 35 HENDERSON, W. VA.
• SALE 15% discount on all spring and summer
pant suits
• SALE 15% discount on large group cotton and
madras slacks.
• Pandora knits and swlmwear for girls size 1
through 14.
• Just arrived! MORE hot pants, scooter skirts and
bermudas.
• CHEESE • IMPORTED GIFTS • W. VA. CRAFTS

and lace covered Bible with
pink and white streamers tied in
lovers knots. Her flowers were
pink carnations.
The maid of honor wore a pale
blue knit dress and lace gloves
of the same color.
A reception was held
following the ceremony at the
home of the bridegroom's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Kerwood.
Attendmg the ceremony were
Mrs. Richard McCartney and
h'ld
T"
nd Marty
c 1, ren, 1mmy a
,
Mrs . Freddie Moore and
children , David , Vickie , and
Jeff, Mrs. John Hager· and
daughter, Barbara , Miss
carolyn Ihrig, Miss Beverly
Sword, Mrs. Larry Marr , Mrs.
Ralph Kerwood, and Mrs. Glen
Hueholt.
The couple are residing in
G;tllipq)is.,

Stop in and say hello- even if it's just for a
curious look. We think you' II aaree ifs somethlnl
quite extra ordinary with a warmth uniquely it's
own.

-

NEW HOURS- Sunday 1-4

Tues. through Friday 1-8
Saturday 10-5

the Apple Tree
RT. 35, HENDERSON, W.VA.
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Tallest Person
The tallest recorded person
was an 8-foot-4.4 woman
named Marianne Wehde, although there ha~e . been
claims of 9-loot-3 mdlVldual_s.
according to Encyclopaedia
Britannica.

TABLE COVERS

Ideal for patio use, just wipe off, square.
oblong, round &amp; ov.a l .

$299

TO

$599

·Darnbrough's
DEPT. STORE

'

GAUJPOLIS, OHIO
On Famous

LARGE SELECTION.

PLAVTEXe
18 HOUR*
BRAS &amp;GIRDLES

••

Club will meet
Eld~mWuerch. 8 o. m.
Bible Class of
Baptist Church will
·fellowship room at

,

Both made with Spanette~
the exclusive Play,tex stretch Iabrie
with the exact combination
of strength and softness
for truly comfortable support.

LOG CABIN

A. Shortie- perfect for panty hose
and short fashions.
B. Bandeau-perfect for today's natural look.
Self-adjustable cups in a unique frame of
lightweight elastic, adjustable
stretch slraps, smooth profile seams
wllh no see-through feature.
Glrdlll $2.01 OH' :
·~Shortie-Reg. $-10.95, Now $8.94
Average Leg Panty-Reg. $11.95, Now $9.94
Long Leg Panty-Reg: $12.95, Now $10.94
Girdle-Reg. $10.95, Now $8.94
'Brief-$1.01 Off-Reg. $8.95, Now $7.94
White, sizes XS, S, M, L, (XL, XXL $1 more)

THROW RUGS
eNON SUP
At 5:20p.m., February 2,1970,
set up an interim police station at an
the Shaker Heie:hts Police Station,
ice rink two miles away.
Shaker Heights, Ohio was leveled by
A call went out for replacement
an explosion.
equipment. Construction men, repair. And a city of 38,000 was virtu·
men, installers,· and cable splil:ers
ally cut off from police protection.
were rounded up. In all. more than
Communication wi~h the public · fifty Ohio Bell men responded to.the
had to be restored fast.
emergency.
By 9 p.m. that evening, eleven
So our first order of business was
the switching of-six pol tee department
lines served toe temporary headlines to the City Ha II switchboard.
quarters.
_ Working through the night,)he
Forty-live minutes after the blast it
crews
had nearly thirty Call Darecwas done.
tors'' ln and operating by morning. .
The decision was then made to

By 4 p.m: the next aftern~n,• or
less than 24 hours -later, the baker
Heigh~s Police Departme t Jas:
practically back in 100% loperatibn.
At times like these, extra-h~Jril'
work and round-the-clock hours lire
normal. Because normal i[ 11 telephone that works.
•
And police protection . , at's just
a phone call away.
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27x45 SHAG--'3.99
27x45 · OVAL.--~99
' -----· ~99
27x453'x5'-------f6.99
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Bra• $1.01 011
·
Bandeau-Reg. $6.00, Now $4.99
White, Sizes A, B, C (0 cups $1 more)
Longline-Reg. $9, Now $7.99
White, Sizes B, C (0
$1 more)

.
LARGE SELECTION OF COLORS ...
Pink . Blue. Avocado Green· Beige· Gold· Yellow · White · Aqua · Lilic ·
Orange . Red . Lime· Light Pink · Rose.
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eMACHINE DRYABLE

24x34 ·---------·'1.99
24165-----,----· '3.99
4'x6' ---------.. - '8.99
'BATH SETS---~-.:.- '2.99

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@Olio Bel
·j

eMACHINE WASHABLE

100% VISCOSE RAYON

[t!

BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!
137 t'lne Street

Reservations are due by May
11 . ·Newcomers will be con-

EASY CARE VINYL

StJ!'iDAV
PA\tENT-C ILD workshop
PupPet P'!\'ade at . River by.
Registrat(on at 2:30 p. m.
Cowboy HaD of Fame
Wcjrkshop liat 3 p. m. Fee 50
The National Cowboy Hall
cents.
I
of Fame is located at Okla·
homa City, Okla. On display
MONDAVt
are
famous guns, saddles,
GALJ.JA apter OCSEA will
Western
memor11bilia; great
meet at e Grande Squares
books
of
range
Club
1622 Eastern Ave., plants andthea West;
45-by..4Q..foot
7:30
Reports and refresh- raised relief map of~ the
West.
I
HAJNNI.N TRACE Pioneers 4-H '&gt;
'meet at the Mer·
cei'11Ull Grange HaD at 7:30

Home ownership may
be closer than you

tu $7.75 in the clubhouse.

THE APPLE TREF

Miss Juanita Kitchen
Weds Tommy Kerwood

meditine w,ithout a p~ysician's approval. - H.

nf the management. However
dinner prices range ·from ~ .50

.Happiness Is ...
Apple Blossoms On

Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Kerwood

Trip to Mars

mg

Chaaael Swimmer
First man to s w i m th~
Encllsh Channel underll"aler

~urrec:t'. •

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!rush-off.
Send your teenage questions to YOUTH ASKED ·FOR IT, care
fl Helen Help Us! this newspaper.

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By Helen Bottel

YOUTH' ASKED FOR IT!
This column is for young people, their problems and
pleasures; their lroubles and fun. 'AS with the ·rest of Helen Help
Us!, it welcomes laughs but won't dodge a seriotis question with a

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SPRING HANDBAG SALE

GALIJPOJJS
A trip to
Scioto Downs where a special
ilection of seats have been
reserved for them is in the offing for the Gallipolis
Newcomers Club.
·
.The committee in charge has
arranged for a bus with the
capacity ol41 to leave the_J!.ark·
front at approxima~ly 5. p.m.
on May 22. The cost of the bus
trip is $2 with no admission
charge at Scioto Downs, curtesy

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Newcomers Go To ·Scioto Downs

!Helen Help Us l

TUESDAY

CHESTER - Mr. and Mrs.
Willis Frost and daughter, Billie
.
..
Jean, of Chester entertained
&amp;
with a family dinner at their
Opp. Post Office
home on · Easter. A turkey
Gallloolis, O~io
dinner was enjoyed by the
following children of the Frosts,
:I'.Sgt. and Mrs. Paul T. Myers, • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ·. .-~
Colene, Kaylene, Ty Kevin and .
Paul Dal'l!IA&gt;f~kbourne Air
Force Base, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Curtis Fraley, Candace,
Marie and Gregory Curtis of
Reynoldsburg, and Richard Lee
Frost, Royal Oak, Michigan .
The most grateful event of the
occasion was that Mr. Frost,
who had been confined to Holzer
Medical Center, was home to
help enjoy the gathering. ,
In other Frost family news, Jo
Ann Fraley spent three weeks
at home, to help during the time
of her father's eye operations.
Richard Lee Frost, Royal Oak,
Mich ., spent his Easter
vacation with his parents and
sister. Mr. Frost is il teacher at
HuntingtOn Woods.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Housebolter, Pontiac, Mich. spent
a. recent afternoon with
Mr. and Mrs. Willis Frost.

~:.lheaa1C::~n ~~~m~~:· FUR
1112. He ustid ,a q u a I u n g
equipment llld "'IIJI guided
b)l a. towed cae,. ltl&gt;neath the

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Mrs. McMillin Honored
With Stork Shower
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. John
McMillin was honored with a
stork shower recently at the
Gallia County Gun Club.
Hostesses were Mrs. Wayne
Francies and Mrs. Ward Smith.
During the evening, games
were played and prizes were
awarded to Mrs. Joyce Twyman
and Mrs. Nancy Sheets. The
door prize was won by Mrs.
Nancy Sheets. Refreshments of
cake, coffee, pop, mints and
nuts were served.
Guests attending include'd:

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DEPARTMENT SIORf-

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302 SECOND AVE.

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GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Gallipolis

412-414 Second Ave.
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1- The Sunday Times-- sentinel, Sunday, April25, 1971

Pres~ytedan Youth Camp to Be Site of Girl Scout l1ay Camp --~

Just Between .
Us

GALLIPOLIS
Announcement is being made that
the Girl Scout Day Camp will be
held at a new site this year, that
of the Presbyterian Youth
Camp on
Mill Creek '
Road. This proper\y is the
former Gilman farm, which
now belongs to the First
Presbyterian Church in
Gallipolis.
"We feel very fortunate to
have the opportunity to use this
camp" is the feeling of those
who will be directing the camp
this year. The farm en-

By Pat Houck
The;.ore I talk to groups of young people the more I enjoy it.
Twice this week I had the privilege of doing this, once to a 4-H
group and again to a junior high sehool class.
.
· It was rewarding when they responded and asked questmns
that revealed they were interested and thinking about what I was
talking a~out.
Then too, I had a feeling of wonder when I realize my words
might influence their entire lives.
SOMEONE BROUGHT ME a clipping abOQt a new bill which
will establish a National Cancer Authority. You probably read
about it in Ann Landers column. WeD, I'm' like Ann, I think it's
'important enough to repeat again and again. She encouraged
each of her readers to let their senators know they want Bill S-34
passed. I'm doing the same. Now don't just pass on by this. Do it
now.
Think of the statistics. 'Of the 200 million Americans alive
today, 50 million will develop cancer. Approximately 34 million
wlU die of it. Cancer claims the lives of more children under 15
than any other illness. Had enough? Then send that letter or
better yet, a telegram to your senator in care of the Senate Office
Building, Washington, D. C. 20510.

compasses many acres of order made payable to Seal of
wooded, open, hilly, and even Ohio Girl Scout Council or in
some cave-like formation some cases a campership
areas. For Scout program it is statement will be attached in
ideal. The girls will have plenty lieu of check or money order.
of room to hike, camp, ·and The program at camp this
engage in aU kinds of outdoor year · will ·inci!Hie some new
program.
. ~ things and some old things, as
Registration is now open and did the training which was just
all girls are to register through completed by the people who
their troop leaders. Camp are to be the Administrative
folders have been distributed Stall. For two days last week,
and the leaders will help the training was given by the
girls in the way the forms are to Council in ChUlicotlie·and it was
be completed. No cash wiD be attended by Mrs. John Gr.oth
accepted. Payment must be in wh.o wiD again be the director of
the form of a check or money the GaUia Day Comp. Mrs. Bill
Shaffer, who will be the
assistant director, and Mrs.
Eldon Wuerch, who has been
the director in the past but this
year will assume the .responsibility of the business
manager.
One of the big changes which
Willis served as best man.
was brought back from the
Mrs. Evans is employed as a training sessions this year is
Teller by the Exchange how the children ~re being
National Bank of Winter Haven, placed in camp troops. Girls
and Mr. _Evans as s~pervisor of who are currenUy in the third
the Orkm Extermmating Co. grade and wiD flyup before this
Wmter Haven branch. They are ·school year ends will come ·to
mak!Rg )heir home at 2225 Ave. Day camp as Junior Girl
C, SW, Wmter 1Javen, F,la.
Scouts. The same will be true of
Mrs.EvansisthenieceofMr. sixth grade girls who are now
and Mrs. James E. Danner and completing the Junior program
Ehse K1mbaU.
_ they will come to camp as
•
Cadettes and the ninth grade
.
girls who wish to, may come.as
Program Aides instead of .
campers.
Sayre, gave an informative talk Because of the new location
on their trip to the convention. there . . are _many new
Mr. Sayre gave the three R's of poss1b1hties _which, could he
the grange - right, respect, and mcorpo~ated mto the progra_m.
responsibility.
The lrammg for the sial~, which
Worthy Lecturer Mrs. has already been recrwted for
Kathleen Durst, ha~ 'a short this sea~on, will be held on the
program
following
the first, third and fourth Tuesdays
delegate's report. It featured in May at the camp site:'? that
readings by granse n.embers. the leaders can familiarize
The program was closed by themselves with the area.
singing The Old Rugged Cross TrJmsportation, as before,
and rel~eshments were served. will be by parents carpools, and

Przybylski-Evans Vows
Exchanged in Florida .
FLORIDA - Announcement
is being made of the marriage
of Mary Jean Przybylski,
daughter of Mrs. Charles C.
Cunningham and Charles S.
Freese,loHurdes M. Evans, Jr.
The double-ring ceremony
was solemnized by Eloy
Delgado, Jus&lt;ice of the Peace,
at 2:30p.m. on April 4 in the
home of the bride.
Mrs. Joan Alderman was
matron or. honor and .Wisll&gt;r

THE PARK IS carpeted in purple these days. Some small
groundcover is blooming prOfusely tliere. lt's a deeper color than
the haze.Jlke lavender of the redbud lrees.

TilE TAWNEY FARMS on Rt. iill8 going toward Rodney are
beautiful, cared-for, ioved.Jooking ~ces. This week so~eo~
was plowing·the field on one side and on the other was a field m
which Jersey cows, resting contentedly, chomping at piles of hay.
The new plowed ground, the )jay, and the cattle were all the same
BIDWELL _ Harris Grange
shade of golden brown. An artist could have fun painting that.
opened in regular form April 8.
with Worthy Master, Danny
THE GALLIPOLIS GARDEN CLUB is doing it again. Trying Hively, in the chair. The charter
to make Gallipolis more beautiful, that is.
was draped in honor of Mrs, D.
They are selling geraniums. They had a great deal of success E Burdell
with their red dogwood trees sales, (the results of which will
·Delegate~ to the state conenriCh thelives of those who follow in our footsteps,) that they vention, Mr . and Mrs. Roy
decided to do something else. Now they want the summer to lie
· colorful and bright with blooming geraniums. When they find GOLD STOCKS DIP
something for winter, they will have it made. Knowing those
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
Garden Club ladies, they might just do that.
Treasury Department says U.S.
gold stocks declined last month
SPEAKING OF THOSE dogwood lrees reminds
that they .to the lowest point in two
should be watered. Mrs. Gloss says to water them deep. They years.
needilrightnow since we have nothadraln.
'
The gold figure went down
$76 million to $10.96 billion, the
ISN'T "PROJECT PRIDE" great?
lowest level since April, 1969,
when the nation was pulling out
IT SEEMS ALL I'M WRITING about is beautification. But of the 1968 gold crisis.
Concern has been expressed
Isn't spring a good time for this subject? Wouldn't it be nice if the
by
some economists recently
city (as if they didn't have enough to do) would take a couple of
because dollar holdings of
afternoons and clear the river bank on upper First Ave.?
The people who Uve there have cleaned and cleared most of foreign central banks, which
the bank on the river side and the view of the river there is technically are convertible to
something. That row of forsythia along the Davis-Kyger line is a gold, far exceed the gold stock.
bu.rst of yellow bloom.
Ado pled Year Later
Think how beautiful a smooth unbroken river front would be
Congress adopted a design
- 101tiUr!Sllf'llftlieyeiiter1oW!fftO!Il tlllitarea?
• , •., · • •·
lor a national flag on June
If the city can't do it, maybe the boy scouts could get per- 14, 1777, almost one year
mission, or some other civic group~ It's just a suggestion I'm after approving the Declara·
tion of Independence, accord·
throwing out with the hope someone catches it.
ing to Encyclopaedia Britan·
nica.

Grange De·legates Gl've Trl'p Report

me

parents will be called when The dates for camp this year
camp time is nearer and asked are Monday through Thursday,
to assist in transporting their June 21-24 and Monday through
Thursday, June 28-July' I. The
children to and from camp.

"""'" fl&gt;e for the
and the reuiislr11tiQ,
May 15.
may register only
quol&lt;t has not
parents should
with the camp
assistant director.

'J1Ie 8undl7 Ta-. Senlipe\, l!mdar. April»' lfll
. 7·- .

weeks is~
deadUne ill
date girl(
the camlf
filled anq:
direct!}:'

Joyful Event
At Frost Home

Mrs. Verna Chamberlain, Mrs.
Sandy George, Mrs . Dale
McMillin, Mrs. Virgil Cross,
Mrs. Judy Chevalier, Mrs. Milt
Houdashelt, Mrs. Unda Greene,
Mrs. Connie Hemphill, Miss
Debby Sheets, Mrs. Judy Baird,
Mrs. Oscar Baird, Mrs. Betty
Owens, Miss Dena Owens, Miss
Carel Hansen, Mrs . Leann
Harrison, Mrs. Nancy Sheets,
Mrs . Marsha Smith, Miss Sue
Thompson, Miss Paula Young,
Mrs. Kristi Humphreys, Miss
Eleanor Salmons, Miss Unda
Salmons, Mrs. Alva Cross, Mrs.
Carol Smith, Mrs. Mary Spears,
Mrs. Joyce Twyman and Mrs.
Patsy Hager.
Sending gilts were: Mrs. Neal
Clark, Miss Bonnie Wetherholt,
Mrs. Karen Baird, Mrs. Elsie
Gooch, Mrs. Ruby Thompson,
Mrs. Ariella Vanover, Mrs.
Bonnie Baird, Mrs. Janet
Cardwell, Mrs. Janice Smith,
Mrs. Garnet Milliron, Mrs. June
Francies and Mrs: Clyde Smith.

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OFF

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Priced From

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ENGAGEMENT .ANNOUNCEMENT - Mr. and Mrs.
. Jphn M. ~er, of Route I, Bidwell, ·~re announcing the
engag~nlenl and approaching marriage of their daUghter'
Barbara Sue Hager, of 4.1ii East Court Street, Washington C.
H., toM. Wayne Wolfe, also of Washington C. H.
1 The wedding wiD lake place on Saturday, May 8, at 4:30
pin. in the First Presbyterian Church, of Gallipolis.
·i Miss Hager is a teacher In the· Adena Local School
sfstem, at Clarksburg. Her fiance is employed at Cudahey's,
jn Washington C. H.
· The gracious custom of open churcb will be observed.

'3" to •15"
Largest Selection

Ever

' ....~ .1'1

20%
off
~
• BankAmericard

Mon. Tues. Wed.

• Roberts

Sat. 9-5
Thur. 9·12, Fri. 9-8 pm,

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Mr. and Mrs. Eaf Reynolds

The aythe police c

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:~~~~ANN;~!V~E~RSAR~Ey~SMr~·:;and

are

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and

wedding "'IlMrs . . Earl
on March 18. Marrled·ln Floyd County, Ky., they
of five chlldren, Rodney, Gulenda Sue,
and Greg. The couple W88 honored with a dinner
and relatives attended. Gifts were opened and

A TOUCH OF JEALOUSY
Dear Helen :
_Last year in eighth grade, 'we didn't get any privileges,
mainly because the grade before us had abused theirs. It was a
terribly year, without any fun. Whatever littie we got, we had to
light for, and then It turned ou~ wrong. We were a nice bunch of
kids, too, now graduated to high scbool.
So this year, they have a new principal and it seems the school
is bending over backwards. Those litue eighth graders get rallies,
assemblies, dances, games, lrips- things we older kids enjOy in
high school.
I'm wondering if maybe they're getting too much. By having
aU this now, what have they got to look forward to? Don't you
think there's such a thing as going too far? -GROWN UP
'
Dear Grown Up :
Do I detect a few jealousy pangs?
It's tough figh\ing aU year so that the next class will reap the.
beilefits, but don'tbegrudge them. I hardly think these privileges
will spoil the eighth graders any more than they would have
spoiled you - if you'd been luckier. - H.
Dear Helen:
At our house, we're aU scared to say a word around my
father. He loves only himself and everyone else is good for
nothing, especially Negroes.
. '
He is "never wrong," constantly ·cussing, fussing and
bickerinli. At the dinner table, he's on ev~one's back. If we open
our mouths, he shouts.us down. He bullies and browbeats. Our
bigeest phrase is "Yes Sir."
He howls if we want to spend a dollar, but he buys anything he
wants for hims61!, including medicine be doesn't need. You should
see the sleeping pills, pain pUis, cold tablets, pep pUis - he even
uses my mother's allergy and bormone piUs.
It makes him furious if any of us doesn't clean up every bite
on our,plates, but he has a mile-long list of foods he won 't touch
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
(so Mom can't fix them).
Charles E. Kitchen of Route 2,
Mom just confided in me (sinee I got engaged and we're sort Patriot, are announcing the
of women together now) that she'd like to leave him, but what marriage of their daughter,
about the kids? And she doesn't think she could get a job at her Juanita Lou, to Tommy Eugene
age.Besides,there'smydivorcedsisterandherlittleboywhoare Kerwood, son of Mr. and Mrs.
living with us.
. . Ralph Kerwood, 33 Smithers
1can take it, for !have only another year before I'm married, Ave., Gallipolis. The · canbut I get sick, thinking how Mom has cowered aU these years - dlelight ceremony was an event
and still will. She has set the pattern for aU of us. We don't fight of March 27 at 2p.m. in the First
back. We're good, quiet kids, but ready to explode.
United Presbyterian Church,
Js there any hope of change? _ D.S.
Gaihpolis, with the Rev. Glen
D.
Hueholt officiating.
Dear ·· 1
.
h tak ·t d take. it and TAKE it • Miss Nancy Ferguson,
My pe peeve IS women w o e 1 , an
,
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"! th ood of the children " Had you.r mother ilsserted herself Galhpohs, served as ma1d o
or e g
.
.J
honor and Mr Mike Hager
long ago she might not
have
a
tyrant
for
a
husband.
It
may
not
be
B"d
d.
bes t man'.
·
d
tst H
1 we11 , serve as
.toolate,evennow.Riseup, oorma .- ·
Thebrideworeastreetlength
Dear Helen:
.
· . .
gown of white lace featuring an
Here's a question I het you've nev~r ha~. If the k~d m the car empire waist and scalloped
accident seems high on drugs, but is m pam, would It be safe to neckline. A large ·lace bow with
administer a pain killer? - MARK
streamers was secured at the
Dear Mark :
back neckline. White lace
My doc~r says -that shots or other _pain killers are sel~m gloves completed the bride's
. .A~MIJ!l~ s~e ~f t~ccjl!,en_.1.~therli,JI~~~-·~ .Dt-c~l\!l\~· S)le, carried a · satin
volved or not. M..O!It dennite1y a layman 81111-iila' l'l~vll:R g1ve

Scientists theorize t h at,
with · a powerful rocket, a
round trip to the plane~ Mars
RIVERSIDE Study Club will would take 400 days, mcludmeet with Mrs . Howard . ing 40 days spent ln explor·
Leimann, 1 p. m.
ing the planet.
WEDNESDAY
LAF AVETTE
Post
327
American Legion and American
Legion Auxiliary oyster supper
at 6:30 p.m. at the hall.

HOME

nts

LOANS
think . . Stop in today
and talk with us. We'll
help you set up a lo111•l
cost, long term
that's easy to pay.

GALLIPOLIS

Gallipolis
at 7:30 p. m.

SAVINGS
LOAN CO.

'

ft·IJI 11 0111
--. po •·
o

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••••••••••••••

tacted by the committee but
anyone else wishin~ to nlake a
reservation is asked to call Mrs.
Frank Porter, 446-3271 or Mrs.
· Richard Simpson, 446-9748.
Races start at approxunately
8 p.m.

RT. 35 HENDERSON, W. VA.
• SALE 15% discount on all spring and summer
pant suits
• SALE 15% discount on large group cotton and
madras slacks.
• Pandora knits and swlmwear for girls size 1
through 14.
• Just arrived! MORE hot pants, scooter skirts and
bermudas.
• CHEESE • IMPORTED GIFTS • W. VA. CRAFTS

and lace covered Bible with
pink and white streamers tied in
lovers knots. Her flowers were
pink carnations.
The maid of honor wore a pale
blue knit dress and lace gloves
of the same color.
A reception was held
following the ceremony at the
home of the bridegroom's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Kerwood.
Attendmg the ceremony were
Mrs. Richard McCartney and
h'ld
T"
nd Marty
c 1, ren, 1mmy a
,
Mrs . Freddie Moore and
children , David , Vickie , and
Jeff, Mrs. John Hager· and
daughter, Barbara , Miss
carolyn Ihrig, Miss Beverly
Sword, Mrs. Larry Marr , Mrs.
Ralph Kerwood, and Mrs. Glen
Hueholt.
The couple are residing in
G;tllipq)is.,

Stop in and say hello- even if it's just for a
curious look. We think you' II aaree ifs somethlnl
quite extra ordinary with a warmth uniquely it's
own.

-

NEW HOURS- Sunday 1-4

Tues. through Friday 1-8
Saturday 10-5

the Apple Tree
RT. 35, HENDERSON, W.VA.
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"'.:.
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Tallest Person
The tallest recorded person
was an 8-foot-4.4 woman
named Marianne Wehde, although there ha~e . been
claims of 9-loot-3 mdlVldual_s.
according to Encyclopaedia
Britannica.

TABLE COVERS

Ideal for patio use, just wipe off, square.
oblong, round &amp; ov.a l .

$299

TO

$599

·Darnbrough's
DEPT. STORE

'

GAUJPOLIS, OHIO
On Famous

LARGE SELECTION.

PLAVTEXe
18 HOUR*
BRAS &amp;GIRDLES

••

Club will meet
Eld~mWuerch. 8 o. m.
Bible Class of
Baptist Church will
·fellowship room at

,

Both made with Spanette~
the exclusive Play,tex stretch Iabrie
with the exact combination
of strength and softness
for truly comfortable support.

LOG CABIN

A. Shortie- perfect for panty hose
and short fashions.
B. Bandeau-perfect for today's natural look.
Self-adjustable cups in a unique frame of
lightweight elastic, adjustable
stretch slraps, smooth profile seams
wllh no see-through feature.
Glrdlll $2.01 OH' :
·~Shortie-Reg. $-10.95, Now $8.94
Average Leg Panty-Reg. $11.95, Now $9.94
Long Leg Panty-Reg: $12.95, Now $10.94
Girdle-Reg. $10.95, Now $8.94
'Brief-$1.01 Off-Reg. $8.95, Now $7.94
White, sizes XS, S, M, L, (XL, XXL $1 more)

THROW RUGS
eNON SUP
At 5:20p.m., February 2,1970,
set up an interim police station at an
the Shaker Heie:hts Police Station,
ice rink two miles away.
Shaker Heights, Ohio was leveled by
A call went out for replacement
an explosion.
equipment. Construction men, repair. And a city of 38,000 was virtu·
men, installers,· and cable splil:ers
ally cut off from police protection.
were rounded up. In all. more than
Communication wi~h the public · fifty Ohio Bell men responded to.the
had to be restored fast.
emergency.
By 9 p.m. that evening, eleven
So our first order of business was
the switching of-six pol tee department
lines served toe temporary headlines to the City Ha II switchboard.
quarters.
_ Working through the night,)he
Forty-live minutes after the blast it
crews
had nearly thirty Call Darecwas done.
tors'' ln and operating by morning. .
The decision was then made to

By 4 p.m: the next aftern~n,• or
less than 24 hours -later, the baker
Heigh~s Police Departme t Jas:
practically back in 100% loperatibn.
At times like these, extra-h~Jril'
work and round-the-clock hours lire
normal. Because normal i[ 11 telephone that works.
•
And police protection . , at's just
a phone call away.
.
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27x45 SHAG--'3.99
27x45 · OVAL.--~99
' -----· ~99
27x453'x5'-------f6.99
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Bra• $1.01 011
·
Bandeau-Reg. $6.00, Now $4.99
White, Sizes A, B, C (0 cups $1 more)
Longline-Reg. $9, Now $7.99
White, Sizes B, C (0
$1 more)

.
LARGE SELECTION OF COLORS ...
Pink . Blue. Avocado Green· Beige· Gold· Yellow · White · Aqua · Lilic ·
Orange . Red . Lime· Light Pink · Rose.
·

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eMACHINE DRYABLE

24x34 ·---------·'1.99
24165-----,----· '3.99
4'x6' ---------.. - '8.99
'BATH SETS---~-.:.- '2.99

•
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@Olio Bel
·j

eMACHINE WASHABLE

100% VISCOSE RAYON

[t!

BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!
137 t'lne Street

Reservations are due by May
11 . ·Newcomers will be con-

EASY CARE VINYL

StJ!'iDAV
PA\tENT-C ILD workshop
PupPet P'!\'ade at . River by.
Registrat(on at 2:30 p. m.
Cowboy HaD of Fame
Wcjrkshop liat 3 p. m. Fee 50
The National Cowboy Hall
cents.
I
of Fame is located at Okla·
homa City, Okla. On display
MONDAVt
are
famous guns, saddles,
GALJ.JA apter OCSEA will
Western
memor11bilia; great
meet at e Grande Squares
books
of
range
Club
1622 Eastern Ave., plants andthea West;
45-by..4Q..foot
7:30
Reports and refresh- raised relief map of~ the
West.
I
HAJNNI.N TRACE Pioneers 4-H '&gt;
'meet at the Mer·
cei'11Ull Grange HaD at 7:30

Home ownership may
be closer than you

tu $7.75 in the clubhouse.

THE APPLE TREF

Miss Juanita Kitchen
Weds Tommy Kerwood

meditine w,ithout a p~ysician's approval. - H.

nf the management. However
dinner prices range ·from ~ .50

.Happiness Is ...
Apple Blossoms On

Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Kerwood

Trip to Mars

mg

Chaaael Swimmer
First man to s w i m th~
Encllsh Channel underll"aler

~urrec:t'. •

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!rush-off.
Send your teenage questions to YOUTH ASKED ·FOR IT, care
fl Helen Help Us! this newspaper.

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By Helen Bottel

YOUTH' ASKED FOR IT!
This column is for young people, their problems and
pleasures; their lroubles and fun. 'AS with the ·rest of Helen Help
Us!, it welcomes laughs but won't dodge a seriotis question with a

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SPRING HANDBAG SALE

GALIJPOJJS
A trip to
Scioto Downs where a special
ilection of seats have been
reserved for them is in the offing for the Gallipolis
Newcomers Club.
·
.The committee in charge has
arranged for a bus with the
capacity ol41 to leave the_J!.ark·
front at approxima~ly 5. p.m.
on May 22. The cost of the bus
trip is $2 with no admission
charge at Scioto Downs, curtesy

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Newcomers Go To ·Scioto Downs

!Helen Help Us l

TUESDAY

CHESTER - Mr. and Mrs.
Willis Frost and daughter, Billie
.
..
Jean, of Chester entertained
&amp;
with a family dinner at their
Opp. Post Office
home on · Easter. A turkey
Gallloolis, O~io
dinner was enjoyed by the
following children of the Frosts,
:I'.Sgt. and Mrs. Paul T. Myers, • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ·. .-~
Colene, Kaylene, Ty Kevin and .
Paul Dal'l!IA&gt;f~kbourne Air
Force Base, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Curtis Fraley, Candace,
Marie and Gregory Curtis of
Reynoldsburg, and Richard Lee
Frost, Royal Oak, Michigan .
The most grateful event of the
occasion was that Mr. Frost,
who had been confined to Holzer
Medical Center, was home to
help enjoy the gathering. ,
In other Frost family news, Jo
Ann Fraley spent three weeks
at home, to help during the time
of her father's eye operations.
Richard Lee Frost, Royal Oak,
Mich ., spent his Easter
vacation with his parents and
sister. Mr. Frost is il teacher at
HuntingtOn Woods.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Housebolter, Pontiac, Mich. spent
a. recent afternoon with
Mr. and Mrs. Willis Frost.

~:.lheaa1C::~n ~~~m~~:· FUR
1112. He ustid ,a q u a I u n g
equipment llld "'IIJI guided
b)l a. towed cae,. ltl&gt;neath the

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Mrs. McMillin Honored
With Stork Shower
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. John
McMillin was honored with a
stork shower recently at the
Gallia County Gun Club.
Hostesses were Mrs. Wayne
Francies and Mrs. Ward Smith.
During the evening, games
were played and prizes were
awarded to Mrs. Joyce Twyman
and Mrs. Nancy Sheets. The
door prize was won by Mrs.
Nancy Sheets. Refreshments of
cake, coffee, pop, mints and
nuts were served.
Guests attending include'd:

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DEPARTMENT SIORf-

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302 SECOND AVE.

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GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Gallipolis

412-414 Second Ave.
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STREET FLOOR .
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· Sale of Better .
Bedrooms! ·

\ \.&lt;--·

~p .Once-A·Year

i

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Great Savings

a, Arnold Grate
By Herman Grate

.. .
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Grate
Vallles!
Knickerbocker's FOLD·A·WAY BED
with BRASS and WALNUT HEADBOARD
Featuring anew 4" THICK Reversible FOAM MATTRESS

All Bedroom Suites
In Stock
I

Reduced

36

PURCHASE THIS EARLY AMERICAN•
LIVING ·ROOM SUitE AND FOR t ·
MORE GET A BEAUTIFUL 3 PC.
~~rt~~,.,... B~OROOM SUITE.
. , ·i

20%
FOR THIS SALEI

'
If you need an extra bedroom furn ished
at this time, don't wait! We have Bassett,
Korth, Kemp and American . For
example a bedroom suite selling for
$300.00, you would save $60.00.

9x12 WOOL RUGS

• Sturdy, li&amp;htweiJht aluminum construction
. 30" w.-fulllength -folds and rolls easily.

.. INQi

FLORAL PATTERNS.
5 COLORS TO CHOOSE

$4995

NICE mR ANY ROOM •

'59~5 .

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Smoo¢, level support and .comfort, border 1:Q
bOrder! No tufts and no buttons. Durable woven
, cover! Sag-resistant border! Firm multi-coil construction for healthfUl support and comfort! ·

3-PC. WALNUT.BEDROOM SUITE

$19995

With mattress 1 box sprinR, 2 la111o~ 1 hedsn.read. 2 oillol'fS and
1 pair pillow cases All for the unheard low pnce oL ___ -- - - -

Hurry! While your mattress dollar is bigger!

Great Savings!

Grate Value!
I

&amp;JFA MAKES A

Opens easily to make bed for 2
Convenient Storage Compartment

7 P'c•

Wagon
Wheel Bunk Bed
WITH BOOKCASE HEADBOARD
A real buy in a goOd red maple
bunk bed. Posts are 60" high .
Includes good inner spring mat·
tress made by Serta. Buy it now!

149 ·
·
95

$

DUAL PURPOSE
LIVING ROOM

GROUP

,
arxl practical ootfit that gives yoo 24-hour ALL

A beautiful
duly! The big sofa arxl matching lounge chair , with reversible foam cushions, have button arxl weltingdetall· .
lng arxl sparkling brass accents. And you get 2 stA!)Hmd
and cocktail tables plus 2 handsome ceramic base table
lamps. Suite comes in choice of colors. ·

CONVENIENT TER MS!
WE DELIVER!

Sale
of
Maple
Chests
,

1

FOR ONLY

'

\Full Size SOFA BEDS $

Wei-e Headqllllrters
For Maytag!.!

1

~~

Here's a sale of our

9 5

Grate Special! 2 --Piece :~~~~:A~ A~ $

$ave On

best chests of
drawers in Red ,
Maple. Save Now! !

Maytag

BUY ONE .
CHAIR FOR

..

'

' SHOWN RIGHT:.

THE &amp;-DRAWER
.
'

'

.'

.BUYI

•29 • 99.

· ALL METAL
DELUXE STYLE
42" WIDE
20" DEEP
72" HIGH

THAfS RIGHT
2 for $30.00

..

'

THE 5-DRA WER----'59.95

•69.95

,,

Mattress or Box Spring

,

I

FOR
ONLY

WRINGER WASHERS

•49.95

Grate
Value!

~

· Grate Value!
I

This
Chair' Sale

,
.&amp;t Bclth Stores .
MISOII Furniture .
..

..

I

.

951-----~------.---

And Get The Second Clair

Automatics
Dryers· .

Smooth -top c()mfort fr0111
head to toe. No tufts, no
buttons. Serta quality inside
and out - for lasting
&lt;:omfort and durability. Coil
springs made of tempered
steel provide years of
bounce-back firmness and
extra mattress life. Come in
todC!Y and see this and other
great · · Serta · Orthoiux
values. .
.. ·.

. Sofa by day, bed by night.
Choice of 4 Colors.

-.v Plenty for Everyonel Big New Shipmentl

CHAIR SALE

Check
Low
Sale
·Prices!

THE 4-DRAWER

'

~V~I~N~Y~L~S~~~F~~~B~E=D~s=R~~N- ~s~~cK-~GR~EEN~~~~~~rateChinaCabinat .

---

Sale!

SHOWN HERE:

'

NO. 188

Sliding Door
- WARDROBE
36" Wide

66;H:•39
STURDY METAL

6995

95

.

�.
'

.,

'

.
'

· Sale of Better .
Bedrooms! ·

\ \.&lt;--·

~p .Once-A·Year

i

· ~tl .I!

'"''"' '"'"''

........

,~

Great Savings

a, Arnold Grate
By Herman Grate

.. .
..,

I

Grate
Vallles!
Knickerbocker's FOLD·A·WAY BED
with BRASS and WALNUT HEADBOARD
Featuring anew 4" THICK Reversible FOAM MATTRESS

All Bedroom Suites
In Stock
I

Reduced

36

PURCHASE THIS EARLY AMERICAN•
LIVING ·ROOM SUitE AND FOR t ·
MORE GET A BEAUTIFUL 3 PC.
~~rt~~,.,... B~OROOM SUITE.
. , ·i

20%
FOR THIS SALEI

'
If you need an extra bedroom furn ished
at this time, don't wait! We have Bassett,
Korth, Kemp and American . For
example a bedroom suite selling for
$300.00, you would save $60.00.

9x12 WOOL RUGS

• Sturdy, li&amp;htweiJht aluminum construction
. 30" w.-fulllength -folds and rolls easily.

.. INQi

FLORAL PATTERNS.
5 COLORS TO CHOOSE

$4995

NICE mR ANY ROOM •

'59~5 .

i •

llzt

Smoo¢, level support and .comfort, border 1:Q
bOrder! No tufts and no buttons. Durable woven
, cover! Sag-resistant border! Firm multi-coil construction for healthfUl support and comfort! ·

3-PC. WALNUT.BEDROOM SUITE

$19995

With mattress 1 box sprinR, 2 la111o~ 1 hedsn.read. 2 oillol'fS and
1 pair pillow cases All for the unheard low pnce oL ___ -- - - -

Hurry! While your mattress dollar is bigger!

Great Savings!

Grate Value!
I

&amp;JFA MAKES A

Opens easily to make bed for 2
Convenient Storage Compartment

7 P'c•

Wagon
Wheel Bunk Bed
WITH BOOKCASE HEADBOARD
A real buy in a goOd red maple
bunk bed. Posts are 60" high .
Includes good inner spring mat·
tress made by Serta. Buy it now!

149 ·
·
95

$

DUAL PURPOSE
LIVING ROOM

GROUP

,
arxl practical ootfit that gives yoo 24-hour ALL

A beautiful
duly! The big sofa arxl matching lounge chair , with reversible foam cushions, have button arxl weltingdetall· .
lng arxl sparkling brass accents. And you get 2 stA!)Hmd
and cocktail tables plus 2 handsome ceramic base table
lamps. Suite comes in choice of colors. ·

CONVENIENT TER MS!
WE DELIVER!

Sale
of
Maple
Chests
,

1

FOR ONLY

'

\Full Size SOFA BEDS $

Wei-e Headqllllrters
For Maytag!.!

1

~~

Here's a sale of our

9 5

Grate Special! 2 --Piece :~~~~:A~ A~ $

$ave On

best chests of
drawers in Red ,
Maple. Save Now! !

Maytag

BUY ONE .
CHAIR FOR

..

'

' SHOWN RIGHT:.

THE &amp;-DRAWER
.
'

'

.'

.BUYI

•29 • 99.

· ALL METAL
DELUXE STYLE
42" WIDE
20" DEEP
72" HIGH

THAfS RIGHT
2 for $30.00

..

'

THE 5-DRA WER----'59.95

•69.95

,,

Mattress or Box Spring

,

I

FOR
ONLY

WRINGER WASHERS

•49.95

Grate
Value!

~

· Grate Value!
I

This
Chair' Sale

,
.&amp;t Bclth Stores .
MISOII Furniture .
..

..

I

.

951-----~------.---

And Get The Second Clair

Automatics
Dryers· .

Smooth -top c()mfort fr0111
head to toe. No tufts, no
buttons. Serta quality inside
and out - for lasting
&lt;:omfort and durability. Coil
springs made of tempered
steel provide years of
bounce-back firmness and
extra mattress life. Come in
todC!Y and see this and other
great · · Serta · Orthoiux
values. .
.. ·.

. Sofa by day, bed by night.
Choice of 4 Colors.

-.v Plenty for Everyonel Big New Shipmentl

CHAIR SALE

Check
Low
Sale
·Prices!

THE 4-DRAWER

'

~V~I~N~Y~L~S~~~F~~~B~E=D~s=R~~N- ~s~~cK-~GR~EEN~~~~~~rateChinaCabinat .

---

Sale!

SHOWN HERE:

'

NO. 188

Sliding Door
- WARDROBE
36" Wide

66;H:•39
STURDY METAL

6995

95

.

�'

.

'

.

~

'10,--The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, April ~,1971 ,

Sorority Meets

~.-~~~~E;~~~

.~ ~ -Engagements,· ~
!t

'

%

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Weddings

POMEROY - Joe Welker qctober. Mrs. Ann . Rupe will
will ~ttend~Buckeye BoySStaie - have charge-of a soctal ev1!nlln
under sponso•ship of the Xi May ·
Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta
Mrs. Pearl Welker gave a
Sigma Phi Sorority, it was report on Founders Day obannounced during a meeting servance at the_ Uptown~r 10
Thursday night at the home of Parkersburg Tuesday mght,
Mrs. Margaret Follrod.
Mrs. Nellie Brown ";,~~
The sorority convention to be presented the Beta Sigma 1
held at Akron was announced ring, Girl ofthe Year Award for
for May 14-16 and it was voted to the chapter: .
send four members. The visit to
Better Ltghtmg for Belter
German Village scheduled for Living was the program toptc
next month was postponed until given by Mrs . June Van
·
Vranken. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Shirley CUster
and Mrs . Roberta O'Brien.
AGREEMENT READY
Members were then invited to
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Alabor the home of Mr. and Mrs.
agreement between the Ohio Thomas D. Crow, Jr. for a
·Bureau of Corrections and the
celebration of their 25th wedOhio Civil Service Employees ding anniversary. Mrs. Crow is
was to be signed Monday, afa member of the chapter.
fecting about 1,200 correctional
officers at state penal institutions.

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Carol lynn Fruth Sets Wedding Day
MASON -Mr. and Mrs. Ralph G. Fruth, Mason, W.Va.,
annodnce the engagement and approaching marriage of
their daughter, Carol Lynn to Mr. Leonard Conrad Lyons.
Mr. Lyons is the son of Mrs. Roy V. Howell, Pomeroy, Route
2, and the late Mr. Leonard M. Lyons. The open church
wedding will be an event of Sunday, May 23, at 2:30p.m. at
the ChriSt United Methodist ChUrch, Mason. The Rev. Lewis
A. Diehl of Wilmore, Ky. will perform the double ring
ceremony.

,.

i

Donna Jarvis Plans·to Wed

COLEEN OHLINGER

/

I

Mrs. Terrell for a St. Francis
statue with daffodils and bridal
wreath. Red ribbons were
awarded to Mrs. Heaton, Mr~.
Lewis, Mrs. Moore, and a white
·ribbon went to Mrs. Beegle.
Serving: Gallipolis
Mrs. Beegle conducted
Pomeroy,
Middleport, 0.
recreation at the conclusion of
-Mason
Co., W.Va.
the meeting , The dessert course
446·1m or '192-5560
served by the hostess carried •
out a springtime theme .
.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.

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DUDLEY R.ORISTS

Patty Ann Goeglein to Wed
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Albert E. Goeglein,
Pomeroy Rt. 3, announce the engagement of their daughter,
Patty Ann, to Airman First Class Ray R. Pickens, son of Mrs.
Elizabeth Pickens, Yorkshire Village Lane, Columbus, and
Dr. R. R. Pickens, 509 South Third Avenue, Middleport. The
bride-elect is a 1968 graduate of Eastern High School and is
presently a!tending Gallipolis Business College, Her fiance is
a 1965 graduate of Middleport High School and in 1969
graduated with a B. A. Degree from Kent State University.
He is now serving with the United States Air Force in Duluth,
Minn. A fall wedding is planned.
'-

J

WOND ERFU LLY COMFORT ABU: • ''·L ·\ l l irl ll 1

'

POMEROY - Planting areas with the name of a favorite
at t~e entrance of the Beech pesticide.
Grove Cemetery and the Meigs The garden calendar was
County Infirmary will be given read by Mrs. Robert Lewis with
a spring cleanup by the Winding tips for April including
Trail Garden Club on Ma·y 12, removing winter protection,
on ly 350 '
according to plans made at a applying lime before the ground
meeting Wednesday night at the is spaded to make a looser soil
and sweeten it, opening the cold
home of Mrs. John Terrell.
Members will meet at 6:30 to frames to harden the seedlings,
do lhe work at the planting and applying liquid fertilizer in
locati ons necessary for furrows where seedlings will be
beautifica tion and better set out to . give them a quick
The luscious cotton terry sandal that hugs the
growth. The jumor garden club start.
foot beautifully ... looks as pretty on the beach
will have an Arbor Day planting Officers reports at the
as it does al home. Super-soft, heel-to-toe ioam
Thursday at the Meigs County meeting were gi~en by Mrs.
cushion gives the ultimate in walking comlort
Infirmary , A seedling packet Charles Hayes and Mrs. Lloyd
Blue, pink, white, yellow.
'
from the Department of Natural Moore. The traveling prize
Sizes: 5(4-5'12 ), M(6-7 1;, ), Li8·9''' I
donated by Mrs. Cora Beegle
Resources will be used.
Arrangements were made for was won by Mrs. Thoma.
several of the members to assist Mrs. Hayes and Mrs. Thoma
at the Jaycee sponsored dance jullged the flower arfor the George Thompson rangements on "Let Us Have
MIDDLEPORT
Kidney 'Fund on April 30 at lhe Peace." Blue ribbons went to
"Where
Shoes
are Sensibly Priced"
Pomeroy junior high ·school Mrs. Allard Pratt who used a
building. Tickets for the dance Madonna and daffodils, and
~.
are being sold by the members.
Mrs. Robert Lewis gave a
~SAPEAKE ...:_ Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. Hinkle, .816
report
on the progress of the
Brow~~..;st., Chesapeake, Ohio, are announcing the
enga~1llient and approaching marriage of their daughter, fund drive sponsored by the
club and it was noted that the
Debr~Jo, to Charles 0. Murray, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
canisters in Pomeroy have
H. l\I.~Y. 1743 Thomas St., Ironton. Miss Hinkle is a senior
brought in $675 to date. The last
at M~gs High School. Mr. Murray graduated with the class
pickup will be made on Monday.
SUNSPOTS • , , a soft dot laeo jacket of acetate/nylon to wear over the
of 1967iii Ironton and is now employed by Columbia Gas of
The jars will then be used by the
lmport~nt two·pieco boy log in a now stretch lace Ban•Lon• knit of nylon/
Ohio, ColumbUs, Ohio. An August wedding is being planned.
club to collect Betty Crocker
Lycra spandex, Jaekel: 12.00 B!&gt;ylog: 24.00
·
coupons for use in securing a
kidney machine for the Holzer
Medical Center.
Seven members of the club
were guests.at a meeting of the
Walk-in Garden Club Thursday
McARTHUR - The Alpha She noted that although evening . .Six members of the
Omicron Chapter of Delta problems are more complicated club attended the regional
Kappa Gaintna held its annual now, "we should still think ol meeting held at Rutland
Saturday, Communications
recruitnie'nt tea at the McAr- them as challenges."
ALBANY - Mr. and Mrs. Roland Reynolds of Albany
Other members of the were read from Mrs. Edward
thur Elementary School on
are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage
committee
who spoke were Mizicko concerning the OAGC
April 18.
ol their eldest daughter, Wilma Faye, to Mr. John Roy
Members of the scholarship Ferne Felton, Marguerite slide contest and from Mrs.
Coleman, son of Mr . and Mrs. Bethel Coleman, Albany,
committee conducted the Gahm, Anna Turner. They John Reese regarding the
former Middleport residents. Miss Reynolds is , a 1969
program,
entitled, The reviewed changes in teaching regional meeting.
graduate ol Alexander High School and completed
Challenge of Teaching in a over the years from the one- It was noted that the May
secretarial training at the Tri.County Vocation'al School at
Changing World . Martha room school to the presenklay meeting will he held at the home
Nelsonville and the Jackson Manpower Training School. She
Husted, chairman of th~ trend to smaller classes, in- of Mrs. Charles Hayes. ·The ~
is presently employed as secretarial aide at the Albany
committl'e; said her first dividual attention, and program presented by Mrs. 1
Elementary School!
principal'said she "should think provi,sion for each student's Earl. Thoma was on "The Safe I
Use of Pesticides."She' urged I
Her finace, a 1966 graduate of Middleport High School
ot' problems .as a challenge." needs.
They emphasized that that before pesticides are used I
,(•'~
attenl!ed Ohio University and is now serving with the U. S.
children
should not be that the label be read thereby
Navy in Italy. The wedding will be an event of May 22 at the
pressured too much and ehould assuring the right one applied in
Albany Methodist Church ,
. r .: :
he given a chance to see their the right way at the right time.
own
mistakes. Mrs. Gahm. said She suggested that it is best to
SE;i~D soN BORN she started
teaching 50 years identify the insect or the disease
POMEY\OY - Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry E. Fields, Pomeroy, are ago, that the pupils of thos~ before using the insecticide.
days had brought about great Pesticides should he mixed
man
for
the
session.
Mrs.
Arannouncing
,the
birth
of
a
son,
POMEROY - The 22nd
Monday, at the Holzer Medical changes, and, "We shall see . outdoors due to fume danger
annual session of the Ohio nold Richards of Middleport, Center. The six pound, 10 ounce greater things if we stand fast in and should not be sprayed on a
Baptist Girls and the Georgia E. t·ecording secre_tary for the O_hio infant ha~ tieen named Terry the faith ."
'
windy day, Mrs. Thoma said.
Miller Guilds will be held Ge neral Baphst AssociatiOn Sc tt M , d M Fi ld h
The members and their She cautioned against smoking
0 · ..~·an
rs. e ave guests, future teachers, were while using insecticides, noting
Sunday, May 2, at the first a n d District Secretary
of the Women's Auxiliary of . another son, Jerry, Jr. Mr. and
Baptist Church in Piketon.
served refreshments from that some are flammable. She
Highlights of the state' guild the Providence Association, will Mrs. Jo~ph Ftelds and Mr. and tables decorated with candles said d,usts should be applied
.
Mrs. Charles E~kew, Pomeroy,
meeting held Oct. 16, at Akron be the guest'· speaker.
and spring flowers .
either in the early morn\ng or
The Rev. E. Hoosier is pastor are the.,grand~rents. Mr. and
will be given by Mrs. William
The business meeting was in the late afternoon.
Smith who is program chair- of the host church. There will w Mrs. Elfil~r Fields, Hartford, charge .of the president, Edith Mrs. Thoma also commented· I
remarks by the moderator of W. Va,:l".aM Mrs. Anna Dill, Hoffman.
on .slug control and suggested 1
the Providence Baptist Pomer~\is are
greatMeigs County members at- the u~ of slug bait pellets or a 1
Association and the state and grandpa: n .
tending were Lucille Smith, small cup of beer sunk into the I
SING ON MAY 2
sub-4istrict
workers.
The
girls
·
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NellieVale,RuthEuler,Martha
ground, They are attracted to I
. POMEROY :... A hymn sing
are
asked
to
wear
while
dresses
Husted, -Theodosia Frecker,. this and once inside drown, she I
, ·wml&gt;e held at,2p.m. on May 2 ar
and
their
purp'
l
e
capes.
Anna Turner, Margaret Par- said. Mrs. Thomas displayed a I
the United Faith · NonREVIVAL
COMING
sons, Roberta Wilson·, Mildred collection of agriculture
denominational Church oti the
CARPENTER - I Revival Hawley, Beatr'ice Rinehart, bulletin.
1' 1---.::;=-Pomeroy-Middleport · by-pass. MARRIAGE APPLICATIONS
.'
services
will
he
held
at
Mt.
Fay
Sauer,
and
Rosalie
Story.
Mrs.
Terrell
gave
devoliohs
1
Singers will include the Bis•ell
P1' PLEASANT ~ ' ApBrothers. The •sing will mark plica iiOn for a marriag~ license ·Union Baptist Church, two Stildenl.s attending were Donna pointing tip opportunities for
of ~ere beginning Webe~. Shelfie Turner, and service to GOfl and the need to
,lhe besiMing of a revival was filed friday In the office of miles
p.m. The Rev. Sherry Nelson.
give of tim~ willingly to help
aerviee to run tl!rough May 8, County Clerk L. W. Getty by
of Racine will be
The next . meeting will be others. Mri. Clarence Heaton
7:•
evening. The Rev. Jamie Glomn King, ,37,
Everyone is
'!/ at
Coach presided at the
witt:

POMEROY - The project of
sending gifts each month to
. Miss Constance Thorn, a
veteran at Miller Cottage,
Dayton, will ~e continued this

Bands Preparing
For Appearances
MASON - Wahama's Junior
and Senior High Bands, under
the direction of Gerald Sim·
mons , have been busy
preparing for area band
festivals.
The Junior High Band, at a
recent festival at Ravenswood,
received ratings of 1 and I plus.
The Senior High Band attended
a Regional Festival in Ravenswood Saturday, one among
p~!ely 13 bands par~cipating ,

Judges for this event were
Thomas •O'Connell and Mr,
Stacy ol Marshall University,
Nels Leonard of West Uberty
and Mr. Duvall from Bethany
College who judged site
reading .
. The annual big event will be
held in Huntington May 7 and 8.
Wahama will hold the 11th place
in the parade and Point
'Fleasant's Band will be ninth In
line.

THE SHOE BOX

Debra Jo Hinkle to Wed in August

~~\. B,ETTER,

~~~

DKG Tea is Held

I

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

:,_~ ·,.'_,·.• · Metg"S

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Air ·Conditioning
--ONLY
Cools
5 To 6 Rooms

.ADD
AN

Our belated congratulations!
MR. AND MRS. JOSEPH W. COOK observed their golden
wedding anniversary on April 14. No big celebration; just a quiet
time of reminiscing over the events of the SO years since that
happy day in 1921 at Catlettsburg, Ky. Here to help the couple
celebrate in a small way were Mr. Cook's sisters, Mrs. William F .
Curiston ol Brighton, Mich., and Miss Edith V. COOk ol Ann Arbor .
Tbey also visited another brother, Thomas F. COOk and family ,

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Soct"al

Calen·d ar
. J:::

,._,
Community School teacher
guest speaker, Members to tur~
in Betty Crocker coupons.
WOMEN'S AUXILIARY of
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., hospital

THOUGHT YOU'D UKE to know of two former residents
who are seriously ill.
Mrs. Howard Hull; Jr., of Marengo, Route I, the former
Josephine Pickens of• Reedsville, a Meigs County native, is
seriously ill at her home. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sauer, cousins,
were there recently to visit her.
Tom Bowen has received word of the critical condition of his
father, John Bowen, at Bradenton, Fla. Mr. Bowen suffered a
heart attack and is confined to a hospital there.
.
These two we're sure would be cheered by cards from their
friends here.

$445

(Plus Installation) ·
"Central" to
Your Present
Heating System

PTA Conference Set

di~~~:o

AMERICAN Legion Auxiliary, 7:30 Tuesday at
Legion Hall. Election of officers .
WEDNESDAY
REVIVAL SERVICES
Wednesday 8 p.m. at Mt. Union
Bapti~t Church, two miles south
of Carpenter, with Rev. Charles
Norris of Racine delivering the
message.
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club,
10:'30 a.m. Wednesday for a
nature tour of the home of Mrs.
Dwight Milhoan. Luncheon will
be served there.
POMEROY Women's
Bowling Association, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday, Pomeroy Bowling
Lanes. Election of officers.
POMEROY WCTU, 2 p.m.
Wednesday, Pomeroy United
Methodist Church.

POMEROY - Luncheon
reservations for the District 16
spring conference of the Ohio
PTA Saturday at th,e Pomeroy
Elementary School will be
accepted through Monday,
Reservations are to be made
with Mrs. Clarence Norton,
Route 1, Minersville, and may
be made by telephone to 9922038.
Plans for the conference were
completed at a meeting of Mrs.
LeQ Crew, general chairman,
Mrs. Harold Lohse, District 16
director, and Mrs. Richard
Vaughan, Ohio PTA executive
board membef with committee
chairmen Thursday at the
Pomeroy school.
It was emphasized that
reservations are needed for the
luncheon only and thai all
sessions of the .conference are
open to PTA members at no
charge.
Cultural arts exhibits are to
be in place not later than 10 a.m.
at which time the judging will
begin. A feature of the day will
be the awarding of certificates
to units 'rith 100 per cent new
officer a\lendance, and 100 per
cent teacher enroUment.
At the planning session were
Mrs. Fred Lewis and Mrs.
William Swisher of the Bradbury PTA cultural arts ; Mrs.
Norton,
Syracuse
unit,
registration; Mrs . Betty
Longstreth, Salem Center PTA,

Salem; Holzer, Hans W.,
Window of the Past; Schimel,
John L., How to be an
Adolescent and Survive; Youth
in TurmoiL
Sutton, Ann, New Worlds for
Wildlife; Ritchie, Barbara, The
Roil Report; Hampden, John,
Endless Treasure; Scott, Alice
Howard, The Giant Picture
Dictionary for Boys and Girls;
Broudy, RoseL., Modern Math
Made
E~sy;
Branley,
Franklyn, Floating and
Sinking ; Hyde, Margaret 0.,
Exploring Earth and Space;
Scott, Frances, Exploring
Ocean Frontiers; Brandenberg,
Allki, My Visit to the
Dinosaurs; Gray, William,
What We Find When We Look at
Molds.
Hudson, Robert G., Nature's
Nursery: baby birds; Hyde,
Margaret 0., Your Skin; Barr,
George, Young Scientist and the
Dentist; Shannon, Terry, Ride
the Ice Down!; Dwiggins, Don, _
Spaceship Ea th; Rounds,
. Glen, The Strawberry Roan;
Boyer, Sophia A., Gifts from the
Greeks; Frei, Hans, Spain;
Gemming, Elizabeth, Getting to
Know New England; Jensen,
, Joan M., The Price of
. YOU SAVE ~
Vigilance; Bauer, Helen,
Hawaii, the Aloha .State.
DOES MAKE A
Cleaver, Eldridge, Soul on
Ice, biography, and Rolllns,
H.,
Black
Charlemae
Troubadour:
Langston
Hughes,
We pay you to save
(and the pay is good). biography.

decorations; Mrs. June Epple,
Chester,
greeters
and
hospitality; Mrs. Gene Mitch,
Pomeroy, coffee hour ; Mrs.
Edward Kennedy, · Salisbury,
publications; and Mrs. Bob
Hoeflich, conference publicity
chairman.

50th Anniversary Celebrated
RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Mace were honored
recently with an open house celebration In observance of
their 50th wedding anniversary. The couple was married
March 'll, 1921 in Kanawha County. Mrs. Mace was the
former Ethel Durham, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.
Meken Durham of Clay,
They are the parents of ·Alvin Mace and Mrs. James
Means of Charleston, W. Va.; Mrs. Harold Ramsburg of
Middleport; Mrs. Don Madden of Columbus, and have 22
grandchtldren and 20 great.ttrandchlldren. For the past 12
years, Mr. and Mrs. Mace have resided in Ohio.

Playlet in Program
MIDDLEPORT - A playlet Mrs. John Werner, Sanborn
by the women of the B. H. Society president. Mrs. Briggs
Sanborn Missionary Society of Kirby of the Cheshire church,
the Middleport First Baptist association vice president, will
Church will be a feature of the give devotions and special
installation service or · the Rio music will be presented by Mrs.
Grande Baptist Association Robert Kuhn of the Pomeroy
Missionary Society to be held Church,
,
Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the Mrs. Simons will'conduct the
Middleport Church.
.installation ceremony for the
Mrs. Manning Kloes Is new officers and the theme
directing the playlet with Mrs. hymn, "They'll Know We Are
Tony Fowler, Mrs. Paul smart, Christians by Our Love" will be
Mrs. E. L. Hughes, Mrs. led by Mrs. Charles Searles who
Elizab~th Slaven, Mrs. Ullian will be installed as president.
McGee, Mrs. Beulah White, Mrs. Edward Simpson of the
Mrs. Charles Simons, Mrs. Racine Church will have the
Pearl Hoffman, Mrs. Fred closing prayer .
Lewis, Mrs. Robert Richardson, Hostesses for the social hour
Mrs . Fred Hoffman, and Mrs. will be l'ylrs. Werner, Mrs.
Richard Owen taking the parts. Owen, and Mrs. Hoffman.
Mrs. Gerald Anthony wlll be
at the organ for the !lervlce, and
the welcome wm be extended by

Lesson on Psalm 23

Rummage Sale Set By Sewing Club
POMEROY - .A rUJI1I1lage . for the next meeting. · Mrs.
sale to be held May 4 and Sin the Larry Wehrung, president, had
Smith building, Second St., charge of ihe buelnesa aeuion.
Pomeroy, wlis plinned during a Others attending were Mrs.
recent meeting llf the Sew-Bile· James Neutzling, Mrs. pan
Sewing Club held at the home of Collins, Mrs. Bill McDaniels,
Mrs. Ronald Browning. Mrs. Mrs. Charles Hoffman, and
Don Mullen was co-hostess.
Mrs. Elza Gilmore, Jr.
Thank-you notes were read
from Mrs. Raymond Batey,
Mrs. Edward Wells, Mrs.
OPERETTA READY
Willard Boyer, and Mrs. Don
MIDDLEPORT - Bradbury
McKnight. Mrs. Batey and Mrs.
Flo Strickland will he hostesses fourth and fifth graders will
present
the
operetta,
"Mulligan's Magic" at 7:30
p.m. on Thursday and Friday
MAYORS TO MEET .
COLUMBUS (UP!)- MQyors nights. Mrs. Phyllis Hackett is
of seven major Ohio cities will tlo~ director.
meet next Tuesday with leaders
of the General Assembly here to
discuss additional aid to urban
areas. Officials· from Cincinnati, Columbus, Cleveland,
Toledo, Akron, Youngstown and
Dayton were to attend the
meeting, set up by House
Speaker Charles F. Kurfess, at
the request of Mayor Willis
Gradison Jr., Cfucinnatl.

POMEROY- A lesson on the
23fd Psalm wa5 given by Mrs.
Thomas Bentz and Miss Frieda
Uevlng at a mee.tlng of the
Willing Workers ClQa 'I1wraday night at the home of Mrs.
Eldon.Weeks.
Participating in the program
were Mrs. Ben Buck, Mrs.
Wllllam Airson, Mrs. Ethel
Smith, Mrs. Herbert Dixon,.
Mrs. PJ!ul Frick, and Mrs.
James Will. Mrs. Beulah VIterbach had prayer. Umbrellas
were ordered for sale by the
-class. A potluck supper was
enjoyed by those named and
Mrs. Thomas Bowen and Patty
Edwards, guests, and Mrs.
Edward Bowen and Mrs. Carl
Moore.

at Baker's • • •
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THINGS HAPPEN IN THREES, they say, so, perhaps the
Charles Eskew family can breathe a sigh of relief. Last Monday
three of .the family were hospitalized. Mrs. Eskew and her
daughter, Barbara Eskew Fields, are now home and Mr. Eskew
appears to j)e on the road to recovery. Barbara, incidentally,
came home with a bouncing baby boy.

Eddy's Schedule And New Titles

WHOLE HOUSE
I

POMEROY -We couldn't be happier about 'the responSe to
the recipe column "Fun with Foods" started this week!
Our success in keeping the new weekly feature going will
depend on your interest and, of CO!lfSC, on your willingness to
share your secrets for good food. So .... keep those recipes c~min'.
Either mail them to me or drop them by the office.

MISS BESS SANBORN marlted up her 85th birthday anniversary Saturday in · a hospi\al room at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. She is confined there lor treatment of a hip injury sufit."
Coleen views life with a very · ·.! fered in a fall at her home. Bess is a "pillar" of .the Middleport
positive, but a very realistic, attitude, ':". Heath United Methodist Church and for over half a century taught
living each day to its fullest. She con- -:\ in !he Sunday School.
veys the impression of a well-adjusted ·,,,
happy young woman, content in her
ROSE REYNOLDS'last month completed 50 years with the
role as wife and mother.
· · Citizens National Bank. That's a long time with one employer.

year by the Past Presidents
Club of the American Legion
MONDAY
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
MEIGS BAND Boosters, 8 p.
39.
m. Monday, Meigs High School.
Meeting Wednesday night at
GROUP
11, Women's
the home of Mrs. Ray Fox, Association, 7:30Monday night,
Clifton, gift month assignmenl.s home of Mrs. William Morris.
were tnade . The club will ' Mrs. Dwight Wallace to have
continue to send gifts at the Bible study; Mrs. Paul
Christmas and on Miss Thorn's Haptonstall, the devotions.
birthday,
TUESDAY
Mrs. Ellen Couch presided at
RACINE American Legion
the meeting which opened with Auxiliary Tuesday 8 p.m.
the pledge to the flag and the Legion Hall. Members to bring
Lord's Prayer in unison. Mrs. : Red Cross money collections,
Gerald Wildermuth gave old hose, old ties and ribbons
devotions using meditations, which will be sent to blind
" Increasing Delight", veterans at Dayton Veterans
"Thoughts of a Spring Mor- Hospital. Junior Auxiliary to
ning", and "Blessed is He". meet at same ti~e.
Prayers for those troubled were
POMEROY CHAPTER 186
given in a prayer chircle.
OES Tuesday 7:30p.m. at hall.
Practice for inspection.
PRODUCTS party Tuesday,
Mrs. Charles Sauer read ~
7:30
p.m. Middleport Masonic
note from Miss Thorn thanking
her for a gift. A quiz on trees Temple sponsored by Past
was conducted by Mrs. Ernest Matrons of Evangeline Chapier
Powell. The hostess served a OES. Everyone invited. •
DREW WEBSTER Post 39,
dessert course to those named
an4 Mrs. Osby Martin, Mrs. American Legion Auxiliary,
Catherine Welsh, Mrs. George 7:30p.m. Tuesday, post home.
Hackett, Sr., Mrs. Ben Neut- Mrs . Judy Crooks, Meigs
zling, Mrs. Owen Watson, Mrs.
Olan Knapp, Mrs. Frank
Cheesebrew, Mrs. Jed Webster,
Sr., Mrs. J. M. Thornton, and a POMEROY - Mr. Eddy
Educator's schedule for the
guest, Robin campbell.
week of April 26-30 in Meigs
County:
MONDAY
9-9:30,
Rock Springs.
.
TUESDAY - 12:3().3, Southern; 3:15-3 :45, Dorcas; 4-4:15,
Spiller; 5-.1:30, Stiversville; 66:30, Portland; 7-8, Racine
Bank.
THURSDAY 9-11 :30,
Southern; 12:30-3, Rutland;
3:30-3:45, Langsville; 4-5,
Rutland Main; 5:15-6:15,
Rutland Park; 6:45-7:30, Hysell
Run; 7:45-8, Old Rt. 7.
FRIDAY - 9-9:15, Catholic
Church; 9:45-11:30, Riverview;
12-1, Reedsville ; 1 : ~. Long
Bottom ; 3:31J-4, Keno; 4:15-4:30,
Bashan,
'
EDDY'S NEW BOOKS
Roth; Phillo, Goodbye,
Columbus; Slavitt, David,
Vector; Stone, Irving, The
Passions of the Mind; Hogben,
Lancelot, Tbe Wonderful World
of Co~mtinication; Hansen,
Chadwtck, Witchcraft at

E·LECTRIC

Wilma Faye Reynolds Betrothed

22nd Session Planned

dependability, and enthusiasm so
essential to the effective leadership she
has . provided as president of the
chapter.
Married to Terry Ohlinger, federal
coordinator at Meigs High School, and
mother to three year old Jay, Coleen is
one who believes that there's something
good in every person and in every
situation. Look on the bright side of life
is her philosophy.
Coleen, Terry and Jay have a
Christian family life. They are active
members ol the Middleport Church of
Christ, where Terry is the Sunday

Gifts to be Continued

,, ,

The wrap-around
sandal that fits
like a dream

Cleanup on May 12

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MIDDLEPORT - Coleen Ohlinger
received the highest token of esteem to
be bestowed on a member of the Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority when she was
named the 1971 Girl of the Year of the
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter,
Selected by popular vote of the
membership on the basis of her overall
contributions to the sorority, Coleeri has
been presented a traveling trophy in·
scribed with her name and a Beta
Sigma Phi ring.
In making the award, the chapter
commended Coleen for her talent,

school superintendent. In June C~~:~
will be assisting with uie Bible sr
prngram.
Employed for six years at
University and two years at
Citizen's National Bank, Coleen
enjoys. staying home with her hU!ib&amp;nld
· and son.
· Her hobby is sewing and now &lt; ~
·besides dresses, suits and sportswear · -:'
for herself, her family and friends, . ;: ·.
she's.,., rking neckties for her husband.
As for collections, she says the only ; .: ·
thing she collects is "junk."
.
Coleen has always been a valued · ,
addition to casts of the Big Bend ·: ':;
Minstrel Association. She was in the · ·
eighth gra de at the Middleport school :.':
when she joined her sister, Carla, for a :·::
-dance number. In more recent years,
Coleen has assisted with the ; ·;
choreography for the shows.
., ,
She expresses a concern about :.' '
social problems but says she is convinced that in the areas of drugs and , ; ·,·:
sex there has been "too much made of i, ;,:

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softest things on two .feet!

rnESHlRE- Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Jarvis, Cheshire, are
announcing the engagement of their daughter, Donna, to Mr.
Jerry Yeauger, son of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Yeauger, also of
Cheshire. Miss Jarvis is a 1964 graduate of Kyger Creek High
School and recently returned from Dayton where she resided
for several years. Her fiance attended Middleport High
School and served two years in the U.S. Army stationed in
Germa!IY. Wedding plans are incomplete.

Community
Cornepy.Charlen_e.H@_\.

Personality,
. et'-Ofile.-~ _.

IDstal_lalio@! _1

PASSBOOK
RATE

MeipCo.Branch
Get silent. even Air-Conditioning all through
your house instead of noisy one room cooling .
Save now by trading in your old window air·
conditioner on an Amana Central System.

..

FOREMAN. &amp; ABBOn
MID,DUPOIT, 0.

The Alhono County

S1vlngs &amp; Loan Co.
· 296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

ON FORRESTAL
PT. PLEASANT - NayY
Airman Paul S. Chapman, son.
of Mr. and Mrs. Paul J.
Chapman of 131 S. Park Drive,
Point Pleasant, W. Va., is
serving abdard the attack
aircraft carrier USS Forrestal
presently visiting Barcelona,
Spain, for a two-week port call.
FUSE IN STORE
PORTSMOU'I')l, Ohio ' (UPI)
- Adevice, believed to be a live
mortar fuse , was discovered
inside the toy department of a
discount department store here
late Friday. Bomb disposal
experts from Lockbourne Air
Force Base near Columbus
were to inspect ·the device

~~~~~y

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So ... tifttt Oft4t tllpt. lr~~toN it where th.
wath i&amp;- •ftJWkrt yo11 CCI~ f"' ocitft11ale
wlrifto, ,t.f'W..I and ftfttiftt, 7-IJII*d
Woth.r dott. loll'lily tiH loath wilh ttltulor
al\d t)elicoti Mlrit~gt.

Flowirtt Htot Dfytr

41-its c'-k sunlhint frflh , '-rtllollt"'

,.,, c... ift W

MIDDLE OF THE UPPER BLOCK

POMEROY, OHIO
Open Friday Nights Ti19
Open All Day Thursdays ·

¥1011Mir IPd

dtytr,

$389 .

BAKER

FUINITUil

•••uroat,o.

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'10,--The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, April ~,1971 ,

Sorority Meets

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.~ ~ -Engagements,· ~
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Weddings

POMEROY - Joe Welker qctober. Mrs. Ann . Rupe will
will ~ttend~Buckeye BoySStaie - have charge-of a soctal ev1!nlln
under sponso•ship of the Xi May ·
Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta
Mrs. Pearl Welker gave a
Sigma Phi Sorority, it was report on Founders Day obannounced during a meeting servance at the_ Uptown~r 10
Thursday night at the home of Parkersburg Tuesday mght,
Mrs. Margaret Follrod.
Mrs. Nellie Brown ";,~~
The sorority convention to be presented the Beta Sigma 1
held at Akron was announced ring, Girl ofthe Year Award for
for May 14-16 and it was voted to the chapter: .
send four members. The visit to
Better Ltghtmg for Belter
German Village scheduled for Living was the program toptc
next month was postponed until given by Mrs . June Van
·
Vranken. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Shirley CUster
and Mrs . Roberta O'Brien.
AGREEMENT READY
Members were then invited to
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Alabor the home of Mr. and Mrs.
agreement between the Ohio Thomas D. Crow, Jr. for a
·Bureau of Corrections and the
celebration of their 25th wedOhio Civil Service Employees ding anniversary. Mrs. Crow is
was to be signed Monday, afa member of the chapter.
fecting about 1,200 correctional
officers at state penal institutions.

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Carol lynn Fruth Sets Wedding Day
MASON -Mr. and Mrs. Ralph G. Fruth, Mason, W.Va.,
annodnce the engagement and approaching marriage of
their daughter, Carol Lynn to Mr. Leonard Conrad Lyons.
Mr. Lyons is the son of Mrs. Roy V. Howell, Pomeroy, Route
2, and the late Mr. Leonard M. Lyons. The open church
wedding will be an event of Sunday, May 23, at 2:30p.m. at
the ChriSt United Methodist ChUrch, Mason. The Rev. Lewis
A. Diehl of Wilmore, Ky. will perform the double ring
ceremony.

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Donna Jarvis Plans·to Wed

COLEEN OHLINGER

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Mrs. Terrell for a St. Francis
statue with daffodils and bridal
wreath. Red ribbons were
awarded to Mrs. Heaton, Mr~.
Lewis, Mrs. Moore, and a white
·ribbon went to Mrs. Beegle.
Serving: Gallipolis
Mrs. Beegle conducted
Pomeroy,
Middleport, 0.
recreation at the conclusion of
-Mason
Co., W.Va.
the meeting , The dessert course
446·1m or '192-5560
served by the hostess carried •
out a springtime theme .
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DUDLEY R.ORISTS

Patty Ann Goeglein to Wed
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Albert E. Goeglein,
Pomeroy Rt. 3, announce the engagement of their daughter,
Patty Ann, to Airman First Class Ray R. Pickens, son of Mrs.
Elizabeth Pickens, Yorkshire Village Lane, Columbus, and
Dr. R. R. Pickens, 509 South Third Avenue, Middleport. The
bride-elect is a 1968 graduate of Eastern High School and is
presently a!tending Gallipolis Business College, Her fiance is
a 1965 graduate of Middleport High School and in 1969
graduated with a B. A. Degree from Kent State University.
He is now serving with the United States Air Force in Duluth,
Minn. A fall wedding is planned.
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WOND ERFU LLY COMFORT ABU: • ''·L ·\ l l irl ll 1

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POMEROY - Planting areas with the name of a favorite
at t~e entrance of the Beech pesticide.
Grove Cemetery and the Meigs The garden calendar was
County Infirmary will be given read by Mrs. Robert Lewis with
a spring cleanup by the Winding tips for April including
Trail Garden Club on Ma·y 12, removing winter protection,
on ly 350 '
according to plans made at a applying lime before the ground
meeting Wednesday night at the is spaded to make a looser soil
and sweeten it, opening the cold
home of Mrs. John Terrell.
Members will meet at 6:30 to frames to harden the seedlings,
do lhe work at the planting and applying liquid fertilizer in
locati ons necessary for furrows where seedlings will be
beautifica tion and better set out to . give them a quick
The luscious cotton terry sandal that hugs the
growth. The jumor garden club start.
foot beautifully ... looks as pretty on the beach
will have an Arbor Day planting Officers reports at the
as it does al home. Super-soft, heel-to-toe ioam
Thursday at the Meigs County meeting were gi~en by Mrs.
cushion gives the ultimate in walking comlort
Infirmary , A seedling packet Charles Hayes and Mrs. Lloyd
Blue, pink, white, yellow.
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from the Department of Natural Moore. The traveling prize
Sizes: 5(4-5'12 ), M(6-7 1;, ), Li8·9''' I
donated by Mrs. Cora Beegle
Resources will be used.
Arrangements were made for was won by Mrs. Thoma.
several of the members to assist Mrs. Hayes and Mrs. Thoma
at the Jaycee sponsored dance jullged the flower arfor the George Thompson rangements on "Let Us Have
MIDDLEPORT
Kidney 'Fund on April 30 at lhe Peace." Blue ribbons went to
"Where
Shoes
are Sensibly Priced"
Pomeroy junior high ·school Mrs. Allard Pratt who used a
building. Tickets for the dance Madonna and daffodils, and
~.
are being sold by the members.
Mrs. Robert Lewis gave a
~SAPEAKE ...:_ Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. Hinkle, .816
report
on the progress of the
Brow~~..;st., Chesapeake, Ohio, are announcing the
enga~1llient and approaching marriage of their daughter, fund drive sponsored by the
club and it was noted that the
Debr~Jo, to Charles 0. Murray, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
canisters in Pomeroy have
H. l\I.~Y. 1743 Thomas St., Ironton. Miss Hinkle is a senior
brought in $675 to date. The last
at M~gs High School. Mr. Murray graduated with the class
pickup will be made on Monday.
SUNSPOTS • , , a soft dot laeo jacket of acetate/nylon to wear over the
of 1967iii Ironton and is now employed by Columbia Gas of
The jars will then be used by the
lmport~nt two·pieco boy log in a now stretch lace Ban•Lon• knit of nylon/
Ohio, ColumbUs, Ohio. An August wedding is being planned.
club to collect Betty Crocker
Lycra spandex, Jaekel: 12.00 B!&gt;ylog: 24.00
·
coupons for use in securing a
kidney machine for the Holzer
Medical Center.
Seven members of the club
were guests.at a meeting of the
Walk-in Garden Club Thursday
McARTHUR - The Alpha She noted that although evening . .Six members of the
Omicron Chapter of Delta problems are more complicated club attended the regional
Kappa Gaintna held its annual now, "we should still think ol meeting held at Rutland
Saturday, Communications
recruitnie'nt tea at the McAr- them as challenges."
ALBANY - Mr. and Mrs. Roland Reynolds of Albany
Other members of the were read from Mrs. Edward
thur Elementary School on
are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage
committee
who spoke were Mizicko concerning the OAGC
April 18.
ol their eldest daughter, Wilma Faye, to Mr. John Roy
Members of the scholarship Ferne Felton, Marguerite slide contest and from Mrs.
Coleman, son of Mr . and Mrs. Bethel Coleman, Albany,
committee conducted the Gahm, Anna Turner. They John Reese regarding the
former Middleport residents. Miss Reynolds is , a 1969
program,
entitled, The reviewed changes in teaching regional meeting.
graduate ol Alexander High School and completed
Challenge of Teaching in a over the years from the one- It was noted that the May
secretarial training at the Tri.County Vocation'al School at
Changing World . Martha room school to the presenklay meeting will he held at the home
Nelsonville and the Jackson Manpower Training School. She
Husted, chairman of th~ trend to smaller classes, in- of Mrs. Charles Hayes. ·The ~
is presently employed as secretarial aide at the Albany
committl'e; said her first dividual attention, and program presented by Mrs. 1
Elementary School!
principal'said she "should think provi,sion for each student's Earl. Thoma was on "The Safe I
Use of Pesticides."She' urged I
Her finace, a 1966 graduate of Middleport High School
ot' problems .as a challenge." needs.
They emphasized that that before pesticides are used I
,(•'~
attenl!ed Ohio University and is now serving with the U. S.
children
should not be that the label be read thereby
Navy in Italy. The wedding will be an event of May 22 at the
pressured too much and ehould assuring the right one applied in
Albany Methodist Church ,
. r .: :
he given a chance to see their the right way at the right time.
own
mistakes. Mrs. Gahm. said She suggested that it is best to
SE;i~D soN BORN she started
teaching 50 years identify the insect or the disease
POMEY\OY - Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry E. Fields, Pomeroy, are ago, that the pupils of thos~ before using the insecticide.
days had brought about great Pesticides should he mixed
man
for
the
session.
Mrs.
Arannouncing
,the
birth
of
a
son,
POMEROY - The 22nd
Monday, at the Holzer Medical changes, and, "We shall see . outdoors due to fume danger
annual session of the Ohio nold Richards of Middleport, Center. The six pound, 10 ounce greater things if we stand fast in and should not be sprayed on a
Baptist Girls and the Georgia E. t·ecording secre_tary for the O_hio infant ha~ tieen named Terry the faith ."
'
windy day, Mrs. Thoma said.
Miller Guilds will be held Ge neral Baphst AssociatiOn Sc tt M , d M Fi ld h
The members and their She cautioned against smoking
0 · ..~·an
rs. e ave guests, future teachers, were while using insecticides, noting
Sunday, May 2, at the first a n d District Secretary
of the Women's Auxiliary of . another son, Jerry, Jr. Mr. and
Baptist Church in Piketon.
served refreshments from that some are flammable. She
Highlights of the state' guild the Providence Association, will Mrs. Jo~ph Ftelds and Mr. and tables decorated with candles said d,usts should be applied
.
Mrs. Charles E~kew, Pomeroy,
meeting held Oct. 16, at Akron be the guest'· speaker.
and spring flowers .
either in the early morn\ng or
The Rev. E. Hoosier is pastor are the.,grand~rents. Mr. and
will be given by Mrs. William
The business meeting was in the late afternoon.
Smith who is program chair- of the host church. There will w Mrs. Elfil~r Fields, Hartford, charge .of the president, Edith Mrs. Thoma also commented· I
remarks by the moderator of W. Va,:l".aM Mrs. Anna Dill, Hoffman.
on .slug control and suggested 1
the Providence Baptist Pomer~\is are
greatMeigs County members at- the u~ of slug bait pellets or a 1
Association and the state and grandpa: n .
tending were Lucille Smith, small cup of beer sunk into the I
SING ON MAY 2
sub-4istrict
workers.
The
girls
·
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NellieVale,RuthEuler,Martha
ground, They are attracted to I
. POMEROY :... A hymn sing
are
asked
to
wear
while
dresses
Husted, -Theodosia Frecker,. this and once inside drown, she I
, ·wml&gt;e held at,2p.m. on May 2 ar
and
their
purp'
l
e
capes.
Anna Turner, Margaret Par- said. Mrs. Thomas displayed a I
the United Faith · NonREVIVAL
COMING
sons, Roberta Wilson·, Mildred collection of agriculture
denominational Church oti the
CARPENTER - I Revival Hawley, Beatr'ice Rinehart, bulletin.
1' 1---.::;=-Pomeroy-Middleport · by-pass. MARRIAGE APPLICATIONS
.'
services
will
he
held
at
Mt.
Fay
Sauer,
and
Rosalie
Story.
Mrs.
Terrell
gave
devoliohs
1
Singers will include the Bis•ell
P1' PLEASANT ~ ' ApBrothers. The •sing will mark plica iiOn for a marriag~ license ·Union Baptist Church, two Stildenl.s attending were Donna pointing tip opportunities for
of ~ere beginning Webe~. Shelfie Turner, and service to GOfl and the need to
,lhe besiMing of a revival was filed friday In the office of miles
p.m. The Rev. Sherry Nelson.
give of tim~ willingly to help
aerviee to run tl!rough May 8, County Clerk L. W. Getty by
of Racine will be
The next . meeting will be others. Mri. Clarence Heaton
7:•
evening. The Rev. Jamie Glomn King, ,37,
Everyone is
'!/ at
Coach presided at the
witt:

POMEROY - The project of
sending gifts each month to
. Miss Constance Thorn, a
veteran at Miller Cottage,
Dayton, will ~e continued this

Bands Preparing
For Appearances
MASON - Wahama's Junior
and Senior High Bands, under
the direction of Gerald Sim·
mons , have been busy
preparing for area band
festivals.
The Junior High Band, at a
recent festival at Ravenswood,
received ratings of 1 and I plus.
The Senior High Band attended
a Regional Festival in Ravenswood Saturday, one among
p~!ely 13 bands par~cipating ,

Judges for this event were
Thomas •O'Connell and Mr,
Stacy ol Marshall University,
Nels Leonard of West Uberty
and Mr. Duvall from Bethany
College who judged site
reading .
. The annual big event will be
held in Huntington May 7 and 8.
Wahama will hold the 11th place
in the parade and Point
'Fleasant's Band will be ninth In
line.

THE SHOE BOX

Debra Jo Hinkle to Wed in August

~~\. B,ETTER,

~~~

DKG Tea is Held

I

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

:,_~ ·,.'_,·.• · Metg"S

.

&lt;:

&lt;

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Air ·Conditioning
--ONLY
Cools
5 To 6 Rooms

.ADD
AN

Our belated congratulations!
MR. AND MRS. JOSEPH W. COOK observed their golden
wedding anniversary on April 14. No big celebration; just a quiet
time of reminiscing over the events of the SO years since that
happy day in 1921 at Catlettsburg, Ky. Here to help the couple
celebrate in a small way were Mr. Cook's sisters, Mrs. William F .
Curiston ol Brighton, Mich., and Miss Edith V. COOk ol Ann Arbor .
Tbey also visited another brother, Thomas F. COOk and family ,

..

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&lt;

''''''''''''' ':':'' ':: ,::,,:,;;':'''''''..:: . . ,

Soct"al

Calen·d ar
. J:::

,._,
Community School teacher
guest speaker, Members to tur~
in Betty Crocker coupons.
WOMEN'S AUXILIARY of
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., hospital

THOUGHT YOU'D UKE to know of two former residents
who are seriously ill.
Mrs. Howard Hull; Jr., of Marengo, Route I, the former
Josephine Pickens of• Reedsville, a Meigs County native, is
seriously ill at her home. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sauer, cousins,
were there recently to visit her.
Tom Bowen has received word of the critical condition of his
father, John Bowen, at Bradenton, Fla. Mr. Bowen suffered a
heart attack and is confined to a hospital there.
.
These two we're sure would be cheered by cards from their
friends here.

$445

(Plus Installation) ·
"Central" to
Your Present
Heating System

PTA Conference Set

di~~~:o

AMERICAN Legion Auxiliary, 7:30 Tuesday at
Legion Hall. Election of officers .
WEDNESDAY
REVIVAL SERVICES
Wednesday 8 p.m. at Mt. Union
Bapti~t Church, two miles south
of Carpenter, with Rev. Charles
Norris of Racine delivering the
message.
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club,
10:'30 a.m. Wednesday for a
nature tour of the home of Mrs.
Dwight Milhoan. Luncheon will
be served there.
POMEROY Women's
Bowling Association, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday, Pomeroy Bowling
Lanes. Election of officers.
POMEROY WCTU, 2 p.m.
Wednesday, Pomeroy United
Methodist Church.

POMEROY - Luncheon
reservations for the District 16
spring conference of the Ohio
PTA Saturday at th,e Pomeroy
Elementary School will be
accepted through Monday,
Reservations are to be made
with Mrs. Clarence Norton,
Route 1, Minersville, and may
be made by telephone to 9922038.
Plans for the conference were
completed at a meeting of Mrs.
LeQ Crew, general chairman,
Mrs. Harold Lohse, District 16
director, and Mrs. Richard
Vaughan, Ohio PTA executive
board membef with committee
chairmen Thursday at the
Pomeroy school.
It was emphasized that
reservations are needed for the
luncheon only and thai all
sessions of the .conference are
open to PTA members at no
charge.
Cultural arts exhibits are to
be in place not later than 10 a.m.
at which time the judging will
begin. A feature of the day will
be the awarding of certificates
to units 'rith 100 per cent new
officer a\lendance, and 100 per
cent teacher enroUment.
At the planning session were
Mrs. Fred Lewis and Mrs.
William Swisher of the Bradbury PTA cultural arts ; Mrs.
Norton,
Syracuse
unit,
registration; Mrs . Betty
Longstreth, Salem Center PTA,

Salem; Holzer, Hans W.,
Window of the Past; Schimel,
John L., How to be an
Adolescent and Survive; Youth
in TurmoiL
Sutton, Ann, New Worlds for
Wildlife; Ritchie, Barbara, The
Roil Report; Hampden, John,
Endless Treasure; Scott, Alice
Howard, The Giant Picture
Dictionary for Boys and Girls;
Broudy, RoseL., Modern Math
Made
E~sy;
Branley,
Franklyn, Floating and
Sinking ; Hyde, Margaret 0.,
Exploring Earth and Space;
Scott, Frances, Exploring
Ocean Frontiers; Brandenberg,
Allki, My Visit to the
Dinosaurs; Gray, William,
What We Find When We Look at
Molds.
Hudson, Robert G., Nature's
Nursery: baby birds; Hyde,
Margaret 0., Your Skin; Barr,
George, Young Scientist and the
Dentist; Shannon, Terry, Ride
the Ice Down!; Dwiggins, Don, _
Spaceship Ea th; Rounds,
. Glen, The Strawberry Roan;
Boyer, Sophia A., Gifts from the
Greeks; Frei, Hans, Spain;
Gemming, Elizabeth, Getting to
Know New England; Jensen,
, Joan M., The Price of
. YOU SAVE ~
Vigilance; Bauer, Helen,
Hawaii, the Aloha .State.
DOES MAKE A
Cleaver, Eldridge, Soul on
Ice, biography, and Rolllns,
H.,
Black
Charlemae
Troubadour:
Langston
Hughes,
We pay you to save
(and the pay is good). biography.

decorations; Mrs. June Epple,
Chester,
greeters
and
hospitality; Mrs. Gene Mitch,
Pomeroy, coffee hour ; Mrs.
Edward Kennedy, · Salisbury,
publications; and Mrs. Bob
Hoeflich, conference publicity
chairman.

50th Anniversary Celebrated
RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Mace were honored
recently with an open house celebration In observance of
their 50th wedding anniversary. The couple was married
March 'll, 1921 in Kanawha County. Mrs. Mace was the
former Ethel Durham, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.
Meken Durham of Clay,
They are the parents of ·Alvin Mace and Mrs. James
Means of Charleston, W. Va.; Mrs. Harold Ramsburg of
Middleport; Mrs. Don Madden of Columbus, and have 22
grandchtldren and 20 great.ttrandchlldren. For the past 12
years, Mr. and Mrs. Mace have resided in Ohio.

Playlet in Program
MIDDLEPORT - A playlet Mrs. John Werner, Sanborn
by the women of the B. H. Society president. Mrs. Briggs
Sanborn Missionary Society of Kirby of the Cheshire church,
the Middleport First Baptist association vice president, will
Church will be a feature of the give devotions and special
installation service or · the Rio music will be presented by Mrs.
Grande Baptist Association Robert Kuhn of the Pomeroy
Missionary Society to be held Church,
,
Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the Mrs. Simons will'conduct the
Middleport Church.
.installation ceremony for the
Mrs. Manning Kloes Is new officers and the theme
directing the playlet with Mrs. hymn, "They'll Know We Are
Tony Fowler, Mrs. Paul smart, Christians by Our Love" will be
Mrs. E. L. Hughes, Mrs. led by Mrs. Charles Searles who
Elizab~th Slaven, Mrs. Ullian will be installed as president.
McGee, Mrs. Beulah White, Mrs. Edward Simpson of the
Mrs. Charles Simons, Mrs. Racine Church will have the
Pearl Hoffman, Mrs. Fred closing prayer .
Lewis, Mrs. Robert Richardson, Hostesses for the social hour
Mrs . Fred Hoffman, and Mrs. will be l'ylrs. Werner, Mrs.
Richard Owen taking the parts. Owen, and Mrs. Hoffman.
Mrs. Gerald Anthony wlll be
at the organ for the !lervlce, and
the welcome wm be extended by

Lesson on Psalm 23

Rummage Sale Set By Sewing Club
POMEROY - .A rUJI1I1lage . for the next meeting. · Mrs.
sale to be held May 4 and Sin the Larry Wehrung, president, had
Smith building, Second St., charge of ihe buelnesa aeuion.
Pomeroy, wlis plinned during a Others attending were Mrs.
recent meeting llf the Sew-Bile· James Neutzling, Mrs. pan
Sewing Club held at the home of Collins, Mrs. Bill McDaniels,
Mrs. Ronald Browning. Mrs. Mrs. Charles Hoffman, and
Don Mullen was co-hostess.
Mrs. Elza Gilmore, Jr.
Thank-you notes were read
from Mrs. Raymond Batey,
Mrs. Edward Wells, Mrs.
OPERETTA READY
Willard Boyer, and Mrs. Don
MIDDLEPORT - Bradbury
McKnight. Mrs. Batey and Mrs.
Flo Strickland will he hostesses fourth and fifth graders will
present
the
operetta,
"Mulligan's Magic" at 7:30
p.m. on Thursday and Friday
MAYORS TO MEET .
COLUMBUS (UP!)- MQyors nights. Mrs. Phyllis Hackett is
of seven major Ohio cities will tlo~ director.
meet next Tuesday with leaders
of the General Assembly here to
discuss additional aid to urban
areas. Officials· from Cincinnati, Columbus, Cleveland,
Toledo, Akron, Youngstown and
Dayton were to attend the
meeting, set up by House
Speaker Charles F. Kurfess, at
the request of Mayor Willis
Gradison Jr., Cfucinnatl.

POMEROY- A lesson on the
23fd Psalm wa5 given by Mrs.
Thomas Bentz and Miss Frieda
Uevlng at a mee.tlng of the
Willing Workers ClQa 'I1wraday night at the home of Mrs.
Eldon.Weeks.
Participating in the program
were Mrs. Ben Buck, Mrs.
Wllllam Airson, Mrs. Ethel
Smith, Mrs. Herbert Dixon,.
Mrs. PJ!ul Frick, and Mrs.
James Will. Mrs. Beulah VIterbach had prayer. Umbrellas
were ordered for sale by the
-class. A potluck supper was
enjoyed by those named and
Mrs. Thomas Bowen and Patty
Edwards, guests, and Mrs.
Edward Bowen and Mrs. Carl
Moore.

at Baker's • • •
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EQUIPMENT OPERATORS •.•

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THINGS HAPPEN IN THREES, they say, so, perhaps the
Charles Eskew family can breathe a sigh of relief. Last Monday
three of .the family were hospitalized. Mrs. Eskew and her
daughter, Barbara Eskew Fields, are now home and Mr. Eskew
appears to j)e on the road to recovery. Barbara, incidentally,
came home with a bouncing baby boy.

Eddy's Schedule And New Titles

WHOLE HOUSE
I

POMEROY -We couldn't be happier about 'the responSe to
the recipe column "Fun with Foods" started this week!
Our success in keeping the new weekly feature going will
depend on your interest and, of CO!lfSC, on your willingness to
share your secrets for good food. So .... keep those recipes c~min'.
Either mail them to me or drop them by the office.

MISS BESS SANBORN marlted up her 85th birthday anniversary Saturday in · a hospi\al room at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. She is confined there lor treatment of a hip injury sufit."
Coleen views life with a very · ·.! fered in a fall at her home. Bess is a "pillar" of .the Middleport
positive, but a very realistic, attitude, ':". Heath United Methodist Church and for over half a century taught
living each day to its fullest. She con- -:\ in !he Sunday School.
veys the impression of a well-adjusted ·,,,
happy young woman, content in her
ROSE REYNOLDS'last month completed 50 years with the
role as wife and mother.
· · Citizens National Bank. That's a long time with one employer.

year by the Past Presidents
Club of the American Legion
MONDAY
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
MEIGS BAND Boosters, 8 p.
39.
m. Monday, Meigs High School.
Meeting Wednesday night at
GROUP
11, Women's
the home of Mrs. Ray Fox, Association, 7:30Monday night,
Clifton, gift month assignmenl.s home of Mrs. William Morris.
were tnade . The club will ' Mrs. Dwight Wallace to have
continue to send gifts at the Bible study; Mrs. Paul
Christmas and on Miss Thorn's Haptonstall, the devotions.
birthday,
TUESDAY
Mrs. Ellen Couch presided at
RACINE American Legion
the meeting which opened with Auxiliary Tuesday 8 p.m.
the pledge to the flag and the Legion Hall. Members to bring
Lord's Prayer in unison. Mrs. : Red Cross money collections,
Gerald Wildermuth gave old hose, old ties and ribbons
devotions using meditations, which will be sent to blind
" Increasing Delight", veterans at Dayton Veterans
"Thoughts of a Spring Mor- Hospital. Junior Auxiliary to
ning", and "Blessed is He". meet at same ti~e.
Prayers for those troubled were
POMEROY CHAPTER 186
given in a prayer chircle.
OES Tuesday 7:30p.m. at hall.
Practice for inspection.
PRODUCTS party Tuesday,
Mrs. Charles Sauer read ~
7:30
p.m. Middleport Masonic
note from Miss Thorn thanking
her for a gift. A quiz on trees Temple sponsored by Past
was conducted by Mrs. Ernest Matrons of Evangeline Chapier
Powell. The hostess served a OES. Everyone invited. •
DREW WEBSTER Post 39,
dessert course to those named
an4 Mrs. Osby Martin, Mrs. American Legion Auxiliary,
Catherine Welsh, Mrs. George 7:30p.m. Tuesday, post home.
Hackett, Sr., Mrs. Ben Neut- Mrs . Judy Crooks, Meigs
zling, Mrs. Owen Watson, Mrs.
Olan Knapp, Mrs. Frank
Cheesebrew, Mrs. Jed Webster,
Sr., Mrs. J. M. Thornton, and a POMEROY - Mr. Eddy
Educator's schedule for the
guest, Robin campbell.
week of April 26-30 in Meigs
County:
MONDAY
9-9:30,
Rock Springs.
.
TUESDAY - 12:3().3, Southern; 3:15-3 :45, Dorcas; 4-4:15,
Spiller; 5-.1:30, Stiversville; 66:30, Portland; 7-8, Racine
Bank.
THURSDAY 9-11 :30,
Southern; 12:30-3, Rutland;
3:30-3:45, Langsville; 4-5,
Rutland Main; 5:15-6:15,
Rutland Park; 6:45-7:30, Hysell
Run; 7:45-8, Old Rt. 7.
FRIDAY - 9-9:15, Catholic
Church; 9:45-11:30, Riverview;
12-1, Reedsville ; 1 : ~. Long
Bottom ; 3:31J-4, Keno; 4:15-4:30,
Bashan,
'
EDDY'S NEW BOOKS
Roth; Phillo, Goodbye,
Columbus; Slavitt, David,
Vector; Stone, Irving, The
Passions of the Mind; Hogben,
Lancelot, Tbe Wonderful World
of Co~mtinication; Hansen,
Chadwtck, Witchcraft at

E·LECTRIC

Wilma Faye Reynolds Betrothed

22nd Session Planned

dependability, and enthusiasm so
essential to the effective leadership she
has . provided as president of the
chapter.
Married to Terry Ohlinger, federal
coordinator at Meigs High School, and
mother to three year old Jay, Coleen is
one who believes that there's something
good in every person and in every
situation. Look on the bright side of life
is her philosophy.
Coleen, Terry and Jay have a
Christian family life. They are active
members ol the Middleport Church of
Christ, where Terry is the Sunday

Gifts to be Continued

,, ,

The wrap-around
sandal that fits
like a dream

Cleanup on May 12

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MIDDLEPORT - Coleen Ohlinger
received the highest token of esteem to
be bestowed on a member of the Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority when she was
named the 1971 Girl of the Year of the
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter,
Selected by popular vote of the
membership on the basis of her overall
contributions to the sorority, Coleeri has
been presented a traveling trophy in·
scribed with her name and a Beta
Sigma Phi ring.
In making the award, the chapter
commended Coleen for her talent,

school superintendent. In June C~~:~
will be assisting with uie Bible sr
prngram.
Employed for six years at
University and two years at
Citizen's National Bank, Coleen
enjoys. staying home with her hU!ib&amp;nld
· and son.
· Her hobby is sewing and now &lt; ~
·besides dresses, suits and sportswear · -:'
for herself, her family and friends, . ;: ·.
she's.,., rking neckties for her husband.
As for collections, she says the only ; .: ·
thing she collects is "junk."
.
Coleen has always been a valued · ,
addition to casts of the Big Bend ·: ':;
Minstrel Association. She was in the · ·
eighth gra de at the Middleport school :.':
when she joined her sister, Carla, for a :·::
-dance number. In more recent years,
Coleen has assisted with the ; ·;
choreography for the shows.
., ,
She expresses a concern about :.' '
social problems but says she is convinced that in the areas of drugs and , ; ·,·:
sex there has been "too much made of i, ;,:

·. :,

softest things on two .feet!

rnESHlRE- Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Jarvis, Cheshire, are
announcing the engagement of their daughter, Donna, to Mr.
Jerry Yeauger, son of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Yeauger, also of
Cheshire. Miss Jarvis is a 1964 graduate of Kyger Creek High
School and recently returned from Dayton where she resided
for several years. Her fiance attended Middleport High
School and served two years in the U.S. Army stationed in
Germa!IY. Wedding plans are incomplete.

Community
Cornepy.Charlen_e.H@_\.

Personality,
. et'-Ofile.-~ _.

IDstal_lalio@! _1

PASSBOOK
RATE

MeipCo.Branch
Get silent. even Air-Conditioning all through
your house instead of noisy one room cooling .
Save now by trading in your old window air·
conditioner on an Amana Central System.

..

FOREMAN. &amp; ABBOn
MID,DUPOIT, 0.

The Alhono County

S1vlngs &amp; Loan Co.
· 296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

ON FORRESTAL
PT. PLEASANT - NayY
Airman Paul S. Chapman, son.
of Mr. and Mrs. Paul J.
Chapman of 131 S. Park Drive,
Point Pleasant, W. Va., is
serving abdard the attack
aircraft carrier USS Forrestal
presently visiting Barcelona,
Spain, for a two-week port call.
FUSE IN STORE
PORTSMOU'I')l, Ohio ' (UPI)
- Adevice, believed to be a live
mortar fuse , was discovered
inside the toy department of a
discount department store here
late Friday. Bomb disposal
experts from Lockbourne Air
Force Base near Columbus
were to inspect ·the device

~~~~~y

......
.

-

••
og

So ... tifttt Oft4t tllpt. lr~~toN it where th.
wath i&amp;- •ftJWkrt yo11 CCI~ f"' ocitft11ale
wlrifto, ,t.f'W..I and ftfttiftt, 7-IJII*d
Woth.r dott. loll'lily tiH loath wilh ttltulor
al\d t)elicoti Mlrit~gt.

Flowirtt Htot Dfytr

41-its c'-k sunlhint frflh , '-rtllollt"'

,.,, c... ift W

MIDDLE OF THE UPPER BLOCK

POMEROY, OHIO
Open Friday Nights Ti19
Open All Day Thursdays ·

¥1011Mir IPd

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$389 .

BAKER

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'

Engineer Placed ~n Board

in foreground, are Evelyn Woo&lt;ls, Miss Congeniality; Regina
Ann Hesson, second runner-up; Miss Thomas, Rebecca
Gibnore, first runner-up and Addie Mae Rhodes, retiring
Miss Mason County. In the background are Paul Watkins,
Jaycee president, and Charles Eshenaur, pageant chairman
for the Jaycees.

RECEIVED TROPHIES - Margaret Catherine (Kitti)
Thomas, new Miss Mason County, third from left, Is flanked
by other trophy winners, the retiring Miss Mason County and
Scholarship' Pageant offtcials of the Point Pleasant Area
Jaycee~ after she was crowned wlrmer Friday night in the
Point Pleasam High School auditoriwn. Pictured, from left

PT. PLEASANT - Lenzie J.
Hedrick, area superintendent.
for -the ~PQ;~~chian Power
Company, was announced
Friday as a new appointee· to
the Board of Trustees of Mason
County Hospital, Inc. (Pleasant
Valley Hospital).
Hedrick will complete the
unexpired term on the board
that was left vacant by the
recent retirement of H. A.
(Ham)
Johnson,
Point
Pleasant. Johnson retired from
the board after having served
since the hospital board was
chartered in 1954.
A ll&lt;)tive of Glady, W. Va.,
Hedrick has been employed by
the Appalachian Power Com.
pany in Point Pleasant since
1963. He resides at 2403 MI.
Vernon.
A graduate of Elkins High
School, he received his elec·
trical engineering degree at the
Chicago Technical College.
He attends the Point Pleasant
Presbyterian Church, past
president of the Point Pleasant.
Mason County Chamber of
Commerce, vice president of
the Point Pleasant Rotary Club,
member of Minturn Lodge No.
19 AF &amp; AM and is a 32nd
Degree Scottish Rite Mason.

PT. PLEASANT - Tears of
joy .flowed from the eyes of
pretty Margaret Catherine
(Kilt!) Thomas, a Point
Pleasant High School senior,
when she was crowned Miss
Mason County at a Scholarship
Pageant, Friday night.
Kitti Thomas, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. E. W. Thomas of Point
Pleasant, was presented the
winning trophy and a $250
scholarship before a crowd
estimated at over 500persons in
the PPHS auditorium. She was
crowned by Addie Mae Rhodes,

Point Pleasant, the retiring
Miss Mason County.
First runner-up, and winner
of a $100 scholarship award,
was
Rebecca
Gilmore,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs·.
Robert Giimore of New Haven.
Regena
Ann
Hesson,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Hesson, of New Haven,
won the second runner-up honor
and Evelyn Sue Woods the Miss
Congeniality trophy.
Miss Woods is a daughter of
Rev. and Mrs. Bobby Woods of
Point Pleasant.

The brown-haired new Miss
Mason County offered a
creative dance and song for her
talent act in the competition.
Rebecca did a tap dance
routine for her talent presentation and Regena played the
guitar arid sang. Both · are
Wahama High seniors.
Other contestants and their
talent presentations were Joan
E. Fruth, classic'! ballet;
Linda Lee Shadle. uneven

parallel bars; Diane Karen
Turner, creative dance with
baton; Martha Lynn Harman, a
song and Deborah Lynn
Brennan, dancing. Miss Woods
did a sketch in the talent
competition.
Master of Ceremonies for the
evening was Robert L. Siler
while Mrs. Paul E. Wagner
provided the fashion commentary.

OPEN SUNDAY 1 TO 6 P.M.

. S HOUR RUG SALE!,

SHAG AREA RUGS
SIZE 27X45
REGULAR $2.87

SI 1ZE 24 X 36
REGULAR $1.87

94c
ALL 3 STORES ARE OPEN!
•

PT. PLEASANT- GALLIPOLIS- MASON

·0%

No, Virginia, Kermit Walton Is not rolling out the barrel.
Those 55-gallon antiqued barrels being carried into Walton's
New York Clothing House this week are a part of the new
interior decorating underway at the men's clothing store. A
rustic atmosphere Is being created in the establishment .
through the use of barrels, boat anchors, chains and other
accessories carrying out a river theme. Joe Crandel, left,
designed the new interior which includes shingled roof
overhangs on each side of the store. At right is Chuck Bartels.

OFF I SUNDAYONLY •: J
RETAIL PRICE

omens Spring Sk ·
REGULAR $1.94------$1.55

Columbia NL Records Gains

REGULAR $2.94------$2.34

JERRY

CASTING

CANS

REEL

1
-

Famous US. Women Ski Team Diet
During the non·snow off season

the U.S. Women's Alpine Ski Team
members go on the "Ski Team" diet
to lose 20 pounds m two weeks.

That's right - 20 pounds in 14 days!

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 24 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W.
Myers, Gallipolis, a son.
Discharges
Mrs. Tommy Lee Adkins and
daughter, Mrs. Philip E. Bali
and son, William W. Brabham,
Mrs. Tyrone Brewer and
daughter, Mrs. Geneva M.
Cabiish, Roger David Chapman, Mrs. Jerry E. Fields and
son, Infant Female Fitch,
Robert E. Gerlach, Rev .
Herbert L. Grate, Mr. St. Clair
Hili, Mrs. Roger W. Hoover,
Mrs. Ovid E. Jayjohn, Edward
L. Lafferty , Mrs. Ethel
Maynard, Mrs. Patricia Ann
Maynard , Mischelle A.
Meadows, Mrs. Ivan D.
Mulford, Mrs. John H. Robinson
and son, Mrs. Ray L. Saunders,
Mrs. Ronald D. S!eed . and
daughter, Michael Stewart,
Mrs. Claude E. Tackett, Mrs.
Cecil L. Terry, Levi M. Tyo,
Mrs. John M. Wanko, Mrs. J.
Harold Webb, and Mrs. Cecil H.
Blan.ton.
Glen A. Adams, Mrs. Edward
Blankenship, Mrs. Robert L.
Bragg, Mrs. Stanley I.
Browning, Mrs. John E. Denny,
Clay E. Fellure, Karen Sue
Grogory , Mrs. Gordon P.
Harlow, Miss Karen A. Heazlit,
Mrs. Russell E. Kennedy,
Pamela King, Margo E. Martin,
Virgil May 0, Clarence J. Me·
Neal, Mrs. Froud W. Mercer,
Mrs. David R. Mitchell, Nor.
man Lee Mitchell, Mrs. Ada
Mullins, Mrs. Anthony M. Nardi
and son, Elmer U. Patrick, Paul
J. Pauley, Mrs. Doyle T.. Shuler,
Mrs. George H. Smith, Claude
W. Souders, Mrs . Clifford
Stapleton, Mrs. Zeida C. Wells,
Mrs. Myrtle J. West, James 0.
White, Mrs. Herman Will, Mrs.

NEW BOARD MEMBER - l.enzie Hedrick, right, is
congratulab,d for being a new member of the board of
trustees of Mason County Hospital, Inc., doing business as
Pleasant Valley Hospital, by Hospital Administrator James
Farley.

\

Richard L. Will, Mrs. William
T. Winter, Jr·., Hazel A. Cade,
and Gregory S. Knipp.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Don Gorby,
L8ngsville; Harry Greathouse,
Racine; Guy Bolen, Pomeroy;
Eugene Eskew, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED · - Effie
White, Fred Leifheit, Virginia

'

E'1ow- Of ~P-ower
'

•

'

By ARNOLD B. SAWJSLAK
WASHING'I'ON (UP!) -President
Nixon wants the federal government to
give '$16 billion to the states counties and
ciUes to see If they can soive their own
probl'ems.
That is a lot of cash, even for the federal
government. But the idea behihd it called revenue sharing-is what makes
Nl,xon's plan controversial and important. :
Its purpose is to reverse the 40-year-old
flow of power toward Washington and
away from state capitals and city halls. ,
This is also what makes the outcome of
the revenue sharing debate far more
important than the outlay of $16 billion. It
just could decide who will really be run·
ning the country in the decades ahead.
That ,mar sound a bit ponderous, but the

to ~Washington

fact is that Nixon is trying to do what
Republican and other conservative orators
have. been talking about ever since Herbert C. Hoover' failed to find the corner
prosperity was just around.
Government Rushes In
It was in the Hoover era that the federal
government rushed into the problem·
solving vacuum left by depression bred
paralysis of private enterprise and state
and local gove,·mnent. Power flowed
steadily toward Washington for the next
four decades.
Nixon wants to reverse the current, to
give state and local governments the
authority to make decisions and the money
to back them up. His allies in this effort are
not only the traditional conservatives. Demands for dispersing government power

also are coming from mayors and
governors of the most liberal stripe, from
minority grogps who not long ago pleaded
for federal ihtervention and from youthful
and·academic critics of the system, who
see the death of democratic processes,
civil liberties and humanitarian capacity
in the growth of big government.
There also remains plenty of opposition
to the id•a behind revenue-6haring. What
are now called "old style" liberals, including many of the most powerful men in
Congress, see the whole concept as a
retreat.from the hard-won proposition that
the national government must address
itself to national problems. Nor are they
wiJiing to concede an automatic bonus in
efficiency or responsiveness in government at "the grass roots." To them,

'

The second part is "special revenue
revenue sharing foreshadows a return to
the governmental jungle, where only the sharing." It WO!lld wrap up a)lout 130
existing specific purpose federal aid
powerful can survive.
The key to returning power to states and programs and divide the $10 billion they
now pay out, plus $1 billion in new funds,
localities is money.
among six broad areas -education, law
President Proposes Program
The President has proposed a twOi)art, enforcement, manpower training , trans$16 billion program to "start power and porta'tion, urban development and rural
resources flowing back from Washington development.
Here, the states and localities would
to the states and communities, and more
important to the 'people all across ' have to spend the money within the area of
activity for which it is earmarked. But .
America.''
The first partis called "general revenue there would be none of the president
sharing." To start, it. would provide $5 requirements that each dollar be focused
billion in new tax revenues for state and on a specific project, such as buying school
local governments to spend as they saw fit. books, building water mains or training
Any legitimate government expense, from lathe operators or that states and localities
garbagemen's pay to a new governor's put up their own funds to match the federal
aid.
mansion, would' be permitted.

Hubbard, Darrell Mitchell,
Ullian Duffy.
PLEASANT VALLEY
ADMISSIONS: Hazel Selby,
Apple .Grove; Cecil Sines,
Phillip Harper, Point Pleasant;
Dell Talbott, Portland, Ohio;
Wirt Robins, Sam Simpkins,
Point Pleasant.
DISCHARGES: Mrs. Harold
Darst,
Mrs.
William
Luckeydoo, Mrs. Gerald
Higginbotham, David Lips·
comb, Phyllis Mulford, Mrs.
Dewey Ferguson, Cecil Dean,
Karen Water, Georgia McCoy,
Mrs. Madge Neal, Linda Marr.

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$16 Billion, mostly from exi..~ting
Agencies, would go to stateS, cities and
Counties for problem solving at home,·
Settling who will be "¥'ning the country
.The proposal is due to be heard later this
session by the House Ways and Means
Committee, whose chairman, Rep. Wilbur
D. Mills, D-Ark., and seni!ll' Republican,
Rep. John W. Byrnes, R·Wis., already are
on the record in opposition. That does not
kill the plan, but it certainly pl&amp;kes it look
sick.
' The money for general revenue-sharing
would come out of screalled new tax
revenues -additional funds generated by
increased personal and corporate incomes
that have not already been claimed for
some existing federal program.
1.3 Per Cent of Income
The general revenue.,haring fund each
year would represent 1.3 per cent of total
taxable income in the United States, and
(Continued on Page 14)

VOL VJ NO. 13

SU~DAY,

PAGE 13

APHIL 25, 1971

otter

ar

SAIGON (UPI)- U.S. t!ayy
warplanes chased a North
Vietnamese MIG21 fighterbomber back to its base in one
of five air incidents reported
Saturday that marked the
,. . RUTLAND - The bell •..
busiest round of air action in
!.;.; rang. The siren sounded. ••··
Indochina
in more than 21&gt;
•••• For awhile this com· ,,
years. Seven guided missiles
munity thought It bad a ••
were fired at American planes:
On the ground, in South
Vietnam, a Communist booby
trap explosion killed seven
•r dev1ce lhatlor some reason .••.• Israeli Premier Golda Meir
American soldiers and wounded
l••• blew Its cool.
;•,. 'd Sat d th t Se ta of
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Be· cards saying "Vietnam to the i ·At 7:18p.m. an alarm In Di 531
ur. a! a ere ry ,
23. It was the worst such
tw
200 000
d 300 000 Vietnamese" and "End Cana· ••·: th p
lfl
f } State Wtlham P. Roger I
incident
in more than a year
e~fl 'te tean ho ting da'scomplicity."
k she if;r;er:y 1°c c~ 0 r,; plannedfirsthandlookatlsrael
and involved men of the
you u pro s rs s u
.
.
I'
.,. . er
o er . ar· •:; may change his mind about
0
"Out now· Out now·" J'ammed
In Washmgton, the c1ty P ICe ••••· tenbach rigged to sound off ·• •
.
.
America! Division, a unit which
'
' ·
· h d
te h Id t te tali e 't
•·•'• urgmg a w1thdrawal from the
has been earmarked for withthe slopes of Cap1tol Htll ea
rs ~of ~.a n th v •f If disturbed In lbe Rutland J territory it captured from the
drawal under the program to
Saturday and roared when told c200
row000 ~~Aun\ li ~ore t ~~ .;.. Branch of the Pome.roy t Arabs in the 1967 Middle East
bring U.S. tr~ops home.
that only Congress -not the
, ·
po 1ce eu enan
••:•• National Bank did JUSt ~;•
White House -can end Ameri· the street, h~lfway through the ii that. Also, a siren here I war.
U.S. headquarters said two
Both Mrs. Meir and Foreign
American helicopters were shot
ca 's decade of involvement in march, esllma~ "at le~st ·. ··: rigged to go off sl·.
Minister
Abba
Eban
told
radio
the Indochina War.
250,000 . people. A spec.lSI .•.'' multaneously did Its .;.;•
down Friday, without loss of
In an antiwar demonstr~tion evaluat10n ~mt of the Jusllce {i duty.
•••• interviewers they ·welcomed a
life, including one in the middle
visit
by
Rogers,
the
man
whose
of the A Shau Valley along the
unparalleled in size at least Depa~tment s Internal Secur!ty ;: In, no time, Deputy •. :.
peace
plan
calls
for
an
aimost
since Nov. 15, 1969, a vast DiVISIOn quoted one pohce ;·.. Sheriff Jim Soulsby, Bruce •··•
Laotian border where U.S. and
South Vietnamese troops have
throng Jed by active duty report of more than 300,000 '••: Davis, Rutland marshal; · • total Israeli pullback from
Arab territory.
been reported planning a major
soldiers and ooarers of the demonstrators.
't Mike Zerkle, Middleport •· occupied
Eban
said
Israel
will
use
the
Stars and Stripes and the Viet
Four dozen scheduled speak· ) pollee officer, and William L.
offensive.
Cong tricolor too.k 21&gt; hours to ers mounted the platform ••:• Hobstetter, president of tbe :••. occasion of Rogers' visit early
UUle Contact
in
May
to
tell
him
it
will
never
march from the Washington halfway up to the west lr?~t of .:• bank, Investigated.
::
Saigon headquarters said U.S.
allow
Egyptian
or
Soviet
troops
Monument up Pennsylvania the . Capitol.. As a brdhant • •• There was no sign of a ,,.
trqops may abandon the A Shau
MISS POPPY TRIO - '111e Junior American Legion Auxiliary of Drew Webeter Post 39,
Avenue to the Capitol.
spnng mormng turned mto a : robber, nor any obvious \ across the Suez Canal under
campaign while other milita(y
Pomeroy, was represented by this Miss Poppy Trio at the District 8 convention held Saturday
The demonstrators -mostly cool, blustery afternoon, they ;.,. reason why the alarm · ·• partial peace agreement. Any
sources said the embryonic
accord, he said, must mean the
Y,Oung white and long-haired declared that the United States . ·• sotmded.
at Wilkesville. They are, left to right, Ida Casci, Jtmior Miss Poppy; Jennifer Couch, Miss
offensive may have been
Ii!lsseti within._)\' block ,of thtt ,!,Dust wait no l~ger ~get out · ·
.,
\ war would not resume .
Poppy Mascot; and Pam Powers, LitUe Miss Poppy.
'
largely a smoke scr,een. Pre&amp;' ,
In
Cairo,
Egyptian
President
White House grounds, but the of an Asia~ Ian!! :war. .
•••.. •··•·•· •· .............. •••• ....;.:••••·•••••'-'•·•••· . •· ...
ident Nguyen Van Thieu said
Anwar Sadat conferred with
Nixons were out of town.
Harold G1bbons, mternat10nal
last week that the offensive had
Soviet Ambassador Vladimir
.Looking over the crowd below vice president of the Teamsters
started but field reports told
Vinogradov Saturday in the
that filled the five block-wide Union, drew lusty cheers that
0
only of reconnaissance opera·
wake of Rogers' announcement
mall and spilled over ·onto echoed off locked government .
lions with major uniis held in
he would visit Israel, Egypt,
Pennsylvania buildings when he declared that
eight-lane
reserve. There has been no
Jordan, Lebanon and Saudi
significant·contact.
Avenue, Rep. Bella Abzug, D- "We must now turn to the
Arabia early in May.
By PETER J. SHAW
Scientific sources in Moscow that the several Soyuz ships
N.Y., remarked over loudspeak· Congress for a fi11&lt;1i solution to
U.S. headquarters reported
At the same time Egyptian MOSCOW (UP!)- The Soviet said there will be more manned will dock nose-in to the Salute,
ers:
the Vietnam War, not the White
one American plane damaged
Foreign Ministry officials re· Union's three-man Soyuz 10 launches-perhaps as many as forming a giant cartwheel with in the busy air action Friday,
"It looks like everybody is House."
viewed reports that the main spacecraf~ Saturday rendez. three more-to join in the ·Salute as the hub.
here today except Richard
Said Rep. John Conyers, D- .
denying Communist claims that
aim of Rogers visit would be voused with the unmanned complex space construction The entire mission, they said,
Nixon. He's in retreat in Camp Mich., "Unless we translate this
two aircraft were shot down.
the
reopening
of
the
Suez
may
continue
for
weeks.
Salute
satellite
and
prepared
to
project.
David. He's in retreat from the into political action, this will be
The action ranged over both
The Soyuz 10 crew was the North Vietnam and Laos where
American people."
another march to an empty COLUMBUS (UP!)- A man, Canal. But in Washington, dock for construction of the The Tass report said that
after the rendezvous between most experienced ever assem· Communist antiaircraft de·
Across the continent in San Capitol. Richard Nixon must go who was not immediately officials said that while Rogers first orbital space station.
wants
to
aid
the
delicate
efforts
The
official
Soviet
news
Soyuz
10 and Salute "scielltific ble~. Shatalov and Yeliseyev
Francisco, where city fathers .... Richard Nixon must go."
identified, was shot and killed to reopen the canal, he has agency Tass said the cosmon· and technical experiments were had been in orbit twice before lenses were reported stiffening
had declared "a day of pullic
Mrs. Corella King said today as he attempted to hold up
in an attempt to cut the
little hope of achieving such a auts piloted their ship to join conducted and work was done the current mission. Rukavishdemonstration to end the war in America is in "moral outrage" a grocery store here.
effectiveness
of American air
goal
during
his
Middle
East
the
Salute
in
orbit
and
carry
a
for
linkup
and
undocking
of
the
nikov
was
making
his
first
Vietnam," police estimated that and appealed for "this nation to
raids on the Ho Chi Minh Trail
Police said the man was shot
series of tests on linkup, manned spaceship and the flight, but the 39-year-old ·test - Hanoi's military lifeline in
70,000 persons led by Gls and· pay tribute to my martyred by Skidmore Robinson, 34, an swing.
Mrs. Meir took aim on undockingandcommunications. orbital station:" The cosmon- engineer was described as a
Vietnam veterans marched husband by withdrawing all employe of the store.
Indochina.
Rogers'
call
for
an
Israeli
After
the
tests
the
cosmonaut
auts,
it
added,
felt.
well.
on
space
stations.
specialist
seven miles from the water· troops from Vietnam by Aug.
Give Detalls
The man entered the store
No Advance Details
front to Golden Gate Park.
28, 1971, the anniversary of with a sawed off shotgun and withdrawal and his statement crew of Vladimir Shatalov,
Communiques in Saigon gave
Ottawa Delegates Gather
Martin Luther King's 'I Have a ordered clerk George Warren to last month that her nation Alexei Yeliseyev and Nikolai Following their usual pattern
these details:
would be better served by Rukavishnikov settled down for the Soviets . gave no advance
And to display their "solidari· Dream' speech."
- Two U.S. Navy F4 Phantom
open the cash drawer. Police international guarantees than a rest period while their ship details of the mission. But
ty" with U.S. demonstrators,
Mrs. King said: "Let us said Robinson was in a back
jets on a bombing mission in
about 400 delegates to a New declare that the war is over. Let room and heard him ask for the by geographical barriers or was out of radio contact with scientific sources said the
Laos between Mu Gia Pass and
land acquisition.
the Soviet mission control muitiple.,hip project, the most
Democratic party convention in us declare that the wars on money.
Kan Karai Pass sighted a
"We cannot be called upon to center in Baikonur.
complicated ever attempted by
Ottawa, gathered outside the poverty, hunger and repression
North Vietnamese MIG21 and
The gunm~n was shot five do this, with our surroundings
Friday Launch '
the Soviets, could involve as COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov. pursued it to the Quang Lang
civic Arena· and waved pia· are in force."
times with a .38 caliber such as 1hey are and our The men bl~sted aloft earl} many as five ships and seven
John J. Gilligan announced airfield only 150 ~Diles south of
revolver.
neighbors-who have never, in Friday to join the Salute ship, · or more cosmonauts.
Saturday night the appointment Hanoi. American planes had
(Continued on Page 14)
in orbit since Monday.
One possibility, they said, is of Dr. Kenneth D. Gaver, attacked the base Thursday and
Oregon State mental health pilots reported damaging two
administrator, as director- M!Gs parked on the ground.
designee of the Ohip Mental The MIG seen Friday did not
Hygiene and Corrections fire on the American planes
He Attracts
Department.
and was not fired on. A3 the
The governor said Gaver two Navy planes approached
Mixed Raves
would serve as constlltant to the base Friday North Vielna·
in Ohio Assembly •. ·• • James
Welch, acting depart- mese ground crew fired three
some of the members have." Tempore Theodore M. Gray.
they don't always know where ment direc11Jr, for six months to missiles, and one of the
By' LEE LEONARD
By CUFFORD P. CHENEY liar long-haired . activists of
Lukens
beat
out
former
state
Heaisois
the
only
senator
who
he
is, they are unable to de. satisfy the constitutional Phantoms was damaged. "They
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
1
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!)- previous demonstrations.
Sen. Donald E: Lukens, R· state Rep. Barry Levey, also of has dared to cut in on Gray's pend on him as part of the residence, requirements and got the he~k out of there
Vietnam veterans and active· The new breed of participants Middletown, who has already Middletown, in a private Repub- practice of answering '.'Aye" to team. But they haven't publicly then officially take over the without returning fire," a U.S.
duty .servicemen, some flying was inspire,d to attend by served in Congress and run for. lican. squabble over Powell's roll calls instead of the custom- Knocked him.
directorship.
' 1 ' • spokesman said of the Navy air
the American flag upside dbwn, appeals from numerous governor, has proven himself seat, and some of the wounds ary "Yes."
One Democratic colleague, Gaver Is "one of the truly crews.
Saturday led a record nwnber churches, endorsements by . the an interesting specimen for may not yet have healed.
And instead of sending the Sen. Ronald M. Mottl of Parma, O!!tstanding young mental -A separate Communist
of West Coast protesters in a Cenb:al Labor Councils of three "Senate-watchers" . His
Always On Go
announcement of his Costa Rica has high praise for Lukens.
health administrators in the antiaircraft base fired two
parade and demonstration counties,and leaders organizing nickname is fittingly "Buz."
"He's a flitter, just like he trip and a statement on My Lai
"So far, he's been just a United States," Gilligan said. missiles at two Navy A7
against the Vietnam War.
contingents of businessmen.
""Y," sa1'd Mottl. · 1'1
Corsair bombers on a mission
Ever since Lukens traded always was," sa1'd one Repu bl'I· to the stateh ouse press room, great .,..
At the end of a seven-mile At the head of the parade, seats with Republican Cong. can colleague. "I don't have he sent them to wire service would rate him 'A'.
over Laos against the Mu Gia
TO SING IN CAPITAL
route to the Polo Grounds in Robert Silva, 21, Who was twice Walter E. Powell last January, much use for All - American offices to lnsure statewide and
Lukens and Mottl had a comPass. Neither plane was bit and
WASHINGTON
(UP!)The
Golden Gate Park, a speaker, wounded in Vietnam, rode in a
boys, and that's what he Is. He possibly nationwide publicity. mon point of reference before
the U.S. crews did not return
identified as Lt. cmdr. Robert wheelchair. He said, "! hope
reminds me of somebody out of Despite his quick pace during Lukens became a senator. Both aii.Qhio Youth Choir, under the the fire .
Burns of a nearby naval this has some effect."
'The Rover Boys.' That's a book floor sessions, Lukens answered used to date Kathy Lynn Bau. direction of Glenville T~~1aas of
-A missile was fired at an
Zanesville,
present
a
·station, announced :
'
With some U.S. nags upside
that was popular when I was a 81 of 83 roll calls through , mann, the gorgeou~ girl from
unarmed Navy RF8 Crusad~r
"I am happy to.say there are down in the international he has been on the go. He al· kid' Sam had ~n airplane and , March 25. His absence during Bowling Green who was Miss concert Monday at the White reconnaissance jet and its Fl
10,000 Gls here today. We are symbol of distress, cries of ·rfady has made visits to China; somebody else had a race car the Costa l\ica trip cost him in Ohio and came within an eye. House Rose Garden for ·Crusader escort fighter-bo\'1ber
just the tip of the iceberg."
"Peace, peace" reverberated Korea and Latin America, and and they were always doing that regard, and he has voted lash of being Miss America President Nixon. The choir, in North Vietnam 82 miles
made up of 130 members frotn no&amp;th of the Demilitarized Zo,e.
Another speaker was Delia among financial district· build· the.re is no indication he is exciting things."
at a poor 30 per cent clip since last year. ·
'Alvarez, a sister of Navy Lf. ings at the start of the march. slowing qown.
Lukens does exciting things. then. '
One disgruntled Democrat, all over the ·state, wlll leave Again, no damage and no
Everett Alvarez Jr., a prisoner Placards read, "The majority
watching Lukens operate in Earlier this month, he made a
Active In Committees
however, has no.use for Luke.ns from , Wooster, where it is return fire.
,
in North Vietnam since 1964, is not silent, the government is the Senate chamber is like llklay jaunt to Costa Rica as Lukens has authored but one and the way he eased into the performing Sunday, and return
-At least one missile wu
who said her brother was "a deaf."
watching a tennis match. While one of President Nixon's bill - calling for a p•ayer Senate alter battling Roger Tuesday. Earlier Monday, the fired ' at a flight of four Navy
1
victim of our government's
At a quick clip the parade most freshmen are ·content to appointees to the U.S. delegation room in the statehouse. His Cloud for the GOP gubernatorial choir wUI perform on the steps· A4 Skyhawk bomoors escorUna
of the Capital Building.
_inhuman policies and not thos!_ moved ~n C()QI, sunny weather stay in their seats during floor to fhe first.regular session of committee participation, while nomination in 1970.
another · unarmed reconnala' '
of Vietnam."
to the windy expanse of the sessipns, Lukens darts hither the General AssemblY of the sporadic, is stimulating because "He doesn't belong in here,
sance plane 40 miles north of
'Police estimated the Saturday Polo Grounds where a couple of and yon, engaging in private Organization Of American ;:~ questioning of witnesses i man who went against his
DRIFT .APART
the Demilitarized Zone in Norlb
crowd in the Polo Grounds at . dozen speakers and blanng . conversations with Republicans States,
.
often points·,up his experience own party," said the old· line NEW DELHI (UP!) - \ Vietnam. The Skyhawks fired
: 90,000.
rock bands were w~iting.
'and Democrats alike.
: Hardly, typical of the lresh- in Washington and his con· politician. "They' shouldn't re· Relations between India and back with their · missilea and
Short-haired men in pullov- Comedian Dick Gregory an"I think he just makes small man state senator. But then sciriusnessofthe federal govern- ward him. I'm glad he's not in Pakistan deteriorated further cannon, but tJtere were no
ers, young aecretar,Ies !n slacks, nounced that ef~ective inuJjedi· talk," said one senator. "He is Lukens is not typical. The first ment'srole in legislation.
my party. If he was, I:~ be .the Sal~rday when Pakistan closed immediate reports on ciaJnaM.
middle-aged couples m. sports ately he was go1ng on a hunger aware of the tensiontmderwhich week he was here, he was hold- Senate' Republican leaders first one to knife ~im. God may its consulate in calcutta and None of the Americiui plaMf
clothes and gr,andfatherly men strike, an all·liquid diet-until he came in here and 1 think ing nfwS conferences in the have looked on Lukens' act! vi· forgive him, and Christ nlay asked India to remove its envoy ·
lContinued on Page 141
appeared, along with tile famJ. the day "the war is . over.'~
he's trying to settle any qualllll office of Se"'te President Pro ties in .semi-amtlf"ment. Since forgive him, but not me."
from D_acca.

VastThrong· ~; ~o~obber

..

Mitchell
May Get

N . Id

li

Jams Capital i!~*~~~:~~~r!:: ~.J By~!esslntern~~
dua\

l

DUDLEY FLORISTS

.59c

Tax Sha•ing "Would ,Reverse

The basis of the diet is chemical food

HOSPITAL NEWS

Colwnbia National ille is a
wholly owned sullsidiary of
REGULAR $3.94-----:-$H4
Columbia National Corporation.
Serving: Gallipolis
Gilbert said the corporation's
Pomeroy, Middleport, 0.
assets totalled $12,979 at the end
&amp; Mason Co., W. Va .
REG. $1.59RFn PLASTU~
446·1777 or 992-5560
of
1970,
an
increase
of
29.9
per
reserves, and insurance in
PLASTIC!
cent
or
nearly
$3
million.
..
_
_
_ _ _ _ _ __.
force, according to Ray C.
Gilbert, president.
Columbia
National
is
represented locally by Andrew
Toler, Maurice A. Toler, Joe
Barsotti, William 0. Northup,
3 SIZES
SUNDAY ONLY
James P. Unroe, Bryce Slnith,
Roger Epple, Larry Clark, and
Jack Mink.
The company's premium
PRICE
income for 1970 was $6,520,890,
up 27.5 per cent, and investment
income of $456,263 during the
year represented an increase of
104.9 per cent, Gilbert said.
Policy
reserves
totaled
MONO FILAMENT OR BRAIDED NYLON
$4,790,893, an increase of
These homes have brick fronis, single car garages.
$2,121,963 or 19.5 per cent.
concrete drlves." seeded yards, shrubbery, wall to wall
· Columbia National's in·
carpet. Built· in klfchen ~nd ranges, ceramic baths. Kyger
Creek School District. Low taxes. All these homes n.W
surance in force was up
LB.- 12. LB. 15 LB. TEST
under construction to qualify . for the Farmers Home
$62,065,358 or 26.9- per cent
Administration
Rural Housing Program.
arid at year-end totalled
LOTS OF PLANS TO CHOOSE FROM
$292,430,739. During the month
SUNDAY
,..... .
ALL TOTiil ELECTRIC
of February, ,Gilbert noted, the
3'12 Mites from Rt. 35 on Bulovllle Road
O_,.L Yl
PRICE
~~:~~~~~ passed the $300
in-force .mark.
..__.
Total benefits paid to
policyholders and beneficiaries
in 1970 was $1,589,960. Policy
GALLI POLIS, OHIO
· PH. 446-3746
16 PINE
dividends totalled. $562,427. '
S•t. .
Mon. thru Fri.
Ba.m. ta12
A female lobster usually
h.m. to s p.m. '
lays eggs only once every
two years. She may lay 5,000
KINQ8BERRY , HOME8
e'ni'F. C,A!CAtl£ CdRF"OR"T!ON
100,000 or more eggs at
time.
The Columbia National Ufe
Insurance Company recorded
substantial gains in 1970 in
assets, premium income, in·
vestment income, policy

LOSE 20 POUNDS
IN TWO WEEKS!

r---------------------------1

Miss Kitti Thomas Crowned Miss Mason County !

' t:LEGTJON SCHEDULED ·
PT. PLEASANT - Twenty
employes of the Point Pleasant
Marine Company will par·
licipate in a collective
bargaining election next Thlfsday, accor4ing to a , n:ws ~­
release by the National l.allOr
':Relations Board Friday in
· Cincinnati. District 50 of the
Allied and Technical Workers of
the United States alld Can~da
and the Tu-Endie-Wei Metal
Trades Council are seeking
bargaining_ rights for the
workers, it was reported.

BAHR -CONSTRUCTION

• •

R hber
Shot Five
T"IIDeS
'

soyuz 10 Makes Linkup

Ohio Takes
Best Man

Protesters in

'•

Pacific Parade · •. • Lukens

on 'Buz'

Ohio Politics

will

r

'

''

\

�.

'

Engineer Placed ~n Board

in foreground, are Evelyn Woo&lt;ls, Miss Congeniality; Regina
Ann Hesson, second runner-up; Miss Thomas, Rebecca
Gibnore, first runner-up and Addie Mae Rhodes, retiring
Miss Mason County. In the background are Paul Watkins,
Jaycee president, and Charles Eshenaur, pageant chairman
for the Jaycees.

RECEIVED TROPHIES - Margaret Catherine (Kitti)
Thomas, new Miss Mason County, third from left, Is flanked
by other trophy winners, the retiring Miss Mason County and
Scholarship' Pageant offtcials of the Point Pleasant Area
Jaycee~ after she was crowned wlrmer Friday night in the
Point Pleasam High School auditoriwn. Pictured, from left

PT. PLEASANT - Lenzie J.
Hedrick, area superintendent.
for -the ~PQ;~~chian Power
Company, was announced
Friday as a new appointee· to
the Board of Trustees of Mason
County Hospital, Inc. (Pleasant
Valley Hospital).
Hedrick will complete the
unexpired term on the board
that was left vacant by the
recent retirement of H. A.
(Ham)
Johnson,
Point
Pleasant. Johnson retired from
the board after having served
since the hospital board was
chartered in 1954.
A ll&lt;)tive of Glady, W. Va.,
Hedrick has been employed by
the Appalachian Power Com.
pany in Point Pleasant since
1963. He resides at 2403 MI.
Vernon.
A graduate of Elkins High
School, he received his elec·
trical engineering degree at the
Chicago Technical College.
He attends the Point Pleasant
Presbyterian Church, past
president of the Point Pleasant.
Mason County Chamber of
Commerce, vice president of
the Point Pleasant Rotary Club,
member of Minturn Lodge No.
19 AF &amp; AM and is a 32nd
Degree Scottish Rite Mason.

PT. PLEASANT - Tears of
joy .flowed from the eyes of
pretty Margaret Catherine
(Kilt!) Thomas, a Point
Pleasant High School senior,
when she was crowned Miss
Mason County at a Scholarship
Pageant, Friday night.
Kitti Thomas, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. E. W. Thomas of Point
Pleasant, was presented the
winning trophy and a $250
scholarship before a crowd
estimated at over 500persons in
the PPHS auditorium. She was
crowned by Addie Mae Rhodes,

Point Pleasant, the retiring
Miss Mason County.
First runner-up, and winner
of a $100 scholarship award,
was
Rebecca
Gilmore,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs·.
Robert Giimore of New Haven.
Regena
Ann
Hesson,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Hesson, of New Haven,
won the second runner-up honor
and Evelyn Sue Woods the Miss
Congeniality trophy.
Miss Woods is a daughter of
Rev. and Mrs. Bobby Woods of
Point Pleasant.

The brown-haired new Miss
Mason County offered a
creative dance and song for her
talent act in the competition.
Rebecca did a tap dance
routine for her talent presentation and Regena played the
guitar arid sang. Both · are
Wahama High seniors.
Other contestants and their
talent presentations were Joan
E. Fruth, classic'! ballet;
Linda Lee Shadle. uneven

parallel bars; Diane Karen
Turner, creative dance with
baton; Martha Lynn Harman, a
song and Deborah Lynn
Brennan, dancing. Miss Woods
did a sketch in the talent
competition.
Master of Ceremonies for the
evening was Robert L. Siler
while Mrs. Paul E. Wagner
provided the fashion commentary.

OPEN SUNDAY 1 TO 6 P.M.

. S HOUR RUG SALE!,

SHAG AREA RUGS
SIZE 27X45
REGULAR $2.87

SI 1ZE 24 X 36
REGULAR $1.87

94c
ALL 3 STORES ARE OPEN!
•

PT. PLEASANT- GALLIPOLIS- MASON

·0%

No, Virginia, Kermit Walton Is not rolling out the barrel.
Those 55-gallon antiqued barrels being carried into Walton's
New York Clothing House this week are a part of the new
interior decorating underway at the men's clothing store. A
rustic atmosphere Is being created in the establishment .
through the use of barrels, boat anchors, chains and other
accessories carrying out a river theme. Joe Crandel, left,
designed the new interior which includes shingled roof
overhangs on each side of the store. At right is Chuck Bartels.

OFF I SUNDAYONLY •: J
RETAIL PRICE

omens Spring Sk ·
REGULAR $1.94------$1.55

Columbia NL Records Gains

REGULAR $2.94------$2.34

JERRY

CASTING

CANS

REEL

1
-

Famous US. Women Ski Team Diet
During the non·snow off season

the U.S. Women's Alpine Ski Team
members go on the "Ski Team" diet
to lose 20 pounds m two weeks.

That's right - 20 pounds in 14 days!

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 24 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W.
Myers, Gallipolis, a son.
Discharges
Mrs. Tommy Lee Adkins and
daughter, Mrs. Philip E. Bali
and son, William W. Brabham,
Mrs. Tyrone Brewer and
daughter, Mrs. Geneva M.
Cabiish, Roger David Chapman, Mrs. Jerry E. Fields and
son, Infant Female Fitch,
Robert E. Gerlach, Rev .
Herbert L. Grate, Mr. St. Clair
Hili, Mrs. Roger W. Hoover,
Mrs. Ovid E. Jayjohn, Edward
L. Lafferty , Mrs. Ethel
Maynard, Mrs. Patricia Ann
Maynard , Mischelle A.
Meadows, Mrs. Ivan D.
Mulford, Mrs. John H. Robinson
and son, Mrs. Ray L. Saunders,
Mrs. Ronald D. S!eed . and
daughter, Michael Stewart,
Mrs. Claude E. Tackett, Mrs.
Cecil L. Terry, Levi M. Tyo,
Mrs. John M. Wanko, Mrs. J.
Harold Webb, and Mrs. Cecil H.
Blan.ton.
Glen A. Adams, Mrs. Edward
Blankenship, Mrs. Robert L.
Bragg, Mrs. Stanley I.
Browning, Mrs. John E. Denny,
Clay E. Fellure, Karen Sue
Grogory , Mrs. Gordon P.
Harlow, Miss Karen A. Heazlit,
Mrs. Russell E. Kennedy,
Pamela King, Margo E. Martin,
Virgil May 0, Clarence J. Me·
Neal, Mrs. Froud W. Mercer,
Mrs. David R. Mitchell, Nor.
man Lee Mitchell, Mrs. Ada
Mullins, Mrs. Anthony M. Nardi
and son, Elmer U. Patrick, Paul
J. Pauley, Mrs. Doyle T.. Shuler,
Mrs. George H. Smith, Claude
W. Souders, Mrs . Clifford
Stapleton, Mrs. Zeida C. Wells,
Mrs. Myrtle J. West, James 0.
White, Mrs. Herman Will, Mrs.

NEW BOARD MEMBER - l.enzie Hedrick, right, is
congratulab,d for being a new member of the board of
trustees of Mason County Hospital, Inc., doing business as
Pleasant Valley Hospital, by Hospital Administrator James
Farley.

\

Richard L. Will, Mrs. William
T. Winter, Jr·., Hazel A. Cade,
and Gregory S. Knipp.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Don Gorby,
L8ngsville; Harry Greathouse,
Racine; Guy Bolen, Pomeroy;
Eugene Eskew, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED · - Effie
White, Fred Leifheit, Virginia

'

E'1ow- Of ~P-ower
'

•

'

By ARNOLD B. SAWJSLAK
WASHING'I'ON (UP!) -President
Nixon wants the federal government to
give '$16 billion to the states counties and
ciUes to see If they can soive their own
probl'ems.
That is a lot of cash, even for the federal
government. But the idea behihd it called revenue sharing-is what makes
Nl,xon's plan controversial and important. :
Its purpose is to reverse the 40-year-old
flow of power toward Washington and
away from state capitals and city halls. ,
This is also what makes the outcome of
the revenue sharing debate far more
important than the outlay of $16 billion. It
just could decide who will really be run·
ning the country in the decades ahead.
That ,mar sound a bit ponderous, but the

to ~Washington

fact is that Nixon is trying to do what
Republican and other conservative orators
have. been talking about ever since Herbert C. Hoover' failed to find the corner
prosperity was just around.
Government Rushes In
It was in the Hoover era that the federal
government rushed into the problem·
solving vacuum left by depression bred
paralysis of private enterprise and state
and local gove,·mnent. Power flowed
steadily toward Washington for the next
four decades.
Nixon wants to reverse the current, to
give state and local governments the
authority to make decisions and the money
to back them up. His allies in this effort are
not only the traditional conservatives. Demands for dispersing government power

also are coming from mayors and
governors of the most liberal stripe, from
minority grogps who not long ago pleaded
for federal ihtervention and from youthful
and·academic critics of the system, who
see the death of democratic processes,
civil liberties and humanitarian capacity
in the growth of big government.
There also remains plenty of opposition
to the id•a behind revenue-6haring. What
are now called "old style" liberals, including many of the most powerful men in
Congress, see the whole concept as a
retreat.from the hard-won proposition that
the national government must address
itself to national problems. Nor are they
wiJiing to concede an automatic bonus in
efficiency or responsiveness in government at "the grass roots." To them,

'

The second part is "special revenue
revenue sharing foreshadows a return to
the governmental jungle, where only the sharing." It WO!lld wrap up a)lout 130
existing specific purpose federal aid
powerful can survive.
The key to returning power to states and programs and divide the $10 billion they
now pay out, plus $1 billion in new funds,
localities is money.
among six broad areas -education, law
President Proposes Program
The President has proposed a twOi)art, enforcement, manpower training , trans$16 billion program to "start power and porta'tion, urban development and rural
resources flowing back from Washington development.
Here, the states and localities would
to the states and communities, and more
important to the 'people all across ' have to spend the money within the area of
activity for which it is earmarked. But .
America.''
The first partis called "general revenue there would be none of the president
sharing." To start, it. would provide $5 requirements that each dollar be focused
billion in new tax revenues for state and on a specific project, such as buying school
local governments to spend as they saw fit. books, building water mains or training
Any legitimate government expense, from lathe operators or that states and localities
garbagemen's pay to a new governor's put up their own funds to match the federal
aid.
mansion, would' be permitted.

Hubbard, Darrell Mitchell,
Ullian Duffy.
PLEASANT VALLEY
ADMISSIONS: Hazel Selby,
Apple .Grove; Cecil Sines,
Phillip Harper, Point Pleasant;
Dell Talbott, Portland, Ohio;
Wirt Robins, Sam Simpkins,
Point Pleasant.
DISCHARGES: Mrs. Harold
Darst,
Mrs.
William
Luckeydoo, Mrs. Gerald
Higginbotham, David Lips·
comb, Phyllis Mulford, Mrs.
Dewey Ferguson, Cecil Dean,
Karen Water, Georgia McCoy,
Mrs. Madge Neal, Linda Marr.

action and was devised by a famous
Colorado physic1an especially for the
u.s: Ski Team. Normal energy is
maintained (very important!) while
reducing. You keep "fuU" - no
starvation -

becau~

the diet

i~

de-

signed that way! It's a diet that is
easy to follow whether you work,
travel or stay at home .'
This is, honestly, a· fantastically
successful diet. If 11 weren't, the U.S.
Women's Ski Team wouldn't be permJtted to use it! Right? So, give
yourse lf the same break the U.S . Ski
Team gets. Lose. weight the scientific,
proven way. Even 1f you've tried all
the other diets, you owe il to yourself to try the U.S. Women's Ski
Team Diet. That is, if you really do
want to lose 20 pounds in two w·eek s.
Order today. Tear this out as- a
reminder.
Sond only $1.00 ($1.25 ror Ru&lt;h
Serv1ce) - cash is O.K. - to: Ski

Team Diel, 279 Sherfield Dr., Dept.
ST. Sanla Barbara, Calir. 93103.
Don't order unless you expect to lose
20 pounds m two weeks! Because
that's whal the Sk1Team Diet will do!

..,
... our favorite word.

WHEN YOU APPLY FOR A.

LOW COST
LONG TERM
MOBILE HOME

ror M(J[ft(ft,

Move In
Soon!

NOW BEING
CONSTRUCTED

AT.

• •

'THE OLD BANK
WITH NEW IDEAS"
'

FISHING LINE

1

1

.

$16 Billion, mostly from exi..~ting
Agencies, would go to stateS, cities and
Counties for problem solving at home,·
Settling who will be "¥'ning the country
.The proposal is due to be heard later this
session by the House Ways and Means
Committee, whose chairman, Rep. Wilbur
D. Mills, D-Ark., and seni!ll' Republican,
Rep. John W. Byrnes, R·Wis., already are
on the record in opposition. That does not
kill the plan, but it certainly pl&amp;kes it look
sick.
' The money for general revenue-sharing
would come out of screalled new tax
revenues -additional funds generated by
increased personal and corporate incomes
that have not already been claimed for
some existing federal program.
1.3 Per Cent of Income
The general revenue.,haring fund each
year would represent 1.3 per cent of total
taxable income in the United States, and
(Continued on Page 14)

VOL VJ NO. 13

SU~DAY,

PAGE 13

APHIL 25, 1971

otter

ar

SAIGON (UPI)- U.S. t!ayy
warplanes chased a North
Vietnamese MIG21 fighterbomber back to its base in one
of five air incidents reported
Saturday that marked the
,. . RUTLAND - The bell •..
busiest round of air action in
!.;.; rang. The siren sounded. ••··
Indochina
in more than 21&gt;
•••• For awhile this com· ,,
years. Seven guided missiles
munity thought It bad a ••
were fired at American planes:
On the ground, in South
Vietnam, a Communist booby
trap explosion killed seven
•r dev1ce lhatlor some reason .••.• Israeli Premier Golda Meir
American soldiers and wounded
l••• blew Its cool.
;•,. 'd Sat d th t Se ta of
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Be· cards saying "Vietnam to the i ·At 7:18p.m. an alarm In Di 531
ur. a! a ere ry ,
23. It was the worst such
tw
200 000
d 300 000 Vietnamese" and "End Cana· ••·: th p
lfl
f } State Wtlham P. Roger I
incident
in more than a year
e~fl 'te tean ho ting da'scomplicity."
k she if;r;er:y 1°c c~ 0 r,; plannedfirsthandlookatlsrael
and involved men of the
you u pro s rs s u
.
.
I'
.,. . er
o er . ar· •:; may change his mind about
0
"Out now· Out now·" J'ammed
In Washmgton, the c1ty P ICe ••••· tenbach rigged to sound off ·• •
.
.
America! Division, a unit which
'
' ·
· h d
te h Id t te tali e 't
•·•'• urgmg a w1thdrawal from the
has been earmarked for withthe slopes of Cap1tol Htll ea
rs ~of ~.a n th v •f If disturbed In lbe Rutland J territory it captured from the
drawal under the program to
Saturday and roared when told c200
row000 ~~Aun\ li ~ore t ~~ .;.. Branch of the Pome.roy t Arabs in the 1967 Middle East
bring U.S. tr~ops home.
that only Congress -not the
, ·
po 1ce eu enan
••:•• National Bank did JUSt ~;•
White House -can end Ameri· the street, h~lfway through the ii that. Also, a siren here I war.
U.S. headquarters said two
Both Mrs. Meir and Foreign
American helicopters were shot
ca 's decade of involvement in march, esllma~ "at le~st ·. ··: rigged to go off sl·.
Minister
Abba
Eban
told
radio
the Indochina War.
250,000 . people. A spec.lSI .•.'' multaneously did Its .;.;•
down Friday, without loss of
In an antiwar demonstr~tion evaluat10n ~mt of the Jusllce {i duty.
•••• interviewers they ·welcomed a
life, including one in the middle
visit
by
Rogers,
the
man
whose
of the A Shau Valley along the
unparalleled in size at least Depa~tment s Internal Secur!ty ;: In, no time, Deputy •. :.
peace
plan
calls
for
an
aimost
since Nov. 15, 1969, a vast DiVISIOn quoted one pohce ;·.. Sheriff Jim Soulsby, Bruce •··•
Laotian border where U.S. and
South Vietnamese troops have
throng Jed by active duty report of more than 300,000 '••: Davis, Rutland marshal; · • total Israeli pullback from
Arab territory.
been reported planning a major
soldiers and ooarers of the demonstrators.
't Mike Zerkle, Middleport •· occupied
Eban
said
Israel
will
use
the
Stars and Stripes and the Viet
Four dozen scheduled speak· ) pollee officer, and William L.
offensive.
Cong tricolor too.k 21&gt; hours to ers mounted the platform ••:• Hobstetter, president of tbe :••. occasion of Rogers' visit early
UUle Contact
in
May
to
tell
him
it
will
never
march from the Washington halfway up to the west lr?~t of .:• bank, Investigated.
::
Saigon headquarters said U.S.
allow
Egyptian
or
Soviet
troops
Monument up Pennsylvania the . Capitol.. As a brdhant • •• There was no sign of a ,,.
trqops may abandon the A Shau
MISS POPPY TRIO - '111e Junior American Legion Auxiliary of Drew Webeter Post 39,
Avenue to the Capitol.
spnng mormng turned mto a : robber, nor any obvious \ across the Suez Canal under
campaign while other milita(y
Pomeroy, was represented by this Miss Poppy Trio at the District 8 convention held Saturday
The demonstrators -mostly cool, blustery afternoon, they ;.,. reason why the alarm · ·• partial peace agreement. Any
sources said the embryonic
accord, he said, must mean the
Y,Oung white and long-haired declared that the United States . ·• sotmded.
at Wilkesville. They are, left to right, Ida Casci, Jtmior Miss Poppy; Jennifer Couch, Miss
offensive may have been
Ii!lsseti within._)\' block ,of thtt ,!,Dust wait no l~ger ~get out · ·
.,
\ war would not resume .
Poppy Mascot; and Pam Powers, LitUe Miss Poppy.
'
largely a smoke scr,een. Pre&amp;' ,
In
Cairo,
Egyptian
President
White House grounds, but the of an Asia~ Ian!! :war. .
•••.. •··•·•· •· .............. •••• ....;.:••••·•••••'-'•·•••· . •· ...
ident Nguyen Van Thieu said
Anwar Sadat conferred with
Nixons were out of town.
Harold G1bbons, mternat10nal
last week that the offensive had
Soviet Ambassador Vladimir
.Looking over the crowd below vice president of the Teamsters
started but field reports told
Vinogradov Saturday in the
that filled the five block-wide Union, drew lusty cheers that
0
only of reconnaissance opera·
wake of Rogers' announcement
mall and spilled over ·onto echoed off locked government .
lions with major uniis held in
he would visit Israel, Egypt,
Pennsylvania buildings when he declared that
eight-lane
reserve. There has been no
Jordan, Lebanon and Saudi
significant·contact.
Avenue, Rep. Bella Abzug, D- "We must now turn to the
Arabia early in May.
By PETER J. SHAW
Scientific sources in Moscow that the several Soyuz ships
N.Y., remarked over loudspeak· Congress for a fi11&lt;1i solution to
U.S. headquarters reported
At the same time Egyptian MOSCOW (UP!)- The Soviet said there will be more manned will dock nose-in to the Salute,
ers:
the Vietnam War, not the White
one American plane damaged
Foreign Ministry officials re· Union's three-man Soyuz 10 launches-perhaps as many as forming a giant cartwheel with in the busy air action Friday,
"It looks like everybody is House."
viewed reports that the main spacecraf~ Saturday rendez. three more-to join in the ·Salute as the hub.
here today except Richard
Said Rep. John Conyers, D- .
denying Communist claims that
aim of Rogers visit would be voused with the unmanned complex space construction The entire mission, they said,
Nixon. He's in retreat in Camp Mich., "Unless we translate this
two aircraft were shot down.
the
reopening
of
the
Suez
may
continue
for
weeks.
Salute
satellite
and
prepared
to
project.
David. He's in retreat from the into political action, this will be
The action ranged over both
The Soyuz 10 crew was the North Vietnam and Laos where
American people."
another march to an empty COLUMBUS (UP!)- A man, Canal. But in Washington, dock for construction of the The Tass report said that
after the rendezvous between most experienced ever assem· Communist antiaircraft de·
Across the continent in San Capitol. Richard Nixon must go who was not immediately officials said that while Rogers first orbital space station.
wants
to
aid
the
delicate
efforts
The
official
Soviet
news
Soyuz
10 and Salute "scielltific ble~. Shatalov and Yeliseyev
Francisco, where city fathers .... Richard Nixon must go."
identified, was shot and killed to reopen the canal, he has agency Tass said the cosmon· and technical experiments were had been in orbit twice before lenses were reported stiffening
had declared "a day of pullic
Mrs. Corella King said today as he attempted to hold up
in an attempt to cut the
little hope of achieving such a auts piloted their ship to join conducted and work was done the current mission. Rukavishdemonstration to end the war in America is in "moral outrage" a grocery store here.
effectiveness
of American air
goal
during
his
Middle
East
the
Salute
in
orbit
and
carry
a
for
linkup
and
undocking
of
the
nikov
was
making
his
first
Vietnam," police estimated that and appealed for "this nation to
raids on the Ho Chi Minh Trail
Police said the man was shot
series of tests on linkup, manned spaceship and the flight, but the 39-year-old ·test - Hanoi's military lifeline in
70,000 persons led by Gls and· pay tribute to my martyred by Skidmore Robinson, 34, an swing.
Mrs. Meir took aim on undockingandcommunications. orbital station:" The cosmon- engineer was described as a
Vietnam veterans marched husband by withdrawing all employe of the store.
Indochina.
Rogers'
call
for
an
Israeli
After
the
tests
the
cosmonaut
auts,
it
added,
felt.
well.
on
space
stations.
specialist
seven miles from the water· troops from Vietnam by Aug.
Give Detalls
The man entered the store
No Advance Details
front to Golden Gate Park.
28, 1971, the anniversary of with a sawed off shotgun and withdrawal and his statement crew of Vladimir Shatalov,
Communiques in Saigon gave
Ottawa Delegates Gather
Martin Luther King's 'I Have a ordered clerk George Warren to last month that her nation Alexei Yeliseyev and Nikolai Following their usual pattern
these details:
would be better served by Rukavishnikov settled down for the Soviets . gave no advance
And to display their "solidari· Dream' speech."
- Two U.S. Navy F4 Phantom
open the cash drawer. Police international guarantees than a rest period while their ship details of the mission. But
ty" with U.S. demonstrators,
Mrs. King said: "Let us said Robinson was in a back
jets on a bombing mission in
about 400 delegates to a New declare that the war is over. Let room and heard him ask for the by geographical barriers or was out of radio contact with scientific sources said the
Laos between Mu Gia Pass and
land acquisition.
the Soviet mission control muitiple.,hip project, the most
Democratic party convention in us declare that the wars on money.
Kan Karai Pass sighted a
"We cannot be called upon to center in Baikonur.
complicated ever attempted by
Ottawa, gathered outside the poverty, hunger and repression
North Vietnamese MIG21 and
The gunm~n was shot five do this, with our surroundings
Friday Launch '
the Soviets, could involve as COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov. pursued it to the Quang Lang
civic Arena· and waved pia· are in force."
times with a .38 caliber such as 1hey are and our The men bl~sted aloft earl} many as five ships and seven
John J. Gilligan announced airfield only 150 ~Diles south of
revolver.
neighbors-who have never, in Friday to join the Salute ship, · or more cosmonauts.
Saturday night the appointment Hanoi. American planes had
(Continued on Page 14)
in orbit since Monday.
One possibility, they said, is of Dr. Kenneth D. Gaver, attacked the base Thursday and
Oregon State mental health pilots reported damaging two
administrator, as director- M!Gs parked on the ground.
designee of the Ohip Mental The MIG seen Friday did not
Hygiene and Corrections fire on the American planes
He Attracts
Department.
and was not fired on. A3 the
The governor said Gaver two Navy planes approached
Mixed Raves
would serve as constlltant to the base Friday North Vielna·
in Ohio Assembly •. ·• • James
Welch, acting depart- mese ground crew fired three
some of the members have." Tempore Theodore M. Gray.
they don't always know where ment direc11Jr, for six months to missiles, and one of the
By' LEE LEONARD
By CUFFORD P. CHENEY liar long-haired . activists of
Lukens
beat
out
former
state
Heaisois
the
only
senator
who
he
is, they are unable to de. satisfy the constitutional Phantoms was damaged. "They
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
1
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!)- previous demonstrations.
Sen. Donald E: Lukens, R· state Rep. Barry Levey, also of has dared to cut in on Gray's pend on him as part of the residence, requirements and got the he~k out of there
Vietnam veterans and active· The new breed of participants Middletown, who has already Middletown, in a private Repub- practice of answering '.'Aye" to team. But they haven't publicly then officially take over the without returning fire," a U.S.
duty .servicemen, some flying was inspire,d to attend by served in Congress and run for. lican. squabble over Powell's roll calls instead of the custom- Knocked him.
directorship.
' 1 ' • spokesman said of the Navy air
the American flag upside dbwn, appeals from numerous governor, has proven himself seat, and some of the wounds ary "Yes."
One Democratic colleague, Gaver Is "one of the truly crews.
Saturday led a record nwnber churches, endorsements by . the an interesting specimen for may not yet have healed.
And instead of sending the Sen. Ronald M. Mottl of Parma, O!!tstanding young mental -A separate Communist
of West Coast protesters in a Cenb:al Labor Councils of three "Senate-watchers" . His
Always On Go
announcement of his Costa Rica has high praise for Lukens.
health administrators in the antiaircraft base fired two
parade and demonstration counties,and leaders organizing nickname is fittingly "Buz."
"He's a flitter, just like he trip and a statement on My Lai
"So far, he's been just a United States," Gilligan said. missiles at two Navy A7
against the Vietnam War.
contingents of businessmen.
""Y," sa1'd Mottl. · 1'1
Corsair bombers on a mission
Ever since Lukens traded always was," sa1'd one Repu bl'I· to the stateh ouse press room, great .,..
At the end of a seven-mile At the head of the parade, seats with Republican Cong. can colleague. "I don't have he sent them to wire service would rate him 'A'.
over Laos against the Mu Gia
TO SING IN CAPITAL
route to the Polo Grounds in Robert Silva, 21, Who was twice Walter E. Powell last January, much use for All - American offices to lnsure statewide and
Lukens and Mottl had a comPass. Neither plane was bit and
WASHINGTON
(UP!)The
Golden Gate Park, a speaker, wounded in Vietnam, rode in a
boys, and that's what he Is. He possibly nationwide publicity. mon point of reference before
the U.S. crews did not return
identified as Lt. cmdr. Robert wheelchair. He said, "! hope
reminds me of somebody out of Despite his quick pace during Lukens became a senator. Both aii.Qhio Youth Choir, under the the fire .
Burns of a nearby naval this has some effect."
'The Rover Boys.' That's a book floor sessions, Lukens answered used to date Kathy Lynn Bau. direction of Glenville T~~1aas of
-A missile was fired at an
Zanesville,
present
a
·station, announced :
'
With some U.S. nags upside
that was popular when I was a 81 of 83 roll calls through , mann, the gorgeou~ girl from
unarmed Navy RF8 Crusad~r
"I am happy to.say there are down in the international he has been on the go. He al· kid' Sam had ~n airplane and , March 25. His absence during Bowling Green who was Miss concert Monday at the White reconnaissance jet and its Fl
10,000 Gls here today. We are symbol of distress, cries of ·rfady has made visits to China; somebody else had a race car the Costa l\ica trip cost him in Ohio and came within an eye. House Rose Garden for ·Crusader escort fighter-bo\'1ber
just the tip of the iceberg."
"Peace, peace" reverberated Korea and Latin America, and and they were always doing that regard, and he has voted lash of being Miss America President Nixon. The choir, in North Vietnam 82 miles
made up of 130 members frotn no&amp;th of the Demilitarized Zo,e.
Another speaker was Delia among financial district· build· the.re is no indication he is exciting things."
at a poor 30 per cent clip since last year. ·
'Alvarez, a sister of Navy Lf. ings at the start of the march. slowing qown.
Lukens does exciting things. then. '
One disgruntled Democrat, all over the ·state, wlll leave Again, no damage and no
Everett Alvarez Jr., a prisoner Placards read, "The majority
watching Lukens operate in Earlier this month, he made a
Active In Committees
however, has no.use for Luke.ns from , Wooster, where it is return fire.
,
in North Vietnam since 1964, is not silent, the government is the Senate chamber is like llklay jaunt to Costa Rica as Lukens has authored but one and the way he eased into the performing Sunday, and return
-At least one missile wu
who said her brother was "a deaf."
watching a tennis match. While one of President Nixon's bill - calling for a p•ayer Senate alter battling Roger Tuesday. Earlier Monday, the fired ' at a flight of four Navy
1
victim of our government's
At a quick clip the parade most freshmen are ·content to appointees to the U.S. delegation room in the statehouse. His Cloud for the GOP gubernatorial choir wUI perform on the steps· A4 Skyhawk bomoors escorUna
of the Capital Building.
_inhuman policies and not thos!_ moved ~n C()QI, sunny weather stay in their seats during floor to fhe first.regular session of committee participation, while nomination in 1970.
another · unarmed reconnala' '
of Vietnam."
to the windy expanse of the sessipns, Lukens darts hither the General AssemblY of the sporadic, is stimulating because "He doesn't belong in here,
sance plane 40 miles north of
'Police estimated the Saturday Polo Grounds where a couple of and yon, engaging in private Organization Of American ;:~ questioning of witnesses i man who went against his
DRIFT .APART
the Demilitarized Zone in Norlb
crowd in the Polo Grounds at . dozen speakers and blanng . conversations with Republicans States,
.
often points·,up his experience own party," said the old· line NEW DELHI (UP!) - \ Vietnam. The Skyhawks fired
: 90,000.
rock bands were w~iting.
'and Democrats alike.
: Hardly, typical of the lresh- in Washington and his con· politician. "They' shouldn't re· Relations between India and back with their · missilea and
Short-haired men in pullov- Comedian Dick Gregory an"I think he just makes small man state senator. But then sciriusnessofthe federal govern- ward him. I'm glad he's not in Pakistan deteriorated further cannon, but tJtere were no
ers, young aecretar,Ies !n slacks, nounced that ef~ective inuJjedi· talk," said one senator. "He is Lukens is not typical. The first ment'srole in legislation.
my party. If he was, I:~ be .the Sal~rday when Pakistan closed immediate reports on ciaJnaM.
middle-aged couples m. sports ately he was go1ng on a hunger aware of the tensiontmderwhich week he was here, he was hold- Senate' Republican leaders first one to knife ~im. God may its consulate in calcutta and None of the Americiui plaMf
clothes and gr,andfatherly men strike, an all·liquid diet-until he came in here and 1 think ing nfwS conferences in the have looked on Lukens' act! vi· forgive him, and Christ nlay asked India to remove its envoy ·
lContinued on Page 141
appeared, along with tile famJ. the day "the war is . over.'~
he's trying to settle any qualllll office of Se"'te President Pro ties in .semi-amtlf"ment. Since forgive him, but not me."
from D_acca.

VastThrong· ~; ~o~obber

..

Mitchell
May Get

N . Id

li

Jams Capital i!~*~~~:~~~r!:: ~.J By~!esslntern~~
dua\

l

DUDLEY FLORISTS

.59c

Tax Sha•ing "Would ,Reverse

The basis of the diet is chemical food

HOSPITAL NEWS

Colwnbia National ille is a
wholly owned sullsidiary of
REGULAR $3.94-----:-$H4
Columbia National Corporation.
Serving: Gallipolis
Gilbert said the corporation's
Pomeroy, Middleport, 0.
assets totalled $12,979 at the end
&amp; Mason Co., W. Va .
REG. $1.59RFn PLASTU~
446·1777 or 992-5560
of
1970,
an
increase
of
29.9
per
reserves, and insurance in
PLASTIC!
cent
or
nearly
$3
million.
..
_
_
_ _ _ _ _ __.
force, according to Ray C.
Gilbert, president.
Columbia
National
is
represented locally by Andrew
Toler, Maurice A. Toler, Joe
Barsotti, William 0. Northup,
3 SIZES
SUNDAY ONLY
James P. Unroe, Bryce Slnith,
Roger Epple, Larry Clark, and
Jack Mink.
The company's premium
PRICE
income for 1970 was $6,520,890,
up 27.5 per cent, and investment
income of $456,263 during the
year represented an increase of
104.9 per cent, Gilbert said.
Policy
reserves
totaled
MONO FILAMENT OR BRAIDED NYLON
$4,790,893, an increase of
These homes have brick fronis, single car garages.
$2,121,963 or 19.5 per cent.
concrete drlves." seeded yards, shrubbery, wall to wall
· Columbia National's in·
carpet. Built· in klfchen ~nd ranges, ceramic baths. Kyger
Creek School District. Low taxes. All these homes n.W
surance in force was up
LB.- 12. LB. 15 LB. TEST
under construction to qualify . for the Farmers Home
$62,065,358 or 26.9- per cent
Administration
Rural Housing Program.
arid at year-end totalled
LOTS OF PLANS TO CHOOSE FROM
$292,430,739. During the month
SUNDAY
,..... .
ALL TOTiil ELECTRIC
of February, ,Gilbert noted, the
3'12 Mites from Rt. 35 on Bulovllle Road
O_,.L Yl
PRICE
~~:~~~~~ passed the $300
in-force .mark.
..__.
Total benefits paid to
policyholders and beneficiaries
in 1970 was $1,589,960. Policy
GALLI POLIS, OHIO
· PH. 446-3746
16 PINE
dividends totalled. $562,427. '
S•t. .
Mon. thru Fri.
Ba.m. ta12
A female lobster usually
h.m. to s p.m. '
lays eggs only once every
two years. She may lay 5,000
KINQ8BERRY , HOME8
e'ni'F. C,A!CAtl£ CdRF"OR"T!ON
100,000 or more eggs at
time.
The Columbia National Ufe
Insurance Company recorded
substantial gains in 1970 in
assets, premium income, in·
vestment income, policy

LOSE 20 POUNDS
IN TWO WEEKS!

r---------------------------1

Miss Kitti Thomas Crowned Miss Mason County !

' t:LEGTJON SCHEDULED ·
PT. PLEASANT - Twenty
employes of the Point Pleasant
Marine Company will par·
licipate in a collective
bargaining election next Thlfsday, accor4ing to a , n:ws ~­
release by the National l.allOr
':Relations Board Friday in
· Cincinnati. District 50 of the
Allied and Technical Workers of
the United States alld Can~da
and the Tu-Endie-Wei Metal
Trades Council are seeking
bargaining_ rights for the
workers, it was reported.

BAHR -CONSTRUCTION

• •

R hber
Shot Five
T"IIDeS
'

soyuz 10 Makes Linkup

Ohio Takes
Best Man

Protesters in

'•

Pacific Parade · •. • Lukens

on 'Buz'

Ohio Politics

will

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'

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'

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14-Tbe$mdayTimes- Sentine_l, Sunday, April 25,1971

t

Tax Sharing

-·

'

Laird Out In '73

Plan

(Continued from P~ge 13)
would be di8tribu!H to the stalell on the $2 billion for manpower, $2 billion for the
buls of their population and "taJ: effort" cltiea; $500 million. for law enforce!Jlent
- the relative effort each makes to raise aDd
billion for rural development
its own reverwes. 11te law would require
Nilon says the federal governmelit has
the states to "pass through" part of the done a good job of tax collection but botmoney --about half,on the average -to ched the delivery of services to the people.
cities, COlfllies, townships and other For problemi!Olvlng, he qys, "The people
localities. \
.
who know a place best are the people who
. For the most part, tile special £evenue- live there."
·
sharing funds would come from the
categorical aid programs they ·would . "What is needed, then, is a program
about one.third of the federal . under which we can enjoy the best of both
govei'DD!ent's total grant-in-aid ouUay of worlds, a program which will apply fast$30 billion a year. 11te first-year amounts growing federal reverwes to (ast~owing
for each fund include $3 billion for state and local requirements ." the
education, $2.6 billion for transportstion, President told Congre~s.

'1.1

,.;place,

MADISON, Wis. (UP!) - Defense
Secretary Melvin R. Laird told the
University of Wisconsin Daily Cardi~al in
a copyrigh!H interview he will leave his
Cabinet post in 1973.
In Friday's edition of the student
·newspaper, Cardinal reporter Peter
Greenberg quoted Laird as saying," 'Four
years as defense secr.etary is long enough.
I'm not interes!H in being secretary of
defense another four years."
The Interview was_conducted Thursday in Laird's Pentagon office. Julian
Levine, a Defense Department public
affairs official, who was present during
part of the interview, confirmed that Laird
planned to retire as secretary in J..973.

.Double Heresy Ripping Church
fundamental need is being met in many.
contemporary churches.
Dr. Elton Trueblood, the Quaker
philosopher, has put his finger on the basic
danger of going overboard in either
direction. In his book "The New Man for
Our Time," he says that intense qctivism
without a life of devotion producea
damaging results, "one of which is
calCulated arrog~nce!' On the other hand, ·
an exclusive preoccupation with personal
piety ts equally bad because one cannot.
truly love Christ while ~'forgetting those
whom Christ loves."

bolh-anq commandment.
No Prolelltant denomination has been
more deeply and aggressively involved in
social action that the United Olurch of
Chrllit. Its executive council met in New
York last month to decide what concerns
should get priority during the next few
years. Predictably, the council sgreed that
of God and Man
local congregatloos of .the United Church
lllto this hereiy, and their resulting should Continue working for racial justice
aquabble has almost tom the church apart and world peace.
Today there are hopeful indications that
IJQille. people on both sides of the divisive
But top billing was given to "the faith
controversy are beginning to realize that crisis of modem man."
half a gospel is not enough-no matter A spokeaman said the decisitm to give
whiCh half you choose. In the teaching of top priority to theological Inquiry was
Jesus, personal piety promp!H by love of · JrOmpted by a conviction that "modem
God and social action JX'OII)pted by love of man needa faith by which to live," and
mankind are not an elther'"r choice, but a there is a serious question whether this
By LOUIS CASSELS
UPI ReUgloa Writer
The chief heresy of contemporary
Christianity is the notion that the church
should be concerned either with social
action or with peraonal lliety.
Both activists and pietists have {allen

It is not a new point. Jesus said lhe same

thing, over and over. But it will bear
repetition in lhe climate of controversy
that ts currently demoralizing the church.

a

DAYLIGHT SAVING
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Daylight &amp;jvlng Time returns at 2
a.m. Sunday in all but four
stalell: Clocks should be turned
ahead one hour.
The four states in which the
time change does i!ot take
effect are Arizona, Hawaii,
Michigan and Indiana. Their
legislatures took advantage of
the Uniform Time Act of 1966
which allowed stalell to remain
on Standard Time If their
legislatures approved.
Daylight Saving Time states
will return to Standard Time
Oc't. 3L

Smith Hearing Opened

PT. PLEASANT- A hearing ·words, full · explanation of
on ten charges for the ouster of charges, that the charges be
L Brooks Smith as superln- signed, and that six certain
tendent of Mason County charges be dismissed since they
Schools got underway Saturday were old charges, which the
morning by four members of Supreme Court had ruled on last
the five-member Board of month.
Education In the local court- Withers asked Charles
room.
Eshenaur to read the 10 charges
In the absence of Ted Stevens, against Smith and then followed
president, Bill Withers was with his reading Smith's anmade president pro-tem. swers. With Smith's answers
Withers announced that Stevens was a summary which cited the
has been considerably lll and Supreme Court ruling in part
ECONOMY TALK
through advice of his doctor " .... that the charges are not of
could not be present.
such serious nature so as to
WASHINGTON (UP!)
.PresldentNlxonwilldiscussthe At mid-morning Withers warrant such action; and that
denied three motions by defense the appoiniment of the acting
economy in a speech Monday to
the u. s. Chambe~ of Com- attorney Gordon Billheimer and superintendent since it involved
merce. The address Is announced the hearing would nepotism further weakens the
sc~uled at 11 a.m. EDT at · continue without delay.
contention that urgent action
Constitution HaiL
Billheimer has asked for a. was necessary .. " regarding
Bill of Particulars, or In other Smith's suspension. In the

r-----------------------------------------1

Voice along Broadway I

I

'

HOW ABOUT A MEATY ROLE
did, to a bash that turned out to be really enINSfEAD OF TONY'S OLD GRIND? ' tertalnlnj!, especially for celebrity-voyeurs.
NEW YORK - Met Tony Rand8ll at 42nd &amp;
Can't get anyone at ABC to say if con5th. Tony just left denUat. Seems he saw a tr.Verslal sportspieler Howard Cosell will be
wcman spllllots of guck on her front and quickly phased out locally with ex-Giant grid stsr and
grabbed a handful of Kleenex from pocket and CBS sportscaster Frank Gifiord's accession to
urged 118ffie on woman. Grateful lady accepted, ABC-TV sports .... Soon-to-be-released
and disappeared. Later Tony discovered biography of the late Dorothy Dandridge will
"safely" wrapped In his Kleenex had been his link that tragic beauty with a recently front"teeth grinder protector," a metal choppers paged film director never in the habit of denying
cover for sleep-wear which neutralized his his past affairs ..-. Autograph fans are go,ing
abrasive constant grinding of teeth. Why should electronic:. At the Ubrary Restaurant, Stacy
Tony grind his teeth whlie sleeping? "Rage!" Keach and Judy Colllns were asked ·not for
Tony elq)lained as he ambled Irately toward autographs but for few worda murmured into
Tlmea Square.
the fan's tape recorder.
The Liberty Magazine revival party at tlie
Sherman Fairchild's $2,000,000 bequeat to
Rainbow Room was a wildly swinging mass
a-owd ·scene, scads of celebritie8 (Patsy Kelly, starlet Dianna Williams (from hts $200 million
Allee Faye, Maureen Stapleton) Connee Boswell estate) has been estimated as the largest ever
(who sang with Jimmy and Marian Mc- left to anyone but a wife or an ex ..... Former
ParUand's band, as warmly good as ever) l!lter Mayor Bob Wagner's idyll with cafe society
Jet erstwhile Bdwy. columnist Frank Farrell and beauty Marilyn Gelber has idled.
The Rainbow Room's BriUah Festival Is a
yours admlrlngly carry her in her wheelchair up
and dowll the assorted exit stairs of the always great success, owner Jerry Brody tells us-ali
beautiful Rainbow Room - Connee's been British dishes plus criSply entertaining bagpipe
paralyzed frun the waist down since chlldhood, intervals and the customary elegant Rainbow
and It was a labor of love-for-talent; also Connie Room service .... It's a magical spot, its timeless
Towers, maybe the most beautiful girl on the Bauhaus decor softened with warm candles and
musical stage (well, anyway tied with Alexis restrained lighting and the mbst marvelous all&amp;nlth of "Follies") .... Hope ~pion, with points views of Manhattan of all sky-view N. Y.
everyone trying to gues.s her age (from ll(ldown) eateries .... And marvelous dance music, not the
In the nolsles!, eyC'Catching, feathers-and-lame noisome eruptions of the discoteks.
costume anywhere' (how does she shut it off?)
La Foret in the Pierre Hotel lB another ·
plus many hundreds of Llberty-loYing or at least · splendid spot for polite dining-dancing amid
cocktall-recepUve Invitees .... Harry Hershfield .comfortable elegance, not the conibalive decor
analyzed the horde: "The trouble with this party and rock assaults of the primitive rhythms ;
Is that everyone they invited show up"; and they melody's 1D sgain, not just jangle.

a

MONDAY 9:30 TO 8 P.M.

*RED *BLACK •WHITE *BLUE

&lt;Continl!ed

VALUES lO $16.00

ONE LOT MEN'S WORK SHOES
VALUES TO $11.98

Mitchell
(Continued from Page 13)
fact, left us a single day of
quiet- as they are," Mrs. Meir
said.
"We cannot be expected to
make the experiment and prove
to the world that geographyiS
unimportant. In fact, (former ·
Sen. Eugene) McCarthy came
to Israel and learned geography
is indeed im)&gt;ortant."
"I think that if Rogers comes
here and sees everything,
perhaps he, too, may change
his mirrd," Mrs. Meir added.
Israel has said it will not
leave such natural military
barriers as the Jordan River
and the Golan Heights, both
captured in 1967. A withdrawal
from the Suez Canal, the third
natural boundary seized in the
war, has been one of Egypt's
conditions for a partial peace.

• HERMAN • CHIPPEWA • WOLVERINE

co.

.

.Fenderhosch, Crew ·Otief,
Door.Gunner on Blue Ghost

was banned.
- Five minulell later, the
sa me reconnaissance illane
received evidence of an electronic "iock,.n" by a Communist
antiaircraft' battery 92 miles
north of the DMZ. One of the
Skyhllwks fired · a missile.
Again, no report of damage on
either side.
·
It was the busiest round of
air ~ction in Indochina since
Nov. I, 1968, when former
President LyndQn B. Johnson
announced a halt in the
bombing of North Vietnam in a
move to get peace talks
started.
The booby trap explosion, in
which seven Americans were
killed, occurred Friday. Spokesmen said the blast was caused
by a 105mm artiliery sheii
rigged as a land mine near
Quang Ngai city 318 miles
northeast of Saigon.

By Sp4 Wllllam W. Jobnion ·
QU~NG TRI PROVINCE,
Republic o(. Viebtam (USARV10) . The men in the
operations . bunker listened
intently to a radio transmls$ion: "Blue Ghost Control
U.S. truck convoy on QL 9 three
kilometers from Khe Sanh is

under mortar and small arms
attack. Can you send help?"
Quickly picking up the
microphone f&lt;om the radio
operator, the operations of-

directs air support.
For the "Blue Ghosts" of the
23rd In fan try Division 's F
Troop, 8th Air Ca vairy, this was
but one of more than 3,500

ADDRESS

COLUMJ!US (UP!) -Bishop
F. Gerald Ensley of Colwnbua,
spiritual and admlnlslrative
leader of the Ohio W1111t me of
u.. Uni. . Methodist Clureb,ll
to give the eplseopll addl n at
the 19'12
conference In

S X7

NO. 725

SOUTH
BEND
REEL

SUPER .MARKETS

THIRD AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS,

_

OPEN 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

ARMOUR;fl

U~ S. 0. A. Choice'Beef

Inspected

HECK'S REG .
$8.88

CHUCK ROASTS

S699

ILADE CUTS

•

SPORTS DEP T ,

enemy supply lines on the Ho servation helicopters (LOH)
Chi Minh trail.
and troop carrying Huey UH-l's
Serving with F Troop is provide convoy escort and
Specialist 5 Joseph G. Fen- armed aerial reconnaissance in
derbosch, 22, a UH-1 crew chief Military· Region 1. Home base
and door gunner. He is the son for F Troop is Chu Lai, but for
of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. 'Operations Lam Son 719, the
Fenderbosch, 4 Hillcrest Dr., unit . operated from a small '
Gallipolis. A 1966 graduate of St. landing pad in Quang Tri.
John Vianney Seminary, Spec. The UH-1 "slicks" are made
Fenderbosch has attended Ohio available for rescue of downed
State University. He has earned helicopter crews and carry
the Air Medal, two Bronze Stars infantrymen, called "Blues" by
and the Army Colflmendation F Troop. In some cases, a slick
Medal.
is capable of recovering a
Blue Ghost helicopter teams disabled WH.
of Cobra gunships, light ob-

. . .69c

• •

!If'S GOT T' ~Ill' 'IJtm ~~~
8loo0 ·'BOCI&lt;lli' I&lt;ROO'B. -·
~N'C1lU:P5. ti KE CI'IP'ri AHAB
WHO'LL COMMIT JIJ~'T ABOUT
~'I' C'ltUMMl' ACll' GET

...,

U. S. No. 1 Grade
GEE, ANClo I
MOHEV TO

GIVi 'EM

10-lb. BAG
WAGNER'S .

•
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Breakfast Drinks

•
•

Oi'ange, Grape &amp; Grapefruit

Quart Bottles

.

PAt.

'

Butter

•

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·'

•

2·1b. 8 oz. Jar
M:USSE~M·AN'S

•
•
•
••
•
•

Apple Sauce

•

·for

•

•

'•

·FW·FFO

CHARM IN

SUNSHINE

SHORTENING

BAIHROOM TISSUE

Sugar Wafers

650-Sh.

'12-oz.

3-lb,
Can

'

87(

Roll45iJY.

4-Pack

· TID.E .
DETERGENT
'

25c Off Label
5-lb. 4-oz. Pkg.

.14

Pkg.

I

5~
. /J
.,.

DAN DEE
CADDY .

POTATO
'

(:HIPS

'.'

'

''
•'
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l-Ib. 4-o:r: Box

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AS F\O'(AL
DOCTOR,\

FOR&amp;ID

15 0'&lt;-IL"' ONE-AN D n.lE
1\CTTEN PART ABOUT HIM
15 - HE LIKES10 ITT
'5LOB60VIAN KI~S.'!
Tf.IE &amp;CORE. SO FAR IS-·

K ING CRABS - 173
KING&amp; - - 0

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WITH COUPLINGS
'. Fitc'K's REG.

sua

• ;J.o

•

DEPT.

S H. P.

GILSON
TILLER

HECK'S RE~.
$177;88

REDWOOD
PICNIC
TABLE
HECK'S REG. $36.88

3 OZ. TUBE

32 OZ.

HECK'S
Detergent

PRELL
CONCENTRATE

HECK'S .
REG .

SHAMPOO

44c

3

for

CAROL HARGRAVES - she's the one with the warm,
pleasant smile- used a great deal of originality and talentfor her
entry in the speech contest of the Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Socle ty this year.
.
Although she says she's rio artist, Carol did four excellent
largedrawings to provide illustrations as she moved through her
Interesting talk on the history of the Sacred Heart Church in
Pomeroy. Three of the drawings - done in pencil - Included the
llrst church, the present church and the pipe organ. The fourth
· was a color picture of a church mouse, "Jeremiah," and Carol
told her historical account through the mouse. Very clever ! Carol
was first place winner in her school and in the county.

$1.00
rr.:·

~ExcedriRJ
THI I l l "

ftf~

1-&lt; ~AI~ 'II I VIM

.

•

EXCEDRIN

'

·ANITA FULTZ, DAUGHTER of Mr. and Mrs. John Fultz,
Middleport, and Duane Will, son of Mr. and Mrs. Norman .Will,
Rutland area, left Saturday at noon for a concerttour with the All·
Ohio Youth Choir.
.·
. ·
The group will glve ,concerts at Berlin and Wooste~ and then.
go to_V[asl)ingtm, q. C.. for a "command performance" for
President Richard Nixon on Monday afternoon. They will go on a :
sight seeing tour bef_or~ returning 'J1uesday afternoon. Miss Fultz,
a soprano, all() Will, a tenor, are students of Mrs. Christine
Guthrie at Metis High School.
mclcientally, the Meigs Chorale of Mrs. Guthrie is preparlng a
concert for May 9in observance of National Music Week .

lOO's
•

. HECK'S REG.
$1.27
COSMIT/t D9T.

A UST pF STUDENTS participlting in.a pan~! discussion at
a m~eting of the Meiga County Education Assh. recently did not

- - - -lMludtd.h.:a nomA...nf. gtAvA_JC_irltmJin.....~a.Rt.AI':n~Riah ~h~1 Jt. nlti U-

PIPE

SPORTS

MR. AND MRS. VINCENT DABO and Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Kelly and children are in Poca, W. Va., today to attend the
dedication of the new home of Mrs: Hilda Peyton and her late
la!sband, tbe Rev. Henry Peyton.
Some months ago, a home fire was shown on television and it
was the Peyton house burning, The Peytons are cousins of the
Dabos and the Kellys. The Peytons later visited in Middleport and
showed their new house plans to local relatives .
The home went under construction and in the meantime, the
Rev. Mr. Peyton was hospitalized. Cancer was deteeted.
However, in spite of his serious illness he was taken to his new
home before his death. His last wish was that the home "be
dedicated to the Lord." Hence, today's observance.

'

SEWER DRAIN

38c

HOW REFRESHING IT has been to see Meigs Countjans - .
joined by others - respond to the George Thompson Kidney Fund
over the past few weeks. The fund total has gone over $7,800 and
George, who is home now from Cleveland Clinic, has tenned the
response and kindness of people, "unbelievable."
A nice gesture on the part of sixth graders at the Salem
Center School- and to be sure you'll find young people right in
there pitching these days - . The sixth graders won a money prize
for having the most parents present for a PTA meeting. There
were many temptations for the young people ... they could have
bought recorda, playground balls and bats and other play
equipm,ent However, they chose to give the prize to George
Thompson.and on top of that made personal contributions to the
fund drive.
·

.

: . . '.

4" PLASTIC

HECK'S
REG.

MEIGS COUNTY WlLL be well represented in Europe this
summer. Two groups are Europe bound on student tours, one
headed by Mrs. Phyllis Hackett and the other by Mrs. Alice Nease
and Mrs. Fay Sauer. Some 15 persons are involved in each tour
both of which will be about three weeks long. .

We RtM'" The Rioht To limit Quantitie1 On All Item&amp; In Thi1 Ad.
Pri&lt;tl Effective Thru Sot. Moy I, 1971 - Nooe Sold To Doalert.

161f:z.oz. Cans

1•

I

POMEROY - Talented and attractive Judy Riggs of the
Chester area was again selected this year to serve as one of the
judges for the "Miss Wood County" Pageant held Saturday night
In Parkersburg. The contest was a preliminary event to ·the annual Miss America Pageant staged at Atlantic City each September.

tiOI'IT WAVE ANY

He!!lthful and Nutrjtious - At A Special Low Price

24(

I'

.

Red Potatoes

..

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I

'''
By Bob Hoeflich

SPORTS
DEPT.

4 QT.
FOAM ICE
BUCKET

I

Of the Bend

HECK'S
REG.
$19.99

SPDR T5 DEPT.

:

~t....

BIKE
HELMET

HECK'S REG. 88c

Ir---------------------------~
·
I

T' THf. "GOlt:l"· ..

SPO RTS DEPT

FOAM
FISHING
HELMET

Sp5 Fenderbosch, Crew Chief,
Door Gunner on a Blue Ghost

CENTER CUT

HECK'S
REG.
$3.99

,. r •

.

CHUC:K STEAK

TARP

u.s:Govt.

THE~

to GIVE

1:oo P.M. -

then switches frequency and support of Operation· Lam Son
calls ·an already airborne 719, the Republic of Vietnam's
helicopter gunship team and · armed incursion Into Laos to cut

~t

5..00
7.98

SUNDAY SAVINGS

ficers answers "Affirmative/' sorties flown since January in

Budget
Studies

COLUMBUS (UPI) - House
and Senate committees will
continue this week to work on
the proposed $9.1 billion budget
of Gov. John J. Gilligan as the
General Assembly draws to
within two months of the time it
must be enacted.
House Republican leaders
hope to get the giant package
out of the Finance Committee
and onto the House Oo&lt;ir the
week of May 10. The new fiscal
were numbers, 4:,5,6,7 ,8 and 9. biennium to which the budget
At this point he asked who applies begins July 1.
attorney John Hash represents The House Finance Committee
and who employed him. Hash will hold several meetings on
replied that he felt these were various segments of the budget,
tactics by the defense to delay hearing from the Department of
by asking for a Bill of . Par- Mental Hygiene and Correction
ticulars and said he was op- Tuesday. education and welfare
posed to this at this time, but proponents and opponents Wedwould' have given it if he had nesday and holding an open
had the request earlier.
meeting for general proponents
As to the defense motion for and opponents Thursday.
dismissal he said the Supreme The House Education CommitCourt had ordered to resume tee, studying the education porthe hearing and they were here tion of the budget, has schedto finish it.
uled working sessions for Tuesday afternoon and Wednesday
WOMEN TO CO.EDIT
night.
GAMBIER, Ohio (UP!)
The House Ways and Means
'I' he camp·us newspaper at Committee, considering various
Kenyon College will have two tax alternatives, ·is meeting
women students as co-editors Wednesday and Thursday.
for the first time in the school's The Senate Finance Commit147-year existence. Named to tee, preparing itself in advance
the top positions on the Kenyon for the budget, will consider its
Collegian were Uesel Freldrich provisions at a Monday night
of Locust Valley, N. Y., and meeting.
Denise Largent of Berea, Ohio, The Senate has scheduled a
sophomores in the Coordinate vote for Tuesday on a heavilyCollege for Women, Kenyon's sponsored bipartisan bill rewritsister college which opened two ing regulations for credit unions
years ago.
in Ohio. The chief spoosor of
the measure is Sen. Ralph S.
Regula, R-Navarre.
A Senate Commerce and Labor subcommittee is expected to
NAMED PRESIDENT
report
to the full committee
NEW CONCORD, Ohio (UPI)
- Dr. William P. Miller has Tuesday on a compromise verbeen named president of sion of Democratic and Republican unemployment compensaMuskingum College here.
tion benefit proposals.
•
TheSenateJudiclaryCommittee is scheduled to begin di8cussions Wednesday on proposed
revisions in Ohio's divorce laws
and reconciliation procedures.
The House Environment Committee will hear testimony Tuesday night and Thursday
ori two new strip mine
control
bills ·sponsored
by Republican Reps. Halph ·
Welker and Sam · Spec.
The measures are then expected to be sent to a subcommittee, joining other strip mine
legislation. ·
The House is acheduled to return at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday and
the Senate. at 1:30 p.m.

YOUR HEADQUARTERS FOR SAFETY TOE' SHOES

!$-The SundayTimes-Sentlnei,Sunday,April25,1971

from Pag~ 13)

MONDAY 9:30 TO 8 P.M.

ONE LOT LADIES DRESS SHOES
.

summary Smith also contended
that "the majority of citi?~ns do
not approve of the hllrrassment
I have been going through".
Withers was explicit in
stating that the hearing would
continue even into the night
until it is finished and that attorneys must · "stick to the
charges." He said he had been
advised by the State Supreme
Court and the State Superintendent to not linger, but to go
right on through.
Biliheimer asked to reserve
the right to "vouch the record."
Biliheimer asked to continue
the hearing until the Bill of
Particulars which he lalieled
"vague" could be furnis hed for
the defense, which brought
remarks from John Hash, attorney for the petitioners, who
contended the defense had time
to make.the request earlier, but
hadn't.
Billheimer requested that six
charges be dismissed which

Air War

1

HECK'S
REG.

92c

0 HI

GENERAL ELECTRIC

Dehumidifier
HECK'S REG. $87.88

SUNDAY
ONLY

�(

'

-

,_

l- ,
•

,

'

'

-·

'
&gt;

1

14-Tbe$mdayTimes- Sentine_l, Sunday, April 25,1971

t

Tax Sharing

-·

'

Laird Out In '73

Plan

(Continued from P~ge 13)
would be di8tribu!H to the stalell on the $2 billion for manpower, $2 billion for the
buls of their population and "taJ: effort" cltiea; $500 million. for law enforce!Jlent
- the relative effort each makes to raise aDd
billion for rural development
its own reverwes. 11te law would require
Nilon says the federal governmelit has
the states to "pass through" part of the done a good job of tax collection but botmoney --about half,on the average -to ched the delivery of services to the people.
cities, COlfllies, townships and other For problemi!Olvlng, he qys, "The people
localities. \
.
who know a place best are the people who
. For the most part, tile special £evenue- live there."
·
sharing funds would come from the
categorical aid programs they ·would . "What is needed, then, is a program
about one.third of the federal . under which we can enjoy the best of both
govei'DD!ent's total grant-in-aid ouUay of worlds, a program which will apply fast$30 billion a year. 11te first-year amounts growing federal reverwes to (ast~owing
for each fund include $3 billion for state and local requirements ." the
education, $2.6 billion for transportstion, President told Congre~s.

'1.1

,.;place,

MADISON, Wis. (UP!) - Defense
Secretary Melvin R. Laird told the
University of Wisconsin Daily Cardi~al in
a copyrigh!H interview he will leave his
Cabinet post in 1973.
In Friday's edition of the student
·newspaper, Cardinal reporter Peter
Greenberg quoted Laird as saying," 'Four
years as defense secr.etary is long enough.
I'm not interes!H in being secretary of
defense another four years."
The Interview was_conducted Thursday in Laird's Pentagon office. Julian
Levine, a Defense Department public
affairs official, who was present during
part of the interview, confirmed that Laird
planned to retire as secretary in J..973.

.Double Heresy Ripping Church
fundamental need is being met in many.
contemporary churches.
Dr. Elton Trueblood, the Quaker
philosopher, has put his finger on the basic
danger of going overboard in either
direction. In his book "The New Man for
Our Time," he says that intense qctivism
without a life of devotion producea
damaging results, "one of which is
calCulated arrog~nce!' On the other hand, ·
an exclusive preoccupation with personal
piety ts equally bad because one cannot.
truly love Christ while ~'forgetting those
whom Christ loves."

bolh-anq commandment.
No Prolelltant denomination has been
more deeply and aggressively involved in
social action that the United Olurch of
Chrllit. Its executive council met in New
York last month to decide what concerns
should get priority during the next few
years. Predictably, the council sgreed that
of God and Man
local congregatloos of .the United Church
lllto this hereiy, and their resulting should Continue working for racial justice
aquabble has almost tom the church apart and world peace.
Today there are hopeful indications that
IJQille. people on both sides of the divisive
But top billing was given to "the faith
controversy are beginning to realize that crisis of modem man."
half a gospel is not enough-no matter A spokeaman said the decisitm to give
whiCh half you choose. In the teaching of top priority to theological Inquiry was
Jesus, personal piety promp!H by love of · JrOmpted by a conviction that "modem
God and social action JX'OII)pted by love of man needa faith by which to live," and
mankind are not an elther'"r choice, but a there is a serious question whether this
By LOUIS CASSELS
UPI ReUgloa Writer
The chief heresy of contemporary
Christianity is the notion that the church
should be concerned either with social
action or with peraonal lliety.
Both activists and pietists have {allen

It is not a new point. Jesus said lhe same

thing, over and over. But it will bear
repetition in lhe climate of controversy
that ts currently demoralizing the church.

a

DAYLIGHT SAVING
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Daylight &amp;jvlng Time returns at 2
a.m. Sunday in all but four
stalell: Clocks should be turned
ahead one hour.
The four states in which the
time change does i!ot take
effect are Arizona, Hawaii,
Michigan and Indiana. Their
legislatures took advantage of
the Uniform Time Act of 1966
which allowed stalell to remain
on Standard Time If their
legislatures approved.
Daylight Saving Time states
will return to Standard Time
Oc't. 3L

Smith Hearing Opened

PT. PLEASANT- A hearing ·words, full · explanation of
on ten charges for the ouster of charges, that the charges be
L Brooks Smith as superln- signed, and that six certain
tendent of Mason County charges be dismissed since they
Schools got underway Saturday were old charges, which the
morning by four members of Supreme Court had ruled on last
the five-member Board of month.
Education In the local court- Withers asked Charles
room.
Eshenaur to read the 10 charges
In the absence of Ted Stevens, against Smith and then followed
president, Bill Withers was with his reading Smith's anmade president pro-tem. swers. With Smith's answers
Withers announced that Stevens was a summary which cited the
has been considerably lll and Supreme Court ruling in part
ECONOMY TALK
through advice of his doctor " .... that the charges are not of
could not be present.
such serious nature so as to
WASHINGTON (UP!)
.PresldentNlxonwilldiscussthe At mid-morning Withers warrant such action; and that
denied three motions by defense the appoiniment of the acting
economy in a speech Monday to
the u. s. Chambe~ of Com- attorney Gordon Billheimer and superintendent since it involved
merce. The address Is announced the hearing would nepotism further weakens the
sc~uled at 11 a.m. EDT at · continue without delay.
contention that urgent action
Constitution HaiL
Billheimer has asked for a. was necessary .. " regarding
Bill of Particulars, or In other Smith's suspension. In the

r-----------------------------------------1

Voice along Broadway I

I

'

HOW ABOUT A MEATY ROLE
did, to a bash that turned out to be really enINSfEAD OF TONY'S OLD GRIND? ' tertalnlnj!, especially for celebrity-voyeurs.
NEW YORK - Met Tony Rand8ll at 42nd &amp;
Can't get anyone at ABC to say if con5th. Tony just left denUat. Seems he saw a tr.Verslal sportspieler Howard Cosell will be
wcman spllllots of guck on her front and quickly phased out locally with ex-Giant grid stsr and
grabbed a handful of Kleenex from pocket and CBS sportscaster Frank Gifiord's accession to
urged 118ffie on woman. Grateful lady accepted, ABC-TV sports .... Soon-to-be-released
and disappeared. Later Tony discovered biography of the late Dorothy Dandridge will
"safely" wrapped In his Kleenex had been his link that tragic beauty with a recently front"teeth grinder protector," a metal choppers paged film director never in the habit of denying
cover for sleep-wear which neutralized his his past affairs ..-. Autograph fans are go,ing
abrasive constant grinding of teeth. Why should electronic:. At the Ubrary Restaurant, Stacy
Tony grind his teeth whlie sleeping? "Rage!" Keach and Judy Colllns were asked ·not for
Tony elq)lained as he ambled Irately toward autographs but for few worda murmured into
Tlmea Square.
the fan's tape recorder.
The Liberty Magazine revival party at tlie
Sherman Fairchild's $2,000,000 bequeat to
Rainbow Room was a wildly swinging mass
a-owd ·scene, scads of celebritie8 (Patsy Kelly, starlet Dianna Williams (from hts $200 million
Allee Faye, Maureen Stapleton) Connee Boswell estate) has been estimated as the largest ever
(who sang with Jimmy and Marian Mc- left to anyone but a wife or an ex ..... Former
ParUand's band, as warmly good as ever) l!lter Mayor Bob Wagner's idyll with cafe society
Jet erstwhile Bdwy. columnist Frank Farrell and beauty Marilyn Gelber has idled.
The Rainbow Room's BriUah Festival Is a
yours admlrlngly carry her in her wheelchair up
and dowll the assorted exit stairs of the always great success, owner Jerry Brody tells us-ali
beautiful Rainbow Room - Connee's been British dishes plus criSply entertaining bagpipe
paralyzed frun the waist down since chlldhood, intervals and the customary elegant Rainbow
and It was a labor of love-for-talent; also Connie Room service .... It's a magical spot, its timeless
Towers, maybe the most beautiful girl on the Bauhaus decor softened with warm candles and
musical stage (well, anyway tied with Alexis restrained lighting and the mbst marvelous all&amp;nlth of "Follies") .... Hope ~pion, with points views of Manhattan of all sky-view N. Y.
everyone trying to gues.s her age (from ll(ldown) eateries .... And marvelous dance music, not the
In the nolsles!, eyC'Catching, feathers-and-lame noisome eruptions of the discoteks.
costume anywhere' (how does she shut it off?)
La Foret in the Pierre Hotel lB another ·
plus many hundreds of Llberty-loYing or at least · splendid spot for polite dining-dancing amid
cocktall-recepUve Invitees .... Harry Hershfield .comfortable elegance, not the conibalive decor
analyzed the horde: "The trouble with this party and rock assaults of the primitive rhythms ;
Is that everyone they invited show up"; and they melody's 1D sgain, not just jangle.

a

MONDAY 9:30 TO 8 P.M.

*RED *BLACK •WHITE *BLUE

&lt;Continl!ed

VALUES lO $16.00

ONE LOT MEN'S WORK SHOES
VALUES TO $11.98

Mitchell
(Continued from Page 13)
fact, left us a single day of
quiet- as they are," Mrs. Meir
said.
"We cannot be expected to
make the experiment and prove
to the world that geographyiS
unimportant. In fact, (former ·
Sen. Eugene) McCarthy came
to Israel and learned geography
is indeed im)&gt;ortant."
"I think that if Rogers comes
here and sees everything,
perhaps he, too, may change
his mirrd," Mrs. Meir added.
Israel has said it will not
leave such natural military
barriers as the Jordan River
and the Golan Heights, both
captured in 1967. A withdrawal
from the Suez Canal, the third
natural boundary seized in the
war, has been one of Egypt's
conditions for a partial peace.

• HERMAN • CHIPPEWA • WOLVERINE

co.

.

.Fenderhosch, Crew ·Otief,
Door.Gunner on Blue Ghost

was banned.
- Five minulell later, the
sa me reconnaissance illane
received evidence of an electronic "iock,.n" by a Communist
antiaircraft' battery 92 miles
north of the DMZ. One of the
Skyhllwks fired · a missile.
Again, no report of damage on
either side.
·
It was the busiest round of
air ~ction in Indochina since
Nov. I, 1968, when former
President LyndQn B. Johnson
announced a halt in the
bombing of North Vietnam in a
move to get peace talks
started.
The booby trap explosion, in
which seven Americans were
killed, occurred Friday. Spokesmen said the blast was caused
by a 105mm artiliery sheii
rigged as a land mine near
Quang Ngai city 318 miles
northeast of Saigon.

By Sp4 Wllllam W. Jobnion ·
QU~NG TRI PROVINCE,
Republic o(. Viebtam (USARV10) . The men in the
operations . bunker listened
intently to a radio transmls$ion: "Blue Ghost Control
U.S. truck convoy on QL 9 three
kilometers from Khe Sanh is

under mortar and small arms
attack. Can you send help?"
Quickly picking up the
microphone f&lt;om the radio
operator, the operations of-

directs air support.
For the "Blue Ghosts" of the
23rd In fan try Division 's F
Troop, 8th Air Ca vairy, this was
but one of more than 3,500

ADDRESS

COLUMJ!US (UP!) -Bishop
F. Gerald Ensley of Colwnbua,
spiritual and admlnlslrative
leader of the Ohio W1111t me of
u.. Uni. . Methodist Clureb,ll
to give the eplseopll addl n at
the 19'12
conference In

S X7

NO. 725

SOUTH
BEND
REEL

SUPER .MARKETS

THIRD AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS,

_

OPEN 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

ARMOUR;fl

U~ S. 0. A. Choice'Beef

Inspected

HECK'S REG .
$8.88

CHUCK ROASTS

S699

ILADE CUTS

•

SPORTS DEP T ,

enemy supply lines on the Ho servation helicopters (LOH)
Chi Minh trail.
and troop carrying Huey UH-l's
Serving with F Troop is provide convoy escort and
Specialist 5 Joseph G. Fen- armed aerial reconnaissance in
derbosch, 22, a UH-1 crew chief Military· Region 1. Home base
and door gunner. He is the son for F Troop is Chu Lai, but for
of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. 'Operations Lam Son 719, the
Fenderbosch, 4 Hillcrest Dr., unit . operated from a small '
Gallipolis. A 1966 graduate of St. landing pad in Quang Tri.
John Vianney Seminary, Spec. The UH-1 "slicks" are made
Fenderbosch has attended Ohio available for rescue of downed
State University. He has earned helicopter crews and carry
the Air Medal, two Bronze Stars infantrymen, called "Blues" by
and the Army Colflmendation F Troop. In some cases, a slick
Medal.
is capable of recovering a
Blue Ghost helicopter teams disabled WH.
of Cobra gunships, light ob-

. . .69c

• •

!If'S GOT T' ~Ill' 'IJtm ~~~
8loo0 ·'BOCI&lt;lli' I&lt;ROO'B. -·
~N'C1lU:P5. ti KE CI'IP'ri AHAB
WHO'LL COMMIT JIJ~'T ABOUT
~'I' C'ltUMMl' ACll' GET

...,

U. S. No. 1 Grade
GEE, ANClo I
MOHEV TO

GIVi 'EM

10-lb. BAG
WAGNER'S .

•
••

Breakfast Drinks

•
•

Oi'ange, Grape &amp; Grapefruit

Quart Bottles

.

PAt.

'

Butter

•

•"•

·'

•

2·1b. 8 oz. Jar
M:USSE~M·AN'S

•
•
•
••
•
•

Apple Sauce

•

·for

•

•

'•

·FW·FFO

CHARM IN

SUNSHINE

SHORTENING

BAIHROOM TISSUE

Sugar Wafers

650-Sh.

'12-oz.

3-lb,
Can

'

87(

Roll45iJY.

4-Pack

· TID.E .
DETERGENT
'

25c Off Label
5-lb. 4-oz. Pkg.

.14

Pkg.

I

5~
. /J
.,.

DAN DEE
CADDY .

POTATO
'

(:HIPS

'.'

'

''
•'
''

l-Ib. 4-o:r: Box

•''

.I
l

AS F\O'(AL
DOCTOR,\

FOR&amp;ID

15 0'&lt;-IL"' ONE-AN D n.lE
1\CTTEN PART ABOUT HIM
15 - HE LIKES10 ITT
'5LOB60VIAN KI~S.'!
Tf.IE &amp;CORE. SO FAR IS-·

K ING CRABS - 173
KING&amp; - - 0

~;

', 11 ;,;.

WITH COUPLINGS
'. Fitc'K's REG.

sua

• ;J.o

•

DEPT.

S H. P.

GILSON
TILLER

HECK'S RE~.
$177;88

REDWOOD
PICNIC
TABLE
HECK'S REG. $36.88

3 OZ. TUBE

32 OZ.

HECK'S
Detergent

PRELL
CONCENTRATE

HECK'S .
REG .

SHAMPOO

44c

3

for

CAROL HARGRAVES - she's the one with the warm,
pleasant smile- used a great deal of originality and talentfor her
entry in the speech contest of the Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Socle ty this year.
.
Although she says she's rio artist, Carol did four excellent
largedrawings to provide illustrations as she moved through her
Interesting talk on the history of the Sacred Heart Church in
Pomeroy. Three of the drawings - done in pencil - Included the
llrst church, the present church and the pipe organ. The fourth
· was a color picture of a church mouse, "Jeremiah," and Carol
told her historical account through the mouse. Very clever ! Carol
was first place winner in her school and in the county.

$1.00
rr.:·

~ExcedriRJ
THI I l l "

ftf~

1-&lt; ~AI~ 'II I VIM

.

•

EXCEDRIN

'

·ANITA FULTZ, DAUGHTER of Mr. and Mrs. John Fultz,
Middleport, and Duane Will, son of Mr. and Mrs. Norman .Will,
Rutland area, left Saturday at noon for a concerttour with the All·
Ohio Youth Choir.
.·
. ·
The group will glve ,concerts at Berlin and Wooste~ and then.
go to_V[asl)ingtm, q. C.. for a "command performance" for
President Richard Nixon on Monday afternoon. They will go on a :
sight seeing tour bef_or~ returning 'J1uesday afternoon. Miss Fultz,
a soprano, all() Will, a tenor, are students of Mrs. Christine
Guthrie at Metis High School.
mclcientally, the Meigs Chorale of Mrs. Guthrie is preparlng a
concert for May 9in observance of National Music Week .

lOO's
•

. HECK'S REG.
$1.27
COSMIT/t D9T.

A UST pF STUDENTS participlting in.a pan~! discussion at
a m~eting of the Meiga County Education Assh. recently did not

- - - -lMludtd.h.:a nomA...nf. gtAvA_JC_irltmJin.....~a.Rt.AI':n~Riah ~h~1 Jt. nlti U-

PIPE

SPORTS

MR. AND MRS. VINCENT DABO and Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Kelly and children are in Poca, W. Va., today to attend the
dedication of the new home of Mrs: Hilda Peyton and her late
la!sband, tbe Rev. Henry Peyton.
Some months ago, a home fire was shown on television and it
was the Peyton house burning, The Peytons are cousins of the
Dabos and the Kellys. The Peytons later visited in Middleport and
showed their new house plans to local relatives .
The home went under construction and in the meantime, the
Rev. Mr. Peyton was hospitalized. Cancer was deteeted.
However, in spite of his serious illness he was taken to his new
home before his death. His last wish was that the home "be
dedicated to the Lord." Hence, today's observance.

'

SEWER DRAIN

38c

HOW REFRESHING IT has been to see Meigs Countjans - .
joined by others - respond to the George Thompson Kidney Fund
over the past few weeks. The fund total has gone over $7,800 and
George, who is home now from Cleveland Clinic, has tenned the
response and kindness of people, "unbelievable."
A nice gesture on the part of sixth graders at the Salem
Center School- and to be sure you'll find young people right in
there pitching these days - . The sixth graders won a money prize
for having the most parents present for a PTA meeting. There
were many temptations for the young people ... they could have
bought recorda, playground balls and bats and other play
equipm,ent However, they chose to give the prize to George
Thompson.and on top of that made personal contributions to the
fund drive.
·

.

: . . '.

4" PLASTIC

HECK'S
REG.

MEIGS COUNTY WlLL be well represented in Europe this
summer. Two groups are Europe bound on student tours, one
headed by Mrs. Phyllis Hackett and the other by Mrs. Alice Nease
and Mrs. Fay Sauer. Some 15 persons are involved in each tour
both of which will be about three weeks long. .

We RtM'" The Rioht To limit Quantitie1 On All Item&amp; In Thi1 Ad.
Pri&lt;tl Effective Thru Sot. Moy I, 1971 - Nooe Sold To Doalert.

161f:z.oz. Cans

1•

I

POMEROY - Talented and attractive Judy Riggs of the
Chester area was again selected this year to serve as one of the
judges for the "Miss Wood County" Pageant held Saturday night
In Parkersburg. The contest was a preliminary event to ·the annual Miss America Pageant staged at Atlantic City each September.

tiOI'IT WAVE ANY

He!!lthful and Nutrjtious - At A Special Low Price

24(

I'

.

Red Potatoes

..

I
I

'''
By Bob Hoeflich

SPORTS
DEPT.

4 QT.
FOAM ICE
BUCKET

I

Of the Bend

HECK'S
REG.
$19.99

SPDR T5 DEPT.

:

~t....

BIKE
HELMET

HECK'S REG. 88c

Ir---------------------------~
·
I

T' THf. "GOlt:l"· ..

SPO RTS DEPT

FOAM
FISHING
HELMET

Sp5 Fenderbosch, Crew Chief,
Door Gunner on a Blue Ghost

CENTER CUT

HECK'S
REG.
$3.99

,. r •

.

CHUC:K STEAK

TARP

u.s:Govt.

THE~

to GIVE

1:oo P.M. -

then switches frequency and support of Operation· Lam Son
calls ·an already airborne 719, the Republic of Vietnam's
helicopter gunship team and · armed incursion Into Laos to cut

~t

5..00
7.98

SUNDAY SAVINGS

ficers answers "Affirmative/' sorties flown since January in

Budget
Studies

COLUMBUS (UPI) - House
and Senate committees will
continue this week to work on
the proposed $9.1 billion budget
of Gov. John J. Gilligan as the
General Assembly draws to
within two months of the time it
must be enacted.
House Republican leaders
hope to get the giant package
out of the Finance Committee
and onto the House Oo&lt;ir the
week of May 10. The new fiscal
were numbers, 4:,5,6,7 ,8 and 9. biennium to which the budget
At this point he asked who applies begins July 1.
attorney John Hash represents The House Finance Committee
and who employed him. Hash will hold several meetings on
replied that he felt these were various segments of the budget,
tactics by the defense to delay hearing from the Department of
by asking for a Bill of . Par- Mental Hygiene and Correction
ticulars and said he was op- Tuesday. education and welfare
posed to this at this time, but proponents and opponents Wedwould' have given it if he had nesday and holding an open
had the request earlier.
meeting for general proponents
As to the defense motion for and opponents Thursday.
dismissal he said the Supreme The House Education CommitCourt had ordered to resume tee, studying the education porthe hearing and they were here tion of the budget, has schedto finish it.
uled working sessions for Tuesday afternoon and Wednesday
WOMEN TO CO.EDIT
night.
GAMBIER, Ohio (UP!)
The House Ways and Means
'I' he camp·us newspaper at Committee, considering various
Kenyon College will have two tax alternatives, ·is meeting
women students as co-editors Wednesday and Thursday.
for the first time in the school's The Senate Finance Commit147-year existence. Named to tee, preparing itself in advance
the top positions on the Kenyon for the budget, will consider its
Collegian were Uesel Freldrich provisions at a Monday night
of Locust Valley, N. Y., and meeting.
Denise Largent of Berea, Ohio, The Senate has scheduled a
sophomores in the Coordinate vote for Tuesday on a heavilyCollege for Women, Kenyon's sponsored bipartisan bill rewritsister college which opened two ing regulations for credit unions
years ago.
in Ohio. The chief spoosor of
the measure is Sen. Ralph S.
Regula, R-Navarre.
A Senate Commerce and Labor subcommittee is expected to
NAMED PRESIDENT
report
to the full committee
NEW CONCORD, Ohio (UPI)
- Dr. William P. Miller has Tuesday on a compromise verbeen named president of sion of Democratic and Republican unemployment compensaMuskingum College here.
tion benefit proposals.
•
TheSenateJudiclaryCommittee is scheduled to begin di8cussions Wednesday on proposed
revisions in Ohio's divorce laws
and reconciliation procedures.
The House Environment Committee will hear testimony Tuesday night and Thursday
ori two new strip mine
control
bills ·sponsored
by Republican Reps. Halph ·
Welker and Sam · Spec.
The measures are then expected to be sent to a subcommittee, joining other strip mine
legislation. ·
The House is acheduled to return at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday and
the Senate. at 1:30 p.m.

YOUR HEADQUARTERS FOR SAFETY TOE' SHOES

!$-The SundayTimes-Sentlnei,Sunday,April25,1971

from Pag~ 13)

MONDAY 9:30 TO 8 P.M.

ONE LOT LADIES DRESS SHOES
.

summary Smith also contended
that "the majority of citi?~ns do
not approve of the hllrrassment
I have been going through".
Withers was explicit in
stating that the hearing would
continue even into the night
until it is finished and that attorneys must · "stick to the
charges." He said he had been
advised by the State Supreme
Court and the State Superintendent to not linger, but to go
right on through.
Biliheimer asked to reserve
the right to "vouch the record."
Biliheimer asked to continue
the hearing until the Bill of
Particulars which he lalieled
"vague" could be furnis hed for
the defense, which brought
remarks from John Hash, attorney for the petitioners, who
contended the defense had time
to make.the request earlier, but
hadn't.
Billheimer requested that six
charges be dismissed which

Air War

1

HECK'S
REG.

92c

0 HI

GENERAL ELECTRIC

Dehumidifier
HECK'S REG. $87.88

SUNDAY
ONLY

�, ~-.-.....---·~,_-~----:-~·------..------------

'

17-Tbe....,,.. •• _.,.l,sM11J,Aprila.JI71

1971 GAlliPOLIS ROTARY RELAYS CHAMPIONS- Dave Angles, Leon SmiUt, Steve Rose, Chuck Wood, Steve
_Garua Academy High .School's Blue DevilS captured Stebbins, Pete Neal, Rod Ferguson, Chris Fisher, Dave
Saturday's FourUt ·Annual RO.tary Relays team cham• . Somerville, Steve Short, John Bagshaw, Rick Grymes.and
pionship wiUt 41 points. Pictured above, front row, left to Coach Orval · Fee. Not pictured - Bill Broyles, Larry
right are : Wayne Alverson·, Dwain Beaver, Richard Snowden, Danny Maynard, Charles Howard and David
Fer-guson,- Dave Knotts, Tim Perry, Randy Rice, Steve Kerns.
Salisbury and Ron Elder. Slandlng, left to tight - Coach

· STEVE STEBBINS ~ptured individual scoring,honorsdllfing Saturday's Rotary Relays
wiUt 16\0 points·. Preserijing Stebbins the trophy IS Juliana Johnson, Ga!Ua Academy High
School Valentine Queen. ·
.

·Rotary Relays Attracts 14 Area Teams
(Continued from page l)
Galllpolis- Rotary· Club, and Dr. Harry
King presented trophies and ribbons to
individual winners and team winners.
The champion·Blue Devils picked up five
firsts, capturing Ute discus, long jump, 100
yard dash, 830-yard run, and 830-yard
. relay events.
Runnerup Chesapeake captured three
firsts. The Panthers won Ute two mile run
(Gallla's Richard Ferguson, defending
champion, did not participate in this
event), 440-yaql dash, and 120-yard dash.
Marietta captured two firsts, Wellston,
Rock Hill, South Point, Logan, North
Gallia and Portsmouth East one each.
FIELD EVENTS
DISCUS- Bagshaw. G; Adkins, Well;
Kouns, RH ; WoOd, G: Curry, C- 135'·9" .
SHOT PUT- Adkins, Well : Kouns, RH ;
Wood, G: Neal, G: Mullins, PE- 45'·11".
. HIGH JUMP - Stewart, RH and
Montgomery, SP, tied for tlrst; Word,
Whbg : Brown, Mar; S111lth. Well.-5'10".
LONG JUMP - Stebbins, G: Cernus,

Mar: Hutchinson, RH: Fairchild, C:
Stewart, RH - 20'-10" .
POLE VAUL T-Davls, Mar : Warth·
man, L: Green. Whbg_: Fairchild, C:
Estep, C - 13'. (New meet record.
Previous mark 12·6 In 1970).
RUNNING EVENTS
120· YARD HIGH HURDLES - Whitley,
C: Cole, L: Crawtord, L: Well· Meigs ;
Stewart, RH - :16.
IOO'YARD DASH- Stebbins, G: Brown,
NG : McKinnis, Well : Noble, SP: .Boston,
Mar - : 10.1. (New meet record . Old mark
:10.5 In 1970) .

-:22. (New meet record. Old mark :22.6
in 19701.
TWO MILE RUN - Sheets, C: Lane,
Mar: Saul. SP: Marklns. I: Davis, W 10: 16.
880-YARD RELAY- Gallipolis. Run·

American League Standings
( Nighl games not included)
East
w L Pet. GB
9 4 .692
Baltimore
9 6 .600 1
Boston
8 7 .533 2
washington
6 9 .400 4
Detroit
6 9 .400 4
New York
5 9 .357 4112
Cleveland
West
W L Pel. GB
Oakland
14 5 .737

.

OU Nips Notre Dam.e7·6·

WHERE 'l1IE ACI'ION WAS - Delj;tie lfrol!g Winds wbldl blew up dUst cons\antiy
Saturday, a g00fl.6ized crowd was on hand at Ga!Upolis' Memorial Field for the Fourth Annual
Rotary Relays.

........ -.
~

both Gary Shade and Mike Bobcats Friday, came back
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI) Schmidt doubled to produ~ with a three-run homer htt by
Ohio University broke a 3-3 lie
a 7-3 lead. Then the . Phil Krill off rebel p1tcher Jun
in the ninth with a four-run
ners were Snowden, Nea l, Ferguson,
.
Stebbins: Marietta: Chesapeake: Wellston
scoring streak, then halted a Irish, who suffered a Bierman.
14-3
drubbing
by
the
Shade
anchored
the
Ohto
and Portsmouth East - 1: 37. (New meet
final Notre Dame rally for a 7-6
attack with a two:.run homer 1n
record. Old mark 1:37.6 in 19701.
college baseball victory
MILE RELAY - Portsmouth East,
the third and a solo four-bagger
Marietta, Wahama , Wellston and
Saturday.
in the fifth.
California
8 8 .500 4112
Gallipolis - 3:42.
The Bobcats shot ahead in the
The Bobcats are 16-3 overall
Milwaukee
7 7 .500 4112
Here's Saturday's team standings;
TEAM
POINTS Kansas City
8 9 .471 5 final inning when Bob Kleiber
while Notre Dame is 7-12.
Minnesota
7 9 .438 S1f2 tripled, Tony Gray singled and
41
Toliver,
L;
Hutchinson
,
Gallipolis
Ohio University
MILE RUN
5 11 .353 7
Chesapeake
361!2 Chicago
002 010 004-7 9 2
RH; Shepherd, Mar: Williams, PE : Hays, Marietta JVs
36
Salurday's Resulls
.
Kansas
City
6
Cleveland
0
C - 4:33.
Notre Dame
·
C., C. Rous h, L
RockanHill
27
440· YARD DASH- Wilson,
23'12 Minnesota 11 New York 8 111
COLUMBUS (UP! )- ClhJo ·
200 010 00}--8 11 3
.Wah: Stebbins, G: Hall , PE - Roney, PE '" w':,lilston
23
innings)
Stat never trailed to defeat
Toadvine, Wenger (4),
Boston 4 Chicago 2
-1~~2~ARD
LOW HURDLES - Cernus
Portsmouth East
13
Purdue 12·7 and 6-5 in Big Ten Bierman (7) and Swisher;
Oakland 5 Detroit 4
·
.
: South Point
12
Mar: Cole, L: Whitley, C. Rutherford. SP, N thGallla
10
Baltimore at California (night)
baseball play Saturday to boost Schmidt and Roemer. w Stewart, RH - :21.4. (New meet record . Worh8 ma
7
Milwaukee at Washington
its loop recol'd to 3-1 in a 9-11 Bierman; HR _ Ohio, Shade
Old mark : 21.8 in 1970) .
Wha 1 b
7
(nightl
lBO· YARD RUN- Rod Ferguson, G:
ee ers urg
POMEROY
Nolan Season.
Kr.ll
2
Today's Games
1 •
2
Hutchin.son. ·RH : Taulbe, L: Stewart, ~r~~n JVs
2
I All limes EDT I
Swackhamer's Meigs High golf The double loss left the ( ). Notre Dame,
Mar : Souders, Well - 2:02.
K
c k
0
Detroit at Oakland (4:30p.m. I team dropped a triangular meet Boilermakers 1·3 in the con220-YARD DASH - Brown, NG: Wilson,
yger reo
Baltimore at California (5 p.m.)
C: McKinnis, Well : Hunt, C; Parks, Whbg
Cleveland at Kansas City 12:30 Saturday to host Marietta and ference and 10-10 overall.
p.m .)
Zanesville, Marietta finishing Ohio State piled up 10 runs in
Milwaukee at Washington (1:30 first with 423 strokes over 18 the first two frames and then
p.m .)
'
Minnesota at New York 12 p.m.) holes followed by Zanesville coasted in the opener. The
For All
Chicago at Boston (2 p.m.)
with 427 and Meigs soaring to Buckeyes tallied five runs in the
Occasions
Monday's Games
first inning of the nightcap
477.
Baltimore at Oakland (night)
•••
The Marauders were playing before Bill Sharp hit a solo
Cleveland at California (night)
Detroit at Kansas City (night) without senior ace Bill Hensler ho)1ler in Ute fifth for the· winPlaques
Milwaukee at Boston (night) who was replaced by Jon Buck. ning run. .
(Only games scheduled)
and
Meigs was led by Frank
' · ~:·xpert
Girolami who carded a 46 and a
National League Standings
By United Press International 47 for 93. Match medalist was
· · 1Engravfng
(Nighl games not included)
It is quite untr.ue that the
Bob Pishco who shot an 80 on
East
hides its head in the
ostrich
W L Pel. GB two 40s.
GALLIPOLIS - Dave Bur- Blue will play Waverly Tueswhen
confronted by
sand
•·Montreal
6 4 .600
Other Meigs scorers were Bob
danger
.
When
cornered or
nett's line single with the bases day evening on Memorial Field.
St. Louis
10 7 .588 'h Werry, 94; Chuck Hannahs, 95;
.538
New York
7 6
wounded, the bird kicks 422 Second Ave. ·Gallipolis
loaded and two outs in Ute
FAIRLAND
.529 '12 Steve Story, 95, and Buck, 99. vic i0 us ly .
Pittsburgh
9
8
a.;;;;.;;;;;;;;.;;;,;,;;;...;,;,;,_...
seventh Saturday, gave the PLAYERS
AB R H
Philadelphia
5 a .385 21!, Meigs will meet Wahama
Gallipolis Blue Devils a come- Black 3b
3 2 1
Chicago
6 11 .353 31!2 Tuesday at the Pomeroy Golf
Roberts ss
4 1 2
West
from-behind 4.3 victory over Brumfield c
4 o 2
W L Pel. GB Course.
Fuller If
3 0 1
Fairland.
San Francisco 14 4 .778
Burneti's shot followed G. Ward 1b
4 o o
Atlanta
8 6 .571 4
Los Angeles
10 8 .556 4
singles by Kev Sheets, Mark ~~~~ ~b
~ ~
Houston
9 8 .529 4112
Johnson and John Davis.
Love rf
2 o 1
Cincinnati
4 10 .286 8
The DeVils plated an earlier McConnel ct
3 0 0
San Diego
3 11 .214 9
run in the inning on walks to Totals
29' 3 10
x - games behind based on
GALLIPOLIS
1st
place team
Tom Prose and Chuck Perroud PLAYERS
AB R H
Salurday's Results
and Sheets' single. Perroud was Johnson 2b
3 0 1
San
Francisco
2 Pittsburgh o
POMEROY •
Nolan
0 1
cut down trying to score.
David
3b
2
Chicago
7
New
York
5
Swackhamer's
Meigs
Golf
team
Burnett p
3 1 1
Los Angeles 5 Cincinnati 4
found the going a little too tough
The win · pushed Gallipolis' Ballard rf
1 0 0
San Diego at Atlanta (twilight)
0
0
record to 10-1. It .was their Slone ss
2
Philadelphia at st. , Louis at the New Lexington course
1
0
·
to
f
the
Prose
1b
1
(night)
Friday as they dropped a match
seven th
. one run vtc ry o
Perroud c
2 0 0
Montr.
e
al
at
Houston
I
night)
208 to 218 to the hosts. Bill
season.
Boone cf
3 0 0
Today's
Games
Visiting Fairland jumped in Sheets If
3 2 2
(All limes EDTI
Hensler again led the
front with a single run in the Totals
20 4 5
San
Francisco
at
Pittsburgh
Marauders as he shot a 41, three
RUNNER-UP TROPHY of Saturday's FourUt Annual
Line Score:
I1:30 p.ni. I
strokes behind medalist Ed
first and added two more in the Fairland
100 020 o-3 10 o Rotary Relays went to Chesapeake. Accepting the team
New
York
at
Chicago
(2:
15
Rugg of New Lex.
fifth.
Gallipolis
000 110 2- 4 5 2
p.m.)
award
Is
CHS
Coach
Bob
Harris.
It was presented by Janie
R. Black, reaching first on an . Mayo I LP) and Brumf ield.
San Del go at Atlanta 2 (1: 30
MEIGS
We Look Forward To Seroing
Burnett (WPI and Perroud .
Stowers, GAHS cheerleader.
·
p.m .)
Bill Hensler ·41 ; Frank
error, scored on a sing Ie by
philadelphia at St. Louis (2: 15 Girolami, 45, Steve Story' 44,
catcher Brumfield.
You In The Future!
p.m.)
,
,
The Dr~gons increased their
Los Angeles at Cincinnati 2 Bob Werry 43, Chuck Hannahs
lead to J..i in the fifth on con- FALCONS SWAP SABATINE
(1: 15 p.m.)
46.
Montreal
at
Houston
(3
p.m.)
. NEW LEXINGTON
secutive doubles by Black and ATLANTA (UPI)- Defens1ve JIM RICHARDS PROMOTED
Oldham moved up to the
Monday's Games,
Roberts and a single by Fuller. tackle Btll Sabatme, seekmg to
Mike Wallenburg 40, Tom
BOWLING GREEN, Ky. position of athletic director New York at St. Louis (night)
"BUILDING SUPPLIERS"
Gallipolis had tied the game at come back after a one-year ( UPI)...Jim Richards, 34, an after guiding Western Kentucky Philadelphia at Houston (night) Saunders, 42, Ed Rugg 38, Steve
Gallipolis, Ohio
Hillis 43, Rick Aleen 45.
1·1 · in Ute fourth inning on a rellrement, was traded Fnday assistant to John Oldham at to third place in the NCAA (Only games scheduled)
booming triple by Sheets and an by the Atlanta Falcons of the Western Kentucky for the past Tournament in Houston last
infield error. They scored National Football Conference to three seasons, Friday was month.
another run in the fifth. ·
the San Diego Chargers of the named to replace the latter as Richards, a 1959 graduate of NEW RACING DIRECTORS
·In going the distance, Burnett Am~rican Conferen~e for an the Hill toppers' head basketball Western Kentucky , never
NEW YORK (UPI)...John J.
fanned eight while walking undiSclOsed draft chotce.
played college basketball.
coach.
Finley Jr., president of Eagle
three .
Sabath\o, 6-foot.J, 243-pounds
Downs, and Patrick J: Rooney,
Brent May'o was charged with from Colorado, was a part-lime
president of Continental Thor-'
the loss. He issued six free player for the Falcons m 1969,
oughbred Racing Assn., were.
but
retired
at
the
end
of
that
passes.
elected Friday to the Thor·
Coach Jim, Osborne's Big season .
oughbred Racing Association's
board of directors.
Rooney, 32, is the son of Art
Rooney, noted horseman and
owner of the Pittsburgh Stee·
lers of the National Football
We have been appointed
League.
the authorized dealer for

Ex-Rio Star Makes It

GALLIPOLIS - Coach John Milhoan's
Gallipolis Blue Devil golfers defeated Waverly and
Ironton St. Joe in a triangular match at Ironton
Friday evening. '
It was the Gallians' eighth and ninth triumphs of
Joseph· McKay, an Oliio high McKay, 34, tall and hand- and research - in education; the year, and sixth and seventh victories in a row
school basketball coach who is some, gathers material for his beillg on the Dean's list several since a 11-stroke loss at Athens on April7.

Big as Coach-Autho·r

Purdue Twice

Meigs ·Golfers ·

TROPHIES

Devils Win lOth Game

Burnett's Single
·~Pefeats Fairland

~TAWN,EY'S .
TROPHY HOUSE

l

Meigs Golfers

Beaten Friday

FOR MAKING OUR

·SPRING PANELING
SALE
ATremendous Success

CARTER &amp; EVANS INC.

SHAKE SHOPPE'S
STUFTSHIRT

TODAY ONLY

K&amp;K Has Done It Again!

RALSTON RE-NAMED
NEW YORK (UPI)~Dennis
Ralston, 28, and a contract
tennis professional · $lnce 1966,
was selected Friday as coach
for the 1911 U.S. Davis Cup
Team . .It marks the fourth
· straight year that Ralston has
served in that post. ·

New

Yorker's beauty
comes in many 12'·wide
models in SS', 60', 62', 65'
and 70' lengths. There's an
arrangement to suit every
desire and every need.

STUFTSH IRTS

.REGULAR
69~

, NO COUPONS

.K·&amp; J{
t,

"One

~ 1;71 ~, ~~:. l~c.~

ol t/lfse days, we can thin' ol this os on important.

prelilliiiUJry step in

ol recyding

ANI SOli

2 FOR
•

--•
-

-

.'

•
•
•

..••
-....•• ·

.•...-.
•

.--..

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

r:::

.-.•"'.

......•

..•

......• •

·No Linlit_._

Second &amp;. Olive

married to the former Ann writing from a background of times during his college life;
Rupe of Middleport, has proved teaching,
playing,
and . and being selected as a NDEA
Guidance Institute participant
himself as a coach and as an coaching.
author.
He is in his 13th year of in 1960.
Head basketball· coach at teaching, having held positions
His playing honors include
Warren-Howland High School, at Mansfield-Madison High
McKay Utis year had hi~ eighth School (as reserve mentor to Utree years on high school allarticle published in a sports Dick Retton, former Pomeroy conference teams; High School
magazine with national cir· mentor ), Willoughby-Kirtland All-Southeastern Ohio; and All·
culation wiUt more assured. ·High, and North Canton High. Ohio. In college he was Most
This year he also coached the This is his sixUt year at Warren- Valuable Player, Captain,- and
Leading Rebounder on his
Tigers to the AAA sectional Howland.
tournament title and got to the
His athletic ·experience in· college team. In post college
district finals before be· eludes four years each of play, he was Sebring Semi-Pro
ing ousted by powerful varsity basketball in high All.Ohio in 1961; was all tourney
Youngstown-Boardman.
school and college; three years various times , and was a
, Said Mc,Kay, "My motivation of semi-pro basketball; nine member of the Warren
lor professional writing is years of ind~pendent basket' championship independent
tWofold: I want to make known ball; high school football and team four of the last six years.
certai.n
theories
about baseball and college baseball
Coach McKay's coaching
basketball and I want to player. He has been a head
demonstrate- to my English coach for ten years and boasts a honors include three constudents Utat I can practice record of 120 wins and 66 losses secutive championships at
what I preach," Besides his over that period, including five Kirtland; the first Trumbull
Conference basketball chamcoaching duties, he also teaches team championships.
English in Ute high school.
Early in 1967, McKay em- pionship in Howland history;
McKay's first article ap- barked on a bolder program of Ute first Sectional Tournament
peared in Coach and Athlete in writing, a 1500-word article championship in Howland
December 1964; then the accompanied by photographs history; Conference coach of
following May another was Utat gave 21 Howland players the year two years at Kirtland ;
printed in the Athletic Journal. national .coverage. This was two Howland High School all·
Before the year was finished, immediately accepted by american basketball players,
another article was publlshtd in Scholastic Coach and published and one High School All·
the Scholastic coach and two in April1967, a fully illustrated American at Kirtland.
more were published the article.
following year in September The high point of the athletic
and October.
writing career occurred Utis
In a comprehensive summary year when the Scholastic
of outstanding basketball ar- AUtletic Services of New York
ticles the B~acon Falls Coaches' City selected one of his articles
Digest chose McKay's first from over a thousand offered.
article as a part of its 1965-00 McKay's was one of only 25 that
issue. GaUtering momentum, made the grade. In the text, The
McKay wrote an article, "Pre· Best of Basketball, McKay's
Game Preparation; Physically contribution appears as
and Psychologically, which was Chapter IS in this compendium.
snapped up by Coach and A copy has a place of honor in
Athlete.
Ute Warren-Howland library.
Then in the summer of 1966, McKay has . had many
Prentice-Hall of New Jersey academic, . coaching, and
consigned to McKay an article playillg honors bestowed upon
• of his own choosing - any phase him during his short career.
• of basketball. In the Coaching Academic honors Include. being
: Clinic of April, 1967, a full ar· initiated into Phi Delta Kappa,
: ticle appeared honoring 10 the national fraternity for
: coaches and 14 players.
scholarship, leadership, service

..-

Overstuffed with a quarter pound of U. S. choice beef, freshly ground and
grilled, with. a mosl skillful blend of melted cheese, crisp green lettuce,
tomato, onion, pickle slices and Shake Shoppe special dressing. Served on
.a gigantic toasted bun . . .
·

.

Oalllpo't Ohio

GAHS Golfers Up
Record To 9-1
.

OSU Defeats

Come in Third

GEORGE CURRY, a member of Kyger Creek's track squad 1captured Ute 23rd annual Gil
Dodd Mile Run held Saturday afternoon in connection with the Fourth Annual Rotary Relays.
The Bobcat sophomore, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Curry, Sr., finished with a 5:05effort, best
of any Gallia COunty runuer participating in Ute event. Curry receives the Rotary Club's
traveling trophy and Ute Gil Dodd Mile Run trophy from Paul Wagner, right, president of the
Gallipolis Rotary Club.

· IUGH JUMP PREuMs - An unldenUlled 'player Is pictured here during high jump
&amp;nlilJllMrles In Saturday's annual Gallipolis Rotary Relays. Rock Hill's Stewart won the
.event with a i-IO etrort.
.•

..

Mike Noe captured medalist
honors with a two-over-par 37 to
pace the visiting Blue Devils.
Final tally was GAHS 153,
Waverly 169 and Ironton St. Joe
198..
John Cunningham was close
behind with a 38. Mike Shaver
and Steve Gardner finished with
39s, and Dow Saunders had a 42.
For runnerup Waverly, )\Ially
Smith had a 39. Butch Workman
fired a 45, Tony Gullion 44, Ken
Workman 49 and Bob Francis
41.

Steve Geswein's 46 led the
Flyers of Ironton St. Joe. Greg
Isaac had 47, Roger Klines 51,
Gary Guessworth 54 and Art
McMasters 55.
Monday, the Gallians will
battle Ironton, Wellston and
Logan in a four-way meet at
Ironton .
The Gallians will host AthenB
Wednesday, and Friday, will
take part in the annual
Southeastern Ohio League Golf
Tournament at Ironton .

SEO Standings
NORTHERN DIVISION
TEAM
W L R OR
Logan
4 o 21 12
Meigs
2 2 35 19
Athens
2 2 22 24
Wellston
o 4 2 25
TOTALS
8 ·a so 80
SOUTHERN DIVISION
TEAM
W L R OR
Gallipolis
3 1 16 11
Jackson
3 1 29 17
Ironton
2 2 21 19
Waverly
0 4 6 25
TOTALS
8 8 72 72
LAST WEEK'S RESULTS :
Jackson 9 Gallipolis 5
Logan 6 Meigs 5
Athens 6 Wellston 1
Ironton 8 Waverly 6
TUESDAY'S GAMES:
Waverly at Gallipol is
Jackson at I renton
Athens vs. Logan
Wellston at Meigs

.

MEETING WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - A meeting of
the Ohio Va ll ey Pee Wee
League will be held at 7: 30 p.m.
Wednesday at the Production
Credit Office across from the

Gallipolis Clinic, Sycamore St.
Gallipolis. President · Dick
Taylor urges all interested Pee
Wee Leagues to be represented
at the meeting .

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Friday's Linescores 11:c; t~~~;~~~~e
Richmond

Major League Results
By United Press International
·
National League
San Oiego at Atlanta (ppd..
cold weather and wet grounds)
Phila
101 200 211- 8 12 0
St. Louis 003 300 OOQ- 6 9 0
Lersch, Fryman 141. Brandon
16) and McCarver: Torrez,
Brunet (4) and Sims, McNerl·
ney (71. WP- Brandon 11·0).
LP- Brunet (O.l). HRs- Torre
(4th), Doyle (1st), Johnson
(1st) , Lis 11 stl. Montanez
(3rd).

W L Pet. GB

~ ~ :~~~

v,

5 2 .714 '12
Mllw
oOo-4
't'
i
Winnipeg
·
3 4 .429 2'h
000 004
Wash
000 000 ooo- o 7 o Charleston
3 4 .429 2'12
Parsons, Sanders (8) and ft~edo 1
J 54 ·tJZ 2'12
Rpof ; McLain, Pina (61
ewa er
·
31/,
Riddleberger (8), Gogolewski Rochester. , 1 5 .167 4
(9) and Casanova. WPFr~day s Results
Parsons 11·2 ). LP- McLaln 12· Charleston 16 Louisville 0
21
Syracuse 12 Tidewater 9 (12
··
innings)
Baltimore 000 200 006- 8 8 0 Toledo 11 Winnipeg 5
Calif.
100 010 ooo- 2 7 o (Only games scheduled)
McNally 13·01 and Etchebar·
ren, Hendricks (9) : Wright, .
Allen (9) and Moses. LPWright (2-31. HRs- Johnson (2)
(2nd and 3rd).

Chicago 100 000 ooo- 1 11 0
Boston
400 030 oox- 7 . 0 0
John, Kealey 151. Forster 171.
Magnuson 181 and Herrmann:
Seibert 13-0) and J.osephson. LP
- John (J.4). HR- Scott (1st) .
Detroit
001 000 001- 2 6 2
Oakland 110 010 60x- 9 13 1
Chance, Scherman (5), Zepp
(7), Hannan (71 and Freehan:
Segui (J.O) and Duncam. LP.Chance (2·01. HRs - Green
(3rdl. Freehan (3rdl.

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422 Second Ave. Gallipolis

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'

17-Tbe....,,.. •• _.,.l,sM11J,Aprila.JI71

1971 GAlliPOLIS ROTARY RELAYS CHAMPIONS- Dave Angles, Leon SmiUt, Steve Rose, Chuck Wood, Steve
_Garua Academy High .School's Blue DevilS captured Stebbins, Pete Neal, Rod Ferguson, Chris Fisher, Dave
Saturday's FourUt ·Annual RO.tary Relays team cham• . Somerville, Steve Short, John Bagshaw, Rick Grymes.and
pionship wiUt 41 points. Pictured above, front row, left to Coach Orval · Fee. Not pictured - Bill Broyles, Larry
right are : Wayne Alverson·, Dwain Beaver, Richard Snowden, Danny Maynard, Charles Howard and David
Fer-guson,- Dave Knotts, Tim Perry, Randy Rice, Steve Kerns.
Salisbury and Ron Elder. Slandlng, left to tight - Coach

· STEVE STEBBINS ~ptured individual scoring,honorsdllfing Saturday's Rotary Relays
wiUt 16\0 points·. Preserijing Stebbins the trophy IS Juliana Johnson, Ga!Ua Academy High
School Valentine Queen. ·
.

·Rotary Relays Attracts 14 Area Teams
(Continued from page l)
Galllpolis- Rotary· Club, and Dr. Harry
King presented trophies and ribbons to
individual winners and team winners.
The champion·Blue Devils picked up five
firsts, capturing Ute discus, long jump, 100
yard dash, 830-yard run, and 830-yard
. relay events.
Runnerup Chesapeake captured three
firsts. The Panthers won Ute two mile run
(Gallla's Richard Ferguson, defending
champion, did not participate in this
event), 440-yaql dash, and 120-yard dash.
Marietta captured two firsts, Wellston,
Rock Hill, South Point, Logan, North
Gallia and Portsmouth East one each.
FIELD EVENTS
DISCUS- Bagshaw. G; Adkins, Well;
Kouns, RH ; WoOd, G: Curry, C- 135'·9" .
SHOT PUT- Adkins, Well : Kouns, RH ;
Wood, G: Neal, G: Mullins, PE- 45'·11".
. HIGH JUMP - Stewart, RH and
Montgomery, SP, tied for tlrst; Word,
Whbg : Brown, Mar; S111lth. Well.-5'10".
LONG JUMP - Stebbins, G: Cernus,

Mar: Hutchinson, RH: Fairchild, C:
Stewart, RH - 20'-10" .
POLE VAUL T-Davls, Mar : Warth·
man, L: Green. Whbg_: Fairchild, C:
Estep, C - 13'. (New meet record.
Previous mark 12·6 In 1970).
RUNNING EVENTS
120· YARD HIGH HURDLES - Whitley,
C: Cole, L: Crawtord, L: Well· Meigs ;
Stewart, RH - :16.
IOO'YARD DASH- Stebbins, G: Brown,
NG : McKinnis, Well : Noble, SP: .Boston,
Mar - : 10.1. (New meet record . Old mark
:10.5 In 1970) .

-:22. (New meet record. Old mark :22.6
in 19701.
TWO MILE RUN - Sheets, C: Lane,
Mar: Saul. SP: Marklns. I: Davis, W 10: 16.
880-YARD RELAY- Gallipolis. Run·

American League Standings
( Nighl games not included)
East
w L Pet. GB
9 4 .692
Baltimore
9 6 .600 1
Boston
8 7 .533 2
washington
6 9 .400 4
Detroit
6 9 .400 4
New York
5 9 .357 4112
Cleveland
West
W L Pel. GB
Oakland
14 5 .737

.

OU Nips Notre Dam.e7·6·

WHERE 'l1IE ACI'ION WAS - Delj;tie lfrol!g Winds wbldl blew up dUst cons\antiy
Saturday, a g00fl.6ized crowd was on hand at Ga!Upolis' Memorial Field for the Fourth Annual
Rotary Relays.

........ -.
~

both Gary Shade and Mike Bobcats Friday, came back
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI) Schmidt doubled to produ~ with a three-run homer htt by
Ohio University broke a 3-3 lie
a 7-3 lead. Then the . Phil Krill off rebel p1tcher Jun
in the ninth with a four-run
ners were Snowden, Nea l, Ferguson,
.
Stebbins: Marietta: Chesapeake: Wellston
scoring streak, then halted a Irish, who suffered a Bierman.
14-3
drubbing
by
the
Shade
anchored
the
Ohto
and Portsmouth East - 1: 37. (New meet
final Notre Dame rally for a 7-6
attack with a two:.run homer 1n
record. Old mark 1:37.6 in 19701.
college baseball victory
MILE RELAY - Portsmouth East,
the third and a solo four-bagger
Marietta, Wahama , Wellston and
Saturday.
in the fifth.
California
8 8 .500 4112
Gallipolis - 3:42.
The Bobcats shot ahead in the
The Bobcats are 16-3 overall
Milwaukee
7 7 .500 4112
Here's Saturday's team standings;
TEAM
POINTS Kansas City
8 9 .471 5 final inning when Bob Kleiber
while Notre Dame is 7-12.
Minnesota
7 9 .438 S1f2 tripled, Tony Gray singled and
41
Toliver,
L;
Hutchinson
,
Gallipolis
Ohio University
MILE RUN
5 11 .353 7
Chesapeake
361!2 Chicago
002 010 004-7 9 2
RH; Shepherd, Mar: Williams, PE : Hays, Marietta JVs
36
Salurday's Resulls
.
Kansas
City
6
Cleveland
0
C - 4:33.
Notre Dame
·
C., C. Rous h, L
RockanHill
27
440· YARD DASH- Wilson,
23'12 Minnesota 11 New York 8 111
COLUMBUS (UP! )- ClhJo ·
200 010 00}--8 11 3
.Wah: Stebbins, G: Hall , PE - Roney, PE '" w':,lilston
23
innings)
Stat never trailed to defeat
Toadvine, Wenger (4),
Boston 4 Chicago 2
-1~~2~ARD
LOW HURDLES - Cernus
Portsmouth East
13
Purdue 12·7 and 6-5 in Big Ten Bierman (7) and Swisher;
Oakland 5 Detroit 4
·
.
: South Point
12
Mar: Cole, L: Whitley, C. Rutherford. SP, N thGallla
10
Baltimore at California (night)
baseball play Saturday to boost Schmidt and Roemer. w Stewart, RH - :21.4. (New meet record . Worh8 ma
7
Milwaukee at Washington
its loop recol'd to 3-1 in a 9-11 Bierman; HR _ Ohio, Shade
Old mark : 21.8 in 1970) .
Wha 1 b
7
(nightl
lBO· YARD RUN- Rod Ferguson, G:
ee ers urg
POMEROY
Nolan Season.
Kr.ll
2
Today's Games
1 •
2
Hutchin.son. ·RH : Taulbe, L: Stewart, ~r~~n JVs
2
I All limes EDT I
Swackhamer's Meigs High golf The double loss left the ( ). Notre Dame,
Mar : Souders, Well - 2:02.
K
c k
0
Detroit at Oakland (4:30p.m. I team dropped a triangular meet Boilermakers 1·3 in the con220-YARD DASH - Brown, NG: Wilson,
yger reo
Baltimore at California (5 p.m.)
C: McKinnis, Well : Hunt, C; Parks, Whbg
Cleveland at Kansas City 12:30 Saturday to host Marietta and ference and 10-10 overall.
p.m .)
Zanesville, Marietta finishing Ohio State piled up 10 runs in
Milwaukee at Washington (1:30 first with 423 strokes over 18 the first two frames and then
p.m .)
'
Minnesota at New York 12 p.m.) holes followed by Zanesville coasted in the opener. The
For All
Chicago at Boston (2 p.m.)
with 427 and Meigs soaring to Buckeyes tallied five runs in the
Occasions
Monday's Games
first inning of the nightcap
477.
Baltimore at Oakland (night)
•••
The Marauders were playing before Bill Sharp hit a solo
Cleveland at California (night)
Detroit at Kansas City (night) without senior ace Bill Hensler ho)1ler in Ute fifth for the· winPlaques
Milwaukee at Boston (night) who was replaced by Jon Buck. ning run. .
(Only games scheduled)
and
Meigs was led by Frank
' · ~:·xpert
Girolami who carded a 46 and a
National League Standings
By United Press International 47 for 93. Match medalist was
· · 1Engravfng
(Nighl games not included)
It is quite untr.ue that the
Bob Pishco who shot an 80 on
East
hides its head in the
ostrich
W L Pel. GB two 40s.
GALLIPOLIS - Dave Bur- Blue will play Waverly Tueswhen
confronted by
sand
•·Montreal
6 4 .600
Other Meigs scorers were Bob
danger
.
When
cornered or
nett's line single with the bases day evening on Memorial Field.
St. Louis
10 7 .588 'h Werry, 94; Chuck Hannahs, 95;
.538
New York
7 6
wounded, the bird kicks 422 Second Ave. ·Gallipolis
loaded and two outs in Ute
FAIRLAND
.529 '12 Steve Story, 95, and Buck, 99. vic i0 us ly .
Pittsburgh
9
8
a.;;;;.;;;;;;;;.;;;,;,;;;...;,;,;,_...
seventh Saturday, gave the PLAYERS
AB R H
Philadelphia
5 a .385 21!, Meigs will meet Wahama
Gallipolis Blue Devils a come- Black 3b
3 2 1
Chicago
6 11 .353 31!2 Tuesday at the Pomeroy Golf
Roberts ss
4 1 2
West
from-behind 4.3 victory over Brumfield c
4 o 2
W L Pel. GB Course.
Fuller If
3 0 1
Fairland.
San Francisco 14 4 .778
Burneti's shot followed G. Ward 1b
4 o o
Atlanta
8 6 .571 4
Los Angeles
10 8 .556 4
singles by Kev Sheets, Mark ~~~~ ~b
~ ~
Houston
9 8 .529 4112
Johnson and John Davis.
Love rf
2 o 1
Cincinnati
4 10 .286 8
The DeVils plated an earlier McConnel ct
3 0 0
San Diego
3 11 .214 9
run in the inning on walks to Totals
29' 3 10
x - games behind based on
GALLIPOLIS
1st
place team
Tom Prose and Chuck Perroud PLAYERS
AB R H
Salurday's Results
and Sheets' single. Perroud was Johnson 2b
3 0 1
San
Francisco
2 Pittsburgh o
POMEROY •
Nolan
0 1
cut down trying to score.
David
3b
2
Chicago
7
New
York
5
Swackhamer's
Meigs
Golf
team
Burnett p
3 1 1
Los Angeles 5 Cincinnati 4
found the going a little too tough
The win · pushed Gallipolis' Ballard rf
1 0 0
San Diego at Atlanta (twilight)
0
0
record to 10-1. It .was their Slone ss
2
Philadelphia at st. , Louis at the New Lexington course
1
0
·
to
f
the
Prose
1b
1
(night)
Friday as they dropped a match
seven th
. one run vtc ry o
Perroud c
2 0 0
Montr.
e
al
at
Houston
I
night)
208 to 218 to the hosts. Bill
season.
Boone cf
3 0 0
Today's
Games
Visiting Fairland jumped in Sheets If
3 2 2
(All limes EDTI
Hensler again led the
front with a single run in the Totals
20 4 5
San
Francisco
at
Pittsburgh
Marauders as he shot a 41, three
RUNNER-UP TROPHY of Saturday's FourUt Annual
Line Score:
I1:30 p.ni. I
strokes behind medalist Ed
first and added two more in the Fairland
100 020 o-3 10 o Rotary Relays went to Chesapeake. Accepting the team
New
York
at
Chicago
(2:
15
Rugg of New Lex.
fifth.
Gallipolis
000 110 2- 4 5 2
p.m.)
award
Is
CHS
Coach
Bob
Harris.
It was presented by Janie
R. Black, reaching first on an . Mayo I LP) and Brumf ield.
San Del go at Atlanta 2 (1: 30
MEIGS
We Look Forward To Seroing
Burnett (WPI and Perroud .
Stowers, GAHS cheerleader.
·
p.m .)
Bill Hensler ·41 ; Frank
error, scored on a sing Ie by
philadelphia at St. Louis (2: 15 Girolami, 45, Steve Story' 44,
catcher Brumfield.
You In The Future!
p.m.)
,
,
The Dr~gons increased their
Los Angeles at Cincinnati 2 Bob Werry 43, Chuck Hannahs
lead to J..i in the fifth on con- FALCONS SWAP SABATINE
(1: 15 p.m.)
46.
Montreal
at
Houston
(3
p.m.)
. NEW LEXINGTON
secutive doubles by Black and ATLANTA (UPI)- Defens1ve JIM RICHARDS PROMOTED
Oldham moved up to the
Monday's Games,
Roberts and a single by Fuller. tackle Btll Sabatme, seekmg to
Mike Wallenburg 40, Tom
BOWLING GREEN, Ky. position of athletic director New York at St. Louis (night)
"BUILDING SUPPLIERS"
Gallipolis had tied the game at come back after a one-year ( UPI)...Jim Richards, 34, an after guiding Western Kentucky Philadelphia at Houston (night) Saunders, 42, Ed Rugg 38, Steve
Gallipolis, Ohio
Hillis 43, Rick Aleen 45.
1·1 · in Ute fourth inning on a rellrement, was traded Fnday assistant to John Oldham at to third place in the NCAA (Only games scheduled)
booming triple by Sheets and an by the Atlanta Falcons of the Western Kentucky for the past Tournament in Houston last
infield error. They scored National Football Conference to three seasons, Friday was month.
another run in the fifth. ·
the San Diego Chargers of the named to replace the latter as Richards, a 1959 graduate of NEW RACING DIRECTORS
·In going the distance, Burnett Am~rican Conferen~e for an the Hill toppers' head basketball Western Kentucky , never
NEW YORK (UPI)...John J.
fanned eight while walking undiSclOsed draft chotce.
played college basketball.
coach.
Finley Jr., president of Eagle
three .
Sabath\o, 6-foot.J, 243-pounds
Downs, and Patrick J: Rooney,
Brent May'o was charged with from Colorado, was a part-lime
president of Continental Thor-'
the loss. He issued six free player for the Falcons m 1969,
oughbred Racing Assn., were.
but
retired
at
the
end
of
that
passes.
elected Friday to the Thor·
Coach Jim, Osborne's Big season .
oughbred Racing Association's
board of directors.
Rooney, 32, is the son of Art
Rooney, noted horseman and
owner of the Pittsburgh Stee·
lers of the National Football
We have been appointed
League.
the authorized dealer for

Ex-Rio Star Makes It

GALLIPOLIS - Coach John Milhoan's
Gallipolis Blue Devil golfers defeated Waverly and
Ironton St. Joe in a triangular match at Ironton
Friday evening. '
It was the Gallians' eighth and ninth triumphs of
Joseph· McKay, an Oliio high McKay, 34, tall and hand- and research - in education; the year, and sixth and seventh victories in a row
school basketball coach who is some, gathers material for his beillg on the Dean's list several since a 11-stroke loss at Athens on April7.

Big as Coach-Autho·r

Purdue Twice

Meigs ·Golfers ·

TROPHIES

Devils Win lOth Game

Burnett's Single
·~Pefeats Fairland

~TAWN,EY'S .
TROPHY HOUSE

l

Meigs Golfers

Beaten Friday

FOR MAKING OUR

·SPRING PANELING
SALE
ATremendous Success

CARTER &amp; EVANS INC.

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TODAY ONLY

K&amp;K Has Done It Again!

RALSTON RE-NAMED
NEW YORK (UPI)~Dennis
Ralston, 28, and a contract
tennis professional · $lnce 1966,
was selected Friday as coach
for the 1911 U.S. Davis Cup
Team . .It marks the fourth
· straight year that Ralston has
served in that post. ·

New

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·No Linlit_._

Second &amp;. Olive

married to the former Ann writing from a background of times during his college life;
Rupe of Middleport, has proved teaching,
playing,
and . and being selected as a NDEA
Guidance Institute participant
himself as a coach and as an coaching.
author.
He is in his 13th year of in 1960.
Head basketball· coach at teaching, having held positions
His playing honors include
Warren-Howland High School, at Mansfield-Madison High
McKay Utis year had hi~ eighth School (as reserve mentor to Utree years on high school allarticle published in a sports Dick Retton, former Pomeroy conference teams; High School
magazine with national cir· mentor ), Willoughby-Kirtland All-Southeastern Ohio; and All·
culation wiUt more assured. ·High, and North Canton High. Ohio. In college he was Most
This year he also coached the This is his sixUt year at Warren- Valuable Player, Captain,- and
Leading Rebounder on his
Tigers to the AAA sectional Howland.
tournament title and got to the
His athletic ·experience in· college team. In post college
district finals before be· eludes four years each of play, he was Sebring Semi-Pro
ing ousted by powerful varsity basketball in high All.Ohio in 1961; was all tourney
Youngstown-Boardman.
school and college; three years various times , and was a
, Said Mc,Kay, "My motivation of semi-pro basketball; nine member of the Warren
lor professional writing is years of ind~pendent basket' championship independent
tWofold: I want to make known ball; high school football and team four of the last six years.
certai.n
theories
about baseball and college baseball
Coach McKay's coaching
basketball and I want to player. He has been a head
demonstrate- to my English coach for ten years and boasts a honors include three constudents Utat I can practice record of 120 wins and 66 losses secutive championships at
what I preach," Besides his over that period, including five Kirtland; the first Trumbull
Conference basketball chamcoaching duties, he also teaches team championships.
English in Ute high school.
Early in 1967, McKay em- pionship in Howland history;
McKay's first article ap- barked on a bolder program of Ute first Sectional Tournament
peared in Coach and Athlete in writing, a 1500-word article championship in Howland
December 1964; then the accompanied by photographs history; Conference coach of
following May another was Utat gave 21 Howland players the year two years at Kirtland ;
printed in the Athletic Journal. national .coverage. This was two Howland High School all·
Before the year was finished, immediately accepted by american basketball players,
another article was publlshtd in Scholastic Coach and published and one High School All·
the Scholastic coach and two in April1967, a fully illustrated American at Kirtland.
more were published the article.
following year in September The high point of the athletic
and October.
writing career occurred Utis
In a comprehensive summary year when the Scholastic
of outstanding basketball ar- AUtletic Services of New York
ticles the B~acon Falls Coaches' City selected one of his articles
Digest chose McKay's first from over a thousand offered.
article as a part of its 1965-00 McKay's was one of only 25 that
issue. GaUtering momentum, made the grade. In the text, The
McKay wrote an article, "Pre· Best of Basketball, McKay's
Game Preparation; Physically contribution appears as
and Psychologically, which was Chapter IS in this compendium.
snapped up by Coach and A copy has a place of honor in
Athlete.
Ute Warren-Howland library.
Then in the summer of 1966, McKay has . had many
Prentice-Hall of New Jersey academic, . coaching, and
consigned to McKay an article playillg honors bestowed upon
• of his own choosing - any phase him during his short career.
• of basketball. In the Coaching Academic honors Include. being
: Clinic of April, 1967, a full ar· initiated into Phi Delta Kappa,
: ticle appeared honoring 10 the national fraternity for
: coaches and 14 players.
scholarship, leadership, service

..-

Overstuffed with a quarter pound of U. S. choice beef, freshly ground and
grilled, with. a mosl skillful blend of melted cheese, crisp green lettuce,
tomato, onion, pickle slices and Shake Shoppe special dressing. Served on
.a gigantic toasted bun . . .
·

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Oalllpo't Ohio

GAHS Golfers Up
Record To 9-1
.

OSU Defeats

Come in Third

GEORGE CURRY, a member of Kyger Creek's track squad 1captured Ute 23rd annual Gil
Dodd Mile Run held Saturday afternoon in connection with the Fourth Annual Rotary Relays.
The Bobcat sophomore, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Curry, Sr., finished with a 5:05effort, best
of any Gallia COunty runuer participating in Ute event. Curry receives the Rotary Club's
traveling trophy and Ute Gil Dodd Mile Run trophy from Paul Wagner, right, president of the
Gallipolis Rotary Club.

· IUGH JUMP PREuMs - An unldenUlled 'player Is pictured here during high jump
&amp;nlilJllMrles In Saturday's annual Gallipolis Rotary Relays. Rock Hill's Stewart won the
.event with a i-IO etrort.
.•

..

Mike Noe captured medalist
honors with a two-over-par 37 to
pace the visiting Blue Devils.
Final tally was GAHS 153,
Waverly 169 and Ironton St. Joe
198..
John Cunningham was close
behind with a 38. Mike Shaver
and Steve Gardner finished with
39s, and Dow Saunders had a 42.
For runnerup Waverly, )\Ially
Smith had a 39. Butch Workman
fired a 45, Tony Gullion 44, Ken
Workman 49 and Bob Francis
41.

Steve Geswein's 46 led the
Flyers of Ironton St. Joe. Greg
Isaac had 47, Roger Klines 51,
Gary Guessworth 54 and Art
McMasters 55.
Monday, the Gallians will
battle Ironton, Wellston and
Logan in a four-way meet at
Ironton .
The Gallians will host AthenB
Wednesday, and Friday, will
take part in the annual
Southeastern Ohio League Golf
Tournament at Ironton .

SEO Standings
NORTHERN DIVISION
TEAM
W L R OR
Logan
4 o 21 12
Meigs
2 2 35 19
Athens
2 2 22 24
Wellston
o 4 2 25
TOTALS
8 ·a so 80
SOUTHERN DIVISION
TEAM
W L R OR
Gallipolis
3 1 16 11
Jackson
3 1 29 17
Ironton
2 2 21 19
Waverly
0 4 6 25
TOTALS
8 8 72 72
LAST WEEK'S RESULTS :
Jackson 9 Gallipolis 5
Logan 6 Meigs 5
Athens 6 Wellston 1
Ironton 8 Waverly 6
TUESDAY'S GAMES:
Waverly at Gallipol is
Jackson at I renton
Athens vs. Logan
Wellston at Meigs

.

MEETING WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - A meeting of
the Ohio Va ll ey Pee Wee
League will be held at 7: 30 p.m.
Wednesday at the Production
Credit Office across from the

Gallipolis Clinic, Sycamore St.
Gallipolis. President · Dick
Taylor urges all interested Pee
Wee Leagues to be represented
at the meeting .

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::::.

Friday's Linescores 11:c; t~~~;~~~~e
Richmond

Major League Results
By United Press International
·
National League
San Oiego at Atlanta (ppd..
cold weather and wet grounds)
Phila
101 200 211- 8 12 0
St. Louis 003 300 OOQ- 6 9 0
Lersch, Fryman 141. Brandon
16) and McCarver: Torrez,
Brunet (4) and Sims, McNerl·
ney (71. WP- Brandon 11·0).
LP- Brunet (O.l). HRs- Torre
(4th), Doyle (1st), Johnson
(1st) , Lis 11 stl. Montanez
(3rd).

W L Pet. GB

~ ~ :~~~

v,

5 2 .714 '12
Mllw
oOo-4
't'
i
Winnipeg
·
3 4 .429 2'h
000 004
Wash
000 000 ooo- o 7 o Charleston
3 4 .429 2'12
Parsons, Sanders (8) and ft~edo 1
J 54 ·tJZ 2'12
Rpof ; McLain, Pina (61
ewa er
·
31/,
Riddleberger (8), Gogolewski Rochester. , 1 5 .167 4
(9) and Casanova. WPFr~day s Results
Parsons 11·2 ). LP- McLaln 12· Charleston 16 Louisville 0
21
Syracuse 12 Tidewater 9 (12
··
innings)
Baltimore 000 200 006- 8 8 0 Toledo 11 Winnipeg 5
Calif.
100 010 ooo- 2 7 o (Only games scheduled)
McNally 13·01 and Etchebar·
ren, Hendricks (9) : Wright, .
Allen (9) and Moses. LPWright (2-31. HRs- Johnson (2)
(2nd and 3rd).

Chicago 100 000 ooo- 1 11 0
Boston
400 030 oox- 7 . 0 0
John, Kealey 151. Forster 171.
Magnuson 181 and Herrmann:
Seibert 13-0) and J.osephson. LP
- John (J.4). HR- Scott (1st) .
Detroit
001 000 001- 2 6 2
Oakland 110 010 60x- 9 13 1
Chance, Scherman (5), Zepp
(7), Hannan (71 and Freehan:
Segui (J.O) and Duncam. LP.Chance (2·01. HRs - Green
(3rdl. Freehan (3rdl.

For
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select a ...
CHARATAN
fr_g_m... .

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PIPE
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422 Second Ave. Gallipolis

etrniar $t

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Catalog Price
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·Sentinel, SUnday, April25, 1971

•

t Age Youngsters Take Over Minstrel Tunes ·
••

ByUalledPre.aiDienlaUoul by retiring Johnny Bench, who . struck out silt, didn't walk beat the New York M~IB, 7-6,,:
Mllnny Molli lll,ng!ed hmne earlier hsd belled hi8 sixth . anyooe and 'did not allow. ,a despite Tommie Agee .s •first :
Bobby Valentine tn · the ntnth homer, on a gam!H!ndtng full. . runner to advance beyond first · major league grand-slam..
•·
lruling to give the Los Angele·s count strikeout after Jim base. -·
'
fappas walied the ~ :
DOdgers a 5..f victory over the Brewer wallfed Tommy Helms
l)ietz singled with one out in &lt;Joaded In the top_of the seventh. :
Cnclnnali Reds Saturday.·
and Tony Perez with two out tn the fourth and scored wh~ Ken Agee then hit l1ls second home .:
Tom Haller touched off the the bottom of the ninth Inning. Henderson tripled down the run- of the season Into_ the ;
Dodgers' winning rally by Lefthander Ron Bryant rightfield Jtne. In )he fifth, Tito centerfield bleachers, sending :
. • drawing a walk of! loeer Clay pltcbed ·a three-bitter for his Fuentes beat out 8 hli behind Pappas to the showers. •
Carroll tO oPen the ninth Inning. first major league ~utout and second base, went to third on a Stepbenson allowed two men to :
Two outs later, Valentine, a catcber Dick Dietz scored one single by Willie McCovey and reach base before striking out :
pinch runner for Haller, atole run IUld drove tn another to give scored on Dietz' double t9 left. Ken Singleton to end the Inning. ;
-BeCOnd to set the stage for the Sijn Francisco Giants a 2-0
Rookie southpaw .Earl In NL night action, San Diego •
Mota's game-winning single., victory over the Pltisburgh . Stepbenson rescued starter Milt was at Atlanta, Philadelphia at :
Pete Mikkelsen preserved the -Pirates.
•
Pappas .tn the seventh tnntng, St. Louis and Montreal was at :
Dodgers' _fifth strall(ht victory Bryant, normally a reliever, enaliltng the Chicago Cubs to Houston.

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Twins/Jump Yanks

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By United Ptes_sID~mation81 . · and · Ton~ Oliva,_. sandwiched
Harmon Killebrew's two-run around an .error by Burbach .on
· · tie.breiildng single off reliever a sacrifice by Rod_Carew; The
Bill Blil'bach with none-Oil! and · ·third run of the inning scored on
the bases l_oatled tn the nth a_sacrifice fly by Rick Renick.
Inning ena~led .the Minnesota The Twins appeared to.hsve
· Twins to defeat the New York · the game wori, a.:;,' when they
Yankees, 11-8, Saturday -after scored three runs in the lOth
each team scored three runs in inning but the Yanks rallied tn
the lOth inning.
their hsl! of the lOth to knot the
Killebrew, who hsd hit two score.
doubles earlier in the - game, Ray COrbin, the sixth Min·
including one in the lOth, con. nesota pitcher, was the winner,
nected with the game-wtnntng picking up his first victory of
blow after the Twins filled the the season. Burbach's record is
bases on walks to Cesar Tovar
GALLlPOlJS Gmts WIN TITLE - GaUia Academy
High School's girls track squad retained possession of the
Girls Rotary Relays tlUe on Memorial Field Saturday. The
Blue Angels totaled 2S points. South Point and Jackson tied
for second with 18 points. Presenting the team chsmpionshlp

'

trophy (In middle of photo) to Ann Adams, coach,' is Paul
Wagner, Rotary president. In !i'ont are Connie Cotton and
Christy King. In rear, left to right, are Cindy Jolin, Carol
Folden, Helen Akers and Carolyn Swain. Not pictured Carolyn Merry and Martha Childers.

T _ of C Action

Marred By Winds

Gallipolis Girls Retain Title
GALLIPOLIS - Coach Ann
·Adams' GAHS Blue Angels
captured their third consecutive
Rotary Relays championship on
Memorial Field Saturday by
compiling 2S points in the fiveevent affair .
Shsr'ing second place with 18
points wer~ South Point and
Jackson. Kyger Creek was
fourth with 15 points.

I

R• R d
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Gallipolis captured three
firsts. Jackson and South Point
each had one first place victory.
Christy King set a new record
in the liJO.yard dash with a :12.4
effort. She held the old mark set
last year at :12.35.
Here's Saturday's results :
100-YARD DASH- King, G;
Mills,SP; Grim,SP; Tanner, J ;

Mullins, J; Mills, SP - 14'-4".
4411-YARD REALY- Won by
South Point in 59.7. GAHS
second, Jackson third.
Team scoring:
TEAM
Points
2:)
Gallipolis
South Point
18
Akers, G; - 29 ' -3~".
Jackson
18
LONG JUMP - Exline, J;
Kyger
Creek
15
Graham, SP; Smith, KC;

Cotton, G - : 12.4. (New meet
record).
HIGH JUMP - Cotton, G;
Stidham , KC; Hall, KC;
Mullins, J. - 4'-1".
SHOT PUT - Swain, G;
Donnett, KC; Speakman, J;

E

A

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e, men ye nOt

RANCHO LA COSTA, Calif.
(UP!) - Powerful Jack
Nicklaus overcame gusty winds
and high rough grass Saturday
to shoot a three-under-par, 69
and lake a five-stroke lead after
three · rounds of the 72-hole
$165,000 Tournament of
Chsmpions. _
With his earlier rounds of 6971, Nicklaus hsd a 54-hole total
of 209, seven under par. Five
shots back in second place was
Australia's Bruce Devlin with
72-711-72-214.
Strongwindswhippedacross
the La Costa' Country Club

Il-L : ·
· N1nth inning homers.'. by
&lt;;;eorge Scott and Billy
.

EagleS . Coasl

'Tl

J. 0

·

·

·Easy Wfu

WATERFORD - The visiting
Eastern Eagles of Meigs County
built a large lead and coasted
home on substitutes here
Friday over Waterford. The
Eagles used 16 hits to pound
acrosS'l9 runs. The final result
was 19-5.
Bob Caldwell, Howie Cald·
well, and Dennis Eichinger
were the big hitters with three,
two, and two hits respectively.
Mike Boring went all the way
oh the mound for Eastern as he
g~ve up only three hits, fanned
e1ght, and gave up eight free
passes.
Boring and B. Caldwell;
Deem, (LP), Forshey (4), and
Mullen. .

1~-8 ·

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"..

COnigliaro crac~ed a 2-2 tie and :
gave the aoston Red SOx their :
fourth straight victory, 84-iwtn :
over ihe Chic~~o .White Sox. ·:
Rico Petrocr lll's tw?·_run :
homer in th~ foilrth inning :
accounted for .the olher two '
Boston rilns , li.s Mike Nagy ; ·
gained · his fidJ victory with :
relief help from Keri TatUm tn :
the nir)th inning,
'
JerryMaydrovein.threeruns :
with a double-and single and :
Mike Hedlund pitched a three· ;
hit shutout, giving the Kansas ·•
City Royals a ~ victory over
the Cleveland ·Indians.
May drove in the first run
with a double In the second and
capped a four-run fifth with a
two-run single to center.
Hedlund, advancing his
record to 3-ll, yielded only three
singles In h~ first route.gotng
performance!of the season. He
-.walked four aild struck out one ..
InALnightgames, Baltimore
was at California and
Milwaukee wa~ at washington.•
---- - - '
• • • • • ·• • • • • •

Frank Beard was one over with
a 73 and an even par 216 total.
Arnold Palmer, three-time
winner of the T of C, blew to a 77
and a 222 total, six over.
Miller Barlier who was tied : • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
with Nicklaus for the lead in the •
first two rounds, took a third •
round 76for a 216 total, even par :
with Beard.
Gary Player, who won the T :
of C in 1969, was one under with •
If you want to see the
a total of 215, tied filr third place •
with Stockton. Player started •
most' exciting mobile
the third round one stroke back 1
ofBarberandNicklausbuttook:
a 74, losing two strokes.
,1

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er rOWn~~~s:k;a~~~~T:m~~r;:ug~ c_~~~:!~.~~:it~eU::.~;;:

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· nJESE "IDLLBILiJF;Su !i'om the sixth grade of i~ 'Sa~lilry ·ElementarY School ,will
dance to "I Like Mountain Music" tn the fifst minstrel show on May 7 and 8. From the left are
Jennifer Mohler, Tamniy Blake, Billie Addison, Sherri Clark and Jackie King .
THIS PONY CHORUS line will step out to "Five Foot Two'; tn the first complete minstrel

AN

the minstrel show, "Be AClown" at the
Sa~~:~r~Sch~:oo~~~ will be Rhonda Reuter, left, and--stepganie
R
. to umue Skies".

.)9hnny Lisle,
Young Director

·~

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STQ-p TODAYI
'

ON DISPLAY NOW

:1

HELEN KING, daughter of
'Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King and
'
a member ol Meigs County's
singing King Family,
rehearses her pleasant
version of "April Showers"
for the Salisbury Elementary
School minstrel.

..

:

BY BOB HOEFLICH
planning,.rehearsing and work.
POMEROY - A grade school Born in the "beat age,"
operetta with its melodies youngsters of the school written for children's voices is grades one through six - have
- pretty traditional but a full· found the traditional minstrel
fledged minstrel show by standards being used in the
elementary students, complete production "funny songs. ~ ·
with all the "old tunes" and the However, they've adjusted well
end men gags, is "something to the lyrics and tunes of
else."
yesterday's favorites such as
Taking on the ambitious Hello, My Baby, Alabama
chore of acquainting the Jubilee, and I'm Looking Over a
youngsters of the Salisbury Four Leaf Clover, to mention
Elementary School with "the only a few of the many tunes
smell of the grease paint and being used.
the roar of the crowd" is a Producing minstrel shows
talented young faculty member, costs money . There are
John Lisle. His complete costuming needs not to mention
minstrel show on May 7 and 8 the necessity for particular
will culminate months of· types of music and props. Funds

show to be staged under the direction of faculty member, John Lisle, at the Salisbury
Elementary School on May 7 and 0. From the left are Rhonda Reuter, Mary Ann Carswell,
Bonnie Morris, Kathleen Ney, Judy Pugh and Nancy Stanley.

at the Salisbury School for the comedy pace. The end men ~re some numbers, precision hand
project have been pretty bound to amaze audiences w1th routines and some real good
limited. However deter- some of llie1r excellent vocal vocal work by some of the
mination goes a l~ng way 1 renditions on a·southern medley soloists.
The production will .mark the
Much of the music has been along with some pretty fancy
borrowed, props are being str~t routines . Their clo~n first complete show effort for
made and the costuming? Well white makeup ~~11 emphaSIZ~ the director who will use the
llie show theme, Be a Clown. next two weeks in polishing the
- that IS something else 1
Members of the chorus Audiences also should be show for the two night run on
backing the soloists will be impressed with the colorful May 7 and 8. Curtain time both
wearing colorful, silver trim· props used by the chorus on evenings is 7:32 p.m .
med vests with matching bow c:::::::::::==----------;--:;-:::::;-:;----11
ties. Few in the audience will
Federal Lao d 8 aok NeWS
realize tha t these costumes

~~~e
:~~~s
b~~~
f~~~dsa~~~~
several attractive colors and

Mrs. Mary Lisle, mother of the
director and producer, made
the sacks, gathered hither and
yo n, into the attractive
costumes.
End men -small but mighty
- will be in bright tailed
costumes and will set the show's

=-~:.,;~ ~tt=E '~ ·~~~:§.]~~=~::= i oKITSECOOKA~OOMIS .~N~~~~ !
District No. 22 golf crown, took
a dual meet decision over
Wilmington COllege Monday,
then came home Wednesday to
take match-point victories over
West Virginia State and Ohio
University
Portsmouth
Branch.
Rio Grande's Gene Grablec
the medalist against
Wlmtngton, shooting 4l).33.7B
overtheSnowHiUCountryCiub
course. Grablec, Dave White,
and Chuck Kramer all took four
points against Wilmington,
winning three match points and
one medal point. AI Mascioli
took 3¥.. for Rio Grande, and Joe
Gullion took 'oil.

w~s

Virginia by 8¥.. to 6¥.. and Ohio
University· Portsmouth 14to 1.
In -medal play, however, Rio
Grande finished second to West
Virginia's 397 team strokes,
with 398.
The Redmen visit Marietta
College Aprll27, then face the
Ohio University Chillicothe
Branch April 28. • The team
returns home to host O.U. •
Oillllcotbe May 3, then host
Cedarville May 4.
The NAJA District No. 22
tournament, leading to a berth
in the national tournament at
West Liberty, Mo. is May 10, at
a site to be announced.

Tornados· Win Big
RACINE - Fooze Wolfe's inning.
Southern Tornadoes walloped For the losers, Mike Caldwell
visiting Hannan Trace Friday lasted only one and one-third
behind the line arm of Jim inning and reliever Maynard
Hubbard. Southern turned eight completed the game.
hits into 12 runs and held the Having one' hit each lor the
Wildcats to only one earned run Tornadoes were .Jeff Hubbard ..
in a 12 to 2 victory. Pat Arnold Steve Jenkins, Mike Nease,
was the big man with the bat as ,Bruce Hart, Stan Kiser and Rod
he had three hits and two RBis. Holman .
' The Tornadoes sewed up the H,T_
000 002 0- 2 5 I
victory in the second frame as Southern
ISO 204 X- 12 8 3
they shelled two Hannan Trace Hubbard (WP) G. Hart (7),
hurlers for five runs. Southern and B. Hart, Pugh (7·). Cata.
scored six more insurance runs well, Maynard, ( 2). and
in the remaining four stanzas. Daniels.
Hubbard whiffed 12 in the six
innings that he worked and ga e In_ the human body, the
. v feelmg of pressure 1s most
out fiv~ walks. He was relieved . highly developed on the tip
in the seventh by Gary Hart who , of the tongue. It is poorest
allowed no runs or hits in hi8 on the back of the shoulders.

festivities blghllgbt this week's Calendar of Events at Rio
Grande College, according to Gerald A. Ramsay, asslstanllo
the president. The Calendar Includes April 231brough April
31.
Tbe CGIIIplete Calendar Includes:
April%3-TeDDis·CentraiState,home,2p.m.
April U- BasebaD, CampbeUsvWe, home (2), 1 p. m.
April24-GirlScoutsSwtm · LyneCenterPooi,3to5p.

m. April24-SearsD,Inner·DintngHaU,7p_. m.
April24-NaU011a!SbaketpeareCompanv, LyaeCeoter,
•
8 P• m.
April 28 - Gallla Couuty Elementary Principals'
AssoclaU011, Dining Hall, &amp;:45 p.m.
April Z7 -Baseball, Manhall, home (2),1p. m.
AprUZ7-Tennls· WestU....""·State,bome,3p.m.
""''
AprD :18- Red Cross, Lyae Center Pool, &amp;:30 to 9 p.m.
April Z9 .:. Extemporaneous Speaking Coolest, DIDIDg
Hall, 7:30 p. m.
April29-BasebaU·OilioDomlnlcan,home (Z),lla. m.
Apr1130 - Track. Centre College Invitational, away, zp.

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Local Bowling
Thursday Afternoon
April.15, 1971
Standings:
Team
.
M&amp; R Foodllner
176
Simons Markel
173
New York Clothing
111
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
106
Moores
95
Racine Food Markel
91
Team High Series _ Simons
Market 2339.
_
Team High Game - Simons
Market 832.
High Ind. Series - Carolyn
Bachner 516.
Second High •Ind. Series _
Patty Carson 509.
High )nd. Game - Carolyn
Bachner 203.
Second High Ind. Game _
Drema Smith 200.

CHESHIRE - A booming righthander working on a two- The Bobcats jumped into a !.()
triple to left center by hitter, suddenly lost his range lead in the second on two errors
sophomore rightfielder Mar- walking second b~seman Jim · and a single to right by leftshall French, climaxed a three- Bennett . and infielder Davy fi elder Greg McCarty: Asecond
run sixth inning upr!Bing here Dunfee. Jene Myers, the losing run crossed the plate in the fifth
'Friday night, giving the Kyger pitcher, aided his cause with a on two errors and a stolen base.
Creek llobcala a 5..f victory over 1line single to center plating Johrrson and Curry combined
Symmes Valley.
Bennett Dunfee scored later on to strike out five while walking
French's winning' blow a fielder 's choice. Myers six.
followed a stngle.by catcher Jim eventually crossed the plate on
Myers fanned eight. He Issued
Bias, an error IJid a walk to a squeeu bunt off the bat of three free passes.
ptnchhitter Georp CUrry.
Larry Kingery, Viking rightFrench paced the KC 11ttack.
It WI!J KC's fourth straight. fielder.
with a single and double.
dlalllond triumph following an
.
· Jamie Lafon singled and
opallln&amp;loss to Pt. Pleasank ·- .41thnug~ Joh~so~ 'l'as doubled for the losers,
Trllllna 2-0 tn the IIIJ:Ih tn· creollet! 1\'lth the wm, 11 too~ a KC will host Eastern on
V~y rallied to atroncrellefjobbyCur):ytoo~il Tuesday. Box Score:
IUe 1 J.2 lead &amp;oillll toto the down the victory.
SYMMES VALLEY
tlotlw1 ;t the Inning.
'l1le seventh Inning ended
PLAYERS
AB R H
~·lin• IIDd willluu11 hurler, W\llllymmes Valley hsving the Corn 2b
3 o o
1KC
go ahead ru•• 'JII baae.
Bennett c
1. 1 1

LAMPLIGHTERS
April19, 1971
Standings :

Team
Us &amp; Co.
88
Lucky Strikes
85
Brite Lites
71
Untouchables
62
L&amp; N 46
Tagalongs
32
1 Team High Series - Us &amp; Co.
2094. .
Team High Game - Lucky
Strikes 719.
High , Ind. Series - Larry
Dugan, 591; Pandora· Collins,
526.
Second High Ind. Series Harold Lohse, 555; Mary yoss,
525.
High Ind. Game - Larry
Dugan - Gilbert Woods. 225; Pat
Carson, 216.
Second High Ind. Game Harold Lohse, 203; MarY Voss,
202.

Dunfee 1b
3
Myersp
3
laton cf
4
Burcham ss
3
Kingery rf
2
Marshalllf
3
Wilson 3b
2
Totals
21
, . KYGER CREEK
PLAYERS
' AB
Baird ss
1
French
rl
4
B. Roush 3b
4
Louden cf
2
Cr&amp;meons 1b
2
Henson 1b
1
J. Blaa c
3
J, Roush 2b
·3
McCarty If
2
Johnson p
2
Currr.p
0
Tot••
24
Line Score: .

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Due to more favorable e&lt;:o·
nomic: t ortd ilions the inter·
es.t on new Fede ral Land
Bank Loans has been low·
ered and over 4 ,000 ex1SI·

i Rl1hl now - ,ou too can
· like adwant111 of thii new
llt'ftl' lnlerut rete to purchase

ing loan3 have had their
inte rest lowered voluntari· ·

provementl you'" been nttd·
tnr. You lH, when you do bu•l·
ness wllh lha Fecler1l Land 81nk
you never lou. Call your loCII

land; or mike those farm im·

M1nacer rtcht away!

Clyde s. Walker,
Manager

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19 Locust St. Phone 446-0203
Gallipolis, Ohio

JOHN WIJ E, PRODUCER and director, a veteran of
many Meigs County minstrels, confers with Mrs. Dorothy
Chaney, accompanist, also of the faculty, on some of the
music being used. This is Lisle's first complete show.

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Largest Manufacturer
of.

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LA UR A HOOV ER,
daughter of Mr, apd Mrs .
Wendell Hoover, belts out her
version of the sland"rd "You
Made Me Love You" while
rehearsing for the first
Salisbury Elementary School
minstrel show_

NOW WE HAVE.

1 0

6th St.

VOL 16, No. 21

MOBILE HOME SALES :

1

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*SPECIAL EDITION

1

·s-YEAR
'
·wARRANfY.

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BEAT THE HEAT·
AND
·THE.R.USH

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benefill of a Federal Land

•
Upper Rt. 7, Next Door to Auto Auctig/
e
DESMOINES, Iwoa (UP!)- Drake record In capturing tbe :
Phone 446-9340
e
Records toppled In seven of 21 marathon for the second • • • • 1 • •
e
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • '• • • •
events In the finale of the 62nd straight year.
•
annual Drake Relays Saturday,
headed by Frank Shorter's
·victory in the six-mile run tn
27:24.4, the fastest time In the
event In the world this year.
Shorter, who was hard
.
pressed to the finish line by
Minnesota's Gary Bjorklund
and who w by I tw· • th
'
on
on y
'"en s
of a second over the long ~
distance, was the only double
winner tn the two-day track
carnival. He beCame the tliird
athlete to win both the three
mile and six mile runs tn the
same Drake tournament.
Shorter also set a record on
Friday tn the three-mile run. In
both the three mile and six mile,
be defeated hi8 Florida Track
aub teammate Jack Bacheler.
who won both events tn 1969 and
1970. Van Nelson of St. Cloud,
Mlrul., won the same two events
tn 1968: 1967 and 1968.
,:
Bjorklund had the consolation
that, although he finished
second to Shorter, he still hung
up the best time by an
'
American collegian in the
'
event, a mark he he!d
previously.
Bruce Mortenson of the Twin
.Qties Track aub broke his own

1 2
0 0 NEW RACETRACK OPENS
0 0
o 1 NEWYORK(UPI)-Sant8 Fe
o 0 . Downs, the newest race -track
4 5 10
·
Nor th America, being
R H constructed at a cost of $$
o 0 million, ,is scheduled to open a
0 2 1ifk1
1 o
ay mee t on · May 29. Teil
o o races will be progralnmed
o o dally, seven for thoroughbreda
o2 01 and three '""
'-quarter hcnes. A
o 1 split meeting, with llf to 60
1 1 days for lhorouchbncls IJid a
0 0 :aklay meeting for quarter
1 0
· 5 5 horses 11 planned for 1972.
Santa Fe Downllllo becaine
Sy,rT): Val. . ' 000 004 1)--.j 5 3 l'le Thoroughbred Ractna AssoK~~~r.,tPl01~~3 ~;5n~~ cllllon'~ ntwal member Frf.
John11011. (WP) Curry (7) and •day,br\ngln&amp;theTRAmember·
Blaa.
·
.. ship l'OIIer .to 57.
.

'

Bank Loan.

7 H.P. Model ttl 7
1

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4000 f ~ouros
1\''' Ln
lOS[ \Nl [R[ST'

ly to the new tower rate.
Just another of t he m;~ny

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May 3fH1 - May Day Weekend.
· -.-.-.

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Ga IIi polis, 0.

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~:::::&lt;::

72.

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LOUISI/Ilt.E, K'f. • FL B •

WIDES eFOREST PARK e MARLETTE e
eREBEL
eMANSION
•

Knudson, 70-76-71 ; Gibby •
Gilbert, 73-71-73; and Gene •
Uttler 72-71·74. Bobby Nichols :
was·all alone at 218 with 71-75- e

Reco•ds 'T'umbled
Jin
.L
6~d DJioke RelavQ
1 '

BQbcats-- Win Fourth Straight ·

..-.s,mmu

Par for 18 holes is 36-36-72 and
only five pros in the field of 35
were under it for three rounds.
Dave Stockton shot 72 for a
215 total. Defending Champion

*

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buy a tractor from a lawn mower maker when
bu~ a tractor !rom the biggest tractor
spe,claliisl in the world? MF 7 gives you a gardenpackage· of the same muscle Massey puts
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every attachment under the eun. Leal and
snow equipment, too. Also 10 and 12 horsepower
models. And don't forget professional service--.
another MF exc:Iusivel

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POLIS TRACTOR

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Massey· Ferguson Dealer" ·

Gal

Upper Rt. 7, Kana uga
Ohio
Phone 446-1044

LARGEST DEALER
IN THE AREA I
.
.
PHONE 446 2463

Come in and get details NOW!

Rl. 1 (Upper Rt. 7l

Ptl. 446-0523

railroad
car unloaders.
../
'

BUY YOUR FERTILIZER FROM THE

Time is limited - lhis offer good from
March 15 to April 30 only al participating
dealers. Also, limited supply of Trail Bikes.

_WHITE IMPLEMENT-CO..

To better serve our cust~mers we have expanded
our fleet of spreaders. We now have new. · ·

CENTRAL SOYA OF' OHIO
\

Gallipolis, Ohio ,

'

· ."Your Farm Super Market"

is, Ohio

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·Sentinel, SUnday, April25, 1971

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t Age Youngsters Take Over Minstrel Tunes ·
••

ByUalledPre.aiDienlaUoul by retiring Johnny Bench, who . struck out silt, didn't walk beat the New York M~IB, 7-6,,:
Mllnny Molli lll,ng!ed hmne earlier hsd belled hi8 sixth . anyooe and 'did not allow. ,a despite Tommie Agee .s •first :
Bobby Valentine tn · the ntnth homer, on a gam!H!ndtng full. . runner to advance beyond first · major league grand-slam..
•·
lruling to give the Los Angele·s count strikeout after Jim base. -·
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fappas walied the ~ :
DOdgers a 5..f victory over the Brewer wallfed Tommy Helms
l)ietz singled with one out in &lt;Joaded In the top_of the seventh. :
Cnclnnali Reds Saturday.·
and Tony Perez with two out tn the fourth and scored wh~ Ken Agee then hit l1ls second home .:
Tom Haller touched off the the bottom of the ninth Inning. Henderson tripled down the run- of the season Into_ the ;
Dodgers' winning rally by Lefthander Ron Bryant rightfield Jtne. In )he fifth, Tito centerfield bleachers, sending :
. • drawing a walk of! loeer Clay pltcbed ·a three-bitter for his Fuentes beat out 8 hli behind Pappas to the showers. •
Carroll tO oPen the ninth Inning. first major league ~utout and second base, went to third on a Stepbenson allowed two men to :
Two outs later, Valentine, a catcber Dick Dietz scored one single by Willie McCovey and reach base before striking out :
pinch runner for Haller, atole run IUld drove tn another to give scored on Dietz' double t9 left. Ken Singleton to end the Inning. ;
-BeCOnd to set the stage for the Sijn Francisco Giants a 2-0
Rookie southpaw .Earl In NL night action, San Diego •
Mota's game-winning single., victory over the Pltisburgh . Stepbenson rescued starter Milt was at Atlanta, Philadelphia at :
Pete Mikkelsen preserved the -Pirates.
•
Pappas .tn the seventh tnntng, St. Louis and Montreal was at :
Dodgers' _fifth strall(ht victory Bryant, normally a reliever, enaliltng the Chicago Cubs to Houston.

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Twins/Jump Yanks

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By United Ptes_sID~mation81 . · and · Ton~ Oliva,_. sandwiched
Harmon Killebrew's two-run around an .error by Burbach .on
· · tie.breiildng single off reliever a sacrifice by Rod_Carew; The
Bill Blil'bach with none-Oil! and · ·third run of the inning scored on
the bases l_oatled tn the nth a_sacrifice fly by Rick Renick.
Inning ena~led .the Minnesota The Twins appeared to.hsve
· Twins to defeat the New York · the game wori, a.:;,' when they
Yankees, 11-8, Saturday -after scored three runs in the lOth
each team scored three runs in inning but the Yanks rallied tn
the lOth inning.
their hsl! of the lOth to knot the
Killebrew, who hsd hit two score.
doubles earlier in the - game, Ray COrbin, the sixth Min·
including one in the lOth, con. nesota pitcher, was the winner,
nected with the game-wtnntng picking up his first victory of
blow after the Twins filled the the season. Burbach's record is
bases on walks to Cesar Tovar
GALLlPOlJS Gmts WIN TITLE - GaUia Academy
High School's girls track squad retained possession of the
Girls Rotary Relays tlUe on Memorial Field Saturday. The
Blue Angels totaled 2S points. South Point and Jackson tied
for second with 18 points. Presenting the team chsmpionshlp

'

trophy (In middle of photo) to Ann Adams, coach,' is Paul
Wagner, Rotary president. In !i'ont are Connie Cotton and
Christy King. In rear, left to right, are Cindy Jolin, Carol
Folden, Helen Akers and Carolyn Swain. Not pictured Carolyn Merry and Martha Childers.

T _ of C Action

Marred By Winds

Gallipolis Girls Retain Title
GALLIPOLIS - Coach Ann
·Adams' GAHS Blue Angels
captured their third consecutive
Rotary Relays championship on
Memorial Field Saturday by
compiling 2S points in the fiveevent affair .
Shsr'ing second place with 18
points wer~ South Point and
Jackson. Kyger Creek was
fourth with 15 points.

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Gallipolis captured three
firsts. Jackson and South Point
each had one first place victory.
Christy King set a new record
in the liJO.yard dash with a :12.4
effort. She held the old mark set
last year at :12.35.
Here's Saturday's results :
100-YARD DASH- King, G;
Mills,SP; Grim,SP; Tanner, J ;

Mullins, J; Mills, SP - 14'-4".
4411-YARD REALY- Won by
South Point in 59.7. GAHS
second, Jackson third.
Team scoring:
TEAM
Points
2:)
Gallipolis
South Point
18
Akers, G; - 29 ' -3~".
Jackson
18
LONG JUMP - Exline, J;
Kyger
Creek
15
Graham, SP; Smith, KC;

Cotton, G - : 12.4. (New meet
record).
HIGH JUMP - Cotton, G;
Stidham , KC; Hall, KC;
Mullins, J. - 4'-1".
SHOT PUT - Swain, G;
Donnett, KC; Speakman, J;

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e, men ye nOt

RANCHO LA COSTA, Calif.
(UP!) - Powerful Jack
Nicklaus overcame gusty winds
and high rough grass Saturday
to shoot a three-under-par, 69
and lake a five-stroke lead after
three · rounds of the 72-hole
$165,000 Tournament of
Chsmpions. _
With his earlier rounds of 6971, Nicklaus hsd a 54-hole total
of 209, seven under par. Five
shots back in second place was
Australia's Bruce Devlin with
72-711-72-214.
Strongwindswhippedacross
the La Costa' Country Club

Il-L : ·
· N1nth inning homers.'. by
&lt;;;eorge Scott and Billy
.

EagleS . Coasl

'Tl

J. 0

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·Easy Wfu

WATERFORD - The visiting
Eastern Eagles of Meigs County
built a large lead and coasted
home on substitutes here
Friday over Waterford. The
Eagles used 16 hits to pound
acrosS'l9 runs. The final result
was 19-5.
Bob Caldwell, Howie Cald·
well, and Dennis Eichinger
were the big hitters with three,
two, and two hits respectively.
Mike Boring went all the way
oh the mound for Eastern as he
g~ve up only three hits, fanned
e1ght, and gave up eight free
passes.
Boring and B. Caldwell;
Deem, (LP), Forshey (4), and
Mullen. .

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COnigliaro crac~ed a 2-2 tie and :
gave the aoston Red SOx their :
fourth straight victory, 84-iwtn :
over ihe Chic~~o .White Sox. ·:
Rico Petrocr lll's tw?·_run :
homer in th~ foilrth inning :
accounted for .the olher two '
Boston rilns , li.s Mike Nagy ; ·
gained · his fidJ victory with :
relief help from Keri TatUm tn :
the nir)th inning,
'
JerryMaydrovein.threeruns :
with a double-and single and :
Mike Hedlund pitched a three· ;
hit shutout, giving the Kansas ·•
City Royals a ~ victory over
the Cleveland ·Indians.
May drove in the first run
with a double In the second and
capped a four-run fifth with a
two-run single to center.
Hedlund, advancing his
record to 3-ll, yielded only three
singles In h~ first route.gotng
performance!of the season. He
-.walked four aild struck out one ..
InALnightgames, Baltimore
was at California and
Milwaukee wa~ at washington.•
---- - - '
• • • • • ·• • • • • •

Frank Beard was one over with
a 73 and an even par 216 total.
Arnold Palmer, three-time
winner of the T of C, blew to a 77
and a 222 total, six over.
Miller Barlier who was tied : • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
with Nicklaus for the lead in the •
first two rounds, took a third •
round 76for a 216 total, even par :
with Beard.
Gary Player, who won the T :
of C in 1969, was one under with •
If you want to see the
a total of 215, tied filr third place •
with Stockton. Player started •
most' exciting mobile
the third round one stroke back 1
ofBarberandNicklausbuttook:
a 74, losing two strokes.
,1

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c
er rOWn~~~s:k;a~~~~T:m~~r;:ug~ c_~~~:!~.~~:it~eU::.~;;:

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· nJESE "IDLLBILiJF;Su !i'om the sixth grade of i~ 'Sa~lilry ·ElementarY School ,will
dance to "I Like Mountain Music" tn the fifst minstrel show on May 7 and 8. From the left are
Jennifer Mohler, Tamniy Blake, Billie Addison, Sherri Clark and Jackie King .
THIS PONY CHORUS line will step out to "Five Foot Two'; tn the first complete minstrel

AN

the minstrel show, "Be AClown" at the
Sa~~:~r~Sch~:oo~~~ will be Rhonda Reuter, left, and--stepganie
R
. to umue Skies".

.)9hnny Lisle,
Young Director

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/'IIOTECT

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AIJAINST
,..... LICE ••I MAfiSE~RAII&amp;E CAmE SPRAY

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, •
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home

DIIIIP mlta on eonto&lt;i will&gt; PURINA • RANfiB
SPRAY, tho llOIAiit To1aphono·LIIIdaM liquid

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STQ-p TODAYI
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ON DISPLAY NOW

:1

HELEN KING, daughter of
'Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King and
'
a member ol Meigs County's
singing King Family,
rehearses her pleasant
version of "April Showers"
for the Salisbury Elementary
School minstrel.

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BY BOB HOEFLICH
planning,.rehearsing and work.
POMEROY - A grade school Born in the "beat age,"
operetta with its melodies youngsters of the school written for children's voices is grades one through six - have
- pretty traditional but a full· found the traditional minstrel
fledged minstrel show by standards being used in the
elementary students, complete production "funny songs. ~ ·
with all the "old tunes" and the However, they've adjusted well
end men gags, is "something to the lyrics and tunes of
else."
yesterday's favorites such as
Taking on the ambitious Hello, My Baby, Alabama
chore of acquainting the Jubilee, and I'm Looking Over a
youngsters of the Salisbury Four Leaf Clover, to mention
Elementary School with "the only a few of the many tunes
smell of the grease paint and being used.
the roar of the crowd" is a Producing minstrel shows
talented young faculty member, costs money . There are
John Lisle. His complete costuming needs not to mention
minstrel show on May 7 and 8 the necessity for particular
will culminate months of· types of music and props. Funds

show to be staged under the direction of faculty member, John Lisle, at the Salisbury
Elementary School on May 7 and 0. From the left are Rhonda Reuter, Mary Ann Carswell,
Bonnie Morris, Kathleen Ney, Judy Pugh and Nancy Stanley.

at the Salisbury School for the comedy pace. The end men ~re some numbers, precision hand
project have been pretty bound to amaze audiences w1th routines and some real good
limited. However deter- some of llie1r excellent vocal vocal work by some of the
mination goes a l~ng way 1 renditions on a·southern medley soloists.
The production will .mark the
Much of the music has been along with some pretty fancy
borrowed, props are being str~t routines . Their clo~n first complete show effort for
made and the costuming? Well white makeup ~~11 emphaSIZ~ the director who will use the
llie show theme, Be a Clown. next two weeks in polishing the
- that IS something else 1
Members of the chorus Audiences also should be show for the two night run on
backing the soloists will be impressed with the colorful May 7 and 8. Curtain time both
wearing colorful, silver trim· props used by the chorus on evenings is 7:32 p.m .
med vests with matching bow c:::::::::::==----------;--:;-:::::;-:;----11
ties. Few in the audience will
Federal Lao d 8 aok NeWS
realize tha t these costumes

~~~e
:~~~s
b~~~
f~~~dsa~~~~
several attractive colors and

Mrs. Mary Lisle, mother of the
director and producer, made
the sacks, gathered hither and
yo n, into the attractive
costumes.
End men -small but mighty
- will be in bright tailed
costumes and will set the show's

=-~:.,;~ ~tt=E '~ ·~~~:§.]~~=~::= i oKITSECOOKA~OOMIS .~N~~~~ !
District No. 22 golf crown, took
a dual meet decision over
Wilmington COllege Monday,
then came home Wednesday to
take match-point victories over
West Virginia State and Ohio
University
Portsmouth
Branch.
Rio Grande's Gene Grablec
the medalist against
Wlmtngton, shooting 4l).33.7B
overtheSnowHiUCountryCiub
course. Grablec, Dave White,
and Chuck Kramer all took four
points against Wilmington,
winning three match points and
one medal point. AI Mascioli
took 3¥.. for Rio Grande, and Joe
Gullion took 'oil.

w~s

Virginia by 8¥.. to 6¥.. and Ohio
University· Portsmouth 14to 1.
In -medal play, however, Rio
Grande finished second to West
Virginia's 397 team strokes,
with 398.
The Redmen visit Marietta
College Aprll27, then face the
Ohio University Chillicothe
Branch April 28. • The team
returns home to host O.U. •
Oillllcotbe May 3, then host
Cedarville May 4.
The NAJA District No. 22
tournament, leading to a berth
in the national tournament at
West Liberty, Mo. is May 10, at
a site to be announced.

Tornados· Win Big
RACINE - Fooze Wolfe's inning.
Southern Tornadoes walloped For the losers, Mike Caldwell
visiting Hannan Trace Friday lasted only one and one-third
behind the line arm of Jim inning and reliever Maynard
Hubbard. Southern turned eight completed the game.
hits into 12 runs and held the Having one' hit each lor the
Wildcats to only one earned run Tornadoes were .Jeff Hubbard ..
in a 12 to 2 victory. Pat Arnold Steve Jenkins, Mike Nease,
was the big man with the bat as ,Bruce Hart, Stan Kiser and Rod
he had three hits and two RBis. Holman .
' The Tornadoes sewed up the H,T_
000 002 0- 2 5 I
victory in the second frame as Southern
ISO 204 X- 12 8 3
they shelled two Hannan Trace Hubbard (WP) G. Hart (7),
hurlers for five runs. Southern and B. Hart, Pugh (7·). Cata.
scored six more insurance runs well, Maynard, ( 2). and
in the remaining four stanzas. Daniels.
Hubbard whiffed 12 in the six
innings that he worked and ga e In_ the human body, the
. v feelmg of pressure 1s most
out fiv~ walks. He was relieved . highly developed on the tip
in the seventh by Gary Hart who , of the tongue. It is poorest
allowed no runs or hits in hi8 on the back of the shoulders.

festivities blghllgbt this week's Calendar of Events at Rio
Grande College, according to Gerald A. Ramsay, asslstanllo
the president. The Calendar Includes April 231brough April
31.
Tbe CGIIIplete Calendar Includes:
April%3-TeDDis·CentraiState,home,2p.m.
April U- BasebaD, CampbeUsvWe, home (2), 1 p. m.
April24-GirlScoutsSwtm · LyneCenterPooi,3to5p.

m. April24-SearsD,Inner·DintngHaU,7p_. m.
April24-NaU011a!SbaketpeareCompanv, LyaeCeoter,
•
8 P• m.
April 28 - Gallla Couuty Elementary Principals'
AssoclaU011, Dining Hall, &amp;:45 p.m.
April Z7 -Baseball, Manhall, home (2),1p. m.
AprUZ7-Tennls· WestU....""·State,bome,3p.m.
""''
AprD :18- Red Cross, Lyae Center Pool, &amp;:30 to 9 p.m.
April Z9 .:. Extemporaneous Speaking Coolest, DIDIDg
Hall, 7:30 p. m.
April29-BasebaU·OilioDomlnlcan,home (Z),lla. m.
Apr1130 - Track. Centre College Invitational, away, zp.

::::::::::::::~::_:~_:~_:;:::::. ·:-:-:·:::-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:::-···············-·-·.·.·.·.·.·.·-·...-.·:·:··::~---.-. ---·.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.--- ~----.- •..-,.;. ··
:-:-:-x::::::::::::,·:-:-:-::;:::·:-.-:-:-:-·-· :-:-:-:-.-:

::)j:_::_::_:::_._:::_;_::_::_::::::

:;;::\:t::::::::;:r:t:t:m:vr:::ttiJJliJt}ii@fiti:l:!:j}[}jJ\

Local Bowling
Thursday Afternoon
April.15, 1971
Standings:
Team
.
M&amp; R Foodllner
176
Simons Markel
173
New York Clothing
111
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
106
Moores
95
Racine Food Markel
91
Team High Series _ Simons
Market 2339.
_
Team High Game - Simons
Market 832.
High Ind. Series - Carolyn
Bachner 516.
Second High •Ind. Series _
Patty Carson 509.
High )nd. Game - Carolyn
Bachner 203.
Second High Ind. Game _
Drema Smith 200.

CHESHIRE - A booming righthander working on a two- The Bobcats jumped into a !.()
triple to left center by hitter, suddenly lost his range lead in the second on two errors
sophomore rightfielder Mar- walking second b~seman Jim · and a single to right by leftshall French, climaxed a three- Bennett . and infielder Davy fi elder Greg McCarty: Asecond
run sixth inning upr!Bing here Dunfee. Jene Myers, the losing run crossed the plate in the fifth
'Friday night, giving the Kyger pitcher, aided his cause with a on two errors and a stolen base.
Creek llobcala a 5..f victory over 1line single to center plating Johrrson and Curry combined
Symmes Valley.
Bennett Dunfee scored later on to strike out five while walking
French's winning' blow a fielder 's choice. Myers six.
followed a stngle.by catcher Jim eventually crossed the plate on
Myers fanned eight. He Issued
Bias, an error IJid a walk to a squeeu bunt off the bat of three free passes.
ptnchhitter Georp CUrry.
Larry Kingery, Viking rightFrench paced the KC 11ttack.
It WI!J KC's fourth straight. fielder.
with a single and double.
dlalllond triumph following an
.
· Jamie Lafon singled and
opallln&amp;loss to Pt. Pleasank ·- .41thnug~ Joh~so~ 'l'as doubled for the losers,
Trllllna 2-0 tn the IIIJ:Ih tn· creollet! 1\'lth the wm, 11 too~ a KC will host Eastern on
V~y rallied to atroncrellefjobbyCur):ytoo~il Tuesday. Box Score:
IUe 1 J.2 lead &amp;oillll toto the down the victory.
SYMMES VALLEY
tlotlw1 ;t the Inning.
'l1le seventh Inning ended
PLAYERS
AB R H
~·lin• IIDd willluu11 hurler, W\llllymmes Valley hsving the Corn 2b
3 o o
1KC
go ahead ru•• 'JII baae.
Bennett c
1. 1 1

LAMPLIGHTERS
April19, 1971
Standings :

Team
Us &amp; Co.
88
Lucky Strikes
85
Brite Lites
71
Untouchables
62
L&amp; N 46
Tagalongs
32
1 Team High Series - Us &amp; Co.
2094. .
Team High Game - Lucky
Strikes 719.
High , Ind. Series - Larry
Dugan, 591; Pandora· Collins,
526.
Second High Ind. Series Harold Lohse, 555; Mary yoss,
525.
High Ind. Game - Larry
Dugan - Gilbert Woods. 225; Pat
Carson, 216.
Second High Ind. Game Harold Lohse, 203; MarY Voss,
202.

Dunfee 1b
3
Myersp
3
laton cf
4
Burcham ss
3
Kingery rf
2
Marshalllf
3
Wilson 3b
2
Totals
21
, . KYGER CREEK
PLAYERS
' AB
Baird ss
1
French
rl
4
B. Roush 3b
4
Louden cf
2
Cr&amp;meons 1b
2
Henson 1b
1
J. Blaa c
3
J, Roush 2b
·3
McCarty If
2
Johnson p
2
Currr.p
0
Tot••
24
Line Score: .

tl a

:
:
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~ ~~·I

1

•
•

Due to more favorable e&lt;:o·
nomic: t ortd ilions the inter·
es.t on new Fede ral Land
Bank Loans has been low·
ered and over 4 ,000 ex1SI·

i Rl1hl now - ,ou too can
· like adwant111 of thii new
llt'ftl' lnlerut rete to purchase

ing loan3 have had their
inte rest lowered voluntari· ·

provementl you'" been nttd·
tnr. You lH, when you do bu•l·
ness wllh lha Fecler1l Land 81nk
you never lou. Call your loCII

land; or mike those farm im·

M1nacer rtcht away!

Clyde s. Walker,
Manager

1

1

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•

·

19 Locust St. Phone 446-0203
Gallipolis, Ohio

JOHN WIJ E, PRODUCER and director, a veteran of
many Meigs County minstrels, confers with Mrs. Dorothy
Chaney, accompanist, also of the faculty, on some of the
music being used. This is Lisle's first complete show.

-:-Ferguson
Largest Manufacturer
of.

-

SIG Valuel Now Only

•

The famous rugged-power·
Cl'OilOillY
giant
with
Selectamatic.
SAVE UP TO S1.000 ON
COMPARABLE
COMPETITIVE
'•
MODELS!

34" MOWER

--

'

l

615-1160
. . . ..

FERTILIZER SPREADERS!·

tight-weight (90 pounds) but
super-power - 4-hp, 4·cycle. A
h~rd-ch~rging on-road, off-road
workmate or playmate.

•

I

,: '

I

With the purchase of any model DAVID
BROWN tractor from 31! to 72 horsepower.
Diesel or Gasoline - Mar. 15 to Apr, 30

INCLUDING

'

5

THIS
SUPER
TRAIL
BIKE

I

Tractors!

1

·
· 5,000 TO .18,000 BTU
Carolina Lum·ber &amp;
·supply Co.· · ·

LA UR A HOOV ER,
daughter of Mr, apd Mrs .
Wendell Hoover, belts out her
version of the sland"rd "You
Made Me Love You" while
rehearsing for the first
Salisbury Elementary School
minstrel show_

NOW WE HAVE.

1 0

6th St.

VOL 16, No. 21

MOBILE HOME SALES :

1

i

*SPECIAL EDITION

1

·s-YEAR
'
·wARRANfY.

'

1

•

BEAT THE HEAT·
AND
·THE.R.USH

'

1 '

benefill of a Federal Land

•
Upper Rt. 7, Next Door to Auto Auctig/
e
DESMOINES, Iwoa (UP!)- Drake record In capturing tbe :
Phone 446-9340
e
Records toppled In seven of 21 marathon for the second • • • • 1 • •
e
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • '• • • •
events In the finale of the 62nd straight year.
•
annual Drake Relays Saturday,
headed by Frank Shorter's
·victory in the six-mile run tn
27:24.4, the fastest time In the
event In the world this year.
Shorter, who was hard
.
pressed to the finish line by
Minnesota's Gary Bjorklund
and who w by I tw· • th
'
on
on y
'"en s
of a second over the long ~
distance, was the only double
winner tn the two-day track
carnival. He beCame the tliird
athlete to win both the three
mile and six mile runs tn the
same Drake tournament.
Shorter also set a record on
Friday tn the three-mile run. In
both the three mile and six mile,
be defeated hi8 Florida Track
aub teammate Jack Bacheler.
who won both events tn 1969 and
1970. Van Nelson of St. Cloud,
Mlrul., won the same two events
tn 1968: 1967 and 1968.
,:
Bjorklund had the consolation
that, although he finished
second to Shorter, he still hung
up the best time by an
'
American collegian in the
'
event, a mark he he!d
previously.
Bruce Mortenson of the Twin
.Qties Track aub broke his own

1 2
0 0 NEW RACETRACK OPENS
0 0
o 1 NEWYORK(UPI)-Sant8 Fe
o 0 . Downs, the newest race -track
4 5 10
·
Nor th America, being
R H constructed at a cost of $$
o 0 million, ,is scheduled to open a
0 2 1ifk1
1 o
ay mee t on · May 29. Teil
o o races will be progralnmed
o o dally, seven for thoroughbreda
o2 01 and three '""
'-quarter hcnes. A
o 1 split meeting, with llf to 60
1 1 days for lhorouchbncls IJid a
0 0 :aklay meeting for quarter
1 0
· 5 5 horses 11 planned for 1972.
Santa Fe Downllllo becaine
Sy,rT): Val. . ' 000 004 1)--.j 5 3 l'le Thoroughbred Ractna AssoK~~~r.,tPl01~~3 ~;5n~~ cllllon'~ ntwal member Frf.
John11011. (WP) Curry (7) and •day,br\ngln&amp;theTRAmember·
Blaa.
·
.. ship l'OIIer .to 57.
.

'

Bank Loan.

7 H.P. Model ttl 7
1

-

4000 f ~ouros
1\''' Ln
lOS[ \Nl [R[ST'

ly to the new tower rate.
Just another of t he m;~ny

•

May 3fH1 - May Day Weekend.
· -.-.-.

1

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•

Ga IIi polis, 0.

•.

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u

m.
~:::::&lt;::

72.

*

LOUISI/Ilt.E, K'f. • FL B •

WIDES eFOREST PARK e MARLETTE e
eREBEL
eMANSION
•

Knudson, 70-76-71 ; Gibby •
Gilbert, 73-71-73; and Gene •
Uttler 72-71·74. Bobby Nichols :
was·all alone at 218 with 71-75- e

Reco•ds 'T'umbled
Jin
.L
6~d DJioke RelavQ
1 '

BQbcats-- Win Fourth Straight ·

..-.s,mmu

Par for 18 holes is 36-36-72 and
only five pros in the field of 35
were under it for three rounds.
Dave Stockton shot 72 for a
215 total. Defending Champion

*

•'

buy a tractor from a lawn mower maker when
bu~ a tractor !rom the biggest tractor
spe,claliisl in the world? MF 7 gives you a gardenpackage· of the same muscle Massey puts
its professional fariJl equipment. Plus optionno-shift Hydra Speell Drive, electric starting
every attachment under the eun. Leal and
snow equipment, too. Also 10 and 12 horsepower
models. And don't forget professional service--.
another MF exc:Iusivel

'l

,

,_ _ _--1

POLIS TRACTOR

'

•

Massey· Ferguson Dealer" ·

Gal

Upper Rt. 7, Kana uga
Ohio
Phone 446-1044

LARGEST DEALER
IN THE AREA I
.
.
PHONE 446 2463

Come in and get details NOW!

Rl. 1 (Upper Rt. 7l

Ptl. 446-0523

railroad
car unloaders.
../
'

BUY YOUR FERTILIZER FROM THE

Time is limited - lhis offer good from
March 15 to April 30 only al participating
dealers. Also, limited supply of Trail Bikes.

_WHITE IMPLEMENT-CO..

To better serve our cust~mers we have expanded
our fleet of spreaders. We now have new. · ·

CENTRAL SOYA OF' OHIO
\

Gallipolis, Ohio ,

'

· ."Your Farm Super Market"

is, Ohio

�'

:Ill- The Sunday Times Sentmel, SWlday April25, 1971

Meigs

Let Science Work, not Rule of Thumb
BY C E BLAKESLEE
Ext. Agent, Agriculture
POMEROY - Tius is the
season of the year when
homeowners ease thetr ''con
sciences sprmkltng ltme on
their lawn and aroWld the
groWlds, regardless of whetiter
the sot! needs tt or not
There are rules of thumb
which can be used m ferttlmng

NEW in FARMING
lawns, but the best way Is to get
a sotl test In securmg sot! for
Ute sotl test 10 to I2 samples
should be taken at different
places m the yard mtxed
thoroughly together and then a
,cupful may be brought tD the
Extenston Offtce for submtsslon
tD the Sot! Testing Laboratory
Cost of the sml test ts $2 each
A ltttle sunple artthmeltc
discloses how much ferti!Uer ts
needed m connectton Wtth trees
growmg around the home
Trees grow m natural areas
for decades wtth no ad&lt;Jlttons of
fertilizer But when they are
transplanted to man made

landscapes sot! and en
vtronmental condtltons change
Then fertilizers must be added
once every two or Utree years
says Kenneth W Retsch
professor of landscape hor
ttculture, The Ohto State
Umverstty
Trees m a ferttle, loamy sot!
need less ferttltzer However
most trees m the landscape are
not planted m thiS type of sot!
andfertiltzattontsbeneftctal he
says
Apply any complete ferlthzer
that IS htgh m mtrogen The
ration of nitrogen potassmm
and phosphorous should be
about 3-1 I Ferltltzers such as
12-4-4 1:;.o.o or JIH!-4 are
recommended Smce trees are
not ferltltzed often used one
fourth to one thtrd of the
mtrogen m an orgamc or other
slow release form Apply fer
tlltzer from early March
through May or m the fall October through late Novem
ber Mmsture condt!tons are
usually better at these times
You ll need about ftve to SIX
pounds of actual mtrogen per

1 000 square feet of sot! sud ace
under the branches Surface
area under branch spread can
be figured as follows surface
area equals the radius squared
times 3 14 (pt) Measure radtus
from trunk of tree to edge of
branch spread
A tree wtth a branch spread of
36 feet has a radms of 18 feet
Usmg the formula we get 18 x
18x 3 14 or 1 017 square feet At
the rate of ftve pounds of actual
mtrogen per 1 000 square feet
apply about 50 pounds of fer
!tltzer such as 11Hl-4 to thts area
(A l!Hl-4 fertilizer contams 10
per cent mtrogen and 10 per
cent of 50 pounds gtves the
destred 5 pounds of actual
mtrogen )
Surface appltcatton ts the
eastest anti fastest Jt ts the best
means tD use on newly planted
trees or trees wtth no vegetatwn
under the branch spread
However tf grass ts growmg
under the tree Ute ferltltzer
rate ts too htgh for a smgle
appltcatton So apply m two or
three
apphcattons
wtth
thorough watermg after each
appltcatton

Smce phosphorous docs not
readtly penetrate the soil the
drtlled hole appltcatton method
may be best tf tree ts growmg m
compacted or poorly aeratedsot! Drilled holes have the
advantage of aeratmg the sml
as well as plactng fertthzer m
the root zone below the surface
Use an auger punch bar of
crowbar tD make holes 15 to 18
mches deep on 12 to 18-tnch
center Begm about two feet
from the trunk and punch holes
m ctrcles around the trunk to a
hne slightly beyond the edge of
the branches Dtstrtbute the
recommended amount of fer
ttltzer tn the holes and fmtsh
filling wtth peat moss calcme
clay perltte or other smtable
matertal
One of the senous problems
wtth trees thts sprmg ts the lack
of mmsture In many cases the
result of the drought thts spnng
may be tn evtdence durmg the
next two or three years
If the sot! has become so dry
around the trees that a ma1or
share of the tmy rootlets dry out
then these trees may dte m part
or even whole trees tn the next

Property

two or three years.
If trees are parltcularly
valuable tl ts unportant that
watermg be practtced before
Ute tmy rootlets dte
If you are transplantmg trees
or shrubs then Ute drought has
another senous effect Con
lamer grown plants and some
balled and burlaped stock can
he moved any ltme durtng the
growmg season tf proper
watermg
practtces
are
followed Bare root dormant
matenal should be planted only
whtle the plant ts dormant etther early sprmg or fall after
leaf drop Jt s best not to plant
bare root stock after new shoot
growth has extended beyond
two to three mches
Put out hard to transplant
ornamentals tn the sprmg
preferably wtth a sotl ball to
assut e the longest posstble
pertod for establtshment of new
roots These plants mclude
beech magnoha rhododen
dron
azalea
!lowermg
dogwood Japanese maple
holly sweetgum hemlock and
tupelo or sourwood

Transfers

County Schools Join Conservation Efforts
BY JOHN COOPER
Soli Conservation Service
PT PLEASANT - Western
Sot! Conservatton Dtstrtct ts
sponsormg two conservalton

Lay of the Land
activtttes m cooperahon wtth
the Mason County school
system the ftrst a conservatton
test tD be gtven soon m each 1Oth

grade btology class at the three
htgh schools and the other a
conservatiOn educatton
workshop for teachers at West
Vtrgmta Umverstty June 14 to
July 2
Teachers mterested m thts
workshop are asked to contact
the school supermtendent A
teacher may earn three hours
credtt toward an advanced

Crown Vetch Has
Proven Qualities
COLUMBUS- Bare exposed
areas of the earth termed
crtttcal areas,'
dump
thousands of tons of stlt a
maJor source of pollu!ton moo
our streams and rtvers ac
cording to Robert E Quilltam,
State Conservaltomst for the U
S SOli Conservation Servtce
(SCS) m Columbus
~ Cr)tlcQl areas may mclude
steep land ftlls and slopes
erodmg channel banks con
struc!ton Sites m urban areas
and other areas exposed due to
change tn land use
Many of these areas are
poorly sutted for plant growth
because of water concentrabon
sot! matertal and slope
Qutlltam noted But sedtment
pollutton from these areas can
be controlled
he satd
Crownvetch
a perenmal
legume, IS tdeal for eslabhshmg
cover on thts type of land
The plant spreads by strong
fleshy rhtzomes (underground
root stalks) It has stems from 2
to 6 feet long that are strongly
branched and an extremely
heavy root system that provtdes
excellent eroston control and
reduces sedunent Because of
Its profuse spreadmg habtt a
smgle plant may cover as much
as 75 to 100 square feet of area
at maturtty
The plant not only provtdes
excellent cover but ts pleasmg
to the eye Qutlllam satd Jt
makes a soltd green mat of
fohage throughout the enttre
growmg season, turmng brown
only m the late fall and wmtcr
From June through August tt
produces an extremely heavy
set of ptnk to pmktsh purple
flowers addmg beauty to the
envtronment The flowers also

have a shght pleastng scent
Crownvetch plants normally
grow to a hetght of l'h to 2 feet
and usually do not need
mowmg Normal lawn mowmg
alongstde crownvetch areas
usually wtll prevent spreadmg
of the plant mto adjacent lawns
Addtltonal 'm!ormalton on
vegetatmg crtltcal areas wttit
crownvelch may be obtamed by
contacting your local SOil and
water conservatiOn dtstr1ct
offtce

degree or renewal of a cer
ltftcate by havmg the course
approved tn advance
Awards wtll be made to the
!11 st ftve wmners m the con
servatton test the tDp awa rd
bemg a scholarshtp to Con
se rvatton Camp at Camp
Caesar
CLIFFORD BARNETT
whose farm ts near Lievmg
mme has marked out stxteen
acres for farmmg m alternate
contour stnps Denver Yoho of
SCS helped htm mark the
contour boundaries for three
stnps He plans to plant corn tn
these stnps and leave a strtp of
sod between each corn area
Mr Barnett learned the value
of contour strtp croppmg when
he was farm manager on the W
W Brown farm tn the same
communtty Mr Barnett plans
to lay out addtttonal acreage for
strtp croppmg before he ftmshes
hts croppmg plan for thts year
He recently purchased thts
farm from John McNetll and ts
operatmg a datry
OTHER NEW cooperators of
the Western Dtstrtcl bestdes
Clifford Barnett are Charles
Engel of Stxteen Mtle Creek
and Ernest Compson of Mason
Engle owns 40 acres and was

mtcrested m some creek work
and a plan I he Compson land
conststs of 12 acres He was
mtet ested tn developmg some of
thts for pasture and developmg
water for one or two head of
livestock
THE WESTERN Dtstnct has
completed plans wtth the Mason
County Mtmstenal Assoctatton
m the promotten of Sot!
Stewardshtp Week whtch ts the
week of May 16 23 Program
blanks mserts for programs
and promolton matenal were
gtven to the mmtsters Jesse
Bro" n dtstnct supervtsor was
m charge of lhts actiVIty m the
county
Leo Thornton whose fa rm ts
on Kapp Rtdge reported that
hts pond was full of water and
that grass was growmg well
over the !til and bare areas
surroundmg the pond Thts pond
"as butlt last fall The mam
purpose for thts pond was an
attractwn to wtldllfe In ad
dtlton to furmshmg water for
wtldhfe Mr Thornton planted
some evergreens around tt and
plans to plant othet wtldlife
plants
THE GREAT KANAWHA
Resource Conservatton and
Development Steenng Com

mtllee has approved as a
proJect the study and posstble
eltmtnatwn of nverbank
eroston along the Ohto and
Kanawha Rtvers
The Western Sot! con
servatton Dtstrtet has been
dtscussmg thts pt oblem for
some two or three ) ears and
referred tl to the RC&amp;D group
for actton
As a result of thts bemg a
prOJect a meetmg has been
called by Norman Walter Chatrman of the RC&amp;D Steenng
Commtttee to be held m Pt
Pleasant May 20 Jnvttatwns
are bemg sent by Mr Walter to
gt oups 1n Ohto and West
Vtrgmta from Hunltngton to
Parkersburg who mtght have
an mterest m thts prOJect

Charles C Beegle Mattte F
Beegle to Ohto Power Co
Ease Sutton
Charles H Thetss Bonme F
Thetss to Ohto Power Co
Ease Sutton
Charles H Thetss Bonme F
Thetss to Ohto Power Co
Ease Lebanon
Kenneth R Thetss Bermce L
Thetss to Ohto Power Co
Ease Sutton
Charles cornell Jr Beulah
Cornell tD Ohto Power Co
Ease Sutton
Herbert Oatley Lorene W
Oatley to Ohto Power Co
Ease Lebanon
Clarence V Prtce Maxme
Pnce to Ohto Power Co Ease
Lebanon
Charles H Thetss Bonme F
Thetss to Ohio Power Co
Ease Sutton
Robert W Profitt! Elizabeth
F Profit tt to Ohto Power Co
Sutton
Blythe J Thetss, Ntna L
Thetss to Ohto Power Co
Ease Sutton
Ralph L Harvey Genevteve
G Harvey to Earl F Snyder
Mary E Snyder Lot Pomeroy
Elste Mtdktff dec to Ztba 0
Mtdkiff Hornet Mtdktff Ella
May Romme Cert for Trans
Bedford
Lan Y W Ebltn LaVama V
Ebhn to Watd Hayman Donna
Hayman Lot Pomeroy
Oolite Mae Ptckett to Mark
Markham 83 A Bedford
Oolite Mae Ptcket to Robet t
G Ptckett 310 77 A Bedford
Gladys Wtlhams to Mary
Allee Samuels Int tn Lot
Pomeroy
Kttrel Wtlltams Delorts
Wtlhams to Mary Allee
Samuels Int tn Lot Pomeroy
Jewel Mtller Welch James L
Welch to Mary Altce Samuels
lnt tn Lot Pomeroy
Sarah Hull to Mat y Altce
Samuels Int m Lot Pomeroy
Theodore A Dowme Dorothy
Dowme Wtlham B Dowme

••..........

IN POMEROY
NEW I
6 HP MASSEY FERGUSON

RIDING MOWER
MF6
with 32 cut

MODERN SUPPLY
tn 2164

Pomeroy

THE STORE WITH ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
FOR P~TS - STABLES - LARGE AND SMALL
ANIMALS LAWNS - GARDENS

Gravely s btg
16 5 HP tractor
has the extra muscle
for the btg JObs steepest
slopes All gear dnve mstant
forward neutral reverse If you have
lawn and garden JObs that call for somethmg
extra the 16 5 IS somethmg else '
Call or see us for a free demonstratiOn

to

OPEN 8 TO 5 MON THRU
T
()pen Eventngs By Appomlme I

Meigs Equipment Co,
PQMEROY, OHIO

PH. 992-2176

GRAVELY TRACT
R
•
SALES &amp; SERVI E
Phone 992 2975

•

• 0 0 ••••

••• 0 •

•

•

0

th ngs

446 2647

97 6

REMODELING and painling
Good references

Ed Sm1th

256 6935

But lh1s they w1pe out never

The memory of the happy days

97 II

----FOR a JOb well done feeling

clean carpels wllh Blue
Lus Ire
Rent
electnc
shampooer $1 Lower G C
Murphy Store
97 6

----CLEANING EST carpel cleaner
you ever used so easy too

1963 •;, T Chevrolet pl~kup
1965 1'12 T Che.rolet Truck
1967 Whole Dtesel Truck
1969 Chev dump truck
1968 1/2 T GMC P U
1965 I T GMC
1969 GMC ~ T log truck
1962 'I• T GMC pickup
1963 I T GMC
19~5 '12 T Ford P U
1963 '12 T ChP.V p u
1965 112 T GMC P U
1969 I T GMC
1967 '12 T GMC P U
1969 FORD Econoline van
1966 1'12 T GMC
1968 Chev Suburban
1962 •;, T GMC P U
1968 white diesel truck
1965 'I• T GMC P U
1967 'I• T Chevrolet pickup
1963 F600 Ford _tr uck

REALTOR
Off, 446 3641
lve. 446 3796

-

USSELL WOOD

REALTOR
446-1066

Charm, Locallon
We know a modern husband who was d sa ppomted when
Conventence
We were all together
h1s w1fe gave b~rth to a daughter he was hopmg for a boy
_ __ _ _ __ 95j
The Bert Scolt Family
IF YOU HAVE BEEN
to help h1m with the housework
82 tt
WAITING FOR JUST THE
97 I
-7-'---~RIGHT
HOME
WE
THINK
~----If s t1me agam to f II out those ncome tax blankety blanks
Wanted To Rent
ADD A ROOMS Overcrowded'
THIS IS IT VERY AT
Plumbmg &amp; Heatmg
TRACTIVE
SPL
IT
LEVEL
Card of Thanks
lnves1Jgate beaut ful Vf!'mco
3 BEDROOM house In Gall 1"'1 s
WITH
3
BEDROOMS
Roomelles
Separate
family
STANDAR D
C1ly School DISinct Needed
WE WISH to thank our fr ends
LARGE LIVING 8. DINING
rooms
extra
bedrooms
Plum
bong &amp; Healing
Immediately
Ph
446
2615
ALL
NEW
LISTINGS
relatives and neighbors for
ROOM
COMPLETELY
laundry
rooms
baths
St)(
room
home
on
two
acres
of
ground
at
the
edge
of
c
ty
95
3
'15
Third
Ave 446 3782
the1r express10n at k ndness
BUILT IN KITCHEN WITH
187 tf
Young
s
Mob
le
Homes
Stale
Th
s
home
has
a
modern
k
tchen
gas
furnace
and
Wall
to
----~RANGE
DISH
WASHER
and sympathy dunng the loss
Rl
7
and
35
(below
Silver
ETC 2 BATHS LARGE
wall carpetmg Extra lot w th low taxe s Pr~ce$14 750
of our dear husband and
W 1d
Memonal Bndge) Gallipolis
SCREENED PATIO AND
Brammer Plumbong &amp; Healtng
father John Montgomery
an e
97 I 1966 &gt;;, T GMC pickup
GARAGE THIS HOME IS
300 Fourth Ave
Our smcere apprec1at10n to LEAD vocalist for rock group
We have a SIX room home on Chatham Avenue m ex
COMPLETELY
CAR
------~
Phone 446 1637
Rev
Richard Graham
Call 446 0005 afler 4 p m
1961 2 T GMC
cellent cond1t1on Home approx•mately 8 years ord See
PETED AND HAS AN
Gene
Plants Owner
Harley Myers Quartet and
95 3 MODERN Walnut Slereorad o 1964 3 T GMC
th s one 1mr"ned1ately for qu ck sale Pr ce $14 000
ATTRACTIVE FIREPLACE
combmahon 4 speaker sound 1966 '12 T Chev
298 If
Waugh Halley Wood Funeral - - - -- - : - - - PLUS
CENTRAL
AIR
ON
A
system1 4 speed changer
-~----BIG SHADY LANDSCAPED
1966 '12 T lnl P U
Home
Older hom e m e)(cellent locahon on V ne Stree t Needs
Balance $6~ 10 Use our 1966 112 T Ford P U
DEWITT S PLUMBING
LOT WITH TREMENDOUS
The Joh n Montgomery Help Wanted
redecorating Pr ce $13 soo
budget
terms
Call
«6 1028 1963 112 T GMC P U
VIEW
AND
CHIL-DREN
AND HEATING
WOMEN
to
do
housework
n
fam ly
97 3 1956 1'12 T Chev van
CAN WALK TO SCHOOL
Route 160al Evergreen
Gall polls area Wnte Fran
97 I
Cement block dwellmg on approximately 2 acres o1
ORCHARD HILL AD
Phone 446 2735
Box 23 Pomeroy Ohio or
Tires - 10 OOx20 12 ply oylon
DRESS
NUFF
SAID
NOW
ground
Across from Green Gables on Route 7 For
AUTHENTIC
Earl~ American
281 tf
phone
985
3900
t res $90 tnt Fed tax
WE WOULD I ke lo tha nk
CALL IKE WISEMAN FOR
commerc1al purposes Call for more nformatlon
Stereo
radiO
AM
FM
rad10
-t
95
6
SOMMER
5
GMC
everyone that senl us g1fts
AN APPOINTMENT
OFFICE4461066
speakers 4 speed automaflc
CARTEl&lt; S PLUMBING
nuCKS lNC
and cards for our 50th an
Even~ngs
Call Ron Canaday 446 3636
changer
Balance
$82
60
Use
AND HEATING
LADIES
need
a
tob'
Full
Under
Construction
133
Ptne
St
niversary
our
budget
terms
Call
446
Or
John
I
Rtchards
446
0280
830
Fourth Avenue
partllme
and
summer
jOb
Ph 446 2532
Mr and Mrs Geor9e
Ready In 4 Weeks
1028
Russell
D
Wood
446
4618
Phone
446
388B or 446 4477
Apply
Gherke
Bout1que
.w,
2411!
Coleman Sr Atlanta Oh10
97 3
!55 tf
ATTRACTIVE
CARPETED
9332
or
446
4273
97 I
3
BECROOM
HOME
97 3
LARGE LIVING AND
Mobile
Home
ELECTRO,l.UX
rebu It USED
0. D. PARSONS
RUSSEU S
-------DINING AREA LOVELY
Headquarters
All
size
mob1le
cleaners
Sales
and
Serv
&lt;:e
PLUMBING&amp;
HEATING
YOU
R
E
In
demand
when
Lost
KITCHEN AND BATH
JAY
SHEPPARD
homes
'"
stock
B
&amp; S Mobile
Phone
~46 9453
SEPTIC
tank
cleantng
d1t
you
re
an
Avon
Represen
FULL
DIVIDED
FEMALE cat long ha1red
Home Sales Second &amp; Viand
97 6
ch1ng
e
l
ectr~c
Eel
serv
Ph
tal1ve
People
want
personal
BASEMENT
GARAGE
REALlORS
color
yellow
mixed
PI
Pleasant
next
to
Heck
s
---~-446
4782
GallipoliS
0
serv ce and world famous
LARGE LOT AND EX
declawed Lost n V1nlon cat I
Farm Vtllage City Property
67 If CELLENT
70 If
LOCATION 2
products lhat have a money IRRIGATION outf1t big motor
3888327
Forst &amp; Olive
MILE
OUT
IN
CITY
pump
800
gal
waler
a
---back
guarantee
Want
to
earn
96 3
DI STRICT
Phone 446 O:Zt9
mtnute
also
Crawler
SINGER Sewing Machine Sales SC HOOL
money meet people w1n
NEARLY
I
300
SQ
FT
FOR
Serv1ces Offered
Proclorv1lle
Oh10
886
6565
&amp;
Serv1ce
All
models
In
stock
pnzes' Write or call Mrs
LESS THAN $20 000 00
Thurman
97
I
Hobart
Dtllon
Realtor
Not1ce
Free
del1very
Service
FAIN
Helen Yea9er Box 172
Offtce 446 2674
NICE 6 room home w lh balh
guaranteed Models priced
FREE Used cloth ng for
ALOHA 1
EXTERMINATING CO
Jackson Oh1o Ph 286 4028
Howard or Luc1lle Brannon
and full basemen I 1 1 acres
from $69 95 French Cl y
anyone who Is 1n need Church
926 1 GOOD m1lk cow can be used
Termite &amp; Pest Control
(Means "Good Buy")
Eventngs
446
1226
as
datry
or
fam1ly
cow
Ph
tronl1ng U S 35 Good
Fabr1c
Shoppe
Singer
ap
of Chnst Bidwell Ph 388
Wheelersburg Oh1o
AND YOU LL AGREE
locat1on near church schoo l
Robert Condee 446 0858
388 8631
proved dealer 58 Court St Ph
8429 or 388 8787
Ph 574-6112
AFTER
READING
THESE
97 3
For Rent
and store Pnced to se ll
97 I
52 If
446 9255
A
Room
Of
FEATURES
LARGE
308lf LIVING ROOM WITH
FURNISHED upstairs apart
Kanauga
My Own
ment 2 rooms &amp; bath all 1957 CHEVROLET 11:2 ton
CALL after 5 p m for Rawle1gh
FIREPLACE
FORMAL
L E PENCI= Masonry Repair
p ckup Pme $225 Ph 446
uti11t es paid Adults only 446
DINING AND NICE SIZED THE dream of every ch1ld NEARLY new 3 bedroom home
Products 1924 E Ave Ph
sand blasting tuck pOinting
BEDROOMS 1h BATHS
RICE'S PRICES
1n Kanauga Large kitchen
3548
446-2089 or 446 3387
Here s your chance 4 BR
1519
caulk ng waler proofing For
LOVELY BUILT IN KIT
97 6 ARE LOWER because of less
97 If
d nlng area Bath Garage
97 I
LR
DR
large
beaut
lui
free
esllmales call Port
CABINETS WITH RANGE
oak
f
loors
k
t
chen
w1th
double
oven
prof1l d1rect factory buying
smouth
259 4253
OVEN
DISHWASHER
everything a woman would
58 tf
STUD serv1ce for AKC reg ! BEDROOM mob1le home Ph EARLY Amer can d ning room
low
overhead
lam ly ETC
CARPETING
Patnot
su le round table w lh 2extra
dream of Located on a corner
wh1le loy poodle Ph 446 9539
367 7329
opera11on We w1ll take your
THROUGHOUT PLUS 2
97 tf
leaves 4 capta n cha1rs large
TWO homes corner location
lot All for onlv SIB ooo
FULL
after 5 p m
old furn~lure In on trade or CAR GARAGE
ELECTRIC SERVICE
hutch hard rock maple $275 2
Larger home has 7 rooms and RESIDENTIAL &amp; Industrial
BASEMENT
AND
ELEC
96 6
buy 11 outnght
Immediate
pc llvtng room suite modern NEW 3 pc Early American TRIC HEAT
sma ll er home has 4 rooms
FURNISHED apartment
Paul Knox office Ph 446 lOll
beige
S40
Mark
II
water
W II sell oulr ght or trade for
Possession
Fourth
Ave
GARAGE SALE
Myrtle
inqu re al 631
maple bedroom su tes $99 95
No
Down
Payment
or
home Ph 446 4822
softener and condthoner 1 yr
bollom farm or cily properly
96 tf
AS the man who must wa t a
Th vener Norma Kuhn
Buy a $59 95 mattress and get
70 If
Low Mo Payment
old $375 Ph 446 0946
month to move m If you r e
Crown
City
Monday
a
matchmg box sprmgs for
Sprmg
Valley
97 6
ready for ac11on heres a 2
Tuesday and Wednesday
2 tlEDROOM mob le home n
only $19 95 2 pc Early YOU CAN NOW OWN YOUR
REFRIGERATION &amp; Air
96 3
OWN HOME IN TOWN OR
story home '" extra good TPI LEVEL br ck and redwood
Cheshire Melvm L1ttle
Amencan Ltvmg room su1te
Condillonlng Ralke s Refrlg
OUT IF YOU HAVE
w th 3 bedrooms and 1wo
co ndition downsta rs car
9~ If 1965 CHEVROLET Impala
tr1mmed m maple w1th strong
8. A r Cond Ph 367 7200
STEADY
EMPLOYMENT
auto trans P S a r con
baths L v mg room and d1nlng
peled 3 BR carporl plenty
• 56 tf
Herculon cover $169 95
AND
GOOD
CREDIT
THE
4
d
!loner
Ph
~46
2375
r
oom
carpeled
Large
eat
tn
shade
large
I
of
at
s
12
500
3
rooms
&amp;
Parkmg
m
rear
R1ce
s
New
&amp;
FURNISHED apl
HOMES DESCRIBED
97 3
k tchen with staonless sleel
AUCTIONEER
You II agree tt s a barga n
Used Furn 854 Sec 446 9523
bath 602 Fourlh Ph ~46 2796
BELOW
SHOULD
MASONRY LUNl ~ACTOR
bu It n range oven and dish
95
If
or «6 0345
QUALIFY
CALL IKE
Earl Carman
Locat1on
94 If 1964 FORD pickup truck Ph
washer
family
room
with
Let us put you out of
WISEMAN FOR DETAILS
Ph 388 871J
large
stone
f1replace
MAKES
the
difference
Here
s
GOOD
CLEAN
LUMP
ana
busoness Charlie Mttler Box -~~~;;=~~;===J88 8738
28 II
97
3
Home
&amp;
2
Acres
Laundry
room
Two
car
a downtown locat1on close to
stoker coal Carl Wlnlers Rio
SLEEPiNG ROOMS weeklv
114 R1o Grande Ohto
everything
~
BR
2
full
baths
garage
Grande Phone 245 5115
rates Park Cen1ral Hotel
JUST h MILE FROM CITY
245 5535
3Q8 If WHITE cement all sizes tile on
811 LIMITS LOCATED ON 2 A
!~replace
1n LR
part
FLOOR COVERING BY
Ltsttngs Needed
stock 12 x 15 field tile
basement near new gas
LOT
MODERN
3
SU~VALLEY Nursery School
su1table for highway ditching
BEDROOM HOME WITH
ARE YOU being transferred? Is
forced a1r furnace
ROOMS weekly
577 Sun Valley Dr ve now &gt;P:EPING
NICE
BUILT
IN
KITCHEN
ARMSTRONG
concrete
blocks
your house or farm too small
rates free garage parking
BATH UTILITY ROOM
One
Too
Many
~ provtdtng full day care and
GALLIPOLIS
BLOCK
CO
or
ton'litrge?
Need
a
different
~
&gt;·u C~RNELL!' M'CIN'f'!V.1A!Ct
AND
GARAGE WITH OWNER has bought a farm and
ch1fd dev elopment program tlbby Hotel
ph
446
2783
locatiOn?
We
need
houses
7~ tf
CASTILEAN
- ••,,
LARGE STORAGE AREA
36 x23 x 009
1or pre school children In
97 If
has th s neat 2 BR home on
farms lands to se lf I
NAT
GAS
CITY
WATER
!ants excluded Open 7 30 a
- -----cLower R ver Rd Ideal for
AND SCHOOLS
m to 6 p m Monday through
'5 '8.25 Sq. Yd.
GOLF set mens W!son Sam
small family or retirement
For
Sale
Fnday Fees $20 for full f1ve REDUCE safe and fast woth
Snead Signature I year old 2
Lovely 3 Bedroom
home Vacant call today
day week $5 per day If less
3 4 s Hand cart bag, ir011S
Gobese tablets and E Vap
FLOOR COVERING BY
Ph 446 0008
than f1ve days $3 per day for
YOU LL BE SURPRISED
- P G A 2 lhru 9 P W &amp;
water pills Gillingham Drug
Hate
To
Pamt?
BYTHISONE VERY NICE
morning sessions Ph 446
puller all lor $135 Phone 446
88 26
CONGOLEUM
USED OFFSET PLATES
Low Tax DiStrict
KITCHEN
CAR PETED NO Need to owner took great
3657
Madge Hauldren
0404 or 446 477 4
LOVELY
3
bedroom
home
with
LIVING
ROOM
AND
HAVE
Owner D1rector John and
13.95
93 4
pride In th1s place and kept 11
RIBBO-.
'5 Sq. Yd.
FAMI LY ROOM 3 NICE
hardwood floors nice kitchen
MANY USES
Loredllh
Hau~dren
spic
and
span
3
BR
all
on
one
SPECIAL $7 50 a dozen IBM
SIZED BEDROOMS ON
cabinets large lawn and nat
operators
floor LR &amp; d1n1ng area 2
CERAMIC TILE
electnc polythylene nbbons USED FURNITURE 2 llv1ng
LARGE DEEP LOT IN
gas SIO ooo
4
35 tf
room suites
small red
TOWN
FUI:L
PRICE
acres of land Yes - only
CARBON PAPER
1
Bargam
Sq. ft.
btcycle Kenmore automatiC
$1~ 500
$12 000
BOX of Carbon paper reg $5 00
NICE
6
room
home In city
8for
$1
00
RALPHS CarRel- Upholstery
dryer
metal
twin
bed
with
only $350
L1ve W1th The
$9 000
INSTALLING INCLUOEO
Cleaning ._ Serv1ce
Free
flat springs
TIME CLOCKS
No Down Payment I
$11,0003
Bedroom
FREE ESTIMATE
eshmales r-h 44,6 029~
Greatest Of Ease
WE ARE now lhe agency for NEW FURNITURE Our an
s ROOMS and balh full
nlversary
sale
ts
in
full
swing
Wtth
Rtver
Vtew
COMBINATION
home
and
- - ' -- ----_;.:.
197 tf
T S I time clocks
basement hardwood floors
Phone Ashworth
Come tn and see our many
mobile home 18 x39 2 BR
Stmmons ptg &amp;Offtce
new furnace ctty water and
WE BUY gold' coins and Sli&gt;•
good values Our slore IS fully
large LR kitchen and dining
Equtp
446
IJ97
446 9368
sewer large gar age and
dollars Tawney Jewelers
HARD TO BELIEVE BUT
stocked wllh fme qual1ly
area cellar and work~hop
72tf
I wn Pnced to sell
HERE
IT
IS
3
BEDROOMS
62 tf
furntture and appliances
small barn plenty water
WITH CARPETED LIVING
Coly L1m1ts
825 Thtrd Ave
ALB!=RT EH~AN
Yoo II be amazed what $3 900 NICE 2 story home larg•
Plenty of free parking Corb1n
ROOM BATH BASEMENT
ALL TYPES of building
Waler
Delivery Serv1ce
Gallipolis
0
&amp;
Snyder
Furniture
Co
955
will
buy
AND
MODERN
FURNACE
For Trade
enough for 2 3 or 4 apts
materials block brick sewer
Patriot
Star
Rt Gallipolis
Second Ave Ph «6 1171
MASSEY Harm pony tractor
Presently the downstairs
ptpes windows lintels etc
Ph
3792133
93 If
with eq_u1pment for grass
living quarters contains 7
Claude Winters Rio Grande
Horse Lovers
f43-tf
__:_
Real Estate For Sale
Modern Home + 3 A
calves Call 367 7607
rooms In good condition with
0 Ph Z45 5121 after 5
USED
TRAILERS
YOU
LL
also
love
this
3
BR
7
96 3
91 tf
fhe same amount of space
UNBELIEVEABLE
3
TERMITE PEST CONTROL
I
room brick home on 30 acres
BUILDING sites 6 miles from
1960 Nahonal 10 x 50 2 br
upstairs 2 garages also
BEDROOM HOME WITH
FREE Inspection Call 446-3245,
of
clean
well
fenced
land
town
qu1et
neighborhood
1967
Horizon
12
x
50
2
br
Ctty School 0151
3 BICYCLES 1 hi powerea 1957 Glider 45 x 8 3 br
FIREPLACE
IN
LARGE
For Sate or Trade
Merrill 0 Dell Operator for
farm
pond
3
new
barns
Ideal
rural water system Ph
2 ACRES containing a n1ce
nfle 309 gauge with scope
LIVING ROOM - NICE
E)(termlnal Termite Service,
14 FT BOAT !wood) ana
locat1on
for
the
Dr
Lawyer
Melv
n
Tabor
~46
3791
KITCHEN BATH AND
home w1lh 3 Bedrooms and a
Assorted glassware and 1966 Namco l2 x 10 3 br
trailer Good fishing boal or
19
Belmont Dr
976
or
Executive
Live
I
up
like
a
1960
Van
Dyke
10
x
50
2
br
MODERN
FURNACE
complete new built In kitchen
paintings from Old Mexico 1960 Van Dyke 10 x 50 2 br
pleasure Must sell Ph 446
267 tf
country squ1re
$8
500
See th is one
446 9208
·
-~---~999 after 5 p m
1965 Kentuckian 56 x 10 3 Br
Invest In Your
88 If .
95 3
GILLENWATER S Septic Tank
1962 Colon~al 50 x 10 2 br
But
ldmg
LotsFor
Future
Thru Slrout
Don't
Fence
Me
In
--~----~-Cleaning &amp; Repair Ph 4461960
Van
Dyke
10
x
40
2
br
IF YOU want to buy or sell
20 FT BOAT w1th Evlnrude All Ira lers clean and recon
Homes
9~99 Price Is rlghl
WANT
a
home
wolh
a
lol
of
Busmess Opportumt1es
properly '" any pari ol Ga Ilia
engme also 5 hp Mercury
174 tf
land' 8h acres located on BT
d t10ned Ready for oc
Mobtle Homes &amp;
Co or In any part of the U S
Realtor,
3Z
Sl
engine Ph 388 8687
GOOD business local10n Super
road
8
room
4
BR
builtin
cupancy Free Delivery and
we have over 500 offices from
Busmess
95 3
Mkt and Furn store com
Central Atr Condtlioftlng
k1tchen part basement Idea l
set up Trt County Mobtle
Tel.
446-1998
coast
to coast waiting to serve
bined well stocked - 1 three - - -- - - THIS LARGE LOT COULD
- Heaftng
for a large family
Homes
446
0175
you Call us today
room apt rents for SIOO mo GIBSON air cond1f1oner 28 000
BE USED FOR 4 MOBIL
Free
Esltmates
93
If
Randy Blackburn
Cety
BTU 2 years old Ph 446 0643
HOMES OR TWO HOME Farm Buymg Time
located Jackson Oh1o on Rte
Stewart's
Hardware
Branch Manager
95 3
SITES CITY WATER CALL We have some good ones
LOOKING
for
something
real
93 across from Goodyear
Vmlon
Ohro
GOOD qual1ty used mobile
SCHOOLS
NAT
GAS
·uce 6 rms ~·'1 laundry
Planl - must sell - owner
from
81h
acres
to
261
acres
homes low down payment
AVAILABLE ON RT 141 AT
and part1al base Large L1v
has bad health Will sell very GERMAN shepherd pups 6 wks
Priced from $9 500 to S52 500
EDGE OF TOWN
bank f1nanc1ng
Kanauga
old
female
full
blooded
1967
rm wilh F P plenly cabinets
reasonable Call 286 3809
Mobile
Home
Sales
Ph
446
FIAT 850 446 9695
1n k1tchen Cilrpeted llv rm
Ethel Riffe 109 Anderson Dr
2 LARGE BUILDING LOT S
9662
95 3
Vacat1on Lots
ana_
T V rm ThiS IS lhe same IN SPR ING VALLEY BUY
Jackson 0 45640 8 a m 7
94 If
as
a
new
house
new
fur
THEM BOTH FOR $6 00000 WITH wafer front plenty
pm
- -- - - SS 00 Service Cnarge
NEAL REALTY
94 6 1969 Z 28 CAMARO 52 400 w1lh hum1d1f1er new siding
shade water on every lot
NEW
1971
Z1g
Zag
sewing
87
ACRES
on
Keystone
Road
Will
removeJour d~d
Phone 446 4585 after 5 p m
WE
HAVE
TWO
OF
THE
new roof new dry wall storm
boat dock privilege Buy a lot
mach1ne In ongmal factory
horse
an cows
95 6
about
~
miles
from
VInton
MOST
BEAUTIFUL
HOME
drs and wmdows Located In
and have a vacation every
carton
Z1g
Zag
to
make
Caii'Jackson
2116-4531
SITES
IN
THE
COU
NTY
Full price $5 000
PARTTIME
exclusive res section on a
weekend Ca II 446 267 4 or ~46
butlonholes sew on buttons
JI/A ACRE EACH WITH
large lot
67 MASSIE Ferguson tractor
1226
VIRGIN
TIMBER
BUSINESS
monograms and make fan cy
WE ALSO have 90 Acres on Coal
REFRIGERATION
less than 300 hours w1fh power
COVERING BOTH EX
deSigns with lust the lwlst of a
Why
W1sh
Valley Road about 1'1&gt; miles
Ph 446 9l6S
NO SELLING
take off brush hog plow
CELLENT
NEIGH
Down
Rt.
7
single d al Left 1n lay away
from V1nton Full pnce $5 000
12 ,.
BORHOOD
WATER
grader blade and double d1sc
For
Mtlhons?
EASY pleasant work near home
PRICE
reduced
on
thiS
good
5
and never been used Will sell
AVAIL
3MILE
FROM
NEW
---~--:--:­
also 61 Chevrolet Pickup
THIS II room home with (3) full WANTED
restocking GENERAL FOOD
rm home II has a full HOSPITAL
for only $47 cash or credll
FARMS AND
IN
CITY
Vacuum Cleaner Servico
Call evenings 256 6588
balhs Is gomg lor only $18 500
P-RODUCTS
NESTLES
ftmshed
base
A1r
con
H
W
terms
available
Phone
446
HOUSES
In
all
parts of Gall Ia HOSE &amp; parts for all makes &amp;
SCHOOL
DIST
94
6
Located '" Pomeror 0 a
PLANTER AND NABISCO
floors large liv rm wllh F P
0665
County It you want yours
models Mullineaux Dec Co
beautllol kitchen al builtin
Requ res 8 to 10 hours per
attached gar also • rar port Hardware Store Domg
94 6
sold
list
It w1th us today
258
Third Ave «6 2606
deluxe f1 xtures mcludlng a
week Earn $600 lo $800 and up
and located on a beauliful
91 26
Offtce
Phone
446
1694
Very
Good
Busmess
tr pie Sink and disposal
landscaped 2 A lot $25 500
t monthly Income tnvestment
IF YOU are building a new ELECTROLUX Vacuum
EYen1ngs
carpeted
LR
2
lornaces
thi
s
secured 100 per cent by In
OWNER WILL
SELL
Cleaner complete with at
hotne cr remodell'lll, see ""
TV Antenna Sales lnstallallon &amp;
Charmes M Neal 446 1546
can be a 2 family home
Kmeon St.
ven[ory G ve your phone
ESTABLISHED
HARD
tachments cordwlnder and
We are builders IJistrlbutor
Serv ce Estimates Ph 446J
Michael
Neal
446
1503
comp letely remodeled Inside
number and wnte lo Box 181
pa nt spray Used bul In like GOOD 5 rm house bath f Jll WARE STORE AT THE
for Holr.olnt Appliances
1673
or 446 9679
and out alum num siding We
base n ce deep lot H W INVENTORY PRICE BE
in care of Gallopolls Dally
new condlllon Pay $34 45
6l If
All ison E ectrlc
know of noth•ng belter allhls
firs liv rm paneled Price YOUR OWN BOSS AND
15~ tf
Tnbune
cash
or
budget
plan
available
MAKE A GOOD LIVING
97 5
SMALL double house ~ rooms D P MARTIN &amp; ~on Naler
pnce
$15 000
Phone ~46 0665
----~TOO
and bath utility room on each
94 6
De1 11ery Serv1ce Your
side
large lot centrally
Cheshire
.:__...,.,----oatronage will be IP
We Sold 8
located In c1ly Ph J•l ~250 or
preclaled Ph 446 0&lt;463
FOUNTAIN
Carbonalor OWNER says loselllhls elegant
Homes and Farms
446 1837
711
2
story
modernized
older
Counter 12 slools salad
94 6
br
ck
home
I
lhasa
full
base
refngerator
automallc
IN LAST T WEEKS AND
2 modern baths beautiful NEED YOUR PROPERTY
Join 1 winner'
has 1n
111d proven business
coffee maker Fruth Phar
LEGAL NOTICE
kitchen F P and carpel or TO SELL WE HAVE
macy Point Pleasant Phone
OPROttunlty fot you'
BUYERS READY TO BUY
liv
rm
and
formal
din
rm
675
2303
NOTICE TO BID
177 PORTSMOUTH Rd 8 rooms
Thou~ands or vendm&amp; machines now In opeoatlon and 6 000
RIGIH NOW SO IF YOU
Located on I 2 A lot $15 750 WANT
96 3
The
L.oc•l
all carpeted 1'1&gt; bath full Board of Snuthwesterr'l
YOURS SOLD CALL
dodlcllld dlattlbutots testily that U II must be 1l&amp;hL The
Educat~on will recelv•
THE
SELLINGEST
OF
basement
equipped
kitchen
totally now des1an concept p11clna and manufacturlna or
b•ds lor one (1 l 66 passenger
Farms
FICE IN TOWN
4SO secona Ave
I SET of tandem wheels and
,mmedlale occupancy Ph school buS Chass1s and bOcly
vendln&amp; machmes atona with UI I s oxpetlence In Ute
Ph 446 4775
axles 10 ply t~res ~nd tr~ller 64 A NEAR Bidwell 6 rm
388 8314
b1dS are to be bid separately
es!lbllshment of now oootes can spell success roo yoo
We Need Large
93 3 and must be accompanied by •
house good barn garage and
longue ld..,l lo make heavy
3 BR TRI LEVt:L - oeaullful
crib plenly water good
duly !railer Ph 446 9539 after
b d bond In the am9unt of 5 ~
&amp; Small Farms Any
u 11 s total ptoaoam Is rounded '" honfasblo deallna
slone and frame home with
cen l of the b1d
fences
and
small
tob
base
punlna you In busmess with a VIIIY ow lnveslliient (as
carpeling two baths family
5 p "'
Place m the County •
All bus chassis and body b&amp;dl
966
Pnced
tor
a
qu1ck
sale
r.oom lois of cabmels and
llnle •• S700l
and helpma keep you In a business
must
mee1 or exceed state
lnsuranct
39 A NEAR Mercerville 41arge
slorage c1ty schools and FOR ALL your Insurance n~eds minimum standards plul
wtoeoe you c111 make money wiUt a successful and completely
ALSO A GREAT NEED FOR
rms
and
bath
all
modern
WE specialiZe 1n portra I and
water
highway tattty acts. ~n
modem pooao., None oUteo or Ill kind exists'
c 1eck with your Grang~ agents national
New fuel oil fur big barn RESIDENTIAL PROP
commercial photography
efh:cl at lime of btd
at
the
Neal
Ins
Agency
64
crib cellar and milk house 5 L.-~--------J 119 ACRE FARM - Two story
Tlrrio Lllo U S News and W01ld Ropoft Vtlld Maaazlno,
All b1ds must be sealed end
church weddingS reunions
Slate ~ Agents for auto hre
lob lots of coal and plenty
National Television The Cllft&amp;!esslonll Retold llld news
and n the clerks otflct
brick home with ongina l homeowners hospttal and marked
etc Tawney Studio
of
the
board
ot ectucallon ray 12
water Pnce $13 500
pepeo messaps h111ld lht metlll or U I I 's ttyn.,lc vend·
aa 11 WOODMILL
wa lnut woodwork full bath
May
~ 1911
general
l•ablhty
RO
52
A
most
tna machme pooa1am The buSiness communi!)~ leadlna banks
th r ee bedrooms carpeted
84 If
Spec1flcatlonf '!'&amp;Y tit
tractor la"d remodeled 7 rm
llld business loadtiS Ill vitally awate Ol U I I 's PIOIIIII
1 v ng room furnace heat
rece ved 1n local supPrln
LOW low prices on Bemco ~nd
house new fur carpet llle
plenty of water
1en dent s off Ice
s!lblllty IIICf 1ntt~~IIY
Serta mattresses and box
and n1ce bath S17 000.
N"TIONWilJE 1NSU1&lt;ANCC
,J!ooerct reostrYts the right to
lllnY choice locations all sttll avai11ble IF you QUALIFY
springs Corbin &amp; Snyder
AUTO F~re life 45 Stale St relecl any Or 111 b'ds
LIST
WITH
US
For
qu1ck
IlliTE TODI!YI Include phone n\tmber IIHI rtlelenen
Furn 955 Second Ave Ph
Mrs No•m• Botmlll Clerk
Waldo F Brown VI R Brown
act1on on your propE:rly llsl
1
Thurman Ollie
446 1171
..., I 2 ,., .. , H!l Eo~" C..lrol•llolltt TIID Mlo
4461960
wilh Baord Really Co
April 11 15 H May 2
when

PAINTING and yard work Call
446 0734

Get Blue Luslre Rent electric
shampooer $1 Central Supply
Co
97 6

------,--

Dillon
Agency

------

------

Pome y, Ohto

I

•

•

.•••
.•••
.••
•••
•

....
•
.•••

•
I 0

••
••

$1 2 95

HAND-PUSH
1223015)

ECONOMY
•. 0. TIU!R
• ••••••••

In carton $63 95

Set upl6895
o

o

o o o oo

0 0 0 I I I 0 0 0

o o

o

o o 0

o 0

I

o o o o o

oo

............... .

0 0 I

0

0 I

o

.....•

MOWER &amp; TILLER SUPER MARKET
SELECTION
UNICO RIDING MOWERS
SERVICE
SAVINGS

5 to 14 HP

$271 95

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

------

------

STROUT REALTY

20

'1.40

Gallipolis
Daily Tribune

'

____

------

and

MASSIE.

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

up

EUGENE BUCKLEY
AND EARL THOMA

- -----

SAVE
ON YOUR
FERTILIZER
ALL ANALYSIS
ON HAND

Visit Our Garden
I

AS LOW AS -139.95
Ask about our spec1al
59 95
·

WE HAVE THOSE GOOD
BURPEE GARDEN SEEDS

Owners Kol for only
· Worlh over $35.00

EVERYBODY
CAN BUY AT. • •

33% Am moni!fn
N1trate
46% Super
60% Potash

TAKE DELIVERY
OUR AREA
IN POMEROY &amp;SAVE!

Horrielite Chain Saws

------

------

Neal Realty

- - - --

INVITE YOU TO

POMEROt

Jack W Carsey
Set vtng.Meigs Gallta &amp; ~:W,[:~Co~unhes
9922181
()penMan .- ~
l6pm

to

to

State

•
•Manufact\lrtr 1 est mete

To have to love and then to part
ls the greatest sorrow of ones
heart
The years may w1pe out many

mlure ant qumg 446 3631 or

- -- -- -

Bnggs engrnes suc1 on hft
blades reinforced decks
and non ca1ch circular
housmgs Self propelled
has poslti¥e trlclton dr ve

111~1

We II prove to you why thts new tractor ts your
fmest cho1ce whether you need a three plow ftrst
tractor or a take charge utility helper o Thrtfty
qutet 4 cyli nder power 36 9 hp PTO* or 38 hp PTO*
gasoline • 8 forward 2 reverse transmtsston g1ves
wtde ch01ce of speeds • Differential lock for extra
traction o Constant runnmg 540 rpm PTO o 8Y2 foot
turnmg radtus for easy maneuvenng o Low 51
mch hood height for outstandtng vtstbillty • Draft
co ntrolled 3 pomt hitch adjusts automattcally tor
smooth steady plowmg • Added conventence con
ven1ent controls faster readtng mstrument panel
deluxe th1ck foam seat
See the new lnternattonal 444 here now
put
11 through tts paces
f1nd out for yourself what It
can do

a gold cham

97 6

New GMC Truck
Headquarters

-----

propelled Both have 31\ hp

..

HI.

IS

Death lnes to break all in vam

x 45 e)(cellenl condlt1on Ph

446 4783

- - -- - -

wlth any other 3-plow
llll

Remembrance

1969 SKYLINE mobile home 12

-----.,...-

Two mowers one hand
push and one self

S Uft0£$T MANU,ACTURn 0' TRACTORS

MODERN SUPPLY

•

••

the NEW
INTERNATIONAl: 444

IN LOVING memory of Bert SPRAY II'IG lor tetm1tes Ph
Albert Scott who passed
446 0734
away 4 years ago April 27
1967
WALLPAPERING and fur

Real Estate For Sale

for Sale

-~------

ECONOMY MOWERS

MASSEY· FERGUSON

W Molin 51

0.

Set up

COMPARE

For Sale

Wanted To Do

~-----

In carton S77 95

Come in and

In Memory

- - - -- -

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Spring Sp.,,. ..,
... ... . .

thl flfmll

$EE THEM AT•••

SMALLTRAL I DR

SELF PROPELLED
(22 3016)

ftrll

WO~L.D

Bll:i POWER IN A

1

,_,

Week's Weather
GALLIPOLIS
Tern
perature prectpttalton and
weather condtttons for each 24
hour pertod as recorded by Pete
McCormtck Fatrfleld Weather
Observer
Day
High Low
Sunday
73
49
Monday
78
39
Tuesday
82
39
Wednesda y
75
41
Thursday
61
34
Frtday
64
30
Saturday
52
35
Average htgh temperature for
week thts year - 69 2 Last year
- 72 4
Average low temperature for
week thts year- 38 I Last year
- 48 5
Total prectpttatton for week
thts year - none Last year 3 37 mches
Total prectpttatton to date
lhts year - 7 24 mches Last
year - 13 41 mches
Normal average prectpttatton
annually - 40 99 mches
• • •
Everythmg that ts done 111
the world ts done by hope
- Martm Luther

to Theodore R
Rachael Dowme Chnstme Jane Searl&lt; Sharon L Van
Brtghl J C Bnghl to Metgs Van Cooney
s Rutland
Investment
Corp
Lot, Cooney 90 r
Pomeroy
Russell Prtddy Altce Prtddy
tD Ralph I Prtddy, Shirley
Pnddy Parcel Rutland
Robert R Durst Maxme
Durst to General Telephone Co ,
East Lebanon
!30
Eber H Carpenter Iva F
zero
Carpenter to General Telephone
the
Co Ease Lebanon
N~ll Mtddleswart to General
Telephone Co Ease Lebanon
L R Gluesencamp Sr
Lomse Gluesencamp to General
Telephone Co Ease Lebanon
Sylvta Allen to General
Telephone Co Ease Lebanon
Robert I Searles Constance

DEAD STOCK-

------

BAIRD REALTY CO.
Oscar Baird, Realtor

'

1-

�'

:Ill- The Sunday Times Sentmel, SWlday April25, 1971

Meigs

Let Science Work, not Rule of Thumb
BY C E BLAKESLEE
Ext. Agent, Agriculture
POMEROY - Tius is the
season of the year when
homeowners ease thetr ''con
sciences sprmkltng ltme on
their lawn and aroWld the
groWlds, regardless of whetiter
the sot! needs tt or not
There are rules of thumb
which can be used m ferttlmng

NEW in FARMING
lawns, but the best way Is to get
a sotl test In securmg sot! for
Ute sotl test 10 to I2 samples
should be taken at different
places m the yard mtxed
thoroughly together and then a
,cupful may be brought tD the
Extenston Offtce for submtsslon
tD the Sot! Testing Laboratory
Cost of the sml test ts $2 each
A ltttle sunple artthmeltc
discloses how much ferti!Uer ts
needed m connectton Wtth trees
growmg around the home
Trees grow m natural areas
for decades wtth no ad&lt;Jlttons of
fertilizer But when they are
transplanted to man made

landscapes sot! and en
vtronmental condtltons change
Then fertilizers must be added
once every two or Utree years
says Kenneth W Retsch
professor of landscape hor
ttculture, The Ohto State
Umverstty
Trees m a ferttle, loamy sot!
need less ferttltzer However
most trees m the landscape are
not planted m thiS type of sot!
andfertiltzattontsbeneftctal he
says
Apply any complete ferlthzer
that IS htgh m mtrogen The
ration of nitrogen potassmm
and phosphorous should be
about 3-1 I Ferltltzers such as
12-4-4 1:;.o.o or JIH!-4 are
recommended Smce trees are
not ferltltzed often used one
fourth to one thtrd of the
mtrogen m an orgamc or other
slow release form Apply fer
tlltzer from early March
through May or m the fall October through late Novem
ber Mmsture condt!tons are
usually better at these times
You ll need about ftve to SIX
pounds of actual mtrogen per

1 000 square feet of sot! sud ace
under the branches Surface
area under branch spread can
be figured as follows surface
area equals the radius squared
times 3 14 (pt) Measure radtus
from trunk of tree to edge of
branch spread
A tree wtth a branch spread of
36 feet has a radms of 18 feet
Usmg the formula we get 18 x
18x 3 14 or 1 017 square feet At
the rate of ftve pounds of actual
mtrogen per 1 000 square feet
apply about 50 pounds of fer
!tltzer such as 11Hl-4 to thts area
(A l!Hl-4 fertilizer contams 10
per cent mtrogen and 10 per
cent of 50 pounds gtves the
destred 5 pounds of actual
mtrogen )
Surface appltcatton ts the
eastest anti fastest Jt ts the best
means tD use on newly planted
trees or trees wtth no vegetatwn
under the branch spread
However tf grass ts growmg
under the tree Ute ferltltzer
rate ts too htgh for a smgle
appltcatton So apply m two or
three
apphcattons
wtth
thorough watermg after each
appltcatton

Smce phosphorous docs not
readtly penetrate the soil the
drtlled hole appltcatton method
may be best tf tree ts growmg m
compacted or poorly aeratedsot! Drilled holes have the
advantage of aeratmg the sml
as well as plactng fertthzer m
the root zone below the surface
Use an auger punch bar of
crowbar tD make holes 15 to 18
mches deep on 12 to 18-tnch
center Begm about two feet
from the trunk and punch holes
m ctrcles around the trunk to a
hne slightly beyond the edge of
the branches Dtstrtbute the
recommended amount of fer
ttltzer tn the holes and fmtsh
filling wtth peat moss calcme
clay perltte or other smtable
matertal
One of the senous problems
wtth trees thts sprmg ts the lack
of mmsture In many cases the
result of the drought thts spnng
may be tn evtdence durmg the
next two or three years
If the sot! has become so dry
around the trees that a ma1or
share of the tmy rootlets dry out
then these trees may dte m part
or even whole trees tn the next

Property

two or three years.
If trees are parltcularly
valuable tl ts unportant that
watermg be practtced before
Ute tmy rootlets dte
If you are transplantmg trees
or shrubs then Ute drought has
another senous effect Con
lamer grown plants and some
balled and burlaped stock can
he moved any ltme durtng the
growmg season tf proper
watermg
practtces
are
followed Bare root dormant
matenal should be planted only
whtle the plant ts dormant etther early sprmg or fall after
leaf drop Jt s best not to plant
bare root stock after new shoot
growth has extended beyond
two to three mches
Put out hard to transplant
ornamentals tn the sprmg
preferably wtth a sotl ball to
assut e the longest posstble
pertod for establtshment of new
roots These plants mclude
beech magnoha rhododen
dron
azalea
!lowermg
dogwood Japanese maple
holly sweetgum hemlock and
tupelo or sourwood

Transfers

County Schools Join Conservation Efforts
BY JOHN COOPER
Soli Conservation Service
PT PLEASANT - Western
Sot! Conservatton Dtstrtct ts
sponsormg two conservalton

Lay of the Land
activtttes m cooperahon wtth
the Mason County school
system the ftrst a conservatton
test tD be gtven soon m each 1Oth

grade btology class at the three
htgh schools and the other a
conservatiOn educatton
workshop for teachers at West
Vtrgmta Umverstty June 14 to
July 2
Teachers mterested m thts
workshop are asked to contact
the school supermtendent A
teacher may earn three hours
credtt toward an advanced

Crown Vetch Has
Proven Qualities
COLUMBUS- Bare exposed
areas of the earth termed
crtttcal areas,'
dump
thousands of tons of stlt a
maJor source of pollu!ton moo
our streams and rtvers ac
cording to Robert E Quilltam,
State Conservaltomst for the U
S SOli Conservation Servtce
(SCS) m Columbus
~ Cr)tlcQl areas may mclude
steep land ftlls and slopes
erodmg channel banks con
struc!ton Sites m urban areas
and other areas exposed due to
change tn land use
Many of these areas are
poorly sutted for plant growth
because of water concentrabon
sot! matertal and slope
Qutlltam noted But sedtment
pollutton from these areas can
be controlled
he satd
Crownvetch
a perenmal
legume, IS tdeal for eslabhshmg
cover on thts type of land
The plant spreads by strong
fleshy rhtzomes (underground
root stalks) It has stems from 2
to 6 feet long that are strongly
branched and an extremely
heavy root system that provtdes
excellent eroston control and
reduces sedunent Because of
Its profuse spreadmg habtt a
smgle plant may cover as much
as 75 to 100 square feet of area
at maturtty
The plant not only provtdes
excellent cover but ts pleasmg
to the eye Qutlllam satd Jt
makes a soltd green mat of
fohage throughout the enttre
growmg season, turmng brown
only m the late fall and wmtcr
From June through August tt
produces an extremely heavy
set of ptnk to pmktsh purple
flowers addmg beauty to the
envtronment The flowers also

have a shght pleastng scent
Crownvetch plants normally
grow to a hetght of l'h to 2 feet
and usually do not need
mowmg Normal lawn mowmg
alongstde crownvetch areas
usually wtll prevent spreadmg
of the plant mto adjacent lawns
Addtltonal 'm!ormalton on
vegetatmg crtltcal areas wttit
crownvelch may be obtamed by
contacting your local SOil and
water conservatiOn dtstr1ct
offtce

degree or renewal of a cer
ltftcate by havmg the course
approved tn advance
Awards wtll be made to the
!11 st ftve wmners m the con
servatton test the tDp awa rd
bemg a scholarshtp to Con
se rvatton Camp at Camp
Caesar
CLIFFORD BARNETT
whose farm ts near Lievmg
mme has marked out stxteen
acres for farmmg m alternate
contour stnps Denver Yoho of
SCS helped htm mark the
contour boundaries for three
stnps He plans to plant corn tn
these stnps and leave a strtp of
sod between each corn area
Mr Barnett learned the value
of contour strtp croppmg when
he was farm manager on the W
W Brown farm tn the same
communtty Mr Barnett plans
to lay out addtttonal acreage for
strtp croppmg before he ftmshes
hts croppmg plan for thts year
He recently purchased thts
farm from John McNetll and ts
operatmg a datry
OTHER NEW cooperators of
the Western Dtstrtcl bestdes
Clifford Barnett are Charles
Engel of Stxteen Mtle Creek
and Ernest Compson of Mason
Engle owns 40 acres and was

mtcrested m some creek work
and a plan I he Compson land
conststs of 12 acres He was
mtet ested tn developmg some of
thts for pasture and developmg
water for one or two head of
livestock
THE WESTERN Dtstnct has
completed plans wtth the Mason
County Mtmstenal Assoctatton
m the promotten of Sot!
Stewardshtp Week whtch ts the
week of May 16 23 Program
blanks mserts for programs
and promolton matenal were
gtven to the mmtsters Jesse
Bro" n dtstnct supervtsor was
m charge of lhts actiVIty m the
county
Leo Thornton whose fa rm ts
on Kapp Rtdge reported that
hts pond was full of water and
that grass was growmg well
over the !til and bare areas
surroundmg the pond Thts pond
"as butlt last fall The mam
purpose for thts pond was an
attractwn to wtldllfe In ad
dtlton to furmshmg water for
wtldhfe Mr Thornton planted
some evergreens around tt and
plans to plant othet wtldlife
plants
THE GREAT KANAWHA
Resource Conservatton and
Development Steenng Com

mtllee has approved as a
proJect the study and posstble
eltmtnatwn of nverbank
eroston along the Ohto and
Kanawha Rtvers
The Western Sot! con
servatton Dtstrtet has been
dtscussmg thts pt oblem for
some two or three ) ears and
referred tl to the RC&amp;D group
for actton
As a result of thts bemg a
prOJect a meetmg has been
called by Norman Walter Chatrman of the RC&amp;D Steenng
Commtttee to be held m Pt
Pleasant May 20 Jnvttatwns
are bemg sent by Mr Walter to
gt oups 1n Ohto and West
Vtrgmta from Hunltngton to
Parkersburg who mtght have
an mterest m thts prOJect

Charles C Beegle Mattte F
Beegle to Ohto Power Co
Ease Sutton
Charles H Thetss Bonme F
Thetss to Ohto Power Co
Ease Sutton
Charles H Thetss Bonme F
Thetss to Ohto Power Co
Ease Lebanon
Kenneth R Thetss Bermce L
Thetss to Ohto Power Co
Ease Sutton
Charles cornell Jr Beulah
Cornell tD Ohto Power Co
Ease Sutton
Herbert Oatley Lorene W
Oatley to Ohto Power Co
Ease Lebanon
Clarence V Prtce Maxme
Pnce to Ohto Power Co Ease
Lebanon
Charles H Thetss Bonme F
Thetss to Ohio Power Co
Ease Sutton
Robert W Profitt! Elizabeth
F Profit tt to Ohto Power Co
Sutton
Blythe J Thetss, Ntna L
Thetss to Ohto Power Co
Ease Sutton
Ralph L Harvey Genevteve
G Harvey to Earl F Snyder
Mary E Snyder Lot Pomeroy
Elste Mtdktff dec to Ztba 0
Mtdkiff Hornet Mtdktff Ella
May Romme Cert for Trans
Bedford
Lan Y W Ebltn LaVama V
Ebhn to Watd Hayman Donna
Hayman Lot Pomeroy
Oolite Mae Ptckett to Mark
Markham 83 A Bedford
Oolite Mae Ptcket to Robet t
G Ptckett 310 77 A Bedford
Gladys Wtlhams to Mary
Allee Samuels Int tn Lot
Pomeroy
Kttrel Wtlltams Delorts
Wtlhams to Mary Allee
Samuels Int tn Lot Pomeroy
Jewel Mtller Welch James L
Welch to Mary Altce Samuels
lnt tn Lot Pomeroy
Sarah Hull to Mat y Altce
Samuels Int m Lot Pomeroy
Theodore A Dowme Dorothy
Dowme Wtlham B Dowme

••..........

IN POMEROY
NEW I
6 HP MASSEY FERGUSON

RIDING MOWER
MF6
with 32 cut

MODERN SUPPLY
tn 2164

Pomeroy

THE STORE WITH ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
FOR P~TS - STABLES - LARGE AND SMALL
ANIMALS LAWNS - GARDENS

Gravely s btg
16 5 HP tractor
has the extra muscle
for the btg JObs steepest
slopes All gear dnve mstant
forward neutral reverse If you have
lawn and garden JObs that call for somethmg
extra the 16 5 IS somethmg else '
Call or see us for a free demonstratiOn

to

OPEN 8 TO 5 MON THRU
T
()pen Eventngs By Appomlme I

Meigs Equipment Co,
PQMEROY, OHIO

PH. 992-2176

GRAVELY TRACT
R
•
SALES &amp; SERVI E
Phone 992 2975

•

• 0 0 ••••

••• 0 •

•

•

0

th ngs

446 2647

97 6

REMODELING and painling
Good references

Ed Sm1th

256 6935

But lh1s they w1pe out never

The memory of the happy days

97 II

----FOR a JOb well done feeling

clean carpels wllh Blue
Lus Ire
Rent
electnc
shampooer $1 Lower G C
Murphy Store
97 6

----CLEANING EST carpel cleaner
you ever used so easy too

1963 •;, T Chevrolet pl~kup
1965 1'12 T Che.rolet Truck
1967 Whole Dtesel Truck
1969 Chev dump truck
1968 1/2 T GMC P U
1965 I T GMC
1969 GMC ~ T log truck
1962 'I• T GMC pickup
1963 I T GMC
19~5 '12 T Ford P U
1963 '12 T ChP.V p u
1965 112 T GMC P U
1969 I T GMC
1967 '12 T GMC P U
1969 FORD Econoline van
1966 1'12 T GMC
1968 Chev Suburban
1962 •;, T GMC P U
1968 white diesel truck
1965 'I• T GMC P U
1967 'I• T Chevrolet pickup
1963 F600 Ford _tr uck

REALTOR
Off, 446 3641
lve. 446 3796

-

USSELL WOOD

REALTOR
446-1066

Charm, Locallon
We know a modern husband who was d sa ppomted when
Conventence
We were all together
h1s w1fe gave b~rth to a daughter he was hopmg for a boy
_ __ _ _ __ 95j
The Bert Scolt Family
IF YOU HAVE BEEN
to help h1m with the housework
82 tt
WAITING FOR JUST THE
97 I
-7-'---~RIGHT
HOME
WE
THINK
~----If s t1me agam to f II out those ncome tax blankety blanks
Wanted To Rent
ADD A ROOMS Overcrowded'
THIS IS IT VERY AT
Plumbmg &amp; Heatmg
TRACTIVE
SPL
IT
LEVEL
Card of Thanks
lnves1Jgate beaut ful Vf!'mco
3 BEDROOM house In Gall 1"'1 s
WITH
3
BEDROOMS
Roomelles
Separate
family
STANDAR D
C1ly School DISinct Needed
WE WISH to thank our fr ends
LARGE LIVING 8. DINING
rooms
extra
bedrooms
Plum
bong &amp; Healing
Immediately
Ph
446
2615
ALL
NEW
LISTINGS
relatives and neighbors for
ROOM
COMPLETELY
laundry
rooms
baths
St)(
room
home
on
two
acres
of
ground
at
the
edge
of
c
ty
95
3
'15
Third
Ave 446 3782
the1r express10n at k ndness
BUILT IN KITCHEN WITH
187 tf
Young
s
Mob
le
Homes
Stale
Th
s
home
has
a
modern
k
tchen
gas
furnace
and
Wall
to
----~RANGE
DISH
WASHER
and sympathy dunng the loss
Rl
7
and
35
(below
Silver
ETC 2 BATHS LARGE
wall carpetmg Extra lot w th low taxe s Pr~ce$14 750
of our dear husband and
W 1d
Memonal Bndge) Gallipolis
SCREENED PATIO AND
Brammer Plumbong &amp; Healtng
father John Montgomery
an e
97 I 1966 &gt;;, T GMC pickup
GARAGE THIS HOME IS
300 Fourth Ave
Our smcere apprec1at10n to LEAD vocalist for rock group
We have a SIX room home on Chatham Avenue m ex
COMPLETELY
CAR
------~
Phone 446 1637
Rev
Richard Graham
Call 446 0005 afler 4 p m
1961 2 T GMC
cellent cond1t1on Home approx•mately 8 years ord See
PETED AND HAS AN
Gene
Plants Owner
Harley Myers Quartet and
95 3 MODERN Walnut Slereorad o 1964 3 T GMC
th s one 1mr"ned1ately for qu ck sale Pr ce $14 000
ATTRACTIVE FIREPLACE
combmahon 4 speaker sound 1966 '12 T Chev
298 If
Waugh Halley Wood Funeral - - - -- - : - - - PLUS
CENTRAL
AIR
ON
A
system1 4 speed changer
-~----BIG SHADY LANDSCAPED
1966 '12 T lnl P U
Home
Older hom e m e)(cellent locahon on V ne Stree t Needs
Balance $6~ 10 Use our 1966 112 T Ford P U
DEWITT S PLUMBING
LOT WITH TREMENDOUS
The Joh n Montgomery Help Wanted
redecorating Pr ce $13 soo
budget
terms
Call
«6 1028 1963 112 T GMC P U
VIEW
AND
CHIL-DREN
AND HEATING
WOMEN
to
do
housework
n
fam ly
97 3 1956 1'12 T Chev van
CAN WALK TO SCHOOL
Route 160al Evergreen
Gall polls area Wnte Fran
97 I
Cement block dwellmg on approximately 2 acres o1
ORCHARD HILL AD
Phone 446 2735
Box 23 Pomeroy Ohio or
Tires - 10 OOx20 12 ply oylon
DRESS
NUFF
SAID
NOW
ground
Across from Green Gables on Route 7 For
AUTHENTIC
Earl~ American
281 tf
phone
985
3900
t res $90 tnt Fed tax
WE WOULD I ke lo tha nk
CALL IKE WISEMAN FOR
commerc1al purposes Call for more nformatlon
Stereo
radiO
AM
FM
rad10
-t
95
6
SOMMER
5
GMC
everyone that senl us g1fts
AN APPOINTMENT
OFFICE4461066
speakers 4 speed automaflc
CARTEl&lt; S PLUMBING
nuCKS lNC
and cards for our 50th an
Even~ngs
Call Ron Canaday 446 3636
changer
Balance
$82
60
Use
AND HEATING
LADIES
need
a
tob'
Full
Under
Construction
133
Ptne
St
niversary
our
budget
terms
Call
446
Or
John
I
Rtchards
446
0280
830
Fourth Avenue
partllme
and
summer
jOb
Ph 446 2532
Mr and Mrs Geor9e
Ready In 4 Weeks
1028
Russell
D
Wood
446
4618
Phone
446
388B or 446 4477
Apply
Gherke
Bout1que
.w,
2411!
Coleman Sr Atlanta Oh10
97 3
!55 tf
ATTRACTIVE
CARPETED
9332
or
446
4273
97 I
3
BECROOM
HOME
97 3
LARGE LIVING AND
Mobile
Home
ELECTRO,l.UX
rebu It USED
0. D. PARSONS
RUSSEU S
-------DINING AREA LOVELY
Headquarters
All
size
mob1le
cleaners
Sales
and
Serv
&lt;:e
PLUMBING&amp;
HEATING
YOU
R
E
In
demand
when
Lost
KITCHEN AND BATH
JAY
SHEPPARD
homes
'"
stock
B
&amp; S Mobile
Phone
~46 9453
SEPTIC
tank
cleantng
d1t
you
re
an
Avon
Represen
FULL
DIVIDED
FEMALE cat long ha1red
Home Sales Second &amp; Viand
97 6
ch1ng
e
l
ectr~c
Eel
serv
Ph
tal1ve
People
want
personal
BASEMENT
GARAGE
REALlORS
color
yellow
mixed
PI
Pleasant
next
to
Heck
s
---~-446
4782
GallipoliS
0
serv ce and world famous
LARGE LOT AND EX
declawed Lost n V1nlon cat I
Farm Vtllage City Property
67 If CELLENT
70 If
LOCATION 2
products lhat have a money IRRIGATION outf1t big motor
3888327
Forst &amp; Olive
MILE
OUT
IN
CITY
pump
800
gal
waler
a
---back
guarantee
Want
to
earn
96 3
DI STRICT
Phone 446 O:Zt9
mtnute
also
Crawler
SINGER Sewing Machine Sales SC HOOL
money meet people w1n
NEARLY
I
300
SQ
FT
FOR
Serv1ces Offered
Proclorv1lle
Oh10
886
6565
&amp;
Serv1ce
All
models
In
stock
pnzes' Write or call Mrs
LESS THAN $20 000 00
Thurman
97
I
Hobart
Dtllon
Realtor
Not1ce
Free
del1very
Service
FAIN
Helen Yea9er Box 172
Offtce 446 2674
NICE 6 room home w lh balh
guaranteed Models priced
FREE Used cloth ng for
ALOHA 1
EXTERMINATING CO
Jackson Oh1o Ph 286 4028
Howard or Luc1lle Brannon
and full basemen I 1 1 acres
from $69 95 French Cl y
anyone who Is 1n need Church
926 1 GOOD m1lk cow can be used
Termite &amp; Pest Control
(Means "Good Buy")
Eventngs
446
1226
as
datry
or
fam1ly
cow
Ph
tronl1ng U S 35 Good
Fabr1c
Shoppe
Singer
ap
of Chnst Bidwell Ph 388
Wheelersburg Oh1o
AND YOU LL AGREE
locat1on near church schoo l
Robert Condee 446 0858
388 8631
proved dealer 58 Court St Ph
8429 or 388 8787
Ph 574-6112
AFTER
READING
THESE
97 3
For Rent
and store Pnced to se ll
97 I
52 If
446 9255
A
Room
Of
FEATURES
LARGE
308lf LIVING ROOM WITH
FURNISHED upstairs apart
Kanauga
My Own
ment 2 rooms &amp; bath all 1957 CHEVROLET 11:2 ton
CALL after 5 p m for Rawle1gh
FIREPLACE
FORMAL
L E PENCI= Masonry Repair
p ckup Pme $225 Ph 446
uti11t es paid Adults only 446
DINING AND NICE SIZED THE dream of every ch1ld NEARLY new 3 bedroom home
Products 1924 E Ave Ph
sand blasting tuck pOinting
BEDROOMS 1h BATHS
RICE'S PRICES
1n Kanauga Large kitchen
3548
446-2089 or 446 3387
Here s your chance 4 BR
1519
caulk ng waler proofing For
LOVELY BUILT IN KIT
97 6 ARE LOWER because of less
97 If
d nlng area Bath Garage
97 I
LR
DR
large
beaut
lui
free
esllmales call Port
CABINETS WITH RANGE
oak
f
loors
k
t
chen
w1th
double
oven
prof1l d1rect factory buying
smouth
259 4253
OVEN
DISHWASHER
everything a woman would
58 tf
STUD serv1ce for AKC reg ! BEDROOM mob1le home Ph EARLY Amer can d ning room
low
overhead
lam ly ETC
CARPETING
Patnot
su le round table w lh 2extra
dream of Located on a corner
wh1le loy poodle Ph 446 9539
367 7329
opera11on We w1ll take your
THROUGHOUT PLUS 2
97 tf
leaves 4 capta n cha1rs large
TWO homes corner location
lot All for onlv SIB ooo
FULL
after 5 p m
old furn~lure In on trade or CAR GARAGE
ELECTRIC SERVICE
hutch hard rock maple $275 2
Larger home has 7 rooms and RESIDENTIAL &amp; Industrial
BASEMENT
AND
ELEC
96 6
buy 11 outnght
Immediate
pc llvtng room suite modern NEW 3 pc Early American TRIC HEAT
sma ll er home has 4 rooms
FURNISHED apartment
Paul Knox office Ph 446 lOll
beige
S40
Mark
II
water
W II sell oulr ght or trade for
Possession
Fourth
Ave
GARAGE SALE
Myrtle
inqu re al 631
maple bedroom su tes $99 95
No
Down
Payment
or
home Ph 446 4822
softener and condthoner 1 yr
bollom farm or cily properly
96 tf
AS the man who must wa t a
Th vener Norma Kuhn
Buy a $59 95 mattress and get
70 If
Low Mo Payment
old $375 Ph 446 0946
month to move m If you r e
Crown
City
Monday
a
matchmg box sprmgs for
Sprmg
Valley
97 6
ready for ac11on heres a 2
Tuesday and Wednesday
2 tlEDROOM mob le home n
only $19 95 2 pc Early YOU CAN NOW OWN YOUR
REFRIGERATION &amp; Air
96 3
OWN HOME IN TOWN OR
story home '" extra good TPI LEVEL br ck and redwood
Cheshire Melvm L1ttle
Amencan Ltvmg room su1te
Condillonlng Ralke s Refrlg
OUT IF YOU HAVE
w th 3 bedrooms and 1wo
co ndition downsta rs car
9~ If 1965 CHEVROLET Impala
tr1mmed m maple w1th strong
8. A r Cond Ph 367 7200
STEADY
EMPLOYMENT
auto trans P S a r con
baths L v mg room and d1nlng
peled 3 BR carporl plenty
• 56 tf
Herculon cover $169 95
AND
GOOD
CREDIT
THE
4
d
!loner
Ph
~46
2375
r
oom
carpeled
Large
eat
tn
shade
large
I
of
at
s
12
500
3
rooms
&amp;
Parkmg
m
rear
R1ce
s
New
&amp;
FURNISHED apl
HOMES DESCRIBED
97 3
k tchen with staonless sleel
AUCTIONEER
You II agree tt s a barga n
Used Furn 854 Sec 446 9523
bath 602 Fourlh Ph ~46 2796
BELOW
SHOULD
MASONRY LUNl ~ACTOR
bu It n range oven and dish
95
If
or «6 0345
QUALIFY
CALL IKE
Earl Carman
Locat1on
94 If 1964 FORD pickup truck Ph
washer
family
room
with
Let us put you out of
WISEMAN FOR DETAILS
Ph 388 871J
large
stone
f1replace
MAKES
the
difference
Here
s
GOOD
CLEAN
LUMP
ana
busoness Charlie Mttler Box -~~~;;=~~;===J88 8738
28 II
97
3
Home
&amp;
2
Acres
Laundry
room
Two
car
a downtown locat1on close to
stoker coal Carl Wlnlers Rio
SLEEPiNG ROOMS weeklv
114 R1o Grande Ohto
everything
~
BR
2
full
baths
garage
Grande Phone 245 5115
rates Park Cen1ral Hotel
JUST h MILE FROM CITY
245 5535
3Q8 If WHITE cement all sizes tile on
811 LIMITS LOCATED ON 2 A
!~replace
1n LR
part
FLOOR COVERING BY
Ltsttngs Needed
stock 12 x 15 field tile
basement near new gas
LOT
MODERN
3
SU~VALLEY Nursery School
su1table for highway ditching
BEDROOM HOME WITH
ARE YOU being transferred? Is
forced a1r furnace
ROOMS weekly
577 Sun Valley Dr ve now &gt;P:EPING
NICE
BUILT
IN
KITCHEN
ARMSTRONG
concrete
blocks
your house or farm too small
rates free garage parking
BATH UTILITY ROOM
One
Too
Many
~ provtdtng full day care and
GALLIPOLIS
BLOCK
CO
or
ton'litrge?
Need
a
different
~
&gt;·u C~RNELL!' M'CIN'f'!V.1A!Ct
AND
GARAGE WITH OWNER has bought a farm and
ch1fd dev elopment program tlbby Hotel
ph
446
2783
locatiOn?
We
need
houses
7~ tf
CASTILEAN
- ••,,
LARGE STORAGE AREA
36 x23 x 009
1or pre school children In
97 If
has th s neat 2 BR home on
farms lands to se lf I
NAT
GAS
CITY
WATER
!ants excluded Open 7 30 a
- -----cLower R ver Rd Ideal for
AND SCHOOLS
m to 6 p m Monday through
'5 '8.25 Sq. Yd.
GOLF set mens W!son Sam
small family or retirement
For
Sale
Fnday Fees $20 for full f1ve REDUCE safe and fast woth
Snead Signature I year old 2
Lovely 3 Bedroom
home Vacant call today
day week $5 per day If less
3 4 s Hand cart bag, ir011S
Gobese tablets and E Vap
FLOOR COVERING BY
Ph 446 0008
than f1ve days $3 per day for
YOU LL BE SURPRISED
- P G A 2 lhru 9 P W &amp;
water pills Gillingham Drug
Hate
To
Pamt?
BYTHISONE VERY NICE
morning sessions Ph 446
puller all lor $135 Phone 446
88 26
CONGOLEUM
USED OFFSET PLATES
Low Tax DiStrict
KITCHEN
CAR PETED NO Need to owner took great
3657
Madge Hauldren
0404 or 446 477 4
LOVELY
3
bedroom
home
with
LIVING
ROOM
AND
HAVE
Owner D1rector John and
13.95
93 4
pride In th1s place and kept 11
RIBBO-.
'5 Sq. Yd.
FAMI LY ROOM 3 NICE
hardwood floors nice kitchen
MANY USES
Loredllh
Hau~dren
spic
and
span
3
BR
all
on
one
SPECIAL $7 50 a dozen IBM
SIZED BEDROOMS ON
cabinets large lawn and nat
operators
floor LR &amp; d1n1ng area 2
CERAMIC TILE
electnc polythylene nbbons USED FURNITURE 2 llv1ng
LARGE DEEP LOT IN
gas SIO ooo
4
35 tf
room suites
small red
TOWN
FUI:L
PRICE
acres of land Yes - only
CARBON PAPER
1
Bargam
Sq. ft.
btcycle Kenmore automatiC
$1~ 500
$12 000
BOX of Carbon paper reg $5 00
NICE
6
room
home In city
8for
$1
00
RALPHS CarRel- Upholstery
dryer
metal
twin
bed
with
only $350
L1ve W1th The
$9 000
INSTALLING INCLUOEO
Cleaning ._ Serv1ce
Free
flat springs
TIME CLOCKS
No Down Payment I
$11,0003
Bedroom
FREE ESTIMATE
eshmales r-h 44,6 029~
Greatest Of Ease
WE ARE now lhe agency for NEW FURNITURE Our an
s ROOMS and balh full
nlversary
sale
ts
in
full
swing
Wtth
Rtver
Vtew
COMBINATION
home
and
- - ' -- ----_;.:.
197 tf
T S I time clocks
basement hardwood floors
Phone Ashworth
Come tn and see our many
mobile home 18 x39 2 BR
Stmmons ptg &amp;Offtce
new furnace ctty water and
WE BUY gold' coins and Sli&gt;•
good values Our slore IS fully
large LR kitchen and dining
Equtp
446
IJ97
446 9368
sewer large gar age and
dollars Tawney Jewelers
HARD TO BELIEVE BUT
stocked wllh fme qual1ly
area cellar and work~hop
72tf
I wn Pnced to sell
HERE
IT
IS
3
BEDROOMS
62 tf
furntture and appliances
small barn plenty water
WITH CARPETED LIVING
Coly L1m1ts
825 Thtrd Ave
ALB!=RT EH~AN
Yoo II be amazed what $3 900 NICE 2 story home larg•
Plenty of free parking Corb1n
ROOM BATH BASEMENT
ALL TYPES of building
Waler
Delivery Serv1ce
Gallipolis
0
&amp;
Snyder
Furniture
Co
955
will
buy
AND
MODERN
FURNACE
For Trade
enough for 2 3 or 4 apts
materials block brick sewer
Patriot
Star
Rt Gallipolis
Second Ave Ph «6 1171
MASSEY Harm pony tractor
Presently the downstairs
ptpes windows lintels etc
Ph
3792133
93 If
with eq_u1pment for grass
living quarters contains 7
Claude Winters Rio Grande
Horse Lovers
f43-tf
__:_
Real Estate For Sale
Modern Home + 3 A
calves Call 367 7607
rooms In good condition with
0 Ph Z45 5121 after 5
USED
TRAILERS
YOU
LL
also
love
this
3
BR
7
96 3
91 tf
fhe same amount of space
UNBELIEVEABLE
3
TERMITE PEST CONTROL
I
room brick home on 30 acres
BUILDING sites 6 miles from
1960 Nahonal 10 x 50 2 br
upstairs 2 garages also
BEDROOM HOME WITH
FREE Inspection Call 446-3245,
of
clean
well
fenced
land
town
qu1et
neighborhood
1967
Horizon
12
x
50
2
br
Ctty School 0151
3 BICYCLES 1 hi powerea 1957 Glider 45 x 8 3 br
FIREPLACE
IN
LARGE
For Sate or Trade
Merrill 0 Dell Operator for
farm
pond
3
new
barns
Ideal
rural water system Ph
2 ACRES containing a n1ce
nfle 309 gauge with scope
LIVING ROOM - NICE
E)(termlnal Termite Service,
14 FT BOAT !wood) ana
locat1on
for
the
Dr
Lawyer
Melv
n
Tabor
~46
3791
KITCHEN BATH AND
home w1lh 3 Bedrooms and a
Assorted glassware and 1966 Namco l2 x 10 3 br
trailer Good fishing boal or
19
Belmont Dr
976
or
Executive
Live
I
up
like
a
1960
Van
Dyke
10
x
50
2
br
MODERN
FURNACE
complete new built In kitchen
paintings from Old Mexico 1960 Van Dyke 10 x 50 2 br
pleasure Must sell Ph 446
267 tf
country squ1re
$8
500
See th is one
446 9208
·
-~---~999 after 5 p m
1965 Kentuckian 56 x 10 3 Br
Invest In Your
88 If .
95 3
GILLENWATER S Septic Tank
1962 Colon~al 50 x 10 2 br
But
ldmg
LotsFor
Future
Thru Slrout
Don't
Fence
Me
In
--~----~-Cleaning &amp; Repair Ph 4461960
Van
Dyke
10
x
40
2
br
IF YOU want to buy or sell
20 FT BOAT w1th Evlnrude All Ira lers clean and recon
Homes
9~99 Price Is rlghl
WANT
a
home
wolh
a
lol
of
Busmess Opportumt1es
properly '" any pari ol Ga Ilia
engme also 5 hp Mercury
174 tf
land' 8h acres located on BT
d t10ned Ready for oc
Mobtle Homes &amp;
Co or In any part of the U S
Realtor,
3Z
Sl
engine Ph 388 8687
GOOD business local10n Super
road
8
room
4
BR
builtin
cupancy Free Delivery and
we have over 500 offices from
Busmess
95 3
Mkt and Furn store com
Central Atr Condtlioftlng
k1tchen part basement Idea l
set up Trt County Mobtle
Tel.
446-1998
coast
to coast waiting to serve
bined well stocked - 1 three - - -- - - THIS LARGE LOT COULD
- Heaftng
for a large family
Homes
446
0175
you Call us today
room apt rents for SIOO mo GIBSON air cond1f1oner 28 000
BE USED FOR 4 MOBIL
Free
Esltmates
93
If
Randy Blackburn
Cety
BTU 2 years old Ph 446 0643
HOMES OR TWO HOME Farm Buymg Time
located Jackson Oh1o on Rte
Stewart's
Hardware
Branch Manager
95 3
SITES CITY WATER CALL We have some good ones
LOOKING
for
something
real
93 across from Goodyear
Vmlon
Ohro
GOOD qual1ty used mobile
SCHOOLS
NAT
GAS
·uce 6 rms ~·'1 laundry
Planl - must sell - owner
from
81h
acres
to
261
acres
homes low down payment
AVAILABLE ON RT 141 AT
and part1al base Large L1v
has bad health Will sell very GERMAN shepherd pups 6 wks
Priced from $9 500 to S52 500
EDGE OF TOWN
bank f1nanc1ng
Kanauga
old
female
full
blooded
1967
rm wilh F P plenly cabinets
reasonable Call 286 3809
Mobile
Home
Sales
Ph
446
FIAT 850 446 9695
1n k1tchen Cilrpeted llv rm
Ethel Riffe 109 Anderson Dr
2 LARGE BUILDING LOT S
9662
95 3
Vacat1on Lots
ana_
T V rm ThiS IS lhe same IN SPR ING VALLEY BUY
Jackson 0 45640 8 a m 7
94 If
as
a
new
house
new
fur
THEM BOTH FOR $6 00000 WITH wafer front plenty
pm
- -- - - SS 00 Service Cnarge
NEAL REALTY
94 6 1969 Z 28 CAMARO 52 400 w1lh hum1d1f1er new siding
shade water on every lot
NEW
1971
Z1g
Zag
sewing
87
ACRES
on
Keystone
Road
Will
removeJour d~d
Phone 446 4585 after 5 p m
WE
HAVE
TWO
OF
THE
new roof new dry wall storm
boat dock privilege Buy a lot
mach1ne In ongmal factory
horse
an cows
95 6
about
~
miles
from
VInton
MOST
BEAUTIFUL
HOME
drs and wmdows Located In
and have a vacation every
carton
Z1g
Zag
to
make
Caii'Jackson
2116-4531
SITES
IN
THE
COU
NTY
Full price $5 000
PARTTIME
exclusive res section on a
weekend Ca II 446 267 4 or ~46
butlonholes sew on buttons
JI/A ACRE EACH WITH
large lot
67 MASSIE Ferguson tractor
1226
VIRGIN
TIMBER
BUSINESS
monograms and make fan cy
WE ALSO have 90 Acres on Coal
REFRIGERATION
less than 300 hours w1fh power
COVERING BOTH EX
deSigns with lust the lwlst of a
Why
W1sh
Valley Road about 1'1&gt; miles
Ph 446 9l6S
NO SELLING
take off brush hog plow
CELLENT
NEIGH
Down
Rt.
7
single d al Left 1n lay away
from V1nton Full pnce $5 000
12 ,.
BORHOOD
WATER
grader blade and double d1sc
For
Mtlhons?
EASY pleasant work near home
PRICE
reduced
on
thiS
good
5
and never been used Will sell
AVAIL
3MILE
FROM
NEW
---~--:--:­
also 61 Chevrolet Pickup
THIS II room home with (3) full WANTED
restocking GENERAL FOOD
rm home II has a full HOSPITAL
for only $47 cash or credll
FARMS AND
IN
CITY
Vacuum Cleaner Servico
Call evenings 256 6588
balhs Is gomg lor only $18 500
P-RODUCTS
NESTLES
ftmshed
base
A1r
con
H
W
terms
available
Phone
446
HOUSES
In
all
parts of Gall Ia HOSE &amp; parts for all makes &amp;
SCHOOL
DIST
94
6
Located '" Pomeror 0 a
PLANTER AND NABISCO
floors large liv rm wllh F P
0665
County It you want yours
models Mullineaux Dec Co
beautllol kitchen al builtin
Requ res 8 to 10 hours per
attached gar also • rar port Hardware Store Domg
94 6
sold
list
It w1th us today
258
Third Ave «6 2606
deluxe f1 xtures mcludlng a
week Earn $600 lo $800 and up
and located on a beauliful
91 26
Offtce
Phone
446
1694
Very
Good
Busmess
tr pie Sink and disposal
landscaped 2 A lot $25 500
t monthly Income tnvestment
IF YOU are building a new ELECTROLUX Vacuum
EYen1ngs
carpeted
LR
2
lornaces
thi
s
secured 100 per cent by In
OWNER WILL
SELL
Cleaner complete with at
hotne cr remodell'lll, see ""
TV Antenna Sales lnstallallon &amp;
Charmes M Neal 446 1546
can be a 2 family home
Kmeon St.
ven[ory G ve your phone
ESTABLISHED
HARD
tachments cordwlnder and
We are builders IJistrlbutor
Serv ce Estimates Ph 446J
Michael
Neal
446
1503
comp letely remodeled Inside
number and wnte lo Box 181
pa nt spray Used bul In like GOOD 5 rm house bath f Jll WARE STORE AT THE
for Holr.olnt Appliances
1673
or 446 9679
and out alum num siding We
base n ce deep lot H W INVENTORY PRICE BE
in care of Gallopolls Dally
new condlllon Pay $34 45
6l If
All ison E ectrlc
know of noth•ng belter allhls
firs liv rm paneled Price YOUR OWN BOSS AND
15~ tf
Tnbune
cash
or
budget
plan
available
MAKE A GOOD LIVING
97 5
SMALL double house ~ rooms D P MARTIN &amp; ~on Naler
pnce
$15 000
Phone ~46 0665
----~TOO
and bath utility room on each
94 6
De1 11ery Serv1ce Your
side
large lot centrally
Cheshire
.:__...,.,----oatronage will be IP
We Sold 8
located In c1ly Ph J•l ~250 or
preclaled Ph 446 0&lt;463
FOUNTAIN
Carbonalor OWNER says loselllhls elegant
Homes and Farms
446 1837
711
2
story
modernized
older
Counter 12 slools salad
94 6
br
ck
home
I
lhasa
full
base
refngerator
automallc
IN LAST T WEEKS AND
2 modern baths beautiful NEED YOUR PROPERTY
Join 1 winner'
has 1n
111d proven business
coffee maker Fruth Phar
LEGAL NOTICE
kitchen F P and carpel or TO SELL WE HAVE
macy Point Pleasant Phone
OPROttunlty fot you'
BUYERS READY TO BUY
liv
rm
and
formal
din
rm
675
2303
NOTICE TO BID
177 PORTSMOUTH Rd 8 rooms
Thou~ands or vendm&amp; machines now In opeoatlon and 6 000
RIGIH NOW SO IF YOU
Located on I 2 A lot $15 750 WANT
96 3
The
L.oc•l
all carpeted 1'1&gt; bath full Board of Snuthwesterr'l
YOURS SOLD CALL
dodlcllld dlattlbutots testily that U II must be 1l&amp;hL The
Educat~on will recelv•
THE
SELLINGEST
OF
basement
equipped
kitchen
totally now des1an concept p11clna and manufacturlna or
b•ds lor one (1 l 66 passenger
Farms
FICE IN TOWN
4SO secona Ave
I SET of tandem wheels and
,mmedlale occupancy Ph school buS Chass1s and bOcly
vendln&amp; machmes atona with UI I s oxpetlence In Ute
Ph 446 4775
axles 10 ply t~res ~nd tr~ller 64 A NEAR Bidwell 6 rm
388 8314
b1dS are to be bid separately
es!lbllshment of now oootes can spell success roo yoo
We Need Large
93 3 and must be accompanied by •
house good barn garage and
longue ld..,l lo make heavy
3 BR TRI LEVt:L - oeaullful
crib plenly water good
duly !railer Ph 446 9539 after
b d bond In the am9unt of 5 ~
&amp; Small Farms Any
u 11 s total ptoaoam Is rounded '" honfasblo deallna
slone and frame home with
cen l of the b1d
fences
and
small
tob
base
punlna you In busmess with a VIIIY ow lnveslliient (as
carpeling two baths family
5 p "'
Place m the County •
All bus chassis and body b&amp;dl
966
Pnced
tor
a
qu1ck
sale
r.oom lois of cabmels and
llnle •• S700l
and helpma keep you In a business
must
mee1 or exceed state
lnsuranct
39 A NEAR Mercerville 41arge
slorage c1ty schools and FOR ALL your Insurance n~eds minimum standards plul
wtoeoe you c111 make money wiUt a successful and completely
ALSO A GREAT NEED FOR
rms
and
bath
all
modern
WE specialiZe 1n portra I and
water
highway tattty acts. ~n
modem pooao., None oUteo or Ill kind exists'
c 1eck with your Grang~ agents national
New fuel oil fur big barn RESIDENTIAL PROP
commercial photography
efh:cl at lime of btd
at
the
Neal
Ins
Agency
64
crib cellar and milk house 5 L.-~--------J 119 ACRE FARM - Two story
Tlrrio Lllo U S News and W01ld Ropoft Vtlld Maaazlno,
All b1ds must be sealed end
church weddingS reunions
Slate ~ Agents for auto hre
lob lots of coal and plenty
National Television The Cllft&amp;!esslonll Retold llld news
and n the clerks otflct
brick home with ongina l homeowners hospttal and marked
etc Tawney Studio
of
the
board
ot ectucallon ray 12
water Pnce $13 500
pepeo messaps h111ld lht metlll or U I I 's ttyn.,lc vend·
aa 11 WOODMILL
wa lnut woodwork full bath
May
~ 1911
general
l•ablhty
RO
52
A
most
tna machme pooa1am The buSiness communi!)~ leadlna banks
th r ee bedrooms carpeted
84 If
Spec1flcatlonf '!'&amp;Y tit
tractor la"d remodeled 7 rm
llld business loadtiS Ill vitally awate Ol U I I 's PIOIIIII
1 v ng room furnace heat
rece ved 1n local supPrln
LOW low prices on Bemco ~nd
house new fur carpet llle
plenty of water
1en dent s off Ice
s!lblllty IIICf 1ntt~~IIY
Serta mattresses and box
and n1ce bath S17 000.
N"TIONWilJE 1NSU1&lt;ANCC
,J!ooerct reostrYts the right to
lllnY choice locations all sttll avai11ble IF you QUALIFY
springs Corbin &amp; Snyder
AUTO F~re life 45 Stale St relecl any Or 111 b'ds
LIST
WITH
US
For
qu1ck
IlliTE TODI!YI Include phone n\tmber IIHI rtlelenen
Furn 955 Second Ave Ph
Mrs No•m• Botmlll Clerk
Waldo F Brown VI R Brown
act1on on your propE:rly llsl
1
Thurman Ollie
446 1171
..., I 2 ,., .. , H!l Eo~" C..lrol•llolltt TIID Mlo
4461960
wilh Baord Really Co
April 11 15 H May 2
when

PAINTING and yard work Call
446 0734

Get Blue Luslre Rent electric
shampooer $1 Central Supply
Co
97 6

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Dillon
Agency

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Pome y, Ohto

I

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•

.•••
.•••
.••
•••
•

....
•
.•••

•
I 0

••
••

$1 2 95

HAND-PUSH
1223015)

ECONOMY
•. 0. TIU!R
• ••••••••

In carton $63 95

Set upl6895
o

o

o o o oo

0 0 0 I I I 0 0 0

o o

o

o o 0

o 0

I

o o o o o

oo

............... .

0 0 I

0

0 I

o

.....•

MOWER &amp; TILLER SUPER MARKET
SELECTION
UNICO RIDING MOWERS
SERVICE
SAVINGS

5 to 14 HP

$271 95

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

------

------

STROUT REALTY

20

'1.40

Gallipolis
Daily Tribune

'

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and

MASSIE.

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

up

EUGENE BUCKLEY
AND EARL THOMA

- -----

SAVE
ON YOUR
FERTILIZER
ALL ANALYSIS
ON HAND

Visit Our Garden
I

AS LOW AS -139.95
Ask about our spec1al
59 95
·

WE HAVE THOSE GOOD
BURPEE GARDEN SEEDS

Owners Kol for only
· Worlh over $35.00

EVERYBODY
CAN BUY AT. • •

33% Am moni!fn
N1trate
46% Super
60% Potash

TAKE DELIVERY
OUR AREA
IN POMEROY &amp;SAVE!

Horrielite Chain Saws

------

------

Neal Realty

- - - --

INVITE YOU TO

POMEROt

Jack W Carsey
Set vtng.Meigs Gallta &amp; ~:W,[:~Co~unhes
9922181
()penMan .- ~
l6pm

to

to

State

•
•Manufact\lrtr 1 est mete

To have to love and then to part
ls the greatest sorrow of ones
heart
The years may w1pe out many

mlure ant qumg 446 3631 or

- -- -- -

Bnggs engrnes suc1 on hft
blades reinforced decks
and non ca1ch circular
housmgs Self propelled
has poslti¥e trlclton dr ve

111~1

We II prove to you why thts new tractor ts your
fmest cho1ce whether you need a three plow ftrst
tractor or a take charge utility helper o Thrtfty
qutet 4 cyli nder power 36 9 hp PTO* or 38 hp PTO*
gasoline • 8 forward 2 reverse transmtsston g1ves
wtde ch01ce of speeds • Differential lock for extra
traction o Constant runnmg 540 rpm PTO o 8Y2 foot
turnmg radtus for easy maneuvenng o Low 51
mch hood height for outstandtng vtstbillty • Draft
co ntrolled 3 pomt hitch adjusts automattcally tor
smooth steady plowmg • Added conventence con
ven1ent controls faster readtng mstrument panel
deluxe th1ck foam seat
See the new lnternattonal 444 here now
put
11 through tts paces
f1nd out for yourself what It
can do

a gold cham

97 6

New GMC Truck
Headquarters

-----

propelled Both have 31\ hp

..

HI.

IS

Death lnes to break all in vam

x 45 e)(cellenl condlt1on Ph

446 4783

- - -- - -

wlth any other 3-plow
llll

Remembrance

1969 SKYLINE mobile home 12

-----.,...-

Two mowers one hand
push and one self

S Uft0£$T MANU,ACTURn 0' TRACTORS

MODERN SUPPLY

•

••

the NEW
INTERNATIONAl: 444

IN LOVING memory of Bert SPRAY II'IG lor tetm1tes Ph
Albert Scott who passed
446 0734
away 4 years ago April 27
1967
WALLPAPERING and fur

Real Estate For Sale

for Sale

-~------

ECONOMY MOWERS

MASSEY· FERGUSON

W Molin 51

0.

Set up

COMPARE

For Sale

Wanted To Do

~-----

In carton S77 95

Come in and

In Memory

- - - -- -

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Spring Sp.,,. ..,
... ... . .

thl flfmll

$EE THEM AT•••

SMALLTRAL I DR

SELF PROPELLED
(22 3016)

ftrll

WO~L.D

Bll:i POWER IN A

1

,_,

Week's Weather
GALLIPOLIS
Tern
perature prectpttalton and
weather condtttons for each 24
hour pertod as recorded by Pete
McCormtck Fatrfleld Weather
Observer
Day
High Low
Sunday
73
49
Monday
78
39
Tuesday
82
39
Wednesda y
75
41
Thursday
61
34
Frtday
64
30
Saturday
52
35
Average htgh temperature for
week thts year - 69 2 Last year
- 72 4
Average low temperature for
week thts year- 38 I Last year
- 48 5
Total prectpttatton for week
thts year - none Last year 3 37 mches
Total prectpttatton to date
lhts year - 7 24 mches Last
year - 13 41 mches
Normal average prectpttatton
annually - 40 99 mches
• • •
Everythmg that ts done 111
the world ts done by hope
- Martm Luther

to Theodore R
Rachael Dowme Chnstme Jane Searl&lt; Sharon L Van
Brtghl J C Bnghl to Metgs Van Cooney
s Rutland
Investment
Corp
Lot, Cooney 90 r
Pomeroy
Russell Prtddy Altce Prtddy
tD Ralph I Prtddy, Shirley
Pnddy Parcel Rutland
Robert R Durst Maxme
Durst to General Telephone Co ,
East Lebanon
!30
Eber H Carpenter Iva F
zero
Carpenter to General Telephone
the
Co Ease Lebanon
N~ll Mtddleswart to General
Telephone Co Ease Lebanon
L R Gluesencamp Sr
Lomse Gluesencamp to General
Telephone Co Ease Lebanon
Sylvta Allen to General
Telephone Co Ease Lebanon
Robert I Searles Constance

DEAD STOCK-

------

BAIRD REALTY CO.
Oscar Baird, Realtor

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Bargains, Bargains,
wlN·AT-BRi[)GE

Sharp South Stops Defense
NORTH

24

• 63
'A Q 6 3
t AKJ1
"'Q J 5

WEST (D)
.. K J 10 9 5
'" 10 852

EAST
• A Q8 7 4

:

"' 3

' J94
9852

+

"K

~G

SOUTH
• 2
¥7
+10 6 4 3
"'K 10 9 8 74 2

North-South vulnerable
West North East south
1•
Dble
4•
5""
Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead- + Q

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby ·

Wpst had a pretty good
plan of defense. He opened
the queen of diamonds with
the intention of ~rabbing the
fir st club lead and putting
IJ.ij. partner in wilh a spade.
ll" w as a good idea .and
would have worked except
that South had been around
a lon g tim e and had a pretty
good idea of just' what West
was up to.
If Sout h could only get to
his hand he could take a
hea rt fine sse. di scard his
si n ~l e ton spade on the ace of
hea rts and make an over·
tr ick , but South could not
exec ute th is nice plan .
See if you can find how
South foiled West's plan. It
wasn 't too complicated.
He simply cashed dum·
my' ace of hearts at trick
two and followed up with the
queen of hearts on which he
chucked his singleton spade.
West took his king , but now
there was no way for him to
get his partner on lead.

· WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEAI!LtNES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadllne9 a.m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until9 a.m. for
Day of Publica! ion ·
REGULATIONS .
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads

deemed

objectional.

The

WILL PICK up merchandise
percentage basis. Call J im
Adam s. auctioneer, Rutland .

Phone 742·4461.
AUCTION -

Pomeroy

Mlriimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three

WHEN? Each

Friday night, 7 p.m. Where?
Hayman ' s Auc1ion House,
Laurel Cliff on :new Rt . 7
pass .

, • RATES
For Wilnt Ad Service
5 cents per Word one insertion

9·23·lfc

Middleport By·

2·7·1fC.

REGISTERED Te nness ee
walk er
stud
servi ce.
Harri son v ille. Oh10. Phone

25 Per (:ent Discount on pa id
ads and ads paid within 10 day s.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

Ohio.

Advertisement.

OFFICE HOURS
8: 30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
8: 30 a.m. to 12 : 00 Noon
Salurday .

Holzer hbspital als~ Ewing's
ambulance
serv1ce
for

I Nina)

4·25·Jtp

Dishe s , WE WISH to exlend our sincere
thanks lo the Rev. Freeland
telephones, tin, brass beds,
Norris and Rev. Paul Sellers,
lamps , etc. Lee Rudi s ill ,
Mrs.
Florence Adams, Mrs .
Phone 992·3403.
Ma
llie
Circle, the Racine
4·23·301p
Emergency Squad and the
Ewing Funeral Home. We
also want to thank our many
friends and neighbors for the

WANTED
Used Furniture

AUr;FION
SERVICE

·:, Tools, Dishes and
Other Miscellaneous
Items. We Also Buy
Complete ..Estates.
'~"trrlbtTSl,i

I

fh e

ANTIQUES:

Chesa eake, Ohio

!'

to

"SELL THE AUCTION
,;\,~~Y'·~ '"

'
,.
Used Furniture

.JAMES (JI

SAYRE

1163 Secona Ave.
Ph~"e 446-2917

PH. 446-3444

PUBLIC SALE

beautiful flowers and all who
helped in any way during lhe
dealh and burial of our
beloved mother, grandmother

ABC CLEANERS
773·5543

Mason, W. Va .

Help Wanted

662·3035.

2·12·1fc
- -- - - - TREE . TRIMMING
and
removal. Fully insured. Free
es timales. Call after 5 ·p.rn .,
collect
Oic:::k
Hayman ,

WANTED ·
'

MALE HELP

Coolville 667·3041 or Tom
Hayman. Chesler 985·3509.
3·28·301p
PAPER·HANGING,

painting ,

....,.=-.,.,.,-.,---.,-.,--

LOST IN vicinity of Shotgun
Hollow and Leading Creek
Road, a 7·monlh old while·
faced heifer calf . If found ,
notify James Reed, Rl. 1,
Middleport. Phone 992·6102.
4·21 ·3fc

" Dit ching . Electric sewer
cleaning ." Reasonable rates.

·Phone
John
Russell,
Gallipoli s 446·4782.
4·7·1fc

es timales . Phone 992·3284.
Goeglein Ready .Mix Co. ,
Middleport , Oh io.
6·30·1fc

Free

estima t es.

Phon e

Gallipolis 446·0294.

opera tor 's li cense? Ca ll 992-

2966.

6·15.tfc

For Sale
FOUNTAIN ,

Carbo na tor,

Counter , 12 stools , salad
re f r i gera t or, auloma ti c
coffee maker . Fruth Pharmacy, Po int Pleasant. Phone

675.2303.

4· 23·3tc

Employment Wanted

Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Phill ips are moving out of slate and

YARDS lb mow In Middleport .
Phone· 992·5083.
4·25·3tp

For Sale or Trade

Notice

1960 GMC lift.cab, 2'12 ton, good
rubber, \1.6, 4 speed Iran ·

Auction eer s Note: Thi s 1s a cl ean lo1 of merchandise.

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•

PUBLIC AUCTION
SAT., MAY 1 - 11:00 A.M.
EQUIPMENT, TOOLS, FIXTURES AND SUPPLIES
OF TWIN RIVERS EQUIPMENT CO.,
2120 JEFFERSON BLVD.,
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
Reseating tool kit, grinders, 12·ton
floor jack, vises, anvi I. socket set;
battery ch,arger, floqr crane, 10"
bench saw, jib saw, heavy duty chain
hoist with trolley and track, line shaft,
grease gun, taps &amp; dies, reamers •.
bench press, Ford front scraper blade,
3 bottom Case plow, wheel weights for
Ford armature tester, counters and
show cases, 3 desks, cash register 1
billing register, typewriter, folding
chairs, warehouse truck, 27 steel parts
bins,7 wood parts bins, filing cabinets,
Homelite and Clinton parts, misc.
bolts, lot chain, lot "V" belts, plow
shares, lot "0" rings, hydraulic hose
and fittings, heavy tire chains, pr.
ladder jacks, electric cable, wheel
barrow, barrel pump, steel work.
bene~, 2 large ~lass doors, lot roller
chain
repair
links,
many
miscellaneous items.

Phone 992·5434.

noon . Horses, dogs, guns, etc .

Two miles from Cheshire off
Stale Route 554 on Stingy
Creek Road.
4·20.61p

10·18·tfc

992-

Howard Schult~

Pt.

'

Phone

John McNeil · Auctioneer .

742-4902
DON'T PAY lHE
HIGH COST OF

TV REPAIRS

Bring them to Chuck's &amp;
save up to ha If on tabor.

SCOTT SMITH CHUCK HUMPHREY
One year guarantee on
all parts. Also auto
radio specialists.

992.5080
751 Butternut
Pomeroy, 0.
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992·2284
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and

GET HIGH with Christ af the
Me igs • United Methodist
Youfh ·Rally, Meigs Jr . High ,
Middlepofl, Monday, April 26, STEREO-rad io combination,
Mod ern Walnul. Full stereo
7: 30p.m.
sound produced by 4
4·25·21c
speakers, furnlable plays all
four speeds, separate controls
LET " Youth of Today" turn you
for volume, tone. etc. Balance
on fo Jesus wifh Nalural High
$67 .32 . Use our budgellerms.
by Ralph Carmichael. Meigs
Call 992·3352.
Junior High School. Mid ·
dleport, Monday, April 26,
7: 30p.m. Sp'onsored by Meigs
County Un ited Melhod isf EARL Y Amer ican Stereo. AM·
FM rad io, 4 speed changer, 4
Youth ~ellowship .
speaker
sound
system .
4·25·2fc
Balance S81 .52 . Use our lime
payment plan. Call 992·3352 .
KOSCOT· Kosmetics, w·d s and
4·22·61c
a ccessori~'s-.

May an

-I! ALSO
DQUBLE~WtDES

POMEROY - 3 bedroom
paneled home wllh large
closets .

Modern

Cuslom meat cutting
Pleasant Ridge Road
Pomeroy, 0.

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

Dick Vaughan
992-3374
Dale Little
992·6346
O' DELL WHEEL allgnmenf
located at Crossroads, Rl. 124.
$'1

BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
Septic tanks Installed. George
\Bill) Pullins. Phone 992·2478 .
I '
4·25·1fc

Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service .
Wheels
balanced
elec -

fronically .
All
work
guararueed .
Reasonable
rates . Phone 992·3213.
4·22·301c

For MINOR aulomotlve repair .
Warren's Mower Shop. 248
Condor Sf .• Pomeroy . Phone
992·7357.
4·25·31c

BULLDOZER wqrk . Basement.
ponds, landscaping. We do all
kinds of dozer work. Haul fill
dirt and top soil . See or call
Bob Jeffers afler 7 p. m.
Phone 992·3525.
·
4·23·30tc

C. BRADFORD, Auclloneer
Complete Service
Phone 949·3821

Racine, Ohio

Chester .water. Several
ciulbulldlngs. $6,500.00

69 DODGE, Polar a, 4dr. Sedan.

$2695

Dr. Hdtp.

$2495

69 DODGE CORNET,~ Dr. Hdtp. AC

$2495

68 DODGE CORNET, 2 Dr. Hdtp.

$2095

~8

$1B95

DODGE, Dart, G. T. Conv.

68 CHEVROLET IMPALA,4 Dr. Sedan

$1795
' ... . ...,

67 OPEL, •Kadette Station Wagon·

s1295

66 DODGE, Charg.er2

Dr. Hdtp., VB.

.

65 BUICK, 2 Dr. Hardtop, VB.

$1195

65 PLYMOUTH, Fury 2 Dr. Hdtp., VB.

$1095

S·1·tfc

NORRIS DODGE
Phone 446-0605 or 446-0842 ·
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

lng machfne proeram. The business community, le"dln&amp; banks

and business leaders are vitally aware of U.!.l.'s p10eress,
stability and integrity . .
Many choice locations are still available IF YOU QUALIFY. ·
WRITE TODAY! Include phone numbei and references.
UsllrJII..Itita., llc.ell95 Emp1re Centrai•Oallas ,Teus 75247•

SPECIAL

66 Pontiac Catalina
, 4 Dr. hardtop, radio &amp; heater, p. steering, p.
brakes. w·S·W tires. Cameo ivory with mat·
ch ing interior. In excellent condition.

$1195
Gallipolis,

Eastern Ave.

o.

NEW ARRIVALS lHIS·. WEEK ,
1967
CHEVROLET~~~--!1295
Biscayne 2 door, six cyl.', std. trans., economy.

MONTH*
~

Will Buy A New
3 Bedroom Ranch Home
NOW! Enjoy the kind of home that thousands of happy
peoRie have enjoyed for 25 years-a .Capp Hom·e,
and save money! We deliver a.nd erect on your tot, en·
close the home, furnish all finishing materials, inside
and out ,.. at the price we quote! Just do the easy
finishing or sub·contract, pnd SAVE, SAVE, SAVE!

~ith walt-to·wall carpeting, afumi~um
srdlng, F.A. gas heat, built· in cobinets,
etc. etc.

3 ~ Stop

31-Portlco
32-Man't nlckn1mt
33-Medow
3•-Ruuitn newt
•a•ncy
35--Brlck·tlrryinl
devices
~
36-Emltt vtpor
3e,.:...set
40-SmtU bird

See T~y

Mornln~~&amp;.

Star 24'x48'
w•th 6~x24' ''L"

WILL DO tailoring and
upholstery. Phone 992·3561.
3·31·30ic

AI 203 Park St., Middleport, o~ r.olt At
Moody, 992-7034; tor oppolntment.

..

Based on family Income of ss,ooo with three
children, taxes ~nd Insurance not Included.

Bernard

Stewart

·
1

Routt t, Hide·•· ·
WIY Hills
lromon, Oijio W07
l'ftone: "4·5"·45"

JEMO ASSOCIATES
Park &amp; Sycamore Sts.
Middleport, Ohio ·

or 1·26..18
'

'
·-;-liP ---~

·

64-Piural endlna
65- Note of scare
66-Unlt of
erecirrcal
musurement
67-Atom .
59-Doctrine
71-Guldo's hleh
note

73-L•ment
7..._FIIh sauce
76-Lone·IICitd
blrdt
79-W•sh llahtly
81-Racky hill
82-Pollceman
(slana)
U - Wtlrd
85-EstMm .
87-Piptr m•••ure

90-Ntrcotl~
9'2-Fem•le h.tft

126-Title of rnpect
127-KeHiedrum

129-Sivtp
131-Pitch
132-Ditelte of
cattle
l33-Men's nlcknamt
134-lnllnl
· 136-Ct:rtmony
137-Droop
138-Hevlnlllll
color ·
139-Bebylonlln
d•lty
14o-Witt person
Ul-Openwork
f1bric
142--fether

143-Siothtul
1.-4-SIIIIntlt
1.6-Wear IWtY
1.-8-Joumeyed

16-Worm
17-Dtlirium
tremens (abbr.)
21-Subttancn
22-oppoeed to ,

23-M•nufacturad
2s-..:.Brvwn ldwl
27-ShortHt

dltt.nce

bttw"n points
28-Pratentlous
hom11
30-Embr•ce

1969 DODGE. _________s2495
Polara 4door sedan, V·8, T· FIIIe, p. sl., air cond.

1968 Olds $1895

1969 VO'LKSWAGEN ____s1995
1966 DODGE _________ $1395

Catalina 4 dr. sedan, beautiful all while finish, spolless. One of
the fl'l&gt;est 66's In town.
'
\

a,_:......a,ilf IOd ofMtmpltlt

Col'--

II
oftlci•lt
81-Chll'lll

. . .··

~95

'.

440 2 door h. -lop, v.8, T· Fllte, p. st.

ld'~u.•

engine . &amp; autOmatic

111·an:s.• radio. Popular model
&amp; priced to go. ·
·

PONTIAC-....__
'GMC TRUCKS
116 Years of Continuous Business
PHONE 992-2143
POMEROY, OHIO

.

HOBSTEIIER
.REAL ESTATE

Real Estate For Sale
SPACIOUS 3 bedroom brick
house,

H.T. Cpe., lite blue
good tires, clean vinyl
terlor, aulo. Iran~ .• DO\•er·l
steering and brakes,
heater.

SPECIAL .
1965 Jeep Wagoneer 4- door Wagon:

large living,

dining, and family rooms .
Basemen!, 2'car garage. All
electric central air. Very
comfortable. Upper lwentles.

HAND N DAY·OLO or started
Leghorn pultets, bofh floor or
cage grown
available.
Poultry
housing
and
automation, 399 W. Main Sf.,
Pomeroy . Phone 992·2164.
4·25·11C
=....,..,.,:-=- ..,.--'-;-TWO LARGE gas healers, one
gas cookslove. melal ward·
robe. Other articles. Eldon
Walburn, phone 992·2805.
4-25·2fc
--------PLANTS NOW ready: Single

1968 Ford $1895
•;, Ton 8' Slyleslde Pickup, V·
8 engine, std. trans .. custom
cab, R·slep bumper, chrome
Int . bumper, radio, while &amp;
red finish . Good !Ires. ·

Six cyl., p. sleerlng, 4 wheel drive, locking hubs, new
paint.

•1095 .

,.

ranch

T. Bird

2 rjoor h. top, Y·8, automallc, p. st., air cond., vinyl roof.

BUICK

Real Estat' For Sale·

,

Come! 4 door sedan, six cyl., aulomalic, ready .

See Bob, Wallace, Emerson, Hilton or Dick for
your transportation needs now . • .

R. H. Rawlings·sons

992·2151

'

2 Ton Cab.Chassls, 84"·cob
to axle. Good 825&gt;&lt;20 tires, 2·
speed rear axle,"' clean c~b,
292 cu. ln. 6 cyl. engine.

992-2152

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

1964 Olivrolet
'749

Impala .Cpe., \1.8 engine, 3
speed std .' Irons ., white
finish, clean Interior, all
:t11rres, radio. Week End
11

U:'

1965. Buick

Previously Owned Cars...

70 Cadillac Sedan De Ville

'745

$6000

Special Custom 4 Door, V·8
1t•nglne, automatic lrans.,
good tires, local'

Bayberry finish with malchlnQ vinyl lop and lnlerlor, full
power equlpmenl, 1111 &amp; lelescope wheel , Climate Control
air condllloning, sold and serviced by us.

69

Cadillac Sedan DeVille

1963 Chewolet
'695

$5000

Gold finish, black vinyl top, malchlng Jnlerlor, fuil power
equipment, Climate Control air conditioning, low mhrr.11ge.
SHARP!'
·

2 Ton cab &amp; c·hassls, 102"
to axle, good 825x20 •or•~·•
clean cab, 292 cu. ln . 6

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

engine.

open Eves ..Til6- Til5 P.M. Sat.

Yes ..• We have
new 1971
Chevrolet cars
and trucksYou7llove
our deals!

GMAC Flnonclng AYIIIIblt
POMIROY
"You'll ~Ike Our Quality Way of Doing Bus in-"

fft.JMZ

ITEM: Jack· Kane.
You somehow get the
eling he has thought
bout . what
he's
haring with you. Your
eling is right.

and double petunias, pansies,
coleus, Mexican tomatoes and
other varieties , peppers,

cabbage, '12 or 1 dozen packs.
Don Hubbard, Syracuse,

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Ohio. Phone 992-5776.

4·22-121c
- - - -- - - - -

WMP0/1390
t.IOI.l!I .. OS

Your Chevy Dealer
"Where Your
Dollar Buys f«lre"
Ph. 992·2126
Open Eves. Ti II 8

For Sale
1962 CHEVY,! $100. 1962. Ford,
$125. Also, beautiful German
Shepherd puppies . Ready
May 2, 520 each. Phone
Coolville 667.3512.
4·2s.61p

For Sale
W. C. ALLIS·CHALMERS
traclor with fwo 14· lnch
bottom drag lype plows an
rubber, bolh for $300. Olen
Young, Success Rd., Reeds·
ville, Ohio. Call alter 4: ~·
4·21·61p

-t-+--116 FT. WEAVER skiff wllh good
trailer . J'h· hp. outboard
motor,, pair of oars, anchor,

yorn•

!47-lym..l for
rutllontum

tor

--~---

lwo life jackels, $200. Phone CARPETS• fright? Makelhtm
IV\ason 773-5147.
'
a · btaullful sight wllh Blue
4·14-llc
Lustra.
Renl
electric
shampooer, $1, Baker Fur·
nllure, Middleport.
BEAUTIFUL selection of
4-2H1c
flowers, baskets, wreaths,
and sprays for Memorial Day.
Cliff Shoe Repair. MiddlepOr-t. COAL, llmeslone. Excelsior
~!t Works, E. Main St.,
~· 21 .tfc
Pom~roy . Phone 992·3191.
4-9·tfc
30 VOLUME set of . &gt;-~merlcana •
Encyclopedia .
12
foot

- - - - --

• will

-p

clean Interior, dark
finish, like new tires, 6

Kadell4 door wagon, 4 cyt., 4 speed. ready to go.

....,-+--f-+--+-1

aluminum boat and mofor.

Also. roto.flller. Phone 992.
7693.
4·20·5tc
'

NEW 1971 Zlg.Zag sewing
machine In original factory
carton . Zig -Zag lo make
bullonholes, sew on bullons,
monograms, and make fancy
designs with just the lwlsl of a
single dlo\. Lett In lay · aw~y
anu never been used. Will sell
for only $47 cash, or credll
terms available, Ph~ne 992·

no

77-cNYot

.

~

iown.

99-Hivlnc mtde

t••"

71--llohoprle

liant 4 Dr .• local 1 owner

Falcon Futura 4 door, si x cyl. , automaloc, sharpest 6.1 In

91-T•k• • voN

39--Fedtl'lll, 111ncy 107-Palnful
(lnlt.) .
109-Shlna
41-;'-'Ftihlon
J 11-Ctrne btch
42-B•ptltfTI•I ,
112-Reputt
bltln
J 13-Btktd city •

14-loundtrlel
15 Co·.~tl'ld whh

1968

.

91-Printar't
me11u,.
94-l.MIIdont
M-Pr.postttOn

lOIJ-fnlcttYif;)'
102--Ftat
3.5-Workm•n
104-Eit
36-N~rrow openlnl 105---Pellllt
37-0...y
~~-

75--Unpottohod

1 owner car .

1965 CORONEl--------~95 ·
62 BUICK
1964 FORD.-~-----~--~-$!95
S
64 fORD 7Z
lL JON
'995 1969 OPEL __________$1595
tra~s.
.
1966 MERCURY--·------· ~95
Many more
1968 JAVELIN SSl----~1895
BLAEnNARS
4Dr. stallon.;agon.Oneoflhe,besl65'sinarea.

33-tlimblna pt1nt

U:-Sacted lm ..•

turq. fini sh, good tires. Local

, Charger 2 door h·lpp, choice of 3, all with V·8, P·. sl.. T·
Fllte, console (!o buckets.

·at-SefW!nt
90-Prtposlttoi-1

93- lroquojln
footh
lnditnt
t•9-Put forth with
44-Somltthtna ..t In 116--EJiptrlmtntal
95-J&lt;illed
effort
47--.l.lb
room (colloq.)
97-Apothtclry't
150-Rtlpted
48-Re..ettbllshu 118-Polton
wel-'rt
151-Artblln prlnCH 49-Pertalnlnl to
119-0.parttd
41-Masc:ulint
98-Aiver In ltely
punishmen~
122-Mexlctn dish
42-Esceped
99-Note of scale
DOWN
50-NHd~ box
124--Giat•
43-Siender flnl•l , 101-Be of use
54-Leek of color
JZI-TI'It trunk
45-Apportloned
103-Metal
1-H•vlnc lent
55-Rockftth
126-Cubtt
46-,rtnter'•·
104-I'IKt of
wtetatlon
5~rchn
J~nd of beer
meaeurt
.
dlnnerwtre
2--PriiHt
59-F'rult
ltktr'a product
47-Body of wtter
lO~Part of house
3-0isturbance
60-Nollvo
'111-..rlod
. ·
48-Splct
101-Enlltnd (lbbr.)
4-Man'a nlckn•rfl•
fupttan
132 MoN crippled ·
49-Lylnl fee•
11G-Went In
5-trmbot tor ttn
61-PNpoaltion
1H-Otp,....lon
downward
112-Ktfn
I Qoet by water
63-WithtNd
137-Brotd
51-Dye pl•nt
J 113-fJeume
7-at.nt
6&amp;--Brothar of .Odin f.....,.rsltn 1ei,Y
52-flupell (tbbr.) ll.t-Exc}•metlt.n
1--WdOdtn vttatl 1 67-Pronoun
140--NutniMT
53---Unusutl
115-Trac:lllor
t-Earth IQddt•• ' 68--Dttlrtnlnlnt
142.!...Tht aun
54-Stlut up
money
l().;..¥reparad for
70--Fript
ll~olo
55-Withstlndt
117--cut
.~
71-lltlnilttllen
144
11 point
57-Scottish for
· Ill-Loud rloltt
11-Vislont~rlet
72-Ftltehood
14~ymbol
far
.
•·one"
119-Men'e nickname
7l-Diduce ·
· i oerlum
12-lun pd
up fire
120--Conlvnctlon

121--litndlt
121-hri" I

Cutlass 4 Door Sedan, Y·8
engine, aUtomatic trans ., p.
sleerlng &amp; brakes, vinyl
Interior, radio , white over

1966 DODGE---------s1495

31-Stelk

.

Nova 2 dr., while finish, blue
cyf. eng.,

interior ~ , 6 '

ANTIQUES, Phone 992·5327.
1-+--1
, 4·6·30tc

SUNDAY, APRIL 25, 1971
ACROSS
1- Fiylne
c:r.. turll
6-Piatform
11- Tralned
18-Follower of Arlus
19-Ventlllted
20- Livtlleat
21-D1rk red
23-Dtlry product
24-Anltr
-26--TI•rm del
Fuea•n lndl1n1
27-Tim• period
(abbr.)
29-Repr•llnt•tlv•

1968 ·Qay Jl$15~
automatic trins.1 new . tires,
radio &amp; lleater\

PUZZLE
PER

FOR LESS

Coronet4404door, v.8, T·Fllte, p. sl..42,000act. miles.

&amp;&amp;.PONTIAC

ABOUT 10,000 SQ. FT. OF . TWO BEDROOM house, ex·
BUILDING SPACE, below
celtent con'dltion, Immediate
Pomeroy . Mason bridge,
possession . Phone 992·2619.
JUST OFF OF MAIN
4·25·61c
STREET, EXCELLENT
LOCATION, has house on II. FIVE ROOM house, two
$3,500.
bedrooms, bafh, basement,
wall to wall carpel In living
RUTLAND-2 ACRES, cemenl
room , bedrooms, and bath.
block house, 3 bedrooms,
Gas forced air furnace.
bath·, nice kitchen, front
Middleporl, phone 992·3.120.
pprch, living room 27xl3
4.2S·Ifc
ALMOST NEW. $8.900.
PROPERTIES ARE SELLING 24 ACRE FARM, Long Bolfom,
wi lh or · wllhoul farm
list with us loday.
machinery.
House with 3
HENRY CLELAND
bedrooms,
dining
room, living
REALTOR
room
,
11!2
baths,
enclosed
Office 992·2259
back
porch.
wall
to wall
Residence 992·2568
carpellng
.
Aluminum
siding,
4·2Hic
awning, storm windows and
storm doors . City water .
:cONVENIENT but secluded
Selllngduetoillhealth. Phone
building lots on T79 at Rock
614·985·3938.
Springs. Within walking
distance of Meigs High
School, a 5 minute drive from
Pomeroy. Cal t or see BU I
Witte weekends. or after 5
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992·
6887.

totally new desijl'l concept, pricin.R and manufacturln&amp; of

vending macblnes alone with U.l.l.'s experience In the
establishment of new ooutes can spell success for you.
U.l.l.'s total piogiam Is founded in honorable deanne . , ,
putting you in business with a very low Investment (as
little as $700) •.. and helplne keep you In a bOslnus
where you can make money with a successful and completely
modern program. None othei of its kind exists!
Time, Life, U.S. News and , World Report, Vend Maaazlne,
National Television, The Congressional Rec01d and news·
paper messaees heiald the merits of U.l.l.'s dynamic vend·

.

Cleland Realty

$1395

66 CHEVROLET, Impala 2 Dr. Hdtp., VS.$1095 ·

Upper Rt. 7

owner. CN.Ined by local merchant. Extra .nice.

POMEROY - 6 room frame, 2
nice lois lor mobile homes. ANNOUNCING THE AP·
POINTMENT OF GEORGE
As~\ng $4,000.00
New Haven . Phone New
• S. HOBSTETTER JR., REAL
Haven 882·2712.
ESTATE BROKER AND
NEW LISTING- RACIJ'IE- 7
4·23·2tC
HILTON
WOLFE
SR.,
rooms, 3 bedrooms, large
living ·and dining rooms.
SALESMAN, AS THE EX·
CLUS!VE REAL ESTATE
Bafh, basement, new gas
forced air furnace, 3 porches,
AGENCY TO SELL FOR:
For Sale
, garage and carport. Nice lot.
THE GREEN HILL
HOMES, INC.
Asking $12,500.00
1966 WEDGEWOOD 2·bedroom
IF YOU WANT TO
SEE one of us loday for com·
mobile home . Glenn R.
SELL'OR BUY
plete information on the type
Liascott, Amesville, Ohio .
of home, location, and about
,i'. CALL 192·3325 ,
Phone 448·2139.
ihe long time financing
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
4.2s.11c
ASSOCIATE
available - Buy a new home
4.23·61c
like paying rent'ln a beaullful ·w;, FOOT Shasia camper~
country setting with at!
sleeps 6. self.contalned.
ui)JIIIes ~vajt~~le, an~ ,il(St off
Siove , ,JJVI',n, .. ntlc\g,~r~.\Q[•
State Route 7, near Pomeroy,
pressurized water system . At!
Ohio.
lhe exfras. Prices lor quick
GeorgeS. Hobstefler Jr.
sale. Phone 9.19·3913.
BROKER, PHONE 985·4186
4·2Hic
5'14 ACRE FARM ..:. ALMOST
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohio ·
IN POMEROY- nice·l.story ·
HILTON WOLFE SR.,
FC170 WILL YS 'I• ton truck, 4
frame home, 3 bedrooms.
SALESMAN, PHONE 949·3211
wheel drive, lockout hubs, 9
bath, 2 ·porches, floor
Racine, Ohio
fool
utility bOdy. good 700x16
covering, barn. ALL IN
4·23·6tc
tires.
15 foot Centry Inboard
GOOD CO~DITION $6,500. ::-=cc-:o----:-:--:--::
boat (needs repair) wllh 6
.HOU!i'E, 1640 Lincoln Hts.,
cylinder gray marine engine
POMEROY- 2 EXCELLENT
Pomeroy. Phone 992·2293.
283 Chevy V8
and
BUILDING LOTS- tots close
10·25·1fc enginetrailer.
·
with
or
without marine
by sold for $~,000.00. ALSO
15foot
flat trailer,
conversion
.
HAS AN OLDER HOUSE, 5 RoiJMS, bath furnished or tandem axle, eleclrlc
brakes.
could be remodeled, needs
unfurnished. Phone 992·3792 Phone 304·882·2138, night 992·
bath. FINE LOCATION.
or 304·882·2138.
4·25·31p 3792.
$7,500.
4·25·31p

Crllt Bradford

Join a winner! U.l.l. has an outstanding and proven business
opportunity for you!
Thousands of vending machines now In operation and 6,000
dedicated disttibutors testify that U.l.l. must be Ilatrt. The

All minerals. 7

room house, bath, furnace.

,

69 OLDSMOBILE, Delta 4

742-4902

kl1chen ,

stove, double sink, Forced air
furnace. Full basement. Only
$12,000.00

•

WOOD MOTOR SALES

Co. be at council meeting
Monday night, April 26, 7 p.

SMALLEY'S
Glfl . Shop ,
Chesler, otoio. · Flowers for
Mother's . Day and Memorial
Day. $.88 and up. Phone
Chester 985·3531.
4·23·12fc

===

Backhoe And
Endloader Work

lHE SHOP.

Electra 4 dr. hardtop, faclory air conditioned. One careful local

.

·.

Deluxe 2 dooro automallc slick shill, sharp.

FOR SALE or i.RENT · - 4
W
W h
h
bedrooms, balh, nice, !&lt;lichen LeSabre· lallon agon. orf muc more.
with cook units. ·., Full
·: •
'
basement. Forced •lr' fur·
nace . . Carport: Asking ., ilnty· '
$8, 300·00
• '
Pickup. 'v.8, sp.
-Like new finish.
'
POMEROY- Nice 3 bedrooms,
bath, large 'living '~nd dining.
Modern kllchen with stove
· and refrigerator. · Large
porch. Gas forced air furnace ,,
2 tots. · Double garage.
$21,000,00
"

JOHNSON MASONRY

June

m . Signed by the Middleport
Cab Co.
4·23·31p

Broker
llOMtchltnlcSt.
ptmetoy '.Ohio. , . .-·

20 ACRES -

special. Kleanslng Kream ,
S2.25. Dislrlbutors, Brown's. MOBILE HOME. 8x32, real
ni ce, with canopy . Brown's
Phone 992·lll3.
Trail e r Park , Minersville,
4·23·tfC
Phone 992 ·3324.
SAVE UP to one half . Bring
your sick TV to Chuck's TV
Shop, 151 Butfernul Ave ., SOUTHERN plants: lomato,
cabbage, . peppers, sweel
Pomeroy .
potatoes and o~lon, IV\ay 1.
4·23·1fc
Older now, Charles R. Harris,
Portland, Ohio. Phone 843·
ANYONE ha vln~ any co'm·
2693.
plaints about Moddleport Cab

H'OME sewing. Phone 992·5J27. 1968 BUICK , 26,000 aclual
3·30·301c
m lies, $1,900. Cushman
Tra ils fer motorbike, $250.
OVEN
FRESH
bakery
•
Phone Chester 985'-3924.
products. Jimmy's Pas fry
•''
Shop: N. 2nd Ave., Mid ·
'lj lepor t. ·Phone 992·3555.
3·28.JOfc 2 Hou's E fralters. 8x22.
Pleasant, W. Va.
675-1205
742·4783.
•
•
REDUCE safe ~nd fasr wlfh
•
I
Go• , tablets and e.Yap
water pills. Nelson Drugs.
..:oJ......o.~.....~----'------------------•1----·-.1.1u.ntn

'

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

SR. ' ,

IN STOCK!
AU. READY TO GO!

MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

And Patios

1220 Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
6048.
4·21·4tc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . - - - - - - --,.,.3-=·
29·11c
- - - - - - -...,...50X10 RI CHARDSON mobile HARR !SON'S TV AND AN·
home, 2 bedroom s, with air
TENNA SERVICE . Phone
For Sale
condilioning. Call 992·5867 .
992·2522.
4·22·61c
ALUMINUM car fop boats, 10·
12·13 foot . Lorenzo D. Davis,
Kingsbury Road.
3·24·301c
smi ssi on. $550. Phone

.jrCHAMPION

it: VAN DYKE

67. BUICK

',JlEAFORD 65 OLDS as- ·-·

.30 - 1971:· ·.

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.

From lhe Largesl Truck or
Bulldozer Rad\alor lo the
Smallest Heater ·core.

CHUCK'S
10 &amp;TV REPAI
12' • 14' - 24' • WIDE

.. Virgil B.

SEE TOM CROW, GUY SH1JLER OR BOB CROW

3· J2. tfc

. 4·2·1fc

apartments. Close to school .

Crow

BLAETTNARS

FURNISHED and unfurnished

OLD FASHIOt-jED trade day .
Every Sunday starling at 12

.j&lt;W!NSOR
«BUDDY

-------

Comm ercial , r esidential and
induslria l wiring . Phone 2472113

,.

~

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

project . Fast and easy . Free

O' BRIEN ELECTRIC Service .

Real Estat~ For Sale

BUICK$ &amp; OPELS

992·2580
Tom

Time You Ever Spent.

Complete
flemodeling

From Gallipolis lake Route 35 toward Jackson to first
road on left past Park La no Mobile Homes.

~

40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable

JOHNSON MASONRY

UNF'U'RNISHED 3 · r oom
apartmenl. Phone 992·2288.
1·J1 .1fc
"Hc::O::-Uc::S-::E:-,-:16c::J-:c7-:L:in-c-,
ol;-n--;-;Hts ..
Pomeroy, 4 rooms, bath, allic
for storage, full basement,
nice
yard ,
driveway .
Avai lable May I. Phone 992·
2780 or 992·3432 .
4.2J.tlc

.

'

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!

CONCRETE
deliver ed right to your

STARTING AT 1 P.M.

R. E. KNOTTS &amp; SON DA\1 E, Auctioneers
Mrs. R. E. Knolls, Clerk

.EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

3·J2.ttc
beds. etc . Wri te M. D. Miller,
::::F:--:1N
-;-G
:, -;S""p_o_u "f'i-n g- and
Rl. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call ~R=-o=-o
992.6271.
Painting. Al so, metal storage Ph. 992·2143
Pomeroy
9·1·1fc
bu ilding 10xl0, concrete fl oor, ~=========~
erected,
for $300. Richard ,..
Wil t, Phone 992·2889. · ·
For Rent
4·12·30tc
l7'h FOOT MOTOR home. plus
travel trailers, 13 and 16 foot
NEIGLER Construction. For
building or r emodeling your
Also. sales and supplies .
home , Cal l Guy Neigler ,
Phone Chester 985·3832. Gaul
Trail er Sales, Inc., Rt. 3,
Rac ine, Ohi o.
Pomer oy, Oh io.
7·31·1fC
4·18·12tc
RALPH ' S
CARPET
Kitchens, Baths
Upholslery Clean ing Ser v ice.
TRAI LER LOTS. Bob's Mobile
Room Additions
Ohio. 992.2951.

.

1964 ·Buick Special _________ .:__'995

Hill Homes, Inc. r-

992·1129
Evenings Call : 992·2534 992·3433
Date
Larry
Dutton
Spencer

READY .MIX

OLD furn i ture, dishes, brass

Cou rt , Rt. 124, Syracu se,

1967 Buick Wildcat ----------$1995
AI.

$3195

steering,

power · brakes, air, 18,000
miles. Excellent coodillon.
Phone 992·2288:
' .
11·10·tfc

Auto., P.S., v.a, 43,000 mileS'. You
'
this car to your best fr.iend's mother·. Sh&lt;aro.

.. .

~reen

hardtop, power

SE·PTIC TANKS CLEANED.

'

will sell th eir furnitur e and household Items Including
carpet antique gla ss and chin a.

Com'e See Us At 97'12 N. Second Sl., Middleport.

All Weather Roofing &amp;
Cons1ructlon Co.

Insured- E Kperienced
Work Guaranteed

THURSDAY, APRIL 29

SUN VALLEY DRIVE

We Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home, V.A., F. H. A.•
And Conventional Loans.

OLD WORK

Cust. Sed., air cond., one owner, sharp.

1/fliJ ..

EARLY BIRD SALE

68 CHRYSLER

4 Dr. hdtp., air c'ond., vinyl top: We s'old It new.

Lei Us Show You How You Can Become A Homeowner -

Roofing &amp; Carpenter
Worll
Spouling, Roof
Painting

Musser . Phone 992·3630.
3·28·301p

2 BEDROOM mobile home.
Insurance
Racine area . Phone 992·6329.
The John Beaver Familv
4·25.3tc AUTOMOBIL E insu rance been
4·25.Jtp
cancelled?
Lost
y our

TWO. YEI\~ old female beagle,
In vicinity of Meigs Beagle
Club. Phone 992-3652.
4·23·31c

You will have something of value to show for the US you'
spend when you buy your own home - plus, you gain an
Income Ta x benefit, you build an equity and you are not
OOund by the terms of a rental agreement.

TO FIT YOUR BUDGET

69 BONNEVIUl

1968 Buick l.eSabre--------· ·$21!5

/.

All Our Cars Are Priced

.1970 DA 'FSUN pickup, only 5,000
mileS. See al 929 Hysell St.,
. Middleport, after 6 p.m .
4·18·71p 4 Dr. liardtop. Poi.tlac's fines! and this one Is tops. Faclory air
.
condition, power sleer., power brakes, aulomatic trans., fully
1964CHEVY plckup; ullllty bed, equipped.
low mileage. Priced to sell.
Roger Bahr, Chester, Ohio.
Phone 985-3958. •
, 4·22·0rC
New POrt 2 dr. hardtOp, faclory ai• conditioned. fully equipped.
1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2·dr. We can gladly refer you to !his owner.

Auto., P.S., P. B., 9,700 miles. Like new; ,

* ASTACK OF WORTHlESS RECEIPTS! ! *

606 E. Maln, Pomeroy, 0 .

plaster ing , dry wall. Arthur

o:-:.. ---- J3295

YOU CAN'T MISS

Saaln' Is ·lallevln'

2:door, hard
Also, 1964
automafic,
,,
.
4·25·31c

1970 MAVERICK, 14,000 miles,
$1,495. Phone 949·3025.
4·2Htc

1970 Cantero'-----------'· ,'2895

THE U$ YOU PAY IN RENT?

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

DEXTER , 0 . 45726
PHONE 742·3945

cond., P. W., P.S., Electra
.
.

.
1969 ·Pontiac·Gran Prix

WHAT DO YOU HAVE FOR

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

&amp;

ai~

Prix, air cond., vinyl top, P.W. Extra nice.

$5.55

NEW

18,000 miles,
trade·in.
-

THINK ABOUT ITI

Wheel Alignment

Bulk Cleaning.

and
great -grandmother ,
Fannie Lee Beaver.

Lost

EXPERT

Please! No Free Storing on

Sanita t ion, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .

2·12·90tc

Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per

Wanted To Buy

PRESTON BEAUTY
COLLEGE

gellhem back .
FOR FREE PICKUP &amp;
DELIVERY SERVICE
CALL 77J.SS43.

or Wilma Casto, Portland. SEPTI C lanks cleaned. Miller

Sl.SO for SO word minimum .

transporting me
hospital.
Mrs. Durward
Cumings.
anytime.

and pressing. Pay when you

1965 OLDS Cullass,
tpp, automatic.
Ponllac, 4·&lt;1oor.
PhON! 742·5361.

1969 Cadillac Cpe DeVille._.:. ___
.

order . 24 hour servi ce. Dwain · - - - - - - - - -

1•

Enroll now
a Beauty
Career. Tra n now , pay
later. Come in and talk to us

All you pay for is cleaning

742·5862.

Either E ast or West had a
chance to sacrifice at fiv e
spades aga inst South 's five·
club bid. The sacrifice would
Baker or Bake(s Helper
Card of Thanks
have been a cheap one since
WE WISH to extend our sincere
they would be down only one
thanks to all our friends and
See Tom Milstead
trick . West had the fir st
neighbors for their ex chance to sacrifice, but did
(N£WSPAPER ENTIRPRII£ AIIN.)
pressions of sympathy at the
not do so because he thought
lime of lhe death of our wife
MILSTEAD'S BAKERY
and mother, Arlene Swisher .
he had a good chance to beat
Special thMks to the staff of
'five clubs.
44,·4122
Hol zer Medical Cenler and
The bidding has been:
East didn't ha ve much de·
Jhe
Rawlings·Coats
Funeral
3rd
Ave.
Gallipolis, 0.
North
East
South
fense, but passed in acc ord. West
Home. Your thoughtfulness is
Pass
?
ance with the well·known
greatly appreciated .
WAITRES S, musl be 21. Apply
p r i n c i p 1e of bidding that
You, South, hold:
Husband, Harley Swisher
in person . Martin Restaurant ,
when you do preempt you .7543 ¥8632 +AKQ ""74
and son. Melvin.
Middleport .
4·25· lip
What do you do?
leave future action to your
4·22·6fc
partner.
A-Bid one diamond. You are
WISH to thank my many
too strong to pass and this re·
fr iends , neighbors. and PRACTICAL nurse, Syracuse
sponse is .the least UDdesirable
Nur sing Home, Syracuse,
relatives for the beautiful
Ohio.
Call in person . Phone
one at your disposal.
cards, flowers, prayers, and
992.3107
.
their visits during_my illness.
TOPAY'S QUESTION
4·25.3tc
Many thanks to Dr . Sfatller,
You do bid one diamond. and the nursing staff at
Partner raises you to two diaM
monds. What do you do now?

For Your Garments

4.20. 301c FOR ex pert elect ri cal work call
99 2·5179.
18 cents per word six con - - - - - - - -- 4·6·24lP
secutive !Jlsertions.
RUBBER STAMPS made lo
consecUtive insertions.

Business .Servic~s

FREE STORAGE

and take to auction on a

for more than one incorrect
~.

Business Services

For Sale

publisher will not be responsible
insertion .

.St.o p '.n' Savel

!'168 FIAT ~port codpe. Low
mileage. J;xGellent coodltion.
Call 9'12·6432 afler ,5: 30 p.m.
•·25·3tp

.5641.

.

f

'4c20·61c

-+-+-+--+---t

ELECTROLUX Vacuum
Cleaner complete with at· '
tachments, cordwluder and
paint spray. Used but In like
new condition. Pay ,SJu.s
cash or bud!l!l plan available.
1'1\one 992·5641.
4-20·61C

For Sale
rOOf
36" x 23" a

Aluminum
Sheets

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

20'
The

I lor 11.00

Dai~
1l1

SentitiJ
c.rt•.

Pe :4&amp;.,,01111

..

�. ..

.

'
~~·--~-~~~;---·--------~~-----------------~----------------·---c~~

,.

•

•

'·

.. .

Bargains, Bargains,
wlN·AT-BRi[)GE

Sharp South Stops Defense
NORTH

24

• 63
'A Q 6 3
t AKJ1
"'Q J 5

WEST (D)
.. K J 10 9 5
'" 10 852

EAST
• A Q8 7 4

:

"' 3

' J94
9852

+

"K

~G

SOUTH
• 2
¥7
+10 6 4 3
"'K 10 9 8 74 2

North-South vulnerable
West North East south
1•
Dble
4•
5""
Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead- + Q

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby ·

Wpst had a pretty good
plan of defense. He opened
the queen of diamonds with
the intention of ~rabbing the
fir st club lead and putting
IJ.ij. partner in wilh a spade.
ll" w as a good idea .and
would have worked except
that South had been around
a lon g tim e and had a pretty
good idea of just' what West
was up to.
If Sout h could only get to
his hand he could take a
hea rt fine sse. di scard his
si n ~l e ton spade on the ace of
hea rts and make an over·
tr ick , but South could not
exec ute th is nice plan .
See if you can find how
South foiled West's plan. It
wasn 't too complicated.
He simply cashed dum·
my' ace of hearts at trick
two and followed up with the
queen of hearts on which he
chucked his singleton spade.
West took his king , but now
there was no way for him to
get his partner on lead.

· WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEAI!LtNES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadllne9 a.m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until9 a.m. for
Day of Publica! ion ·
REGULATIONS .
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads

deemed

objectional.

The

WILL PICK up merchandise
percentage basis. Call J im
Adam s. auctioneer, Rutland .

Phone 742·4461.
AUCTION -

Pomeroy

Mlriimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three

WHEN? Each

Friday night, 7 p.m. Where?
Hayman ' s Auc1ion House,
Laurel Cliff on :new Rt . 7
pass .

, • RATES
For Wilnt Ad Service
5 cents per Word one insertion

9·23·lfc

Middleport By·

2·7·1fC.

REGISTERED Te nness ee
walk er
stud
servi ce.
Harri son v ille. Oh10. Phone

25 Per (:ent Discount on pa id
ads and ads paid within 10 day s.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

Ohio.

Advertisement.

OFFICE HOURS
8: 30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
8: 30 a.m. to 12 : 00 Noon
Salurday .

Holzer hbspital als~ Ewing's
ambulance
serv1ce
for

I Nina)

4·25·Jtp

Dishe s , WE WISH to exlend our sincere
thanks lo the Rev. Freeland
telephones, tin, brass beds,
Norris and Rev. Paul Sellers,
lamps , etc. Lee Rudi s ill ,
Mrs.
Florence Adams, Mrs .
Phone 992·3403.
Ma
llie
Circle, the Racine
4·23·301p
Emergency Squad and the
Ewing Funeral Home. We
also want to thank our many
friends and neighbors for the

WANTED
Used Furniture

AUr;FION
SERVICE

·:, Tools, Dishes and
Other Miscellaneous
Items. We Also Buy
Complete ..Estates.
'~"trrlbtTSl,i

I

fh e

ANTIQUES:

Chesa eake, Ohio

!'

to

"SELL THE AUCTION
,;\,~~Y'·~ '"

'
,.
Used Furniture

.JAMES (JI

SAYRE

1163 Secona Ave.
Ph~"e 446-2917

PH. 446-3444

PUBLIC SALE

beautiful flowers and all who
helped in any way during lhe
dealh and burial of our
beloved mother, grandmother

ABC CLEANERS
773·5543

Mason, W. Va .

Help Wanted

662·3035.

2·12·1fc
- -- - - - TREE . TRIMMING
and
removal. Fully insured. Free
es timales. Call after 5 ·p.rn .,
collect
Oic:::k
Hayman ,

WANTED ·
'

MALE HELP

Coolville 667·3041 or Tom
Hayman. Chesler 985·3509.
3·28·301p
PAPER·HANGING,

painting ,

....,.=-.,.,.,-.,---.,-.,--

LOST IN vicinity of Shotgun
Hollow and Leading Creek
Road, a 7·monlh old while·
faced heifer calf . If found ,
notify James Reed, Rl. 1,
Middleport. Phone 992·6102.
4·21 ·3fc

" Dit ching . Electric sewer
cleaning ." Reasonable rates.

·Phone
John
Russell,
Gallipoli s 446·4782.
4·7·1fc

es timales . Phone 992·3284.
Goeglein Ready .Mix Co. ,
Middleport , Oh io.
6·30·1fc

Free

estima t es.

Phon e

Gallipolis 446·0294.

opera tor 's li cense? Ca ll 992-

2966.

6·15.tfc

For Sale
FOUNTAIN ,

Carbo na tor,

Counter , 12 stools , salad
re f r i gera t or, auloma ti c
coffee maker . Fruth Pharmacy, Po int Pleasant. Phone

675.2303.

4· 23·3tc

Employment Wanted

Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Phill ips are moving out of slate and

YARDS lb mow In Middleport .
Phone· 992·5083.
4·25·3tp

For Sale or Trade

Notice

1960 GMC lift.cab, 2'12 ton, good
rubber, \1.6, 4 speed Iran ·

Auction eer s Note: Thi s 1s a cl ean lo1 of merchandise.

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: · .~......................................

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•

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)•

!'

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·-'
'

•
'

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'

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i

l'
•

PUBLIC AUCTION
SAT., MAY 1 - 11:00 A.M.
EQUIPMENT, TOOLS, FIXTURES AND SUPPLIES
OF TWIN RIVERS EQUIPMENT CO.,
2120 JEFFERSON BLVD.,
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
Reseating tool kit, grinders, 12·ton
floor jack, vises, anvi I. socket set;
battery ch,arger, floqr crane, 10"
bench saw, jib saw, heavy duty chain
hoist with trolley and track, line shaft,
grease gun, taps &amp; dies, reamers •.
bench press, Ford front scraper blade,
3 bottom Case plow, wheel weights for
Ford armature tester, counters and
show cases, 3 desks, cash register 1
billing register, typewriter, folding
chairs, warehouse truck, 27 steel parts
bins,7 wood parts bins, filing cabinets,
Homelite and Clinton parts, misc.
bolts, lot chain, lot "V" belts, plow
shares, lot "0" rings, hydraulic hose
and fittings, heavy tire chains, pr.
ladder jacks, electric cable, wheel
barrow, barrel pump, steel work.
bene~, 2 large ~lass doors, lot roller
chain
repair
links,
many
miscellaneous items.

Phone 992·5434.

noon . Horses, dogs, guns, etc .

Two miles from Cheshire off
Stale Route 554 on Stingy
Creek Road.
4·20.61p

10·18·tfc

992-

Howard Schult~

Pt.

'

Phone

John McNeil · Auctioneer .

742-4902
DON'T PAY lHE
HIGH COST OF

TV REPAIRS

Bring them to Chuck's &amp;
save up to ha If on tabor.

SCOTT SMITH CHUCK HUMPHREY
One year guarantee on
all parts. Also auto
radio specialists.

992.5080
751 Butternut
Pomeroy, 0.
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992·2284
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and

GET HIGH with Christ af the
Me igs • United Methodist
Youfh ·Rally, Meigs Jr . High ,
Middlepofl, Monday, April 26, STEREO-rad io combination,
Mod ern Walnul. Full stereo
7: 30p.m.
sound produced by 4
4·25·21c
speakers, furnlable plays all
four speeds, separate controls
LET " Youth of Today" turn you
for volume, tone. etc. Balance
on fo Jesus wifh Nalural High
$67 .32 . Use our budgellerms.
by Ralph Carmichael. Meigs
Call 992·3352.
Junior High School. Mid ·
dleport, Monday, April 26,
7: 30p.m. Sp'onsored by Meigs
County Un ited Melhod isf EARL Y Amer ican Stereo. AM·
FM rad io, 4 speed changer, 4
Youth ~ellowship .
speaker
sound
system .
4·25·2fc
Balance S81 .52 . Use our lime
payment plan. Call 992·3352 .
KOSCOT· Kosmetics, w·d s and
4·22·61c
a ccessori~'s-.

May an

-I! ALSO
DQUBLE~WtDES

POMEROY - 3 bedroom
paneled home wllh large
closets .

Modern

Cuslom meat cutting
Pleasant Ridge Road
Pomeroy, 0.

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

Dick Vaughan
992-3374
Dale Little
992·6346
O' DELL WHEEL allgnmenf
located at Crossroads, Rl. 124.
$'1

BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
Septic tanks Installed. George
\Bill) Pullins. Phone 992·2478 .
I '
4·25·1fc

Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service .
Wheels
balanced
elec -

fronically .
All
work
guararueed .
Reasonable
rates . Phone 992·3213.
4·22·301c

For MINOR aulomotlve repair .
Warren's Mower Shop. 248
Condor Sf .• Pomeroy . Phone
992·7357.
4·25·31c

BULLDOZER wqrk . Basement.
ponds, landscaping. We do all
kinds of dozer work. Haul fill
dirt and top soil . See or call
Bob Jeffers afler 7 p. m.
Phone 992·3525.
·
4·23·30tc

C. BRADFORD, Auclloneer
Complete Service
Phone 949·3821

Racine, Ohio

Chester .water. Several
ciulbulldlngs. $6,500.00

69 DODGE, Polar a, 4dr. Sedan.

$2695

Dr. Hdtp.

$2495

69 DODGE CORNET,~ Dr. Hdtp. AC

$2495

68 DODGE CORNET, 2 Dr. Hdtp.

$2095

~8

$1B95

DODGE, Dart, G. T. Conv.

68 CHEVROLET IMPALA,4 Dr. Sedan

$1795
' ... . ...,

67 OPEL, •Kadette Station Wagon·

s1295

66 DODGE, Charg.er2

Dr. Hdtp., VB.

.

65 BUICK, 2 Dr. Hardtop, VB.

$1195

65 PLYMOUTH, Fury 2 Dr. Hdtp., VB.

$1095

S·1·tfc

NORRIS DODGE
Phone 446-0605 or 446-0842 ·
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

lng machfne proeram. The business community, le"dln&amp; banks

and business leaders are vitally aware of U.!.l.'s p10eress,
stability and integrity . .
Many choice locations are still available IF YOU QUALIFY. ·
WRITE TODAY! Include phone numbei and references.
UsllrJII..Itita., llc.ell95 Emp1re Centrai•Oallas ,Teus 75247•

SPECIAL

66 Pontiac Catalina
, 4 Dr. hardtop, radio &amp; heater, p. steering, p.
brakes. w·S·W tires. Cameo ivory with mat·
ch ing interior. In excellent condition.

$1195
Gallipolis,

Eastern Ave.

o.

NEW ARRIVALS lHIS·. WEEK ,
1967
CHEVROLET~~~--!1295
Biscayne 2 door, six cyl.', std. trans., economy.

MONTH*
~

Will Buy A New
3 Bedroom Ranch Home
NOW! Enjoy the kind of home that thousands of happy
peoRie have enjoyed for 25 years-a .Capp Hom·e,
and save money! We deliver a.nd erect on your tot, en·
close the home, furnish all finishing materials, inside
and out ,.. at the price we quote! Just do the easy
finishing or sub·contract, pnd SAVE, SAVE, SAVE!

~ith walt-to·wall carpeting, afumi~um
srdlng, F.A. gas heat, built· in cobinets,
etc. etc.

3 ~ Stop

31-Portlco
32-Man't nlckn1mt
33-Medow
3•-Ruuitn newt
•a•ncy
35--Brlck·tlrryinl
devices
~
36-Emltt vtpor
3e,.:...set
40-SmtU bird

See T~y

Mornln~~&amp;.

Star 24'x48'
w•th 6~x24' ''L"

WILL DO tailoring and
upholstery. Phone 992·3561.
3·31·30ic

AI 203 Park St., Middleport, o~ r.olt At
Moody, 992-7034; tor oppolntment.

..

Based on family Income of ss,ooo with three
children, taxes ~nd Insurance not Included.

Bernard

Stewart

·
1

Routt t, Hide·•· ·
WIY Hills
lromon, Oijio W07
l'ftone: "4·5"·45"

JEMO ASSOCIATES
Park &amp; Sycamore Sts.
Middleport, Ohio ·

or 1·26..18
'

'
·-;-liP ---~

·

64-Piural endlna
65- Note of scare
66-Unlt of
erecirrcal
musurement
67-Atom .
59-Doctrine
71-Guldo's hleh
note

73-L•ment
7..._FIIh sauce
76-Lone·IICitd
blrdt
79-W•sh llahtly
81-Racky hill
82-Pollceman
(slana)
U - Wtlrd
85-EstMm .
87-Piptr m•••ure

90-Ntrcotl~
9'2-Fem•le h.tft

126-Title of rnpect
127-KeHiedrum

129-Sivtp
131-Pitch
132-Ditelte of
cattle
l33-Men's nlcknamt
134-lnllnl
· 136-Ct:rtmony
137-Droop
138-Hevlnlllll
color ·
139-Bebylonlln
d•lty
14o-Witt person
Ul-Openwork
f1bric
142--fether

143-Siothtul
1.-4-SIIIIntlt
1.6-Wear IWtY
1.-8-Joumeyed

16-Worm
17-Dtlirium
tremens (abbr.)
21-Subttancn
22-oppoeed to ,

23-M•nufacturad
2s-..:.Brvwn ldwl
27-ShortHt

dltt.nce

bttw"n points
28-Pratentlous
hom11
30-Embr•ce

1969 DODGE. _________s2495
Polara 4door sedan, V·8, T· FIIIe, p. sl., air cond.

1968 Olds $1895

1969 VO'LKSWAGEN ____s1995
1966 DODGE _________ $1395

Catalina 4 dr. sedan, beautiful all while finish, spolless. One of
the fl'l&gt;est 66's In town.
'
\

a,_:......a,ilf IOd ofMtmpltlt

Col'--

II
oftlci•lt
81-Chll'lll

. . .··

~95

'.

440 2 door h. -lop, v.8, T· Fllte, p. st.

ld'~u.•

engine . &amp; autOmatic

111·an:s.• radio. Popular model
&amp; priced to go. ·
·

PONTIAC-....__
'GMC TRUCKS
116 Years of Continuous Business
PHONE 992-2143
POMEROY, OHIO

.

HOBSTEIIER
.REAL ESTATE

Real Estate For Sale
SPACIOUS 3 bedroom brick
house,

H.T. Cpe., lite blue
good tires, clean vinyl
terlor, aulo. Iran~ .• DO\•er·l
steering and brakes,
heater.

SPECIAL .
1965 Jeep Wagoneer 4- door Wagon:

large living,

dining, and family rooms .
Basemen!, 2'car garage. All
electric central air. Very
comfortable. Upper lwentles.

HAND N DAY·OLO or started
Leghorn pultets, bofh floor or
cage grown
available.
Poultry
housing
and
automation, 399 W. Main Sf.,
Pomeroy . Phone 992·2164.
4·25·11C
=....,..,.,:-=- ..,.--'-;-TWO LARGE gas healers, one
gas cookslove. melal ward·
robe. Other articles. Eldon
Walburn, phone 992·2805.
4-25·2fc
--------PLANTS NOW ready: Single

1968 Ford $1895
•;, Ton 8' Slyleslde Pickup, V·
8 engine, std. trans .. custom
cab, R·slep bumper, chrome
Int . bumper, radio, while &amp;
red finish . Good !Ires. ·

Six cyl., p. sleerlng, 4 wheel drive, locking hubs, new
paint.

•1095 .

,.

ranch

T. Bird

2 rjoor h. top, Y·8, automallc, p. st., air cond., vinyl roof.

BUICK

Real Estat' For Sale·

,

Come! 4 door sedan, six cyl., aulomalic, ready .

See Bob, Wallace, Emerson, Hilton or Dick for
your transportation needs now . • .

R. H. Rawlings·sons

992·2151

'

2 Ton Cab.Chassls, 84"·cob
to axle. Good 825&gt;&lt;20 tires, 2·
speed rear axle,"' clean c~b,
292 cu. ln. 6 cyl. engine.

992-2152

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

1964 Olivrolet
'749

Impala .Cpe., \1.8 engine, 3
speed std .' Irons ., white
finish, clean Interior, all
:t11rres, radio. Week End
11

U:'

1965. Buick

Previously Owned Cars...

70 Cadillac Sedan De Ville

'745

$6000

Special Custom 4 Door, V·8
1t•nglne, automatic lrans.,
good tires, local'

Bayberry finish with malchlnQ vinyl lop and lnlerlor, full
power equlpmenl, 1111 &amp; lelescope wheel , Climate Control
air condllloning, sold and serviced by us.

69

Cadillac Sedan DeVille

1963 Chewolet
'695

$5000

Gold finish, black vinyl top, malchlng Jnlerlor, fuil power
equipment, Climate Control air conditioning, low mhrr.11ge.
SHARP!'
·

2 Ton cab &amp; c·hassls, 102"
to axle, good 825x20 •or•~·•
clean cab, 292 cu. ln . 6

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

engine.

open Eves ..Til6- Til5 P.M. Sat.

Yes ..• We have
new 1971
Chevrolet cars
and trucksYou7llove
our deals!

GMAC Flnonclng AYIIIIblt
POMIROY
"You'll ~Ike Our Quality Way of Doing Bus in-"

fft.JMZ

ITEM: Jack· Kane.
You somehow get the
eling he has thought
bout . what
he's
haring with you. Your
eling is right.

and double petunias, pansies,
coleus, Mexican tomatoes and
other varieties , peppers,

cabbage, '12 or 1 dozen packs.
Don Hubbard, Syracuse,

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Ohio. Phone 992-5776.

4·22-121c
- - - -- - - - -

WMP0/1390
t.IOI.l!I .. OS

Your Chevy Dealer
"Where Your
Dollar Buys f«lre"
Ph. 992·2126
Open Eves. Ti II 8

For Sale
1962 CHEVY,! $100. 1962. Ford,
$125. Also, beautiful German
Shepherd puppies . Ready
May 2, 520 each. Phone
Coolville 667.3512.
4·2s.61p

For Sale
W. C. ALLIS·CHALMERS
traclor with fwo 14· lnch
bottom drag lype plows an
rubber, bolh for $300. Olen
Young, Success Rd., Reeds·
ville, Ohio. Call alter 4: ~·
4·21·61p

-t-+--116 FT. WEAVER skiff wllh good
trailer . J'h· hp. outboard
motor,, pair of oars, anchor,

yorn•

!47-lym..l for
rutllontum

tor

--~---

lwo life jackels, $200. Phone CARPETS• fright? Makelhtm
IV\ason 773-5147.
'
a · btaullful sight wllh Blue
4·14-llc
Lustra.
Renl
electric
shampooer, $1, Baker Fur·
nllure, Middleport.
BEAUTIFUL selection of
4-2H1c
flowers, baskets, wreaths,
and sprays for Memorial Day.
Cliff Shoe Repair. MiddlepOr-t. COAL, llmeslone. Excelsior
~!t Works, E. Main St.,
~· 21 .tfc
Pom~roy . Phone 992·3191.
4-9·tfc
30 VOLUME set of . &gt;-~merlcana •
Encyclopedia .
12
foot

- - - - --

• will

-p

clean Interior, dark
finish, like new tires, 6

Kadell4 door wagon, 4 cyt., 4 speed. ready to go.

....,-+--f-+--+-1

aluminum boat and mofor.

Also. roto.flller. Phone 992.
7693.
4·20·5tc
'

NEW 1971 Zlg.Zag sewing
machine In original factory
carton . Zig -Zag lo make
bullonholes, sew on bullons,
monograms, and make fancy
designs with just the lwlsl of a
single dlo\. Lett In lay · aw~y
anu never been used. Will sell
for only $47 cash, or credll
terms available, Ph~ne 992·

no

77-cNYot

.

~

iown.

99-Hivlnc mtde

t••"

71--llohoprle

liant 4 Dr .• local 1 owner

Falcon Futura 4 door, si x cyl. , automaloc, sharpest 6.1 In

91-T•k• • voN

39--Fedtl'lll, 111ncy 107-Palnful
(lnlt.) .
109-Shlna
41-;'-'Ftihlon
J 11-Ctrne btch
42-B•ptltfTI•I ,
112-Reputt
bltln
J 13-Btktd city •

14-loundtrlel
15 Co·.~tl'ld whh

1968

.

91-Printar't
me11u,.
94-l.MIIdont
M-Pr.postttOn

lOIJ-fnlcttYif;)'
102--Ftat
3.5-Workm•n
104-Eit
36-N~rrow openlnl 105---Pellllt
37-0...y
~~-

75--Unpottohod

1 owner car .

1965 CORONEl--------~95 ·
62 BUICK
1964 FORD.-~-----~--~-$!95
S
64 fORD 7Z
lL JON
'995 1969 OPEL __________$1595
tra~s.
.
1966 MERCURY--·------· ~95
Many more
1968 JAVELIN SSl----~1895
BLAEnNARS
4Dr. stallon.;agon.Oneoflhe,besl65'sinarea.

33-tlimblna pt1nt

U:-Sacted lm ..•

turq. fini sh, good tires. Local

, Charger 2 door h·lpp, choice of 3, all with V·8, P·. sl.. T·
Fllte, console (!o buckets.

·at-SefW!nt
90-Prtposlttoi-1

93- lroquojln
footh
lnditnt
t•9-Put forth with
44-Somltthtna ..t In 116--EJiptrlmtntal
95-J&lt;illed
effort
47--.l.lb
room (colloq.)
97-Apothtclry't
150-Rtlpted
48-Re..ettbllshu 118-Polton
wel-'rt
151-Artblln prlnCH 49-Pertalnlnl to
119-0.parttd
41-Masc:ulint
98-Aiver In ltely
punishmen~
122-Mexlctn dish
42-Esceped
99-Note of scale
DOWN
50-NHd~ box
124--Giat•
43-Siender flnl•l , 101-Be of use
54-Leek of color
JZI-TI'It trunk
45-Apportloned
103-Metal
1-H•vlnc lent
55-Rockftth
126-Cubtt
46-,rtnter'•·
104-I'IKt of
wtetatlon
5~rchn
J~nd of beer
meaeurt
.
dlnnerwtre
2--PriiHt
59-F'rult
ltktr'a product
47-Body of wtter
lO~Part of house
3-0isturbance
60-Nollvo
'111-..rlod
. ·
48-Splct
101-Enlltnd (lbbr.)
4-Man'a nlckn•rfl•
fupttan
132 MoN crippled ·
49-Lylnl fee•
11G-Went In
5-trmbot tor ttn
61-PNpoaltion
1H-Otp,....lon
downward
112-Ktfn
I Qoet by water
63-WithtNd
137-Brotd
51-Dye pl•nt
J 113-fJeume
7-at.nt
6&amp;--Brothar of .Odin f.....,.rsltn 1ei,Y
52-flupell (tbbr.) ll.t-Exc}•metlt.n
1--WdOdtn vttatl 1 67-Pronoun
140--NutniMT
53---Unusutl
115-Trac:lllor
t-Earth IQddt•• ' 68--Dttlrtnlnlnt
142.!...Tht aun
54-Stlut up
money
l().;..¥reparad for
70--Fript
ll~olo
55-Withstlndt
117--cut
.~
71-lltlnilttllen
144
11 point
57-Scottish for
· Ill-Loud rloltt
11-Vislont~rlet
72-Ftltehood
14~ymbol
far
.
•·one"
119-Men'e nickname
7l-Diduce ·
· i oerlum
12-lun pd
up fire
120--Conlvnctlon

121--litndlt
121-hri" I

Cutlass 4 Door Sedan, Y·8
engine, aUtomatic trans ., p.
sleerlng &amp; brakes, vinyl
Interior, radio , white over

1966 DODGE---------s1495

31-Stelk

.

Nova 2 dr., while finish, blue
cyf. eng.,

interior ~ , 6 '

ANTIQUES, Phone 992·5327.
1-+--1
, 4·6·30tc

SUNDAY, APRIL 25, 1971
ACROSS
1- Fiylne
c:r.. turll
6-Piatform
11- Tralned
18-Follower of Arlus
19-Ventlllted
20- Livtlleat
21-D1rk red
23-Dtlry product
24-Anltr
-26--TI•rm del
Fuea•n lndl1n1
27-Tim• period
(abbr.)
29-Repr•llnt•tlv•

1968 ·Qay Jl$15~
automatic trins.1 new . tires,
radio &amp; lleater\

PUZZLE
PER

FOR LESS

Coronet4404door, v.8, T·Fllte, p. sl..42,000act. miles.

&amp;&amp;.PONTIAC

ABOUT 10,000 SQ. FT. OF . TWO BEDROOM house, ex·
BUILDING SPACE, below
celtent con'dltion, Immediate
Pomeroy . Mason bridge,
possession . Phone 992·2619.
JUST OFF OF MAIN
4·25·61c
STREET, EXCELLENT
LOCATION, has house on II. FIVE ROOM house, two
$3,500.
bedrooms, bafh, basement,
wall to wall carpel In living
RUTLAND-2 ACRES, cemenl
room , bedrooms, and bath.
block house, 3 bedrooms,
Gas forced air furnace.
bath·, nice kitchen, front
Middleporl, phone 992·3.120.
pprch, living room 27xl3
4.2S·Ifc
ALMOST NEW. $8.900.
PROPERTIES ARE SELLING 24 ACRE FARM, Long Bolfom,
wi lh or · wllhoul farm
list with us loday.
machinery.
House with 3
HENRY CLELAND
bedrooms,
dining
room, living
REALTOR
room
,
11!2
baths,
enclosed
Office 992·2259
back
porch.
wall
to wall
Residence 992·2568
carpellng
.
Aluminum
siding,
4·2Hic
awning, storm windows and
storm doors . City water .
:cONVENIENT but secluded
Selllngduetoillhealth. Phone
building lots on T79 at Rock
614·985·3938.
Springs. Within walking
distance of Meigs High
School, a 5 minute drive from
Pomeroy. Cal t or see BU I
Witte weekends. or after 5
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992·
6887.

totally new desijl'l concept, pricin.R and manufacturln&amp; of

vending macblnes alone with U.l.l.'s experience In the
establishment of new ooutes can spell success for you.
U.l.l.'s total piogiam Is founded in honorable deanne . , ,
putting you in business with a very low Investment (as
little as $700) •.. and helplne keep you In a bOslnus
where you can make money with a successful and completely
modern program. None othei of its kind exists!
Time, Life, U.S. News and , World Report, Vend Maaazlne,
National Television, The Congressional Rec01d and news·
paper messaees heiald the merits of U.l.l.'s dynamic vend·

.

Cleland Realty

$1395

66 CHEVROLET, Impala 2 Dr. Hdtp., VS.$1095 ·

Upper Rt. 7

owner. CN.Ined by local merchant. Extra .nice.

POMEROY - 6 room frame, 2
nice lois lor mobile homes. ANNOUNCING THE AP·
POINTMENT OF GEORGE
As~\ng $4,000.00
New Haven . Phone New
• S. HOBSTETTER JR., REAL
Haven 882·2712.
ESTATE BROKER AND
NEW LISTING- RACIJ'IE- 7
4·23·2tC
HILTON
WOLFE
SR.,
rooms, 3 bedrooms, large
living ·and dining rooms.
SALESMAN, AS THE EX·
CLUS!VE REAL ESTATE
Bafh, basement, new gas
forced air furnace, 3 porches,
AGENCY TO SELL FOR:
For Sale
, garage and carport. Nice lot.
THE GREEN HILL
HOMES, INC.
Asking $12,500.00
1966 WEDGEWOOD 2·bedroom
IF YOU WANT TO
SEE one of us loday for com·
mobile home . Glenn R.
SELL'OR BUY
plete information on the type
Liascott, Amesville, Ohio .
of home, location, and about
,i'. CALL 192·3325 ,
Phone 448·2139.
ihe long time financing
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
4.2s.11c
ASSOCIATE
available - Buy a new home
4.23·61c
like paying rent'ln a beaullful ·w;, FOOT Shasia camper~
country setting with at!
sleeps 6. self.contalned.
ui)JIIIes ~vajt~~le, an~ ,il(St off
Siove , ,JJVI',n, .. ntlc\g,~r~.\Q[•
State Route 7, near Pomeroy,
pressurized water system . At!
Ohio.
lhe exfras. Prices lor quick
GeorgeS. Hobstefler Jr.
sale. Phone 9.19·3913.
BROKER, PHONE 985·4186
4·2Hic
5'14 ACRE FARM ..:. ALMOST
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohio ·
IN POMEROY- nice·l.story ·
HILTON WOLFE SR.,
FC170 WILL YS 'I• ton truck, 4
frame home, 3 bedrooms.
SALESMAN, PHONE 949·3211
wheel drive, lockout hubs, 9
bath, 2 ·porches, floor
Racine, Ohio
fool
utility bOdy. good 700x16
covering, barn. ALL IN
4·23·6tc
tires.
15 foot Centry Inboard
GOOD CO~DITION $6,500. ::-=cc-:o----:-:--:--::
boat (needs repair) wllh 6
.HOU!i'E, 1640 Lincoln Hts.,
cylinder gray marine engine
POMEROY- 2 EXCELLENT
Pomeroy. Phone 992·2293.
283 Chevy V8
and
BUILDING LOTS- tots close
10·25·1fc enginetrailer.
·
with
or
without marine
by sold for $~,000.00. ALSO
15foot
flat trailer,
conversion
.
HAS AN OLDER HOUSE, 5 RoiJMS, bath furnished or tandem axle, eleclrlc
brakes.
could be remodeled, needs
unfurnished. Phone 992·3792 Phone 304·882·2138, night 992·
bath. FINE LOCATION.
or 304·882·2138.
4·25·31p 3792.
$7,500.
4·25·31p

Crllt Bradford

Join a winner! U.l.l. has an outstanding and proven business
opportunity for you!
Thousands of vending machines now In operation and 6,000
dedicated disttibutors testify that U.l.l. must be Ilatrt. The

All minerals. 7

room house, bath, furnace.

,

69 OLDSMOBILE, Delta 4

742-4902

kl1chen ,

stove, double sink, Forced air
furnace. Full basement. Only
$12,000.00

•

WOOD MOTOR SALES

Co. be at council meeting
Monday night, April 26, 7 p.

SMALLEY'S
Glfl . Shop ,
Chesler, otoio. · Flowers for
Mother's . Day and Memorial
Day. $.88 and up. Phone
Chester 985·3531.
4·23·12fc

===

Backhoe And
Endloader Work

lHE SHOP.

Electra 4 dr. hardtop, faclory air conditioned. One careful local

.

·.

Deluxe 2 dooro automallc slick shill, sharp.

FOR SALE or i.RENT · - 4
W
W h
h
bedrooms, balh, nice, !&lt;lichen LeSabre· lallon agon. orf muc more.
with cook units. ·., Full
·: •
'
basement. Forced •lr' fur·
nace . . Carport: Asking ., ilnty· '
$8, 300·00
• '
Pickup. 'v.8, sp.
-Like new finish.
'
POMEROY- Nice 3 bedrooms,
bath, large 'living '~nd dining.
Modern kllchen with stove
· and refrigerator. · Large
porch. Gas forced air furnace ,,
2 tots. · Double garage.
$21,000,00
"

JOHNSON MASONRY

June

m . Signed by the Middleport
Cab Co.
4·23·31p

Broker
llOMtchltnlcSt.
ptmetoy '.Ohio. , . .-·

20 ACRES -

special. Kleanslng Kream ,
S2.25. Dislrlbutors, Brown's. MOBILE HOME. 8x32, real
ni ce, with canopy . Brown's
Phone 992·lll3.
Trail e r Park , Minersville,
4·23·tfC
Phone 992 ·3324.
SAVE UP to one half . Bring
your sick TV to Chuck's TV
Shop, 151 Butfernul Ave ., SOUTHERN plants: lomato,
cabbage, . peppers, sweel
Pomeroy .
potatoes and o~lon, IV\ay 1.
4·23·1fc
Older now, Charles R. Harris,
Portland, Ohio. Phone 843·
ANYONE ha vln~ any co'm·
2693.
plaints about Moddleport Cab

H'OME sewing. Phone 992·5J27. 1968 BUICK , 26,000 aclual
3·30·301c
m lies, $1,900. Cushman
Tra ils fer motorbike, $250.
OVEN
FRESH
bakery
•
Phone Chester 985'-3924.
products. Jimmy's Pas fry
•''
Shop: N. 2nd Ave., Mid ·
'lj lepor t. ·Phone 992·3555.
3·28.JOfc 2 Hou's E fralters. 8x22.
Pleasant, W. Va.
675-1205
742·4783.
•
•
REDUCE safe ~nd fasr wlfh
•
I
Go• , tablets and e.Yap
water pills. Nelson Drugs.
..:oJ......o.~.....~----'------------------•1----·-.1.1u.ntn

'

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

SR. ' ,

IN STOCK!
AU. READY TO GO!

MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

And Patios

1220 Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
6048.
4·21·4tc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . - - - - - - --,.,.3-=·
29·11c
- - - - - - -...,...50X10 RI CHARDSON mobile HARR !SON'S TV AND AN·
home, 2 bedroom s, with air
TENNA SERVICE . Phone
For Sale
condilioning. Call 992·5867 .
992·2522.
4·22·61c
ALUMINUM car fop boats, 10·
12·13 foot . Lorenzo D. Davis,
Kingsbury Road.
3·24·301c
smi ssi on. $550. Phone

.jrCHAMPION

it: VAN DYKE

67. BUICK

',JlEAFORD 65 OLDS as- ·-·

.30 - 1971:· ·.

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.

From lhe Largesl Truck or
Bulldozer Rad\alor lo the
Smallest Heater ·core.

CHUCK'S
10 &amp;TV REPAI
12' • 14' - 24' • WIDE

.. Virgil B.

SEE TOM CROW, GUY SH1JLER OR BOB CROW

3· J2. tfc

. 4·2·1fc

apartments. Close to school .

Crow

BLAETTNARS

FURNISHED and unfurnished

OLD FASHIOt-jED trade day .
Every Sunday starling at 12

.j&lt;W!NSOR
«BUDDY

-------

Comm ercial , r esidential and
induslria l wiring . Phone 2472113

,.

~

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

project . Fast and easy . Free

O' BRIEN ELECTRIC Service .

Real Estat~ For Sale

BUICK$ &amp; OPELS

992·2580
Tom

Time You Ever Spent.

Complete
flemodeling

From Gallipolis lake Route 35 toward Jackson to first
road on left past Park La no Mobile Homes.

~

40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable

JOHNSON MASONRY

UNF'U'RNISHED 3 · r oom
apartmenl. Phone 992·2288.
1·J1 .1fc
"Hc::O::-Uc::S-::E:-,-:16c::J-:c7-:L:in-c-,
ol;-n--;-;Hts ..
Pomeroy, 4 rooms, bath, allic
for storage, full basement,
nice
yard ,
driveway .
Avai lable May I. Phone 992·
2780 or 992·3432 .
4.2J.tlc

.

'

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!

CONCRETE
deliver ed right to your

STARTING AT 1 P.M.

R. E. KNOTTS &amp; SON DA\1 E, Auctioneers
Mrs. R. E. Knolls, Clerk

.EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

3·J2.ttc
beds. etc . Wri te M. D. Miller,
::::F:--:1N
-;-G
:, -;S""p_o_u "f'i-n g- and
Rl. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call ~R=-o=-o
992.6271.
Painting. Al so, metal storage Ph. 992·2143
Pomeroy
9·1·1fc
bu ilding 10xl0, concrete fl oor, ~=========~
erected,
for $300. Richard ,..
Wil t, Phone 992·2889. · ·
For Rent
4·12·30tc
l7'h FOOT MOTOR home. plus
travel trailers, 13 and 16 foot
NEIGLER Construction. For
building or r emodeling your
Also. sales and supplies .
home , Cal l Guy Neigler ,
Phone Chester 985·3832. Gaul
Trail er Sales, Inc., Rt. 3,
Rac ine, Ohi o.
Pomer oy, Oh io.
7·31·1fC
4·18·12tc
RALPH ' S
CARPET
Kitchens, Baths
Upholslery Clean ing Ser v ice.
TRAI LER LOTS. Bob's Mobile
Room Additions
Ohio. 992.2951.

.

1964 ·Buick Special _________ .:__'995

Hill Homes, Inc. r-

992·1129
Evenings Call : 992·2534 992·3433
Date
Larry
Dutton
Spencer

READY .MIX

OLD furn i ture, dishes, brass

Cou rt , Rt. 124, Syracu se,

1967 Buick Wildcat ----------$1995
AI.

$3195

steering,

power · brakes, air, 18,000
miles. Excellent coodillon.
Phone 992·2288:
' .
11·10·tfc

Auto., P.S., v.a, 43,000 mileS'. You
'
this car to your best fr.iend's mother·. Sh&lt;aro.

.. .

~reen

hardtop, power

SE·PTIC TANKS CLEANED.

'

will sell th eir furnitur e and household Items Including
carpet antique gla ss and chin a.

Com'e See Us At 97'12 N. Second Sl., Middleport.

All Weather Roofing &amp;
Cons1ructlon Co.

Insured- E Kperienced
Work Guaranteed

THURSDAY, APRIL 29

SUN VALLEY DRIVE

We Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home, V.A., F. H. A.•
And Conventional Loans.

OLD WORK

Cust. Sed., air cond., one owner, sharp.

1/fliJ ..

EARLY BIRD SALE

68 CHRYSLER

4 Dr. hdtp., air c'ond., vinyl top: We s'old It new.

Lei Us Show You How You Can Become A Homeowner -

Roofing &amp; Carpenter
Worll
Spouling, Roof
Painting

Musser . Phone 992·3630.
3·28·301p

2 BEDROOM mobile home.
Insurance
Racine area . Phone 992·6329.
The John Beaver Familv
4·25.3tc AUTOMOBIL E insu rance been
4·25.Jtp
cancelled?
Lost
y our

TWO. YEI\~ old female beagle,
In vicinity of Meigs Beagle
Club. Phone 992-3652.
4·23·31c

You will have something of value to show for the US you'
spend when you buy your own home - plus, you gain an
Income Ta x benefit, you build an equity and you are not
OOund by the terms of a rental agreement.

TO FIT YOUR BUDGET

69 BONNEVIUl

1968 Buick l.eSabre--------· ·$21!5

/.

All Our Cars Are Priced

.1970 DA 'FSUN pickup, only 5,000
mileS. See al 929 Hysell St.,
. Middleport, after 6 p.m .
4·18·71p 4 Dr. liardtop. Poi.tlac's fines! and this one Is tops. Faclory air
.
condition, power sleer., power brakes, aulomatic trans., fully
1964CHEVY plckup; ullllty bed, equipped.
low mileage. Priced to sell.
Roger Bahr, Chester, Ohio.
Phone 985-3958. •
, 4·22·0rC
New POrt 2 dr. hardtOp, faclory ai• conditioned. fully equipped.
1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2·dr. We can gladly refer you to !his owner.

Auto., P.S., P. B., 9,700 miles. Like new; ,

* ASTACK OF WORTHlESS RECEIPTS! ! *

606 E. Maln, Pomeroy, 0 .

plaster ing , dry wall. Arthur

o:-:.. ---- J3295

YOU CAN'T MISS

Saaln' Is ·lallevln'

2:door, hard
Also, 1964
automafic,
,,
.
4·25·31c

1970 MAVERICK, 14,000 miles,
$1,495. Phone 949·3025.
4·2Htc

1970 Cantero'-----------'· ,'2895

THE U$ YOU PAY IN RENT?

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

DEXTER , 0 . 45726
PHONE 742·3945

cond., P. W., P.S., Electra
.
.

.
1969 ·Pontiac·Gran Prix

WHAT DO YOU HAVE FOR

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

&amp;

ai~

Prix, air cond., vinyl top, P.W. Extra nice.

$5.55

NEW

18,000 miles,
trade·in.
-

THINK ABOUT ITI

Wheel Alignment

Bulk Cleaning.

and
great -grandmother ,
Fannie Lee Beaver.

Lost

EXPERT

Please! No Free Storing on

Sanita t ion, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .

2·12·90tc

Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per

Wanted To Buy

PRESTON BEAUTY
COLLEGE

gellhem back .
FOR FREE PICKUP &amp;
DELIVERY SERVICE
CALL 77J.SS43.

or Wilma Casto, Portland. SEPTI C lanks cleaned. Miller

Sl.SO for SO word minimum .

transporting me
hospital.
Mrs. Durward
Cumings.
anytime.

and pressing. Pay when you

1965 OLDS Cullass,
tpp, automatic.
Ponllac, 4·&lt;1oor.
PhON! 742·5361.

1969 Cadillac Cpe DeVille._.:. ___
.

order . 24 hour servi ce. Dwain · - - - - - - - - -

1•

Enroll now
a Beauty
Career. Tra n now , pay
later. Come in and talk to us

All you pay for is cleaning

742·5862.

Either E ast or West had a
chance to sacrifice at fiv e
spades aga inst South 's five·
club bid. The sacrifice would
Baker or Bake(s Helper
Card of Thanks
have been a cheap one since
WE WISH to extend our sincere
they would be down only one
thanks to all our friends and
See Tom Milstead
trick . West had the fir st
neighbors for their ex chance to sacrifice, but did
(N£WSPAPER ENTIRPRII£ AIIN.)
pressions of sympathy at the
not do so because he thought
lime of lhe death of our wife
MILSTEAD'S BAKERY
and mother, Arlene Swisher .
he had a good chance to beat
Special thMks to the staff of
'five clubs.
44,·4122
Hol zer Medical Cenler and
The bidding has been:
East didn't ha ve much de·
Jhe
Rawlings·Coats
Funeral
3rd
Ave.
Gallipolis, 0.
North
East
South
fense, but passed in acc ord. West
Home. Your thoughtfulness is
Pass
?
ance with the well·known
greatly appreciated .
WAITRES S, musl be 21. Apply
p r i n c i p 1e of bidding that
You, South, hold:
Husband, Harley Swisher
in person . Martin Restaurant ,
when you do preempt you .7543 ¥8632 +AKQ ""74
and son. Melvin.
Middleport .
4·25· lip
What do you do?
leave future action to your
4·22·6fc
partner.
A-Bid one diamond. You are
WISH to thank my many
too strong to pass and this re·
fr iends , neighbors. and PRACTICAL nurse, Syracuse
sponse is .the least UDdesirable
Nur sing Home, Syracuse,
relatives for the beautiful
Ohio.
Call in person . Phone
one at your disposal.
cards, flowers, prayers, and
992.3107
.
their visits during_my illness.
TOPAY'S QUESTION
4·25.3tc
Many thanks to Dr . Sfatller,
You do bid one diamond. and the nursing staff at
Partner raises you to two diaM
monds. What do you do now?

For Your Garments

4.20. 301c FOR ex pert elect ri cal work call
99 2·5179.
18 cents per word six con - - - - - - - -- 4·6·24lP
secutive !Jlsertions.
RUBBER STAMPS made lo
consecUtive insertions.

Business .Servic~s

FREE STORAGE

and take to auction on a

for more than one incorrect
~.

Business Services

For Sale

publisher will not be responsible
insertion .

.St.o p '.n' Savel

!'168 FIAT ~port codpe. Low
mileage. J;xGellent coodltion.
Call 9'12·6432 afler ,5: 30 p.m.
•·25·3tp

.5641.

.

f

'4c20·61c

-+-+-+--+---t

ELECTROLUX Vacuum
Cleaner complete with at· '
tachments, cordwluder and
paint spray. Used but In like
new condition. Pay ,SJu.s
cash or bud!l!l plan available.
1'1\one 992·5641.
4-20·61C

For Sale
rOOf
36" x 23" a

Aluminum
Sheets

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

20'
The

I lor 11.00

Dai~
1l1

SentitiJ
c.rt•.

Pe :4&amp;.,,01111

..

�-:

.

~

'

..

,

..•.

.'

•.

.

.

DAYLIGHT 8a'ling Tilile began at 2a.m. today . H you didn't
turn your cloc)t or watch ahead one hour, you're in a h~ap of
trouble, timewise!.

'+++++

· WILIJAM D.. Ruckelshaus, head of ,the Enviroilmental
Protection Agency; said recently there is a "growing awareness,
a growing concern on the part of government" about the nation's
pollution problems.

.

' .- -

'"''Hl!: IJ!IIY

' +++++

way we are going to make progress, make a
comrillttment. ls ' through_ public concern and support,"
Ruckelshaus added. Locally, as a result of Project Pride, Gallia
Countianll have been made more aware of their environmental
(toblems during the past three weeks.

++ + ++

'1'1•:.\'(;/ Ji

HE: A~SD
FOR. AT THE

..

t . IITW

Now arrange the circled letters
I
form the
by the above cartoon.
I I f... A su"eoted
~'""=..'=~
==-=.MII~I~ITIJ~::;::::. FGR HIS( 1 I l I )

V "'

to

aurprilt IUIIWer, aa

.

.

IF your husband or son or father _or brother or friend were
' beillg )lei~ captive ·by the North Vietnamese, would you write your
elected officials and Hanoi for him? Natura)ly, those questions
need no answers. Of cour8e you would. But would you do it for
' ·-someone else's husband, or son, father or brother? That question ·
does need an answer - your answer in the fomi of .prayerful
concern a!ld positive action.
•

OFFICIAI..S of Gallia County's Project Freedom are in ,the
process of obtaining signatures on petitions for the purpose of
urging North Vietnam to abide by the provisions of the 1954
Geneva Convention. You can help by signing those petitions. Of
the 1,550 U. S. Citizens who are prisoners of war, or missing in
action, 103 are from Ohio.

and weekly Gallia Tililes . . . Don Pollock steps ·down as local
airport manager ... Harry.M.' Miller-resigns position on Public ·
Utilities Commisaion .. . Gilbert C. Beard named Commercial
and sa'lings Bank ,cashier ... Two,GSI patients .d!:own, one in
Chickamauga Creek, other in reservoir . .' .Blue Devils chalk 'up
first baseball victory by bombing previously unbeaten Wahama,
12--1.

33 at Syracuse On Horwr List
SYRACUSE - 'Thirty-three
students of the Syracuse
Elementary School have been
named to the "honor roil at the
close of the fifth six weeks
grading period.
Making a grade of "B" or
above in ail their subjects to be
named to the roll were :
Grade 1: Brian Ash, Vicki
Arnold, C. T. Chapman, Julie
-Flagg, SUSI!n Jell, Eric Lipscomb, Diana Nease, Ann
Williams, B. K. Arms.
:• • • • • • • - • •'

Grade 2: Paula Barnett, ·
Donna Hubbard, Scott Nease,
Cynthia Smith, Mary Beth ·
Slavin, John Williams.
Grade 3: Rosemary Hubbard,
Meg Amberger, Carrie Guinther, Tra cey Jeffers , Vicki
Sheets, Sonia Ash and Tonia
Ash.
Grade 4! None.
Grade 5: Lorie Guinther,
Jaye Ord; Jean Ann Ritchhart,
Kelly Winebrenner.
Grade 6: Chris Forbes,
Timmy Smith, David Bass,
.Bruce Cottrill, Bobbi Chapman,
Kimberly Grueser, and Patricia
Autherson.

.. .

Reg . 249.00 Chairs
Reg . 229.00 Chairs
Reg . 219.00 Chairs Reg. 198.00 Chairs
Reg. 189.00 Chairs
Reg . 179.00 Chairs
Reg . 169.00 Chairs
Reg. 159.00 Chairs
Reg. 149.00 Chairs
Reg. 139.00 Chairs
. Reg . 129.00 Chairs
Reg. ,119.00 Chairs
.Reg . 98.00 Chairs
Reg. 84.00 Chairs
Reg. 74.00 Chairs
Reg. _69.00 Chairs
Reg. 59.00 Chairs

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

. i&lt; •

199.00
184.00
176.00
159.00
151.00
144.00
136.00
128.60
119.00
114.00
109.00
99.00
78.00
69.00
62.00
56.00
48 .00

·, Spring Furniture Sale

Dining Room Furniture
799.00 Walnut Table, 4 side chairs, china · · Sale 649.00
750.00 Walnut Table, 6 side chairs, china - · Sale 599.00
695.00 Maple Table
2 Arm, 4 Side Chairs, Buffet &amp; Hutch · · · · · Sale 555.00
595.00 Pecan Table, china , 5 side-1 arm chair
Sale 499.00
400.00 H~ywood Wakefield Buffet &amp; Hutch · · · - Sale 320.00
399.95 48" Round Pine Table
·
2 Captalns-4 Male Chairs . . . - · · · · Sale 325.00 '
289.00 Heywood Wakefield
·
· Maple Table, 4· side chairs · · · · · · Sale 233.00
288.95 42" Round Maple Table
4 Side Chairs, Buffet &amp; Hutch · . · · Sale 233.00
258.95 36" Round Maple Table, 4 side chairs · · Sale 215.00
229.00 Mahogany Corner Cabinet · . · · Sale 150.00
199.00 Fruilwood Hide-Away Table . . · · Sale 159.00
159.00 Maple Table-4 mate chairs ·
Sale 128.00
129.00 Maple Table-4 mate chairs
. Sale 109.00

Sale!

RACINE - Twenty-two
students of the Southern Junior
High School were named to the
honor roll at the close of the filth
six weeks grading pe[iod.
Making a grade of "B" or
above in all their subjects to be
listed on the roll were: (Those
in all capital letters received all
A's).
239.95 30" Large OVen, while . . . .
Sale 192.00
259.00 36" Large oven, white . . . .
Grade Seven - Keith Circle,
Sale 201.00
359.00 30" Large Oven, conti"nuous clean
Paul Cross , Molly -Fisher,
White or Avocado . . . . . . . .
Sale 288.00
Denise Hendrix, CHERYL
369.00 36" Large OVen
LARKINS, SANDRA NORRIS,
Continuous Clean Avocado . . .
Sale 296.00
CORENA RHODES , Debbie
479.00 30" Cha!Oilurange, Double OVen
Roush, Paula Rowe, BECKY
Continuous Clean, Avocado . .
Sale 384.00
298.00 36" Large OVen, coppertone
SAYRE , Bobby Roush and
Sale m .oo
Rhonda West.
....~-·-·-·-·-·-·c-~--------~----1
Grade Eight - Rhonda Ash,
Hope Bird, Jeff Circle, Dan
Husto n,
Milch
Nease·,
STEPHANIE ORD , PAUL
SIMPSON, VICKI E ·WOLFE,
Rhoda South, and Helen
Wilcoxen.

GAS
RANGES

Caroll K.

Spring SpeciJJl!.

Snowden
P1rk Central
Hotel Bldg.
SeCOnd Ave .

Crib andMattress

Phone 446·4290
Home ~46· 4518

State F ar m F ir e and Casualty

company

Home Offic e: Bloom ington,

Illinois

.

,.

Magic Chef

King -size homeown er s poli c y
grows w ith th e r epla ce m ent
cost of your ho me as it in crea ses the amoun t of your
polic y to help keep pa ce wi th
inflat i on . See me abou t details .
State Farm is all you need
to know about insuran ce.

P·C932

-----------

KIM NEAL

Worst ship disaster in U.S.
history was the explosion of
tile steamer Sultana on the
Mississfppi River, April 27.
1965. with the loss of life being 1,450.

- 39.00 Standard Size Crib. single side drop.
- Springs Elevate to 3 Heights.
- Plastic teething ralls on sides, head and loot.
Finished In maple. walnut pnd white.
12.95 (&lt;anlwet Land '0 Nod Mattress.

1. Street repairs 12 months a year and not just
ohe month before an election. ·
'

2. A ,concerned city go,vernment that ·will
atta.c k Middleport's problems before they,
grow out of proportion. Ex. The landfill. ·
3. 'Better citizen-city government com ·
munication (all aspects) .
'

4. A cleaner Middleport: for ourselves and
thOSI moving in npw.

.

Pd.· Pol. Adv.

.

.

ji11ixll

11

SPRING FURNITURE SALE
I'

.

.

;·

·. Spring

•

' .

Sale sus
Sale 3US
Sale 25:95
Sale 12.95
. ' Sale 9.95

•

·'

- .

....' .

.
'

Reg .
Reg .
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg .
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg .
Reg .
Reg .
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

Sale
~le
Sale
Sale

..,,
11.79

Uf •

3.79
Sale 1.79

·;

'

·REGISTER NOWI
. Register in our Third Floor Furniture Department for the

Fiuniture
.
.

Kroehler Living Room .Suite

SALE!

No purchase nece!\ary- you need no~ be present to win.

Tables . Record
'tabinels - Desks Magazine Racks .
Cedar Chests
Room Dividers Book Cases Smokers
Telephone Stands
. Bar Stools · End
Tables.

.

Sale 171.00
Sale 118.00 .
Sale 108.00
Sale 99.00
Sale 88.00
'Sale 80.00
Sale 72.QO
Sale 64.00
Sale 56.00
Sale 48.00
' Sale 42.00
Sale· 40.00
Sale 35.00
Sale 32.00
Sale 24.00
Sale 17 .oo
Sale 9.60
Sale 9.00
Sale 7.25
Sale 6.25
Sale 6.00
Sale 3.25
Sale 1.19

209.00 Furniture
139.00 Furniture
129.00 Fur.niture
119.00. Furniture
109.00 Furniture
99.00 Furniture
89.00 Furniture
79.00 Furniture
69.00 Furniture
59.00 Furniture
52.00 Furniture
49 .00 Furniture
42.00 Furniture
39.00 Furniture
29.00 Furniture
21.00 Furniture
12.00 Furniture
11.00 Furniture
8. 95 Furniture
8.00 Furniture
7.50 Furniture
4.00 Furniture
1.49 Furniture

·.
'

.

Spring Fumiture Sale!

Bedroom ·Suites
Sale 895.00
Sale 639.00
Sale 600.00
Sale 479.00
Sale 448.00
Sale 440.00
Sale 424.00
Sale 399.00
Sale 389.00
Sale 360.00
Sjlle 352.00
Sile 319.00
Sale 312.00
Sale 288.00
Sale 268.00
Sale 216.00
Sale 208.00

Reg .' 1095.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg. 798.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg. 749.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg. 598.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg. 559.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg. 549.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg. 529.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg. 489.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg. 479.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg. 449.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg. 439.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg. 398.00 Bedroom Suites · Reg. 387 .oo Bedroom Suites
Reg. 359.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg 3.19.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg. 269.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg . 259 .oo Bedroom Suites

Spring Furniture Sale

Maple Chests • Beds • .
Night Stands.• Cedar Robes
'Spring Furniture Sale

living Room Suites Sofas •
Love Seats
Sale 456.00
Sate 424.00
Sale 416.00
Sale 400.00
Sale 392.00
Sale 376:00
Sale 360.00
Sale 344.00
Sale 336.00
Sale 304.00
Sale 296.00
Sale 272.00
Sale 208.00
Sale 199.00
Sate 192.00
Sale 184.00
Sale 161.00

Regular 569.00 Furniture
Regular 529.00 Furniture
Regular 519.00 Furniture
Regular 498.00 Furniture
Regular 489.00 Furniture
Regular 469.00 Furniture
Regular 449.00 Furniture
Regular 429.00 Furniture
Regular 419.00 Furniture
Regular 379.00 Furniture
Regular 369.00 Furniture
Regular 339.00 Furniture
Regular 259.00 Furniture
Regular 249.00 Furniture
Regular 239.00 Furniture
Regular 229.00 Furniture
Regular 198.00 Furniture

Reg. 109.00 Cedar Robes - · - Reg. 99.00 Cedar Robes - - - Reg i$ 89.00 Maple Chests - - - Reg. 79.00 Cedar Robes • - - - Reg . 74,. 00 5-drawer Chests - - •
Reg. 70.00 Maple Beds - - - Reg . 64.00 4-Drawer Chests - Reg. 54.00 Jenny Lind Beds • Reg. 45.00 Pastu Beds
Reg. 42.00 Nite Stands
Reg. 32.00 Panel Beds
Reg. 27 .oo Nite Stands

'

rrwout.q

HAVE MADE

Sale 90.00
Sale 82.00.
Sale 72.00
Sale 64.00
Sale 60.00
Sale 56.00
Sale 52.00
Sale 45.00
Sale 36.00
Sale 34.00
Sale.26.00
Sale 22.00

I

.DOG,,'

&lt;~

Gain That Extra Bedroom For Your ·
Summer Visitors With A Dual
Purpose
.

.

Sofa Bed ·
Simmons Hide-A-Bed
Kroehler Sleep or Lounge
.

429 .oo Furniture • 389 :oo Furniture
385.00. Furn,ture
379.00 Furniture •
329.00 ,:urniture
315.00 Furniture
.....
309.00 Furniture
· 298.00 Furniture
229.00 Furniture
n9.00 Furniture

USE OUR RNSIILI

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

·-

.. -

344.00
319.00
316.00
309.00
~le 264.00
Sale 254.00
Sale 241.00
$ale 239.00 ·
Sale 169.95
Sale 99.00
•

Spring Sale
· Prices On
'&gt; Telescope

Folding

Summer
Fumiture

,;

I •
,~., -....
•

Large· selection of
new styles and
colors .

I

·~

·

10.50 .
11.50 .
12.50 .

Slit 1.50
Sale 9.50
Salt 10.50

22.95
26.50
27.50
34.00

IUS · ·
\4.95

Sale lUG
Sale n.so

39.00

7.50

17.50
20.95

Sale 6.00

I ,

PLANS • DELIVERY • SIRVICE
.'

•

,....

Sale IUS
Salt 21.10
Sale 22.51
Sale 27.10
Salt 21.50
Sate 12.00

JUS

Salt l4.50
. Salt 16 •.95 ,

IN POMIROY

..

Salt40.01

49.10

T

•

Salt St.OI

_,.

by 'A rt.·- sansom.

THE. BORN. . 'L O B .R
'

\

"

I

•

Rl 1&lt;-lb HT,
Vt:EBLEFfSTER,

Sale 230.00
Sale 222.00
Sale 220.00 .
Sale 215.00
Sale 199.00
Sale184.oo
Sale 176.00·.
Sale 161.00
Sale 159.00
Salem.oo
Salt 135.00 ·
Sale 121.00
Sale 114.00

•

.'

DIN mE
Regular 289.00 Dinette Sets
Regular 279.00 Dinette Sets
Regular 274.00 Dinette Sets
Regular 269.00 Dinette Sets
Regular 249.00 Dinette Sets
Regular 229.00,Dinette Sets
Regular :m.90 Din~e Sets .,
Re9ular 209.00 Dinette Sets _
Regular 191.00 Dinette Sets
Regular 189.00 Dinette Sets
Regular 169.00 Dinette Sets
Regular 159.00 Dinette Sets
Regular 139.00 Dinette Sets

A .60.0t?.t
~AEEP

Spring
FurnitUre
Sale

SETS

,~~e Selection of CMIS in latest fab~ / ·

. OVAL BRAIDEfRUGS

Regular 54.95 102x1,.
Regular 42.95 nx114
Regular' 32.50 66x10l
Regular 14.95 22x131
Regular 12.9~ 22x102
Regutat 1,49 22xU . . .
Regular 14.95 42x66 .
Regular 8.49 30x54 •·
Regular 4.49 22x42. · .
Regular 3.69 ~Ox32 ·

sALE·

. ·,
f''nd ~,.Pet Departments nowfof.Tremendous Spring Sale Savings.
'..

'

'

Sale 44.00

.I '

REPUBLICAN
MIDDLEPORT
AS.MAYOR I WOULD LIKE TO SEE:

,_r;,,.,, f//1 ' lUI Ill lfhH t/fU'~ II ' 1/1111'1'

In

:SPRING FURNITURE

.]~. Jligh Honor
List Announced

New
State Farm
Inflation
Coverage

lf;ltfl f

t'IWIIJ{II Ill

EASY
CHAIRS

. + -+="+ ++

:

..\lllolotr•r :

Spring
Furniture
Sale

++ + ++

++ ++ +

j,.. ..... l.. ,.,

~hlm our Third Floor

+ ++++

TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune

J1nnl•t•·": INKED

·ELBERFELD$ • POMERO·Y

!WMEROUS volunteers, mostly young people, have joined
hands in the community-wide cleanup effort and performed
. treriiendbtis tasks Sinee April 4. No doubt Gallia County.will be
r!lC!)gnlzed by state officials for'a job "well done ." There.'s stm
room for considerable ililprovement throughout the city and
. cOunty, and until every nook arid cranny is sparkling &lt;:lean, we
should all continue to work hard toward that goal.

ACCORDING to a Glenwood Unit~ Methodist Church
Bulletin We received last week from Hattie Campbell, Columbus,
members of the Hilltop Kiwanis Club and several community
organizations are scheduled to conduct a "salute to Charles
Harold campbell" on Thursday, April 29. Mr. calllpbell is a
former resident of Gallipolis ·and a 1914 graduatf of Gallia
Academy High School. ·He Js the son of the late Mr. and Mrs.
Charles campbell. The bulletin carried no particulars.

&amp;TbRE.

~SCOND~AND

11-iiS IS IT!
.. '
~

,, I

l
I

'{

'•

•

'

l WAJJT 1t1AT
F1&lt;DMOTIOI-l YOU
Pl&lt;OM\SED !.'€

w.o·
~~ws ,....'&lt;-V.....
..
·I

AND I

\.I.JA~T

1HcMON6V
~,A..T~S

\if!

.

.

�-:

.

~

'

..

,

..•.

.'

•.

.

.

DAYLIGHT 8a'ling Tilile began at 2a.m. today . H you didn't
turn your cloc)t or watch ahead one hour, you're in a h~ap of
trouble, timewise!.

'+++++

· WILIJAM D.. Ruckelshaus, head of ,the Enviroilmental
Protection Agency; said recently there is a "growing awareness,
a growing concern on the part of government" about the nation's
pollution problems.

.

' .- -

'"''Hl!: IJ!IIY

' +++++

way we are going to make progress, make a
comrillttment. ls ' through_ public concern and support,"
Ruckelshaus added. Locally, as a result of Project Pride, Gallia
Countianll have been made more aware of their environmental
(toblems during the past three weeks.

++ + ++

'1'1•:.\'(;/ Ji

HE: A~SD
FOR. AT THE

..

t . IITW

Now arrange the circled letters
I
form the
by the above cartoon.
I I f... A su"eoted
~'""=..'=~
==-=.MII~I~ITIJ~::;::::. FGR HIS( 1 I l I )

V "'

to

aurprilt IUIIWer, aa

.

.

IF your husband or son or father _or brother or friend were
' beillg )lei~ captive ·by the North Vietnamese, would you write your
elected officials and Hanoi for him? Natura)ly, those questions
need no answers. Of cour8e you would. But would you do it for
' ·-someone else's husband, or son, father or brother? That question ·
does need an answer - your answer in the fomi of .prayerful
concern a!ld positive action.
•

OFFICIAI..S of Gallia County's Project Freedom are in ,the
process of obtaining signatures on petitions for the purpose of
urging North Vietnam to abide by the provisions of the 1954
Geneva Convention. You can help by signing those petitions. Of
the 1,550 U. S. Citizens who are prisoners of war, or missing in
action, 103 are from Ohio.

and weekly Gallia Tililes . . . Don Pollock steps ·down as local
airport manager ... Harry.M.' Miller-resigns position on Public ·
Utilities Commisaion .. . Gilbert C. Beard named Commercial
and sa'lings Bank ,cashier ... Two,GSI patients .d!:own, one in
Chickamauga Creek, other in reservoir . .' .Blue Devils chalk 'up
first baseball victory by bombing previously unbeaten Wahama,
12--1.

33 at Syracuse On Horwr List
SYRACUSE - 'Thirty-three
students of the Syracuse
Elementary School have been
named to the "honor roil at the
close of the fifth six weeks
grading period.
Making a grade of "B" or
above in ail their subjects to be
named to the roll were :
Grade 1: Brian Ash, Vicki
Arnold, C. T. Chapman, Julie
-Flagg, SUSI!n Jell, Eric Lipscomb, Diana Nease, Ann
Williams, B. K. Arms.
:• • • • • • • - • •'

Grade 2: Paula Barnett, ·
Donna Hubbard, Scott Nease,
Cynthia Smith, Mary Beth ·
Slavin, John Williams.
Grade 3: Rosemary Hubbard,
Meg Amberger, Carrie Guinther, Tra cey Jeffers , Vicki
Sheets, Sonia Ash and Tonia
Ash.
Grade 4! None.
Grade 5: Lorie Guinther,
Jaye Ord; Jean Ann Ritchhart,
Kelly Winebrenner.
Grade 6: Chris Forbes,
Timmy Smith, David Bass,
.Bruce Cottrill, Bobbi Chapman,
Kimberly Grueser, and Patricia
Autherson.

.. .

Reg . 249.00 Chairs
Reg . 229.00 Chairs
Reg . 219.00 Chairs Reg. 198.00 Chairs
Reg. 189.00 Chairs
Reg . 179.00 Chairs
Reg . 169.00 Chairs
Reg. 159.00 Chairs
Reg. 149.00 Chairs
Reg. 139.00 Chairs
. Reg . 129.00 Chairs
Reg. ,119.00 Chairs
.Reg . 98.00 Chairs
Reg. 84.00 Chairs
Reg. 74.00 Chairs
Reg. _69.00 Chairs
Reg. 59.00 Chairs

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

. i&lt; •

199.00
184.00
176.00
159.00
151.00
144.00
136.00
128.60
119.00
114.00
109.00
99.00
78.00
69.00
62.00
56.00
48 .00

·, Spring Furniture Sale

Dining Room Furniture
799.00 Walnut Table, 4 side chairs, china · · Sale 649.00
750.00 Walnut Table, 6 side chairs, china - · Sale 599.00
695.00 Maple Table
2 Arm, 4 Side Chairs, Buffet &amp; Hutch · · · · · Sale 555.00
595.00 Pecan Table, china , 5 side-1 arm chair
Sale 499.00
400.00 H~ywood Wakefield Buffet &amp; Hutch · · · - Sale 320.00
399.95 48" Round Pine Table
·
2 Captalns-4 Male Chairs . . . - · · · · Sale 325.00 '
289.00 Heywood Wakefield
·
· Maple Table, 4· side chairs · · · · · · Sale 233.00
288.95 42" Round Maple Table
4 Side Chairs, Buffet &amp; Hutch · . · · Sale 233.00
258.95 36" Round Maple Table, 4 side chairs · · Sale 215.00
229.00 Mahogany Corner Cabinet · . · · Sale 150.00
199.00 Fruilwood Hide-Away Table . . · · Sale 159.00
159.00 Maple Table-4 mate chairs ·
Sale 128.00
129.00 Maple Table-4 mate chairs
. Sale 109.00

Sale!

RACINE - Twenty-two
students of the Southern Junior
High School were named to the
honor roll at the close of the filth
six weeks grading pe[iod.
Making a grade of "B" or
above in all their subjects to be
listed on the roll were: (Those
in all capital letters received all
A's).
239.95 30" Large OVen, while . . . .
Sale 192.00
259.00 36" Large oven, white . . . .
Grade Seven - Keith Circle,
Sale 201.00
359.00 30" Large Oven, conti"nuous clean
Paul Cross , Molly -Fisher,
White or Avocado . . . . . . . .
Sale 288.00
Denise Hendrix, CHERYL
369.00 36" Large OVen
LARKINS, SANDRA NORRIS,
Continuous Clean Avocado . . .
Sale 296.00
CORENA RHODES , Debbie
479.00 30" Cha!Oilurange, Double OVen
Roush, Paula Rowe, BECKY
Continuous Clean, Avocado . .
Sale 384.00
298.00 36" Large OVen, coppertone
SAYRE , Bobby Roush and
Sale m .oo
Rhonda West.
....~-·-·-·-·-·-·c-~--------~----1
Grade Eight - Rhonda Ash,
Hope Bird, Jeff Circle, Dan
Husto n,
Milch
Nease·,
STEPHANIE ORD , PAUL
SIMPSON, VICKI E ·WOLFE,
Rhoda South, and Helen
Wilcoxen.

GAS
RANGES

Caroll K.

Spring SpeciJJl!.

Snowden
P1rk Central
Hotel Bldg.
SeCOnd Ave .

Crib andMattress

Phone 446·4290
Home ~46· 4518

State F ar m F ir e and Casualty

company

Home Offic e: Bloom ington,

Illinois

.

,.

Magic Chef

King -size homeown er s poli c y
grows w ith th e r epla ce m ent
cost of your ho me as it in crea ses the amoun t of your
polic y to help keep pa ce wi th
inflat i on . See me abou t details .
State Farm is all you need
to know about insuran ce.

P·C932

-----------

KIM NEAL

Worst ship disaster in U.S.
history was the explosion of
tile steamer Sultana on the
Mississfppi River, April 27.
1965. with the loss of life being 1,450.

- 39.00 Standard Size Crib. single side drop.
- Springs Elevate to 3 Heights.
- Plastic teething ralls on sides, head and loot.
Finished In maple. walnut pnd white.
12.95 (&lt;anlwet Land '0 Nod Mattress.

1. Street repairs 12 months a year and not just
ohe month before an election. ·
'

2. A ,concerned city go,vernment that ·will
atta.c k Middleport's problems before they,
grow out of proportion. Ex. The landfill. ·
3. 'Better citizen-city government com ·
munication (all aspects) .
'

4. A cleaner Middleport: for ourselves and
thOSI moving in npw.

.

Pd.· Pol. Adv.

.

.

ji11ixll

11

SPRING FURNITURE SALE
I'

.

.

;·

·. Spring

•

' .

Sale sus
Sale 3US
Sale 25:95
Sale 12.95
. ' Sale 9.95

•

·'

- .

....' .

.
'

Reg .
Reg .
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg .
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg .
Reg .
Reg .
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

Sale
~le
Sale
Sale

..,,
11.79

Uf •

3.79
Sale 1.79

·;

'

·REGISTER NOWI
. Register in our Third Floor Furniture Department for the

Fiuniture
.
.

Kroehler Living Room .Suite

SALE!

No purchase nece!\ary- you need no~ be present to win.

Tables . Record
'tabinels - Desks Magazine Racks .
Cedar Chests
Room Dividers Book Cases Smokers
Telephone Stands
. Bar Stools · End
Tables.

.

Sale 171.00
Sale 118.00 .
Sale 108.00
Sale 99.00
Sale 88.00
'Sale 80.00
Sale 72.QO
Sale 64.00
Sale 56.00
Sale 48.00
' Sale 42.00
Sale· 40.00
Sale 35.00
Sale 32.00
Sale 24.00
Sale 17 .oo
Sale 9.60
Sale 9.00
Sale 7.25
Sale 6.25
Sale 6.00
Sale 3.25
Sale 1.19

209.00 Furniture
139.00 Furniture
129.00 Fur.niture
119.00. Furniture
109.00 Furniture
99.00 Furniture
89.00 Furniture
79.00 Furniture
69.00 Furniture
59.00 Furniture
52.00 Furniture
49 .00 Furniture
42.00 Furniture
39.00 Furniture
29.00 Furniture
21.00 Furniture
12.00 Furniture
11.00 Furniture
8. 95 Furniture
8.00 Furniture
7.50 Furniture
4.00 Furniture
1.49 Furniture

·.
'

.

Spring Fumiture Sale!

Bedroom ·Suites
Sale 895.00
Sale 639.00
Sale 600.00
Sale 479.00
Sale 448.00
Sale 440.00
Sale 424.00
Sale 399.00
Sale 389.00
Sale 360.00
Sjlle 352.00
Sile 319.00
Sale 312.00
Sale 288.00
Sale 268.00
Sale 216.00
Sale 208.00

Reg .' 1095.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg. 798.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg. 749.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg. 598.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg. 559.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg. 549.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg. 529.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg. 489.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg. 479.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg. 449.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg. 439.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg. 398.00 Bedroom Suites · Reg. 387 .oo Bedroom Suites
Reg. 359.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg 3.19.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg. 269.00 Bedroom Suites
Reg . 259 .oo Bedroom Suites

Spring Furniture Sale

Maple Chests • Beds • .
Night Stands.• Cedar Robes
'Spring Furniture Sale

living Room Suites Sofas •
Love Seats
Sale 456.00
Sate 424.00
Sale 416.00
Sale 400.00
Sale 392.00
Sale 376:00
Sale 360.00
Sale 344.00
Sale 336.00
Sale 304.00
Sale 296.00
Sale 272.00
Sale 208.00
Sale 199.00
Sate 192.00
Sale 184.00
Sale 161.00

Regular 569.00 Furniture
Regular 529.00 Furniture
Regular 519.00 Furniture
Regular 498.00 Furniture
Regular 489.00 Furniture
Regular 469.00 Furniture
Regular 449.00 Furniture
Regular 429.00 Furniture
Regular 419.00 Furniture
Regular 379.00 Furniture
Regular 369.00 Furniture
Regular 339.00 Furniture
Regular 259.00 Furniture
Regular 249.00 Furniture
Regular 239.00 Furniture
Regular 229.00 Furniture
Regular 198.00 Furniture

Reg. 109.00 Cedar Robes - · - Reg. 99.00 Cedar Robes - - - Reg i$ 89.00 Maple Chests - - - Reg. 79.00 Cedar Robes • - - - Reg . 74,. 00 5-drawer Chests - - •
Reg. 70.00 Maple Beds - - - Reg . 64.00 4-Drawer Chests - Reg. 54.00 Jenny Lind Beds • Reg. 45.00 Pastu Beds
Reg. 42.00 Nite Stands
Reg. 32.00 Panel Beds
Reg. 27 .oo Nite Stands

'

rrwout.q

HAVE MADE

Sale 90.00
Sale 82.00.
Sale 72.00
Sale 64.00
Sale 60.00
Sale 56.00
Sale 52.00
Sale 45.00
Sale 36.00
Sale 34.00
Sale.26.00
Sale 22.00

I

.DOG,,'

&lt;~

Gain That Extra Bedroom For Your ·
Summer Visitors With A Dual
Purpose
.

.

Sofa Bed ·
Simmons Hide-A-Bed
Kroehler Sleep or Lounge
.

429 .oo Furniture • 389 :oo Furniture
385.00. Furn,ture
379.00 Furniture •
329.00 ,:urniture
315.00 Furniture
.....
309.00 Furniture
· 298.00 Furniture
229.00 Furniture
n9.00 Furniture

USE OUR RNSIILI

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

·-

.. -

344.00
319.00
316.00
309.00
~le 264.00
Sale 254.00
Sale 241.00
$ale 239.00 ·
Sale 169.95
Sale 99.00
•

Spring Sale
· Prices On
'&gt; Telescope

Folding

Summer
Fumiture

,;

I •
,~., -....
•

Large· selection of
new styles and
colors .

I

·~

·

10.50 .
11.50 .
12.50 .

Slit 1.50
Sale 9.50
Salt 10.50

22.95
26.50
27.50
34.00

IUS · ·
\4.95

Sale lUG
Sale n.so

39.00

7.50

17.50
20.95

Sale 6.00

I ,

PLANS • DELIVERY • SIRVICE
.'

•

,....

Sale IUS
Salt 21.10
Sale 22.51
Sale 27.10
Salt 21.50
Sate 12.00

JUS

Salt l4.50
. Salt 16 •.95 ,

IN POMIROY

..

Salt40.01

49.10

T

•

Salt St.OI

_,.

by 'A rt.·- sansom.

THE. BORN. . 'L O B .R
'

\

"

I

•

Rl 1&lt;-lb HT,
Vt:EBLEFfSTER,

Sale 230.00
Sale 222.00
Sale 220.00 .
Sale 215.00
Sale 199.00
Sale184.oo
Sale 176.00·.
Sale 161.00
Sale 159.00
Salem.oo
Salt 135.00 ·
Sale 121.00
Sale 114.00

•

.'

DIN mE
Regular 289.00 Dinette Sets
Regular 279.00 Dinette Sets
Regular 274.00 Dinette Sets
Regular 269.00 Dinette Sets
Regular 249.00 Dinette Sets
Regular 229.00,Dinette Sets
Regular :m.90 Din~e Sets .,
Re9ular 209.00 Dinette Sets _
Regular 191.00 Dinette Sets
Regular 189.00 Dinette Sets
Regular 169.00 Dinette Sets
Regular 159.00 Dinette Sets
Regular 139.00 Dinette Sets

A .60.0t?.t
~AEEP

Spring
FurnitUre
Sale

SETS

,~~e Selection of CMIS in latest fab~ / ·

. OVAL BRAIDEfRUGS

Regular 54.95 102x1,.
Regular 42.95 nx114
Regular' 32.50 66x10l
Regular 14.95 22x131
Regular 12.9~ 22x102
Regutat 1,49 22xU . . .
Regular 14.95 42x66 .
Regular 8.49 30x54 •·
Regular 4.49 22x42. · .
Regular 3.69 ~Ox32 ·

sALE·

. ·,
f''nd ~,.Pet Departments nowfof.Tremendous Spring Sale Savings.
'..

'

'

Sale 44.00

.I '

REPUBLICAN
MIDDLEPORT
AS.MAYOR I WOULD LIKE TO SEE:

,_r;,,.,, f//1 ' lUI Ill lfhH t/fU'~ II ' 1/1111'1'

In

:SPRING FURNITURE

.]~. Jligh Honor
List Announced

New
State Farm
Inflation
Coverage

lf;ltfl f

t'IWIIJ{II Ill

EASY
CHAIRS

. + -+="+ ++

:

..\lllolotr•r :

Spring
Furniture
Sale

++ + ++

++ ++ +

j,.. ..... l.. ,.,

~hlm our Third Floor

+ ++++

TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune

J1nnl•t•·": INKED

·ELBERFELD$ • POMERO·Y

!WMEROUS volunteers, mostly young people, have joined
hands in the community-wide cleanup effort and performed
. treriiendbtis tasks Sinee April 4. No doubt Gallia County.will be
r!lC!)gnlzed by state officials for'a job "well done ." There.'s stm
room for considerable ililprovement throughout the city and
. cOunty, and until every nook arid cranny is sparkling &lt;:lean, we
should all continue to work hard toward that goal.

ACCORDING to a Glenwood Unit~ Methodist Church
Bulletin We received last week from Hattie Campbell, Columbus,
members of the Hilltop Kiwanis Club and several community
organizations are scheduled to conduct a "salute to Charles
Harold campbell" on Thursday, April 29. Mr. calllpbell is a
former resident of Gallipolis ·and a 1914 graduatf of Gallia
Academy High School. ·He Js the son of the late Mr. and Mrs.
Charles campbell. The bulletin carried no particulars.

&amp;TbRE.

~SCOND~AND

11-iiS IS IT!
.. '
~

,, I

l
I

'{

'•

•

'

l WAJJT 1t1AT
F1&lt;DMOTIOI-l YOU
Pl&lt;OM\SED !.'€

w.o·
~~ws ,....'&lt;-V.....
..
·I

AND I

\.I.JA~T

1HcMON6V
~,A..T~S

\if!

.

.

�•

"

.

:ISBOBT BIBS~....- ......
...

•

O'Neal~···.

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SQUI:Q,
'

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·. :t HAD

:WH,A.1S WRONG'?
'

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.'
'
. KIDDJNG
.... '
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by Crooks &amp; · Lawren~e

CAPTAIN B·A SY 1

·•·

'

'

'

'

I

LEiAM56. THEi HOTrot.. AFT£:~ THe WE.I..COMIN~ ·
THe PA?HA OF FAZOO!-....
'

'

THEY' VI? JIJ~T
HAD A TIP THAT A

'

. THE::

PASHA~

'

FIENDI~H CHI~oJE7E

PJ..OTTO~, KNOWI\J
- A~ D~. FANG HA?
~LIPPE!&gt; INfO

·

...

~6

IWZ:ZOFF!... !3LAZE:7! HE'~ AND He 5AI" WW 13EL!..E~
Jl\l CHAR:~ IS OF THE DANC1N8 COSTUME: WA7 'JHEER.
c;I~L.-!7 WHO ENTERTAIN!:!/
PYNI#Mir.E!!

T.He

"·

-~

COUNT~'/!

5He HAS JU:;r
IHJ;. BOMB
'CO::.TUMt;-!
· WHEN THE: PASHA ·
fMe&gt;RACEi.$ fle&gt;R, I.
~EfP

ONE:

· A~P

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'

'

.'
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WINTIIROP.
r

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. 1..161 EN ....:n-t SRI;: · ·
IT 15AGAIN.

1 WONDB&lt; WHA.T
IT 16 ':f

BOOM! .

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~IG~oJAL­

b~

.

Dick· C:ava1ll

by Ji111 Bra~aga:a.~

·OUR 'B OABDI·N G .BOUSE
•

· SOLJND6·WKE

MO~ING, MR. cANCEit.'! .

A FIGHT/'

AN ' IMPo~iAN\ Mlt;SI\IE:f ·
!26GIS1'EI&lt;e.D,
. .
NO DOUBi'!

. i

'I
'

'

•

1 MP¥-S., UP
PoEM&lt;; W~ILE
I

Wf&gt;-.Li&lt;-1

Wl"fl-\ 6~ PUe:,

i'I-IE S5Nt'Er:2.

COI.lL.D ONLY gr;:
MY gi&lt;DTHEI2.

' JAKe.'

�CAMPVS C-L ATTER .

~ewis

by
Larry
-.

'

.

.. REMEM86~, C!.ASS, TOMMil?W
IS TUi Brti . ~AM ON
·F,&amp;MAr.;&amp; AN~:r(f}6V .
.

,.

~

"SAW,l'l&gt; BEra

s •01&gt;''7

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tlOW WHO I&amp; iH I~ FE?t.LOW, if\~. C,
~U CL.AIM

F~

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ALLBY OOP

R'ANq

IS PEPE:NDE:IIJT ON tiOU

AJ..L.. Hl6 DOG FOOP ?J

.,. '

..

··~'

A·

••. I JUST WENT TO VISIT ME'N GUZ BEEN HUNTIN'
RELATIVES OVER IN
ALL. OVER FOR yOU ....
GULCH •••WHY?

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EVERYBODY SAl\)
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YVML.lP WAWA.' KIDNAP ME?
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••• THAT'S .
YEH! 'THAT'S
Rl DICULOUS1~- JUST WHAT I '

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THE DROPOUTS.
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PEACit.,
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·By Howard ·Post
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DEAR PQLLY-To f&lt;:eep tracf&lt;: ol my
rings, I stuffed a glove with cotton and
put my ri~gs on it. It is a lu~ thina to
MYf ·in '!'Y lOOnj. -1(, S.•
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DEAR P0 Ll Y-Moil aclvtrtlsementt
often hove samples of material used in
the clothing they are trying to sell. My
yo~ ng son ~ug~etted ·t.bat I SG'f tl!~
little samples to use lor potching.'Hopt
t~ is prom helpful lor som•one.- LOREfTA
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DEAR POL'L r.:...Bab(.s cotton•tipped
. stic4s dipped in baby' oil and carefolly
da~~4 on jea~ on~ jacket snaps ,will
make .fhem eas~er to open and close.MRS. 'M. S. J.

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PoLLY-Mr. mother uses plecu
at old sheets freshly laundertd wit~out
f.!lric 10 ttn.er, instead .of pa~r towels,
fo1
windows. lhert a11 ., .,.,
am
ROLYN
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DEAR POLl"t'-Instead of having -.to
hunt tl!rpugh the button 1J¥ for shirt
!
buttqn replacemen!l, sew those cut off 1
diicarded Ill irts on' h 5 W4s IQ all on
Olifl •(arcl will mate~. File tftest· cords,
and :it wi!l bt 'osier ·lo fin~ matchi~g
DEAR POLL.Y-A hohh.y.pin maket an
buttons,-MRS."G. :M. G, 1
-' ~ ·
· idtal book mark. Slip tit~ page between
the ends, pressing 11ttem ~lose IOiltlher.
-MRS. M: S. J. '

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DEAlt ,OLLY-1 ~-ep the faciill tissues
tuch. as w~ all carry in our purMs in 4 ·
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plasti' 11!11~ and tlttn thl)' stay,
,fresl! ond elton. I h~ f1 aeotuolaokiag

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DE.U POLLY-My dod'kfepl our
•! , ~ ''""' look\ng rtal ntw' aiMI nifty
_. ~~~~~ tht boclrd filr a new IOMI
witlt
lhtll~ lltf.re w, l¥tr ploy
witlt it,-lA'fHY ·
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DEAR POLLY,...Whlll I moyed 1• 1
large house to a •m.ella~rlftlltlt, stor•
age was o probltlll'. •ln 1M broom cloHt
I hung .a shot ~~ •with. pocktts. This
holds'such articles bs dust cloths,'silver
cleaning cloth I, rubber glo'ltl, sponges,
all'
1 purppst' alut,.and ~tMr. smaU, ton•
atantly ·nttd~ •ittms float wou14 other- ·
wist take up .olua~l• ahtlf space.MRS;-M. E. ~
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DEAR POLLY-Joo hav• frnh·tastint
coffle fo1 fll¥'tlf and any unexpected·
IUHIJ I make p full .pot aa~h illltf!lint
and then fiH a quart thermos "'111•
No waiting'-' it to braw.-MRS. S. D.
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' 'DrAIII'Of.LY.-zMy husband and I art
111 ·our ~~~~ 701 ana ... like pancakes
for llrteklast, but only UN half an.egg
in· the little bit of 1batter I make each
1110ming; The way 1-do this is •to brta~ ·
"-"'ttl. into a small: bowl, beat it with
lllf egg beattr an~ measure it out py
NW11p00nluls. 1.Put pe1t of !!tis in my
· lllt!Jr in4 the refloiltdtf ilia t~nall jlr.
· IIIJt .... in the rifrittrattr for Ull 11!1
- t "'· We t~ln~ the Mttll' .IJ l,uao

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JIRISCIEI.A'S POP ·

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SOME

SOUP! · .

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':J"H' 11eAitLY 61R0 SPeCIAL.' IS

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by S ·t offel &amp; llei~nd.ahl .
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wrn·f Tl-f DtNNE~t, su.

I TMlNK'YER GONNA CHANGE Y~R MIND/ ...
H~Y. SYL.V~STeR/

CHICKEN FRICASSEE.,,
UNL~SS Y.b&gt;:D LIKE T' ORDER
~~M TH' REG(.)l.A~ M.E?'JU /

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STREETS ARE
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MOST TIMID OLD
LADY TO CFI.OSS.~"

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WHY DO il-IE:Y ~F~Il.
FOOD TO THE OUL.CE:T'
1VNES OF MV
13E:L.OVfD .

IF YA DOM'T' ORO!.I t DessERT, SYL\16Tt:R PLAYS
~IS AC~DION DURIN' YER iNTitW MEAL.!

THE'{ MAKE iRt)STWO~TH"/, Cl-tEAP, AND
· AMUSING e.,A6&lt;Y SITTEPS/!'

INS~MENr'f

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JOHNNY WONDER ·

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bY DlCK ROGERS
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&amp;OTH5RYOU
. AGA.IN!

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BY DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
A fire beljeved lriggered Sunday morning by a ga!IOUne ex·
plosion in a rural GalUa County home, claimed its sixth victim
early this morning.
Mrs. Louella Yost, 52, Rt. 1, Bidwell, died at 1:50 a.m. today
at the Holzer Medical CeniLT. She had suffered burns over 80 per
cent of her body.
A son, Cecil, ag~ 22, only slU'Vivor of the blaze, I,s listed in
critical condition at Holzer Medical Center , He too suffered burns
over 80 per cent of'his body.
Other victims were: BerlonYost,55; BobbyYost,24; Thelma
Yolit, 18; and two neighbors, Jeff Dobbins, 13; and PaUl Kent, Jr.,
14. The fire at 8 a.m. 'deslroyed the two-6tory seven&gt;~"oom Yost
home located on Poplar Church Rd., Cheshire twp.
Dr. Donald R. Warehime, Gallia CoWlty Coroner, ruled five of
the six victims died from Baphyxiation.
The deaUl tol) was the worst of any fire in the modern history
of Gallia CoWlty.
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· The .blaze was discovered shortly :after 8 by two neighbors,
Walter Jenkins and Harold WeDs. Jenkins, who·Uves less than one
mile from tire Yosts was attracted by the·smoke. He fo\llld Mrs.
YQSt and her son, Cecil, sitting ln_ ll car in front ·of the burning
house and ran to a nearby home to call for an ambulance. Waugh·
Halley-Wood,,Gallipolis, responded.
According wMiddleport Fire Chief Thomas Darst, Bert Yost
apparently was trying to build a fire in a coal stove by throwing

was situated, be 88id, and the fifth victim was found at the op. posi~ side of the h~.
.·
'Ibe Mlddleport fire dep&amp;l'tinent conlracts to provide fire
assistance to aeveralCOI!Iinullltles such as Oteshire and Cheshire ·
Twp., which is a nmof 15to18miles,Dantsaid.
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"Everything was on the ground when we got here,'~ Darst
said.
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The neighbor boys were believed to have arrived to visit with
the Yosts shortly before the fire. Tbey each lived about one mile
away.
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· Assisting at lhe.scene were Sheriff Denver A. Walker.~S![t.
James . E: Baldwin, Deputy Lew planck, Dr. Donald R.
. Warellime, and Prosecutors Hamlin C. King and ,James Bennett.
PaUl H. Kent
at 1 p.m. TueSday from Ute
Graveside services were Waugh-Halley.Wood Funeral
schedUled at 4. p.J1l. today at Home for Harvey Jefferson
Vinton Memorial Park for PaUl Dobbins, 13, Rt. 1: Bidwell, son
Herbert Kent, Jr., 14, Rt. I, of David and Nancy Thompson
Cheshire, son of PaUl ·and Dobbins. )n addition to his
Geraldine Spaulding Kent. A parents, he is SW'Vived by five
junior high student at Kyger sisters, Mrs. Carol Jean Oiler,
Creek High· School, he is sur· Rt. I, Bidwell, Bonnie, Mary,
vived by his parents,· four Crystal and Betty Lou, all at
sisters, Mrs, Oenver Rhodes, · home ; two brothers; · David
Robertsburg, W. Va., Shirley, Richard and James Virgil, boUt
Paula Jean, and · Ellen and a at home; Ute paternal grandbroUler, Gary, all at home. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
gasollne inlll it. An explosion apparently followed. ·
.
Burial was Wider Ute direction Dobbins, Sr., Rt.1, Bidwell; the
Darst said the bodies of two boys were found near where a of the McCoy Funeral Home at maternal grandparents, Mr .
window bad been. "They apparently were trying to get to. a Vinton.
and Mrs. William Boston of Rt.
window when they were overcome," he said.
Harvey J ..Dobblns
2, Bidweil, and the great·
Two other bodies were found at the center,.where the stove
Funeral services will be held
(Continued 00 Page 8)

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ONLOOKERS were numerous following Sunday
morning's fire which destroyed the Bert Yost home on

Poplar Church Rd . near Eno. Six persons lost their lives in
the infe rno , Gallia 's worstfire tragedy in modern history.

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Now You Know

e

Ail governors and ·an
mayo r s are for revenue·
sharing as a concept. It's
like true Jove. The problem
is defining it.

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GRMJ.D! LET:S AAV€ A

Weather

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Devoted To The InteresiA Of The Meigs-Mason Area

. POME~OY·MIDDl:EPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXIV NO. 8
MJD Do ~U. E.El&lt;., TAk€
THIS v..b~MJ TD Be 'tWR fRIE!Vp,
TO L.Q\IE. 1-\ER... Ak.JD ·m TRlJ~i · · ,
1-\ER. TILL. •••

PAR.IY MJD ce:u:.BR:A.Te !

Little change in temperature.
High today mid to lower 50:;
northeast to mid to upper 60s
southwest. Low tonight middle
to upper 30s. High Tuesday
lower 50:; to lower 60s.

Nixon

tirnistic

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WASijiNGTON (UPI)-Say· pledged •that it would use its throwing out our principles,
ing "you have to be an strengUl 1'only to build peace throwing away our heritage or
optimist" in dealing . wiUl the wiUl freedom, and never 'to throwing up our hands."
nation'sfuture, President Nixon destroy it."
Calling for a new surge of
declared firm confidence today
optimism and confidence in the
in the soundness and heaiUl of . "FaiUl in the American · nation's future, he said : " It is
America's economic system.
future has · never been mis· the confidence that comes from
Nixon called on the public to placed," Nixon told the busi· knowing that the character of
join him in rejecting what he nessmen'sconvention. "!tis not Ute American people is strong;
characterized as dark forecasts misplaced tlljlay. In dealing Utat the spirit and will of Ute
of gloom and doom.
with Ute future of this coWJtry, United Statess is powerful; and
In a prepared speech on the if you want to be a realist, you that the free economic system
economy ro the U.S. Chamber have to be an optimist."
- Ulat supports all we. can and
of Commerce, the President There is no disrupting that- ·do for ourselves and for others
touched briefly on the Vietnam as antiwar protesters ~nd around the world - is sound and
War-at a tirne of a round of others have charged - that healthy."
major spring protests against "there are plenty of wrongs to
· his policies in washington and be righted in our society,"
Nixon insisted that ·inflation
elsewhere.
Nixon said.
was now under control and
He sb'essed anew that the "But let us never forget this: forecast a period of solid,
United States was ending its We shall ·never make the sustainable economic expan.
involvement in Indochina and chan~es that are needed by sion.

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6t\Je U$ MO~E'SHADe N
Tt1.E SUMMERliME·
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MAUREEN HENNEsY of Pomeroy, left, was elected ElghUl District president at
Saturday'S co(\ference of Junior American Legion Auxiliary units. She displays her first place

T~E'E"
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P~mt

conference cover and the handwork which won a first place for the Drew Webster Post 39junior
unit. With Miss Hennesy is Mrs. Charles Kessinger, Pomeroy, Eighth District junior activities
· chairman, showing handwork which brought a first place award to the Middleport unit, and
Debra McGuffin, right, displaying her first place conference cover and more winning hand· .
work of the Middleport unit. see page 2for account and more pictures.

Bl6, · 7

WON'T If· ·

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! News ... in Briefs \ Hearing
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By United Press lnlernallonal

Delayed

It's Down to Suroival

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IN THE: AUTUMN ,. LEA\IES \I.J ILL
"t-1'.'-l. Fi20M-TH'AT TI&lt;Ec'Mc:5 S01\IE.8&lt;:5DY»1
LL .HAVE 10 ~.AK E Tf:iEM AND
8UI&lt;N TrlEM.

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II= THEWI~D 15 .8LOWlr-JG IJJ~EN
THE LeA,\JES ARE BURNING, '(OIJL,L

.· HAVe A PROBLEM!
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!10LLER HIS
HEAD OFF IF
'THE SMOKE" ,
BLOWS IN HIS

1-lEIZ E!TAI&lt;E' IT .AND STCR
YOu~ SEU.:
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Enemy.Presses Attacks
SAIGON (UPI)-The Viet In what the U.S. command
Cong ended a battlefield lull in . called six "significant•: shelling
South Vietnam this weekend attacks SWlday and early today
wiUl a series of atlacks against the . Communists killed six
U.S. and SouUl Vietnamese Americans and woWJded 47.
bases Ute JengUl and bre~tdth of Two of the battles were within
the country , Today they at· 23 miles of Saigon which, until
tacked six miles from Saigon- the sapper attack, had been Ute
closest such attack in a year. closest fighting to the capital
Aspokesman said 10 Commu· ~is year.
1
nistsappers attacked a regional The South Vietnamese comforce post six miles southwest mand reported a total of 54
of Ute capital early this CommWlist-initiated incidents
morning inflicting "light" ca· in the 24 hours ending at 6 a.m.
sualties on . the defenders but today- the ·most since March
not fatalities. Communist losses 29. The incidents included 25
were not known .
shelling attacks which killed

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992·2156

MONDAY, APRIL 26, 1971

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five ·civilians and one soldier
and wounded 12 persons.
.
During Ute ~!tacks an Amerlcan an:mumhon dwnp ~xpioded
two miles west of Qui Nhon
killing a South Vietnamese
militiaman and wounding. 10
m1htia~~n a~d a c1v1han .
Author1hes sa1d the cause of
the e~plosion was• "unknown."

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WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Supreme Court Jet
sland today a lower court decision that granting
welfare benefits to sb'tklng worken did not Interfere
with free collective bargaining. In a brief order wiUtoul
comment, the court rejected an appeal of a lsi U. S.
Circuit Court of Appeals ruling of Dec. 14, 1970, that
striking worken could receive welfare benefits.
The ITT Lamp Division of ITitr argued Wl·
successfully In Ill appeal that the acUon altered the
reiadve economic streoillh of the parUes In the labor
dispute and thWJ ulide~ed the collective bargaining
process.
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l'MSO OVE~JOYEp; I:CAN .
~A~DIX WAIT To GEf MY

/'lEXr' liE~ 'cAiP
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Three autos were demolished
and a fourth heavily damaged
in Ulree accidents investigated
over the weekend by Sheriff
Robert Hartenbach's Dept.'
At 8:50p.m. Sunday on US 7
near its Forest Run road in·
tersection, a car driven by teon
C. Pierce, 18, of Langsville,
struck guard railing and turned
over , . Pierce said his brakes
apparently locked when he went
to slow his car. He was not injured and no charge was filed.
At 3 p.m. Sunday on Snowball
Hill,1.2 miles N. E. of SR 124, a
car driven by Donald F ,
Winebrenner 16 of Syracuse
was a total ioss' when it went
into loose gravel on a curve at
the top of a grade, slid sideways
and turned over twice before
going over an embankment.
Winebrenner had a laceration of
the knee but was not b'eated
imm~iately .
J.
At I p.m. Saturday on Vine St.
in Racine, a car driven by
Garfield Pauley, Jr., 32, Por·
liand, traveling north on Sixth

CLEVELAND -SURVIVALHAS BECOME a major concern
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
of u. S. business and industry, lnduslry Week magazine said
Ohio Extended Outlook PT. PLEASANT - ABoard of
today. Early first quarter earnings reports of business and in·
Wednesday through Friday:
dustry are disappointingly mixed, and sb'ike threats, imports and Education hearing against
Rather cool with showers .
continued inflation contfuue to darken the business ouUook, the . Supt. I. Brooks SmiUl on 10
Lows in the upper 30s and 40s
charges brought by Wlidentified
magazine 88id.
·
and highs in the 50s.
The current situation follows an equally bad fourth quarter of petitione~s was recessed until
1970 Induslry Week said, when factory profit margins after taxes 7:30p.m. Tuesday Saturday at 5
wet; only 3.7 cents per Bales dollar, !~est since the first Ulree p.m.
The board, hung up by Charge
months of 1961. Many bu$inessmen are expressing concern over No. 7, found that one of the key
the problema faced by their companies. ·One of Utem, John D. witnesses, Lawrence Gerlach,
Harper, chairman ·and chief executive officer of Ute Alwninurn Jr., was not present alUlough he
Co. of America (ALCOA), said inflation "is pushing the U. S. out had been subpoenaed. At the
of a competitive position in the world.' '
conclusion of Saturday's
BY BOB WINGETT
Diehl' praised the firemen for
hearingithadstillnotreacheda
An estimated 75 Meigs High continuing to hold the
A Kind of Dirty Pool '
decision as whether or not to School athletes and firemen ate traditional dinner year-after·
.
KENT, OHIO - NBC NEWS COMMENTATOR D.av1d ·accept Gerlach's previous chicken and ali the dinner year and expressed Ute ap·
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Brinkley Baid.Sunday he does not mil)d honest criticism of the testimony given at the hearing trimmings that go with it preciation of the school.
news media but objects to "intimidation" froil) Ute government. in February which concerned Saturday night at Ute Second "This is a yearly highlight for
Kicking.off a tw&lt;Miay symposium on politics and the press at Kent alleged remarks by Smith Ward firehouse when the our athletic minded young
State University, Brinkley Bald the governmellt's use of subpoena against former Wahama Coach Pomeroy Fire Dept.' gave its people," said Diehl.
annual stag AU-Sports Banquet. Diehl introduced Larry
and tax investifiation powers against news gathering Grant Barnett. •
The courtroom .Saturday was WiUl firemen performing the Morrison , assistan t superin·
organizations was "dirty pooL"
.
filled
wiUl anxious spectators cUlinary artistry, the event tendent of the Meigs Local
"The press doesn't have Ute power to subpoena, to investigate
tax records or many of the oUter things the government can do," awaiting to hear the bpard's again was - as it has been for School District, who praised the
he ~id .. "When the ·government uses ttx;se powers against the decision, since Bill Withers, more Ulan 20 years - a firemen lor their interest in
president, pro tern had earlier highlight of the 1970-71 high athletics.
press, then that is dirty pool.
annoWJced that the hearing school , athletic program. No Others introduced were Nolan
would continue until it was white-collar affairs·, the· Swackhamer, golf coach; Ben
Turnpike Blocked in Jersey
banquets are relaxed, with no Slawter , assistant football
SwEDESBORO, N. J. - MORE 1 THAl!l 1;000 antiwar through.
· Taking the stand late long program to sit through, coach; Carl Wolfe, basketball
demonstrators, claiming they were frustrated !J001.use the nation
ignored the weekend of peaeefui rallies 'in Washington, D. C., Saturday morning were Supt. and only invited adults present coach; Russell .Moore, Meigs
Smith, Albert DUrose, Michael other. than firemen and the JWJior High principal; Robert
·. blocked b'affic on the busy .New Jersey Turnpike for .five hours . Whalen, Harry Siders, Charles · athletes.
Bowen, superintendent of Meigs
Sunday night. Stale pol\ce, outnumbered 10 to one.by Ute singing, WiUlers, and.. Ed. Grimes and
. ,
, County Schools; John . Arnott,
chanting protesters, broke up the'' protest with 80 .arrests for VIrgil Siders, who were both
Pomeroy fire[pen after World junior high football coach;
disorderly conduct.
ca!led by· Gordon Billheimer, War II gave the. banquet for Charles Chancey, Meigs High
At the height of Ute mass sitdown 10 miles norUteast of Ute counsel for Supt. SmiUl.
Pomeroy High ' School boys. athletic director and head
Delaware border, traffic jama in front of the II(JUthern four turnMuch of the testimony ap- Following consolidation of football coach; Terry Ohlinger ,
pike exits stretched out eight miles. Stale police shut down .the . peared to center in determining Rutland, Pomeroy and Mid· Fenton Taylor, wrestling coach
...,
soulhernrnost·35 miles of six-lane loll road.
"who was b'ying. to get who! " dieport into Meigs High, Ute and assistant football coach;
Supt. Smitl) was a frequent firemen took on Ul.e bigger job Marvin McKelvey i jWlior high
Soong is
visitor tO the witness stand, as of preparing the dinner for the coach; Butch Meier, jUnior high
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SAN FRANCISCO -THE Ol'I:E-TIME ACTING premier of Ute parade of witnesses took it enlarged ptogram. :
. coach; Don iJixon, assistant
NaUonallst China who also served.as the natipn's foreign minister for only a short part most of the Meigs Jiigh School Principal foo,tball -coach; John Bentley,
time, .Wldergoing questioning James A. Diehl, Jr., was master t~ack, coach and assistant
· during World War 11, died here Sunday night.
CHIEF WERRY. AT YOUR SEIW!Ctj - Pomeroy Fi~e
T. v. Soong, once one of the most po\Verful figures in China and cross-examinati(ln as the of ceremonies for the brief football · coach; Ed Bartels, Chief Henry Werry is brin gin~ fried chick~n to Jon Kloes, .
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· wl!o in recent years was a leader in, Cl!lnese-American bankjng various . . charges . were program in which coaches, and
left, and Bobby Werry Saturday nigl\t.
presentea.
·
splll:iai
~uests
were
intr.oduced,
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page
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Autos Wrecked

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Athletes Given Banquet

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St. went through a stop sign and
ran into the path and side of a
car driven by Gertrude Rizer,
47, Racine, moving east on Vine
St. Curtis Price, Portland, a
passenger in the Pauley car,
had minor·injurles. Damages to
tbe Rizer vehicle were heavy
and the Pauley car was a total
Joss. Pauley was cited to coWJty
court on a charge of failing to ·
obey a stop sign.

Two Autos

Damaged
Heavy damage was reported
to two cars in an accident at
7:55 a. m. Saturday on SR 124 in
Syracuse.
Marshall Milton Varian said a
car driven by Thelma M.
Cundiff, 32, Racine Route 1, WI!S
stopped to make a lefthand turn
onto Worchesler St. when her
vehicle was struck in the rear
by a car driven by Clarence M.
Lawrence, 19, Portland.
Mrs. Cundiff, who complained
of injuries to the right leg, head,
neck and abdomen, was taken
to the Holzer Medical .Center by
the Syracuse E·R squad. She
was treated and released.
Lawrence was cited to Mayor
Herman London's court for
failing to maintain assured
clear distance.
IMPORTANT MEETING
Kenneth Ball, Ohio Assn. of
Public School Employes field
representative, will be speaker '
at an important meeting of the
Eastern Local School District
' OAPSE at 8 p.m. Tuesday at
E~st •rn High School. Ail
member&gt;, Including substitute
. cooks and bus drivers and their
spouses are urged to at,lend.
Refreshments will be served.
CHILD TREATED
Shelhe Fox, 5, daughter of
Mr.. and Mrs. Larry Fox, 33 ·
Custer ·St., Middleport, was
taken to Veterans Memorial
· Hospital Saturday . evening I«
treatment of a forehead
laceration suffert:&lt;( in a fall at
her home, She was discharged . ·
following treatment. ·
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downiown
-·!' Pomeroy at 11 a.m MlJIICiay
was 58· degrees under cloudy
skies.

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