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•

•

10- . Tb! Dl&gt;ily Sen1lnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, July 12, t974
EXTE;NDEO WEA11fER
PLEASANT VALLEY
Olllo Ext~nd&lt;d Outlook DISCHARGES
Mrs .
S.Wy lllrougb Tllesday: Samue! Holley, Ashton ; Steve
A chance of •bowen -or
Richmond, Point Pleasant;
..-.nllowen Sullday and
Mrs. Bernard Smith, Southagain obout Tllw!lly. Highs side; Irene · Bitting, RavensBy Frank W. Porter, Ill ·
lb tbe 80s aod lows mosUy Ia
wood ; Mrs. George Hatfield, ·
Ike ....
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. George
Our knowledge . of the
Whitt PUny· Mrs Clarence American lndums IS based
Rou; h Leiart· · Bill Joe llP00 the_study of lhe remains
• Point Pleasant.
•
oftheh. uman , s kit
Johnson,
e e ons
•
BIRTI-1 - A son to Mr. and prese~ed'" a fOSSil state, the
Mrs. J ohn Hill , Ashton, mater~al products of hw:nan
Tonight - July l:t
!IIO'lday
industry, and for thl6e tr1bes
·
present at the arrival of lhe
Double Future
" THE WORKING GIRLS "
Europeans . . written records.,
- It takes about 1hn:'c
~
Rated " R"
PresenUy,
representative
rn ilc.s uf \'arn . to ~ roducc a
Plus
spokesmen for the American
IJ:ti r of ny)on stockmgs.
MAN OFT HE HAR
Indians ure actively seeking
Rated " R"
through
legal channels
recompense for lhe atrocities
SATURDAY
suffered
by their ancestors at
JULY 13
Tonight,
Sat.,
Sun.
the hands of land-hungry white
Double Feature Program
July 12-13-14
TWINS OF EVIL
men moving west to the Pacific
Peter Cushing
Ocean.
BANG THE
( R)
DRUM SLOWLY
In the melee surrounding this
PLUS
(Technicolor)
acUvity, the retur" nf their
" HANDS OF
M ichael M orar ity

•

·c onvicts demand plane

American Indians ·seek recompense

Mason
Drive-In

MEIGS THEATRE

THE RIPPER"

Robert DeNiro

&lt;Co lor)

Featurette ;

Eric Por ter
Jane Merrow

- Dora

( PG)

Dizzy Detectives
J

Bry~n

Stooges

Show Starts 7 p.m .

( R)

Ohio Selective Service
Director • Paul A. Corey announced today that Meigs
County Locid Board 83 moved
to the College Building 815
Gailia Street, Portsmouth.
"The move," Corey said
"will enable Selective Servic~
. to effect further economi~s
while maintaining an efficient
site office within a reasonable
distance."
Corey also reminded young
men that, although no one is·

his food , .his own bones and
burial place&amp; - allow us to
deduce how he lived. Today's
professional and amateur
historians and archaeologists
have been able to reconstruct
with remarkable accuracy the
daily life patterns of the'
American Indians, The key to
their success, however, has
been the preservation of Indlan
artifacts.
All too often lhe conatrucUon
of highwayo, buildings, and
bridges - plus lhe damage
caused by blatant pilfering and
vandalism - has obliterated
many of these sites.
Almost everyone at one time
in their Ufe has walked through
a newly plowed cornfield and
..dlscovered" pieces of runt, an

I

t

~yROBERTH.GORDON

Drug abuse subject of
Monday Grand Jury

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

1

pomeroy
national
bank
the bQnk of
I he cenrury

eslabfish@d 1872

IMiilbor

FDIC
.
MAIN OFFICE
Mon ., Tues,., Wed ., Thurs . 9 a .m .-J p .m .
Fr•day 9a .m. to7 p.m.
Saturday 9 a·.m . to 12l'l.loon

1u n

Open Friday and Saturday Night Until 8 PM
WHEAT SJIOCKtRS - Two 1odJng d!aractera d. the
hlatorlcal mUllic pageant, ''Gallla Country," now playing at
the amphitheatre, Bob Evans Farms, Rio Grande, are pictured here shocking wheat "near their rock shelter along
Raccoon Creek." On left Is Bill Spires, Canal Winchester,
who plays Daniel Boone. On rlght ls Lee Durieux, Mt. Ver-

Special sale prices now on Girls Sportswear - Womens
Sportswear - Womens Dresses and Pants Suits- Slippers
- Aprons .

Sa·~e on Me~s Dress Slacks . Mens Shirts - Boys Shirts .

Sw1m Trunks. Lee Work Uniforms- Mens Walk Shorts Mens &amp; Boys Socks - Neckties.

showers.

AUTO BANK HOURS
· FRIDAY 9 to ]:...SATURDAY 9 to 12MONDAY-THURSDAY 9 to 3

A hometown friend.

REG.
49.95

'

IN HONOH- Racine Mayor Charles Pyles and Racine Council members have
purchased and placed on the groull&lt;b at the Racine Fire Station a monument
dedicated to the Honor and Sscriflce of the men and women of the Racine area who
served their country. Shown'are 1-r, Glen Rizer and Henry Lyons, coUJicil members and Mayor Pyles. Other council members not present were Gracie Roush,
Larry Wolfe, Don Beegle and Lynn Hart. The monument was purchased from Leo
Vaughan.

Enjoy! Enjoy!
{'

THE FUN
PLACE!!

· 6FOOT
3' 11. 5' printed flag . 6' two-section
steel pole with $imulated chrome
finish . Includes 5" eagle , steel
brocket IJild screws.

:E9~

RED, WHITE &amp; BL~E

388

•

HEAVY DUTY "D" SIZE .

. BAmRIES

BASKETBALL NET

Braided, he9vy duty poly indoor·outdoor
ne t. Full length official size . AU-weather
ployingoction .

.

p

More active formula gives lonoer
service life ... up lo 110% ... 0Yer regular

177

00

fuQ2'QilllQftooi·~~~;D

POMEROY

.FREE

•

2149&lt;

BAmRIES

BUG BULBS ·

twice tJ~e seN Ice life of regular onei.

Will not oltror:t bugs. ldeol for
outdoor porth and ..-..t 'o
H9htino. ·
.
""" •

WITH COUPON &amp; $5.00
OR MORE PURCHASE

.
•
t:7!

MIDDLEPOHT - Installation of 1974- educational systems for the races, which
GALLIPOLIS - George C. Smith,
75 officers and a talk by Meigs County pennitted states to call the most Republican nominee for Ohio Attorney
common pleas judge John C. Bacon " Wlequal " education systems equal n in General, announced · today that
highlighted the weekly meeting of the the sight of the law was changed by the Prosecuting Attorney Gene Wetherhoit
Middleport • Pomeroy Rotary Club at court. He also reviewed recent economic will serve as chairman of Smith's cam~
Heath United Methodist Church Friday trends as related to innation and govern- paign in Gallia County.
nlght.
'
To kick off the campaign for Smith in
ment policy. ·
Gallia
County, a reception will be held
Pa1il Smart installed the new officers
Women·of the church served the dlnner.
Saturday, July 20at 3:30p.m. at the Courtwho are the Rev. Robert T. Baumgardner,
president, Vernon Weber, vice president, !f:::~:!:::~:::::::~~:::::~!:~o:~:::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::~:::;::::::~ house on Locust St. in Gallipolis.
Jotln L. Werner, secretary, the Rev. !::;
Extended Outlook
\~
The reception wiil be open to all who are
Robert W. Kuhn, treasurer, and directors, · :!:!
Monday through Wednesday: ::( interested in the Smith for Attorney
.
Harold E. Hubbard; Dennis Keney and :;:;
Chaijce of showers Monday j:!: General campaign.
George Meinhart.
:;';
ot Tuesday then clearing , )~;:
George Smith, 38, Prosecuting Attorney
Judge Bacon, introduced by Vernon :!::
Wednesday. Highs ln the 90s tl lor Franklin County won the Republican
Weber, program chairman, used how !i!i
Monday dropping lo the 70s and ~( nomination [or Ohlo Attorney General in
decisions of the U. S. Supreme Court set ;ij
low 80s Wednesday. Lows Jn [:~; the -May primary.
precedent and bring ·about changes In law j:;
the 10s Monday and Tuesd~y :[:!
Smith is presently serving hls fourth
liS his topic. For example, he said, that a
lowering to the 50s and low 60s !~; year as Prosecuting Attorney for Franklin
1954 decision ruling illegal the practice :~ ·. We.dnesday.
·
;:;; · County.",ffis experience Includes 15 years
in state, local and COU11Iy publlc service.
Iince ,the 19th centl&amp;'y of dual but eaual . -

YELLOW

99C VALUE

,

head campaign

ll

..... ....,.......

Heavy duty Supe!" cells 9ive I'!'IOI"e than

(LESS "0." SIZE BATTERIES)

Live Entertainment

Wetherholt to

HEAVY DUTY "C" SIZE .

FLASHLIGHT

Brings You

~~=~

I ;;~· F~ ' 2i44~ .
r=::?

Rotarians install .seven
newly elected officers

POMEROY - Two fo urteen-year old
youths are in very critical condition at St.
Marys Hospital, Huntington, following a
Single car accident Friday night at approximately 8 p.m.
· The Meigs County Sheriff's Department reported that Michael Sigler, 16,
Rutland, Rt. l, driver of the .car, was
· traveling south on U. S. Rl. 33 at a high
rate of speed . He repc.rted that· he put the
car in neutral when a passenger aliegedly
shifted the car in reverse locking the back
wheels.
The drivet· lost control going off the
highway into the median strip, struck a
culvert, and bounced back coming to a
stop i.n the northbound lane upslde down .
The most seriously injured were ·
passengers Russell Fitchpatrick, l4, Rt. I,
Middleport, and Rick Priddy, 14, DeXter,
who are in St. Marys Hospital and Howard
Furgeson, 12, no address recorded, who is
in Holzer Medical Center. Sigler, the
driver, was not injured nor was rinother

PRICE 20 CENTS

Vandalism probed
by Gallia Sheriff
GALIJPOIJS
Two acts o[ van·
dalism, a tbefl complaint and · an auto
accident were investigated Friday by
Gallia County sherifl's deputies.
.
P. W. Rickman o! Lower River .Rd.
reported sl!rneone broke a window out of
his moblle home and Stan Evans of Bob
McCormick Rd. sald someone slashes two
tires on his van which was parked Ji'riday
night at the Holiday Inn in Kanauga.
· Phillip Heck of Ravenswood reported .
the theft of a .22 caliber pistol taken from .
his change locker at the James M. Gavin
Plant.
Deputies investigated a ..)filljic accident at the Tara Apartrno.rff complex in
Addison where an auto driven by William
E. Kushali, 57, 844 Carm Dr., backed into a
parked car owned by Patricia K. Hastlngs,
26, o! Addison.

Two men charged
with destruction
GALLIPOLIS - Larry L. Woodall, 20,
Kent, Ob,io, and Gregory L. Kerr, 19,
.Rootstown, Ohio, were arrested by city
police here Friday following a complaint
filed by Mrs. John McKean at the WilHam
Ann Motel.
According to the police, the pair were
charged with destruction o[ property in
their motel room ..
Officers said a lamp was broken and
that a picture and the elecirlcal system
, were damaged. Both men posted $200
bonds in lleu of appearances in Gallipolis
Municipal Court.
Pollee investigated a hit-skip Frlday
on the parking lot at the Pennyfare Market
. on Thlrd Ave. Officers said lll1 unknown
vehicle struck a parked c~r owned . by
Lennle E. Haptonstall of Middleport.
A backing mlshap occurred on Court St.
where an auto drlven by Il!Sac L. Fraley,
70, 554 Jackson Plke, backed lnto a truck
owned by Samuel L. Morrls of BidwelL.

Vinton .woman ~ets
one-year sentence ,

POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK ·co
.

Middleport-Pomeroy

passenger, Floyd Fitchpatrick, 16, Rt. 1;
Middleport.
·
Ali-re taken to Veterans Merrtocial
Hospitaloy the Pomeroy E:R Squad. The
three Q&lt;&gt;ys were later trans!erred to the
other two hospitals.
The accident is still under in··
vestigation.

11

oomo·oooo?iilooc&lt;l.JIICNoootrmXY'K)(~"""'"

MEIGS INN .

9:30 til 2

•

FLAG
KIT
Anderson

17!~

2.99

NIGHT

bockyord picnics, barbecues .. . or for recreation
room activities.

36" ~ 48 " x 1h" double laminated masonite
bockboord 'f inished in white, noo-glore
eoomel. 12-net loop gool ispl"emoooted.

REG .

SAT-.

1-Y2" thick rustic redwood p1cmc set .n ottractivt
porkoy style . Tobie is 24-1 / 16" wide. Use for

IN CTN .

SUNDAY, JULY 14, 1974

Two youths critical
following car _mishap

ELBERFELDS .IN POMEROY

BACKBOARD
&amp;GOAL

REG.
23.95

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

9:30 AM to 8 PM

.sn

3488

1'han 12,{)(}()
Families
34 PAGES

your own backyard

'

Reaching More

THREE' SECTIONS
VOL 9 NO. 24

He said authorities were Ueplnc
about 70 officers lnslde the federal co..-t
building including 54 city policemen, 10 to
20 U. S. deputy marshals and government
building guards.
George K. McKenny, chlel U. S.
marshal for the District of Columblo, said
the hostages are "in ~'!Od shape and Rood
spirits.'' He said he thought the releaoe
was "a good sign - lt was a muluaiiiOI'I of
thing. I believe-a solution can be reached."
"We are communicating with each
other. I can't say when this thing will come
to an end . I'm not interested in any bloodshed, violence or loss of life."
In another sign of easing tenalon, one
of the prisoners told radio station WASH
that officials had agreed to provide toothpaste, towels, toothbrushes and other
personal items.
Frank Gorham, 25, and Otis D.
Wilkerson, 24, who calls htmBelf Robert
Nathan Jones, overpowered federal
marshals in a desperate bld lor freedom
Thursday.
.
Gorham is serving up Ia 25 years for
armed bank robbery and Wilkerson lOla 30
years for conspiracy to kldnap, escape and
other counts.
They took eight hostgaes - four
deputy marshals, two private attorneys
and two Justice Department employes.
One deputy marshal was released Thurs- ·
day night.
·

Your Invited Guest

tmts

Partly cloudy with a chance

Clearance Sale Prices on piece goods • bath towels bedspreads - luggage -housewares -and furniture on the
third floor.

'"This may be an unprecedented action
for a judge in this county, but l truly
believe that some direct action must be
taken to settle the fears of this commll1lity
and its people .;
Provided sufficient evidence exists, it
is hoped this wlll bring about the indictment and trial of individuals involved in
drug abuse and related criminal activities," Judge Calhoun concluded.

+

of a!temoon thundershowers.
. High in 90s. Monday, chance of

PICNIC TABLE

NOW YOU KNOW
The
oyster
cocktail
._-iginated at a California bar
in I866 when a miner ordered a
whisky cocktail and some raw
oysters, and ..:. after drinking
the cocktail - placed the
oysters in the same glass with
catsup, Worcestershire and
pepper sauce 'and ate the
concoction with great gusto.

non, author of the pagent. Duerleu portra~ John Burford.
Friday, during the fourth of nine presentations, more than
600 persons attended the pageant. The sixth performance will
start at 9 o'clock this evening. Tickets are available at the
gate.

Weather

5FOOT

RUTLAND BRANCH
.
Mon ., Tues ., Wed ., Sat ., 9 a .m .-3 p.m .
l'hursday 9a .m. to 12 Noon
Friday 9 a .m . to 7 p.m .

GALLIPOLIS - The Galila County
Grand Jury wili..be seated at 9:'30 a.m.
Monday to hear testimony and evidence on
drug abuse in the Gallla County area .
Common Pleas Court Judge Ronald R.
Calhoun, earlier this month said:' " I want
every citizen of Gailia County to have an
opportunity to present to this grand Jury
all evidence he or she may have on drug
abuse and related crimes.

•

Open Friday &amp;

" It Is ll1llikely but possible."
The convict. earlier Saturday
released II other prisoners in what officials said was a sign of hope the incident
could end without bloodshed.
One prisoner, Almeda Washington, 24,
of Washington, decided to stay iri the
basement jail with the convicts who have
Uu-eatened to kill the hostages unless U&gt;ey
are freed. No one has been inJured so far .
Stevenson described the situation as
"stable." He said the gunmen had set no
deadline, and that the government was
willing "to let the standofi go on as long as
necessary ."

WASHl.NGTON ( UP!)
The
government held out Saturday the
"unlikely · but P&lt;&gt;SSible" hope that two
coovlcts besieged lor the third day ln the
federal courthouse Jail with seven
hostages, would be granted their demand
ol a plane to freedom .
. Justice Department spokesman
Robert Stevenson safd the two prisoners
were told thelr demand for air transportation to a foreign coUJitry "Is a condition the government cannot aceept."
But, asked If the government could
charoge its mind, Stevenson said:

antedate
the
Hopewell
Moundbuilder culture , Included In the find ~·• 1
ceremonial gorget placed at
the head of lhe grave.
Research is now belng
conducted by myself, a
member of lhe Department Of
Geography at the University Of
Maryland, and Mr. McDonald,
an employee of the · Kyger
Creek Power Plant, In an st.tempt to shed more light on the
Identity of the artifacts.

Storewide July ·Clearance Sale

•
.
being inducted, the law stili are discarded sold or find
reqwres every young man to their way into shoeboxes
register within the 6Q-day beneath other curios in a closet
period commencing 30 days or attic.
prior to his 18th birthday. He
For the more curious
pointed out that registration "amateur archaeologist"
can be conveniently ac- numerous books are available,
complished · in one of three which provide aid in (Ieier·
ways for the Meiga County mining the origin and purpose
youth :
of such artifacts. An excellent
I. Registration ai the site litUemonographdiseusslng lhe
office in Portsmouth
Virginia Indians is Ben c,
2. Registration by mail if no McClary, "Indians in Seven.
volunteer registrar is con- teenth Century Virgins",
venienUy located
which is available from the
3. Registration by volunteer University Press of Virginia
registrar at the following for only $1.50.
locations:
0 Another work which
Reedsville - Eastern High discusses in considerable
School, Ms. Helen Heaton, delail all the eastern seabord is
Registrar.
·
James B. Griffin "ArRadne - Southern High chaeoiogy ot Eastern' United .
Sch~l, Ms. Marilyn L. Powell, States", published by the
University of Chicago Press.
Reg1strar.
Pomeroy' - _ Meigs Hlgh This thoroughiy documented
School, Mr. Harold E. Sauer, text provides drawings
Registrar; Board of Education photographs, and maps so that
Office (Mulberry Heights), Ms. common and rare artifacts in
Unda Lou Raley, Registrar ; your possession can be comGallia-Meiga Corporation for pared. For more general in-.
Community Ac~on ; Ms. Hazel formation, the numerous
McKelvey, Registrar.
works by Clark Wissler should
•

years of being plowed , a
considerable amount of earth
still had to be removed by
shovels before l!Oatchin8 lhe
actual grave. Beneath a cover
of large sandstone
meticulOUSly placed by lhe
Indians - a four inch layer of
charcoal wu noted, whlch
cootained fragmenrs of anlmal
bones and small chips of flint .
At a depth of sis feet we
discovered 72 spear points and
ar.rowheads which possibly

•

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Senate Thursday voted to
deprive federal agents of the
power to· rilake "no knock"
ralds on suspected drug deaSat~rday
lers.
It also voted overwhelmingly
for an amendment to cut off
military and economic aid to
any COUJitry that grows opiwn
that illegally reaches U.S.
markets.
The move was clearly aimed
at Turkey, whlch recently
Ufted a ban on the growing of
poppies from which opium and 1--------------------------_.:.'---------------~------~---__,
heroin are derived.
The_ controversial "no
knock" law enacted four years
ago empowered federal narcotics agents and District of '
Columbia police to obtain '
warranis to break torclbly into
a suspect's home or offlce
without announcing themselves.
An amendment repealing the
authority passed, 64 to 3I, as
part of a measure extending
the Ufe of the Drug Enforcement Administration for five
years.
The legislation was sent to
the House. .
The antiopium amendment
was sponsored by Sena. Walter
Mondsle, D-Minn., and James
Buckley, R-N.Y., and passed
3PIECESET
by Monterey Bay
81-3.

Get that
new car you deserve.
See us today
about an Auto Loan.
Fast. Efficient Thrifty.
Zoom in today.

992-3629

he consulted.
This short essay was
prompted In part by my recent
vtslt Ia Pomeroy, during which
it·was my good fortune to work
wlth Bruce M. McDonald in
excavating an Indian mound in
that area . Informed of the
location of the burial mound,
we were graciously given
pennisslon by lhe owner to
excavate lt.
AithOU8h the mound was
much Jower after successJve

::~:.e:~.,:,~~:e~a~:' often, however, these objecls

Draft hoard moves

No knock
rule is kayoed

oome,c;y
'"'lond

land has assumed at times
more Importance than the
preservatioo of their cultaral
heritage.
Most or lhe tribes Inhabiting
North An&gt;erica have long since
vanished, leaving lillie but
their weapons, tools, and
domestic utensils buried ln the
earth. One practice which has
brought to light considerable
knowledge concerning these
tribes has been the search for
these elusive and fast
diminishing artifacts.
These material remains of
mlll1 - the objects he used and
made, his dwelling places and
defensive structares, his tools
and weapons, the remains of

•

.

The Department Store of.BuUditig Since 1915

I

HEW omCERS .- Poul llmlrt, -.cont~ from left, in·
111111 new' llllmbetl ollhl Mlddlllpcri-Pomero)i Rolllry Club
at-tile club's weekly rneetln&amp; Friday nlcht. New officers are,

.

••

from ltft to rJsht, Delln!J Keney, director, Slnlrt, Harolti E.

Hubbard, director, Rev. ·Robert S.UIIlllrdntr, president,
Vemon Weber, vice-preeldent, Jolin L: Werner, secretary,
aitd George Melllhart, director, Additional photo on page 2.

'

•

• · PT. PLEASANT ..:. A one year sentence in' the Mason County Jall wa.s given
wSadie Lynn Thacker of.Route I, Vinton,
by Judge James Lee Thompson in the
Mason CoUJity Circuit Court Friday.
The sentence followed a guilty plea to
Petit Larceny on June 17 by Miss Thacker.
·· Origlnally;she had pleaded not guilty to a
charge o! grand larceny.
Tile incident that Miss Thacker was
·. charged With stems back to January 24
when she was acculltld Ol stealing · ap• .
proximately '300 of personal property
belonging to Mary Waller of . Polr\t
Pleasant.
·

..

l
I·

WARDROBE MISTIIESS for lhe ltlsiAirical mualcal pageant "Gallill Country';
is Mrs. Th~ (Nora) Price, Gallipolis. Mrs. Price was asalgned the respon.
sib1Uiy of proVIding costumes for approximately 85 east members.

Nora Price wardrobe
-mistress for pageant
RIO GRANDE"- Mrs. Thorn· (Nora) Scrips-Howard correspondent, as "looking
Price, Galilpoiis, is wardrobe mistress for as though it had come from one of Ohlo's
the historical musical pageant, "Gallia historical musewns."
Co'Wltry."
Those wh\l have attended '"Gallia
Country"
can attest to the fact that Uie
Mrs . .Price has undertaken the
mopurnental task of providing costumes costuming has added a great dimension
for approximately 85 participants in the and reality to the pageant When the appageant.
plause is heard following the per!onnances,
a large part ol it should be shared
. Some o!the wardrobe has been rented,
but for the most part, the work has been with Nora Price, ~~seamstress ex·
turned out by Mrs. Price with many yards traordinaire !'' • .
of material, miles of thread and acres of
Following this weekend's per·
talent and patlence.
formances, there will be three more on
She made patterns. bought patterns, July 19, 20 and 21, starting at 9 p.m. In the
let out seams ... took in searrts ... collected amphitheatre at ·.Rio Grande. Tlcke~ for
~~ sorts of clOthing from Goodwill, the adults are
an.d children I2 yeara of
age
and
under,
$i.IIO.
people's attics and basements, but with the
skill of · a Michelangelo or Mantisse,
There are special rates for groupa of •
''Artistic Nora"·has come up wlih a ward- or more. Further infonnation may be
robe which has been described by one obtained from the Gallia Dramatic Aria
·Society, Chamber of Commerce BJdi., I8
State St., Gal,lipoiis, phone He-8011.

'3

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MIDDLEPORT ~

Cecil Thompson of
Rutland owned a car destroyed by flre
following a traffic ~¢elden! Wednesday at
the junction of County Road 3 and Rt. 7 ln ·
Meigs County.
The Gallla-Meigs Po~t State Highway
Patrol said an auto drlven by Albert D.
Cain, 58, Williamstown, W. Va ~ struck the
rear end of the car, which was dtlven by
Paul D. Kuhn, 27, Rt. 1, Middleport. The
car caught flre after the cruh.

.

. No one hUrt in mishap
, GALIJPOLIS- No Qll' waallljured In
an accident at 8 a.m. Friday 011 Rl. 110,
.flve tenths 'of a mile 11011th of tbt GalllaVinton County line.
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The Gallla·Melga l'olt 1111118 JlcllwiJ
'Patrol sald Dena K, Fralty, II, II. l,
Ewing ton, 1011 Clllllrol of hlr car llhldl na.
off the hlahway llriklllc a cW*III. ,_.
was mt&gt;dtrate dlmliCe Ia lhl - .

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2- The sunday Timos-Senlinei,Swlday,July Jf,lt74

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Michig~n m·ak~s' conviction easier g~~~~~c:e!~ LAMB
LANSING, Mich . ( UP!} - The sUite her ease.
legialators early Saturday appro.ed a
Additionally, the proposed law would
"tough revision of Michigan 's antiquate pro teet men and women alike from forced
rape laws to make it easier to convict aexual activity.
rapisla.
First degree raP., wouid encompass
The legwation prohibit.! a defense sexual interCourse with a child under 13"
attorney from dredging up details of a

incest with a child aged 13 to 16, forceable
rape, rape with a weapon or rape com-mitted during the perpetration of another
felony , such as kidnaping ,
'
By uwroaoe E. umb, M.D.
eases &lt;( moderately elevated
The other three degrees would be for
DEAR DR" LAMB - My blood pressure can be conprogressively lesser forms of assaul ~ .
husband has high blood trolled adequately wi Ill proper
pressure which is inberited. weight COI!trol, That means
rape victim 's previous sexual a ctivity in
Everyone in his famlly has It, getting rid ot all the fat. Some
court in an attempt to discredit her by
May prOblem is, he goes to a doctors give up, knowing a
"Implying that she invited sexual attack.
doctor who doesn't weigh him patient · will not follow a diet
The law also changes rape !rom a
or put him on any kind of a diet. and wiU continue to fry eggs
sexual crime to a crime of assault,
He has been going to him for :swimming in oil and Ignore
dividing it into lour degrees much as
the past lo years and keeps every bit of diet advice given,
murder is divided into "' three degrees.
putting on weight. He's five- So, the doctor does what he can
First-degree rape would carry a
feet..nlne and weighs about 200. with a patient who won't
maximum jail tenn of life which is the
He has a lot of indigestion cooperate, and uses medicine
same required by current law.
and keeps chewing piUs lor to help relieve the problem.
The House approved the bill Thursday
gas. He fries his eggs in a pan
Personally, I think all
on a 99-2 vote and the Senate followed suit
of oil, He can't drink coffee, tea moderate cases of high blOOd
with a 27~ volt! Friday . But Sen . Basil
or Sanka because they all pressure should first be treated
Brown, D-Detroit, teamed "UP with other
bother hitn, and now he's on by eliminating any "excess fat
...-attorneys in the Senate to move to
cocoa because so far this hasn 'I the patient has. If the high
reconsider the Senate vote.
bothered hitn. I told him cocoa blood pressure persists then it
The bill's sponsor, Sen . Gary Byker,
isn' t good for him.
is time to use medicines.
R-Hudsonville, evaded 23 amendment.!
I ·am very patient with hitn.
A lot of your husband's indrawn up by Brown whi•.h would have
We've been married 28 years digestion may be related to his
emasculated the key provisions, Byker
and have had a happy life, but I bad
dietary
program .
said . Brown's move was defeated early
worry about what he's doing to Overeating leads to ugas'.' and
Saturday morning in a marathon budget
himself" I keep asking him to indigestion. And, it is true that
session on a 20-9 vote. Gov. William G"
change doctors and he won't. cocoa contains caffeine which
Milliken is expected to sign it into law.
Shouldn't he be going to a may not be good for the inGAvEL PASsEr&gt; - Harold Hubbard, past president of tbe Middleport The rape measure provides that a rape
specialist? I'm sure he "might digestion problem . It also
Pomeroy Rotary Club, !l"'sented the gavel, symbolic of the top officer of an
victim need not prove that she resisted to
live longer than me, but I contains plenty of calories.
organization, to the n.Wly elected president, Rev. Robert Baumgardrer, during
the utmost - something she must often
would like you to 1&lt;!11 me if I'm
It does sound like your
·Friday night's meet,lng at tbe Heath United Methodist Church,
provide in court under current law to win
wrong in worrying. He's been husband needs help in the diet
on pressure medication all department. Can't you do it for
FIGURES RELEASED
these years.
·him? One sure way to avoid
Finley who resigned recently
GALLIPOLIS
May
1974
DEAR READER - Obesity those eggs swimming in ' Oil
to mqve to Detroit, Michigan .
sales
of
Series
E.
&amp;
H
United
is
harm!ulto patientS with high 'woUld be for you to fix his
Mrs. Zimmer comes to the
Savings
Bonds
in
Ohio
were
blood
pressure. Even if it is breakfasffor him. Give him a
Commission from Northern
PORTSMOUTH
A State
Planning
Region Kentucky State College , $36.9 million . At the end of inheril&lt;!d it still needs to be low-fat, low-cholesterol breakResearch Director , Child designations.
Highland Heights, Kentucky, May, the slate attained 45.0 treated. You don't neglect to . fast to start the day with. Tben
Development Coordinator, and
Added to the O.V.RD.C.
where she was employed as an pet or its 1974 sales goal " c" treat diabetes just because you plan the rest or his meals so
Comptroller have been added Child Development staff is
Leon"Saunders, Gallia County have inherited it. The same that they are satisfying but not
to the staff of the Ohio Valley Mrs. Kay Bradley who will accoun tant Prior lo ·that she Volunteer Savings Bonds applies to high blood pressure. loaded with calories. The wife
was employed as an ac·
Regional Deve1opm·ent coordinate progriun activities
The evidence strongly ofl&lt;!n makes the difference in
countant and bookkeeper in Chairman, reported May sales
Commission.
of th"e Commission's three
of
Savings
Bonds
in
the
county
suggests that about half of th• whether a husband is · sucCincinna !L She a !tended
Frank Balmer!, . Executive Child Development programs.
$36,629
.
The
county
were
cessful or not on a diet.
Ashland School of Commerce,
Director, announced the Mrs.. Bradley has a Bachelor of Xavier University and the achieved 45.5 pet of its annual . SUNilAY
J"' I can' t cover all the poinla
employment of Steven G. Arts Degree in Education from
·
sales
goal
May
31.
here, but you could plan a lowNational Cash Regisl&lt;!r Ac·
Published every SUnday by The Ohio
Hunter, 24, formerly of West the University of Kentucky and counting &amp; Programming
Valle)' Publi!hlng Co. '
fat, low-cholesterol meal
GALUPOUS
Jeff on, Ohio, as Research has done graduate work in
program for your husband by
School. Mrs. Zimmer has two
DAILY TRIBUNE
ector. Mr. Hunter attended Clinical Psychology at the u. or daughl&lt;!rs .
!135 'J'h.ird Ave., Gallipolis, Ohil) 45131.
using the recipes and food
WRONG l\fAN GETS $25,000
io University in Athens K. and Morehead State
, Published every weftday evenin&amp; et.·J tables in my book, 1'What You
O.VRD.C. is a service and
LANSING, Mich. (UP!) - , cept Sih.trdlly. Second ClaM Postage Pakl
wh re he received his University.
Need to Know About Food and
·
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development orgariiza tion The Michigan. Senate Friday " . 'a.t Gallipolis, Ohio «11.
Ba elor's
degree
and · Mrs. Bradley was employed
mE DAILY SENTINEL
Cooking
lor Health" (Viking
eslablished in 1967 to coor- agreed to pay $25,000 to Lee
lll Court St.. Pomeroy, 0 . U761.
Mas 's degree in Regional for· three years aJ the Lans- "
dinate
the
economic !leU Walker, who spent nearly : Pub!~ every weekday evening except Press, 625 Madison Avenue,
Planning . . As a graduate downe Mental Health Center at
Entered u aecond da111 malltng
New York, N. Y" )"
development activities of 20 years in prison on murder Saturday.
rna_uer at Pomeroy, OJIIo Pol!lt Office. I
student he was the recipient or Ashland, Kentucky, and served
You didn't say what your
eleven southern Ohio c·ounties charges but was freed when it
By earlier da ilr and Sunday '&amp;oc per
an ·American Collegiate as Early Childhood specialist
.
husband's
blood pressure is
,
week.
Motor
route
S
2.60
per
month
.
·including Scioto, Pike, Ross, was learned that he was the
Schools of Architecture En- in the community coordinated
MAIL .
with his present treatment
Adams, Brown , Highland, wrong man.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
vironmental Stipends Program Child Care Prog~am of Palm
plan.
If it is well "controlled
The Galllpoli! 'l'flbune In Ohio and Wl!llt
Clermont, Lawrence, Jackson,
On a unanimous 33-0 vote, the
Grant, served as a gl'aduate Beach County, Florida .
Virglnla
Oil!
month
~. 5(1 ; one year ili.OO;
senate approved the bill, six month:! SUO; thnlt montM f&amp;.OO. I then his remaining p~oblem is
teaching assistant, . and Presently living in Ashland, . Vinton and .Gallia.
sponsored by former Sen . , Ebewhere 122 per year; slxmonth!llJ-1.50: that diet which you could help
received the 1974 Faculty "she is married to Robert
1 three months 16.50; motor" route· f%.&amp;11
with. He could ask his doctur to
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - More
•
Award as outstanding Plan- Bradley and has a son and a than $1 mJ1Uon in granla has Coleman A. Young, who has t moilUtly.
refer him to a heart specialist.
since been elected · mayor of
The Daily sentinel, one 'month f:!.!WI; llll!
ning student.
daughter . The Bradleys plan to been awarded to 79 Ohio school
Detroit. Tbe bill now goes to ) year $18.00; sh: months 19 .~; t1;1rtt After he has had the benefit or
Hunter is single and now move to the Portsmouth area distrlcta to adapt new teaching the state house. · ·
onlhs $8.00. Elsewhere t22 per year~lix
the specialist's advice he could
montha 111.50; three monll"lll $8.50; •
resides in Portsmouth ." • in the near future. ·
aides to local needs.
return to his family doctor if he
Walker , 61, a native of roote $2.60 monthly.
·
The Commission's new
Balmer! said Hunter will be
Ohip School Superinl&lt;!ndent Texarkana, Tex.,' spent the ' The United Pit!111 lntemaUOnal Is c•· wishes and . all the reco'\1dWiively enUlled to the 111e for pubUcadon
responsible for the Com- Comptroller is Mrs. Martha Mart!! W. Essex said Ohio is
time behind bars due to a of, all news dlspatc._ credited · to this mendations or I the specialist
mission's efforts to obtain Zimmer or Route I, Kitts Hill, the first state to qualify for
mistake in identity and falSe newspaper and alao the local news would be given to the referring
certification " under the new Ohio. She replaces Mrs. Pat such federal funds.
publlsh!M herein.
.family doctor.
testimony,

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Lfttnt of ophdourt welcomed. Tboy ob011Jd bo 1-

lhu 300 wordo 10111 (or be oubloct to r.educdoa by lhe ,
edllor) ud mUJt bo oiJIIOd wllh tile oicoee'• lddnu.
N11111u "'IOY be wtthllold upotl p•bUcatloo. Ho'l!'evor, 011
requoat, namu wUibo dlteloaed. L&lt;tten ahould be l•lood
uoate, addrHtlna ltauea, oot ptnoaaUUH.

high blood pressure

OVRDC adds three

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I

TOBEWF:D

I

GALUPOL!S
Miss
Patricia Ann Gingerich and '
Charles W. Bodlmer !II, will be
married July 20 at 6:30 p.n\, in
the First Baptist Church
because of the remodeling of
Grace . United Methodi st
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Custer
Olurch. Pre-nuptial music will and son, Bart, have returned to
begin at 6 p.m. The custom of Morgantown , W. Va., alter
open Church will be observed . visltinR here with Mr . and Mrs.
_James Criswell.
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds accookout and an evening {){ companied her sister, Mrs.
entertalmr.&lt;i! nt by Clarence Nina Bland, and Miss Cheryl
Andrews by Mr . · and Mrs . Neher to Akron Friday .
Charles Withee, Mr" and Mrs . · Mrs. Alma Thompson,
Jim Andrews, Mr, and Mrs" Columbus, 5penl Wednesday
Ralph Frye, Pomeroy ; Mr. and and Thursday here visiting her
Mrs. William Eskew of Dayton . brother, Edward Hoeflich, and
Homemade ice cream and Mr. and Mr•. Reino Lind ,
cake were served ,
Condor SL

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Dear Mr. Editor :
.
We, tbe parenu of the 1974-75 killdergarten children of tile
Eastern Local School District, attended the regular, June board
meeting and asked the board to reUiin half day kindergarten li1
our !K'hool district. Fourteen "parenta were present along with
petiUons bearing 33 signatures Q{ kindergarten parents. Theoe 33
signatures represented a majority of those regl.stered for the
!974-.75 school year. (We couldn't conUict every parent as we had
no list of names. Mr, Riebel, at thattlme, couldn't locate the Ust.)
It appears our feelings (those of the majority) were Ignored.
At the regular July board meetin8 it was moved by Mr. Caldwell
and seconded by Mr. Smith that Eastern go to whole day kindergarten. All five members voted yes.
.Why are we the only school district in Meigs County having
whole day \dndergarten? U other school districts can finance half
day sessions why can't Eastern???
In 1972 Meigs Local changed their kindergarten from whole
day U&gt; half day due to parental pressure. PLEASE, kindergarten
parenla for the school year 1974-75 and also parents of upcoming
children contact each board member and demand that our !l"'hool
district return to half day kindergarten. Let them .kn9W the
welfare of our young chlldren is of the utmost imporUin~;e! Urge
each board member to. calla special board meeting and change
this back. It appears it wiq take more pressure than what we, the,
majority,have shown thus far. Remind each board member that
we parenta are also voters and taxpayers.
·
Very truly yours, Mrs. Everett Calaway, Spokeswoman for
the parenla asking for hall day kindergarten.

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Tonight, Mon ., Tues.

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Eskew descendants gather
POMEROY - Descendants
of John and Roxie Eskew held
a reunion on JW1e 30 at Forest
Acres Park near Rutland.
A basket dinner and cookout
was held at noon with games,
fishin g and guitar music by
· Clarence and Bill Andrews and
Rick Webster being enjoyed .

Jannan

~

F1orsheim

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Low
~

Low As

'14.00

Selected Styles Of
Florsheim

•

Jarman

Crosby Square

••
•

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Florsheim 12995J37'l .

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Now •21 10·'2910

I

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Janna~

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Now '7"·'1411

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" IT CAlf B~ SAID,

SIMPLY AND \'liTH THANKS,
THAT !TIS AN
"
ABSOLUTELY TERRIFIC MOVIE:'
Jay Co cks
Ti me Maga zi he

t

r

IEG HNICOLOR" • f'RINTS BYD ~

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Monday thru Thursday
July 15- 18

NOT OPEN

_,_ -·

- 366 Second Ave. Gallipolis. Ohio
See The World Famous
Exhibits On Display
• '87,000 Umousine
• Bonnie &amp; Clyde Car ~
• World's Smallest Hone

Noon til 9 Tues.

NCE
3 EASY WAYS TO BUY

. CASH • CHARGE
LAYAWAY

3U QUART PI,.

ICE CHEST
Keep Food Moist,
Fresh, Cold, Leak

-2

Proof, ~

No Mildew
Serving Tray Ud
'

20 INCH 3'n HP

POWER
MOWER

REG.

l.li

PRICE

1

$

DO
SALE
PRICE

ITEM

TO
'I

95

''

TO

ITEM

BUSTOUT BLOUSE

40

BOYS SHORTY PJs

125

TANK TOPS

44

MENS WALKING SHORTS

40

X SIZE KNIT TOPS

34

MENS DOUBLE KNIT SLACKS

'

'2n

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1
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sr

"

Group Florsheim Shoes:.................... ~ Low As 114.00
Entire Stock Swimwear &amp; Walk Shorts '5-111 Now 14-?

.41

'
.

65

BOYS SHIRTS, 8 to 18

41

SHORT SETS, Knit 4 to 6x

36

PURSES

'

Entire Stock Ladies Summer Mdse. Reduced25% to 40%

All

i
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Boys Wear............................·•Reduced 20%-33¥3%

y

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BOYS BAGGIES, Sizes 6 to 16

to '19' .

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.....

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68

LADIES PANT SETS

.'1JS

59

SHiFT &amp; SHORTS

IJS

24

STRAW HANDBAGS

16
29!1

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'2n

.1

~

00

$197

STRUCTO KETTLE GRILLS

'•'

·~5.00

ASSORTED SUMMER FABRIC

•

&gt;

•
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WIDDER WOMAN "

WALKING
TALL
.BATHING
SUITS

•

t

\THE
UNIFORM CENTER

Y2 PRICE

L UH~

~
CARTOON

Entire Stock MeJISc'Sport Coats .......... Reduced 20%-25%

Now '8
GALUPOUS, OHIO

v"ur WHfTE SWAN DISTRIBUTOR at

Show Starts 7 p.m.

FAMILY

•

Reg. '60 to 1110;.....................Now 148 to 188

10

l
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from 17.00

3 Stooges

FOR THE
ENTIRE

',

ENTIRE STOCK
Palm. Beach - Johnny Carson • SeweH Suits

Were •11.00 to

•:

Michael Morar ity
Robert DeNiro
Feature»e :
&lt;PGI
Diuy Detectives

DIRNDL &amp; BRA ·

'
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MENS DRESS SLACKS

,

m Many colors &amp; styles

LADIES HALTERS

l

&amp; SPort Coats
to 70%

ENTIRE STOCK ·

"'

BANG THE
DRUM SLOWLY
( Technicotor l

RE W .DE SUMMER CLE

'

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To aid you in your profession what ever it is

Plaza

''•

Entire Stock Sport Shirts Dress Shirts '6-115 Now 1411-'12

19!i

1

TOf'light, July 14

Plus

" PREACH ERMAN MEETS

•

·SMOCKS

SHOP EARlY WHilE
QUANTITIES lAST .

.f'

•3.88

~

AN ARTIST or
A NURSE or
A BEAUTICIAN or
A HOMEMAKER or
A MOTHER .
if So- We Have

LAY-AWAY

I

Reg. 1110 to 1120 SportCoats ................. '88.00 to -96.00

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"ARE.YOU

ONE WEEK
Tonight thru Saturday

Tonight thru
Tuesday

Reg. 1125 to 1185 Suits &amp; Trios .............~3.00 to '138.00

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CASH, CHARGE,

•I

Su~

Double Feature

" PREACHERMAN"

S.n .Francisco, he •••
BUoclated with the allomoy
general's office In Cohmbu4.

fht•utrY

•

HART SCHAFFNER &amp; MARX
•

Clarence
Andrews
and
Raymond, Mr . and Mrs.
Eugene Eskew, Lori and Andy,
Pomeroy .
They werf jQined for a

••

ENTIRE STOCK

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REDUCED 50%

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Ke vin and Marie, Teresa King
and Dennis, Tuppers Plains;

Larry ard Elaine Stafford,
Loretta, Larry and Penny,
Groveport ; Dick and Judy
Simon, Rocky, Patti, Tom and
Bill, Brookville : . Charles
Eugen~ and Mary Withee,
Matthew and Kevin, Rio
dW'ing the afternoon . Plans Grande ; Jim and Comlee
were made for the 1975 reunion Andrews,
Fred
KinCh,
to be held at the park on the Pomeroy ; Mary Wayland,
last Sunday of June.
Terry and Lauree, Middleport;
AUending .the reunion were Charlie and Jan Hatfield, Mike
·Edward and Leona Webster and Darla, Rutland: Bill An·
and son, Rick; Bill and Millie drews, Mason, W. Va .; Mike
Eskew, John, Tom and Jim; and
Teresa
Marcinko,
Dewayne and Rosemary Louisiana, and Pete Gfddes,
Eskew and Mark, aiJ of Atlanta, Ga .
Dayton;
Clarence
and
Several of the families spent
Margaret Andrews, .Susie ard . the weekend in the cabins at
Raymon"d ; Chuck and Mildred Forest Acres. They were Mr.
Withee; Ralph and Gladys and Mrs. Dewayne Eskew and
Frye, Gene and Margaret Mark, Mr" and Mrs. Eddie
Eskew, ·J fri Sue, Beverly, Webster and Jim Eskew,
Ellora, and Andy, Pomeroy". Dayton ; Mr . and Mrs.
"Ra ym'ond and
Eileen
Hatfield, Rutland; Bob and .
Maxine Marcinko, Eric, Jeff,""

CONGRESSIONAL PAGE- John Cliiit Foltz (right) Ia
serving as a Congresaional page in the U. S. ·Capitol during
the month of July, Foltz, the grandson of Mr. and Mrs. James
. L. Clark, Rio Grande, frequently visit,. with U. S.
Representative Clarence Miller, or Ohlo'sloth Congressional
District. Rep. Miller praised Foltz, who is an Eagle SC&lt;lut, for
his work in the summer pag_e program.

"

Group of Men's

July 14-_15-16

rnovkl&amp; to

COLO\\ ·

OVER 400 PAIRS
OF SHOES
ON SALE!
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Mason
Drive-In

Academy' BefOI't

Is

MEIGS THEATRE·

SONS AND DAUGHTERS ol the late John and Rolde Eskew attending reunion beld .
recently at Forest Acres Park were, left to right, Dewayne Eskew, Eugene Eskew, wtlliain
Es"kew, Maxine Marcinko, Leona Webswr, Mildred Withee, Eileen Hatfield, Margaret An·
drews and Gladys Frye, Ason,.CharlesEskew, was unable to attend.

former realden• ol GtiiUpOUo
and a graduate ol Gallla

GO / A20

••

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" Froncioco. The baby weighed I
lbs. and has been ..med
Amy Elaine . Mrs. Irene St.
Clair
the J!l!ternal yondmother, and maternal yond·
parenlaare Mr .and Mrs . Willis .
Foote, Cleveland. Rood Is a

• •

. Europeans once grew cat·
nip, or catmint, in herb gar- ...- - - - - - - - - •
dens and used it to sea son
food and brew lea .

TIMEs.SE~NR

'•

PAUGHTER BORN
SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. Ally, and Mrs. James Steven
ROOd, San Franc~¥o. Calif.,
announce the blrt~ of a
daughter , Sanday, July 7, at
Children's Hospital, San

$1996

I

SHORTS &amp; JACKET SETS
ASSORTED JEWELRY

~PRICE

�-.
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2- The sunday Timos-Senlinei,Swlday,July Jf,lt74

,

Michig~n m·ak~s' conviction easier g~~~~~c:e!~ LAMB
LANSING, Mich . ( UP!} - The sUite her ease.
legialators early Saturday appro.ed a
Additionally, the proposed law would
"tough revision of Michigan 's antiquate pro teet men and women alike from forced
rape laws to make it easier to convict aexual activity.
rapisla.
First degree raP., wouid encompass
The legwation prohibit.! a defense sexual interCourse with a child under 13"
attorney from dredging up details of a

incest with a child aged 13 to 16, forceable
rape, rape with a weapon or rape com-mitted during the perpetration of another
felony , such as kidnaping ,
'
By uwroaoe E. umb, M.D.
eases &lt;( moderately elevated
The other three degrees would be for
DEAR DR" LAMB - My blood pressure can be conprogressively lesser forms of assaul ~ .
husband has high blood trolled adequately wi Ill proper
pressure which is inberited. weight COI!trol, That means
rape victim 's previous sexual a ctivity in
Everyone in his famlly has It, getting rid ot all the fat. Some
court in an attempt to discredit her by
May prOblem is, he goes to a doctors give up, knowing a
"Implying that she invited sexual attack.
doctor who doesn't weigh him patient · will not follow a diet
The law also changes rape !rom a
or put him on any kind of a diet. and wiU continue to fry eggs
sexual crime to a crime of assault,
He has been going to him for :swimming in oil and Ignore
dividing it into lour degrees much as
the past lo years and keeps every bit of diet advice given,
murder is divided into "' three degrees.
putting on weight. He's five- So, the doctor does what he can
First-degree rape would carry a
feet..nlne and weighs about 200. with a patient who won't
maximum jail tenn of life which is the
He has a lot of indigestion cooperate, and uses medicine
same required by current law.
and keeps chewing piUs lor to help relieve the problem.
The House approved the bill Thursday
gas. He fries his eggs in a pan
Personally, I think all
on a 99-2 vote and the Senate followed suit
of oil, He can't drink coffee, tea moderate cases of high blOOd
with a 27~ volt! Friday . But Sen . Basil
or Sanka because they all pressure should first be treated
Brown, D-Detroit, teamed "UP with other
bother hitn, and now he's on by eliminating any "excess fat
...-attorneys in the Senate to move to
cocoa because so far this hasn 'I the patient has. If the high
reconsider the Senate vote.
bothered hitn. I told him cocoa blood pressure persists then it
The bill's sponsor, Sen . Gary Byker,
isn' t good for him.
is time to use medicines.
R-Hudsonville, evaded 23 amendment.!
I ·am very patient with hitn.
A lot of your husband's indrawn up by Brown whi•.h would have
We've been married 28 years digestion may be related to his
emasculated the key provisions, Byker
and have had a happy life, but I bad
dietary
program .
said . Brown's move was defeated early
worry about what he's doing to Overeating leads to ugas'.' and
Saturday morning in a marathon budget
himself" I keep asking him to indigestion. And, it is true that
session on a 20-9 vote. Gov. William G"
change doctors and he won't. cocoa contains caffeine which
Milliken is expected to sign it into law.
Shouldn't he be going to a may not be good for the inGAvEL PASsEr&gt; - Harold Hubbard, past president of tbe Middleport The rape measure provides that a rape
specialist? I'm sure he "might digestion problem . It also
Pomeroy Rotary Club, !l"'sented the gavel, symbolic of the top officer of an
victim need not prove that she resisted to
live longer than me, but I contains plenty of calories.
organization, to the n.Wly elected president, Rev. Robert Baumgardrer, during
the utmost - something she must often
would like you to 1&lt;!11 me if I'm
It does sound like your
·Friday night's meet,lng at tbe Heath United Methodist Church,
provide in court under current law to win
wrong in worrying. He's been husband needs help in the diet
on pressure medication all department. Can't you do it for
FIGURES RELEASED
these years.
·him? One sure way to avoid
Finley who resigned recently
GALLIPOLIS
May
1974
DEAR READER - Obesity those eggs swimming in ' Oil
to mqve to Detroit, Michigan .
sales
of
Series
E.
&amp;
H
United
is
harm!ulto patientS with high 'woUld be for you to fix his
Mrs. Zimmer comes to the
Savings
Bonds
in
Ohio
were
blood
pressure. Even if it is breakfasffor him. Give him a
Commission from Northern
PORTSMOUTH
A State
Planning
Region Kentucky State College , $36.9 million . At the end of inheril&lt;!d it still needs to be low-fat, low-cholesterol breakResearch Director , Child designations.
Highland Heights, Kentucky, May, the slate attained 45.0 treated. You don't neglect to . fast to start the day with. Tben
Development Coordinator, and
Added to the O.V.RD.C.
where she was employed as an pet or its 1974 sales goal " c" treat diabetes just because you plan the rest or his meals so
Comptroller have been added Child Development staff is
Leon"Saunders, Gallia County have inherited it. The same that they are satisfying but not
to the staff of the Ohio Valley Mrs. Kay Bradley who will accoun tant Prior lo ·that she Volunteer Savings Bonds applies to high blood pressure. loaded with calories. The wife
was employed as an ac·
Regional Deve1opm·ent coordinate progriun activities
The evidence strongly ofl&lt;!n makes the difference in
countant and bookkeeper in Chairman, reported May sales
Commission.
of th"e Commission's three
of
Savings
Bonds
in
the
county
suggests that about half of th• whether a husband is · sucCincinna !L She a !tended
Frank Balmer!, . Executive Child Development programs.
$36,629
.
The
county
were
cessful or not on a diet.
Ashland School of Commerce,
Director, announced the Mrs.. Bradley has a Bachelor of Xavier University and the achieved 45.5 pet of its annual . SUNilAY
J"' I can' t cover all the poinla
employment of Steven G. Arts Degree in Education from
·
sales
goal
May
31.
here, but you could plan a lowNational Cash Regisl&lt;!r Ac·
Published every SUnday by The Ohio
Hunter, 24, formerly of West the University of Kentucky and counting &amp; Programming
Valle)' Publi!hlng Co. '
fat, low-cholesterol meal
GALUPOUS
Jeff on, Ohio, as Research has done graduate work in
program for your husband by
School. Mrs. Zimmer has two
DAILY TRIBUNE
ector. Mr. Hunter attended Clinical Psychology at the u. or daughl&lt;!rs .
!135 'J'h.ird Ave., Gallipolis, Ohil) 45131.
using the recipes and food
WRONG l\fAN GETS $25,000
io University in Athens K. and Morehead State
, Published every weftday evenin&amp; et.·J tables in my book, 1'What You
O.VRD.C. is a service and
LANSING, Mich. (UP!) - , cept Sih.trdlly. Second ClaM Postage Pakl
wh re he received his University.
Need to Know About Food and
·
·
development orgariiza tion The Michigan. Senate Friday " . 'a.t Gallipolis, Ohio «11.
Ba elor's
degree
and · Mrs. Bradley was employed
mE DAILY SENTINEL
Cooking
lor Health" (Viking
eslablished in 1967 to coor- agreed to pay $25,000 to Lee
lll Court St.. Pomeroy, 0 . U761.
Mas 's degree in Regional for· three years aJ the Lans- "
dinate
the
economic !leU Walker, who spent nearly : Pub!~ every weekday evening except Press, 625 Madison Avenue,
Planning . . As a graduate downe Mental Health Center at
Entered u aecond da111 malltng
New York, N. Y" )"
development activities of 20 years in prison on murder Saturday.
rna_uer at Pomeroy, OJIIo Pol!lt Office. I
student he was the recipient or Ashland, Kentucky, and served
You didn't say what your
eleven southern Ohio c·ounties charges but was freed when it
By earlier da ilr and Sunday '&amp;oc per
an ·American Collegiate as Early Childhood specialist
.
husband's
blood pressure is
,
week.
Motor
route
S
2.60
per
month
.
·including Scioto, Pike, Ross, was learned that he was the
Schools of Architecture En- in the community coordinated
MAIL .
with his present treatment
Adams, Brown , Highland, wrong man.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
vironmental Stipends Program Child Care Prog~am of Palm
plan.
If it is well "controlled
The Galllpoli! 'l'flbune In Ohio and Wl!llt
Clermont, Lawrence, Jackson,
On a unanimous 33-0 vote, the
Grant, served as a gl'aduate Beach County, Florida .
Virglnla
Oil!
month
~. 5(1 ; one year ili.OO;
senate approved the bill, six month:! SUO; thnlt montM f&amp;.OO. I then his remaining p~oblem is
teaching assistant, . and Presently living in Ashland, . Vinton and .Gallia.
sponsored by former Sen . , Ebewhere 122 per year; slxmonth!llJ-1.50: that diet which you could help
received the 1974 Faculty "she is married to Robert
1 three months 16.50; motor" route· f%.&amp;11
with. He could ask his doctur to
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - More
•
Award as outstanding Plan- Bradley and has a son and a than $1 mJ1Uon in granla has Coleman A. Young, who has t moilUtly.
refer him to a heart specialist.
since been elected · mayor of
The Daily sentinel, one 'month f:!.!WI; llll!
ning student.
daughter . The Bradleys plan to been awarded to 79 Ohio school
Detroit. Tbe bill now goes to ) year $18.00; sh: months 19 .~; t1;1rtt After he has had the benefit or
Hunter is single and now move to the Portsmouth area distrlcta to adapt new teaching the state house. · ·
onlhs $8.00. Elsewhere t22 per year~lix
the specialist's advice he could
montha 111.50; three monll"lll $8.50; •
resides in Portsmouth ." • in the near future. ·
aides to local needs.
return to his family doctor if he
Walker , 61, a native of roote $2.60 monthly.
·
The Commission's new
Balmer! said Hunter will be
Ohip School Superinl&lt;!ndent Texarkana, Tex.,' spent the ' The United Pit!111 lntemaUOnal Is c•· wishes and . all the reco'\1dWiively enUlled to the 111e for pubUcadon
responsible for the Com- Comptroller is Mrs. Martha Mart!! W. Essex said Ohio is
time behind bars due to a of, all news dlspatc._ credited · to this mendations or I the specialist
mission's efforts to obtain Zimmer or Route I, Kitts Hill, the first state to qualify for
mistake in identity and falSe newspaper and alao the local news would be given to the referring
certification " under the new Ohio. She replaces Mrs. Pat such federal funds.
publlsh!M herein.
.family doctor.
testimony,

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Lfttnt of ophdourt welcomed. Tboy ob011Jd bo 1-

lhu 300 wordo 10111 (or be oubloct to r.educdoa by lhe ,
edllor) ud mUJt bo oiJIIOd wllh tile oicoee'• lddnu.
N11111u "'IOY be wtthllold upotl p•bUcatloo. Ho'l!'evor, 011
requoat, namu wUibo dlteloaed. L&lt;tten ahould be l•lood
uoate, addrHtlna ltauea, oot ptnoaaUUH.

high blood pressure

OVRDC adds three

."'

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I

TOBEWF:D

I

GALUPOL!S
Miss
Patricia Ann Gingerich and '
Charles W. Bodlmer !II, will be
married July 20 at 6:30 p.n\, in
the First Baptist Church
because of the remodeling of
Grace . United Methodi st
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Custer
Olurch. Pre-nuptial music will and son, Bart, have returned to
begin at 6 p.m. The custom of Morgantown , W. Va., alter
open Church will be observed . visltinR here with Mr . and Mrs.
_James Criswell.
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds accookout and an evening {){ companied her sister, Mrs.
entertalmr.&lt;i! nt by Clarence Nina Bland, and Miss Cheryl
Andrews by Mr . · and Mrs . Neher to Akron Friday .
Charles Withee, Mr" and Mrs . · Mrs. Alma Thompson,
Jim Andrews, Mr, and Mrs" Columbus, 5penl Wednesday
Ralph Frye, Pomeroy ; Mr. and and Thursday here visiting her
Mrs. William Eskew of Dayton . brother, Edward Hoeflich, and
Homemade ice cream and Mr. and Mr•. Reino Lind ,
cake were served ,
Condor SL

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Dear Mr. Editor :
.
We, tbe parenu of the 1974-75 killdergarten children of tile
Eastern Local School District, attended the regular, June board
meeting and asked the board to reUiin half day kindergarten li1
our !K'hool district. Fourteen "parenta were present along with
petiUons bearing 33 signatures Q{ kindergarten parents. Theoe 33
signatures represented a majority of those regl.stered for the
!974-.75 school year. (We couldn't conUict every parent as we had
no list of names. Mr, Riebel, at thattlme, couldn't locate the Ust.)
It appears our feelings (those of the majority) were Ignored.
At the regular July board meetin8 it was moved by Mr. Caldwell
and seconded by Mr. Smith that Eastern go to whole day kindergarten. All five members voted yes.
.Why are we the only school district in Meigs County having
whole day \dndergarten? U other school districts can finance half
day sessions why can't Eastern???
In 1972 Meigs Local changed their kindergarten from whole
day U&gt; half day due to parental pressure. PLEASE, kindergarten
parenla for the school year 1974-75 and also parents of upcoming
children contact each board member and demand that our !l"'hool
district return to half day kindergarten. Let them .kn9W the
welfare of our young chlldren is of the utmost imporUin~;e! Urge
each board member to. calla special board meeting and change
this back. It appears it wiq take more pressure than what we, the,
majority,have shown thus far. Remind each board member that
we parenta are also voters and taxpayers.
·
Very truly yours, Mrs. Everett Calaway, Spokeswoman for
the parenla asking for hall day kindergarten.

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Tonight, Mon ., Tues.

"

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Eskew descendants gather
POMEROY - Descendants
of John and Roxie Eskew held
a reunion on JW1e 30 at Forest
Acres Park near Rutland.
A basket dinner and cookout
was held at noon with games,
fishin g and guitar music by
· Clarence and Bill Andrews and
Rick Webster being enjoyed .

Jannan

~

F1orsheim

•'•

Low
~

Low As

'14.00

Selected Styles Of
Florsheim

•

Jarman

Crosby Square

••
•

•

Florsheim 12995J37'l .

'

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Now •21 10·'2910

I

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Janna~

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•

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Now '7"·'1411

•I

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" IT CAlf B~ SAID,

SIMPLY AND \'liTH THANKS,
THAT !TIS AN
"
ABSOLUTELY TERRIFIC MOVIE:'
Jay Co cks
Ti me Maga zi he

t

r

IEG HNICOLOR" • f'RINTS BYD ~

•
'

Monday thru Thursday
July 15- 18

NOT OPEN

_,_ -·

- 366 Second Ave. Gallipolis. Ohio
See The World Famous
Exhibits On Display
• '87,000 Umousine
• Bonnie &amp; Clyde Car ~
• World's Smallest Hone

Noon til 9 Tues.

NCE
3 EASY WAYS TO BUY

. CASH • CHARGE
LAYAWAY

3U QUART PI,.

ICE CHEST
Keep Food Moist,
Fresh, Cold, Leak

-2

Proof, ~

No Mildew
Serving Tray Ud
'

20 INCH 3'n HP

POWER
MOWER

REG.

l.li

PRICE

1

$

DO
SALE
PRICE

ITEM

TO
'I

95

''

TO

ITEM

BUSTOUT BLOUSE

40

BOYS SHORTY PJs

125

TANK TOPS

44

MENS WALKING SHORTS

40

X SIZE KNIT TOPS

34

MENS DOUBLE KNIT SLACKS

'

'2n

'

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1
'•

sr

"

Group Florsheim Shoes:.................... ~ Low As 114.00
Entire Stock Swimwear &amp; Walk Shorts '5-111 Now 14-?

.41

'
.

65

BOYS SHIRTS, 8 to 18

41

SHORT SETS, Knit 4 to 6x

36

PURSES

'

Entire Stock Ladies Summer Mdse. Reduced25% to 40%

All

i
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'

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Boys Wear............................·•Reduced 20%-33¥3%

y

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BOYS BAGGIES, Sizes 6 to 16

to '19' .

•'"
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.....

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,.

68

LADIES PANT SETS

.'1JS

59

SHiFT &amp; SHORTS

IJS

24

STRAW HANDBAGS

16
29!1

••
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'2n

.1

~

00

$197

STRUCTO KETTLE GRILLS

'•'

·~5.00

ASSORTED SUMMER FABRIC

•

&gt;

•
•

WIDDER WOMAN "

WALKING
TALL
.BATHING
SUITS

•

t

\THE
UNIFORM CENTER

Y2 PRICE

L UH~

~
CARTOON

Entire Stock MeJISc'Sport Coats .......... Reduced 20%-25%

Now '8
GALUPOUS, OHIO

v"ur WHfTE SWAN DISTRIBUTOR at

Show Starts 7 p.m.

FAMILY

•

Reg. '60 to 1110;.....................Now 148 to 188

10

l
•

from 17.00

3 Stooges

FOR THE
ENTIRE

',

ENTIRE STOCK
Palm. Beach - Johnny Carson • SeweH Suits

Were •11.00 to

•:

Michael Morar ity
Robert DeNiro
Feature»e :
&lt;PGI
Diuy Detectives

DIRNDL &amp; BRA ·

'
''

MENS DRESS SLACKS

,

m Many colors &amp; styles

LADIES HALTERS

l

&amp; SPort Coats
to 70%

ENTIRE STOCK ·

"'

BANG THE
DRUM SLOWLY
( Technicotor l

RE W .DE SUMMER CLE

'

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••••
J
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To aid you in your profession what ever it is

Plaza

''•

Entire Stock Sport Shirts Dress Shirts '6-115 Now 1411-'12

19!i

1

TOf'light, July 14

Plus

" PREACH ERMAN MEETS

•

·SMOCKS

SHOP EARlY WHilE
QUANTITIES lAST .

.f'

•3.88

~

AN ARTIST or
A NURSE or
A BEAUTICIAN or
A HOMEMAKER or
A MOTHER .
if So- We Have

LAY-AWAY

I

Reg. 1110 to 1120 SportCoats ................. '88.00 to -96.00

'
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"ARE.YOU

ONE WEEK
Tonight thru Saturday

Tonight thru
Tuesday

Reg. 1125 to 1185 Suits &amp; Trios .............~3.00 to '138.00

•
•

-

CASH, CHARGE,

•I

Su~

Double Feature

" PREACHERMAN"

S.n .Francisco, he •••
BUoclated with the allomoy
general's office In Cohmbu4.

fht•utrY

•

HART SCHAFFNER &amp; MARX
•

Clarence
Andrews
and
Raymond, Mr . and Mrs.
Eugene Eskew, Lori and Andy,
Pomeroy .
They werf jQined for a

••

ENTIRE STOCK

.

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•

REDUCED 50%

••
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Ke vin and Marie, Teresa King
and Dennis, Tuppers Plains;

Larry ard Elaine Stafford,
Loretta, Larry and Penny,
Groveport ; Dick and Judy
Simon, Rocky, Patti, Tom and
Bill, Brookville : . Charles
Eugen~ and Mary Withee,
Matthew and Kevin, Rio
dW'ing the afternoon . Plans Grande ; Jim and Comlee
were made for the 1975 reunion Andrews,
Fred
KinCh,
to be held at the park on the Pomeroy ; Mary Wayland,
last Sunday of June.
Terry and Lauree, Middleport;
AUending .the reunion were Charlie and Jan Hatfield, Mike
·Edward and Leona Webster and Darla, Rutland: Bill An·
and son, Rick; Bill and Millie drews, Mason, W. Va .; Mike
Eskew, John, Tom and Jim; and
Teresa
Marcinko,
Dewayne and Rosemary Louisiana, and Pete Gfddes,
Eskew and Mark, aiJ of Atlanta, Ga .
Dayton;
Clarence
and
Several of the families spent
Margaret Andrews, .Susie ard . the weekend in the cabins at
Raymon"d ; Chuck and Mildred Forest Acres. They were Mr.
Withee; Ralph and Gladys and Mrs. Dewayne Eskew and
Frye, Gene and Margaret Mark, Mr" and Mrs. Eddie
Eskew, ·J fri Sue, Beverly, Webster and Jim Eskew,
Ellora, and Andy, Pomeroy". Dayton ; Mr . and Mrs.
"Ra ym'ond and
Eileen
Hatfield, Rutland; Bob and .
Maxine Marcinko, Eric, Jeff,""

CONGRESSIONAL PAGE- John Cliiit Foltz (right) Ia
serving as a Congresaional page in the U. S. ·Capitol during
the month of July, Foltz, the grandson of Mr. and Mrs. James
. L. Clark, Rio Grande, frequently visit,. with U. S.
Representative Clarence Miller, or Ohlo'sloth Congressional
District. Rep. Miller praised Foltz, who is an Eagle SC&lt;lut, for
his work in the summer pag_e program.

"

Group of Men's

July 14-_15-16

rnovkl&amp; to

COLO\\ ·

OVER 400 PAIRS
OF SHOES
ON SALE!
•

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Mason
Drive-In

Academy' BefOI't

Is

MEIGS THEATRE·

SONS AND DAUGHTERS ol the late John and Rolde Eskew attending reunion beld .
recently at Forest Acres Park were, left to right, Dewayne Eskew, Eugene Eskew, wtlliain
Es"kew, Maxine Marcinko, Leona Webswr, Mildred Withee, Eileen Hatfield, Margaret An·
drews and Gladys Frye, Ason,.CharlesEskew, was unable to attend.

former realden• ol GtiiUpOUo
and a graduate ol Gallla

GO / A20

••

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" Froncioco. The baby weighed I
lbs. and has been ..med
Amy Elaine . Mrs. Irene St.
Clair
the J!l!ternal yondmother, and maternal yond·
parenlaare Mr .and Mrs . Willis .
Foote, Cleveland. Rood Is a

• •

. Europeans once grew cat·
nip, or catmint, in herb gar- ...- - - - - - - - - •
dens and used it to sea son
food and brew lea .

TIMEs.SE~NR

'•

PAUGHTER BORN
SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. Ally, and Mrs. James Steven
ROOd, San Franc~¥o. Calif.,
announce the blrt~ of a
daughter , Sanday, July 7, at
Children's Hospital, San

$1996

I

SHORTS &amp; JACKET SETS
ASSORTED JEWELRY

~PRICE

�..

•

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Mr. and Mrs. William lee Kuhn

·Nuptials peiformed
GALLIPGIJS - The wed·
ding of Marilyn Louise
Childers and William ~ Kuhn
was solemnized at 2:30 p.m.
Sunday, June 23 in St. Peter's
'Episcopal Church witll Rev,
Paul W, Hawks, pastor of
Grace United Methodist
Church, officiating.
· The bride is the daughter of.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Child~rs,
and was given in marriage by
her parents. The groom is the
son of Mr,· and Mrs. Vernon

~e~ories . Her corsage was
from the bridal bouquet.
The new Mrs. Kuhn is a
S'ludent at Rio Grande College
and part-time employe in the
office of Southeast Ohio
Emergency Medical Service.
Kuhn is employed by Kuhn and
Saunders. Both are 1972
graduates of Gallia Academy
High SChool. Following a short
wedding trip the couple is at
home in Northup.

Miss Andra Bernice DaVidson

Miss Debra joan Milliron

PHOJ'O BY DELBRIDGE SI'UDIO
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT- Mr. and Mrs. John W.
Davidaon, Tullahoma, TeM., fonnerly of GallipoUs, announce tho: engagement of Utelr daughter, Andra Bernice, to
James Len Hatfield, son of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Hatfield ,
Baxter, Ky. The wedding will be ail event of Aug . 17 in the
First Presbyterian Olurch, Murfreesboro, TOM. The brideelect Is tho: granddaughter of Emmett Davids!&gt;n and the late
Mrs. Blanche Davidson and the late Mrs, Leona Treadway
WeUs, Point Pleasant, W. Va. She Is a 1970 graduate of Gallia
Academy Higb SChool and attended Oblo State University.
She will graduate in August fran Middle TeMessee State
Unlversitywhereshe.lsamemberofCliiOmegaSororltyand
Tau Omicron, women's honorary sorority. This fall she will
be employed as a ·speech and hearing therapist in the
Chatham County SChool System. Her fiance i.s a graduate of
Loyall High School, Loyall, Ky., and attended Middle Tennessee State University. He i.s presently employed as an
associate manager for Tennessee Region Assoc., Nashville.

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED -Mr. and Mrs. Delbert
Milliron, l&amp;..tart FaUs, annOWtce the engagement of their
daughter,l7011l11 Joan, wRonald Lee Clonch, BOn of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert 'Clonch, Middleport. The bride-elect. is a 1973
graduate of Southern High School and is presently employed
at the GallipoUs state Institute, Her fil!nce graduated from
Meigs High SChool and is employed at the Southern Ohio Coal
Co. The wedding will be an event of July 27 at 8 p.in, at the
Olurch of Christ in Christian Union at Hoboon. The custom of
open church will be observed.

a -

• •••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••• ~ .-••••.••••••••• ••• ••••• • ••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
•.
•
Preceding the double ring :•
.

Kuhn.

ceremony
a hif selections:
hour of:
lradilional wedding
was presented by Mrs. Merlyn !
Ross at the organ. The only:
· candles used were the altar :
candles, and the white aisle :

oman 's ·.

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Mrs. Woodrow R. Cossey

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Hennessy-Cossey
nuptials read
POMEROY - Baskets of
peach and white gladioli
decorated the altar , of the
Newman Chapel at the
University of California in San
Francisco for the wedding of
Miss Patricia Ruth Hennessy
and Woodrow R. Cossey.
The bride is the daughter of
Mrs. Thomas Hennessy, Jr.,
Pomeroy, and the late Mr,
Hennessy. The bridegroom is
the son of -Mr. and Mrs,
Woodrow , Cossey; ~a
Park, Calif.
The wedding was event of
June 15 at 6 p.m. with Uie Rev.
Fr. Thomas J. Burns of.
fi.ciating at the double ring
. ceremony, , Taped nuptial
·music by Mrs. George Hackett,
Jr., Middleport, .was played,
The bride was escorted to the
altar by her uncle, Robert .

.·jan's Side
by

Dorothy ]. Countryman ·

!

Moss, She wore a gown of silk
organza fashioned in empire a·
line style with long sheer
sleeves. The gown was trimmed with lace adorned with
crystals at the neckline, waist,
hem, cuffs of the sleeves, and
on the train , She wore a we~
camelot cap which held her
three tiered fingertip silk
illusion veil, and carried a
cascade of white and yellow
roses, stephanotis and baby's
breath.
Maid of honor for her sister

\.lALIJPOIJS- "We sure are a good team,"
tne
~nd gal in our quintet of hay balers last Sunday afternoon.
•
Ii wasn't a whole lot of comfort to the rest of ils who were
was Maureen Hennessy ,
sitting on the back of the wagon after haling, loading and
Pomeroy, and the bridesmaid
cloth and
two wrge
bouquets
of!:
Ga IIi polis· Point Pleasant
Pomeroy-Middleport
;• unloading 300 of those scratchy monsters in 97 degree heat, but It
pastel
summer
flowers
comwas another sister, .Miss Mary
was kind of good to know.
.pleted the nuptial setting.
:
446-2342
992-2156
!
K. Hennessy. The attendants
After the couple··had spoken ·
We hear a lot about women's lib and the like, but I kind of
were attired in apricot floral
their vows, and as they were
have a feeling that hardworking women, doing men's jobs, like
gowns with bittersweet sashes.
still kneeling following- the
my sisters and I, have been around one whale of long time.
They wore picture hats With
wedding prayer, all those
I'm not sure there's any-glory in proving that I can swing hay
bittersweet ribbons · and
present joined with them and
hales as blgh and as fast as any guy witl!in 30 miles of my fa!her's
carried
colonial bouquets of
their pastor in praying
fann. The point is that the job has to be done and there are no
yellow roses and bittersweet
•
brothers in our family to do II. The occa.slonal couains and
l&lt;gether the Lcrd's Prayer.
carnations.
boyfriends who have wandered in' from time 1&lt;1 time 1&lt;1 asalst
The bride's gown was of
William Cossey, Canoga
have left breathless and, fqr tho: m001t part, exhausted after an
traditional style in while silk
Park,
served as best man for
hour of accunpllshlng no more, imd oftentimes less; than we
organza with empire waist and
his brother, Ushers were Paul
blgh banded neckline. The
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. - have. We are, as Beth says, pretty capable, but we'll gladly go
Greenblatt and Ronald Lehnec:tJine was accented by seed
Regular registration for the unllberated if BOmeone else would-like to 'do this kind of thing fer
man, Colorado S~rings, ,Colo,
pearls, and tiny satin covered
second summer term at free.
For her daughter's wedding,
Marshall University will be
buttons in the hack extended 1&lt;1
Mrs. Hennessy wore a tan imd
ALoNG those same lines, I hear there's a move 1&lt;1 get more
the satin sash wbleh ended·in a
conducted Monday, July 16
brown
gown. Mrs. Cossey wore
CALENDAR
trom 8 a.m. to 4 p,m. in the liberation among 11111les. A male· airline sl!!ward for inatance
flat bow. Double bands of ruffle
it melon gown, and both
Multi-Purpose Room of the will BOOn join the ranks of feUows holding down jobs tradltionatly ,
JULY
trim ctrcled the sleeves at the
mothers
wore ·orchJd corsages.
Exhibit Robert F. Calrow, a
wrists. OlanWJy wee trinuned
Memorial Student Center . asaigned 1&lt;1 girls. I think it's great, Can the rest of you gals ·
Classes begin at 8 a ,m, imagine having your husband or boyfriends NOT staring at the Caribbeaii Series of water. A reception honoring the
the bodice and. sleeve&amp; of the
airline host?
colors from the Old Bergen Art couple . was held at the
Tuesday, July 17.
gown and the chapel train. A
Presidio, San Francisco. The
Guild.
matching headband held the
New freshmen, transfer and
'
THE OlnO State University "TBDBITL" (best damn bimd
-Tuesday and Wedne~day, bride's 1able featured. a fourshoulder length illUBion veil.
transient students should
1
report at Ba.m. to Room 2W22, in the land) will march again Sept. 21 at half-time of the Ohio July 16 and 17, Caning Work- tiered wedding cake. Guests
She carried a white satin and
mce covered Blble, a gift from
in the center for orientation, State-Oregon foothall game. All alumni of the Ohio State Mar- shop, at Rlverby from 7-9 p.m., were registered by Miss Fs:ye
cl)lng &amp;nds are invited 1&lt;1 participate in the presentation of the conducted by Mrs. ' Milford Shidell, San Francisco. \
July 16.
Mrs .
Linson . Stebbins,
For a wedding trip 1&lt;1 Hawaii,
surrounded by white daisies
A schedule request fonn 181~ Overture. For more infonnation write the OSU Alumni Icard. Fee $4.
the
bride changed ini&lt;J a red
approved by the student's · House, ~ Olentangy River Rd., Columbus, 43210.
and baby's breath tied with
TUesday, July 23, B p.m., at
academic .~, advisor,
a
. Riverby,
combined
In- and grey suit with which she
blue and wblte streamers.
I CAN'T say too many times that ''Gallla COWtiry" Is great. terdepartmental and Board of wore white accessories. They
The maid of honor was the
registration pbnnit obtained
reside .at 370 Upper Terrace,
from the Office of the So if yOli haven't gone to see It yet this year please do so. It's not Trustees Meeting.
bride'&amp; twin sister, Miss .
San
Francisco.
Registrar and ·a university expensive and is sure a good way 1&lt;1 spend an evening as a
AUGUST
.Martha Cbllders. Her gown
family.
.
The new Mrs, Cossey is a
identification card are
Exhibit '-- Antique Show.
blue and while gingham
graduate
of Pomeroy High
required for registration. Cil!ss
Thursday and Friday,
checked dotted swiss with
HAVE A NICE WEEK.
fees are due and payable at the
empire waist, square necldine,
August 8 and 9, Antiques SChool, St. Joseph's SChool of
lime of registration,
and short . puff aleeves. She
Seminar by Orva Heissen- Nursing, Ohio State Univerbutlel, Sandwich and Salad sity, where she received her
wore a while wide brim&gt;straw
Late registration and
bachelor of science degree, and
Bar, t5 per day.
hat with royal blue ribbon, Her
ochedule adjustment for the
n010glly was of pasiel daisies
term will be conducted
Monday, Augusl12, 8:30p.m. lite University of California
and baby's breath, with
Tuesday, July 17 from 8:30
Ohio Summer Theater Folk with a master of science
Arts
Festival . presents degree.
flowing royal streamers.
a.m. 1&lt;1 3 p.m. in the MultiCossey is a graduate of
uGreenparks Projects." an
Purpose Room, There will be
Bridesmatrons were Mrs.
no night registration. Cll!sses
Pat Canaday and Mrs. Leroy
cpen air vocal production in• UCLA and the University of
Parks. Their gowns and
eluding songs of .the. blatory of Teltas Law SChool. He served '
CROWN CITY - Mr. and (Louise ) Swain, Bowling in the . tenn will end Friday,
nOeegays were Identical with Mrs. Mack Williams, Rt. I, Green; Don8ld , Getaway; 'Aug . 16.
our country. On the patio at four years in the U. S. Army
Riverby, Bring something to and Is aasociated with the
lhOIOofthemaid of honor, with Crown City, will observe their Jack, Proctorville; Mrs.
Pilisbtry Madison and Sutro
all on.
MOREHEAD, Ky,
pastel blue ribboned · hats and liOth wedding anniversary, July Charles (De Isle ) Burgess,
Law
Firm in San Francisco.
flower streamers. The at, 18. Open houae will be observed Crown City; . Mrs, Warren Morehead State University has
tendants' gowns had been . Sunday, July 21, from !.p.m. w (Gall) Holley, Crown City, and released the riames of 1,853
APPOINTED AGENT
made by the bride.
4 p.m., at their home; friends 14 grandchildren and· five persons on the spring dean's
, GALLIPOLIS
The
The groom ·chose Mike are cordll!lly invited.
Ust
including
Robert
E.
Sml.
t
h,
great-grandchildren.
McGinness - Stanley Agency,
Caldwell wserve as best man.
Mack and Pearl were
Inc., 4~2 Second Ave. ,
Mr. and Mrs. Williams are Jr., Pomeroy.
Uahers were Mark Davis aQd ma·rried July 19, 1924, at
GallipoUs,
has been appointed
COLUMBUS _ Judith D.
Tom WOOdward.
. Calletlsburg, Ky. They are the both members of . the Crown
an agent with A~ers . GALLIPOIJS - The Senior .
The mother·of the bride wore parents of three daughters and City Wesleyan Church, He is a" .Kemp, 454 Hedgewood Dr.,
(Mutual)
Insurance Company, Citizens Center, located in the
GallipoUs, will be ·among 140
a lime summer ltnlt dress. The two. sons. Mrs . Denver retired farmer.
Llnaing, Miclr. The local in- Holier Hospital Bldg., Cedar
high school seniors .who 'have
groom's mother's drelts was
dependent
agency
will St: entrance, is open Monday
been appointed Freshman
befce ltnlt. Bolb wore eoraages
represent Auto-Owners for all through Friday, 'from 9 a.m. w
~
Scholars in recognition of
of b!'l!lht yeUow dalates.
types of personal and buainess 3 p.m. and one night a week.
'"U(.,Ij
outstanding aoademic records
The reception was held ln.the
,
VU
'_Y
'
insurance
In the Gallipollaarea Theochedulefor thioweek·is as
at Ohio state University in the
IIONORI:D- A put)&gt; -blldftc.ll)' ID oll1 1,_,. Ill..
~Uowablp area. of the church..
' .
and
will
be serviced by the · follows . .
·
the llztb birthday of Judy Ann and Julie Am Dunt, twin
The four-tiered wedding cake,
POMEROY - Mrs. babeUe Price, an~ RHONDA Price; fall quarter. She is. a graduate
Auto-Owners branch offices in
Mon.b.y, July 1~, Bridge
daugllten of Mr. and Mrs. Rlllph Dunl. on- attending In
_Circled by a band of lace, Foster, district advisor for the Mrs. Pat, Thoma, Pomeroy, of Gallla Academy High
Uma and Columbus.
lessons, 12 noon-3 p,m, ;
•
addition to paron Ia and alster, Mary Ann, """" Mn. F. P,
leather-leaf fern and bright . Black Diamond Girl SCout aiBO assisted in the camp School,
Quilting, 1-3 p.m.; Chorus
Overturf, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Overturf and
colorful summer blossoms, Council, spent two days at day program.
·
Practice, 1:30 p.m.
Melodle,
Columbus
and
Jan
Harman,
Sunbury,
RIO
GRANDE
"'John
M.
was topped by a minmture camp of the Big Bend Neigh·
Floyd
who Ia ill.
.
. Tuesday, July 18, Marietta
bride and groom which had borhood held last ·week at
Denney, son of. Ml', and Mrs.
J
PleaiUt Valley Hoopltal
Mrs.
Beule
King,
ways
and
'Trip
- leave the Canter at a
been In the bride's family for Camp Klashuta, Chestet.
Discharges
Darren
means committee . chair- a.m.; Friendly VWUng, 1!!-11 ·
·
many years. The only candle , Mrs. Foster .· assisted Mrs. Priddy, Buffalo; MUI&lt;Jn Long,
woman, repOrted that ltnivu a.m.
· ·
on the reception. table wu .the Donna Hatfield who itssmned Ashton ; Deborah Maiden, the fall terril, J1e ill a graduate
Wednesday, July 17, Taak
MIDDLEPORT - A meeting tribute items for the aale. AlsO 1!1"1 still for sale. · Oblipllon
wedding candle, which had , the position of camp direcl&lt;lr MiddleJ&gt;I'I"t; Mrs, John Hill and ·or North· Gallia Higb SChool.
nlcht
waa
oboerved
with
14
ForceMeeUngatRloGrande,9
.
been IIPied by tlie bride's when Mrs . Merle Johnson ooo, Ashi&lt;Jn; Willard Nibert, JoffreY A• Nea I' son. of Mrs. of
N the· Roberta
M hfCircle
ld Aug. 15at announced was the 'Aug. 23 memben partldJMiting.
Hooked
Rug
Clus
ew
ars le
was an- .reception ~or!ng B. Louloe
Fr i ends , Night with a · a.m.; N"""'--'- 1 Cia , 1-3
before the ceremony became · unable to serve Gallipolis Ferry ; Bessie JanetM. Neal, RioGrande,has
·p.m.; _,....,t
a , I.,'I
lnd bliide which the bride becauae of the death of her . Slayton, Point Pleasant; Mrs. also .been accepted for the fall nounced by MiM Kathy King, MitcheU, District 24 deputy
reception
for
Mrs.
A
vaneD
p.m.;
Bowline
and
ahopping
at ·
lenn and will study education. · w~thy matron of Ev&amp;Qgelir1e grand matron, in Ga!Upolls,
plleed ber new wbllct Bible, • mother.
George, page of the Grand su
Bri•d Pia
Lester Hall, Apple Grove ; Ho is a graduate of Kyger Chapter 172, Order . of the
Thank-you cards were read Chapter, was announced for
llrYinl ~ Cake 111d punch Scouts receiving , camp Johnnie Donahue, Letart; Mrs.
ver ""'
za, 1' 30 p.m-.
Creek
High
SChool,
Eastern
Star,
meeting
Thurs·
.
from
Nancy
Roush
and
Mrs.
Sept.
12
at
Harrilonvllle.
Oct.
Thursday,
July
II,. Blood
IIIII NaDC)' &amp;.gor l11d patches and rib~ In . an Russell Cundiff, Mason;
PreiiiUI"e,
I
p.m.;
Art Sket.
day
night
at
the
Middleport
Louise
Stewart
on
behalf
of
be.
r
I
Mn. lliiYe Stebblnl. Guilts awardl cu emony -F'riday at · George Mayes, Henderson ;
2
a
reception
will
be
held
lor
"'""
,.,__
1
•
"---~•
MaiOIIic Temple. .
mother, Mrs. Helen Lewlsc Dr Howard
Shull
p.m.: """'"'u
WW. nciatend by lllu the eGIICiuslon of the day CIIDP
,
I.
, .grand Meeting, 2 p.m.
Jenevee
CiJeaber
llflln Ltaaard.
PI'GIP'IIII were U... pictured Guy Garr!BOn, Roberlsburg ; · The IJ.S. Mint churns out 35 It was noted that an aucUon Mn.
P'rlclay' July 18, Jiffy Cl!llbeo.'
BIWe Stewart, Le1arl; Oma million P.ennies daily; this wiD be held at the circle re~ that .Cathryn ErVin -tine!, at the Atu.der RJcb
rtr lraniJni lbe bride In a -P feature In the ThUI'a- Craig,
SChool,
Albllly.
8twln1
Claaa, 1-3 p.m.;
Leon; Mrs. Glenn Jones, year 10 btl! ion pennies will be meeUng with proceeds 1&lt;1 go 1&lt;1 and Allen Hughes had been
J • • I ,.U.. pallult day lentlnel and Angle Hat- Gallipolis
Mn. Joyce
IIII'Vad Quilting. 1-a p.m.; Cenler 1a ·
Ferry ; James minted , more .than three the district · treasurf and rem~mbered during illnesa. A
Ill'... trim and ac- lleld1 Allaa Johnaon, Judy Gilllllpio, Robertaburg.
reltt~hmenta followin1 tbe open; Ccllor alldM w111 be
times as many as in ~.
membera were asked to con- · Wd was llgned for Mra. Sue
meetlnj.
•
lbown, H p.m.

Dorothy Countryman

Chariene H
' .oeflich

:

::

an

a

College
News

PEAK U.S. GRADE .A·SELECTED

I.G.A.

'

GREAT NORTHERN

16 OZ. LOAF
•

2 LB.
LOAVES

BAG

FOR

•

MAPLE.LAWN WHOLE

,,

Mr. and Mrs. Mack Williams

Mark 50th.anniversary

FANTASTIC.

I Sr. Citizens ·.

I

scou·t /'/lm'

Jl

Calendar

ON THIS

Concl·.. '..· es

;:!'ll~i~o":;"l.;,:!d~~8::~

£

ITEM

LB.

vangeline kiuies meet

..,.nil

"*'

e.-. ,_, ..

=
•

·SAVINGS

n.ba

'

:

CROCKWARE &amp;.BOWLS
ON SALE All
· WEEK AT LOW
LOW ·SPECIALS

-. '

SHOPPING .

CENTER
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
•

'.

·-

.I

�..

•

.,

Mr. and Mrs. William lee Kuhn

·Nuptials peiformed
GALLIPGIJS - The wed·
ding of Marilyn Louise
Childers and William ~ Kuhn
was solemnized at 2:30 p.m.
Sunday, June 23 in St. Peter's
'Episcopal Church witll Rev,
Paul W, Hawks, pastor of
Grace United Methodist
Church, officiating.
· The bride is the daughter of.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Child~rs,
and was given in marriage by
her parents. The groom is the
son of Mr,· and Mrs. Vernon

~e~ories . Her corsage was
from the bridal bouquet.
The new Mrs. Kuhn is a
S'ludent at Rio Grande College
and part-time employe in the
office of Southeast Ohio
Emergency Medical Service.
Kuhn is employed by Kuhn and
Saunders. Both are 1972
graduates of Gallia Academy
High SChool. Following a short
wedding trip the couple is at
home in Northup.

Miss Andra Bernice DaVidson

Miss Debra joan Milliron

PHOJ'O BY DELBRIDGE SI'UDIO
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT- Mr. and Mrs. John W.
Davidaon, Tullahoma, TeM., fonnerly of GallipoUs, announce tho: engagement of Utelr daughter, Andra Bernice, to
James Len Hatfield, son of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Hatfield ,
Baxter, Ky. The wedding will be ail event of Aug . 17 in the
First Presbyterian Olurch, Murfreesboro, TOM. The brideelect Is tho: granddaughter of Emmett Davids!&gt;n and the late
Mrs. Blanche Davidson and the late Mrs, Leona Treadway
WeUs, Point Pleasant, W. Va. She Is a 1970 graduate of Gallia
Academy Higb SChool and attended Oblo State University.
She will graduate in August fran Middle TeMessee State
Unlversitywhereshe.lsamemberofCliiOmegaSororltyand
Tau Omicron, women's honorary sorority. This fall she will
be employed as a ·speech and hearing therapist in the
Chatham County SChool System. Her fiance i.s a graduate of
Loyall High School, Loyall, Ky., and attended Middle Tennessee State University. He i.s presently employed as an
associate manager for Tennessee Region Assoc., Nashville.

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED -Mr. and Mrs. Delbert
Milliron, l&amp;..tart FaUs, annOWtce the engagement of their
daughter,l7011l11 Joan, wRonald Lee Clonch, BOn of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert 'Clonch, Middleport. The bride-elect. is a 1973
graduate of Southern High School and is presently employed
at the GallipoUs state Institute, Her fil!nce graduated from
Meigs High SChool and is employed at the Southern Ohio Coal
Co. The wedding will be an event of July 27 at 8 p.in, at the
Olurch of Christ in Christian Union at Hoboon. The custom of
open church will be observed.

a -

• •••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••• ~ .-••••.••••••••• ••• ••••• • ••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
•.
•
Preceding the double ring :•
.

Kuhn.

ceremony
a hif selections:
hour of:
lradilional wedding
was presented by Mrs. Merlyn !
Ross at the organ. The only:
· candles used were the altar :
candles, and the white aisle :

oman 's ·.

~
-.

_

~0~-~

Mrs. Woodrow R. Cossey

1
•

'

Hennessy-Cossey
nuptials read
POMEROY - Baskets of
peach and white gladioli
decorated the altar , of the
Newman Chapel at the
University of California in San
Francisco for the wedding of
Miss Patricia Ruth Hennessy
and Woodrow R. Cossey.
The bride is the daughter of
Mrs. Thomas Hennessy, Jr.,
Pomeroy, and the late Mr,
Hennessy. The bridegroom is
the son of -Mr. and Mrs,
Woodrow , Cossey; ~a
Park, Calif.
The wedding was event of
June 15 at 6 p.m. with Uie Rev.
Fr. Thomas J. Burns of.
fi.ciating at the double ring
. ceremony, , Taped nuptial
·music by Mrs. George Hackett,
Jr., Middleport, .was played,
The bride was escorted to the
altar by her uncle, Robert .

.·jan's Side
by

Dorothy ]. Countryman ·

!

Moss, She wore a gown of silk
organza fashioned in empire a·
line style with long sheer
sleeves. The gown was trimmed with lace adorned with
crystals at the neckline, waist,
hem, cuffs of the sleeves, and
on the train , She wore a we~
camelot cap which held her
three tiered fingertip silk
illusion veil, and carried a
cascade of white and yellow
roses, stephanotis and baby's
breath.
Maid of honor for her sister

\.lALIJPOIJS- "We sure are a good team,"
tne
~nd gal in our quintet of hay balers last Sunday afternoon.
•
Ii wasn't a whole lot of comfort to the rest of ils who were
was Maureen Hennessy ,
sitting on the back of the wagon after haling, loading and
Pomeroy, and the bridesmaid
cloth and
two wrge
bouquets
of!:
Ga IIi polis· Point Pleasant
Pomeroy-Middleport
;• unloading 300 of those scratchy monsters in 97 degree heat, but It
pastel
summer
flowers
comwas another sister, .Miss Mary
was kind of good to know.
.pleted the nuptial setting.
:
446-2342
992-2156
!
K. Hennessy. The attendants
After the couple··had spoken ·
We hear a lot about women's lib and the like, but I kind of
were attired in apricot floral
their vows, and as they were
have a feeling that hardworking women, doing men's jobs, like
gowns with bittersweet sashes.
still kneeling following- the
my sisters and I, have been around one whale of long time.
They wore picture hats With
wedding prayer, all those
I'm not sure there's any-glory in proving that I can swing hay
bittersweet ribbons · and
present joined with them and
hales as blgh and as fast as any guy witl!in 30 miles of my fa!her's
carried
colonial bouquets of
their pastor in praying
fann. The point is that the job has to be done and there are no
yellow roses and bittersweet
•
brothers in our family to do II. The occa.slonal couains and
l&lt;gether the Lcrd's Prayer.
carnations.
boyfriends who have wandered in' from time 1&lt;1 time 1&lt;1 asalst
The bride's gown was of
William Cossey, Canoga
have left breathless and, fqr tho: m001t part, exhausted after an
traditional style in while silk
Park,
served as best man for
hour of accunpllshlng no more, imd oftentimes less; than we
organza with empire waist and
his brother, Ushers were Paul
blgh banded neckline. The
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. - have. We are, as Beth says, pretty capable, but we'll gladly go
Greenblatt and Ronald Lehnec:tJine was accented by seed
Regular registration for the unllberated if BOmeone else would-like to 'do this kind of thing fer
man, Colorado S~rings, ,Colo,
pearls, and tiny satin covered
second summer term at free.
For her daughter's wedding,
Marshall University will be
buttons in the hack extended 1&lt;1
Mrs. Hennessy wore a tan imd
ALoNG those same lines, I hear there's a move 1&lt;1 get more
the satin sash wbleh ended·in a
conducted Monday, July 16
brown
gown. Mrs. Cossey wore
CALENDAR
trom 8 a.m. to 4 p,m. in the liberation among 11111les. A male· airline sl!!ward for inatance
flat bow. Double bands of ruffle
it melon gown, and both
Multi-Purpose Room of the will BOOn join the ranks of feUows holding down jobs tradltionatly ,
JULY
trim ctrcled the sleeves at the
mothers
wore ·orchJd corsages.
Exhibit Robert F. Calrow, a
wrists. OlanWJy wee trinuned
Memorial Student Center . asaigned 1&lt;1 girls. I think it's great, Can the rest of you gals ·
Classes begin at 8 a ,m, imagine having your husband or boyfriends NOT staring at the Caribbeaii Series of water. A reception honoring the
the bodice and. sleeve&amp; of the
airline host?
colors from the Old Bergen Art couple . was held at the
Tuesday, July 17.
gown and the chapel train. A
Presidio, San Francisco. The
Guild.
matching headband held the
New freshmen, transfer and
'
THE OlnO State University "TBDBITL" (best damn bimd
-Tuesday and Wedne~day, bride's 1able featured. a fourshoulder length illUBion veil.
transient students should
1
report at Ba.m. to Room 2W22, in the land) will march again Sept. 21 at half-time of the Ohio July 16 and 17, Caning Work- tiered wedding cake. Guests
She carried a white satin and
mce covered Blble, a gift from
in the center for orientation, State-Oregon foothall game. All alumni of the Ohio State Mar- shop, at Rlverby from 7-9 p.m., were registered by Miss Fs:ye
cl)lng &amp;nds are invited 1&lt;1 participate in the presentation of the conducted by Mrs. ' Milford Shidell, San Francisco. \
July 16.
Mrs .
Linson . Stebbins,
For a wedding trip 1&lt;1 Hawaii,
surrounded by white daisies
A schedule request fonn 181~ Overture. For more infonnation write the OSU Alumni Icard. Fee $4.
the
bride changed ini&lt;J a red
approved by the student's · House, ~ Olentangy River Rd., Columbus, 43210.
and baby's breath tied with
TUesday, July 23, B p.m., at
academic .~, advisor,
a
. Riverby,
combined
In- and grey suit with which she
blue and wblte streamers.
I CAN'T say too many times that ''Gallla COWtiry" Is great. terdepartmental and Board of wore white accessories. They
The maid of honor was the
registration pbnnit obtained
reside .at 370 Upper Terrace,
from the Office of the So if yOli haven't gone to see It yet this year please do so. It's not Trustees Meeting.
bride'&amp; twin sister, Miss .
San
Francisco.
Registrar and ·a university expensive and is sure a good way 1&lt;1 spend an evening as a
AUGUST
.Martha Cbllders. Her gown
family.
.
The new Mrs, Cossey is a
identification card are
Exhibit '-- Antique Show.
blue and while gingham
graduate
of Pomeroy High
required for registration. Cil!ss
Thursday and Friday,
checked dotted swiss with
HAVE A NICE WEEK.
fees are due and payable at the
empire waist, square necldine,
August 8 and 9, Antiques SChool, St. Joseph's SChool of
lime of registration,
and short . puff aleeves. She
Seminar by Orva Heissen- Nursing, Ohio State Univerbutlel, Sandwich and Salad sity, where she received her
wore a while wide brim&gt;straw
Late registration and
bachelor of science degree, and
Bar, t5 per day.
hat with royal blue ribbon, Her
ochedule adjustment for the
n010glly was of pasiel daisies
term will be conducted
Monday, Augusl12, 8:30p.m. lite University of California
and baby's breath, with
Tuesday, July 17 from 8:30
Ohio Summer Theater Folk with a master of science
Arts
Festival . presents degree.
flowing royal streamers.
a.m. 1&lt;1 3 p.m. in the MultiCossey is a graduate of
uGreenparks Projects." an
Purpose Room, There will be
Bridesmatrons were Mrs.
no night registration. Cll!sses
Pat Canaday and Mrs. Leroy
cpen air vocal production in• UCLA and the University of
Parks. Their gowns and
eluding songs of .the. blatory of Teltas Law SChool. He served '
CROWN CITY - Mr. and (Louise ) Swain, Bowling in the . tenn will end Friday,
nOeegays were Identical with Mrs. Mack Williams, Rt. I, Green; Don8ld , Getaway; 'Aug . 16.
our country. On the patio at four years in the U. S. Army
Riverby, Bring something to and Is aasociated with the
lhOIOofthemaid of honor, with Crown City, will observe their Jack, Proctorville; Mrs.
Pilisbtry Madison and Sutro
all on.
MOREHEAD, Ky,
pastel blue ribboned · hats and liOth wedding anniversary, July Charles (De Isle ) Burgess,
Law
Firm in San Francisco.
flower streamers. The at, 18. Open houae will be observed Crown City; . Mrs, Warren Morehead State University has
tendants' gowns had been . Sunday, July 21, from !.p.m. w (Gall) Holley, Crown City, and released the riames of 1,853
APPOINTED AGENT
made by the bride.
4 p.m., at their home; friends 14 grandchildren and· five persons on the spring dean's
, GALLIPOLIS
The
The groom ·chose Mike are cordll!lly invited.
Ust
including
Robert
E.
Sml.
t
h,
great-grandchildren.
McGinness - Stanley Agency,
Caldwell wserve as best man.
Mack and Pearl were
Inc., 4~2 Second Ave. ,
Mr. and Mrs. Williams are Jr., Pomeroy.
Uahers were Mark Davis aQd ma·rried July 19, 1924, at
GallipoUs,
has been appointed
COLUMBUS _ Judith D.
Tom WOOdward.
. Calletlsburg, Ky. They are the both members of . the Crown
an agent with A~ers . GALLIPOIJS - The Senior .
The mother·of the bride wore parents of three daughters and City Wesleyan Church, He is a" .Kemp, 454 Hedgewood Dr.,
(Mutual)
Insurance Company, Citizens Center, located in the
GallipoUs, will be ·among 140
a lime summer ltnlt dress. The two. sons. Mrs . Denver retired farmer.
Llnaing, Miclr. The local in- Holier Hospital Bldg., Cedar
high school seniors .who 'have
groom's mother's drelts was
dependent
agency
will St: entrance, is open Monday
been appointed Freshman
befce ltnlt. Bolb wore eoraages
represent Auto-Owners for all through Friday, 'from 9 a.m. w
~
Scholars in recognition of
of b!'l!lht yeUow dalates.
types of personal and buainess 3 p.m. and one night a week.
'"U(.,Ij
outstanding aoademic records
The reception was held ln.the
,
VU
'_Y
'
insurance
In the Gallipollaarea Theochedulefor thioweek·is as
at Ohio state University in the
IIONORI:D- A put)&gt; -blldftc.ll)' ID oll1 1,_,. Ill..
~Uowablp area. of the church..
' .
and
will
be serviced by the · follows . .
·
the llztb birthday of Judy Ann and Julie Am Dunt, twin
The four-tiered wedding cake,
POMEROY - Mrs. babeUe Price, an~ RHONDA Price; fall quarter. She is. a graduate
Auto-Owners branch offices in
Mon.b.y, July 1~, Bridge
daugllten of Mr. and Mrs. Rlllph Dunl. on- attending In
_Circled by a band of lace, Foster, district advisor for the Mrs. Pat, Thoma, Pomeroy, of Gallla Academy High
Uma and Columbus.
lessons, 12 noon-3 p,m, ;
•
addition to paron Ia and alster, Mary Ann, """" Mn. F. P,
leather-leaf fern and bright . Black Diamond Girl SCout aiBO assisted in the camp School,
Quilting, 1-3 p.m.; Chorus
Overturf, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Overturf and
colorful summer blossoms, Council, spent two days at day program.
·
Practice, 1:30 p.m.
Melodle,
Columbus
and
Jan
Harman,
Sunbury,
RIO
GRANDE
"'John
M.
was topped by a minmture camp of the Big Bend Neigh·
Floyd
who Ia ill.
.
. Tuesday, July 18, Marietta
bride and groom which had borhood held last ·week at
Denney, son of. Ml', and Mrs.
J
PleaiUt Valley Hoopltal
Mrs.
Beule
King,
ways
and
'Trip
- leave the Canter at a
been In the bride's family for Camp Klashuta, Chestet.
Discharges
Darren
means committee . chair- a.m.; Friendly VWUng, 1!!-11 ·
·
many years. The only candle , Mrs. Foster .· assisted Mrs. Priddy, Buffalo; MUI&lt;Jn Long,
woman, repOrted that ltnivu a.m.
· ·
on the reception. table wu .the Donna Hatfield who itssmned Ashton ; Deborah Maiden, the fall terril, J1e ill a graduate
Wednesday, July 17, Taak
MIDDLEPORT - A meeting tribute items for the aale. AlsO 1!1"1 still for sale. · Oblipllon
wedding candle, which had , the position of camp direcl&lt;lr MiddleJ&gt;I'I"t; Mrs, John Hill and ·or North· Gallia Higb SChool.
nlcht
waa
oboerved
with
14
ForceMeeUngatRloGrande,9
.
been IIPied by tlie bride's when Mrs . Merle Johnson ooo, Ashi&lt;Jn; Willard Nibert, JoffreY A• Nea I' son. of Mrs. of
N the· Roberta
M hfCircle
ld Aug. 15at announced was the 'Aug. 23 memben partldJMiting.
Hooked
Rug
Clus
ew
ars le
was an- .reception ~or!ng B. Louloe
Fr i ends , Night with a · a.m.; N"""'--'- 1 Cia , 1-3
before the ceremony became · unable to serve Gallipolis Ferry ; Bessie JanetM. Neal, RioGrande,has
·p.m.; _,....,t
a , I.,'I
lnd bliide which the bride becauae of the death of her . Slayton, Point Pleasant; Mrs. also .been accepted for the fall nounced by MiM Kathy King, MitcheU, District 24 deputy
reception
for
Mrs.
A
vaneD
p.m.;
Bowline
and
ahopping
at ·
lenn and will study education. · w~thy matron of Ev&amp;Qgelir1e grand matron, in Ga!Upolls,
plleed ber new wbllct Bible, • mother.
George, page of the Grand su
Bri•d Pia
Lester Hall, Apple Grove ; Ho is a graduate of Kyger Chapter 172, Order . of the
Thank-you cards were read Chapter, was announced for
llrYinl ~ Cake 111d punch Scouts receiving , camp Johnnie Donahue, Letart; Mrs.
ver ""'
za, 1' 30 p.m-.
Creek
High
SChool,
Eastern
Star,
meeting
Thurs·
.
from
Nancy
Roush
and
Mrs.
Sept.
12
at
Harrilonvllle.
Oct.
Thursday,
July
II,. Blood
IIIII NaDC)' &amp;.gor l11d patches and rib~ In . an Russell Cundiff, Mason;
PreiiiUI"e,
I
p.m.;
Art Sket.
day
night
at
the
Middleport
Louise
Stewart
on
behalf
of
be.
r
I
Mn. lliiYe Stebblnl. Guilts awardl cu emony -F'riday at · George Mayes, Henderson ;
2
a
reception
will
be
held
lor
"'""
,.,__
1
•
"---~•
MaiOIIic Temple. .
mother, Mrs. Helen Lewlsc Dr Howard
Shull
p.m.: """'"'u
WW. nciatend by lllu the eGIICiuslon of the day CIIDP
,
I.
, .grand Meeting, 2 p.m.
Jenevee
CiJeaber
llflln Ltaaard.
PI'GIP'IIII were U... pictured Guy Garr!BOn, Roberlsburg ; · The IJ.S. Mint churns out 35 It was noted that an aucUon Mn.
P'rlclay' July 18, Jiffy Cl!llbeo.'
BIWe Stewart, Le1arl; Oma million P.ennies daily; this wiD be held at the circle re~ that .Cathryn ErVin -tine!, at the Atu.der RJcb
rtr lraniJni lbe bride In a -P feature In the ThUI'a- Craig,
SChool,
Albllly.
8twln1
Claaa, 1-3 p.m.;
Leon; Mrs. Glenn Jones, year 10 btl! ion pennies will be meeUng with proceeds 1&lt;1 go 1&lt;1 and Allen Hughes had been
J • • I ,.U.. pallult day lentlnel and Angle Hat- Gallipolis
Mn. Joyce
IIII'Vad Quilting. 1-a p.m.; Cenler 1a ·
Ferry ; James minted , more .than three the district · treasurf and rem~mbered during illnesa. A
Ill'... trim and ac- lleld1 Allaa Johnaon, Judy Gilllllpio, Robertaburg.
reltt~hmenta followin1 tbe open; Ccllor alldM w111 be
times as many as in ~.
membera were asked to con- · Wd was llgned for Mra. Sue
meetlnj.
•
lbown, H p.m.

Dorothy Countryman

Chariene H
' .oeflich

:

::

an

a

College
News

PEAK U.S. GRADE .A·SELECTED

I.G.A.

'

GREAT NORTHERN

16 OZ. LOAF
•

2 LB.
LOAVES

BAG

FOR

•

MAPLE.LAWN WHOLE

,,

Mr. and Mrs. Mack Williams

Mark 50th.anniversary

FANTASTIC.

I Sr. Citizens ·.

I

scou·t /'/lm'

Jl

Calendar

ON THIS

Concl·.. '..· es

;:!'ll~i~o":;"l.;,:!d~~8::~

£

ITEM

LB.

vangeline kiuies meet

..,.nil

"*'

e.-. ,_, ..

=
•

·SAVINGS

n.ba

'

:

CROCKWARE &amp;.BOWLS
ON SALE All
· WEEK AT LOW
LOW ·SPECIALS

-. '

SHOPPING .

CENTER
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
•

'.

·-

.I

�.
1- The Sunday Tlmea -Sentinel, Sunday, July If, 1974

SUGARDALE -FULLY COOKE
.

.

.BONELESS

•

.H·-

•

RDALE TOP QUALITY
SUGAR DALE

· · WHOLE
OR

CHUCK WAGON

REG •.OR THICK

·. HALF

SUGARDALE
SLICED ·
.

Boiled
Ham
POUND
o na. ~-------------------

.

. SUGARDALE

TENDER PUPS
I

.

PAK

LB.

SUGARDALE

'

SUGARDALE

· SUGARDALE

Braunschweig8r

.

oz.

.

LB.

.. 1 LB. VAC PAK

.

. FOOT LONG
HOT DOGS ·

. ALL

•.

.

•

PKG.

POUND
·CHUNK

12

•

VARIETIES

1 LB. PKG.
·..

'

••

.

M&amp;R BUILDING SUPPLIES
.

K.
· UP NOW
AND SAVE

BAG
· WE RESERVE THE RIGHT . .

•

. · TO Ll MIT QUANTIT.I ES
I .

' .. I

;~~~~y

.

POUND

..

HOURS 9 AM - 6 PM 6 DAYS

-

.
•

.. .

.

I

�.
1- The Sunday Tlmea -Sentinel, Sunday, July If, 1974

SUGARDALE -FULLY COOKE
.

.

.BONELESS

•

.H·-

•

RDALE TOP QUALITY
SUGAR DALE

· · WHOLE
OR

CHUCK WAGON

REG •.OR THICK

·. HALF

SUGARDALE
SLICED ·
.

Boiled
Ham
POUND
o na. ~-------------------

.

. SUGARDALE

TENDER PUPS
I

.

PAK

LB.

SUGARDALE

'

SUGARDALE

· SUGARDALE

Braunschweig8r

.

oz.

.

LB.

.. 1 LB. VAC PAK

.

. FOOT LONG
HOT DOGS ·

. ALL

•.

.

•

PKG.

POUND
·CHUNK

12

•

VARIETIES

1 LB. PKG.
·..

'

••

.

M&amp;R BUILDING SUPPLIES
.

K.
· UP NOW
AND SAVE

BAG
· WE RESERVE THE RIGHT . .

•

. · TO Ll MIT QUANTIT.I ES
I .

' .. I

;~~~~y

.

POUND

..

HOURS 9 AM - 6 PM 6 DAYS

-

.
•

.. .

.

I

�'·

Persof/4/ity Profile

Celebrate
'
•
annzversary ••t

Music 'sheer pleasur.e'
BYCHARLENEHOEFUCH
RACINE - Practicing the plano or
011111 may be a bore to many, but lo
Mrs. Mattie Circle, it's "sheer
pleasUre."
ton accomplished musician, Mrs.
CirCle Is a finn believer that folks
ev.,rywhere should make a joyful noise
unto the Lord and as organist of the
Wesleyan United Methodist Churc:; in
Racine, she takes joy in her respon sibility.
Soveral . days each week Mattie
walks the two blocks from her home to
the church to spend a few hours at the
-Organ. Practice makes perfect is her
philosophy. She plays not only at her
own church, but on many Sunday
·· evenings uses her talent at the Racine
Baptist Church.
Mattie started lessons on a pwnp
organ when she was 12 years old and
then, when she.was about 16, the family
got a plano and she shifted to that.
In 1926 she began accompanying

'

VINTON - Mr. and Mrs.
O!arlea V. Casto (Vennle), 63\i
Jacklon Rd., VInton, wlll
celebrate their 50th wedding
.,nlveraary Sunday, July 21. A
reception will be given In their
honiN' at the VInton &amp;pU.t
O!urch Fellowship room from
2 to 4 pm.
Hostesses for the reception
will be Mrs. Mary Lanier, Mrs.
Ell%8beth Cloud, Mrs. ' Laura
• Brown and Mro. Ruth Evans.
Everyone lB Invited.
Mr. and Mrs. Casto were
married July 24, 1924, In
Logan. They have one
daughter, Mrs. Myron Hull
( Geanie) and three grand·
children, O!arles, Paul and
Patricia, all of Dayton .

the Ashley Gospel Quartet and then
later palyed for the Norris Quartet,
traveling over Ohio 8lld West Virginia
as they performed.
' '
Mattie also likes to sing and was
active with the Farm Bw-eau OJortis in
the 19Sos and later sang with the
choruses .. of the Big Bend 1\!instrel
Assox:iation.
1
For 51 years, Mattie and her
husband, Garrett, a retired raHway
clerk, have lived in a spacious \Ohite
house on Elm St., Racine. Their only
relatives are a nephew, his wife and
five children who now live In Con~
necticut.
Healthy and active, Mr. and Mrs.
Circle look after several aged and iU_
neighbors, helping in whatever way
they can.
Through lhe years, despite the
MA1TIECmCLE
informality of lhe day, Mattie has ·
maintained a very special mark of hats and while gloves almost every ..
distinction - she wears big, beautiful where she goes.

/

.

Nuptials
planned
GALLIPOLIS - Plans have
been completed for the wedding of Mary Louise Thornton ,
daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
Thomas Thornton, Gallipolis,
and Jack Bai1es, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Bailes, Gallipolis. It
will be an .event of Sunday, July

"

IIIARII.8 BIRTHDAY
POIIIEROY - Roctr Dison.
..., of Mr. 111d Mro. Herberl
Dbwn, Pomel'(ly, will celebrllf
hll birthday July II. RDtlorll •
at Morletla CoQqf
and 1.1 preaenUy worldns thla
llllllmer for ConUnental 011.
Hia nut dOOr neJahbor II Dolvkl
AJt&gt;ert, son of the Speaker of
the Houoe, Carl Albert. Albert
Is also employed by Con·
tlnental 011. They were both
given honorary membenhlps
to a counlry club In Oklahoma
where they are staying.
Dixon's address is 50710 E.
Oklahoma Ave., Hennessey,
Oija. 73742.

MARRIAGE LICENSES
POMEROY - George Ed·
ward Pope, 29, Gallipolis, and
Candace Ann Bahr, 24,
Gallipolis; Ronnie Eugene
Casto, 19, Mason, and Anita
LOuise Jeffers, 19, Pomeroy.
REUNION SET
POMEROY - The annual
Carr reunion wiU be held at the
. roadside park on the westside
of U. S. 33, five miles north of
Pomeroy, Sunday, July 21.
Basket dinner will be at 12:30
p.m.

- R~ to Rufus 14.98
- Bo DonaldsOn and ~
the Heywoods '5.98
-The De Franco
Fami~ '5.98
-Olivia Newton·
John '5.98 _
-Alleluia, The Gaither
Trio 14.98

's Pantry .
Introduces

Dave .Mellott

The Alcove

A Painter of Portraits.

DEBORAH DOBBINS
TODD L· CAULXlNS
ENGAGED- Mr. aDd Mn.
Roaald E. Dobblal, II N. Weill
SI.,HOIIdale,Mieh., IDDCIIIDee
tbe eDgacomeDt of tbelr
daqbter, lleborah L)'llll to
Todd L. Caulklol, 1011 of Mr• •
llld MrJ, Ted L. Calllkbls, 4N
Slate Rd., RDiadale, A Sept. Z8
ftddlolil beJq plODDed, The
Dobblu aro former retldeDII
of Gallla Coontyllld the br!deeleet II the P'llllddalllbler of
Katbryo Dobbfllll, Hedgewood
Dr., aDd · lbe late Johll W·.
· Dobblu, aod MrJ, ·Jeanie
Miller, Jacksoa. Sbe II a 19'12
grad1111te of HUiatlale Hlgb
Sebool aad II employed by the
HlDadale County Balllt. The
pl'NJ~ecllve groom II a 1974
ARLINGTON - Wedding
~d1111te of North AdaliiJ
vows were exchanged 'by Miss
HIP Seboot.
Linda Lee Suter and David
Paul Chipman at 7:30 p.m.
June 29 in the Bible Fellowship
Church, Arlington . Rev.
RECEIPTS REPORTED
Charles Gerringer, Bible
POMEROY- Meigs Co!Jilty Fellowship, and Rev. Joseph
Court recepilB for the month of Chapman , father of the groom,
June totaled $3,958.65 ac· Blessed Hope Baptist, of.
cording io Betty Hobstetter, ficiated . . .
clerk.
The bride is the daughter of
Receipts were distributed as Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
follows: fines to state, Suter, 213 W. Liberty St.,
$1,052.12 ; · fees to sheriff, ' Arlington, and the groom is the
$153.25; lines and costs to son of Rev. and Mrs . Joseph
county:
general
fund , Chapman, 2-\13 Garland. Ave.,
$1,628.49; law library fWld, Springfield. The Chapmans are
$7115.92; auto and license and former residents of Gallipolis.
gas furid ; $330.87.
Miss Shirley · Chapman,
sister of the · groom, was the
".l .
organist and Mrs, Wilbur
Kirtland, sister of the groom,
FILES SUIT
clnd Miss Penny Suter, were
POMEROY - Brenda S. the soloists. During the
Patterson,-Shade, filed sult for ceremony the groom sang a
. divorce in Meigs County selection. ·
common pleas .court · against
The bridal gow n was of
Charles E. Patterson, Mid- da cron polyester organza
dleport, on charges Qf extreme styled with a crescent waistline
cruelty.
and flounced hem sweeping lo
a chapel train. Cotton venice
· lace brimmed the full-length
illusion · veil. Her ruby ring
belonged to . her maternal
grandmother , · Mrs.
Lee
Remaley. The bridal bouquet
was a cascade of yellow roses,
white fuji mwns, baby's breath
and springeri. •·
Miss Cinda Beucler, 139 E.
Yates Ave., Findlay, was maid
of honor. Her lemon yellow
chiffon over taffeta gown was
trimmed in lace and styled
similarly to the .bride's .. At.'

the double ring ceremony.
Mrs. Jan Brown, Gallipolis,
will serve as .matron of honor
with Mrs . Carolyn Sigler,
· Shreve, sister of the groom, as
'bridesmatron and Miss Beth

,.~

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•

Second Avenue .
~·

I

• •

•'•

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bas-

•"
' f 111

~t

Charlie!

1:

••
••
•
•
1.•

in

i:,'•. .
.,.••,.,. Gallipolis, Ohio

·~ I

i
l

~•.
[
&gt;:·

.

maid. Miss Angie Hook, :::·&lt;::
Shreve, niece of the groom, and
Mlss Rhonda Sloan, Grove
City, cousin of the bride, will be . :
the flower girls.
~
Serving as best man will be
GaryBrown, Gallipolis. Steve ~-~:
Betz, Gallipolis arid Rick W
Thornton , brother of the bride o,
from Gallipolis, will be the ~
ushers.
•·
The gracious custom of open .
- church will be observ.ed.

&amp;tc. ...•

-

an

CII!I'PA.'ID- -£vii• J«4g--~ RadDe. ceala",
WIS 'given I aurpriae (W'ty on bJI 8'llh b~-by hiiiOill,
John, left, Lorain and GeQrge, right, Rt. 2, Racine on June 21.
The party wu held at the home of Mrs. Etbel Joltnllon, Rt. I,
Racine, who was aaalated In preparing the dinner by ~.
· John (Clarys) Johnson. Grandchildren present who
p-esenled their grandfather glfta wete Joljn Johnson, Jr.,
Barbara and Thomas Johnson, all of Lorain. Eugene Johnson
and hlB wife, LIIUe, have three other children who were
unable to attend. Mrs. Elizabeth Barrlnt!er, Reedsville, Mrs.
Mary O'Conner, Neah Bay, Wuh and Paul Johnson, also of
Lorain.

·Layette
shower
•
zs held

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY, JULY 14 THRU JULY 20

.

SNACK.
BOX.

;i

tendants were Miss Penny .
Suter, sister of the bride, Mrs .
David Inbody, Rt. I, Janera,
and Miss Diana Chapman,
sister of the groom, Spring.
field . Their gowns, styled
identically to that of .the maid
of honor :were apricot. Junior ·
bridesmaid Holly Suter, sister
of the bride, and flower girl,
MONDAY
Amy Sue Kirtland, Springfield,
CANDYSTRIPERS, 7 p.m. ·
niece of the groom, were at- All girls urged to attend.
tired in mint_gre·en gowns.
MIDDLEPORT Business
The .attendants · wore
headpieces of matching lace and Professional ·Women,
and net and carried white annual family picnic, roadside
baskets fiiled with daisies; park, Kanauga, 6:30 p.m .
carnations and baby's breath Members and guests to take
tinted to match their dresses. table service, a favorite dish
Dan Cwnmins, Cedarville, and beverage. Each member is .
was the best man arid ushers also asked to take a small t
were Wilbur KlrUand, brother- game prize. Mrs .. Grace Pratt
in-law of the groom, Spring· and Mrs. Betty Conkle are
field ; Terry Suter, Dayton, hostesses.
brother of the bride, and Brian
TUESDAY'
Reese, Springfield and James
WINDING TRAIL Garaen [
Staley, Arlington. David In- Club, 8 p.m., home ·of Mrs.
~
body, 11, Jeoera, was ring-" Robert l.A!wis.
beaTer.
The reception was held
following the ceremony in the
Veterans Memorial Hospital
church fellowship hall.
Admitted - Lee lludisill,
· Following a wedding trip in
Pomeroy; Dorol.hy Great.
northern Michigan 'the couple
Racine ; Marlon Oiler,
is at home at 1429 W. Belmont, . house,
Pomeroy. ·
Springfield.
Discharged - Mary StilJ,
The bride is a teacber ln . Eleanore
Thomas.
I
Madison Plains High School,
London. She gradu'aled from
Arlington High School in 1969
The John F . Kennedy
'center
for the Pe rforming
and Cedarville College in 1973.
Arts
in
Washingto n, D.C.
Chapman, a 1971 graduate of
houses
three
ma gnifica nt
Gallia Academy High School,
theaters: the or.:;ra House,
is attending Cedarville College the Eisenhower rheater .and
and Is employed. by Kreider the Conce rt Hall, with a total
and Son Roofing.
seating capacity' of 11 ,050.

• Roll
No Substitutions

108th

. TRY OUR NEW SANDWICHES
'
HOMEMADE BEEF .BARBEQUE
. OR PORK TENDERLOIN
.

Anniversary

•

.

. . .... '

i}fa~

· lllfnppr

2nd &amp; OLIVE ST.

GAlliPOLIS, OHICJ

.fOR QUICK PICK W' SER J!JCE PHONE 446-2682 ·

SUITS ·
Reg. '75
. .. ...................
:........ :.'Sooo
' Values ................
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Reg. $80 Vaiues .................~· .••• ,......................... ~oo

f

Re2. SS5 Values............................................... '68 00
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Reg. '90 Values ............................ ;................... '7'l:"

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• French Fries

HASKINS-TANNER'S

lj

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• 2 Pieces Chicken

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Reg. '!20 Values .............................................. '9600

Reg. '55 Values.......... ~ ................................~ ..... s44oo
00
Reg. SSO Values .................................
................
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.
. '48

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.. Reg. '70 Values ................................................
.'5600
Reg. '80 Values.................................................5f;400

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YOUR CHOICE OF OUR
ENTIRE SELECTION
DRESS AND CASUAL

~·

Reg. l90 Values ............................................... '7'1}»

MEN'S WEAR

BOY'S WEAR ·

Sport Shirts ......................... ..'5 to '12 now '3" to ·~
Knit Slacks ...............:.....'l4 to '32" Now '11~ to '25"
Knit Shirts .........................'4 to '1500 Now '3" to '11"
·
Swlmwear,
................... ,.. ...... '4 · to ~
,- Now ~ ~~
o
Flairs &amp; Baggys .. :.......:......... •g to '15 Now '6" to'll"

Sport Shirts........................... '4 to '6 Now '3"' to '4"
Knrt Shirts ................. :......... '1" .to '6 Now 'I" to '4"
Tank Tops ................. :......... '2" to '4"· Now '2" to 13"'

COATS

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.·. ·50% off

1.
;

'i

&lt;

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ALL. SUMMER
JEWELRY
ON SALE AT

1

OFF
REGULAR
PRICE

OPEN MONDAY &amp; FRIDAY TIL 8:00

REDUCED PRICES

1866

. 1974

J£Wfi.ERS
eQUALITY CLOTHING SINC~ 186€ •

.

-412-414 Secand ••

Ohio~-~--~·..__.

.

Wedding vows read

HoNEY

groom, served as best man.
Ushers were Dave Evans,
James Henry and Fred Hall.
Flowergirl was Miss Heather
Smith, the groom's niece, and
Greg Rodetick -served as
ringbearer.
Misses Joan Haskins and
Becky Durham served at the
reception following the
ceremony with Miss Denise
Lewis reg!Btering the guests ..
Smith is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Vaught Smith, Garfield
Hts., Gallipolis, and the
grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
Claude Kemper, Huntington,
W. Va., and the late Dr. and
Mrs . V;tught Smith, also of
HWltington.
Following a wedding trip
through the Southern United
States, the couple is making
their horne in Gallipolis.

..

WEARING APPAREL

I, C. Leon Saunders, Vice l'relklent and Cashier, of the aboviHIIImed bank,
do solemnly alfinn that this report of condition II true and correct, to the belt of
my knowledge and belief.
·
Correet--Atteot: . Leola Sallllden

c:

'

'MIOIUPORT. 0:

WOMENS FINE

Cash and due from bankS • • . . · · · · - · • • • • • • · · • 2,325,.728.01
U.s. Treasury secutltl~ • • • • • • · - • • • • • • • • • • • 6,202,93:;.3:;
Obligations of other U.S. Government
· agencies and corporations •. • • • • • • • • • · · • • • 1,001,484.38
Obligations of States and political subdiv!Bloos - · · • • • • • 4,218,707.28
Other securities (Including $1.00 corporate stocks) • • • • • • • • • ·
1.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell • • • • • •
1,400,000.00
Other loana • • • • • - · • • • • • •
19,565,180.78
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets .representing bank premises
• • • • • • 678,401.85
• • • ·• • • • 255,479.94
Otherassets · • • • • • - · - - ' - •
TOTAL ASSETS • • • • · • • - • • • • • • • - - • $35,847,919.57
LIABn.fi'IES
Demand deposits of Individuals, partnetshlps,
. and corporations • • • • • • , • • • • • • • • • • • · $ 8,024,240.49
. Time and aavlngs deposits or Individuals,
partnerships, and corporatiOns • • • • • • • • • • • • ~ 22,102,0'18.08
Depoalts of United Slates Govetrunent • • • • - • • • • • • 228,943.39
Depoalts of States and political subdivisions · • • • • • • • • • 1,081,483.85
Depoalts of commercial banks • • • - • • • • • • • • .~ • I,OOO.OQ
Certified and officers' checks, etc. • • • • • • • • • • • • • 91,502.84
TOTAL DEPOSITS • • · • • • • • • ~1,529,:M8.45
(a) Total demand deposits • • · • • • • · - $ 8,977,170.31
(b) Total time and savings deposits • • • • • $22,552,0'18,08
Other llabWtles • • • • • • • • - • • • • • • • • - 1,077,982.99
TOTAL UABILITIES • • • · • • • • • • • • • • • ~2,607,231.41
.
. RESERY,ES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
·Reserve for bad debt looses on loans
. ·
(setup purouant to IRS rulings) • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • $294,696.17
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES • • • • • $294,696.17
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital, total • • • • • • • •
• • • • • $2,745,Wl.ltl
Common stock-total par value • • • •
• • • • 750,000.00
No. shares authorized 75,000
No. ahares outstanding 75,000.
Surplus - • • - - - - - - .. - - .. - • • - ' • • • 1,360,000.00
• • • • 840,991.98
Undivided profits • • • • • • • • • •
TOTAL CAPITAL AC&lt;X&gt;UNTS
2, 745,991.96
TOTAL UABIIJTIES, RESERVES, AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS . • • • •. •
.. $35,647,919.57
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar
. .
· days ending with call date · • · . - • , • • • • • • • • • • $31,016,3711.02
Average of total loans for the 15 calendar
.
..
.
days ending with call date • • • • • • • • • • • - • • • • $21,193,387.85
·
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA .
Pledged ....ts and securities loaned (book value):
u.S. Govenunent obllgaUons, direct and guaranteed,
pledged to secure deposit~! and other llabWtles • • • • • • • - $1,ti85,347.K
TOTA_!. - • • • • - • c • • - • -4 • • • • • • • • • $1,tl85,347.94

Toddler &amp; Infant ·
Shorts. Shirts
·Shorta lis. Sunsuits

S. 2NQ

ON BOTH MEN AND

.ASSETS

To

·THE .K·IDDIE SHOPPE·

20%to 50%

of GaWpoU. Ia lbe .State of.Ohfo aDd Dome1tlc Subol~ at the clooe of
baalaeas on Jaoe 29, l97f. ·

~~;es

Crib Sets
Bathing Suits
Dresses
Patamas .
Gowns

SAVINGS OF

.The Ohio Valley Bank Company

$8.00 ..

Girls Shirts
&amp; Shorts
Girls Shirts
h.
&amp; Skirts Crib Sets. Bat mg
Sizes 4·14 Suits • Dres.s es.
.
Pajamas. Gowns.

CONTINUES

Slate Balik No. UO
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDmON OF

Price

· ~oys
Muscle Shirts
Sizes5·14

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&amp;""'t""
CC,....
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SUMMER
CLEARANCE SALE
.

Mrs. Gregory Vaught Smith

PAJAMAS

BLOUSES ·~~::s

;

BAHR CLOTHIERS

GALLIPOLIS - Saturday,
June 22, at 2:30 p.m., Miss
Karen Lee Adams and Gregory
Vaught Smith were united in
marriage at St. Peters
Episcopal Church, Galtipolis,
10ith Rev. Paul W. Hawks
performing the double.rlng
ceremony.
Mrs. Merlyn Ross, organist,
played a selection of wedding
POMEROY ~ A layette music
preceding
the
shower honoring Mrs. Sandi ceremony. Mrs . Robert Mayle,
Sargent was held Tuesday : aunt of the bride, was soloist
night at the home . of Mrs. and sang "I Love Thee",
Becky Anderson wtth Mrs. ~&lt;Because", "One HaOd, One
Anderson and Mrs. Carolyn Heart" and " The Lord 's
Bartels as co-hostesses.
Prayer".
. Games were played with
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas ll.
prizes being awarded to the Adams 362 Debbie Dr .,
winners. Mrs. Avice Bailey Gallipolls, gave their daughter
won the door pnze.
in marriage. Her silk chiffon
A green and yellow c~lor gown was trimmed in imported
scheme was used m the B1ble reembroidered alencon lace. It
decorations with a · floral had a natural waistline with a
centerpiece made in the velvet band and velvet bow in
replica of a bassinet and a cake back. The fingertip mantilla of
d~orated with yellow booties. silk illusion was attached to a
After Mrs. Sargent opened the pouf and outlined in alencon
glfts, refreshments of finger la ce. Small matching lace
sandwiches, nuts, mints, cake, motifs were reembroidered on
punch and coffee were served the mantilla.
to the guests.
.
Miss Nancy Adams served
- InCluded on the guest list her sister as maid of honor and
Mrs. Jane MJtchell, Mrs. attendants were Miss Cindy
Erwin, Miss Jane Quivey, Smith, sister of the groom,
Susie Baer, Mrs. Becky ..Mrs. Martha Burlile and Mrs.
ITannehill, Mrs. Karen Goins, Sandy Smith, sister-in-law of
Mrs. Karen ~tanley, Mrs. the groom. Their gowns were
~nna Nease, Mrs. Jill Nease, of lavender jersey knit, and ·
Mrs. Janet Pickens, Mrs. they wore wide-brimmed white
Kathy Cumings, Mrs, Kathy · hats banded in lavendar. Their
Fry, Mrs. Debbie Finlaw, Mrs.· bouquets were of lavendat
Barbara Karr, Miss Patty asters and baby's breath. The
Shain, Mrs. Millie Mldklff, maid of honor carried a
Mrs: Sylvia Midkiff, Miss Mary nosegay of pink carnations and
Midkiff, Mrs. Betty Gilkey, baby's breath.
Mrs. Debbie Gilkey, Mrs.
Gary S. Smith, brother of the
Golda Reed, Mrs . Nellie
Sargent, Mrs. Golda Roush,
Mrs. Barbara Sargent, Miss
Bernice King, Mrs. Avice .
Bailey, Mrs . Helen Milhoan,
Mrs. Kay Logan, Mrs. Cindi Mrs. William Geremesz, St.
Logan, Mrs. Peggy Logan, Clair, MJch.
Attending the ceremony
Mrs. Elsie Hines, Mrs. Sadie
al9ng
with his parents and
Carl, Mrs: Kay Hill, Mrs.
Charlotte Wamsley and Mrs. godparents were his maternal'·
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Brenda Wolfe.
Steve Geremesz, Gallipolis,
- paternal grandparents, Mr.
, and Mrs. Marvin Ours, Sr., and
Jennifer, paternal greatgr8lldparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Dowie Williams, all of Eureka,
·and Greg and Julie Geremesz,
GALLIPOLIS Brian also of St. Clair, Mich.
Brian wore the traditional
Christopher Ours, son of ~·
christening
dress which had
and Mrs .. Marvin E. Ours, Jr.,
Eureka Star Route, was been in the family for 32 years.
baptl2ed at St. Louis Catholic Mterwards, a buffet IWlch was
ChiD'ch June 30, by Rev. A. J . served at the Geremesz
residence on Debby Dr.,
Golublewsld.
Gallipolis.
His godparents are Mr. and

PRICES SlASHED!
THINK AHEAD AND SAVE! ,

·

20% off

Galipolis,

Take your choice from our entire collection of ·
famous brands. Casual and dress coats in lhe
newest styles, fabrics, and .colors. Save one-half~.--•.,now during this ·
Clea~ance Sale at DavlsShuler. Shop early.

Sport Coats ..._..........,..:...'!~" to '27" Now '11" to '22"

35 Pair Famous Brands
Disc. Sizes &amp; Patterns

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Brian Ours
christened .

SPORT COATS

Sale Begin s Fn. 9:30 a.m.

Famous Brand Mens &amp;·Ladies .

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Sizes

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LUGGAGE

Olllo

Sfile!

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MEN'S SHOES

lecGndAve.

Supe~:

Second-,
,

has-

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Tank T~ps .............................. '3 to '7 Now '2" to '5"
Straw Hats:......................'4" to '13" Now \3" to '11 00

PAUL DAVIES

the gueots, membort Qf tho
M~lgs Inn 110flball learn 00
which IArl bas played. They
were Teresa Taylor, Clndy
McKinney, Kathy Wh!Uatch,
Stephanie Bego, ~na Lefebre,
Karen Smith, Sue Taylor, Cleo
Bego , Lori Smith, Cheryl
Lefebre, Barbara Wh!Uatch,
O!eryl Smith, Mrs. Ray Srnlth,
and MJke and Kelly WhiUatch.
Members of the learn Wlable to
attend were Connie Mossman,
Deena Nease, Jan Betzlng and
Marsha Holcomb.

I'

june vows solemnized

. a.EARANCE

POMEilOY
An
"' autographed baseball 10as one
:~ of several glfts presented to
. Lori Rupe at a surprise
farewell party held Friday
""night at lhe home of Mr. and
" Mrs. Harlan Whitlatch
u~ Pomeroy.
•
;, Lori leaves tomorrow with
.. her parents, Mr . and Mrs.
Rupe and a
. ;. Richard
' sister. Unda, for a vacation
. v• in Europe and then to South ·
Africa where they wiU reside
fur a year.
Refreshments were served to

. .,.

:r~~~a:;deG:~v;~ii~~' b~~:: ~

· Mrs. David P. Chapman ·

..----""'!---"1

.

· 42 Court 51.
G.IIII..Us, 0.
I Opon AU DIY TllwtiiiY I

~:~=:~c~~~:t~:~~ r~~*'.~~~~::9·W'M;:~~:~~S!.:'6' ~~'JV;.:~;:»;:;,~~fi'~~,.~~~···· wx····,,.

Miss Rupe feted

:::.

Books, Records, Tapes
Come in and let us show you his workf
-State &amp; Third
U.!lfpoiJs. Oh·IG!o--

w

PICNIC HELD
Roocoo WIM, llld dalllthllrt,
FOREST RUN - Mra. John Jemlfer ond Sulllnna, aDd
P. Scctt, Forest Run, en- R.oa Wlae, MlddlepGrt; Mn.
tertained with a family picnic Olan GenMJmer, Mrll. Ria
at her home Fourth of July. w-.on ..,d Salldy Ham.Uion,
Those In attendance were Mr. Forest' Run. Later In tho
and Mrs. William R. Knight evening Mr. and Mrs. John F ·
and SQn., Ricky and John, Pt. Marshall, Mayfield, Ky ..
Plo:asant, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. arrived to spend the weekend
William R. Sheridan and with· Mrs. Scott, Mrs. Wal.aon
daughters, Marla, Anita and and Mrs. Genhelmer. They
Christina, Waverly ; Mrs. returned to their horne Stllday.

•

ALBUMS

Mr. and Mrs.
C. V Casto

~,

I - The Sunday 'l'tn)ea. SenU.,.l, Sunday, July 14, 11'14

Emenota E. Eva•
Wamo11 F. Slleell - Dlrettin
SeiW)'II R. White
state of Ohio, County ot Gallla; .. :
·
.
Swom to and subecrlbed before me thla 12th clay of Julf, 1174 and I hereby
eertlf)' that I am not an olflcer '"'dlroclclr of thla ban)! •
My comrnllalm uplrea AprU I, 1174.
.

PltJllll ~....... NlliiiJ Pd!,la,

�'·

Persof/4/ity Profile

Celebrate
'
•
annzversary ••t

Music 'sheer pleasur.e'
BYCHARLENEHOEFUCH
RACINE - Practicing the plano or
011111 may be a bore to many, but lo
Mrs. Mattie Circle, it's "sheer
pleasUre."
ton accomplished musician, Mrs.
CirCle Is a finn believer that folks
ev.,rywhere should make a joyful noise
unto the Lord and as organist of the
Wesleyan United Methodist Churc:; in
Racine, she takes joy in her respon sibility.
Soveral . days each week Mattie
walks the two blocks from her home to
the church to spend a few hours at the
-Organ. Practice makes perfect is her
philosophy. She plays not only at her
own church, but on many Sunday
·· evenings uses her talent at the Racine
Baptist Church.
Mattie started lessons on a pwnp
organ when she was 12 years old and
then, when she.was about 16, the family
got a plano and she shifted to that.
In 1926 she began accompanying

'

VINTON - Mr. and Mrs.
O!arlea V. Casto (Vennle), 63\i
Jacklon Rd., VInton, wlll
celebrate their 50th wedding
.,nlveraary Sunday, July 21. A
reception will be given In their
honiN' at the VInton &amp;pU.t
O!urch Fellowship room from
2 to 4 pm.
Hostesses for the reception
will be Mrs. Mary Lanier, Mrs.
Ell%8beth Cloud, Mrs. ' Laura
• Brown and Mro. Ruth Evans.
Everyone lB Invited.
Mr. and Mrs. Casto were
married July 24, 1924, In
Logan. They have one
daughter, Mrs. Myron Hull
( Geanie) and three grand·
children, O!arles, Paul and
Patricia, all of Dayton .

the Ashley Gospel Quartet and then
later palyed for the Norris Quartet,
traveling over Ohio 8lld West Virginia
as they performed.
' '
Mattie also likes to sing and was
active with the Farm Bw-eau OJortis in
the 19Sos and later sang with the
choruses .. of the Big Bend 1\!instrel
Assox:iation.
1
For 51 years, Mattie and her
husband, Garrett, a retired raHway
clerk, have lived in a spacious \Ohite
house on Elm St., Racine. Their only
relatives are a nephew, his wife and
five children who now live In Con~
necticut.
Healthy and active, Mr. and Mrs.
Circle look after several aged and iU_
neighbors, helping in whatever way
they can.
Through lhe years, despite the
MA1TIECmCLE
informality of lhe day, Mattie has ·
maintained a very special mark of hats and while gloves almost every ..
distinction - she wears big, beautiful where she goes.

/

.

Nuptials
planned
GALLIPOLIS - Plans have
been completed for the wedding of Mary Louise Thornton ,
daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
Thomas Thornton, Gallipolis,
and Jack Bai1es, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Bailes, Gallipolis. It
will be an .event of Sunday, July

"

IIIARII.8 BIRTHDAY
POIIIEROY - Roctr Dison.
..., of Mr. 111d Mro. Herberl
Dbwn, Pomel'(ly, will celebrllf
hll birthday July II. RDtlorll •
at Morletla CoQqf
and 1.1 preaenUy worldns thla
llllllmer for ConUnental 011.
Hia nut dOOr neJahbor II Dolvkl
AJt&gt;ert, son of the Speaker of
the Houoe, Carl Albert. Albert
Is also employed by Con·
tlnental 011. They were both
given honorary membenhlps
to a counlry club In Oklahoma
where they are staying.
Dixon's address is 50710 E.
Oklahoma Ave., Hennessey,
Oija. 73742.

MARRIAGE LICENSES
POMEROY - George Ed·
ward Pope, 29, Gallipolis, and
Candace Ann Bahr, 24,
Gallipolis; Ronnie Eugene
Casto, 19, Mason, and Anita
LOuise Jeffers, 19, Pomeroy.
REUNION SET
POMEROY - The annual
Carr reunion wiU be held at the
. roadside park on the westside
of U. S. 33, five miles north of
Pomeroy, Sunday, July 21.
Basket dinner will be at 12:30
p.m.

- R~ to Rufus 14.98
- Bo DonaldsOn and ~
the Heywoods '5.98
-The De Franco
Fami~ '5.98
-Olivia Newton·
John '5.98 _
-Alleluia, The Gaither
Trio 14.98

's Pantry .
Introduces

Dave .Mellott

The Alcove

A Painter of Portraits.

DEBORAH DOBBINS
TODD L· CAULXlNS
ENGAGED- Mr. aDd Mn.
Roaald E. Dobblal, II N. Weill
SI.,HOIIdale,Mieh., IDDCIIIDee
tbe eDgacomeDt of tbelr
daqbter, lleborah L)'llll to
Todd L. Caulklol, 1011 of Mr• •
llld MrJ, Ted L. Calllkbls, 4N
Slate Rd., RDiadale, A Sept. Z8
ftddlolil beJq plODDed, The
Dobblu aro former retldeDII
of Gallla Coontyllld the br!deeleet II the P'llllddalllbler of
Katbryo Dobbfllll, Hedgewood
Dr., aDd · lbe late Johll W·.
· Dobblu, aod MrJ, ·Jeanie
Miller, Jacksoa. Sbe II a 19'12
grad1111te of HUiatlale Hlgb
Sebool aad II employed by the
HlDadale County Balllt. The
pl'NJ~ecllve groom II a 1974
ARLINGTON - Wedding
~d1111te of North AdaliiJ
vows were exchanged 'by Miss
HIP Seboot.
Linda Lee Suter and David
Paul Chipman at 7:30 p.m.
June 29 in the Bible Fellowship
Church, Arlington . Rev.
RECEIPTS REPORTED
Charles Gerringer, Bible
POMEROY- Meigs Co!Jilty Fellowship, and Rev. Joseph
Court recepilB for the month of Chapman , father of the groom,
June totaled $3,958.65 ac· Blessed Hope Baptist, of.
cording io Betty Hobstetter, ficiated . . .
clerk.
The bride is the daughter of
Receipts were distributed as Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
follows: fines to state, Suter, 213 W. Liberty St.,
$1,052.12 ; · fees to sheriff, ' Arlington, and the groom is the
$153.25; lines and costs to son of Rev. and Mrs . Joseph
county:
general
fund , Chapman, 2-\13 Garland. Ave.,
$1,628.49; law library fWld, Springfield. The Chapmans are
$7115.92; auto and license and former residents of Gallipolis.
gas furid ; $330.87.
Miss Shirley · Chapman,
sister of the · groom, was the
".l .
organist and Mrs, Wilbur
Kirtland, sister of the groom,
FILES SUIT
clnd Miss Penny Suter, were
POMEROY - Brenda S. the soloists. During the
Patterson,-Shade, filed sult for ceremony the groom sang a
. divorce in Meigs County selection. ·
common pleas .court · against
The bridal gow n was of
Charles E. Patterson, Mid- da cron polyester organza
dleport, on charges Qf extreme styled with a crescent waistline
cruelty.
and flounced hem sweeping lo
a chapel train. Cotton venice
· lace brimmed the full-length
illusion · veil. Her ruby ring
belonged to . her maternal
grandmother , · Mrs.
Lee
Remaley. The bridal bouquet
was a cascade of yellow roses,
white fuji mwns, baby's breath
and springeri. •·
Miss Cinda Beucler, 139 E.
Yates Ave., Findlay, was maid
of honor. Her lemon yellow
chiffon over taffeta gown was
trimmed in lace and styled
similarly to the .bride's .. At.'

the double ring ceremony.
Mrs. Jan Brown, Gallipolis,
will serve as .matron of honor
with Mrs . Carolyn Sigler,
· Shreve, sister of the groom, as
'bridesmatron and Miss Beth

,.~

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Second Avenue .
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bas-

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' f 111

~t

Charlie!

1:

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•
1.•

in

i:,'•. .
.,.••,.,. Gallipolis, Ohio

·~ I

i
l

~•.
[
&gt;:·

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maid. Miss Angie Hook, :::·&lt;::
Shreve, niece of the groom, and
Mlss Rhonda Sloan, Grove
City, cousin of the bride, will be . :
the flower girls.
~
Serving as best man will be
GaryBrown, Gallipolis. Steve ~-~:
Betz, Gallipolis arid Rick W
Thornton , brother of the bride o,
from Gallipolis, will be the ~
ushers.
•·
The gracious custom of open .
- church will be observ.ed.

&amp;tc. ...•

-

an

CII!I'PA.'ID- -£vii• J«4g--~ RadDe. ceala",
WIS 'given I aurpriae (W'ty on bJI 8'llh b~-by hiiiOill,
John, left, Lorain and GeQrge, right, Rt. 2, Racine on June 21.
The party wu held at the home of Mrs. Etbel Joltnllon, Rt. I,
Racine, who was aaalated In preparing the dinner by ~.
· John (Clarys) Johnson. Grandchildren present who
p-esenled their grandfather glfta wete Joljn Johnson, Jr.,
Barbara and Thomas Johnson, all of Lorain. Eugene Johnson
and hlB wife, LIIUe, have three other children who were
unable to attend. Mrs. Elizabeth Barrlnt!er, Reedsville, Mrs.
Mary O'Conner, Neah Bay, Wuh and Paul Johnson, also of
Lorain.

·Layette
shower
•
zs held

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY, JULY 14 THRU JULY 20

.

SNACK.
BOX.

;i

tendants were Miss Penny .
Suter, sister of the bride, Mrs .
David Inbody, Rt. I, Janera,
and Miss Diana Chapman,
sister of the groom, Spring.
field . Their gowns, styled
identically to that of .the maid
of honor :were apricot. Junior ·
bridesmaid Holly Suter, sister
of the bride, and flower girl,
MONDAY
Amy Sue Kirtland, Springfield,
CANDYSTRIPERS, 7 p.m. ·
niece of the groom, were at- All girls urged to attend.
tired in mint_gre·en gowns.
MIDDLEPORT Business
The .attendants · wore
headpieces of matching lace and Professional ·Women,
and net and carried white annual family picnic, roadside
baskets fiiled with daisies; park, Kanauga, 6:30 p.m .
carnations and baby's breath Members and guests to take
tinted to match their dresses. table service, a favorite dish
Dan Cwnmins, Cedarville, and beverage. Each member is .
was the best man arid ushers also asked to take a small t
were Wilbur KlrUand, brother- game prize. Mrs .. Grace Pratt
in-law of the groom, Spring· and Mrs. Betty Conkle are
field ; Terry Suter, Dayton, hostesses.
brother of the bride, and Brian
TUESDAY'
Reese, Springfield and James
WINDING TRAIL Garaen [
Staley, Arlington. David In- Club, 8 p.m., home ·of Mrs.
~
body, 11, Jeoera, was ring-" Robert l.A!wis.
beaTer.
The reception was held
following the ceremony in the
Veterans Memorial Hospital
church fellowship hall.
Admitted - Lee lludisill,
· Following a wedding trip in
Pomeroy; Dorol.hy Great.
northern Michigan 'the couple
Racine ; Marlon Oiler,
is at home at 1429 W. Belmont, . house,
Pomeroy. ·
Springfield.
Discharged - Mary StilJ,
The bride is a teacber ln . Eleanore
Thomas.
I
Madison Plains High School,
London. She gradu'aled from
Arlington High School in 1969
The John F . Kennedy
'center
for the Pe rforming
and Cedarville College in 1973.
Arts
in
Washingto n, D.C.
Chapman, a 1971 graduate of
houses
three
ma gnifica nt
Gallia Academy High School,
theaters: the or.:;ra House,
is attending Cedarville College the Eisenhower rheater .and
and Is employed. by Kreider the Conce rt Hall, with a total
and Son Roofing.
seating capacity' of 11 ,050.

• Roll
No Substitutions

108th

. TRY OUR NEW SANDWICHES
'
HOMEMADE BEEF .BARBEQUE
. OR PORK TENDERLOIN
.

Anniversary

•

.

. . .... '

i}fa~

· lllfnppr

2nd &amp; OLIVE ST.

GAlliPOLIS, OHICJ

.fOR QUICK PICK W' SER J!JCE PHONE 446-2682 ·

SUITS ·
Reg. '75
. .. ...................
:........ :.'Sooo
' Values ................
.
.

Reg. $80 Vaiues .................~· .••• ,......................... ~oo

f

Re2. SS5 Values............................................... '68 00
'
Reg. '90 Values ............................ ;................... '7'l:"

~

• French Fries

HASKINS-TANNER'S

lj

I

• 2 Pieces Chicken

I

'

Reg. '!20 Values .............................................. '9600

Reg. '55 Values.......... ~ ................................~ ..... s44oo
00
Reg. SSO Values .................................
................
.
.
. '48

.
.. Reg. '70 Values ................................................
.'5600
Reg. '80 Values.................................................5f;400

·

YOUR CHOICE OF OUR
ENTIRE SELECTION
DRESS AND CASUAL

~·

Reg. l90 Values ............................................... '7'1}»

MEN'S WEAR

BOY'S WEAR ·

Sport Shirts ......................... ..'5 to '12 now '3" to ·~
Knit Slacks ...............:.....'l4 to '32" Now '11~ to '25"
Knit Shirts .........................'4 to '1500 Now '3" to '11"
·
Swlmwear,
................... ,.. ...... '4 · to ~
,- Now ~ ~~
o
Flairs &amp; Baggys .. :.......:......... •g to '15 Now '6" to'll"

Sport Shirts........................... '4 to '6 Now '3"' to '4"
Knrt Shirts ................. :......... '1" .to '6 Now 'I" to '4"
Tank Tops ................. :......... '2" to '4"· Now '2" to 13"'

COATS

"

.·. ·50% off

1.
;

'i

&lt;

j '

ALL. SUMMER
JEWELRY
ON SALE AT

1

OFF
REGULAR
PRICE

OPEN MONDAY &amp; FRIDAY TIL 8:00

REDUCED PRICES

1866

. 1974

J£Wfi.ERS
eQUALITY CLOTHING SINC~ 186€ •

.

-412-414 Secand ••

Ohio~-~--~·..__.

.

Wedding vows read

HoNEY

groom, served as best man.
Ushers were Dave Evans,
James Henry and Fred Hall.
Flowergirl was Miss Heather
Smith, the groom's niece, and
Greg Rodetick -served as
ringbearer.
Misses Joan Haskins and
Becky Durham served at the
reception following the
ceremony with Miss Denise
Lewis reg!Btering the guests ..
Smith is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Vaught Smith, Garfield
Hts., Gallipolis, and the
grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
Claude Kemper, Huntington,
W. Va., and the late Dr. and
Mrs . V;tught Smith, also of
HWltington.
Following a wedding trip
through the Southern United
States, the couple is making
their horne in Gallipolis.

..

WEARING APPAREL

I, C. Leon Saunders, Vice l'relklent and Cashier, of the aboviHIIImed bank,
do solemnly alfinn that this report of condition II true and correct, to the belt of
my knowledge and belief.
·
Correet--Atteot: . Leola Sallllden

c:

'

'MIOIUPORT. 0:

WOMENS FINE

Cash and due from bankS • • . . · · · · - · • • • • • • · · • 2,325,.728.01
U.s. Treasury secutltl~ • • • • • • · - • • • • • • • • • • • 6,202,93:;.3:;
Obligations of other U.S. Government
· agencies and corporations •. • • • • • • • • • · · • • • 1,001,484.38
Obligations of States and political subdiv!Bloos - · · • • • • • 4,218,707.28
Other securities (Including $1.00 corporate stocks) • • • • • • • • • ·
1.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell • • • • • •
1,400,000.00
Other loana • • • • • - · • • • • • •
19,565,180.78
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets .representing bank premises
• • • • • • 678,401.85
• • • ·• • • • 255,479.94
Otherassets · • • • • • - · - - ' - •
TOTAL ASSETS • • • • · • • - • • • • • • • - - • $35,847,919.57
LIABn.fi'IES
Demand deposits of Individuals, partnetshlps,
. and corporations • • • • • • , • • • • • • • • • • • · $ 8,024,240.49
. Time and aavlngs deposits or Individuals,
partnerships, and corporatiOns • • • • • • • • • • • • ~ 22,102,0'18.08
Depoalts of United Slates Govetrunent • • • • - • • • • • • 228,943.39
Depoalts of States and political subdivisions · • • • • • • • • • 1,081,483.85
Depoalts of commercial banks • • • - • • • • • • • • .~ • I,OOO.OQ
Certified and officers' checks, etc. • • • • • • • • • • • • • 91,502.84
TOTAL DEPOSITS • • · • • • • • • ~1,529,:M8.45
(a) Total demand deposits • • · • • • • · - $ 8,977,170.31
(b) Total time and savings deposits • • • • • $22,552,0'18,08
Other llabWtles • • • • • • • • - • • • • • • • • - 1,077,982.99
TOTAL UABILITIES • • • · • • • • • • • • • • • ~2,607,231.41
.
. RESERY,ES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
·Reserve for bad debt looses on loans
. ·
(setup purouant to IRS rulings) • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • $294,696.17
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES • • • • • $294,696.17
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital, total • • • • • • • •
• • • • • $2,745,Wl.ltl
Common stock-total par value • • • •
• • • • 750,000.00
No. shares authorized 75,000
No. ahares outstanding 75,000.
Surplus - • • - - - - - - .. - - .. - • • - ' • • • 1,360,000.00
• • • • 840,991.98
Undivided profits • • • • • • • • • •
TOTAL CAPITAL AC&lt;X&gt;UNTS
2, 745,991.96
TOTAL UABIIJTIES, RESERVES, AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS . • • • •. •
.. $35,647,919.57
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar
. .
· days ending with call date · • · . - • , • • • • • • • • • • $31,016,3711.02
Average of total loans for the 15 calendar
.
..
.
days ending with call date • • • • • • • • • • • - • • • • $21,193,387.85
·
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA .
Pledged ....ts and securities loaned (book value):
u.S. Govenunent obllgaUons, direct and guaranteed,
pledged to secure deposit~! and other llabWtles • • • • • • • - $1,ti85,347.K
TOTA_!. - • • • • - • c • • - • -4 • • • • • • • • • $1,tl85,347.94

Toddler &amp; Infant ·
Shorts. Shirts
·Shorta lis. Sunsuits

S. 2NQ

ON BOTH MEN AND

.ASSETS

To

·THE .K·IDDIE SHOPPE·

20%to 50%

of GaWpoU. Ia lbe .State of.Ohfo aDd Dome1tlc Subol~ at the clooe of
baalaeas on Jaoe 29, l97f. ·

~~;es

Crib Sets
Bathing Suits
Dresses
Patamas .
Gowns

SAVINGS OF

.The Ohio Valley Bank Company

$8.00 ..

Girls Shirts
&amp; Shorts
Girls Shirts
h.
&amp; Skirts Crib Sets. Bat mg
Sizes 4·14 Suits • Dres.s es.
.
Pajamas. Gowns.

CONTINUES

Slate Balik No. UO
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDmON OF

Price

· ~oys
Muscle Shirts
Sizes5·14

----

- - ~
- '~
&amp;""'t""
CC,....
. ~
•

SUMMER
CLEARANCE SALE
.

Mrs. Gregory Vaught Smith

PAJAMAS

BLOUSES ·~~::s

;

BAHR CLOTHIERS

GALLIPOLIS - Saturday,
June 22, at 2:30 p.m., Miss
Karen Lee Adams and Gregory
Vaught Smith were united in
marriage at St. Peters
Episcopal Church, Galtipolis,
10ith Rev. Paul W. Hawks
performing the double.rlng
ceremony.
Mrs. Merlyn Ross, organist,
played a selection of wedding
POMEROY ~ A layette music
preceding
the
shower honoring Mrs. Sandi ceremony. Mrs . Robert Mayle,
Sargent was held Tuesday : aunt of the bride, was soloist
night at the home . of Mrs. and sang "I Love Thee",
Becky Anderson wtth Mrs. ~&lt;Because", "One HaOd, One
Anderson and Mrs. Carolyn Heart" and " The Lord 's
Bartels as co-hostesses.
Prayer".
. Games were played with
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas ll.
prizes being awarded to the Adams 362 Debbie Dr .,
winners. Mrs. Avice Bailey Gallipolls, gave their daughter
won the door pnze.
in marriage. Her silk chiffon
A green and yellow c~lor gown was trimmed in imported
scheme was used m the B1ble reembroidered alencon lace. It
decorations with a · floral had a natural waistline with a
centerpiece made in the velvet band and velvet bow in
replica of a bassinet and a cake back. The fingertip mantilla of
d~orated with yellow booties. silk illusion was attached to a
After Mrs. Sargent opened the pouf and outlined in alencon
glfts, refreshments of finger la ce. Small matching lace
sandwiches, nuts, mints, cake, motifs were reembroidered on
punch and coffee were served the mantilla.
to the guests.
.
Miss Nancy Adams served
- InCluded on the guest list her sister as maid of honor and
Mrs. Jane MJtchell, Mrs. attendants were Miss Cindy
Erwin, Miss Jane Quivey, Smith, sister of the groom,
Susie Baer, Mrs. Becky ..Mrs. Martha Burlile and Mrs.
ITannehill, Mrs. Karen Goins, Sandy Smith, sister-in-law of
Mrs. Karen ~tanley, Mrs. the groom. Their gowns were
~nna Nease, Mrs. Jill Nease, of lavender jersey knit, and ·
Mrs. Janet Pickens, Mrs. they wore wide-brimmed white
Kathy Cumings, Mrs, Kathy · hats banded in lavendar. Their
Fry, Mrs. Debbie Finlaw, Mrs.· bouquets were of lavendat
Barbara Karr, Miss Patty asters and baby's breath. The
Shain, Mrs. Millie Mldklff, maid of honor carried a
Mrs: Sylvia Midkiff, Miss Mary nosegay of pink carnations and
Midkiff, Mrs. Betty Gilkey, baby's breath.
Mrs. Debbie Gilkey, Mrs.
Gary S. Smith, brother of the
Golda Reed, Mrs . Nellie
Sargent, Mrs. Golda Roush,
Mrs. Barbara Sargent, Miss
Bernice King, Mrs. Avice .
Bailey, Mrs . Helen Milhoan,
Mrs. Kay Logan, Mrs. Cindi Mrs. William Geremesz, St.
Logan, Mrs. Peggy Logan, Clair, MJch.
Attending the ceremony
Mrs. Elsie Hines, Mrs. Sadie
al9ng
with his parents and
Carl, Mrs: Kay Hill, Mrs.
Charlotte Wamsley and Mrs. godparents were his maternal'·
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Brenda Wolfe.
Steve Geremesz, Gallipolis,
- paternal grandparents, Mr.
, and Mrs. Marvin Ours, Sr., and
Jennifer, paternal greatgr8lldparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Dowie Williams, all of Eureka,
·and Greg and Julie Geremesz,
GALLIPOLIS Brian also of St. Clair, Mich.
Brian wore the traditional
Christopher Ours, son of ~·
christening
dress which had
and Mrs .. Marvin E. Ours, Jr.,
Eureka Star Route, was been in the family for 32 years.
baptl2ed at St. Louis Catholic Mterwards, a buffet IWlch was
ChiD'ch June 30, by Rev. A. J . served at the Geremesz
residence on Debby Dr.,
Golublewsld.
Gallipolis.
His godparents are Mr. and

PRICES SlASHED!
THINK AHEAD AND SAVE! ,

·

20% off

Galipolis,

Take your choice from our entire collection of ·
famous brands. Casual and dress coats in lhe
newest styles, fabrics, and .colors. Save one-half~.--•.,now during this ·
Clea~ance Sale at DavlsShuler. Shop early.

Sport Coats ..._..........,..:...'!~" to '27" Now '11" to '22"

35 Pair Famous Brands
Disc. Sizes &amp; Patterns

"

Brian Ours
christened .

SPORT COATS

Sale Begin s Fn. 9:30 a.m.

Famous Brand Mens &amp;·Ladies .

••

Sizes

l

~

LUGGAGE

Olllo

Sfile!

••'
'

MEN'S SHOES

lecGndAve.

Supe~:

Second-,
,

has-

•

Tank T~ps .............................. '3 to '7 Now '2" to '5"
Straw Hats:......................'4" to '13" Now \3" to '11 00

PAUL DAVIES

the gueots, membort Qf tho
M~lgs Inn 110flball learn 00
which IArl bas played. They
were Teresa Taylor, Clndy
McKinney, Kathy Wh!Uatch,
Stephanie Bego, ~na Lefebre,
Karen Smith, Sue Taylor, Cleo
Bego , Lori Smith, Cheryl
Lefebre, Barbara Wh!Uatch,
O!eryl Smith, Mrs. Ray Srnlth,
and MJke and Kelly WhiUatch.
Members of the learn Wlable to
attend were Connie Mossman,
Deena Nease, Jan Betzlng and
Marsha Holcomb.

I'

june vows solemnized

. a.EARANCE

POMEilOY
An
"' autographed baseball 10as one
:~ of several glfts presented to
. Lori Rupe at a surprise
farewell party held Friday
""night at lhe home of Mr. and
" Mrs. Harlan Whitlatch
u~ Pomeroy.
•
;, Lori leaves tomorrow with
.. her parents, Mr . and Mrs.
Rupe and a
. ;. Richard
' sister. Unda, for a vacation
. v• in Europe and then to South ·
Africa where they wiU reside
fur a year.
Refreshments were served to

. .,.

:r~~~a:;deG:~v;~ii~~' b~~:: ~

· Mrs. David P. Chapman ·

..----""'!---"1

.

· 42 Court 51.
G.IIII..Us, 0.
I Opon AU DIY TllwtiiiY I

~:~=:~c~~~:t~:~~ r~~*'.~~~~::9·W'M;:~~:~~S!.:'6' ~~'JV;.:~;:»;:;,~~fi'~~,.~~~···· wx····,,.

Miss Rupe feted

:::.

Books, Records, Tapes
Come in and let us show you his workf
-State &amp; Third
U.!lfpoiJs. Oh·IG!o--

w

PICNIC HELD
Roocoo WIM, llld dalllthllrt,
FOREST RUN - Mra. John Jemlfer ond Sulllnna, aDd
P. Scctt, Forest Run, en- R.oa Wlae, MlddlepGrt; Mn.
tertained with a family picnic Olan GenMJmer, Mrll. Ria
at her home Fourth of July. w-.on ..,d Salldy Ham.Uion,
Those In attendance were Mr. Forest' Run. Later In tho
and Mrs. William R. Knight evening Mr. and Mrs. John F ·
and SQn., Ricky and John, Pt. Marshall, Mayfield, Ky ..
Plo:asant, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. arrived to spend the weekend
William R. Sheridan and with· Mrs. Scott, Mrs. Wal.aon
daughters, Marla, Anita and and Mrs. Genhelmer. They
Christina, Waverly ; Mrs. returned to their horne Stllday.

•

ALBUMS

Mr. and Mrs.
C. V Casto

~,

I - The Sunday 'l'tn)ea. SenU.,.l, Sunday, July 14, 11'14

Emenota E. Eva•
Wamo11 F. Slleell - Dlrettin
SeiW)'II R. White
state of Ohio, County ot Gallla; .. :
·
.
Swom to and subecrlbed before me thla 12th clay of Julf, 1174 and I hereby
eertlf)' that I am not an olflcer '"'dlroclclr of thla ban)! •
My comrnllalm uplrea AprU I, 1174.
.

PltJllll ~....... NlliiiJ Pd!,la,

�•

•

•

•

•

•

~"----~-&gt;---~·····&gt;-'&lt;&gt;"·"~--~
"o"'i'o' o'N•'•...............,.,•, • • ,•,..v;o.,-..,o,

1Coming
.1 Events

SUNDAY
JOYFUL Echoes of the White
Oat BapUst Church will sing ,t
the 10 :30 a .m. service at the
Vinton Baptist Church.
CENTENARY UMW famUy
picnic, Centenary Church, 12

OPEII

noon.

-Mr. and Mrs. F. Van Meter
MARRIAGE ANNOUNCED - The wedding of Miss
'Candy Sue Jeffers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Jeffers,
Clifton, W. Va.,aildCharlesF. Van Meter, Jr., aon o( Mrs. A.
L. Phelps, Jr., West Columbia, W.Va., was an event of June
21 at the home of Rev. Qeorge Hoschar, West Columbia. A
reception was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John D.
TUrnbull, Clifton, W.Va. The cou~le honeymooned at Tygart
Lake, W. Va.
welcome to attend. A special
PICNIC PLANNED
invitation
is being issued to all
POMEROY - The annual
picnic of the Meigs County recent retirees living in Meigs
Retired Teachers Assn., will _be County. As usual, spouses andat ~:30 p.m., $aturday, at the or guests are welcome. Miss
Roadside Park, west' side, Lucille Smith is president of
'
Route 33. All retired teachers, the association.
whether members or not. are

Now at

REV. John Banks wlll preach
at Walnut Ridge Church, 7:30
p.m.
HOMECOMING
services,
Northup Bapt ist Church,
basket dinner. Special singers.
Rev. Clifford Suiter and Rev.
Bud Hatfield will speak in the
afternoon. At II a.m. Rev. Earl
Hinkle will speak.
PAST Matrons and pstrons,
district 24, OES plcnlc, 2 p.m., ·
South Point Community
Center. Familles welcome.
Bring basket dinner and table
service. Drinks furnished.
.WILSON Rewlion at the Gallia
County JWJior Fairgrounds
THE SHAFER Family will b&lt;
singing at Clark chapel,
Porter, 7:30 p.m.
MONDAY
SPECIAL services each night
this week at the White Oak
Baptist Church, -except
Satwday. Rev. James Puckett,
Deerfield
Beach,
Fla .,
evangelist. Everyone
welcome, 7:30p.m.
BUSINESS and Professional
Women, regular meeting, 6:30
p.m. at Oscar's. Reservations
· or cancellations can be made
· with Miss . Flossie Trout,
chairwoman of the calling
committee.

10.9

MONDAY. JULY 14t
/' -

CLUBWOMAN OF YEAR - Frances Thomas, right, was .
recently voted Clubwoman of the Year 1973-74 by the
Gallipolls Junior Woman's Club. She was presented an
engraved sliver plate by outgoing club president, Mickey
Stokes.

WILL SING -Tile_ Good s.ma,tiM ....... l)llmnbuo, wtil be In concert, Saturday, July
20, at King's Olapel Church, 7::10 p.m. They will al8o lliDg at2 p.m. at Walmt Ridge Coorch,

SUnday, July 21. Everyone Is welcome to aUend.
CORRECTION
GALUPOLIS - The cwrect
address of Pvt. Jerry RobertS
ls .~th Plt. 297-58--5695, Co. B 11th
Bn., 5th Tng, BDE, Ft. Knox,
Ky., ,40121.

'" Mrs. jack Blaine Matthews

ticipating many more happy .
relUlions.

Classmates
get together

·Las Vegas

: GALLIPOLIS
The
Mayfield United Methodist
&amp;urch, Cleveland, was the
iCene for the JWJe I, 4:30p.m.
fedding of Miss Dyan Lynn
~ellogg and Jack Blaine

Bonanza!
Labor Day Weekend

BAKER FURNITURE
..

·Mrs.

Poiier Fugate

4 fun-filled days
3 glamorous nights .
Landmark Hotel
$279

Holiday Inn
$299
For details of this great
holiday , call Donna

8
WORLD WIDE
Court 51.

Gallipolis

~·6-0700

\

Fugate-Hyme vows read
LANCASTER
Miss
Deborah A. Hyrne became the
bride of Porter Fugate in a
double ring ceremony at 2:30
p.m., June 15 at St. Berdnattes
Church, Lancaster.
Father Bernald Jones performed the ceremony for the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pius
Hyrne, 2303 Glenn De., Lancaster, formerly of Gallipolis,
and the son of Mrs. Eileen
Fugate, Rl. I, Rushville.
The candlelight mass was
decorated with ferns and three
tier candles with jv~l'Y, bases.
Clara Bailey was the organist
and vocal seleciions were
pre sen ted by Mrs. David
McLaughlin and Andrew
Hyrne.
· For her wedding the bride
chose a gown of white
maricaine crepe trimmed in
venice lace. The .bodice_ was
fitted to an empire waist with
lace trim at the waist and the
keyhole neckline was edged in
lace. The long fitted sleeves
ended in lace cuffs and the
skirt,fell in a soft a-line style,
with a chapel length train. The
double elbow-length veil of silk
illusion was held by a bridal
bonnet. She carried a cascade
of white daisies and. yellow
sweetheart roses with 8 fern
edging.
Mrs . Debby Taylor was
matron of honor and wore a
yellow dotted swiss gown In
empire styling. The material
was sprinkled with white
nowers and the gown had long .
sleeveS. Her Yellow straw hat
had a wide brim and she
carried a bouquet of white and
yellow daisies, arid baby's
breath tied with yellow

An exclusive accessorv that
makes this elegant Frigidaire 3-door
refrigerator worth listening to. ·
Everybody's talking about the Frigidaire Conversati~n Pi~ce, an
innovative and exclusive refrigerator accessory. Its actually
a Panasonic® AM/FM radio and tape cassette recorder-player
un~. mounted handso,mely in a special third d~or that's available
for the elegant 20.3 cu. ft. Frigidaire Side-by-S1de RefrlgeratorFreeier.
Thanks to this acce'ssory, you can put an entertainment center In
your kitchen without sacrificing valuable counter space. What's
more, you can record messages at the push of a button to keep
track of your family in a fun, personal way. The recorder offers
.built-in microphone and pop-out cassette. And the whole, battery
operated unit removes easily from the door to go where y~u go.

$729

'·

Baker
Furniture

,--:ee, and hear the
C, •nversation Piece today, at

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

•'

'
\.

Miss Amy Hyrne, sister of
the bride, flower girl, wore a
yellow dotte.d swiss gown
sprinkled with orange flowers.
She carried white and yellow
daisies with yellow streamers
. and baby's breath In a small
white basket.
WiUJam Taylor served as
best man and ushers were
Robert Yoder, Andrew H)'11le
and John Hyrne. Jimmie
Georgie, "!phew of the groom,
was ringbearer, and Tom
Hyrne read the eplsUe.
The reception room in the
church was decorated with live
Uer-candelabra highllghted by
white 'daiaiea, yellow sweet.
heart roees and baby's breath·.
The lour-tier cake .was
dei;QI'8ted with yellow roses.
Mils Hannah · Fugate, Mrs.
Agnus · Hart.horn and MlJs
Agn us Fugate were the

Let us put
your wedding
in bloom.
T ne d&lt;1Y 15 app•oa ¢h mg A'n d
the arrangements are be1ng

made _Call us for bququets .
cur sages. boutonrue•cs. II owe~&gt;&gt;
lor church or ta bl e ccrncrpteccs.
We have e " er~ t hmg to makeyour wedd•ng a beaul1lu l
oq: as1 on

·Francis Florist
Ph. 992-2644 ·

The world ' s smallest
352 E. Main
Pomeroy
a:rmy is that of San Marino,
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with a total regular strength L_ _ _w_a_tc_h_F
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300 SECOND AVE.

. . GALLIPOLIS

"LAFA YEnE MALL"

·SALE
.

.

G.REAT VALUES ON ALL
MERCHANDISE

Shorts
·
Pantsuits
Tops
Dresses
Skirts
Coats·
WeddingGowns' Blouses
·Slacks ·
· Handbags
All Sales

BankAm enQI'
. d.

Final

· Master Charge
•
'

'

Mon. &amp; Fri. 9:30 til 8 PM
Tues., Wed~ Thur. &amp; Sat.
9:30 til 5 PM

bouquet.

Choose from Faultless Sombrero
or Wilson Hoi-Hi.

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Models, 20, 30 .4tND 40 Compod design retain• "P•cktlfability.'' 7-seccnd
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Ttt. mighty mite with the tiny priu tag . The
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S-13 99

Heck's Reg. 99'

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IIWiliY 11/11.

Housewares Dept

IC8 18

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CasfiielicDept.

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bride was given in
Kathy McCloy and Jo Ann
marriage by her father before DeWilde, both of Cleveland, .
all altar holding :white mwils registered the guests.
a ~ d pink carnations with
Following a wedding trip to
g('eenery and a pink bow. The Virginia Beach and Williamscandelabra were trimmed in burg, the couple resides at 66'h
white mums and pink satin · Court St., Gallipolis: Both are . •
rlbbons and the pews were . May graduates of Morehead
decorated with pink ribbons State University. Matthews is
a)ld greenery.
now employed at The' Ohio
;The bridal gown was Valley Bank. He is a member
designed by Alfred Angelo, of of Lambda Chi Alpha
'
New
York in white em- Fraternity and holds a degree
.broidered French schiffli in business administration .
OJiganza with a built-in chapel Mrs. Matthews, a past
trpin. The puffed sleeves had president of . Delta Zeta
fr!ple tier trim and the hemline Sorority, has a degree in social
flounce was accented with work and psychology.
'
venice
lace. The veil of
Out-of-town guests attending
crocheted flowers was he.ld by were Mrs. Lee Matthews, Mr.
a seed]iearl headpiece and and Mrs. John Hood and
c!Ji!pel, fingertip and short daughters, Mr. and Mrs.
veils feU from the headpiece. Edward Edelblute, Mrs.
Her outfit was completed with Marsha Smith, Mrs. Meda
a white satin shoes, pearl ear- McNeil, Mrs. Donna Allen and
rings and blue satin ribbon and children, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
old lace garter. She carried a Ours, Miss Debby Stout, Miss
n"'iegay of mums, daisies, pink Debbie Johnson, Mike Duffy,
and baby's breath tied John Felker, Mrs. Jeri Gibson,
r--_,OIUl long -pink satin ribbon.
Miss Brenda Gibson, and Tom
KaJren Irwin, Louisville, Ky., Weaver, all of Gallipolis; Mr.
selfved as maid of honor. She and Mrs. Vernon Haskey,
attired in a green chiffon Mansfield; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde .
ha1ter dress with flowing back. Evans and Mrs. Revs Evans,
The jacket, which had short Rio Grande; Mr. and Mrs.
tiered sleeves, tied in the front. George Evans, Granville; Mr.
Bridesmaids were Patsy and Mrs. Dan. Evans, Vinton;
M~yer, Covington, Ky ., Kim Mr. and Mrs. Gene Stein,
Ke)logg, Cleveland, Kerl Columbus; Miss Marilyn Long,
Kellogg, Cleveland, and Cathy Cincinnati; Miss Cynthia
'
Gabbard,
Ft. Thomas, Ky. Couisa, San Antonio, Tex.; .Mr.
They were attired in pink and Mrs. Tom Switzer,
chiUon halter dresses with Delaware; Charles Nava,
fl&lt;n\').ng back and -jackets with Louisville; Rick Beverly,
shot t tiered sleeves. The Morehead, Ky.; Miss Fran
jac~ts !led In front. They Collins, South Shore, Ky.;
· car ..ed white mums, pink Grant Stevens, South Shore,
roses and baby's .breath lied ·Ky. ; Harlan Roe, Morehead,
witil_ long pink satin ribbon. Ky . ; and Jansorf Deiner,
1
Thelf gold'' heart necklaces Toledo.
. wer~ gifts from the bride.
'-"'jj'-"'jj'-"!j!'-"'jjfiffllli:(j&gt;SIM-.,01!1
J\!lss JUlie AlUm, Gallipolis,
serv'ed as flower girl. She was
atti~ in a white gown With
pink and green· emb•oide•ed
flowers and a long pink sa tin
bow. She carried a basket of
POMEROY - The Meigs
carnations and pink roses with Senior Citizens Center in the
pink .. ribbon streamers. All or Pomeroy Junior High $chool is
: the p ride's attendants wore · open 9 a:m.-4 · p.m. Monday
pink' tea roses and baby's through Friday: Activities·
breath with pink ribbon in their include:
hair .•
Monday, July 15, Rug
Capt . . John Matthews, . Making, Square Dancing.
Stutzgard, Germany, was the
Tuesday, July 16, cards and
beSt, man. ·ushers were Gar:l!es, Chorus, 1-2:30 p.m.
Wedilesday, July 17, Chair
Micty.el Allen, Galllpolls, .
Bruce Wilson, Gallipolis, Dave Caning, Quilting, Nurses Day
. Durham, Gallipolis, and Scott . - Blood Press'¥'•• 12:;1()-2:30
Kellogg, Gates Mills. - T~ey p.m ., Art Lessons 2-3 p.m.
Thursday, July 18, Crans,
were' attired In gray tu~edoes
with , black pants and white Cards and Games, .
Friday, July 19, Bowling 1-3
rufnt&lt;~ shirts wtth black vests
and 'l'lW Ues, They wore white p.m.
· carnation boutonnieres. The
Senior Citizens Lunch
groom's boutonniere was. pink Program , 11 :30 a.m.-12:30
rooes arid baby's broth.
· r ,m, Monday through Friday.
-Fo(' her daughter's wedding
Mrs. Kellogg chOse a shocking
pink chiffon gown with ilowlng
panel., diamond earrings and
The chances of a sextuplet.
.two Pink cymbldiwn orchids. birth in the world today are
'Tile rtlother of the groom chooe . 3,000,000,000 lo one.

•tyltd for•arm. Adju1toblt rear
1ight. Cros ... bolt 1of.ty. An tCOno•
my .22 autom otk ric h with frOnfi•r
. heritage. S~ oo11 17 long J or 15
long Rille.

HECK'S REG. 64' QUART

SIINTS DEPT.

,...__-: ...,.... ----. .. ...._
.'i ''

Model 190 Sernf. Aulomofic· 1M • .
Bo ld pi5.tol g ri p $lock . Cr is-ply

.

Packageaf 3

" \-

WITH SCOPE

LIMIT 5 QT.

Sr. Citizens
Calendar

SUMMER CLEARANCE

streamers.

'.

Model FPCI-203V3
(wllh ICC.tiOry RT-1)

I

hostesses.
Following a wedding 1rip to
Columbus, the couple is at
home at 13li6Sheridan Dr., Apt.
24, in Lancaster.
The bride is a . graduate of
Gallia Academy High School
and Rio Grande College. She is
employed as . a medical lab
technician at Fairfield COWJty
Hospital, Lancaster. The
groom is a receivin'g clerk at
the hospital.
Out-&lt;Jf-town guests at the
wedding _were Mr. and Mrs.
Don Bolton, Dayton ; Mrs .
Richard Fisher and Carol,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Dodrill, Vinton ; Mrs. Silas
Fugate and granddaughter,
Dayion; Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Day, Mr. and Mrs. John Finney, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Baker and sons, Mrs. Katie
Naskey, Mrs. Ellen Schopis,
Miss Sherry Finney and Mrs.
Gary Fisher, all of Gallipolis.

stt~ ' '

GOLF BALLS

~The

TRAVEL
33

• Rev . Donald Huffman
•performed
the double-ring
dl!remony . The bride is the
&lt;Qlughter of Mr. and lll:rs.
~eighton Kellqgg, 733 But~mut Dr., Gates Mills, and
!lie groom is the son of Mr. and
~- William Matthews, 13
Qilrfield Ave., Gallipolis. :Mrs. Donald Huffman played
"'l'welfth of Never " "My Old
( entucky Home" ' and other
selections and Patsy Meyer,
COvington ,
Ky .,
sang
''..Sometimes," " The Lord's
ptayer" and " Sunrise, Sun-

a pink crepe gown with flowing
chiffon coat in pink, orange and
light green with white flowers .
A long chiffon tie enhanced the ·
neckline. She carried a pearl
beaded bag and wore pink
cymbidium orchids.
The buffet dinner - reception
was served to over 200 persons
at
the
Forge,
Gates
Mills, Music was provided by T~e Three J's,
who played " Let Me .c all You
Sweetheart" for the bridal
dance.
The bridal table held two
cande.labra and flowers. The
three-tiered wedding cake was
decorated in whipped cream
icing, topped by bells and pink
icing roses : Bruce Wilson ,
Gallipolis, caught the garter
and Keri Kellogg caught the

~tthews .

1974 August 30-Sept. 2

Present were Mrs. David

Price (Betty Ann Haskins),
Chicago, Dl.; Mrs. Donald
Burkett
( Betty
Lou
Shoemaker ), Toledo; Mrs.
John Janes (JoAnn Yeauger),
Columbus; Mrs. Jack Frazier
. (Mary Campbell ), Columbus;
Mrs. Josie Evans (Imogene)
Burns), Oak Hill, and Mrs.
P~ul Butler (Elizabeth Bush ),
· Mrs. Jlm Betz (Barbara
Woods) , Mrs. Alfred Gabrielli
(Jennie Lou Baker, Gal]jpolis.
Many happy memories were
recalled by the group,
In the evening the group with
husbands met at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Gabrielli
lor cocktails and dinner. All
enjoyed the renliniscent and
picture laking, and are an-

'IOW30· o• GT•I
MOTOR OIL

•

••
•

22 AUTOMATIC
RIFLE .

KENDALL

sVows read
•

Join Our

GALLIPOLIS - For the past
28 years, nine girls who were
high school classmates, have
been meeting every lew years
for a reunion. Saturday, July 6,
1974, they met at the home of
Mrs. Robert Frances (Donnie
Postuwaite), for an afternoon
social.

TUESDAY
HAPPY Days Senior Citizens
Club picnic at Lake Alma.
Meet at Frank Denney's, 6
p;m, Bring food and table
service.
OPEN GATE Garden Club
meets at Edna Graham's 7:30
p,m.
LAFAYETTE Shrine 44 meets
at 8 p.m.

WINCHESTER

'\

35'

•

�•

•

•

•

•

•

~"----~-&gt;---~·····&gt;-'&lt;&gt;"·"~--~
"o"'i'o' o'N•'•...............,.,•, • • ,•,..v;o.,-..,o,

1Coming
.1 Events

SUNDAY
JOYFUL Echoes of the White
Oat BapUst Church will sing ,t
the 10 :30 a .m. service at the
Vinton Baptist Church.
CENTENARY UMW famUy
picnic, Centenary Church, 12

OPEII

noon.

-Mr. and Mrs. F. Van Meter
MARRIAGE ANNOUNCED - The wedding of Miss
'Candy Sue Jeffers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Jeffers,
Clifton, W. Va.,aildCharlesF. Van Meter, Jr., aon o( Mrs. A.
L. Phelps, Jr., West Columbia, W.Va., was an event of June
21 at the home of Rev. Qeorge Hoschar, West Columbia. A
reception was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John D.
TUrnbull, Clifton, W.Va. The cou~le honeymooned at Tygart
Lake, W. Va.
welcome to attend. A special
PICNIC PLANNED
invitation
is being issued to all
POMEROY - The annual
picnic of the Meigs County recent retirees living in Meigs
Retired Teachers Assn., will _be County. As usual, spouses andat ~:30 p.m., $aturday, at the or guests are welcome. Miss
Roadside Park, west' side, Lucille Smith is president of
'
Route 33. All retired teachers, the association.
whether members or not. are

Now at

REV. John Banks wlll preach
at Walnut Ridge Church, 7:30
p.m.
HOMECOMING
services,
Northup Bapt ist Church,
basket dinner. Special singers.
Rev. Clifford Suiter and Rev.
Bud Hatfield will speak in the
afternoon. At II a.m. Rev. Earl
Hinkle will speak.
PAST Matrons and pstrons,
district 24, OES plcnlc, 2 p.m., ·
South Point Community
Center. Familles welcome.
Bring basket dinner and table
service. Drinks furnished.
.WILSON Rewlion at the Gallia
County JWJior Fairgrounds
THE SHAFER Family will b&lt;
singing at Clark chapel,
Porter, 7:30 p.m.
MONDAY
SPECIAL services each night
this week at the White Oak
Baptist Church, -except
Satwday. Rev. James Puckett,
Deerfield
Beach,
Fla .,
evangelist. Everyone
welcome, 7:30p.m.
BUSINESS and Professional
Women, regular meeting, 6:30
p.m. at Oscar's. Reservations
· or cancellations can be made
· with Miss . Flossie Trout,
chairwoman of the calling
committee.

10.9

MONDAY. JULY 14t
/' -

CLUBWOMAN OF YEAR - Frances Thomas, right, was .
recently voted Clubwoman of the Year 1973-74 by the
Gallipolls Junior Woman's Club. She was presented an
engraved sliver plate by outgoing club president, Mickey
Stokes.

WILL SING -Tile_ Good s.ma,tiM ....... l)llmnbuo, wtil be In concert, Saturday, July
20, at King's Olapel Church, 7::10 p.m. They will al8o lliDg at2 p.m. at Walmt Ridge Coorch,

SUnday, July 21. Everyone Is welcome to aUend.
CORRECTION
GALUPOLIS - The cwrect
address of Pvt. Jerry RobertS
ls .~th Plt. 297-58--5695, Co. B 11th
Bn., 5th Tng, BDE, Ft. Knox,
Ky., ,40121.

'" Mrs. jack Blaine Matthews

ticipating many more happy .
relUlions.

Classmates
get together

·Las Vegas

: GALLIPOLIS
The
Mayfield United Methodist
&amp;urch, Cleveland, was the
iCene for the JWJe I, 4:30p.m.
fedding of Miss Dyan Lynn
~ellogg and Jack Blaine

Bonanza!
Labor Day Weekend

BAKER FURNITURE
..

·Mrs.

Poiier Fugate

4 fun-filled days
3 glamorous nights .
Landmark Hotel
$279

Holiday Inn
$299
For details of this great
holiday , call Donna

8
WORLD WIDE
Court 51.

Gallipolis

~·6-0700

\

Fugate-Hyme vows read
LANCASTER
Miss
Deborah A. Hyrne became the
bride of Porter Fugate in a
double ring ceremony at 2:30
p.m., June 15 at St. Berdnattes
Church, Lancaster.
Father Bernald Jones performed the ceremony for the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pius
Hyrne, 2303 Glenn De., Lancaster, formerly of Gallipolis,
and the son of Mrs. Eileen
Fugate, Rl. I, Rushville.
The candlelight mass was
decorated with ferns and three
tier candles with jv~l'Y, bases.
Clara Bailey was the organist
and vocal seleciions were
pre sen ted by Mrs. David
McLaughlin and Andrew
Hyrne.
· For her wedding the bride
chose a gown of white
maricaine crepe trimmed in
venice lace. The .bodice_ was
fitted to an empire waist with
lace trim at the waist and the
keyhole neckline was edged in
lace. The long fitted sleeves
ended in lace cuffs and the
skirt,fell in a soft a-line style,
with a chapel length train. The
double elbow-length veil of silk
illusion was held by a bridal
bonnet. She carried a cascade
of white daisies and. yellow
sweetheart roses with 8 fern
edging.
Mrs . Debby Taylor was
matron of honor and wore a
yellow dotted swiss gown In
empire styling. The material
was sprinkled with white
nowers and the gown had long .
sleeveS. Her Yellow straw hat
had a wide brim and she
carried a bouquet of white and
yellow daisies, arid baby's
breath tied with yellow

An exclusive accessorv that
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for the elegant 20.3 cu. ft. Frigidaire Side-by-S1de RefrlgeratorFreeier.
Thanks to this acce'ssory, you can put an entertainment center In
your kitchen without sacrificing valuable counter space. What's
more, you can record messages at the push of a button to keep
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Furniture

,--:ee, and hear the
C, •nversation Piece today, at

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

•'

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\.

Miss Amy Hyrne, sister of
the bride, flower girl, wore a
yellow dotte.d swiss gown
sprinkled with orange flowers.
She carried white and yellow
daisies with yellow streamers
. and baby's breath In a small
white basket.
WiUJam Taylor served as
best man and ushers were
Robert Yoder, Andrew H)'11le
and John Hyrne. Jimmie
Georgie, "!phew of the groom,
was ringbearer, and Tom
Hyrne read the eplsUe.
The reception room in the
church was decorated with live
Uer-candelabra highllghted by
white 'daiaiea, yellow sweet.
heart roees and baby's breath·.
The lour-tier cake .was
dei;QI'8ted with yellow roses.
Mils Hannah · Fugate, Mrs.
Agnus · Hart.horn and MlJs
Agn us Fugate were the

Let us put
your wedding
in bloom.
T ne d&lt;1Y 15 app•oa ¢h mg A'n d
the arrangements are be1ng

made _Call us for bququets .
cur sages. boutonrue•cs. II owe~&gt;&gt;
lor church or ta bl e ccrncrpteccs.
We have e " er~ t hmg to makeyour wedd•ng a beaul1lu l
oq: as1 on

·Francis Florist
Ph. 992-2644 ·

The world ' s smallest
352 E. Main
Pomeroy
a:rmy is that of San Marino,
d 0p
with a total regular strength L_ _ _w_a_tc_h_F
_o_r_Gr
_ a_n_ e_n_in_g_A_t_ou_r_N_e_w_L_o_c •_t_io_n._.....J
of II men.

300 SECOND AVE.

. . GALLIPOLIS

"LAFA YEnE MALL"

·SALE
.

.

G.REAT VALUES ON ALL
MERCHANDISE

Shorts
·
Pantsuits
Tops
Dresses
Skirts
Coats·
WeddingGowns' Blouses
·Slacks ·
· Handbags
All Sales

BankAm enQI'
. d.

Final

· Master Charge
•
'

'

Mon. &amp; Fri. 9:30 til 8 PM
Tues., Wed~ Thur. &amp; Sat.
9:30 til 5 PM

bouquet.

Choose from Faultless Sombrero
or Wilson Hoi-Hi.

CHOICE

s1''

44C

HECK'S REG. $2.99

"'

'

.

$49'5HECK'SRE~.

OT.

'64.95
Sl't»TS
D9T.

AUTOD.T.
..

.-

-~

•·

Huffy 2.5 Gallon

:i

'I

GAS CAN

.·' ''
q
P·
.' ' i
-'

i

,· .

' i '.-

:i

lORON
ti QUART

: '':

25% off

$4299

LICHTER FLUID

33c

Heck's Reg. Price .

7 oz. FOAM CUPS

Models, 20, 30 .4tND 40 Compod design retain• "P•cktlfability.'' 7-seccnd
re&lt;ydetime with vbiblt reody lamp. o4
to 9 fHf with color film- o4·12 feet

33(

$11 99

HECK'SRE~.

17.99.

lOOCOUNT
.LIMIT 2 PACKS

$1399

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG. $34,96
IIWIUY III/IT.

HIC:K'S REG. $11.18
IIWIIIY /llf'T.

·84'

TOYDIPT.

$2799

CAMERA .
. TRIPOD

9" PAPER PLATES

HICK'SRIG. $1.99

flfJI/SIWAIIJ

DEI'T.

''FEED ME''
WASTE BASKET

DRAGSTER -

66e

Heck's Reg.
11.99

ELECTRONIC
CAMERA STROBE
Ttt. mighty mite with the tiny priu tag . The
Koko 81 Bl&amp;alures both AC and P11mlight battery operation, open flc:uh button, neon ready

lamp 1111powre comput1r dial. and dip on shoe

for Yer1ital or horizontal mounting.

S-13 99

Heck's Reg. 99'

HECK'S REG. $11.88
IIWiliY 11/11.

Housewares Dept

IC8 18

2~PLAYER

BADMINTON.
sn

ST,JOSIPH

70Z,

FOAMY
SHAVE CREAM
-11

oz.

69e

Heck's R.-. 97'

-·Dept.

9C

70Z.

SCORE
.HAIR..SPRAY

HECK'S
REG.
$2.39

59c

SIINTS

••r.

lied's Rea,78'
CasfiielicDept.

.•

· cREST
TOOTHPASTE
RIGULAR &amp; MINT

·59c
HICK'S RIG.

'

•
•

•

••

...
..,

HICK'IIIG.

•

•

.

M8415 &amp;
. 18416

G. E. CASSEnE
TAPE RECORDER

with Bloc;k &amp; White film . Up to 200

NOUSIWARI
DEPT.

SJll

.

fknhe1 with 2 AA alkaline banerie1 .

HECK'S REG.
53'

BAJA JEEP

HECK'S RiG •
~:~~·... 36

- INSTAMATJC STROBE

50 COUNT
LIMIT 2 PACKS

··

REEL

CHARCOAL

ALL WINDOW SCREENS
.

bride was given in
Kathy McCloy and Jo Ann
marriage by her father before DeWilde, both of Cleveland, .
all altar holding :white mwils registered the guests.
a ~ d pink carnations with
Following a wedding trip to
g('eenery and a pink bow. The Virginia Beach and Williamscandelabra were trimmed in burg, the couple resides at 66'h
white mums and pink satin · Court St., Gallipolis: Both are . •
rlbbons and the pews were . May graduates of Morehead
decorated with pink ribbons State University. Matthews is
a)ld greenery.
now employed at The' Ohio
;The bridal gown was Valley Bank. He is a member
designed by Alfred Angelo, of of Lambda Chi Alpha
'
New
York in white em- Fraternity and holds a degree
.broidered French schiffli in business administration .
OJiganza with a built-in chapel Mrs. Matthews, a past
trpin. The puffed sleeves had president of . Delta Zeta
fr!ple tier trim and the hemline Sorority, has a degree in social
flounce was accented with work and psychology.
'
venice
lace. The veil of
Out-of-town guests attending
crocheted flowers was he.ld by were Mrs. Lee Matthews, Mr.
a seed]iearl headpiece and and Mrs. John Hood and
c!Ji!pel, fingertip and short daughters, Mr. and Mrs.
veils feU from the headpiece. Edward Edelblute, Mrs.
Her outfit was completed with Marsha Smith, Mrs. Meda
a white satin shoes, pearl ear- McNeil, Mrs. Donna Allen and
rings and blue satin ribbon and children, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
old lace garter. She carried a Ours, Miss Debby Stout, Miss
n"'iegay of mums, daisies, pink Debbie Johnson, Mike Duffy,
and baby's breath tied John Felker, Mrs. Jeri Gibson,
r--_,OIUl long -pink satin ribbon.
Miss Brenda Gibson, and Tom
KaJren Irwin, Louisville, Ky., Weaver, all of Gallipolis; Mr.
selfved as maid of honor. She and Mrs. Vernon Haskey,
attired in a green chiffon Mansfield; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde .
ha1ter dress with flowing back. Evans and Mrs. Revs Evans,
The jacket, which had short Rio Grande; Mr. and Mrs.
tiered sleeves, tied in the front. George Evans, Granville; Mr.
Bridesmaids were Patsy and Mrs. Dan. Evans, Vinton;
M~yer, Covington, Ky ., Kim Mr. and Mrs. Gene Stein,
Ke)logg, Cleveland, Kerl Columbus; Miss Marilyn Long,
Kellogg, Cleveland, and Cathy Cincinnati; Miss Cynthia
'
Gabbard,
Ft. Thomas, Ky. Couisa, San Antonio, Tex.; .Mr.
They were attired in pink and Mrs. Tom Switzer,
chiUon halter dresses with Delaware; Charles Nava,
fl&lt;n\').ng back and -jackets with Louisville; Rick Beverly,
shot t tiered sleeves. The Morehead, Ky.; Miss Fran
jac~ts !led In front. They Collins, South Shore, Ky.;
· car ..ed white mums, pink Grant Stevens, South Shore,
roses and baby's .breath lied ·Ky. ; Harlan Roe, Morehead,
witil_ long pink satin ribbon. Ky . ; and Jansorf Deiner,
1
Thelf gold'' heart necklaces Toledo.
. wer~ gifts from the bride.
'-"'jj'-"'jj'-"!j!'-"'jjfiffllli:(j&gt;SIM-.,01!1
J\!lss JUlie AlUm, Gallipolis,
serv'ed as flower girl. She was
atti~ in a white gown With
pink and green· emb•oide•ed
flowers and a long pink sa tin
bow. She carried a basket of
POMEROY - The Meigs
carnations and pink roses with Senior Citizens Center in the
pink .. ribbon streamers. All or Pomeroy Junior High $chool is
: the p ride's attendants wore · open 9 a:m.-4 · p.m. Monday
pink' tea roses and baby's through Friday: Activities·
breath with pink ribbon in their include:
hair .•
Monday, July 15, Rug
Capt . . John Matthews, . Making, Square Dancing.
Stutzgard, Germany, was the
Tuesday, July 16, cards and
beSt, man. ·ushers were Gar:l!es, Chorus, 1-2:30 p.m.
Wedilesday, July 17, Chair
Micty.el Allen, Galllpolls, .
Bruce Wilson, Gallipolis, Dave Caning, Quilting, Nurses Day
. Durham, Gallipolis, and Scott . - Blood Press'¥'•• 12:;1()-2:30
Kellogg, Gates Mills. - T~ey p.m ., Art Lessons 2-3 p.m.
Thursday, July 18, Crans,
were' attired In gray tu~edoes
with , black pants and white Cards and Games, .
Friday, July 19, Bowling 1-3
rufnt&lt;~ shirts wtth black vests
and 'l'lW Ues, They wore white p.m.
· carnation boutonnieres. The
Senior Citizens Lunch
groom's boutonniere was. pink Program , 11 :30 a.m.-12:30
rooes arid baby's broth.
· r ,m, Monday through Friday.
-Fo(' her daughter's wedding
Mrs. Kellogg chOse a shocking
pink chiffon gown with ilowlng
panel., diamond earrings and
The chances of a sextuplet.
.two Pink cymbldiwn orchids. birth in the world today are
'Tile rtlother of the groom chooe . 3,000,000,000 lo one.

•tyltd for•arm. Adju1toblt rear
1ight. Cros ... bolt 1of.ty. An tCOno•
my .22 autom otk ric h with frOnfi•r
. heritage. S~ oo11 17 long J or 15
long Rille.

HECK'S REG. 64' QUART

SIINTS DEPT.

,...__-: ...,.... ----. .. ...._
.'i ''

Model 190 Sernf. Aulomofic· 1M • .
Bo ld pi5.tol g ri p $lock . Cr is-ply

.

Packageaf 3

" \-

WITH SCOPE

LIMIT 5 QT.

Sr. Citizens
Calendar

SUMMER CLEARANCE

streamers.

'.

Model FPCI-203V3
(wllh ICC.tiOry RT-1)

I

hostesses.
Following a wedding 1rip to
Columbus, the couple is at
home at 13li6Sheridan Dr., Apt.
24, in Lancaster.
The bride is a . graduate of
Gallia Academy High School
and Rio Grande College. She is
employed as . a medical lab
technician at Fairfield COWJty
Hospital, Lancaster. The
groom is a receivin'g clerk at
the hospital.
Out-&lt;Jf-town guests at the
wedding _were Mr. and Mrs.
Don Bolton, Dayton ; Mrs .
Richard Fisher and Carol,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Dodrill, Vinton ; Mrs. Silas
Fugate and granddaughter,
Dayion; Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Day, Mr. and Mrs. John Finney, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Baker and sons, Mrs. Katie
Naskey, Mrs. Ellen Schopis,
Miss Sherry Finney and Mrs.
Gary Fisher, all of Gallipolis.

stt~ ' '

GOLF BALLS

~The

TRAVEL
33

• Rev . Donald Huffman
•performed
the double-ring
dl!remony . The bride is the
&lt;Qlughter of Mr. and lll:rs.
~eighton Kellqgg, 733 But~mut Dr., Gates Mills, and
!lie groom is the son of Mr. and
~- William Matthews, 13
Qilrfield Ave., Gallipolis. :Mrs. Donald Huffman played
"'l'welfth of Never " "My Old
( entucky Home" ' and other
selections and Patsy Meyer,
COvington ,
Ky .,
sang
''..Sometimes," " The Lord's
ptayer" and " Sunrise, Sun-

a pink crepe gown with flowing
chiffon coat in pink, orange and
light green with white flowers .
A long chiffon tie enhanced the ·
neckline. She carried a pearl
beaded bag and wore pink
cymbidium orchids.
The buffet dinner - reception
was served to over 200 persons
at
the
Forge,
Gates
Mills, Music was provided by T~e Three J's,
who played " Let Me .c all You
Sweetheart" for the bridal
dance.
The bridal table held two
cande.labra and flowers. The
three-tiered wedding cake was
decorated in whipped cream
icing, topped by bells and pink
icing roses : Bruce Wilson ,
Gallipolis, caught the garter
and Keri Kellogg caught the

~tthews .

1974 August 30-Sept. 2

Present were Mrs. David

Price (Betty Ann Haskins),
Chicago, Dl.; Mrs. Donald
Burkett
( Betty
Lou
Shoemaker ), Toledo; Mrs.
John Janes (JoAnn Yeauger),
Columbus; Mrs. Jack Frazier
. (Mary Campbell ), Columbus;
Mrs. Josie Evans (Imogene)
Burns), Oak Hill, and Mrs.
P~ul Butler (Elizabeth Bush ),
· Mrs. Jlm Betz (Barbara
Woods) , Mrs. Alfred Gabrielli
(Jennie Lou Baker, Gal]jpolis.
Many happy memories were
recalled by the group,
In the evening the group with
husbands met at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Gabrielli
lor cocktails and dinner. All
enjoyed the renliniscent and
picture laking, and are an-

'IOW30· o• GT•I
MOTOR OIL

•

••
•

22 AUTOMATIC
RIFLE .

KENDALL

sVows read
•

Join Our

GALLIPOLIS - For the past
28 years, nine girls who were
high school classmates, have
been meeting every lew years
for a reunion. Saturday, July 6,
1974, they met at the home of
Mrs. Robert Frances (Donnie
Postuwaite), for an afternoon
social.

TUESDAY
HAPPY Days Senior Citizens
Club picnic at Lake Alma.
Meet at Frank Denney's, 6
p;m, Bring food and table
service.
OPEN GATE Garden Club
meets at Edna Graham's 7:30
p,m.
LAFAYETTE Shrine 44 meets
at 8 p.m.

WINCHESTER

'\

35'

•

�•

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO
STORE HOURS
•

GALLIPOLIS - "Now that people have found
out bow much fun we bave, ·we can't keep them •
. away," cries RSVP member, Edith Gilkey, and we
have to agree. The Senior Citizens Center In the old
Holzer Hospital Bldg., Cedar St., Is aUve with activity from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., Mooday through
Friday ;and one evening each week. In the accompanying photos are examples of some of the fun
things going on at the center: The Old Tyme Chorus
performing at the recent River Recreation Festival,
craft classes that go on daily and folk just getting
out to visit. In addition to these goings~n. the center
offers a hot-lunch program from 12 to 1 each day
and supplies RSVP's to various activities in the
community. Nor are the Seniors stay-at-home folk.
One of their recent ramblings took them to Nash·
ville, Tenn., and another saw them visiting King's
Island. Intent on what they're doing and very much
aUve, they are a real joy to be around. There are 872
members. Folk. 55 and over, who have not made the
acquaintance of tbe center and its family are
welcome to do so by calling 446-7000 for more fn.
formation. Photo essay by Jan Countryman.

I

MON. THRU SAT.

to Food Shop Here!

PRICES GOOD THRU JULY 20

FRESH &amp; LEAN

NO SALES TO DEALERS

GROUND BEEF...~:.89~

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

8 AM TO 10 PM

•

SUN. 10 AM·lO PM
VAW. PACK SOY PROTEIN ADDED 3 lbs. or

GROUND BEEF...........~~~....... ~:.59~
ROCK CORNISH

PAPER
TOWELS·

R

a·
R

,.R

•
·. JUMBO$
ROLLS
FROZEN

.

6 OZ. CAN

_

.

-

sggso
$}6goo

% Karat

I

'fJ Karat

$25()00
TAWNEY
JEWELERS

% Karat

4~2

Second Ave.
Ohio

CLOSED
•

SUNDAYS
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

DON'T MISS OUR
JULY CLEARANCE

SUNDAY ONLY
1 • 5 p.m.

Men's. ·Shoes
'

VALUES TO '24.95

NOW ·

$9.97
• )arman

• Acme
• Varsity

·• uexter

-

Baton winners listed

dorff, Athena, ~· age group;
Sandi Craft, Belpre, 7-8 age
group; Cindy Kasler, Athena, · MASpN - Plans for at- 'Thursday evening.
~10 age group; Pee Simms,· tending the annual · SouthTransportation . .will be
wttUF Etrnl!llll! OII&amp;IUI(S
Colwnbus, 11-12 age group; western Assn. picnic July 26 at provided by the Mason group
Jennifer Walker., Belpre 1:1-14 Camden Park, HuntingtO"n, for anyone interested in atEverytliing Is
age group, and Diana Guthrie, were made when the . Mason teriding the picnic. Those atCoolvllle, 1f&gt;-20 age division . . Senior Citizens Club met
Guaranteed
tending are to ta.ke. a covered
In the corps colripetillon, the
dish. The Mason group is afJo Satisfy• .
Charleston Sequinettes won
filiated
with
the
association.
It
first places in both divisions of
Or Money Back
was announced that a quilt
the Juvenile and Junior Parade Teams.
awarded by the group went to
Corps contest, while the
In junior small dance-twirl Mrs. Harold Roush.
Crystaliers of Athena County the Charleston Sequinettes wo~
The Mason group meets from
won first place in the Junior first place, and the French City
10
a.m. to 3 p.m. each Monday ·
Sllow Corps Division.
Strutters, Gallipolis, won
In the twirling teams com·. second. The Ravenswf!Od High and Thursday at the club
petition the Riggs Royai·Ettes, School Majorettes won first house. Anyone needing infonnation about the club may
Athens,. and Meigs Counties, place ·in their division and call Mrs. Marie G&lt;lodwin, 773won first places in Jwllor second place in Junior Small 5360.
Large Dance-Twirl; Senior Teams. The Charleston
Dance.Twirl; Juvenile and Sequinettes also won first place ·
ALUMNI TO MEET
Junior small Twirl teams, and in Juveniie Dance~Twirl · RIO GRANDE - The Rio
•
second in Juvenile Twirlin~ Teams.
Grande High School Alwnni
Below are the names Of the picnic wiU be held on the Rio
'
winners In the individual Grande College Campus,
competition 'ho are from this Community Hall, Saturday,
area: Lisa Kuhn, Brenda July 211, at 12 noon. All
; Bruce, Joanne · Flck, Cindy graduates, friends and fonner
Craft, Nancy McCord, Teresa ieachers are invited.
Carr, Cindy Patterson, Annelle
Anderson, Jessica Estadt,
.~ .... 330Second Aventi1
Alicia Anderson, Tracy Brown,
Debra Newell, Alicia Roush,
Lynne Francisco, Nancy
hasCooner, Usa Van ·Maire, Beth
·
.I
Weaver, Tammy Thomas,
aiiGIU.
Beth Snider, Linda Williams,
110?
tara Thomaa, Cindy Hunter,
Bl~mses
Beth Milhoan, Rita Welsh,
I'
Becky W"mdon, Suzy Goebel,
Gail Deardorff, Usa Pcoton,
Karen Young, Usa Dearth,
Karl Snider, Pollle OladweU,
Susan Co!&gt;mer, Julie Gibbs,
Sherr! Russell , Kimberly .
'
Let~&lt;~'~ to Cbrlo lbllldd be addrnoed to Mill Cbrtlty M~, Sa111ders and Lynn Epple.
IAwer .RJver Rd., Gdlpollo, Oldq 'IGL
Ohio ...Ciillilllll.- ...-.-.,.411.._tG

High heels and
regular heels

i?onHH

••oe•. .

...... lilww ..........

'

'

.
I

.

APPLE
PIE

NEW PURINA BEEF &amp; EGG .

DOG

~

Sleeveless

•

25 LBS.

99

CHOW. . . . . . . ..

·

HOME GROWN ·

,,

TOMATOES

ARMOUR
•

--- £tC.

LB.

29~

WHITE

GRAPES

12 oz.

FREE

LB.

49¢-

•

BORDEN ELSIE . HALF GALLON.
. . ICE CREAM ....................... ;............. · .
•
'

'

.

The Pleasure Of Eating Is Good Flavor
Good Flavor Comes Only From QU41ity Food

•

Quali~Y .

••

Is a Hamburger from Bob Evans Drive-In- made from
our own fresh qround beef- served dallv at

•

0

BOB EVANS DRIVE-l

OFF

J 0 Y. . . . . .-. ;. . . . . ~~. ~~ . . . . . .

FJtOM

TO THE H.ARD
OF HE.AIUN_Gj ••
.A TELEPHO'Nl
.AMPLIFIER

15~

DUTCH

79t

CHillS

00

•

Jane Parker

MIDDLEPORT .- A family
dinner party . was held last
Sunday at the ·home of Mrs.
James Murray, Middleport, in
observance of her 94th birthday, and the sixth birthday of
her great-granddaughter,
Tammy Giles, Ravenswood.
A yellow and blue color
scheme was carried out in the
birthday cake and the table
centerpiece was of blue
hydrangeas and yellow lilies.
Gifts were presented w the
honored · guests. Several
congratulatory telephone calls
'
ANDw.,suu;pWPI.E
were received ~uring the day.
H you really come to lblnk about lt, arimalo are Uke people.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Don't ~t them """'81y. Treat them Uke people. Maot people
Randolph Ward, Mr. and Mrs. think anilnals are just another pretty flee. AQlmala have rights
Richard Ward, Sllerrie, Ricky' J\lSt u people do, 10 treat. them !aU1y; and watch who yoo're
and Mike, Mrs. Dwaine Giles, calllnc a.pansy.
Tammy and Angle, Mr; ·and
Mrs. BiD ·no,.;, Mr. and Mrs.
F1RE IN THE 1"'RE8T
Mike Colmer, Kandi and Clad,
Molt people lblnk they'll nner st.n a fire, 10 they don't
Ravenswood, W. Va.; and Mr. •4ll't'Y about tbomoelves. They W4ll't')' about the plber guy. Sut
and Mrs. David !illrp9le and you should worey about younelf. Contrlll fine, put matchea oot,
.TraCy, Ulinoi.s·.
· . don't throw clpnttes. Be caroful. They're J.bee ill the woodl! .

REDSK-IN BOLOGNA..........~;.69~

LIQUID

••

•••
'

'

.·· DEL MONTE

'•

.

KRAFT CHEESE SI-NGLES
12 oz.

"

'

•
•

.

'

CATSUP.

~

·~~ 1!!1!1 ~

Life Line·
Professional
Toothbrush

Reg•

14

~

ARMOUR CHUNK

ooz.a9~
GLAZED DONUTS..............

WE()

'QUOTES'
Party held
.a .

FRESH .BAKERY

·
,-----' ~

Mason seniors have meeting

~

.

'

Since 1859

'

.

~·

0.

LEMONADE ....................................]
POMEROY
Baton
Twirlers from as far away as
District Heights, Md., traveled
to Pomeroy during the Regatta
weekend to participate in the
5th Annual Regatta Baton
Twirling Festival at the Meigs
HighSchool. The winners of the
various divisions of the NBTA
sanctioned contest are listed
below by Mrs. ·Judy Riggs,
contest director.
The three high point grand
champions were ' Dalelene
Scott, Albany, in the ().10 year
division ; Jennifer Walker ,
Belpre, 11-14, and Jo Ann Fick,
Chester, in the 1f&gt;-211 year
division.
The travel trophy was won
by Jimmy _Palmer, who
traveled 600 miles. to take part ·
in the competition.
The Miss Regatta Majorette
Queena were Cilmmie Dear-

" 69"
GAME HENS........................
.
.

p

SOLITAIRE
SPECIAL

.

oz.

89'
Rt&lt;leemobt• .

on~

WITH TH1.8 COUPON

PoweR's Super Valu

�•

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO
STORE HOURS
•

GALLIPOLIS - "Now that people have found
out bow much fun we bave, ·we can't keep them •
. away," cries RSVP member, Edith Gilkey, and we
have to agree. The Senior Citizens Center In the old
Holzer Hospital Bldg., Cedar St., Is aUve with activity from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., Mooday through
Friday ;and one evening each week. In the accompanying photos are examples of some of the fun
things going on at the center: The Old Tyme Chorus
performing at the recent River Recreation Festival,
craft classes that go on daily and folk just getting
out to visit. In addition to these goings~n. the center
offers a hot-lunch program from 12 to 1 each day
and supplies RSVP's to various activities in the
community. Nor are the Seniors stay-at-home folk.
One of their recent ramblings took them to Nash·
ville, Tenn., and another saw them visiting King's
Island. Intent on what they're doing and very much
aUve, they are a real joy to be around. There are 872
members. Folk. 55 and over, who have not made the
acquaintance of tbe center and its family are
welcome to do so by calling 446-7000 for more fn.
formation. Photo essay by Jan Countryman.

I

MON. THRU SAT.

to Food Shop Here!

PRICES GOOD THRU JULY 20

FRESH &amp; LEAN

NO SALES TO DEALERS

GROUND BEEF...~:.89~

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

8 AM TO 10 PM

•

SUN. 10 AM·lO PM
VAW. PACK SOY PROTEIN ADDED 3 lbs. or

GROUND BEEF...........~~~....... ~:.59~
ROCK CORNISH

PAPER
TOWELS·

R

a·
R

,.R

•
·. JUMBO$
ROLLS
FROZEN

.

6 OZ. CAN

_

.

-

sggso
$}6goo

% Karat

I

'fJ Karat

$25()00
TAWNEY
JEWELERS

% Karat

4~2

Second Ave.
Ohio

CLOSED
•

SUNDAYS
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

DON'T MISS OUR
JULY CLEARANCE

SUNDAY ONLY
1 • 5 p.m.

Men's. ·Shoes
'

VALUES TO '24.95

NOW ·

$9.97
• )arman

• Acme
• Varsity

·• uexter

-

Baton winners listed

dorff, Athena, ~· age group;
Sandi Craft, Belpre, 7-8 age
group; Cindy Kasler, Athena, · MASpN - Plans for at- 'Thursday evening.
~10 age group; Pee Simms,· tending the annual · SouthTransportation . .will be
wttUF Etrnl!llll! OII&amp;IUI(S
Colwnbus, 11-12 age group; western Assn. picnic July 26 at provided by the Mason group
Jennifer Walker., Belpre 1:1-14 Camden Park, HuntingtO"n, for anyone interested in atEverytliing Is
age group, and Diana Guthrie, were made when the . Mason teriding the picnic. Those atCoolvllle, 1f&gt;-20 age division . . Senior Citizens Club met
Guaranteed
tending are to ta.ke. a covered
In the corps colripetillon, the
dish. The Mason group is afJo Satisfy• .
Charleston Sequinettes won
filiated
with
the
association.
It
first places in both divisions of
Or Money Back
was announced that a quilt
the Juvenile and Junior Parade Teams.
awarded by the group went to
Corps contest, while the
In junior small dance-twirl Mrs. Harold Roush.
Crystaliers of Athena County the Charleston Sequinettes wo~
The Mason group meets from
won first place in the Junior first place, and the French City
10
a.m. to 3 p.m. each Monday ·
Sllow Corps Division.
Strutters, Gallipolis, won
In the twirling teams com·. second. The Ravenswf!Od High and Thursday at the club
petition the Riggs Royai·Ettes, School Majorettes won first house. Anyone needing infonnation about the club may
Athens,. and Meigs Counties, place ·in their division and call Mrs. Marie G&lt;lodwin, 773won first places in Jwllor second place in Junior Small 5360.
Large Dance-Twirl; Senior Teams. The Charleston
Dance.Twirl; Juvenile and Sequinettes also won first place ·
ALUMNI TO MEET
Junior small Twirl teams, and in Juveniie Dance~Twirl · RIO GRANDE - The Rio
•
second in Juvenile Twirlin~ Teams.
Grande High School Alwnni
Below are the names Of the picnic wiU be held on the Rio
'
winners In the individual Grande College Campus,
competition 'ho are from this Community Hall, Saturday,
area: Lisa Kuhn, Brenda July 211, at 12 noon. All
; Bruce, Joanne · Flck, Cindy graduates, friends and fonner
Craft, Nancy McCord, Teresa ieachers are invited.
Carr, Cindy Patterson, Annelle
Anderson, Jessica Estadt,
.~ .... 330Second Aventi1
Alicia Anderson, Tracy Brown,
Debra Newell, Alicia Roush,
Lynne Francisco, Nancy
hasCooner, Usa Van ·Maire, Beth
·
.I
Weaver, Tammy Thomas,
aiiGIU.
Beth Snider, Linda Williams,
110?
tara Thomaa, Cindy Hunter,
Bl~mses
Beth Milhoan, Rita Welsh,
I'
Becky W"mdon, Suzy Goebel,
Gail Deardorff, Usa Pcoton,
Karen Young, Usa Dearth,
Karl Snider, Pollle OladweU,
Susan Co!&gt;mer, Julie Gibbs,
Sherr! Russell , Kimberly .
'
Let~&lt;~'~ to Cbrlo lbllldd be addrnoed to Mill Cbrtlty M~, Sa111ders and Lynn Epple.
IAwer .RJver Rd., Gdlpollo, Oldq 'IGL
Ohio ...Ciillilllll.- ...-.-.,.411.._tG

High heels and
regular heels

i?onHH

••oe•. .

...... lilww ..........

'

'

.
I

.

APPLE
PIE

NEW PURINA BEEF &amp; EGG .

DOG

~

Sleeveless

•

25 LBS.

99

CHOW. . . . . . . ..

·

HOME GROWN ·

,,

TOMATOES

ARMOUR
•

--- £tC.

LB.

29~

WHITE

GRAPES

12 oz.

FREE

LB.

49¢-

•

BORDEN ELSIE . HALF GALLON.
. . ICE CREAM ....................... ;............. · .
•
'

'

.

The Pleasure Of Eating Is Good Flavor
Good Flavor Comes Only From QU41ity Food

•

Quali~Y .

••

Is a Hamburger from Bob Evans Drive-In- made from
our own fresh qround beef- served dallv at

•

0

BOB EVANS DRIVE-l

OFF

J 0 Y. . . . . .-. ;. . . . . ~~. ~~ . . . . . .

FJtOM

TO THE H.ARD
OF HE.AIUN_Gj ••
.A TELEPHO'Nl
.AMPLIFIER

15~

DUTCH

79t

CHillS

00

•

Jane Parker

MIDDLEPORT .- A family
dinner party . was held last
Sunday at the ·home of Mrs.
James Murray, Middleport, in
observance of her 94th birthday, and the sixth birthday of
her great-granddaughter,
Tammy Giles, Ravenswood.
A yellow and blue color
scheme was carried out in the
birthday cake and the table
centerpiece was of blue
hydrangeas and yellow lilies.
Gifts were presented w the
honored · guests. Several
congratulatory telephone calls
'
ANDw.,suu;pWPI.E
were received ~uring the day.
H you really come to lblnk about lt, arimalo are Uke people.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Don't ~t them """'81y. Treat them Uke people. Maot people
Randolph Ward, Mr. and Mrs. think anilnals are just another pretty flee. AQlmala have rights
Richard Ward, Sllerrie, Ricky' J\lSt u people do, 10 treat. them !aU1y; and watch who yoo're
and Mike, Mrs. Dwaine Giles, calllnc a.pansy.
Tammy and Angle, Mr; ·and
Mrs. BiD ·no,.;, Mr. and Mrs.
F1RE IN THE 1"'RE8T
Mike Colmer, Kandi and Clad,
Molt people lblnk they'll nner st.n a fire, 10 they don't
Ravenswood, W. Va.; and Mr. •4ll't'Y about tbomoelves. They W4ll't')' about the plber guy. Sut
and Mrs. David !illrp9le and you should worey about younelf. Contrlll fine, put matchea oot,
.TraCy, Ulinoi.s·.
· . don't throw clpnttes. Be caroful. They're J.bee ill the woodl! .

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weekend to participate in the
5th Annual Regatta Baton
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HighSchool. The winners of the
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The three high point grand
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Belpre, 11-14, and Jo Ann Fick,
Chester, in the 1f&gt;-211 year
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The Miss Regatta Majorette
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Committee hopes for higher ethics

By WESLEY G. PIPPERT
WA.SHINGTON (UP!) - The

Senate Watersate Committee
said In Its final reporj Sat!ll'day
it hopeo Watergate-"one or
· America's m0&lt;1 tragic happenlngo"-•W Ioree the nation's leadero to adopt higher
ethical otandardJ for years to

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The committee drew no
conclusions about President
Ntxo.n's Involvement In the
ocandal, but said It wao
"acutely conscious" or the
Houae Impeachment Inquiry
now reaching Its crltical stage.
The report, approved unanlmouaJy by the seven senators,
provided no major revelationo
but offered 28 recommendations
- Includ ing
establtslunent of a permanent
"publlc attorney" patterned
after the Watergate special
prosecutor.
"Hopefully, after the fiood or
Watergate revelations the
country has witnessed, the
public can now expect, at least
for some years to come, a
higher standard of conduct
from Its public officials and its
business and professional
leadert," the committee said.
...Also, it is hopeful that the
Watergate exposures have
created what former Vice
Prealdent Agnew has called a
· post-Watergate morality'
w~re respect for law and
morality Is present. "
The three-volume, 2,217-llBi!e
report was released 17 months
after the &lt;:OIDDIItlei! was formed to probe rumors of toplevel administration Involvement in Watergate. At the
Ume, the report said, ''the
cover-&lt;Jp was In the
smell. of
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WOODWORKER- Roscoe Satterfield, Middleport, Is a most active senior citizen with his
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raised th~ average value of
shares on the New York Stock
Exchange by $1.14.
White House spokesman Geraid Warren said he believed
the WPI meant " the economy
is now beginning to expand
slowly."
And Herbert Stein, chairman
of the President's Council ol
Economic Advisers, said It
showed inflation was 'easing.
· A drop In food prices of 3.4
per cent was the .chief reason
for the lower rate of overall
Increase in the WPI.
But Stein said there were
suggestions that inflation still
had strength.
He noted that wholesale food
prices were beginning to rise.
And ·he said tlie important
Industrial commodities sector
- which comprises about twQ
thirds of the WPI and refiects
long-tenn costs - jumped at an
annual rate of 26 par cent,

Summ.,, s 1'1e season let-tal! c:OOI dnnk.a. and
lhe Grtaon ICe Metti!lf ktePI mtklf'O

''

OOLUMBUS (UP! ) ..;. Mrs. Coroner William AdrJon said
Enqulqueta Bivens, 21, her all .the victims died of smoke
four chlldren and a neighbOr lnh~latlon.
were killed SaturdaY In a fire
The Fire Deparbnent said
'that destroyed their two- Ill• only survivor w,as Mrs.
bedroom apartment on the lllvens' husband, Dlimel, 24,
clty'l eaet side.
·
•ho leaped from the third floor
A Fire Dei&gt;artment spokes· apartment window.
man uld Mrs. Blvena and her1, Firemen said the blaze
sbwnonth old daughter Vickie atarted In a Uvlng room couch,
were found in a hallway.
apparent!f from a 'dropped
Found In a bedroom were cigarette.
· MJchale Blvena, 4, twlris Chad
Mrloq said the four chlldren
Blvena .ind Sllad Jllvena, 2, and apparently died aa they slept
Kathy Green, 11. .
,
while Mrs. Bivens was killed
Franldlh County Deputy attempting to escapo with the
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WOMAN HURT
· POMEROY - The Pomeroy
emergency squad ans'wered a
call to East Main St. , at I: 30
p.m. Saturday where Mrs. Ida
~urphy, Middleport, jU. I,
was injured when struck by a
car. Details of the . accident,
which is under investi gation,
' were . not availa ble. Mrs .
· Murphy was taken to the
Holzer Medical Ce~ ter .

.....

I

He said the Increase was
" larger and reveals the
seriousness of the inflation
;with which the nation is con. tendlna."
- .., .
Industrial commodities rose
most sharply in metals, chemi- ·
cals, fuels other than oil,

l

machinery and equipment.
Wholesale prices were also
up for textiles, cars and trucks, .
railroad equipment, commercial a.nd household equipment,
floor coverings, ~applian ces ,
television sets, lawn mowers
and flat ware.

telephone with Kalmbach In - These areas an&lt;l capsule
Ca Hforn.~. Kalmbach says that comments:
at that point Ehrllchman
Watergate breat-la aud
notified Kalmbach of an up- cover-up
coming meeting scheduled for
-"The Watergate drama is
11 p.m. on the night of the. 24th still unfolding. Because aU the
between Kaln\bach ~nd others Ulcts are not yet in, becauoe all
In Washington," the committee Ute Watergate criminal trials
said.
and the Impeachment proceed· The report quoted Kabn· ing are not cor*'luded, and
fitch, now In prison for 11110 because the !'resident has
campaign violations, as saying refused to produce to the Select
in· the interview: "I think ... Commltlei! many crucial tape
that my understanding was recordings and other evidence,
simply, as I stated, that the this report ... ;., limited by
price support would be an- these ractors."
nounced the next day, that the
The .report said, however,
pledge to the President's 19'12 there is evidence that former
campaign was being rea(. Attorney General ·John N.
firmed to . me as a principal Mitchell, who was Nixon's
fund raiser."
campaign director, "reluctant"The commlttee wishes to ly" approved the break-In note that It has received no but that the matter remains in
evidence suggesting any com- doubt. .
pllclty in Wl'ongdolng 011 the
Campaign practices, or
part of the ~epubll c an " dirty trle ks"
National Committee or the
·-This section dlscusaed the
Democratic National Com- activities of Donald Segrettl,
mittee or its principal officers the so~alled "political saboduring the presidential cam- teur" who has gone to prison
paign of 972," the report said. for distributio n of illegal
The report was divided Into campaign literature In the
c-hapters that corresponded to F l or i d a Democratic
the areas of Investigation. primary.

VOL. 9 NO. 24

But the final reported deleted
this statement from the draft:
" However, It Is President
Nixon who must be he1d
responsible and acccountable
for tbe actions of his subordillates, Not only was he the
candidate on behall of whom
these activities were undertaken, he also set the moral
and ethical standards by which
his re-election campaign
operated."

uResponslvene••" pro~~:ram
· -"The 'evidence suggests
that one area of emphasis in
the Responslvenes. Program
was the allotllng or "rechanneling" . of federal money funds for grants, contracts,
loans and subsidies - to target
groups and areas in order to
enhance Ute President's reelection chances, and to Individual applicants who were
supportive of, or would thereafter
support,
the
President."

The report said Fred V.
Malek, now deputy federal
budget director, developed the
program, with oversight by
Charles W. Colson, .then White
House liaison for special In·

SUNDAY, JULY 14, 1974

Ioree! grouupo, to mlkt the
admlnlltraUon "rttponlive"
to particular groupo. One rt
these groupoo wu the Splnlobspoaldng,_to whom about flO
mW!on In federal granu and
loans were channeled:
Campalp fblaaellll
The · rep&lt;rt ~ that. In
violation of law, 12 cor.
poratl0111 made f/80,000 in
contributions to Nixon'• reelection campaign.
.
Presidential bldl of !ieL
Hubert H. Hampbrey, D-MIIIL,
and Rep. WUbur D. Mllla, DArk.

- MWs got $185,000 from
dsiry producer 110urceo and
$15,000 In oil runds, and
Humphrey received ta,OOO on
corporate and truot funds.
Howard Hugbeo--Cbarlet G.
'''Bebe" Rebozo
- Rebozo, N~on ' a c1oeest .
friend, uoed nearly *·000 In
campaign lunds-eome of It
from a $100,000 donation fr&lt;m
billionaire HOifard Hughes, to
pay for improvements on the
President's Key Biscayne
property and help buy diamond
earrings Nlzon purChased for
Pat Nixoo's 60th birthday.

PAGE 15

Ehrlichman convicted
By CHERYL· ARVIDSON

WASHINGTON (UP!)
John D. Ehrlichman, once
among the most powetiul -of
President Nixon's aides, was
convicted Friday of conspiracy
and three. counts of perjury In
the Ellsberg break-In case.
Ehrlichman immediately instructed his atto111eys to appeal, and he said he was sure
he would be cleared by higher
courts.
A federal district court jury
deliberated slightly more than
3 I&gt; hOurs before returning a
gtiilty verdict against Ehrlichman and three others. They
were charged with conspiracy
to violate the civll rights of Dr.
Lewis
Fielding,
the
psychiatrist of Pentagon
Papers defendant Dane!
Ellsberg, through a Sept. 3,
1971, break-In at Fleldillg's
Beverly Hilla, Cali{., office.
Ehrllchman, hlghest..-anklng
former administration aide to
be convicted In a Watergaterelated matter, also was found
guilty Friday 9f three countS of
lying to the FBI and a federal
grand jury investigallng the
burgiary .
He still faces trial in the
Watergate cover-&lt;Jp case set to
begin in September.
The prosecution said · the
California burglary was staged
to examine Fleldillg's medical
files In an effort to discredit
Ellsberg after he leaked the
Pentagon Papers on the origins
of the Vell\am War.
Ehrlichman, 49, and his codefendants, convicted Water.
gate burglars G. Gordon Uddy,
Bernard Barker and Eugenio
Martinez, showed no outward
sign of emotion as the guilty
verdicts were returned.
Ehrllchman was cleared of

one count of perjury relating to all,
his grand jury testimony on the
Gesell earlier In the day had
White House plumbers unit issued a tough set of insln!cwhich prosecutors said tions to'Ute jury of six men and
planned the brOllk-ln.
.six women which appeared to
With his wife Jeanne at his cut their deliberation time to a
side, Ehrlichman talked bare lliinimum,
briefly with reporters before
The judge told the jury that
leaving the courthouse. He said an Wegal and warrantless
he ordered his lawyers to entry cannot be justified even
appeal the convictions, which if an Individual believes he is
together carry a maximum acting " in the name of
sentence of 25 years In prison patriotism or national security
and a $25,000 fine. He said he
~xpects
. ''c omplete
exoneration .''
"! have and hllve for many
years had an abiding confidence In the American judicial
system. Nothing has happened
today that has. shaken this
confidence," said Ehrllchman,
who was forced to resign April
CIMARRON, N. M. (UP!) 30, 1973, as Nixon's domestic
affairs adviser and No, 2 aide lightning struck a group of
when the Watergate scandal Boy Scouts trying to fmd·
· reached the White House. · shelter from a high mountain
Nixon at · that Ume•.called r~lnstorm In a rugged norEhrllchman one of th{ "finest theastern New Mexico atea
Friday, killing one youth and
pubUc servants I know."
injuring
six companions and an
The other defendants also
were expected to appeal. adult leader.
The scouts, six youngsters
Sentencing for all was set for
9:30 a.m. July 31 before u.s. and the.l~de~ from Maryland
District Co\lrt Judge Gerhard and · Vlrgm1a s Capital Area
A. Gesell.
·
• Coun~U of the Boy Sco~ts of
·Asked whether EhrUchman's . Amer!ca, were stranded m the
conviction might affect the electrical and rain storm only a
House inquiry Into JXlSS!ble mlle from headquarters of the
Impeachment of President Philmont Scout Ranch and
Nixon, .Presidential attorney E&gt;;plorer Base, the s~er
James D. St. Clair said it would home of some 15,000 Boy
"have no affect on our caae at · Scouts.
II

or a need to create an unfavorable press 'Image or that
his superiors had the authoriiJ
without a warrant to 8uspend .
the constitutional protectlona
of the Fourth Amendment."
The def~ndants, seep! · for
Uddy who Is serving a lengthy
·prison term for his part In the
June 17, 1972, break-In at
Democratic National
headquarters, were freed on
bond pending recognllance.

Lightning strikes
scouts, on.e .dead
The dead boy was Bordon E.
LeBleu,15, 1!011 of Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. LeBleu of Rockville,
Md.
.
The most Severely Injured .·
were Michael Hahn, 15, and
Stephen Dobbs, 15, boll! ol
Rockville. they were held in the
North Colfu ColDlty Hoapltsl
in Raton, N.M., for observation.
.
Treated and released at 11Ie
Philmont medical center were
adult leader Richard Hahn, 50,
father of the Injured ICOUt;
llryan Jefferson, 16, of Rock·
ville; Kevin ~. 16, ol
Rockville, and Michael O'Donnell, 15, of Alexander, Va. ·.

•

National Guard called
out in prison strikes

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) National Guard troops manned
watch towers and patroled Ute
perimeter of the maximum
security Southern Ohio Correctional FacUlty - Saturdsy In
place of striking clvilj,ans. ·
More than 1,500 correctional
officers have struck the Lucasville fa cUlty, the Lebanon
Correctional lnatituUon, the
Ml'"Sfleld Reformatory, the
Chillicothe Correctional ln., Stltution and the Grafton Honor

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Lower .food ·costs resp9nsible
for small wholesale price hike
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Lower food costs kept wholesale price hikes to a scant 0.6
per cent in June, prompting
• two administration offlci aIs to
voice-cautious optimism about
the economy.
However, boosts In the costs
of everything from texWes to
televisions showed inflation
was far from over, one official
said.
The June ·Increase in the
Wholesale
Price hidex
reported by the Labor
Department Friday was about
half the rate of Increases in the
past eight months.
The WPI meal!lll'es the cost
of animal feed to farmers, raw
materials to factories, and food
and manufactured goods to
stores-one· step from con- ,
sumers.
·
Stock market analysts said
they believed'. the WPJ · news
. · contributed to. a rally that

Model FPI-170T

campaign.
- Make Illegal campaign
contributions by persons
receiving more th811 $!!,000 a
year in federal sa~ry.

communicaUons between the
White House and the Internal
Revenue Service, and prohibit
all persons in the White House,
Including the president, from
receiving any Income tax
returns.
- Require annual full financial disclosure by the pr"-'!ldent
and vice president.
Nearly all the report had
been leaked lo the public in
draft form In recent weeks.
Committee sources said, howe.
ver, this served to elicit
commrnent from personssome of whom were mentioned
In Ute draft-and there was
considerable debate subsequently about parts of it.
But the fina l report r.emalned
almost Intact from the standpoint or substance. The sources
said some words were changed
investigate cases in volving at the request of Republicans,
public officials.
for instance, changing an
- Make It unlawfql for a outright allegation of wrongdoWhite House aide to engage in Ing to merely raising Ute
any Investigative or lntelli- possibility of wrongdoing; In
genc"i!atherlng activity not this way could the ·four
authorized by Congress.
Democrats and three Republi- Make It a crime for anyone cans agree on the report.
to work· in a federal election
A major chauge was on Ute
campaign under false preten- so-&lt;:aUed '~ milk fwtd," which
Ses.
apparently_further implicated
- Tighten laws on political John D. Ehrlichman, formerly
activities by governmenll!l Nixon's No. 2 aide who was
officials by making it a felony found guilty of conspiracy and
if they "obstruct, 'irnpair or perjury in the Ellsberg case
pervert a government !unc- Friday.
tion," or "by defraudtng the
. In testim'l"y taken June 13,
goverrlment in any matmer," Herbert W. Kalmbach, formerby acts such as using govern- ly Nixon's p~rsonallawyer and
ment resources in an election political fund raiser, said that
within hours after Nixon met
with milk producers in 1971,
Ehrliciunan summoned Kalmbach to a meeting-apparently
to tle a new Increase in the
price support for raw milk to
the · producers' $2 million
campaign pledge.
Nixon met with the milk
producers March 23, 1971. Two
days · later, Ute Agrieulture
Department reversed a
decision made earlier that
month and raised the price .
!IUPport.
"Sometime on the afternoon
or evening of the 23rd, Ehrlichman spoke by longdistance

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the planning or had advance
knowledge ol the break-ln."
The report went far beyond
an Investigation ol the break~n
at the Demqcratlc Natl01111l
Commltlei! In the Watergate
compl"' June 17, 1972.
On March 23, Federal Court
Judge John J. Slrlca revealed a
letter from James W. McCord
Jr., one of the original seven
Watergate defendants,
charging there had been
perjury committed during his
trial.
' The report said McCord also
volunteered on the same dey to
talk to ·the committee stall, The
letter was a key breakthrough
In the cover-up c.ase- and
McCord's offer. also launched
Ute committee's invest(J;(atlon.
The commltlei!'s 28 recom.
mendations would:
-Establish a commission to
Investigate vlolatlo.ns of
federal election law.
-Create a public attorney
who in effect would he a permanent special prosecutor to

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The report came just one
year after the committee's
televised hearings focused the
attention of the world on its
historic proceedings, PerhaPI!I
its most dramatic di3covery
came July 18 when tormer
White House aide Ale&gt;;ander P.
Bu tterlleld reI uc tantly
revea led the ezlstence of
Nixon's secret tape recordings.
Although the committee discovered the tapes existed, it
was frustrated repeatedly In Its
efforts to obtain them, and the
panel's work languished. But
the tapes provided both the
special prosecutor and the
House Judiciary Commlttee
with their best raw material.
With some of the language he
lised during the'hearings, Sen.
Sam J . Ervin Jr ., D-N.C., the
chairma n, said in personal
views:
" Wa tergate
was
unprecedented In the political
annals of America in respect to
the scope and intensity of its
unethical and illegal actions_
To be sure, there had been
previous milder political
scalldals in American history.
That fact does not excuse
Watergate.
"Murder and stealing have
occurred in every generation
since earth began, but that fact
has not made murder meritorious or larceny legal," Ervin
said.
Sen. Edward J. Gurney, RFla ., Nixon's staunchest supporter on the panel, said in his
personal remarks "there has
been no proof gathered by the
commltlei! to Indicate that the
President of the United States
participated in or approved of

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everything In iJur power to get
these employes to return to
work and those who refuse will
be subject to disciplinary
action ranging from letters of
reprimand up to and Including
dismissal," he said.
The strike began last week at
Lebanon and spread to the

other facUlties during the
week.
•
Attendants In at least 10 state
. mental Institutions have said
they could join t.he strike within
the next few days. Attendants
at the Athens Mental Heiilth
Care Center struck on Wednesdsy.

REcREATIONAL VEHICLE SHOW - The Silver Bridge Merchants Association Ia
sponsoring a spectsl promotion thla week featuring various kinds of recreational vehicles such
as v811s, jeeps, motorcycles, and campers. Tuesday from noon to 9 p.m. the show will feature
an $87,000 Rusalan limousine, the smallest horse in the world and the auto used in the Bonnie
·and Clyde movie. This Is a donation type of promotion with 15 pet. of the proceeds gollllf to the
association for the Gallla .County Cancer Crusade.

Assembly·action on budget not_likely

·-farm ln a wage dispute.
abotit one-tliird of the jgs mn. llon for a variety oh smaller .
Gov. John J . Gllllgan said - COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Democrats were to have reprojects, such as disaster rellef
supplemental
ap- for Xenia and other communJNational Guard mllttsry · Ohio General Assembly Is to ported back to the admlnlstra- lion
policemen were called out only reco~~e~ in a ~outhselkeeplnkg lion of Gov. John j _ GIIligan proprlation used for tsJ; relief, ties, and busing subsidies for
at. , Lucasville . He . said sbuess o ,_~.ce aganf
s wee , during the weekend, while Re- ·Including a tioost In personal the mentally retarded.
helicopters were airlifting
t a su.-man co erence com- publicans said they had no · Income m ezemptioN by $100,
The $96 mllllon figure ex·
medlcal supplles mall and mlttee on a supplements! plans to change their inaistenee a hike In property tax exemp- . eludes mandatory appropr.lessential food st~lfs Into the budget Ia not likely to 'have Ii on $30 million or more llix re-. tioos for the elderly and repeal
prison.
. report ready for action .
lief by January.
of the slate tsx on stohs and atlons of$12.5 mllllon foi"Voca.Gilligan tirged the f!liards to
The House and Senate sesBoth sides Indicated m re- bonds.
tiona! education c&lt;&gt;nstruc~on
end the strike, which has not slons are set for Tuesdsy, and _ llef was the major stumbling
It Ia especially the repeal ·of projects and $1U million or
been sanctioned by the three If the conference committee block and that nothing would the "intangibles" tsx on stocks interest paymenls on bonds .
unlons representing the . meets before that, It expected be ready for party caucuseo and bonds that Democrats and . sold for Vietnam bonus funds.
workers - the Ohio Civil· to be a repeat of the secret when the one-day "skeleton" the Gilligan administration
A pay raise for llate em.
me tl g
hi h 0 c
d sess1 011 1s h Id Tu-~...
will not buy during the current amoW!tsofupto'~mWlon,
ployaa has been d' · -,uued In
Servlce EmployesAssociation,
en
w c
curre
e
........,.
"'--!period
.._
the American Federation .of Frlday afternoon. .
Leglalative leaders were re- """"
·
'
Public IIChools and state em• • the conferees report, lnCiudlntl
State, CouniY and Munlcipiu, At that two-bour session, the ported to be shooting fer July
Employes and the Team- conferees continued to be 23 as the date for possible noor ployas are ticketed for the buill alternatives of a llat raise or
•ters- ln their demands for a deadlocked over tb8 Issue of action If a settlement · Is · of the rest of ihe money, 8J. one geared to low~~Cille em- .
''th011gh the ·con1erees are talk• ployes.
31~cnt..an-llour pay hike.
· · ts x re llef and Oo c ha nge Is· · reached.
One of thole u_n d e r dlscualon
"We will contlme to do anticipated immediately. ·
RepUbllcans .say they want · ln8 aboot $10 million. to $1~mil·

.

•

•

called for a 15-to-20 cent ral8e
for thoee employestlll'lllnll-.
than $l2,000, and nothlnc for
those earnlns more..
_Pay raise negotlltiona have ·
been Condooled durtnc wlllkouts by employaa at •w1'81
correctional lnstltutiOIII.
·Also unda- dllc:uuiDn .,..
several methods of c:lllnalllnll
estra mone• to publle ~:boola,
either b ' llaf blldf ID.
'1 I
._
cresee or • (lll'1lllllll baolt•
Tll4l auppiiiDtlllal .,.
proprilllkllllatolll..._..bf
J 'llkln _.. o1 Clllllllft
tao m
over fnm lllllulllal ,..,
$43.6 mllllaa wortb ol liDo
ticlpated
Illite
lolla")'
proc:•da, lit ball!.

�•

•

.

.

Committee hopes for higher ethics

By WESLEY G. PIPPERT
WA.SHINGTON (UP!) - The

Senate Watersate Committee
said In Its final reporj Sat!ll'day
it hopeo Watergate-"one or
· America's m0&lt;1 tragic happenlngo"-•W Ioree the nation's leadero to adopt higher
ethical otandardJ for years to

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The committee drew no
conclusions about President
Ntxo.n's Involvement In the
ocandal, but said It wao
"acutely conscious" or the
Houae Impeachment Inquiry
now reaching Its crltical stage.
The report, approved unanlmouaJy by the seven senators,
provided no major revelationo
but offered 28 recommendations
- Includ ing
establtslunent of a permanent
"publlc attorney" patterned
after the Watergate special
prosecutor.
"Hopefully, after the fiood or
Watergate revelations the
country has witnessed, the
public can now expect, at least
for some years to come, a
higher standard of conduct
from Its public officials and its
business and professional
leadert," the committee said.
...Also, it is hopeful that the
Watergate exposures have
created what former Vice
Prealdent Agnew has called a
· post-Watergate morality'
w~re respect for law and
morality Is present. "
The three-volume, 2,217-llBi!e
report was released 17 months
after the &lt;:OIDDIItlei! was formed to probe rumors of toplevel administration Involvement in Watergate. At the
Ume, the report said, ''the
cover-&lt;Jp was In the
smell. of
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'
WOODWORKER- Roscoe Satterfield, Middleport, Is a most active senior citizen with his
woodworking hobby. Satterfield, who wW be 81 on July 24, and Mrs. Rex Cumings, the former
Kathy Moore, inSpect an early American cradle whi~h Sattetiield Is making for Mrs. Moore.
. This Is the 32nd such cradle Satterfield has turned out in his garage workshop. The Middleport
·
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raised th~ average value of
shares on the New York Stock
Exchange by $1.14.
White House spokesman Geraid Warren said he believed
the WPI meant " the economy
is now beginning to expand
slowly."
And Herbert Stein, chairman
of the President's Council ol
Economic Advisers, said It
showed inflation was 'easing.
· A drop In food prices of 3.4
per cent was the .chief reason
for the lower rate of overall
Increase in the WPI.
But Stein said there were
suggestions that inflation still
had strength.
He noted that wholesale food
prices were beginning to rise.
And ·he said tlie important
Industrial commodities sector
- which comprises about twQ
thirds of the WPI and refiects
long-tenn costs - jumped at an
annual rate of 26 par cent,

Summ.,, s 1'1e season let-tal! c:OOI dnnk.a. and
lhe Grtaon ICe Metti!lf ktePI mtklf'O

''

OOLUMBUS (UP! ) ..;. Mrs. Coroner William AdrJon said
Enqulqueta Bivens, 21, her all .the victims died of smoke
four chlldren and a neighbOr lnh~latlon.
were killed SaturdaY In a fire
The Fire Deparbnent said
'that destroyed their two- Ill• only survivor w,as Mrs.
bedroom apartment on the lllvens' husband, Dlimel, 24,
clty'l eaet side.
·
•ho leaped from the third floor
A Fire Dei&gt;artment spokes· apartment window.
man uld Mrs. Blvena and her1, Firemen said the blaze
sbwnonth old daughter Vickie atarted In a Uvlng room couch,
were found in a hallway.
apparent!f from a 'dropped
Found In a bedroom were cigarette.
· MJchale Blvena, 4, twlris Chad
Mrloq said the four chlldren
Blvena .ind Sllad Jllvena, 2, and apparently died aa they slept
Kathy Green, 11. .
,
while Mrs. Bivens was killed
Franldlh County Deputy attempting to escapo with the
ba~y.

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WOMAN HURT
· POMEROY - The Pomeroy
emergency squad ans'wered a
call to East Main St. , at I: 30
p.m. Saturday where Mrs. Ida
~urphy, Middleport, jU. I,
was injured when struck by a
car. Details of the . accident,
which is under investi gation,
' were . not availa ble. Mrs .
· Murphy was taken to the
Holzer Medical Ce~ ter .

.....

I

He said the Increase was
" larger and reveals the
seriousness of the inflation
;with which the nation is con. tendlna."
- .., .
Industrial commodities rose
most sharply in metals, chemi- ·
cals, fuels other than oil,

l

machinery and equipment.
Wholesale prices were also
up for textiles, cars and trucks, .
railroad equipment, commercial a.nd household equipment,
floor coverings, ~applian ces ,
television sets, lawn mowers
and flat ware.

telephone with Kalmbach In - These areas an&lt;l capsule
Ca Hforn.~. Kalmbach says that comments:
at that point Ehrllchman
Watergate breat-la aud
notified Kalmbach of an up- cover-up
coming meeting scheduled for
-"The Watergate drama is
11 p.m. on the night of the. 24th still unfolding. Because aU the
between Kaln\bach ~nd others Ulcts are not yet in, becauoe all
In Washington," the committee Ute Watergate criminal trials
said.
and the Impeachment proceed· The report quoted Kabn· ing are not cor*'luded, and
fitch, now In prison for 11110 because the !'resident has
campaign violations, as saying refused to produce to the Select
in· the interview: "I think ... Commltlei! many crucial tape
that my understanding was recordings and other evidence,
simply, as I stated, that the this report ... ;., limited by
price support would be an- these ractors."
nounced the next day, that the
The .report said, however,
pledge to the President's 19'12 there is evidence that former
campaign was being rea(. Attorney General ·John N.
firmed to . me as a principal Mitchell, who was Nixon's
fund raiser."
campaign director, "reluctant"The commlttee wishes to ly" approved the break-In note that It has received no but that the matter remains in
evidence suggesting any com- doubt. .
pllclty in Wl'ongdolng 011 the
Campaign practices, or
part of the ~epubll c an " dirty trle ks"
National Committee or the
·-This section dlscusaed the
Democratic National Com- activities of Donald Segrettl,
mittee or its principal officers the so~alled "political saboduring the presidential cam- teur" who has gone to prison
paign of 972," the report said. for distributio n of illegal
The report was divided Into campaign literature In the
c-hapters that corresponded to F l or i d a Democratic
the areas of Investigation. primary.

VOL. 9 NO. 24

But the final reported deleted
this statement from the draft:
" However, It Is President
Nixon who must be he1d
responsible and acccountable
for tbe actions of his subordillates, Not only was he the
candidate on behall of whom
these activities were undertaken, he also set the moral
and ethical standards by which
his re-election campaign
operated."

uResponslvene••" pro~~:ram
· -"The 'evidence suggests
that one area of emphasis in
the Responslvenes. Program
was the allotllng or "rechanneling" . of federal money funds for grants, contracts,
loans and subsidies - to target
groups and areas in order to
enhance Ute President's reelection chances, and to Individual applicants who were
supportive of, or would thereafter
support,
the
President."

The report said Fred V.
Malek, now deputy federal
budget director, developed the
program, with oversight by
Charles W. Colson, .then White
House liaison for special In·

SUNDAY, JULY 14, 1974

Ioree! grouupo, to mlkt the
admlnlltraUon "rttponlive"
to particular groupo. One rt
these groupoo wu the Splnlobspoaldng,_to whom about flO
mW!on In federal granu and
loans were channeled:
Campalp fblaaellll
The · rep&lt;rt ~ that. In
violation of law, 12 cor.
poratl0111 made f/80,000 in
contributions to Nixon'• reelection campaign.
.
Presidential bldl of !ieL
Hubert H. Hampbrey, D-MIIIL,
and Rep. WUbur D. Mllla, DArk.

- MWs got $185,000 from
dsiry producer 110urceo and
$15,000 In oil runds, and
Humphrey received ta,OOO on
corporate and truot funds.
Howard Hugbeo--Cbarlet G.
'''Bebe" Rebozo
- Rebozo, N~on ' a c1oeest .
friend, uoed nearly *·000 In
campaign lunds-eome of It
from a $100,000 donation fr&lt;m
billionaire HOifard Hughes, to
pay for improvements on the
President's Key Biscayne
property and help buy diamond
earrings Nlzon purChased for
Pat Nixoo's 60th birthday.

PAGE 15

Ehrlichman convicted
By CHERYL· ARVIDSON

WASHINGTON (UP!)
John D. Ehrlichman, once
among the most powetiul -of
President Nixon's aides, was
convicted Friday of conspiracy
and three. counts of perjury In
the Ellsberg break-In case.
Ehrlichman immediately instructed his atto111eys to appeal, and he said he was sure
he would be cleared by higher
courts.
A federal district court jury
deliberated slightly more than
3 I&gt; hOurs before returning a
gtiilty verdict against Ehrlichman and three others. They
were charged with conspiracy
to violate the civll rights of Dr.
Lewis
Fielding,
the
psychiatrist of Pentagon
Papers defendant Dane!
Ellsberg, through a Sept. 3,
1971, break-In at Fleldillg's
Beverly Hilla, Cali{., office.
Ehrllchman, hlghest..-anklng
former administration aide to
be convicted In a Watergaterelated matter, also was found
guilty Friday 9f three countS of
lying to the FBI and a federal
grand jury investigallng the
burgiary .
He still faces trial in the
Watergate cover-&lt;Jp case set to
begin in September.
The prosecution said · the
California burglary was staged
to examine Fleldillg's medical
files In an effort to discredit
Ellsberg after he leaked the
Pentagon Papers on the origins
of the Vell\am War.
Ehrlichman, 49, and his codefendants, convicted Water.
gate burglars G. Gordon Uddy,
Bernard Barker and Eugenio
Martinez, showed no outward
sign of emotion as the guilty
verdicts were returned.
Ehrllchman was cleared of

one count of perjury relating to all,
his grand jury testimony on the
Gesell earlier In the day had
White House plumbers unit issued a tough set of insln!cwhich prosecutors said tions to'Ute jury of six men and
planned the brOllk-ln.
.six women which appeared to
With his wife Jeanne at his cut their deliberation time to a
side, Ehrlichman talked bare lliinimum,
briefly with reporters before
The judge told the jury that
leaving the courthouse. He said an Wegal and warrantless
he ordered his lawyers to entry cannot be justified even
appeal the convictions, which if an Individual believes he is
together carry a maximum acting " in the name of
sentence of 25 years In prison patriotism or national security
and a $25,000 fine. He said he
~xpects
. ''c omplete
exoneration .''
"! have and hllve for many
years had an abiding confidence In the American judicial
system. Nothing has happened
today that has. shaken this
confidence," said Ehrllchman,
who was forced to resign April
CIMARRON, N. M. (UP!) 30, 1973, as Nixon's domestic
affairs adviser and No, 2 aide lightning struck a group of
when the Watergate scandal Boy Scouts trying to fmd·
· reached the White House. · shelter from a high mountain
Nixon at · that Ume•.called r~lnstorm In a rugged norEhrllchman one of th{ "finest theastern New Mexico atea
Friday, killing one youth and
pubUc servants I know."
injuring
six companions and an
The other defendants also
were expected to appeal. adult leader.
The scouts, six youngsters
Sentencing for all was set for
9:30 a.m. July 31 before u.s. and the.l~de~ from Maryland
District Co\lrt Judge Gerhard and · Vlrgm1a s Capital Area
A. Gesell.
·
• Coun~U of the Boy Sco~ts of
·Asked whether EhrUchman's . Amer!ca, were stranded m the
conviction might affect the electrical and rain storm only a
House inquiry Into JXlSS!ble mlle from headquarters of the
Impeachment of President Philmont Scout Ranch and
Nixon, .Presidential attorney E&gt;;plorer Base, the s~er
James D. St. Clair said it would home of some 15,000 Boy
"have no affect on our caae at · Scouts.
II

or a need to create an unfavorable press 'Image or that
his superiors had the authoriiJ
without a warrant to 8uspend .
the constitutional protectlona
of the Fourth Amendment."
The def~ndants, seep! · for
Uddy who Is serving a lengthy
·prison term for his part In the
June 17, 1972, break-In at
Democratic National
headquarters, were freed on
bond pending recognllance.

Lightning strikes
scouts, on.e .dead
The dead boy was Bordon E.
LeBleu,15, 1!011 of Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. LeBleu of Rockville,
Md.
.
The most Severely Injured .·
were Michael Hahn, 15, and
Stephen Dobbs, 15, boll! ol
Rockville. they were held in the
North Colfu ColDlty Hoapltsl
in Raton, N.M., for observation.
.
Treated and released at 11Ie
Philmont medical center were
adult leader Richard Hahn, 50,
father of the Injured ICOUt;
llryan Jefferson, 16, of Rock·
ville; Kevin ~. 16, ol
Rockville, and Michael O'Donnell, 15, of Alexander, Va. ·.

•

National Guard called
out in prison strikes

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) National Guard troops manned
watch towers and patroled Ute
perimeter of the maximum
security Southern Ohio Correctional FacUlty - Saturdsy In
place of striking clvilj,ans. ·
More than 1,500 correctional
officers have struck the Lucasville fa cUlty, the Lebanon
Correctional lnatituUon, the
Ml'"Sfleld Reformatory, the
Chillicothe Correctional ln., Stltution and the Grafton Honor

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Lower .food ·costs resp9nsible
for small wholesale price hike
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Lower food costs kept wholesale price hikes to a scant 0.6
per cent in June, prompting
• two administration offlci aIs to
voice-cautious optimism about
the economy.
However, boosts In the costs
of everything from texWes to
televisions showed inflation
was far from over, one official
said.
The June ·Increase in the
Wholesale
Price hidex
reported by the Labor
Department Friday was about
half the rate of Increases in the
past eight months.
The WPI meal!lll'es the cost
of animal feed to farmers, raw
materials to factories, and food
and manufactured goods to
stores-one· step from con- ,
sumers.
·
Stock market analysts said
they believed'. the WPJ · news
. · contributed to. a rally that

Model FPI-170T

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- Make Illegal campaign
contributions by persons
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communicaUons between the
White House and the Internal
Revenue Service, and prohibit
all persons in the White House,
Including the president, from
receiving any Income tax
returns.
- Require annual full financial disclosure by the pr"-'!ldent
and vice president.
Nearly all the report had
been leaked lo the public in
draft form In recent weeks.
Committee sources said, howe.
ver, this served to elicit
commrnent from personssome of whom were mentioned
In Ute draft-and there was
considerable debate subsequently about parts of it.
But the fina l report r.emalned
almost Intact from the standpoint or substance. The sources
said some words were changed
investigate cases in volving at the request of Republicans,
public officials.
for instance, changing an
- Make It unlawfql for a outright allegation of wrongdoWhite House aide to engage in Ing to merely raising Ute
any Investigative or lntelli- possibility of wrongdoing; In
genc"i!atherlng activity not this way could the ·four
authorized by Congress.
Democrats and three Republi- Make It a crime for anyone cans agree on the report.
to work· in a federal election
A major chauge was on Ute
campaign under false preten- so-&lt;:aUed '~ milk fwtd," which
Ses.
apparently_further implicated
- Tighten laws on political John D. Ehrlichman, formerly
activities by governmenll!l Nixon's No. 2 aide who was
officials by making it a felony found guilty of conspiracy and
if they "obstruct, 'irnpair or perjury in the Ellsberg case
pervert a government !unc- Friday.
tion," or "by defraudtng the
. In testim'l"y taken June 13,
goverrlment in any matmer," Herbert W. Kalmbach, formerby acts such as using govern- ly Nixon's p~rsonallawyer and
ment resources in an election political fund raiser, said that
within hours after Nixon met
with milk producers in 1971,
Ehrliciunan summoned Kalmbach to a meeting-apparently
to tle a new Increase in the
price support for raw milk to
the · producers' $2 million
campaign pledge.
Nixon met with the milk
producers March 23, 1971. Two
days · later, Ute Agrieulture
Department reversed a
decision made earlier that
month and raised the price .
!IUPport.
"Sometime on the afternoon
or evening of the 23rd, Ehrlichman spoke by longdistance

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~

the planning or had advance
knowledge ol the break-ln."
The report went far beyond
an Investigation ol the break~n
at the Demqcratlc Natl01111l
Commltlei! In the Watergate
compl"' June 17, 1972.
On March 23, Federal Court
Judge John J. Slrlca revealed a
letter from James W. McCord
Jr., one of the original seven
Watergate defendants,
charging there had been
perjury committed during his
trial.
' The report said McCord also
volunteered on the same dey to
talk to ·the committee stall, The
letter was a key breakthrough
In the cover-up c.ase- and
McCord's offer. also launched
Ute committee's invest(J;(atlon.
The commltlei!'s 28 recom.
mendations would:
-Establish a commission to
Investigate vlolatlo.ns of
federal election law.
-Create a public attorney
who in effect would he a permanent special prosecutor to

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The report came just one
year after the committee's
televised hearings focused the
attention of the world on its
historic proceedings, PerhaPI!I
its most dramatic di3covery
came July 18 when tormer
White House aide Ale&gt;;ander P.
Bu tterlleld reI uc tantly
revea led the ezlstence of
Nixon's secret tape recordings.
Although the committee discovered the tapes existed, it
was frustrated repeatedly In Its
efforts to obtain them, and the
panel's work languished. But
the tapes provided both the
special prosecutor and the
House Judiciary Commlttee
with their best raw material.
With some of the language he
lised during the'hearings, Sen.
Sam J . Ervin Jr ., D-N.C., the
chairma n, said in personal
views:
" Wa tergate
was
unprecedented In the political
annals of America in respect to
the scope and intensity of its
unethical and illegal actions_
To be sure, there had been
previous milder political
scalldals in American history.
That fact does not excuse
Watergate.
"Murder and stealing have
occurred in every generation
since earth began, but that fact
has not made murder meritorious or larceny legal," Ervin
said.
Sen. Edward J. Gurney, RFla ., Nixon's staunchest supporter on the panel, said in his
personal remarks "there has
been no proof gathered by the
commltlei! to Indicate that the
President of the United States
participated in or approved of

.MAYTAG &amp;)@~OUD®flil

SET DURING THIS SALE

ALL STEEL
FRAME

0 ~uuu~u

MAYTAG

air-."

everything In iJur power to get
these employes to return to
work and those who refuse will
be subject to disciplinary
action ranging from letters of
reprimand up to and Including
dismissal," he said.
The strike began last week at
Lebanon and spread to the

other facUlties during the
week.
•
Attendants In at least 10 state
. mental Institutions have said
they could join t.he strike within
the next few days. Attendants
at the Athens Mental Heiilth
Care Center struck on Wednesdsy.

REcREATIONAL VEHICLE SHOW - The Silver Bridge Merchants Association Ia
sponsoring a spectsl promotion thla week featuring various kinds of recreational vehicles such
as v811s, jeeps, motorcycles, and campers. Tuesday from noon to 9 p.m. the show will feature
an $87,000 Rusalan limousine, the smallest horse in the world and the auto used in the Bonnie
·and Clyde movie. This Is a donation type of promotion with 15 pet. of the proceeds gollllf to the
association for the Gallla .County Cancer Crusade.

Assembly·action on budget not_likely

·-farm ln a wage dispute.
abotit one-tliird of the jgs mn. llon for a variety oh smaller .
Gov. John J . Gllllgan said - COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Democrats were to have reprojects, such as disaster rellef
supplemental
ap- for Xenia and other communJNational Guard mllttsry · Ohio General Assembly Is to ported back to the admlnlstra- lion
policemen were called out only reco~~e~ in a ~outhselkeeplnkg lion of Gov. John j _ GIIligan proprlation used for tsJ; relief, ties, and busing subsidies for
at. , Lucasville . He . said sbuess o ,_~.ce aganf
s wee , during the weekend, while Re- ·Including a tioost In personal the mentally retarded.
helicopters were airlifting
t a su.-man co erence com- publicans said they had no · Income m ezemptioN by $100,
The $96 mllllon figure ex·
medlcal supplles mall and mlttee on a supplements! plans to change their inaistenee a hike In property tax exemp- . eludes mandatory appropr.lessential food st~lfs Into the budget Ia not likely to 'have Ii on $30 million or more llix re-. tioos for the elderly and repeal
prison.
. report ready for action .
lief by January.
of the slate tsx on stohs and atlons of$12.5 mllllon foi"Voca.Gilligan tirged the f!liards to
The House and Senate sesBoth sides Indicated m re- bonds.
tiona! education c&lt;&gt;nstruc~on
end the strike, which has not slons are set for Tuesdsy, and _ llef was the major stumbling
It Ia especially the repeal ·of projects and $1U million or
been sanctioned by the three If the conference committee block and that nothing would the "intangibles" tsx on stocks interest paymenls on bonds .
unlons representing the . meets before that, It expected be ready for party caucuseo and bonds that Democrats and . sold for Vietnam bonus funds.
workers - the Ohio Civil· to be a repeat of the secret when the one-day "skeleton" the Gilligan administration
A pay raise for llate em.
me tl g
hi h 0 c
d sess1 011 1s h Id Tu-~...
will not buy during the current amoW!tsofupto'~mWlon,
ployaa has been d' · -,uued In
Servlce EmployesAssociation,
en
w c
curre
e
........,.
"'--!period
.._
the American Federation .of Frlday afternoon. .
Leglalative leaders were re- """"
·
'
Public IIChools and state em• • the conferees report, lnCiudlntl
State, CouniY and Munlcipiu, At that two-bour session, the ported to be shooting fer July
Employes and the Team- conferees continued to be 23 as the date for possible noor ployas are ticketed for the buill alternatives of a llat raise or
•ters- ln their demands for a deadlocked over tb8 Issue of action If a settlement · Is · of the rest of ihe money, 8J. one geared to low~~Cille em- .
''th011gh the ·con1erees are talk• ployes.
31~cnt..an-llour pay hike.
· · ts x re llef and Oo c ha nge Is· · reached.
One of thole u_n d e r dlscualon
"We will contlme to do anticipated immediately. ·
RepUbllcans .say they want · ln8 aboot $10 million. to $1~mil·

.

•

•

called for a 15-to-20 cent ral8e
for thoee employestlll'lllnll-.
than $l2,000, and nothlnc for
those earnlns more..
_Pay raise negotlltiona have ·
been Condooled durtnc wlllkouts by employaa at •w1'81
correctional lnstltutiOIII.
·Also unda- dllc:uuiDn .,..
several methods of c:lllnalllnll
estra mone• to publle ~:boola,
either b ' llaf blldf ID.
'1 I
._
cresee or • (lll'1lllllll baolt•
Tll4l auppiiiDtlllal .,.
proprilllkllllatolll..._..bf
J 'llkln _.. o1 Clllllllft
tao m
over fnm lllllulllal ,..,
$43.6 mllllaa wortb ol liDo
ticlpated
Illite
lolla")'
proc:•da, lit ball!.

�•
•

11-Tho Sunday Times-Sentinei,Sunday, July 14, !974
11- ':'bellundavTimoi-Sentlntl, Sunday,JII)y 14,1174

LYTHAM

ST.

ANNES, hts Johannesburg ranch
virtually. wrapped up th~
$120.000 championship with.;.
million
dollar . winners , e~le at the lll6-yard PIIT s
satLrday '""?his eighth major stxth. Havmg bogeyed the two
:"'ptonohtp when he look Ute p~eviOUJ ~oles to offset a
lim !ish Open TiUe for the third btrdle.birdie start, this was a
f e with a one'l.lllder-par 70 tremendous psychological
blow to hi11 rivals and liited hi&gt;
or • 12-hole lola~ oi 282.
Player, the retgmng U. S. own morale.
:•t..rs champion, was the
Player reached the green in
Y man to flntsh under par two and left himself a simple
and led lhe 103rd chlm!ptonshtp lour-footer which he gladly
throughout tls 72 holes. He acce pted. To rub it in, he then
birdied the seventh and turned
earn ed a check of $13,200.
8 riton Peter Oosterhws who in 32
partn ed PI
f
h '/).h ~r
_ayer or t e ftnal
With cballengets Nicklaus,
3 _ o ea, finlShC\1 seco~d wtth a Green and Oosterhuis turning
;1_286d while Players great tn 3-4s tt was virtually all over
nen
and riyal, Jack but the shouting because Royal
Ntcklaus, was thtrd , 71-287. Lytham's treacherous back
rub~ Green, 71 - 288, was mne~ontinuedtositupandbite
0~
h
b dr
deaptte a lack of wind and
t r~ay, w en e opped brilliant sunshine for the final
our ols to par BJ1d saw his round .
five stroke lead cut to three,
The final day gaUery of
Player played defen sively by 17,455, which brought the total
httting iron s off the. tee. attendance to 90 625 gave
' '
saturday he decided to defend
hi11 lead by attack and he did it
superbly until faltering on the
Ia•! four holes with the
championship already won.
The 37-yea r-&lt;~ld South
PITTSBURGH (UP!) African, who 'breeds horses at Johnn Y Ben ch and Tony Perez
England (UPI )- Gary Player
of South Alrlca, one of golf's

·.i

Player dressed in hh 75 - 293 to be 12 strokes of! the
rustom:ry black a slallding pace, mad&lt; four.
ovation when he. reaehed Ute
Nicklaus, with 14 major tiUes
18th green. He smiled, doffed 111der his belt, spoke for the
his cap, but showed no real other players, when he said
emotion until h1s final putt "Gary played a heck of a round
of golf today." dropped.
Oosterhuis said he bad
Before the Una! round
started. Player's rivals said planned to attark on !.he front
they would have to attack him nine , "but how do you attack
over Royal Lylham's Iront nine him when he shoots a 32?"
because the backside was too
Player . 1•lslbly excited
tough.
despite his seven previous
But as much as the others major championships, said,
attacked Player refused to " This U&gt;urnamen t seemed lik,e
· an ·'tnch. On the back nine the· longest I've ever played.
yteld
it was as it had been the three It's agony to lead for all four
days in a major championship.
previous days: trouble~
Nic klaus , who 'd stayed Nobody wants to be kn own as a
reasonably close, missed a siJ&lt;- 'choker. The guy wlio led and
foot birdie putt at No. 13 and Josl.'
I made up my mind to attack
then made three stra ight
bogeys, his concentration in and just kept the baU in play."
_Player also flir-ted with
tatters. Green also made three disaster at !.he 17th when hlS
bogeys, as did Player himself, drive landed in taU grass near
while defending champion Tom the green. " I practically had to
Weiskopf, who finished with a go down on my hands and

out . U was a very gOOd five."
In •ddi lion 10 his three
British titles, Pi'ayer bas one U.
S. Open victory ( 1965), two
PGA 's (196:! and '72), and two
Masters ('61 and this year ).
Last year he became the fifth
ma,n to win more than one
miUion dollars on Ute !()ur
while he already has banked
$99,188 this year in his brief U.
S. appearance. In addition to
the Masters, he won the
Thomas 'Memphis Classic.
Nicklaus, with U major
champions, Bobby Jones, 13,
Walter Hagen, 11, and
Ben Hogan, nine, lead him in
major championship victories
but he ill ahead or' Arnold
Palmer, Sam Snead and other
outstanding Americans.
Player's four stroke victory
was the biggest since the late
Tony Lexa's five stroke margin
over Nicklaus at St. Andrews in
1964.

Announcement

The Meigs Inn
POMEROY, OHIO

Will Be Closed July 20
At 2 pm
For Privat~ Wedding l'arty
Wi II Re•Open Monday
At II a.m. As Usual.

®

RKLUUO
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'

•I

•

•

QUANTITY PURCHASING AND
· OUI(IC TURNOVER MAKES THIS
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(3) FRONT UVING ROOMS
(2) FRONT KITatENS
STARTING FROM

.
·
sacrifice.
RicJi Hebner's double and
singles by Reuss Rennie
Stennett and Gene ciines gave
the Pirates two runs in their
half of the third and Pittsburgh
tied It in the fourth on Mario
Mendoza's two-run triple after
a paif of walks.
Ril;e's single , a walk,
Bench 's run-scoring single and
Perez' sacrific.e tty gave Ute
Reds two more in the fifth and
they made it 7-4 in the sixth on
Merv Rettenmund's single
after a walk and a sacrifice.
Bench's double and singles
by Perez, George Foster and
Borbon gave the Reds another
pair in the seventh.

FRESH FRYING

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

'

BREWERS WIN
MILYYAUKEE (UPI) _ Jim
Colborn, wjth las.! out re~ef
help from Torn Murph
scattered eight hits and ~·
Garcia drove In two runs to
lead the Milwaukee Brewers to .
a $.2 win over Ute Texas
Ranger~ Saturday afternoon 1n
a nationally televised gliDe.
The wln ''"" the Brewers'
•nh in Uteir laot ellht glmeti.

"

For Middleport, Britt Dodson
ruined Rifne's attempt for a
no:hitter in the sixth with a
single, before Paul Hatfield
and Joe Watkins each singled
in the

~venth .

Ron Ca5\'i started for Mid-

Bankers, Meigs Inn
Mark V cage winners
POMEROY - In swnmer
basketball action at the
High ,
Pomeroy
Junior
Pomeroy National Bank
defeated the Paily Sentinel, 7641, Meigs Inn topped Citizens
National Bank, 53-47 and Mark
V edged Luigi's, 61-00.
In the first g 0 me, the
bankers were led by Steve
Walburn and· Steve Dunfee
with 21 and 20 points respectively. The losers were led by
Julius Blanks with 17 points
and Tom Walters with 14.

ie

Leading rebolmder was Danny

Gallipolis' 'steve Blowers
finished lo a five-way tic for
37th place In the 1974 Ohio
Men's Amateur Golf tou ....
nameot Friday. Blowers had
rounds of 80, 7%, 78 and 83 for
a 313 total, 18 strokes behind
cha mplon Kim Heisler, of
Auror·a.
coach of the Cleveland Browns
and now a talent scout Ior the
football team.
Kim, 21, gave up football after high school, but llBtens to his
'father's words of wisdom in his
chosen sport - golf.
"Concentrate on making aU

putts under 10 feet," Fritz ad·

held going into the final round,
vised hilt son before Kim enter- shot a 79 and finished fourth
ed the Mens Ohio Amateur with a 297.
Golf Championship, " and
Dave Hrusovsky of Warren
you'll win the tourney."
was fifth with a 300, Denny
Kim heeded the advice and · Spencer o! Toledo was sixth
won .
with 301, and Lalu Sabotin of
"Every lime I had a short Warren arid Ralph Ballenger of
putt I could hear .my (ather's Columbus tied for !!"Venth with
words," said K!m. "1 think I scores of 302.
only missed three putts under
Tied for ninth place with 303s
10 fe_et !.he whole tournament." were Joe Harper of C&lt;Jiwnbus
The young Heisler fired a 73 and Ludwig Schenck of Mansin Friday's closing round over field, the 1972 champion.
"
the difficult par 71 south course
Tbe tournameni's early leadof the National Cash Register ers had bad finishes.
(NCR) Country Club to take
Howard Hendershott of Hudthe trophy.
son, who led at the halfway
Heisler's 72 hole U&gt;tal of 295 mark, finished in a tle for 25th
was one better than second place with a 308 score.
place finishers GleM Apple of
First round leader John
Olmsted FaUs and 19-year-&lt;&gt;ld Turner of Mlddlelown fared
Jim Decker of Fremont.
even worse, -finishing in a tie_
Lost Lead
for 54th place with a 319.
Ed Gowan of Olmsted Falls
The four-&lt;lay tourney atblew a three-stroke lead he tracted a field of 229 golfers

Dodson with 17.
In
the
second
game,
the
•
Meigs Inn came Irom behind
•
with the help of Bill Vaughan's
•
••
16 points. H was followed
closely by Dean Schorck and
~
Doxie Walters with 14 and 13
r
points respectively.
'•
Citizen's Dennis Eichinger
"
was the game's high scorer,
followed 1&gt;Y Jim Amsbary with
••
CHESHIRE - S. Lambert the firs t inning. The lndians
10 points. Eichinger was the
•• •
tripled
leadin&amp; off the bottom took a 5·1 lead in the third only
leading rebounder · with 22
caroms, while Walters ali.d of the seventh inning and to see Rutland bounce back
l•
Vaughan had 18 each for the scored on a fielder 's choice with one in the third -and three
winners . In the final game, giving Rutland's Dodgers a in the fourth.
The Dodgers jwnped ahead
'·
Ron Ferguson ahd Dave Booth hard-earned 8-7 victory over
each fired in 19 points, while the Gallipolis Indians here in the Iifth but Gallipolis tied it
m
•
Lonnie Coats added 18. For the Friday night in the best of up with two runs in the sixth.
R. Mowery, Lambert, and T.
losers, Chip Brauer had 16 and three games of the Kyger
Creek Little League Tour- Eads led the Rutland attack.
Mitrh Meadows had 13.
•~
S. Willer, M. Allison, J .
Randy Crawford and Steve nament,
~
ln _the see-saw conte st , Cameron had hilS for the In •
..:,~
GALLIPOLIS - Miss Jackie Price had 12 points apiece. Gallipolis led 2-1 at the end of dians.
;'
summer Leading rebounder in the game
Knight,
gi rls
recreation direc tor, Saturday was Chip Brauer. Ferguson,
•I
announ ced the pairings for thjs · Ron Hill and Booth each had 13
week' s beginning do ub les reboW1ds for the winners.
tennis ladder tournament.
The tournament will begin
CINCINNATI (UP!)
International
lead. at the end of eight holes,
L
ea
gue
Standings
Sa~dy
Jones,
a
math
teacher
in
Monday, and 'un throu gh
but Mrs, Oldhlml, a ·former
By United Pr ess International
the Cincinnati school system, Olympic diScus thrower, closed
Wednesda y, Aug. 7.
North
w . 1. pet . g.b . captured the Ohio State the gap to within two by Ute
According to Miss Knight, Rochester
49 30 .620
Women's Amateur Golf lith.
doubles teams are Bob Sy ra cuse
49 34 .590 2
35
49
.417
16112
To
le
do
Tournament
Friday after
Hwrison and Bev Rusk ; Anita
But Mrs. Oldham chipped
JO 50 .375 191;2
Pawtucket
having been a ruiinerup in two over the green at the 12th, and
Tope and Nancy James; Jud y
South
w. I. pet . g .b. of the last three years.
M3rkham and Anne Fischer ; Memphis
Miss Jones, daughter of pro
48 32 .600
Miss Jones, 38, defeated an- golfer Morgan Jones, coasted
Darlene Barnes and Donna Ri ch mond
47 34 .580 J lh
38 42 .475 10
,,•• Edwards; Donna Fisher and Charleston
other two-time ninnerup Mrs . in to victory.- _
Ti dewater
27 '52 .342 201 12
•'\
Ned Oldham of Cuyahoga Fails
charlotte Rankin ; Kim Betz
Miss Jones advanced to the
Fr iday' s Results
4 and 3 in the match play finale finailt with a 2 and· I win over
Char leston 2 Richmond 1
,.
and Diana Canterbury, and Memphis
4 Tidewater 3, 12 inn.
at the Hyde Park Country Club. Mrs. Robert DeGroff of CincinDee · James on and Rachel Roches t er 2 Toledo 1
~
Pawtuck{!
l
5
Sy
ra
cuse
1
Miss Jones took a five:hole nati in the semi-finals while
Pullins.
••'
Here are the tournament's
rules:
•
(llarterNo.l36 .
National Bank Region No.4
Call No, 490
'·,;
A team may ch'i-31 1enge orie or
REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING
two positions above their own .
~
• · A team rri ust challenge af
DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES, OF THE
~ ·~
least once ev.e ry se ven day s or
•,
be dropped to the bottom

••

Golf title

PENNYFARI QUALITY
U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED Family Pak 3-lbs. or More

OUND -BEEF.

FRESH

...

from around !.he state, the
largest entry list in the 68 year

· "I double bogeyed the first
hole and tho ninth hole," here.
history of !.he event.
called. "8Qt th~t second double
Hei111er, who hopes to be- bogey may have helped more
come a professional golfer, is than hurl. I sot furious with
making quite a name for him- myself and knew I'd have to
self in Ohio amateur circles, concentraie If I was going to
In 1911 he won !.he state high come back,''
l!Chool golf tiUe and led his
Helltler played sensational
Aurora High School team- golf the final nine holes,
mates to . the team chamOn Ute 15th hole, for instance,
pionship.
his tee shol fell just two feet
Third Try
short of the pin. He tapped illn
This ·was the sandy haired for a two on tbe 23Z.yard hole.
youth's third crack at the state
He got into trouble on the
amateur title , He made !.he cut 17th, hilling his teesitot Into the
in 1970 and 1971, but finished trees. A daring recovery shot
far down the list. He passed up cleared a three--foot gap betthe tourney the last two years. ween two trees and saved the
Heisler, who will be a senior day .
at Florida State University this
"Every day I pracUce hilling
fall, started Friday four . about 15 or 20 shots on a direct
strokes ·behind leader Gowan line - just as straight as I
and figured he had no chance &lt;&gt;f can."' Heisler said. UIJ.lte prac·
winning when he got off to a lice was really worth it for that
rocky start.
shot today."

COUJ'Ie

.

- l!lte of the 1111!9 PGA' •

tourney·- "the li1oSt demanding coune l've ever played."
Only one sub-par round was
played on Ute layout all weeka 70 by Gowan on Thu.rsday.

Rutland Dodgers, Syracuse and .::JercalledktheNCR~uth

BAXTER SIGNS
. CLEVELAND (UP!) Cleveland Crusaders' General
Manager Jack Vlvlan announced the signing Thursday
of dffenseman Paul Baxter to a
multi-year contract.
" His aggressiveness and
desire to play pro!eaalonal
hockey will be made up for any
lack of pollsh or flnesae "
'
VIvian said of Ute 18-year-&lt;tld
Canadian who was Cleveland'•
first draft pick. Baxter will
report to the Crusaders' trainIng camp at Kent State
University
In
midSeptember.

_

. ~ an ees capture
New Haven advance with wins three more wins

Pairings ·
nnnounced
for tourney

••
"

A~ateur

..

G. Shuler was the wmmng
pitcher while G. Harrington
look the loss .
Syracuse, behind the no.hit
pitching of righthander Davis
blasted Middleport's Mets, 16l. In hurling the four inning no. .
hitter, Davis fanned ll of 12
batters.
,
D. Nance and J - Williams
paced the winners with three
and two hits res pectively .
Syracuse plated 12 runs in the

firs t inning enroute to its easy
victory .
New
Have n
pounded
Gallipolis' White Sox, 14-2 in
the other game Friday niRht.
Weaver fired a one-hitter
again~t the White Sox . Phil .
King collected the only
Gallipolis hit, a single .
Leading New Raven's attack
were G. Richards, two singles;
J. Arnold, a double BJld single;
L. Gibbs, ·K. Stewart, and -D .
Roush, all singles. J_ , Wilcox
was charged with the loss.
Monday night, Gallipolis'
Orioles will play Point
Pleasant City Ice and Fuel,
Gallipolis
Yankees will play
Mrs. Oldham dffeated Pat Williams of Akron 5 and 4 in !.he Letart and the Pomeroy Yanks
' will battie Vinton.
·
semi-finals.

Miss Jones Women's champion

'

.

had a single .

•

MASON - Wabama High
Football Coach Marcus Rice
announced Saturday . all
prospective .WHS grldders,
gr~,dfs 7-IZ, a:re to report at
tbe g)'maaolum betweeD the
hount of 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., .
July 15 tbrolll!b July It to
pick tip plt)'lllcat'!ormo. '
Also; all boys IDiereated 1n
being managers are to
· conta&lt;t Casch Rlo!e.

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

Racine concluded its season
with a 4""·1 record .

••
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•'

Dailey

~~

.

EN SALE!

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Yankees won three games last
week to up their mark to 9-0
defeating the Pomeroy Giants:
!l-2, ljarrisonville, 8-2 and the
Pomeroy Pirates, 13-2.
In the first victory, Tom ,
Owens was the winning pitcher
giving up just two bits, both by
Chris Woods.
For the Yanks, Steve Little
had a double and pair of
singles, Chris Taylor bad a pair
of triples, Mark Norton had
triple and a single, Tim Roush
bad a pair of singles, Tim Fulk ·
had a pair of doubles, Owens
had a single and SteVie Call
had a double and pair of
singles.
·
Owens again got credit for
the win over HarrisoovUle
giving up six hits, singles by

a

Donohue, Williams, and two
each by Howard and Arnold.
For the Yat&gt;kees, Mike
WhiUatch had a pair of singles,
Stevie Call had a •double and
single, Steve Little had - a
single, as did Tom Owens and
Jim Snider, and Chris Taylor
had a doubl~.
Stevie Call fired a threehitter in the win over the
Pirates. Call struck out 11 and
walked two.
The Pirate hits were a single
by Cliff Kennedy and a pa(r of
triples by Smith.
· For the Yanks, Tim Roush
slammed a home run and a
double, Chris Taylor had a
double and triple, Stevie Call
had a .triple, and singles carne
off the bats of Steve Li!Ue, Tom
Oweos and Jimmy Snider.

.

-.
"

'-"-PT. KID'S
IMITATION

• ... ·
; "

PEANUT BOnER

: :
, ..
., ~

posit ion .
Games pre arranged at the
convenience of all parties;
however, a team must agree on
date an~ tim e on the second
challenge or th e defender mu st

~'

torfelf.

:: .
'-..
: '
.,

One
games
decide
The

~

40-oz:. Jar
2

set, having wOn six
by two games, will
the winner .
winning team must
report the game and score to
Jackie Knight within 24 hours
and before either:.•.1eam may
challeng·e. ·
. A team may enter at any
t1me by add ! n~ a position to the
bottom . Entnes must contiict

:

•

KING COLE

DVEGETABLES,
SLICED or WHOLE CARROTS
1-lb. Can
LIMIT6

••
••
••

,.
••

.••
'

Jack le Kn ight (441&gt;-0287) 24

~­

hours befo re beginning t o
chall-enge.
.•
Current standings wi l l .be
available dafly on the board
near -the court s or by calling

•••
••
•••

for

446-02S7 .

'

1••

ICLES

c

Hermitage Air .Conditioning

Racine 's triumph. striking out
18 batters and walking five ..

DAYTON, Ohio (UPI )- Kim
Heisler is not exacUy followin g
his father's footstepo, but he ;,
following his father's advice,
Kim'sJatheris Fritz Heisler,
for '2:i years the offeoslve line

~

B.J.DAILEY

B?STON (UP!) _ Frank saturday as the California
_Robtn$0n knocked in two runs Angels won their second
DAYTON - '! seldom get
and scored three, and Andy . straight game after lllosses in Hassler scattered eight hits a row. clubbing the Boston !led excited about a freshman, but I
am about this one because he
Sox 12-1.
can do it all - run, pass and
punt."
. With this enthushism,
University of Dayton football
coach Ro~ Marciniak an- ·
nounced the signing Friday of
B. J . Dalley, standout quarterback for Chillicothe Unioto
Ma\or Leag-ue Standin!ils .-:.
West
,BY Un ted Press InternatiOnal
w. I. pet. g.b. High School; to a national letter
American League
Los Angeles
60 29 .674
of Intent. ·
· East
Cinclnnat l
52 ·37 .58.4 8
_Bailey is the son of Don and
w. I. pet, g.b. Houston
47 41 .534 121J2
Clevoland
46 38 .54S
Atlanta
47 43 .522 lJ'h Margaret Dailey, former
Boston
47 40 .539
San Fran .
39 50 .438 21
residents of Pomeroy and both
Baltimore
46 39 .541
lf2 San Diego
39 53 .424 22'12 graduates of Pomeroy High
Milwaukee
44, .42 .512 Jlh
Saturday's results :
School.
·
New York
.. 43 .506 4
Cincinnat i 9 PIHsburgh 4
YYest
( Philadelphia at San Franclsco
His grandparents, who
- w. I. pet, g.b. twilight
' reside in Meigs County; are ·
Oakland
. 4S 39 .551
Monireal at San Diego, night
Mr- and Mrs. Everett Dailey of .
Kan5as City
43 42 .506 4
Atlanta at St. Louis, night
Chicago
42 43 .494 5
New York at 'Los AnQeles , Pomeroy and Mrs. Edward
Texas
43 47 .478 61f2 night
Hawley oi Minersville.
·Minnesota
~ 40 48 ;455 9
CfllcaQo at HOuston. n ight
".B. J. (for Byron Jay ) Is the
Californ ia
34 56 .377 151!2
Today's Games :
Saturday's results :
Philadelphia (Scheler 4-11 kind of kid we really needed,"
Californ ia 12 ·Boston 1
and Twitchell 3-21 at San Marcinkak said. "He's the type
Milwaukee 5 l'ex.as 2
Francisco !Halicki 0-0 and
you search and search and
. New York 12 Oakland 6
Bradley 7-9). , 2. 3 p.m .
Detroit at Kansas City, night
Cincinnati (Billingham 9-6 search for . He's a true tt'iple
Baltimore at Chicago, night . and Norman 8-8) at Pittsburgh option quarterback, which is
Tod•y's games ;
·
( Brett 11 -5 and Klson 4-41. 2, the offense w~ nut."
Detroit (Coleman 7-9) at
1:05 p.m.
.
Kansas City (Dol Canton 4-41.
Dailey, 6-2 and 185 -lbs., ran
MOfJtreal (Torrez 8·6 and
2:30p.m.
Blair 3-21 at San Diego for 14 touchdowns and passed
Cleveland CBosinan 1-0J at
ISplllner S-3 and Palmer 1-2),
Minnesota (Albury 4-SJ. 2: 15 2, :.4 p.m.
- for 19 others the past two
p.m .·
Atlanta INiekro S-8) at St seasons in leading Unioto to a
Texii!s {Hargan 7-5 and
Louis (Bare 0-01. 2:15p.m. - 11).5 record. He completed 110.
Brown 7-61 at Milwaukee
New York (Matlack 7-6) at
(Sprague ~- 1 and Slaton 7-lOJ. Los Angeles (Rau 7-5), 4:15 · of 294 passes and punted for a
2, 2 p.m.
32 yard average. He was allp.rn .
Baltimore (Grimsley 11 -7) at
Chicago (Stone 3-31 at slate honorable mention as a
Chicago (Bahnsen 7-11}, t p.m. Houston (Grltlln 10-3). 3:05 · junior and was named to the
. Oakland (Hunter 11 -8 and p.m.
Southeastern Ohio District first
Hamilton 5-2) at New York
(Pagan 1-1 ond McDowell 1-11 ,
team iast fall.
2, 12:30 p.m .
Dailey, who picked Dayton
California , (Lange 3-S) at
SIX IN ROW
Boston (Tiont 12-T) , 2 p.m.
NEW YORK (UPI) - The after narrowing his college
red-hot New York Yankees choices to Ohio University,
Natiopat League
pounded four Oakland pitchers Marshall and Ohio Northern, is
. East
also an excellent baseball
w. I. pet, g,b. for 17 hits, scoring five runs in prospect, batting .3115 while
the fifth inning and si~ In the
· St. Louts
44 42 .512
Phltadetrhla 4.4 42 .512
seventh, to extend their win· playing the shortstop position,
Monfrea ·
1
40 43 . 482 2 12
ning streak to six games
Chicago
37 47 .440 I&gt;
Saturday
with a 12~ victory
Pittsburgh
37 48 ,434 61fz
New York
. 31 48 .435 61/2 over the A's.·

•

dleport and wa• the losing
pitcher. He wasreplaced In the
second by Mark Haggerty .ind
in the fourth by Tim Ebersbach.
J . F . Young led the Racine
attack with a triple and a
single, while Jim Riffie had a
double, Steve Hendricks a pair
of singles and Danny Dudding

••

·Dayton·

BUY NOW!

Men's ·O hio

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Phillles defeated Rutland ·2-1
and Racine dumped the
Middleport A'• 6-3 in Meigs
Count:&lt; Pony League action
l'riday.
Chip Brauer went the
distance Ior the Phillies
allowing just two hits, a •ihgl~
by Wayland and double by
George.
.
For the Phillies, whose
record now stands at 5-4,.
Randy MarshaJI, Rick Taylor
and David Blake each had a
single.
Jim Riffle got the win In

·-•
•,.
-t

Boston, 12-1

-

•l
•••"
•

2 Pkg s. Giblets and 2 Necks

selects

Deluxe Spanish - Deluxe Early Amer.ican &amp;

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OPEN DAILY 9 TIL 9-CLOSED SUNDAY
252 THIRD AVENUE, GALliPOLIS

Includes: 3 Breast Quarters w/l~ack•l
3 Leg Quarter s w / Ba cks

Angels.wallop

•

•••
•

.

$5695

One -with Carpet Throughout,

•••

Famil Pak Chicken Parts

Bench paces win
.
comb'tn ed to drive
in seven
.runs saturday as the Cincinnati Reds beat the PittsbLrgh Pirates, 9--4, with Tom
Hall picking up his first victory
in- his frrst start his season .
Hall (1-1), whose last start
":as l~st . July 28, scattered
etgbt h1ts 111 seven innings and
Pedro Borbon' handcuifed the
Pirates the rest of the way.
Bench, who drove in (our
runs, socked a three-run
horner, his 17th of the year, off
losing pitche~ Jerry .Reuss (87) m the ftrst inning after
stngles by Pete Rose and Joe
Morgan .The Reds made it 4.()
in the l.hird on Perez' runscoring single after walk and a

cop Pony wins

knees 10 see the ball, but I got it

•
•

••

''

. 24-ct. Pkg.

l'

Meigs Babes

I
I

split J!.Bir

j

FORMULA 409
•
ALL PURPOSE CLEANER

$159

%-Gal
Bot.

CHIP AHOY -........... :•:;_·· 79c
PECAN SHORT BREAD ...• ':k:.· 79c
COCONUT CHOC. CHIP • . . ·~~:- 79c
· MRS. FILBERT'S MARGA!IINE
WHIPPED ~s.... , . ; • • • • • • • • • • ~~:

59c
FAMILY SIZE SOFT GOLDEN .. l·"-69c
SOFT GOLDEN MUGS .•.... .~ 35c
• llowl

. IRAn CHEF'S SURPRISE SUPPERS

~,::y~OE .................. "~'· •••· 67c
.
S UN ........... " .. .. .•... u -c11 Ilk' 67c
CHILl MACARONI ....... ,. .... ,.., ·... · 67c
PISHIIMAN'S · · · · · · · · · ··. · ~ · · ·· .. ,....,~~~,- 67c
RANCHIIO
. o, u ....-'"''. 67c
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0

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KRAn

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DRESSINGS

'I

•···46c
. French . , .. , ~~;: 46c
. h •....
Frene
M!racle

NABISCO COOKIE FEATURES

0

Appeals or
com plai nt s
should be _m ade directly' to
Jackie Knight immediat el y .
Courteous play should be
demonstrated at all t imes: An·y
pol nt questioned should be
played over ra ther than
argued .

aot .

1
Fren ch ... -~ . -•lat.
"'

1

I
''

•••

79c

IALLAID
REFRIGERATED .
. PRODUCTS

&gt;•

•
'

''

~."" !_•ll4y6-htte
•···.8·3c

,'•

Buttertllllk ·
Bisct11ts • • ,,.,-,

••'

. DIICUn• • . .

. 6··· 83

FOLGER'S

tNIT ANT COffll .

CRYSTALS
10..1.'252
Jer

.,

c

'

...

POMEROY - The Meigs
Babe Ruth team upJied its
record to 24-7 with a
doubleheader split with Mason
County.
Mason took the first game of
the twlnb.ill, Ul-2: before Meigs
took the nightcap 4-,'l.
Barry Marshall slammed the
game-winning hit, a double, in
!.he second contest,
Sunday the Babe Ruth squad
plays Coolville at 2 p.m. and 4
p.m. Tbe coach adds, " Thi$·
team will play anybody who
wants games by calling 992'
6794 or 992-3059."

Cleveland
-401 OJ1 OOo- 9 15 0
Mlnnesot• . 100 300 PlO- 5 14 o
J . Perry , · WI\C.O)I (8) end

· Ouncen ;. Corbin, · Butler { I L
Hand s
(3), Burgme!er (5),
• Campbell (8 1 and RoQf. WP -J .
l
Perry (9 -71 . LP -Cor b ln 15·3) .
•HRs -Hlsle (Uth1 , Sp ikes (12th).

.•

_..;..._

'
:
-.
•

••nlmort
ChlcttO

ooo ooo no- l 12 2

JOO 000 OOl- 4 8 0
AltKfH'Ider ( 4 -5) and Wil ·
llem'1 ; Kaet . Gossage .(81 11nd
~trrmann . WP -Gosuge (1 ll.
HAs -Fuller !Jih). Grlch (lo41t1 J.

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK

of Galllpolls, Ohio in tbe State of Ohio, at tbe close of business on June 30, 1974
published ln response to Call made by Comptroller of the Currency, uader Tille ·
IZ,
United States Code, Section 161.
. .
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .. - - - - $ 1,894,998.95
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - - - - . - - - - - • - - - 2,244,1100.34
Obligations of States and political subdivisions - - - - - - - - 3,262,633.31
Other securities - - - - - - - - ·- - - - - - - - - - - - 110, 7SO.OO
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
1,100,000.00
- - - - under agreements to resell • - - - - 9,961,544.58
Loans - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - • - - - •
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
- 163,237.09
other assets representing bank premises - - - 10,500.00
Real estate owned other tban -bank premises
$18,748,470.27
TOTAL ASSETS - - - - - - - - • - - -LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
$5,282,982.32
and-corporations - - - - - - - - - - - Time and savings deposits of individuals, ·
partnerships, and corporations - - - - - - - • - - - - - 9,523,556.77
Deposits of United States Government - - - - - - - - - - - 183,147.68
. Deposits of States and political subdivisions - - - - - - - - - · - 960,662.09
Certified and officers' checks, etc. ·- - - - - - - - - - - 249,049.55
TOTAL DEPOSITS - - - - - - - - - $16,199,398.41
(a ) Total de!TUlnd deposits - - - - - - $ 6,675,841.64
(b) Total time and savings deposits - • - - - $ 9,5~,556 .77
Other liabilities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ·- - - - 803,099.42
TOTAL LJABIUTIES - - - - - - - - - - - ·- - - - $17,002,497.8.1
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans ·
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $108,024.74
TOTAL RESERVES ON WANS AND SECURITIES • - • • • $108,024.74
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
- - $1 ,637,947.70
Equity capital-total - - - • • • •
I 00,000.00
Common Stock-total par value - - - - No. shares authorized 1,000
· No. shares outstanding 1,000
- - - : 1,100,000,00
Surplus - -. - - - - • • , . . •
• • • .. • •
- - - 437,947.70
Undivided profits - - - - - - 1,637,947,70
TOTAL CA.PITAL ACCOUNTS
TOTAL i.JABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND .
$18,748,470.27
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS • • MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar days
$15,549,119.00
ending with call date - - - - - - - - - •
Average of totalioans for tlie 15caleridar days
$ 9.939,657.84
ending with cali date - - - - - - - , -

....

.

!

.DART SWINGER •.

FACT 1: A DART SWINGER WITH AN AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION COT
.

·

23.6 MILES-PER-GALLON IN OPEN ROAD DRIVING.
In the USAC"Miles-Per-Gallo n Showdown,'' the open road·phase of testing cowed a 972-mile dist ance
at an average speed. of 53 mph using nonproJessional drivers. .

\

'

·

\'lhen you buy a.Oart Swinger h~rdtop or Dart Custom four-door sedan optionally equjpped with power
•teermg, vmyl roof, AM radio, light package, whitewall tires, deluxe wheel covers, left remote
co.ntrol mtrror, _
deluKe. bumper guards, ~hree 7spe-ed Wipers with electric washerS, day/night inside
m~rror , _delu~e msulahon package, and special exteriormouldings,'ypur Dodge Dealer can offer you lhe
automattc transmiSSion tree (because Dodge doesn't charge him lor it).
·
·

.FACT 3: DART SWINGER CARRIES UP TO SIX PEOPLE•

--

.TARGET AT

. I, Marlin G. Kerns, Executive Vice President, of·the above-Oarned bank do
hereby declare that this report of condition is true and correct to the best of my
knowledge and belief.
. MarUn G. Ke1'118, Executive VIce Preoldeut

·E:

•

FACT 2: AND YOU CAN GET THE AUTOMAtiC TRANSMISSION FR££•

'

· We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of thl. report of condition· and declare that It has been examined by us and to the best of our
knowleclj!e and belief Is true and correct.
·
Emeot E .. NuU
Russell D. Wood .,... Directors
John
Halliday

-

Dodge~
AUTHORIZED DEALER/i-

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE .INC.
50 STATE STREET

GALLIPOUS, OHIO

�•
•

11-Tho Sunday Times-Sentinei,Sunday, July 14, !974
11- ':'bellundavTimoi-Sentlntl, Sunday,JII)y 14,1174

LYTHAM

ST.

ANNES, hts Johannesburg ranch
virtually. wrapped up th~
$120.000 championship with.;.
million
dollar . winners , e~le at the lll6-yard PIIT s
satLrday '""?his eighth major stxth. Havmg bogeyed the two
:"'ptonohtp when he look Ute p~eviOUJ ~oles to offset a
lim !ish Open TiUe for the third btrdle.birdie start, this was a
f e with a one'l.lllder-par 70 tremendous psychological
blow to hi11 rivals and liited hi&gt;
or • 12-hole lola~ oi 282.
Player, the retgmng U. S. own morale.
:•t..rs champion, was the
Player reached the green in
Y man to flntsh under par two and left himself a simple
and led lhe 103rd chlm!ptonshtp lour-footer which he gladly
throughout tls 72 holes. He acce pted. To rub it in, he then
birdied the seventh and turned
earn ed a check of $13,200.
8 riton Peter Oosterhws who in 32
partn ed PI
f
h '/).h ~r
_ayer or t e ftnal
With cballengets Nicklaus,
3 _ o ea, finlShC\1 seco~d wtth a Green and Oosterhuis turning
;1_286d while Players great tn 3-4s tt was virtually all over
nen
and riyal, Jack but the shouting because Royal
Ntcklaus, was thtrd , 71-287. Lytham's treacherous back
rub~ Green, 71 - 288, was mne~ontinuedtositupandbite
0~
h
b dr
deaptte a lack of wind and
t r~ay, w en e opped brilliant sunshine for the final
our ols to par BJ1d saw his round .
five stroke lead cut to three,
The final day gaUery of
Player played defen sively by 17,455, which brought the total
httting iron s off the. tee. attendance to 90 625 gave
' '
saturday he decided to defend
hi11 lead by attack and he did it
superbly until faltering on the
Ia•! four holes with the
championship already won.
The 37-yea r-&lt;~ld South
PITTSBURGH (UP!) African, who 'breeds horses at Johnn Y Ben ch and Tony Perez
England (UPI )- Gary Player
of South Alrlca, one of golf's

·.i

Player dressed in hh 75 - 293 to be 12 strokes of! the
rustom:ry black a slallding pace, mad&lt; four.
ovation when he. reaehed Ute
Nicklaus, with 14 major tiUes
18th green. He smiled, doffed 111der his belt, spoke for the
his cap, but showed no real other players, when he said
emotion until h1s final putt "Gary played a heck of a round
of golf today." dropped.
Oosterhuis said he bad
Before the Una! round
started. Player's rivals said planned to attark on !.he front
they would have to attack him nine , "but how do you attack
over Royal Lylham's Iront nine him when he shoots a 32?"
because the backside was too
Player . 1•lslbly excited
tough.
despite his seven previous
But as much as the others major championships, said,
attacked Player refused to " This U&gt;urnamen t seemed lik,e
· an ·'tnch. On the back nine the· longest I've ever played.
yteld
it was as it had been the three It's agony to lead for all four
days in a major championship.
previous days: trouble~
Nic klaus , who 'd stayed Nobody wants to be kn own as a
reasonably close, missed a siJ&lt;- 'choker. The guy wlio led and
foot birdie putt at No. 13 and Josl.'
I made up my mind to attack
then made three stra ight
bogeys, his concentration in and just kept the baU in play."
_Player also flir-ted with
tatters. Green also made three disaster at !.he 17th when hlS
bogeys, as did Player himself, drive landed in taU grass near
while defending champion Tom the green. " I practically had to
Weiskopf, who finished with a go down on my hands and

out . U was a very gOOd five."
In •ddi lion 10 his three
British titles, Pi'ayer bas one U.
S. Open victory ( 1965), two
PGA 's (196:! and '72), and two
Masters ('61 and this year ).
Last year he became the fifth
ma,n to win more than one
miUion dollars on Ute !()ur
while he already has banked
$99,188 this year in his brief U.
S. appearance. In addition to
the Masters, he won the
Thomas 'Memphis Classic.
Nicklaus, with U major
champions, Bobby Jones, 13,
Walter Hagen, 11, and
Ben Hogan, nine, lead him in
major championship victories
but he ill ahead or' Arnold
Palmer, Sam Snead and other
outstanding Americans.
Player's four stroke victory
was the biggest since the late
Tony Lexa's five stroke margin
over Nicklaus at St. Andrews in
1964.

Announcement

The Meigs Inn
POMEROY, OHIO

Will Be Closed July 20
At 2 pm
For Privat~ Wedding l'arty
Wi II Re•Open Monday
At II a.m. As Usual.

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RKLUUO
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QUANTITY PURCHASING AND
· OUI(IC TURNOVER MAKES THIS
. REPEAT OFFER POSSIBLE! BETrER HURRYI

KIRKWOOd

60'x 12'

HDM•B

2 Bedroom

• dlvi•ioft of lfEDMAN lndurtrlea. Inc.

2 BEDROOM &amp; FRONT LIVING .ROOM - FRONT
KITCHEN - HOUSE TYPE DOORS-&amp; WINDOWS .
-: BAY WINDO\'# - U.L. CERTIFICATION - YEAR
WARRANTY -COMPLETELY FURNISifED - FREE ·
DELIVERY &amp; SETUP - ALL THE FINE KIRKWOOD
~TURES AT ASPECIAL PRICE •.
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(3) FRONT UVING ROOMS
(2) FRONT KITatENS
STARTING FROM

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·
sacrifice.
RicJi Hebner's double and
singles by Reuss Rennie
Stennett and Gene ciines gave
the Pirates two runs in their
half of the third and Pittsburgh
tied It in the fourth on Mario
Mendoza's two-run triple after
a paif of walks.
Ril;e's single , a walk,
Bench 's run-scoring single and
Perez' sacrific.e tty gave Ute
Reds two more in the fifth and
they made it 7-4 in the sixth on
Merv Rettenmund's single
after a walk and a sacrifice.
Bench's double and singles
by Perez, George Foster and
Borbon gave the Reds another
pair in the seventh.

FRESH FRYING

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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BREWERS WIN
MILYYAUKEE (UPI) _ Jim
Colborn, wjth las.! out re~ef
help from Torn Murph
scattered eight hits and ~·
Garcia drove In two runs to
lead the Milwaukee Brewers to .
a $.2 win over Ute Texas
Ranger~ Saturday afternoon 1n
a nationally televised gliDe.
The wln ''"" the Brewers'
•nh in Uteir laot ellht glmeti.

"

For Middleport, Britt Dodson
ruined Rifne's attempt for a
no:hitter in the sixth with a
single, before Paul Hatfield
and Joe Watkins each singled
in the

~venth .

Ron Ca5\'i started for Mid-

Bankers, Meigs Inn
Mark V cage winners
POMEROY - In swnmer
basketball action at the
High ,
Pomeroy
Junior
Pomeroy National Bank
defeated the Paily Sentinel, 7641, Meigs Inn topped Citizens
National Bank, 53-47 and Mark
V edged Luigi's, 61-00.
In the first g 0 me, the
bankers were led by Steve
Walburn and· Steve Dunfee
with 21 and 20 points respectively. The losers were led by
Julius Blanks with 17 points
and Tom Walters with 14.

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Leading rebolmder was Danny

Gallipolis' 'steve Blowers
finished lo a five-way tic for
37th place In the 1974 Ohio
Men's Amateur Golf tou ....
nameot Friday. Blowers had
rounds of 80, 7%, 78 and 83 for
a 313 total, 18 strokes behind
cha mplon Kim Heisler, of
Auror·a.
coach of the Cleveland Browns
and now a talent scout Ior the
football team.
Kim, 21, gave up football after high school, but llBtens to his
'father's words of wisdom in his
chosen sport - golf.
"Concentrate on making aU

putts under 10 feet," Fritz ad·

held going into the final round,
vised hilt son before Kim enter- shot a 79 and finished fourth
ed the Mens Ohio Amateur with a 297.
Golf Championship, " and
Dave Hrusovsky of Warren
you'll win the tourney."
was fifth with a 300, Denny
Kim heeded the advice and · Spencer o! Toledo was sixth
won .
with 301, and Lalu Sabotin of
"Every lime I had a short Warren arid Ralph Ballenger of
putt I could hear .my (ather's Columbus tied for !!"Venth with
words," said K!m. "1 think I scores of 302.
only missed three putts under
Tied for ninth place with 303s
10 fe_et !.he whole tournament." were Joe Harper of C&lt;Jiwnbus
The young Heisler fired a 73 and Ludwig Schenck of Mansin Friday's closing round over field, the 1972 champion.
"
the difficult par 71 south course
Tbe tournameni's early leadof the National Cash Register ers had bad finishes.
(NCR) Country Club to take
Howard Hendershott of Hudthe trophy.
son, who led at the halfway
Heisler's 72 hole U&gt;tal of 295 mark, finished in a tle for 25th
was one better than second place with a 308 score.
place finishers GleM Apple of
First round leader John
Olmsted FaUs and 19-year-&lt;&gt;ld Turner of Mlddlelown fared
Jim Decker of Fremont.
even worse, -finishing in a tie_
Lost Lead
for 54th place with a 319.
Ed Gowan of Olmsted Falls
The four-&lt;lay tourney atblew a three-stroke lead he tracted a field of 229 golfers

Dodson with 17.
In
the
second
game,
the
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Meigs Inn came Irom behind
•
with the help of Bill Vaughan's
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16 points. H was followed
closely by Dean Schorck and
~
Doxie Walters with 14 and 13
r
points respectively.
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Citizen's Dennis Eichinger
"
was the game's high scorer,
followed 1&gt;Y Jim Amsbary with
••
CHESHIRE - S. Lambert the firs t inning. The lndians
10 points. Eichinger was the
•• •
tripled
leadin&amp; off the bottom took a 5·1 lead in the third only
leading rebounder · with 22
caroms, while Walters ali.d of the seventh inning and to see Rutland bounce back
l•
Vaughan had 18 each for the scored on a fielder 's choice with one in the third -and three
winners . In the final game, giving Rutland's Dodgers a in the fourth.
The Dodgers jwnped ahead
'·
Ron Ferguson ahd Dave Booth hard-earned 8-7 victory over
each fired in 19 points, while the Gallipolis Indians here in the Iifth but Gallipolis tied it
m
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Lonnie Coats added 18. For the Friday night in the best of up with two runs in the sixth.
R. Mowery, Lambert, and T.
losers, Chip Brauer had 16 and three games of the Kyger
Creek Little League Tour- Eads led the Rutland attack.
Mitrh Meadows had 13.
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S. Willer, M. Allison, J .
Randy Crawford and Steve nament,
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ln _the see-saw conte st , Cameron had hilS for the In •
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GALLIPOLIS - Miss Jackie Price had 12 points apiece. Gallipolis led 2-1 at the end of dians.
;'
summer Leading rebounder in the game
Knight,
gi rls
recreation direc tor, Saturday was Chip Brauer. Ferguson,
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announ ced the pairings for thjs · Ron Hill and Booth each had 13
week' s beginning do ub les reboW1ds for the winners.
tennis ladder tournament.
The tournament will begin
CINCINNATI (UP!)
International
lead. at the end of eight holes,
L
ea
gue
Standings
Sa~dy
Jones,
a
math
teacher
in
Monday, and 'un throu gh
but Mrs, Oldhlml, a ·former
By United Pr ess International
the Cincinnati school system, Olympic diScus thrower, closed
Wednesda y, Aug. 7.
North
w . 1. pet . g.b . captured the Ohio State the gap to within two by Ute
According to Miss Knight, Rochester
49 30 .620
Women's Amateur Golf lith.
doubles teams are Bob Sy ra cuse
49 34 .590 2
35
49
.417
16112
To
le
do
Tournament
Friday after
Hwrison and Bev Rusk ; Anita
But Mrs. Oldham chipped
JO 50 .375 191;2
Pawtucket
having been a ruiinerup in two over the green at the 12th, and
Tope and Nancy James; Jud y
South
w. I. pet . g .b. of the last three years.
M3rkham and Anne Fischer ; Memphis
Miss Jones, daughter of pro
48 32 .600
Miss Jones, 38, defeated an- golfer Morgan Jones, coasted
Darlene Barnes and Donna Ri ch mond
47 34 .580 J lh
38 42 .475 10
,,•• Edwards; Donna Fisher and Charleston
other two-time ninnerup Mrs . in to victory.- _
Ti dewater
27 '52 .342 201 12
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Ned Oldham of Cuyahoga Fails
charlotte Rankin ; Kim Betz
Miss Jones advanced to the
Fr iday' s Results
4 and 3 in the match play finale finailt with a 2 and· I win over
Char leston 2 Richmond 1
,.
and Diana Canterbury, and Memphis
4 Tidewater 3, 12 inn.
at the Hyde Park Country Club. Mrs. Robert DeGroff of CincinDee · James on and Rachel Roches t er 2 Toledo 1
~
Pawtuck{!
l
5
Sy
ra
cuse
1
Miss Jones took a five:hole nati in the semi-finals while
Pullins.
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Here are the tournament's
rules:
•
(llarterNo.l36 .
National Bank Region No.4
Call No, 490
'·,;
A team may ch'i-31 1enge orie or
REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING
two positions above their own .
~
• · A team rri ust challenge af
DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES, OF THE
~ ·~
least once ev.e ry se ven day s or
•,
be dropped to the bottom

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Golf title

PENNYFARI QUALITY
U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED Family Pak 3-lbs. or More

OUND -BEEF.

FRESH

...

from around !.he state, the
largest entry list in the 68 year

· "I double bogeyed the first
hole and tho ninth hole," here.
history of !.he event.
called. "8Qt th~t second double
Hei111er, who hopes to be- bogey may have helped more
come a professional golfer, is than hurl. I sot furious with
making quite a name for him- myself and knew I'd have to
self in Ohio amateur circles, concentraie If I was going to
In 1911 he won !.he state high come back,''
l!Chool golf tiUe and led his
Helltler played sensational
Aurora High School team- golf the final nine holes,
mates to . the team chamOn Ute 15th hole, for instance,
pionship.
his tee shol fell just two feet
Third Try
short of the pin. He tapped illn
This ·was the sandy haired for a two on tbe 23Z.yard hole.
youth's third crack at the state
He got into trouble on the
amateur title , He made !.he cut 17th, hilling his teesitot Into the
in 1970 and 1971, but finished trees. A daring recovery shot
far down the list. He passed up cleared a three--foot gap betthe tourney the last two years. ween two trees and saved the
Heisler, who will be a senior day .
at Florida State University this
"Every day I pracUce hilling
fall, started Friday four . about 15 or 20 shots on a direct
strokes ·behind leader Gowan line - just as straight as I
and figured he had no chance &lt;&gt;f can."' Heisler said. UIJ.lte prac·
winning when he got off to a lice was really worth it for that
rocky start.
shot today."

COUJ'Ie

.

- l!lte of the 1111!9 PGA' •

tourney·- "the li1oSt demanding coune l've ever played."
Only one sub-par round was
played on Ute layout all weeka 70 by Gowan on Thu.rsday.

Rutland Dodgers, Syracuse and .::JercalledktheNCR~uth

BAXTER SIGNS
. CLEVELAND (UP!) Cleveland Crusaders' General
Manager Jack Vlvlan announced the signing Thursday
of dffenseman Paul Baxter to a
multi-year contract.
" His aggressiveness and
desire to play pro!eaalonal
hockey will be made up for any
lack of pollsh or flnesae "
'
VIvian said of Ute 18-year-&lt;tld
Canadian who was Cleveland'•
first draft pick. Baxter will
report to the Crusaders' trainIng camp at Kent State
University
In
midSeptember.

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. ~ an ees capture
New Haven advance with wins three more wins

Pairings ·
nnnounced
for tourney

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A~ateur

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G. Shuler was the wmmng
pitcher while G. Harrington
look the loss .
Syracuse, behind the no.hit
pitching of righthander Davis
blasted Middleport's Mets, 16l. In hurling the four inning no. .
hitter, Davis fanned ll of 12
batters.
,
D. Nance and J - Williams
paced the winners with three
and two hits res pectively .
Syracuse plated 12 runs in the

firs t inning enroute to its easy
victory .
New
Have n
pounded
Gallipolis' White Sox, 14-2 in
the other game Friday niRht.
Weaver fired a one-hitter
again~t the White Sox . Phil .
King collected the only
Gallipolis hit, a single .
Leading New Raven's attack
were G. Richards, two singles;
J. Arnold, a double BJld single;
L. Gibbs, ·K. Stewart, and -D .
Roush, all singles. J_ , Wilcox
was charged with the loss.
Monday night, Gallipolis'
Orioles will play Point
Pleasant City Ice and Fuel,
Gallipolis
Yankees will play
Mrs. Oldham dffeated Pat Williams of Akron 5 and 4 in !.he Letart and the Pomeroy Yanks
' will battie Vinton.
·
semi-finals.

Miss Jones Women's champion

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had a single .

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MASON - Wabama High
Football Coach Marcus Rice
announced Saturday . all
prospective .WHS grldders,
gr~,dfs 7-IZ, a:re to report at
tbe g)'maaolum betweeD the
hount of 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., .
July 15 tbrolll!b July It to
pick tip plt)'lllcat'!ormo. '
Also; all boys IDiereated 1n
being managers are to
· conta&lt;t Casch Rlo!e.

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

Racine concluded its season
with a 4""·1 record .

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Dailey

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EN SALE!

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Yankees won three games last
week to up their mark to 9-0
defeating the Pomeroy Giants:
!l-2, ljarrisonville, 8-2 and the
Pomeroy Pirates, 13-2.
In the first victory, Tom ,
Owens was the winning pitcher
giving up just two bits, both by
Chris Woods.
For the Yanks, Steve Little
had a double and pair of
singles, Chris Taylor bad a pair
of triples, Mark Norton had
triple and a single, Tim Roush
bad a pair of singles, Tim Fulk ·
had a pair of doubles, Owens
had a single and SteVie Call
had a double and pair of
singles.
·
Owens again got credit for
the win over HarrisoovUle
giving up six hits, singles by

a

Donohue, Williams, and two
each by Howard and Arnold.
For the Yat&gt;kees, Mike
WhiUatch had a pair of singles,
Stevie Call had a •double and
single, Steve Little had - a
single, as did Tom Owens and
Jim Snider, and Chris Taylor
had a doubl~.
Stevie Call fired a threehitter in the win over the
Pirates. Call struck out 11 and
walked two.
The Pirate hits were a single
by Cliff Kennedy and a pa(r of
triples by Smith.
· For the Yanks, Tim Roush
slammed a home run and a
double, Chris Taylor had a
double and triple, Stevie Call
had a .triple, and singles carne
off the bats of Steve Li!Ue, Tom
Oweos and Jimmy Snider.

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'-"-PT. KID'S
IMITATION

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PEANUT BOnER

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posit ion .
Games pre arranged at the
convenience of all parties;
however, a team must agree on
date an~ tim e on the second
challenge or th e defender mu st

~'

torfelf.

:: .
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One
games
decide
The

~

40-oz:. Jar
2

set, having wOn six
by two games, will
the winner .
winning team must
report the game and score to
Jackie Knight within 24 hours
and before either:.•.1eam may
challeng·e. ·
. A team may enter at any
t1me by add ! n~ a position to the
bottom . Entnes must contiict

:

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KING COLE

DVEGETABLES,
SLICED or WHOLE CARROTS
1-lb. Can
LIMIT6

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Jack le Kn ight (441&gt;-0287) 24

~­

hours befo re beginning t o
chall-enge.
.•
Current standings wi l l .be
available dafly on the board
near -the court s or by calling

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for

446-02S7 .

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1••

ICLES

c

Hermitage Air .Conditioning

Racine 's triumph. striking out
18 batters and walking five ..

DAYTON, Ohio (UPI )- Kim
Heisler is not exacUy followin g
his father's footstepo, but he ;,
following his father's advice,
Kim'sJatheris Fritz Heisler,
for '2:i years the offeoslve line

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B.J.DAILEY

B?STON (UP!) _ Frank saturday as the California
_Robtn$0n knocked in two runs Angels won their second
DAYTON - '! seldom get
and scored three, and Andy . straight game after lllosses in Hassler scattered eight hits a row. clubbing the Boston !led excited about a freshman, but I
am about this one because he
Sox 12-1.
can do it all - run, pass and
punt."
. With this enthushism,
University of Dayton football
coach Ro~ Marciniak an- ·
nounced the signing Friday of
B. J . Dalley, standout quarterback for Chillicothe Unioto
Ma\or Leag-ue Standin!ils .-:.
West
,BY Un ted Press InternatiOnal
w. I. pet. g.b. High School; to a national letter
American League
Los Angeles
60 29 .674
of Intent. ·
· East
Cinclnnat l
52 ·37 .58.4 8
_Bailey is the son of Don and
w. I. pet, g.b. Houston
47 41 .534 121J2
Clevoland
46 38 .54S
Atlanta
47 43 .522 lJ'h Margaret Dailey, former
Boston
47 40 .539
San Fran .
39 50 .438 21
residents of Pomeroy and both
Baltimore
46 39 .541
lf2 San Diego
39 53 .424 22'12 graduates of Pomeroy High
Milwaukee
44, .42 .512 Jlh
Saturday's results :
School.
·
New York
.. 43 .506 4
Cincinnat i 9 PIHsburgh 4
YYest
( Philadelphia at San Franclsco
His grandparents, who
- w. I. pet, g.b. twilight
' reside in Meigs County; are ·
Oakland
. 4S 39 .551
Monireal at San Diego, night
Mr- and Mrs. Everett Dailey of .
Kan5as City
43 42 .506 4
Atlanta at St. Louis, night
Chicago
42 43 .494 5
New York at 'Los AnQeles , Pomeroy and Mrs. Edward
Texas
43 47 .478 61f2 night
Hawley oi Minersville.
·Minnesota
~ 40 48 ;455 9
CfllcaQo at HOuston. n ight
".B. J. (for Byron Jay ) Is the
Californ ia
34 56 .377 151!2
Today's Games :
Saturday's results :
Philadelphia (Scheler 4-11 kind of kid we really needed,"
Californ ia 12 ·Boston 1
and Twitchell 3-21 at San Marcinkak said. "He's the type
Milwaukee 5 l'ex.as 2
Francisco !Halicki 0-0 and
you search and search and
. New York 12 Oakland 6
Bradley 7-9). , 2. 3 p.m .
Detroit at Kansas City, night
Cincinnati (Billingham 9-6 search for . He's a true tt'iple
Baltimore at Chicago, night . and Norman 8-8) at Pittsburgh option quarterback, which is
Tod•y's games ;
·
( Brett 11 -5 and Klson 4-41. 2, the offense w~ nut."
Detroit (Coleman 7-9) at
1:05 p.m.
.
Kansas City (Dol Canton 4-41.
Dailey, 6-2 and 185 -lbs., ran
MOfJtreal (Torrez 8·6 and
2:30p.m.
Blair 3-21 at San Diego for 14 touchdowns and passed
Cleveland CBosinan 1-0J at
ISplllner S-3 and Palmer 1-2),
Minnesota (Albury 4-SJ. 2: 15 2, :.4 p.m.
- for 19 others the past two
p.m .·
Atlanta INiekro S-8) at St seasons in leading Unioto to a
Texii!s {Hargan 7-5 and
Louis (Bare 0-01. 2:15p.m. - 11).5 record. He completed 110.
Brown 7-61 at Milwaukee
New York (Matlack 7-6) at
(Sprague ~- 1 and Slaton 7-lOJ. Los Angeles (Rau 7-5), 4:15 · of 294 passes and punted for a
2, 2 p.m.
32 yard average. He was allp.rn .
Baltimore (Grimsley 11 -7) at
Chicago (Stone 3-31 at slate honorable mention as a
Chicago (Bahnsen 7-11}, t p.m. Houston (Grltlln 10-3). 3:05 · junior and was named to the
. Oakland (Hunter 11 -8 and p.m.
Southeastern Ohio District first
Hamilton 5-2) at New York
(Pagan 1-1 ond McDowell 1-11 ,
team iast fall.
2, 12:30 p.m .
Dailey, who picked Dayton
California , (Lange 3-S) at
SIX IN ROW
Boston (Tiont 12-T) , 2 p.m.
NEW YORK (UPI) - The after narrowing his college
red-hot New York Yankees choices to Ohio University,
Natiopat League
pounded four Oakland pitchers Marshall and Ohio Northern, is
. East
also an excellent baseball
w. I. pet, g,b. for 17 hits, scoring five runs in prospect, batting .3115 while
the fifth inning and si~ In the
· St. Louts
44 42 .512
Phltadetrhla 4.4 42 .512
seventh, to extend their win· playing the shortstop position,
Monfrea ·
1
40 43 . 482 2 12
ning streak to six games
Chicago
37 47 .440 I&gt;
Saturday
with a 12~ victory
Pittsburgh
37 48 ,434 61fz
New York
. 31 48 .435 61/2 over the A's.·

•

dleport and wa• the losing
pitcher. He wasreplaced In the
second by Mark Haggerty .ind
in the fourth by Tim Ebersbach.
J . F . Young led the Racine
attack with a triple and a
single, while Jim Riffie had a
double, Steve Hendricks a pair
of singles and Danny Dudding

••

·Dayton·

BUY NOW!

Men's ·O hio

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Phillles defeated Rutland ·2-1
and Racine dumped the
Middleport A'• 6-3 in Meigs
Count:&lt; Pony League action
l'riday.
Chip Brauer went the
distance Ior the Phillies
allowing just two hits, a •ihgl~
by Wayland and double by
George.
.
For the Phillies, whose
record now stands at 5-4,.
Randy MarshaJI, Rick Taylor
and David Blake each had a
single.
Jim Riffle got the win In

·-•
•,.
-t

Boston, 12-1

-

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•••"
•

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Famil Pak Chicken Parts

Bench paces win
.
comb'tn ed to drive
in seven
.runs saturday as the Cincinnati Reds beat the PittsbLrgh Pirates, 9--4, with Tom
Hall picking up his first victory
in- his frrst start his season .
Hall (1-1), whose last start
":as l~st . July 28, scattered
etgbt h1ts 111 seven innings and
Pedro Borbon' handcuifed the
Pirates the rest of the way.
Bench, who drove in (our
runs, socked a three-run
horner, his 17th of the year, off
losing pitche~ Jerry .Reuss (87) m the ftrst inning after
stngles by Pete Rose and Joe
Morgan .The Reds made it 4.()
in the l.hird on Perez' runscoring single after walk and a

cop Pony wins

knees 10 see the ball, but I got it

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0

Appeals or
com plai nt s
should be _m ade directly' to
Jackie Knight immediat el y .
Courteous play should be
demonstrated at all t imes: An·y
pol nt questioned should be
played over ra ther than
argued .

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,'•

Buttertllllk ·
Bisct11ts • • ,,.,-,

••'

. DIICUn• • . .

. 6··· 83

FOLGER'S

tNIT ANT COffll .

CRYSTALS
10..1.'252
Jer

.,

c

'

...

POMEROY - The Meigs
Babe Ruth team upJied its
record to 24-7 with a
doubleheader split with Mason
County.
Mason took the first game of
the twlnb.ill, Ul-2: before Meigs
took the nightcap 4-,'l.
Barry Marshall slammed the
game-winning hit, a double, in
!.he second contest,
Sunday the Babe Ruth squad
plays Coolville at 2 p.m. and 4
p.m. Tbe coach adds, " Thi$·
team will play anybody who
wants games by calling 992'
6794 or 992-3059."

Cleveland
-401 OJ1 OOo- 9 15 0
Mlnnesot• . 100 300 PlO- 5 14 o
J . Perry , · WI\C.O)I (8) end

· Ouncen ;. Corbin, · Butler { I L
Hand s
(3), Burgme!er (5),
• Campbell (8 1 and RoQf. WP -J .
l
Perry (9 -71 . LP -Cor b ln 15·3) .
•HRs -Hlsle (Uth1 , Sp ikes (12th).

.•

_..;..._

'
:
-.
•

••nlmort
ChlcttO

ooo ooo no- l 12 2

JOO 000 OOl- 4 8 0
AltKfH'Ider ( 4 -5) and Wil ·
llem'1 ; Kaet . Gossage .(81 11nd
~trrmann . WP -Gosuge (1 ll.
HAs -Fuller !Jih). Grlch (lo41t1 J.

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK

of Galllpolls, Ohio in tbe State of Ohio, at tbe close of business on June 30, 1974
published ln response to Call made by Comptroller of the Currency, uader Tille ·
IZ,
United States Code, Section 161.
. .
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .. - - - - $ 1,894,998.95
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - - - - . - - - - - • - - - 2,244,1100.34
Obligations of States and political subdivisions - - - - - - - - 3,262,633.31
Other securities - - - - - - - - ·- - - - - - - - - - - - 110, 7SO.OO
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
1,100,000.00
- - - - under agreements to resell • - - - - 9,961,544.58
Loans - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - • - - - •
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
- 163,237.09
other assets representing bank premises - - - 10,500.00
Real estate owned other tban -bank premises
$18,748,470.27
TOTAL ASSETS - - - - - - - - • - - -LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
$5,282,982.32
and-corporations - - - - - - - - - - - Time and savings deposits of individuals, ·
partnerships, and corporations - - - - - - - • - - - - - 9,523,556.77
Deposits of United States Government - - - - - - - - - - - 183,147.68
. Deposits of States and political subdivisions - - - - - - - - - · - 960,662.09
Certified and officers' checks, etc. ·- - - - - - - - - - - 249,049.55
TOTAL DEPOSITS - - - - - - - - - $16,199,398.41
(a ) Total de!TUlnd deposits - - - - - - $ 6,675,841.64
(b) Total time and savings deposits - • - - - $ 9,5~,556 .77
Other liabilities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ·- - - - 803,099.42
TOTAL LJABIUTIES - - - - - - - - - - - ·- - - - $17,002,497.8.1
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans ·
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $108,024.74
TOTAL RESERVES ON WANS AND SECURITIES • - • • • $108,024.74
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
- - $1 ,637,947.70
Equity capital-total - - - • • • •
I 00,000.00
Common Stock-total par value - - - - No. shares authorized 1,000
· No. shares outstanding 1,000
- - - : 1,100,000,00
Surplus - -. - - - - • • , . . •
• • • .. • •
- - - 437,947.70
Undivided profits - - - - - - 1,637,947,70
TOTAL CA.PITAL ACCOUNTS
TOTAL i.JABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND .
$18,748,470.27
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS • • MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar days
$15,549,119.00
ending with call date - - - - - - - - - •
Average of totalioans for tlie 15caleridar days
$ 9.939,657.84
ending with cali date - - - - - - - , -

....

.

!

.DART SWINGER •.

FACT 1: A DART SWINGER WITH AN AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION COT
.

·

23.6 MILES-PER-GALLON IN OPEN ROAD DRIVING.
In the USAC"Miles-Per-Gallo n Showdown,'' the open road·phase of testing cowed a 972-mile dist ance
at an average speed. of 53 mph using nonproJessional drivers. .

\

'

·

\'lhen you buy a.Oart Swinger h~rdtop or Dart Custom four-door sedan optionally equjpped with power
•teermg, vmyl roof, AM radio, light package, whitewall tires, deluxe wheel covers, left remote
co.ntrol mtrror, _
deluKe. bumper guards, ~hree 7spe-ed Wipers with electric washerS, day/night inside
m~rror , _delu~e msulahon package, and special exteriormouldings,'ypur Dodge Dealer can offer you lhe
automattc transmiSSion tree (because Dodge doesn't charge him lor it).
·
·

.FACT 3: DART SWINGER CARRIES UP TO SIX PEOPLE•

--

.TARGET AT

. I, Marlin G. Kerns, Executive Vice President, of·the above-Oarned bank do
hereby declare that this report of condition is true and correct to the best of my
knowledge and belief.
. MarUn G. Ke1'118, Executive VIce Preoldeut

·E:

•

FACT 2: AND YOU CAN GET THE AUTOMAtiC TRANSMISSION FR££•

'

· We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of thl. report of condition· and declare that It has been examined by us and to the best of our
knowleclj!e and belief Is true and correct.
·
Emeot E .. NuU
Russell D. Wood .,... Directors
John
Halliday

-

Dodge~
AUTHORIZED DEALER/i-

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE .INC.
50 STATE STREET

GALLIPOUS, OHIO

�•

lt · eu a~s

Indians ~in,
regain .first

'

BLOOMINGTON,

I . :JO.JOC.mp CrtJt:tndO

(UP! ) - aevelaild Indlans
pitcher Jim Perry said lila
Friday night victory over the
Mlmeoola Twins made him

OU plans
·special .

workshop

ATIIENS - The certification
of high school coaches is the
topio of a special slllilmer
w6rll5hop being offered.Aug . &amp;.
9 at Ohio University.

Course,

The

which

WTJIN awarded
3-year contract
- -for OSU games
""coL',ft~us (UP!) _ Ohio
,um.D
State University's board of
· trustees Friday approved the
award of a ,180,700 three-year
contract 1ll'ith WTVN-TV ln Col.1110bua to televlae the
ttity' home bask
s
etboU games.
WTVN-TV submitted the
high bid of $180,700 foe the

unlder-

exclusive

'
agreement. WLWC-TV of
Columbus bid $148,370,
The conttact 111'itb WTVN-TV
will take effect 111'ith the 1974-75
1081100 and cootlnues througlt
the 1~77 season.
The, contract Is the first by
OSU for a three-year period f&lt;r
home baBIIethall games, p~e­
viously handled on a one-year

buls.

llTTL~ l~AGU~

is

designed primarily for school
superintendents, principals,
athletic direcl«s and coaches,
will include discussions of the
responsibilities, competencies
and accoun lability of coaches.
The course carries three
quarter hours of credit.
Guest lecturers for the fiveday workshop will beDr. Paul
W. Hailey, direck&gt;r of teacher
education and certification for
the Ohio Department of
Education; Dr. Harold A.
Meyer, commissioner of the
Ohio High School Athletic
Association; ·and Robert L.
Holland, assistant director of
elementary and secondary
education for Ohio.
Enrollment information can
)le obtained from William G.
Stewart, Grove center, Ohio
University, Athens, Ohio,
45701'.

threevear

Gallipolis
.Summer League

laSt

WTVN radio
fall began
broadcasting the school's foot.
ball games via a newly establillled radlo network under a
lhree-year contract awarded
fa- $230,400.

TEAM
Tigers

.W L P OP
8 o lOa 32

Athletics

Orioles
Indians

2 7 99 105

Cubs

'

Amateur track
meet set July 20
.

RIO GRANDE An
amateur track meet will be
held at Evans lield, Rio Grande
eo11e~e, Saturday, July 20,
starting at 12 noon.
Events range from the 100
yard dash to the three mile run
111'ith the board jump as the only
lield event.
· ..
AD_ age graups, and girls'.
divisions will be honored.
Entry fee is $2 for one event
ancl25cenlj! for each additional

event.

Entry blanks should be
mailed to Ed Sayre, 8or 151,
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674 or Bob
t.WIOII, Rlral Route, Oak Hill
Ohio 45658.
'

2 7 68 160

~.::t~~~s

;~

TOTAlS

~ ;~

36 36 Ill Btl
Last Week's ResultS:

&amp;0!~s1le~~~:?:s,•

White Sox 14 Indians 6
Athletics 13 Cubs 7
White Sox 11 Orioles 8
Red Sox.Senators. ppnd.
Tigers 20 Athletlcs 4
Yanke~s 14 Orioles 11 (7)
This Week's Games'

So~nday - Orioles vs. Wh ite
Tuesday - Yankees vs
Tigers, 6; Athletics vs . O..ioles:

8: 15.
Wodnesday - Athletics vs.
White Sox, 6; Senators vs.
Yankees, B: 15.
Thursday .._ Senators vs.
Cubs. 6 ~ Indians vs. Red Sox.
8: 15.
Friday - Tigers "VS. Cubs, 6.
PONY LEAGUE
TEAM
W
L R OR
Braves
8 0 101 18
Reds
6 3 93 47
Ptlillies

.t 6 77 74

Giants
Dodgers
TOTALS

·3 5 15 98
1 8 24 139

22 22 376 376

Last Week's Resutts :
Phlll ies 16 Giants 11

Phlllles 21 Dodgers 5
. Dodgers-Giants, ppnd.
Braves-Giants, ppnd.
Phlllles 6 Reds 3
Braves 13 Giants 3
This Week's Games:
Monday - Dodgers vs .
Braves
.
Tuesday - Giants vs. Reds
Wednesday - Phillies vs.
Braves
Thursday - Dodgers vs.
Reds
Friday- Phillies vs. Giants
PEE WEE LEAGUE
Monday - Falcons vs. J•
Hawks'
.
Tuesday &amp; Angels vs. Cards
Wednesday - J-Hawks vs.
Eagles
. .
Ca~~~rsday - Rob ins vs .
Friday .,.- Robins vs. Angels
Braves 5 Reds 0

t
l

•·5 Swim ~IISOnt
7-1: 30()gon Swim

12: 30·1: 30 Open Swim

July 18 7-1: JO Open Recreotlon
a: J0-10 camp Cre-scendo

7-8:30 Open Swim
8:30-10 Camp Crescenclo
12:J0-1: 30 Open Swim

1: 30-J:JOCamp Crncendo
~ - 5 Swim Lessons
7-1:30 Open Swim

July 20 CLOSED
.
July 21 t: 30-3: 30 Open Recreation
7-8: lOOpen Recreation
8: 30-10 Camp Crescendo

JULY 16th

1: J0-3: JO Camp Crfl&lt;tnclo
4-5 $wlm Lessons

Juty 19 ,. ..a: 30 (»en Recreation

CLOSED
1:30-3:30 Open Swim

7-8: 30 Open Swim
8: 30-10 Camp Crescendo

'

9:00 P.M.

THE I'ORTLAND Pee w.. Squad ended 1111 ..,..0., with a
4-4 record. Team memben are flrst row, 1-r, Johnny Pickens,
Bruce Wolfe, Troy Ward, Tom Greathouse, Ray Lawrence;

second row, Danny Pickens, Wade Connolly, BrUce Joltnsoo,
. Dave Talbott, Kevin Teaford, Davld Bryant, Steven Teaford;
back row, Gene Ward, coach. Absent was Ed Icenhower. -

I

Gullett's forkball
opens up career

B-O NNIE
and
CLYDE'S

Reds sweep pair from Pirates
P!TISBURGH (UP!) rtgltthander, after he scattered
Tommy Carroll nptched lila eight hits ln eight innings to
second win Friday since being bring the Cincinnati Reds a 4-3
called up from the min&lt;rs II victory over the Pittsburgh
days ago, but Ibis time he was Pirates in the second game for
pitching in his home town a sweep of their doubleheader.
before 30,569 fans.
Cincinnati won the first
" It made me feel better " game 7-o behind the five-hit
' pitching of Don Gullet!.
said Carroll. a 21-vear-old

B raves,

"I think I concentrated more
because of lt," Carroll said. "I
wanted to do well ln front of my
family." His family at the
game consisted of his parents,
three brothers and three
sisters.
"Maybe it hasn't hit me yet
and thst's why I don't appear

k
J. an ees remazn
unbeaten in league play
V

o

GALLIPOLIS
The the year following Friday's credited with the win. Bucky
Gallipolis Pony League Braves
setback. Brent Joh,nson was ., Qualls was charged with Ute
lied
beate f
·
ro
on un
n ollowmg a
loss.
13-3 city league victory over
. Brett Russell had a iriple for
the Giants on Memorial Field
the
Giants. Brent Johnson ·had
Friday evening.
three hils and Dallas Love two
The Braves. nOW 8-0 on the .
for
the winners. The Braves
year, are scheduled to play in
wrapped it up 111'ith seven runs
an out-&lt;&gt;1-league !Qurnament
CENTENARY- The annual in the third inning.
·
this week.
Ohio Valley Pee Wee League
In Uttle League play Friday,
. The Giants dropped to 3-li on
Tournament wiU be held at the defending champion
Green Elementary School with Yankees were forced into the
initial garoes beginning season's first extra~hming
PBA LEADER. UP .
Tuesday, July 23.
··
game before downing the
AKRoN, Ohlo (UP!) -Earl
Winners will advance and Orioles 14-11 for their sevenUt
Anthony of Tacoma, Wash., play on Thursday, July 25 in straight victory against no
boosted his leading total in tbe the semifinals.
setbacks. The Orioles dropped
money earnlnga list of the
The cltamplotiship game will to ¥4 on the year.
Professional Bowlers Asoocia- be held on Saturday, July 'n.
Chuck Sanders tw o-run
l!on to $64,72:i 111'itb his $5,000 Here are the pairings :
double in the top of the seventh
victory this week ln the Fresno
Centerv~e
vs.
Vinton
5:15
.
rung proved to be the game's
Open.
p.m., fteld m back.
big blow.
In second place Is Larry
Armstrong
was
. Bidwell vs. Green, 5:,15, field · . John
Laub of Santa Rosa, CaUl.,
credited with the win in relief.
whose $1,700 In Fresno gave m front.
Salem
vs.
Addaville,
7
p.m..
Marc Hardway, also in relief,
him $55,810for the year. Jlm
was charged with the. loss.
Stefanich of JoUet, ill., is third field m back.
'Rio
Grande
vs
.
.
Cheshire,
7
For the Yankees Craig
111'ith $50,8110.
p.m., field m front. (Visiting Mason had three hlts. Ted
team h~ted ftrst) .
.
Adams had two singles and a
TURNS PROFESSIONAL
·.,. Startmg ltme for cham- triple. Chuck Sanders had a
RICHMOND, Vt. (UP!) pio_nsbip game wiU be after the single and double.
Three years ago Bob Cochran fims~ of the consolation game,
Marc Hardway had a single
said it would never happen.
slated at 5_ p.m. .
and triple, Matt Willis a single
. Friday, tbe 22-year old top
Ftr.st ntgM w~nners will and double, Bobby Hood two
ranked skier announced his rematn on tbetr fteld 'of play singles and Barry Plymale a
plans to become a pmfesaional. and begm play at 6 p.m.
triple for the Orioles. ·
Cochran ~id he signed a
contract with the Ollit Ski Co.,
of Middletown, Conn., and will
.
start trainq for tbe jro circuit ln Cltlle next mooth.

Pee Weemeet
starts July 23

•

'

CINCINNATI (UP!) - The forkball. They teU me R&lt;rlc
notch between the first and !larriBon (of the Atlanta Brasecond fingers on Don Gullett's ves) may have come up 111'ith
left hand Is much larger than ooe. He's got a nt:W pitch that's
doing some strange things."
yours &lt;r mine.
Gullett's forkbaU does some
Try to slip a baseball into
'~strange
things.''
tha.t notch on yoor )limd so the
When the plt;:h nears tbe
excited. Pitching takes a lot out · ball !its snugly against the
plate,
It drops --80 quickly and
of you emotionally. But I'm webbed skin. You probably
so sharply that It's been
really happy I did well."
can't do it.
likened
to a ball rolling off the
Now watch Cincinnati Reds
Carroll struck out six and
edge of a table.
walked one before giving way pitcher Don Gullett.
After Larry Bowa of the
to Clay Carroll in the ninth.
He 1Urna thooe two fingers
Another
rookie,
Larry into a big pair of scissors and Philadelphia Phils struck out
Demery, suffered the loss, 111a wedges the baseball deep Into by s111'inging far above a Gullett
fourth 111'ithout a vlctory.
the notch, flush against the forkball, be muttered to
Gullett, ''That'!Wj naatypiU:b."
Johnny Bench scored !be run 111'ide swath of skin there.
"That's the kinM""stulf !like
that broke a 3-3 tie in the fifth
Gullett can't begin to do the
to
hear," grins the 23-yearold .
011 one of three errors in the same thing with his right hand,
Gullett,
wbo says he throws the
game by Pittsburgh shortstop but hours and hours of wedging
Mario Mendoza.
a"hasehall between the fingers forkball ooce every five &lt;r six
The Pirates runs came in the of his left hand --pitching hand pitches.
"I use lt u my change of
third when Richie ·Hebner --bas opened that notch and
pace
. I was getting a
singled and scored on AI also opened up his career.
Oliver'~ double and after W"tllie
It has giv..n him a much reputation around !he league
Stargell was walked In- talked about but U!Ue under· as only being a fastball pitcher.
tentionally, Richie Zisk and stood pitch 111'ith which · to I still rely on my fastball, but
. Manny Sanguillen each singled frustrate batters -the fork- the forkhall has made me a
much better fastball pitcher
for two more runs.
ball.
Gullett struck out nine in the
Gullett Is tbe only member of because hitters can't always
firs!. game to beat the Pirates the Reds staff who throws the expect it now."
for tbe first time.
pitch and one of the few in aU of
"I will say it was easier • baseball.
Gullett relishes striking out
Gaylord Perry of tbe Cleve- hitters on the forkball .
pitching to that lineup 111'ithout
(Willie) Stargell and (AI) landlndlanshasbrightenedhis
"U it looks like It's coming .ln
Oliver and some of their otber career 111'i.th the pitch. Veteran thigh high, It drops to below tbe
81JllS," Gullett said. "I wasn't St. Louis Cardinals reliever -knees,'' he says. ''lfit'~ ccmingaware that I hadn't beaten the Orlando Pena knows how to in knee high, tbe catcher has to
Pirates before, but I've pitched throw it.
dig it out of the dirtc
well against them, especially
"But I don't know too many
" It doesn't dance around
in relief during my first year more who· can throw it," says coming to the plate. It has to
up."
Gullett. "You've got to develop look like a fastball. -But then it
:::::=:i:i:i:ii::!:i:(::.~;;::.-:.~:-»-x:-~::::m::::- the notcb between your fingers sinks all at once.
GALLIPOLIS The to bold ltflnn II" else you can't
"Last time out against the
sec~od five-day GaiiJpoUs control it.
Dodgers I struck out Steve
"Whene""r someone comes Yeager Dn· three straight forkDay Basketball Camp. wUI
begin here Monday morolog up 111'ith a fumy type of pitch balls and then got Steve
according to GAHS Coach against us, our .bitters suspect Garvey and Ron Cey in !be
be may be trying to develop a same inning, on the pitch."
Jim Osborne.
As of Saturday, · approximately 22 area fourth,
fifth, sixth and seventh ·
graders bad registered for
the session, which runs from
9 a.m. untO I p.m. eacb day.
Osborne said those · who
bave not registered or paid
all their $30 fee should report
to the GAHS, gym early
Monday (8:38a.m.) to take
care of those matters.

"BULLET-SPRAYED"

. J· .

GETAWAY CAR!

and violence _do not pay.

JOSEPH STALIN'S
RUSSIAN $87,000.00
LIMOUSINE
.

WORLD'S SMALLEST
•
HORSE

.

··-.

• Built in 1950 in ·stalingrad,
Russia• Given to China in .1951
as a good wi II gift

touch
'

. ..

\• .

3.

Minn-Gio LATEX

4.

SEMI-GLOSS

.
••
1\

;..-;t'l
....
. ;"-'.,'

ENAMEL

Ti.mes Will ae Appreciated
Fees Must Accompany Entry

•

family and we'll prove that crime

''

f

•

from the record-smas.hing' movie
.
"Bonnie and Clyde". Bring th"e whole

·,

.. ,,

•

See the world-famous car depicted

:!::::::;::::!&amp;;:!:{;:i;::::~S!$i:~~;:::~.w».&amp;«-::·

DON'T MISS IT!

.

.~,

'

the

1.

e Only J9Yz" Tall e Weighs Only 44 lbs.
e Discovered and Imported From South America

Evans Field, Rio Grande, Ohio
Saturday, July 20, 1974
Events Start at 12 Noon

• Sent into Korean War
by China and captured
by the U. S. Army
• Gets 4 miles to a
gallon of gas

.

'

• Given by ·President ·
Sygman Rhee, of
South Korea to
· General Walton
Walker's widow as a
gift from the South
Korean people
\

• The only car of ·its
kind outside the Iron
Curtain
•

• In its original
condition
• All hand-made

'

• Weighs 7,500
pounds

• Bring your
camera

'

."So Small It Can Actually Walk Under a Dogf"

NOTICE
TO
TAXPAYERS
·
Notice is hereby given in compliance with
Section 571.S.J7 of the Ohio Revised. Code. that
the lax returns of· Meigs County, lor the year
1974 have been revised and the valuations
completed and are open lor public inspection
at the office of the County Auditor in the Court
House, Pomeroy, Olio. ·
Complaints against · any . valuation or
assessment, except the valuations fixed and
· assessments made by the Tax Commissioner
· of Ohio, wil.l be heard by the County Board of
Revision , at its office in the Court House,
Pomeroy, Ohio on -or alter A119ust 26, 1974.
Complaints . must be made in writing, on
~ianks furntshed by ltle County Auditor and
flied in his office on or before lhe time limited
for pay":'ent of taxes lor the flrsl half year, or
at any t1me during wtlictl taxes are received
by the County Treasurer, .without penally for
th
e first half year.

j

."

'

GALLON

NEW LOCA.TION
SILVER BRIDGE SHOPPING PLAZA

&lt;
•
• Subdued G.iDS! Finish

A perfect · finish for
kitchens, baths •. , all
. woodwork, walls and
trim where washability is desired. Select
from hundreds of
colors.

6130 PM TIL 8:30 PM

Free Refreshments - Gifts - Catalogs

Lim: COuntry Music By

\
I'

l

',,·

!

!

CARTER &amp; £VANS INC.

. · GRAND PRIZES

. OLIVE ST.
•

•

GAI.UPOUS, OHIO .
- I

.,

ON .· THE PARKING LOT

•'

'

Tex Harrison &amp; The Valley Boys
SPECIAL APPLIANCE BUYS

I

'

••

WEDNESDAy I JULy 17th

·
"WATCH FOR IT" .

.

'•

• Latex Ease ; Water Clean· Up
o Extremely Washable
• For Kitcfians, Baths ; Ali
Walls and Woodwork

GAlliPOLIS, OHIO

DOOR PRIZE

Auditor of
Mllgs County

•

to

..

Name---:::::-cc--:---:::---- - Age
Events Wish to Enter:
---

•

12 Noon

-~---~'~""'"'*"'~=''w··'·'·!&lt;~;&gt;~
J!l
~-..~-.....Yo'h ~.Vt?o."'-"·. ...........
-~---- .

JAMES E. ROUSH
'

TUESDAY ONLY

1: 30-10 Camp Crflcenclo

Amateur Track Meet Entry Blank

2.
.

7 0 114 26
7 2 ll4 70
4 3 84 a~
4 4 83 n

Yankees

White Sox

-

8: 30-10 Camp Crtscendo
. 12: JO.I : 30 Open Swim
1: JO-l : 30 Camp Cret&lt;tnclo

.J uly 11 7-1: 30 Open Recrutton
1: JO.IO Camp Crescendo

~ta 'l'1ll'ina Manager
Frank ~d said aboot PI!IT)',

"I thougltt we were going to get
feel 10 years younger.
him bu.t !ben he started w&lt;rkin'
Nrry won hla ninth game of rtgltt When be's w&lt;rkln' rtgltt,
tbe """""'~ Fl'iilay night .. tbe be throws the in and out which
American League East leading is reliable."
·
lndlans downed the Twins 11-S.
1'1!11')' said be and his brother
The loss broke a five-game Gaylonl have ''made beUevers
winning streak fa- Minnesota. of the people In Cleveland."
"I felt like I did 10 years
Otarlie Spikes drove In three
ago," tbe 37-year-old Pl!rry runs to lead Cle""land's 15-fllt
said.
attack. The Indians drove
Oeveland look a third lming Twins starter Ray Corbin from
&amp;.! lead, but the Twins rallied Ute mound in the first inning by
scoring four runs on five hit..
Larry Hisle hit his 14th
homer of tbe season in tbe .
Minnesota first before Spikes
got his 12th of tbe year 1n tbe
third inning.
The Indians built ' up their
~d· unW Bill Campbell came
into work the final two innings
111'ithout allowing a run . .

SILVER BRIDG
SHOPPING
PLAZA
resents

l2: 30-1: JOOpon~e?~
o:J0-3:30 Camp Crescenco
...5 Swim La10n1
7-1: 30 Otpn Swim
1: 30·10 C•mp Cres&lt;tnc!o

12:30-1:30 O&lt;&gt;on Swim
1: J0-3: )I) Camp Crescenc!o
..S Sw Im LIS"""'
7-1:30 O&lt;&gt;on Swim

Juty 16 7-1: 10 Open Recreation
1:30-l Ocamp Crescenco

to narrow tbe .score tD ~ in 1!&gt;0
f-•JL
, •
....... UIJUlg.

Minn.

-RIO-Gi:iANDiCoLLEGE

~YNECENTER,CHEDU~E

DIIITE - GYMNASIUM
July lS 7-1: :100!1en Recrootlon

•

Tho Swtday Tlmeo . Sentinel, Sunday, July 11, lt7~

'..·

••
••

•

i

'•
'·'

1

1-

"
'

.

.., ,

.,

I

�•

lt · eu a~s

Indians ~in,
regain .first

'

BLOOMINGTON,

I . :JO.JOC.mp CrtJt:tndO

(UP! ) - aevelaild Indlans
pitcher Jim Perry said lila
Friday night victory over the
Mlmeoola Twins made him

OU plans
·special .

workshop

ATIIENS - The certification
of high school coaches is the
topio of a special slllilmer
w6rll5hop being offered.Aug . &amp;.
9 at Ohio University.

Course,

The

which

WTJIN awarded
3-year contract
- -for OSU games
""coL',ft~us (UP!) _ Ohio
,um.D
State University's board of
· trustees Friday approved the
award of a ,180,700 three-year
contract 1ll'ith WTVN-TV ln Col.1110bua to televlae the
ttity' home bask
s
etboU games.
WTVN-TV submitted the
high bid of $180,700 foe the

unlder-

exclusive

'
agreement. WLWC-TV of
Columbus bid $148,370,
The conttact 111'itb WTVN-TV
will take effect 111'ith the 1974-75
1081100 and cootlnues througlt
the 1~77 season.
The, contract Is the first by
OSU for a three-year period f&lt;r
home baBIIethall games, p~e­
viously handled on a one-year

buls.

llTTL~ l~AGU~

is

designed primarily for school
superintendents, principals,
athletic direcl«s and coaches,
will include discussions of the
responsibilities, competencies
and accoun lability of coaches.
The course carries three
quarter hours of credit.
Guest lecturers for the fiveday workshop will beDr. Paul
W. Hailey, direck&gt;r of teacher
education and certification for
the Ohio Department of
Education; Dr. Harold A.
Meyer, commissioner of the
Ohio High School Athletic
Association; ·and Robert L.
Holland, assistant director of
elementary and secondary
education for Ohio.
Enrollment information can
)le obtained from William G.
Stewart, Grove center, Ohio
University, Athens, Ohio,
45701'.

threevear

Gallipolis
.Summer League

laSt

WTVN radio
fall began
broadcasting the school's foot.
ball games via a newly establillled radlo network under a
lhree-year contract awarded
fa- $230,400.

TEAM
Tigers

.W L P OP
8 o lOa 32

Athletics

Orioles
Indians

2 7 99 105

Cubs

'

Amateur track
meet set July 20
.

RIO GRANDE An
amateur track meet will be
held at Evans lield, Rio Grande
eo11e~e, Saturday, July 20,
starting at 12 noon.
Events range from the 100
yard dash to the three mile run
111'ith the board jump as the only
lield event.
· ..
AD_ age graups, and girls'.
divisions will be honored.
Entry fee is $2 for one event
ancl25cenlj! for each additional

event.

Entry blanks should be
mailed to Ed Sayre, 8or 151,
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674 or Bob
t.WIOII, Rlral Route, Oak Hill
Ohio 45658.
'

2 7 68 160

~.::t~~~s

;~

TOTAlS

~ ;~

36 36 Ill Btl
Last Week's ResultS:

&amp;0!~s1le~~~:?:s,•

White Sox 14 Indians 6
Athletics 13 Cubs 7
White Sox 11 Orioles 8
Red Sox.Senators. ppnd.
Tigers 20 Athletlcs 4
Yanke~s 14 Orioles 11 (7)
This Week's Games'

So~nday - Orioles vs. Wh ite
Tuesday - Yankees vs
Tigers, 6; Athletics vs . O..ioles:

8: 15.
Wodnesday - Athletics vs.
White Sox, 6; Senators vs.
Yankees, B: 15.
Thursday .._ Senators vs.
Cubs. 6 ~ Indians vs. Red Sox.
8: 15.
Friday - Tigers "VS. Cubs, 6.
PONY LEAGUE
TEAM
W
L R OR
Braves
8 0 101 18
Reds
6 3 93 47
Ptlillies

.t 6 77 74

Giants
Dodgers
TOTALS

·3 5 15 98
1 8 24 139

22 22 376 376

Last Week's Resutts :
Phlll ies 16 Giants 11

Phlllles 21 Dodgers 5
. Dodgers-Giants, ppnd.
Braves-Giants, ppnd.
Phlllles 6 Reds 3
Braves 13 Giants 3
This Week's Games:
Monday - Dodgers vs .
Braves
.
Tuesday - Giants vs. Reds
Wednesday - Phillies vs.
Braves
Thursday - Dodgers vs.
Reds
Friday- Phillies vs. Giants
PEE WEE LEAGUE
Monday - Falcons vs. J•
Hawks'
.
Tuesday &amp; Angels vs. Cards
Wednesday - J-Hawks vs.
Eagles
. .
Ca~~~rsday - Rob ins vs .
Friday .,.- Robins vs. Angels
Braves 5 Reds 0

t
l

•·5 Swim ~IISOnt
7-1: 30()gon Swim

12: 30·1: 30 Open Swim

July 18 7-1: JO Open Recreotlon
a: J0-10 camp Cre-scendo

7-8:30 Open Swim
8:30-10 Camp Crescenclo
12:J0-1: 30 Open Swim

1: 30-J:JOCamp Crncendo
~ - 5 Swim Lessons
7-1:30 Open Swim

July 20 CLOSED
.
July 21 t: 30-3: 30 Open Recreation
7-8: lOOpen Recreation
8: 30-10 Camp Crescendo

JULY 16th

1: J0-3: JO Camp Crfl&lt;tnclo
4-5 $wlm Lessons

Juty 19 ,. ..a: 30 (»en Recreation

CLOSED
1:30-3:30 Open Swim

7-8: 30 Open Swim
8: 30-10 Camp Crescendo

'

9:00 P.M.

THE I'ORTLAND Pee w.. Squad ended 1111 ..,..0., with a
4-4 record. Team memben are flrst row, 1-r, Johnny Pickens,
Bruce Wolfe, Troy Ward, Tom Greathouse, Ray Lawrence;

second row, Danny Pickens, Wade Connolly, BrUce Joltnsoo,
. Dave Talbott, Kevin Teaford, Davld Bryant, Steven Teaford;
back row, Gene Ward, coach. Absent was Ed Icenhower. -

I

Gullett's forkball
opens up career

B-O NNIE
and
CLYDE'S

Reds sweep pair from Pirates
P!TISBURGH (UP!) rtgltthander, after he scattered
Tommy Carroll nptched lila eight hits ln eight innings to
second win Friday since being bring the Cincinnati Reds a 4-3
called up from the min&lt;rs II victory over the Pittsburgh
days ago, but Ibis time he was Pirates in the second game for
pitching in his home town a sweep of their doubleheader.
before 30,569 fans.
Cincinnati won the first
" It made me feel better " game 7-o behind the five-hit
' pitching of Don Gullet!.
said Carroll. a 21-vear-old

B raves,

"I think I concentrated more
because of lt," Carroll said. "I
wanted to do well ln front of my
family." His family at the
game consisted of his parents,
three brothers and three
sisters.
"Maybe it hasn't hit me yet
and thst's why I don't appear

k
J. an ees remazn
unbeaten in league play
V

o

GALLIPOLIS
The the year following Friday's credited with the win. Bucky
Gallipolis Pony League Braves
setback. Brent Joh,nson was ., Qualls was charged with Ute
lied
beate f
·
ro
on un
n ollowmg a
loss.
13-3 city league victory over
. Brett Russell had a iriple for
the Giants on Memorial Field
the
Giants. Brent Johnson ·had
Friday evening.
three hils and Dallas Love two
The Braves. nOW 8-0 on the .
for
the winners. The Braves
year, are scheduled to play in
wrapped it up 111'ith seven runs
an out-&lt;&gt;1-league !Qurnament
CENTENARY- The annual in the third inning.
·
this week.
Ohio Valley Pee Wee League
In Uttle League play Friday,
. The Giants dropped to 3-li on
Tournament wiU be held at the defending champion
Green Elementary School with Yankees were forced into the
initial garoes beginning season's first extra~hming
PBA LEADER. UP .
Tuesday, July 23.
··
game before downing the
AKRoN, Ohlo (UP!) -Earl
Winners will advance and Orioles 14-11 for their sevenUt
Anthony of Tacoma, Wash., play on Thursday, July 25 in straight victory against no
boosted his leading total in tbe the semifinals.
setbacks. The Orioles dropped
money earnlnga list of the
The cltamplotiship game will to ¥4 on the year.
Professional Bowlers Asoocia- be held on Saturday, July 'n.
Chuck Sanders tw o-run
l!on to $64,72:i 111'itb his $5,000 Here are the pairings :
double in the top of the seventh
victory this week ln the Fresno
Centerv~e
vs.
Vinton
5:15
.
rung proved to be the game's
Open.
p.m., fteld m back.
big blow.
In second place Is Larry
Armstrong
was
. Bidwell vs. Green, 5:,15, field · . John
Laub of Santa Rosa, CaUl.,
credited with the win in relief.
whose $1,700 In Fresno gave m front.
Salem
vs.
Addaville,
7
p.m..
Marc Hardway, also in relief,
him $55,810for the year. Jlm
was charged with the. loss.
Stefanich of JoUet, ill., is third field m back.
'Rio
Grande
vs
.
.
Cheshire,
7
For the Yankees Craig
111'ith $50,8110.
p.m., field m front. (Visiting Mason had three hlts. Ted
team h~ted ftrst) .
.
Adams had two singles and a
TURNS PROFESSIONAL
·.,. Startmg ltme for cham- triple. Chuck Sanders had a
RICHMOND, Vt. (UP!) pio_nsbip game wiU be after the single and double.
Three years ago Bob Cochran fims~ of the consolation game,
Marc Hardway had a single
said it would never happen.
slated at 5_ p.m. .
and triple, Matt Willis a single
. Friday, tbe 22-year old top
Ftr.st ntgM w~nners will and double, Bobby Hood two
ranked skier announced his rematn on tbetr fteld 'of play singles and Barry Plymale a
plans to become a pmfesaional. and begm play at 6 p.m.
triple for the Orioles. ·
Cochran ~id he signed a
contract with the Ollit Ski Co.,
of Middletown, Conn., and will
.
start trainq for tbe jro circuit ln Cltlle next mooth.

Pee Weemeet
starts July 23

•

'

CINCINNATI (UP!) - The forkball. They teU me R&lt;rlc
notch between the first and !larriBon (of the Atlanta Brasecond fingers on Don Gullett's ves) may have come up 111'ith
left hand Is much larger than ooe. He's got a nt:W pitch that's
doing some strange things."
yours &lt;r mine.
Gullett's forkbaU does some
Try to slip a baseball into
'~strange
things.''
tha.t notch on yoor )limd so the
When the plt;:h nears tbe
excited. Pitching takes a lot out · ball !its snugly against the
plate,
It drops --80 quickly and
of you emotionally. But I'm webbed skin. You probably
so sharply that It's been
really happy I did well."
can't do it.
likened
to a ball rolling off the
Now watch Cincinnati Reds
Carroll struck out six and
edge of a table.
walked one before giving way pitcher Don Gullett.
After Larry Bowa of the
to Clay Carroll in the ninth.
He 1Urna thooe two fingers
Another
rookie,
Larry into a big pair of scissors and Philadelphia Phils struck out
Demery, suffered the loss, 111a wedges the baseball deep Into by s111'inging far above a Gullett
fourth 111'ithout a vlctory.
the notch, flush against the forkball, be muttered to
Gullett, ''That'!Wj naatypiU:b."
Johnny Bench scored !be run 111'ide swath of skin there.
"That's the kinM""stulf !like
that broke a 3-3 tie in the fifth
Gullett can't begin to do the
to
hear," grins the 23-yearold .
011 one of three errors in the same thing with his right hand,
Gullett,
wbo says he throws the
game by Pittsburgh shortstop but hours and hours of wedging
Mario Mendoza.
a"hasehall between the fingers forkball ooce every five &lt;r six
The Pirates runs came in the of his left hand --pitching hand pitches.
"I use lt u my change of
third when Richie ·Hebner --bas opened that notch and
pace
. I was getting a
singled and scored on AI also opened up his career.
Oliver'~ double and after W"tllie
It has giv..n him a much reputation around !he league
Stargell was walked In- talked about but U!Ue under· as only being a fastball pitcher.
tentionally, Richie Zisk and stood pitch 111'ith which · to I still rely on my fastball, but
. Manny Sanguillen each singled frustrate batters -the fork- the forkhall has made me a
much better fastball pitcher
for two more runs.
ball.
Gullett struck out nine in the
Gullett Is tbe only member of because hitters can't always
firs!. game to beat the Pirates the Reds staff who throws the expect it now."
for tbe first time.
pitch and one of the few in aU of
"I will say it was easier • baseball.
Gullett relishes striking out
Gaylord Perry of tbe Cleve- hitters on the forkball .
pitching to that lineup 111'ithout
(Willie) Stargell and (AI) landlndlanshasbrightenedhis
"U it looks like It's coming .ln
Oliver and some of their otber career 111'i.th the pitch. Veteran thigh high, It drops to below tbe
81JllS," Gullett said. "I wasn't St. Louis Cardinals reliever -knees,'' he says. ''lfit'~ ccmingaware that I hadn't beaten the Orlando Pena knows how to in knee high, tbe catcher has to
Pirates before, but I've pitched throw it.
dig it out of the dirtc
well against them, especially
"But I don't know too many
" It doesn't dance around
in relief during my first year more who· can throw it," says coming to the plate. It has to
up."
Gullett. "You've got to develop look like a fastball. -But then it
:::::=:i:i:i:ii::!:i:(::.~;;::.-:.~:-»-x:-~::::m::::- the notcb between your fingers sinks all at once.
GALLIPOLIS The to bold ltflnn II" else you can't
"Last time out against the
sec~od five-day GaiiJpoUs control it.
Dodgers I struck out Steve
"Whene""r someone comes Yeager Dn· three straight forkDay Basketball Camp. wUI
begin here Monday morolog up 111'ith a fumy type of pitch balls and then got Steve
according to GAHS Coach against us, our .bitters suspect Garvey and Ron Cey in !be
be may be trying to develop a same inning, on the pitch."
Jim Osborne.
As of Saturday, · approximately 22 area fourth,
fifth, sixth and seventh ·
graders bad registered for
the session, which runs from
9 a.m. untO I p.m. eacb day.
Osborne said those · who
bave not registered or paid
all their $30 fee should report
to the GAHS, gym early
Monday (8:38a.m.) to take
care of those matters.

"BULLET-SPRAYED"

. J· .

GETAWAY CAR!

and violence _do not pay.

JOSEPH STALIN'S
RUSSIAN $87,000.00
LIMOUSINE
.

WORLD'S SMALLEST
•
HORSE

.

··-.

• Built in 1950 in ·stalingrad,
Russia• Given to China in .1951
as a good wi II gift

touch
'

. ..

\• .

3.

Minn-Gio LATEX

4.

SEMI-GLOSS

.
••
1\

;..-;t'l
....
. ;"-'.,'

ENAMEL

Ti.mes Will ae Appreciated
Fees Must Accompany Entry

•

family and we'll prove that crime

''

f

•

from the record-smas.hing' movie
.
"Bonnie and Clyde". Bring th"e whole

·,

.. ,,

•

See the world-famous car depicted

:!::::::;::::!&amp;;:!:{;:i;::::~S!$i:~~;:::~.w».&amp;«-::·

DON'T MISS IT!

.

.~,

'

the

1.

e Only J9Yz" Tall e Weighs Only 44 lbs.
e Discovered and Imported From South America

Evans Field, Rio Grande, Ohio
Saturday, July 20, 1974
Events Start at 12 Noon

• Sent into Korean War
by China and captured
by the U. S. Army
• Gets 4 miles to a
gallon of gas

.

'

• Given by ·President ·
Sygman Rhee, of
South Korea to
· General Walton
Walker's widow as a
gift from the South
Korean people
\

• The only car of ·its
kind outside the Iron
Curtain
•

• In its original
condition
• All hand-made

'

• Weighs 7,500
pounds

• Bring your
camera

'

."So Small It Can Actually Walk Under a Dogf"

NOTICE
TO
TAXPAYERS
·
Notice is hereby given in compliance with
Section 571.S.J7 of the Ohio Revised. Code. that
the lax returns of· Meigs County, lor the year
1974 have been revised and the valuations
completed and are open lor public inspection
at the office of the County Auditor in the Court
House, Pomeroy, Olio. ·
Complaints against · any . valuation or
assessment, except the valuations fixed and
· assessments made by the Tax Commissioner
· of Ohio, wil.l be heard by the County Board of
Revision , at its office in the Court House,
Pomeroy, Ohio on -or alter A119ust 26, 1974.
Complaints . must be made in writing, on
~ianks furntshed by ltle County Auditor and
flied in his office on or before lhe time limited
for pay":'ent of taxes lor the flrsl half year, or
at any t1me during wtlictl taxes are received
by the County Treasurer, .without penally for
th
e first half year.

j

."

'

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6130 PM TIL 8:30 PM

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ON .· THE PARKING LOT

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SPECIAL APPLIANCE BUYS

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• For Kitcfians, Baths ; Ali
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GAlliPOLIS, OHIO

DOOR PRIZE

Auditor of
Mllgs County

•

to

..

Name---:::::-cc--:---:::---- - Age
Events Wish to Enter:
---

•

12 Noon

-~---~'~""'"'*"'~=''w··'·'·!&lt;~;&gt;~
J!l
~-..~-.....Yo'h ~.Vt?o."'-"·. ...........
-~---- .

JAMES E. ROUSH
'

TUESDAY ONLY

1: 30-10 Camp Crflcenclo

Amateur Track Meet Entry Blank

2.
.

7 0 114 26
7 2 ll4 70
4 3 84 a~
4 4 83 n

Yankees

White Sox

-

8: 30-10 Camp Crtscendo
. 12: JO.I : 30 Open Swim
1: JO-l : 30 Camp Cret&lt;tnclo

.J uly 11 7-1: 30 Open Recrutton
1: JO.IO Camp Crescendo

~ta 'l'1ll'ina Manager
Frank ~d said aboot PI!IT)',

"I thougltt we were going to get
feel 10 years younger.
him bu.t !ben he started w&lt;rkin'
Nrry won hla ninth game of rtgltt When be's w&lt;rkln' rtgltt,
tbe """""'~ Fl'iilay night .. tbe be throws the in and out which
American League East leading is reliable."
·
lndlans downed the Twins 11-S.
1'1!11')' said be and his brother
The loss broke a five-game Gaylonl have ''made beUevers
winning streak fa- Minnesota. of the people In Cleveland."
"I felt like I did 10 years
Otarlie Spikes drove In three
ago," tbe 37-year-old Pl!rry runs to lead Cle""land's 15-fllt
said.
attack. The Indians drove
Oeveland look a third lming Twins starter Ray Corbin from
&amp;.! lead, but the Twins rallied Ute mound in the first inning by
scoring four runs on five hit..
Larry Hisle hit his 14th
homer of tbe season in tbe .
Minnesota first before Spikes
got his 12th of tbe year 1n tbe
third inning.
The Indians built ' up their
~d· unW Bill Campbell came
into work the final two innings
111'ithout allowing a run . .

SILVER BRIDG
SHOPPING
PLAZA
resents

l2: 30-1: JOOpon~e?~
o:J0-3:30 Camp Crescenco
...5 Swim La10n1
7-1: 30 Otpn Swim
1: 30·10 C•mp Cres&lt;tnc!o

12:30-1:30 O&lt;&gt;on Swim
1: J0-3: )I) Camp Crescenc!o
..S Sw Im LIS"""'
7-1:30 O&lt;&gt;on Swim

Juty 16 7-1: 10 Open Recreation
1:30-l Ocamp Crescenco

to narrow tbe .score tD ~ in 1!&gt;0
f-•JL
, •
....... UIJUlg.

Minn.

-RIO-Gi:iANDiCoLLEGE

~YNECENTER,CHEDU~E

DIIITE - GYMNASIUM
July lS 7-1: :100!1en Recrootlon

•

Tho Swtday Tlmeo . Sentinel, Sunday, July 11, lt7~

'..·

••
••

•

i

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'·'

1

1-

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.., ,

.,

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�•
21 - The Sunday Timet .

JD- The Sunday Tlmes-llentinel, &amp;lndll{.iuly 14. 1rl4

At halfway point, several
diamond events 'guaranteed'

.
'

NEW YORK (UP! ) - Many Abton~s retirement a.s manger
of them have already oome !&lt;I of the Dodgers. ·
pass, but as bueball roars
- The Dodgers will prompUy
along to liS halfway point it is re-sign Alston lor another
still reassuring to know that ' . season. '
besides the inevitable Sep-Willie Horton of the Tigers
tember Pennant Races, there will be placed on the disabled
.are still a. couple dozen events list.
that are guaranteed to happen
- Billy Martin will have a
dtl'ing the course or season.
fight of words wi.th his em·
For instance :
ployers.
- Charlie Finley and the
- Billy Martin will have a
WO&lt;id champion A's will pull. fight or fists with one or his
off at least two or three players.
"waiver" deals for established
- Chuck Tanner will ex·
veterans in late August I!IId po und to anyone who is still
September.
listening that Dick Allen of the
- Other teams wiU follow White Sox If the most valuable
suit and commissioner Bowie player in baseball.
Kuhn will look the other way
The
Whi te
Sox
while aging (but still valuable ) management will agree with
sluggers like Frank Robinson, Tan ner . pointing to Allen's
Willie McCovey, etc. casually $200,000 • plus salary as proof.
pass t_brough waivers to
- Frank Robinson , Maury
pennan t cohtenders.
Wills, Larry"'Doby et. al. will
- The Braves, with Hank again be prominenUy men·
Aaron probably playing in his tioned as "soon to be named"
final games, will draw near- baseball's first black manager,
sellout crowds everywhere on but when the axe falls again
the road during Aug ust and and yacancies open at season's
September.
end, it'll be old rellables like
- A columni st will go out on Wes Westrum and Al Dark et.
a limb and predict Wal ter al . getting the call.

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLERPLYMOUTH
Southeastern Ohio's Largest
Chrysler-P~mouth

Dealer

.BIG SAVINGS ON ALL
1975 Models Will Be

CHECK WITH
GALLIPOLIS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
BEFORE YOU BUY YOUR NEXT CAR

Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth
1639' Eastern
GaiJj.Wjs
· u " '3273
.._________
,;;;;;;;:;"'";;,;;;..___..;'ftV";:;~:.:;,:.::..J

An Alou brother will be

traded or sold.
· - Baltimore will overteke
Bos!&lt;ln in the American League
East and rumors will ·n y that
Red Sox manager Darrell
Johnson couldn't control owner
Tom Yawkey•s 11Spoiled''
players.
- FraU Mels sh&lt;&gt;&lt;tstop BUd
Harrelson will return to full.
time duty in mid-August and
then prompUy go ·back on the
sh~lf with MOther injury.
- With the Mets out ot·
contentio n, Ha rrelso n's
. roomie, Tom Seaver, will go on
a late-season winning streak !&lt;I
re..,ffirm his backers' claim of
being " the best pitcher in
baseball."
- Pete Rose of the Reds will
collect over 190 hits, bat over
.300 and play in over 150
gam es.

manager in
baseball with the exception of
Sparky Anderson will wish
PORTLAND'S Lrrn.E LEAGUE - Team members are, first row, 1-r, Brian Jobn.oon
Pete Rose was playing on his
Van Bar~r, Bry~ Lawrence, Steve Fitch ; second row, Paul Dean Evans, Jim Meadows'
team.
Duke Dailey, DaVId Foreman and Joe Johnson. The team ended its season with a 6--'1 record:
- With every bulging at·
tendance figure of the World
Football League, rumblings of
a new world baseball league
will become louder.
Of course, there are count· By United Preso Inlernatloual mediator who reported "no and he waved back but there
O.J. Simpson and J.ohnny particular progress" in the were no incidents.
less other sure;shots we can
exp ect to see before the Unllas, two of the most negotiations.
The Green Bay Packers'
season 's end - these are just a glamorous names in pro foot· . Mediator James S. Scearce, veterans also joined in support
few . But in case there is some ball, found themselves on after listening !&lt;I both sides, of the strike by failing to arrive
dnubt still of their validity. a opposite sides of the picket line recessed the talks and asked at the opening of their camp,
word of caution (which was Friday when ,the strike of both the owners and the Coach Dan Devine issued a
often uttered by Casey Stengel National Football League play- players union tu ''reconSider short statement expressing his
about hot ballclubs during the ers concluded its 12th day.
and
reevalutate
their disappointment with the vete.
month of April ) is hereby of· · Simpson, the aU-time single positions." He said he would be rans ' failure to tep(ll"(.
fered :
season rusher, was on the in contact with them next week
One NFL veteran, who
Said Stengel in those early picket line with the other and expressed hope that fur. already bad crossed the picket
April days during the 1950s· Buffalo veterans as the Bills ther discussions would take line, seized an opPortunity to
when his Yankees had not yet opened their training camp at place then.
blast the strike and the Players
begun to flex their muscles : Niagara University, but
Simpson, who is not a Association president, Blll
"Come see me in September. " .Unitas, perhaps ·the . greatest member of the NFL Players Curry.
9""J'Ierback in league history, Association, joined his teamSteve Kiner, a linebacker for
~ the line and became mates on the picket line and
the Houston Oilers whose
the first and only veteran to seemed to enjoy himself.
Major League leaders
career came close to ending
By United Press lntern~t i onal
report to the San Diego
" I' don 't even know ·all the on~e b•cause of a . drug
Leading Batters
Chargers•
c;~mp.
.
issues -we're askiltg for " ad- problem, chided Curry -a
National L_eague
.
g _ab
r h pc:t.
Wbile the picketers were rrutted
Simpson, who ' spent teammate of his at Houston - .
g~~~s~~~u :~. ~~i ~a
:1~~ marching in front of various some of his time on line joking and the other NFL veterans for
51
training camp sites across the with Bills' owner Ralph C. supporting the strike.
~r:'si~~P h iiL ~~ ~~; J~ 1~! :~~~ country,
opposing sides in the Wilson Jr., who.was a visitor at . "Curry is political about
Zlsk, P it t
78 27 4 Ao 87 .318
~chmdt, Phl 86 287 52 91 .317 strike conferred in Washington
camp.
this,"-said Kiner. "I guess h~'s
eronfll . Cn 76 206 38 65 .316
Garvev , LA 88 362 53 113 .312 for seven hours with a federal
Unitas, wbose statuS with the thinking ahead to the day he
_
B ucknr , LA 77 307 39 95 ·. J09
Chargers is in doubt this might run for the Seriate, I
Gr ubb . SO 81 ~59 jJ 80 .309
M
il
and
Bu
rroughs
.
T
ex
15.
season
because of his age ( 41 ), don't like politicians because
American League
Runs Batfed In
g ab r h pet.
they don' t care about inNational Lugue : . Cedeno, bad announced in advance that
Carew . Mnn 84 337 49 129 .3 83
Hou
72 ;
Gar v ey,
LA
65 · he would appear M camp as dividuals. Rlch.ard Nixon could
~~r:.r~~r Tx :~ ~~i ;~ ;: : n~ Sc h mid t. Ph il 62 ; Cey and scheduled. Veterans picketing be out there with those idiots
Yaz , Bos
84 29 1 52 94 .323 Wynn , L A 6 1.
American League : Bu r - the Chargers' camp waved at and . I wouldn't pay any atJackson . Ok 76 261 · 47 8-4 .372
roughS , Te x 7 i ; D . A llen , C h i Unitas as he crossed the line
tention."
~~~~1~~·. ~~~:; ~~g -~:
:5~2 60 ; Rudi , Oak 59 ; Br igg s , 'M il
-

Ever·y

Unitas cross·es picke-t line

'

!i

STONES WITHDRAWS
LONDON (UP)) - Dwi!ht
Stones, holder of the World
High Jump record, pulled out
of the English Amateur
Ath letics championships at
London's Crys tal Pl ace
Saturday because of the VIet

County court fines 16
POMEROY
Sixteen
defendants were lined, one was
assessed costs .only and 15
forf eited bonds in Meigs
County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Frank W.
Porter were Dennie E. Ki ser ,
Dexter, ·Rt. 1, $10 and costs
failure to signal turn; Lace F:
Willman , Hun tlngton, Rickie L.
Hollan, Long Bottom, Rt. 1,
Robert E. Troy, Hunlfngton,
Richard Miles, Romney, w.
Va., James T. Fulmer , Ad·
dison , Patricia VanMatre
West Columbia , and Robert'

conditions.

Stones, who cleared 7 ft . 61&gt;
inches last year , said : " [ have

just arrived back from Athers
where the tempterature was!'O
117 m.p.h. as he jumped to a degrees so I do not want to ri1k
slight lead over Epple Wietzes being taken out of this stadimi
and slowly widened the margin on a stretcher."

SKYLINE LANES

.

Specializing in AMF &amp;
Columbia Bowling Balls.

PROFESSIONAL BALL FITTING,
DRILLING&amp; INSTRUCTION
AVAILABLE

446-3362

.

"A ll New AMF Equipment"
.
Kanauga, Ohio

'
•
Ridge Ho~ hits the home and the nn:tgage

Hendr ick . Clev and J ackson,

Oak 16; H orton , Det , Br iggs .

Mi!jor League R.esulfs
By Un1fed _Press International
Nat•onal League
- . · . . . flstgamel
C!nclnnati
120 130 ooo- 7 11 1
P•Hsburgh O(IO ooo ooo- 0 50
Gullett ( 10-6) and Plumm er ·
Rook£&gt;i'" , Patter son (6 ), M o r i a ~
.(( 8 ) and Sang uilt en . L P -Rooker
5-1). HR -F oster ( 4f hL

you need..M'lth a down payment of just $100!
Eleven Dream Homes Under $17,990

St. Lou!s

. &lt;1st game)
101 DOD OJ2-

AIR

THE SHERWOOD- S17,a1s•- Ridge Ho ~e~' .most p~pu;ar
model. Features 3 bedroo ms, full baseme nt and a living room
almost 23 feet lo~g . What"s more, the Sherwood, like all Ridge ·
homes, comes V.:ith wall-to-wall ca rpeting , a co mplete kitchen ,
bathroo":J . and JUSt about everythi ng you'd expec t from one
of the largest home builders ln. the Uriited .States . See us now!

7 11 o

DOD JOO ODD- 3 7 o
J . N iek ro
(7) ,
Fn selta (8 ) and Oates ; G ibson ,
·z.rabos ky (9), Garman ' f 9l and
L~Ca_rv e r . WP -J :Niek r' o (l . I J.

(J'2t~) ~son . (5 -91. HR -Simm on s

·

·

St. Louis

T,.,,

•re

THIS UNPRETENTIOUS railroad Illation In North
Redwood, Minn., was the first home of a mall~rder business

•hlch later spread throughout the United States. Here, In
1886, Richard W. Sears launched the business which was to
make his name famous .

GALLIPOLIS - Looking at
Sears, Roebuck and Co.'s new·
Silver Bridge Plaza Catalog
Kenneth Peoples, Wellston, $25
and costs, $10 suspended each,
overload. John J . Rose, Long
Bottom, Rt. 1, costs only,
speeding.
F-orfeiting bonds we r ~ Louis
A. Phillips, Belpre, James D.
Roe, East Uverpool, Charles
L. Sha ver, Ravenswood ,
Randal L. Ramsey, Caldwell,
Walter Hickman , III, Parkers·
burg, Ric hard Mitchell ,
Ewington, Ra y Williams,
Moundsvllle, Arden Shaffer,
Chesapeake and David Vance,
Belpre , $27.50 each, speeding;
Paul D. Kuhn, Middleport,
$57.50, no operator's license;
Albert D. Cain, Wllliamstown,
W. Va., $27.50, failure to. stop
within assured clear distan ce,
Dennis
D.
Bradshaw,
Lucasville, $2.7.50, passing
without ·a ssured
clear
distance ; Benn y Wolfe ,
Rutland, Rt. 1, $22.50, no
muffler, John Tillis , Pomeroy ,
RD, $50, assault and battery,
Blltty Nitz, Pomeroy, RD, $25,
disturbing the peace.

Re g istration o.f pri Vat e
yehicle_
s is nothing new; a la\V
tn anc1ent Rom e stipu ra_
ted
that all chariots had to be
registered .

as

Sear s, Roebuck anq, Co . was was doing $50 million in
born .
business annually, had become
The company began to ex- publicly owned, had moved
pand almost immediately. Its · into a new headquarters
first catalogs featured mostly building and opened its first
watches. Then, farm equip· branch catalog· order plant at
ment and . supplies that, Dallas, Texas.
In the first quarter of this

. This lady really had no right to be famous. She was
the wore of a eubstantlal Florentine merchant named Glocondo
whe~, In 1499, Da VInci's portralt made her Immortal. The
·
mysteroous Mona Usa smile? Perhapl she was thinking about
gol~g shopping. Of courw, If she'd had Master Charge,
hke you do now, she'd be grinning from ear to ear.

Co. grew and prospered with
the country. By 1925, the face of
the nation was changing. U. S.
population reached 115 million
- double what it was when
Sears started his business in
1886.
The automobile had come
irito its own. Americans, with

•

'

••
•
••

•'
••"

.

new mobllity, were moving

from farm to city. Less than
half remsined in rural areas.
Viewing this changing scene,
General Robert E·. Wood,
argued that the company
should open retail stores to
capitalize on the growing
mobility and changing needs of
the people. He recognized the
need to serve an expanding

urban
population
that
traditionally shopped in stores.
As an experiment in 1925,
Sears opened its first retail
store in a corner of its Chicago
catalog order plant. Its success
was so great that the company
launched a full-scale expansion
program in retailing. During
one 12-nionth period in the late
192Qs, stores oepend on the

Montrea I
ooo ooo 'ooO- o 5 0
San Dlegq_
100 000 00.- 1 5 O
M cA na ll v . Montag ue ( 8 ) and
F oote ; Jones (6 -13 1 and Ken
d all . LP -McAn a llv (6 -10 &gt;.
·

New York
000 000 ~01 - s 9 0
los. Angele S Dc:IO 000 20o- 2 e 0 ·
Apoda c ~ . A k e;r -17) arid G r ote .
John , Hou g h
Marsha ll &lt;si
• nl d l=e r ; .u son . WP .Apoda ca (l4 • LP -Joh n 113·3). ·HR -Fer gu

en,

$On ( 12th ).

·

Pt\llidelph i a O IOQO I n 2- 6 14 0
hn Fr•nclsc IDO 001 000-- 2· 7 0
Ruth v en . ~~ - 7 1 e nd Boon e .
D ' Acqu is to, Sosa {6) Bry ant
(7!! M offitt ( 8 ) and Rader L P
~~StH5 - 5) . H R -And er son (o~iti"I L •
A merle-an League

ooo ooo Ooo- o 2 1
010 000 02x- 3 1 o
Holtz m an , Fln!jlers · (8) en d
Henev, Ho sl e r 19J; Dobson (7 .
In ·and M un son , L P·- H oUzma n
Oalr:llnd
New Vork

(9 -11).

••
it.

---(!11 003

'

CaliforniA
101 - 7 13 (I
Bo1ton
ooo ooo .o oo- o 1o 1
Figueroa
( 1-1)
and
Rodr l ouet ; Moret. Segu l (6), Pole
{1J and Bla c kWell, Mon tg ome r y
(91. L P -Moret 12-31. HR s-U enu
( 2nd ). Rob ln101'l ( l2ti\ J.
Tu_~s

---

Mllw .

100 110 000- J

:JOI ODD 00()-. 4 7 I

ao

J enkins ( 11 ·9 J end Sundberg ·;
Wrlvht , Ro&lt;tr loutz (1) , Murf)hy
($ ) lnd Porter . LP -Wr lght (1 .
J1) , . HAs -Burroughs
(15th )
Garc11 ( 10th ) .
'

'COMMERCIAL &amp;SAVINGS BANK
-

'-

---

100 ooo ooo- 2 10 J
tl:lftlf!Clty 10021310a- 7 fO

Detroit

..... Uili'GIJS

.

•

Lolich , L emanczyk (8 1 -lnd
L•m Dnt ;
Busbv 112·8) and
Hetly. LP ~t,.o li ch (10.10).

• Floor Joi nt 9n 16" (en ter wilh ~ T &amp; G Floor

That's less than a third of our usual price!
·
HERE'S THE BEST PART_: We hav
'
.·
gage plans tor qua lified buyers Wh o~ a 1 _ of three l'r!Qrt..
rng tot free and clear. The down
wn or can get) a ~u lldjust $100 . As one of Americ a's largfs~yh~~n~ ~s if~ most al~ays
our own financial resou rces to help ou c 1 u ers, we have
homes when they want them 0
t r us omers bu ild the ir
," point~'' to pay, and closing cOst~~ :: ~~nf~~~~ompetltlve,· no

l1vmg roo m ove~ 25
laundry, full basement
close ts , .. you get·the idea
I"
.
'J
.
everything comes with 8 fudge ho~:P~~:"~:~· ~!~r~~ O~~.

r~dlsh by doi ng
'"

some of the interior finishi ng you rsel f ! You' ll

e who le story in the Ridge magazine.

·

Thlte .,, len model• priced .,.twnn 122,505 •nd $27,305.

•

0".

can ge t a ir co ndition ing in it fo r just $99. Yo u' ll
save hundreds o r dollars!
. Save whe n yo u cool a new S upe r Beet le.
Or Das her . Or 41 2. Or Bus. Or Karman Ghia .
Or Campmo bile. Or Thing .,lAir c ond itioning in
any of th e m, just $99 . In fact , Ihe only mode ls
n ot in c luded in this offe r a re the Basic Beetle
a nd the Love Bug .
Vo lks w a gen a ir co nd ition ing ... no w wh e n
you need il most . :. no w just $99 .

' lot and ·'nclu d~ rri•ter lal s appllan
ownerS

-

Idle morts a ge plans hot avilil• ble In Verffiont . IllinoiS t.IJin'e K :n~ u~ of ~he d~lw n paymen t piLls all monthly sP:ym l ~ - 0 1 ••ch and then"1 ti
_'
·
u ~ . •w Jersey anr;t North Carotin• . How
e n s over l6 years). Such
S
•• .
.
'
.
• ve r, othe r t11lr t1c ll v• pla ns ere,

lop Waotmg to ge t started on .your dream home You

Free· M
•
probably have all the cash yo u need. You'll fi nd the Mag •. agFaz~ne: Get you r F REE Cull-color Ridge
whole _exci ting story in our free 88·p age Ridge Homes drea~z~~;,e ;~,.?u' how yo ur fa mily can _have their .
Magaz me. It features an arttclc by Francis Reers ·who,. up a copy at
. Send fo r o ur F REE magazone or pick
h~c mos'. of .out cus'.omers, had " Rid ge home built on W
yo ur nea rest Ro dge dealer today.
.
ho~ lot woth JUS( $100 dow n, Over 25,000 families own lnte ~rn.dreama
.
Rodge ho mes- and so can yours.
.
o omes". every day.

Just think ... you can custom-design your home just as
th ey dtd. You ge t the exact home you want, and an easy •
way to afford the ho~e you choose. The. Reers family .•
saved $4,000 . by iloon~ some of the interior finishing
themselves. Our free R odge Magazi ne tells you how.
•

YOUR RIDGE DEALER;

RIDG~

MORGAN-RIDGE HOMES

&gt;

DON WATTS
VOLKSWAGEN

TO: lltiDQE HOMES
1100 Rldtt ,.,,.

Conshoh~lilen, Pa. 19-e:tl -

..

412 ~~

~~~~:~;:~fd~ ~o'm~;£~::z1~:,·ou_r

· Loots Morpn
3W West Ma in

.

'8

·-

\0:1!/~~

••
e
•

This sp ecia l air co nditio nin' g
o ffer by your Volks wagen distribu tor ex'pires Au gust
15. 1974. And it's available only at participa ting
Vo lKs wagen dealers;

.

HOmES

. ----...~

•

In lhe Gafllpof/1, Ohio/Ripley, W.Va . Area:

15

UPP.ER RT. 7

•e N~m:~==;======~~~=====

~ ip!ey

;~;"

......._.

GEM""
"""' •

lllCTIIIC •

e c.,•••

We'd Ilk• to build In (to.,n)
l
,

Pha

StatL-_ _ _ __

•

.. 1- l - - - - _

•••••••••••••••

PH. 446-!11100

GAI!IPOUS

Addres

304-3 72·2949
304·273·2024

Anodized A l ymin urr." W indow wi th Insu l ated G loss and Scree n~
• 4 Pic ture Wi ndows

• Double lnsulo l ed Thro ugh ovt
• Premiu m W' Pan el ing, Bi rch and Elm
•"Bi rt h Doo rs and Hcm;h .,.ood Trim

• De l v.~~.e Kirchen Cobi nets ond N ome Brand Appliances
.• The

Quie t Heo tmg System i_s Ano ther Morleue Fea ture , Gos. Fuel

Oil _
o r To to/ Elec_trlc

.-

. • Del uJt:e Nylon Carpet, Very G ?od Q.un lity
• This Modetre Sectional Home Features A Very large li~i~g ~oom .
Dining ioom, 2 lorge Bedrooms, ond o Mos ter Be.dr oom &amp; Dressi ng

Ared l ~ o l wilt Appea l ro rha Most Oiscril':"l inat ing lady. lorge Fomi ly

Room ond o Deluxe Kir chen !hoi Makes Living A Ple asure, 1~ B ot~s
ond Ul i) ity Ar ea .

au/ yo u be tter hUt~y.

···~· • • • • • •
.........- ..........

• '2x4 'Studding wil h Plvwood Slarm Si ding
• Trussed J?oof wi th Pl)-wood Roof Sheo lhing
• '2351 b.•a.spho ll Roof Shi11gles ISeal Down l

avera ge of one every other

1

If you buy a ne w Vo lks wage n right no w, you

'";;;:;;,;:";:;,;:;~:;:;7,:;:;::~==~:;~----1
1
'::;~~~~~c::f
ds~:." ·6o4•'·"'Qe•1nterr••t.•npayment
A~NU~t~~1r¢E":tAbdEe~~
;l ~fl~S~·:~,.·•,•,.".•,•,,· in1&lt;1 0•1uun
de~~~mon
,.,~":x:~~~'~r
fin~~~~~~~~~
•'m
'"o'' " 1t t'l• Interior.
Fl"
pr~c• - $35 385 .4 3 (th
thly paym · n!
f S 5·
un of $18 000
sh ow n
ar•tr ansportlt
for homeslon
stmi·cons
t r ue 1ed
lPrice•
ocel taus
and
char

Call No. 490

l.RADI·fNS ACCIPIID - FINANCING AVAIIAitl
.

.

SoW and erect.d \y tM ar"'s _most

tllptrilfKtd

dealer or hlhltr of

1ettiMal ltomts.

THI "lOUIS!" NOW ON DISPlAY
STOP IN TODAY

.. HOURS, 9 TO, BMO N DA Y TH-RU FRI DAY .
9 TO 5 SATU RDAY-ClOSED SU N DAY

business day. By 1928, Sears
had opened. 192 stores; it grew
to 324 stores in 1929. By the
time the 400th store had opened
in 1933, Sears retail sales
volume already ·had surpassed
catalog sal~s .
Despite . the depression,
Sears continued to open stores
dlll:ing the I930s. When the war
broke out in 1941, more than 600
stores were opera~ing .
Today Sears, Roebuck .and
(::o. operate~ more than 825
retail outlelswhich account for
l .m.nr•lhan three.quarters of its
annual sales volume.
The success or Sears'
domestic stores only whetted
General WOod's imagination
for international business. In
1942, Wood, by then Chairman
of the Board, Opened a Sears
'
s!&lt;lre
in Havana, Cuba - the

Midkiff takes part
irt Atlantic exercise
POMEROY -'- Marine lrCpl.
Daniel F. Midkiff, participated
in "Solid Shield '74" the only
annual Atlantic Command
exercise which includes force s
from all or the u. s. Armed.
Services. He took part io
maneuvers off the East Coast
near the Marine Corps base at
Camp LeJeune, N. c. The
operation is designed to test the
control and coordination of
forces in a unified command
environment . Cpl. Midkiff
serves with the Second Am·
phibious Tractor Bn. at Camp
LeJeune. He is niarried to the
former Cynthia Doliligan,
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Roy
Domigan of Coolville Route 2,
and is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Midkiff, Langsville.

by Nell S1mon

july 3 1-Aug. 3 and Aug. 7·10
Baker Cente r Ballroom
•
(includes. dinner)
T ic ket Off ice Ho ur s:

IOa.m . to 2 p.m.an.d 5 to 9p.m.
Monday throug h Saturday.
Sunday hours 12 npo n tp 5 p.m .

Call 594-5010

QV~!:!:.
·

Theater,tnc:.

Athens , Ohio 45701

Charter No . .1980
National Bank Region No.4
REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING
DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES, OF THE

ol Pomeroy In the State of Ohio, at the dose ol business on June 30, 1974
published In response to cau made by Comptroller ol the Currency, uoder Title
12, United States Code, Section 161.
·
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks • • • • • • • •• • .•••. • " •• $ 1,597,471.97
U.S.-Treasury securities • ~ • • • • • . . . • .
• •••• 2,834,060.57
Obligations of other U.S. Government
agencies and corporations . . . • • . • • •
" " " " " 159,642.4I
.Obligations of States and political subdivisions • . .
2,026,957.88
Othersecurities · - • • • • · • • • • •
• .• .• . " 37,742.50
Federal funds sold and securiiies purchased .
under agreements to resell " · · · · · · ,.
6,875,000.00
Loans • • • • • • • • . . . . • . . . . . . .
7,468,369.10
Bank premises, furniture and 'fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises • . • •
" 287,525.39
Otherassets • . . • • • • • • • • . •
" " I,ll7.58
TOTAL ASSETS . . . • • • • • • • • •
$21,287,887.40
LIABU..ITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
andcorporatlons • .• • • • • • • . . . .
$4,719,153.30
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations • • • · • • • • • •
12,270,999.15
Deposits of United States Government • • • • • • •
• 197,761.27
Deposits of States and political subdivisions • ~ • • •••• · • • 2,142 877.29
Certified and officers' checks, etc. · · · • · • • • • • • • • 10i,371.39
TOTAL DEPOSITS · · · · · · - · · $19,433,162.4il
(a) Total demand deposits • • • • • .
$ 6,123,682.73
(b) Total time and savings deposits · • •
$13 1309,479.67
Other liabilities • • • • • . • • • • •
• • • • • • 227,384.06
TOTAL UABIUTIES • • • • • • • ·
• • • • • $19,660,546.45
RESERVES ON J 'IANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
·
(setuppursuanttoiRSrulings) · • · . ·• · · · · •.
: : !92,845.11.
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
" $92,845.11
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital-total • • • • • ; •
• .
$1,534,495.84
Common S!&lt;lck.total par value
200,000.00
No . shares authorized 8,1100
No. shares outstanding · 8,000
Surplus .
.. • ..
" " " " 1,0110,000.00
Un
ro 'ts · · · · · · ·
TOT L CAPIT
ACCOUNTS
TOTAL U
UTJES, RESERVES, AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
121,287,887.40 .
.
.
. .MEMORANDA
Average of !&lt;ltal deposits for the 15 calendar
/
days ending with call date . . • . . . .
$19,109,182.95
Average of !&lt;ltalloans lor the 15 calendar
days ending with call date
• . ..
$ 7,139,317.94
I, Maxine Griffltb, Cashier, ol the above-named baiok do hereby declBre
that this report or condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and
l&gt;ellel. ·
:
·
· ·
·
Maxine GrU!Ith

company 's first ·permanent

MOBIL~
u

HOMES, INC.

see Jim

Staab or Joe G:toos

.Pper Rt · 7 Nut Door to Auto Auction
Phone 446-9340
Ga!Jt'""lls', Ohio
....

:._-----,-------- --.._,_.;----J ..___________________..
i

DANIEL F. MIDKIFF

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK

cen,tury, Sears, · Roebuck and

~~~,~~~,s;o~n~t~h ~~.- $19,sss• ::_- This bi-.level has 3 large

-Four bedroOms, 2¥2

Good food and sa ucy comedy

Roebuck, and six years later, retired in 1908, the company

000 000 DOG- 0 4 3

-

J uly 17· 21 and 24-2 8
Forum Th eater

other "soft good s.~~
because of volume buying,
In 1947, with war shortages
ra ilr oads and post offices,
disappearing,
Sears opened a
offered farmers an alternative
store in Mexico City, and
to high-priced rural stores.
By 1895, Sears was producing furth er expansion began .
a 507-page catalog that in· Today, Sears has more than 100
eluded a wide variety ot items stores and sales offices in II
previously difficult and ex· Latin American countries.
Sears e xpansi on overseas
pensive to obtain in rural
we nt un claimed until the areas. Years later, the com- · was matched in 1953 by ex·
pansion into Canada, In that
to ~· n 's 23-yea r -old ra il roa d pany adopted the motto, ~~sh op
year,
Sears joined a pioneer
sta ti on e~gen t received per- at Sears and Save." Beca use
mission to buy them at a farmers could do just that in Canadian company, Simpsons,
Ltd., to form Simpson-Sears
discoun t.
the 1890s, Sears prospered.
In doing so, Richard W.
Just as the company was · Ltd . This company now
Sears embarked on a new changing to meet the needs of operates more than 30 retail
career that led to the birth of its customers, so it changed soores and more than 400
the world's larges t me r· from within. Shortly before the catalog sales offices in the
chandising organization.
turn of the century, Roebuck Dominion.
In 1967, Sears expanded into
By year's end, Sears .wa s in resigned because of poor
business for himself in Min· health . Sears , although Europe with the opening of a
neapolis
head of the R. W. . recognized as a promotional store in Barcelona, Spain . A
Sears Watch Company. He had and marketing genius, had to Madrid store was opened in
sold his watches to other turn oqtward for management 1970, and in 1971 the company
age nts up and down the line, !alent. So, in 1895, Julius acquired Galeries Anspach, a
made a profit and ordered Rosenwald, a Chicago clothing leading retail opera lion in
more foi' resale.
manufacturer , purchased an Brussels, Belgium , which
operates eight retail outlets.
The next year Sears moved interest in the firm .
At home, General Wood's
to Chicago and established a
Rosenwald 's business inexpansion
program . was
catalog sales business . He teUect, combined with Sears'
hired a young watchmaker to genius for salesmanship, carried on by his successors. It
make certain his products started ·the company on the continues today under Sears
chairmct:n and chief executive
could be serviced well. The road to greatness.
oiflcer,
.Arthur M. Wood.
man 's name was Alvah C.
By the time Richard Sears

Store, it's hard to imagine that
his modern shopping hub can
be traced back to 1886 and the
ar riv al ol some gold-filled
watches in the small mining
community of North Redm ond,
Minp.
Addressed to a jeweler who
didn't want them , the watches

too 000 Dlx- 10 9 1
.( Ca~r'a , K ra usse (1), J . N iekro
6), Hou se fBI and Oat es ·
C,o rrell t 8); For sch ( h 1) , and
S1mm on s. L P -Cap r a ( 9 . 4 ).

..

by Ala n Ja )' Lt&gt;t!h!t
and F1edl'ncM Loewe

Sears, RQebuck and Co., traced back to 1886

( 2nd game)

Chic-ago
100 DOD 201 - 4 6 1
Houston
205 D20. DO IC- 9 13 •0
·T Reusche l , Ston e (3), P ina (5) ,
• ~d {5&gt;. _Pr all ing ( 7) an d
SWISher ; W rlson. F 9 r sch 191
. Land M . M ay . WP -WiiSo n { 6-6).
P-Reusc h el 18-7) . HR: s-KesS Inger f l st lr L. Ma y ( 15th).

Highlands

,;;.

great fam ily roo~ ~ft~e!~~v:-~~~~e lower level has room for a
powder roo m and garage With AI~ de~ spacious utility room,
the home you want at' a p'rica
ge omes, you always get
for 25,000 famil ies Ia choose- ~~ug~aSeaftford. Reason enough
The
·
e or yourse lf!
re are 1ourtun modtll prfetd betwt•n·S11,305 -Ind 121,185.

eleven modelt priced between $14,1510 and $17,920.

The musiC
and th e ma gic
o r tho
Scott ish

RONALD E. RUSSELL

. a new Sears vice president,

t:~arr r son ,

Artanta

POMEROY Spec. 4
Ronald E. RusseU .._tved on
honorable diJch.arge frll!ll the
U.s. Army on July D. He wu
stationed at Fort Geor1e G.
Meade, Maryland, with the .
78th Engineers, Co. D. He Ia the
- or Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Russell of Wolf Pen. Grand·
parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Russell, Pomeroy
Route 4, and Mrs. E thel Chork,
Albany Route 2. Ruaell Is
married to the formeT Nancy
Roush of Apple Grove. They
have two children, Amanda, 2,
an d Michael, 8 montha.·

....

· .- ·
o ·nd game)
C!ncinnati
ooo 310 aoo- 4 10 3 .
Pittsburgh 003 ooo ooo- 3 8 3
T . Carroll , C. Carro ll (9) and
8 en ch, Pl umm er (7) ; Deme r y ,
H~rnand ez fll and sangu illen .
WP -T .
Carrol l
(2 -0J.
LPOem er y f O-•H .
·
·
AUant~

and costs, speeding; Michael
Wilson, Belpre, $17 and costs,
speeding; Willi a R. Peters,
Parkersburg, $10 and costs,
failure to yield ; Je~frey B.
Russell , Middleport, $15 and
costs, license suspended 30
days, r eckl ess operation ;
Addison C. Person , Murray
City, $7 and costs, speeding;
Thomas Stobart, Racine, and

•24 New AMF Lanes
.snack Bar and
Captain's Lounge

Pitching

Nahonal League : John, LA 13-3 ; M c Glo then . St. L
12 -4;
Marshall , LA 11 -4; Br ett . P itt
11 -5_; M orton . A tl and Lonbor g
Ph il 11 -7.
'
American League : G . P er ry,
C!ev 15-2; Wood , Chi 14-10 ;
T•ant , Bos 12-7; Busb y , K C and
Hunter , Oak 12 -B.

8~ 325 . 39 101 .311
Home Runs
Niitional LE!ague : . Cedeno ,
Hou
and
W ynn ,
LA
19 ·
Schm idt, Phil 18 ; Be nc h, Ci~
16: Perez , Cin. L. Ma y, Ho u
and Gervey , LA 15.
American League: 0 . A l len ,
Chi 22 ; Mayberry , K C 17 ;

Rud i, Oa k

costs, tmsafe vehic1e; Marvin
Randolph, Pomeroy, Rt. 2, $8

"For That Personal &amp; Professional Touch"
· FEATURING

55 ; Ja c k s on , Oak 53.

:~:~~~nM~~~ ~~ ~:~ i~ :~ :~ ~~

Holter , Racine, Rt. 1, $10 and
costs each, speeding; Daniel E.
McOoud, Middleport, $5 and

and PRO-SHOP

SPECIAL RATES TO,
CHURCH GROUPS
PARTIES, STUDENTS.

Russell receives honorable discharge

RACINE - Contracts for the will lnsl&lt;!ad lake part In fJ
next school year were awarded &lt;na&amp;l&lt;!r's degree progrum . The
Thursday night when the board agreed to enter Into a
Southe.rn Local School &amp;ard contract with the county board
&lt;I education for a school nurse
met in regular se!!Slon .
The Betsy RAJss Co. was lor a period of one year . All
given the contract on baked buill on rurnace for the junior
go&lt;!ds; Valley Bell on dairy high school were rejected
products; Jerrers Coal Co., pending further lltudy.
coal; Best Orlke Machines Co
The re&lt;~ignation of Ea rl
service to the busines~ Cross, a bus driver, was aced u cat l on mach ines; oepted and Gordon Proffitt was
Roseberry's Pennzoil, anti employed as custodian at the
Creete, retread tires, tubers, • Portland School effective J uly
motor oil, grease; Meigs Tire 22 .
Center, new tires.
The board recessed its
The board employed Mary meeting untll8 p.m. on July 16.
Ann Slone as a business and Attending were board mem·
&lt;ifice ·education instructor lor bers, Dennie Hill , Denn y
t!Je high school and accepted Evans, Grover Salser, Jr.,
the resignation of Michaela David Nease, Jack Bostic;
Hoback who had been em- Qerk N;mcy Carnahan, Supt.
ployed as a new teacher but Bob Ord _and Mrs .. Gcn cyiev~
Harvey, clerk·trainee .

111Ul he beat the Calladlan by
J0.9seconds in the second hMt.
Graham McRae ol New
Zealand was tlllrd and Brett
Lunger, the ex-Marine from
Santa Ana, Calli., lOOmed
, home rourth.
Redrnail, the 1973 F ·500
champion in this country,
reached 176.5 m.p.h. durilg
one straightaway, the top
speed in either heal.
The French Tricolor ap.
peared destined to rule o•er
another auto racing capital as
the powerful Bl ue Matras
shoved off from the fr ont row
Saturday in search of their
sixt~ straight world chan.
· pionship of Manufacture 's
Race .

Redman , a Briton, drivin g a
crimson Lola, also averaged

'i;

1974 MODEL CARS
•300.00 to •400.00 Dollars
Higher---

-

Contracts awarded
by Southern board

Andretti, Redntan
earn front row
WATKINS GLEN, N. Y.
(UP! )_ Mario AndreW scored
a runaway 44"5econd victory i~
the first heat and Brian Hed·
man had an 11-second ad·
vantage in his section Saturday
as they qualilied lor the front
row in today's JOI·mile ronnula
5000 Feature Race.
Marvelous Marlo, a ronner
Indianapolis champion and one
of a handful or u. s. drivers to
ever win a Fonnula 1 Grand
Prix .Race, averaged 117 miles
per hour in beating David
Hobbs of England in the 11;-lap,
50.1knile opening heat .
· Andretti, an Halian born
driver from Na,.reth, Pa., had
the fastest lap in either heat
when he pushed his Lola to a
clocking of one minute, 11.5
seconds during one lap around
the 3.37-m.ile circuit .
Sam Posey of San Juan
Capistrano, Calif., driving with
a right leg tightly bandaged
after tear ing several ligaments
in a minor mishap on !',riday,
was black flagged for a broken
exhaust but was allowed to
keep his third place finish .
Evan Noyes of Cedarville,
Mich., finished fourth in the
.opening heat.

ntlllei,Sw\day, July l4. lt74

outlet In a foreign land. Sears '
Cuban stores were ex·
propriated by Fidel Castro in

1960.
World War II shortages ilf
refrigerators, stoves and other
appliances halted expansion
plans, but exis ting stores
prospered a s Sears moved
more strongly into apparel ~hd

We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this report of con,
ditlon and declare that lt has be~n examined by us and to th~ best or our
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
· ·
Edison Hobstetter
Horace Klirr Dlnctoro
Warren Plrkena

'

"

�•
21 - The Sunday Timet .

JD- The Sunday Tlmes-llentinel, &amp;lndll{.iuly 14. 1rl4

At halfway point, several
diamond events 'guaranteed'

.
'

NEW YORK (UP! ) - Many Abton~s retirement a.s manger
of them have already oome !&lt;I of the Dodgers. ·
pass, but as bueball roars
- The Dodgers will prompUy
along to liS halfway point it is re-sign Alston lor another
still reassuring to know that ' . season. '
besides the inevitable Sep-Willie Horton of the Tigers
tember Pennant Races, there will be placed on the disabled
.are still a. couple dozen events list.
that are guaranteed to happen
- Billy Martin will have a
dtl'ing the course or season.
fight of words wi.th his em·
For instance :
ployers.
- Charlie Finley and the
- Billy Martin will have a
WO&lt;id champion A's will pull. fight or fists with one or his
off at least two or three players.
"waiver" deals for established
- Chuck Tanner will ex·
veterans in late August I!IId po und to anyone who is still
September.
listening that Dick Allen of the
- Other teams wiU follow White Sox If the most valuable
suit and commissioner Bowie player in baseball.
Kuhn will look the other way
The
Whi te
Sox
while aging (but still valuable ) management will agree with
sluggers like Frank Robinson, Tan ner . pointing to Allen's
Willie McCovey, etc. casually $200,000 • plus salary as proof.
pass t_brough waivers to
- Frank Robinson , Maury
pennan t cohtenders.
Wills, Larry"'Doby et. al. will
- The Braves, with Hank again be prominenUy men·
Aaron probably playing in his tioned as "soon to be named"
final games, will draw near- baseball's first black manager,
sellout crowds everywhere on but when the axe falls again
the road during Aug ust and and yacancies open at season's
September.
end, it'll be old rellables like
- A columni st will go out on Wes Westrum and Al Dark et.
a limb and predict Wal ter al . getting the call.

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLERPLYMOUTH
Southeastern Ohio's Largest
Chrysler-P~mouth

Dealer

.BIG SAVINGS ON ALL
1975 Models Will Be

CHECK WITH
GALLIPOLIS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
BEFORE YOU BUY YOUR NEXT CAR

Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth
1639' Eastern
GaiJj.Wjs
· u " '3273
.._________
,;;;;;;;:;"'";;,;;;..___..;'ftV";:;~:.:;,:.::..J

An Alou brother will be

traded or sold.
· - Baltimore will overteke
Bos!&lt;ln in the American League
East and rumors will ·n y that
Red Sox manager Darrell
Johnson couldn't control owner
Tom Yawkey•s 11Spoiled''
players.
- FraU Mels sh&lt;&gt;&lt;tstop BUd
Harrelson will return to full.
time duty in mid-August and
then prompUy go ·back on the
sh~lf with MOther injury.
- With the Mets out ot·
contentio n, Ha rrelso n's
. roomie, Tom Seaver, will go on
a late-season winning streak !&lt;I
re..,ffirm his backers' claim of
being " the best pitcher in
baseball."
- Pete Rose of the Reds will
collect over 190 hits, bat over
.300 and play in over 150
gam es.

manager in
baseball with the exception of
Sparky Anderson will wish
PORTLAND'S Lrrn.E LEAGUE - Team members are, first row, 1-r, Brian Jobn.oon
Pete Rose was playing on his
Van Bar~r, Bry~ Lawrence, Steve Fitch ; second row, Paul Dean Evans, Jim Meadows'
team.
Duke Dailey, DaVId Foreman and Joe Johnson. The team ended its season with a 6--'1 record:
- With every bulging at·
tendance figure of the World
Football League, rumblings of
a new world baseball league
will become louder.
Of course, there are count· By United Preso Inlernatloual mediator who reported "no and he waved back but there
O.J. Simpson and J.ohnny particular progress" in the were no incidents.
less other sure;shots we can
exp ect to see before the Unllas, two of the most negotiations.
The Green Bay Packers'
season 's end - these are just a glamorous names in pro foot· . Mediator James S. Scearce, veterans also joined in support
few . But in case there is some ball, found themselves on after listening !&lt;I both sides, of the strike by failing to arrive
dnubt still of their validity. a opposite sides of the picket line recessed the talks and asked at the opening of their camp,
word of caution (which was Friday when ,the strike of both the owners and the Coach Dan Devine issued a
often uttered by Casey Stengel National Football League play- players union tu ''reconSider short statement expressing his
about hot ballclubs during the ers concluded its 12th day.
and
reevalutate
their disappointment with the vete.
month of April ) is hereby of· · Simpson, the aU-time single positions." He said he would be rans ' failure to tep(ll"(.
fered :
season rusher, was on the in contact with them next week
One NFL veteran, who
Said Stengel in those early picket line with the other and expressed hope that fur. already bad crossed the picket
April days during the 1950s· Buffalo veterans as the Bills ther discussions would take line, seized an opPortunity to
when his Yankees had not yet opened their training camp at place then.
blast the strike and the Players
begun to flex their muscles : Niagara University, but
Simpson, who is not a Association president, Blll
"Come see me in September. " .Unitas, perhaps ·the . greatest member of the NFL Players Curry.
9""J'Ierback in league history, Association, joined his teamSteve Kiner, a linebacker for
~ the line and became mates on the picket line and
the Houston Oilers whose
the first and only veteran to seemed to enjoy himself.
Major League leaders
career came close to ending
By United Press lntern~t i onal
report to the San Diego
" I' don 't even know ·all the on~e b•cause of a . drug
Leading Batters
Chargers•
c;~mp.
.
issues -we're askiltg for " ad- problem, chided Curry -a
National L_eague
.
g _ab
r h pc:t.
Wbile the picketers were rrutted
Simpson, who ' spent teammate of his at Houston - .
g~~~s~~~u :~. ~~i ~a
:1~~ marching in front of various some of his time on line joking and the other NFL veterans for
51
training camp sites across the with Bills' owner Ralph C. supporting the strike.
~r:'si~~P h iiL ~~ ~~; J~ 1~! :~~~ country,
opposing sides in the Wilson Jr., who.was a visitor at . "Curry is political about
Zlsk, P it t
78 27 4 Ao 87 .318
~chmdt, Phl 86 287 52 91 .317 strike conferred in Washington
camp.
this,"-said Kiner. "I guess h~'s
eronfll . Cn 76 206 38 65 .316
Garvev , LA 88 362 53 113 .312 for seven hours with a federal
Unitas, wbose statuS with the thinking ahead to the day he
_
B ucknr , LA 77 307 39 95 ·. J09
Chargers is in doubt this might run for the Seriate, I
Gr ubb . SO 81 ~59 jJ 80 .309
M
il
and
Bu
rroughs
.
T
ex
15.
season
because of his age ( 41 ), don't like politicians because
American League
Runs Batfed In
g ab r h pet.
they don' t care about inNational Lugue : . Cedeno, bad announced in advance that
Carew . Mnn 84 337 49 129 .3 83
Hou
72 ;
Gar v ey,
LA
65 · he would appear M camp as dividuals. Rlch.ard Nixon could
~~r:.r~~r Tx :~ ~~i ;~ ;: : n~ Sc h mid t. Ph il 62 ; Cey and scheduled. Veterans picketing be out there with those idiots
Yaz , Bos
84 29 1 52 94 .323 Wynn , L A 6 1.
American League : Bu r - the Chargers' camp waved at and . I wouldn't pay any atJackson . Ok 76 261 · 47 8-4 .372
roughS , Te x 7 i ; D . A llen , C h i Unitas as he crossed the line
tention."
~~~~1~~·. ~~~:; ~~g -~:
:5~2 60 ; Rudi , Oak 59 ; Br igg s , 'M il
-

Ever·y

Unitas cross·es picke-t line

'

!i

STONES WITHDRAWS
LONDON (UP)) - Dwi!ht
Stones, holder of the World
High Jump record, pulled out
of the English Amateur
Ath letics championships at
London's Crys tal Pl ace
Saturday because of the VIet

County court fines 16
POMEROY
Sixteen
defendants were lined, one was
assessed costs .only and 15
forf eited bonds in Meigs
County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Frank W.
Porter were Dennie E. Ki ser ,
Dexter, ·Rt. 1, $10 and costs
failure to signal turn; Lace F:
Willman , Hun tlngton, Rickie L.
Hollan, Long Bottom, Rt. 1,
Robert E. Troy, Hunlfngton,
Richard Miles, Romney, w.
Va., James T. Fulmer , Ad·
dison , Patricia VanMatre
West Columbia , and Robert'

conditions.

Stones, who cleared 7 ft . 61&gt;
inches last year , said : " [ have

just arrived back from Athers
where the tempterature was!'O
117 m.p.h. as he jumped to a degrees so I do not want to ri1k
slight lead over Epple Wietzes being taken out of this stadimi
and slowly widened the margin on a stretcher."

SKYLINE LANES

.

Specializing in AMF &amp;
Columbia Bowling Balls.

PROFESSIONAL BALL FITTING,
DRILLING&amp; INSTRUCTION
AVAILABLE

446-3362

.

"A ll New AMF Equipment"
.
Kanauga, Ohio

'
•
Ridge Ho~ hits the home and the nn:tgage

Hendr ick . Clev and J ackson,

Oak 16; H orton , Det , Br iggs .

Mi!jor League R.esulfs
By Un1fed _Press International
Nat•onal League
- . · . . . flstgamel
C!nclnnati
120 130 ooo- 7 11 1
P•Hsburgh O(IO ooo ooo- 0 50
Gullett ( 10-6) and Plumm er ·
Rook£&gt;i'" , Patter son (6 ), M o r i a ~
.(( 8 ) and Sang uilt en . L P -Rooker
5-1). HR -F oster ( 4f hL

you need..M'lth a down payment of just $100!
Eleven Dream Homes Under $17,990

St. Lou!s

. &lt;1st game)
101 DOD OJ2-

AIR

THE SHERWOOD- S17,a1s•- Ridge Ho ~e~' .most p~pu;ar
model. Features 3 bedroo ms, full baseme nt and a living room
almost 23 feet lo~g . What"s more, the Sherwood, like all Ridge ·
homes, comes V.:ith wall-to-wall ca rpeting , a co mplete kitchen ,
bathroo":J . and JUSt about everythi ng you'd expec t from one
of the largest home builders ln. the Uriited .States . See us now!

7 11 o

DOD JOO ODD- 3 7 o
J . N iek ro
(7) ,
Fn selta (8 ) and Oates ; G ibson ,
·z.rabos ky (9), Garman ' f 9l and
L~Ca_rv e r . WP -J :Niek r' o (l . I J.

(J'2t~) ~son . (5 -91. HR -Simm on s

·

·

St. Louis

T,.,,

•re

THIS UNPRETENTIOUS railroad Illation In North
Redwood, Minn., was the first home of a mall~rder business

•hlch later spread throughout the United States. Here, In
1886, Richard W. Sears launched the business which was to
make his name famous .

GALLIPOLIS - Looking at
Sears, Roebuck and Co.'s new·
Silver Bridge Plaza Catalog
Kenneth Peoples, Wellston, $25
and costs, $10 suspended each,
overload. John J . Rose, Long
Bottom, Rt. 1, costs only,
speeding.
F-orfeiting bonds we r ~ Louis
A. Phillips, Belpre, James D.
Roe, East Uverpool, Charles
L. Sha ver, Ravenswood ,
Randal L. Ramsey, Caldwell,
Walter Hickman , III, Parkers·
burg, Ric hard Mitchell ,
Ewington, Ra y Williams,
Moundsvllle, Arden Shaffer,
Chesapeake and David Vance,
Belpre , $27.50 each, speeding;
Paul D. Kuhn, Middleport,
$57.50, no operator's license;
Albert D. Cain, Wllliamstown,
W. Va., $27.50, failure to. stop
within assured clear distan ce,
Dennis
D.
Bradshaw,
Lucasville, $2.7.50, passing
without ·a ssured
clear
distance ; Benn y Wolfe ,
Rutland, Rt. 1, $22.50, no
muffler, John Tillis , Pomeroy ,
RD, $50, assault and battery,
Blltty Nitz, Pomeroy, RD, $25,
disturbing the peace.

Re g istration o.f pri Vat e
yehicle_
s is nothing new; a la\V
tn anc1ent Rom e stipu ra_
ted
that all chariots had to be
registered .

as

Sear s, Roebuck anq, Co . was was doing $50 million in
born .
business annually, had become
The company began to ex- publicly owned, had moved
pand almost immediately. Its · into a new headquarters
first catalogs featured mostly building and opened its first
watches. Then, farm equip· branch catalog· order plant at
ment and . supplies that, Dallas, Texas.
In the first quarter of this

. This lady really had no right to be famous. She was
the wore of a eubstantlal Florentine merchant named Glocondo
whe~, In 1499, Da VInci's portralt made her Immortal. The
·
mysteroous Mona Usa smile? Perhapl she was thinking about
gol~g shopping. Of courw, If she'd had Master Charge,
hke you do now, she'd be grinning from ear to ear.

Co. grew and prospered with
the country. By 1925, the face of
the nation was changing. U. S.
population reached 115 million
- double what it was when
Sears started his business in
1886.
The automobile had come
irito its own. Americans, with

•

'

••
•
••

•'
••"

.

new mobllity, were moving

from farm to city. Less than
half remsined in rural areas.
Viewing this changing scene,
General Robert E·. Wood,
argued that the company
should open retail stores to
capitalize on the growing
mobility and changing needs of
the people. He recognized the
need to serve an expanding

urban
population
that
traditionally shopped in stores.
As an experiment in 1925,
Sears opened its first retail
store in a corner of its Chicago
catalog order plant. Its success
was so great that the company
launched a full-scale expansion
program in retailing. During
one 12-nionth period in the late
192Qs, stores oepend on the

Montrea I
ooo ooo 'ooO- o 5 0
San Dlegq_
100 000 00.- 1 5 O
M cA na ll v . Montag ue ( 8 ) and
F oote ; Jones (6 -13 1 and Ken
d all . LP -McAn a llv (6 -10 &gt;.
·

New York
000 000 ~01 - s 9 0
los. Angele S Dc:IO 000 20o- 2 e 0 ·
Apoda c ~ . A k e;r -17) arid G r ote .
John , Hou g h
Marsha ll &lt;si
• nl d l=e r ; .u son . WP .Apoda ca (l4 • LP -Joh n 113·3). ·HR -Fer gu

en,

$On ( 12th ).

·

Pt\llidelph i a O IOQO I n 2- 6 14 0
hn Fr•nclsc IDO 001 000-- 2· 7 0
Ruth v en . ~~ - 7 1 e nd Boon e .
D ' Acqu is to, Sosa {6) Bry ant
(7!! M offitt ( 8 ) and Rader L P
~~StH5 - 5) . H R -And er son (o~iti"I L •
A merle-an League

ooo ooo Ooo- o 2 1
010 000 02x- 3 1 o
Holtz m an , Fln!jlers · (8) en d
Henev, Ho sl e r 19J; Dobson (7 .
In ·and M un son , L P·- H oUzma n
Oalr:llnd
New Vork

(9 -11).

••
it.

---(!11 003

'

CaliforniA
101 - 7 13 (I
Bo1ton
ooo ooo .o oo- o 1o 1
Figueroa
( 1-1)
and
Rodr l ouet ; Moret. Segu l (6), Pole
{1J and Bla c kWell, Mon tg ome r y
(91. L P -Moret 12-31. HR s-U enu
( 2nd ). Rob ln101'l ( l2ti\ J.
Tu_~s

---

Mllw .

100 110 000- J

:JOI ODD 00()-. 4 7 I

ao

J enkins ( 11 ·9 J end Sundberg ·;
Wrlvht , Ro&lt;tr loutz (1) , Murf)hy
($ ) lnd Porter . LP -Wr lght (1 .
J1) , . HAs -Burroughs
(15th )
Garc11 ( 10th ) .
'

'COMMERCIAL &amp;SAVINGS BANK
-

'-

---

100 ooo ooo- 2 10 J
tl:lftlf!Clty 10021310a- 7 fO

Detroit

..... Uili'GIJS

.

•

Lolich , L emanczyk (8 1 -lnd
L•m Dnt ;
Busbv 112·8) and
Hetly. LP ~t,.o li ch (10.10).

• Floor Joi nt 9n 16" (en ter wilh ~ T &amp; G Floor

That's less than a third of our usual price!
·
HERE'S THE BEST PART_: We hav
'
.·
gage plans tor qua lified buyers Wh o~ a 1 _ of three l'r!Qrt..
rng tot free and clear. The down
wn or can get) a ~u lldjust $100 . As one of Americ a's largfs~yh~~n~ ~s if~ most al~ays
our own financial resou rces to help ou c 1 u ers, we have
homes when they want them 0
t r us omers bu ild the ir
," point~'' to pay, and closing cOst~~ :: ~~nf~~~~ompetltlve,· no

l1vmg roo m ove~ 25
laundry, full basement
close ts , .. you get·the idea
I"
.
'J
.
everything comes with 8 fudge ho~:P~~:"~:~· ~!~r~~ O~~.

r~dlsh by doi ng
'"

some of the interior finishi ng you rsel f ! You' ll

e who le story in the Ridge magazine.

·

Thlte .,, len model• priced .,.twnn 122,505 •nd $27,305.

•

0".

can ge t a ir co ndition ing in it fo r just $99. Yo u' ll
save hundreds o r dollars!
. Save whe n yo u cool a new S upe r Beet le.
Or Das her . Or 41 2. Or Bus. Or Karman Ghia .
Or Campmo bile. Or Thing .,lAir c ond itioning in
any of th e m, just $99 . In fact , Ihe only mode ls
n ot in c luded in this offe r a re the Basic Beetle
a nd the Love Bug .
Vo lks w a gen a ir co nd ition ing ... no w wh e n
you need il most . :. no w just $99 .

' lot and ·'nclu d~ rri•ter lal s appllan
ownerS

-

Idle morts a ge plans hot avilil• ble In Verffiont . IllinoiS t.IJin'e K :n~ u~ of ~he d~lw n paymen t piLls all monthly sP:ym l ~ - 0 1 ••ch and then"1 ti
_'
·
u ~ . •w Jersey anr;t North Carotin• . How
e n s over l6 years). Such
S
•• .
.
'
.
• ve r, othe r t11lr t1c ll v• pla ns ere,

lop Waotmg to ge t started on .your dream home You

Free· M
•
probably have all the cash yo u need. You'll fi nd the Mag •. agFaz~ne: Get you r F REE Cull-color Ridge
whole _exci ting story in our free 88·p age Ridge Homes drea~z~~;,e ;~,.?u' how yo ur fa mily can _have their .
Magaz me. It features an arttclc by Francis Reers ·who,. up a copy at
. Send fo r o ur F REE magazone or pick
h~c mos'. of .out cus'.omers, had " Rid ge home built on W
yo ur nea rest Ro dge dealer today.
.
ho~ lot woth JUS( $100 dow n, Over 25,000 families own lnte ~rn.dreama
.
Rodge ho mes- and so can yours.
.
o omes". every day.

Just think ... you can custom-design your home just as
th ey dtd. You ge t the exact home you want, and an easy •
way to afford the ho~e you choose. The. Reers family .•
saved $4,000 . by iloon~ some of the interior finishing
themselves. Our free R odge Magazi ne tells you how.
•

YOUR RIDGE DEALER;

RIDG~

MORGAN-RIDGE HOMES

&gt;

DON WATTS
VOLKSWAGEN

TO: lltiDQE HOMES
1100 Rldtt ,.,,.

Conshoh~lilen, Pa. 19-e:tl -

..

412 ~~

~~~~:~;:~fd~ ~o'm~;£~::z1~:,·ou_r

· Loots Morpn
3W West Ma in

.

'8

·-

\0:1!/~~

••
e
•

This sp ecia l air co nditio nin' g
o ffer by your Volks wagen distribu tor ex'pires Au gust
15. 1974. And it's available only at participa ting
Vo lKs wagen dealers;

.

HOmES

. ----...~

•

In lhe Gafllpof/1, Ohio/Ripley, W.Va . Area:

15

UPP.ER RT. 7

•e N~m:~==;======~~~=====

~ ip!ey

;~;"

......._.

GEM""
"""' •

lllCTIIIC •

e c.,•••

We'd Ilk• to build In (to.,n)
l
,

Pha

StatL-_ _ _ __

•

.. 1- l - - - - _

•••••••••••••••

PH. 446-!11100

GAI!IPOUS

Addres

304-3 72·2949
304·273·2024

Anodized A l ymin urr." W indow wi th Insu l ated G loss and Scree n~
• 4 Pic ture Wi ndows

• Double lnsulo l ed Thro ugh ovt
• Premiu m W' Pan el ing, Bi rch and Elm
•"Bi rt h Doo rs and Hcm;h .,.ood Trim

• De l v.~~.e Kirchen Cobi nets ond N ome Brand Appliances
.• The

Quie t Heo tmg System i_s Ano ther Morleue Fea ture , Gos. Fuel

Oil _
o r To to/ Elec_trlc

.-

. • Del uJt:e Nylon Carpet, Very G ?od Q.un lity
• This Modetre Sectional Home Features A Very large li~i~g ~oom .
Dining ioom, 2 lorge Bedrooms, ond o Mos ter Be.dr oom &amp; Dressi ng

Ared l ~ o l wilt Appea l ro rha Most Oiscril':"l inat ing lady. lorge Fomi ly

Room ond o Deluxe Kir chen !hoi Makes Living A Ple asure, 1~ B ot~s
ond Ul i) ity Ar ea .

au/ yo u be tter hUt~y.

···~· • • • • • •
.........- ..........

• '2x4 'Studding wil h Plvwood Slarm Si ding
• Trussed J?oof wi th Pl)-wood Roof Sheo lhing
• '2351 b.•a.spho ll Roof Shi11gles ISeal Down l

avera ge of one every other

1

If you buy a ne w Vo lks wage n right no w, you

'";;;:;;,;:";:;,;:;~:;:;7,:;:;::~==~:;~----1
1
'::;~~~~~c::f
ds~:." ·6o4•'·"'Qe•1nterr••t.•npayment
A~NU~t~~1r¢E":tAbdEe~~
;l ~fl~S~·:~,.·•,•,.".•,•,,· in1&lt;1 0•1uun
de~~~mon
,.,~":x:~~~'~r
fin~~~~~~~~~
•'m
'"o'' " 1t t'l• Interior.
Fl"
pr~c• - $35 385 .4 3 (th
thly paym · n!
f S 5·
un of $18 000
sh ow n
ar•tr ansportlt
for homeslon
stmi·cons
t r ue 1ed
lPrice•
ocel taus
and
char

Call No. 490

l.RADI·fNS ACCIPIID - FINANCING AVAIIAitl
.

.

SoW and erect.d \y tM ar"'s _most

tllptrilfKtd

dealer or hlhltr of

1ettiMal ltomts.

THI "lOUIS!" NOW ON DISPlAY
STOP IN TODAY

.. HOURS, 9 TO, BMO N DA Y TH-RU FRI DAY .
9 TO 5 SATU RDAY-ClOSED SU N DAY

business day. By 1928, Sears
had opened. 192 stores; it grew
to 324 stores in 1929. By the
time the 400th store had opened
in 1933, Sears retail sales
volume already ·had surpassed
catalog sal~s .
Despite . the depression,
Sears continued to open stores
dlll:ing the I930s. When the war
broke out in 1941, more than 600
stores were opera~ing .
Today Sears, Roebuck .and
(::o. operate~ more than 825
retail outlelswhich account for
l .m.nr•lhan three.quarters of its
annual sales volume.
The success or Sears'
domestic stores only whetted
General WOod's imagination
for international business. In
1942, Wood, by then Chairman
of the Board, Opened a Sears
'
s!&lt;lre
in Havana, Cuba - the

Midkiff takes part
irt Atlantic exercise
POMEROY -'- Marine lrCpl.
Daniel F. Midkiff, participated
in "Solid Shield '74" the only
annual Atlantic Command
exercise which includes force s
from all or the u. s. Armed.
Services. He took part io
maneuvers off the East Coast
near the Marine Corps base at
Camp LeJeune, N. c. The
operation is designed to test the
control and coordination of
forces in a unified command
environment . Cpl. Midkiff
serves with the Second Am·
phibious Tractor Bn. at Camp
LeJeune. He is niarried to the
former Cynthia Doliligan,
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Roy
Domigan of Coolville Route 2,
and is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Midkiff, Langsville.

by Nell S1mon

july 3 1-Aug. 3 and Aug. 7·10
Baker Cente r Ballroom
•
(includes. dinner)
T ic ket Off ice Ho ur s:

IOa.m . to 2 p.m.an.d 5 to 9p.m.
Monday throug h Saturday.
Sunday hours 12 npo n tp 5 p.m .

Call 594-5010

QV~!:!:.
·

Theater,tnc:.

Athens , Ohio 45701

Charter No . .1980
National Bank Region No.4
REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING
DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES, OF THE

ol Pomeroy In the State of Ohio, at the dose ol business on June 30, 1974
published In response to cau made by Comptroller ol the Currency, uoder Title
12, United States Code, Section 161.
·
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks • • • • • • • •• • .•••. • " •• $ 1,597,471.97
U.S.-Treasury securities • ~ • • • • • . . . • .
• •••• 2,834,060.57
Obligations of other U.S. Government
agencies and corporations . . . • • . • • •
" " " " " 159,642.4I
.Obligations of States and political subdivisions • . .
2,026,957.88
Othersecurities · - • • • • · • • • • •
• .• .• . " 37,742.50
Federal funds sold and securiiies purchased .
under agreements to resell " · · · · · · ,.
6,875,000.00
Loans • • • • • • • • . . . . • . . . . . . .
7,468,369.10
Bank premises, furniture and 'fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises • . • •
" 287,525.39
Otherassets • . . • • • • • • • • . •
" " I,ll7.58
TOTAL ASSETS . . . • • • • • • • • •
$21,287,887.40
LIABU..ITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
andcorporatlons • .• • • • • • • . . . .
$4,719,153.30
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations • • • · • • • • • •
12,270,999.15
Deposits of United States Government • • • • • • •
• 197,761.27
Deposits of States and political subdivisions • ~ • • •••• · • • 2,142 877.29
Certified and officers' checks, etc. · · · • · • • • • • • • • 10i,371.39
TOTAL DEPOSITS · · · · · · - · · $19,433,162.4il
(a) Total demand deposits • • • • • .
$ 6,123,682.73
(b) Total time and savings deposits · • •
$13 1309,479.67
Other liabilities • • • • • . • • • • •
• • • • • • 227,384.06
TOTAL UABIUTIES • • • • • • • ·
• • • • • $19,660,546.45
RESERVES ON J 'IANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
·
(setuppursuanttoiRSrulings) · • · . ·• · · · · •.
: : !92,845.11.
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
" $92,845.11
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital-total • • • • • ; •
• .
$1,534,495.84
Common S!&lt;lck.total par value
200,000.00
No . shares authorized 8,1100
No. shares outstanding · 8,000
Surplus .
.. • ..
" " " " 1,0110,000.00
Un
ro 'ts · · · · · · ·
TOT L CAPIT
ACCOUNTS
TOTAL U
UTJES, RESERVES, AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
121,287,887.40 .
.
.
. .MEMORANDA
Average of !&lt;ltal deposits for the 15 calendar
/
days ending with call date . . • . . . .
$19,109,182.95
Average of !&lt;ltalloans lor the 15 calendar
days ending with call date
• . ..
$ 7,139,317.94
I, Maxine Griffltb, Cashier, ol the above-named baiok do hereby declBre
that this report or condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and
l&gt;ellel. ·
:
·
· ·
·
Maxine GrU!Ith

company 's first ·permanent

MOBIL~
u

HOMES, INC.

see Jim

Staab or Joe G:toos

.Pper Rt · 7 Nut Door to Auto Auction
Phone 446-9340
Ga!Jt'""lls', Ohio
....

:._-----,-------- --.._,_.;----J ..___________________..
i

DANIEL F. MIDKIFF

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK

cen,tury, Sears, · Roebuck and

~~~,~~~,s;o~n~t~h ~~.- $19,sss• ::_- This bi-.level has 3 large

-Four bedroOms, 2¥2

Good food and sa ucy comedy

Roebuck, and six years later, retired in 1908, the company

000 000 DOG- 0 4 3

-

J uly 17· 21 and 24-2 8
Forum Th eater

other "soft good s.~~
because of volume buying,
In 1947, with war shortages
ra ilr oads and post offices,
disappearing,
Sears opened a
offered farmers an alternative
store in Mexico City, and
to high-priced rural stores.
By 1895, Sears was producing furth er expansion began .
a 507-page catalog that in· Today, Sears has more than 100
eluded a wide variety ot items stores and sales offices in II
previously difficult and ex· Latin American countries.
Sears e xpansi on overseas
pensive to obtain in rural
we nt un claimed until the areas. Years later, the com- · was matched in 1953 by ex·
pansion into Canada, In that
to ~· n 's 23-yea r -old ra il roa d pany adopted the motto, ~~sh op
year,
Sears joined a pioneer
sta ti on e~gen t received per- at Sears and Save." Beca use
mission to buy them at a farmers could do just that in Canadian company, Simpsons,
Ltd., to form Simpson-Sears
discoun t.
the 1890s, Sears prospered.
In doing so, Richard W.
Just as the company was · Ltd . This company now
Sears embarked on a new changing to meet the needs of operates more than 30 retail
career that led to the birth of its customers, so it changed soores and more than 400
the world's larges t me r· from within. Shortly before the catalog sales offices in the
chandising organization.
turn of the century, Roebuck Dominion.
In 1967, Sears expanded into
By year's end, Sears .wa s in resigned because of poor
business for himself in Min· health . Sears , although Europe with the opening of a
neapolis
head of the R. W. . recognized as a promotional store in Barcelona, Spain . A
Sears Watch Company. He had and marketing genius, had to Madrid store was opened in
sold his watches to other turn oqtward for management 1970, and in 1971 the company
age nts up and down the line, !alent. So, in 1895, Julius acquired Galeries Anspach, a
made a profit and ordered Rosenwald, a Chicago clothing leading retail opera lion in
more foi' resale.
manufacturer , purchased an Brussels, Belgium , which
operates eight retail outlets.
The next year Sears moved interest in the firm .
At home, General Wood's
to Chicago and established a
Rosenwald 's business inexpansion
program . was
catalog sales business . He teUect, combined with Sears'
hired a young watchmaker to genius for salesmanship, carried on by his successors. It
make certain his products started ·the company on the continues today under Sears
chairmct:n and chief executive
could be serviced well. The road to greatness.
oiflcer,
.Arthur M. Wood.
man 's name was Alvah C.
By the time Richard Sears

Store, it's hard to imagine that
his modern shopping hub can
be traced back to 1886 and the
ar riv al ol some gold-filled
watches in the small mining
community of North Redm ond,
Minp.
Addressed to a jeweler who
didn't want them , the watches

too 000 Dlx- 10 9 1
.( Ca~r'a , K ra usse (1), J . N iekro
6), Hou se fBI and Oat es ·
C,o rrell t 8); For sch ( h 1) , and
S1mm on s. L P -Cap r a ( 9 . 4 ).

..

by Ala n Ja )' Lt&gt;t!h!t
and F1edl'ncM Loewe

Sears, RQebuck and Co., traced back to 1886

( 2nd game)

Chic-ago
100 DOD 201 - 4 6 1
Houston
205 D20. DO IC- 9 13 •0
·T Reusche l , Ston e (3), P ina (5) ,
• ~d {5&gt;. _Pr all ing ( 7) an d
SWISher ; W rlson. F 9 r sch 191
. Land M . M ay . WP -WiiSo n { 6-6).
P-Reusc h el 18-7) . HR: s-KesS Inger f l st lr L. Ma y ( 15th).

Highlands

,;;.

great fam ily roo~ ~ft~e!~~v:-~~~~e lower level has room for a
powder roo m and garage With AI~ de~ spacious utility room,
the home you want at' a p'rica
ge omes, you always get
for 25,000 famil ies Ia choose- ~~ug~aSeaftford. Reason enough
The
·
e or yourse lf!
re are 1ourtun modtll prfetd betwt•n·S11,305 -Ind 121,185.

eleven modelt priced between $14,1510 and $17,920.

The musiC
and th e ma gic
o r tho
Scott ish

RONALD E. RUSSELL

. a new Sears vice president,

t:~arr r son ,

Artanta

POMEROY Spec. 4
Ronald E. RusseU .._tved on
honorable diJch.arge frll!ll the
U.s. Army on July D. He wu
stationed at Fort Geor1e G.
Meade, Maryland, with the .
78th Engineers, Co. D. He Ia the
- or Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Russell of Wolf Pen. Grand·
parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Russell, Pomeroy
Route 4, and Mrs. E thel Chork,
Albany Route 2. Ruaell Is
married to the formeT Nancy
Roush of Apple Grove. They
have two children, Amanda, 2,
an d Michael, 8 montha.·

....

· .- ·
o ·nd game)
C!ncinnati
ooo 310 aoo- 4 10 3 .
Pittsburgh 003 ooo ooo- 3 8 3
T . Carroll , C. Carro ll (9) and
8 en ch, Pl umm er (7) ; Deme r y ,
H~rnand ez fll and sangu illen .
WP -T .
Carrol l
(2 -0J.
LPOem er y f O-•H .
·
·
AUant~

and costs, speeding; Michael
Wilson, Belpre, $17 and costs,
speeding; Willi a R. Peters,
Parkersburg, $10 and costs,
failure to yield ; Je~frey B.
Russell , Middleport, $15 and
costs, license suspended 30
days, r eckl ess operation ;
Addison C. Person , Murray
City, $7 and costs, speeding;
Thomas Stobart, Racine, and

•24 New AMF Lanes
.snack Bar and
Captain's Lounge

Pitching

Nahonal League : John, LA 13-3 ; M c Glo then . St. L
12 -4;
Marshall , LA 11 -4; Br ett . P itt
11 -5_; M orton . A tl and Lonbor g
Ph il 11 -7.
'
American League : G . P er ry,
C!ev 15-2; Wood , Chi 14-10 ;
T•ant , Bos 12-7; Busb y , K C and
Hunter , Oak 12 -B.

8~ 325 . 39 101 .311
Home Runs
Niitional LE!ague : . Cedeno ,
Hou
and
W ynn ,
LA
19 ·
Schm idt, Phil 18 ; Be nc h, Ci~
16: Perez , Cin. L. Ma y, Ho u
and Gervey , LA 15.
American League: 0 . A l len ,
Chi 22 ; Mayberry , K C 17 ;

Rud i, Oa k

costs, tmsafe vehic1e; Marvin
Randolph, Pomeroy, Rt. 2, $8

"For That Personal &amp; Professional Touch"
· FEATURING

55 ; Ja c k s on , Oak 53.

:~:~~~nM~~~ ~~ ~:~ i~ :~ :~ ~~

Holter , Racine, Rt. 1, $10 and
costs each, speeding; Daniel E.
McOoud, Middleport, $5 and

and PRO-SHOP

SPECIAL RATES TO,
CHURCH GROUPS
PARTIES, STUDENTS.

Russell receives honorable discharge

RACINE - Contracts for the will lnsl&lt;!ad lake part In fJ
next school year were awarded &lt;na&amp;l&lt;!r's degree progrum . The
Thursday night when the board agreed to enter Into a
Southe.rn Local School &amp;ard contract with the county board
&lt;I education for a school nurse
met in regular se!!Slon .
The Betsy RAJss Co. was lor a period of one year . All
given the contract on baked buill on rurnace for the junior
go&lt;!ds; Valley Bell on dairy high school were rejected
products; Jerrers Coal Co., pending further lltudy.
coal; Best Orlke Machines Co
The re&lt;~ignation of Ea rl
service to the busines~ Cross, a bus driver, was aced u cat l on mach ines; oepted and Gordon Proffitt was
Roseberry's Pennzoil, anti employed as custodian at the
Creete, retread tires, tubers, • Portland School effective J uly
motor oil, grease; Meigs Tire 22 .
Center, new tires.
The board recessed its
The board employed Mary meeting untll8 p.m. on July 16.
Ann Slone as a business and Attending were board mem·
&lt;ifice ·education instructor lor bers, Dennie Hill , Denn y
t!Je high school and accepted Evans, Grover Salser, Jr.,
the resignation of Michaela David Nease, Jack Bostic;
Hoback who had been em- Qerk N;mcy Carnahan, Supt.
ployed as a new teacher but Bob Ord _and Mrs .. Gcn cyiev~
Harvey, clerk·trainee .

111Ul he beat the Calladlan by
J0.9seconds in the second hMt.
Graham McRae ol New
Zealand was tlllrd and Brett
Lunger, the ex-Marine from
Santa Ana, Calli., lOOmed
, home rourth.
Redrnail, the 1973 F ·500
champion in this country,
reached 176.5 m.p.h. durilg
one straightaway, the top
speed in either heal.
The French Tricolor ap.
peared destined to rule o•er
another auto racing capital as
the powerful Bl ue Matras
shoved off from the fr ont row
Saturday in search of their
sixt~ straight world chan.
· pionship of Manufacture 's
Race .

Redman , a Briton, drivin g a
crimson Lola, also averaged

'i;

1974 MODEL CARS
•300.00 to •400.00 Dollars
Higher---

-

Contracts awarded
by Southern board

Andretti, Redntan
earn front row
WATKINS GLEN, N. Y.
(UP! )_ Mario AndreW scored
a runaway 44"5econd victory i~
the first heat and Brian Hed·
man had an 11-second ad·
vantage in his section Saturday
as they qualilied lor the front
row in today's JOI·mile ronnula
5000 Feature Race.
Marvelous Marlo, a ronner
Indianapolis champion and one
of a handful or u. s. drivers to
ever win a Fonnula 1 Grand
Prix .Race, averaged 117 miles
per hour in beating David
Hobbs of England in the 11;-lap,
50.1knile opening heat .
· Andretti, an Halian born
driver from Na,.reth, Pa., had
the fastest lap in either heat
when he pushed his Lola to a
clocking of one minute, 11.5
seconds during one lap around
the 3.37-m.ile circuit .
Sam Posey of San Juan
Capistrano, Calif., driving with
a right leg tightly bandaged
after tear ing several ligaments
in a minor mishap on !',riday,
was black flagged for a broken
exhaust but was allowed to
keep his third place finish .
Evan Noyes of Cedarville,
Mich., finished fourth in the
.opening heat.

ntlllei,Sw\day, July l4. lt74

outlet In a foreign land. Sears '
Cuban stores were ex·
propriated by Fidel Castro in

1960.
World War II shortages ilf
refrigerators, stoves and other
appliances halted expansion
plans, but exis ting stores
prospered a s Sears moved
more strongly into apparel ~hd

We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this report of con,
ditlon and declare that lt has be~n examined by us and to th~ best or our
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
· ·
Edison Hobstetter
Horace Klirr Dlnctoro
Warren Plrkena

'

"

�:12 • Tho Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sunday, July 14, 1?'14

Accidents, fires costly
to ranchers, farmers ·
OOL.UMBUS - Two and a but lert thousands of (llsabllng
hall billion dollars ! That is injuries - many permanent
what accidents and !Ires cost handicaps.
.
farm and ranch pt'O!Jle across
Focusing In on the lives of
the country last year. In 1972, Ohlo's- farm fo'lliUes, the Ohio
farm accldents alone cos t Cooperative- c xtension Service
Ohioans over five milli on

recenUy com~lded a farm

died in accidents each week.
2. Seventy-five percent of the
farm people killed in accidents
were men and boys.
3. Ninety (90) serious, nonfatal accidents occurred for

every fatal accident . .
4. Accident..! deaths from
faits came to 16pct. and misuse
of motor vehicles accounted for
mere gold, however, were the over the last ten years, much 44 pd.
2,200 people killed across the work still remains in over- · Accidents claimed the lives
country last
year
in coming additional study lin- of 194 Ohio farm people in 1972.
agricultural accidents . Ac- dings :
Trying to make a dent In a
cidents that not only took Jives,
I. Four _Ohio farm people
massive problem like this Is
what July 25-31 is all about National Farm Safety Week.
Local and st..te organizations
·throughout Ohio will be actively engaged in educational
campaigns to strike back at the
tremendous loss to farm people.
and property .
Because falls and motor
By &amp;b Hoeflich
.

Beat ...

Apage in the 1974 Meigs County Fair premium book has been
used in memory or Marvin King, vice president of the fair board,
who recenUy was killed in an accident while on his employment
In Athena.
The page Includes a photograph of Marvin who was certainly
me of the most dedicated members of the board. The annual fair
was certainly his thing. His widow, Mickey, is continuing as
secrell' : of the board.

'

MRS. LOIS PAUl ..' who is about to embark into the real
estate sales busine ·• as the local representative of Stout Realty
received a fractured '•g recently when she fell while fishing at
Hidden Lakes. lr casf, Lois is just about grounded completely for
the next few weeks.
. A NICE GESTIJRE to Milton Hood who is retiring after
serving lor 'SI years with the Ford Motor Co. dealership in Meigs
Count)' at the Meigs Inn Thursday night. Miltop and wife, Freda,
who reside In Middleport, are the parents of two sons, Jim and
John. They lost their beloved third son, Sam, in a tragic auto
accident on Sept. 2, 1971.
PAMNORTII, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Rickman, must
be quite an asset to the M. and R. Shopping Center operated by
, her follal. Pam, one of the most personable and poised youngsters
' I've seen In a while, steps Into the center now and again to lielp
with special promotions and other work at the store. Pam will he
a sophomore at Meigs High
fall .

COllie

.'

JOHN MOHLER, Middleport Route I, has written the words
to a country-western tune, "Wounded Knee" which Is due out
soon on 1he Shanes label. John is enthused these days shout the
po88ibilities of some of his tunes really catching ori across the
naUon.
·
·
·
.

01 Agrieullure
SoU Cou. Service
Pt. Pleouol

By John C. Rl&lt;o
Ell. Agent, Agriculture

dollars - about $329 per ac- acci&lt;jcnt study. Encouraged by
cident,
.
a 40 pet. drop In accidental
StlU more precious thar d, aths to Ohio's farm people

Of the Bend .:;. ,'
Ill!' ~~

County ligent's Soi~s important in growth
corner
By u.s. Department

.

•

vehicles

account for the
majority of farm related ac-

cide nts ,
the
Accident
Prevention &amp; Product Safety
Unit of the Ohio Deparirnent of
Health, in cooperation with
Gallipolis City Manager Paul
Willer has zeroed in on
suggested

recommendations

geared to reducing farm
deaths and inj!U'ies.
I. Watch your step at all
times when working with farm
equipment
mounting,
dismounting. servicing.
·2. Keep platforms, steps free
of mud, debris, and tools.
3. - Don'tjump off a tractor,
wagon or other ·moving
machinery.
4. Enforce the

11

no rider"

rule for all tractors and selfpropelled equipment.
5. Wear shoos or boots with
sllp-resist..nt soles and heels.
6. When pulling heavy loads,
keep the drawbar at the
recommended height, usually
under 21 inches and 4 inches
behind rear tires.
7. Avoid operating your
tractor on steep slopes when

possible and avoid quick, sharp
turns.
6. Always operate machinery
with tile power t.lke off shield
in place and shut off power

23 - TheSunday~.&amp;ntlnel,&amp;mday,July 14,1t'lt

BY JOHNC,RJCE
Coll!lly Este•loa A&amp;etlt, Apic.

The Ohio "FerUbuli" program has now been la\lllched. The
program conalots of on-the.fann del!l0115trations to show that
beef catUe producUon Is more profitable wtth the right combination or resources.
Fifteen Ohio farmers have been selected throughout the
stare as demmstratlon cooperators. Each will provide 25 or more
heef cows to be bred to production-tested bulls by AI. or natural
seryice. The cows will be maintained from the production of 60
acres of meadows and pastures.
The Meigs County cooperator is Dave Gloeckner of Route %,
Raclne,Ohlo. This has been made possible locaUy by the banks,
machinery dealers, leed dealers, -and other local government
agencies plus the Cooperative Extension Service. This is a ·
tribute to Meigs O&gt;unty to see such a joint elfori.
The aim is to achieve a high level of soil fertility through
application of ferillizer and lime based on soil test. recommendationa. Maintenance fertilizer and lime appllcationa are to
he applied annuaUy. Higher yields will penni! expanding the
heel cow and, In turn, result In a more profitable enterprise.
The farm operators are to keep complete records to determine crop and livestock production. The records also will show
annual expenses and income,
. Objectives of the program are to (I) Increase forage and
crop production through adequate use or lime and fertilher ; (2)
increase calving percentage and weaning weights by using
quality beef-breeding livestock and good management pracUces; (3) make Ohio's pasture lands more profitable by increasing the carrying capacity and beef catUe stocking rates;
and (4) gain gteater profits through proper comblnaUons or
pastures, forages, and beef herd management.
Seedlngs of improved grasses will be made in August and_25
cows will be put on 60 acres in the spring.

Have you looked recenUy to
see who your neighbors are?
A ql!lck glance !rom your
living room window may
reveal a new housJng
development, an aparirnent
complex. or even in the
dist..nce a shopping center.
The chances are good !hat
you have a new view if you live
In the fringe areas of many
West Virginia cilles; large and
small. according to JalQes S.
Bennett, st..te conservationist
!rom the U. &amp;. Soil Conservation Service (SCS).
Growth around Charleston,
Huntington, · Parkersburg,
Morgantown and Clarksburg
has accelerated by about 50
pet. during the last five years,
he said. In the Eastern
Panhandle, development
around Martinsburg has increased even faster, in!iuenced
by growth in the Washington
meb:opolit..n area,
More and better buildings
are required, Bennett said, but
developers also need to consider the soils they are

'Brigadoon' opens at OU

He Identified sotleroelon as •
Ptot&gt;tem cormnon to all construction sites.
"Erosion can be reduced by
llmtUng the amount of land
disturbed at any one Ume,
temporary
seeding
or
disturbed areas left more than
30 days, permanent seeding a•
soon as coll.'ltrucUon is com·
pleted, and proper water
disposal," he said.
"Water disposal Is most
Important
ln controlling
basements, cracked foun·
dationa, or unattractive sei.- erosion. Developers can use
storm sewers, diverslons,
Un~ ."
Proper site selection is the waterways, sediment baslll.'l,
!irst stop toward wise grade stabilization structures,
protection ,
development, he said. Some streambank
sOils are flooded periodically, culverts, or water storage
and others are too steep. Some structures."
Local soil conservation
sOils have seasonal high water
tables. Others are stony or districts and the SCS have .
shallow to bedrock. In some published the Erosion and
parts of West VIrginia, soils Sediment Control HandboOk
that slip and slide under for Urban Areas of West
pressure
have actually Virginia. ·The handbook ex·
destroyed homes by pulling plains which plants and
them apart.
structural measures are most
" It is most import,nt that useful to reduce erosion and
the land be suited for the in- manage runoff.
tended use, or else that
Advice on soilS is available
measures be taken to over- from the Wes&lt;ern Soli Concome soil limitations during servation District at the SCS
and after construction;" he office in Pt. Pleasant.
said.
dlslurblng and using as
!oundaUon materials, .
"Just as it is Jnacrurate to
think of all parts of West
Virginia as being alike, it din
be cooUy to lgn!O'e the dif·
ference ln soils," he said.
"Because West Virginia soils
are very dlllerent !rom place
to place - even within the
same county - thoughUess
construcUon can end In excess.ive . !!rosion,
~et

ATHENS ~ The magic or
love and the lure or the fan.
l.ast(c are lW!t two of the .
qualities that characterize. the

Heather on the Hili," " Almost
Uke Being in Love," and
"Come to Me, Bend to Me,"
written by music masters

musi cal, '• Brigadoon," the

Lerner and Loewe.

second production to be st.aged
by t.he Ohio Valley Summer
Theater (OVST) during ihe
monlli of July.
Beginning July 17, in the.
Forum Theater, theatergoors
will be able to explore the
highlights of ScoUand through
the magical dream-world of
Brigadoon. A realistic love
story placed In a mystical
setting, "Brlgadoon" is sure to

Rehearsals for "Brlgadoon"
are presently underway under
the direction or Robert Winters
·wtth the music being handled
by Ira Zook. Oloreographer
Joan Wickstrom is In charge o!
the dances. Designers are Dan
Wilhelm, production ; John
Cosby, l!gbting; and Carol
Blanchard, costumes.
Tickets for "Brigadoon" and
the remaining OVST shows are
capture everyone's heart.
presently on sale in the Kant·
Audiences will hear such ner Hall box office Monday
beautilul son~s as "The through Saturday, 10 a .m. to 2

...

"

'·

p.m. an!l 5 to 9 p.m., and
S111day from 12 noon to 2 p.m.
and 5 to 9 p.m .
SERVICES SET
GAlliPOLIS - There will
be preaching every night this
week except Saturday at the
White Oak Baptist Olurch with
Rev . Jameo Puckett, Dearfield
Beach, Fla., as evangelist,
every night at 7:30 p.m.
~veryone

is welcome.

Ca nadian five -cent. p\eces

are magnetic , while their
U.S. counterparts are not beca use the former have a
higher nickel content.

,,

Society has picnic
POMEROY
Approximately 65 members and
guests attended a picnic held at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Clinton Fisher on Uncoln Hill
Road Thursday in a ~barter
day observance by the Meigs
County Humane Society.
Mrs. Roscoo Fowler, Mrs.
Eleanor Welch Zelher and
Thurston Stone were in charge
of the affair . A mobile unit used
by Dr. Paul E. Shockey and Dr.
J . W. McCoy of the Jackson
County, w. va ., animal clinic
was on display and it is hoped
by the local society that the
unit can be brought to Meigs
County on 8 monthly basis to

•

Nine key men appointed
Red soil dominates to area Boy Scout .Council
T. L. Lore ·farm
Ashland Oil, Inc., Ashland,
Ky ., Training Chairman;
chairmen of the operating Earle S. · Dillard, President;
committee of the Tri-State .Bloss &amp; Dillard, Inc., HunArea Council, Boy Scouts of tington, Membership ChairAmerica, were made by man ; Pat McDonald, Manager
Council President Ted. Cald· of Technical Services, The
'l'ell at the Council Executive Cammack Agency, HunBoard meeting held on June 24. tington, Public Relations
Those men reappointed are Chairman; Donald E. Maras follows: Dr. Richard Mc- teeny, Plant Manager ACF
cray, Oral Surge,on· of Hun- InduStries, Huntington, Ex·
tington, Camping Chairman; plorlng Division Chairman and
John Schneider, General Bernard Dickinson, Works
Engineer, U. S. Corps of Manager, W. Va., Works ,
Engineers, Ashland, Health Connors Steel Division, H. K.
and Safety Chainnan; Walter Porter Co., of Huntington,
M. Thomaso.n, Technical Advancement Chairman.
Service Engineering Manager,
Product Application Dept,,
Ashland Petroleum Co.,
HUNTINGTON
Ap·
poinbnents of nine key men as

BY JOHN COOPER
Soil Cons. Service
PT. PLEASANT - We
visited the T. L.. Lore place on
Red Mud Ridge for the purpose
of helping him locate a site for
a pond. As the name of · the
ridge indicates, the color of the
soil is red and the name of it is
Upshur Silty Clay Loam.
This type of red clay is excellent for holding water,
although once in'a while a gray

Lay of the Land

st..ying healthy. Joining the
Lore place and on out the ridge,
we visited the Ed Durst farm .
Mr. Durst is one of those oc·
togenarian farmer s about

whom we wrote feature stories
sorrie two years ago.

We found Mr. Durst still hale
and hearty, although he had
recenUy recovered from a sick
speH and at the age of 67, was
about to retire.
HIS son, Virgil, and family
are still operating the 364-acre
farm with the same vigor
exhibited by Mr. Durst in

shale layer appears and clay
must be packed over that shale former years. Virgi1 was
HOWARD FRANK as Meigs County treasurer is irequently befor.e di smounting from
In order to prevent leading.
preparing a seedbed on a 4().
named In lawsuits !U.ed In the Meigs County Common Pleas Court II:actor.
We
found
an
excellent
place
acre ridge to reseed this ridge
by virtue ·of his position as county official. The reason for this is.
Farm Safety Week·' calls ·
· ' tllat the treasurer generally holds a real estate lien against attention to accident problems for a medium . sized pond, It meadow. He was doing It by
properties Involved in the suits and this lien holds top priority. which steal away . valued would he consll:ucted by ex- disking, rather than by plowing
cavation with a fill being made
We did want to clarify that there is 1\0 personal involvement on human · and
economic on one side. Since the loCation and disking . .Virgil said that
alxtut three times over the field
Franll•s part -It's automatic because of his treasurer's position. resources in oui agricultural
Is on •op of the ridge, a supply with the disk would have it
communities. These resources of water would be provided ·by
cannot be spared - make a diversion ditch which would thoroughly prepared with a
· Farm ~a fety Week · every pick up possibly an acre in week or two lapse between
each disking operation. We
week !
addition to what water filled in agreed with Virgil that disking
the impoundment itself. We is an excellent way of
have found that with little or no preparing seedbed.
leaking that small watersheds · During our conversation i.t
will supply an ample amount of was pointed out that by dlsking
water for this type of pond.
the organic matter is kept near
The Lores have . their main the surface of the soil ;
home in Evans, · but enjoy . therefore bacteria can · Work
coming
out to the farm where
MARSEILLE, France (UP!) they have a one-acre garden better and seed can germinate
- A r,farseille judge ordered area, some nut trees and a lot and grow to better advant..ge.
Soil conservationists become
prison terms totalling more of open I!Pace.
engaged
in many · activities
than 195 years and a fine of $10 · We found Mr. Lore working
million today for 30 persona in his .garden and after . whi1e visiting farms and
convicted of operating the examining the rank gr~W\ng · servicing requests.
'
We visited the Robert and
notOrious French connection veget..bles In searching for
"•
Clarence
Thomas farn1 near
drug ring,
weeds, we commented to Mr. l-etart for the purpose of
Prosecutors said the ring LOre that we thought he should
•'
moved
a ton of heroin to the he put In jail because we found helping them plan some
•!
United· States before it was two or three weeds perhaps 5 or pasture treatment projects. We
.,
. smashed, parUy thr.ough the 6 inches high, That drew a grin
••
disclosures by a French singer, from the 74-year-&lt;&gt;ld Mr . Lore .
•
Edmond Taillet, 42, who was
RED MUD RIDGE ap•••"
arrested in New York and parently is a good loca\ion lor
named his accomplices to U.S.
'
••
police•
••
Taillet, now free in the Marseille bar-owner, received
United States after serving a the same sentence 1n his abo
'•,
sllortened sentence there, was · sence. Police are still search·;
•·
BODY ENGLISH llu Ill place in filhlng, too, as Linda
sentenced to 16 years at today's ing for him. Other sentences
:: King (llandlng) of ClnclnnaU demonstrated at the recent
M!ll'seille hearing.
·
ranged from 15 years to sir
;: annual Jungle Cock Meet. The meet is sponsored by the
The man named as leader of months.
•• Brotherhood of the Jwigle Cock (Ohio Chapter) and the
the network, a Corsican, Jean
The accused were ordered to
;; .League of Ohio Sportsmen for the purpose of teaching fishing
BapUate Cro&lt;:e, ~2, received pay a total fine of $10 million
•, and nature lore to children between the ages of 12 aild 16. For
the heaviest sentence- 18 the traditional p(actice 1~
i: the Initiated, a "jungle cock" is the bird whose neck festhers · years.
French courts tbough the sums ·
' · are used tn·trout aild salmm flies.
Joseph Marro, a rormer are rarely collected.

a:

French drug
ring hit fifl'lh
·stiff penalties

..
.r.

::

.

referred to as "taking" the

·:

..

b)" Unlttd f'taturt

SJ; ndlt::u~ .

Murray

celebrated her 94th birthday
anniversary at her com.

• A'!"fEND COURSE
ATHENS - Dorothy Griflin,
13 Court St., Gallipolis; Ann
Epling, 626 First Ave .,
Gallipolis; and Angela Griffin,
618Second Ave., Gallipolis, are

fortable and attractive home
on Grant St. in Middleport.
· Quite alert mentally, Mrs.
Murray recalls her girlhood
days at Reedsville where she
was horn, a daughter of the late
Joseph and Mary Randolph.
Her father was a farmer and a
ferryman and Mrs. Murray
\Yas one of 13 children - two
boys and II girls.
Everyone worked at the
Randolph home which was
located right on the Ohio River.
Often, Mrs. Murray recalls, as

a Rirl she used the family skiff
to transport people across the
river. She recalls also the
freezing of the river and the ice

SUNDAY, JULY 14, 19'14

CAP'fAIN EAS'i
' A5 '/0\J .SEj{.-~;~ C LAII'
,~ Af&gt;J "1\.o$0 &gt;'J 16LD "A
&lt;£.LE0.:5Ew\ ,\IMEI&lt;: : ...

'

1\'HICH

~

•

6
10
14
19
21

DUC EY !

•

...

H.E PHANTOM

'

,.

·,

.

26
26
29
30
32

l3
14
35
37

39
40
41
42

Space Saving

44

46
47

48
50
52

•

53

55
·57

Model CT~ 14ER

58

ONLY 26" Wide
• 4.58 cu. ft . lreezer -

59

60

on shopping trips

62

• Adjus1Bble shelves
• Rolls out on wheels

64
66
LITTLE

• Automa1ic icemaker acces-

sory (available at extra
costl. lnsrall when you ·
bfl't il ... or it can be
added laler.

ORPB 'Aif
IIIR . BAlAHCE, Til ' 611111&lt;E~,
TFI'II't' TO Qill l Mf! liE'S
:!lliRf. IT WoiS "tt''Ct.E~K

11flPftllH'JOI'afS - I'E

OIKot!l TO KMOW •

REG. $369.90

$319" .

executive

1 Tremul-ous

HAN P.O~ !;f&lt;,:

•

••

73 Strikes
75 Newspaper

ACROSS

I 5H .4 L.I,..
U5E ON 'iQL!UN Lf~S YOU

22

NOW

Mrs .

"

23
24

'50 OFF

Tuesday,

lne.

*•

· Hand!es all sizes
and types of twines
witho.u t knotter adjustment

..

Dl4trLbu~4

•

duous ordeal.

BY ROBERT-HOEFLICH
MIDDLEPORT Mrs.
James ( Lula ) Randolph
Murray is going strong
towards a century or living In
Meigs County.

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

'
•'

14.2 cu. ft.
NO. FROST
REFRIGERATOR·
FREEZER

Mrs. Murray
celebrates

provide veterinarian services partidpating in a· Swnmer

•

calf.
. Robert said that his heifer
had been In labor ahout a day
and was unable to give birth
without assistance. We
managed to bring the calf
salely. It was alive and the cow
was living in spite of an ar-

Otto, all of the Parkersburg
chapter;
Miss Kathryn
Blizzard and Dr . Paul E.
Shockey, Ripley, W. Va., and
Miss Patricia Nutter, Olarles
F. Bare and Olarles N. Bare,
Ravenswood. Wheatley is
president or the Parkersburg
Society.

here. ·
Dance Workshop for high
· Attending from out of town school students and adults on
were Mr. and Mrs. Elvin the Ohio University campus.
Sheets, Mr. and Mrs. Frank The program Is orrerlng workArnfleld, Mr. and Mrs. Larry shops in modern dance, with
Wheatley, Miss Susan Bradley, emphasis on technique,
Charles Jeffers , William composition,
and
im·
Summers, .. Miss Penny Hen- . provisation, as well as ballet·
derson, Dr , R , C, Rob.mson, and tap. ')'he faculty of the
Miss Sheryl Tanburlni, Terry School of Dance is supervising ·
'i'anburini, Mrs. Jaye Otto, instructors experienced in both
Miss Ruth Hornbrook, Jaye teaching and performing.

New appoinbnents are as
!ollows : H. T. Boggs,
President, H. T. Boggs Co., of
Huntington, Activities
Chairman; and Bob E. Myers,
Vice President-Treasurer
Myers Transfer and Storage,
Inc., of Huntington, Finance
Chairman. .
These operating cllairmen
bring a wealth of Scouting andor business and community
experience to their role or
giving volun leer leadership to .
their respective committees, In
order to support the leaders or
the some 200 Scouting units In
the Tri-State Area C?uncil.

CAPI'IVE NATIONS
OOLUMBl}S (UP!) - July
14-20 has been proclaimed Captive Nations Week In Ohio by ·
Gov: John J. Gilligan In recognition of nations .taken over by
communists.
"We in Ohio deeply share the
aspirations of those countries
for their national independence
and we join them In stri~ for
this freedom," Gilligan said.
arrived at the farm just in time
to help become a midwife to· a
cow who was giving birth to a
call. In farm language it is

MRS. Jamu Murray
oblervetl ber 94th blrtllday
at her Grant St. home In
Middleport Tuesday. She hao
lived in the same residence
for the past 65 years.

INSPECt' UNIT - Mill Rilll Lewta And Dr. Shockey
inspect the mobile unit for wterinary service at the recent
Melga Count)' Humane Society at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Clinton Fisher.

68

Booty (slang}
·oracelul bird
Knots
Extras
Qomesticate
Time gone by
,Calm
Comes on the
scene
Peri ls
Mislead
Penpoinl
Girl's name
SlnP of
leather
Period of time
Wooden pin
Ox ol Celebes
Fall short
Godde ss of
hea ling
Fruit
Falsehoo ds
Containers
Pieces of
dinnerware
RoW
Perform'S
Part ol face
Fasc inate
Oceans
French article
Pertaining to
the laity
Symbol for tin
Long ago
Slalk
Exist
Those holding
offic e
Blemish
Compass
po int
A continent

(abbr.)

39 Above and
touching
10 Neckpiece
71 Girl 's name ..

77 Real estate
map
78 Pluc k
80 Equals
81 Deposit
82 Iterates .
84 Eagles' nests
86 Overlooked
B1 Flag
89 Possessive
pronoun
92 Frolic
95 Country of
Asia
98 Capital of
Latvia
99 Aspiration
101 Vital organs
103 Dispatch
104 Anger
105 Locate
106 Newsgathering
organizati on
(inil .)
107 ll)definite
article
108 Short jacket
110 Free of
1 11 Earth goddess
112 Narro w, llat
board
"113 A continent
115 Preposition
117 Hebrew month
119 Cooled lava
120 Tribe
121 Passenger
boat of the
Nile (pi.l
124 Hebrew
measure
126 Vessel
127 HOst ,"
128 Mestizo
130 Beverage
132 Imitated
133 Word of
sorro,w

134 Fooll ike part
135 Grain (pU
137 Walk
139 Scottish cap
140. Leg
141 Turpentine
Ingredient
143 Baker's
products
145 Federal
agency. (abbr.l
146 Anc ient ga lley
148 Octoroons
150 Pertainin'g to
lhe stars
152 Ta x
153 Gasp far
breath
154 Rat ional
156 Bogs do wn
157 Musica l
instruments
i58 Emmets
159 English
streetcar
160 Passageway
DOWN
1 The narra

2 Dash
3 Subject to
extreme heat
4 Silk worm
5 Firn
6 Saint (abbr.)
7 Small lump
8 Wine cups
9 Refined
10 Lance
11 Distort
12 Beasl of
burden
13 Symbol for
nit on
14 Isthmus
15 Native metal
16 Idolizes
17 Covets
18 Sows
20 P-ersonal
iillerest
.

..

23
25
27
28
3 -t
33

Prophet
.Strike
Gruesome
Loved one
Is ill
Unwanted
plant
36 Dye plant
38 Turns around
track
40 Evergreen
lree
41 Clayey earth
43 Resorts
45 More taut
46 Angry
outburst
47 Profound
49 Drinks slowly
51Partsof

89 Two (Roman
number) .
90 Worthless

91 Cuttlefish

92 The ur lal
93 Group of live
94 Sun god
96 OolphinHke
cetacean
97 Egyptian skink
100 A stale (abbr.)
102 P.i ece for one
105 Te~_b
109 Torpid
112 Skidded
113 Dutch
.measure(pt .)
114 Most
oo mpe1ent
116 A state
sket~ton
~ 18 Dregs
52 Reta1l
12o Style ol dress
establishments 12 1 Colorless
53 Hold on
122 Simplest
123 Break
property
54 Heraldry:
suddenly
gra fted
125 Narrates again
56 Able
126 Thinly
59 Short stqry
scattered
60 V~s se l .
127 Egyptian
61 Dmes .
dancing gi!'l
63 Unusual
129 Great bustard
65 Cravats
131 Remember
67 Worni
132 Essence
69 Ne~r
133 Goats
70 lns1de of
134 Nuisances
lootball
136 Deposits
72 Genus of
138 Analyze, as
grasses
sentence
74 Symbol for
140 Smaller 1
tellurium
number
76 Pron9un
141 Lease
77 Points of
142 Approach
hammer
144 Bristle
79 Period of time 147 Communist
148 Provide crew
83 Greek letter
149 Nahoor sheep
85 Native
151 Burma
American
tribesman
86 Simple
153 Parent
87 Punctilious
Jcolloq.l
person
15.5 Printer s
88 Ireland
measure

All-

ENJOY THE FAIRS

Get Your Fair .

The White House was the
niclmal)'le ~iven to the Execu·
tin Mans10n when Its char· ·
red remains w e re
tewashed after the burn·
of Washlngton by the
.
1111 In 1814.
I

.

•
,,
.

,•

Come In today and compare features, ·
The 40(lls the best baler buy around.

Meigs Equipment

-· '

:If:.'

Supplies Now At

ALL 1974 MODELS MUST GOI ·

Forget about costly down1time and missed bales ,
with the International® All· Twine Balers .. .
with the knotter tnat ties a unique bow-type,
double diameter knot that tests up to 17 percent
stronger than ordinary s·ingle diameter knots
: . . and does· ii with all . types and diameters .
of bater twine without adj ust"lent. ·
• Heavy-duty power train with extra large main
· drive clutch and precision spiral bevel and
pinion ge~rs .

ARE AHEAD!

PH. 992·2176 .

~OMEROY, OHIO

GRJ t~t, 01111

eo~

• 30Y," wide, 64" high
• 6.64 cu. fl. lreozer
• Adjuilable shelves
• Power S!ver Switch helps
cur operating cost
• Automatic icemak'er lavail·

able at extra cosrl . ln'stell
when you buy it ... or .it
can be edded later.

•

• •
'

.'

r

-··

.

$7895
!Al.$4995 .

70X14 SKYLINE
3 BEDROOMS, GAS . . . . NOW
....
.S2x12 SKYLINE 2 BR. TOTAL .
ELEC. USED
OFFICE SPE

$

GEnYSBURG BY CASTLE

5595
.$6995

Model CSF19ER

.RE.G. SS61.57

.•SO OFF

· 60x12 2 BEDROOMS, GAS·•····· .. ••·
. 65x12 3 BR. TOTAL ELEC.............

NOW

CLOSEOUT! NEW 1973 MODEL
· 24x44 2 BEDROOMS
Double wide, total ellictric. Full one
warranty. 'A bargain!

ye&lt;~r

out.rtsn,ding Hotpoint Ss/11 V11/u11s now

_POMEROY
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
PH. 992-2181
~rvll!g Meigs, Gallla

,_...;.._ _ _ _ _ _ ~..;a;,.n..;d--Mason

•

tried to entice her to make her
residence with them. However,

the frozen water. Mrs. Murray Mrs. Murray loves her Mid-·
recalls that she attended a one dleport home.
room school In Reedsville. It
"There's just no place like
was enlarged to four rooms home/' she ·c omments and the
later. It was nothing for the care her home gets is living
Randolph children to plQd to proof.
school through knee deep snow.
she remembers.
W
Mrs . Murray and her
_J_
husband, James, who died 24
OruulJ
years ago h.ave two children, a
BY GOLDIE CLENDENIN
daughter, Mrs. Randolph
PORTLAND - Bible School
Ward, Ravenswood, W. Va., hegins at Reorganized Church
and a son, William (Bill), of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day
Worthington, Ky. Mrs. Murray Saints on Racine-Portland Rd.,
has three grandchildren, seven · Monday, July 15, 7 to 9 p.m ..
. great-grandchildren and three through Friday.
Commencement will be
great-great-grandchildren,
Mrs. Murray maintains an Sunday evening, ,July 21, at 7
immaculate home and's given p.m. when certi!icates will he
a helping hand by her children given out. Coordinators are
and grandchildren, Neighbors Denny and I.J.nda Evans.
help bring in any food that she
There will be six classes with
needs from stores. She sews two teachers each. Dah and.
and turns oUt laney work. She Patty Roush will have the
.enjoys television "to a nilrsery; Sharon Russell and
degree."
Linda Diddle, kindergarten.
1
Residing In the same home In Others participating in c(ass
Middleport lor the past 65 work will be:
years, Mrs. Murray is one of · Linda Evans and Bonnie .
the oldest member of the Lawrence, · Herb White, Bill
Middleport First Baptist Roush, Denny , Evans and

Bz'bl- school
M
starts

Quirch. She has not,·however,

others.

been a~le to attend church for
something like the last three
years.
Members of her family have

Two evenlnga Mercedes
Condon will direct \lie song
service with Jocelyn Baer
taking over on evenings when·
Mercedes has classes at home.
We look forward to a good
turn out, an enjoyable Ume iii
fellowship with the young folk.
Everyone is welcome.
On Friday evening there will
be a wiener roast on the church
lawn SPOnsored by Joo and
Earlene Stobart, owners and
operators of The Steaml!oat
Inn at Racine with a sort of
impromptu program of hymn
sing, folk sorigs and just
v.isiting, Come jOin us in an
evening of ljJn and song.

NO I J. .(} •t 0 S .

,J'L ABNER

"

NEW HAVEN - The New
Haven U0ns will soon he out
ringing doorbeHs as they
.engage In a. broom sales acUvity, The local Lions Sig~t .
. Conservation program and
. · other community projects are .
financed by actiVIties such as
the coming broom sale.
The house brooms to be sold
lire manufactured by the In'
dultrlous Blind Enterprise of
·Clarksburg, West Virginia -a
, project of the West Virginia
J.Jona Sight Conservation
FCIUildation.
The Uona Club of Point
Plea11111t recently completed a
aucceuful broom sales ac;Uvlty.

being so thick that wagons with
supplies moved freely across

MOBILE HOMES

'

·Lions to
sell brooms

CANNERS - A number of Meigs County hcmemaklt8
attended a canning clinic at which bu.lc techniqueo were
demonstrated Friday at the Rock Sprlns• Gralll!e Hall.
Demonstrator was Mrs. Bettie Clark, GaU!a Count)' home
demonstration agent, right, who Ia pictured pointing ,out
volume aapecta to Miss Marta Gullkey, -Meigs County home
demonstraUon agent, who planned the cUnic.

Countit~

$9895

Ali prices include set up and delivery. Financing availabte.

KINGSBURY HOMES
1100 E. MAIN

SALES &amp;
SERVICE, iNC.

PH. 992-7034
POMEROY, OHiO
OPEN DAiLY &amp; SUNDAY2 P.M. toi i&gt;:M.

16-1 &amp; 2 Pc. Uving Room Suites
20.00 lip
3- Bedroom Suites
49.95 up ,
24~Chesls and Dressers
·15.00 up
. 42-Twin and ,l=ull Size Beds, complete 29.95 up
3- Poster. . Beds, you must see .these 39.95 up

Special This Week!

2 BRAND NEW REQ.INERS
in Herculon Materiai

Reduced to 69.95 ·
Several Gas &amp; Etectric Ranges
30.00 up
14-Refrigerator.~, best seieclion now 25.00 up
3-Wooden Dinette Sets, maple, Spanish oak
anddarkpine
.P!liCEDTOSELL
3-Wringer Washers, see these now 49.95 up
Several Kitchen Cabinets, of all kinds 10.00 up .
Goid Philco Re(rigerator, like new
199.95
Turquoise Stove &amp; Refrigerator
pair 249.95
New Vinyl Recliners
49.95
· 18 ·cu. ft. Coppertone Refrigerator, like
249.95

.

•

�:12 • Tho Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sunday, July 14, 1?'14

Accidents, fires costly
to ranchers, farmers ·
OOL.UMBUS - Two and a but lert thousands of (llsabllng
hall billion dollars ! That is injuries - many permanent
what accidents and !Ires cost handicaps.
.
farm and ranch pt'O!Jle across
Focusing In on the lives of
the country last year. In 1972, Ohlo's- farm fo'lliUes, the Ohio
farm accldents alone cos t Cooperative- c xtension Service
Ohioans over five milli on

recenUy com~lded a farm

died in accidents each week.
2. Seventy-five percent of the
farm people killed in accidents
were men and boys.
3. Ninety (90) serious, nonfatal accidents occurred for

every fatal accident . .
4. Accident..! deaths from
faits came to 16pct. and misuse
of motor vehicles accounted for
mere gold, however, were the over the last ten years, much 44 pd.
2,200 people killed across the work still remains in over- · Accidents claimed the lives
country last
year
in coming additional study lin- of 194 Ohio farm people in 1972.
agricultural accidents . Ac- dings :
Trying to make a dent In a
cidents that not only took Jives,
I. Four _Ohio farm people
massive problem like this Is
what July 25-31 is all about National Farm Safety Week.
Local and st..te organizations
·throughout Ohio will be actively engaged in educational
campaigns to strike back at the
tremendous loss to farm people.
and property .
Because falls and motor
By &amp;b Hoeflich
.

Beat ...

Apage in the 1974 Meigs County Fair premium book has been
used in memory or Marvin King, vice president of the fair board,
who recenUy was killed in an accident while on his employment
In Athena.
The page Includes a photograph of Marvin who was certainly
me of the most dedicated members of the board. The annual fair
was certainly his thing. His widow, Mickey, is continuing as
secrell' : of the board.

'

MRS. LOIS PAUl ..' who is about to embark into the real
estate sales busine ·• as the local representative of Stout Realty
received a fractured '•g recently when she fell while fishing at
Hidden Lakes. lr casf, Lois is just about grounded completely for
the next few weeks.
. A NICE GESTIJRE to Milton Hood who is retiring after
serving lor 'SI years with the Ford Motor Co. dealership in Meigs
Count)' at the Meigs Inn Thursday night. Miltop and wife, Freda,
who reside In Middleport, are the parents of two sons, Jim and
John. They lost their beloved third son, Sam, in a tragic auto
accident on Sept. 2, 1971.
PAMNORTII, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Rickman, must
be quite an asset to the M. and R. Shopping Center operated by
, her follal. Pam, one of the most personable and poised youngsters
' I've seen In a while, steps Into the center now and again to lielp
with special promotions and other work at the store. Pam will he
a sophomore at Meigs High
fall .

COllie

.'

JOHN MOHLER, Middleport Route I, has written the words
to a country-western tune, "Wounded Knee" which Is due out
soon on 1he Shanes label. John is enthused these days shout the
po88ibilities of some of his tunes really catching ori across the
naUon.
·
·
·
.

01 Agrieullure
SoU Cou. Service
Pt. Pleouol

By John C. Rl&lt;o
Ell. Agent, Agriculture

dollars - about $329 per ac- acci&lt;jcnt study. Encouraged by
cident,
.
a 40 pet. drop In accidental
StlU more precious thar d, aths to Ohio's farm people

Of the Bend .:;. ,'
Ill!' ~~

County ligent's Soi~s important in growth
corner
By u.s. Department

.

•

vehicles

account for the
majority of farm related ac-

cide nts ,
the
Accident
Prevention &amp; Product Safety
Unit of the Ohio Deparirnent of
Health, in cooperation with
Gallipolis City Manager Paul
Willer has zeroed in on
suggested

recommendations

geared to reducing farm
deaths and inj!U'ies.
I. Watch your step at all
times when working with farm
equipment
mounting,
dismounting. servicing.
·2. Keep platforms, steps free
of mud, debris, and tools.
3. - Don'tjump off a tractor,
wagon or other ·moving
machinery.
4. Enforce the

11

no rider"

rule for all tractors and selfpropelled equipment.
5. Wear shoos or boots with
sllp-resist..nt soles and heels.
6. When pulling heavy loads,
keep the drawbar at the
recommended height, usually
under 21 inches and 4 inches
behind rear tires.
7. Avoid operating your
tractor on steep slopes when

possible and avoid quick, sharp
turns.
6. Always operate machinery
with tile power t.lke off shield
in place and shut off power

23 - TheSunday~.&amp;ntlnel,&amp;mday,July 14,1t'lt

BY JOHNC,RJCE
Coll!lly Este•loa A&amp;etlt, Apic.

The Ohio "FerUbuli" program has now been la\lllched. The
program conalots of on-the.fann del!l0115trations to show that
beef catUe producUon Is more profitable wtth the right combination or resources.
Fifteen Ohio farmers have been selected throughout the
stare as demmstratlon cooperators. Each will provide 25 or more
heef cows to be bred to production-tested bulls by AI. or natural
seryice. The cows will be maintained from the production of 60
acres of meadows and pastures.
The Meigs County cooperator is Dave Gloeckner of Route %,
Raclne,Ohlo. This has been made possible locaUy by the banks,
machinery dealers, leed dealers, -and other local government
agencies plus the Cooperative Extension Service. This is a ·
tribute to Meigs O&gt;unty to see such a joint elfori.
The aim is to achieve a high level of soil fertility through
application of ferillizer and lime based on soil test. recommendationa. Maintenance fertilizer and lime appllcationa are to
he applied annuaUy. Higher yields will penni! expanding the
heel cow and, In turn, result In a more profitable enterprise.
The farm operators are to keep complete records to determine crop and livestock production. The records also will show
annual expenses and income,
. Objectives of the program are to (I) Increase forage and
crop production through adequate use or lime and fertilher ; (2)
increase calving percentage and weaning weights by using
quality beef-breeding livestock and good management pracUces; (3) make Ohio's pasture lands more profitable by increasing the carrying capacity and beef catUe stocking rates;
and (4) gain gteater profits through proper comblnaUons or
pastures, forages, and beef herd management.
Seedlngs of improved grasses will be made in August and_25
cows will be put on 60 acres in the spring.

Have you looked recenUy to
see who your neighbors are?
A ql!lck glance !rom your
living room window may
reveal a new housJng
development, an aparirnent
complex. or even in the
dist..nce a shopping center.
The chances are good !hat
you have a new view if you live
In the fringe areas of many
West Virginia cilles; large and
small. according to JalQes S.
Bennett, st..te conservationist
!rom the U. &amp;. Soil Conservation Service (SCS).
Growth around Charleston,
Huntington, · Parkersburg,
Morgantown and Clarksburg
has accelerated by about 50
pet. during the last five years,
he said. In the Eastern
Panhandle, development
around Martinsburg has increased even faster, in!iuenced
by growth in the Washington
meb:opolit..n area,
More and better buildings
are required, Bennett said, but
developers also need to consider the soils they are

'Brigadoon' opens at OU

He Identified sotleroelon as •
Ptot&gt;tem cormnon to all construction sites.
"Erosion can be reduced by
llmtUng the amount of land
disturbed at any one Ume,
temporary
seeding
or
disturbed areas left more than
30 days, permanent seeding a•
soon as coll.'ltrucUon is com·
pleted, and proper water
disposal," he said.
"Water disposal Is most
Important
ln controlling
basements, cracked foun·
dationa, or unattractive sei.- erosion. Developers can use
storm sewers, diverslons,
Un~ ."
Proper site selection is the waterways, sediment baslll.'l,
!irst stop toward wise grade stabilization structures,
protection ,
development, he said. Some streambank
sOils are flooded periodically, culverts, or water storage
and others are too steep. Some structures."
Local soil conservation
sOils have seasonal high water
tables. Others are stony or districts and the SCS have .
shallow to bedrock. In some published the Erosion and
parts of West VIrginia, soils Sediment Control HandboOk
that slip and slide under for Urban Areas of West
pressure
have actually Virginia. ·The handbook ex·
destroyed homes by pulling plains which plants and
them apart.
structural measures are most
" It is most import,nt that useful to reduce erosion and
the land be suited for the in- manage runoff.
tended use, or else that
Advice on soilS is available
measures be taken to over- from the Wes&lt;ern Soli Concome soil limitations during servation District at the SCS
and after construction;" he office in Pt. Pleasant.
said.
dlslurblng and using as
!oundaUon materials, .
"Just as it is Jnacrurate to
think of all parts of West
Virginia as being alike, it din
be cooUy to lgn!O'e the dif·
ference ln soils," he said.
"Because West Virginia soils
are very dlllerent !rom place
to place - even within the
same county - thoughUess
construcUon can end In excess.ive . !!rosion,
~et

ATHENS ~ The magic or
love and the lure or the fan.
l.ast(c are lW!t two of the .
qualities that characterize. the

Heather on the Hili," " Almost
Uke Being in Love," and
"Come to Me, Bend to Me,"
written by music masters

musi cal, '• Brigadoon," the

Lerner and Loewe.

second production to be st.aged
by t.he Ohio Valley Summer
Theater (OVST) during ihe
monlli of July.
Beginning July 17, in the.
Forum Theater, theatergoors
will be able to explore the
highlights of ScoUand through
the magical dream-world of
Brigadoon. A realistic love
story placed In a mystical
setting, "Brlgadoon" is sure to

Rehearsals for "Brlgadoon"
are presently underway under
the direction or Robert Winters
·wtth the music being handled
by Ira Zook. Oloreographer
Joan Wickstrom is In charge o!
the dances. Designers are Dan
Wilhelm, production ; John
Cosby, l!gbting; and Carol
Blanchard, costumes.
Tickets for "Brigadoon" and
the remaining OVST shows are
capture everyone's heart.
presently on sale in the Kant·
Audiences will hear such ner Hall box office Monday
beautilul son~s as "The through Saturday, 10 a .m. to 2

...

"

'·

p.m. an!l 5 to 9 p.m., and
S111day from 12 noon to 2 p.m.
and 5 to 9 p.m .
SERVICES SET
GAlliPOLIS - There will
be preaching every night this
week except Saturday at the
White Oak Baptist Olurch with
Rev . Jameo Puckett, Dearfield
Beach, Fla., as evangelist,
every night at 7:30 p.m.
~veryone

is welcome.

Ca nadian five -cent. p\eces

are magnetic , while their
U.S. counterparts are not beca use the former have a
higher nickel content.

,,

Society has picnic
POMEROY
Approximately 65 members and
guests attended a picnic held at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Clinton Fisher on Uncoln Hill
Road Thursday in a ~barter
day observance by the Meigs
County Humane Society.
Mrs. Roscoo Fowler, Mrs.
Eleanor Welch Zelher and
Thurston Stone were in charge
of the affair . A mobile unit used
by Dr. Paul E. Shockey and Dr.
J . W. McCoy of the Jackson
County, w. va ., animal clinic
was on display and it is hoped
by the local society that the
unit can be brought to Meigs
County on 8 monthly basis to

•

Nine key men appointed
Red soil dominates to area Boy Scout .Council
T. L. Lore ·farm
Ashland Oil, Inc., Ashland,
Ky ., Training Chairman;
chairmen of the operating Earle S. · Dillard, President;
committee of the Tri-State .Bloss &amp; Dillard, Inc., HunArea Council, Boy Scouts of tington, Membership ChairAmerica, were made by man ; Pat McDonald, Manager
Council President Ted. Cald· of Technical Services, The
'l'ell at the Council Executive Cammack Agency, HunBoard meeting held on June 24. tington, Public Relations
Those men reappointed are Chairman; Donald E. Maras follows: Dr. Richard Mc- teeny, Plant Manager ACF
cray, Oral Surge,on· of Hun- InduStries, Huntington, Ex·
tington, Camping Chairman; plorlng Division Chairman and
John Schneider, General Bernard Dickinson, Works
Engineer, U. S. Corps of Manager, W. Va., Works ,
Engineers, Ashland, Health Connors Steel Division, H. K.
and Safety Chainnan; Walter Porter Co., of Huntington,
M. Thomaso.n, Technical Advancement Chairman.
Service Engineering Manager,
Product Application Dept,,
Ashland Petroleum Co.,
HUNTINGTON
Ap·
poinbnents of nine key men as

BY JOHN COOPER
Soil Cons. Service
PT. PLEASANT - We
visited the T. L.. Lore place on
Red Mud Ridge for the purpose
of helping him locate a site for
a pond. As the name of · the
ridge indicates, the color of the
soil is red and the name of it is
Upshur Silty Clay Loam.
This type of red clay is excellent for holding water,
although once in'a while a gray

Lay of the Land

st..ying healthy. Joining the
Lore place and on out the ridge,
we visited the Ed Durst farm .
Mr. Durst is one of those oc·
togenarian farmer s about

whom we wrote feature stories
sorrie two years ago.

We found Mr. Durst still hale
and hearty, although he had
recenUy recovered from a sick
speH and at the age of 67, was
about to retire.
HIS son, Virgil, and family
are still operating the 364-acre
farm with the same vigor
exhibited by Mr. Durst in

shale layer appears and clay
must be packed over that shale former years. Virgi1 was
HOWARD FRANK as Meigs County treasurer is irequently befor.e di smounting from
In order to prevent leading.
preparing a seedbed on a 4().
named In lawsuits !U.ed In the Meigs County Common Pleas Court II:actor.
We
found
an
excellent
place
acre ridge to reseed this ridge
by virtue ·of his position as county official. The reason for this is.
Farm Safety Week·' calls ·
· ' tllat the treasurer generally holds a real estate lien against attention to accident problems for a medium . sized pond, It meadow. He was doing It by
properties Involved in the suits and this lien holds top priority. which steal away . valued would he consll:ucted by ex- disking, rather than by plowing
cavation with a fill being made
We did want to clarify that there is 1\0 personal involvement on human · and
economic on one side. Since the loCation and disking . .Virgil said that
alxtut three times over the field
Franll•s part -It's automatic because of his treasurer's position. resources in oui agricultural
Is on •op of the ridge, a supply with the disk would have it
communities. These resources of water would be provided ·by
cannot be spared - make a diversion ditch which would thoroughly prepared with a
· Farm ~a fety Week · every pick up possibly an acre in week or two lapse between
each disking operation. We
week !
addition to what water filled in agreed with Virgil that disking
the impoundment itself. We is an excellent way of
have found that with little or no preparing seedbed.
leaking that small watersheds · During our conversation i.t
will supply an ample amount of was pointed out that by dlsking
water for this type of pond.
the organic matter is kept near
The Lores have . their main the surface of the soil ;
home in Evans, · but enjoy . therefore bacteria can · Work
coming
out to the farm where
MARSEILLE, France (UP!) they have a one-acre garden better and seed can germinate
- A r,farseille judge ordered area, some nut trees and a lot and grow to better advant..ge.
Soil conservationists become
prison terms totalling more of open I!Pace.
engaged
in many · activities
than 195 years and a fine of $10 · We found Mr. Lore working
million today for 30 persona in his .garden and after . whi1e visiting farms and
convicted of operating the examining the rank gr~W\ng · servicing requests.
'
We visited the Robert and
notOrious French connection veget..bles In searching for
"•
Clarence
Thomas farn1 near
drug ring,
weeds, we commented to Mr. l-etart for the purpose of
Prosecutors said the ring LOre that we thought he should
•'
moved
a ton of heroin to the he put In jail because we found helping them plan some
•!
United· States before it was two or three weeds perhaps 5 or pasture treatment projects. We
.,
. smashed, parUy thr.ough the 6 inches high, That drew a grin
••
disclosures by a French singer, from the 74-year-&lt;&gt;ld Mr . Lore .
•
Edmond Taillet, 42, who was
RED MUD RIDGE ap•••"
arrested in New York and parently is a good loca\ion lor
named his accomplices to U.S.
'
••
police•
••
Taillet, now free in the Marseille bar-owner, received
United States after serving a the same sentence 1n his abo
'•,
sllortened sentence there, was · sence. Police are still search·;
•·
BODY ENGLISH llu Ill place in filhlng, too, as Linda
sentenced to 16 years at today's ing for him. Other sentences
:: King (llandlng) of ClnclnnaU demonstrated at the recent
M!ll'seille hearing.
·
ranged from 15 years to sir
;: annual Jungle Cock Meet. The meet is sponsored by the
The man named as leader of months.
•• Brotherhood of the Jwigle Cock (Ohio Chapter) and the
the network, a Corsican, Jean
The accused were ordered to
;; .League of Ohio Sportsmen for the purpose of teaching fishing
BapUate Cro&lt;:e, ~2, received pay a total fine of $10 million
•, and nature lore to children between the ages of 12 aild 16. For
the heaviest sentence- 18 the traditional p(actice 1~
i: the Initiated, a "jungle cock" is the bird whose neck festhers · years.
French courts tbough the sums ·
' · are used tn·trout aild salmm flies.
Joseph Marro, a rormer are rarely collected.

a:

French drug
ring hit fifl'lh
·stiff penalties

..
.r.

::

.

referred to as "taking" the

·:

..

b)" Unlttd f'taturt

SJ; ndlt::u~ .

Murray

celebrated her 94th birthday
anniversary at her com.

• A'!"fEND COURSE
ATHENS - Dorothy Griflin,
13 Court St., Gallipolis; Ann
Epling, 626 First Ave .,
Gallipolis; and Angela Griffin,
618Second Ave., Gallipolis, are

fortable and attractive home
on Grant St. in Middleport.
· Quite alert mentally, Mrs.
Murray recalls her girlhood
days at Reedsville where she
was horn, a daughter of the late
Joseph and Mary Randolph.
Her father was a farmer and a
ferryman and Mrs. Murray
\Yas one of 13 children - two
boys and II girls.
Everyone worked at the
Randolph home which was
located right on the Ohio River.
Often, Mrs. Murray recalls, as

a Rirl she used the family skiff
to transport people across the
river. She recalls also the
freezing of the river and the ice

SUNDAY, JULY 14, 19'14

CAP'fAIN EAS'i
' A5 '/0\J .SEj{.-~;~ C LAII'
,~ Af&gt;J "1\.o$0 &gt;'J 16LD "A
&lt;£.LE0.:5Ew\ ,\IMEI&lt;: : ...

'

1\'HICH

~

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6
10
14
19
21

DUC EY !

•

...

H.E PHANTOM

'

,.

·,

.

26
26
29
30
32

l3
14
35
37

39
40
41
42

Space Saving

44

46
47

48
50
52

•

53

55
·57

Model CT~ 14ER

58

ONLY 26" Wide
• 4.58 cu. ft . lreezer -

59

60

on shopping trips

62

• Adjus1Bble shelves
• Rolls out on wheels

64
66
LITTLE

• Automa1ic icemaker acces-

sory (available at extra
costl. lnsrall when you ·
bfl't il ... or it can be
added laler.

ORPB 'Aif
IIIR . BAlAHCE, Til ' 611111&lt;E~,
TFI'II't' TO Qill l Mf! liE'S
:!lliRf. IT WoiS "tt''Ct.E~K

11flPftllH'JOI'afS - I'E

OIKot!l TO KMOW •

REG. $369.90

$319" .

executive

1 Tremul-ous

HAN P.O~ !;f&lt;,:

•

••

73 Strikes
75 Newspaper

ACROSS

I 5H .4 L.I,..
U5E ON 'iQL!UN Lf~S YOU

22

NOW

Mrs .

"

23
24

'50 OFF

Tuesday,

lne.

*•

· Hand!es all sizes
and types of twines
witho.u t knotter adjustment

..

Dl4trLbu~4

•

duous ordeal.

BY ROBERT-HOEFLICH
MIDDLEPORT Mrs.
James ( Lula ) Randolph
Murray is going strong
towards a century or living In
Meigs County.

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

'
•'

14.2 cu. ft.
NO. FROST
REFRIGERATOR·
FREEZER

Mrs. Murray
celebrates

provide veterinarian services partidpating in a· Swnmer

•

calf.
. Robert said that his heifer
had been In labor ahout a day
and was unable to give birth
without assistance. We
managed to bring the calf
salely. It was alive and the cow
was living in spite of an ar-

Otto, all of the Parkersburg
chapter;
Miss Kathryn
Blizzard and Dr . Paul E.
Shockey, Ripley, W. Va., and
Miss Patricia Nutter, Olarles
F. Bare and Olarles N. Bare,
Ravenswood. Wheatley is
president or the Parkersburg
Society.

here. ·
Dance Workshop for high
· Attending from out of town school students and adults on
were Mr. and Mrs. Elvin the Ohio University campus.
Sheets, Mr. and Mrs. Frank The program Is orrerlng workArnfleld, Mr. and Mrs. Larry shops in modern dance, with
Wheatley, Miss Susan Bradley, emphasis on technique,
Charles Jeffers , William composition,
and
im·
Summers, .. Miss Penny Hen- . provisation, as well as ballet·
derson, Dr , R , C, Rob.mson, and tap. ')'he faculty of the
Miss Sheryl Tanburlni, Terry School of Dance is supervising ·
'i'anburini, Mrs. Jaye Otto, instructors experienced in both
Miss Ruth Hornbrook, Jaye teaching and performing.

New appoinbnents are as
!ollows : H. T. Boggs,
President, H. T. Boggs Co., of
Huntington, Activities
Chairman; and Bob E. Myers,
Vice President-Treasurer
Myers Transfer and Storage,
Inc., of Huntington, Finance
Chairman. .
These operating cllairmen
bring a wealth of Scouting andor business and community
experience to their role or
giving volun leer leadership to .
their respective committees, In
order to support the leaders or
the some 200 Scouting units In
the Tri-State Area C?uncil.

CAPI'IVE NATIONS
OOLUMBl}S (UP!) - July
14-20 has been proclaimed Captive Nations Week In Ohio by ·
Gov: John J. Gilligan In recognition of nations .taken over by
communists.
"We in Ohio deeply share the
aspirations of those countries
for their national independence
and we join them In stri~ for
this freedom," Gilligan said.
arrived at the farm just in time
to help become a midwife to· a
cow who was giving birth to a
call. In farm language it is

MRS. Jamu Murray
oblervetl ber 94th blrtllday
at her Grant St. home In
Middleport Tuesday. She hao
lived in the same residence
for the past 65 years.

INSPECt' UNIT - Mill Rilll Lewta And Dr. Shockey
inspect the mobile unit for wterinary service at the recent
Melga Count)' Humane Society at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Clinton Fisher.

68

Booty (slang}
·oracelul bird
Knots
Extras
Qomesticate
Time gone by
,Calm
Comes on the
scene
Peri ls
Mislead
Penpoinl
Girl's name
SlnP of
leather
Period of time
Wooden pin
Ox ol Celebes
Fall short
Godde ss of
hea ling
Fruit
Falsehoo ds
Containers
Pieces of
dinnerware
RoW
Perform'S
Part ol face
Fasc inate
Oceans
French article
Pertaining to
the laity
Symbol for tin
Long ago
Slalk
Exist
Those holding
offic e
Blemish
Compass
po int
A continent

(abbr.)

39 Above and
touching
10 Neckpiece
71 Girl 's name ..

77 Real estate
map
78 Pluc k
80 Equals
81 Deposit
82 Iterates .
84 Eagles' nests
86 Overlooked
B1 Flag
89 Possessive
pronoun
92 Frolic
95 Country of
Asia
98 Capital of
Latvia
99 Aspiration
101 Vital organs
103 Dispatch
104 Anger
105 Locate
106 Newsgathering
organizati on
(inil .)
107 ll)definite
article
108 Short jacket
110 Free of
1 11 Earth goddess
112 Narro w, llat
board
"113 A continent
115 Preposition
117 Hebrew month
119 Cooled lava
120 Tribe
121 Passenger
boat of the
Nile (pi.l
124 Hebrew
measure
126 Vessel
127 HOst ,"
128 Mestizo
130 Beverage
132 Imitated
133 Word of
sorro,w

134 Fooll ike part
135 Grain (pU
137 Walk
139 Scottish cap
140. Leg
141 Turpentine
Ingredient
143 Baker's
products
145 Federal
agency. (abbr.l
146 Anc ient ga lley
148 Octoroons
150 Pertainin'g to
lhe stars
152 Ta x
153 Gasp far
breath
154 Rat ional
156 Bogs do wn
157 Musica l
instruments
i58 Emmets
159 English
streetcar
160 Passageway
DOWN
1 The narra

2 Dash
3 Subject to
extreme heat
4 Silk worm
5 Firn
6 Saint (abbr.)
7 Small lump
8 Wine cups
9 Refined
10 Lance
11 Distort
12 Beasl of
burden
13 Symbol for
nit on
14 Isthmus
15 Native metal
16 Idolizes
17 Covets
18 Sows
20 P-ersonal
iillerest
.

..

23
25
27
28
3 -t
33

Prophet
.Strike
Gruesome
Loved one
Is ill
Unwanted
plant
36 Dye plant
38 Turns around
track
40 Evergreen
lree
41 Clayey earth
43 Resorts
45 More taut
46 Angry
outburst
47 Profound
49 Drinks slowly
51Partsof

89 Two (Roman
number) .
90 Worthless

91 Cuttlefish

92 The ur lal
93 Group of live
94 Sun god
96 OolphinHke
cetacean
97 Egyptian skink
100 A stale (abbr.)
102 P.i ece for one
105 Te~_b
109 Torpid
112 Skidded
113 Dutch
.measure(pt .)
114 Most
oo mpe1ent
116 A state
sket~ton
~ 18 Dregs
52 Reta1l
12o Style ol dress
establishments 12 1 Colorless
53 Hold on
122 Simplest
123 Break
property
54 Heraldry:
suddenly
gra fted
125 Narrates again
56 Able
126 Thinly
59 Short stqry
scattered
60 V~s se l .
127 Egyptian
61 Dmes .
dancing gi!'l
63 Unusual
129 Great bustard
65 Cravats
131 Remember
67 Worni
132 Essence
69 Ne~r
133 Goats
70 lns1de of
134 Nuisances
lootball
136 Deposits
72 Genus of
138 Analyze, as
grasses
sentence
74 Symbol for
140 Smaller 1
tellurium
number
76 Pron9un
141 Lease
77 Points of
142 Approach
hammer
144 Bristle
79 Period of time 147 Communist
148 Provide crew
83 Greek letter
149 Nahoor sheep
85 Native
151 Burma
American
tribesman
86 Simple
153 Parent
87 Punctilious
Jcolloq.l
person
15.5 Printer s
88 Ireland
measure

All-

ENJOY THE FAIRS

Get Your Fair .

The White House was the
niclmal)'le ~iven to the Execu·
tin Mans10n when Its char· ·
red remains w e re
tewashed after the burn·
of Washlngton by the
.
1111 In 1814.
I

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.

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Come In today and compare features, ·
The 40(lls the best baler buy around.

Meigs Equipment

-· '

:If:.'

Supplies Now At

ALL 1974 MODELS MUST GOI ·

Forget about costly down1time and missed bales ,
with the International® All· Twine Balers .. .
with the knotter tnat ties a unique bow-type,
double diameter knot that tests up to 17 percent
stronger than ordinary s·ingle diameter knots
: . . and does· ii with all . types and diameters .
of bater twine without adj ust"lent. ·
• Heavy-duty power train with extra large main
· drive clutch and precision spiral bevel and
pinion ge~rs .

ARE AHEAD!

PH. 992·2176 .

~OMEROY, OHIO

GRJ t~t, 01111

eo~

• 30Y," wide, 64" high
• 6.64 cu. fl. lreozer
• Adjuilable shelves
• Power S!ver Switch helps
cur operating cost
• Automatic icemak'er lavail·

able at extra cosrl . ln'stell
when you buy it ... or .it
can be edded later.

•

• •
'

.'

r

-··

.

$7895
!Al.$4995 .

70X14 SKYLINE
3 BEDROOMS, GAS . . . . NOW
....
.S2x12 SKYLINE 2 BR. TOTAL .
ELEC. USED
OFFICE SPE

$

GEnYSBURG BY CASTLE

5595
.$6995

Model CSF19ER

.RE.G. SS61.57

.•SO OFF

· 60x12 2 BEDROOMS, GAS·•····· .. ••·
. 65x12 3 BR. TOTAL ELEC.............

NOW

CLOSEOUT! NEW 1973 MODEL
· 24x44 2 BEDROOMS
Double wide, total ellictric. Full one
warranty. 'A bargain!

ye&lt;~r

out.rtsn,ding Hotpoint Ss/11 V11/u11s now

_POMEROY
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
PH. 992-2181
~rvll!g Meigs, Gallla

,_...;.._ _ _ _ _ _ ~..;a;,.n..;d--Mason

•

tried to entice her to make her
residence with them. However,

the frozen water. Mrs. Murray Mrs. Murray loves her Mid-·
recalls that she attended a one dleport home.
room school In Reedsville. It
"There's just no place like
was enlarged to four rooms home/' she ·c omments and the
later. It was nothing for the care her home gets is living
Randolph children to plQd to proof.
school through knee deep snow.
she remembers.
W
Mrs . Murray and her
_J_
husband, James, who died 24
OruulJ
years ago h.ave two children, a
BY GOLDIE CLENDENIN
daughter, Mrs. Randolph
PORTLAND - Bible School
Ward, Ravenswood, W. Va., hegins at Reorganized Church
and a son, William (Bill), of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day
Worthington, Ky. Mrs. Murray Saints on Racine-Portland Rd.,
has three grandchildren, seven · Monday, July 15, 7 to 9 p.m ..
. great-grandchildren and three through Friday.
Commencement will be
great-great-grandchildren,
Mrs. Murray maintains an Sunday evening, ,July 21, at 7
immaculate home and's given p.m. when certi!icates will he
a helping hand by her children given out. Coordinators are
and grandchildren, Neighbors Denny and I.J.nda Evans.
help bring in any food that she
There will be six classes with
needs from stores. She sews two teachers each. Dah and.
and turns oUt laney work. She Patty Roush will have the
.enjoys television "to a nilrsery; Sharon Russell and
degree."
Linda Diddle, kindergarten.
1
Residing In the same home In Others participating in c(ass
Middleport lor the past 65 work will be:
years, Mrs. Murray is one of · Linda Evans and Bonnie .
the oldest member of the Lawrence, · Herb White, Bill
Middleport First Baptist Roush, Denny , Evans and

Bz'bl- school
M
starts

Quirch. She has not,·however,

others.

been a~le to attend church for
something like the last three
years.
Members of her family have

Two evenlnga Mercedes
Condon will direct \lie song
service with Jocelyn Baer
taking over on evenings when·
Mercedes has classes at home.
We look forward to a good
turn out, an enjoyable Ume iii
fellowship with the young folk.
Everyone is welcome.
On Friday evening there will
be a wiener roast on the church
lawn SPOnsored by Joo and
Earlene Stobart, owners and
operators of The Steaml!oat
Inn at Racine with a sort of
impromptu program of hymn
sing, folk sorigs and just
v.isiting, Come jOin us in an
evening of ljJn and song.

NO I J. .(} •t 0 S .

,J'L ABNER

"

NEW HAVEN - The New
Haven U0ns will soon he out
ringing doorbeHs as they
.engage In a. broom sales acUvity, The local Lions Sig~t .
. Conservation program and
. · other community projects are .
financed by actiVIties such as
the coming broom sale.
The house brooms to be sold
lire manufactured by the In'
dultrlous Blind Enterprise of
·Clarksburg, West Virginia -a
, project of the West Virginia
J.Jona Sight Conservation
FCIUildation.
The Uona Club of Point
Plea11111t recently completed a
aucceuful broom sales ac;Uvlty.

being so thick that wagons with
supplies moved freely across

MOBILE HOMES

'

·Lions to
sell brooms

CANNERS - A number of Meigs County hcmemaklt8
attended a canning clinic at which bu.lc techniqueo were
demonstrated Friday at the Rock Sprlns• Gralll!e Hall.
Demonstrator was Mrs. Bettie Clark, GaU!a Count)' home
demonstration agent, right, who Ia pictured pointing ,out
volume aapecta to Miss Marta Gullkey, -Meigs County home
demonstraUon agent, who planned the cUnic.

Countit~

$9895

Ali prices include set up and delivery. Financing availabte.

KINGSBURY HOMES
1100 E. MAIN

SALES &amp;
SERVICE, iNC.

PH. 992-7034
POMEROY, OHiO
OPEN DAiLY &amp; SUNDAY2 P.M. toi i&gt;:M.

16-1 &amp; 2 Pc. Uving Room Suites
20.00 lip
3- Bedroom Suites
49.95 up ,
24~Chesls and Dressers
·15.00 up
. 42-Twin and ,l=ull Size Beds, complete 29.95 up
3- Poster. . Beds, you must see .these 39.95 up

Special This Week!

2 BRAND NEW REQ.INERS
in Herculon Materiai

Reduced to 69.95 ·
Several Gas &amp; Etectric Ranges
30.00 up
14-Refrigerator.~, best seieclion now 25.00 up
3-Wooden Dinette Sets, maple, Spanish oak
anddarkpine
.P!liCEDTOSELL
3-Wringer Washers, see these now 49.95 up
Several Kitchen Cabinets, of all kinds 10.00 up .
Goid Philco Re(rigerator, like new
199.95
Turquoise Stove &amp; Refrigerator
pair 249.95
New Vinyl Recliners
49.95
· 18 ·cu. ft. Coppertone Refrigerator, like
249.95

.

•

�•

27 - T~ SWld•y Tlrnttt.S.ntiMI, Sunday, July a, lt74

Help Wanted

Bom from the dirt··

SMITH NELSON MOTORS INC.

and bred for

SUMMER

the street.
Corne see the Honda MT·250.

18 POINT TUNE UP

·--------sPECIAL·-------- i

.,
=
E

68 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

.!t

1:

ON ALL 1974 MODELS
AND USED CARS

.."'

.
-Go_ld with gold interior. full power equipment,
w-s· w tires, Climate Control air conditioning .

COME TO WHERE THE ACTION IS!

1:

Come to where bec;ause of our high volume 1nd low overhe•d

loi
10

we can give you the buy of your life . Come to where we Mve
will ~ell not only at sticker price but will give you a

gener~us

allowance on your trade-in. Come to where you can buy w1th

•~

confidence because we have a good service and parts
department behind every new and u~ed car we 5ell. Come to
where we can tell you eXactly who owned ·the used car - he
may be your best friend or neighbor. We are offering these at
clearance- prices because of our ~lgh volume we must have
action! You may never have another chance to get so-much
value for your dollar!
,.,

"',,.

.."~

-.

992-5342

...

1972 FORD GRAN TORIN0 ................... 1995
1

"
••

"

'
owner". auto . tran s.,

h

...t

1972 FORD V8 RANCHERO ................... 12495

~

•'

Car truck , sports. If yo u are looking for a truck with car ride
and looks, this is it. One- l,o cal owner . Power steering, auto .
trans .

."'~

1972 FORD MAVERICK. ....................... 2195

""

1

-'

how careful he is with his car .

~

1971 FORD TORINO V8 ...................... '1595

••
~

"••

·'•

4 Or . Sedan . On~ local owner , 302 V-S, auto. , power steering .

~

~

~

1.•

· 1970 MERCURY MARAUDER ................. '2495
2 Or . hardtop. We' ll gladly refer you to local owner. Power
steering, auto. trans , power bra·kes. v inyl top. One of the
~~ finest series Mercurys.
·

~

~

•
••
•

"

1970 FORD TORINO STA. WAGON .... ~ ...... 11295
One local owner . Air c(Hl~ition i ng, power steeri ng ,. auto .
trans ., 302 V-8.

~

•

•

~

5ee : Fred BtaeHnar ar Danny Thompson.

~

".•

.'

l/lcLOSER
YOU LOOK, THE BETTER
WE LOOK
Phones: 992-2196
hours: 992-2412
Wrecker service: 99f7587 or 992-7135

~

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•

••
•

'•~
;
•,•

~'i!)JMIDM;;u..t

~

~

•
i;

'••

'
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:

-•...,,,.,

D

t
.
·
I
.
I
I:===·I
~

~-

Now arran1e t.he circled 1•tten
to form the surprise answer, as

NOTICE

2 Days for . Price
Everyone welcome.

of

1.

For Sale
FRESH Hols tein he ifer , hay in
the f ield , 1970 Pontia c. Cal l
388 ·8573 .
1972 Nov A s s 350 f ou r speed .
Cus tom inter ior and ex~e r i or .
AM -FM rad io. 446 .0172 .
165 ·3
___ __ .._________
1971 SCHULT Mobi le Hom e, 3 BR , 12x65 wi th tip -ou l , ca r pet ing and arr con dition ing .
446 -3897 .
. 165-3

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

SERVICE

. "SELL THE
AUCTION WAY"

JIMME SAYKf
AUCTIONEER

w i th Blue Lustre . Rent
electric
shampooer
Sl.
Central Su pply .
165-6

Local 1 owner , good tires, 6 cy l. with .auto~atic trans.,
radio, blue finish , spotless clean blue mtenor .
backhoe .

1970 FORD MAVERICK ..............s1395

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

___________

Wanted To Do

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

'73 Chevrolet Chevelle
4 Dr . sedan, 350 c u. in. eng ine , V-8, radio, auto. ·

trans., lac. air cond .• beige fin ish, matching
interi or, with vinyl top, w-s-w tires. 13,000
miles. Lik e new cond . ·

Qualltv Service

,.

Competitive Pricing

S2895
WOOD MOTOR SALES

BRIDGE

Big slam scores
on slapstick

.J

POMER3Y MOTOR CO.

+

'4+s

1•

-BIG --'--- -- - -.,----YARD SA LE -:- C1o l hlng ,

children ' s, w omen's and
men's. D ishes, odds and ends .
3m iles out Bul aville Rd . Mon.
thru Fri. 9 - ?
165-3

a

GARAGE SALE
105 K I NEON Dr. Like new air
c ond i tion er, carpet. auto .
washer and mise~ i t ems . July
15 and 16 . Phone 446-1889. ·
165-3

s•

_____________

- --------·-----

--~-'-

AND COOL.ING

·'OIL Gas, and cle{l ri c t u rn c. ~ e
sa res and service , 24 h_o ur
servi.ce , ~t o 5, 446 -4119 , alt er
s. 44 6-25f9 .
63 -lf

Lz:en ;~ t!rlb}tttl

I.

3.

0 '

clean carpets with Blu e
Lustre .
Rent ·
electr i c
Shampooer Sl. G . C. Murph y .
,___..,...165 -6

___________

ROTO TILL..ER, new , .5 h .):i . Ph .
446 ·9436 . .
165-3

-------------.-LOT of goOd used furniture . Se t

__________ ...,. ___

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

165-3

1973 MODEL 8 ft . truck ·ca mper
with gas or elec . ref ., tlke
new. Call 388 -8433 .
165-J

EARN '10,000+
SALES OPENING
Start IOCIIV w1th one of the Trl· County's fastest .
growing de1lers. good working conditions •ncl
comfortab'le atmosphere.
I

Apply In Person To

GENE ASHWORTH
llm¥£EN 10 AM AND 3 PM MOft.fRI.

1957 DODGE truck . 5 sPeed
trans ., 28 feet bed , $1 ,200 , elsa
.wilt pick up ca r bodies free .
Phon e 245 -5178 .
·
1611 -3
...... --- --~-- -----

--- ---------DALMA f ION -puppies 535. 245 ·
9369 . Rio Grande. Oh io.

157-tf

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

RESTAURANT
MANAGEMENT
.
. .
TRAINEES
.

Bob Evans is probably the best-known farmer In the
Midwest . . . besf. known because of the sausage · and ..
restaurants that bear his name and his reputation for
quality. NoW, as the cOmpany expands and b!JIIds 'more
restaurants. management tra inees are needed, men who
can mo~e q~ic::kly into positions as aulst~nt managers
and .!'flanagers. If you have a sincere Interest In restaurant
business and If you want to work ·In an oroanltatlon where
.r;tandards of quality and service are the highest, we can
,Her you an exciting and rewarding future.' For further
information, c:all collect M_rs. Jamrozy at (61oft 491 -2225,
or send a resume to Bob Ev•ns Farms, P.O. Bo)( 7863,
Station G .• Columbus, Ohio 'l207.

County Motor
Pt.
I

92.1

CO.slstlng In p•rt of:. Show Case with Marble Base &amp;
·Lights, Treadle Sewing Machines. Bass and Snare Drums,
Sforte Churn, Bunk Beds, Blue Glass Topped Coffee Table,

Avon, Uull), library Tables, Pictures and Frames.
National Geographies, BoHies of all kinds. Wall Desk
made In Sweden, cane Bottom Chair, D41sy Churn ,
Aquariums &amp; Fixtures. Depression Glass, Dishes and
Glassware of all kinds, Cheese Box, Horse Clock , Vapor .
Crest aline Lamp, OK - Yoke, Eledrlc Guitar, Furniture, ·

Electric Appl_lances, Antiques and Collectables, many,
meny more. Come Out.
TERMS: CASH
.
Lunc~ Will Be S.rvtd
f!IR. •IMI·MRS. FRANK BELVILLE, OWNER
O.ryiAIINon
-AUCTIONEER~
Ktnny S•..ln
O.k Hill, Ohio .
•
O.lllpotli, Ohio
Not rospon.lblt for .ccldonts

J.

EXPERIE N c ·e o
par TS
manager or pa rt s clerk. Good
working conditio n s. Reply
90)( 329 ; C ·O Tr i bun e.
148-tf

Television Log
7: 00 -

Jerry Falwell 13; Communique .6 ; Fi lm 4 ; Marshal l
fron ' s Sunday School 10.
7: 15 - Tele-A -Bib le Time 4.
7:30 - Church by the Side of the Road 4; Talk ing Hand s S;
Ca m era Thr!!e 10 ; Gospel Caravan 6.
B: OO - Bllly James Harg is and Hi s All -American Kids 10 ; Da y
of Discovery 4; Rev . Leonard Repa ss S; Morm on Choir 3;
Mamre Chur ch 13.
B: JO- Your Hea lth 4;
of Di scovery 8; Get Together 10;
Rev. Humbard 13 ; Ora Roberts 3 ; Kathryn Kuhlman 6 ;
Bobby Martin 15.
8:55- Black Cameo 4.
9: 00 - Cadle Chapel 4 ; Oral Roberts 10 ; Rex Hum bard 6, lS ;
Kathryn Kuhlman 8; Go~pel Singing Jub ilee 3.
9:30 - Christ is the Answer 13 ; Church Services 10 ; Yours for
the Asking 4 ; VanZant Church of Chri st B.
10 : 00 - Kid Power 6, 13 ; Thi s is the Life 3; Church Ser vice 4 ;
Faith for Today lS i Thinking in the Black 8; M ovie "Les
M iserabtes " 10.
.
10: 30 - What the Bible Pla i n ly Says 13; Capta in Noah 3; VIsion
On 6 ; Th is is the Life 15 ; lnslgh14 ; ViewpointS .
11 : 00 - TV Chapel J ; Focus on Col umbus 4; Pq int of View 6:
Ca m era ThreeS ; Religi on 13; Across the Fence 15 . .
11: 30 - Mak e A Wis·h 13; Bishop Sheen 6; Insight 15 ; Rex
Humbard 8; Th is is the Answer 3. •
12 : 00 - Rev . Calvin Eva11s 13 ; Bowling 6; Meet ! he Pres s 3, 4, 1 5 ~
At IsSue 3 ; Doctors on Ca ll 4; The, IssUe 10; Sa cr ed Heart 15.

12: 15 - Open Bible 15 .

12:30- Meet the Press 3, 4, 15; Face the NationS; Blue Ridg e
Quartet 13.
. ,
. 1:00- Lower Lighthouse .13 ; Wash ington Oebi;!t~s for the 70s 15;
Baseball 3, 4,· TBA ·a; Movie " La st Train from Bombay" 10.
1:30 - Issues and Answers 6, 13. .
2: 00 - Today' s Hea'lth 6; NFL Champ ionship Games 13; NF L

·

2:30 - Cancer : Life or Death 13; Eli'zabeth R. 6:i'·CBS Tennis '
Classic 8, 10.
~
3:00 - Anything You Can Oo 13.
3:30 - CBS Sports Spectacular 8, 10; Ben Casey 13; Per r y
Mason 3 ; B!g Red Mac hine 4.
.
4:00 - TBA 4, 1s :· Women's Pro Tennis 6; Antiques 33 .
4: 30 - Time and the Cities J, 15 ; Sa le of the Centu ry 4; Othe r
Peoole, Other Places 13 ; Fren ch Chef 33 .
Day at Disneyland 4; Movie "RiO Conchos " 13.
5: 30 - Untamed World 6; It Tak es a Thief 3; Champ ionship
Fishing Bi To Be Announced 15; Proud Count ry 10 ; Per , formance 33 .
6:00 - Lilias , Yogi and You 33 ; Ozzie 's GirlS 6 ; N ews 4 : CBS
News Retrospective 8, 10.
6: 30 - NBC News 3, 15; Let's Grow a Garden 33; Jimm y Dean
6; News 4.
7: 00 - Zoom 20 ; Untamed World 13; Let's Mak e A Dea l 6;
Conflicts of Harry S-Truman 33 ; Safari to Adventure 3; W.ild
Kingdom 15 ; Lassie 8; Animal World 10 ; Cara van to M ex1co
4.

7:30 - F816, 13; Mountain Sc:;:ene 33; World of Disney 3, 4, 15;
Apple's Way S, 10 ; Journey to Jaoan 20. ·
00 - Evening at .Pops 20, 33.
8 ~ 30- Mann!x 8, 10 ; M cC loud 3, 4, 15; Movi e " Riot " 6, 13 .
9: 00 - Masterpiece Theater 20, 33 . _
9: 30 - 60 Minutes S, 10.
10: 30 - News 6, 8; Newsmaker '74 13; Road to Adventure 10 ; We
Think You Should Know 3; Police Surgeon 15 ; Firing Line 33;
News 4.
11:.00 - New s 3, 4, 10, 15 ; ABC News6, 13 i CBS News 8; Bonanza

a·

4.

11 : 15 - PoticeSurgeon6 ; CBS New s 10 ; News 13 ; Movie " Clive
of India " 8.
·
11 : 30 - Johnny Carson 15; Face the Nation 10 ; Janak i 33; Mov ie
"S he Done Him Wrong " 3; Don Kirshner's ROck Concert 13.
ll : 45 - Good News 6.
·
1.2 : 00 - Urban League 10; Johnn y Ca r son 4,
12 : 30 - Movie " Driicula - Prince of Darkness " 19.

Sun r ise Semina r 4; Su mmer Semester 10.
6: 25 -. Farm Report 13.
6: 30 - Five Minutes to Live By 4; News 6 ; Sible Answers 8;
Good News 13 ; Sacred Heart 10.
6: 25 - Columbus Tod~y 4 .
6: 45 ....... M orning Report 3; Farm time 10 .
7: 00- Today J , 4, 15; Bugs Bunny 6 ; CBS News 8, 10; Dick Van

Dyke 13.

Leadingham Agency

9:30 - To Tell the Trulh 3; Lucy Show B.
Matter of Fiction 33 . .

Your Auto, Home or Business . .
Represe~t
Llg!;ltning Rod Mutual ·
· Insurance Company

balanCe . due~ rtcelpl of
Gtneral-Warranty -deed, Farm will be sold at. 12 : 00 .noon.

1949 Case VAC tractor with 2-way 16" plows, cultivators
and brush hog . New MW riding mower, 32" cut, nearly
new appliam;:es Including refrigerator, electric stove,
Washer, dr-y er, 2 fuel oil htoaters, 220 V air conditioner , 2
. sweepers, .S fans, oak dining room table end library table,
A beds, dre1sers, stands, chairs, 2 reclining chlllr!i, 4 new
qullh, quilting· fr8mes, 4 9x12 rugS, small rUgs, trunks ,
dishes, oil lamp, jars. 1ugs, marble-top dress-er, lard press
and saosage stuffer. steelyards , 2.5-gat. Iron kettle with
~tand, one lot carpenter tools, 2 foQI 'cheats, 2 copper wash

• Low Cost Auto msuran ce--compare our r ates .
• Low Cost Hom eowne_r Policy .
.
eLow Cost Hom eowners .Policy for Ren~ers . .
eFarmowners Policy ....... Complet e Protect1on In Qne Polley.
eA Modern Moblte Homcowne·r Po lley.
1 Low Cost F ir e Polic y.
·
·
B
A Specia l M ulti. Pfi!rll Package Polley for Your uslness

•

MAVERICK

2 Dr .• 3 speed , 6 cyl. engine.

5

MAVERICKS

2 Or ., auto. trans ., some 6 cyl.. some 8 cyl.

3

MAVERICKS

4 Or .• auto . trans., 8 cyl., some with air .
,

10,00- Dinah Shore 3, 15 ; Company 6; Jokers Wild 8, 10 ; L1ilas,
Yoga and You 33 . .
, . _,
10 :30 - Gambi tS, 10; Wheels, KilnS: and Clay 33 ; Wmnmg Streak

3,4, 15.

If

3

o

·, a, io.

·

3

11: 35 - Matter of Fiction 33.
11: 55 ___:_ CBS News S; Dan I mel 's World 10.
12: 00 - Ji!ckpot 31 15; Password 6 ; Bob Braun ' s 50-50 Club 4;
News 8, 10, 13; Mr . Rogers 33 .
h
12: 30- Celebrity Sweepstakes 3, 15; Split Second 6 ; .Searc 1or

20, 33.

4

TORINO$, GRAND AND ELITE
Four 2 dr . hardtops, auto. trans ., with air .
Sl)( 4 dr ,, 8 cyl ., ·auto . trans ., with a'lr .

LTDs a n d LTD BROUGH
Six 4 dr. , auto. tra·ns., pwr . steering &amp; brakes, With a,r . ·
Six 2 dr ,, auto . trans _;-pwr. Steering &amp; brakes, with air .

STATION WAGONS
· 2 Torlnos, fully equipped. 4 L TDs fully equipped.
MERCURY MONTEGO MXs
Four ·4 drs., pwr . st . and br., 8 cyl., with air .· ·
Three 2 drs ._, wr. st, an~ br ;, 8 c 1., with air.

-5: 30 - Elec. Co . 33; Hogan 's Heroes 1-3 ; Hodgepodge o ge 20 ;
West ern Star Theater 15.
·
6: 00 - News 3, 4, 15 ; News 8, 10; 'rruth or Consequences 6 ;
Sesame Street 20; What's the Big Idea? 33.

1:30 - That Good Ole Nashville Music 3 ; Buck Owens B: To Tell

MUSTANGS

4 and 6 cyi ., auto . trans .

L d

6:30- NBC News 3, 4i 15; Room 222 13; ABC News 6; CBS News
E. 10.
·.
OWhl'
7: 00 - Truth or Cons. 3 ; Beat the Clock 4; News 6, 1 ;
a s
My Line 8; Circus 13; Elec. Co. 20; Workshop 15; Audubon
Wildlife Thealre 33.
·

COMETS

4 Dr., 6 and 8 cy l ., aUto . trans.

Tomorrow B. 10 ; Afternoon with OJ 13 ; Electric Co. 33.

12:55 - NB C News 3, 15:
,
·
1:00- News J; All My Children 6, 13 ; HazelS; What s My Une
10 ; Not for Women Only 15 ; Making.Thlngs Grow 33.
1:30 - Jeopardy 3. 4, 15; Let's Make A Oeal6, 13; As the World
Turn s 8, 10 ; Dig If 33 .
2: ,00 - Days of Our Uves 3, 4, 15 ; Newlywed Games 6, 13 ;
Gu iding Light 8, 10 ; Our Street 33 .
2: 30 ~ Doctors 3, 4, 15; Girl in My tlfe 6, 13; Edge of Night 8, 10 :
Handsful of Ashes 33.
3:00- Another World 3, 4, 15 ; Pri ce Is -Right 8, 10 ; General
Hospita l 6, 13 ; Boboquivari 33.
.
.
3: 30 - How to Survive a Marnage 3, 15 ; Match Game 8, 10, One
Life t o Live 6, 13; Phil D~nahue · 4 ; Performance33.
4: 00 - Mr. CartoOn and The Banana Splits 3; Huck &amp; Yog/6 ;
Sesa m e St. 33 ; I Dream of Jeannie 13 ; Tattletales 8;
Somer set-15 ; Movie " Roman Scandals" ·10.
4:30 - Green Acr es 3; Jackpot 4; Gilligan's Is. 6 ; Bonanza 15;
Daniel Boone ·1 j; Virginian 8.
5: 00 - Bonanza 3; Merv Griffin 4; Big Valley 6 ; M ister Rogers

COMETS

2 Dr . Sedan s,6'and 8 cyl ., auto. trans .

11 : 00 - Passwo rd 13; Mike Doug las 6 ; Now You See
8, 1 ;
Co mm unity of Living Things 33 ; H igh Rollers 3, 4, 15.
11 : 30- Hollywood Squa res3, 4,15 ; Brady Bunch 13; Love of Life

1

MERCURY MONTEREY

Custom, 4 dr., fully equiPped.

2 COUGARS XR7
Fully equipped.

th Truth 6; Beat the Clock 13; Episode Action 33 ; Municipal

tou rt 10; Wacky World of Jonathan Winters 15; Help Thy
Neighbor 4 ; Music of the PeoPle 20.

B: 00 -

Gu nsmoke 8, 10; Coming Asunder of Jimmy Brlght20, 33.
8: 15 - Baseball 3, 4, 15.
"
9:00 - H ere's Lucy 8, 10 ; Movies "A New Kind of Love 13;
" The Turn ing Point". 6.
9: 30 - D ick Van o ·yke 8, 10 ; How Could I Not Be Among You?

20, 33.
10: 00 -

'

Handsful of Ashes 33 ; News20; Medical Center 8, 10.

G~LAXIES

2

Baseball World of Joe Garaglola 3, 15, 4; Rookies 6, 13:

One 2 dr. and one 4 dr ., fully!:!~' .,&gt;ped.

MERCURY M~RQUIS
Dr .• pillared hardtop, fully equipped.

3
4

10:30 - Day at Night 33.

11· 00- News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15 ; Janak! 33 .
11 :30 - Johnny Ca r son 3, 4, 15; Untouchables 13 ; Mission: /m .
· possible6 ,· Movies " The Chairman " 8 ; " The Dark Angel" 10.

12,30 -

News 13.

1:00 - Speak Easy 13.

Tomorrow 3, 4,· Ta.ke Five for Life 15 ; Wide World

1: 30 2: Oo -

2:00 -

News 4.

10 TRUCKS F-100-250fs-350's
Assorted features .

Myster y 13.

News 4.
News 13.

LOCAL USED
CARS

A-1

I
' ~··

AUTO AIR CO

'J4
PLYMOUTH 4
,
mi. , air , p~r . st. and br.
7 300

2

F-1

'73 FORD

DR.

oo·

s

Sharp!

3 '73 MONTEGA$
Fully equipped,
·. ..
1 '73 DODGE D .ART
With sun roof . S.h arp!

s

. Use Your
BankAmerl(ard Master Charge or

.95

1

SERVICES
EXTRA

FOR MOST
U.S. tARS

'72 CHEVELLE

Auto. trans ., pwr . st. and br ., 8 cyl.

1 '72 PINTO

.

1 '72 OLDSMOBILE
Vlst.!_Crulser stat l.on wa~C?_'!!.._9 passenger, full ~ equipPed .

SALE
• ADDITIONAL
PARTS ANi&gt;

Convertible

1 '73 PINTO RUNABOUT

Sohlo Credit Card

SERVICES INCLUDE:
and inspect con·
4
1 Cleon
denser (h:ternol)
hoses and
• •
5
2 Check
h
51'/ltC es.
belts for
'3 AdJust
6
proper tension.
'

Why not compare. our rates with your present
·
We k
we can save you money.

readers, ·Misc:ellanaous Items.

1

.
,

1:00 -

e

'boilers, picture frames, books, Including s McGvHy

PINTO WAGONS

One 4 speed ; two with auto . trans .

.

Writes All Types of losurance For

Terms: ssoo.oo at time of sale,

3

7: 30 - New Zoo Revue6 ; Tennessee Tu xedo 13.
6: 00 - Capt . Kangaroo 8; Jeff's Co ll ie 6; New Zoo Revue 13 ;
Sesame St. 33 ; · Schoo l Sce ne 10.
8: 25 - Jack La Lanne 13.
,
8:·30 - Brady Bunch 6; Green Acres 10.
S: SS ~ N ews 13 ; Chuck White Rep_
o rts 10.
.
9:oo - AM 3; Paul Dixon 4; Wild , W i ld West6; Abbott &amp; Costello
8; Ph i l Donahue 15;· Captain Kangaroo 10 .- Community o~
Uvi ng Things 33 ; Movie " The Blue Ma x" 13.
9: 35 -

PINTOS

One 2 dr. 4-Speed; fwo 3 dr . Runabouts, automat ic trans .
'

6: 00 -

Newsmaker ' 74 13; Travelogue 4; Lamp Unto My Feel

,

3

MONDAY, JULY 15,1974

SUNOAY, JULY 14, 1974

Action 8; TBA 15. .

. NEW CARS

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

'

buildinas, mineral rights included, some standinG timber.
·located 10 miles east of ·Point Pleasant on Long Hollow
Road. 2112 mile~ oH Rt. 2. (Turn at Forest Hill Cemetery,
watch for sign).

CLARENCE EDEN
ltltrl, W. VI.
John M&lt;Noiii-Auct.
Roso, lllrbtt, Shell-Clerks .
• Lunch will bt hrvtd,

50 STATE STREET

162-6

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

REAL ESTATE-PERSONAL PROPERTY
42 Acres. ·I, room hoU$e and ~th , fuel oil .heat, out-

SATURDAY, JULY20;1974
Starting at 10:30 a.m.

SPRITE
TRAVEL trai ler s, wor l d's best
selle r , Why? Because of ea sy
t-owi ng , low price , many'
ex c lus ive e n ginee r i ng
featu r es . see it now ! Speci al
facto r y sa le price. AI Ams .
bary•s- , 63 1 FoUrlh A,v e .,
Gal l ipolis , Oh io.
165-3

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

WMPO-FM

PUBLIC AUCTION
Located on the Bob McCormick ·Road just off
of State Route 588 West of Gallipolis, Ohio.
Watch for AJJction Signs.

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

1962 CHEVY pickup S195 . Ph .

10.

MODELS

CL IP -News pa per !!ems . E:.arn
ss to S-35 each. Information :
Se nd 50c and sta mp ed , sel f addr'essed
e nvelope
to
Ric hard Unroc . Crown City ,
Ohio.
163 ·3

511REO

Middleport-Pome roy

Clevel and engine , four speed ,
mag wheel s on ba ck . Mu~t
sell . $500 . Phone 446 -7504 .
163-3

6: 30 -

TO MAKE ROOM FOR '75

Help Wanted

COUNTRY

AUCTION SERVICE

Produced f r om a speCia l
viny l co mpound made by B.
F. Goodrich and Mon santo . 5
times t hicker than metal
si ding. · Will not deni, chip,
crack , peeL rot , ru st _or
chal k .
Free· Hom e f;stimates
Call
Superior
Vinyl
Products , Athens, 0 ., collect
1-592-5544.

~~-- ~:--- --- -----

SWAIN .

PUBLIC
AUCTION
.

SEAL
weeks
P 0 old
IN T. Ph
Slam
. 245
ese-5689
kltteiiS
.
..9 I, . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . ; .. .
164-6

'l

GREAT

SAT, JULY 20-10:30 A.M.

of m i lkers . Ph . 388 -8641.

I

SOLID
VINYL SIDING

Camping Equipment

BUkllL E HEATING

Pets For Sale

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

-----

----- ---~-~--..--

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

·ror Sale

.

~LEA MARKET
SATURDAY and Sunday , July
13 -14, at Memory Shop , U . S .
35, Fr aziers Boftom , W . Va .
164-2
'

KNOTTS
AUCTION BARN .

____________

· uAY CARE

SUN VA l!LEY Nursery Sc hools .
, licensed by Sta,_e ot Oh ~ o . Jlh
miles Wes t of new hospital
577 SUn Valley Or . Ph . 446
3657 . Day care that says " we
c are ." Mad ge Ha ul dren ,
-==-~-y AROSAL E- - - Own~r ;
Loredith and John
PLEA SANT Valley Rd ., J uly 18
H&lt;iu ldr en, Operators .
and 19 . Depress io n g lass , old
114-t·
ca rn ival glass . Misc . i tems .
--------...~
-2.45 -5178 .
165-3

•as

163 -6

------ - -----1969
FORD
To r ino
351

5:00- Wall Till Your Father Gets Home 6; Dig It 33; Theatre

Notic!l

CHAIN
LINK
fenCi!}g ,
residential and commer c1a L
wood and pr iva cy fen ce. Call
collect (6 14 ) 887 -2345 .
151 26

soum

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

Gallipolis, Ohio

Notice

+

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

__

Eastern A»e.

1966 BUICK , Ph . .!.46"3824 .

~5~ ·6839,

ALL 74'S MUST GO-WE'VE GOT

50 OF THE SHARPEST
USED CARS IN THE AREA!

Dar

Good things happen on a Honda.

1971 RJRD 4 WH. DRIVE.. .........s2395

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

Mo!o r C o ., In c: .

KANAOGA, OHIO

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

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

-

ttl9'14 A mer1con Hon da

SMITH HONDA SALES

-------------FOR " a jo b well don e feel in.g," --- -------------

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

'

1970 NOVA CPE.......................'1495

1972 OIEVROLET % TON .......... '2395

-BE-----------gentle , be k ind . to that -------------expens ive carpet, clean it

'

AUCTION ·

Local 1 owner trade· in, 4 speed tran s .. ti . T. eq~ipm .ent ,
radio, good tires, clean Inside, rej:t fi ni sh, blk . vmyl 1nL
low mileage .
·

Wantetl To Buy

1970 CHEVY Pick -up . Ph . 446 4655 .

The new Hond a MT-250 gets lts style and
TM
performance from the C R·250M Elsmore, o ne of
1973's winnmges-t bikes. The MT-250 features a
stx-port two-stroke alumi num engine with a bonded
· casl-1ron cylinder !mer Street·legal with lighting
and instrumentation, th1s new bike has captured
the imaginatio n of all those who wailed for a
two-stroke good enough to be called Honda .
W1th it, you'll blaze new trails, and your own
special victories. See the Honda MT-250 in our
showroom now.

for the Hot

USED bulldozer or
446 -005L

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

Jur.,h1rll: DROOP FLORA MUSUN SOIREE
·· ·
1
A.,~&gt; .. r·r : II'• fair - to use the 110me Word twire- "SO-SO"

Starting July 13 &amp;_1q
OPENII'(G WEEK
0,

M 16HT BE ENOU6H
'TO TU~ 'IOU~
E5eAI':D WHI'TE!

(AnAwera i\ londa_YI

Gigantic ~'Flea Market (7o
yard sales), all concentrated
at one place, 1/z mi. out
Spring Ave. off Rt. 7, Main
St., Pomeroy, Ohio . Free
admission,
plenty
of
parking. Rastrooms and
refre$hments outside -and
inside. Far· reservations
contact Fredie Thabet, Ph .
773-5543 or 77J-5651 after 5

.

euv-&amp;

._I--'-Prill
_· -'1111-'-"'SUR=M=IIGWII
= m=-_1 Ct I I I I J --------------

p.m.

..

Pets for Sale "-

BOARDING and pupp ies . Ph .
446 ·4824 .
160-ff

-----~---"-----

l972 VEGA HATOIBACK CPE. ...... ~2095

Summer.

•.7 00°

163 -3

w -w tires , low m ileage, blk . vinyl interior , beautiful red
finish with blk . vi nyl top, radio, wh . covers, de luxe
equipment. A sharp car .

CLEARANCE

0

-------------1968 OLDS . 614 -286 -2496 .

302 V-Bengine, automatic trans .• power steeririg , I~ke new

ED

PRICES,)LASH_

RAMSCHARGERS

DISCOUNTS UP TO

ius! take over payment S36
per mo Call before I at 446 ·
7406 after 1. 4A6 -3427 .
'
164 ·3

1972 FORD GRAN TORINO........ s2445

Air Cond .

VANS

·

•

~--

flcial car, never titled, bal. o f warranty, loaded ~lt h
ex1ras In cluding factory air, radio &amp; tape, w -w f1res,
guards &amp; all the fine accessories .

/

.

CLUB CABS

----..----'68 CORVA IR . good condition,

4 Door, light grn. finish, green vi nyl top, u5e? as Co. ol·

1
1
I
I
1
J

Put in Shape

Ph. 992-2174

Auto Sales

PICKUPS

1967 THUNDERBIRD , SSSO . Ph .
388 8791 after 3 p.m .
160 ~

lost

___________ __

:::_;:~-:=.:~~~,1~=~-::;::·__:•::u::g;gested by the above Cartoon.

·

I

Have Your Auto

Pomeroy , Ohio·

1974

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

IMPALA~ ........ s3895

164-3
F URNISHED 3 rm . and bath 1.000 SQ . F T. s torage area and
Local rowner car, good ti res , 6 cyl. with standa rd tran s.,
STAND I NG t imber . 388 ·8490 .
!'lom e, 640 Fifth Ave . Ph . 446 garage
p~rk in g
space
s
.
radio,
blue finish , spot less clean blue interior.
164-6
1607. No pet s or children .
Downtown area , 446 -1743.
Avai labl e 21s t of July .
154-tr LARGE bla ck male Labrador ,
SELLU-:-s:-Coins~MTS
answers to Schlitz . Family
16 ' ·"
Coins of Gallipolis . 12 1 Stale
SLEEP ING ~o;msb; t h;-week .
pet . Lost around Rt . 141 and
St. Ph . 446 ·18_
42 .
OFF ICE spa(:e and bui ldin g,
Gallia HoteL
Edgemont Dr . Rf!ward . Call
132 -tf
Mason , w . Va . area . Good•
Carl Cameron , 446 -3777 .
139 -78
location . Will remodel tO svi t
164-3
~-~----------8' F letside, V·8 erlgine . 4 speed trans .. 15"' Comm . tires,
tena nt. Ph . 304 -7-73 -5118 .
TWo 2 eR m-ObilE! homes, Upper·
H. duty springs, radio, gree(l_finish , solid cab.
11 5-lf
R i ver Rd ., 446-0008.
l46·1f
-,WA[L .PAPER l N G.and irlierlor ;
painting , Ph . 446-9865 .
HOU SE. 7 room and bath,
60.1f 1
· garage , $140 mo., qv iel street
-~- - -.....:
in GaHipolis . can 446-4416
BOO KKEEPER with 1 year
after 6.
experience . wants partt ime
~ or;;UROQM, 6room nouse plus
Sport Custom 8' Pickup, white over dark red , V -8 engi ne, 4
164-6
iob . Ph . 379-2552 .
bath in Vinton . Mu st have
164·3
speed
trans ., radio , good tires. Loaded wi th extras.
reference . Phone 446 -7699
afte r 5 and Sunday c all 446 · TRAILER space in Rio Grande .
Ph . 245-582-3.
· POODLE gra~;&gt;m i ng . Ph . 446 9539 .
164-3
148-11
3582 or 367 -7409.
For Sund•y, July 14, 1974
----~"---"'---------161 -6
'tRAILER space : Ph . 446 -3879 MOBILE home , tot,ai electric , 2 ARIES (March 21--Aprll 19)
bedroom S100 ; 3 bedroom You should have a little surplus
GREAT SELECTIQN NEW74
or 367 -7438 .
·
CARPENTRY ~nd r'Oofing
Sl25 . Phone 446-0175 or. 446 - built up. Don't let it bum a hole
work . Ph . 446 ·2787 .
' 15.1f
CHEVY 112 &amp; 3/4 TON TRUCKS .
1934 .
161 -12
- -- ----- -- ~ -- 105-tf in · your pocket. Put it sOmeFUR N ISHED aparfm enl, &lt;t .c.,
.:::--=----- ~-- -- - - -- ....... _
where out of reach.
' CU STOM seWing, alterat ions on
r easonably . pr iced . 12 ·miles
apartment. TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20)
all types of cl oth ing , fvr s..
from Pomeroy . Ph . 304 -773 - FURNISHED
51 18 .
Adu l ts only . All ut ilit ies paid . Some little frustrations at home
reweaving . Phone 446 .7520 or:
446 -1771 .
'
446 -952.3.
early in the . day won't carry
enough wallop to spo il what
90 -tf '
. ~
w ill tum out to be a Pleasant
FURNIS HED
apar t ment. Sunday.
EILOCK laying work . W e also
Quail Creek
Inquire 631 Fourth Avenue .
have Concrete block . Ph . 446 GEMINI (Moy 21 -June 20)
160-tf
3608 .
Mobile Community
Your luck is taking a sharp turn
156-tf
&amp; Sale.s
SLEEPING rooms weekly· for the better. Don't be too surrates , free garage parking . prised when something good
Libby Hotel.
Seems to happen out of the
WIN AT
"WE RUN A VERY SIMPLE BUSINESS"
· Contact Newt Jones
24 1. ft -blue .
Rodney-cora Rd .
We Sell &amp; Service Chevrolet Cars &amp; Trucks .
- ~- ----- -- - -CANCER (June 21 ·July 22)
Rodney, Ohio
BRA
UR Y
e f.f i c r en c v The best course of action for
Ph. 245-9374-245-5021
apartments , adults , no pe1s . you at the present is the one
729 2nd Ave ., Ph . 446 -0957.
yousetforyoursel_fwhereyou
'
153-tf
We rent .mobile home Jots, '
lead and are not led by others .
not just a place to ·park your
1 BORM . apt. , next t o post of: LEO (July 23·Aug.22)
home. We have more tq_ offer
l ice in Cheshire . Pr ice d upon Others will rally to your colors
., 13
NORTH
inspection. Ph . ~67 - 7234 .
than any mobile commudify
and support your views if you
• AKB
in Southeastern Ohio, '
·
163-3 have 1o take a pOsilion on any
'AK . '
major iSsues.
.
- ' ---- - ~---:."&gt;---- -VIRGO (Aug .23·Sepl.22)
K QI06
"Your Chevy Dealer"
12x60 TRA ILER located in Ri o
Something bright a11d hopeful
• 10 7 53
992
-2126
.
Open Eves. TillS
Grande. Air conditionM . 2-45- 1970 SCHULTZ mobf le home, is developing. It will fit favora Pomeroy
WEST !D)
EAST
5267 .
12x65, 2 bdrm . total etec . air bly into your future plans . Two
.._
cond ., smau. down payment
• 632
165 -tf
and balance like rent . Ph . 446- importarit contacts will be of
'QJ 1097632
_
LARGE
Expando
Tra i ler
9279 or 446-2733 after 10 .a .m . help.
• 982
AJ743
Pass ?
South was making some sort Pass
mobile hom e FOncrete patio
165-tf LIBRA (Sepl.23·0cl.23)
ofoK
ofoQB2
shade , lwo people . Ref ere nce,
Keep concen1ratlng on and
of obscure grand·slam force.
You, South, hold:
Upper R iver Road , $125 per
TR I· STATE MOBILE HOME work ing toward your major
Since
she
held
two
of
the
SALES,
446-Hl:!
·month . Phone 446 -1799 .
•AQ4 'KJ432 +AQ97. 3
g'oal. II there is something you
.Ql09754
three top spade honors,. North
165·3 1967 Horizon 12x60
What do you do now?
today
to
further
th
ings,
can
do
1965 New Moon 1:2x55
bid
s.
e
ven
spades.
A-Pass or bid seven spades.
by
au
means
do
it.
MOBILE home space lot, 40' x 1970 Fl~etwo.od 12X60
West
opened
the
queen
of
SCORPIO (0ct.24·Nov.22)
Yo\_1
-know the club opening was
70 ' $40 per mon lh . 4 mi. west 1967 RitZ Craff 10x35
ofoAJ964
hearts. This ~ave South a a fake; that your side holds all
ot Gallipoli s, Rt. 35, Park 1958 Sk ytine Bx45
D ip lomacy and tact will prove
Lane Mobile Hom e Court . Ph . 1953 Uberty 8x45
to be powerful allies In your
North·South vulnerable
chance to get rrd of her losing · the aces; that you have a
446 -38 68 .
1949 Howard 8x25
dealings with others. Use them
singleton club; and a long heart
West North
164 -tf wisely and you 'll be assured of
East
South diamond on a heart.
165-3
South played two rounds of suit, so let your consCience be
Pass
Pass
hoped-1or results.
B&amp; S MOBILE HOMES
NICE 3 bedroom home, near
spades and then caHed for your guide.
Pass 2 N.T. Pass 3.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.2-3 ·
PT. Pl. EASANT
new shopping ce nt er, Adults
the 10 of clubs from dummy.
Pass 3•
ot~ ly, no pets . Refer ence and
1968 Globemaster 12x60 2 BR Dec.21) Services you perform
Pass 4 N;T. At
TODAY'S QUESTION
the sarne tirne she hapSec urily Depos i t .req.uired·. 1973 Nashua 12x52 2 BR
for others at this time carry ex Pass
Pass 6.
You
deal and hold:
pened to knock over an ash
Phone 446 -1044 during day or 197 1 Rebel 12X60 2BR
cep1ionally large rewards. Be
Pass 1•
Pass
Pass
•AQ6
5 4 'AQ654 +AK+ 2
1970
Sta
tesman
12x50
2
BR
446 -7322 after 5: 30 p .,m .
tray at her left. She looked
willing to assist where you can.
Pass
.._165 -3 . 1969 Star 12x60 3 B"R
What
is
your opening bid?
CAPRICORN (Dec.22·
down to inspect the result
1964 Parkwood 10x56 2 BR
Opening lead-Q'
and when she looked back
164-tf Jan.19) You 'll be lucky tQday,
FURNIS HED apt ,, 4 rm . and
not only . 1or yourself but tor
East had produced the queen.
bath , adu l t s only . Secu r ity
depos it requ ir ed . Ph . 446 -0444 4 MOBILE homes . 2 - 1973 f one Who is closely associated
South
played her ace. West
bdrms . 12 x 50 ; I - 1969 J with you .
after 6 p .m .
had
to
drop her singleton
By
Oowald
&amp;
Jarneo
Jacoby
bdrm . 12x65 ; 1 - 1959 2 bdrm . AQUARIUS (Jon.20-Feb.19)
_._,_
162 -6
South had managed
king
and
l 'Jx50 . Ph . 7.!.2 .5980 .
Unusual ·conditions that tend to
Here is a hand frorn the to score what
108 -tf make one feel more secure
a
sell anything
World's championship well-deserved she-considers
top.
anybt&gt;dy
at our Auction
down deep are now quite
women's pairs that may well
favorable tor you.
Barn
or
in
yoUr home. For
~N,EWSPAPER ENTEH PRISE ASSNJ
be the funniest of the year. ·
WALNUT t imber . Ph . 4.46 -3964 . 2 REG". mlniature Schn.iuzers, 6 PISCES (Feb.20·Morcll 20)
Information
•nd pickup
North's opening club bid
165 -J
weeks old , mare "nd female . Much ol the risk of something
servite
call256-6967
alter 5,
was designed to stop a club
446·7489 .
speculative that you 're in·
- - - -- -- -- - ---..:..
p.m.
..
10 FOOT f ishing boa1 , 5 h .p ,
lead against an eventual
165-6 valved in is re:duced Ju~t as
Every Saturday Night
engine ; swivel seats and all
long as you continue to use the
notrump contract.
access or ies . 446.1251.
BRITTANY Spaniel pupS , 3. good judgment you 're now
Al7 p.m.
The
bidding
has
been:
13
West's five heart bid was
months old, champion blood using.
16 5-3
an effort to disrupt Black· West
North
lines , AKC Reg . Beaut iful
East
dogs, S50 or trade . Ph . 6111 -992 wood, but North and South
u
Pass
6359 .
1966 FOR D Galaxie 500 P .S.,
were pla'ylng that a pass ·Pass
Pass
P .B .• air cond . i4'l0. Ph . 446165-1
showed
zero or· two aces; a .Pass
4 N.T .
4200 .
Pass
Third &amp; Olive
double one or three so when Pass
5 N.T. Pass
165-3
K &amp; P KENNELS
No•th passed South knew her
A.K ..C. Pupp ies . Boarding . 388 .
8274 . Rt , 5511 1/ 2 mi. E . Porter.'
paftner held two aces.
FOR SALE
108 -tf
South's six club bid was in·
July 14, 1974
Coal Acreage. Est. 44 Acres.
tended
to l(ive North a choice
1971 FORD Ranger pi ckup This is the year when your past
Jesse Creek, 6 miles from
tru ck , auto . tran smisSion ,
between
. s1x spades and six
Cheshire.
P .s ., .P .B .• excellent con d . Ph ., expetieilce and knowledge will
by this time North
clubs,
but
be put lo good use to tum you
256 -1331 after 5 p .m .
·
.
M. l . McCord
had forgotten ·that she had
'
162-4 a handsome profit. n·s some1140 S. Orlando Ave .
opened
a club. North decided
thing
lo
look
forward
to!
----.----~ ----..:...
Maitland, Fla.l27S 1

Mobile Homes For Sale

! [IJ

I

r

&amp; tr uc k oastur e in FURNISHED upstairs 3 rm .
cou ntry ;
full
fac ilities ,
and bath apt . All utiliti es
avail abre June 30th . Wr it e
paid . Adults only , no pets . Ph .
Box 324 , c -o Dally Tr ibune.
446 -1519.
128 -11
138-tf

HOUSE

1973 OIEVROLET

Stay Cool

500 E. Main St.

1

I I

\' ••t.-rdav· •

Special Low
Price on

Smith Nelson
Motors

babys i tter to live ln Or' out .
Call before 1: 30 p .m .. .tA6
0712 1'
161 6

161 -6

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

For Rent

I ---- - ----------

VEVER

I

•
'I'

__

'

DEELntY

Our Special Prices Include Plugs, Points, &amp; Cond .
Service Performed by Factory Trained Technicians

I
I

Re airs

o·-e

·CIIfiU'!bt"""..-.''-

~ -

'.•
'
'

-J,_

form four ordinary words.

••

'••••

_,IJ

Onscrambl~ these four Jumbles.
orie. letter to each square, to

•

•••.

For Rent

·

tra vel.

1
1
I

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

by HENRI ARNOlD otncl HOR lEE

••

Performance _

Check Fuel Felter
Set Points &amp; Timing
Check Emission Control
CtM:tk all Hoses

L AO"rE"S to work m d;;-clean l no
and l aundry c; enter Apply In
person . Sc otch Clean Center ,
656 Second .

'1969 OPEL Cadette exc . cand
256 69)0 .

Quality Carr

•
~
•

Operation

_

lO Pass .• small V -8 automatic trans ., power" st eer ing ~

brakes, t inted glass . tactorv air, radio. new Good yea
Rad ial W · W tires, vinyl interior . A sharp car &amp; ready to

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

-~
~

1
I

Adtust Carburetor
Clean Choke
Road Test For

Chetk Our

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

••

19.

1973 RJRD OOUNTRY SEDAN....... s3295

!
Performan(e

Che~k St~rter
Check A1r Cl~aner

LIBBY HOTEL
Apply In Per'ton .

wA;;Eo - J,;-,;;-dliie 1v.

1
I

The Entire
Month of July

Replace Plugs
10.
Replace Points
H.
Replace Condenser
12.
Check Distributor Cap
13.
ctM!ck Distributor Rotor 14.
Check Spark Plug Wire1 15.
Check Coil &amp; Coil Wires 16.
Check all Fan Belts
, 17.
Check Heat Riser
18.

Transmission

6-Cyl ., 2 dr, You probably know tn is previous oWner well and

h

I
11.

,...

See one of these courteous sa lesmen:
Pete Burris
Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvin Keebaugh

Orie careful local
power st eering . You ' U
have to see it to appreciate i ts good condit ion .

Good i!or"

DESII Q.ERII.

165 fl

1
I
I

Plus Tox
With This Coupon

All Makes of
C.rs

" You ' ll Like Our Qualify Way of Doing Business"

1973 FORD GRAN TORIN0................... '2495

~

Pomeroy

,__ ___ Open Eves. Til6- Til S P.M. Sat.

4 Or . Sedan . One careful local ow ner, power steering, auto.
tr'ans ., 302 V-8.
·

a

~

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
Cad ilia( . Oldsmobile
GMAC Financing Available

11
I

I
I

Just $3595
Expert Service on

2.
13
14:
15.
1 6.
17.a.

*1495

several new cars teft at Old, old, old,. sticker price which we ·

..
=

I1

2 OF THESE

CLEAR~NCE

j

•

I
I .

FUU OR PARTTIME

·Install up to 3 cans
of refrigerant• · .
Inspect system lor
freon leaks*
Test cooling efficiency

SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC INC.
GAUl POLIS, OHIO

.,.

1

'70 OPEL 4 speed. low mileage. shorpl

2

'69

FORD LTD's

Squire Wagon s . ·

•

UPPER RT. 7

1Sports
'70 GALAXIE 2 DR.
roof, auto . 1rans., pWr .. st ., etc .

2

'68

FORDS

·

".2 Or , hardtop, lluto. trans .• pwr. St., etc .

1

66

1

FORD Shllrp! less than

50,000

milK.

Sevftr~l Coo~ Hunter 1nd Fo~ Hunttr

�•

27 - T~ SWld•y Tlrnttt.S.ntiMI, Sunday, July a, lt74

Help Wanted

Bom from the dirt··

SMITH NELSON MOTORS INC.

and bred for

SUMMER

the street.
Corne see the Honda MT·250.

18 POINT TUNE UP

·--------sPECIAL·-------- i

.,
=
E

68 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

.!t

1:

ON ALL 1974 MODELS
AND USED CARS

.."'

.
-Go_ld with gold interior. full power equipment,
w-s· w tires, Climate Control air conditioning .

COME TO WHERE THE ACTION IS!

1:

Come to where bec;ause of our high volume 1nd low overhe•d

loi
10

we can give you the buy of your life . Come to where we Mve
will ~ell not only at sticker price but will give you a

gener~us

allowance on your trade-in. Come to where you can buy w1th

•~

confidence because we have a good service and parts
department behind every new and u~ed car we 5ell. Come to
where we can tell you eXactly who owned ·the used car - he
may be your best friend or neighbor. We are offering these at
clearance- prices because of our ~lgh volume we must have
action! You may never have another chance to get so-much
value for your dollar!
,.,

"',,.

.."~

-.

992-5342

...

1972 FORD GRAN TORIN0 ................... 1995
1

"
••

"

'
owner". auto . tran s.,

h

...t

1972 FORD V8 RANCHERO ................... 12495

~

•'

Car truck , sports. If yo u are looking for a truck with car ride
and looks, this is it. One- l,o cal owner . Power steering, auto .
trans .

."'~

1972 FORD MAVERICK. ....................... 2195

""

1

-'

how careful he is with his car .

~

1971 FORD TORINO V8 ...................... '1595

••
~

"••

·'•

4 Or . Sedan . On~ local owner , 302 V-S, auto. , power steering .

~

~

~

1.•

· 1970 MERCURY MARAUDER ................. '2495
2 Or . hardtop. We' ll gladly refer you to local owner. Power
steering, auto. trans , power bra·kes. v inyl top. One of the
~~ finest series Mercurys.
·

~

~

•
••
•

"

1970 FORD TORINO STA. WAGON .... ~ ...... 11295
One local owner . Air c(Hl~ition i ng, power steeri ng ,. auto .
trans ., 302 V-8.

~

•

•

~

5ee : Fred BtaeHnar ar Danny Thompson.

~

".•

.'

l/lcLOSER
YOU LOOK, THE BETTER
WE LOOK
Phones: 992-2196
hours: 992-2412
Wrecker service: 99f7587 or 992-7135

~

••"
•
•

••
•

'•~
;
•,•

~'i!)JMIDM;;u..t

~

~

•
i;

'••

'
~~

:

-•...,,,.,

D

t
.
·
I
.
I
I:===·I
~

~-

Now arran1e t.he circled 1•tten
to form the surprise answer, as

NOTICE

2 Days for . Price
Everyone welcome.

of

1.

For Sale
FRESH Hols tein he ifer , hay in
the f ield , 1970 Pontia c. Cal l
388 ·8573 .
1972 Nov A s s 350 f ou r speed .
Cus tom inter ior and ex~e r i or .
AM -FM rad io. 446 .0172 .
165 ·3
___ __ .._________
1971 SCHULT Mobi le Hom e, 3 BR , 12x65 wi th tip -ou l , ca r pet ing and arr con dition ing .
446 -3897 .
. 165-3

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

SERVICE

. "SELL THE
AUCTION WAY"

JIMME SAYKf
AUCTIONEER

w i th Blue Lustre . Rent
electric
shampooer
Sl.
Central Su pply .
165-6

Local 1 owner , good tires, 6 cy l. with .auto~atic trans.,
radio, blue finish , spotless clean blue mtenor .
backhoe .

1970 FORD MAVERICK ..............s1395

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

___________

Wanted To Do

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

'73 Chevrolet Chevelle
4 Dr . sedan, 350 c u. in. eng ine , V-8, radio, auto. ·

trans., lac. air cond .• beige fin ish, matching
interi or, with vinyl top, w-s-w tires. 13,000
miles. Lik e new cond . ·

Qualltv Service

,.

Competitive Pricing

S2895
WOOD MOTOR SALES

BRIDGE

Big slam scores
on slapstick

.J

POMER3Y MOTOR CO.

+

'4+s

1•

-BIG --'--- -- - -.,----YARD SA LE -:- C1o l hlng ,

children ' s, w omen's and
men's. D ishes, odds and ends .
3m iles out Bul aville Rd . Mon.
thru Fri. 9 - ?
165-3

a

GARAGE SALE
105 K I NEON Dr. Like new air
c ond i tion er, carpet. auto .
washer and mise~ i t ems . July
15 and 16 . Phone 446-1889. ·
165-3

s•

_____________

- --------·-----

--~-'-

AND COOL.ING

·'OIL Gas, and cle{l ri c t u rn c. ~ e
sa res and service , 24 h_o ur
servi.ce , ~t o 5, 446 -4119 , alt er
s. 44 6-25f9 .
63 -lf

Lz:en ;~ t!rlb}tttl

I.

3.

0 '

clean carpets with Blu e
Lustre .
Rent ·
electr i c
Shampooer Sl. G . C. Murph y .
,___..,...165 -6

___________

ROTO TILL..ER, new , .5 h .):i . Ph .
446 ·9436 . .
165-3

-------------.-LOT of goOd used furniture . Se t

__________ ...,. ___

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

165-3

1973 MODEL 8 ft . truck ·ca mper
with gas or elec . ref ., tlke
new. Call 388 -8433 .
165-J

EARN '10,000+
SALES OPENING
Start IOCIIV w1th one of the Trl· County's fastest .
growing de1lers. good working conditions •ncl
comfortab'le atmosphere.
I

Apply In Person To

GENE ASHWORTH
llm¥£EN 10 AM AND 3 PM MOft.fRI.

1957 DODGE truck . 5 sPeed
trans ., 28 feet bed , $1 ,200 , elsa
.wilt pick up ca r bodies free .
Phon e 245 -5178 .
·
1611 -3
...... --- --~-- -----

--- ---------DALMA f ION -puppies 535. 245 ·
9369 . Rio Grande. Oh io.

157-tf

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

RESTAURANT
MANAGEMENT
.
. .
TRAINEES
.

Bob Evans is probably the best-known farmer In the
Midwest . . . besf. known because of the sausage · and ..
restaurants that bear his name and his reputation for
quality. NoW, as the cOmpany expands and b!JIIds 'more
restaurants. management tra inees are needed, men who
can mo~e q~ic::kly into positions as aulst~nt managers
and .!'flanagers. If you have a sincere Interest In restaurant
business and If you want to work ·In an oroanltatlon where
.r;tandards of quality and service are the highest, we can
,Her you an exciting and rewarding future.' For further
information, c:all collect M_rs. Jamrozy at (61oft 491 -2225,
or send a resume to Bob Ev•ns Farms, P.O. Bo)( 7863,
Station G .• Columbus, Ohio 'l207.

County Motor
Pt.
I

92.1

CO.slstlng In p•rt of:. Show Case with Marble Base &amp;
·Lights, Treadle Sewing Machines. Bass and Snare Drums,
Sforte Churn, Bunk Beds, Blue Glass Topped Coffee Table,

Avon, Uull), library Tables, Pictures and Frames.
National Geographies, BoHies of all kinds. Wall Desk
made In Sweden, cane Bottom Chair, D41sy Churn ,
Aquariums &amp; Fixtures. Depression Glass, Dishes and
Glassware of all kinds, Cheese Box, Horse Clock , Vapor .
Crest aline Lamp, OK - Yoke, Eledrlc Guitar, Furniture, ·

Electric Appl_lances, Antiques and Collectables, many,
meny more. Come Out.
TERMS: CASH
.
Lunc~ Will Be S.rvtd
f!IR. •IMI·MRS. FRANK BELVILLE, OWNER
O.ryiAIINon
-AUCTIONEER~
Ktnny S•..ln
O.k Hill, Ohio .
•
O.lllpotli, Ohio
Not rospon.lblt for .ccldonts

J.

EXPERIE N c ·e o
par TS
manager or pa rt s clerk. Good
working conditio n s. Reply
90)( 329 ; C ·O Tr i bun e.
148-tf

Television Log
7: 00 -

Jerry Falwell 13; Communique .6 ; Fi lm 4 ; Marshal l
fron ' s Sunday School 10.
7: 15 - Tele-A -Bib le Time 4.
7:30 - Church by the Side of the Road 4; Talk ing Hand s S;
Ca m era Thr!!e 10 ; Gospel Caravan 6.
B: OO - Bllly James Harg is and Hi s All -American Kids 10 ; Da y
of Discovery 4; Rev . Leonard Repa ss S; Morm on Choir 3;
Mamre Chur ch 13.
B: JO- Your Hea lth 4;
of Di scovery 8; Get Together 10;
Rev. Humbard 13 ; Ora Roberts 3 ; Kathryn Kuhlman 6 ;
Bobby Martin 15.
8:55- Black Cameo 4.
9: 00 - Cadle Chapel 4 ; Oral Roberts 10 ; Rex Hum bard 6, lS ;
Kathryn Kuhlman 8; Go~pel Singing Jub ilee 3.
9:30 - Christ is the Answer 13 ; Church Services 10 ; Yours for
the Asking 4 ; VanZant Church of Chri st B.
10 : 00 - Kid Power 6, 13 ; Thi s is the Life 3; Church Ser vice 4 ;
Faith for Today lS i Thinking in the Black 8; M ovie "Les
M iserabtes " 10.
.
10: 30 - What the Bible Pla i n ly Says 13; Capta in Noah 3; VIsion
On 6 ; Th is is the Life 15 ; lnslgh14 ; ViewpointS .
11 : 00 - TV Chapel J ; Focus on Col umbus 4; Pq int of View 6:
Ca m era ThreeS ; Religi on 13; Across the Fence 15 . .
11: 30 - Mak e A Wis·h 13; Bishop Sheen 6; Insight 15 ; Rex
Humbard 8; Th is is the Answer 3. •
12 : 00 - Rev . Calvin Eva11s 13 ; Bowling 6; Meet ! he Pres s 3, 4, 1 5 ~
At IsSue 3 ; Doctors on Ca ll 4; The, IssUe 10; Sa cr ed Heart 15.

12: 15 - Open Bible 15 .

12:30- Meet the Press 3, 4, 15; Face the NationS; Blue Ridg e
Quartet 13.
. ,
. 1:00- Lower Lighthouse .13 ; Wash ington Oebi;!t~s for the 70s 15;
Baseball 3, 4,· TBA ·a; Movie " La st Train from Bombay" 10.
1:30 - Issues and Answers 6, 13. .
2: 00 - Today' s Hea'lth 6; NFL Champ ionship Games 13; NF L

·

2:30 - Cancer : Life or Death 13; Eli'zabeth R. 6:i'·CBS Tennis '
Classic 8, 10.
~
3:00 - Anything You Can Oo 13.
3:30 - CBS Sports Spectacular 8, 10; Ben Casey 13; Per r y
Mason 3 ; B!g Red Mac hine 4.
.
4:00 - TBA 4, 1s :· Women's Pro Tennis 6; Antiques 33 .
4: 30 - Time and the Cities J, 15 ; Sa le of the Centu ry 4; Othe r
Peoole, Other Places 13 ; Fren ch Chef 33 .
Day at Disneyland 4; Movie "RiO Conchos " 13.
5: 30 - Untamed World 6; It Tak es a Thief 3; Champ ionship
Fishing Bi To Be Announced 15; Proud Count ry 10 ; Per , formance 33 .
6:00 - Lilias , Yogi and You 33 ; Ozzie 's GirlS 6 ; N ews 4 : CBS
News Retrospective 8, 10.
6: 30 - NBC News 3, 15; Let's Grow a Garden 33; Jimm y Dean
6; News 4.
7: 00 - Zoom 20 ; Untamed World 13; Let's Mak e A Dea l 6;
Conflicts of Harry S-Truman 33 ; Safari to Adventure 3; W.ild
Kingdom 15 ; Lassie 8; Animal World 10 ; Cara van to M ex1co
4.

7:30 - F816, 13; Mountain Sc:;:ene 33; World of Disney 3, 4, 15;
Apple's Way S, 10 ; Journey to Jaoan 20. ·
00 - Evening at .Pops 20, 33.
8 ~ 30- Mann!x 8, 10 ; M cC loud 3, 4, 15; Movi e " Riot " 6, 13 .
9: 00 - Masterpiece Theater 20, 33 . _
9: 30 - 60 Minutes S, 10.
10: 30 - News 6, 8; Newsmaker '74 13; Road to Adventure 10 ; We
Think You Should Know 3; Police Surgeon 15 ; Firing Line 33;
News 4.
11:.00 - New s 3, 4, 10, 15 ; ABC News6, 13 i CBS News 8; Bonanza

a·

4.

11 : 15 - PoticeSurgeon6 ; CBS New s 10 ; News 13 ; Movie " Clive
of India " 8.
·
11 : 30 - Johnny Carson 15; Face the Nation 10 ; Janak i 33; Mov ie
"S he Done Him Wrong " 3; Don Kirshner's ROck Concert 13.
ll : 45 - Good News 6.
·
1.2 : 00 - Urban League 10; Johnn y Ca r son 4,
12 : 30 - Movie " Driicula - Prince of Darkness " 19.

Sun r ise Semina r 4; Su mmer Semester 10.
6: 25 -. Farm Report 13.
6: 30 - Five Minutes to Live By 4; News 6 ; Sible Answers 8;
Good News 13 ; Sacred Heart 10.
6: 25 - Columbus Tod~y 4 .
6: 45 ....... M orning Report 3; Farm time 10 .
7: 00- Today J , 4, 15; Bugs Bunny 6 ; CBS News 8, 10; Dick Van

Dyke 13.

Leadingham Agency

9:30 - To Tell the Trulh 3; Lucy Show B.
Matter of Fiction 33 . .

Your Auto, Home or Business . .
Represe~t
Llg!;ltning Rod Mutual ·
· Insurance Company

balanCe . due~ rtcelpl of
Gtneral-Warranty -deed, Farm will be sold at. 12 : 00 .noon.

1949 Case VAC tractor with 2-way 16" plows, cultivators
and brush hog . New MW riding mower, 32" cut, nearly
new appliam;:es Including refrigerator, electric stove,
Washer, dr-y er, 2 fuel oil htoaters, 220 V air conditioner , 2
. sweepers, .S fans, oak dining room table end library table,
A beds, dre1sers, stands, chairs, 2 reclining chlllr!i, 4 new
qullh, quilting· fr8mes, 4 9x12 rugS, small rUgs, trunks ,
dishes, oil lamp, jars. 1ugs, marble-top dress-er, lard press
and saosage stuffer. steelyards , 2.5-gat. Iron kettle with
~tand, one lot carpenter tools, 2 foQI 'cheats, 2 copper wash

• Low Cost Auto msuran ce--compare our r ates .
• Low Cost Hom eowne_r Policy .
.
eLow Cost Hom eowners .Policy for Ren~ers . .
eFarmowners Policy ....... Complet e Protect1on In Qne Polley.
eA Modern Moblte Homcowne·r Po lley.
1 Low Cost F ir e Polic y.
·
·
B
A Specia l M ulti. Pfi!rll Package Polley for Your uslness

•

MAVERICK

2 Dr .• 3 speed , 6 cyl. engine.

5

MAVERICKS

2 Or ., auto. trans ., some 6 cyl.. some 8 cyl.

3

MAVERICKS

4 Or .• auto . trans., 8 cyl., some with air .
,

10,00- Dinah Shore 3, 15 ; Company 6; Jokers Wild 8, 10 ; L1ilas,
Yoga and You 33 . .
, . _,
10 :30 - Gambi tS, 10; Wheels, KilnS: and Clay 33 ; Wmnmg Streak

3,4, 15.

If

3

o

·, a, io.

·

3

11: 35 - Matter of Fiction 33.
11: 55 ___:_ CBS News S; Dan I mel 's World 10.
12: 00 - Ji!ckpot 31 15; Password 6 ; Bob Braun ' s 50-50 Club 4;
News 8, 10, 13; Mr . Rogers 33 .
h
12: 30- Celebrity Sweepstakes 3, 15; Split Second 6 ; .Searc 1or

20, 33.

4

TORINO$, GRAND AND ELITE
Four 2 dr . hardtops, auto. trans ., with air .
Sl)( 4 dr ,, 8 cyl ., ·auto . trans ., with a'lr .

LTDs a n d LTD BROUGH
Six 4 dr. , auto. tra·ns., pwr . steering &amp; brakes, With a,r . ·
Six 2 dr ,, auto . trans _;-pwr. Steering &amp; brakes, with air .

STATION WAGONS
· 2 Torlnos, fully equipped. 4 L TDs fully equipped.
MERCURY MONTEGO MXs
Four ·4 drs., pwr . st . and br., 8 cyl., with air .· ·
Three 2 drs ._, wr. st, an~ br ;, 8 c 1., with air.

-5: 30 - Elec. Co . 33; Hogan 's Heroes 1-3 ; Hodgepodge o ge 20 ;
West ern Star Theater 15.
·
6: 00 - News 3, 4, 15 ; News 8, 10; 'rruth or Consequences 6 ;
Sesame Street 20; What's the Big Idea? 33.

1:30 - That Good Ole Nashville Music 3 ; Buck Owens B: To Tell

MUSTANGS

4 and 6 cyi ., auto . trans .

L d

6:30- NBC News 3, 4i 15; Room 222 13; ABC News 6; CBS News
E. 10.
·.
OWhl'
7: 00 - Truth or Cons. 3 ; Beat the Clock 4; News 6, 1 ;
a s
My Line 8; Circus 13; Elec. Co. 20; Workshop 15; Audubon
Wildlife Thealre 33.
·

COMETS

4 Dr., 6 and 8 cy l ., aUto . trans.

Tomorrow B. 10 ; Afternoon with OJ 13 ; Electric Co. 33.

12:55 - NB C News 3, 15:
,
·
1:00- News J; All My Children 6, 13 ; HazelS; What s My Une
10 ; Not for Women Only 15 ; Making.Thlngs Grow 33.
1:30 - Jeopardy 3. 4, 15; Let's Make A Oeal6, 13; As the World
Turn s 8, 10 ; Dig If 33 .
2: ,00 - Days of Our Uves 3, 4, 15 ; Newlywed Games 6, 13 ;
Gu iding Light 8, 10 ; Our Street 33 .
2: 30 ~ Doctors 3, 4, 15; Girl in My tlfe 6, 13; Edge of Night 8, 10 :
Handsful of Ashes 33.
3:00- Another World 3, 4, 15 ; Pri ce Is -Right 8, 10 ; General
Hospita l 6, 13 ; Boboquivari 33.
.
.
3: 30 - How to Survive a Marnage 3, 15 ; Match Game 8, 10, One
Life t o Live 6, 13; Phil D~nahue · 4 ; Performance33.
4: 00 - Mr. CartoOn and The Banana Splits 3; Huck &amp; Yog/6 ;
Sesa m e St. 33 ; I Dream of Jeannie 13 ; Tattletales 8;
Somer set-15 ; Movie " Roman Scandals" ·10.
4:30 - Green Acr es 3; Jackpot 4; Gilligan's Is. 6 ; Bonanza 15;
Daniel Boone ·1 j; Virginian 8.
5: 00 - Bonanza 3; Merv Griffin 4; Big Valley 6 ; M ister Rogers

COMETS

2 Dr . Sedan s,6'and 8 cyl ., auto. trans .

11 : 00 - Passwo rd 13; Mike Doug las 6 ; Now You See
8, 1 ;
Co mm unity of Living Things 33 ; H igh Rollers 3, 4, 15.
11 : 30- Hollywood Squa res3, 4,15 ; Brady Bunch 13; Love of Life

1

MERCURY MONTEREY

Custom, 4 dr., fully equiPped.

2 COUGARS XR7
Fully equipped.

th Truth 6; Beat the Clock 13; Episode Action 33 ; Municipal

tou rt 10; Wacky World of Jonathan Winters 15; Help Thy
Neighbor 4 ; Music of the PeoPle 20.

B: 00 -

Gu nsmoke 8, 10; Coming Asunder of Jimmy Brlght20, 33.
8: 15 - Baseball 3, 4, 15.
"
9:00 - H ere's Lucy 8, 10 ; Movies "A New Kind of Love 13;
" The Turn ing Point". 6.
9: 30 - D ick Van o ·yke 8, 10 ; How Could I Not Be Among You?

20, 33.
10: 00 -

'

Handsful of Ashes 33 ; News20; Medical Center 8, 10.

G~LAXIES

2

Baseball World of Joe Garaglola 3, 15, 4; Rookies 6, 13:

One 2 dr. and one 4 dr ., fully!:!~' .,&gt;ped.

MERCURY M~RQUIS
Dr .• pillared hardtop, fully equipped.

3
4

10:30 - Day at Night 33.

11· 00- News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15 ; Janak! 33 .
11 :30 - Johnny Ca r son 3, 4, 15; Untouchables 13 ; Mission: /m .
· possible6 ,· Movies " The Chairman " 8 ; " The Dark Angel" 10.

12,30 -

News 13.

1:00 - Speak Easy 13.

Tomorrow 3, 4,· Ta.ke Five for Life 15 ; Wide World

1: 30 2: Oo -

2:00 -

News 4.

10 TRUCKS F-100-250fs-350's
Assorted features .

Myster y 13.

News 4.
News 13.

LOCAL USED
CARS

A-1

I
' ~··

AUTO AIR CO

'J4
PLYMOUTH 4
,
mi. , air , p~r . st. and br.
7 300

2

F-1

'73 FORD

DR.

oo·

s

Sharp!

3 '73 MONTEGA$
Fully equipped,
·. ..
1 '73 DODGE D .ART
With sun roof . S.h arp!

s

. Use Your
BankAmerl(ard Master Charge or

.95

1

SERVICES
EXTRA

FOR MOST
U.S. tARS

'72 CHEVELLE

Auto. trans ., pwr . st. and br ., 8 cyl.

1 '72 PINTO

.

1 '72 OLDSMOBILE
Vlst.!_Crulser stat l.on wa~C?_'!!.._9 passenger, full ~ equipPed .

SALE
• ADDITIONAL
PARTS ANi&gt;

Convertible

1 '73 PINTO RUNABOUT

Sohlo Credit Card

SERVICES INCLUDE:
and inspect con·
4
1 Cleon
denser (h:ternol)
hoses and
• •
5
2 Check
h
51'/ltC es.
belts for
'3 AdJust
6
proper tension.
'

Why not compare. our rates with your present
·
We k
we can save you money.

readers, ·Misc:ellanaous Items.

1

.
,

1:00 -

e

'boilers, picture frames, books, Including s McGvHy

PINTO WAGONS

One 4 speed ; two with auto . trans .

.

Writes All Types of losurance For

Terms: ssoo.oo at time of sale,

3

7: 30 - New Zoo Revue6 ; Tennessee Tu xedo 13.
6: 00 - Capt . Kangaroo 8; Jeff's Co ll ie 6; New Zoo Revue 13 ;
Sesame St. 33 ; · Schoo l Sce ne 10.
8: 25 - Jack La Lanne 13.
,
8:·30 - Brady Bunch 6; Green Acres 10.
S: SS ~ N ews 13 ; Chuck White Rep_
o rts 10.
.
9:oo - AM 3; Paul Dixon 4; Wild , W i ld West6; Abbott &amp; Costello
8; Ph i l Donahue 15;· Captain Kangaroo 10 .- Community o~
Uvi ng Things 33 ; Movie " The Blue Ma x" 13.
9: 35 -

PINTOS

One 2 dr. 4-Speed; fwo 3 dr . Runabouts, automat ic trans .
'

6: 00 -

Newsmaker ' 74 13; Travelogue 4; Lamp Unto My Feel

,

3

MONDAY, JULY 15,1974

SUNOAY, JULY 14, 1974

Action 8; TBA 15. .

. NEW CARS

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

'

buildinas, mineral rights included, some standinG timber.
·located 10 miles east of ·Point Pleasant on Long Hollow
Road. 2112 mile~ oH Rt. 2. (Turn at Forest Hill Cemetery,
watch for sign).

CLARENCE EDEN
ltltrl, W. VI.
John M&lt;Noiii-Auct.
Roso, lllrbtt, Shell-Clerks .
• Lunch will bt hrvtd,

50 STATE STREET

162-6

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

REAL ESTATE-PERSONAL PROPERTY
42 Acres. ·I, room hoU$e and ~th , fuel oil .heat, out-

SATURDAY, JULY20;1974
Starting at 10:30 a.m.

SPRITE
TRAVEL trai ler s, wor l d's best
selle r , Why? Because of ea sy
t-owi ng , low price , many'
ex c lus ive e n ginee r i ng
featu r es . see it now ! Speci al
facto r y sa le price. AI Ams .
bary•s- , 63 1 FoUrlh A,v e .,
Gal l ipolis , Oh io.
165-3

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

WMPO-FM

PUBLIC AUCTION
Located on the Bob McCormick ·Road just off
of State Route 588 West of Gallipolis, Ohio.
Watch for AJJction Signs.

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

1962 CHEVY pickup S195 . Ph .

10.

MODELS

CL IP -News pa per !!ems . E:.arn
ss to S-35 each. Information :
Se nd 50c and sta mp ed , sel f addr'essed
e nvelope
to
Ric hard Unroc . Crown City ,
Ohio.
163 ·3

511REO

Middleport-Pome roy

Clevel and engine , four speed ,
mag wheel s on ba ck . Mu~t
sell . $500 . Phone 446 -7504 .
163-3

6: 30 -

TO MAKE ROOM FOR '75

Help Wanted

COUNTRY

AUCTION SERVICE

Produced f r om a speCia l
viny l co mpound made by B.
F. Goodrich and Mon santo . 5
times t hicker than metal
si ding. · Will not deni, chip,
crack , peeL rot , ru st _or
chal k .
Free· Hom e f;stimates
Call
Superior
Vinyl
Products , Athens, 0 ., collect
1-592-5544.

~~-- ~:--- --- -----

SWAIN .

PUBLIC
AUCTION
.

SEAL
weeks
P 0 old
IN T. Ph
Slam
. 245
ese-5689
kltteiiS
.
..9 I, . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . ; .. .
164-6

'l

GREAT

SAT, JULY 20-10:30 A.M.

of m i lkers . Ph . 388 -8641.

I

SOLID
VINYL SIDING

Camping Equipment

BUkllL E HEATING

Pets For Sale

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

-----

----- ---~-~--..--

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

·ror Sale

.

~LEA MARKET
SATURDAY and Sunday , July
13 -14, at Memory Shop , U . S .
35, Fr aziers Boftom , W . Va .
164-2
'

KNOTTS
AUCTION BARN .

____________

· uAY CARE

SUN VA l!LEY Nursery Sc hools .
, licensed by Sta,_e ot Oh ~ o . Jlh
miles Wes t of new hospital
577 SUn Valley Or . Ph . 446
3657 . Day care that says " we
c are ." Mad ge Ha ul dren ,
-==-~-y AROSAL E- - - Own~r ;
Loredith and John
PLEA SANT Valley Rd ., J uly 18
H&lt;iu ldr en, Operators .
and 19 . Depress io n g lass , old
114-t·
ca rn ival glass . Misc . i tems .
--------...~
-2.45 -5178 .
165-3

•as

163 -6

------ - -----1969
FORD
To r ino
351

5:00- Wall Till Your Father Gets Home 6; Dig It 33; Theatre

Notic!l

CHAIN
LINK
fenCi!}g ,
residential and commer c1a L
wood and pr iva cy fen ce. Call
collect (6 14 ) 887 -2345 .
151 26

soum

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

Gallipolis, Ohio

Notice

+

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

__

Eastern A»e.

1966 BUICK , Ph . .!.46"3824 .

~5~ ·6839,

ALL 74'S MUST GO-WE'VE GOT

50 OF THE SHARPEST
USED CARS IN THE AREA!

Dar

Good things happen on a Honda.

1971 RJRD 4 WH. DRIVE.. .........s2395

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

Mo!o r C o ., In c: .

KANAOGA, OHIO

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

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

-

ttl9'14 A mer1con Hon da

SMITH HONDA SALES

-------------FOR " a jo b well don e feel in.g," --- -------------

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

'

1970 NOVA CPE.......................'1495

1972 OIEVROLET % TON .......... '2395

-BE-----------gentle , be k ind . to that -------------expens ive carpet, clean it

'

AUCTION ·

Local 1 owner trade· in, 4 speed tran s .. ti . T. eq~ipm .ent ,
radio, good tires, clean Inside, rej:t fi ni sh, blk . vmyl 1nL
low mileage .
·

Wantetl To Buy

1970 CHEVY Pick -up . Ph . 446 4655 .

The new Hond a MT-250 gets lts style and
TM
performance from the C R·250M Elsmore, o ne of
1973's winnmges-t bikes. The MT-250 features a
stx-port two-stroke alumi num engine with a bonded
· casl-1ron cylinder !mer Street·legal with lighting
and instrumentation, th1s new bike has captured
the imaginatio n of all those who wailed for a
two-stroke good enough to be called Honda .
W1th it, you'll blaze new trails, and your own
special victories. See the Honda MT-250 in our
showroom now.

for the Hot

USED bulldozer or
446 -005L

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

Jur.,h1rll: DROOP FLORA MUSUN SOIREE
·· ·
1
A.,~&gt; .. r·r : II'• fair - to use the 110me Word twire- "SO-SO"

Starting July 13 &amp;_1q
OPENII'(G WEEK
0,

M 16HT BE ENOU6H
'TO TU~ 'IOU~
E5eAI':D WHI'TE!

(AnAwera i\ londa_YI

Gigantic ~'Flea Market (7o
yard sales), all concentrated
at one place, 1/z mi. out
Spring Ave. off Rt. 7, Main
St., Pomeroy, Ohio . Free
admission,
plenty
of
parking. Rastrooms and
refre$hments outside -and
inside. Far· reservations
contact Fredie Thabet, Ph .
773-5543 or 77J-5651 after 5

.

euv-&amp;

._I--'-Prill
_· -'1111-'-"'SUR=M=IIGWII
= m=-_1 Ct I I I I J --------------

p.m.

..

Pets for Sale "-

BOARDING and pupp ies . Ph .
446 ·4824 .
160-ff

-----~---"-----

l972 VEGA HATOIBACK CPE. ...... ~2095

Summer.

•.7 00°

163 -3

w -w tires , low m ileage, blk . vinyl interior , beautiful red
finish with blk . vi nyl top, radio, wh . covers, de luxe
equipment. A sharp car .

CLEARANCE

0

-------------1968 OLDS . 614 -286 -2496 .

302 V-Bengine, automatic trans .• power steeririg , I~ke new

ED

PRICES,)LASH_

RAMSCHARGERS

DISCOUNTS UP TO

ius! take over payment S36
per mo Call before I at 446 ·
7406 after 1. 4A6 -3427 .
'
164 ·3

1972 FORD GRAN TORINO........ s2445

Air Cond .

VANS

·

•

~--

flcial car, never titled, bal. o f warranty, loaded ~lt h
ex1ras In cluding factory air, radio &amp; tape, w -w f1res,
guards &amp; all the fine accessories .

/

.

CLUB CABS

----..----'68 CORVA IR . good condition,

4 Door, light grn. finish, green vi nyl top, u5e? as Co. ol·

1
1
I
I
1
J

Put in Shape

Ph. 992-2174

Auto Sales

PICKUPS

1967 THUNDERBIRD , SSSO . Ph .
388 8791 after 3 p.m .
160 ~

lost

___________ __

:::_;:~-:=.:~~~,1~=~-::;::·__:•::u::g;gested by the above Cartoon.

·

I

Have Your Auto

Pomeroy , Ohio·

1974

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

IMPALA~ ........ s3895

164-3
F URNISHED 3 rm . and bath 1.000 SQ . F T. s torage area and
Local rowner car, good ti res , 6 cyl. with standa rd tran s.,
STAND I NG t imber . 388 ·8490 .
!'lom e, 640 Fifth Ave . Ph . 446 garage
p~rk in g
space
s
.
radio,
blue finish , spot less clean blue interior.
164-6
1607. No pet s or children .
Downtown area , 446 -1743.
Avai labl e 21s t of July .
154-tr LARGE bla ck male Labrador ,
SELLU-:-s:-Coins~MTS
answers to Schlitz . Family
16 ' ·"
Coins of Gallipolis . 12 1 Stale
SLEEP ING ~o;msb; t h;-week .
pet . Lost around Rt . 141 and
St. Ph . 446 ·18_
42 .
OFF ICE spa(:e and bui ldin g,
Gallia HoteL
Edgemont Dr . Rf!ward . Call
132 -tf
Mason , w . Va . area . Good•
Carl Cameron , 446 -3777 .
139 -78
location . Will remodel tO svi t
164-3
~-~----------8' F letside, V·8 erlgine . 4 speed trans .. 15"' Comm . tires,
tena nt. Ph . 304 -7-73 -5118 .
TWo 2 eR m-ObilE! homes, Upper·
H. duty springs, radio, gree(l_finish , solid cab.
11 5-lf
R i ver Rd ., 446-0008.
l46·1f
-,WA[L .PAPER l N G.and irlierlor ;
painting , Ph . 446-9865 .
HOU SE. 7 room and bath,
60.1f 1
· garage , $140 mo., qv iel street
-~- - -.....:
in GaHipolis . can 446-4416
BOO KKEEPER with 1 year
after 6.
experience . wants partt ime
~ or;;UROQM, 6room nouse plus
Sport Custom 8' Pickup, white over dark red , V -8 engi ne, 4
164-6
iob . Ph . 379-2552 .
bath in Vinton . Mu st have
164·3
speed
trans ., radio , good tires. Loaded wi th extras.
reference . Phone 446 -7699
afte r 5 and Sunday c all 446 · TRAILER space in Rio Grande .
Ph . 245-582-3.
· POODLE gra~;&gt;m i ng . Ph . 446 9539 .
164-3
148-11
3582 or 367 -7409.
For Sund•y, July 14, 1974
----~"---"'---------161 -6
'tRAILER space : Ph . 446 -3879 MOBILE home , tot,ai electric , 2 ARIES (March 21--Aprll 19)
bedroom S100 ; 3 bedroom You should have a little surplus
GREAT SELECTIQN NEW74
or 367 -7438 .
·
CARPENTRY ~nd r'Oofing
Sl25 . Phone 446-0175 or. 446 - built up. Don't let it bum a hole
work . Ph . 446 ·2787 .
' 15.1f
CHEVY 112 &amp; 3/4 TON TRUCKS .
1934 .
161 -12
- -- ----- -- ~ -- 105-tf in · your pocket. Put it sOmeFUR N ISHED aparfm enl, &lt;t .c.,
.:::--=----- ~-- -- - - -- ....... _
where out of reach.
' CU STOM seWing, alterat ions on
r easonably . pr iced . 12 ·miles
apartment. TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20)
all types of cl oth ing , fvr s..
from Pomeroy . Ph . 304 -773 - FURNISHED
51 18 .
Adu l ts only . All ut ilit ies paid . Some little frustrations at home
reweaving . Phone 446 .7520 or:
446 -1771 .
'
446 -952.3.
early in the . day won't carry
enough wallop to spo il what
90 -tf '
. ~
w ill tum out to be a Pleasant
FURNIS HED
apar t ment. Sunday.
EILOCK laying work . W e also
Quail Creek
Inquire 631 Fourth Avenue .
have Concrete block . Ph . 446 GEMINI (Moy 21 -June 20)
160-tf
3608 .
Mobile Community
Your luck is taking a sharp turn
156-tf
&amp; Sale.s
SLEEPING rooms weekly· for the better. Don't be too surrates , free garage parking . prised when something good
Libby Hotel.
Seems to happen out of the
WIN AT
"WE RUN A VERY SIMPLE BUSINESS"
· Contact Newt Jones
24 1. ft -blue .
Rodney-cora Rd .
We Sell &amp; Service Chevrolet Cars &amp; Trucks .
- ~- ----- -- - -CANCER (June 21 ·July 22)
Rodney, Ohio
BRA
UR Y
e f.f i c r en c v The best course of action for
Ph. 245-9374-245-5021
apartments , adults , no pe1s . you at the present is the one
729 2nd Ave ., Ph . 446 -0957.
yousetforyoursel_fwhereyou
'
153-tf
We rent .mobile home Jots, '
lead and are not led by others .
not just a place to ·park your
1 BORM . apt. , next t o post of: LEO (July 23·Aug.22)
home. We have more tq_ offer
l ice in Cheshire . Pr ice d upon Others will rally to your colors
., 13
NORTH
inspection. Ph . ~67 - 7234 .
than any mobile commudify
and support your views if you
• AKB
in Southeastern Ohio, '
·
163-3 have 1o take a pOsilion on any
'AK . '
major iSsues.
.
- ' ---- - ~---:."&gt;---- -VIRGO (Aug .23·Sepl.22)
K QI06
"Your Chevy Dealer"
12x60 TRA ILER located in Ri o
Something bright a11d hopeful
• 10 7 53
992
-2126
.
Open Eves. TillS
Grande. Air conditionM . 2-45- 1970 SCHULTZ mobf le home, is developing. It will fit favora Pomeroy
WEST !D)
EAST
5267 .
12x65, 2 bdrm . total etec . air bly into your future plans . Two
.._
cond ., smau. down payment
• 632
165 -tf
and balance like rent . Ph . 446- importarit contacts will be of
'QJ 1097632
_
LARGE
Expando
Tra i ler
9279 or 446-2733 after 10 .a .m . help.
• 982
AJ743
Pass ?
South was making some sort Pass
mobile hom e FOncrete patio
165-tf LIBRA (Sepl.23·0cl.23)
ofoK
ofoQB2
shade , lwo people . Ref ere nce,
Keep concen1ratlng on and
of obscure grand·slam force.
You, South, hold:
Upper R iver Road , $125 per
TR I· STATE MOBILE HOME work ing toward your major
Since
she
held
two
of
the
SALES,
446-Hl:!
·month . Phone 446 -1799 .
•AQ4 'KJ432 +AQ97. 3
g'oal. II there is something you
.Ql09754
three top spade honors,. North
165·3 1967 Horizon 12x60
What do you do now?
today
to
further
th
ings,
can
do
1965 New Moon 1:2x55
bid
s.
e
ven
spades.
A-Pass or bid seven spades.
by
au
means
do
it.
MOBILE home space lot, 40' x 1970 Fl~etwo.od 12X60
West
opened
the
queen
of
SCORPIO (0ct.24·Nov.22)
Yo\_1
-know the club opening was
70 ' $40 per mon lh . 4 mi. west 1967 RitZ Craff 10x35
ofoAJ964
hearts. This ~ave South a a fake; that your side holds all
ot Gallipoli s, Rt. 35, Park 1958 Sk ytine Bx45
D ip lomacy and tact will prove
Lane Mobile Hom e Court . Ph . 1953 Uberty 8x45
to be powerful allies In your
North·South vulnerable
chance to get rrd of her losing · the aces; that you have a
446 -38 68 .
1949 Howard 8x25
dealings with others. Use them
singleton club; and a long heart
West North
164 -tf wisely and you 'll be assured of
East
South diamond on a heart.
165-3
South played two rounds of suit, so let your consCience be
Pass
Pass
hoped-1or results.
B&amp; S MOBILE HOMES
NICE 3 bedroom home, near
spades and then caHed for your guide.
Pass 2 N.T. Pass 3.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.2-3 ·
PT. Pl. EASANT
new shopping ce nt er, Adults
the 10 of clubs from dummy.
Pass 3•
ot~ ly, no pets . Refer ence and
1968 Globemaster 12x60 2 BR Dec.21) Services you perform
Pass 4 N;T. At
TODAY'S QUESTION
the sarne tirne she hapSec urily Depos i t .req.uired·. 1973 Nashua 12x52 2 BR
for others at this time carry ex Pass
Pass 6.
You
deal and hold:
pened to knock over an ash
Phone 446 -1044 during day or 197 1 Rebel 12X60 2BR
cep1ionally large rewards. Be
Pass 1•
Pass
Pass
•AQ6
5 4 'AQ654 +AK+ 2
1970
Sta
tesman
12x50
2
BR
446 -7322 after 5: 30 p .,m .
tray at her left. She looked
willing to assist where you can.
Pass
.._165 -3 . 1969 Star 12x60 3 B"R
What
is
your opening bid?
CAPRICORN (Dec.22·
down to inspect the result
1964 Parkwood 10x56 2 BR
Opening lead-Q'
and when she looked back
164-tf Jan.19) You 'll be lucky tQday,
FURNIS HED apt ,, 4 rm . and
not only . 1or yourself but tor
East had produced the queen.
bath , adu l t s only . Secu r ity
depos it requ ir ed . Ph . 446 -0444 4 MOBILE homes . 2 - 1973 f one Who is closely associated
South
played her ace. West
bdrms . 12 x 50 ; I - 1969 J with you .
after 6 p .m .
had
to
drop her singleton
By
Oowald
&amp;
Jarneo
Jacoby
bdrm . 12x65 ; 1 - 1959 2 bdrm . AQUARIUS (Jon.20-Feb.19)
_._,_
162 -6
South had managed
king
and
l 'Jx50 . Ph . 7.!.2 .5980 .
Unusual ·conditions that tend to
Here is a hand frorn the to score what
108 -tf make one feel more secure
a
sell anything
World's championship well-deserved she-considers
top.
anybt&gt;dy
at our Auction
down deep are now quite
women's pairs that may well
favorable tor you.
Barn
or
in
yoUr home. For
~N,EWSPAPER ENTEH PRISE ASSNJ
be the funniest of the year. ·
WALNUT t imber . Ph . 4.46 -3964 . 2 REG". mlniature Schn.iuzers, 6 PISCES (Feb.20·Morcll 20)
Information
•nd pickup
North's opening club bid
165 -J
weeks old , mare "nd female . Much ol the risk of something
servite
call256-6967
alter 5,
was designed to stop a club
446·7489 .
speculative that you 're in·
- - - -- -- -- - ---..:..
p.m.
..
10 FOOT f ishing boa1 , 5 h .p ,
lead against an eventual
165-6 valved in is re:duced Ju~t as
Every Saturday Night
engine ; swivel seats and all
long as you continue to use the
notrump contract.
access or ies . 446.1251.
BRITTANY Spaniel pupS , 3. good judgment you 're now
Al7 p.m.
The
bidding
has
been:
13
West's five heart bid was
months old, champion blood using.
16 5-3
an effort to disrupt Black· West
North
lines , AKC Reg . Beaut iful
East
dogs, S50 or trade . Ph . 6111 -992 wood, but North and South
u
Pass
6359 .
1966 FOR D Galaxie 500 P .S.,
were pla'ylng that a pass ·Pass
Pass
P .B .• air cond . i4'l0. Ph . 446165-1
showed
zero or· two aces; a .Pass
4 N.T .
4200 .
Pass
Third &amp; Olive
double one or three so when Pass
5 N.T. Pass
165-3
K &amp; P KENNELS
No•th passed South knew her
A.K ..C. Pupp ies . Boarding . 388 .
8274 . Rt , 5511 1/ 2 mi. E . Porter.'
paftner held two aces.
FOR SALE
108 -tf
South's six club bid was in·
July 14, 1974
Coal Acreage. Est. 44 Acres.
tended
to l(ive North a choice
1971 FORD Ranger pi ckup This is the year when your past
Jesse Creek, 6 miles from
tru ck , auto . tran smisSion ,
between
. s1x spades and six
Cheshire.
P .s ., .P .B .• excellent con d . Ph ., expetieilce and knowledge will
by this time North
clubs,
but
be put lo good use to tum you
256 -1331 after 5 p .m .
·
.
M. l . McCord
had forgotten ·that she had
'
162-4 a handsome profit. n·s some1140 S. Orlando Ave .
opened
a club. North decided
thing
lo
look
forward
to!
----.----~ ----..:...
Maitland, Fla.l27S 1

Mobile Homes For Sale

! [IJ

I

r

&amp; tr uc k oastur e in FURNISHED upstairs 3 rm .
cou ntry ;
full
fac ilities ,
and bath apt . All utiliti es
avail abre June 30th . Wr it e
paid . Adults only , no pets . Ph .
Box 324 , c -o Dally Tr ibune.
446 -1519.
128 -11
138-tf

HOUSE

1973 OIEVROLET

Stay Cool

500 E. Main St.

1

I I

\' ••t.-rdav· •

Special Low
Price on

Smith Nelson
Motors

babys i tter to live ln Or' out .
Call before 1: 30 p .m .. .tA6
0712 1'
161 6

161 -6

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

For Rent

I ---- - ----------

VEVER

I

•
'I'

__

'

DEELntY

Our Special Prices Include Plugs, Points, &amp; Cond .
Service Performed by Factory Trained Technicians

I
I

Re airs

o·-e

·CIIfiU'!bt"""..-.''-

~ -

'.•
'
'

-J,_

form four ordinary words.

••

'••••

_,IJ

Onscrambl~ these four Jumbles.
orie. letter to each square, to

•

•••.

For Rent

·

tra vel.

1
1
I

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

by HENRI ARNOlD otncl HOR lEE

••

Performance _

Check Fuel Felter
Set Points &amp; Timing
Check Emission Control
CtM:tk all Hoses

L AO"rE"S to work m d;;-clean l no
and l aundry c; enter Apply In
person . Sc otch Clean Center ,
656 Second .

'1969 OPEL Cadette exc . cand
256 69)0 .

Quality Carr

•
~
•

Operation

_

lO Pass .• small V -8 automatic trans ., power" st eer ing ~

brakes, t inted glass . tactorv air, radio. new Good yea
Rad ial W · W tires, vinyl interior . A sharp car &amp; ready to

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

-~
~

1
I

Adtust Carburetor
Clean Choke
Road Test For

Chetk Our

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

••

19.

1973 RJRD OOUNTRY SEDAN....... s3295

!
Performan(e

Che~k St~rter
Check A1r Cl~aner

LIBBY HOTEL
Apply In Per'ton .

wA;;Eo - J,;-,;;-dliie 1v.

1
I

The Entire
Month of July

Replace Plugs
10.
Replace Points
H.
Replace Condenser
12.
Check Distributor Cap
13.
ctM!ck Distributor Rotor 14.
Check Spark Plug Wire1 15.
Check Coil &amp; Coil Wires 16.
Check all Fan Belts
, 17.
Check Heat Riser
18.

Transmission

6-Cyl ., 2 dr, You probably know tn is previous oWner well and

h

I
11.

,...

See one of these courteous sa lesmen:
Pete Burris
Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvin Keebaugh

Orie careful local
power st eering . You ' U
have to see it to appreciate i ts good condit ion .

Good i!or"

DESII Q.ERII.

165 fl

1
I
I

Plus Tox
With This Coupon

All Makes of
C.rs

" You ' ll Like Our Qualify Way of Doing Business"

1973 FORD GRAN TORIN0................... '2495

~

Pomeroy

,__ ___ Open Eves. Til6- Til S P.M. Sat.

4 Or . Sedan . One careful local ow ner, power steering, auto.
tr'ans ., 302 V-8.
·

a

~

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
Cad ilia( . Oldsmobile
GMAC Financing Available

11
I

I
I

Just $3595
Expert Service on

2.
13
14:
15.
1 6.
17.a.

*1495

several new cars teft at Old, old, old,. sticker price which we ·

..
=

I1

2 OF THESE

CLEAR~NCE

j

•

I
I .

FUU OR PARTTIME

·Install up to 3 cans
of refrigerant• · .
Inspect system lor
freon leaks*
Test cooling efficiency

SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC INC.
GAUl POLIS, OHIO

.,.

1

'70 OPEL 4 speed. low mileage. shorpl

2

'69

FORD LTD's

Squire Wagon s . ·

•

UPPER RT. 7

1Sports
'70 GALAXIE 2 DR.
roof, auto . 1rans., pWr .. st ., etc .

2

'68

FORDS

·

".2 Or , hardtop, lluto. trans .• pwr. St., etc .

1

66

1

FORD Shllrp! less than

50,000

milK.

Sevftr~l Coo~ Hunter 1nd Fo~ Hunttr

�'

f--A_;;;--n;;(h;---, Ohio Politics
~o~Meigs c. c.
Tax program produces
:;;;=;;v~: ct;:~LE~A;:_=e:h more than anticipated
· -,........, TlmM-!Ionllnoi,Sunday, Jlllf 1.. Irll

Litchfield,

Calumbal, diecl Friday, She
na a (ormer reaJdent Of Mt!lg$
Comly.

She was .a member of
Columbus WestCI!urchorGod,
the O.E.S. No. 255 at
Harrl.sonvllle.
She is survived by two sons,
Jay of Albsny and Don of Tlpp
City, one daughter, Mrs. Inez
Isoo, seven grandchildren, 13
great-grandchildren, two
great-sreatof!l'andchildren, one
sister, Garnet Wise, S.veral
nieces and nephews.
. Frlef)ds may call at Jerry
Spears Funeral Home, 2693 w.
Broad, today from 2 to 4 and 7
to 9 p.m. Funeral services will
bol held Mondiiy at 1p.m. at the
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Orvllle Cunningham . officiatlng, Burial will be in
Sunset Cemetery.

PRACTICE SLATED ·
POMEROY - Practice for
the • Meigs High School
Majorette line and F1ag Corps
wiU be beld Tuesday from 4
until 6 p.m. at the Meigs High
School. The practice was an•
nounced by Mrs .. Judy Riggs,
instructor.

Cllfford Utcllfleld, 46,449 New
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
Milford Rd., Atwater, Ohio, a John J. Gilligan took a severe
native of Mason County, died verl)al beating last weelt after
today at the Robinson announcing th~ was an extra
Memorlalllospltalat Atwater.- tao.s mllllon in thestate treaFlllleral services will be · sury le.ft over from the
conducted Tuesday from the ~vlous flxcal year.
Wood Funeral Home at I p.m.
The governor· had contended
and burial wtu follow in the for months there would be no
Greenlawn cemetery there. . e~:ceu ohtate mooey, and that
•Frleilds will be receiv!"J from 2 for the legislature to lllllke
to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. additional appropriations
Monday.
would be "spending moonThe former Mason CoWity beams."
man was born October 12, 1927
At the same Ume, GUllgan
in Point Pleasant, a son of Mr. was putting forth · recomand Mrs. Lawrence Utchfleld mendatlons for spending $43.5
of Point Pleasant. He lived for miWoo worth of moonbeams in
a year and half at Atwater and the form pf anticipated
spent~ IS years with his family- proceeds from the state lotat Kenmore, Ohio near Akron. tery, for which the first ticket
He was employed by the . has yet to be sold.
Barmett Industry Aluminum
Then came the day of
Company at Barberton, Ohio, reckoning, and tbe governor
and was a member of the guessed _up to $19.5 million In
Akron Baptist Temple. Sur- unanticipated state tax
$60 million in
vivors Include his wife • collections and
•
Harriett, in addition to his unappropnated . federal
parents; two sons, Leslie Alien, revenue sharing funds with
Copley, Ohio, and Clifford Which to start the new fiscal
Dwain, at home; one daughter, Y~ ·
Mrs. Gene (Diane ) Peters,
~oneyEamslnterest
Streetsboro· seven brothers · GUilgan explained that the
.and two ~lsters, and two $60 million was in a special
grandchildren.

trust !Wid eamlnll valuable
interest to finance vocation$!
education construction
projects. Laudable.
He also said the
miiUon
windfall could not have been
foreseen by even the most
gifted crystal-ball gazers in
today's bouncing econo y.
Acceptable.

"9.$

The administration even
lllllkes points for conservative
fiscal policy by pillying it close
to the vest and bolding onto the
money · to leave a cushion
rather than going in the hole.
But the real questloo Is not
about the $60 miiUon or even
the $19.5 miWon.
Nor Is it a major issue that
GUllgan tried for the rest of
last week to wriggle off the
hook by pretending to out-oftown newsmen thai he never
flatly predicted there would be
no surplus.
The real question is whether
Ohio's tall: structure, rewritten
wlt)J the governor's guidance in
1971, produced li!Ore or less
than expected during the fiscal
year which ended _last June 30.

More 'nlllll Expetted

.

Smith reception
slated Saturday

notlC

6

POMEROY - Prosecuting Smith for . Attorney General
Altoruy Bernard Fultz, campaign.
Chairman of George C. Smith
George
Smith, ·
38,
for Ohio Attorney Generlll · Prosecuting Attorney for
campaign In Meigs County, Franklin County won the
announced today that a Republican nomination for
reception will be held Satur- Ohio Attorney General In the
day, July 20 lot Mr. Smith In May primary.
Meigs County.Smith is presently serving
· The reception wUI be at 10:30 his fourth year as Prosecuting
a.m. at the Meigs Inn on Attorney for Franltlin County.
Second Street In Pomeroy.
His experience Includes 15
· The reception wlll be open to years in state, local and county
all who are Interested In the public service.

The answer is that It
produCI\(1 substantially more
than anticipated, and this boost
by all oddo will multiply during
the current fbcai year before
state legislators got their
banda on another two-year
budget proposal -from the
goveroor's office in 11175.
In early 11173, when the admlnlatration's budget was first
presented, state tax collectlona
for flscallll74 were pegged at
$2.323 bUllon (b). They ended
UP $70'1nillion higher than that,
not counting the $60 m!Won in .
RACINE - The Meigs
revenue sharing monies which
County
Board of Education is
has been withbeld.
accepting
appfications from
Sales tall: collectloils were up
by $39 miiUon over. original es- registered nurses interested in
Umates, personal income tax serving as a school nurse in the
collections by · $21 miiUon and Meigs County Schools.
This position was made
corporation taxes by $30
available
through
the
miiUoo.
Moreover; latest figures cooperative a~tion of the
from !be treasurer's office Boards of Education in Meigs
sh9w a growth rate or 9.6 per . County. ·
cent in the productivity of the
Although the Meigs County
state tall: structure, including Board or Education will em.8.9 per cent in the sale~~ tax, ploy the nurse, the 'l&lt;icai scb'ool
13.4 per cent in corporate lues ·districts wlll be responsible for
and a whopping 21.8 per cent in planning and implementing the
the state income tas.
school health program for their

OWMJU
Insurance

you'll find it al State Farm
Give me a call today. You11
discover what's made Stat a Faml
the number one homeowners 1ft.
surer in the world,

Carrol K. ·Snowden

Meigs board accepting
nursing applications

Park Central
Hotel Bldg .
Second Ave . ,

Gallipolis

district.
Tentative plans are for the
nurse to be employed at ·the
Like a good neighbor,
regular meeting of the County
State Fann is there.
Board Of Education on August
6. The contract of employment
would begin August 25 and
UAtl PUM
continue through the School
Year .
Interested persons should
S!ttt Ftr!JI f ~ e .tnd tas~o~~ltr COfiiHIIY
file ill' application with. the .
""tnt Olfiu :
Meigs County Board of
8110111irttlllll, Illinois
Education . For further in·
formation contact Robert E. P 74
04
Bowen, Superintendent, Meigs
County Schools, Pomeroy at

A

992-3883.

t

Elberfelds In Pqmeroy and Berkline
invitii' you to an irresistible

•

•

\

PRE-FINISHED PANEUNG

,,

-

.

.

..

~

... --,

-

.

~-

'

'

)

~

-

'

.,

comfort~Action
Recliner and
Rock.-A-Lounger
•
pnces

at
Once you see
these Chairs. ·.
you'll want to
take them Hnnna

,,
We

,.

. 4' X 8' X 1/8"

Oceana - Med.

first ·quarter of '74

WASHINGTON (UP I) - Serious crime year ago.
and 9 per cent In the North Bod North pared to 100 for the first three months of
in the netkln roae I~ per etnt during the
Q-lme in middle.siu cities jumped 10 Central states.
1973.
•
flut three mooths of 1974, with tho the · per cent compared to a 29 per cent gain in
The generoliy grbn news showed that Qimes against people rose an average 4
biggett gains in suburban and rural areas small cltiflll under 10,000 people - but in crimes of violence Increased 4 per cent per cetlt for the period with forcible rape
and in citletrwitb populations Wider 25,000, the suburbs and rural areaa the increase nationwide but that was .good compared · up 10 per cent, aggr~vated a88ualt and
according to FBI statbtlca.
was 22 and 18 per cent, respectively.
with the 6 per cent rise tn violent crime murder up seven per cent each and robThe figures, ~ on lnfOI'n'I&amp;Uon
The report waa released by FBI Director reported in the first thrae months of 1973. bery one per cent.
oompUed from local, county and state law Oarence M. Kelley.
The lncreose in crime 'was relected in Q-imes against property soared 16 per
en!orcemalt organizations, wore 16 per
Reg!ooaily the increases were 23 per the statistics from wajor cities. Thirty- cent, compared to a 2 per c-ent decrease in
cent h)Bher than for the same period a cent in the South, 17 per cent in the Weat, ·three reported decreases this year com- January-March 11173. larceny increased 19

Weather
Partly cloudy with a chanc.e
of thWiderstorma south today.
High near 80 north, near 00
south. Oear and cooler tonight
low in the 50s north to the low
60s south. Sunny Tuesday high
in the 705 north, 60s south .

_
VO_L._X_XV_I___
N..:....0.....:.6_4_

•
per cent, burglary I&amp; per cent and auw olll« lban In what ..... or 111e c:or~~try 111e
thefl five per cent.
increaaesareoc:curlna," AllomeJO.Wal
The Uniform Crime Reports dlvidel Wllllun Saxbe uld In • 1111-1.
serious crime Into two catagorie~, violent
"Thts meana that an or ua 1n 11,. •-·
crbne - murder, rape, robbery and forcement, ae well tilthe'puhlic,mllll taU
aggravated assualt -and property crbne, a hard loot lit tho 11t1111tlon and work
which includes burglary ,larceny and auw together to hall thill trend.
theft.
The entire criminal Juotlee aylllan - the
"These statistics provide no clues as to .pollee, the prosecutors, the COUI'U, and the
what is causing the upsurge in crime, .corrections aylllolu -mlllt improve Itself."
-

•

Now .You Know

en tine
Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs~Mason Area
__,--__:_P.:.:
OM.:.:.::E::..:.RO:..:Y.:.:.·M.:.:.::IO~Ol=E:..:
PO:.:.:.RT:.:._•..:.:OH~IO:__ _ _ _ _ _______:
MON DAY, JULY 15, 197 4

West ·virginia .court
begins bridge cases

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
W.Oesday through Friday
. .·United Press International
Felr and warm with blghs
In the upper 80s and low 90s.
Low in the 60s.

Solar prominences - con~
densed, namellke bU'Sia of gas
- mend as far as :mo,ooo
miles from the surface of the

sun.

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

Prison strike.grows,
teamsters add sanctiOil

Foote's sales
net earnings.

volve ~!alms by the estate of something," Browning said in
Melvin Cantrell and James summarizing his legal defense.
White, BroWning said.
"The state does not believe any
The attorney general repre- of its actions-or non.actlons By United Press International Mental Health Center.
representing striker's ate the .· .·... ·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·-:..·: .·:-: .·.·.. .·:.·.·... .·.·.·.·
sents the state in the trial and were the preximate cause of
The strike by state employes
Ohio National Guardsmen Cllio Civil Service Employes
Robert CoruweU, baalneaa
has been preparing for.the case the collapse of the bridge."
at Ohio's prisons and mental today continued to help man Association and the American
for nearly a year.
The claimants have· called
,
health institutions spread to the state's main maximum Federation of Stale, County IIUIDager at the Gallipolill
Slo~ loaUtute, said today all
EXTON,
Pa.
Foote
other
facilities today with the ·security prison at' Lucasville. and Municipal Employes.
If the court rules that the three state employes to testify
Joe Ashley, a spokesman for · The AFSCME was to hold a siaffo were on the Job today
state was not responsible for at the !rial in an attempt to Mineral Company announced saction of one of the representu uauaL
the state Corrections Depar- meeting today to decide wbeth·
the disaster, all claims wo)l!d determine how the bridge was today second quarter sales ing unions.
· C•rawell uld be UD·
The Teamsters Union an- · ment, said there were no im· er to join the Teimlters in
bol disallowed, Browning ell• maintained. They were from continuing operations
piained.
·
WUllam 'Hanshew, a district were $29,975,327 compared ooWtce'd Sunday it had aanc- mediate plano to IIlii! guard- sanctioolng the walltOut .
derslood that the loeal
chapter of the America
There could be no appeal to engineer with ._the highways with $22,655,915 for the 1973 tioned the strike by its mem- smen at tbe other facUlties.
Ashley said he believed emFedet81ln of Stale, CGUIIIy
the state Supreme Court, he department at Lewisburg, Ed quarter. Total net earnings for hers because it is "fed UP with However, supervisory ,em- ployes at the three unaffected
said.
Cundiff and Donald Haynes. the second quarter were the red tape and politics and ployes and supplies would be prisons are awaiting loday's
aDd M11Dlelpal Empl6yes'
llllln were to declde later
The state would seek an apJohn B. Garden of Wheeling, $3,556,529 eqUivalent to $1.67 wUI not stand for any more airlifted into prisons .when talks before walldng off the
.
needed, he said. Ashley job.
peal from the high court if the Henry L. Ducker of HWtlington per common share, compared pushing arotlld."
Ieday or tomorrow oa what,
Workers walked off the job . reported no security problems.
claims
court
awarded and W. Dyie Jones of Bridge- with$100,768in 1973,an amoW!t
The state employes are pro- If aay, aelloa It would late.
At the prison hospital at the testing the failure of tbe &lt;Jilo
damages to the claimants and port were on the bench to hear equal to the then existing nine days ago at the Lebanon
' the Legislature approved the . the case.
P r e.f e r r e d · d 1v i d e n d Correctional ·Institution and OP, Slime 62 inmates w«e be- leglslature to enact at least a
day bY day employes joined the ing' cared for by 75 nurses and 35-cent acrose-the-board pay
ruling by appropriating the·
The state did not con- requirement. ·
money: Browning said.
template to summon witnesses
Included in the 1974 second strike .at the Chillicothe supervlsor.y personnel -about hike.
·
' ·
propriatlons bill, ill playing
"There will be no out of court at this time but it would not quarter earnings figure is Correctional Institute, the half the normal staff.
"This is a real deadlock and · "shamele88 poWics."
settlement," . Browning said. preclude that action either, $599,347 (30c per share) Southern Ohio Correctional . Besldethe Teamsters Union, wiU .not be broken lUI !be.joint
"We have' reporta of an at"This is a landmark proceed- · Browning said.
resulting from the restoration Facility at Lucasvtue, the Ohio other · labor organizations Jeglslative cooference commit· · tempted deal in which the 00111ing in future cases."
The 'Highways Department to income ofthe unused portion State Reformatory at Man·
tee gets off Its duff and gives mittee.won'tbeabletomoveoo
. 'Ple state has a $112,000 max- was acting "responsibly" in of the reserve for ex- sfield, the Grafton Honor F!lfiil
. the corrections officers a de- a raise unless .!he le8lslature
imum limit-to collect for death maintaining and servicing the traordinary loss established in and the Indian River School for
cent pay raise Instead of the 10 repeals Oblo'a long«anddng
by any individual or corpora- bridge, be said.
late · 1972., Earnings from Boys near Ma881Uon.
centa an hour pltance they got ta• on intangibles," Mapa
lion, the attorney general exA bridge expert Contended continuing operations wer.e
On Sunday night, the medical
July 1," said James Magae, said.
'plained. The state of Ohio has shortly alter the disaster the $2,736,579 ($).26 per share) in complex at the Ohio P~itenti•
"Intangibles are stocks,
leader of Teamsters Local 7116,
no SUch limitation, be said.
span collapsed because of OV· the 1974 quarter compared to ary in Columbus was struck
which is charged with coo.rdl- boitds and other aecurllles," he
"There can only be liability erwelght, caused by scores of $421,328 In the 1973 quarter. •and today state. employes at ·
nating the walkout by Ito mem- continued. "lt'a clear lOme
when negligence is proven on · cars and trucks. · ·'.
Earnings from discontinued Kent State University and sevhers.
·
people would rather aive ~ a
the part of a person or the state
.Dr. Thomas E. Stelson, operations were $222,603 (lie eral_mental health facilities in . David · Darst, · no .addreSI!
He aald the conference 00111- break. to the wealthy thin to
wbo had some obligation to do chairman of ·. the ·civil per share) in the 1974 quru;ter Cincinnati · planned to pjcket. · recorded, appeared before mlltee, lnei!tlng in ·Columbus lilose who have tO eat~~ a liVing
Engin~ing Department of the
compared with )279,440 .in the
Already, mental institutions probate judge 1\fBI)ning D. on a supplemental .. ap- by the sweat of their brow."
struck Include the Athens Webster and pied guilty to a
CarnegieMellon Unlveralty 'in . 1973 quarter.
.
Six
month
sales
from
conCounty Mental Health Center, charge of trespassing with
Pittsburgh said at that Ume
blame could not be placed With t!nuing operation~ were Apple Creek State Hospital, purpose to commit thefi ac,
the state because "en- $53,114,042 compared . to Ha'll'thorden State Hospital, in cording to en entry in the Meigs
forcement of weight laws.. is . $43,725,802 in the 1973 period, Akron and the Broadview County clerk ·of courts office.
nearly impossible anywhere." Total net earnings for the 1974
Bond was set at $5,000 and
Other speculatiOns raised in- six months were $4,937,984 Syra~use
By Ualled ~•IDIOI'IIatloul
.
Darst was remanded to the
cluded that ·waterbed activity ($2.24 per share) consisting of
WASHINGTON- RETIRED GEN. Carl A. Spaatz, tbe first
~
custody of the Meigs County
in the river htid callBed the $3,812,538 ($1.70 per share)
sheriff. He waived trial by chief of staff of lbe Air Force, died Sunday of heart failure at the
•
Billy R. Songer, 19, · south of Rl. 7 where an-auto peers to alip or thrown them from· continuing operations,
age of 83 at Waller Reed Army Medical Center.
jury.
GalUpolls, was ta)ten to the driven by Johnny R. Stewart, out of alignment.
Spaatz was credited aloog with Gen. ,Bllly Mitchell With
$526,0il9 ($.24 per share) froin
In other court action, Marie
52,
of
·
Barboursville,
W.Va.
Holzer Medical Center for
The western . end of the discontinued operations 311d
Schar tiger, Smithfield, Pa., bejng one of tbe first American aviators who recogntied the
treatinent of injuries suffered went out of control, ran bridge originated in Ohio and $599,347 ($.30 per share) from Syracuse police chief Milton filed for support under the military potentll!l of lbe airplane,
in a motorcycle acc4!ent on off the highway striking Browning indicated legal restoration of WtUSed reserve Varian investigated a two car reciprocal agreement act
. After graduation ffom Welt Point in 1914, Spaatz served as a
Wllliam Bostic Rd., seven a parked truck and camp- ·questions were stlil pending mentioned above. 1973 six accident Sunday at 3:15p.m. against Elbert Scharliger, ffigbt leader and pursuit pilot during World War I and downed
three German planes. He wu best know befora World Warn for .
tenths of a·rpile south of Rt. 588. er owned by Russell Tay- whether the Buckeye State month earnings were $956,960 on SR 124 .In the village of Rutland, Rt. 2.
·
According ·to the Gallia ; lor of Rt. 2, Thurmart, and could be sued for the disaster. (an amount in~ufficient to Syracuse. No personal injuries
being one of two men who aet an airborne endiD'ance record,
staying aloft over Los Angeles for 150 houta.Meigs Post State Highway Saunders of Northup.
The . trial which Browning cover . the then existing · were reported.
.
Stewart was taken to the ' said .could last several months preferred
Patrol, Songer, traveling
dividend
Walter Cleland, Racine,'was
·
.
· •
SAN ANTONIO. TEX. - DEFENSE AND oroaecullru! at•
north, apparently lost control Holzer Medical Center for was being held in the Senate requirement) composed of traveling east on '124 .when a
torneys ~aent their ltnal ar_I!IIDl,enllloday in the trial of Elmer
of his motorcycle in the loose treatment ol minor injuries. Judiciary Committee $709,509 from continuing car driven by Ernestine · M.
room.
Wayne Henley, 18, cllarged with killing six of the Z1 youtha slain
gravel.
operations and $247,451 from •Fischer, traveling west,t'!l'ned
during a three-year period in Houston.
·
Songer was thrown off the
discontinued operations.
· left in front of the Cleland car
District
Judge
Preston
Dial
has
allotted
two hours each lor ·
cycle. He was charged with
Wayne T..Barrett, President and the two collided.
. argument&amp;. The case could go to the jury by mldaftarnoon.
having no motorcycle enand chief executive ·officer
There was moderate damage
.
.
The state built its caae prlmartly on written and 11poken
dorsement on his driver's
said customer demand for to both vehicles.
license. . .
·virtually all of. the company's Mrs. Fischer was cited to
Meigs County Sheriff Robert statements Henley gave pollee the night following his arreot Aug.
1
s
M
C.
Hartenbach's Department 8, 1973.
.
The patrol is still inproducts continues strong . yracu~e ayor Herman's investigated two accidents
The defense, led by court-appointi.I attorney Will Gray,
vestigating a single car mishap
Foote !las a major plant near London s ·court on a charge of Sunday.
rested
Ill case abrupUy Friday without calling tiny of ill 58
which occurred at 3 · a.m.
New Haven, W.Va.
· faliuretoyieldtherlghtofway.
.
WASHINGTON(UPI)-The bomes of America as witness
At 6:10 p.m. In Salisbury subpoenaed witnesses.
Sunday on Rt. 33 in Meigs
· The presentation, of lestlm&lt;iny had been upected to take ·
Senate
Watergate
committee
after
witness
brought
the
Township,120feeteast
ofRt. 7,
County.
about siX weeks but required only one.
.
Officers said Jeffery Boggs, presented eVery fact It could on Watergate scandal closer to
new Kings arms Nile Club,
the
scandals
of
the
1972
the
While
House.
One,
John
w.
Patricia
L.
Campbell,
24, Middleport, lost control ·of
.
.Madison, Tenn., was cro88ing .
his car on a ciD've. The auto left presidential election without Dean III, implicated' Nixon
the railroad tracks .when a
CHARLESTON, W.VA. - THE DIREC'roR of the Wut
the highway and rolled over an drawing any conclusions about' himself. .
Virginia
Surface Mining and Reclamation Aaaociation Sunday
the role of President Nixon.
II eoded last Friday where it
railroad'inachine coming down
embankment.
II proposed new campaign began, the high~Uinged ·Senthe tracks, driven by Kenneth criticized a proposed fed«al stlrp mine bill, saying the ineaaure ·
Investigation also continues
~~
Watson, Pt. Pleasant, struck could eventually shut down score~ of undergroimd mlnt111.
into an accident at 12:20 a.m. laws hut decided the onlr way ate caucus room, 'with · 10
In a letter to United Mine Workers President Arnold Miller,
the Campbell vehicle.
on Rt. 218, four tenths of a mile to prevent future Watergates pounda o( bologna -!Ill atwas for the nation to demand tempted riposte to White.HouSe ··
·
·
' ·Campbell was taken to associaUoo president Ben Lull! Slld SWiday the bill under conBy United Press Intematl•ual Michigan about four miles off Veteran
' s Me·moria! Hospital sideration by Congress would ellmlnate 10 per cent of strip
higher ethical standards of ita press secretary Ronald L.
F c f 1 1d
1 d · 1'ta "-1
sh
The bo
leaders. · It recommended. · Ziegler, wbo called a recent
or e u w n s caps'" · ""' cago ore.
at she by the Southeastern Ohio · mining in West VIrginia.
.
creating a legal watchdog to committee revelation ''warm- . boats and spun 8 747 jetliner in was a passenger 00 over- Emergency Service amOther states thai 'iioald experience a drastic redw:tlon of
,
Cl!lcago and tornadoes cut a turned. Two othe&lt; passengers bulance. There were no surface mining include eastern Kentucky, southwestern VIrginia
ak
th
d
ed
bal
m e sure ey o.
over
IIley ·
destructive path through lower were rescued.
arrests.
and the coal regions in Temesaee, Alabama, Ohio and PannThe 2,217,P.ge report made Mich'• Sunda At 1 st tw0
lts lelevi.s&lt;id hearings re'dd
·
mi
h
llttl
..,an
y.
ea
·
OfficialS
at
O'Hare
InlernaIn
Ql1've
Townshl'p
Sunday
on
sylvanla, Lusk said.
vea Ied h1 en
crop ones .
e news Moat of its major
kill d
. in lb Whl
.findin hti. d be
persons were e .
tiona! Airport in Cl!lcago said county road on Deanna Mae
d
ta
rd
"Surface mining now repreaeitta over half of all ooal mined
an pereco ers
e
te
gs ·
ei1 previously
.The sudden, but powerfUl wlndsragingupto .70milesper
. ""
House, but the committee given to _reporters, but the storms spawned tornadoes hour, spim a huge Northwest Hensley, Reedsville, was in the United states each year," Lusk said.
The P~meroy emergency didn't get a single tape, II said three green volumes provided · which destroyed rural homes Or'
tU
traveling west when her auto
74 ?jetlin
squad was called to the Flat- its investigation was In- the most thorough chro!licle so throughout lowe. r Mlch'•an. ·A cralensh
. ted· into a.paer.:0.~ wlnlkg met an oncoming vehicle. She
ALUANCE, OIUO - MUCH OF l'IIE NORTHERN lection
'\"'odS area at 5:13p.m. SWiday complete, largely because far on the Watergate break-In motorist was killed In o':k!and way and . ·damaged.,~se-:'rai pulled to the right going Into a · Of tins northeastern OhiO citY wu under quarantine today lifter
for George Batey, Middleport, NIXon refused to give up. the and cover-up, alleged corrupt County, Mich., when . a tree bUilding
ditch, and out ol the ditch · explosioos Sunday night hit the Unlvenal Coop O!emlcat Planl.' '
who was IU. He was taken to recordings it sought . in a campaign practices, lbe dairy crashed onto his van:
"This s~ the first lime I've acro88 ·.the highway into a .
Pollce.Sild the ezplollona during i storm Hnt 1tlgblf IOIIc
Veterans Memorial Ho&amp;pital. number of way!, including an controversy
and . the
Fierce winds tore through seen such severe winds in my . fence. She . was not injured. fume~ into the lllr. Pollee Slld llllllY people in the •rea were
AI 7:06 p.m. the squad was unsucceaafulsuit
m)'llerloua $100,000 Howard SanUac County, Mich., uproot- tenure al O'Hare," Chicago Moderate property damage evacualedandremalnedouloftheirhilmelloday.Poilcualdllle
called to Union Ave. for
The flnalrepori waa released Hughes donation.
1ng trees, downing power linea Fire Qtlef for the 25th bat· was incurred.
.
quarantine meant no one, escept authorized pet'IOIIIIel, "at
Olatles Smith, on Saturday. Saturday and named aU the
The committee made .28 and causing injury 10 at least' taliion, stanley Larsen, said.
SQUAD CALLED·
allowed in the. affected IJ'ea, ·
·
Smith had an arm Injury and names OOt one: Nixon's role recommedatklns aimed al ,pre- three peraona in a trailer park. "This place is just a mess." . . The Middleport E-R squad
Damage was expected to run u hleh u
mWIGa. l'olke
W'U talten to Holter Medical wu not dlacuaaed. The four venting ."future Watergates"
-Thousands of peraons wbo
·. · .
.
.
was called al10:02 a.m. today said aome people aulrertd fnlm .molte InhalatiOn and .,...,
Center.
Democral;a and three Republi- Including a ' commission to had Docked to Cl!icago beaches
Th un de rsto rm s a lao for Walter King, who was treated. at the kelle but rio one wu holpltaJI"" 'l1le plln&amp; ·
Talten to the Holzer Medical cans said they were "acutely supervise election spending IM"!lting relief from the 9&amp;- prod"ced wind damage at . having chest pains. He was handled pootlcldes, fll'ill chelnlclll and [1111111.
Center at 1:30 p.m. Saturday contldoua that ... the iasue of and a permanent special degree heal scurried fol' . Pontiac, m., Terre Haute, Ind., taken to Veterans Memorial
.
by the oquad was Mr1. Ida lmpeachinent of the Prelident prosecutor for caaea involving . ahi!lter ae sklea turned a dark and Chorubusco, Ind., Nor- Hospital .
Murphy, Middleport Route I, . on Watergate-related evidence high public of!lclals.
. ATHENS - THE i:YPRIJS NATIONAl: GUARD, led 111
grey and the winds kicked up thwett of Fort warne. The .
who wu atruck by a car on is now pending in tbe House of
Greek army offlcen aeeldal UDion ol CyJI'UI 111111 ar-,
The report said "the conduct dual and began to howl.
lower Milllllsslppi valley· and
SQUAD AIDS
Eut Main St. Karen Kent, 18, Repreaentatlvea! '
·overthrew
the IIOvenilnent of Prtlld~nt .Atchbilllop Mallltrtal
of many Watergate par·
The ~ Guard In Chicago aouthern Texas alao were hit
The Middleport emergency
New Haverl, drlvtr of the ear
The committee, backed by a Ucipants aeema grounded on wu IWIIIIlped with di*- by storms.
squad answered a call to Royal today and nore in Dellll*l*' publllll• Nicol samp~~~~ • whlclt atruck Mn. Murphy aatd 77-4 Senate vOle, started 17 the belief the ends Jllltlfled the calla from -keild boaters
A tornado whipped a shop- Oak Park at 4:46 p.m. SoliD'' president, Nlcolla Radio repartjd.
Turkey vlolllltly llpiiCIIII .-lrll o( &lt;.'Jprulwla 0r.- IJe(m . .
lhe llllpped rram be- monllta aao, Wltb Sen. limn J. IIIHI18, that laws could be ·caught In the unelqlected ping center near Houston, day for Ed Zacarhill who
' - two Yllhk:letl Into her En1n boldine up for televlllon flaunted to maintain the otonn. ~ o1 bolla ......,.
and wtnda downed a received an elbow lnjw-y In a tt lean for 111e llfltt or 1111 'l'llrldltl CJIIto&amp;
,.all. Tile ac:ddent ill being - • • iavel carwd !If preaent administration In .,.aped or overturned by pow«line aouth of Vlcklb11111, motor bllte accident. lie wu went to warwl!b Greebt Ia 11M
lli'l •......
t.
'
lnftlllpled by lhe . Pomeroy North Cal'o1lna Indiana thai . office.
r"8inn wtnda.
Mill., and ~ear Alellandrla, talten to Veterans Memorial the TurD and It~ ltllinlllll..,_ WIJ, 'b:fftPallce llltp&amp;.
•
would ring through~u~, the
ConUnued on page 8
9ne wor11an
1n Lake La. • ,.. , _
Hoapltal;,.
c.tlllald • , ••, •
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(UP!) - The Weat Virginia
Court of Claims embarked oo a
landmark trial today to
determine whether the state
can be held legally accountable
. for the 1967 Silver Bridge
disaater which took 46 lives.
Trial opened in the first two
cases among claims seeking
nearly $lt5 million In damages
for wrongful death from the
Department of IUghways.
"The claimants wiU have the
burden of proving thtit the state
acted negligently in this case,"
Attorney General Cl!auncey
Browning Jr. said in a UP!
Interview on the eve of the
trial. "We disclaim liability."
Browning spent the ' better
part of the weekend at the state
Law Ubrary lo prepare for the
case.
West Virginia. assumed
operation of the Silver Bridge
in 1941 which.collapsed into the
Ohio River at Point Pleasant
during rush hour traffic on
Dec. 15, 1967.
A total of 56 claims were
lrougbt against the depart·
ment, contending the disaster
was caused· by negligence on
the -~~ the _state.
The first two test" cases in·

up OVer 1973

.Man pleads .
guilty to
trespassing

chie.f

Sheriff's Dept

ONLY .. $399 .
Sheet

·investig'ates

No
. conclusions
as ·to Nixon role

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